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+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World from Marathon to Waterloo, by
+ Sir Edward Creasy, M.A.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fifteen Decisive Battles of The World
+From Marathon to Waterloo, by Edward Creasy
+
+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: The Fifteen Decisive Battles of The World From Marathon to Waterloo
+
+Author: Edward Creasy
+
+Release Date: May, 2003 [EBook #4061]
+Last Updated: January 26, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Hill and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE WORLD FROM MARATHON TO WATERLOO
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Sir Edward Creasy, M.A.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ (Late Chief Justice of Ceylon) Author of 'The Rise and Progress of the
+ English Constitution'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dedicated to ROBERT GORDON LATHAM, M.D., F.R.S. Late Fellow of King's
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ College Cambridge; Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Member of the Ethnological Society, New York; Late Professor of the
+ English Language and Literature, in University College, London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By his Friend THE AUTHOR.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Transcriber's Notes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Capital letters have been used to replace text in italics in the printed
+ text. Accents have been omitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Footnotes have been inserted into the text enclosed in square [ ]
+ brackets, near the point where they were indicated by a suffix in the
+ text.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Greek words in the text have been crudely translated into Western
+ European capital letters. Sincere apologies to Greek scholars! Longer
+ passages in Greek have been omitted and where possible replaced with a
+ reference to the original from which they were taken.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is an honourable characteristic of the Spirit of this Age, that
+ projects of violence and warfare are regarded among civilized states with
+ gradually increasing aversion. The Universal Peace Society certainly does
+ not, and probably never will, enrol the majority of statesmen among its
+ members. But even those who look upon the Appeal of Battle as occasionally
+ unavoidable in international controversies, concur in thinking it a
+ deplorable necessity, only to be resorted to when all peaceful modes of
+ arrangement have been vainly tried; and when the law of self-defence
+ justifies a State, like an individual, in using force to protect itself
+ from imminent and serious injury. For a writer, therefore, of the present
+ day to choose battles for his favourite topic, merely because they were
+ battles, merely because so many myriads of troops were arrayed in them,
+ and so many hundreds or thousands of human beings stabbed, hewed, or shot
+ each other to death during them, would argue strange weakness or depravity
+ of mind. Yet it cannot be denied that a fearful and wonderful interest is
+ attached to these scenes of carnage. There is undeniable greatness in the
+ disciplined courage, and in the love of honour, which make the combatants
+ confront agony and destruction. And the powers of the human intellect are
+ rarely more strongly displayed than they are in the Commander, who
+ regulates, arrays, and wields at his will these masses of armed
+ disputants; who, cool yet daring, in the midst of peril reflects on all,
+ and provides for all, ever ready with fresh resources and designs, as the
+ vicissitudes of the storm of slaughter require. But these qualities,
+ however high they may appear, are to be found in the basest as well as in
+ the noblest of mankind. Catiline was as brave a soldier as Leonidas, and a
+ much better officer. Alva surpassed the Prince of Orange in the field; and
+ Suwarrow was the military superior of Kosciusko. To adopt the emphatic
+ words of Byron:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "'Tis the Cause makes all,
+ Degrades or hallows courage in its fall."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There are some battles, also, which claim our attention, independently of
+ the moral worth of the combatants, on account of their enduring
+ importance, and by reason of the practical influence on our own social and
+ political condition, which we can trace up to the results of those
+ engagements. They have for us an abiding and actual interest, both while
+ we investigate the chain of causes and effects, by which they have helped
+ to make us what we are; and also while we speculate on what we probably
+ should have been, if any one of those battles had come to a different
+ termination. Hallam has admirably expressed this in his remarks on the
+ victory gained by Charles Martel, between Tours and Poictiers, over the
+ invading Saracens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He says of it, that "it may justly be reckoned among those few battles of
+ which a contrary event would have essentially varied the drama of the
+ world in all its subsequent scenes: with Marathon, Arbela, the Metaurus,
+ Chalons, and Leipsic." It was the perusal of this note of Hallam's that
+ first led me to the consideration of my present subject. I certainly
+ differ from that great historian as to the comparative importance of some
+ of the battles which he thus enumerates, and also of some which he omits.
+ It is probable, indeed, that no two historical inquirers would entirely
+ agree in their lists of the Decisive Battles of the World. Different minds
+ will naturally vary in the impressions which particular events make on
+ them; and in the degree of interest with which they watch the career, and
+ reflect on the importance, of different historical personages. But our
+ concurrence in our catalogues is of little moment, provided we learn to
+ look on these great historical events in the spirit which Hallam's
+ observations indicate. Those remarks should teach us to watch how the
+ interests of many states are often involved in the collisions between a
+ few; and how the effect of those collisions is not limited to a single
+ age, but may give an impulse which will sway the fortunes of successive
+ generations of mankind. Most valuable also is the mental discipline which
+ is thus acquired, and by which we are trained not only to observe what has
+ been, and what is, but also to ponder on what might have been. [See
+ Bolingbroke, On the Study and Use of History, vol. ii. p. 497 of his
+ collected works.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We thus learn not to judge of the wisdom of measures too exclusively by
+ the results. We learn to apply the juster standard of seeing what the
+ circumstances and the probabilities were that surrounded a statesman or a
+ general at the time when he decided on his plan: we value him not by his
+ fortune, but by his PROAIRESIZ, to adopt the expressive Greek word, for
+ which our language gives no equivalent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reasons why each of the following Fifteen Battles has been selected
+ will, I trust, appear when it is described. But it may be well to premise
+ a few remarks on the negative tests which have led me to reject others,
+ which at first sight may appear equal in magnitude and importance to the
+ chosen Fifteen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I need hardly remark that it is not the number of killed and wounded in a
+ battle that determines its general historical importance. It is not
+ because only a few hundreds fell in the battle by which Joan of Arc
+ captured the Tourelles and raised the siege of Orleans, that the effect of
+ that crisis is to be judged: nor would a full belief in the largest number
+ which Eastern historians state to have been slaughtered in any of the
+ numerous conflicts between Asiatic rulers, make me regard the engagement
+ in which they fell as one of paramount importance to mankind. But, besides
+ battles of this kind, there are many of great consequence, and attended
+ with circumstances which powerfully excite our feelings, and rivet our
+ attention, and yet which appear to me of mere secondary rank, inasmuch as
+ either their effects were limited in area, or they themselves merely
+ confirmed some great tendency or bias which an earlier battle had
+ originated. For example, the encounters between the Greeks and Persians,
+ which followed Marathon, seem to me not to have been phenomena of primary
+ impulse. Greek superiority had been already asserted, Asiatic ambition had
+ already been checked, before Salamis and Platea confirmed the superiority
+ of European free states over Oriental despotism. So, AEgos-Potamos, which
+ finally crushed the maritime power of Athens, seems to me inferior in
+ interest to the defeat before Syracuse, where Athens received her first
+ fatal check, and after which she only struggled to retard her downfall. I
+ think similarly of Zama with respect to Carthage, as compared with the
+ Metaurus: and, on the same principle, the subsequent great battles of the
+ Revolutionary war appear to me inferior in their importance to Valmy,
+ which first determined the military character and career of the French
+ Revolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am aware that a little activity of imagination, and a slight exercise of
+ metaphysical ingenuity, may amuse us, by showing how the chain of
+ circumstances is so linked together, that the smallest skirmish, or the
+ slightest occurrence of any kind, that ever occurred, may be said to have
+ been essential, in its actual termination, to the whole order of
+ subsequent events. But when I speak of Causes and Effects, I speak of the
+ obvious and important agency of one fact upon another, and not of remote
+ and fancifully infinitesimal influences. I am aware that, on the other
+ hand, the reproach of Fatalism is justly incurred by those, who, like the
+ writers of a certain school in a neighbouring country, recognise in
+ history nothing more than a series of necessary phenomena, which follow
+ inevitably one upon the other. But when, in this work, I speak of
+ probabilities, I speak of human probabilities only. When I speak of Cause
+ and Effect, I speak of those general laws only, by which we perceive the
+ sequence of human affairs to be usually regulated; and in which we
+ recognise emphatically the wisdom and power of the Supreme Lawgiver, the
+ design of The Designer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MITRE COURT CHAMBERS, TEMPLE, June 26, 1851.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> <big><b>THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE
+ WORLD.</b></big> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I.&mdash;THE BATTLE OF MARATHON. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. &mdash; DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT
+ SYRACUSE, B.C.413. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF ARBELA, B.C.
+ 331. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS,
+ B.C. 207. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. &mdash; VICTORY OF ARMINIUS OVER THE
+ ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS, </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI &mdash; THE BATTLE OF CHALONS, A.D.
+ 451. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF TOURS, A.D.
+ 732, </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS,
+ 1066. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. &mdash; JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY OVER
+ THE ENGLISH AT ORLEANS, A.D. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. &mdash; THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH
+ ARMADA, A.D. 1588. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, 1704.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, 1709.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. &mdash; VICTORY OF THE AMERICANS
+ OVER BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA, </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF VALMY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO, 1815.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ DETAILED CONTENTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ CHAP. I. <br /> THE BATTLE OF MARATHON <br /> Explanatory Remarks on some of
+ the circumstances of the Battle of <br /> Marathon. <br /> Synopsis of
+ Events between the Battle of Marathon, B.C. 490, and the <br /> Defeat of
+ the Athenians at Syracuse, B.C. 413. <br /> CHAP. II. <br /> DEFEAT OF THE
+ ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE, B.C. 413. <br /> Synopsis of Events between the
+ Defeat of the Athenians at Syracuse and <br /> the Battle of Arbela. <br />
+ CHAP. III. <br /> THE BATTLE OF ARBELA, B.C. 331. <br /> Synopsis of Events
+ between the Battle of Arbela and the Battle of the <br /> Metaurus. <br />
+ CHAP. IV. <br /> THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS, B.C. 207. <br /> Synopsis of
+ Events between the Battle of the Metaurus, B.C. 207, and <br /> Arminius's
+ Victory over the Roman Legions under Varus. A.D. 9. <br /> CHAP. V. <br />
+ VICTORY OF ARMINIUS OVER THE ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS, A.D. 9. <br />
+ Arminius. Synopsis of Events between Arminius's Victory over Varus and
+ <br /> the Battle of Chalons. <br /> CHAP. VI. <br /> THE BATTLE OF CHALONS,
+ A.D. 451. <br /> Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Chalons, A.D.
+ 451, and the <br /> Battle of Tours, 732. <br /> CHAP. VII. <br /> THE BATTLE
+ OF TOURS, A.D. 732. <br /> Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Tours,
+ A.D. 732 and the Battle <br /> of Hastings, 1066. <br /> CHAP. VIII. <br />
+ THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS, A.D. 1066. <br /> Synopsis of Events between the
+ Battle of Hastings, A.D. 1066, and Joan <br /> of Arc's Victory at Orleans,
+ 1429. <br /> CHAP. IX. <br /> JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY OVER THE ENGLISH AT
+ ORLEANS, A.D. 1429. <br /> Synopsis of Events between Joan of Arc's Victory
+ at Orleans, A.D. 1429, <br /> and the Defeat of the Spanish Armada, 1588.
+ <br /> CHAP. X. <br /> THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588. <br />
+ Synopsis of events between the Defeat of the Spanish Armada A.D. 1588,
+ <br /> and the Battle of Blenheim, 1704. <br /> CHAP. XI. <br /> THE BATTLE
+ OF BLENHEIM, A.D. 1704. <br /> Synopsis of Events between the Battle of
+ Blenheim, 1704, and the Battle <br /> of Pultowa, 1709. <br /> CHAP. XII.
+ <br /> THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, A.D. 1709. <br /> Synopsis of Events between
+ the Battle of Pultowa, 1709, and the Defeat <br /> of Burgoyne at Saratoga,
+ 1777. <br /> CHAP. XIII. <br /> VICTORY OF THE AMERICANS OVER BURGOYNE AT
+ SARATOGA, A.D. 1777. <br /> Synopsis of Events between the Defeat of
+ Burgoyne at Saratoga, 1777, and <br /> the Battle of Valmy, 1792. <br />
+ CHAP. XIV. <br /> THE BATTLE OF VALMY. <br /> Synopsis of Events between the
+ Battle of Valmy, 1792, and the Battle of <br /> Waterloo, 1815. <br /> CHAP.
+ XV. <br /> THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO, 1815. <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE WORLD.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.&mdash;THE BATTLE OF MARATHON.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Quibus actus uterque
+ Europae atque Asiae fatis concurrerit orbis."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Two thousand three hundred and forty years ago, a council of Athenian
+ officers was summoned on the slope of one of the mountains that look over
+ the plain of Marathon, on the eastern coast of Attica. The immediate
+ subject of their meeting was to consider whether they should give battle
+ to an enemy that lay encamped on the shore beneath them; but on the result
+ of their deliberations depended not merely the fate of two armies, but the
+ whole future progress of human civilization.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were eleven members of that council of war. Ten were the generals,
+ who were then annually elected at Athens, one for each of the local tribes
+ into which the Athenians were divided. Each general led the men of his own
+ tribe, and each was invested with equal military authority. One also of
+ the Archons was associated with them in the joint command of the
+ collective force. This magistrate was termed the Polemarch or War-Ruler:
+ he had the privilege of leading the right wing of the army in battle, and
+ of taking part in all councils of war. A noble Athenian, named
+ Callimachus, was the War-Ruler of this year; and as such, stood listening
+ to the earnest discussion of the ten generals. They had, indeed, deep
+ matter for anxiety, though little aware how momentous to mankind were the
+ votes they were about to give, or how the generations to come would read
+ with interest that record of their debate. They saw before them the
+ invading forces of a mighty empire, which had in the last fifty years
+ shattered and enslaved nearly all the kingdoms and principalities of the
+ then known world. They knew that all the resources of their own country
+ were comprised in the little army entrusted to their guidance. They saw
+ before them a chosen host of the Great King sent to wreak his special
+ wrath on that country, and on the other insolent little Greek community,
+ which had dared to aid his rebels and burn the capital of one of his
+ provinces. That victorious host had already fulfilled half its mission of
+ vengeance. Eretria, the confederate of Athens in the bold march against
+ Sardis nine years before, had fallen in the last few days; and the
+ Athenian generals could discern from the heights the island of AEgilia, in
+ which the Persians had deposited their Eretrian prisoners, whom they had
+ reserved to be led away captives into Upper Asia, there to hear their doom
+ from the lips of King Darius himself. Moreover, the men of Athens knew
+ that in the camp before them was their own banished tyrant, Hippias, who
+ was seeking to be reinstated by foreign scimitars in despotic sway over
+ any remnant of his countrymen that might survive the sack of their town,
+ and might be left behind as too worthless for leading away into Median
+ bondage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The numerical disparity between the force which the Athenian commanders
+ had under them, and that which they were called on to encounter, was
+ fearfully apparent to some of the council. The historians who wrote
+ nearest to the time of the battle do not pretend to give any detailed
+ statements of the numbers engaged, but there are sufficient data for our
+ making a general estimate. Every free Greek was trained to military duty:
+ and, from the incessant border wars between the different states, few
+ Greeks reached the age of manhood without having seen some service. But
+ the muster-roll of free Athenian citizens of an age fit for military duty
+ never exceeded thirty thousand, and at this epoch probably did not amount
+ to two-thirds of that number. Moreover, the poorer portion of these were
+ unprovided with the equipments, and untrained to the operations of the
+ regular infantry. Some detachments of the best armed troops would be
+ required to garrison the city itself, and man the various fortified posts
+ in the territory; so that it is impossible to reckon the fully equipped
+ force that marched from Athens to Marathon, when the news of the Persian
+ landing arrived, at higher than ten thousand men. [The historians who
+ lived long after the time of the battle, such as Justin, Plutarch and
+ others, give ten thousand as the number of the Athenian army. Not much
+ reliance could be placed on their authority, if unsupported by other
+ evidence; but a calculation made from the number of the Athenian free
+ population remarkably confirms it. For the data of this, see Boeck's
+ "Public Economy of Athens," vol. i. p. 45. Some METOIKOI probably served
+ as Hoplites at Marathon, but the number of resident aliens at Athens
+ cannot have been large at this period.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With one exception, the other Greeks held back from aiding them. Sparta
+ had promised assistance; but the Persians had landed on the sixth day of
+ the moon, and a religious scruple delayed the march of Spartan troops till
+ the moon should have reached its full. From one quarter only, and that a
+ most unexpected one, did Athens receive aid at the moment of her great
+ peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some years before this time, the little state of Plataea in Boeotia,
+ being hard pressed by her powerful neighbour, Thebes, had asked the
+ protection of Athens, and had owed to an Athenian army the rescue of her
+ independence. Now when it was noised over Greece that the Mede had come
+ from the uttermost parts of the earth to destroy Athens, the brave
+ Plataeans, unsolicited, marched with their whole force to assist in the
+ defence, and to share the fortunes of their benefactors. The general levy
+ of the Plataeans only amounted to a thousand men: and this little column,
+ marching from their city along the southern ridge of Mount Cithaeron, and
+ thence across the Attic territory, joined the Athenian forces above
+ Marathon almost immediately before the battle. The reinforcement was
+ numerically small; but the gallant spirit of the men who composed it must
+ have made it of tenfold value to the Athenians: and its presence must have
+ gone far to dispel the cheerless feeling of being deserted and friendless,
+ which the delay of the Spartan succours was calculated to create among the
+ Athenian ranks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This generous daring of their weak but true-hearted ally was never
+ forgotten at Athens. The Plataeans were made the fellow-countrymen of the
+ Athenians, except the right of exercising certain political functions; and
+ from that time forth in the solemn sacrifices at Athens, the public
+ prayers were offered up for a joint blessing from Heaven upon the
+ Athenians, and the Plataeans also. [Mr. Grote observes (vol. iv. p. 484),
+ that "this volunteer march of the whole Plataean force to Marathon is one
+ of the most affecting incidents of all Grecian history." In truth, the
+ whole career of Plataea, and the friendship, strong even unto death,
+ between her and Athens, form one of the most affecting episodes in the
+ history of antiquity. In the Peloponnesian War the Plataeans again were
+ true to the Athenians against all risks and all calculation of
+ self-interest; and the destruction of Plataea was the consequence. There
+ are few nobler passages in the classics than the speech in which the
+ Plataean prisoners of war, after the memorable siege of their city,
+ justify before their Spartan executioners their loyal adherence to Athens.
+ (See Thucydides, lib. iii. secs. 53-60.)]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the junction of the column from Plataea, the Athenians commanders
+ must have had under them about eleven thousand fully-armed and disciplined
+ infantry, and probably a larger number of irregular light-armed troops;
+ as, besides the poorer citizens who went to the field armed with javelins,
+ cutlasses, and targets, each regular heavy-armed soldier was attended in
+ the camp by one or more slaves, who were armed like the inferior freemen.
+ [At the battle of Plataea, eleven years after Marathon, each of the eight
+ thousand Athenian regular infantry who served there, was attended by a
+ light-armed slave. (Herod. lib. viii. c. 28,29.)] Cavalry or archers the
+ Athenians (on this occasion) had none: and the use in the field of
+ military engines was not at that period introduced into ancient warfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contrasted with their own scanty forces, the Greek commanders saw
+ stretched before them, along the shores of the winding bay, the tents and
+ shipping of the varied nations that marched to do the bidding of the King
+ of the Eastern world. The difficulty of finding transports and of securing
+ provisions would form the only limit to the numbers of a Persian army. Nor
+ is there any reason to suppose the estimate of Justin exaggerated, who
+ rates at a hundred thousand the force which on this occasion had sailed,
+ under the satraps Datis and Artaphernes, from the Cilician shores, against
+ the devoted coasts of Euboea and Attica. And after largely deducting from
+ this total, so as to allow for mere mariners and camp followers, there
+ must still have remained fearful odds against the national levies of the
+ Athenians. Nor could Greek generals then feel that confidence in the
+ superior quality of their troops which ever since the battle of Marathon
+ has animated Europeans in conflicts with Asiatics; as, for instance, in
+ the after struggles between Greece and Persia, or when the Roman legions
+ encountered the myriads of Mithridates and Tigranes, or as is the case in
+ the Indian campaigns of our own regiments. On the contrary, up to the day
+ of Marathon the Medes and Persians were reputed invincible. They had more
+ than once met Greek troops in Asia Minor, in Cyprus, in Egypt, and had
+ invariably beaten them. Nothing can be stronger than the expressions used
+ by the early Creek writers respecting the terror which the name of the
+ Medes inspired, and the prostration of men's spirits before the apparently
+ resistless career of the Persian arms. It is therefore, little to be
+ wondered at, that five of the ten Athenian generals shrank from the
+ prospect of fighting a pitched battle against an enemy so superior in
+ numbers, and so formidable in military renown. Their own position on the
+ heights was strong, and offered great advantages to a small defending
+ force against assailing masses. They deemed it mere foolhardiness to
+ descend into the plain to be trampled down by the Asiatic horse,
+ overwhelmed with the archery, or cut to pieces by the invincible veterans
+ of Cambyses and Cyrus. Moreover, Sparta, the great war-state of Greece,
+ had been applied to, and had promised succour to Athens, though the
+ religious observance which the Dorians paid to certain times and seasons
+ had for the present delayed their march. Was it not wise, at any rate, to
+ wait till the Spartans came up, and to have the help of the best troops in
+ Greece, before they exposed themselves to the shock of the dreaded Medes?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Specious as these reasons might appear, the other five generals were for
+ speedier and bolder operations. And, fortunately for Athens and for the
+ world, one of them was a man, not only of the highest military genius, but
+ also of that energetic character which impresses its own type and ideas
+ upon spirits feebler in conception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miltiades was the head of one of the noblest houses at Athens: he ranked
+ the AEacidae among his ancestry, and the blood of Achilles flowed in the
+ veins of the hero of Marathon. One of his immediate ancestors had acquired
+ the dominion of the Thracian Chersonese, and thus the family became at the
+ same time Athenian citizens and Thracian princes. This occurred at the
+ time when Pisistratus was tyrant of Athens. Two of the relatives of
+ Miltiades&mdash;an uncle of the same name, and a brother named Stesagoras&mdash;had
+ ruled the Chersonese before Miltiades became its prince. He had been
+ brought up at Athens in the house of his father Cimon, [Herodotus, lib.
+ vi. c. 102] who was renowned throughout Greece for his victories in the
+ Olympic chariot-races, and who must have been possessed of great wealth.
+ The sons of Pisistratus, who succeeded their father in the tyranny at
+ Athens, caused Cimon to be assassinated, but they treated the young
+ Miltiades with favour and kindness; and when his brother Stesagoras died
+ in the Chersonese, they sent him out there as lord of the principality.
+ This was about twenty-eight years before the battle of Marathon, and it is
+ with his arrival in the Chersonese that our first knowledge of the career
+ and character of Miltiades commences. We find, in the first act recorded
+ of him, proof of the same resolute and unscrupulous spirit that marked his
+ mature age. His brother's authority in the principality had been shaken by
+ war and revolt: Miltiades determined to rule more securely. On his arrival
+ he kept close within his house, as if he was mourning for his brother. The
+ principal men of the Chersonese, hearing of this, assembled from all the
+ towns and districts, and went together to the house of Miltiades on a
+ visit of condolence. As soon as he had thus got them in his power, he made
+ them all prisoners. He then asserted and maintained his own absolute
+ authority in the peninsula, taking into his pay a body of five hundred
+ regular troops, and strengthening his interest by marrying the daughter of
+ the king of the neighbouring Thracians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Persian power was extended to the Hellespont and its
+ neighbourhood, Miltiades, as prince of the Chersonese, submitted to King
+ Darius; and he was one of the numerous tributary rulers who led their
+ contingents of men to serve in the Persian army in the expedition against
+ Scythia. Miltiades and the vassal Greeks of Asia Minor were left by the
+ Persian king in charge of the bridge across the Danube, when the invading
+ army crossed that river, and plunged into the wilds of the country that
+ now is Russia, in vain pursuit of the ancestors of the modern Cossacks. On
+ learning the reverses that Darius met with in the Scythian wilderness,
+ Miltiades proposed to his companions that they should break the bridge
+ down, and leave the Persian king and his army to perish by famine and the
+ Scythian arrows. The rulers of the Asiatic Greek cities whom Miltiades
+ addressed, shrank from this bold and ruthless stroke against the Persian
+ power, and Darius returned in safety. But it was known what advice
+ Miltiades had given; and the vengeance of Darius was thenceforth specially
+ directed against the man who had counselled such a deadly blow against his
+ empire and his person. The occupation of the Persian arms in other
+ quarters left Miltiades for some years after this in possession of the
+ Chersonese; but it was precarious and interrupted. He, however, availed
+ himself of the opportunity which his position gave him of conciliating the
+ goodwill of his fellow-countrymen at Athens, by conquering and placing
+ under Athenian authority the islands of Lemnos and Imbros, to which Athens
+ had ancient claims, but which she had never previously been able to bring
+ into complete subjection. At length, in 494 B.C., the complete suppression
+ of the Ionian revolt by the Persians left their armies and fleets at
+ liberty to act against the enemies of the Great King to the west of the
+ Hellespont. A strong squadron of Phoenician galleys was sent against the
+ Chersonese. Miltiades knew that resistance was hopeless; and while the
+ Phoenicians were at Tenedos, he loaded five galleys with all the treasure
+ that he could collect, and sailed away for Athens. The Phoenicians fell in
+ with him, and chased him hard along the north of the AEgean. One of his
+ galleys, on board of which was his eldest son, Metiochus, was actually
+ captured; but Miltiades, with the other four, succeeded in reaching the
+ friendly coast of Imbros in safety. Thence he afterwards proceeded to
+ Athens, and resumed his station as a free citizen of the Athenian
+ commonwealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Athenians at this time had recently expelled Hippias, the son of
+ Pisistratus, the last of their tyrants. They were in the full glow of
+ their newly-recovered liberty and equality; and the constitutional changes
+ of Cleisthenes had inflamed their republican zeal to the utmost. Miltiades
+ had enemies at Athens; and these, availing themselves of the state of
+ popular feeling, brought him to trial for his life for having been tyrant
+ of the Chersonese. The charge did not necessarily import any acts of
+ cruelty or wrong to individuals: it was founded on so specific law; but it
+ was based on the horror with which the Greeks of that age regarded every
+ man who made himself compulsory master of his fellow-men, and exercised
+ irresponsible dominion over them. The fact of Miltiades having so ruled in
+ the Chersonese was undeniable; but the question which the Athenians,
+ assembled in judgment, must have tried, was, whether Miltiades, by
+ becoming tyrant of the Chersonese, deserved punishment as an Athenian
+ citizen. The eminent service that he had done the state in conquering
+ Lemnos and Imbros for it, pleaded strongly in his favour. The people
+ refused to convict him. He stood high in public opinion; and when the
+ coming invasion of the Persians was known, the people wisely elected him
+ one of their generals for the year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two other men of signal eminence in history, though their renown was
+ achieved at a later period than that of Miltiades, were also among the ten
+ Athenian generals at Marathon. One was Themistocles, the future founder of
+ the Athenian navy and the destined victor of Salamis: the other was
+ Aristides, who afterwards led the Athenian troops at Plataea, and whose
+ integrity and just popularity acquired for his country, when the Persians
+ had finally been repulsed, the advantageous pre-eminence of being
+ acknowledged by half of the Greeks as their impartial leader and
+ protector. It is not recorded what part either Themistocles or Aristides
+ took in the debate of the council of war at Marathon. But from the
+ character of Themistocles, his boldness, and his intuitive genius for
+ extemporizing the best measures in every emergency (a quality which the
+ greatest of historians ascribes to him beyond all his contemporaries), we
+ may well believe that the vote of Themistocles was for prompt and decisive
+ action. [See the character of Themistocles in the 138th section of the
+ first book of Thucydides, especially the last sentence.] On the vote of
+ Aristides it may be more difficult to speculate. His predilection for the
+ Spartans may have made him wish to wait till they came up; but, though
+ circumspect, he was neither timid as a soldier nor as a politician; and
+ the bold advice of Miltiades may probably have found in Aristides a
+ willing, most assuredly it found in him a candid, hearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miltiades felt no hesitation as to the course which the Athenian army
+ ought to pursue: and earnestly did he press his opinion on his
+ brother-generals. Practically acquainted with the organization of the
+ Persian armies, Miltiades was convinced of the superiority of the Greek
+ troops, if properly handled: he saw with the military eye of a great
+ general the advantage which the position of the forces gave him for a
+ sudden attack, and as a profound politician he felt the perils of
+ remaining inactive, and of giving treachery time to ruin the Athenian
+ cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One officer in the council of war had not yet voted. This was Callimachus,
+ the War-Ruler. The votes of the generals were five and five, so that the
+ voice of Callimachus would be decisive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On that vote, in all human probability, the destiny of all the nations of
+ the world depended. Miltiades turned to him, and in simple soldierly
+ eloquence, the substance of which we may read faithfully reported in
+ Herodotus, who had conversed with the veterans of Marathon, the great
+ Athenian thus adjured his countryman to vote for giving battle:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It now rests with you, Callimachus, either to enslave Athens, or, by
+ assuring her freedom, to win yourself an immortality of fame, such as not
+ even Harmodius and Aristogeiton have acquired. For never, since the
+ Athenians were a people, were they in such danger as they are in at this
+ moment. If they bow the knee to these Medes, they are to be given up to
+ Hippias, and you know what they then will have to suffer. But if Athens
+ comes victorious out of this contest, she has it in her to become the
+ first city of Greece. Your vote is to decide whether we are to join battle
+ or not. If we do not bring on a battle presently, some factious intrigue
+ will disunite the Athenians, and the city will be betrayed to the Medes.
+ But if we fight, before there is anything rotten in the state of Athens, I
+ believe that, provided the Gods will give fair play and no favour, we are
+ able to get the best of it in the engagement." [Herodotus, lib. vi. sec.
+ 209. The 116th section is to my mind clear proof that Herodotus had
+ personally conversed with Epizelus, one of the veterans of Marathon. The
+ substance of the speech of Miltiades would naturally become known by the
+ report of some of his colleagues.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vote of the brave War-Ruler was gained; the council determined to give
+ battle; and such was the ascendancy and military eminence of Miltiades,
+ that his brother-generals, one and all, gave up their days of command to
+ him, and cheerfully acted under his orders. Fearful, however, of creating
+ any jealousy, and of so failing to obtain the co-operation of all parts of
+ his small army, Miltiades waited till the day when the chief command would
+ have come round to him in regular rotation, before he led the troops
+ against the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inaction of the Asiatic commanders, during this interval, appears
+ strange at first sight; but Hippias was with them, and they and he were
+ aware of their chance of a bloodless conquest through the machinations of
+ his partisans among the Athenians. The nature of the ground also explains,
+ in many points, the tactics of the opposite generals before the battle, as
+ well as the operations of the troops during the engagement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plain of Marathon, which is about twenty-two miles distant from
+ Athens, lies along the bay of the same name on the north-eastern coast of
+ Attica. The plain is nearly in the form of a crescent, and about six miles
+ in length. It is about two miles broad in the centre, where the space
+ between the mountains and the sea is greatest, but it narrows towards
+ either extremity, the mountains coming close down to the water at the
+ horns of the bay. There is a valley trending inwards from the middle of
+ the plain, and a ravine comes down to it to the southward. Elsewhere it,
+ is closely girt round on the land side by rugged limestone mountains,
+ which are thickly studded with pines, olive-trees, and cedars, and
+ overgrown with the myrtle, arbutus, and the other low odoriferous shrubs
+ that everywhere perfume the Attic air. The level of the ground is now
+ varied by the mound raised over those who fell in the battle, but it was
+ an unbroken plain when the Persians encamped on it. There are marshes at
+ each end, which are dry in spring and summer, and then offer no
+ obstruction to the horseman, but are commonly flooded with rain, and so
+ rendered impracticable for cavalry, in the autumn, the time of year at
+ which the action took place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Greeks, lying encamped on the mountains, could watch every movement of
+ the Persians on the plain below, while they were enabled completely to
+ mask their own. Miltiades also had, from his position, the power of giving
+ battle whenever he pleased, or of delaying it at his discretion, unless
+ Datis were to attempt the perilous operation of storming the heights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we turn to the map of the old world, to test the comparative
+ territorial resources of the two states whose armies were now about to
+ come into conflict, the immense preponderance of the material power of the
+ Persian king over that of the Athenian republic is more striking than any
+ similar contrast which history can supply. It has been truly remarked,
+ that, in estimating mere areas, Attica, containing on its whole surface
+ only seven hundred square miles, shrinks into insignificance if compared
+ with many a baronial fief of the Middle Ages, or many a colonial allotment
+ of modern times. Its antagonist, the Persian empire, comprised the whole
+ of modern Asiatic and much of modern European Turkey, the modern kingdom
+ of Persia, and the countries of modern Georgia, Armenia, Balkh, the
+ Punjaub, Affghanistan, Beloochistan, Egypt, and Tripoli.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor could a European, in the beginning of the fifth century before our
+ era, look upon this huge accumulation of power beneath the sceptre of a
+ single Asiatic ruler, with the indifference with which we now observe on
+ the map the extensive dominions of modern Oriental sovereigns. For, as has
+ been already remarked, before Marathon was fought, the prestige of success
+ and of supposed superiority of race was on the side of the Asiatic against
+ the European. Asia was the original seat of human societies and long
+ before any trace can be found of the inhabitants of the rest of the world
+ having emerged from the rudest barbarism, we can perceive that mighty and
+ brilliant empires flourished in the Asiatic continent. They appear before
+ us through the twilight of primeval history, dim and indistinct, but
+ massive and majestic, like mountains in the early dawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead, however, of the infinite variety and restless change which have
+ characterised the institutions and fortunes of European states ever since
+ the commencement of the civilization of our continent, a monotonous
+ uniformity pervades the histories of nearly all Oriental empires, from the
+ most ancient down to the most recent times. They are characterised by the
+ rapidity of their early conquests; by the immense extent of the dominions
+ comprised in them; by the establishment of a satrap or pacha system of
+ governing the provinces; by an invariable and speedy degeneracy in the
+ princes of the royal house, the effeminate nurslings of the seraglio
+ succeeding to the warrior-sovereigns reared in the camp; and by the
+ internal anarchy and insurrections, which indicate and accelerate the
+ decline and fall of those unwieldy and ill-organized fabrics of power. It
+ is also a striking fact that the governments of all the great Asiatic
+ empires have in all ages been absolute despotisms. And Heeren is right in
+ connecting this with another great fact, which is important from its
+ influence both on the political and the social life of Asiatics. "Among
+ all the considerable nations of Inner Asia, the paternal government of
+ every household was corrupted by polygamy; where that custom exists, a
+ good political constitution is impossible. Fathers being converted into
+ domestic despots, are ready to pay the same abject obedience to their
+ sovereign which they exact from their family and dependants in their
+ domestic economy." We should bear in mind also the inseparable connexion
+ between the state religion and all legislation, which has always prevailed
+ in the East, and the constant existence of a powerful sacerdotal body,
+ exercising some check, though precarious and irregular, over the throne
+ itself, grasping at all civil administration, claiming the supreme control
+ of education, stereotyping the lines in which literature and science must
+ move, and limiting the extent to which it shall be lawful for the human
+ mind to prosecute its inquiries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these general characteristics rightly felt and understood, it becomes
+ a comparatively easy task to investigate and appreciate the origin,
+ progress, and principles of Oriental empires in general, as well as of the
+ Persian monarchy in particular. And we are thus better enabled to
+ appreciate the repulse which Greece gave to the arms of the East, and to
+ judge of the probable consequences to human civilization, if the Persians
+ had succeeded in bringing Europe under their yoke, as they had already
+ subjugated the fairest portions of the rest of the then known world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Greeks, from their geographical position, formed the natural vanguard
+ of European liberty against Persian ambition; and they pre-eminently
+ displayed the salient points of distinctive national character, which have
+ rendered European civilization so far superior to Asiatic. The nations
+ that dwelt in ancient times around and near the northern shores of the
+ Mediterranean Sea, were the first in our continent to receive from the
+ East the rudiments of art and literature, and the germs of social and
+ political organization. Of these nations, the Greeks, through their
+ vicinity to Asia Minor, Phoenicia, and Egypt, were among the very foremost
+ in acquiring the principles and habits of civilized life; and they also at
+ once imparted a new and wholly original stamp on all which they received.
+ Thus, in their religion they received from foreign settlers the names of
+ all their deities and many of their rites, but they discarded the
+ loathsome monstrosities of the Nile, the Orontes, and the Ganges;&mdash;they
+ nationalized their creed; and their own poets created their beautiful
+ mythology. No sacerdotal caste ever existed in Greece. So, in their
+ governments they lived long under hereditary kings, but never endured the
+ permanent establishment of absolute monarchy. Their early kings were
+ constitutional rulers, governing with defined prerogatives. And long
+ before the Persian invasion the kingly form of government had given way in
+ almost all the Greek states to republican institutions, presenting
+ infinite varieties of the balancing or the alternate predominance of the
+ oligarchical and democratical principles. In literature and science the
+ Greek intellect followed no beaten track, and acknowledged no limitary
+ rules. The Greeks thought their subjects boldly out; and the novelty of a
+ speculation invested it in their minds with interest, and not with
+ criminality. Versatile, restless, enterprising and self-confident, the
+ Greeks presented the most striking contrast to the habitual quietude and
+ submissiveness of the Orientals. And, of all the Greeks, the Athenians
+ exhibited these national characteristics in the strongest degree. This
+ spirit of activity and daring, joined to a generous sympathy for the fate
+ of their fellow-Greeks in Asia, had led them to join in the last Ionian
+ war; and now, mingling with their abhorrence of the usurping family of
+ their own citizens, which for a period had forcibly seized on and
+ exercised despotic power at Athens, it nerved them to defy the wrath of
+ King Darius, and to refuse to receive back at his bidding the tyrant whom
+ they had some years before driven from their land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The enterprise and genius of an Englishman have lately confirmed by fresh
+ evidence, and invested with fresh interest, the might of the Persian
+ monarch, who sent his troops to combat at Marathon. Inscriptions in a
+ character termed the Arrow-headed, or Cuneiform, had long been known to
+ exist on the marble monuments at Persepolis, near the site of the ancient
+ Susa, and on the faces of rocks in other places formerly ruled over by the
+ early Persian kings. But for thousands of years they had been mere
+ unintelligible enigmas to the curious but baffled beholder: and they were
+ often referred to as instances of the folly of human pride, which could
+ indeed write its own praises in the solid rock, but only for the rock to
+ outlive the language as well as the memory of the vain-glorious
+ inscribers. The elder Niebuhr, Grotefend, and Lassen had made some guesses
+ at the meaning of the Cuneiform letters; but Major Rawlinson, of the East
+ India Company's service, after years of labour, has at last accomplished
+ the glorious achievement of fully revealing the alphabet and the grammar
+ of this long unknown tongue. He has, in particular, fully deciphered and
+ expounded the inscriptions on the sacred rock of Behistun, on the western
+ frontiers of Media. These records of the Achaemenidae have at length found
+ their interpreter; and Darius himself speaks to us from the consecrated
+ mountain, and tells us the names of the nations that obeyed him, the
+ revolts that he suppressed, his victories, his piety, and his glory. [See
+ the tenth volume of the "Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kings who thus seek the admiration of posterity are little likely to dim
+ the record of their successes by the mention of their occasional defeats;
+ and it throws no suspicion on the narrative of the Greek historians, that
+ we find these inscriptions silent respecting the overthrow of Datis and
+ Artaphernes, as well as respecting the reverses which Darius sustained in
+ person during his Scythian campaigns. But these indisputable monuments of
+ Persian fame confirm, and even increase, the opinion with which Herodotus
+ inspires us, of the vast power which Cyrus founded and Cambyses increased;
+ which Darius augmented by Indian and Arabian conquests, and seemed likely,
+ when he directed his arms against Europe, to make the predominant monarchy
+ of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the exception of the Chinese empire, in which, throughout all ages
+ down to the last few years, one-third of the human race has dwelt almost
+ unconnected with the other portions, all the great kingdoms which we know
+ to have existed in Ancient Asia, were, in Darius's time, blended with the
+ Persian. The northern Indians, the Assyrians, the Syrians, the
+ Babylonians, the Chaldees, the Phoenicians, the nations of Palestine, the
+ Armenians, the Bactrians, the Lydians, the Phrygians, the Parthians, and
+ the Medes,&mdash;all obeyed the sceptre of the Great King: the Medes
+ standing next to the native Persians in honour, and the empire being
+ frequently spoken of as that of the Medes, or as that of the Medes and
+ Persians. Egypt and Cyrene were Persian provinces; the Greek colonists in
+ Asia Minor and the islands of the AEgean were Darius's subjects; and their
+ gallant but unsuccessful attempts to throw off the Persian yoke had only
+ served to rivet it more strongly, and to increase the general belief: that
+ the Greeks could not stand before the Persians in a field of battle.
+ Darius's Scythian war, though unsuccessful in its immediate object, had
+ brought about the subjugation of Thrace and the submission of Macedonia.
+ From the Indus to the Peneus, all was his.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may imagine the wrath with which the lord of so many nations must have
+ heard, nine years before the battle of Marathon, that a strange nation
+ towards the setting sun, called the Athenians, had dared to help his
+ rebels in Ionia against him, and that they had plundered and burnt the
+ capital of one of his provinces. Before the burning of Sardis, Darius
+ seems never to have heard of the existence of Athens; but his satraps in
+ Asia Minor had for some time seen Athenian refugees at their provincial
+ courts imploring assistance against their fellow-countrymen. When Hippias
+ was driven away from Athens, and the tyrannic dynasty of the Pisistratidae
+ finally overthrown in 510 B.C., the banished tyrant and his adherents,
+ after vainly seeking to be restored by Spartan intervention, had betaken
+ themselves to Sardis, the capital city of the satrapy of Artaphernes.
+ There Hippias (in the expressive words of Herodotus) [Herod. lib. v. c.
+ 96.] began every kind of agitation, slandering the Athenians before
+ Artaphernes, and doing all he could to induce the satrap to place Athens
+ in subjection to him, as the tributary vassal of King Darius. When the
+ Athenians heard of his practices, they sent envoys to Sardis to
+ remonstrate with the Persians against taking up the quarrel of the
+ Athenian refugees. But Artaphernes gave them in reply a menacing command
+ to receive Hippias back again if they looked for safety. The Athenians
+ were resolved not to purchase safety at such a price; and after rejecting
+ the satrap's terms, they considered that they and the Persians were
+ declared enemies. At this very crisis the Ionian Greeks implored the
+ assistance of their European brethren, to enable them to recover their
+ independence from Persia. Athens, and the city of Eretria in Euboea, alone
+ consented. Twenty Athenian galleys, and five Eretrian, crossed the AEgean
+ Sea; and by a bold and sudden march upon Sardis the Athenians and their
+ allies succeeded in capturing the capital city of the haughty satrap, who
+ had recently menaced them with servitude or destruction. The Persian
+ forces were soon rallied, and the Greeks were compelled to retire. They
+ were pursued, and defeated on their return to the coast, and Athens took
+ no further part in the Ionian war. But the insult that she had put upon
+ the Persian power was speedily made known throughout that empire, and was
+ never to be forgiven or forgotten. In the emphatic simplicity of the
+ narrative of Herodotus, the wrath of the Great King is thus described:&mdash;"Now
+ when it was told to King Darius that Sardis had been taken and burnt by
+ the Athenians and Ionians, he took small heed of the Ionians, well knowing
+ who they were, and that their revolt would soon be put down: but he asked
+ who, and what manner of men, the Athenians were. And when he had been
+ told, he called for his bow; and, having taken it, and placed an arrow on
+ the string, he let the arrow fly towards heaven; and as he shot it into
+ the air, he said, 'O Supreme God! grant me that I may avenge myself on the
+ Athenians.' And when he had said this, he appointed one of his servants to
+ say to him every day as he sat at meat, 'Sire, remember the Athenians.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some years were occupied in the complete reduction of Ionia. But when this
+ was effected, Darius ordered his victorious forces to proceed to punish
+ Athens and Eretria, and to conquer European Greece. The first armament
+ sent for this purpose was shattered by shipwreck, and nearly destroyed off
+ Mount Athos, But the purpose of King Darius was not easily shaken. A
+ larger army was ordered to be collected in Cilicia; and requisitions were
+ sent to all the maritime cities of the Persian empire for ships of war,
+ and for transports of sufficient size for carrying cavalry as well as
+ infantry across the AEgean. While these preparations were being made,
+ Darius sent heralds round to the Grecian cities demanding their submission
+ to Persia. It was proclaimed in the market-place of each little Hellenic
+ state (some with territories not larger than the Isle of Wight), that King
+ Darius, the lord of all men, from the rising to the setting sun, required
+ earth and water to be delivered to his heralds, as a symbolical
+ acknowledgment that he was head and master of the country. [Aeschines in
+ Ctes. p. 622, ed. Reiske. Mitford, vol. i. p. 485. AEschines is speaking
+ of Xerxes, but Mitford is probably right in considering it as the style of
+ the Persian kings in their proclamations. In one of the inscriptions at
+ Persepolis, Darius terms himself "Darius the great king, king of kings,
+ the king of the many peopled countries, the supporter also of this great
+ world." In another, he styles himself "the king of all inhabited
+ countries." (See "Asiatic Journal" vol. X pp. 287 and 292, and Major
+ Rawlinson's Comments.)] Terror-stricken at the power of Persia and at the
+ severe punishment that had recently been inflicted on the refractory
+ Ionians, many of the continental Greeks and nearly all the islanders
+ submitted, and gave the required tokens of vassalage. At Sparta and Athens
+ an indignant refusal was returned: a refusal which was disgraced by
+ outrage and violence against the persons of the Asiatic heralds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fresh fuel was thus added to the anger of Darius against Athens, and the
+ Persian preparations went on with renewed vigour. In the summer of 490
+ B.C., the army destined for the invasion was assembled in the Aleian plain
+ of Cilicia, near the sea. A fleet of six hundred galleys and numerous
+ transports was collected on the coast for the embarkation of troops, horse
+ as well as foot. A Median general named Datis, and Artaphernes, the son of
+ the satrap of Sardis, and who was also nephew of Darius, were placed in
+ titular joint command of the expedition. That the real supreme authority
+ was given to Datis alone is probable, from the way in which the Greek
+ writers speak of him. We know no details of the previous career of this
+ officer; but there is every reason to believe that his abilities and
+ bravery had been proved by experience, or his Median birth would have
+ prevented his being placed in high command by Darius. He appears to have
+ been the first Mede who was thus trusted by the Persian kings after the
+ overthrow of the conspiracy of the Median Magi against the Persians
+ immediately before Darius obtained the throne. Datis received instructions
+ to complete the subjugation of Greece, and especial orders were given him
+ with regard to Eretria and Athens. He was to take these two cities; and he
+ was to lead the inhabitants away captive, and bring them as slaves into
+ the presence of the Great King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Datis embarked his forces in the fleet that awaited them; and coasting
+ along the shores of Asia Minor till he was off Samos, he thence sailed due
+ westward through the AEgean Sea for Greece, taking the islands in his way.
+ The Naxians had, ten years before, successfully stood a siege against a
+ Persian armament, but they now were too terrified to offer any resistance,
+ and fled to the mountain-tops, while the enemy burnt their town and laid
+ waste their lands. Thence Datis, compelling the Greek islanders to join
+ him with their ships and men, sailed onward to the coast of Euboea. The
+ little town of Carystus essayed resistance, but was quickly overpowered.
+ He next attacked Eretria. The Athenians sent four thousand men to its aid.
+ But treachery was at work among the Eretrians; and the Athenian force
+ received timely warning from one of the leading men of the city to retire
+ to aid in saving their own country, instead of remaining to share in the
+ inevitable destruction of Eretria. Left to themselves, the Eretrians
+ repulsed the assaults of the Persians against their walls for six days; on
+ the seventh day they were betrayed by two of their chiefs and the Persians
+ occupied the city. The temples were burnt in revenge for the burning of
+ Sardis, and the inhabitants were bound and placed as prisoners in the
+ neighbouring islet of AEgylia, to wait there till Datis should bring the
+ Athenians to join them in captivity, when both populations were to be led
+ into Upper Asia, there to learn their doom from the lips of King Darius
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flushed with success, and with half his mission thus accomplished, Datis
+ reimbarked his troops, and crossing the little channel that separates
+ Euboea from the mainland, he encamped his troops on the Attic coast at
+ Marathon, drawing up his galleys on the shelving beach, as was the custom
+ with the navies of antiquity. The conquered islands behind him served as
+ places of deposit for his provisions and military stores. His position at
+ Marathon seemed to him in every respect advantageous; and the level nature
+ of the ground on which he camped was favourable for the employment of his
+ cavalry, if the Athenians should venture to engage him. Hippias, who
+ accompanied him, and acted as the guide of the invaders, had pointed out
+ Marathon as the best place for a landing, for this very reason. Probably
+ Hippias was also influenced by the recollection, that forty-seven years
+ previously he, with his father Pisistratus, had crossed with an army from
+ Eretria to Marathon, and had won an easy victory over their Athenian
+ enemies on that very plain, which had restored them to tyrannic power. The
+ omen seemed cheering. The place was the same; but Hippias soon learned to
+ his cost how great a change had come over the spirit of the Athenians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though "the fierce democracy" of Athens was zealous and true against
+ foreign invader and domestic tyrant, a faction existed in Athens, as at
+ Eretria, of men willing to purchase a party triumph over their
+ fellow-citizens at the price of their country's ruin. Communications were
+ opened between these men and the Persian camp, which would have led to a
+ catastrophe like that of Eretria, if Miltiades had not resolved, and had
+ not persuaded his colleagues to resolve, on fighting at all hazards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Miltiades arrayed his men for action, he staked on the arbitrement of
+ one battle not only the fate of Athens, but that of all Greece; for if
+ Athens had fallen, no other Greek state, except Lacedaemon, would have had
+ the courage to resist; and the Lacedaemonians, though they would probably
+ have died in their ranks to the last man, never could have successfully
+ resisted the victorious Persians, and the numerous Greek troops, which
+ would have soon marched under the Persian satraps, had they prevailed over
+ Athens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was there any power to the westward of Greece that could have offered
+ an effectual opposition to Persia, had she once conquered Greece, and made
+ that country a basis for future military operations. Rome was at this time
+ in her season of utmost weakness. Her dynasty of powerful Etruscan kings
+ had been driven out, and her infant commonwealth was reeling under the
+ attacks of the Etruscans and Volscians from without, and the fierce
+ dissensions between the patricians and plebeians within. Etruria, with her
+ Lucumos and serfs, was no match for Persia. Samnium had not grown into the
+ might which she afterwards put forth: nor could the Greek colonies in
+ South Italy and Sicily hope to survive when their parent states had
+ perished. Carthage had escaped the Persian yoke in the time of Cambyses,
+ through the reluctance of the Phoenician mariners to serve against their
+ kinsmen. But such forbearance could not long have been relied on, and the
+ future rival of Rome would have become as submissive a minister of the
+ Persian power as were the Phoenician cities themselves. If we turn to
+ Spain, or if we pass the great mountain chain which, prolonged through the
+ Pyrenees, the Cevennes, the Alps, and the Balkan, divides Northern from
+ Southern Europe, we shall find nothing at that period but mere savage
+ Finns, Celts, Slaves, and Teutons. Had Persia beaten Athens at Marathon,
+ she could have found no obstacle to prevent Darius, the chosen servant of
+ Ormuzd, from advancing his sway over all the known Western races of
+ mankind. The infant energies of Europe would have been trodden out beneath
+ universal conquest; and the history of the world, like the history of
+ Asia, would have become a mere record of the rise and fall of despotic
+ dynasties, of the incursions of barbarous hordes, and of the mental and
+ political prostration of millions beneath the diadem, the tiara, and the
+ sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great as the preponderance of the Persian over the Athenian power at that
+ crisis seems to have been, it would be unjust to impute wild rashness to
+ the policy of Miltiades, and those who voted with him in the Athenian
+ council of war, or to look on the after-current of events as the mere
+ result of successful indiscretion, as before has been remarked, Miltiades,
+ whilst prince of the Chersonese, had seen service in the Persian armies;
+ and he knew by personal observation how many elements of weakness lurked
+ beneath their imposing aspect of strength. He knew that the bulk of their
+ troops no longer consisted of the hardy shepherds and mountaineers from
+ Persia Proper and Kurdistan, who won Cyrus's battles: but that unwilling
+ contingents from conquered nations now largely filled up the Persian
+ muster rolls, fighting more from compulsion than from any zeal in the
+ cause of their masters. He had also the sagacity and the spirit to
+ appreciate the superiority of the Greek armour and organization over the
+ Asiatic, notwithstanding former reverses. Above all, he felt and worthily
+ trusted the enthusiasm of the men under his command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Athenians, whom he led, had proved by their new-born valour in recent
+ wars against the neighbouring states, that "Liberty and Equality of civic
+ rights are brave spirit-stirring things: and they who, while under the
+ yoke of a despot, had been no better men of war than any of their
+ neighbours, as soon as they were free, became the foremost men of all; for
+ each felt that in fighting for a free commonwealth, he fought for himself,
+ and, whatever he took in hand, he was zealous to do the work thoroughly."
+ So the nearly contemporaneous historian describes the change of spirit
+ that was seen in the Athenians after their tyrants were expelled; [Herod.
+ lib. v. c. 87.] and Miltiades knew that in leading them against the
+ invading army, where they had Hippias, the foe they most hated, before
+ them, he was bringing into battle no ordinary men, and could calculate on
+ no ordinary heroism. As for traitors, he was sure, that whatever treachery
+ might lurk among some of the higher-born and wealthier Athenians, the rank
+ and file whom he commanded were ready to do their utmost in his and their
+ own cause. With regard to future attacks from Asia, he might reasonably
+ hope that one victory would inspirit all Greece to combine against common
+ foe; and that the latent seeds of revolt and disunion in the Persian
+ empire would soon burst forth and paralyse its energies, so as to leave
+ Greek independence secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With these hopes and risks, Miltiades, on the afternoon of a September
+ day, 490 B.C., gave the word for the Athenian army to prepare for battle.
+ There were many local associations connected with those mountain heights,
+ which were calculated powerfully to excite the spirits of the men, and of
+ which the commanders well knew how to avail themselves in their
+ exhortations to their troops before the encounter. Marathon itself was a
+ region sacred to; Hercules. Close to them was the fountain of Macaria, who
+ had in days of yore devoted herself to death for the liberty of her
+ people. The very plain on which they were to fight was the scene of the
+ exploits of their national hero, Theseus; and there, too, as old legends
+ told, the Athenians and the Heraclidae had routed the invader, Eurystheus.
+ These traditions were not mere cloudy myths, or idle fictions, but matters
+ of implicit earnest faith to the men of that day: and many a fervent
+ prayer arose from the Athenian ranks to the heroic spirits who while on
+ earth had striven and suffered on that very spot, and who were believed to
+ be now heavenly powers, looking down with interest on their still beloved
+ country, and capable of interposing with superhuman aid in its behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to old national custom, the warriors of each tribe were arrayed
+ together; neighbour thus fighting by the side of neighbour, friend by
+ friend, and the spirit of emulation and the consciousness of
+ responsibility excited to the very utmost. The War-Ruler, Callimachus, had
+ the leading of the right wing; the Plataeans formed the extreme left; and
+ Themistocles and Aristides commanded the centre. The line consisted of the
+ heavy-armed spearmen only. For the Greeks (until the time of Iphicrates)
+ took little or no account of light-armed soldiers in a pitched battle,
+ using them only in skirmishes or for the pursuit of a defeated enemy. The
+ panoply of the regular infantry consisted of a long spear, of a shield,
+ helmet, breast-plate, greaves, and short sword. Thus equipped, they
+ usually advanced slowly and steadily into action in an uniform phalanx of
+ about eight spears deep. But the military genius of Miltiades led him to
+ deviate on this occasion from the commonplace tactics of his countrymen.
+ It was essential for him to extend his line so as to cover all the
+ practicable ground, and to secure himself from being outflanked and
+ charged in the rear by the Persian horse. This extension involved the
+ weakening of his line. Instead of an uniform reduction of its strength, he
+ determined on detaching principally from his centre, which, from the
+ nature of the ground, would have the best opportunities for rallying if
+ broken; and on strengthening his wings, so as to insure advantage at those
+ points; and he trusted to his own skill, and to his soldiers' discipline,
+ for the improvement of that advantage into decisive victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [It is remarkable that there is no other instance of a Greek general
+ deviating from the ordinary mode of bringing a phalanx of spearmen into
+ action, until the battles of Leuctra and Mantineia, more than a century
+ after Marathon, when Epaminondas introduced the tactics (which Alexander
+ the Great in ancient times, and Frederic the Great in modern times, made
+ so famous) of concentrating an overpowering force on some decisive point
+ of the enemy's line, while he kept back, or, in military phrase, refused
+ the weaker part of his own.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this order, and availing himself probably of the inequalities of the
+ ground, so as to conceal his preparations from the enemy till the last
+ possible moment, Miltiades drew up the eleven thousand infantry whose
+ spears were to decide this crisis in the struggle between the European and
+ the Asiatic worlds. The sacrifices, by which the favour of Heaven was
+ sought, and its will consulted, were announced to show propitious omens.
+ The trumpet sounded for action, and, chanting the hymn of battle, the
+ little army bore down upon the host of the foe. Then, too, along the
+ mountain slopes of Marathon must have resounded the mutual exhortation
+ which AEschylus, who fought in both battles, tells us was afterwards heard
+ over the waves of Salamis,&mdash;"On, sons of the Greeks! Strike for the
+ freedom of your country! strike for the freedom of your children and of
+ your wives&mdash;for the shrines of your fathers' gods, and for the
+ sepulchres of your sires. All&mdash;all are now staked upon the strife!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of advancing at the usual slow pace of the phalanx, Miltiades
+ brought his men on at a run. They were all trained in the exercises of the
+ palaestra, so that there was no fear of their ending the charge in
+ breathless exhaustion: and it was of the deepest importance for him to
+ traverse as rapidly as possible the space of about a mile of level ground,
+ that lay between the mountain foot and the Persian outposts, and so to get
+ his troops into close action before the Asiatic cavalry could mount, form,
+ and manoeuvre against him, or their archers keep him long under bow-shot,
+ and before the enemy's generals could fairly deploy their masses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the Persians," says Herodotus, "saw the Athenians running down on
+ them, without horse or bowmen, and scanty in numbers, they thought them a
+ set of madmen rushing upon certain destruction." They began, however, to
+ prepare to receive them and the Eastern chiefs arrayed, as quickly as time
+ and place allowed, the varied races who served in their motley ranks.
+ Mountaineers from Hyrcania and Affghanistan, wild horsemen from the
+ steppes of Khorassan, the black archers of Ethiopia, swordsmen from the
+ banks of the Indus, the Oxus, the Euphrates, and the Nile, made ready
+ against the enemies of the Great King. But no national cause inspired
+ them, except the division of native Persians; and in the large host there
+ was no uniformity of language, creed, race, or military system. Still,
+ among them there were many gallant men, under a veteran general; they were
+ familiarized with victory; and in contemptuous confidence their infantry,
+ which alone had time to form, awaited the Athenian charge. On came the
+ Greeks, with one unwavering line of levelled spears, against which the
+ light targets, the short lances and scymetars of the Orientals offered
+ weak defence. The front rank of the Asiatics must have gone down to a man
+ at the first shock. Still they recoiled not, but strove by individual
+ gallantry, and by the weight of numbers, to make up for the disadvantages
+ of weapons and tactics, and to bear back the shallow line of the
+ Europeans. In the centre, where the native Persians and the Sacae fought,
+ they succeeded in breaking through the weaker part of the Athenian
+ phalanx; and the tribes led by Aristides and Themistocles were, after a
+ brave resistance, driven back over the plain, and chased by the Persians
+ up the valley towards the inner country. There the nature of the ground
+ gave the opportunity of rallying and renewing the struggle: and meanwhile,
+ the Greek wings, where Miltiades had concentrated his chief strength, had
+ routed the Asiatics opposed to them; and the Athenian and Plataean
+ officers, instead of pursuing the fugitives, kept their troops well in
+ hand, and wheeling round they formed the two wings together. Miltiades
+ instantly led them against the Persian centre, which had hitherto been
+ triumphant, but which now fell back, and prepared to encounter these new
+ and unexpected assailants. Aristides and Themistocles renewed the fight
+ with their re-organized troops, and the full force of the Greeks was
+ brought into close action with the Persian and Sacian divisions of the
+ enemy. Datis's veterans strove hard to keep their ground, and evening
+ [ARISTOPH. Vesvoe 1085.] was approaching before the stern encounter was
+ decided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Persians, with their slight wicker shields, destitute of
+ body-armour, and never taught by training to keep the even front and act
+ with the regular movement of the Greek infantry, fought at grievous
+ disadvantage with their shorter and feebler weapons against the compact
+ array of well-armed Athenian and Plataean spearmen, all perfectly drilled
+ to perform each necessary evolution in concert, and to preserve an uniform
+ and unwavering line in battle. In personal courage and in bodily activity
+ the Persians were not inferior to their adversaries. Their spirits were
+ not yet cowed by the recollection of former defeats; and they lavished
+ their lives freely, rather than forfeit the fame which they had won by so
+ many victories. While their rear ranks poured an incessant shower of
+ arrows over the heads of their comrades, the foremost Persians kept
+ rushing forward, sometimes singly, sometimes in desperate groups of twelve
+ or ten upon the projecting spears of the Greeks, striving to force a lane
+ into the phalanx, and to bring their scimetars and daggers into play. But
+ the Greeks felt their superiority, and though the fatigue of the
+ long-continued action told heavily on their inferior numbers, the sight of
+ the carnage that they dealt amongst their assailants nerved them to fight
+ still more fiercely on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [See the description, in the 62nd section of the ninth book of Herodotus,
+ of the gallantry shown by the Persian infantry against the Lacedaemonians
+ at Plataea. We have no similar detail of the fight at Marathon, but we
+ know that it was long and obstinately contested (see the 113th section of
+ the sixth book of Herodotus, and the lines from the "Vespae" already
+ quoted), and the spirit of the Persians must have been even higher at
+ Marathon than at Plataea. In both battles it was only the true Persians
+ and the Sacae who showed this valour; the other Asiatics fled like sheep.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the previously unvanquished lords of Asia turned their backs and
+ fled, and the Greeks followed, striking them down, to the water's edge,
+ where the invaders were now hastily launching their galleys, and seeking
+ to embark and fly. Flushed with success, the Athenians dashed at the
+ fleet.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [The flying Mede, his shaftless broken bow;
+ The fiery Greek, his red pursuing spear;
+ Mountains above, Earth's, Ocean's plain below,
+ Death in the front, Destruction in the rear!
+ Such was the scene.&mdash;Byron's CHILDE HARROLD.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Bring fire, bring fire," was their cry; and they began to lay hold of the
+ ships. But here the Asiatics resisted desperately, and the principal loss
+ sustained by the Greeks was in the assault on the fleet. Here fell the
+ brave War-Ruler Callimachus, the general Stesilaus, and other Athenians of
+ note. Conspicuous among them was Cynaegeirus, the brother of the tragic
+ poet AEschylus. He had grasped the ornamental work on the stern of one of
+ the galleys, and had his hand struck off by an axe. Seven galleys were
+ captured; but the Persians succeeded in saving the rest. They pushed off
+ from the fatal shore: but even here the skill of Datis did not desert him,
+ and he sailed round to the western coast of Attica, in hopes to find the
+ city unprotected, and to gain possession of it from some of the partisans
+ of Hippias. Miltiades, however, saw and counteracted his manoeuvre.
+ Leaving Aristides, and the troops of his tribe, to guard the spoil and the
+ slain, the Athenian commander led his conquering army by a rapid
+ night-march back across the country to Athens. And when the Persian fleet
+ had doubled the Cape of Sunium and sailed up to the Athenian harbour in
+ the morning, Datis saw arrayed on the heights above the city the troops
+ before whom his men had fled on the preceding evening. All hope of further
+ conquest in Europe for the time was abandoned, and the baffled armada
+ returned to the Asiatic coasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the battle had been fought, but while the dead bodies were yet on
+ the ground, the promised reinforcement from Sparta arrived. Two thousand
+ Lacedaemonian spearmen, starting immediately after the full moon, had
+ marched the hundred and fifty miles between Athens and Sparta in the
+ wonderfully short time of three days. Though too late to share in the
+ glory of the action, they requested to be allowed to march to the
+ battle-field to behold the Medes. They proceeded thither, gazed on the
+ dead bodies of the invaders, and then, praising the Athenians and what
+ they had done, they returned to Lacedaemon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The number of the Persian dead was six thousand four hundred; of the
+ Athenians, a hundred and ninety-two. The number of Plataeans who fell is
+ not mentioned, but as they fought in the part of the army which was not
+ broken, it cannot have been large.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The apparent disproportion between the losses of the two armies is not
+ surprising, when we remember the armour of the Greek spearmen, and the
+ impossibility of heavy slaughter being inflicted by sword or lance on
+ troops so armed, as long as they kept firm in their ranks. [Mitford well
+ refers to Crecy, Poictiers, and Agincourt, as instances of similar
+ disparity of loss between the conquerors and the conquered.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Athenian slain were buried on the field of battle. This was contrary
+ to the usual custom, according to which the bones of all who fell fighting
+ for their country in each year were deposited in a public sepulchre in the
+ suburb of Athens called the Cerameicus. But it was felt that a distinction
+ ought to be made in the funeral honours paid to the men of Marathon, even
+ as their merit had been distinguished over that of all other Athenians. A
+ lofty mound was raised on the plain of Marathon, beneath which the remains
+ of the men of Athens who fell in the battle were deposited. Ten columns
+ were erected on the spot, one for each of the Athenian tribes; and on the
+ monumental column of each tribe were graven the names of those of its
+ members whose glory it was to have fallen in the great battle of
+ liberation. The antiquary Pausanias read those names there six hundred
+ years after the time when they were first graven. The columns have long
+ perished, but the mound still marks the spot where the noblest heroes of
+ antiquity, the MARATHONOMAKHOI repose. [Pausanias states, with implicit
+ belief, that the battlefield was haunted at night by supernatural beings,
+ and that the noise of combatants and the snorting of horses were heard to
+ resound on it. The superstition has survived the change of creeds, and the
+ shepherds of the neighbourhood still believe that spectral warriors
+ contend on the plain at midnight, and they say that they have heard the
+ shouts of the combatants and the neighing of the steeds. See Grote and
+ Thirlwall.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A separate tumulus was raised over the bodies of the slain Plataeans, and
+ another over the light-armed slaves who had taken part and had fallen in
+ the battle. [It is probable that the Greek light-armed irregulars were
+ active in the attack on the Persian ships and it was in this attack that
+ the Greeks suffered their principal loss.] There was also a distinct
+ sepulchral monument to the general to whose genius the victory was mainly
+ due. Miltiades did not live long after his achievement at Marathon, but he
+ lived long enough to experience a lamentable reverse of his popularity and
+ good fortune. As soon as the Persians had quitted the western coasts of
+ the AEgean, he proposed to an assembly of the Athenian people that they
+ should fit out seventy galleys, with a proportionate force of soldiers and
+ military stores, and place them at his disposal; not telling them whither
+ he meant to proceed, but promising them that if they would equip the force
+ he asked for, and give him discretionary powers, he would lead it to a
+ land where there was gold in abundance to be won with ease. The Greeks of
+ that time believed in the existence of Eastern realms teeming with gold,
+ as firmly as the Europeans of the sixteenth century believed in Eldorado
+ of the West. The Athenians probably thought that the recent victor of
+ Marathon, and former officer of Darius, was about to guide them on a
+ secret expedition against some wealthy and unprotected cities of treasure
+ in the Persian dominions. The armament was voted and equipped, and sailed
+ eastward from Attica, no one but Miltiades knowing its destination, until
+ the Greek isle of Paros was reached, when his true object appeared. In
+ former years, while connected with the Persians as prince of the
+ Chersonese, Miltiades had been involved in a quarrel with one of the
+ leading men among the Parians, who had injured his credit and caused some
+ slights to be put upon him at the court of the Persian satrap, Hydarnes.
+ The feud had ever since rankled in the heart of the Athenian chief, and he
+ now attacked Paros for the sake of avenging himself on his ancient enemy.
+ His pretext, as general of the Athenians, was, that the Parians had aided
+ the armament of Datis with a war-galley. The Parians pretended to treat
+ about terms of surrender, but used the time which they thus gained in
+ repairing the defective parts of the fortifications of their city; and
+ they then set the Athenians at defiance. So far, says Herodotus, the
+ accounts of all the Greeks agree. But the Parians, in after years, told
+ also a wild legend, how a captive priestess of a Parian temple of the
+ Deities of the Earth promised Miltiades to give him the means of capturing
+ Paros: how, at her bidding, the Athenian general went alone at night and
+ forced his way into a holy shrine, near the city gate, but with what
+ purpose it was not known: how a supernatural awe came over him, and in his
+ flight he fell and fractured his leg: how an oracle afterwards forbad the
+ Parians to punish the sacrilegious and traitorous priestess, "because it
+ was fated that Miltiades should come to an ill end, and she was only the
+ instrument to lead him to evil." Such was the tale that Herodotus heard at
+ Paros. Certain it was that Miltiades either dislocated or broke his leg
+ during an unsuccessful siege of that city, and returned home in evil
+ plight with his baffled and defeated forces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The indignation of the Athenians was proportionate to the hope and
+ excitement which his promises had raised. Xanthippus, the head of one of
+ the first families in Athens, indicted him before the supreme popular
+ tribunal for the capital offence of having deceived the people. His guilt
+ was undeniable, and the Athenians passed their verdict accordingly. But
+ the recollections of Lemnos and Marathon, and the sight of the fallen
+ general who lay stretched on a couch before them, pleaded successfully in
+ mitigation of punishment, and the sentence was commuted from death to a
+ fine of fifty talents. This was paid by his son, the afterwards
+ illustrious Cimon, Miltiades dying, soon after the trial, of the injury
+ which he had received at Paros.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [The common-place calumnies against the Athenians respecting Miltiades
+ have been well answered by Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton in his "Rise and Fall
+ of Athens," and Bishop Thirlwall in the second volume of his "History of
+ Greece;" but they have received their most complete refutation from Mr.
+ Grote in the fourth volume of his History, p.490 et seq., and notes. I
+ quite concur with him that, "looking to the practice of the Athenian
+ dicastery in criminal cases, fifty talents was the minor penalty actually
+ proposed by the defenders of Miltiades themselves as a substitute for the
+ punishment of death. In those penal cases at Athens, where the punishment
+ was not fixed beforehand by the terms of the law, if the person accused
+ was found guilty, it was customary to submit to the jurors subsequently
+ and separately, the question as to the amount of punishment. First, the
+ accuser named the penalty which he thought suitable; next, the accused
+ person was called upon to name an amount of penalty for himself, and the
+ jurors were constrained to take their choice between these two; no third
+ gradation of penalty being admissible for consideration. Of course, under
+ such circumstances, it was the interest of the accused party to name, even
+ in his own case, some real and serious penalty, something which the jurors
+ might be likely to deem not wholly inadequate to his crime just proved;
+ for if he proposed some penalty only trifling, he drove them to far the
+ heavier sentence recommended by his opponent." The stories of Miltiades
+ having been cast into prison and died there, and of his having been saved
+ from death only by the interposition of the Prytanis of the day, are, I
+ think, rightly rejected by Mr. Grote as the fictions of after ages. The
+ silence of Herodotus respecting them is decisive. It is true that Plato,
+ in the Gorgias, says that the Athenians passed a vote to throw Miltiades
+ into the Barathrum, and speaks of the interposition of the Prytanis in his
+ favour; but it is to be remembered that Plato, with all his transcendent
+ genius, was (as Niebuhr has termed him) a very indifferent patriot, who
+ loved to blacken the character of his country's democratic institutions;
+ and if the fact was that the Prytanis, at the trial of Miltiades, opposed
+ the vote of capital punishment, and spoke in favour of the milder
+ sentence, Plato (in a passage written to show the misfortunes that befell
+ Athenian statesmen) would readily exaggerate this fact into the story that
+ appears in his text.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The melancholy end of Miltiades, after his elevation to such a height of
+ power and glory, must often have been recalled to the mind of the ancient
+ Greeks by the sight of one, in particular, of the memorials of the great
+ battle which he won. This was the remarkable statue (minutely described by
+ Pausanias) which the Athenians, in the time of Pericles, caused to be hewn
+ out of a huge block of marble, which, it was believed, had been provided
+ by Datis to form a trophy of the anticipated victory of the Persians.
+ Phidias fashioned out of this a colossal image of the goddess Nemesis, the
+ deity whose peculiar function was to visit the exuberant prosperity both
+ of nations and individuals with sudden and awful reverses. This statue was
+ placed in a temple of the goddess at Rhamnus, about eight miles from
+ Marathon, Athens herself contained numerous memorials of her primary great
+ victory. Panenus, the cousin of Phidias, represented it in fresco on the
+ walls of the painted porch; and, centuries afterwards, the figures of
+ Miltiades and Callimachus at the head of the Athenians were conspicuous in
+ the fresco. The tutelary deities were exhibited taking part in the fray.
+ In the back-ground were seen the Phoenician galleys; and nearer to the
+ spectator, the Athenians and the Plataeans (distinguished by their
+ leathern helmets) were chasing routed Asiatics into the marshes and the
+ sea. The battle was sculptured also on the Temple of Victory in the
+ Acropolis; and even now there may be traced on the frieze the figures of
+ the Persian combatants with their lunar shields, their bows and quivers,
+ their curved scimetars, their loose trowsers, and Phrygian tiaras.
+ [Wordsworth's "Greece," p. 115.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These and other memorials of Marathon were the produce of the meridian age
+ of Athenian intellectual splendour&mdash;of the age of Phidias and
+ Pericles. For it was not merely by the generation of men whom the battle
+ liberated from Hippias and the Medes, that the transcendent importance of
+ their victory was gratefully recognised. Through the whole epoch of her
+ prosperity, through the long Olympiads of her decay, through centuries
+ after her fall, Athens looked back on the day of Marathon as the brightest
+ of her national existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By a natural blending of patriotic pride with grateful piety, the very
+ spirits of the Athenians who fell at Marathon were deified by their
+ countrymen. The inhabitants of the districts of Marathon paid religious
+ rites to them; and orators solemnly invoked them in their most impassioned
+ adjurations before the assembled men of Athens. "Nothing was omitted that
+ could keep alive the remembrance of a deed which had first taught the
+ Athenian people to know its own strength, by measuring it with the power
+ which had subdued the greater part of the known world. The consciousness
+ thus awakened fixed its character, its station, and its destiny; it was
+ the spring of its later great actions and ambitious enterprises."
+ [Thirlwall.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not indeed by one defeat, however signal, that the pride of Persia
+ could be broken, and her dreams of universal empire be dispelled. Ten
+ years afterwards she renewed her attempts upon Europe on a grander scale
+ of enterprise, and was repulsed by Greece with greater and reiterated
+ loss. Larger forces and heavier slaughter than had been seen at Marathon
+ signalised the conflicts of Greeks and Persians at Artemisium, Salamis,
+ Plataea, and the Eurymedon. But mighty and momentous as these battles
+ were, they rank not with Marathon in importance. They originated no new
+ impulse. They turned back no current of fate. They were merely
+ confirmatory of the already existing bias which Marathon had created. The
+ day of Marathon is the critical epoch in the history of the two nations.
+ It broke for ever the spell of Persian invincibility, which had paralysed
+ men's minds. It generated among the Greeks the spirit which beat back
+ Xerxes, and afterwards led on Xenophon, Agesilaus, and Alexander, in
+ terrible retaliation, through their Asiatic campaigns. It secured for
+ mankind the intellectual treasures of Athens, the growth of free
+ institutions the liberal enlightenment of the Western world, and the
+ gradual ascendency for many ages of the great principles of European
+ civilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ EXPLANATORY REMARKS ON SOME OF THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE BATTLE OF
+ MARATHON.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is said by Herodotus of the Persian cavalry taking any part in the
+ battle, although he mentions that Hippias recommended the Persians to land
+ at Marathon, because the plain was favourable for cavalry evolutions. In
+ the life of Miltiades, which is usually cited as the production of
+ Cornelius Nepos, but which I believe to be of no authority whatever, it is
+ said that Miltiades protected his flanks from the enemy's horse by an
+ abattis of felled trees. While he was on the high ground he would not have
+ required this defence; and it is not likely that the Persians would have
+ allowed him to erect it on the plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bishop Thirlwall calls our attention to a passage in Suidas, where the
+ proverb KHORIS HIPPEIS is said to have originated from some Ionian Greeks,
+ who were serving compulsorily in the army of Datis, contriving to inform
+ Miltiades that the Persian cavalry had gone away, whereupon Miltiades
+ immediately joined battle and gained the victory. There may probably be a
+ gleam of truth in this legend. If Datis's cavalry was numerous, as the
+ abundant pastures of Euboea were close at hand, the Persian general, when
+ he thought, from the inaction of his enemy, that they did not mean to come
+ down from the heights and give battle, might naturally send the larger
+ part of his horse back across the channel to the neighbourhood of Eretria,
+ where he had already left a detachment, and where his military stores must
+ have been deposited. The knowledge of such a movement would of course
+ confirm Miltiades in his resolution to bring on a speedy engagement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, in truth, whatever amount of cavalry we suppose Datis to have had
+ with him on the day of Marathon, their inaction in the battle is
+ intelligible, if we believe the attack of the Athenian spearmen to have
+ been as sudden as it was rapid. The Persian horse-soldier, on an alarm
+ being given, had to take the shackles off his horse, to strap the saddle
+ on, and bridle him, besides equipping himself (see Xenoph. Anab. lib.iii
+ c.4); and when each individual horseman was ready, the line had to be
+ formed; and the time that it takes to form the Oriental cavalry in line
+ for a charge, has, in all ages, been observed by Europeans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wet state of the marshes at each end of the plain, in the time of year
+ when the battle was fought, has been adverted to by Mr Wordsworth; and
+ this would hinder the Persian general from arranging and employing his
+ horsemen on his extreme wings, while it also enabled the Greeks, as they
+ came forward, to occupy the whole breadth of the practicable ground with
+ an unbroken line of levelled spears, against which, if any Persian horse
+ advanced they would be driven back in confusion upon their own foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even numerous and fully-arrayed bodies of cavalry have been repeatedly
+ broken, both in ancient and modern warfare, by resolute charges of
+ infantry. For instance, it was by an attack of some picked cohorts that
+ Caesar routed the Pompeian cavalry, which had previously defeated his own
+ at Pharsalia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have represented the battle of Marathon as beginning in the afternoon,
+ and ending towards evening. If it had lasted all day, Herodotus would have
+ probably mentioned that fact. That it ended towards evening is, I think,
+ proved by the line from the "Vespae" which I have already quoted, and to
+ which my attention was called by Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton's account of the
+ battle. I think that the succeeding lines in Aristophanes, also already
+ quoted, justify the description which I have given of the rear-ranks of
+ the Persians keeping up a flight of arrows over the heads of their
+ comrades against the Greeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF MARATHON, B.C. 490, AND THE
+ DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE, B.C. 413.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ B.C. 490 to 487. All Asia is filled with the preparations made by King
+ Darius for a new expedition against Greece. Themistocles persuades the
+ Athenians to leave off dividing the proceeds of their silver mines among
+ themselves, and to employ the money in strengthening their navy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 487. Egypt revolts from the Persians, and delays the expedition against
+ Greece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 485. Darius dies, and Xerxes his son becomes King of Persia in his stead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 484 The Persians recover Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 480 Xerxes invades Greece. Indecisive actions between the Persian and
+ Greek fleets at Artemisium. Destruction of the three hundred Spartans at
+ Thermopyae. The Athenians abandon Attica and go on shipboard. Great naval
+ victory of the Greeks at Salamis. Xerxes returns to Asia, leaving a chosen
+ army under Mardonius, to carry on the war against the Greeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 478. Mardonius and his army destroyed by the Greeks at Plataea The Greeks
+ land in Asia Minor, and defeat a Persian force at Mycale. In this and the
+ following years the Persians lose all their conquests in Europe, and many
+ on the coast of Asia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 477. Many of the Greek maritime states take Athens as their leader,
+ instead of Sparta.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 466. Victories of Cimon over the Persians at the Eurymedon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 464. Revolt of the Helots against Sparta. Third Messenian war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 460. Egypt again revolts against Persia. The Athenians send a powerful
+ armament to aid the Egyptians, which, after gaining some successes, is
+ destroyed, and Egypt submits. This war lasted six years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 457. Wars in Greece between the Athenian and several Peloponnesian states.
+ Immense exertions of Athens at this time. There is an original inscription
+ still preserved in the Louvre, which attests the energies of Athens at
+ this crisis, when Athens, like England in modern wars, at once sought
+ conquests abroad, and repelled enemies at home. At the period we now
+ advert to (B.C. 457), an Athenian armament of two hundred galleys was
+ engaged in a bold though unsuccessful expedition against Egypt. The
+ Athenian crews had landed, had won a battle; they had then re-embarked and
+ sailed up the Nile, and were busily besieging the Persian garrison in
+ Memphis. As the complement of a trireme galley was at least two hundred
+ men, we cannot estimate the forces then employed by Athens against Egypt
+ at less than forty thousand men. At the same time she kept squadrons on
+ the coasts of Phoenicia and Cyprus, and yet maintained a home-fleet that
+ enabled her to defeat her Peloponnesian enemies at Cecryphalae and AEgina,
+ capturing in the last engagement seventy galleys. This last fact may give
+ us some idea of the strength of the Athenian home-fleet that gained the
+ victory; and by adopting the same ratio of multiplying whatever number of
+ galleys we suppose to have been employed, by two hundred, so as to gain
+ the aggregate number of the crews, we may form some estimate of the forces
+ which this little, Greek state then kept on foot. Between sixty and
+ seventy thousand men must have served in her fleets during that year. Her
+ tenacity of purpose was equal to her boldness of enterprise. Sooner than
+ yield or withdraw from any of their expeditions the Athenians at this very
+ time, when Corinth sent an army to attack their garrison at Megara, did
+ not recall a single crew or a single soldier from AEgina or from abroad;
+ but the lads and old men, who had been left to guard the city, fought and
+ won a battle against these new assailants. The inscription which we have
+ referred to is graven on a votive tablet to the memory of the dead,
+ erected in that year by the Erecthean tribe, one of the ten into which the
+ Athenians were divided. It shows, as Thirlwall has remarked, "that the
+ Athenians were conscious of the greatness of their own effort;" and in it
+ this little civic community of the ancient world still "records to us with
+ emphatic simplicity, that 'its slain fell in Cyprus, in Egypt, in
+ Phoenicia, at Haliae, in AEgina, and in Megara, IN THE SAME YEAR.'"
+ [Paeans of the Athenian Navy.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 455. A thirty years' truce concluded between Athens and Lacedaemon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 440. The Samians endeavour to throw off the supremacy of Athens. Samos
+ completely reduced to subjection. Pericles is now sole director of the
+ Athenian councils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 431. Commencement of the great Peloponnesian war, in which Sparta, at the
+ head of nearly all the Peloponnesian states, and aided by the Boeotians
+ and some of the other Greeks beyond the Isthmus, endeavours to reduce the
+ power of Athens, and to restore independence to the Greek maritime states
+ who were the subject allies of Athens. At the commencement of the war the
+ Peloponnesian armies repeatedly invade and ravage Attica, but Athens
+ herself is impregnable, and her fleets secure her the dominion of the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 430. Athens visited by a pestilence, which sweeps off large numbers of her
+ population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 426. The Athenians gain great advantages over the Spartans at Sphacteria,
+ and by occupying Cythera; but they suffer a severe defeat in Boeotia, and
+ the Spartan general Brasidas, leads an expedition to the Thracian coasts,
+ and conquers many of the most valuable Athenian possessions in those
+ regions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 421. Nominal truce for thirty years between Athens and Sparta, but
+ hostilities continue on the Thracian coast and in other quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 415. The Athenians send an expedition to conquer Sicily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. &mdash; DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE, B.C.413.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The Romans knew not, and could not know, how deeply the
+ greatness of their own posterity, and the fate of the whole
+ Western world, were involved in the destruction of the fleet of
+ Athens in the harbour of Syracuse. Had that great expedition
+ proved victorious, the energies of Greece during the next
+ eventful century would have found their field in the West no less
+ than in the East; Greece, and not Rome, might have conquered
+ Carthage; Greek instead of Latin might have been at this day the
+ principal element of the language of Spain, of France, and of
+ Italy; and the laws of Athens, rather than of Rome, might be the
+ foundation of the law of the civilized world."&mdash;ARNOLD.
+
+ "The great expedition to Sicily, one of the most decisive events in
+ the history of the world."&mdash;NIEBUHR.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Few cities have undergone more memorable sieges during ancient and
+ mediaeval times, than has the city of Syracuse. Athenian, Carthaginian,
+ Roman, Vandal, Byzantine, Saracen, and Norman, have in turns beleaguered
+ her walls; and the resistance which she successfully opposed to some of
+ her early assailants was of the deepest importance, not only to the
+ fortunes of the generations then in being, but to all the subsequent
+ current of human events. To adopt the eloquent expressions of Arnold
+ respecting the check which she gave to the Carthaginian arms, "Syracuse
+ was a breakwater, which God's providence raised up to protect the yet
+ immature strength of Rome." And her triumphant repulse of the great
+ Athenian expedition against her was of even more wide-spread and enduring
+ importance. It forms a decisive epoch in the strife for universal empire,
+ in which all the great states of antiquity successively engaged and
+ failed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The present city of Syracuse is a place of little or no military strength,
+ as the fire of artillery from the neighbouring heights would almost
+ completely command it. But in ancient warfare its position, and the care
+ bestowed on its walls, rendered it formidably strong against the means of
+ offence which then were employed by besieging armies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient city, in the time of the Peloponnesian war, was chiefly built
+ on the knob of land which projects into the sea on the eastern coast of
+ Sicily, between two bays; one of which, to the north, was called the bay
+ of Thapsus, while the southern one formed the great harbour of the city of
+ Syracuse itself. A small island, or peninsula (for such it soon was
+ rendered), lies at the south-eastern extremity of this knob of land,
+ stretching almost entirely across the mouth of the great harbour, and
+ rendering it nearly land-locked. This island comprised the original
+ settlement of the first Greek colonists from Corinth, who founded Syracuse
+ two thousand five hundred years ago; and the modern city has shrunk again
+ into these primary limits. But, in the fifth century before our era, the
+ growing wealth and population of the Syracusans had led them to occupy and
+ include within their city walls portion after portion of the mainland
+ lying next to the little isle; so that at the time of the Athenian
+ expedition the seaward part of the land between the two bays already
+ spoken of was built over, and fortified from bay to bay; constituting the
+ larger part of Syracuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The landward wall, therefore, of the city traversed this knob of land,
+ which continues to slope upwards from the sea, and which to the west of
+ the old fortifications (that is, towards the interior of Sicily) rises
+ rapidly for a mile or two, but diminishes in width, and finally terminates
+ in a long narrow ridge, between which and Mount Hybla a succession of
+ chasms and uneven low ground extend. On each flank of this ridge the
+ descent is steep and precipitous from its summits to the strips of level
+ land that lie immediately below it, both to the south-west and north-west.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The usual mode of assailing fortified towns in the time of the
+ Peloponnesian war, was to build a double wall round them, sufficiently
+ strong to check any sally of the garrison from within, or any attack of a
+ relieving force from without. The interval within the two walls of the
+ circumvallation was roofed over, and formed barracks, in which the
+ besiegers posted themselves, and awaited the effects of want or treachery
+ among the besieged in producing a surrender. And, in every Greek city of
+ those days, as in every Italian republic of the middle ages, the rage of
+ domestic sedition between aristocrats and democrats ran high. Rancorous
+ refugees swarmed in the camp of every invading enemy; and every blockaded
+ city was sure to contain within its walls a body of intriguing
+ malcontents, who were eager to purchase a party-triumph at the expense of
+ a national disaster. Famine and faction were the allies on whom besiegers
+ relied. The generals of that time trusted to the operation of these sure
+ confederates as soon as they could establish a complete blockade. They
+ rarely ventured on the attempt to storm any fortified post. For the
+ military engines of antiquity were feeble in breaching masonry, before the
+ improvements which the first Dionysius effected in the mechanics of
+ destruction; and the lives of spearmen the boldest and most highly-trained
+ would, of course, have been idly spent in charges against unshattered
+ walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A city built, close to the sea, like Syracuse, was impregnable, save by
+ the combined operations of a superior hostile fleet and a superior hostile
+ army. And Syracuse, from her size, her population, and her military and
+ naval resources, not unnaturally thought herself secure from finding in
+ another Greek city a foe capable of sending a sufficient armament to
+ menace her with capture and subjection. But in the spring of 414 B.C. the
+ Athenian navy was mistress of her harbour and the adjacent seas; an
+ Athenian army had defeated her troops, and cooped them within the town;
+ and from bay to bay a blockading wall was being rapidly carried across the
+ strips of level ground and the high ridge outside the city (then termed
+ Epipolae), which, if completed, would have cut the Syracusans off from all
+ succour from the interior of Sicily, and have left them at the mercy of
+ the Athenian generals. The besiegers' works were, indeed, unfinished; but
+ every day the unfortified interval in their lines grew narrower, and with
+ it diminished all apparent hope of safety for the beleaguered town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Athens was now staking the flower of her forces, and the accumulated
+ fruits of seventy years of glory, on one bold throw for the dominion of
+ the Western world. As Napoleon from Mount Coeur de Lion pointed to St.
+ Jean d'Acre, and told his staff that the capture of that town would decide
+ his destiny, and would change the face of the world; so the Athenian
+ officers, from the heights of Epipolae, must have looked on Syracuse, and
+ felt that with its fall all the known powers of the earth would fall
+ beneath them. They must have felt also that Athens, if repulsed there,
+ must pause for ever in her career of conquest, and sink from an imperial
+ republic into a ruined and subservient community.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Marathon, the first in date of the Great Battles of the World, we
+ beheld Athens struggling for self-preservation against the invading armies
+ of the East. At Syracuse she appears as the ambitious and oppressive
+ invader of others. In her, as in other republics of old and of modern
+ times, the same energy that had inspired the most heroic efforts in
+ defence of the national independence, soon learned to employ itself in
+ daring and unscrupulous schemes of self-aggrandizement at the expense of
+ neighbouring nations. In the interval between the Persian and
+ Peloponnesian wars she had rapidly grown into a conquering and dominant
+ state, the chief of a thousand tributary cities, and the mistress of the
+ largest and best-manned navy that the Mediterranean had yet beheld. The
+ occupations of her territory by Xerxes and Mardonius, in the second
+ Persian war, had forced her whole population to become mariners; and the
+ glorious results of that struggle confirmed them in their zeal for their
+ country's service at sea. The voluntary suffrage of the Greek cities of
+ the coasts and islands of the AEgean first placed Athens at the head of
+ the confederation formed for the further prosecution of the war against
+ Persia. But this titular ascendancy was soon converted by her into
+ practical and arbitrary dominion. She protected them from piracy and the
+ Persian power, which soon fell into decrepitude and decay; but she exacted
+ in return implicit obedience to herself. She claimed and enforced a
+ prerogative of taxing them at her discretion; and proudly refused to be
+ accountable for her mode of expending their supplies. Remonstrance against
+ her assessments was treated as factious disloyalty; and refusal to pay was
+ promptly punished as revolt. Permitting and encouraging her subject allies
+ to furnish all their contingents in money, instead of part consisting of
+ ships and men, the sovereign republic gained the double object of training
+ her own citizens by constant and well-paid service in her fleets, and of
+ seeing her confederates lose their skill and discipline by inaction, and
+ become more and more passive and powerless under her yoke. Their towns
+ were generally dismantled; while the imperial city herself was fortified
+ with the greatest care and sumptuousness: the accumulated revenues from
+ her tributaries serving to strengthen and adorn to the utmost her havens,
+ her docks, her arsenals, her theatres, and her shrines; and to array her
+ in that plenitude of architectural magnificence, the ruins of which still
+ attest the intellectual grandeur of the age and people, which produced a
+ Pericles to plan and a Phidias to execute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All republics that acquire supremacy over other nations, rule them
+ selfishly and oppressively. There is no exception to this in either
+ ancient or modern times. Carthage, Rome, Venice, Genoa, Florence, Pisa,
+ Holland, and Republican France, all tyrannized over every province and
+ subject state where they gained authority. But none of them openly avowed
+ their system of doing so upon principle, with the candour which the
+ Athenian republicans displayed, when any remonstrance was made against the
+ severe exactions which they imposed upon their vassal allies. They avowed
+ that their empire was a tyranny, and frankly stated that they solely
+ trusted to force and terror to uphold it. They appealed to what they
+ called "the eternal law of nature, that the weak should be coerced by the
+ strong." [THUC. i. 77.] Sometimes they stated, and not without some truth,
+ that the unjust hatred of Sparta against themselves forced them to be
+ unjust to others in self-defence. To be safe they must be powerful; and to
+ be powerful they must plunder and coerce their neighbours. They never
+ dreamed of communicating any franchise, or share in office, to their
+ dependents; but jealously monopolized every post of command, and all
+ political and judicial power; exposing themselves to every risk with
+ unflinching gallantry; enduring cheerfully the laborious training and
+ severe discipline which their sea-service required; venturing readily on
+ every ambitious scheme; and never suffering difficulty or disaster to
+ shake their tenacity of purpose. Their hope was to acquire unbounded
+ empire for their country, and the means of maintaining each of the thirty
+ thousand citizens who made up the sovereign republic, in exclusive
+ devotion to military occupations, and to those brilliant sciences and arts
+ in which Athens already had reached the meridian of intellectual
+ splendour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her great political, dramatist speaks of the Athenian empire as
+ comprehending a thousand states. The language of the stage must not be
+ taken too literally; but the number of the dependencies of Athens, at the
+ time when the Peloponnesian confederacy attacked her, was undoubtedly very
+ great. With a few trifling exceptions, all the islands of the AEgean, and
+ all the Greek cities, which in that age fringed the coasts of Asia Minor,
+ the Hellespont, and Thrace paid tribute to Athens, and implicitly obeyed
+ her orders. The AEgean Sea was an Attic lake. Westward of Greece, her
+ influence though strong, was not equally predominant. She had colonies and
+ allies among the wealthy and populous Greek settlements in Sicily and
+ South Italy, but she had no organized system of confederates in those
+ regions; and her galleys brought her no tribute from the western seas. The
+ extension of her empire over Sicily was the favourite project of her
+ ambitious orators and generals. While her great statesman Pericles lived,
+ his commanding genius kept his countrymen under control and forbade them
+ to risk the fortunes of Athens in distant enterprises, while they had
+ unsubdued and powerful enemies at their own doors. He taught Athens this
+ maxim; but he also taught her to know and to use her own strength, and
+ when Pericles had departed the bold spirit which he had fostered
+ overleaped the salutary limits which he had prescribed. When her bitter
+ enemies, the Corinthians, succeeded, in 431 B.C., in inducing Sparta to
+ attack her, and a confederacy was formed of five-sixths of the continental
+ Greeks, all animated by anxious jealousy and bitter hatred of Athens; when
+ armies far superior in numbers and equipment to those which had marched
+ against the Persians were poured into the Athenian territory, and laid it
+ waste to the city walls; the general opinion was that Athens would, in two
+ or three years at the farthest, be reduced to submit to the requisitions
+ of her invaders. But her strong fortifications, by which she was girt and
+ linked to her principal haven, gave her, in those ages, almost all the
+ advantages of an insular position. Pericles had made her trust to her
+ empire of the seas. Every Athenian in those days was a practised seaman. A
+ state indeed whose members, of an age fit for service, at no time exceeded
+ thirty thousand, and whose territorial extent did not equal half Sussex,
+ could only have acquired such a naval dominion as Athens once held, by
+ devoting, and zealously training, all its sons to service in its fleets.
+ In order to man the numerous galleys which she sent out, she necessarily
+ employed also large numbers of hired mariners and slaves at the oar; but
+ the staple of her crews was Athenian, and all posts of command were held
+ by native citizens. It was by reminding them of this, of their long
+ practice in seamanship, and the certain superiority which their discipline
+ gave them over the enemy's marine, that their great minister mainly
+ encouraged them to resist the combined power of Lacedaemon and her allies.
+ He taught them that Athens might thus reap the fruit of her zealous
+ devotion to maritime affairs ever since the invasion of the Medes; "she
+ had not, indeed, perfected herself; but the reward of her superior
+ training was the rule of the sea&mdash;a mighty dominion, for it gave her
+ the rule of much fair land beyond its waves, safe from the idle ravages
+ with which the Lacedaemonians might harass Attica, but never could subdue
+ Athens." [THUC. lib. i. sec. 144.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Athens accepted the war with which her enemies threatened her, rather than
+ descend from her pride of place. And though the awful visitation of the
+ Plague came upon her, and swept away more of her citizens than the Dorian
+ spear laid low, she held her own gallantly against her foes. If the
+ Peloponnesian armies in irresistible strength wasted every spring her corn
+ lands, her vineyards, and her olive groves with fire and sword, she
+ retaliated on their coasts with her fleets; which, if resisted, were only
+ resisted to display the pre-eminent skill and bravery of her seamen. Some
+ of her subject-allies revolted, but the revolts were in general sternly
+ and promptly quelled. The genius of one enemy had, indeed, inflicted blows
+ on her power in Thrace which she was unable to remedy; but he fell in
+ battle in the tenth year of the war; and with the loss of Brasidas the
+ Lacedaemonians seemed to have lost all energy and judgment. Both sides at
+ length grew weary of the war; and in 421 B.C. a truce of fifty years was
+ concluded, which, though ill kept, and though many of the confederates of
+ Sparta refused to recognise it, and hostilities still continued in many
+ parts of Greece, protected the Athenian territory from the ravages of
+ enemies, and enabled Athens to accumulate large sums out of the proceeds
+ of her annual revenues. So also, as a few years passed by, the havoc which
+ the pestilence and the sword had made in her population was repaired; and
+ in 415 B.C. Athens was full of bold and restless spirits, who longed for
+ some field of distant enterprise, wherein they might signalize themselves,
+ and aggrandize the state; and who looked on the alarm of Spartan hostility
+ as a mere old woman's tale. When Sparta had wasted their territory she had
+ done her worst; and the fact of its always being in her power to do so,
+ seemed a strong reason for seeking to increase the transmarine dominion of
+ Athens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The West was now the quarter towards which the thoughts of every aspiring
+ Athenian were directed. From the very beginning of the war Athens had kept
+ up an interest in Sicily; and her squadrons had from time to time appeared
+ on its coasts and taken part in the dissensions in which the Sicilian
+ Greeks were universally engaged one against the other. There were
+ plausible grounds for a direct quarrel, and an open attack by the
+ Athenians upon Syracuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the capture of Syracuse all Sicily, it was hoped, would be secured.
+ Carthage and Italy were next to be assailed. With large levies of Iberian
+ mercenaries she then meant to overwhelm her Peloponnesian enemies. The
+ Persian monarchy lay in hopeless imbecility, inviting Greek invasion; nor
+ did the known world contain the power that seemed capable of checking the
+ growing might of Athens, if Syracuse once could be hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The national historian of Rome has left us, as an episode of his great
+ work, a disquisition on the probable effects that would have followed, if
+ Alexander the Great had invaded Italy. Posterity has generally regarded
+ that disquisition as proving Livy's patriotism more strongly than his
+ impartiality or acuteness. Yet, right or wrong, the speculations of the
+ Roman writer were directed to the consideration of a very remote
+ possibility. To whatever age Alexander's life might have been prolonged,
+ the East would have furnished full occupation for his martial ambition, as
+ well as for those schemes of commercial grandeur and imperial amalgamation
+ of nations, in which the truly great qualities of his mind loved to
+ display themselves. With his death the dismemberment of his empire among
+ his generals was certain, even as the dismemberment of Napoleon's empire
+ among his marshals would certainly have ensued, if he had been cut off in
+ the zenith of his power. Rome, also, was far weaker when the Athenians
+ were in Sicily, than she was a century afterwards, in Alexander's time.
+ There can be little doubt but that Rome would have been blotted out from
+ the independent powers of the West, had she been attacked at the end of
+ the fifth century B.C., by an Athenian army, largely aided by Spanish
+ mercenaries, and flushed with triumphs over Sicily and Africa; instead of
+ the collision between her and Greece having been deferred until the latter
+ had sunk into decrepitude, and the Roman Mars had grown into full vigour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The armament which the Athenians equipped against Syracuse was in every
+ way worthy of the state which formed such projects of universal empire;
+ and it has been truly termed "the noblest that ever yet had been sent
+ forth by a free and civilized commonwealth." [Arnold's History of Rome.]
+ The fleet consisted of one hundred and thirty-four war galleys, with a
+ multitude of store ships. A powerful force of the best heavy-armed
+ infantry that Athens and her allies could furnish was sent on board,
+ together with a smaller number of slingers and bowmen. The quality of the
+ forces was even more remarkable than the number. The zeal of individuals
+ vied with that of the republic in giving every galley the best possible
+ crew, and every troop the most perfect accoutrements. And with private as
+ well as public wealth eagerly lavished on all that could give splendour as
+ well as efficiency to the expedition, the fated fleet began its voyage for
+ the Sicilian shores in the summer of 415 B.C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Syracusans themselves, at the time of the Peloponnesian war, were a
+ bold and turbulent democracy, tyrannizing over the weaker Greek cities in
+ Sicily, and trying to gain in that island the same arbitrary supremacy
+ which Athens maintained along the eastern coast of the Mediterranean. In
+ numbers and in spirit they were fully equal to the Athenians, but far
+ inferior to them in military and naval discipline. When the probability of
+ an Athenian invasion was first publicly discussed at Syracuse, and efforts
+ were made by some of the wiser citizens to improve the state of the
+ national defences, and prepare for the impending danger, the rumours of
+ coming war and the proposals for preparation were received by the mass of
+ the Syracusans with scornful incredulity. The speech of one of their
+ popular orators is preserved to us in Thucydides, [Lib. vi. sec. 36 et
+ seq., Arnold's edition. I have almost literally transcribed some of the
+ marginal epitomes of the original speech.] and many of its topics might,
+ by a slight alteration of names and details, serve admirably for the party
+ among ourselves at present which opposes the augmentation of our forces,
+ and derides the idea of our being in any peril from the sudden attack of a
+ French expedition. The Syracusan orator told his countrymen to dismiss
+ with scorn the visionary terrors which a set of designing men among
+ themselves strove to excite, in order to get power and influence thrown
+ into their own hands. He told them that Athens knew her own interest too
+ well to think of wantonly provoking their hostility:&mdash;"EVEN IF THE
+ ENEMIES WERE TO COME," said he, "SO DISTANT FROM THEIR RESOURCES, AND
+ OPPOSED TO SUCH A POWER AS OURS, THEIR DESTRUCTION WOULD BE EASY AND
+ INEVITABLE. THEIR SHIPS WILL HAVE ENOUGH TO DO TO GET TO OUR ISLAND AT
+ ALL, AND TO CARRY SUCH STORES OF ALL SORTS AS WILL BE NEEDED. THEY CANNOT
+ THEREFORE CARRY, BESIDES, AN ARMY LARGE ENOUGH TO COPE WITH SUCH A
+ POPULATION AS OURS. THEY WILL HAVE NO FORTIFIED PLACE FROM WHICH TO
+ COMMENCE THEIR OPERATIONS; BUT MUST REST THEM ON NO BETTER BASE THAN A SET
+ OF WRETCHED TENTS, AND SUCH MEANS AS THE NECESSITIES OF THE MOMENT WILL
+ ALLOW THEM. BUT IN TRUTH I DO NOT BELIEVE THAT THEY WOULD EVEN BE ABLE TO
+ EFFECT A DISEMBARKATION. LET US, THEREFORE, SET AT NOUGHT THESE REPORTS AS
+ ALTOGETHER OF HOME MANUFACTURE; AND BE SURE THAT IF ANY ENEMY DOES COME,
+ THE STATE WILL KNOW HOW TO DEFEND ITSELF IN A MANNER WORTHY OF THE
+ NATIONAL HONOUR."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such assertions pleased the Syracusan assembly; and their counterparts
+ find favour now among some portion of the English public. But the invaders
+ of Syracuse came; made good their landing in Sicily; and, if they had
+ promptly attacked the city itself, instead of wasting nearly a year in
+ desultory operations in other parts of the island, the Syracusans must
+ have paid the penalty of their self-sufficient carelessness in submission
+ to the Athenian yoke. But, of the three generals who led the Athenian
+ expedition, two only were men of ability, and one was most weak and
+ incompetent. Fortunately for Syracuse, Alcibiades, the most skilful of the
+ three, was soon deposed from his command by a factious and fanatic vote of
+ his fellow-countrymen, and the other competent one, Lamachus, fell early
+ in a skirmish: while, more fortunately still for her, the feeble and
+ vacillating Nicias remained unrecalled and unhurt, to assume the undivided
+ leadership of the Athenian army and fleet, and to mar, by alternate
+ over-caution and over-carelessness, every chance of success which the
+ early part of the operations offered. Still, even under him, the Athenians
+ nearly won the town. They defeated the raw levies of the Syracusans,
+ cooped them within the walls, and, as before mentioned, almost effected a
+ continuous fortification from bay to bay over Epipolae, the completion of
+ which would certainly have been followed by capitulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alcibiades, the most complete example of genius without principle that
+ history produces, the Bolingbroke of antiquity, but with high military
+ talents superadded to diplomatic and oratorical powers, on being summoned
+ home from his command in Sicily to take his trial before the Athenian
+ tribunal had escaped to Sparta; and he exerted himself there with all the
+ selfish rancour of a renegade to renew the war with Athens, and to send
+ instant assistance to Syracuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we read his words in the pages of Thucydides (who was himself an
+ exile from Athens at this period, and may probably have been at Sparta,
+ and heard Alcibiades speak), we are at loss whether most to admire or
+ abhor his subtile and traitorous counsels. After an artful exordium, in
+ which he tried to disarm the suspicions which he felt must be entertained
+ of him, and to point out to the Spartans how completely his interests and
+ theirs were identified, through hatred of the Athenian democracy, he thus
+ proceeded:&mdash;"Hear me, at any rate, on the matters which require your
+ grave attention, and which I, from the personal knowledge that I have of
+ them, can and ought to bring before you. We Athenians sailed to Sicily
+ with the design of subduing, first the Greek cities there, and next those
+ in Italy. Then we intended to make an attempt on the dominions of
+ Carthage, and on Carthage itself. [Arnold, in his notes on this passage,
+ well reminds the reader that Agathocles, with a Greek force far inferior
+ to that of the Athenians at this period, did, a century afterwards, very
+ nearly conquer Carthage.] If all these projects succeeded (nor did we
+ limit ourselves to them in these quarters), we intended to increase our
+ fleet with the inexhaustible supplies of ship timber which Italy affords,
+ to put in requisition the whole military force of the conquered Greek
+ states, and also to hire large armies of the barbarians; of the Iberians,
+ and others in those regions, who are allowed to make the best possible
+ soldiers. [It will be remembered that Spanish infantry were the staple of
+ the Carthaginian armies. Doubtless Alcibiades and other leading Athenians
+ had made themselves acquainted with the Carthaginian system of carrying on
+ war, and meant to adopt it. With the marvellous powers which Alcibiades
+ possessed of ingratiating himself with men of every class and every
+ nation, and his high military genius, he would have been as formidable a
+ chief of an army of CONDOTTIERI as Hannibal afterwards was.] Then, when we
+ had done all this, we intended to assail Peloponnesus with our collected
+ force. Our fleets would blockade you by sea, and desolate your coasts; our
+ armies would be landed at different points, and assail your cities. Some
+ of these we expected to storm and others we meant to take by surrounding
+ them with fortified lines. [Alcibiades here alluded to Sparta itself,
+ which was unfortified. His Spartan hearers must have glanced round them at
+ these words, with mixed alarm and indignation.] We thought that it would
+ thus be an easy matter thoroughly to war you down; and then we should
+ become the masters of the whole Greek race. As for expense, we reckoned
+ that each conquered state would give us supplies of money and provisions
+ sufficient to pay for its own conquest, and furnish the means for the
+ conquest of its neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such are the designs of the present Athenian expedition to Sicily, and
+ you have heard them from the lips of the man who, of all men living, is
+ most accurately acquainted with them. The other Athenian generals, who
+ remain with the expedition, will endeavour to carry out these plans. And
+ be sure that without your speedy interference they will all be
+ accomplished. The Sicilian Greeks are deficient in military training; but
+ still if they could be at once brought to combine in an organised
+ resistance to Athens, they might even now be saved. But as for the
+ Syracusans resisting Athens by themselves, they have already with the
+ whole strength of their population fought a battle and been beaten; they
+ cannot face the Athenians at sea; and it is quite impossible for them to
+ hold out against the force of their invaders. And if this city falls into
+ the hands of the Athenians, all Sicily is theirs, and presently Italy
+ also: and the danger which I warned you of from that quarter will soon
+ fall upon yourselves. You must, therefore, in Sicily fight for the safety
+ of Peloponnesus. Send some galleys thither instantly. Put men on board who
+ can work their own way over, and who, as soon as they land, can do duty as
+ regular troops. But above all, let one of yourselves, let a man of Sparta,
+ go over to take the chief command, to bring into order and effective
+ discipline the forces that are in Syracuse, and urge those, who at present
+ hang back to come forward and aid the Syracusans. The presence of a
+ Spartan general at this crisis will do more to save the city than a whole
+ army." [THUC., lib. vi sec. 90,91.] The renegade then proceeded to urge on
+ them the necessity of encouraging their friends in Sicily, by showing that
+ they themselves were earnest in hostility to Athens. He exhorted them not
+ only to march their armies into Attica again, but to take up a permanent
+ fortified position in the country: and he gave them in detail information
+ of all that the Athenians most dreaded, and how his country might receive
+ the most distressing and enduring injury at their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spartans resolved to act on his advice, and appointed Gylippus to the
+ Sicilian command. Gylippus was a man who, to the national bravery and
+ military skill of a Spartan, united political sagacity that was worthy of
+ his great fellow-countryman Brasidas; but his merits were debased by mean
+ and sordid vice; and his is one of the cases in which history has been
+ austerely just, and where little or no fame has been accorded to the
+ successful but venal soldier. But for the purpose for which he was
+ required in Sicily, an abler man could not have been found in Lacedaemon.
+ His country gave him neither men nor money, but she gave him her
+ authority; and the influence of her name and of his own talents was
+ speedily seen in the zeal with which the Corinthians and other
+ Peloponnesian Greeks began to equip a squadron to act under him for the
+ rescue of Sicily. As soon as four galleys were ready, he hurried over with
+ them to the southern coast of Italy; and there, though he received such
+ evil tidings of the state of Syracuse that he abandoned all hope of saving
+ that city, he determined to remain on the coast, and do what he could in
+ preserving the Italian cities from the Athenians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So nearly, indeed, had Nicias completed his beleaguering lines, and so
+ utterly desperate had the state of Syracuse seemingly become, that an
+ assembly of the Syracusans was actually convened, and they were discussing
+ the terms on which they should offer to capitulate, when a galley was seen
+ dashing into the great harbour, and making her way towards the town with
+ all the speed that her rowers could supply. From her shunning the part of
+ the harbour where the Athenian fleet lay, and making straight for the
+ Syracusan side, it was clear that she was a friend; the enemy's cruisers,
+ careless through confidence of success, made no attempt to cut her off;
+ she touched the beach, and a Corinthian captain springing on shore from
+ her, was eagerly conducted to the assembly of the Syracusan people, just
+ in time to prevent the fatal vote being put for a surrender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Providentially for Syracuse, Gongylus, the commander of the galley, had
+ been prevented by an Athenian squadron from following Gylippus to South
+ Italy, and he had been obliged to push direct for Syracuse from Greece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sight of actual succour, and the promise of more, revived the drooping
+ spirits of the Syracusans. They felt that they were not left desolate to
+ perish; and the tidings that a Spartan was coming to command them
+ confirmed their resolution to continue their resistance. Gylippus was
+ already near the city. He had learned at Locri that the first report which
+ had reached him of the state of Syracuse was exaggerated; and that there
+ was an unfinished space in the besiegers' lines through which it was
+ barely possible to introduce reinforcements into the town. Crossing the
+ straits of Messina, which the culpable negligence of Nicias had left
+ unguarded, Gylippus landed on the northern coast of Sicily, and there
+ began to collect from the Greek cities an army, of which the regular
+ troops that he brought from Peloponnesus formed the nucleus. Such was the
+ influence of the name of Sparta, [The effect of the presence of a Spartan
+ officer on the troops of the other Greeks, seems to have been like the
+ effect of the presence of an English officer upon native Indian troops.]
+ and such were his own abilities and activity, that he succeeded in raising
+ a force of about two thousand fully armed infantry, with a larger number
+ of irregular troops. Nicias, as if infatuated, made no attempt to
+ counteract his operations; nor, when Gylippus marched his little army
+ towards Syracuse, did the Athenian commander endeavour to check him. The
+ Syracusans marched out to meet him: and while the Athenians were solely
+ intent on completing their fortifications on the southern side towards the
+ harbour, Gylippus turned their position by occupying the high ground in
+ the extreme rear of Epipolae. He then marched through the unfortified
+ interval of Nicias's lines into the besieged town; and, joining his troops
+ with the Syracusan forces, after some engagements with varying success,
+ gained the mastery over Nicias, drove the Athenians from Epipolae, and
+ hemmed them into a disadvantageous position in the low grounds near the
+ great harbour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attention of all Greece was now fixed on Syracuse; and every enemy of
+ Athens felt the importance of the opportunity now offered of checking her
+ ambition, and, perhaps, of striking a deadly blow at her power. Large
+ reinforcements from Corinth, Thebes, and other cities, now reached the
+ Syracusans; while the baffled and dispirited Athenian general earnestly
+ besought his countrymen to recall him, and represented the further
+ prosecution of the siege as hopeless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Athens had made it a maxim never to let difficulty or disaster drive
+ her back from any enterprise once undertaken, so long as she possessed the
+ means of making any effort, however desperate, for its accomplishment.
+ With indomitable pertinacity she now decreed, instead of recalling her
+ first armament from before Syracuse, to send out a second, though her
+ enemies near home had now renewed open warfare against her, and by
+ occupying a permanent fortification in her territory, had severely
+ distressed her population, and were pressing her with almost all the
+ hardships of an actual siege. She still was mistress of the sea, and she
+ sent forth another fleet of seventy galleys, and another army, which
+ seemed to drain the very last reserves of her military population, to try
+ if Syracuse could not yet be won, and the honour of the Athenian arms be
+ preserved from the stigma of a retreat. Hers was, indeed, a spirit that
+ might be broken, but never would bend. At the head of this second
+ expedition she wisely placed her best general Demosthenes, one of the most
+ distinguished officers whom the long Peloponnesian war had produced, and
+ who, if he had originally held the Sicilian command, would soon have
+ brought Syracuse to submission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fame of Demosthenes the general, has been dimmed by the superior
+ lustre of his great countryman, Demosthenes the orator. When the name of
+ Demosthenes is mentioned, it is the latter alone that is thought of. The
+ soldier has found no biographer. Yet out of the long list of the great men
+ of the Athenian republic, there are few that deserve to stand higher than
+ this brave, though finally unsuccessful, leader of her fleets and armies
+ in the first half of the Peloponnesian war. In his first campaign in
+ AEtolia he had shown some of the rashness of youth, and had received a
+ lesson of caution, by which he profited throughout the rest of his career,
+ but without losing any of his natural energy in enterprise or in
+ execution. He had performed the eminent service of rescuing Naupactus from
+ a powerful hostile armament in the seventh year of the war; he had then,
+ at the request of the Acarnanian republics, taken on himself the office of
+ commander-in-chief of all their forces, and at their head he had gained
+ some important advantages over the enemies of Athens in Western Greece.
+ His most celebrated exploits had been the occupation of Pylos on the
+ Messenian coast, the successful defence of that place against the fleet
+ and armies of Lacedaemon, and the subsequent capture of the Spartan forces
+ on the isle of Sphacteria; which was the severest blow dealt to Sparta
+ throughout the war, and which had mainly caused her to humble herself to
+ make the truce with Athens. Demosthenes was as honourably unknown in the
+ war of party politics at Athens, as he was eminent in the war against the
+ foreign enemy. We read of no intrigues of his on either the aristocratic
+ or democratic side. He was neither in the interest of Nicias, nor of
+ Cleon. His private character was free from any of the stains which
+ polluted that of Alcibiades. On all these points the silence of the comic
+ dramatist is decisive evidence in his favour. He had also the moral
+ courage, not always combined with physical of seeking to do his duty to
+ his country, irrespectively of any odium that he himself might incur, and
+ unhampered by any petty jealousy of those who were associated with him in
+ command. There are few men named in ancient history, of whom posterity
+ would gladly know more, or whom we sympathise with more deeply in the
+ calamities that befel them, than Demosthenes, the son of Alcisthenes, who,
+ in the spring of the year 413 B.C., left Piraeus at the head of the second
+ Athenian expedition against Sicily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His arrival was critically timed; for Gylippus had encouraged the
+ Syracusans to attack the Athenians under Nicias by sea as well as by land,
+ and by an able stratagem of Ariston, one of the admirals of the Corinthian
+ auxiliary squadron, the Syracusans and their confederates had inflicted on
+ the fleet of Nicias the first defeat that the Athenian navy had ever
+ sustained from a numerically inferior foe. Gylippus was preparing to
+ follow up his advantage by fresh attacks on the Athenians on both
+ elements, when the arrival of Demosthenes completely changed the aspect of
+ affairs, and restored the superiority to the invaders. With seventy-three
+ war-galleys in the highest state of efficiency, and brilliantly equipped,
+ with a force of five thousand picked men of the regular infantry of Athens
+ and her allies, and a still larger number of bowmen, javelin-men, and
+ slingers on board, Demosthenes rowed round the great harbour with loud
+ cheers and martial music, as if in defiance of the Syracusans and their
+ confederates. His arrival had indeed changed their newly-born hopes into
+ the deepest consternation. The resources of Athens seemed inexhaustible,
+ and resistance to her hopeless. They had been told that she was reduced to
+ the last extremities, and that her territory was occupied by an enemy; and
+ yet, here they saw her, as if in prodigality of power, sending forth, to
+ make foreign conquests, a second armament, not inferior to that with which
+ Nicias had first landed on the Sicilian shores.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the intuitive decision of a great commander, Demosthenes at once saw
+ that the possession of Epipolae was the key to the possession of Syracuse,
+ and he resolved to make a prompt and vigorous attempt to recover that
+ position, while his force was unimpaired, and the consternation which its
+ arrival had produced among the besieged remained unabated. The Syracusans
+ and their allies had run out an outwork along Epipolae from the city
+ walls, intersecting the fortified lines of circumvallation which Nicias
+ had commenced, but from which they had been driven by Gylippus. Could
+ Demosthenes succeed in storming this outwork, and in re-establishing the
+ Athenian troops on the high ground, he might fairly hope to be able to
+ resume the circumvallation of the city, and become the conqueror of
+ Syracuse: for, when once the besiegers' lines were completed, the number
+ of the troops with which Gylippus had garrisoned the place would only tend
+ to exhaust the stores of provisions, and accelerate its downfall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An easily-repelled attack was first made on the outwork in the day-time,
+ probably more with the view of blinding the besieged to the nature of the
+ main operations than with any expectation of succeeding in an open
+ assault, with every disadvantage of the ground to contend against. But,
+ when the darkness had set in, Demosthenes formed his men in columns, each
+ soldier taking with him five days' provisions, and the engineers and
+ workmen of the camp following the troops with their tools, and all
+ portable implements of fortification, so as at once to secure any
+ advantage of ground that the army might gain. Thus equipped and prepared,
+ he led his men along by the foot of the southern flank of Epipolae, in a
+ direction towards the interior of the island, till he came immediately
+ below the narrow ridge that forms the extremity of the high ground looking
+ westward. He then wheeled his vanguard to the right, sent them rapidly up
+ the paths that wind along the face of the cliff, and succeeded in
+ completely surprising the Syracusan outposts, and in placing his troops
+ fairly on the extreme summit of the all-important Epipolae. Thence the
+ Athenians marched eagerly down the slope towards the town, routing some
+ Syracusan detachments that were quartered in their way, and vigorously
+ assailing the unprotected part of the outwork. All at first favoured them.
+ The outwork was abandoned by its garrison, and the Athenian engineers
+ began to dismantle it. In vain Gylippus brought up fresh troops to check
+ the assault: the Athenians broke and drove them back, and continued to
+ press hotly forward, in the full confidence of victory. But, amid the
+ general consternation of the Syracusans and their confederates, one body
+ of infantry stood firm. This was a brigade of their Boeotian allies, which
+ was posted low down the slope of Epipolae, outside the city walls. Coolly
+ and steadily the Boeotian infantry formed their line, and, undismayed by
+ the current of flight around them, advanced against the advancing
+ Athenians. This was the crisis of the battle. But the Athenian van was
+ disorganized by its own previous successes; and, yielding to the
+ unexpected charge thus made on it by troops in perfect order, and of the
+ most obstinate courage, it was driven back in confusion upon the other
+ divisions of the army that still continued to press forward. When once the
+ tide was thus turned, the Syracusans passed rapidly from the extreme of
+ panic to the extreme of vengeful daring, and with all their forces they
+ now fiercely assailed the embarrassed and receding Athenians. In vain did
+ the officers of the latter strive to re-form their line. Amid the din and
+ the shouting of the fight, and the confusion inseparable upon a night
+ engagement, especially one where many thousand combatants were pent and
+ whirled together in a narrow and uneven area, the necessary manoeuvres
+ were impracticable; and though many companies still fought on desperately,
+ wherever the moonlight showed them the semblance of a foe, [THUC. vii. 44.
+ Compare Tacitus's description of the night engagement in the civil war
+ between Vespasian and Vitellius: "Neutro inclinaverat fortuna, donec
+ adulta nocte, LUNA OSTENDERET ACIES, FALERESQUE."&mdash;Hist. Lib. iii.
+ sec. 23.] they fought without concert or subordination; and not
+ unfrequently, amid the deadly chaos, Athenian troops assailed each other.
+ Keeping their ranks close, the Syracusans and their allies pressed on
+ against the disorganized masses of the besiegers; and at length drove
+ them, with heavy slaughter, over the cliffs, which, scarce an hour before,
+ they had scaled full of hope, and apparently certain of success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This defeat was decisive of the event of the siege. The Athenians
+ afterwards struggled only to protect themselves from the vengeance which
+ the Syracusans sought to wreak in the complete destruction of their
+ invaders. Never, however, was vengeance more complete and terrible. A
+ series of sea-fights followed, in which the Athenian galleys were utterly
+ destroyed or captured. The mariners and soldiers who escaped death in
+ disastrous engagements, and in a vain: attempt to force a retreat into the
+ interior of the island, became prisoners of war. Nicias and Demosthenes
+ were put to death in cold blood; and their men either perished miserably
+ in the Syracusan dungeons, or were sold into slavery to the very persons
+ whom, in their pride of power, they had crossed the seas to enslave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All danger from Athens to the independent nations of the West was now for
+ ever at an end. She, indeed, continued to struggle against her combined
+ enemies and revolted allies with unparalleled gallantry; and many more
+ years of varying warfare passed away before she surrendered to their arms.
+ But no success in subsequent conquests could ever have restored her to the
+ pre-eminence in enterprise, resources, and maritime skill which she had
+ acquired before her fatal reverses in Sicily. Nor among the rival Greek
+ republics, whom her own rashness aided to crush her, was there any capable
+ of reorganizing her empire, or resuming her schemes of conquest. The
+ dominion of Western Europe was left for Rome and Carthage to dispute two
+ centuries later, in conflicts still more terrible, and with even higher
+ displays of military daring and genius, than Athens had witnessed either
+ in her rise, her meridian, or her fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF THE EVENTS BETWEEN THE DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE,
+ AND THE BATTLE OF ARBELA.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 412 B.C. Many of the subject allies of Athens revolt from her, on her
+ disasters before Syracuse being known; the seat of war is transferred to
+ the Hellespont and eastern side of the AEgean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 410. The Carthaginians attempt to make conquests in Sicily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 407. Cyrus the Younger is sent by the king of Persia to take the
+ government of all the maritime parts of Asia Minor, and with orders to
+ help the Lacedaemonian fleet against the Athenian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 406. Agrigentum taken by the Carthaginians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 405. The last Athenian fleet destroyed by Lysander at AEgospotamos. Athens
+ closely besieged. Rise of the power of Dionysius at Syracuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 404. Athens surrenders. End of the Peloponnesian war. The ascendancy of
+ Sparta complete throughout Greece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 403. Thrasybulus, aided by the Thebans and with the connivance of one of
+ the Spartan kings, liberates Athens from the Thirty Tyrants, and restores
+ the democracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 401. Cyrus the Younger commences his expedition into Upper Asia to
+ dethrone his brother Artaxerxes Mnemon. He takes with him an auxiliary
+ force of ten thousand Greeks. He in killed in battle at Cunaxa; and the
+ ten thousand, led by Xenophon, effect their retreat in spite of the
+ Persian armies and the natural obstacles of their march.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 399. In this, and the five following years, the Lacedaemonians under
+ Agesilaus and other commanders, carry on war against the Persian satraps
+ in Asia Minor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 396. Syracuse is besieged by the Carthaginians, and successfully defended
+ by Dionysius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 394. Rome makes her first great stride in the career of conquest by the
+ capture of Veii.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 393. The Athenian admiral Conon, in conjunction with the Persian satrap
+ Pharnabazus, defeats the Lacedaemonian fleet off Cnidus, and restores the
+ fortifications of Athens. Several of the former allies of Sparta in Greece
+ carry on hostilities against her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 388. The nations of Northern Europe now first appear in authentic history.
+ The Gauls overrun great part of Italy, and burn Rome. Rome recovers from
+ the blow, but her old enemies, the AEquians and Volscians, are left
+ completely crushed by the Gallic invaders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 387. The peace of Antalcidas is concluded among the Greeks by the
+ mediation, and under the sanction, of the Persian king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 378 to 361. Fresh wars in Greece. Epaminondas raises Thebes to be the
+ leading state of Greece, and the supremacy of Sparta is destroyed at the
+ battle of Leuctra. Epaminondas is killed in gaining the victory of
+ Mantinea, and the power of Thebes falls with him. The Athenians attempt a
+ balancing system between Sparta and Thebes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 359. Philip becomes king of Macedon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 357. The Social War breaks out in Greece, and lasts three years. Its
+ result checks the attempt of Athens to regain her old maritime empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 356. Alexander the Great is born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 343. Rome begins her wars with the Samnites: they extend over a period of
+ fifty years. The result of this obstinate contest is to secure for her the
+ dominion of Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 340. Fresh attempts of the Carthaginians upon Syracuse. Timoleon defeats
+ them with great slaughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 338. Philip defeats the confederate armies of Athens and Thebes at
+ Chaeronea, and the Macedonian supremacy over Greece is firmly established.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 336. Philip is assassinated, and Alexander the Great becomes king of
+ Macedon. He gains several victories over the northern barbarians who had
+ attacked Macedonia, and destroys Thebes, which, in conjunction with
+ Athens, had taken up arms against the Macedonians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 334. Alexander passes the Hellespont.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF ARBELA, B.C. 331.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Alexander deserves the glory which he has enjoyed for so
+ many centuries and among all nations; but what if he had
+ been beaten at Arbela having the Euphrates, the Tigris, and
+ the deserts in his rear, without any strong places of
+ refuge, nine hundred leagues from Macedonia?"&mdash;NAPOLEON.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Asia beheld with astonishment and awe the uninterrupted
+ progress of a hero, the sweep of whose conquests was as wide
+ and rapid as that of her own barbaric kings, or the Scythian
+ or Chaldaean hordes; but, far unlike the transient
+ whirlwinds of Asiatic warfare, the advance of the Macedonian
+ leader was no less deliberate than rapid; at every step the
+ Greek power took root, and the language and the civilization
+ of Greece were planted from the shores of the AEgean to the
+ banks of the Indus, from the Caspian and the great Hyrcanian
+ plain to the cataracts of the Nile; to exist actually for
+ nearly a thousand years, and in their effects to endure for
+ ever."&mdash;ARNOLD.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A long and not uninstructive list might be made out of illustrious men,
+ whose characters have been vindicated during recent times from aspersions
+ which for centuries had been thrown on them. The spirit of modern inquiry,
+ and the tendency of modern scholarship, both of which are often said to be
+ solely negative and destructive, have, in truth, restored to splendour,
+ and almost created anew, far more than they have assailed with censure, or
+ dismissed from consideration as unreal. The truth of many a brilliant
+ narrative of brilliant exploits has of late years been triumphantly
+ demonstrated; and the shallowness of the sceptical scoffs with which
+ little minds have carped at the great minds of antiquity, has been in many
+ instances decisively exposed. The laws, the politics, and the lines of
+ action adopted or recommended by eminent men and powerful nations have
+ been examined with keener investigation, and considered with more
+ comprehensive judgment, than formerly were brought to bear on these
+ subjects. The result has been at least as often favourable as unfavourable
+ to the persons and the states so scrutinized; and many an oft-repeated
+ slander against both measures and men has thus been silenced, we may hope,
+ for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The veracity of Herodotus, the pure patriotism of Pericles, of
+ Demosthenes, and of the Gracchi, the wisdom of Cleisthenes and of Licinius
+ as constitutional reformers, may be mentioned as facts which recent
+ writers have cleared from unjust suspicion and censure. And it might be
+ easily shown that the defensive tendency which distinguishes the present
+ and recent best historians of Germany, France, and England, has been
+ equally manifested in the spirit in which they have treated the heroes of
+ thought and the heroes of action who lived during what we term the Middle
+ Ages and whom it was so long the fashion to sneer at or neglect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The name of the victor of Arbela has led to these reflections; for,
+ although the rapidity and extent of Alexander's conquests have through all
+ ages challenged admiration and amazement, the grandeur of genius which he
+ displayed in his schemes of commerce, civilization, and of comprehensive
+ union and unity amongst nations, has, until lately, been comparatively
+ unhonoured. This long-continued depreciation was of early date. The
+ ancient rhetoricians&mdash;a class of babblers, a school for lies and
+ scandal, as Niebuhr justly termed them&mdash;chose among the stock themes
+ for their commonplaces, the character and exploits of Alexander. They had
+ their followers in every age; and until a very recent period, all who
+ wished to "point a moral or adorn a tale" about unreasoning ambition,
+ extravagant pride, and the formidable frenzies of free will when leagued
+ with free power, have never failed to blazon forth the so-called madman of
+ Macedonia as one of the most glaring examples. Without doubt, many of
+ these writers adopted with implicit credence traditional ideas and
+ supposed, with uninquiring philanthropy, that in blackening Alexander they
+ were doing humanity good service. But also, without doubt, many of his
+ assailants, like those of other great men, have been mainly instigated by
+ "that strongest of all antipathies, the antipathy of a second-rate mind to
+ a first-rate one," [De Stael.] and by the envy which talent too often
+ bears to genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arrian, who wrote his history of Alexander when Hadrian was emperor of the
+ Roman world, and when the spirit of declamation and dogmatism was at its
+ full height, but who was himself, unlike the dreaming pedants of the
+ schools, a statesman and a soldier of practical and proved ability, well
+ rebuked the malevolent aspersions which he heard continually thrown upon
+ the memory of the great conqueror of the East. He truly says, "Let the man
+ who speaks evil of Alexander not merely bring forward those passages of
+ Alexander's life which were really evil, but let him collect and review
+ all the actions of Alexander, and then let him thoroughly consider first
+ who and what manner of man he himself is, and what has been his own
+ career; and then let him consider who and what manner of man Alexander
+ was, and to what an eminence of human grandeur HE arrived. Let him
+ consider that Alexander was a king, and the undisputed lord of the two
+ continents; and that his name is renowned throughout the whole earth. Let
+ the evil-speaker against Alexander bear all this in mind, and then let him
+ reflect on his own insignificance, the pettiness of his own circumstances
+ and affairs, and the blunders that he makes about these, paltry and
+ trifling as they are. Let him then ask himself whether he is a fit person
+ to censure and revile such a man as Alexander. I believe that there was in
+ his time no nation of men, no city, nay, no single individual, with whom
+ Alexander's name had not become a familiar word. I therefore hold that
+ such a man, who was like no ordinary mortal was not born into the world
+ without some special providence." [Arrian, lib. vii. AD FINEM.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And one of the most distinguished soldiers and writers of our own nation,
+ Sir Walter Raleigh, though he failed to estimate justly the full merits of
+ Alexander, has expressed his sense of the grandeur of the part played in
+ the world by "The Great Emathian Conqueror" in language that well deserves
+ quotation:&mdash;"So much hath the spirit of some one man excelled as it
+ hath undertaken and effected the alteration of the greatest states and
+ commonwealths, the erection of monarchies, the conquest of kingdoms and
+ empires, guided handfuls of men against multitudes of equal bodily
+ strength, contrived victories beyond all hope and discourse of reason,
+ converted the fearful passions of his own followers into magnanimity, and
+ the valour of his enemies into cowardice; such spirits have been stirred
+ up in sundry ages of the world, and in divers parts thereof, to erect and
+ cast down again, to establish and to destroy, and to bring all things,
+ persons, and states to the same certain ends, which the infinite spirit of
+ the UNIVERSAL, piercing, moving, and governing all things, hath ordained.
+ Certainly, the things that this king did were marvellous, and would hardly
+ have been undertaken by any one else: and though his father had determined
+ to have invaded the Lesser Asia, it is like that he would have contented
+ himself with some part thereof, and not have discovered the river of
+ Indus, as this man did." ["The Historie of the World," by Sir Walter
+ Raleigh, Knight, p. 628.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A higher authority than either Arrian or Raleigh may now be referred to by
+ those who wish to know the real merit of Alexander as a general, and how
+ far the commonplace assertions are true, that his successes were the mere
+ results of fortunate rashness and unreasoning pugnacity, Napoleon selected
+ Alexander as one of the seven greatest generals whose noble deeds history
+ has handed down to us, and from the study of whose campaigns the
+ principles of war are to be learned. The critique of the greatest
+ conqueror of modern times on the military career of the great conqueror of
+ the old world, is no less graphic than true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alexander crossed the Dardanelles 334 B.C. with an army of about forty
+ thousand men, of which one-eighth was cavalry; he forced the passage of
+ the Granicus in opposition to an army under Memnon, the Greek, who
+ commanded for Darius on the coast of Asia, and he spent the whole of the
+ year 333 in establishing his power in Asia Minor. He was seconded by the
+ Greek colonists, who dwelt on the borders of the Black Sea, and on the
+ Mediterranean, and in Smyrna, Ephesus, Tarsus, Miletus, &amp;c. The kings
+ of Persia left their provinces and towns to be governed according to their
+ own particular laws. Their empire was a union of confederated states, and
+ did not form one nation; this facilitated its conquest. As Alexander only
+ wished for the throne of the monarch, he easily effected the change, by
+ respecting the customs, manners, and laws of the people, who experienced
+ no change in their condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the year 332, he met with Darius at the head of sixty thousand men,
+ who had taken up a position near Tarsus, on the banks of the Issus, in the
+ province of Cilicia. He defeated him, entered Syria, took Damascus, which
+ contained all the riches of the Great King, and laid siege to Tyre. This
+ superb metropolis of the commerce of the world detained him nine months.
+ He took Gaza after a siege of two months; crossed the Desert in seven
+ days; entered Pelusium and Memphis, and founded Alexandria. In less than
+ two years, after two battles and four or five sieges, the coasts of the
+ Black Sea from Phasis to Byzantium, those of the Mediterranean as far as
+ Alexandria, all Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt, had submitted to his arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In 331, he repassed the Desert, encamped in Tyre, recrossed Syria,
+ entered Damascus, passed the Euphrates and Tigris, and defeated Darius on
+ the field of Arbela, when he was at the head of a still stronger army than
+ that which he commanded on the Issus, and Babylon opened her gates to him.
+ In 330, he overran Susa, and took that city, Persepolis, and Pasargada,
+ which contained the tomb of Cyrus. In 329, he directed his course
+ northward, entered Ecbatana, and extended his conquests to the coasts of
+ the Caspian, punished Bessus, the cowardly assassin of Darius, penetrated
+ into Scythia, and subdued the Scythians. In 328, he forced the passage of
+ the Oxus, received sixteen thousand recruits from Macedonia, and reduced
+ the neighbouring people to subjection. In 327, he crossed the Indus,
+ vanquished Poros in a pitched battle, took him prisoner, and treated him
+ as a king. He contemplated passing the Ganges, but his army refused. He
+ sailed down the Indus, in the year 326, with eight hundred vessels; having
+ arrived at the ocean, he sent Nearchus with a fleet to run along the
+ coasts of the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf, as far as the mouth of
+ the Euphrates. In 325, he took sixty days in crossing from Gedrosia,
+ entered Keramania, returned to Pasargada, Persepolis, and Susa, and
+ married Statira, the daughter of Darius. In 324, he marched once more to
+ the north, passed Ecbatana, and terminated his career at Babylon." [See
+ Count Montolon's Memoirs of Napoleon.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The enduring importance of Alexander's conquests is to be estimated not by
+ the duration of his own life and empire, or even by the duration of the
+ kingdoms which his generals after his death formed out of the fragments of
+ that mighty dominion. In every region of the world that he traversed,
+ Alexander planted Greek settlements, and founded cities, in the
+ populations of which the Greek element at once asserted its predominance.
+ Among his successors, the Seleucids and the Ptolemies imitated their great
+ captain in blending schemes of civilization, of commercial intercourse,
+ and of literary and scientific research with all their enterprises of
+ military aggrandizement, and with all their systems of civil
+ administration. Such was the ascendancy of the Greek genius, so
+ wonderfully comprehensive and assimilating was the cultivation which it
+ introduced, that, within thirty years after Alexander crossed the
+ Hellespont, the language, the literature, and the arts of Hellas, enforced
+ and promoted by the arms of semi-Hellenic Macedon, predominated in every
+ country from the shores of that sea to the Indian waters. Even sullen
+ Egypt acknowledged the intellectual supremacy of Greece; and the language
+ of Pericles and Plato became the language of the statesmen and the sages
+ who dwelt in the mysterious land of the Pyramids and the Sphinx. It is not
+ to be supposed that this victory of the Greek tongue was so complete as to
+ exterminate the Coptic, the Syrian, the Armenian, the Persian, or the
+ other native languages of the numerous nations and tribes between the
+ AEgean, the Iaxertes, the Indus, and the Nile; they survived as provincial
+ dialects. Each probably was in use as the vulgar tongue of its own
+ district. But every person with the slightest pretence to education spoke
+ Greek. Greek was universally the State language, and the exclusive
+ language of all literature and science, It formed also for the merchant,
+ the trader, and the traveller, as well as for the courtier, the government
+ official, and the soldier, the organ of intercommunication among the
+ myriads of mankind inhabiting these large portions of the Old World. [See
+ Arnold, Hist. Rome, ii. 406.] Throughout Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt, the
+ Hellenic character that was thus imparted, remained in full vigour down to
+ the time of the Mahometan conquests. The infinite value of this to
+ humanity in the highest and holiest point of view has often been pointed
+ out; and the workings of the finger of Providence have been gratefully
+ recognised by those who have observed how the early growth and progress of
+ Christianity were aided by that diffusion of the Greek language and
+ civilization throughout Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt which had been caused
+ by the Macedonian conquest of the East.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Upper Asia, beyond the Euphrates, the direct and material influence of
+ Greek ascendancy was more short-lived. Yet, during the existence of the
+ Hellenic kingdoms in these regions, especially of the Greek kingdom of
+ Bactria, the modern Bokhara, very important effects were produced on the
+ intellectual tendencies and tastes of the inhabitants of those countries
+ and of the adjacent ones, by the animating contact of the Grecian spirit.
+ Much of Hindoo science and philosophy, much of the literature of the later
+ Persian kingdom of the Arsacidae, either originated from, or was largely
+ modified by, Grecian influences. So, also, the learning and science of the
+ Arabians were in a far less degree the result of original invention and
+ genius, than the reproduction, in an altered form, of the Greek philosophy
+ and the Greek lore, acquired by the Saracenic conquerors together with
+ their acquisition of the provinces which Alexander had subjugated nearly a
+ thousand years before the armed disciples of Mahomet commenced their
+ career in the East. It is well known that Western Europe in the Middle
+ ages drew its philosophy, its arts, and its science, principally from
+ Arabian teachers. And thus we see how the intellectual influence of
+ ancient Greece, poured on the Eastern world by Alexander's victories, and
+ then brought back to bear on Mediaeval Europe by the spread of the
+ Saracenic powers, has exerted its action on the elements of modern
+ civilization by this powerful though indirect channel as well as by the
+ more obvious effects of the remnants of classic civilization which
+ survived in Italy, Gaul, Britain, and Spain, after the irruption of the
+ Germanic nations. [See Humboldt's Cosmos.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These considerations invest the Macedonian triumphs in the East with
+ never-dying interest, such as the most showy and sanguinary successes of
+ mere "low ambition and the pride of kings," however they may dazzle for a
+ moment, can never retain with posterity. Whether the old Persian empire,
+ which Cyrus founded, could have survived much longer than it did, even if
+ Darius had been victorious at Arbela, may safely be disputed. That ancient
+ dominion, like the Turkish at the present time, laboured under every cause
+ of decay and dissolution. The satraps, like the modern pachas, continually
+ rebelled against the central power, and Egypt, in particular, was almost
+ always in a state of insurrection against its nominal sovereign. There was
+ no longer any effective central control, or any internal principle of
+ unity fused through the huge mass of the empire, and binding it together.
+ Persia was evidently about to fall; but, had it not been for Alexander's
+ invasion of Asia, she would most probably have fallen beneath some other
+ Oriental power, as Media and Babylon had formerly fallen before herself,
+ and as, in after times, the Parthian supremacy gave way to the revived
+ ascendancy of Persia in the East, under the sceptres of the Arsacidae. A
+ revolution that merely substituted one Eastern power for another would
+ have been utterly barren and unprofitable to mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander's victory at Arbela not only overthrew an Oriental dynasty, but
+ established European rulers in its stead. It broke the monotony, of the
+ Eastern world by the impression of Western energy and superior
+ civilization; even as England's present mission is to break up the mental
+ and moral stagnation of India and Cathay, by pouring upon and through them
+ the impulsive current of Anglo-Saxon commerce and conquest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arbela, the city which has furnished its name to the decisive battle that
+ gave Asia to Alexander, lies more than twenty miles from the actual scene
+ of conflict. The little village then named Gaugamela is close to the spot
+ where the armies met, but has ceded the honour of naming the battle to its
+ more euphonious neighbour. Gaugamela is situate in one of the wide plains
+ that lie between the Tigris and the mountains of Kurdistan. A few
+ undulating hillocks diversify the surface of this sandy track; but the
+ ground is generally level, and admirably qualified for the evolutions of
+ cavalry, and also calculated to give the larger of two armies the full
+ advantage of numerical superiority. The Persian King (who before he came
+ to the throne, had proved his personal valour as a soldier, and his skill
+ as a general) had wisely selected this region for the third and decisive
+ encounter between his forces and the invaders. The previous defeats of his
+ troops, however severe they had been, were not looked on as irreparable,
+ The Granicus had been fought by his generals rashly and without mutual
+ concert. And, though Darius himself had commanded and been beaten at
+ Issus, that defeat might be attributed to the disadvantageous nature of
+ the ground; where, cooped up between the mountains, the river, and the
+ sea, the numbers of the Persians confused and clogged alike the general's
+ skill and the soldiers' prowess, so that their very strength became their
+ weakness. Here, on the broad plains of Kurdistan, there was scope for
+ Asia's largest host to array its lines, to wheel, to skirmish, to condense
+ or expand its squadrons, to manoeuvre, and to charge at will. Should
+ Alexander and his scanty band dare to plunge into that living sea of war,
+ their destruction seemed inevitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius felt, however, the critical nature to himself as well as to his
+ adversary of the coming encounter. He could not hope to retrieve the
+ consequences of a third overthrow. The great cities of Mesopotamia and
+ Upper Asia, the central provinces of the Persian empire, were certain to
+ be at the mercy of the victor. Darius knew also the Asiatic character well
+ enough to be aware how it yields to the prestige of success, and the
+ apparent career of destiny. He felt that the diadem was now either to be
+ firmly replaced on his own brow, or to be irrevocably transferred to the
+ head of his European conqueror. He, therefore, during the long interval
+ left him after the battle of Issus, while Alexander was subjugating Syria
+ and Egypt, assiduously busied himself in selecting the best troops which
+ his vast empire supplied, and in training his varied forces to act
+ together with some uniformity of discipline and system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hardy mountaineers of Affghanistan, Bokhara, Khiva, and Thibet, were
+ then, as at present, far different from the generality of Asiatics in
+ warlike spirit and endurance. From these districts Darius collected large
+ bodies of admirable infantry; and the countries of the modern Kurds and
+ Turkomans supplied, as they do now, squadrons of horsemen, strong,
+ skilful, bold, and trained to a life of constant activity and warfare. It
+ is not uninteresting to notice that the ancestors of our own late enemies,
+ the Sikhs, served as allies of Darius against the Macedonians. They are
+ spoken of in Arrian as Indians who dwelt near Bactria. They were attached
+ to the troops of that satrapy, and their cavalry was one of the most
+ formidable forces in the whole Persian army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides these picked troops, contingents also came in from the numerous
+ other provinces that yet obeyed the Great King. Altogether, the horse are
+ said to have been forty thousand, the scythe-bearing chariots two hundred,
+ and the armed elephants fifteen in number. The amount of the infantry is
+ uncertain; but the knowledge which both ancient and modern times supply of
+ the usual character of Oriental armies, and of their populations of
+ camp-followers, may warrant us in believing that many myriads were
+ prepared to fight, or to encumber those who fought, for the last Darius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The position of the Persian king near Mesopotamia was chosen with great
+ military skill. It was certain that Alexander on his return from Egypt
+ must march northward along the Syrian coast, before he attacked the
+ central provinces of the Persian empire. A direct eastward march from the
+ lower part of Palestine across the great Syrian Desert was then, as now,
+ utterly impracticable. Marching eastward from Syria, Alexander would, on
+ crossing the Euphrates, arrive at the vast Mesopotamian plains. The
+ wealthy capitals of the empire, Babylon, Susa, and Persepolis, would then
+ lie to his south; and if he marched down through Mesopotamia to attack
+ them, Darius might reasonably hope to follow the Macedonians with his
+ immense force of cavalry, and, without even risking a pitched battle, to
+ harass and finally overwhelm them. We may remember that three centuries
+ afterwards a Roman army under Crassus was thus actually destroyed by the
+ Oriental archers and horsemen in these very plains; [See Mitford.] and
+ that the ancestors of the Parthians who thus vanquished the Roman legions,
+ served by thousands under King Darius. If, on the contrary, Alexander
+ should defer his march against Babylon, and first seek an encounter with
+ the Persian army, the country on each side of the Tigris in this latitude
+ was highly advantageous for such an army as Darius commanded; and he had
+ close in his rear the mountainous districts of Northern Media, where he
+ himself had in early life been satrap, where he had acquired reputation as
+ a soldier and a general, and where he justly expected to find loyalty to
+ his person, and a safe refuge in case of defeat. [Mitford's remarks on the
+ strategy of Darius in his last campaign are very just. After having been
+ unduly admired as an historian, Mitford is now unduly neglected. His
+ partiality, and his deficiency in scholarship, have been exposed
+ sufficiently to make him no longer a dangerous guide as to Greek polities;
+ while the clearness and brilliancy of his narrative, and the strong common
+ sense of his remarks (where his party prejudices do not interfere) must
+ always make his volumes valuable as well as entertaining.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His great antagonist came on across the Euphrates against him, at the head
+ of an army which Arrian, copying from the journals of Macedonian officers,
+ states to have consisted of forty thousand foot, and seven thousand horse.
+ In studying the campaigns of Alexander, we possess the peculiar advantage
+ of deriving our information from two of Alexander's generals of division,
+ who bore an important part in all his enterprises. Aristobulus and Ptolemy
+ (who afterwards became king of Egypt) kept regular journals of the
+ military events which they witnessed; and these journals were in the
+ possession of Arrian, when he drew up his history of Alexander's
+ expedition. The high character of Arrian for integrity makes us confident
+ that he used them fairly, and his comments on the occasional discrepancies
+ between the two Macedonian narratives prove that he used them sensibly. He
+ frequently quotes the very words of his authorities: and his history thus
+ acquires a charm such as very few ancient or modern military narratives
+ possess. The anecdotes and expressions which he records we fairly believe
+ to be genuine, and not to be the coinage of a rhetorician, like those in
+ Curtius. In fact, in reading Arrian, we read General Aristobulus and
+ General Ptolemy on the campaigns of the Macedonians; and it is like
+ reading General Jomini or General Foy on the campaigns of the French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The estimate which we find in Arrian of the strength of Alexander's army,
+ seems reasonable when we take into account both the losses which he had
+ sustained, and the reinforcements which he had received since he left
+ Europe. Indeed, to Englishmen, who know with what mere handfuls of men our
+ own generals have, at Plassy, at Assaye, at Meeanee, and other Indian
+ battles, routed large hosts of Asiatics, the disparity of numbers that we
+ read of in the victories won by the Macedonians over the Persians presents
+ nothing incredible. The army which Alexander now led was wholly composed
+ of veteran troops in the highest possible state of equipment and
+ discipline, enthusiastically devoted to their leader, and full of
+ confidence in his military genius and his victorious destiny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The celebrated Macedonian phalanx formed the main strength of his
+ infantry. This force had been raised and organized by his father Philip,
+ who on his accession to the Macedonian throne needed a numerous and
+ quickly-formed army, and who, by lengthening the spear of the ordinary
+ Greek phalanx, and increasing the depth of the files, brought the tactic
+ of armed masses to the greatest efficiency of which it was capable with
+ such materials as he possessed. [See Niebuhr's Hist. of Rome, iii. 488.]
+ He formed his men sixteen deep, and placed in their grasp the SARISSA, as
+ the Macedonian pike was called, which was four-and-twenty feet in length,
+ and when couched for action, reached eighteen feet in front of the
+ soldier: so that, as a space of about two feet was allowed between the
+ ranks, the spears of the five files behind him projected in advance of
+ each front-rank man. The phalangite soldier was fully equipped in the
+ defensive armour of the regular Greek infantry. And thus the phalanx
+ presented a ponderous and bristling mass, which as long as its order was
+ kept compact, was sure to bear down all opposition. The defects of such an
+ organization are obvious, and were proved in after years, when the
+ Macedonians were opposed to the Roman legions. But it is clear that, under
+ Alexander, the phalanx was not the cumbrous unwieldy body which it was at
+ Cynoscephalae and Pydna. His men were veterans; and he could obtain from
+ them an accuracy of movement and steadiness of evolution, such as probably
+ the recruits of his father would only have floundered in attempting, and
+ such as certainly were impracticable in the phalanx when handled by his
+ successors: especially as under them it ceased to be a standing force, and
+ became only a militia. [See Niebuhr.] Under Alexander the phalanx
+ consisted of an aggregate of eighteen thousand men, who were divided into
+ six brigades of three thousand each. These were again subdivided into
+ regiments and companies; and the men were carefully trained to wheel, to
+ face about, to take more ground, or to close up, as the emergencies of the
+ battle required. Alexander also arrayed in the intervals of the regiments
+ of his phalangites, troops armed in a different manner, which could
+ prevent their line from being pierced, and their companies taken in flank,
+ when the nature of the ground prevented a close formation; and which could
+ be withdrawn, when a favourable opportunity arrived for closing up the
+ phalanx or any of its brigades for a charge, or when it was necessary to
+ prepare to receive cavalry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the phalanx, Alexander had a considerable force of infantry who
+ were called shield-bearers: they were not so heavily armed as the
+ phalangites, or as was the case with the Greek regular infantry in
+ general; but they were equipped for close fight, as well as for
+ skirmishing, and were far superior to the ordinary irregular troops of
+ Greek warfare. They were about six thousand strong. Besides these, he had
+ several bodies of Greek regular infantry; and he had archers, slingers,
+ and javelin-men, who fought also with broadsword and target. These were
+ principally supplied to him by the highlanders of Illyria and Thracia. The
+ main strength of his cavalry consisted in two chosen corps of cuirassiers,
+ one Macedonian, and one Thessalian each of which was about fifteen hundred
+ strong. They were provided with long lances and heavy swords, and horse as
+ well as man was fully equipped with defensive armour. Other regiments of
+ regular cavalry were less heavily armed, and there were several bodies of
+ light horsemen, whom Alexander's conquests in Egypt and Syria had enabled
+ him to mount superbly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little before the end of August, Alexander crossed the Euphrates at
+ Thapsacus, a small corps of Persian cavalry under Mazaeus retiring before
+ him. Alexander was too prudent to march down through the Mesopotamian
+ deserts, and continued to advance eastward with the intention of passing
+ the Tigris, and then, if he was unable to find Darius and bring him to
+ action, of marching southward on the left side of that river along the
+ skirts of a mountainous district where his men would suffer less from heat
+ and thirst, and where provisions would be more abundant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius, finding that his adversary was not to be enticed into the march
+ through Mesopotamia against his capital, determined to remain on the
+ battle-ground which he had chosen on the left of the Tigris; where, if his
+ enemy met a defeat or a check, the destruction of the invaders would be
+ certain with two such rivers as the Euphrates and the Tigris in their
+ rear. The Persian king availed himself to the utmost of every advantage in
+ his power. He caused a large space of ground to be carefully levelled for
+ the operation of his scythe-armed chariots; and he deposited his military
+ stores in the strong town of Arbela, about twenty miles in his rear. The
+ rhetoricians of after ages have loved to describe Darius Codomannus as a
+ second Xerxes in ostentation and imbecility; but a fair examination of his
+ generalship in this his last campaign, shows that he was worthy of bearing
+ the same name as his great predecessor, the royal son of Hystaspes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On learning that Darius was with a large army on the left of the Tigris,
+ Alexander hurried forward and crossed that river without opposition. He
+ was at first unable to procure any certain intelligence of the precise
+ position of the enemy, and after giving his army a short interval of rest,
+ he marched for four days down the left bank of the river. A moralist may
+ pause upon the fact, that Alexander must in this march have passed within
+ a few miles of the remains of Nineveh, the great, city of the primaeval
+ conquerors of the human race. Neither the Macedonian king nor any of his
+ followers knew what those vast mounds had once been. They had already
+ become nameless masses of grass-grown ruins; and it is only within the
+ last few years that the intellectual energy of one of our own countrymen
+ has rescued Nineveh from its long centuries of oblivion. [See Layard's
+ "Nineveh," and also Vaux's "Nineveh and Persepolis," p. 16.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the fourth day of Alexander's southward march, his advanced guard
+ reported that a body of the enemy's cavalry was in sight. He instantly
+ formed his army in order for battle, and directing them to advance
+ steadily, he rode forward at the head of some squadrons of cavalry, and
+ charged the Persian horse whom he found before him. This was a mere
+ reconnoitring party, and they broke and fled immediately; but the
+ Macedonians made some prisoners, and from them Alexander found that Darius
+ was posted only a few miles off and learned the strength of the army that
+ he had with him. On receiving this news, Alexander halted, and gave his
+ men repose for four days, so that they should go into action fresh and
+ vigorous. He also fortified his camp, and deposited in it all his military
+ stores, and all his sick and disabled soldiers; intending to advance upon
+ the enemy with the serviceable part of his army perfectly unencumbered.
+ After this halt, he moved forward, while it was yet dark, with the
+ intention of reaching the enemy, and attacking them at break of day. About
+ half-way between the camps there were some undulations of the ground,
+ which concealed the two armies from each other's view. But, on Alexander
+ arriving at their summit, he saw by the early light the Persian host
+ arrayed before him; and he probably also observed traces of some
+ engineering operation having been carried on along part of the ground in
+ front of them. Not knowing that these marks had been caused by the
+ Persians having levelled the ground for the free use of their
+ war-chariots, Alexander suspected that hidden pitfalls had been prepared
+ with a view of disordering the approach of his cavalry. He summoned a
+ council of war forthwith, some of the officers were for attacking
+ instantly at all hazards, but the more prudent opinion of Parmenio
+ prevailed, and it was determined not to advance farther till the
+ battle-ground had been carefully surveyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander halted his army on the heights; and taking with him some
+ light-armed infantry and some cavalry, he passed part of the day in
+ reconnoitring the enemy, and observing the nature of the ground which he
+ had to fight on. Darius wisely refrained from moving from his position to
+ attack the Macedonians on eminences which they occupied, and the two
+ armies remained until night without molesting each other. On Alexander's
+ return to his head-quarters, he summoned his generals and superior
+ officers together, and telling them that he well knew that THEIR zeal
+ wanted no exhortation, he besought them to do their utmost in encouraging
+ and instructing those whom each commanded, to do their best in the next
+ day's battle. They were to remind them that they were now not going to
+ fight for a province, as they had hitherto fought, but they were about to
+ decide by their swords the dominion of all Asia. Each officer ought to
+ impress this upon his subalterns and they should urge it on their men.
+ Their natural courage required no long words to excite its ardour: but
+ they should be reminded of the paramount importance of steadiness in
+ action. The silence in the ranks must be unbroken as long as silence was
+ proper; but when the time came for the charge, the shout and the cheer
+ must be full of terror for the foe. The officers were to be alert in
+ receiving and communicating orders; and every one was to act as if he felt
+ that the whole result of the battle depended on his own single good
+ conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus briefly instructed his generals, Alexander ordered that the
+ army should sup, and take their rest for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darkness had closed over the tents of the Macedonians, when Alexander's
+ veteran general, Parmenio, came to him, and proposed that they should make
+ a night attack on the Persians. The King is said to have answered, that he
+ scorned to such a victory, and that Alexander must conquer openly and
+ fairly. Arrian justly remarks that Alexander's resolution was as wise as
+ it was spirited. Besides the confusion and uncertainty which are
+ inseparable from night engagements, the value of Alexander's victory would
+ have been impaired, if gained under circumstances which might supply the
+ enemy with any excuse for his defeat, and encourage him to renew the
+ contest. It was necessary for Alexander not only to beat Darius, but to
+ gain such a victory as should leave his rival without apology for defeat,
+ and without hope of recovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Persians, in fact, expected, and were prepared to meet a night attack.
+ Such was the apprehension that Darius entertained of it, that he formed
+ his troops at evening in order of battle, and kept them under arms all
+ night. The effect of this was, that the morning found them jaded and
+ dispirited, while it brought their adversaries all fresh and vigorous
+ against them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The written order of battle which Darius himself caused to be drawn up,
+ fell into the hands of the Macedonians after the engagement, and
+ Aristobulus copied it into his journal. We thus possess, through Arrian,
+ unusually authentic information as to the composition and arrangement of
+ the Persian army. On the extreme left were the Bactrian, Daan, and
+ Arachosian cavalry. Next to these Darius placed the troops from Persia
+ proper, both horse and foot. Then came the Susians, and next to these the
+ Cadusians. These forces made up the left wing. Darius's own station was in
+ the centre. This was composed of the Indians, the Carians, the Mardian
+ archers, and the division of Persians who were distinguished by the golden
+ apples that formed knobs of their spears. Here also were stationed the
+ body-guard of the Persian nobility. Besides these, there were in the
+ centre, formed in deep order, the Uxian and Babylonian troops, and the
+ soldiers from the Red Sea. The brigade of Greek mercenaries, whom Darius
+ had in his service, and who were alone considered fit to stand in the
+ charge of the Macedonian phalanx, was drawn up on either side of the royal
+ chariot. The right wing was composed of the Coelosyrians and
+ Mesopotamians, the Medes, the Parthians, the Sacians, the Tapurians,
+ Hyrcanians, Albanians, and Sacesinae. In advance of the line on the left
+ wing were placed the Scythian cavalry, with a thousand of the Bactrian
+ horse, and a hundred scythe-armed chariots. The elephants and fifty
+ scythe-armed chariots were ranged in front of the centre; and fifty more
+ chariots, with the Armenian and Cappadocian cavalry, were drawn up in
+ advance of the right wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus arrayed, the great host of King Darius passed the night, that to many
+ thousands of them was the last of their existence. The morning of the
+ first of October, two thousand one hundred and eighty-two years ago,
+ dawned slowly to their wearied watching, and they could hear the note of
+ the Macedonian trumpet sounding to arms, and could see King Alexander's
+ forces descend from their tents on the heights, and form in order of
+ battle on the plain. [See Clinton's "Fasti Hellenici." The battle was
+ fought eleven days after an eclipse of the moon, which gives the means of
+ fixing the precise date.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was deep need of skill, as well as of valour, on Alexander's side;
+ and few battle-fields have witnessed more consummate generalship than was
+ now displayed by the Macedonian king. There were no natural barriers by
+ which he could protect his flanks; and not only was he certain to be
+ overlapped on either wing by the vast lines of the Persian army, but there
+ was imminent risk of their circling round him and charging him in the
+ rear, while he advanced against their centre. He formed, therefore, a
+ second or reserve line, which was to wheel round, if required, or to
+ detach troops to either flank; as the enemy's movements might necessitate:
+ and thus, with their whole army ready at any moment to be thrown into one
+ vast hollow square, the Macedonians advanced in two lines against the
+ enemy, Alexander himself leading on the right wing, and the renowned
+ phalanx forming the centre, while Parmenio commanded on the left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the general nature of the disposition which Alexander made of his
+ army. But we have in Arrian the details of the position of each brigade
+ and regiment; and as we know that these details were taken from the
+ journals of Macedonian generals, it is interesting to examine them, and to
+ read the names and stations of King Alexander's generals and colonels in
+ this the greatest of his battles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eight troops of the royal horse-guards formed the right of Alexander's
+ line. Their captains were Cleitus (whose regiment was on the extreme
+ right, the post of peculiar danger), Graucias, Ariston, Sopolis,
+ Heracleides, Demetrias, Meleager, and Hegelochus. Philotas was general of
+ the whole division. Then came the shield-bearing infantry: Nicanor was
+ their general. Then came the phalanx, in six brigades. Coenus's brigade
+ was on the right, and nearest to the shield-bearers; next to this stood
+ the brigade of Perdiccas, then Meleager's, then Polysperchon's; and then
+ the brigade of Amynias, but which was now commanded by Simmias, as Amynias
+ had been sent to Macedonia to levy recruits. Then came the infantry of the
+ left wing, under the command of Craterus. Next to Craterus's infantry were
+ placed the cavalry regiments of the allies, with Eriguius for their
+ general. The Messalian cavalry, commanded by Philippus, were next, and
+ held the extreme left of the whole army. The whole left wing was entrusted
+ to the command of Parmenio, who had round his person the Pharsalian troop
+ of cavalry, which was the strongest and best amid all the Thessalian
+ horse-regiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The centre of the second line was occupied by a body of phalangite
+ infantry, formed of companies, which were drafted for this purpose from
+ each of the brigades of their phalanx. The officers in command of this
+ corps were ordered to be ready to face about, if the enemy should succeed
+ in gaining the rear of the army. On the right of this reserve of infantry,
+ in the second line, and behind the royal horse-guards, Alexander placed
+ half the Agrian light-armed infantry under Attalus, and with them Brison's
+ body of Macedonian archers, and Cleander's regiment of foot. He also
+ placed in this part of his army Menidas's squadron of cavalry, and
+ Aretes's and Ariston's light horse. Menidas was ordered to watch if the
+ enemy's cavalry tried to turn the flank, and if they did so, to charge
+ them before they wheeled completely round, and so take them in flank
+ themselves. A similar force was arranged on the left of the second line
+ for the same purpose, The Thracian infantry of Sitalces was placed there,
+ and Coeranus's regiment of the cavalry of the Greek allies, and Agathon's
+ troops of the Odrysian irregular horse. The extreme left of the second
+ line in this quarter was held by Andromachus's cavalry. A division of
+ Thracian infantry was left in guard of the camp. In advance of the right
+ wing and centre was scattered a number of light-armed troops, of
+ javelin-men and bowmen, with the intention of warding off the charge of
+ the armed chariots. [Kleber's arrangement of his troops at the battle of
+ Heliopolis, where, with ten thousand Europeans, he had to encounter eighty
+ thousand Asiatics in an open plain, is worth comparing with Alexander's
+ tactics at Arbela. See Thiers's "Histoire du Consulat," &amp;c. vol. ii.
+ livre v.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conspicuous by the brilliancy of his armour, and by the chosen band of
+ officers who were round his person, Alexander took his own station, as his
+ custom was, in the right wing, at the head of his cavalry: and when all
+ the arrangements for the battle were complete, and his generals were fully
+ instructed how to act in each probable emergency, he began to lead his men
+ towards the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was ever his custom to expose his life freely in battle, and to emulate
+ the personal prowess of his great ancestor, Achilles. Perhaps in the bold
+ enterprise of conquering Persia, it was politic for Alexander to raise his
+ army's daring to the utmost by the example of his own heroic valour: and,
+ in his subsequent campaigns, the love of the excitement, of "the rapture
+ of the strife," may have made him, like Murat, continue from choice a
+ custom which he commenced from duty. But he never suffered the ardour of
+ the soldier to make him lose the coolness of the general; and at Arbela,
+ in particular, he showed that he could act up to his favourite Homeric
+ maxim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great reliance had been placed by the Persian king on the effects of the
+ scythe-bearing chariots. It was designed to launch these against the
+ Macedonian phalanx, and to follow them up by a heavy charge of cavalry,
+ which it was hoped would find the ranks of the spearmen disordered by the
+ rush of the chariots, and easily destroy this most formidable part of
+ Alexander's force. In front, therefore, of the Persian centre, where
+ Darius took his station, and which it was supposed the phalanx would
+ attack, the ground had been carefully levelled and smoothed, so as to
+ allow the chariots to charge over it with their full sweep and speed. As
+ the Macedonian army approached the Persian, Alexander found that the front
+ of his whole line barely equalled the front of the Persian centre, so that
+ he was outflanked on his right by the entire left; wing of the enemy, and
+ by their entire right wing on his left. His tactics were to assail some
+ one point of the hostile army, and gain a decisive advantage; while he
+ refused, as far as possible, the encounter along the rest of the line. He
+ therefore inclined his order of march to the right so as to enable his
+ right wing and centre to come into collision with the enemy on as
+ favourable terms as possible though the manoeuvre might in some respects
+ compromise his left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The effect of this oblique movement was to bring the phalanx and his own
+ wing nearly beyond the limits of the ground which the Persians had
+ prepared for the operations of the chariots; and Darius, fearing to lose
+ the benefit of this arm against the most important parts of the Macedonian
+ force, ordered the Scythian and Bactrian cavalry, who were drawn up on his
+ extreme left, to charge round upon Alexander's right wing, and check its
+ further lateral progress. Against these assailants Alexander sent from his
+ second line Menidas's cavalry. As these proved too few to make head
+ against the enemy, he ordered Ariston also from the second line with his
+ light horse, and Cleander with his foot, in support of Menidas. The
+ Bactrians and Scythians now began to give way, but Darius reinforced them
+ by the mass of Bactrian cavalry from his main line, and an obstinate
+ cavalry fight now took place. The Bactrians and Scythians were numerous,
+ and were better armed than the horseman under Menidas and Ariston; and the
+ loss at first was heaviest on the Macedonian side. But still the European
+ cavalry stood the charge of the Asiatics, and at last, by their superior
+ discipline, and by acting in squadrons that supported each other, instead
+ of fighting in a confused mass like the barbarians, the Macedonians broke
+ their adversaries, and drove them off the field. [The best explanation of
+ this may be found in Napoleon's account of the cavalry fights between the
+ French and the Mamelukes:&mdash;"Two Mamelukes were able to make head
+ against three Frenchmen, because they were better armed, better mounted,
+ and better trained; they had two pair of pistols, a blunderbuss, a
+ carbine, a helmet with a vizor, and a coat of mail; they had several
+ horses, and several attendants on foot. One hundred cuirassiers, however
+ were not afraid of one hundred Mamelukes; three hundred could beat; an
+ equal number, and one thousand could easily put to the rout fifteen
+ hundred, so great is the influence of tactics, order, and evolutions!
+ Leclerc and Lasalle presented their men to the Mamelukes in several lines.
+ When the Arabs were on the point of overwhelming the first, the second
+ came to its assistance on the right and left; the Mamelukes then halted
+ and wheeled, in order to turn the wings of this new line; this moment was
+ always seized upon to charge them, and they were uniformly broken."&mdash;MONTHOLON'S
+ HISTORY OF THE CAPTIVITY OF NAPOLEON, iv. 70.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darius, now directed the scythe-armed chariots to be driven against
+ Alexander's horse-guards and the phalanx; and these formidable vehicles
+ were accordingly sent rattling across the plain, against the Macedonian
+ line. When we remember the alarm which the war-chariots of the Britons
+ created among Caesar's legions, we shall not be prone to deride this arm
+ of ancient warfare as always useless. The object of the chariots was to
+ create unsteadiness in the ranks against which they were driven, and
+ squadrons of cavalry followed close upon them, to profit by such disorder.
+ But the Asiatic chariots were rendered ineffective at Arbela by the
+ light-armed troops whom Alexander had specially appointed for the service,
+ and who, wounding the horses and drivers with their missile weapons, and
+ running alongside so as to cut the traces or seize the reins, marred the
+ intended charge; and the few chariots that reached the phalanx passed
+ harmlessly through the intervals which the spearmen opened for them, and
+ were easily captured in the rear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A mass of the Asiatic cavalry was now, for the second time, collected
+ against Alexander's extreme right, and moved round it, with the view of
+ gaining the flank of his army. At the critical moment, Aretes, with his
+ horsemen from Alexander's second line, dashed on the Persian squadrons
+ when their own flanks were exposed by this evolution. While Alexander thus
+ met and baffled all the flanking attacks of the enemy with troops brought
+ up from his second line, he kept his own horse-guards and the rest of the
+ front line of his wing fresh, and ready to take advantage of the first
+ opportunity for striking a decisive blow. This soon came. A large body of
+ horse, who were posted on the Persian left wing nearest to the centre,
+ quitted their station, and rode off to help their comrades in the cavalry
+ fight that still was going on at the extreme right of Alexander's wing
+ against the detachments from his second line. This made a huge gap in the
+ Persian array, and into this space Alexander instantly dashed with his
+ guard; and then pressing towards his left, he soon began to make havoc in
+ the left flank of the Persian centre. The shield-bearing infantry now
+ charged also among the reeling masses of the Asiatics; and five of the
+ brigades of the phalanx, with the irresistible might of their sarissas,
+ bore down the Greek mercenaries of Darius, and dug their way through the
+ Persian centre. In the early part of the battle, Darius had showed skill
+ and energy; and he now for some time encouraged his men, by voice and
+ example, to keep firm. But the lances of Alexander's cavalry, and the
+ pikes of the phalanx now gleamed nearer and nearer to him. His charioteer
+ was struck down by a javelin at his side; and at last Darius's nerve
+ failed him; and, descending from his chariot, he mounted on a fleet horse
+ and galloped from the plain, regardless of the state of the battle in
+ other parts of the field, where matters were going on much more favourably
+ for his cause, and where his presence might have done much towards gaining
+ a victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander's operations with his right and centre had exposed his left to
+ an immensely preponderating force of the enemy. Parmenio kept out of
+ action as long as possible; but Mazaeus, who commanded the Persian right
+ wing, advanced against him, completely outflanked him, and pressed him
+ severely with reiterated charges by superior numbers. Seeing the distress
+ of Parmenio's wing, Simmias, who commanded the sixth brigade of the
+ phalanx, which was next to the left wing, did not advance with the other
+ brigades in the great charge upon the Persian centre, but kept back to
+ cover Parmenio's troops on their right flank; as otherwise they would have
+ been completely surrounded and cut off from the rest of the Macedonian
+ army. By so doing, Simmias had unavoidably opened a gap in the Macedonian
+ left centre; and a large column of Indian and Persian horse, from the
+ Persian right centre, had galloped forward through this interval, and
+ right through the troops of the Macedonian second line. Instead of then
+ wheeling round upon Sarmenio, or upon the rear of Alexander's conquering
+ wing, the Indian and Persian cavalry rode straight on to the Macedonian
+ camp, overpowered the Thracians who were left in charge of it, and began
+ to plunder. This was stopped by the phalangite troops of the second line,
+ who, after the enemy's horsemen had rushed by them, faced about,
+ countermarched upon the camp, killed many of the Indians and Persians in
+ the act of plundering, and forced the rest to ride off again. Just at this
+ crisis, Alexander had been recalled from his pursuit of Darius, by tidings
+ of the distress of Parmenio, and of his inability to bear up any longer
+ against the hot attacks of Mazaeus. Taking his horse-guards with him,
+ Alexander rode towards the part of the field where his left wing was
+ fighting; but on his way thither he encountered the Persian and Indian
+ cavalry, on their return from his camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These men now saw that their only chance of safety was to cut their way
+ through; and in one huge column they charged desperately upon the
+ Macedonians. There was here a close hand-to-hand fight, which lasted some
+ time, and sixty of the royal horse-guards fell, and three generals, who
+ fought close to Alexander's side, were wounded. At length the Macedonian,
+ discipline and valour again prevailed, and a large number of the Persian
+ and Indian horsemen were cut down; some few only succeeded in breaking
+ through and riding away. Relieved of these obstinate enemies, Alexander
+ again formed his horse-guards, and led them towards Parmenio; but by this
+ time that general also was victorious. Probably the news of Darius's
+ flight had reached Mazaeus, and had damped the ardour of the Persian right
+ wing; while the tidings of their comrades' success must have
+ proportionally encouraged the Macedonian forces under Parmenio. His
+ Thessalian cavalry particularly distinguished themselves by their
+ gallantry and persevering good conduct; and by the time that Alexander had
+ ridden up to Parmenio, the whole Persian army was in full flight from the
+ field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was of the deepest importance to Alexander to secure the person of
+ Darius, and he now urged on the pursuit. The river Lycus was between the
+ field of battle and the city of Arbela, whither the fugitives directed
+ their course, and the passage of this river was even more destructive to
+ the Persians than the swords and spears of the Macedonians had been in the
+ engagement. [I purposely omit any statement of the loss in the battle.
+ There is a palpable error of the transcribers in the numbers which we find
+ in our present manuscripts of Arrian; and Curtius is of no authority.] The
+ narrow bridge was soon choked up by the flying thousands who rushed
+ towards it, and vast numbers of the Persians threw themselves, or were
+ hurried by others, into the rapid stream, and perished in its waters.
+ Darius had crossed it, and had ridden on through Arbela without halting.
+ Alexander reached that city on the next day, and made himself master of
+ all Darius's treasure and stores; but the Persian king unfortunately for
+ himself, had fled too fast for his conqueror: he had only escaped to
+ perish by the treachery of his Bactrian satrap, Bessus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days after the battle Alexander entered Babylon, "the oldest seat of
+ earthly empire" then in existence, as its acknowledged lord and master.
+ There were yet some campaigns of his brief and bright career to be
+ accomplished. Central Asia was yet to witness the march of his phalanx. He
+ was yet to effect that conquest of Affghanistan in which England since has
+ failed. His generalship, as well as his valour, were yet to be signalised
+ on the banks of the Hydaspes, and the field of Chillianwallah; and he was
+ yet to precede the Queen of England in annexing the Punjaub to the
+ dominions of an European sovereign. But the crisis of his career was
+ reached; the great object of his mission was accomplished; and the ancient
+ Persian empire, which once menaced all the nations of the earth with
+ subjection, was irreparably crushed, when Alexander had won his crowning
+ victory at Arbela.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF ARBELA AND THE BATTLE OF THE
+ METAURUS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ B.C. 330. The Lacedaemonians endeavour to create a rising in Greece
+ against the Macedonian power; they are defeated by Antipater, Alexander's
+ viceroy; and their king, Agis, falls in the battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 330 to 327. Alexander's campaigns in Upper Asia. "Having conquered Darius,
+ Alexander pursued his way, encountering difficulties which would have
+ appalled almost any other general, through Bactriana, and taking Bactra,
+ or Zariaspa, (now Balkh), the chief city of that province, where he spent
+ the winter. Crossing the Oxus, he advanced in the following spring to
+ Marakanda (Samarcand) to replace the loss of horses which he had sustained
+ in crossing the Caucasus, to obtain supplies from the rich valley of Sogd
+ (the Mahometan Paradise of Mader-al-Nahr), and to enforce the submission
+ of Transoxiana. The northern limit of his march is probably represented by
+ the modern Uskand, or Aderkand, a village on the Iaxartes, near the end of
+ the Ferganah district. In Margiana he founded another Alexandria.
+ Returning from the north, he led on his army in the hope of conquering
+ India, till at length, marching in a line apparently nearly parallel with
+ the Kabul river, he arrived at the celebrated rock Aornos, the position of
+ which must have been on the right bank of the Indus, at some distance from
+ Attock; and it may perhaps be represented by the modern Akora"&mdash;(VAUX.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 327, 326. Alexander marches through, Affghanistan to the Punjaub. He
+ defeats Porus. His troops refuse to march towards the Ganges, and he
+ commences the descent of the Indus. On his march he attacks and subdues
+ several Indian tribes, among others the Malli; in the storming of whose
+ capital (Mooltan), he is severely wounded. He directs his admiral,
+ Nearchus, to sail round from the Indus to the Persian Gulf; and leads the
+ army back across Scinde and Beloochistan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 324. Alexander returns to Babylon. "In the tenth year after he had crossed
+ the Hellespont, Alexander, having won his vast dominion, entered Babylon;
+ and resting from his career in that oldest seat of earthly empire, he
+ steadily surveyed the mass of various nations which owned his sovereignty,
+ and revolved in his mind the great work of breathing into this huge but
+ inert body the living spirit of Greek civilization. In the bloom of
+ youthful manhood, at the age of thirty-two, he paused from the fiery speed
+ of his earlier course; and for the first time gave the nations an
+ opportunity of offering their homage before his throne. They came from all
+ the extremities of the earth to propitiate his anger, to celebrate his
+ greatness, or to solicit his protection.... History may allow us to think
+ that Alexander and a Roman ambassador did meet at Babylon; that the
+ greatest man of the ancient world saw and spoke with a citizen of that
+ great nation, which was destined to succeed him in his appointed work, and
+ to found a wider and still more enduring empire. They met, too, in
+ Babylon, almost beneath the shadow of the temple of Bel, perhaps the
+ earliest monument ever raised by human pride and power, in a city
+ stricken, as it were, by the word of God's heaviest judgment, as the
+ symbol of greatness apart from and opposed to goodness."&mdash;(ARNOLD.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 323. Alexander dies at Babylon. On his death being known at Greece, the
+ Athenians, and others of the southern states, take up arms to shake off
+ the domination of Macedon. They are at first successful; but the return of
+ some of Alexander's veterans from Asia enables Antipater to prevail over
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 317 to 289. Agathocles is tyrant of Syracuse; and carries on repeated wars
+ with the Carthaginians; in the course of which (311) he invades Africa,
+ and reduces the Carthaginians to great distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 306. After a long series of wars with each other, and after all the heirs
+ of Alexander had been murdered, his principal surviving generals assume
+ the title of king, each over the provinces which he has occupied. The four
+ chief among them were Antigonus, Ptolemy, Lysimachus, and Seleucus.
+ Antipater was now dead, but his son Cassander succeeded to his power in
+ Macedonia and Greece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 301. Seleucus and Lysimachus defeat Antigonus at Ipsus. Antigonus is
+ killed in the battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 280. Seleucus, the last of Alexander's captains, is assassinated. Of all
+ Alexander's successors, Seleucus had formed the most powerful empire. He
+ had acquired all the provinces between Phrygia and the Indus. He extended
+ his dominion in India beyond the limits reached by Alexander. Seleucus had
+ some sparks of his great master's genius in promoting civilization and
+ commerce, as well as in gaining victories. Under his successors, the
+ Seleucidae, this vast empire rapidly diminished; Bactria became
+ independent, and a separate dynasty of Greek kings ruled there in the year
+ 125, when it was overthrown by the Scythian tribes. Parthia threw off its
+ allegiance to the Seleucidae in 250 B.C., and the powerful Parthian
+ kingdom, which afterwards proved so formidable a foe to Rome, absorbed
+ nearly all the provinces west of the Euphrates, that had obeyed the first
+ Seleucus. Before the battle of Ipsus, Mithridates, a Persian prince of the
+ blood-royal of the Achaemenidae, had escaped to Pontus, and founded there
+ the kingdom of that name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the kingdom of Seleucus, which, when limited to Syria, Palestine,
+ and parts of Asia Minor, long survived; the most important kingdom formed
+ by a general of Alexander was that of the Ptolemies in Egypt. The throne
+ of Macedonia was long and obstinately contended for by Cassander,
+ Polysperchon, Lysimachus, Pyrrhus, Antigonus, and others; but at last was
+ secured by the dynasty of Antigonus Gonatas. The old republics of southern
+ Greece suffered severely during these tumults, and the only Greek states
+ that showed any strength and spirit were the cities of the Achaean league,
+ the AEtolians, and the islanders of Rhodes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 290. Rome had now thoroughly subdued the Samnites and the Etruscans, and
+ had gained numerous victories over the Cisalpine Gauls. Wishing to confirm
+ her dominion in Lower Italy, she became entangled in a war with Pyrrhus,
+ fourth king of Epirus, who was called over by the Tarentines to aid them.
+ Pyrrhus was at first victorious, but in the year 275 was defeated by the
+ Roman legions in a pitched battle. He returned to Greece, remarking, "Rome
+ becomes mistress of all Italy from the Rubicon to the Straits of Messina."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 264. The first Punic war begins. Its primary cause was the desire of both
+ the Romans and the Carthaginians to possess themselves of Sicily. The
+ Romans form a fleet, and successfully compete with the marine of Carthage.
+ [There is at this present moment [written in June, 1851] in the Great
+ Exhibition at Hyde Park a model of a piratical galley of Labuan, part of
+ the mast of which can be let down on an enemy, and form a bridge for
+ boarders. It is worth while to compare this with the account in Polybius
+ of the boarding bridges which the Roman admiral Dullius, affixed to the
+ masts of his galleys and by means of which he won his great victory over
+ the Carthaginian fleet.] During the latter half of the war, the military
+ genius of Hamilcar Barca sustains the Carthaginian cause in Sicily. At the
+ end of twenty-four years, the Carthaginians sue for peace, though their
+ aggregate loss in ships and men had been less than that sustained by the
+ Romans since the beginning of the war. Sicily becomes a Roman province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 240 to 218. The Carthaginian mercenaries who had been brought back from
+ Sicily to Africa, mutiny against Carthage, and nearly succeed in
+ destroying her. After a sanguinary and desperate struggle, Hamilcar Barca
+ crushes them. During this season of weakness to Carthage, Rome takes from
+ her the island of Sardinia. Hamilcar Barca forms the project of obtaining
+ compensation by conquests in Spain, and thus enabling Carthage to renew
+ the struggle with Rome. He takes Hannibal (then a child) to Spain with
+ him. He and, after his death, his brother, win great part of southern
+ Spain to the Carthaginian interest. Hannibal obtains the command of the
+ Carthaginian armies in Spain, 221 B.C., being then twenty-six years old.
+ He attacks Saguntum, a city on the Ebro in alliance with Rome, which is
+ the immediate pretext for the second Punic war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this interval Rome had to sustain a storm from the north. The
+ Cisalpine Gauls, in 226, formed an alliance with one of the fiercest
+ tribes of their brethren north of the Alps, and began a furious war
+ against the Romans, which lasted six years. The Romans gave them several
+ severe defeats, and took from them part of their territories near the Po.
+ It was on this occasion that the Roman colonies of Cremona and Placentia
+ were founded, the latter of which did such essential service to Rome in
+ the second Punic war, by the resistance which it made to the army of
+ Hasdrubal. A muster-roll was made in this war of the effective military
+ force of the Romans themselves, and of those Italian states that were
+ subject to them. The return showed a force of seven hundred thousand foot,
+ and seventy thousand horse. Polybius mentions this muster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 228. Hannibal crosses the Alps and invades Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS, B.C. 207.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Quid debeas, O Roma, Neronibus,
+ Testis Metaurum flumen, et Hasdrubal
+ Devictus, et pulcher fugatis
+ Ille dies Latio tenebris,
+
+ Qui primus alma risit adorea;
+ Dirus per urbes Afer ut Italas,
+ Ceu flamma per taedas, vel Eurus
+ Per Siculas equitavit undas.&mdash;HORATIUS, iv. Od. 4.
+
+ "... The consul Nero, who made the unequalled march which
+ deceived Hannibal, and defeated Hasdrubal, thereby accomplishing
+ an achievement almost unrivalled in military annals. The first
+ intelligence of his return, to Hannibal, was the sight of
+ Hasdrubal's head thrown into his camp. When Hannibal saw this,
+ he exclaimed with a sigh, that 'Rome would now be the mistress of
+ the world.' To this victory of Nero's it might be owing that his
+ imperial namesake reigned at all. But the infamy of the one has
+ eclipsed the glory of the other. When the name of Nero is heard,
+ who thinks of the consul! But such are human things."&mdash;BYRON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ About midway between Rimini and Ancona a little river falls into the
+ Adriatic, after traversing one of those districts of Italy, in which a
+ vain attempt has lately been made to revive, after long centuries of
+ servitude and shame, the spirit of Italian nationality, and the energy of
+ free institutions. That stream is still called the Metauro; and wakens by
+ its name recollections of the resolute daring of ancient Rome, and of the
+ slaughter that stained its current two thousand and sixty-three years ago,
+ when the combined consular armies of Livius and Nero encountered and
+ crushed near its banks the varied hosts which Hannibal's brother was
+ leading from the Pyrenees, the Rhone, the Alps, and the Po, to aid the
+ great Carthaginian in his stern struggle to annihilate the growing might
+ of the Roman Republic, and make the Punic power supreme over all the
+ nations of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Roman historian, who termed that struggle the most memorable of all
+ wars that ever were carried on, [Livy, Lib. xxi. sec. 1.] wrote-in no
+ spirit of exaggeration. For it is not in ancient but in modern history,
+ that parallels for its incidents and its heroes are to be found. The
+ similitude between the contest which Rome maintained against Hannibal, and
+ that which England was for many years engaged in against Napoleon, has not
+ passed unobserved by recent historians. "Twice," says Arnold, [Vol. iii,
+ p. 62. See also Alison&mdash;PASSIM.] "has there been witnessed the
+ struggle of the highest individual genius against the resources and
+ institutions of a great nation; and in both cases the nation has been
+ victorious. For seventeen years Hannibal strove against Rome; for sixteen
+ years Napoleon Bonaparte strove against England; the efforts of the first
+ ended in Zama, those of the second in Waterloo." One point, however, of
+ the similitude between the two wars has scarcely been adequately dwelt on.
+ That is, the remarkable parallel between the Roman general who finally
+ defeated the great Carthaginian, and the English general who gave the last
+ deadly overthrow to the French emperor. Scipio and Wellington both held
+ for many years commands of high importance, but distant from the main
+ theatres of warfare. The same country was the scene of the principal
+ military career of each. It was in Spain that Scipio, like Wellington,
+ successively encountered and overthrew nearly all the subordinate generals
+ of the enemy, before being opposed to the chief champion and conqueror
+ himself. Both Scipio and Wellington restored their countrymen's confidence
+ in arms, when shaken by a series of reverses. And each of them closed a
+ long and perilous war by a complete and overwhelming defeat of the chosen
+ leader and the chosen veterans of the foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor is the parallel between them limited to their military characters and
+ exploits. Scipio, like Wellington, became an important leader of the
+ aristocratic party among his countrymen, and was exposed to the unmeasured
+ invectives of the violent section of his political antagonists. When,
+ early in the last reign, an infuriated mob assaulted the Duke of
+ Wellington in the streets of the English capital on the anniversary of
+ Waterloo, England was even more disgraced by that outrage, than Rome was
+ by the factious accusations which demagogues brought against Scipio, but
+ which he proudly repelled on the day of trial, by reminding the assembled
+ people that it was the anniversary of the battle of Zama. Happily, a wiser
+ and a better spirit has now for years pervaded all classes of our
+ community; and we shall be spared the ignominy of having worked out to the
+ end the parallel of national iugratitude. Scipio died a voluntary exile
+ from the malevolent turbulence of Rome. Englishmen of all ranks and
+ politics have now long united in affectionate admiration of our modern
+ Scipio: and even those who have most widely differed from the Duke on
+ legislative or administrative questions, forget what they deem the
+ political errors of that time-honoured head, while they gratefully call to
+ mind the laurels that have wreathed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scipio at Zama trampled in the dust the power of Carthage; but that power
+ had been already irreparably shattered in another field, where neither
+ Scipio nor Hannibal commanded. When the Metaurus witnessed the defeat and
+ death of Hasdrubal, it witnessed the ruin of the scheme by which alone
+ Carthage could hope to organise decisive success,&mdash;the scheme of
+ enveloping Rome at once from the north and the south of Italy by chosen
+ armies, led by two sons of Hamilcar. [See Arnold, vol. iii, p. 387.] That
+ battle was the determining crisis of the contest, not merely between Rome
+ and Carthage, but between the two great families of the world, which then
+ made Italy the arena of their oft-renewed contest for pre-eminence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French historian Michelet whose "Histoire Romaine" would have been
+ invaluable, if the general industry and accuracy of the writer had in any
+ degree equalled his originality and brilliancy, eloquently remarks: "It is
+ not without reason that so universal and vivid a remembrance of the Punic
+ wars has dwelt in the memories of men. They formed no mere struggle to
+ determine the lot of two cities or two empires; but it was a strife on the
+ event of which depended the fate of two races of mankind, whether the
+ dominion of the world should belong to the Indo-Germanic or to the Semitic
+ family of nations. Bear in mind, that the first of these comprises,
+ besides the Indians and the Persians, the Greeks, the Romans, and the
+ Germans. In the other are ranked the Jews and the Arabs, the Phoenicians
+ and the Carthaginians. On the one side is the genius of heroism, of art,
+ and legislation: on the other is the spirit of industry, of commerce, of
+ navigation. The two opposite races have everywhere come into contact,
+ everywhere into hostility. In the primitive history of Persia and Chaldea,
+ the heroes are perpetually engaged in combat with their industrious and
+ perfidious, neighbours. The struggle is renewed between the Phoenicians
+ and the Greeks on every coast of the Mediterranean. The Greek supplants
+ the Phoenician in all his factories, all his colonies in the east: soon
+ will the Roman come, and do likewise in the west. Alexander did far more
+ against Tyre than Salmanasar or Nabuchodonosor had done. Not content with
+ crushing her, he took care that she never should revive: for he founded
+ Alexandria as her substitute, and changed for ever the track of commerce
+ of the world. There remained Carthage&mdash;the great Carthage, and her
+ mighty empire,&mdash;mighty in a far different degree than Phoenicia's had
+ been. Rome annihilated it. Then occurred that which has no parallel in
+ history,&mdash;an entire civilisation perished at one blow&mdash;vanished,
+ like a falling star. The 'Periplus' of Hanno, a few coins, a score of
+ lines in Plautus, and, lo, all that remains of the Carthaginian world!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Many generations must needs pass away before the struggle between the two
+ races could be renewed; and the Arabs, that formidable rear-guard of the
+ Semitic world, dashed forth from their deserts. The conflict between the
+ two races then became the conflict of two religions. Fortunate was it that
+ those daring Saracenic cavaliers encountered in the East the impregnable
+ walls of Constantinople, in the West the chivalrous valour of Charles
+ Martel and the sword of the Cid. The crusades were the natural reprisals
+ for the Arab invasions, and form the last epoch of that great struggle
+ between the two principal families of the human race."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult amid the glimmering light supplied by the allusions of the
+ classical writers to gain a full idea of the character and institutions of
+ Rome's great rival. But we can perceive how inferior Carthage was to her
+ competitor in military resources; and how far less fitted than Rome she
+ was to become the founder of centralized and centralizing dominion, that
+ should endure for centuries, and fuse into imperial unity the narrow
+ nationalities of the ancient races that dwelt around and near the shores
+ of the Mediterranean Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carthage was originally neither the most ancient nor the most powerful of
+ the numerous colonies which the Phoenicians planted on the coast of
+ Northern Africa. But her advantageous position, the excellence of her
+ constitution (of which, though ill-informed as to its details, we know
+ that it commanded the admiration of Aristotle), and the commercial and
+ political energy of her citizens, gave her the ascendancy over Hippo,
+ Utica, Leptis, and her other sister Phoenician cities in those regions;
+ and she finally seduced them to a condition of dependency, similar to that
+ which the subject allies of Athens occupied relatively to that once
+ imperial city. When Tyre and Sidon and the other cities of Phoenicia
+ itself sank from independent republics into mere vassal states of the
+ great Asiatic monarchies and obeyed by turns a Babylonian, a Persian, and
+ a Macedonian master, their power and their traffic rapidly declined; and
+ Carthage succeeded to the important maritime and commercial character
+ which they had previously maintained. The Carthaginians did not seek to
+ compete with the Greeks on the north-eastern shores of the Mediterranean,
+ or in the three inland seas which are connected with it; but they
+ maintained an active intercourse with the Phoenicians, and through them
+ with lower and Central Asia; and they, and they alone, after the decline
+ and fall of Tyre, navigated the waters of the Atlantic. They had the
+ monopoly of all the commerce of the world that was carried on beyond the
+ Straits of Gibraltar. We have yet extant (in a Greek translation) the
+ narrative of the voyage of Hanno, one of their admirals, along the western
+ coast of Africa as far as Sierra Leone. And in the Latin poem of Festus
+ Avienus, frequent references are made to the records of the voyages of
+ another celebrated Carthaginian admiral, Himilco, who had explored the
+ north-western coast of Europe. Our own islands are mentioned by Himilco as
+ the lands of the Hiberni and the Albioni. It is indeed certain that the
+ Carthaginians frequented the Cornish coast (as the Phoenicians had done
+ before them) for the purpose of procuring tin; and there is every reason
+ to believe that they sailed as far as the coasts of the Baltic for amber.
+ When it is remembered that the mariner's compass was unknown in those
+ ages, the boldness and skill of the seamen of Carthage, and the enterprise
+ of her merchants, may be paralleled with any achievements that the history
+ of modern navigation and commerce can supply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In their Atlantic voyages along the African shores, the Carthaginians
+ followed the double object of trade and colonization. The numerous
+ settlements that were planted by them along the coast from Morocco to
+ Senegal, provided for the needy members of the constantly-increasing
+ population of a great commercial capital; and also strengthened the
+ influence which Carthage exercised among the tribes of the African coast.
+ Besides her fleets, her caravans gave her a large and lucrative trade with
+ the native Africans; nor must we limit our belief of the extent of the
+ Carthaginian trade with the tribes of Central and Western Africa, by the
+ narrowness of the commercial intercourse which civilized nations of modern
+ times have been able to create in those regions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although essentially a mercantile and seafaring people, the Carthaginians
+ by no means neglected agriculture. On the contrary, the whole of their
+ territory was cultivated like a garden. The fertility of the soil repaid
+ the skill and toil bestowed on it; and every invader, from Agathocles to
+ Scipio AEmilianus, was struck with admiration at the rich pasture-lands
+ carefully irrigated, the abundant harvests, the luxuriant vineyards, the
+ plantations of fig and olive-trees, the thriving villages, the populous
+ towns, and the splendid villas of the wealthy Carthaginians, through which
+ his march lay, as long as he was on Carthaginian ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Carthaginians abandoned the Aegean and the Pontus to the Greeks, but
+ they were by no means disposed to relinquish to those rivals the commerce
+ and the dominion of the coasts of the Mediterranean westward of Italy. For
+ centuries the Carthaginians strove to make themselves masters of the
+ islands that lie between Italy and Spain. They acquired the Balearic
+ islands, where the principal harbour, Port Mahon, still bears the name of
+ the Carthaginian admiral. They succeeded in reducing the greater part of
+ Sardinia; but Sicily could never be brought into their power. They
+ repeatedly invaded that island, and nearly overran it; but the resistance
+ which was opposed to them by the Syracusans under Gelon, Dionysius,
+ Timoleon, and Agathocles, preserved the island from becoming Punic, though
+ many of its cities remained under the Carthaginian rule, until Rome
+ finally settled the question to whom Sicily was to belong, by conquering
+ it for herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With so many elements of success, with almost unbounded wealth with
+ commercial and maritime activity, with a fertile territory, with a capital
+ city of almost impregnable strength, with a constitution that ensured for
+ centuries the blessings of, social order, with an aristocracy singularly
+ fertile in men of the highest genius, Carthage yet failed signally and
+ calamitously in her contest for power with Rome. One of the immediate
+ causes of this may seem to have been the want, of firmness among her
+ citizens, which made them terminate the first Punic war by begging peace,
+ sooner than endure any longer the hardships and burdens caused by a state
+ of warfare, although their antagonists had suffered far more severely than
+ themselves. Another cause was the spirit of faction among their leading
+ men, which prevented Hannibal in the second war from being properly
+ reinforced and supported. But there were also more general causes why
+ Carthage proved inferior to Rome. These were her position relatively to
+ the mass of the inhabitants of the country which she ruled, and her habit
+ of trusting to mercenary armies in her wars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our clearest information as to the different races of men in and about
+ Carthage is derived from Diodorus Siculus. [Vol. ii. p. 447, Wesseling's
+ ed.] That historian enumerates four different races: first, he mentions
+ the Phoenicians who dwelt in Carthage: next, he speaks of the
+ Liby-Phoenicians; these, he tells us, dwelt in many of the maritime
+ cities, and were connected by intermarriages with the Phoenicians, which
+ was the cause of their compound name: thirdly, he mentions the Libyans,
+ the bulk and the most ancient part of the population, hating the
+ Carthaginians intensely, on account of the oppressiveness of their
+ domination: lastly, he names the Numidians, the nomad tribes of the
+ frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is evident, from this description, that the native Libyans were a
+ subject class, without franchise or political rights; and, accordingly, we
+ find no instance specified in history of a Libyan holding political office
+ or military command. The half-castes, the Liby-Phoenicians, seem to have
+ been sometimes sent out as colonists; [See the "Periplus" of Hanno.] but
+ it may be inferred, from what Diodorus says of their residence, that they
+ had not the right of the citizenship of Carthage: and only a solitary case
+ occurs of one of this race being entrusted with authority, and that, too,
+ not emanating from the home government. This is the instance of the
+ officer sent by Hannibal to Sicily, after the fall of Syracuse; whom
+ Polybius [Lib. ix. 22.] calls Myttinus the Libyan, but whom, from the
+ fuller account in Livy, we find to have been a Liby-Phoenician [Lib. xxv.
+ 40.] and it is expressly mentioned what indignation was felt by the
+ Carthaginian commanders in the island that this half-caste should control
+ their operations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the composition of their armies, it is observable that,
+ though thirsting for extended empire, and though some of the leading men
+ became generals of the highest order, the Carthaginians, as a people, were
+ anything but personally warlike. As long as they could hire mercenaries to
+ fight for them, they had little appetite for the irksome training, and
+ they grudged the loss of valuable time, which military service would have
+ entailed on themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Michelet remarks, "The life of an industrious merchant, of a
+ Carthaginian, was too precious to be risked, as long as it was possible to
+ substitute advantageously for it that of a barbarian from Spain or Gaul.
+ Carthage knew, and could tell to a drachma, what the life of a man of each
+ nation came to. A Greek was worth more than a Campanian, a Campanian worth
+ more than a Gaul or a Spaniard. When once this tariff of blood was
+ correctly made out, Carthage began a war as a mercantile speculation. She
+ tried to make conquests in the hope of getting new mines to work, or to
+ open fresh markets for her exports. In one venture she could afford to
+ spend fifty thousand mercenaries, in another, rather more. If the returns
+ were good, there was no regret felt for the capital that had been lavished
+ in the investment; more money got more men, and all went on well."
+ [Histoire Romaine, vol. ii. p. 40.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Armies composed of foreign mercenaries have, in all ages, been as
+ formidable to their employers as to the enemy against whom they were
+ directed. We know of one occasion (between the first and second Punic
+ wars) when Carthage was brought to the very brink of destruction by a
+ revolt of her foreign troops. Other mutinies of the same kind must from
+ time to time have occurred. Probably one of these was the cause of the
+ comparative weakness of Carthage at the time of the Athenian expedition
+ against Syracuse; so different from the energy with which she attacked
+ Gelon half a century earlier, and Dionysius half a century later. And even
+ when we consider her armies with reference only to their efficiency in
+ warfare, we perceive at once the inferiority of such bands of condottieri,
+ brought together without any common bond of origin, tactics, or cause, to
+ the legions of Rome, which at the time of the Punic wars were raised from
+ the very flower of a hardy agricultural population trained in the
+ strictest discipline, habituated to victory, and animated by the most
+ resolute patriotism. And this shows also the transcendency of the genius
+ of Hannibal, which could form such discordant materials into a compact
+ organized force, and inspire them with the spirit of patient discipline
+ and loyalty to their chief; so that they were true to him in his adverse
+ as well as in his prosperous fortunes; and throughout the chequered series
+ of his campaigns no panic rout ever disgraced a division under his
+ command; no mutiny, or even attempt at mutiny, was ever known in his camp;
+ and, finally, after fifteen years of Italian warfare, his men followed
+ their old leader to Zama, "with no fear and little hope;" ["We advanced to
+ Waterloo as the Greeks did to Thermopylae; all of us without fear and most
+ of us without hope."&mdash;SPEECH OF GENERAL FOY.] and there, on that
+ disastrous field, stood firm around him, his Old Guard, till Scipio's
+ Numidian allies came up on their flank; when at last, surrounded and
+ overpowered, the veteran battalions sealed their devotion to their general
+ with their blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But if Hannibal's genius may be likened to the Homeric god, who, in his
+ hatred to the Trojans, rises from the deep to rally the fainting Greeks,
+ and to lead them against the enemy, so the calm courage with which Hector
+ met his more than human adversary in his country's cause, is no unworthy
+ image of the unyielding magnanimity displayed by the aristocracy of Rome.
+ As Hannibal utterly eclipses Carthage, so, on the contrary, Fabius,
+ Marcellus, Claudius Nero, even Scipio himself, are as nothing when
+ compared to the spirit, and wisdom, and power of Rome. The senate, which
+ voted its thanks to its political enemy, Varro, after his disastrous
+ defeat, 'because he had not despaired of the commonwealth,' and which
+ disdained either to solicit, or to reprove, or to threaten, or in any way
+ to notice the twelve colonies which had refused their customary supplies
+ of men for the army, is far more to be honoured than the conqueror of
+ Zama. This we should the more carefully bear in mind because our tendency
+ is to admire individual greatness far more than national; and, as no
+ single Roman will bear comparison to Hannibal, we are apt to murmur at the
+ event of the contest, and to think that the victory was awarded to the
+ least worthy of the combatants. On the contrary, never was the wisdom of
+ God's Providence more manifest than in the issue of the struggle between
+ Rome and Carthage. It was clearly for the good of man kind that Hannibal
+ should be conquered: his triumph would have stopped the progress of the
+ world. For great men can only act permanently by forming great nations;
+ and no one man, even though it were Hannibal himself, can in one
+ generation effect such a work. But where the nation has been merely
+ enkindled for a while by a great man's spirit, the light passes away with
+ him who communicated it; and the nation, when he is gone, is like a dead
+ body, to which magic power had, for a moment, given unnatural life: when
+ the charm has ceased, the body is cold and stiff as before. He who grieves
+ over the battle of Zama should carry on his thoughts to a period thirty
+ years later, when Hannibal must, in the course of nature, have been dead,
+ and consider how the isolated Phoenician city of Carthage was fitted to
+ receive and to consolidate the civilization of Greece, or by its laws and
+ institutions to bind together barbarians of every race and language into
+ an organized empire, and prepare them for becoming, when that empire was
+ dissolved, the free members of the commonwealth of Christian Europe."
+ [Arnold, vol. iii. p. 61. The above is one of the numerous bursts of
+ eloquence that adorn Arnold's third volume, and cause such deep regret
+ that that volume should have been the last, and its great and good author
+ have been cut off with his work thus incomplete.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the spring of 207 B.C. that Hasdrubal, after skilfully
+ disentangling himself from the Roman forces in Spain, and, after a march
+ conducted with great judgment and little loss, through the interior of
+ Gaul and the passes of the Alps, appeared in the country that now is the
+ north of Lombardy, at the head of troops which he had partly brought out
+ of Spain, and partly levied among the Gauls and Ligurians on his way. At
+ this time Hannibal with his unconquered, and seemingly unconquerable army,
+ had been eleven years in Italy, executing with strenuous ferocity the vow
+ of hatred to Rome which had been sworn by him while yet a child at the
+ bidding of his father, Hamilcar; who, as he boasted, had trained up his
+ three sons, Hannibal, Hasdrubal, and Mago, Like three lion's whelps, to
+ prey upon the Romans. But Hannibal's latter campaigns had not been
+ signalised by any such great victories as marked the first years of his
+ invasion of Italy. The stern spirit of Roman resolution, ever highest in
+ disaster and danger, had neither bent nor despaired beneath the merciless
+ blows which "the dire African" dealt her in rapid succession at Trebia, at
+ Thrasymene, and at Cannae. Her population was thinned by repeated
+ slaughter in the field; poverty and actual scarcity wore down the
+ survivors, through the fearful ravages which Hannibal's cavalry spread
+ through their corn-fields, their pasture-lands, and their vineyards; many
+ of her allies went over to the invader's side; and new clouds of foreign
+ war threatened her from Macedonia and Gaul. But Rome receded not. Rich and
+ poor among her citizens vied with each other in devotion to their country.
+ The wealthy placed their stores, and all placed their lives at the state's
+ disposal. And though Hannibal could not be driven out of Italy, though
+ every year brought its sufferings and sacrifices, Rome felt that her
+ constancy had not been exerted in vain. If she was weakened by the
+ continual strife, so was Hannibal also; and it was clear that the unaided
+ resources of his army were unequal to the task of her destruction. The
+ single deer-hound could not pull down the quarry which he had so furiously
+ assailed. Rome not only stood fiercely at bay, but had pressed back and
+ gored her antagonist, that still, however, watched her in act to spring.
+ She was weary, and bleeding at every pore; and there seemed to be little
+ hope of her escape, if the other hound of old Hamilcar's race should come
+ up in time to aid his brother in the death-grapple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hasdrubal had commanded the Carthaginian armies in Spain for some time,
+ with varying but generally unpropitious fortune. He had not the full
+ authority over the Punic forces in that country which his brother and his
+ father had previously exercised. The faction at Carthage, which was at
+ feud with his family, succeeded in fettering and interfering with his
+ power; and other generals were from time to time sent into Spain, whose
+ errors and misconduct caused the reverses that Hasdrubal met with. This is
+ expressly attested by the Greek historian Polybius, who was the intimate
+ friend of the younger Africanus, and drew his information respecting the
+ second Punic war from the best possible authorities. Livy gives a long
+ narrative of campaigns between the Roman commanders in Spain and
+ Hasdrubal, which is so palpably deformed by fictions and exaggerations as
+ to be hardly deserving of attention. [See the excellent criticisms of Sir
+ Walter Raleigh on this, in his "History of the World," book v. chap. iii.
+ sec. 11.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is clear that in the year 208 B.C., at least, Hasdrubal outmanoeuvred
+ Publius Scipio, who held the command of the Roman forces in Spain; and
+ whose object was to prevent him from passing the Pyrenees and marching
+ upon Italy. Scipio expected that Hasdrubal would attempt the nearest
+ route, along the coast of the Mediterranean; and he therefore carefully
+ fortified and guarded the passes of the eastern Pyrenees. But Hasdrubal
+ passed these mountains near their western extremity; and then, with a
+ considerable force of Spanish infantry, with a small number of African
+ troops, with some elephants and much treasure, he marched, not directly
+ towards the coast of the Mediterranean, but in a north-eastern line
+ towards the centre of Gaul. He halted for the winter in the territory of
+ the Arverni, the modern Auvergne; and conciliated or purchased the
+ good-will of the Gauls in that region so far, that he not only found
+ friendly winter quarters among them, but great numbers of them enlisted
+ under him, and on the approach of spring marched with him to invade Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By thus entering Gaul at the south-west, and avoiding its southern
+ maritime districts, Hasdrubal kept the Romans in complete ignorance of his
+ precise operations and movements in that country; all that they knew was
+ that Hasdrubal had baffled Scipio's attempts to detain him in Spain; that
+ he had crossed the Pyrenees with soldiers, elephants, and money, and that
+ he was raising fresh forces among the Gauls. The spring was sure to bring
+ him into Italy; and then would come the real tempest of the war, when from
+ the north and from the south the two Carthaginian armies, each under a son
+ of the Thunderbolt, were to gather together around the seven hills of
+ Rome. [Hamilcar was surnamed Barca, which means the Thunderbolt. Sultan
+ Bajazet had the similar surname of Yilderim.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this emergency the Romans looked among themselves earnestly and
+ anxiously for leaders fit to meet the perils of the coming campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The senate recommended the people to elect, as one of their consuls, Caius
+ Claudius Nero, a patrician of one of the families of the great Claudian
+ house. Nero had served during the preceding years of the war, both against
+ Hannibal in Italy, and against Hasdrubal in Spain; but it is remarkable
+ that the histories, which we possess, record no successes as having been
+ achieved by him either before or after his great campaign of the Metaurus.
+ It proves much for the sagacity of the leading men of the senate, that
+ they recognised in Nero the energy and spirit which were required at this
+ crisis, and it is equally creditable to the patriotism of the people, that
+ they followed the advice of the senate by electing a general who had no
+ showy exploits to recommend him to their choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a matter of greater difficulty to find a second consul; the laws
+ required that one consul should be a plebeian; and the plebeian nobility
+ had been fearfully thinned by the events of the war. While the senators
+ anxiously deliberated among themselves what fit colleague for Nero could
+ be nominated at the coming comitia, and sorrowfully recalled the names of
+ Marcellus, Gracchus, and other plebeian generals who were no more&mdash;one
+ taciturn and moody old man sat in sullen apathy among the conscript
+ fathers. This was Marcus Livius, who had been consul in the gear before
+ the beginning of this war, and had then gained a victory over the
+ Illyrians. After his consulship he had been impeached before the people on
+ a charge of peculation and unfair division of the spoils among his
+ soldiers: the verdict was unjustly given against him, and the sense of
+ this wrong, and of the indignity thus put upon him, had rankled
+ unceasingly in the bosom of Livius, so that for eight years after his
+ trial he had lived in seclusion at his country seat, taking no part in any
+ affairs of state. Latterly the censors had compelled him to come to Rome
+ and resume his place in the senate, where he used to sit gloomily apart,
+ giving only a silent vote. At last an unjust accusation against one of his
+ near kinsmen made him break silence; and he harangued the house in words
+ of weight and sense, which drew attention to him, and taught the senators
+ that a strong spirit dwelt beneath that unimposing exterior. Now, while
+ they were debating on what noble of a plebeian house was fit to assume the
+ perilous honours of the consulate, some of the elder of them looked on
+ Marcus Livius, and remembered that in the very last triumph which had been
+ celebrated in the streets of Rome this grim old man had sat in the car of
+ victory; and that he had offered the last grand thanksgiving sacrifice for
+ the success of the Roman arms that had bled before Capitoline Jove. There
+ had been no triumphs since Hannibal came into Italy. [Marcellus had been
+ only allowed an ovation for the conquest of Syracuse.] The Illyrian
+ campaign of Livius was the last that had been so honoured; perhaps it
+ might be destined for him now to renew the long-interrupted series. The
+ senators resolved that Livius should be put in nomination as consul with
+ Nero; the people were willing to elect him; the only opposition came from
+ himself. He taunted them with their inconsistency is honouring a man they
+ had convicted of a base crime. "If I am innocent," said he, "why did you
+ place such a stain on me? If I am guilty, why am I more fit for a second
+ consulship than I was for my first one?" The other senators remonstrated
+ with him urging the example of the great Camillus, who, after an unjust
+ condemnation on a similar charge, both served and saved his country. At
+ last Livius ceased to object; and Caius Claudius Nero and Marcus Livius
+ were chosen consuls of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A quarrel had long existed between the two consuls, and the senators
+ strove to effect a reconciliation between them before the campaign. Here
+ again Livius for a long time obstinately resisted the wish of his
+ fellow-senators. He said it was best for the state that he and Nero should
+ continue to hate one another. Each would do his duty better, when he knew
+ that he was watched by an enemy in the person of his own colleague. At
+ last the entreaties of the senators prevailed, and Livius consented to
+ forego the feud, and to co-operate with Nero in preparing for the coming
+ struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the winter snows were thawed, Hasdrubal commenced his march
+ from Auvergne to the Alps. He experienced none of the difficulties which
+ his brother had met with from the mountain tribes. Hannibal's army had
+ been the first body of regular troops that had ever traversed the regions;
+ and, as wild animals assail a traveller, the natives rose against it
+ instinctively, in imagined defence of their own habitations, which they
+ supposed to be the objects of Carthaginian ambition. But the fame of the
+ war, with which Italy had now been convulsed for eleven years, had
+ penetrated into the Alpine passes; and the mountaineers understood that a
+ mighty city, southward of the Alps, was to be attacked by the troops whom
+ they saw marching among them. They not only opposed no resistance to the
+ passage of Hasdrubal, but many of them, out of the love of enterprise and
+ plunder, or allured by the high pay that he offered, took service with
+ him; and thus he advanced upon Italy with an army that gathered strength
+ at every league. It is said, also, that some of the most important
+ engineering works which Hannibal had constructed, were found by Hasdrubal
+ still in existence, and materially favoured the speed of his advance. He
+ thus emerged into Italy from the Alpine valleys much sooner than had been
+ anticipated. Many warriors of the Ligurian tribes joined him; and,
+ crossing the river Po, he marched down its southern bank to the city of
+ Placentia, which he wished to secure as a base for his future operations.
+ Placentia resisted him as bravely as it had resisted Hannibal eleven years
+ before; and for some time Hasdrubal was occupied with a fruitless siege
+ before its walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six armies were levied for the defence of Italy when the long-dreaded
+ approach of Hasdrubal was announced. Seventy thousand Romans served in the
+ fifteen legions of which, with an equal number of Italian allies, those
+ armies and the garrisons were composed. Upwards of thirty thousand more
+ Romans were serving in Sicily, Sardinia, and Spain. The whole number of
+ Roman citizens of an age fit for military duty scarcely exceeded a hundred
+ and thirty thousand. The census taken before the war had shown a total of
+ two hundred and seventy thousand, which had been diminished by more than
+ half during twelve years. These numbers are fearfully emphatic of the
+ extremity to which Rome was reduced, and of her gigantic efforts in that
+ great agony of her fate. Not merely men, but money and military stores,
+ were drained to the utmost; and if the armies of that year should be swept
+ off by a repetition of the slaughters of Thrasymene and Cannae, all felt
+ that Rome would cease to exist. Even if the campaign were to be marked by
+ no decisive success on either side, her ruin seemed certain. In South
+ Italy Hannibal had either detached Rome's allies from her, or had
+ impoverished them by the ravages of his army. If Hasdrubal could have done
+ the same in Upper Italy; if Etruria, Umbria, and Northern Latium had
+ either revolted or been laid waste, Rome must have sunk beneath sheer
+ starvation; for the hostile or desolated territory would have yielded no
+ supplies of corn for her population; and money, to purchase it from
+ abroad, there was none. Instant victory was a matter of life and death.
+ Three of her six armies were ordered to the north, but the first of these
+ was required to overawe the disaffected Etruscans. The second army of the
+ north was pushed forward, under Porcius, the praetor, to meet and keep in,
+ check the advanced troops of Hasdrubal; while the third, the grand army of
+ the north, which was to be under the immediate command of the consul
+ Livius, who had the chief command in all North Italy, advanced more slowly
+ in its support. There were similarly three armies in the south, under the
+ orders of the other consul Claudius Nero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lot had decided that Livius was to be opposed to Hasdrubal, and that
+ Nero should face Hannibal. And "when all was ordered as themselves thought
+ best, the two consuls went forth of the city; each his several way. The
+ people of Rome were now quite otherwise affected, than they had been, when
+ L. AEmilius Paulus and C. Tarentius Varro were sent against Hannibal. They
+ did no longer take upon them to direct their generals, or bid them
+ dispatch, and win the victory betimes; but rather they stood in fear, lest
+ all diligence, wisdom, and valour should prove too little. For since, few
+ years had passed, wherein some one of their generals had not been slain;
+ and since it was manifest, that if either of these present consuls were
+ defeated, or put to the worst, the two Carthaginians would forthwith join,
+ and make short work with the other: it seemed a greater happiness than
+ could be expected, that each of them should return home victor; and come
+ off with honour from such mighty opposition as he was like to find. With
+ extreme difficulty had Rome held up her head ever since the battle of
+ Cannae; though it were so, that Hannibal alone, with little help from
+ Carthage, had continued the war in Italy. But there was now arrived
+ another son of Amilcar; and one that, in his present expedition, had
+ seemed a man of more sufficiency than Hannibal himself. For, whereas in
+ that long and dangerous march through barbarous nations, over great rivers
+ and mountains, that were thought unpassable, Hannibal had lost a great
+ part of his army; this Asdrubal, in the same places, had multiplied his
+ numbers; and gathering the people that he found in the way, descended from
+ the Alps like a rolling snow-ball, far greater than he came over the
+ Pyrenees at his first setting out of Spain. These considerations, and the
+ like, of which fear presented many unto them, caused the people of Rome to
+ wait upon their consuls out of the town, like a pensive train of mourners;
+ thinking upon Marcellus and Crispinus, upon whom, in the like sort, they
+ had given attendance the last year, but saw neither of them return alive
+ from a less dangerous war. Particularly old Q. Fabius gave his accustomed
+ advice to M. Livius, that he should abstain from giving or taking battle,
+ until he well understood the enemies' condition. But the consul made him a
+ froward answer, and said, that he would fight the very first day, for that
+ he thought it long till he should either recover his honour by victory,
+ or, by seeing the overthrow of his own unjust citizens, satisfy himself
+ with the joy of a great, though not an honest revenge. But his meaning was
+ better than his words." [Sir Walter Raleigh.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hannibal at this period occupied with his veteran but much reduced forces
+ the extreme south of Italy. It had not been expected either by friend or
+ foe, that Hasdrubal would effect his passage of the Alps so early in the
+ year as actually occurred. And even when Hannibal learned that his brother
+ was in Italy, and had advanced as far as Placentia, he was obliged to
+ pause for further intelligence, before he himself commenced active
+ operations, as he could not tell whether his brother might not be invited
+ into Etruria, to aid the party there that was disaffected to Rome or
+ whether he would march down by the Adriatic Sea. Hannibal led his troops
+ out of their winter quarters in Bruttium, and marched northward as far as
+ Canusium. Nero had his head-quarters near Venusia, with an army which he
+ had increased to forty thousand foot and two thousand five hundred horse,
+ by incorporating under his own command some of the legions which had been
+ intended to set under other generals in the south. There was another Roman
+ army twenty thousand strong, south of Hannibal, at Tarentum. The strength
+ of that city secured this Roman force from any attack by Hannibal, and it
+ was a serious matter to march northward and leave it in his rear, free to
+ act against all his depots and allies in the friendly part of Italy, which
+ for the last two or three campaigns had served him for a base of his
+ operations. Moreover, Nero's army was so strong that Hannibal could not
+ concentrate troops enough to assume the offensive against it without
+ weakening his garrisons, and relinquishing, at least for a time, his grasp
+ upon the southern provinces. To do this before he was certainly informed
+ of his brother's operations would have been an useless sacrifice; as Nero
+ could retreat before him upon the other Roman armies near the capital, and
+ Hannibal knew by experience that a mere advance of his army upon the walls
+ of Rome would have no effect on the fortunes of the war. In the hope,
+ probably, of inducing Nero to follow him, and of gaining an opportunity of
+ outmanoeuvring the Roman consul and attacking him on his march, Hannibal
+ moved into Lucania, and then back into Apulis;&mdash;he again marched down
+ into Bruttium, and strengthened his army by a levy of recruits in that
+ district. Nero followed him, but gave him no chance of assailing him at a
+ disadvantage. Some partial encounters seem to have taken place; but the
+ consul could not prevent Hannibal's junction with his Bruttian levies, nor
+ could Hannibal gain an opportunity of surprising and crushing the consul.
+ Hannibal returned to his former head-quarters at Canusium, and halted
+ there in expectation of further tidings of his brother's movements. Nero
+ also resumed his former position in observation of the Carthaginian army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [The annalists whom Livy copied, spoke of Nero's gaining repeated
+ victories over Hannibal, and killing; and taking his men by tens of
+ thousands. The falsehood of all this is self-evident. If Nero could thus
+ always beat Hannibal, the Romans would not have been in such an agony of
+ dread about Hasdrubal, as all writers describe. Indeed, we have the
+ express testimony of Polybius that such statements as we read in Livy of
+ Marcellus, Nero, and others gaining victories over Hannibal in Italy, must
+ be all fabrications of Roman vanity. Polybius states (Lib. xv. sec. 16)
+ that Hannibal was never defeated before the battle of Zama; and in another
+ passage (Book ix. chap, 3) he mentions that after the defeats which
+ Hannibal inflicted on the Romans in the early years of the war, they no
+ longer dared face his army in a pitched battle on a fair field, and yet
+ they resolutely maintained the war. He rightly explains this by referring
+ to the superiority of Hannibal's cavalry the arm which gained him all his
+ victories. By keeping within fortified lines, or close to the sides of the
+ mountains when Hannibal approached them, the Romans rendered his cavalry
+ ineffective; and a glance at the geography of Italy will show how an army
+ can traverse the greater part of that country without venturing far from
+ the high grounds.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Hasdrubal had raised the siege of Placentia, and was advancing
+ towards Ariminum on the Adriatic, and driving before him the Roman army
+ under Porcina. Nor when the consul Livius had come up, and united the
+ second and third armies of the north, could he make head against the
+ invaders. The Romans still fell back before Hasdrubal, beyond Ariminum,
+ beyond the Metaurus, and as far as the little town of Sena, to the
+ southeast of that river. Hasdrubal was not unmindful of the necessity of
+ acting in concert with his brother. He sent messengers to Hannibal to
+ announce his own line of march and to propose that they should unite their
+ armies in South Umbria, and then wheel round against Rome. Those
+ messengers traversed the greater part of Italy in safety; but, when close
+ to the object of their mission, were captured by a Roman detachment; and
+ Hasdrubal's letter, detailing his whole plan of the campaign, was laid,
+ not in his brother's hands, but in those of the commander of the Roman
+ armies of the south. Nero saw at once the full importance of the crisis.
+ The two sons of Hamilcar were now within two hundred miles of each other,
+ and if Rome were to be saved, the brothers must never meet alive. Nero
+ instantly ordered seven thousand picked men, a thousand being cavalry, to
+ hold themselves in readiness for a secret expedition against one of
+ Hannibal's garrisons; and as soon as night had set in, he hurried forward
+ on his bold enterprise: but he quickly left the southern road towards
+ Lucania, and wheeling round, pressed northward with the utmost rapidity
+ towards Picenum. He had, during the preceding afternoon, sent messengers
+ to Rome, who were to lay Hasdrubal's letters before the senate. There was
+ a law forbidding a consul to make war or to march his army beyond the
+ limits of the province assigned to him; but in such an emergency Nero did
+ not wait for the permission of the senate to execute his project, but
+ informed them that he was already on his march to join Livius against
+ Hasdrubal. He advised them to send the two legions which formed the home
+ garrison, on to Narnia, so as to defend that pass of the Flaminian road
+ against Hasdrubal, in case he should march upon Rome before the consular
+ armies could attack him. They were to supply the place of those two
+ legions at Rome by a levy EN MASSE in the city, and by ordering up the
+ reserve legion from Capua. These were his communications to the senate. He
+ also sent horseman forward along his line of march, with orders to the
+ local authorities to bring stores of; provisions and refreshments of every
+ kind to the road-side, and to have relays of carriages ready for the
+ conveyance of the wearied soldiers. Such were the precautions which he
+ took for accelerating his march; and when he had advanced some little
+ distance from his camp, he briefly informed his soldiers of the real
+ object of their expedition. He told them that there never was a design
+ more seemingly audacious, and more really safe. He said he was leading
+ them to a certain victory, for his colleague had an army large enough to
+ balance the enemy already, so that THEIR swords would decisively turn the
+ scale. The very rumour that a fresh consul and a fresh army had come up,
+ when heard on the battle-field (and he would take care that they should
+ not be heard of before they were seen and felt) would settle the campaign.
+ They would have all the credit of the victory, and of having dealt the
+ final decisive blow, He appealed to the enthusiastic reception which they
+ already met with on their line of march as a proof and an omen of their
+ good fortune. [Livy. lib. xxvii. c. 45.] And, indeed, their whole path was
+ amidst the vows and prayers and praises of their countrymen. The entire
+ population of the districts through which they passed, flocked to the
+ road-side to see and bless the deliverers of their country. Food, drink,
+ and refreshments of every kind were eagerly pressed on their acceptance.
+ Each peasant thought a favour was conferred on him, if one of Nero's
+ chosen band would accept aught at his hands. The soldiers caught the full
+ spirit of their leader. Night and day they marched forwards, taking their
+ hurried meals in the ranks and resting by relays in the waggons which the
+ zeal of the country-people provided, and which followed in the rear of the
+ column.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, at Rome, the news of Nero's expedition had caused the greatest
+ excitement and alarm. All men felt the full audacity of the enterprise,
+ but hesitated what epithet to apply to it. It was evident that Nero's
+ conduct would be judged of by the event, that most unfair criterion, as
+ the Roman historian truly terms it. ["Adparebat (quo nihil iniquius est)
+ ex eventu famam habiturum."&mdash;LIVY, lib. xxvii. c. 44.] People
+ reasoned on the perilous state in which Nero had left the rest of his
+ army, without a general, and deprived of the core of its strength, in the
+ vicinity of the terrible Hannibal. They speculated on how long it would
+ take Hannibal to pursue and overtake Nero himself, and his expeditionary
+ force. They talked over the former disasters of the war, and the fall of
+ both the consuls of the last year. All these calamities had come on them
+ while they had only one Carthaginian general and army to deal with in
+ Italy. Now they had two Punic wars at one time. They had two Carthaginian
+ armies; they had almost two Hannibals in Italy, Hasdrubal was sprung from
+ the same father; trained up in the same hostility to Rome; equally
+ practised in battle against its legions; and, if the comparative speed and
+ success with which he had crossed the Alps was a fair test, he was even a
+ better general than his brother. With fear for their interpreter of every
+ rumour, they exaggerated the strength of their enemy's forces in every
+ quarter, and criticised and distrusted their own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately for Rome, while she was thus a prey to terror and anxiety, her
+ consul's nerves were strong, and he resolutely urged on his march towards
+ Sena, where his colleague, Livius, and the praetor Portius were encamped;
+ Hasdrubal's army being in position about half a mile to the north. Nero
+ had sent couriers forward to apprise his colleague of his project and of
+ his approach; and by the advice of Livius, Nero so timed his final march
+ as to reach the camp at Sena by night. According to a previous
+ arrangement, Nero's men were received silently into the tents of their
+ comrades, each according to his rank. By these means there was no
+ enlargement of the camp that could betray to Hasdrubal the accession of
+ force which the Romans had received. This was considerable; as Nero's
+ numbers had been increased on the march by the volunteers, who offered
+ themselves in crowds, and from whom he selected the most promising men,
+ and especially the veterans of former campaigns. A council of war was held
+ on the morning after his arrival, in which some advised that time should
+ be given for Nero's men to refresh themselves, after the fatigue of such a
+ march. But Nero vehemently opposed all delay. "The officer," said he, "who
+ is for giving time for my men here to rest themselves, is for giving time
+ to Hannibal to attack my men, whom I have left in the camp in Apulia. He
+ is for giving time to Hannibal and Hasdrubal to discover my march, and to
+ manoeuvre for a junction with each other in Cisalpine Gaul at their
+ leisure. We must fight instantly, while both the foe here and the foe in
+ the south are ignorant of our movements. We must destroy this Hasdrubal,
+ and I must be back In Apulia before Hannibal awakes from his torpor."
+ [Livy, lib. xxvii. c. 45.] Nero's advice prevailed. It was resolved to
+ fight directly; and before the consuls and praetor left the tent of
+ Livius, the red ensign, which was the signal to prepare for immediate
+ action, was hoisted, and the Romans forthwith drew up in battle array
+ outside the camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hasdrubal had been anxious to bring Livius and Porcius to battle, though
+ he had not judged it expedient to attack them in their lines. And now, on
+ hearing that the Romans offered battle, he also drew up his men, and
+ advanced towards them. No spy or deserter had informed him of Nero's
+ arrival; nor had he received any direct information that he had more than
+ his old enemies to deal with. But as he rode forward to reconnoitre the
+ Roman lines, he thought that their numbers seemed to have increased, and
+ that the armour of some-of them was unusually dull and stained. He noticed
+ also that the horses of some of the cavalry appeared to be rough and out
+ of condition, as if they had just come from a succession of forced
+ marches. So also, though, owing to the precaution of Livius, the Roman
+ camp showed no change of size, it had not escaped the quick ear of the
+ Carthaginian general, that the trumpet, which gave the signal to the Roman
+ legions, sounded that morning once oftener than usual, as if directing the
+ troops of some additional superior officer. Hasdrubal, from his Spanish
+ campaigns, was well acquainted with all the sounds and signals of Roman
+ war; and from all that he heard and saw, he felt convinced that both the
+ Roman consuls were before him. In doubt and difficulty as to what might
+ have taken place between the armies of the south, and probably hoping that
+ Hannibal also was approaching, Hasdrubal determined to avoid an encounter
+ with the combined Roman forces, and to endeavour to retreat upon Insubrian
+ Gaul, where he would be in a friendly country, and could endeavour to
+ re-open his communications with his brother. He therefore led his troops
+ back into their camp; and, as the Romans did not venture on an assault
+ upon his entrenchments, and Hasdrubal did not choose to commence his
+ retreat in their sight, the day passed away in inaction. At the first
+ watch of the night, Hasdrubal led his men silently out of their camp, and
+ moved northwards towards the Metaurus, in the hope of placing that river
+ between himself and the Romans before his retreat was discovered. His
+ guides betrayed him; and having purposely led him away from the part of
+ the river that was fordable, they made their escape in the dark, and left
+ Hasdrubal and his army wandering in confusion along the steep bank, and
+ seeking in vain for a spot where the stream could be safely crossed. At
+ last they halted; and when day dawned on them, Hasdrubal found that great
+ numbers of his men, in their fatigue and impatience, had lost all
+ discipline and subordination, and that many of his Gallic auxiliaries had
+ got drunk, and were lying helpless in their quarters. The Roman cavalry
+ was soon seen coming up in pursuit, followed at no great distance by the
+ legions, which marched in readiness for an instant engagement. It was
+ hopeless for Hasdrubal, to think of continuing his retreat before them.
+ The prospect of immediate battle might recall the disordered part of his
+ troops to a sense of duty, and revive the instinct of discipline. He
+ therefore ordered his men to prepare for action instantly, and made the
+ best arrangement of them that the nature of the ground would permit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heeren has well described the general appearance of a Carthaginian army.
+ He says: "It was an assemblage of the most opposite races of the human
+ species, from the farthest parts of the globe. Hordes of half-naked Gauls
+ were ranged next to companies of white clothed Iberians, and savage
+ Ligurians next to the far-travelled Nasamones and Lotophagi. Carthaginians
+ and Phoenici-Africans formed the centre; while innumerable troops of
+ Numidian horse-men, taken from all the tribes of the Desert, swarmed about
+ on unsaddled horses, and formed the wings; the van was composed of
+ Balearic slingers; and a line of colossal elephants, with their Ethiopian
+ guides, formed, as it were, a chain of moving fortresses before the whole
+ army. Such were the usual materials and arrangements of the hosts that
+ fought for Carthage; but the troops under Hasdrubal were not in all
+ respects thus constituted or thus stationed. He seems to have been
+ especially deficient in cavalry, and he had few African troops, though
+ some Carthaginians of high rank were with him. His veteran Spanish
+ infantry, armed with helmets and shields, and short cut-and-thrust swords,
+ were the best part of his army. These, and his few Africans, he drew up on
+ his right wing, under his own personal command. In the centre, he placed
+ his Ligurian infantry, and on the left wing he placed or retained the
+ Gauls, who were armed with long javelins and with huge broadswords and
+ targets. The rugged nature of the ground in front and on the flank of this
+ part of his line, made him hope that the Roman right wing would be unable
+ to come to close quarters with these unserviceable barbarians, before he
+ could make some impression with his Spanish veterans on the Roman left.
+ This was the only chance that he had of victory or safety, and he seems to
+ have done everything that good generalship could do to secure it. He
+ placed his elephants in advance of his centre and right wing. He had
+ caused the driver of each of them to be provided with a sharp iron spike
+ and a mallet; and had given orders that every beast that became
+ unmanageable, and ran back upon his own ranks, should be instantly killed,
+ by driving the spike into the vertebra at the junction of the head and the
+ spine. Hasdrubal's elephants were ten in number. We have no trustworthy
+ information as to the amount of his infantry, but it is quite clear that
+ he was greatly outnumbered by the combined Roman forces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tactic of the Roman legions had not yet acquired the perfection which
+ it received from the military genius of Marius, [Most probably during the
+ period of his prolonged consulship, from B.C. 104 to B.C. 101, while he
+ was training his army against the Cimbri and the Teutons.] and which we
+ read of in the first chapter of Gibbon. We possess in that great work an
+ account of the Roman legions at the end of the commonwealth, and during
+ the early ages of the empire, which those alone can adequately admire, who
+ have attempted a similar description. We have also, in the sixth and
+ seventeenth books of Polybius, an elaborate discussion on the military
+ system of the Romans in his time, which was not far distant from the time
+ of the battle of the Metaurus. But the subject is beset with difficulties:
+ and instead of entering into minute but inconclusive details, I would
+ refer to Gibbon's first chapter, as serving for a general description of
+ the Roman army in its period of perfection; and remark, that the training
+ and armour which the whole legion received in the time of Augustus, was,
+ two centuries earlier, only partially introduced. Two divisions of troops,
+ called Hastati and Principes, formed the bulk of each Roman legion in the
+ second Punic war. Each of these divisions was twelve hundred strong. The
+ Hastatus and the Princeps legionary bore a breast-plate or coat of mail,
+ brazen greaves, and a brazen helmet, with a lofty, upright crest of
+ scarlet or black feathers. He had a large oblong shield; and, as weapons
+ of offence, two javelins, one of which was light and slender, but the
+ other was a strong and massive weapon, with a shaft about four feet long,
+ and an iron head of equal length. The sword was carried on the right
+ thigh, and was a short cut-and thrust weapon, like that which was used by
+ the Spaniards. Thus armed, the Hastati formed the front division of the
+ legion, and the Principes the second. Each division was drawn up about ten
+ deep; a space of three feet being allowed between the files as well as the
+ ranks, so as to give each legionary ample room for the use of his
+ javelins, and of his sword and shield. The men in the second rank did not
+ stand immediately behind those in the first rank, but the files were
+ alternate, like the position of the men on a draught board. This was
+ termed the quincunx order. Niebuhr considers that this arrangement enabled
+ the legion to keep up a shower of javelins on the enemy for some
+ considerable time. He says: "When the first line had hurled its pila, it
+ probably stepped back between those who stood behind it, who with two
+ steps forward restored the front nearly to its first position; a movement
+ which, on account of the arrangement of the quincunx, could be executed
+ without losing a moment. Thus one line succeeded the other in the front
+ till it was time to draw the swords; nay, when it was found expedient, the
+ lines which had already been in the front might repeat this change, since
+ the stores of pila were surely not confined to the two which each soldier
+ took with him into battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The same change must have taken place in fighting with the sword; which,
+ when the same tactic was adopted on both sides, was anything but a
+ confused MELEE; on the contrary, it was a series of single combats." He
+ adds, that a military man of experience had been consulted by him on the
+ subject, and had given it as his opinion, "that the change of the lines as
+ described above was by no means impracticable; and in the absence of the
+ deafening noise of gunpowder, it cannot have had even any difficulty with
+ trained troops."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The third division of the legion was six hundred strong, and acted as a
+ reserve. It was always composed of veteran soldiers, who were called the
+ Triarii. Their arms were the same as those of the Principes and Hastati;
+ except that each Triarian carried a spear instead of javelins. The rest of
+ the legion consisted of light armed troops, who acted as skirmishers. The
+ cavalry of each legion was at this period about three hundred strong. The
+ Italian allies, who were attached to the legion, seem to have been
+ similarly armed and equipped, but their numerical proportion of cavalry
+ was much larger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the nature of the forces that advanced on the Roman side to the
+ battle of the Metaurus. Nero commanded the right wing, Livius the left,
+ and the praetor Porcius had the command of the centre. "Both Romans and
+ Carthaginians well understood how much depended upon the fortune of this
+ day, and how little hope of safety there was for the vanquished. Only the
+ Romans herein seemed to have had the better in conceit and opinion, that
+ they were to fight with men desirous to have fled from them. And according
+ to this presumption came Livius the consul, with a proud bravery, to give
+ charge on the Spaniards and Africans, by whom he was so sharply
+ entertained that victory seemed very doubtful. The Africans and Spaniards
+ were stout soldiers, and well acquainted with the manner of the Roman
+ fight. The Ligurians, also, were a hardy nation, and not accustomed to
+ give ground; which they needed the less, or were able now to do, being
+ placed in the midst. Livius, therefore, and Porcius found great
+ opposition; and, with great slaughter on both sides, prevailed little or
+ nothing. Besides other difficulties, they were exceedingly troubled by the
+ elephants, that brake their first ranks, and put them in such disorder, as
+ the Roman ensigns were driven to fall back; all this while Claudius Nero,
+ labouring in vain against a steep hill, was unable to come to blows with
+ the Gauls that stood opposite him, but out of danger. This made Hasdrubal
+ the more confident, who, seeing his own left wing safe, did the more
+ boldly and fiercely make impression on the other side upon the left wing
+ of the Romans." ["Historie of the World," by Sir Walter Raleigh, p. 946.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at last Nero, who found that Hasdrubal refused his left wing, and who
+ could not overcome the difficulties of the ground in the quarter assigned
+ to him, decided the battle by another stroke of that military genius which
+ had inspired his march. Wheeling a brigade of his best men round the rear
+ of the rest of the Roman army, Nero fiercely charged the flank of the
+ Spaniards and Africans. The charge was as successful as it was sudden.
+ Rolled back in disorder upon each other, and overwhelmed by numbers, the
+ Spaniards and Ligurians died, fighting gallantly to the last. The Gauls,
+ who had taken little or no part in the strife of the day, were then
+ surrounded, and butchered almost without resistance. Hasdrubal, after
+ having, by the confession of his enemies, done all that a general could
+ do, when he saw that the victory was irreparably lost, scorning to survive
+ the gallant; host which he had led, and to gratify, as a captive, Roman
+ cruelty and pride, spurred his horse into the midst of a Roman cohort;
+ where, sword in hand, he met the death that was worthy of the son of
+ Hamilcar and the brother of Hannibal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Success the most complete had crowned Nero's enterprise. Returning as
+ rapidly as he had advanced, he was again facing the inactive enemies in
+ the south, before they even knew of his march. But he brought with him a
+ ghastly trophy of what he had done. In the true spirit of that savage
+ brutality which deformed the Roman national character, Nero ordered
+ Hasdrubal's head to be flung into his brother's camp. Eleven years had
+ passed since Hannibal had last gazed on those features. The sons of
+ Hamilcar had then planned their system of warfare against Rome, which they
+ had so nearly brought to successful accomplishment. Year after year had
+ Hannibal been struggling in Italy, in the hope of one day hailing the
+ arrival of him whom he had left in Spain; and of seeing his brother's eye
+ flash with affection and pride at the junction of their irresistible
+ hosts. He now saw that eye glazed in death and, in the agony of his heart,
+ the great Carthaginian groaned aloud that he recognised his country's
+ destiny.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [Carthagini jam non ego nuntios
+ Mittam superbos. Occidit, occidit
+ Spes omnis et fortuna nostri
+ Nominis, Hastrubale interemto.&mdash;HORACE.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Rome was almost delirious with joy: [See the splendid description in Livy,
+ lib. xxvii. sec. 50, 51.] so agonising had been the suspense with which
+ the battle's verdict on that great issue of a nation's life and death had
+ been awaited; so overpowering was the sudden reaction to the consciousness
+ of security, and to the full glow of glory and success. From the time when
+ it had been known at Rome that the armies were in presence of each other,
+ the people had never ceased to throng the forum, the Conscript Fathers had
+ been in permanent sitting at the senate house. Ever and anon a fearful
+ whisper crept among the crowd of a second Cannae won by a second Hannibal.
+ Then came truer rumours that the day was Rome's; but the people were sick
+ at heart, and heeded them not. The shrines were thronged with trembling
+ women, who seemed to weary heaven with prayers to shield them from the
+ brutal Gaul and the savage African. Presently the reports of good fortune
+ assumed a more definite form. It was said that two Narnian horseman had
+ ridden from the east into the Roman camp of observation in Umbria, and had
+ brought tidings of the utter slaughter of the foe. Such news seemed too
+ good to be true, Men tortured their neighbours and themselves by
+ demonstrating its improbability and by ingeniously criticising its
+ evidence. Soon, however, a letter came from Lucius Manlius Acidinus, who
+ commanded in Umbria, and who announced the arrival of the Narnian horsemen
+ in his camp, and the intelligence which they brought thither. The letter
+ was first laid before the senate, and then before the assembly of the
+ people. The excitement grew more and more vehement. The letter was read
+ and re-read aloud to thousands. It confirmed the previous rumour. But even
+ this was insufficient to allay the feverish anxiety that thrilled through
+ every breast in Rome. The letter might be a forgery: the Narnian horseman
+ might be traitors or impostors. "We must see officers from the army that
+ fought, or hear despatches from the consuls themselves, and then only will
+ we believe." Such was the public sentiment, though some of more hopeful
+ nature already permitted themselves a foretaste of joy. At length came
+ news that officers who really had been in the battle were near at hand.
+ Forthwith the whole city poured forth to meet them, each person coveting
+ to be the first to receive with his own eyes and ears convincing proofs of
+ the reality of such a deliverance. One vast throng of human beings filled
+ the road from Rome to the Milvian bridge. The three officers, Lucius
+ Veturius Pollio, Publius Licinius Vasus, and Quintus Caecilius Metellus
+ came riding on, making their way slowly through the living sea around
+ them, As they advanced, each told the successive waves of eager
+ questioners that Rome was victorious. "We have destroyed Hasdrubal and his
+ army, our legions are safe, and our consuls are unhurt." Each happy
+ listener, who caught the welcome sounds from their lips, retired to
+ communicate his own joy to others, and became himself the centre of an
+ anxious and inquiring group. When the officers had, with much difficulty,
+ reached the senate house, and the crowd was with still greater difficulty
+ put back from entering and mingling with the Conscript Fathers, the
+ despatches of Livius and Nero were produced and read aloud. From the
+ senate house the officers proceeded to the public assembly, where the
+ despatches were read again; and then the senior officer, Lucius Veturius,
+ gave in his own words a fuller detail of how went the fight. When he had
+ done speaking to the people, an universal shout of rapture rent the air.
+ The vast assembly then separated: some hastening to the temples to find in
+ devotion a vent for the overflowing excitement of their hearts; others
+ seeking their homes to gladden their wives and children with the good
+ news, and to feast their own eyes with the sight of the loved ones, who
+ now, at last, were safe from outrage and slaughter. The senate ordained a
+ thanksgiving of three days for the great deliverance which had been
+ vouchsafed to Rome; and throughout that period the temples were
+ incessantly crowded with exulting worshippers; and the matrons, with their
+ children round them, in their gayest attire, and with joyous aspects and
+ voices, offered grateful praises to the immortal gods, as if all
+ apprehension of evil were over, and the war were already ended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the revival of confidence came also the revival of activity in
+ traffic and commerce, and in all the busy intercourse of daily life. A
+ numbing load was taken off each heart and brain, and once more men bought
+ and sold, and formed their plans fleely, as had been done before the dire
+ Carthaginians came into Italy. Hannibal was, certainly, still in the land;
+ but all felt that his power to destroy was broken, and that the crisis of
+ the war-fever was past. The Metaurus, indeed, had not only determined the
+ event of the strife between Rome and Carthage, but it had ensured to Rome
+ two centuries more of almost unchanged conquest. Hannibal did actually,
+ with almost superhuman skill, retain his hold on Southern Italy for a few
+ years longer, but the imperial city, and her allies, were no longer in
+ danger from his arms; and, after Hannibal's downfall, the great military
+ republic of the ancient world met in her career of conquest no other
+ worthy competitor. Byron has termed Nero's march "unequalled," and, in the
+ magnitude of its consequences, it is so. Viewed only as a military
+ exploit, it remains unparalleled save by Marlborough's bold march from
+ Flanders to the Danube, in the campaign of Blenheim, and perhaps also by
+ the Archduke Charles's lateral march in 1796, by which he overwhelmed the
+ French under Jourdain, and then, driving Moreau through the Black Forest
+ and across the Rhine, for a while freed Germany from her invaders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS, B.C. 207, AND
+ ARMININIUS'S VICTORY OVER THE ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS, A.D. 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ B.C. 205 to 201. Scipio is made consul, and carries the war into Africa.
+ He gains several victories there, and the Carthaginians recall Hannibal
+ from Italy to oppose him. Battle of Zama in 201: Hannibal is defeated, and
+ Carthage sues for peace. End of the second Punic war, leaving Rome
+ confirmed in the dominion of Italy, Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica, and
+ also mistress of great part of Spain, and virtually predominant in North
+ Africa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 200. Rome makes war upon Philip, king of Macedonia. She pretends to take
+ the Greek cities of the Achaean league and the AEtolians under her
+ protection as allies. Philip is defeated by the proconsul Flaminius at
+ Cynocephalae, 198; and begs for peace. The Macedonian influence is now
+ completely destroyed in Greece, and the Roman established in its stead,
+ though Rome nominally acknowledged the independence of the Greek cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 194. Rome makes war upon Antiochus, king of Syria. He is completely
+ defeated at the battle of Magnesia, 192, and is glad to accept peace on
+ conditions which leave him dependent upon Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 200-190. "Thus, within the short; space of ten years, was laid the
+ foundation of the Roman authority in the East, and the general state of
+ affairs entirely changed. If Rome was not yet the ruler, she was at least
+ the arbitress of the world from the Atlantic to the Euphrates. The power
+ of the three principal states was so completely humbled, that they durst
+ not, without the permission of Rome, begin any new war; the fourth, Egypt,
+ had already, in the year 201, placed herself under the guardianship of
+ Rome; and the lesser powers followed of themselves: esteeming it an honour
+ to be called the allies of Rome. With this name the nations were lulled
+ into security, and brought under the Roman yoke; the new political system
+ of Rome was founded and strengthened partly by exciting and supporting the
+ weaker states against the stronger, however unjust the cause of the former
+ might be, and partly by factions which she found means to raise in every
+ state, even the smallest."&mdash;(HEEREN.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 172. War renewed between Macedon and Rome. Decisive defeat of Perses, the
+ Macedonian king, by Paulus AEmilius at Pydna, 168, Destruction of the
+ Macedonian monarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 150. Rome oppresses the Carthaginians till they are driven to take up
+ arms, and the third Punic war begins, Carthage is taken and destroyed by
+ Scipio AEmilianus, 146, and the Carthaginian territory is made a Roman
+ province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 146. In the same year in which Carthage falls, Corinth is stormed by the
+ Roman army under Mummius. The Achaean league had been goaded into
+ hostilities with Rome, by means similar to those employed against
+ Carthage. The greater part of Southern Greece is made a Roman province,
+ under the name of Achaia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 133. Numantium is destroyed by Scipio AEmilianus. "The war against the
+ Spaniards, who, of all the nations subdued by the Romans, defended their
+ liberty with the greatest obstinacy, began in the year 200, six years
+ after the total expulsion of the Carthaginians from their country, 206. It
+ was exceedingly obstinate, partly from the natural state of the country,
+ which was thickly populated, and where every place became a fortress;
+ partly from the courage of the inhabitants; but at last all, owing to the
+ peculiar policy of the Romans, who yielded to employ their allies to
+ subdue other nations. This war continued, almost without interruption,
+ from the year 200 to 133, and was for the most part carried on at the same
+ time in Hispania Citerior, where the Celtiberi were the most formidable
+ adversaries, and in Hispania Ulterior, where the Lusitani were equally
+ powerful. Hostilities were at the highest pitch in 195, under Cato, who
+ reduced Hispania Citerior to a state of tranquillity in 185-179, when the
+ Celtiberi were attacked in their native territory; and 155-150, when the
+ Romans in both provinces were so often beaten, that nothing was more
+ dreaded by the soldiers at home than to be sent there. The extortions and
+ perfidy of Servius Galba placed Viriathus, in the year 146, at the head of
+ his nations, the Lusitani: the war, however, soon extended itself to
+ Hispania Citerior, where many nations, particularly the Numantines, took
+ up arms against Rome, 143. Viriathus, sometimes victorious and sometimes
+ defeated, was never more formidable than in the moment of defeat; because
+ he knew how to take advantage of his knowledge of the country and of the
+ dispositions of his countrymen. After his murder, caused by the treachery
+ of Saepio, 140, Lusitania was subdued; but the Numantine war became still
+ more violent, and the Numantines compelled the consul Mancinus to a
+ disadvantageous treaty, 137. When Scipio, in the year 133, put an end to
+ this war, Spain was certainly tranquil; the northern parts, however, were
+ still unsubdued, though the Romans penetrated as far as Galatia."&mdash;HEEREN.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 134. Commencement of the revolutionary century at Rome, I.E. from the time
+ of the excitement produced by the attempts made by the Gracchi to reform
+ the commonwealth, to the battle of Actium (B.C. 31), which established
+ Octavianus Caesar as sole master of the Roman world. Throughout this
+ period Rome was engaged in important foreign wars, most of which procured
+ large accessions to her territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 118-106. The Jugurthine war. Numidia is conquered, and made a Roman
+ province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 113-101. The great and terrible war of the Cimbri and Teutones against
+ Rome. These nations of northern warriors slaughter several Roman armies in
+ Gaul, and in 102 attempt to penetrate into Italy, The military genius of
+ Marius here saves his country; he defeats the Teutones near Aix, in
+ Provence; and in the following year he destroys the army of the Cimbri,
+ who had passed the Alps, near Vercellae.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 91-88. The war of the Italian allies against Rome. This was caused by the
+ refusal of Rome to concede to them the rights of Roman citizenship. After
+ a sanguine struggle, Rome gradually grants it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 89-86. First war of the Romans against Mithridates the Great, king of
+ Pontus, who had overrun Asia Minor, Macedonia, and Greece. Sylla defeats
+ his armies, and forces him to withdraw his forces from Europe. Sylla
+ returns to Rome to carry on the civil war against the son and partisans of
+ Marius. He makes himself Dictator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 74-64. The last Mithridatic wars. Lucullus, and after him Pompeius,
+ command against the great King of Pontus, who at last is poisoned by his
+ son, while designing to raise the warlike tribes of the Danube against
+ Rome, and to invade Italy from the north-east. Great Asiatic conquests of
+ the Romans. Besides the ancient province of Pergamus, the maritime
+ countries of Bithynia, and nearly all Paphlagonia and Pontus, are formed
+ into a Roman province, under the name of Bithynia; while on the southern
+ coast Cilicia and Pamphylia form another, under the name of Cilicia;
+ Phoenicia and Syria compose a third, under the name of Syria. On the other
+ hand, Great Armenia is left to Tigranes; Cappodocia to Ariobarzanes; the
+ Bosphorus to Pharnaces; Judaea to Hyrcanus; and some other small states
+ are also given to petty princes, all of whom remain dependent on Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 58-50. Caesar conquers Gaul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 54. Crassus attacks the Parthians with a Roman army, but is overthrown and
+ killed at Carrhae in Mesopotamia. His lieutenant Cassius collects the
+ wrecks of the army, and prevents the Parthians from conquering Syria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 49-45. The civil war between Caesar and the Pompeian party. Caesar drives
+ Pompeius out of Italy, conquers his enemy's forces in Spain, and then
+ passes into Greece, where Pompeius and the other aristocratic chiefs had
+ assembled a large army. Caesar gives them a decisive defeat at the great
+ battle of Pharsalia. Pompeius flies for refuge to Alexandria, where he is
+ assassinated. Caesar, who had followed him thither, is involved in a war
+ with the Egyptians, in which he is finally victorious. The celebrated
+ Cleopatra is made Queen of Egypt. Caesar next marches into Pontus, and
+ defeats the son of Mithridates, who had taken part in the war against him.
+ He then proceeds to the Roman province of Africa, where some of the
+ Pompeian chiefs had established themselves, aided by Juba, a native
+ prince. He over throws them at the battle of Thapsus. He is again obliged
+ to lead an army into Spain, where the sons of Pompeius had collected the
+ wrecks of their father's party. He crushes the last of his enemies at the
+ battle of Munda. Under the title of Dictator, he is the sole master of the
+ Roman world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 44. Caesar is killed in the Senate-house; the Civil wars are soon renewed,
+ Brutus and Cassius being at the head of the aristocratic party, and the
+ party of Caesar being led by Mark Antony and Octavianus Caesar, afterwards
+ Augustus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 42. Defeat and death of Brutus and Cassius at Philippi. Dissensions soon
+ break out between Octavianus Caesar and Antony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31. Antony is completely defeated by Octavianus Caesar at Actium. He flies
+ to Egypt with Cleopatra. Octavianus pursues him. Antony and Cleopatra kill
+ themselves. Egypt becomes a Roman province, and Octavianus Caesar is left
+ undisputed master of Rome, and all that is Rome's. The state of the Roman
+ world at this time is best described in two lines of Tacitus:&mdash;"Postquam
+ bellatum apud Actium, atque OMNEM POTESTATEM AD UNUM CONFERRI PACIS
+ INTERFUIT." (Hist. lib. i. s. 1.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 44th year of the reign of Augustus, and the 1st year of the 195th
+ Olympiad, is commonly assigned as the date of THE NATIVITY OF OUR LORD.
+ There is much of the beauty of holiness in the remarks with which the
+ American historian, Eliot, closes his survey of the conquering career and
+ civil downfall of the Roman Commonwealth:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So far as humility amongst men was necessary for the preparation of a
+ truer freedom than could ever be known under heathenism, the part of Rome,
+ however dreadful was yet sublime. It was not to unite, to discipline, or
+ to fortify humanity, but to enervate, to loosen, and to scatter its
+ forces, that the people whose history we have read were allowed to conquer
+ the earth, and were then themselves reduced to deep submission. Every good
+ labour of theirs that failed was, by reason of what we esteem its failure,
+ a step gained nearer to the end of the well-nigh universal evil that
+ prevailed; while every bad achievement that may seem to us to have
+ succeeded, temporarily or lastingly, with them was equally, by reason of
+ its success, a progress towards the good of which the coming would have
+ been longed and prayed for, could it have been comprehended. Alike in the
+ virtues and in the vices of antiquity, we may read the progress towards
+ its humiliation. ["The Christian revelation," says Leland, in his truly
+ admirable work on the subject (vol. i. p. 488), "was made to the world at
+ a time when it was most wanted; when the darkness and corruption of
+ mankind were arrived at the height.... if it had been published much
+ sooner, and before there had been a full trial made of what was to be
+ expected from human wisdom and philosophy, the great need men stood in of
+ such an extraordinary divine dispensation would not have been so
+ apparent."] Yet, on the other hand, it must not seem, at the last, that
+ the disposition of the Romans or of mankind to submission was secured
+ solely through the errors, and the apparently ineffectual toils which we
+ have traced back to these times of old. Desires too true to have been
+ wasted, and strivings too humane to have been unproductive, though all
+ were overshadowed by passing wrongs, still gleam as if in anticipation or
+ in preparation of the advancing day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At length, when it had been proved by ages of conflict and loss, that no
+ lasting joy and no abiding truth could be procured through the power, the
+ freedom, or the faith of mankind, the angels sang their song in which the
+ glory of God and the good-will of men were together blended. The universe
+ was wrapped In momentary tranquillity, and 'peaceful was the night' above
+ the manger at Bethlehem. We may believe, that when the morning came, the
+ ignorance, the confusion, and the servitude of humanity had left their
+ darkest forms amongst the midnight clouds. It was still, indeed, beyond
+ the power of man to lay hold securely of the charity and the regeneration
+ that were henceforth to be his law; and the indefinable terrors of the
+ future, whether seen from the West or from the East, were not at once to
+ be dispelled. But before the death of the Emperor Augustus, in the midst
+ of his fallen subjects, the business of THE FATHER had already been begun
+ in the Temple at Jerusalem; and near by, THE SON was increasing in wisdom
+ and in stature, and in favour with God and man." [Eliot's "Liberty of
+ Rome," vol. ii. p. 521.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. &mdash; VICTORY OF ARMINIUS OVER THE ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS,
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 9.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Hac clade factum, ut Imperium quod in littore oceani non
+ steterat, in ripa Rheni fluminis staret."&mdash;FLORUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To a truly illustrious Frenchman, whose reverses as a minister can never
+ obscure his achievements in the world of letters, we are indebted for the
+ most profound and most eloquent estimate that we possess of the importance
+ of the Germanic element in European civilization, and of the extent to
+ which the human race is indebted to those brave warriors, who long were
+ the unconquered antagonists, and finally became the conquerors, of
+ Imperial Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-three eventful years have passed away since M. Guizot delivered
+ from the chair of modern history at Paris his course of lectures on the
+ History of Civilization in Europe. During those years the spirit of
+ earnest inquiry into the germs and early developments of existing
+ institutions has become more and more active and universal; and the
+ merited celebrity of M. Guizot's work has proportionally increased. Its
+ admirable analysis of the complex political and social organizations of
+ which the modern civilized world is made up, must have led thousands to
+ trace with keener interest the great crises of times past, by which the
+ characteristics of the present were determined. The narrative of one of
+ these great crises, of the epoch A.D. 9, when Germany took up arms for her
+ independence against Roman invasion, has for us this special attraction&mdash;that
+ it forms part of our own national history. Had Arminius been supine or
+ unsuccessful, our Germanic ancestors would have been enslaved or
+ exterminated in their original seats along the Eyder and the Elbe; this
+ island would never have borne the name of England, and "we, this great
+ English nation, whose race and language are now over-running the earth,
+ from one end of it to the other," [Arnold's Lectures on Modern History.]
+ would have been utterly cut off from existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arnold may, indeed, go too far in holding that we are wholly unconnected
+ in race with the Romans and Britons who inhabited this country before the
+ coming over of the Saxons; that, "nationally speaking, the history of
+ Caesar's invasion has no more to do with us than the natural history of
+ the animals which then inhabited our forests." There seems ample evidence
+ to prove that the Romanized Celts, whom our Teutonic forefathers found
+ here, influenced materially the character of our nation. But the main
+ stream of our people was and is Germanic. Our language alone decisively
+ proves this. Arminius is far more truly one of our national heroes than
+ Caractacus: and it was our own primeval fatherland that the brave German
+ rescued, when he slaughtered the Roman legions eighteen centuries ago in
+ the marshy glens between the Lippe and the Ems. [See post, remarks on the
+ relationship between the Cherusci and the English.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dark and disheartening, even to heroic spirits, must have seemed the
+ prospects of Germany when Arminius planned the general rising of his
+ countrymen against Rome. Half the land was occupied by Roman garrisons;
+ and, what was worse, many of the Germans seemed patiently acquiescent in
+ their state of bondage. The braver portion, whose patriotism could be
+ relied on, was ill-armed and undisciplined; while the enemy's troops
+ consisted of veterans in the highest state of equipment and training,
+ familiarized with victory, and commanded by officers of proved skill and
+ valour. The resources of Rome seemed boundless; her tenacity of purpose
+ was believed to be invincible. There was no hope of foreign sympathy or
+ aid; for "the self-governing powers that had filled the old world, had
+ bent one after another before the rising power of Rome, and had vanished.
+ The earth seemed left void of independent nations." [Ranke.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The (German) chieftain knew well the gigantic power of the oppressor.
+ Arminius was no rude savage, fighting out of mere animal instinct, or in
+ ignorance of the might of his adversary. He was familiar with the Roman
+ language and civilization; he had served in the Roman armies; he had been
+ admitted to the Roman citizenship, and raised to the dignity of the
+ equestrian order. It was part of the subtle policy of Rome to confer rank
+ and privileges on the youth of the leading families in the nations which
+ she wished to enslave. Among other young German chieftains, Arminius and
+ his brother, who were the heads of the noblest house in the tribe of the
+ Cherusci, had been selected as fit objects for the exercise of this
+ insidious system. Roman refinements and dignities succeeded in
+ denationalizing the brother, who assumed the Roman name of Flavius, and
+ adhered to Rome throughout all her wars against his country. Arminius
+ remained unbought by honours or wealth, uncorrupted by refinement or
+ luxury. He aspired to and obtained from Roman enmity a higher title than
+ ever could have been given him by Roman favour. It is in the page of
+ Rome's greatest historian, that his name has come down to us with the
+ proud addition of "Liberator haud dubie Germaniae." [Tacitus, Annals, ii.
+ 88.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often must the young chieftain, while meditating the exploit which has
+ thus immortalised him, have anxiously revolved in his mind the fate of the
+ many great men who had been crushed in the attempt which he was about to
+ renew,&mdash;the attempt to stay the chariot-wheels of triumphant Rome.
+ Could he hope to succeed where Hannibal and Mithridates had perished? What
+ had been the doom of Viriathus? and what warning against vain valour was
+ written on the desolate site where Numantia once had fourished? Nor was a
+ caution wanting in scenes nearer home and in more recent times. The Gauls
+ had fruitlessly struggled for eight years against Caesar; and the valiant
+ Vercingetorix, who in the last year of the war had roused all his
+ countrymen to insurrection, who had cut off Roman detachments, and brought
+ Caesar himself to the extreme of peril at Alesia&mdash;he, too, had
+ finally succumbed, had been led captive in Caesar's triumph, and had then
+ been butchered in cold blood in a Roman dungeon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was true that Rome was no longer the great military republic which for
+ so many ages had shattered the kingdoms of the world. Her system of
+ government was changed; and, after a century of revolution and civil war,
+ she had placed herself under the despotism of a single ruler. But the
+ discipline of her troops was yet unimpaired, and her warlike spirit seemed
+ unabated. The first wars of the empire had been signalised by conquests as
+ valuable as any gained by the republic in a corresponding period. It is a
+ great fallacy, though apparently sanctioned by great authorities, to
+ suppose that the foreign policy pursued by Augustus was pacific. He
+ certainly recommended such a policy to his successors, either from
+ timidity, or from jealousy of their fame outshining his own; ["Incertum
+ metu an per invidiam."&mdash;Tac. Ann. i. 11] but he himself, until
+ Arminius broke his spirit, had followed a very different course. Besides
+ his Spanish wars, his generals, in a series of principally aggressive
+ campaigns, had extended the Roman frontier from the Alps to the Danube;
+ and had reduced into subjection the large and important countries that now
+ form the territories of all Austria south of that river, and of East
+ Switzerland, Lower Wirtemberg, Bavaria, the Valteline, and the Tyrol.
+ While the progress of the Roman arms thus pressed the Germans from the
+ south, still more formidable inroads had been made by the Imperial legions
+ in the west. Roman armies, moving from the province of Gaul, established a
+ chain of fortresses along the right as well as the left bank of the Rhine,
+ and, in a series of victorious campaigns, advanced their eagles as far as
+ the Elbe; which now seemed added to the list of vassal rivers, to the
+ Nile, the Rhine, the Rhone, the Danube, the Tagus, the Seine, and many
+ more, that acknowledged the supremacy of the Tiber. Roman fleets also,
+ sailing from the harbours of Gaul along the German coasts, and up the
+ estuaries, co-operated with the land-forces of the empire; and seemed to
+ display, even more decisively than her armies, her overwhelming
+ superiority over the rude Germanic tribes. Throughout the territory thus
+ invaded, the Romans had, with their usual military skill, established
+ chains of fortified posts; and a powerful army of occupation was kept on
+ foot, ready to move instantly on any spot where a popular outbreak might
+ be attempted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vast however, and admirably organized as the fabric of Roman power
+ appeared on the frontiers and in the provinces, there was rottenness at
+ the core. In Rome's unceasing hostilities with foreign foes, and, still
+ more, in her long series of desolating civil wars, the free middle classes
+ of Italy had almost wholly disappeared. Above the position which they had
+ occupied, an oligarchy of wealth had reared itself: beneath that position
+ a degraded mass of poverty and misery was fermenting. Slaves, the chance
+ sweepings of every conquered country, shoals of Africans, Sardinians,
+ Asiatics, Illyrians, and others, made up the bulk of the population of the
+ Italian peninsula. The foulest profligacy of manners was general in all
+ ranks. In universal weariness of revolution and civil war, and in
+ consciousness of being too debased for self-government, the nation had
+ submitted itself to the absolute authority of Augustus. Adulation was now
+ the chief function the senate: and the gifts of genius and accomplishments
+ of art were devoted to the elaboration of eloquently false panegyrics upon
+ the prince and his favourite courtiers. With bitter indignation must the
+ German chieftain have beheld all this, and contrasted with it the rough
+ worth of his own countrymen;&mdash;their bravery, their fidelity to their
+ word, their manly independence of spirit their love of their national free
+ institutions, and their loathing of every pollution and meanness. Above
+ all, he must have thought of the domestic virtues that hallowed a German
+ home; of the respect there shown to the female character, and of the pure
+ affection by which that respect was repaid. His soul must have burned
+ within him at the contemplation of such a race yielding to these debased
+ Italians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, to persuade the Germans to combine, in spite of their frequent
+ feuds among themselves, in one sudden outbreak against Rome; to keep the
+ scheme concealed from the Romans until the hour for action had arrived;
+ and then, without possessing a single walled town, without military
+ stores, without training, to teach his insurgent countrymen to defeat
+ veteran armies, and storm fortifications, seemed so perilous an
+ enterprise, that probably Arminius would have receded from it, had not a
+ stronger feeling even than patriotism urged him on. Among the Germans of
+ high rank who had most readily submitted to the invaders, and become
+ zealous partisans of Roman authority, was a chieftain named Segestes. His
+ daughter, Thusnelda, was pre-eminent among the noble maidens of Germany.
+ Arminius had sought her hand in marriage; but Segestes, who probably
+ discerned the young chief's disaffection to Rome, forbade his suit, and
+ strove to preclude all communication between him and his daughter.
+ Thusnelda, however, sympathised far more with the heroic spirit of her
+ lover, than with the time serving policy of her father. An elopement
+ baffled the precautions of Segestes; who, disappointed in his hope of
+ preventing the marriage, accused Arminius, before the Roman governor, of
+ having carried off his daughter, and of planning treason against Rome.
+ Thus assailed, and dreading to see his bride torn from him by the
+ officials of the foreign oppressor, Arminius delayed no longer, but bent
+ all his energies to organize and execute a general insurrection of the
+ great mass of his countrymen, who hitherto had submitted in sullen
+ inertness to the Roman dominion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A change of governors had recently taken place, which, while it materially
+ favoured the ultimate success of the insurgents, served, by the immediate
+ aggravation of the Roman oppressions which it produced, to make the native
+ population more universally eager to take arms. Tiberius, who was
+ afterwards emperor, had lately been recalled from the command in Germany,
+ and sent into Pannonia to put down a dangerous revolt which had broken out
+ against the Romans in that province. The German patriots were thus
+ delivered from the stern supervision of one of the most auspicious of
+ mankind, and were also relieved from having to contend against the high
+ military talents of a veteran commander, who thoroughly understood their
+ national character, and the nature of the country, which he himself had
+ principally subdued. In the room of Tiberius, Augustus sent into Germany
+ Quintilius Varus, who had lately returned from the proconsulate of Syria.
+ Varus was a true representative of the higher classes of the Romans; among
+ whom a general taste for literature, a keen susceptibility to all
+ intellectual gratifications, a minute acquaintance with the principles and
+ practice of their own national jurisprudence, a careful training in the
+ schools of the rhetoricians, and a fondness for either partaking in or
+ watching the intellectual strife of forensic oratory, had become generally
+ diffused; without, however, having humanized the old Roman spirit of cruel
+ indifference for human feelings and human sufferings, and without acting
+ as the least check on unprincipled avarice and ambition, or on habitual
+ and gross profligacy. Accustomed to govern the depraved and debased
+ natives of Syria, a country where courage in man, and virtue in woman, had
+ for centuries been unknown, Varus thought that he might gratify his
+ licentious and rapacious passions with equal impunity among the
+ high-minded sons and pure-spirited daughters of Germany. When the general
+ of an army sets the example of outrages of this description, he is soon
+ faithfully imitated by his officers, and surpassed by his still more
+ brutal soldiery. The Romans now habitually indulged in those violations of
+ the sanctity of the domestic shrine, and those insults upon honour and
+ modesty, by which far less gallant spirits than those of our Teutonic
+ ancestors have often been maddened into insurrection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [I cannot forbear quoting Macaulay's beautiful lines, where he describes
+ how similar outrages in the early times of Rome goaded the plebeians to
+ rise against the patricians:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Heap heavier still the fetters; bar closer still the grate;
+ Patient as sheep we yield us up unto your cruel hate.
+ But by the shades beneath us, and by the gods above,
+ Add not unto your cruel hate your still more cruel love.
+ * * *
+ Then leave the poor plebeian his single tie to life&mdash;
+ The sweet, sweet love of daughter, of sister, and of wife,
+ The gentle speech, the balm for all that his vext soul endures,
+ The kiss in which he half forgets even such a yoke as yours.
+ Still let the maiden's beauty swell the father's breast with
+ pride;
+ Still let the bridegroom's arms enfold an unpolluted bride.
+ Spare us the inexpiable wrong, the unutterable shame,
+ That turns the coward's heart to steel, the sluggard's blood to
+ flame;
+ Lest when our latest hope is fled ye taste of our despair,
+ And learn by proof in some wild hour, how much the wretched
+ dare."]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Arminius found among the other German chiefs many who sympathised with him
+ in his indignation at their country's debasement, and many whom private
+ wrongs had stung yet more deeply. There was little difficulty in
+ collecting bold leaders for an attack on the oppressors, and little fear
+ of the population not rising readily at those leaders' call. But to
+ declare open war against Rome, and to encounter Varus's army in a pitched
+ battle, would have been merely rushing upon certain destruction. Varus had
+ three legions under him, a force which, after allowing for detachments,
+ cannot be estimated at less than fourteen thousand Roman infantry. He had
+ also eight or nine hundred Roman cavalry, and at least an equal number of
+ horse and foot sent from the allied states, or raised among those
+ provincials who had not received the Roman franchise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not merely the number, but the quality of this force that made it
+ formidable; and however contemptible Varus might be as a general, Arminius
+ well knew how admirably the Roman armies were organized and officered, and
+ how perfectly the legionaries understood every manoeuvre and every duty
+ which the varying emergencies of a stricken field might require. Stratagem
+ was, therefore, indispensable; and it was necessary to blind Varus to his
+ schemes until a favourable opportunity should arrive for striking a
+ decisive blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this purpose the German confederates frequented the headquarters of
+ Varus, which seem to have been near the centre of the modern country of
+ Westphalia, where the Roman general conducted himself with all the
+ arrogant security of the governor of a perfectly submissive province.
+ There Varus gratified at once his vanity, his rhetorical taste, and his
+ avarice, by holding courts, to which he summoned the Germans for the
+ settlement of all their disputes, while a bar of Roman advocates attended
+ to argue the cases before the tribunal of the Proconsul; who did not omit
+ the opportunity of exacting court-fees and accepting bribes. Varus trusted
+ implicitly to the respect which the Germans pretended to pay to his
+ abilities as a judge, and to the interest which they affected to take in
+ the forensic eloquence of their conquerors. Meanwhile a succession of
+ heavy rains rendered the country more difficult for the operations of
+ regular troops; and Arminius, seeing that the infatuation of Varus was
+ complete, secretly directed the tribes near the Weser and the Ems to take
+ up arms in open revolt against the Romans. This was represented to Varus
+ as an occasion which required his prompt attendance at the spot; but he
+ was kept in studied ignorance of its being part of a concerted national
+ rising; and he still looked on Arminius as his submissive vassal, whose
+ aid he might rely on in facilitating the march of his troops against the
+ rebels, and in extinguishing the local disturbance. He therefore set his
+ army in motion, and marched eastward in a line parallel to the course of
+ the Lippe. For some distance his route lay along a level plain; but on
+ arriving at the tract between the curve of the upper part of that stream
+ and the sources of the Ems, the country assumes a very different
+ character; and here, in the territory of the modern little principality of
+ Lippe, it was that Arminius had fixed the scene of his enterprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A woody and hilly region intervenes between the heads of the two rivers,
+ and forms the water-shed of their streams. This region still retains the
+ name (Teutoberger wald&mdash;Teutobergiensis saltus) which it bore in the
+ days of Arminius. The nature of the ground has probably also remained
+ unaltered. The eastern part of it, round Detmoldt, the present capital of
+ the principality of Lippe, is described by a modern German scholar, Dr.
+ Plate, as being "a table-land intersected by numerous deep and narrow
+ valleys, which in some places form small plains, surrounded by steep
+ mountains and rocks, and only accessible by narrow defiles. All the
+ valleys are traversed by rapid streams, shallow in the dry season, but
+ subject to sudden swellings in autumn and winter. The vast forests which
+ cover the summits and slopes of the hills consist chiefly of oak; there is
+ little underwood, and both men and horse would move with ease in the
+ forests if the ground were not broken by gulleys, or rendered
+ impracticable by fallen trees." This is the district to which Varus is
+ supposed to have marched; and Dr. Plate adds, that "the names of several
+ localities on and near that spot seem to indicate that a great battle had
+ once been fought there. We find the names 'das Winnefeld' (the field of
+ victory), 'die Knochenbahn' (the bone-lane), 'die Knochenleke' (the
+ bone-brook), 'der Mordkessel' (the kettle of slaughter), and others." [I
+ am indebted for much valuable information on this subject to my friend Mr.
+ Henry Pearson.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contrary to the usual strict principles of Roman discipline, Varus had
+ suffered his army to be accompanied and impeded by an immense train of
+ baggage-waggons, and by a rabble of camp followers; as if his troops had
+ been merely changing their quarters in a friendly country. When the long
+ array quitted the firm level ground, and began to wind its way among the
+ woods, the marshes, and the ravines, the difficulties of the march, even
+ without the intervention of an armed foe, became fearfully apparent. In
+ many places the soil, sodden with rain, was impracticable for cavalry and
+ even for infantry, until trees had been felled, and a rude causeway formed
+ through the morass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The duties of the engineer were familiar to all who served in the Roman
+ armies. But the crowd and confusion of the columns embarrassed the working
+ parties of the soldiery, and in the midst of their toil and disorder the
+ word was suddenly passed through their ranks that the rear-guard was
+ attacked by the barbarians. Varus resolved on pressing forward; but a
+ heavy discharge of missiles from the woods on either flank taught him how
+ serious was the peril, and he saw the best men falling round him without
+ the opportunity of retaliation; for his light-armed auxiliaries, who were
+ principally of Germanic race, now rapidly deserted, and it was impossible
+ to deploy the legionaries on such broken ground for a charge against the
+ enemy. Choosing one of the most open and firm spots which they could force
+ their way to, the Romans halted for the night; and, faithful to their
+ national discipline and tactics, formed their camp amid the harassing
+ attacks of the rapidly thronging foes, with the elaborate toil and
+ systematic skill, the traces of which are impressed permanently on the
+ soil of so many European countries, attesting the presence in the olden
+ time of the imperial eagles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morrow the Romans renewed their march; the veteran officers who
+ served under Varus now probably directing the operations, and hoping to
+ find the Germans drawn up to meet them; in which case they relied on their
+ own superior discipline and tactics for such a victory as should reassure
+ the supremacy of Rome. But Arminius was far too sage a commander to lead
+ on his followers, with their unwieldy broadswords and inefficient
+ defensive armour, against the Roman legionaries, fully armed with helmet,
+ cuirass, greaves, and shield; who were skilled to commence the conflict
+ with a murderous volley of heavy javelins, hurled upon the foe when a few
+ yards distant, and then, with their short cut-and-thrust swords, to hew
+ their way through all opposition; preserving the utmost steadiness and
+ coolness, and obeying each word of command. In the midst of strife and
+ slaughter with the same precision and alertness as if upon parade. [See
+ Gibbon's description (vol. i, chap. 1) of the Roman legions in the time of
+ Augustus; and see the description in Tacitus (Ann. lib. i) of the
+ subsequent battles between Caecina and Arminius.] Arminius suffered the
+ Romans to march out from their camp, to form first in line for action, and
+ then in column for marching, without the show of opposition. For some
+ distance Varus was allowed to move on, only harassed by slight skirmishes,
+ but struggling with difficulty through the broken ground; the toil and
+ distress of his men being aggravated by heavy torrents of rain, which
+ burst upon the devoted legions as if the angry gods of Germany were
+ pouring out the vials of their wrath upon the invaders. After some little
+ time their van approached a ridge of high woody ground, which is one of
+ the off-shoots of the great Hercynian forest, and is situate between the
+ modern villages of Driburg and Bielefeld. Arminius had caused barricades
+ of hewn trees to be formed here, so as to add to the natural difficulties
+ of the passage. Fatigue and discouragement now began to betray themselves
+ in the Roman ranks. Their line became less steady; baggage-waggons were
+ abandoned from the impossibility of forcing them along; and, as this
+ happened, many soldiers left their ranks and crowded round the waggons to
+ secure the most valuable portions of their property; each was busy about
+ his own affairs, and purposely slow in hearing the word of command from
+ his officers. Arminius now gave the signal for a general attack. The
+ fierce shouts of the Germans pealed through the gloom of the forests, and
+ in thronging multitudes they assailed the flanks of the invaders, pouring
+ in clouds of darts on the encumbered legionaries, as they struggled up the
+ glens or floundered in the morasses, and watching every opportunity of
+ charging through the intervals of the disjointed column, and so cutting
+ off the communication between its several brigades. Arminius, with a
+ chosen band of personal retainers round him, cheered on his countrymen by
+ voice and example. He and his men aimed their weapons particularly at the
+ horses of the Roman cavalry. The wounded animals, slipping about in the
+ mire and their own blood, threw their riders, and plunged among the ranks
+ of the legions, disordering all round them. Varus now ordered the troops
+ to be countermarched, in the hope of reaching the nearest Roman garrison
+ on the Lippe. [The circumstances of the early part of the battle which
+ Arminius fought with Caecina six years afterwards, evidently resembled
+ those of his battle with Varus, and the result was very near being the
+ same: I have therefore adopted part of the description which Tacitus gives
+ (Ann. lib. i. c. 65) of the last mentioned engagement: "Neque tamen
+ Arminius, quamquam libero in cursu, statim prorupit: sed ut haesere caeno
+ fossisque impedimenta, turbati circum milites; incertus signorum ordo;
+ utque tali in tempore sibi quisque properus, et lentae adversum imperia
+ aures, irrumpere Germanos jubet, clamitans 'En Varus, et eodem iterum fato
+ victae legiones!' Simul haec, et cum delectis scindit agmen, equisque
+ maxime vulnera ingerit; illi sanguine suo et lubrico paludum lapsantes,
+ excussis rectoribus, disjicere obvios, proterere jacentes."] But retreat
+ now was as impracticable as advance; and the falling back of the Romans
+ only augmented the courage of their assailants, and caused fiercer and
+ more frequent charges on the flanks of the disheartened army. The Roman
+ officer who commanded the cavalry, Numonius Vala, rode off with his
+ squadrons, in the vain hope of escaping by thus abandoning his comrades.
+ Unable to keep together, or force their way across the woods and swamps,
+ the horsemen were overpowered in detail and slaughtered to the last man.
+ The Roman infantry still held together and resisted, but more through the
+ instinct of discipline and bravery than from any hope of success or
+ escape. Varus, after being severely wounded in a charge of the Germans
+ against his part of the column, committed suicide to avoid falling into
+ the hands of those whom he had exasperated by his oppressions. One of the
+ lieutenant-generals of the army fell fighting; the other surrendered to
+ the enemy. But mercy to a fallen foe had never been a Roman virtue, and
+ those among her legions who now laid down their arms in hope of quarter,
+ drank deep of the cup of suffering, which Rome had held to the lips of
+ many a brave but unfortunate enemy. The infuriated Germans slaughtered
+ their oppressors with deliberate ferocity; and those prisoners who were
+ not hewn to pieces on the spot, were only preserved to perish by a more
+ cruel death in cold blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bulk of the Roman army fought steadily and stubbornly, frequently
+ repelling the masses of the assailants, but gradually losing the
+ compactness of their array, and becoming weaker and weaker beneath the
+ incessant shower of darts and the reiterated assaults of the vigorous and
+ unencumbered Germans. At last, in a series of desperate attacks the column
+ was pierced through and through, two of the eagles captured, and the Roman
+ host, which on the yester morning had marched forth in such pride and
+ might, now broken up into confused fragments, either fell fighting beneath
+ the overpowering numbers of the enemy, or perished in the swamps and woods
+ in unavailing efforts at flight. Few, very few, ever saw again the left
+ bank of the Rhine. One body of brave veterans, arraying themselves in a
+ ring on a little mound, beat off every charge of the Germans, and
+ prolonged their honourable resistance to the close of that dreadful day.
+ The traces of a feeble attempt at forming a ditch and mound attested in
+ after years the spot where the last of the Romans passed their night of
+ suffering and despair. But on the morrow this remnant also, worn out with
+ hunger, wounds, and toil, was charged by the victorious Germans, and
+ either massacred on the spot, or offered up in fearful rites at the alters
+ of the deities of the old mythology of the North.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A gorge in the mountain ridge, through which runs the modern road between
+ Paderborn and Pyrmont, leads from the spot where the heat of the battle
+ raged, to the Extersteine, a cluster of bold and grotesque rocks of
+ sandstone; near which is a small sheet of water, overshadowed by a grove
+ of aged trees. According to local tradition, this was one of the sacred
+ groves of the ancient Germans, and it was here that the Roman captives
+ were slain in sacrifice by the victorious warriors of Arminius. ["Lucis
+ propinquis barbarae arae, apud quas tribunos ac primorum ordinam
+ centuriones mactaverant."&mdash;TACITUS, Ann. lib. i. c. 61.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never was victory more decisive, never was the liberation of an oppressed
+ people more instantaneous and complete. Throughout Germany the Roman
+ garrisons were assailed and cut off; and, within a few weeks after Varus
+ had fallen, the German soil was freed from the foot of an invader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Rome, the tidings of the battle was received with an agony of terror,
+ the descriptions of which we should deem exaggerated, did they not come
+ from Roman historians themselves. These passages in the Roman writers not
+ only tell emphatically how great was the awe which the Romans felt of the
+ prowess of the Germans, if their various tribes could be brought to
+ reunite for a common purpose, but also they reveal bow weakened and
+ debased the population of Italy had become. [It is clear that the Romans
+ followed the policy of fomenting dissension and wars of the Germans among
+ themselves. See the thirty-third section of the "Germania" of Tacitus,
+ where he mentions the destruction of the Bructeri by the neighbouring
+ tribes: "Favore quodam erga nos deorum: nam ne spectaculo quidem proelii
+ invidere: super LX. millia non armis telisque Romanis, sed, quod
+ magnificentius est, oblectationi oculisque ceciderunt. Maneat quaeso,
+ duretque gentibus, si non amor nostri at certe odium sui quando urgentibus
+ imperii fatis, nihil jam praestare fortuna majus potes quam hostiam
+ discordiam."] Dion Cassius says: [Lib. lvi. sec. 23.] "Then Augustus, when
+ he heard the calamity of Varus, rent his garments, and was in great
+ affliction for the troops he had lost, and for terror respecting the
+ Germans and the Gauls. And his chief alarm was, that he expected them to
+ push on against Italy and Rome: and there remained no Roman youth fit for
+ military duty, that were worth speaking of, and the allied populations
+ that were at all serviceable had been wasted away. Yet he prepared for the
+ emergency as well as his means allowed; and when none of the citizens of
+ military age were willing to enlist he made them cast lots, and punished
+ by confiscation of goods and disfranchisement every fifth man among those
+ under thirty-five, and every tenth man of those above that age. At last,
+ when he found that not even thus; could he make many come forward, he put
+ some of them to death. So he made a conscription of discharged veterans
+ and emancipated slaves, and collecting as large a force as he could, sent
+ it, under Tiberius, with all speed into Germany."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dion mentions, also, a number of terrific portents that were believed to
+ have occurred at the time; and the narration of which is not immaterial,
+ as it shows the state of the public mind, when such things were so
+ believed in, and so interpreted. The summits of the Alps were said to have
+ fallen, and three columns of fire to have blazed up from them. In the
+ Campus Martius, the temple of the War-God, from whom the founder of Rome
+ had sprung, was struck by a thunderbolt. The nightly heavens glowed
+ several times, as if on fire. Many comets blazed forth together; and fiery
+ meteors shaped like spears, had shot from the northern quarter of the sky,
+ down into the Roman camps. It was said, too, that a statue of Victory,
+ which had stood at a place on the frontier, pointing the way towards
+ Germany, had of its own accord turned round, and now pointed to Italy.
+ These and other prodigies were believed by the multitude to accompany the
+ slaughter of Varus's legions, and to manifest the anger of the gods
+ against Rome, Augustus himself was not free from superstition; but on this
+ occasion no supernatural terrors were needed to increase the alarm and
+ grief that he felt; and which made him, even for months after the news of
+ the battle had arrived, often beat his head against the wall, and exclaim,
+ "Quintilius Varus, give me back my legions!" We learn this from his
+ biographer, Suetonius; and, indeed, every ancient writer who alludes to
+ the overthrow of Varus, attests the importance of the blow against the
+ Roman power, and the bitterness with which it was felt. [Florus expresses
+ its effect most pithily: "Hac clade factum est ut imperium quod in litore
+ oceani non steterat, in ripa Rheni fluminis staret" (iv. 12).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Germans did not pursue their victory beyond their own territory. But
+ that victory secured at once and for ever the independence of the Teutonic
+ race. Rome sent, indeed, her legions again into Germany, to parade a
+ temporary superiority; but all hopes of permanent conquest were abandoned
+ by Augustus and his successors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blow which Arminius had struck never was forgotten, Roman fear
+ disguised itself under the specious title of moderation; and the Rhine
+ became the acknowledged boundary of the two nations until the fifth
+ century of our era, when the Germans became the assailants, and carved
+ with their conquering swords the provinces of Imperial Rome into the
+ kingdoms of modern Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ARMINIUS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have said above that the great Cheruscan is more truly one of our
+ national heroes than Caractacus is. It may be added that an Englishman is
+ entitled to claim a closer degree of relationship with Arminius than can
+ be claimed by any German of modern Germany. The proof of this depends on
+ the proof of four facts: first, that the Cherusci were Old Saxons, or
+ Saxons of the interior of Germany; secondly, that the Anglo-Saxons, or
+ Saxons of the coast of Germany, were more closely akin than other German
+ tribes were to the Cheruscan Saxons; thirdly, that the Old Saxons were
+ almost exterminated by Charlemagne; fourthly, that the Anglo-Saxons are
+ our immediate ancestors. The last of these may be assumed as an axiom in
+ English history. The proofs of the other three are partly philological,
+ and partly historical. I have not space to go into them here, but they
+ will be found in the early chapters of the great work of Dr. Robert Gordon
+ Latham on the "English Language;" and in the notes to his edition of the
+ "Germania of Tacitus." It may be, however, here remarked that the present
+ Saxons of Germany are of the High Germanic division of the German race,
+ whereas both the Anglo-Saxon and Old Saxon were of the Low Germanic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being thus the nearest heirs of the glory of Arminius, we may fairly
+ devote more attention to his career than, in such a work as the present,
+ could be allowed to any individual leader, and it is interesting to trace
+ how far his fame survived during the middle ages, both among the Germans
+ of the Continent and among ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems probable that the jealousy with which Maraboduus, the king of the
+ Suevi and Marcomanni, regarded Arminius, and which ultimately broke out
+ into open hostilities between those German tribes and the Cherusci,
+ prevented Arminius from leading the confederate Germans to attack Italy
+ after his first victory. Perhaps he may have had the rare moderation of
+ being content with the liberation of his country, without seeking to
+ retaliate on her former oppressors. When Tiberius marched into Germany in
+ the year 10, Arminius was too cautious to attack him on ground favourable
+ to the legions, and Tiberius was too skilful, to entangle his troops in
+ difficult parts of the country. His march and counter-march were as
+ unresisted as they were unproductive. A few years later, when a dangerous
+ revolt of the Roman legions near the frontier caused their generals to
+ find them active employment by leading them into the interior of Germany,
+ we find Arminius again energetic in his country's defence. The old quarrel
+ between him and his father-in-law, Segestes, had broken out afresh.
+ Segestes now called in the aid of the Roman general, Germanicus, to whom
+ he surrendered himself; and by his contrivance his daughter Thusnelda, the
+ wife of Arminius, also came into the hands of the Romans, being far
+ advanced in pregnancy. She showed, as Tacitus relates, [Ann. i. 57.] more
+ of the spirit of her husband than of her father, a spirit that could not
+ be subdued into tears or supplications. She was sent to Ravenna, and there
+ gave birth to a son, whose life we find, from an allusion in Tacitus, to
+ have been eventful and unhappy; but the part of the great historian's work
+ which narrated his fate has perished, and we only know from another
+ quarter that the son of Arminius was, at the age of four years, led
+ captive in a triumphal pageant along the streets of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The high spirit of Arminius was goaded almost into frenzy by these
+ bereavements. The fate of his wife, thus torn from him, and of his babe
+ doomed to bondage even before its birth, inflamed the eloquent invectives
+ with which he roused his countrymen against the home traitors, and against
+ their invaders, who thus made war upon women and children. Germanicus had
+ marched his army to the place where Varus had perished, and had there paid
+ funeral honours to the ghastly relics of his predecessor's legions that he
+ found heaped around him. [In the Museum of Rhenish antiquities at Bonn
+ there is a Roman sepulchral monument, the inscription on which records
+ that it was erected to the memory of M. Coelius, who fell "BELLO
+ VARIANO."] Arminius lured him to advance a little further into the
+ country, and then assailed him, and fought a battle, which, by the Roman
+ accounts, was a drawn one. The effect of it was to make Germanicus resolve
+ on retreating to the Rhine. He himself, with part of his troops, embarked
+ in some vessels on the Ems, and returned by that river, and then by sea;
+ but part of his forces were entrusted to a Roman general, named Caecina,
+ to lead them back by land to the Rhine. Arminius followed this division on
+ its march, and fought several battles with it, in which he inflicted heavy
+ loss on the Romans, captured the greater part of their baggage, and would
+ have destroyed them completely, had not his skilful system of operations
+ been finally thwarted by the haste of Inguiomerus, a confederate German
+ chief who insisted on assaulting the Romans in their camp, instead of
+ waiting till they were entangled in the difficulties of the country, and
+ assailing their columns on the march.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following year the Romans were inactive; but in the year afterwards
+ Germanicus led a fresh invasion. He placed his army on ship-board, and
+ sailed to the mouth of the Ems, where he disembarked, and marched to the
+ Weser, where he encamped, probably in the neighbourhood of Minden.
+ Arminius had collected his army on the other side of the river; and a
+ scene occurred, which is powerfully told by Tacitus, and which is the
+ subject of a beautiful poem by Praed. It has been already mentioned that
+ the brother of Arminius, like himself, had been trained up, while young,
+ to serve in the Roman armies; but, unlike Arminius, he not only refused to
+ quit the Roman service for that of his country, but fought against his
+ country with the legions of Germanicus. He had assumed the Roman name of
+ Flavius, and had gained considerable distinction in the Roman service, in
+ which he had lost an eye from a wound in battle. When the Roman outposts
+ approached the river Weser, Arminius called out to them from the opposite
+ bank, and expressed a wish to see his brother. Flavius stepped forward,
+ and Arminius ordered his own followers to retire, and requested that the
+ archers should be removed from the Roman bank of the river. This was done:
+ and the brothers, who apparently had not seen each other for some years,
+ began a conversation from the opposite sides of the stream, in which
+ Arminius questioned his brother respecting the loss of his eye, and what
+ battle it had been lost in, and what reward he had received for his wound.
+ Flavius told him how the eye was destroyed, and mentioned the increased
+ pay that he had on account of its loss, and showed the collar and other
+ military decorations that had been given him. Arminius mocked at these as
+ badges of slavery; and then each began to try to win the other over;
+ Flavius boasting the power of Rome, and her generosity to the submissive;
+ Arminius appealing to him in the name of their country's gods, of the
+ mother that had borne them, and by the holy names of fatherland and
+ freedom, not to prefer being the betrayer to being the champion of his
+ country. They soon proceeded to mutual taunts and menaces, and Flavius
+ called aloud for his horse and his arms, that he might dash across the
+ river and attack his brother; nor would he have been checked from doing
+ so, had not the Roman general, Stertinius, run up to him, and forcibly
+ detained him. Arminius stood on the other bank, threatening the renegade,
+ and defying him to battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I shall not be thought to need apology for quoting here the stanzas in
+ which Praed has described this scene&mdash;a scene among the most
+ affecting, as well as the most striking, that history supplies. It makes
+ us reflect on the desolate position of Arminius, with his wife and child
+ captives in the enemy's hands, and with his brother a renegade in arms
+ against him. The great liberator of our German race stood there, with
+ every source of human happiness denied him, except the consciousness of
+ doing his duty to his country.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Back, back! he fears not foaming flood
+ Who fears not steel-clad line:&mdash;
+ No warrior thou of German blood,
+ No brother thou of mine.
+ Go, earn Rome's chain to load thy neck,
+ Her gems to deck thy hilt;
+ And blazon honour's hapless wreck
+ With all the gauds of guilt.
+
+ "But wouldst thou have ME share the prey?
+ By all that I have done,&mdash;
+ The Varian bones that day by day
+ Lie whitening in the sun,
+ The legion's trampled panoply,
+ The eagle's shattered wing,&mdash;
+ I would not be for earth or sky
+ So scorn'd and mean a thing.
+
+ "Ho, call me here the wizard, boy,
+ Of dark and subtle skill,
+ To agonise but not destroy,
+ To curse, but not to kill.
+ When swords are out, and shriek and shout,
+ Leave little room for prayer,
+ No fetter on man's arm or heart
+ Hangs half so heavy there.
+
+ "I curse him by the gifts the land
+ Hath won from him and Rome&mdash;
+ The riving axe, the wasting brand,
+ Rent forest, blazing home.
+ I curse him by our country's gods,
+ The terrible, the dark,
+ The breakers of the Roman rods,
+ The smiters of the bark.
+
+ "Oh misery, that such a ban
+ On such a brow should be!
+ Why comes he not in battle's van
+ His country's chief to be?&mdash;
+ To stand a comrade by my side,
+ The sharer of my fame,
+ And worthy of a brother's pride
+ And of a brother's name?
+
+ "But it is past!&mdash;where heroes press
+ And cowards bend the knee
+ Arminius is not brotherless;
+ His brethren are the free.
+ They come around: one hour, and light
+ Will fade from turf and tide,
+ Then onward, onward to the fight
+ With darkness for our guide.
+
+ "To-night, to-night, when we shall meet
+ In combat face to face,
+ Then only would Arminius greet
+ The renegade's embrace.
+ The canker of Rome's guilt shall be
+ Upon his dying name;
+ And as he lived in slavery,
+ So shall he fall in shame.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the day after the Romans had reached the Weser, Germanicus led his army
+ across that river, and a partial encounter took place, in which Arminius
+ was successful. But on the succeeding day a general action was fought, in
+ which Arminius was severely wounded, and the German infantry routed with
+ heavy loss. The horsemen of the two armies encountered without either
+ party gaining the advantage. But the Roman army remained master of the
+ ground, and claimed a complete victory. Germanicus erected a trophy in the
+ field, with a vaunting inscription, that the nations between the Rhine and
+ the Elbe had been thoroughly conquered by his army. But that army speedily
+ made a final retreat to the left bank of the Rhine; nor was the effect of
+ their campaign more durable than their trophy. The sarcasm with which
+ Tacitus speaks of certain other triumphs of Roman generals over Germans,
+ may apply to the pageant which Germanicus celebrated on his return to Rome
+ from his command of the Roman army of the Rhine. The Germans were
+ "TRIUMPHATI POTIUS QUAM VICTI."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the Romans had abandoned their attempts on Germany, we find Arminius
+ engaged in hostilities with Maroboduus, the king of the Suevi and
+ Marcomanni who was endeavouring to bring the other German tribes into a
+ state of dependency on him. Arminius was at the head of the Germans who
+ took up arms against this home invader of their liberties. After some
+ minor engagements, a pitched battle was fought between the two
+ confederacies, A.D. 16, in which the loss on each side was equal; but
+ Maroboduus confessed the ascendency of his antagonist by avoiding a
+ renewal of the engagement, and by imploring the intervention of the Romans
+ in his defence. The younger Drusus then commanded the Roman legions in the
+ province of Illyricum, and by his mediation a peace was concluded between
+ Arminius and Maroboduus, by the terms of which it is evident that the
+ latter must have renounced his ambitious schemes against the freedom of
+ the other German tribes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arminius did not long survive this second war of independence, which he
+ successfully waged for his country. He was assassinated in the
+ thirty-seventh year of his age, by some of his own kinsmen, who conspired
+ against him. Tacitus says that this happened while he was engaged in a
+ civil war, which had been caused by his attempts to make himself king over
+ his countrymen. It is far more probable (as one of the best biographers of
+ Arminius has observed) that Tacitus misunderstood an attempt of Arminius
+ to extend his influence as elective war-chieftain of the Cherusci, and
+ other tribes, for an attempt to obtain the royal dignity. [Dr. Plate, in
+ Biographical Dictionary commenced by the Society for the Diffusion of
+ Useful Knowledge.] When we remember that his father-in-law and his brother
+ were renegades, we can well understand that a party among his kinsmen may
+ have been bitterly hostile to him, and have opposed his authority with the
+ tribe by open violence, and when that seemed ineffectual, by secret
+ assassination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arminius left a name, which the historians of the nation against which he
+ combated so long and so gloriously have delighted to honour. It is from
+ the most indisputable source, from the lips of enemies, that we know his
+ exploits. [See Tacitus, Ann. lib. ii. sec. 88; Velleius Paterculus, lib.
+ ii. sec. 118.] His country men made history, but did not write it. But his
+ memory lived among them in the lays of their bards, who recorded
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The deeds he did, the fields he won, The freedom he restored."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tacitus, many years after the death of Arminius, says of him, "Canitur
+ adhuc barbaras apud gentes." As time passed on, the gratitude of ancient
+ Germany to her great deliverer grew into adoration, and divine honours
+ were paid for centuries to Arminius by every tribe of the Low Germanic
+ division of the Teutonic races. The Irmin-sul, or the column of Herman,
+ near Eresburg, the modern Stadtberg, was the chosen object of worship to
+ the descendants of the Cherusci, the Old Saxons, and in defence of which
+ they fought most desperately against Charlemagne and his christianized
+ Franks. "Irmin, in the cloudy Olympus of Teutonic belief, appears as a
+ king and a warrior; and the pillar, the 'Irmin-sul,' bearing the statue,
+ and considered as the symbol of the deity, was the Palladium of the Saxon
+ nation, until the temple of Eresburg was destroyed by Charlemagne, and the
+ column itself transferred to the monastery of Corbey, where, perhaps, a
+ portion of the rude rock idol yet remains, covered by the ornaments of the
+ Gothic era." [Palgrave on the English Commonwealth, vol. ii. p. 140.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Traces of the worship of Arminius are to be found among our Anglo-Saxon
+ ancestors, after their settlement in this island. One of the four great
+ highways was held to be under the protection of the deity, and was called
+ the "Irmin-street." The name Arminius is, of course, the mere Latinized
+ form of "Herman," the name by which the hero and the deity were known by
+ every man of Low German blood, on either side of the German Sea. It means,
+ etymologically, the "War-man," the "man of hosts." No other explanation of
+ the worship of the "Irmin-sul," and of the name of the "Irmin-street," is
+ so satisfactory as that which connects them with the deified Arminius. We
+ know for certain of the existence of other columns of an analogous
+ character. Thus, there was the Roland-seule in North Germany; there was a
+ Thor-seule in Sweden, and (what is more important) there was an
+ Athelstan-seule in Saxon England. [See Lappenburg's Anglo-Saxons, p. 378.
+ For nearly all the philological and ethnographical facts respecting
+ Arminius, I am indebted to Dr. R. G. Latham.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is at the present moment a song respecting the Irmin-sul current in
+ the bishopric of Minden, one version of which might seem only to refer to
+ Charlemagne having pulled down the Irmin-sul:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Herman, sla dermen, Sla pipen, sla trummen,
+ De Kaiser will kummen,
+ Met hamer un stangen,
+ Will Herman uphangen."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But there is another version, which probably is the oldest, and which
+ clearly refers to the great Arminius:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Un Herman slaug dermen; Slaug pipen, slaug trummen;
+ De fursten sind kammen,
+ Met all eren-mannen
+ Hebt VARUS uphangen."
+ [See Grimm, Deutsche Mythologie, p. 329.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ About ten centuries and a half after the demolition of the Irmin-sul, and
+ nearly eighteen after the death of Arminius, the modern Germans conceived
+ the idea of rendering tardy homage to their great hero; and, accordingly
+ some eight or ten years ago, a general subscription was organized in
+ Germany, for the purpose of erecting on the Osning&mdash;a conical
+ mountain, which forms the highest summit of the Teutoberger Wald, and is
+ eighteen hundred feet above the level of the sea&mdash;a colossal bronze
+ statue of Arminius. The statue was designed by Bandel. The hero was to
+ stand uplifting a sword in his right hand, and looking towards the Rhine.
+ The height of the statue was to be eighty feet from the base to the point
+ of the sword, and was to stand on a circular Gothic temple, ninety feet
+ high, and supported by oak trees as columns. The mountain, where it was to
+ be erected, is wild and stern, and overlooks the scene of the battle. It
+ was calculated that the statue would be clearly visible at a distance of
+ sixty miles. The temple is nearly finished, and the statue itself has been
+ cast at the copper works at Lemgo. But there, through want of funds to set
+ it up, it has lain for some years, in disjointed fragments, exposed to the
+ mutilating homage of relic-seeking travellers. The idea of honouring a
+ hero who belongs to ALL Germany, is not one which the present rulers of
+ that divided country have any wish to encourage; and the statue may long
+ continue to lie there, and present too true a type of the condition of
+ Germany herself. [On the subject of this statue I must repeat an
+ acknowledgment of my obligations to my friend Mr. Henry Pearson.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely this is an occasion in which Englishmen might well prove, by acts
+ as well as words, that we also rank Arminius among our heroes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have quoted the noble stanzas of one of our modern English poets on
+ Arminius, and I will conclude this memoir with one of the odes of the
+ great poet of modern Germany, Klopstock, on the victory to which we owe
+ our freedom, and Arminius mainly owes his fame. Klopstock calls it the
+ "Battle of Winfield." The epithet of "Sister of Cannae" shows that
+ Klopstock followed some chronologers, according to whom, Varus was
+ defeated on the anniversary of the day on which Paulus and Varro were
+ defeated by Hannibal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SONG OF TRIUMPH AFTER THE VICTORY OF HERRMAN, THE DELIVERER OF GERMANY
+ FROM THE ROMANS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FROM KLOPSTOCK'S "HERRMAN UND DIE FURSTEN." Supposed to be sung by a
+ Chorus of Bards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A CHORUS.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Sister of Cannae! Winfield's fight!
+ We saw thee with thy streaming bloody hair,
+ With fiery eye, bright with the world's despair,
+ Sweep by Walhalla's bards from out our sight.
+ Herrman outspake&mdash;"Now Victory or Death!"
+ The Romans,... "Victory!"
+ And onward rushed their eagles with the cry.
+ &mdash;So ended the FIRST day.
+
+ "Victory or Death!" began
+ Then, first, the Roman chief; and Herrman spake
+ Not, but home struck: the eagles fluttered&mdash;brake.
+ &mdash;So sped the SECOND day.
+
+ TWO CHORUSES.
+
+ And the third came.... The cry was "Flight or Death!"
+ Flight left they not for them who'd make them slaves&mdash;
+ Men who stab children!&mdash;flight for THEM!... no! graves!
+ &mdash;'Twas their LAST day.
+
+ TWO BARDS.
+
+ Yet spared they messengers: two came to Rome.
+ How drooped the plume! the lance was left to trail
+ Down in the dust behind: their cheek was pale:
+ So came the messengers to Rome.
+
+ High in his hall the Imperator sate&mdash;
+ OCTAVIANUS CAESAR AUGUSTUS sate.
+ They filled up wine-cups, wine-cups filled they up
+ For him the highest, Jove of all their state.
+
+ The flutes of Lydia hushed before their voice,
+ Before the messengers&mdash;the "Highest" sprung&mdash;
+ The god against the marble pillars, wrung
+ By the dred words, striking his brow, and thrice
+ Cried he aloud in anguish&mdash;"Varus! Varus!
+ Give back my legions, Varus!"
+
+ And now the world-wide conquerors shrunk and feared
+ For fatherland and home
+ The lance to raise; and 'mongst those false to Rome
+ The death-lot rolled, and still they shrunk and feared;
+
+ "For she her face hath turned,
+ The victor goddess," cried these cowards&mdash;(for aye
+ Be it!)&mdash;"from Rome and Romans, and her day
+ Is done!"&mdash;And still be mourned
+ And cried aloud in anguish&mdash;"Varus! Varus!
+ Give back my legions, Varus!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ [Notes:&mdash;The battle of Cannae, B.C. 216&mdash;Hannibal's victory over
+ the Romans. Winfield&mdash;the probable site of the "Herrmanschladt." See
+ SUPRA. Augustus was worshipped as a deity in his lifetime. I have taken
+ this translation from an anonymous writer in FRASER, two years ago.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN ARMINIUS'S VICTORY OVER VARUS, AND THE BATTLE
+ OF CHALONS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 43. The Romans commence the conquest of Britain, Claudius being then
+ Emperor of Rome. The population of this island was then Celtic. In about
+ forty years all the tribes south of the Clyde were subdued, and their land
+ made a Roman province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 68-60. Successful campaigns of the Roman general Corbulo against the
+ Parthians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 64. First persecution of the Christians at Rome under Nero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 68-70. Civil wars in the Roman World. The emperors Nero, Galba, Otho, and
+ Vitellius, cut off successively by violent deaths. Vespasian becomes
+ emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 70. Jerusalem destroyed by the Romans under Titus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 83. Futile attack of Domitian on the Germans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 86. Beginning of the wars between the Romans and the Dacians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 98-117. Trajan, emperor of Rome. Under him the empire acquires its
+ greatest territorial extent by his conquests in Dacia and in the East. His
+ successor, Hadrian, abandons the provinces beyond the Euphrates, which
+ Trajan had conquered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 138-180. Era of the Antonines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 167-176. A long and desperate war between Rome and a great confederacy of
+ the German nations. Marcus Antoninus at last succeeds in repelling them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 192-197. Civil Wars throughout the Roman world. Severus becomes emperor.
+ He relaxes the discipline of the soldiers. After his death in 211, the
+ series of military insurrections, civil wars, and murders of emperors
+ recommences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 226. Artaxerxes (Ardisheer) overthrows the Parthian, and restores the
+ Persian kingdom in Asia. He attacks the Roman possessions in the East.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 260. The Goths invade the Roman provinces. The emperor Decius is defeated
+ and slain by them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 253-260. The Franks and Alemanni invade Gaul, Spain, and Africa. The Goths
+ attack Asia Minor and Greece. The Persians conquer Armenia. Their king,
+ Sapor, defeats the Roman emperor Valerian, and takes him prisoner. General
+ distress of the Roman empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 268-283. The emperors Claudius, Aurelian, Tacitus, Probus, and Carus
+ defeat the various enemies of Rome, and restore order in the Roman state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 285. Diocletian divides and reorganizes the Roman empire. After his
+ abdication in 305 a fresh series of civil wars and confusion ensues.
+ Constantine, the first Christian emperor, reunites the empire in 324.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 330. Constantine makes Constantinople the seat of empire instead of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 363. The emperor Julian is killed in action against the Persians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 364-375. The empire is again divided, Valentinian being emperor of the
+ West, and Valens of the East. Valentinian repulses the Alemanni, and other
+ German invaders from Gaul. Splendour of the Gothic kingdom under
+ Hermanric, north of the Danube.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 376-395. The Huns attack the Goths, who implore the protection of the
+ Roman emperor of the East. The Goths are allowed to pass the Danube, and
+ to settle in the Roman provinces. A war soon breaks out between them and
+ the Romans, and the emperor Valens and his army are destroyed by them.
+ They ravage the Roman territories. The emperor Theodosius reduces them to
+ submission. They retain settlements in Thrace and Asia Minor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 395. Final division of the Roman empire between Arcadius and Honorius, the
+ two sons of Theodosius. The Goths revolt, and under Alaric attack various
+ parts of both the Roman empires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 410. Alaric takes the city of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 412. The Goths march into Gaul, and in 414 into Spain, which had been
+ already invaded by hosts of Vandals, Suevi, Alani, and other Germanic
+ nations. Britain is formally abandoned by the Roman emperor of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 428. Genseric, king of the Vandals, conquers the Roman province of North
+ Africa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 441. The Huns attack the Eastern empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI &mdash; THE BATTLE OF CHALONS, A.D. 451.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The discomfiture of the mighty attempt of Attila to found a new
+ anti-Christian dynasty upon the wreck of the temporal power of
+ Rome, at the end of the term of twelve hundred years, to which
+ its duration had been limited by the forebodings of the
+ heathen."&mdash;HERBERT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A broad expanse of plains, the Campi Catalaunici of the ancients, spreads
+ far and wide around the city of Chalons, in the north-east of France. The
+ long rows of poplars, through which the river Marne winds its way, and a
+ few thinly-scattered villages, are almost the only objects that vary the
+ monotonous aspect of the greater part of this region. But about five miles
+ from Chalons, near the little hamlets of Chaps and Cuperly, the ground is
+ indented and heaped up in ranges of grassy mounds and trenches, which
+ attest the work of man's hand in ages past; and which, to the practised
+ eye, demonstrate that this quiet spot has once been the fortified position
+ of a huge military host.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Local tradition gives to these ancient earthworks the name of Attila's
+ Camp. Nor is there any reason to question the correctness of the title, or
+ to doubt that behind these very ramparts it was that, 1400 years ago, the
+ most powerful heathen king that ever ruled in Europe mustered the remnants
+ of his vast army, which had striven on these plains against the Christian
+ soldiery of Thoulouse and Rome. Here it was that Attila prepared to resist
+ to the death his victors in the field; and here he heaped up the treasures
+ of his camp in one vast pile, which was to be his funeral pyre should his
+ camp be stormed. It was here that the Gothic and Italian forces watched
+ but dared not assail, their enemy in his despair, after that great and
+ terrible day of battle, when
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The sound
+ Of conflict was o'erpast, the shout of all
+ Whom earth could send from her remotest bounds,
+ Heathen or faithful;&mdash;from thy hundred mouths,
+ That feed the Caspian with Riphean snows,
+ Huge Volga! from famed Hypanis, which once
+ Cradled the Hun; from all the countless realms
+ Between Imaus and that utmost strand
+ Where columns of Herculean rock confront
+ The blown Atlantic; Roman, Goth, and Hun,
+ And Scythian strength of chivalry, that tread
+ The cold Codanian shore, or what far lands
+ Inhospitable drink Cimmerian floods,
+ Franks, Saxons, Suevic, and Sarmartian chiefs,
+ And who from green Armorica or Spain
+ Flocked to the work of death."
+ [Herbert's Attila, book i. line 13.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The victory which the Roman general Aetius, with his Gothic allies, had
+ then gained over the Huns, was the last victory of Imperial Rome. But
+ among the long Fasti of her triumphs, few can be found that, for their
+ importance and ultimate benefit to mankind, are comparable with this
+ expiring effort of her arms. It did not, indeed, open to her any new
+ career of conquest; it did not consolidate the relics of her power; it did
+ not turn the rapid ebb of her fortunes. The mission of Imperial Rome was,
+ in truth, already accomplished. She had received and transmitted through
+ her once ample dominion the civilization of Greece. She had broken up the
+ barriers of narrow nationalities among the various states and tribes that
+ dwelt around the coast of the Mediterranean. She had fused these and many
+ other races into one organized empire, bound together by a community of
+ laws, of government and institutions. Under the shelter of her full power
+ the True Faith had arisen in the earth and during the years of her decline
+ it had been nourished to maturity, and had overspread all the provinces
+ that ever obeyed her sway. [See the Introduction to Ranke's History of the
+ Popes.] For no beneficial purpose to mankind could the dominion of the
+ seven-hilled city have been restored or prolonged. But it was
+ all-important to mankind what nations should divide among them Rome's rich
+ inheritance of empire: whether the Germanic and Gothic warriors should
+ form states and kingdoms out of the fragments of her dominions, and become
+ the free members of the commonwealth of Christian Europe; or whether pagan
+ savages from the wilds of Central Asia should crush the relics of classic
+ civilization, and the early institutions of the christianized Germans, in
+ one hopeless chaos of barbaric conquest. The Christian Vistigoths of King
+ Theodoric fought and triumphed at Chalons, side by side with the legions
+ of Aetius. Their joint victory over the Hunnish host not only rescued for
+ a time from destruction the old age of Rome, but preserved for centuries
+ of power and glory the Germanic element in the civilization of modern
+ Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to estimate the full importance to mankind of the battle of
+ Chalons, we must keep steadily in mind who and what the Germans were, and
+ the important distinctions between them and the numerous other races that
+ assailed the Roman Empire: and it is to be understood that the Gothic and
+ the Scandinavian nations are included in the German race. Now, "in two
+ remarkable traits the Germans differed from the Sarmatic, as well as from
+ the Slavic nations, and, indeed, from all those other races to whom the
+ Greeks and Romans gave the designation of barbarians. I allude to their
+ personal freedom and regards for the rights of men; secondly, to the
+ respect paid by them to the female sex and the chastity for which the
+ latter were celebrated among the people of the North. These were the
+ foundations of that probity of character, self-respect, and purity of
+ manners which may be traced among the Germans and Goths even during pagan
+ times, and which, when their sentiments were enlightened by Christianity,
+ brought out those splendid traits of character which distinguish the age
+ of chivalry and romance." [See Prichard's Researches into the Physical
+ History of Mankind, vol iii. p. 423.] What the intermixture of the German
+ stock with the classic, at the fall of the Western Empire, has done for
+ mankind may be best felt by watching, with Arnold, over how large a
+ portion of the earth the influence of the German element is now extended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It affects, more or less, the whole west of Europe, from the head of the
+ Gulf of Bothnia to the most southern promontory of Sicily, from the Oder
+ and the Adriatic to the Hebrides and to Lisbon. It is true that the
+ language spoken over a large portion of this space is not predominantly
+ German; but even in France, and Italy, and Spain, the influence of the
+ Franks, Burgundians, Visigoths, Ostrogoths, and Lombards, while it has
+ coloured even the language, has in blood and institutions left its mark
+ legibly and indelibly. Germany, the Low Countries, Switzerland for the
+ most part, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, and our own islands, are all in
+ language, in blood, and in institutions, German most decidedly. But all
+ South America is peopled with Spaniards and Portuguese; all North America,
+ and all Australia with Englishmen. I say nothing of the prospects and
+ influence of the German race in Africa and in India: it is enough to say
+ that half of Europe, and all America and Australia, are German, more or
+ less completely, in race, in language, or in institutions, or in all."
+ [Arnold's Lectures on Modern History, p. 35.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the middle of the fifth century, Germanic nations had settled
+ themselves in many of the fairest regions of the Roman empire, had imposed
+ their yoke on the provincials, and had undergone, to a considerable
+ extent, that moral conquest which the arts and refinements of the
+ vanquished in arms have so often achieved over the rough victor. The
+ Visigoths held the north of Spain and Gaul south of the Loire. Franks,
+ Alemanni, Alans, and Burgundians had established themselves in other
+ Gallic provinces, and the Suevi were masters of a large southern portion
+ of the Spanish peninsula. A king of the Vandals reigned in North Africa,
+ and the Ostrogoths had firmly planted themselves in the provinces north of
+ Italy. Of these powers and principalities, that of the Visigoths, under
+ their king Theodoric, son of Alaric, was by far the first in power and in
+ civilization.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pressure of the Huns upon Europe had first been felt in the fourth
+ century of our era. They had long been formidable to the Chinese empire;
+ but the ascendency in arms which another nomadic tribe of Central Asia,
+ the Sienpi gained over them, drove the Huns from their Chinese conquests
+ westward; and this movement once being communicated to the whole chain of
+ barbaric nations that dwelt northward of the Black Sea and the Roman
+ empire, tribe after tribe of savage warriors broke in upon the barriers of
+ civilized Europe, "velut unda supervenit undam." The Huns crossed the
+ Tanais into Europe in 375, and rapidly reduced to subjection the Alans,
+ the Ostrogoths, and other tribes that were then dwelling along the course
+ of the Danube. The armies of the Roman emperor that tried to check their
+ progress were cut to pieces by them; and Panonia and other provinces south
+ of the Danube were speedily occupied by the victorious cavalry of these
+ new invaders. Not merely the degenerate Romans, but the bold and hardy
+ warriors of Germany and Scandinavia were appalled at the numbers, the
+ ferocity, the ghastly appearance, and the lightning-like rapidity of the
+ Huns. Strange and loathsome legends were coined and credited, which
+ attributed their origin to the union of "Secret, black, and midnight hags"
+ with the evil spirits of the wilderness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tribe after tribe, and city after city, fell before them. Then came a
+ pause in their career of conquest in South-western Europe caused probably
+ by dissensions among their chiefs, and also by their arms being employed
+ in attack upon the Scandinavian nations. But when Attila (or Atzel, as he
+ is called in the Hungarian language) became their ruler, the torrent of
+ their arms was directed with augmented terrors upon the west and the
+ south; and their myriads marched beneath the guidance of one master-mind
+ to the overthrow both of the new and the old powers of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Recent events have thrown such a strong interest over everything connected
+ with the Hungarian name, that even the terrible name of Attila now
+ impresses us the more vividly through our sympathising admiration of the
+ exploits of those who claim to be descended from his warriors, and
+ "ambitiously insert the name of Attila among their native kings." The
+ authenticity of this martial genealogy is denied by some writers, and
+ questioned by more. But it is at least certain that the Magyars of Arpad,
+ who are the immediate ancestors of the bulk of the modern Hungarians, and
+ who conquered the country which bears the name of Hungary in A.D. 889,
+ were of the same stock of mankind as were the Huns of Attila, even if they
+ did not belong to the same subdivision of that stock. Nor is there any
+ improbability in the tradition, that after Attila's death many of his
+ warriors remained in Hungary, and that their descendants afterwards joined
+ the Huns of Arpad in their career of conquest. It is certain that Attila
+ made Hungary the seat of his empire. It seems also susceptible of clear
+ proof that the territory was then called Hungvar, and Attila's soldiers
+ Hungvari. Both the Huns of Attila and those of Arpad came from the family
+ of nomadic nations, whose primitive regions were those vast wildernesses
+ of High Asia which are included between the Altaic and the Himalayan
+ mountain-chains. The inroads of these tribes upon the lower regions of
+ Asia and into Europe, have caused many of the most remarkable revolutions
+ in the history of the world. There is every reason to believe that swarms
+ of these nations made their way into distant parts of the earth, at
+ periods long before the date of the Scythian invasion of Asia, which is
+ the earliest inroad of the nomadic race that history records. The first,
+ as far as we can conjecture, in respect to the time of their descent were
+ the Finnish and Ugrian tribes, who appear to have come down from the
+ Asiatic border of High Asia towards the north-west, in which direction
+ they advanced to the Uralian mountains. There they established themselves:
+ and that mountain chain, with its valleys and pasture-lands, became to
+ them a new country, whence they sent out colonies on every side; but the
+ Ugrian colony, which under Arpad occupied Hungary, and became the
+ ancestors of the bulk of the present Hungarian nation, did not quit their
+ settlements on the Uralian mountains till a very late period, not until
+ four centuries after the time when Attila led from the primary seats of
+ the nomadic races in High Asia the host with which he advanced into the
+ heart of France. [See Prichard's Researches into the Physical History of
+ Mankind.] That host was Turkish; but closely allied in origin, language,
+ and habits, with the Finno-Ugrian settlers on the Ural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attila's fame has not come down to us through the partial and suspicious
+ medium of chroniclers and poets of his own race. It is not from Hunnish
+ authorities that we learn the extent of his might: It is from his enemies,
+ from the literature and the legends of the nations whom he afflicted with
+ his arms, that we draw the unquestionable evidence of his greatness.
+ Besides the express narratives of Byzantine, Latin, and Gothic writers, we
+ have the strongest proof of the stern reality of Attila's conquests in the
+ extent to which he and his Huns have been the themes of the earliest
+ German and Scandinavian lays. Wild as many of these legends are, they bear
+ concurrent and certain testimony to the awe with which the memory of
+ Attila was regarded by the bold warriors who composed and delighted in
+ them. Attila's exploits, and the wonders of his unearthly steed and magic
+ sword, repeatedly occur in the Sagas of Norway and Iceland; and the
+ celebrated Niebelungen Lied, the most ancient of Germanic poetry, is full
+ of them. There Etsel or Attila, is described as the wearer of twelve
+ mighty crowns, and as promising to his bride the lands of thirty kings,
+ whom his irresistible sword has subdued. He is, in fact, the hero of the
+ latter part of this remarkable poem; and it is at his capital city,
+ Etselenburgh, which evidently corresponds to the modern Buda, that much of
+ its action takes place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we turn from the legendary to the historic Attila, we see clearly
+ that he was not one of the vulgar herd of barbaric conquerors. Consummate
+ military skill may be traced in his campaigns; and he relied far less on
+ the brute force of armies for the aggrandizement of his empire, than on
+ the unbounded influence over the affections of friends and the fears of
+ foes which his genius enabled him to acquire. Austerely sober in his
+ private life, severely just on the judgment-seat, conspicuous among a
+ nation of warriors for hardihood, strength, and skill in every martial
+ exercise, grave and deliberate in counsel, but rapid and remorseless in
+ execution, he gave safety and security to all who were under his dominion,
+ while he waged a warfare of extermination against all who opposed or
+ sought to escape from it. He matched the national passions, the
+ prejudices, the creeds, and the superstitions of the varied nations over
+ which he ruled, and of those which he sought to reduce beneath his sway:
+ and these feelings he had the skill to turn to his own account. His own
+ warriors believed him to be the inspired favourite of their deities, and
+ followed him with fanatic zeal: his enemies looked on him as the
+ pre-appointed minister of Heaven's wrath against themselves; and, though
+ they believed not in his creed, their own made them tremble before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one of his early campaigns he appeared before his troops with an
+ ancient iron sword in his grasp, which he told them was the god of war
+ whom their ancestors had worshipped. It is certain that the nomadic tribes
+ of Northern Asia, whom Herodotus described under the name of Scythians,
+ from the earliest times worshipped as their god a bare sword. That
+ sword-God was supposed, in Attila's time, to have disappeared from earth;
+ but the Hunnish king now claimed to have received it by special
+ revelation. It was said that a herdsman, who was tracking in the desert a
+ wounded heifer by the drops of blood, found the mysterious sword standing
+ fixed in the ground, as if it had been darted down from heaven. The
+ herdsman bore it to Attila, who thenceforth was believed by the Huns to
+ wield the Spirit of Death in battle; and the seers prophesied that that
+ sword was to destroy the world. A Roman, [Priscus.] who was on an embassy
+ to the Hunnish camp, recorded in his memoirs Attila's acquisition of this
+ supernatural weapon, and the immense influence over the minds of the
+ barbaric tribes which its possession gave him. In the title which he
+ assumed, we shall see the skill with which he availed himself of the
+ legends and creeds of other nations as well as of his own. He designated
+ himself "ATTILA, Descendant of the Great Nimrod. Nurtured in Engaddi. By
+ the Grace of God, King of the Huns, the Goths, the Danes, and the Medes.
+ The Dread of the World."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert states that Attila is represented on an old medallion with a
+ Teraphim, or a head, on his breast; and the same writer adds: "We know,
+ from the 'Hamartigenea' of Prudentius, that Nimrod, with a snaky-haired
+ head, was the object of adoration to the heretical followers of Marcion;
+ and the same head was the palladium set up by Antiochus Epiphanes over the
+ gates of Antioch, though it has been called the visage of Charon. The
+ memory of Nimrod was certainly regarded with mystic veneration by many;
+ and by asserting himself to be the heir of that mighty hunter before the
+ Lord, he vindicated to himself at least the whole Babylonian kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The singular assertion in his style, that he was nurtured in Engaddi
+ where he certainly, had never been, will be more easily understood on
+ reference to the twelfth chapter of the Book of Revelation, concerning the
+ woman clothed with the sun, who was to bring forth in the wilderness&mdash;'where
+ she hath a place prepared of God'&mdash;a man-child, who was to contend
+ with the dragon having seven heads and ten horns, and rule all nations
+ with a rod of iron. This prophecy was at that time understood universally
+ by the sincere Christians to refer to the birth of Constantine, who was to
+ overwhelm the paganism of the city on the seven hills, and it is still so
+ explained; but it is evident that the heathens must have looked on it in a
+ different light, and have regarded it as a foretelling of the birth of
+ that Great One who should master the temporal power of Rome. The
+ assertion, therefore, that he was nurtured in Engaddi, is a claim to be
+ looked upon as that man-child who was to be brought forth in a place
+ prepared of God in the wilderness. Engaddi means, a place of palms and
+ vines, in the desert; it was hard by Zoar, the city of refuge, which was
+ saved in the vale of Siddim, or Demons, when the rest were destroyed by
+ fire and brimstone from the Lord in heaven, and might, therefore, be
+ especially called a place prepared of God in the wilderness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is obvious enough why he styled himself "By the grace of God, King of
+ the Huns and Goths;" and it seems far from difficult to see why he added
+ the names of the Medes and the Danes. His armies had been engaged in
+ warfare against the Persian kingdom of the Sassanidae; and it is certain
+ [See the narrative of Priscus.] that he meditated the attack and overthrow
+ of the Medo-Persian power. Probably some of the northern provinces of that
+ kingdom had been compelled to pay him tribute; and this would account for
+ his styling himself King of the Medes, they being his remotest subjects to
+ the south. From a similar cause he may have called himself King of the
+ Danes, as his power may well have extended northwards as far as the
+ nearest of the Scandinavian nations; and this mention of Medes and Danes
+ as his subjects would serve at once to indicate the vast extent of his
+ dominion. [In the "Niebelungen-Lied," the old poet who describes the
+ reception of the heroine Chrimhild by Attila (Etsel) says that Attila's
+ dominions were so vast, that among his subject-warriors there were
+ Russian, Greek, Wallachian, Polish, and even DANISH KNIGHTS.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extensive territory north of the Danube and Black sea, and eastward of
+ Caucasus, over which Attila ruled, first in conjunction with his brother
+ Bleda, and afterwards alone, cannot be very accurately defined; but it
+ must have comprised within it, besides the Huns, many nations of Slavic,
+ Gothic, Teutonic, and Finnish origin. South also of the Danube, the
+ country from the river Sau as far as Novi in Thrace was a Hunnish
+ province. Such was the empire of the Huns in A.D. 445; a memorable year,
+ in which Attila founded Buda on the Danube as his capital city; and ridded
+ himself of his brother by a crime, which seems to have been prompted not
+ only by selfish ambition, but also by a desire of turning to his purpose
+ the legends and forebodings which then were universally spread throughout
+ the Roman empire, and must have been well known to the watchful and
+ ruthless Hun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The year 445 of our era completed the twelfth century from the foundation
+ of Rome, according to the best chronologers. It had always been believed
+ among the Romans that the twelve vultures which were said to have appeared
+ to Romulus when he founded the city, signified the time during which the
+ Roman power should endure. The twelve vultures denoted twelve centuries.
+ This interpretation of the vision of the birds of destiny was current
+ among learned Romans, even when there were yet many of the twelve
+ centuries to run, and while the imperial city was at the zenith of its
+ power. But as the allotted time drew nearer and nearer to its conclusion,
+ and as Rome grew weaker and weaker beneath the blows of barbaric invaders,
+ the terrible omen was more and more talked and thought of; and in Attila's
+ time, men watched for the momentary extinction of the Roman state with the
+ last beat of the last vulture's wing. Moreover, among the numerous legends
+ connected with the foundation of the city, and the fratricidal death of
+ Remus, there was one most terrible one, which told that Romulus did not
+ put his brother to death in accident, or in hasty quarrel, but that
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "He slew his gallant twin
+ With inexpiable sin."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ deliberately, and in compliance with the warnings of supernatural powers.
+ The shedding of a brother's blood was believed to have been the price at
+ which the founder of Rome had purchased from destiny her twelve centuries
+ of existence. [See a curious justification of Attila's murder of his
+ brother, by a zealous Hungarian advocate, in the note to Pray's "Annales
+ Hunnorum," p. 117. The example of Romulus is the main authority quoted.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may imagine, therefore, with what terror in this, the twelve-hundredth
+ year after the foundation of Rome, the inhabitants of the Roman empire
+ must have heard the tidings that the royal brethren, Attila and Bleda, had
+ founded a new capitol on the Danube, which was designed to rule over the
+ ancient capitol on the Tiber; and that Attila, like Romulus, had
+ consecrated the foundations of his new city by murdering his brother; so
+ that, for the new cycle of centuries then about to commence, dominion had
+ been bought from the gloomy spirits of destiny in favour of the Hun, by a
+ sacrifice of equal awe and value with that which had formerly obtained it
+ for the Romans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is to be remembered that not only the pagans, but also the Christians
+ of that age, knew and believed in these legends and omens, however they
+ might differ as to the nature of the superhuman agency by which such
+ mysteries had been made known to mankind. And we may observe, with
+ Herbert, a modern learned dignitary of our Church, how remarkably this
+ augury was fulfilled. For, "if to the twelve centuries denoted by the
+ twelve vultures that appeared to Romulus, we add for the six birds that
+ appeared to Remus six lustra, or periods of five years each, by which the
+ Romans were wont to number their time, it brings us precisely to the year
+ 476, in which the Roman empire was finally extinguished by Odoacer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An attempt to assassinate Attila, made, or supposed to have been made, at
+ the instigation of Theodosius the Younger, the Emperor of Constantinople,
+ drew the Hunnish armies, in 445, upon the Eastern empire, and delayed for
+ a time the destined blow against Rome. Probably a more important cause of
+ delay was the revolt of some of the Hunnish tribes to the north of the
+ Black Sea against Attila, which broke out about this period, and is
+ cursorily mentioned by the Byzantine writers. Attila quelled this revolt;
+ and having thus consolidated his power, and having punished the
+ presumption of the Eastern Roman emperor by fearful ravages of his fairest
+ provinces, Attila, A.D. 450, prepared to set his vast forces in motion for
+ the conquest of Western Europe. He sought unsuccessfully by diplomatic
+ intrigues to detach the King of the Visigoths from his alliance with Rome,
+ and he resolved first to crush the power of Theodoric, and then to advance
+ with overwhelming power to trample out the last sparks of the doomed Roman
+ empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strong invitation from a Roman princess gave him a pretext for the war,
+ and threw an air of chivalric enterprise over his invasion. Honoria,
+ sister of Valentinian III., the Emperor of the West, had sent to Attila to
+ offer him her hand, and her supposed right to share in the imperial power.
+ This had been discovered by Romans, and Honoria had been forthwith closely
+ imprisoned, Attila now pretended to take up arms in behalf of his
+ self-promised bride, and proclaimed that he was about to march to Rome to
+ redress Honoria's wrongs. Ambition and spite against her brother must have
+ been the sole motives that led the lady to woo the royal Hun for Attila's
+ face and person had all the national ugliness of his race and the
+ description given of him by a Byzantine ambassador must have been well
+ known in the imperial courts. Herbert has well versified the portrait
+ drawn by Priscus of the great enemy of both Byzantium and Rome:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Terrific was his semblance, in no mould
+ Of beautiful proportion cast; his limbs
+ Nothing exalted, but with sinews braced
+ Of Chalybaean temper, agile, lithe,
+ And swifter than the roe; his ample chest
+ Was overbrowed by a gigantic head,
+ With eyes keen, deeply sunk, and small, that gleam'd
+ Strangely in wrath, as though some spirit unclean
+ Within that corporal tenement installed
+ Look'd from its windows, but with temper'd fire
+ Beam'd mildly on the unresisting. Thin
+ His beard and hoary; his flat nostrils crown'd
+ A cicatrised, swart visage,&mdash;but withal
+ That questionable shape such glory wore
+ That mortals quail'd beneath him."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Two chiefs of the Franks, who were then settled on the lower Rhine, were
+ at this period engaged in a feud with each other: and while one of them
+ appealed to the Romans for aid, the other invoked the assistance and
+ protection of the Huns. Attila thus obtained an ally whose co-operation
+ secured for him the passage of the Rhine; and it was this circumstance
+ which caused him to take a northward route from Hungary for his attack
+ upon Gaul. The muster of the Hunnish hosts was swollen by warriors of
+ every tribe that they had subjugated; nor is there any reason to suspect
+ the old chroniclers of wilful exaggeration in estimating Attila's army at
+ seven hundred thousand strong. Having crossed the Rhine, probably a little
+ below Coblentz, he defeated the King of the Burgundians, who endeavoured
+ to bar his progress. He then divided his vast forces into two armies,&mdash;one
+ of which marched north-west upon Tongres and Arras, and the other cities
+ of that part of France; while the main body, under Attila himself marched
+ up the Moselle, and destroyed Besancon, and other towns in the country of
+ the Burgundians. One of the latest and best biographers of Attila well
+ observes, that, "having thus conquered the eastern part of France, Attila
+ prepared for an invasion of the West Gothic territories beyond the Loire.
+ He marched upon Orleans, where he intended to force the passage of that
+ river; and only a little attention is requisite to enable us to perceive
+ that he proceeded on a systematic plan: he had his right wing on the
+ north, for the protection of his Frank allies; his left wing on the south,
+ for the purpose of preventing the Burgundians from rallying, and of
+ menacing the passes of the Alps from Italy; and he led his centre towards
+ the chief object of the campaign&mdash;the conquest of Orleans, and an
+ easy passage into the West Gothic dominion. The whole plan is very like
+ that of the allied powers in 1814, with this difference, that their left
+ wing entered France through the defiles of the Jura, in the direction of
+ Lyons, and that the military object of the campaign was the capture of
+ Paris." [Biographical Dictionary commenced by the Useful Knowledge Society
+ in 1844.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until the year 451 that the Huns commenced the siege of
+ Orleans; and during their campaign in Eastern Gaul, the Roman general
+ Aetius had strenuously exerted himself in collecting and organizing such
+ an army as might, when united to the soldiery of the Visigoths, be fit to
+ face the Huns in the field. He enlisted every subject of the Roman empire
+ whom patriotism, courage, or compulsion could collect beneath the
+ standards; and round these troops, which assumed the once proud title of
+ the legions of Rome, he arrayed the large forces of barbaric auxiliaries
+ whom pay, persuasion, or the general hate and dread of the Huns, brought
+ to the camp of the last of the Roman generals. King Theodoric exerted
+ himself with equal energy, Orleans resisted her besiegers bravely as in
+ after times. The passage of the Loire was skilfully defended against the
+ Huns; and Aetius and Theodoric, after much manoeuvring and difficulty,
+ effected a junction of their armies to the south of that important river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the advance of the allies upon Orleans, Attila instantly broke up the
+ siege of that city, and retreated towards the Marne. He did not choose to
+ risk a decisive battle with only the central corps of his army against the
+ combined power of his enemies; and he therefore fell back upon his base of
+ operations; calling in his wings from Arras and Besancon, and
+ concentrating the whole of the Hunnish forces on the vast plains of
+ Chalons-sur-Marne. A glance at the map will show how scientifically this
+ place was chosen by the Hunnish general, as the point for his scattered
+ forces to converge upon; and the nature of the ground was eminently
+ favourable for the operations of cavalry, the arm in which Attila's
+ strength peculiarly lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was during the retreat from Orleans that a Christian is reported to
+ have approached the Hunnish king, and said to him, "Thou art the Scourge
+ of God for the chastisement of Christians." Attila instantly assumed this
+ new title of terror, which thenceforth became the appellation by which he
+ was most widely and most fearfully known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The confederate armies of Romans and Visigoths at last met their great
+ adversary, face to face, on the ample battle-ground of the Chalons plains.
+ Aetius commanded on the right of the allies; King Theodoric on the left;
+ and Sangipan, king of the Alans, whose fidelity was suspected, was placed
+ purposely in the centre and in the very front of the battle. Attila
+ commanded his centre in person, at the head of his own countrymen, while
+ the Ostrogoths, the Gepidae, and the other subject allies of the Huns,
+ were drawn up on the wings. Some manoeuvring appears to have occurred
+ before the engagement, in which Attila had the advantage, inasmuch as he
+ succeeded in occupying a sloping hill, which commanded the left flank of
+ the Huns. Attila saw the importance of the position taken by Aetius on the
+ high ground, and commenced the battle by a furious attack on this part of
+ the Roman line, in which he seems to have detached some of his best troops
+ from his centre to aid his left. The Romans having the advantage of the
+ ground, repulsed the Huns, and while the allies gained this advantage on
+ their right, their left, under King Theodoric, assailed the Ostrogoths,
+ who formed the right of Attila's army. The gallant king was himself struck
+ down by a javelin, as he rode onward at the head of his men, and his own
+ cavalry charging over him trampled him to death in the confusion. But the
+ Visigoths, infuriated, not dispirited, by their monarch's fall, routed the
+ enemies opposed to them, and then wheeled upon the flank of the Hunnish
+ centre, which had been engaged in a sanguinary and indecisive contest with
+ the Alans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this peril Attila made his centre fall back upon his camp; and when the
+ shelter of its entrenchments and waggons had once been gained, the Hunnish
+ archers repulsed, without difficulty, the charges of the vengeful Gothic
+ cavalry. Aetius had not pressed the advantage which he gained on his side
+ of the field, and when night fell over the wild scene of havoc, Attila's
+ left was still unbroken, but his right had been routed, and his centre
+ forced back upon his camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Expecting an assault on the morrow, Attila stationed his best archers in
+ front of the cars and waggons, which were drawn up as a fortification
+ along his lines, and made every preparation for a desperate resistance.
+ But the "Scourge of God" resolved that no man should boast of the honour
+ of having either captured or slain him; and he caused to be raised in the
+ centre of his encampment a huge pyramid of the wooden saddles of his
+ cavalry: round it he heaped the spoils and the wealth that he had won; on
+ it he stationed his wives who had accompanied him in the campaign; and on
+ the summit he placed himself, ready to perish in the flames, and baulk the
+ victorious foe of their choicest booty, should they succeed in storming
+ his defences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the morning broke, and revealed the extent of the carnage, with
+ which the plains were heaped for miles, the successful allies saw also and
+ respected the resolute attitude of their antagonist. Neither were any
+ measures taken to blockade him in his camp, and so to extort by famine
+ that submission which it was too plainly perilous to enforce with the
+ sword. Attila was allowed to march back the remnants of his army without
+ molestation, and even with the semblance of success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is probable that the crafty Aetius was unwilling to be too victorious.
+ He dreaded the glory which his allies the Visigoths had acquired; and
+ feared that Rome might find a second Alaric in Prince Thorismund, who had
+ signalized himself in the battle, and had been chosen on the field to
+ succeed his father Theodoric. He persuaded the young king to return at
+ once to his capital: and thus relieved himself at the same time of the
+ presence of a dangerous friend, as well as of a formidable though beaten
+ foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attila's attacks on the Western, empire were soon renewed; but never with
+ such peril to the civilized world as had menaced it before his defeat at
+ Chalons. And on his death, two years after that battle, the vast empire
+ which his genius had founded was soon dissevered by the successful revolts
+ of the subject nations. The name of the Huns ceased for some centuries to
+ inspire terror in Western Europe, and their ascendency passed away with
+ the life of the great king by whom it had been so fearfully augmented. [If
+ I seem to have given fewer of the details of the battle itself than its
+ importance would warrant, my excuse must be, that Gibbon has enriched our
+ language with a description of it, too long for quotation and too splendid
+ for rivalry. I have not, however, taken altogether the same view of it
+ that he has. The notes to Mr. Herbert's poem of "Attila" bring together
+ nearly all the authorities on the subject.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF CHALONS, A.D. 451, AND THE BATTLE
+ OF TOURS, 732.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 476. The Roman Empire of the West extinguished by Odoacer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 482. Establishment of the French monarchy in Gaul by Clovis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 455-482. The Saxons, Angles, and Frisians conquer Britain except the
+ northern parts, and the districts along the west coast. The German
+ conquerors found eight independent kingdoms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 533-568. The generals of Justinian, the Emperor of Constantinople, conquer
+ Italy and North Africa; and these countries are for a short time annexed
+ to the Roman Empire of the East.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 568-570. The Lombards conquer great part of Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 570-627. The wars between the Emperors of Constantinople and the Kings of
+ Persia are actively continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 622. The Mahometan era of the Hegira. Mahomet is driven from Mecca, and is
+ received as prince of Medina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 629-632. Mahomet conquers Arabia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 632-651. The Mahometan Arabs invade and conquer Persia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 632-709. They attack the Roman Empire of the East. They conquer Syria,
+ Egypt, and Africa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 709-713. They cross the straits of Gibraltar, and invade and conquer
+ Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At the death of Mohammad, in 632, his temporal and religious sovereignty
+ embraced and was limited by the Arabian Peninsula. The Roman and Persian
+ empires, engaged in tedious and indecisive hostility upon the rivers of
+ Mesopotamia and the Armenian mountains, were viewed by the ambitious
+ fanatics of his creed as their quarry. In the very first year of
+ Mohammad's immediate successor, Abubeker, each of these mighty empires was
+ invaded. The crumbling fabric of Eastern despotism is never secured
+ against rapid and total subversion; a few victories, a few sieges, carried
+ the Arabian arms from the Tigris to the Oxus, and overthrew, with the
+ Sassanian dynasty, the ancient and famous religion they had professed.
+ Seven years of active and unceasing warfare sufficed to subjugate the rich
+ province of Syria, though defended by numerous armies and fortified
+ cities; and the Khalif Omar had scarcely returned thanks for the
+ accomplishment of this conquest, when Amrou, his lieutenant, announced to
+ him the entire reduction of Egypt. After some interval, the Saracens won
+ their way along the coast of Africa, as far as the Pillars of Hercules,
+ and a third province was irretrievably torn from the Greek empire. These
+ western conquests introduced them to fresh enemies, and ushered in more
+ splendid successes. Encouraged by the disunion of the Visigoths, and
+ invited by treachery, Musa, the general of a master who sat beyond the
+ opposite extremity of the Mediterranean Sea, passed over into Spain, and
+ within about two years the name of Mohammad was invoked under the
+ Pyrenees."&mdash;[HALLAM.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF TOURS, A.D. 732,
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The events that rescued our ancestors of Britain, and our
+ neighbours of Gaul, from the civil and religious yoke of the
+ Koran."&mdash;GIBBON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The broad tract of champaign country which intervenes between the cities
+ of Poictiers and Tours is principally composed of a succession of rich
+ pasture lands, which are traversed and fertilized by the Cher, the Creuse,
+ the Vienne, the Claine, the Indre, and other tributaries of the river
+ Loire. Here and there, the ground swells into picturesque eminences; and
+ occasionally a belt of forest land, a brown heath, or a clustering series
+ of vineyards, breaks the monotony of the wide-spread meadows; but the
+ general character of the land is that of a grassy plain, and it seems
+ naturally adapted for the evolutions of numerous armies, especially of
+ those vast bodies of cavalry which, principally decided the fate of
+ nations during the centuries that followed the downfall of Rome, and
+ preceded the consolidation of the modern European powers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This region has been signalized by more than one memorable conflict; but
+ it is principally interesting to the historian, by having been the scene
+ of the great victory won by Charles Martel over the Saracens, A.D. 732,
+ which gave a decisive check to the career of Arab conquest in Western
+ Europe, rescued Christendom from Islam, preserved the relics of ancient
+ and the germs of modern civilization, and re-established the old
+ superiority of the Indo-European over the Semitic family of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sismondi and Michelet have underrated the enduring interest of this great
+ Appeal of Battle between the champions of the Crescent and the Cross. But,
+ if French writers have slighted the exploits of their national hero, the
+ Saracenic trophies of Charles Martel have had full justice done to them by
+ English and German historians. Gibbon devotes several pages of his great
+ work to the narrative of the battle of Tours, and to the consideration of
+ the consequences which probably would have resulted, if Abderrahman's
+ enterprise had not been crushed by the Frankish chief. [Vol, vii. p. 11,
+ ET SEQ. Gibbon's remark, that if the Saracen conquest had not then been
+ checked, "Perhaps the interpretation of the Koran would now be taught in
+ the schools of Oxford, and her pulpits might demonstrate to a circumcised
+ people the sanctity and truth of the revelation of Mahomat," has almost an
+ air of regret.] Schlegel speaks of this "mighty victory" in terms of
+ fervent gratitude; and tells how "the arms of Charles Martel saved and
+ delivered the Christian nations of the West from the deadly grasp of
+ all-destroying Islam;" [Philosophy of History, p. 331.] and Ranke points
+ out, as "one of the most important epochs in the history of the world, the
+ commencement of the eighth century; when, on the one side, Mahommedanism
+ threatened to overspread Italy and Gaul, and on the other, the ancient
+ idolatry of Saxony and Friesland once more forced its way across the
+ Rhine. In this peril of Christian institutions, a youthful prince of
+ Germanic race, Karl Martell, arose as their champion; maintained them with
+ all the energy which the necessity for self-defence calls forth, and
+ finally extended them into new regions." [History of the Reformation in
+ Germany, vol. i. p. 5.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arnold ranks the victory of Charles Martel even higher than the victory of
+ Arminius, "among those signal deliverances which have affected for
+ centuries the happiness of mankind." [History of the later Roman
+ Commonwealth, vol ii. p. 317.] In fact, the more we test its importance,
+ the higher we shall be led to estimate it; and, though the authentic
+ details which we possess of its circumstances and its heroes are but
+ meagre, we can trace enough of its general character to make us watch with
+ deep interest this encounter between the rival conquerors of the decaying
+ Roman empire. That old classic world, the history of which occupies so
+ large a portion of our early studies, lay, in the eighth century of our
+ era, utterly exanimate and overthrown. On the north the German, on the
+ south the Arab, was rending away its provinces. At last the spoilers
+ encountered one another, each striving for the full mastery of the prey.
+ Their conflict brought back upon the memory of Gibbon the old Homeric
+ simile, where the strife of Hector and Patroclus over the dead body of
+ Cebriones is compared to the combat of two lions, that in their hate and
+ hunger fight together on the mountain-tops over the carcass of a
+ slaughtered stag: and the reluctant yielding of the Saracen power to the
+ superior might of the Northern warriors, might not inaptly recall those
+ other lines of the same book of the Iliad, where the downfall of Patroclus
+ beneath Hector is likened to the forced yielding of the panting and
+ exhausted wild boar, that had long and furiously fought with a superior
+ beast of prey for the possession of the fountain among the rocks, at which
+ each burned to drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although three centuries had passed away since the Germanic conquerors of
+ Rome had crossed the Rhine, never to repass that frontier stream, no
+ settled system of institutions or government, no amalgamation of the
+ various races into one people, no uniformity of language or habits, had
+ been established in the country, at the time when Charles Martel was
+ called on to repel the menacing tide of Saracenic invasion from the south.
+ Gaul was not yet France. In that, as in other provinces of the Roman
+ empire of the West, the dominion of the Caesars had been shattered as
+ early as the fifth century, and barbaric kingdoms and principalities had
+ promptly arisen on the ruins of the Roman power. But few of these had any
+ permanency; and none of them consolidated the rest, or any considerable
+ number of the rest, into one coherent and organized civil and political
+ society. The great bulk of the population still consisted of the conquered
+ provincials, that is to say, of Romanized Celts, of a Gallic race which
+ had long been under the dominion of the Caesars, and had acquired,
+ together with no slight infusion of Roman blood, the language, the
+ literature, the laws, and the civilization of Latium. Among these, and
+ dominant over them, roved or dwelt the German victors: some retaining
+ nearly all the rude independence of their primitive national character;
+ others, softened and disciplined by the aspect and contact of the manners
+ and institutions of civilized life. For it is to be borne in mind, that
+ the Roman empire in the West was not crushed by any sudden avalanche of
+ barbaric invasion. The German conquerors came across the Rhine, not in
+ enormous hosts, but in bands of a few thousand warriors at a time. The
+ conquest of a province was the result of an infinite series of partial
+ local invasions, carried on by little armies of this description. The
+ victorious warriors either retired with their booty, or fixed themselves
+ in the invaded district, taking care to keep sufficiently concentrated for
+ military purposes, and ever ready for some fresh foray, either against a
+ rival Teutonic band, or some hitherto unassailed city of the provincials.
+ Gradually, however, the conquerors acquired a desire for permanent landed
+ possessions. They lost somewhat of the restless thirst for novelty and
+ adventure which had first made them throng beneath the banner of the
+ boldest captains of their tribe, and leave their native forests for a
+ roving military Life on the left bank of the Rhine. They were converted to
+ the Christian faith; and gave up with their old creed much of the coarse
+ ferocity, which must have been fostered in the spirits of the ancient
+ warriors of the North by a mythology which promised, as the reward of the
+ brave on earth, an eternal cycle of fighting and drunkenness in heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, although their conversion and other civilizing influences operated
+ powerfully upon the Germans in Gaul; and although the Franks (who were
+ originally a confederation of the Teutonic tribes that dwelt between the
+ Rhine, the Maine, and the Weser) established a decided superiority over
+ the other conquerors of the province, as well as over the conquered
+ provincials, the country long remained a chaos of uncombined and shifting
+ elements. The early princes of the Merovingian dynasty were generally
+ occupied in wars against other princes of their house, occasioned by the
+ frequent subdivisions of the Frank monarchy: and the ablest and best of
+ them had found all their energies tasked to the utmost to defend the
+ barrier of the Rhine against the Pagan Germans, who strove to pass that
+ river and gather their share of the spoils of the empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conquests which the Saracens effected over the southern and eastern
+ provinces of Rome were far more rapid than those achieved by the Germans
+ in the north; and the new organizations of society which the Moslems
+ introduced were summarily and uniformly enforced. Exactly a century passed
+ between the death of Mohammed and the date of the battle of Tours. During
+ that century the followers of the Prophet had torn away half the Roman
+ empire; and besides their conquests over Persia, the Saracens had overrun
+ Syria, Egypt, Africa, and Spain, in an unchequered and apparently
+ irresistible career of victory. Nor, at the commencement of the eighth
+ century of our era, was the Mohammedan world divided against itself, as it
+ subsequently became. All these vast regions obeyed the Caliph; throughout
+ them all, from the Pyrenees to the Oxus, the name of Mohammed was invoked
+ in prayer, and the Koran revered as the book of the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was under one of their ablest and most renowned commanders, with a
+ veteran army, and with every apparent advantage of time, place, and
+ circumstance, that the Arabs made their great effort at the conquest of
+ Europe north of the Pyrenees. The victorious Moslem soldiery in Spain,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "A countless multitude;
+ Syrian, Moor, Saracen, Greek renegade,
+ Persian, and Copt, and Tartar, in one bond
+ Of erring faith conjoined&mdash;strong in the youth
+ And heat of zeal&mdash;a dreadful brotherhood,"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ were eager for the plunder of more Christian cities and shrines, and full
+ of fanatic confidence in the invincibility of their arms.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Nor were the chiefs
+ Of victory less assured, by long success
+ Elate, and proud of that o'erwhelming strength
+ Which surely, they believed, as it had rolled
+ Thus far uncheck'd, would roll victorious on,
+ Till, like the Orient, the subjected West
+ Should bow in reverence at Mahommed's name;
+ And pilrims from remotest Arctic shores
+ Tread with religious feet the burning sands
+ Of Araby and Mecca's stony soil."
+ SOUTHEY'S RODERICK.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is not only by the modern Christian poet, but by the old Arabian
+ chroniclers also, that these feelings of ambition and arrogance are
+ attributed to the Moslems, who had overthrown the Visigoth power in Spain.
+ And their eager expectations of new wars were excited to the utmost on the
+ re-appointment by the Caliph of Abderrahman Ibn Abdillah Alghafeki to the
+ government of that country, A.D. 729, which restored them a general who
+ had signalized his skill and prowess during the conquests of Africa and
+ Spain, whose ready valour and generosity had made him the idol of the
+ troops, who had already been engaged in several expeditions into Gaul, so
+ as to be well acquainted with the national character and tactics of the
+ Franks; and who was known to thirst, like a good Moslem, for revenge for
+ the slaughter of some detachments of the true believers, which had been
+ cut off on the north of the Pyrenees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to his cardinal military virtues, Abderrahman is described by
+ the Arab writers as a model of integrity and justice. The first two years
+ of his second administration in Spain were occupied in severe reforms of
+ the abuses which under his predecessors had crept into the system of
+ government, and in extensive preparations for his intended conquest of
+ Gaul. Besides the troops which he collected from his province, he obtained
+ from Africa a large body of chosen Barber cavalry, officered by Arabs of
+ proved skill and valour: and in the summer of 732 he crossed the Pyrenees
+ at the head of an army which some Arab writers rate at eighty thousand
+ strong, while some of the Christian chroniclers swell its numbers to many
+ hundreds of thousands more. Probably the Arab account diminishes, but of
+ the two keeps nearer to the truth. It was from this formidable host, after
+ Eudes, the Count of Acquitaine, had vainly striven to check it, after many
+ strong cities had fallen before it, and half the land been overrun, that
+ Gaul and Christendom were at last rescued by the strong arm of Prince
+ Charles, who acquired a surname, [Martel&mdash;'The Hammer.' See the
+ Scandinavian Sagas for an account of the favourite weapon of Thor.] like
+ that of the war-god of his forefathers' creed, from the might with which
+ he broke and shattered his enemies in the battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Merovingian kings had sunk into absolute insignificance, and had
+ become mere puppets of royalty before the eighth century. Charles Martel
+ like his father, Pepin Heristal, was Duke of the Austrasian Franks, the
+ bravest and most thoroughly Germanic part of the nation: and exercised, in
+ the name of the titular king, what little paramount authority the
+ turbulent minor rulers of districts and towns could be persuaded or
+ compelled to acknowledge. Engaged with his national competitors in
+ perpetual conflicts for power, engaged also in more serious struggles for
+ safety against the fierce tribes of the unconverted Frisians, Bavarians,
+ Saxons, and Thuringians, who at that epoch assailed with peculiar ferocity
+ the christianized Germans on the left bank of the Rhine, Charles Martel
+ added experienced skill to his natural courage, and he had also formed a
+ militia of veterans among the Franks. Hallam has thrown out a doubt
+ whether, in our admiration of his victory at Tours, we do not judge a
+ little too much by the event, and whether there was not rashness in his
+ risking the fate of France on the result of a general battle with the
+ invaders. But, when we remember that Charles had no standing army, and the
+ independent spirit of the Frank warriors who followed his standard, it
+ seems most probable that it was not in his power to adopt the cautious
+ policy of watching the invaders, and wearing out their strength by delay.
+ So dreadful and so wide-spread were the ravages of the Saracenic light
+ cavalry throughout Gaul that it must have been impossible to restrain for
+ any length of time the indignant ardour of the Franks. And, even if
+ Charles could have persuaded his men to look tamely on while the Arabs
+ stormed more towns and desolated more districts, he could not have kept an
+ army together when the usual period of a military expedition had expired.
+ If, indeed, the Arab account of the disorganization of the Moslem forces
+ be correct, the battle was as well-timed on the part of Charles as it was
+ beyond all question, well-fought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monkish chroniclers, from whom we are obliged to glean a narrative of
+ this memorable campaign, bear full evidence to the terror which the
+ Saracen invasion inspired, and to the agony of that; great struggle. The
+ Saracens, say they, and their king, who was called Abdirames, came out of
+ Spain, with all their wives, and their children, and their substance, in
+ such great multitudes that no man could reckon or estimate them. They
+ brought with them all their armour, and whatever they had, as if they were
+ thence forth always to dwell in France. ["Lors issirent d'Espaigne li
+ Sarrazins, et un leur Roi qui avoit nom Abdirames, et ont leur fames et
+ leur enfans at touts leur substance an si grand plente que nus ne le
+ prevoit nombrer ne estimer: tout leur harnois et quanques il avoient
+ amenement avec ents, aussi comme si ils deussent toujours mes habiter en
+ France."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then Abderrahman, seeing the land filled with the multitude of his army,
+ pierces through the mountains, tramples over rough and level ground
+ plunders far into the country of the Franks, and smites all with the
+ sword, insomuch that when Eudo came to battle with him at the river
+ Garonne, and fled before him, God alone knows the number of the slain.
+ Then Abderrahman pursued after Count Eudo, and while he strives to spoil
+ and burn the holy shrine at Tours, he encounters the chief of the
+ Austrasian Franks, Charles, a man of war from his youth up, to whom Eudo
+ had sent warning. There for nearly seven days they strive intensely, and
+ at last they set themselves in battle array; and the nations of the north
+ standing firm as a wall, and impenetrable as a zone of ice, utterly slay
+ the Arabs with the edge of the sword." ["Tunc Abdirrahman, multitudine sui
+ exercitus repletam prospiciane terram," &amp;c.&mdash;SCRIPT. GEST. FRANC.
+ p. 785.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The European writers all concur in speaking of the fall of Abderrahman as
+ one of the principal causes of the defeat of the Arabs; who, according to
+ one writer, after finding that their leader was slain, dispersed in the
+ night, to the agreeable surprise of the Christians, who expected the next
+ morning to see them issue from their tents, and renew the combat. One
+ monkish chronicler puts the loss of the Arabs at 375,000 men, while he
+ says that only 1,007 Christians fell&mdash;a disparity of loss which he
+ feels bound to account for by a special interposition of Providence. I
+ have translated above some of the most spirited passages of these writers;
+ but it is impossible to collect from them anything like a full or
+ authentic description of the great battle itself, or of the operations
+ which preceded or followed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though, however, we may have cause to regret the meagreness and doubtful
+ character of these narratives, we have the great advantage of being able
+ to compare the accounts given of Abderrahman's expedition by the national
+ writers of each side. This is a benefit which the inquirer into antiquity
+ so seldom can obtain, that the fact of possessing it, in the instance of
+ the battle of Tours, makes us think the historical testimony respecting
+ that great event more certain and satisfactory than is the case in many
+ other instances, where we possess abundant details respecting military
+ exploits, but where those details come to us from the annalist of one
+ nation only; and where we have, consequently, no safeguard against the
+ exaggerations, the distortions, and the fictions which national vanity has
+ so often put forth in the garb and under the title of history. The Arabian
+ writers who recorded the conquests and wars of their countrymen in Spain,
+ have narrated also the expedition into Gaul of their great Emir, and his
+ defeat and death near Tours in battle with the host of the Franks under
+ King Caldus, the name into which they metamorphose Charles. [The Arabian
+ chronicles were compiled and translated into Spanish by Don Jose Antonio
+ Conde, in his "Historia de la Dominacion de los Arabos an Espana,"
+ published at Madrid in 1820. Conde's plan, which I have endeavoured to
+ follow, was to present both the style and spirit of his oriental
+ authorities, so that we find in his pages a genuine Saracenic narrative of
+ the wars in Western Europe between the Mahommedans and the Christians.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They tell us how there was war between the count of the Frankish frontier
+ and the Moslems, and how the count gathered together all his people, and
+ fought for a time with doubtful success. "But," say the Arabian
+ chroniclers, "Abderrahman drove them back; and the men of Abderrahman were
+ puffed up in spirit by their repeated successes, and they were full of
+ trust in the valour and the practice in war of their Emir. So the Moslems
+ smote their enemies, and passed the river Garonne, and laid waste the
+ country, and took captives without number. And that army went through all
+ places like a desolating storm. Prosperity made those warriors insatiable.
+ At the passage of the river, Abderrahman overthrew the count, and the
+ count retired into his stronghold, but the Moslems fought against it, and
+ entered it by force, and slew the count; for everything gave way to their
+ scimetars, which were the robbers of lives. All the nations of the Franks
+ trembled at that terrible army, and they betook them to their king Caldus,
+ and told him of the havoc made by the Moslem horsemen, and how they rode
+ at their will through all the land of Narbonne Toulouse, and Bordeaux, and
+ they told the king of the death of their count. Then the king bade them be
+ of good cheer, and offered to aid them. And in the 114th year [Of the
+ Hegira.] he mounted his home, and he took with him a host that could not
+ be numbered, and went against the Moslems. And he came upon them at the
+ great city of Tours. And Abderrahman and other prudent cavaliers saw the
+ disorder of the Moslem troops, who were loaded with spoil; but they did
+ not venture to displease the soldiers by ordering them to abandon
+ everything except their arms and war-horses. And Abderrahman trusted in
+ the valour of his soldiers, and in the good fortune which had ever
+ attended him. But (the Arab writer remarks) such defect of discipline
+ always is fatal to armies. So Abderrahman and his host attacked Tours to
+ gain still more spoil, and they fought against it so fiercely that they
+ stormed the city almost before the eyes of the army that came to save it;
+ and the fury and the cruelty of the Moslems towards the inhabitants of the
+ city were like the fury and cruelty of raging tigers. It was manifest,"
+ adds the Arab, "that God's chastisement was sure to follow such excesses;
+ and fortune thereupon turned her back upon the Moslems."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near the river Owar, [Probably the Loire.] the two great hosts of the two
+ languages and the two creeds were set in array against each other. The
+ hearts of Abderrahman, his captains, and his men were filled with wrath
+ and pride, and they were the first to begin the fight. The Moslem horseman
+ dashed fierce and frequent forward against the battalions of the Franks,
+ who resisted manfully, and many fell dead on either side, until the going
+ down of the sun. Night parted the two armies: but in the grey of the
+ morning the Moslems returned to the battle. Their cavaliers had soon hewn
+ their way into the centre of the Christian host. But many of the Moslems
+ were fearful for the safety of the spoil which they had stored in their
+ tents, and a false cry arose in their ranks that some of the enemy were
+ plundering the camp; whereupon several squadrons of the Moslem horseman
+ rode off to protect their tents. But it seemed as if they fled; and all
+ the host was troubled. And while Abderrahman strove to check their tumult,
+ and to lead them back to battle, the warriors of the Franks came around
+ him, and he was pierced through with many spears, so that he died. Then
+ all the host fled before the enemy, and many died in the flight. This
+ deadly defeat of the Moslems, and the loss of the great leader and good
+ cavalier Abderrahman, took place in the hundred and fifteenth year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be difficult to expect from an adversary a more explicit
+ confession of having been thoroughly vanquished, than the Arabs here
+ accord to the Europeans. The points on which their narrative differs from
+ those of the Christians,&mdash;as to how many days the conflict lasted,
+ whether the assailed city was actually rescued or not, and the like,&mdash;are
+ of little moment compared with the admitted great fact that there was a
+ decisive trial of strength between Frank and Saracen, in which the former
+ conquered. The enduring importance of the battle of Tours in the eyes of
+ the Moslems, is attested not only by the expressions of "the deadly
+ battle," and "the disgraceful overthrow," which their writers constantly
+ employ when referring to it, but also by the fact that no further serious
+ attempts at conquest beyond the Pyrenees were made by the Saracens.
+ Charles Martel, and his son and grandson, were left at leisure to
+ consolidate and extend their power. The new Christian Roman Empire of the
+ West, which the genius of Charlemagne founded, and throughout which his
+ iron will imposed peace on the old anarchy of creeds and races, did not
+ indeed retain its integrity after its great ruler's death. Fresh troubles
+ came over Europe; but Christendom, though disunited, was safe. The
+ progress of civilization, and the development of the nationalities and
+ governments of modern Europe, from that time forth, went forward in not
+ uninterrupted, but, ultimately, certain career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF TOURS, A.D. 732, AND THE BATTLE
+ OF HASTINGS, 1066.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 768-814. Reign of Charlemagne. This monarch has justly been termed
+ the principal regenerator of Western Europe, after the destruction of the
+ Roman empire. The early death of his brother, Carloman, left him sole
+ master of the dominions of the Franks, which, by a succession of
+ victorious wars, he enlarged into the new Empire of the West. He conquered
+ the Lombards, and re-established the Pope at Rome, who, in return,
+ acknowledged Charles as suzerain of Italy; and in the year 800, Leo III,
+ in the name of the Roman people, solemnly crowned Charlemagne at Rome, as
+ Emperor of the Roman Empire of the West. In Spain, Charlemagne ruled the
+ country between the Pyrenees and the Ebro; but his most important
+ conquests were effected on the eastern side of his original kingdom, over
+ the Sclavonians of Bohemia, the Avars of Pannonia, and over the previously
+ uncivilized German tribes who had remained in their fatherland. The old
+ Saxons were his most obstinate antagonists, and his wars with them lasted
+ for thirty years. Under him the greater part of Germany was compulsorily
+ civilized, and converted from Paganism to Christianity, His empire
+ extended eastward as far as the Elbe, the Saal, the Bohemian mountains,
+ and a line drawn from thence crossing the Danube above Vienna, and
+ prolonged to the Gulf of Istria. [Hallam's Middle Ages.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout this vast assemblage of provinces, Charlemagne established an
+ organized and firm government. But it is not as a mere conqueror that he
+ demands admiration. "In a life restlessly active, we see him reforming the
+ coinage, and establishing the legal divisions of money, gathering about
+ him the learned of every country; founding schools and collecting
+ libraries; interfering, with the air of a king, in religious
+ controversies; attempting, for the sake of commerce, the magnificent
+ enterprise of uniting the Rhine and the Danube, and meditating to mould
+ the discordant code of Roman and barbarian laws into an uniform system."
+ [Hallam, UT SUPRA.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 814-888. Repeated partitions of the empire and civil wars between
+ Charlemagne's descendants. Ultimately, the kingdom of France is finally
+ separated from Germany and Italy. In 982, Otho the Great, of Germany,
+ revives the imperial dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 827. Egbert, king of Wessex, acquires the supremacy over the Anglo-Saxon
+ kingdoms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 832. The first Danish squadron attacks part of the English coast. The
+ Danes, or Northmen, had begun their ravages in France a few years earlier.
+ For two centuries Scandinavia sends out fleet after fleet of sea-rovers,
+ who desolate all the western kingdoms of Europe, and in many cases effect
+ permanent conquests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 871-900. Reign of Alfred in England. After a long and varied struggle, he
+ rescues England from the Danish invaders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 911, The French king cedes Neustria to Hrolf the Northman. Hrolf (or Duke
+ Rollo, as he thenceforth was termed) and his army of Scandinavian
+ warriors, become the ruling class of the population of the province, which
+ is called after them Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1016. Four knights from Normandy, who had been on a pilgrimage to the Holy
+ Land, while returning through Italy, head the people of Salerno in
+ repelling an attack of a band of Saracen corsairs. In the next year many
+ adventurers from Normandy settle in Italy, where they conquer Apulia
+ (1040), and afterwards (1060) Sicily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1017. Canute, king of Denmark, becomes king of England. On the death of
+ the last of his sons, in 1041, the Saxon line is restored, and Edward the
+ Confessor (who had been bred in the court of the Duke of Normandy), is
+ called by the English to the throne of this island, as the representative
+ of the House of Cerdic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1035. Duke Robert of Normandy dies on his return from a pilgrimage to the
+ Holy Land, and his son William (afterwards the conqueror of England)
+ succeeds to the dukedom of Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS, 1066.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Eis vos la Bataille assemblee,
+ Dunc encore est grant renomee."
+ ROMAN DE ROU, 1. 3183.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Arletta's pretty feet twinkling in the brook gained her a duke's love, and
+ gave us William the Conqueror. Had she not thus fascinated Duke Robert,
+ the Liberal, of Normandy, Harold would not have fallen at Hastings, no
+ Anglo-Norman dynasty could have arisen, no British empire. The reflection
+ is Sir Francis Palgrave's: [History of Normandy and England, vol. i. p.
+ 528.] and it is emphatically true. If any one should write a history of
+ "Decisive loves that; have materially influenced the drama of the world in
+ all its subsequent scenes," the daughter of the tanner of Falaise would
+ deserve a conspicuous place in his pages. But it is her son, the victor of
+ Hastings, who is now the object of our attention; and no one, who
+ appreciates the influence of England and her empire upon the destinies of
+ the world, will ever rank that victory as one of secondary importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that in the last century some writers of eminence on our
+ history and laws mentioned the Norman Conquest in terms, from which it
+ might be supposed that the battle of Hastings led to little more than the
+ substitution of one royal family for another on the throne of this
+ country, and to the garbling and changing of some of our laws through the
+ "cunning of the Norman lawyers." But, at least since the appearance of the
+ work of Augustin Thierry on the Norman Conquest, these forensic fallacies
+ have been exploded. Thierry made his readers keenly appreciate the
+ magnitude of that political and social catastrophe. He depicted in vivid
+ colours the atrocious cruelties of the conquerors, and the sweeping and
+ enduring innovations that they wrought, involving the overthrow of the
+ ancient constitution, as well as of the last of the Saxon kings. In his
+ pages we see new tribunals and tenures superseding the old ones, new
+ divisions of race and class introduced, whole districts devastated to
+ gratify the vengeance or the caprice of the new tyrant, the greater part
+ of the lands of the English confiscated and divided among aliens, the very
+ name of Englishmen turned into a reproach, the English language rejected
+ as servile and barbarous, and all the high places in Church and State for
+ upwards of a century filled exclusively by men of foreign race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No less true than eloquent is Thierry's summing up of the social effects
+ of the Norman Conquest on the generation that witnessed it, and on many of
+ their successors. He tells his reader that "if he would form a just idea
+ of England conquered by William of Normandy, he must figure to himself,
+ not a mere change of political rule, not the triumph of one candidate over
+ another candidate, of the man of one party over the man of another party;
+ but the intrusion of one people into the bosom of another people, the
+ violent placing of one society over another society, which it came to
+ destroy, and the scattered fragments of which it retained only as personal
+ property, or (to use the words of an old act) as 'the clothing of the
+ soil:' he must not picture to himself on the one hand, William, a king and
+ a despot&mdash;on the other, subjects of William's, high and low, rich and
+ poor, all inhabiting England, and consequently all English; but he must
+ imagine two nations, of one of which William is a member and the chief&mdash;two
+ nations which (if the term must be used) were both subject to William, but
+ as applied to which the word has quite different senses, meaning in the
+ one case subordinate, in the other subjugated. He must consider that there
+ are two countries, two soils, included in the same geographical
+ circumference; that of the Normans rich and free, that of the Saxons poor
+ and serving, vexed by RENT and TAILLAGE; the former full of spacious
+ mansions, and walled and moated castles, the latter scattered over with
+ huts and straw, and ruined hovels; that peopled with the happy and the
+ idle, with men of the army and of the court, with knights and nobles,&mdash;this
+ with men of pain and labour, with farmers and artizans: on the one side,
+ luxury and insolence, on the other, misery and envy&mdash;not the envy of
+ the poor at the sight of opulence they cannot reach, but the envy of the
+ despoiled when in presence of the despoilers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the effect of Thierry's work has been to cast into the shade the
+ ultimate good effects on England of the Norman Conquest. Yet these are as
+ undeniable as are the miseries which that conquest inflicted on our Saxon
+ ancestors from the time of the battle of Hastings to the time of the
+ signing of the Great Charter at Runnymede. That last is the true epoch of
+ English nationality: it is the epoch when Anglo-Norman and Anglo-Saxon
+ ceased to keep aloof from each other, the one in haughty scorn, the other
+ in sullen abhorrence; and when all the free men of the land; whether
+ barons, knights, yeomen, or burghers, combined to lay the foundations of
+ English freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Norman barons were the chiefs of that primary constitutional movement;
+ those "iron barons" whom Chatham has so nobly eulogized. This alone should
+ make England remember her obligations to the Norman Conquest, which
+ planted far and wide, as a dominant class in her land, a martial nobility
+ of the bravest and most energetic race that ever existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may sound paradoxical, but it is in reality no exaggeration to say,
+ with Guizot, [Essais sur l'Histoirs de France, p. 273, et seq.] that
+ England owes her liberties to her having been conquered by the Normans. It
+ is true that the Saxon institutions were the primitive cradle of English
+ liberty, but by their own intrinsic force they could never have founded
+ the enduring free English constitution. It was the Conquest that infused
+ into them a new virtue; and the political liberties of England arose from
+ the situation in which the Anglo-Saxon and the Anglo-Norman populations
+ and laws found themselves placed relatively to each other in this island.
+ The state of England under her last Anglo-Saxon kings closely resembled
+ the state of France under the last Carlovingian, and the first Capetian
+ princes. The crown was feeble, the great nobles were strong and turbulent.
+ And although there was more national unity in Saxon England than in
+ France; although the English local free institutions had more reality and
+ energy than was the case with anything analogous to them on the Continent
+ in the eleventh century, still the probability is that the Saxon system of
+ polity, if left to itself, would have fallen into utter confusion, out of
+ which would have arisen first an aristocratic hierarchy like that which
+ arose in France, next an absolute monarchy, and finally a series of
+ anarchical revolutions, such as we now behold around, but not among us.
+ [See Guizot, UT SUPRA.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latest conquerors of this island were also the bravest and the best. I
+ do not except even the Romans. And, in spite of our sympathies with Harold
+ and Hereward, and our abhorrence of the founder of the New Forest, and the
+ desolator of Yorkshire, we must confess the superiority of the Normans to
+ the Anglo-Saxons and Anglo-Danes, whom they met here in 1066, as well as
+ to the degenerate Frank noblesse and the crushed and servile Romanesque
+ provincials, from whom, in 912, they had wrested the district in the north
+ of Gaul which still bears the name of Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not merely by extreme valour and ready subordination or military
+ discipline, that the Normans were pre-eminent among all the conquering
+ races of the Gothic stock, but also by their instinctive faculty of
+ appreciating and adopting the superior civilizations which they
+ encountered. Thus Duke Rollo and his Scandinavian warriors readily
+ embraced the creed, the language, the laws, and the arts which France, in
+ those troubled and evil times with which the Capetian dynasty commenced,
+ still inherited from imperial Rome and imperial Charlemagne. They adopted
+ the customs, the duties, the obedience that the capitularies of emperors
+ and kings had established; but that which they brought to the application
+ of those laws, was the spirit of life, the spirit of liberty&mdash;the
+ habits also of military subordination, and the aptness for a state
+ politic, which could reconcile the security of all with the independence
+ of each. [Sismondi, Histoire des Francais, vol. iii. p. 174.] So also in
+ all chivalric feelings, in enthusiastic religious zeal, in almost
+ idolatrous respect to females of gentle birth, in generous fondness for
+ the nascent poetry of the time, in a keen intellectual relish for subtle
+ thought and disputation, in a taste for architectural magnificence, and
+ all courtly refinement and pageantry, the Normans were the Paladins of the
+ world. Their brilliant qualities were sullied by many darker traits of
+ pride, of merciless cruelty, and of brutal contempt for the industry, the
+ rights, and the feelings of all whom they considered the lower classes of
+ mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their gradual blending with the Saxons softened these harsh and evil
+ points of their national character, and in return they fired the duller
+ Saxon mass with a new spirit of animation and power. As Campbell boldly
+ expressed it, "THEY HIGH-METTLED THE BLOOD OF OUR VEINS." Small had been
+ the figure which England made in the world before the coming over of the
+ Normans; and without them she never would have emerged from
+ insignificance. The authority of Gibbon may be taken as decisive when he
+ pronounces that, "Assuredly England was a gainer by the Conquest." and we
+ may proudly adopt the comment of the Frenchman Rapin, who, writing of the
+ battle of Hastings more than a century ago, speaks of the revolution
+ effected by it, as "the first step by which England has arrived to that
+ height of grandeur and glory we behold it in at present." [Rapin, Hist.
+ England, p. 164. See also Sharon Turner, vol. iv. p. 72; and, above all,
+ Palgrave's Normandy and England.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interest of this eventful struggle, by which William of Normandy
+ became King of England, is materially enhanced by the high personal
+ characters of the competitors for our crown. They were three in number.
+ One was a foreign prince from the North. One was a foreign prince from the
+ South: and one was a native hero of the land. Harald Hardrada, the
+ strongest and the most chivalric of the kings of Norway, was the first;
+ [See in Snerre the Saga of Harald Hardrada.] Duke William of Normandy was
+ the second; and the Saxon Harold, the son of Earl Godwin, was the third.
+ Never was a nobler prize sought by nobler champions, or striven for more
+ gallantly. The Saxon triumphed over the Norwegian, and the Norman
+ triumphed over the Saxon: but Norse valour was never more conspicuous than
+ when Harald Hardrada and his host fought and fell at Stamford Bridge; nor
+ did Saxons ever face their foes more bravely than our Harold and his men
+ on the fatal day of Hastings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the reign of King Edward the Confessor over this land, the claims
+ of the Norwegian king to our Crown were little thought of; and though
+ Hardrada's predecessor, King Magnus of Norway had on one occasion asserted
+ that, by virtue of a compact with our former king, Hardicanute, he was
+ entitled to the English throne, no serious attempt had been made to
+ enforce his pretensions. But the rivalry of the Saxon Harold and the
+ Norman William was foreseen and bewailed by the Confessor, who was
+ believed to have predicted on his death-bed the calamities that were
+ pending over England. Duke William was King Edward's kinsman. Harold was
+ the head of the most powerful noble house, next to the royal blood, in
+ England; and personally, he was the bravest and most popular chieftain in
+ the land. King Edward was childless, and the nearest collateral heir was a
+ puny unpromising boy. England had suffered too severely during royal
+ minorities, to make the accession of Edgar Atheling desirable; and long
+ before King Edward's death, Earl Harold was the destined king of the
+ nation's choice, though the favour of the Confessor was believed to lean
+ towards the Norman duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little time before the death of King Edward, Harold was in Normandy. The
+ causes of the voyage of the Saxon earl to the continent are doubtful; but
+ the fact of his having been, in 1065, at the ducal court, and in the power
+ of his rival, is indisputable. William made skilful and unscrupulous use
+ of the opportunity. Though Harold was treated with outward courtesy and
+ friendship, he was made fully aware that his liberty and life depended on
+ his compliance with the Duke's requests. William said to him, in apparent
+ confidence and cordiality, "When King Edward and I once lived like
+ brothers under the same roof, he promised that if ever he became King of
+ England, he would make me heir to his throne. Harold, I wish that thou
+ wouldst assist me to realize this promise." Harold replied with
+ expressions of assent: and further agreed, at William's request, to marry
+ William's daughter Adela, and to send over his own sister to be married to
+ one of William's barons. The crafty Norman was not content with this
+ extorted promise; he determined to bind Harold by a more solemn pledge,
+ which if broken, would be a weight on the spirit of the gallant Saxon, and
+ a discouragement to others from adopting his cause. Before a full assembly
+ of the Norman barons, Harold was required to do homage to Duke William, as
+ the heir-apparent of the English crown. Kneeling down, Harold placed his
+ hands between those of the Duke, and repeated the solemn form, by which he
+ acknowledged the Duke as his lord, and promised to him fealty and true
+ service. But William exacted more. He had caused all the bones and relics
+ of saints, that were preserved in the Norman monasteries and churches, to
+ be collected into a chest, which was placed in the council-room, covered
+ over with a cloth of gold. On the chest of relics, which were thus
+ concealed, was laid a missal. The Duke then solemnly addressed his titular
+ guest and real captive, and said to him, "Harold, I require thee, before
+ this noble assembly, to confirm by oath the promises which thou hast made
+ me, to assist me in obtaining the crown of England after King Edward's
+ death, to marry my daughter Adela, and to send me thy sister, that I may
+ give her in marriage to one of my barons." Harold, once more taken by
+ surprise, and not able to deny his former words, approached the missal,
+ and laid his hand on it, not knowing that the chest of relics was beneath.
+ The old Norman chronicler, who describes the scene most minutely, [Wace,
+ Roman de Rou. I have nearly followed his words.] says, when Harold placed
+ his hand on it, the hand trembled, and the flesh quivered; but he swore,
+ and promised upon his oath, to take Ele [Adela] to wife, and to deliver up
+ England to the Duke, and thereunto to do all in his power, according to
+ his might and wit, after the death of Edward, if he himself should live:
+ so help him God. Many cried, "God grant it!" and when Harold rose from his
+ knees, the Duke made him stand close to the chest, and took off the pall
+ that had covered it, and showed Harold upon what holy relics he had sworn;
+ and Harold was sorely alarmed at the sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold was soon, after this permitted to return to England; and, after a
+ short interval, during which he distinguished himself by the wisdom and
+ humanity with which he pacified some formidable tumults of the Anglo-Danes
+ in Northumbria, he found himself called on to decide whether he would keep
+ the oath which the Norman had obtained from him, or mount the vacant
+ throne of England in compliance with the nation's choice. King Edward the
+ Confessor died on the 5th of January, 1066, and on the following day an
+ assembly of the thanes and prelates present in London, and of the citizens
+ of-the metropolis, declared that Harold should be their king. It was
+ reported that the dying Edward had nominated him as his successor; but the
+ sense which his countrymen entertained of his pre-eminent merit was the
+ true foundation of his title to the crown. Harold resolved to disregard
+ the oath which he made in Normandy, as violent and void, and on the 7th
+ day of that January he was anointed King of England, and received from the
+ archbishop's hands the golden crown and sceptre of England, and also an
+ ancient national symbol, a weighty battle-axe. He had deep and speedy need
+ of this significant part of the insignia of Saxon royalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A messenger from Normandy soon arrived to remind Harold of the oath which
+ he had sworn to the Duke "with his mouth, and his hand upon good and holy
+ relics." "It is true," replied the Saxon king, "that I took an oath to
+ William; but I took it under constraint: I promised what did not belong to
+ me&mdash;what I could not in any way hold: my royalty is not my own; I
+ could not lay it down against the will of the country, nor can I against
+ the will of the country take a foreign wife. As for my sister, whom the
+ Duke claims that he may marry her to one of his chiefs, she has died
+ within the year; would he have me send her corpse?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William sent another message, which met with a similar answer; and then
+ the Duke published far and wide through Christendom what he termed the
+ perjury and bad faith of his rival; and proclaimed his intention of
+ asserting his rights by the sword before the year should expire, and of
+ pursuing and punishing the perjurer even in those places where he thought
+ he stood most strongly and most securely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before, however, he commenced hostilities, William, with deep laid policy
+ submitted his claims to the decision of the Pope. Harold refused to
+ acknowledge this tribunal, or to answer before an Italian priest for his
+ title as an English king. After a formal examination of William's
+ complaints by the Pope and the cardinals, it was solemnly adjudged at Rome
+ that England belonged to the Norman duke; and a banner was sent to William
+ from the holy see, which the Pope himself had consecrated and blessed for
+ the invasion of this island. The clergy throughout the continent were now
+ assiduous and energetic in preaching up William's enterprise as undertaken
+ in the cause of God. Besides these spiritual arms (the effect of which in
+ the eleventh century must not be measured by the philosophy or the
+ indifferentism of the nineteenth), the Norman duke applied all the
+ energies of his mind and body, all the resources of his duchy, and all the
+ influence he possessed among vassals or allies, to the collection of "the
+ most remarkable and formidable armament which the Western nations had
+ witnessed." [Sir James Mackintosh's History of England, vol. i. p. 97.]
+ All the adventurous spirits of Christendom flocked to the holy banner,
+ under which Duke William, the most renowned knight and sagest general of
+ the age, promised to lead them to glory and wealth in the fair domains of
+ England. His army was filled with the chivalry of continental Europe, all
+ eager to save their souls by fighting at the Pope's bidding, ardent to
+ signalise their valour in so great an enterprise, and longing also for the
+ pay and the plunder which William liberally promised. But the Normans
+ themselves were the pith and the flower of the army; and William himself
+ was the strongest, the sagest, and fiercest spirit of them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout the spring and summer of 1066, all the seaports of Normandy,
+ Picardy, and Brittany rang with the busy sound of preparation. On the
+ opposite side of the Channel, King Harold collected the army and the fleet
+ with which he hoped to crush the southern invaders. But the unexpected
+ attack of King Harald Hardrada of Norway upon another part of England,
+ disconcerted the skilful measures which the Saxon had taken against the
+ menacing armada of Duke William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold's renegade brother, Earl Tostig, had excited the Norse king to this
+ enterprise, the importance of which has naturally been eclipsed by the
+ superior interest attached to the victorious expedition of Duke William,
+ but which was on a scale of grandeur which the Scandinavian ports had
+ rarely, if ever, before witnessed. Hardrada's fleet consisted of two
+ hundred war-ships, and three hundred other vessels, and all the best
+ warriors of Norway were in his host. He sailed first to the Orkneys, where
+ many of the islanders joined him, and then to Yorkshire. After a severe
+ conflict near York, he completely routed Earls Edwin and Morcar, the
+ governors of Northumbria. The city of York opened its gates, and all the
+ country, from the Tyne to the Humber, submitted to him. The tidings of the
+ defeat of Edwin and Morcar compelled Harold to leave his position an the
+ southern coast, and move instantly against the Norwegians. By a remarkably
+ rapid, march, he reached Yorkshire in four days, and took the Norse king
+ and his confederates by surprise. Nevertheless, the battle which ensued,
+ and which was fought near Stamford Bridge, was desperate, and was long
+ doubtful. Unable to break the ranks of the Norwegian phalanx by force,
+ Harold at length tempted them to quit their close order by a pretended
+ flight. Then the English columns burst in among them, and a carnage
+ ensued, the extent of which may be judged of by the exhaustion and
+ inactivity of Norway for a quarter of a century afterwards. King Harald
+ Hardrada, and all the flower of his nobility, perished on the 25th of
+ September, 1066, at Stamford Bridge; a battle which was a Flodden to
+ Norway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold's victory was splendid; but he had bought it dearly by the fall of
+ many of his best officers and men; and still more dearly by the
+ opportunity which Duke William had gained of effecting an unopposed
+ landing on the Sussex coast. The whole of William's shipping had assembled
+ at the mouth of the Dive, a little river between the Seine and the Orme,
+ as early as the middle of August. The army which he had collected,
+ amounted to fifty thousand knights, and ten thousand soldiers of inferior
+ degree. Many of the knights were mounted, but many must have served on
+ foot; as it is hardly possible to believe that William could have found
+ transports for the conveyance of fifty thousand war-horses across the
+ Channel. For a long time the winds were adverse; and the Duke employed the
+ interval that passed before he could set sail in completing the
+ organization and in improving the discipline of his army; which he seems
+ to have brought into the same state of perfection, as was seven centuries
+ and a half afterwards the boast of another army assembled on the same
+ coast, and which Napoleon designed (but providentially in vain) for a
+ similar descent upon England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not till the approach of the equinox that the wind veered from the
+ north-east to the west, and gave the Normans an opportunity of quitting
+ the weary shores of the Dive. They eagerly embarked, and set sail; but the
+ wind soon freshened to a gale, and drove them along the French coast to
+ St. Valery, where the greater part of them found shelter; but many of
+ their vessels were wrecked and the whole coast of Normandy was strewn with
+ the bodies of the drowned. William's army began to grow discouraged and
+ averse to the enterprise, which the very elements thus seemed to fight
+ against; though in reality the north-east wind which had cooped them so
+ long at the mouth of the Dive, and the western gale which had forced them
+ into St. Valery, were the best possible friends to the invaders. They
+ prevented the Normans from crossing the Channel until the Saxon king and
+ his army of defence had been called away from the Sussex coast to
+ encounter Harald Hardrada in Yorkshire: and also until a formidable
+ English fleet, which by King Harold's orders had been cruising in the
+ Channel to intercept the Normans, had been obliged to disperse temporarily
+ for the purpose of refitting and taking in fresh stores of provisions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Duke William used every expedient to re-animate the drooping spirits of
+ his men at St. Valery; and at last he caused the body of the patron saint
+ of the place to be exhumed and carried in solemn procession, while the
+ whole assemblage of soldiers, mariners, and appurtenant priests implored
+ the saint's intercession for a change of wind. That very night the wind
+ veered, and enabled the mediaeval Agamemnon to quit his Aulia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With full sails, and a following southern breeze, the Norman armada left
+ the French shores and steered for England. The invaders crossed an
+ undefended sea, and found an undefended coast. It was in Pevensey Bay in
+ Sussex, at Bulverhithe, between the castle of Pevensey and Hastings, that
+ the last conquerors of this island landed, on the 29th of September, 1066.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold was at York, rejoicing over his recent victory, which had delivered
+ England from her ancient Scandinavian foes, and resettling the government
+ of the counties which Harald Hardrada had overrun, when the tidings
+ reached him that Duke William of Normandy and his host had landed on the
+ Sussex shore. Harold instantly hurried southward to meet this
+ long-expected enemy. The severe loss which his army had sustained in the
+ battle with the Norwegians must have made it impossible for any large
+ number of veteran troops to accompany him in his forced march to London,
+ and thence to Sussex. He halted at the capital only six days; and during
+ that time gave orders for collecting forces from his southern and midland
+ counties, and also directed his fleet to reassemble off the Sussex coast.
+ Harold was well received in London, and his summons to arms was promptly
+ obeyed by citizen, by thane, by sokman, and by ceorl; for he had shown
+ himself during his brief reign a just and wise king, affable to all men,
+ active for the good of his country, and (in the words of the old
+ historian) sparing himself from no fatigue by land or sea. [See Roger de
+ Hoveden and William of Malmesbury, cited in Thierry, book iii.] He might
+ have gathered a much more numerous force than that of William, but his
+ recent victory had made, him over-confident, and he was irritated by the
+ reports of the country being ravaged by the invaders. As soon therefore,
+ as he had collected a small army in London, he marched off towards the
+ coast: pressing forward as rapidly as his men could traverse Surrey and
+ Sussex in the hope of taking the Normans unawares, as he had recently by a
+ similar forced march succeeded in surprising the Norwegians. But he had
+ now to deal with a foe equally brave with Harald Hardrada, and far more
+ skilful and wary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old Norman chroniclers describe the preparations of William on his
+ landing, with a graphic vigour, which would be wholly lost by transfusing
+ their racy Norman couplets and terse Latin prose into the current style of
+ modern history. It is best to follow them closely, though at the expense
+ of much quaintness and occasional uncouthness of expression. They tell us
+ how Duke William's own ship was the first of the Norman fleet. "It was
+ called the Mora, and was the gift of his duchess, Matilda. On the head of
+ the ship in the front, which mariners call the prow, there was a brazen
+ child bearing an arrow with a bended bow. His face was turned towards
+ England, and thither he looked, as though he was about to shoot. The
+ breeze became soft and sweet, and the sea was smooth for their landing.
+ The ships ran on dry land, and each ranged by the other's side. There you
+ might see the good sailors, the sergeants, and squires sally forth and
+ unload the ships; cast the anchors, haul the ropes, bear out shields and
+ saddles, and land the war-horses and palfreys. The archers came forth, and
+ touched land the first, each with his bow strong and with his quiver full
+ of arrows, slung at his side. All were shaven and shorn; and all clad in
+ short garments, ready to attack, to shoot, to wheel about and skirmish.
+ All stood well equipped, and of good courage for the fight; and they
+ scoured the whole shore, but found not an armed man there. After the
+ archers had thus gone forth, the knights landed all armed, with their
+ hauberks on, their shields slung at their necks, and their helmets laced.
+ They formed together on the shore, each armed, and mounted on his
+ war-horse: all had their swords girded on, and rode forward into the
+ country with their lances raised. Then the carpenters landed, who had
+ great axes in their hands, and planes and adzes hung at their sides. They
+ took counsel together, and sought for a good spot to place a castle on.
+ They had brought with them in the fleet, three wooden castles from
+ Normandy, in pieces, all ready for framing together, and they took the
+ materials of one of these out of the ships, all shaped and pierced to
+ receive the pins which they had brought cut and ready in large barrels;
+ and before evening had set in, they had finished a good fort on the
+ English ground, and there they placed their stores. All then ate and drank
+ enough, and were right glad that they were ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When Duke William himself landed, as he stepped on the shore, he slipped
+ and fell forward upon his two hands. Forthwith all raised a loud cry of
+ distress. 'An evil sign,' said they, 'is here.' But he cried out lustily,
+ 'See, my lords! by the splendour of God, [William's customary oath.] I
+ have taken possession of England with both my hands. It is now mine; and
+ what is mine is yours.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The next day they marched along the sea-shore to Hastings. Near that
+ place the Duke fortified a camp, and set up the two other wooden castles.
+ The foragers, and those who looked out for booty, seized all the clothing
+ and provisions they could find, lest what had been brought by the ships
+ should fail them. And the English were to be seen fleeing before them,
+ driving off their cattle, and quitting their houses. Many took shelter in
+ burying-places, and even there they were in grievous alarm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the marauders from the Norman camp, strong bodies of cavalry were
+ detached by William into the country, and these, when Harold and his army
+ made their rapid march from London southward, fell, back in good order
+ upon the main body of the Normans, and reported that the Saxon king was
+ rushing on like a madman. But Harold, when he found that his hopes of
+ surprising his adversary were vain changed his tactics, and halted about
+ seven miles from the Norman lines. He sent some spies, who spoke the
+ French language, to examine the number and preparations of the enemy, who,
+ on their return, related with astonishment that there were more priests in
+ William's camp than there were fighting men in the English army. They had
+ mistaken for priests all the Norman soldiers who had short hair and shaven
+ chins; for the English layman were then accustomed to wear long hair and
+ mustachios, Harold, who knew the Norman usages, smiled at their words and
+ said, "Those whom you have seen in such numbers are not priests, but stout
+ soldiers, as they will soon make us feel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold's army was far inferior in number to that of the Normans, and some
+ of his captains advised him to retreat upon London, and lay waste the
+ country, so as to starve down the strength, of the invaders. The policy
+ thus recommended was unquestionably the wisest; for the Saxon fleet had
+ now reassembled, and intercepted all William's communications with
+ Normandy; so that as soon as his stores of provisions were exhausted he
+ must have moved forward upon London; where Harold, at the head of the full
+ military strength of the kingdom, could have defied his assault, and
+ probably might have witnessed his rival's destruction by famine and
+ disease, without having to strike a single blow. But Harold's bold blood
+ was up, and his kindly heart could not endure to inflict on his South
+ Saxon subjects even the temporary misery of wasting the country. "He would
+ not burn houses and villages, neither would he take away the substance of
+ his people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harold's brothers, Gurth and Leofwine, were with him in the camp, and
+ Gurth endeavoured to persuade him to absent himself from the battle. The
+ incident shows how well devised had been William's scheme of binding
+ Harold by the oath on the holy relics. "My brother", said the young Saxon
+ prince, "thou canst not deny that either by force or free-will thou hast
+ made Duke William an oath on the bodies of saints. Why then risk thyself
+ in the battle with a perjury upon thee? To us, who have sworn nothing,
+ this is a holy and a just war, for we are fighting for our country. Leave
+ us then, alone to fight this battle, and he who has the right will win."
+ Harold replied that he would not look on while others risked their lives
+ for him. Men would hold him a coward, and blame him for sending his best
+ friends where he dared not go himself. He resolved, therefore, to fight,
+ and to fight in person: but he was still too good a general to be the
+ assailant in the action. He strengthened his position on the hill where he
+ had halted, by a palisade of stakes interlaced with osier hurdles, and
+ there, he said, he would defend himself against whoever should seek him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ruins of Battle Abbey at this hour attest the place where Harold's
+ army was posted. The high altar of the abbey stood on the very spot where
+ Harold's own standard was planted during the fight, and where the carnage
+ was the thickest. Immediately after his victory William vowed to build an
+ abbey on the site; and a fair and stately pile soon rose there, where for
+ many ages the monks prayed, and said masses for the souls of those who
+ were slain in the battle, whence the abbey took its name. Before that time
+ the place was called Senlac. Little of the ancient edifice now remains:
+ but it is easy to trace among its relics and in the neighbourhood the
+ scenes of the chief incidents in the action; and it is impossible to deny
+ the generalship shown by Harold in stationing his men; especially when we
+ bear in mind that he was deficient in cavalry, the arm in which his
+ adversary's main strength consisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A neck of hills trends inwards for nearly seven miles from the high ground
+ immediately to the north-east of Hastings. The line of this neck of hills
+ is from south-east to north-west, and the usual route from Hastings to
+ London must, in ancient as in modern times, have been along its summits.
+ At the distance from Hastings which has been mentioned, the continuous
+ chain of hills ceases. A valley must be crossed, and on the other side of
+ it, opposite to the last of the neck of hills, rises a high ground of some
+ extent, facing to the south-east. This high ground, then termed Senlac,
+ was occupied by Harold's army. It could not be attacked in front without
+ considerable disadvantage to the assailants, and could hardly be turned
+ without those engaged in the manoeuvre exposing themselves to a fatal
+ charge in flank, while they wound round the base of the height, and
+ underneath the ridges which project from it on either side. There was a
+ rough and thickly-wooded district in the rear, which seemed to offer
+ Harold great facilities for rallying his men, and checking the progress of
+ the enemy, if they should succeed in forcing him back from his post. And
+ it seemed scarcely possible that the Normans, if they met with any
+ repulse, could save themselves from utter destruction. With such hopes and
+ expectations (which cannot be termed unreasonable, though "Successum Dea
+ dira negavit,") King Harold bade his standard be set up a little way down
+ the slope of Senlac-hill, at the point where the ascent from the valley
+ was least steep, and on which the fiercest attacks of the advancing enemy
+ were sure to be directed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foundation-stones of the high altar of Battle Abbey have, during late
+ years, been discovered; and we may place our feet on the very spot where
+ Harold stood with England's banner waving over him; where, when the battle
+ was joined, he defended himself to the utmost; where the fatal arrow came
+ down on him; where he "leaned in agony on his shield;" and where at last
+ he was beaten to the earth, and with him the Saxon banner was beaten down,
+ like him never to rise again. The ruins of the altar are a little to the
+ west of the high road, which leads from Hastings along the neck of hills
+ already described, across the valley, and through the modern town of
+ Battle, towards London. Before a railway was made along this valley, some
+ of the old local features were more easy than now to recognise. The eye
+ then at once saw that the ascent from the valley was least steep at the
+ point which Harold selected for his own post in the engagement. But this
+ is still sufficiently discernible; and we can fix the spot, a little lower
+ down the slope, immediately in front of the high altar, where the brave
+ Kentish men stood, "whose right it was to strike first when ever the king
+ went to battle," and who, therefore, were placed where the Normans would
+ be most likely to make their first charge. Round Harold himself, and where
+ the plantations wave which now surround the high altar's ruins, stood the
+ men of London, "whose privilege it was to guard the king's body, to place
+ themselves around it, and to guard his standard." On the right and left
+ were ranged the other warriors of central and southern England, whose
+ shires the old Norman chronicler distorts in his French nomenclature.
+ Looking thence in the direction of Hastings, we can distinguish the "ridge
+ of the rising ground over which the Normans appeared advancing." It is the
+ nearest of the neck of hills. It is along that hill that Harold and his
+ brothers saw approach in succession the three divisions of the Norman
+ army. The Normans came down that slope, and then formed in the valley, so
+ as to assault the whole front of the English position. Duke William's own
+ division, with "the best men and greatest strength of the army," made the
+ Norman centre, and charged the English immediately in front of Harold's
+ banner, as the nature of the ground had led the Saxon king to anticipate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are few battles the localities of which can be more completely
+ traced; and the whole scene is fraught with associations of deep interest:
+ but the spot which, most of all, awakens our sympathy and excites our
+ feelings, is that where Harold himself fought and fell. The crumbling
+ fragments of the grey altar-stones, with the wild flowers that cling
+ around their base, seem fitting memorials of the brave Saxon who there
+ bowed his head in death; while the laurel-trees that are planted near, and
+ wave over the ruins, remind us of the Conqueror, who there, at the close
+ of that dreadful day, reared his victorious standard high over the
+ trampled banner of the Saxon, and held his triumphant carousal amid the
+ corses of the slain, with his Norman chivalry exulting around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it was known in the invaders' camp at Hastings that King Harold had
+ marched southward with his power, but a brief interval ensued before the
+ two hosts met in decisive encounter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William's only chance of safety lay in bringing on a general engagement;
+ and he joyfully advanced his army from their camp on the hill over
+ Hastings, nearer to the Saxon position. But he neglected no means of
+ weakening his opponent, and renewed his summonses and demands on Harold
+ with an ostentatious air of sanctity and moderation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A monk named Hugues Maigrot came in William's name to call upon the Saxon
+ king to do one of three things&mdash;either to resign his royalty in
+ favour of William, or to refer it to the arbitration of the Pope to decide
+ which of the two ought to be king, or to let it be determined by the issue
+ of a single combat. Harold abruptly replied, 'I will not resign my title,
+ I will not refer it to the Pope, nor will I accept the single combat.' He
+ was far from being deficient in bravery; but he was no more at liberty to
+ stake the crown which he had received from a whole people on the chance of
+ a duel, than to deposit it in the hands of an Italian priest. William was
+ not at all ruffled by the Saxon's refusal, but steadily pursuing the
+ course of his calculated measures, sent the Norman monk again, after
+ giving him these instructions:&mdash;'Go and tell Harold, that if he will
+ keep his former compact with me, I will leave to him all the country which
+ is beyond the Humber, and will give his brother Gurth all the lands which
+ Godwin held. If he still persist in refusing my offers, then thou shalt
+ tell him, before all his people, that he is a perjurer and a liar; that
+ he, and all who shall support him, are excommunicated by the mouth of the
+ Pope; and that the bull to that effect is in my hands.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hugues Maigrot delivered this message in a solemn tone; and the Norman
+ chronicle says that at the word EXCOMMUNICATION, the English chiefs looked
+ at one another as if some great danger were impending. One of them then
+ spoke as follows: 'We must fight, whatever may be the danger to us; for
+ what we have to consider is not whether we shall accept and receive a new
+ lord as if our king were dead: the case is quite otherwise. The Norman has
+ given our lands to his captains, to his knights, to all his people, the
+ greater part of whom have already done homage to him for them; they will
+ all look for their gift, if their Duke become our king; and he himself is
+ bound to deliver up to them our goods, our wives, and our daughters: all
+ is promised to them beforehand. They come, not only to ruin us, but to
+ ruin our descendants also, and to take from us the country of our
+ ancestors and what shall we do&mdash;whither shall we go&mdash;when we
+ have no longer a country?' The English promised by a unanimous oath, to
+ make neither peace, nor truce nor treaty, with the invader, but to die, or
+ drive away the Normans." [Thierry.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 13th of October was occupied in these negotiations; and at night the
+ Duke announced to his men that the next day would, be the day of battle.
+ That night is said to have been passed by the two armies in very different
+ manners. The Saxon soldiers spent it in joviality, singing their national
+ songs, and draining huge horns of ale and wine round their camp-fires. The
+ Normans, when they had looked to their arms and horses, confessed
+ themselves to the priests, with whom their camp was thronged, and received
+ the sacrament by thousands at a time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Saturday, the 14th of October, was fought the great battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not difficult to compose a narrative of its principal incidents,
+ from the historical information which we possess, especially if aided by
+ an examination of the ground. But it is far better to adopt the
+ spirit-stirring words of the old chroniclers, who wrote while the
+ recollections of the battle were yet fresh, and while the feelings and
+ prejudices of the combatants yet glowed in the bosoms of their near
+ descendants. Robert Wace, the Norman poet, who presented his "Roman de
+ Rou" to our Henry II., is the most picturesque and animated of the old
+ writers; and from him we can obtain a more vivid and full description of
+ the conflict, than even the most brilliant romance-writer of the present
+ time can supply. We have also an antique memorial of the battle, more to
+ be relied on than either chronicler or poet (and which confirms Wace's
+ narrative remarkably), in the celebrated Bayeux tapestry, which represents
+ the principal scenes of Duke William's expedition, and of the
+ circumstances connected with it, in minute though occasionally grotesque
+ details, and which was undoubtedly the production of the same age in which
+ the battle took place; whether we admit or reject the legend that Queen
+ Matilda and the ladies of her court wrought it with their own hands in
+ honour of the royal Conqueror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us therefore suffer the old Norman chronicler to transport our
+ imaginations to the fair Sussex scenery, north-west of Hastings, with its
+ breezy uplands, its grassy slopes, and ridges of open down swelling inland
+ from the sparkling sea, its scattered copses, and its denser glades of
+ intervening forests, clad in all the varied tints of autumn, as they
+ appeared on the morning of the fourteenth of October, seven hundred and
+ eighty-five years ago. The Norman host is pouring forth from its tents;
+ and each troop, and each company, is forming fast under the banner of its
+ leader. The masses have been sung, which were finished betimes in the
+ morning; the barons have all assembled round Duke William; and the Duke
+ has ordered that the army shall be formed in three divisions, so as to
+ make the attack upon the Saxon position in three places. The Duke stood on
+ a hill where he could best see his men; the barons surrounded him, and he
+ spake to them proudly. He told them how he trusted them, and how all that
+ he gained should be theirs; and how sure he felt of conquest, for in all
+ the world there was not so brave an army or such good men and true as were
+ then forming around him. Then they cheered him in turn, and cried out,
+ "'You will not see one coward; none here will fear to die for love of you,
+ if need be.' And he answered them, 'I thank you well. For God's sake spare
+ not; strike hard at the beginning; stay not to take spoil; all the booty
+ shall be in common, and there will be plenty for everyone. There will be
+ no safety in asking quarter or in fight: the English will never love or
+ spare a Norman. Felons they were, and felons they are; false they were,
+ and false they will be. Show no weakness towards them, for they will have
+ no pity on you. Neither the coward for running well, nor the bold man for
+ smiting well, will be the better liked by the English, nor will any be the
+ more spared on either account. You may fly to the sea, but you can fly no
+ further; you will find neither ships nor bridge there; there will be no
+ sailors to receive you; and the English will overtake you there and slay
+ you in your shame. More of you will die in flight than in the battle.
+ Then, as flight will not secure you, fight, and you will conquer. I have
+ no doubt of the victory: we are come for glory, the victory is in our
+ hands, and we may make sure of obtaining it if we so please.' As the Duke
+ was speaking thus, and would yet have spoken more, William Fitz Osber rode
+ up with his horse all coated with iron: 'Sire,' said he, 'we tarry here
+ too long, let us all arm ourselves. ALLONS! ALLONS!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then all went to their tents and armed themselves as they best might; and
+ the Duke was very busy, giving every one his orders; and he was courteous
+ to all the vassals, giving away many arms and horses to them. When he
+ prepared to arm himself, he called first for his good hauberk, and a man
+ brought it on his arm, and placed it before him, but in putting his head
+ in, to get it on, he unawares turned it the wrong way, with the back part
+ in front. He soon changed it, but when he saw that those who stood by were
+ sorely alarmed, he said, 'I have seen many a man who, if such a thing had
+ happened to him, would not have borne arms, or entered the field the same
+ day; but I never believed in omens, and I never will. I trust in God, for
+ He does in all things His pleasure, and ordains what is to come to pass,
+ according to His will. I have never liked fortune-tellers, nor believed in
+ diviners; but I commend myself to our Lady. Let not this mischance give
+ you trouble. The hauberk which was turned wrong, and then set right by me,
+ signifies that a change will arise out of the matter which we are now
+ stirring. You shall see the name of duke changed into king. Yea, a king
+ shall I be, who hitherto have been but duke.' Then he crossed himself and
+ straightway took his hauberk, stooped his head, and put it on aright, and
+ laced his helmet, and girt on his sword, which a varlet brought him. Then
+ the Duke called for his good horse&mdash;a better could not be found. It
+ had been sent him by a king of Spain, out of very great friendship.
+ Neither arms nor the press of fighting men did it fear, if its lord
+ spurred it on. Walter Giffard brought it. The Duke stretched out his hand,
+ took the reins, put foot in stirrup, and mounted; and the good horse
+ pawed, pranced, reared himself up, and curvetted. The Viscount of Toarz
+ saw how the Duke bore himself in arms, and said to his people that were
+ around him, 'Never have I seen a man so fairly armed, nor one who rods so
+ gallantly, or bore his arms or became his hauberk so well; neither any one
+ who bore his lance so gracefully, or sat his horse and managed him so
+ nobly. There is no such knight under heaven! a fair count he is, and fair
+ king he will be. Let him fight, and he shall overcome: shame be to the man
+ who shall fail him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then the Duke called for the standard which the Pope had sent him, and he
+ who bore it having unfolded it, the Duke took it, and, called to Raol de
+ Conches. 'Bear my standard,' said he, 'for I would not but do you right;
+ by right and by ancestry your line are standard-bearers of Normandy, and
+ very good knights have they all been.' But Raol said that he would serve
+ the Duke that day in other guise, and would fight the English with his
+ hand as long as life should last. Then the Duke bade Galtier Giffart bear
+ the standard. But he was old and white-headed, and bade the Duke give the
+ standard to some younger and stronger man to carry. Then the Duke said
+ fiercely, 'By the splendour of God, my lords, I think you mean to betray
+ and fail me in this great need.'&mdash;'Sire,' said Giffart, 'not so! we
+ have done no treason, nor do I refuse from any felony towards you; but I
+ have to lead a great chivalry, both hired men and the men of my fief.
+ Never had I such good means of serving you as I now have; and if God
+ please, I will serve you; if need be, I will die for you, and will give my
+ own heart for yours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'By my faith,' quoth the Duke, 'I always loved thee, and now I love thee
+ more; if I survive this day, thou shalt be the better for it all thy
+ days.' Then he called out a knight, whom he had heard much praised,
+ Tosteins Fitz-Rou le Blanc by name, whose abode was at Bec-en-Caux. To him
+ he delivered the standard; and Tosteins took it right cheerfully, and
+ bowed low to him in thanks, and bore it gallantly, and with good heart.
+ His kindred still have quittance of all service for their inheritance on
+ that account, and their heirs are entitled so to hold their inheritance
+ for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "William sat on his war-horse, and called on Rogier, whom they call De
+ Mongomeri. 'I rely much upon you,' said he: 'lead your men thitherward,
+ and attack them from that side. William, the son of Osber the seneschal, a
+ right good vassal, shall go with you and help in the attack, and you shall
+ have the men of Boulogne and Poix, and all my soldiers. Alain Fergert and
+ Ameri shall attack on the other side; they shall lead the Poitevins and
+ the Bretons, and all the Barons of Maine; and I, with my own great men, my
+ friends and kindred, will fight in the middle throng, where the battle
+ shall be the hottest.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The barons, and knights, and men-at-arms were all now armed; the
+ foot-soldiers were well equipped, each bearing bow and sword; on their
+ heads were caps, and to their feet were bound buskins. Some had good hides
+ which they had bound round their bodies; and many were clad in frocks, and
+ had quivers and bows hung to their girdles. The knights had hauberks and
+ swords, boots of steel and shining helmets; shields at their necks, and in
+ their hands lances. And all had their cognizances, so that each might know
+ his fellow, and Norman might not strike Norman, nor Frenchman kill his
+ countryman by mistake. Those on foot led the way, with serried ranks,
+ bearing their bows. The knights rode next, supporting the archers from
+ behind. Thus both horse and foot kept their course and order of march as
+ they began; in close ranks at a gentle pace, that the one might not pass
+ or separate from the other. All went firmly and compactly, bearing
+ themselves gallantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Harold had summoned his men, earls, barons, and vavassours, from, the
+ castles and the cities; from the ports, the villages, and boroughs. The
+ peasants were also called together from the villages, bearing such arms as
+ they found; clubs and great picks, iron forge and stages. The English had
+ enclosed the place where Harold was, with his friends and the barons of
+ the country whom he had summoned and called together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Those of London had come at once, and those of Kent, Hartfort, and of
+ Essesse; those of Suree and Susesse, of St. Edmund and Sufoc; of Norwis
+ and Norfoc; of Cantorbierre and Stanfort Bedefort and Hundetone. The men
+ of Northanton also came; and those of Eurowic and Bokingkeham, of Bed and
+ Notinkeham, Lindesie and Nichole. There came also from the west all, who
+ heard the summons; and very many were to be seen coming from Salebiere and
+ Dorset, from Bat and from Somerset. Many came, too, from about Glocestre,
+ and many from Wirecestre, from Wincestre, Hontesire, and Brichesire; and
+ many more from other counties that we have not named, and cannot indeed
+ recount. All who could bear arms, and had learnt the news of the Duke's
+ arrival, came to defend the land. But none came from beyond Humbre, for
+ they had other business upon their hands; the Danes and Tosti having much
+ damaged and weakened them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Harold knew that the Normans would come and attack him hand to hand; so
+ he had early enclosed the field in which he placed his men. He made them
+ arm early, and range themselves for the battle; he himself having put on
+ arms and equipments that became such a lord. The Duke, he said, ought to
+ seek him, as he wanted to conquer England; and it became him to abide the
+ attack who had to defend the land. He commanded the people, and counselled
+ his barons to keep themselves altogether, and defend themselves in a body;
+ for if they once separated, they would with difficulty recover themselves.
+ 'The Normans,' he said, 'are good vassals, valiant on foot and on
+ horseback; good knights are they on horseback, and well used to battle;
+ all is lost if they once penetrate our ranks. They have brought long
+ lances and swords, but you have pointed lances and keen-edged bills; and I
+ do not expect that their arms can stand against yours. Cleave wherever you
+ can; it will be ill done if you spare aught.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The English had built up a fence before them with their shields, and with
+ ash and other wood; and had well joined and wattled in the whole work, so
+ as not to leave even a crevice; and thus they had a barricade in their
+ front, through which any Norman who would attack them must first pass.
+ Being covered in this way by their shields and barricades, their aim was
+ to defend themselves: and if they had remained steady for that purpose,
+ they would not have been conquered that day; for every Norman who made his
+ way in, lost his life, either by hatchet, or bill, by club, or other
+ weapons. They wore short and close hauberks, and helmets that hung over
+ their garments. King Harold issued orders and made proclamation round,
+ that all should be ranged with their faces towards the enemy; and that no
+ one should move from where he was; so that, whoever came, might find them
+ ready; and that whatever any one, be he Norman or other, should do, each
+ should do his best to defend his own place. Then he ordered the men of
+ Kent to go where the Normans were likely to make the attack; for they say
+ that the men of Kent are entitled to strike first; and that whenever the
+ king goes to battle, the first blow belongs to them. The right of the men
+ of London is to guard the king's body, to place themselves around him, and
+ to guard his standard; and they were accordingly placed by the standard to
+ watch and defend it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When Harold had made his reply, and given his orders, he came into the
+ midst of the English, and dismounted by the side of the standard: Leofwin
+ and Gurth, his brothers, were with him, and around him he had barons
+ enough, as he stood by his standard, which was in truth a noble one,
+ sparkling with gold and precious stones. After the victory, William sent
+ it to the Pope, to prove and commemorate his great conquest and glory. The
+ English stood in close ranks, ready and eager for the fight; and they
+ moreover made a fosse, which went across the field, guarding one side of
+ their army,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Meanwhile the Normans appeared advancing over the ridge of a rising
+ ground; and the first division of their troops moved onwards along the
+ hill and across a vallley. And presently another division, still larger,
+ came in sight, close following upon the first, and they were led towards
+ another part of the field, forming together as the first body had done.
+ And while Harold saw and examined them, and was pointing them out to
+ Gurth, a fresh company came in sight, covering all the plain; and in the
+ midst of them was raised the standard that came from Rome. Near it was the
+ Duke, and the best men and greatest strength of the army were there. The
+ good knights, the good vassals, and brave warriors were there; and there
+ were gathered together the gentle barons, the good archers, and the
+ men-at-arms, whose duty it was to guard the Duke, and range themselves
+ around him. The youths and common herd of the camp, whose business was not
+ to join in the battle, but to take care of the harness and stores, moved
+ on towards a rising ground. The priests and the clerks also ascended a
+ hill, there to offer up prayers to God, and watch the event of the battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The English stood firm on foot in close ranks, and carried themselves
+ right boldly. Each man had his hauberk on, with his sword girt, and his
+ shield at his neck. Great hatchets were also slung at their necks, with
+ which they expected to strike heavy blows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Normans brought on the three divisions of their army to attack at
+ different places. They set out in three companies, and in three companies
+ did they fight. The first and second had come up, and then advanced the
+ third, which was the greatest; with that came the Duke with his own men,
+ and all moved boldly forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As soon as the two armies were in full view of each other, great noise
+ and tumult arose. You might hear the sound of many trumpets, of bugles,
+ and of horns: and then you might see men ranging themselves in line,
+ lifting their shields, raising their lances, bending their bows, handling
+ their arrows, ready for assault and defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The English stood ready to their post, the Normans still moved on; and
+ when they drew near, the English were to be seen stirring to and fro; were
+ going and coming; troops ranging themselves in order; some with their
+ colour rising, others turning pale; some making ready their arms, others
+ raising their shields; the brave man rousing himself to fight, the coward
+ trembling at the approach of danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then Taillefer, who sang right well, rode mounted on a swift horse,
+ before the Duke, singing of Charlemagne and of Roland, of Olivier and the
+ Peers who died in Roncesvalles, and when they drew nigh to the English, 'A
+ boon, sire!' cried Taillefer; 'I have long served you, and you owe me for
+ all such service. To-day, so please you, you shall repay it. I ask as my
+ guerdon, and beseech you for it earnestly, that you will allow me to
+ strike the first blow in the battle!' And the Duke answered, 'I grant it.'
+ Then Taillefer put his horse to a gallop, charging before all the rest,
+ and struck an Englishman dead, driving his lance below the breast into his
+ body, and stretching him upon the ground. Then he drew his sword, and
+ struck another, crying out, 'Come on, come on! What do ye, sirs! lay on,
+ lay on!' At the second blow he struck, the English pushed forward, and
+ surrounded and slew him. Forthwith arose the noise and cry of war, and on
+ either side the people put themselves in motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Normans moved on to the assault, and the English defended themselves
+ well. Some were striking, others urging onwards; all were bold, and cast
+ aside fear. And now, behold, that battle was gathered, whereof the fame is
+ yet mighty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Loud and far resounded the bray of the horns; and the shocks of the
+ lances, the mighty strokes of maces, and the quick clashing of swords. One
+ while the Englishmen rushed on, another while they fell back; one while
+ the men from over the sea charged onwards, and again at other times
+ retreated. The Normans shouted 'Dex aie,' the English people 'Out.' Then
+ came the cunning manoeuvres, the rude shocks and strokes of the lance and
+ blows of the swords, among the sergeants and soldiers, both English and
+ Norman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the English fall, the Normans shout. Each side taunts and defies the
+ other, yet neither knoweth what the other saith; and the Normans say the
+ English bark, because they understand not their speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some wax strong, others weak: the brave exult, but the cowards tremble,
+ as men who are sore dismayed. The Normans press on the assault, and the
+ English defend their post well: they pierce the hauberks, and cleave the
+ shields, receive and return mighty blows. Again, some press forwards,
+ others yield; and thus in various ways the struggle proceeds. In the plain
+ was a fosse, which the Normans had now behind them, having passed it in
+ the fight without regarding it. But the English charged, and drove the
+ Normans before them till they made them fall back upon this fosse,
+ overthrowing into it horses and men. Many were to be seen falling therein,
+ rolling one over the other, with their faces to the earth, and unable to
+ rise. Many of the English, also, whom the Normans drew down along with
+ them, died there. At no time during the day's battle did so many Normans
+ die as perished in that fosse. So those said who saw the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The varlets who were set to guard the harness began to abandon it as they
+ saw the loss of the Frenchmen, when thrown back upon the fosse without
+ power to recover themselves. Being greatly alarmed at seeing the
+ difficulty in restoring order, they began to quit the harness, and sought
+ around, not knowing where to find shelter. Then Duke William's brother,
+ Odo, the good priest, the Bishop of Bayeux, galloped up, and said to them,
+ 'Stand fast! stand fast! be quiet and move not! fear nothing, for if God
+ please, we shall conquer yet.' So they took courage, and rested where they
+ were; and Odo returned galloping back to where the battle was most fierce,
+ and was of great service on that day. He had put hauberk on, over a white
+ aube, wide in the body, with the sleeve tight; and sat on a white horse,
+ so that all might recognise him. In his hand he held a mace, and wherever
+ he saw most need he held up and stationed the knights, and often urged
+ them on to assault and strike the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From nine o'clock in the morning, when the combat began, till three
+ o'clock came, the battle was up and down, this way and that, and no one
+ knew who would conquer and win the land. Both sides stood so firm and
+ fought so well, that no one could guess which would prevail. The Norman
+ archers with their bows shot thickly upon the English; but they covered
+ themselves with their shields, so that the arrows could not reach their
+ bodies, nor do any mischief, how true soever was their aim, or however
+ well they shot. Then the Normans determined to shoot their arrows upwards
+ into the air, so that they might fall on their enemies' heads, and strike
+ their faces. The archers adopted this scheme, and shot up into the air
+ towards the English; and the arrows in falling struck their heads and
+ faces, and put out the eyes of many; and all feared to open their eyes, or
+ leave their faces unguarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The arrows now flew thicker than rain before the wind; fast sped the
+ shafts that the English called 'wibetes.' Then it was that an arrow, that
+ had been thus shot upwards, struck Harold above his right eye and put it
+ out. In his agony he drew the arrow and threw it away, breaking it with
+ his hands; and the pain to his head was so great, that he leaned upon his
+ shield. So the English were wont to say, and still say to the French, that
+ the arrow was well shot which was so sent up against their king; and that
+ the archer won them great glory, who thus put out Harold's eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Normans saw that the English defended themselves well, and were so
+ strong in their position that they could do little against them. So they
+ consulted together privily, and arranged to draw off, and pretend to flee,
+ till the English should pursue and scatter themselves over the field; for
+ they saw that if they could once get their enemies to break: their ranks,
+ they might be attacked and discomfited much more easily. As they had said,
+ so they did. The Normans by little and little fled, the English following
+ them. As the one fell back, the other pressed after; and when the
+ Frenchmen retreated, the English thought and cried out that the men of
+ France fled, and would never return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus they were deceived by the pretended flight, and great mischief
+ thereby befell them; for if they had not moved from their position, it is
+ not likely that they would have been conquered at all; but like fools they
+ broke their lines and pursued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Normans were to be seen following up their stratagem, retreating
+ slowly so as to draw the English further on. As they still flee, the
+ English pursue; they push out their lances and stretch forth their
+ hatchets: following the Normans, as they go rejoicing in the success of
+ their scheme, and scattering themselves over the plain. And the English
+ meantime jeered and insulted their foes with words. 'Cowards,' they cried,
+ 'you came hither in an evil hour, wanting our lands, and seeking to seize
+ our property, fools that ye were to come! Normandy is too far off and you
+ will not easily reach it. It is of little use to run back; unless you can
+ cross the sea at a leap, or can drink it dry, your sons and daughters are
+ lost to you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Normans bore it all, but in fact they knew not what the English said:
+ their language seemed like the baying of dogs, which they could not
+ understand. At length they stopped and turned round, determined to recover
+ their ranks; and the barons might be heard crying 'Dex aie!' for a halt.
+ Then the Normans resumed their former position, turning their faces
+ towards the enemy; and their men were to be seen facing round and rushing
+ onwards to a fresh MELEE; the one party assaulting the other; this man
+ striking, another pressing onwards. One hits, another misses; one flies,
+ another pursues; one is aiming a stroke, while another discharges his
+ blow. Norman strives with Englishman again, and aims his blows afresh. One
+ flies, another pursues swiftly: the combatants are many, the plain wide,
+ the battle and the MELEE fierce. On every hand they fight hard, the blows
+ are heavy, and the struggle becomes fierce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Normans were playing their part well, when an English knight came
+ rushing up, having in his company a hundred men, furnished with various
+ arms. He wielded a northern hatchet, with the blade a full foot long; and
+ was well armed after his manner, being tall, bold, and of noble carriage.
+ In the front of the battle where the Normans thronged most, he came
+ bounding on swifter than the stag, many Normans falling before him and his
+ company. He rushed straight upon a Norman who was armed and riding on a
+ war-horse, and tried with, his hatchet of steel to cleave his helmet; but
+ the blow miscarried and the sharp blade glanced down before the
+ saddle-bow, driving through the horse's neck down to the ground, so that
+ both horse and master fell together to the earth. I know not whether the
+ Englishman struck another blow; but the Normans who saw the stroke were
+ astonished and about to abandon the assault, when Roger de Mongomeri came
+ galloping up, with his lance set, and heeding not the long-handled axe,
+ which the English-man wielded aloft, struck him down, and left him
+ stretched upon the ground. Then Roger cried out, 'Frenchmen, strike! the
+ day is ours!' and again a fierce MELEE was to be seen, with many a blow of
+ lance and sword; the English still defending themselves, killing the
+ horses and cleaving the shields.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was a French soldier of noble mien, who sat his horse gallantly. He
+ spied two Englishmen who were also carrying themselves boldly. They were
+ both men of great worth, and had become companions in arms and fought
+ together, the one protecting the other. They bore two long and broad
+ bills, and did great mischief to the Normans, killing both horses and men.
+ The French soldier looked at them and their bills, and was sore alarmed,
+ for he was afraid of losing his good horse, the best that he had; and
+ would willingly have turned to some other quarter, if it would not have
+ looked like cowardice. He soon, however, recovered his courage, and
+ spurring his horse gave him the bridle, and galloped swiftly forward.
+ Fearing the two bills, he raised his shield, and struck one of the
+ Englishmen with his lance on the breast, so that the iron passed out at
+ his back; at the moment that he fell the lance broke, and the Frenchmen
+ seized the mace that hung at his right side, and struck the other
+ Englishman a blow that completely broke his skull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the other side was an Englishman who much annoyed the French,
+ continually assaulting them with a keen-edged hatchet. He had a helmet
+ made of wood, which he had fastened down to his coat, and laced round his
+ neck, so that no blows could reach his head. The ravage he was making was
+ seen by a gallant Norman knight, who rode a horse that neither fire nor
+ water could stop in its career, when its master urged it on. The knight
+ spurred, and his horse carried him on well till he charged the Englishman,
+ striking him over the helmet, so that it fell down over his eyes; and as
+ he stretched out his hand to raise it and uncover the face, the Norman cut
+ off his right hand, so that his hatchet fell to the ground. Another Norman
+ sprang forward and eagerly seized the prize with both his hands, but he
+ kept it little space, and paid dearly for it, for as he stooped to pick up
+ the hatchet, an Englishman with his long-handled axe struck him over the
+ back, breaking all his bones, so that his entrails and lungs gushed forth.
+ The knight of the good horse meantime returned without injury; but on his
+ way he met another Englishman, and bore him down under his his horse,
+ wounding him grievously, and trampling him altogether under foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now might be heard the loud clang and cry of battle, and the clashing
+ of lances. The English stood firm in their barricades, and shivered the
+ lances, beating them into pieces with their bills and maces. The Normans
+ drew their swords, and hewed down the barricades, and the English in great
+ trouble fell back upon their standard, where were collected the maimed and
+ wounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There were many knights of Chauz, who jousted and made attacks. The
+ English knew not how to joust, or bear arms on horseback but fought with
+ hatchets and bills. A man when he wanted to strike with one of their
+ hatchets, was obliged to hold it with both his hands, and could not at the
+ same time, as it seems to me, both cover himself and strike with any
+ freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The English fell back towards the standard, which was upon a rising
+ ground, and the Normans followed them across the valley, attacking them on
+ foot and horseback. Then Hue de Mortemer, with the sires D'Auviler,
+ D'Onebac, and St. Cler, rode up and charged, overthrowing many.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Robert Fitz Erneis fixed his lance, took his shield, and, galloping
+ towards the standard, with his keen-edged sword struck an Englishman who
+ was in front, killed him, and then drawing back his sword, attacked many
+ others, and pushed straight for the standard, trying to beat it down, but
+ the English surrounded it, and killed him with their bills. He was found
+ on the spot, when they afterwards sought for him, dead, and lying at the
+ standard's foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Duke William pressed close upon the English with his lance; striving hard
+ to reach the standard with the great troop he led; and seeking earnestly
+ for Harold, on whose account the whole war was. The Normans follow their
+ lord, and press around him; they ply their blows upon the English; and
+ these defend themselves stoutly, striving hard with their enemies,
+ returning blow for blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One of them was a man of great strength, a wrestler, who did great
+ mischief to the Normans with his hatchet; all feared him, for he struck
+ down a great many Normans. The Duke spurred on his horse, and aimed a blow
+ at him, but he stooped, and so escaped the stroke; then jumping on one
+ side, he lifted his hatchet aloft, and as the Duke bent to avoid the blow
+ the Englishman boldly struck him on the head, and beat in his helmet,
+ though without doing much injury. He was very near falling, however, but
+ bearing on his stirrups he recovered himself immediately; and when he
+ thought to have revenged himself upon the churl by killing him, he had
+ escaped, dreading the Duke's blow. He ran back in among the English, but
+ he was not safe even there; for the Normans seeing him, pursued and caught
+ him; and having pierced him through and through with their lances, left
+ him dead on the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where the throng of the battle was greatest, the men of Kent and Essex
+ fought wondrously well, and made the Normans again retreat, but without
+ doing them much injury. And when the Duke saw his men fall back and the
+ English triumphing over them, his spirit rose high, and he seized his
+ shield and his lance, which a vassal handed to him, and took his post by
+ his standard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then those who kept close guard by him and rode where he rode, being
+ about a thousand armed men, came and rushed with closed ranks upon the
+ English; and with the weight of their good horses, and the blows the
+ knights gave, broke the press of the enemy, and scattered the crowd before
+ them, the good Duke leading them on in front. Many pursued and many fled;
+ many were the Englishmen who fell around, and were trampled under the
+ horses, crawling upon the earth, and not able to rise. Many of the richest
+ and noblest men fell in that rout, but the English still rallied in
+ places; smote down those whom they reached, and maintained the combat the
+ best they could; beating down the men and killing the horses. One
+ Englishman watched the Duke, and plotted to kill him; he would have struck
+ him with his lance, but he could not, for the Duke struck him first, and
+ felled him to the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Loud was now the clamour, and great the slaughter; many a soul then
+ quitted the body it inhabited. The living marched over the heaps of dead,
+ and each side was weary of striking. He charged on who could, and he who
+ could no longer strike still pushed forward. The strong struggled with the
+ strong; some failed, others triumphed; the cowards fell back, the brave
+ pressed on; and sad was his fate who fell in the midst, for he had little
+ chance of rising again; and many in truth fell, who never rose at all,
+ being crushed under the throng.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now the Normans pressed on so far, that at last they had reached the
+ standard. There Harold had remained, defending himself to the utmost; but
+ he was sorely wounded in his eye by the arrow, and suffered grievous pain
+ from the blow. An armed man came in the throng of the battle, and struck
+ him on the ventaille of his helmet, and beat him to the ground; and as he
+ sought to recover himself, a knight beat him down again, striking him on
+ the thick of his thigh, down to the bone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gurth saw the English falling around, and that there was no remedy. He
+ saw his race hastening to ruin, and despaired of any aid; he would have
+ fled but could not, for the throng continually increased and the Duke
+ pushed on till he reached him, and struck him with great force. Whether he
+ died of that blow I know not, but it was said that he fell under it, and
+ rose no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The standard was beaten down, the golden standard was taken, and Harold
+ and the best of his friends were slain; but there was so much eagerness,
+ and throng of so many around, seeking to kill him, that I know not who it
+ was that slew him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The English were in great trouble at having lost their king, and at the
+ Duke's having conquered and beat down the standard; but they still fought
+ on, and defended themselves long, and in fact till the day drew to a
+ close. Then it clearly appeared to all that the standard was lost, and the
+ news had spread throughout the army that Harold for certain was dead; and
+ all saw that there was no longer any hope, so they left the field, and
+ those fled who could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "William fought well; many an assault did he lead, many a blow did he
+ give, and many receive, and many fell dead under his hand. Two horses were
+ killed under him, and he took a third at time of need, so that he fell not
+ to the ground; and he lost not a drop of blood. But whatever any one did,
+ and whoever lived or died, this is certain, that William conquered, and
+ that many of the English fled from the field, and many died on the spot.
+ Then he returned thanks to God, and in his pride ordered his standard to
+ be brought and set up on high where the English standard had stood; and
+ that was the signal of his having conquered and beaten down the foe. And
+ he ordered his tent to be raised on the spot among the dead, and had his
+ meat brought thither, and his supper prepared there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then he took off his armour; and the barons and knights, pages and
+ squires came, when he had unstrung his shield: and they took the helmet
+ from his head, and the hauberk from his back, and saw the heavy blows upon
+ his shield, and how his helmet was dinted in. And all greatly wondered,
+ and said, 'Such a baron never bestrode war-horse, or dealt such blows, or
+ did such feats of arms; neither has there been on earth such a knight
+ since Rollant and Olivier.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus they lauded and extolled him greatly, and rejoiced in what they saw;
+ but grieving also for their friends who were slain in the battle. And the
+ Duke stood meanwhile among them of noble stature and mien; and rendered
+ thanks to the King of Glory, through whom he had the victory; and thanked
+ the knights around him, mourning also frequently for the dead. And he ate
+ and drank among the dead, and made his bed that night upon the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The morrow was Sunday; and those who had slept upon the field of battle,
+ keeping watch around, and suffering great fatigue, bestirred themselves at
+ break of day and sought out and buried such of the bodies of their dead
+ friends as they might find. The noble ladies of the land also came, some
+ to seek their husbands, and others their fathers, sons, or brothers. They
+ bore the bodies to their villages, and interred them at the churches; and
+ the clerks and priests of the country were ready, and at the request of
+ their friends, took the bodies that were found, and prepared graves and
+ laid them therein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "King Harold was carried and buried at Varham; but I know not who it was
+ that bore him thither, neither do I know who buried him. Many remained on
+ the field, and many had fled in the night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is a Norman account of the battle of Hastings, which does full
+ justice to the valour of the Saxons, as well as to the skill and bravery
+ of the victors. [In the preceding pages, I have woven together the
+ "purpureos pannos" of the old chronicler. In so doing, I have largely
+ availed myself of Mr. Edgar Taylor's version of that part of the "Roman de
+ Rou" which describes the conquest. By giving engravings from the Bayeux
+ Tapestry, and excellent notes, Mr. Taylor has added much to the value and
+ interest of his volume.] It is indeed evident that the loss of the battle
+ to the English was owing to the wound which Harold received in the
+ afternoon, and which must have incapacitated him from effective command.
+ When we remember that he had himself just won the battle of Stamford
+ Bridge over Harald Hardrada by the manoeuvre of a feigned flight, it is
+ impossible to suppose that he could be deceived by the same stratagem on
+ the part of the Normans at Hastings. But his men, when deprived of his
+ control would very naturally be led by their inconsiderate ardour into the
+ pursuit that proved so fatal to them. All the narratives of the battle,
+ however much they may vary as to the precise time and manner of Harold's
+ fall, eulogise the generalship and the personal prowess which he
+ displayed, until the fatal arrow struck him. The skill with which he had
+ posted his army was proved, both by the slaughter which it cost the
+ Normans to force the position, and also by the desperate rally which some
+ of the Saxons made, after the battle, in the forest in the rear, in which
+ they cut off a large number of the pursuing Normans. This circumstance is
+ particularly mentioned by William of Poictiers, the Conqueror's own
+ chaplain. Indeed, if Harold, or either of his brothers, had survived, the
+ remains of the English army might have formed again in the wood, and could
+ at least have effected an orderly retreat, and prolonged the war. But both
+ Gurth and Leofwine, and all the bravest thanes of Southern England, lay
+ dead on Senlac, around their fallen king and the fallen standard of their
+ country. The exact number of the slain on the Saxon side is unknown; but
+ we read that on the side of the victors, out of sixty thousand men who had
+ been engaged, no less than a fourth perished: so well had the English
+ bill-men "plied the ghastly blow" and so sternly had the Saxon battle-axe
+ cloven Norman casque and mail. [The Conqueror's chaplain calls the Saxon
+ battle-axes "saevissimas secures."] The old historian Daniel justly as
+ well as forcibly remarks, [As cited in the "Pictorial History."] "Thus was
+ tried, by the great assize of God's judgment in battle, the right of power
+ between the English and Norman nations; a battle the most memorable of all
+ others; and, however miserably lost, yet most nobly fought on the part of
+ England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many a pathetic legend was told in after years respecting the discovery
+ and the burial of the corpse of our last Saxon king. The main
+ circumstances, though they seem to vary, are perhaps reconcilable. [See
+ them collected in Lingard, vol. i p. 452, ET SEQ.; Thierry, vol i. p. 299;
+ Sharon Turner, Vol. i. p. 82; and Histoire de Normandie par Lieguet, p.
+ 242.] Two of the monks of Waltham abbey, which Harold had founded a little
+ time before his election to the throne, had accompanied him to the battle.
+ On the morning after the slaughter they begged and gained permission of
+ the Conqueror to search for the body of their benefactor. The Norman
+ soldiery and camp-followers had stripped and gashed the slain; and the two
+ monks vainly strove to recognise from among the mutilated and gory heaps
+ around them the features of their former king. They sent for Harold's
+ mistress, Edith, surnamed "the Fair" and the "Swan-necked," to aid them.
+ The eye of love proved keener than the eye of gratitude, and the Saxon
+ lady, even in that Aceldama, knew her Harold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king's mother now sought the victorious Norman, and begged the dead
+ body of her son. But William at first answered in his wrath, and in the
+ hardness of his heart, that a man who had been false to his word and his
+ religion should have no other sepulchre than the sand of the shore. He
+ added, with a sneer, "Harold mounted guard on the coast while he was
+ alive; he may continue his guard now he is dead." The taunt was an
+ unintentional eulogy; and a grave washed by the spray of the Sussex waves
+ would have been the noblest burial-place for the martyr of Saxon freedom.
+ But Harold's mother was urgent in her lamentations and her prayers: the
+ Conqueror relented: like Achilles, he gave up the dead body of his fallen
+ foe to a parent's supplications; and the remains of King Harold were
+ deposited with regal honours in Waltham Abbey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Christmas day of the same year, William the Conqueror was crowned at
+ London, King of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS, A.D. 1066, AND JOAN OF
+ ARC'S VICTORY AT ORLEANS, 1429.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 1066-1087. Reign of William the Conqueror. Frequent risings of the
+ English against him, which are quelled with merciless rigour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1096. The first Crusade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1112. Commencement of the disputes about investitures between the emperors
+ and the popes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1140. Foundation of the city of Lubeck, whence originated the Hanseatic
+ League. Commencement of the feuds in Italy between the Guelphs and
+ Ghibellines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1146. The second Crusade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1154. Henry II. becomes King of England. Under him Thomas a Becket is made
+ Archbishop of Canterbury: the first instance of any man of the Saxon race
+ being raised to high office in Church or State since the Conquest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1170. Strongbow, earl of Pembroke, lands with an English army in Ireland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1189. Richard Coeur de Lion becomes King of England. He and King Philip
+ Augustus of France join in the third Crusade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1199-1204. On the death of King Richard, his brother John claims and makes
+ himself master of England and Normandy and the other large continental
+ possessions of the early Plantagenet princes. Philip Augustus asserts the
+ cause of Prince Arthur, John's nephew, against him. Arthur is murdered,
+ but the French king continues the war against John, and conquers from him
+ Normandy, Brittany, Anjou, Maine, Touraine, and Poictiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1216. The barons, the freeholders, the citizens, and the yeomen of England
+ rise against the tyranny of John and his foreign favourites. They compel
+ him to sign Magna Charta. This is the commencement of our nationality: for
+ our history from this time forth is the history of a national life, then
+ complete, and still in being. All English history before this period is a
+ mere history of elements, of their collisions, and of the processes of
+ their fusion. For upwards of a century after the Conquest, Anglo-Norman
+ and Anglo-Saxon had kept aloof from each other: the one in haughty scorn,
+ the other in sullen abhorrence. They were two peoples, though living in
+ the same land. It is not until the thirteenth century, the period of the
+ reigns of John and his son and grandson, that we can perceive the
+ existence of any feeling of common patriotism among them. But in studying
+ the history of these reigns, we read of the old dissensions no longer. The
+ Saxon no more appears in civil war against the Norman; the Norman no
+ longer scorns the language of the Saxon, or refuses to bear together with
+ him the name of Englishman. No part of the community think themselves
+ foreigners to another part. They feel that they are all one people, and
+ they have learned to unite their efforts for the common purpose of
+ protecting the rights and promoting the welfare of all. The fortunate loss
+ of the Duchy of Normandy in John's reign greatly promoted these new
+ feelings. Thenceforth our barons' only homes were in England. One language
+ had, in the reign of Henry III., become the language of the land; and
+ that, also, had then assumed the form in which we still possess it. One
+ law, in the eye of which all freemen are equal without distinction of
+ race, was modelled, and steadily enforced, and still continues to form the
+ groundwork of our judicial system. [Creasy's Text-book of the
+ Constitution, p. 4.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1273. Rudolph of Hapsburg chosen Emperor of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1283. Edward I. conquers Wales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1346. Edward III. invades France, and gains the battle of Cressy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1356. Battle of Poictiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1360. Treaty of Bretigny between England and France. By it Edward III.
+ renounces his pretensions to the French crown. The treaty is ill kept, and
+ indecisive hostilities continue between the forces of the two countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1414. Henry V. of England claims the crown of France, and resolves to
+ invade and conquer that kingdom. At this time France was in the most
+ deplorable state of weakness and suffering, from the factions that raged
+ among her nobility, and from the cruel oppressions which the rival nobles
+ practised on the mass of the community. "The people were exhausted by
+ taxes, civil wars, and military executions; and they had fallen into that
+ worst of all states of mind, when the independence of one's country is
+ thought no longer a paramount and sacred object. 'What can the English do
+ to us worse than the things we suffer at the hands of our own princes?'
+ was a common exclamation among the poor people of France." [Pictorial
+ Hist. of England, vol. i. p. 28.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1415. Henry invades France, takes Harfleur, and wins the great battle of
+ Agincourt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1417-1419. Henry conquers Normandy. The French Dauphin assassinates the
+ Duke of Burgundy, the most powerful of the French nobles, at Montereau.
+ The successor of the murdered duke becomes the active ally of the English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1420. The Treaty of Troyes is concluded between Henry V. of England and
+ Charles VI. of France, and Philip, duke of Burgundy. By this treaty it was
+ stipulated that Henry should marry the Princess Catherine of France; that
+ King Charles, during his life-time, should keep the title and dignity of
+ King of France, but that Henry should succeed him, and should at once be
+ entrusted with the administration of the government, and that the French
+ crown should descend to Henry's heirs; that France and England should for
+ ever be united under one king, but should still retain their several
+ usages, customs, and privileges; that all the princes, peers, vassals, and
+ communities of France should swear allegiance to Henry as their future
+ king, and should pay him present obedience as regent; that Henry should
+ unite his arms to those of King Charles and the Duke of Burgundy, in order
+ to subdue the adherents of Charles, the pretended dauphin; and that these
+ three princes should make no truce or peace with the Dauphin, but by the
+ common consent of all three.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1421. Henry V. gains several victories over the French, who refuse to
+ acknowledge the treaty of Troyes. His son, afterwards Henry VI., is born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1422. Henry V. and Charles VI. of France die. Henry VI. is proclaimed at
+ Paris, King of England and France. The followers of the French Dauphin
+ proclaim him Charles VII., King of France. The Duke of Bedford, the
+ English Regent in France, defeats the army of the Dauphin at Crevant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1424. The Duke of Bedford gains the great victory of Verneuil over the
+ French partizans of the Dauphin, and their Scotch auxiliaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1428. The English begin the siege of Orleans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. &mdash; JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY OVER THE ENGLISH AT ORLEANS,
+ A.D.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1429.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The eyes of all Europe were turned towards this scene; where, it
+ was reasonably supposed, the French were to make their last stand
+ for maintaining the independence of their monarchy and the rights
+ of their; sovereign"&mdash;HUME.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When, after their victory at Salamis, the generals of the various Greek
+ states voted the prizes for distinguished individual merit, each assigned
+ the first place of excellence to himself, but they all concurred in giving
+ their second votes to Themistocles. [Plutarch, Vit. Them. 17.] This was
+ looked on as a decisive proof that Themistocles ought to be ranked first
+ of all. If we were to endeavour, by a similar test, to ascertain which
+ European nation has contributed the most to the progress of European
+ civilization, we should find Italy, Germany, England, and Spain, each
+ claiming the first degree, but each also naming France as clearly next in
+ merit. It is impossible to deny her paramount importance in history.
+ Besides the formidable part that she has for nearly three centuries
+ played, as the Bellona of the European commonwealth of states, her
+ influence during all this period over the arts, the literature, the
+ manners and the feelings of mankind, has been such as to make the crisis
+ of her earlier fortunes a point of world-wide interest; and it may be
+ asserted without exaggeration, that the future career of every nation was
+ involved in the result of the struggle by which the unconscious heroine of
+ France, in the beginning of the fifteenth century, rescued her country
+ from becoming a second Ireland under the yoke of the triumphant English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seldom has the extinction of a a nation's independence appeared more
+ inevitable than was the case in France, when the English invaders
+ completed their lines round Orleans, four hundred and twenty-three years
+ ago. A series of dreadful defeats had thinned the chivalry of France, and
+ daunted the spirits of her soldiers. A foreign King had been proclaimed in
+ her capital; and foreign armies of the bravest veterans, and led by the
+ ablest captains then known in the world, occupied the fairest portions of
+ her territory. Worse to her even than the fierceness and the strength of
+ her foes were the factions, the vices, and the crimes of her own children.
+ Her native prince was a dissolute trifler, stained with the assassination
+ of the most powerful noble of the land, whose son, in revenge, had leagued
+ himself with the enemy. Many more of her nobility, many of her prelates,
+ her magistrates, and rulers, had sworn fealty to the English king. The
+ condition of the peasantry amid the general prevalence of anarchy and
+ brigandage, which were added to the customary devastations of contending
+ armies, was wretched beyond the power of language to describe. The sense
+ of terror and suffering seemed to have extended itself even to the brute
+ creation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In sooth, the estate of France was then most miserable. There appeared
+ nothing but a horrible face, confusion, poverty, desolation,
+ solitarinesse, and feare. The lean and bare labourers in the country did
+ terrifie even theeves themselves, who had nothing left them to spoile but
+ the carkasses of these poore miserable creatures, wandering up and down
+ like ghostes drawne out of their graves. The least farmes and hamlets were
+ fortified by these robbers, English, Bourguegnons, and French, every one
+ striving to do his worst; all men-of-war were well agreed to spoile the
+ countryman and merchant. EVEN THE CATTELL, ACCUSTOMED TO THE LARUME BELL,
+ THE SIGNE OF THE ENEMY'S APPROACH, WOULD RUN HOME OF THEMSELVES WITHOUT
+ ANY GUIDE BY THIS ACCUSTOMED MISERY." [De Serres, quoted in the notes to
+ Southey's Joan of Arc.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the autumn of 1428, the English, who were already masters of all France
+ north of the Loire, prepared their forces for the conquest of the southern
+ provinces, which yet adhered to the cause of the Dauphin. The city of
+ Orleans, on the banks of that river, was looked upon as the last
+ stronghold of the French national party. If the English could once obtain
+ possession of it, their victorious progress through the residue of the
+ kingdom seemed free from any serious obstacle. Accordingly, the Earl of
+ Salisbury, one of the bravest and most experienced of the English
+ generals, who had been trained under Henry V., marched to the attack of
+ the all-important city; and, after reducing several places of inferior
+ consequence in the neighbourhood, appeared with his army before its walls
+ on the 12th of October, 1428.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The city of Orleans itself was on the north side of the Loire, but its
+ suburbs extended far on the southern side, and a strong bridge connected
+ them with the town. A fortification which in modern military phrase would
+ be termed a tete-du-pont, defended the bridge-head on the southern side,
+ and two towers, called the Tourelles, were built on the bridge itself,
+ where it rested on an island at a little distance from the tete-du-pont.
+ Indeed, the solid masonry of the bridge terminated at the Tourelles; and
+ the communication thence with the tete-du-pont on the southern shore was
+ by means of a drawbridge. The Tourelles and the tete-du-pont formed
+ together a strong fortified post, capable of containing a garrison of
+ considerable strength; and so long as this was in possession of the
+ Orleannais, they could communicate freely with the southern provinces, the
+ inhabitants of which, like the Orleannais themselves, supported the cause
+ of their Dauphin against the foreigners. Lord Salisbury rightly judged the
+ capture of the Tourelles to be the most material step towards the
+ reduction of the city itself. Accordingly he directed his principal
+ operations against this post, and after some severe repulses, he carried
+ the Tourelles by storm, on the 23d of October. The French, however, broke
+ down the part of the bridge which was nearest to the north bank and thus
+ rendered a direct assault from the Tourelles upon the city impossible. But
+ the possession of this post enabled the English to distress the town
+ greatly by a battery of cannon which they planted there, and which
+ commanded some of the principal streets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been observed by Hume, that this is the first siege in which any
+ important use appears to have been made of artillery. And even at Orleans
+ both besiegers and besieged seem to have employed their cannons more as
+ instruments of destruction against their enemy's men, than as engines of
+ demolition against their enemy's walls and works. The efficacy of cannon
+ in breaching solid masonry was taught Europe by the Turks, a few years
+ after wards, at the memorable siege of Constantinople. In our French wars,
+ as in the wars of the classic nations, famine was looked on as the surest
+ weapon to compel the submission of a well-walled town and the great object
+ of the besiegers was to effect a complete circumvallation. The great ambit
+ of the walls of Orleans, and the facilities which the river gave for
+ obtaining succour and supplies, rendered the capture of the place by this
+ process a matter of great difficulty. Nevertheless, Lord Salisbury, and
+ Lord Suffolk, who succeeded him in command of the English after his death
+ by a cannon-ball, carried on the necessary works with great skill and
+ resolution. Six strongly fortified posts, called bastillos, were formed at
+ certain intervals round the town and the purpose of the English engineers
+ was to draw strong lines between them. During the winter little progress
+ was made with the entrenchments, but when the spring of 1429 came, the
+ English resumed their works with activity; the communications between the
+ city and the country became more difficult, and the approach of want began
+ already to be felt in Orleans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The besieging force also fared hardly for stores and provisions, until
+ relieved by the effects of a brilliant victory which Sir John Fastolfe,
+ one of the best English generals, gained at Rouvrai, near Orleans, a few
+ days after Ash Wednesday, 1429. With only sixteen hundred fighting men,
+ Sir John completely defeated an army of French and Scots, four thousand
+ strong, which had been collected for the purpose of aiding the Orleannais,
+ and harassing the besiegers. After this encounter, which seemed decisively
+ to confirm the superiority of the English in battle over their
+ adversaries, Fastolfe escorted large supplies of stores and food to
+ Suffolk's camp, and the spirits of the English rose to the highest pitch
+ at the prospect of the speedy capture of the city before them, and the
+ consequent subjection of all France beneath their arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Orleannais now in their distress offered to surrender the city into
+ the hands of the Duke of Burgundy, who, though the ally of the English,
+ was yet one of their native princes. The Regent Bedford refused these
+ terms, and the speedy submission of the city to the English seemed
+ inevitable. The Dauphin Charles, who was now at Chinon with his remnant of
+ a court, despaired of maintaining any longer the struggle for his crown;
+ and was only prevented from abandoning the country by the more masculine
+ spirits of his mistress and his queen. Yet neither they, nor the boldest
+ of Charles's captains, could have shown him where to find resources for
+ prolonging the war; and least of all could any human skill have predicted
+ the quarter whence rescue was to come to Orleans and to France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the village of Domremy, on the borders of Lorraine, there was a poor
+ peasant of the name of Jacques d'Arc, respected in his station of life,
+ and who had reared a family in virtuous habits and in the practice of the
+ strictest devotion. His eldest daughter was named by her parents
+ Jeannette, but she was called Jeanne by the French, which was Latinised
+ into Johanna, and anglicised into Joan. ["Respondit quod in partibus suis
+ vocabatur Johanneta, et postquam venit in Franciam vocata est Johanna."&mdash;PROCES
+ DE JEANNE D'ARC, vol i. p. 46.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time when Joan first attracted attention, she was about eighteen
+ years of age. She was naturally of a susceptible disposition, which
+ diligent attention to the legends of saints, and tales of fairies, aided
+ by the dreamy loneliness of her life while tending her father's flocks,
+ had made peculiarly prone to enthusiastic fervour. At the same time she
+ was eminent for piety and purity of soul, and for her compassionate
+ gentleness to the sick and the distressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Southey, in one of the speeches which he puts in the mouth of his Joan of
+ Arc, has made her beautifully describe the effect; on her mind of the
+ scenery in which she dwelt:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Here in solitude and peace
+ My soul was nurst, amid the loveliest scenes
+ Of-unpolluted nature. Sweet it was,
+ As the white mists of morning roll'd away,
+ To see the mountain's wooded heights appear
+ Dark in the early dawn, and mark its slope
+ With gorse-flowers glowing, as the rising sun
+ On the golden ripeness pour'd a deepening light.
+ Pleasant at noon beside the vocal brook
+ To lay me down, and watch the the floating clouds,
+ And shape to Fancy's wild similitudes
+ Their ever-varying forms; and oh, how sweet,
+ To drive my flock at evening to the fold,
+ And hasten to our little hut, and hear
+ The voice of kindness bid me welcome home!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The only foundation for the story told by the Burgundian partisan
+ Monstrelet, and adopted by Hume, of Joan having been brought up as servant
+ at an inn, is the circumstance of her having been once, with the rest of
+ her family, obliged to take refuge in an AUBERGE in Neufchateau for
+ fifteen days, when a party of Burgundian cavalry made an incursion into
+ Domremy. (See the Quarterly Review, No. 138.)]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The district where she dwelt had escaped comparatively free from the
+ ravages of war, but the approach of roving bands of Burgundian or English
+ troops frequently spread terror through Domremy. Once the village had been
+ plundered by some of these marauders, and Joan and her family had been
+ driven from their home, and forced to seek refuge for a time at
+ Neufchateau. The peasantry in Domremy were principally attached to the
+ House of Orleans and the Dauphin; and all the miseries which France
+ endured, were there imputed to the Burgundian faction and their allies,
+ the English, who were seeking to enslave unhappy France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus from infancy to girlhood Joan had heard continually of the woes of
+ the war, and she had herself witnessed some of the wretchedness that it
+ caused. A feeling of intense patriotism grew in her with her growth. The
+ deliverance of France from the English was the subject of her reveries by
+ day and her dreams by night. Blended with these aspirations were
+ recollections of the miraculous interpositions of Heaven in favour of the
+ oppressed, which she had learned from the legends of her Church. Her faith
+ was undoubting; her prayers were fervent. "She feared no danger, for she
+ felt no sin;" and at length she believed herself to have received the
+ supernatural inspiration which, she sought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to her own narrative, delivered by her to her merciless
+ inquisitors in the time of her captivity and approaching death, she was
+ about thirteen years old when her revelations commenced. Her own words
+ describe them best: [Proces de Jeanne d'Arc, vol. i. p. 52.] "At the age
+ of thirteen, a voice from God came near to her to help her in ruling
+ herself, and that voice came to her about the hour of noon, in summer
+ time, while she was in her father's garden. And she had fasted the day
+ before. And she heard the voice on her right, in the direction of the
+ church; and when she heard the voice she also saw a bright light.
+ Afterwards, St. Michael and St. Margaret and St. Catherine appeared to
+ her. They were always in a halo of glory; she could see that their heads
+ were crowned with jewels: and she heard their voices, which were sweet and
+ mild. She did not distinguish their arms or limbs. She heard them more
+ frequently than she saw them; and the usual time when she heard them was
+ when the church bells were sounding for prayer. And if she was in the
+ woods when she heard them, she could plainly distinguish their voices
+ drawing near to her. When she thought that she discerned the Heavenly
+ Voices, she knelt down, and bowed herself to the ground. Their presence
+ gladdened her even to tears; and after they departed she wept because they
+ had not taken her with them back to Paradise. They always spoke soothingly
+ to her. They told her that France would be saved, and that she was to save
+ it." Such were the visions and the Voices that moved the spirit of the
+ girl of thirteen; and as she grew older they became more frequent and more
+ clear. At last the tidings of the siege of Orleans reached Domremy, Joan
+ heard her parents and neighbours talk of the sufferings of its population,
+ of the ruin which its capture would bring on their lawful sovereign, and
+ of the distress of the Dauphin and his court. Joan's heart was sorely
+ troubled at the thought of the fate of Orleans; and her Voices now ordered
+ her to leave her home; and warned her that she was the instrument chosen
+ by Heaven for driving away the English from that city, and for taking the
+ Dauphin to be anointed king at Rheims. At length she informed her parents
+ of her divine mission, and told them that she must go to the Sire de
+ Baudricourt, who commanded at Vaucouleurs, and who was the appointed
+ person to bring her into the presence of the king, whom she was to save.
+ Neither the anger nor the grief of her parents, who said that they would
+ rather see her drowned than exposed to the contamination of the camp,
+ could move her from her purpose. One of her uncles consented to take her
+ to Vaucouleurs, where De Baudricourt at first thought her mad, and derided
+ her; but by degrees was led to believe, if not in her inspiration, at
+ least in her enthusiasm and in its possible utility to the Dauphin's
+ cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inhabitants of Vaucouleurs were completely won over to her side, by
+ the piety and devoutness which she displayed and by her firm assurance in
+ the truth of her mission. She told them that it was God's will that she
+ should go to the King, and that no one but her could save the kingdom of
+ France. She said that she herself would rather remain with her poor mother
+ and spin; but the Lord had ordered her forth. The fame of "The Maid," as
+ she was termed, the renown of her holiness, and of her mission, spread far
+ and wide. Baudricourt sent her with an escort to Chinon, where the Dauphin
+ Charles was dallying away his time. Her Voices had bidden her assume the
+ arms and the apparel of a knight; and the wealthiest inhabitants of
+ Vaucouleurs had vied with each other in equipping her with warhorse,
+ armour, and sword. On reaching Chinon, she was, after some delay, admitted
+ into the presence of the Dauphin. Charles designedly dressed himself far
+ less richly than many of his courtiers were apparelled, and mingled with
+ them, when Jean was introduced, in order to see if the Holy Maid would
+ address her exhortations to the wrong person. But she instantly singled
+ him out, and kneeling before him, said, "Most noble Dauphin, the King of
+ Heaven announces to you by me, that you shall be anointed and crowned king
+ in the city of Rheims, and that you shall be His viceregent in France."
+ His features may probably have been seen by her previously in portraits,
+ or have been described to her by others; but she herself believed that her
+ Voices inspired her when she addressed the King; [Proces de Jeanne d'Arc,
+ vol. i. p. 56.] and the report soon spread abroad that the Holy Maid had
+ found the King by a miracle; and this, with many other similar rumours,
+ augmented the renown and influence that she now rapidly acquired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The state of public feeling in France was not favourable to an
+ enthusiastic belief in Divine interposition in favour of the party that
+ had hitherto been unsuccessful and oppressed. The humiliations which had
+ befallen the French royal family and nobility were looked on as the just
+ judgments of God upon them for their vice and impiety. The misfortunes
+ that had come upon France as a nation, were believed to have been drawn
+ down by national sins. The English, who had been the instruments of
+ Heaven's wrath against France, seemed now by their pride and cruelty to be
+ fitting objects of it themselves. France in that age was a profoundly
+ religious country. There was ignorance, there was superstition there was
+ bigotry; but there was Faith&mdash;a Faith that itself worked true
+ miracles, even while it believed in unreal ones. At this time, also, one
+ of those devotional movements began among the clergy in France, which from
+ time to time occur in national Churches, without it being possible for the
+ historian to assign any adequate human cause for their immediate date or
+ extension. Numberless friars and priests traversed the rural districts and
+ towns of France, preaching to the people that they must seek from Heaven a
+ deliverance from the pillages of the soldiery, and the insolence of the
+ foreign oppressors. [See, Sismondi vol. xiii. p. 114; Michelet, vol. v.
+ Livre x.] The idea of a Providence that works only by general laws was
+ wholly alien to the feelings of the age. Every political event, as well as
+ every natural phenomenon, was believed to be the immediate result of a
+ special mandate of God. This led to the belief that His holy angels and
+ saints were constantly employed in executing His commands and mingling in
+ the affairs of men. The Church encouraged these feelings; and at the same
+ time sanctioned; the concurrent popular belief that hosts of evil spirits
+ were also ever actively interposing in the current of earthly events, with
+ whom sorcerers and wizards could league themselves, and thereby obtain the
+ exercise of supernatural power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus all things favoured the influence which Joan obtained both over
+ friends and foes. The French nation, as well as the English and the
+ Burgundians, readily admitted that superhuman beings inspired her: the
+ only question was, whether these beings were good or evil angels; whether
+ she brought with her "airs from heaven, or blasts from hell." This
+ question seemed to her countrymen to be decisively settled in her favour,
+ by the austere sanctity of her life, by the holiness of her conversation,
+ but, still more, by her exemplary attention to all the services and rites
+ of the Church. The dauphin at first feared the injury that might be done
+ to his cause if he had laid himself open to the charge of having leagued
+ himself with a sorceress. Every imaginable test, therefore, was resorted
+ to in order to set Joan's orthodoxy and purity beyond suspicion. At last
+ Charles and his advisers felt safe in accepting her services as those of a
+ true and virtuous daughter of the Holy Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is indeed probable that Charles himself, and some of his counsellors,
+ may have suspected Joan of being a mere enthusiast; and it is certain that
+ Dunois, and others of the best generals, took considerable latitude in
+ obeying or deviating from the military orders that she gave. But over the
+ mass of the people and the soldiery, her influence was unbounded. While
+ Charles and his doctors of theology, and court ladies, had been
+ deliberating as to recognising or dismissing the Maid, a considerable
+ period had passed away, during which a small army, the last gleanings, as
+ it seemed, of the English sword, had been assembled at Blois, under
+ Dunois, La Hire, Xaintrailles, and other chiefs, who to their natural
+ valour were now beginning to unite the wisdom that is taught by
+ misfortune. It was resolved to send Joan with this force and a convoy of
+ provisions to Orleans. The distress of that city had now become urgent.
+ But the communication with the open country was not entirely cut off: the
+ Orleannais had heard of the Holy Maid whom Providence had raised up for
+ their deliverance, and their messengers urgently implored the dauphin to
+ send her to them without delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joan appeared at the camp at Blois, clad in a new suit of brilliant white
+ armour, mounted on a stately black war-horse, and with a lance in her
+ right hand, which she had learned to wield with skill and grace. [See the
+ description of her by Gui de Laval, quoted in the note to Michelet, p. 69;
+ and see the account of the banner at Orleans, which is believed to bear an
+ authentic portrait of the Maid, in Murray's Handbook for France, p. 175.]
+ Her head was unhelmeted; so that all could behold her fair and expressive
+ features, her deep-set and earnest eyes, and her long black hair, which
+ was parted across her forehead, and bound by a ribbon behind her back. She
+ wore at her side a small battle-axe, and the consecrated sword, marked on
+ the blade with five crosses, which had at her bidding been taken for her
+ from the shrine of St. Catherine at Fierbois. A page carried her banner,
+ which she had caused to be made and embroidered as her Voices enjoined. It
+ was white satin [Proces de Jeanne d'Arc, vol. i. p. 238.] strewn with
+ fleur-de-lis; and on it were the words "JHESUS MARIA," and the
+ representation of the Saviour in His glory. Joan afterwards generally bore
+ her banner herself in battle; she said that though she loved her sword
+ much, she loved her banner forty times as much; and she loved to carry it
+ because it could not kill any one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus accoutred, she came to lead the troops of France, who looked with
+ soldierly admiration on her well-proportioned and upright figure, the
+ skill with which she managed her war-horse, and the easy grace with which
+ she handled her weapons. Her military education had been short, but she
+ had availed herself of it well. She had also the good sense to interfere
+ little with the manoeuvres of the troops, leaving those things to Dunois,
+ and others whom she had the discernment to recognise as the best officers
+ in the camp. Her tactics in action were simple enough. As she herself
+ described it&mdash;"I used to say to them, 'Go boldly in among the
+ English,' and then I used to go boldly in myself." [Ibid.] Such, as she
+ told her inquisitors, was the only spell she used; and it was one of
+ power. But while interfering little with the military discipline of the
+ troops, in all matters of moral discipline she was inflexibly strict. All
+ the abandoned followers of the camp were driven away. She compelled both
+ generals and soldiers to attend regularly at confessional. Her chaplain
+ and other priests marched with the army under her orders; and at every
+ halt, an altar was set up and the sacrament administered. No oath or foul
+ language passed without punishment or censure. Even the roughest and most
+ hardened veterans obeyed her. They put off for a time the bestial
+ coarseness which had grown on them during a life of bloodshed and rapine;
+ they felt that they must go forth in a new spirit to a new career, and
+ acknowledged the beauty of the holiness in which the heaven-sent Maid was
+ leading them to certain victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joan marched from Blois on the 26th of April with a convoy of provisions
+ for Orleans, accompanied by Dunois, La Hire, and the other chief captains
+ of the French; and on the evening of the 28th they approached the town. In
+ the words of the old chronicler Hall: [Hall, f. 127.] "The Englishmen,
+ perceiving that they within could not long continue for faute of vitaile
+ and pouder, kepte not their watche so diligently as thei were accustomed,
+ nor scoured now the countrey environed as thei before had ordained. Whiche
+ negligence the citizens shut in perceiving, sente worde thereof to the
+ French captaines, which with Pucelle in the dedde tyme of the nighte, and
+ in a greats rayne and thunders, with all their vitaile and artillery
+ entered into the citie."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it was day, the Maid rode in solemn procession through the city, clad
+ in complete armour, and mounted on a white horse. Dunois was by her side,
+ and all the bravest knights of her army and of the garrison followed in
+ her train. The whole population thronged around her; and men, women, and
+ children strove to touch her garments, or her banner, or her charger. They
+ poured forth blessings on her, whom they already considered their
+ deliverer. In the words used by two of them afterwards before the
+ tribunal, which reversed the sentence, but could not restore the life of
+ the Virgin-martyr of France, "the people of Orleans, when they first saw
+ her in their city, thought that it was an angel from heaven that had come
+ down to save them." Joan spoke gently in reply to their acclamations and
+ addresses. She told them to fear God, and trust in Him for safety from the
+ fury of their enemies. She first went to the principal church, where TE
+ DEUM was chaunted; and then she took up her abode in the house of Jacques
+ Bourgier, one of the principal citizens, and whose wife was a matron of
+ good repute. She refused to attend a splendid banquet which had been
+ provided for her, and passed nearly all her time in prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it was known by the English that the Maid was in Orleans, their minds
+ were not less occupied about her than were the minds of those in the city;
+ but it was in a very different spirit. The English believed in her
+ supernatural mission as firmly as the French did; but they thought her a
+ sorceress who had come to overthrow them by her enchantments. An old
+ prophecy, which told that a damsel from Lorraine was to save France, had
+ long been current; and it was known and applied to Joan by foreigners as
+ well as by the natives. For months the English had heard of the coming
+ Maid; and the tales of miracles which she was said to have wrought, had
+ been listened to by the rough yeomen of the English camp with anxious
+ curiosity and secret awe. She had sent a herald to the English generals
+ before she marched for Orleans; and he had summoned the English generals
+ in the name of the Most High to give up to the Maid who was sent by
+ Heaven, the keys of the French cities which they had wrongfully taken: and
+ he also solemnly adjured the English troops, whether archers, or men of
+ the companies of war, or gentlemen, or others, who were before the city of
+ Orleans, to depart thence to their homes, under peril of being visited by
+ the judgment of God. On her arrival in Orleans, Joan sent another similar
+ message; but the English scoffed at her from their towers, and threatened
+ to burn her heralds. She determined before she shed the blood of the
+ besiegers, to repeat the warning with her own voice; and accordingly she
+ mounted one of the boulevards of the town, which was within hearing of the
+ Tourelles; and thence she spoke to the English, and bade them depart,
+ otherwise they would meet with shame and woe. Sir William Gladsdale (whom
+ the French call GLACIDAS) commanded the English post at the Tourelles, and
+ he and another English officer replied by bidding her go home and keep her
+ cows, and by ribald jests, that brought tears of shame and indignation
+ into her eyes. But though the English leaders vaunted aloud, the effect
+ produced on their army by Joan's presence in Orleans, was proved four days
+ after her arrival; when, on the approach of reinforcements and stores to
+ the town, Joan and La Hire marched out to meet them, and escorted the long
+ train of provision waggons safely into Orleans, between the bastilles of
+ the English, who cowered behind their walls, instead of charging fiercely
+ and fearlessly, as had been their wont, on any French band that dared to
+ show itself within reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far she had prevailed without striking a blow; but the time was now
+ come to test her courage amid the horrors of actual slaughter. On the
+ afternoon of the day on which she had escorted the reinforcements into the
+ city, while she was resting fatigued at home, Dunois had seized an
+ advantageous opportunity of attacking the English bastille of St. Loup:
+ and a fierce assault of the Orleannais had been made on it, which the
+ English garrison of the fort stubbornly resisted. Joan was roused by a
+ sound which she believed to be that of Her Heavenly Voices; she called for
+ her arms and horse, and quickly equipping herself she mounted to ride off
+ to where the fight was raging. In her haste she had forgotten her banner;
+ she rode back, and, without dismounting, had it given to her from the
+ window, and then she galloped to the gate, whence the sally had been made.
+ On her way she met some of the wounded French who had been carried back
+ from the fight. "Ha," she exclaimed, "I never can see French blood flow,
+ without my hair standing on end." She rode out of the gate, and met the
+ tide of her countrymen, who had been repulsed from the English fort, and
+ were flying back to Orleans in confusion. At the sight of the Holy Maid
+ and her banner they rallied and renewed the assault. Joan rode forward at
+ their head, waving her banner and cheering them on. The English quailed at
+ what they believed to be the charge of hell; St. Loup was stormed, and its
+ defenders put to the sword, except some few, whom Jean succeeded in
+ saving. All her woman's gentleness returned when the combat was over. It
+ was the first time that she had ever seen a battle-field. She wept at the
+ sight of so many blood-stained and mangled corpses; and her tears flowed
+ doubly when she reflected that they were the bodies of Christian men who
+ had died without confession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day was ascension-day, and it was passed by Joan in prayer. But
+ on the following morrow it was resolved by the chiefs of the garrison to
+ attack the English forts on the south of the river. For this purpose they
+ crossed the river in boats, and after some severe fighting, in which the
+ Maid was wounded in the heel, both the English bastilles of the Augustins
+ and St. Jean de Blanc were captured. The Tourelles were now the only post
+ which the besiegers held on the south of the river. But that post was
+ formidably strong, and by its command of the bridge, it was the key to the
+ deliverance of Orleans. It was known that a fresh English army was
+ approaching under Falstolfe to reinforce the besiegers, and should that
+ army arrive, while the Tourelles were yet in the possession of their
+ comrades, there was great peril of all the advantages which the French had
+ gained being nullified, and of the siege being again actively carried on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was resolved, therefore, by the French, to assail the Tourelles at
+ once, while the enthusiasm which the presence and the heroic valour of the
+ Maid had created was at its height. But the enterprise was difficult. The
+ rampart of the tete-du-pont, or landward bulwark, of the Tourelles was
+ steep and high; and Sir John Gladsdale occupied this all-important fort
+ with five hundred archers and men-at-arms, who were the very flower of the
+ English army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the morning of the 7th of May, some thousands of the best French
+ troops in Orleans heard mass and attended the confessional by Joan's
+ orders; and then crossing the river in boats, as on the preceding day they
+ assailed the bulwark of the Tourelles, "with light hearts and heavy
+ hands." But Gladsdale's men, encouraged by their bold and skilful leader,
+ made a resolute and able defence. The Maid planted her banner on the edge
+ of the fosse, and then springing down into the ditch, she placed the first
+ ladder against the wall, and began to mount. An English archer sent an
+ arrow at her, which pierced her corslet and wounded her severely between
+ the neck and shoulder. She fell bleeding from the ladder; and the English
+ were leaping down from the wall to capture her, but her followers bore her
+ off. She was carried to the rear, and laid upon the grass; her armour was
+ taken off, and the anguish of her wound and the sight of her blood, made
+ her at first tremble and weep. But her confidence in her celestial mission
+ soon returned: her patron saints seemed to stand before her and reassure
+ her. She sate up and drew the arrow out with her own hands. Some of the
+ soldiers who stood by wished to stanch the blood, by saying a charm over
+ the wound; but she forbade them, saying, that she did not wish to be cured
+ by unhallowed means. She had the wound dressed with a little oil, and then
+ bidding her confessor come to her, she betook herself to prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, the English in the bulwark of the Tourelles, had
+ repulsed the oft-renewed efforts of the French to scale the wall. Dunois,
+ who commanded the assailants, was at first discouraged, and gave orders
+ for a retreat to be sounded, Joan sent for him and the other generals, and
+ implored them not to despair. "By my God" she said to them, "you shall
+ soon enter in there. Do not doubt it. When you see my banner wave again up
+ to the wall, to your arms again! the fort is yours. For the present rest a
+ little, and take some food and drink. They did so," says the old
+ chronicler of the siege, [Journal du Siege d'Orleans, p. 87.] "for they
+ obeyed her marvellously." The faintness caused by her wound had now passed
+ off, and she headed the French in another rush against the bulwark. The
+ English, who had thought her slain, were alarmed at her reappearance;
+ while the French pressed furiously and fanatically forward. A Biscayan
+ soldier was carrying Joan's banner. She had told the troops that directly
+ the banner touched the wall they should enter. The Biscayan waved the
+ banner forward from the edge of the fosse, and touched the wall with it;
+ and then all the French host swarmed madly up the ladders that now were
+ raised in all directions against the English fort. At this crisis, the
+ efforts of the English garrison were distracted by an attach from another
+ quarter. The French troops who had been left in Orleans, had placed some
+ planks over the broken part of the bridge, and advanced across them to the
+ assault of the Tourelles on the northern side. Gladsdale resolved to
+ withdraw his men from the landward bulwark, and concentrate his whole
+ force in the Tourelles themselves. He was passing for this purpose across
+ the drawbridge that connected the Tourelles and the tete-du-pont, when
+ Joan, who by this time had scaled the wall of the bulwark, called out to
+ him, "Surrender, surrender to the King of Heaven. Ah, Glacidas, you have
+ foully wronged me with your words, but I have great pity on your soul and
+ the souls of your men." The Englishman, disdainful of her summons, was
+ striding on across the drawbridge, when a cannon-shot from the town
+ carried it away, and Gladsdale perished in the water that ran beneath.
+ After his fall, the remnant of the English abandoned all further
+ resistance. Three hundred of them had been killed in the battle, and two
+ hundred were made prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The broken arch was speedily repaired by the exulting Orleannais; and Joan
+ made her triumphal re-entry into the city by the bridge that had so long
+ been closed. Every church in Orleans rang out its gratulating peal; and
+ throughout the night the sounds of rejoicing echoed, and the bonfires
+ blazed up from the city. But in the lines and forts which the besiegers
+ yet retained on the northern shore, there was anxious watching of the
+ generals, and there was desponding gloom among the soldiery. Even Talbot
+ now counselled retreat. On the following morning, the Orleannais, from
+ their walls, saw the great forts called "London" and "St. Lawrence," in
+ flames; and witnessed their invaders busy in destroying the stores and
+ munitions which had been relied on for the destruction of Orleans. Slowly
+ and sullenly the English army retired; but not before it had drawn up in
+ battle array opposite to the city, as if to challenge the garrison to an
+ encounter. The French troops were eager to go out and attack, but Joan
+ forbade it. The day was Sunday. "In the name of God," she said, "let them
+ depart, and let us return thanks to God." She led the soldiers and
+ citizens forth from Orleans, but not for the shedding of blood. They
+ passed in solemn procession round the city walls; and then, while their
+ retiring enemies were yet in sight, they knelt in thanksgiving to God for
+ the deliverance which he had vouchsafed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within three months from the time of her first interview with the Dauphin,
+ Joan had fulfilled the first part of her promise, the raising of the siege
+ of Orleans. Within three months more she fulfilled the second part also;
+ and she stood with her banner in her hand by the high altar at Rheims
+ while he was anointed and crowned as King Charles VII. of France. In the
+ interval she had taken Jargeau, Troyes, and other strong places; and she
+ had defeated an English army in a fair field at Patay. The enthusiasm of
+ her countrymen knew no bounds; but the importance of her services, and
+ especially of her primary achievement at Orleans, may perhaps be best
+ proved by the testimony of her enemies. There is extant a fragment of a
+ letter from the Regent Bedford to his royal nephew, Henry VI., in which he
+ bewails the turn that the war had taken, and especially attributes it to
+ the raising of the siege of Orleans by Joan. Bedford's own words, which
+ are preserved in Rymer, [Vol. x. p. 403.] are as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "AND ALLE THING THERE PROSPERED FOR YOU TIL THE TYME OF THE SIEGE OF
+ ORLEANS, TAKEN IN HAND, GOD KNOWETH BY WHAT ADVIS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "AT THE WHICHE TYME, AFTER THE ADVENTURE FALLEN TO THE PERSONE OF MY
+ COUSIN OF SALISBURY, WHOM GOD ASSOILLE, THERE FELLE, BY THE HAND OF GOD AS
+ IT SEEMETH, A GREAT STROOK UPON YOUR PEUPLE THAT WAS ASSEMBLED THERE IN
+ GRETE NOMBRE, CAUSED IN GRETE PARTIE, AS Y TROWE, OF LAKKE OF SADDE
+ BELEVE, AND OF UNLEVEFULLE DOUBTE, THAT THEI HADDE OF A DISCIPLE AND LYME
+ OF THE FEENDE, CALLED THE PUCELLE, THAT USED FALS ENCHANTMENTS AND
+ SORCERIE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "THE WHICHE STROOKE AND DISCOMFITURE NOT OONLY LESSED IN GRETE PARTIE THE
+ NOMBRE OF YOUR PEUPLE THERE, BUT AS WELL WITHDREWE THE COURAGE OF THE
+ REMENANT IN MERVEILLOUS WYSE, AND COURAIGED YOUR ADVERSE PARTIE AND
+ ENNEMYS TO ASSEMBLE THEM FORTHWITH IN GRETE NOMBRE."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Charles had been anointed King of France, Joan believed that her
+ mission was accomplished. And in truth the deliverance of France from the
+ English, though not completed for many years afterwards, was then insured.
+ The ceremony of a royal coronation and anointment was not in those days
+ regarded as a mere costly formality. It was believed to confer the
+ sanction and the grace of heaven upon the prince, who had previously ruled
+ with mere human authority. Thenceforth he was the Lord's Anointed.
+ Moreover, one of the difficulties that had previously lain in the way of
+ many Frenchman when called on to support Charles VII. was now removed. He
+ had been publicly stigmatised, even by his own parents, as no true son of
+ the royal race of France. The queen-mother, the English, and the partisans
+ of Burgundy, called him the "Pretender to the title of Dauphin;" but those
+ who had been led to doubt his legitimacy, were cured of their scepticism
+ by the victories of the Holy Maid, and by the fulfilment of her pledges.
+ They thought that heaven had now declared itself in favour of Charles as
+ the true heir of the crown of St. Louis; and the tales about his being
+ spurious were thenceforth regarded as mere English calumnies. With this
+ strong tide of national feeling in his favour, with victorious generals
+ and soldiers round him, and a dispirited and divided enemy before him, he
+ could not fail to conquer; though his own imprudence and misconduct, and
+ the stubborn valour which some of the English still displayed, prolonged
+ the war in France nearly to the time when the civil war of the Roses broke
+ out in England, and insured for France peace and repose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joan knelt before the new-crowned king in the cathedral of Rheims, and
+ shed tears of joy. She said that she had then fulfilled the work which the
+ Lord had commanded her. The young girl now asked for her dismissal. She
+ wished to return to her peasant home, to tend her parent's flocks again,
+ and to live at her own will in her native village. ["Je voudrais bien
+ qu'il voulut me faire ramener aupres mes pere et mere, et garder leurs
+ brebis et betail, et faire ce que je voudrois faire."] She had always
+ believed that her career would be a short one. But Charles and his
+ captains were loth to lose the presence of one who had such an influence
+ upon the soldiery and the people. They persuaded her to stay with the
+ army. She still showed the same bravery and zeal for the cause of France.
+ She was as fervent as before in her prayers, and as exemplary in all
+ religious duties. She still heard her Heavenly Voices, but; she now no
+ longer thought herself the appointed minister of heaven to lead her
+ countrymen to certain victory. Our admiration for her courage and
+ patriotism ought to be increased a hundred-fold by her conduct throughout
+ the latter part of her career, amid dangers, against which she no longer
+ believed herself to be divinely secured. Indeed she believed herself
+ doomed to perish in little more than a year; ["Des le commencement elle
+ avait dit, 'Il me faut employer: je ne durerai qu'un an, ou guere plus."&mdash;MICHELAIT
+ v. p. 101.] but she still fought on as resolutely, if not as exultingly as
+ ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As in the case of Arminius, the interest attached to individual heroism
+ and virtue makes us trace the fate of Joan of Arc after she had saved her
+ country. She served well with Charles's army in the capture of Laon,
+ Soissons, Compeigne, Beauvais, and other strong places; but in a premature
+ attack on Paris, in September 1429, the French were repulsed, and Joan was
+ severely wounded in the winter she was again in the field with some of the
+ French troops; and in the following spring she threw herself into the
+ fortress of Compeigne, which she had herself won for the French king in
+ the preceding autumn, and which was now besieged by a strong Burgundian
+ force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was taken prisoner in a sally from Compeigne, on the 24th of May, and
+ was imprisoned by the Burgundians first at Arras, and then at a place
+ called Crotoy, on the Flemish coast, until November, when for payment of a
+ large sum of money, she was given up to the English, and taken to Rouen,
+ which was then their main stronghold in France.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Sorrow it were, and shame to tell,
+ The butchery that there befell:"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And the revolting details of the cruelties practised upon this young girl
+ may be left to those, whose duty as avowed biographers, it is to describe
+ them. [The whole of the "Proces de Condamnation at de Rehabilitation de
+ Jeanne d'Arc" has been published in five volumes, by the Societe de
+ l'Histoire de France. All the passages from contemporary chroniclers and
+ poets are added; and the most ample materials are thus given for acquiring
+ full information on a subject which is, to an Englishman, one of painful
+ interest. There is an admirable essay on Joan of Arc, in the 138th number
+ of the QUARTERLY.] She was tried before an ecclesiastical tribunal on the
+ charge of witchcraft, and on the 30th of May, 1431, she was burnt alive in
+ the market-place at Rouen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I will add but one remark on the character of the truest heroine that the
+ world has ever seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If any person can be found in the present age who would join in the scoffs
+ of Voltaire against the Maid of Orleans and the Heavenly Voices by which
+ she believed herself inspired, let him read the life of the wisest and
+ best man that the heathen nations ever produced. Let him read of the
+ Heavenly Voice, by which Socrates believed himself to be constantly
+ attended; which cautioned him on his way from the field of battle at
+ Delium, and which from his boyhood to the time of his death visited him
+ with unearthly warnings. [See Cicero, de Divinatione, lib. i. sec. 41; and
+ see the words of Socrates himself, in Plato, Apol. Soc.] Let the modern
+ reader reflect upon this; and then, unless he is prepared to term Socrates
+ either fool or impostor, let him not dare to deride or vilify Joan of Arc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY AT ORLEANS, A.D. 1429,
+ AND THE DEFEAT OP THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 1452. Final expulsion of the English from France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1453. Constantinople taken, and the Roman empire of the East destroyed by
+ the Turkish Sultan Mahomet II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1455. Commencement of the civil wars in England between the Houses of York
+ and Lancaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1479. Union of the Christian kingdoms of Spain under Ferdinand and
+ Isabella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1492. Capture of Grenada by Ferdinand and Isabella, and end of the Moorish
+ dominion in Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1492. Columbus discovers the New World.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1494. Charles VIII. of France invades Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1497. Expedition of Vasco di Gama to the East Indies round the Cape of
+ Good Hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1503. Naples conquered from the French by the great Spanish general,
+ Gonsalvo of Cordova.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1508. League of Cambray, by the Pope, the Emperor, and the King of France,
+ against Venice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1509. Albuquerque establishes the empire of the Portuguese in the East
+ Indies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1516. Death of Ferdinand of Spain; he is succeeded by his grandson
+ Charles, afterwards the Emperor Charles V.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1517. Dispute between Luther and Tetzel respecting the sale of
+ indulgences, which is the immediate cause of the Reformation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1519. Charles V. is elected Emperor of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1520. Cortez conquers Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1525. Francis I. of France defeated and taken prisoner by the imperial
+ army at Pavia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1529. League of Smalcald formed by the Protestant princes of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1533. Henry VIII. renounces the Papal supremacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1533. Pizarro conquers Peru.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1556. Abdication of the Emperor Charles V. Philip II. becomes King of
+ Spain, and Ferdinand I. Emperor of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1557.[sic] Elizabeth becomes Queen of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1557. The Spaniards defeat the French at the battle of St. Quentin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1571. Don John of Austria at the head of the Spanish fleet, aided by the
+ Venetian and the Papal squadrons, defeats the Turks at Lepanto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1572. Massacre of the Protestants in France on St. Bartholomew's day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1579. The Netherlands revolt against Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1580. Philip II. conquers Portugal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. &mdash; THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "In that memorable year, when the dark cloud gathered round our
+ coasts, when Europe stood by in fearful suspense to behold what
+ should be the result of that great cast in the game of human
+ politics, what the craft of Rome, the power of Philip, the genius
+ of Farnese, could achieve against the island-queen, with her
+ Drakes and Cecils,&mdash;in that agony of the Protestant faith and
+ English name."&mdash;HALLAM, CONST. HIST. vol. i. p. 220.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the afternoon of the 19th of July, A.D. 1588, a group of English
+ captains was collected at the Bowling Green on the Hoe at Plymouth, whose
+ equals have never before or since been brought together, even at that
+ favourite mustering-place of the heroes of the British navy. There was Sir
+ Francis Drake, the first English circumnavigator of the globe, the terror
+ of every Spanish coast in the Old World and the New; there was Sir John
+ Hawkins, the rough veteran of many a daring voyage on the African and
+ American seas, and of many a desperate battle; there was Sir Martin
+ Frobisher, one of the earliest explorers of the Arctic seas in search of
+ that North-West Passage which is still the darling object of England's
+ boldest mariners. There was the high-admiral of England, Lord Howard of
+ Effingham, prodigal of all things in his country's cause, and who had
+ recently had the noble daring to refuse to dismantle part of the fleet,
+ though the Queen had sent him orders to do so, in consequence of an
+ exaggerated report that the enemy had been driven back and shattered by a
+ storm. Lord Howard (whom contemporary writers describe as being of a wise
+ and noble courage, skilful in sea matters, wary and provident, and of
+ great esteem among the sailors) resolved to risk his sovereign's anger,
+ and to keep the ships afloat at his own charge, rather than that England
+ should run the peril of losing their protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another of our Elizabethan sea-kings, Sir Walter Raleigh, was at that time
+ commissioned to raise and equip the land-forces of Cornwall; but, as he
+ was also commander of Plymouth, we may well believe that he must have
+ availed himself of the opportunity of consulting with the lord-admiral and
+ other high officers which was offered by the English fleet putting into
+ that port; and we may look on Raleigh as one of the group that was
+ assembled at the Bowling Green on the Hoe. Many other brave men and
+ skilful mariners, besides the chiefs whose names have been mentioned, were
+ there, enjoying, with true sailor-like merriment, their temporary
+ relaxation from duty. In the harbour lay the English fleet with which they
+ had just returned from a cruise to Corunna in search of information
+ respecting the real condition and movements of the hostile, Armada. Lord
+ Howard had ascertained that our enemies, though tempest-tost, were still
+ formidably strong; and fearing that part of their fleet might make for
+ England in his absence, he had hurried back to the Devonshire coast. He
+ resumed his station at Plymouth, and waited there for certain tidings of
+ the Spaniard's approach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A match at bowls was being played, in which Drake and other high officers
+ of the fleet were engaged, when a small armed vessel was seen running
+ before the wind into Plymouth harbour, with all sails set. Her commander
+ landed in haste, and eagerly sought the place where the English
+ lord-admiral and his captains were standing. His name was Fleming; he was
+ the master of a Scotch privateer; and he told the English officers that he
+ had that morning seen the Spanish Armada off the Cornish coast. At this
+ exciting information the captains began to hurry down to the water, and
+ there was a shouting for the ship's boats: but Drake coolly checked his
+ comrades, and insisted that the match should be played out. He said that
+ there was plenty of time both to win the game and beat the Spaniards. The
+ best and bravest match that ever was scored was resumed accordingly. Drake
+ and his friends aimed their last bowls with the same steady calculating
+ coolness with which they were about to point their guns. The winning cast
+ was made; and then they went on board and prepared for action, with their
+ hearts as light and their nerves as firm as they had been on the Hoe
+ Bowling Green.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the messengers and signals had been despatched fast and far
+ through England, to warn each town and village that the enemy had come at
+ last. In every seaport there was instant making ready by land and by sea;
+ in every shire and every city there was instant mustering of horse and
+ man. [In Macaulay's Ballad on the Spanish Armada, the transmission of the
+ tidings of the Armada's approach, and the arming of the English nation,
+ are magnificently described. The progress of the fire-signals is depicted
+ in lines which are worthy of comparison with the renowned passage in the
+ Agamemnon, which describes the transmission of the beacon-light announcing
+ the fall of Troy, from Mount Ida to Argos.] But England's best defence
+ then, as ever, was her fleet; and after warping laboriously out of
+ Plymouth harbour against the wind, the lord-admiral stood westward under
+ easy sail, keeping an anxious look-out for the Armada, the approach of
+ which was soon announced by Cornish fishing-boats, and signals from the
+ Cornish cliffs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The England of our own days is so strong, and the Spain of our own days is
+ so feeble, that it is not possible, without some reflection and care, to
+ comprehend the full extent of the peril which England then ran from the
+ power and the ambition of Spain, or to appreciate the importance of that
+ crisis in the history of the world. We had then no Indian or Colonial
+ Empire save the feeble germs of our North American settlements, which
+ Raleigh and Gilbert had recently planted. Scotland was a separate kingdom;
+ and Ireland was then even a greater source of weakness, and a worse nest
+ of rebellion than she has been in after times. Queen Elizabeth had found
+ at her accession an encumbered revenue, a divided people and an
+ unsuccessful foreign war, in which the last remnant of our possessions in
+ France had been lost; she had also a formidable pretender to her crown,
+ whose interests were favoured by all the Roman Catholic powers; and even
+ some of her subjects were warped by religious bigotry to deny her title,
+ and to look on her as an heretical usurper. It is true that during the
+ years of her reign which had passed away before the attempted invasion of
+ 1588, she had revived the commercial prosperity, the national spirit, and
+ the national loyalty of England. But her resources, to cope with the
+ colossal power of Philip II., still seemed most scanty; and she had not a
+ single foreign ally, except the Dutch, who were themselves struggling
+ hard, and, as it seemed, hopelessly, to maintain their revolt against
+ Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand Philip II, was absolute master of an empire so superior
+ to the other states of the world in extent, in resources and especially in
+ military and naval forces, as to make the project of enlarging that empire
+ into a universal monarchy seem a perfectly feasible scheme; and Philip had
+ both the ambition to form that project, and the resolution to devote all
+ his energies, and all his means, to its realization. Since the downfall of
+ the Roman empire no such preponderating power had existed in the world.
+ During the mediaeval centuries the chief European kingdoms were slowly
+ moulding themselves out of the feudal chaos. And, though their wars with
+ each other were numerous and desperate, and several of their respective
+ kings figured for a time as mighty conquerors, none of them in those times
+ acquired the consistency and perfect organization which are requisite for
+ a long-sustained career of aggrandizement. After the consolidation of the
+ great kingdoms, they for some time kept each other in mutual check. During
+ the first half of the sixteenth century, the balancing system was
+ successfully practised by European statesmen. But when Philip II. reigned,
+ France had become so miserably weak through her civil wars, that he had
+ nothing to dread from the rival state, which had so long curbed his father
+ the Emperor Charles V. In Germany, Italy, and Poland he had either zealous
+ friends and dependents, or weak and divided enemies. Against the Turks he
+ had gained great and glorious successes; and he might look round the
+ continent of Europe without discerning a single antagonist of whom he
+ could stand in awe. Spain, when he acceded to the throne, was at the
+ zenith of her power. The hardihood and spirit which the Arragonese, the
+ Castilians, and the other nations of the peninsula had acquired during
+ centuries of free institutions and successful war against the Moors, had
+ not yet become obliterated. Charles V. had, indeed, destroyed the
+ liberties of Spain; but that had been done too recently for its full evil
+ to be felt in Philip's time. A people cannot be debased in a single
+ generation; and the Spaniards under Charles V. and Philip II. proved the
+ truth of the remark, that no nation is ever so formidable to its
+ neighbours, for a time, as is a nation, which, after being trained up in
+ self-government, passes suddenly under a despotic ruler. The energy of
+ democratic institutions survives for a few generations, and to it are
+ superadded the decision and certainty which are the attributes of
+ government, when all its powers are directed by a single mind. It is true
+ that this preter-natural vigour is short-lived: national corruption and
+ debasement gradually follow the loss of the national liberties; but there
+ is an interval before their workings are felt, and in that interval the
+ most ambitious schemes of foreign conquest are often successfully
+ undertaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip had also the advantage of finding himself at the head of a large
+ standing army in a perfect state of discipline and equipment, in an age
+ when, except some few insignificant corps, standing armies were unknown in
+ Christendom. The renown of the Spanish troops was justly high, and the
+ infantry in particular was considered the best in the world. His fleet,
+ also, was far more numerous, and better appointed, than that of any other
+ European power; and both his soldiers and his sailors had the confidence
+ in themselves and their commanders, which a long career of successful
+ warfare alone can create.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the Spanish crown, Philip succeeded to the kingdom, of Naples and
+ Sicily, the Duchy of Milan, Franche-Comte, and the Netherlands. In Africa
+ he possessed Tunis, Oran, the Cape Verde and the Canary Islands; and in
+ Asia, the Philippine and Sunda Islands and a part of the Moluccas. Beyond
+ the Atlantic he was lord of the most splendid portions of the New world
+ which "Columbus found for Castile and Leon." The empire of Peru and
+ Mexico, New Spain, and Chili, with their abundant mines of the precious
+ metals, Hispaniola and Cuba, and many other of the American Islands, were
+ provinces of the sovereign of Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip had, indeed, experienced the mortification of seeing the
+ inhabitants of the Netherlands revolt against his authority, nor could he
+ succeed in bringing back beneath the Spanish sceptre all the possessions
+ which his father had bequeathed to him. But he had reconquered a large
+ number of the towns and districts that originally took up arms against
+ him. Belgium was brought more thoroughly into implicit obedience to Spain
+ than she had been before her insurrection, and it was only Holland and the
+ six other Northern States that still held out against his arms. The
+ contest had also formed a compact and veteran army on Philip's side,
+ which, under his great general, the Prince of Parma, had been trained to
+ act together under all difficulties and all vicissitudes of warfare; and
+ on whose steadiness and loyalty perfect reliance might be placed
+ throughout any enterprise, however difficult and tedious. Alexander
+ Farnese, Prince of Parma, captain-general of the Spanish armies, and
+ governor of the Spanish possessions in the Netherlands was beyond all
+ comparison the greatest military genius of his age. He was also highly
+ distinguished for political wisdom and sagacity, and for his great
+ administrative talents. He was idolised by his troops, whose affections he
+ knew how to win without relaxing their discipline or diminishing his own
+ authority. Pre-eminently cool and circumspect in his plans, but swift and
+ energetic when the moment arrived for striking a decisive blow, neglecting
+ no risk that caution could provide against, conciliating even the
+ populations of the districts which he attacked by his scrupulous good
+ faith, his moderation, and his address, Farnese was one of the most
+ formidable generals that ever could be placed at the head of an army
+ designed not only to win battles, but to effect conquests. Happy it is for
+ England and the world that this island was saved from becoming an arena
+ for the exhibition of his powers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever diminution the Spanish empire might have sustained in the
+ Netherlands, seemed to be more than compensated by the acquisition of
+ Portugal, which Philip had completely conquered in 1580. Not only that
+ ancient kingdom itself, but all the fruits of the maritime enterprises of
+ the Portuguese had fallen into Philip's hands. All the Portuguese colonies
+ in America, Africa, and the East Indies, acknowledged the sovereignty of
+ the King of Spain; who thus not only united the whole Iberian peninsula
+ under his single sceptre, but had acquired a transmarine empire, little
+ inferior in wealth and extent to that which he had inherited at his
+ accession. The splendid victory which his fleet, in conjunction with the
+ Papal and Venetian galleys, had gained at Lepanto over the Turks, had
+ deservedly exalted the fame of the Spanish marine throughout Christendom;
+ and when Philip had reigned thirty-five years, the vigour of his empire
+ seemed unbroken, and the glory of the Spanish arms had increased, and was
+ increasing throughout the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One nation only had been his active, his persevering, and his successful
+ foe. England had encouraged his revolted subjects in Flanders against him,
+ and given them the aid in men and money without which they must soon have
+ been humbled in the dust. English ships had plundered his colonies; had
+ denied his supremacy in the New World, as well as the Old; they had
+ inflicted ignominious defeats on his squadrons; they had captured his
+ cities, and burned his arsenals on the very coasts of Spain. The English
+ had made Philip himself the object of personal insult. He was held up to
+ ridicule in their stage plays and masks, and these scoffs at the man had
+ (as is not unusual in such cases) excited the anger of the absolute king,
+ even more vehemently than the injuries inflicted on his power. [See
+ Ranke's Hist. Popes, vol. ii. p. 170.] Personal as well as political
+ revenge urged him to attack England. Were she once subdued, the Dutch must
+ submit; France could not cope with him, the empire would not oppose him;
+ and universal dominion seemed sure to be the result of the conquest of
+ that malignant island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was yet another and a stronger feeling which armed King Philip
+ against England. He was one of the sincerest and sternest bigots of his
+ age. He looked on himself, and was looked on by others, as the appointed
+ champion to extirpate heresy and re-establish the Papal power throughout
+ Europe. A powerful reaction against Protestantism had taken place since
+ the commencement of the second half of the sixteenth century, and Philip
+ believed that he was destined to complete it. The Reform doctrines had
+ been thoroughly rooted out from Italy and Spain. Belgium, which had
+ previously been half Protestant, had been reconquered both in allegiance
+ and creed by Philip, and had become one of the most Catholic countries in
+ the world. Half Germany had been won back to the old faith. In Savoy, in
+ Switzerland and many other countries, the progress of the
+ counter-Reformation had been rapid and decisive. The Catholic league
+ seemed victorious in France. The Papal Court itself had shaken off the
+ supineness of recent centuries; and, at the head of the Jesuits and the
+ other new ecclesiastical orders, was displaying a vigour and a boldness
+ worthy of the days of Hildebrand or Innocent III.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout continental Europe, the Protestants, discomfited and dismayed,
+ looked to England as their protector and refuge. England was the
+ acknowledged central point of Protestant power and policy; and to conquer
+ England was to stab Protestantism to the very heart. Sixtus V., the then
+ reigning pope, earnestly exhorted Philip to this enterprise. And when the
+ tidings reached Italy and Spain that the Protestant Queen of England had
+ put to death her Catholic prisoner, Mary Queen of Scots, the fury of the
+ Vatican and Escurial knew no bounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince of Parma, who was appointed military chief of the expedition,
+ collected on the coast of Flanders a veteran force that was to play a
+ principal part in the conquest of England. Besides the troops who were in
+ his garrisons, or under his colours, five thousand infantry were sent to
+ him from northern and central Italy, four thousand from the kingdom of
+ Naples, six thousand from Castile, three thousand from Arragon, three
+ thousand from Austria and Germany, together with four squadrons of
+ heavy-armed horse; besides which he received forces from the Franche-Comte
+ and the Walloon country. By his command, the forest of Waes was felled for
+ the purpose of building flat-bottomed boats, which, floating down the
+ rivers and canals to Meinport and Dunkerque, were to carry this large army
+ of chosen troops to the mouth of the Thames, under the escort of the great
+ Spanish fleet. Gun-carriages, fascines, machines used in sieges, together
+ with every material requisite for building bridges, forming camps, and
+ raising fortresses, were to be placed on board the flotillas of the Prince
+ of Parma, who followed up the conquest of the Netherlands, whilst he was
+ making preparations for the invasion of this island. Favoured by the
+ dissensions between the insurgents of the United Provinces and Leicester,
+ the Prince of Parma had recovered Deventer, as well as a fort before
+ Zutphen, which the English commanders, Sir William Stanley, the friend of
+ Babbington, and Sir Roland York, had surrendered to him, when with their
+ troops they passed over to the service of Philip II., after the death of
+ Mary Stuart, and he had also made himself master of the Sluys. His
+ intention was to leave to the Count de Mansfeldt sufficient forces to
+ follow up the war with the Dutch, which had now become a secondary object,
+ whilst he himself went at the head of fifty thousand men of the Armada and
+ the flotilla, to accomplish the principal enterprise&mdash;that
+ enterprise, which, in the highest degree, affected the interests of the
+ pontifical authority. In a bull, intended to be kept secret until the day
+ of landing, Sixtus V., renewing the anathema fulminated against Elizabeth
+ by Pius V. and Gregory XIII., affected to depose her from our throne. [See
+ Mignet's Mary Queen of Scots vol. ii.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elizabeth was denounced as a murderous heretic whose destruction was an
+ instant duty. A formal treaty was concluded (in June, 1587), by which the
+ pope bound himself to contribute a million of scudi to the expenses of the
+ war; the money to be paid as soon as the king had actual possession of an
+ English port. Philip, on his part, strained the resources of his vast
+ empire to the utmost. The French Catholic chiefs eagerly co-operated with
+ him. In the sea-ports of the Mediterranean, and along almost the whole
+ coast from Gibraltar to Jutland, the preparations for the great armament
+ were urged forward with all the earnestness of religious zeal, as well as
+ of angry ambition.&mdash;"Thus," says the German historian of the Popes,
+ [Ranke, vol ii. p. 172.] "thus did the united powers of Italy and Spain,
+ from which such mighty influences had gone forth over the whole world, now
+ rouse themselves for an attack upon England! The king had already
+ compiled, from the archives of Simancas, a statement of the claims which
+ he had to the throne of that country on the extinction of the Stuart line;
+ the most brilliant prospects, especially that of an universal dominion of
+ the seas, were associated in his mind with this enterprise. Everything
+ seemed to conspire to such end; the predominance of Catholicism in
+ Germany, the renewed attack upon the Huguenots in France, the attempt upon
+ Geneva, and the enterprise against England. At the same moment a
+ thoroughly Catholic prince, Sigismund III., ascended the throne of Poland,
+ with the prospect also of future succession to the throne of Sweden. But
+ whenever any principle or power, be it what it may, aims at unlimited
+ supremacy in Europe, some vigorous resistance to it, having its origin in
+ the deepest springs of human nature, invariably arises. Philip II. had
+ had, to encounter newly-awakened powers, braced by the vigour of youth,
+ and elevated by a sense of their future destiny. The intrepid corsairs,
+ who had rendered every sea insecure, now clustered round the coasts of
+ their native island. The Protestants in a body,&mdash;even the Puritans,
+ although they had been subjected to as severe oppressions as the
+ Catholics,&mdash;rallied round their queen, who now gave admirable proof
+ of her masculine courage, and her princely talent of winning the
+ affections, and leading the minds, and preserving the allegiance of men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ranke should have added that the English Catholics at this crisis proved
+ themselves as loyal to their queen, and true to their country, as were the
+ most vehement anti-Catholic zealots in the island. Some few traitors there
+ were; but, as a body, the Englishmen who held the ancient faith, stood the
+ trial of their patriotism nobly. The lord-admiral himself was a Catholic,
+ and (to adopt the words of Hallam) "then it was that the Catholics in
+ every county repaired to the standard of the lord-lieutenant, imploring
+ that they might not be suspected of bartering the national independence
+ for their religion itself." The Spaniard found no partisans in the country
+ which he assailed, nor did England, self-wounded,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Lie at the proud foot of her enemy."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For some time the destination of the enormous armament of Philip was not
+ publicly announced. Only Philip himself, the Pope Sixtus, the Duke of
+ Guise, and Philip's favourite minister, Mendoza, at first knew its real
+ object. Rumours were sedulously spread that it was designed to proceed to
+ the Indies to realize vast projects of distant conquest. Sometimes hints
+ were dropped by Philip's ambassadors in foreign courts, that his master
+ had resolved on a decisive effort to crush his rebels in the Low
+ Countries. But Elizabeth and her statesmen could not view the gathering of
+ such a storm without feeling the probability of its bursting on their own
+ shores. As early as the spring of 1587, Elizabeth sent Sir Francis Drake
+ to cruise off the Tagus. Drake sailed into the Bay of Cadiz and the Lisbon
+ Roads, and burnt much shipping and military stores, causing thereby an
+ important delay in the progress of the Spanish preparations. Drake called
+ this "Singeing the King of of Spain's beard." Elizabeth also increased her
+ succours of troops to the Netherlanders, to prevent the Prince of Parma
+ from overwhelming them, and from thence being at full leisure to employ
+ his army against her dominions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each party at this time thought it politic to try to amuse its adversary
+ by pretending to treat for peace, and negotiations were opened at Ostend
+ in the beginning of 1588, which were prolonged during the first six months
+ of that year. Nothing real was effected, and probably nothing real had
+ been intended to be effected by them. But, in the meantime, each party had
+ been engaged in important communications with the chief powers in France,
+ in which Elizabeth seemed at first to have secured a great advantage, but
+ in which Philip ultimately prevailed. "Henry III. of France was alarmed at
+ the negotiations that were going on at Ostend; and he especially dreaded
+ any accommodation between Spain and England, in consequence of which
+ Philip II. might be enabled to subdue the United Provinces, and make
+ himself master of France. In order, therefore, to dissuade Elizabeth from
+ any arrangement, he offered to support her, in case she were attacked by
+ the Spaniards, with twice the number of troops, which he was bound by the
+ treaty of 1574 to send to her assistance. He had a long conference with
+ her ambassador, Stafford, upon this subject, and told him that the Pope
+ and the Catholic King had entered into a league against the queen, his
+ mistress, and had invited himself and the Venetians to join them, but they
+ had refused to do so. 'If the Queen of England,' he added, 'concludes a
+ peace with the Catholic king, that peace will not last three months,
+ because the Catholic king will aid the League with all his forces to
+ overthrow her, and you may imagine what fate is reserved for your mistress
+ after that.' On the other hand, in order most effectually to frustrate
+ this negotiation, he proposed to Philip II. to form a still closer union
+ between the two crowns of France and Spain: and, at the same time, he
+ secretly despatched a confidential envoy to Constantinople to warn the
+ Sultan, that if he did not again declare war against the Catholic King,
+ that monarch, who already possessed the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, the
+ Indies, and nearly all Italy, would soon make himself master of England,
+ and would then turn the forces of all Europe against the Turks." [Mignet's
+ History of Mary Queen of Scots. vol. ii.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Philip had an ally in France, who was far more powerful than the
+ French king. This was the Duke of Guise, the chief of the League, and the
+ idol of the fanatic partisans of the Romish faith. Philip prevailed on
+ Guise openly to take up arms against Henry III. (who was reviled by the
+ Leaguers as a traitor to the true Church, and a secret friend to the
+ Huguenots); and thus prevent the French king from interfering in favour of
+ Queen Elizabeth. "With this object, the commander, Juan Iniguez Moreo, was
+ despatched by him in the early part of April to the Duke of Guise at
+ Soissons. He met with complete success. He offered the Duke of Guise, as
+ soon as he took the field against Henry III., three hundred thousand
+ crowns, six thousand infantry, and twelve hundred pikemen, on behalf of
+ the king his master, who would, in addition, withdraw his ambassador from
+ the court of France, and accredit an envoy to the Catholic party. A treaty
+ was concluded on these conditions, and the Duke of Guise entered Paris,
+ where he was expected by the Leaguers, and whence he expelled Henry III.
+ on the 12th of May, by the insurrection of the barricades. A fortnight
+ after this insurrection, which reduced Henry III. to impotence, and, to
+ use the language of the Prince of Parma, did not even 'permit him to
+ assist the Queen of England with his tears, as he needed them all to weep
+ over his own misfortunes,' the Spanish fleet left the Tagus and sailed
+ towards the British isles." [Mignet.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile in England, from the sovereign on the throne to the peasant in
+ the cottage, all hearts and hands made ready to meet the imminent deadly
+ peril. Circular letters from the queen were sent round to the
+ lord-lieutenants of the several counties requiring them "to call together
+ the best sort of gentlemen under their lieutenancy, and to declare unto
+ them these great preparations and arrogant threatenings, now burst forth
+ in action upon the seas, wherein every man's particular state, in the
+ highest degree, could be touched in respect of country, liberty, wives,
+ children, lands, lives, and (which was specially to be regarded) the
+ profession of the true and sincere religion of Christ: and to lay before
+ them the infinite and unspeakable miseries that would fall out upon any
+ such change, which miseries were evidently seen by the fruits of that hard
+ and cruel government holden in countries not far distant. We do look,"
+ said the queen, "that the most part of them should have, upon this instant
+ extraordinary occasion, a larger proportion of furniture, both for
+ horseman and footmen, but especially horsemen, than hath been certified;
+ thereby to be in their best strength against any attempt, or to be
+ employed about our own person, or otherwise. Hereunto as we doubt not but
+ by your good endeavours they will be the rather conformable, so also we
+ assure ourselves, that Almighty God will so bless these their loyal hearts
+ borne towards us, their loving sovereign, and their natural country, that
+ all the attempts of any enemy whatsoever shall be made void and frustrate,
+ to their confusion, your comfort, and to God's high glory." [Strype, cited
+ in Southey's Naval History.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Letters of a similar kind were also sent by the council to each of the
+ nobility, and to the great cities. The primate called on the clergy for
+ their contributions; and by every class of the community the appeal was
+ responded to with liberal zeal, that offered more even than the queen
+ required. The boasting threats of the Spaniards had roused the spirit of
+ the nation; and the whole people "were thoroughly irritated to stir up
+ their whole forces for their defence against such prognosticated
+ conquests; so that, in a very short time, all the whole realm, and every
+ corner were furnished with armed men, on horseback and on foot; and these
+ continually trained, exercised, and put into bands, in warlike manner, as
+ in no age ever was before in this realm. There was no sparing of money to
+ provide horse, armour, weapons, powder, and all necessaries; no, nor want
+ of provision of pioneers, carriages, and victuals, in every county of the
+ realm, without exception, to attend upon the armies. And to this general
+ furniture every man voluntarily offered, very many their services
+ personally without wages, others money for armour and weapons, and to wage
+ soldiers: a matter strange, and never the like heard of in this realm or
+ else where. And this general reason moved all men to large contributions,
+ that when a conquest was to be withstood wherein all should be lost, it
+ was no time to spare a portion." [Copy of contemporary letter in the
+ Harleian Collection, quoted by Southey.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our lion-hearted queen showed herself worthy of such a people. A camp was
+ formed at Tilbury; and there Elizabeth rode through the ranks, encouraging
+ her captains and her soldiers by her presence and her words. One of the
+ speeches which she addressed to them during this crisis has been
+ preserved; and, though often quoted, it must not be omitted here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My loving people," she said, "we have been persuaded by some that are
+ careful of our safety, to take heed how we commit ourselves to armed
+ multitudes for fear of treachery; but I assure you I do not desire to live
+ to distrust my faithful and loving people. Let tyrants fear! I have always
+ so behaved myself, that, under God, I have placed my chiefest strength and
+ safeguard in the loyal hearts and good will of my subjects; and,
+ therefore, I am come amongst you, as you see, at this time, not for my
+ recreation or disport, but being resolved, in the midst and heat of the
+ battle, to live or die amongst you all, to lay down for my God, for my
+ kingdom, and for my people, my honour and my blood, even in the dust. I
+ know I have the body but of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the heart
+ and stomach of a king, and of a King of England too; and think it foul
+ scorn that Parma, or Spain, or any prince of Europe, should dare to invade
+ the borders of my realm; to which, rather than any dishonour shall grow by
+ me, I myself will take up arms, I myself will be your general, judge, and
+ rewarder of every one of your virtues in the field. I know already for
+ your forwardness you have deserved rewards and crowns; and we do assure
+ you, on the word of a prince, they shall be duly paid you. In the
+ meantime, my lieutenant-general shall be in my stead, than whom never
+ prince commanded a more noble or worthy subject, not doubting but by your
+ obedience to my general, by your concord in the camp, and your valour in
+ the field, we shall shortly have a famous victory over those enemies of my
+ God, of my kingdom, and of my people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have minute proofs of the skill with which the government of Elizabeth
+ made its preparations; for the documents still exist which were drawn up
+ at that time by the ministers and military men who were consulted by
+ Elizabeth respecting the defence of the country. [See note in Tytler's
+ Life of Raleigh, p. 71.] Among those summoned to the advice of their queen
+ at this crisis, were Sir Walter Raleigh, Lord Grey, Sir Francis Knolles,
+ Sir Thomas Leighton, Sir John Norris, Sir Richard Grenville, Sir Richard
+ Bingham, and Sir Roger Williams; and the biographer of Sir Walter Raleigh
+ observes that "These councillors were chosen by the queen, as being not
+ only men bred to arms, and some of them, as Grey, Norris, Bingham, and
+ Grenville, of high military talents, but of grave experience in affairs of
+ state, and in the civil government of provinces,&mdash;qualities by no
+ means means unimportant, when the debate referred not merely to the
+ leading of an army or the plan of a campaign, but to the organization of a
+ militia, and the communication with the magistrates for arming the
+ peasantry, and encouraging them to a resolute and simultaneous resistance.
+ From some private papers of Lord Burleigh, it appears that Sir Walter took
+ a principal share in these deliberations; and the abstract of their
+ proceedings, a document still preserved, is supposed to have been drawn up
+ by him. They first prepared a list of places where it was likely the
+ Spanish army might attempt a descent, as well as of those which lay most
+ exposed to the forces under the Duke of Parma. They next considered the
+ speediest and most effectual means of defence, whether by fortification or
+ the muster of a military array; and, lastly, deliberated on the course to
+ be taken for fighting the enemy if he should land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of Elizabeth's advisers recommended that the whole care and resources
+ of the government should be devoted to the equipment of the armies, and
+ that the enemy, when he attempted to land, should be welcomed with a
+ battle on the shore. But the wiser counsels of Raleigh and others
+ prevailed, who urged the importance of fitting out a fleet, that should
+ encounter the Spaniards at sea, and, if possible, prevent them from
+ approaching the land at all. In Raleigh's great work on the "History of
+ the World," he takes occasion, when discussing some of the events of the
+ first Punic war, to give his reasonings on the proper policy of England
+ when menaced with invasion. Without doubt, we have there the substance of
+ the advice which he gave to Elizabeth's council; and the remarks of such a
+ man, on such a subject, have a general and enduring interest, beyond the
+ immediate peril which called them forth. Raleigh [Historie of the World
+ pp. 799&mdash;801.] says:&mdash;"Surely I hold that the best way is to
+ keep our enemies from treading upon our ground: wherein if we fail, then
+ must we seek to make him wish that he had stayed at his own home. In such
+ a case if it should happen, our judgments are to weigh many particular
+ circumstances, that belongs not unto this discourse. But making the
+ question general, the positive, WHETHER England, WITHOUT THE HELP OF HER
+ FLEET, BE ABLE TO DEBAR AN ENEMY FROM LANDING; I hold that it is unable so
+ to do; and therefore I think it most dangerous to make the adventure. For
+ the encouragement of a first victory to an enemy, and the discouragement
+ of being beaten, to the invaded, may draw after it a most perilous
+ consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Great difference I know there is, and a diverse consideration to be had,
+ between such a country as France is, strengthened with many fortified
+ places; and this of ours, where our ramparts are but the bodies of men.
+ But I say that an army to be transported over sea, and to be landed again
+ in an enemy's country, and the place left to the choice of the invader,
+ cannot be resisted on the coast of England, without a fleet to impeach it;
+ no, nor on the coast of France, or any other country; except every creek,
+ port, or sandy bay, had a powerful army, in each of them, to make
+ opposition. For let the supposition be granted that Kent is able to
+ furnish twelve thousand foot, and that those twelve thousand be layed in
+ the three best landing-places within that country, to wit, three thousand
+ at Margat, three thousand at the Nesse, and six thousand at Foulkstone,
+ that is, somewhat equally distant from them both; as also that two of
+ these troops (unless some other order be thought more fit) be directed to
+ strengthen the third, when they shall see the enemies' fleet to head
+ towards it: I say, that notwithstanding this provision, if the enemy,
+ setting sail from the Isle of Wight, in the first watch of the night, and
+ towing their long boats at their sterns, shall arrive by dawn of day at
+ the Nesse, and thrust their army on shore there, it will be hard for those
+ three thousand that are at Margat (twenty-and-four long miles from
+ thence), to come time enough to reinforce their fellows at the Nesse. Nay,
+ how shall they at Foulkstone be able to do it, who are nearer by more than
+ half the way? seeing that the enemy, at his first arrival, will either
+ make his entrance by force, with three or four shot of great artillery,
+ and quickly put the first three thousand that are entrenched at the Nesse
+ to run, or else give them so much to do that they shall be glad to send
+ for help to Foulkstone, and perhaps to Margat, whereby those places will
+ be left bare. Now let us suppose that all the twelve thousand Kentish
+ soldiers arrive at the Nesse, ere the enemy can be ready to disembarque
+ his army, so that he will find it unsafe to land in the face of so many
+ prepared to withstand him, yet must we believe that he will play the best
+ of his own game (having liberty to go which way he list), and under covert
+ of the night, set sail towards the east, where what shall hinder him to
+ take ground either at Margat, the Downes, or elsewhere, before they, at
+ the Nesse, can be well aware of his departure? Certainly there is nothing
+ more easy than to do it. Yea, the like may be said of Weymouth, Purbeck,
+ Poole, and of all landing-places on the south-west. For there is no man
+ ignorant, that ships without putting themselves out of breath, will easily
+ outrun the souldiers that coast them. 'LES ARMEES NE VOLENT POINT EN
+ POSTE;'&mdash;'Armies neither flye, nor run post,' saith a marshal of
+ France. And I know it to be true, that a fleet of ships may be seen at
+ sunset, and after it at the Lizard, yet by the next morning they may
+ recover Portland, whereas an army of foot shall not be able to march it in
+ six dayes. Again, when those troops lodged on the sea-shores, shall be
+ forced to run from place to place in vain, after a fleet of ships, they
+ will at length sit down in the midway, and leave all at adventure. But say
+ it were otherwise, that the invading enemy will offer to land in some such
+ place, where there shall be an army of ours ready to receive him; yet it
+ cannot be doubted, but that when the choice of all our trained bands, and
+ the choice of our commanders and captains, shall be drawn together (as
+ they were at Tilbury in the year 1588) to attend the person of the prince,
+ and for the defence of the city of London; they that remain to guard the
+ coast can be of no such force as to encounter an army like unto that
+ wherewith it was intended that the Prince of Parma should have landed in
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For end of this digression, I hope that this question shall never come to
+ trial; his majestie's many moveable forts will forbid the experience. And
+ although the English will no less disdain that any nation under heaven can
+ do, to be beaten, upon their own ground, or elsewhere, by a foreign enemy;
+ yet to entertain those that shall assail us with their own beef in their
+ bellies, and before they eat of our Kentish capons, I take it to be the
+ wisest way; to do which his majesty, after God, will employ his good ships
+ on the sea, and not trust in any intrenchment upon the shore."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The introduction of steam as a propelling power at sea, has added tenfold
+ weight to these arguments of Raleigh, On the other hand, a
+ well-constructed system of railways, especially of coast-lines, aided by
+ the operation or the electric telegraph, would give facilities for
+ concentrating a defensive army to oppose an enemy on landing, and for
+ moving troops from place to place in observation of the movements of the
+ hostile fleet, such as would have astonished Sir Walter even more than the
+ sight of vessels passing rapidly to and fro without the aid of wind or
+ tide. The observation of the French marshal, whom he quotes, is now no
+ longer correct. Armies can be made to pass from place to place almost with
+ the speed of wings, and far more rapidly than any post-travelling that was
+ known in the Elizabethan or any other age. Still, the presence of a
+ sufficient armed force at the right spot, at the right time, can never be
+ made a matter of certainty; and even after the changes that have taken
+ place, no one can doubt but that the policy of Raleigh is that which
+ England should ever seek to follow in defensive war. At the time of the
+ Armada, that policy certainly saved the country, if not from conquest, at
+ least from deplorable calamities. If indeed the enemy had landed, we may
+ be sure that he would have been heroically opposed. But history shows us
+ so many examples of the superiority of veteran troops over new levies,
+ however numerous and brave, that without disparaging our countrymen's
+ soldierly merits, we may well be thankful that no trial of them was then
+ made on English land. Especially must we feel this, when we contrast the
+ high military genius of the Prince of Parma, who would have headed the
+ Spaniards, with the imbecility of the Earl of Leicester, to whom the
+ deplorable spirit of favouritism, which formed the greatest blemish in
+ Elizabeth's character, had then committed the chief command of the English
+ armies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ships of the royal navy at this time amounted to no more than
+ thirty-six; but the most serviceable merchant vessels were collected from
+ all the ports of the country; and the citizens of London, Bristol, and the
+ other great seats of commerce, showed as liberal a zeal in equipping and
+ manning vessels as the nobility and gentry displayed in mustering forces
+ by land. The seafaring population of the coast, of every rank and station,
+ was animated by the same ready spirit; and the whole number of seamen who
+ came forward to man the English fleet was 17,472. The number of the ships
+ that were collected was 191; and the total amount of their tonnage 31,985.
+ There was one ship in the fleet (the Triumph) of 1100 tons, one of 1000,
+ one of 900, two of 800 each, three of 600, five of 600, five of 400, six
+ of 300, six of 250, twenty of 200, and the residue of inferior burden.
+ Application was made to the Dutch for assistance; and, as Stows expresses
+ it, "The Hollanders came roundly in, with threescore sail, brave ships of
+ war, fierce and full of spleen, not so much for England's aid, as in just
+ occasion for their own defence; these men foreseeing the greatness of the
+ danger that might ensue, if the Spaniards should chance to win the day and
+ get the mastery over them; in due regard whereof their manly courage was
+ inferior to none."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have more minute information of the numbers and equipment of the
+ hostile forces than we have of our own. In the first volume of Hakluyt's
+ "Voyages," dedicated to Lord Effingham, who commanded against the Armada,
+ there is given (from the contemporary foreign writer, Meteran) a more
+ complete and detailed catalogue than has perhaps ever appeared of a
+ similar armament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A very large and particular description of this navie was put in print
+ and published by the Spaniards; wherein was set downe the number, names,
+ and burthens of the shippes, the number of mariners and soldiers
+ throughout the whole fleete; likewise the quantitie of their ordinance, of
+ their armour of bullets, of match, of gun-poulder, of victuals, and of all
+ their navall furniture, was in the saide description particularized. Unto
+ all these were added the names of the governours, captaines, noblemen, and
+ gentlemen voluntaries, of whom there was so great a multitude, that scarce
+ was there any family of accompt, or any one principall man throughout all
+ Spaine, that had not a brother, sonne, or kinsman in that fleete; who all
+ of them were in good hope to purchase unto themselves in that navie (as
+ they termed it) invincible, endless glory and renown, and to possess
+ themselves of great seigniories and riches in England, and in the Low
+ Countreys. But because the said description was translated and published
+ out of Spanish into divers other languages, we will here only make an
+ abridgement or brief rehearsal thereof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Portugal furnished and set foorth under the conduct of the Duke of Medina
+ Sidonia, generall of the fleete, ten galeons, two zabraes, 1300 mariners,
+ 3300 souldiers, 300 great pieces, with all requisite furniture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Biscay, under the conduct of John Martines de Ricalde, admiral of the
+ whole fleete, set forth tenne galeons, four pataches, 700 mariners, 2000
+ souldiers, 260 great pieces, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Guipusco, under the conduct of Michael de Orquendo, tenne galeons, four
+ pataches, 700 mariners, 2000 souldiers, 310 great pieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Italy with the Levant Islands, under Martine de Vertendona, ten galeons,
+ 800 mariners, 2000 souldiers, 310 great pieces, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Castile, under Diego Flores de Valdez, fourteen galeons, two pataches,
+ 1700 mariners, 2400 souldiers, and 388 great pieces, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Andaluzia, under the conduct of Petro de Valdez, ten galeons, one
+ patache, 800 mariners, 2400 souldiers, 280 great pieces, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Item, under the conduct of John Lopez de Medina, twenty-three great
+ Flemish hulkes, with 700 mariners, 3200 souldiers, and 400 great pieces,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Item, under Hugo de Moncada, fours galliasses, containing 1200
+ gally-slaves, 460 mariners, 870 souldiers, 200 great pieces, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Item, under Diego de Mandrana, fours gallies of Portugall with 888
+ gally-slaves, 360 mariners, twenty great pieces, and other requisite
+ furniture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Item, under Anthonie de Mendoza, twenty-two pataches and zabraes, with
+ 574 mariners, 488 souldiers, and 193 great pieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Besides the ships aforementioned, there were twenty caravels rowed with
+ oares, being appointed to perform necessary services under the greater
+ ships, insomuch that all the ships appertayning to this navie amounted
+ unto the summe of 150, eche one being sufficiently provided of furniture
+ and victuals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The number of mariners in the saide fleete were above 8000, of slaves
+ 2088, of souldiers 20,000 (besides noblemen and gentlemen voluntaries), of
+ great cast pieces 2600. The aforesaid ships were of an huge and incredible
+ capacitie and receipt: for the whole fleete was large enough to contains
+ the burthen of 60,000 tunnes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The galeons were 64 in number, being of an huge bignesse, and very
+ flately built, being of marveilous force also, and so high, that they
+ resembled great castles, most fit to defend themselves and to withstand
+ any assault, but in giving any other ships the encounter farr inferiour
+ unto the English and Dutch ships, which can with great dexteritie weild
+ and turne themselves at all assayes. The upperworke of the said galeons
+ was of thicknesse and strength sufficient to bear off musket-shot. The
+ lower works and the timbers thereof were out of measure strong, being
+ framed of plankes and ribs fours or five foote in thicknesse, insomuch
+ that no bullets could pierce them, but such as were discharged hard at
+ hand; which afterward prooved true, for a great number of bullets were
+ found to sticke fast within the massie substance of those thicke plankes.
+ Great and well pitched cables were twined about the masts of their
+ shippes, to strengthen them against the battery of shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The galliasses were of such bignesse, that they contained within them
+ chambers, chapels, turrets, pulpits, and other commodities of great
+ houses. The galliasses were rowed with great oares, there being in eche
+ one of them 300 slaves for the same purpose and were able to do great
+ service with the force of their ordinance. All these, together with the
+ residue aforenamed, were furnished and beautified with trumpets,
+ streamers, banners, warlike ensignes, and other such like ornaments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Their pieces of brazen ordinance were 1600, and of yron 1000.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The bullets thereto belonging were 120 thousand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Item of gun-poulder, 5600 quintals. Of matche, 1200 quintals. Of muskets
+ and kaleivers, 7000. Of haleberts and partisans, 10,000.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Moreover they had great store of canons, double-canons, culverings and
+ field-pieces for land services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Likewise they were provided of all instruments necessary on land to
+ conveigh and transport their furniture from place to place; as namely of
+ carts, wheeles, wagons, &amp;c. Also they had spades, mattocks, and
+ baskets, to set pioners to works. They had in like sort great store of
+ mules and horses, and whatsoever else was requisite for a land-armie. They
+ were so well stored of biscuit, that for the space of halfe a yeere, they
+ might allow eche person in the whole fleete halfe a quintall every month;
+ whereof the whole summe amounteth unto an hundreth thousand quintals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Likewise of wine they had 147 thousand pipes, sufficient also for halfe a
+ yeeres expedition. Of bacon, 6500 quintals. Of cheese, three thousand
+ quintals. Besides fish, rise, beanes, pease, oils, vinegar, &amp;c.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Moreover they had 12,000 pipes of fresh water, and all other necessary
+ provision, as, namely, candles, lanternes, lampes, sailes, hempe,
+ oxe-hides, and lead to stop holes that should be made with the battery of
+ gun-shot. To be short, they brought all things expedient, either for a
+ fleete by sea, or for an armie by land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This navie (as Diego Pimentelli afterward confessed) was esteemed by the
+ king himselfe to containe 32,000 persons, and to cost him every day 30
+ thousand ducates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There were in the said navie five terzaes of Spaniards (which terzaes the
+ Frenchmen call regiments), under the command of five governours, termed by
+ the Spaniards masters of the field, and amongst the rest there were many
+ olde and expert souldiers chosen out of the garisons of Sicilie, Naples,
+ and Tercera. Their captaines or colonels were Diego Pimentelli, Don
+ Francisco de Toledo, Don Alonco de Lucon, Don Nicolas de Isla, Don
+ Augustin de Mexia; who had each of them thirty-two companies under their
+ conduct. Besides the which companies, there were many bands also of
+ Castilians and Portugals, every one of which had their peculiar
+ governours, captains, officers, colours, and weapons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While this huge armada was making ready in the southern ports of the
+ Spanish dominions, the Prince of Parma, with almost incredible toil and
+ skill, collected a squadron of war-ships at Dunkirk, and his flotilla of
+ other ships and of flat-bottomed boats for the transport to England of the
+ picked troops, which were designed to be the main instruments in subduing
+ England. Thousands of workmen were employed, night and day, in the
+ construction of these vessels, in the ports of Flanders and Brabant. One
+ hundred of the kind called hendes, built at Antwerp, Bruges, and Ghent,
+ and laden with provision and ammunition, together with sixty flat-bottomed
+ boats, each capable of carrying thirty horses, were brought, by means of
+ canals and fosses, dug expressly for the purpose, to Nieuport and Dunkirk.
+ One hundred smaller vessels were equipped at the former place, and
+ thirty-two at Dunkirk, provided with twenty thousand empty barrels, and
+ with materials for making pontoons, for stopping up the harbours, and
+ raising forts and entrenchments. The army which these vessels were
+ designed to convey to England amounted to thirty thousand strong, besides
+ a body of four thousand cavalry, stationed at Courtroi, composed chiefly
+ of the ablest veterans of Europe; invigorated by rest, (the siege of Sluys
+ having been the only enterprise in which they were employed during the
+ last campaign,) and excited by the hopes of plunder and the expectation of
+ certain conquest. [Davis's Holland, vol. ii. p. 219.] And "to this great
+ enterprise and imaginary conquest, divers princes and noblemen came from
+ divers countries; out of Spain came the Duke of Pestrana, who was said to
+ be the son of Ruy Gomez de Silva, but was held to be the king's bastard;
+ the Marquis of Bourgou, one of the Archduke Ferdinand's sons, by
+ Philippina Welserine; Don Vespasian Gonzaga, of the house of Mantua, a
+ great soldier, who had been viceroy in Spain; Giovanni de Medici, Bastard
+ of Florence; Amedo, Bastard of Savoy, with many such like, besides others
+ of meaner quality." [Grimstone, cited in Southey.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip had been advised by the deserter, Sir William Stanley, not to
+ attack England in the first instance, but first to effect a landing and
+ secure a strong position in Ireland; his admiral, Santa Cruz, had
+ recommended him to make sure, in the first instance, of some large harbour
+ on the coast of Holland or Zealand, where the Armada, having entered the
+ Channel, might find shelter in case of storm, and whence it could sail
+ without difficulty for England; but Philip rejected both these counsels,
+ and directed that England itself should be made the immediate object of
+ attack; and on the 20th of May the Armada left the Tagus, in the pomp and
+ pride of supposed invincibility, and amidst the shouts of thousands, who
+ believed that England was already conquered. But steering to the
+ northward, and before it was clear of the coast of Spain, the Armada, was
+ assailed by a violent storm, and driven back with considerable damage to
+ the ports of Biscay and Galicia. It had, however, sustained its heaviest
+ loss before it left the Tagus, in the death of the veteran admiral Santa
+ Cruz, who had been destined to guide it against England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This experienced sailor, notwithstanding his diligence and success, had
+ been unable to keep pace with the impatient ardour of his master. Philip
+ II. had reproached him with his dilatoriness, and had said with ungrateful
+ harshness, "You make an ill return for all my kindness to you." These
+ words cut the veteran's heart, and proved fatal to Santa Cruz. Overwhelmed
+ with fatigue and grief, he sickened and died. Philip II. had replaced him
+ by Alonzo Perez de Gusman, Duke of Medina Sidonia, one of the most
+ powerful of the Spanish grandees, but wholly unqualified to command such
+ an expedition. He had, however, as his lieutenants, two sea men of proved
+ skill and bravery, Juan de Martinez Recalde of Biscay, and Miguel Orquendo
+ of Guipuzcoa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The report of the storm which had beaten back the Armada reached England
+ with much exaggeration, and it was supposed by some of the queen's
+ counsellors that the invasion would now be deferred to another year. But
+ Lord Howard of Effingham, the lord high-admiral of the English fleet,
+ judged more wisely that the danger was not yet passed, and, as already
+ mentioned, had the moral courage to refuse to dismantle his principal
+ ships, though he received orders to that effect. But it was not Howard's
+ design to keep the English fleet in costly inaction, and to wait patiently
+ in our own harbours, till the Spaniards had recruited their strength, and
+ sailed forth again to attack us. The English seamen of that age (like
+ their successors) loved to strike better than to parry, though, when
+ emergency required, they could be patient and cautious in their bravery.
+ It was resolved to proceed to Spain, to learn the enemy's real condition,
+ and to deal him any blow for which there might be opportunity. In this
+ bold policy we may well believe him to have been eagerly seconded by those
+ who commanded under him. Howard and Drake sailed accordingly to Corunna,
+ hoping to surprise and attack some part of the Armada in that harbour; but
+ when near the coast of Spain, the north wind, which had blown up to that
+ time, veered suddenly to the south; and fearing that the Spaniards might
+ put to sea and pass him unobserved, Howard returned to the entrance of the
+ Channel, where he cruised for some time on the look-out for the enemy. In
+ part of a letter written by him at this period, he speaks of the
+ difficulty of guarding so large a breadth of sea&mdash;a difficulty that
+ ought not to be forgotten when modern schemes of defence against hostile
+ fleets from the south are discussed. "I myself," he wrote, "do lie in the
+ midst of the Channel, with the greatest force; Sir Francis Drake hath
+ twenty ships, and four or five pinnaces, which lie towards Ushant; and Mr.
+ Hawkins, with as many more, lieth towards Scilly. Thus we are fain to do,
+ or else with this wind they might pass us by, and we never the wiser. The
+ SLEEVE is another manner of thing than it was taken for: we find it by
+ experience and daily observation to be 100 miles over: a large room for me
+ to look unto!" But after some time further reports that the Spaniards were
+ inactive in their harbour, where they were suffering severely from
+ sickness, caused Howard also to relax in his vigilance; and he returned to
+ Plymouth with the greater part of his fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 12th of July, the Armada having completely refitted, sailed again
+ for the Channel, and reached it without obstruction or observation by the
+ English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The design of the Spaniards was, that the Armada should give them, at
+ least for a time, the command of the sea, and that it should join the
+ squadron which Parma had collected, off Calais. Then, escorted by an
+ overpowering naval force, Parma and his army were to embark in their
+ flotilla, and cross the sea to England where they were to be landed,
+ together with the troops which the Armada brought from the ports of Spain.
+ The scheme was not dissimilar to one formed against England a little more
+ than two centuries afterwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Napoleon, in 1805, waited with his army and flotilla at Boulogne,
+ looking for Villeneuve to drive away the English cruisers, and secure him
+ a passage across the Channel, so Parma, in 1588, waited for Medina Sidonia
+ to drive away the Dutch and English squadrons that watched his flotilla,
+ and to enable his veterans to cross the sea to the land that they were to
+ conquer. Thanks to Providence, in each case England's enemy waited in
+ vain!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the numbers of sail which the queen's government, and the
+ patriotic zeal of volunteers, had collected for the defence of England
+ exceeded the number of sail in the Spanish fleet, the English ships were,
+ collectively, far inferior in size to their adversaries; their aggregate
+ tonnage being less by half than that of the enemy. In the number of guns,
+ and weight of metal, the disproportion was still greater. The English
+ admiral was also obliged to subdivide his force; and Lord Henry Seymour,
+ with forty of the best Dutch and English ships, was employed in blockading
+ the hostile ports in Flanders, and in preventing the Prince of Parma from
+ coming out of Dunkirk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The orders of King Philip to the Duke de Medina Sidonia were, that he
+ should, on entering the Channel, keep near the French coast, and, if
+ attacked by the English ships, avoid an action, and steer on to Calais
+ roads, where the Prince of Parma's squadron was to join him. The hope of
+ surprising and destroying the English fleet in Plymouth, led the Spanish
+ admiral to deviate from these orders, and to stand across to the English
+ shore; but, on finding that Lord Howard was coming out to meet him, he
+ resumed the original plan, and determined to bend his way steadily towards
+ Calais and Dunkirk, and to keep merely on the defensive against such
+ squadrons of the English as might come up with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on Saturday, the 20th of July, that Lord Effingham came in sight of
+ his formidable adversaries. The Armada was drawn up in form of a crescent,
+ which from horn to horn measured some seven miles. There was a south-west
+ wind; and before it the vast vessels sailed slowly on. The English let
+ them pass by; and then, following in the rear, commenced an attack on
+ them. A running fight now took place, in which some of the best ships of
+ the Spaniards were captured; many more received heavy damage; while the
+ English vessels, which took care not to close with their huge antagonists,
+ but availed themselves of their superior celerity in tacking and
+ manoeuvring, suffered little comparative loss. Each day added not only to
+ the spirit, but to the number of Effingham's force. Raleigh, Oxford,
+ Cumberland, and Sheffield joined him; and "the gentlemen of England hired
+ ships from all parts at their own charge, and with one accord came
+ flocking thither as to a set field, where glory was to be attained, and
+ faithful service performed unto their prince and their country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Raleigh justly praises the English admiral for his skilful tactics. He
+ says, [Historie of the World, p. 791.] "Certainly, he that will happily
+ perform a fight at sea, must be skillful in making choice of vessels to
+ fight in; he must believe that there is more belonging to a good
+ man-of-war, upon the waters, than great daring; and must know that there
+ is a great deal of difference between fighting loose or at large and
+ grappling. The guns of a slow ship pierce as well, and make as great
+ holes, as those in a swift. To clap ships together, without consideration,
+ belongs rather to a madman than to a man of war; for by such an ignorant
+ bravery was Peter Strossie lost at the Azores, when he fought against the
+ Marquis of Santa Cruza. In like sort had the Lord Charles Howard, admiral
+ of England, been lost in the year 1588, if he had not been better advised,
+ than a great many malignant fools were, that found fault with his
+ demeanour. The Spaniards had an army aboard them, and he had none; they
+ had more ships than he had, and of higher building and charging; so that,
+ had he entangled himself with those great and powerful vessels, he had
+ greatly endangered this kingdom of England. For, twenty men upon the
+ defences are equal to a hundred that board and enter; whereas then,
+ contrariwise, the Spaniards had a hundred, for twenty of ours, to defend
+ themselves withall. But our admiral knew his advantage, and held it: which
+ had he not done, he had not been worthy to have held his head."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spanish admiral also showed great judgment and firmness in following
+ the line of conduct that had been traced out for him; and on the 27th of
+ July he brought his fleet unbroken, though sorely distressed, to anchor in
+ Calais roads. But the King of Spain, had calculated ill the number and
+ activity of the English and Dutch fleets; as the old historian expresses
+ it, "It seemeth that the Duke of Parma and the Spaniards grounded upon a
+ vain and presumptuous expectation, that all the ships of England and of
+ the Low Countreys would at the first sight of the Spanish and Dunkerk
+ navie have betaken themselves to flight, yeelding them sea-room, and
+ endeavouring only to defend themselves, their havens, and sea-coasts from
+ invasion. Wherefore their intent and purpose was, that the Duke of Parma,
+ in his small and flat-bottomed ships should, as it were, under the shadow
+ and wing of the Spanish fleet, convey over all his troupes, armour, and
+ warlike provisions, and with their forces so united, should invade
+ England; or, while the English fleet were busied in fight against the
+ Spanish, should enter upon any part of the coast which he thought to be
+ most convenient. Which invasion (as the captives afterwards confessed) the
+ Duke of Parma thought first to have attempted by the river of Thames; upon
+ the banks whereof, having at the first arrivall landed twenty or thirty
+ thousand of his principall souldiers, he supposed that he might easily
+ have wonne the citie of London; both because his small shippes should have
+ followed and assisted his land-forces, and also for that the citie itselfe
+ was but meanely fortified and easie to overcome, by reason of the
+ citizens' delicacie and discontinuance from the warres, who, with
+ continuall and constant labour, might be vanquished, if they yielded not
+ at the first assault." [Hakluyt's Voyages, vol. i. 601.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the English and Dutch found ships and mariners enough to keep the
+ Armada itself in check, and at the same time to block up Parma's flotilla.
+ The greater part of Seymour's squadron left its cruising ground off
+ Dunkirk to join the English admiral off Calais; but the Dutch manned about
+ five-and-thirty sail of good ships, with a strong force of soldiers on
+ board, all well seasoned to the sea-service, and with these they blockaded
+ the Flemish ports that were in Parma's power. Still it was resolved by the
+ Spanish admiral and the prince to endeavour to effect a junction, which
+ the English seamen were equally resolute to prevent: and bolder measures
+ on our side now became necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Armada lay off Calais, with its largest ships ranged outside, "like
+ strong castles fearing no assault; the lesser placed in the middle ward."
+ The English admiral could not attack them in their position without great
+ disadvantage, but on the night of the 29th he sent eight fire-ships among
+ them, with almost equal effect to that of the fire-ships which the Greeks
+ so often employed against the Turkish fleets in their late war of
+ independence. The Spaniards cut their cables and put to sea in confusion.
+ One of the largest galeasses ran foul of another vessel and was stranded.
+ The rest of the fleet was scattered about on the Flemish coast, and when
+ the morning broke, it was with difficulty and delay that they obeyed their
+ admiral's signal to range themselves round him near Gravelines. Now was
+ the golden opportunity for the English to assail them, and prevent them
+ from ever letting loose Parma's flotilla against England; and nobly was
+ that opportunity used. Drake and Fenner were the first English captains
+ who attacked the unwieldy leviathans: then came Fenton, Southwell, Burton,
+ Cross, Raynor, and then the lord admiral, with Lord Thomas Howard and Lord
+ Sheffield. The Spaniards only thought of forming and keeping close
+ together, and were driven by the English past Dunkirk, and far away from
+ the Prince of Parma, who in watching their defeat from the coast, must, as
+ Drake expressed it, have chafed like a bear robbed of her whelps. This was
+ indeed the last and the decisive battle between the two fleets. It is,
+ perhaps, best described in the very words of the contemporary writer as we
+ may read them in Hakluyt. [Vol. i. p. 602.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon the 29th of July in the morning, the Spanish fleet after the forsayd
+ tumult, having arranged themselves againe into order, were, within sight
+ of Greveling, most bravely and furiously encountered by the English; where
+ they once again got the wind of the Spaniards; who suffered themselves to
+ be deprived of the commodity of the place in Calais road, and of the
+ advantage of the wind neer unto Dunkerk, rather than they would change
+ their array or separate their forces now conjoyned and united together,
+ standing only upon their defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And howbeit there were many excellent and warlike ships in the English
+ fleet, yet scarce were there 22 or 23 among them all, which matched 90 of
+ the Spanish ships in the bigness, or could conveniently assault them.
+ Wherefore the English ships using their prerogative of nimble steerage,
+ whereby they could turn and wield themselves with the wind which way they
+ listed, came often times very near upon the Spaniards, and charged them so
+ sore, that now and then they were but a pike's length asunder: and so
+ continually giving them one broadside after another, they discharged all
+ their shot both great and small upon them, spending one whole day from
+ morning till night in that violent kind of conflict, untill such time as
+ powder and bullets failed them. In regard of which want they thought it
+ convenient not to pursue the Spaniards any longer, because they had many
+ great vantages of the English, namely, for the extraordinary bigness of
+ their ships, and also for that they were so neerley conjoyned, and kept
+ together in so good array, that they could by no meanes be fought withall
+ one to one. The English thought, therefore, that they had right well
+ acquitted themselves, in chasing the Spaniards first from Caleis, and then
+ from Dunkerk, and by that meanes to have hindered them from joyning with
+ the Duke of Parma his forces, and getting the wind of them, to have driven
+ them from their own coasts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Spaniards that day sustained great loss and damage, having many of
+ their shippes shot thorow and thorow, and they discharged likewise great
+ store of ordinance against the English; who, indeed, sustained some
+ hindrance, but not comparable to the Spaniard's loss: for they lost not
+ any one ship or person of account, for very diligent inquisition being
+ made, the English men all that time wherein the Spanish navy sayled upon
+ their seas, are not found to have wanted aboue one hundred of their
+ people: albeit Sir Francis Drake's ship was pierced with shot above forty
+ times, and his very cabben was twice shot thorow, and about the conclusion
+ of the fight, the bed of a certaine gentleman, lying weary thereupon, was
+ taken quite from under him with the force of a bullet. Likewise, as the
+ Earle of Northumberland and Sir Charles Blunt were at dinner upon a time,
+ the bullet of a demy-culverin brake thorow the middest of their cabben,
+ touched their feet, and strooke downe two of the standers by, with many
+ such accidents befalling the English shippes, which it were tedious to
+ rehearse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It reflects little credit on the English Government that the English fleet
+ was so deficiently supplied with ammunition, as to be unable to complete
+ the destruction of the invaders. But enough was done to ensure it. Many of
+ the largest Spanish ships were sunk or captured in the action of this day.
+ And at length the Spanish admiral, despairing of success, fled northward
+ with a southerly wind, in the hope of rounding Scotland, and so returning
+ to Spain without a farther encounter with the English fleet. Lord
+ Effingham left a squadron to continue the blockade of the Prince of
+ Parma's armament; but that wise general soon withdrew his troops to more
+ promising fields of action. Meanwhile the lord-admiral himself and Drake
+ chased the vincible Armada, as it was now termed, for some distance
+ northward; and then, when it seemed to bend away from the Scotch coast
+ towards Norway, it was thought best, in the words of Drake, "to leave them
+ to those boisterous and uncouth northern seas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sufferings and losses which the unhappy Spaniards sustained in their
+ flight round Scotland and Ireland, are well known. Of their whole Armada
+ only fifty-three shattered vessels brought back their beaten and wasted
+ crews to the Spanish coast which they had quitted in such pageantry and
+ pride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some passages from the writings of those who took part in the struggle,
+ have been already quoted; and the most spirited description of the defeat
+ of the Armada which ever was penned, may perhaps be taken from the letter
+ which our brave vice-admiral Drake wrote in answer to some mendacious
+ stories by which the Spaniards strove to hide their shame. Thus does he
+ describe the scenes in which he played so important a part: [See Strypo,
+ and the notes to the Life of Drake, in the "Biographia Britannica."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They were not ashamed to publish, in sundry languages in print, great
+ victories in words, which they pretended to have obtained against this
+ realm, and spread the same in a most false sort over all parts of France,
+ Italy, and elsewhere; when, shortly afterwards, it was happily manifested
+ in very deed to all nations, how their navy, which they termed invincible,
+ consisting of one hundred and forty sail of ships, not only of their own
+ kingdom, but strengthened with the greatest argosies, Portugal carracks,
+ Florentines, and large hulks of other countries, were by thirty of her
+ majesty's own ships of war, and a few of our own merchants, by the wise,
+ valiant, and advantageous conduct of the Lord Charles Howard, high-admiral
+ of England, beaten and shuffled together even from the Lizard in Cornwall,
+ first to Portland, when they shamefully left Don Pedro de Valdez with his
+ mighty ship; from Portland to Calais, where they lost Hugh de Moncado,
+ with the galleys of which he was captain; and from Calais driven with
+ squibs from their anchors, were chased out of the sight of England, round
+ about Scotland and Ireland. Where, for the sympathy of their religion,
+ hoping to find succour and assistance, a great part of them were crushed
+ against the rocks, and those others that landed, being very many in
+ number, were, notwithstanding, broken, slain, and taken; and so sent from
+ village to village, coupled in halters, to be shipped into England, where
+ her majesty, of her princely and invincible disposition, disdaining to put
+ them to death, and scorning either to retain or to entertain them, they
+ were all sent back again to their countries, to witness and recount the
+ worthy achievement of their invincible and dreadful navy. Of which the
+ number of soldiers, the fearful burthen of their ships, the commanders'
+ names of every squadron, with all others, their magazines of provision
+ were put in print, as an army and navy irresistible and disdaining
+ prevention: with all which their great and terrible ostentation, they did
+ not in all their sailing round about England so much as sink or take one
+ ship, bark, pinnace, or cockboat of ours, or even burn so much as one
+ sheep-cote on this land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588;
+ AND THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, A.D. 1704.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 1594. Henry IV. of France conforms to the Roman Catholic Church, and
+ ends the civil wars that had long desolated France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1598. Philip II. of Spain dies, leaving a ruined navy and an exhausted
+ kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1603. Death of Queen Elizabeth. The Scotch dynasty of the Stuarts succeeds
+ to the throne of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1619. Commencement of the Thirty Years' War in Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1624-1642. Cardinal Richelieu is minister of France. He breaks the power
+ of the nobility, reduces the Huguenots to complete subjection; and by
+ aiding the Protestant German princes in the latter part of the Thirty
+ Years' War, he humiliates France's ancient rival, Austria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1630. Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden, marches into Germany to the
+ assistance of the Protestants, who ware nearly crushed by the Austrian
+ armies. He gains several great victories, and, after his death, Sweden,
+ under his statesmen and generals, continues to take a leading part in the
+ war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1640. Portugal throws off the Spanish yoke: and the House of Braganza
+ begins to reign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1642. Commencement of the civil war in England between Charles I. and his
+ parliament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1648. The Thirty Years' War in Germany ended by the treaty of Westphalia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1653. Oliver Cromwell lord-protector of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1660. Restoration of the Stuarts to the English throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1661. Louis XIV. takes the administration of affairs in France into his
+ own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1667-1668. Louis XVI. makes war in Spain, and conquers a large part of the
+ Spanish Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1672. Louis makes war upon Holland, and almost overpowers it, Charles II.
+ of England is his pensioner, and England helps the French in their attacks
+ upon Holland until 1674. Heroic resistance of the Dutch under the Prince
+ of Orange.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1674. Louis conquers Franche-Comte.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1679. Peace of Nimeguen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1681. Louis invades and occupies Alsace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1682. Accession of Peter the Great to the throne of Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1685. Louis commences a merciless persecution of his Protestant subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1688. The glorious Revolution in England. Expulsion of James II. William
+ of Orange is made King of England. James takes refuge at the French court,
+ and Louis undertakes to restore him. General war in the west of Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1691. Treaty of Ryswick. Charles XII. becomes King of Sweden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1700. Charles II. of Spain dies, having bequeathed his dominions to Philip
+ of Anjou, Louis XIV.'s grandson. Defeat of the Russians at Narva, by
+ Charles XII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1701. William III. forms a "Grand Alliance" of Austria, the Empire, the
+ United Provinces, England, and other powers, against France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1702. King William dies; but his successor, Queen Anne, adheres to the
+ Grand Alliance, and war is proclaimed against France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, 1704.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The decisive blow struck at Blenheim resounded through every
+ part of Europe: it at once destroyed the vast fabric of power
+ which it had taken Louis XIV., aided by the talents of Turenne,
+ and the genius of Vauban, so long to construct."&mdash;ALISON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Though more slowly moulded and less imposingly vast than the empire of
+ Napoleon, the power which Louis XIV. had acquired and was acquiring at the
+ commencement of the eighteenth century, was almost equally menacing to the
+ general liberties of Europe. If tested by the amount of permanent
+ aggrandisement which each procured for France, the ambition of the royal
+ Bourbon was more successful than were the enterprises of the imperial
+ Corsican. All the provinces that Bonaparte conquered, were rent again from
+ France within twenty years from the date when the very earliest of them
+ was acquired. France is not stronger by a single city or a single acre for
+ all the devastating wars of the Consulate and the Empire. But she still
+ possesses Franche-Comte, Alsace, and part of Flanders. She has still the
+ extended boundaries which Louis XIV. gave her. And the royal Spanish
+ marriages, a few years ago, proved clearly how enduring has been the
+ political influence which the arts and arms of France's "Grand Monarque"
+ obtained for her southward of the Pyrenees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Louis XIV. took the reins of government into his own hands, after the
+ death of Cardinal Mazarin, there was a union of ability with opportunity,
+ such as France had not seen since the days of Charlemagne. Moreover,
+ Louis's career was no brief one. For upwards of forty years, for a period
+ nearly equal to the duration of Charlemagne's reign, Louis steadily
+ followed an aggressive and a generally successful policy. He passed a long
+ youth and manhood of triumph, before the military genius of Marlborough
+ made him acquainted with humiliation and defeat. The great Bourbon lived
+ too long. He should not have outstayed our two English kings&mdash;one his
+ dependent, James II., the other his antagonist, William III. Had he died
+ in the year within which they died, his reign would be cited as unequalled
+ in the French annals for its prosperity. But he lived on to see his armies
+ beaten, his cities captured, and his kingdom wasted by disastrous war. It
+ is as if Charlemagne had survived to be defeated by the Northmen, and to
+ witness the misery and shame that actually fell to the lot of his
+ descendants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, Louis XIV. had forty years of success; and from the permanence of
+ their fruits we may judge what the results would have been if the last
+ fifteen years of his reign had been equally fortunate. Had it not been for
+ Blenheim, all Europe might at this day suffer under the effect of French
+ conquests resembling those of Alexander in extent, and those of the Romans
+ in durability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Louis XIV. began to govern, he found all the materials for a strong
+ government ready to his hand. Richelieu had completely tamed the turbulent
+ spirit of the French nobility, and had subverted the "imperium in imperio"
+ of the Huguenots. The faction of the Frondeurs in Mazarin's time had had
+ the effect of making the Parisian parliament utterly hateful and
+ contemptible in the eyes of the nation. The assemblies of the
+ States-General were obsolete. The royal authority alone remained. The King
+ was the State. Louis knew his position. He fearlessly avowed it, and he
+ fearlessly acted up to it. ["Quand Louis XIV. dit, 'L'etat, c'est moi:' il
+ n'y eut dans cette parole ni enflure, ni vanterie, mais la simple
+ enonciation d'un fait."&mdash;MICHELET, HISTOIRE MODERNE vol. ii. p. 106.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not only was his government a strong one, but the country which he
+ governed was strong: strong in its geographical situation, in the
+ compactness of its territory, in the number and martial spirit of its
+ inhabitants, and in their complete and undivided nationality. Louis had
+ neither a Hungary nor an Ireland in his dominions, and it was not till
+ late in his reign, when old age had made his bigotry more gloomy, and had
+ given fanaticism the mastery over prudence, that his persecuting
+ intolerance caused the civil war in the Cevennes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like Napoleon in after-times, Louis XIV. saw clearly that the great wants
+ of France were "ships, colonies, and commerce." But Louis did more than
+ see these wants: by the aid of his great minister, Colbert, he supplied
+ them. One of the surest proofs of the genius of Louis was his skill in
+ finding out genius in others, and his promptness in calling it into
+ action. Under him, Louvois organized, Turenne, Conde, Villars and Berwick,
+ led the armies of France; and Vauban fortified her frontiers. Throughout
+ his reign, French diplomacy was marked by skilfulness and activity, and
+ also by comprehensive far-sightedness, such as the representatives of no
+ other nation possessed. Guizot's testimony to the vigour that was
+ displayed through every branch of Louis XIV.'s government, and to the
+ extent to which France at present is indebted to him, is remarkable. He
+ says, that, "taking the public services of every kind, the finances, the
+ departments of roads and public works, the military administration, and
+ all the establishments which belong to every branch of administration,
+ there is not one that will not be found to have had its origin, its
+ development, or its greatest perfection, under the reign of Louis XIV."
+ [History of European Civilization, Lecture 13.] And he points out to us,
+ that "the government of Louis XIV. was the first that presented itself to
+ the eyes of Europe as a power acting upon sure grounds, which had not to
+ dispute its existence with inward enemies, but was at ease as to its
+ territory and its people, and solely occupied with the task of
+ administering government, properly so called. All the European governments
+ had been previously thrown into incessant wars, which deprived them of all
+ security as well as of all leisure, or so harassed by internal parties or
+ antagonists, that their time was passed in fighting for existence. The
+ government of Louis XIV. was the first to appear as a busy thriving
+ administration of affairs, as a power at once definitive and progressive,
+ which was not afraid to innovate, because it could reckon securely on the
+ future. There have been in fact very few governments equally innovating.
+ Compare it with a government of the same nature, the unmixed monarchy of
+ Philip II. in Spain; it was more absolute than that of Louis XIV., and yet
+ it was far less regular and tranquil. How did Philip II. succeed in
+ establishing absolute power in Spain? By stifling all activity in the
+ country, opposing himself to every species of amelioration, and rendering
+ the state of Spain completely stagnant. The government of Louis XIV., on
+ the contrary, exhibited alacrity for all sorts of innovations, and showed
+ itself favourable to the progress of letters, arts, wealth in short, of
+ civilization. This was the veritable cause of its preponderance in Europe,
+ which arose to such a pitch, that it became the type of a government not
+ only to sovereigns, but also to nations, during the seventeenth century."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While France was thus strong and united in herself, and ruled by a
+ martial, an ambitious, and (with all his faults) an enlightened and
+ high-spirited sovereign, what European power was there fit to cope with
+ her, or keep her in check?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to Germany, the ambitious projects of the German branch of Austria had
+ been entirely defeated, the peace of the empire had been restored, and
+ almost a new constitution formed, or an old revived, by the treaties of
+ Westphalia; NAY, THE IMPERIAL EAGLE WAS NOT ONLY FALLEN, BUT HER WINGS
+ WERE CLIPPED." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 378. Lord Bolingbroke's "Letters
+ on the Use of History," and his "Sketch of the History and State of
+ Europe," abound with remarks on Louis XIV. and his contemporaries, of
+ which the substance is as sound as the style is beautiful. Unfortunately,
+ like all his other works, they contain also a large proportion of
+ sophistry and misrepresentation. The best test to use before we adopt any
+ opinion or assertion of Bolingbroke's, is to consider whether in writing
+ it he was thinking either of Sir Robert Walpole or of Revealed Religion.
+ When either of these objects of his hatred was before his mind, he
+ scrupled at no artifice or exaggeration that; might serve the purpose of
+ his malignity. On most other occasions he may be followed with advantage,
+ as he always may be read with pleasure.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to Spain, the Spanish branch of the Austrian house had sunk equally
+ low. Philip II. left his successors a ruined monarchy. He left them
+ something worse; he left them his example and his principles of
+ government, founded in ambition, in pride, in ignorance, in bigotry, and
+ all the pedantry of state." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 378.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not, therefore, to be wondered at, that France, in the first war of
+ Louis XIV., despised the opposition of both branches of the once
+ predominant house of Austria. Indeed, in Germany the French king acquired
+ allies among the princes of the Empire against the emperor himself. He had
+ a still stronger support in Austria's misgovernment of her own subjects.
+ The words of Bolingbroke on this are remarkable, and some of them sound as
+ if written within the last three years. Bolingbroke says, "It was not
+ merely the want of cordial co-operation among the princes of the Empire
+ that disabled the emperor from acting with vigour in the cause of his
+ family then, nor that has rendered the house of Austria a dead weight upon
+ all her allies ever since. Bigotry, and its inseparable companion,
+ cruelty, as well as the tyranny and avarice of the court of Vienna,
+ created in those days, and has maintained in ours, almost a perpetual
+ diversion of the imperial arms from all effectual opposition to France. I
+ MEAN TO SPEAK OF THE TROUBLES IN HUNGARY. WHATEVER THEY BECAME IN THEIR
+ PROGRESS, THEY WERE CAUSED ORIGINALLY BY THE USERPATIONS AND PERSECUTIONS
+ OF THE EMPEROR; AND WHEN THE HUNGARIANS WERE CALLED REBELS FIRST, THEY
+ WERE CALLED SO FOR NO OTHER REASON THAN THIS, THAT THEY WOULD NOT BE
+ SLAVES. The dominion of the emperor being less supportable than that of
+ the Turks, this unhappy people opened a door to the latter to infest the
+ empire, instead of making their country, what it had been before, a
+ barrier against the Ottoman power. France became a sure though secret ally
+ of the Turks, as well as the Hungarians, and has found her account in it,
+ by keeping the emperor in perpetual alarms on that side, while she has
+ ravaged the Empire and the Low Countries on the other." [Bolingbroke, vol.
+ ii. p. 397.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, after having seen the imbecility of Germany and Spain against the
+ France of Louis XIV., we turn to the two only remaining European powers of
+ any importance at that time, to England and to Holland, we find the
+ position of our own country as to European politics, from 1660 to 1688,
+ most painful to contemplate. From 1660 to 1688, "England, by the return of
+ the Stuarts, was reduced to a nullity." The words are Michelet's,
+ [Histoire Moderne, vol. ii. p.106.] and though severe they are just. They
+ are, in fact, not severe enough: for when England, under her restored
+ dynasty of the Stuarts, did take any part in European politics, her
+ conduct, or rather her king's conduct, was almost invariably wicked and
+ dishonourable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bolingbroke rightly says that, "previous to the Revolution of 1688, during
+ the whole progress that Louis XIV. made in obtaining such exorbitant
+ power, as gave him well-grounded hopes of acquiring at last to his family
+ the Spanish monarchy, England had been either an idle spectator of what
+ passed on the continent, or a faint and uncertain ally against France, or
+ a warm and sure ally on her side, or a partial mediator between her and
+ the powers confederated together in their common defence. But though the
+ court of England submitted to abet the usurpations of France, and the King
+ of England stooped to be her pensioner, the crime was not national. On the
+ contrary, the nation cried out loudly against it even whilst it was being
+ committed." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii p. 418.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holland alone, of all the European powers, opposed from the very beginning
+ a steady and uniform resistance to the ambition and power of the French
+ king. It was against Holland that the fiercest attacks of France were
+ made, and though often apparently on the eve of complete success, they
+ were always ultimately baffled by the stubborn bravery of the Dutch, and
+ the heroism of their leader, William of Orange. When he became king of
+ England, the power of this country was thrown decidedly into the scale
+ against France; but though the contest was thus rendered less unequal,
+ though William acted throughout "with invincible firmness, like a patriot
+ and a hero," [Bolingbroke, vol, ii, p.404.] France had the general
+ superiority in every war and in every treaty: and the commencement of the
+ eighteenth century found the last league against her dissolved, all the
+ forces of the confederates against her dispersed, and many disbanded;
+ while France continued armed, with her veteran forces by sea and land
+ increased, and held in readiness to act on all sides, whenever the
+ opportunity should arise for seizing on the great prizes which, from the
+ very beginning of his reign, had never been lost sight of by her king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is not the place for any narrative of the first essay which Louis
+ XIV. made of his power in the war of 1667; of his rapid conquest of
+ Flanders and Franche-Comte; of the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, which "was
+ nothing more than a composition between the bully and the bullied;" [Ibid
+ p. 399.] of his attack on Holland in 1672; of the districts and
+ barrier-towns of the Spanish Netherlands which were secured to him by the
+ treaty of Nimeguen in 1678; of how, after this treaty, he "continued to
+ vex both Spain and the Empire, and to extend his conquests in the Low
+ Countries and on the Rhine, both by the pen and the sword; how he took
+ Luxembourg by force, stole Strasburg, and bought Casal;" of how the league
+ of Augsburg was formed against him in 1686, and the election of William of
+ Orange to the English throne in 1688, gave a new spirit to the opposition
+ which France encountered; of the long and chequered war that followed, in
+ which the French armies were generally victorious on the continent, though
+ his fleet was beaten at La Hogue, and his dependent, James II,, was
+ defeated at the Boyne, or of the treaty of Ryswick, which left France in
+ possession of Roussillon, Artois, and Strasburg, which gave Europe no
+ security against her claims on the Spanish succession, and which Louis
+ regarded as a mere truce, to gain breathing-time before a more decisive
+ struggle. It must be borne in mind that the ambition of Louis in these
+ wars was twofold. It had its immediate and its ulterior objects. Its
+ immediate object was to conquer and annex to France the neighbouring
+ provinces and towns that were most convenient for the increase of her
+ strength; but the ulterior object of Louis, from the time of his marriage
+ to the Spanish Infanta in 1659, was to acquire for the house of Bourbon
+ the whole empire of Spain. A formal renunciation of all right to the
+ Spanish succession had been made at the time of the marriage; but such
+ renunciations were never of any practical effect, and many casuists and
+ jurists of the age even held them to be intrinsically void, as time passed
+ on, and the prospect of Charles II. of Spain dying without lineal heirs
+ became more and more certain, so did the claims of the house of Bourbon to
+ the Spanish crown after his death become matters of urgent interest to
+ French ambition on the one hand, and to the other powers of Europe on the
+ other. At length the unhappy King of Spain died. By his will he appointed
+ Philip, Duke of Anjou, one of Louis XIV.'s grandsons, to succeed him on
+ the throne of Spain, and strictly forbade any partition of his dominions.
+ Louis well knew that a general European war would follow if he accepted
+ for his house the crown thus bequeathed. But he had been preparing for
+ this crisis throughout his reign. He sent his grandson into Spain as King
+ Philip V. of that country, addressing to him on his departure the
+ memorable words, "There are no longer any Pyrenees."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The empire, which now received the grandson of Louis as its king,
+ comprised, besides Spain itself, the strongest part of the Netherlands,
+ Sardinia, Sicily, Naples, the principality of Milan, and other possessions
+ in Italy, the Philippines and Marilla Islands in Asia, and, in the New
+ World, besides California and Florida the greatest part of Central and of
+ Southern America. Philip was well received in Madrid, where he was crowned
+ as King Philip V. in the beginning of 1701. The distant portions of his
+ empire sent in their adhesion; and the house of Bourbon, either by its
+ French or Spanish troops, now had occupation both of the kingdom of
+ Francis I., and of the fairest and amplest portion of the empire of the
+ great rival of Francis, Charles V.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Loud was the wrath of Austria, whose princes were the rival claimants of
+ the Bourbons for the empire of Spain. The indignation of William III.,
+ though not equally loud, was far more deep and energetic. By his exertions
+ a league against the house of Bourbon was formed between England, Holland,
+ and the Austrian Emperor, which was subsequently joined by the kings of
+ Portugal and Prussia, by the Duke of Savoy, and by Denmark. Indeed, the
+ alarm throughout Europe was now general and urgent. It was clear that
+ Louis aimed a consolidating France and the Spanish dominions into one
+ preponderating empire. At the moment when Philip was departing to take
+ possession of Spain, Louis had issued letters-patent in his favour to the
+ effect of preserving his rights to the throne of France. And Louis had
+ himself obtained possession of the important frontier of the Spanish
+ Netherlands, with its numerous fortified cities, which were given up to
+ his troops under pretence of securing them for the young King of Spain.
+ Whether the formal union of the two crowns was likely to take place
+ speedily or not, it was evident that the resources of the whole Spanish
+ monarchy were now virtually at the French king's disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peril that seemed to menace the empire, England, Holland, and the
+ other independent powers, is well summed up by Alison: "Spain had
+ threatened the liberties of Europe in the end of the sixteenth century,
+ France had all but overthrown them in the close of the seventeenth. What
+ hope was there of their being able to make head against them both, united
+ under such a monarch as Louis XIV.?" [Military History of the Duke of
+ Marlborough, p. 32.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our knowledge of the decayed state into which the Spanish power had
+ fallen, ought not to make us regard their alarms as chimerical. Spain
+ possessed enormous resources, and her strength was capable of being
+ regenerated by a vigorous ruler. We should remember what Alberoni
+ effected, even after the close of the War of Succession. By what that
+ minister did in a few years, we may judge what Louis XIV. would have done
+ in restoring the maritime and military power of that great country which
+ nature has so largely gifted, and which man's misgovernment has so
+ debased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The death of King William on the 8th of March, 1702, at first seemed
+ likely to paralyse the league against France, for "notwithstanding the
+ ill-success with which he made war generally, he was looked upon as the
+ sole centre of union that could keep together the great confederacy then
+ forming; and how much the French feared from his life, had appeared a few
+ years before, in the extravagant and indecent joy they expressed on a
+ false report of his death. A short time showed how vain the fears of some,
+ and the hopes of others were." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 445.] Queen Anne,
+ within three days after her accession, went down to the House of Lords,
+ and there declared her resolution to support the measures planned by her
+ predecessor, who had been "the great support, not only of these kingdoms,
+ but of all Europe." Anne was married to Prince George of Denmark, and by
+ her accession to the English throne the confederacy against Louis obtained
+ the aid of the troops of Denmark; but Anne's strong attachment to one of
+ her female friends led to far more important advantages to the
+ anti-Gallican confederacy, than the acquisition of many armies, for it
+ gave them MARLBOROUGH as their Captain-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are few successful commanders on whom Fame has shone so unwillingly
+ as upon John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, Prince of the Holy Roman
+ Empire,&mdash;victor of Blenheim, Ramilies, Oudenarde, and Malplaquet,&mdash;captor
+ of Liege, Bonn, Limburg, Landau, Ghent, Bruges, Antwerp, Oudenarde,
+ Ostend, Menin, Dendermonde, Ath, Lille, Tourney, Mons, Douay, Aire,
+ Bethune, and Bouchain; who never fought a battle that he did not win, and
+ never besieged a place that he did not take. Marlborough's own private
+ character is the cause of this. Military glory may, and too often does,
+ dazzle both contemporaries and posterity, until the crimes as well as the
+ vices of heroes are forgotten. But even a few stains of personal meanness
+ will dim a soldier's reputation irreparably; and Marlborough's faults were
+ of a peculiarly base and mean order. Our feelings towards historical
+ personages are in this respect like our feelings towards private
+ acquaintances. There are actions of that shabby nature, that, however much
+ they may be outweighed by a man's good deeds on a general estimate of his
+ character, we never can feel any cordial liking for the person who has
+ been guilty of them. Thus, with respect to the Duke of Marlborough, it
+ goes against our feelings to admire the man, who owed his first
+ advancement in life to the court-favour which he and his family acquired
+ through his sister becoming one of the mistresses of the Duke of York. It
+ is repulsive to know that Marlborough laid the foundation of his wealth by
+ being the paid lover of one of the fair and frail favourites of Charles
+ II. His treachery and ingratitude to his patron and benefactor, James II.,
+ stand out in dark relief, even in that age of thankless perfidy. He was
+ almost equally disloyal to his new master, King William; and a more
+ un-English act cannot be recorded than Godolphin's and Marlborough's
+ betrayal to the French court in 1694 of the expedition then designed
+ against Brest, an act of treason which caused some hundreds of English
+ soldiers and sailors to be helplessly slaughtered on the beach in Camaret
+ Bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is, however, only in his military career that we have now to consider
+ him; and there are very few generals, of either ancient or modern times,
+ whose campaigns will bear a comparison with those of Marlborough, either
+ for the masterly skill with which they were planned, or for the bold yet
+ prudent energy with which each plan was carried into execution.
+ Marlborough had served while young under Turenne, and had obtained the
+ marked praise of that great tactician. It would be difficult, indeed, to
+ name a single quality which a general ought to have, and with which
+ Marlborough was not eminently gifted. What principally attracted the
+ notice of contemporaries, was the imperturbable evenness of his spirit.
+ Voltaire [Siecle de Louis Quatorze.] says of him:&mdash;"He had, to a
+ degree above all other generals of his time, that calm courage in the
+ midst of tumult, that serenity of soul in danger, which the English call a
+ COOL HEAD (que les Anglais appellant COOL HEAD, TETE FROID), and it was
+ perhaps this quality, the greatest gift of nature for command, which
+ formerly gave the English so many advantages over the French in the plains
+ of Cressy, Poictiers, and Agincourt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ King William's knowledge of Marlborough's high abilities, though he knew
+ his faithlessness equally well, is said to have caused that sovereign in
+ his last illness to recommend Marlborough to his successor as the fittest
+ person to command her armies: but Marlborough's favour with the new queen
+ by means of his wife was so high, that he was certain of obtaining the
+ highest employment: and the war against Louis opened to him a glorious
+ theatre for the display of those military talents, which he had before
+ only had an opportunity of exercising in a subordinate character, and on
+ far less conspicuous scenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not only made captain-general of the English forces at home and
+ abroad, but such was the authority of England in the council of the Grand
+ Alliance, and Marlborough was so skilled in winning golden opinions from
+ all whom he met with, that, on his reaching the Hague, he was received
+ with transports of joy by the Dutch, and it was agreed by the heads of
+ that republic, and the minister of the emperor, that Marlborough should
+ have the chief command of all the allied armies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must indeed, in justice to Marlborough, be borne in mind, that mere
+ military skill was by no means all that was required of him in this
+ arduous and invidious station. Had it not been for his unrivalled patience
+ and sweetness of temper, and his marvellous ability in discerning the
+ character of those with whom he had to act, his intuitive perception of
+ those who were to be thoroughly trusted, and of those who were to be
+ amused with the mere semblance of respect and confidence,&mdash;had not
+ Marlborough possessed and employed, while at the head of the allied
+ armies, all the qualifications of a polished courtier and a great
+ statesman, he never would have led the allied armies to the Danube. The
+ Confederacy would not have held together for a single year. His great
+ political adversary, Bolingbroke, does him ample justice here.
+ Bolingbroke, after referring to the loss which King William's death seemed
+ to inflict on the cause of the Allies, observes that, "By his death the
+ Duke of Marlborough was raised to the head of the army, and, indeed, of
+ the Confederacy; where he, a new, a private man, a subject, acquired by
+ merit and by management, a more deciding influence, than high birth,
+ confirmed authority, and even the crown of Great Britain, had given to
+ King William. Not only all the parts of that vast machine, the Grand
+ Alliance, were kept more compact and entire; but a more rapid and vigorous
+ motion was given to the whole; and instead of languishing and disastrous
+ campaigns, we saw every scene of the war full of action. All those wherein
+ he appeared and many of those wherein he was not then an actor, but
+ abettor, however, of their action, were crowned with the most triumphant
+ success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I take with pleasure this opportunity of doing justice to that great man,
+ whose faults I knew, whose virtues I admired; and whose memory, as the
+ greatest general and as the greatest minister that our country, or perhaps
+ any other, has produced, I honour." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 445.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ War, was formally declared by the allies against France on the 4th of May,
+ 1702. The principal scenes of its operation were, at first, Flanders, the
+ Upper Rhine, and North Italy. Marlborough headed the allied troops in
+ Flanders during the first two years of the war, and took some towns from
+ the enemy, but nothing decisive occurred. Nor did any actions of
+ importance take place during this period, between the rival armies in
+ Italy. But in the centre of that line from north to south, from the mouth
+ of the Scheldt to the mouth of the Po, along which the war was carried on,
+ the generals of Louis XIV. acquired advantages in 1703, which threatened
+ one chief member of the Grand Alliance with utter destruction. France had
+ obtained the important assistance of Bavaria, as her confederate in the
+ war. The Elector of this powerful German state made himself master of the
+ strong fortress of Ulm, and opened a communication with the French armies
+ on the Upper Rhine. By this junction, the troops of Louis were enabled to
+ assail the Emperor in the very heart of Germany. In the autumn of the year
+ 1703, the combined armies of the Elector and French king completely
+ defeated the Imperialists in Bavaria; and in the following winter they
+ made themselves masters of the important cities of Augsburg and Passau.
+ Meanwhile the French army of the Upper Rhine and Moselle had beaten the
+ allied armies opposed to them, and taken Treves and Landau. At the same
+ time the discontents in Hungary with Austria again broke out into open
+ insurrection, so as to distract the attention, and complete the terror of
+ the Emperor and his council at Vienna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis XIV. ordered the next campaign to be commenced by his troops on a
+ scale of grandeur and with a boldness of enterprise, such as even
+ Napoleon's military schemes have seldom equalled. On the extreme left of
+ the line of the war, in the Netherlands, the French armies were to act
+ only on the defensive. The fortresses in the hands of the French there,
+ were so many and so strong that no serious impression seemed likely to be
+ made by the Allies on the French frontier in that quarter during one
+ campaign; and that one campaign was to give France such triumphs elsewhere
+ as would (it was hoped) determine the war. Large detachments were,
+ therefore, to be made from the French force in Flanders, and they were to
+ be led by Marshal Villeroy to the Moselle and Upper Rhine. The French army
+ already in the neighbourhood of those rivers was to march under Marshal
+ Tallard through the Black Forest, and join the Elector of Bavaria and the
+ French troops that were already with the Elector under Marshal Marsin.
+ Meanwhile the French army of Italy was to advance through the Tyrol into
+ Austria, and the whole forces were to combine between the Danube and the
+ Inn. A strong body of troops was to be despatched into Hungary, to assist
+ and organize the insurgents in that kingdom; and the French grand army of
+ the Danube was then, in collected and irresistible might, to march upon
+ Vienna, and dictate terms of peace to the Emperor. High military genius
+ was shown in the formation of this plan, but it was met and baffled by a
+ genius higher still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marlborough had watched, with the deepest anxiety, the progress of the
+ French arms on the Rhine and in Bavaria, and he saw the futility of
+ carrying on a war of posts and sieges in Flanders, while death-blows to
+ the empire were being dealt on the Danube. He resolved therefore to let
+ the war in Flanders languish for a year, while he moved with all the
+ disposable forces that he could collect to the central scenes of decisive
+ operations. Such a march was in itself difficult, but Marlborough had, in
+ the first instance, to overcome the still greater difficulty of obtaining
+ the consent and cheerful co-operation of the Allies, especially of the
+ Dutch, whose frontier it was proposed thus to deprive of the larger part
+ of the force which had hitherto been its protection. Fortunately, among
+ the many slothful, the many foolish, the many timid, and the not few
+ treacherous rulers, statesmen, and generals of different nations with whom
+ he had to deal, there were two men, eminent both in ability and integrity,
+ who entered fully into Marlborough's projects, and who, from the stations
+ which they occupied, were enabled materially to forward them. One of these
+ was the Dutch statesman Heinsius, who had been the cordial supporter of
+ King William, and who now, with equal zeal and good faith, supported
+ Marlborough in the councils of the Allies; the other was the celebrated
+ general Prince Eugene, whom the Austrian cabinet had recalled from the
+ Italian frontier, to take the command of one of the Emperor's armies in
+ Germany. To these two great men, and a few more, Marlborough communicated
+ his plan freely and unreservedly; but to the general councils of his
+ allies he only disclosed part, of his daring scheme. He proposed to the
+ Dutch that he should march from Flanders to the Upper Rhine and Moselle,
+ with the British troops and part of the Foreign auxiliaries, and commence
+ vigorous operations against the French armies in that quarter, whilst
+ General Auverquerque, with the Dutch and the remainder of the auxiliaries,
+ maintained a defensive war in the Netherlands. Having with difficulty
+ obtained the consent of the Dutch to this portion of his project, he
+ exercised the same diplomatic zeal, with the same success, in urging the
+ King of Prussia, and other princes of the empire, to increase the number
+ of the troops which they supplied, and to post them in places convenient
+ for his own intended movements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marlborough commenced his celebrated march on the 19th of May. The army,
+ which he was to lead, had been assembled by his brother, General
+ Churchill, at Bedburg, not far from Maestricht on the Meuse: it included
+ sixteen thousand English troops, and consisted of fifty-one battalions of
+ foot, and ninety-two squadrons of horse. Marlborough was to collect and
+ join with him on his march the troops of Prussia, Luneburg, and Hesse,
+ quartered on the Rhine, and eleven Dutch battalions that were stationed at
+ Rothweil. [Coxe's Life of Marlborough.] He had only marched a single day,
+ when the series of interruptions, complaints, and requisitions from the
+ other leaders of the Allies began, to which he seemed doomed throughout
+ his enterprise, and which would have caused its failure in the hands of
+ any one not gifted with the firmness and the exquisite temper of
+ Marlborough. One specimen of these annoyances and of Marlborough's mode of
+ dealing with them may suffice. On his encamping at Kupen, on the 20th, he
+ received an express from Auverquerque pressing him to halt, because
+ Villeroy, who commanded the French army in Flanders, had quitted the
+ lines, which he had been occupying, and crossed the Meuse at Namur with
+ thirty-six battalions and forty-five squadrons, and was threatening the
+ town of Huys. At the same time Marlborough received letters from the
+ Margrave of Baden and Count Wratislaw, who commanded the Imperialist
+ forces at Stollhoffen near the left bank of the Rhine, stating that
+ Tallard had made a movement, as if intending to cross the Rhine, and
+ urging him to hasten his march towards the lines of Stollhoffen.
+ Marlborough was not diverted by these applications from the prosecution of
+ his grand design. Conscious that the army of Villeroy would be too much
+ reduced to undertake offensive operations, by the detachments which had
+ already been made towards the Rhine, and those which must follow his own
+ march, he halted only a day to quiet the alarms of Auverquerque. To
+ satisfy also the margrave he ordered the troops of Hompesch and Bulow to
+ draw towards Philipsburg, though with private injunctions not to proceed
+ beyond a certain distance. He even exacted a promise to the same effect
+ from Count Wratislaw, who at this juncture arrived at the camp to attend
+ him during the whole campaign. [Coxe.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marlborough reached the Rhine at Coblentz, where he crossed that river,
+ and then marched along its right bank to Broubach and Mentz. His march,
+ though rapid, was admirably conducted, so as to save the troops from all
+ unnecessary fatigue; ample supplies of provisions were ready, and the most
+ perfect discipline was maintained. By degrees Marlborough obtained more
+ reinforcements from the Dutch and the other confederates, and he also was
+ left more at liberty by them to follow his own course. Indeed, before even
+ a blow was struck, his enterprise had paralysed the enemy, and had
+ materially relieved Austria from the pressure of the war. Villeroy, with
+ his detachments from the French-Flemish army, was completely bewildered by
+ Marlborough's movements; and, unable to divine where it was that the
+ English general meant to strike his blow, wasted away the early part of
+ the summer between Flanders and the Moselle without effecting anything.
+ ["Marshal Villeroy," says Voltaire, "who had wished to follow Marlborough
+ on his first marches, suddenly lost sight of him altogether, and only
+ learned where he really was, on hearing of his victory at Donauwert."&mdash;SIECLE
+ DE LOUIS XIV.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marshal Tallard, who commanded forty-five thousand men at Strasburg, and
+ who had been destined by Louis to march early in the year into Bavaria,
+ thought that Marlborough's march along the Rhine was preliminary to an
+ attack upon Alsace; and the marshal therefore kept his forty-five thousand
+ men back in order to support France in that quarter. Marlborough skilfully
+ encouraged his apprehensions by causing a bridge to be constructed across
+ the Rhine at Philipsburg, and by making the Landgrave of Hesse advance his
+ artillery at Manheim, as if for a siege of Landau. Meanwhile the Elector
+ of Bavaria and Marshal Marsin, suspecting that Marlborough's design might
+ be what it really proved to be, forbore to press upon the Austrians
+ opposed to them, or to send troops into Hungary; and they kept back so as
+ to secure their communications with France. Thus, when Marlborough, at the
+ beginning of June, left the Rhine and marched for the Danube, the numerous
+ hostile armies were uncombined, and unable to check him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With such skill and science had this enterprise been concerted, that at
+ the very moment when it assumed a specific direction, the enemy was no
+ longer enabled to render it abortive. As the march was now to be bent
+ towards the Danube, notice was given for the Prussians, Palatines, and
+ Hessians, who were stationed on the Rhine, to order their march so as to
+ join the main body in its progress. At the same time directions were sent
+ to accelerate the advance of the Danish auxiliaries, who were marching
+ from the Netherlands." [Coxe.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crossing the river Neckar, Marlborough marched in a south-eastern
+ direction to Mundelshene, where he had his first personal interview with
+ Prince Eugene, who was destined to be his colleague on so many glorious
+ fields. Thence, through a difficult and dangerous country, Marlborough
+ continued his march against the Bavarians, whom he encountered on the 2d
+ of July, on the heights of the Schullenberg near Donauwert. Marlborough
+ stormed their entrenched camp, crossed the Danube, took several strong
+ places in Bavaria, and made himself completely master of the Elector's
+ dominions, except the fortified cities of Munich and Augsburg. But the
+ Elector's army, though defeated at Donauwert, was still numerous and
+ strong; and at last Marshal Tallard, when thoroughly apprised of the real
+ nature of Marlborough's movements, crossed the Rhine. He was suffered
+ through the supineness of the German general at Stollhoffen, to march
+ without loss through the Black Forest, and united his powerful army at
+ Biberach near Augsburg, with that of the Elector and the French troops
+ under Marshal Marsin, who had previously been co-operating with the
+ Bavarians. On the other hand, Marlborough re-crossed the Danube, and on
+ the 11th of August united his army with the Imperialist forces under
+ Prince Eugene. The combined armies occupied a position near Hochstadt, a
+ little higher up the left bank of the Danube than Donauwert, the scene of
+ Marlborough's recent victory, and almost exactly on the ground where
+ Marshal Villars and the Elector had defeated an Austrian army in the
+ preceding year. The French marshals and the Elector were now in position a
+ little farther to the east, between Blenheim and Lutzingen, and with the
+ little stream of the Nebel between them and the troops of Marlborough and
+ Eugene. The Gallo-Bavarian army consisted of about sixty thousand men, and
+ they had sixty-one pieces of artillery. "The army of the Allies was about
+ fifty-six thousand strong, with fifty-two guns." [A short time before the
+ War of the Succession the musquet and bayonet had been made the arms of
+ all the French infantry. It had formerly been usual to mingle pike-men
+ with musqueteers. The other European nations followed the example of
+ France, and the weapons used at Blenheim were substantially the same as
+ those still employed.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the French army of Italy had been unable to penetrate into
+ Austria, and although the masterly strategy of Marlborough had hitherto
+ warded off the destruction with which the cause of the Allies seemed
+ menaced at the beginning of the campaign, the peril was still most
+ serious. It was absolutely necessary for Marlborough to attack the enemy,
+ before Villeroy should be roused into action. There was nothing to stop
+ that general and his army from marching into Franconia, whence the Allies
+ drew their principal supplies; and besides thus distressing them, he
+ might, by marching on and joining his army to those of Tallard and the
+ Elector, form a mass which would overwhelm the force under Marlborough and
+ Eugene. On the other hand, the chances of a battle seemed perilous, and
+ the fatal consequences of a defeat were certain. The inferiority of the
+ Allies in point of number was not very great, but still it was not to be
+ disregarded; and the advantage which the enemy seemed to have in the
+ composition of their troops was striking. Tallard and Marsin had
+ forty-five thousand Frenchmen under them, all veterans, and all trained to
+ act together: the Elector's own troops also were good soldiers.
+ Marlborough, like Wellington at Waterloo, headed an army, of which the
+ larger proportion consisted not of English, but of men of many different
+ nations, and many different languages. He was also obliged to be the
+ assailant in the action, and thus to expose his troops to comparatively
+ heavy loss at the commencement of the battle, while the enemy would fight
+ under the protection of the villages and lines which they were actively
+ engaged in strengthening. The consequences of a defeat of the confederated
+ army must have broken up the Grand Alliance, and realised the proudest
+ hopes of the French king. Mr. Alison, in his admirable military history of
+ the Duke of Marlborough, has truly stated the effects which would have
+ taken place if France had been successful in the war. And, when the
+ position of the Confederates at the time when Blenheim was fought is
+ remembered; when we recollect the exhaustion of Austria, the menacing
+ insurrection of Hungary, the feuds and jealousies of the German princes,
+ the strength and activity of the Jacobite party in England, the imbecility
+ of nearly all the Dutch statesmen of the time, and the weakness of Holland
+ if deprived of her allies, we may adopt his words in speculating on what
+ would have ensued, if France had been victorious in the battle, and "if a
+ power, animated by the ambition, guided by the fanaticism and directed by
+ the ability of that of Louis XIV., had gained the ascendancy in Europe.
+ Beyond all question, a universal despotic dominion would have been
+ established over the bodies, a cruel spiritual thraldom over the minds of
+ men. France and Spain united under Bourbon princes, and in a close family
+ alliance&mdash;the empire of Charlemagne with that of Charles V.&mdash;the
+ power which revolted the edict of Nantes, and perpetrated the massacre of
+ St. Bartholomew, with that which banished the Moriscoes, and established
+ the Inquisition, would have proved irresistible, and beyond example
+ destructive to the best interests of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Protestants might have been driven, like the Pagan heathens of old by
+ the son of Pepin, beyond the Elbe; the Stuart race, and with them Romish,
+ ascendancy, might have been re-established in England; the fire lighted by
+ Latimer and Ridley might have been extinguished in blood; and the energy
+ breathed by religious freedom into the Anglo-Saxon race might have
+ expired. The destinies of the world would have been changed. Europe,
+ instead of a variety of independent states, whose mutual, hostility kept
+ alive courage, while their national rivalry stimulated talent, would have
+ sunk into the slumber attendant on universal dominion. The colonial empire
+ of England would have withered away and perished, as that of Spain has
+ done in the grasp of the Inquisition. The Anglo-Saxon race would have been
+ arrested in its mission to overspread the earth and subdue it. The
+ centralised despotism of the Roman empire would have been renewed on
+ Continental Europe; the chains of Romish tyranny, and with them the
+ general infidelity of France before the Revolution, would have
+ extinguished or perverted thought in the British islands." [Alison's Life
+ of Marlborough, p. 248.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marlborough's words at the council of war, when a battle was resolved on,
+ are remarkable, and they deserve recording. We know them on the authority
+ of his chaplain, Mr. (afterwards Bishop) Hare, who accompanied him
+ throughout the campaign, and in whose journal the biographers of
+ Marlborough have found many of their best materials. Marborough's words to
+ the officers who remonstrated with him on the seeming temerity of
+ attacking the enemy in their position, were&mdash;"I know the danger, yet
+ a battle is absolutely necessary; and I rely on the bravery and discipline
+ of the troops, which will make amends for our disadvantages." In the
+ evening orders were issued for a general engagement, and received by the
+ army with an alacrity which justified his confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French and Bavarians were posted behind a little stream called the
+ Nebel, which runs almost from north to south into the Danube immediately
+ in front of the village of Blenheim. The Nebel flows along a little
+ valley, and the French occupied the rising ground to the west of it. The
+ village of Blenheim was the extreme right of their position, and the
+ village of Lutzingen, about three miles north of Blenheim, formed their
+ left. Beyond Lutzingen are the rugged high grounds of the Godd Berg, and
+ Eich Berg, on the skirts of which some detachments were posted so as to
+ secure the Gallo-Bavarian position from being turned on the left flank.
+ The Danube protected their right flank; and it was only in front that they
+ could be attacked. The villages of Blenheim and Lutzingen had been
+ strongly palisadoed and entrenched. Marshal Tallard, who held the chief
+ command, took his station at Blenheim: Prince Maximilian the Elector, and
+ Marshal Marsin commanded on the left. Tallard garrisoned Blenheim with
+ twenty-six battalions of French infantry, and twelve squadrons of French
+ cavalry. Marsin and the Elector had twenty-two battalions of infantry, and
+ thirty-six squadrons of cavalry in front of the village of Lutzingen. The
+ centre was occupied by fourteen battalions of infantry, including the
+ celebrated Irish Brigade. These were posted in the little hamlet of
+ Oberglau, which lies somewhat nearer to Lutzingen than to Blenheim. Eighty
+ squadrons of cavalry and seven battalions of foot were ranged between
+ Oberglau and Blenheim. Thus the French position was very strong at each
+ extremity, but was comparatively weak in the centre. Tallard seems to have
+ relied on the swampy state of the part of the valley that reaches from
+ below Oberglau to Blenheim, for preventing any serious attack on this part
+ of his line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The army of the Allies was formed into two great divisions: the largest
+ being commanded by the Duke in person, and being destined to act against
+ Tallard, while Prince Eugene led the other division, which consisted
+ chiefly of cavalry, and was intended to oppose the enemy under Marsin and
+ the Elector. As they approached the enemy, Marlborough's troops formed the
+ left and the centre, while Eugene's formed the right of the entire army.
+ Early in the morning of the 13th of August, the Allies left their own camp
+ and marched towards the enemy. A thick haze covered the ground, and it was
+ not until the allied right and centre had advanced nearly within
+ cannon-shot of the enemy that Tallard was aware of their approach. He made
+ his preparations with what haste he could, and about eight o'clock a heavy
+ fire of artillery was opened from the French right on the advancing left
+ wing of the British. Marlborough ordered up some of his batteries to reply
+ to it, and while the columns that were to form the allied left and centre
+ deployed, and took up their proper stations in the line, a warm cannonade
+ was kept up by the guns on both sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ground which Eugene's columns had to traverse was peculiarly
+ difficult, especially for the passage of the artillery; and it was nearly
+ mid-day before he could get his troops into line opposite to Lutzingen.
+ During this interval, Marlborough ordered divine service to be performed
+ by the chaplains at the head of each regiment; and then rode along the
+ lines, and found both officers and men in the highest spirits, and waiting
+ impatiently for the signal for the the attack. At length an aide-de-camp
+ galloped up from the right with the welcome news that Eugene was ready.
+ Marlborough instantly sent Lord Cutts, with a strong brigade of infantry,
+ to assault the village of Blenheim, while he himself led the main body
+ down the eastward slope of the valley of the Nebel, and prepared to effect
+ the passage of the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The assault on Blenheim, though bravely made, was repulsed with severe
+ loss; and Marlborough, finding how strongly that village was garrisoned,
+ desisted from any further attempts to carry it, and bent all his energies
+ to breaking the enemy's line between Blenheim and Oberglau. Some temporary
+ bridges had been prepared, and planks and fascinas had been collected; and
+ by the aid of these and a little stone bridge which crossed the Nebel,
+ near a hamlet called Unterglau, that lay in the centre of the valley,
+ Marlborough succeeded in getting several squadrons across the Nebel,
+ though it was divided into several branches, and the ground between them
+ was soft, and in places, little better than a mere marsh. But the French
+ artillery was not idle. The cannon balls plunged incessantly among the
+ advancing squadrons of the allies; and bodies of French cavalry rode
+ frequently down from the western ridge, to charge them before they had
+ time to form on the firm ground. It was only by supporting his men by
+ fresh troops, and by bringing up infantry, who checked the advance of the
+ enemy's horse by their steady fire, that Marlborough was able to save his
+ army in this quarter from a repulse, which, following the failure of the
+ attack upon Blenheim, would probably have been fatal to the Allies. By
+ degrees, his cavalry struggled over the blood-stained streams; the
+ infantry were also now brought across, so as to keep in check the French
+ troops who held Blenheim, and who, when no longer assailed in front, had
+ begun to attack the Allies on their left with considerable effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marlborough had thus at last succeeded in drawing up the whole left wing
+ of his army beyond the Nebel, and was about to press forward with it, when
+ he was called away to another part of the field by a disaster that had
+ befallen his centre. The Prince of Holstein-Beck had, with eleven
+ Hanoverian battalions, passed the Nebel opposite to Oberglau, when he was
+ charged and utterly routed by the Irish brigade which held that village.
+ The Irish drove the Hanoverians back with heavy slaughter, broke
+ completely through the line of the Allies, and nearly achieved a success
+ as brilliant as that which the same brigade afterwards gained at Fontenoy.
+ But at Blenheim their ardour in pursuit led them too far. Marlborough came
+ up in person, and dashed in upon their exposed flank with some squadrons
+ of British cavalry. The Irish reeled back, and as they strove to regain
+ the height of Oberglau, their column was raked through and through by the
+ fire of three battalions of the Allies, which Marlborough had summoned up
+ from the reserve. Marlborough having re-established the order and
+ communication of the Allies in this quarter, now, as he returned to his
+ own left wing, sent to learn how his colleague fared against Marsin and
+ the Elector, and to inform Eugene of his own success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eugene had hitherto not been equally fortunate. He had made three attacks
+ on the enemy opposed to him, and had been thrice driven back. It was only
+ by his own desperate personal exertions, and the remarkable steadiness of
+ the regiments of Prussian infantry which were under him, that he was able
+ to save his wing from being totally defeated. But it was on the southern
+ part of the battle-field, on the ground which Marlborough had won beyond
+ the Nebel with such difficulty, that the crisis of the battle was to be
+ decided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like Hannibal, Marlborough relied principally on his cavalry for achieving
+ his decisive successes, and it was by his cavalry that Blenheim, the
+ greatest of his victories, was won. The battle had lasted till five in the
+ afternoon. Marlborough had now eight thousand horseman drawn up in two
+ lines, and in the most perfect order for a general attack on the enemy's
+ line along the space between Blenheim and Oberglau. The infantry was drawn
+ up in battalions in their rear, so as to support them if repulsed, and to
+ keep in check the large masses of the French that still occupied the
+ village of Blenheim. Tallard now interlaced his squadrons of cavalry with
+ battalions of infantry; and Marlborough by a corresponding movement,
+ brought several regiments of infantry, and some pieces of artillery, to
+ his front line, at intervals between the bodies of horse. A little after
+ five, Marlborough commenced the decisive movement, and the allied cavalry,
+ strengthened and supported by foot and guns, advanced slowly from the
+ lower ground near the Nebel up the slope to where the French cavalry, ten
+ thousand strong, awaited them. On riding over the summit of the acclivity,
+ the Allies were received with so hot a fire from the French artillery and
+ small arms, that at first the cavalry recoiled, but without abandoning the
+ high ground. The guns and the infantry which they had brought with them,
+ maintained the contest with spirit and effect. The French fire seemed to
+ slacken Marlborough instantly ordered a charge along the line. The allied
+ cavalry galloped forward at the enemy's squadrons, and the hearts of the
+ French horseman failed them. Discharging their carbines at an idle
+ distance, they wheeled round and spurred from the field, leaving the nine
+ infantry battalions of their comrades to be ridden down by the torrent of
+ the allied cavalry. The battle was now won. Tallard and Marsin, severed
+ from each other, thought only of retreat. Tallard drew up the squadrons of
+ horse which he had left in a line extended towards Blenheim, and sent
+ orders to the infantry in that village to leave and join him without
+ delay. But long ere his orders could be obeyed, the conquering squadrons
+ of Marlborough had wheeled to the left and thundered down on the feeble
+ army of the French marshal. Part of the force which Tallard had drawn up
+ for this last effort was driven into the Danube; part fled with their
+ general to the village of Sonderheim, where they were soon surrounded by
+ the victorious Allies, and compelled to surrender. Meanwhile, Eugene had
+ renewed his attack upon the Gallo-Bavarian left, and Marsin, finding his
+ colleague utterly routed, and his own right flank uncovered, prepared to
+ retreat. He and the Elector succeeded in withdrawing a considerable part
+ of their troops in tolerable order to Dillingen; but the large body of
+ French who garrisoned Blenheim were left exposed to certain destruction.
+ Marlborough speedily occupied all the outlets from the village with his
+ victorious troops, and then, collecting his artillery round it, he
+ commenced a cannonade that speedily would have destroyed Blenheim itself
+ and all who were in it. After several gallant but unsuccessful attempts to
+ cut their way through the Allies, the French in Blenheim were at length
+ compelled to surrender at discretion; and twenty-four battalions, and
+ twelve squadrons, with all their officers, laid down their arms, and
+ became the captives of Marlborough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such," says Voltaire, "was the celebrated battle, which the French call
+ the battle of Hochstet, the Germans Plentheim, and the English Blenheim,
+ The conquerors had about five thousand killed, and eight thousand wounded,
+ the greater part being on the side of Prince Eugene. The French army was
+ almost entirely destroyed: of sixty thousand men, so long victorious,
+ there never reassembled more than twenty thousand effective. About twelve
+ thousand killed, fourteen thousand prisoners, all the cannon, a prodigious
+ number of colours and standards, all the tents and equipages, the general
+ of the army, and one thousand two hundred officers of mark, in the power
+ of the conqueror, signalised that day!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ulm, Landau, Treves, and Traerbach surrendered to the allies before the
+ close of the year. Bavaria submitted to the emperor, and the Hungarians
+ laid down their arms. Germany was completely delivered from France; and
+ the military ascendancy of the arms of the Allies was completely
+ established. Throughout the rest of the war Louis fought only in defence.
+ Blenheim had dissipated for ever his once proud visions of almost
+ universal conquest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, 1704, AND THE BATTLE OF
+ PULTOWA, 1709.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 1705. The Archduke Charles lands in Spain with a small English army
+ under Lord Peterborough, who takes Barcelona.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1706. Marlborough's victory at Ramilies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1707. The English army in Spain is defeated at the battle of Almanza.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1708. Marlborough's victory at Oudenarde.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, 1709.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Dread Pultowa's day,
+ When fortune left the royal Swede,
+ Around a slaughtered army lay,
+ No more to combat and to bleed.
+ The power and fortune of the war
+ Had passed to the triumphant Czar."&mdash;BYRON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon prophesied at St. Helena, that all Europe would soon be either
+ Cossack or Republican. Four years ago, the fulfilment of the last of these
+ alternatives appeared most probable. But the democratic movements of 1848
+ were sternly repressed in 1849. The absolute authority of a single ruler,
+ and the austere stillness of martial law, are now paramount in the
+ capitals of the continent, which lately owned no sovereignty save the will
+ of the multitude; and where that which the democrat calls his sacred right
+ of insurrection, was so loudly asserted and so often fiercely enforced.
+ Many causes have contributed to bring about this reaction, but the most
+ effective and the most permanent have been Russian influence and Russian
+ arms. Russia is now the avowed and acknowledged champion of Monarchy
+ against Democracy;&mdash;of constituted authority, however acquired,
+ against revolution and change for whatever purpose desired;&mdash;of the
+ imperial supremacy of strong states over their weaker neighbours against
+ all claims for political independence, and all striving for separate
+ nationality. She has crushed the heroic Hungarians; and Austria, for whom
+ nominally she crushed them, is now one of her dependents. Whether the
+ rumours of her being about to engage in fresh enterprises be well or ill
+ founded, it is certain that recent events must have fearfully augmented
+ the power of the Muscovite empire, which, even previously, had been the
+ object of well-founded anxiety to all Western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was truly stated, twelve years ago, that "the acquisitions which Russia
+ has made within the [then] last sixty-four years, are equal in extent and
+ importance to the whole empire she had in Europe before that time; that
+ the acquisitions she had made from Sweden are greater than what remains of
+ that ancient kingdom; that her acquisitions from Poland are as large as
+ the whole Austrian empire; that the territory she has wrested from Turkey
+ in Europe is equal to the dominions of Prussia, exclusive of her Rhenish
+ provinces; and that her acquisitions from Turkey in Asia are equal in
+ extent to all the smaller states of Germany, the Rhenish provinces of
+ Prussia, Belgium, and Holland taken together; that the country she has
+ conquered from Persia is about the size of England; that her acquisitions
+ in Tartary have an area equal to Turkey in Europe, Greece, Italy, and
+ Spain. In sixty-four years she has advanced her frontier eight hundred and
+ fifty miles towards Vienna, Berlin, Dresden, Munich, and Paris; she has
+ approached four hundred and fifty miles nearer to Constantinople; she has
+ possessed herself of the capital of Poland, and has advanced to within a
+ few miles of the capital of Sweden, from which, when Peter the Great
+ mounted the throne, her frontier was distant three hundred miles. Since
+ that time she has stretched herself forward about one thousand miles
+ towards India, and the same distance towards the capital of Persia."
+ [Progress of Russia in the East. p. 142.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, at that period, had been the recent aggrandisement of Russia; and
+ the events of the last few years, by weakening and disuniting all her
+ European neighbours, have immeasurably augmented the relative superiority
+ of the Muscovite empire over all the other continental powers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a population exceeding sixty millions, all implicitly obeying the
+ impulse of a single ruling mind; with a territorial area of six millions
+ and a half of square miles; with a standing army eight hundred thousand
+ strong; with powerful fleets on the Baltic and Black Seas; with a skilful
+ host of diplomatic agents planted in every court, and among every tribe;
+ with the confidence which unexpected success creates, and the sagacity
+ which long experience fosters, Russia now grasps with an armed right hand
+ the tangled thread of European politics, and issues her mandate as the
+ arbitress of the movements of the age. Yet a century and a half have
+ hardly elapsed since she was first recognised as a member of the drama of
+ modern European history&mdash;previously to the battle of Pultowa, Russia
+ played no part. Charles V. and his great rival our Elizabeth and her
+ adversary Philip of Spain, the Guises, Sully, Richelieu, Cromwell, De
+ Witt, William of Orange, and the other leading spirits of the sixteenth
+ and seventeenth centuries, thought no more about the Muscovite Czar than
+ we now think about the King of Timbuctoo. Even as late as 1735, Lord
+ Bollingbroke, in his admirable "Letters on History," speaks of the history
+ of the Muscovites, as having no relation to the knowledge which a
+ practical English statesman ought to acquire. [Bolingbroke's Works, vol
+ ii. p. 374. In the same page he observes how Sweden had often turned her
+ arms southwards with prodigious effect.] It may be doubted whether a
+ cabinet council often takes place now in our Foreign Office, without
+ Russia being uppermost in every English statesman's thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though Russia remained thus long unheeded amid her snows, there was a
+ northern power, the influence of which was acknowledged in the principal
+ European quarrels, and whose good will was sedulously courted by many of
+ the boldest chiefs and ablest councillors of the leading states. This was
+ Sweden; Sweden, on whose ruins Russia has risen; but whose ascendancy over
+ her semi-barbarous neighbours was complete, until the fatal battle that
+ now forms our subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As early as 1542 France had sought the alliance of Sweden to aid her in
+ her struggle against Charles V. And the name of Gustavus Adolphus is of
+ itself sufficient to remind us, that in the great contest for religious
+ liberty, of which Germany was for thirty years the arena, it was Sweden
+ that rescued the falling cause of Protestantism; and it was Sweden that
+ principally dictated the remodelling of the European state system at the
+ peace of Westphalia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the proud pre-eminence in which the valour of the "Lion of the North"
+ and of Torstenston, Bannier, Wrangel and the other Generals of Gustavus,
+ guided by the wisdom of Oxenstiern, had placed Sweden, the defeat of
+ Charles XII. at Pultowa hurled her down at once and for ever. Her efforts
+ during the wars of the French revolution to assume a leading part in
+ European politics, met with instant discomfiture, and almost provoked
+ derision. But the Sweden, whose sceptre was bequeathed to Christina, and
+ whose alliance Cromwell valued so highly, was a different power from the
+ Sweden of the present day. Finland, Ingria, Livonia, Esthonia, Carelia,
+ and other districts east of the Baltic, then were Swedish provinces; and
+ the possession of Pomerania, Rugen, and Bremen, made her an important
+ member of the Germanic empire. These territories are now all reft from
+ her; and the most valuable of them form the staple of her victorious
+ rival's strength. Could she resume them, could the Sweden of 1648 be
+ reconstructed, we should have a first-class Scandinavian State in the
+ North, well qualified to maintain the balance of power, and check the
+ progress of Russia; whose power, indeed, never could have become
+ formidable to Europe, save by Sweden becoming weak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The decisive triumph of Russia over Sweden at Pultowa was therefore
+ all-important to the world, on account of what it overthrew as well as for
+ what it established; and it is the more deeply interesting because it was
+ not merely the crisis of a struggle between two states, but it was a trial
+ of strength between two great races of mankind. We must bear in mind, that
+ while the Swedes, like the English, the Dutch, and others, belong to the
+ Germanic race, the Russians are a Sclavonic people. Nations of Sclavonian
+ origin have long occupied the greater part of Europe eastward of the
+ Vistula, and the populations also of Bohemia, Croatia, Servia, Dalmatia,
+ and other important regions westward of that river, are Sclavonic. In the
+ long and varied conflicts between them and the Germanic nations that
+ adjoin them, the Germanic race had, before Pultowa, almost always
+ maintained a superiority. With the single but important exception of
+ Poland, no Sclavonic state had made any considerable figure in history
+ before the time when Peter the Great won his great victory over the
+ Swedish king. [The Hussite wars may, perhaps, entitle Bohemia to be
+ distinguished.] What Russia has done since that time we know and we feel.
+ And some of the wisest and best men of our own age and nation, who have
+ watched with deepest care the annals and the destinies of humanity, have
+ believed that the Sclavonic element in the population of Europe has as yet
+ only partially developed its powers: that, while other races of mankind
+ (our own, the Germanic, included) have exhausted their creative energies,
+ and completed their allotted achievements, the Sclavonic race has yet a
+ great career to run: and, that the narrative of Sclavonic ascendancy is
+ the remaining page that; will conclude the history of the world. [See
+ Arnold's Lectures on Modern History, pp. 36-39.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let it not be supposed that in thus regarding the primary triumph of
+ Russia over Sweden as a victory of the Sclavonic over the Germanic race,
+ we are dealing with matters of mere ethnological pedantry, or with themes
+ of mere speculative curiosity. The fact that Russia is a Sclavonic empire,
+ is a fact of immense practical influence at the present moment. Half the
+ inhabitants of the Austrian empire are Sclavonian. The population of the
+ larger part of Turkey in Europe is of the same race. Silesia, Posen, and
+ other parts of the Prussian dominions are principally Sclavonic. And
+ during late years an enthusiastic zeal for blending all Sclavonians into
+ one great united Sclavonic empire, has been growing up in these countries,
+ which, however we may deride its principle, is not the less real and
+ active, and of which Russia, as the head and champion of the Sclavonic
+ race, knows well how to take her advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ["The idea of Panslavism had a purely literary origin. It was started by
+ Pollar, a Protestant clergyman of the Sclavonic congregation at Pesth, in
+ Hungary, who wished to establish a national literature, by circulating all
+ works, written in the various Sclavonic dialects, through every country
+ where any of them are spoken. He suggested, that all the Slavonic literati
+ should become acguainted with the sister dialects, so that a Bohemian, or
+ other work, might be read on the shores of the Adriatic, as well as on the
+ banks of the Volga, or any other place where a Sclavonic language was
+ spoken; by which means an extensive literature might be created, tending
+ to advance knowledge in all Sclavonic countries; and he supported his
+ arguments by observing, that the dialects of ancient Greece differed from
+ each other, like those of his own language, and yet that they formed only
+ one Hellenic literature. The idea of an intellectual union of all those
+ nations naturally led to that of a political one; and the Sclavonians,
+ seeing that their numbers amounted to about one-third part of the whole
+ population of Europe, and occupied more than half its territory, began to
+ be sensible that they might claim for themselves a position, to which they
+ had not hitherto aspired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The opinion gained ground; and the question now is, whether the
+ Slavonians can form a nation independent of Russia; or whether they ought
+ to rest satisfied in being part of one great race, with the most powerful
+ member of it as their chief. The latter, indeed, is gaining ground amongst
+ them; and some Poles are disposed to attribute their sufferings to the
+ arbitrary will of the Czar, without extending the blame to the Russians
+ themselves. These begin to think that, if they cannot exist as Poles, the
+ best thing to be done is to rest satisfied with a position in the
+ Sclavonic empire, and they hope that, when once they give up the idea of
+ restoring their country, Russia may grant some concessions to their
+ separate nationality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The same idea has been put forward by writers in the Russian interest;
+ great efforts are making among other Sclavonic people, to induce them to
+ look upon Russia as their future head; and she has already gained
+ considerable influence over the Sclavonic populations of Turkey."&mdash;WILKINSON'S
+ DALMATIA.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a singular fact that Russia owes her very name to a band of Swedish
+ invaders who conquered her a thousand years ago. They were soon absorbed
+ in the Sclavonic population, and every trace of the Swedish character had
+ disappeared in Russia for many centuries before her invasion by Charles
+ XII. She was long the victim and the slave of the Tartars; and for many
+ considerable periods of years the Poles held her in subjugation. Indeed,
+ if we except the expeditions of some of the early Russian chiefs against
+ Byzantium, and the reign of Ivan Vasilovitch, the history of Russia before
+ the time of Peter the Great is one long tale of suffering and degradation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whatever may have been the amount of national injuries that she
+ sustained from Swede, from Tartar, or from Pole in the ages of her
+ weakness, she has certainly retaliated ten-fold during the century and a
+ half of her strength. Her rapid transition at the commencement of that
+ period from being the prey of every conqueror to being the conqueror of
+ all with whom she comes into contact, to being the oppressor instead of
+ the oppressed, is almost without a parallel in the history of nations. It
+ was the work of a single ruler; who, himself without education, promoted
+ science and literature among barbaric millions; who gave them fleets,
+ commerce, arts, and arms; who, at Pultowa, taught them to face and beat
+ the previously invincible Swedes: and who made stubborn valour, and
+ implicit subordination, from that time forth the distinguishing
+ characteristics of the Russian soldiery, which had before his time been a
+ mere disorderly and irresolute rabble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The career of Philip of Macedon resembles most nearly that of the great
+ Muscovite Czar: but there is this important difference, that Philip had,
+ while young, received in Southern Greece the best education in all matters
+ of peace and war that the ablest philosophers and generals of the age
+ could bestow. Peter was brought up among barbarians, and in barbaric
+ ignorance. He strove to remedy this when a grown man, by leaving all the
+ temptations to idleness and sensuality, which his court offered, and by
+ seeking instruction abroad. He laboured with his own hands as a common
+ artisan in Holland and in England, that he might return and teach his
+ subjects how ships, commerce, and civilization could be acquired. There is
+ a degree of heroism here superior to anything that we know of in the
+ Macedonian king. But Philip's consolidation of the long disunited
+ Macedonian empire,&mdash;his raising a people which he found the scorn of
+ their civilized southern neighbours, to be their dread,&mdash;his
+ organization of a brave and well-disciplined army, instead of a disorderly
+ militia,&mdash;his creation of a maritime force, and his systematic skill
+ in acquiring and improving sea-ports and arsenals,&mdash;his patient
+ tenacity of purpose under reverses,&mdash;his personal bravery,&mdash;and
+ even his proneness to coarse amusements and pleasures,&mdash;all mark him
+ out as the prototype of the imperial founder of the Russian power. In
+ justice, however, to the ancient hero, it ought to be added, that we find
+ in the history of Philip no examples of that savage cruelty which deforms
+ so grievously the character of Peter the Great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In considering the effects of the overthrow which the Swedish arms
+ sustained at Pultowa, and in speculating on the probable consequences that
+ would have followed if the invaders had been successful we must not only
+ bear in mind the wretched state In which Peter found Russia at his
+ accession, compared with her present grandeur, but we must also keep in
+ view the fact, that, at the time when Pultowa was fought, his reforms were
+ yet incomplete, and his new institutions immature. He had broken up the
+ old Russia; and the New Russia, which he ultimately created, was still in
+ embryo. Had he been crushed at Pultowa, his mighty schemes would have been
+ buried with him; and (to use the words of Voltaire) "the most extensive
+ empire in the world would have relapsed into the chaos from which it had
+ been so lately taken." It is this fact that makes the repulse of Charles
+ XII. the critical point in the fortunes of Russia. The danger which she
+ incurred a century afterwards from her invasion by Napoleon was in reality
+ far less than her peril when Charles attacked her; though the French
+ Emperor, as a military genius, was infinitely superior to the Swedish
+ King, and led a host against her, compared with which the armies of
+ Charles seem almost insignificant. But, as Fouche well warned his imperial
+ master, when he vainly endeavoured to dissuade him from his disastrous
+ expedition against the empire of the Czars, the difference between the
+ Russia of 1812 and the Russia of 1709 was greater, than the disparity
+ between the power of Charles and the might of Napoleon. "If that heroic
+ king," said Fouche, "had not, like your imperial Majesty, half Europe in
+ arms to back him, neither had his opponent, the Czar Peter, 400,000
+ soldiers, and 60,000 Cossacks." The historians, who describe the state of
+ the Muscovite empire when revolutionary and imperial France encountered
+ it, narrate with truth and justice, how "at the epoch of the French
+ Revolution this immense empire, comprehending nearly half of Europe and
+ Asia within its dominions, inhabited by a patient and indomitable race,
+ ever ready to exchange the luxury and adventure of the south for the
+ hardships and monotony of the north, was daily becoming more formidable to
+ the liberties of Europe. The Russian infantry had then long been
+ celebrated for its immoveable firmness. Her immense population, amounting
+ then in Europe alone to nearly thirty-five millions, afforded an
+ inexhaustible supply of men. Her soldiers, inured to heat and cold from
+ their infancy, and actuated by a blind devotion to their Czar, united the
+ steady valour of the English to the impetuous energy of the French
+ troops." [Alison.] So, also, we read how the haughty aggressions of
+ Bonaparte "went to excite a national feeling, from the banks of the
+ Borysthenes to the wall of China, and to unite against him the wild and
+ uncivilized inhabitants of an extended empire, possessed by a love to
+ their religion, their government, and their country, and having a
+ character of stern devotion, which he was incapable of estimating."
+ [Scott's Life of Napoleon] But the Russia of 1709 had no such forces to
+ oppose to an assailant. Her whole population then was below sixteen
+ millions; and, what is far more important, this population had neither
+ acquired military spirit, nor strong nationality; nor was it united in
+ loyal attachment to its ruler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peter had wisely abolished the old regular troops of the empire, the
+ Strelitzes; but the forces which he had raised in their stead on a new and
+ foreign plan, and principally officered with foreigners, had, before the
+ Swedish invasion, given no proof that they could be relied on. In numerous
+ encounters with the Swedes, Peter's soldiery had run like sheep before
+ inferior numbers. Great discontent, also, had been excited among all
+ classes of the community by the arbitrary changes which their great
+ emperor introduced, many of which clashed with the most cherished national
+ prejudices of his subjects. A career of victory and prosperity had not yet
+ raised Peter above the reach of that disaffection, nor had superstitious
+ obedience to the Czar yet become the characteristic of the Muscovite mind.
+ The victorious occupation of Moscow by Charles XII. would have quelled the
+ Russian nation as effectually, as had been the case when Batou Khan, and
+ other ancient invaders, captured the capital of primitive Muscovy. How
+ little such a triumph could effect towards subduing modern Russia, the
+ fate of Napoleon demonstrated at once and for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The character of Charles XII. has been a favourite theme with historians,
+ moralists, philosophers, and poets. But it is his military conduct during
+ the campaign in Russia that alone requires comment here. Napoleon, in the
+ memoirs dictated by him at St. Helena, has given us a systematic criticism
+ on that, among other celebrated campaigns, his own Russian campaign
+ included. He labours hard to prove that he himself observed all the true
+ principles of offensive war: and probably his censures of Charles's
+ generalship were rather highly coloured, for the sake of making his own
+ military skill stand out in more favourable relief. Yet, after making all
+ allowances, we must admit the force of Napoleon's strictures on Charles's
+ tactics, and own that his judgment, though severe, is correct, when he
+ pronounces that the Swedish king, unlike his great predecessor Gustavus,
+ knew nothing of the art of war, and was nothing more than a brave and
+ intrepid soldier. Such, however, was not the light in which Charles was
+ regarded by his contemporaries at the commencement of his Russian
+ expedition. His numerous victories, his daring and resolute spirit,
+ combined with the ancient renown of the Swedish arms, then filled all
+ Europe with admiration and anxiety. As Johnson expresses it, his name was
+ then one at which the world grew pale. Even Louis le Grand earnestly
+ solicited his assistance; and our own Marlborough, then in the full career
+ of his victories, was specially sent by the English court to the camp of
+ Charles, to propitiate the hero of the north in favour of the cause of the
+ allies and to prevent the Swedish sword from being flung into the scale in
+ the French king's favour. But Charles at that time was solely bent on
+ dethroning the sovereign of Russia, as he had already dethroned the
+ sovereign of Poland, and all Europe fully believed that he would entirely
+ crush the Czar, and dictate conditions of peace in the Kremlin. [Voltaire
+ attests, from personal inspection of the letters of several public
+ ministers to their respective courts, that such was the general
+ expectation.] Charles himself looked on success as a matter of certainty;
+ and the romantic extravagance of his views was continually increasing.
+ "One year, he thought, would suffice for the conquest of Russia. The court
+ of Rome was next to feel his vengeance, as the pope had dared to oppose
+ the concession of religious liberty to the Silesian Protestants. No
+ enterprise at that time appeared impossible to him. He had even dispatched
+ several officers privately into Asia and Egypt, to take plans of the
+ towns, and examine into the strength and resources of those countries."
+ [Crighton's Scandinavia.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon thus epitomises the earlier operations of Charles's invasion of
+ Russia:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That prince set out from his camp at Aldstadt, near Leipsic, in September
+ 1707, at the head of 46,000 men, and traversed Poland; 20,000 men, under
+ Count Lewenhaupt, disembarked at Riga; and 15,000 were in Finland. He was
+ therefore in a condition to have brought together 80,000 of the best
+ troops in the world. He left 10,000 men at Warsaw to guard King
+ Stanislaus, and in January 1708, arrived at Grodno, where he wintered. In
+ June he crossed the forest of Minsk, and presented himself before Borisov;
+ forced the Russian army, which occupied the left bank of the Beresina;
+ defeated 20,000 Russians who were strongly entrenched behind marshes;
+ passed the Borysthenes at Mohiloev, and vanquished a corps of 16,000
+ Muscovites near Smolensko, on the 22d of September. He was now advanced to
+ the confines of Lithuania, and was about to enter Russia Proper: the Czar,
+ alarmed at his approach, made him proposals of peace. Up to this time all
+ his movements mere conformable to rule, and his communications were well
+ secured. He was master of Poland and Riga, and only ten days' march
+ distant from Moscow: and it is probable that he would have reached that
+ capital, had he not quitted the high road thither, and directed his steps
+ towards the Ukraine, in order to form a junction with Mazeppa, who brought
+ him only 6,000 men. By this movement his line of operations, beginning at
+ Sweden, exposed his flank to Russia for a distance of four hundred
+ leagues, and he was unable to protect it, or to receive either
+ reinforcements or assistance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon severely censures this neglect of one of the great rules of war.
+ He points out that Charles had not organized his war like Hannibal, on the
+ principle of relinquishing all communications with home, keeping all his
+ forces concentrated, and creating a base of operations in the conquered
+ country. Such had been the bold system of the Carthaginian general; but
+ Charles acted on no such principle, inasmuch as he caused Lewenhaupt, one
+ of his generals who commanded a considerable detachment, and escorted a
+ most important convoy, to follow him at a distance of twelve days' march.
+ By this dislocation of his forces he exposed Lewenhaupt to be overwhelmed
+ separately by the full force of the enemy, and deprived the troops under
+ his own command of the aid which that general's men and stores might have
+ afforded, at the very crisis of the campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Czar had collected an army of about a hundred thousand effective men;
+ and though the Swedes, in the beginning of the invasion, were successful
+ in every encounter, the Russian troops were gradually acquiring
+ discipline; and Peter and his officers were learning generalship from
+ their victors, as the Thebans of old learned it from the Spartans. When
+ Lewenhaupt, in the October of 1708, was striving to join Charles in the
+ Ukraine, the Czar suddenly attacked him near the Borysthenes with an
+ overwhelming force of fifty thousand Russians. Lewenhaupt fought bravely
+ for three days, and succeeded in cutting his way through the enemy, with
+ about four thousand of his men, to where Charles awaited him near the
+ river Desna; but upwards of eight thousand Swedes fell in these battles;
+ Lewenhaupt's cannon and ammunition were abandoned; and the whole of his
+ important convoy of provisions, on which Charles and his half-starved
+ troops were relying, fell into the enemy's hands. Charles was compelled to
+ remain in the Ukraine during the winter; but in the spring of 1709 he
+ moved forward towards Moscow, and invested the fortified town of Pultowa,
+ on the river Vorskla, a place where the Czar had stored up large supplies
+ of provisions and military stores, and which commanded the roads leading
+ towards Moscow. The possession of this place would have given Charles the
+ means of supplying all the wants of his suffering army, and would also
+ have furnished him with a secure base of operations for his advance
+ against the Muscovite capital. The siege was therefore hotly pressed by
+ the Swedes; the garrison resisted obstinately; and the Czar, feeling the
+ importance of saving the town, advanced in June to its relief, at the head
+ of an army from fifty to sixty thousand strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both sovereigns now prepared for the general action, which each perceived
+ to be inevitable, and which each felt would be decisive of his own and of
+ his country's destiny. The Czar, by some masterly manoeuvres, crossed the
+ Vorskla, and posted his army on the same side of that river with the
+ besiegers, but a little higher up. The Vorskla falls into the Borysthenes
+ about fifteen leagues below Pultowa, and the Czar arranged his forces in
+ two lines, stretching from one river towards the other; so that if the
+ Swedes attacked him and were repulsed, they would be driven backwards into
+ the acute angle formed by the two streams at their junction. He fortified
+ these lines with several redoubts, lined with heavy artillery; and his
+ troops, both horse and foot, were in the best possible condition, and
+ amply provided with stores and ammunition. Charles's forces were about
+ twenty-four thousand strong. But not more than half of these were Swedes;
+ so much had battle, famine, fatigue, and the deadly frosts of Russia,
+ thinned the gallant bands which the Swedish king and Lewenhaupt had led to
+ the Ukraine. The other twelve thousand men under Charles were Cossacks and
+ Wallachians, who had joined him in that country. On hearing that the Czar
+ was about to attack him, he deemed that his dignity required that he
+ himself should be the assailant; and leading his army out of their
+ entrenched lines before the town, he advanced with them against the
+ Russian redoubts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been severely wounded in the foot in a skirmish a few days before;
+ and was borne in a litter along the ranks, into the thick of the fight.
+ Notwithstanding the fearful disparity of numbers and disadvantage of
+ position, the Swedes never showed their ancient valour more nobly than on
+ that dreadful day. Nor do their Cossack and Wallachian allies seem to have
+ been unworthy of fighting side by side with Charles's veterans. Two of the
+ Russian redoubts were actually entered, and the Swedish infantry began to
+ raise the cry of victory. But on the other side, neither general nor
+ soldiers flinched in their duty. The Russian cannonade and musketry were
+ kept up; fresh masses of defenders were poured into the fortifications,
+ and at length the exhausted remnants of the Swedish columns recoiled from
+ the blood-stained redoubts. Then the Czar led the infantry and cavalry of
+ his first line outside the works, drew them up steadily and skilfully, and
+ the action was renewed along the whole fronts of the two armies on the
+ open ground. Each sovereign exposed his life freely in the world-winning
+ battle; and on each side the troops fought obstinately and eagerly under
+ their ruler's eye. It was not till two hours from the commencement of the
+ action that, overpowered by numbers, the hitherto invincible Swedes gave
+ way. All was then hopeless disorder and irreparable rout. Driven downward
+ to where the rivers join, the fugitive Swedes surrendered to their
+ victorious pursuers, or perished in the waters of the Borysthenes. Only a
+ few hundreds swam that river with their king and the Cossack Mazeppa, and
+ escaped into the Turkish territory. Nearly ten thousand lay killed and
+ wounded in the redoubts and on the field of battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the joy of his heart the Czar exclaimed, when the strife was over,
+ "That the son of the morning had fallen from heaven; and that the
+ foundations of St. Petersburg at length stood firm." Even on that
+ battle-field, near the Ukraine, the Russian emperor's first thoughts were
+ of conquests and aggrandisement on the Baltic. The peace of Nystadt, which
+ transferred the fairest provinces of Sweden to Russia, ratified the
+ judgment of battle which was pronounced at Pultowa. Attacks on Turkey and
+ Persia by Russia commenced almost directly after that victory. And though
+ the Czar failed in his first attempts against the Sultan, the successors
+ of Peter have, one and all, carried on an uniformly aggressive and
+ uniformly successful system of policy against Turkey, and against every
+ other state, Asiatic as well as European, which has had the misfortune of
+ having Russia for a neighbour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orators and authors, who have discussed the progress of Russia, have often
+ alluded to the similitude between the modern extension of the Muscovite
+ empire and the extension of the Roman dominions in ancient times. But
+ attention has scarcely been drawn to the closeness of the parallel between
+ conquering Russia and conquering Rome, not only in the extent of
+ conquests, but in the means of effecting conquest. The history of Rome
+ during the century and a half which followed the close of the second Punic
+ war, and during which her largest acquisitions of territory were made,
+ should be minutely compared with the history of Russia for the last one
+ hundred and fifty years. The main points of similitude can only be
+ indicated in these pages; but they deserve the fullest consideration.
+ Above all, the sixth chapter of Montesquieu's great Treatise on Rome, the
+ chapter "DE LA CONDUITE QUE LES ROMAINS TINRENT POUR SOUMETTRE LES
+ PEUPLES," should be carefully studied by every one who watches the career
+ and policy of Russia. The classic scholar will remember the state-craft of
+ the Roman Senate, which took care in every foreign war to appear in the
+ character of a PROTECTOR. Thus Rome PROTECTED the AEtolians, and the Greek
+ cities, against Macedon; she PROTECTED Bithynia, and other small Asiatic
+ states, against the Syrian kings; she protected Numidia against Carthage;
+ and in numerous other instances assumed the same specious character. But,
+ "Woe to the people whose liberty depends on the continued forbearance of
+ an over-mighty protector." [Malkin's History of Greece.] Every state which
+ Rome protected was ultimately subjugated and absorbed by her. And Russia
+ has been the protector of Poland, the protector of the Crimea,&mdash;the
+ protector of Courland,&mdash;the protector of Georgia, Immeritia,
+ Mingrelia, the Tcherkessian and Caucasian tribes. She has first protected,
+ and then appropriated them all. She protects Moldavia and Wallachia. A few
+ years ago she became the protector of Turkey from Mehemet Ali; and since
+ the summer of 1849 she has made herself the protector of Austria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the partisans of Russia speak of the disinterestedness with which she
+ withdrew her protecting troops from Constantinople, and from Hungary, let
+ us here also mark the ominous exactness of the parallel between her and
+ Rome. While the ancient world yet contained a number of independent
+ states, which might have made a formidable league against Rome if she had
+ alarmed them by openly avowing her ambitious schemes, Rome's favourite
+ policy was seeming disinterestedness and moderation. After her first war
+ against Philip, after that against Antiochus, and many others, victorious
+ Rome promptly withdrew her troops from the territories which they
+ occupied. She affected to employ her arms only for the good of others;
+ but, when the favourable moment came, she always found a pretext for
+ marching her legions back into each coveted district, and making it a
+ Roman province. Fear, not moderation, is the only effective check on the
+ ambition of such powers as Ancient Rome and Modern Russia. The amount of
+ that fear depends on the amount of timely vigilance and energy which other
+ states choose to employ against the common enemy of their freedom and
+ national independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS FROM THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, 1709, AND THE DEFEAT OF
+ BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA, 1777.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 1713. Treaty of Utrecht. Philip is left by it in possession of the
+ throne of Spain. But Naples, Milan, the Spanish territories on the Tuscan
+ coast, the Spanish Netherlands, and some parts of the French Netherlands,
+ are given to Austria. France cedes to England Hudson's Bay and Straits,
+ the Island of St. Christopher, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland in America,
+ Spain cedes to England Gibraltar and Minorca, which the English had taken
+ during the war. The King of Prussia and the Duke of Savoy both obtain
+ considerable additions of territory to their dominions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1714. Death of Queen Anne. The House of Hanover begins to reign in
+ England. A rebellion in favour of the Stuarts is put down. Death of Louis
+ XIV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1718. Charles XII. killed at the siege of Frederickshall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1725. Death of Peter the Great of Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1740. Frederick II, King of Prussia, begins his reign. He attacks the
+ Austrian dominions, and conquers Silesia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1742. War between France and England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1743. Victory of the English at Dettingen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1745. Victory of the French at Fontenoy. Rebellion in Scotland in favour
+ of the House of Stuart: finally quelled by the battle of Culloden in the
+ next year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1748. Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1756-1763. The Seven Years' War, during which Prussia makes an heroic
+ resistance against the allies of Austria, Russia, and France. England,
+ under the administration of the elder Pitt (afterwards Lord Chatham),
+ takes a glorious part in the war in opposition to France and Spain. Wolfe
+ wins the battle of Quebec, and the English conquer Canada, Cape Breton,
+ and St. John. Clive begins his career of conquest in India. Cuba, is taken
+ by the English from Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1763. Treaty of Paris: which leaves the power of Prussia increased, and
+ its military reputation greatly exalted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "France, by the treaty of Paris, ceded to England Canada, and the island
+ of Cape Breton, with the islands and coasts of the gulf and river of St.
+ Lawrence. The boundaries between the two nations in North America were
+ fixed by a line drawn along the middle of the Mississippi, from its source
+ to its mouth. All on the left or eastern bank of that river, was given up
+ to England, except the city of New Orleans, which was reserved to France;
+ as was also the liberty of the fisheries on a part of the coasts of
+ Newfoundland and the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The islands of St. Peter and
+ Miquelon were given them as a shelter for their fishermen, but without
+ permission to raise fortifications. The islands of Martinico, Guadaloupe,
+ Mariegalante, Desirada, and St. Lucia, were surrendered to France; while
+ Grenada, the Grenadines, St. Vincent, Dominica, and Tobago, were ceded to
+ England. This latter power retained her conquests on the Senegal, and
+ restored to France the island of Gores, on-the coast of Africa. France was
+ put in possession of the forts and factories which belonged to her in the
+ East Indies, on the coasts of Coromandel, Orissa, Malabar, and Bengal
+ under the restriction of keeping up no military force in Bengal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In Europe, France restored all the conquests she had made in Germany; as
+ also the island, of Minorca, England gave up to her Belleisle, on the
+ coast of Brittany; while Dunkirk was kept in the same condition as had
+ been determined by the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. The island of Cuba, with
+ the Havannah, were restored to the King of Spain, who, on his part, ceded
+ to England Florida, with Port-Augustine and the Bay of Pensacola. The King
+ of Portugal was restored to the same state in which he had been before the
+ war. The colony of St. Sacrament in America, which the Spaniards had
+ conquered, was given back to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The peace of Paris, of which we have just now spoken, was the era of
+ England's greatest prosperity. Her commerce and navigation extended over
+ all parts of the globe, and were supported by a naval force so much the
+ more imposing, as it was no longer counter-balanced by the maritime power
+ of France, which had been almost annihilated in the preceding war. The
+ immense territories which that peace had secured her, both in Africa and
+ America, opened up new channels for her industry: and what deserves
+ specially to be remarked is, that she acquired at the same time vast and
+ important possessions in the East Indies." [Koch's Revolutions of Europe.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. &mdash; VICTORY OF THE AMERICANS OVER BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA,
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 1777.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Westward the course of empire takes its way;
+ The first four acts already past,
+ A fifth shall close the drama with the day:
+ TIME'S NOBLEST OFFSPRING IS ITS LAST."
+ BISHOP BERKELEY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Even of those great conflicts, in which hundreds of thousands have been
+ engaged and tens of thousands have fallen, none has been more fruitful of
+ results than this surrender of thirty-five hundred fighting-men at
+ Saratoga. It not merely changed the relations of England and the feelings
+ of Europe towards these insurgent colonies, but it has modified, for all
+ times to come, the connexion between every colony and every parent state."&mdash;LORD
+ MAHON.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the four great powers that now principally rule the political destinies
+ of the world, France and England are the only two whose influence can be
+ dated back beyond the last century and a half. The third great power,
+ Russia, was a feeble mass of barbarism before the epoch of Peter the
+ Great; and the very existence of the fourth great power, as an independent
+ nation, commenced within the memory of living men. By the fourth great
+ power of the world I mean the mighty commonwealth of the western
+ continent, which now commands the admiration of mankind. That homage is
+ sometimes reluctantly given, and accompanied with suspicion and ill-will.
+ But none can refuse it. All the physical essentials for national strength
+ are undeniably to be found in the geographical position and amplitude of
+ territory which the United States possess: in their almost inexhaustible
+ tracts of fertile, but hitherto untouched soil; in their stately forests,
+ in their mountain-chains and their rivers, their beds of coal, and stores
+ of metallic wealth; in their extensive seaboard along the waters of two
+ oceans, and in their already numerous and rapidly increasing population.
+ And, when we examine the character of this population, no one can look on
+ the fearless energy, the sturdy determination, the aptitude for local self
+ government, the versatile alacrity, and the unresting spirit of enterprise
+ which characterise the Anglo-Americans, without feeling that he here
+ beholds the true moral elements of progressive might.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three quarters of a century have not yet passed away since the United
+ States ceased to be mere dependencies of England. And even if we date
+ their origin from the period when the first permanent European
+ settlements, out of which they grew, were made on the western coast of the
+ North Atlantic, the increase of their strength is unparalleled, either in
+ rapidity or extent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient Roman boasted, with reason, of the growth of Rome from humble
+ beginnings to the greatest magnitude which the world had then ever
+ witnessed. But the citizen of the United States is still more justly
+ entitled to claim this praise. In two centuries and a half his country has
+ acquired ampler dominion than the Roman gained in ten. And even if we
+ credit the legend of the band of shepherds and outlaws with which Romulus
+ is said to have colonized the Seven Hills, we find not there so small a
+ germ of future greatness, as we find in the group of a hundred and five
+ ill-chosen and disunited emigrants who founded Jamestown in 1607, or in
+ the scanty band of the Pilgrim-Fathers, who, a few years later, moored
+ their bark on the wild and rock-bound coast of the wilderness that was to
+ become New England. The power of the United States is emphatically the
+ "Imperium quo neque ab exordio ullum fere minus, neque incrementis toto
+ orbe amplius humans potest memoria recordari." [Eutropius, lib. i.
+ (exordium).]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is more calculated to impress the mind with a sense of the
+ rapidity with which the resources of the American republic advance, than
+ the difficulty which the historical inquirer finds in ascertaining their
+ precise amount. If he consults the most recent works, and those written by
+ the ablest investigators of the subject, he finds in them admiring
+ comments on the change which the last few years, before those books were
+ written, had made; but when he turns to apply the estimates in those books
+ to the present moment, he finds them wholly inadequate. Before a book on
+ the subject of the United States has lost its novelty, those states have
+ outgrown the description which it contains. The celebrated work of the
+ French statesman, De Tocqueville, appeared about fifteen years ago. In the
+ passage which I am about to quote, it will be seen that he predicts the
+ constant increase of the Anglo-American power, but he looks on the Rocky
+ Mountains as their extreme western limit for many years to come. He had
+ evidently no expectation of himself seeing that power dominant along the
+ Pacific as well as along the Atlantic coast. He says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The distance from Lake Superior to the Gulf of Mexico extends from the
+ 47th to the 30th degree of latitude, a distance of more than 1,200 miles,
+ as the bird flies. The frontier of the United States winds along the whole
+ of this immense line; sometimes falling within its limits, but more
+ frequently extending far beyond it into the waste. It has been calculated
+ that the Whites, advance every year a mean distance of seventeen miles
+ along the whole of this vast boundary. Obstacles, such as an unproductive
+ district, a lake, or an Indian nation unexpectedly encountered, are
+ sometimes met with. The advancing column then halts for a while; its two
+ extremities fall back upon themselves, and as soon as they are re-united
+ they proceed onwards. This gradual and continuous progress of the European
+ race towards the Rocky Mountains has the solemnity of a Providential
+ event: it is like a deluge of men rising unabatedly, and daily driven
+ onwards by the hand of God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Within this first line of conquering settlers towns are built, and vast
+ estates founded. In 1790 there were only a few thousand pioneers sprinkled
+ along the valleys of the Mississippi: and at the present day these valleys
+ contain as many inhabitants as were to be found in the whole Union in
+ 1790. Their population amounts to nearly four millions. The city of
+ Washington was founded in 1800, in the very centre of the Union; but such
+ are the changes which have taken place, that it now stands at one of the
+ extremities; and the delegates of the most remote Western States are
+ already obliged to perform a journey as long so that from Vienna to Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It must not, then, be imagined that the impulse of the British race in
+ the New World can be arrested. The dismemberment of the Union, and the
+ hostilities which might ensue, the abolition of republican institutions,
+ and the tyrannical government which might succeed it, may retard this
+ impulse, but they cannot prevent it from ultimately fulfilling the
+ destinies to which that race is reserved. No power upon earth can close
+ upon the emigrants that fertile wilderness, which offers resources to all
+ industry, and a refuge from all want. Future events, of whatever nature
+ they may be, will not deprive the Americans of their climate or of their
+ inland seas, or of their great rivers, or of their exuberant soil. Nor
+ will bad laws, revolutions, and anarchy be able to obliterate that love of
+ prosperity and that spirit of enterprise which seem to be the distinctive
+ characteristics of their race, or to extinguish that knowledge which
+ guides them on their way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus, in the midst of the uncertain future, one event at least is sure.
+ At a period which may be said to be near (for we are speaking of the life
+ of a nation), the Anglo-Americans will alone cover the immense space
+ contained between the Polar regions and the Tropics, extending from the
+ coast of the Atlantic to the shores of the Pacific Ocean; the territory
+ which will probably be occupied by the Anglo-Americans at some future
+ time, may be computed to equal three-quarters of Europe in extent. The
+ climate of the Union is upon the whole preferable to that of Europe, and
+ its natural advantages are not less great; it is therefore evident that
+ its population will at some future time be proportionate to our own.
+ Europe, divided as it is between so many different nations, and torn as it
+ has been by incessant wars and the barbarous manners of the Middle Ages,
+ has notwithstanding attained a population of 410 inhabitants to the square
+ league. What cause can prevent the United States from having as numerous a
+ population in time?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The time will therefore come when one hundred and fifty millions of men
+ will be living in North America, equal in condition, the progeny of one
+ race, owing their origin to the same cause, and preserving the same
+ civilization, the same language, the same religion, the same habits, the
+ same manners, and imbued with the same opinions, propagated under the same
+ forms. The rest is uncertain, but this is certain; and it is a fact new to
+ the world, a fact fraught with such portentous consequences as to baffle
+ the efforts even of the imagination."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [The original French of these passages will be found in the chapter on
+ "Quelles sont les chances de duree de l'Union Americaine&mdash;Quels
+ dangers la menacent." in the third volume of the first part of De
+ Tocqueville, and in the conclusion of the first part. They are (with
+ others) collected and translated by Mr. Alison, in his "Essays," vol. iii.
+ p. 374.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us turn from the French statesman writing in 1835, to an English
+ statesman, who is justly regarded as the highest authority on all
+ statistical subjects, and who described the United States only seven years
+ ago. Macgregor [Macgregor's Commercial Statistics.] tells us&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The States which, on the ratification of independence, formed the
+ American Republican Union, were thirteen, viz.:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New
+ Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina, South
+ Carolina, and Georgia." The foregoing thirteen states (THE WHOLE INHABITED
+ TERRITORY OF WHICH, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF A FEW SMALL SETTLEMENTS, WAS
+ CONFINED TO THE REGION EXTENDING BETWEEN THE ALLEGHANY MOUNTAINS AND THE
+ ATLANTIC) were those which existed at the period when they became an
+ acknowledged separate and independent federal sovereign power. The
+ thirteen stripes of the standard or flag of the United States, continue to
+ represent the original number, The stars have multiplied to twenty-six,
+ [Fresh stars have dawned since this was written.] according as the number
+ of States have increased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The territory of the thirteen original States of the Union, including
+ Maine and Vermont, comprehended a superficies of 371,124 English square
+ miles; that of the whole United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland,
+ 120,354; that of France, including Corsica, 214,910; that of the Austrian
+ Empire, including Hungary and all the Imperial States, 257,540 English
+ square miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The present superficies of the twenty-six constitutional States of the
+ Anglo-American Union, and the district of Columbia, and territories of
+ Florida, include 1,029,025 square miles; to which if we add the
+ north-west, or Wisconsin territory, east of the Mississippi, and bounded
+ by Lake Superior on the north, and Michigan on the east, and occupying at
+ least 100,000 square miles, and then add the great western region, not yet
+ well-defined territories, but at the most limited calculation
+ comprehending 700,000 square miles, the whole unbroken in its vast length
+ and breadth by foreign nations, comprehends a portion of the earth's
+ surface equal to 1,729,025 English, or 1,296,770 geographical square
+ miles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We may add that the population of the States, when they declared their
+ independence, was about two millions and a half; it is now twenty-three
+ millions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have quoted Macgregor, not only on account of the clear and full view
+ which he gives of the progress of America to the date when he wrote, but
+ because his description may be contrasted with what the United States have
+ become even since his book appeared. Only three years after the time when
+ Macgregor thus wrote, the American President truly stated:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Within less than four years the annexation of Texas to the Union has been
+ consummated; all conflicting title to the Oregon territory, south of the
+ 49th degree of north latitude, adjusted; and New Mexico and Upper
+ California have been acquired by treaty. The area of these several
+ territories contains 1,193,061 square miles, or 763,559,040 acres; while
+ the area of the remaining twenty-nine States, and the territory not yet
+ organized into States east of the Rocky Mountains, contains 2,059,513
+ square miles, or 1,318,126,058 acres. These estimates show that the
+ territories recently acquired, and over which our exclusive jurisdiction
+ and dominion have been extended, constitute a country more than half as
+ large as all that which was held by the United States before their
+ acquisition. If Oregon be excluded from the estimate, there will still
+ remain within the limits of Texas, New Mexico, and California, 851,598
+ square miles, or 545,012,720 acres; being an addition equal to more than
+ one-third of all the territory owned by the United States before their
+ acquisition; and, including Oregon, nearly as great an extent of territory
+ as the whole of Europe, Russia only excepted. THE MISSISSIPPI, SO LATELY
+ THE FRONTIER OF OUR COUNTRY, IS NOW ONLY ITS CENTRE. With the addition of
+ the late acquisitions, the United States are now estimated to be nearly as
+ large as the whole of Europe. The extent of the sea-coast of Texas, on the
+ Gulf of Mexico, is upwards of 400 miles; of the coast of Upper California,
+ on the Pacific, of 970 miles; and of Oregon, including the Straits of
+ Fuca, of 650 miles; MAKING THE WHOLE EXTENT OF SEA-COAST ON THE PACIFIC
+ 1,620 MILES; and the whole extent on both the Pacific and the Gulf of
+ Mexico, 2,020 miles. The length of the coast on the Atlantic, from the
+ northern limits of the United States, round the Capes of Florida to the
+ Sabine on the eastern boundary of Texas, is estimated to be 3,100 miles,
+ so that the addition of sea-coast, including Oregon, is very nearly
+ two-thirds as great as all we possessed before; and, excluding Oregon, is
+ an addition of 1,370 miles; being nearly equal to one-half of the extent
+ of coast which we possessed before these acquisitions. We have now three
+ great maritime fronts&mdash;on the Atlantic, the Gulf of Mexico, and the
+ Pacific; making, in the whole, an extent of sea-coast exceeding 5,000
+ miles. This is the extent of the sea-coast of the United States, not
+ including bays, sounds, and small irregularities of the main shore, and of
+ the sea islands. If these be included, the length of the shore line of
+ coast, as estimated by the superintendent of the Coast Survey, in his
+ report, would be 33,063 miles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The importance of the power of the United States being then firmly planted
+ along the Pacific applies not only to the New World, but to the Old.
+ Opposite to San Francisco, on the coast of that ocean, lie the wealthy but
+ decrepit empires of China and Japan. Numerous groups of islets stud the
+ larger part of the intervening sea, and form convenient stepping-stones
+ for the progress of commerce or ambition. The intercourse of traffic
+ between these ancient Asiatic monarchies, and the young Anglo-American
+ Republic, must be rapid and extensive. Any attempt of the Chinese or
+ Japanese rulers to check it, will only accelerate an armed collision. The
+ American will either buy or force his way. Between such populations as
+ that of China and Japan on the one side, and that of the United States on
+ the other&mdash;the former haughty, formal, and insolent, the latter bold,
+ intrusive, and unscrupulous&mdash;causes of quarrel must, sooner or later,
+ arise, The results of such a quarrel cannot be doubted. America will
+ scarcely imitate the forbearance shown by England at the end of our late
+ war with the Celestial Empire; and the conquests of China and Japan by the
+ fleets and armies of the United States, are events which many now living
+ are likely to witness. Compared with the magnitude of such changes in the
+ dominion of the Old World, the certain ascendancy of the Anglo-Americans
+ over Central and Southern America, seems a matter of secondary importance.
+ Well may we repeat De Tocqueville's words, that the growing power of this
+ commonwealth is, "Un fait entierement nouveau dans le monde, et dont
+ l'imagination ellememe ne saurait saisir la portee." [These remarks were
+ written in May 1851, and now, in May 1852, a powerful squadron of American
+ war-steamers has been sent to Japan, for the ostensible purpose of
+ securing protection for the crews of American vessels shipwrecked on the
+ Japanese coasts, but also evidently for important ulterior purposes.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An Englishman may look, and ought to look, on the growing grandeur of the
+ Americans with no small degree of generous sympathy and satisfaction.
+ They, like ourselves, are members of the great Anglo-Saxon nation "whose
+ race and language are now overrunning the world from one end of it to the
+ other." [Arnold.] and whatever differences of form of government may exist
+ between us and them; whatever reminiscences of the days when, though
+ brethren, we strove together, may rankle in the minds of us, the defeated
+ party; we should cherish the bonds of common nationality that still exist
+ between us. We should remember, as the Athenians remembered of the
+ Spartans at a season of jealousy and temptation, that our race is one,
+ being of the same blood, speaking the same language, having an essential
+ resemblance in our institutions and usages, and worshipping in the temples
+ of the same God. [HERODOTUS, viii. 144.] All this may and should be borne
+ in mind. And yet an Englishman can hardly watch the progress of America,
+ without the regretful thought that America once was English, and that, but
+ for the folly of our rulers, she might be English still. It is true that
+ the commerce between the two countries has largely and beneficially
+ increased; but this is no proof that the increase would not have been
+ still greater, had the States remained integral portions of the same great
+ empire. By giving a fair and just participation in political rights,
+ these, "the fairest possessions" of the British crown, might have been
+ preserved to it. "This ancient and most noble monarchy" [Lord Chatham.]
+ would not have been dismembered; nor should we see that which ought to be
+ the right arm of our strength, now menacing us in every political crisis,
+ as the most formidable rival of our commercial and maritime ascendancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war which rent away the North American colonies of England is, of all
+ subjects in history, the most painful for an Englishman to dwell on. It
+ was commenced and carried on by the British ministry in iniquity and
+ folly, and it was concluded in disaster and shame. But the contemplation
+ of it cannot be evaded by the historian, however much it may be abhorred.
+ Nor can any military event be said to have exercised more important
+ influence on the future fortunes of mankind, than the complete defeat of
+ Burgoyne's expedition in 1777; a defeat which rescued the revolted
+ colonists from certain subjection; and which, by inducing the courts of
+ France and Spain to attack England in their behalf, ensured the
+ independence of the United States, and the formation of that
+ trans-Atlantic power which, not only America, but both Europe and Asia,
+ now see and feel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, in proceeding to describe this "decisive battle of the world," a
+ very brief recapitulation of the earlier events of the war may be
+ sufficient; nor shall I linger unnecessarily on a painful theme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The five northern colonies of Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
+ New Hampshire, and Vermont, usually classed together as the New England
+ colonies, were the strongholds of the insurrection against the
+ mother-country. The feeling of resistance was less vehement and general in
+ the central settlement of New York; and still less so in Pennsylvania,
+ Maryland, and the other colonies of the south, although everywhere it was
+ formidably active. Virginia should, perhaps, be particularised for the
+ zeal which its leading men displayed in the American cause; but it was
+ among the descendants of the stern Puritans that the spirit of Cromwell
+ and Vane breathed in all its fervour; it was from the New Englanders that
+ the first armed opposition to the British crown had been offered; and it
+ was by them that the most stubborn determination to fight to the last,
+ rather than waive a single right or privilege, had been displayed. In
+ 1775, they had succeeded in forcing the British troops to evacuate Boston;
+ and the events of 1776 had made New York (which the royalists captured in
+ that year) the principal basis of operations for the armies of the
+ mother-country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A glance at the map will show that the Hudson river, which falls into the
+ Atlantic at New York, runs down from the north at the back of the New
+ England States, forming an angle of about forty-five degrees with the line
+ of the coast of the Atlantic, along which the New England states are
+ situate. Northward of the Hudson, we see a small chain of lakes
+ communicating with the Canadian frontier. It is necessary to attend
+ closely to these geographical points, in order to understand the plan of
+ the operations which the English attempted in 1777, and which the battle
+ of Saratoga defeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English had a considerable force in Canada; and in 1776 had completely
+ repulsed an attack which the Americans had made upon that province. The
+ British ministry resolved to avail themselves, in the next year, of the
+ advantage which the occupation of Canada gave them, not merely for the
+ purpose of defence, but for the purpose of striking a vigorous and
+ crushing blow against the revolted colonies. With this view, the army in
+ Canada was largely reinforced. Seven thousand veteran troops were sent out
+ from England, with a corps of artillery abundantly supplied, and led by
+ select and experienced officers. Large quantities of military stores were
+ also furnished for the equipment of the Canadian volunteers, who were
+ expected to join the expedition. It was intended that the force thus
+ collected should march southward by the line of the lakes, and thence
+ along the banks of the Hudson river. The British army in New York (or a
+ large detachment of it) was to make a simultaneous movement northward, up
+ the line of the Hudson, and the two expeditions were to unite at Albany, a
+ town on that river. By these operations all communication between the
+ northern colonies and those of the centre and south would be cut off. An
+ irresistible force would be concentrated, so as to crush all further
+ opposition in New England; and when this was done, it was believed that
+ the other colonies would speedily submit. The Americans had no troops in
+ the field that seemed able to baffle these movements. Their principal
+ army, under Washington, was occupied in watching over Pennsylvania and the
+ south. At any rate it was believed that, in order to oppose the plan
+ intended for the new campaign, the insurgents must risk a pitched battle,
+ in which the superiority of the royalists, in numbers, in discipline, and
+ in equipment, seemed to promise to the latter a crowning victory. Without
+ question the plan was ably formed; and had the success of the execution
+ been equal to the ingenuity of the design, the re-conquest or submission
+ of the thirteen United States must, in all human probability, have
+ followed; and the independence which they proclaimed in 1776 would have
+ been extinguished before it existed a second year. No European power had
+ as yet come forward to aid America. It is true that England was generally
+ regarded with jealousy and ill-will, and was thought to have acquired, at
+ the treaty of Paris, a preponderance of dominion which was perilous to the
+ balance of power; but though many were willing to wound, none had yet
+ ventured to strike; and America, if defeated in 1777, would have been
+ suffered to fall unaided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [In Lord Albemarle's "Memoirs of the Marquis of Rockingham." is contained
+ the following remarkable state paper, drawn up by King George III himself
+ respecting the plan of Burgoyne's expedition. The original is in the
+ king's own hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "REMARKS ON THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR FROM CANADA.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The outlines of the plan seem to be on a proper foundation. The rank and
+ file of the army now in Canada (including the 11th Regiment of British,
+ M'Clean's corps, the Brunswicks and Hanover), amount to 10,527; add the
+ eleven additional companies and four hundred Hanover Chasseurs, the total
+ will be 11,443.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As sickness and other contingencies must be expected, I should think not
+ above 7,000 effectives can be spared over Lake Champlain; for it would be
+ highly imprudent to run any risk in Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The fixing the stations of those left in the province may not be quite
+ right, though the plan proposed may be recommended. Indians must be
+ employed, and this measure must be avowedly directed, and Carleton must be
+ in the strongest manner directed that the Apollo shall be ready by that
+ day, to receive Burgoyne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The magazines must be formed with the greatest expedition, at Crown
+ Point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If possible, possession must be taken of Lake George, and nothing but an
+ absolute impossibility of succeeding in this, can be an excuse for
+ proceeding by South Bay and Skeenborough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As Sir W. Howe does not think of acting from Rhode island into the
+ Massachusets, the force from Canada must join him in Albany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The diversion on the Mohawk River ought at least to be strengthened by
+ the addition of the four hundred Hanover Chasseurs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Ordnance ought to furnish a complete proportion of intrenching tools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The provisions ought to be calculated for a third more than the effective
+ soldiery, and the General ordered to avoid delivering these when the army
+ can be subsisted by the country. Burgoyne certainly greatly undervalues
+ the German recruits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The idea of carrying the army by sea to Sir W. Howe, would certainly
+ require the leaving a much larger part of it in Canada, as in that case
+ the rebel army would divide that province from the immense one under Sir
+ W. Howe. I greatly dislike this last idea."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burgoyne had gained celebrity by some bold and dashing exploits in
+ Portugal during the last war; he was personally as brave an officer as
+ ever headed British troops; he had considerable skill as a tactician; and
+ his general intellectual abilities and acquirements were of a high order.
+ He had several very able and experienced officers under him, among whom
+ were Major-General Phillips and Brigadier-General Fraser. His regular
+ troops amounted, exclusively of the corps of artillery, to about seven
+ thousand two hundred men, rank and file. Nearly half of these were
+ Germans. He had also an auxiliary force of from two to three thousand
+ Canadians. He summoned the warriors of several tribes of the Red Indians
+ near the western lakes to join his army. Much eloquence was poured forth,
+ both in America and in England, in denouncing the use of these savage
+ auxiliaries. Yet Burgoyne seems to have done no more than Montcalm, Wolfe,
+ and other French, American, and English generals had done before him. But,
+ in truth, the lawless ferocity of the Indians, their unskilfulness in
+ regular action, and the utter impossibility of bringing them under any
+ discipline, made their services of little or no value in times of
+ difficulty: while the indignation which their outrages inspired, went far
+ to rouse the whole population of the invaded districts into active
+ hostilities against Burgoyne's force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burgoyne assembled his troops and confederates near the river Bouquet, on
+ the west side of Lake Champlain. He then, on the 21st of June, 1777, gave
+ his Red Allies a war-feast, and harangued them on the necessity of
+ abstaining from their usual cruel practices against unarmed people and
+ prisoners. At the same time he published a pompous manifesto to the
+ Americans, in which he threatened the refractory with all the horrors of
+ war, Indian as well as European. The army proceeded by water to Crown
+ Point, a fortification which the Americans held at the northern extremity
+ of the inlet by which the water from Lake George is conveyed to Lake
+ Champlain. He landed here without opposition; but the reduction of
+ Ticonderoga, a fortification about twelve miles to the south of Crown
+ Point, was a more serious matter, and was supposed to be the critical part
+ of the expedition. Ticonderoga commanded the passage along the lakes, and
+ was considered to be the key to the route which Burgoyne wished to follow.
+ The English had been repulsed in an attack on it in the war with the
+ French in 1768 with severe loss. But Burgoyne now invested it with great
+ skill; and the American general, St. Clair, who had only an ill-equipped
+ army of about three thousand men, evacuated it on the 5th of July. It
+ seems evident that a different course would have caused the destruction or
+ capture of his whole army; which, weak as it was, was the chief force then
+ in the field for the protection of the New England states. When censured
+ by some of his countrymen for abandoning Ticonderoga, St. Clair truly
+ replied, "that he had lost a post, but saved a province." Burgoyne's
+ troops pursued the retiring Americans, gained several advantages over
+ them, and took a large part of their artillery and military stores.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss of the British in these engagements was trifling. The army moved
+ southward along Lake George to Skenesborough; and thence slowly, and with
+ great difficulty, across a broken country, full of creeks and marshes, and
+ clogged by the enemy with felled trees and other obstacles, to Fort
+ Edward, on the Hudson river, the American troops continuing to retire
+ before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burgoyne reached the left bank of the Hudson river on the 30th of July.
+ Hitherto he had overcome every difficulty which the enemy and the nature
+ of the country had placed in his way. His army was in excellent order and
+ in the highest spirits; and the peril of the expedition seemed over, when
+ they were once on the bank of the river which was to be the channel of
+ communication between them and the British army in the south. But their
+ feelings, and those of the English nation in general when their successes
+ were announced, may best be learned from a contemporary writer. Burke, in
+ the "Annual Register" for 1777, describes them thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such was the rapid torrent of success, which swept everything away before
+ the northern army in its onset. It is not to be wondered at, if both
+ officers and private men were highly elated with their good fortune, and
+ deemed that and their prowess to be irresistible; if they regarded their
+ enemy with the greatest contempt; considered their own toils to be nearly
+ at an end; Albany to be already in their hands; and the reduction of the
+ northern provinces to be rather a matter of some time, than an arduous
+ task full of difficulty and danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At home, the joy and exultation was extreme; not only at court, but with
+ all those who hoped or wished the unqualified subjugation, and
+ unconditional submission of the colonies. The loss in reputation was
+ greater to the Americans, and capable of more fatal consequences, than
+ even that of ground, of posts, of artillery, or of men. All the
+ contemptuous and most degrading charges which had been made by their
+ enemies, of their wanting the resolution and abilities of men, even in
+ their defence of whatever was dear to them, were now repeated and
+ believed. Those who still regarded them as men, and who had not yet lost
+ all affection to them as brethren, who also retained hopes that a happy
+ reconciliation upon constitutional principles, without sacrificing the
+ dignity or the just authority of government on the one side, or a
+ dereliction of the rights of freemen on the other, was not even now
+ impossible, notwithstanding their favourable dispositions in general,
+ could not help feeling upon this occasion that the Americans sunk not a
+ little in their estimation. It was not difficult to diffuse an opinion
+ that the war in effect was over; and that any further resistance could
+ serve only to render the terms of their submission the worse. Such were
+ some of the immediate effects of the loss of those grand keys of North
+ America, Ticonderoga and the lakes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The astonishment and alarm which these events produced among the Americans
+ were naturally great; but in the midst of their disasters none of the
+ colonists showed any disposition to submit. The local governments of the
+ New England States, as well as the Congress, acted with vigour and
+ firmness in their efforts to repel the enemy. General Gates was sent to
+ take command of the army at Saratoga; and Arnold, a favourite leader of
+ the Americans, was despatched by Washington to act under him, with
+ reinforcements of troops and guns from the main American army. Burgoyne's
+ employment of the Indians now produced the worst possible effects. Though
+ he laboured hard to check the atrocities which they were accustomed to
+ commit, he could not prevent the occurrence of many barbarous outrages,
+ repugnant both to the feelings of humanity and to the laws of civilized
+ warfare. The American commanders took care that the reports of these
+ excesses should be circulated far and wide, well knowing that they would
+ make the stern New Englanders not droop, but rage. Such was their effect;
+ and though, when each man looked upon his wife, his children, his sisters,
+ or his aged parents, the thought of the merciless Indian "thirsting for
+ the blood of man, woman, and child," of "the cannibal savage torturing,
+ murdering, roasting, and eating the mangled victims of his barbarous
+ battles," [Lord Chatham's speech on the employment of Indians in the war.]
+ "might raise terror in the bravest breasts; this very terror produced a
+ directly contrary effect to causing submission to the royal army. It was
+ seen that the few friends of the royal cause, as well as its enemies, were
+ liable to be the victims of the indiscriminate rage of the savages;" [See
+ in the "Annual Register" for 1777, p.117, the "Narrative of the Murder of
+ Miss M'Crea, the daughter of an American loyalist."] and thus "the
+ inhabitants of the open and frontier countries had no choice of acting:
+ they had no means of security left, but by abandoning their habitations
+ and taking up arms. Every man saw the necessity of becoming a temporary
+ soldier, not only for his own security, but for the protection and defence
+ of those connexions which are dearer than life itself. Thus an army was
+ poured forth by the woods, mountains, and marshes, which in this part were
+ thickly sown with plantations and villages. The Americans recalled their
+ courage; and when their regular army seemed to be entirely wasted, the
+ spirit of the country produced a much greater and more formidable force."
+ [Burke.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While resolute recruits, accustomed to the use of fire-arms, and all
+ partially trained by service in the provincial militias, were thus
+ flocking to the standard of Gates and Arnold at Saratoga; and while
+ Burgoyne was engaged at Port Edward in providing the means for the further
+ advance of his army through the intricate and hostile country that still
+ lay before him, two events occurred, in each of which the British
+ sustained loss, and the Americans obtained advantage, the moral effects of
+ which were even more important than the immediate result of the
+ encounters. When Burgoyne left Canada, General St. Leger was detached from
+ that province with a mixed force of about one thousand men, and some light
+ field-pieces, across Lake Ontario against Fort Stanwix, which the
+ Americans held. After capturing this, he was to march along the Mohawk
+ river to its confluence with the Hudson, between Saratoga and Albany,
+ where his force and that of Burgoyne were to unite. But, after some
+ successes, St. Leger was obliged to retreat, and to abandon his tents and
+ large quantities of stores to the garrison. At the very time that General
+ Burgoyne heard of this disaster, he experienced one still more severe in
+ the defeat of Colonel Baum with a large detachment of German troops at
+ Benington, whither Burgoyne had sent them for the purpose of capturing
+ some magazines of provisions, of which the British army stood greatly in
+ need. The Americans, augmented by continual accessions of strength,
+ succeeded, after many attacks, in breaking this corps, which fled into the
+ woods, and left its commander mortally wounded on the field: they then
+ marched against a force of five hundred grenadiers and light infantry,
+ which was advancing to Colonel Baum's assistance under Lieutenant-Colonel
+ Breyman; who, after a gallant resistance, was obliged to retreat on the
+ main army. The British loss in these two actions exceeded six hundred men:
+ and a party of American loyalists, on their way to join the army, having
+ attached themselves to Colonel Baum's corps, were destroyed with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding these reverses, which added greatly to the spirit and
+ numbers of the American forces, Burgoyne determined to advance. It was
+ impossible any longer to keep up his communications with Canada by way of
+ the lakes, so as to supply his army on his southward march; but having by
+ unremitting exertions collected provisions for thirty days, he crossed the
+ Hudson by means of a bridge of rafts, and, marching a short distance along
+ its western bank, he encamped on the 14th of September on the heights of
+ Saratoga, about sixteen miles from Albany. The Americans had fallen back
+ from Saratoga, and were now strongly posted near Stillwater, about half
+ way between Saratoga and Albany, and showed a determination to recede no
+ farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Lord Howe, with the bulk of the British army that had lain at
+ New York, had sailed away to the Delaware, and there commenced a campaign
+ against Washington, in which the English general took Philadelphia, and
+ gained other showy, but unprofitable successes, But Sir Henry Clinton, a
+ brave and skilful officer, was left with a considerable force at New York;
+ and he undertook the task of moving up the Hudson to co-operate with
+ Burgoyne. Clinton was obliged for this purpose to wait for reinforcements
+ which had been promised from England, and these did not arrive till
+ September. As soon as he received them, Clinton embarked about 3,000 of
+ his men on a flotilla, convoyed by some ships of war under Commander
+ Hotham, and proceeded to force his may up the river, but it was long
+ before he was able to open any communication with Burgoyne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country between Burgoyne's position at Saratoga and that of the
+ Americans at Stillwater was rugged, and seamed with creeks and
+ water-courses; but after great labour in making bridges and temporary
+ causeways, the British army moved forward. About four miles from Saratoga,
+ on the afternoon of the 19th of September, a sharp encounter took place
+ between part of the English right wing, under Burgoyne himself, and a
+ strong body of the enemy, under Gates and Arnold. The conflict lasted till
+ sunset. The British remained masters of the field; but the loss on each
+ side was nearly equal (from five hundred to six hundred men); and the
+ spirits of the Americans were greatly raised by having withstood the best
+ regular troops of the English army. Burgoyne now halted again, and
+ strengthened his position by field-works and redoubts; and the Americans
+ also improved their defences. The two armies remained nearly within
+ cannon-shot of each other for a considerable time, during which Burgoyne
+ was anxiously looking for intelligence of the promised expedition from New
+ York, which, according to the original plan, ought by this time to have
+ been approaching Albany from the south. At last, a messenger from Clinton
+ made his way, with great difficulty, to Burgoyne's camp, and brought the
+ information that Clinton was on his way up the Hudson to attack the
+ American forts which barred the passage up that river to Albany. Burgoyne,
+ in reply, on the 30th of September, urged Clinton to attack the forts as
+ speedily as possible, stating that the effect of such an attack, or even
+ the semblance of it, would be to move the American army from its position
+ before his own troops. By another messenger, who reached Clinton on the
+ 5th of October, Burgoyne informed his brother general that he had lost his
+ communications with Canada, but had provisions which would last him till
+ the 20th. Burgoyne described himself as strongly posted, and stated that
+ though the Americans in front of him were strongly posted also, he made no
+ doubt of being able to force them, and making his way to Albany; but that
+ he doubted whether he could subsist there, as the country was drained of
+ provisions. He wished Clinton to meet him there, and to keep open a
+ communication with New York. [See the letters of General Clinton to
+ General Harvey, published by Lord Albemarle in his "Memoirs of the Marquis
+ of Rockingham," vol. ii. p. 335, ET SEQ.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burgoyne had over-estimated his resources, and in the very beginning of
+ October found difficulty and distress pressing him hard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indians and Canadians began to desert him; while, on the other hand,
+ Gates's army was continually reinforced by fresh bodies of the militia. An
+ expeditionary force was detached by the Americans, which made a bold,
+ though unsuccessful, attempt to retake Ticonderoga. And finding the number
+ and spirit of the enemy to increase daily, and his own stores of provision
+ to diminish, Burgoyne determined on attacking the Americans in front of
+ him, and by dislodging them from their position, to gain the means of
+ moving upon Albany, or at least of relieving his troops from the
+ straitened position in which they were cooped up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burgoyne's force was now reduced to less than 6,000 men. The right of his
+ camp was on some high ground a little to the west of the river; thence his
+ entrenchments extended along the lower ground to the bank of the Hudson,
+ the line of their front being nearly at a right angle with the course of
+ the stream. The lines were fortified with redoubts and field-works, and on
+ a height on the bank of the extreme right a strong redoubt was reared, and
+ entrenchments, in a horse-shoe form, thrown up. The Hessians, under
+ Colonel Breyman, were stationed here, forming a flank defence to
+ Burgoyne's main army. The numerical force of the Americans was now greater
+ than the British even in regular troops, and the numbers of the militia
+ and volunteers which had joined Gates and Arnold were greater still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Lincoln with 2,000 New England troops, had reached the American
+ camp on the 29th of September. Gates gave him the command of the right
+ wing, and took in person the command of the left wing, which was composed
+ of two brigades under Generals Poor and Leonard, of Colonel Morgan's rifle
+ corps, and part of the fresh New England Militia. The whole of the
+ American lines had been ably fortified under the direction of the
+ celebrated Polish general, Kosciusko, who was now serving as a volunteer
+ in Gates's army. The right of the American position, that is to say, the
+ part of it nearest to the river, was too strong to be assailed with any
+ prospect of success: and Burgoyne therefore determined to endeavour to
+ force their left. For this purpose he formed a column of 1,500 regular
+ troops, with two twelve-pounders, two howitzers and six six-pounders. He
+ headed this in person, having Generals Phillips, Reidesel, and Fraser
+ under him. The enemy's force immediately in front of his lines was so
+ strong that he dared not weaken the troops who guarded them, by detaching
+ any more to strengthen his column of attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on the 7th of October that Burgoyne led his column forward; and on
+ the preceding day, the 6th, Clinton had successfully executed a brilliant
+ enterprise against the two American forts which barred his progress up the
+ Hudson. He had captured them both, with severe loss to the American forces
+ opposed to him; he had destroyed the fleet which the Americans had been
+ forming on the Hudson, under the protection of their forts; and the upward
+ river was laid open to his squadron. He had also, with admirable skill and
+ industry, collected in small vessels, such as could float within a few
+ miles of Albany, provisions sufficient to supply Burgoyne's Army for six
+ months. [See Clinton's letters in Lord Albemarle, p. 337.] He was now only
+ a hundred and fifty-six miles distant from Burgoyne; and a detachment of
+ 1,700 men actually advanced within forty miles of Albany. Unfortunately
+ Burgoyne and Clinton were each ignorant of the other's movements; but if
+ Burgoyne had won his battle on the 7th, he must on advancing have soon
+ learned the tidings of Clinton's success, and Clinton would have heard of
+ his. A junction would soon have been made of the two victorious armies,
+ and the great objects of the campaign might yet have been accomplished.
+ All depended on the fortune of the column with which Burgoyne, on the
+ eventful 7th of October, 1777, advanced against the American position.
+ There were brave men, both English and German, in its ranks; and in
+ particular it comprised one of the best bodies of grenadiers in the
+ British service. [I am indebted for many of the details of the battle, to
+ Mr Lossing's "Field-book of the Revolution."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burgoyne pushed forward some bodies of irregular troops to distract the
+ enemy's attention; and led his column to within three-quarters of a mile
+ from the left of Gates's camp, and then deployed his men into line. The
+ grenadiers under Major Ackland, and the artillery under Major Williams,
+ were drawn up on the left; a corps of Germans under General Reidesel, and
+ some British troops under General Phillips, were in the centre; and the
+ English light infantry, and the 24th regiment under Lord Balcarres and
+ General Fraser, were on the right. But Gates did not wait to be attacked;
+ and directly the British line was formed and began to advance, the
+ American general, with admirable skill, caused General Poor's brigade of
+ New York and New Hampshire troops, and part of General Leonard's brigade,
+ to make a sudden and vehement rush against its left, and at the same time
+ sent Colonel Morgan, with his rifle corps and other troops, amounting to
+ 1,500, to turn the right of the English. The grenadiers under Ackland
+ sustained the charge of superior numbers nobly. But Gates sent more
+ Americans forward, and in a few minutes the action became general along
+ the centre, so as to prevent the Germans from detaching any help to the
+ grenadiers. Morgan, with his riflemen, was now pressing Lord Balcarres and
+ General Fraser hard, and fresh masses of the enemy were observed advancing
+ from their extreme left, with the evident intention of forcing the British
+ right, and cutting off its retreat. The English light infantry and the
+ 24th now fell back, and formed an oblique second line, which enabled them
+ to baffle this manoeuvre, and also to succour their comrades in the left
+ wing, the gallant grenadiers, who were overpowered by superior numbers,
+ and, but for this aid, must have been cut to pieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contest now was fiercely maintained on both sides. The English cannon
+ were repeatedly taken and retaken; but when the grenadiers near them were
+ forced back by the weight of superior numbers, one of the guns was
+ permanently captured by the Americans, and turned upon the English. Major
+ Williams and Major Ackland were both made prisoners, and in this part of
+ the field the advantage of the Americans was decided. The British centre
+ still held its ground; but now it was that the American general Arnold
+ appeared upon the scene, and did more for his countrymen than whole
+ battalions could have effected. Arnold, when the decisive engagement of
+ the 7th of October commenced, had been deprived of his command by Gates,
+ in consequence of a quarrel between them about the action of the 19th of
+ September. He had listened for a short time in the American camp to the
+ thunder of the battle, in which he had no military right to take part,
+ either as commander or as combatant. But his excited spirit could not long
+ endure such a state of inaction. He called for his horse, a powerful brown
+ charger, and springing on it, galloped furiously to where the fight seemed
+ to be the thickest. Gates saw him, and sent an aide-de-camp to recall him;
+ but Arnold spurred far in advance, and placed himself at the head of three
+ regiments which had formerly been under him, and which welcomed their old
+ commander with joyous cheers. He led them instantly upon the British
+ centre; and then galloping along the American line, he issued orders for a
+ renewed and a closer attack, which were obeyed with alacrity, Arnold
+ himself setting the example of the most daring personal bravery, and
+ charging more than once, sword in hand, into the English ranks. On the
+ British side the officers did their duty nobly; but General Fraser was the
+ most eminent of them all, restoring order wherever the line began to
+ waver, and infusing fresh courage into his men by voice and example.
+ Mounted on an iron-grey charger, and dressed in the full uniform of a
+ general officer, he was conspicuous to foes as well as to friends. The
+ American Colonel Morgan thought that the fate of the battle rested on this
+ gallant man's life, and calling several of his best marksman round him,
+ pointed Fraser out, and said: "That officer is General Fraser; I admire
+ him, but he must die. Our victory depends on it. Take your stations in
+ that clump of bushes, and do your duty." Within five minutes Fraser fell
+ mortally wounded, and was carried to the British camp by two grenadiers.
+ Just previously to his being struck by the fatal bullet, one rifle-ball
+ had cut the crupper of his saddle and smother had passed through his
+ horse's mane close behind the ears. His aide-de-camp had noticed this, and
+ said: "It is evident that you are marked out for particular aim; would it
+ not be prudent; for you to retire from this place?" Fraser replied: "My
+ duty forbids me to fly from danger;" and the next moment he fell.
+ [Lossing.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burgoyne's whole force was now compelled to retreat towards their camp;
+ the left and centre were in complete disorder, but the light infantry and
+ the 24th checked the fury of the assailants, and the remains of the column
+ with great difficulty effected their return to their camp; leaving six of
+ their cannons in the possession of the enemy, and great numbers of killed
+ and wounded on the field; and especially a large proportion of the
+ artillerymen, who had stood to their guns until shot down or bayoneted
+ beside them by the advancing Americans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burgoyne's column had been defeated, but the action was not yet over. The
+ English had scarcely entered the camp, when the Americans, pursuing their
+ success, assaulted it in several places with remarkable impetuosity,
+ rushing in upon the intrenchments and redoubts through a severe fire of
+ grape-shot and musketry. Arnold especially, who on this day appeared
+ maddened with the thirst of combat and carnage, urged on the attack
+ against a part of the intrenchments which was occupied by the light
+ infantry under Lord Balcarres. [Botta's American War, book viii.] But the
+ English received him with vigour and spirit. The struggle here was
+ obstinate and sanguinary. At length, as it grew towards evening, Arnold,
+ having forced all obstacles, entered the works with some of the most
+ fearless of his followers. But in this critical moment of glory and
+ danger, he received a painful wound in the same leg which had already been
+ injured at the assault on Quebec. To his bitter regret he was obliged to
+ be carried back. His party still continued the attack, but the English
+ also continued their obstinate resistance, and at last night fell, and the
+ assailants withdrew from this quarter of the British intrenchments. But,
+ in another part the attack had been more successful. A body of the
+ Americans, under Colonel Brooke, forced their way in through a part of the
+ horse-shoe intrenchments on the extreme right, which was defended by the
+ Hessian reserve under Colonel Breyman. The Germans resisted well, and
+ Breyman died in defence of his post; but the Americans made good the
+ ground which they had won, and captured baggage, tents, artillery, and a
+ store of ammunition, which they were greatly in need of. They had by
+ establishing themselves on this point, acquired the means of completely
+ turning the right flank of the British, and gaining their rear. To prevent
+ this calamity, Burgoyne effected during the night an entire change of
+ position. With great skill he removed his whole army to some heights near
+ the river, a little northward of the former camp, and he there drew up his
+ men, expecting to be attacked on the following day. But Gates was resolved
+ not to risk the certain triumph which his success had already secured for
+ him. He harassed the English with skirmishes, but attempted no regular
+ attack. Meanwhile he detached bodies of troops on both sides of the Hudson
+ to prevent the British from recrossing that river, and to bar their
+ retreat. When night fell, it became absolutely necessary for Burgoyne to
+ retire again, and, accordingly, the troops were marched through a stormy
+ and rainy night towards Saratoga, abandoning their sick and wounded, and
+ the greater part of their baggage to the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the rear-guard quitted the camp, the last sad honours were paid to
+ the brave General Fraser, who expired on the day after the action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had, almost with his last breath, expressed a wish to be buried in the
+ redoubt which had formed the part of the British lines where he had been
+ stationed, but which had now been abandoned by the English, and was within
+ full range of the cannon which the advancing Americans were rapidly
+ placing in position to bear upon Burgoyne's force. Burgoyne resolved,
+ nevertheless, to comply with the dying wish of his comrade; and the
+ interment took place under circumstances the most affecting that have ever
+ marked a soldier's funeral. Still more interesting is the narrative of
+ Lady Ackland's passage from the British to the American camp, after the
+ battle, to share the captivity and alleviate the sufferings of her husband
+ who had been severely wounded, and left in the enemy's power. The American
+ historian, Lossing, has described both these touching episodes of the
+ campaign, in a spirit that does honour to the writer as well as to his
+ subject. After narrating the death of General Fraser on the 8th of
+ October, he says that "It was just at sunset, on that calm October
+ evening, that the corpse of General Fraser was carried up the hill to the
+ place of burial within the 'great redoubt.' It was attended only by the
+ military members of his family and Mr. Brudenell, the chaplain; yet the
+ eyes of hundreds of both armies followed the solemn procession, while the
+ Americans, ignorant of its true character, kept up a constant cannonade
+ upon the redoubt. The chaplain, unawed by the danger to which he was
+ exposed, as the cannon-balls that struck the hill threw the loose soil
+ over him, pronounced the impressive funeral service of the Church of
+ England with an unfaltering voice. The growing darkness added solemnity to
+ the scene. Suddenly the irregular firing ceased, and the solemn voice of a
+ single cannon, at measured intervals, boomed along the valley, and
+ awakened the responses of the hills. It was a minute gun fired by the
+ Americans in honour of the gallant dead. The moment the information was
+ given that the gathering at the redoubt was a funeral company, fulfilling,
+ at imminent peril, the last-breathed wishes of the noble Fraser, orders
+ were issued to withhold the cannonade with balls, and to render military
+ homage to the fallen brave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The case of Major Ackland and his heroic wife presents kindred features.
+ He belonged to the grenadiers, and was an accomplished soldier. His wife
+ accompanied him to Canada in 1776; and during the whole campaign of that
+ year, and until his return to England after the surrender of Burgoyne, in
+ the autumn of 1777, endured all the hardships, dangers, and privations of
+ an active campaign in an enemy's country. At Chambly, on the Sorel, she
+ attended him in illness, in a miserable hut; and when he was wounded in
+ the battle of Hubbardton, Vermont she hastened to him at Henesborough from
+ Montreal, where she had been persuaded to remain, and resolved to follow
+ the army hereafter. Just before crossing the Hudson, she and her husband
+ had had a narrow escape from losing their lives in consequence of their
+ tent accidentally taking fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "During the terrible engagement of the 7th October, she heard all the
+ tumult and dreadful thunder of the battle in which her husband was
+ engaged; and when, on the morning of the 8th, the British fell back in
+ confusion to their new position, she, with the other women, was obliged to
+ take refuge among the dead and dying; for the tents were all struck, and
+ hardly a shed was left standing. Her husband was wounded, and a prisoner
+ in the American camp. That gallant officer was shot through both legs.
+ When Poor and Learned's troops assaulted the grenadiers and artillery on
+ the British left, on the afternoon of the 7th, Wilkinson, Gates's
+ adjutant-general, while pursuing the flying enemy when they abandoned
+ their battery, heard a feeble voice exclaim 'Protect me, sir, against that
+ boy.' He turned and saw a lad with a musket taking deliberate aim at a
+ wounded British officer, lying in a corner of a low fence. Wilkinson
+ ordered the boy to desist, and discovered the wounded man to be Major
+ Ackland. He had him conveyed to the quarters of General Poor (now the
+ residence of Mr. Neilson) on the heights, where every attention was paid
+ to his wants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When the intelligence that he was wounded and a prisoner reached his
+ wife, she was greatly distressed, and, by the advice of her friend, Baron
+ Reidesel, resolved to visit the American camp, and implore the favour of a
+ personal attendance upon her husband. On the 9th she sent a message to
+ Burgoyne by Lord Petersham, his aide-de-camp, asking permission to depart.
+ 'Though I was ready to believe,' says Burgoyne, 'that patience and
+ fortitude, in a supreme degree, were to be found, as well as every other
+ virtue, under the most tender forms, I was astonished at this proposal.
+ After so long an agitation of spirits, exhausted not only for want of
+ rest, but absolutely want of food, drenched in rain for twelve hours
+ together, that a woman should be capable of such an undertaking as
+ delivering herself to an enemy, probably in the night, and uncertain of
+ what hands she might fall into, appeared an effort above human nature. The
+ assistance I was able to give was small indeed. I had not even a cup of
+ wine to offer her. All I could furnish her with was an open boat, and a
+ few lines, written upon dirty wet paper, to General Gates, recommending
+ her to his protection.' The following is a copy of the note sent by
+ Burgoyne to General Gates:&mdash;'Sir,&mdash;Lady Harriet Ackland, a lady
+ of the first distinction of family, rank, and personal virtues, is under
+ such concern on account of Major Ackland, her husband, wounded and a
+ prisoner in your hands, that I cannot refuse her request to commit her to
+ your protection. Whatever general impropriety there may be in persons of
+ my situation and yours to solicit favours, I cannot see the uncommon
+ perseverance in every female grace, and the exaltation of character of
+ this lady, and her very hard fortune, without testifying that your
+ attentions to her will lay me under obligations. I am, sir, your obedient
+ servant, J. Burgoyne.' She set out in an open boat upon the Hudson,
+ accompanied by Mr. Brudenell, the chaplain, Sarah Pollard, her waiting
+ maid, and her husband's valet, who had been severely wounded while
+ searching for his master upon the battle-field. It was about sunset when
+ they started, and a violent storm of rain and wind, which had been
+ increasing since the morning, rendered the voyage tedious and perilous in
+ the extreme. It was long after dark when they reached the American
+ out-posts; the sentinel heard their oars, and hailed them, Lady Harriet
+ returned the answer herself. The clear, silvery tones of a woman's voice
+ amid the darkness, filled the soldier on duty with superstitious fear, and
+ he called a comrade to accompany him to the river bank. The errand of the
+ voyagers was made known, but the faithful guard, apprehensive of
+ treachery, would not allow them to laud until they sent for Major
+ Dearborn. They were invited by that officer to his quarters, where every
+ attention was paid to them, and Lady Harriet was comforted by the joyful
+ tidings that her husband was safe. In the morning she experienced parental
+ tenderness from General Gates who sent her to her husband, at Poor's
+ quarters, under a suitable escort. There she remained until he was removed
+ to Albany."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burgoyne now took up his last position on the heights near Saratoga; and
+ hemmed in by the enemy, who refused any encounter, and baffled in all his
+ attempts at finding a path of escape, he there lingered until famine
+ compelled him to capitulate. The fortitude of the British army during this
+ melancholy period has been justly eulogised by many native historians, but
+ I prefer quoting the testimony of a foreign writer, as free from all
+ possibility of partiality. Botta says: [Botta, book viii.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It exceeds the power of words to describe the pitiable condition to which
+ the British army was now reduced. The troops were worn down by a series of
+ toil, privation, sickness, and desperate fighting. They were abandoned by
+ the Indians and Canadians; and the effective force of the whole army was
+ now diminished by repeated and heavy losses, which had principally fallen
+ on the best soldiers and the most distinguished officers, from ten
+ thousand combatants to less than one-half that number. Of this remnant
+ little more than three thousand were English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In these circumstances, and thus weakened, they were invested by an army
+ of four times their own number, whose position extended three parts of a
+ circle round them; who refused to fight them, as knowing their weakness,
+ and who, from the nature of the ground, could not be attacked in any part.
+ In this helpless condition, obliged to be constantly under arms, while the
+ enemy's cannon played on every part of their camp, and even the American
+ rifle-balls whistled in many parts of the lines, the troops of Burgoyne
+ retained their customary firmness, and, while sinking under a hard
+ necessity, they showed themselves worthy of a better fate. They could not
+ be reproached with an action or a word, which betrayed a want of temper or
+ of fortitude."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length the 13th of October arrived, and as no prospect of assistance
+ appeared, and the provisions were nearly exhausted, Burgoyne, by the
+ unanimous advice of a council of war, sent a messenger to the American
+ camp to treat of a convention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Gates in the first instance demanded that the royal army should
+ surrender prisoners of war. He also proposed that the British should
+ ground their arms. Burgoyne replied, "This article is inadmissible in
+ every extremity; sooner than this army will consent to ground their arms
+ in their encampment, they will rush on the enemy, determined to take no
+ quarter." After various messages, a convention for the surrender of the
+ army was settled, which provided that "The troops under General Burgoyne
+ were to march out of their camp with the honours of war, and the artillery
+ of the intrenchments, to the verge of the river, where the arms and
+ artillery were to be left. The arms to be piled by word of command from
+ their own officers. A free passage was to be granted to the army under
+ Lieutenant-General Burgoyne to Great Britain, upon condition of not
+ serving again in North America during the present contest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The articles of capitulation were settled on the 15th of October: and on
+ that very evening a messenger arrived from Clinton with an account of his
+ successes, and with the tidings that part of his force had penetrated as
+ far as Esopus, within fifty miles of Burgoyne's camp. But it was too late.
+ The public faith was pledged; and the army was, indeed, too debilitated by
+ fatigue and hunger to resist an attack if made; and Gates certainly would
+ have made it, if the convention had been broken off. Accordingly, on the
+ 17th, the convention of Saratoga was carried into effect. By this
+ convention 5,790 men surrendered themselves as prisoners. The sick and
+ wounded left in the camp when the British retreated to Saratoga, together
+ with the numbers of the British, German, and Canadian troops, who were
+ killed, wounded, or taken, and who had deserted in the preceding part of
+ the expedition, were reckoned to be 4,689.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British sick and wounded who had fallen into the hands of the
+ Americans after the battle of the 7th, were treated with exemplary
+ humanity; and when the convention was executed, General Gates showed a
+ noble delicacy of feeling which deserves the highest degree of honour.
+ Every circumstance was avoided which could give the appearance of triumph.
+ The American troops remained within their lines until the British had
+ piled their arms; and when this was done, the vanquished officers and
+ soldiers were received with friendly kindness by their victors, and their
+ immediate wants were promptly and liberally supplied. Discussions and
+ disputes afterwards arose as to some of the terms of the convention; and
+ the American Congress refused for a long time to carry into effect the
+ article which provided for the return of Burgoyne's men to Europe; but no
+ blame was imputable to General Gates or his army, who showed themselves to
+ be generous as they had proved themselves to be brave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gates after the victory, immediately despatched Colonel Wilkinson to carry
+ the happy tidings to Congress. On being introduced into the hall, he said,
+ "The whole British army has laid down its arms at Saratoga; our own, full
+ of vigour and courage, expect your order. It is for your wisdom to decide
+ where the country may still have need for their service." Honours and
+ rewards were liberally voted by the Congress to their conquering general
+ and his men; "and it would be difficult" (says the Italian historian) "to
+ describe the transports of joy which the news of this event excited among
+ the Americans. They began to flatter themselves with a still more happy
+ future. No one any longer felt any doubt about their achieving their
+ independence. All hoped, and with good reason, that a success of this
+ importance would at length determine France, and the other European powers
+ that waited for her example, to declare themselves in favour of America.
+ THERE COULD NO LONGER BE ANY QUESTION RESPECTING THE FUTURE; SINCE THERE
+ WAS NO LONGER THE RISK OF ESPOUSING THE CAUSE OF A PEOPLE TOO FEEBLE TO
+ DEFEND THEMSELVES."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth of this was soon displayed in the conduct of France. When the
+ news arrived at Paris of the capture of Ticonderoga, and of the victorious
+ march of Burgoyne towards Albany, events which seemed decisive in favour
+ of the English, instructions had been immediately despatched to Nantz, and
+ the other ports of the kingdom, that no American privateers should be
+ suffered to enter them, except from indispensable necessity, as to repair
+ their vessels, to obtain provisions, or to escape the perils of the sea.
+ The American commissioners at Paris, in their disgust and despair, had
+ almost broken off all negotiations with the French government; and they
+ even endeavoured to open communications with the British ministry. But the
+ British government, elated with the first successes of Burgoyne, refused
+ to listen to any overtures for accommodation. But when the news of
+ Saratoga reached Paris, the whole scene was changed. Franklin and his
+ brother commissioners found all their difficulties with the French
+ government vanish. The time seemed to have arrived for the House of
+ Bourbon to take a full revenge for all its humiliations and losses in
+ previous wars. In December a treaty was arranged, and formally signed in
+ the February following, by which France acknowledged the INDEPENDENT
+ UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. This was, of course, tantamount to a declaration
+ of war with England. Spain soon followed France; and before long Holland
+ took the same course. Largely aided by French fleets and troops, the
+ Americans vigorously maintained the war against the armies which England,
+ in spite of her European foes, continued to send across the Atlantic. But
+ the struggle was too unequal to be maintained by this country for many
+ years: and when the treaties of 1783 restored peace to the world, the
+ independence of the United States was reluctantly recognized by their
+ ancient parent and recent enemy, England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE DEFEAT OF BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA, 1777, AND
+ THE BATTLE OF VALMY, 1792.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 1781. Surrender of Lord Cornwallis and the British army to
+ Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1782. Rodney's victory over the Spanish fleet. Unsuccessful siege of
+ Gibraltar by the Spaniards and French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1783. End of the American war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1788. The States-General are convened in France:&mdash;beginning of the
+ Revolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF VALMY.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Purpurei metuunt tyranni
+ Injurioso ne pede proruas
+ Stantem columnam; neu populus frequens
+ Ad arma cessantes ad arma
+ Concitet, imperiumque frangat."
+ HORAT. Od. i 35.
+
+ "A little fire is quickly trodden out,
+ Which, being suffered, rivers cannot quench."
+ SHAKESPEARE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A few miles distant from the little town of St. Menehould, in the
+ north-east of France, are the village and hill of Valmy; and near the
+ crest of that hill, a simple monument points out the burial-place of the
+ heart of a general of the French republic, and a marshal of the French
+ empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The elder Kellerman (father of the distinguished officer of that name,
+ whose cavalry-charge decided the battle of Marengo) held high commands in
+ the French armies throughout the wars of the Convention, the Directory,
+ the Consulate, and the Empire. He survived those wars, and the empire
+ itself, dying in extreme old age in 1820. The last wish of the veteran on
+ his death bed was that his heart should be deposited in the battle-field
+ of Valmy, there to repose among the remains of his old companions in arms,
+ who had fallen at his side on that spot twenty-eight years before, on the
+ memorable day when they won the primal victory of revolutionary France,
+ and prevented the armies of Brunswick and the emigrant bands of Conde from
+ marching on defenceless Paris, and destroying the immature democracy in
+ its cradle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Valmy (for Kellerman, when made one of Napoleon's military
+ peers in 1802, took his title from this same battlefield) had
+ participated, during his long and active career, in the gaining of many a
+ victory far more immediately dazzling than the the one, the remembrance of
+ which he thus cherished. He had been present at many a scene of carnage,
+ where blood flowed in deluges, compared with which the libations of
+ slaughter poured out at Valmy would have seemed scant and insignificant.
+ But he rightly estimated the paramount importance of the battle with which
+ he thus wished his appellation while living, and his memory after his
+ death, to be identified. The successful resistance, which the new
+ Carmagnole levies, and the disorganized relics of the old monarchy's army,
+ then opposed to the combined hosts and chosen leaders of Prussia, Austria,
+ and the French refugee noblesse, determined at once and for ever the
+ belligerent character of the revolution. The raw artisans and tradesmen,
+ the clumsy burghers, the base mechanics and low peasant churls, as it had
+ been the fashion to term the middle and lower classes in France, found
+ that they could face cannon-balls, pull triggers, and cross bayonets,
+ without having been drilled into military machines, and without being
+ officered by scions of noble houses. They awoke to the consciousness of
+ their own instinctive soldiership. They at once acquired confidence in
+ themselves and in each other; and that confidence soon grew into a spirit
+ of unbounded audacity and ambition. "From the cannonade of Valmy may be
+ dated the commencement of that career of victory which carried their
+ armies to Vienna and the Kremlin." [Alison.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the gravest reflections that arises from the contemplation of the
+ civil restlessness and military enthusiasm which the close of the last
+ century saw nationalised in France, is the consideration that these
+ disturbing influences have become perpetual. No settled system of
+ government, that shall endure from generation to generation, that shall be
+ proof against corruption and popular violence, seems capable of taking
+ root among the French. And every revolutionary movement in Paris thrills
+ throughout the rest of the world. Even the successes which the powers
+ allied against France gained in 1814 and 1815, important as they were,
+ could not annul the effects of the preceding twenty-three years of general
+ convulsion and war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1830, the dynasty which foreign bayonets had imposed on France was
+ shaken off; and men trembled at the expected outbreak of French anarchy
+ and the dreaded inroads of French ambition. They "looked forward with
+ harassing anxiety to a period of destruction similar to that which the
+ Roman world experienced about the middle of the third century of our era."
+ [See Niebuhr's Preface to the second volume of the "History of Rome,"
+ written in October 1830.] Louis Philippe cajoled revolution, and then
+ strove with seeming success to stifle it. But in spite of Fieschi laws, in
+ spite of the dazzle of Algerian razzias and Pyrenees-effacing marriages,
+ in spite of hundreds of armed forts, and hundreds of thousands of coercing
+ troops, Revolution lived, and struggled to get free. The old Titan spirit
+ heaved restlessly beneath "the monarchy based on republican institutions."
+ At last, four years ago, the whole fabric of kingcraft was at once rent
+ and scattered to the winds, by the uprising of the Parisian democracy; and
+ insurrections, barricades and dethronements, the downfall of coronets and
+ crowns, the armed collisions of parties, systems, and populations, became
+ the commonplaces of recent European history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ France now calls herself a republic. She first assumed that title on the
+ 20th of September, 1792, on the very day on which the battle of Valmy was
+ fought and won. To that battle the democratic spirit which in 1848, as
+ well as in 1792, proclaimed the Republic in Paris, owed its preservation,
+ and it is thence that the imperishable activity of its principles may be
+ dated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far different seemed the prospects of democracy in Europe on the eve of
+ that battle; and far different would have been the present position and
+ influence of the French nation, if Brunswick's columns had charged with
+ more boldness, or the lines of Dumouriez resisted with less firmness. When
+ France, in 1792, declared war with the great powers of Europe, she was far
+ from possessing that splendid military organization which the experience
+ of a few revolutionary campaigns taught her to assume, and which she has
+ never abandoned. The army of the old monarchy had, during the latter part
+ of the reign of Louis XV. sunk into gradual decay, both in numerical
+ force, and in efficiency of equipment and spirit. The laurels gained by
+ the auxiliary regiments which Louis XVI. sent to the American war, did but
+ little to restore the general tone of the army. The insubordination and
+ licence, which the revolt of the French guards, and the participation of
+ other troops in many of the first excesses of the Revolution introduced
+ among the soldiery, were soon rapidly disseminated through all the ranks.
+ Under the Legislative Assembly every complaint of the soldier against his
+ officer, however frivolous or ill-founded, was listened to with eagerness,
+ and investigated with partiality, on the principles of liberty and
+ equality. Discipline accordingly became more and more relaxed; and the
+ dissolution of several of the old corps, under the pretext of their being
+ tainted with an aristocratic feeling, aggravated the confusion and
+ inefficiency of the war department. Many of the most effective regiments
+ during the last period of the monarchy had consisted of foreigners. These
+ had either been slaughtered in defence of the throne against
+ insurrections, like the Swiss; or had been disbanded, and had crossed the
+ frontier to recruit the forces which were assembling for the invasion of
+ France. Above all, the emigration of the noblesse had stripped the French
+ army of nearly all its officers of high rank, and of the greatest portion
+ of its subalterns. More than twelve thousand of the high-born youth of
+ France, who had been trained to regard military command as their exclusive
+ patrimony, and to whom the nation had been accustomed to look up as its
+ natural guides and champions in the storm of war; were now marshalled
+ beneath the banner of Conde and the other emigrant princes, for the
+ overthrow of the French armies, and the reduction of the French capital.
+ Their successors in the French regiments and brigades had as yet acquired
+ neither skill nor experience: they possessed neither self-reliance nor the
+ respect of the men who were under them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the state of the wrecks of the old army; but the bulk of the
+ forces with which France began the war, consisted of raw insurrectionary
+ levies, which were even less to be depended on. The Carmagnoles, as the
+ revolutionary volunteers were called, flocked, indeed, readily to the
+ frontier from every department when the war was proclaimed, and the fierce
+ leaders of the Jacobins shouted that the country was in danger. They were
+ full of zeal and courage, "heated and excited by the scenes of the
+ Revolution, and inflamed by the florid eloquence, the songs, dances, and
+ signal-words with which it had been celebrated." [Scott, Life of Napoleon,
+ vol. i c. viii.] But they were utterly undisciplined, and turbulently
+ impatient of superior authority, or systematical control. Many ruffians,
+ also, who were sullied with participation in the most sanguinary horrors
+ of Paris, joined the camps, and were pre-eminent alike for misconduct
+ before the enemy and for savage insubordination against their own
+ officers. On one occasion during the campaign of Valmy, eight battalions
+ of federates, intoxicated with massacre and sedition, joined the forces
+ under Dumouriez, and soon threatened to uproot all discipline, saying
+ openly that the ancient officers were traitors, and that it was necessary
+ to purge the army, as they had Paris, of its aristocrats. Dumouriez posted
+ these battalions apart from the others, placed a strong force of cavalry
+ behind them, and two pieces of cannon on their flank. Then, affecting to
+ review them, he halted at the head of the line, surrounded by all his
+ staff, and an escort of a hundred hussars. "Fellows," said he, "for I will
+ not call you either citizens or soldiers, you see before you this
+ artillery, behind you this cavalry; you are stained with crimes, and I do
+ not tolerate here assassins or executioners. I know that there are
+ scoundrels amongst you charged to excite you to crime. Drive them from
+ amongst you, or denounce them to me, for I shall hold you responsible for
+ their conduct." [Lamartine.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of our recent historians of the Revolution, who narrates this
+ incident, [Carlyle.] thus apostrophises the French general:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Patience, O Dumouriez! This uncertain heap of shriekers, mutineers, were
+ they once drilled and inured, will become a phalanxed mass of fighters;
+ and wheel and whirl to order swiftly, like the wind or the whirlwind;
+ tanned mustachio-figures; often barefoot, even barebacked, with sinews of
+ iron; who require only bread and gunpowder; very sons of fire; the
+ adroitest, hastiest, hottest, ever seen perhaps since Attila's time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such phalanxed masses of fighters did the Carmagnoles ultimately become;
+ but France ran a fearful risk in being obliged to rely on them when the
+ process of their transmutation had barely commenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first events, indeed, of the war were disastrous and disgraceful to
+ France, even beyond what might have been expected from the chaotic state
+ in which it found her armies as well as her government. In the hopes of
+ profiting by the unprepared state of Austria, then the mistress of the
+ Netherlands, the French opened the campaign of 1792 by an invasion of
+ Flanders, with forces whose muster-rolls showed a numerical overwhelming
+ superiority to the enemy, and seemed to promise a speedy conquest of that
+ old battle-field of Europe. But the first flash of an Austrian sabre, or
+ the first sound of Austrian gun, was enough to discomfit the French. Their
+ first corps, four thousand strong, that advanced from Lille across the
+ frontier, came suddenly upon a far inferior detachment of the Austrian
+ garrison of Tournay. Not a shot was fired, not a bayonet levelled. With
+ one simultaneous cry of panic the French broke and ran headlong back to
+ Lille, where they completed the specimen of insubordination which they had
+ given in the field, by murdering their general and several of their chief
+ officers. On the same day, another division under Biron, mustering ten
+ thousand sabres and bayonets, saw a few Austrian skirmishers
+ reconnoitering their position. The French advanced posts had scarcely
+ given and received a volley, and only a few balls from the enemy's
+ field-pieces had fallen among the lines, when two regiments of French
+ dragoons raised the cry, "We are betrayed," galloped off, and were
+ followed in disgraceful rout by the rest of the whole army. Similar
+ panics, or repulses almost equally discreditable, occurred whenever
+ Rochambeau, or Luckner, or La Fayette, the earliest French generals in the
+ war, brought their troops into the presence of the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the allied sovereigns had gradually collected on the Rhine a
+ veteran and finely-disciplined army for the invasion of France, which for
+ numbers, equipment, and martial renown, both of generals and men, was
+ equal to any that Germany had ever sent forth to conquer. Their design was
+ to strike boldly and decisively at the heart of France, and penetrating
+ the country through the Ardennes, to proceed by Chalons upon Paris. The
+ obstacles that lay in their way seemed insignificant. The disorder and
+ imbecility of the French armies had been even augmented by the forced
+ flight of La Fayette, and a sudden change of generals. The only troops
+ posted on or near the track by which the allies were about to advance,
+ were the twenty-three thousand men at Sedan, whom La Fayette had
+ commanded, and a corps of twenty thousand near Metz, the command of which
+ had just been transferred from Luckner to Kellerman. There were only three
+ fortresses which it was necessary for the allies to capture or mask&mdash;Sedan,
+ Longwy, and Verdun. The defences and stores of these three were known to
+ be wretchedly dismantled and insufficient; and when once these feeble
+ barriers were overcome, and Chalons reached, a fertile and unprotected
+ country seemed to invite the invaders to that "military promenade to
+ Paris," which they gaily talked of accomplishing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of July the allied army, having completed all preparations for
+ the campaign, broke up from its cantonments, and marching from Luxembourg
+ upon Longwy, crossed the French frontier. Eighty thousand Prussians,
+ trained in the school, and many of them under the eye of the Great
+ Frederick, heirs of the glories of the Seven Years' War, and universally
+ esteemed the best troops in Europe, marched in one column against the
+ central point of attack. Forty-five thousand Austrians, the greater part
+ of whom were picked troops, and had served in the recent Turkish war,
+ supplied two formidable corps that supported the flanks of the Prussians.
+ There was also a powerful body of Hessians, and leagued with the Germans
+ against the Parisian democracy, came fifteen thousand of the noblest and
+ bravest amongst the sons of France. In these corps of emigrants, many of
+ the highest born of the French nobility, scions of houses whose chivalric
+ trophies had for centuries filled Europe with renown, served as rank and
+ file. They looked on the road to Paris as the path which they were to
+ carve out by their swords to victory, to honour, to the rescue of their
+ king, to reunion with their families, to the recovery of their patrimony,
+ and to the restoration of their order. [See Scott, Life of Napoleon, vol.
+ i. c. xi.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over this imposing army the allied sovereigns placed as generalissimo the
+ Duke of Brunswick, one of the minor reigning princes of Germany, a
+ statesman of no mean capacity, and who had acquired in the Seven Years'
+ War, a military reputation second only to that of the Great Frederick
+ himself. He had been deputed a few years before to quell the popular
+ movements which then took place in Holland; and he had put down the
+ attempted revolution in that country with a promptitude and completeness,
+ which appeared to augur equal success to the army that now marched under
+ his orders on a similar mission into France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moving majestically forward, with leisurely deliberation, that seemed to
+ show the consciousness of superior strength, and a steady purpose of doing
+ their work thoroughly, the Allies appeared before Longwy on the 20th of
+ August, and the dispirited and dependent garrison opened the gates of that
+ fortress to them after the first shower of bombs. On the 2d of September
+ the still more important stronghold of Verdun capitulated after scarcely
+ the shadow of resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brunswick's superior force was now interposed between Kellerman's troops
+ on the left, and the other French army near Sedan, which La Fayette's
+ flight had, for the time, left destitute of a commander. It was in the
+ power of the German general, by striking with an overwhelming mass to the
+ right and left, to crush in succession each of these weak armies, and the
+ allies might then have marched irresistible and unresisted upon Paris. But
+ at this crisis Dumouriez, the new commander-in-chief of the French,
+ arrived at the camp near Sedan, and commenced a series of movements, by
+ which he reunited the dispersed and disorganized forces of his country,
+ checked the Prussian columns at the very moment when the last obstacles of
+ their triumph seemed to have given way, and finally rolled back the tide
+ of invasion far across the enemy's frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French fortresses had fallen; but nature herself still offered to
+ brave and vigorous defenders of the land, the means of opposing a barrier
+ to the progress of the Allies. A ridge of broken ground, called the
+ Argonne, extends from the vicinity of Sedan towards the south-west for
+ about fifteen or sixteen leagues, The country of L'Argonne has now been
+ cleared and drained; but in 1792 it was thickly wooded, and the lower
+ portions of its unequal surface were filled with rivulets and marshes. It
+ thus presented a natural barrier of from four to five leagues broad, which
+ was absolutely impenetrable to an army, except by a few defiles, such as
+ an inferior force might easily fortify and defend. Dumouriez succeeded in
+ marching his army down from Sedan behind the Argonne, and in occupying its
+ passes, while the Prussians still lingered on the north-eastern side of
+ the forest line. Ordering Kellerman to wheel round from Metz to St.
+ Menehould, and the reinforcements from the interior and extreme north also
+ to concentrate at that spot, Dumouriez trusted to assemble a powerful
+ force in the rear of the south-west extremity of the Argonne, while, with
+ the twenty-five thousand men under his immediate command, he held the
+ enemy at bay before the passes, or forced him to a long circumvolution
+ round one extremity of the forest ridge, during which, favourable
+ opportunities of assailing his flank were almost certain to occur.
+ Dumouriez fortified the principal defiles, and boasted of the Thermopylae
+ which he had found for the invaders; but the simile was nearly rendered
+ fatally complete for the defending force. A pass, which was thought of
+ inferior importance, had been but slightly manned, and an Austrian corps
+ under Clairfayt, forced it after some sharp fighting. Dumouriez with great
+ difficulty saved himself from being enveloped and destroyed by the hostile
+ columns that now pushed through the forest. But instead of despairing at
+ the failure of his plans, and falling back into the interior, to be
+ completely severed from Kellerman's army, to be hunted as a fugitive under
+ the walls of Paris by the victorious Germans, and to lose all chance of
+ ever rallying his dispirited troops, he resolved to cling to the difficult
+ country in which the armies still were grouped, to force a junction with
+ Kellerman, and so to place himself at the head of a force, which the
+ invaders would not dare to disregard, and by which he might drag them back
+ from the advance on Paris, which he had not been able to bar. Accordingly,
+ by a rapid movement to the south, during which, in his own words, "France
+ was within a hair's-breadth of destruction," and after, with difficulty,
+ checking several panics of his troops in which they ran by thousands at
+ the sight of a few Prussian hussars, Dumouriez succeeded in establishing
+ his head-quarters in a strong position at St. Menehould, protected by the
+ marshes and shallows of the river Aisne and Aube, beyond which, to the
+ north-west, rose a firm and elevated plateau, called Dampierre's Camp,
+ admirably situated for commanding the road by Chalons to Paris, and where
+ he intended to post Kellerman's army so soon as it came up. [Some late
+ writers represent that Brunswick did not wish to check Dumouriez. There is
+ no sufficient authority for this insinuation, which seems to have been
+ first prompted by a desire to soothe the wounded military pride of the
+ Prussians.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news of the retreat of Dumouriez from the Argonne passes, and of the
+ panic flight of some divisions of his troops, spread rapidly throughout
+ the country; and Kellerman, who believed that his comrade's army had been
+ annihilated, and feared to fall among the victorious masses of the
+ Prussians, had halted on his march from Metz when almost close to St.
+ Menehould. He had actually commenced a retrograde movement, when couriers
+ from his commander-in-chief checked him from that fatal course; and then
+ continuing to wheel round the rear and left flank of the troops at St.
+ Menehould, Kellerman, with twenty thousand of the army of Metz, and some
+ thousands of volunteers who had joined him in the march, made his
+ appearance to the west of Dumouriez, on the very evening when Westerman
+ and Thouvenot, two of the staff-officers of Dumouriez, galloped in with
+ the tidings that Brunswick's army had come through the upper passes of the
+ Argonne in full force, and was deploying on the heights of La Lune, a
+ chain of eminences that stretch obliquely from south-west to north-east
+ opposite the high ground which Dumouriez held, and also opposite, but at a
+ shorter distance from, the position which Kellerman was designed to
+ occupy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Allies were now, in fact, nearer to Paris than were the French troops
+ themselves; but, as Dumouriez had foreseen, Brunswick deemed it unsafe to
+ march upon the capital with so large a hostile force left in his rear
+ between his advancing columns and his base of operations. The young King
+ of Prussia, who was in the allied camp, and the emigrant princes, eagerly
+ advocated an instant attack upon the nearest French general. Kellerman had
+ laid himself unnecessarily open, by advancing beyond Dampierre's Camp,
+ which Dumouriez had designed for him, and moving forward across the Aube
+ to the plateau of Valmy, a post inferior in strength and space to that
+ which he had left, and which brought him close upon the Prussian lines,
+ leaving him separated by a dangerous interval from the troops under
+ Dumouriez himself. It seemed easy for the Prussian army to overwhelm him
+ while thus isolated, and then they might surround and crush Dumouriez at
+ their leisure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, the right wing of the allied army moved forward, in the grey
+ of the morning of the 20th of September, to gain Kellerman's left flank
+ and rear, and cut him off from retreat upon Chalons, while the rest of the
+ army, moving from the heights of La Lune, which here converge
+ semi-circularly round the plateau of Valmy, were to assail his position in
+ front, and interpose between him and Dumouriez. An unexpected collision
+ between some of the advanced cavalry on each side in the low ground,
+ warned Kellerman of the enemy's approach. Dumouriez had not been
+ unobservant of the danger of his comrade, thus isolated and involved; and
+ he had ordered up troops to support Kellerman on either flank in the event
+ of his being attacked. These troops, however, moved forward slowly; and
+ Kellerman's army, ranged on the plateau of Valmy, "projected like a cape
+ into the midst of the lines of the Prussian bayonets." [See Lamartine,
+ Hist. Girond. livre xvii. I have drawn much of the ensuing description
+ from him.] A thick autumnal mist floated in waves of vapour over the
+ plains and ravines that lay between the two armies, leaving only the
+ crests and peaks of the hills glittering in the early light. About ten
+ o'clock the fog began to clear off, and then the French from their
+ promontory saw emerging from the white wreaths of mist, and glittering in
+ the sunshine, the countless Prussian cavalry which were to envelops them
+ as in a net if once driven from their position, the solid columns of the
+ infantry that moved forward as if animated by a single will, the bristling
+ batteries of the artillery, and the glancing clouds of the Austrian light
+ troops, fresh from their contests with the Spahis of the east.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best and bravest of the French must have beheld this spectacle with
+ secret apprehension and awe. However bold and resolute a man may be in the
+ discharge of duty, it is an anxious and fearful thing to be called on to
+ encounter danger among comrades of whose steadiness you can feel no
+ certainty. Each soldier of Kellerman's army must have remembered the
+ series of panic routs which had hitherto invariably taken place on the
+ French side during the war; and must have cast restless glances to the
+ right and left, to see if any symptoms of wavering began to show
+ themselves, and to calculate how long it was likely to be before a general
+ rush of his comrades to the rear would either harry him off with
+ involuntary disgrace, or leave him alone and helpless, to be cut down by
+ assailing multitudes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On that very morning, and at the self-same hour, in which the allied
+ forces and the emigrants began to descend from La Lune to the attack of
+ Valmy, and while the cannonade was opening between the Prussian and the
+ Revolutionary batteries, the debate in the National Convention at Paris
+ commenced on the proposal to proclaim France a Republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old monarchy had little chance of support in the hall of the
+ Convention; but if its more effective advocates at Valmy had triumphed,
+ there were yet the elements existing in France for a permanent revival of
+ the better part of the ancient institutions, and for substituting Reform
+ for Revolution. Only a few weeks before, numerously signed addresses from
+ the middle classes in Paris, Rouen, and other large cities, had been
+ presented to the king, expressive of their horror of the anarchists, and
+ their readiness to uphold the rights of the crown, together with the
+ liberties of the subject. And an armed resistance to the authority of the
+ Convention, and in favour of the king, was in reality at this time being
+ actively organized in La Vendee and Brittany, the importance of which may
+ be estimated from the formidable opposition which the Royalists of these
+ provinces made to the Republican party, at a later period, and under much
+ more disadvantageous circumstances. It is a fact peculiarly illustrative
+ of the importance of the battle of Valmy, that "during the summer of 1792,
+ the gentlemen of Brittany entered into an extensive association for the
+ purpose of rescuing the country from the oppressive yoke which had been
+ imposed by the Parisian demagogues. At the head of the whole was the
+ Marquis de la Rouarie, one of those remarkable men who rise into
+ pre-eminence during the stormy days of a revolution, from conscious
+ ability to direct its current. Ardent, impetuous, and enthusiastic, he was
+ first distinguished in the American war, when the intrepidity of his
+ conduct attracted the admiration of the Republican troops, and the same
+ qualities rendered him at first an ardent supporter of the Revolution in
+ France; but when the atrocities of the people began, he espoused with
+ equal warmth the opposite side, and used the utmost efforts to rouse the
+ noblesse of Brittany against the plebeian yoke which had been imposed upon
+ them by the National Assembly. He submitted his plan to the Count
+ d'Artois, and had organized one so extensive, as would have proved
+ extremely formidable to the Convention, if the retreat of the Duke of
+ Brunswick, in September 1792, had not damped the ardour of the whole of
+ the west of France, then ready to break out into insurrection." [Alison,
+ vol. iii. p. 323.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it was not only among the zealots of the old monarchy that the cause
+ of the king would then have found friends. The ineffable atrocities of the
+ September massacres had just occurred, and the reaction produced by them
+ among thousands who had previously been active on the ultra-democratic
+ side, was fresh and powerful. The nobility had not yet been made utter
+ aliens in the eyes of the nation by long expatriation and civil war. There
+ was not yet a generation of youth educated in revolutionary principles,
+ and knowing no worship-save that of military glory, Louis XVI. was just
+ and humane, and deeply sensible of the necessity of a gradual extension of
+ political rights among all classes of his subjects. The Bourbon throne, if
+ rescued in 1792, would have had chances of stability, such as did not
+ exist for it in 1814, and seem never likely to be found again in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Serving under Kellerman on that day was one who experienced, perhaps the
+ most deeply of all men, the changes for good and for evil which the French
+ Revolution has produced. He who, in his second exile, bore the name of the
+ Count de Neuilly in this country, and who lately was Louis Philippe, King
+ of the French, figured in the French lines at Valmy, as a young and
+ gallant officer, cool and sagacious beyond his years, and trusted
+ accordingly by Kellerman and Dumouriez with an important station in the
+ national army. The Duc de Chartres (the title he then bore) commanded the
+ French right, General Valence was on the left, and Kellerman himself took
+ his post in the centre, which was the strength and key of his position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides these celebrated men, who were in the French army, and besides the
+ King of Prussia, the Duke of Brunswick, and other men of rank and power,
+ who were in the lines of the Allies, there was an individual present at
+ the battle of Valmy, of little political note, but who has exercised, and
+ exercises, a greater influence over the human mind, and whose fame is more
+ widely spread, than that of either duke, or general, or king. This was the
+ German poet, Goethe, who had, out of curiosity, accompanied the allied
+ army on its march into France as a mere spectator. He has given us a
+ curious record of the sensations which he experienced during the
+ cannonade. It must be remembered that many thousands in, the French ranks
+ then, like Goethe, felt the "cannon-fever" for the first time. The German
+ poet says, [Goethe's Campaign in France in 1792. Farie's translation,
+ p.77.]&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had heard so much of the cannon-fever, that I wanted to know what kind
+ of thing it was. ENNUI, and a spirit which every kind of danger excites to
+ daring, nay even to rashness, induced me to ride up quite coolly to the
+ outwork of La Lune. This was again occupied by our people; but it
+ presented the wildest aspect. The roofs were shot to pieces; the
+ corn-shocks scattered about, the bodies of men mortally wounded stretched
+ upon them here and there; and occasionally a spent cannon-ball fell and
+ rattled among the ruins of the the roofs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite alone, and left to myself, I rode away on the heights to the left,
+ and could plainly survey the favourable position of the French; they were
+ standing in the form of a semicircle in the greatest quiet and security;
+ Kellerman, then on the left wing, being the easiest to reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fell in with good company on the way, officers of my acquaintance,
+ belonging to the general staff and the regiment, greatly surprised to find
+ me here. They wanted to take me back again with them; but I spoke to them
+ of particular objects I had in view, and they left me without further
+ dissuasion, to my well-known singular caprice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had now arrived quite in the region where the balls were playing across
+ me: the sound of them is curious enough, as if it were composed of the
+ humming of tops, the gurgling of water, and the whistling of birds. They
+ were less dangerous, by reason of the wetness of the ground: wherever one
+ fell, it stuck fast. And thus my foolish experimental ride was secured
+ against the danger at least of the balls rebounding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the midst of these circumstances, I was soon able to remark that
+ something unusual was taking place within me. I paid close attention to
+ it, and still the sensation can be described only by similitude. It
+ appeared as if you were in some extremely hot place, and, at the same
+ time, quite penetrated by the heat of it, so that you feel yourself, as it
+ were, quite one with the element in which you are. The eyes lose nothing
+ of their strength or clearness; but it is as if the world had a kind of
+ brown-red tint, which makes the situation, as well as the surrounding
+ objects, more impressive. I was unable to perceive any agitation of the
+ blood; but everything seemed rather to be swallowed up in the glow of
+ which I speak. From this, then, it is clear in what sense this condition
+ can be called a fever. It is remarkable, however, that the horrible uneasy
+ feeling arising from it is produced in us solely through the ears; for the
+ cannon-thunder, the howling and crashing of the balls through the air, is
+ the real cause of these sensations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After I had ridden back, and was in perfect security, I remarked with
+ surprise that the glow was completely extinguished, and not the slightest
+ feverish agitation was left behind. On the whole, this condition is one of
+ the least desirable; as, indeed, among my dear and noble comrades, I found
+ scarcely one who expressed a really passionate desire to try it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contrary to the expectations of both friends and foes, the French infantry
+ held their ground steadily under the fire of the Prussian guns, which
+ thundered on them from La Lune; and their own artillery replied with equal
+ spirit and greater effect on the denser masses of the allied army.
+ Thinking that the Prussians were slackening in their fire, Kellerman
+ formed a column in charging order, and dashed down into the valley, in the
+ hopes of capturing some of the nearest guns of the enemy. A masked battery
+ opened its fire on the French column, and drove it back in disorder.
+ Kellerman having his horse shot under him, and being with difficulty
+ carried off by his men. The Prussian columns now advanced in turn. The
+ French artillerymen began to waver and desert their posts, but were
+ rallied by the efforts and example of their officers; and Kellerman,
+ reorganizing the line of his infantry, took his station in the ranks on
+ foot, and called out to his men to let the enemy come close up, and then
+ to charge them with the bayonet. The troops caught the enthusiasm of their
+ general, and a cheerful shout of VIVE LA NATION! taken by one battalion
+ from another, pealed across the valley to the assailants. The Prussians
+ flinched from a charge up-hill against a force that seemed so resolute and
+ formidable; they halted for a while in the hollow, and then slowly
+ retreated up their own side of the valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indignant at being thus repulsed by such a foe, the King of Prussia formed
+ the flower of his men in person, and, riding along the column, bitterly
+ reproached them with letting their standard be thus humiliated. Then he
+ led them on again to the attack marching in the front line, and seeing his
+ staff mowed down around him by the deadly fire which the French artillery
+ re-opened. But the troops sent by Dumouriez were now co-operating
+ effectually with Kellerman, and that general's own men, flushed by
+ success, presented a firmer front than ever. Again the Prussians
+ retreated, leaving eight hundred dead behind, and at nightfall the French
+ remained victors on the heights of Valmy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All hopes of crushing the revolutionary armies, and of the promenade to
+ Paris, had now vanished, though Brunswick lingered long in the Argonne,
+ till distress and sickness wasted away his once splendid force, and
+ finally but a mere wreck of it recrossed the frontier. France, meanwhile,
+ felt that she possessed a giant's strength, and like a giant did she use
+ it. Before the close of that year, all Belgium obeyed the National
+ Convention at Paris, and the kings of Europe, after the lapse of eighteen
+ centuries, trembled once more before a conquering military Republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Goethe's description of the cannonade has been quoted. His observation to
+ his comrades in the camp of the Allies, at the end of the battle, deserves
+ citation also. It shows that the poet felt (and, probably, he alone of the
+ thousands there assembled felt) the full importance of that day. He
+ describes the consternation and the change of demeanour which he observed
+ among his Prussian friends that evening, he tells us that "most of them
+ were silent; and, in fact, the power of reflection and judgment was
+ wanting to all. At last I was called upon to say what I thought of the
+ engagement; for I had been in the habit of enlivening and amusing the
+ troop with short sayings. This time I said: 'FROM THIS PLACE, AND FROM
+ THIS DAY FORTH, COMMENCES A NEW ERA IN THE WORLD'S HISTORY, AND YOU CAN
+ ALL SAY THAT YOU WERE PRESENT AT ITS BIRTH.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SYNOPSIS OP EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF VALMY, 1792, AND THE BATTLE OF
+ WATERLOO, 1815.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A.D. 1793. Trial and execution of Louis XVI. at Paris. England and Spain
+ declare war against France. Royalist war in La Vendee. Second invasion of
+ France by the Allies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1794. Lord Howe's victory over the French fleet. Final partition of Poland
+ by Russia, Prussia, and Austria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1795. The French armies under Pichegru, conquer Holland. Cessation of the
+ war in La Vendee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1796. Bonaparte commands the French army of Italy and gains repeated
+ victories over the Austrians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1797. Victory of Jervis, off Cape St. Vincent. Peace of Campo Formio
+ between France and Austria. Defeat of the Dutch off Camperdown by Admiral
+ Duncan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1798. Rebellion in Ireland. Expedition of the French under Bonaparte to
+ Egypt. Lord Nelson destroys the French fleet at the Battle of the Nile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1799. Renewal of the war between Austria and France. The Russian emperor
+ sends an army in aid of Austria, under Suwarrow. The French are repeatedly
+ defeated in Italy. Bonaparte returns from Egypt and makes himself First
+ Consul of France. Massena wins the battle of Zurich. The Russian emperor
+ makes peace with France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1800. Bonaparte passes the Alps and defeats the Austrians at Marengo.
+ Moreau wins the battle of Hohenlinden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1801. Treaty of Luneville between France and Austria. The battle of
+ Copenhagen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1802. Peace of Amiens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1803. War between England and France renewed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1804. Napoleon Bonaparte is made Emperor of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1805. Great preparations of Napoleon to invade England. Austria, supported
+ by Russia, renews war with France. Napoleon marches into Germany, takes
+ Vienna, and gains the battle of Austerlitz. Lord Nelson destroys the
+ combined French and Spanish fleets, and is killed at the battle of
+ Trafalgar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1806. War between Prussia and France, Napoleon conquers Prussia in the
+ battle of Jena.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1807. Obstinate warfare between the French and Russian armies in East
+ Prussia and Poland. Peace of Tilsit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1808. Napoleon endeavours to make his brother King of Spain. Rising of the
+ Spanish nation against him. England sends troops to aid the Spaniards.
+ Battles of Vimiera and Corunna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1809. War renewed between France and Austria. Battles of Asperne and
+ Wagram. Peace granted to Austria. Lord Wellington's victory of Talavera,
+ in Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1810. Marriage of Napoleon and the Arch-duchess Maria Louisa. Holland
+ annexed to France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1812. War between England and the United States. Napoleon invades Russia.
+ Battle of Borodino. The French occupy Moscow, which is burned. Disastrous
+ retreat and almost total destruction of the great army of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1813. Prussia and Austria take up arms again against France. Battles of
+ Lutzen, Bautzen, Dresden, Culm, and Leipsic. The French are driven out of
+ Germany. Lord Wellington gains the great battle of Vittoria, which
+ completes the rescue of Spain from France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1814. The Allies invade France on the eastern, and Lord Wellington invades
+ it on the southern frontier. Battles of Laon, Montmirail, Arcis-sur-Aube,
+ and others in the north-east of France; and of Toulouse in the south.
+ Paris surrenders to the Allies, and Napoleon abdicates. First restoration
+ of the Bourbons. Napoleon goes to the isle of Elba, which is assigned to
+ him by the Allies. Treaty of Ghent, between the United States and England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1815. Napoleon suddenly escapes from Elba, and lands in France. The French
+ soldiery join him and Louis XVIII. is obliged to fly from the throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. &mdash; THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO, 1815.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Thou first and last of fields, king-making victory."&mdash;BYRON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ England has now been blest with thirty-seven years of peace. At no other
+ period of her history can a similarly long cessation from a state of
+ warfare be found. It is true that our troops have had battles to fight
+ during this interval for the protection and extension of our Indian
+ possessions and our colonies; but these have been with distant and
+ unimportant enemies. The danger has never been brought near our own
+ shores, and no matter of vital importance to our empire has ever been at
+ stake. We have not had hostilities with either France, America, or Russia;
+ and when not at war with any of our peers, we feel ourselves to be
+ substantially at peace. There has, indeed, throughout this long period,
+ been no great war, like those with which the previous history of modern
+ Europe abounds. There have been formidable collisions between particular
+ states; and there have been still more formidable collisions between the
+ armed champions of the conflicting principles of absolutism and democracy;
+ but there has been no general war, like those of the French Revolution,
+ like the American, or the Seven Years' War, or like the War of the Spanish
+ Succession. It would be far too much to augur from this, that no similar
+ wars will again convulse the world; but the value of the period of peace
+ which Europe has gained, is incalculable; even if we look on it as only a
+ truce, and expect again to see the nations of the earth recur to what some
+ philosophers have termed man's natural state of warfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No equal number of years can be found, during which science, commerce, and
+ civilization have advanced so rapidly and so extensively, as has been the
+ case since 1815. When we trace their progress, especially in this country,
+ it is impossible not to feel that their wondrous development has been
+ mainly due to the land having been at peace. [See the excellent
+ Introduction to Mr. Charles Knight's "History of the Thirty Years'
+ Peace."] Their good effects cannot be obliterated, even if a series of
+ wars were to recommence. When we reflect on this, and contrast these
+ thirty-seven years with the period that preceded them, a period of
+ violence, of tumult, of unrestingly destructive energy,&mdash;a period
+ throughout which the wealth of nations was scattered like sand, and the
+ blood of nations lavished like water,&mdash;it is impossible not to look
+ with deep interest on the final crisis of that dark and dreadful epoch;
+ the crisis out of which our own happier cycle of years has been evolved.
+ The great battle which ended the twenty-three years' war of the first
+ French Revolution, and which quelled the man whose genius and ambition had
+ so long disturbed and desolated the world, deserves to be regarded by us,
+ not only with peculiar pride, as one of our greatest national victories,
+ but with peculiar gratitude for the repose which it secured for us, and
+ for the greater part of the human race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One good test for determining the importance of Waterloo, is to ascertain
+ what was felt by wise and prudent statesmen before that battle, respecting
+ the return of Napoleon from Elba to the Imperial throne of France, and the
+ probable effects of his success. For this purpose, I will quote the words,
+ not of any of our vehement anti-Gallican politicians of the school of
+ Pitt, but of a leader of our Liberal party, of a man whose reputation as a
+ jurist, a historian and a far-sighted and candid statesman, was, and is,
+ deservedly high, not only in this country, but throughout Europe. Sir
+ James Mackintosh, in the debate in the British House of Commons, on the
+ 20th April, 1815, spoke thus of the return from Elba:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Was it in the power of language to describe the evil. Wars which had
+ raged for more than twenty years throughout Europe; which had spread blood
+ and desolation from Cadiz to Moscow, and from Naples to Copenhagen; which
+ had wasted the means of human enjoyment, and destroyed the instruments of
+ social improvement; which threatened to diffuse among the European
+ nations, the dissolute and ferocious habits of a predatory soldiery,&mdash;at
+ length, by one of those vicissitudes which bid defiance to the foresight
+ of man, had been brought to a close, upon the whole, happy beyond all
+ reasonable expectation, with no violent shock to national independence,
+ with some tolerable compromise between the opinions of the age and
+ reverence due to ancient institutions; with no too signal or mortifying
+ triumph over the legitimate interests or avowable feelings of any numerous
+ body of men, and, above all, without those retaliations against nations or
+ parties, which beget new convulsions, often as horrible as those which
+ they close, and perpetuate revenge and hatred and bloodshed, from age to
+ age. Europe seemed to breathe after her sufferings. In the midst of this
+ fair prospect, and of these consolatory hopes, Napoleon Bonaparte escaped
+ from Elba; three small vessels reached the coast of Provence; our hopes
+ are instantly dispelled; the work of our toil and fortitude is undone; the
+ blood of Europe is spilt in vain&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Ibi omnis effusus labor!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Congress of Emperors, Kings, Princes, Generals, and Statesmen, who had
+ assembled at Vienna to remodel the world after the overthrow of the mighty
+ conqueror, and who thought that Napoleon had passed away for ever from the
+ great drama of European politics, had not yet completed their triumphant
+ festivities, and their diplomatic toils, when Talleyrand, on the 11th of
+ March, 1815, rose up among them, and announced that the ex-emperor had
+ escaped from Elba, and was Emperor of France once more. It is recorded by
+ Sir Walter Scott, as a curious physiological fact, that the first effect
+ of the news of an event which threatened to neutralise all their labours,
+ was to excite a loud burst of laughter from nearly every member of the
+ Congress. [Life of Napoleon, vol. viii. chap. 1.] But the jest was a
+ bitter one: and they soon were deeply busied in anxious deliberations
+ respecting the mode in which they should encounter their arch-enemy, who
+ had thus started from torpor and obscurity into renovated splendour and
+ strength:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Qualis ubi in lucem coluber mala gramina pastus,
+ Frigida sub terra tumidum quem bruma tegebat,
+ Nunc positis novus exuviis nitidusque juventa,
+ Lubrica convolvit sublato pectore terga
+ Arduus ad solem, at linguis micat ore trisulcis." Virg. AEN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon sought to disunite the formidable confederacy, which he knew
+ would be arrayed against him, by endeavouring to negotiate separately with
+ each of the allied sovereigns. It is said that Austria and Russia were at
+ first not unwilling to treat with him. Disputes and jealousies had been
+ rife among several of the Allies on the subject of the division of the
+ conquered countries; and the cordial unanimity with which they had acted
+ during 1813 and the first months of 1814, had grown chill during some
+ weeks of discussions. But the active exertions of Tralleyrand, who
+ represented Louis XVIII. at the Congress, and who both hated and feared
+ Napoleon with all the intensity of which his powerful spirit was capable,
+ prevented the secession of any member of the Congress from the new great
+ league against their ancient enemy. Still it is highly probable that, if
+ Napoleon had triumphed in Belgium over the Prussians and the English, he
+ would have succeeded in opening negotiations with the Austrians and
+ Russians; and he might have thus gained advantages similar to those which
+ he had obtained on his return from Egypt, when he induced the Czar Paul to
+ withdraw the Russian armies from co-operating with the other enemies of
+ France in the extremity of peril to which she seemed reduced in 1799. But
+ fortune now had deserted him both in diplomacy and in war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 13th of March, 1815, the Ministers of the seven powers, Austria,
+ Spain, England, Portugal, Prussia, Russia, and Sweden, signed a manifesto,
+ by which they declared Napoleon an outlaw; and this denunciation was
+ instantly followed up by a treaty between England, Austria, Prussia, and
+ Russia (to which other powers soon acceded), by which the rulers of those
+ countries bound themselves to enforce that decree, and to prosecute the
+ war until Napoleon should be driven from the throne of France, and
+ rendered incapable of disturbing the peace of Europe. The Duke of
+ Wellington was the representative of England at the Congress of Vienna,
+ and he was immediately applied to for his advice on the plan of military
+ operations against France. It was obvious that Belgium would be the first
+ battle-field; and by the general wish of the Allies, the English Duke
+ proceeded thither to assemble an army from the contingents of Dutch,
+ Belgian, and Hanoverian troops, that were most speedily available, and
+ from the English regiments which his own Government was hastening to send
+ over from this country. A strong Prussian corps was near Aix-la-Chapelle,
+ having remained there since the campaign of the preceding year. This was
+ largely reinforced by other troops of the same nation; and Marshal
+ Blucher, the favourite hero of the Prussian soldiery, and the deadliest
+ foe of France, assumed the command of this army, which was termed the Army
+ of the Lower Rhine; and which, in conjunction with Wellington's forces,
+ was to make the van of the armaments of the Allied Powers. Meanwhile
+ Prince Swartzenburg was to collect 130,000 Austrians, and 124,000 troops
+ of other Germanic States, as "the Army of the Upper Rhine;" and 168,000
+ Russians, under the command of Barclay de Tolly, were to form "the Army of
+ the Middle Rhine," and to repeat the march from Muscovy to that river's
+ banks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The exertions which the Allied Powers thus made at this crisis to grapple
+ promptly with the French emperor have truly been termed gigantic; and
+ never were Napoleon's genius and activity more signally displayed, than in
+ the celerity and skill by which he brought forward all the military
+ resources of France, which the reverses of the three preceding years, and
+ the pacific policy of the Bourbons during the months of their first
+ restoration, had greatly diminished and disorganized. He re-entered Paris
+ on the 20th of March, and by the end of May, besides sending a force into
+ La Vendee to put down the armed rising of the royalists in that province,
+ and besides providing troops under Massena and Suchet for the defence of
+ the southern frontiers of France, Napoleon had an army assembled in the
+ north-east for active operations under his own command, which amounted to
+ between one hundred and twenty, and one hundred and thirty thousand men,
+ with a superb park of artillery and in the highest possible state of
+ equipment, discipline, and efficiency. [See for these numbers Siborne's
+ History of the Campaign of Waterloo, vol. i. p. 41.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The approach of the multitudinous Russian, Austrian, Bavarian, and other
+ foes of the French Emperor to the Rhine was necessarily slow; but the two
+ most active of the allied powers had occupied Belgium with their troops,
+ while Napoleon was organizing his forces. Marshal Blucher was there with
+ one hundred and sixteen thousand Prussians; and, before the end of May,
+ the Duke of Wellington was there also with about one hundred and six
+ thousand troops, either British or in British pay. [Ibid. vol. i. chap. 3.
+ Wellington had but a small part of his old Peninsular army in Belgium. The
+ flower of it had been sent on the expeditions against America. His troops,
+ in 1815, were chiefly second battalions, or regiments lately filled up
+ with new recruits. See Scott, vol viii. p. 474.] Napoleon determined to
+ attack these enemies in Belgium. The disparity of numbers was indeed
+ great, but delay was sure to increase the proportionate numerical
+ superiority of his enemies over his own ranks. The French Emperor
+ considered also that "the enemy's troops were now cantoned under the
+ command of two generals, and composed of nations differing both in
+ interest and in feelings." [See Montholon's Memoirs, p. 45.] His own army
+ was under his own sole command. It was composed exclusively of French
+ soldiers, mostly of veterans, well acquainted with their officers and with
+ each other, and full of enthusiastic confidence in their commander. If he
+ could separate the Prussians from the British, so as to attack each
+ singly, he felt sanguine of success, not only against these the most
+ resolute of his many adversaries, but also against the other masses, that
+ were slowly labouring up against his eastern dominions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The triple chain of strong fortresses, which the French possessed on the
+ Belgian frontier, formed a curtain, behind which Napoleon was able to
+ concentrate his army, and to conceal, till the very last moment, the
+ precise line of attack which he intended to take. On the other hand,
+ Blucher and Wellington were obliged to canton their troops along a line of
+ open country of considerable length, so as to watch for the outbreak of
+ Napoleon from whichever point of his chain of strongholds he should please
+ to make it. Blucher, with his army, occupied the banks of the Sambre and
+ the Meuse, from Liege on his left, to Charleroi on his right; and the Duke
+ of Wellington covered Brussels; his cantonments being partly in front of
+ that city and between it and the French frontier, and partly on its west
+ their extreme right reaching to Courtray and Tournay, while the left
+ approached Charleroi and communicated with the Prussian right. It was upon
+ Charleroi that Napoleon resolved to level his attack, in hopes of severing
+ the two allied armies from each other, and then pursuing his favourite
+ tactic of assailing each separately with a superior force on the
+ battle-field, though the aggregate of their numbers considerably exceeded
+ his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first French corps d'armee, commanded by Count d'Erlon, was stationed
+ in the beginning of June in and around the city of Lille, near to the
+ north-eastern frontier of France. The second corps, under Count Reille,
+ was at Valenciennes, to the right of the first one. The third corps, under
+ Count Vandamme, was at Mezieres. The fourth, under Count Gerard, had its
+ head-quarters at Metz, and the sixth under Count Lobau, was at Laon. [The
+ fifth corps was under Count Rapp at Strasburg.] Four corps of reserve
+ cavalry, under Marshal Grouchy, were also near the frontier, between the
+ rivers Aisne and Sambre. The Imperial Guard remained in Paris until the
+ 8th of June, when it marched towards Belgium, and reached Avesnes on the
+ 13th; and in the course of the same and the following day, the five corps
+ d'armee with the cavalry reserves which have been mentioned, were, in
+ pursuance of skilfully combined orders, rapidly drawn together, and
+ concentrated in and around the same place, on the right bank of the river
+ Sambre. On the 14th Napoleon arrived among his troops, who were exulting
+ at the display of their commander's skill in the celerity and precision
+ with which they had been drawn together, and in the consciousness of their
+ collective strength. Although Napoleon too often permitted himself to use
+ language unworthy of his own character respecting his great English
+ adversary, his real feelings in commencing this campaign may be judged
+ from the last words which he spoke, as he threw himself into his
+ travelling carriage to leave Paris for the army. "I go," he said, "to
+ measure myself with Wellington."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The enthusiasm of the French soldiers at seeing their Emperor among them,
+ was still more excited by the "Order of the day," in which he thus
+ appealed to them:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Napoleon, by the Grace of God, and the Constitution of the Empire,
+ Emperor of the French, &amp;c. to the Grand Army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "AT THE IMPERIAL HEAD-QUARTERS, AVESNES, JUNE 14th, 1815.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Soldiers! this day is the anniversary of Marengo and of Friedland, which
+ twice decided the destiny of Europe. Then, as after Austerlitz, as after
+ Wagram, we were too generous! We believed in the protestations and in the
+ oaths of princes, whom we left on their thrones. Now, however, leagued
+ together, they aim at the independence and the most sacred rights of
+ France. They have commenced the most unjust of aggressions. Let us, then,
+ march to meet them. Are they and we no longer the same men?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Soldiers! at Jena, against these same Prussians, now so arrogant, you
+ were one to three, and at Montmirail one to six!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let those among you who have been captives to the English, describe the
+ nature of their prison ships, and the frightful miseries they endured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Saxons, the Belgians, the Hanoverians, the soldiers of the
+ Confederation of the Rhine, lament that they are compelled to use their
+ arms in the cause of princes, the enemies of justice and of the rights of
+ all nations. They know that this coalition is insatiable! After having
+ devoured twelve millions of Poles, twelve millions of Italians, one
+ million of Saxons, and six millions of Belgians, it now wishes to devour
+ the states of the second rank in Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madmen! one moment of prosperity has bewildered them. The oppression and
+ the humiliation of the French people are beyond their power. If they enter
+ France they will there find their grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Soldiers! we have forced marches to make, battles to fight, dangers to
+ encounter; but, with firmness victory will, be ours. The rights, the
+ honour, and the happiness of the country will be recovered!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To every Frenchman who has a heart, the moment is now arrived to conquer
+ or to die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "NAPOLEON." "THE MARSHAL DUKE OF DALMATIA. MAJOR GENERAL."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 15th of June had scarcely dawned before the French army was in motion
+ for the decisive campaign, and crossed the frontier in three columns,
+ which were pointed upon Charleroi and its vicinity. The French line of
+ advance upon Brussels, which city Napoleon resolved to occupy, thus lay
+ right through the centre of the cantonments of the Allies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much criticism has been expended on the supposed surprise of Wellington's
+ army in its cantonments by Napoleon's rapid advance. These comments would
+ hardly have been made if sufficient attention had been paid to the
+ geography of the Waterloo campaign; and if it had been remembered that the
+ protection of Brussels was justly considered by the allied generals a
+ matter of primary importance. If Napoleon could, either by manoeuvring or
+ fighting, have succeeded in occupying that city, the greater part of
+ Belgium would unquestionably have declared in his favour; and the results
+ of such a success, gained by the Emperor at the commencement of the
+ campaign, might have decisively influenced the whole after-current of
+ events. A glance at the map will show the numerous roads that lead from
+ the different fortresses on the French north-eastern frontier, and
+ converge upon Brussels; any one of which Napoleon might have chosen for
+ the advance of a strong force upon that city. The Duke's army was
+ judiciously arranged, so as to enable him to concentrate troops on any one
+ of these roads sufficiently in advance of Brussels to check an assailing
+ enemy. The army was kept thus available for movement in any necessary
+ direction, till certain intelligence arrived on the 15th of June that the
+ French had crossed the frontier in large force near Thuin, that they had
+ driven back the Prussian advanced troops under General Ziethen, and were
+ also moving across the Sambre upon Charleroi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marshal Blucher now rapidly concentrated his forces, calling them in from
+ the left upon Ligny, which is to the north-east of Charleroi. Wellington
+ also drew his troops together, calling them in from the right. But even
+ now, though it was certain that the French were in large force at
+ Charleroi it was unsafe for the English general to place his army directly
+ between that place and Brussels, until it was certain that no corps of the
+ enemy was marching upon Brussels by the western road through Mons and Hal.
+ The Duke therefore, collected his troops in Brussels and its immediate
+ vicinity, ready to move due southward upon Quatre Bras, and co-operate
+ with Blucher, who was taking his station at Ligny: but also ready to meet
+ and defeat any manoeuvre, that the enemy might make to turn the right of
+ the Allies, and occupy Brussels by a flanking movement. The testimony of
+ the Prussian general, Baron Muffling, who was attached to the Duke's staff
+ during the campaign, and who expressly states the reasons on which the
+ English general acted, ought for ever to have silenced the "weak
+ inventions of the enemy" about the Duke of Wellington having been deceived
+ and surprised by his assailant, which some writers of our own nation, as
+ well as foreigners, have incautiously repeated. [See "Passages from my
+ Life and Writings," by Baron Muffling, p. 224 of the English Translation,
+ edited by Col. Yorke. See also the 178th number of the QUARTERLY. It is
+ strange that Lamartine should, after the appearance of Muffling's work,
+ have repeated in his "History of the Restoration" the myth of Wellington
+ having been surprised in the Brussels ball-room, &amp;c.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about three o'clock in the afternoon of the 15th, that a Prussian
+ officer reached Brussels, whom General Ziethen had sent to Muffling to
+ inform him of the advance of the main French army upon Charleroi. Muffling
+ immediately communicated this to the Duke of Wellington; and asked him
+ whether he would now concentrate his army, and what would be his point of
+ concentration; observing that Marshal Blucher in consequence of this
+ intelligence would certainly concentrate the Prussians at Ligny. The Duke
+ replied&mdash;"If all is as General Ziethen supposes, I will concentrate
+ on my left wing, and so be in readiness to fight in conjunction with the
+ Prussian army. Should, however, a portion of the enemy's force come by
+ Mons, I must concentrate more towards my centre. This is the reason why I
+ must wait for positive news from Mons before I fix the rendezvous. Since,
+ however, it is certain that the troops MUST march, though it is uncertain
+ upon what precise spot they must march, I will order all to be in
+ readiness, and will direct a brigade to move at once towards Quatre Bras."
+ [Muffling, p. 231.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later in the same day a message from Blucher himself was delivered to
+ Muffling, in which the Prussian Field-Marshal informed the Baron that he
+ was concentrating his men at Sombref and Ligny, and charged Muffling to
+ give him speedy intelligence respecting the concentration of Wellington.
+ Muffling immediately communicated this to the Duke, who expressed his
+ satisfaction with Blucher's arrangements, but added that he could not even
+ then resolve upon his own point of concentration before he obtained the
+ desired intelligence from Mons. About midnight this information arrived.
+ The Duke went to the quarters of General Muffling, and told him that he
+ now had received his reports from Mons, and was sure that no French troops
+ were advancing by that route, but that the mass of the enemy's force was
+ decidedly directed on Charleroi. He informed the Prussian general that he
+ had ordered the British troops to move forward upon Quatre Bras; but with
+ characteristic coolness and sagacity resolved not to give the appearance
+ of alarm by hurrying on with them himself. A ball was to be given by the
+ Duchess of Richmond at Brussels that night, and the Duke proposed to
+ General Muffling that they should go to the ball for a few hours, and ride
+ forward in the morning to overtake the troops at Quatre Bras.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To hundreds, who were assembled at that memorable ball, the news that the
+ enemy was advancing, and that the time for battle had come, must have been
+ a fearfully exciting surprise, and the magnificent stanzas of Byron are as
+ true as they are beautiful; but the Duke and his principal officers knew
+ well the stern termination to that festive scene which was approaching.
+ One by one, and in such a way as to attract as little observation as
+ possible, the leaders of the various corps left the ball-room, and took
+ their stations at the head of their men, who were pressing forward through
+ the last hours of the short summer night to the arena of anticipated
+ slaughter.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [There was a sound of revelry by night,
+ And Belgium's capital had gather'd then
+ Her Beauty and her chivalry, and bright
+ The lamps shone o'er fair women and brave men;
+ A thousand hearts beat happily; and when
+ Music arose with its voluptuous swell,
+ Soft eyes look'd love to eyes which spake again,
+ And all went merry as a marriage bell;
+ But hush! hark! a deep sound strikes like a rising knell,
+
+ Did ye not hear it?&mdash;No; 'twas but; the wind,
+ Or the car rattling o'er the stony street;
+ On with the dance! let joy be unconfined;
+ No sleep till morn, when Youth and Pleasure meet
+ To chase the glowing Hours with flying feet&mdash;
+ But, hark!&mdash;that heavy sound breaks in once more,
+ As if the clouds its echo would repeat;
+ And nearer, clearer, deadlier than before!
+ Arm! Arm! it is&mdash;it is&mdash;the cannon's opening roar!
+
+ Within a window'd niche of that high hall
+ Sate Brunswick's fated chieftain; he did hear
+ That sound the first amidst the festival,
+ And caught its tone with Death's prophetic ear;
+ And when they smiled because he deem'd it near,
+ His heart more truly knew that peal too well
+ Which stretch'd his father on a bloody bier,
+ And roused the vengeance blood alone could quell;
+ He rush'd into the field, and, foremost fighting, fell.
+
+ Ah! then and there was hurrying to and fro,
+ And gathering tears, and tremblings of distress,
+ And cheeks all pale, which but an hour ago
+ Blush'd at the praise of their own loveliness;
+ And there were sudden partings, such as press
+ The life from out young hearts, and choking sighs
+ Which ne'er might be repeated; who could guess
+ If ever more should meet those mutual eyes,
+ Since upon night so sweet such awful morn could rise!
+
+ And there was mounting in hot haste: the steed,
+ The mustering squadron, and the clattering car,
+ Went pouring forward with impetuous speed,
+ And swiftly forming in the ranks of war;
+ And the deep thunder peal on peal afar;
+ And near, the beat of the alarming drum
+ Roused up the soldier ere the morning star;
+ While thronged the citizens with terror dumb,
+ Or whispering, with white lips&mdash;"The foe!
+ They come! they come!"
+
+ And Ardennes waves above them her green leaves,
+ Dewy with nature's teardrops, as they pass,
+ Grieving, if aught inanimate e'er grieves,
+ Over the unreturning brave,&mdash;alas!
+ Ere evening to be trodden like the grass
+ Which now beneath them, but above shall grow
+ In its next verdure, when this fiery mass
+ Of living valour, rolling on the foe
+ And burning with high hope, shall moulder cold and low.
+
+ Last noon beheld them full of lusty life,
+ Last eve in Beauty's circle proudly gay,
+ The midnight brought the signal-sound of strife,
+ The morn the marshalling in arms,&mdash;the day
+ Battle's magnificently stern array!
+ The thunder-clouds close o'er it, which when rent
+ The earth is covered thick with other clay,
+ Which her own clay shall cover, heaped and pent,
+ Rider and horse,&mdash;friend, foe,&mdash;in one red burial blent.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon's operations on the 16th had been conducted with signal skill and
+ vigour; and their results had been very advantageous for his plan of the
+ campaign. With his army formed in three vast columns, [Victoires et
+ Conquetes des Francais, vol. xxv. p. 177.] he had struck at the centre of
+ the line of cantonments of his allied foes; and he had so far made good
+ his blow, that he had affected the passage of the Sambre, he had beaten
+ with his left wing the Prussian corps of General Ziethen at Thuin, and
+ with his centre he had in person advanced right through Charleroi upon
+ Fleurus, inflicting considerable loss upon the Prussians that fell back
+ before him. His right column had with little opposition moved forward as
+ far as the bridge of Chatelet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon had thus a powerful force immediately in front of the point which
+ Blucher had fixed for the concentration of the Prussian army, and that
+ concentration was still incomplete. The French Emperor designed to attack
+ the Prussians on the morrow in person, with the troops of his centre and
+ right columns, and to employ his left wing in beating back such English
+ troops as might advance to the help of their allies, and also in aiding
+ his own attack upon Blucher. He gave the command of this left wing to
+ Marshal Ney. Napoleon seems not to have originally intended to employ this
+ celebrated General in the campaign. It was only on the night of the 11th
+ of June, that Marshal Ney received at Paris an order to join the army.
+ Hurrying forward to the Belgian frontier, he met the Emperor near
+ Charleroi. Napoleon immediately directed him to take the command of the
+ left wing, and to press forward with it upon Quatre Bras by the line of
+ the road which leads from Charleroi to Brussels, through Gosselies,
+ Frasne, Quatre Bras, Genappe, and Waterloo. Ney immediately proceeded to
+ the post assigned him; and before ten on the night of the 15th he had
+ occupied Gosselies and Frasne, driving out without much difficulty some
+ weak Belgian detachments which had been stationed in those villages. The
+ lateness of the hour, and the exhausted state of the French troops, who
+ had been marching and fighting since ten in the morning, made him pause
+ from advancing further to attack the much more important position of
+ Quatre Bras. In truth, the advantages which the French gained by their
+ almost superhuman energy and activity throughout the long day of the 15th
+ of June, were necessarily bought at the price of more delay and inertness
+ during the following night and morrow, than would have been observable if
+ they had not been thus overtasked. Ney has been blamed for want of
+ promptness in his attack upon Quatre Bras; and Napoleon has been
+ criticised for not having fought at Ligny before the afternoon of the
+ 16th: but their censors should remember that soldiers are but men; and
+ that there must be necessarily some interval of time, before troops, that
+ have been worn and weakened by twenty hours of incessant fatigue and
+ strife, can be fed, rested, reorganized, and brought again into action
+ with any hope of success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having on the night of the 15th placed the most advanced of the French
+ under his command in position in front of Frasne, Ney rode back to
+ Charleroi, where Napoleon also arrived about midnight, having returned
+ from directing the operations of the centre and right column of the
+ French. The Emperor and the Marshal supped together, and remained in
+ earnest conversation till two in the morning. An hour or two afterwards
+ Ney rode back to Frasne, where he endeavoured to collect tidings of the
+ numbers and movements of the enemy in front of him; and also busied
+ himself in the necessary duty of learning the amount and composition of
+ the troops which he himself was commanding. He had been so suddenly
+ appointed to his high station, that he did not know the strength of the
+ several regiments under him, or even the names of their commanding
+ officers. He now caused his aides-de-camp to prepare the requisite
+ returns, and drew together the troops, whom he was thus learning before he
+ used them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wellington remained at the Duchess of Richmond's ball at Brussels till
+ about three o'clock in the morning of the 16th, "showing himself very
+ cheerful" as Baron Muffling, who accompanied him, observes. [Muffling, p.
+ 233.] At five o'clock the Duke and the Baron were on horseback, and
+ reached the position at Quatre Bras about eleven. As the French, who were
+ in front of Frasne, were perfectly quiet, and the Duke was informed that a
+ very large force under Napoleon in person was menacing Blucher, it was
+ thought possible that only a slight detachment of the French was posted at
+ Frasne in order to mask the English army. In that event Wellington, as he
+ told Baron Muffling, would be able to employ his whole strength in
+ supporting the Prussians: and he proposed to ride across from Quatre Bras
+ to Blucher's position, in order to concert with him personally the
+ measures which should be taken in order to bring on a decisive battle with
+ the French. Wellington and Muffling rode accordingly towards Ligny, and
+ found Marshal Blucher and his staff at the windmill of Bry, near that
+ village. The Prussian army, 80,000 strong, was drawn up chiefly along a
+ chain of heights, with the villages of Sombref, St. Amand, and Ligny in
+ their front. These villages were strongly occupied by Prussian
+ detachments, and formed the keys of Blucher's position. The heads of the
+ columns which Napoleon was forming for the attack, were visible in the
+ distance. The Duke asked Blucher and General Gneisenau (who was Blucher's
+ adviser in matters of strategy) what they wished him to do, Muffling had
+ already explained to them in a few words the Duke's earnest desire to
+ support the Field-Marshal, and that he would do all that they wished,
+ provided they did not ask him to divide his army, which was contrary to
+ his principles. The Duke wished to advance with his army (as soon as it
+ was concentrated) upon Frasne and Gosselies, and thence to move upon
+ Napoleon's flank and rear. The Prussian leaders preferred that he should
+ march his men from Quatre Bras by the Namur road, so as to form a reserve
+ in rear of Blucher's army. The Duke replied, "Well, I will come if I am
+ not attacked myself," and galloped back with Muffling to Quatre Bras,
+ where the French attack was now actually raging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marshal Ney began the battle about two o'clock in the afternoon. He had at
+ this time in hand about 16,000 infantry, nearly 2,000 cavalry, and 38
+ guns. The force which Napoleon nominally placed at his command exceeded
+ 40,000 men. But more than one half of these consisted of the first French
+ corps d'armee, under Count d'Erlon; and Ney was deprived of the use of
+ this corps at the time that he most required it, in consequence of its
+ receiving orders to march to the aid of the Emperor at Ligny. A
+ magnificent body of heavy cavalry under Kellerman, nearly 5,000 strong,
+ and several more battalions of artillery were added to Ney's army during
+ the battle of Quatre Bras; but his effective infantry force never exceeded
+ 16,000.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the battle began, the greater part of the Duke's army was yet on its
+ march towards Quatre Bras from Brussels and the other parts of its
+ cantonments. The force of the Allies, actually in position there,
+ consisted only of a Dutch and Belgian division of infantry, not quite
+ 7,000 strong, with one battalion of foot, and one of horse-artillery. The
+ Prince of Orange commanded them. A wood, called the Bois de Bossu,
+ stretched along the right (or western) flank of the position of Quatre
+ Bras; a farmhouse and building, called Gemiancourt, stood on some elevated
+ ground in its front; and to the left (or east), were the inclosures of the
+ village of Pierremont. The Prince of Orange endeavoured to secure these
+ posts; but Ney carried Gemiancourt in the centre, and Pierremont on the
+ east, and gained occupation of the southern part of the wood of Bossu. He
+ ranged the chief part of his artillery on the high ground of Gemiancourt,
+ whence it played throughout the action with most destructive effect upon
+ the Allies. He was pressing forward to further advantages, when the fifth
+ infantry division under Sir Thomas Picton and the Duke of Brunswick's
+ corps appeared upon the scene. Wellington (who had returned to Quatre Bras
+ from his interview with Blucher shortly before the arrival of these
+ forces) restored the fight with them; and, as fresh troops of the Allies
+ arrived, they were brought forward to stem the fierce attacks which Ney's
+ columns and squadrons continued to make with unabated gallantry and zeal.
+ The only cavalry of the anglo-allied army that reached Quatre Bras during
+ the action, consisted of Dutch and Belgians, and a small force of
+ Brunswickers, under their Duke, who was killed on the field. These proved
+ wholly unable to encounter Kellerman's cuirassiers and Pire's lancers; the
+ Dutch and Belgian infantry also gave way early in the engagement; so that
+ the whole brunt of the battle fell on the British and German infantry.
+ They sustained it nobly. Though repeatedly charged by the French cavalry,
+ though exposed to the murderous fire of the French batteries, which from
+ the heights of Gemiancourt sent shot and shell into the devoted squares
+ whenever the French horseman withdrew, they not only repelled their
+ assailants, but Kempt's and Pack's brigades, led, on by Picton, actually
+ advanced against and through their charging foes, and with stern
+ determination made good to the end of the day the ground which they had
+ thus boldly won. Some, however, of the British regiments were during the
+ confusion assailed by the French cavalry before they could form squares,
+ and suffered severely. One regiment, the 92d, was almost wholly destroyed
+ by the cuirassiers. A French private soldier, named Lami, of the 8th
+ regiment of cuirassiers, captured one of the English colours, and
+ presented it to Ney. It was a solitary trophy. The arrival of the English
+ Guards about half-past six o'clock, enabled the Duke to recover the wood
+ of Bossu, which the French had almost entirely won, and the possession of
+ which by them would have enabled Ney to operate destructively upon the
+ allied flank and rear. Not only was the wood of Bossu recovered on the
+ British right, but the inclosures of Pierremont were also carried on the
+ left. When night set in the French had been driven back on all points
+ towards Frasne; but they still held the farm of Gemiancourt in front of
+ the Duke's centre. Wellington and Muffling were unacquainted with the
+ result of the collateral battle between Blucher and Napoleon, the
+ cannonading of which had been distinctly audible at Quatre Bras throughout
+ the afternoon and evening. The Duke observed to Muffling, that of course
+ the two Allied armies would assume the offensive against the enemy on the
+ morrow; and consequently, it would be better to capture the farm at once,
+ instead of waiting till next morning. Muffling agreed in the Duke's views
+ and Gemiancourt was forthwith attacked by the English and captured with
+ little loss to its assailants. [Muffling, p. 242.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the French and the Prussians had been fighting in and round the
+ villages of Ligny, Sombref, and St. Armand, from three in the afternoon to
+ nine in the evening, with a savage inveteracy almost unparalleled in
+ modern warfare. Blucher had in the field, when he began the battle, 83,417
+ men, and 224 guns. Bulow's corps, which was 25,000 strong, had not joined
+ him; but the Field-Marshal hoped to be reinforced by it, or by the English
+ army before the end of the action. But Bulow, through some error in the
+ transmission of orders, was far in the rear; and the Duke of Wellington
+ was engaged, as we have seen, with Marshal Ney. Blucher received early
+ warning from Baron Muffling that the Duke could not come to his
+ assistance; but, as Muffling observes, Wellington rendered the Prussians
+ the great service of occupying more than 40,000 of the enemy, who
+ otherwise would have crushed Blucher's right flank. For, not only did the
+ conflict at Quatre Bras detain the French troops which actually took part
+ in it, but d'Erlon received orders from Ney to join him, which hindered
+ d'Erlon from giving effectual aid to Napoleon. Indeed, the whole of
+ d'Erlon's corps, in consequence of conflicting directions from Ney and the
+ Emperor, marched and countermarched, during the 16th, between Quatre Bras
+ and Ligny without firing a shot in either battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blucher had, in fact, a superiority of more than 12,000 in number over the
+ French army that attacked him at Ligny. The numerical difference was even
+ greater at the beginning of the battle, as Lobau's corps did not come up
+ from Charleroi till eight o'clock. After five hours and a half of
+ desperate and long-doubtful struggle, Napoleon succeeded in breaking the
+ centre of the Prussian line at Ligny, and in forcing his obstinate
+ antagonists off the field of battle. The issue was attributable to his
+ skill, and not to any want of spirit or resolution on the part of the
+ Prussian troops; nor did they, though defeated, abate one jot in
+ discipline, heart, or hope. As Blucher observed, it was a battle in which
+ his army lost the day but not its honour. The Prussians retreated during
+ the night of the 16th, and the early part of the 17th, with perfect
+ regularity and steadiness, The retreat was directed not towards
+ Maestricht, where their principal depots were established, but towards
+ Wavre, so as to be able to maintain their communication with Wellington's
+ army, and still follow out the original plan of the campaign. The heroism
+ with which the Prussians endured and repaired their defeat at Ligny, is
+ more glorious than many victories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The messenger who was sent to inform Wellington of the retreat of the
+ Prussian army, was shot on the way; and it was not until the morning of
+ the 17th that the Allies, at Quatre Bras, knew the result of the battle of
+ Ligny. The Duke was ready at daybreak to take the offensive against the
+ enemy with vigour, his whole army being by that time fully assembled. But
+ on learning that Blucher had been defeated, a different course of action
+ was clearly necessary. It was obvious that Napoleon's main army would now
+ be directed against Wellington, and a retreat was inevitable. On
+ ascertaining that the Prussian army had retired upon Wavre, that there was
+ no hot pursuit of them by the French, and that Bulow's corps had taken no
+ part in the action at Ligny, the Duke resolved to march his army back
+ towards Brussels, still intending to cover that city, and to halt at a
+ point in a line with Wavre, and there restore his communication with
+ Blucher. An officer from Blucher's army reached the Duke about nine
+ o'clock, from whom he learned the effective strength that Blucher still
+ possessed, and how little discouraged his ally was by the yesterday's
+ battle. Wellington sent word to the Prussian commander that he would halt
+ in the position of Mont St. Jean, and accept a general battle with the
+ French, if Blucher would pledge himself to come to his assistance with a
+ single corps of 25,000 men. This was readily promised; and after allowing
+ his men ample time for rest and refreshment, Wellington retired over about
+ half the space between Quatre Bras and Brussels. He was pursued, but
+ little molested, by the main French army, which about noon of the 17th
+ moved laterally from Ligny, and joined Ney's forces, which had advanced
+ through Quatre Bras when the British abandoned that position. The Earl of
+ Uxbridge, with the British cavalry, covered the retreat of the Duke's
+ army, with great skill and gallantry; and a heavy thunderstorm, with
+ torrents of rain, impeded the operations of the French pursuing squadrons.
+ The Duke still expected that the French would endeavour to turn his right,
+ and march upon Brussels by the high road that leads through Mons and Hal.
+ In order to counteract this anticipated manoeuvre, he stationed a force of
+ 18,000 men, under Prince Frederick of the Netherlands, at Hal, with orders
+ to maintain himself there if attacked, as long as possible. The Duke
+ halted with the rest of his army at the position near Mont St. Jean,
+ which, from a village in its neighbourhood, has received the
+ ever-memorable name of the field of Waterloo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wellington was now about twelve miles distant, on a line running from west
+ to east, from Wavre, where the Prussian army had now been completely
+ reorganised and collected, and where it had been strengthened by the
+ junction of Bulow's troops, which had taken no part in the battle of
+ Ligny. Blucher sent word from Wavre to the Duke, that he was coming to
+ help the English at Mont St. Jean, in the morning, not with one corps, but
+ with his whole army. The fiery old man only stipulated that the combined
+ armies, if not attacked by Napoleon on the 18th, should themselves attack
+ him on the 19th. So far were Blucher and his army from being in the state
+ of annihilation described in the boastful bulletin by which Napoleon
+ informed the Parisians of his victory at Ligny. Indeed, the French Emperor
+ seems himself to have been misinformed as to the extent of loss which he
+ had inflicted on the Prussians. Had he known in what good order and with
+ what undiminished spirit they were retiring, he would scarcely have
+ delayed sending a large force to press them in their retreat until noon on
+ the 17th. Such, however, was the case. It was about that time that he
+ confided to Marshal Grouchy the duty of pursuing the defeated Prussians,
+ and preventing them from joining Wellington. He placed for this purpose
+ 32,000 men and 96 guns under his orders. Violent complaints and
+ recriminations passed afterwards between the Emperor and the marshal
+ respecting the manner in which Grouchy attempted to perform this duty, and
+ the reasons why he failed on the 18th to arrest the lateral movement of
+ the Prussians from Wavre to Waterloo. It is sufficient to remark here,
+ that the force which Napoleon gave to Grouchy (though the utmost that the
+ Emperor's limited means would allow) was insufficient to make head against
+ the entire Prussian army, especially after Bulow's junction with Blucher.
+ We shall presently have occasion to consider what opportunities were given
+ to Grouchy during the 18th, and what he might have effected if he had been
+ a man of original military genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the failure of Grouchy was in truth mainly owing to the indomitable
+ heroism of Blucher himself; who, though he had received severe personal
+ injuries in the battle of Ligny, was as energetic and ready as ever in
+ bringing his men into action again, and who had the resolution to expose a
+ part of his army, under Thielman, to be overwhelmed by Grouchy at Wavre on
+ the 18th, while he urged the march of the mass of his troops upon
+ Waterloo. "It is not at Wavre, but at Waterloo," said the old
+ Field-Marshal, "that the campaign is to be decided;" and he risked a
+ detachment, and won the campaign accordingly. Wellington and Blucher
+ trusted each other as cordially, and co-operated as zealously, as formerly
+ had been the case with Marlborough and Eugene. It was in full reliance on
+ Blucher's promise to join him that the Duke stood his ground and fought at
+ Waterloo; and those who have ventured to impugn the Duke's capacity as a
+ general, ought to have had common-sense enough to perceive, that to charge
+ the Duke with having won the battle of Waterloo by the help of the
+ Prussians, is really to say that he won it by the very means on which he
+ relied, and without the expectation of which the battle would not have
+ been fought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon himself has found fault with Wellington for not having retreated
+ further, so as to complete a junction of his army with Blucher's before he
+ risked a general engagement. [See Montholon's Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 44.]
+ But, as we have seen, the Duke justly considered it important to protect
+ Brussels. He had reason to expect that his army could singly resist the
+ French at Waterloo until the Prussians came up; and that, on the Prussians
+ joining, there would be a sufficient force united under himself and
+ Blucher for completely overwhelming the enemy. And while Napoleon thus
+ censures his great adversary, he involuntarily bears the highest possible
+ testimony to the military character of the English, and proves decisively
+ of what paramount importance was the battle to which he challenged his
+ fearless opponent. Napoleon asks, "IF THE ENGLISH ARMY HAD BEEN BEATEN AT
+ WATERLOO, WHAT WOULD HAVE BEEN THE USE OF THOSE NUMEROUS BODIES OF TROOPS,
+ OF PRUSSIANS, AUSTRIANS, GERMANS, AND SPANIARDS, WHICH WERE ADVANCING BY
+ FORCED MARCHES TO THE RHINE, THE ALPS, AND THE PYRENEES?" [Ibid.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The strength of the army under the Duke of Wellington at Waterloo was
+ 49,608 infantry, 12,402 cavalry, and 5,645 artillerymen with 156 guns.
+ [Siborne, vol. i. p. 376.] But of this total of 67,655 men, scarcely
+ 24,000 were British, a circumstance of very serious importance, if
+ Napoleon's own estimate of the relative value of troops of different
+ nations is to be taken. In the Emperor's own words, speaking of this
+ campaign, "A French soldier would not be equal to more than one English
+ soldier, but he would not be afraid to meet two Dutchmen, Prussians, or
+ soldiers of the Confederation." [Montholon's Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 41.]
+ There were about 6,000 men of the old German Legion with the Duke; these
+ were veteran troops, and of excellent quality. Of the rest of the army the
+ Hanoverians and Brunswickers proved themselves deserving of confidence and
+ praise. But the Nassauers, Dutch, and Belgians were almost worthless; and
+ not a few of them were justly suspected of a strong wish to fight, if they
+ fought at all, under the French eagles rather than against them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon's army at Waterloo consisted of 48,950 infantry, 15,765 cavalry,
+ 7,232 artillerymen, being a total of 71,947 men, and 246 guns. [See
+ Siborne, UT SUPRA.] They were the flower of the national forces of France;
+ and of all the numerous gallant armies which that martial land has poured
+ forth, never was there one braver, or better disciplined, or better led,
+ than the host that took up its position at Waterloo on the morning of the
+ 18th of June, 1815.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps those who have not seen the field of battle at Waterloo, or the
+ admirable model of the ground, and of the conflicting armies, which was
+ executed by Captain Siborne, may gain a generally accurate idea of the
+ localities, by picturing to themselves a valley between two and three
+ miles long, of various breadths at different points, but generally not
+ exceeding half a mile. On each side of the valley there is a winding chain
+ of low hills running somewhat parallel, with each other. The declivity
+ from each of these ranges of hills to the intervening valley is gentle but
+ not uniform, the undulations of the ground being frequent and
+ considerable. The English army was posted on the northern, and the French
+ army occupied the southern ridge. The artillery of each side thundered at
+ the other from their respective heights throughout the day, and the
+ charges of horse and foot were made across the valley that has been
+ described. The village of Mont St. Jean is situate a little behind the
+ centre of the northern chain of hills, and the village of La Belle
+ Alliance is close behind the centre of the southern ridge. The high road
+ from Charleroi to Brussels (a broad paved causeway) runs through both
+ these villages, and bisects therefore both the English and the French
+ positions. The line of this road was the line of Napoleon's intended
+ advance on Brussels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are some other local particulars connected with the situation of
+ each army, which it is necessary to bear in mind. The strength of the
+ British position did not consist merely in the occupation of a ridge of
+ high ground. A village and ravine, called Merk Braine, on the Duke of
+ Wellington's extreme right, secured his flank from being turned on that
+ side; and on his extreme left, two little hamlets called La Haye and
+ Papelotte, gave a similar, though a slighter, protection. Behind the whole
+ British position is the extensive forest of Soignies. As no attempt was
+ made by the French to turn either of the English flanks, and the battle
+ was a day of straightforward fighting, it is chiefly important to
+ ascertain what posts there were in front of the British line of hills, of
+ which advantage could be taken either to repel or facilitate an attack;
+ and it will be seen that there were two, and that each was of very great
+ importance in the action. In front of the British right, that is to say,
+ on the northern slope of the valley towards its western end, there stood
+ an old-fashioned Flemish farm-house called Goumont, or Hougoumont, with
+ out-buildings and a garden, and with a copse of beach trees of about two
+ acres in extent round it. This was strongly garrisoned by the allied
+ troops; and, while it was in their possession, it was difficult for the
+ enemy to press on and force the British right wing. On the other hand, if
+ the enemy could take it, it would be difficult for that wing to keep its
+ ground on the heights, with a strong post held adversely in its immediate
+ front, being one that; would give much shelter to the enemy's marksmen,
+ and great facilities for the sudden concentration of attacking columns.
+ Almost immediately in front of the British centre, and not so far down the
+ slope as Hougoumont, there was another farm-house, of a smaller size,
+ called La Haye Sainte, [Not to be confounded with the hamlet of La Haye at
+ the extreme left of the British line.] which was also held by the British
+ troops, and the occupation of which was found to be of very serious
+ consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the French position, the principal feature to be noticed
+ is the village of Planchenoit, which lay a little in the rear of their
+ right (I.E. on the eastern side), and which proved to be of great
+ importance in aiding them to check the advance of the Prussians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon, in his memoirs, and other French writers, have vehemently blamed
+ the Duke for having given battle in such a position as that of Waterloo.
+ They particularly object that the Duke fought without having the means of
+ a retreat, if the attacks of his enemy had proved successful; and that the
+ English army, if once broken, must have lost all its guns and MATERIEL in
+ its flight through the Forest of Soignies, that lay in its rear. In answer
+ to these censures, instead of merely referring to the event of the battle
+ as proof of the correctness of the Duke's judgment, it is to be observed
+ that many military critics of high authority, have considered the position
+ of Waterloo to have been admirably adapted for the Duke's purpose of
+ protecting Brussels by a battle; and that certainly the Duke's opinion in
+ favour of it was not lightly or hastily formed. It is a remarkable fact
+ (mentioned in the speech of Lord Bathurst when moving the vote of thanks
+ to the Duke in the House of Lords), [Parliamentary Debates, vol. xxxi. p.
+ 875.] that when the Duke of Wellington was passing through Belgium in the
+ preceding summer of 1814, he particularly noticed the strength of the
+ position of Waterloo, and made a minute of it at the time, stating to
+ those who were with him, that if it ever should be his fate to fight a
+ battle in that quarter for the protection of Brussels, he should endeavour
+ to do so in that position. And with respect to the Forest of Soignies,
+ which the French (and some few English) critics have thought calculated to
+ prove so fatal to a retreating force, the Duke on the contrary believed it
+ to be a post that might have proved of infinite value to his army in the
+ event of his having been obliged to give way. The Forest of Soignies has
+ no thicket or masses of close-growing trees. It consists of tall beeches,
+ and is everywhere passable for men and horses. The artillery could have
+ been withdrawn by the broad road which traverses it towards Brussels; and
+ in the meanwhile a few regiments of resolute infantry could have held the
+ forest and kept the pursuers in check. One of the best writers on the
+ Waterloo campaign, Captain Pringle, [See the Appendix to the 8th volume of
+ Scott's Life of Napoleon.] well observes that "every person, the least
+ experienced in war, knows the extreme difficulty of forcing infantry from
+ a wood which cannot be turned." The defence of the Bois de Bossu near
+ Quatre Bras on the 16th of June had given a good proof of this; and the
+ Duke of Wellington, when speaking in after years of the possible events
+ that might have followed if he had been beaten back from the open field of
+ Waterloo, pointed to the wood of Soignies as his secure rallying place,
+ saying, "they never could have beaten us so, that we could not have held
+ the wood against them." He was always confident that he could have made
+ good that post until joined by the Prussians, upon whose co-operation he
+ throughout depended. [See Lord Ellesmere's Life and Character of the Duke
+ of Wellington, p. 40.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As has been already mentioned, the Prussians, on the morning of the 18th,
+ were at Wavre, which is about twelve miles to the east of the field of
+ battle of Waterloo. The junction of Bulow's division had more than made up
+ for the loss sustained at Ligny; and leaving Thielman with about seventeen
+ thousand men to hold his ground, as he best could, against the attack
+ which Grouchy was about to make on Wavre, Bulow and Blucher moved with the
+ rest of the Prussians through St. Lambert upon Waterloo. It was calculated
+ that they would be there by three o'clock; but the extremely difficult
+ nature of the ground which they had to traverse, rendered worse by the
+ torrents of rain that had just fallen, delayed them long on their twelve
+ miles' march.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An army indeed, less animated by bitter hate against the enemy than was
+ the Prussians, and under a less energetic chief than Blucher, would have
+ failed altogether in effecting a passage through the swamps, into which
+ the incessant rain had transformed the greater part of the ground through
+ which it was necessary to move not only with columns of foot, but with
+ cavalry and artillery. At one point of the march, on entering the defile
+ of St. Lambert, the spirits of the Prussians almost gave way. Exhausted in
+ the attempts to extricate and drag forward the heavy guns, the men began
+ to murmur. Blucher came to the spot, and heard cries from the ranks of&mdash;"We
+ cannot get on." "But you must get on," was the old Field-Marshal's answer.
+ "I have pledged my word to Wellington, and you surely will not make me
+ break it. Only exert yourselves for a few hours longer, and we are sure of
+ victory." This appeal from old "Marshal Forwards," as the Prussian
+ soldiers loved to call Blucher, had its wonted affect. The Prussians again
+ moved forward, slowly, indeed, and with pain and toil; but still they
+ moved forward. [See Siborne, vol. ii. p. 137.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French and British armies lay on the open field during the wet and
+ stormy night of the 17th; and when the dawn of the memorable 18th of June
+ broke, the rain was still descending heavily upon Waterloo. The rival
+ nations rose from their dreary bivouacs, and began to form, each on the
+ high ground which it occupied. Towards nine the weather grew clearer, and
+ each army was able to watch the position and arrangements of the other on
+ the opposite side of the valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Wellington drew up his army in two lines; the principal one
+ being stationed near the crest of the ridge of hills already described,
+ and the other being arranged along the slope in the rear of his position.
+ Commencing from the eastward, on the extreme left of the first or main
+ line, were Vivian's and Vandeleur's brigades of light cavalry, and the
+ fifth Hanoverian brigade of infantry, under Von Vincke. Then came Best's
+ fourth Hanoverian brigade. Detachments from these bodies of troops
+ occupied the little villages of Papelotte and La Haye, down the hollow in
+ advance of the left of the Duke's position. To the right of Best's
+ Hanoverians, Bylandt's brigade of Dutch and Belgian infantry was drawn up
+ on the outer slope of the heights. Behind them were the ninth brigade of
+ British infantry under Pack; and to the right of these last, but more in
+ advance, stood the eighth brigade of English infantry under Kempt. These
+ were close to the Charleroi road, and to the centre of the entire
+ position. These two English brigades, with the fifth Hanoverian, made up
+ the fifth division, commanded by Sir Thomas Picton. Immediately to their
+ right, and westward of the Charleroi road, stood the third division,
+ commanded by General Alten, and consisting of Ompteda's brigade of the
+ King's German legion, and Kielmansegge's Hanoverian brigade. The important
+ post of La Haye Sainte, which it will be remembered lay in front of the
+ Duke's centre, close to the Charleroi road, was garrisoned with troops
+ from this division. Westward, and on the right of Kielmansegge's
+ Hanoverians, stood the fifth British brigade under Halkett; and behind,
+ Kruse's Nassau brigade was posted. On the right of Halkett's men stood the
+ English Guards. They were in two brigades, one commanded By Maitland, and
+ the other by Byng. The entire division was under General Cooke. The
+ buildings and gardens of Hougoumont, which lay immediately under the
+ height, on which stood the British Guards, were principally manned by
+ detachments from Byng's Brigade, aided by some brave Hanoverian riflemen,
+ and accompanied by a battalion of a Nassau regiment. On a plateau in the
+ rear of Cooks's division of Guards, and inclining westward towards the
+ village of Merk Braine, were Clinton's second infantry division, composed
+ of Adams's third brigade of light infantry, Du Plat's first brigade of the
+ King's German legion, and third Hanoverian brigade under Colonel Halkett.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke formed his second line of cavalry. This only extended behind the
+ right and centre of his first line. The largest mass was drawn up behind
+ the brigades of infantry in the centre, on either side of the Charleroi
+ road. The brigade of household cavalry under Lord Somerset was on the
+ immediate right of the road, and on the left of it was Ponsonby's brigade.
+ Behind these were Trip's and Ghingy's brigades of Dutch and Belgian horse.
+ The third Hussars of the King's German Legion were to the right of
+ Somerset's brigade. To the right of these, and behind Maitland's infantry,
+ stood the third brigade under Dornberg, consisting of the 23d English
+ Light Dragoons, and the regiments of Light Dragoons of the King's German
+ Legion. The last cavalry on the right was Grant's brigade, stationed in
+ the rear of the Foot-Guards. The corps of Brunswickers, both horse and
+ foot, and the 10th British brigade of foot, were in reserve behind the
+ centre and right of the entire position. The artillery was distributed at
+ convenient intervals along the front of the whole line. Besides the
+ Generals who have been mentioned, Lord Hill, Lord Uxbridge (who had the
+ general command of the cavalry), the Prince of Orange, and General Chasse,
+ were present, and acting under the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Prince Frederick's force remained at Hal, and took no part in the battle
+ of the 18th. The reason for this arrangement (which has been much cavilled
+ at), may be best given in the words of Baron Muffling:&mdash;"The Duke had
+ retired from Quatre Bras in three columns, by three chaussees; and on the
+ evening of the 17th, Prince Frederick of Orange was at Hal, Lord Hill at
+ Braine la Leud, and the Prince of Orange with the reserve, at Mont St.
+ Jean. This distribution was necessary, as Napoleon could dispose of these
+ three roads for his advance on Brussels. Napoleon on the 17th had pressed
+ on by Genappe as far as Rossomme. On the two other roads no enemy had yet
+ shown himself. On the 18th the offensive was taken by Napoleon on its
+ greatest scale, but still the Nivelles road was not overstepped by his
+ left wing. These circumstances made it possible to draw Prince Frederick
+ to the army, which would certainly have been done if entirely new
+ circumstances had not arisen. The Duke had, twenty-four hours before,
+ pledged himself to accept a battle at Mont St. Jean if Blucher would
+ assist him there with one corps, of 25,000 men. This being promised, the
+ Duke was taking his measures for defence, when he learned that, in
+ addition to the one corps promised, Blucher was actually already on the
+ march with his whole force, to break in by Planchenoit on Napoleon's flank
+ and rear. If three corps of the Prussian army should penetrate by the
+ unguarded plateau of Rossomme, which was not improbable, Napoleon would be
+ thrust from his line of retreat by Genappe, and might possibly lose even
+ that by Nivelles. In this case Prince Frederick with his 18,000 men (who
+ might be accounted superfluous at Mont St. Jean), might have rendered the
+ most essential service."&mdash;See Muffling, p. 246 and the QUARTERLY
+ REVIEW, No. 178. It is also worthy of observation that Napoleon actually
+ detached a force of 2,000 cavalry to threaten Hal, though they returned to
+ the main French army during the night of the 17th. See "Victoires at
+ Conquetes des Francais," vol. xxiv. p 186.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the opposite heights the French army was drawn up in two general lines,
+ with the entire force of the Imperial Guards, cavalry as well as infantry,
+ in rear of the centre, as a reserve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first line of the French army was formed of the two corps commanded by
+ Count d'Erlon and Count Reille. D'Erlon's corps was on the right, that is,
+ eastward of the Charleroi road, and consisted of four divisions of
+ infantry under Generals Durette, Marcognet, Alix, and Donzelot, and of one
+ division of light cavalry under General Jaquinot. Count Reille's corps
+ formed the left or western wing, and was formed of Bachelu's, Foy's, and
+ Jerome Bonaparte's divisions of infantry, and of Pire's division of
+ cavalry. The right wing of the second general French line was formed of
+ Milhaud's corps, consisting of two divisions of heavy cavalry. The left
+ wing of this line was formed by Kellerman's cavalry corps, also in two
+ divisions. Thus each of the corps of infantry that composed the first line
+ had a corps of cavalry behind it; but the second line consisted also of
+ Lobau's corps of infantry, and Domont and Subervie's divisions of light
+ cavalry; these three bodies of troops being drawn up on either side of La
+ Belle Alliance, and forming the centre of the second line. The third, or
+ reserve line, had its centre composed of the infantry of the Imperial
+ Guard. Two regiments of grenadiers and two of chasseurs, formed the foot
+ of the Old Guard under General Friant. The Middle Guard, under Count
+ Morand, was similarly composed; while two regiments of voltigeurs, and two
+ of tirailleurs, under Duhesme, constituted the Young Guard. The chasseurs
+ and lancers of the Guard were on the right of the infantry, under Lefebvre
+ Desnouettes; and the grenadiers and dragoons of the Guards, under Guyot,
+ were on the left. All the French corps comprised, besides their cavalry
+ and infantry regiments, strong batteries of horse artillery; and
+ Napoleon's numerical superiority in guns was of deep importance throughout
+ the action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the leading generals who have been mentioned as commanding
+ particular corps, Ney and Soult were present, and acted as the Emperor's
+ lieutenants in the battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ English military critics have highly eulogised the admirable arrangement
+ which Napoleon made of his forces of each arm, so as to give him the most
+ ample means of sustaining, by an immediate and sufficient support, any
+ attack, from whatever point he might direct it; and of drawing promptly
+ together a strong force, to resist any attack that might be made on
+ himself in any part of the field. [Siborne, vol. i. p. 376.] When his
+ troops were all arrayed, he rode along the lines, receiving everywhere the
+ most enthusiastic cheers from his men, of whose entire devotion to him his
+ assurance was now doubly sure. On the northern side of the valley the
+ Duke's army was also drawn up, and ready to meet the menaced attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wellington had caused, on the preceding night, every brigade and corps to
+ take up its station on or near the part of the ground which it was
+ intended to hold in the coming battle. He had slept a few hours at his
+ headquarters in the village of Waterloo; and rising on the 18th, while it
+ was yet deep night, he wrote several letters to the Governor of Antwerp,
+ to the English Minister at Brussels, and other official personages, in
+ which he expressed his confidence that all would go well, but "as it was
+ necessary to provide against serious losses; should any accident occur,"
+ he gave a series of judicious orders for what should be done in the rear
+ of the army, in the event of the battle going against the Allies. He also,
+ before he left the village of Waterloo, saw to the distribution of the
+ reserves of ammunition which had been parked there, so that supplies
+ should be readily forwarded to every part of the line of battle, where
+ they might be required, The Duke, also, personally inspected the
+ arrangements that had been made for receiving the wounded, and providing
+ temporary hospitals in the houses in the rear of the army. Then, mounting
+ a favourite charger, a small thorough-bred chestnut horse, named
+ "Copenhagen," Wellington rode forward to the range of hills where his men
+ were posted. Accompanied by his staff and by the Prussian General
+ Muffling, he rode along his lines, carefully inspecting all the details of
+ his position. Hougoumont was the object of his special attention. He rode
+ down to the south-eastern extremity of its enclosures, and after having
+ examined the nearest French troops, he made some changes in the
+ disposition of his own men, who were to defend that important post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having given his final orders about Hougoumont, the Duke galloped back to
+ the high ground in the right centre of his position; and halting there,
+ sat watching the enemy on the opposite heights, and conversing with his
+ staff with that cheerful serenity which was ever his characteristic in the
+ hour of battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not all brave men are thus gifted; and many a glance of anxious excitement
+ must have been cast across the valley that separated the two hosts during
+ the protracted pause which ensued between the completion of Napoleon's
+ preparations for attack and the actual commencement of the contest. It
+ was, indeed, an awful calm before the coming storm, when armed myriads
+ stood gazing on their armed foes, scanning their number, their array,
+ their probable powers of resistance and destruction, and listening with
+ throbbing hearts for the momentarily expected note of death; while visions
+ of victory and glory came thronging on each soldier's high-strung brain,
+ not unmingled with recollections of the home which his fall might soon
+ leave desolate, nor without shrinking nature sometimes prompting the cold
+ thought, that in a few moments he might be writhing in agony, or lie a
+ trampled and mangled mass of clay on the grass now waving so freshly and
+ purely before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such thoughts WILL arise in human breasts, though the brave man soon
+ silences "the child within us that trembles before death," [See Plato,
+ Phaedon, c. 60; and Grote's History of Greece, vol. viii. p. 656.] and
+ nerves himself for the coming struggle by the mental preparation which
+ Xenophon has finely called "the soldier's arraying his own soul for
+ battle." [Hellenica, lib. vii. c. v. s. 22.] Well, too, may we hope and
+ believe that many a spirit sought aid from a higher and holier source; and
+ that many a fervent though silent prayer arose on that Sabbath morn (the
+ battle of Waterloo was fought on a Sunday) to the Lord of Sabaoth, the God
+ of Battles, from the ranks, whence so many thousands were about to appear
+ that day before his judgment-seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not only to those who were thus present as spectators and actors in the
+ dread drama, but to all Europe, the decisive contest then impending
+ between the rival French and English nations, each under its chosen chief
+ was the object of exciting interest and deepest solicitude. "Never,
+ indeed, had two such generals as the Duke of Wellington and the Emperor
+ Napoleon encountered since the day when Scipio and Hannibal met at Zama."
+ [See SUPRA, p. 82.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two great champions, who now confronted each other, were equals in
+ years, and each had entered the military profession at the same early age.
+ The more conspicuous stage, on which the French general's youthful genius
+ was displayed, his heritage of the whole military power of the French
+ Republic, the position on which for years he was elevated as sovereign
+ head of an empire surpassing that of Charlemagne, and the dazzling results
+ of his victories, which made and unmade kings, had given him a formidable
+ pre-eminence in the eyes of mankind. Military men spoke with justly
+ rapturous admiration of the brilliancy of his first Italian campaigns,
+ when he broke through the pedantry of traditional tactics, and with a
+ small but promptly-wielded force, shattered army after army of the
+ Austrians, conquered provinces and capitals, dictated treaties, and
+ annihilated or created states. The iniquity of his Egyptian expedition was
+ too often forgotten in contemplating the skill and boldness with which he
+ destroyed the Mameluke cavalry at the Pyramids, and the Turkish infantry
+ at Aboukir. None could forget the marvellous passage of the Alps in 1800,
+ or the victory of Marengo, which wrested Italy back from Austria, and
+ destroyed the fruit of twenty victories, which the enemies of France had
+ gained over her in the absence of her favourite chief. Even higher seemed
+ the glories of his German campaigns, the triumphs of Ulm, of Austerlitz,
+ of Jena, of Wagram. Napoleon's disasters in Russia, in 1812, were imputed
+ by his admirers to the elements; his reverses in Germany, in 1813, were
+ attributed by them to treachery: and even those two calamitous years had
+ been signalised by his victories at Borodino, at Lutzen, at Bautzen, at
+ Dresden, and at Hanau. His last campaign, in the early months of 1814, was
+ rightly cited as the most splendid exhibition of his military genius,
+ when, with a far inferior army, he long checked and frequently defeated
+ the vast hosts that were poured upon France. His followers fondly hoped
+ that the campaign of 1815 would open with another "week of miracles," like
+ that which had seen his victories at Montmirail and Montereau. The laurel
+ of Ligny was even now fresh upon his brows. Blucher had not stood before
+ him; and who was the Adversary that now should bar the Emperor's way?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Adversary had already overthrown the Emperor's best generals, and the
+ Emperor's best armies; and, like Napoleon himself, had achieved a
+ reputation in more than European wars. Wellington was illustrious as the
+ destroyer of the Mahratta power, as the liberator of Portugal and Spain,
+ and the successful invader of Southern France. In early youth he had held
+ high command in India; and had displayed eminent skill in planning and
+ combining movements, and unrivalled celerity and boldness in execution. On
+ his return to Europe several years passed away before any fitting
+ opportunity was accorded for the exercise of his genius. In this important
+ respect, Wellington, as a subject, and Napoleon, as a sovereign, were far
+ differently situated. At length his appointment to the command in the
+ Spanish Peninsula gave him the means of showing Europe that England had a
+ general who could revive the glories of Crecy, of Poictiers, of Agincourt,
+ of Blenheim, and of Ramilies. At the head of forces always numerically far
+ inferior to the armies with which Napoleon deluged the Peninsula;&mdash;thwarted
+ by jealous and incompetent allies;&mdash;ill-supported by friends, and
+ assailed by factious enemies at home; Wellington maintained the war for
+ several years, unstained by any serious reverse, and marked by victory in
+ thirteen pitched battles, at Vimiera, the Douro, Talavera, Busaco, Fuentes
+ d'Onore, Salamanca, Vittoria, the Pyrenees, the Bidassoa, the Nive, the
+ Nivelle, Orthes, and Toulouse. Junot, Victor, Massena, Ney, Marmont, and
+ Jourdain,&mdash;marshals whose names were the terrors of continental
+ Europe&mdash;had been baffled by his skill, and smitten down by his
+ energy, while he liberated the kingdoms of the Peninsula from them and
+ their Imperial master. In vain did Napoleon at last despatch Soult, the
+ ablest of his lieutenants, to turn the tide of Wellington's success and
+ defend France against the English invader. Wellington met Soult's
+ manoeuvres with superior skill, and his boldness with superior vigour.
+ When Napoleon's first abdication, in 1814, suspended hostilities,
+ Wellington was master of the fairest districts of Southern France; and had
+ under him a veteran army, with which (to use his own expressive phrase)
+ "he felt he could have gone anywhere and done anything." The fortune of
+ war had hitherto kept separate the orbits in which Napoleon and he had
+ moved. Now, on the ever memorable 18th of June, 1815, they met at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is, indeed, remarkable that Napoleon, during his numerous campaigns in
+ Spain as well as other countries, not only never encountered the Duke of
+ Wellington before the day of Waterloo, but that he was never until then
+ personally engaged with British troops, except at the siege of Toulon, in
+ 1793, which was the very first incident of his military career. Many,
+ however, of the French generals who were with him in 1815, knew well, by
+ sharp experience, what English soldiers were, and what the leader was who
+ now headed them. Ney, Foy, and other officers who had served in the
+ Peninsula, warned Napoleon that he would find the English infantry "very
+ devils in fight." The Emperor, however, persisted in employing the old
+ system of attack, with which the French generals often succeeded against
+ continental troops, but which had always failed against the English in the
+ Peninsula. He adhered to his usual tactics of employing the order of the
+ column; a mode of attack probably favoured by him (as Sir Walter Scott
+ remarks) on account of his faith in the extreme valour of the French
+ officers by whom the column was headed. It is a threatening formation,
+ well calculated to shake the firmness of ordinary foes; but which, when
+ steadily met, as the English have met it, by heavy volleys of musketry
+ from an extended line, followed up by a resolute bayonet charge, has
+ always resulted in disaster to the assailants. [See especially Sir W.
+ Napier's glorious pictures of the battles of Busaco and Albuera. The
+ THEORETICAL advantages of the attack in column, and its peculiar fitness
+ for a French army, are set forth in the Chevalier Folard's "Traite de la
+ Colonne," prefixed to the first volume of his "Polybius," See also the
+ preface to his sixth volume.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was approaching noon before the action commenced. Napoleon, in his
+ Memoirs, gives as the reason for this delay, the miry state of the ground
+ through the heavy rain of the preceding night and day, which rendered it
+ impossible for cavalry or artillery to manoeuvre on it till a few hours of
+ dry weather had given it its natural consistency. It has been supposed,
+ also, that he trusted to the effect which the sight of the imposing array
+ of his own forces was likely to produce on the part of the allied army.
+ The Belgian regiments had been tampered with; and Napoleon had
+ well-founded hopes of seeing them quit the Duke of Wellington in a body,
+ and range themselves under his own eagles. The Duke, however, who knew and
+ did not trust them, had guarded against the risk of this, by breaking up
+ the corps of Belgians, and distributing them in separate regiments among
+ troops on whom he could rely. [Siborne, vol. i. p. 373.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, at about half-past eleven o'clock, Napoleon began the battle by
+ directing a powerful force from his left wing under his brother, Prince
+ Jerome, to attack Hougoumont. Column after column of the French now
+ descended from the west of the southern heights, and assailed that post
+ with fiery valour, which was encountered with the most determined bravery.
+ The French won the copse round the house, but a party of the British
+ Guards held the house itself throughout the day. The whole of Byng's
+ brigade was required to man this hotly-contested post. Amid shell and
+ shot, and the blazing fragments of part of the buildings, this obstinate
+ contest was continued. But still the English were firm in Hougoumont;
+ though the French occasionally moved forward in such numbers as enabled
+ them to surround and mask it with part of their troops from their left
+ wing, while others pressed onward up the slope, and assailed the British
+ right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cannonade, which commenced at first between the British right and the
+ French left, in consequence of the attack on Hougoumont, soon became
+ general along both lines; and about one o'clock, Napoleon directed a grand
+ attack to be made under Marshal Ney upon the centre and left wing of the
+ allied army. For this purpose four columns of infantry, amounting to about
+ eighteen thousand men, were collected, supported by a strong division of
+ cavalry under the celebrated Kellerman; and seventy-four guns were brought
+ forward ready to be posted on the ridge of a little undulation of the
+ ground in the interval between the two principal chains of heights, so as
+ to bring their fire to bear on the Duke's line at a range of about seven
+ hundred yards. By the combined assault of these formidable forces, led on
+ by Ney, "the bravest of the brave," Napoleon hoped to force the left
+ centre of the British position, to take La Haye Sainte, and then pressing
+ forward, to occupy also the farm of Mont St. Jean. He then could cut the
+ mass of Wellington's troops off from their line of retreat upon Brussels,
+ and from their own left, and also completely sever them from any Prussian
+ troops that might be approaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The columns destined for this great and decisive operation descended
+ majestically from the French line of hills, and gained the ridge of the
+ intervening eminence, on which the batteries that supported them were now
+ ranged. As the columns descended again from this eminence, the
+ seventy-four guns opened over their heads with terrible effect upon the
+ troops of the Allies that were stationed on the heights to the left of the
+ Charleroi road. One of the French columns kept to the east, and attacked
+ the extreme left of the Allies; the other three continued to move rapidly
+ forwards upon the left centre of the allied position. The front line of
+ the Allies here was composed of Bylandt's brigade of Dutch and Belgians.
+ As the French columns moved up the southward slope of the height on which
+ the Dutch and Belgians stood, and the skirmishers in advance began to open
+ their fire, Bylandt's entire brigade turned and fled in disgraceful and
+ disorderly panic; but there were men more worthy of the name behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this part of-the second line of the Allies were posted Pack and Kempt's
+ brigades of English infantry, which had suffered severely at Quatre Bras.
+ But Picton was here as general of division, and not even Ney himself
+ surpassed in resolute bravery that stern and fiery spirit. Picton brought
+ his two brigades forward, side by side, in a thin, two-deep line. Thus
+ joined together, they were not three thousand strong. With these Picton
+ had to make head against the three victorious French columns, upwards of
+ four times that strength, and who, encouraged by the easy rout of the
+ Dutch and Belgians, now came confidently over the ridge of the hill. The
+ British infantry stood firm; and as the French halted and began to deploy
+ into line, Picton seized the critical moment. He shouted in his stentorian
+ voice to Kempt's brigade: "A volley, and then charge!" At a distance of
+ less than thirty yards that volley was poured upon the devoted first
+ sections of the nearest column; and then, with a fierce hurrah, the
+ British dashed in with the bayonet. Picton was shot dead as he rushed
+ forward, but his men pushed on with the cold steel. The French reeled back
+ in confusion. Pack's infantry had checked the other two columns and down
+ came a whirlwind of British horse on the whole mass, sending them
+ staggering from the crest of the hill, and cutting them down by whole
+ battalions. Ponsonby's brigade of heavy cavalry (the Union Brigade as it
+ was called, from its being made up of the British Royals, the Scots Greys,
+ and the Irish Inniskillings), did this good service. On went the horsemen
+ amid the wrecks of the French columns, capturing two eagles, and two
+ thousand prisoners; onwards still they galloped, and sabred the
+ artillerymen of Ney's seventy-four advanced guns; then severing the
+ traces, and cutting the throats of the artillery horses, they rendered
+ these guns totally useless to the French throughout the remainder of the
+ day. While thus far advanced beyond the British position and disordered by
+ success, they were charged by a large body of French lancers, and driven
+ back with severe loss, till Vandeleur's Light horse came to their aid, and
+ beat off the French lancers in their turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Equally unsuccessful with the advance of the French infantry in this grand
+ attack, had been the efforts of the French cavalry who moved forward in
+ support of it, along the east of the Charleroi road. Somerset's cavalry of
+ the English Household Brigade had been launched, on the right of Picton's
+ division, against the French horse, at the same time that the English
+ Union Brigade of heavy horse charged the French infantry columns on the
+ left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somerset's brigade was formed of the Life Guards, the Blues, and the
+ Dragoon Guards. The hostile cavalry, which Kellerman led forward,
+ consisted chiefly of Cuirassiers. This steel-clad mass of French horsemen
+ rode down some companies of German infantry, near La Haye Sainte, and
+ flushed with success, they bounded onward to the ridge of the British
+ position. The English Household Brigade, led on by the Earl of Uxbridge in
+ person, spurred forward to the encounter, and in an instant, the two
+ adverse lines of strong swordsmen, on their strong steeds, dashed
+ furiously together. A desperate and sanguinary hand-to-hand fight ensued,
+ in which the physical superiority of the Anglo-Saxons, guided by equal
+ skill, and animated with equal valour, was made decisively manifest. Back
+ went the chosen cavalry of France; and after them, in hot pursuit, spurred
+ the English Guards. They went forward as far and as fiercely as their
+ comrades of the Union Brigade; and, like them, the Household cavalry
+ suffered severely before they regained the British position, after their
+ magnificent charge and adventurous pursuit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon's grand effort to break the English left centre had thus
+ completely failed; and his right wing was seriously weakened by the heavy
+ loss which it had sustained. Hougoumont was still being assailed, and was
+ still successfully resisting. Troops were now beginning to appear at the
+ edge of the horizon on Napoleon's right, which he too well knew to be
+ Prussian, though he endeavoured to persuade his followers that they were
+ Grouchy's men coming to their aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grouchy was in fact now engaged at Wavre with his whole force, against
+ Thielmam's single Prussian corps, while the other three corps of the
+ Prussian army were moving without opposition, save from the difficulties
+ of the ground, upon Waterloo. Grouchy believed, on the 17th, and caused
+ Napoleon to believe, that the Prussian army was retreating by lines of
+ march remote from Waterloo upon Namur and Maestricht. Napoleon learned
+ only on the 18th, that there were Prussians in Wavre, and felt jealous
+ about the security of his own right. He accordingly, before he attacked
+ the English, sent Grouchy orders to engage the Prussians at Wavre without
+ delay, AND TO APPROACH THE MAIN FRENCH ARMY, SO AS TO UNITE HIS
+ COMMUNICATIONS WITH THE EMPEROR'S. Grouchy entirely neglected this last
+ part of his instructions; and in attacking the Prussians whom he found at
+ Wavre, he spread his force more and more towards his right, that is to
+ say, in the direction most remote from Napoleon. He thus knew nothing of
+ Blucher's and Bulow's flank march upon Waterloo, till six in the evening
+ of the 18th, when he received a note which Soult by Napoleon's orders had
+ sent off from the field of battle at Waterloo at one o'clock, to inform
+ Grouchy that Bulow was coming over the heights of St. Lambert, on the
+ Emperor's right flank, and directing Grouchy to approach and join the main
+ army instantly, and crush Bulow EN FLAGRANT DELIT. It was then too late
+ for Grouchy to obey; but it is remarkable that as early as noon on the
+ 18th, and while Grouchy had not proceeded as far as Wavre, he and his
+ suite heard, the sound of heavy cannonading In the direction of
+ Planchenoit and Mont St. Jean. General Gerard, who was with Grouchy,
+ implored him to march towards the cannonade, and join his operations with
+ those of Napoleon, who was evidently engaged with the English. Grouchy
+ refused to do so, or even to detach part of his force in that direction.
+ He said that his instructions were to fight the Prussians at Wavre. He
+ marched upon Wavre and fought for the rest of the day with Thielman
+ accordingly, while Blucher and Bulow were attacking the Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [I have heard the remark made that Grouchy twice had in his hands the
+ power of changing the destinies of Europe, and twice wanted nerve to act:
+ first when he flinched from landing the French army at Bantry Bay in 1796
+ (he was second in command to Hoche, whose ship was blown back by a storm),
+ and secondly, when he failed to lead his whole force from Wavre to the
+ scene of decisive conflict at Waterloo. But such were the arrangements of
+ the Prussian General, that even if Grouchy had marched upon Waterloo, he
+ would have been held in check by the nearest Prussian corps, or certainly
+ by the two nearest ones, while the rest proceeded to join Wellington.
+ This, however, would have diminished the number of Prussians who appeared
+ at Waterloo, and (what is still more important) would have kept them back
+ to a later hour.&mdash;See Siborne, vol i. p. 323, and Gleig, p. 142.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are some very valuable remarks on this subject in the 70th No. of
+ the QUARTERLY in an article on the "Life of Blucher," usually attributed
+ to Sir Francis Head. The Prussian writer, General Clausewitz, is there
+ cited as "expressing a positive opinion, in which every military critic
+ but a Frenchman must concur, that, even had the whole of Grouchy's force
+ been at Napoleon's disposal, the Duke had nothing to fear pending
+ Blucher's arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Duke is often talked of as having exhausted his reserves in the
+ action. This is another gross error, which Clausewitz has thoroughly
+ disposed of. He enumerates the tenth British Brigade, the division of
+ Chasse, and the cavalry of Collaert, as having been little or not at all
+ engaged; and he might have also added two brigades of light cavalry." The
+ fact, also, that Wellington did not at any part of the day order up Prince
+ Frederick's corps from Hal, is a conclusive proof that the Duke was not so
+ distressed as some writers have represented. Hal is not ten miles from the
+ field of Waterloo.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon had witnessed with bitter disappointment the rout of his troops,&mdash;foot,
+ horse, and artillery,&mdash;which attacked the left centre of the English,
+ and the obstinate resistance which the garrison of Hougoumont opposed to
+ all the exertions of his left wing. He now caused the batteries along the
+ line of high ground held by him to be strengthened, and for some time an
+ unremitting and most destructive cannonade raged across the valley, to the
+ partial cessation of other conflict. But the superior fire of the French
+ artillery, though it weakened, could not break the British line, and more
+ close and summary measures were requisite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now about half-past three o'clock; and though Wellington's army had
+ suffered severely by the unremitting cannonade, and in the late desperate
+ encounter, no part of the British position had been forced. Napoleon
+ determined therefore to try what effect he could produce on the British
+ centre and right by charges of his splendid cavalry, brought on in such
+ force that the Duke's cavalry could not check them. Fresh troops were at
+ the same time sent to assail La Haye Sainte and Hougoumont, the possession
+ of these posts being the Emperor's unceasing object. Squadron after
+ squadron of the French cuirassiers accordingly ascended the slopes on the
+ Duke's right, and rode forward with dauntless courage against the
+ batteries of the British artillery in that part of the field. The
+ artillery-men were driven from their guns, and the cuirassiers cheered
+ loudly at their supposed triumph. But the Duke had formed his infantry in
+ squares, and the cuirassiers charged in vain against the impenetrable
+ hedges of bayonets, while the fire from the inner ranks of the squares
+ told with terrible effect on their squadrons. Time after time they rode
+ forward with invariably the same result: and as they receded from each
+ attack the British artillerymen rushed forward from the centres of the
+ squares, where they had taken refuge, and plied their guns on the retiring
+ horsemen. Nearly the whole of Napoleon's magnificent body of heavy cavalry
+ was destroyed in these fruitless attempts upon the British right. But in
+ another part of the field fortune favoured him for a time. Two French
+ columns of infantry from Donzelot's division took La Haye Sainte between
+ six and seven o'clock, and the means were now given for organizing another
+ formidable attack on the centre of the Allies.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ["On came the whirlwind&mdash;like the last
+ But fiercest sweep of tempest blast&mdash;
+ On came the whirlwind&mdash;steel-gleams broke
+ Like lightning through the rolling smoke;
+ The war was waked anew,
+ Three hundred cannon-mouths roar'd loud,
+ And from their throats, with flash and cloud,
+ Their showers of iron threw.
+ Beneath their fire in full career,
+ Rush'd on the ponderous cuirassier,
+ The lancer couch'd his ruthless spear,
+ And hurrying as to havoc near,
+ The cohorts' eagles flew.
+ In one dark torrent, broad and strong,
+ The advancing onset roll'd along,
+ Forth harbinger'd by fierce acclaim,
+ That, from the shroud of smoke and flame,
+ Peal'd wildly the imperial name.
+
+ "But on the British heart were lost
+ The terrors of the charging host;
+ For not an eye the storm that view'd
+ Changed its proud glance of fortitude,
+ Nor was one forward footstep staid,
+ As dropp'd the dying and the dead.
+ Fast as their ranks the thunders tear,
+ Fast they renew'd each serried square;
+ And on the wounded and the slain
+ Closed their diminish'd files again,
+ Till from their line scarce spears' lengths three,
+ Emerging from the smoke they see
+ Helmet, and plume, and panoply,&mdash;
+ Then waked their fire at once!
+ Each musketeer's revolving knell,
+ As fast, as regularly fell,
+ As when they practise to display
+ Their discipline on festal day.
+ Then down went helm and lance,
+ Down were the eagle banners sent,
+ Down reeling steeds and riders went,
+ Corslets were pierced, and pennons rent;
+ And, to augment the fray,
+ Wheeled full against their staggering flanks,
+ The English horsemen's foaming ranks
+ Forced their resistless way.
+ Then to the musket-knell succeeds
+ The clash of swords&mdash;the neigh of steeds&mdash;
+ As plies the smith his clanging trade,
+ Against the cuirass rang the blade;
+ And while amid their close array
+ The well-served cannon rent their way,
+ And while amid their scatter'd band
+ Raged the fierce rider's bloody brand,
+ Recoil'd in common rout and fear,
+ Lancer and guard and cuirassier,
+ Horseman and foot,&mdash;a mingled host,
+ Their leaders fall'n, their standards lost."&mdash;SCOTT.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was no time to be lost&mdash;Blucher and Bulow were beginning to
+ press hard upon the French right. As early as five o'clock, Napoleon had
+ been obliged to detach Lobau's infantry and Domont's horse to check these
+ new enemies. They succeeded in doing so for a time; but as larger numbers
+ of the Prussians came on the field, they turned Lobau's right flank, and
+ sent a strong force to seize the village of Planchenoit, which, it will be
+ remembered, lay in the rear of the French right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The design of the Allies was not merely to prevent Napoleon from advancing
+ upon Brussels, but to cut off his line of retreat and utterly destroy his
+ army. The defence of Planchenoit therefore became absolutely essential for
+ the safety of the French, and Napoleon was obliged to send his Young Guard
+ to occupy that village, which was accordingly held by them with great
+ gallantry against the reiterated assaults of the Prussian left, under
+ Bulow. Three times did the Prussians fight their way into Planchenoit, and
+ as often did the French drive them out: the contest was maintained with
+ the fiercest desperation on both sides, such being the animosity between
+ the two nations that quarter was seldom given or even asked. Other
+ Prussian forces were now appearing on the field nearer to the English
+ left; whom also Napoleon kept in check, by troops detached for that
+ purpose. Thus a large part of the French army was now thrown back on a
+ line at right angles with the line of that portion which still confronted
+ and assailed the English position. But this portion was now numerically
+ inferior to the force under the Duke of Wellington, which Napoleon had
+ been assailing throughout the day, without gaining any other advantage
+ than the capture of La Haye Sainte. It is true that, owing to the gross
+ misconduct of the greater part of the Dutch and Belgian troops, the Duke
+ was obliged to rely exclusively on his English and German soldiers, and
+ the ranks of these had been fearfully thinned; but the survivors stood
+ their ground heroically, and opposed a resolute front to every forward
+ movement of their enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On no point of the British line was the pressure more severe than on
+ Halkett's brigade in the right centre which was composed of battalions of
+ the 30th, the 33d, the 69th, and the 73d British regiments. We fortunately
+ can quote from the journal of a brave officer of the 30th, a narrative of
+ what took place in this part of the field. [This excellent journal was
+ published in the "United Service Magazine" during the year 1852.] The late
+ Major Macready served at Waterloo in the light company of the 30th. The
+ extent of the peril and the carnage which Halkett's brigade had to
+ encounter, may be judged of by the fact that this light company marched
+ into the field three officers and fifty-one men, and that at the end of
+ the battle they stood one officer and ten men. Major Macready's blunt
+ soldierly account of what he actually saw and felt, gives a far better
+ idea of the terrific scene, than can be gained from the polished
+ generalisations which the conventional style of history requires, or even
+ from the glowing stanzas of the poet. During the earlier part of the day
+ Macready and his light company were thrown forward as skirmishers in front
+ of the brigade; but when the French cavalry commenced their attacks on the
+ British right centre, he and his comrades were ordered back. The brave
+ soldier thus himself describes what passed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Before the commencement of this attack our company and the Grenadiers of
+ the 73d were skirmishing briskly in the low ground, covering our guns, and
+ annoying those of the enemy. The line of tirailleurs opposed to us was not
+ stronger than our own, but on a sudden they were reinforced by numerous
+ bodies, and several guns began playing on us with canister. Our poor
+ fellows dropped very fast, and Colonel Vigoureux, Rumley, and Pratt, were
+ carried off badly wounded in about two minutes. I was now commander of our
+ company. We stood under this hurricane of small shot till Halkett sent to
+ order us in, and I brought away about a third of the light bobs; the rest
+ were killed or wounded, and I really wonder how one of them escaped. As
+ our bugler was killed, I shouted and made signals to move by the left, in
+ order to avoid the fire of our guns, and to put as good a face upon the
+ business as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I reached Lloyd's abandoned guns, I stood near them for about a
+ minute to contemplate the scene: it was grand beyond description.
+ Hougoumont and its wood sent up a broad flame through the dark masses of
+ smoke that overhung the field; beneath this cloud the French were
+ indistinctly visible. Here a waving mass of long red feathers could be
+ seen; there, gleams as from a sheet of steel showed that the cuirassiers
+ were moving; 400 cannon were belching forth fire and death on every side;
+ the roaring and shouting were indistinguishably commixed&mdash;together
+ they gave me an idea of a labouring volcano. Bodies of infantry and
+ cavalry were pouring down on us, and it was time to leave contemplation,
+ so I moved towards our columns, which were standing up in square. Our
+ regiment and 73d formed one, and 33d and 69th another; to our right beyond
+ them were the Guards, and on our left the Hanoverians and German legion of
+ our division. As I entered the rear face of our square I had to step over
+ a body, and looking down, recognised Harry Beers, an officer of our
+ Grenadiers, who about an hour before shook hands with me, laughing, as I
+ left the columns. I was on the usual terms of military intimacy with poor
+ Harry&mdash;that is to say, if either of us had died a natural death, the
+ other would have pitied him as a good fellow, and smiled at his neighbour
+ as he congratulated him on the step; but seeing his herculean frame and
+ animated countenance thus suddenly stiff and motionless before me (I know
+ not whence the feeling could originate, for I had just seen my dearest
+ friend drop, almost with indifference), the tears started in my eyes as I
+ sighed out, 'Poor Harry!' The tear was not dry on my cheek when poor Harry
+ was no longer thought of. In a few minutes after, the enemy's cavalry
+ galloped up and crowned the crest of our position. Our guns were
+ abandoned, and they formed between the two brigades, about a hundred paces
+ in our front. Their first charge was magnificent. As soon as they
+ quickened their trot into a gallop, the cuirassiers bent their heads so
+ that the peaks of their helmets looked like vizors, and they seemed cased
+ in armour from the plume to the saddle. Not a shot was fired till they
+ were within thirty yards, when the word was given, and our men fired away
+ at them. The effect was magical. Through the smoke we could see helmets
+ falling, cavaliers starting from their seats with convulsive springs as
+ they received our balls, horses plunging and rearing in the agonies of
+ fright and pain, and crowds of the soldiery dismounted, part of the
+ squadron in retreat, but the more daring remainder backing their horses to
+ force them on our bayonets. Our fire soon disposed of these gentlemen. The
+ main body re-formed in our front, and rapidly and gallantly repeated their
+ attacks, In fact, from this time (about four o'clock) till near six, we
+ had a constant repetition of these brave but unavailing charges. There was
+ no difficulty in repulsing them, but our ammunition decreased alarmingly.
+ At length an artillery wagon galloped up, emptied two or three casks of
+ cartridges into the square, and we were all comfortable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The best cavalry is contemptible to a steady and well-supplied infantry
+ regiment; even our men saw this, and began to pity the useless
+ perseverance of their assailants, and, as they advanced, would growl out,
+ 'Here come these fools again!' One of their superior officers tried a RUSE
+ DE GUERRE, by advancing and dropping his sword, as though he surrendered;
+ some of us were deceived by him, but Halkett ordered the men to fire, and
+ he coolly retired, saluting us. Their devotion was invincible. One officer
+ whom we had taken prisoner was asked what force Napoleon might have in the
+ field, and replied with a smile of mingled derision and threatening, 'Vous
+ verrez bientot sa force, messieurs.' A private cuirassier was wounded and
+ dragged into the square; his only cry was, 'Tuez donc, tuez, tuez moi,
+ soldats!' and as one of our men dropped dead close to him, he seized his
+ bayonet, and forced it into his own neck; but this not despatching him, he
+ raised up his cuirass, and plunging the bayonet into his stomach, kept
+ working it about till he ceased to breathe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Though we constantly thrashed our steel-clad opponents, we found more
+ troublesome customers in the round shot and grape, which all this time
+ played on us with terrible effect, and fully avenged the cuirassiers.
+ Often as the volleys created openings in our square would the cavalry dash
+ on, but they were uniformly unsuccessful. A regiment on our right seemed
+ sadly disconcerted, and at one moment was in considerable confusion.
+ Halkett rode out to them, and seizing their colour, waved it over his
+ head, and restored them to something like order, though not before his
+ horse was shot under him. At the height of their unsteadiness we got the
+ order to 'right face' to move to their assistance; some of the men mistook
+ it for 'right about face,' and faced accordingly, when old Major M'Laine,
+ 73d, called out, 'No, my boys, its "right face;" you'll never hear the
+ right about as long as a French bayonet is in front of you!' In a few
+ moments he was mortally wounded. A regiment of light Dragoons, by their
+ facings either the 16th or 23d, came up to our left and charged the
+ cuirassiers. We cheered each other as they passed us; they did all they
+ could, but were obliged to retire after a few minutes at the sabre. A body
+ of Belgian cavalry advanced for the same purpose, but on passing our
+ square, they stopped short. Our noble Halkett rode out to them and offered
+ to charge at their head; it was of no use; the Prince of Orange came up
+ and exhorted them to do their duty, but in vain. They hesitated till a few
+ shots whizzed through them, when they turned about, and galloped like
+ fury, or, rather, like fear. As they passed the right face of our square
+ the men, irritated by their rascally conduct, unanimously took up their
+ pieces and fired a volley into them, and 'many a good fellow was destroyed
+ so cowardly.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The enemy's cavalry were by this time nearly disposed of, and as they had
+ discovered the inutility of their charges, they commenced annoying us by a
+ spirited and well-directed carbine fire. While we were employed in this
+ manner it was impossible to see farther than the columns on our right and
+ left, but I imagine most of the army were similarly situated: all the
+ British and Germans were doing their duty. About six o'clock I perceived
+ some artillery trotting up our hill, which I knew by their caps to belong
+ to the Imperial Guard. I had hardly mentioned this to a brother officer
+ when two guns unlimbered within seventy paces of us, and, by their first
+ discharge of grape, blew seven men into the centre of the square. They
+ immediately reloaded, and kept up a constant and destructive fire. It was
+ noble to see our fellows fill up the gaps after every discharge. I was
+ much distressed at this moment; having ordered up three of my light bobs,
+ they had hardly taken their station when two of them fell horribly
+ lacerated. One of them looked up in my face and uttered a sort of
+ reproachful groan, and I involuntarily exclaimed, 'I couldn't help it.' We
+ would willingly have charged these guns, but, had we deployed, the cavalry
+ that flanked them would have made an example of us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The 'vivida vis animi'&mdash;the glow which fires one upon entering into
+ action&mdash;had ceased; it was now to be seen which side had most bottom,
+ and would stand killing longest. The Duke visited us frequently at this
+ momentous period; he was coolness personified. As he crossed the rear face
+ of our square a shell fell amongst our grenadiers, and he checked his
+ horse to see its effect. Some men were blown to pieces by the explosion,
+ and he merely stirred the rein of his charger, apparently as little
+ concerned at their fate as at his own danger. No leader ever possessed so
+ fully the confidence of his soldiery: wherever he appeared, a murmur of
+ 'Silence&mdash;stand to your front&mdash;here's the Duke,' was heard
+ through the column, and then all was steady as on a parade. His
+ aides-de-camp, Colonels Canning and Gordon, fell near our square, and the
+ former died within it. As he came near us late in the evening, Halkett
+ rode out to him and represented our weak state, begging his Grace to
+ afford us a little support. 'It's impossible, Halkett,' said he. And our
+ general replied, 'If so, sir, you may depend on the brigade to a man!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All accounts of the battle show that the Duke was ever present at each
+ spot where danger seemed the most pressing; inspiriting his men by a few
+ homely and good-humoured words; and restraining their impatience to be led
+ forward to attack in their turn.&mdash;"Hard pounding this, gentlemen: we
+ will try who can pound the longest," was his remark to a battalion, on
+ which the storm from the French guns was pouring with peculiar fury.
+ Riding up to one of the squares, which had been dreadfully weakened, and
+ against which a fresh attack of French cavalry was coming, he called to
+ them: "Stand firm, my lads; what will they say of this in England?" As he
+ rode along another part of the line where the men had for some time been
+ falling fast beneath the enemy's cannonade, without having any close
+ fighting, a murmur reached his ear of natural eagerness to advance and do
+ something more than stand still to be shot at. The Duke called to them:
+ "Wait a little longer, my lads, and you shall have your wish." The men
+ were instantly satisfied and steady. It was, indeed, indispensable for the
+ Duke to bide his time. The premature movement of a single corps down from
+ the British line of heights, would have endangered the whole position, and
+ have probably made Waterloo a second Hastings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Duke inspired all under him with his own spirit of patient
+ firmness. When other generals besides Halkett sent to him, begging for
+ reinforcements, or for leave to withdraw corps which were reduced to
+ skeletons, the answer was the same: "It is impossible; you must hold your
+ ground to the last man, and all will be well." He gave a similar reply to
+ some of his staff; who asked instructions from him, so that, in the event
+ of his falling, his successor might follow out his plan. He answered, "My
+ plan is simply to stand my ground here to the last man." His personal
+ danger was indeed imminent throughout the day; and though he escaped
+ without injury to himself or horse, one only of his numerous staff was
+ equally fortunate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ["As far as the French accounts would lead us to infer, it appears that
+ the losses among Napoleon's staff were comparatively trifling. On this
+ subject perhaps the marked contrast afforded by the following anecdotes,
+ which have been related to me on excellent authority, may tend to throw
+ some light. At one period of the battle, when the Duke was surrounded by
+ several of his staff, it was very evident that the group had become the
+ object of the fire of a French battery. The shot fell fast about them,
+ generally striking and turning up the ground on which they stood. Their
+ horses became restive and 'Copenhagen' himself so fidgetty, that the Duke,
+ getting impatient, and having reasons for remaining on the spot, said to
+ those about him, 'Gentlemen we are rather too close together&mdash;better
+ to divide a little.' Subsequently, at another point of the line, an
+ officer of artillery came up to the Duke, and stated that he had a
+ distinct view of Napoleon, attended by his staff; that he had the guns of
+ his battery well pointed in that direction, and was prepared to fire. His
+ Grace instantly and emphatically exclaimed, 'No! no! I'll not allow it. It
+ is not the business of commanders to be firing upon each other.'"&mdash;Siborne,
+ vol. ii. p. 263. How different is this from Napoleon's conduct at the
+ battle of Dresden, when he personally directed the fire of the battery
+ which, as he thought, killed the Emperor Alexander, and actually killed
+ Moreau.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon had stationed himself during the battle on a little hillock near
+ La Belle Alliance, in the centre of the French position. Here he was
+ seated, with a large table from the neighbouring farm-house before him, on
+ which maps and plans were spread; and thence with his telescope he
+ surveyed the various points of the field. Soult watched his orders close
+ at his left hand, and his staff was grouped on horseback a few paces in
+ the rear. ["Souvenirs Militaires," par Col. Lemonnier-Delafosse, p. 407.
+ "Ouvrard, who attended Napoleon as chief commissary of the French army on
+ that occasion, told me that Napoleon was suffering from a complaint which
+ made it very painful for him to ride."&mdash;Lord Ellesmere, p. 47.] Here
+ he remained till near the close of the day, preserving the appearance at
+ least of calmness, except some expressions of irritation which escaped
+ him, when Ney's attack on the British left centre was defeated. But now
+ that the crisis of the battle was evidently approaching, he mounted a
+ white Persian charger, which he rode in action because the troops easily
+ recognised him by the horse colour. He had still the means of effecting a
+ retreat. His Old Guard had yet taken no part in the action. Under cover of
+ it, he might have withdrawn his shattered forces and retired upon the
+ French frontier. But this would only have given the English and Prussians
+ the opportunity of completing their junction; and he knew that other
+ armies were fast coming up to aid them in a march upon Paris, if he should
+ succeed in avoiding an encounter with them, and retreating upon the
+ capital. A victory at Waterloo was his only alternative from utter ruin,
+ and he determined to employ his Guard in one bold stroke more to make that
+ victory his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between seven and eight o'clock, the infantry of the Old Guard was formed
+ into two columns, on the declivity near La Belle Alliance. Ney was placed
+ at their head. Napoleon himself rode forward to a spot by which his
+ veterans were to pass; and, as they approached, he raised his arm, and
+ pointed to the position of the Allies, as if to tell them that their path
+ lay there. They answered with loud cries of "Vive l'Empereur!" and
+ descended the hill from their own side, into that "valley of the shadow of
+ death" while the batteries thundered with redoubled vigour over their
+ heads upon the British line. The line of march of the columns of the Guard
+ was directed between Hougoumont and La Haye Sainte, against the British
+ right centre; and at the same time the French under Donzelot, who had
+ possession of La Haye Sainte, commenced a fierce attack upon the British
+ centre, a little more to its left. This part of the battle has drawn less
+ attention than the celebrated attack of the Old Guard; but it formed the
+ most perilous crisis for the allied army; and if the Young Guard had been
+ there to support Donzelot, instead of being engaged with the Prussians at
+ Planchenoit, the consequences to the Allies in that part of the field must
+ have been most serious. The French tirailleurs, who were posted in clouds
+ in La Haye Sainte, and the sheltered spots near it, picked off the
+ artillerymen of the English batteries near them: and taking advantage of
+ the disabled state of the English guns, the French brought some
+ field-pieces up to La Haye Sainte, and commenced firing grape from them on
+ the infantry of the Allies, at a distance of not more than a hundred
+ paces. The allied infantry here consisted of some German brigades, who
+ were formed in squares, as it was believed that Donzelot had cavalry ready
+ behind La Haye Sainte to charge them with, if they left that order of
+ formation. In this state the Germans remained for some time with heroic
+ fortitude, though the grape-shot was tearing gaps in their ranks and the
+ side of one square was literally blown away by one tremendous volley which
+ the French gunners poured into it. The Prince of Orange in vain
+ endeavoured to lead some Nassau troops to the aid of the brave Germans.
+ The Nassauers would not or could not face the French; and some battalions
+ of Brunswickers, whom the Duke of Wellington had ordered up as a
+ reinforcement, at first fell back, until the Duke in person rallied them,
+ and led them on. Having thus barred the farther advance of Donzelot, the
+ Duke galloped off to the right to head his men who were exposed to the
+ attack of the Imperial Guard. He had saved one part of his centre from
+ being routed; but the French had gained ground and kept it; and the
+ pressure on the allied line in front of La Haye Sainte was fearfully
+ severe, until it was relieved by the decisive success which the British in
+ the right centre achieved over the columns of the Guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British troops on the crest of that part of the position, which the
+ first column of Napoleon's Guards assailed, were Maitland's brigade of
+ British Guards, having Adams's brigade (which had been brought forward
+ during the action) on their right. Maitland's men were lying down, in
+ order to avoid as far as possible the destructive effect of the French
+ artillery, which kept up an unremitting fire from the opposite heights,
+ until the first column of the Imperial Guard had advanced so far up the
+ slope towards the British position, that any further firing of the French
+ artillerymen would have endangered their own comrades. Meanwhile the
+ British guns were not idle; but shot and shell ploughed fast through the
+ ranks of the stately array of veterans that still moved imposingly on.
+ Several of the French superior officers were at its head. Ney's horse was
+ shot under him, but he still led the way on foot, sword in hand. The front
+ of the massive column now was on the ridge of the hill. To their surprise
+ they saw no troops before them. All they could discern through the smoke
+ was a small band of mounted officers. One of them was the Duke himself.
+ The French advanced to about fifty yards from where the British Guards
+ were lying down when the voice of one of the group of British officers was
+ heard calling, as if to the ground before him, "Up, Guards, and at them!"
+ It was the Duke who gave the order; and at the words, as if by magic, up
+ started before them a line of the British Guards four deep, and in the
+ most compact and perfect order. They poured an instantaneous volley upon
+ the head of the French column, by which no less than three hundred of
+ those chosen veterans are said to have fallen. The French officers rushed
+ forwards; and, conspicuous in front of their men, attempted to deploy them
+ into a more extended line, so as to enable them to reply with effect to
+ the British fire. But Maitland's brigade kept showering in volley after
+ volley with deadly rapidity. The decimated column grew disordered in its
+ vain efforts to expand itself into a more efficient formation. The right
+ word was given at the right moment to the British for the bayonet-charge,
+ and the brigade sprang forward with a loud cheer against their dismayed
+ antagonists. In an instant the compact mass of the French spread out into
+ a rabble, and they fled back down the hill, pursued by Maitland's men,
+ who, however, returned to their position in time to take part in the
+ repulse of the second column of the Imperial Guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This column also advanced with great spirit and firmness under the
+ cannonade which was opened on it; and passing by the eastern wall of
+ Hougoumont, diverged slightly to the right as it moved up the slope
+ towards the British position, so as to approach nearly the same spot where
+ the first column had surmounted the height, and been defeated. This
+ enabled the British regiments of Adams's brigade to form a line parallel
+ to the left flank of the French column; so that while the front of this
+ column of French Guards had to encounter the cannonade of the British
+ batteries, and the musketry of Maitlands Guards, its left flank was
+ assailed with a destructive fire by a four-deep body of British infantry,
+ extending all along it. In such a position all the bravery and skill of
+ the French veterans were vain. The second column, like its predecessor,
+ broke and fled, taking at first a lateral direction along the front of the
+ British line towards the rear of La Haye Sainte, and so becoming blended
+ with the divisions of French infantry, which under Donzelot had been
+ assailing the Allies so formidably in that quarter. The sight of the Old
+ Guard broken and in flight checked the ardour which Donzelot's troops had
+ hitherto displayed. They, too, began to waver. Adams's victorious brigade
+ was pressing after the flying Guard, and now cleared away the assailants
+ of the allied centre. But the battle was not yet won. Napoleon had still
+ some battalions in reserve near La Belle Alliance. He was rapidly rallying
+ the remains of the first column of his Guards, and he had collected into
+ one body the remnants of the various corps of cavalry, which had suffered
+ so severely in the earlier part of the day. The Duke instantly formed the
+ bold resolution of now himself becoming the assailant, and leading his
+ successful though enfeebled army forward, while the disheartening effect
+ of the repulse of the Imperial Guard on the rest of the French army was
+ still strong, and before Napoleon and Ney could rally the beaten veterans
+ themselves for another and a fiercer charge. As the close approach of the
+ Prussians now completely protected the Duke's left, he had drawn some
+ reserves of horse from that quarter, and he had a brigade of Hussars under
+ Vivian fresh and ready at hand. Without a moment's hesitation he launched
+ these against the cavalry near La Belie Alliance. The charge was as
+ successful as it was daring: and as there was now no hostile cavalry to
+ check the British infantry in a forward movement, the Duke gave the
+ long-wished-for command for a general advance of the army along the whole
+ line upon the foe. It was now past eight o'clock, and for nearly nine
+ deadly hours had the British and German regiments stood unflinching under
+ the fire of artillery, the charge of cavalry, and every variety of
+ assault, which the compact columns or the scattered tirailleurs of the
+ enemy's infantry could inflict. As they joyously sprang forward against
+ the discomfited masses of the French, the setting sun broke through the
+ clouds which had obscured the sky during the greater part of the day, and
+ glittered on the bayonets of the Allies, while they poured down into the
+ valley and towards the heights that were held by the foe. The Duke himself
+ was among the foremost in the advance, and personally directed the
+ movements against each body of the French that essayed resistance. He rode
+ in front of Adams's brigade, cheering it forward, and even galloped among
+ the most advanced of the British skirmishers, speaking joyously to the
+ men, and receiving their hearty shouts of congratulation. The bullets of
+ both friends and foes were whistling fast round him; and one of the few
+ survivors of his staff remonstrated with him for thus exposing a life of
+ such value. "Never mind," was the Duke's answer;&mdash;"Never mind, let
+ them fire away; the battle's won, and my life is of no consequence now."
+ And, indeed, almost the whole of the French host was now in irreparable
+ confusion. The Prussian army was coming more and more rapidly forwards on
+ their right; and the Young Guard, which had held Planchenoit so bravely,
+ was at last compelled to give way. Some regiments of the Old Guard in vain
+ endeavoured to form in squares and stem the current. They were swept away,
+ and wrecked among the waves of the flyers. Napoleon had placed himself in
+ one of these squares: Marshal Soult, Generals Bertrand, Drouot, Corbineau,
+ De Flahaut, and Gourgaud, were with him. The Emperor spoke of dying on the
+ field, but Soult seized his bridle and turned his charger round,
+ exclaiming, "Sire, are not the enemy already lucky enough?" [Colonel
+ Lemonnier-Delafosse, "Memoires," p. 388. The Colonel states that he heard
+ these details from General Gourgaud himself. The English reader will be
+ reminded of Charles I.'s retreat from Naseby.] With the greatest
+ difficulty, and only by the utmost exertion of the devoted officers round
+ him, Napoleon cleared the throng of fugitives, and escaped from the scene
+ of the battle and the war, which he and France had lost past all recovery.
+ Meanwhile the Duke of Wellington still rode forward with the van of his
+ victorious troops, until he reined up on the elevated ground near
+ Rossomme. The daylight was now entirely gone; but the young moon had
+ risen, and the light which it cast, aided by the glare from the burning
+ houses and other buildings in the line of the flying French and pursuing
+ Prussians, enabled the Duke to assure himself that his victory was
+ complete. He then rode back along the Charleroi road toward Waterloo: and
+ near La Belle Alliance he met Marshal Blucher. Warm were the
+ congratulations that were exchanged between the Allied Chiefs. It was
+ arranged that the Prussians should follow up the pursuit, and give the
+ French no chance of rallying. Accordingly the British army, exhausted by
+ its toils and sufferings during that dreadful day, did not advance beyond
+ the heights which the enemy had occupied. But the Prussians drove the
+ fugitives before them in merciless chase throughout the night. Cannon,
+ baggage, and all the materiel of the army were abandoned by the French;
+ and many thousands of the infantry threw away their arms to facilitate
+ their escape. The ground was strewn for miles with the wrecks of their
+ host. There was no rear-guard; nor was even the semblance of order
+ attempted, an attempt at resistance was made at the bridge and village of
+ Genappe, the first narrow pass through which the bulk of the French
+ retired. The situation was favourable; and a few resolute battalions, if
+ ably commanded, might have held their pursuers at bay there for some
+ considerable time. But despair and panic were now universal in the beaten
+ army. At the first sound of the Prussian drums and bugles, Genappe was
+ abandoned, and nothing thought of but headlong flight. The Prussians,
+ under General Gneisenau, still followed and still slew; nor even when the
+ Prussian infantry stopped in sheer exhaustion, was the pursuit given up.
+ Gneisenau still pushed on with the cavalry; and by an ingenious stratagem,
+ made the French believe that his infantry were still close on them, and
+ scared them from every spot where they attempted to pause and rest. He
+ mounted one of his drummers on a horse which had been taken from the
+ captured carriage of Napoleon, and made him ride along with the pursuing
+ cavalry, and beat the drum whenever they came on any large number of the
+ French. The French thus fled, and the Prussians pursued through Quatre
+ Bras, and even over the heights of Frasne; and when at length Gneisenau
+ drew bridle, and halted a little beyond Frasne with the scanty remnant of
+ keen hunters who had kept up the chace with him to the last, the French
+ were scattered through Gosselies, Marchiennes, and Charleroi; and were
+ striving to regain the left bank of the river Sambre, which they had
+ crossed in such pomp and pride not a hundred hours before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Part of the French left wing endeavoured to escape from the field without
+ blending with the main body of the fugitives who thronged the Genappe
+ causeway. A French officer, who was among those who thus retreated across
+ the country westward of the high-road, has vividly described what he
+ witnessed and what he suffered. Colonel Lemonnier-Delafosse served in the
+ campaign of 1815 in General Foy's staff, and was consequently in that part
+ of the French army at Waterloo, which acted against Hougoumont and the
+ British right wing. When the column of the Imperial Guard made their great
+ charge at the end of the day, the troops of Foy's division advanced in
+ support of them, and Colonel Lemonnier-Delafosse describes the confident
+ hopes of victory and promotion with which he marched to that attack, and
+ the fearful carnage and confusion of the assailants, amid which he was
+ helplessly hurried back by his flying comrades. He then narrates the
+ closing scene, [Col. Lemonnier-Delafosse, "Memoires," pp. 385-405. There
+ are omissions and abridgments in the translation which I have given.]:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Near one of the hedges of Hougoumont farm, without even a drummer to beat
+ the RAPPEL, we succeeded in rallying under the enemy's fire 300 men: they
+ were nearly all that remained of our splendid division, Thither came
+ together a band of generals. There was Reille, whose horse had been shot
+ under him; there were D'Erlon, Bachelu, Foy, Jamin, and others. All were
+ gloomy and sorrowful, like vanquished men. Their words were,&mdash;'Here
+ is all that is left of my corps, of my division, of my brigade. I,
+ myself.' We had seen the fall of Duhesme, of Pelet-de-Morvan, of Michel&mdash;generals
+ who had found a glorious death. My General, Foy, had his shoulder pierced
+ through by a musket-ball: and out of his whole staff two officers only
+ were left to him, Cahour Duhay and I. Fate had spared me in the midst of
+ so many dangers, though the first charger I rode had been shot and had
+ fallen on me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The enemy's horse were coming down on us, and our little group was
+ obliged to retreat. 'What had happened to our division of the left wing
+ had taken place all along the line. The movement of the hostile cavalry,
+ which inundated the whole plain, had demoralised our soldiers, who seeing
+ all regular retreat of the army cut off, strove each man to effect one for
+ himself. At each instant the road became more encumbered. Infantry,
+ cavalry, and artillery, were pressing along pell-mell: jammed together
+ like a solid mass. Figure to yourself 40,000 men struggling and thrusting
+ themselves along a single causeway. We could not take that way without
+ destruction; so the generals who had collected together near the
+ Hougoumont hedge dispersed across the fields. General Foy alone remained
+ with the 300 men whom he had gleaned from the field of battle, and marched
+ at their head. Our anxiety was to withdraw from the scene of action
+ without being confounded with the fugitives. Our general wished to retreat
+ like a true soldier. Seeing three lights in the southern horizon, like
+ beacons, General Foy asked me what I thought of the position of each. I
+ answered, 'The first to the left is Genappe, the second is at Bois de
+ Bossu, near the farm of Quatre Bras; the third is at Gosselies.' 'Let us
+ march on the second one, then,' replied Foy, 'and let no obstacle stop us&mdash;take
+ the head of the column, and do not lose sight of the guiding light.' Such
+ was his order, and I strove to obey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After all the agitation and the incessant din of a long day of battle,
+ how imposing was the stillness of that night! We proceeded on our sad and
+ lonely march. We were a prey to the most cruel reflections, we were
+ humiliated, we were hopeless; but not a word of complaint was heard. We
+ walked silently as a troop of mourners, and it might have been said that
+ we were attending the funeral of our country's glory. Suddenly the
+ stillness was broken by a challenge,&mdash;'QUI VIVE?' 'France!'
+ 'Kellerman!' 'Foy!' 'Is it you, General? come nearer to us.' At that
+ moment we were passing over a little hillock, at the foot of which was a
+ hut, in which Kellerman and some of his officers had halted. They came out
+ to join as Foy said to me, 'Kellerman knows the country: he has been along
+ here before with his cavalry; we had better follow him.' But we found that
+ the direction which Kellerman chose was towards the first light, towards
+ Genappe. That led to the causeway which our general rightly wished to
+ avoid I went to the left to reconnoitre, and was soon convinced that such
+ was the case. It was then that I was able to form a full idea of the
+ disorder of a routed army. What a hideous spectacle! The mountain torrent,
+ that uproots and whirls along with it every momentary obstacle, is a
+ feeble image of that heap of men, of horses, of equipages, rushing one
+ upon another; gathering before the least obstacle which dams up their way
+ for a few seconds, only to form a mass which overthrows everything in the
+ path which it forces for itself. Woe to him whose footing failed him in
+ that deluge! He was crushed, trampled to death! I returned and told my
+ general what I had seen, and he instantly abandoned Kellerman, and resumed
+ his original line of march.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Keeping straight across the country over fields and the rough thickets,
+ we at last arrived at the Bois de Bossu, where we halted. My General said
+ to me, 'Go to the farm of Quatre Bras and announce that we are here. The
+ Emperor or Soult must be there. Ask for orders, and recollect that I am
+ waiting here for you. The lives of these men depend on your exactness.' To
+ reach the farm I was obliged to cross the high road: I was on horseback,
+ but nevertheless was borne away by the crowd that fled along the road, and
+ it was long are I could extricate myself and reach the farmhouse. General
+ Lobau was there with his staff, resting in fancied security. They thought
+ that their troops had halted there; but, though a halt had been attempted,
+ the men had soon fled forwards, like their comrades of the rest of the
+ army. The shots of the approaching Prussians were now heard; and I believe
+ that General Lobau was taken prisoner in that farmhouse. I left him to
+ rejoin my general, which I did with difficulty. I found him alone. His
+ men, as they came near the current of flight, were infected with the
+ general panic, and fled also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What was to be done? Follow that crowd of runaways? General Foy would not
+ hear of it. There were five of us still with him, all officers. He had
+ been wounded at about five in the afternoon, and the wound had not been
+ dressed. He suffered severely; but his moral courage was unbroken. 'Let us
+ keep,' he said, 'a line parallel to the high road, and work our way hence
+ as we best can.' A foot-track was before us, and we followed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The moon shone out brightly, and revealed the full wretchedness of the
+ TABLEAU which met our eyes. A brigadier and four cavalry soldiers, whom we
+ met with, formed our escort. We marched on; and, as the noise grew more
+ distant, I thought that we were losing the parallel of the highway.
+ Finding that we had the moon more and more on the left, I felt sure of
+ this, and mentioned it to the General. Absorbed in thought, he made me no
+ reply. We came in front of a windmill, and endeavoured to procure some
+ information; but we could not gain an entrance, or make any one answer,
+ and we continued our nocturnal march. At last we entered a village, but
+ found every door closed against us, and were obliged to use threats in
+ order to gain admission into a single house. The poor woman to whom it
+ belonged, more dead than alive, received us as if we had been enemies.
+ Before asking where we were, 'Food, give as some food!' was our cry. Bread
+ and butter and beer were brought, and soon disappeared before men who had
+ fasted for twenty-four hours. A little revived, we ask, 'Where are we?
+ what is the name of this village?'&mdash;'Vieville.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On looking at the map, I saw that in coming to that village we had leaned
+ too much to the right, and that we were in the direction of Mons. In order
+ to reach the Sambre at the bridge of Marchiennes, we had four leagues to
+ traverse; and there was scarcely time to march the distance before
+ daybreak. I made a villager act as our guide, and bound him by his arm to
+ my stirrup. He led us through Roux to Marchiennes. The poor fellow ran
+ alongside of my horse the whole way. It was cruel, but necessary to compel
+ him, for we had not an instant to spare. At six in the morning we entered
+ Marchiennes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Marshal Ney was there. Our general went to see him, and to ask what
+ orders he had to give. Ney was asleep; and, rather than rob him of the
+ first repose he had had for four days, our General returned to us without
+ seeing him. And, indeed, what orders could Marshal Ney have given? The
+ whole army was crossing the Sambre, each man where and now he chose; some
+ at Charleroi, some at Marchiennes. We were about to do the same thing.
+ When once beyond the Sambre we might safely halt; and both men and horses
+ were in extreme need of rest. We passed through Thuin; and finding a
+ little copse near the road, we gladly sought its shelter. While our horses
+ grazed, we lay down and slept. How sweet was that sleep after the fatigues
+ of the long day of battle, and after the night of retreat more painful
+ still! We rested in the little copse till noon, and sate there watching
+ the wrecks of our army defile along the road before us. It was a
+ soul-harrowing sight! Yet the different arms of the service had resumed a
+ certain degree of order amid their disorder; and our General, feeling his
+ strength revive, resolved to follow a strong column of cavalry which was
+ taking the direction of Beaumont, about four leagues off. We drew near
+ Beaumont, when suddenly a regiment of horse was seen debouching from a
+ wood on our left. The column that we followed shouted out, 'The Prussians!
+ the Prussians!' and galloped off in utter disorder. The troops that thus
+ alarmed them were not a tenth part of their number, and were in reality
+ our own 8th Hussars, who wore green uniforms. But the panic had been
+ brought even thus far from the battle-field, and the disorganized column
+ galloped into Beaumont, which was already crowded with our infantry. We
+ were obliged to follow that DEBACLE. On entering Beaumont we chose a house
+ of superior appearance, and demanded of the mistress of it refreshments
+ for the General. 'Alas!' said the lady, 'this is the tenth General who has
+ been to this house since this morning. I have nothing left. Search, if you
+ please, and see.' Though unable to find food for the General, I persuaded
+ him to take his coat off and let me examine his wound. The bullet had gone
+ through the twists of the left epaulette, and penetrating the skin, had
+ run round the shoulder without injuring the bone. The lady of the house
+ made some lint for me; and without any great degree of surgical skill I
+ succeeded in dressing the wound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Being still anxious to procure some food for the General and ourselves,
+ if it were but a loaf of ammunition bread, I left the house and rode out
+ into the town. I saw pillage going on in every direction: open caissons,
+ stripped and half-broken, blocked up the streets. The pavement was covered
+ with plundered and torn baggage. Pillagers and runaways, such were all the
+ comrades I met with. Disgusted at them, I strove, sword in hand, to stop
+ one of the plunderers; but, more active than I, he gave me a bayonet stab
+ in my left arm, in which I fortunately caught his thrust, which had been
+ aimed full at my body. He disappeared among the crowd, through which I
+ could not force my horse. My spirit of discipline had made me forget that
+ in such circumstances the soldier is a mere wild beast. But to be wounded
+ by a fellow-countryman after having passed unharmed through all the perils
+ of Quatre Bras and Waterloo!&mdash;this did seem hard, indeed. I was
+ trying to return to General Foy, when another horde of flyers burst into
+ Beaumont, swept me into the current of their flight, and hurried me out of
+ the town with them. Until I received my wound I had preserved my moral
+ courage in full force; but now, worn out with fatigue, covered with blood,
+ and suffering severe pain from the wound, I own that I gave way to the
+ general demoralisation, and let myself be inertly borne along with the
+ rushing mass. At last I reached Landrecies, though I know not how or when.
+ But I found there our Colonel Hurday, who had been left behind there in
+ consequence of an accidental injury from a carriage. He took me with him
+ to Paris, where I retired amid my family, and got cured of my wound,
+ knowing nothing of the rest of political and military events that were
+ taking place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No returns ever were made of the amount of the French loss in the battle
+ of Waterloo; but it must have been immense, and may be partially judged of
+ by the amount of killed and wounded in the armies of the conquerors. On
+ this subject both the Prussian and British official evidence is
+ unquestionably full and authentic. The figures are terribly emphatic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the army that fought under the Duke of Wellington nearly 15,000 men
+ were killed and wounded on this single day of battle. Seven thousand
+ Prussians also fell at Waterloo. At such a fearful price was the
+ deliverance of Europe purchased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By none was the severity of that loss more keenly felt than by our great
+ deliverer himself. As may be seen in Major Macready's narrative, the Duke,
+ while the battle was raging, betrayed no sign of emotion at the most
+ ghastly casualties; but, when all was over, the sight of the carnage with
+ which the field was covered, and still more, the sickening spectacle of
+ the agonies of the wounded men who lay moaning in their misery by
+ thousands and tens of thousands, weighed heavily on the spirit of the
+ victor, as he rode back across the scene of strife. On reaching his
+ head-quarters in the village of Waterloo, the Duke inquired anxiously
+ after the numerous friends who had been round him in the morning, and to
+ whom he was warmly attached. Many he was told were dead; others were lying
+ alive, but mangled and suffering, in the houses round him. It is in our
+ hero's own words alone that his feelings can be adequately told. In a
+ letter written by him almost immediately after his return from the field,
+ he thus expressed himself:&mdash;"My heart is broken by the terrible loss
+ I have sustained in my old friends and companions, and my poor soldiers.
+ Believe me, nothing except a battle lost, can be half so melancholy as a
+ battle won; the bravery of my troops has hitherto saved me from the
+ greater evil; but to win such a battle as this of Waterloo, at the expense
+ of so many gallant friends, could only be termed a heavy misfortune but
+ for the result to the public."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not often that a successful General in modern warfare is called on,
+ like the victorious commander of the ancient Greek armies, to award a
+ prize of superior valour to one of his soldiers. Such was to some extent
+ the case with respect to the battle of Waterloo. In the August of 1818, an
+ English clergyman offered to confer a small annuity on some Waterloo
+ soldier, to be named by the Duke. [Siborne, vol. i. p. 391.] The Duke
+ requested Sir John Byng to choose a man from the 2d Brigade of Guards,
+ which had so highly distinguished itself in the defence of Hougoumont.
+ There were many gallant candidates, but the election fell on Sergeant
+ James Graham, of the light company of the Coldstreams. This brave man had
+ signalised himself, throughout the day, in the defence of that important
+ post, and especially in the critical struggle that took place at the
+ period when the French, who had gained the wood, the orchard, and detached
+ garden, succeeded in bursting open a gate of the courtyard of the chateau
+ itself, and rushed in in large masses, confident of carrying all before
+ them. A hand-to-hand fight, of the most desperate character, was kept up
+ between them and the Guards for a few minutes; but at last the British
+ bayonets prevailed. Nearly all the Frenchmen who had forced their way in
+ were killed on the spot; and, as the few survivors ran back, five of the
+ Guards, Colonel Macdonnell, Captain Wyndham, Ensign Gooch, Ensign Hervey,
+ and Sergeant Graham, by sheer strength, closed the gate again, in spite of
+ the efforts of the French from without, and effectually barricaded it
+ against further assaults. Over and through the loopholed wall of the
+ courtyard, the English garrison now kept up a deadly fire of musketry,
+ which was fiercely answered by the French, who swarmed round the curtilage
+ like ravening wolves. Shells, too, from their batteries, were falling fast
+ into the besieged place, one of which set part of the mansion and some of
+ the out-buildings on fire. Graham, who was at this time standing near
+ Colonel Macdonnell at the wall, and who had shown the most perfect
+ steadiness and courage, now asked permission of his commanding officer to
+ retire for a moment. Macdonnell replied, "By all means, Graham; but I
+ wonder you should ask leave now." Graham answered, "I would not, sir, only
+ my brother is wounded, and he is in that out-building there, which has
+ just caught fire." Laying down his musket, Graham ran to the blazing spot,
+ lifted up his brother, and laid him in a ditch. Then he was back at his
+ post, and was plying his musket against the French again, before his
+ absence was noticed, except by his colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many anecdotes of individual prowess have been preserved: but of all the
+ brave men who were in the British army on that eventful day, none deserve
+ more honour for courage and indomitable resolution than Sir Thomas Picton,
+ who, as has been mentioned, fell in repulsing the great attack of the
+ French upon the British left centre. It was not until the dead body was
+ examined after the battle, that the full heroism of Picton was discerned.
+ He had been wounded on the 16th, at Quatre Bras, by a musket-ball, which
+ had broken two of his ribs, and caused also severe internal injuries; but
+ he had concealed the circumstance, evidently in expectation that another
+ and greater battle would be fought in a short time, and desirous to avoid
+ being solicited to absent himself from the field. His body was blackened
+ and swollen by the wound, which must have caused severe and incessant
+ pain; and it was marvellous how his spirit had borne him up, and enabled
+ him to take part in the fatigues and duties of the field. The bullet
+ which, on the 18th, killed the renowned loader of "the fighting Division"
+ of the Peninsula, entered the head near the left temple, and passed
+ through the brain; so that Picton's death must have been instantaneous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most interesting narratives of personal adventure at Waterloo,
+ is that of Colonel Frederick Ponsonby, of the 12th Light Dragoons, who was
+ severely wounded when Vandeleur's brigade, to which he belonged, attacked
+ the French lancers, in order to bring off the Union Brigade, which was
+ retiring from its memorable charge. [See p. 361, SUPRA.] The 12th, like
+ those whom they rescued, advanced much further against the French position
+ than prudence warranted. Ponsonby, with many others, was speared by a
+ reserve of Polish lancers, and left for dead on the field. It is well to
+ refer to the description of what he suffered (as he afterwards gave it,
+ when almost miraculously recovered from his numerous wounds), because his
+ fate, or worse, was the fate of thousands more; and because the narrative
+ of the pangs of an individual, with whom we can identify ourselves, always
+ comes more home to us than a general description of the miseries of whole
+ masses. His tale may make us remember what are the horrors of war as well
+ as its glories. It is to be remembered that the operations which he refers
+ to, took place about three o'clock in the day, and that the fighting went
+ on for at least five hours more. After describing how he and his men
+ charged through the French whom they first encountered, and went against
+ other enemies, he states:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had no sooner passed them than we were ourselves attacked before we
+ could form, by about 300 Polish lancers, who had hastened to their relief;
+ the French artillery pouring in among us a heavy fire of grape, though for
+ one of our men they killed three of their own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the MELEE I was almost instantly disabled in both arms, losing first
+ my sword, and then my reins, and followed by a few men, who were presently
+ cut down, no quarter being allowed, asked or given, I was carried along by
+ my horse, till, receiving a blow from a sabre, I fell senseless on my face
+ to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Recovering, I raised myself a little to look round, being at that time, I
+ believe, in a condition to get up and run away; when a lancer passing by,
+ cried out, 'Tu n'est pas mort, coquin!' and struck his lance through my
+ back. My head dropped, the blood gushed into my mouth, a difficulty of
+ breathing came on, and I thought all was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not long afterwards (it was impossible to measure time, but I must have
+ fallen in less than ten minutes after the onset), a tirailleur stopped to
+ plunder me, threatening my life. I directed him to a small side-pocket, in
+ which he found three dollars, all I had; but he continued to threaten, and
+ I said he might search me: this he did immediately, unloosing my stock and
+ tearing open my waistcoat, and leaving me in a very uneasy posture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he was no sooner gone, than an officer bringing up some troops, to
+ which probably the tirailleur belonged and happening to halt where I lay,
+ stooped down and addressed me, saying, he feared I was badly wounded; I
+ said that I was, and expressed a wish to be removed to the rear. He said
+ it was against their orders to remove even their own men; but that if they
+ gained the day (and he understood that the Duke of Wellington was killed,
+ and that some of our battalions had surrendered), every attention in his
+ power would be shown me. I complained of thirst, and he held his
+ brandy-bottle to my lips, directing one of the soldiers to lay me straight
+ on my side, and place a knapsack under my head. He then passed on into
+ action&mdash;soon, perhaps, to want, though not receive, the same
+ assistance; and I shall never know to whose generosity I was indebted, as
+ I believe, for my life. Of what rank he was, I cannot say: he wore a great
+ coat. By-and-by another tirailleur came up, a fine young man, full of
+ ardour. He knelt down and fired over me, loading and firing many times,
+ and conversing with me all the while." The Frenchman, with strange
+ coolness, informed Ponsonby of how he was shooting, and what he thought of
+ the progress of the battle. "At last he ran off, exclaiming, 'You will
+ probably not be sorry to hear that we are going to retreat. Good day, my
+ friend.' It was dusk," Ponsonby adds, "when two squadrons of Prussian
+ cavalry, each of them two deep, came across the valley, and passed over me
+ in full trot, lifting me from the ground, and tumbling me about cruelly.
+ The clatter of of their approach and the apprehensions they excited, may
+ be imagined; a gun taking that direction must have destroyed me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The battle was now at an end, or removed to a distance. The shouts, the
+ imprecations, the outcries of 'Vive l'Empereur!' the discharge of musketry
+ and cannon, were over; and the groans of the wounded all around me, became
+ every moment more and more audible. I thought the night would never end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Much about this time I found a soldier of the Royals lying across my
+ legs: he had probably crawled thither in his agony; and his weight, his
+ convulsive motions, and the air issuing through a wound in his side,
+ distressed me greatly; the last circumstance most of all, as I had a wound
+ of the same nature myself. It was not a dark night, and the Prussians were
+ wandering about to plunder; the scene in Ferdinand Count Fathom came into
+ my mind, though no women appeared. Several stragglers looked at me, as
+ they passed by, one after another, and at last one of them stopped to
+ examine me. I told him as well as I could, for I spoke German very
+ imperfectly, that I was a British officer, and had been plundered already;
+ he did not desist, however, and pulled me about roughly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An hour before midnight I saw a man in an English uniform walking towards
+ me. He was, I suspect, on the same errand, and he came and looked in my
+ face. I spoke instantly, telling him who I was, and assuring him of a
+ reward if he would remain by me. He said he belonged to the 40th, and had
+ missed his regiment; he released me from the dying soldier, and being
+ unarmed, took up a sword from the ground, and stood over me, pacing
+ backwards and forwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Day broke; and at six o'clock in the morning some English were seen at a
+ distance, and he ran to them. A messenger being sent off to Hervey, a cart
+ came for me, and I was placed in it, and carried to the village of
+ Waterloo, a mile and a half off, and laid in the bed from which as I
+ understood afterwards, Gordon had been just carried out. I had received
+ seven wounds; a surgeon slept in my room, and I was saved by excessive
+ bleeding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Macready, in the journal already cited, [See SUPRA. p. 368.] justly
+ praises the deep devotion to their Emperor which, marked the French at
+ Waterloo. Never, indeed, had the national bravery of the French people
+ been more nobly shown. One soldier in the French ranks was seen, when his
+ arm was shattered by a cannon-ball, to wrench it off with the other; and
+ throwing it up in the air, he exclaimed to his comrades, "Vive l'Empereur
+ jusqu'a la mort!" Colonel Lemonnier-Delafosse mentions in his Memoirs,
+ [Page 388.] that at the beginning of the action, a French soldier who had
+ had both legs carried off by a cannon-ball, was borne past the front of
+ Foy's division, and called out to them, "Ca n'est rien, camarades; Vive
+ l'Empereur! Gloire a la France!" The same officer, at the end of the
+ battle, when all hope was lost, tells us that he saw a French grenadier,
+ blackened with powder, and with his clothes torn and stained, leaning on
+ his musket, and immoveable as a statue. The colonel called to him to join
+ his comrades and retreat; but the grenadier showed him his musket and his
+ hands; and said, "These hands have with this musket used to-day more than
+ twenty packets of cartridges: it was more than my share: I supplied myself
+ with ammunition from the dead. Leave me to die here on the field of
+ battle. It is not courage that fails me, but strength." Then, as Colonel
+ Delafosse left him, the soldier stretched himself on the ground to meet
+ his fate, exclaiming, "Tout est perdu! pauvre France!" The gallantry of
+ the French officers at least equalled that of their men. Ney, in
+ particular, set the example of the most daring courage. Here, as in every
+ French army in which he ever served or commanded, he was "le brave des
+ braves." Throughout the day he was in the front of the battle; and was one
+ of the very last Frenchmen who quitted the field. His horse was killed
+ under him in the last attack made on the English position; but he was seen
+ on foot, his clothes torn with bullets, his face smirched with powder,
+ striving, sword in hand, first to urge his men forward, and at last to
+ check their flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was another brave general of the French army, whose valour and good
+ conduct on that day of disaster to his nation should never be unnoticed
+ when the story of Waterloo is recounted. This was General Polet, who,
+ about seven in the evening, led the first battalion of the 2d regiment of
+ the Chasseurs of the Guard to the defence of Planchenoit; and on whom
+ Napoleon personally urged the deep importance of maintaining possession of
+ that village. Pelet and his men took their post in the central part of the
+ village, and occupied the church and churchyard in great strength. There
+ they repelled every assault of the Prussians, who in rapidly increasing
+ numbers rushed forward with infuriated pertinacity. They held their post
+ till the utter rout of the main army of their comrades was apparent, and
+ the victorious Allies were thronging around Planchenoit. When Pelet and
+ his brave chasseurs quitted the churchyard, and retired with steady march,
+ though they suffered fearfully from the moment they left their shelter,
+ and Prussian cavalry as well as infantry dashed fiercely after them. Pelet
+ kept together a little knot of 250 veterans, and had the eagle covered
+ over, and borne along in the midst of them. At one time the inequality of
+ the ground caused his ranks to open a little; and in an instant the
+ Prussian horseman were on them, and striving to capture the eagle. Captain
+ Siborne relates the conduct of Pelet with the admiration worthy of one
+ brave soldier for another:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pelet, taking advantage of a spot of ground which afforded them some
+ degree of cover against the fire of grape by which they were constantly
+ assailed, halted the standard-bearer, and called out, "A moi chasseurs!
+ sauvons l'aigle ou mourons autour d'elle!" The chasseurs immediately
+ pressed around him, forming what is usually termed the rallying square,
+ and, lowering their bayonets, succeeded in repulsing the charge of
+ cavalry. Some guns were then brought to bear upon them, and subsequently a
+ brisk fire of musketry; but notwithstanding the awful sacrifice which was
+ thus offered up in defence of their precious charge, they succeeded in
+ reaching the main line of retreat, favoured by the universal confusion, as
+ also by the general obscurity which now prevailed; and thus saved alike
+ the eagle and the honour of the regiment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ French writers do injustice to their own army and general, when they
+ revive malignant calumnies against Wellington, and speak of his having
+ blundered into victory. No blunderer could have successfully encountered
+ such troops as those of Napoleon, and under such a leader. It is
+ superfluous to cite against these cavils the testimony which other
+ continental critics have borne to the high military genius of our
+ illustrious chief. I refer to one only, which is of peculiar value, on
+ account of the quarter whence it comes. It is that of the great German
+ writer Niebuhr, whose accurate acquaintance with every important scene of
+ modern as well as ancient history was unparalleled: and who was no mere
+ pedant, but a man practically versed in active life, and had been
+ personally acquainted with most of the leading men in the great events of
+ the early part of this century. Niebuhr, in the passage which I allude to,
+ [Roman History, vol. v. p. 17.] after referring to the military "blunders"
+ of Mithridates, Frederick the Great, Napoleon, Pyrrhus, and Hannibal, uses
+ these remarkable words, "The Duke of Wellington is, I believe, the only
+ general in whose conduct of war we cannot discover any important mistake."
+ Not that it is to be supposed that the Duke's merits were simply of a
+ negative order, or that he was merely a cautious, phlegmatic general fit
+ only for defensive warfare, as some recent French historians have
+ described him. On the contrary, he was bold even to audacity when boldness
+ was required. "The intrepid advance and fight at Assaye, the crossing of
+ the Douro, and the movement on Talavera in 1809, the advance to Madrid and
+ Burgos in 1812, the actions before Bayonne in 1813, and the desperate
+ stand made at Waterloo itself, when more tamely-prudent generals would
+ have retreated beyond Brussels, place this beyond a doubt." [See the
+ admirable parallel of Wellington and Marlborough at the end of Sir
+ Archibald Alison's "Life of the Duke of Marlborough." Sir Archibald justly
+ considers Wellington the more daring general of the two.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The overthrow of the French military power at Waterloo was so complete,
+ that the subsequent events of the brief campaign have little interest.
+ Lamartine truly says: "This defeat left nothing undecided in future
+ events, for victory had given judgment. The war began and ended in a
+ single battle." Napoleon himself recognised instantly and fully the deadly
+ nature of the blow which had been dealt to his empire. In his flight from
+ the battle-field he first halted at Charleroi, but the approach of the
+ pursuing Prussians drove him thence before he had rested there an hour.
+ With difficulty getting clear of the wrecks of his own army, he reached
+ Philippeville, where he remained a few hours, and sent orders to the
+ French generals in the various extremities of France to converge with
+ their troops upon Paris. He ordered Soult to collect the fugitives of his
+ own force, and lead them to Laon. He then hurried forward to Paris, and
+ reached his capital before the news of his own defeat. But the stern truth
+ soon transpired. At the demand of the Chambers of Peers and
+ Representatives, he abandoned the throne by a second and final abdication
+ on the 22d of June. On the 29th of June he left the neighbourhood of
+ Paris, and proceeded to Rochefort in the hope of escaping to America; but
+ the coast was strictly watched, and on the 15th of July the ex-emperor
+ surrendered himself on board of the English man-of-war the Bellerophon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the allied armies had advanced steadily upon Paris, driving
+ before them Grouchy's corps, and the scanty force which Soult had
+ succeeded in rallying at Laon. Cambray, Peronne, and other fortresses were
+ speedily captured; and by the 29th of June the invaders were taking their
+ positions in front of Paris. The Provisional Government, which acted in
+ the French capital after the Emperor's abdication, opened negotiations
+ with the allied chiefs. Blucher, in his quenchless hatred of the French,
+ was eager to reject all proposals for a suspension of hostilities, and to
+ assault and storm the city. But the sager and calmer spirit of Wellington
+ prevailed over his colleague; the entreated armistice was granted; and on
+ the 3d of July the capitulation of Paris terminated the War of the Battle
+ of Waterloo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In closing our observations on this the last of the Decisive Battles of
+ the World, it is pleasing to contrast the year which it signalized with
+ the year that is now [Written in June 1851.] passing over our heads. We
+ have not (and long may we be without) the stern excitement of martial
+ strife, and we see no captive standards of our European neighbours brought
+ in triumph to our shrines. But we behold an infinitely prouder spectacle.
+ We see the banners of every civilized nation waving over the arena of our
+ competition with each other, in the arts that minister to our race's
+ support and happiness, and not to its suffering and destruction.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Peace hath her victories
+ No less renowned than War;"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ and no battle-field ever witnessed a victory more noble than that which
+ England, under her Sovereign Lady and her Royal Prince, is now teaching
+ the peoples of the earth to achieve over selfish prejudices and
+ international feuds, in the great cause of the general promotion of the
+ industry and welfare of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fifteen Decisive Battles of The
+World From Marathon to Waterloo, by Edward Creasy
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fifteen Decisive Battles of The World
+From Marathon to Waterloo, by Edward Creasy
+
+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: The Fifteen Decisive Battles of The World From Marathon to Waterloo
+
+Author: Edward Creasy
+
+Release Date: May, 2003 [EBook #4061]
+Last Updated: August 7, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Hill
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE WORLD FROM MARATHON TO WATERLOO
+
+By Sir Edward Creasy, M.A.
+
+(Late Chief Justice of Ceylon) Author of 'The Rise and Progress of the
+English Constitution'
+
+
+
+
+Dedicated to ROBERT GORDON LATHAM, M.D., F.R.S. Late Fellow of King's
+College Cambridge; Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
+
+Member of the Ethnological Society, New York; Late Professor of the
+English Language and Literature, in University College, London.
+
+By his Friend THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Capital letters have been used to replace text in italics in the printed
+text. Accents have been omitted.
+
+Footnotes have been inserted into the text enclosed in square '[]'
+brackets, near the point where they were indicated by a suffix in the
+text.
+
+Greek words in the text have been crudely translated into Western
+European capital letters. Sincere apologies to Greek scholars! Longer
+passages in Greek have been omitted and where possible replaced with a
+reference to the original from which they were taken.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+It is an honourable characteristic of the Spirit of this Age, that
+projects of violence and warfare are regarded among civilized states
+with gradually increasing aversion. The Universal Peace Society
+certainly does not, and probably never will, enrol the majority of
+statesmen among its members. But even those who look upon the Appeal
+of Battle as occasionally unavoidable in international controversies,
+concur in thinking it a deplorable necessity, only to be resorted to
+when all peaceful modes of arrangement have been vainly tried; and when
+the law of self-defence justifies a State, like an individual, in using
+force to protect itself from imminent and serious injury. For a writer,
+therefore, of the present day to choose battles for his favourite topic,
+merely because they were battles, merely because so many myriads of
+troops were arrayed in them, and so many hundreds or thousands of human
+beings stabbed, hewed, or shot each other to death during them, would
+argue strange weakness or depravity of mind. Yet it cannot be denied
+that a fearful and wonderful interest is attached to these scenes of
+carnage. There is undeniable greatness in the disciplined courage, and
+in the love of honour, which make the combatants confront agony and
+destruction. And the powers of the human intellect are rarely more
+strongly displayed than they are in the Commander, who regulates,
+arrays, and wields at his will these masses of armed disputants; who,
+cool yet daring, in the midst of peril reflects on all, and provides for
+all, ever ready with fresh resources and designs, as the vicissitudes of
+the storm of slaughter require. But these qualities, however high they
+may appear, are to be found in the basest as well as in the noblest of
+mankind. Catiline was as brave a soldier as Leonidas, and a much better
+officer. Alva surpassed the Prince of Orange in the field; and Suwarrow
+was the military superior of Kosciusko. To adopt the emphatic words of
+Byron:--
+
+ "'Tis the Cause makes all,
+ Degrades or hallows courage in its fall."
+
+There are some battles, also, which claim our attention, independently
+of the moral worth of the combatants, on account of their enduring
+importance, and by reason of the practical influence on our own social
+and political condition, which we can trace up to the results of those
+engagements. They have for us an abiding and actual interest, both
+while we investigate the chain of causes and effects, by which they have
+helped to make us what we are; and also while we speculate on what we
+probably should have been, if any one of those battles had come to
+a different termination. Hallam has admirably expressed this in his
+remarks on the victory gained by Charles Martel, between Tours and
+Poictiers, over the invading Saracens.
+
+He says of it, that "it may justly be reckoned among those few battles
+of which a contrary event would have essentially varied the drama of the
+world in all its subsequent scenes: with Marathon, Arbela, the Metaurus,
+Chalons, and Leipsic." It was the perusal of this note of Hallam's that
+first led me to the consideration of my present subject. I certainly
+differ from that great historian as to the comparative importance of
+some of the battles which he thus enumerates, and also of some which he
+omits. It is probable, indeed, that no two historical inquirers would
+entirely agree in their lists of the Decisive Battles of the World.
+Different minds will naturally vary in the impressions which particular
+events make on them; and in the degree of interest with which they
+watch the career, and reflect on the importance, of different historical
+personages. But our concurrence in our catalogues is of little moment,
+provided we learn to look on these great historical events in the spirit
+which Hallam's observations indicate. Those remarks should teach us
+to watch how the interests of many states are often involved in the
+collisions between a few; and how the effect of those collisions is not
+limited to a single age, but may give an impulse which will sway the
+fortunes of successive generations of mankind. Most valuable also is the
+mental discipline which is thus acquired, and by which we are trained
+not only to observe what has been, and what is, but also to ponder on
+what might have been. [See Bolingbroke, On the Study and Use of History,
+vol. ii. p. 497 of his collected works.]
+
+We thus learn not to judge of the wisdom of measures too exclusively by
+the results. We learn to apply the juster standard of seeing what the
+circumstances and the probabilities were that surrounded a statesman or
+a general at the time when he decided on his plan: we value him not by
+his fortune, but by his PROAIRESIZ, to adopt the expressive Greek word,
+for which our language gives no equivalent.
+
+The reasons why each of the following Fifteen Battles has been selected
+will, I trust, appear when it is described. But it may be well to
+premise a few remarks on the negative tests which have led me to
+reject others, which at first sight may appear equal in magnitude and
+importance to the chosen Fifteen.
+
+I need hardly remark that it is not the number of killed and wounded in
+a battle that determines its general historical importance. It is not
+because only a few hundreds fell in the battle by which Joan of Arc
+captured the Tourelles and raised the siege of Orleans, that the effect
+of that crisis is to be judged: nor would a full belief in the largest
+number which Eastern historians state to have been slaughtered in any
+of the numerous conflicts between Asiatic rulers, make me regard the
+engagement in which they fell as one of paramount importance to mankind.
+But, besides battles of this kind, there are many of great consequence,
+and attended with circumstances which powerfully excite our feelings,
+and rivet our attention, and yet which appear to me of mere secondary
+rank, inasmuch as either their effects were limited in area, or they
+themselves merely confirmed some great tendency or bias which an earlier
+battle had originated. For example, the encounters between the Greeks
+and Persians, which followed Marathon, seem to me not to have been
+phenomena of primary impulse. Greek superiority had been already
+asserted, Asiatic ambition had already been checked, before Salamis and
+Platea confirmed the superiority of European free states over Oriental
+despotism. So, AEgos-Potamos, which finally crushed the maritime
+power of Athens, seems to me inferior in interest to the defeat before
+Syracuse, where Athens received her first fatal check, and after which
+she only struggled to retard her downfall. I think similarly of Zama
+with respect to Carthage, as compared with the Metaurus: and, on the
+same principle, the subsequent great battles of the Revolutionary
+war appear to me inferior in their importance to Valmy, which first
+determined the military character and career of the French Revolution.
+
+I am aware that a little activity of imagination, and a slight exercise
+of metaphysical ingenuity, may amuse us, by showing how the chain of
+circumstances is so linked together, that the smallest skirmish, or the
+slightest occurrence of any kind, that ever occurred, may be said to
+have been essential, in its actual termination, to the whole order of
+subsequent events. But when I speak of Causes and Effects, I speak of
+the obvious and important agency of one fact upon another, and not of
+remote and fancifully infinitesimal influences. I am aware that, on the
+other hand, the reproach of Fatalism is justly incurred by those,
+who, like the writers of a certain school in a neighbouring country,
+recognise in history nothing more than a series of necessary phenomena,
+which follow inevitably one upon the other. But when, in this work,
+I speak of probabilities, I speak of human probabilities only. When I
+speak of Cause and Effect, I speak of those general laws only, by which
+we perceive the sequence of human affairs to be usually regulated; and
+in which we recognise emphatically the wisdom and power of the Supreme
+Lawgiver, the design of The Designer.
+
+MITRE COURT CHAMBERS, TEMPLE, June 26, 1851.
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAP. I.
+
+THE BATTLE OF MARATHON
+
+Explanatory Remarks on some of the circumstances of the Battle of
+Marathon.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Marathon, B.C. 490, and the
+Defeat of the Athenians at Syracuse, B.C. 413.
+
+
+CHAP. II.
+
+DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE, B.C. 413.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Defeat of the Athenians at Syracuse and
+the Battle of Arbela.
+
+
+CHAP. III.
+
+THE BATTLE OF ARBELA, B.C. 331.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Arbela and the Battle of the
+Metaurus.
+
+
+CHAP. IV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS, B.C. 207.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of the Metaurus, B.C. 207, and
+Arminius's Victory over the Roman Legions under Varus. A.D. 9.
+
+
+CHAP. V.
+
+VICTORY OF ARMINIUS OVER THE ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS, A.D. 9.
+
+Arminius. Synopsis of Events between Arminius's Victory over Varus and
+the Battle of Chalons.
+
+
+CHAP. VI.
+
+THE BATTLE OF CHALONS, A.D. 451.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Chalons, A.D. 451, and the
+Battle of Tours, 732.
+
+
+CHAP. VII.
+
+THE BATTLE OF TOURS, A.D. 732.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Tours, A.D. 732 and the Battle
+of Hastings, 1066.
+
+
+CHAP. VIII.
+
+THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS, A.D. 1066.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Hastings, A.D. 1066, and Joan
+of Arc's Victory at Orleans, 1429.
+
+
+CHAP. IX.
+
+JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY OVER THE ENGLISH AT ORLEANS, A.D. 1429.
+
+Synopsis of Events between Joan of Arc's Victory at Orleans, A.D. 1429,
+and the Defeat of the Spanish Armada, 1588.
+
+
+CHAP. X.
+
+THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588.
+
+Synopsis of events between the Defeat of the Spanish Armada A.D. 1588,
+and the Battle of Blenheim, 1704.
+
+
+CHAP. XI.
+
+THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, A.D. 1704.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Blenheim, 1704, and the Battle
+of Pultowa, 1709.
+
+
+CHAP. XII.
+
+THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, A.D. 1709.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Pultowa, 1709, and the Defeat
+of Burgoyne at Saratoga, 1777.
+
+
+CHAP. XIII.
+
+VICTORY OF THE AMERICANS OVER BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA, A.D. 1777.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Defeat of Burgoyne at Saratoga, 1777, and
+the Battle of Valmy, 1792.
+
+
+CHAP. XIV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF VALMY.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Valmy, 1792, and the Battle of
+Waterloo, 1815.
+
+
+CHAP. XV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO, 1815.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE WORLD.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.--THE BATTLE OF MARATHON.
+
+ "Quibus actus uterque
+ Europae atque Asiae fatis concurrerit orbis."
+
+Two thousand three hundred and forty years ago, a council of Athenian
+officers was summoned on the slope of one of the mountains that
+look over the plain of Marathon, on the eastern coast of Attica. The
+immediate subject of their meeting was to consider whether they should
+give battle to an enemy that lay encamped on the shore beneath them; but
+on the result of their deliberations depended not merely the fate of two
+armies, but the whole future progress of human civilization.
+
+There were eleven members of that council of war. Ten were the generals,
+who were then annually elected at Athens, one for each of the local
+tribes into which the Athenians were divided. Each general led the men
+of his own tribe, and each was invested with equal military authority.
+One also of the Archons was associated with them in the joint command
+of the collective force. This magistrate was termed the Polemarch or
+War-Ruler: he had the privilege of leading the right wing of the army
+in battle, and of taking part in all councils of war. A noble Athenian,
+named Callimachus, was the War-Ruler of this year; and as such, stood
+listening to the earnest discussion of the ten generals. They had,
+indeed, deep matter for anxiety, though little aware how momentous to
+mankind were the votes they were about to give, or how the generations
+to come would read with interest that record of their debate. They saw
+before them the invading forces of a mighty empire, which had in the
+last fifty years shattered and enslaved nearly all the kingdoms and
+principalities of the then known world. They knew that all the resources
+of their own country were comprised in the little army entrusted to
+their guidance. They saw before them a chosen host of the Great King
+sent to wreak his special wrath on that country, and on the other
+insolent little Greek community, which had dared to aid his rebels
+and burn the capital of one of his provinces. That victorious host
+had already fulfilled half its mission of vengeance. Eretria, the
+confederate of Athens in the bold march against Sardis nine years
+before, had fallen in the last few days; and the Athenian generals could
+discern from the heights the island of AEgilia, in which the Persians
+had deposited their Eretrian prisoners, whom they had reserved to be led
+away captives into Upper Asia, there to hear their doom from the lips of
+King Darius himself. Moreover, the men of Athens knew that in the camp
+before them was their own banished tyrant, Hippias, who was seeking to
+be reinstated by foreign scimitars in despotic sway over any remnant of
+his countrymen that might survive the sack of their town, and might be
+left behind as too worthless for leading away into Median bondage.
+
+The numerical disparity between the force which the Athenian commanders
+had under them, and that which they were called on to encounter, was
+fearfully apparent to some of the council. The historians who wrote
+nearest to the time of the battle do not pretend to give any detailed
+statements of the numbers engaged, but there are sufficient data for
+our making a general estimate. Every free Greek was trained to military
+duty: and, from the incessant border wars between the different states,
+few Greeks reached the age of manhood without having seen some service.
+But the muster-roll of free Athenian citizens of an age fit for military
+duty never exceeded thirty thousand, and at this epoch probably did not
+amount to two-thirds of that number. Moreover, the poorer portion
+of these were unprovided with the equipments, and untrained to the
+operations of the regular infantry. Some detachments of the best armed
+troops would be required to garrison the city itself, and man the
+various fortified posts in the territory; so that it is impossible to
+reckon the fully equipped force that marched from Athens to Marathon,
+when the news of the Persian landing arrived, at higher than ten
+thousand men. [The historians who lived long after the time of the
+battle, such as Justin, Plutarch and others, give ten thousand as the
+number of the Athenian army. Not much reliance could be placed on their
+authority, if unsupported by other evidence; but a calculation made from
+the number of the Athenian free population remarkably confirms it. For
+the data of this, see Boeck's "Public Economy of Athens," vol. i. p. 45.
+Some METOIKOI probably served as Hoplites at Marathon, but the number of
+resident aliens at Athens cannot have been large at this period.]
+
+With one exception, the other Greeks held back from aiding them. Sparta
+had promised assistance; but the Persians had landed on the sixth day
+of the moon, and a religious scruple delayed the march of Spartan troops
+till the moon should have reached its full. From one quarter only, and
+that a most unexpected one, did Athens receive aid at the moment of her
+great peril.
+
+For some years before this time, the little state of Plataea in Boeotia,
+being hard pressed by her powerful neighbour, Thebes, had asked the
+protection of Athens, and had owed to an Athenian army the rescue of her
+independence. Now when it was noised over Greece that the Mede had
+come from the uttermost parts of the earth to destroy Athens, the brave
+Plataeans, unsolicited, marched with their whole force to assist in the
+defence, and to share the fortunes of their benefactors. The general
+levy of the Plataeans only amounted to a thousand men: and this little
+column, marching from their city along the southern ridge of Mount
+Cithaeron, and thence across the Attic territory, joined the Athenian
+forces above Marathon almost immediately before the battle. The
+reinforcement was numerically small; but the gallant spirit of the men
+who composed it must have made it of tenfold value to the Athenians: and
+its presence must have gone far to dispel the cheerless feeling of being
+deserted and friendless, which the delay of the Spartan succours was
+calculated to create among the Athenian ranks.
+
+This generous daring of their weak but true-hearted ally was never
+forgotten at Athens. The Plataeans were made the fellow-countrymen
+of the Athenians, except the right of exercising certain political
+functions; and from that time forth in the solemn sacrifices at Athens,
+the public prayers were offered up for a joint blessing from Heaven upon
+the Athenians, and the Plataeans also. [Mr. Grote observes (vol. iv. p.
+484), that "this volunteer march of the whole Plataean force to Marathon
+is one of the most affecting incidents of all Grecian history." In
+truth, the whole career of Plataea, and the friendship, strong even unto
+death, between her and Athens, form one of the most affecting episodes
+in the history of antiquity. In the Peloponnesian War the Plataeans
+again were true to the Athenians against all risks and all calculation
+of self-interest; and the destruction of Plataea was the consequence.
+There are few nobler passages in the classics than the speech in which
+the Plataean prisoners of war, after the memorable siege of their city,
+justify before their Spartan executioners their loyal adherence to
+Athens. (See Thucydides, lib. iii. secs. 53-60.)]
+
+After the junction of the column from Plataea, the Athenians commanders
+must have had under them about eleven thousand fully-armed and
+disciplined infantry, and probably a larger number of irregular
+light-armed troops; as, besides the poorer citizens who went to
+the field armed with javelins, cutlasses, and targets, each regular
+heavy-armed soldier was attended in the camp by one or more slaves, who
+were armed like the inferior freemen. [At the battle of Plataea, eleven
+years after Marathon, each of the eight thousand Athenian regular
+infantry who served there, was attended by a light-armed slave. (Herod.
+lib. viii. c. 28,29.)] Cavalry or archers the Athenians (on this
+occasion) had none: and the use in the field of military engines was not
+at that period introduced into ancient warfare.
+
+Contrasted with their own scanty forces, the Greek commanders saw
+stretched before them, along the shores of the winding bay, the tents
+and shipping of the varied nations that marched to do the bidding of the
+King of the Eastern world. The difficulty of finding transports and
+of securing provisions would form the only limit to the numbers of a
+Persian army. Nor is there any reason to suppose the estimate of Justin
+exaggerated, who rates at a hundred thousand the force which on this
+occasion had sailed, under the satraps Datis and Artaphernes, from the
+Cilician shores, against the devoted coasts of Euboea and Attica.
+And after largely deducting from this total, so as to allow for mere
+mariners and camp followers, there must still have remained fearful odds
+against the national levies of the Athenians. Nor could Greek generals
+then feel that confidence in the superior quality of their troops which
+ever since the battle of Marathon has animated Europeans in conflicts
+with Asiatics; as, for instance, in the after struggles between Greece
+and Persia, or when the Roman legions encountered the myriads of
+Mithridates and Tigranes, or as is the case in the Indian campaigns of
+our own regiments. On the contrary, up to the day of Marathon the Medes
+and Persians were reputed invincible. They had more than once met Greek
+troops in Asia Minor, in Cyprus, in Egypt, and had invariably beaten
+them. Nothing can be stronger than the expressions used by the early
+Creek writers respecting the terror which the name of the Medes
+inspired, and the prostration of men's spirits before the apparently
+resistless career of the Persian arms. It is therefore, little to be
+wondered at, that five of the ten Athenian generals shrank from the
+prospect of fighting a pitched battle against an enemy so superior in
+numbers, and so formidable in military renown. Their own position on the
+heights was strong, and offered great advantages to a small defending
+force against assailing masses. They deemed it mere foolhardiness
+to descend into the plain to be trampled down by the Asiatic horse,
+overwhelmed with the archery, or cut to pieces by the invincible
+veterans of Cambyses and Cyrus. Moreover, Sparta, the great war-state of
+Greece, had been applied to, and had promised succour to Athens, though
+the religious observance which the Dorians paid to certain times and
+seasons had for the present delayed their march. Was it not wise, at
+any rate, to wait till the Spartans came up, and to have the help of the
+best troops in Greece, before they exposed themselves to the shock of
+the dreaded Medes?
+
+Specious as these reasons might appear, the other five generals were for
+speedier and bolder operations. And, fortunately for Athens and for the
+world, one of them was a man, not only of the highest military genius,
+but also of that energetic character which impresses its own type and
+ideas upon spirits feebler in conception.
+
+Miltiades was the head of one of the noblest houses at Athens: he ranked
+the AEacidae among his ancestry, and the blood of Achilles flowed in
+the veins of the hero of Marathon. One of his immediate ancestors had
+acquired the dominion of the Thracian Chersonese, and thus the family
+became at the same time Athenian citizens and Thracian princes. This
+occurred at the time when Pisistratus was tyrant of Athens. Two of the
+relatives of Miltiades--an uncle of the same name, and a brother named
+Stesagoras--had ruled the Chersonese before Miltiades became its prince.
+He had been brought up at Athens in the house of his father Cimon,
+[Herodotus, lib. vi. c. 102] who was renowned throughout Greece for his
+victories in the Olympic chariot-races, and who must have been possessed
+of great wealth. The sons of Pisistratus, who succeeded their father in
+the tyranny at Athens, caused Cimon to be assassinated, but they treated
+the young Miltiades with favour and kindness; and when his brother
+Stesagoras died in the Chersonese, they sent him out there as lord of
+the principality. This was about twenty-eight years before the battle
+of Marathon, and it is with his arrival in the Chersonese that our first
+knowledge of the career and character of Miltiades commences. We
+find, in the first act recorded of him, proof of the same resolute and
+unscrupulous spirit that marked his mature age. His brother's authority
+in the principality had been shaken by war and revolt: Miltiades
+determined to rule more securely. On his arrival he kept close within
+his house, as if he was mourning for his brother. The principal men
+of the Chersonese, hearing of this, assembled from all the towns and
+districts, and went together to the house of Miltiades on a visit of
+condolence. As soon as he had thus got them in his power, he made
+them all prisoners. He then asserted and maintained his own absolute
+authority in the peninsula, taking into his pay a body of five hundred
+regular troops, and strengthening his interest by marrying the daughter
+of the king of the neighbouring Thracians.
+
+When the Persian power was extended to the Hellespont and its
+neighbourhood, Miltiades, as prince of the Chersonese, submitted to King
+Darius; and he was one of the numerous tributary rulers who led their
+contingents of men to serve in the Persian army in the expedition
+against Scythia. Miltiades and the vassal Greeks of Asia Minor were left
+by the Persian king in charge of the bridge across the Danube, when
+the invading army crossed that river, and plunged into the wilds of
+the country that now is Russia, in vain pursuit of the ancestors of the
+modern Cossacks. On learning the reverses that Darius met with in the
+Scythian wilderness, Miltiades proposed to his companions that they
+should break the bridge down, and leave the Persian king and his army
+to perish by famine and the Scythian arrows. The rulers of the Asiatic
+Greek cities whom Miltiades addressed, shrank from this bold and
+ruthless stroke against the Persian power, and Darius returned in
+safety. But it was known what advice Miltiades had given; and the
+vengeance of Darius was thenceforth specially directed against the man
+who had counselled such a deadly blow against his empire and his person.
+The occupation of the Persian arms in other quarters left Miltiades
+for some years after this in possession of the Chersonese; but it
+was precarious and interrupted. He, however, availed himself of the
+opportunity which his position gave him of conciliating the goodwill
+of his fellow-countrymen at Athens, by conquering and placing under
+Athenian authority the islands of Lemnos and Imbros, to which Athens had
+ancient claims, but which she had never previously been able to
+bring into complete subjection. At length, in 494 B.C., the complete
+suppression of the Ionian revolt by the Persians left their armies and
+fleets at liberty to act against the enemies of the Great King to the
+west of the Hellespont. A strong squadron of Phoenician galleys was sent
+against the Chersonese. Miltiades knew that resistance was hopeless; and
+while the Phoenicians were at Tenedos, he loaded five galleys with all
+the treasure that he could collect, and sailed away for Athens. The
+Phoenicians fell in with him, and chased him hard along the north of
+the AEgean. One of his galleys, on board of which was his eldest son,
+Metiochus, was actually captured; but Miltiades, with the other four,
+succeeded in reaching the friendly coast of Imbros in safety. Thence
+he afterwards proceeded to Athens, and resumed his station as a free
+citizen of the Athenian commonwealth.
+
+The Athenians at this time had recently expelled Hippias, the son of
+Pisistratus, the last of their tyrants. They were in the full glow
+of their newly-recovered liberty and equality; and the constitutional
+changes of Cleisthenes had inflamed their republican zeal to the utmost.
+Miltiades had enemies at Athens; and these, availing themselves of the
+state of popular feeling, brought him to trial for his life for having
+been tyrant of the Chersonese. The charge did not necessarily import any
+acts of cruelty or wrong to individuals: it was founded on so specific
+law; but it was based on the horror with which the Greeks of that age
+regarded every man who made himself compulsory master of his fellow-men,
+and exercised irresponsible dominion over them. The fact of Miltiades
+having so ruled in the Chersonese was undeniable; but the question which
+the Athenians, assembled in judgment, must have tried, was, whether
+Miltiades, by becoming tyrant of the Chersonese, deserved punishment as
+an Athenian citizen. The eminent service that he had done the state in
+conquering Lemnos and Imbros for it, pleaded strongly in his favour. The
+people refused to convict him. He stood high in public opinion; and when
+the coming invasion of the Persians was known, the people wisely elected
+him one of their generals for the year.
+
+Two other men of signal eminence in history, though their renown was
+achieved at a later period than that of Miltiades, were also among the
+ten Athenian generals at Marathon. One was Themistocles, the future
+founder of the Athenian navy and the destined victor of Salamis: the
+other was Aristides, who afterwards led the Athenian troops at Plataea,
+and whose integrity and just popularity acquired for his country, when
+the Persians had finally been repulsed, the advantageous pre-eminence of
+being acknowledged by half of the Greeks as their impartial leader and
+protector. It is not recorded what part either Themistocles or Aristides
+took in the debate of the council of war at Marathon. But from the
+character of Themistocles, his boldness, and his intuitive genius for
+extemporizing the best measures in every emergency (a quality which the
+greatest of historians ascribes to him beyond all his contemporaries),
+we may well believe that the vote of Themistocles was for prompt and
+decisive action. [See the character of Themistocles in the 138th section
+of the first book of Thucydides, especially the last sentence.] On
+the vote of Aristides it may be more difficult to speculate. His
+predilection for the Spartans may have made him wish to wait till they
+came up; but, though circumspect, he was neither timid as a soldier
+nor as a politician; and the bold advice of Miltiades may probably have
+found in Aristides a willing, most assuredly it found in him a candid,
+hearer.
+
+Miltiades felt no hesitation as to the course which the Athenian
+army ought to pursue: and earnestly did he press his opinion on his
+brother-generals. Practically acquainted with the organization of the
+Persian armies, Miltiades was convinced of the superiority of the Greek
+troops, if properly handled: he saw with the military eye of a great
+general the advantage which the position of the forces gave him for
+a sudden attack, and as a profound politician he felt the perils of
+remaining inactive, and of giving treachery time to ruin the Athenian
+cause.
+
+One officer in the council of war had not yet voted. This was
+Callimachus, the War-Ruler. The votes of the generals were five and
+five, so that the voice of Callimachus would be decisive.
+
+On that vote, in all human probability, the destiny of all the nations
+of the world depended. Miltiades turned to him, and in simple soldierly
+eloquence, the substance of which we may read faithfully reported in
+Herodotus, who had conversed with the veterans of Marathon, the great
+Athenian thus adjured his countryman to vote for giving battle:--
+
+"It now rests with you, Callimachus, either to enslave Athens, or, by
+assuring her freedom, to win yourself an immortality of fame, such as
+not even Harmodius and Aristogeiton have acquired. For never, since the
+Athenians were a people, were they in such danger as they are in at this
+moment. If they bow the knee to these Medes, they are to be given up to
+Hippias, and you know what they then will have to suffer. But if Athens
+comes victorious out of this contest, she has it in her to become the
+first city of Greece. Your vote is to decide whether we are to join
+battle or not. If we do not bring on a battle presently, some factious
+intrigue will disunite the Athenians, and the city will be betrayed to
+the Medes. But if we fight, before there is anything rotten in the state
+of Athens, I believe that, provided the Gods will give fair play and
+no favour, we are able to get the best of it in the engagement."
+[Herodotus, lib. vi. sec. 209. The 116th section is to my mind clear
+proof that Herodotus had personally conversed with Epizelus, one of the
+veterans of Marathon. The substance of the speech of Miltiades would
+naturally become known by the report of some of his colleagues.]
+
+The vote of the brave War-Ruler was gained; the council determined
+to give battle; and such was the ascendancy and military eminence of
+Miltiades, that his brother-generals, one and all, gave up their days of
+command to him, and cheerfully acted under his orders. Fearful, however,
+of creating any jealousy, and of so failing to obtain the co-operation
+of all parts of his small army, Miltiades waited till the day when the
+chief command would have come round to him in regular rotation, before
+he led the troops against the enemy.
+
+The inaction of the Asiatic commanders, during this interval, appears
+strange at first sight; but Hippias was with them, and they and he were
+aware of their chance of a bloodless conquest through the machinations
+of his partisans among the Athenians. The nature of the ground also
+explains, in many points, the tactics of the opposite generals
+before the battle, as well as the operations of the troops during the
+engagement.
+
+The plain of Marathon, which is about twenty-two miles distant from
+Athens, lies along the bay of the same name on the north-eastern coast
+of Attica. The plain is nearly in the form of a crescent, and about six
+miles in length. It is about two miles broad in the centre, where the
+space between the mountains and the sea is greatest, but it narrows
+towards either extremity, the mountains coming close down to the water
+at the horns of the bay. There is a valley trending inwards from the
+middle of the plain, and a ravine comes down to it to the southward.
+Elsewhere it, is closely girt round on the land side by rugged limestone
+mountains, which are thickly studded with pines, olive-trees, and
+cedars, and overgrown with the myrtle, arbutus, and the other low
+odoriferous shrubs that everywhere perfume the Attic air. The level of
+the ground is now varied by the mound raised over those who fell in the
+battle, but it was an unbroken plain when the Persians encamped on it.
+There are marshes at each end, which are dry in spring and summer, and
+then offer no obstruction to the horseman, but are commonly flooded with
+rain, and so rendered impracticable for cavalry, in the autumn, the time
+of year at which the action took place.
+
+The Greeks, lying encamped on the mountains, could watch every movement
+of the Persians on the plain below, while they were enabled completely
+to mask their own. Miltiades also had, from his position, the power of
+giving battle whenever he pleased, or of delaying it at his discretion,
+unless Datis were to attempt the perilous operation of storming the
+heights.
+
+If we turn to the map of the old world, to test the comparative
+territorial resources of the two states whose armies were now about to
+come into conflict, the immense preponderance of the material power of
+the Persian king over that of the Athenian republic is more striking
+than any similar contrast which history can supply. It has been truly
+remarked, that, in estimating mere areas, Attica, containing on
+its whole surface only seven hundred square miles, shrinks into
+insignificance if compared with many a baronial fief of the Middle
+Ages, or many a colonial allotment of modern times. Its antagonist, the
+Persian empire, comprised the whole of modern Asiatic and much of modern
+European Turkey, the modern kingdom of Persia, and the countries of
+modern Georgia, Armenia, Balkh, the Punjaub, Affghanistan, Beloochistan,
+Egypt, and Tripoli.
+
+Nor could a European, in the beginning of the fifth century before our
+era, look upon this huge accumulation of power beneath the sceptre of a
+single Asiatic ruler, with the indifference with which we now observe on
+the map the extensive dominions of modern Oriental sovereigns. For, as
+has been already remarked, before Marathon was fought, the prestige
+of success and of supposed superiority of race was on the side of
+the Asiatic against the European. Asia was the original seat of human
+societies and long before any trace can be found of the inhabitants of
+the rest of the world having emerged from the rudest barbarism, we can
+perceive that mighty and brilliant empires flourished in the Asiatic
+continent. They appear before us through the twilight of primeval
+history, dim and indistinct, but massive and majestic, like mountains in
+the early dawn.
+
+Instead, however, of the infinite variety and restless change which
+have characterised the institutions and fortunes of European states
+ever since the commencement of the civilization of our continent, a
+monotonous uniformity pervades the histories of nearly all Oriental
+empires, from the most ancient down to the most recent times. They are
+characterised by the rapidity of their early conquests; by the immense
+extent of the dominions comprised in them; by the establishment of a
+satrap or pacha system of governing the provinces; by an invariable
+and speedy degeneracy in the princes of the royal house, the effeminate
+nurslings of the seraglio succeeding to the warrior-sovereigns reared in
+the camp; and by the internal anarchy and insurrections, which indicate
+and accelerate the decline and fall of those unwieldy and ill-organized
+fabrics of power. It is also a striking fact that the governments of all
+the great Asiatic empires have in all ages been absolute despotisms.
+And Heeren is right in connecting this with another great fact, which is
+important from its influence both on the political and the social life
+of Asiatics. "Among all the considerable nations of Inner Asia, the
+paternal government of every household was corrupted by polygamy; where
+that custom exists, a good political constitution is impossible. Fathers
+being converted into domestic despots, are ready to pay the same abject
+obedience to their sovereign which they exact from their family and
+dependants in their domestic economy." We should bear in mind also the
+inseparable connexion between the state religion and all legislation,
+which has always prevailed in the East, and the constant existence of a
+powerful sacerdotal body, exercising some check, though precarious and
+irregular, over the throne itself, grasping at all civil administration,
+claiming the supreme control of education, stereotyping the lines in
+which literature and science must move, and limiting the extent to which
+it shall be lawful for the human mind to prosecute its inquiries.
+
+With these general characteristics rightly felt and understood, it
+becomes a comparatively easy task to investigate and appreciate the
+origin, progress, and principles of Oriental empires in general, as well
+as of the Persian monarchy in particular. And we are thus better enabled
+to appreciate the repulse which Greece gave to the arms of the East,
+and to judge of the probable consequences to human civilization, if the
+Persians had succeeded in bringing Europe under their yoke, as they had
+already subjugated the fairest portions of the rest of the then known
+world.
+
+The Greeks, from their geographical position, formed the natural
+vanguard of European liberty against Persian ambition; and they
+pre-eminently displayed the salient points of distinctive national
+character, which have rendered European civilization so far superior
+to Asiatic. The nations that dwelt in ancient times around and near
+the northern shores of the Mediterranean Sea, were the first in our
+continent to receive from the East the rudiments of art and literature,
+and the germs of social and political organization. Of these nations,
+the Greeks, through their vicinity to Asia Minor, Phoenicia, and Egypt,
+were among the very foremost in acquiring the principles and habits of
+civilized life; and they also at once imparted a new and wholly original
+stamp on all which they received. Thus, in their religion they received
+from foreign settlers the names of all their deities and many of their
+rites, but they discarded the loathsome monstrosities of the Nile, the
+Orontes, and the Ganges;--they nationalized their creed; and their
+own poets created their beautiful mythology. No sacerdotal caste ever
+existed in Greece. So, in their governments they lived long under
+hereditary kings, but never endured the permanent establishment of
+absolute monarchy. Their early kings were constitutional rulers,
+governing with defined prerogatives. And long before the Persian
+invasion the kingly form of government had given way in almost all the
+Greek states to republican institutions, presenting infinite varieties
+of the balancing or the alternate predominance of the oligarchical and
+democratical principles. In literature and science the Greek intellect
+followed no beaten track, and acknowledged no limitary rules. The Greeks
+thought their subjects boldly out; and the novelty of a speculation
+invested it in their minds with interest, and not with criminality.
+Versatile, restless, enterprising and self-confident, the Greeks
+presented the most striking contrast to the habitual quietude and
+submissiveness of the Orientals. And, of all the Greeks, the Athenians
+exhibited these national characteristics in the strongest degree. This
+spirit of activity and daring, joined to a generous sympathy for the
+fate of their fellow-Greeks in Asia, had led them to join in the last
+Ionian war; and now, mingling with their abhorrence of the usurping
+family of their own citizens, which for a period had forcibly seized on
+and exercised despotic power at Athens, it nerved them to defy the wrath
+of King Darius, and to refuse to receive back at his bidding the tyrant
+whom they had some years before driven from their land.
+
+The enterprise and genius of an Englishman have lately confirmed by
+fresh evidence, and invested with fresh interest, the might of the
+Persian monarch, who sent his troops to combat at Marathon. Inscriptions
+in a character termed the Arrow-headed, or Cuneiform, had long been
+known to exist on the marble monuments at Persepolis, near the site of
+the ancient Susa, and on the faces of rocks in other places formerly
+ruled over by the early Persian kings. But for thousands of years
+they had been mere unintelligible enigmas to the curious but baffled
+beholder: and they were often referred to as instances of the folly of
+human pride, which could indeed write its own praises in the solid rock,
+but only for the rock to outlive the language as well as the memory of
+the vain-glorious inscribers. The elder Niebuhr, Grotefend, and Lassen
+had made some guesses at the meaning of the Cuneiform letters; but Major
+Rawlinson, of the East India Company's service, after years of labour,
+has at last accomplished the glorious achievement of fully revealing
+the alphabet and the grammar of this long unknown tongue. He has, in
+particular, fully deciphered and expounded the inscriptions on the
+sacred rock of Behistun, on the western frontiers of Media. These
+records of the Achaemenidae have at length found their interpreter; and
+Darius himself speaks to us from the consecrated mountain, and tells
+us the names of the nations that obeyed him, the revolts that he
+suppressed, his victories, his piety, and his glory. [See the tenth
+volume of the "Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society."]
+
+Kings who thus seek the admiration of posterity are little likely to
+dim the record of their successes by the mention of their occasional
+defeats; and it throws no suspicion on the narrative of the Greek
+historians, that we find these inscriptions silent respecting the
+overthrow of Datis and Artaphernes, as well as respecting the reverses
+which Darius sustained in person during his Scythian campaigns. But
+these indisputable monuments of Persian fame confirm, and even increase,
+the opinion with which Herodotus inspires us, of the vast power which
+Cyrus founded and Cambyses increased; which Darius augmented by Indian
+and Arabian conquests, and seemed likely, when he directed his arms
+against Europe, to make the predominant monarchy of the world.
+
+With the exception of the Chinese empire, in which, throughout all ages
+down to the last few years, one-third of the human race has dwelt almost
+unconnected with the other portions, all the great kingdoms which we
+know to have existed in Ancient Asia, were, in Darius's time, blended
+with the Persian. The northern Indians, the Assyrians, the Syrians, the
+Babylonians, the Chaldees, the Phoenicians, the nations of Palestine,
+the Armenians, the Bactrians, the Lydians, the Phrygians, the Parthians,
+and the Medes,--all obeyed the sceptre of the Great King: the Medes
+standing next to the native Persians in honour, and the empire being
+frequently spoken of as that of the Medes, or as that of the Medes and
+Persians. Egypt and Cyrene were Persian provinces; the Greek colonists
+in Asia Minor and the islands of the AEgean were Darius's subjects; and
+their gallant but unsuccessful attempts to throw off the Persian yoke
+had only served to rivet it more strongly, and to increase the general
+belief: that the Greeks could not stand before the Persians in a field
+of battle. Darius's Scythian war, though unsuccessful in its immediate
+object, had brought about the subjugation of Thrace and the submission
+of Macedonia. From the Indus to the Peneus, all was his.
+
+We may imagine the wrath with which the lord of so many nations must
+have heard, nine years before the battle of Marathon, that a strange
+nation towards the setting sun, called the Athenians, had dared to help
+his rebels in Ionia against him, and that they had plundered and burnt
+the capital of one of his provinces. Before the burning of Sardis,
+Darius seems never to have heard of the existence of Athens; but his
+satraps in Asia Minor had for some time seen Athenian refugees at their
+provincial courts imploring assistance against their fellow-countrymen.
+When Hippias was driven away from Athens, and the tyrannic dynasty of
+the Pisistratidae finally overthrown in 510 B.C., the banished tyrant
+and his adherents, after vainly seeking to be restored by Spartan
+intervention, had betaken themselves to Sardis, the capital city of
+the satrapy of Artaphernes. There Hippias (in the expressive words
+of Herodotus) [Herod. lib. v. c. 96.] began every kind of agitation,
+slandering the Athenians before Artaphernes, and doing all he could to
+induce the satrap to place Athens in subjection to him, as the tributary
+vassal of King Darius. When the Athenians heard of his practices, they
+sent envoys to Sardis to remonstrate with the Persians against taking up
+the quarrel of the Athenian refugees. But Artaphernes gave them in reply
+a menacing command to receive Hippias back again if they looked for
+safety. The Athenians were resolved not to purchase safety at such a
+price; and after rejecting the satrap's terms, they considered that they
+and the Persians were declared enemies. At this very crisis the Ionian
+Greeks implored the assistance of their European brethren, to enable
+them to recover their independence from Persia. Athens, and the city of
+Eretria in Euboea, alone consented. Twenty Athenian galleys, and five
+Eretrian, crossed the AEgean Sea; and by a bold and sudden march upon
+Sardis the Athenians and their allies succeeded in capturing the capital
+city of the haughty satrap, who had recently menaced them with servitude
+or destruction. The Persian forces were soon rallied, and the Greeks
+were compelled to retire. They were pursued, and defeated on their
+return to the coast, and Athens took no further part in the Ionian war.
+But the insult that she had put upon the Persian power was speedily made
+known throughout that empire, and was never to be forgiven or forgotten.
+In the emphatic simplicity of the narrative of Herodotus, the wrath of
+the Great King is thus described:--"Now when it was told to King Darius
+that Sardis had been taken and burnt by the Athenians and Ionians, he
+took small heed of the Ionians, well knowing who they were, and that
+their revolt would soon be put down: but he asked who, and what manner
+of men, the Athenians were. And when he had been told, he called for his
+bow; and, having taken it, and placed an arrow on the string, he let the
+arrow fly towards heaven; and as he shot it into the air, he said, 'O
+Supreme God! grant me that I may avenge myself on the Athenians.' And
+when he had said this, he appointed one of his servants to say to him
+every day as he sat at meat, 'Sire, remember the Athenians.'"
+
+Some years were occupied in the complete reduction of Ionia. But when
+this was effected, Darius ordered his victorious forces to proceed to
+punish Athens and Eretria, and to conquer European Greece. The first
+armament sent for this purpose was shattered by shipwreck, and nearly
+destroyed off Mount Athos, But the purpose of King Darius was not
+easily shaken. A larger army was ordered to be collected in Cilicia; and
+requisitions were sent to all the maritime cities of the Persian empire
+for ships of war, and for transports of sufficient size for carrying
+cavalry as well as infantry across the AEgean. While these preparations
+were being made, Darius sent heralds round to the Grecian cities
+demanding their submission to Persia. It was proclaimed in the
+market-place of each little Hellenic state (some with territories not
+larger than the Isle of Wight), that King Darius, the lord of all men,
+from the rising to the setting sun, required earth and water to be
+delivered to his heralds, as a symbolical acknowledgment that he was
+head and master of the country. [Aeschines in Ctes. p. 622, ed. Reiske.
+Mitford, vol. i. p. 485. AEschines is speaking of Xerxes, but Mitford
+is probably right in considering it as the style of the Persian kings
+in their proclamations. In one of the inscriptions at Persepolis, Darius
+terms himself "Darius the great king, king of kings, the king of the
+many peopled countries, the supporter also of this great world." In
+another, he styles himself "the king of all inhabited countries."
+(See "Asiatic Journal" vol. X pp. 287 and 292, and Major Rawlinson's
+Comments.)] Terror-stricken at the power of Persia and at the severe
+punishment that had recently been inflicted on the refractory Ionians,
+many of the continental Greeks and nearly all the islanders submitted,
+and gave the required tokens of vassalage. At Sparta and Athens an
+indignant refusal was returned: a refusal which was disgraced by outrage
+and violence against the persons of the Asiatic heralds.
+
+Fresh fuel was thus added to the anger of Darius against Athens, and the
+Persian preparations went on with renewed vigour. In the summer of 490
+B.C., the army destined for the invasion was assembled in the Aleian
+plain of Cilicia, near the sea. A fleet of six hundred galleys and
+numerous transports was collected on the coast for the embarkation
+of troops, horse as well as foot. A Median general named Datis, and
+Artaphernes, the son of the satrap of Sardis, and who was also nephew of
+Darius, were placed in titular joint command of the expedition. That the
+real supreme authority was given to Datis alone is probable, from the
+way in which the Greek writers speak of him. We know no details of the
+previous career of this officer; but there is every reason to believe
+that his abilities and bravery had been proved by experience, or his
+Median birth would have prevented his being placed in high command by
+Darius. He appears to have been the first Mede who was thus trusted by
+the Persian kings after the overthrow of the conspiracy of the Median
+Magi against the Persians immediately before Darius obtained the throne.
+Datis received instructions to complete the subjugation of Greece, and
+especial orders were given him with regard to Eretria and Athens. He
+was to take these two cities; and he was to lead the inhabitants away
+captive, and bring them as slaves into the presence of the Great King.
+
+Datis embarked his forces in the fleet that awaited them; and coasting
+along the shores of Asia Minor till he was off Samos, he thence sailed
+due westward through the AEgean Sea for Greece, taking the islands in
+his way. The Naxians had, ten years before, successfully stood a siege
+against a Persian armament, but they now were too terrified to offer any
+resistance, and fled to the mountain-tops, while the enemy burnt their
+town and laid waste their lands. Thence Datis, compelling the Greek
+islanders to join him with their ships and men, sailed onward to the
+coast of Euboea. The little town of Carystus essayed resistance, but was
+quickly overpowered. He next attacked Eretria. The Athenians sent four
+thousand men to its aid. But treachery was at work among the Eretrians;
+and the Athenian force received timely warning from one of the leading
+men of the city to retire to aid in saving their own country, instead
+of remaining to share in the inevitable destruction of Eretria. Left to
+themselves, the Eretrians repulsed the assaults of the Persians against
+their walls for six days; on the seventh day they were betrayed by two
+of their chiefs and the Persians occupied the city. The temples were
+burnt in revenge for the burning of Sardis, and the inhabitants were
+bound and placed as prisoners in the neighbouring islet of AEgylia,
+to wait there till Datis should bring the Athenians to join them in
+captivity, when both populations were to be led into Upper Asia, there
+to learn their doom from the lips of King Darius himself.
+
+Flushed with success, and with half his mission thus accomplished, Datis
+reimbarked his troops, and crossing the little channel that separates
+Euboea from the mainland, he encamped his troops on the Attic coast
+at Marathon, drawing up his galleys on the shelving beach, as was the
+custom with the navies of antiquity. The conquered islands behind him
+served as places of deposit for his provisions and military stores. His
+position at Marathon seemed to him in every respect advantageous; and
+the level nature of the ground on which he camped was favourable for
+the employment of his cavalry, if the Athenians should venture to
+engage him. Hippias, who accompanied him, and acted as the guide of the
+invaders, had pointed out Marathon as the best place for a landing,
+for this very reason. Probably Hippias was also influenced by the
+recollection, that forty-seven years previously he, with his father
+Pisistratus, had crossed with an army from Eretria to Marathon, and
+had won an easy victory over their Athenian enemies on that very plain,
+which had restored them to tyrannic power. The omen seemed cheering.
+The place was the same; but Hippias soon learned to his cost how great a
+change had come over the spirit of the Athenians.
+
+But though "the fierce democracy" of Athens was zealous and true against
+foreign invader and domestic tyrant, a faction existed in Athens, as
+at Eretria, of men willing to purchase a party triumph over their
+fellow-citizens at the price of their country's ruin. Communications
+were opened between these men and the Persian camp, which would have led
+to a catastrophe like that of Eretria, if Miltiades had not resolved,
+and had not persuaded his colleagues to resolve, on fighting at all
+hazards.
+
+When Miltiades arrayed his men for action, he staked on the arbitrement
+of one battle not only the fate of Athens, but that of all Greece; for
+if Athens had fallen, no other Greek state, except Lacedaemon, would
+have had the courage to resist; and the Lacedaemonians, though they
+would probably have died in their ranks to the last man, never could
+have successfully resisted the victorious Persians, and the numerous
+Greek troops, which would have soon marched under the Persian satraps,
+had they prevailed over Athens.
+
+Nor was there any power to the westward of Greece that could have
+offered an effectual opposition to Persia, had she once conquered
+Greece, and made that country a basis for future military operations.
+Rome was at this time in her season of utmost weakness. Her dynasty of
+powerful Etruscan kings had been driven out, and her infant commonwealth
+was reeling under the attacks of the Etruscans and Volscians from
+without, and the fierce dissensions between the patricians and plebeians
+within. Etruria, with her Lucumos and serfs, was no match for Persia.
+Samnium had not grown into the might which she afterwards put forth: nor
+could the Greek colonies in South Italy and Sicily hope to survive when
+their parent states had perished. Carthage had escaped the Persian
+yoke in the time of Cambyses, through the reluctance of the Phoenician
+mariners to serve against their kinsmen. But such forbearance could not
+long have been relied on, and the future rival of Rome would have become
+as submissive a minister of the Persian power as were the Phoenician
+cities themselves. If we turn to Spain, or if we pass the great mountain
+chain which, prolonged through the Pyrenees, the Cevennes, the Alps, and
+the Balkan, divides Northern from Southern Europe, we shall find nothing
+at that period but mere savage Finns, Celts, Slaves, and Teutons. Had
+Persia beaten Athens at Marathon, she could have found no obstacle to
+prevent Darius, the chosen servant of Ormuzd, from advancing his sway
+over all the known Western races of mankind. The infant energies of
+Europe would have been trodden out beneath universal conquest; and the
+history of the world, like the history of Asia, would have become a mere
+record of the rise and fall of despotic dynasties, of the incursions
+of barbarous hordes, and of the mental and political prostration of
+millions beneath the diadem, the tiara, and the sword.
+
+Great as the preponderance of the Persian over the Athenian power
+at that crisis seems to have been, it would be unjust to impute wild
+rashness to the policy of Miltiades, and those who voted with him in the
+Athenian council of war, or to look on the after-current of events as
+the mere result of successful indiscretion, as before has been remarked,
+Miltiades, whilst prince of the Chersonese, had seen service in the
+Persian armies; and he knew by personal observation how many elements of
+weakness lurked beneath their imposing aspect of strength. He knew that
+the bulk of their troops no longer consisted of the hardy shepherds and
+mountaineers from Persia Proper and Kurdistan, who won Cyrus's battles:
+but that unwilling contingents from conquered nations now largely filled
+up the Persian muster rolls, fighting more from compulsion than from
+any zeal in the cause of their masters. He had also the sagacity and
+the spirit to appreciate the superiority of the Greek armour and
+organization over the Asiatic, notwithstanding former reverses. Above
+all, he felt and worthily trusted the enthusiasm of the men under his
+command.
+
+The Athenians, whom he led, had proved by their new-born valour in
+recent wars against the neighbouring states, that "Liberty and Equality
+of civic rights are brave spirit-stirring things: and they who, while
+under the yoke of a despot, had been no better men of war than any of
+their neighbours, as soon as they were free, became the foremost men of
+all; for each felt that in fighting for a free commonwealth, he fought
+for himself, and, whatever he took in hand, he was zealous to do the
+work thoroughly." So the nearly contemporaneous historian describes the
+change of spirit that was seen in the Athenians after their tyrants were
+expelled; [Herod. lib. v. c. 87.] and Miltiades knew that in leading
+them against the invading army, where they had Hippias, the foe they
+most hated, before them, he was bringing into battle no ordinary men,
+and could calculate on no ordinary heroism. As for traitors, he was
+sure, that whatever treachery might lurk among some of the higher-born
+and wealthier Athenians, the rank and file whom he commanded were ready
+to do their utmost in his and their own cause. With regard to future
+attacks from Asia, he might reasonably hope that one victory would
+inspirit all Greece to combine against common foe; and that the latent
+seeds of revolt and disunion in the Persian empire would soon burst
+forth and paralyse its energies, so as to leave Greek independence
+secure.
+
+With these hopes and risks, Miltiades, on the afternoon of a September
+day, 490 B.C., gave the word for the Athenian army to prepare for
+battle. There were many local associations connected with those mountain
+heights, which were calculated powerfully to excite the spirits of the
+men, and of which the commanders well knew how to avail themselves in
+their exhortations to their troops before the encounter. Marathon itself
+was a region sacred to; Hercules. Close to them was the fountain of
+Macaria, who had in days of yore devoted herself to death for the
+liberty of her people. The very plain on which they were to fight was
+the scene of the exploits of their national hero, Theseus; and there,
+too, as old legends told, the Athenians and the Heraclidae had routed
+the invader, Eurystheus. These traditions were not mere cloudy myths, or
+idle fictions, but matters of implicit earnest faith to the men of that
+day: and many a fervent prayer arose from the Athenian ranks to the
+heroic spirits who while on earth had striven and suffered on that very
+spot, and who were believed to be now heavenly powers, looking down with
+interest on their still beloved country, and capable of interposing with
+superhuman aid in its behalf.
+
+According to old national custom, the warriors of each tribe were
+arrayed together; neighbour thus fighting by the side of neighbour,
+friend by friend, and the spirit of emulation and the consciousness of
+responsibility excited to the very utmost. The War-Ruler, Callimachus,
+had the leading of the right wing; the Plataeans formed the extreme
+left; and Themistocles and Aristides commanded the centre. The line
+consisted of the heavy-armed spearmen only. For the Greeks (until the
+time of Iphicrates) took little or no account of light-armed soldiers in
+a pitched battle, using them only in skirmishes or for the pursuit of a
+defeated enemy. The panoply of the regular infantry consisted of a long
+spear, of a shield, helmet, breast-plate, greaves, and short sword. Thus
+equipped, they usually advanced slowly and steadily into action in an
+uniform phalanx of about eight spears deep. But the military genius
+of Miltiades led him to deviate on this occasion from the commonplace
+tactics of his countrymen. It was essential for him to extend his line
+so as to cover all the practicable ground, and to secure himself from
+being outflanked and charged in the rear by the Persian horse. This
+extension involved the weakening of his line. Instead of an uniform
+reduction of its strength, he determined on detaching principally from
+his centre, which, from the nature of the ground, would have the best
+opportunities for rallying if broken; and on strengthening his wings, so
+as to insure advantage at those points; and he trusted to his own skill,
+and to his soldiers' discipline, for the improvement of that advantage
+into decisive victory.
+
+[It is remarkable that there is no other instance of a Greek general
+deviating from the ordinary mode of bringing a phalanx of spearmen into
+action, until the battles of Leuctra and Mantineia, more than a century
+after Marathon, when Epaminondas introduced the tactics (which Alexander
+the Great in ancient times, and Frederic the Great in modern times, made
+so famous) of concentrating an overpowering force on some decisive point
+of the enemy's line, while he kept back, or, in military phrase, refused
+the weaker part of his own.]
+
+In this order, and availing himself probably of the inequalities of the
+ground, so as to conceal his preparations from the enemy till the last
+possible moment, Miltiades drew up the eleven thousand infantry whose
+spears were to decide this crisis in the struggle between the European
+and the Asiatic worlds. The sacrifices, by which the favour of Heaven
+was sought, and its will consulted, were announced to show propitious
+omens. The trumpet sounded for action, and, chanting the hymn of battle,
+the little army bore down upon the host of the foe. Then, too, along the
+mountain slopes of Marathon must have resounded the mutual exhortation
+which AEschylus, who fought in both battles, tells us was afterwards
+heard over the waves of Salamis,--"On, sons of the Greeks! Strike for
+the freedom of your country! strike for the freedom of your children
+and of your wives--for the shrines of your fathers' gods, and for the
+sepulchres of your sires. All--all are now staked upon the strife!"
+
+Instead of advancing at the usual slow pace of the phalanx, Miltiades
+brought his men on at a run. They were all trained in the exercises of
+the palaestra, so that there was no fear of their ending the charge in
+breathless exhaustion: and it was of the deepest importance for him
+to traverse as rapidly as possible the space of about a mile of level
+ground, that lay between the mountain foot and the Persian outposts, and
+so to get his troops into close action before the Asiatic cavalry could
+mount, form, and manoeuvre against him, or their archers keep him long
+under bow-shot, and before the enemy's generals could fairly deploy
+their masses.
+
+"When the Persians," says Herodotus, "saw the Athenians running down on
+them, without horse or bowmen, and scanty in numbers, they thought them
+a set of madmen rushing upon certain destruction." They began, however,
+to prepare to receive them and the Eastern chiefs arrayed, as quickly
+as time and place allowed, the varied races who served in their motley
+ranks. Mountaineers from Hyrcania and Affghanistan, wild horsemen from
+the steppes of Khorassan, the black archers of Ethiopia, swordsmen from
+the banks of the Indus, the Oxus, the Euphrates, and the Nile, made
+ready against the enemies of the Great King. But no national cause
+inspired them, except the division of native Persians; and in the large
+host there was no uniformity of language, creed, race, or military
+system. Still, among them there were many gallant men, under a veteran
+general; they were familiarized with victory; and in contemptuous
+confidence their infantry, which alone had time to form, awaited
+the Athenian charge. On came the Greeks, with one unwavering line of
+levelled spears, against which the light targets, the short lances and
+scymetars of the Orientals offered weak defence. The front rank of the
+Asiatics must have gone down to a man at the first shock. Still they
+recoiled not, but strove by individual gallantry, and by the weight of
+numbers, to make up for the disadvantages of weapons and tactics, and
+to bear back the shallow line of the Europeans. In the centre, where the
+native Persians and the Sacae fought, they succeeded in breaking through
+the weaker part of the Athenian phalanx; and the tribes led by Aristides
+and Themistocles were, after a brave resistance, driven back over
+the plain, and chased by the Persians up the valley towards the inner
+country. There the nature of the ground gave the opportunity of rallying
+and renewing the struggle: and meanwhile, the Greek wings, where
+Miltiades had concentrated his chief strength, had routed the Asiatics
+opposed to them; and the Athenian and Plataean officers, instead of
+pursuing the fugitives, kept their troops well in hand, and wheeling
+round they formed the two wings together. Miltiades instantly led them
+against the Persian centre, which had hitherto been triumphant, but
+which now fell back, and prepared to encounter these new and unexpected
+assailants. Aristides and Themistocles renewed the fight with their
+re-organized troops, and the full force of the Greeks was brought into
+close action with the Persian and Sacian divisions of the enemy. Datis's
+veterans strove hard to keep their ground, and evening [ARISTOPH. Vesvoe
+1085.] was approaching before the stern encounter was decided.
+
+But the Persians, with their slight wicker shields, destitute of
+body-armour, and never taught by training to keep the even front and
+act with the regular movement of the Greek infantry, fought at grievous
+disadvantage with their shorter and feebler weapons against the compact
+array of well-armed Athenian and Plataean spearmen, all perfectly
+drilled to perform each necessary evolution in concert, and to preserve
+an uniform and unwavering line in battle. In personal courage and in
+bodily activity the Persians were not inferior to their adversaries.
+Their spirits were not yet cowed by the recollection of former defeats;
+and they lavished their lives freely, rather than forfeit the fame which
+they had won by so many victories. While their rear ranks poured
+an incessant shower of arrows over the heads of their comrades, the
+foremost Persians kept rushing forward, sometimes singly, sometimes
+in desperate groups of twelve or ten upon the projecting spears of the
+Greeks, striving to force a lane into the phalanx, and to bring their
+scimetars and daggers into play. But the Greeks felt their superiority,
+and though the fatigue of the long-continued action told heavily on
+their inferior numbers, the sight of the carnage that they dealt amongst
+their assailants nerved them to fight still more fiercely on.
+
+[See the description, in the 62nd section of the ninth book of
+Herodotus, of the gallantry shown by the Persian infantry against the
+Lacedaemonians at Plataea. We have no similar detail of the fight at
+Marathon, but we know that it was long and obstinately contested (see
+the 113th section of the sixth book of Herodotus, and the lines from the
+"Vespae" already quoted), and the spirit of the Persians must have been
+even higher at Marathon than at Plataea. In both battles it was only the
+true Persians and the Sacae who showed this valour; the other Asiatics
+fled like sheep.]
+
+At last the previously unvanquished lords of Asia turned their backs and
+fled, and the Greeks followed, striking them down, to the water's edge,
+where the invaders were now hastily launching their galleys, and seeking
+to embark and fly. Flushed with success, the Athenians dashed at the
+fleet.
+
+
+ [The flying Mede, his shaftless broken bow;
+ The fiery Greek, his red pursuing spear;
+ Mountains above, Earth's, Ocean's plain below,
+ Death in the front, Destruction in the rear!
+ Such was the scene.--Byron's CHILDE HARROLD.]
+
+
+"Bring fire, bring fire," was their cry; and they began to lay hold of
+the ships. But here the Asiatics resisted desperately, and the principal
+loss sustained by the Greeks was in the assault on the fleet. Here
+fell the brave War-Ruler Callimachus, the general Stesilaus, and other
+Athenians of note. Conspicuous among them was Cynaegeirus, the brother
+of the tragic poet AEschylus. He had grasped the ornamental work on
+the stern of one of the galleys, and had his hand struck off by an axe.
+Seven galleys were captured; but the Persians succeeded in saving the
+rest. They pushed off from the fatal shore: but even here the skill of
+Datis did not desert him, and he sailed round to the western coast of
+Attica, in hopes to find the city unprotected, and to gain possession
+of it from some of the partisans of Hippias. Miltiades, however, saw
+and counteracted his manoeuvre. Leaving Aristides, and the troops of his
+tribe, to guard the spoil and the slain, the Athenian commander led
+his conquering army by a rapid night-march back across the country to
+Athens. And when the Persian fleet had doubled the Cape of Sunium and
+sailed up to the Athenian harbour in the morning, Datis saw arrayed on
+the heights above the city the troops before whom his men had fled on
+the preceding evening. All hope of further conquest in Europe for the
+time was abandoned, and the baffled armada returned to the Asiatic
+coasts.
+
+After the battle had been fought, but while the dead bodies were yet on
+the ground, the promised reinforcement from Sparta arrived. Two thousand
+Lacedaemonian spearmen, starting immediately after the full moon, had
+marched the hundred and fifty miles between Athens and Sparta in the
+wonderfully short time of three days. Though too late to share in
+the glory of the action, they requested to be allowed to march to the
+battle-field to behold the Medes. They proceeded thither, gazed on the
+dead bodies of the invaders, and then, praising the Athenians and what
+they had done, they returned to Lacedaemon.
+
+The number of the Persian dead was six thousand four hundred; of the
+Athenians, a hundred and ninety-two. The number of Plataeans who fell is
+not mentioned, but as they fought in the part of the army which was not
+broken, it cannot have been large.
+
+The apparent disproportion between the losses of the two armies is not
+surprising, when we remember the armour of the Greek spearmen, and the
+impossibility of heavy slaughter being inflicted by sword or lance on
+troops so armed, as long as they kept firm in their ranks. [Mitford
+well refers to Crecy, Poictiers, and Agincourt, as instances of similar
+disparity of loss between the conquerors and the conquered.]
+
+The Athenian slain were buried on the field of battle. This was contrary
+to the usual custom, according to which the bones of all who fell
+fighting for their country in each year were deposited in a public
+sepulchre in the suburb of Athens called the Cerameicus. But it was felt
+that a distinction ought to be made in the funeral honours paid to the
+men of Marathon, even as their merit had been distinguished over that of
+all other Athenians. A lofty mound was raised on the plain of Marathon,
+beneath which the remains of the men of Athens who fell in the battle
+were deposited. Ten columns were erected on the spot, one for each of
+the Athenian tribes; and on the monumental column of each tribe were
+graven the names of those of its members whose glory it was to have
+fallen in the great battle of liberation. The antiquary Pausanias read
+those names there six hundred years after the time when they were first
+graven. The columns have long perished, but the mound still marks the
+spot where the noblest heroes of antiquity, the MARATHONOMAKHOI repose.
+[Pausanias states, with implicit belief, that the battlefield was
+haunted at night by supernatural beings, and that the noise of
+combatants and the snorting of horses were heard to resound on it. The
+superstition has survived the change of creeds, and the shepherds of the
+neighbourhood still believe that spectral warriors contend on the
+plain at midnight, and they say that they have heard the shouts of the
+combatants and the neighing of the steeds. See Grote and Thirlwall.]
+
+A separate tumulus was raised over the bodies of the slain Plataeans,
+and another over the light-armed slaves who had taken part and had
+fallen in the battle. [It is probable that the Greek light-armed
+irregulars were active in the attack on the Persian ships and it was in
+this attack that the Greeks suffered their principal loss.] There was
+also a distinct sepulchral monument to the general to whose genius
+the victory was mainly due. Miltiades did not live long after his
+achievement at Marathon, but he lived long enough to experience a
+lamentable reverse of his popularity and good fortune. As soon as the
+Persians had quitted the western coasts of the AEgean, he proposed to
+an assembly of the Athenian people that they should fit out seventy
+galleys, with a proportionate force of soldiers and military stores,
+and place them at his disposal; not telling them whither he meant to
+proceed, but promising them that if they would equip the force he asked
+for, and give him discretionary powers, he would lead it to a land where
+there was gold in abundance to be won with ease. The Greeks of that time
+believed in the existence of Eastern realms teeming with gold, as firmly
+as the Europeans of the sixteenth century believed in Eldorado of the
+West. The Athenians probably thought that the recent victor of Marathon,
+and former officer of Darius, was about to guide them on a secret
+expedition against some wealthy and unprotected cities of treasure in
+the Persian dominions. The armament was voted and equipped, and sailed
+eastward from Attica, no one but Miltiades knowing its destination,
+until the Greek isle of Paros was reached, when his true object
+appeared. In former years, while connected with the Persians as prince
+of the Chersonese, Miltiades had been involved in a quarrel with one of
+the leading men among the Parians, who had injured his credit and caused
+some slights to be put upon him at the court of the Persian satrap,
+Hydarnes. The feud had ever since rankled in the heart of the Athenian
+chief, and he now attacked Paros for the sake of avenging himself on his
+ancient enemy. His pretext, as general of the Athenians, was, that the
+Parians had aided the armament of Datis with a war-galley. The Parians
+pretended to treat about terms of surrender, but used the time which
+they thus gained in repairing the defective parts of the fortifications
+of their city; and they then set the Athenians at defiance. So far, says
+Herodotus, the accounts of all the Greeks agree. But the Parians, in
+after years, told also a wild legend, how a captive priestess of a
+Parian temple of the Deities of the Earth promised Miltiades to give him
+the means of capturing Paros: how, at her bidding, the Athenian general
+went alone at night and forced his way into a holy shrine, near the city
+gate, but with what purpose it was not known: how a supernatural awe
+came over him, and in his flight he fell and fractured his leg: how
+an oracle afterwards forbad the Parians to punish the sacrilegious and
+traitorous priestess, "because it was fated that Miltiades should come
+to an ill end, and she was only the instrument to lead him to evil."
+Such was the tale that Herodotus heard at Paros. Certain it was that
+Miltiades either dislocated or broke his leg during an unsuccessful
+siege of that city, and returned home in evil plight with his baffled
+and defeated forces.
+
+The indignation of the Athenians was proportionate to the hope and
+excitement which his promises had raised. Xanthippus, the head of one
+of the first families in Athens, indicted him before the supreme popular
+tribunal for the capital offence of having deceived the people.
+His guilt was undeniable, and the Athenians passed their verdict
+accordingly. But the recollections of Lemnos and Marathon, and the sight
+of the fallen general who lay stretched on a couch before them, pleaded
+successfully in mitigation of punishment, and the sentence was commuted
+from death to a fine of fifty talents. This was paid by his son, the
+afterwards illustrious Cimon, Miltiades dying, soon after the trial, of
+the injury which he had received at Paros.
+
+[The common-place calumnies against the Athenians respecting Miltiades
+have been well answered by Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton in his "Rise and
+Fall of Athens," and Bishop Thirlwall in the second volume of his
+"History of Greece;" but they have received their most complete
+refutation from Mr. Grote in the fourth volume of his History, p.490 et
+seq., and notes. I quite concur with him that, "looking to the practice
+of the Athenian dicastery in criminal cases, fifty talents was the minor
+penalty actually proposed by the defenders of Miltiades themselves as a
+substitute for the punishment of death. In those penal cases at Athens,
+where the punishment was not fixed beforehand by the terms of the law,
+if the person accused was found guilty, it was customary to submit to
+the jurors subsequently and separately, the question as to the amount
+of punishment. First, the accuser named the penalty which he thought
+suitable; next, the accused person was called upon to name an amount
+of penalty for himself, and the jurors were constrained to take their
+choice between these two; no third gradation of penalty being admissible
+for consideration. Of course, under such circumstances, it was the
+interest of the accused party to name, even in his own case, some real
+and serious penalty, something which the jurors might be likely to deem
+not wholly inadequate to his crime just proved; for if he proposed
+some penalty only trifling, he drove them to far the heavier sentence
+recommended by his opponent." The stories of Miltiades having been cast
+into prison and died there, and of his having been saved from death only
+by the interposition of the Prytanis of the day, are, I think, rightly
+rejected by Mr. Grote as the fictions of after ages. The silence of
+Herodotus respecting them is decisive. It is true that Plato, in the
+Gorgias, says that the Athenians passed a vote to throw Miltiades into
+the Barathrum, and speaks of the interposition of the Prytanis in his
+favour; but it is to be remembered that Plato, with all his transcendent
+genius, was (as Niebuhr has termed him) a very indifferent patriot, who
+loved to blacken the character of his country's democratic institutions;
+and if the fact was that the Prytanis, at the trial of Miltiades,
+opposed the vote of capital punishment, and spoke in favour of the
+milder sentence, Plato (in a passage written to show the misfortunes
+that befell Athenian statesmen) would readily exaggerate this fact into
+the story that appears in his text.]
+
+The melancholy end of Miltiades, after his elevation to such a height
+of power and glory, must often have been recalled to the mind of the
+ancient Greeks by the sight of one, in particular, of the memorials of
+the great battle which he won. This was the remarkable statue (minutely
+described by Pausanias) which the Athenians, in the time of Pericles,
+caused to be hewn out of a huge block of marble, which, it was believed,
+had been provided by Datis to form a trophy of the anticipated victory
+of the Persians. Phidias fashioned out of this a colossal image of the
+goddess Nemesis, the deity whose peculiar function was to visit the
+exuberant prosperity both of nations and individuals with sudden and
+awful reverses. This statue was placed in a temple of the goddess at
+Rhamnus, about eight miles from Marathon, Athens herself contained
+numerous memorials of her primary great victory. Panenus, the cousin
+of Phidias, represented it in fresco on the walls of the painted porch;
+and, centuries afterwards, the figures of Miltiades and Callimachus at
+the head of the Athenians were conspicuous in the fresco. The tutelary
+deities were exhibited taking part in the fray. In the back-ground were
+seen the Phoenician galleys; and nearer to the spectator, the Athenians
+and the Plataeans (distinguished by their leathern helmets) were chasing
+routed Asiatics into the marshes and the sea. The battle was sculptured
+also on the Temple of Victory in the Acropolis; and even now there may
+be traced on the frieze the figures of the Persian combatants with their
+lunar shields, their bows and quivers, their curved scimetars, their
+loose trowsers, and Phrygian tiaras. [Wordsworth's "Greece," p. 115.]
+
+These and other memorials of Marathon were the produce of the meridian
+age of Athenian intellectual splendour--of the age of Phidias and
+Pericles. For it was not merely by the generation of men whom the battle
+liberated from Hippias and the Medes, that the transcendent importance
+of their victory was gratefully recognised. Through the whole epoch
+of her prosperity, through the long Olympiads of her decay, through
+centuries after her fall, Athens looked back on the day of Marathon as
+the brightest of her national existence.
+
+By a natural blending of patriotic pride with grateful piety, the very
+spirits of the Athenians who fell at Marathon were deified by their
+countrymen. The inhabitants of the districts of Marathon paid religious
+rites to them; and orators solemnly invoked them in their most
+impassioned adjurations before the assembled men of Athens. "Nothing was
+omitted that could keep alive the remembrance of a deed which had first
+taught the Athenian people to know its own strength, by measuring it
+with the power which had subdued the greater part of the known world.
+The consciousness thus awakened fixed its character, its station, and
+its destiny; it was the spring of its later great actions and ambitious
+enterprises." [Thirlwall.]
+
+It was not indeed by one defeat, however signal, that the pride of
+Persia could be broken, and her dreams of universal empire be dispelled.
+Ten years afterwards she renewed her attempts upon Europe on a grander
+scale of enterprise, and was repulsed by Greece with greater and
+reiterated loss. Larger forces and heavier slaughter than had been
+seen at Marathon signalised the conflicts of Greeks and Persians
+at Artemisium, Salamis, Plataea, and the Eurymedon. But mighty and
+momentous as these battles were, they rank not with Marathon in
+importance. They originated no new impulse. They turned back no current
+of fate. They were merely confirmatory of the already existing bias
+which Marathon had created. The day of Marathon is the critical epoch in
+the history of the two nations. It broke for ever the spell of Persian
+invincibility, which had paralysed men's minds. It generated among
+the Greeks the spirit which beat back Xerxes, and afterwards led on
+Xenophon, Agesilaus, and Alexander, in terrible retaliation, through
+their Asiatic campaigns. It secured for mankind the intellectual
+treasures of Athens, the growth of free institutions the liberal
+enlightenment of the Western world, and the gradual ascendency for many
+ages of the great principles of European civilisation.
+
+
+EXPLANATORY REMARKS ON SOME OF THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE BATTLE OF
+MARATHON.
+
+Nothing is said by Herodotus of the Persian cavalry taking any part in
+the battle, although he mentions that Hippias recommended the Persians
+to land at Marathon, because the plain was favourable for cavalry
+evolutions. In the life of Miltiades, which is usually cited as the
+production of Cornelius Nepos, but which I believe to be of no authority
+whatever, it is said that Miltiades protected his flanks from the
+enemy's horse by an abattis of felled trees. While he was on the high
+ground he would not have required this defence; and it is not likely
+that the Persians would have allowed him to erect it on the plain.
+
+Bishop Thirlwall calls our attention to a passage in Suidas, where
+the proverb KHORIS HIPPEIS is said to have originated from some Ionian
+Greeks, who were serving compulsorily in the army of Datis, contriving
+to inform Miltiades that the Persian cavalry had gone away, whereupon
+Miltiades immediately joined battle and gained the victory. There may
+probably be a gleam of truth in this legend. If Datis's cavalry was
+numerous, as the abundant pastures of Euboea were close at hand, the
+Persian general, when he thought, from the inaction of his enemy, that
+they did not mean to come down from the heights and give battle, might
+naturally send the larger part of his horse back across the channel to
+the neighbourhood of Eretria, where he had already left a detachment,
+and where his military stores must have been deposited. The knowledge of
+such a movement would of course confirm Miltiades in his resolution to
+bring on a speedy engagement.
+
+But, in truth, whatever amount of cavalry we suppose Datis to have
+had with him on the day of Marathon, their inaction in the battle is
+intelligible, if we believe the attack of the Athenian spearmen to have
+been as sudden as it was rapid. The Persian horse-soldier, on an alarm
+being given, had to take the shackles off his horse, to strap the saddle
+on, and bridle him, besides equipping himself (see Xenoph. Anab. lib.iii
+c.4); and when each individual horseman was ready, the line had to be
+formed; and the time that it takes to form the Oriental cavalry in line
+for a charge, has, in all ages, been observed by Europeans.
+
+The wet state of the marshes at each end of the plain, in the time of
+year when the battle was fought, has been adverted to by Mr Wordsworth;
+and this would hinder the Persian general from arranging and employing
+his horsemen on his extreme wings, while it also enabled the Greeks, as
+they came forward, to occupy the whole breadth of the practicable ground
+with an unbroken line of levelled spears, against which, if any Persian
+horse advanced they would be driven back in confusion upon their own
+foot.
+
+Even numerous and fully-arrayed bodies of cavalry have been repeatedly
+broken, both in ancient and modern warfare, by resolute charges of
+infantry. For instance, it was by an attack of some picked cohorts that
+Caesar routed the Pompeian cavalry, which had previously defeated his
+own at Pharsalia.
+
+I have represented the battle of Marathon as beginning in the afternoon,
+and ending towards evening. If it had lasted all day, Herodotus would
+have probably mentioned that fact. That it ended towards evening is, I
+think, proved by the line from the "Vespae" which I have already quoted,
+and to which my attention was called by Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton's
+account of the battle. I think that the succeeding lines in
+Aristophanes, also already quoted, justify the description which I have
+given of the rear-ranks of the Persians keeping up a flight of arrows
+over the heads of their comrades against the Greeks.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF MARATHON, B.C. 490, AND THE
+DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE, B.C. 413.
+
+B.C. 490 to 487. All Asia is filled with the preparations made by King
+Darius for a new expedition against Greece. Themistocles persuades the
+Athenians to leave off dividing the proceeds of their silver mines among
+themselves, and to employ the money in strengthening their navy.
+
+487. Egypt revolts from the Persians, and delays the expedition against
+Greece.
+
+485. Darius dies, and Xerxes his son becomes King of Persia in his
+stead.
+
+484 The Persians recover Egypt.
+
+480 Xerxes invades Greece. Indecisive actions between the Persian and
+Greek fleets at Artemisium. Destruction of the three hundred Spartans
+at Thermopyae. The Athenians abandon Attica and go on shipboard. Great
+naval victory of the Greeks at Salamis. Xerxes returns to Asia, leaving
+a chosen army under Mardonius, to carry on the war against the Greeks.
+
+478. Mardonius and his army destroyed by the Greeks at Plataea The
+Greeks land in Asia Minor, and defeat a Persian force at Mycale. In this
+and the following years the Persians lose all their conquests in Europe,
+and many on the coast of Asia.
+
+477. Many of the Greek maritime states take Athens as their leader,
+instead of Sparta.
+
+466. Victories of Cimon over the Persians at the Eurymedon.
+
+464. Revolt of the Helots against Sparta. Third Messenian war.
+
+460. Egypt again revolts against Persia. The Athenians send a powerful
+armament to aid the Egyptians, which, after gaining some successes, is
+destroyed, and Egypt submits. This war lasted six years.
+
+457. Wars in Greece between the Athenian and several Peloponnesian
+states. Immense exertions of Athens at this time. There is an original
+inscription still preserved in the Louvre, which attests the energies of
+Athens at this crisis, when Athens, like England in modern wars, at once
+sought conquests abroad, and repelled enemies at home. At the period we
+now advert to (B.C. 457), an Athenian armament of two hundred galleys
+was engaged in a bold though unsuccessful expedition against Egypt. The
+Athenian crews had landed, had won a battle; they had then re-embarked
+and sailed up the Nile, and were busily besieging the Persian garrison
+in Memphis. As the complement of a trireme galley was at least two
+hundred men, we cannot estimate the forces then employed by Athens
+against Egypt at less than forty thousand men. At the same time she kept
+squadrons on the coasts of Phoenicia and Cyprus, and yet maintained
+a home-fleet that enabled her to defeat her Peloponnesian enemies
+at Cecryphalae and AEgina, capturing in the last engagement seventy
+galleys. This last fact may give us some idea of the strength of the
+Athenian home-fleet that gained the victory; and by adopting the same
+ratio of multiplying whatever number of galleys we suppose to have been
+employed, by two hundred, so as to gain the aggregate number of the
+crews, we may form some estimate of the forces which this little, Greek
+state then kept on foot. Between sixty and seventy thousand men must
+have served in her fleets during that year. Her tenacity of purpose was
+equal to her boldness of enterprise. Sooner than yield or withdraw from
+any of their expeditions the Athenians at this very time, when Corinth
+sent an army to attack their garrison at Megara, did not recall a single
+crew or a single soldier from AEgina or from abroad; but the lads and
+old men, who had been left to guard the city, fought and won a battle
+against these new assailants. The inscription which we have referred to
+is graven on a votive tablet to the memory of the dead, erected in that
+year by the Erecthean tribe, one of the ten into which the Athenians
+were divided. It shows, as Thirlwall has remarked, "that the Athenians
+were conscious of the greatness of their own effort;" and in it this
+little civic community of the ancient world still "records to us with
+emphatic simplicity, that 'its slain fell in Cyprus, in Egypt, in
+Phoenicia, at Haliae, in AEgina, and in Megara, IN THE SAME YEAR.'"
+[Paeans of the Athenian Navy.]
+
+455. A thirty years' truce concluded between Athens and Lacedaemon.
+
+440. The Samians endeavour to throw off the supremacy of Athens. Samos
+completely reduced to subjection. Pericles is now sole director of the
+Athenian councils.
+
+431. Commencement of the great Peloponnesian war, in which Sparta,
+at the head of nearly all the Peloponnesian states, and aided by the
+Boeotians and some of the other Greeks beyond the Isthmus, endeavours
+to reduce the power of Athens, and to restore independence to the
+Greek maritime states who were the subject allies of Athens. At the
+commencement of the war the Peloponnesian armies repeatedly invade and
+ravage Attica, but Athens herself is impregnable, and her fleets secure
+her the dominion of the sea.
+
+430. Athens visited by a pestilence, which sweeps off large numbers of
+her population.
+
+426. The Athenians gain great advantages over the Spartans at
+Sphacteria, and by occupying Cythera; but they suffer a severe defeat
+in Boeotia, and the Spartan general Brasidas, leads an expedition to
+the Thracian coasts, and conquers many of the most valuable Athenian
+possessions in those regions.
+
+421. Nominal truce for thirty years between Athens and Sparta, but
+hostilities continue on the Thracian coast and in other quarters.
+
+415. The Athenians send an expedition to conquer Sicily.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. -- DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE, B.C.413.
+
+
+ "The Romans knew not, and could not know, how deeply the
+ greatness of their own posterity, and the fate of the whole
+ Western world, were involved in the destruction of the fleet of
+ Athens in the harbour of Syracuse. Had that great expedition
+ proved victorious, the energies of Greece during the next
+ eventful century would have found their field in the West no less
+ than in the East; Greece, and not Rome, might have conquered
+ Carthage; Greek instead of Latin might have been at this day the
+ principal element of the language of Spain, of France, and of
+ Italy; and the laws of Athens, rather than of Rome, might be the
+ foundation of the law of the civilized world."--ARNOLD.
+
+ "The great expedition to Sicily, one of the most decisive events in
+ the history of the world."--NIEBUHR.
+
+
+Few cities have undergone more memorable sieges during ancient and
+mediaeval times, than has the city of Syracuse. Athenian, Carthaginian,
+Roman, Vandal, Byzantine, Saracen, and Norman, have in turns beleaguered
+her walls; and the resistance which she successfully opposed to some
+of her early assailants was of the deepest importance, not only to the
+fortunes of the generations then in being, but to all the subsequent
+current of human events. To adopt the eloquent expressions of Arnold
+respecting the check which she gave to the Carthaginian arms, "Syracuse
+was a breakwater, which God's providence raised up to protect the yet
+immature strength of Rome." And her triumphant repulse of the great
+Athenian expedition against her was of even more wide-spread and
+enduring importance. It forms a decisive epoch in the strife
+for universal empire, in which all the great states of antiquity
+successively engaged and failed.
+
+The present city of Syracuse is a place of little or no military
+strength, as the fire of artillery from the neighbouring heights would
+almost completely command it. But in ancient warfare its position, and
+the care bestowed on its walls, rendered it formidably strong against
+the means of offence which then were employed by besieging armies.
+
+The ancient city, in the time of the Peloponnesian war, was chiefly
+built on the knob of land which projects into the sea on the eastern
+coast of Sicily, between two bays; one of which, to the north, was
+called the bay of Thapsus, while the southern one formed the great
+harbour of the city of Syracuse itself. A small island, or peninsula
+(for such it soon was rendered), lies at the south-eastern extremity of
+this knob of land, stretching almost entirely across the mouth of
+the great harbour, and rendering it nearly land-locked. This island
+comprised the original settlement of the first Greek colonists from
+Corinth, who founded Syracuse two thousand five hundred years ago; and
+the modern city has shrunk again into these primary limits. But, in the
+fifth century before our era, the growing wealth and population of the
+Syracusans had led them to occupy and include within their city walls
+portion after portion of the mainland lying next to the little isle; so
+that at the time of the Athenian expedition the seaward part of the land
+between the two bays already spoken of was built over, and fortified
+from bay to bay; constituting the larger part of Syracuse.
+
+The landward wall, therefore, of the city traversed this knob of land,
+which continues to slope upwards from the sea, and which to the west of
+the old fortifications (that is, towards the interior of Sicily)
+rises rapidly for a mile or two, but diminishes in width, and finally
+terminates in a long narrow ridge, between which and Mount Hybla a
+succession of chasms and uneven low ground extend. On each flank of
+this ridge the descent is steep and precipitous from its summits to
+the strips of level land that lie immediately below it, both to the
+south-west and north-west.
+
+The usual mode of assailing fortified towns in the time of the
+Peloponnesian war, was to build a double wall round them, sufficiently
+strong to check any sally of the garrison from within, or any attack of
+a relieving force from without. The interval within the two walls of
+the circumvallation was roofed over, and formed barracks, in which
+the besiegers posted themselves, and awaited the effects of want or
+treachery among the besieged in producing a surrender. And, in every
+Greek city of those days, as in every Italian republic of the middle
+ages, the rage of domestic sedition between aristocrats and democrats
+ran high. Rancorous refugees swarmed in the camp of every invading
+enemy; and every blockaded city was sure to contain within its walls
+a body of intriguing malcontents, who were eager to purchase a
+party-triumph at the expense of a national disaster. Famine and faction
+were the allies on whom besiegers relied. The generals of that time
+trusted to the operation of these sure confederates as soon as they
+could establish a complete blockade. They rarely ventured on the attempt
+to storm any fortified post. For the military engines of antiquity were
+feeble in breaching masonry, before the improvements which the first
+Dionysius effected in the mechanics of destruction; and the lives of
+spearmen the boldest and most highly-trained would, of course, have been
+idly spent in charges against unshattered walls.
+
+A city built, close to the sea, like Syracuse, was impregnable, save
+by the combined operations of a superior hostile fleet and a superior
+hostile army. And Syracuse, from her size, her population, and her
+military and naval resources, not unnaturally thought herself secure
+from finding in another Greek city a foe capable of sending a sufficient
+armament to menace her with capture and subjection. But in the spring of
+414 B.C. the Athenian navy was mistress of her harbour and the adjacent
+seas; an Athenian army had defeated her troops, and cooped them within
+the town; and from bay to bay a blockading wall was being rapidly
+carried across the strips of level ground and the high ridge outside
+the city (then termed Epipolae), which, if completed, would have cut the
+Syracusans off from all succour from the interior of Sicily, and have
+left them at the mercy of the Athenian generals. The besiegers' works
+were, indeed, unfinished; but every day the unfortified interval in
+their lines grew narrower, and with it diminished all apparent hope of
+safety for the beleaguered town.
+
+Athens was now staking the flower of her forces, and the accumulated
+fruits of seventy years of glory, on one bold throw for the dominion of
+the Western world. As Napoleon from Mount Coeur de Lion pointed to St.
+Jean d'Acre, and told his staff that the capture of that town would
+decide his destiny, and would change the face of the world; so the
+Athenian officers, from the heights of Epipolae, must have looked on
+Syracuse, and felt that with its fall all the known powers of the
+earth would fall beneath them. They must have felt also that Athens, if
+repulsed there, must pause for ever in her career of conquest, and sink
+from an imperial republic into a ruined and subservient community.
+
+At Marathon, the first in date of the Great Battles of the World, we
+beheld Athens struggling for self-preservation against the invading
+armies of the East. At Syracuse she appears as the ambitious and
+oppressive invader of others. In her, as in other republics of old
+and of modern times, the same energy that had inspired the most heroic
+efforts in defence of the national independence, soon learned to employ
+itself in daring and unscrupulous schemes of self-aggrandizement at the
+expense of neighbouring nations. In the interval between the Persian and
+Peloponnesian wars she had rapidly grown into a conquering and dominant
+state, the chief of a thousand tributary cities, and the mistress of the
+largest and best-manned navy that the Mediterranean had yet beheld.
+The occupations of her territory by Xerxes and Mardonius, in the second
+Persian war, had forced her whole population to become mariners; and the
+glorious results of that struggle confirmed them in their zeal for their
+country's service at sea. The voluntary suffrage of the Greek cities of
+the coasts and islands of the AEgean first placed Athens at the head of
+the confederation formed for the further prosecution of the war against
+Persia. But this titular ascendancy was soon converted by her into
+practical and arbitrary dominion. She protected them from piracy and
+the Persian power, which soon fell into decrepitude and decay; but
+she exacted in return implicit obedience to herself. She claimed and
+enforced a prerogative of taxing them at her discretion; and proudly
+refused to be accountable for her mode of expending their supplies.
+Remonstrance against her assessments was treated as factious disloyalty;
+and refusal to pay was promptly punished as revolt. Permitting and
+encouraging her subject allies to furnish all their contingents in
+money, instead of part consisting of ships and men, the sovereign
+republic gained the double object of training her own citizens by
+constant and well-paid service in her fleets, and of seeing her
+confederates lose their skill and discipline by inaction, and become
+more and more passive and powerless under her yoke. Their towns were
+generally dismantled; while the imperial city herself was fortified with
+the greatest care and sumptuousness: the accumulated revenues from her
+tributaries serving to strengthen and adorn to the utmost her havens,
+her docks, her arsenals, her theatres, and her shrines; and to array
+her in that plenitude of architectural magnificence, the ruins of which
+still attest the intellectual grandeur of the age and people, which
+produced a Pericles to plan and a Phidias to execute.
+
+All republics that acquire supremacy over other nations, rule them
+selfishly and oppressively. There is no exception to this in either
+ancient or modern times. Carthage, Rome, Venice, Genoa, Florence, Pisa,
+Holland, and Republican France, all tyrannized over every province
+and subject state where they gained authority. But none of them openly
+avowed their system of doing so upon principle, with the candour which
+the Athenian republicans displayed, when any remonstrance was made
+against the severe exactions which they imposed upon their vassal
+allies. They avowed that their empire was a tyranny, and frankly stated
+that they solely trusted to force and terror to uphold it. They appealed
+to what they called "the eternal law of nature, that the weak should be
+coerced by the strong." [THUC. i. 77.] Sometimes they stated, and not
+without some truth, that the unjust hatred of Sparta against themselves
+forced them to be unjust to others in self-defence. To be safe they
+must be powerful; and to be powerful they must plunder and coerce their
+neighbours. They never dreamed of communicating any franchise, or share
+in office, to their dependents; but jealously monopolized every post of
+command, and all political and judicial power; exposing themselves to
+every risk with unflinching gallantry; enduring cheerfully the laborious
+training and severe discipline which their sea-service required;
+venturing readily on every ambitious scheme; and never suffering
+difficulty or disaster to shake their tenacity of purpose. Their hope
+was to acquire unbounded empire for their country, and the means
+of maintaining each of the thirty thousand citizens who made up the
+sovereign republic, in exclusive devotion to military occupations, and
+to those brilliant sciences and arts in which Athens already had reached
+the meridian of intellectual splendour.
+
+Her great political, dramatist speaks of the Athenian empire as
+comprehending a thousand states. The language of the stage must not be
+taken too literally; but the number of the dependencies of Athens,
+at the time when the Peloponnesian confederacy attacked her, was
+undoubtedly very great. With a few trifling exceptions, all the islands
+of the AEgean, and all the Greek cities, which in that age fringed the
+coasts of Asia Minor, the Hellespont, and Thrace paid tribute to Athens,
+and implicitly obeyed her orders. The AEgean Sea was an Attic lake.
+Westward of Greece, her influence though strong, was not equally
+predominant. She had colonies and allies among the wealthy and populous
+Greek settlements in Sicily and South Italy, but she had no organized
+system of confederates in those regions; and her galleys brought her no
+tribute from the western seas. The extension of her empire over Sicily
+was the favourite project of her ambitious orators and generals. While
+her great statesman Pericles lived, his commanding genius kept his
+countrymen under control and forbade them to risk the fortunes of Athens
+in distant enterprises, while they had unsubdued and powerful enemies at
+their own doors. He taught Athens this maxim; but he also taught her
+to know and to use her own strength, and when Pericles had departed the
+bold spirit which he had fostered overleaped the salutary limits which
+he had prescribed. When her bitter enemies, the Corinthians, succeeded,
+in 431 B.C., in inducing Sparta to attack her, and a confederacy was
+formed of five-sixths of the continental Greeks, all animated by anxious
+jealousy and bitter hatred of Athens; when armies far superior in
+numbers and equipment to those which had marched against the Persians
+were poured into the Athenian territory, and laid it waste to the city
+walls; the general opinion was that Athens would, in two or three
+years at the farthest, be reduced to submit to the requisitions of
+her invaders. But her strong fortifications, by which she was girt and
+linked to her principal haven, gave her, in those ages, almost all the
+advantages of an insular position. Pericles had made her trust to her
+empire of the seas. Every Athenian in those days was a practised seaman.
+A state indeed whose members, of an age fit for service, at no time
+exceeded thirty thousand, and whose territorial extent did not equal
+half Sussex, could only have acquired such a naval dominion as Athens
+once held, by devoting, and zealously training, all its sons to service
+in its fleets. In order to man the numerous galleys which she sent out,
+she necessarily employed also large numbers of hired mariners and slaves
+at the oar; but the staple of her crews was Athenian, and all posts of
+command were held by native citizens. It was by reminding them of this,
+of their long practice in seamanship, and the certain superiority which
+their discipline gave them over the enemy's marine, that their great
+minister mainly encouraged them to resist the combined power of
+Lacedaemon and her allies. He taught them that Athens might thus reap
+the fruit of her zealous devotion to maritime affairs ever since the
+invasion of the Medes; "she had not, indeed, perfected herself; but
+the reward of her superior training was the rule of the sea--a mighty
+dominion, for it gave her the rule of much fair land beyond its waves,
+safe from the idle ravages with which the Lacedaemonians might harass
+Attica, but never could subdue Athens." [THUC. lib. i. sec. 144.]
+
+Athens accepted the war with which her enemies threatened her, rather
+than descend from her pride of place. And though the awful visitation of
+the Plague came upon her, and swept away more of her citizens than the
+Dorian spear laid low, she held her own gallantly against her foes. If
+the Peloponnesian armies in irresistible strength wasted every spring
+her corn lands, her vineyards, and her olive groves with fire and sword,
+she retaliated on their coasts with her fleets; which, if resisted,
+were only resisted to display the pre-eminent skill and bravery of her
+seamen. Some of her subject-allies revolted, but the revolts were in
+general sternly and promptly quelled. The genius of one enemy had,
+indeed, inflicted blows on her power in Thrace which she was unable to
+remedy; but he fell in battle in the tenth year of the war; and with the
+loss of Brasidas the Lacedaemonians seemed to have lost all energy and
+judgment. Both sides at length grew weary of the war; and in 421 B.C. a
+truce of fifty years was concluded, which, though ill kept, and
+though many of the confederates of Sparta refused to recognise it,
+and hostilities still continued in many parts of Greece, protected the
+Athenian territory from the ravages of enemies, and enabled Athens to
+accumulate large sums out of the proceeds of her annual revenues. So
+also, as a few years passed by, the havoc which the pestilence and the
+sword had made in her population was repaired; and in 415 B.C. Athens
+was full of bold and restless spirits, who longed for some field
+of distant enterprise, wherein they might signalize themselves, and
+aggrandize the state; and who looked on the alarm of Spartan hostility
+as a mere old woman's tale. When Sparta had wasted their territory she
+had done her worst; and the fact of its always being in her power to
+do so, seemed a strong reason for seeking to increase the transmarine
+dominion of Athens.
+
+The West was now the quarter towards which the thoughts of every
+aspiring Athenian were directed. From the very beginning of the war
+Athens had kept up an interest in Sicily; and her squadrons had from
+time to time appeared on its coasts and taken part in the dissensions
+in which the Sicilian Greeks were universally engaged one against the
+other. There were plausible grounds for a direct quarrel, and an open
+attack by the Athenians upon Syracuse.
+
+With the capture of Syracuse all Sicily, it was hoped, would be secured.
+Carthage and Italy were next to be assailed. With large levies of
+Iberian mercenaries she then meant to overwhelm her Peloponnesian
+enemies. The Persian monarchy lay in hopeless imbecility, inviting Greek
+invasion; nor did the known world contain the power that seemed capable
+of checking the growing might of Athens, if Syracuse once could be hers.
+
+The national historian of Rome has left us, as an episode of his great
+work, a disquisition on the probable effects that would have followed,
+if Alexander the Great had invaded Italy. Posterity has generally
+regarded that disquisition as proving Livy's patriotism more
+strongly than his impartiality or acuteness. Yet, right or wrong, the
+speculations of the Roman writer were directed to the consideration of
+a very remote possibility. To whatever age Alexander's life might have
+been prolonged, the East would have furnished full occupation for his
+martial ambition, as well as for those schemes of commercial grandeur
+and imperial amalgamation of nations, in which the truly great
+qualities of his mind loved to display themselves. With his death the
+dismemberment of his empire among his generals was certain, even as the
+dismemberment of Napoleon's empire among his marshals would certainly
+have ensued, if he had been cut off in the zenith of his power. Rome,
+also, was far weaker when the Athenians were in Sicily, than she was a
+century afterwards, in Alexander's time. There can be little doubt but
+that Rome would have been blotted out from the independent powers of the
+West, had she been attacked at the end of the fifth century B.C., by an
+Athenian army, largely aided by Spanish mercenaries, and flushed with
+triumphs over Sicily and Africa; instead of the collision between
+her and Greece having been deferred until the latter had sunk into
+decrepitude, and the Roman Mars had grown into full vigour.
+
+The armament which the Athenians equipped against Syracuse was in every
+way worthy of the state which formed such projects of universal empire;
+and it has been truly termed "the noblest that ever yet had been sent
+forth by a free and civilized commonwealth." [Arnold's History of Rome.]
+The fleet consisted of one hundred and thirty-four war galleys, with
+a multitude of store ships. A powerful force of the best heavy-armed
+infantry that Athens and her allies could furnish was sent on board,
+together with a smaller number of slingers and bowmen. The quality
+of the forces was even more remarkable than the number. The zeal of
+individuals vied with that of the republic in giving every galley the
+best possible crew, and every troop the most perfect accoutrements. And
+with private as well as public wealth eagerly lavished on all that could
+give splendour as well as efficiency to the expedition, the fated fleet
+began its voyage for the Sicilian shores in the summer of 415 B.C.
+
+The Syracusans themselves, at the time of the Peloponnesian war, were a
+bold and turbulent democracy, tyrannizing over the weaker Greek
+cities in Sicily, and trying to gain in that island the same arbitrary
+supremacy which Athens maintained along the eastern coast of the
+Mediterranean. In numbers and in spirit they were fully equal to the
+Athenians, but far inferior to them in military and naval discipline.
+When the probability of an Athenian invasion was first publicly
+discussed at Syracuse, and efforts were made by some of the wiser
+citizens to improve the state of the national defences, and prepare for
+the impending danger, the rumours of coming war and the proposals for
+preparation were received by the mass of the Syracusans with scornful
+incredulity. The speech of one of their popular orators is preserved to
+us in Thucydides, [Lib. vi. sec. 36 et seq., Arnold's edition. I have
+almost literally transcribed some of the marginal epitomes of the
+original speech.] and many of its topics might, by a slight alteration
+of names and details, serve admirably for the party among ourselves at
+present which opposes the augmentation of our forces, and derides
+the idea of our being in any peril from the sudden attack of a French
+expedition. The Syracusan orator told his countrymen to dismiss
+with scorn the visionary terrors which a set of designing men among
+themselves strove to excite, in order to get power and influence thrown
+into their own hands. He told them that Athens knew her own interest
+too well to think of wantonly provoking their hostility:--"EVEN IF THE
+ENEMIES WERE TO COME," said he, "SO DISTANT FROM THEIR RESOURCES, AND
+OPPOSED TO SUCH A POWER AS OURS, THEIR DESTRUCTION WOULD BE EASY AND
+INEVITABLE. THEIR SHIPS WILL HAVE ENOUGH TO DO TO GET TO OUR ISLAND
+AT ALL, AND TO CARRY SUCH STORES OF ALL SORTS AS WILL BE NEEDED. THEY
+CANNOT THEREFORE CARRY, BESIDES, AN ARMY LARGE ENOUGH TO COPE WITH SUCH
+A POPULATION AS OURS. THEY WILL HAVE NO FORTIFIED PLACE FROM WHICH TO
+COMMENCE THEIR OPERATIONS; BUT MUST REST THEM ON NO BETTER BASE THAN A
+SET OF WRETCHED TENTS, AND SUCH MEANS AS THE NECESSITIES OF THE MOMENT
+WILL ALLOW THEM. BUT IN TRUTH I DO NOT BELIEVE THAT THEY WOULD EVEN BE
+ABLE TO EFFECT A DISEMBARKATION. LET US, THEREFORE, SET AT NOUGHT THESE
+REPORTS AS ALTOGETHER OF HOME MANUFACTURE; AND BE SURE THAT IF ANY ENEMY
+DOES COME, THE STATE WILL KNOW HOW TO DEFEND ITSELF IN A MANNER WORTHY
+OF THE NATIONAL HONOUR."
+
+Such assertions pleased the Syracusan assembly; and their counterparts
+find favour now among some portion of the English public. But the
+invaders of Syracuse came; made good their landing in Sicily; and, if
+they had promptly attacked the city itself, instead of wasting nearly
+a year in desultory operations in other parts of the island, the
+Syracusans must have paid the penalty of their self-sufficient
+carelessness in submission to the Athenian yoke. But, of the three
+generals who led the Athenian expedition, two only were men of ability,
+and one was most weak and incompetent. Fortunately for Syracuse,
+Alcibiades, the most skilful of the three, was soon deposed from his
+command by a factious and fanatic vote of his fellow-countrymen, and
+the other competent one, Lamachus, fell early in a skirmish: while, more
+fortunately still for her, the feeble and vacillating Nicias remained
+unrecalled and unhurt, to assume the undivided leadership of the
+Athenian army and fleet, and to mar, by alternate over-caution and
+over-carelessness, every chance of success which the early part of the
+operations offered. Still, even under him, the Athenians nearly won the
+town. They defeated the raw levies of the Syracusans, cooped them
+within the walls, and, as before mentioned, almost effected a continuous
+fortification from bay to bay over Epipolae, the completion of which
+would certainly have been followed by capitulation.
+
+Alcibiades, the most complete example of genius without principle that
+history produces, the Bolingbroke of antiquity, but with high military
+talents superadded to diplomatic and oratorical powers, on being
+summoned home from his command in Sicily to take his trial before the
+Athenian tribunal had escaped to Sparta; and he exerted himself there
+with all the selfish rancour of a renegade to renew the war with Athens,
+and to send instant assistance to Syracuse.
+
+When we read his words in the pages of Thucydides (who was himself an
+exile from Athens at this period, and may probably have been at Sparta,
+and heard Alcibiades speak), we are at loss whether most to admire or
+abhor his subtile and traitorous counsels. After an artful exordium,
+in which he tried to disarm the suspicions which he felt must be
+entertained of him, and to point out to the Spartans how completely his
+interests and theirs were identified, through hatred of the Athenian
+democracy, he thus proceeded:--"Hear me, at any rate, on the matters
+which require your grave attention, and which I, from the personal
+knowledge that I have of them, can and ought to bring before you. We
+Athenians sailed to Sicily with the design of subduing, first the Greek
+cities there, and next those in Italy. Then we intended to make an
+attempt on the dominions of Carthage, and on Carthage itself. [Arnold,
+in his notes on this passage, well reminds the reader that Agathocles,
+with a Greek force far inferior to that of the Athenians at this period,
+did, a century afterwards, very nearly conquer Carthage.] If all
+these projects succeeded (nor did we limit ourselves to them in these
+quarters), we intended to increase our fleet with the inexhaustible
+supplies of ship timber which Italy affords, to put in requisition the
+whole military force of the conquered Greek states, and also to hire
+large armies of the barbarians; of the Iberians, and others in those
+regions, who are allowed to make the best possible soldiers. [It will
+be remembered that Spanish infantry were the staple of the Carthaginian
+armies. Doubtless Alcibiades and other leading Athenians had made
+themselves acquainted with the Carthaginian system of carrying on war,
+and meant to adopt it. With the marvellous powers which Alcibiades
+possessed of ingratiating himself with men of every class and every
+nation, and his high military genius, he would have been as formidable a
+chief of an army of CONDOTTIERI as Hannibal afterwards was.] Then,
+when we had done all this, we intended to assail Peloponnesus with our
+collected force. Our fleets would blockade you by sea, and desolate your
+coasts; our armies would be landed at different points, and assail your
+cities. Some of these we expected to storm and others we meant to take
+by surrounding them with fortified lines. [Alcibiades here alluded to
+Sparta itself, which was unfortified. His Spartan hearers must have
+glanced round them at these words, with mixed alarm and indignation.] We
+thought that it would thus be an easy matter thoroughly to war you down;
+and then we should become the masters of the whole Greek race. As for
+expense, we reckoned that each conquered state would give us supplies of
+money and provisions sufficient to pay for its own conquest, and furnish
+the means for the conquest of its neighbours.
+
+"Such are the designs of the present Athenian expedition to Sicily, and
+you have heard them from the lips of the man who, of all men living, is
+most accurately acquainted with them. The other Athenian generals, who
+remain with the expedition, will endeavour to carry out these plans.
+And be sure that without your speedy interference they will all be
+accomplished. The Sicilian Greeks are deficient in military training;
+but still if they could be at once brought to combine in an organised
+resistance to Athens, they might even now be saved. But as for the
+Syracusans resisting Athens by themselves, they have already with the
+whole strength of their population fought a battle and been beaten; they
+cannot face the Athenians at sea; and it is quite impossible for them
+to hold out against the force of their invaders. And if this city falls
+into the hands of the Athenians, all Sicily is theirs, and presently
+Italy also: and the danger which I warned you of from that quarter will
+soon fall upon yourselves. You must, therefore, in Sicily fight for the
+safety of Peloponnesus. Send some galleys thither instantly. Put men on
+board who can work their own way over, and who, as soon as they land,
+can do duty as regular troops. But above all, let one of yourselves, let
+a man of Sparta, go over to take the chief command, to bring into order
+and effective discipline the forces that are in Syracuse, and urge
+those, who at present hang back to come forward and aid the Syracusans.
+The presence of a Spartan general at this crisis will do more to save
+the city than a whole army." [THUC., lib. vi sec. 90,91.] The renegade
+then proceeded to urge on them the necessity of encouraging their
+friends in Sicily, by showing that they themselves were earnest in
+hostility to Athens. He exhorted them not only to march their armies
+into Attica again, but to take up a permanent fortified position in
+the country: and he gave them in detail information of all that the
+Athenians most dreaded, and how his country might receive the most
+distressing and enduring injury at their hands.
+
+The Spartans resolved to act on his advice, and appointed Gylippus to
+the Sicilian command. Gylippus was a man who, to the national bravery
+and military skill of a Spartan, united political sagacity that was
+worthy of his great fellow-countryman Brasidas; but his merits were
+debased by mean and sordid vice; and his is one of the cases in which
+history has been austerely just, and where little or no fame has been
+accorded to the successful but venal soldier. But for the purpose for
+which he was required in Sicily, an abler man could not have been found
+in Lacedaemon. His country gave him neither men nor money, but she gave
+him her authority; and the influence of her name and of his own talents
+was speedily seen in the zeal with which the Corinthians and other
+Peloponnesian Greeks began to equip a squadron to act under him for the
+rescue of Sicily. As soon as four galleys were ready, he hurried over
+with them to the southern coast of Italy; and there, though he received
+such evil tidings of the state of Syracuse that he abandoned all hope of
+saving that city, he determined to remain on the coast, and do what he
+could in preserving the Italian cities from the Athenians.
+
+So nearly, indeed, had Nicias completed his beleaguering lines, and so
+utterly desperate had the state of Syracuse seemingly become, that
+an assembly of the Syracusans was actually convened, and they were
+discussing the terms on which they should offer to capitulate, when
+a galley was seen dashing into the great harbour, and making her way
+towards the town with all the speed that her rowers could supply. From
+her shunning the part of the harbour where the Athenian fleet lay, and
+making straight for the Syracusan side, it was clear that she was a
+friend; the enemy's cruisers, careless through confidence of success,
+made no attempt to cut her off; she touched the beach, and a Corinthian
+captain springing on shore from her, was eagerly conducted to the
+assembly of the Syracusan people, just in time to prevent the fatal vote
+being put for a surrender.
+
+Providentially for Syracuse, Gongylus, the commander of the galley, had
+been prevented by an Athenian squadron from following Gylippus to South
+Italy, and he had been obliged to push direct for Syracuse from Greece.
+
+The sight of actual succour, and the promise of more, revived the
+drooping spirits of the Syracusans. They felt that they were not left
+desolate to perish; and the tidings that a Spartan was coming to command
+them confirmed their resolution to continue their resistance. Gylippus
+was already near the city. He had learned at Locri that the first report
+which had reached him of the state of Syracuse was exaggerated; and that
+there was an unfinished space in the besiegers' lines through which it
+was barely possible to introduce reinforcements into the town. Crossing
+the straits of Messina, which the culpable negligence of Nicias had left
+unguarded, Gylippus landed on the northern coast of Sicily, and there
+began to collect from the Greek cities an army, of which the regular
+troops that he brought from Peloponnesus formed the nucleus. Such was
+the influence of the name of Sparta, [The effect of the presence of a
+Spartan officer on the troops of the other Greeks, seems to have been
+like the effect of the presence of an English officer upon native Indian
+troops.] and such were his own abilities and activity, that he succeeded
+in raising a force of about two thousand fully armed infantry, with a
+larger number of irregular troops. Nicias, as if infatuated, made no
+attempt to counteract his operations; nor, when Gylippus marched his
+little army towards Syracuse, did the Athenian commander endeavour
+to check him. The Syracusans marched out to meet him: and while the
+Athenians were solely intent on completing their fortifications on the
+southern side towards the harbour, Gylippus turned their position by
+occupying the high ground in the extreme rear of Epipolae. He then
+marched through the unfortified interval of Nicias's lines into the
+besieged town; and, joining his troops with the Syracusan forces, after
+some engagements with varying success, gained the mastery over
+Nicias, drove the Athenians from Epipolae, and hemmed them into a
+disadvantageous position in the low grounds near the great harbour.
+
+The attention of all Greece was now fixed on Syracuse; and every enemy
+of Athens felt the importance of the opportunity now offered of checking
+her ambition, and, perhaps, of striking a deadly blow at her power.
+Large reinforcements from Corinth, Thebes, and other cities, now reached
+the Syracusans; while the baffled and dispirited Athenian general
+earnestly besought his countrymen to recall him, and represented the
+further prosecution of the siege as hopeless.
+
+But Athens had made it a maxim never to let difficulty or disaster drive
+her back from any enterprise once undertaken, so long as she
+possessed the means of making any effort, however desperate, for its
+accomplishment. With indomitable pertinacity she now decreed, instead of
+recalling her first armament from before Syracuse, to send out a second,
+though her enemies near home had now renewed open warfare against
+her, and by occupying a permanent fortification in her territory, had
+severely distressed her population, and were pressing her with almost
+all the hardships of an actual siege. She still was mistress of the sea,
+and she sent forth another fleet of seventy galleys, and another army,
+which seemed to drain the very last reserves of her military population,
+to try if Syracuse could not yet be won, and the honour of the Athenian
+arms be preserved from the stigma of a retreat. Hers was, indeed, a
+spirit that might be broken, but never would bend. At the head of this
+second expedition she wisely placed her best general Demosthenes, one
+of the most distinguished officers whom the long Peloponnesian war had
+produced, and who, if he had originally held the Sicilian command, would
+soon have brought Syracuse to submission.
+
+The fame of Demosthenes the general, has been dimmed by the superior
+lustre of his great countryman, Demosthenes the orator. When the name of
+Demosthenes is mentioned, it is the latter alone that is thought of. The
+soldier has found no biographer. Yet out of the long list of the great
+men of the Athenian republic, there are few that deserve to stand higher
+than this brave, though finally unsuccessful, leader of her fleets and
+armies in the first half of the Peloponnesian war. In his first campaign
+in AEtolia he had shown some of the rashness of youth, and had received
+a lesson of caution, by which he profited throughout the rest of his
+career, but without losing any of his natural energy in enterprise or
+in execution. He had performed the eminent service of rescuing Naupactus
+from a powerful hostile armament in the seventh year of the war; he had
+then, at the request of the Acarnanian republics, taken on himself the
+office of commander-in-chief of all their forces, and at their head
+he had gained some important advantages over the enemies of Athens in
+Western Greece. His most celebrated exploits had been the occupation
+of Pylos on the Messenian coast, the successful defence of that place
+against the fleet and armies of Lacedaemon, and the subsequent capture
+of the Spartan forces on the isle of Sphacteria; which was the severest
+blow dealt to Sparta throughout the war, and which had mainly caused
+her to humble herself to make the truce with Athens. Demosthenes was
+as honourably unknown in the war of party politics at Athens, as he was
+eminent in the war against the foreign enemy. We read of no intrigues of
+his on either the aristocratic or democratic side. He was neither in the
+interest of Nicias, nor of Cleon. His private character was free from
+any of the stains which polluted that of Alcibiades. On all these points
+the silence of the comic dramatist is decisive evidence in his favour.
+He had also the moral courage, not always combined with physical of
+seeking to do his duty to his country, irrespectively of any odium that
+he himself might incur, and unhampered by any petty jealousy of those
+who were associated with him in command. There are few men named in
+ancient history, of whom posterity would gladly know more, or whom we
+sympathise with more deeply in the calamities that befel them, than
+Demosthenes, the son of Alcisthenes, who, in the spring of the year 413
+B.C., left Piraeus at the head of the second Athenian expedition against
+Sicily.
+
+His arrival was critically timed; for Gylippus had encouraged the
+Syracusans to attack the Athenians under Nicias by sea as well as by
+land, and by an able stratagem of Ariston, one of the admirals of the
+Corinthian auxiliary squadron, the Syracusans and their confederates had
+inflicted on the fleet of Nicias the first defeat that the Athenian
+navy had ever sustained from a numerically inferior foe. Gylippus was
+preparing to follow up his advantage by fresh attacks on the Athenians
+on both elements, when the arrival of Demosthenes completely changed the
+aspect of affairs, and restored the superiority to the invaders. With
+seventy-three war-galleys in the highest state of efficiency, and
+brilliantly equipped, with a force of five thousand picked men of the
+regular infantry of Athens and her allies, and a still larger number of
+bowmen, javelin-men, and slingers on board, Demosthenes rowed round the
+great harbour with loud cheers and martial music, as if in defiance of
+the Syracusans and their confederates. His arrival had indeed changed
+their newly-born hopes into the deepest consternation. The resources of
+Athens seemed inexhaustible, and resistance to her hopeless. They had
+been told that she was reduced to the last extremities, and that her
+territory was occupied by an enemy; and yet, here they saw her, as if in
+prodigality of power, sending forth, to make foreign conquests, a second
+armament, not inferior to that with which Nicias had first landed on the
+Sicilian shores.
+
+With the intuitive decision of a great commander, Demosthenes at once
+saw that the possession of Epipolae was the key to the possession of
+Syracuse, and he resolved to make a prompt and vigorous attempt
+to recover that position, while his force was unimpaired, and the
+consternation which its arrival had produced among the besieged remained
+unabated. The Syracusans and their allies had run out an outwork along
+Epipolae from the city walls, intersecting the fortified lines of
+circumvallation which Nicias had commenced, but from which they had been
+driven by Gylippus. Could Demosthenes succeed in storming this outwork,
+and in re-establishing the Athenian troops on the high ground, he might
+fairly hope to be able to resume the circumvallation of the city, and
+become the conqueror of Syracuse: for, when once the besiegers' lines
+were completed, the number of the troops with which Gylippus had
+garrisoned the place would only tend to exhaust the stores of
+provisions, and accelerate its downfall.
+
+An easily-repelled attack was first made on the outwork in the day-time,
+probably more with the view of blinding the besieged to the nature of
+the main operations than with any expectation of succeeding in an open
+assault, with every disadvantage of the ground to contend against. But,
+when the darkness had set in, Demosthenes formed his men in columns,
+each soldier taking with him five days' provisions, and the engineers
+and workmen of the camp following the troops with their tools, and
+all portable implements of fortification, so as at once to secure
+any advantage of ground that the army might gain. Thus equipped and
+prepared, he led his men along by the foot of the southern flank of
+Epipolae, in a direction towards the interior of the island, till he
+came immediately below the narrow ridge that forms the extremity of the
+high ground looking westward. He then wheeled his vanguard to the right,
+sent them rapidly up the paths that wind along the face of the cliff,
+and succeeded in completely surprising the Syracusan outposts, and in
+placing his troops fairly on the extreme summit of the all-important
+Epipolae. Thence the Athenians marched eagerly down the slope towards
+the town, routing some Syracusan detachments that were quartered in
+their way, and vigorously assailing the unprotected part of the outwork.
+All at first favoured them. The outwork was abandoned by its garrison,
+and the Athenian engineers began to dismantle it. In vain Gylippus
+brought up fresh troops to check the assault: the Athenians broke and
+drove them back, and continued to press hotly forward, in the full
+confidence of victory. But, amid the general consternation of the
+Syracusans and their confederates, one body of infantry stood firm. This
+was a brigade of their Boeotian allies, which was posted low down the
+slope of Epipolae, outside the city walls. Coolly and steadily the
+Boeotian infantry formed their line, and, undismayed by the current of
+flight around them, advanced against the advancing Athenians. This was
+the crisis of the battle. But the Athenian van was disorganized by its
+own previous successes; and, yielding to the unexpected charge thus made
+on it by troops in perfect order, and of the most obstinate courage, it
+was driven back in confusion upon the other divisions of the army that
+still continued to press forward. When once the tide was thus turned,
+the Syracusans passed rapidly from the extreme of panic to the extreme
+of vengeful daring, and with all their forces they now fiercely assailed
+the embarrassed and receding Athenians. In vain did the officers of the
+latter strive to re-form their line. Amid the din and the shouting
+of the fight, and the confusion inseparable upon a night engagement,
+especially one where many thousand combatants were pent and whirled
+together in a narrow and uneven area, the necessary manoeuvres were
+impracticable; and though many companies still fought on desperately,
+wherever the moonlight showed them the semblance of a foe, [THUC. vii.
+44. Compare Tacitus's description of the night engagement in the civil
+war between Vespasian and Vitellius: "Neutro inclinaverat fortuna, donec
+adulta nocte, LUNA OSTENDERET ACIES, FALERESQUE."--Hist. Lib. iii. sec.
+23.] they fought without concert or subordination; and not unfrequently,
+amid the deadly chaos, Athenian troops assailed each other. Keeping
+their ranks close, the Syracusans and their allies pressed on against
+the disorganized masses of the besiegers; and at length drove them, with
+heavy slaughter, over the cliffs, which, scarce an hour before, they had
+scaled full of hope, and apparently certain of success.
+
+This defeat was decisive of the event of the siege. The Athenians
+afterwards struggled only to protect themselves from the vengeance which
+the Syracusans sought to wreak in the complete destruction of their
+invaders. Never, however, was vengeance more complete and terrible.
+A series of sea-fights followed, in which the Athenian galleys were
+utterly destroyed or captured. The mariners and soldiers who escaped
+death in disastrous engagements, and in a vain: attempt to force a
+retreat into the interior of the island, became prisoners of war. Nicias
+and Demosthenes were put to death in cold blood; and their men either
+perished miserably in the Syracusan dungeons, or were sold into slavery
+to the very persons whom, in their pride of power, they had crossed the
+seas to enslave.
+
+All danger from Athens to the independent nations of the West was now
+for ever at an end. She, indeed, continued to struggle against her
+combined enemies and revolted allies with unparalleled gallantry; and
+many more years of varying warfare passed away before she surrendered
+to their arms. But no success in subsequent conquests could ever have
+restored her to the pre-eminence in enterprise, resources, and maritime
+skill which she had acquired before her fatal reverses in Sicily. Nor
+among the rival Greek republics, whom her own rashness aided to crush
+her, was there any capable of reorganizing her empire, or resuming her
+schemes of conquest. The dominion of Western Europe was left for Rome
+and Carthage to dispute two centuries later, in conflicts still more
+terrible, and with even higher displays of military daring and genius,
+than Athens had witnessed either in her rise, her meridian, or her fall.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF THE EVENTS BETWEEN THE DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE,
+AND THE BATTLE OF ARBELA.
+
+412 B.C. Many of the subject allies of Athens revolt from her, on her
+disasters before Syracuse being known; the seat of war is transferred to
+the Hellespont and eastern side of the AEgean.
+
+410. The Carthaginians attempt to make conquests in Sicily.
+
+407. Cyrus the Younger is sent by the king of Persia to take the
+government of all the maritime parts of Asia Minor, and with orders to
+help the Lacedaemonian fleet against the Athenian.
+
+406. Agrigentum taken by the Carthaginians.
+
+405. The last Athenian fleet destroyed by Lysander at AEgospotamos.
+Athens closely besieged. Rise of the power of Dionysius at Syracuse.
+
+404. Athens surrenders. End of the Peloponnesian war. The ascendancy of
+Sparta complete throughout Greece.
+
+403. Thrasybulus, aided by the Thebans and with the connivance of one
+of the Spartan kings, liberates Athens from the Thirty Tyrants, and
+restores the democracy.
+
+401. Cyrus the Younger commences his expedition into Upper Asia to
+dethrone his brother Artaxerxes Mnemon. He takes with him an auxiliary
+force of ten thousand Greeks. He in killed in battle at Cunaxa; and
+the ten thousand, led by Xenophon, effect their retreat in spite of the
+Persian armies and the natural obstacles of their march.
+
+399. In this, and the five following years, the Lacedaemonians under
+Agesilaus and other commanders, carry on war against the Persian satraps
+in Asia Minor.
+
+396. Syracuse is besieged by the Carthaginians, and successfully
+defended by Dionysius.
+
+394. Rome makes her first great stride in the career of conquest by the
+capture of Veii.
+
+393. The Athenian admiral Conon, in conjunction with the Persian satrap
+Pharnabazus, defeats the Lacedaemonian fleet off Cnidus, and restores
+the fortifications of Athens. Several of the former allies of Sparta in
+Greece carry on hostilities against her.
+
+388. The nations of Northern Europe now first appear in authentic
+history. The Gauls overrun great part of Italy, and burn Rome. Rome
+recovers from the blow, but her old enemies, the AEquians and Volscians,
+are left completely crushed by the Gallic invaders.
+
+387. The peace of Antalcidas is concluded among the Greeks by the
+mediation, and under the sanction, of the Persian king.
+
+378 to 361. Fresh wars in Greece. Epaminondas raises Thebes to be the
+leading state of Greece, and the supremacy of Sparta is destroyed at
+the battle of Leuctra. Epaminondas is killed in gaining the victory of
+Mantinea, and the power of Thebes falls with him. The Athenians attempt
+a balancing system between Sparta and Thebes.
+
+359. Philip becomes king of Macedon.
+
+357. The Social War breaks out in Greece, and lasts three years. Its
+result checks the attempt of Athens to regain her old maritime empire.
+
+356. Alexander the Great is born.
+
+343. Rome begins her wars with the Samnites: they extend over a period
+of fifty years. The result of this obstinate contest is to secure for
+her the dominion of Italy.
+
+340. Fresh attempts of the Carthaginians upon Syracuse. Timoleon defeats
+them with great slaughter.
+
+338. Philip defeats the confederate armies of Athens and Thebes
+at Chaeronea, and the Macedonian supremacy over Greece is firmly
+established.
+
+336. Philip is assassinated, and Alexander the Great becomes king of
+Macedon. He gains several victories over the northern barbarians who
+had attacked Macedonia, and destroys Thebes, which, in conjunction with
+Athens, had taken up arms against the Macedonians.
+
+334. Alexander passes the Hellespont.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. -- THE BATTLE OF ARBELA, B.C. 331.
+
+
+ "Alexander deserves the glory which he has enjoyed for so
+ many centuries and among all nations; but what if he had
+ been beaten at Arbela having the Euphrates, the Tigris, and
+ the deserts in his rear, without any strong places of
+ refuge, nine hundred leagues from Macedonia?"--NAPOLEON.
+
+
+ "Asia beheld with astonishment and awe the uninterrupted
+ progress of a hero, the sweep of whose conquests was as wide
+ and rapid as that of her own barbaric kings, or the Scythian
+ or Chaldaean hordes; but, far unlike the transient
+ whirlwinds of Asiatic warfare, the advance of the Macedonian
+ leader was no less deliberate than rapid; at every step the
+ Greek power took root, and the language and the civilization
+ of Greece were planted from the shores of the AEgean to the
+ banks of the Indus, from the Caspian and the great Hyrcanian
+ plain to the cataracts of the Nile; to exist actually for
+ nearly a thousand years, and in their effects to endure for
+ ever."--ARNOLD.
+
+
+A long and not uninstructive list might be made out of illustrious
+men, whose characters have been vindicated during recent times from
+aspersions which for centuries had been thrown on them. The spirit of
+modern inquiry, and the tendency of modern scholarship, both of which
+are often said to be solely negative and destructive, have, in truth,
+restored to splendour, and almost created anew, far more than they have
+assailed with censure, or dismissed from consideration as unreal. The
+truth of many a brilliant narrative of brilliant exploits has of
+late years been triumphantly demonstrated; and the shallowness of the
+sceptical scoffs with which little minds have carped at the great minds
+of antiquity, has been in many instances decisively exposed. The laws,
+the politics, and the lines of action adopted or recommended by eminent
+men and powerful nations have been examined with keener investigation,
+and considered with more comprehensive judgment, than formerly were
+brought to bear on these subjects. The result has been at least as often
+favourable as unfavourable to the persons and the states so scrutinized;
+and many an oft-repeated slander against both measures and men has thus
+been silenced, we may hope, for ever.
+
+The veracity of Herodotus, the pure patriotism of Pericles, of
+Demosthenes, and of the Gracchi, the wisdom of Cleisthenes and of
+Licinius as constitutional reformers, may be mentioned as facts which
+recent writers have cleared from unjust suspicion and censure. And it
+might be easily shown that the defensive tendency which distinguishes
+the present and recent best historians of Germany, France, and England,
+has been equally manifested in the spirit in which they have treated the
+heroes of thought and the heroes of action who lived during what we
+term the Middle Ages and whom it was so long the fashion to sneer at or
+neglect.
+
+The name of the victor of Arbela has led to these reflections; for,
+although the rapidity and extent of Alexander's conquests have through
+all ages challenged admiration and amazement, the grandeur of genius
+which he displayed in his schemes of commerce, civilization, and of
+comprehensive union and unity amongst nations, has, until lately, been
+comparatively unhonoured. This long-continued depreciation was of early
+date. The ancient rhetoricians--a class of babblers, a school for lies
+and scandal, as Niebuhr justly termed them--chose among the stock themes
+for their commonplaces, the character and exploits of Alexander. They
+had their followers in every age; and until a very recent period,
+all who wished to "point a moral or adorn a tale" about unreasoning
+ambition, extravagant pride, and the formidable frenzies of free will
+when leagued with free power, have never failed to blazon forth the
+so-called madman of Macedonia as one of the most glaring examples.
+Without doubt, many of these writers adopted with implicit credence
+traditional ideas and supposed, with uninquiring philanthropy, that in
+blackening Alexander they were doing humanity good service. But also,
+without doubt, many of his assailants, like those of other great men,
+have been mainly instigated by "that strongest of all antipathies, the
+antipathy of a second-rate mind to a first-rate one," [De Stael.] and by
+the envy which talent too often bears to genius.
+
+Arrian, who wrote his history of Alexander when Hadrian was emperor of
+the Roman world, and when the spirit of declamation and dogmatism was at
+its full height, but who was himself, unlike the dreaming pedants of the
+schools, a statesman and a soldier of practical and proved ability, well
+rebuked the malevolent aspersions which he heard continually thrown upon
+the memory of the great conqueror of the East. He truly says, "Let the
+man who speaks evil of Alexander not merely bring forward those passages
+of Alexander's life which were really evil, but let him collect and
+review all the actions of Alexander, and then let him thoroughly
+consider first who and what manner of man he himself is, and what has
+been his own career; and then let him consider who and what manner of
+man Alexander was, and to what an eminence of human grandeur HE arrived.
+Let him consider that Alexander was a king, and the undisputed lord of
+the two continents; and that his name is renowned throughout the whole
+earth. Let the evil-speaker against Alexander bear all this in mind, and
+then let him reflect on his own insignificance, the pettiness of his own
+circumstances and affairs, and the blunders that he makes about these,
+paltry and trifling as they are. Let him then ask himself whether he is
+a fit person to censure and revile such a man as Alexander. I believe
+that there was in his time no nation of men, no city, nay, no single
+individual, with whom Alexander's name had not become a familiar word. I
+therefore hold that such a man, who was like no ordinary mortal was not
+born into the world without some special providence." [Arrian, lib. vii.
+AD FINEM.]
+
+And one of the most distinguished soldiers and writers of our own
+nation, Sir Walter Raleigh, though he failed to estimate justly the full
+merits of Alexander, has expressed his sense of the grandeur of the part
+played in the world by "The Great Emathian Conqueror" in language that
+well deserves quotation:--"So much hath the spirit of some one man
+excelled as it hath undertaken and effected the alteration of the
+greatest states and commonwealths, the erection of monarchies, the
+conquest of kingdoms and empires, guided handfuls of men against
+multitudes of equal bodily strength, contrived victories beyond all
+hope and discourse of reason, converted the fearful passions of his
+own followers into magnanimity, and the valour of his enemies into
+cowardice; such spirits have been stirred up in sundry ages of the
+world, and in divers parts thereof, to erect and cast down again, to
+establish and to destroy, and to bring all things, persons, and states
+to the same certain ends, which the infinite spirit of the UNIVERSAL,
+piercing, moving, and governing all things, hath ordained. Certainly,
+the things that this king did were marvellous, and would hardly have
+been undertaken by any one else: and though his father had determined
+to have invaded the Lesser Asia, it is like that he would have contented
+himself with some part thereof, and not have discovered the river of
+Indus, as this man did." ["The Historie of the World," by Sir Walter
+Raleigh, Knight, p. 628.]
+
+A higher authority than either Arrian or Raleigh may now be referred to
+by those who wish to know the real merit of Alexander as a general, and
+how far the commonplace assertions are true, that his successes were the
+mere results of fortunate rashness and unreasoning pugnacity, Napoleon
+selected Alexander as one of the seven greatest generals whose noble
+deeds history has handed down to us, and from the study of whose
+campaigns the principles of war are to be learned. The critique of the
+greatest conqueror of modern times on the military career of the great
+conqueror of the old world, is no less graphic than true.
+
+"Alexander crossed the Dardanelles 334 B.C. with an army of about forty
+thousand men, of which one-eighth was cavalry; he forced the passage
+of the Granicus in opposition to an army under Memnon, the Greek, who
+commanded for Darius on the coast of Asia, and he spent the whole of the
+year 333 in establishing his power in Asia Minor. He was seconded by the
+Greek colonists, who dwelt on the borders of the Black Sea, and on the
+Mediterranean, and in Smyrna, Ephesus, Tarsus, Miletus, &c. The kings of
+Persia left their provinces and towns to be governed according to their
+own particular laws. Their empire was a union of confederated states,
+and did not form one nation; this facilitated its conquest. As Alexander
+only wished for the throne of the monarch, he easily effected the
+change, by respecting the customs, manners, and laws of the people, who
+experienced no change in their condition.
+
+"In the year 332, he met with Darius at the head of sixty thousand men,
+who had taken up a position near Tarsus, on the banks of the Issus, in
+the province of Cilicia. He defeated him, entered Syria, took Damascus,
+which contained all the riches of the Great King, and laid siege to
+Tyre. This superb metropolis of the commerce of the world detained
+him nine months. He took Gaza after a siege of two months; crossed
+the Desert in seven days; entered Pelusium and Memphis, and founded
+Alexandria. In less than two years, after two battles and four or five
+sieges, the coasts of the Black Sea from Phasis to Byzantium, those
+of the Mediterranean as far as Alexandria, all Asia Minor, Syria, and
+Egypt, had submitted to his arms.
+
+"In 331, he repassed the Desert, encamped in Tyre, recrossed Syria,
+entered Damascus, passed the Euphrates and Tigris, and defeated Darius
+on the field of Arbela, when he was at the head of a still stronger army
+than that which he commanded on the Issus, and Babylon opened her gates
+to him. In 330, he overran Susa, and took that city, Persepolis, and
+Pasargada, which contained the tomb of Cyrus. In 329, he directed his
+course northward, entered Ecbatana, and extended his conquests to the
+coasts of the Caspian, punished Bessus, the cowardly assassin of Darius,
+penetrated into Scythia, and subdued the Scythians. In 328, he forced
+the passage of the Oxus, received sixteen thousand recruits from
+Macedonia, and reduced the neighbouring people to subjection. In 327,
+he crossed the Indus, vanquished Poros in a pitched battle, took him
+prisoner, and treated him as a king. He contemplated passing the Ganges,
+but his army refused. He sailed down the Indus, in the year 326, with
+eight hundred vessels; having arrived at the ocean, he sent Nearchus
+with a fleet to run along the coasts of the Indian Ocean and the Persian
+Gulf, as far as the mouth of the Euphrates. In 325, he took sixty days
+in crossing from Gedrosia, entered Keramania, returned to Pasargada,
+Persepolis, and Susa, and married Statira, the daughter of Darius. In
+324, he marched once more to the north, passed Ecbatana, and terminated
+his career at Babylon." [See Count Montolon's Memoirs of Napoleon.]
+
+The enduring importance of Alexander's conquests is to be estimated not
+by the duration of his own life and empire, or even by the duration
+of the kingdoms which his generals after his death formed out of the
+fragments of that mighty dominion. In every region of the world that he
+traversed, Alexander planted Greek settlements, and founded cities,
+in the populations of which the Greek element at once asserted its
+predominance. Among his successors, the Seleucids and the Ptolemies
+imitated their great captain in blending schemes of civilization, of
+commercial intercourse, and of literary and scientific research with all
+their enterprises of military aggrandizement, and with all their systems
+of civil administration. Such was the ascendancy of the Greek genius, so
+wonderfully comprehensive and assimilating was the cultivation which
+it introduced, that, within thirty years after Alexander crossed the
+Hellespont, the language, the literature, and the arts of Hellas,
+enforced and promoted by the arms of semi-Hellenic Macedon, predominated
+in every country from the shores of that sea to the Indian waters. Even
+sullen Egypt acknowledged the intellectual supremacy of Greece; and the
+language of Pericles and Plato became the language of the statesmen
+and the sages who dwelt in the mysterious land of the Pyramids and the
+Sphinx. It is not to be supposed that this victory of the Greek tongue
+was so complete as to exterminate the Coptic, the Syrian, the Armenian,
+the Persian, or the other native languages of the numerous nations and
+tribes between the AEgean, the Iaxertes, the Indus, and the Nile; they
+survived as provincial dialects. Each probably was in use as the vulgar
+tongue of its own district. But every person with the slightest pretence
+to education spoke Greek. Greek was universally the State language, and
+the exclusive language of all literature and science, It formed also
+for the merchant, the trader, and the traveller, as well as for the
+courtier, the government official, and the soldier, the organ of
+intercommunication among the myriads of mankind inhabiting these large
+portions of the Old World. [See Arnold, Hist. Rome, ii. 406.] Throughout
+Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt, the Hellenic character that was thus
+imparted, remained in full vigour down to the time of the Mahometan
+conquests. The infinite value of this to humanity in the highest and
+holiest point of view has often been pointed out; and the workings of
+the finger of Providence have been gratefully recognised by those who
+have observed how the early growth and progress of Christianity
+were aided by that diffusion of the Greek language and civilization
+throughout Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt which had been caused by the
+Macedonian conquest of the East.
+
+In Upper Asia, beyond the Euphrates, the direct and material influence
+of Greek ascendancy was more short-lived. Yet, during the existence of
+the Hellenic kingdoms in these regions, especially of the Greek kingdom
+of Bactria, the modern Bokhara, very important effects were produced
+on the intellectual tendencies and tastes of the inhabitants of those
+countries and of the adjacent ones, by the animating contact of the
+Grecian spirit. Much of Hindoo science and philosophy, much of the
+literature of the later Persian kingdom of the Arsacidae, either
+originated from, or was largely modified by, Grecian influences. So,
+also, the learning and science of the Arabians were in a far less degree
+the result of original invention and genius, than the reproduction, in
+an altered form, of the Greek philosophy and the Greek lore, acquired
+by the Saracenic conquerors together with their acquisition of the
+provinces which Alexander had subjugated nearly a thousand years before
+the armed disciples of Mahomet commenced their career in the East. It is
+well known that Western Europe in the Middle ages drew its philosophy,
+its arts, and its science, principally from Arabian teachers. And thus
+we see how the intellectual influence of ancient Greece, poured on the
+Eastern world by Alexander's victories, and then brought back to bear on
+Mediaeval Europe by the spread of the Saracenic powers, has exerted its
+action on the elements of modern civilization by this powerful though
+indirect channel as well as by the more obvious effects of the remnants
+of classic civilization which survived in Italy, Gaul, Britain, and
+Spain, after the irruption of the Germanic nations. [See Humboldt's
+Cosmos.]
+
+These considerations invest the Macedonian triumphs in the East with
+never-dying interest, such as the most showy and sanguinary successes of
+mere "low ambition and the pride of kings," however they may dazzle
+for a moment, can never retain with posterity. Whether the old Persian
+empire, which Cyrus founded, could have survived much longer than
+it did, even if Darius had been victorious at Arbela, may safely be
+disputed. That ancient dominion, like the Turkish at the present time,
+laboured under every cause of decay and dissolution. The satraps, like
+the modern pachas, continually rebelled against the central power,
+and Egypt, in particular, was almost always in a state of insurrection
+against its nominal sovereign. There was no longer any effective central
+control, or any internal principle of unity fused through the huge mass
+of the empire, and binding it together. Persia was evidently about to
+fall; but, had it not been for Alexander's invasion of Asia, she would
+most probably have fallen beneath some other Oriental power, as Media
+and Babylon had formerly fallen before herself, and as, in after times,
+the Parthian supremacy gave way to the revived ascendancy of Persia in
+the East, under the sceptres of the Arsacidae. A revolution that merely
+substituted one Eastern power for another would have been utterly barren
+and unprofitable to mankind.
+
+Alexander's victory at Arbela not only overthrew an Oriental dynasty,
+but established European rulers in its stead. It broke the monotony,
+of the Eastern world by the impression of Western energy and superior
+civilization; even as England's present mission is to break up the
+mental and moral stagnation of India and Cathay, by pouring upon and
+through them the impulsive current of Anglo-Saxon commerce and conquest.
+
+Arbela, the city which has furnished its name to the decisive battle
+that gave Asia to Alexander, lies more than twenty miles from the actual
+scene of conflict. The little village then named Gaugamela is close to
+the spot where the armies met, but has ceded the honour of naming the
+battle to its more euphonious neighbour. Gaugamela is situate in one
+of the wide plains that lie between the Tigris and the mountains of
+Kurdistan. A few undulating hillocks diversify the surface of this sandy
+track; but the ground is generally level, and admirably qualified for
+the evolutions of cavalry, and also calculated to give the larger of
+two armies the full advantage of numerical superiority. The Persian King
+(who before he came to the throne, had proved his personal valour as a
+soldier, and his skill as a general) had wisely selected this region for
+the third and decisive encounter between his forces and the invaders.
+The previous defeats of his troops, however severe they had been,
+were not looked on as irreparable, The Granicus had been fought by his
+generals rashly and without mutual concert. And, though Darius himself
+had commanded and been beaten at Issus, that defeat might be attributed
+to the disadvantageous nature of the ground; where, cooped up between
+the mountains, the river, and the sea, the numbers of the Persians
+confused and clogged alike the general's skill and the soldiers'
+prowess, so that their very strength became their weakness. Here, on the
+broad plains of Kurdistan, there was scope for Asia's largest host
+to array its lines, to wheel, to skirmish, to condense or expand its
+squadrons, to manoeuvre, and to charge at will. Should Alexander and
+his scanty band dare to plunge into that living sea of war, their
+destruction seemed inevitable.
+
+Darius felt, however, the critical nature to himself as well as to his
+adversary of the coming encounter. He could not hope to retrieve the
+consequences of a third overthrow. The great cities of Mesopotamia and
+Upper Asia, the central provinces of the Persian empire, were certain
+to be at the mercy of the victor. Darius knew also the Asiatic character
+well enough to be aware how it yields to the prestige of success, and
+the apparent career of destiny. He felt that the diadem was now either
+to be firmly replaced on his own brow, or to be irrevocably transferred
+to the head of his European conqueror. He, therefore, during the
+long interval left him after the battle of Issus, while Alexander was
+subjugating Syria and Egypt, assiduously busied himself in selecting the
+best troops which his vast empire supplied, and in training his varied
+forces to act together with some uniformity of discipline and system.
+
+The hardy mountaineers of Affghanistan, Bokhara, Khiva, and Thibet, were
+then, as at present, far different from the generality of Asiatics in
+warlike spirit and endurance. From these districts Darius collected
+large bodies of admirable infantry; and the countries of the modern
+Kurds and Turkomans supplied, as they do now, squadrons of horsemen,
+strong, skilful, bold, and trained to a life of constant activity and
+warfare. It is not uninteresting to notice that the ancestors of our
+own late enemies, the Sikhs, served as allies of Darius against the
+Macedonians. They are spoken of in Arrian as Indians who dwelt near
+Bactria. They were attached to the troops of that satrapy, and their
+cavalry was one of the most formidable forces in the whole Persian army.
+
+Besides these picked troops, contingents also came in from the numerous
+other provinces that yet obeyed the Great King. Altogether, the horse
+are said to have been forty thousand, the scythe-bearing chariots two
+hundred, and the armed elephants fifteen in number. The amount of the
+infantry is uncertain; but the knowledge which both ancient and modern
+times supply of the usual character of Oriental armies, and of their
+populations of camp-followers, may warrant us in believing that many
+myriads were prepared to fight, or to encumber those who fought, for the
+last Darius.
+
+The position of the Persian king near Mesopotamia was chosen with great
+military skill. It was certain that Alexander on his return from Egypt
+must march northward along the Syrian coast, before he attacked the
+central provinces of the Persian empire. A direct eastward march from
+the lower part of Palestine across the great Syrian Desert was then,
+as now, utterly impracticable. Marching eastward from Syria, Alexander
+would, on crossing the Euphrates, arrive at the vast Mesopotamian
+plains. The wealthy capitals of the empire, Babylon, Susa, and
+Persepolis, would then lie to his south; and if he marched down through
+Mesopotamia to attack them, Darius might reasonably hope to follow the
+Macedonians with his immense force of cavalry, and, without even risking
+a pitched battle, to harass and finally overwhelm them. We may remember
+that three centuries afterwards a Roman army under Crassus was thus
+actually destroyed by the Oriental archers and horsemen in these very
+plains; [See Mitford.] and that the ancestors of the Parthians who thus
+vanquished the Roman legions, served by thousands under King Darius. If,
+on the contrary, Alexander should defer his march against Babylon, and
+first seek an encounter with the Persian army, the country on each side
+of the Tigris in this latitude was highly advantageous for such an
+army as Darius commanded; and he had close in his rear the mountainous
+districts of Northern Media, where he himself had in early life been
+satrap, where he had acquired reputation as a soldier and a general,
+and where he justly expected to find loyalty to his person, and a safe
+refuge in case of defeat. [Mitford's remarks on the strategy of Darius
+in his last campaign are very just. After having been unduly admired as
+an historian, Mitford is now unduly neglected. His partiality, and his
+deficiency in scholarship, have been exposed sufficiently to make him no
+longer a dangerous guide as to Greek polities; while the clearness and
+brilliancy of his narrative, and the strong common sense of his remarks
+(where his party prejudices do not interfere) must always make his
+volumes valuable as well as entertaining.]
+
+His great antagonist came on across the Euphrates against him, at the
+head of an army which Arrian, copying from the journals of Macedonian
+officers, states to have consisted of forty thousand foot, and seven
+thousand horse. In studying the campaigns of Alexander, we possess the
+peculiar advantage of deriving our information from two of Alexander's
+generals of division, who bore an important part in all his enterprises.
+Aristobulus and Ptolemy (who afterwards became king of Egypt) kept
+regular journals of the military events which they witnessed; and these
+journals were in the possession of Arrian, when he drew up his history
+of Alexander's expedition. The high character of Arrian for integrity
+makes us confident that he used them fairly, and his comments on the
+occasional discrepancies between the two Macedonian narratives prove
+that he used them sensibly. He frequently quotes the very words of his
+authorities: and his history thus acquires a charm such as very few
+ancient or modern military narratives possess. The anecdotes and
+expressions which he records we fairly believe to be genuine, and not
+to be the coinage of a rhetorician, like those in Curtius. In fact, in
+reading Arrian, we read General Aristobulus and General Ptolemy on the
+campaigns of the Macedonians; and it is like reading General Jomini or
+General Foy on the campaigns of the French.
+
+The estimate which we find in Arrian of the strength of Alexander's
+army, seems reasonable when we take into account both the losses which
+he had sustained, and the reinforcements which he had received since he
+left Europe. Indeed, to Englishmen, who know with what mere handfuls of
+men our own generals have, at Plassy, at Assaye, at Meeanee, and other
+Indian battles, routed large hosts of Asiatics, the disparity of
+numbers that we read of in the victories won by the Macedonians over the
+Persians presents nothing incredible. The army which Alexander now led
+was wholly composed of veteran troops in the highest possible state of
+equipment and discipline, enthusiastically devoted to their leader, and
+full of confidence in his military genius and his victorious destiny.
+
+The celebrated Macedonian phalanx formed the main strength of his
+infantry. This force had been raised and organized by his father Philip,
+who on his accession to the Macedonian throne needed a numerous and
+quickly-formed army, and who, by lengthening the spear of the ordinary
+Greek phalanx, and increasing the depth of the files, brought the tactic
+of armed masses to the greatest efficiency of which it was capable with
+such materials as he possessed. [See Niebuhr's Hist. of Rome, iii. 488.]
+He formed his men sixteen deep, and placed in their grasp the SARISSA,
+as the Macedonian pike was called, which was four-and-twenty feet in
+length, and when couched for action, reached eighteen feet in front of
+the soldier: so that, as a space of about two feet was allowed between
+the ranks, the spears of the five files behind him projected in advance
+of each front-rank man. The phalangite soldier was fully equipped in
+the defensive armour of the regular Greek infantry. And thus the phalanx
+presented a ponderous and bristling mass, which as long as its order was
+kept compact, was sure to bear down all opposition. The defects of such
+an organization are obvious, and were proved in after years, when the
+Macedonians were opposed to the Roman legions. But it is clear that,
+under Alexander, the phalanx was not the cumbrous unwieldy body which
+it was at Cynoscephalae and Pydna. His men were veterans; and he could
+obtain from them an accuracy of movement and steadiness of evolution,
+such as probably the recruits of his father would only have floundered
+in attempting, and such as certainly were impracticable in the phalanx
+when handled by his successors: especially as under them it ceased to
+be a standing force, and became only a militia. [See Niebuhr.] Under
+Alexander the phalanx consisted of an aggregate of eighteen thousand
+men, who were divided into six brigades of three thousand each. These
+were again subdivided into regiments and companies; and the men were
+carefully trained to wheel, to face about, to take more ground, or to
+close up, as the emergencies of the battle required. Alexander also
+arrayed in the intervals of the regiments of his phalangites, troops
+armed in a different manner, which could prevent their line from being
+pierced, and their companies taken in flank, when the nature of the
+ground prevented a close formation; and which could be withdrawn, when a
+favourable opportunity arrived for closing up the phalanx or any of its
+brigades for a charge, or when it was necessary to prepare to receive
+cavalry.
+
+Besides the phalanx, Alexander had a considerable force of infantry
+who were called shield-bearers: they were not so heavily armed as the
+phalangites, or as was the case with the Greek regular infantry
+in general; but they were equipped for close fight, as well as for
+skirmishing, and were far superior to the ordinary irregular troops of
+Greek warfare. They were about six thousand strong. Besides these,
+he had several bodies of Greek regular infantry; and he had archers,
+slingers, and javelin-men, who fought also with broadsword and target.
+These were principally supplied to him by the highlanders of Illyria and
+Thracia. The main strength of his cavalry consisted in two chosen corps
+of cuirassiers, one Macedonian, and one Thessalian each of which was
+about fifteen hundred strong. They were provided with long lances and
+heavy swords, and horse as well as man was fully equipped with defensive
+armour. Other regiments of regular cavalry were less heavily armed, and
+there were several bodies of light horsemen, whom Alexander's conquests
+in Egypt and Syria had enabled him to mount superbly.
+
+A little before the end of August, Alexander crossed the Euphrates
+at Thapsacus, a small corps of Persian cavalry under Mazaeus retiring
+before him. Alexander was too prudent to march down through the
+Mesopotamian deserts, and continued to advance eastward with the
+intention of passing the Tigris, and then, if he was unable to find
+Darius and bring him to action, of marching southward on the left side
+of that river along the skirts of a mountainous district where his men
+would suffer less from heat and thirst, and where provisions would be
+more abundant.
+
+Darius, finding that his adversary was not to be enticed into the march
+through Mesopotamia against his capital, determined to remain on the
+battle-ground which he had chosen on the left of the Tigris; where, if
+his enemy met a defeat or a check, the destruction of the invaders would
+be certain with two such rivers as the Euphrates and the Tigris in their
+rear. The Persian king availed himself to the utmost of every advantage
+in his power. He caused a large space of ground to be carefully levelled
+for the operation of his scythe-armed chariots; and he deposited his
+military stores in the strong town of Arbela, about twenty miles in
+his rear. The rhetoricians of after ages have loved to describe Darius
+Codomannus as a second Xerxes in ostentation and imbecility; but a fair
+examination of his generalship in this his last campaign, shows that he
+was worthy of bearing the same name as his great predecessor, the royal
+son of Hystaspes.
+
+On learning that Darius was with a large army on the left of the Tigris,
+Alexander hurried forward and crossed that river without opposition. He
+was at first unable to procure any certain intelligence of the precise
+position of the enemy, and after giving his army a short interval
+of rest, he marched for four days down the left bank of the river. A
+moralist may pause upon the fact, that Alexander must in this march have
+passed within a few miles of the remains of Nineveh, the great, city of
+the primaeval conquerors of the human race. Neither the Macedonian king
+nor any of his followers knew what those vast mounds had once been. They
+had already become nameless masses of grass-grown ruins; and it is only
+within the last few years that the intellectual energy of one of our own
+countrymen has rescued Nineveh from its long centuries of oblivion. [See
+Layard's "Nineveh," and also Vaux's "Nineveh and Persepolis," p. 16.]
+
+On the fourth day of Alexander's southward march, his advanced guard
+reported that a body of the enemy's cavalry was in sight. He instantly
+formed his army in order for battle, and directing them to advance
+steadily, he rode forward at the head of some squadrons of cavalry,
+and charged the Persian horse whom he found before him. This was a
+mere reconnoitring party, and they broke and fled immediately; but the
+Macedonians made some prisoners, and from them Alexander found that
+Darius was posted only a few miles off and learned the strength of the
+army that he had with him. On receiving this news, Alexander halted, and
+gave his men repose for four days, so that they should go into action
+fresh and vigorous. He also fortified his camp, and deposited in it all
+his military stores, and all his sick and disabled soldiers; intending
+to advance upon the enemy with the serviceable part of his army
+perfectly unencumbered. After this halt, he moved forward, while it was
+yet dark, with the intention of reaching the enemy, and attacking
+them at break of day. About half-way between the camps there were some
+undulations of the ground, which concealed the two armies from each
+other's view. But, on Alexander arriving at their summit, he saw by the
+early light the Persian host arrayed before him; and he probably also
+observed traces of some engineering operation having been carried on
+along part of the ground in front of them. Not knowing that these marks
+had been caused by the Persians having levelled the ground for the free
+use of their war-chariots, Alexander suspected that hidden pitfalls had
+been prepared with a view of disordering the approach of his cavalry.
+He summoned a council of war forthwith, some of the officers were for
+attacking instantly at all hazards, but the more prudent opinion of
+Parmenio prevailed, and it was determined not to advance farther till
+the battle-ground had been carefully surveyed.
+
+Alexander halted his army on the heights; and taking with him some
+light-armed infantry and some cavalry, he passed part of the day in
+reconnoitring the enemy, and observing the nature of the ground which he
+had to fight on. Darius wisely refrained from moving from his position
+to attack the Macedonians on eminences which they occupied, and the two
+armies remained until night without molesting each other. On Alexander's
+return to his head-quarters, he summoned his generals and superior
+officers together, and telling them that he well knew that THEIR
+zeal wanted no exhortation, he besought them to do their utmost in
+encouraging and instructing those whom each commanded, to do their best
+in the next day's battle. They were to remind them that they were now
+not going to fight for a province, as they had hitherto fought, but
+they were about to decide by their swords the dominion of all Asia. Each
+officer ought to impress this upon his subalterns and they should urge
+it on their men. Their natural courage required no long words to excite
+its ardour: but they should be reminded of the paramount importance of
+steadiness in action. The silence in the ranks must be unbroken as long
+as silence was proper; but when the time came for the charge, the shout
+and the cheer must be full of terror for the foe. The officers were to
+be alert in receiving and communicating orders; and every one was to act
+as if he felt that the whole result of the battle depended on his own
+single good conduct.
+
+Having thus briefly instructed his generals, Alexander ordered that the
+army should sup, and take their rest for the night.
+
+Darkness had closed over the tents of the Macedonians, when Alexander's
+veteran general, Parmenio, came to him, and proposed that they should
+make a night attack on the Persians. The King is said to have answered,
+that he scorned to such a victory, and that Alexander must conquer
+openly and fairly. Arrian justly remarks that Alexander's resolution was
+as wise as it was spirited. Besides the confusion and uncertainty which
+are inseparable from night engagements, the value of Alexander's victory
+would have been impaired, if gained under circumstances which might
+supply the enemy with any excuse for his defeat, and encourage him
+to renew the contest. It was necessary for Alexander not only to beat
+Darius, but to gain such a victory as should leave his rival without
+apology for defeat, and without hope of recovery.
+
+The Persians, in fact, expected, and were prepared to meet a night
+attack. Such was the apprehension that Darius entertained of it, that
+he formed his troops at evening in order of battle, and kept them under
+arms all night. The effect of this was, that the morning found them
+jaded and dispirited, while it brought their adversaries all fresh and
+vigorous against them.
+
+The written order of battle which Darius himself caused to be drawn
+up, fell into the hands of the Macedonians after the engagement, and
+Aristobulus copied it into his journal. We thus possess, through Arrian,
+unusually authentic information as to the composition and arrangement
+of the Persian army. On the extreme left were the Bactrian, Daan, and
+Arachosian cavalry. Next to these Darius placed the troops from Persia
+proper, both horse and foot. Then came the Susians, and next to these
+the Cadusians. These forces made up the left wing. Darius's own station
+was in the centre. This was composed of the Indians, the Carians, the
+Mardian archers, and the division of Persians who were distinguished
+by the golden apples that formed knobs of their spears. Here also were
+stationed the body-guard of the Persian nobility. Besides these, there
+were in the centre, formed in deep order, the Uxian and Babylonian
+troops, and the soldiers from the Red Sea. The brigade of Greek
+mercenaries, whom Darius had in his service, and who were alone
+considered fit to stand in the charge of the Macedonian phalanx,
+was drawn up on either side of the royal chariot. The right wing
+was composed of the Coelosyrians and Mesopotamians, the Medes, the
+Parthians, the Sacians, the Tapurians, Hyrcanians, Albanians, and
+Sacesinae. In advance of the line on the left wing were placed the
+Scythian cavalry, with a thousand of the Bactrian horse, and a hundred
+scythe-armed chariots. The elephants and fifty scythe-armed chariots
+were ranged in front of the centre; and fifty more chariots, with the
+Armenian and Cappadocian cavalry, were drawn up in advance of the right
+wing.
+
+Thus arrayed, the great host of King Darius passed the night, that to
+many thousands of them was the last of their existence. The morning of
+the first of October, two thousand one hundred and eighty-two years ago,
+dawned slowly to their wearied watching, and they could hear the note of
+the Macedonian trumpet sounding to arms, and could see King Alexander's
+forces descend from their tents on the heights, and form in order of
+battle on the plain. [See Clinton's "Fasti Hellenici." The battle was
+fought eleven days after an eclipse of the moon, which gives the means
+of fixing the precise date.]
+
+There was deep need of skill, as well as of valour, on Alexander's side;
+and few battle-fields have witnessed more consummate generalship than
+was now displayed by the Macedonian king. There were no natural barriers
+by which he could protect his flanks; and not only was he certain to
+be overlapped on either wing by the vast lines of the Persian army, but
+there was imminent risk of their circling round him and charging him in
+the rear, while he advanced against their centre. He formed, therefore,
+a second or reserve line, which was to wheel round, if required, or
+to detach troops to either flank; as the enemy's movements might
+necessitate: and thus, with their whole army ready at any moment to
+be thrown into one vast hollow square, the Macedonians advanced in two
+lines against the enemy, Alexander himself leading on the right wing,
+and the renowned phalanx forming the centre, while Parmenio commanded on
+the left.
+
+Such was the general nature of the disposition which Alexander made
+of his army. But we have in Arrian the details of the position of each
+brigade and regiment; and as we know that these details were taken from
+the journals of Macedonian generals, it is interesting to examine them,
+and to read the names and stations of King Alexander's generals and
+colonels in this the greatest of his battles.
+
+The eight troops of the royal horse-guards formed the right of
+Alexander's line. Their captains were Cleitus (whose regiment was on the
+extreme right, the post of peculiar danger), Graucias, Ariston, Sopolis,
+Heracleides, Demetrias, Meleager, and Hegelochus. Philotas was general
+of the whole division. Then came the shield-bearing infantry: Nicanor
+was their general. Then came the phalanx, in six brigades. Coenus's
+brigade was on the right, and nearest to the shield-bearers; next
+to this stood the brigade of Perdiccas, then Meleager's, then
+Polysperchon's; and then the brigade of Amynias, but which was now
+commanded by Simmias, as Amynias had been sent to Macedonia to levy
+recruits. Then came the infantry of the left wing, under the command of
+Craterus. Next to Craterus's infantry were placed the cavalry regiments
+of the allies, with Eriguius for their general. The Messalian cavalry,
+commanded by Philippus, were next, and held the extreme left of
+the whole army. The whole left wing was entrusted to the command of
+Parmenio, who had round his person the Pharsalian troop of
+cavalry, which was the strongest and best amid all the Thessalian
+horse-regiments.
+
+The centre of the second line was occupied by a body of phalangite
+infantry, formed of companies, which were drafted for this purpose from
+each of the brigades of their phalanx. The officers in command of
+this corps were ordered to be ready to face about, if the enemy should
+succeed in gaining the rear of the army. On the right of this reserve
+of infantry, in the second line, and behind the royal horse-guards,
+Alexander placed half the Agrian light-armed infantry under Attalus, and
+with them Brison's body of Macedonian archers, and Cleander's regiment
+of foot. He also placed in this part of his army Menidas's squadron of
+cavalry, and Aretes's and Ariston's light horse. Menidas was ordered to
+watch if the enemy's cavalry tried to turn the flank, and if they did
+so, to charge them before they wheeled completely round, and so take
+them in flank themselves. A similar force was arranged on the left of
+the second line for the same purpose, The Thracian infantry of Sitalces
+was placed there, and Coeranus's regiment of the cavalry of the Greek
+allies, and Agathon's troops of the Odrysian irregular horse.
+The extreme left of the second line in this quarter was held by
+Andromachus's cavalry. A division of Thracian infantry was left in guard
+of the camp. In advance of the right wing and centre was scattered
+a number of light-armed troops, of javelin-men and bowmen, with the
+intention of warding off the charge of the armed chariots. [Kleber's
+arrangement of his troops at the battle of Heliopolis, where, with ten
+thousand Europeans, he had to encounter eighty thousand Asiatics in an
+open plain, is worth comparing with Alexander's tactics at Arbela. See
+Thiers's "Histoire du Consulat," &c. vol. ii. livre v.]
+
+Conspicuous by the brilliancy of his armour, and by the chosen band of
+officers who were round his person, Alexander took his own station, as
+his custom was, in the right wing, at the head of his cavalry: and when
+all the arrangements for the battle were complete, and his generals were
+fully instructed how to act in each probable emergency, he began to lead
+his men towards the enemy.
+
+It was ever his custom to expose his life freely in battle, and to
+emulate the personal prowess of his great ancestor, Achilles. Perhaps in
+the bold enterprise of conquering Persia, it was politic for Alexander
+to raise his army's daring to the utmost by the example of his own
+heroic valour: and, in his subsequent campaigns, the love of the
+excitement, of "the rapture of the strife," may have made him, like
+Murat, continue from choice a custom which he commenced from duty.
+But he never suffered the ardour of the soldier to make him lose the
+coolness of the general; and at Arbela, in particular, he showed that he
+could act up to his favourite Homeric maxim.
+
+Great reliance had been placed by the Persian king on the effects of
+the scythe-bearing chariots. It was designed to launch these against the
+Macedonian phalanx, and to follow them up by a heavy charge of cavalry,
+which it was hoped would find the ranks of the spearmen disordered by
+the rush of the chariots, and easily destroy this most formidable part
+of Alexander's force. In front, therefore, of the Persian centre, where
+Darius took his station, and which it was supposed the phalanx would
+attack, the ground had been carefully levelled and smoothed, so as to
+allow the chariots to charge over it with their full sweep and speed.
+As the Macedonian army approached the Persian, Alexander found that the
+front of his whole line barely equalled the front of the Persian centre,
+so that he was outflanked on his right by the entire left; wing of the
+enemy, and by their entire right wing on his left. His tactics were
+to assail some one point of the hostile army, and gain a decisive
+advantage; while he refused, as far as possible, the encounter along the
+rest of the line. He therefore inclined his order of march to the right
+so as to enable his right wing and centre to come into collision with
+the enemy on as favourable terms as possible though the manoeuvre might
+in some respects compromise his left.
+
+The effect of this oblique movement was to bring the phalanx and his
+own wing nearly beyond the limits of the ground which the Persians had
+prepared for the operations of the chariots; and Darius, fearing to
+lose the benefit of this arm against the most important parts of the
+Macedonian force, ordered the Scythian and Bactrian cavalry, who were
+drawn up on his extreme left, to charge round upon Alexander's right
+wing, and check its further lateral progress. Against these assailants
+Alexander sent from his second line Menidas's cavalry. As these proved
+too few to make head against the enemy, he ordered Ariston also from the
+second line with his light horse, and Cleander with his foot, in support
+of Menidas. The Bactrians and Scythians now began to give way, but
+Darius reinforced them by the mass of Bactrian cavalry from his main
+line, and an obstinate cavalry fight now took place. The Bactrians and
+Scythians were numerous, and were better armed than the horseman
+under Menidas and Ariston; and the loss at first was heaviest on the
+Macedonian side. But still the European cavalry stood the charge of the
+Asiatics, and at last, by their superior discipline, and by acting in
+squadrons that supported each other, instead of fighting in a confused
+mass like the barbarians, the Macedonians broke their adversaries, and
+drove them off the field. [The best explanation of this may be found
+in Napoleon's account of the cavalry fights between the French and
+the Mamelukes:--"Two Mamelukes were able to make head against three
+Frenchmen, because they were better armed, better mounted, and better
+trained; they had two pair of pistols, a blunderbuss, a carbine, a
+helmet with a vizor, and a coat of mail; they had several horses, and
+several attendants on foot. One hundred cuirassiers, however were not
+afraid of one hundred Mamelukes; three hundred could beat; an equal
+number, and one thousand could easily put to the rout fifteen hundred,
+so great is the influence of tactics, order, and evolutions! Leclerc and
+Lasalle presented their men to the Mamelukes in several lines. When the
+Arabs were on the point of overwhelming the first, the second came to
+its assistance on the right and left; the Mamelukes then halted and
+wheeled, in order to turn the wings of this new line; this moment
+was always seized upon to charge them, and they were uniformly
+broken."--MONTHOLON'S HISTORY OF THE CAPTIVITY OF NAPOLEON, iv. 70.]
+
+Darius, now directed the scythe-armed chariots to be driven against
+Alexander's horse-guards and the phalanx; and these formidable vehicles
+were accordingly sent rattling across the plain, against the Macedonian
+line. When we remember the alarm which the war-chariots of the Britons
+created among Caesar's legions, we shall not be prone to deride this arm
+of ancient warfare as always useless. The object of the chariots was
+to create unsteadiness in the ranks against which they were driven,
+and squadrons of cavalry followed close upon them, to profit by such
+disorder. But the Asiatic chariots were rendered ineffective at Arbela
+by the light-armed troops whom Alexander had specially appointed for
+the service, and who, wounding the horses and drivers with their missile
+weapons, and running alongside so as to cut the traces or seize the
+reins, marred the intended charge; and the few chariots that reached
+the phalanx passed harmlessly through the intervals which the spearmen
+opened for them, and were easily captured in the rear.
+
+A mass of the Asiatic cavalry was now, for the second time, collected
+against Alexander's extreme right, and moved round it, with the view of
+gaining the flank of his army. At the critical moment, Aretes, with his
+horsemen from Alexander's second line, dashed on the Persian squadrons
+when their own flanks were exposed by this evolution. While Alexander
+thus met and baffled all the flanking attacks of the enemy with troops
+brought up from his second line, he kept his own horse-guards and the
+rest of the front line of his wing fresh, and ready to take advantage
+of the first opportunity for striking a decisive blow. This soon came. A
+large body of horse, who were posted on the Persian left wing nearest to
+the centre, quitted their station, and rode off to help their comrades
+in the cavalry fight that still was going on at the extreme right of
+Alexander's wing against the detachments from his second line. This made
+a huge gap in the Persian array, and into this space Alexander instantly
+dashed with his guard; and then pressing towards his left, he soon
+began to make havoc in the left flank of the Persian centre. The
+shield-bearing infantry now charged also among the reeling masses of the
+Asiatics; and five of the brigades of the phalanx, with the irresistible
+might of their sarissas, bore down the Greek mercenaries of Darius,
+and dug their way through the Persian centre. In the early part of the
+battle, Darius had showed skill and energy; and he now for some time
+encouraged his men, by voice and example, to keep firm. But the lances
+of Alexander's cavalry, and the pikes of the phalanx now gleamed nearer
+and nearer to him. His charioteer was struck down by a javelin at his
+side; and at last Darius's nerve failed him; and, descending from
+his chariot, he mounted on a fleet horse and galloped from the plain,
+regardless of the state of the battle in other parts of the field, where
+matters were going on much more favourably for his cause, and where his
+presence might have done much towards gaining a victory.
+
+Alexander's operations with his right and centre had exposed his left
+to an immensely preponderating force of the enemy. Parmenio kept out of
+action as long as possible; but Mazaeus, who commanded the Persian right
+wing, advanced against him, completely outflanked him, and pressed
+him severely with reiterated charges by superior numbers. Seeing the
+distress of Parmenio's wing, Simmias, who commanded the sixth brigade of
+the phalanx, which was next to the left wing, did not advance with the
+other brigades in the great charge upon the Persian centre, but kept
+back to cover Parmenio's troops on their right flank; as otherwise they
+would have been completely surrounded and cut off from the rest of the
+Macedonian army. By so doing, Simmias had unavoidably opened a gap in
+the Macedonian left centre; and a large column of Indian and Persian
+horse, from the Persian right centre, had galloped forward through this
+interval, and right through the troops of the Macedonian second line.
+Instead of then wheeling round upon Sarmenio, or upon the rear of
+Alexander's conquering wing, the Indian and Persian cavalry rode
+straight on to the Macedonian camp, overpowered the Thracians who were
+left in charge of it, and began to plunder. This was stopped by the
+phalangite troops of the second line, who, after the enemy's horsemen
+had rushed by them, faced about, countermarched upon the camp, killed
+many of the Indians and Persians in the act of plundering, and forced
+the rest to ride off again. Just at this crisis, Alexander had been
+recalled from his pursuit of Darius, by tidings of the distress of
+Parmenio, and of his inability to bear up any longer against the hot
+attacks of Mazaeus. Taking his horse-guards with him, Alexander rode
+towards the part of the field where his left wing was fighting; but on
+his way thither he encountered the Persian and Indian cavalry, on their
+return from his camp.
+
+These men now saw that their only chance of safety was to cut their
+way through; and in one huge column they charged desperately upon the
+Macedonians. There was here a close hand-to-hand fight, which lasted
+some time, and sixty of the royal horse-guards fell, and three generals,
+who fought close to Alexander's side, were wounded. At length the
+Macedonian, discipline and valour again prevailed, and a large number of
+the Persian and Indian horsemen were cut down; some few only succeeded
+in breaking through and riding away. Relieved of these obstinate
+enemies, Alexander again formed his horse-guards, and led them towards
+Parmenio; but by this time that general also was victorious. Probably
+the news of Darius's flight had reached Mazaeus, and had damped the
+ardour of the Persian right wing; while the tidings of their comrades'
+success must have proportionally encouraged the Macedonian forces under
+Parmenio. His Thessalian cavalry particularly distinguished themselves
+by their gallantry and persevering good conduct; and by the time that
+Alexander had ridden up to Parmenio, the whole Persian army was in full
+flight from the field.
+
+It was of the deepest importance to Alexander to secure the person of
+Darius, and he now urged on the pursuit. The river Lycus was between the
+field of battle and the city of Arbela, whither the fugitives directed
+their course, and the passage of this river was even more destructive to
+the Persians than the swords and spears of the Macedonians had been
+in the engagement. [I purposely omit any statement of the loss in the
+battle. There is a palpable error of the transcribers in the numbers
+which we find in our present manuscripts of Arrian; and Curtius is of no
+authority.] The narrow bridge was soon choked up by the flying
+thousands who rushed towards it, and vast numbers of the Persians
+threw themselves, or were hurried by others, into the rapid stream, and
+perished in its waters. Darius had crossed it, and had ridden on through
+Arbela without halting. Alexander reached that city on the next day, and
+made himself master of all Darius's treasure and stores; but the Persian
+king unfortunately for himself, had fled too fast for his conqueror:
+he had only escaped to perish by the treachery of his Bactrian satrap,
+Bessus.
+
+A few days after the battle Alexander entered Babylon, "the oldest
+seat of earthly empire" then in existence, as its acknowledged lord and
+master. There were yet some campaigns of his brief and bright career
+to be accomplished. Central Asia was yet to witness the march of his
+phalanx. He was yet to effect that conquest of Affghanistan in which
+England since has failed. His generalship, as well as his valour, were
+yet to be signalised on the banks of the Hydaspes, and the field of
+Chillianwallah; and he was yet to precede the Queen of England in
+annexing the Punjaub to the dominions of an European sovereign. But the
+crisis of his career was reached; the great object of his mission was
+accomplished; and the ancient Persian empire, which once menaced all
+the nations of the earth with subjection, was irreparably crushed, when
+Alexander had won his crowning victory at Arbela.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF ARBELA AND THE BATTLE OF THE
+METAURUS.
+
+B.C. 330. The Lacedaemonians endeavour to create a rising in Greece
+against the Macedonian power; they are defeated by Antipater,
+Alexander's viceroy; and their king, Agis, falls in the battle.
+
+330 to 327. Alexander's campaigns in Upper Asia. "Having conquered
+Darius, Alexander pursued his way, encountering difficulties which would
+have appalled almost any other general, through Bactriana, and taking
+Bactra, or Zariaspa, (now Balkh), the chief city of that province, where
+he spent the winter. Crossing the Oxus, he advanced in the following
+spring to Marakanda (Samarcand) to replace the loss of horses which he
+had sustained in crossing the Caucasus, to obtain supplies from the rich
+valley of Sogd (the Mahometan Paradise of Mader-al-Nahr), and to enforce
+the submission of Transoxiana. The northern limit of his march is
+probably represented by the modern Uskand, or Aderkand, a village on the
+Iaxartes, near the end of the Ferganah district. In Margiana he founded
+another Alexandria. Returning from the north, he led on his army in the
+hope of conquering India, till at length, marching in a line apparently
+nearly parallel with the Kabul river, he arrived at the celebrated rock
+Aornos, the position of which must have been on the right bank of the
+Indus, at some distance from Attock; and it may perhaps be represented
+by the modern Akora"--(VAUX.)
+
+327, 326. Alexander marches through, Affghanistan to the Punjaub. He
+defeats Porus. His troops refuse to march towards the Ganges, and he
+commences the descent of the Indus. On his march he attacks and subdues
+several Indian tribes, among others the Malli; in the storming of whose
+capital (Mooltan), he is severely wounded. He directs his admiral,
+Nearchus, to sail round from the Indus to the Persian Gulf; and leads
+the army back across Scinde and Beloochistan.
+
+324. Alexander returns to Babylon. "In the tenth year after he had
+crossed the Hellespont, Alexander, having won his vast dominion, entered
+Babylon; and resting from his career in that oldest seat of earthly
+empire, he steadily surveyed the mass of various nations which owned his
+sovereignty, and revolved in his mind the great work of breathing into
+this huge but inert body the living spirit of Greek civilization. In the
+bloom of youthful manhood, at the age of thirty-two, he paused from
+the fiery speed of his earlier course; and for the first time gave the
+nations an opportunity of offering their homage before his throne. They
+came from all the extremities of the earth to propitiate his anger, to
+celebrate his greatness, or to solicit his protection.... History may
+allow us to think that Alexander and a Roman ambassador did meet at
+Babylon; that the greatest man of the ancient world saw and spoke with
+a citizen of that great nation, which was destined to succeed him in
+his appointed work, and to found a wider and still more enduring empire.
+They met, too, in Babylon, almost beneath the shadow of the temple of
+Bel, perhaps the earliest monument ever raised by human pride and power,
+in a city stricken, as it were, by the word of God's heaviest
+judgment, as the symbol of greatness apart from and opposed to
+goodness."--(ARNOLD.)
+
+323. Alexander dies at Babylon. On his death being known at Greece, the
+Athenians, and others of the southern states, take up arms to shake off
+the domination of Macedon. They are at first successful; but the return
+of some of Alexander's veterans from Asia enables Antipater to prevail
+over them.
+
+317 to 289. Agathocles is tyrant of Syracuse; and carries on repeated
+wars with the Carthaginians; in the course of which (311) he invades
+Africa, and reduces the Carthaginians to great distress.
+
+306. After a long series of wars with each other, and after all the
+heirs of Alexander had been murdered, his principal surviving generals
+assume the title of king, each over the provinces which he has occupied.
+The four chief among them were Antigonus, Ptolemy, Lysimachus, and
+Seleucus. Antipater was now dead, but his son Cassander succeeded to his
+power in Macedonia and Greece.
+
+301. Seleucus and Lysimachus defeat Antigonus at Ipsus. Antigonus is
+killed in the battle.
+
+280. Seleucus, the last of Alexander's captains, is assassinated. Of all
+Alexander's successors, Seleucus had formed the most powerful empire.
+He had acquired all the provinces between Phrygia and the Indus. He
+extended his dominion in India beyond the limits reached by Alexander.
+Seleucus had some sparks of his great master's genius in promoting
+civilization and commerce, as well as in gaining victories. Under his
+successors, the Seleucidae, this vast empire rapidly diminished; Bactria
+became independent, and a separate dynasty of Greek kings ruled there
+in the year 125, when it was overthrown by the Scythian tribes. Parthia
+threw off its allegiance to the Seleucidae in 250 B.C., and the powerful
+Parthian kingdom, which afterwards proved so formidable a foe to Rome,
+absorbed nearly all the provinces west of the Euphrates, that had obeyed
+the first Seleucus. Before the battle of Ipsus, Mithridates, a Persian
+prince of the blood-royal of the Achaemenidae, had escaped to Pontus,
+and founded there the kingdom of that name.
+
+Besides the kingdom of Seleucus, which, when limited to Syria,
+Palestine, and parts of Asia Minor, long survived; the most important
+kingdom formed by a general of Alexander was that of the Ptolemies in
+Egypt. The throne of Macedonia was long and obstinately contended for by
+Cassander, Polysperchon, Lysimachus, Pyrrhus, Antigonus, and others;
+but at last was secured by the dynasty of Antigonus Gonatas. The old
+republics of southern Greece suffered severely during these tumults,
+and the only Greek states that showed any strength and spirit were
+the cities of the Achaean league, the AEtolians, and the islanders of
+Rhodes.
+
+290. Rome had now thoroughly subdued the Samnites and the Etruscans,
+and had gained numerous victories over the Cisalpine Gauls. Wishing to
+confirm her dominion in Lower Italy, she became entangled in a war with
+Pyrrhus, fourth king of Epirus, who was called over by the Tarentines
+to aid them. Pyrrhus was at first victorious, but in the year 275
+was defeated by the Roman legions in a pitched battle. He returned to
+Greece, remarking, "Rome becomes mistress of all Italy from the Rubicon
+to the Straits of Messina."
+
+264. The first Punic war begins. Its primary cause was the desire of
+both the Romans and the Carthaginians to possess themselves of Sicily.
+The Romans form a fleet, and successfully compete with the marine of
+Carthage. [There is at this present moment [written in June, 1851]
+in the Great Exhibition at Hyde Park a model of a piratical galley of
+Labuan, part of the mast of which can be let down on an enemy, and
+form a bridge for boarders. It is worth while to compare this with the
+account in Polybius of the boarding bridges which the Roman admiral
+Dullius, affixed to the masts of his galleys and by means of which he
+won his great victory over the Carthaginian fleet.] During the latter
+half of the war, the military genius of Hamilcar Barca sustains the
+Carthaginian cause in Sicily. At the end of twenty-four years, the
+Carthaginians sue for peace, though their aggregate loss in ships and
+men had been less than that sustained by the Romans since the beginning
+of the war. Sicily becomes a Roman province.
+
+240 to 218. The Carthaginian mercenaries who had been brought back
+from Sicily to Africa, mutiny against Carthage, and nearly succeed in
+destroying her. After a sanguinary and desperate struggle, Hamilcar
+Barca crushes them. During this season of weakness to Carthage, Rome
+takes from her the island of Sardinia. Hamilcar Barca forms the project
+of obtaining compensation by conquests in Spain, and thus enabling
+Carthage to renew the struggle with Rome. He takes Hannibal (then a
+child) to Spain with him. He and, after his death, his brother, win
+great part of southern Spain to the Carthaginian interest. Hannibal
+obtains the command of the Carthaginian armies in Spain, 221 B.C., being
+then twenty-six years old. He attacks Saguntum, a city on the Ebro in
+alliance with Rome, which is the immediate pretext for the second Punic
+war.
+
+During this interval Rome had to sustain a storm from the north. The
+Cisalpine Gauls, in 226, formed an alliance with one of the fiercest
+tribes of their brethren north of the Alps, and began a furious war
+against the Romans, which lasted six years. The Romans gave them several
+severe defeats, and took from them part of their territories near the
+Po. It was on this occasion that the Roman colonies of Cremona and
+Placentia were founded, the latter of which did such essential service
+to Rome in the second Punic war, by the resistance which it made to the
+army of Hasdrubal. A muster-roll was made in this war of the effective
+military force of the Romans themselves, and of those Italian states
+that were subject to them. The return showed a force of seven hundred
+thousand foot, and seventy thousand horse. Polybius mentions this
+muster.
+
+228. Hannibal crosses the Alps and invades Italy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. -- THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS, B.C. 207.
+
+
+ Quid debeas, O Roma, Neronibus,
+ Testis Metaurum flumen, et Hasdrubal
+ Devictus, et pulcher fugatis
+ Ille dies Latio tenebris,
+
+ Qui primus alma risit adorea;
+ Dirus per urbes Afer ut Italas,
+ Ceu flamma per taedas, vel Eurus
+ Per Siculas equitavit undas.--HORATIUS, iv. Od. 4.
+
+ "... The consul Nero, who made the unequalled march which
+ deceived Hannibal, and defeated Hasdrubal, thereby accomplishing
+ an achievement almost unrivalled in military annals. The first
+ intelligence of his return, to Hannibal, was the sight of
+ Hasdrubal's head thrown into his camp. When Hannibal saw this,
+ he exclaimed with a sigh, that 'Rome would now be the mistress of
+ the world.' To this victory of Nero's it might be owing that his
+ imperial namesake reigned at all. But the infamy of the one has
+ eclipsed the glory of the other. When the name of Nero is heard,
+ who thinks of the consul! But such are human things."--BYRON.
+
+
+About midway between Rimini and Ancona a little river falls into the
+Adriatic, after traversing one of those districts of Italy, in which
+a vain attempt has lately been made to revive, after long centuries of
+servitude and shame, the spirit of Italian nationality, and the energy
+of free institutions. That stream is still called the Metauro; and
+wakens by its name recollections of the resolute daring of ancient
+Rome, and of the slaughter that stained its current two thousand and
+sixty-three years ago, when the combined consular armies of Livius
+and Nero encountered and crushed near its banks the varied hosts which
+Hannibal's brother was leading from the Pyrenees, the Rhone, the Alps,
+and the Po, to aid the great Carthaginian in his stern struggle to
+annihilate the growing might of the Roman Republic, and make the Punic
+power supreme over all the nations of the world.
+
+The Roman historian, who termed that struggle the most memorable of all
+wars that ever were carried on, [Livy, Lib. xxi. sec. 1.] wrote-in no
+spirit of exaggeration. For it is not in ancient but in modern history,
+that parallels for its incidents and its heroes are to be found. The
+similitude between the contest which Rome maintained against Hannibal,
+and that which England was for many years engaged in against Napoleon,
+has not passed unobserved by recent historians. "Twice," says Arnold,
+[Vol. iii, p. 62. See also Alison--PASSIM.] "has there been witnessed
+the struggle of the highest individual genius against the resources and
+institutions of a great nation; and in both cases the nation has been
+victorious. For seventeen years Hannibal strove against Rome; for
+sixteen years Napoleon Bonaparte strove against England; the efforts of
+the first ended in Zama, those of the second in Waterloo." One point,
+however, of the similitude between the two wars has scarcely been
+adequately dwelt on. That is, the remarkable parallel between the Roman
+general who finally defeated the great Carthaginian, and the English
+general who gave the last deadly overthrow to the French emperor. Scipio
+and Wellington both held for many years commands of high importance,
+but distant from the main theatres of warfare. The same country was the
+scene of the principal military career of each. It was in Spain that
+Scipio, like Wellington, successively encountered and overthrew nearly
+all the subordinate generals of the enemy, before being opposed to
+the chief champion and conqueror himself. Both Scipio and Wellington
+restored their countrymen's confidence in arms, when shaken by a series
+of reverses. And each of them closed a long and perilous war by a
+complete and overwhelming defeat of the chosen leader and the chosen
+veterans of the foe.
+
+Nor is the parallel between them limited to their military characters
+and exploits. Scipio, like Wellington, became an important leader of
+the aristocratic party among his countrymen, and was exposed to
+the unmeasured invectives of the violent section of his political
+antagonists. When, early in the last reign, an infuriated mob assaulted
+the Duke of Wellington in the streets of the English capital on the
+anniversary of Waterloo, England was even more disgraced by that
+outrage, than Rome was by the factious accusations which demagogues
+brought against Scipio, but which he proudly repelled on the day of
+trial, by reminding the assembled people that it was the anniversary
+of the battle of Zama. Happily, a wiser and a better spirit has now for
+years pervaded all classes of our community; and we shall be spared
+the ignominy of having worked out to the end the parallel of national
+iugratitude. Scipio died a voluntary exile from the malevolent
+turbulence of Rome. Englishmen of all ranks and politics have now long
+united in affectionate admiration of our modern Scipio: and even
+those who have most widely differed from the Duke on legislative or
+administrative questions, forget what they deem the political errors of
+that time-honoured head, while they gratefully call to mind the laurels
+that have wreathed it.
+
+Scipio at Zama trampled in the dust the power of Carthage; but that
+power had been already irreparably shattered in another field, where
+neither Scipio nor Hannibal commanded. When the Metaurus witnessed the
+defeat and death of Hasdrubal, it witnessed the ruin of the scheme
+by which alone Carthage could hope to organise decisive success,--the
+scheme of enveloping Rome at once from the north and the south of Italy
+by chosen armies, led by two sons of Hamilcar. [See Arnold, vol. iii, p.
+387.] That battle was the determining crisis of the contest, not merely
+between Rome and Carthage, but between the two great families of the
+world, which then made Italy the arena of their oft-renewed contest for
+pre-eminence.
+
+The French historian Michelet whose "Histoire Romaine" would have been
+invaluable, if the general industry and accuracy of the writer had in
+any degree equalled his originality and brilliancy, eloquently remarks:
+"It is not without reason that so universal and vivid a remembrance of
+the Punic wars has dwelt in the memories of men. They formed no mere
+struggle to determine the lot of two cities or two empires; but it was a
+strife on the event of which depended the fate of two races of mankind,
+whether the dominion of the world should belong to the Indo-Germanic or
+to the Semitic family of nations. Bear in mind, that the first of these
+comprises, besides the Indians and the Persians, the Greeks, the Romans,
+and the Germans. In the other are ranked the Jews and the Arabs, the
+Phoenicians and the Carthaginians. On the one side is the genius
+of heroism, of art, and legislation: on the other is the spirit of
+industry, of commerce, of navigation. The two opposite races have
+everywhere come into contact, everywhere into hostility. In the
+primitive history of Persia and Chaldea, the heroes are perpetually
+engaged in combat with their industrious and perfidious, neighbours.
+The struggle is renewed between the Phoenicians and the Greeks on every
+coast of the Mediterranean. The Greek supplants the Phoenician in all
+his factories, all his colonies in the east: soon will the Roman come,
+and do likewise in the west. Alexander did far more against Tyre than
+Salmanasar or Nabuchodonosor had done. Not content with crushing her, he
+took care that she never should revive: for he founded Alexandria as
+her substitute, and changed for ever the track of commerce of the
+world. There remained Carthage--the great Carthage, and her mighty
+empire,--mighty in a far different degree than Phoenicia's had been.
+Rome annihilated it. Then occurred that which has no parallel in
+history,--an entire civilisation perished at one blow--vanished, like a
+falling star. The 'Periplus' of Hanno, a few coins, a score of lines in
+Plautus, and, lo, all that remains of the Carthaginian world!
+
+"Many generations must needs pass away before the struggle between the
+two races could be renewed; and the Arabs, that formidable rear-guard of
+the Semitic world, dashed forth from their deserts. The conflict between
+the two races then became the conflict of two religions. Fortunate was
+it that those daring Saracenic cavaliers encountered in the East the
+impregnable walls of Constantinople, in the West the chivalrous valour
+of Charles Martel and the sword of the Cid. The crusades were the
+natural reprisals for the Arab invasions, and form the last epoch of
+that great struggle between the two principal families of the human
+race."
+
+It is difficult amid the glimmering light supplied by the allusions
+of the classical writers to gain a full idea of the character and
+institutions of Rome's great rival. But we can perceive how inferior
+Carthage was to her competitor in military resources; and how far
+less fitted than Rome she was to become the founder of centralized and
+centralizing dominion, that should endure for centuries, and fuse into
+imperial unity the narrow nationalities of the ancient races that dwelt
+around and near the shores of the Mediterranean Sea.
+
+Carthage was originally neither the most ancient nor the most powerful
+of the numerous colonies which the Phoenicians planted on the coast of
+Northern Africa. But her advantageous position, the excellence of her
+constitution (of which, though ill-informed as to its details, we know
+that it commanded the admiration of Aristotle), and the commercial and
+political energy of her citizens, gave her the ascendancy over Hippo,
+Utica, Leptis, and her other sister Phoenician cities in those regions;
+and she finally seduced them to a condition of dependency, similar to
+that which the subject allies of Athens occupied relatively to that once
+imperial city. When Tyre and Sidon and the other cities of Phoenicia
+itself sank from independent republics into mere vassal states of the
+great Asiatic monarchies and obeyed by turns a Babylonian, a Persian,
+and a Macedonian master, their power and their traffic rapidly declined;
+and Carthage succeeded to the important maritime and commercial
+character which they had previously maintained. The Carthaginians did
+not seek to compete with the Greeks on the north-eastern shores of the
+Mediterranean, or in the three inland seas which are connected with
+it; but they maintained an active intercourse with the Phoenicians,
+and through them with lower and Central Asia; and they, and they
+alone, after the decline and fall of Tyre, navigated the waters of the
+Atlantic. They had the monopoly of all the commerce of the world that
+was carried on beyond the Straits of Gibraltar. We have yet extant (in
+a Greek translation) the narrative of the voyage of Hanno, one of their
+admirals, along the western coast of Africa as far as Sierra Leone. And
+in the Latin poem of Festus Avienus, frequent references are made to
+the records of the voyages of another celebrated Carthaginian admiral,
+Himilco, who had explored the north-western coast of Europe. Our own
+islands are mentioned by Himilco as the lands of the Hiberni and the
+Albioni. It is indeed certain that the Carthaginians frequented the
+Cornish coast (as the Phoenicians had done before them) for the purpose
+of procuring tin; and there is every reason to believe that they sailed
+as far as the coasts of the Baltic for amber. When it is remembered that
+the mariner's compass was unknown in those ages, the boldness and skill
+of the seamen of Carthage, and the enterprise of her merchants, may be
+paralleled with any achievements that the history of modern navigation
+and commerce can supply.
+
+In their Atlantic voyages along the African shores, the Carthaginians
+followed the double object of trade and colonization. The numerous
+settlements that were planted by them along the coast from Morocco to
+Senegal, provided for the needy members of the constantly-increasing
+population of a great commercial capital; and also strengthened the
+influence which Carthage exercised among the tribes of the African
+coast. Besides her fleets, her caravans gave her a large and lucrative
+trade with the native Africans; nor must we limit our belief of the
+extent of the Carthaginian trade with the tribes of Central and Western
+Africa, by the narrowness of the commercial intercourse which civilized
+nations of modern times have been able to create in those regions.
+
+Although essentially a mercantile and seafaring people, the
+Carthaginians by no means neglected agriculture. On the contrary, the
+whole of their territory was cultivated like a garden. The fertility of
+the soil repaid the skill and toil bestowed on it; and every invader,
+from Agathocles to Scipio AEmilianus, was struck with admiration at
+the rich pasture-lands carefully irrigated, the abundant harvests,
+the luxuriant vineyards, the plantations of fig and olive-trees, the
+thriving villages, the populous towns, and the splendid villas of the
+wealthy Carthaginians, through which his march lay, as long as he was on
+Carthaginian ground.
+
+The Carthaginians abandoned the Aegean and the Pontus to the Greeks,
+but they were by no means disposed to relinquish to those rivals the
+commerce and the dominion of the coasts of the Mediterranean westward of
+Italy. For centuries the Carthaginians strove to make themselves masters
+of the islands that lie between Italy and Spain. They acquired the
+Balearic islands, where the principal harbour, Port Mahon, still bears
+the name of the Carthaginian admiral. They succeeded in reducing the
+greater part of Sardinia; but Sicily could never be brought into their
+power. They repeatedly invaded that island, and nearly overran it; but
+the resistance which was opposed to them by the Syracusans under Gelon,
+Dionysius, Timoleon, and Agathocles, preserved the island from becoming
+Punic, though many of its cities remained under the Carthaginian rule,
+until Rome finally settled the question to whom Sicily was to belong, by
+conquering it for herself.
+
+With so many elements of success, with almost unbounded wealth with
+commercial and maritime activity, with a fertile territory, with a
+capital city of almost impregnable strength, with a constitution
+that ensured for centuries the blessings of, social order, with an
+aristocracy singularly fertile in men of the highest genius, Carthage
+yet failed signally and calamitously in her contest for power with Rome.
+One of the immediate causes of this may seem to have been the want, of
+firmness among her citizens, which made them terminate the first Punic
+war by begging peace, sooner than endure any longer the hardships and
+burdens caused by a state of warfare, although their antagonists had
+suffered far more severely than themselves. Another cause was the spirit
+of faction among their leading men, which prevented Hannibal in the
+second war from being properly reinforced and supported. But there were
+also more general causes why Carthage proved inferior to Rome. These
+were her position relatively to the mass of the inhabitants of the
+country which she ruled, and her habit of trusting to mercenary armies
+in her wars.
+
+Our clearest information as to the different races of men in and about
+Carthage is derived from Diodorus Siculus. [Vol. ii. p. 447, Wesseling's
+ed.] That historian enumerates four different races: first, he
+mentions the Phoenicians who dwelt in Carthage: next, he speaks of the
+Liby-Phoenicians; these, he tells us, dwelt in many of the maritime
+cities, and were connected by intermarriages with the Phoenicians, which
+was the cause of their compound name: thirdly, he mentions the Libyans,
+the bulk and the most ancient part of the population, hating the
+Carthaginians intensely, on account of the oppressiveness of their
+domination: lastly, he names the Numidians, the nomad tribes of the
+frontier.
+
+It is evident, from this description, that the native Libyans were a
+subject class, without franchise or political rights; and, accordingly,
+we find no instance specified in history of a Libyan holding political
+office or military command. The half-castes, the Liby-Phoenicians, seem
+to have been sometimes sent out as colonists; [See the "Periplus"
+of Hanno.] but it may be inferred, from what Diodorus says of their
+residence, that they had not the right of the citizenship of Carthage:
+and only a solitary case occurs of one of this race being entrusted with
+authority, and that, too, not emanating from the home government. This
+is the instance of the officer sent by Hannibal to Sicily, after the
+fall of Syracuse; whom Polybius [Lib. ix. 22.] calls Myttinus the
+Libyan, but whom, from the fuller account in Livy, we find to have been
+a Liby-Phoenician [Lib. xxv. 40.] and it is expressly mentioned what
+indignation was felt by the Carthaginian commanders in the island that
+this half-caste should control their operations.
+
+With respect to the composition of their armies, it is observable that,
+though thirsting for extended empire, and though some of the leading men
+became generals of the highest order, the Carthaginians, as a people,
+were anything but personally warlike. As long as they could hire
+mercenaries to fight for them, they had little appetite for the irksome
+training, and they grudged the loss of valuable time, which military
+service would have entailed on themselves.
+
+As Michelet remarks, "The life of an industrious merchant, of a
+Carthaginian, was too precious to be risked, as long as it was possible
+to substitute advantageously for it that of a barbarian from Spain or
+Gaul. Carthage knew, and could tell to a drachma, what the life of a
+man of each nation came to. A Greek was worth more than a Campanian, a
+Campanian worth more than a Gaul or a Spaniard. When once this tariff
+of blood was correctly made out, Carthage began a war as a mercantile
+speculation. She tried to make conquests in the hope of getting new
+mines to work, or to open fresh markets for her exports. In one venture
+she could afford to spend fifty thousand mercenaries, in another, rather
+more. If the returns were good, there was no regret felt for the capital
+that had been lavished in the investment; more money got more men, and
+all went on well." [Histoire Romaine, vol. ii. p. 40.]
+
+Armies composed of foreign mercenaries have, in all ages, been as
+formidable to their employers as to the enemy against whom they were
+directed. We know of one occasion (between the first and second Punic
+wars) when Carthage was brought to the very brink of destruction by a
+revolt of her foreign troops. Other mutinies of the same kind must from
+time to time have occurred. Probably one of these was the cause of the
+comparative weakness of Carthage at the time of the Athenian expedition
+against Syracuse; so different from the energy with which she attacked
+Gelon half a century earlier, and Dionysius half a century later. And
+even when we consider her armies with reference only to their efficiency
+in warfare, we perceive at once the inferiority of such bands of
+condottieri, brought together without any common bond of origin,
+tactics, or cause, to the legions of Rome, which at the time of the
+Punic wars were raised from the very flower of a hardy agricultural
+population trained in the strictest discipline, habituated to victory,
+and animated by the most resolute patriotism. And this shows also
+the transcendency of the genius of Hannibal, which could form such
+discordant materials into a compact organized force, and inspire them
+with the spirit of patient discipline and loyalty to their chief; so
+that they were true to him in his adverse as well as in his prosperous
+fortunes; and throughout the chequered series of his campaigns no panic
+rout ever disgraced a division under his command; no mutiny, or even
+attempt at mutiny, was ever known in his camp; and, finally, after
+fifteen years of Italian warfare, his men followed their old leader to
+Zama, "with no fear and little hope;" ["We advanced to Waterloo as the
+Greeks did to Thermopylae; all of us without fear and most of us without
+hope."--SPEECH OF GENERAL FOY.] and there, on that disastrous field,
+stood firm around him, his Old Guard, till Scipio's Numidian allies came
+up on their flank; when at last, surrounded and overpowered, the veteran
+battalions sealed their devotion to their general with their blood.
+
+"But if Hannibal's genius may be likened to the Homeric god, who, in his
+hatred to the Trojans, rises from the deep to rally the fainting Greeks,
+and to lead them against the enemy, so the calm courage with which
+Hector met his more than human adversary in his country's cause, is
+no unworthy image of the unyielding magnanimity displayed by the
+aristocracy of Rome. As Hannibal utterly eclipses Carthage, so, on the
+contrary, Fabius, Marcellus, Claudius Nero, even Scipio himself, are as
+nothing when compared to the spirit, and wisdom, and power of Rome. The
+senate, which voted its thanks to its political enemy, Varro, after his
+disastrous defeat, 'because he had not despaired of the commonwealth,'
+and which disdained either to solicit, or to reprove, or to threaten,
+or in any way to notice the twelve colonies which had refused their
+customary supplies of men for the army, is far more to be honoured than
+the conqueror of Zama. This we should the more carefully bear in mind
+because our tendency is to admire individual greatness far more than
+national; and, as no single Roman will bear comparison to Hannibal, we
+are apt to murmur at the event of the contest, and to think that the
+victory was awarded to the least worthy of the combatants. On the
+contrary, never was the wisdom of God's Providence more manifest than in
+the issue of the struggle between Rome and Carthage. It was clearly
+for the good of man kind that Hannibal should be conquered: his triumph
+would have stopped the progress of the world. For great men can only
+act permanently by forming great nations; and no one man, even though
+it were Hannibal himself, can in one generation effect such a work. But
+where the nation has been merely enkindled for a while by a great man's
+spirit, the light passes away with him who communicated it; and the
+nation, when he is gone, is like a dead body, to which magic power had,
+for a moment, given unnatural life: when the charm has ceased, the body
+is cold and stiff as before. He who grieves over the battle of Zama
+should carry on his thoughts to a period thirty years later, when
+Hannibal must, in the course of nature, have been dead, and consider how
+the isolated Phoenician city of Carthage was fitted to receive and to
+consolidate the civilization of Greece, or by its laws and institutions
+to bind together barbarians of every race and language into an organized
+empire, and prepare them for becoming, when that empire was dissolved,
+the free members of the commonwealth of Christian Europe." [Arnold, vol.
+iii. p. 61. The above is one of the numerous bursts of eloquence that
+adorn Arnold's third volume, and cause such deep regret that that volume
+should have been the last, and its great and good author have been cut
+off with his work thus incomplete.]
+
+It was in the spring of 207 B.C. that Hasdrubal, after skilfully
+disentangling himself from the Roman forces in Spain, and, after a march
+conducted with great judgment and little loss, through the interior of
+Gaul and the passes of the Alps, appeared in the country that now is the
+north of Lombardy, at the head of troops which he had partly brought out
+of Spain, and partly levied among the Gauls and Ligurians on his way.
+At this time Hannibal with his unconquered, and seemingly unconquerable
+army, had been eleven years in Italy, executing with strenuous ferocity
+the vow of hatred to Rome which had been sworn by him while yet a child
+at the bidding of his father, Hamilcar; who, as he boasted, had trained
+up his three sons, Hannibal, Hasdrubal, and Mago, Like three lion's
+whelps, to prey upon the Romans. But Hannibal's latter campaigns had not
+been signalised by any such great victories as marked the first years
+of his invasion of Italy. The stern spirit of Roman resolution, ever
+highest in disaster and danger, had neither bent nor despaired beneath
+the merciless blows which "the dire African" dealt her in rapid
+succession at Trebia, at Thrasymene, and at Cannae. Her population was
+thinned by repeated slaughter in the field; poverty and actual scarcity
+wore down the survivors, through the fearful ravages which Hannibal's
+cavalry spread through their corn-fields, their pasture-lands, and their
+vineyards; many of her allies went over to the invader's side; and new
+clouds of foreign war threatened her from Macedonia and Gaul. But Rome
+receded not. Rich and poor among her citizens vied with each other in
+devotion to their country. The wealthy placed their stores, and all
+placed their lives at the state's disposal. And though Hannibal could
+not be driven out of Italy, though every year brought its sufferings and
+sacrifices, Rome felt that her constancy had not been exerted in vain.
+If she was weakened by the continual strife, so was Hannibal also; and
+it was clear that the unaided resources of his army were unequal to the
+task of her destruction. The single deer-hound could not pull down the
+quarry which he had so furiously assailed. Rome not only stood fiercely
+at bay, but had pressed back and gored her antagonist, that still,
+however, watched her in act to spring. She was weary, and bleeding at
+every pore; and there seemed to be little hope of her escape, if the
+other hound of old Hamilcar's race should come up in time to aid his
+brother in the death-grapple.
+
+Hasdrubal had commanded the Carthaginian armies in Spain for some time,
+with varying but generally unpropitious fortune. He had not the full
+authority over the Punic forces in that country which his brother and
+his father had previously exercised. The faction at Carthage, which was
+at feud with his family, succeeded in fettering and interfering with his
+power; and other generals were from time to time sent into Spain, whose
+errors and misconduct caused the reverses that Hasdrubal met with.
+This is expressly attested by the Greek historian Polybius, who was
+the intimate friend of the younger Africanus, and drew his information
+respecting the second Punic war from the best possible authorities.
+Livy gives a long narrative of campaigns between the Roman commanders
+in Spain and Hasdrubal, which is so palpably deformed by fictions and
+exaggerations as to be hardly deserving of attention. [See the excellent
+criticisms of Sir Walter Raleigh on this, in his "History of the World,"
+book v. chap. iii. sec. 11.]
+
+It is clear that in the year 208 B.C., at least, Hasdrubal outmanoeuvred
+Publius Scipio, who held the command of the Roman forces in Spain; and
+whose object was to prevent him from passing the Pyrenees and marching
+upon Italy. Scipio expected that Hasdrubal would attempt the nearest
+route, along the coast of the Mediterranean; and he therefore carefully
+fortified and guarded the passes of the eastern Pyrenees. But Hasdrubal
+passed these mountains near their western extremity; and then, with a
+considerable force of Spanish infantry, with a small number of African
+troops, with some elephants and much treasure, he marched, not directly
+towards the coast of the Mediterranean, but in a north-eastern line
+towards the centre of Gaul. He halted for the winter in the territory
+of the Arverni, the modern Auvergne; and conciliated or purchased the
+good-will of the Gauls in that region so far, that he not only found
+friendly winter quarters among them, but great numbers of them enlisted
+under him, and on the approach of spring marched with him to invade
+Italy.
+
+By thus entering Gaul at the south-west, and avoiding its southern
+maritime districts, Hasdrubal kept the Romans in complete ignorance of
+his precise operations and movements in that country; all that they knew
+was that Hasdrubal had baffled Scipio's attempts to detain him in Spain;
+that he had crossed the Pyrenees with soldiers, elephants, and money,
+and that he was raising fresh forces among the Gauls. The spring was
+sure to bring him into Italy; and then would come the real tempest of
+the war, when from the north and from the south the two Carthaginian
+armies, each under a son of the Thunderbolt, were to gather together
+around the seven hills of Rome. [Hamilcar was surnamed Barca, which
+means the Thunderbolt. Sultan Bajazet had the similar surname of
+Yilderim.]
+
+In this emergency the Romans looked among themselves earnestly and
+anxiously for leaders fit to meet the perils of the coming campaign.
+
+The senate recommended the people to elect, as one of their consuls,
+Caius Claudius Nero, a patrician of one of the families of the great
+Claudian house. Nero had served during the preceding years of the war,
+both against Hannibal in Italy, and against Hasdrubal in Spain; but it
+is remarkable that the histories, which we possess, record no successes
+as having been achieved by him either before or after his great campaign
+of the Metaurus. It proves much for the sagacity of the leading men of
+the senate, that they recognised in Nero the energy and spirit which
+were required at this crisis, and it is equally creditable to the
+patriotism of the people, that they followed the advice of the senate by
+electing a general who had no showy exploits to recommend him to their
+choice.
+
+It was a matter of greater difficulty to find a second consul; the laws
+required that one consul should be a plebeian; and the plebeian nobility
+had been fearfully thinned by the events of the war. While the senators
+anxiously deliberated among themselves what fit colleague for Nero could
+be nominated at the coming comitia, and sorrowfully recalled the
+names of Marcellus, Gracchus, and other plebeian generals who were no
+more--one taciturn and moody old man sat in sullen apathy among the
+conscript fathers. This was Marcus Livius, who had been consul in the
+gear before the beginning of this war, and had then gained a victory
+over the Illyrians. After his consulship he had been impeached before
+the people on a charge of peculation and unfair division of the spoils
+among his soldiers: the verdict was unjustly given against him, and the
+sense of this wrong, and of the indignity thus put upon him, had rankled
+unceasingly in the bosom of Livius, so that for eight years after his
+trial he had lived in seclusion at his country seat, taking no part in
+any affairs of state. Latterly the censors had compelled him to come to
+Rome and resume his place in the senate, where he used to sit gloomily
+apart, giving only a silent vote. At last an unjust accusation against
+one of his near kinsmen made him break silence; and he harangued the
+house in words of weight and sense, which drew attention to him, and
+taught the senators that a strong spirit dwelt beneath that unimposing
+exterior. Now, while they were debating on what noble of a plebeian
+house was fit to assume the perilous honours of the consulate, some of
+the elder of them looked on Marcus Livius, and remembered that in the
+very last triumph which had been celebrated in the streets of Rome this
+grim old man had sat in the car of victory; and that he had offered the
+last grand thanksgiving sacrifice for the success of the Roman arms
+that had bled before Capitoline Jove. There had been no triumphs since
+Hannibal came into Italy. [Marcellus had been only allowed an ovation
+for the conquest of Syracuse.] The Illyrian campaign of Livius was the
+last that had been so honoured; perhaps it might be destined for him now
+to renew the long-interrupted series. The senators resolved that Livius
+should be put in nomination as consul with Nero; the people were willing
+to elect him; the only opposition came from himself. He taunted them
+with their inconsistency is honouring a man they had convicted of a base
+crime. "If I am innocent," said he, "why did you place such a stain on
+me? If I am guilty, why am I more fit for a second consulship than I was
+for my first one?" The other senators remonstrated with him urging the
+example of the great Camillus, who, after an unjust condemnation on a
+similar charge, both served and saved his country. At last Livius ceased
+to object; and Caius Claudius Nero and Marcus Livius were chosen consuls
+of Rome.
+
+A quarrel had long existed between the two consuls, and the senators
+strove to effect a reconciliation between them before the campaign.
+Here again Livius for a long time obstinately resisted the wish of his
+fellow-senators. He said it was best for the state that he and Nero
+should continue to hate one another. Each would do his duty better,
+when he knew that he was watched by an enemy in the person of his own
+colleague. At last the entreaties of the senators prevailed, and Livius
+consented to forego the feud, and to co-operate with Nero in preparing
+for the coming struggle.
+
+As soon as the winter snows were thawed, Hasdrubal commenced his march
+from Auvergne to the Alps. He experienced none of the difficulties which
+his brother had met with from the mountain tribes. Hannibal's army
+had been the first body of regular troops that had ever traversed the
+regions; and, as wild animals assail a traveller, the natives rose
+against it instinctively, in imagined defence of their own habitations,
+which they supposed to be the objects of Carthaginian ambition. But
+the fame of the war, with which Italy had now been convulsed for eleven
+years, had penetrated into the Alpine passes; and the mountaineers
+understood that a mighty city, southward of the Alps, was to be attacked
+by the troops whom they saw marching among them. They not only opposed
+no resistance to the passage of Hasdrubal, but many of them, out of
+the love of enterprise and plunder, or allured by the high pay that he
+offered, took service with him; and thus he advanced upon Italy with an
+army that gathered strength at every league. It is said, also, that some
+of the most important engineering works which Hannibal had constructed,
+were found by Hasdrubal still in existence, and materially favoured the
+speed of his advance. He thus emerged into Italy from the Alpine valleys
+much sooner than had been anticipated. Many warriors of the Ligurian
+tribes joined him; and, crossing the river Po, he marched down its
+southern bank to the city of Placentia, which he wished to secure as a
+base for his future operations. Placentia resisted him as bravely as it
+had resisted Hannibal eleven years before; and for some time Hasdrubal
+was occupied with a fruitless siege before its walls.
+
+Six armies were levied for the defence of Italy when the long-dreaded
+approach of Hasdrubal was announced. Seventy thousand Romans served in
+the fifteen legions of which, with an equal number of Italian allies,
+those armies and the garrisons were composed. Upwards of thirty thousand
+more Romans were serving in Sicily, Sardinia, and Spain. The whole
+number of Roman citizens of an age fit for military duty scarcely
+exceeded a hundred and thirty thousand. The census taken before the war
+had shown a total of two hundred and seventy thousand, which had been
+diminished by more than half during twelve years. These numbers are
+fearfully emphatic of the extremity to which Rome was reduced, and of
+her gigantic efforts in that great agony of her fate. Not merely men,
+but money and military stores, were drained to the utmost; and if
+the armies of that year should be swept off by a repetition of the
+slaughters of Thrasymene and Cannae, all felt that Rome would cease to
+exist. Even if the campaign were to be marked by no decisive success on
+either side, her ruin seemed certain. In South Italy Hannibal had either
+detached Rome's allies from her, or had impoverished them by the ravages
+of his army. If Hasdrubal could have done the same in Upper Italy; if
+Etruria, Umbria, and Northern Latium had either revolted or been laid
+waste, Rome must have sunk beneath sheer starvation; for the hostile
+or desolated territory would have yielded no supplies of corn for her
+population; and money, to purchase it from abroad, there was none.
+Instant victory was a matter of life and death. Three of her six armies
+were ordered to the north, but the first of these was required to
+overawe the disaffected Etruscans. The second army of the north was
+pushed forward, under Porcius, the praetor, to meet and keep in, check
+the advanced troops of Hasdrubal; while the third, the grand army of the
+north, which was to be under the immediate command of the consul Livius,
+who had the chief command in all North Italy, advanced more slowly in
+its support. There were similarly three armies in the south, under the
+orders of the other consul Claudius Nero.
+
+The lot had decided that Livius was to be opposed to Hasdrubal, and
+that Nero should face Hannibal. And "when all was ordered as themselves
+thought best, the two consuls went forth of the city; each his several
+way. The people of Rome were now quite otherwise affected, than they had
+been, when L. AEmilius Paulus and C. Tarentius Varro were sent against
+Hannibal. They did no longer take upon them to direct their generals, or
+bid them dispatch, and win the victory betimes; but rather they stood
+in fear, lest all diligence, wisdom, and valour should prove too little.
+For since, few years had passed, wherein some one of their generals
+had not been slain; and since it was manifest, that if either of
+these present consuls were defeated, or put to the worst, the two
+Carthaginians would forthwith join, and make short work with the other:
+it seemed a greater happiness than could be expected, that each of them
+should return home victor; and come off with honour from such mighty
+opposition as he was like to find. With extreme difficulty had Rome held
+up her head ever since the battle of Cannae; though it were so, that
+Hannibal alone, with little help from Carthage, had continued the war in
+Italy. But there was now arrived another son of Amilcar; and one that,
+in his present expedition, had seemed a man of more sufficiency than
+Hannibal himself. For, whereas in that long and dangerous march through
+barbarous nations, over great rivers and mountains, that were thought
+unpassable, Hannibal had lost a great part of his army; this Asdrubal,
+in the same places, had multiplied his numbers; and gathering the
+people that he found in the way, descended from the Alps like a rolling
+snow-ball, far greater than he came over the Pyrenees at his first
+setting out of Spain. These considerations, and the like, of which fear
+presented many unto them, caused the people of Rome to wait upon their
+consuls out of the town, like a pensive train of mourners; thinking upon
+Marcellus and Crispinus, upon whom, in the like sort, they had given
+attendance the last year, but saw neither of them return alive from
+a less dangerous war. Particularly old Q. Fabius gave his accustomed
+advice to M. Livius, that he should abstain from giving or taking
+battle, until he well understood the enemies' condition. But the consul
+made him a froward answer, and said, that he would fight the very first
+day, for that he thought it long till he should either recover his
+honour by victory, or, by seeing the overthrow of his own unjust
+citizens, satisfy himself with the joy of a great, though not an
+honest revenge. But his meaning was better than his words." [Sir Walter
+Raleigh.]
+
+Hannibal at this period occupied with his veteran but much reduced
+forces the extreme south of Italy. It had not been expected either by
+friend or foe, that Hasdrubal would effect his passage of the Alps so
+early in the year as actually occurred. And even when Hannibal learned
+that his brother was in Italy, and had advanced as far as Placentia,
+he was obliged to pause for further intelligence, before he himself
+commenced active operations, as he could not tell whether his brother
+might not be invited into Etruria, to aid the party there that was
+disaffected to Rome or whether he would march down by the Adriatic Sea.
+Hannibal led his troops out of their winter quarters in Bruttium, and
+marched northward as far as Canusium. Nero had his head-quarters near
+Venusia, with an army which he had increased to forty thousand foot and
+two thousand five hundred horse, by incorporating under his own command
+some of the legions which had been intended to set under other generals
+in the south. There was another Roman army twenty thousand strong, south
+of Hannibal, at Tarentum. The strength of that city secured this Roman
+force from any attack by Hannibal, and it was a serious matter to march
+northward and leave it in his rear, free to act against all his depots
+and allies in the friendly part of Italy, which for the last two or
+three campaigns had served him for a base of his operations. Moreover,
+Nero's army was so strong that Hannibal could not concentrate troops
+enough to assume the offensive against it without weakening his
+garrisons, and relinquishing, at least for a time, his grasp upon the
+southern provinces. To do this before he was certainly informed of his
+brother's operations would have been an useless sacrifice; as Nero could
+retreat before him upon the other Roman armies near the capital, and
+Hannibal knew by experience that a mere advance of his army upon the
+walls of Rome would have no effect on the fortunes of the war. In
+the hope, probably, of inducing Nero to follow him, and of gaining an
+opportunity of outmanoeuvring the Roman consul and attacking him on his
+march, Hannibal moved into Lucania, and then back into Apulis;--he
+again marched down into Bruttium, and strengthened his army by a levy of
+recruits in that district. Nero followed him, but gave him no chance of
+assailing him at a disadvantage. Some partial encounters seem to have
+taken place; but the consul could not prevent Hannibal's junction
+with his Bruttian levies, nor could Hannibal gain an opportunity of
+surprising and crushing the consul. Hannibal returned to his former
+head-quarters at Canusium, and halted there in expectation of further
+tidings of his brother's movements. Nero also resumed his former
+position in observation of the Carthaginian army.
+
+[The annalists whom Livy copied, spoke of Nero's gaining repeated
+victories over Hannibal, and killing; and taking his men by tens of
+thousands. The falsehood of all this is self-evident. If Nero could thus
+always beat Hannibal, the Romans would not have been in such an agony
+of dread about Hasdrubal, as all writers describe. Indeed, we have the
+express testimony of Polybius that such statements as we read in Livy
+of Marcellus, Nero, and others gaining victories over Hannibal in Italy,
+must be all fabrications of Roman vanity. Polybius states (Lib. xv. sec.
+16) that Hannibal was never defeated before the battle of Zama; and in
+another passage (Book ix. chap, 3) he mentions that after the defeats
+which Hannibal inflicted on the Romans in the early years of the war,
+they no longer dared face his army in a pitched battle on a fair field,
+and yet they resolutely maintained the war. He rightly explains this by
+referring to the superiority of Hannibal's cavalry the arm which gained
+him all his victories. By keeping within fortified lines, or close to
+the sides of the mountains when Hannibal approached them, the Romans
+rendered his cavalry ineffective; and a glance at the geography of Italy
+will show how an army can traverse the greater part of that country
+without venturing far from the high grounds.]
+
+Meanwhile, Hasdrubal had raised the siege of Placentia, and was
+advancing towards Ariminum on the Adriatic, and driving before him the
+Roman army under Porcina. Nor when the consul Livius had come up, and
+united the second and third armies of the north, could he make head
+against the invaders. The Romans still fell back before Hasdrubal,
+beyond Ariminum, beyond the Metaurus, and as far as the little town of
+Sena, to the southeast of that river. Hasdrubal was not unmindful of the
+necessity of acting in concert with his brother. He sent messengers
+to Hannibal to announce his own line of march and to propose that they
+should unite their armies in South Umbria, and then wheel round against
+Rome. Those messengers traversed the greater part of Italy in safety;
+but, when close to the object of their mission, were captured by a Roman
+detachment; and Hasdrubal's letter, detailing his whole plan of the
+campaign, was laid, not in his brother's hands, but in those of the
+commander of the Roman armies of the south. Nero saw at once the full
+importance of the crisis. The two sons of Hamilcar were now within two
+hundred miles of each other, and if Rome were to be saved, the brothers
+must never meet alive. Nero instantly ordered seven thousand picked men,
+a thousand being cavalry, to hold themselves in readiness for a secret
+expedition against one of Hannibal's garrisons; and as soon as night had
+set in, he hurried forward on his bold enterprise: but he quickly left
+the southern road towards Lucania, and wheeling round, pressed northward
+with the utmost rapidity towards Picenum. He had, during the preceding
+afternoon, sent messengers to Rome, who were to lay Hasdrubal's letters
+before the senate. There was a law forbidding a consul to make war or to
+march his army beyond the limits of the province assigned to him; but in
+such an emergency Nero did not wait for the permission of the senate to
+execute his project, but informed them that he was already on his
+march to join Livius against Hasdrubal. He advised them to send the two
+legions which formed the home garrison, on to Narnia, so as to defend
+that pass of the Flaminian road against Hasdrubal, in case he should
+march upon Rome before the consular armies could attack him. They were
+to supply the place of those two legions at Rome by a levy EN MASSE in
+the city, and by ordering up the reserve legion from Capua. These were
+his communications to the senate. He also sent horseman forward along
+his line of march, with orders to the local authorities to bring stores
+of; provisions and refreshments of every kind to the road-side, and
+to have relays of carriages ready for the conveyance of the wearied
+soldiers. Such were the precautions which he took for accelerating his
+march; and when he had advanced some little distance from his camp, he
+briefly informed his soldiers of the real object of their expedition.
+He told them that there never was a design more seemingly audacious, and
+more really safe. He said he was leading them to a certain victory, for
+his colleague had an army large enough to balance the enemy already, so
+that THEIR swords would decisively turn the scale. The very rumour
+that a fresh consul and a fresh army had come up, when heard on the
+battle-field (and he would take care that they should not be heard of
+before they were seen and felt) would settle the campaign. They would
+have all the credit of the victory, and of having dealt the final
+decisive blow, He appealed to the enthusiastic reception which they
+already met with on their line of march as a proof and an omen of their
+good fortune. [Livy. lib. xxvii. c. 45.] And, indeed, their whole path
+was amidst the vows and prayers and praises of their countrymen. The
+entire population of the districts through which they passed, flocked
+to the road-side to see and bless the deliverers of their country. Food,
+drink, and refreshments of every kind were eagerly pressed on their
+acceptance. Each peasant thought a favour was conferred on him, if one
+of Nero's chosen band would accept aught at his hands. The soldiers
+caught the full spirit of their leader. Night and day they marched
+forwards, taking their hurried meals in the ranks and resting by relays
+in the waggons which the zeal of the country-people provided, and which
+followed in the rear of the column.
+
+Meanwhile, at Rome, the news of Nero's expedition had caused the
+greatest excitement and alarm. All men felt the full audacity of the
+enterprise, but hesitated what epithet to apply to it. It was evident
+that Nero's conduct would be judged of by the event, that most unfair
+criterion, as the Roman historian truly terms it. ["Adparebat (quo nihil
+iniquius est) ex eventu famam habiturum."--LIVY, lib. xxvii. c. 44.]
+People reasoned on the perilous state in which Nero had left the rest of
+his army, without a general, and deprived of the core of its strength,
+in the vicinity of the terrible Hannibal. They speculated on how long
+it would take Hannibal to pursue and overtake Nero himself, and his
+expeditionary force. They talked over the former disasters of the war,
+and the fall of both the consuls of the last year. All these calamities
+had come on them while they had only one Carthaginian general and army
+to deal with in Italy. Now they had two Punic wars at one time. They
+had two Carthaginian armies; they had almost two Hannibals in Italy,
+Hasdrubal was sprung from the same father; trained up in the same
+hostility to Rome; equally practised in battle against its legions; and,
+if the comparative speed and success with which he had crossed the Alps
+was a fair test, he was even a better general than his brother. With
+fear for their interpreter of every rumour, they exaggerated the
+strength of their enemy's forces in every quarter, and criticised and
+distrusted their own.
+
+Fortunately for Rome, while she was thus a prey to terror and anxiety,
+her consul's nerves were strong, and he resolutely urged on his march
+towards Sena, where his colleague, Livius, and the praetor Portius were
+encamped; Hasdrubal's army being in position about half a mile to the
+north. Nero had sent couriers forward to apprise his colleague of his
+project and of his approach; and by the advice of Livius, Nero so timed
+his final march as to reach the camp at Sena by night. According to a
+previous arrangement, Nero's men were received silently into the tents
+of their comrades, each according to his rank. By these means there was
+no enlargement of the camp that could betray to Hasdrubal the accession
+of force which the Romans had received. This was considerable; as Nero's
+numbers had been increased on the march by the volunteers, who offered
+themselves in crowds, and from whom he selected the most promising men,
+and especially the veterans of former campaigns. A council of war was
+held on the morning after his arrival, in which some advised that time
+should be given for Nero's men to refresh themselves, after the fatigue
+of such a march. But Nero vehemently opposed all delay. "The officer,"
+said he, "who is for giving time for my men here to rest themselves, is
+for giving time to Hannibal to attack my men, whom I have left in the
+camp in Apulia. He is for giving time to Hannibal and Hasdrubal to
+discover my march, and to manoeuvre for a junction with each other in
+Cisalpine Gaul at their leisure. We must fight instantly, while both the
+foe here and the foe in the south are ignorant of our movements. We must
+destroy this Hasdrubal, and I must be back In Apulia before Hannibal
+awakes from his torpor." [Livy, lib. xxvii. c. 45.] Nero's advice
+prevailed. It was resolved to fight directly; and before the consuls and
+praetor left the tent of Livius, the red ensign, which was the signal to
+prepare for immediate action, was hoisted, and the Romans forthwith drew
+up in battle array outside the camp.
+
+Hasdrubal had been anxious to bring Livius and Porcius to battle, though
+he had not judged it expedient to attack them in their lines. And now,
+on hearing that the Romans offered battle, he also drew up his men, and
+advanced towards them. No spy or deserter had informed him of Nero's
+arrival; nor had he received any direct information that he had more
+than his old enemies to deal with. But as he rode forward to reconnoitre
+the Roman lines, he thought that their numbers seemed to have increased,
+and that the armour of some-of them was unusually dull and stained. He
+noticed also that the horses of some of the cavalry appeared to be rough
+and out of condition, as if they had just come from a succession of
+forced marches. So also, though, owing to the precaution of Livius, the
+Roman camp showed no change of size, it had not escaped the quick ear of
+the Carthaginian general, that the trumpet, which gave the signal to
+the Roman legions, sounded that morning once oftener than usual, as if
+directing the troops of some additional superior officer. Hasdrubal,
+from his Spanish campaigns, was well acquainted with all the sounds
+and signals of Roman war; and from all that he heard and saw, he felt
+convinced that both the Roman consuls were before him. In doubt and
+difficulty as to what might have taken place between the armies of the
+south, and probably hoping that Hannibal also was approaching, Hasdrubal
+determined to avoid an encounter with the combined Roman forces, and
+to endeavour to retreat upon Insubrian Gaul, where he would be in a
+friendly country, and could endeavour to re-open his communications with
+his brother. He therefore led his troops back into their camp; and, as
+the Romans did not venture on an assault upon his entrenchments, and
+Hasdrubal did not choose to commence his retreat in their sight, the day
+passed away in inaction. At the first watch of the night, Hasdrubal led
+his men silently out of their camp, and moved northwards towards the
+Metaurus, in the hope of placing that river between himself and the
+Romans before his retreat was discovered. His guides betrayed him;
+and having purposely led him away from the part of the river that was
+fordable, they made their escape in the dark, and left Hasdrubal and his
+army wandering in confusion along the steep bank, and seeking in vain
+for a spot where the stream could be safely crossed. At last they
+halted; and when day dawned on them, Hasdrubal found that great numbers
+of his men, in their fatigue and impatience, had lost all discipline and
+subordination, and that many of his Gallic auxiliaries had got drunk,
+and were lying helpless in their quarters. The Roman cavalry was soon
+seen coming up in pursuit, followed at no great distance by the legions,
+which marched in readiness for an instant engagement. It was hopeless
+for Hasdrubal, to think of continuing his retreat before them. The
+prospect of immediate battle might recall the disordered part of his
+troops to a sense of duty, and revive the instinct of discipline. He
+therefore ordered his men to prepare for action instantly, and made the
+best arrangement of them that the nature of the ground would permit.
+
+Heeren has well described the general appearance of a Carthaginian army.
+He says: "It was an assemblage of the most opposite races of the human
+species, from the farthest parts of the globe. Hordes of half-naked
+Gauls were ranged next to companies of white clothed Iberians, and
+savage Ligurians next to the far-travelled Nasamones and Lotophagi.
+Carthaginians and Phoenici-Africans formed the centre; while innumerable
+troops of Numidian horse-men, taken from all the tribes of the Desert,
+swarmed about on unsaddled horses, and formed the wings; the van was
+composed of Balearic slingers; and a line of colossal elephants, with
+their Ethiopian guides, formed, as it were, a chain of moving fortresses
+before the whole army. Such were the usual materials and arrangements of
+the hosts that fought for Carthage; but the troops under Hasdrubal were
+not in all respects thus constituted or thus stationed. He seems to have
+been especially deficient in cavalry, and he had few African troops,
+though some Carthaginians of high rank were with him. His veteran
+Spanish infantry, armed with helmets and shields, and short
+cut-and-thrust swords, were the best part of his army. These, and his
+few Africans, he drew up on his right wing, under his own personal
+command. In the centre, he placed his Ligurian infantry, and on the left
+wing he placed or retained the Gauls, who were armed with long javelins
+and with huge broadswords and targets. The rugged nature of the ground
+in front and on the flank of this part of his line, made him hope that
+the Roman right wing would be unable to come to close quarters with
+these unserviceable barbarians, before he could make some impression
+with his Spanish veterans on the Roman left. This was the only chance
+that he had of victory or safety, and he seems to have done everything
+that good generalship could do to secure it. He placed his elephants in
+advance of his centre and right wing. He had caused the driver of each
+of them to be provided with a sharp iron spike and a mallet; and had
+given orders that every beast that became unmanageable, and ran back
+upon his own ranks, should be instantly killed, by driving the spike
+into the vertebra at the junction of the head and the spine. Hasdrubal's
+elephants were ten in number. We have no trustworthy information as to
+the amount of his infantry, but it is quite clear that he was greatly
+outnumbered by the combined Roman forces."
+
+The tactic of the Roman legions had not yet acquired the perfection
+which it received from the military genius of Marius, [Most probably
+during the period of his prolonged consulship, from B.C. 104 to B.C.
+101, while he was training his army against the Cimbri and the Teutons.]
+and which we read of in the first chapter of Gibbon. We possess in
+that great work an account of the Roman legions at the end of the
+commonwealth, and during the early ages of the empire, which those alone
+can adequately admire, who have attempted a similar description. We
+have also, in the sixth and seventeenth books of Polybius, an elaborate
+discussion on the military system of the Romans in his time, which was
+not far distant from the time of the battle of the Metaurus. But the
+subject is beset with difficulties: and instead of entering into minute
+but inconclusive details, I would refer to Gibbon's first chapter, as
+serving for a general description of the Roman army in its period of
+perfection; and remark, that the training and armour which the whole
+legion received in the time of Augustus, was, two centuries earlier,
+only partially introduced. Two divisions of troops, called Hastati and
+Principes, formed the bulk of each Roman legion in the second Punic war.
+Each of these divisions was twelve hundred strong. The Hastatus and the
+Princeps legionary bore a breast-plate or coat of mail, brazen greaves,
+and a brazen helmet, with a lofty, upright crest of scarlet or black
+feathers. He had a large oblong shield; and, as weapons of offence, two
+javelins, one of which was light and slender, but the other was a strong
+and massive weapon, with a shaft about four feet long, and an iron head
+of equal length. The sword was carried on the right thigh, and was a
+short cut-and thrust weapon, like that which was used by the Spaniards.
+Thus armed, the Hastati formed the front division of the legion, and the
+Principes the second. Each division was drawn up about ten deep; a space
+of three feet being allowed between the files as well as the ranks, so
+as to give each legionary ample room for the use of his javelins, and
+of his sword and shield. The men in the second rank did not stand
+immediately behind those in the first rank, but the files were
+alternate, like the position of the men on a draught board. This was
+termed the quincunx order. Niebuhr considers that this arrangement
+enabled the legion to keep up a shower of javelins on the enemy for some
+considerable time. He says: "When the first line had hurled its pila,
+it probably stepped back between those who stood behind it, who with
+two steps forward restored the front nearly to its first position; a
+movement which, on account of the arrangement of the quincunx, could be
+executed without losing a moment. Thus one line succeeded the other in
+the front till it was time to draw the swords; nay, when it was found
+expedient, the lines which had already been in the front might repeat
+this change, since the stores of pila were surely not confined to the
+two which each soldier took with him into battle.
+
+"The same change must have taken place in fighting with the sword;
+which, when the same tactic was adopted on both sides, was anything but
+a confused MELEE; on the contrary, it was a series of single combats."
+He adds, that a military man of experience had been consulted by him on
+the subject, and had given it as his opinion, "that the change of the
+lines as described above was by no means impracticable; and in the
+absence of the deafening noise of gunpowder, it cannot have had even any
+difficulty with trained troops."
+
+The third division of the legion was six hundred strong, and acted as a
+reserve. It was always composed of veteran soldiers, who were called the
+Triarii. Their arms were the same as those of the Principes and Hastati;
+except that each Triarian carried a spear instead of javelins. The rest
+of the legion consisted of light armed troops, who acted as skirmishers.
+The cavalry of each legion was at this period about three hundred
+strong. The Italian allies, who were attached to the legion, seem to
+have been similarly armed and equipped, but their numerical proportion
+of cavalry was much larger.
+
+Such was the nature of the forces that advanced on the Roman side to the
+battle of the Metaurus. Nero commanded the right wing, Livius the left,
+and the praetor Porcius had the command of the centre. "Both Romans and
+Carthaginians well understood how much depended upon the fortune of this
+day, and how little hope of safety there was for the vanquished. Only
+the Romans herein seemed to have had the better in conceit and opinion,
+that they were to fight with men desirous to have fled from them. And
+according to this presumption came Livius the consul, with a proud
+bravery, to give charge on the Spaniards and Africans, by whom he was so
+sharply entertained that victory seemed very doubtful. The Africans and
+Spaniards were stout soldiers, and well acquainted with the manner
+of the Roman fight. The Ligurians, also, were a hardy nation, and not
+accustomed to give ground; which they needed the less, or were able now
+to do, being placed in the midst. Livius, therefore, and Porcius found
+great opposition; and, with great slaughter on both sides, prevailed
+little or nothing. Besides other difficulties, they were exceedingly
+troubled by the elephants, that brake their first ranks, and put them in
+such disorder, as the Roman ensigns were driven to fall back; all this
+while Claudius Nero, labouring in vain against a steep hill, was unable
+to come to blows with the Gauls that stood opposite him, but out of
+danger. This made Hasdrubal the more confident, who, seeing his own left
+wing safe, did the more boldly and fiercely make impression on the other
+side upon the left wing of the Romans." ["Historie of the World," by Sir
+Walter Raleigh, p. 946.]
+
+But at last Nero, who found that Hasdrubal refused his left wing, and
+who could not overcome the difficulties of the ground in the quarter
+assigned to him, decided the battle by another stroke of that military
+genius which had inspired his march. Wheeling a brigade of his best men
+round the rear of the rest of the Roman army, Nero fiercely charged the
+flank of the Spaniards and Africans. The charge was as successful as it
+was sudden. Rolled back in disorder upon each other, and overwhelmed
+by numbers, the Spaniards and Ligurians died, fighting gallantly to the
+last. The Gauls, who had taken little or no part in the strife of the
+day, were then surrounded, and butchered almost without resistance.
+Hasdrubal, after having, by the confession of his enemies, done all that
+a general could do, when he saw that the victory was irreparably lost,
+scorning to survive the gallant; host which he had led, and to gratify,
+as a captive, Roman cruelty and pride, spurred his horse into the midst
+of a Roman cohort; where, sword in hand, he met the death that was
+worthy of the son of Hamilcar and the brother of Hannibal.
+
+Success the most complete had crowned Nero's enterprise. Returning as
+rapidly as he had advanced, he was again facing the inactive enemies in
+the south, before they even knew of his march. But he brought with him
+a ghastly trophy of what he had done. In the true spirit of that savage
+brutality which deformed the Roman national character, Nero ordered
+Hasdrubal's head to be flung into his brother's camp. Eleven years had
+passed since Hannibal had last gazed on those features. The sons of
+Hamilcar had then planned their system of warfare against Rome, which
+they had so nearly brought to successful accomplishment. Year after year
+had Hannibal been struggling in Italy, in the hope of one day hailing
+the arrival of him whom he had left in Spain; and of seeing his
+brother's eye flash with affection and pride at the junction of their
+irresistible hosts. He now saw that eye glazed in death and, in the
+agony of his heart, the great Carthaginian groaned aloud that he
+recognised his country's destiny.
+
+
+ [Carthagini jam non ego nuntios
+ Mittam superbos. Occidit, occidit
+ Spes omnis et fortuna nostri
+ Nominis, Hastrubale interemto.--HORACE.]
+
+
+Rome was almost delirious with joy: [See the splendid description in
+Livy, lib. xxvii. sec. 50, 51.] so agonising had been the suspense with
+which the battle's verdict on that great issue of a nation's life and
+death had been awaited; so overpowering was the sudden reaction to the
+consciousness of security, and to the full glow of glory and success.
+From the time when it had been known at Rome that the armies were in
+presence of each other, the people had never ceased to throng the forum,
+the Conscript Fathers had been in permanent sitting at the senate house.
+Ever and anon a fearful whisper crept among the crowd of a second Cannae
+won by a second Hannibal. Then came truer rumours that the day was
+Rome's; but the people were sick at heart, and heeded them not. The
+shrines were thronged with trembling women, who seemed to weary heaven
+with prayers to shield them from the brutal Gaul and the savage African.
+Presently the reports of good fortune assumed a more definite form. It
+was said that two Narnian horseman had ridden from the east into the
+Roman camp of observation in Umbria, and had brought tidings of the
+utter slaughter of the foe. Such news seemed too good to be true,
+Men tortured their neighbours and themselves by demonstrating its
+improbability and by ingeniously criticising its evidence. Soon,
+however, a letter came from Lucius Manlius Acidinus, who commanded in
+Umbria, and who announced the arrival of the Narnian horsemen in his
+camp, and the intelligence which they brought thither. The letter
+was first laid before the senate, and then before the assembly of the
+people. The excitement grew more and more vehement. The letter was read
+and re-read aloud to thousands. It confirmed the previous rumour. But
+even this was insufficient to allay the feverish anxiety that thrilled
+through every breast in Rome. The letter might be a forgery: the Narnian
+horseman might be traitors or impostors. "We must see officers from the
+army that fought, or hear despatches from the consuls themselves, and
+then only will we believe." Such was the public sentiment, though some
+of more hopeful nature already permitted themselves a foretaste of joy.
+At length came news that officers who really had been in the battle were
+near at hand. Forthwith the whole city poured forth to meet them, each
+person coveting to be the first to receive with his own eyes and ears
+convincing proofs of the reality of such a deliverance. One vast throng
+of human beings filled the road from Rome to the Milvian bridge. The
+three officers, Lucius Veturius Pollio, Publius Licinius Vasus, and
+Quintus Caecilius Metellus came riding on, making their way slowly
+through the living sea around them, As they advanced, each told the
+successive waves of eager questioners that Rome was victorious. "We have
+destroyed Hasdrubal and his army, our legions are safe, and our consuls
+are unhurt." Each happy listener, who caught the welcome sounds from
+their lips, retired to communicate his own joy to others, and became
+himself the centre of an anxious and inquiring group. When the officers
+had, with much difficulty, reached the senate house, and the crowd was
+with still greater difficulty put back from entering and mingling with
+the Conscript Fathers, the despatches of Livius and Nero were produced
+and read aloud. From the senate house the officers proceeded to the
+public assembly, where the despatches were read again; and then the
+senior officer, Lucius Veturius, gave in his own words a fuller detail
+of how went the fight. When he had done speaking to the people,
+an universal shout of rapture rent the air. The vast assembly then
+separated: some hastening to the temples to find in devotion a vent for
+the overflowing excitement of their hearts; others seeking their homes
+to gladden their wives and children with the good news, and to feast
+their own eyes with the sight of the loved ones, who now, at last, were
+safe from outrage and slaughter. The senate ordained a thanksgiving of
+three days for the great deliverance which had been vouchsafed to Rome;
+and throughout that period the temples were incessantly crowded with
+exulting worshippers; and the matrons, with their children round them,
+in their gayest attire, and with joyous aspects and voices, offered
+grateful praises to the immortal gods, as if all apprehension of evil
+were over, and the war were already ended.
+
+With the revival of confidence came also the revival of activity in
+traffic and commerce, and in all the busy intercourse of daily life.
+A numbing load was taken off each heart and brain, and once more men
+bought and sold, and formed their plans fleely, as had been done before
+the dire Carthaginians came into Italy. Hannibal was, certainly, still
+in the land; but all felt that his power to destroy was broken, and that
+the crisis of the war-fever was past. The Metaurus, indeed, had not only
+determined the event of the strife between Rome and Carthage, but it
+had ensured to Rome two centuries more of almost unchanged conquest.
+Hannibal did actually, with almost superhuman skill, retain his hold on
+Southern Italy for a few years longer, but the imperial city, and her
+allies, were no longer in danger from his arms; and, after Hannibal's
+downfall, the great military republic of the ancient world met in her
+career of conquest no other worthy competitor. Byron has termed Nero's
+march "unequalled," and, in the magnitude of its consequences, it is
+so. Viewed only as a military exploit, it remains unparalleled save by
+Marlborough's bold march from Flanders to the Danube, in the campaign
+of Blenheim, and perhaps also by the Archduke Charles's lateral march
+in 1796, by which he overwhelmed the French under Jourdain, and then,
+driving Moreau through the Black Forest and across the Rhine, for a
+while freed Germany from her invaders.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS, B.C. 207, AND
+ARMININIUS'S VICTORY OVER THE ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS, A.D. 9.
+
+B.C. 205 to 201. Scipio is made consul, and carries the war into Africa.
+He gains several victories there, and the Carthaginians recall Hannibal
+from Italy to oppose him. Battle of Zama in 201: Hannibal is defeated,
+and Carthage sues for peace. End of the second Punic war, leaving Rome
+confirmed in the dominion of Italy, Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica, and
+also mistress of great part of Spain, and virtually predominant in North
+Africa.
+
+200. Rome makes war upon Philip, king of Macedonia. She pretends to
+take the Greek cities of the Achaean league and the AEtolians under her
+protection as allies. Philip is defeated by the proconsul Flaminius at
+Cynocephalae, 198; and begs for peace. The Macedonian influence is now
+completely destroyed in Greece, and the Roman established in its stead,
+though Rome nominally acknowledged the independence of the Greek cities.
+
+194. Rome makes war upon Antiochus, king of Syria. He is completely
+defeated at the battle of Magnesia, 192, and is glad to accept peace on
+conditions which leave him dependent upon Rome.
+
+200-190. "Thus, within the short; space of ten years, was laid the
+foundation of the Roman authority in the East, and the general state
+of affairs entirely changed. If Rome was not yet the ruler, she was at
+least the arbitress of the world from the Atlantic to the Euphrates. The
+power of the three principal states was so completely humbled, that
+they durst not, without the permission of Rome, begin any new war; the
+fourth, Egypt, had already, in the year 201, placed herself under the
+guardianship of Rome; and the lesser powers followed of themselves:
+esteeming it an honour to be called the allies of Rome. With this name
+the nations were lulled into security, and brought under the Roman yoke;
+the new political system of Rome was founded and strengthened partly by
+exciting and supporting the weaker states against the stronger, however
+unjust the cause of the former might be, and partly by factions which
+she found means to raise in every state, even the smallest."--(HEEREN.)
+
+172. War renewed between Macedon and Rome. Decisive defeat of Perses,
+the Macedonian king, by Paulus AEmilius at Pydna, 168, Destruction of
+the Macedonian monarchy.
+
+150. Rome oppresses the Carthaginians till they are driven to take up
+arms, and the third Punic war begins, Carthage is taken and destroyed by
+Scipio AEmilianus, 146, and the Carthaginian territory is made a Roman
+province.
+
+146. In the same year in which Carthage falls, Corinth is stormed by
+the Roman army under Mummius. The Achaean league had been goaded into
+hostilities with Rome, by means similar to those employed against
+Carthage. The greater part of Southern Greece is made a Roman province,
+under the name of Achaia.
+
+133. Numantium is destroyed by Scipio AEmilianus. "The war against the
+Spaniards, who, of all the nations subdued by the Romans, defended their
+liberty with the greatest obstinacy, began in the year 200, six years
+after the total expulsion of the Carthaginians from their country,
+206. It was exceedingly obstinate, partly from the natural state of the
+country, which was thickly populated, and where every place became a
+fortress; partly from the courage of the inhabitants; but at last all,
+owing to the peculiar policy of the Romans, who yielded to employ their
+allies to subdue other nations. This war continued, almost without
+interruption, from the year 200 to 133, and was for the most part
+carried on at the same time in Hispania Citerior, where the Celtiberi
+were the most formidable adversaries, and in Hispania Ulterior, where
+the Lusitani were equally powerful. Hostilities were at the highest
+pitch in 195, under Cato, who reduced Hispania Citerior to a state
+of tranquillity in 185-179, when the Celtiberi were attacked in their
+native territory; and 155-150, when the Romans in both provinces were so
+often beaten, that nothing was more dreaded by the soldiers at home than
+to be sent there. The extortions and perfidy of Servius Galba placed
+Viriathus, in the year 146, at the head of his nations, the Lusitani:
+the war, however, soon extended itself to Hispania Citerior, where many
+nations, particularly the Numantines, took up arms against Rome, 143.
+Viriathus, sometimes victorious and sometimes defeated, was never more
+formidable than in the moment of defeat; because he knew how to take
+advantage of his knowledge of the country and of the dispositions of his
+countrymen. After his murder, caused by the treachery of Saepio, 140,
+Lusitania was subdued; but the Numantine war became still more violent,
+and the Numantines compelled the consul Mancinus to a disadvantageous
+treaty, 137. When Scipio, in the year 133, put an end to this war,
+Spain was certainly tranquil; the northern parts, however, were still
+unsubdued, though the Romans penetrated as far as Galatia."--HEEREN.
+
+134. Commencement of the revolutionary century at Rome, I.E. from the
+time of the excitement produced by the attempts made by the Gracchi
+to reform the commonwealth, to the battle of Actium (B.C. 31), which
+established Octavianus Caesar as sole master of the Roman world.
+Throughout this period Rome was engaged in important foreign wars, most
+of which procured large accessions to her territory.
+
+118-106. The Jugurthine war. Numidia is conquered, and made a Roman
+province.
+
+113-101. The great and terrible war of the Cimbri and Teutones against
+Rome. These nations of northern warriors slaughter several Roman armies
+in Gaul, and in 102 attempt to penetrate into Italy, The military genius
+of Marius here saves his country; he defeats the Teutones near Aix, in
+Provence; and in the following year he destroys the army of the Cimbri,
+who had passed the Alps, near Vercellae.
+
+91-88. The war of the Italian allies against Rome. This was caused by
+the refusal of Rome to concede to them the rights of Roman citizenship.
+After a sanguine struggle, Rome gradually grants it.
+
+89-86. First war of the Romans against Mithridates the Great, king of
+Pontus, who had overrun Asia Minor, Macedonia, and Greece. Sylla defeats
+his armies, and forces him to withdraw his forces from Europe. Sylla
+returns to Rome to carry on the civil war against the son and partisans
+of Marius. He makes himself Dictator.
+
+74-64. The last Mithridatic wars. Lucullus, and after him Pompeius,
+command against the great King of Pontus, who at last is poisoned by his
+son, while designing to raise the warlike tribes of the Danube against
+Rome, and to invade Italy from the north-east. Great Asiatic conquests
+of the Romans. Besides the ancient province of Pergamus, the maritime
+countries of Bithynia, and nearly all Paphlagonia and Pontus, are formed
+into a Roman province, under the name of Bithynia; while on the southern
+coast Cilicia and Pamphylia form another, under the name of Cilicia;
+Phoenicia and Syria compose a third, under the name of Syria. On
+the other hand, Great Armenia is left to Tigranes; Cappodocia to
+Ariobarzanes; the Bosphorus to Pharnaces; Judaea to Hyrcanus; and some
+other small states are also given to petty princes, all of whom remain
+dependent on Rome.
+
+58-50. Caesar conquers Gaul.
+
+54. Crassus attacks the Parthians with a Roman army, but is overthrown
+and killed at Carrhae in Mesopotamia. His lieutenant Cassius collects
+the wrecks of the army, and prevents the Parthians from conquering
+Syria.
+
+49-45. The civil war between Caesar and the Pompeian party. Caesar
+drives Pompeius out of Italy, conquers his enemy's forces in Spain,
+and then passes into Greece, where Pompeius and the other aristocratic
+chiefs had assembled a large army. Caesar gives them a decisive
+defeat at the great battle of Pharsalia. Pompeius flies for refuge
+to Alexandria, where he is assassinated. Caesar, who had followed him
+thither, is involved in a war with the Egyptians, in which he is finally
+victorious. The celebrated Cleopatra is made Queen of Egypt. Caesar next
+marches into Pontus, and defeats the son of Mithridates, who had taken
+part in the war against him. He then proceeds to the Roman province of
+Africa, where some of the Pompeian chiefs had established themselves,
+aided by Juba, a native prince. He over throws them at the battle of
+Thapsus. He is again obliged to lead an army into Spain, where the sons
+of Pompeius had collected the wrecks of their father's party. He crushes
+the last of his enemies at the battle of Munda. Under the title of
+Dictator, he is the sole master of the Roman world.
+
+44. Caesar is killed in the Senate-house; the Civil wars are soon
+renewed, Brutus and Cassius being at the head of the aristocratic party,
+and the party of Caesar being led by Mark Antony and Octavianus Caesar,
+afterwards Augustus.
+
+42. Defeat and death of Brutus and Cassius at Philippi. Dissensions soon
+break out between Octavianus Caesar and Antony.
+
+31. Antony is completely defeated by Octavianus Caesar at Actium.
+He flies to Egypt with Cleopatra. Octavianus pursues him. Antony
+and Cleopatra kill themselves. Egypt becomes a Roman province, and
+Octavianus Caesar is left undisputed master of Rome, and all that is
+Rome's. The state of the Roman world at this time is best described
+in two lines of Tacitus:--"Postquam bellatum apud Actium, atque OMNEM
+POTESTATEM AD UNUM CONFERRI PACIS INTERFUIT." (Hist. lib. i. s. 1.)
+
+The 44th year of the reign of Augustus, and the 1st year of the 195th
+Olympiad, is commonly assigned as the date of THE NATIVITY OF OUR LORD.
+There is much of the beauty of holiness in the remarks with which the
+American historian, Eliot, closes his survey of the conquering career
+and civil downfall of the Roman Commonwealth:--
+
+"So far as humility amongst men was necessary for the preparation of
+a truer freedom than could ever be known under heathenism, the part
+of Rome, however dreadful was yet sublime. It was not to unite, to
+discipline, or to fortify humanity, but to enervate, to loosen, and
+to scatter its forces, that the people whose history we have read were
+allowed to conquer the earth, and were then themselves reduced to deep
+submission. Every good labour of theirs that failed was, by reason
+of what we esteem its failure, a step gained nearer to the end of the
+well-nigh universal evil that prevailed; while every bad achievement
+that may seem to us to have succeeded, temporarily or lastingly, with
+them was equally, by reason of its success, a progress towards the good
+of which the coming would have been longed and prayed for, could it have
+been comprehended. Alike in the virtues and in the vices of antiquity,
+we may read the progress towards its humiliation. ["The Christian
+revelation," says Leland, in his truly admirable work on the subject
+(vol. i. p. 488), "was made to the world at a time when it was most
+wanted; when the darkness and corruption of mankind were arrived at the
+height.... if it had been published much sooner, and before there had
+been a full trial made of what was to be expected from human wisdom and
+philosophy, the great need men stood in of such an extraordinary divine
+dispensation would not have been so apparent."] Yet, on the other hand,
+it must not seem, at the last, that the disposition of the Romans or
+of mankind to submission was secured solely through the errors, and the
+apparently ineffectual toils which we have traced back to these times of
+old. Desires too true to have been wasted, and strivings too humane to
+have been unproductive, though all were overshadowed by passing wrongs,
+still gleam as if in anticipation or in preparation of the advancing
+day.
+
+"At length, when it had been proved by ages of conflict and loss, that
+no lasting joy and no abiding truth could be procured through the power,
+the freedom, or the faith of mankind, the angels sang their song in
+which the glory of God and the good-will of men were together blended.
+The universe was wrapped In momentary tranquillity, and 'peaceful was
+the night' above the manger at Bethlehem. We may believe, that when
+the morning came, the ignorance, the confusion, and the servitude of
+humanity had left their darkest forms amongst the midnight clouds. It
+was still, indeed, beyond the power of man to lay hold securely of the
+charity and the regeneration that were henceforth to be his law; and the
+indefinable terrors of the future, whether seen from the West or from
+the East, were not at once to be dispelled. But before the death of the
+Emperor Augustus, in the midst of his fallen subjects, the business of
+THE FATHER had already been begun in the Temple at Jerusalem; and near
+by, THE SON was increasing in wisdom and in stature, and in favour with
+God and man." [Eliot's "Liberty of Rome," vol. ii. p. 521.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. -- VICTORY OF ARMINIUS OVER THE ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS,
+A.D. 9.
+
+
+ "Hac clade factum, ut Imperium quod in littore oceani non
+ steterat, in ripa Rheni fluminis staret."--FLORUS.
+
+
+To a truly illustrious Frenchman, whose reverses as a minister can never
+obscure his achievements in the world of letters, we are indebted for
+the most profound and most eloquent estimate that we possess of the
+importance of the Germanic element in European civilization, and of the
+extent to which the human race is indebted to those brave warriors,
+who long were the unconquered antagonists, and finally became the
+conquerors, of Imperial Rome.
+
+Twenty-three eventful years have passed away since M. Guizot delivered
+from the chair of modern history at Paris his course of lectures on
+the History of Civilization in Europe. During those years the spirit
+of earnest inquiry into the germs and early developments of existing
+institutions has become more and more active and universal; and the
+merited celebrity of M. Guizot's work has proportionally increased. Its
+admirable analysis of the complex political and social organizations of
+which the modern civilized world is made up, must have led thousands to
+trace with keener interest the great crises of times past, by which the
+characteristics of the present were determined. The narrative of one of
+these great crises, of the epoch A.D. 9, when Germany took up arms
+for her independence against Roman invasion, has for us this special
+attraction--that it forms part of our own national history. Had Arminius
+been supine or unsuccessful, our Germanic ancestors would have been
+enslaved or exterminated in their original seats along the Eyder and the
+Elbe; this island would never have borne the name of England, and "we,
+this great English nation, whose race and language are now over-running
+the earth, from one end of it to the other," [Arnold's Lectures on
+Modern History.] would have been utterly cut off from existence.
+
+Arnold may, indeed, go too far in holding that we are wholly unconnected
+in race with the Romans and Britons who inhabited this country before
+the coming over of the Saxons; that, "nationally speaking, the history
+of Caesar's invasion has no more to do with us than the natural history
+of the animals which then inhabited our forests." There seems
+ample evidence to prove that the Romanized Celts, whom our Teutonic
+forefathers found here, influenced materially the character of our
+nation. But the main stream of our people was and is Germanic. Our
+language alone decisively proves this. Arminius is far more truly one
+of our national heroes than Caractacus: and it was our own primeval
+fatherland that the brave German rescued, when he slaughtered the Roman
+legions eighteen centuries ago in the marshy glens between the Lippe and
+the Ems. [See post, remarks on the relationship between the Cherusci and
+the English.]
+
+Dark and disheartening, even to heroic spirits, must have seemed the
+prospects of Germany when Arminius planned the general rising of his
+countrymen against Rome. Half the land was occupied by Roman garrisons;
+and, what was worse, many of the Germans seemed patiently acquiescent
+in their state of bondage. The braver portion, whose patriotism could
+be relied on, was ill-armed and undisciplined; while the enemy's troops
+consisted of veterans in the highest state of equipment and training,
+familiarized with victory, and commanded by officers of proved skill and
+valour. The resources of Rome seemed boundless; her tenacity of purpose
+was believed to be invincible. There was no hope of foreign sympathy or
+aid; for "the self-governing powers that had filled the old world,
+had bent one after another before the rising power of Rome, and had
+vanished. The earth seemed left void of independent nations." [Ranke.]
+
+The (German) chieftain knew well the gigantic power of the oppressor.
+Arminius was no rude savage, fighting out of mere animal instinct, or in
+ignorance of the might of his adversary. He was familiar with the Roman
+language and civilization; he had served in the Roman armies; he had
+been admitted to the Roman citizenship, and raised to the dignity of
+the equestrian order. It was part of the subtle policy of Rome to confer
+rank and privileges on the youth of the leading families in the nations
+which she wished to enslave. Among other young German chieftains,
+Arminius and his brother, who were the heads of the noblest house in the
+tribe of the Cherusci, had been selected as fit objects for the exercise
+of this insidious system. Roman refinements and dignities succeeded in
+denationalizing the brother, who assumed the Roman name of Flavius, and
+adhered to Rome throughout all her wars against his country. Arminius
+remained unbought by honours or wealth, uncorrupted by refinement or
+luxury. He aspired to and obtained from Roman enmity a higher title than
+ever could have been given him by Roman favour. It is in the page of
+Rome's greatest historian, that his name has come down to us with the
+proud addition of "Liberator haud dubie Germaniae." [Tacitus, Annals,
+ii. 88.]
+
+Often must the young chieftain, while meditating the exploit which has
+thus immortalised him, have anxiously revolved in his mind the fate
+of the many great men who had been crushed in the attempt which he was
+about to renew,--the attempt to stay the chariot-wheels of triumphant
+Rome. Could he hope to succeed where Hannibal and Mithridates had
+perished? What had been the doom of Viriathus? and what warning against
+vain valour was written on the desolate site where Numantia once had
+fourished? Nor was a caution wanting in scenes nearer home and in
+more recent times. The Gauls had fruitlessly struggled for eight years
+against Caesar; and the valiant Vercingetorix, who in the last year of
+the war had roused all his countrymen to insurrection, who had cut off
+Roman detachments, and brought Caesar himself to the extreme of peril at
+Alesia--he, too, had finally succumbed, had been led captive in Caesar's
+triumph, and had then been butchered in cold blood in a Roman dungeon.
+
+It was true that Rome was no longer the great military republic which
+for so many ages had shattered the kingdoms of the world. Her system
+of government was changed; and, after a century of revolution and civil
+war, she had placed herself under the despotism of a single ruler. But
+the discipline of her troops was yet unimpaired, and her warlike spirit
+seemed unabated. The first wars of the empire had been signalised by
+conquests as valuable as any gained by the republic in a corresponding
+period. It is a great fallacy, though apparently sanctioned by great
+authorities, to suppose that the foreign policy pursued by Augustus
+was pacific. He certainly recommended such a policy to his successors,
+either from timidity, or from jealousy of their fame outshining his
+own; ["Incertum metu an per invidiam."--Tac. Ann. i. 11] but he himself,
+until Arminius broke his spirit, had followed a very different course.
+Besides his Spanish wars, his generals, in a series of principally
+aggressive campaigns, had extended the Roman frontier from the Alps
+to the Danube; and had reduced into subjection the large and important
+countries that now form the territories of all Austria south of
+that river, and of East Switzerland, Lower Wirtemberg, Bavaria, the
+Valteline, and the Tyrol. While the progress of the Roman arms thus
+pressed the Germans from the south, still more formidable inroads had
+been made by the Imperial legions in the west. Roman armies, moving from
+the province of Gaul, established a chain of fortresses along the right
+as well as the left bank of the Rhine, and, in a series of victorious
+campaigns, advanced their eagles as far as the Elbe; which now seemed
+added to the list of vassal rivers, to the Nile, the Rhine, the Rhone,
+the Danube, the Tagus, the Seine, and many more, that acknowledged the
+supremacy of the Tiber. Roman fleets also, sailing from the harbours of
+Gaul along the German coasts, and up the estuaries, co-operated with the
+land-forces of the empire; and seemed to display, even more decisively
+than her armies, her overwhelming superiority over the rude Germanic
+tribes. Throughout the territory thus invaded, the Romans had, with
+their usual military skill, established chains of fortified posts; and a
+powerful army of occupation was kept on foot, ready to move instantly on
+any spot where a popular outbreak might be attempted.
+
+Vast however, and admirably organized as the fabric of Roman power
+appeared on the frontiers and in the provinces, there was rottenness at
+the core. In Rome's unceasing hostilities with foreign foes, and, still
+more, in her long series of desolating civil wars, the free middle
+classes of Italy had almost wholly disappeared. Above the position which
+they had occupied, an oligarchy of wealth had reared itself: beneath
+that position a degraded mass of poverty and misery was fermenting.
+Slaves, the chance sweepings of every conquered country, shoals of
+Africans, Sardinians, Asiatics, Illyrians, and others, made up the bulk
+of the population of the Italian peninsula. The foulest profligacy of
+manners was general in all ranks. In universal weariness of revolution
+and civil war, and in consciousness of being too debased for
+self-government, the nation had submitted itself to the absolute
+authority of Augustus. Adulation was now the chief function the senate:
+and the gifts of genius and accomplishments of art were devoted to
+the elaboration of eloquently false panegyrics upon the prince and his
+favourite courtiers. With bitter indignation must the German chieftain
+have beheld all this, and contrasted with it the rough worth of his own
+countrymen;--their bravery, their fidelity to their word, their manly
+independence of spirit their love of their national free institutions,
+and their loathing of every pollution and meanness. Above all, he must
+have thought of the domestic virtues that hallowed a German home; of the
+respect there shown to the female character, and of the pure affection
+by which that respect was repaid. His soul must have burned within him
+at the contemplation of such a race yielding to these debased Italians.
+
+Still, to persuade the Germans to combine, in spite of their frequent
+feuds among themselves, in one sudden outbreak against Rome; to keep the
+scheme concealed from the Romans until the hour for action had arrived;
+and then, without possessing a single walled town, without military
+stores, without training, to teach his insurgent countrymen to defeat
+veteran armies, and storm fortifications, seemed so perilous an
+enterprise, that probably Arminius would have receded from it, had not a
+stronger feeling even than patriotism urged him on. Among the Germans
+of high rank who had most readily submitted to the invaders, and become
+zealous partisans of Roman authority, was a chieftain named Segestes.
+His daughter, Thusnelda, was pre-eminent among the noble maidens of
+Germany. Arminius had sought her hand in marriage; but Segestes, who
+probably discerned the young chief's disaffection to Rome, forbade
+his suit, and strove to preclude all communication between him and
+his daughter. Thusnelda, however, sympathised far more with the heroic
+spirit of her lover, than with the time serving policy of her father. An
+elopement baffled the precautions of Segestes; who, disappointed in
+his hope of preventing the marriage, accused Arminius, before the Roman
+governor, of having carried off his daughter, and of planning treason
+against Rome. Thus assailed, and dreading to see his bride torn from him
+by the officials of the foreign oppressor, Arminius delayed no longer,
+but bent all his energies to organize and execute a general insurrection
+of the great mass of his countrymen, who hitherto had submitted in
+sullen inertness to the Roman dominion.
+
+A change of governors had recently taken place, which, while it
+materially favoured the ultimate success of the insurgents, served, by
+the immediate aggravation of the Roman oppressions which it produced,
+to make the native population more universally eager to take arms.
+Tiberius, who was afterwards emperor, had lately been recalled from
+the command in Germany, and sent into Pannonia to put down a dangerous
+revolt which had broken out against the Romans in that province. The
+German patriots were thus delivered from the stern supervision of one
+of the most auspicious of mankind, and were also relieved from having
+to contend against the high military talents of a veteran commander, who
+thoroughly understood their national character, and the nature of
+the country, which he himself had principally subdued. In the room of
+Tiberius, Augustus sent into Germany Quintilius Varus, who had lately
+returned from the proconsulate of Syria. Varus was a true representative
+of the higher classes of the Romans; among whom a general taste for
+literature, a keen susceptibility to all intellectual gratifications,
+a minute acquaintance with the principles and practice of their own
+national jurisprudence, a careful training in the schools of the
+rhetoricians, and a fondness for either partaking in or watching the
+intellectual strife of forensic oratory, had become generally diffused;
+without, however, having humanized the old Roman spirit of cruel
+indifference for human feelings and human sufferings, and without acting
+as the least check on unprincipled avarice and ambition, or on habitual
+and gross profligacy. Accustomed to govern the depraved and debased
+natives of Syria, a country where courage in man, and virtue in woman,
+had for centuries been unknown, Varus thought that he might gratify
+his licentious and rapacious passions with equal impunity among the
+high-minded sons and pure-spirited daughters of Germany. When the
+general of an army sets the example of outrages of this description, he
+is soon faithfully imitated by his officers, and surpassed by his
+still more brutal soldiery. The Romans now habitually indulged in those
+violations of the sanctity of the domestic shrine, and those insults
+upon honour and modesty, by which far less gallant spirits than those of
+our Teutonic ancestors have often been maddened into insurrection.
+
+[I cannot forbear quoting Macaulay's beautiful lines, where he describes
+how similar outrages in the early times of Rome goaded the plebeians to
+rise against the patricians:--
+
+ "Heap heavier still the fetters; bar closer still the grate;
+ Patient as sheep we yield us up unto your cruel hate.
+ But by the shades beneath us, and by the gods above,
+ Add not unto your cruel hate your still more cruel love.
+ * * *
+ Then leave the poor plebeian his single tie to life--
+ The sweet, sweet love of daughter, of sister, and of wife,
+ The gentle speech, the balm for all that his vext soul endures,
+ The kiss in which he half forgets even such a yoke as yours.
+ Still let the maiden's beauty swell the father's breast with
+ pride;
+ Still let the bridegroom's arms enfold an unpolluted bride.
+ Spare us the inexpiable wrong, the unutterable shame,
+ That turns the coward's heart to steel, the sluggard's blood to
+ flame;
+ Lest when our latest hope is fled ye taste of our despair,
+ And learn by proof in some wild hour, how much the wretched
+ dare."]
+
+Arminius found among the other German chiefs many who sympathised with
+him in his indignation at their country's debasement, and many whom
+private wrongs had stung yet more deeply. There was little difficulty in
+collecting bold leaders for an attack on the oppressors, and little
+fear of the population not rising readily at those leaders' call. But
+to declare open war against Rome, and to encounter Varus's army in a
+pitched battle, would have been merely rushing upon certain destruction.
+Varus had three legions under him, a force which, after allowing for
+detachments, cannot be estimated at less than fourteen thousand Roman
+infantry. He had also eight or nine hundred Roman cavalry, and at least
+an equal number of horse and foot sent from the allied states, or raised
+among those provincials who had not received the Roman franchise.
+
+It was not merely the number, but the quality of this force that made
+it formidable; and however contemptible Varus might be as a general,
+Arminius well knew how admirably the Roman armies were organized and
+officered, and how perfectly the legionaries understood every manoeuvre
+and every duty which the varying emergencies of a stricken field might
+require. Stratagem was, therefore, indispensable; and it was necessary
+to blind Varus to his schemes until a favourable opportunity should
+arrive for striking a decisive blow.
+
+For this purpose the German confederates frequented the headquarters of
+Varus, which seem to have been near the centre of the modern country
+of Westphalia, where the Roman general conducted himself with all the
+arrogant security of the governor of a perfectly submissive province.
+There Varus gratified at once his vanity, his rhetorical taste, and his
+avarice, by holding courts, to which he summoned the Germans for
+the settlement of all their disputes, while a bar of Roman advocates
+attended to argue the cases before the tribunal of the Proconsul;
+who did not omit the opportunity of exacting court-fees and accepting
+bribes. Varus trusted implicitly to the respect which the Germans
+pretended to pay to his abilities as a judge, and to the interest which
+they affected to take in the forensic eloquence of their conquerors.
+Meanwhile a succession of heavy rains rendered the country more
+difficult for the operations of regular troops; and Arminius, seeing
+that the infatuation of Varus was complete, secretly directed the tribes
+near the Weser and the Ems to take up arms in open revolt against the
+Romans. This was represented to Varus as an occasion which required his
+prompt attendance at the spot; but he was kept in studied ignorance of
+its being part of a concerted national rising; and he still looked
+on Arminius as his submissive vassal, whose aid he might rely on
+in facilitating the march of his troops against the rebels, and in
+extinguishing the local disturbance. He therefore set his army in
+motion, and marched eastward in a line parallel to the course of the
+Lippe. For some distance his route lay along a level plain; but on
+arriving at the tract between the curve of the upper part of that
+stream and the sources of the Ems, the country assumes a very different
+character; and here, in the territory of the modern little principality
+of Lippe, it was that Arminius had fixed the scene of his enterprise.
+
+A woody and hilly region intervenes between the heads of the two rivers,
+and forms the water-shed of their streams. This region still retains
+the name (Teutoberger wald--Teutobergiensis saltus) which it bore in the
+days of Arminius. The nature of the ground has probably also remained
+unaltered. The eastern part of it, round Detmoldt, the present capital
+of the principality of Lippe, is described by a modern German scholar,
+Dr. Plate, as being "a table-land intersected by numerous deep and
+narrow valleys, which in some places form small plains, surrounded by
+steep mountains and rocks, and only accessible by narrow defiles. All
+the valleys are traversed by rapid streams, shallow in the dry season,
+but subject to sudden swellings in autumn and winter. The vast forests
+which cover the summits and slopes of the hills consist chiefly of oak;
+there is little underwood, and both men and horse would move with ease
+in the forests if the ground were not broken by gulleys, or rendered
+impracticable by fallen trees." This is the district to which Varus is
+supposed to have marched; and Dr. Plate adds, that "the names of several
+localities on and near that spot seem to indicate that a great battle
+had once been fought there. We find the names 'das Winnefeld' (the field
+of victory), 'die Knochenbahn' (the bone-lane), 'die Knochenleke' (the
+bone-brook), 'der Mordkessel' (the kettle of slaughter), and others." [I
+am indebted for much valuable information on this subject to my friend
+Mr. Henry Pearson.]
+
+Contrary to the usual strict principles of Roman discipline, Varus had
+suffered his army to be accompanied and impeded by an immense train of
+baggage-waggons, and by a rabble of camp followers; as if his troops had
+been merely changing their quarters in a friendly country. When the long
+array quitted the firm level ground, and began to wind its way among the
+woods, the marshes, and the ravines, the difficulties of the march, even
+without the intervention of an armed foe, became fearfully apparent. In
+many places the soil, sodden with rain, was impracticable for cavalry
+and even for infantry, until trees had been felled, and a rude causeway
+formed through the morass.
+
+The duties of the engineer were familiar to all who served in the Roman
+armies. But the crowd and confusion of the columns embarrassed the
+working parties of the soldiery, and in the midst of their toil and
+disorder the word was suddenly passed through their ranks that the
+rear-guard was attacked by the barbarians. Varus resolved on pressing
+forward; but a heavy discharge of missiles from the woods on either
+flank taught him how serious was the peril, and he saw the best men
+falling round him without the opportunity of retaliation; for his
+light-armed auxiliaries, who were principally of Germanic race, now
+rapidly deserted, and it was impossible to deploy the legionaries on
+such broken ground for a charge against the enemy. Choosing one of the
+most open and firm spots which they could force their way to, the Romans
+halted for the night; and, faithful to their national discipline and
+tactics, formed their camp amid the harassing attacks of the rapidly
+thronging foes, with the elaborate toil and systematic skill, the traces
+of which are impressed permanently on the soil of so many European
+countries, attesting the presence in the olden time of the imperial
+eagles.
+
+On the morrow the Romans renewed their march; the veteran officers who
+served under Varus now probably directing the operations, and hoping
+to find the Germans drawn up to meet them; in which case they relied on
+their own superior discipline and tactics for such a victory as
+should reassure the supremacy of Rome. But Arminius was far too sage a
+commander to lead on his followers, with their unwieldy broadswords and
+inefficient defensive armour, against the Roman legionaries, fully armed
+with helmet, cuirass, greaves, and shield; who were skilled to commence
+the conflict with a murderous volley of heavy javelins, hurled upon the
+foe when a few yards distant, and then, with their short cut-and-thrust
+swords, to hew their way through all opposition; preserving the utmost
+steadiness and coolness, and obeying each word of command. In the midst
+of strife and slaughter with the same precision and alertness as if upon
+parade. [See Gibbon's description (vol. i, chap. 1) of the Roman legions
+in the time of Augustus; and see the description in Tacitus (Ann. lib.
+i) of the subsequent battles between Caecina and Arminius.] Arminius
+suffered the Romans to march out from their camp, to form first in
+line for action, and then in column for marching, without the show
+of opposition. For some distance Varus was allowed to move on, only
+harassed by slight skirmishes, but struggling with difficulty through
+the broken ground; the toil and distress of his men being aggravated by
+heavy torrents of rain, which burst upon the devoted legions as if the
+angry gods of Germany were pouring out the vials of their wrath upon the
+invaders. After some little time their van approached a ridge of high
+woody ground, which is one of the off-shoots of the great Hercynian
+forest, and is situate between the modern villages of Driburg and
+Bielefeld. Arminius had caused barricades of hewn trees to be formed
+here, so as to add to the natural difficulties of the passage. Fatigue
+and discouragement now began to betray themselves in the Roman ranks.
+Their line became less steady; baggage-waggons were abandoned from
+the impossibility of forcing them along; and, as this happened, many
+soldiers left their ranks and crowded round the waggons to secure the
+most valuable portions of their property; each was busy about his own
+affairs, and purposely slow in hearing the word of command from his
+officers. Arminius now gave the signal for a general attack. The fierce
+shouts of the Germans pealed through the gloom of the forests, and in
+thronging multitudes they assailed the flanks of the invaders, pouring
+in clouds of darts on the encumbered legionaries, as they struggled up
+the glens or floundered in the morasses, and watching every opportunity
+of charging through the intervals of the disjointed column, and so
+cutting off the communication between its several brigades. Arminius,
+with a chosen band of personal retainers round him, cheered on his
+countrymen by voice and example. He and his men aimed their weapons
+particularly at the horses of the Roman cavalry. The wounded animals,
+slipping about in the mire and their own blood, threw their riders,
+and plunged among the ranks of the legions, disordering all round
+them. Varus now ordered the troops to be countermarched, in the hope of
+reaching the nearest Roman garrison on the Lippe. [The circumstances
+of the early part of the battle which Arminius fought with Caecina six
+years afterwards, evidently resembled those of his battle with Varus,
+and the result was very near being the same: I have therefore adopted
+part of the description which Tacitus gives (Ann. lib. i. c. 65) of the
+last mentioned engagement: "Neque tamen Arminius, quamquam libero in
+cursu, statim prorupit: sed ut haesere caeno fossisque impedimenta,
+turbati circum milites; incertus signorum ordo; utque tali in tempore
+sibi quisque properus, et lentae adversum imperia aures, irrumpere
+Germanos jubet, clamitans 'En Varus, et eodem iterum fato victae
+legiones!' Simul haec, et cum delectis scindit agmen, equisque maxime
+vulnera ingerit; illi sanguine suo et lubrico paludum lapsantes,
+excussis rectoribus, disjicere obvios, proterere jacentes."] But retreat
+now was as impracticable as advance; and the falling back of the Romans
+only augmented the courage of their assailants, and caused fiercer and
+more frequent charges on the flanks of the disheartened army. The Roman
+officer who commanded the cavalry, Numonius Vala, rode off with his
+squadrons, in the vain hope of escaping by thus abandoning his comrades.
+Unable to keep together, or force their way across the woods and swamps,
+the horsemen were overpowered in detail and slaughtered to the last man.
+The Roman infantry still held together and resisted, but more through
+the instinct of discipline and bravery than from any hope of success or
+escape. Varus, after being severely wounded in a charge of the Germans
+against his part of the column, committed suicide to avoid falling into
+the hands of those whom he had exasperated by his oppressions. One of
+the lieutenant-generals of the army fell fighting; the other surrendered
+to the enemy. But mercy to a fallen foe had never been a Roman virtue,
+and those among her legions who now laid down their arms in hope of
+quarter, drank deep of the cup of suffering, which Rome had held to
+the lips of many a brave but unfortunate enemy. The infuriated Germans
+slaughtered their oppressors with deliberate ferocity; and those
+prisoners who were not hewn to pieces on the spot, were only preserved
+to perish by a more cruel death in cold blood.
+
+The bulk of the Roman army fought steadily and stubbornly, frequently
+repelling the masses of the assailants, but gradually losing the
+compactness of their array, and becoming weaker and weaker beneath the
+incessant shower of darts and the reiterated assaults of the vigorous
+and unencumbered Germans. At last, in a series of desperate attacks the
+column was pierced through and through, two of the eagles captured, and
+the Roman host, which on the yester morning had marched forth in such
+pride and might, now broken up into confused fragments, either fell
+fighting beneath the overpowering numbers of the enemy, or perished in
+the swamps and woods in unavailing efforts at flight. Few, very few,
+ever saw again the left bank of the Rhine. One body of brave veterans,
+arraying themselves in a ring on a little mound, beat off every charge
+of the Germans, and prolonged their honourable resistance to the close
+of that dreadful day. The traces of a feeble attempt at forming a ditch
+and mound attested in after years the spot where the last of the Romans
+passed their night of suffering and despair. But on the morrow this
+remnant also, worn out with hunger, wounds, and toil, was charged by the
+victorious Germans, and either massacred on the spot, or offered up in
+fearful rites at the alters of the deities of the old mythology of the
+North.
+
+A gorge in the mountain ridge, through which runs the modern road
+between Paderborn and Pyrmont, leads from the spot where the heat of the
+battle raged, to the Extersteine, a cluster of bold and grotesque rocks
+of sandstone; near which is a small sheet of water, overshadowed by a
+grove of aged trees. According to local tradition, this was one of the
+sacred groves of the ancient Germans, and it was here that the Roman
+captives were slain in sacrifice by the victorious warriors of Arminius.
+["Lucis propinquis barbarae arae, apud quas tribunos ac primorum ordinam
+centuriones mactaverant."--TACITUS, Ann. lib. i. c. 61.]
+
+Never was victory more decisive, never was the liberation of an
+oppressed people more instantaneous and complete. Throughout Germany the
+Roman garrisons were assailed and cut off; and, within a few weeks after
+Varus had fallen, the German soil was freed from the foot of an invader.
+
+At Rome, the tidings of the battle was received with an agony of terror,
+the descriptions of which we should deem exaggerated, did they not come
+from Roman historians themselves. These passages in the Roman writers
+not only tell emphatically how great was the awe which the Romans felt
+of the prowess of the Germans, if their various tribes could be brought
+to reunite for a common purpose, but also they reveal bow weakened and
+debased the population of Italy had become. [It is clear that the Romans
+followed the policy of fomenting dissension and wars of the Germans
+among themselves. See the thirty-third section of the "Germania" of
+Tacitus, where he mentions the destruction of the Bructeri by the
+neighbouring tribes: "Favore quodam erga nos deorum: nam ne spectaculo
+quidem proelii invidere: super LX. millia non armis telisque Romanis,
+sed, quod magnificentius est, oblectationi oculisque ceciderunt. Maneat
+quaeso, duretque gentibus, si non amor nostri at certe odium sui quando
+urgentibus imperii fatis, nihil jam praestare fortuna majus potes quam
+hostiam discordiam."] Dion Cassius says: [Lib. lvi. sec. 23.] "Then
+Augustus, when he heard the calamity of Varus, rent his garments, and
+was in great affliction for the troops he had lost, and for terror
+respecting the Germans and the Gauls. And his chief alarm was, that he
+expected them to push on against Italy and Rome: and there remained no
+Roman youth fit for military duty, that were worth speaking of, and the
+allied populations that were at all serviceable had been wasted away.
+Yet he prepared for the emergency as well as his means allowed; and when
+none of the citizens of military age were willing to enlist he made them
+cast lots, and punished by confiscation of goods and disfranchisement
+every fifth man among those under thirty-five, and every tenth man of
+those above that age. At last, when he found that not even thus; could
+he make many come forward, he put some of them to death. So he made
+a conscription of discharged veterans and emancipated slaves, and
+collecting as large a force as he could, sent it, under Tiberius, with
+all speed into Germany."
+
+Dion mentions, also, a number of terrific portents that were believed to
+have occurred at the time; and the narration of which is not immaterial,
+as it shows the state of the public mind, when such things were so
+believed in, and so interpreted. The summits of the Alps were said to
+have fallen, and three columns of fire to have blazed up from them. In
+the Campus Martius, the temple of the War-God, from whom the founder of
+Rome had sprung, was struck by a thunderbolt. The nightly heavens glowed
+several times, as if on fire. Many comets blazed forth together; and
+fiery meteors shaped like spears, had shot from the northern quarter of
+the sky, down into the Roman camps. It was said, too, that a statue of
+Victory, which had stood at a place on the frontier, pointing the way
+towards Germany, had of its own accord turned round, and now pointed
+to Italy. These and other prodigies were believed by the multitude to
+accompany the slaughter of Varus's legions, and to manifest the anger of
+the gods against Rome, Augustus himself was not free from superstition;
+but on this occasion no supernatural terrors were needed to increase the
+alarm and grief that he felt; and which made him, even for months after
+the news of the battle had arrived, often beat his head against the
+wall, and exclaim, "Quintilius Varus, give me back my legions!" We learn
+this from his biographer, Suetonius; and, indeed, every ancient writer
+who alludes to the overthrow of Varus, attests the importance of the
+blow against the Roman power, and the bitterness with which it was felt.
+[Florus expresses its effect most pithily: "Hac clade factum est ut
+imperium quod in litore oceani non steterat, in ripa Rheni fluminis
+staret" (iv. 12).]
+
+The Germans did not pursue their victory beyond their own territory.
+But that victory secured at once and for ever the independence of the
+Teutonic race. Rome sent, indeed, her legions again into Germany, to
+parade a temporary superiority; but all hopes of permanent conquest were
+abandoned by Augustus and his successors.
+
+The blow which Arminius had struck never was forgotten, Roman fear
+disguised itself under the specious title of moderation; and the Rhine
+became the acknowledged boundary of the two nations until the fifth
+century of our era, when the Germans became the assailants, and carved
+with their conquering swords the provinces of Imperial Rome into the
+kingdoms of modern Europe.
+
+
+ARMINIUS.
+
+I have said above that the great Cheruscan is more truly one of our
+national heroes than Caractacus is. It may be added that an Englishman
+is entitled to claim a closer degree of relationship with Arminius
+than can be claimed by any German of modern Germany. The proof of this
+depends on the proof of four facts: first, that the Cherusci were
+Old Saxons, or Saxons of the interior of Germany; secondly, that the
+Anglo-Saxons, or Saxons of the coast of Germany, were more closely akin
+than other German tribes were to the Cheruscan Saxons; thirdly, that the
+Old Saxons were almost exterminated by Charlemagne; fourthly, that
+the Anglo-Saxons are our immediate ancestors. The last of these may be
+assumed as an axiom in English history. The proofs of the other three
+are partly philological, and partly historical. I have not space to
+go into them here, but they will be found in the early chapters of the
+great work of Dr. Robert Gordon Latham on the "English Language;" and
+in the notes to his edition of the "Germania of Tacitus." It may be,
+however, here remarked that the present Saxons of Germany are of the
+High Germanic division of the German race, whereas both the Anglo-Saxon
+and Old Saxon were of the Low Germanic.
+
+Being thus the nearest heirs of the glory of Arminius, we may fairly
+devote more attention to his career than, in such a work as the present,
+could be allowed to any individual leader, and it is interesting to
+trace how far his fame survived during the middle ages, both among the
+Germans of the Continent and among ourselves.
+
+It seems probable that the jealousy with which Maraboduus, the king of
+the Suevi and Marcomanni, regarded Arminius, and which ultimately broke
+out into open hostilities between those German tribes and the Cherusci,
+prevented Arminius from leading the confederate Germans to attack Italy
+after his first victory. Perhaps he may have had the rare moderation
+of being content with the liberation of his country, without seeking to
+retaliate on her former oppressors. When Tiberius marched into Germany
+in the year 10, Arminius was too cautious to attack him on ground
+favourable to the legions, and Tiberius was too skilful, to entangle his
+troops in difficult parts of the country. His march and counter-march
+were as unresisted as they were unproductive. A few years later, when
+a dangerous revolt of the Roman legions near the frontier caused
+their generals to find them active employment by leading them into the
+interior of Germany, we find Arminius again energetic in his country's
+defence. The old quarrel between him and his father-in-law, Segestes,
+had broken out afresh. Segestes now called in the aid of the Roman
+general, Germanicus, to whom he surrendered himself; and by his
+contrivance his daughter Thusnelda, the wife of Arminius, also came into
+the hands of the Romans, being far advanced in pregnancy. She showed, as
+Tacitus relates, [Ann. i. 57.] more of the spirit of her husband than
+of her father, a spirit that could not be subdued into tears or
+supplications. She was sent to Ravenna, and there gave birth to a son,
+whose life we find, from an allusion in Tacitus, to have been eventful
+and unhappy; but the part of the great historian's work which narrated
+his fate has perished, and we only know from another quarter that
+the son of Arminius was, at the age of four years, led captive in a
+triumphal pageant along the streets of Rome.
+
+The high spirit of Arminius was goaded almost into frenzy by these
+bereavements. The fate of his wife, thus torn from him, and of his
+babe doomed to bondage even before its birth, inflamed the eloquent
+invectives with which he roused his countrymen against the home
+traitors, and against their invaders, who thus made war upon women and
+children. Germanicus had marched his army to the place where Varus had
+perished, and had there paid funeral honours to the ghastly relics
+of his predecessor's legions that he found heaped around him. [In
+the Museum of Rhenish antiquities at Bonn there is a Roman sepulchral
+monument, the inscription on which records that it was erected to the
+memory of M. Coelius, who fell "BELLO VARIANO."] Arminius lured him to
+advance a little further into the country, and then assailed him, and
+fought a battle, which, by the Roman accounts, was a drawn one. The
+effect of it was to make Germanicus resolve on retreating to the Rhine.
+He himself, with part of his troops, embarked in some vessels on the
+Ems, and returned by that river, and then by sea; but part of his forces
+were entrusted to a Roman general, named Caecina, to lead them back by
+land to the Rhine. Arminius followed this division on its march, and
+fought several battles with it, in which he inflicted heavy loss on
+the Romans, captured the greater part of their baggage, and would have
+destroyed them completely, had not his skilful system of operations been
+finally thwarted by the haste of Inguiomerus, a confederate German chief
+who insisted on assaulting the Romans in their camp, instead of waiting
+till they were entangled in the difficulties of the country, and
+assailing their columns on the march.
+
+In the following year the Romans were inactive; but in the year
+afterwards Germanicus led a fresh invasion. He placed his army on
+ship-board, and sailed to the mouth of the Ems, where he disembarked,
+and marched to the Weser, where he encamped, probably in the
+neighbourhood of Minden. Arminius had collected his army on the other
+side of the river; and a scene occurred, which is powerfully told by
+Tacitus, and which is the subject of a beautiful poem by Praed. It has
+been already mentioned that the brother of Arminius, like himself, had
+been trained up, while young, to serve in the Roman armies; but, unlike
+Arminius, he not only refused to quit the Roman service for that of his
+country, but fought against his country with the legions of Germanicus.
+He had assumed the Roman name of Flavius, and had gained considerable
+distinction in the Roman service, in which he had lost an eye from a
+wound in battle. When the Roman outposts approached the river Weser,
+Arminius called out to them from the opposite bank, and expressed a wish
+to see his brother. Flavius stepped forward, and Arminius ordered
+his own followers to retire, and requested that the archers should
+be removed from the Roman bank of the river. This was done: and the
+brothers, who apparently had not seen each other for some years, began
+a conversation from the opposite sides of the stream, in which Arminius
+questioned his brother respecting the loss of his eye, and what battle
+it had been lost in, and what reward he had received for his wound.
+Flavius told him how the eye was destroyed, and mentioned the increased
+pay that he had on account of its loss, and showed the collar and other
+military decorations that had been given him. Arminius mocked at these
+as badges of slavery; and then each began to try to win the other
+over; Flavius boasting the power of Rome, and her generosity to the
+submissive; Arminius appealing to him in the name of their country's
+gods, of the mother that had borne them, and by the holy names of
+fatherland and freedom, not to prefer being the betrayer to being
+the champion of his country. They soon proceeded to mutual taunts and
+menaces, and Flavius called aloud for his horse and his arms, that he
+might dash across the river and attack his brother; nor would he have
+been checked from doing so, had not the Roman general, Stertinius, run
+up to him, and forcibly detained him. Arminius stood on the other bank,
+threatening the renegade, and defying him to battle.
+
+I shall not be thought to need apology for quoting here the stanzas in
+which Praed has described this scene--a scene among the most affecting,
+as well as the most striking, that history supplies. It makes us reflect
+on the desolate position of Arminius, with his wife and child captives
+in the enemy's hands, and with his brother a renegade in arms against
+him. The great liberator of our German race stood there, with every
+source of human happiness denied him, except the consciousness of doing
+his duty to his country.
+
+
+ "Back, back! he fears not foaming flood
+ Who fears not steel-clad line:--
+ No warrior thou of German blood,
+ No brother thou of mine.
+ Go, earn Rome's chain to load thy neck,
+ Her gems to deck thy hilt;
+ And blazon honour's hapless wreck
+ With all the gauds of guilt.
+
+ "But wouldst thou have ME share the prey?
+ By all that I have done,--
+ The Varian bones that day by day
+ Lie whitening in the sun,
+ The legion's trampled panoply,
+ The eagle's shattered wing,--
+ I would not be for earth or sky
+ So scorn'd and mean a thing.
+
+ "Ho, call me here the wizard, boy,
+ Of dark and subtle skill,
+ To agonise but not destroy,
+ To curse, but not to kill.
+ When swords are out, and shriek and shout,
+ Leave little room for prayer,
+ No fetter on man's arm or heart
+ Hangs half so heavy there.
+
+ "I curse him by the gifts the land
+ Hath won from him and Rome--
+ The riving axe, the wasting brand,
+ Rent forest, blazing home.
+ I curse him by our country's gods,
+ The terrible, the dark,
+ The breakers of the Roman rods,
+ The smiters of the bark.
+
+ "Oh misery, that such a ban
+ On such a brow should be!
+ Why comes he not in battle's van
+ His country's chief to be?--
+ To stand a comrade by my side,
+ The sharer of my fame,
+ And worthy of a brother's pride
+ And of a brother's name?
+
+ "But it is past!--where heroes press
+ And cowards bend the knee
+ Arminius is not brotherless;
+ His brethren are the free.
+ They come around: one hour, and light
+ Will fade from turf and tide,
+ Then onward, onward to the fight
+ With darkness for our guide.
+
+ "To-night, to-night, when we shall meet
+ In combat face to face,
+ Then only would Arminius greet
+ The renegade's embrace.
+ The canker of Rome's guilt shall be
+ Upon his dying name;
+ And as he lived in slavery,
+ So shall he fall in shame.
+
+
+On the day after the Romans had reached the Weser, Germanicus led his
+army across that river, and a partial encounter took place, in which
+Arminius was successful. But on the succeeding day a general action was
+fought, in which Arminius was severely wounded, and the German infantry
+routed with heavy loss. The horsemen of the two armies encountered
+without either party gaining the advantage. But the Roman army remained
+master of the ground, and claimed a complete victory. Germanicus erected
+a trophy in the field, with a vaunting inscription, that the nations
+between the Rhine and the Elbe had been thoroughly conquered by his
+army. But that army speedily made a final retreat to the left bank of
+the Rhine; nor was the effect of their campaign more durable than their
+trophy. The sarcasm with which Tacitus speaks of certain other
+triumphs of Roman generals over Germans, may apply to the pageant which
+Germanicus celebrated on his return to Rome from his command of the
+Roman army of the Rhine. The Germans were "TRIUMPHATI POTIUS QUAM
+VICTI."
+
+After the Romans had abandoned their attempts on Germany, we find
+Arminius engaged in hostilities with Maroboduus, the king of the Suevi
+and Marcomanni who was endeavouring to bring the other German tribes
+into a state of dependency on him. Arminius was at the head of the
+Germans who took up arms against this home invader of their liberties.
+After some minor engagements, a pitched battle was fought between the
+two confederacies, A.D. 16, in which the loss on each side was equal;
+but Maroboduus confessed the ascendency of his antagonist by avoiding
+a renewal of the engagement, and by imploring the intervention of the
+Romans in his defence. The younger Drusus then commanded the Roman
+legions in the province of Illyricum, and by his mediation a peace was
+concluded between Arminius and Maroboduus, by the terms of which it
+is evident that the latter must have renounced his ambitious schemes
+against the freedom of the other German tribes.
+
+Arminius did not long survive this second war of independence, which
+he successfully waged for his country. He was assassinated in the
+thirty-seventh year of his age, by some of his own kinsmen, who
+conspired against him. Tacitus says that this happened while he was
+engaged in a civil war, which had been caused by his attempts to make
+himself king over his countrymen. It is far more probable (as one of the
+best biographers of Arminius has observed) that Tacitus misunderstood an
+attempt of Arminius to extend his influence as elective war-chieftain
+of the Cherusci, and other tribes, for an attempt to obtain the royal
+dignity. [Dr. Plate, in Biographical Dictionary commenced by the Society
+for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge.] When we remember that his
+father-in-law and his brother were renegades, we can well understand
+that a party among his kinsmen may have been bitterly hostile to him,
+and have opposed his authority with the tribe by open violence, and when
+that seemed ineffectual, by secret assassination.
+
+Arminius left a name, which the historians of the nation against which
+he combated so long and so gloriously have delighted to honour. It is
+from the most indisputable source, from the lips of enemies, that
+we know his exploits. [See Tacitus, Ann. lib. ii. sec. 88; Velleius
+Paterculus, lib. ii. sec. 118.] His country men made history, but did
+not write it. But his memory lived among them in the lays of their
+bards, who recorded
+
+"The deeds he did, the fields he won, The freedom he restored."
+
+Tacitus, many years after the death of Arminius, says of him, "Canitur
+adhuc barbaras apud gentes." As time passed on, the gratitude of ancient
+Germany to her great deliverer grew into adoration, and divine honours
+were paid for centuries to Arminius by every tribe of the Low Germanic
+division of the Teutonic races. The Irmin-sul, or the column of Herman,
+near Eresburg, the modern Stadtberg, was the chosen object of worship to
+the descendants of the Cherusci, the Old Saxons, and in defence of which
+they fought most desperately against Charlemagne and his christianized
+Franks. "Irmin, in the cloudy Olympus of Teutonic belief, appears as a
+king and a warrior; and the pillar, the 'Irmin-sul,' bearing the statue,
+and considered as the symbol of the deity, was the Palladium of the
+Saxon nation, until the temple of Eresburg was destroyed by Charlemagne,
+and the column itself transferred to the monastery of Corbey, where,
+perhaps, a portion of the rude rock idol yet remains, covered by the
+ornaments of the Gothic era." [Palgrave on the English Commonwealth,
+vol. ii. p. 140.]
+
+Traces of the worship of Arminius are to be found among our Anglo-Saxon
+ancestors, after their settlement in this island. One of the four great
+highways was held to be under the protection of the deity, and was
+called the "Irmin-street." The name Arminius is, of course, the mere
+Latinized form of "Herman," the name by which the hero and the deity
+were known by every man of Low German blood, on either side of the
+German Sea. It means, etymologically, the "War-man," the "man of hosts."
+No other explanation of the worship of the "Irmin-sul," and of the name
+of the "Irmin-street," is so satisfactory as that which connects them
+with the deified Arminius. We know for certain of the existence of other
+columns of an analogous character. Thus, there was the Roland-seule
+in North Germany; there was a Thor-seule in Sweden, and (what is
+more important) there was an Athelstan-seule in Saxon England. [See
+Lappenburg's Anglo-Saxons, p. 378. For nearly all the philological and
+ethnographical facts respecting Arminius, I am indebted to Dr. R. G.
+Latham.]
+
+There is at the present moment a song respecting the Irmin-sul current
+in the bishopric of Minden, one version of which might seem only to
+refer to Charlemagne having pulled down the Irmin-sul:--
+
+
+ "Herman, sla dermen, Sla pipen, sla trummen,
+ De Kaiser will kummen,
+ Met hamer un stangen,
+ Will Herman uphangen."
+
+
+But there is another version, which probably is the oldest, and which
+clearly refers to the great Arminius:--
+
+
+ "Un Herman slaug dermen; Slaug pipen, slaug trummen;
+ De fursten sind kammen,
+ Met all eren-mannen
+ Hebt VARUS uphangen."
+ [See Grimm, Deutsche Mythologie, p. 329.]
+
+
+About ten centuries and a half after the demolition of the Irmin-sul,
+and nearly eighteen after the death of Arminius, the modern Germans
+conceived the idea of rendering tardy homage to their great hero; and,
+accordingly some eight or ten years ago, a general subscription was
+organized in Germany, for the purpose of erecting on the Osning--a
+conical mountain, which forms the highest summit of the Teutoberger
+Wald, and is eighteen hundred feet above the level of the sea--a
+colossal bronze statue of Arminius. The statue was designed by Bandel.
+The hero was to stand uplifting a sword in his right hand, and looking
+towards the Rhine. The height of the statue was to be eighty feet from
+the base to the point of the sword, and was to stand on a circular
+Gothic temple, ninety feet high, and supported by oak trees as columns.
+The mountain, where it was to be erected, is wild and stern, and
+overlooks the scene of the battle. It was calculated that the statue
+would be clearly visible at a distance of sixty miles. The temple is
+nearly finished, and the statue itself has been cast at the copper works
+at Lemgo. But there, through want of funds to set it up, it has lain for
+some years, in disjointed fragments, exposed to the mutilating homage
+of relic-seeking travellers. The idea of honouring a hero who belongs to
+ALL Germany, is not one which the present rulers of that divided country
+have any wish to encourage; and the statue may long continue to lie
+there, and present too true a type of the condition of Germany herself.
+[On the subject of this statue I must repeat an acknowledgment of my
+obligations to my friend Mr. Henry Pearson.]
+
+Surely this is an occasion in which Englishmen might well prove, by acts
+as well as words, that we also rank Arminius among our heroes.
+
+I have quoted the noble stanzas of one of our modern English poets on
+Arminius, and I will conclude this memoir with one of the odes of the
+great poet of modern Germany, Klopstock, on the victory to which we owe
+our freedom, and Arminius mainly owes his fame. Klopstock calls it
+the "Battle of Winfield." The epithet of "Sister of Cannae" shows that
+Klopstock followed some chronologers, according to whom, Varus was
+defeated on the anniversary of the day on which Paulus and Varro were
+defeated by Hannibal.
+
+SONG OF TRIUMPH AFTER THE VICTORY OF HERRMAN, THE DELIVERER OF GERMANY
+FROM THE ROMANS.
+
+FROM KLOPSTOCK'S "HERRMAN UND DIE FURSTEN." Supposed to be sung by a
+Chorus of Bards.
+
+A CHORUS.
+
+ Sister of Cannae! Winfield's fight!
+ We saw thee with thy streaming bloody hair,
+ With fiery eye, bright with the world's despair,
+ Sweep by Walhalla's bards from out our sight.
+ Herrman outspake--"Now Victory or Death!"
+ The Romans,... "Victory!"
+ And onward rushed their eagles with the cry.
+ --So ended the FIRST day.
+
+ "Victory or Death!" began
+ Then, first, the Roman chief; and Herrman spake
+ Not, but home struck: the eagles fluttered--brake.
+ --So sped the SECOND day.
+
+ TWO CHORUSES.
+
+ And the third came.... The cry was "Flight or Death!"
+ Flight left they not for them who'd make them slaves--
+ Men who stab children!--flight for THEM!... no! graves!
+ --'Twas their LAST day.
+
+ TWO BARDS.
+
+ Yet spared they messengers: two came to Rome.
+ How drooped the plume! the lance was left to trail
+ Down in the dust behind: their cheek was pale:
+ So came the messengers to Rome.
+
+ High in his hall the Imperator sate--
+ OCTAVIANUS CAESAR AUGUSTUS sate.
+ They filled up wine-cups, wine-cups filled they up
+ For him the highest, Jove of all their state.
+
+ The flutes of Lydia hushed before their voice,
+ Before the messengers--the "Highest" sprung--
+ The god against the marble pillars, wrung
+ By the dred words, striking his brow, and thrice
+ Cried he aloud in anguish--"Varus! Varus!
+ Give back my legions, Varus!"
+
+ And now the world-wide conquerors shrunk and feared
+ For fatherland and home
+ The lance to raise; and 'mongst those false to Rome
+ The death-lot rolled, and still they shrunk and feared;
+
+ "For she her face hath turned,
+ The victor goddess," cried these cowards--(for aye
+ Be it!)--"from Rome and Romans, and her day
+ Is done!"--And still be mourned
+ And cried aloud in anguish--"Varus! Varus!
+ Give back my legions, Varus!"
+
+[Notes:--The battle of Cannae, B.C. 216--Hannibal's victory over the
+Romans. Winfield--the probable site of the "Herrmanschladt." See SUPRA.
+Augustus was worshipped as a deity in his lifetime. I have taken this
+translation from an anonymous writer in FRASER, two years ago.]
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN ARMINIUS'S VICTORY OVER VARUS, AND THE BATTLE
+OF CHALONS.
+
+A.D. 43. The Romans commence the conquest of Britain, Claudius being
+then Emperor of Rome. The population of this island was then Celtic. In
+about forty years all the tribes south of the Clyde were subdued, and
+their land made a Roman province.
+
+68-60. Successful campaigns of the Roman general Corbulo against the
+Parthians.
+
+64. First persecution of the Christians at Rome under Nero.
+
+68-70. Civil wars in the Roman World. The emperors Nero, Galba, Otho,
+and Vitellius, cut off successively by violent deaths. Vespasian becomes
+emperor.
+
+70. Jerusalem destroyed by the Romans under Titus.
+
+83. Futile attack of Domitian on the Germans.
+
+86. Beginning of the wars between the Romans and the Dacians.
+
+98-117. Trajan, emperor of Rome. Under him the empire acquires its
+greatest territorial extent by his conquests in Dacia and in the East.
+His successor, Hadrian, abandons the provinces beyond the Euphrates,
+which Trajan had conquered.
+
+138-180. Era of the Antonines.
+
+167-176. A long and desperate war between Rome and a great confederacy
+of the German nations. Marcus Antoninus at last succeeds in repelling
+them.
+
+192-197. Civil Wars throughout the Roman world. Severus becomes emperor.
+He relaxes the discipline of the soldiers. After his death in 211, the
+series of military insurrections, civil wars, and murders of emperors
+recommences.
+
+226. Artaxerxes (Ardisheer) overthrows the Parthian, and restores the
+Persian kingdom in Asia. He attacks the Roman possessions in the East.
+
+260. The Goths invade the Roman provinces. The emperor Decius is
+defeated and slain by them.
+
+253-260. The Franks and Alemanni invade Gaul, Spain, and Africa. The
+Goths attack Asia Minor and Greece. The Persians conquer Armenia. Their
+king, Sapor, defeats the Roman emperor Valerian, and takes him prisoner.
+General distress of the Roman empire.
+
+268-283. The emperors Claudius, Aurelian, Tacitus, Probus, and Carus
+defeat the various enemies of Rome, and restore order in the Roman
+state.
+
+285. Diocletian divides and reorganizes the Roman empire. After his
+abdication in 305 a fresh series of civil wars and confusion ensues.
+Constantine, the first Christian emperor, reunites the empire in 324.
+
+330. Constantine makes Constantinople the seat of empire instead of
+Rome.
+
+363. The emperor Julian is killed in action against the Persians.
+
+364-375. The empire is again divided, Valentinian being emperor of the
+West, and Valens of the East. Valentinian repulses the Alemanni, and
+other German invaders from Gaul. Splendour of the Gothic kingdom under
+Hermanric, north of the Danube.
+
+376-395. The Huns attack the Goths, who implore the protection of the
+Roman emperor of the East. The Goths are allowed to pass the Danube, and
+to settle in the Roman provinces. A war soon breaks out between them and
+the Romans, and the emperor Valens and his army are destroyed by them.
+They ravage the Roman territories. The emperor Theodosius reduces them
+to submission. They retain settlements in Thrace and Asia Minor.
+
+395. Final division of the Roman empire between Arcadius and Honorius,
+the two sons of Theodosius. The Goths revolt, and under Alaric attack
+various parts of both the Roman empires.
+
+410. Alaric takes the city of Rome.
+
+412. The Goths march into Gaul, and in 414 into Spain, which had been
+already invaded by hosts of Vandals, Suevi, Alani, and other Germanic
+nations. Britain is formally abandoned by the Roman emperor of the West.
+
+428. Genseric, king of the Vandals, conquers the Roman province of North
+Africa.
+
+441. The Huns attack the Eastern empire.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI -- THE BATTLE OF CHALONS, A.D. 451.
+
+
+ "The discomfiture of the mighty attempt of Attila to found a new
+ anti-Christian dynasty upon the wreck of the temporal power of
+ Rome, at the end of the term of twelve hundred years, to which
+ its duration had been limited by the forebodings of the
+ heathen."--HERBERT.
+
+
+A broad expanse of plains, the Campi Catalaunici of the ancients,
+spreads far and wide around the city of Chalons, in the north-east of
+France. The long rows of poplars, through which the river Marne winds
+its way, and a few thinly-scattered villages, are almost the only
+objects that vary the monotonous aspect of the greater part of this
+region. But about five miles from Chalons, near the little hamlets of
+Chaps and Cuperly, the ground is indented and heaped up in ranges of
+grassy mounds and trenches, which attest the work of man's hand in ages
+past; and which, to the practised eye, demonstrate that this quiet spot
+has once been the fortified position of a huge military host.
+
+Local tradition gives to these ancient earthworks the name of Attila's
+Camp. Nor is there any reason to question the correctness of the title,
+or to doubt that behind these very ramparts it was that, 1400 years ago,
+the most powerful heathen king that ever ruled in Europe mustered the
+remnants of his vast army, which had striven on these plains against
+the Christian soldiery of Thoulouse and Rome. Here it was that Attila
+prepared to resist to the death his victors in the field; and here he
+heaped up the treasures of his camp in one vast pile, which was to be
+his funeral pyre should his camp be stormed. It was here that the Gothic
+and Italian forces watched but dared not assail, their enemy in his
+despair, after that great and terrible day of battle, when
+
+ "The sound
+ Of conflict was o'erpast, the shout of all
+ Whom earth could send from her remotest bounds,
+ Heathen or faithful;--from thy hundred mouths,
+ That feed the Caspian with Riphean snows,
+ Huge Volga! from famed Hypanis, which once
+ Cradled the Hun; from all the countless realms
+ Between Imaus and that utmost strand
+ Where columns of Herculean rock confront
+ The blown Atlantic; Roman, Goth, and Hun,
+ And Scythian strength of chivalry, that tread
+ The cold Codanian shore, or what far lands
+ Inhospitable drink Cimmerian floods,
+ Franks, Saxons, Suevic, and Sarmartian chiefs,
+ And who from green Armorica or Spain
+ Flocked to the work of death."
+ [Herbert's Attila, book i. line 13.]
+
+The victory which the Roman general Aetius, with his Gothic allies, had
+then gained over the Huns, was the last victory of Imperial Rome. But
+among the long Fasti of her triumphs, few can be found that, for their
+importance and ultimate benefit to mankind, are comparable with this
+expiring effort of her arms. It did not, indeed, open to her any new
+career of conquest; it did not consolidate the relics of her power; it
+did not turn the rapid ebb of her fortunes. The mission of Imperial Rome
+was, in truth, already accomplished. She had received and transmitted
+through her once ample dominion the civilization of Greece. She had
+broken up the barriers of narrow nationalities among the various states
+and tribes that dwelt around the coast of the Mediterranean. She had
+fused these and many other races into one organized empire, bound
+together by a community of laws, of government and institutions. Under
+the shelter of her full power the True Faith had arisen in the earth and
+during the years of her decline it had been nourished to maturity, and
+had overspread all the provinces that ever obeyed her sway. [See the
+Introduction to Ranke's History of the Popes.] For no beneficial
+purpose to mankind could the dominion of the seven-hilled city have been
+restored or prolonged. But it was all-important to mankind what nations
+should divide among them Rome's rich inheritance of empire: whether the
+Germanic and Gothic warriors should form states and kingdoms out of
+the fragments of her dominions, and become the free members of the
+commonwealth of Christian Europe; or whether pagan savages from the
+wilds of Central Asia should crush the relics of classic civilization,
+and the early institutions of the christianized Germans, in one hopeless
+chaos of barbaric conquest. The Christian Vistigoths of King Theodoric
+fought and triumphed at Chalons, side by side with the legions of
+Aetius. Their joint victory over the Hunnish host not only rescued for
+a time from destruction the old age of Rome, but preserved for centuries
+of power and glory the Germanic element in the civilization of modern
+Europe.
+
+In order to estimate the full importance to mankind of the battle of
+Chalons, we must keep steadily in mind who and what the Germans were,
+and the important distinctions between them and the numerous other races
+that assailed the Roman Empire: and it is to be understood that the
+Gothic and the Scandinavian nations are included in the German race.
+Now, "in two remarkable traits the Germans differed from the Sarmatic,
+as well as from the Slavic nations, and, indeed, from all those other
+races to whom the Greeks and Romans gave the designation of barbarians.
+I allude to their personal freedom and regards for the rights of men;
+secondly, to the respect paid by them to the female sex and the chastity
+for which the latter were celebrated among the people of the North.
+These were the foundations of that probity of character, self-respect,
+and purity of manners which may be traced among the Germans and
+Goths even during pagan times, and which, when their sentiments were
+enlightened by Christianity, brought out those splendid traits of
+character which distinguish the age of chivalry and romance." [See
+Prichard's Researches into the Physical History of Mankind, vol iii. p.
+423.] What the intermixture of the German stock with the classic, at
+the fall of the Western Empire, has done for mankind may be best felt
+by watching, with Arnold, over how large a portion of the earth the
+influence of the German element is now extended.
+
+"It affects, more or less, the whole west of Europe, from the head of
+the Gulf of Bothnia to the most southern promontory of Sicily, from the
+Oder and the Adriatic to the Hebrides and to Lisbon. It is true that the
+language spoken over a large portion of this space is not predominantly
+German; but even in France, and Italy, and Spain, the influence of the
+Franks, Burgundians, Visigoths, Ostrogoths, and Lombards, while it has
+coloured even the language, has in blood and institutions left its mark
+legibly and indelibly. Germany, the Low Countries, Switzerland for the
+most part, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, and our own islands, are all in
+language, in blood, and in institutions, German most decidedly. But
+all South America is peopled with Spaniards and Portuguese; all North
+America, and all Australia with Englishmen. I say nothing of the
+prospects and influence of the German race in Africa and in India: it
+is enough to say that half of Europe, and all America and Australia,
+are German, more or less completely, in race, in language, or in
+institutions, or in all." [Arnold's Lectures on Modern History, p. 35.]
+
+By the middle of the fifth century, Germanic nations had settled
+themselves in many of the fairest regions of the Roman empire,
+had imposed their yoke on the provincials, and had undergone, to a
+considerable extent, that moral conquest which the arts and refinements
+of the vanquished in arms have so often achieved over the rough victor.
+The Visigoths held the north of Spain and Gaul south of the Loire.
+Franks, Alemanni, Alans, and Burgundians had established themselves in
+other Gallic provinces, and the Suevi were masters of a large southern
+portion of the Spanish peninsula. A king of the Vandals reigned in
+North Africa, and the Ostrogoths had firmly planted themselves in the
+provinces north of Italy. Of these powers and principalities, that of
+the Visigoths, under their king Theodoric, son of Alaric, was by far the
+first in power and in civilization.
+
+The pressure of the Huns upon Europe had first been felt in the fourth
+century of our era. They had long been formidable to the Chinese empire;
+but the ascendency in arms which another nomadic tribe of Central Asia,
+the Sienpi gained over them, drove the Huns from their Chinese conquests
+westward; and this movement once being communicated to the whole chain
+of barbaric nations that dwelt northward of the Black Sea and the Roman
+empire, tribe after tribe of savage warriors broke in upon the barriers
+of civilized Europe, "velut unda supervenit undam." The Huns crossed the
+Tanais into Europe in 375, and rapidly reduced to subjection the Alans,
+the Ostrogoths, and other tribes that were then dwelling along the
+course of the Danube. The armies of the Roman emperor that tried to
+check their progress were cut to pieces by them; and Panonia and other
+provinces south of the Danube were speedily occupied by the victorious
+cavalry of these new invaders. Not merely the degenerate Romans, but the
+bold and hardy warriors of Germany and Scandinavia were appalled at the
+numbers, the ferocity, the ghastly appearance, and the lightning-like
+rapidity of the Huns. Strange and loathsome legends were coined and
+credited, which attributed their origin to the union of "Secret, black,
+and midnight hags" with the evil spirits of the wilderness.
+
+Tribe after tribe, and city after city, fell before them. Then came
+a pause in their career of conquest in South-western Europe caused
+probably by dissensions among their chiefs, and also by their arms being
+employed in attack upon the Scandinavian nations. But when Attila (or
+Atzel, as he is called in the Hungarian language) became their ruler,
+the torrent of their arms was directed with augmented terrors upon the
+west and the south; and their myriads marched beneath the guidance of
+one master-mind to the overthrow both of the new and the old powers of
+the earth.
+
+Recent events have thrown such a strong interest over everything
+connected with the Hungarian name, that even the terrible name of Attila
+now impresses us the more vividly through our sympathising admiration of
+the exploits of those who claim to be descended from his warriors, and
+"ambitiously insert the name of Attila among their native kings." The
+authenticity of this martial genealogy is denied by some writers, and
+questioned by more. But it is at least certain that the Magyars of
+Arpad, who are the immediate ancestors of the bulk of the modern
+Hungarians, and who conquered the country which bears the name of
+Hungary in A.D. 889, were of the same stock of mankind as were the Huns
+of Attila, even if they did not belong to the same subdivision of that
+stock. Nor is there any improbability in the tradition, that after
+Attila's death many of his warriors remained in Hungary, and that their
+descendants afterwards joined the Huns of Arpad in their career of
+conquest. It is certain that Attila made Hungary the seat of his empire.
+It seems also susceptible of clear proof that the territory was then
+called Hungvar, and Attila's soldiers Hungvari. Both the Huns of Attila
+and those of Arpad came from the family of nomadic nations, whose
+primitive regions were those vast wildernesses of High Asia which are
+included between the Altaic and the Himalayan mountain-chains. The
+inroads of these tribes upon the lower regions of Asia and into Europe,
+have caused many of the most remarkable revolutions in the history of
+the world. There is every reason to believe that swarms of these nations
+made their way into distant parts of the earth, at periods long before
+the date of the Scythian invasion of Asia, which is the earliest inroad
+of the nomadic race that history records. The first, as far as we can
+conjecture, in respect to the time of their descent were the Finnish and
+Ugrian tribes, who appear to have come down from the Asiatic border of
+High Asia towards the north-west, in which direction they advanced
+to the Uralian mountains. There they established themselves: and that
+mountain chain, with its valleys and pasture-lands, became to them a
+new country, whence they sent out colonies on every side; but the Ugrian
+colony, which under Arpad occupied Hungary, and became the ancestors of
+the bulk of the present Hungarian nation, did not quit their settlements
+on the Uralian mountains till a very late period, not until four
+centuries after the time when Attila led from the primary seats of the
+nomadic races in High Asia the host with which he advanced into the
+heart of France. [See Prichard's Researches into the Physical History of
+Mankind.] That host was Turkish; but closely allied in origin, language,
+and habits, with the Finno-Ugrian settlers on the Ural.
+
+Attila's fame has not come down to us through the partial and suspicious
+medium of chroniclers and poets of his own race. It is not from Hunnish
+authorities that we learn the extent of his might: It is from his
+enemies, from the literature and the legends of the nations whom he
+afflicted with his arms, that we draw the unquestionable evidence of
+his greatness. Besides the express narratives of Byzantine, Latin, and
+Gothic writers, we have the strongest proof of the stern reality of
+Attila's conquests in the extent to which he and his Huns have been the
+themes of the earliest German and Scandinavian lays. Wild as many of
+these legends are, they bear concurrent and certain testimony to the awe
+with which the memory of Attila was regarded by the bold warriors who
+composed and delighted in them. Attila's exploits, and the wonders of
+his unearthly steed and magic sword, repeatedly occur in the Sagas
+of Norway and Iceland; and the celebrated Niebelungen Lied, the most
+ancient of Germanic poetry, is full of them. There Etsel or Attila, is
+described as the wearer of twelve mighty crowns, and as promising to
+his bride the lands of thirty kings, whom his irresistible sword has
+subdued. He is, in fact, the hero of the latter part of this remarkable
+poem; and it is at his capital city, Etselenburgh, which evidently
+corresponds to the modern Buda, that much of its action takes place.
+
+When we turn from the legendary to the historic Attila, we see
+clearly that he was not one of the vulgar herd of barbaric conquerors.
+Consummate military skill may be traced in his campaigns; and he relied
+far less on the brute force of armies for the aggrandizement of his
+empire, than on the unbounded influence over the affections of friends
+and the fears of foes which his genius enabled him to acquire.
+Austerely sober in his private life, severely just on the judgment-seat,
+conspicuous among a nation of warriors for hardihood, strength, and
+skill in every martial exercise, grave and deliberate in counsel, but
+rapid and remorseless in execution, he gave safety and security to all
+who were under his dominion, while he waged a warfare of extermination
+against all who opposed or sought to escape from it. He matched the
+national passions, the prejudices, the creeds, and the superstitions of
+the varied nations over which he ruled, and of those which he sought to
+reduce beneath his sway: and these feelings he had the skill to turn
+to his own account. His own warriors believed him to be the inspired
+favourite of their deities, and followed him with fanatic zeal: his
+enemies looked on him as the pre-appointed minister of Heaven's wrath
+against themselves; and, though they believed not in his creed, their
+own made them tremble before him.
+
+In one of his early campaigns he appeared before his troops with an
+ancient iron sword in his grasp, which he told them was the god of war
+whom their ancestors had worshipped. It is certain that the nomadic
+tribes of Northern Asia, whom Herodotus described under the name of
+Scythians, from the earliest times worshipped as their god a bare sword.
+That sword-God was supposed, in Attila's time, to have disappeared from
+earth; but the Hunnish king now claimed to have received it by special
+revelation. It was said that a herdsman, who was tracking in the desert
+a wounded heifer by the drops of blood, found the mysterious sword
+standing fixed in the ground, as if it had been darted down from heaven.
+The herdsman bore it to Attila, who thenceforth was believed by the Huns
+to wield the Spirit of Death in battle; and the seers prophesied that
+that sword was to destroy the world. A Roman, [Priscus.] who was on
+an embassy to the Hunnish camp, recorded in his memoirs Attila's
+acquisition of this supernatural weapon, and the immense influence over
+the minds of the barbaric tribes which its possession gave him. In the
+title which he assumed, we shall see the skill with which he availed
+himself of the legends and creeds of other nations as well as of his
+own. He designated himself "ATTILA, Descendant of the Great Nimrod.
+Nurtured in Engaddi. By the Grace of God, King of the Huns, the Goths,
+the Danes, and the Medes. The Dread of the World."
+
+Herbert states that Attila is represented on an old medallion with a
+Teraphim, or a head, on his breast; and the same writer adds: "We know,
+from the 'Hamartigenea' of Prudentius, that Nimrod, with a snaky-haired
+head, was the object of adoration to the heretical followers of Marcion;
+and the same head was the palladium set up by Antiochus Epiphanes over
+the gates of Antioch, though it has been called the visage of Charon.
+The memory of Nimrod was certainly regarded with mystic veneration by
+many; and by asserting himself to be the heir of that mighty hunter
+before the Lord, he vindicated to himself at least the whole Babylonian
+kingdom.
+
+"The singular assertion in his style, that he was nurtured in Engaddi
+where he certainly, had never been, will be more easily understood on
+reference to the twelfth chapter of the Book of Revelation, concerning
+the woman clothed with the sun, who was to bring forth in the
+wilderness--'where she hath a place prepared of God'--a man-child, who
+was to contend with the dragon having seven heads and ten horns, and
+rule all nations with a rod of iron. This prophecy was at that time
+understood universally by the sincere Christians to refer to the birth
+of Constantine, who was to overwhelm the paganism of the city on the
+seven hills, and it is still so explained; but it is evident that the
+heathens must have looked on it in a different light, and have regarded
+it as a foretelling of the birth of that Great One who should master the
+temporal power of Rome. The assertion, therefore, that he was nurtured
+in Engaddi, is a claim to be looked upon as that man-child who was to
+be brought forth in a place prepared of God in the wilderness. Engaddi
+means, a place of palms and vines, in the desert; it was hard by Zoar,
+the city of refuge, which was saved in the vale of Siddim, or Demons,
+when the rest were destroyed by fire and brimstone from the Lord in
+heaven, and might, therefore, be especially called a place prepared of
+God in the wilderness."
+
+It is obvious enough why he styled himself "By the grace of God, King of
+the Huns and Goths;" and it seems far from difficult to see why he added
+the names of the Medes and the Danes. His armies had been engaged in
+warfare against the Persian kingdom of the Sassanidae; and it is
+certain [See the narrative of Priscus.] that he meditated the attack
+and overthrow of the Medo-Persian power. Probably some of the northern
+provinces of that kingdom had been compelled to pay him tribute; and
+this would account for his styling himself King of the Medes, they being
+his remotest subjects to the south. From a similar cause he may have
+called himself King of the Danes, as his power may well have extended
+northwards as far as the nearest of the Scandinavian nations; and
+this mention of Medes and Danes as his subjects would serve at once to
+indicate the vast extent of his dominion. [In the "Niebelungen-Lied,"
+the old poet who describes the reception of the heroine Chrimhild by
+Attila (Etsel) says that Attila's dominions were so vast, that among his
+subject-warriors there were Russian, Greek, Wallachian, Polish, and even
+DANISH KNIGHTS.]
+
+The extensive territory north of the Danube and Black sea, and eastward
+of Caucasus, over which Attila ruled, first in conjunction with his
+brother Bleda, and afterwards alone, cannot be very accurately defined;
+but it must have comprised within it, besides the Huns, many nations of
+Slavic, Gothic, Teutonic, and Finnish origin. South also of the Danube,
+the country from the river Sau as far as Novi in Thrace was a Hunnish
+province. Such was the empire of the Huns in A.D. 445; a memorable year,
+in which Attila founded Buda on the Danube as his capital city; and
+ridded himself of his brother by a crime, which seems to have been
+prompted not only by selfish ambition, but also by a desire of turning
+to his purpose the legends and forebodings which then were universally
+spread throughout the Roman empire, and must have been well known to the
+watchful and ruthless Hun.
+
+The year 445 of our era completed the twelfth century from the
+foundation of Rome, according to the best chronologers. It had always
+been believed among the Romans that the twelve vultures which were said
+to have appeared to Romulus when he founded the city, signified the time
+during which the Roman power should endure. The twelve vultures denoted
+twelve centuries. This interpretation of the vision of the birds of
+destiny was current among learned Romans, even when there were yet many
+of the twelve centuries to run, and while the imperial city was at the
+zenith of its power. But as the allotted time drew nearer and nearer to
+its conclusion, and as Rome grew weaker and weaker beneath the blows
+of barbaric invaders, the terrible omen was more and more talked
+and thought of; and in Attila's time, men watched for the momentary
+extinction of the Roman state with the last beat of the last vulture's
+wing. Moreover, among the numerous legends connected with the foundation
+of the city, and the fratricidal death of Remus, there was one most
+terrible one, which told that Romulus did not put his brother to death
+in accident, or in hasty quarrel, but that
+
+ "He slew his gallant twin
+ With inexpiable sin."
+
+deliberately, and in compliance with the warnings of supernatural
+powers. The shedding of a brother's blood was believed to have been the
+price at which the founder of Rome had purchased from destiny her twelve
+centuries of existence. [See a curious justification of Attila's murder
+of his brother, by a zealous Hungarian advocate, in the note to Pray's
+"Annales Hunnorum," p. 117. The example of Romulus is the main authority
+quoted.]
+
+We may imagine, therefore, with what terror in this, the
+twelve-hundredth year after the foundation of Rome, the inhabitants of
+the Roman empire must have heard the tidings that the royal brethren,
+Attila and Bleda, had founded a new capitol on the Danube, which was
+designed to rule over the ancient capitol on the Tiber; and that Attila,
+like Romulus, had consecrated the foundations of his new city by
+murdering his brother; so that, for the new cycle of centuries then
+about to commence, dominion had been bought from the gloomy spirits of
+destiny in favour of the Hun, by a sacrifice of equal awe and value with
+that which had formerly obtained it for the Romans.
+
+It is to be remembered that not only the pagans, but also the Christians
+of that age, knew and believed in these legends and omens, however they
+might differ as to the nature of the superhuman agency by which such
+mysteries had been made known to mankind. And we may observe, with
+Herbert, a modern learned dignitary of our Church, how remarkably this
+augury was fulfilled. For, "if to the twelve centuries denoted by the
+twelve vultures that appeared to Romulus, we add for the six birds that
+appeared to Remus six lustra, or periods of five years each, by which
+the Romans were wont to number their time, it brings us precisely to
+the year 476, in which the Roman empire was finally extinguished by
+Odoacer."
+
+An attempt to assassinate Attila, made, or supposed to have been
+made, at the instigation of Theodosius the Younger, the Emperor of
+Constantinople, drew the Hunnish armies, in 445, upon the Eastern
+empire, and delayed for a time the destined blow against Rome. Probably
+a more important cause of delay was the revolt of some of the Hunnish
+tribes to the north of the Black Sea against Attila, which broke out
+about this period, and is cursorily mentioned by the Byzantine writers.
+Attila quelled this revolt; and having thus consolidated his power, and
+having punished the presumption of the Eastern Roman emperor by fearful
+ravages of his fairest provinces, Attila, A.D. 450, prepared to set
+his vast forces in motion for the conquest of Western Europe. He
+sought unsuccessfully by diplomatic intrigues to detach the King of the
+Visigoths from his alliance with Rome, and he resolved first to crush
+the power of Theodoric, and then to advance with overwhelming power to
+trample out the last sparks of the doomed Roman empire.
+
+A strong invitation from a Roman princess gave him a pretext for
+the war, and threw an air of chivalric enterprise over his invasion.
+Honoria, sister of Valentinian III., the Emperor of the West, had sent
+to Attila to offer him her hand, and her supposed right to share in the
+imperial power. This had been discovered by Romans, and Honoria had been
+forthwith closely imprisoned, Attila now pretended to take up arms in
+behalf of his self-promised bride, and proclaimed that he was about to
+march to Rome to redress Honoria's wrongs. Ambition and spite against
+her brother must have been the sole motives that led the lady to woo the
+royal Hun for Attila's face and person had all the national ugliness of
+his race and the description given of him by a Byzantine ambassador must
+have been well known in the imperial courts. Herbert has well versified
+the portrait drawn by Priscus of the great enemy of both Byzantium and
+Rome:--
+
+
+ "Terrific was his semblance, in no mould
+ Of beautiful proportion cast; his limbs
+ Nothing exalted, but with sinews braced
+ Of Chalybaean temper, agile, lithe,
+ And swifter than the roe; his ample chest
+ Was overbrowed by a gigantic head,
+ With eyes keen, deeply sunk, and small, that gleam'd
+ Strangely in wrath, as though some spirit unclean
+ Within that corporal tenement installed
+ Look'd from its windows, but with temper'd fire
+ Beam'd mildly on the unresisting. Thin
+ His beard and hoary; his flat nostrils crown'd
+ A cicatrised, swart visage,--but withal
+ That questionable shape such glory wore
+ That mortals quail'd beneath him."
+
+
+Two chiefs of the Franks, who were then settled on the lower Rhine, were
+at this period engaged in a feud with each other: and while one of them
+appealed to the Romans for aid, the other invoked the assistance and
+protection of the Huns. Attila thus obtained an ally whose co-operation
+secured for him the passage of the Rhine; and it was this circumstance
+which caused him to take a northward route from Hungary for his attack
+upon Gaul. The muster of the Hunnish hosts was swollen by warriors of
+every tribe that they had subjugated; nor is there any reason to suspect
+the old chroniclers of wilful exaggeration in estimating Attila's army
+at seven hundred thousand strong. Having crossed the Rhine, probably
+a little below Coblentz, he defeated the King of the Burgundians, who
+endeavoured to bar his progress. He then divided his vast forces into
+two armies,--one of which marched north-west upon Tongres and Arras,
+and the other cities of that part of France; while the main body, under
+Attila himself marched up the Moselle, and destroyed Besancon, and other
+towns in the country of the Burgundians. One of the latest and best
+biographers of Attila well observes, that, "having thus conquered the
+eastern part of France, Attila prepared for an invasion of the West
+Gothic territories beyond the Loire. He marched upon Orleans, where he
+intended to force the passage of that river; and only a little attention
+is requisite to enable us to perceive that he proceeded on a systematic
+plan: he had his right wing on the north, for the protection of his
+Frank allies; his left wing on the south, for the purpose of preventing
+the Burgundians from rallying, and of menacing the passes of the Alps
+from Italy; and he led his centre towards the chief object of the
+campaign--the conquest of Orleans, and an easy passage into the West
+Gothic dominion. The whole plan is very like that of the allied powers
+in 1814, with this difference, that their left wing entered France
+through the defiles of the Jura, in the direction of Lyons, and that the
+military object of the campaign was the capture of Paris." [Biographical
+Dictionary commenced by the Useful Knowledge Society in 1844.]
+
+It was not until the year 451 that the Huns commenced the siege of
+Orleans; and during their campaign in Eastern Gaul, the Roman general
+Aetius had strenuously exerted himself in collecting and organizing such
+an army as might, when united to the soldiery of the Visigoths, be fit
+to face the Huns in the field. He enlisted every subject of the Roman
+empire whom patriotism, courage, or compulsion could collect beneath the
+standards; and round these troops, which assumed the once proud title of
+the legions of Rome, he arrayed the large forces of barbaric auxiliaries
+whom pay, persuasion, or the general hate and dread of the Huns, brought
+to the camp of the last of the Roman generals. King Theodoric exerted
+himself with equal energy, Orleans resisted her besiegers bravely as in
+after times. The passage of the Loire was skilfully defended against the
+Huns; and Aetius and Theodoric, after much manoeuvring and difficulty,
+effected a junction of their armies to the south of that important
+river.
+
+On the advance of the allies upon Orleans, Attila instantly broke up the
+siege of that city, and retreated towards the Marne. He did not choose
+to risk a decisive battle with only the central corps of his army
+against the combined power of his enemies; and he therefore fell
+back upon his base of operations; calling in his wings from Arras and
+Besancon, and concentrating the whole of the Hunnish forces on the
+vast plains of Chalons-sur-Marne. A glance at the map will show how
+scientifically this place was chosen by the Hunnish general, as the
+point for his scattered forces to converge upon; and the nature of the
+ground was eminently favourable for the operations of cavalry, the arm
+in which Attila's strength peculiarly lay.
+
+It was during the retreat from Orleans that a Christian is reported to
+have approached the Hunnish king, and said to him, "Thou art the Scourge
+of God for the chastisement of Christians." Attila instantly assumed
+this new title of terror, which thenceforth became the appellation by
+which he was most widely and most fearfully known.
+
+The confederate armies of Romans and Visigoths at last met their great
+adversary, face to face, on the ample battle-ground of the Chalons
+plains. Aetius commanded on the right of the allies; King Theodoric on
+the left; and Sangipan, king of the Alans, whose fidelity was suspected,
+was placed purposely in the centre and in the very front of the
+battle. Attila commanded his centre in person, at the head of his own
+countrymen, while the Ostrogoths, the Gepidae, and the other subject
+allies of the Huns, were drawn up on the wings. Some manoeuvring
+appears to have occurred before the engagement, in which Attila had the
+advantage, inasmuch as he succeeded in occupying a sloping hill, which
+commanded the left flank of the Huns. Attila saw the importance of the
+position taken by Aetius on the high ground, and commenced the battle
+by a furious attack on this part of the Roman line, in which he seems to
+have detached some of his best troops from his centre to aid his left.
+The Romans having the advantage of the ground, repulsed the Huns, and
+while the allies gained this advantage on their right, their left,
+under King Theodoric, assailed the Ostrogoths, who formed the right of
+Attila's army. The gallant king was himself struck down by a javelin, as
+he rode onward at the head of his men, and his own cavalry charging
+over him trampled him to death in the confusion. But the Visigoths,
+infuriated, not dispirited, by their monarch's fall, routed the enemies
+opposed to them, and then wheeled upon the flank of the Hunnish centre,
+which had been engaged in a sanguinary and indecisive contest with the
+Alans.
+
+In this peril Attila made his centre fall back upon his camp; and when
+the shelter of its entrenchments and waggons had once been gained,
+the Hunnish archers repulsed, without difficulty, the charges of the
+vengeful Gothic cavalry. Aetius had not pressed the advantage which he
+gained on his side of the field, and when night fell over the wild
+scene of havoc, Attila's left was still unbroken, but his right had been
+routed, and his centre forced back upon his camp.
+
+Expecting an assault on the morrow, Attila stationed his best archers
+in front of the cars and waggons, which were drawn up as a fortification
+along his lines, and made every preparation for a desperate resistance.
+But the "Scourge of God" resolved that no man should boast of the honour
+of having either captured or slain him; and he caused to be raised in
+the centre of his encampment a huge pyramid of the wooden saddles of his
+cavalry: round it he heaped the spoils and the wealth that he had won;
+on it he stationed his wives who had accompanied him in the campaign;
+and on the summit he placed himself, ready to perish in the flames, and
+baulk the victorious foe of their choicest booty, should they succeed in
+storming his defences.
+
+But when the morning broke, and revealed the extent of the carnage, with
+which the plains were heaped for miles, the successful allies saw also
+and respected the resolute attitude of their antagonist. Neither were
+any measures taken to blockade him in his camp, and so to extort by
+famine that submission which it was too plainly perilous to enforce with
+the sword. Attila was allowed to march back the remnants of his army
+without molestation, and even with the semblance of success.
+
+It is probable that the crafty Aetius was unwilling to be too
+victorious. He dreaded the glory which his allies the Visigoths had
+acquired; and feared that Rome might find a second Alaric in Prince
+Thorismund, who had signalized himself in the battle, and had been
+chosen on the field to succeed his father Theodoric. He persuaded the
+young king to return at once to his capital: and thus relieved himself
+at the same time of the presence of a dangerous friend, as well as of a
+formidable though beaten foe.
+
+Attila's attacks on the Western, empire were soon renewed; but never
+with such peril to the civilized world as had menaced it before his
+defeat at Chalons. And on his death, two years after that battle, the
+vast empire which his genius had founded was soon dissevered by the
+successful revolts of the subject nations. The name of the Huns ceased
+for some centuries to inspire terror in Western Europe, and their
+ascendency passed away with the life of the great king by whom it had
+been so fearfully augmented. [If I seem to have given fewer of the
+details of the battle itself than its importance would warrant, my
+excuse must be, that Gibbon has enriched our language with a description
+of it, too long for quotation and too splendid for rivalry. I have not,
+however, taken altogether the same view of it that he has. The notes to
+Mr. Herbert's poem of "Attila" bring together nearly all the authorities
+on the subject.]
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF CHALONS, A.D. 451, AND THE
+BATTLE OF TOURS, 732.
+
+A.D. 476. The Roman Empire of the West extinguished by Odoacer.
+
+482. Establishment of the French monarchy in Gaul by Clovis.
+
+455-482. The Saxons, Angles, and Frisians conquer Britain except the
+northern parts, and the districts along the west coast. The German
+conquerors found eight independent kingdoms.
+
+533-568. The generals of Justinian, the Emperor of Constantinople,
+conquer Italy and North Africa; and these countries are for a short time
+annexed to the Roman Empire of the East.
+
+568-570. The Lombards conquer great part of Italy.
+
+570-627. The wars between the Emperors of Constantinople and the Kings
+of Persia are actively continued.
+
+622. The Mahometan era of the Hegira. Mahomet is driven from Mecca, and
+is received as prince of Medina.
+
+629-632. Mahomet conquers Arabia.
+
+632-651. The Mahometan Arabs invade and conquer Persia.
+
+632-709. They attack the Roman Empire of the East. They conquer Syria,
+Egypt, and Africa.
+
+709-713. They cross the straits of Gibraltar, and invade and conquer
+Spain.
+
+"At the death of Mohammad, in 632, his temporal and religious
+sovereignty embraced and was limited by the Arabian Peninsula. The Roman
+and Persian empires, engaged in tedious and indecisive hostility upon
+the rivers of Mesopotamia and the Armenian mountains, were viewed by the
+ambitious fanatics of his creed as their quarry. In the very first
+year of Mohammad's immediate successor, Abubeker, each of these mighty
+empires was invaded. The crumbling fabric of Eastern despotism is never
+secured against rapid and total subversion; a few victories, a few
+sieges, carried the Arabian arms from the Tigris to the Oxus, and
+overthrew, with the Sassanian dynasty, the ancient and famous religion
+they had professed. Seven years of active and unceasing warfare sufficed
+to subjugate the rich province of Syria, though defended by numerous
+armies and fortified cities; and the Khalif Omar had scarcely returned
+thanks for the accomplishment of this conquest, when Amrou, his
+lieutenant, announced to him the entire reduction of Egypt. After some
+interval, the Saracens won their way along the coast of Africa, as far
+as the Pillars of Hercules, and a third province was irretrievably torn
+from the Greek empire. These western conquests introduced them to fresh
+enemies, and ushered in more splendid successes. Encouraged by the
+disunion of the Visigoths, and invited by treachery, Musa, the general
+of a master who sat beyond the opposite extremity of the Mediterranean
+Sea, passed over into Spain, and within about two years the name of
+Mohammad was invoked under the Pyrenees."--[HALLAM.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. -- THE BATTLE OF TOURS, A.D. 732,
+
+
+ "The events that rescued our ancestors of Britain, and our
+ neighbours of Gaul, from the civil and religious yoke of the
+ Koran."--GIBBON.
+
+
+The broad tract of champaign country which intervenes between the cities
+of Poictiers and Tours is principally composed of a succession of rich
+pasture lands, which are traversed and fertilized by the Cher, the
+Creuse, the Vienne, the Claine, the Indre, and other tributaries of
+the river Loire. Here and there, the ground swells into picturesque
+eminences; and occasionally a belt of forest land, a brown heath, or a
+clustering series of vineyards, breaks the monotony of the wide-spread
+meadows; but the general character of the land is that of a grassy
+plain, and it seems naturally adapted for the evolutions of numerous
+armies, especially of those vast bodies of cavalry which, principally
+decided the fate of nations during the centuries that followed the
+downfall of Rome, and preceded the consolidation of the modern European
+powers.
+
+This region has been signalized by more than one memorable conflict; but
+it is principally interesting to the historian, by having been the scene
+of the great victory won by Charles Martel over the Saracens, A.D. 732,
+which gave a decisive check to the career of Arab conquest in Western
+Europe, rescued Christendom from Islam, preserved the relics of ancient
+and the germs of modern civilization, and re-established the old
+superiority of the Indo-European over the Semitic family of mankind.
+
+Sismondi and Michelet have underrated the enduring interest of this
+great Appeal of Battle between the champions of the Crescent and the
+Cross. But, if French writers have slighted the exploits of their
+national hero, the Saracenic trophies of Charles Martel have had full
+justice done to them by English and German historians. Gibbon devotes
+several pages of his great work to the narrative of the battle of Tours,
+and to the consideration of the consequences which probably would
+have resulted, if Abderrahman's enterprise had not been crushed by the
+Frankish chief. [Vol, vii. p. 11, ET SEQ. Gibbon's remark, that if the
+Saracen conquest had not then been checked, "Perhaps the interpretation
+of the Koran would now be taught in the schools of Oxford, and her
+pulpits might demonstrate to a circumcised people the sanctity and truth
+of the revelation of Mahomat," has almost an air of regret.] Schlegel
+speaks of this "mighty victory" in terms of fervent gratitude; and
+tells how "the arms of Charles Martel saved and delivered the Christian
+nations of the West from the deadly grasp of all-destroying Islam;"
+[Philosophy of History, p. 331.] and Ranke points out, as "one of the
+most important epochs in the history of the world, the commencement of
+the eighth century; when, on the one side, Mahommedanism threatened to
+overspread Italy and Gaul, and on the other, the ancient idolatry of
+Saxony and Friesland once more forced its way across the Rhine. In this
+peril of Christian institutions, a youthful prince of Germanic race,
+Karl Martell, arose as their champion; maintained them with all the
+energy which the necessity for self-defence calls forth, and finally
+extended them into new regions." [History of the Reformation in Germany,
+vol. i. p. 5.]
+
+Arnold ranks the victory of Charles Martel even higher than the victory
+of Arminius, "among those signal deliverances which have affected
+for centuries the happiness of mankind." [History of the later Roman
+Commonwealth, vol ii. p. 317.] In fact, the more we test its importance,
+the higher we shall be led to estimate it; and, though the authentic
+details which we possess of its circumstances and its heroes are but
+meagre, we can trace enough of its general character to make us watch
+with deep interest this encounter between the rival conquerors of the
+decaying Roman empire. That old classic world, the history of which
+occupies so large a portion of our early studies, lay, in the eighth
+century of our era, utterly exanimate and overthrown. On the north the
+German, on the south the Arab, was rending away its provinces. At last
+the spoilers encountered one another, each striving for the full mastery
+of the prey. Their conflict brought back upon the memory of Gibbon the
+old Homeric simile, where the strife of Hector and Patroclus over the
+dead body of Cebriones is compared to the combat of two lions, that
+in their hate and hunger fight together on the mountain-tops over the
+carcass of a slaughtered stag: and the reluctant yielding of the Saracen
+power to the superior might of the Northern warriors, might not inaptly
+recall those other lines of the same book of the Iliad, where the
+downfall of Patroclus beneath Hector is likened to the forced yielding
+of the panting and exhausted wild boar, that had long and furiously
+fought with a superior beast of prey for the possession of the fountain
+among the rocks, at which each burned to drink.
+
+Although three centuries had passed away since the Germanic conquerors
+of Rome had crossed the Rhine, never to repass that frontier stream,
+no settled system of institutions or government, no amalgamation of the
+various races into one people, no uniformity of language or habits, had
+been established in the country, at the time when Charles Martel was
+called on to repel the menacing tide of Saracenic invasion from the
+south. Gaul was not yet France. In that, as in other provinces of the
+Roman empire of the West, the dominion of the Caesars had been shattered
+as early as the fifth century, and barbaric kingdoms and principalities
+had promptly arisen on the ruins of the Roman power. But few of these
+had any permanency; and none of them consolidated the rest, or any
+considerable number of the rest, into one coherent and organized civil
+and political society. The great bulk of the population still consisted
+of the conquered provincials, that is to say, of Romanized Celts, of a
+Gallic race which had long been under the dominion of the Caesars,
+and had acquired, together with no slight infusion of Roman blood, the
+language, the literature, the laws, and the civilization of Latium.
+Among these, and dominant over them, roved or dwelt the German victors:
+some retaining nearly all the rude independence of their primitive
+national character; others, softened and disciplined by the aspect and
+contact of the manners and institutions of civilized life. For it is to
+be borne in mind, that the Roman empire in the West was not crushed by
+any sudden avalanche of barbaric invasion. The German conquerors came
+across the Rhine, not in enormous hosts, but in bands of a few thousand
+warriors at a time. The conquest of a province was the result of an
+infinite series of partial local invasions, carried on by little armies
+of this description. The victorious warriors either retired with their
+booty, or fixed themselves in the invaded district, taking care to keep
+sufficiently concentrated for military purposes, and ever ready for
+some fresh foray, either against a rival Teutonic band, or some hitherto
+unassailed city of the provincials. Gradually, however, the conquerors
+acquired a desire for permanent landed possessions. They lost somewhat
+of the restless thirst for novelty and adventure which had first made
+them throng beneath the banner of the boldest captains of their tribe,
+and leave their native forests for a roving military Life on the left
+bank of the Rhine. They were converted to the Christian faith; and gave
+up with their old creed much of the coarse ferocity, which must have
+been fostered in the spirits of the ancient warriors of the North by
+a mythology which promised, as the reward of the brave on earth, an
+eternal cycle of fighting and drunkenness in heaven.
+
+But, although their conversion and other civilizing influences operated
+powerfully upon the Germans in Gaul; and although the Franks (who were
+originally a confederation of the Teutonic tribes that dwelt between the
+Rhine, the Maine, and the Weser) established a decided superiority over
+the other conquerors of the province, as well as over the conquered
+provincials, the country long remained a chaos of uncombined and
+shifting elements. The early princes of the Merovingian dynasty were
+generally occupied in wars against other princes of their house,
+occasioned by the frequent subdivisions of the Frank monarchy: and
+the ablest and best of them had found all their energies tasked to the
+utmost to defend the barrier of the Rhine against the Pagan Germans, who
+strove to pass that river and gather their share of the spoils of the
+empire.
+
+The conquests which the Saracens effected over the southern and eastern
+provinces of Rome were far more rapid than those achieved by the Germans
+in the north; and the new organizations of society which the Moslems
+introduced were summarily and uniformly enforced. Exactly a century
+passed between the death of Mohammed and the date of the battle of
+Tours. During that century the followers of the Prophet had torn away
+half the Roman empire; and besides their conquests over Persia, the
+Saracens had overrun Syria, Egypt, Africa, and Spain, in an unchequered
+and apparently irresistible career of victory. Nor, at the commencement
+of the eighth century of our era, was the Mohammedan world divided
+against itself, as it subsequently became. All these vast regions obeyed
+the Caliph; throughout them all, from the Pyrenees to the Oxus, the name
+of Mohammed was invoked in prayer, and the Koran revered as the book of
+the law.
+
+It was under one of their ablest and most renowned commanders, with
+a veteran army, and with every apparent advantage of time, place, and
+circumstance, that the Arabs made their great effort at the conquest of
+Europe north of the Pyrenees. The victorious Moslem soldiery in Spain,
+
+
+ "A countless multitude;
+ Syrian, Moor, Saracen, Greek renegade,
+ Persian, and Copt, and Tartar, in one bond
+ Of erring faith conjoined--strong in the youth
+ And heat of zeal--a dreadful brotherhood,"
+
+
+were eager for the plunder of more Christian cities and shrines, and
+full of fanatic confidence in the invincibility of their arms.
+
+
+ "Nor were the chiefs
+ Of victory less assured, by long success
+ Elate, and proud of that o'erwhelming strength
+ Which surely, they believed, as it had rolled
+ Thus far uncheck'd, would roll victorious on,
+ Till, like the Orient, the subjected West
+ Should bow in reverence at Mahommed's name;
+ And pilrims from remotest Arctic shores
+ Tread with religious feet the burning sands
+ Of Araby and Mecca's stony soil."
+ SOUTHEY'S RODERICK.
+
+
+It is not only by the modern Christian poet, but by the old Arabian
+chroniclers also, that these feelings of ambition and arrogance are
+attributed to the Moslems, who had overthrown the Visigoth power in
+Spain. And their eager expectations of new wars were excited to the
+utmost on the re-appointment by the Caliph of Abderrahman Ibn Abdillah
+Alghafeki to the government of that country, A.D. 729, which restored
+them a general who had signalized his skill and prowess during the
+conquests of Africa and Spain, whose ready valour and generosity had
+made him the idol of the troops, who had already been engaged in several
+expeditions into Gaul, so as to be well acquainted with the national
+character and tactics of the Franks; and who was known to thirst, like
+a good Moslem, for revenge for the slaughter of some detachments of the
+true believers, which had been cut off on the north of the Pyrenees.
+
+In addition to his cardinal military virtues, Abderrahman is described
+by the Arab writers as a model of integrity and justice. The first two
+years of his second administration in Spain were occupied in severe
+reforms of the abuses which under his predecessors had crept into the
+system of government, and in extensive preparations for his intended
+conquest of Gaul. Besides the troops which he collected from his
+province, he obtained from Africa a large body of chosen Barber cavalry,
+officered by Arabs of proved skill and valour: and in the summer of 732
+he crossed the Pyrenees at the head of an army which some Arab writers
+rate at eighty thousand strong, while some of the Christian chroniclers
+swell its numbers to many hundreds of thousands more. Probably the Arab
+account diminishes, but of the two keeps nearer to the truth. It was
+from this formidable host, after Eudes, the Count of Acquitaine, had
+vainly striven to check it, after many strong cities had fallen before
+it, and half the land been overrun, that Gaul and Christendom were
+at last rescued by the strong arm of Prince Charles, who acquired
+a surname, [Martel--'The Hammer.' See the Scandinavian Sagas for an
+account of the favourite weapon of Thor.] like that of the war-god of
+his forefathers' creed, from the might with which he broke and shattered
+his enemies in the battle.
+
+The Merovingian kings had sunk into absolute insignificance, and had
+become mere puppets of royalty before the eighth century. Charles Martel
+like his father, Pepin Heristal, was Duke of the Austrasian Franks, the
+bravest and most thoroughly Germanic part of the nation: and exercised,
+in the name of the titular king, what little paramount authority the
+turbulent minor rulers of districts and towns could be persuaded or
+compelled to acknowledge. Engaged with his national competitors in
+perpetual conflicts for power, engaged also in more serious struggles
+for safety against the fierce tribes of the unconverted Frisians,
+Bavarians, Saxons, and Thuringians, who at that epoch assailed with
+peculiar ferocity the christianized Germans on the left bank of the
+Rhine, Charles Martel added experienced skill to his natural courage,
+and he had also formed a militia of veterans among the Franks. Hallam
+has thrown out a doubt whether, in our admiration of his victory at
+Tours, we do not judge a little too much by the event, and whether there
+was not rashness in his risking the fate of France on the result of a
+general battle with the invaders. But, when we remember that Charles had
+no standing army, and the independent spirit of the Frank warriors who
+followed his standard, it seems most probable that it was not in his
+power to adopt the cautious policy of watching the invaders, and wearing
+out their strength by delay. So dreadful and so wide-spread were the
+ravages of the Saracenic light cavalry throughout Gaul that it must have
+been impossible to restrain for any length of time the indignant ardour
+of the Franks. And, even if Charles could have persuaded his men to
+look tamely on while the Arabs stormed more towns and desolated more
+districts, he could not have kept an army together when the usual period
+of a military expedition had expired. If, indeed, the Arab account of
+the disorganization of the Moslem forces be correct, the battle was
+as well-timed on the part of Charles as it was beyond all question,
+well-fought.
+
+The monkish chroniclers, from whom we are obliged to glean a narrative
+of this memorable campaign, bear full evidence to the terror which the
+Saracen invasion inspired, and to the agony of that; great struggle. The
+Saracens, say they, and their king, who was called Abdirames, came out
+of Spain, with all their wives, and their children, and their substance,
+in such great multitudes that no man could reckon or estimate them. They
+brought with them all their armour, and whatever they had, as if they
+were thence forth always to dwell in France. ["Lors issirent d'Espaigne
+li Sarrazins, et un leur Roi qui avoit nom Abdirames, et ont leur fames
+et leur enfans at touts leur substance an si grand plente que nus ne
+le prevoit nombrer ne estimer: tout leur harnois et quanques il avoient
+amenement avec ents, aussi comme si ils deussent toujours mes habiter en
+France."]
+
+"Then Abderrahman, seeing the land filled with the multitude of his
+army, pierces through the mountains, tramples over rough and level
+ground plunders far into the country of the Franks, and smites all with
+the sword, insomuch that when Eudo came to battle with him at the river
+Garonne, and fled before him, God alone knows the number of the slain.
+Then Abderrahman pursued after Count Eudo, and while he strives to
+spoil and burn the holy shrine at Tours, he encounters the chief of the
+Austrasian Franks, Charles, a man of war from his youth up, to whom Eudo
+had sent warning. There for nearly seven days they strive intensely,
+and at last they set themselves in battle array; and the nations of
+the north standing firm as a wall, and impenetrable as a zone of ice,
+utterly slay the Arabs with the edge of the sword." ["Tunc Abdirrahman,
+multitudine sui exercitus repletam prospiciane terram," &c.--SCRIPT.
+GEST. FRANC. p. 785.]
+
+The European writers all concur in speaking of the fall of Abderrahman
+as one of the principal causes of the defeat of the Arabs; who,
+according to one writer, after finding that their leader was slain,
+dispersed in the night, to the agreeable surprise of the Christians, who
+expected the next morning to see them issue from their tents, and renew
+the combat. One monkish chronicler puts the loss of the Arabs at 375,000
+men, while he says that only 1,007 Christians fell--a disparity of
+loss which he feels bound to account for by a special interposition of
+Providence. I have translated above some of the most spirited passages
+of these writers; but it is impossible to collect from them anything
+like a full or authentic description of the great battle itself, or of
+the operations which preceded or followed it.
+
+Though, however, we may have cause to regret the meagreness and doubtful
+character of these narratives, we have the great advantage of being
+able to compare the accounts given of Abderrahman's expedition by the
+national writers of each side. This is a benefit which the inquirer into
+antiquity so seldom can obtain, that the fact of possessing it, in the
+instance of the battle of Tours, makes us think the historical testimony
+respecting that great event more certain and satisfactory than is
+the case in many other instances, where we possess abundant details
+respecting military exploits, but where those details come to us from
+the annalist of one nation only; and where we have, consequently, no
+safeguard against the exaggerations, the distortions, and the fictions
+which national vanity has so often put forth in the garb and under the
+title of history. The Arabian writers who recorded the conquests and
+wars of their countrymen in Spain, have narrated also the expedition
+into Gaul of their great Emir, and his defeat and death near Tours in
+battle with the host of the Franks under King Caldus, the name into
+which they metamorphose Charles. [The Arabian chronicles were compiled
+and translated into Spanish by Don Jose Antonio Conde, in his "Historia
+de la Dominacion de los Arabos an Espana," published at Madrid in 1820.
+Conde's plan, which I have endeavoured to follow, was to present both
+the style and spirit of his oriental authorities, so that we find in
+his pages a genuine Saracenic narrative of the wars in Western Europe
+between the Mahommedans and the Christians.]
+
+They tell us how there was war between the count of the Frankish
+frontier and the Moslems, and how the count gathered together all his
+people, and fought for a time with doubtful success. "But," say the
+Arabian chroniclers, "Abderrahman drove them back; and the men of
+Abderrahman were puffed up in spirit by their repeated successes, and
+they were full of trust in the valour and the practice in war of their
+Emir. So the Moslems smote their enemies, and passed the river Garonne,
+and laid waste the country, and took captives without number. And that
+army went through all places like a desolating storm. Prosperity made
+those warriors insatiable. At the passage of the river, Abderrahman
+overthrew the count, and the count retired into his stronghold, but the
+Moslems fought against it, and entered it by force, and slew the count;
+for everything gave way to their scimetars, which were the robbers of
+lives. All the nations of the Franks trembled at that terrible army, and
+they betook them to their king Caldus, and told him of the havoc made
+by the Moslem horsemen, and how they rode at their will through all the
+land of Narbonne Toulouse, and Bordeaux, and they told the king of the
+death of their count. Then the king bade them be of good cheer, and
+offered to aid them. And in the 114th year [Of the Hegira.] he mounted
+his home, and he took with him a host that could not be numbered, and
+went against the Moslems. And he came upon them at the great city of
+Tours. And Abderrahman and other prudent cavaliers saw the disorder of
+the Moslem troops, who were loaded with spoil; but they did not venture
+to displease the soldiers by ordering them to abandon everything except
+their arms and war-horses. And Abderrahman trusted in the valour of his
+soldiers, and in the good fortune which had ever attended him. But
+(the Arab writer remarks) such defect of discipline always is fatal to
+armies. So Abderrahman and his host attacked Tours to gain still more
+spoil, and they fought against it so fiercely that they stormed the city
+almost before the eyes of the army that came to save it; and the fury
+and the cruelty of the Moslems towards the inhabitants of the city were
+like the fury and cruelty of raging tigers. It was manifest," adds the
+Arab, "that God's chastisement was sure to follow such excesses; and
+fortune thereupon turned her back upon the Moslems."
+
+Near the river Owar, [Probably the Loire.] the two great hosts of the
+two languages and the two creeds were set in array against each other.
+The hearts of Abderrahman, his captains, and his men were filled with
+wrath and pride, and they were the first to begin the fight. The Moslem
+horseman dashed fierce and frequent forward against the battalions of
+the Franks, who resisted manfully, and many fell dead on either side,
+until the going down of the sun. Night parted the two armies: but in the
+grey of the morning the Moslems returned to the battle. Their cavaliers
+had soon hewn their way into the centre of the Christian host. But many
+of the Moslems were fearful for the safety of the spoil which they had
+stored in their tents, and a false cry arose in their ranks that some of
+the enemy were plundering the camp; whereupon several squadrons of the
+Moslem horseman rode off to protect their tents. But it seemed as if
+they fled; and all the host was troubled. And while Abderrahman strove
+to check their tumult, and to lead them back to battle, the warriors of
+the Franks came around him, and he was pierced through with many spears,
+so that he died. Then all the host fled before the enemy, and many died
+in the flight. This deadly defeat of the Moslems, and the loss of the
+great leader and good cavalier Abderrahman, took place in the hundred
+and fifteenth year.
+
+It would be difficult to expect from an adversary a more explicit
+confession of having been thoroughly vanquished, than the Arabs here
+accord to the Europeans. The points on which their narrative differs
+from those of the Christians,--as to how many days the conflict
+lasted, whether the assailed city was actually rescued or not, and the
+like,--are of little moment compared with the admitted great fact that
+there was a decisive trial of strength between Frank and Saracen, in
+which the former conquered. The enduring importance of the battle
+of Tours in the eyes of the Moslems, is attested not only by the
+expressions of "the deadly battle," and "the disgraceful overthrow,"
+which their writers constantly employ when referring to it, but also
+by the fact that no further serious attempts at conquest beyond the
+Pyrenees were made by the Saracens. Charles Martel, and his son and
+grandson, were left at leisure to consolidate and extend their power.
+The new Christian Roman Empire of the West, which the genius of
+Charlemagne founded, and throughout which his iron will imposed peace on
+the old anarchy of creeds and races, did not indeed retain its integrity
+after its great ruler's death. Fresh troubles came over Europe; but
+Christendom, though disunited, was safe. The progress of civilization,
+and the development of the nationalities and governments of modern
+Europe, from that time forth, went forward in not uninterrupted, but,
+ultimately, certain career.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF TOURS, A.D. 732, AND THE BATTLE
+OF HASTINGS, 1066.
+
+A.D. 768-814. Reign of Charlemagne. This monarch has justly been termed
+the principal regenerator of Western Europe, after the destruction of
+the Roman empire. The early death of his brother, Carloman, left him
+sole master of the dominions of the Franks, which, by a succession
+of victorious wars, he enlarged into the new Empire of the West. He
+conquered the Lombards, and re-established the Pope at Rome, who, in
+return, acknowledged Charles as suzerain of Italy; and in the year 800,
+Leo III, in the name of the Roman people, solemnly crowned Charlemagne
+at Rome, as Emperor of the Roman Empire of the West. In Spain,
+Charlemagne ruled the country between the Pyrenees and the Ebro; but
+his most important conquests were effected on the eastern side of
+his original kingdom, over the Sclavonians of Bohemia, the Avars of
+Pannonia, and over the previously uncivilized German tribes who had
+remained in their fatherland. The old Saxons were his most obstinate
+antagonists, and his wars with them lasted for thirty years. Under him
+the greater part of Germany was compulsorily civilized, and converted
+from Paganism to Christianity, His empire extended eastward as far as
+the Elbe, the Saal, the Bohemian mountains, and a line drawn from thence
+crossing the Danube above Vienna, and prolonged to the Gulf of Istria.
+[Hallam's Middle Ages.]
+
+Throughout this vast assemblage of provinces, Charlemagne established an
+organized and firm government. But it is not as a mere conqueror that he
+demands admiration. "In a life restlessly active, we see him reforming
+the coinage, and establishing the legal divisions of money, gathering
+about him the learned of every country; founding schools and
+collecting libraries; interfering, with the air of a king, in religious
+controversies; attempting, for the sake of commerce, the magnificent
+enterprise of uniting the Rhine and the Danube, and meditating to mould
+the discordant code of Roman and barbarian laws into an uniform system."
+[Hallam, UT SUPRA.]
+
+814-888. Repeated partitions of the empire and civil wars between
+Charlemagne's descendants. Ultimately, the kingdom of France is finally
+separated from Germany and Italy. In 982, Otho the Great, of Germany,
+revives the imperial dignity.
+
+827. Egbert, king of Wessex, acquires the supremacy over the Anglo-Saxon
+kingdoms.
+
+832. The first Danish squadron attacks part of the English coast.
+The Danes, or Northmen, had begun their ravages in France a few years
+earlier. For two centuries Scandinavia sends out fleet after fleet of
+sea-rovers, who desolate all the western kingdoms of Europe, and in many
+cases effect permanent conquests.
+
+871-900. Reign of Alfred in England. After a long and varied struggle,
+he rescues England from the Danish invaders.
+
+911, The French king cedes Neustria to Hrolf the Northman. Hrolf (or
+Duke Rollo, as he thenceforth was termed) and his army of Scandinavian
+warriors, become the ruling class of the population of the province,
+which is called after them Normandy.
+
+1016. Four knights from Normandy, who had been on a pilgrimage to the
+Holy Land, while returning through Italy, head the people of Salerno in
+repelling an attack of a band of Saracen corsairs. In the next year many
+adventurers from Normandy settle in Italy, where they conquer Apulia
+(1040), and afterwards (1060) Sicily.
+
+1017. Canute, king of Denmark, becomes king of England. On the death of
+the last of his sons, in 1041, the Saxon line is restored, and Edward
+the Confessor (who had been bred in the court of the Duke of Normandy),
+is called by the English to the throne of this island, as the
+representative of the House of Cerdic.
+
+1035. Duke Robert of Normandy dies on his return from a pilgrimage to
+the Holy Land, and his son William (afterwards the conqueror of England)
+succeeds to the dukedom of Normandy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. -- THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS, 1066.
+
+
+ "Eis vos la Bataille assemblee,
+ Dunc encore est grant renomee."
+ ROMAN DE ROU, 1. 3183.
+
+
+Arletta's pretty feet twinkling in the brook gained her a duke's love,
+and gave us William the Conqueror. Had she not thus fascinated Duke
+Robert, the Liberal, of Normandy, Harold would not have fallen at
+Hastings, no Anglo-Norman dynasty could have arisen, no British empire.
+The reflection is Sir Francis Palgrave's: [History of Normandy and
+England, vol. i. p. 528.] and it is emphatically true. If any one should
+write a history of "Decisive loves that; have materially influenced the
+drama of the world in all its subsequent scenes," the daughter of the
+tanner of Falaise would deserve a conspicuous place in his pages. But
+it is her son, the victor of Hastings, who is now the object of our
+attention; and no one, who appreciates the influence of England and her
+empire upon the destinies of the world, will ever rank that victory as
+one of secondary importance.
+
+It is true that in the last century some writers of eminence on our
+history and laws mentioned the Norman Conquest in terms, from which it
+might be supposed that the battle of Hastings led to little more than
+the substitution of one royal family for another on the throne of this
+country, and to the garbling and changing of some of our laws through
+the "cunning of the Norman lawyers." But, at least since the appearance
+of the work of Augustin Thierry on the Norman Conquest, these forensic
+fallacies have been exploded. Thierry made his readers keenly appreciate
+the magnitude of that political and social catastrophe. He depicted
+in vivid colours the atrocious cruelties of the conquerors, and the
+sweeping and enduring innovations that they wrought, involving the
+overthrow of the ancient constitution, as well as of the last of the
+Saxon kings. In his pages we see new tribunals and tenures superseding
+the old ones, new divisions of race and class introduced, whole
+districts devastated to gratify the vengeance or the caprice of the new
+tyrant, the greater part of the lands of the English confiscated
+and divided among aliens, the very name of Englishmen turned into a
+reproach, the English language rejected as servile and barbarous, and
+all the high places in Church and State for upwards of a century filled
+exclusively by men of foreign race.
+
+No less true than eloquent is Thierry's summing up of the social effects
+of the Norman Conquest on the generation that witnessed it, and on many
+of their successors. He tells his reader that "if he would form a just
+idea of England conquered by William of Normandy, he must figure to
+himself, not a mere change of political rule, not the triumph of one
+candidate over another candidate, of the man of one party over the man
+of another party; but the intrusion of one people into the bosom of
+another people, the violent placing of one society over another society,
+which it came to destroy, and the scattered fragments of which it
+retained only as personal property, or (to use the words of an old act)
+as 'the clothing of the soil:' he must not picture to himself on the one
+hand, William, a king and a despot--on the other, subjects of William's,
+high and low, rich and poor, all inhabiting England, and consequently
+all English; but he must imagine two nations, of one of which William
+is a member and the chief--two nations which (if the term must be used)
+were both subject to William, but as applied to which the word has quite
+different senses, meaning in the one case subordinate, in the other
+subjugated. He must consider that there are two countries, two soils,
+included in the same geographical circumference; that of the Normans
+rich and free, that of the Saxons poor and serving, vexed by RENT and
+TAILLAGE; the former full of spacious mansions, and walled and moated
+castles, the latter scattered over with huts and straw, and ruined
+hovels; that peopled with the happy and the idle, with men of the army
+and of the court, with knights and nobles,--this with men of pain
+and labour, with farmers and artizans: on the one side, luxury and
+insolence, on the other, misery and envy--not the envy of the poor at
+the sight of opulence they cannot reach, but the envy of the despoiled
+when in presence of the despoilers."
+
+Perhaps the effect of Thierry's work has been to cast into the shade the
+ultimate good effects on England of the Norman Conquest. Yet these are
+as undeniable as are the miseries which that conquest inflicted on our
+Saxon ancestors from the time of the battle of Hastings to the time of
+the signing of the Great Charter at Runnymede. That last is the true
+epoch of English nationality: it is the epoch when Anglo-Norman and
+Anglo-Saxon ceased to keep aloof from each other, the one in haughty
+scorn, the other in sullen abhorrence; and when all the free men of the
+land; whether barons, knights, yeomen, or burghers, combined to lay the
+foundations of English freedom.
+
+Our Norman barons were the chiefs of that primary constitutional
+movement; those "iron barons" whom Chatham has so nobly eulogized.
+This alone should make England remember her obligations to the Norman
+Conquest, which planted far and wide, as a dominant class in her land,
+a martial nobility of the bravest and most energetic race that ever
+existed.
+
+It may sound paradoxical, but it is in reality no exaggeration to say,
+with Guizot, [Essais sur l'Histoirs de France, p. 273, et seq.] that
+England owes her liberties to her having been conquered by the Normans.
+It is true that the Saxon institutions were the primitive cradle of
+English liberty, but by their own intrinsic force they could never have
+founded the enduring free English constitution. It was the Conquest that
+infused into them a new virtue; and the political liberties of England
+arose from the situation in which the Anglo-Saxon and the Anglo-Norman
+populations and laws found themselves placed relatively to each other
+in this island. The state of England under her last Anglo-Saxon kings
+closely resembled the state of France under the last Carlovingian, and
+the first Capetian princes. The crown was feeble, the great nobles were
+strong and turbulent. And although there was more national unity
+in Saxon England than in France; although the English local free
+institutions had more reality and energy than was the case with anything
+analogous to them on the Continent in the eleventh century, still the
+probability is that the Saxon system of polity, if left to itself, would
+have fallen into utter confusion, out of which would have arisen first
+an aristocratic hierarchy like that which arose in France, next an
+absolute monarchy, and finally a series of anarchical revolutions, such
+as we now behold around, but not among us. [See Guizot, UT SUPRA.]
+
+The latest conquerors of this island were also the bravest and the best.
+I do not except even the Romans. And, in spite of our sympathies with
+Harold and Hereward, and our abhorrence of the founder of the New
+Forest, and the desolator of Yorkshire, we must confess the superiority
+of the Normans to the Anglo-Saxons and Anglo-Danes, whom they met here
+in 1066, as well as to the degenerate Frank noblesse and the crushed and
+servile Romanesque provincials, from whom, in 912, they had wrested the
+district in the north of Gaul which still bears the name of Normandy.
+
+It was not merely by extreme valour and ready subordination or military
+discipline, that the Normans were pre-eminent among all the conquering
+races of the Gothic stock, but also by their instinctive faculty
+of appreciating and adopting the superior civilizations which they
+encountered. Thus Duke Rollo and his Scandinavian warriors readily
+embraced the creed, the language, the laws, and the arts which France,
+in those troubled and evil times with which the Capetian dynasty
+commenced, still inherited from imperial Rome and imperial Charlemagne.
+They adopted the customs, the duties, the obedience that the
+capitularies of emperors and kings had established; but that which they
+brought to the application of those laws, was the spirit of life, the
+spirit of liberty--the habits also of military subordination, and the
+aptness for a state politic, which could reconcile the security of all
+with the independence of each. [Sismondi, Histoire des Francais,
+vol. iii. p. 174.] So also in all chivalric feelings, in enthusiastic
+religious zeal, in almost idolatrous respect to females of gentle birth,
+in generous fondness for the nascent poetry of the time, in a keen
+intellectual relish for subtle thought and disputation, in a taste for
+architectural magnificence, and all courtly refinement and pageantry,
+the Normans were the Paladins of the world. Their brilliant qualities
+were sullied by many darker traits of pride, of merciless cruelty, and
+of brutal contempt for the industry, the rights, and the feelings of all
+whom they considered the lower classes of mankind.
+
+Their gradual blending with the Saxons softened these harsh and evil
+points of their national character, and in return they fired the duller
+Saxon mass with a new spirit of animation and power. As Campbell boldly
+expressed it, "THEY HIGH-METTLED THE BLOOD OF OUR VEINS." Small had been
+the figure which England made in the world before the coming over of
+the Normans; and without them she never would have emerged from
+insignificance. The authority of Gibbon may be taken as decisive when he
+pronounces that, "Assuredly England was a gainer by the Conquest." and
+we may proudly adopt the comment of the Frenchman Rapin, who, writing of
+the battle of Hastings more than a century ago, speaks of the revolution
+effected by it, as "the first step by which England has arrived to that
+height of grandeur and glory we behold it in at present." [Rapin, Hist.
+England, p. 164. See also Sharon Turner, vol. iv. p. 72; and, above all,
+Palgrave's Normandy and England.]
+
+The interest of this eventful struggle, by which William of Normandy
+became King of England, is materially enhanced by the high personal
+characters of the competitors for our crown. They were three in number.
+One was a foreign prince from the North. One was a foreign prince from
+the South: and one was a native hero of the land. Harald Hardrada, the
+strongest and the most chivalric of the kings of Norway, was the first;
+[See in Snerre the Saga of Harald Hardrada.] Duke William of Normandy
+was the second; and the Saxon Harold, the son of Earl Godwin, was the
+third. Never was a nobler prize sought by nobler champions, or striven
+for more gallantly. The Saxon triumphed over the Norwegian, and the
+Norman triumphed over the Saxon: but Norse valour was never more
+conspicuous than when Harald Hardrada and his host fought and fell at
+Stamford Bridge; nor did Saxons ever face their foes more bravely than
+our Harold and his men on the fatal day of Hastings.
+
+During the reign of King Edward the Confessor over this land, the claims
+of the Norwegian king to our Crown were little thought of; and though
+Hardrada's predecessor, King Magnus of Norway had on one occasion
+asserted that, by virtue of a compact with our former king, Hardicanute,
+he was entitled to the English throne, no serious attempt had been made
+to enforce his pretensions. But the rivalry of the Saxon Harold and
+the Norman William was foreseen and bewailed by the Confessor, who was
+believed to have predicted on his death-bed the calamities that were
+pending over England. Duke William was King Edward's kinsman. Harold was
+the head of the most powerful noble house, next to the royal blood, in
+England; and personally, he was the bravest and most popular chieftain
+in the land. King Edward was childless, and the nearest collateral heir
+was a puny unpromising boy. England had suffered too severely during
+royal minorities, to make the accession of Edgar Atheling desirable; and
+long before King Edward's death, Earl Harold was the destined king of
+the nation's choice, though the favour of the Confessor was believed to
+lean towards the Norman duke.
+
+A little time before the death of King Edward, Harold was in Normandy.
+The causes of the voyage of the Saxon earl to the continent are
+doubtful; but the fact of his having been, in 1065, at the ducal court,
+and in the power of his rival, is indisputable. William made skilful
+and unscrupulous use of the opportunity. Though Harold was treated
+with outward courtesy and friendship, he was made fully aware that his
+liberty and life depended on his compliance with the Duke's requests.
+William said to him, in apparent confidence and cordiality, "When King
+Edward and I once lived like brothers under the same roof, he promised
+that if ever he became King of England, he would make me heir to his
+throne. Harold, I wish that thou wouldst assist me to realize this
+promise." Harold replied with expressions of assent: and further agreed,
+at William's request, to marry William's daughter Adela, and to send
+over his own sister to be married to one of William's barons. The crafty
+Norman was not content with this extorted promise; he determined to bind
+Harold by a more solemn pledge, which if broken, would be a weight on
+the spirit of the gallant Saxon, and a discouragement to others from
+adopting his cause. Before a full assembly of the Norman barons, Harold
+was required to do homage to Duke William, as the heir-apparent of the
+English crown. Kneeling down, Harold placed his hands between those of
+the Duke, and repeated the solemn form, by which he acknowledged the
+Duke as his lord, and promised to him fealty and true service. But
+William exacted more. He had caused all the bones and relics of saints,
+that were preserved in the Norman monasteries and churches, to be
+collected into a chest, which was placed in the council-room, covered
+over with a cloth of gold. On the chest of relics, which were thus
+concealed, was laid a missal. The Duke then solemnly addressed his
+titular guest and real captive, and said to him, "Harold, I require
+thee, before this noble assembly, to confirm by oath the promises which
+thou hast made me, to assist me in obtaining the crown of England after
+King Edward's death, to marry my daughter Adela, and to send me thy
+sister, that I may give her in marriage to one of my barons." Harold,
+once more taken by surprise, and not able to deny his former words,
+approached the missal, and laid his hand on it, not knowing that the
+chest of relics was beneath. The old Norman chronicler, who describes
+the scene most minutely, [Wace, Roman de Rou. I have nearly followed his
+words.] says, when Harold placed his hand on it, the hand trembled, and
+the flesh quivered; but he swore, and promised upon his oath, to
+take Ele [Adela] to wife, and to deliver up England to the Duke, and
+thereunto to do all in his power, according to his might and wit, after
+the death of Edward, if he himself should live: so help him God. Many
+cried, "God grant it!" and when Harold rose from his knees, the Duke
+made him stand close to the chest, and took off the pall that had
+covered it, and showed Harold upon what holy relics he had sworn; and
+Harold was sorely alarmed at the sight.
+
+Harold was soon, after this permitted to return to England; and, after a
+short interval, during which he distinguished himself by the wisdom
+and humanity with which he pacified some formidable tumults of the
+Anglo-Danes in Northumbria, he found himself called on to decide whether
+he would keep the oath which the Norman had obtained from him, or mount
+the vacant throne of England in compliance with the nation's choice.
+King Edward the Confessor died on the 5th of January, 1066, and on the
+following day an assembly of the thanes and prelates present in London,
+and of the citizens of-the metropolis, declared that Harold should be
+their king. It was reported that the dying Edward had nominated him as
+his successor; but the sense which his countrymen entertained of his
+pre-eminent merit was the true foundation of his title to the crown.
+Harold resolved to disregard the oath which he made in Normandy, as
+violent and void, and on the 7th day of that January he was anointed
+King of England, and received from the archbishop's hands the golden
+crown and sceptre of England, and also an ancient national symbol, a
+weighty battle-axe. He had deep and speedy need of this significant
+part of the insignia of Saxon royalty.
+
+A messenger from Normandy soon arrived to remind Harold of the oath
+which he had sworn to the Duke "with his mouth, and his hand upon good
+and holy relics." "It is true," replied the Saxon king, "that I took an
+oath to William; but I took it under constraint: I promised what did
+not belong to me--what I could not in any way hold: my royalty is not my
+own; I could not lay it down against the will of the country, nor can I
+against the will of the country take a foreign wife. As for my sister,
+whom the Duke claims that he may marry her to one of his chiefs, she has
+died within the year; would he have me send her corpse?"
+
+William sent another message, which met with a similar answer; and then
+the Duke published far and wide through Christendom what he termed the
+perjury and bad faith of his rival; and proclaimed his intention of
+asserting his rights by the sword before the year should expire, and
+of pursuing and punishing the perjurer even in those places where he
+thought he stood most strongly and most securely.
+
+Before, however, he commenced hostilities, William, with deep laid
+policy submitted his claims to the decision of the Pope. Harold refused
+to acknowledge this tribunal, or to answer before an Italian priest for
+his title as an English king. After a formal examination of William's
+complaints by the Pope and the cardinals, it was solemnly adjudged at
+Rome that England belonged to the Norman duke; and a banner was sent to
+William from the holy see, which the Pope himself had consecrated and
+blessed for the invasion of this island. The clergy throughout the
+continent were now assiduous and energetic in preaching up William's
+enterprise as undertaken in the cause of God. Besides these spiritual
+arms (the effect of which in the eleventh century must not be measured
+by the philosophy or the indifferentism of the nineteenth), the Norman
+duke applied all the energies of his mind and body, all the resources of
+his duchy, and all the influence he possessed among vassals or allies,
+to the collection of "the most remarkable and formidable armament which
+the Western nations had witnessed." [Sir James Mackintosh's History
+of England, vol. i. p. 97.] All the adventurous spirits of Christendom
+flocked to the holy banner, under which Duke William, the most renowned
+knight and sagest general of the age, promised to lead them to glory
+and wealth in the fair domains of England. His army was filled with
+the chivalry of continental Europe, all eager to save their souls by
+fighting at the Pope's bidding, ardent to signalise their valour in so
+great an enterprise, and longing also for the pay and the plunder which
+William liberally promised. But the Normans themselves were the pith
+and the flower of the army; and William himself was the strongest, the
+sagest, and fiercest spirit of them all.
+
+Throughout the spring and summer of 1066, all the seaports of Normandy,
+Picardy, and Brittany rang with the busy sound of preparation. On the
+opposite side of the Channel, King Harold collected the army and the
+fleet with which he hoped to crush the southern invaders. But the
+unexpected attack of King Harald Hardrada of Norway upon another part
+of England, disconcerted the skilful measures which the Saxon had taken
+against the menacing armada of Duke William.
+
+Harold's renegade brother, Earl Tostig, had excited the Norse king to
+this enterprise, the importance of which has naturally been eclipsed
+by the superior interest attached to the victorious expedition of Duke
+William, but which was on a scale of grandeur which the Scandinavian
+ports had rarely, if ever, before witnessed. Hardrada's fleet consisted
+of two hundred war-ships, and three hundred other vessels, and all
+the best warriors of Norway were in his host. He sailed first to the
+Orkneys, where many of the islanders joined him, and then to Yorkshire.
+After a severe conflict near York, he completely routed Earls Edwin and
+Morcar, the governors of Northumbria. The city of York opened its gates,
+and all the country, from the Tyne to the Humber, submitted to him. The
+tidings of the defeat of Edwin and Morcar compelled Harold to leave
+his position an the southern coast, and move instantly against the
+Norwegians. By a remarkably rapid, march, he reached Yorkshire in
+four days, and took the Norse king and his confederates by surprise.
+Nevertheless, the battle which ensued, and which was fought near
+Stamford Bridge, was desperate, and was long doubtful. Unable to break
+the ranks of the Norwegian phalanx by force, Harold at length tempted
+them to quit their close order by a pretended flight. Then the English
+columns burst in among them, and a carnage ensued, the extent of which
+may be judged of by the exhaustion and inactivity of Norway for a
+quarter of a century afterwards. King Harald Hardrada, and all the
+flower of his nobility, perished on the 25th of September, 1066, at
+Stamford Bridge; a battle which was a Flodden to Norway.
+
+Harold's victory was splendid; but he had bought it dearly by the fall
+of many of his best officers and men; and still more dearly by the
+opportunity which Duke William had gained of effecting an unopposed
+landing on the Sussex coast. The whole of William's shipping had
+assembled at the mouth of the Dive, a little river between the Seine
+and the Orme, as early as the middle of August. The army which he had
+collected, amounted to fifty thousand knights, and ten thousand soldiers
+of inferior degree. Many of the knights were mounted, but many must have
+served on foot; as it is hardly possible to believe that William could
+have found transports for the conveyance of fifty thousand war-horses
+across the Channel. For a long time the winds were adverse; and the Duke
+employed the interval that passed before he could set sail in completing
+the organization and in improving the discipline of his army; which he
+seems to have brought into the same state of perfection, as was seven
+centuries and a half afterwards the boast of another army assembled on
+the same coast, and which Napoleon designed (but providentially in vain)
+for a similar descent upon England.
+
+It was not till the approach of the equinox that the wind veered from
+the north-east to the west, and gave the Normans an opportunity of
+quitting the weary shores of the Dive. They eagerly embarked, and set
+sail; but the wind soon freshened to a gale, and drove them along
+the French coast to St. Valery, where the greater part of them found
+shelter; but many of their vessels were wrecked and the whole coast of
+Normandy was strewn with the bodies of the drowned. William's army
+began to grow discouraged and averse to the enterprise, which the very
+elements thus seemed to fight against; though in reality the north-east
+wind which had cooped them so long at the mouth of the Dive, and the
+western gale which had forced them into St. Valery, were the best
+possible friends to the invaders. They prevented the Normans from
+crossing the Channel until the Saxon king and his army of defence had
+been called away from the Sussex coast to encounter Harald Hardrada
+in Yorkshire: and also until a formidable English fleet, which by
+King Harold's orders had been cruising in the Channel to intercept the
+Normans, had been obliged to disperse temporarily for the purpose of
+refitting and taking in fresh stores of provisions.
+
+Duke William used every expedient to re-animate the drooping spirits
+of his men at St. Valery; and at last he caused the body of the patron
+saint of the place to be exhumed and carried in solemn procession, while
+the whole assemblage of soldiers, mariners, and appurtenant priests
+implored the saint's intercession for a change of wind. That very night
+the wind veered, and enabled the mediaeval Agamemnon to quit his Aulia.
+
+With full sails, and a following southern breeze, the Norman armada
+left the French shores and steered for England. The invaders crossed an
+undefended sea, and found an undefended coast. It was in Pevensey Bay
+in Sussex, at Bulverhithe, between the castle of Pevensey and Hastings,
+that the last conquerors of this island landed, on the 29th of
+September, 1066.
+
+Harold was at York, rejoicing over his recent victory, which had
+delivered England from her ancient Scandinavian foes, and resettling the
+government of the counties which Harald Hardrada had overrun, when
+the tidings reached him that Duke William of Normandy and his host had
+landed on the Sussex shore. Harold instantly hurried southward to meet
+this long-expected enemy. The severe loss which his army had sustained
+in the battle with the Norwegians must have made it impossible for any
+large number of veteran troops to accompany him in his forced march to
+London, and thence to Sussex. He halted at the capital only six days;
+and during that time gave orders for collecting forces from his southern
+and midland counties, and also directed his fleet to reassemble off the
+Sussex coast. Harold was well received in London, and his summons to
+arms was promptly obeyed by citizen, by thane, by sokman, and by ceorl;
+for he had shown himself during his brief reign a just and wise king,
+affable to all men, active for the good of his country, and (in the
+words of the old historian) sparing himself from no fatigue by land or
+sea. [See Roger de Hoveden and William of Malmesbury, cited in Thierry,
+book iii.] He might have gathered a much more numerous force than that
+of William, but his recent victory had made, him over-confident, and
+he was irritated by the reports of the country being ravaged by the
+invaders. As soon therefore, as he had collected a small army in London,
+he marched off towards the coast: pressing forward as rapidly as his
+men could traverse Surrey and Sussex in the hope of taking the Normans
+unawares, as he had recently by a similar forced march succeeded in
+surprising the Norwegians. But he had now to deal with a foe equally
+brave with Harald Hardrada, and far more skilful and wary.
+
+The old Norman chroniclers describe the preparations of William on
+his landing, with a graphic vigour, which would be wholly lost by
+transfusing their racy Norman couplets and terse Latin prose into the
+current style of modern history. It is best to follow them closely,
+though at the expense of much quaintness and occasional uncouthness of
+expression. They tell us how Duke William's own ship was the first
+of the Norman fleet. "It was called the Mora, and was the gift of his
+duchess, Matilda. On the head of the ship in the front, which mariners
+call the prow, there was a brazen child bearing an arrow with a bended
+bow. His face was turned towards England, and thither he looked, as
+though he was about to shoot. The breeze became soft and sweet, and the
+sea was smooth for their landing. The ships ran on dry land, and each
+ranged by the other's side. There you might see the good sailors,
+the sergeants, and squires sally forth and unload the ships; cast the
+anchors, haul the ropes, bear out shields and saddles, and land the
+war-horses and palfreys. The archers came forth, and touched land the
+first, each with his bow strong and with his quiver full of arrows,
+slung at his side. All were shaven and shorn; and all clad in short
+garments, ready to attack, to shoot, to wheel about and skirmish. All
+stood well equipped, and of good courage for the fight; and they scoured
+the whole shore, but found not an armed man there. After the archers had
+thus gone forth, the knights landed all armed, with their hauberks on,
+their shields slung at their necks, and their helmets laced. They formed
+together on the shore, each armed, and mounted on his war-horse: all
+had their swords girded on, and rode forward into the country with their
+lances raised. Then the carpenters landed, who had great axes in their
+hands, and planes and adzes hung at their sides. They took counsel
+together, and sought for a good spot to place a castle on. They had
+brought with them in the fleet, three wooden castles from Normandy, in
+pieces, all ready for framing together, and they took the materials of
+one of these out of the ships, all shaped and pierced to receive the
+pins which they had brought cut and ready in large barrels; and before
+evening had set in, they had finished a good fort on the English ground,
+and there they placed their stores. All then ate and drank enough, and
+were right glad that they were ashore.
+
+"When Duke William himself landed, as he stepped on the shore, he
+slipped and fell forward upon his two hands. Forthwith all raised a loud
+cry of distress. 'An evil sign,' said they, 'is here.' But he cried out
+lustily, 'See, my lords! by the splendour of God, [William's customary
+oath.] I have taken possession of England with both my hands. It is now
+mine; and what is mine is yours.'
+
+"The next day they marched along the sea-shore to Hastings. Near
+that place the Duke fortified a camp, and set up the two other wooden
+castles. The foragers, and those who looked out for booty, seized all
+the clothing and provisions they could find, lest what had been brought
+by the ships should fail them. And the English were to be seen fleeing
+before them, driving off their cattle, and quitting their houses. Many
+took shelter in burying-places, and even there they were in grievous
+alarm."
+
+Besides the marauders from the Norman camp, strong bodies of cavalry
+were detached by William into the country, and these, when Harold and
+his army made their rapid march from London southward, fell, back in
+good order upon the main body of the Normans, and reported that the
+Saxon king was rushing on like a madman. But Harold, when he found that
+his hopes of surprising his adversary were vain changed his tactics, and
+halted about seven miles from the Norman lines. He sent some spies, who
+spoke the French language, to examine the number and preparations of the
+enemy, who, on their return, related with astonishment that there were
+more priests in William's camp than there were fighting men in the
+English army. They had mistaken for priests all the Norman soldiers
+who had short hair and shaven chins; for the English layman were then
+accustomed to wear long hair and mustachios, Harold, who knew the Norman
+usages, smiled at their words and said, "Those whom you have seen in
+such numbers are not priests, but stout soldiers, as they will soon make
+us feel."
+
+Harold's army was far inferior in number to that of the Normans, and
+some of his captains advised him to retreat upon London, and lay waste
+the country, so as to starve down the strength, of the invaders. The
+policy thus recommended was unquestionably the wisest; for the Saxon
+fleet had now reassembled, and intercepted all William's communications
+with Normandy; so that as soon as his stores of provisions were
+exhausted he must have moved forward upon London; where Harold, at the
+head of the full military strength of the kingdom, could have defied his
+assault, and probably might have witnessed his rival's destruction by
+famine and disease, without having to strike a single blow. But Harold's
+bold blood was up, and his kindly heart could not endure to inflict
+on his South Saxon subjects even the temporary misery of wasting the
+country. "He would not burn houses and villages, neither would he take
+away the substance of his people."
+
+Harold's brothers, Gurth and Leofwine, were with him in the camp, and
+Gurth endeavoured to persuade him to absent himself from the battle.
+The incident shows how well devised had been William's scheme of binding
+Harold by the oath on the holy relics. "My brother", said the young
+Saxon prince, "thou canst not deny that either by force or free-will
+thou hast made Duke William an oath on the bodies of saints. Why then
+risk thyself in the battle with a perjury upon thee? To us, who have
+sworn nothing, this is a holy and a just war, for we are fighting for
+our country. Leave us then, alone to fight this battle, and he who has
+the right will win." Harold replied that he would not look on while
+others risked their lives for him. Men would hold him a coward, and
+blame him for sending his best friends where he dared not go himself. He
+resolved, therefore, to fight, and to fight in person: but he was still
+too good a general to be the assailant in the action. He strengthened
+his position on the hill where he had halted, by a palisade of stakes
+interlaced with osier hurdles, and there, he said, he would defend
+himself against whoever should seek him.
+
+The ruins of Battle Abbey at this hour attest the place where Harold's
+army was posted. The high altar of the abbey stood on the very spot
+where Harold's own standard was planted during the fight, and where the
+carnage was the thickest. Immediately after his victory William vowed to
+build an abbey on the site; and a fair and stately pile soon rose there,
+where for many ages the monks prayed, and said masses for the souls
+of those who were slain in the battle, whence the abbey took its name.
+Before that time the place was called Senlac. Little of the ancient
+edifice now remains: but it is easy to trace among its relics and in the
+neighbourhood the scenes of the chief incidents in the action; and it
+is impossible to deny the generalship shown by Harold in stationing his
+men; especially when we bear in mind that he was deficient in cavalry,
+the arm in which his adversary's main strength consisted.
+
+A neck of hills trends inwards for nearly seven miles from the high
+ground immediately to the north-east of Hastings. The line of this neck
+of hills is from south-east to north-west, and the usual route from
+Hastings to London must, in ancient as in modern times, have been along
+its summits. At the distance from Hastings which has been mentioned, the
+continuous chain of hills ceases. A valley must be crossed, and on the
+other side of it, opposite to the last of the neck of hills, rises a
+high ground of some extent, facing to the south-east. This high ground,
+then termed Senlac, was occupied by Harold's army. It could not be
+attacked in front without considerable disadvantage to the assailants,
+and could hardly be turned without those engaged in the manoeuvre
+exposing themselves to a fatal charge in flank, while they wound round
+the base of the height, and underneath the ridges which project from
+it on either side. There was a rough and thickly-wooded district in the
+rear, which seemed to offer Harold great facilities for rallying his
+men, and checking the progress of the enemy, if they should succeed in
+forcing him back from his post. And it seemed scarcely possible that the
+Normans, if they met with any repulse, could save themselves from utter
+destruction. With such hopes and expectations (which cannot be termed
+unreasonable, though "Successum Dea dira negavit,") King Harold bade his
+standard be set up a little way down the slope of Senlac-hill, at the
+point where the ascent from the valley was least steep, and on which the
+fiercest attacks of the advancing enemy were sure to be directed.
+
+The foundation-stones of the high altar of Battle Abbey have, during
+late years, been discovered; and we may place our feet on the very spot
+where Harold stood with England's banner waving over him; where, when
+the battle was joined, he defended himself to the utmost; where the
+fatal arrow came down on him; where he "leaned in agony on his shield;"
+and where at last he was beaten to the earth, and with him the Saxon
+banner was beaten down, like him never to rise again. The ruins of
+the altar are a little to the west of the high road, which leads from
+Hastings along the neck of hills already described, across the valley,
+and through the modern town of Battle, towards London. Before a railway
+was made along this valley, some of the old local features were more
+easy than now to recognise. The eye then at once saw that the ascent
+from the valley was least steep at the point which Harold selected
+for his own post in the engagement. But this is still sufficiently
+discernible; and we can fix the spot, a little lower down the slope,
+immediately in front of the high altar, where the brave Kentish men
+stood, "whose right it was to strike first when ever the king went to
+battle," and who, therefore, were placed where the Normans would be most
+likely to make their first charge. Round Harold himself, and where the
+plantations wave which now surround the high altar's ruins, stood the
+men of London, "whose privilege it was to guard the king's body, to
+place themselves around it, and to guard his standard." On the right
+and left were ranged the other warriors of central and southern
+England, whose shires the old Norman chronicler distorts in his French
+nomenclature. Looking thence in the direction of Hastings, we can
+distinguish the "ridge of the rising ground over which the Normans
+appeared advancing." It is the nearest of the neck of hills. It is along
+that hill that Harold and his brothers saw approach in succession the
+three divisions of the Norman army. The Normans came down that slope,
+and then formed in the valley, so as to assault the whole front of the
+English position. Duke William's own division, with "the best men and
+greatest strength of the army," made the Norman centre, and charged the
+English immediately in front of Harold's banner, as the nature of the
+ground had led the Saxon king to anticipate.
+
+There are few battles the localities of which can be more completely
+traced; and the whole scene is fraught with associations of deep
+interest: but the spot which, most of all, awakens our sympathy and
+excites our feelings, is that where Harold himself fought and fell. The
+crumbling fragments of the grey altar-stones, with the wild flowers that
+cling around their base, seem fitting memorials of the brave Saxon who
+there bowed his head in death; while the laurel-trees that are planted
+near, and wave over the ruins, remind us of the Conqueror, who there, at
+the close of that dreadful day, reared his victorious standard high over
+the trampled banner of the Saxon, and held his triumphant carousal amid
+the corses of the slain, with his Norman chivalry exulting around him.
+
+When it was known in the invaders' camp at Hastings that King Harold had
+marched southward with his power, but a brief interval ensued before the
+two hosts met in decisive encounter.
+
+William's only chance of safety lay in bringing on a general engagement;
+and he joyfully advanced his army from their camp on the hill over
+Hastings, nearer to the Saxon position. But he neglected no means of
+weakening his opponent, and renewed his summonses and demands on Harold
+with an ostentatious air of sanctity and moderation.
+
+"A monk named Hugues Maigrot came in William's name to call upon the
+Saxon king to do one of three things--either to resign his royalty in
+favour of William, or to refer it to the arbitration of the Pope to
+decide which of the two ought to be king, or to let it be determined
+by the issue of a single combat. Harold abruptly replied, 'I will not
+resign my title, I will not refer it to the Pope, nor will I accept the
+single combat.' He was far from being deficient in bravery; but he was
+no more at liberty to stake the crown which he had received from a whole
+people on the chance of a duel, than to deposit it in the hands of an
+Italian priest. William was not at all ruffled by the Saxon's refusal,
+but steadily pursuing the course of his calculated measures, sent the
+Norman monk again, after giving him these instructions:--'Go and tell
+Harold, that if he will keep his former compact with me, I will leave
+to him all the country which is beyond the Humber, and will give his
+brother Gurth all the lands which Godwin held. If he still persist in
+refusing my offers, then thou shalt tell him, before all his people,
+that he is a perjurer and a liar; that he, and all who shall support
+him, are excommunicated by the mouth of the Pope; and that the bull to
+that effect is in my hands.'
+
+"Hugues Maigrot delivered this message in a solemn tone; and the Norman
+chronicle says that at the word EXCOMMUNICATION, the English chiefs
+looked at one another as if some great danger were impending. One of
+them then spoke as follows: 'We must fight, whatever may be the danger
+to us; for what we have to consider is not whether we shall accept
+and receive a new lord as if our king were dead: the case is quite
+otherwise. The Norman has given our lands to his captains, to his
+knights, to all his people, the greater part of whom have already done
+homage to him for them; they will all look for their gift, if their
+Duke become our king; and he himself is bound to deliver up to them our
+goods, our wives, and our daughters: all is promised to them beforehand.
+They come, not only to ruin us, but to ruin our descendants also, and to
+take from us the country of our ancestors and what shall we do--whither
+shall we go--when we have no longer a country?' The English promised by
+a unanimous oath, to make neither peace, nor truce nor treaty, with the
+invader, but to die, or drive away the Normans." [Thierry.]
+
+The 13th of October was occupied in these negotiations; and at night the
+Duke announced to his men that the next day would, be the day of
+battle. That night is said to have been passed by the two armies in very
+different manners. The Saxon soldiers spent it in joviality, singing
+their national songs, and draining huge horns of ale and wine round
+their camp-fires. The Normans, when they had looked to their arms and
+horses, confessed themselves to the priests, with whom their camp was
+thronged, and received the sacrament by thousands at a time.
+
+On Saturday, the 14th of October, was fought the great battle.
+
+It is not difficult to compose a narrative of its principal incidents,
+from the historical information which we possess, especially if aided
+by an examination of the ground. But it is far better to adopt the
+spirit-stirring words of the old chroniclers, who wrote while the
+recollections of the battle were yet fresh, and while the feelings and
+prejudices of the combatants yet glowed in the bosoms of their near
+descendants. Robert Wace, the Norman poet, who presented his "Roman de
+Rou" to our Henry II., is the most picturesque and animated of the old
+writers; and from him we can obtain a more vivid and full description of
+the conflict, than even the most brilliant romance-writer of the present
+time can supply. We have also an antique memorial of the battle, more to
+be relied on than either chronicler or poet (and which confirms
+Wace's narrative remarkably), in the celebrated Bayeux tapestry, which
+represents the principal scenes of Duke William's expedition, and of the
+circumstances connected with it, in minute though occasionally grotesque
+details, and which was undoubtedly the production of the same age in
+which the battle took place; whether we admit or reject the legend that
+Queen Matilda and the ladies of her court wrought it with their own
+hands in honour of the royal Conqueror.
+
+Let us therefore suffer the old Norman chronicler to transport our
+imaginations to the fair Sussex scenery, north-west of Hastings, with
+its breezy uplands, its grassy slopes, and ridges of open down swelling
+inland from the sparkling sea, its scattered copses, and its denser
+glades of intervening forests, clad in all the varied tints of autumn,
+as they appeared on the morning of the fourteenth of October, seven
+hundred and eighty-five years ago. The Norman host is pouring forth
+from its tents; and each troop, and each company, is forming fast under
+the banner of its leader. The masses have been sung, which were finished
+betimes in the morning; the barons have all assembled round Duke
+William; and the Duke has ordered that the army shall be formed in three
+divisions, so as to make the attack upon the Saxon position in three
+places. The Duke stood on a hill where he could best see his men; the
+barons surrounded him, and he spake to them proudly. He told them how he
+trusted them, and how all that he gained should be theirs; and how sure
+he felt of conquest, for in all the world there was not so brave an army
+or such good men and true as were then forming around him. Then they
+cheered him in turn, and cried out, "'You will not see one coward; none
+here will fear to die for love of you, if need be.' And he answered
+them, 'I thank you well. For God's sake spare not; strike hard at the
+beginning; stay not to take spoil; all the booty shall be in common,
+and there will be plenty for everyone. There will be no safety in asking
+quarter or in fight: the English will never love or spare a Norman.
+Felons they were, and felons they are; false they were, and false they
+will be. Show no weakness towards them, for they will have no pity on
+you. Neither the coward for running well, nor the bold man for smiting
+well, will be the better liked by the English, nor will any be the more
+spared on either account. You may fly to the sea, but you can fly no
+further; you will find neither ships nor bridge there; there will be no
+sailors to receive you; and the English will overtake you there and slay
+you in your shame. More of you will die in flight than in the battle.
+Then, as flight will not secure you, fight, and you will conquer. I have
+no doubt of the victory: we are come for glory, the victory is in our
+hands, and we may make sure of obtaining it if we so please.' As the
+Duke was speaking thus, and would yet have spoken more, William Fitz
+Osber rode up with his horse all coated with iron: 'Sire,' said he, 'we
+tarry here too long, let us all arm ourselves. ALLONS! ALLONS!'
+
+"Then all went to their tents and armed themselves as they best might;
+and the Duke was very busy, giving every one his orders; and he was
+courteous to all the vassals, giving away many arms and horses to them.
+When he prepared to arm himself, he called first for his good hauberk,
+and a man brought it on his arm, and placed it before him, but in
+putting his head in, to get it on, he unawares turned it the wrong way,
+with the back part in front. He soon changed it, but when he saw that
+those who stood by were sorely alarmed, he said, 'I have seen many a man
+who, if such a thing had happened to him, would not have borne arms,
+or entered the field the same day; but I never believed in omens, and I
+never will. I trust in God, for He does in all things His pleasure, and
+ordains what is to come to pass, according to His will. I have never
+liked fortune-tellers, nor believed in diviners; but I commend myself to
+our Lady. Let not this mischance give you trouble. The hauberk which
+was turned wrong, and then set right by me, signifies that a change will
+arise out of the matter which we are now stirring. You shall see the
+name of duke changed into king. Yea, a king shall I be, who hitherto
+have been but duke.' Then he crossed himself and straightway took his
+hauberk, stooped his head, and put it on aright, and laced his helmet,
+and girt on his sword, which a varlet brought him. Then the Duke called
+for his good horse--a better could not be found. It had been sent him
+by a king of Spain, out of very great friendship. Neither arms nor the
+press of fighting men did it fear, if its lord spurred it on. Walter
+Giffard brought it. The Duke stretched out his hand, took the reins, put
+foot in stirrup, and mounted; and the good horse pawed, pranced, reared
+himself up, and curvetted. The Viscount of Toarz saw how the Duke bore
+himself in arms, and said to his people that were around him, 'Never
+have I seen a man so fairly armed, nor one who rods so gallantly, or
+bore his arms or became his hauberk so well; neither any one who bore
+his lance so gracefully, or sat his horse and managed him so nobly.
+There is no such knight under heaven! a fair count he is, and fair king
+he will be. Let him fight, and he shall overcome: shame be to the man
+who shall fail him.'
+
+"Then the Duke called for the standard which the Pope had sent him, and
+he who bore it having unfolded it, the Duke took it, and, called to Raol
+de Conches. 'Bear my standard,' said he, 'for I would not but do you
+right; by right and by ancestry your line are standard-bearers of
+Normandy, and very good knights have they all been.' But Raol said that
+he would serve the Duke that day in other guise, and would fight the
+English with his hand as long as life should last. Then the Duke bade
+Galtier Giffart bear the standard. But he was old and white-headed,
+and bade the Duke give the standard to some younger and stronger man to
+carry. Then the Duke said fiercely, 'By the splendour of God, my lords,
+I think you mean to betray and fail me in this great need.'--'Sire,'
+said Giffart, 'not so! we have done no treason, nor do I refuse from any
+felony towards you; but I have to lead a great chivalry, both hired men
+and the men of my fief. Never had I such good means of serving you as
+I now have; and if God please, I will serve you; if need be, I will die
+for you, and will give my own heart for yours.
+
+"'By my faith,' quoth the Duke, 'I always loved thee, and now I love
+thee more; if I survive this day, thou shalt be the better for it all
+thy days.' Then he called out a knight, whom he had heard much praised,
+Tosteins Fitz-Rou le Blanc by name, whose abode was at Bec-en-Caux. To
+him he delivered the standard; and Tosteins took it right cheerfully,
+and bowed low to him in thanks, and bore it gallantly, and with good
+heart. His kindred still have quittance of all service for their
+inheritance on that account, and their heirs are entitled so to hold
+their inheritance for ever.
+
+"William sat on his war-horse, and called on Rogier, whom they call De
+Mongomeri. 'I rely much upon you,' said he: 'lead your men thitherward,
+and attack them from that side. William, the son of Osber the seneschal,
+a right good vassal, shall go with you and help in the attack, and you
+shall have the men of Boulogne and Poix, and all my soldiers. Alain
+Fergert and Ameri shall attack on the other side; they shall lead the
+Poitevins and the Bretons, and all the Barons of Maine; and I, with my
+own great men, my friends and kindred, will fight in the middle throng,
+where the battle shall be the hottest.'
+
+"The barons, and knights, and men-at-arms were all now armed; the
+foot-soldiers were well equipped, each bearing bow and sword; on their
+heads were caps, and to their feet were bound buskins. Some had good
+hides which they had bound round their bodies; and many were clad in
+frocks, and had quivers and bows hung to their girdles. The knights
+had hauberks and swords, boots of steel and shining helmets; shields at
+their necks, and in their hands lances. And all had their cognizances,
+so that each might know his fellow, and Norman might not strike Norman,
+nor Frenchman kill his countryman by mistake. Those on foot led the
+way, with serried ranks, bearing their bows. The knights rode next,
+supporting the archers from behind. Thus both horse and foot kept their
+course and order of march as they began; in close ranks at a gentle
+pace, that the one might not pass or separate from the other. All went
+firmly and compactly, bearing themselves gallantly.
+
+"Harold had summoned his men, earls, barons, and vavassours, from, the
+castles and the cities; from the ports, the villages, and boroughs. The
+peasants were also called together from the villages, bearing such arms
+as they found; clubs and great picks, iron forge and stages. The English
+had enclosed the place where Harold was, with his friends and the barons
+of the country whom he had summoned and called together.
+
+"Those of London had come at once, and those of Kent, Hartfort, and of
+Essesse; those of Suree and Susesse, of St. Edmund and Sufoc; of Norwis
+and Norfoc; of Cantorbierre and Stanfort Bedefort and Hundetone. The men
+of Northanton also came; and those of Eurowic and Bokingkeham, of Bed
+and Notinkeham, Lindesie and Nichole. There came also from the west
+all, who heard the summons; and very many were to be seen coming from
+Salebiere and Dorset, from Bat and from Somerset. Many came, too, from
+about Glocestre, and many from Wirecestre, from Wincestre, Hontesire,
+and Brichesire; and many more from other counties that we have not
+named, and cannot indeed recount. All who could bear arms, and had
+learnt the news of the Duke's arrival, came to defend the land. But none
+came from beyond Humbre, for they had other business upon their hands;
+the Danes and Tosti having much damaged and weakened them.
+
+"Harold knew that the Normans would come and attack him hand to hand; so
+he had early enclosed the field in which he placed his men. He made them
+arm early, and range themselves for the battle; he himself having put on
+arms and equipments that became such a lord. The Duke, he said, ought
+to seek him, as he wanted to conquer England; and it became him to abide
+the attack who had to defend the land. He commanded the people,
+and counselled his barons to keep themselves altogether, and defend
+themselves in a body; for if they once separated, they would with
+difficulty recover themselves. 'The Normans,' he said, 'are good
+vassals, valiant on foot and on horseback; good knights are they on
+horseback, and well used to battle; all is lost if they once penetrate
+our ranks. They have brought long lances and swords, but you have
+pointed lances and keen-edged bills; and I do not expect that their arms
+can stand against yours. Cleave wherever you can; it will be ill done if
+you spare aught.'
+
+"The English had built up a fence before them with their shields, and
+with ash and other wood; and had well joined and wattled in the whole
+work, so as not to leave even a crevice; and thus they had a barricade
+in their front, through which any Norman who would attack them must
+first pass. Being covered in this way by their shields and barricades,
+their aim was to defend themselves: and if they had remained steady for
+that purpose, they would not have been conquered that day; for every
+Norman who made his way in, lost his life, either by hatchet, or bill,
+by club, or other weapons. They wore short and close hauberks, and
+helmets that hung over their garments. King Harold issued orders and
+made proclamation round, that all should be ranged with their faces
+towards the enemy; and that no one should move from where he was; so
+that, whoever came, might find them ready; and that whatever any one, be
+he Norman or other, should do, each should do his best to defend his
+own place. Then he ordered the men of Kent to go where the Normans
+were likely to make the attack; for they say that the men of Kent are
+entitled to strike first; and that whenever the king goes to battle, the
+first blow belongs to them. The right of the men of London is to guard
+the king's body, to place themselves around him, and to guard his
+standard; and they were accordingly placed by the standard to watch and
+defend it.
+
+"When Harold had made his reply, and given his orders, he came into
+the midst of the English, and dismounted by the side of the standard:
+Leofwin and Gurth, his brothers, were with him, and around him he had
+barons enough, as he stood by his standard, which was in truth a noble
+one, sparkling with gold and precious stones. After the victory, William
+sent it to the Pope, to prove and commemorate his great conquest and
+glory. The English stood in close ranks, ready and eager for the fight;
+and they moreover made a fosse, which went across the field, guarding
+one side of their army,
+
+"Meanwhile the Normans appeared advancing over the ridge of a rising
+ground; and the first division of their troops moved onwards along the
+hill and across a vallley. And presently another division, still larger,
+came in sight, close following upon the first, and they were led towards
+another part of the field, forming together as the first body had done.
+And while Harold saw and examined them, and was pointing them out to
+Gurth, a fresh company came in sight, covering all the plain; and in the
+midst of them was raised the standard that came from Rome. Near it was
+the Duke, and the best men and greatest strength of the army were there.
+The good knights, the good vassals, and brave warriors were there; and
+there were gathered together the gentle barons, the good archers,
+and the men-at-arms, whose duty it was to guard the Duke, and range
+themselves around him. The youths and common herd of the camp, whose
+business was not to join in the battle, but to take care of the harness
+and stores, moved on towards a rising ground. The priests and the clerks
+also ascended a hill, there to offer up prayers to God, and watch the
+event of the battle.
+
+"The English stood firm on foot in close ranks, and carried themselves
+right boldly. Each man had his hauberk on, with his sword girt, and his
+shield at his neck. Great hatchets were also slung at their necks, with
+which they expected to strike heavy blows.
+
+"The Normans brought on the three divisions of their army to attack
+at different places. They set out in three companies, and in three
+companies did they fight. The first and second had come up, and then
+advanced the third, which was the greatest; with that came the Duke with
+his own men, and all moved boldly forward.
+
+"As soon as the two armies were in full view of each other, great noise
+and tumult arose. You might hear the sound of many trumpets, of bugles,
+and of horns: and then you might see men ranging themselves in line,
+lifting their shields, raising their lances, bending their bows,
+handling their arrows, ready for assault and defence.
+
+"The English stood ready to their post, the Normans still moved on; and
+when they drew near, the English were to be seen stirring to and fro;
+were going and coming; troops ranging themselves in order; some with
+their colour rising, others turning pale; some making ready their arms,
+others raising their shields; the brave man rousing himself to fight,
+the coward trembling at the approach of danger.
+
+"Then Taillefer, who sang right well, rode mounted on a swift horse,
+before the Duke, singing of Charlemagne and of Roland, of Olivier and
+the Peers who died in Roncesvalles, and when they drew nigh to the
+English, 'A boon, sire!' cried Taillefer; 'I have long served you, and
+you owe me for all such service. To-day, so please you, you shall repay
+it. I ask as my guerdon, and beseech you for it earnestly, that you will
+allow me to strike the first blow in the battle!' And the Duke answered,
+'I grant it.' Then Taillefer put his horse to a gallop, charging before
+all the rest, and struck an Englishman dead, driving his lance below the
+breast into his body, and stretching him upon the ground. Then he drew
+his sword, and struck another, crying out, 'Come on, come on! What do
+ye, sirs! lay on, lay on!' At the second blow he struck, the English
+pushed forward, and surrounded and slew him. Forthwith arose the noise
+and cry of war, and on either side the people put themselves in motion.
+
+"The Normans moved on to the assault, and the English defended
+themselves well. Some were striking, others urging onwards; all were
+bold, and cast aside fear. And now, behold, that battle was gathered,
+whereof the fame is yet mighty.
+
+"Loud and far resounded the bray of the horns; and the shocks of the
+lances, the mighty strokes of maces, and the quick clashing of swords.
+One while the Englishmen rushed on, another while they fell back; one
+while the men from over the sea charged onwards, and again at other
+times retreated. The Normans shouted 'Dex aie,' the English people
+'Out.' Then came the cunning manoeuvres, the rude shocks and strokes
+of the lance and blows of the swords, among the sergeants and soldiers,
+both English and Norman.
+
+"When the English fall, the Normans shout. Each side taunts and defies
+the other, yet neither knoweth what the other saith; and the Normans say
+the English bark, because they understand not their speech.
+
+"Some wax strong, others weak: the brave exult, but the cowards tremble,
+as men who are sore dismayed. The Normans press on the assault, and the
+English defend their post well: they pierce the hauberks, and cleave the
+shields, receive and return mighty blows. Again, some press forwards,
+others yield; and thus in various ways the struggle proceeds. In the
+plain was a fosse, which the Normans had now behind them, having passed
+it in the fight without regarding it. But the English charged, and drove
+the Normans before them till they made them fall back upon this fosse,
+overthrowing into it horses and men. Many were to be seen falling
+therein, rolling one over the other, with their faces to the earth, and
+unable to rise. Many of the English, also, whom the Normans drew down
+along with them, died there. At no time during the day's battle did so
+many Normans die as perished in that fosse. So those said who saw the
+dead.
+
+"The varlets who were set to guard the harness began to abandon it as
+they saw the loss of the Frenchmen, when thrown back upon the fosse
+without power to recover themselves. Being greatly alarmed at seeing
+the difficulty in restoring order, they began to quit the harness, and
+sought around, not knowing where to find shelter. Then Duke William's
+brother, Odo, the good priest, the Bishop of Bayeux, galloped up, and
+said to them, 'Stand fast! stand fast! be quiet and move not! fear
+nothing, for if God please, we shall conquer yet.' So they took courage,
+and rested where they were; and Odo returned galloping back to where the
+battle was most fierce, and was of great service on that day. He had put
+hauberk on, over a white aube, wide in the body, with the sleeve tight;
+and sat on a white horse, so that all might recognise him. In his hand
+he held a mace, and wherever he saw most need he held up and stationed
+the knights, and often urged them on to assault and strike the enemy.
+
+"From nine o'clock in the morning, when the combat began, till three
+o'clock came, the battle was up and down, this way and that, and no one
+knew who would conquer and win the land. Both sides stood so firm and
+fought so well, that no one could guess which would prevail. The Norman
+archers with their bows shot thickly upon the English; but they covered
+themselves with their shields, so that the arrows could not reach their
+bodies, nor do any mischief, how true soever was their aim, or however
+well they shot. Then the Normans determined to shoot their arrows
+upwards into the air, so that they might fall on their enemies' heads,
+and strike their faces. The archers adopted this scheme, and shot up
+into the air towards the English; and the arrows in falling struck their
+heads and faces, and put out the eyes of many; and all feared to open
+their eyes, or leave their faces unguarded.
+
+"The arrows now flew thicker than rain before the wind; fast sped the
+shafts that the English called 'wibetes.' Then it was that an arrow,
+that had been thus shot upwards, struck Harold above his right eye and
+put it out. In his agony he drew the arrow and threw it away, breaking
+it with his hands; and the pain to his head was so great, that he leaned
+upon his shield. So the English were wont to say, and still say to the
+French, that the arrow was well shot which was so sent up against
+their king; and that the archer won them great glory, who thus put out
+Harold's eye.
+
+"The Normans saw that the English defended themselves well, and were so
+strong in their position that they could do little against them. So they
+consulted together privily, and arranged to draw off, and pretend to
+flee, till the English should pursue and scatter themselves over the
+field; for they saw that if they could once get their enemies to break:
+their ranks, they might be attacked and discomfited much more easily. As
+they had said, so they did. The Normans by little and little fled, the
+English following them. As the one fell back, the other pressed after;
+and when the Frenchmen retreated, the English thought and cried out that
+the men of France fled, and would never return.
+
+"Thus they were deceived by the pretended flight, and great mischief
+thereby befell them; for if they had not moved from their position, it
+is not likely that they would have been conquered at all; but like fools
+they broke their lines and pursued.
+
+"The Normans were to be seen following up their stratagem, retreating
+slowly so as to draw the English further on. As they still flee, the
+English pursue; they push out their lances and stretch forth their
+hatchets: following the Normans, as they go rejoicing in the success of
+their scheme, and scattering themselves over the plain. And the English
+meantime jeered and insulted their foes with words. 'Cowards,' they
+cried, 'you came hither in an evil hour, wanting our lands, and seeking
+to seize our property, fools that ye were to come! Normandy is too far
+off and you will not easily reach it. It is of little use to run back;
+unless you can cross the sea at a leap, or can drink it dry, your sons
+and daughters are lost to you.
+
+"The Normans bore it all, but in fact they knew not what the English
+said: their language seemed like the baying of dogs, which they could
+not understand. At length they stopped and turned round, determined to
+recover their ranks; and the barons might be heard crying 'Dex aie!' for
+a halt. Then the Normans resumed their former position, turning their
+faces towards the enemy; and their men were to be seen facing round and
+rushing onwards to a fresh MELEE; the one party assaulting the other;
+this man striking, another pressing onwards. One hits, another misses;
+one flies, another pursues; one is aiming a stroke, while another
+discharges his blow. Norman strives with Englishman again, and aims his
+blows afresh. One flies, another pursues swiftly: the combatants are
+many, the plain wide, the battle and the MELEE fierce. On every hand
+they fight hard, the blows are heavy, and the struggle becomes fierce.
+
+"The Normans were playing their part well, when an English knight came
+rushing up, having in his company a hundred men, furnished with various
+arms. He wielded a northern hatchet, with the blade a full foot long;
+and was well armed after his manner, being tall, bold, and of noble
+carriage. In the front of the battle where the Normans thronged most, he
+came bounding on swifter than the stag, many Normans falling before
+him and his company. He rushed straight upon a Norman who was armed and
+riding on a war-horse, and tried with, his hatchet of steel to cleave
+his helmet; but the blow miscarried and the sharp blade glanced down
+before the saddle-bow, driving through the horse's neck down to the
+ground, so that both horse and master fell together to the earth. I know
+not whether the Englishman struck another blow; but the Normans who saw
+the stroke were astonished and about to abandon the assault, when Roger
+de Mongomeri came galloping up, with his lance set, and heeding not the
+long-handled axe, which the English-man wielded aloft, struck him
+down, and left him stretched upon the ground. Then Roger cried out,
+'Frenchmen, strike! the day is ours!' and again a fierce MELEE was to be
+seen, with many a blow of lance and sword; the English still defending
+themselves, killing the horses and cleaving the shields.
+
+"There was a French soldier of noble mien, who sat his horse gallantly.
+He spied two Englishmen who were also carrying themselves boldly. They
+were both men of great worth, and had become companions in arms and
+fought together, the one protecting the other. They bore two long and
+broad bills, and did great mischief to the Normans, killing both horses
+and men. The French soldier looked at them and their bills, and was sore
+alarmed, for he was afraid of losing his good horse, the best that he
+had; and would willingly have turned to some other quarter, if it would
+not have looked like cowardice. He soon, however, recovered his courage,
+and spurring his horse gave him the bridle, and galloped swiftly
+forward. Fearing the two bills, he raised his shield, and struck one of
+the Englishmen with his lance on the breast, so that the iron passed
+out at his back; at the moment that he fell the lance broke, and the
+Frenchmen seized the mace that hung at his right side, and struck the
+other Englishman a blow that completely broke his skull.
+
+"On the other side was an Englishman who much annoyed the French,
+continually assaulting them with a keen-edged hatchet. He had a helmet
+made of wood, which he had fastened down to his coat, and laced round
+his neck, so that no blows could reach his head. The ravage he was
+making was seen by a gallant Norman knight, who rode a horse that
+neither fire nor water could stop in its career, when its master urged
+it on. The knight spurred, and his horse carried him on well till he
+charged the Englishman, striking him over the helmet, so that it fell
+down over his eyes; and as he stretched out his hand to raise it and
+uncover the face, the Norman cut off his right hand, so that his hatchet
+fell to the ground. Another Norman sprang forward and eagerly seized the
+prize with both his hands, but he kept it little space, and paid dearly
+for it, for as he stooped to pick up the hatchet, an Englishman with his
+long-handled axe struck him over the back, breaking all his bones, so
+that his entrails and lungs gushed forth. The knight of the good
+horse meantime returned without injury; but on his way he met another
+Englishman, and bore him down under his his horse, wounding him
+grievously, and trampling him altogether under foot.
+
+"And now might be heard the loud clang and cry of battle, and the
+clashing of lances. The English stood firm in their barricades, and
+shivered the lances, beating them into pieces with their bills and
+maces. The Normans drew their swords, and hewed down the barricades, and
+the English in great trouble fell back upon their standard, where were
+collected the maimed and wounded.
+
+"There were many knights of Chauz, who jousted and made attacks. The
+English knew not how to joust, or bear arms on horseback but fought with
+hatchets and bills. A man when he wanted to strike with one of their
+hatchets, was obliged to hold it with both his hands, and could not at
+the same time, as it seems to me, both cover himself and strike with any
+freedom.
+
+"The English fell back towards the standard, which was upon a rising
+ground, and the Normans followed them across the valley, attacking them
+on foot and horseback. Then Hue de Mortemer, with the sires D'Auviler,
+D'Onebac, and St. Cler, rode up and charged, overthrowing many.
+
+"Robert Fitz Erneis fixed his lance, took his shield, and, galloping
+towards the standard, with his keen-edged sword struck an Englishman who
+was in front, killed him, and then drawing back his sword, attacked many
+others, and pushed straight for the standard, trying to beat it down,
+but the English surrounded it, and killed him with their bills. He was
+found on the spot, when they afterwards sought for him, dead, and lying
+at the standard's foot.
+
+"Duke William pressed close upon the English with his lance; striving
+hard to reach the standard with the great troop he led; and seeking
+earnestly for Harold, on whose account the whole war was. The Normans
+follow their lord, and press around him; they ply their blows upon the
+English; and these defend themselves stoutly, striving hard with their
+enemies, returning blow for blow.
+
+"One of them was a man of great strength, a wrestler, who did great
+mischief to the Normans with his hatchet; all feared him, for he struck
+down a great many Normans. The Duke spurred on his horse, and aimed a
+blow at him, but he stooped, and so escaped the stroke; then jumping on
+one side, he lifted his hatchet aloft, and as the Duke bent to avoid
+the blow the Englishman boldly struck him on the head, and beat in his
+helmet, though without doing much injury. He was very near falling,
+however, but bearing on his stirrups he recovered himself immediately;
+and when he thought to have revenged himself upon the churl by killing
+him, he had escaped, dreading the Duke's blow. He ran back in among the
+English, but he was not safe even there; for the Normans seeing him,
+pursued and caught him; and having pierced him through and through with
+their lances, left him dead on the ground.
+
+"Where the throng of the battle was greatest, the men of Kent and Essex
+fought wondrously well, and made the Normans again retreat, but without
+doing them much injury. And when the Duke saw his men fall back and the
+English triumphing over them, his spirit rose high, and he seized his
+shield and his lance, which a vassal handed to him, and took his post by
+his standard.
+
+"Then those who kept close guard by him and rode where he rode, being
+about a thousand armed men, came and rushed with closed ranks upon the
+English; and with the weight of their good horses, and the blows the
+knights gave, broke the press of the enemy, and scattered the crowd
+before them, the good Duke leading them on in front. Many pursued and
+many fled; many were the Englishmen who fell around, and were trampled
+under the horses, crawling upon the earth, and not able to rise. Many
+of the richest and noblest men fell in that rout, but the English still
+rallied in places; smote down those whom they reached, and maintained
+the combat the best they could; beating down the men and killing the
+horses. One Englishman watched the Duke, and plotted to kill him; he
+would have struck him with his lance, but he could not, for the Duke
+struck him first, and felled him to the earth.
+
+"Loud was now the clamour, and great the slaughter; many a soul then
+quitted the body it inhabited. The living marched over the heaps of
+dead, and each side was weary of striking. He charged on who could, and
+he who could no longer strike still pushed forward. The strong struggled
+with the strong; some failed, others triumphed; the cowards fell back,
+the brave pressed on; and sad was his fate who fell in the midst, for
+he had little chance of rising again; and many in truth fell, who never
+rose at all, being crushed under the throng.
+
+"And now the Normans pressed on so far, that at last they had reached
+the standard. There Harold had remained, defending himself to the
+utmost; but he was sorely wounded in his eye by the arrow, and suffered
+grievous pain from the blow. An armed man came in the throng of the
+battle, and struck him on the ventaille of his helmet, and beat him to
+the ground; and as he sought to recover himself, a knight beat him down
+again, striking him on the thick of his thigh, down to the bone.
+
+"Gurth saw the English falling around, and that there was no remedy. He
+saw his race hastening to ruin, and despaired of any aid; he would have
+fled but could not, for the throng continually increased and the Duke
+pushed on till he reached him, and struck him with great force. Whether
+he died of that blow I know not, but it was said that he fell under it,
+and rose no more.
+
+"The standard was beaten down, the golden standard was taken, and Harold
+and the best of his friends were slain; but there was so much eagerness,
+and throng of so many around, seeking to kill him, that I know not who
+it was that slew him.
+
+"The English were in great trouble at having lost their king, and at
+the Duke's having conquered and beat down the standard; but they still
+fought on, and defended themselves long, and in fact till the day drew
+to a close. Then it clearly appeared to all that the standard was lost,
+and the news had spread throughout the army that Harold for certain was
+dead; and all saw that there was no longer any hope, so they left the
+field, and those fled who could.
+
+"William fought well; many an assault did he lead, many a blow did he
+give, and many receive, and many fell dead under his hand. Two horses
+were killed under him, and he took a third at time of need, so that he
+fell not to the ground; and he lost not a drop of blood. But whatever
+any one did, and whoever lived or died, this is certain, that William
+conquered, and that many of the English fled from the field, and many
+died on the spot. Then he returned thanks to God, and in his pride
+ordered his standard to be brought and set up on high where the English
+standard had stood; and that was the signal of his having conquered and
+beaten down the foe. And he ordered his tent to be raised on the
+spot among the dead, and had his meat brought thither, and his supper
+prepared there.
+
+"Then he took off his armour; and the barons and knights, pages and
+squires came, when he had unstrung his shield: and they took the helmet
+from his head, and the hauberk from his back, and saw the heavy blows
+upon his shield, and how his helmet was dinted in. And all greatly
+wondered, and said, 'Such a baron never bestrode war-horse, or dealt
+such blows, or did such feats of arms; neither has there been on earth
+such a knight since Rollant and Olivier.'
+
+"Thus they lauded and extolled him greatly, and rejoiced in what they
+saw; but grieving also for their friends who were slain in the battle.
+And the Duke stood meanwhile among them of noble stature and mien; and
+rendered thanks to the King of Glory, through whom he had the victory;
+and thanked the knights around him, mourning also frequently for the
+dead. And he ate and drank among the dead, and made his bed that night
+upon the field.
+
+"The morrow was Sunday; and those who had slept upon the field of
+battle, keeping watch around, and suffering great fatigue, bestirred
+themselves at break of day and sought out and buried such of the bodies
+of their dead friends as they might find. The noble ladies of the land
+also came, some to seek their husbands, and others their fathers, sons,
+or brothers. They bore the bodies to their villages, and interred them
+at the churches; and the clerks and priests of the country were ready,
+and at the request of their friends, took the bodies that were found,
+and prepared graves and laid them therein.
+
+"King Harold was carried and buried at Varham; but I know not who it was
+that bore him thither, neither do I know who buried him. Many remained
+on the field, and many had fled in the night."
+
+Such is a Norman account of the battle of Hastings, which does full
+justice to the valour of the Saxons, as well as to the skill and bravery
+of the victors. [In the preceding pages, I have woven together the
+"purpureos pannos" of the old chronicler. In so doing, I have largely
+availed myself of Mr. Edgar Taylor's version of that part of the "Roman
+de Rou" which describes the conquest. By giving engravings from the
+Bayeux Tapestry, and excellent notes, Mr. Taylor has added much to the
+value and interest of his volume.] It is indeed evident that the loss of
+the battle to the English was owing to the wound which Harold received
+in the afternoon, and which must have incapacitated him from effective
+command. When we remember that he had himself just won the battle of
+Stamford Bridge over Harald Hardrada by the manoeuvre of a feigned
+flight, it is impossible to suppose that he could be deceived by the
+same stratagem on the part of the Normans at Hastings. But his men,
+when deprived of his control would very naturally be led by their
+inconsiderate ardour into the pursuit that proved so fatal to them.
+All the narratives of the battle, however much they may vary as to the
+precise time and manner of Harold's fall, eulogise the generalship and
+the personal prowess which he displayed, until the fatal arrow struck
+him. The skill with which he had posted his army was proved, both by the
+slaughter which it cost the Normans to force the position, and also by
+the desperate rally which some of the Saxons made, after the battle,
+in the forest in the rear, in which they cut off a large number of the
+pursuing Normans. This circumstance is particularly mentioned by William
+of Poictiers, the Conqueror's own chaplain. Indeed, if Harold, or either
+of his brothers, had survived, the remains of the English army might
+have formed again in the wood, and could at least have effected an
+orderly retreat, and prolonged the war. But both Gurth and Leofwine, and
+all the bravest thanes of Southern England, lay dead on Senlac, around
+their fallen king and the fallen standard of their country. The exact
+number of the slain on the Saxon side is unknown; but we read that on
+the side of the victors, out of sixty thousand men who had been engaged,
+no less than a fourth perished: so well had the English bill-men "plied
+the ghastly blow" and so sternly had the Saxon battle-axe cloven Norman
+casque and mail. [The Conqueror's chaplain calls the Saxon battle-axes
+"saevissimas secures."] The old historian Daniel justly as well as
+forcibly remarks, [As cited in the "Pictorial History."] "Thus was
+tried, by the great assize of God's judgment in battle, the right
+of power between the English and Norman nations; a battle the most
+memorable of all others; and, however miserably lost, yet most nobly
+fought on the part of England."
+
+Many a pathetic legend was told in after years respecting the
+discovery and the burial of the corpse of our last Saxon king. The main
+circumstances, though they seem to vary, are perhaps reconcilable. [See
+them collected in Lingard, vol. i p. 452, ET SEQ.; Thierry, vol i.
+p. 299; Sharon Turner, Vol. i. p. 82; and Histoire de Normandie par
+Lieguet, p. 242.] Two of the monks of Waltham abbey, which Harold had
+founded a little time before his election to the throne, had accompanied
+him to the battle. On the morning after the slaughter they begged and
+gained permission of the Conqueror to search for the body of their
+benefactor. The Norman soldiery and camp-followers had stripped and
+gashed the slain; and the two monks vainly strove to recognise from
+among the mutilated and gory heaps around them the features of their
+former king. They sent for Harold's mistress, Edith, surnamed "the Fair"
+and the "Swan-necked," to aid them. The eye of love proved keener than
+the eye of gratitude, and the Saxon lady, even in that Aceldama, knew
+her Harold.
+
+The king's mother now sought the victorious Norman, and begged the dead
+body of her son. But William at first answered in his wrath, and in the
+hardness of his heart, that a man who had been false to his word and his
+religion should have no other sepulchre than the sand of the shore. He
+added, with a sneer, "Harold mounted guard on the coast while he was
+alive; he may continue his guard now he is dead." The taunt was an
+unintentional eulogy; and a grave washed by the spray of the Sussex
+waves would have been the noblest burial-place for the martyr of Saxon
+freedom. But Harold's mother was urgent in her lamentations and her
+prayers: the Conqueror relented: like Achilles, he gave up the dead body
+of his fallen foe to a parent's supplications; and the remains of King
+Harold were deposited with regal honours in Waltham Abbey.
+
+On Christmas day of the same year, William the Conqueror was crowned at
+London, King of England.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS, A.D. 1066, AND JOAN
+OF ARC'S VICTORY AT ORLEANS, 1429.
+
+A.D. 1066-1087. Reign of William the Conqueror. Frequent risings of the
+English against him, which are quelled with merciless rigour.
+
+1096. The first Crusade.
+
+1112. Commencement of the disputes about investitures between the
+emperors and the popes.
+
+1140. Foundation of the city of Lubeck, whence originated the Hanseatic
+League. Commencement of the feuds in Italy between the Guelphs and
+Ghibellines.
+
+1146. The second Crusade.
+
+1154. Henry II. becomes King of England. Under him Thomas a Becket is
+made Archbishop of Canterbury: the first instance of any man of the
+Saxon race being raised to high office in Church or State since the
+Conquest.
+
+1170. Strongbow, earl of Pembroke, lands with an English army in
+Ireland.
+
+1189. Richard Coeur de Lion becomes King of England. He and King Philip
+Augustus of France join in the third Crusade.
+
+1199-1204. On the death of King Richard, his brother John claims
+and makes himself master of England and Normandy and the other large
+continental possessions of the early Plantagenet princes. Philip
+Augustus asserts the cause of Prince Arthur, John's nephew, against him.
+Arthur is murdered, but the French king continues the war against John,
+and conquers from him Normandy, Brittany, Anjou, Maine, Touraine, and
+Poictiers.
+
+1216. The barons, the freeholders, the citizens, and the yeomen of
+England rise against the tyranny of John and his foreign favourites.
+They compel him to sign Magna Charta. This is the commencement of our
+nationality: for our history from this time forth is the history of a
+national life, then complete, and still in being. All English history
+before this period is a mere history of elements, of their collisions,
+and of the processes of their fusion. For upwards of a century after the
+Conquest, Anglo-Norman and Anglo-Saxon had kept aloof from each other:
+the one in haughty scorn, the other in sullen abhorrence. They were two
+peoples, though living in the same land. It is not until the thirteenth
+century, the period of the reigns of John and his son and grandson, that
+we can perceive the existence of any feeling of common patriotism among
+them. But in studying the history of these reigns, we read of the old
+dissensions no longer. The Saxon no more appears in civil war against
+the Norman; the Norman no longer scorns the language of the Saxon, or
+refuses to bear together with him the name of Englishman. No part of the
+community think themselves foreigners to another part. They feel that
+they are all one people, and they have learned to unite their efforts
+for the common purpose of protecting the rights and promoting the
+welfare of all. The fortunate loss of the Duchy of Normandy in John's
+reign greatly promoted these new feelings. Thenceforth our barons' only
+homes were in England. One language had, in the reign of Henry III.,
+become the language of the land; and that, also, had then assumed the
+form in which we still possess it. One law, in the eye of which all
+freemen are equal without distinction of race, was modelled, and
+steadily enforced, and still continues to form the groundwork of our
+judicial system. [Creasy's Text-book of the Constitution, p. 4.]
+
+1273. Rudolph of Hapsburg chosen Emperor of Germany.
+
+1283. Edward I. conquers Wales.
+
+1346. Edward III. invades France, and gains the battle of Cressy.
+
+1356. Battle of Poictiers.
+
+1360. Treaty of Bretigny between England and France. By it Edward III.
+renounces his pretensions to the French crown. The treaty is ill kept,
+and indecisive hostilities continue between the forces of the two
+countries.
+
+1414. Henry V. of England claims the crown of France, and resolves to
+invade and conquer that kingdom. At this time France was in the most
+deplorable state of weakness and suffering, from the factions that
+raged among her nobility, and from the cruel oppressions which the
+rival nobles practised on the mass of the community. "The people were
+exhausted by taxes, civil wars, and military executions; and they had
+fallen into that worst of all states of mind, when the independence of
+one's country is thought no longer a paramount and sacred object. 'What
+can the English do to us worse than the things we suffer at the hands
+of our own princes?' was a common exclamation among the poor people of
+France." [Pictorial Hist. of England, vol. i. p. 28.]
+
+1415. Henry invades France, takes Harfleur, and wins the great battle of
+Agincourt.
+
+1417-1419. Henry conquers Normandy. The French Dauphin assassinates the
+Duke of Burgundy, the most powerful of the French nobles, at Montereau.
+The successor of the murdered duke becomes the active ally of the
+English.
+
+1420. The Treaty of Troyes is concluded between Henry V. of England and
+Charles VI. of France, and Philip, duke of Burgundy. By this treaty it
+was stipulated that Henry should marry the Princess Catherine of France;
+that King Charles, during his life-time, should keep the title and
+dignity of King of France, but that Henry should succeed him, and should
+at once be entrusted with the administration of the government, and
+that the French crown should descend to Henry's heirs; that France
+and England should for ever be united under one king, but should still
+retain their several usages, customs, and privileges; that all the
+princes, peers, vassals, and communities of France should swear
+allegiance to Henry as their future king, and should pay him present
+obedience as regent; that Henry should unite his arms to those of King
+Charles and the Duke of Burgundy, in order to subdue the adherents of
+Charles, the pretended dauphin; and that these three princes should make
+no truce or peace with the Dauphin, but by the common consent of all
+three.
+
+1421. Henry V. gains several victories over the French, who refuse to
+acknowledge the treaty of Troyes. His son, afterwards Henry VI., is
+born.
+
+1422. Henry V. and Charles VI. of France die. Henry VI. is proclaimed at
+Paris, King of England and France. The followers of the French Dauphin
+proclaim him Charles VII., King of France. The Duke of Bedford, the
+English Regent in France, defeats the army of the Dauphin at Crevant.
+
+1424. The Duke of Bedford gains the great victory of Verneuil over the
+French partizans of the Dauphin, and their Scotch auxiliaries.
+
+1428. The English begin the siege of Orleans.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. -- JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY OVER THE ENGLISH AT ORLEANS, A.D.
+1429.
+
+
+ "The eyes of all Europe were turned towards this scene; where, it
+ was reasonably supposed, the French were to make their last stand
+ for maintaining the independence of their monarchy and the rights
+ of their; sovereign"--HUME.
+
+
+When, after their victory at Salamis, the generals of the various
+Greek states voted the prizes for distinguished individual merit,
+each assigned the first place of excellence to himself, but they all
+concurred in giving their second votes to Themistocles. [Plutarch, Vit.
+Them. 17.] This was looked on as a decisive proof that Themistocles
+ought to be ranked first of all. If we were to endeavour, by a similar
+test, to ascertain which European nation has contributed the most to
+the progress of European civilization, we should find Italy, Germany,
+England, and Spain, each claiming the first degree, but each also naming
+France as clearly next in merit. It is impossible to deny her paramount
+importance in history. Besides the formidable part that she has
+for nearly three centuries played, as the Bellona of the European
+commonwealth of states, her influence during all this period over the
+arts, the literature, the manners and the feelings of mankind, has been
+such as to make the crisis of her earlier fortunes a point of world-wide
+interest; and it may be asserted without exaggeration, that the future
+career of every nation was involved in the result of the struggle
+by which the unconscious heroine of France, in the beginning of the
+fifteenth century, rescued her country from becoming a second Ireland
+under the yoke of the triumphant English.
+
+Seldom has the extinction of a a nation's independence appeared more
+inevitable than was the case in France, when the English invaders
+completed their lines round Orleans, four hundred and twenty-three years
+ago. A series of dreadful defeats had thinned the chivalry of France,
+and daunted the spirits of her soldiers. A foreign King had been
+proclaimed in her capital; and foreign armies of the bravest veterans,
+and led by the ablest captains then known in the world, occupied the
+fairest portions of her territory. Worse to her even than the fierceness
+and the strength of her foes were the factions, the vices, and the
+crimes of her own children. Her native prince was a dissolute trifler,
+stained with the assassination of the most powerful noble of the land,
+whose son, in revenge, had leagued himself with the enemy. Many more
+of her nobility, many of her prelates, her magistrates, and rulers, had
+sworn fealty to the English king. The condition of the peasantry amid
+the general prevalence of anarchy and brigandage, which were added to
+the customary devastations of contending armies, was wretched beyond the
+power of language to describe. The sense of terror and suffering seemed
+to have extended itself even to the brute creation.
+
+"In sooth, the estate of France was then most miserable. There
+appeared nothing but a horrible face, confusion, poverty, desolation,
+solitarinesse, and feare. The lean and bare labourers in the country did
+terrifie even theeves themselves, who had nothing left them to spoile
+but the carkasses of these poore miserable creatures, wandering up
+and down like ghostes drawne out of their graves. The least farmes and
+hamlets were fortified by these robbers, English, Bourguegnons, and
+French, every one striving to do his worst; all men-of-war were
+well agreed to spoile the countryman and merchant. EVEN THE CATTELL,
+ACCUSTOMED TO THE LARUME BELL, THE SIGNE OF THE ENEMY'S APPROACH, WOULD
+RUN HOME OF THEMSELVES WITHOUT ANY GUIDE BY THIS ACCUSTOMED MISERY." [De
+Serres, quoted in the notes to Southey's Joan of Arc.]
+
+In the autumn of 1428, the English, who were already masters of all
+France north of the Loire, prepared their forces for the conquest of the
+southern provinces, which yet adhered to the cause of the Dauphin. The
+city of Orleans, on the banks of that river, was looked upon as the
+last stronghold of the French national party. If the English could once
+obtain possession of it, their victorious progress through the residue
+of the kingdom seemed free from any serious obstacle. Accordingly,
+the Earl of Salisbury, one of the bravest and most experienced of the
+English generals, who had been trained under Henry V., marched to the
+attack of the all-important city; and, after reducing several places of
+inferior consequence in the neighbourhood, appeared with his army before
+its walls on the 12th of October, 1428.
+
+The city of Orleans itself was on the north side of the Loire, but its
+suburbs extended far on the southern side, and a strong bridge connected
+them with the town. A fortification which in modern military phrase
+would be termed a tete-du-pont, defended the bridge-head on the southern
+side, and two towers, called the Tourelles, were built on the bridge
+itself, where it rested on an island at a little distance from the
+tete-du-pont. Indeed, the solid masonry of the bridge terminated at the
+Tourelles; and the communication thence with the tete-du-pont on the
+southern shore was by means of a drawbridge. The Tourelles and the
+tete-du-pont formed together a strong fortified post, capable of
+containing a garrison of considerable strength; and so long as this was
+in possession of the Orleannais, they could communicate freely with
+the southern provinces, the inhabitants of which, like the Orleannais
+themselves, supported the cause of their Dauphin against the foreigners.
+Lord Salisbury rightly judged the capture of the Tourelles to be the
+most material step towards the reduction of the city itself. Accordingly
+he directed his principal operations against this post, and after
+some severe repulses, he carried the Tourelles by storm, on the 23d of
+October. The French, however, broke down the part of the bridge which
+was nearest to the north bank and thus rendered a direct assault from
+the Tourelles upon the city impossible. But the possession of this post
+enabled the English to distress the town greatly by a battery of cannon
+which they planted there, and which commanded some of the principal
+streets.
+
+It has been observed by Hume, that this is the first siege in which
+any important use appears to have been made of artillery. And even at
+Orleans both besiegers and besieged seem to have employed their cannons
+more as instruments of destruction against their enemy's men, than
+as engines of demolition against their enemy's walls and works. The
+efficacy of cannon in breaching solid masonry was taught Europe by
+the Turks, a few years after wards, at the memorable siege of
+Constantinople. In our French wars, as in the wars of the classic
+nations, famine was looked on as the surest weapon to compel the
+submission of a well-walled town and the great object of the besiegers
+was to effect a complete circumvallation. The great ambit of the walls
+of Orleans, and the facilities which the river gave for obtaining
+succour and supplies, rendered the capture of the place by this process
+a matter of great difficulty. Nevertheless, Lord Salisbury, and Lord
+Suffolk, who succeeded him in command of the English after his death
+by a cannon-ball, carried on the necessary works with great skill and
+resolution. Six strongly fortified posts, called bastillos, were formed
+at certain intervals round the town and the purpose of the English
+engineers was to draw strong lines between them. During the winter
+little progress was made with the entrenchments, but when the spring
+of 1429 came, the English resumed their works with activity; the
+communications between the city and the country became more difficult,
+and the approach of want began already to be felt in Orleans.
+
+The besieging force also fared hardly for stores and provisions, until
+relieved by the effects of a brilliant victory which Sir John Fastolfe,
+one of the best English generals, gained at Rouvrai, near Orleans, a few
+days after Ash Wednesday, 1429. With only sixteen hundred fighting men,
+Sir John completely defeated an army of French and Scots, four
+thousand strong, which had been collected for the purpose of aiding the
+Orleannais, and harassing the besiegers. After this encounter, which
+seemed decisively to confirm the superiority of the English in battle
+over their adversaries, Fastolfe escorted large supplies of stores
+and food to Suffolk's camp, and the spirits of the English rose to the
+highest pitch at the prospect of the speedy capture of the city before
+them, and the consequent subjection of all France beneath their arms.
+
+The Orleannais now in their distress offered to surrender the city into
+the hands of the Duke of Burgundy, who, though the ally of the English,
+was yet one of their native princes. The Regent Bedford refused these
+terms, and the speedy submission of the city to the English seemed
+inevitable. The Dauphin Charles, who was now at Chinon with his remnant
+of a court, despaired of maintaining any longer the struggle for his
+crown; and was only prevented from abandoning the country by the more
+masculine spirits of his mistress and his queen. Yet neither they, nor
+the boldest of Charles's captains, could have shown him where to find
+resources for prolonging the war; and least of all could any human skill
+have predicted the quarter whence rescue was to come to Orleans and to
+France.
+
+In the village of Domremy, on the borders of Lorraine, there was a poor
+peasant of the name of Jacques d'Arc, respected in his station of life,
+and who had reared a family in virtuous habits and in the practice of
+the strictest devotion. His eldest daughter was named by her parents
+Jeannette, but she was called Jeanne by the French, which was Latinised
+into Johanna, and anglicised into Joan. ["Respondit quod in partibus
+suis vocabatur Johanneta, et postquam venit in Franciam vocata est
+Johanna."--PROCES DE JEANNE D'ARC, vol i. p. 46.]
+
+At the time when Joan first attracted attention, she was about eighteen
+years of age. She was naturally of a susceptible disposition, which
+diligent attention to the legends of saints, and tales of fairies, aided
+by the dreamy loneliness of her life while tending her father's flocks,
+had made peculiarly prone to enthusiastic fervour. At the same time
+she was eminent for piety and purity of soul, and for her compassionate
+gentleness to the sick and the distressed.
+
+[Southey, in one of the speeches which he puts in the mouth of his Joan
+of Arc, has made her beautifully describe the effect; on her mind of the
+scenery in which she dwelt:--
+
+
+ "Here in solitude and peace
+ My soul was nurst, amid the loveliest scenes
+ Of-unpolluted nature. Sweet it was,
+ As the white mists of morning roll'd away,
+ To see the mountain's wooded heights appear
+ Dark in the early dawn, and mark its slope
+ With gorse-flowers glowing, as the rising sun
+ On the golden ripeness pour'd a deepening light.
+ Pleasant at noon beside the vocal brook
+ To lay me down, and watch the the floating clouds,
+ And shape to Fancy's wild similitudes
+ Their ever-varying forms; and oh, how sweet,
+ To drive my flock at evening to the fold,
+ And hasten to our little hut, and hear
+ The voice of kindness bid me welcome home!"
+
+
+The only foundation for the story told by the Burgundian partisan
+Monstrelet, and adopted by Hume, of Joan having been brought up as
+servant at an inn, is the circumstance of her having been once, with the
+rest of her family, obliged to take refuge in an AUBERGE in Neufchateau
+for fifteen days, when a party of Burgundian cavalry made an incursion
+into Domremy. (See the Quarterly Review, No. 138.)]
+
+The district where she dwelt had escaped comparatively free from the
+ravages of war, but the approach of roving bands of Burgundian or
+English troops frequently spread terror through Domremy. Once the
+village had been plundered by some of these marauders, and Joan and her
+family had been driven from their home, and forced to seek refuge for a
+time at Neufchateau. The peasantry in Domremy were principally attached
+to the House of Orleans and the Dauphin; and all the miseries which
+France endured, were there imputed to the Burgundian faction and their
+allies, the English, who were seeking to enslave unhappy France.
+
+Thus from infancy to girlhood Joan had heard continually of the woes of
+the war, and she had herself witnessed some of the wretchedness that it
+caused. A feeling of intense patriotism grew in her with her growth. The
+deliverance of France from the English was the subject of her reveries
+by day and her dreams by night. Blended with these aspirations were
+recollections of the miraculous interpositions of Heaven in favour of
+the oppressed, which she had learned from the legends of her Church. Her
+faith was undoubting; her prayers were fervent. "She feared no danger,
+for she felt no sin;" and at length she believed herself to have
+received the supernatural inspiration which, she sought.
+
+According to her own narrative, delivered by her to her merciless
+inquisitors in the time of her captivity and approaching death, she was
+about thirteen years old when her revelations commenced. Her own words
+describe them best: [Proces de Jeanne d'Arc, vol. i. p. 52.] "At the
+age of thirteen, a voice from God came near to her to help her in ruling
+herself, and that voice came to her about the hour of noon, in summer
+time, while she was in her father's garden. And she had fasted the day
+before. And she heard the voice on her right, in the direction of
+the church; and when she heard the voice she also saw a bright light.
+Afterwards, St. Michael and St. Margaret and St. Catherine appeared to
+her. They were always in a halo of glory; she could see that their heads
+were crowned with jewels: and she heard their voices, which were sweet
+and mild. She did not distinguish their arms or limbs. She heard them
+more frequently than she saw them; and the usual time when she heard
+them was when the church bells were sounding for prayer. And if she was
+in the woods when she heard them, she could plainly distinguish their
+voices drawing near to her. When she thought that she discerned the
+Heavenly Voices, she knelt down, and bowed herself to the ground. Their
+presence gladdened her even to tears; and after they departed she wept
+because they had not taken her with them back to Paradise. They always
+spoke soothingly to her. They told her that France would be saved, and
+that she was to save it." Such were the visions and the Voices that
+moved the spirit of the girl of thirteen; and as she grew older they
+became more frequent and more clear. At last the tidings of the siege of
+Orleans reached Domremy, Joan heard her parents and neighbours talk of
+the sufferings of its population, of the ruin which its capture would
+bring on their lawful sovereign, and of the distress of the Dauphin and
+his court. Joan's heart was sorely troubled at the thought of the fate
+of Orleans; and her Voices now ordered her to leave her home; and warned
+her that she was the instrument chosen by Heaven for driving away the
+English from that city, and for taking the Dauphin to be anointed king
+at Rheims. At length she informed her parents of her divine mission, and
+told them that she must go to the Sire de Baudricourt, who commanded
+at Vaucouleurs, and who was the appointed person to bring her into the
+presence of the king, whom she was to save. Neither the anger nor the
+grief of her parents, who said that they would rather see her drowned
+than exposed to the contamination of the camp, could move her from her
+purpose. One of her uncles consented to take her to Vaucouleurs, where
+De Baudricourt at first thought her mad, and derided her; but by
+degrees was led to believe, if not in her inspiration, at least in her
+enthusiasm and in its possible utility to the Dauphin's cause.
+
+The inhabitants of Vaucouleurs were completely won over to her side, by
+the piety and devoutness which she displayed and by her firm assurance
+in the truth of her mission. She told them that it was God's will
+that she should go to the King, and that no one but her could save the
+kingdom of France. She said that she herself would rather remain with
+her poor mother and spin; but the Lord had ordered her forth. The fame
+of "The Maid," as she was termed, the renown of her holiness, and of
+her mission, spread far and wide. Baudricourt sent her with an escort to
+Chinon, where the Dauphin Charles was dallying away his time. Her Voices
+had bidden her assume the arms and the apparel of a knight; and the
+wealthiest inhabitants of Vaucouleurs had vied with each other in
+equipping her with warhorse, armour, and sword. On reaching Chinon,
+she was, after some delay, admitted into the presence of the Dauphin.
+Charles designedly dressed himself far less richly than many of
+his courtiers were apparelled, and mingled with them, when Jean
+was introduced, in order to see if the Holy Maid would address her
+exhortations to the wrong person. But she instantly singled him out,
+and kneeling before him, said, "Most noble Dauphin, the King of Heaven
+announces to you by me, that you shall be anointed and crowned king in
+the city of Rheims, and that you shall be His viceregent in France." His
+features may probably have been seen by her previously in portraits, or
+have been described to her by others; but she herself believed that
+her Voices inspired her when she addressed the King; [Proces de Jeanne
+d'Arc, vol. i. p. 56.] and the report soon spread abroad that the Holy
+Maid had found the King by a miracle; and this, with many other similar
+rumours, augmented the renown and influence that she now rapidly
+acquired.
+
+The state of public feeling in France was not favourable to an
+enthusiastic belief in Divine interposition in favour of the party that
+had hitherto been unsuccessful and oppressed. The humiliations which had
+befallen the French royal family and nobility were looked on as the just
+judgments of God upon them for their vice and impiety. The misfortunes
+that had come upon France as a nation, were believed to have been drawn
+down by national sins. The English, who had been the instruments of
+Heaven's wrath against France, seemed now by their pride and cruelty to
+be fitting objects of it themselves. France in that age was a profoundly
+religious country. There was ignorance, there was superstition there was
+bigotry; but there was Faith--a Faith that itself worked true miracles,
+even while it believed in unreal ones. At this time, also, one of those
+devotional movements began among the clergy in France, which from time
+to time occur in national Churches, without it being possible for the
+historian to assign any adequate human cause for their immediate date or
+extension. Numberless friars and priests traversed the rural districts
+and towns of France, preaching to the people that they must seek
+from Heaven a deliverance from the pillages of the soldiery, and the
+insolence of the foreign oppressors. [See, Sismondi vol. xiii. p. 114;
+Michelet, vol. v. Livre x.] The idea of a Providence that works only
+by general laws was wholly alien to the feelings of the age. Every
+political event, as well as every natural phenomenon, was believed to be
+the immediate result of a special mandate of God. This led to the belief
+that His holy angels and saints were constantly employed in executing
+His commands and mingling in the affairs of men. The Church encouraged
+these feelings; and at the same time sanctioned; the concurrent popular
+belief that hosts of evil spirits were also ever actively interposing
+in the current of earthly events, with whom sorcerers and wizards could
+league themselves, and thereby obtain the exercise of supernatural
+power.
+
+Thus all things favoured the influence which Joan obtained both over
+friends and foes. The French nation, as well as the English and the
+Burgundians, readily admitted that superhuman beings inspired her:
+the only question was, whether these beings were good or evil angels;
+whether she brought with her "airs from heaven, or blasts from hell."
+This question seemed to her countrymen to be decisively settled in her
+favour, by the austere sanctity of her life, by the holiness of her
+conversation, but, still more, by her exemplary attention to all the
+services and rites of the Church. The dauphin at first feared the injury
+that might be done to his cause if he had laid himself open to the
+charge of having leagued himself with a sorceress. Every imaginable
+test, therefore, was resorted to in order to set Joan's orthodoxy and
+purity beyond suspicion. At last Charles and his advisers felt safe in
+accepting her services as those of a true and virtuous daughter of the
+Holy Church.
+
+It is indeed probable that Charles himself, and some of his counsellors,
+may have suspected Joan of being a mere enthusiast; and it is certain
+that Dunois, and others of the best generals, took considerable latitude
+in obeying or deviating from the military orders that she gave. But over
+the mass of the people and the soldiery, her influence was unbounded.
+While Charles and his doctors of theology, and court ladies, had been
+deliberating as to recognising or dismissing the Maid, a considerable
+period had passed away, during which a small army, the last gleanings,
+as it seemed, of the English sword, had been assembled at Blois, under
+Dunois, La Hire, Xaintrailles, and other chiefs, who to their natural
+valour were now beginning to unite the wisdom that is taught by
+misfortune. It was resolved to send Joan with this force and a convoy of
+provisions to Orleans. The distress of that city had now become urgent.
+But the communication with the open country was not entirely cut off:
+the Orleannais had heard of the Holy Maid whom Providence had raised
+up for their deliverance, and their messengers urgently implored the
+dauphin to send her to them without delay.
+
+Joan appeared at the camp at Blois, clad in a new suit of brilliant
+white armour, mounted on a stately black war-horse, and with a lance
+in her right hand, which she had learned to wield with skill and grace.
+[See the description of her by Gui de Laval, quoted in the note to
+Michelet, p. 69; and see the account of the banner at Orleans, which is
+believed to bear an authentic portrait of the Maid, in Murray's Handbook
+for France, p. 175.] Her head was unhelmeted; so that all could behold
+her fair and expressive features, her deep-set and earnest eyes, and her
+long black hair, which was parted across her forehead, and bound by a
+ribbon behind her back. She wore at her side a small battle-axe, and the
+consecrated sword, marked on the blade with five crosses, which had
+at her bidding been taken for her from the shrine of St. Catherine at
+Fierbois. A page carried her banner, which she had caused to be made and
+embroidered as her Voices enjoined. It was white satin [Proces de Jeanne
+d'Arc, vol. i. p. 238.] strewn with fleur-de-lis; and on it were the
+words "JHESUS MARIA," and the representation of the Saviour in His
+glory. Joan afterwards generally bore her banner herself in battle; she
+said that though she loved her sword much, she loved her banner forty
+times as much; and she loved to carry it because it could not kill any
+one.
+
+Thus accoutred, she came to lead the troops of France, who looked with
+soldierly admiration on her well-proportioned and upright figure, the
+skill with which she managed her war-horse, and the easy grace with
+which she handled her weapons. Her military education had been short,
+but she had availed herself of it well. She had also the good sense to
+interfere little with the manoeuvres of the troops, leaving those things
+to Dunois, and others whom she had the discernment to recognise as the
+best officers in the camp. Her tactics in action were simple enough. As
+she herself described it--"I used to say to them, 'Go boldly in among
+the English,' and then I used to go boldly in myself." [Ibid.] Such, as
+she told her inquisitors, was the only spell she used; and it was one of
+power. But while interfering little with the military discipline of the
+troops, in all matters of moral discipline she was inflexibly strict.
+All the abandoned followers of the camp were driven away. She compelled
+both generals and soldiers to attend regularly at confessional. Her
+chaplain and other priests marched with the army under her orders; and
+at every halt, an altar was set up and the sacrament administered. No
+oath or foul language passed without punishment or censure. Even the
+roughest and most hardened veterans obeyed her. They put off for a
+time the bestial coarseness which had grown on them during a life of
+bloodshed and rapine; they felt that they must go forth in a new spirit
+to a new career, and acknowledged the beauty of the holiness in which
+the heaven-sent Maid was leading them to certain victory.
+
+Joan marched from Blois on the 26th of April with a convoy of provisions
+for Orleans, accompanied by Dunois, La Hire, and the other chief
+captains of the French; and on the evening of the 28th they approached
+the town. In the words of the old chronicler Hall: [Hall, f. 127.] "The
+Englishmen, perceiving that they within could not long continue for
+faute of vitaile and pouder, kepte not their watche so diligently as
+thei were accustomed, nor scoured now the countrey environed as thei
+before had ordained. Whiche negligence the citizens shut in perceiving,
+sente worde thereof to the French captaines, which with Pucelle in the
+dedde tyme of the nighte, and in a greats rayne and thunders, with all
+their vitaile and artillery entered into the citie."
+
+When it was day, the Maid rode in solemn procession through the city,
+clad in complete armour, and mounted on a white horse. Dunois was by
+her side, and all the bravest knights of her army and of the garrison
+followed in her train. The whole population thronged around her; and
+men, women, and children strove to touch her garments, or her banner,
+or her charger. They poured forth blessings on her, whom they already
+considered their deliverer. In the words used by two of them afterwards
+before the tribunal, which reversed the sentence, but could not restore
+the life of the Virgin-martyr of France, "the people of Orleans, when
+they first saw her in their city, thought that it was an angel from
+heaven that had come down to save them." Joan spoke gently in reply to
+their acclamations and addresses. She told them to fear God, and trust
+in Him for safety from the fury of their enemies. She first went to the
+principal church, where TE DEUM was chaunted; and then she took up her
+abode in the house of Jacques Bourgier, one of the principal citizens,
+and whose wife was a matron of good repute. She refused to attend a
+splendid banquet which had been provided for her, and passed nearly all
+her time in prayer.
+
+When it was known by the English that the Maid was in Orleans, their
+minds were not less occupied about her than were the minds of those in
+the city; but it was in a very different spirit. The English believed in
+her supernatural mission as firmly as the French did; but they thought
+her a sorceress who had come to overthrow them by her enchantments. An
+old prophecy, which told that a damsel from Lorraine was to save
+France, had long been current; and it was known and applied to Joan by
+foreigners as well as by the natives. For months the English had heard
+of the coming Maid; and the tales of miracles which she was said to have
+wrought, had been listened to by the rough yeomen of the English camp
+with anxious curiosity and secret awe. She had sent a herald to the
+English generals before she marched for Orleans; and he had summoned the
+English generals in the name of the Most High to give up to the Maid
+who was sent by Heaven, the keys of the French cities which they had
+wrongfully taken: and he also solemnly adjured the English troops,
+whether archers, or men of the companies of war, or gentlemen, or
+others, who were before the city of Orleans, to depart thence to their
+homes, under peril of being visited by the judgment of God. On her
+arrival in Orleans, Joan sent another similar message; but the English
+scoffed at her from their towers, and threatened to burn her heralds.
+She determined before she shed the blood of the besiegers, to repeat
+the warning with her own voice; and accordingly she mounted one of the
+boulevards of the town, which was within hearing of the Tourelles; and
+thence she spoke to the English, and bade them depart, otherwise they
+would meet with shame and woe. Sir William Gladsdale (whom the French
+call GLACIDAS) commanded the English post at the Tourelles, and he and
+another English officer replied by bidding her go home and keep her
+cows, and by ribald jests, that brought tears of shame and indignation
+into her eyes. But though the English leaders vaunted aloud, the effect
+produced on their army by Joan's presence in Orleans, was proved four
+days after her arrival; when, on the approach of reinforcements and
+stores to the town, Joan and La Hire marched out to meet them, and
+escorted the long train of provision waggons safely into Orleans,
+between the bastilles of the English, who cowered behind their walls,
+instead of charging fiercely and fearlessly, as had been their wont, on
+any French band that dared to show itself within reach.
+
+Thus far she had prevailed without striking a blow; but the time was now
+come to test her courage amid the horrors of actual slaughter. On the
+afternoon of the day on which she had escorted the reinforcements into
+the city, while she was resting fatigued at home, Dunois had seized an
+advantageous opportunity of attacking the English bastille of St. Loup:
+and a fierce assault of the Orleannais had been made on it, which the
+English garrison of the fort stubbornly resisted. Joan was roused by a
+sound which she believed to be that of Her Heavenly Voices; she called
+for her arms and horse, and quickly equipping herself she mounted to
+ride off to where the fight was raging. In her haste she had forgotten
+her banner; she rode back, and, without dismounting, had it given to her
+from the window, and then she galloped to the gate, whence the sally had
+been made. On her way she met some of the wounded French who had been
+carried back from the fight. "Ha," she exclaimed, "I never can see
+French blood flow, without my hair standing on end." She rode out of the
+gate, and met the tide of her countrymen, who had been repulsed from the
+English fort, and were flying back to Orleans in confusion. At the sight
+of the Holy Maid and her banner they rallied and renewed the assault.
+Joan rode forward at their head, waving her banner and cheering them on.
+The English quailed at what they believed to be the charge of hell; St.
+Loup was stormed, and its defenders put to the sword, except some few,
+whom Jean succeeded in saving. All her woman's gentleness returned when
+the combat was over. It was the first time that she had ever seen a
+battle-field. She wept at the sight of so many blood-stained and mangled
+corpses; and her tears flowed doubly when she reflected that they were
+the bodies of Christian men who had died without confession.
+
+The next day was ascension-day, and it was passed by Joan in prayer. But
+on the following morrow it was resolved by the chiefs of the garrison
+to attack the English forts on the south of the river. For this purpose
+they crossed the river in boats, and after some severe fighting, in
+which the Maid was wounded in the heel, both the English bastilles of
+the Augustins and St. Jean de Blanc were captured. The Tourelles were
+now the only post which the besiegers held on the south of the river.
+But that post was formidably strong, and by its command of the bridge,
+it was the key to the deliverance of Orleans. It was known that a fresh
+English army was approaching under Falstolfe to reinforce the besiegers,
+and should that army arrive, while the Tourelles were yet in the
+possession of their comrades, there was great peril of all the
+advantages which the French had gained being nullified, and of the siege
+being again actively carried on.
+
+It was resolved, therefore, by the French, to assail the Tourelles at
+once, while the enthusiasm which the presence and the heroic valour
+of the Maid had created was at its height. But the enterprise was
+difficult. The rampart of the tete-du-pont, or landward bulwark, of
+the Tourelles was steep and high; and Sir John Gladsdale occupied this
+all-important fort with five hundred archers and men-at-arms, who were
+the very flower of the English army.
+
+Early in the morning of the 7th of May, some thousands of the best
+French troops in Orleans heard mass and attended the confessional by
+Joan's orders; and then crossing the river in boats, as on the preceding
+day they assailed the bulwark of the Tourelles, "with light hearts and
+heavy hands." But Gladsdale's men, encouraged by their bold and skilful
+leader, made a resolute and able defence. The Maid planted her banner
+on the edge of the fosse, and then springing down into the ditch, she
+placed the first ladder against the wall, and began to mount. An English
+archer sent an arrow at her, which pierced her corslet and wounded
+her severely between the neck and shoulder. She fell bleeding from the
+ladder; and the English were leaping down from the wall to capture her,
+but her followers bore her off. She was carried to the rear, and laid
+upon the grass; her armour was taken off, and the anguish of her wound
+and the sight of her blood, made her at first tremble and weep. But her
+confidence in her celestial mission soon returned: her patron saints
+seemed to stand before her and reassure her. She sate up and drew the
+arrow out with her own hands. Some of the soldiers who stood by wished
+to stanch the blood, by saying a charm over the wound; but she forbade
+them, saying, that she did not wish to be cured by unhallowed means. She
+had the wound dressed with a little oil, and then bidding her confessor
+come to her, she betook herself to prayer.
+
+In the meanwhile, the English in the bulwark of the Tourelles, had
+repulsed the oft-renewed efforts of the French to scale the wall.
+Dunois, who commanded the assailants, was at first discouraged, and
+gave orders for a retreat to be sounded, Joan sent for him and the other
+generals, and implored them not to despair. "By my God" she said to
+them, "you shall soon enter in there. Do not doubt it. When you see my
+banner wave again up to the wall, to your arms again! the fort is yours.
+For the present rest a little, and take some food and drink. They did
+so," says the old chronicler of the siege, [Journal du Siege d'Orleans,
+p. 87.] "for they obeyed her marvellously." The faintness caused by
+her wound had now passed off, and she headed the French in another
+rush against the bulwark. The English, who had thought her slain, were
+alarmed at her reappearance; while the French pressed furiously and
+fanatically forward. A Biscayan soldier was carrying Joan's banner.
+She had told the troops that directly the banner touched the wall they
+should enter. The Biscayan waved the banner forward from the edge of
+the fosse, and touched the wall with it; and then all the French host
+swarmed madly up the ladders that now were raised in all directions
+against the English fort. At this crisis, the efforts of the English
+garrison were distracted by an attach from another quarter. The French
+troops who had been left in Orleans, had placed some planks over the
+broken part of the bridge, and advanced across them to the assault of
+the Tourelles on the northern side. Gladsdale resolved to withdraw his
+men from the landward bulwark, and concentrate his whole force in
+the Tourelles themselves. He was passing for this purpose across the
+drawbridge that connected the Tourelles and the tete-du-pont, when Joan,
+who by this time had scaled the wall of the bulwark, called out to him,
+"Surrender, surrender to the King of Heaven. Ah, Glacidas, you have
+foully wronged me with your words, but I have great pity on your soul
+and the souls of your men." The Englishman, disdainful of her summons,
+was striding on across the drawbridge, when a cannon-shot from the town
+carried it away, and Gladsdale perished in the water that ran beneath.
+After his fall, the remnant of the English abandoned all further
+resistance. Three hundred of them had been killed in the battle, and two
+hundred were made prisoners.
+
+The broken arch was speedily repaired by the exulting Orleannais; and
+Joan made her triumphal re-entry into the city by the bridge that had so
+long been closed. Every church in Orleans rang out its gratulating
+peal; and throughout the night the sounds of rejoicing echoed, and the
+bonfires blazed up from the city. But in the lines and forts which the
+besiegers yet retained on the northern shore, there was anxious watching
+of the generals, and there was desponding gloom among the soldiery. Even
+Talbot now counselled retreat. On the following morning, the Orleannais,
+from their walls, saw the great forts called "London" and "St.
+Lawrence," in flames; and witnessed their invaders busy in destroying
+the stores and munitions which had been relied on for the destruction of
+Orleans. Slowly and sullenly the English army retired; but not before
+it had drawn up in battle array opposite to the city, as if to challenge
+the garrison to an encounter. The French troops were eager to go out and
+attack, but Joan forbade it. The day was Sunday. "In the name of God,"
+she said, "let them depart, and let us return thanks to God." She led
+the soldiers and citizens forth from Orleans, but not for the shedding
+of blood. They passed in solemn procession round the city walls; and
+then, while their retiring enemies were yet in sight, they knelt in
+thanksgiving to God for the deliverance which he had vouchsafed them.
+
+Within three months from the time of her first interview with the
+Dauphin, Joan had fulfilled the first part of her promise, the raising
+of the siege of Orleans. Within three months more she fulfilled the
+second part also; and she stood with her banner in her hand by the high
+altar at Rheims while he was anointed and crowned as King Charles VII.
+of France. In the interval she had taken Jargeau, Troyes, and other
+strong places; and she had defeated an English army in a fair field
+at Patay. The enthusiasm of her countrymen knew no bounds; but the
+importance of her services, and especially of her primary achievement
+at Orleans, may perhaps be best proved by the testimony of her enemies.
+There is extant a fragment of a letter from the Regent Bedford to his
+royal nephew, Henry VI., in which he bewails the turn that the war
+had taken, and especially attributes it to the raising of the siege
+of Orleans by Joan. Bedford's own words, which are preserved in Rymer,
+[Vol. x. p. 403.] are as follows:--
+
+"AND ALLE THING THERE PROSPERED FOR YOU TIL THE TYME OF THE SIEGE OF
+ORLEANS, TAKEN IN HAND, GOD KNOWETH BY WHAT ADVIS.
+
+"AT THE WHICHE TYME, AFTER THE ADVENTURE FALLEN TO THE PERSONE OF MY
+COUSIN OF SALISBURY, WHOM GOD ASSOILLE, THERE FELLE, BY THE HAND OF GOD
+AS IT SEEMETH, A GREAT STROOK UPON YOUR PEUPLE THAT WAS ASSEMBLED THERE
+IN GRETE NOMBRE, CAUSED IN GRETE PARTIE, AS Y TROWE, OF LAKKE OF SADDE
+BELEVE, AND OF UNLEVEFULLE DOUBTE, THAT THEI HADDE OF A DISCIPLE AND
+LYME OF THE FEENDE, CALLED THE PUCELLE, THAT USED FALS ENCHANTMENTS AND
+SORCERIE.
+
+"THE WHICHE STROOKE AND DISCOMFITURE NOT OONLY LESSED IN GRETE PARTIE
+THE NOMBRE OF YOUR PEUPLE THERE, BUT AS WELL WITHDREWE THE COURAGE OF
+THE REMENANT IN MERVEILLOUS WYSE, AND COURAIGED YOUR ADVERSE PARTIE AND
+ENNEMYS TO ASSEMBLE THEM FORTHWITH IN GRETE NOMBRE."
+
+When Charles had been anointed King of France, Joan believed that her
+mission was accomplished. And in truth the deliverance of France from
+the English, though not completed for many years afterwards, was then
+insured. The ceremony of a royal coronation and anointment was not
+in those days regarded as a mere costly formality. It was believed to
+confer the sanction and the grace of heaven upon the prince, who had
+previously ruled with mere human authority. Thenceforth he was the
+Lord's Anointed. Moreover, one of the difficulties that had previously
+lain in the way of many Frenchman when called on to support Charles
+VII. was now removed. He had been publicly stigmatised, even by his own
+parents, as no true son of the royal race of France. The queen-mother,
+the English, and the partisans of Burgundy, called him the "Pretender
+to the title of Dauphin;" but those who had been led to doubt his
+legitimacy, were cured of their scepticism by the victories of the Holy
+Maid, and by the fulfilment of her pledges. They thought that heaven had
+now declared itself in favour of Charles as the true heir of the crown
+of St. Louis; and the tales about his being spurious were thenceforth
+regarded as mere English calumnies. With this strong tide of national
+feeling in his favour, with victorious generals and soldiers round him,
+and a dispirited and divided enemy before him, he could not fail to
+conquer; though his own imprudence and misconduct, and the stubborn
+valour which some of the English still displayed, prolonged the war in
+France nearly to the time when the civil war of the Roses broke out in
+England, and insured for France peace and repose.
+
+Joan knelt before the new-crowned king in the cathedral of Rheims, and
+shed tears of joy. She said that she had then fulfilled the work which
+the Lord had commanded her. The young girl now asked for her dismissal.
+She wished to return to her peasant home, to tend her parent's flocks
+again, and to live at her own will in her native village. ["Je voudrais
+bien qu'il voulut me faire ramener aupres mes pere et mere, et garder
+leurs brebis et betail, et faire ce que je voudrois faire."] She had
+always believed that her career would be a short one. But Charles and
+his captains were loth to lose the presence of one who had such an
+influence upon the soldiery and the people. They persuaded her to stay
+with the army. She still showed the same bravery and zeal for the cause
+of France. She was as fervent as before in her prayers, and as exemplary
+in all religious duties. She still heard her Heavenly Voices, but; she
+now no longer thought herself the appointed minister of heaven to lead
+her countrymen to certain victory. Our admiration for her courage
+and patriotism ought to be increased a hundred-fold by her conduct
+throughout the latter part of her career, amid dangers, against which
+she no longer believed herself to be divinely secured. Indeed she
+believed herself doomed to perish in little more than a year; ["Des le
+commencement elle avait dit, 'Il me faut employer: je ne durerai qu'un
+an, ou guere plus."--MICHELAIT v. p. 101.] but she still fought on as
+resolutely, if not as exultingly as ever.
+
+As in the case of Arminius, the interest attached to individual heroism
+and virtue makes us trace the fate of Joan of Arc after she had saved
+her country. She served well with Charles's army in the capture of
+Laon, Soissons, Compeigne, Beauvais, and other strong places; but in a
+premature attack on Paris, in September 1429, the French were repulsed,
+and Joan was severely wounded in the winter she was again in the field
+with some of the French troops; and in the following spring she threw
+herself into the fortress of Compeigne, which she had herself won for
+the French king in the preceding autumn, and which was now besieged by a
+strong Burgundian force.
+
+She was taken prisoner in a sally from Compeigne, on the 24th of May,
+and was imprisoned by the Burgundians first at Arras, and then at a
+place called Crotoy, on the Flemish coast, until November, when for
+payment of a large sum of money, she was given up to the English, and
+taken to Rouen, which was then their main stronghold in France.
+
+
+ "Sorrow it were, and shame to tell,
+ The butchery that there befell:"
+
+
+And the revolting details of the cruelties practised upon this young
+girl may be left to those, whose duty as avowed biographers, it is
+to describe them. [The whole of the "Proces de Condamnation at de
+Rehabilitation de Jeanne d'Arc" has been published in five volumes, by
+the Societe de l'Histoire de France. All the passages from contemporary
+chroniclers and poets are added; and the most ample materials are
+thus given for acquiring full information on a subject which is, to an
+Englishman, one of painful interest. There is an admirable essay on Joan
+of Arc, in the 138th number of the QUARTERLY.] She was tried before an
+ecclesiastical tribunal on the charge of witchcraft, and on the 30th of
+May, 1431, she was burnt alive in the market-place at Rouen.
+
+I will add but one remark on the character of the truest heroine that
+the world has ever seen.
+
+If any person can be found in the present age who would join in the
+scoffs of Voltaire against the Maid of Orleans and the Heavenly Voices
+by which she believed herself inspired, let him read the life of the
+wisest and best man that the heathen nations ever produced. Let him
+read of the Heavenly Voice, by which Socrates believed himself to be
+constantly attended; which cautioned him on his way from the field of
+battle at Delium, and which from his boyhood to the time of his death
+visited him with unearthly warnings. [See Cicero, de Divinatione, lib.
+i. sec. 41; and see the words of Socrates himself, in Plato, Apol. Soc.]
+Let the modern reader reflect upon this; and then, unless he is prepared
+to term Socrates either fool or impostor, let him not dare to deride or
+vilify Joan of Arc.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY AT ORLEANS, A.D. 1429,
+AND THE DEFEAT OP THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588.
+
+A.D. 1452. Final expulsion of the English from France.
+
+1453. Constantinople taken, and the Roman empire of the East destroyed
+by the Turkish Sultan Mahomet II.
+
+1455. Commencement of the civil wars in England between the Houses of
+York and Lancaster.
+
+1479. Union of the Christian kingdoms of Spain under Ferdinand and
+Isabella.
+
+1492. Capture of Grenada by Ferdinand and Isabella, and end of the
+Moorish dominion in Spain.
+
+1492. Columbus discovers the New World.
+
+1494. Charles VIII. of France invades Italy.
+
+1497. Expedition of Vasco di Gama to the East Indies round the Cape of
+Good Hope.
+
+1503. Naples conquered from the French by the great Spanish general,
+Gonsalvo of Cordova.
+
+1508. League of Cambray, by the Pope, the Emperor, and the King of
+France, against Venice.
+
+1509. Albuquerque establishes the empire of the Portuguese in the East
+Indies.
+
+1516. Death of Ferdinand of Spain; he is succeeded by his grandson
+Charles, afterwards the Emperor Charles V.
+
+1517. Dispute between Luther and Tetzel respecting the sale of
+indulgences, which is the immediate cause of the Reformation.
+
+1519. Charles V. is elected Emperor of Germany.
+
+1520. Cortez conquers Mexico.
+
+1525. Francis I. of France defeated and taken prisoner by the imperial
+army at Pavia.
+
+1529. League of Smalcald formed by the Protestant princes of Germany.
+
+1533. Henry VIII. renounces the Papal supremacy.
+
+1533. Pizarro conquers Peru.
+
+1556. Abdication of the Emperor Charles V. Philip II. becomes King of
+Spain, and Ferdinand I. Emperor of Germany.
+
+1557.[sic] Elizabeth becomes Queen of England.
+
+1557. The Spaniards defeat the French at the battle of St. Quentin.
+
+1571. Don John of Austria at the head of the Spanish fleet, aided by the
+Venetian and the Papal squadrons, defeats the Turks at Lepanto.
+
+1572. Massacre of the Protestants in France on St. Bartholomew's day.
+
+1579. The Netherlands revolt against Spain.
+
+1580. Philip II. conquers Portugal.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. -- THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588.
+
+
+ "In that memorable year, when the dark cloud gathered round our
+ coasts, when Europe stood by in fearful suspense to behold what
+ should be the result of that great cast in the game of human
+ politics, what the craft of Rome, the power of Philip, the genius
+ of Farnese, could achieve against the island-queen, with her
+ Drakes and Cecils,--in that agony of the Protestant faith and
+ English name."--HALLAM, CONST. HIST. vol. i. p. 220.
+
+
+On the afternoon of the 19th of July, A.D. 1588, a group of English
+captains was collected at the Bowling Green on the Hoe at Plymouth,
+whose equals have never before or since been brought together, even at
+that favourite mustering-place of the heroes of the British navy. There
+was Sir Francis Drake, the first English circumnavigator of the globe,
+the terror of every Spanish coast in the Old World and the New; there
+was Sir John Hawkins, the rough veteran of many a daring voyage on the
+African and American seas, and of many a desperate battle; there was Sir
+Martin Frobisher, one of the earliest explorers of the Arctic seas in
+search of that North-West Passage which is still the darling object of
+England's boldest mariners. There was the high-admiral of England, Lord
+Howard of Effingham, prodigal of all things in his country's cause, and
+who had recently had the noble daring to refuse to dismantle part of the
+fleet, though the Queen had sent him orders to do so, in consequence of
+an exaggerated report that the enemy had been driven back and shattered
+by a storm. Lord Howard (whom contemporary writers describe as being of
+a wise and noble courage, skilful in sea matters, wary and provident,
+and of great esteem among the sailors) resolved to risk his sovereign's
+anger, and to keep the ships afloat at his own charge, rather than that
+England should run the peril of losing their protection.
+
+Another of our Elizabethan sea-kings, Sir Walter Raleigh, was at that
+time commissioned to raise and equip the land-forces of Cornwall; but,
+as he was also commander of Plymouth, we may well believe that he
+must have availed himself of the opportunity of consulting with the
+lord-admiral and other high officers which was offered by the English
+fleet putting into that port; and we may look on Raleigh as one of the
+group that was assembled at the Bowling Green on the Hoe. Many other
+brave men and skilful mariners, besides the chiefs whose names have been
+mentioned, were there, enjoying, with true sailor-like merriment, their
+temporary relaxation from duty. In the harbour lay the English fleet
+with which they had just returned from a cruise to Corunna in search of
+information respecting the real condition and movements of the
+hostile, Armada. Lord Howard had ascertained that our enemies, though
+tempest-tost, were still formidably strong; and fearing that part of
+their fleet might make for England in his absence, he had hurried back
+to the Devonshire coast. He resumed his station at Plymouth, and waited
+there for certain tidings of the Spaniard's approach.
+
+A match at bowls was being played, in which Drake and other high
+officers of the fleet were engaged, when a small armed vessel was seen
+running before the wind into Plymouth harbour, with all sails set.
+Her commander landed in haste, and eagerly sought the place where
+the English lord-admiral and his captains were standing. His name
+was Fleming; he was the master of a Scotch privateer; and he told the
+English officers that he had that morning seen the Spanish Armada off
+the Cornish coast. At this exciting information the captains began to
+hurry down to the water, and there was a shouting for the ship's boats:
+but Drake coolly checked his comrades, and insisted that the match
+should be played out. He said that there was plenty of time both to win
+the game and beat the Spaniards. The best and bravest match that ever
+was scored was resumed accordingly. Drake and his friends aimed their
+last bowls with the same steady calculating coolness with which they
+were about to point their guns. The winning cast was made; and then they
+went on board and prepared for action, with their hearts as light and
+their nerves as firm as they had been on the Hoe Bowling Green.
+
+Meanwhile the messengers and signals had been despatched fast and far
+through England, to warn each town and village that the enemy had come
+at last. In every seaport there was instant making ready by land and by
+sea; in every shire and every city there was instant mustering of horse
+and man. [In Macaulay's Ballad on the Spanish Armada, the transmission
+of the tidings of the Armada's approach, and the arming of the English
+nation, are magnificently described. The progress of the fire-signals
+is depicted in lines which are worthy of comparison with the renowned
+passage in the Agamemnon, which describes the transmission of the
+beacon-light announcing the fall of Troy, from Mount Ida to Argos.] But
+England's best defence then, as ever, was her fleet; and after warping
+laboriously out of Plymouth harbour against the wind, the lord-admiral
+stood westward under easy sail, keeping an anxious look-out for
+the Armada, the approach of which was soon announced by Cornish
+fishing-boats, and signals from the Cornish cliffs.
+
+The England of our own days is so strong, and the Spain of our own days
+is so feeble, that it is not possible, without some reflection and care,
+to comprehend the full extent of the peril which England then ran from
+the power and the ambition of Spain, or to appreciate the importance
+of that crisis in the history of the world. We had then no Indian or
+Colonial Empire save the feeble germs of our North American settlements,
+which Raleigh and Gilbert had recently planted. Scotland was a separate
+kingdom; and Ireland was then even a greater source of weakness, and
+a worse nest of rebellion than she has been in after times. Queen
+Elizabeth had found at her accession an encumbered revenue, a divided
+people and an unsuccessful foreign war, in which the last remnant of our
+possessions in France had been lost; she had also a formidable pretender
+to her crown, whose interests were favoured by all the Roman Catholic
+powers; and even some of her subjects were warped by religious bigotry
+to deny her title, and to look on her as an heretical usurper. It is
+true that during the years of her reign which had passed away before the
+attempted invasion of 1588, she had revived the commercial prosperity,
+the national spirit, and the national loyalty of England. But her
+resources, to cope with the colossal power of Philip II., still seemed
+most scanty; and she had not a single foreign ally, except the Dutch,
+who were themselves struggling hard, and, as it seemed, hopelessly, to
+maintain their revolt against Spain.
+
+On the other hand Philip II, was absolute master of an empire so
+superior to the other states of the world in extent, in resources and
+especially in military and naval forces, as to make the project of
+enlarging that empire into a universal monarchy seem a perfectly
+feasible scheme; and Philip had both the ambition to form that project,
+and the resolution to devote all his energies, and all his means, to
+its realization. Since the downfall of the Roman empire no such
+preponderating power had existed in the world. During the mediaeval
+centuries the chief European kingdoms were slowly moulding themselves
+out of the feudal chaos. And, though their wars with each other were
+numerous and desperate, and several of their respective kings figured
+for a time as mighty conquerors, none of them in those times acquired
+the consistency and perfect organization which are requisite for a
+long-sustained career of aggrandizement. After the consolidation of
+the great kingdoms, they for some time kept each other in mutual check.
+During the first half of the sixteenth century, the balancing system
+was successfully practised by European statesmen. But when Philip II.
+reigned, France had become so miserably weak through her civil wars,
+that he had nothing to dread from the rival state, which had so long
+curbed his father the Emperor Charles V. In Germany, Italy, and Poland
+he had either zealous friends and dependents, or weak and divided
+enemies. Against the Turks he had gained great and glorious successes;
+and he might look round the continent of Europe without discerning a
+single antagonist of whom he could stand in awe. Spain, when he acceded
+to the throne, was at the zenith of her power. The hardihood and spirit
+which the Arragonese, the Castilians, and the other nations of the
+peninsula had acquired during centuries of free institutions and
+successful war against the Moors, had not yet become obliterated.
+Charles V. had, indeed, destroyed the liberties of Spain; but that had
+been done too recently for its full evil to be felt in Philip's time. A
+people cannot be debased in a single generation; and the Spaniards under
+Charles V. and Philip II. proved the truth of the remark, that no nation
+is ever so formidable to its neighbours, for a time, as is a nation,
+which, after being trained up in self-government, passes suddenly under
+a despotic ruler. The energy of democratic institutions survives for
+a few generations, and to it are superadded the decision and certainty
+which are the attributes of government, when all its powers are
+directed by a single mind. It is true that this preter-natural vigour
+is short-lived: national corruption and debasement gradually follow the
+loss of the national liberties; but there is an interval before their
+workings are felt, and in that interval the most ambitious schemes of
+foreign conquest are often successfully undertaken.
+
+Philip had also the advantage of finding himself at the head of a large
+standing army in a perfect state of discipline and equipment, in an age
+when, except some few insignificant corps, standing armies were unknown
+in Christendom. The renown of the Spanish troops was justly high, and
+the infantry in particular was considered the best in the world. His
+fleet, also, was far more numerous, and better appointed, than that of
+any other European power; and both his soldiers and his sailors had the
+confidence in themselves and their commanders, which a long career of
+successful warfare alone can create.
+
+Besides the Spanish crown, Philip succeeded to the kingdom, of Naples
+and Sicily, the Duchy of Milan, Franche-Comte, and the Netherlands. In
+Africa he possessed Tunis, Oran, the Cape Verde and the Canary Islands;
+and in Asia, the Philippine and Sunda Islands and a part of the
+Moluccas. Beyond the Atlantic he was lord of the most splendid portions
+of the New world which "Columbus found for Castile and Leon." The empire
+of Peru and Mexico, New Spain, and Chili, with their abundant mines of
+the precious metals, Hispaniola and Cuba, and many other of the American
+Islands, were provinces of the sovereign of Spain.
+
+Philip had, indeed, experienced the mortification of seeing the
+inhabitants of the Netherlands revolt against his authority, nor
+could he succeed in bringing back beneath the Spanish sceptre all
+the possessions which his father had bequeathed to him. But he had
+reconquered a large number of the towns and districts that originally
+took up arms against him. Belgium was brought more thoroughly into
+implicit obedience to Spain than she had been before her insurrection,
+and it was only Holland and the six other Northern States that still
+held out against his arms. The contest had also formed a compact and
+veteran army on Philip's side, which, under his great general, the
+Prince of Parma, had been trained to act together under all difficulties
+and all vicissitudes of warfare; and on whose steadiness and loyalty
+perfect reliance might be placed throughout any enterprise,
+however difficult and tedious. Alexander Farnese, Prince of Parma,
+captain-general of the Spanish armies, and governor of the Spanish
+possessions in the Netherlands was beyond all comparison the greatest
+military genius of his age. He was also highly distinguished for
+political wisdom and sagacity, and for his great administrative talents.
+He was idolised by his troops, whose affections he knew how to win
+without relaxing their discipline or diminishing his own authority.
+Pre-eminently cool and circumspect in his plans, but swift and energetic
+when the moment arrived for striking a decisive blow, neglecting no risk
+that caution could provide against, conciliating even the populations
+of the districts which he attacked by his scrupulous good faith, his
+moderation, and his address, Farnese was one of the most formidable
+generals that ever could be placed at the head of an army designed not
+only to win battles, but to effect conquests. Happy it is for England
+and the world that this island was saved from becoming an arena for the
+exhibition of his powers.
+
+Whatever diminution the Spanish empire might have sustained in the
+Netherlands, seemed to be more than compensated by the acquisition of
+Portugal, which Philip had completely conquered in 1580. Not only that
+ancient kingdom itself, but all the fruits of the maritime enterprises
+of the Portuguese had fallen into Philip's hands. All the Portuguese
+colonies in America, Africa, and the East Indies, acknowledged the
+sovereignty of the King of Spain; who thus not only united the
+whole Iberian peninsula under his single sceptre, but had acquired a
+transmarine empire, little inferior in wealth and extent to that which
+he had inherited at his accession. The splendid victory which his
+fleet, in conjunction with the Papal and Venetian galleys, had gained at
+Lepanto over the Turks, had deservedly exalted the fame of the Spanish
+marine throughout Christendom; and when Philip had reigned thirty-five
+years, the vigour of his empire seemed unbroken, and the glory of the
+Spanish arms had increased, and was increasing throughout the world.
+
+One nation only had been his active, his persevering, and his successful
+foe. England had encouraged his revolted subjects in Flanders against
+him, and given them the aid in men and money without which they must
+soon have been humbled in the dust. English ships had plundered his
+colonies; had denied his supremacy in the New World, as well as the
+Old; they had inflicted ignominious defeats on his squadrons; they
+had captured his cities, and burned his arsenals on the very coasts
+of Spain. The English had made Philip himself the object of personal
+insult. He was held up to ridicule in their stage plays and masks, and
+these scoffs at the man had (as is not unusual in such cases) excited
+the anger of the absolute king, even more vehemently than the injuries
+inflicted on his power. [See Ranke's Hist. Popes, vol. ii. p. 170.]
+Personal as well as political revenge urged him to attack England. Were
+she once subdued, the Dutch must submit; France could not cope with him,
+the empire would not oppose him; and universal dominion seemed sure to
+be the result of the conquest of that malignant island.
+
+There was yet another and a stronger feeling which armed King Philip
+against England. He was one of the sincerest and sternest bigots of his
+age. He looked on himself, and was looked on by others, as the
+appointed champion to extirpate heresy and re-establish the Papal power
+throughout Europe. A powerful reaction against Protestantism had
+taken place since the commencement of the second half of the sixteenth
+century, and Philip believed that he was destined to complete it. The
+Reform doctrines had been thoroughly rooted out from Italy and Spain.
+Belgium, which had previously been half Protestant, had been reconquered
+both in allegiance and creed by Philip, and had become one of the most
+Catholic countries in the world. Half Germany had been won back to
+the old faith. In Savoy, in Switzerland and many other countries, the
+progress of the counter-Reformation had been rapid and decisive. The
+Catholic league seemed victorious in France. The Papal Court itself had
+shaken off the supineness of recent centuries; and, at the head of the
+Jesuits and the other new ecclesiastical orders, was displaying a vigour
+and a boldness worthy of the days of Hildebrand or Innocent III.
+
+Throughout continental Europe, the Protestants, discomfited and
+dismayed, looked to England as their protector and refuge. England was
+the acknowledged central point of Protestant power and policy; and to
+conquer England was to stab Protestantism to the very heart. Sixtus V.,
+the then reigning pope, earnestly exhorted Philip to this enterprise.
+And when the tidings reached Italy and Spain that the Protestant Queen
+of England had put to death her Catholic prisoner, Mary Queen of Scots,
+the fury of the Vatican and Escurial knew no bounds.
+
+The Prince of Parma, who was appointed military chief of the expedition,
+collected on the coast of Flanders a veteran force that was to play a
+principal part in the conquest of England. Besides the troops who were
+in his garrisons, or under his colours, five thousand infantry were sent
+to him from northern and central Italy, four thousand from the kingdom
+of Naples, six thousand from Castile, three thousand from Arragon,
+three thousand from Austria and Germany, together with four squadrons
+of heavy-armed horse; besides which he received forces from the
+Franche-Comte and the Walloon country. By his command, the forest of
+Waes was felled for the purpose of building flat-bottomed boats, which,
+floating down the rivers and canals to Meinport and Dunkerque, were to
+carry this large army of chosen troops to the mouth of the Thames, under
+the escort of the great Spanish fleet. Gun-carriages, fascines, machines
+used in sieges, together with every material requisite for building
+bridges, forming camps, and raising fortresses, were to be placed on
+board the flotillas of the Prince of Parma, who followed up the conquest
+of the Netherlands, whilst he was making preparations for the invasion
+of this island. Favoured by the dissensions between the insurgents of
+the United Provinces and Leicester, the Prince of Parma had recovered
+Deventer, as well as a fort before Zutphen, which the English
+commanders, Sir William Stanley, the friend of Babbington, and Sir
+Roland York, had surrendered to him, when with their troops they passed
+over to the service of Philip II., after the death of Mary Stuart, and
+he had also made himself master of the Sluys. His intention was to leave
+to the Count de Mansfeldt sufficient forces to follow up the war with
+the Dutch, which had now become a secondary object, whilst he himself
+went at the head of fifty thousand men of the Armada and the flotilla,
+to accomplish the principal enterprise--that enterprise, which, in the
+highest degree, affected the interests of the pontifical authority. In
+a bull, intended to be kept secret until the day of landing, Sixtus
+V., renewing the anathema fulminated against Elizabeth by Pius V. and
+Gregory XIII., affected to depose her from our throne. [See Mignet's
+Mary Queen of Scots vol. ii.]
+
+Elizabeth was denounced as a murderous heretic whose destruction was an
+instant duty. A formal treaty was concluded (in June, 1587), by which
+the pope bound himself to contribute a million of scudi to the expenses
+of the war; the money to be paid as soon as the king had actual
+possession of an English port. Philip, on his part, strained the
+resources of his vast empire to the utmost. The French Catholic chiefs
+eagerly co-operated with him. In the sea-ports of the Mediterranean, and
+along almost the whole coast from Gibraltar to Jutland, the preparations
+for the great armament were urged forward with all the earnestness of
+religious zeal, as well as of angry ambition.--"Thus," says the German
+historian of the Popes, [Ranke, vol ii. p. 172.] "thus did the united
+powers of Italy and Spain, from which such mighty influences had gone
+forth over the whole world, now rouse themselves for an attack upon
+England! The king had already compiled, from the archives of Simancas,
+a statement of the claims which he had to the throne of that country
+on the extinction of the Stuart line; the most brilliant prospects,
+especially that of an universal dominion of the seas, were associated
+in his mind with this enterprise. Everything seemed to conspire to such
+end; the predominance of Catholicism in Germany, the renewed attack upon
+the Huguenots in France, the attempt upon Geneva, and the enterprise
+against England. At the same moment a thoroughly Catholic prince,
+Sigismund III., ascended the throne of Poland, with the prospect also of
+future succession to the throne of Sweden. But whenever any principle
+or power, be it what it may, aims at unlimited supremacy in Europe, some
+vigorous resistance to it, having its origin in the deepest springs
+of human nature, invariably arises. Philip II. had had, to encounter
+newly-awakened powers, braced by the vigour of youth, and elevated by a
+sense of their future destiny. The intrepid corsairs, who had rendered
+every sea insecure, now clustered round the coasts of their native
+island. The Protestants in a body,--even the Puritans, although they had
+been subjected to as severe oppressions as the Catholics,--rallied round
+their queen, who now gave admirable proof of her masculine courage, and
+her princely talent of winning the affections, and leading the minds,
+and preserving the allegiance of men."
+
+Ranke should have added that the English Catholics at this crisis proved
+themselves as loyal to their queen, and true to their country, as were
+the most vehement anti-Catholic zealots in the island. Some few traitors
+there were; but, as a body, the Englishmen who held the ancient faith,
+stood the trial of their patriotism nobly. The lord-admiral himself was
+a Catholic, and (to adopt the words of Hallam) "then it was that
+the Catholics in every county repaired to the standard of the
+lord-lieutenant, imploring that they might not be suspected of bartering
+the national independence for their religion itself." The Spaniard
+found no partisans in the country which he assailed, nor did England,
+self-wounded,
+
+ "Lie at the proud foot of her enemy."
+
+For some time the destination of the enormous armament of Philip was not
+publicly announced. Only Philip himself, the Pope Sixtus, the Duke of
+Guise, and Philip's favourite minister, Mendoza, at first knew its real
+object. Rumours were sedulously spread that it was designed to proceed
+to the Indies to realize vast projects of distant conquest. Sometimes
+hints were dropped by Philip's ambassadors in foreign courts, that his
+master had resolved on a decisive effort to crush his rebels in the Low
+Countries. But Elizabeth and her statesmen could not view the gathering
+of such a storm without feeling the probability of its bursting on their
+own shores. As early as the spring of 1587, Elizabeth sent Sir Francis
+Drake to cruise off the Tagus. Drake sailed into the Bay of Cadiz and
+the Lisbon Roads, and burnt much shipping and military stores, causing
+thereby an important delay in the progress of the Spanish preparations.
+Drake called this "Singeing the King of of Spain's beard." Elizabeth
+also increased her succours of troops to the Netherlanders, to prevent
+the Prince of Parma from overwhelming them, and from thence being at
+full leisure to employ his army against her dominions.
+
+Each party at this time thought it politic to try to amuse its adversary
+by pretending to treat for peace, and negotiations were opened at Ostend
+in the beginning of 1588, which were prolonged during the first six
+months of that year. Nothing real was effected, and probably nothing
+real had been intended to be effected by them. But, in the meantime,
+each party had been engaged in important communications with the chief
+powers in France, in which Elizabeth seemed at first to have secured a
+great advantage, but in which Philip ultimately prevailed. "Henry III.
+of France was alarmed at the negotiations that were going on at Ostend;
+and he especially dreaded any accommodation between Spain and England,
+in consequence of which Philip II. might be enabled to subdue the United
+Provinces, and make himself master of France. In order, therefore, to
+dissuade Elizabeth from any arrangement, he offered to support her,
+in case she were attacked by the Spaniards, with twice the number
+of troops, which he was bound by the treaty of 1574 to send to her
+assistance. He had a long conference with her ambassador, Stafford,
+upon this subject, and told him that the Pope and the Catholic King had
+entered into a league against the queen, his mistress, and had invited
+himself and the Venetians to join them, but they had refused to do
+so. 'If the Queen of England,' he added, 'concludes a peace with the
+Catholic king, that peace will not last three months, because the
+Catholic king will aid the League with all his forces to overthrow her,
+and you may imagine what fate is reserved for your mistress after
+that.' On the other hand, in order most effectually to frustrate this
+negotiation, he proposed to Philip II. to form a still closer union
+between the two crowns of France and Spain: and, at the same time, he
+secretly despatched a confidential envoy to Constantinople to warn the
+Sultan, that if he did not again declare war against the Catholic King,
+that monarch, who already possessed the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain,
+the Indies, and nearly all Italy, would soon make himself master of
+England, and would then turn the forces of all Europe against the
+Turks." [Mignet's History of Mary Queen of Scots. vol. ii.]
+
+But Philip had an ally in France, who was far more powerful than the
+French king. This was the Duke of Guise, the chief of the League, and
+the idol of the fanatic partisans of the Romish faith. Philip prevailed
+on Guise openly to take up arms against Henry III. (who was reviled by
+the Leaguers as a traitor to the true Church, and a secret friend to the
+Huguenots); and thus prevent the French king from interfering in favour
+of Queen Elizabeth. "With this object, the commander, Juan Iniguez
+Moreo, was despatched by him in the early part of April to the Duke of
+Guise at Soissons. He met with complete success. He offered the Duke of
+Guise, as soon as he took the field against Henry III., three hundred
+thousand crowns, six thousand infantry, and twelve hundred pikemen,
+on behalf of the king his master, who would, in addition, withdraw
+his ambassador from the court of France, and accredit an envoy to the
+Catholic party. A treaty was concluded on these conditions, and the
+Duke of Guise entered Paris, where he was expected by the Leaguers, and
+whence he expelled Henry III. on the 12th of May, by the insurrection of
+the barricades. A fortnight after this insurrection, which reduced Henry
+III. to impotence, and, to use the language of the Prince of Parma, did
+not even 'permit him to assist the Queen of England with his tears, as
+he needed them all to weep over his own misfortunes,' the Spanish fleet
+left the Tagus and sailed towards the British isles." [Mignet.]
+
+Meanwhile in England, from the sovereign on the throne to the peasant in
+the cottage, all hearts and hands made ready to meet the imminent
+deadly peril. Circular letters from the queen were sent round to
+the lord-lieutenants of the several counties requiring them "to call
+together the best sort of gentlemen under their lieutenancy, and to
+declare unto them these great preparations and arrogant threatenings,
+now burst forth in action upon the seas, wherein every man's particular
+state, in the highest degree, could be touched in respect of country,
+liberty, wives, children, lands, lives, and (which was specially to be
+regarded) the profession of the true and sincere religion of Christ: and
+to lay before them the infinite and unspeakable miseries that would
+fall out upon any such change, which miseries were evidently seen by
+the fruits of that hard and cruel government holden in countries not far
+distant. We do look," said the queen, "that the most part of them should
+have, upon this instant extraordinary occasion, a larger proportion of
+furniture, both for horseman and footmen, but especially horsemen, than
+hath been certified; thereby to be in their best strength against any
+attempt, or to be employed about our own person, or otherwise. Hereunto
+as we doubt not but by your good endeavours they will be the rather
+conformable, so also we assure ourselves, that Almighty God will so
+bless these their loyal hearts borne towards us, their loving sovereign,
+and their natural country, that all the attempts of any enemy whatsoever
+shall be made void and frustrate, to their confusion, your comfort, and
+to God's high glory." [Strype, cited in Southey's Naval History.]
+
+Letters of a similar kind were also sent by the council to each of the
+nobility, and to the great cities. The primate called on the clergy for
+their contributions; and by every class of the community the appeal was
+responded to with liberal zeal, that offered more even than the queen
+required. The boasting threats of the Spaniards had roused the spirit of
+the nation; and the whole people "were thoroughly irritated to stir
+up their whole forces for their defence against such prognosticated
+conquests; so that, in a very short time, all the whole realm, and every
+corner were furnished with armed men, on horseback and on foot; and
+these continually trained, exercised, and put into bands, in warlike
+manner, as in no age ever was before in this realm. There was no sparing
+of money to provide horse, armour, weapons, powder, and all necessaries;
+no, nor want of provision of pioneers, carriages, and victuals, in every
+county of the realm, without exception, to attend upon the armies. And
+to this general furniture every man voluntarily offered, very many their
+services personally without wages, others money for armour and weapons,
+and to wage soldiers: a matter strange, and never the like heard of in
+this realm or else where. And this general reason moved all men to large
+contributions, that when a conquest was to be withstood wherein
+all should be lost, it was no time to spare a portion." [Copy of
+contemporary letter in the Harleian Collection, quoted by Southey.]
+
+Our lion-hearted queen showed herself worthy of such a people. A camp
+was formed at Tilbury; and there Elizabeth rode through the ranks,
+encouraging her captains and her soldiers by her presence and her words.
+One of the speeches which she addressed to them during this crisis has
+been preserved; and, though often quoted, it must not be omitted here.
+
+"My loving people," she said, "we have been persuaded by some that are
+careful of our safety, to take heed how we commit ourselves to armed
+multitudes for fear of treachery; but I assure you I do not desire to
+live to distrust my faithful and loving people. Let tyrants fear! I have
+always so behaved myself, that, under God, I have placed my chiefest
+strength and safeguard in the loyal hearts and good will of my subjects;
+and, therefore, I am come amongst you, as you see, at this time, not for
+my recreation or disport, but being resolved, in the midst and heat of
+the battle, to live or die amongst you all, to lay down for my God, for
+my kingdom, and for my people, my honour and my blood, even in the dust.
+I know I have the body but of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the
+heart and stomach of a king, and of a King of England too; and think it
+foul scorn that Parma, or Spain, or any prince of Europe, should dare
+to invade the borders of my realm; to which, rather than any dishonour
+shall grow by me, I myself will take up arms, I myself will be your
+general, judge, and rewarder of every one of your virtues in the field.
+I know already for your forwardness you have deserved rewards and
+crowns; and we do assure you, on the word of a prince, they shall be
+duly paid you. In the meantime, my lieutenant-general shall be in my
+stead, than whom never prince commanded a more noble or worthy subject,
+not doubting but by your obedience to my general, by your concord in
+the camp, and your valour in the field, we shall shortly have a famous
+victory over those enemies of my God, of my kingdom, and of my people."
+
+We have minute proofs of the skill with which the government of
+Elizabeth made its preparations; for the documents still exist which
+were drawn up at that time by the ministers and military men who were
+consulted by Elizabeth respecting the defence of the country. [See note
+in Tytler's Life of Raleigh, p. 71.] Among those summoned to the advice
+of their queen at this crisis, were Sir Walter Raleigh, Lord Grey,
+Sir Francis Knolles, Sir Thomas Leighton, Sir John Norris, Sir Richard
+Grenville, Sir Richard Bingham, and Sir Roger Williams; and the
+biographer of Sir Walter Raleigh observes that "These councillors were
+chosen by the queen, as being not only men bred to arms, and some of
+them, as Grey, Norris, Bingham, and Grenville, of high military talents,
+but of grave experience in affairs of state, and in the civil government
+of provinces,--qualities by no means means unimportant, when the debate
+referred not merely to the leading of an army or the plan of a campaign,
+but to the organization of a militia, and the communication with the
+magistrates for arming the peasantry, and encouraging them to a resolute
+and simultaneous resistance. From some private papers of Lord
+Burleigh, it appears that Sir Walter took a principal share in these
+deliberations; and the abstract of their proceedings, a document still
+preserved, is supposed to have been drawn up by him. They first prepared
+a list of places where it was likely the Spanish army might attempt a
+descent, as well as of those which lay most exposed to the forces under
+the Duke of Parma. They next considered the speediest and most effectual
+means of defence, whether by fortification or the muster of a military
+array; and, lastly, deliberated on the course to be taken for fighting
+the enemy if he should land."
+
+Some of Elizabeth's advisers recommended that the whole care and
+resources of the government should be devoted to the equipment of
+the armies, and that the enemy, when he attempted to land, should be
+welcomed with a battle on the shore. But the wiser counsels of Raleigh
+and others prevailed, who urged the importance of fitting out a fleet,
+that should encounter the Spaniards at sea, and, if possible, prevent
+them from approaching the land at all. In Raleigh's great work on the
+"History of the World," he takes occasion, when discussing some of the
+events of the first Punic war, to give his reasonings on the proper
+policy of England when menaced with invasion. Without doubt, we have
+there the substance of the advice which he gave to Elizabeth's council;
+and the remarks of such a man, on such a subject, have a general and
+enduring interest, beyond the immediate peril which called them forth.
+Raleigh [Historie of the World pp. 799--801.] says:--"Surely I hold
+that the best way is to keep our enemies from treading upon our ground:
+wherein if we fail, then must we seek to make him wish that he had
+stayed at his own home. In such a case if it should happen, our
+judgments are to weigh many particular circumstances, that belongs not
+unto this discourse. But making the question general, the positive,
+WHETHER England, WITHOUT THE HELP OF HER FLEET, BE ABLE TO DEBAR AN
+ENEMY FROM LANDING; I hold that it is unable so to do; and therefore I
+think it most dangerous to make the adventure. For the encouragement of
+a first victory to an enemy, and the discouragement of being beaten, to
+the invaded, may draw after it a most perilous consequence.
+
+"Great difference I know there is, and a diverse consideration to
+be had, between such a country as France is, strengthened with many
+fortified places; and this of ours, where our ramparts are but the
+bodies of men. But I say that an army to be transported over sea, and to
+be landed again in an enemy's country, and the place left to the choice
+of the invader, cannot be resisted on the coast of England, without
+a fleet to impeach it; no, nor on the coast of France, or any other
+country; except every creek, port, or sandy bay, had a powerful army,
+in each of them, to make opposition. For let the supposition be granted
+that Kent is able to furnish twelve thousand foot, and that those twelve
+thousand be layed in the three best landing-places within that country,
+to wit, three thousand at Margat, three thousand at the Nesse, and six
+thousand at Foulkstone, that is, somewhat equally distant from them
+both; as also that two of these troops (unless some other order be
+thought more fit) be directed to strengthen the third, when they shall
+see the enemies' fleet to head towards it: I say, that notwithstanding
+this provision, if the enemy, setting sail from the Isle of Wight,
+in the first watch of the night, and towing their long boats at their
+sterns, shall arrive by dawn of day at the Nesse, and thrust their army
+on shore there, it will be hard for those three thousand that are at
+Margat (twenty-and-four long miles from thence), to come time enough to
+reinforce their fellows at the Nesse. Nay, how shall they at Foulkstone
+be able to do it, who are nearer by more than half the way? seeing that
+the enemy, at his first arrival, will either make his entrance by force,
+with three or four shot of great artillery, and quickly put the first
+three thousand that are entrenched at the Nesse to run, or else
+give them so much to do that they shall be glad to send for help to
+Foulkstone, and perhaps to Margat, whereby those places will be left
+bare. Now let us suppose that all the twelve thousand Kentish soldiers
+arrive at the Nesse, ere the enemy can be ready to disembarque his army,
+so that he will find it unsafe to land in the face of so many prepared
+to withstand him, yet must we believe that he will play the best of his
+own game (having liberty to go which way he list), and under covert of
+the night, set sail towards the east, where what shall hinder him to
+take ground either at Margat, the Downes, or elsewhere, before they,
+at the Nesse, can be well aware of his departure? Certainly there is
+nothing more easy than to do it. Yea, the like may be said of Weymouth,
+Purbeck, Poole, and of all landing-places on the south-west. For there
+is no man ignorant, that ships without putting themselves out of breath,
+will easily outrun the souldiers that coast them. 'LES ARMEES NE VOLENT
+POINT EN POSTE;'--'Armies neither flye, nor run post,' saith a marshal
+of France. And I know it to be true, that a fleet of ships may be seen
+at sunset, and after it at the Lizard, yet by the next morning they may
+recover Portland, whereas an army of foot shall not be able to march it
+in six dayes. Again, when those troops lodged on the sea-shores, shall
+be forced to run from place to place in vain, after a fleet of ships,
+they will at length sit down in the midway, and leave all at adventure.
+But say it were otherwise, that the invading enemy will offer to land in
+some such place, where there shall be an army of ours ready to receive
+him; yet it cannot be doubted, but that when the choice of all our
+trained bands, and the choice of our commanders and captains, shall be
+drawn together (as they were at Tilbury in the year 1588) to attend the
+person of the prince, and for the defence of the city of London; they
+that remain to guard the coast can be of no such force as to encounter
+an army like unto that wherewith it was intended that the Prince of
+Parma should have landed in England.
+
+"For end of this digression, I hope that this question shall never come
+to trial; his majestie's many moveable forts will forbid the experience.
+And although the English will no less disdain that any nation under
+heaven can do, to be beaten, upon their own ground, or elsewhere, by a
+foreign enemy; yet to entertain those that shall assail us with their
+own beef in their bellies, and before they eat of our Kentish capons, I
+take it to be the wisest way; to do which his majesty, after God, will
+employ his good ships on the sea, and not trust in any intrenchment upon
+the shore."
+
+The introduction of steam as a propelling power at sea, has added
+tenfold weight to these arguments of Raleigh, On the other hand, a
+well-constructed system of railways, especially of coast-lines, aided
+by the operation or the electric telegraph, would give facilities for
+concentrating a defensive army to oppose an enemy on landing, and for
+moving troops from place to place in observation of the movements of the
+hostile fleet, such as would have astonished Sir Walter even more than
+the sight of vessels passing rapidly to and fro without the aid of wind
+or tide. The observation of the French marshal, whom he quotes, is now
+no longer correct. Armies can be made to pass from place to place almost
+with the speed of wings, and far more rapidly than any post-travelling
+that was known in the Elizabethan or any other age. Still, the presence
+of a sufficient armed force at the right spot, at the right time, can
+never be made a matter of certainty; and even after the changes that
+have taken place, no one can doubt but that the policy of Raleigh is
+that which England should ever seek to follow in defensive war. At the
+time of the Armada, that policy certainly saved the country, if not from
+conquest, at least from deplorable calamities. If indeed the enemy had
+landed, we may be sure that he would have been heroically opposed. But
+history shows us so many examples of the superiority of veteran troops
+over new levies, however numerous and brave, that without disparaging
+our countrymen's soldierly merits, we may well be thankful that no trial
+of them was then made on English land. Especially must we feel this,
+when we contrast the high military genius of the Prince of Parma, who
+would have headed the Spaniards, with the imbecility of the Earl of
+Leicester, to whom the deplorable spirit of favouritism, which formed
+the greatest blemish in Elizabeth's character, had then committed the
+chief command of the English armies.
+
+The ships of the royal navy at this time amounted to no more than
+thirty-six; but the most serviceable merchant vessels were collected
+from all the ports of the country; and the citizens of London, Bristol,
+and the other great seats of commerce, showed as liberal a zeal in
+equipping and manning vessels as the nobility and gentry displayed in
+mustering forces by land. The seafaring population of the coast, of
+every rank and station, was animated by the same ready spirit; and the
+whole number of seamen who came forward to man the English fleet was
+17,472. The number of the ships that were collected was 191; and the
+total amount of their tonnage 31,985. There was one ship in the fleet
+(the Triumph) of 1100 tons, one of 1000, one of 900, two of 800 each,
+three of 600, five of 600, five of 400, six of 300, six of 250, twenty
+of 200, and the residue of inferior burden. Application was made to the
+Dutch for assistance; and, as Stows expresses it, "The Hollanders came
+roundly in, with threescore sail, brave ships of war, fierce and full of
+spleen, not so much for England's aid, as in just occasion for their
+own defence; these men foreseeing the greatness of the danger that might
+ensue, if the Spaniards should chance to win the day and get the mastery
+over them; in due regard whereof their manly courage was inferior to
+none."
+
+We have more minute information of the numbers and equipment of the
+hostile forces than we have of our own. In the first volume of Hakluyt's
+"Voyages," dedicated to Lord Effingham, who commanded against the
+Armada, there is given (from the contemporary foreign writer, Meteran) a
+more complete and detailed catalogue than has perhaps ever appeared of a
+similar armament.
+
+"A very large and particular description of this navie was put in print
+and published by the Spaniards; wherein was set downe the number,
+names, and burthens of the shippes, the number of mariners and soldiers
+throughout the whole fleete; likewise the quantitie of their ordinance,
+of their armour of bullets, of match, of gun-poulder, of victuals,
+and of all their navall furniture, was in the saide description
+particularized. Unto all these were added the names of the governours,
+captaines, noblemen, and gentlemen voluntaries, of whom there was so
+great a multitude, that scarce was there any family of accompt, or any
+one principall man throughout all Spaine, that had not a brother, sonne,
+or kinsman in that fleete; who all of them were in good hope to purchase
+unto themselves in that navie (as they termed it) invincible, endless
+glory and renown, and to possess themselves of great seigniories and
+riches in England, and in the Low Countreys. But because the said
+description was translated and published out of Spanish into divers
+other languages, we will here only make an abridgement or brief
+rehearsal thereof.
+
+"Portugal furnished and set foorth under the conduct of the Duke of
+Medina Sidonia, generall of the fleete, ten galeons, two zabraes,
+1300 mariners, 3300 souldiers, 300 great pieces, with all requisite
+furniture.
+
+"Biscay, under the conduct of John Martines de Ricalde, admiral of the
+whole fleete, set forth tenne galeons, four pataches, 700 mariners, 2000
+souldiers, 260 great pieces, &c.
+
+"Guipusco, under the conduct of Michael de Orquendo, tenne galeons, four
+pataches, 700 mariners, 2000 souldiers, 310 great pieces.
+
+"Italy with the Levant Islands, under Martine de Vertendona, ten
+galeons, 800 mariners, 2000 souldiers, 310 great pieces, &c.
+
+"Castile, under Diego Flores de Valdez, fourteen galeons, two pataches,
+1700 mariners, 2400 souldiers, and 388 great pieces, &c.
+
+"Andaluzia, under the conduct of Petro de Valdez, ten galeons, one
+patache, 800 mariners, 2400 souldiers, 280 great pieces, &c.
+
+"Item, under the conduct of John Lopez de Medina, twenty-three great
+Flemish hulkes, with 700 mariners, 3200 souldiers, and 400 great pieces,
+
+"Item, under Hugo de Moncada, fours galliasses, containing 1200
+gally-slaves, 460 mariners, 870 souldiers, 200 great pieces, &c.
+
+"Item, under Diego de Mandrana, fours gallies of Portugall with 888
+gally-slaves, 360 mariners, twenty great pieces, and other requisite
+furniture.
+
+"Item, under Anthonie de Mendoza, twenty-two pataches and zabraes, with
+574 mariners, 488 souldiers, and 193 great pieces.
+
+"Besides the ships aforementioned, there were twenty caravels rowed with
+oares, being appointed to perform necessary services under the greater
+ships, insomuch that all the ships appertayning to this navie amounted
+unto the summe of 150, eche one being sufficiently provided of furniture
+and victuals.
+
+"The number of mariners in the saide fleete were above 8000, of slaves
+2088, of souldiers 20,000 (besides noblemen and gentlemen voluntaries),
+of great cast pieces 2600. The aforesaid ships were of an huge and
+incredible capacitie and receipt: for the whole fleete was large enough
+to contains the burthen of 60,000 tunnes.
+
+"The galeons were 64 in number, being of an huge bignesse, and very
+flately built, being of marveilous force also, and so high, that they
+resembled great castles, most fit to defend themselves and to withstand
+any assault, but in giving any other ships the encounter farr inferiour
+unto the English and Dutch ships, which can with great dexteritie weild
+and turne themselves at all assayes. The upperworke of the said galeons
+was of thicknesse and strength sufficient to bear off musket-shot. The
+lower works and the timbers thereof were out of measure strong, being
+framed of plankes and ribs fours or five foote in thicknesse, insomuch
+that no bullets could pierce them, but such as were discharged hard at
+hand; which afterward prooved true, for a great number of bullets
+were found to sticke fast within the massie substance of those thicke
+plankes. Great and well pitched cables were twined about the masts of
+their shippes, to strengthen them against the battery of shot.
+
+"The galliasses were of such bignesse, that they contained within them
+chambers, chapels, turrets, pulpits, and other commodities of great
+houses. The galliasses were rowed with great oares, there being in eche
+one of them 300 slaves for the same purpose and were able to do great
+service with the force of their ordinance. All these, together with
+the residue aforenamed, were furnished and beautified with trumpets,
+streamers, banners, warlike ensignes, and other such like ornaments.
+
+"Their pieces of brazen ordinance were 1600, and of yron 1000.
+
+"The bullets thereto belonging were 120 thousand.
+
+"Item of gun-poulder, 5600 quintals. Of matche, 1200 quintals. Of
+muskets and kaleivers, 7000. Of haleberts and partisans, 10,000.
+
+"Moreover they had great store of canons, double-canons, culverings and
+field-pieces for land services.
+
+"Likewise they were provided of all instruments necessary on land to
+conveigh and transport their furniture from place to place; as namely of
+carts, wheeles, wagons, &c. Also they had spades, mattocks, and baskets,
+to set pioners to works. They had in like sort great store of mules and
+horses, and whatsoever else was requisite for a land-armie. They were so
+well stored of biscuit, that for the space of halfe a yeere, they might
+allow eche person in the whole fleete halfe a quintall every month;
+whereof the whole summe amounteth unto an hundreth thousand quintals.
+
+"Likewise of wine they had 147 thousand pipes, sufficient also for halfe
+a yeeres expedition. Of bacon, 6500 quintals. Of cheese, three thousand
+quintals. Besides fish, rise, beanes, pease, oils, vinegar, &c.
+
+"Moreover they had 12,000 pipes of fresh water, and all other necessary
+provision, as, namely, candles, lanternes, lampes, sailes, hempe,
+oxe-hides, and lead to stop holes that should be made with the battery
+of gun-shot. To be short, they brought all things expedient, either for
+a fleete by sea, or for an armie by land.
+
+"This navie (as Diego Pimentelli afterward confessed) was esteemed by
+the king himselfe to containe 32,000 persons, and to cost him every day
+30 thousand ducates.
+
+"There were in the said navie five terzaes of Spaniards (which terzaes
+the Frenchmen call regiments), under the command of five governours,
+termed by the Spaniards masters of the field, and amongst the rest
+there were many olde and expert souldiers chosen out of the garisons
+of Sicilie, Naples, and Tercera. Their captaines or colonels were Diego
+Pimentelli, Don Francisco de Toledo, Don Alonco de Lucon, Don Nicolas de
+Isla, Don Augustin de Mexia; who had each of them thirty-two companies
+under their conduct. Besides the which companies, there were many bands
+also of Castilians and Portugals, every one of which had their peculiar
+governours, captains, officers, colours, and weapons."
+
+While this huge armada was making ready in the southern ports of the
+Spanish dominions, the Prince of Parma, with almost incredible toil and
+skill, collected a squadron of war-ships at Dunkirk, and his flotilla of
+other ships and of flat-bottomed boats for the transport to England of
+the picked troops, which were designed to be the main instruments in
+subduing England. Thousands of workmen were employed, night and day, in
+the construction of these vessels, in the ports of Flanders and Brabant.
+One hundred of the kind called hendes, built at Antwerp, Bruges, and
+Ghent, and laden with provision and ammunition, together with sixty
+flat-bottomed boats, each capable of carrying thirty horses, were
+brought, by means of canals and fosses, dug expressly for the purpose,
+to Nieuport and Dunkirk. One hundred smaller vessels were equipped
+at the former place, and thirty-two at Dunkirk, provided with twenty
+thousand empty barrels, and with materials for making pontoons, for
+stopping up the harbours, and raising forts and entrenchments. The
+army which these vessels were designed to convey to England amounted
+to thirty thousand strong, besides a body of four thousand cavalry,
+stationed at Courtroi, composed chiefly of the ablest veterans of
+Europe; invigorated by rest, (the siege of Sluys having been the only
+enterprise in which they were employed during the last campaign,) and
+excited by the hopes of plunder and the expectation of certain conquest.
+[Davis's Holland, vol. ii. p. 219.] And "to this great enterprise
+and imaginary conquest, divers princes and noblemen came from divers
+countries; out of Spain came the Duke of Pestrana, who was said to be
+the son of Ruy Gomez de Silva, but was held to be the king's bastard;
+the Marquis of Bourgou, one of the Archduke Ferdinand's sons, by
+Philippina Welserine; Don Vespasian Gonzaga, of the house of Mantua,
+a great soldier, who had been viceroy in Spain; Giovanni de Medici,
+Bastard of Florence; Amedo, Bastard of Savoy, with many such like,
+besides others of meaner quality." [Grimstone, cited in Southey.]
+
+Philip had been advised by the deserter, Sir William Stanley, not to
+attack England in the first instance, but first to effect a landing
+and secure a strong position in Ireland; his admiral, Santa Cruz, had
+recommended him to make sure, in the first instance, of some large
+harbour on the coast of Holland or Zealand, where the Armada, having
+entered the Channel, might find shelter in case of storm, and whence
+it could sail without difficulty for England; but Philip rejected both
+these counsels, and directed that England itself should be made the
+immediate object of attack; and on the 20th of May the Armada left the
+Tagus, in the pomp and pride of supposed invincibility, and amidst the
+shouts of thousands, who believed that England was already conquered.
+But steering to the northward, and before it was clear of the coast of
+Spain, the Armada, was assailed by a violent storm, and driven back with
+considerable damage to the ports of Biscay and Galicia. It had, however,
+sustained its heaviest loss before it left the Tagus, in the death
+of the veteran admiral Santa Cruz, who had been destined to guide it
+against England.
+
+This experienced sailor, notwithstanding his diligence and success, had
+been unable to keep pace with the impatient ardour of his master.
+Philip II. had reproached him with his dilatoriness, and had said with
+ungrateful harshness, "You make an ill return for all my kindness to
+you." These words cut the veteran's heart, and proved fatal to Santa
+Cruz. Overwhelmed with fatigue and grief, he sickened and died. Philip
+II. had replaced him by Alonzo Perez de Gusman, Duke of Medina Sidonia,
+one of the most powerful of the Spanish grandees, but wholly unqualified
+to command such an expedition. He had, however, as his lieutenants, two
+sea men of proved skill and bravery, Juan de Martinez Recalde of Biscay,
+and Miguel Orquendo of Guipuzcoa.
+
+The report of the storm which had beaten back the Armada reached England
+with much exaggeration, and it was supposed by some of the queen's
+counsellors that the invasion would now be deferred to another year. But
+Lord Howard of Effingham, the lord high-admiral of the English fleet,
+judged more wisely that the danger was not yet passed, and, as already
+mentioned, had the moral courage to refuse to dismantle his principal
+ships, though he received orders to that effect. But it was not Howard's
+design to keep the English fleet in costly inaction, and to wait
+patiently in our own harbours, till the Spaniards had recruited their
+strength, and sailed forth again to attack us. The English seamen of
+that age (like their successors) loved to strike better than to parry,
+though, when emergency required, they could be patient and cautious in
+their bravery. It was resolved to proceed to Spain, to learn the enemy's
+real condition, and to deal him any blow for which there might be
+opportunity. In this bold policy we may well believe him to have been
+eagerly seconded by those who commanded under him. Howard and Drake
+sailed accordingly to Corunna, hoping to surprise and attack some part
+of the Armada in that harbour; but when near the coast of Spain, the
+north wind, which had blown up to that time, veered suddenly to the
+south; and fearing that the Spaniards might put to sea and pass him
+unobserved, Howard returned to the entrance of the Channel, where he
+cruised for some time on the look-out for the enemy. In part of a letter
+written by him at this period, he speaks of the difficulty of guarding
+so large a breadth of sea--a difficulty that ought not to be forgotten
+when modern schemes of defence against hostile fleets from the south are
+discussed. "I myself," he wrote, "do lie in the midst of the Channel,
+with the greatest force; Sir Francis Drake hath twenty ships, and four
+or five pinnaces, which lie towards Ushant; and Mr. Hawkins, with as
+many more, lieth towards Scilly. Thus we are fain to do, or else with
+this wind they might pass us by, and we never the wiser. The SLEEVE is
+another manner of thing than it was taken for: we find it by experience
+and daily observation to be 100 miles over: a large room for me to
+look unto!" But after some time further reports that the Spaniards
+were inactive in their harbour, where they were suffering severely from
+sickness, caused Howard also to relax in his vigilance; and he returned
+to Plymouth with the greater part of his fleet.
+
+On the 12th of July, the Armada having completely refitted, sailed again
+for the Channel, and reached it without obstruction or observation by
+the English.
+
+The design of the Spaniards was, that the Armada should give them, at
+least for a time, the command of the sea, and that it should join the
+squadron which Parma had collected, off Calais. Then, escorted by an
+overpowering naval force, Parma and his army were to embark in their
+flotilla, and cross the sea to England where they were to be landed,
+together with the troops which the Armada brought from the ports of
+Spain. The scheme was not dissimilar to one formed against England a
+little more than two centuries afterwards.
+
+As Napoleon, in 1805, waited with his army and flotilla at Boulogne,
+looking for Villeneuve to drive away the English cruisers, and secure
+him a passage across the Channel, so Parma, in 1588, waited for Medina
+Sidonia to drive away the Dutch and English squadrons that watched his
+flotilla, and to enable his veterans to cross the sea to the land that
+they were to conquer. Thanks to Providence, in each case England's enemy
+waited in vain!
+
+Although the numbers of sail which the queen's government, and the
+patriotic zeal of volunteers, had collected for the defence of England
+exceeded the number of sail in the Spanish fleet, the English ships
+were, collectively, far inferior in size to their adversaries; their
+aggregate tonnage being less by half than that of the enemy. In the
+number of guns, and weight of metal, the disproportion was still
+greater. The English admiral was also obliged to subdivide his force;
+and Lord Henry Seymour, with forty of the best Dutch and English
+ships, was employed in blockading the hostile ports in Flanders, and in
+preventing the Prince of Parma from coming out of Dunkirk.
+
+The orders of King Philip to the Duke de Medina Sidonia were, that he
+should, on entering the Channel, keep near the French coast, and, if
+attacked by the English ships, avoid an action, and steer on to Calais
+roads, where the Prince of Parma's squadron was to join him. The hope of
+surprising and destroying the English fleet in Plymouth, led the Spanish
+admiral to deviate from these orders, and to stand across to the English
+shore; but, on finding that Lord Howard was coming out to meet him,
+he resumed the original plan, and determined to bend his way steadily
+towards Calais and Dunkirk, and to keep merely on the defensive against
+such squadrons of the English as might come up with him.
+
+It was on Saturday, the 20th of July, that Lord Effingham came in sight
+of his formidable adversaries. The Armada was drawn up in form of a
+crescent, which from horn to horn measured some seven miles. There was
+a south-west wind; and before it the vast vessels sailed slowly on. The
+English let them pass by; and then, following in the rear, commenced
+an attack on them. A running fight now took place, in which some of
+the best ships of the Spaniards were captured; many more received heavy
+damage; while the English vessels, which took care not to close with
+their huge antagonists, but availed themselves of their superior
+celerity in tacking and manoeuvring, suffered little comparative loss.
+Each day added not only to the spirit, but to the number of Effingham's
+force. Raleigh, Oxford, Cumberland, and Sheffield joined him; and "the
+gentlemen of England hired ships from all parts at their own charge, and
+with one accord came flocking thither as to a set field, where glory
+was to be attained, and faithful service performed unto their prince and
+their country."
+
+Raleigh justly praises the English admiral for his skilful tactics. He
+says, [Historie of the World, p. 791.] "Certainly, he that will happily
+perform a fight at sea, must be skillful in making choice of vessels
+to fight in; he must believe that there is more belonging to a good
+man-of-war, upon the waters, than great daring; and must know that there
+is a great deal of difference between fighting loose or at large and
+grappling. The guns of a slow ship pierce as well, and make as
+great holes, as those in a swift. To clap ships together, without
+consideration, belongs rather to a madman than to a man of war; for by
+such an ignorant bravery was Peter Strossie lost at the Azores, when
+he fought against the Marquis of Santa Cruza. In like sort had the Lord
+Charles Howard, admiral of England, been lost in the year 1588, if he
+had not been better advised, than a great many malignant fools were,
+that found fault with his demeanour. The Spaniards had an army aboard
+them, and he had none; they had more ships than he had, and of higher
+building and charging; so that, had he entangled himself with those
+great and powerful vessels, he had greatly endangered this kingdom of
+England. For, twenty men upon the defences are equal to a hundred
+that board and enter; whereas then, contrariwise, the Spaniards had
+a hundred, for twenty of ours, to defend themselves withall. But our
+admiral knew his advantage, and held it: which had he not done, he had
+not been worthy to have held his head."
+
+The Spanish admiral also showed great judgment and firmness in following
+the line of conduct that had been traced out for him; and on the 27th of
+July he brought his fleet unbroken, though sorely distressed, to anchor
+in Calais roads. But the King of Spain, had calculated ill the number
+and activity of the English and Dutch fleets; as the old historian
+expresses it, "It seemeth that the Duke of Parma and the Spaniards
+grounded upon a vain and presumptuous expectation, that all the ships of
+England and of the Low Countreys would at the first sight of the Spanish
+and Dunkerk navie have betaken themselves to flight, yeelding them
+sea-room, and endeavouring only to defend themselves, their havens, and
+sea-coasts from invasion. Wherefore their intent and purpose was, that
+the Duke of Parma, in his small and flat-bottomed ships should, as it
+were, under the shadow and wing of the Spanish fleet, convey over all
+his troupes, armour, and warlike provisions, and with their forces so
+united, should invade England; or, while the English fleet were busied
+in fight against the Spanish, should enter upon any part of the coast
+which he thought to be most convenient. Which invasion (as the captives
+afterwards confessed) the Duke of Parma thought first to have attempted
+by the river of Thames; upon the banks whereof, having at the first
+arrivall landed twenty or thirty thousand of his principall souldiers,
+he supposed that he might easily have wonne the citie of London;
+both because his small shippes should have followed and assisted
+his land-forces, and also for that the citie itselfe was but meanely
+fortified and easie to overcome, by reason of the citizens' delicacie
+and discontinuance from the warres, who, with continuall and constant
+labour, might be vanquished, if they yielded not at the first assault."
+[Hakluyt's Voyages, vol. i. 601.]
+
+But the English and Dutch found ships and mariners enough to keep
+the Armada itself in check, and at the same time to block up Parma's
+flotilla. The greater part of Seymour's squadron left its cruising
+ground off Dunkirk to join the English admiral off Calais; but the Dutch
+manned about five-and-thirty sail of good ships, with a strong force of
+soldiers on board, all well seasoned to the sea-service, and with these
+they blockaded the Flemish ports that were in Parma's power. Still
+it was resolved by the Spanish admiral and the prince to endeavour to
+effect a junction, which the English seamen were equally resolute to
+prevent: and bolder measures on our side now became necessary.
+
+The Armada lay off Calais, with its largest ships ranged outside, "like
+strong castles fearing no assault; the lesser placed in the middle
+ward." The English admiral could not attack them in their position
+without great disadvantage, but on the night of the 29th he sent
+eight fire-ships among them, with almost equal effect to that of the
+fire-ships which the Greeks so often employed against the Turkish fleets
+in their late war of independence. The Spaniards cut their cables
+and put to sea in confusion. One of the largest galeasses ran foul of
+another vessel and was stranded. The rest of the fleet was scattered
+about on the Flemish coast, and when the morning broke, it was with
+difficulty and delay that they obeyed their admiral's signal to range
+themselves round him near Gravelines. Now was the golden opportunity
+for the English to assail them, and prevent them from ever letting loose
+Parma's flotilla against England; and nobly was that opportunity used.
+Drake and Fenner were the first English captains who attacked the
+unwieldy leviathans: then came Fenton, Southwell, Burton, Cross, Raynor,
+and then the lord admiral, with Lord Thomas Howard and Lord Sheffield.
+The Spaniards only thought of forming and keeping close together, and
+were driven by the English past Dunkirk, and far away from the Prince
+of Parma, who in watching their defeat from the coast, must, as Drake
+expressed it, have chafed like a bear robbed of her whelps. This was
+indeed the last and the decisive battle between the two fleets. It is,
+perhaps, best described in the very words of the contemporary writer as
+we may read them in Hakluyt. [Vol. i. p. 602.]
+
+"Upon the 29th of July in the morning, the Spanish fleet after the
+forsayd tumult, having arranged themselves againe into order, were,
+within sight of Greveling, most bravely and furiously encountered by
+the English; where they once again got the wind of the Spaniards; who
+suffered themselves to be deprived of the commodity of the place in
+Calais road, and of the advantage of the wind neer unto Dunkerk,
+rather than they would change their array or separate their forces now
+conjoyned and united together, standing only upon their defence.
+
+"And howbeit there were many excellent and warlike ships in the English
+fleet, yet scarce were there 22 or 23 among them all, which matched 90
+of the Spanish ships in the bigness, or could conveniently assault them.
+Wherefore the English ships using their prerogative of nimble steerage,
+whereby they could turn and wield themselves with the wind which way
+they listed, came often times very near upon the Spaniards, and charged
+them so sore, that now and then they were but a pike's length asunder:
+and so continually giving them one broadside after another, they
+discharged all their shot both great and small upon them, spending one
+whole day from morning till night in that violent kind of conflict,
+untill such time as powder and bullets failed them. In regard of which
+want they thought it convenient not to pursue the Spaniards any longer,
+because they had many great vantages of the English, namely, for the
+extraordinary bigness of their ships, and also for that they were so
+neerley conjoyned, and kept together in so good array, that they
+could by no meanes be fought withall one to one. The English thought,
+therefore, that they had right well acquitted themselves, in chasing the
+Spaniards first from Caleis, and then from Dunkerk, and by that meanes
+to have hindered them from joyning with the Duke of Parma his forces,
+and getting the wind of them, to have driven them from their own coasts.
+
+"The Spaniards that day sustained great loss and damage, having many of
+their shippes shot thorow and thorow, and they discharged likewise great
+store of ordinance against the English; who, indeed, sustained some
+hindrance, but not comparable to the Spaniard's loss: for they lost not
+any one ship or person of account, for very diligent inquisition being
+made, the English men all that time wherein the Spanish navy sayled
+upon their seas, are not found to have wanted aboue one hundred of their
+people: albeit Sir Francis Drake's ship was pierced with shot above
+forty times, and his very cabben was twice shot thorow, and about the
+conclusion of the fight, the bed of a certaine gentleman, lying weary
+thereupon, was taken quite from under him with the force of a bullet.
+Likewise, as the Earle of Northumberland and Sir Charles Blunt were
+at dinner upon a time, the bullet of a demy-culverin brake thorow the
+middest of their cabben, touched their feet, and strooke downe two of
+the standers by, with many such accidents befalling the English shippes,
+which it were tedious to rehearse."
+
+It reflects little credit on the English Government that the English
+fleet was so deficiently supplied with ammunition, as to be unable to
+complete the destruction of the invaders. But enough was done to ensure
+it. Many of the largest Spanish ships were sunk or captured in the
+action of this day. And at length the Spanish admiral, despairing of
+success, fled northward with a southerly wind, in the hope of rounding
+Scotland, and so returning to Spain without a farther encounter with the
+English fleet. Lord Effingham left a squadron to continue the blockade
+of the Prince of Parma's armament; but that wise general soon
+withdrew his troops to more promising fields of action. Meanwhile the
+lord-admiral himself and Drake chased the vincible Armada, as it was now
+termed, for some distance northward; and then, when it seemed to bend
+away from the Scotch coast towards Norway, it was thought best, in the
+words of Drake, "to leave them to those boisterous and uncouth northern
+seas."
+
+The sufferings and losses which the unhappy Spaniards sustained in their
+flight round Scotland and Ireland, are well known. Of their whole Armada
+only fifty-three shattered vessels brought back their beaten and wasted
+crews to the Spanish coast which they had quitted in such pageantry and
+pride.
+
+Some passages from the writings of those who took part in the struggle,
+have been already quoted; and the most spirited description of the
+defeat of the Armada which ever was penned, may perhaps be taken from
+the letter which our brave vice-admiral Drake wrote in answer to some
+mendacious stories by which the Spaniards strove to hide their shame.
+Thus does he describe the scenes in which he played so important a part:
+[See Strypo, and the notes to the Life of Drake, in the "Biographia
+Britannica."]
+
+"They were not ashamed to publish, in sundry languages in print, great
+victories in words, which they pretended to have obtained against
+this realm, and spread the same in a most false sort over all parts of
+France, Italy, and elsewhere; when, shortly afterwards, it was happily
+manifested in very deed to all nations, how their navy, which they
+termed invincible, consisting of one hundred and forty sail of ships,
+not only of their own kingdom, but strengthened with the greatest
+argosies, Portugal carracks, Florentines, and large hulks of other
+countries, were by thirty of her majesty's own ships of war, and a few
+of our own merchants, by the wise, valiant, and advantageous conduct of
+the Lord Charles Howard, high-admiral of England, beaten and shuffled
+together even from the Lizard in Cornwall, first to Portland, when they
+shamefully left Don Pedro de Valdez with his mighty ship; from Portland
+to Calais, where they lost Hugh de Moncado, with the galleys of which he
+was captain; and from Calais driven with squibs from their anchors, were
+chased out of the sight of England, round about Scotland and Ireland.
+Where, for the sympathy of their religion, hoping to find succour and
+assistance, a great part of them were crushed against the rocks,
+and those others that landed, being very many in number, were,
+notwithstanding, broken, slain, and taken; and so sent from village
+to village, coupled in halters, to be shipped into England, where her
+majesty, of her princely and invincible disposition, disdaining to put
+them to death, and scorning either to retain or to entertain them, they
+were all sent back again to their countries, to witness and recount the
+worthy achievement of their invincible and dreadful navy. Of which the
+number of soldiers, the fearful burthen of their ships, the commanders'
+names of every squadron, with all others, their magazines of provision
+were put in print, as an army and navy irresistible and disdaining
+prevention: with all which their great and terrible ostentation, they
+did not in all their sailing round about England so much as sink or take
+one ship, bark, pinnace, or cockboat of ours, or even burn so much as
+one sheep-cote on this land."
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588;
+AND THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, A.D. 1704.
+
+A.D. 1594. Henry IV. of France conforms to the Roman Catholic Church,
+and ends the civil wars that had long desolated France.
+
+1598. Philip II. of Spain dies, leaving a ruined navy and an exhausted
+kingdom.
+
+1603. Death of Queen Elizabeth. The Scotch dynasty of the Stuarts
+succeeds to the throne of England.
+
+1619. Commencement of the Thirty Years' War in Germany.
+
+1624-1642. Cardinal Richelieu is minister of France. He breaks the power
+of the nobility, reduces the Huguenots to complete subjection; and by
+aiding the Protestant German princes in the latter part of the Thirty
+Years' War, he humiliates France's ancient rival, Austria.
+
+1630. Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden, marches into Germany to the
+assistance of the Protestants, who ware nearly crushed by the Austrian
+armies. He gains several great victories, and, after his death, Sweden,
+under his statesmen and generals, continues to take a leading part in
+the war.
+
+1640. Portugal throws off the Spanish yoke: and the House of Braganza
+begins to reign.
+
+1642. Commencement of the civil war in England between Charles I. and
+his parliament.
+
+1648. The Thirty Years' War in Germany ended by the treaty of
+Westphalia.
+
+1653. Oliver Cromwell lord-protector of England.
+
+1660. Restoration of the Stuarts to the English throne.
+
+1661. Louis XIV. takes the administration of affairs in France into his
+own hands.
+
+1667-1668. Louis XVI. makes war in Spain, and conquers a large part of
+the Spanish Netherlands.
+
+1672. Louis makes war upon Holland, and almost overpowers it, Charles
+II. of England is his pensioner, and England helps the French in their
+attacks upon Holland until 1674. Heroic resistance of the Dutch under
+the Prince of Orange.
+
+1674. Louis conquers Franche-Comte.
+
+1679. Peace of Nimeguen.
+
+1681. Louis invades and occupies Alsace.
+
+1682. Accession of Peter the Great to the throne of Russia.
+
+1685. Louis commences a merciless persecution of his Protestant
+subjects.
+
+1688. The glorious Revolution in England. Expulsion of James II. William
+of Orange is made King of England. James takes refuge at the French
+court, and Louis undertakes to restore him. General war in the west of
+Europe.
+
+1691. Treaty of Ryswick. Charles XII. becomes King of Sweden.
+
+1700. Charles II. of Spain dies, having bequeathed his dominions to
+Philip of Anjou, Louis XIV.'s grandson. Defeat of the Russians at Narva,
+by Charles XII.
+
+1701. William III. forms a "Grand Alliance" of Austria, the Empire, the
+United Provinces, England, and other powers, against France.
+
+1702. King William dies; but his successor, Queen Anne, adheres to the
+Grand Alliance, and war is proclaimed against France.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. -- THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, 1704.
+
+
+ "The decisive blow struck at Blenheim resounded through every
+ part of Europe: it at once destroyed the vast fabric of power
+ which it had taken Louis XIV., aided by the talents of Turenne,
+ and the genius of Vauban, so long to construct."--ALISON.
+
+Though more slowly moulded and less imposingly vast than the empire of
+Napoleon, the power which Louis XIV. had acquired and was acquiring at
+the commencement of the eighteenth century, was almost equally menacing
+to the general liberties of Europe. If tested by the amount of permanent
+aggrandisement which each procured for France, the ambition of the royal
+Bourbon was more successful than were the enterprises of the imperial
+Corsican. All the provinces that Bonaparte conquered, were rent again
+from France within twenty years from the date when the very earliest of
+them was acquired. France is not stronger by a single city or a single
+acre for all the devastating wars of the Consulate and the Empire. But
+she still possesses Franche-Comte, Alsace, and part of Flanders. She has
+still the extended boundaries which Louis XIV. gave her. And the royal
+Spanish marriages, a few years ago, proved clearly how enduring has
+been the political influence which the arts and arms of France's "Grand
+Monarque" obtained for her southward of the Pyrenees.
+
+When Louis XIV. took the reins of government into his own hands,
+after the death of Cardinal Mazarin, there was a union of ability with
+opportunity, such as France had not seen since the days of Charlemagne.
+Moreover, Louis's career was no brief one. For upwards of forty years,
+for a period nearly equal to the duration of Charlemagne's reign, Louis
+steadily followed an aggressive and a generally successful policy. He
+passed a long youth and manhood of triumph, before the military genius
+of Marlborough made him acquainted with humiliation and defeat. The
+great Bourbon lived too long. He should not have outstayed our two
+English kings--one his dependent, James II., the other his antagonist,
+William III. Had he died in the year within which they died, his reign
+would be cited as unequalled in the French annals for its prosperity.
+But he lived on to see his armies beaten, his cities captured, and his
+kingdom wasted by disastrous war. It is as if Charlemagne had survived
+to be defeated by the Northmen, and to witness the misery and shame that
+actually fell to the lot of his descendants.
+
+Still, Louis XIV. had forty years of success; and from the permanence of
+their fruits we may judge what the results would have been if the last
+fifteen years of his reign had been equally fortunate. Had it not been
+for Blenheim, all Europe might at this day suffer under the effect of
+French conquests resembling those of Alexander in extent, and those of
+the Romans in durability.
+
+When Louis XIV. began to govern, he found all the materials for a
+strong government ready to his hand. Richelieu had completely tamed the
+turbulent spirit of the French nobility, and had subverted the "imperium
+in imperio" of the Huguenots. The faction of the Frondeurs in Mazarin's
+time had had the effect of making the Parisian parliament utterly
+hateful and contemptible in the eyes of the nation. The assemblies of
+the States-General were obsolete. The royal authority alone remained.
+The King was the State. Louis knew his position. He fearlessly avowed
+it, and he fearlessly acted up to it. ["Quand Louis XIV. dit, 'L'etat,
+c'est moi:' il n'y eut dans cette parole ni enflure, ni vanterie, mais
+la simple enonciation d'un fait."--MICHELET, HISTOIRE MODERNE vol. ii.
+p. 106.]
+
+Not only was his government a strong one, but the country which he
+governed was strong: strong in its geographical situation, in the
+compactness of its territory, in the number and martial spirit of its
+inhabitants, and in their complete and undivided nationality. Louis had
+neither a Hungary nor an Ireland in his dominions, and it was not till
+late in his reign, when old age had made his bigotry more gloomy, and
+had given fanaticism the mastery over prudence, that his persecuting
+intolerance caused the civil war in the Cevennes.
+
+Like Napoleon in after-times, Louis XIV. saw clearly that the great
+wants of France were "ships, colonies, and commerce." But Louis did
+more than see these wants: by the aid of his great minister, Colbert, he
+supplied them. One of the surest proofs of the genius of Louis was his
+skill in finding out genius in others, and his promptness in calling it
+into action. Under him, Louvois organized, Turenne, Conde, Villars and
+Berwick, led the armies of France; and Vauban fortified her frontiers.
+Throughout his reign, French diplomacy was marked by skilfulness
+and activity, and also by comprehensive far-sightedness, such as the
+representatives of no other nation possessed. Guizot's testimony to
+the vigour that was displayed through every branch of Louis XIV.'s
+government, and to the extent to which France at present is indebted to
+him, is remarkable. He says, that, "taking the public services of every
+kind, the finances, the departments of roads and public works, the
+military administration, and all the establishments which belong to
+every branch of administration, there is not one that will not be found
+to have had its origin, its development, or its greatest perfection,
+under the reign of Louis XIV." [History of European Civilization,
+Lecture 13.] And he points out to us, that "the government of Louis XIV.
+was the first that presented itself to the eyes of Europe as a power
+acting upon sure grounds, which had not to dispute its existence with
+inward enemies, but was at ease as to its territory and its people, and
+solely occupied with the task of administering government, properly so
+called. All the European governments had been previously thrown into
+incessant wars, which deprived them of all security as well as of all
+leisure, or so harassed by internal parties or antagonists, that their
+time was passed in fighting for existence. The government of Louis XIV.
+was the first to appear as a busy thriving administration of affairs,
+as a power at once definitive and progressive, which was not afraid to
+innovate, because it could reckon securely on the future. There have
+been in fact very few governments equally innovating. Compare it with
+a government of the same nature, the unmixed monarchy of Philip II. in
+Spain; it was more absolute than that of Louis XIV., and yet it was far
+less regular and tranquil. How did Philip II. succeed in establishing
+absolute power in Spain? By stifling all activity in the country,
+opposing himself to every species of amelioration, and rendering the
+state of Spain completely stagnant. The government of Louis XIV., on the
+contrary, exhibited alacrity for all sorts of innovations, and showed
+itself favourable to the progress of letters, arts, wealth in short,
+of civilization. This was the veritable cause of its preponderance
+in Europe, which arose to such a pitch, that it became the type of
+a government not only to sovereigns, but also to nations, during the
+seventeenth century."
+
+While France was thus strong and united in herself, and ruled by a
+martial, an ambitious, and (with all his faults) an enlightened and
+high-spirited sovereign, what European power was there fit to cope with
+her, or keep her in check?
+
+"As to Germany, the ambitious projects of the German branch of Austria
+had been entirely defeated, the peace of the empire had been restored,
+and almost a new constitution formed, or an old revived, by the treaties
+of Westphalia; NAY, THE IMPERIAL EAGLE WAS NOT ONLY FALLEN, BUT HER
+WINGS WERE CLIPPED." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 378. Lord Bolingbroke's
+"Letters on the Use of History," and his "Sketch of the History
+and State of Europe," abound with remarks on Louis XIV. and his
+contemporaries, of which the substance is as sound as the style is
+beautiful. Unfortunately, like all his other works, they contain also
+a large proportion of sophistry and misrepresentation. The best test
+to use before we adopt any opinion or assertion of Bolingbroke's, is
+to consider whether in writing it he was thinking either of Sir Robert
+Walpole or of Revealed Religion. When either of these objects of his
+hatred was before his mind, he scrupled at no artifice or exaggeration
+that; might serve the purpose of his malignity. On most other occasions
+he may be followed with advantage, as he always may be read with
+pleasure.]
+
+"As to Spain, the Spanish branch of the Austrian house had sunk equally
+low. Philip II. left his successors a ruined monarchy. He left them
+something worse; he left them his example and his principles of
+government, founded in ambition, in pride, in ignorance, in bigotry, and
+all the pedantry of state." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 378.]
+
+It is not, therefore, to be wondered at, that France, in the first war
+of Louis XIV., despised the opposition of both branches of the once
+predominant house of Austria. Indeed, in Germany the French king
+acquired allies among the princes of the Empire against the emperor
+himself. He had a still stronger support in Austria's misgovernment of
+her own subjects. The words of Bolingbroke on this are remarkable,
+and some of them sound as if written within the last three years.
+Bolingbroke says, "It was not merely the want of cordial co-operation
+among the princes of the Empire that disabled the emperor from acting
+with vigour in the cause of his family then, nor that has rendered the
+house of Austria a dead weight upon all her allies ever since. Bigotry,
+and its inseparable companion, cruelty, as well as the tyranny
+and avarice of the court of Vienna, created in those days, and has
+maintained in ours, almost a perpetual diversion of the imperial arms
+from all effectual opposition to France. I MEAN TO SPEAK OF THE TROUBLES
+IN HUNGARY. WHATEVER THEY BECAME IN THEIR PROGRESS, THEY WERE CAUSED
+ORIGINALLY BY THE USERPATIONS AND PERSECUTIONS OF THE EMPEROR; AND WHEN
+THE HUNGARIANS WERE CALLED REBELS FIRST, THEY WERE CALLED SO FOR NO
+OTHER REASON THAN THIS, THAT THEY WOULD NOT BE SLAVES. The dominion of
+the emperor being less supportable than that of the Turks, this unhappy
+people opened a door to the latter to infest the empire, instead of
+making their country, what it had been before, a barrier against the
+Ottoman power. France became a sure though secret ally of the Turks, as
+well as the Hungarians, and has found her account in it, by keeping
+the emperor in perpetual alarms on that side, while she has ravaged the
+Empire and the Low Countries on the other." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p.
+397.]
+
+If, after having seen the imbecility of Germany and Spain against the
+France of Louis XIV., we turn to the two only remaining European powers
+of any importance at that time, to England and to Holland, we find the
+position of our own country as to European politics, from 1660 to 1688,
+most painful to contemplate. From 1660 to 1688, "England, by the return
+of the Stuarts, was reduced to a nullity." The words are Michelet's,
+[Histoire Moderne, vol. ii. p.106.] and though severe they are just.
+They are, in fact, not severe enough: for when England, under her
+restored dynasty of the Stuarts, did take any part in European politics,
+her conduct, or rather her king's conduct, was almost invariably wicked
+and dishonourable.
+
+Bolingbroke rightly says that, "previous to the Revolution of 1688,
+during the whole progress that Louis XIV. made in obtaining such
+exorbitant power, as gave him well-grounded hopes of acquiring at last
+to his family the Spanish monarchy, England had been either an idle
+spectator of what passed on the continent, or a faint and uncertain
+ally against France, or a warm and sure ally on her side, or a partial
+mediator between her and the powers confederated together in their
+common defence. But though the court of England submitted to abet
+the usurpations of France, and the King of England stooped to be her
+pensioner, the crime was not national. On the contrary, the nation cried
+out loudly against it even whilst it was being committed." [Bolingbroke,
+vol. ii p. 418.]
+
+Holland alone, of all the European powers, opposed from the very
+beginning a steady and uniform resistance to the ambition and power of
+the French king. It was against Holland that the fiercest attacks of
+France were made, and though often apparently on the eve of complete
+success, they were always ultimately baffled by the stubborn bravery of
+the Dutch, and the heroism of their leader, William of Orange. When he
+became king of England, the power of this country was thrown decidedly
+into the scale against France; but though the contest was thus rendered
+less unequal, though William acted throughout "with invincible firmness,
+like a patriot and a hero," [Bolingbroke, vol, ii, p.404.] France
+had the general superiority in every war and in every treaty: and the
+commencement of the eighteenth century found the last league against her
+dissolved, all the forces of the confederates against her dispersed, and
+many disbanded; while France continued armed, with her veteran forces
+by sea and land increased, and held in readiness to act on all sides,
+whenever the opportunity should arise for seizing on the great prizes
+which, from the very beginning of his reign, had never been lost sight
+of by her king.
+
+This is not the place for any narrative of the first essay which Louis
+XIV. made of his power in the war of 1667; of his rapid conquest of
+Flanders and Franche-Comte; of the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, which
+"was nothing more than a composition between the bully and the bullied;"
+[Ibid p. 399.] of his attack on Holland in 1672; of the districts and
+barrier-towns of the Spanish Netherlands which were secured to him by
+the treaty of Nimeguen in 1678; of how, after this treaty, he "continued
+to vex both Spain and the Empire, and to extend his conquests in the Low
+Countries and on the Rhine, both by the pen and the sword; how he took
+Luxembourg by force, stole Strasburg, and bought Casal;" of how the
+league of Augsburg was formed against him in 1686, and the election of
+William of Orange to the English throne in 1688, gave a new spirit to
+the opposition which France encountered; of the long and chequered war
+that followed, in which the French armies were generally victorious
+on the continent, though his fleet was beaten at La Hogue, and his
+dependent, James II,, was defeated at the Boyne, or of the treaty of
+Ryswick, which left France in possession of Roussillon, Artois, and
+Strasburg, which gave Europe no security against her claims on the
+Spanish succession, and which Louis regarded as a mere truce, to gain
+breathing-time before a more decisive struggle. It must be borne in
+mind that the ambition of Louis in these wars was twofold. It had its
+immediate and its ulterior objects. Its immediate object was to conquer
+and annex to France the neighbouring provinces and towns that were most
+convenient for the increase of her strength; but the ulterior object of
+Louis, from the time of his marriage to the Spanish Infanta in 1659, was
+to acquire for the house of Bourbon the whole empire of Spain. A formal
+renunciation of all right to the Spanish succession had been made at the
+time of the marriage; but such renunciations were never of any practical
+effect, and many casuists and jurists of the age even held them to be
+intrinsically void, as time passed on, and the prospect of Charles II.
+of Spain dying without lineal heirs became more and more certain, so did
+the claims of the house of Bourbon to the Spanish crown after his death
+become matters of urgent interest to French ambition on the one hand,
+and to the other powers of Europe on the other. At length the unhappy
+King of Spain died. By his will he appointed Philip, Duke of Anjou, one
+of Louis XIV.'s grandsons, to succeed him on the throne of Spain, and
+strictly forbade any partition of his dominions. Louis well knew that a
+general European war would follow if he accepted for his house the crown
+thus bequeathed. But he had been preparing for this crisis throughout
+his reign. He sent his grandson into Spain as King Philip V. of that
+country, addressing to him on his departure the memorable words, "There
+are no longer any Pyrenees."
+
+The empire, which now received the grandson of Louis as its king,
+comprised, besides Spain itself, the strongest part of the Netherlands,
+Sardinia, Sicily, Naples, the principality of Milan, and other
+possessions in Italy, the Philippines and Marilla Islands in Asia, and,
+in the New World, besides California and Florida the greatest part of
+Central and of Southern America. Philip was well received in Madrid,
+where he was crowned as King Philip V. in the beginning of 1701. The
+distant portions of his empire sent in their adhesion; and the house of
+Bourbon, either by its French or Spanish troops, now had occupation both
+of the kingdom of Francis I., and of the fairest and amplest portion of
+the empire of the great rival of Francis, Charles V.
+
+Loud was the wrath of Austria, whose princes were the rival claimants of
+the Bourbons for the empire of Spain. The indignation of William
+III., though not equally loud, was far more deep and energetic. By
+his exertions a league against the house of Bourbon was formed between
+England, Holland, and the Austrian Emperor, which was subsequently
+joined by the kings of Portugal and Prussia, by the Duke of Savoy, and
+by Denmark. Indeed, the alarm throughout Europe was now general and
+urgent. It was clear that Louis aimed a consolidating France and the
+Spanish dominions into one preponderating empire. At the moment when
+Philip was departing to take possession of Spain, Louis had issued
+letters-patent in his favour to the effect of preserving his rights to
+the throne of France. And Louis had himself obtained possession of
+the important frontier of the Spanish Netherlands, with its numerous
+fortified cities, which were given up to his troops under pretence of
+securing them for the young King of Spain. Whether the formal union of
+the two crowns was likely to take place speedily or not, it was evident
+that the resources of the whole Spanish monarchy were now virtually at
+the French king's disposal.
+
+The peril that seemed to menace the empire, England, Holland, and
+the other independent powers, is well summed up by Alison: "Spain had
+threatened the liberties of Europe in the end of the sixteenth century,
+France had all but overthrown them in the close of the seventeenth.
+What hope was there of their being able to make head against them both,
+united under such a monarch as Louis XIV.?" [Military History of the
+Duke of Marlborough, p. 32.]
+
+Our knowledge of the decayed state into which the Spanish power had
+fallen, ought not to make us regard their alarms as chimerical. Spain
+possessed enormous resources, and her strength was capable of being
+regenerated by a vigorous ruler. We should remember what Alberoni
+effected, even after the close of the War of Succession. By what that
+minister did in a few years, we may judge what Louis XIV. would have
+done in restoring the maritime and military power of that great country
+which nature has so largely gifted, and which man's misgovernment has so
+debased.
+
+The death of King William on the 8th of March, 1702, at first seemed
+likely to paralyse the league against France, for "notwithstanding the
+ill-success with which he made war generally, he was looked upon as the
+sole centre of union that could keep together the great confederacy then
+forming; and how much the French feared from his life, had appeared a
+few years before, in the extravagant and indecent joy they expressed on
+a false report of his death. A short time showed how vain the fears of
+some, and the hopes of others were." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 445.]
+Queen Anne, within three days after her accession, went down to the
+House of Lords, and there declared her resolution to support the
+measures planned by her predecessor, who had been "the great support,
+not only of these kingdoms, but of all Europe." Anne was married to
+Prince George of Denmark, and by her accession to the English throne the
+confederacy against Louis obtained the aid of the troops of Denmark; but
+Anne's strong attachment to one of her female friends led to far
+more important advantages to the anti-Gallican confederacy, than the
+acquisition of many armies, for it gave them MARLBOROUGH as their
+Captain-General.
+
+There are few successful commanders on whom Fame has shone so
+unwillingly as upon John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, Prince of
+the Holy Roman Empire,--victor of Blenheim, Ramilies, Oudenarde, and
+Malplaquet,--captor of Liege, Bonn, Limburg, Landau, Ghent, Bruges,
+Antwerp, Oudenarde, Ostend, Menin, Dendermonde, Ath, Lille, Tourney,
+Mons, Douay, Aire, Bethune, and Bouchain; who never fought a battle
+that he did not win, and never besieged a place that he did not take.
+Marlborough's own private character is the cause of this. Military glory
+may, and too often does, dazzle both contemporaries and posterity, until
+the crimes as well as the vices of heroes are forgotten. But even a few
+stains of personal meanness will dim a soldier's reputation irreparably;
+and Marlborough's faults were of a peculiarly base and mean order. Our
+feelings towards historical personages are in this respect like our
+feelings towards private acquaintances. There are actions of that shabby
+nature, that, however much they may be outweighed by a man's good deeds
+on a general estimate of his character, we never can feel any cordial
+liking for the person who has been guilty of them. Thus, with respect to
+the Duke of Marlborough, it goes against our feelings to admire the man,
+who owed his first advancement in life to the court-favour which he and
+his family acquired through his sister becoming one of the mistresses
+of the Duke of York. It is repulsive to know that Marlborough laid the
+foundation of his wealth by being the paid lover of one of the fair and
+frail favourites of Charles II. His treachery and ingratitude to his
+patron and benefactor, James II., stand out in dark relief, even in
+that age of thankless perfidy. He was almost equally disloyal to his new
+master, King William; and a more un-English act cannot be recorded than
+Godolphin's and Marlborough's betrayal to the French court in 1694 of
+the expedition then designed against Brest, an act of treason which
+caused some hundreds of English soldiers and sailors to be helplessly
+slaughtered on the beach in Camaret Bay.
+
+It is, however, only in his military career that we have now to consider
+him; and there are very few generals, of either ancient or modern times,
+whose campaigns will bear a comparison with those of Marlborough, either
+for the masterly skill with which they were planned, or for the bold
+yet prudent energy with which each plan was carried into execution.
+Marlborough had served while young under Turenne, and had obtained the
+marked praise of that great tactician. It would be difficult, indeed,
+to name a single quality which a general ought to have, and with which
+Marlborough was not eminently gifted. What principally attracted the
+notice of contemporaries, was the imperturbable evenness of his spirit.
+Voltaire [Siecle de Louis Quatorze.] says of him:--"He had, to a degree
+above all other generals of his time, that calm courage in the midst of
+tumult, that serenity of soul in danger, which the English call a COOL
+HEAD (que les Anglais appellant COOL HEAD, TETE FROID), and it was
+perhaps this quality, the greatest gift of nature for command, which
+formerly gave the English so many advantages over the French in the
+plains of Cressy, Poictiers, and Agincourt."
+
+King William's knowledge of Marlborough's high abilities, though he knew
+his faithlessness equally well, is said to have caused that sovereign
+in his last illness to recommend Marlborough to his successor as the
+fittest person to command her armies: but Marlborough's favour with
+the new queen by means of his wife was so high, that he was certain of
+obtaining the highest employment: and the war against Louis opened to
+him a glorious theatre for the display of those military talents, which
+he had before only had an opportunity of exercising in a subordinate
+character, and on far less conspicuous scenes.
+
+He was not only made captain-general of the English forces at home and
+abroad, but such was the authority of England in the council of the
+Grand Alliance, and Marlborough was so skilled in winning golden
+opinions from all whom he met with, that, on his reaching the Hague, he
+was received with transports of joy by the Dutch, and it was agreed
+by the heads of that republic, and the minister of the emperor, that
+Marlborough should have the chief command of all the allied armies.
+
+It must indeed, in justice to Marlborough, be borne in mind, that mere
+military skill was by no means all that was required of him in this
+arduous and invidious station. Had it not been for his unrivalled
+patience and sweetness of temper, and his marvellous ability in
+discerning the character of those with whom he had to act, his intuitive
+perception of those who were to be thoroughly trusted, and of those
+who were to be amused with the mere semblance of respect and
+confidence,--had not Marlborough possessed and employed, while at the
+head of the allied armies, all the qualifications of a polished courtier
+and a great statesman, he never would have led the allied armies to the
+Danube. The Confederacy would not have held together for a single year.
+His great political adversary, Bolingbroke, does him ample justice here.
+Bolingbroke, after referring to the loss which King William's death
+seemed to inflict on the cause of the Allies, observes that, "By his
+death the Duke of Marlborough was raised to the head of the army, and,
+indeed, of the Confederacy; where he, a new, a private man, a subject,
+acquired by merit and by management, a more deciding influence, than
+high birth, confirmed authority, and even the crown of Great Britain,
+had given to King William. Not only all the parts of that vast machine,
+the Grand Alliance, were kept more compact and entire; but a more rapid
+and vigorous motion was given to the whole; and instead of languishing
+and disastrous campaigns, we saw every scene of the war full of action.
+All those wherein he appeared and many of those wherein he was not then
+an actor, but abettor, however, of their action, were crowned with the
+most triumphant success.
+
+"I take with pleasure this opportunity of doing justice to that great
+man, whose faults I knew, whose virtues I admired; and whose memory, as
+the greatest general and as the greatest minister that our country, or
+perhaps any other, has produced, I honour." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p.
+445.]
+
+War, was formally declared by the allies against France on the 4th
+of May, 1702. The principal scenes of its operation were, at first,
+Flanders, the Upper Rhine, and North Italy. Marlborough headed the
+allied troops in Flanders during the first two years of the war, and
+took some towns from the enemy, but nothing decisive occurred. Nor did
+any actions of importance take place during this period, between the
+rival armies in Italy. But in the centre of that line from north to
+south, from the mouth of the Scheldt to the mouth of the Po, along which
+the war was carried on, the generals of Louis XIV. acquired advantages
+in 1703, which threatened one chief member of the Grand Alliance with
+utter destruction. France had obtained the important assistance of
+Bavaria, as her confederate in the war. The Elector of this powerful
+German state made himself master of the strong fortress of Ulm, and
+opened a communication with the French armies on the Upper Rhine. By
+this junction, the troops of Louis were enabled to assail the Emperor in
+the very heart of Germany. In the autumn of the year 1703, the
+combined armies of the Elector and French king completely defeated
+the Imperialists in Bavaria; and in the following winter they made
+themselves masters of the important cities of Augsburg and Passau.
+Meanwhile the French army of the Upper Rhine and Moselle had beaten the
+allied armies opposed to them, and taken Treves and Landau. At the same
+time the discontents in Hungary with Austria again broke out into open
+insurrection, so as to distract the attention, and complete the terror
+of the Emperor and his council at Vienna.
+
+Louis XIV. ordered the next campaign to be commenced by his troops on
+a scale of grandeur and with a boldness of enterprise, such as even
+Napoleon's military schemes have seldom equalled. On the extreme left of
+the line of the war, in the Netherlands, the French armies were to act
+only on the defensive. The fortresses in the hands of the French there,
+were so many and so strong that no serious impression seemed likely to
+be made by the Allies on the French frontier in that quarter during
+one campaign; and that one campaign was to give France such triumphs
+elsewhere as would (it was hoped) determine the war. Large detachments
+were, therefore, to be made from the French force in Flanders, and they
+were to be led by Marshal Villeroy to the Moselle and Upper Rhine. The
+French army already in the neighbourhood of those rivers was to march
+under Marshal Tallard through the Black Forest, and join the Elector of
+Bavaria and the French troops that were already with the Elector under
+Marshal Marsin. Meanwhile the French army of Italy was to advance
+through the Tyrol into Austria, and the whole forces were to combine
+between the Danube and the Inn. A strong body of troops was to be
+despatched into Hungary, to assist and organize the insurgents in that
+kingdom; and the French grand army of the Danube was then, in collected
+and irresistible might, to march upon Vienna, and dictate terms of peace
+to the Emperor. High military genius was shown in the formation of this
+plan, but it was met and baffled by a genius higher still.
+
+Marlborough had watched, with the deepest anxiety, the progress of the
+French arms on the Rhine and in Bavaria, and he saw the futility of
+carrying on a war of posts and sieges in Flanders, while death-blows to
+the empire were being dealt on the Danube. He resolved therefore to let
+the war in Flanders languish for a year, while he moved with all
+the disposable forces that he could collect to the central scenes
+of decisive operations. Such a march was in itself difficult, but
+Marlborough had, in the first instance, to overcome the still greater
+difficulty of obtaining the consent and cheerful co-operation of the
+Allies, especially of the Dutch, whose frontier it was proposed thus
+to deprive of the larger part of the force which had hitherto been its
+protection. Fortunately, among the many slothful, the many foolish, the
+many timid, and the not few treacherous rulers, statesmen, and generals
+of different nations with whom he had to deal, there were two
+men, eminent both in ability and integrity, who entered fully into
+Marlborough's projects, and who, from the stations which they occupied,
+were enabled materially to forward them. One of these was the Dutch
+statesman Heinsius, who had been the cordial supporter of King William,
+and who now, with equal zeal and good faith, supported Marlborough in
+the councils of the Allies; the other was the celebrated general
+Prince Eugene, whom the Austrian cabinet had recalled from the Italian
+frontier, to take the command of one of the Emperor's armies in Germany.
+To these two great men, and a few more, Marlborough communicated his
+plan freely and unreservedly; but to the general councils of his allies
+he only disclosed part, of his daring scheme. He proposed to the Dutch
+that he should march from Flanders to the Upper Rhine and Moselle, with
+the British troops and part of the Foreign auxiliaries, and commence
+vigorous operations against the French armies in that quarter,
+whilst General Auverquerque, with the Dutch and the remainder of the
+auxiliaries, maintained a defensive war in the Netherlands. Having with
+difficulty obtained the consent of the Dutch to this portion of his
+project, he exercised the same diplomatic zeal, with the same success,
+in urging the King of Prussia, and other princes of the empire, to
+increase the number of the troops which they supplied, and to post them
+in places convenient for his own intended movements.
+
+Marlborough commenced his celebrated march on the 19th of May. The
+army, which he was to lead, had been assembled by his brother, General
+Churchill, at Bedburg, not far from Maestricht on the Meuse: it included
+sixteen thousand English troops, and consisted of fifty-one battalions
+of foot, and ninety-two squadrons of horse. Marlborough was to collect
+and join with him on his march the troops of Prussia, Luneburg, and
+Hesse, quartered on the Rhine, and eleven Dutch battalions that were
+stationed at Rothweil. [Coxe's Life of Marlborough.] He had only
+marched a single day, when the series of interruptions, complaints, and
+requisitions from the other leaders of the Allies began, to which he
+seemed doomed throughout his enterprise, and which would have caused
+its failure in the hands of any one not gifted with the firmness and the
+exquisite temper of Marlborough. One specimen of these annoyances and of
+Marlborough's mode of dealing with them may suffice. On his encamping
+at Kupen, on the 20th, he received an express from Auverquerque
+pressing him to halt, because Villeroy, who commanded the French army
+in Flanders, had quitted the lines, which he had been occupying, and
+crossed the Meuse at Namur with thirty-six battalions and forty-five
+squadrons, and was threatening the town of Huys. At the same time
+Marlborough received letters from the Margrave of Baden and Count
+Wratislaw, who commanded the Imperialist forces at Stollhoffen near the
+left bank of the Rhine, stating that Tallard had made a movement, as if
+intending to cross the Rhine, and urging him to hasten his march
+towards the lines of Stollhoffen. Marlborough was not diverted by these
+applications from the prosecution of his grand design. Conscious that
+the army of Villeroy would be too much reduced to undertake offensive
+operations, by the detachments which had already been made towards the
+Rhine, and those which must follow his own march, he halted only a day
+to quiet the alarms of Auverquerque. To satisfy also the margrave he
+ordered the troops of Hompesch and Bulow to draw towards Philipsburg,
+though with private injunctions not to proceed beyond a certain
+distance. He even exacted a promise to the same effect from Count
+Wratislaw, who at this juncture arrived at the camp to attend him during
+the whole campaign. [Coxe.]
+
+Marlborough reached the Rhine at Coblentz, where he crossed that river,
+and then marched along its right bank to Broubach and Mentz. His march,
+though rapid, was admirably conducted, so as to save the troops from all
+unnecessary fatigue; ample supplies of provisions were ready, and the
+most perfect discipline was maintained. By degrees Marlborough obtained
+more reinforcements from the Dutch and the other confederates, and he
+also was left more at liberty by them to follow his own course. Indeed,
+before even a blow was struck, his enterprise had paralysed the enemy,
+and had materially relieved Austria from the pressure of the war.
+Villeroy, with his detachments from the French-Flemish army, was
+completely bewildered by Marlborough's movements; and, unable to divine
+where it was that the English general meant to strike his blow, wasted
+away the early part of the summer between Flanders and the Moselle
+without effecting anything. ["Marshal Villeroy," says Voltaire, "who had
+wished to follow Marlborough on his first marches, suddenly lost sight
+of him altogether, and only learned where he really was, on hearing of
+his victory at Donauwert."--SIECLE DE LOUIS XIV.]
+
+Marshal Tallard, who commanded forty-five thousand men at Strasburg, and
+who had been destined by Louis to march early in the year into Bavaria,
+thought that Marlborough's march along the Rhine was preliminary to
+an attack upon Alsace; and the marshal therefore kept his forty-five
+thousand men back in order to support France in that quarter.
+Marlborough skilfully encouraged his apprehensions by causing a bridge
+to be constructed across the Rhine at Philipsburg, and by making the
+Landgrave of Hesse advance his artillery at Manheim, as if for a
+siege of Landau. Meanwhile the Elector of Bavaria and Marshal Marsin,
+suspecting that Marlborough's design might be what it really proved
+to be, forbore to press upon the Austrians opposed to them, or to
+send troops into Hungary; and they kept back so as to secure their
+communications with France. Thus, when Marlborough, at the beginning of
+June, left the Rhine and marched for the Danube, the numerous hostile
+armies were uncombined, and unable to check him.
+
+"With such skill and science had this enterprise been concerted, that at
+the very moment when it assumed a specific direction, the enemy was no
+longer enabled to render it abortive. As the march was now to be bent
+towards the Danube, notice was given for the Prussians, Palatines, and
+Hessians, who were stationed on the Rhine, to order their march so as
+to join the main body in its progress. At the same time directions
+were sent to accelerate the advance of the Danish auxiliaries, who were
+marching from the Netherlands." [Coxe.]
+
+Crossing the river Neckar, Marlborough marched in a south-eastern
+direction to Mundelshene, where he had his first personal interview with
+Prince Eugene, who was destined to be his colleague on so many glorious
+fields. Thence, through a difficult and dangerous country, Marlborough
+continued his march against the Bavarians, whom he encountered on the 2d
+of July, on the heights of the Schullenberg near Donauwert. Marlborough
+stormed their entrenched camp, crossed the Danube, took several strong
+places in Bavaria, and made himself completely master of the Elector's
+dominions, except the fortified cities of Munich and Augsburg. But the
+Elector's army, though defeated at Donauwert, was still numerous and
+strong; and at last Marshal Tallard, when thoroughly apprised of the
+real nature of Marlborough's movements, crossed the Rhine. He was
+suffered through the supineness of the German general at Stollhoffen,
+to march without loss through the Black Forest, and united his powerful
+army at Biberach near Augsburg, with that of the Elector and the French
+troops under Marshal Marsin, who had previously been co-operating with
+the Bavarians. On the other hand, Marlborough re-crossed the Danube, and
+on the 11th of August united his army with the Imperialist forces under
+Prince Eugene. The combined armies occupied a position near Hochstadt,
+a little higher up the left bank of the Danube than Donauwert, the scene
+of Marlborough's recent victory, and almost exactly on the ground where
+Marshal Villars and the Elector had defeated an Austrian army in the
+preceding year. The French marshals and the Elector were now in position
+a little farther to the east, between Blenheim and Lutzingen, and
+with the little stream of the Nebel between them and the troops of
+Marlborough and Eugene. The Gallo-Bavarian army consisted of about sixty
+thousand men, and they had sixty-one pieces of artillery. "The army of
+the Allies was about fifty-six thousand strong, with fifty-two guns." [A
+short time before the War of the Succession the musquet and bayonet
+had been made the arms of all the French infantry. It had formerly been
+usual to mingle pike-men with musqueteers. The other European nations
+followed the example of France, and the weapons used at Blenheim were
+substantially the same as those still employed.]
+
+Although the French army of Italy had been unable to penetrate into
+Austria, and although the masterly strategy of Marlborough had hitherto
+warded off the destruction with which the cause of the Allies seemed
+menaced at the beginning of the campaign, the peril was still most
+serious. It was absolutely necessary for Marlborough to attack the
+enemy, before Villeroy should be roused into action. There was nothing
+to stop that general and his army from marching into Franconia, whence
+the Allies drew their principal supplies; and besides thus distressing
+them, he might, by marching on and joining his army to those of Tallard
+and the Elector, form a mass which would overwhelm the force under
+Marlborough and Eugene. On the other hand, the chances of a battle
+seemed perilous, and the fatal consequences of a defeat were certain.
+The inferiority of the Allies in point of number was not very great, but
+still it was not to be disregarded; and the advantage which the enemy
+seemed to have in the composition of their troops was striking. Tallard
+and Marsin had forty-five thousand Frenchmen under them, all veterans,
+and all trained to act together: the Elector's own troops also were good
+soldiers. Marlborough, like Wellington at Waterloo, headed an army, of
+which the larger proportion consisted not of English, but of men of many
+different nations, and many different languages. He was also obliged
+to be the assailant in the action, and thus to expose his troops to
+comparatively heavy loss at the commencement of the battle, while the
+enemy would fight under the protection of the villages and lines which
+they were actively engaged in strengthening. The consequences of a
+defeat of the confederated army must have broken up the Grand Alliance,
+and realised the proudest hopes of the French king. Mr. Alison, in his
+admirable military history of the Duke of Marlborough, has truly stated
+the effects which would have taken place if France had been successful
+in the war. And, when the position of the Confederates at the time when
+Blenheim was fought is remembered; when we recollect the exhaustion of
+Austria, the menacing insurrection of Hungary, the feuds and jealousies
+of the German princes, the strength and activity of the Jacobite party
+in England, the imbecility of nearly all the Dutch statesmen of the
+time, and the weakness of Holland if deprived of her allies, we may
+adopt his words in speculating on what would have ensued, if France
+had been victorious in the battle, and "if a power, animated by the
+ambition, guided by the fanaticism and directed by the ability of that
+of Louis XIV., had gained the ascendancy in Europe. Beyond all question,
+a universal despotic dominion would have been established over the
+bodies, a cruel spiritual thraldom over the minds of men. France and
+Spain united under Bourbon princes, and in a close family alliance--the
+empire of Charlemagne with that of Charles V.--the power which revolted
+the edict of Nantes, and perpetrated the massacre of St. Bartholomew,
+with that which banished the Moriscoes, and established the Inquisition,
+would have proved irresistible, and beyond example destructive to the
+best interests of mankind.
+
+"The Protestants might have been driven, like the Pagan heathens of old
+by the son of Pepin, beyond the Elbe; the Stuart race, and with them
+Romish, ascendancy, might have been re-established in England; the fire
+lighted by Latimer and Ridley might have been extinguished in blood; and
+the energy breathed by religious freedom into the Anglo-Saxon race
+might have expired. The destinies of the world would have been changed.
+Europe, instead of a variety of independent states, whose mutual,
+hostility kept alive courage, while their national rivalry stimulated
+talent, would have sunk into the slumber attendant on universal
+dominion. The colonial empire of England would have withered away and
+perished, as that of Spain has done in the grasp of the Inquisition. The
+Anglo-Saxon race would have been arrested in its mission to overspread
+the earth and subdue it. The centralised despotism of the Roman empire
+would have been renewed on Continental Europe; the chains of Romish
+tyranny, and with them the general infidelity of France before the
+Revolution, would have extinguished or perverted thought in the British
+islands." [Alison's Life of Marlborough, p. 248.]
+
+Marlborough's words at the council of war, when a battle was resolved
+on, are remarkable, and they deserve recording. We know them on the
+authority of his chaplain, Mr. (afterwards Bishop) Hare, who accompanied
+him throughout the campaign, and in whose journal the biographers of
+Marlborough have found many of their best materials. Marborough's words
+to the officers who remonstrated with him on the seeming temerity of
+attacking the enemy in their position, were--"I know the danger, yet a
+battle is absolutely necessary; and I rely on the bravery and discipline
+of the troops, which will make amends for our disadvantages." In the
+evening orders were issued for a general engagement, and received by the
+army with an alacrity which justified his confidence.
+
+The French and Bavarians were posted behind a little stream called the
+Nebel, which runs almost from north to south into the Danube immediately
+in front of the village of Blenheim. The Nebel flows along a little
+valley, and the French occupied the rising ground to the west of it.
+The village of Blenheim was the extreme right of their position, and the
+village of Lutzingen, about three miles north of Blenheim, formed their
+left. Beyond Lutzingen are the rugged high grounds of the Godd Berg, and
+Eich Berg, on the skirts of which some detachments were posted so as to
+secure the Gallo-Bavarian position from being turned on the left flank.
+The Danube protected their right flank; and it was only in front that
+they could be attacked. The villages of Blenheim and Lutzingen had been
+strongly palisadoed and entrenched. Marshal Tallard, who held the chief
+command, took his station at Blenheim: Prince Maximilian the Elector,
+and Marshal Marsin commanded on the left. Tallard garrisoned Blenheim
+with twenty-six battalions of French infantry, and twelve squadrons
+of French cavalry. Marsin and the Elector had twenty-two battalions of
+infantry, and thirty-six squadrons of cavalry in front of the village of
+Lutzingen. The centre was occupied by fourteen battalions of infantry,
+including the celebrated Irish Brigade. These were posted in the little
+hamlet of Oberglau, which lies somewhat nearer to Lutzingen than to
+Blenheim. Eighty squadrons of cavalry and seven battalions of foot were
+ranged between Oberglau and Blenheim. Thus the French position was very
+strong at each extremity, but was comparatively weak in the centre.
+Tallard seems to have relied on the swampy state of the part of the
+valley that reaches from below Oberglau to Blenheim, for preventing any
+serious attack on this part of his line.
+
+The army of the Allies was formed into two great divisions: the largest
+being commanded by the Duke in person, and being destined to act against
+Tallard, while Prince Eugene led the other division, which consisted
+chiefly of cavalry, and was intended to oppose the enemy under Marsin
+and the Elector. As they approached the enemy, Marlborough's troops
+formed the left and the centre, while Eugene's formed the right of the
+entire army. Early in the morning of the 13th of August, the Allies left
+their own camp and marched towards the enemy. A thick haze covered the
+ground, and it was not until the allied right and centre had advanced
+nearly within cannon-shot of the enemy that Tallard was aware of their
+approach. He made his preparations with what haste he could, and about
+eight o'clock a heavy fire of artillery was opened from the French right
+on the advancing left wing of the British. Marlborough ordered up some
+of his batteries to reply to it, and while the columns that were to form
+the allied left and centre deployed, and took up their proper stations
+in the line, a warm cannonade was kept up by the guns on both sides.
+
+The ground which Eugene's columns had to traverse was peculiarly
+difficult, especially for the passage of the artillery; and it was
+nearly mid-day before he could get his troops into line opposite to
+Lutzingen. During this interval, Marlborough ordered divine service to
+be performed by the chaplains at the head of each regiment; and then
+rode along the lines, and found both officers and men in the highest
+spirits, and waiting impatiently for the signal for the the attack. At
+length an aide-de-camp galloped up from the right with the welcome news
+that Eugene was ready. Marlborough instantly sent Lord Cutts, with a
+strong brigade of infantry, to assault the village of Blenheim, while he
+himself led the main body down the eastward slope of the valley of the
+Nebel, and prepared to effect the passage of the stream.
+
+The assault on Blenheim, though bravely made, was repulsed with severe
+loss; and Marlborough, finding how strongly that village was garrisoned,
+desisted from any further attempts to carry it, and bent all his
+energies to breaking the enemy's line between Blenheim and Oberglau.
+Some temporary bridges had been prepared, and planks and fascinas had
+been collected; and by the aid of these and a little stone bridge which
+crossed the Nebel, near a hamlet called Unterglau, that lay in the
+centre of the valley, Marlborough succeeded in getting several squadrons
+across the Nebel, though it was divided into several branches, and the
+ground between them was soft, and in places, little better than a mere
+marsh. But the French artillery was not idle. The cannon balls plunged
+incessantly among the advancing squadrons of the allies; and bodies of
+French cavalry rode frequently down from the western ridge, to charge
+them before they had time to form on the firm ground. It was only by
+supporting his men by fresh troops, and by bringing up infantry, who
+checked the advance of the enemy's horse by their steady fire, that
+Marlborough was able to save his army in this quarter from a repulse,
+which, following the failure of the attack upon Blenheim, would probably
+have been fatal to the Allies. By degrees, his cavalry struggled over
+the blood-stained streams; the infantry were also now brought across, so
+as to keep in check the French troops who held Blenheim, and who, when
+no longer assailed in front, had begun to attack the Allies on their
+left with considerable effect.
+
+Marlborough had thus at last succeeded in drawing up the whole left wing
+of his army beyond the Nebel, and was about to press forward with it,
+when he was called away to another part of the field by a disaster that
+had befallen his centre. The Prince of Holstein-Beck had, with eleven
+Hanoverian battalions, passed the Nebel opposite to Oberglau, when he
+was charged and utterly routed by the Irish brigade which held that
+village. The Irish drove the Hanoverians back with heavy slaughter,
+broke completely through the line of the Allies, and nearly achieved a
+success as brilliant as that which the same brigade afterwards gained
+at Fontenoy. But at Blenheim their ardour in pursuit led them too far.
+Marlborough came up in person, and dashed in upon their exposed flank
+with some squadrons of British cavalry. The Irish reeled back, and as
+they strove to regain the height of Oberglau, their column was raked
+through and through by the fire of three battalions of the Allies,
+which Marlborough had summoned up from the reserve. Marlborough having
+re-established the order and communication of the Allies in this
+quarter, now, as he returned to his own left wing, sent to learn how his
+colleague fared against Marsin and the Elector, and to inform Eugene of
+his own success.
+
+Eugene had hitherto not been equally fortunate. He had made three
+attacks on the enemy opposed to him, and had been thrice driven back.
+It was only by his own desperate personal exertions, and the remarkable
+steadiness of the regiments of Prussian infantry which were under him,
+that he was able to save his wing from being totally defeated. But
+it was on the southern part of the battle-field, on the ground which
+Marlborough had won beyond the Nebel with such difficulty, that the
+crisis of the battle was to be decided.
+
+Like Hannibal, Marlborough relied principally on his cavalry for
+achieving his decisive successes, and it was by his cavalry that
+Blenheim, the greatest of his victories, was won. The battle had lasted
+till five in the afternoon. Marlborough had now eight thousand horseman
+drawn up in two lines, and in the most perfect order for a general
+attack on the enemy's line along the space between Blenheim and
+Oberglau. The infantry was drawn up in battalions in their rear, so as
+to support them if repulsed, and to keep in check the large masses of
+the French that still occupied the village of Blenheim. Tallard now
+interlaced his squadrons of cavalry with battalions of infantry; and
+Marlborough by a corresponding movement, brought several regiments of
+infantry, and some pieces of artillery, to his front line, at intervals
+between the bodies of horse. A little after five, Marlborough commenced
+the decisive movement, and the allied cavalry, strengthened and
+supported by foot and guns, advanced slowly from the lower ground near
+the Nebel up the slope to where the French cavalry, ten thousand strong,
+awaited them. On riding over the summit of the acclivity, the Allies
+were received with so hot a fire from the French artillery and small
+arms, that at first the cavalry recoiled, but without abandoning the
+high ground. The guns and the infantry which they had brought with them,
+maintained the contest with spirit and effect. The French fire seemed
+to slacken Marlborough instantly ordered a charge along the line. The
+allied cavalry galloped forward at the enemy's squadrons, and the hearts
+of the French horseman failed them. Discharging their carbines at an
+idle distance, they wheeled round and spurred from the field, leaving
+the nine infantry battalions of their comrades to be ridden down by
+the torrent of the allied cavalry. The battle was now won. Tallard and
+Marsin, severed from each other, thought only of retreat. Tallard drew
+up the squadrons of horse which he had left in a line extended towards
+Blenheim, and sent orders to the infantry in that village to leave and
+join him without delay. But long ere his orders could be obeyed,
+the conquering squadrons of Marlborough had wheeled to the left and
+thundered down on the feeble army of the French marshal. Part of the
+force which Tallard had drawn up for this last effort was driven into
+the Danube; part fled with their general to the village of Sonderheim,
+where they were soon surrounded by the victorious Allies, and compelled
+to surrender. Meanwhile, Eugene had renewed his attack upon the
+Gallo-Bavarian left, and Marsin, finding his colleague utterly routed,
+and his own right flank uncovered, prepared to retreat. He and the
+Elector succeeded in withdrawing a considerable part of their troops
+in tolerable order to Dillingen; but the large body of French
+who garrisoned Blenheim were left exposed to certain destruction.
+Marlborough speedily occupied all the outlets from the village with
+his victorious troops, and then, collecting his artillery round it, he
+commenced a cannonade that speedily would have destroyed Blenheim itself
+and all who were in it. After several gallant but unsuccessful attempts
+to cut their way through the Allies, the French in Blenheim were at
+length compelled to surrender at discretion; and twenty-four battalions,
+and twelve squadrons, with all their officers, laid down their arms, and
+became the captives of Marlborough.
+
+"Such," says Voltaire, "was the celebrated battle, which the French call
+the battle of Hochstet, the Germans Plentheim, and the English Blenheim,
+The conquerors had about five thousand killed, and eight thousand
+wounded, the greater part being on the side of Prince Eugene. The French
+army was almost entirely destroyed: of sixty thousand men, so long
+victorious, there never reassembled more than twenty thousand effective.
+About twelve thousand killed, fourteen thousand prisoners, all the
+cannon, a prodigious number of colours and standards, all the tents
+and equipages, the general of the army, and one thousand two hundred
+officers of mark, in the power of the conqueror, signalised that day!"
+
+Ulm, Landau, Treves, and Traerbach surrendered to the allies before the
+close of the year. Bavaria submitted to the emperor, and the Hungarians
+laid down their arms. Germany was completely delivered from France;
+and the military ascendancy of the arms of the Allies was completely
+established. Throughout the rest of the war Louis fought only in
+defence. Blenheim had dissipated for ever his once proud visions of
+almost universal conquest.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, 1704, AND THE BATTLE
+OF PULTOWA, 1709.
+
+A.D. 1705. The Archduke Charles lands in Spain with a small English army
+under Lord Peterborough, who takes Barcelona.
+
+1706. Marlborough's victory at Ramilies.
+
+1707. The English army in Spain is defeated at the battle of Almanza.
+
+1708. Marlborough's victory at Oudenarde.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. -- THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, 1709.
+
+
+ "Dread Pultowa's day,
+ When fortune left the royal Swede,
+ Around a slaughtered army lay,
+ No more to combat and to bleed.
+ The power and fortune of the war
+ Had passed to the triumphant Czar."--BYRON.
+
+
+Napoleon prophesied at St. Helena, that all Europe would soon be either
+Cossack or Republican. Four years ago, the fulfilment of the last of
+these alternatives appeared most probable. But the democratic movements
+of 1848 were sternly repressed in 1849. The absolute authority of
+a single ruler, and the austere stillness of martial law, are now
+paramount in the capitals of the continent, which lately owned no
+sovereignty save the will of the multitude; and where that which the
+democrat calls his sacred right of insurrection, was so loudly asserted
+and so often fiercely enforced. Many causes have contributed to bring
+about this reaction, but the most effective and the most permanent have
+been Russian influence and Russian arms. Russia is now the avowed and
+acknowledged champion of Monarchy against Democracy;--of constituted
+authority, however acquired, against revolution and change for whatever
+purpose desired;--of the imperial supremacy of strong states over their
+weaker neighbours against all claims for political independence, and
+all striving for separate nationality. She has crushed the heroic
+Hungarians; and Austria, for whom nominally she crushed them, is now one
+of her dependents. Whether the rumours of her being about to engage
+in fresh enterprises be well or ill founded, it is certain that recent
+events must have fearfully augmented the power of the Muscovite empire,
+which, even previously, had been the object of well-founded anxiety to
+all Western Europe.
+
+It was truly stated, twelve years ago, that "the acquisitions which
+Russia has made within the [then] last sixty-four years, are equal in
+extent and importance to the whole empire she had in Europe before that
+time; that the acquisitions she had made from Sweden are greater than
+what remains of that ancient kingdom; that her acquisitions from Poland
+are as large as the whole Austrian empire; that the territory she has
+wrested from Turkey in Europe is equal to the dominions of Prussia,
+exclusive of her Rhenish provinces; and that her acquisitions from
+Turkey in Asia are equal in extent to all the smaller states of Germany,
+the Rhenish provinces of Prussia, Belgium, and Holland taken together;
+that the country she has conquered from Persia is about the size of
+England; that her acquisitions in Tartary have an area equal to Turkey
+in Europe, Greece, Italy, and Spain. In sixty-four years she has
+advanced her frontier eight hundred and fifty miles towards Vienna,
+Berlin, Dresden, Munich, and Paris; she has approached four hundred and
+fifty miles nearer to Constantinople; she has possessed herself of the
+capital of Poland, and has advanced to within a few miles of the capital
+of Sweden, from which, when Peter the Great mounted the throne, her
+frontier was distant three hundred miles. Since that time she has
+stretched herself forward about one thousand miles towards India, and
+the same distance towards the capital of Persia." [Progress of Russia in
+the East. p. 142.]
+
+Such, at that period, had been the recent aggrandisement of Russia; and
+the events of the last few years, by weakening and disuniting all
+her European neighbours, have immeasurably augmented the relative
+superiority of the Muscovite empire over all the other continental
+powers.
+
+With a population exceeding sixty millions, all implicitly obeying the
+impulse of a single ruling mind; with a territorial area of six millions
+and a half of square miles; with a standing army eight hundred thousand
+strong; with powerful fleets on the Baltic and Black Seas; with a
+skilful host of diplomatic agents planted in every court, and among
+every tribe; with the confidence which unexpected success creates, and
+the sagacity which long experience fosters, Russia now grasps with an
+armed right hand the tangled thread of European politics, and issues her
+mandate as the arbitress of the movements of the age. Yet a century and
+a half have hardly elapsed since she was first recognised as a member
+of the drama of modern European history--previously to the battle of
+Pultowa, Russia played no part. Charles V. and his great rival our
+Elizabeth and her adversary Philip of Spain, the Guises, Sully,
+Richelieu, Cromwell, De Witt, William of Orange, and the other leading
+spirits of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, thought no more
+about the Muscovite Czar than we now think about the King of Timbuctoo.
+Even as late as 1735, Lord Bollingbroke, in his admirable "Letters on
+History," speaks of the history of the Muscovites, as having no relation
+to the knowledge which a practical English statesman ought to acquire.
+[Bolingbroke's Works, vol ii. p. 374. In the same page he observes how
+Sweden had often turned her arms southwards with prodigious effect.] It
+may be doubted whether a cabinet council often takes place now in
+our Foreign Office, without Russia being uppermost in every English
+statesman's thoughts.
+
+But though Russia remained thus long unheeded amid her snows, there
+was a northern power, the influence of which was acknowledged in the
+principal European quarrels, and whose good will was sedulously courted
+by many of the boldest chiefs and ablest councillors of the leading
+states. This was Sweden; Sweden, on whose ruins Russia has risen; but
+whose ascendancy over her semi-barbarous neighbours was complete, until
+the fatal battle that now forms our subject.
+
+As early as 1542 France had sought the alliance of Sweden to aid her in
+her struggle against Charles V. And the name of Gustavus Adolphus is of
+itself sufficient to remind us, that in the great contest for religious
+liberty, of which Germany was for thirty years the arena, it was Sweden
+that rescued the falling cause of Protestantism; and it was Sweden that
+principally dictated the remodelling of the European state system at the
+peace of Westphalia.
+
+From the proud pre-eminence in which the valour of the "Lion of the
+North" and of Torstenston, Bannier, Wrangel and the other Generals of
+Gustavus, guided by the wisdom of Oxenstiern, had placed Sweden, the
+defeat of Charles XII. at Pultowa hurled her down at once and for ever.
+Her efforts during the wars of the French revolution to assume a leading
+part in European politics, met with instant discomfiture, and almost
+provoked derision. But the Sweden, whose sceptre was bequeathed to
+Christina, and whose alliance Cromwell valued so highly, was a different
+power from the Sweden of the present day. Finland, Ingria, Livonia,
+Esthonia, Carelia, and other districts east of the Baltic, then were
+Swedish provinces; and the possession of Pomerania, Rugen, and Bremen,
+made her an important member of the Germanic empire. These territories
+are now all reft from her; and the most valuable of them form the staple
+of her victorious rival's strength. Could she resume them, could
+the Sweden of 1648 be reconstructed, we should have a first-class
+Scandinavian State in the North, well qualified to maintain the balance
+of power, and check the progress of Russia; whose power, indeed, never
+could have become formidable to Europe, save by Sweden becoming weak.
+
+The decisive triumph of Russia over Sweden at Pultowa was therefore
+all-important to the world, on account of what it overthrew as well as
+for what it established; and it is the more deeply interesting because
+it was not merely the crisis of a struggle between two states, but it
+was a trial of strength between two great races of mankind. We must bear
+in mind, that while the Swedes, like the English, the Dutch, and others,
+belong to the Germanic race, the Russians are a Sclavonic people.
+Nations of Sclavonian origin have long occupied the greater part of
+Europe eastward of the Vistula, and the populations also of Bohemia,
+Croatia, Servia, Dalmatia, and other important regions westward of that
+river, are Sclavonic. In the long and varied conflicts between them and
+the Germanic nations that adjoin them, the Germanic race had, before
+Pultowa, almost always maintained a superiority. With the single
+but important exception of Poland, no Sclavonic state had made any
+considerable figure in history before the time when Peter the Great won
+his great victory over the Swedish king. [The Hussite wars may, perhaps,
+entitle Bohemia to be distinguished.] What Russia has done since that
+time we know and we feel. And some of the wisest and best men of our own
+age and nation, who have watched with deepest care the annals and the
+destinies of humanity, have believed that the Sclavonic element in the
+population of Europe has as yet only partially developed its powers:
+that, while other races of mankind (our own, the Germanic, included)
+have exhausted their creative energies, and completed their allotted
+achievements, the Sclavonic race has yet a great career to run: and,
+that the narrative of Sclavonic ascendancy is the remaining page that;
+will conclude the history of the world. [See Arnold's Lectures on Modern
+History, pp. 36-39.]
+
+Let it not be supposed that in thus regarding the primary triumph of
+Russia over Sweden as a victory of the Sclavonic over the Germanic
+race, we are dealing with matters of mere ethnological pedantry, or
+with themes of mere speculative curiosity. The fact that Russia is
+a Sclavonic empire, is a fact of immense practical influence at
+the present moment. Half the inhabitants of the Austrian empire are
+Sclavonian. The population of the larger part of Turkey in Europe is of
+the same race. Silesia, Posen, and other parts of the Prussian dominions
+are principally Sclavonic. And during late years an enthusiastic zeal
+for blending all Sclavonians into one great united Sclavonic empire,
+has been growing up in these countries, which, however we may deride its
+principle, is not the less real and active, and of which Russia, as
+the head and champion of the Sclavonic race, knows well how to take her
+advantage.
+
+["The idea of Panslavism had a purely literary origin. It was started by
+Pollar, a Protestant clergyman of the Sclavonic congregation at
+Pesth, in Hungary, who wished to establish a national literature,
+by circulating all works, written in the various Sclavonic dialects,
+through every country where any of them are spoken. He suggested, that
+all the Slavonic literati should become acguainted with the sister
+dialects, so that a Bohemian, or other work, might be read on the shores
+of the Adriatic, as well as on the banks of the Volga, or any other
+place where a Sclavonic language was spoken; by which means an extensive
+literature might be created, tending to advance knowledge in all
+Sclavonic countries; and he supported his arguments by observing, that
+the dialects of ancient Greece differed from each other, like those of
+his own language, and yet that they formed only one Hellenic literature.
+The idea of an intellectual union of all those nations naturally led to
+that of a political one; and the Sclavonians, seeing that their numbers
+amounted to about one-third part of the whole population of Europe, and
+occupied more than half its territory, began to be sensible that they
+might claim for themselves a position, to which they had not hitherto
+aspired.
+
+"The opinion gained ground; and the question now is, whether the
+Slavonians can form a nation independent of Russia; or whether they
+ought to rest satisfied in being part of one great race, with the most
+powerful member of it as their chief. The latter, indeed, is gaining
+ground amongst them; and some Poles are disposed to attribute their
+sufferings to the arbitrary will of the Czar, without extending the
+blame to the Russians themselves. These begin to think that, if they
+cannot exist as Poles, the best thing to be done is to rest satisfied
+with a position in the Sclavonic empire, and they hope that, when once
+they give up the idea of restoring their country, Russia may grant some
+concessions to their separate nationality.
+
+"The same idea has been put forward by writers in the Russian interest;
+great efforts are making among other Sclavonic people, to induce them
+to look upon Russia as their future head; and she has already
+gained considerable influence over the Sclavonic populations of
+Turkey."--WILKINSON'S DALMATIA.]
+
+It is a singular fact that Russia owes her very name to a band of
+Swedish invaders who conquered her a thousand years ago. They were soon
+absorbed in the Sclavonic population, and every trace of the Swedish
+character had disappeared in Russia for many centuries before her
+invasion by Charles XII. She was long the victim and the slave of the
+Tartars; and for many considerable periods of years the Poles held her
+in subjugation. Indeed, if we except the expeditions of some of
+the early Russian chiefs against Byzantium, and the reign of Ivan
+Vasilovitch, the history of Russia before the time of Peter the Great is
+one long tale of suffering and degradation.
+
+But whatever may have been the amount of national injuries that she
+sustained from Swede, from Tartar, or from Pole in the ages of her
+weakness, she has certainly retaliated ten-fold during the century and
+a half of her strength. Her rapid transition at the commencement of that
+period from being the prey of every conqueror to being the conqueror of
+all with whom she comes into contact, to being the oppressor instead of
+the oppressed, is almost without a parallel in the history of nations.
+It was the work of a single ruler; who, himself without education,
+promoted science and literature among barbaric millions; who gave them
+fleets, commerce, arts, and arms; who, at Pultowa, taught them to face
+and beat the previously invincible Swedes: and who made stubborn valour,
+and implicit subordination, from that time forth the distinguishing
+characteristics of the Russian soldiery, which had before his time been
+a mere disorderly and irresolute rabble.
+
+The career of Philip of Macedon resembles most nearly that of the great
+Muscovite Czar: but there is this important difference, that Philip
+had, while young, received in Southern Greece the best education in all
+matters of peace and war that the ablest philosophers and generals of
+the age could bestow. Peter was brought up among barbarians, and in
+barbaric ignorance. He strove to remedy this when a grown man, by
+leaving all the temptations to idleness and sensuality, which his court
+offered, and by seeking instruction abroad. He laboured with his own
+hands as a common artisan in Holland and in England, that he might
+return and teach his subjects how ships, commerce, and civilization
+could be acquired. There is a degree of heroism here superior
+to anything that we know of in the Macedonian king. But Philip's
+consolidation of the long disunited Macedonian empire,--his raising a
+people which he found the scorn of their civilized southern neighbours,
+to be their dread,--his organization of a brave and well-disciplined
+army, instead of a disorderly militia,--his creation of a maritime
+force, and his systematic skill in acquiring and improving sea-ports and
+arsenals,--his patient tenacity of purpose under reverses,--his
+personal bravery,--and even his proneness to coarse amusements and
+pleasures,--all mark him out as the prototype of the imperial founder of
+the Russian power. In justice, however, to the ancient hero, it ought
+to be added, that we find in the history of Philip no examples of that
+savage cruelty which deforms so grievously the character of Peter the
+Great.
+
+In considering the effects of the overthrow which the Swedish arms
+sustained at Pultowa, and in speculating on the probable consequences
+that would have followed if the invaders had been successful we must not
+only bear in mind the wretched state In which Peter found Russia at his
+accession, compared with her present grandeur, but we must also keep in
+view the fact, that, at the time when Pultowa was fought, his reforms
+were yet incomplete, and his new institutions immature. He had broken
+up the old Russia; and the New Russia, which he ultimately created,
+was still in embryo. Had he been crushed at Pultowa, his mighty schemes
+would have been buried with him; and (to use the words of Voltaire) "the
+most extensive empire in the world would have relapsed into the chaos
+from which it had been so lately taken." It is this fact that makes the
+repulse of Charles XII. the critical point in the fortunes of Russia.
+The danger which she incurred a century afterwards from her invasion by
+Napoleon was in reality far less than her peril when Charles attacked
+her; though the French Emperor, as a military genius, was infinitely
+superior to the Swedish King, and led a host against her, compared with
+which the armies of Charles seem almost insignificant. But, as Fouche
+well warned his imperial master, when he vainly endeavoured to dissuade
+him from his disastrous expedition against the empire of the Czars,
+the difference between the Russia of 1812 and the Russia of 1709 was
+greater, than the disparity between the power of Charles and the might
+of Napoleon. "If that heroic king," said Fouche, "had not, like your
+imperial Majesty, half Europe in arms to back him, neither had his
+opponent, the Czar Peter, 400,000 soldiers, and 60,000 Cossacks."
+The historians, who describe the state of the Muscovite empire when
+revolutionary and imperial France encountered it, narrate with truth and
+justice, how "at the epoch of the French Revolution this immense empire,
+comprehending nearly half of Europe and Asia within its dominions,
+inhabited by a patient and indomitable race, ever ready to exchange the
+luxury and adventure of the south for the hardships and monotony of the
+north, was daily becoming more formidable to the liberties of Europe.
+The Russian infantry had then long been celebrated for its immoveable
+firmness. Her immense population, amounting then in Europe alone to
+nearly thirty-five millions, afforded an inexhaustible supply of men.
+Her soldiers, inured to heat and cold from their infancy, and actuated
+by a blind devotion to their Czar, united the steady valour of the
+English to the impetuous energy of the French troops." [Alison.] So,
+also, we read how the haughty aggressions of Bonaparte "went to excite
+a national feeling, from the banks of the Borysthenes to the wall of
+China, and to unite against him the wild and uncivilized inhabitants
+of an extended empire, possessed by a love to their religion, their
+government, and their country, and having a character of stern devotion,
+which he was incapable of estimating." [Scott's Life of Napoleon] But
+the Russia of 1709 had no such forces to oppose to an assailant. Her
+whole population then was below sixteen millions; and, what is far more
+important, this population had neither acquired military spirit, nor
+strong nationality; nor was it united in loyal attachment to its ruler.
+
+Peter had wisely abolished the old regular troops of the empire, the
+Strelitzes; but the forces which he had raised in their stead on a new
+and foreign plan, and principally officered with foreigners, had, before
+the Swedish invasion, given no proof that they could be relied on. In
+numerous encounters with the Swedes, Peter's soldiery had run like sheep
+before inferior numbers. Great discontent, also, had been excited among
+all classes of the community by the arbitrary changes which their
+great emperor introduced, many of which clashed with the most cherished
+national prejudices of his subjects. A career of victory and prosperity
+had not yet raised Peter above the reach of that disaffection, nor had
+superstitious obedience to the Czar yet become the characteristic of
+the Muscovite mind. The victorious occupation of Moscow by Charles XII.
+would have quelled the Russian nation as effectually, as had been the
+case when Batou Khan, and other ancient invaders, captured the capital
+of primitive Muscovy. How little such a triumph could effect towards
+subduing modern Russia, the fate of Napoleon demonstrated at once and
+for ever.
+
+The character of Charles XII. has been a favourite theme with
+historians, moralists, philosophers, and poets. But it is his military
+conduct during the campaign in Russia that alone requires comment here.
+Napoleon, in the memoirs dictated by him at St. Helena, has given us a
+systematic criticism on that, among other celebrated campaigns, his
+own Russian campaign included. He labours hard to prove that he himself
+observed all the true principles of offensive war: and probably his
+censures of Charles's generalship were rather highly coloured, for
+the sake of making his own military skill stand out in more favourable
+relief. Yet, after making all allowances, we must admit the force of
+Napoleon's strictures on Charles's tactics, and own that his judgment,
+though severe, is correct, when he pronounces that the Swedish king,
+unlike his great predecessor Gustavus, knew nothing of the art of war,
+and was nothing more than a brave and intrepid soldier. Such, however,
+was not the light in which Charles was regarded by his contemporaries at
+the commencement of his Russian expedition. His numerous victories,
+his daring and resolute spirit, combined with the ancient renown of the
+Swedish arms, then filled all Europe with admiration and anxiety. As
+Johnson expresses it, his name was then one at which the world grew
+pale. Even Louis le Grand earnestly solicited his assistance; and our
+own Marlborough, then in the full career of his victories, was specially
+sent by the English court to the camp of Charles, to propitiate the hero
+of the north in favour of the cause of the allies and to prevent the
+Swedish sword from being flung into the scale in the French king's
+favour. But Charles at that time was solely bent on dethroning the
+sovereign of Russia, as he had already dethroned the sovereign of
+Poland, and all Europe fully believed that he would entirely crush the
+Czar, and dictate conditions of peace in the Kremlin. [Voltaire attests,
+from personal inspection of the letters of several public ministers to
+their respective courts, that such was the general expectation.] Charles
+himself looked on success as a matter of certainty; and the romantic
+extravagance of his views was continually increasing. "One year, he
+thought, would suffice for the conquest of Russia. The court of Rome
+was next to feel his vengeance, as the pope had dared to oppose
+the concession of religious liberty to the Silesian Protestants.
+No enterprise at that time appeared impossible to him. He had even
+dispatched several officers privately into Asia and Egypt, to take
+plans of the towns, and examine into the strength and resources of those
+countries." [Crighton's Scandinavia.]
+
+Napoleon thus epitomises the earlier operations of Charles's invasion of
+Russia:--
+
+"That prince set out from his camp at Aldstadt, near Leipsic, in
+September 1707, at the head of 46,000 men, and traversed Poland; 20,000
+men, under Count Lewenhaupt, disembarked at Riga; and 15,000 were in
+Finland. He was therefore in a condition to have brought together 80,000
+of the best troops in the world. He left 10,000 men at Warsaw to guard
+King Stanislaus, and in January 1708, arrived at Grodno, where he
+wintered. In June he crossed the forest of Minsk, and presented himself
+before Borisov; forced the Russian army, which occupied the left bank
+of the Beresina; defeated 20,000 Russians who were strongly entrenched
+behind marshes; passed the Borysthenes at Mohiloev, and vanquished a
+corps of 16,000 Muscovites near Smolensko, on the 22d of September. He
+was now advanced to the confines of Lithuania, and was about to enter
+Russia Proper: the Czar, alarmed at his approach, made him proposals of
+peace. Up to this time all his movements mere conformable to rule, and
+his communications were well secured. He was master of Poland and Riga,
+and only ten days' march distant from Moscow: and it is probable that
+he would have reached that capital, had he not quitted the high road
+thither, and directed his steps towards the Ukraine, in order to form a
+junction with Mazeppa, who brought him only 6,000 men. By this movement
+his line of operations, beginning at Sweden, exposed his flank to Russia
+for a distance of four hundred leagues, and he was unable to protect it,
+or to receive either reinforcements or assistance."
+
+Napoleon severely censures this neglect of one of the great rules of
+war. He points out that Charles had not organized his war like Hannibal,
+on the principle of relinquishing all communications with home, keeping
+all his forces concentrated, and creating a base of operations in the
+conquered country. Such had been the bold system of the Carthaginian
+general; but Charles acted on no such principle, inasmuch as he caused
+Lewenhaupt, one of his generals who commanded a considerable detachment,
+and escorted a most important convoy, to follow him at a distance
+of twelve days' march. By this dislocation of his forces he exposed
+Lewenhaupt to be overwhelmed separately by the full force of the enemy,
+and deprived the troops under his own command of the aid which that
+general's men and stores might have afforded, at the very crisis of the
+campaign.
+
+The Czar had collected an army of about a hundred thousand effective
+men; and though the Swedes, in the beginning of the invasion, were
+successful in every encounter, the Russian troops were gradually
+acquiring discipline; and Peter and his officers were learning
+generalship from their victors, as the Thebans of old learned it from
+the Spartans. When Lewenhaupt, in the October of 1708, was striving to
+join Charles in the Ukraine, the Czar suddenly attacked him near the
+Borysthenes with an overwhelming force of fifty thousand Russians.
+Lewenhaupt fought bravely for three days, and succeeded in cutting his
+way through the enemy, with about four thousand of his men, to where
+Charles awaited him near the river Desna; but upwards of eight thousand
+Swedes fell in these battles; Lewenhaupt's cannon and ammunition were
+abandoned; and the whole of his important convoy of provisions, on which
+Charles and his half-starved troops were relying, fell into the enemy's
+hands. Charles was compelled to remain in the Ukraine during the winter;
+but in the spring of 1709 he moved forward towards Moscow, and invested
+the fortified town of Pultowa, on the river Vorskla, a place where the
+Czar had stored up large supplies of provisions and military stores, and
+which commanded the roads leading towards Moscow. The possession of this
+place would have given Charles the means of supplying all the wants of
+his suffering army, and would also have furnished him with a secure base
+of operations for his advance against the Muscovite capital. The
+siege was therefore hotly pressed by the Swedes; the garrison resisted
+obstinately; and the Czar, feeling the importance of saving the town,
+advanced in June to its relief, at the head of an army from fifty to
+sixty thousand strong.
+
+Both sovereigns now prepared for the general action, which each
+perceived to be inevitable, and which each felt would be decisive of his
+own and of his country's destiny. The Czar, by some masterly manoeuvres,
+crossed the Vorskla, and posted his army on the same side of that river
+with the besiegers, but a little higher up. The Vorskla falls into the
+Borysthenes about fifteen leagues below Pultowa, and the Czar arranged
+his forces in two lines, stretching from one river towards the other; so
+that if the Swedes attacked him and were repulsed, they would be driven
+backwards into the acute angle formed by the two streams at their
+junction. He fortified these lines with several redoubts, lined with
+heavy artillery; and his troops, both horse and foot, were in the best
+possible condition, and amply provided with stores and ammunition.
+Charles's forces were about twenty-four thousand strong. But not more
+than half of these were Swedes; so much had battle, famine, fatigue, and
+the deadly frosts of Russia, thinned the gallant bands which the Swedish
+king and Lewenhaupt had led to the Ukraine. The other twelve thousand
+men under Charles were Cossacks and Wallachians, who had joined him
+in that country. On hearing that the Czar was about to attack him,
+he deemed that his dignity required that he himself should be the
+assailant; and leading his army out of their entrenched lines before the
+town, he advanced with them against the Russian redoubts.
+
+He had been severely wounded in the foot in a skirmish a few days
+before; and was borne in a litter along the ranks, into the thick of the
+fight. Notwithstanding the fearful disparity of numbers and disadvantage
+of position, the Swedes never showed their ancient valour more nobly
+than on that dreadful day. Nor do their Cossack and Wallachian allies
+seem to have been unworthy of fighting side by side with Charles's
+veterans. Two of the Russian redoubts were actually entered, and the
+Swedish infantry began to raise the cry of victory. But on the other
+side, neither general nor soldiers flinched in their duty. The Russian
+cannonade and musketry were kept up; fresh masses of defenders were
+poured into the fortifications, and at length the exhausted remnants of
+the Swedish columns recoiled from the blood-stained redoubts. Then the
+Czar led the infantry and cavalry of his first line outside the works,
+drew them up steadily and skilfully, and the action was renewed along
+the whole fronts of the two armies on the open ground. Each sovereign
+exposed his life freely in the world-winning battle; and on each side
+the troops fought obstinately and eagerly under their ruler's eye.
+It was not till two hours from the commencement of the action that,
+overpowered by numbers, the hitherto invincible Swedes gave way. All was
+then hopeless disorder and irreparable rout. Driven downward to where
+the rivers join, the fugitive Swedes surrendered to their victorious
+pursuers, or perished in the waters of the Borysthenes. Only a few
+hundreds swam that river with their king and the Cossack Mazeppa, and
+escaped into the Turkish territory. Nearly ten thousand lay killed and
+wounded in the redoubts and on the field of battle.
+
+In the joy of his heart the Czar exclaimed, when the strife was over,
+"That the son of the morning had fallen from heaven; and that the
+foundations of St. Petersburg at length stood firm." Even on that
+battle-field, near the Ukraine, the Russian emperor's first thoughts
+were of conquests and aggrandisement on the Baltic. The peace of
+Nystadt, which transferred the fairest provinces of Sweden to Russia,
+ratified the judgment of battle which was pronounced at Pultowa. Attacks
+on Turkey and Persia by Russia commenced almost directly after that
+victory. And though the Czar failed in his first attempts against
+the Sultan, the successors of Peter have, one and all, carried on an
+uniformly aggressive and uniformly successful system of policy against
+Turkey, and against every other state, Asiatic as well as European,
+which has had the misfortune of having Russia for a neighbour.
+
+Orators and authors, who have discussed the progress of Russia, have
+often alluded to the similitude between the modern extension of the
+Muscovite empire and the extension of the Roman dominions in ancient
+times. But attention has scarcely been drawn to the closeness of the
+parallel between conquering Russia and conquering Rome, not only in the
+extent of conquests, but in the means of effecting conquest. The history
+of Rome during the century and a half which followed the close of the
+second Punic war, and during which her largest acquisitions of territory
+were made, should be minutely compared with the history of Russia for
+the last one hundred and fifty years. The main points of similitude
+can only be indicated in these pages; but they deserve the fullest
+consideration. Above all, the sixth chapter of Montesquieu's great
+Treatise on Rome, the chapter "DE LA CONDUITE QUE LES ROMAINS TINRENT
+POUR SOUMETTRE LES PEUPLES," should be carefully studied by every one
+who watches the career and policy of Russia. The classic scholar will
+remember the state-craft of the Roman Senate, which took care in
+every foreign war to appear in the character of a PROTECTOR. Thus Rome
+PROTECTED the AEtolians, and the Greek cities, against Macedon; she
+PROTECTED Bithynia, and other small Asiatic states, against the Syrian
+kings; she protected Numidia against Carthage; and in numerous other
+instances assumed the same specious character. But, "Woe to the people
+whose liberty depends on the continued forbearance of an over-mighty
+protector." [Malkin's History of Greece.] Every state which Rome
+protected was ultimately subjugated and absorbed by her. And Russia
+has been the protector of Poland, the protector of the Crimea,--the
+protector of Courland,--the protector of Georgia, Immeritia, Mingrelia,
+the Tcherkessian and Caucasian tribes. She has first protected, and then
+appropriated them all. She protects Moldavia and Wallachia. A few years
+ago she became the protector of Turkey from Mehemet Ali; and since the
+summer of 1849 she has made herself the protector of Austria.
+
+When the partisans of Russia speak of the disinterestedness with
+which she withdrew her protecting troops from Constantinople, and from
+Hungary, let us here also mark the ominous exactness of the parallel
+between her and Rome. While the ancient world yet contained a number of
+independent states, which might have made a formidable league against
+Rome if she had alarmed them by openly avowing her ambitious schemes,
+Rome's favourite policy was seeming disinterestedness and moderation.
+After her first war against Philip, after that against Antiochus, and
+many others, victorious Rome promptly withdrew her troops from the
+territories which they occupied. She affected to employ her arms only
+for the good of others; but, when the favourable moment came, she
+always found a pretext for marching her legions back into each coveted
+district, and making it a Roman province. Fear, not moderation, is the
+only effective check on the ambition of such powers as Ancient Rome and
+Modern Russia. The amount of that fear depends on the amount of timely
+vigilance and energy which other states choose to employ against the
+common enemy of their freedom and national independence.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS FROM THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, 1709, AND THE DEFEAT OF
+BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA, 1777.
+
+A.D. 1713. Treaty of Utrecht. Philip is left by it in possession of
+the throne of Spain. But Naples, Milan, the Spanish territories on the
+Tuscan coast, the Spanish Netherlands, and some parts of the French
+Netherlands, are given to Austria. France cedes to England Hudson's
+Bay and Straits, the Island of St. Christopher, Nova Scotia, and
+Newfoundland in America, Spain cedes to England Gibraltar and Minorca,
+which the English had taken during the war. The King of Prussia and the
+Duke of Savoy both obtain considerable additions of territory to their
+dominions.
+
+1714. Death of Queen Anne. The House of Hanover begins to reign in
+England. A rebellion in favour of the Stuarts is put down. Death of
+Louis XIV.
+
+1718. Charles XII. killed at the siege of Frederickshall.
+
+1725. Death of Peter the Great of Russia.
+
+1740. Frederick II, King of Prussia, begins his reign. He attacks the
+Austrian dominions, and conquers Silesia.
+
+1742. War between France and England.
+
+1743. Victory of the English at Dettingen.
+
+1745. Victory of the French at Fontenoy. Rebellion in Scotland in favour
+of the House of Stuart: finally quelled by the battle of Culloden in the
+next year.
+
+1748. Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle.
+
+1756-1763. The Seven Years' War, during which Prussia makes an heroic
+resistance against the allies of Austria, Russia, and France. England,
+under the administration of the elder Pitt (afterwards Lord Chatham),
+takes a glorious part in the war in opposition to France and Spain.
+Wolfe wins the battle of Quebec, and the English conquer Canada, Cape
+Breton, and St. John. Clive begins his career of conquest in India.
+Cuba, is taken by the English from Spain.
+
+1763. Treaty of Paris: which leaves the power of Prussia increased, and
+its military reputation greatly exalted.
+
+"France, by the treaty of Paris, ceded to England Canada, and the island
+of Cape Breton, with the islands and coasts of the gulf and river of St.
+Lawrence. The boundaries between the two nations in North America were
+fixed by a line drawn along the middle of the Mississippi, from its
+source to its mouth. All on the left or eastern bank of that river, was
+given up to England, except the city of New Orleans, which was reserved
+to France; as was also the liberty of the fisheries on a part of the
+coasts of Newfoundland and the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The islands of St.
+Peter and Miquelon were given them as a shelter for their fishermen, but
+without permission to raise fortifications. The islands of Martinico,
+Guadaloupe, Mariegalante, Desirada, and St. Lucia, were surrendered
+to France; while Grenada, the Grenadines, St. Vincent, Dominica, and
+Tobago, were ceded to England. This latter power retained her conquests
+on the Senegal, and restored to France the island of Gores, on-the coast
+of Africa. France was put in possession of the forts and factories which
+belonged to her in the East Indies, on the coasts of Coromandel, Orissa,
+Malabar, and Bengal under the restriction of keeping up no military
+force in Bengal.
+
+"In Europe, France restored all the conquests she had made in Germany;
+as also the island, of Minorca, England gave up to her Belleisle, on the
+coast of Brittany; while Dunkirk was kept in the same condition as had
+been determined by the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. The island of Cuba,
+with the Havannah, were restored to the King of Spain, who, on his part,
+ceded to England Florida, with Port-Augustine and the Bay of Pensacola.
+The King of Portugal was restored to the same state in which he had
+been before the war. The colony of St. Sacrament in America, which the
+Spaniards had conquered, was given back to him.
+
+"The peace of Paris, of which we have just now spoken, was the era of
+England's greatest prosperity. Her commerce and navigation extended over
+all parts of the globe, and were supported by a naval force so much
+the more imposing, as it was no longer counter-balanced by the maritime
+power of France, which had been almost annihilated in the preceding war.
+The immense territories which that peace had secured her, both in Africa
+and America, opened up new channels for her industry: and what deserves
+specially to be remarked is, that she acquired at the same time vast
+and important possessions in the East Indies." [Koch's Revolutions of
+Europe.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. -- VICTORY OF THE AMERICANS OVER BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA,
+A.D. 1777.
+
+
+ "Westward the course of empire takes its way;
+ The first four acts already past,
+ A fifth shall close the drama with the day:
+ TIME'S NOBLEST OFFSPRING IS ITS LAST."
+ BISHOP BERKELEY.
+
+
+"Even of those great conflicts, in which hundreds of thousands have been
+engaged and tens of thousands have fallen, none has been more fruitful
+of results than this surrender of thirty-five hundred fighting-men
+at Saratoga. It not merely changed the relations of England and
+the feelings of Europe towards these insurgent colonies, but it has
+modified, for all times to come, the connexion between every colony and
+every parent state."--LORD MAHON.
+
+Of the four great powers that now principally rule the political
+destinies of the world, France and England are the only two whose
+influence can be dated back beyond the last century and a half. The
+third great power, Russia, was a feeble mass of barbarism before the
+epoch of Peter the Great; and the very existence of the fourth great
+power, as an independent nation, commenced within the memory of
+living men. By the fourth great power of the world I mean the mighty
+commonwealth of the western continent, which now commands the admiration
+of mankind. That homage is sometimes reluctantly given, and accompanied
+with suspicion and ill-will. But none can refuse it. All the physical
+essentials for national strength are undeniably to be found in the
+geographical position and amplitude of territory which the United States
+possess: in their almost inexhaustible tracts of fertile, but hitherto
+untouched soil; in their stately forests, in their mountain-chains and
+their rivers, their beds of coal, and stores of metallic wealth; in
+their extensive seaboard along the waters of two oceans, and in their
+already numerous and rapidly increasing population. And, when we examine
+the character of this population, no one can look on the fearless
+energy, the sturdy determination, the aptitude for local self
+government, the versatile alacrity, and the unresting spirit of
+enterprise which characterise the Anglo-Americans, without feeling that
+he here beholds the true moral elements of progressive might.
+
+Three quarters of a century have not yet passed away since the United
+States ceased to be mere dependencies of England. And even if we
+date their origin from the period when the first permanent European
+settlements, out of which they grew, were made on the western coast
+of the North Atlantic, the increase of their strength is unparalleled,
+either in rapidity or extent.
+
+The ancient Roman boasted, with reason, of the growth of Rome from
+humble beginnings to the greatest magnitude which the world had then
+ever witnessed. But the citizen of the United States is still more
+justly entitled to claim this praise. In two centuries and a half his
+country has acquired ampler dominion than the Roman gained in ten. And
+even if we credit the legend of the band of shepherds and outlaws with
+which Romulus is said to have colonized the Seven Hills, we find not
+there so small a germ of future greatness, as we find in the group of
+a hundred and five ill-chosen and disunited emigrants who founded
+Jamestown in 1607, or in the scanty band of the Pilgrim-Fathers, who, a
+few years later, moored their bark on the wild and rock-bound coast of
+the wilderness that was to become New England. The power of the United
+States is emphatically the "Imperium quo neque ab exordio ullum fere
+minus, neque incrementis toto orbe amplius humans potest memoria
+recordari." [Eutropius, lib. i. (exordium).]
+
+Nothing is more calculated to impress the mind with a sense of the
+rapidity with which the resources of the American republic advance, than
+the difficulty which the historical inquirer finds in ascertaining their
+precise amount. If he consults the most recent works, and those written
+by the ablest investigators of the subject, he finds in them admiring
+comments on the change which the last few years, before those books were
+written, had made; but when he turns to apply the estimates in those
+books to the present moment, he finds them wholly inadequate. Before
+a book on the subject of the United States has lost its novelty, those
+states have outgrown the description which it contains. The celebrated
+work of the French statesman, De Tocqueville, appeared about fifteen
+years ago. In the passage which I am about to quote, it will be seen
+that he predicts the constant increase of the Anglo-American power, but
+he looks on the Rocky Mountains as their extreme western limit for many
+years to come. He had evidently no expectation of himself seeing that
+power dominant along the Pacific as well as along the Atlantic coast. He
+says:--
+
+"The distance from Lake Superior to the Gulf of Mexico extends from
+the 47th to the 30th degree of latitude, a distance of more than 1,200
+miles, as the bird flies. The frontier of the United States winds along
+the whole of this immense line; sometimes falling within its limits,
+but more frequently extending far beyond it into the waste. It has
+been calculated that the Whites, advance every year a mean distance of
+seventeen miles along the whole of this vast boundary. Obstacles, such
+as an unproductive district, a lake, or an Indian nation unexpectedly
+encountered, are sometimes met with. The advancing column then halts for
+a while; its two extremities fall back upon themselves, and as soon as
+they are re-united they proceed onwards. This gradual and continuous
+progress of the European race towards the Rocky Mountains has the
+solemnity of a Providential event: it is like a deluge of men rising
+unabatedly, and daily driven onwards by the hand of God.
+
+"Within this first line of conquering settlers towns are built, and
+vast estates founded. In 1790 there were only a few thousand pioneers
+sprinkled along the valleys of the Mississippi: and at the present day
+these valleys contain as many inhabitants as were to be found in the
+whole Union in 1790. Their population amounts to nearly four millions.
+The city of Washington was founded in 1800, in the very centre of the
+Union; but such are the changes which have taken place, that it now
+stands at one of the extremities; and the delegates of the most remote
+Western States are already obliged to perform a journey as long so that
+from Vienna to Paris.
+
+"It must not, then, be imagined that the impulse of the British race in
+the New World can be arrested. The dismemberment of the Union, and the
+hostilities which might ensue, the abolition of republican institutions,
+and the tyrannical government which might succeed it, may retard this
+impulse, but they cannot prevent it from ultimately fulfilling the
+destinies to which that race is reserved. No power upon earth can close
+upon the emigrants that fertile wilderness, which offers resources to
+all industry, and a refuge from all want. Future events, of whatever
+nature they may be, will not deprive the Americans of their climate or
+of their inland seas, or of their great rivers, or of their exuberant
+soil. Nor will bad laws, revolutions, and anarchy be able to obliterate
+that love of prosperity and that spirit of enterprise which seem to be
+the distinctive characteristics of their race, or to extinguish that
+knowledge which guides them on their way.
+
+"Thus, in the midst of the uncertain future, one event at least is sure.
+At a period which may be said to be near (for we are speaking of the
+life of a nation), the Anglo-Americans will alone cover the immense
+space contained between the Polar regions and the Tropics, extending
+from the coast of the Atlantic to the shores of the Pacific Ocean; the
+territory which will probably be occupied by the Anglo-Americans at
+some future time, may be computed to equal three-quarters of Europe in
+extent. The climate of the Union is upon the whole preferable to that of
+Europe, and its natural advantages are not less great; it is therefore
+evident that its population will at some future time be proportionate to
+our own. Europe, divided as it is between so many different nations, and
+torn as it has been by incessant wars and the barbarous manners of
+the Middle Ages, has notwithstanding attained a population of 410
+inhabitants to the square league. What cause can prevent the United
+States from having as numerous a population in time?
+
+"The time will therefore come when one hundred and fifty millions of men
+will be living in North America, equal in condition, the progeny of
+one race, owing their origin to the same cause, and preserving the same
+civilization, the same language, the same religion, the same habits, the
+same manners, and imbued with the same opinions, propagated under the
+same forms. The rest is uncertain, but this is certain; and it is a fact
+new to the world, a fact fraught with such portentous consequences as to
+baffle the efforts even of the imagination."
+
+[The original French of these passages will be found in the chapter on
+"Quelles sont les chances de duree de l'Union Americaine--Quels dangers
+la menacent." in the third volume of the first part of De Tocqueville,
+and in the conclusion of the first part. They are (with others)
+collected and translated by Mr. Alison, in his "Essays," vol. iii. p.
+374.]
+
+Let us turn from the French statesman writing in 1835, to an English
+statesman, who is justly regarded as the highest authority on all
+statistical subjects, and who described the United States only seven
+years ago. Macgregor [Macgregor's Commercial Statistics.] tells us--
+
+"The States which, on the ratification of independence, formed the
+American Republican Union, were thirteen, viz.:--
+
+"Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York,
+New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina,
+South Carolina, and Georgia." The foregoing thirteen states (THE
+WHOLE INHABITED TERRITORY OF WHICH, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF A FEW SMALL
+SETTLEMENTS, WAS CONFINED TO THE REGION EXTENDING BETWEEN THE ALLEGHANY
+MOUNTAINS AND THE ATLANTIC) were those which existed at the period when
+they became an acknowledged separate and independent federal sovereign
+power. The thirteen stripes of the standard or flag of the United
+States, continue to represent the original number, The stars have
+multiplied to twenty-six, [Fresh stars have dawned since this was
+written.] according as the number of States have increased.
+
+"The territory of the thirteen original States of the Union, including
+Maine and Vermont, comprehended a superficies of 371,124 English square
+miles; that of the whole United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland,
+120,354; that of France, including Corsica, 214,910; that of the
+Austrian Empire, including Hungary and all the Imperial States, 257,540
+English square miles.
+
+"The present superficies of the twenty-six constitutional States of the
+Anglo-American Union, and the district of Columbia, and territories
+of Florida, include 1,029,025 square miles; to which if we add the
+north-west, or Wisconsin territory, east of the Mississippi, and bounded
+by Lake Superior on the north, and Michigan on the east, and occupying
+at least 100,000 square miles, and then add the great western region,
+not yet well-defined territories, but at the most limited calculation
+comprehending 700,000 square miles, the whole unbroken in its vast
+length and breadth by foreign nations, comprehends a portion of the
+earth's surface equal to 1,729,025 English, or 1,296,770 geographical
+square miles."
+
+We may add that the population of the States, when they declared their
+independence, was about two millions and a half; it is now twenty-three
+millions.
+
+I have quoted Macgregor, not only on account of the clear and full view
+which he gives of the progress of America to the date when he wrote, but
+because his description may be contrasted with what the United States
+have become even since his book appeared. Only three years after the
+time when Macgregor thus wrote, the American President truly stated:--
+
+"Within less than four years the annexation of Texas to the Union has
+been consummated; all conflicting title to the Oregon territory, south
+of the 49th degree of north latitude, adjusted; and New Mexico and
+Upper California have been acquired by treaty. The area of these several
+territories contains 1,193,061 square miles, or 763,559,040 acres; while
+the area of the remaining twenty-nine States, and the territory not yet
+organized into States east of the Rocky Mountains, contains 2,059,513
+square miles, or 1,318,126,058 acres. These estimates show that the
+territories recently acquired, and over which our exclusive jurisdiction
+and dominion have been extended, constitute a country more than half
+as large as all that which was held by the United States before their
+acquisition. If Oregon be excluded from the estimate, there will still
+remain within the limits of Texas, New Mexico, and California, 851,598
+square miles, or 545,012,720 acres; being an addition equal to more than
+one-third of all the territory owned by the United States before
+their acquisition; and, including Oregon, nearly as great an extent of
+territory as the whole of Europe, Russia only excepted. THE MISSISSIPPI,
+SO LATELY THE FRONTIER OF OUR COUNTRY, IS NOW ONLY ITS CENTRE. With the
+addition of the late acquisitions, the United States are now estimated
+to be nearly as large as the whole of Europe. The extent of the
+sea-coast of Texas, on the Gulf of Mexico, is upwards of 400 miles;
+of the coast of Upper California, on the Pacific, of 970 miles; and of
+Oregon, including the Straits of Fuca, of 650 miles; MAKING THE WHOLE
+EXTENT OF SEA-COAST ON THE PACIFIC 1,620 MILES; and the whole extent on
+both the Pacific and the Gulf of Mexico, 2,020 miles. The length of the
+coast on the Atlantic, from the northern limits of the United States,
+round the Capes of Florida to the Sabine on the eastern boundary
+of Texas, is estimated to be 3,100 miles, so that the addition of
+sea-coast, including Oregon, is very nearly two-thirds as great as all
+we possessed before; and, excluding Oregon, is an addition of 1,370
+miles; being nearly equal to one-half of the extent of coast which we
+possessed before these acquisitions. We have now three great maritime
+fronts--on the Atlantic, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Pacific; making,
+in the whole, an extent of sea-coast exceeding 5,000 miles. This is
+the extent of the sea-coast of the United States, not including bays,
+sounds, and small irregularities of the main shore, and of the sea
+islands. If these be included, the length of the shore line of coast,
+as estimated by the superintendent of the Coast Survey, in his report,
+would be 33,063 miles."
+
+The importance of the power of the United States being then firmly
+planted along the Pacific applies not only to the New World, but to
+the Old. Opposite to San Francisco, on the coast of that ocean, lie
+the wealthy but decrepit empires of China and Japan. Numerous groups of
+islets stud the larger part of the intervening sea, and form convenient
+stepping-stones for the progress of commerce or ambition. The
+intercourse of traffic between these ancient Asiatic monarchies, and the
+young Anglo-American Republic, must be rapid and extensive. Any attempt
+of the Chinese or Japanese rulers to check it, will only accelerate an
+armed collision. The American will either buy or force his way. Between
+such populations as that of China and Japan on the one side, and that
+of the United States on the other--the former haughty, formal, and
+insolent, the latter bold, intrusive, and unscrupulous--causes of
+quarrel must, sooner or later, arise, The results of such a quarrel
+cannot be doubted. America will scarcely imitate the forbearance shown
+by England at the end of our late war with the Celestial Empire; and
+the conquests of China and Japan by the fleets and armies of the United
+States, are events which many now living are likely to witness. Compared
+with the magnitude of such changes in the dominion of the Old World,
+the certain ascendancy of the Anglo-Americans over Central and Southern
+America, seems a matter of secondary importance. Well may we repeat De
+Tocqueville's words, that the growing power of this commonwealth is, "Un
+fait entierement nouveau dans le monde, et dont l'imagination ellememe
+ne saurait saisir la portee." [These remarks were written in May 1851,
+and now, in May 1852, a powerful squadron of American war-steamers has
+been sent to Japan, for the ostensible purpose of securing protection
+for the crews of American vessels shipwrecked on the Japanese coasts,
+but also evidently for important ulterior purposes.]
+
+An Englishman may look, and ought to look, on the growing grandeur
+of the Americans with no small degree of generous sympathy and
+satisfaction. They, like ourselves, are members of the great Anglo-Saxon
+nation "whose race and language are now overrunning the world from one
+end of it to the other." [Arnold.] and whatever differences of form of
+government may exist between us and them; whatever reminiscences of the
+days when, though brethren, we strove together, may rankle in the
+minds of us, the defeated party; we should cherish the bonds of common
+nationality that still exist between us. We should remember, as the
+Athenians remembered of the Spartans at a season of jealousy and
+temptation, that our race is one, being of the same blood, speaking the
+same language, having an essential resemblance in our institutions and
+usages, and worshipping in the temples of the same God. [HERODOTUS,
+viii. 144.] All this may and should be borne in mind. And yet an
+Englishman can hardly watch the progress of America, without the
+regretful thought that America once was English, and that, but for the
+folly of our rulers, she might be English still. It is true that
+the commerce between the two countries has largely and beneficially
+increased; but this is no proof that the increase would not have been
+still greater, had the States remained integral portions of the same
+great empire. By giving a fair and just participation in political
+rights, these, "the fairest possessions" of the British crown, might
+have been preserved to it. "This ancient and most noble monarchy" [Lord
+Chatham.] would not have been dismembered; nor should we see that which
+ought to be the right arm of our strength, now menacing us in every
+political crisis, as the most formidable rival of our commercial and
+maritime ascendancy.
+
+The war which rent away the North American colonies of England is, of
+all subjects in history, the most painful for an Englishman to dwell on.
+It was commenced and carried on by the British ministry in iniquity and
+folly, and it was concluded in disaster and shame. But the contemplation
+of it cannot be evaded by the historian, however much it may be
+abhorred. Nor can any military event be said to have exercised more
+important influence on the future fortunes of mankind, than the complete
+defeat of Burgoyne's expedition in 1777; a defeat which rescued the
+revolted colonists from certain subjection; and which, by inducing the
+courts of France and Spain to attack England in their behalf, ensured
+the independence of the United States, and the formation of that
+trans-Atlantic power which, not only America, but both Europe and Asia,
+now see and feel.
+
+Still, in proceeding to describe this "decisive battle of the world,"
+a very brief recapitulation of the earlier events of the war may be
+sufficient; nor shall I linger unnecessarily on a painful theme.
+
+The five northern colonies of Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
+New Hampshire, and Vermont, usually classed together as the New
+England colonies, were the strongholds of the insurrection against the
+mother-country. The feeling of resistance was less vehement and
+general in the central settlement of New York; and still less so in
+Pennsylvania, Maryland, and the other colonies of the south, although
+everywhere it was formidably active. Virginia should, perhaps, be
+particularised for the zeal which its leading men displayed in the
+American cause; but it was among the descendants of the stern Puritans
+that the spirit of Cromwell and Vane breathed in all its fervour; it was
+from the New Englanders that the first armed opposition to the British
+crown had been offered; and it was by them that the most stubborn
+determination to fight to the last, rather than waive a single right or
+privilege, had been displayed. In 1775, they had succeeded in forcing
+the British troops to evacuate Boston; and the events of 1776 had made
+New York (which the royalists captured in that year) the principal basis
+of operations for the armies of the mother-country.
+
+A glance at the map will show that the Hudson river, which falls into
+the Atlantic at New York, runs down from the north at the back of the
+New England States, forming an angle of about forty-five degrees with
+the line of the coast of the Atlantic, along which the New England
+states are situate. Northward of the Hudson, we see a small chain of
+lakes communicating with the Canadian frontier. It is necessary to
+attend closely to these geographical points, in order to understand the
+plan of the operations which the English attempted in 1777, and which
+the battle of Saratoga defeated.
+
+The English had a considerable force in Canada; and in 1776 had
+completely repulsed an attack which the Americans had made upon that
+province. The British ministry resolved to avail themselves, in the next
+year, of the advantage which the occupation of Canada gave them, not
+merely for the purpose of defence, but for the purpose of striking a
+vigorous and crushing blow against the revolted colonies. With this
+view, the army in Canada was largely reinforced. Seven thousand veteran
+troops were sent out from England, with a corps of artillery abundantly
+supplied, and led by select and experienced officers. Large quantities
+of military stores were also furnished for the equipment of the Canadian
+volunteers, who were expected to join the expedition. It was intended
+that the force thus collected should march southward by the line of the
+lakes, and thence along the banks of the Hudson river. The British army
+in New York (or a large detachment of it) was to make a simultaneous
+movement northward, up the line of the Hudson, and the two expeditions
+were to unite at Albany, a town on that river. By these operations all
+communication between the northern colonies and those of the centre and
+south would be cut off. An irresistible force would be concentrated,
+so as to crush all further opposition in New England; and when this was
+done, it was believed that the other colonies would speedily submit. The
+Americans had no troops in the field that seemed able to baffle these
+movements. Their principal army, under Washington, was occupied in
+watching over Pennsylvania and the south. At any rate it was believed
+that, in order to oppose the plan intended for the new campaign, the
+insurgents must risk a pitched battle, in which the superiority of
+the royalists, in numbers, in discipline, and in equipment, seemed to
+promise to the latter a crowning victory. Without question the plan
+was ably formed; and had the success of the execution been equal to the
+ingenuity of the design, the re-conquest or submission of the thirteen
+United States must, in all human probability, have followed; and the
+independence which they proclaimed in 1776 would have been extinguished
+before it existed a second year. No European power had as yet come
+forward to aid America. It is true that England was generally regarded
+with jealousy and ill-will, and was thought to have acquired, at the
+treaty of Paris, a preponderance of dominion which was perilous to the
+balance of power; but though many were willing to wound, none had yet
+ventured to strike; and America, if defeated in 1777, would have been
+suffered to fall unaided.
+
+[In Lord Albemarle's "Memoirs of the Marquis of Rockingham." is
+contained the following remarkable state paper, drawn up by King George
+III himself respecting the plan of Burgoyne's expedition. The original
+is in the king's own hand.
+
+"REMARKS ON THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR FROM CANADA.
+
+"The outlines of the plan seem to be on a proper foundation. The rank
+and file of the army now in Canada (including the 11th Regiment of
+British, M'Clean's corps, the Brunswicks and Hanover), amount to 10,527;
+add the eleven additional companies and four hundred Hanover Chasseurs,
+the total will be 11,443.
+
+"As sickness and other contingencies must be expected, I should think
+not above 7,000 effectives can be spared over Lake Champlain; for it
+would be highly imprudent to run any risk in Canada.
+
+"The fixing the stations of those left in the province may not be quite
+right, though the plan proposed may be recommended. Indians must be
+employed, and this measure must be avowedly directed, and Carleton must
+be in the strongest manner directed that the Apollo shall be ready by
+that day, to receive Burgoyne.
+
+"The magazines must be formed with the greatest expedition, at Crown
+Point.
+
+"If possible, possession must be taken of Lake George, and nothing but
+an absolute impossibility of succeeding in this, can be an excuse for
+proceeding by South Bay and Skeenborough.
+
+"As Sir W. Howe does not think of acting from Rhode island into the
+Massachusets, the force from Canada must join him in Albany.
+
+"The diversion on the Mohawk River ought at least to be strengthened by
+the addition of the four hundred Hanover Chasseurs.
+
+"The Ordnance ought to furnish a complete proportion of intrenching
+tools.
+
+"The provisions ought to be calculated for a third more than the
+effective soldiery, and the General ordered to avoid delivering these
+when the army can be subsisted by the country. Burgoyne certainly
+greatly undervalues the German recruits.
+
+"The idea of carrying the army by sea to Sir W. Howe, would certainly
+require the leaving a much larger part of it in Canada, as in that case
+the rebel army would divide that province from the immense one under Sir
+W. Howe. I greatly dislike this last idea."]
+
+Burgoyne had gained celebrity by some bold and dashing exploits in
+Portugal during the last war; he was personally as brave an officer as
+ever headed British troops; he had considerable skill as a tactician;
+and his general intellectual abilities and acquirements were of a high
+order. He had several very able and experienced officers under him,
+among whom were Major-General Phillips and Brigadier-General Fraser. His
+regular troops amounted, exclusively of the corps of artillery, to about
+seven thousand two hundred men, rank and file. Nearly half of these were
+Germans. He had also an auxiliary force of from two to three thousand
+Canadians. He summoned the warriors of several tribes of the Red Indians
+near the western lakes to join his army. Much eloquence was poured
+forth, both in America and in England, in denouncing the use of these
+savage auxiliaries. Yet Burgoyne seems to have done no more than
+Montcalm, Wolfe, and other French, American, and English generals had
+done before him. But, in truth, the lawless ferocity of the Indians,
+their unskilfulness in regular action, and the utter impossibility of
+bringing them under any discipline, made their services of little or no
+value in times of difficulty: while the indignation which their
+outrages inspired, went far to rouse the whole population of the invaded
+districts into active hostilities against Burgoyne's force.
+
+Burgoyne assembled his troops and confederates near the river Bouquet,
+on the west side of Lake Champlain. He then, on the 21st of June, 1777,
+gave his Red Allies a war-feast, and harangued them on the necessity of
+abstaining from their usual cruel practices against unarmed people and
+prisoners. At the same time he published a pompous manifesto to the
+Americans, in which he threatened the refractory with all the horrors
+of war, Indian as well as European. The army proceeded by water to
+Crown Point, a fortification which the Americans held at the northern
+extremity of the inlet by which the water from Lake George is conveyed
+to Lake Champlain. He landed here without opposition; but the reduction
+of Ticonderoga, a fortification about twelve miles to the south of Crown
+Point, was a more serious matter, and was supposed to be the critical
+part of the expedition. Ticonderoga commanded the passage along the
+lakes, and was considered to be the key to the route which Burgoyne
+wished to follow. The English had been repulsed in an attack on it
+in the war with the French in 1768 with severe loss. But Burgoyne now
+invested it with great skill; and the American general, St. Clair, who
+had only an ill-equipped army of about three thousand men, evacuated it
+on the 5th of July. It seems evident that a different course would have
+caused the destruction or capture of his whole army; which, weak as it
+was, was the chief force then in the field for the protection of the New
+England states. When censured by some of his countrymen for abandoning
+Ticonderoga, St. Clair truly replied, "that he had lost a post, but
+saved a province." Burgoyne's troops pursued the retiring Americans,
+gained several advantages over them, and took a large part of their
+artillery and military stores.
+
+The loss of the British in these engagements was trifling. The army
+moved southward along Lake George to Skenesborough; and thence slowly,
+and with great difficulty, across a broken country, full of creeks and
+marshes, and clogged by the enemy with felled trees and other obstacles,
+to Fort Edward, on the Hudson river, the American troops continuing to
+retire before them.
+
+Burgoyne reached the left bank of the Hudson river on the 30th of July.
+Hitherto he had overcome every difficulty which the enemy and the nature
+of the country had placed in his way. His army was in excellent order
+and in the highest spirits; and the peril of the expedition seemed over,
+when they were once on the bank of the river which was to be the channel
+of communication between them and the British army in the south. But
+their feelings, and those of the English nation in general when their
+successes were announced, may best be learned from a contemporary
+writer. Burke, in the "Annual Register" for 1777, describes them thus:--
+
+"Such was the rapid torrent of success, which swept everything away
+before the northern army in its onset. It is not to be wondered at,
+if both officers and private men were highly elated with their good
+fortune, and deemed that and their prowess to be irresistible; if they
+regarded their enemy with the greatest contempt; considered their own
+toils to be nearly at an end; Albany to be already in their hands; and
+the reduction of the northern provinces to be rather a matter of some
+time, than an arduous task full of difficulty and danger.
+
+"At home, the joy and exultation was extreme; not only at court, but
+with all those who hoped or wished the unqualified subjugation, and
+unconditional submission of the colonies. The loss in reputation was
+greater to the Americans, and capable of more fatal consequences,
+than even that of ground, of posts, of artillery, or of men. All the
+contemptuous and most degrading charges which had been made by their
+enemies, of their wanting the resolution and abilities of men, even
+in their defence of whatever was dear to them, were now repeated and
+believed. Those who still regarded them as men, and who had not yet lost
+all affection to them as brethren, who also retained hopes that a happy
+reconciliation upon constitutional principles, without sacrificing
+the dignity or the just authority of government on the one side, or
+a dereliction of the rights of freemen on the other, was not even now
+impossible, notwithstanding their favourable dispositions in general,
+could not help feeling upon this occasion that the Americans sunk not a
+little in their estimation. It was not difficult to diffuse an opinion
+that the war in effect was over; and that any further resistance could
+serve only to render the terms of their submission the worse. Such were
+some of the immediate effects of the loss of those grand keys of North
+America, Ticonderoga and the lakes."
+
+The astonishment and alarm which these events produced among the
+Americans were naturally great; but in the midst of their disasters none
+of the colonists showed any disposition to submit. The local governments
+of the New England States, as well as the Congress, acted with vigour
+and firmness in their efforts to repel the enemy. General Gates was sent
+to take command of the army at Saratoga; and Arnold, a favourite leader
+of the Americans, was despatched by Washington to act under him,
+with reinforcements of troops and guns from the main American army.
+Burgoyne's employment of the Indians now produced the worst possible
+effects. Though he laboured hard to check the atrocities which they
+were accustomed to commit, he could not prevent the occurrence of many
+barbarous outrages, repugnant both to the feelings of humanity and to
+the laws of civilized warfare. The American commanders took care that
+the reports of these excesses should be circulated far and wide, well
+knowing that they would make the stern New Englanders not droop, but
+rage. Such was their effect; and though, when each man looked upon his
+wife, his children, his sisters, or his aged parents, the thought of the
+merciless Indian "thirsting for the blood of man, woman, and child,"
+of "the cannibal savage torturing, murdering, roasting, and eating the
+mangled victims of his barbarous battles," [Lord Chatham's speech on
+the employment of Indians in the war.] "might raise terror in the bravest
+breasts; this very terror produced a directly contrary effect to causing
+submission to the royal army. It was seen that the few friends of the
+royal cause, as well as its enemies, were liable to be the victims of
+the indiscriminate rage of the savages;" [See in the "Annual Register"
+for 1777, p.117, the "Narrative of the Murder of Miss M'Crea, the
+daughter of an American loyalist."] and thus "the inhabitants of the
+open and frontier countries had no choice of acting: they had no means
+of security left, but by abandoning their habitations and taking up
+arms. Every man saw the necessity of becoming a temporary soldier, not
+only for his own security, but for the protection and defence of those
+connexions which are dearer than life itself. Thus an army was poured
+forth by the woods, mountains, and marshes, which in this part were
+thickly sown with plantations and villages. The Americans recalled their
+courage; and when their regular army seemed to be entirely wasted,
+the spirit of the country produced a much greater and more formidable
+force." [Burke.]
+
+While resolute recruits, accustomed to the use of fire-arms, and all
+partially trained by service in the provincial militias, were thus
+flocking to the standard of Gates and Arnold at Saratoga; and while
+Burgoyne was engaged at Port Edward in providing the means for the
+further advance of his army through the intricate and hostile country
+that still lay before him, two events occurred, in each of which the
+British sustained loss, and the Americans obtained advantage, the moral
+effects of which were even more important than the immediate result
+of the encounters. When Burgoyne left Canada, General St. Leger was
+detached from that province with a mixed force of about one thousand
+men, and some light field-pieces, across Lake Ontario against Fort
+Stanwix, which the Americans held. After capturing this, he was to
+march along the Mohawk river to its confluence with the Hudson, between
+Saratoga and Albany, where his force and that of Burgoyne were to unite.
+But, after some successes, St. Leger was obliged to retreat, and to
+abandon his tents and large quantities of stores to the garrison. At the
+very time that General Burgoyne heard of this disaster, he experienced
+one still more severe in the defeat of Colonel Baum with a large
+detachment of German troops at Benington, whither Burgoyne had sent them
+for the purpose of capturing some magazines of provisions, of which
+the British army stood greatly in need. The Americans, augmented by
+continual accessions of strength, succeeded, after many attacks, in
+breaking this corps, which fled into the woods, and left its commander
+mortally wounded on the field: they then marched against a force of five
+hundred grenadiers and light infantry, which was advancing to Colonel
+Baum's assistance under Lieutenant-Colonel Breyman; who, after a gallant
+resistance, was obliged to retreat on the main army. The British loss
+in these two actions exceeded six hundred men: and a party of American
+loyalists, on their way to join the army, having attached themselves to
+Colonel Baum's corps, were destroyed with it.
+
+Notwithstanding these reverses, which added greatly to the spirit and
+numbers of the American forces, Burgoyne determined to advance. It was
+impossible any longer to keep up his communications with Canada by
+way of the lakes, so as to supply his army on his southward march; but
+having by unremitting exertions collected provisions for thirty days, he
+crossed the Hudson by means of a bridge of rafts, and, marching a short
+distance along its western bank, he encamped on the 14th of September on
+the heights of Saratoga, about sixteen miles from Albany. The Americans
+had fallen back from Saratoga, and were now strongly posted near
+Stillwater, about half way between Saratoga and Albany, and showed a
+determination to recede no farther.
+
+Meanwhile Lord Howe, with the bulk of the British army that had lain
+at New York, had sailed away to the Delaware, and there commenced
+a campaign against Washington, in which the English general took
+Philadelphia, and gained other showy, but unprofitable successes,
+But Sir Henry Clinton, a brave and skilful officer, was left with a
+considerable force at New York; and he undertook the task of moving up
+the Hudson to co-operate with Burgoyne. Clinton was obliged for this
+purpose to wait for reinforcements which had been promised from England,
+and these did not arrive till September. As soon as he received them,
+Clinton embarked about 3,000 of his men on a flotilla, convoyed by some
+ships of war under Commander Hotham, and proceeded to force his may up
+the river, but it was long before he was able to open any communication
+with Burgoyne.
+
+The country between Burgoyne's position at Saratoga and that of
+the Americans at Stillwater was rugged, and seamed with creeks and
+water-courses; but after great labour in making bridges and temporary
+causeways, the British army moved forward. About four miles from
+Saratoga, on the afternoon of the 19th of September, a sharp encounter
+took place between part of the English right wing, under Burgoyne
+himself, and a strong body of the enemy, under Gates and Arnold. The
+conflict lasted till sunset. The British remained masters of the field;
+but the loss on each side was nearly equal (from five hundred to six
+hundred men); and the spirits of the Americans were greatly raised by
+having withstood the best regular troops of the English army. Burgoyne
+now halted again, and strengthened his position by field-works and
+redoubts; and the Americans also improved their defences. The two armies
+remained nearly within cannon-shot of each other for a considerable
+time, during which Burgoyne was anxiously looking for intelligence of
+the promised expedition from New York, which, according to the original
+plan, ought by this time to have been approaching Albany from the south.
+At last, a messenger from Clinton made his way, with great difficulty,
+to Burgoyne's camp, and brought the information that Clinton was on his
+way up the Hudson to attack the American forts which barred the passage
+up that river to Albany. Burgoyne, in reply, on the 30th of September,
+urged Clinton to attack the forts as speedily as possible, stating that
+the effect of such an attack, or even the semblance of it, would be
+to move the American army from its position before his own troops. By
+another messenger, who reached Clinton on the 5th of October, Burgoyne
+informed his brother general that he had lost his communications with
+Canada, but had provisions which would last him till the 20th. Burgoyne
+described himself as strongly posted, and stated that though the
+Americans in front of him were strongly posted also, he made no doubt
+of being able to force them, and making his way to Albany; but that he
+doubted whether he could subsist there, as the country was drained of
+provisions. He wished Clinton to meet him there, and to keep open a
+communication with New York. [See the letters of General Clinton to
+General Harvey, published by Lord Albemarle in his "Memoirs of the
+Marquis of Rockingham," vol. ii. p. 335, ET SEQ.]
+
+Burgoyne had over-estimated his resources, and in the very beginning of
+October found difficulty and distress pressing him hard.
+
+The Indians and Canadians began to desert him; while, on the other hand,
+Gates's army was continually reinforced by fresh bodies of the militia.
+An expeditionary force was detached by the Americans, which made a bold,
+though unsuccessful, attempt to retake Ticonderoga. And finding the
+number and spirit of the enemy to increase daily, and his own stores of
+provision to diminish, Burgoyne determined on attacking the Americans
+in front of him, and by dislodging them from their position, to gain the
+means of moving upon Albany, or at least of relieving his troops from
+the straitened position in which they were cooped up.
+
+Burgoyne's force was now reduced to less than 6,000 men. The right of
+his camp was on some high ground a little to the west of the river;
+thence his entrenchments extended along the lower ground to the bank of
+the Hudson, the line of their front being nearly at a right angle with
+the course of the stream. The lines were fortified with redoubts and
+field-works, and on a height on the bank of the extreme right a strong
+redoubt was reared, and entrenchments, in a horse-shoe form, thrown
+up. The Hessians, under Colonel Breyman, were stationed here, forming
+a flank defence to Burgoyne's main army. The numerical force of the
+Americans was now greater than the British even in regular troops, and
+the numbers of the militia and volunteers which had joined Gates and
+Arnold were greater still.
+
+General Lincoln with 2,000 New England troops, had reached the American
+camp on the 29th of September. Gates gave him the command of the
+right wing, and took in person the command of the left wing, which was
+composed of two brigades under Generals Poor and Leonard, of Colonel
+Morgan's rifle corps, and part of the fresh New England Militia. The
+whole of the American lines had been ably fortified under the direction
+of the celebrated Polish general, Kosciusko, who was now serving as a
+volunteer in Gates's army. The right of the American position, that
+is to say, the part of it nearest to the river, was too strong to be
+assailed with any prospect of success: and Burgoyne therefore determined
+to endeavour to force their left. For this purpose he formed a column
+of 1,500 regular troops, with two twelve-pounders, two howitzers and
+six six-pounders. He headed this in person, having Generals Phillips,
+Reidesel, and Fraser under him. The enemy's force immediately in front
+of his lines was so strong that he dared not weaken the troops who
+guarded them, by detaching any more to strengthen his column of attack.
+
+It was on the 7th of October that Burgoyne led his column forward;
+and on the preceding day, the 6th, Clinton had successfully executed
+a brilliant enterprise against the two American forts which barred his
+progress up the Hudson. He had captured them both, with severe loss to
+the American forces opposed to him; he had destroyed the fleet which the
+Americans had been forming on the Hudson, under the protection of their
+forts; and the upward river was laid open to his squadron. He had also,
+with admirable skill and industry, collected in small vessels, such
+as could float within a few miles of Albany, provisions sufficient to
+supply Burgoyne's Army for six months. [See Clinton's letters in Lord
+Albemarle, p. 337.] He was now only a hundred and fifty-six miles
+distant from Burgoyne; and a detachment of 1,700 men actually advanced
+within forty miles of Albany. Unfortunately Burgoyne and Clinton were
+each ignorant of the other's movements; but if Burgoyne had won his
+battle on the 7th, he must on advancing have soon learned the tidings of
+Clinton's success, and Clinton would have heard of his. A junction would
+soon have been made of the two victorious armies, and the great objects
+of the campaign might yet have been accomplished. All depended on
+the fortune of the column with which Burgoyne, on the eventful 7th of
+October, 1777, advanced against the American position. There were
+brave men, both English and German, in its ranks; and in particular it
+comprised one of the best bodies of grenadiers in the British service.
+[I am indebted for many of the details of the battle, to Mr Lossing's
+"Field-book of the Revolution."]
+
+Burgoyne pushed forward some bodies of irregular troops to distract the
+enemy's attention; and led his column to within three-quarters of a mile
+from the left of Gates's camp, and then deployed his men into line. The
+grenadiers under Major Ackland, and the artillery under Major Williams,
+were drawn up on the left; a corps of Germans under General Reidesel,
+and some British troops under General Phillips, were in the centre; and
+the English light infantry, and the 24th regiment under Lord Balcarres
+and General Fraser, were on the right. But Gates did not wait to be
+attacked; and directly the British line was formed and began to advance,
+the American general, with admirable skill, caused General Poor's
+brigade of New York and New Hampshire troops, and part of General
+Leonard's brigade, to make a sudden and vehement rush against its left,
+and at the same time sent Colonel Morgan, with his rifle corps and
+other troops, amounting to 1,500, to turn the right of the English. The
+grenadiers under Ackland sustained the charge of superior numbers nobly.
+But Gates sent more Americans forward, and in a few minutes the action
+became general along the centre, so as to prevent the Germans from
+detaching any help to the grenadiers. Morgan, with his riflemen, was now
+pressing Lord Balcarres and General Fraser hard, and fresh masses of the
+enemy were observed advancing from their extreme left, with the evident
+intention of forcing the British right, and cutting off its retreat. The
+English light infantry and the 24th now fell back, and formed an oblique
+second line, which enabled them to baffle this manoeuvre, and also to
+succour their comrades in the left wing, the gallant grenadiers, who
+were overpowered by superior numbers, and, but for this aid, must have
+been cut to pieces.
+
+The contest now was fiercely maintained on both sides. The English
+cannon were repeatedly taken and retaken; but when the grenadiers near
+them were forced back by the weight of superior numbers, one of the guns
+was permanently captured by the Americans, and turned upon the English.
+Major Williams and Major Ackland were both made prisoners, and in
+this part of the field the advantage of the Americans was decided. The
+British centre still held its ground; but now it was that the American
+general Arnold appeared upon the scene, and did more for his countrymen
+than whole battalions could have effected. Arnold, when the decisive
+engagement of the 7th of October commenced, had been deprived of his
+command by Gates, in consequence of a quarrel between them about the
+action of the 19th of September. He had listened for a short time in the
+American camp to the thunder of the battle, in which he had no military
+right to take part, either as commander or as combatant. But his excited
+spirit could not long endure such a state of inaction. He called for his
+horse, a powerful brown charger, and springing on it, galloped furiously
+to where the fight seemed to be the thickest. Gates saw him, and sent
+an aide-de-camp to recall him; but Arnold spurred far in advance, and
+placed himself at the head of three regiments which had formerly been
+under him, and which welcomed their old commander with joyous cheers. He
+led them instantly upon the British centre; and then galloping along the
+American line, he issued orders for a renewed and a closer attack, which
+were obeyed with alacrity, Arnold himself setting the example of the
+most daring personal bravery, and charging more than once, sword in
+hand, into the English ranks. On the British side the officers did
+their duty nobly; but General Fraser was the most eminent of them all,
+restoring order wherever the line began to waver, and infusing fresh
+courage into his men by voice and example. Mounted on an iron-grey
+charger, and dressed in the full uniform of a general officer, he was
+conspicuous to foes as well as to friends. The American Colonel Morgan
+thought that the fate of the battle rested on this gallant man's life,
+and calling several of his best marksman round him, pointed Fraser out,
+and said: "That officer is General Fraser; I admire him, but he must
+die. Our victory depends on it. Take your stations in that clump of
+bushes, and do your duty." Within five minutes Fraser fell mortally
+wounded, and was carried to the British camp by two grenadiers. Just
+previously to his being struck by the fatal bullet, one rifle-ball had
+cut the crupper of his saddle and smother had passed through his horse's
+mane close behind the ears. His aide-de-camp had noticed this, and said:
+"It is evident that you are marked out for particular aim; would it not
+be prudent; for you to retire from this place?" Fraser replied: "My duty
+forbids me to fly from danger;" and the next moment he fell. [Lossing.]
+
+Burgoyne's whole force was now compelled to retreat towards their camp;
+the left and centre were in complete disorder, but the light infantry
+and the 24th checked the fury of the assailants, and the remains of
+the column with great difficulty effected their return to their camp;
+leaving six of their cannons in the possession of the enemy, and great
+numbers of killed and wounded on the field; and especially a large
+proportion of the artillerymen, who had stood to their guns until shot
+down or bayoneted beside them by the advancing Americans.
+
+Burgoyne's column had been defeated, but the action was not yet over.
+The English had scarcely entered the camp, when the Americans,
+pursuing their success, assaulted it in several places with remarkable
+impetuosity, rushing in upon the intrenchments and redoubts through a
+severe fire of grape-shot and musketry. Arnold especially, who on this
+day appeared maddened with the thirst of combat and carnage, urged on
+the attack against a part of the intrenchments which was occupied by the
+light infantry under Lord Balcarres. [Botta's American War, book viii.]
+But the English received him with vigour and spirit. The struggle here
+was obstinate and sanguinary. At length, as it grew towards evening,
+Arnold, having forced all obstacles, entered the works with some of the
+most fearless of his followers. But in this critical moment of glory and
+danger, he received a painful wound in the same leg which had already
+been injured at the assault on Quebec. To his bitter regret he was
+obliged to be carried back. His party still continued the attack, but
+the English also continued their obstinate resistance, and at last
+night fell, and the assailants withdrew from this quarter of the British
+intrenchments. But, in another part the attack had been more successful.
+A body of the Americans, under Colonel Brooke, forced their way in
+through a part of the horse-shoe intrenchments on the extreme right,
+which was defended by the Hessian reserve under Colonel Breyman. The
+Germans resisted well, and Breyman died in defence of his post; but the
+Americans made good the ground which they had won, and captured baggage,
+tents, artillery, and a store of ammunition, which they were greatly in
+need of. They had by establishing themselves on this point, acquired the
+means of completely turning the right flank of the British, and gaining
+their rear. To prevent this calamity, Burgoyne effected during the night
+an entire change of position. With great skill he removed his whole army
+to some heights near the river, a little northward of the former camp,
+and he there drew up his men, expecting to be attacked on the following
+day. But Gates was resolved not to risk the certain triumph which
+his success had already secured for him. He harassed the English with
+skirmishes, but attempted no regular attack. Meanwhile he detached
+bodies of troops on both sides of the Hudson to prevent the British from
+recrossing that river, and to bar their retreat. When night fell,
+it became absolutely necessary for Burgoyne to retire again, and,
+accordingly, the troops were marched through a stormy and rainy night
+towards Saratoga, abandoning their sick and wounded, and the greater
+part of their baggage to the enemy.
+
+Before the rear-guard quitted the camp, the last sad honours were paid
+to the brave General Fraser, who expired on the day after the action.
+
+He had, almost with his last breath, expressed a wish to be buried in
+the redoubt which had formed the part of the British lines where he had
+been stationed, but which had now been abandoned by the English, and
+was within full range of the cannon which the advancing Americans were
+rapidly placing in position to bear upon Burgoyne's force. Burgoyne
+resolved, nevertheless, to comply with the dying wish of his comrade;
+and the interment took place under circumstances the most affecting
+that have ever marked a soldier's funeral. Still more interesting is
+the narrative of Lady Ackland's passage from the British to the American
+camp, after the battle, to share the captivity and alleviate the
+sufferings of her husband who had been severely wounded, and left in the
+enemy's power. The American historian, Lossing, has described both these
+touching episodes of the campaign, in a spirit that does honour to the
+writer as well as to his subject. After narrating the death of General
+Fraser on the 8th of October, he says that "It was just at sunset, on
+that calm October evening, that the corpse of General Fraser was carried
+up the hill to the place of burial within the 'great redoubt.' It was
+attended only by the military members of his family and Mr. Brudenell,
+the chaplain; yet the eyes of hundreds of both armies followed the
+solemn procession, while the Americans, ignorant of its true character,
+kept up a constant cannonade upon the redoubt. The chaplain, unawed by
+the danger to which he was exposed, as the cannon-balls that struck the
+hill threw the loose soil over him, pronounced the impressive funeral
+service of the Church of England with an unfaltering voice. The growing
+darkness added solemnity to the scene. Suddenly the irregular firing
+ceased, and the solemn voice of a single cannon, at measured intervals,
+boomed along the valley, and awakened the responses of the hills. It was
+a minute gun fired by the Americans in honour of the gallant dead. The
+moment the information was given that the gathering at the redoubt was a
+funeral company, fulfilling, at imminent peril, the last-breathed wishes
+of the noble Fraser, orders were issued to withhold the cannonade with
+balls, and to render military homage to the fallen brave.
+
+"The case of Major Ackland and his heroic wife presents kindred
+features. He belonged to the grenadiers, and was an accomplished
+soldier. His wife accompanied him to Canada in 1776; and during the
+whole campaign of that year, and until his return to England after the
+surrender of Burgoyne, in the autumn of 1777, endured all the hardships,
+dangers, and privations of an active campaign in an enemy's country. At
+Chambly, on the Sorel, she attended him in illness, in a miserable
+hut; and when he was wounded in the battle of Hubbardton, Vermont
+she hastened to him at Henesborough from Montreal, where she had been
+persuaded to remain, and resolved to follow the army hereafter. Just
+before crossing the Hudson, she and her husband had had a narrow escape
+from losing their lives in consequence of their tent accidentally taking
+fire.
+
+"During the terrible engagement of the 7th October, she heard all the
+tumult and dreadful thunder of the battle in which her husband was
+engaged; and when, on the morning of the 8th, the British fell back in
+confusion to their new position, she, with the other women, was obliged
+to take refuge among the dead and dying; for the tents were all struck,
+and hardly a shed was left standing. Her husband was wounded, and a
+prisoner in the American camp. That gallant officer was shot through
+both legs. When Poor and Learned's troops assaulted the grenadiers and
+artillery on the British left, on the afternoon of the 7th, Wilkinson,
+Gates's adjutant-general, while pursuing the flying enemy when they
+abandoned their battery, heard a feeble voice exclaim 'Protect me,
+sir, against that boy.' He turned and saw a lad with a musket taking
+deliberate aim at a wounded British officer, lying in a corner of a low
+fence. Wilkinson ordered the boy to desist, and discovered the wounded
+man to be Major Ackland. He had him conveyed to the quarters of General
+Poor (now the residence of Mr. Neilson) on the heights, where every
+attention was paid to his wants.
+
+"When the intelligence that he was wounded and a prisoner reached his
+wife, she was greatly distressed, and, by the advice of her friend,
+Baron Reidesel, resolved to visit the American camp, and implore the
+favour of a personal attendance upon her husband. On the 9th she sent
+a message to Burgoyne by Lord Petersham, his aide-de-camp, asking
+permission to depart. 'Though I was ready to believe,' says Burgoyne,
+'that patience and fortitude, in a supreme degree, were to be found,
+as well as every other virtue, under the most tender forms, I was
+astonished at this proposal. After so long an agitation of spirits,
+exhausted not only for want of rest, but absolutely want of food,
+drenched in rain for twelve hours together, that a woman should be
+capable of such an undertaking as delivering herself to an enemy,
+probably in the night, and uncertain of what hands she might fall into,
+appeared an effort above human nature. The assistance I was able to give
+was small indeed. I had not even a cup of wine to offer her. All I could
+furnish her with was an open boat, and a few lines, written upon dirty
+wet paper, to General Gates, recommending her to his protection.'
+The following is a copy of the note sent by Burgoyne to General
+Gates:--'Sir,--Lady Harriet Ackland, a lady of the first distinction of
+family, rank, and personal virtues, is under such concern on account of
+Major Ackland, her husband, wounded and a prisoner in your hands, that
+I cannot refuse her request to commit her to your protection. Whatever
+general impropriety there may be in persons of my situation and yours to
+solicit favours, I cannot see the uncommon perseverance in every female
+grace, and the exaltation of character of this lady, and her very hard
+fortune, without testifying that your attentions to her will lay me
+under obligations. I am, sir, your obedient servant, J. Burgoyne.' She
+set out in an open boat upon the Hudson, accompanied by Mr. Brudenell,
+the chaplain, Sarah Pollard, her waiting maid, and her husband's valet,
+who had been severely wounded while searching for his master upon the
+battle-field. It was about sunset when they started, and a violent
+storm of rain and wind, which had been increasing since the morning,
+rendered the voyage tedious and perilous in the extreme. It was long
+after dark when they reached the American out-posts; the sentinel heard
+their oars, and hailed them, Lady Harriet returned the answer herself.
+The clear, silvery tones of a woman's voice amid the darkness, filled
+the soldier on duty with superstitious fear, and he called a comrade
+to accompany him to the river bank. The errand of the voyagers was made
+known, but the faithful guard, apprehensive of treachery, would not
+allow them to laud until they sent for Major Dearborn. They were invited
+by that officer to his quarters, where every attention was paid to them,
+and Lady Harriet was comforted by the joyful tidings that her husband
+was safe. In the morning she experienced parental tenderness from
+General Gates who sent her to her husband, at Poor's quarters, under a
+suitable escort. There she remained until he was removed to Albany."
+
+Burgoyne now took up his last position on the heights near Saratoga; and
+hemmed in by the enemy, who refused any encounter, and baffled in all
+his attempts at finding a path of escape, he there lingered until famine
+compelled him to capitulate. The fortitude of the British army during
+this melancholy period has been justly eulogised by many native
+historians, but I prefer quoting the testimony of a foreign writer, as
+free from all possibility of partiality. Botta says: [Botta, book viii.]
+
+"It exceeds the power of words to describe the pitiable condition to
+which the British army was now reduced. The troops were worn down by a
+series of toil, privation, sickness, and desperate fighting. They were
+abandoned by the Indians and Canadians; and the effective force of the
+whole army was now diminished by repeated and heavy losses, which had
+principally fallen on the best soldiers and the most distinguished
+officers, from ten thousand combatants to less than one-half that
+number. Of this remnant little more than three thousand were English.
+
+"In these circumstances, and thus weakened, they were invested by an
+army of four times their own number, whose position extended three parts
+of a circle round them; who refused to fight them, as knowing their
+weakness, and who, from the nature of the ground, could not be attacked
+in any part. In this helpless condition, obliged to be constantly under
+arms, while the enemy's cannon played on every part of their camp, and
+even the American rifle-balls whistled in many parts of the lines, the
+troops of Burgoyne retained their customary firmness, and, while sinking
+under a hard necessity, they showed themselves worthy of a better fate.
+They could not be reproached with an action or a word, which betrayed a
+want of temper or of fortitude."
+
+At length the 13th of October arrived, and as no prospect of assistance
+appeared, and the provisions were nearly exhausted, Burgoyne, by the
+unanimous advice of a council of war, sent a messenger to the American
+camp to treat of a convention.
+
+General Gates in the first instance demanded that the royal army should
+surrender prisoners of war. He also proposed that the British should
+ground their arms. Burgoyne replied, "This article is inadmissible in
+every extremity; sooner than this army will consent to ground their arms
+in their encampment, they will rush on the enemy, determined to take no
+quarter." After various messages, a convention for the surrender of the
+army was settled, which provided that "The troops under General Burgoyne
+were to march out of their camp with the honours of war, and the
+artillery of the intrenchments, to the verge of the river, where the
+arms and artillery were to be left. The arms to be piled by word of
+command from their own officers. A free passage was to be granted to the
+army under Lieutenant-General Burgoyne to Great Britain, upon condition
+of not serving again in North America during the present contest."
+
+The articles of capitulation were settled on the 15th of October: and
+on that very evening a messenger arrived from Clinton with an account
+of his successes, and with the tidings that part of his force had
+penetrated as far as Esopus, within fifty miles of Burgoyne's camp. But
+it was too late. The public faith was pledged; and the army was, indeed,
+too debilitated by fatigue and hunger to resist an attack if made; and
+Gates certainly would have made it, if the convention had been broken
+off. Accordingly, on the 17th, the convention of Saratoga was carried
+into effect. By this convention 5,790 men surrendered themselves as
+prisoners. The sick and wounded left in the camp when the British
+retreated to Saratoga, together with the numbers of the British, German,
+and Canadian troops, who were killed, wounded, or taken, and who had
+deserted in the preceding part of the expedition, were reckoned to be
+4,689.
+
+The British sick and wounded who had fallen into the hands of the
+Americans after the battle of the 7th, were treated with exemplary
+humanity; and when the convention was executed, General Gates showed a
+noble delicacy of feeling which deserves the highest degree of honour.
+Every circumstance was avoided which could give the appearance of
+triumph. The American troops remained within their lines until the
+British had piled their arms; and when this was done, the vanquished
+officers and soldiers were received with friendly kindness by their
+victors, and their immediate wants were promptly and liberally supplied.
+Discussions and disputes afterwards arose as to some of the terms of the
+convention; and the American Congress refused for a long time to carry
+into effect the article which provided for the return of Burgoyne's men
+to Europe; but no blame was imputable to General Gates or his army, who
+showed themselves to be generous as they had proved themselves to be
+brave.
+
+Gates after the victory, immediately despatched Colonel Wilkinson to
+carry the happy tidings to Congress. On being introduced into the hall,
+he said, "The whole British army has laid down its arms at Saratoga;
+our own, full of vigour and courage, expect your order. It is for
+your wisdom to decide where the country may still have need for their
+service." Honours and rewards were liberally voted by the Congress to
+their conquering general and his men; "and it would be difficult" (says
+the Italian historian) "to describe the transports of joy which the
+news of this event excited among the Americans. They began to flatter
+themselves with a still more happy future. No one any longer felt any
+doubt about their achieving their independence. All hoped, and with
+good reason, that a success of this importance would at length determine
+France, and the other European powers that waited for her example, to
+declare themselves in favour of America. THERE COULD NO LONGER BE ANY
+QUESTION RESPECTING THE FUTURE; SINCE THERE WAS NO LONGER THE RISK OF
+ESPOUSING THE CAUSE OF A PEOPLE TOO FEEBLE TO DEFEND THEMSELVES."
+
+The truth of this was soon displayed in the conduct of France. When
+the news arrived at Paris of the capture of Ticonderoga, and of the
+victorious march of Burgoyne towards Albany, events which seemed
+decisive in favour of the English, instructions had been immediately
+despatched to Nantz, and the other ports of the kingdom, that no
+American privateers should be suffered to enter them, except from
+indispensable necessity, as to repair their vessels, to obtain
+provisions, or to escape the perils of the sea. The American
+commissioners at Paris, in their disgust and despair, had almost
+broken off all negotiations with the French government; and they even
+endeavoured to open communications with the British ministry. But the
+British government, elated with the first successes of Burgoyne, refused
+to listen to any overtures for accommodation. But when the news of
+Saratoga reached Paris, the whole scene was changed. Franklin and his
+brother commissioners found all their difficulties with the French
+government vanish. The time seemed to have arrived for the House of
+Bourbon to take a full revenge for all its humiliations and losses in
+previous wars. In December a treaty was arranged, and formally signed
+in the February following, by which France acknowledged the INDEPENDENT
+UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. This was, of course, tantamount to a
+declaration of war with England. Spain soon followed France; and before
+long Holland took the same course. Largely aided by French fleets and
+troops, the Americans vigorously maintained the war against the armies
+which England, in spite of her European foes, continued to send across
+the Atlantic. But the struggle was too unequal to be maintained by this
+country for many years: and when the treaties of 1783 restored peace
+to the world, the independence of the United States was reluctantly
+recognized by their ancient parent and recent enemy, England.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE DEFEAT OF BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA, 1777, AND
+THE BATTLE OF VALMY, 1792.
+
+A.D. 1781. Surrender of Lord Cornwallis and the British army to
+Washington.
+
+1782. Rodney's victory over the Spanish fleet. Unsuccessful siege of
+Gibraltar by the Spaniards and French.
+
+1783. End of the American war.
+
+1788. The States-General are convened in France:--beginning of the
+Revolution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. -- THE BATTLE OF VALMY.
+
+
+ "Purpurei metuunt tyranni
+ Injurioso ne pede proruas
+ Stantem columnam; neu populus frequens
+ Ad arma cessantes ad arma
+ Concitet, imperiumque frangat."
+ HORAT. Od. i 35.
+
+ "A little fire is quickly trodden out,
+ Which, being suffered, rivers cannot quench."
+ SHAKESPEARE.
+
+
+A few miles distant from the little town of St. Menehould, in the
+north-east of France, are the village and hill of Valmy; and near the
+crest of that hill, a simple monument points out the burial-place of
+the heart of a general of the French republic, and a marshal of the
+French empire.
+
+The elder Kellerman (father of the distinguished officer of that name,
+whose cavalry-charge decided the battle of Marengo) held high commands
+in the French armies throughout the wars of the Convention, the
+Directory, the Consulate, and the Empire. He survived those wars, and
+the empire itself, dying in extreme old age in 1820. The last wish of
+the veteran on his death bed was that his heart should be deposited in
+the battle-field of Valmy, there to repose among the remains of his old
+companions in arms, who had fallen at his side on that spot twenty-eight
+years before, on the memorable day when they won the primal victory
+of revolutionary France, and prevented the armies of Brunswick and
+the emigrant bands of Conde from marching on defenceless Paris, and
+destroying the immature democracy in its cradle.
+
+The Duke of Valmy (for Kellerman, when made one of Napoleon's
+military peers in 1802, took his title from this same battlefield) had
+participated, during his long and active career, in the gaining of
+many a victory far more immediately dazzling than the the one, the
+remembrance of which he thus cherished. He had been present at many a
+scene of carnage, where blood flowed in deluges, compared with which the
+libations of slaughter poured out at Valmy would have seemed scant and
+insignificant. But he rightly estimated the paramount importance of the
+battle with which he thus wished his appellation while living, and his
+memory after his death, to be identified. The successful resistance,
+which the new Carmagnole levies, and the disorganized relics of the old
+monarchy's army, then opposed to the combined hosts and chosen leaders
+of Prussia, Austria, and the French refugee noblesse, determined at
+once and for ever the belligerent character of the revolution. The raw
+artisans and tradesmen, the clumsy burghers, the base mechanics and low
+peasant churls, as it had been the fashion to term the middle and
+lower classes in France, found that they could face cannon-balls, pull
+triggers, and cross bayonets, without having been drilled into military
+machines, and without being officered by scions of noble houses. They
+awoke to the consciousness of their own instinctive soldiership. They
+at once acquired confidence in themselves and in each other; and that
+confidence soon grew into a spirit of unbounded audacity and ambition.
+"From the cannonade of Valmy may be dated the commencement of that
+career of victory which carried their armies to Vienna and the Kremlin."
+[Alison.]
+
+One of the gravest reflections that arises from the contemplation of the
+civil restlessness and military enthusiasm which the close of the last
+century saw nationalised in France, is the consideration that these
+disturbing influences have become perpetual. No settled system of
+government, that shall endure from generation to generation, that shall
+be proof against corruption and popular violence, seems capable of
+taking root among the French. And every revolutionary movement in Paris
+thrills throughout the rest of the world. Even the successes which the
+powers allied against France gained in 1814 and 1815, important as they
+were, could not annul the effects of the preceding twenty-three years of
+general convulsion and war.
+
+In 1830, the dynasty which foreign bayonets had imposed on France was
+shaken off; and men trembled at the expected outbreak of French anarchy
+and the dreaded inroads of French ambition. They "looked forward with
+harassing anxiety to a period of destruction similar to that which the
+Roman world experienced about the middle of the third century of our
+era." [See Niebuhr's Preface to the second volume of the "History of
+Rome," written in October 1830.] Louis Philippe cajoled revolution, and
+then strove with seeming success to stifle it. But in spite of Fieschi
+laws, in spite of the dazzle of Algerian razzias and Pyrenees-effacing
+marriages, in spite of hundreds of armed forts, and hundreds of
+thousands of coercing troops, Revolution lived, and struggled to get
+free. The old Titan spirit heaved restlessly beneath "the monarchy based
+on republican institutions." At last, four years ago, the whole fabric
+of kingcraft was at once rent and scattered to the winds, by the
+uprising of the Parisian democracy; and insurrections, barricades and
+dethronements, the downfall of coronets and crowns, the armed collisions
+of parties, systems, and populations, became the commonplaces of recent
+European history.
+
+France now calls herself a republic. She first assumed that title on the
+20th of September, 1792, on the very day on which the battle of Valmy
+was fought and won. To that battle the democratic spirit which in
+1848, as well as in 1792, proclaimed the Republic in Paris, owed its
+preservation, and it is thence that the imperishable activity of its
+principles may be dated.
+
+Far different seemed the prospects of democracy in Europe on the eve of
+that battle; and far different would have been the present position and
+influence of the French nation, if Brunswick's columns had charged with
+more boldness, or the lines of Dumouriez resisted with less firmness.
+When France, in 1792, declared war with the great powers of Europe, she
+was far from possessing that splendid military organization which the
+experience of a few revolutionary campaigns taught her to assume, and
+which she has never abandoned. The army of the old monarchy had, during
+the latter part of the reign of Louis XV. sunk into gradual decay,
+both in numerical force, and in efficiency of equipment and spirit. The
+laurels gained by the auxiliary regiments which Louis XVI. sent to the
+American war, did but little to restore the general tone of the army.
+The insubordination and licence, which the revolt of the French guards,
+and the participation of other troops in many of the first excesses
+of the Revolution introduced among the soldiery, were soon rapidly
+disseminated through all the ranks. Under the Legislative Assembly
+every complaint of the soldier against his officer, however frivolous
+or ill-founded, was listened to with eagerness, and investigated with
+partiality, on the principles of liberty and equality. Discipline
+accordingly became more and more relaxed; and the dissolution of several
+of the old corps, under the pretext of their being tainted with an
+aristocratic feeling, aggravated the confusion and inefficiency of the
+war department. Many of the most effective regiments during the last
+period of the monarchy had consisted of foreigners. These had either
+been slaughtered in defence of the throne against insurrections, like
+the Swiss; or had been disbanded, and had crossed the frontier to
+recruit the forces which were assembling for the invasion of France.
+Above all, the emigration of the noblesse had stripped the French army
+of nearly all its officers of high rank, and of the greatest portion
+of its subalterns. More than twelve thousand of the high-born youth
+of France, who had been trained to regard military command as their
+exclusive patrimony, and to whom the nation had been accustomed to look
+up as its natural guides and champions in the storm of war; were now
+marshalled beneath the banner of Conde and the other emigrant princes,
+for the overthrow of the French armies, and the reduction of the French
+capital. Their successors in the French regiments and brigades had
+as yet acquired neither skill nor experience: they possessed neither
+self-reliance nor the respect of the men who were under them.
+
+Such was the state of the wrecks of the old army; but the bulk of the
+forces with which France began the war, consisted of raw insurrectionary
+levies, which were even less to be depended on. The Carmagnoles, as the
+revolutionary volunteers were called, flocked, indeed, readily to the
+frontier from every department when the war was proclaimed, and the
+fierce leaders of the Jacobins shouted that the country was in danger.
+They were full of zeal and courage, "heated and excited by the scenes of
+the Revolution, and inflamed by the florid eloquence, the songs, dances,
+and signal-words with which it had been celebrated." [Scott, Life of
+Napoleon, vol. i c. viii.] But they were utterly undisciplined, and
+turbulently impatient of superior authority, or systematical control.
+Many ruffians, also, who were sullied with participation in the most
+sanguinary horrors of Paris, joined the camps, and were pre-eminent
+alike for misconduct before the enemy and for savage insubordination
+against their own officers. On one occasion during the campaign of
+Valmy, eight battalions of federates, intoxicated with massacre and
+sedition, joined the forces under Dumouriez, and soon threatened to
+uproot all discipline, saying openly that the ancient officers were
+traitors, and that it was necessary to purge the army, as they had
+Paris, of its aristocrats. Dumouriez posted these battalions apart from
+the others, placed a strong force of cavalry behind them, and two pieces
+of cannon on their flank. Then, affecting to review them, he halted at
+the head of the line, surrounded by all his staff, and an escort of a
+hundred hussars. "Fellows," said he, "for I will not call you either
+citizens or soldiers, you see before you this artillery, behind you
+this cavalry; you are stained with crimes, and I do not tolerate here
+assassins or executioners. I know that there are scoundrels amongst you
+charged to excite you to crime. Drive them from amongst you, or denounce
+them to me, for I shall hold you responsible for their conduct."
+[Lamartine.]
+
+One of our recent historians of the Revolution, who narrates this
+incident, [Carlyle.] thus apostrophises the French general:--
+
+"Patience, O Dumouriez! This uncertain heap of shriekers, mutineers,
+were they once drilled and inured, will become a phalanxed mass of
+fighters; and wheel and whirl to order swiftly, like the wind or the
+whirlwind; tanned mustachio-figures; often barefoot, even barebacked,
+with sinews of iron; who require only bread and gunpowder; very sons of
+fire; the adroitest, hastiest, hottest, ever seen perhaps since Attila's
+time."
+
+Such phalanxed masses of fighters did the Carmagnoles ultimately become;
+but France ran a fearful risk in being obliged to rely on them when the
+process of their transmutation had barely commenced.
+
+The first events, indeed, of the war were disastrous and disgraceful to
+France, even beyond what might have been expected from the chaotic state
+in which it found her armies as well as her government. In the hopes of
+profiting by the unprepared state of Austria, then the mistress of the
+Netherlands, the French opened the campaign of 1792 by an invasion of
+Flanders, with forces whose muster-rolls showed a numerical overwhelming
+superiority to the enemy, and seemed to promise a speedy conquest of
+that old battle-field of Europe. But the first flash of an Austrian
+sabre, or the first sound of Austrian gun, was enough to discomfit the
+French. Their first corps, four thousand strong, that advanced from
+Lille across the frontier, came suddenly upon a far inferior detachment
+of the Austrian garrison of Tournay. Not a shot was fired, not a bayonet
+levelled. With one simultaneous cry of panic the French broke and
+ran headlong back to Lille, where they completed the specimen of
+insubordination which they had given in the field, by murdering their
+general and several of their chief officers. On the same day, another
+division under Biron, mustering ten thousand sabres and bayonets, saw
+a few Austrian skirmishers reconnoitering their position. The French
+advanced posts had scarcely given and received a volley, and only a few
+balls from the enemy's field-pieces had fallen among the lines, when two
+regiments of French dragoons raised the cry, "We are betrayed," galloped
+off, and were followed in disgraceful rout by the rest of the whole
+army. Similar panics, or repulses almost equally discreditable, occurred
+whenever Rochambeau, or Luckner, or La Fayette, the earliest French
+generals in the war, brought their troops into the presence of the
+enemy.
+
+Meanwhile, the allied sovereigns had gradually collected on the Rhine
+a veteran and finely-disciplined army for the invasion of France, which
+for numbers, equipment, and martial renown, both of generals and men,
+was equal to any that Germany had ever sent forth to conquer. Their
+design was to strike boldly and decisively at the heart of France, and
+penetrating the country through the Ardennes, to proceed by Chalons upon
+Paris. The obstacles that lay in their way seemed insignificant. The
+disorder and imbecility of the French armies had been even augmented by
+the forced flight of La Fayette, and a sudden change of generals. The
+only troops posted on or near the track by which the allies were about
+to advance, were the twenty-three thousand men at Sedan, whom La Fayette
+had commanded, and a corps of twenty thousand near Metz, the command of
+which had just been transferred from Luckner to Kellerman. There were
+only three fortresses which it was necessary for the allies to capture
+or mask--Sedan, Longwy, and Verdun. The defences and stores of these
+three were known to be wretchedly dismantled and insufficient; and when
+once these feeble barriers were overcome, and Chalons reached, a fertile
+and unprotected country seemed to invite the invaders to that "military
+promenade to Paris," which they gaily talked of accomplishing.
+
+At the end of July the allied army, having completed all preparations
+for the campaign, broke up from its cantonments, and marching from
+Luxembourg upon Longwy, crossed the French frontier. Eighty thousand
+Prussians, trained in the school, and many of them under the eye of
+the Great Frederick, heirs of the glories of the Seven Years' War, and
+universally esteemed the best troops in Europe, marched in one column
+against the central point of attack. Forty-five thousand Austrians, the
+greater part of whom were picked troops, and had served in the recent
+Turkish war, supplied two formidable corps that supported the flanks of
+the Prussians. There was also a powerful body of Hessians, and leagued
+with the Germans against the Parisian democracy, came fifteen thousand
+of the noblest and bravest amongst the sons of France. In these corps
+of emigrants, many of the highest born of the French nobility, scions
+of houses whose chivalric trophies had for centuries filled Europe with
+renown, served as rank and file. They looked on the road to Paris as the
+path which they were to carve out by their swords to victory, to honour,
+to the rescue of their king, to reunion with their families, to the
+recovery of their patrimony, and to the restoration of their order. [See
+Scott, Life of Napoleon, vol. i. c. xi.]
+
+Over this imposing army the allied sovereigns placed as generalissimo
+the Duke of Brunswick, one of the minor reigning princes of Germany, a
+statesman of no mean capacity, and who had acquired in the Seven Years'
+War, a military reputation second only to that of the Great Frederick
+himself. He had been deputed a few years before to quell the popular
+movements which then took place in Holland; and he had put down
+the attempted revolution in that country with a promptitude and
+completeness, which appeared to augur equal success to the army that now
+marched under his orders on a similar mission into France.
+
+Moving majestically forward, with leisurely deliberation, that seemed
+to show the consciousness of superior strength, and a steady purpose of
+doing their work thoroughly, the Allies appeared before Longwy on the
+20th of August, and the dispirited and dependent garrison opened the
+gates of that fortress to them after the first shower of bombs. On
+the 2d of September the still more important stronghold of Verdun
+capitulated after scarcely the shadow of resistance.
+
+Brunswick's superior force was now interposed between Kellerman's troops
+on the left, and the other French army near Sedan, which La Fayette's
+flight had, for the time, left destitute of a commander. It was in the
+power of the German general, by striking with an overwhelming mass to
+the right and left, to crush in succession each of these weak armies,
+and the allies might then have marched irresistible and unresisted upon
+Paris. But at this crisis Dumouriez, the new commander-in-chief of
+the French, arrived at the camp near Sedan, and commenced a series of
+movements, by which he reunited the dispersed and disorganized forces
+of his country, checked the Prussian columns at the very moment when the
+last obstacles of their triumph seemed to have given way, and finally
+rolled back the tide of invasion far across the enemy's frontier.
+
+The French fortresses had fallen; but nature herself still offered
+to brave and vigorous defenders of the land, the means of opposing a
+barrier to the progress of the Allies. A ridge of broken ground, called
+the Argonne, extends from the vicinity of Sedan towards the south-west
+for about fifteen or sixteen leagues, The country of L'Argonne has now
+been cleared and drained; but in 1792 it was thickly wooded, and the
+lower portions of its unequal surface were filled with rivulets and
+marshes. It thus presented a natural barrier of from four to five
+leagues broad, which was absolutely impenetrable to an army, except by a
+few defiles, such as an inferior force might easily fortify and defend.
+Dumouriez succeeded in marching his army down from Sedan behind the
+Argonne, and in occupying its passes, while the Prussians still lingered
+on the north-eastern side of the forest line. Ordering Kellerman to
+wheel round from Metz to St. Menehould, and the reinforcements from the
+interior and extreme north also to concentrate at that spot, Dumouriez
+trusted to assemble a powerful force in the rear of the south-west
+extremity of the Argonne, while, with the twenty-five thousand men under
+his immediate command, he held the enemy at bay before the passes, or
+forced him to a long circumvolution round one extremity of the forest
+ridge, during which, favourable opportunities of assailing his flank
+were almost certain to occur. Dumouriez fortified the principal defiles,
+and boasted of the Thermopylae which he had found for the invaders; but
+the simile was nearly rendered fatally complete for the defending force.
+A pass, which was thought of inferior importance, had been but slightly
+manned, and an Austrian corps under Clairfayt, forced it after some
+sharp fighting. Dumouriez with great difficulty saved himself from being
+enveloped and destroyed by the hostile columns that now pushed through
+the forest. But instead of despairing at the failure of his plans,
+and falling back into the interior, to be completely severed from
+Kellerman's army, to be hunted as a fugitive under the walls of Paris
+by the victorious Germans, and to lose all chance of ever rallying his
+dispirited troops, he resolved to cling to the difficult country in
+which the armies still were grouped, to force a junction with Kellerman,
+and so to place himself at the head of a force, which the invaders would
+not dare to disregard, and by which he might drag them back from the
+advance on Paris, which he had not been able to bar. Accordingly, by a
+rapid movement to the south, during which, in his own words, "France was
+within a hair's-breadth of destruction," and after, with difficulty,
+checking several panics of his troops in which they ran by thousands at
+the sight of a few Prussian hussars, Dumouriez succeeded in establishing
+his head-quarters in a strong position at St. Menehould, protected by
+the marshes and shallows of the river Aisne and Aube, beyond which, to
+the north-west, rose a firm and elevated plateau, called Dampierre's
+Camp, admirably situated for commanding the road by Chalons to Paris,
+and where he intended to post Kellerman's army so soon as it came
+up. [Some late writers represent that Brunswick did not wish to check
+Dumouriez. There is no sufficient authority for this insinuation, which
+seems to have been first prompted by a desire to soothe the wounded
+military pride of the Prussians.]
+
+The news of the retreat of Dumouriez from the Argonne passes, and of the
+panic flight of some divisions of his troops, spread rapidly throughout
+the country; and Kellerman, who believed that his comrade's army had
+been annihilated, and feared to fall among the victorious masses of the
+Prussians, had halted on his march from Metz when almost close to
+St. Menehould. He had actually commenced a retrograde movement, when
+couriers from his commander-in-chief checked him from that fatal course;
+and then continuing to wheel round the rear and left flank of the troops
+at St. Menehould, Kellerman, with twenty thousand of the army of Metz,
+and some thousands of volunteers who had joined him in the march,
+made his appearance to the west of Dumouriez, on the very evening
+when Westerman and Thouvenot, two of the staff-officers of Dumouriez,
+galloped in with the tidings that Brunswick's army had come through
+the upper passes of the Argonne in full force, and was deploying on the
+heights of La Lune, a chain of eminences that stretch obliquely from
+south-west to north-east opposite the high ground which Dumouriez held,
+and also opposite, but at a shorter distance from, the position which
+Kellerman was designed to occupy.
+
+The Allies were now, in fact, nearer to Paris than were the French
+troops themselves; but, as Dumouriez had foreseen, Brunswick deemed it
+unsafe to march upon the capital with so large a hostile force left in
+his rear between his advancing columns and his base of operations. The
+young King of Prussia, who was in the allied camp, and the emigrant
+princes, eagerly advocated an instant attack upon the nearest French
+general. Kellerman had laid himself unnecessarily open, by advancing
+beyond Dampierre's Camp, which Dumouriez had designed for him, and
+moving forward across the Aube to the plateau of Valmy, a post inferior
+in strength and space to that which he had left, and which brought him
+close upon the Prussian lines, leaving him separated by a dangerous
+interval from the troops under Dumouriez himself. It seemed easy for the
+Prussian army to overwhelm him while thus isolated, and then they might
+surround and crush Dumouriez at their leisure.
+
+Accordingly, the right wing of the allied army moved forward, in the
+grey of the morning of the 20th of September, to gain Kellerman's left
+flank and rear, and cut him off from retreat upon Chalons, while
+the rest of the army, moving from the heights of La Lune, which here
+converge semi-circularly round the plateau of Valmy, were to assail
+his position in front, and interpose between him and Dumouriez. An
+unexpected collision between some of the advanced cavalry on each side
+in the low ground, warned Kellerman of the enemy's approach. Dumouriez
+had not been unobservant of the danger of his comrade, thus isolated and
+involved; and he had ordered up troops to support Kellerman on either
+flank in the event of his being attacked. These troops, however, moved
+forward slowly; and Kellerman's army, ranged on the plateau of Valmy,
+"projected like a cape into the midst of the lines of the Prussian
+bayonets." [See Lamartine, Hist. Girond. livre xvii. I have drawn much
+of the ensuing description from him.] A thick autumnal mist floated in
+waves of vapour over the plains and ravines that lay between the two
+armies, leaving only the crests and peaks of the hills glittering in the
+early light. About ten o'clock the fog began to clear off, and then
+the French from their promontory saw emerging from the white wreaths
+of mist, and glittering in the sunshine, the countless Prussian cavalry
+which were to envelops them as in a net if once driven from their
+position, the solid columns of the infantry that moved forward as if
+animated by a single will, the bristling batteries of the artillery,
+and the glancing clouds of the Austrian light troops, fresh from their
+contests with the Spahis of the east.
+
+The best and bravest of the French must have beheld this spectacle with
+secret apprehension and awe. However bold and resolute a man may be in
+the discharge of duty, it is an anxious and fearful thing to be called
+on to encounter danger among comrades of whose steadiness you can feel
+no certainty. Each soldier of Kellerman's army must have remembered the
+series of panic routs which had hitherto invariably taken place on the
+French side during the war; and must have cast restless glances to
+the right and left, to see if any symptoms of wavering began to show
+themselves, and to calculate how long it was likely to be before a
+general rush of his comrades to the rear would either harry him off with
+involuntary disgrace, or leave him alone and helpless, to be cut down by
+assailing multitudes.
+
+On that very morning, and at the self-same hour, in which the allied
+forces and the emigrants began to descend from La Lune to the attack of
+Valmy, and while the cannonade was opening between the Prussian and the
+Revolutionary batteries, the debate in the National Convention at Paris
+commenced on the proposal to proclaim France a Republic.
+
+The old monarchy had little chance of support in the hall of the
+Convention; but if its more effective advocates at Valmy had triumphed,
+there were yet the elements existing in France for a permanent revival
+of the better part of the ancient institutions, and for substituting
+Reform for Revolution. Only a few weeks before, numerously signed
+addresses from the middle classes in Paris, Rouen, and other large
+cities, had been presented to the king, expressive of their horror of
+the anarchists, and their readiness to uphold the rights of the crown,
+together with the liberties of the subject. And an armed resistance
+to the authority of the Convention, and in favour of the king, was in
+reality at this time being actively organized in La Vendee and Brittany,
+the importance of which may be estimated from the formidable opposition
+which the Royalists of these provinces made to the Republican party, at
+a later period, and under much more disadvantageous circumstances. It is
+a fact peculiarly illustrative of the importance of the battle of Valmy,
+that "during the summer of 1792, the gentlemen of Brittany entered into
+an extensive association for the purpose of rescuing the country from
+the oppressive yoke which had been imposed by the Parisian demagogues.
+At the head of the whole was the Marquis de la Rouarie, one of those
+remarkable men who rise into pre-eminence during the stormy days of
+a revolution, from conscious ability to direct its current. Ardent,
+impetuous, and enthusiastic, he was first distinguished in the American
+war, when the intrepidity of his conduct attracted the admiration of
+the Republican troops, and the same qualities rendered him at first an
+ardent supporter of the Revolution in France; but when the atrocities of
+the people began, he espoused with equal warmth the opposite side, and
+used the utmost efforts to rouse the noblesse of Brittany against the
+plebeian yoke which had been imposed upon them by the National Assembly.
+He submitted his plan to the Count d'Artois, and had organized one so
+extensive, as would have proved extremely formidable to the Convention,
+if the retreat of the Duke of Brunswick, in September 1792, had not
+damped the ardour of the whole of the west of France, then ready to
+break out into insurrection." [Alison, vol. iii. p. 323.]
+
+And it was not only among the zealots of the old monarchy that the cause
+of the king would then have found friends. The ineffable atrocities of
+the September massacres had just occurred, and the reaction produced
+by them among thousands who had previously been active on the
+ultra-democratic side, was fresh and powerful. The nobility had not yet
+been made utter aliens in the eyes of the nation by long expatriation
+and civil war. There was not yet a generation of youth educated in
+revolutionary principles, and knowing no worship-save that of military
+glory, Louis XVI. was just and humane, and deeply sensible of the
+necessity of a gradual extension of political rights among all classes
+of his subjects. The Bourbon throne, if rescued in 1792, would have had
+chances of stability, such as did not exist for it in 1814, and seem
+never likely to be found again in France.
+
+Serving under Kellerman on that day was one who experienced, perhaps
+the most deeply of all men, the changes for good and for evil which the
+French Revolution has produced. He who, in his second exile, bore the
+name of the Count de Neuilly in this country, and who lately was Louis
+Philippe, King of the French, figured in the French lines at Valmy, as
+a young and gallant officer, cool and sagacious beyond his years, and
+trusted accordingly by Kellerman and Dumouriez with an important station
+in the national army. The Duc de Chartres (the title he then bore)
+commanded the French right, General Valence was on the left, and
+Kellerman himself took his post in the centre, which was the strength
+and key of his position.
+
+Besides these celebrated men, who were in the French army, and besides
+the King of Prussia, the Duke of Brunswick, and other men of rank and
+power, who were in the lines of the Allies, there was an individual
+present at the battle of Valmy, of little political note, but who has
+exercised, and exercises, a greater influence over the human mind, and
+whose fame is more widely spread, than that of either duke, or general,
+or king. This was the German poet, Goethe, who had, out of curiosity,
+accompanied the allied army on its march into France as a mere
+spectator. He has given us a curious record of the sensations which
+he experienced during the cannonade. It must be remembered that
+many thousands in, the French ranks then, like Goethe, felt the
+"cannon-fever" for the first time. The German poet says, [Goethe's
+Campaign in France in 1792. Farie's translation, p.77.]--
+
+"I had heard so much of the cannon-fever, that I wanted to know what
+kind of thing it was. ENNUI, and a spirit which every kind of danger
+excites to daring, nay even to rashness, induced me to ride up quite
+coolly to the outwork of La Lune. This was again occupied by our people;
+but it presented the wildest aspect. The roofs were shot to pieces;
+the corn-shocks scattered about, the bodies of men mortally wounded
+stretched upon them here and there; and occasionally a spent cannon-ball
+fell and rattled among the ruins of the the roofs.
+
+"Quite alone, and left to myself, I rode away on the heights to the
+left, and could plainly survey the favourable position of the French;
+they were standing in the form of a semicircle in the greatest quiet and
+security; Kellerman, then on the left wing, being the easiest to reach.
+
+"I fell in with good company on the way, officers of my acquaintance,
+belonging to the general staff and the regiment, greatly surprised to
+find me here. They wanted to take me back again with them; but I spoke
+to them of particular objects I had in view, and they left me without
+further dissuasion, to my well-known singular caprice.
+
+"I had now arrived quite in the region where the balls were playing
+across me: the sound of them is curious enough, as if it were composed
+of the humming of tops, the gurgling of water, and the whistling of
+birds. They were less dangerous, by reason of the wetness of the ground:
+wherever one fell, it stuck fast. And thus my foolish experimental ride
+was secured against the danger at least of the balls rebounding.
+
+"In the midst of these circumstances, I was soon able to remark that
+something unusual was taking place within me. I paid close attention
+to it, and still the sensation can be described only by similitude. It
+appeared as if you were in some extremely hot place, and, at the same
+time, quite penetrated by the heat of it, so that you feel yourself,
+as it were, quite one with the element in which you are. The eyes lose
+nothing of their strength or clearness; but it is as if the world had
+a kind of brown-red tint, which makes the situation, as well as the
+surrounding objects, more impressive. I was unable to perceive any
+agitation of the blood; but everything seemed rather to be swallowed up
+in the glow of which I speak. From this, then, it is clear in what sense
+this condition can be called a fever. It is remarkable, however, that
+the horrible uneasy feeling arising from it is produced in us solely
+through the ears; for the cannon-thunder, the howling and crashing of
+the balls through the air, is the real cause of these sensations.
+
+"After I had ridden back, and was in perfect security, I remarked
+with surprise that the glow was completely extinguished, and not
+the slightest feverish agitation was left behind. On the whole, this
+condition is one of the least desirable; as, indeed, among my dear and
+noble comrades, I found scarcely one who expressed a really passionate
+desire to try it."
+
+Contrary to the expectations of both friends and foes, the French
+infantry held their ground steadily under the fire of the Prussian guns,
+which thundered on them from La Lune; and their own artillery replied
+with equal spirit and greater effect on the denser masses of the
+allied army. Thinking that the Prussians were slackening in their fire,
+Kellerman formed a column in charging order, and dashed down into the
+valley, in the hopes of capturing some of the nearest guns of the enemy.
+A masked battery opened its fire on the French column, and drove it back
+in disorder. Kellerman having his horse shot under him, and being with
+difficulty carried off by his men. The Prussian columns now advanced in
+turn. The French artillerymen began to waver and desert their posts,
+but were rallied by the efforts and example of their officers; and
+Kellerman, reorganizing the line of his infantry, took his station in
+the ranks on foot, and called out to his men to let the enemy come close
+up, and then to charge them with the bayonet. The troops caught the
+enthusiasm of their general, and a cheerful shout of VIVE LA NATION!
+taken by one battalion from another, pealed across the valley to the
+assailants. The Prussians flinched from a charge up-hill against a force
+that seemed so resolute and formidable; they halted for a while in the
+hollow, and then slowly retreated up their own side of the valley.
+
+Indignant at being thus repulsed by such a foe, the King of Prussia
+formed the flower of his men in person, and, riding along the column,
+bitterly reproached them with letting their standard be thus humiliated.
+Then he led them on again to the attack marching in the front line,
+and seeing his staff mowed down around him by the deadly fire which the
+French artillery re-opened. But the troops sent by Dumouriez were now
+co-operating effectually with Kellerman, and that general's own men,
+flushed by success, presented a firmer front than ever. Again the
+Prussians retreated, leaving eight hundred dead behind, and at nightfall
+the French remained victors on the heights of Valmy.
+
+All hopes of crushing the revolutionary armies, and of the promenade to
+Paris, had now vanished, though Brunswick lingered long in the Argonne,
+till distress and sickness wasted away his once splendid force,
+and finally but a mere wreck of it recrossed the frontier. France,
+meanwhile, felt that she possessed a giant's strength, and like a giant
+did she use it. Before the close of that year, all Belgium obeyed the
+National Convention at Paris, and the kings of Europe, after the lapse
+of eighteen centuries, trembled once more before a conquering military
+Republic.
+
+Goethe's description of the cannonade has been quoted. His observation
+to his comrades in the camp of the Allies, at the end of the battle,
+deserves citation also. It shows that the poet felt (and, probably, he
+alone of the thousands there assembled felt) the full importance of that
+day. He describes the consternation and the change of demeanour which he
+observed among his Prussian friends that evening, he tells us that "most
+of them were silent; and, in fact, the power of reflection and judgment
+was wanting to all. At last I was called upon to say what I thought of
+the engagement; for I had been in the habit of enlivening and amusing
+the troop with short sayings. This time I said: 'FROM THIS PLACE, AND
+FROM THIS DAY FORTH, COMMENCES A NEW ERA IN THE WORLD'S HISTORY, AND YOU
+CAN ALL SAY THAT YOU WERE PRESENT AT ITS BIRTH.'"
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OP EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF VALMY, 1792, AND THE BATTLE OF
+WATERLOO, 1815.
+
+A.D. 1793. Trial and execution of Louis XVI. at Paris. England and Spain
+declare war against France. Royalist war in La Vendee. Second invasion
+of France by the Allies.
+
+1794. Lord Howe's victory over the French fleet. Final partition of
+Poland by Russia, Prussia, and Austria.
+
+1795. The French armies under Pichegru, conquer Holland. Cessation of
+the war in La Vendee.
+
+1796. Bonaparte commands the French army of Italy and gains repeated
+victories over the Austrians.
+
+1797. Victory of Jervis, off Cape St. Vincent. Peace of Campo Formio
+between France and Austria. Defeat of the Dutch off Camperdown by
+Admiral Duncan.
+
+1798. Rebellion in Ireland. Expedition of the French under Bonaparte to
+Egypt. Lord Nelson destroys the French fleet at the Battle of the Nile.
+
+1799. Renewal of the war between Austria and France. The Russian
+emperor sends an army in aid of Austria, under Suwarrow. The French are
+repeatedly defeated in Italy. Bonaparte returns from Egypt and makes
+himself First Consul of France. Massena wins the battle of Zurich. The
+Russian emperor makes peace with France.
+
+1800. Bonaparte passes the Alps and defeats the Austrians at Marengo.
+Moreau wins the battle of Hohenlinden.
+
+1801. Treaty of Luneville between France and Austria. The battle of
+Copenhagen.
+
+1802. Peace of Amiens.
+
+1803. War between England and France renewed.
+
+1804. Napoleon Bonaparte is made Emperor of France.
+
+1805. Great preparations of Napoleon to invade England. Austria,
+supported by Russia, renews war with France. Napoleon marches into
+Germany, takes Vienna, and gains the battle of Austerlitz. Lord Nelson
+destroys the combined French and Spanish fleets, and is killed at the
+battle of Trafalgar.
+
+1806. War between Prussia and France, Napoleon conquers Prussia in the
+battle of Jena.
+
+1807. Obstinate warfare between the French and Russian armies in East
+Prussia and Poland. Peace of Tilsit.
+
+1808. Napoleon endeavours to make his brother King of Spain. Rising
+of the Spanish nation against him. England sends troops to aid the
+Spaniards. Battles of Vimiera and Corunna.
+
+1809. War renewed between France and Austria. Battles of Asperne and
+Wagram. Peace granted to Austria. Lord Wellington's victory of Talavera,
+in Spain.
+
+1810. Marriage of Napoleon and the Arch-duchess Maria Louisa. Holland
+annexed to France.
+
+1812. War between England and the United States. Napoleon invades
+Russia. Battle of Borodino. The French occupy Moscow, which is burned.
+Disastrous retreat and almost total destruction of the great army of
+France.
+
+1813. Prussia and Austria take up arms again against France. Battles of
+Lutzen, Bautzen, Dresden, Culm, and Leipsic. The French are driven out
+of Germany. Lord Wellington gains the great battle of Vittoria, which
+completes the rescue of Spain from France.
+
+1814. The Allies invade France on the eastern, and Lord Wellington
+invades it on the southern frontier. Battles of Laon, Montmirail,
+Arcis-sur-Aube, and others in the north-east of France; and of Toulouse
+in the south. Paris surrenders to the Allies, and Napoleon abdicates.
+First restoration of the Bourbons. Napoleon goes to the isle of Elba,
+which is assigned to him by the Allies. Treaty of Ghent, between the
+United States and England.
+
+1815. Napoleon suddenly escapes from Elba, and lands in France. The
+French soldiery join him and Louis XVIII. is obliged to fly from the
+throne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. -- THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO, 1815.
+
+ "Thou first and last of fields, king-making victory."--BYRON.
+
+England has now been blest with thirty-seven years of peace. At no other
+period of her history can a similarly long cessation from a state of
+warfare be found. It is true that our troops have had battles to fight
+during this interval for the protection and extension of our Indian
+possessions and our colonies; but these have been with distant and
+unimportant enemies. The danger has never been brought near our own
+shores, and no matter of vital importance to our empire has ever been
+at stake. We have not had hostilities with either France, America, or
+Russia; and when not at war with any of our peers, we feel ourselves
+to be substantially at peace. There has, indeed, throughout this long
+period, been no great war, like those with which the previous history
+of modern Europe abounds. There have been formidable collisions between
+particular states; and there have been still more formidable collisions
+between the armed champions of the conflicting principles of absolutism
+and democracy; but there has been no general war, like those of the
+French Revolution, like the American, or the Seven Years' War, or like
+the War of the Spanish Succession. It would be far too much to augur
+from this, that no similar wars will again convulse the world; but the
+value of the period of peace which Europe has gained, is incalculable;
+even if we look on it as only a truce, and expect again to see the
+nations of the earth recur to what some philosophers have termed man's
+natural state of warfare.
+
+No equal number of years can be found, during which science, commerce,
+and civilization have advanced so rapidly and so extensively, as has
+been the case since 1815. When we trace their progress, especially
+in this country, it is impossible not to feel that their wondrous
+development has been mainly due to the land having been at peace. [See
+the excellent Introduction to Mr. Charles Knight's "History of the
+Thirty Years' Peace."] Their good effects cannot be obliterated, even
+if a series of wars were to recommence. When we reflect on this, and
+contrast these thirty-seven years with the period that preceded them,
+a period of violence, of tumult, of unrestingly destructive energy,--a
+period throughout which the wealth of nations was scattered like sand,
+and the blood of nations lavished like water,--it is impossible not to
+look with deep interest on the final crisis of that dark and dreadful
+epoch; the crisis out of which our own happier cycle of years has been
+evolved. The great battle which ended the twenty-three years' war of
+the first French Revolution, and which quelled the man whose genius and
+ambition had so long disturbed and desolated the world, deserves to be
+regarded by us, not only with peculiar pride, as one of our greatest
+national victories, but with peculiar gratitude for the repose which it
+secured for us, and for the greater part of the human race.
+
+One good test for determining the importance of Waterloo, is to
+ascertain what was felt by wise and prudent statesmen before that
+battle, respecting the return of Napoleon from Elba to the Imperial
+throne of France, and the probable effects of his success. For
+this purpose, I will quote the words, not of any of our vehement
+anti-Gallican politicians of the school of Pitt, but of a leader of our
+Liberal party, of a man whose reputation as a jurist, a historian and a
+far-sighted and candid statesman, was, and is, deservedly high, not only
+in this country, but throughout Europe. Sir James Mackintosh, in the
+debate in the British House of Commons, on the 20th April, 1815, spoke
+thus of the return from Elba:--
+
+"Was it in the power of language to describe the evil. Wars which had
+raged for more than twenty years throughout Europe; which had
+spread blood and desolation from Cadiz to Moscow, and from Naples to
+Copenhagen; which had wasted the means of human enjoyment, and destroyed
+the instruments of social improvement; which threatened to diffuse among
+the European nations, the dissolute and ferocious habits of a predatory
+soldiery,--at length, by one of those vicissitudes which bid defiance to
+the foresight of man, had been brought to a close, upon the whole, happy
+beyond all reasonable expectation, with no violent shock to national
+independence, with some tolerable compromise between the opinions of
+the age and reverence due to ancient institutions; with no too signal or
+mortifying triumph over the legitimate interests or avowable feelings
+of any numerous body of men, and, above all, without those retaliations
+against nations or parties, which beget new convulsions, often as
+horrible as those which they close, and perpetuate revenge and hatred
+and bloodshed, from age to age. Europe seemed to breathe after her
+sufferings. In the midst of this fair prospect, and of these consolatory
+hopes, Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from Elba; three small vessels reached
+the coast of Provence; our hopes are instantly dispelled; the work of
+our toil and fortitude is undone; the blood of Europe is spilt in vain--
+
+"'Ibi omnis effusus labor!'"
+
+
+The Congress of Emperors, Kings, Princes, Generals, and Statesmen, who
+had assembled at Vienna to remodel the world after the overthrow of the
+mighty conqueror, and who thought that Napoleon had passed away for ever
+from the great drama of European politics, had not yet completed their
+triumphant festivities, and their diplomatic toils, when Talleyrand,
+on the 11th of March, 1815, rose up among them, and announced that the
+ex-emperor had escaped from Elba, and was Emperor of France once more.
+It is recorded by Sir Walter Scott, as a curious physiological fact,
+that the first effect of the news of an event which threatened to
+neutralise all their labours, was to excite a loud burst of laughter
+from nearly every member of the Congress. [Life of Napoleon, vol. viii.
+chap. 1.] But the jest was a bitter one: and they soon were deeply
+busied in anxious deliberations respecting the mode in which they
+should encounter their arch-enemy, who had thus started from torpor and
+obscurity into renovated splendour and strength:
+
+
+ "Qualis ubi in lucem coluber mala gramina pastus,
+ Frigida sub terra tumidum quem bruma tegebat,
+ Nunc positis novus exuviis nitidusque juventa,
+ Lubrica convolvit sublato pectore terga
+ Arduus ad solem, at linguis micat ore trisulcis." Virg. AEN.
+
+
+Napoleon sought to disunite the formidable confederacy, which he knew
+would be arrayed against him, by endeavouring to negotiate separately
+with each of the allied sovereigns. It is said that Austria and Russia
+were at first not unwilling to treat with him. Disputes and jealousies
+had been rife among several of the Allies on the subject of the division
+of the conquered countries; and the cordial unanimity with which they
+had acted during 1813 and the first months of 1814, had grown
+chill during some weeks of discussions. But the active exertions of
+Tralleyrand, who represented Louis XVIII. at the Congress, and who both
+hated and feared Napoleon with all the intensity of which his powerful
+spirit was capable, prevented the secession of any member of the
+Congress from the new great league against their ancient enemy. Still it
+is highly probable that, if Napoleon had triumphed in Belgium over
+the Prussians and the English, he would have succeeded in opening
+negotiations with the Austrians and Russians; and he might have thus
+gained advantages similar to those which he had obtained on his return
+from Egypt, when he induced the Czar Paul to withdraw the Russian armies
+from co-operating with the other enemies of France in the extremity of
+peril to which she seemed reduced in 1799. But fortune now had deserted
+him both in diplomacy and in war.
+
+On the 13th of March, 1815, the Ministers of the seven powers, Austria,
+Spain, England, Portugal, Prussia, Russia, and Sweden, signed a
+manifesto, by which they declared Napoleon an outlaw; and this
+denunciation was instantly followed up by a treaty between England,
+Austria, Prussia, and Russia (to which other powers soon acceded), by
+which the rulers of those countries bound themselves to enforce that
+decree, and to prosecute the war until Napoleon should be driven from
+the throne of France, and rendered incapable of disturbing the peace of
+Europe. The Duke of Wellington was the representative of England at the
+Congress of Vienna, and he was immediately applied to for his advice
+on the plan of military operations against France. It was obvious that
+Belgium would be the first battle-field; and by the general wish of the
+Allies, the English Duke proceeded thither to assemble an army from the
+contingents of Dutch, Belgian, and Hanoverian troops, that were most
+speedily available, and from the English regiments which his own
+Government was hastening to send over from this country. A strong
+Prussian corps was near Aix-la-Chapelle, having remained there since
+the campaign of the preceding year. This was largely reinforced by other
+troops of the same nation; and Marshal Blucher, the favourite hero of
+the Prussian soldiery, and the deadliest foe of France, assumed the
+command of this army, which was termed the Army of the Lower Rhine; and
+which, in conjunction with Wellington's forces, was to make the van of
+the armaments of the Allied Powers. Meanwhile Prince Swartzenburg was to
+collect 130,000 Austrians, and 124,000 troops of other Germanic States,
+as "the Army of the Upper Rhine;" and 168,000 Russians, under the
+command of Barclay de Tolly, were to form "the Army of the Middle
+Rhine," and to repeat the march from Muscovy to that river's banks.
+
+The exertions which the Allied Powers thus made at this crisis to
+grapple promptly with the French emperor have truly been termed
+gigantic; and never were Napoleon's genius and activity more signally
+displayed, than in the celerity and skill by which he brought forward
+all the military resources of France, which the reverses of the three
+preceding years, and the pacific policy of the Bourbons during
+the months of their first restoration, had greatly diminished and
+disorganized. He re-entered Paris on the 20th of March, and by the end
+of May, besides sending a force into La Vendee to put down the armed
+rising of the royalists in that province, and besides providing troops
+under Massena and Suchet for the defence of the southern frontiers of
+France, Napoleon had an army assembled in the north-east for active
+operations under his own command, which amounted to between one hundred
+and twenty, and one hundred and thirty thousand men, with a superb park
+of artillery and in the highest possible state of equipment, discipline,
+and efficiency. [See for these numbers Siborne's History of the Campaign
+of Waterloo, vol. i. p. 41.]
+
+The approach of the multitudinous Russian, Austrian, Bavarian, and other
+foes of the French Emperor to the Rhine was necessarily slow; but the
+two most active of the allied powers had occupied Belgium with their
+troops, while Napoleon was organizing his forces. Marshal Blucher was
+there with one hundred and sixteen thousand Prussians; and, before the
+end of May, the Duke of Wellington was there also with about one hundred
+and six thousand troops, either British or in British pay. [Ibid. vol.
+i. chap. 3. Wellington had but a small part of his old Peninsular army
+in Belgium. The flower of it had been sent on the expeditions against
+America. His troops, in 1815, were chiefly second battalions, or
+regiments lately filled up with new recruits. See Scott, vol viii.
+p. 474.] Napoleon determined to attack these enemies in Belgium. The
+disparity of numbers was indeed great, but delay was sure to increase
+the proportionate numerical superiority of his enemies over his own
+ranks. The French Emperor considered also that "the enemy's troops were
+now cantoned under the command of two generals, and composed of nations
+differing both in interest and in feelings." [See Montholon's Memoirs,
+p. 45.] His own army was under his own sole command. It was composed
+exclusively of French soldiers, mostly of veterans, well acquainted with
+their officers and with each other, and full of enthusiastic confidence
+in their commander. If he could separate the Prussians from the British,
+so as to attack each singly, he felt sanguine of success, not only
+against these the most resolute of his many adversaries, but also
+against the other masses, that were slowly labouring up against his
+eastern dominions.
+
+The triple chain of strong fortresses, which the French possessed on the
+Belgian frontier, formed a curtain, behind which Napoleon was able to
+concentrate his army, and to conceal, till the very last moment, the
+precise line of attack which he intended to take. On the other hand,
+Blucher and Wellington were obliged to canton their troops along a line
+of open country of considerable length, so as to watch for the outbreak
+of Napoleon from whichever point of his chain of strongholds he should
+please to make it. Blucher, with his army, occupied the banks of the
+Sambre and the Meuse, from Liege on his left, to Charleroi on his right;
+and the Duke of Wellington covered Brussels; his cantonments being
+partly in front of that city and between it and the French frontier, and
+partly on its west their extreme right reaching to Courtray and Tournay,
+while the left approached Charleroi and communicated with the Prussian
+right. It was upon Charleroi that Napoleon resolved to level his attack,
+in hopes of severing the two allied armies from each other, and then
+pursuing his favourite tactic of assailing each separately with a
+superior force on the battle-field, though the aggregate of their
+numbers considerably exceeded his own.
+
+The first French corps d'armee, commanded by Count d'Erlon, was
+stationed in the beginning of June in and around the city of Lille, near
+to the north-eastern frontier of France. The second corps, under Count
+Reille, was at Valenciennes, to the right of the first one. The third
+corps, under Count Vandamme, was at Mezieres. The fourth, under Count
+Gerard, had its head-quarters at Metz, and the sixth under Count Lobau,
+was at Laon. [The fifth corps was under Count Rapp at Strasburg.] Four
+corps of reserve cavalry, under Marshal Grouchy, were also near the
+frontier, between the rivers Aisne and Sambre. The Imperial Guard
+remained in Paris until the 8th of June, when it marched towards
+Belgium, and reached Avesnes on the 13th; and in the course of the same
+and the following day, the five corps d'armee with the cavalry reserves
+which have been mentioned, were, in pursuance of skilfully combined
+orders, rapidly drawn together, and concentrated in and around the
+same place, on the right bank of the river Sambre. On the 14th Napoleon
+arrived among his troops, who were exulting at the display of their
+commander's skill in the celerity and precision with which they had been
+drawn together, and in the consciousness of their collective strength.
+Although Napoleon too often permitted himself to use language unworthy
+of his own character respecting his great English adversary, his real
+feelings in commencing this campaign may be judged from the last words
+which he spoke, as he threw himself into his travelling carriage to
+leave Paris for the army. "I go," he said, "to measure myself with
+Wellington."
+
+The enthusiasm of the French soldiers at seeing their Emperor among
+them, was still more excited by the "Order of the day," in which he thus
+appealed to them:
+
+"Napoleon, by the Grace of God, and the Constitution of the Empire,
+Emperor of the French, &c. to the Grand Army.
+
+"AT THE IMPERIAL HEAD-QUARTERS, AVESNES, JUNE 14th, 1815.
+
+"Soldiers! this day is the anniversary of Marengo and of
+Friedland, which twice decided the destiny of Europe. Then, as after
+Austerlitz, as after Wagram, we were too generous! We believed in
+the protestations and in the oaths of princes, whom we left on their
+thrones. Now, however, leagued together, they aim at the independence
+and the most sacred rights of France. They have commenced the most
+unjust of aggressions. Let us, then, march to meet them. Are they and we
+no longer the same men?
+
+"Soldiers! at Jena, against these same Prussians, now so arrogant, you
+were one to three, and at Montmirail one to six!
+
+"Let those among you who have been captives to the English, describe the
+nature of their prison ships, and the frightful miseries they endured.
+
+"The Saxons, the Belgians, the Hanoverians, the soldiers of the
+Confederation of the Rhine, lament that they are compelled to use their
+arms in the cause of princes, the enemies of justice and of the rights
+of all nations. They know that this coalition is insatiable! After
+having devoured twelve millions of Poles, twelve millions of Italians,
+one million of Saxons, and six millions of Belgians, it now wishes to
+devour the states of the second rank in Germany.
+
+"Madmen! one moment of prosperity has bewildered them. The oppression
+and the humiliation of the French people are beyond their power. If they
+enter France they will there find their grave.
+
+"Soldiers! we have forced marches to make, battles to fight, dangers
+to encounter; but, with firmness victory will, be ours. The rights, the
+honour, and the happiness of the country will be recovered!
+
+"To every Frenchman who has a heart, the moment is now arrived to
+conquer or to die.
+
+"NAPOLEON."
+
+"THE MARSHAL DUKE OF DALMATIA. MAJOR GENERAL."
+
+The 15th of June had scarcely dawned before the French army was in
+motion for the decisive campaign, and crossed the frontier in three
+columns, which were pointed upon Charleroi and its vicinity. The French
+line of advance upon Brussels, which city Napoleon resolved to occupy,
+thus lay right through the centre of the cantonments of the Allies.
+
+Much criticism has been expended on the supposed surprise of
+Wellington's army in its cantonments by Napoleon's rapid advance. These
+comments would hardly have been made if sufficient attention had been
+paid to the geography of the Waterloo campaign; and if it had been
+remembered that the protection of Brussels was justly considered by
+the allied generals a matter of primary importance. If Napoleon could,
+either by manoeuvring or fighting, have succeeded in occupying that
+city, the greater part of Belgium would unquestionably have declared in
+his favour; and the results of such a success, gained by the Emperor at
+the commencement of the campaign, might have decisively influenced
+the whole after-current of events. A glance at the map will show the
+numerous roads that lead from the different fortresses on the French
+north-eastern frontier, and converge upon Brussels; any one of which
+Napoleon might have chosen for the advance of a strong force upon that
+city. The Duke's army was judiciously arranged, so as to enable him to
+concentrate troops on any one of these roads sufficiently in advance of
+Brussels to check an assailing enemy. The army was kept thus available
+for movement in any necessary direction, till certain intelligence
+arrived on the 15th of June that the French had crossed the frontier in
+large force near Thuin, that they had driven back the Prussian advanced
+troops under General Ziethen, and were also moving across the Sambre
+upon Charleroi.
+
+Marshal Blucher now rapidly concentrated his forces, calling them in
+from the left upon Ligny, which is to the north-east of Charleroi.
+Wellington also drew his troops together, calling them in from the
+right. But even now, though it was certain that the French were in large
+force at Charleroi it was unsafe for the English general to place his
+army directly between that place and Brussels, until it was certain that
+no corps of the enemy was marching upon Brussels by the western road
+through Mons and Hal. The Duke therefore, collected his troops in
+Brussels and its immediate vicinity, ready to move due southward upon
+Quatre Bras, and co-operate with Blucher, who was taking his station at
+Ligny: but also ready to meet and defeat any manoeuvre, that the enemy
+might make to turn the right of the Allies, and occupy Brussels by
+a flanking movement. The testimony of the Prussian general, Baron
+Muffling, who was attached to the Duke's staff during the campaign, and
+who expressly states the reasons on which the English general acted,
+ought for ever to have silenced the "weak inventions of the enemy"
+about the Duke of Wellington having been deceived and surprised by his
+assailant, which some writers of our own nation, as well as foreigners,
+have incautiously repeated. [See "Passages from my Life and Writings,"
+by Baron Muffling, p. 224 of the English Translation, edited by Col.
+Yorke. See also the 178th number of the QUARTERLY. It is strange that
+Lamartine should, after the appearance of Muffling's work, have repeated
+in his "History of the Restoration" the myth of Wellington having been
+surprised in the Brussels ball-room, &c.]
+
+It was about three o'clock in the afternoon of the 15th, that a Prussian
+officer reached Brussels, whom General Ziethen had sent to Muffling
+to inform him of the advance of the main French army upon Charleroi.
+Muffling immediately communicated this to the Duke of Wellington; and
+asked him whether he would now concentrate his army, and what would
+be his point of concentration; observing that Marshal Blucher in
+consequence of this intelligence would certainly concentrate the
+Prussians at Ligny. The Duke replied--"If all is as General Ziethen
+supposes, I will concentrate on my left wing, and so be in readiness to
+fight in conjunction with the Prussian army. Should, however, a portion
+of the enemy's force come by Mons, I must concentrate more towards my
+centre. This is the reason why I must wait for positive news from Mons
+before I fix the rendezvous. Since, however, it is certain that the
+troops MUST march, though it is uncertain upon what precise spot they
+must march, I will order all to be in readiness, and will direct a
+brigade to move at once towards Quatre Bras." [Muffling, p. 231.]
+
+Later in the same day a message from Blucher himself was delivered to
+Muffling, in which the Prussian Field-Marshal informed the Baron that he
+was concentrating his men at Sombref and Ligny, and charged Muffling to
+give him speedy intelligence respecting the concentration of Wellington.
+Muffling immediately communicated this to the Duke, who expressed his
+satisfaction with Blucher's arrangements, but added that he could not
+even then resolve upon his own point of concentration before he obtained
+the desired intelligence from Mons. About midnight this information
+arrived. The Duke went to the quarters of General Muffling, and told
+him that he now had received his reports from Mons, and was sure that
+no French troops were advancing by that route, but that the mass of
+the enemy's force was decidedly directed on Charleroi. He informed the
+Prussian general that he had ordered the British troops to move forward
+upon Quatre Bras; but with characteristic coolness and sagacity resolved
+not to give the appearance of alarm by hurrying on with them himself. A
+ball was to be given by the Duchess of Richmond at Brussels that night,
+and the Duke proposed to General Muffling that they should go to the
+ball for a few hours, and ride forward in the morning to overtake the
+troops at Quatre Bras.
+
+To hundreds, who were assembled at that memorable ball, the news that
+the enemy was advancing, and that the time for battle had come, must
+have been a fearfully exciting surprise, and the magnificent stanzas of
+Byron are as true as they are beautiful; but the Duke and his principal
+officers knew well the stern termination to that festive scene which
+was approaching. One by one, and in such a way as to attract as little
+observation as possible, the leaders of the various corps left the
+ball-room, and took their stations at the head of their men, who were
+pressing forward through the last hours of the short summer night to the
+arena of anticipated slaughter.
+
+
+ [There was a sound of revelry by night,
+ And Belgium's capital had gather'd then
+ Her Beauty and her chivalry, and bright
+ The lamps shone o'er fair women and brave men;
+ A thousand hearts beat happily; and when
+ Music arose with its voluptuous swell,
+ Soft eyes look'd love to eyes which spake again,
+ And all went merry as a marriage bell;
+ But hush! hark! a deep sound strikes like a rising knell,
+
+ Did ye not hear it?--No; 'twas but; the wind,
+ Or the car rattling o'er the stony street;
+ On with the dance! let joy be unconfined;
+ No sleep till morn, when Youth and Pleasure meet
+ To chase the glowing Hours with flying feet--
+ But, hark!--that heavy sound breaks in once more,
+ As if the clouds its echo would repeat;
+ And nearer, clearer, deadlier than before!
+ Arm! Arm! it is--it is--the cannon's opening roar!
+
+ Within a window'd niche of that high hall
+ Sate Brunswick's fated chieftain; he did hear
+ That sound the first amidst the festival,
+ And caught its tone with Death's prophetic ear;
+ And when they smiled because he deem'd it near,
+ His heart more truly knew that peal too well
+ Which stretch'd his father on a bloody bier,
+ And roused the vengeance blood alone could quell;
+ He rush'd into the field, and, foremost fighting, fell.
+
+ Ah! then and there was hurrying to and fro,
+ And gathering tears, and tremblings of distress,
+ And cheeks all pale, which but an hour ago
+ Blush'd at the praise of their own loveliness;
+ And there were sudden partings, such as press
+ The life from out young hearts, and choking sighs
+ Which ne'er might be repeated; who could guess
+ If ever more should meet those mutual eyes,
+ Since upon night so sweet such awful morn could rise!
+
+ And there was mounting in hot haste: the steed,
+ The mustering squadron, and the clattering car,
+ Went pouring forward with impetuous speed,
+ And swiftly forming in the ranks of war;
+ And the deep thunder peal on peal afar;
+ And near, the beat of the alarming drum
+ Roused up the soldier ere the morning star;
+ While thronged the citizens with terror dumb,
+ Or whispering, with white lips--"The foe!
+ They come! they come!"
+
+ And Ardennes waves above them her green leaves,
+ Dewy with nature's teardrops, as they pass,
+ Grieving, if aught inanimate e'er grieves,
+ Over the unreturning brave,--alas!
+ Ere evening to be trodden like the grass
+ Which now beneath them, but above shall grow
+ In its next verdure, when this fiery mass
+ Of living valour, rolling on the foe
+ And burning with high hope, shall moulder cold and low.
+
+ Last noon beheld them full of lusty life,
+ Last eve in Beauty's circle proudly gay,
+ The midnight brought the signal-sound of strife,
+ The morn the marshalling in arms,--the day
+ Battle's magnificently stern array!
+ The thunder-clouds close o'er it, which when rent
+ The earth is covered thick with other clay,
+ Which her own clay shall cover, heaped and pent,
+ Rider and horse,--friend, foe,--in one red burial blent.]
+
+
+Napoleon's operations on the 16th had been conducted with signal skill
+and vigour; and their results had been very advantageous for his plan of
+the campaign. With his army formed in three vast columns, [Victoires et
+Conquetes des Francais, vol. xxv. p. 177.] he had struck at the centre
+of the line of cantonments of his allied foes; and he had so far made
+good his blow, that he had affected the passage of the Sambre, he had
+beaten with his left wing the Prussian corps of General Ziethen at
+Thuin, and with his centre he had in person advanced right through
+Charleroi upon Fleurus, inflicting considerable loss upon the Prussians
+that fell back before him. His right column had with little opposition
+moved forward as far as the bridge of Chatelet.
+
+Napoleon had thus a powerful force immediately in front of the point
+which Blucher had fixed for the concentration of the Prussian army, and
+that concentration was still incomplete. The French Emperor designed
+to attack the Prussians on the morrow in person, with the troops of his
+centre and right columns, and to employ his left wing in beating back
+such English troops as might advance to the help of their allies, and
+also in aiding his own attack upon Blucher. He gave the command of this
+left wing to Marshal Ney. Napoleon seems not to have originally intended
+to employ this celebrated General in the campaign. It was only on the
+night of the 11th of June, that Marshal Ney received at Paris an order
+to join the army. Hurrying forward to the Belgian frontier, he met the
+Emperor near Charleroi. Napoleon immediately directed him to take the
+command of the left wing, and to press forward with it upon Quatre Bras
+by the line of the road which leads from Charleroi to Brussels, through
+Gosselies, Frasne, Quatre Bras, Genappe, and Waterloo. Ney immediately
+proceeded to the post assigned him; and before ten on the night of the
+15th he had occupied Gosselies and Frasne, driving out without much
+difficulty some weak Belgian detachments which had been stationed in
+those villages. The lateness of the hour, and the exhausted state of
+the French troops, who had been marching and fighting since ten in the
+morning, made him pause from advancing further to attack the much more
+important position of Quatre Bras. In truth, the advantages which the
+French gained by their almost superhuman energy and activity throughout
+the long day of the 15th of June, were necessarily bought at the price
+of more delay and inertness during the following night and morrow, than
+would have been observable if they had not been thus overtasked. Ney has
+been blamed for want of promptness in his attack upon Quatre Bras; and
+Napoleon has been criticised for not having fought at Ligny before the
+afternoon of the 16th: but their censors should remember that soldiers
+are but men; and that there must be necessarily some interval of time,
+before troops, that have been worn and weakened by twenty hours of
+incessant fatigue and strife, can be fed, rested, reorganized, and
+brought again into action with any hope of success.
+
+Having on the night of the 15th placed the most advanced of the French
+under his command in position in front of Frasne, Ney rode back to
+Charleroi, where Napoleon also arrived about midnight, having returned
+from directing the operations of the centre and right column of the
+French. The Emperor and the Marshal supped together, and remained in
+earnest conversation till two in the morning. An hour or two afterwards
+Ney rode back to Frasne, where he endeavoured to collect tidings of
+the numbers and movements of the enemy in front of him; and also busied
+himself in the necessary duty of learning the amount and composition
+of the troops which he himself was commanding. He had been so suddenly
+appointed to his high station, that he did not know the strength of
+the several regiments under him, or even the names of their commanding
+officers. He now caused his aides-de-camp to prepare the requisite
+returns, and drew together the troops, whom he was thus learning before
+he used them.
+
+Wellington remained at the Duchess of Richmond's ball at Brussels till
+about three o'clock in the morning of the 16th, "showing himself very
+cheerful" as Baron Muffling, who accompanied him, observes. [Muffling,
+p. 233.] At five o'clock the Duke and the Baron were on horseback, and
+reached the position at Quatre Bras about eleven. As the French, who
+were in front of Frasne, were perfectly quiet, and the Duke was informed
+that a very large force under Napoleon in person was menacing Blucher,
+it was thought possible that only a slight detachment of the French
+was posted at Frasne in order to mask the English army. In that event
+Wellington, as he told Baron Muffling, would be able to employ his whole
+strength in supporting the Prussians: and he proposed to ride across
+from Quatre Bras to Blucher's position, in order to concert with him
+personally the measures which should be taken in order to bring on
+a decisive battle with the French. Wellington and Muffling rode
+accordingly towards Ligny, and found Marshal Blucher and his staff
+at the windmill of Bry, near that village. The Prussian army, 80,000
+strong, was drawn up chiefly along a chain of heights, with the villages
+of Sombref, St. Amand, and Ligny in their front. These villages were
+strongly occupied by Prussian detachments, and formed the keys of
+Blucher's position. The heads of the columns which Napoleon was forming
+for the attack, were visible in the distance. The Duke asked Blucher
+and General Gneisenau (who was Blucher's adviser in matters of strategy)
+what they wished him to do, Muffling had already explained to them in
+a few words the Duke's earnest desire to support the Field-Marshal, and
+that he would do all that they wished, provided they did not ask him to
+divide his army, which was contrary to his principles. The Duke wished
+to advance with his army (as soon as it was concentrated) upon Frasne
+and Gosselies, and thence to move upon Napoleon's flank and rear. The
+Prussian leaders preferred that he should march his men from Quatre Bras
+by the Namur road, so as to form a reserve in rear of Blucher's army.
+The Duke replied, "Well, I will come if I am not attacked myself," and
+galloped back with Muffling to Quatre Bras, where the French attack was
+now actually raging.
+
+Marshal Ney began the battle about two o'clock in the afternoon. He had
+at this time in hand about 16,000 infantry, nearly 2,000 cavalry, and 38
+guns. The force which Napoleon nominally placed at his command exceeded
+40,000 men. But more than one half of these consisted of the first
+French corps d'armee, under Count d'Erlon; and Ney was deprived of the
+use of this corps at the time that he most required it, in consequence
+of its receiving orders to march to the aid of the Emperor at Ligny. A
+magnificent body of heavy cavalry under Kellerman, nearly 5,000 strong,
+and several more battalions of artillery were added to Ney's army
+during the battle of Quatre Bras; but his effective infantry force never
+exceeded 16,000.
+
+When the battle began, the greater part of the Duke's army was yet on
+its march towards Quatre Bras from Brussels and the other parts of
+its cantonments. The force of the Allies, actually in position there,
+consisted only of a Dutch and Belgian division of infantry, not quite
+7,000 strong, with one battalion of foot, and one of horse-artillery.
+The Prince of Orange commanded them. A wood, called the Bois de Bossu,
+stretched along the right (or western) flank of the position of Quatre
+Bras; a farmhouse and building, called Gemiancourt, stood on some
+elevated ground in its front; and to the left (or east), were
+the inclosures of the village of Pierremont. The Prince of Orange
+endeavoured to secure these posts; but Ney carried Gemiancourt in
+the centre, and Pierremont on the east, and gained occupation of the
+southern part of the wood of Bossu. He ranged the chief part of his
+artillery on the high ground of Gemiancourt, whence it played throughout
+the action with most destructive effect upon the Allies. He was pressing
+forward to further advantages, when the fifth infantry division under
+Sir Thomas Picton and the Duke of Brunswick's corps appeared upon the
+scene. Wellington (who had returned to Quatre Bras from his interview
+with Blucher shortly before the arrival of these forces) restored the
+fight with them; and, as fresh troops of the Allies arrived, they were
+brought forward to stem the fierce attacks which Ney's columns and
+squadrons continued to make with unabated gallantry and zeal. The only
+cavalry of the anglo-allied army that reached Quatre Bras during
+the action, consisted of Dutch and Belgians, and a small force of
+Brunswickers, under their Duke, who was killed on the field. These
+proved wholly unable to encounter Kellerman's cuirassiers and Pire's
+lancers; the Dutch and Belgian infantry also gave way early in the
+engagement; so that the whole brunt of the battle fell on the British
+and German infantry. They sustained it nobly. Though repeatedly charged
+by the French cavalry, though exposed to the murderous fire of the
+French batteries, which from the heights of Gemiancourt sent shot and
+shell into the devoted squares whenever the French horseman withdrew,
+they not only repelled their assailants, but Kempt's and Pack's
+brigades, led, on by Picton, actually advanced against and through their
+charging foes, and with stern determination made good to the end of the
+day the ground which they had thus boldly won. Some, however, of the
+British regiments were during the confusion assailed by the French
+cavalry before they could form squares, and suffered severely. One
+regiment, the 92d, was almost wholly destroyed by the cuirassiers. A
+French private soldier, named Lami, of the 8th regiment of cuirassiers,
+captured one of the English colours, and presented it to Ney. It was a
+solitary trophy. The arrival of the English Guards about half-past six
+o'clock, enabled the Duke to recover the wood of Bossu, which the French
+had almost entirely won, and the possession of which by them would have
+enabled Ney to operate destructively upon the allied flank and rear.
+Not only was the wood of Bossu recovered on the British right, but the
+inclosures of Pierremont were also carried on the left. When night set
+in the French had been driven back on all points towards Frasne; but
+they still held the farm of Gemiancourt in front of the Duke's centre.
+Wellington and Muffling were unacquainted with the result of the
+collateral battle between Blucher and Napoleon, the cannonading of which
+had been distinctly audible at Quatre Bras throughout the afternoon and
+evening. The Duke observed to Muffling, that of course the two Allied
+armies would assume the offensive against the enemy on the morrow; and
+consequently, it would be better to capture the farm at once, instead
+of waiting till next morning. Muffling agreed in the Duke's views and
+Gemiancourt was forthwith attacked by the English and captured with
+little loss to its assailants. [Muffling, p. 242.]
+
+Meanwhile the French and the Prussians had been fighting in and round
+the villages of Ligny, Sombref, and St. Armand, from three in the
+afternoon to nine in the evening, with a savage inveteracy almost
+unparalleled in modern warfare. Blucher had in the field, when he began
+the battle, 83,417 men, and 224 guns. Bulow's corps, which was 25,000
+strong, had not joined him; but the Field-Marshal hoped to be reinforced
+by it, or by the English army before the end of the action. But Bulow,
+through some error in the transmission of orders, was far in the rear;
+and the Duke of Wellington was engaged, as we have seen, with Marshal
+Ney. Blucher received early warning from Baron Muffling that the Duke
+could not come to his assistance; but, as Muffling observes, Wellington
+rendered the Prussians the great service of occupying more than 40,000
+of the enemy, who otherwise would have crushed Blucher's right flank.
+For, not only did the conflict at Quatre Bras detain the French troops
+which actually took part in it, but d'Erlon received orders from Ney to
+join him, which hindered d'Erlon from giving effectual aid to Napoleon.
+Indeed, the whole of d'Erlon's corps, in consequence of conflicting
+directions from Ney and the Emperor, marched and countermarched, during
+the 16th, between Quatre Bras and Ligny without firing a shot in either
+battle.
+
+Blucher had, in fact, a superiority of more than 12,000 in number over
+the French army that attacked him at Ligny. The numerical difference was
+even greater at the beginning of the battle, as Lobau's corps did not
+come up from Charleroi till eight o'clock. After five hours and a half
+of desperate and long-doubtful struggle, Napoleon succeeded in breaking
+the centre of the Prussian line at Ligny, and in forcing his obstinate
+antagonists off the field of battle. The issue was attributable to his
+skill, and not to any want of spirit or resolution on the part of
+the Prussian troops; nor did they, though defeated, abate one jot in
+discipline, heart, or hope. As Blucher observed, it was a battle in
+which his army lost the day but not its honour. The Prussians retreated
+during the night of the 16th, and the early part of the 17th, with
+perfect regularity and steadiness, The retreat was directed not towards
+Maestricht, where their principal depots were established, but
+towards Wavre, so as to be able to maintain their communication with
+Wellington's army, and still follow out the original plan of the
+campaign. The heroism with which the Prussians endured and repaired
+their defeat at Ligny, is more glorious than many victories.
+
+The messenger who was sent to inform Wellington of the retreat of the
+Prussian army, was shot on the way; and it was not until the morning of
+the 17th that the Allies, at Quatre Bras, knew the result of the battle
+of Ligny. The Duke was ready at daybreak to take the offensive
+against the enemy with vigour, his whole army being by that time fully
+assembled. But on learning that Blucher had been defeated, a different
+course of action was clearly necessary. It was obvious that Napoleon's
+main army would now be directed against Wellington, and a retreat was
+inevitable. On ascertaining that the Prussian army had retired upon
+Wavre, that there was no hot pursuit of them by the French, and that
+Bulow's corps had taken no part in the action at Ligny, the Duke
+resolved to march his army back towards Brussels, still intending to
+cover that city, and to halt at a point in a line with Wavre, and there
+restore his communication with Blucher. An officer from Blucher's army
+reached the Duke about nine o'clock, from whom he learned the effective
+strength that Blucher still possessed, and how little discouraged his
+ally was by the yesterday's battle. Wellington sent word to the Prussian
+commander that he would halt in the position of Mont St. Jean, and
+accept a general battle with the French, if Blucher would pledge himself
+to come to his assistance with a single corps of 25,000 men. This was
+readily promised; and after allowing his men ample time for rest and
+refreshment, Wellington retired over about half the space between Quatre
+Bras and Brussels. He was pursued, but little molested, by the main
+French army, which about noon of the 17th moved laterally from Ligny,
+and joined Ney's forces, which had advanced through Quatre Bras when the
+British abandoned that position. The Earl of Uxbridge, with the British
+cavalry, covered the retreat of the Duke's army, with great skill and
+gallantry; and a heavy thunderstorm, with torrents of rain, impeded the
+operations of the French pursuing squadrons. The Duke still expected
+that the French would endeavour to turn his right, and march upon
+Brussels by the high road that leads through Mons and Hal. In order to
+counteract this anticipated manoeuvre, he stationed a force of 18,000
+men, under Prince Frederick of the Netherlands, at Hal, with orders to
+maintain himself there if attacked, as long as possible. The Duke halted
+with the rest of his army at the position near Mont St. Jean, which,
+from a village in its neighbourhood, has received the ever-memorable
+name of the field of Waterloo.
+
+Wellington was now about twelve miles distant, on a line running
+from west to east, from Wavre, where the Prussian army had now been
+completely reorganised and collected, and where it had been strengthened
+by the junction of Bulow's troops, which had taken no part in the battle
+of Ligny. Blucher sent word from Wavre to the Duke, that he was coming
+to help the English at Mont St. Jean, in the morning, not with one
+corps, but with his whole army. The fiery old man only stipulated that
+the combined armies, if not attacked by Napoleon on the 18th, should
+themselves attack him on the 19th. So far were Blucher and his army from
+being in the state of annihilation described in the boastful bulletin by
+which Napoleon informed the Parisians of his victory at Ligny. Indeed,
+the French Emperor seems himself to have been misinformed as to the
+extent of loss which he had inflicted on the Prussians. Had he known in
+what good order and with what undiminished spirit they were retiring, he
+would scarcely have delayed sending a large force to press them in their
+retreat until noon on the 17th. Such, however, was the case. It was
+about that time that he confided to Marshal Grouchy the duty of pursuing
+the defeated Prussians, and preventing them from joining Wellington. He
+placed for this purpose 32,000 men and 96 guns under his orders. Violent
+complaints and recriminations passed afterwards between the Emperor and
+the marshal respecting the manner in which Grouchy attempted to perform
+this duty, and the reasons why he failed on the 18th to arrest the
+lateral movement of the Prussians from Wavre to Waterloo. It is
+sufficient to remark here, that the force which Napoleon gave to Grouchy
+(though the utmost that the Emperor's limited means would allow) was
+insufficient to make head against the entire Prussian army, especially
+after Bulow's junction with Blucher. We shall presently have occasion to
+consider what opportunities were given to Grouchy during the 18th, and
+what he might have effected if he had been a man of original military
+genius.
+
+But the failure of Grouchy was in truth mainly owing to the indomitable
+heroism of Blucher himself; who, though he had received severe personal
+injuries in the battle of Ligny, was as energetic and ready as ever in
+bringing his men into action again, and who had the resolution to expose
+a part of his army, under Thielman, to be overwhelmed by Grouchy at
+Wavre on the 18th, while he urged the march of the mass of his troops
+upon Waterloo. "It is not at Wavre, but at Waterloo," said the old
+Field-Marshal, "that the campaign is to be decided;" and he risked a
+detachment, and won the campaign accordingly. Wellington and Blucher
+trusted each other as cordially, and co-operated as zealously, as
+formerly had been the case with Marlborough and Eugene. It was in full
+reliance on Blucher's promise to join him that the Duke stood his ground
+and fought at Waterloo; and those who have ventured to impugn the
+Duke's capacity as a general, ought to have had common-sense enough to
+perceive, that to charge the Duke with having won the battle of Waterloo
+by the help of the Prussians, is really to say that he won it by the
+very means on which he relied, and without the expectation of which the
+battle would not have been fought.
+
+Napoleon himself has found fault with Wellington for not having
+retreated further, so as to complete a junction of his army with
+Blucher's before he risked a general engagement. [See Montholon's
+Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 44.] But, as we have seen, the Duke justly
+considered it important to protect Brussels. He had reason to expect
+that his army could singly resist the French at Waterloo until the
+Prussians came up; and that, on the Prussians joining, there would be
+a sufficient force united under himself and Blucher for completely
+overwhelming the enemy. And while Napoleon thus censures his great
+adversary, he involuntarily bears the highest possible testimony to
+the military character of the English, and proves decisively of what
+paramount importance was the battle to which he challenged his fearless
+opponent. Napoleon asks, "IF THE ENGLISH ARMY HAD BEEN BEATEN AT
+WATERLOO, WHAT WOULD HAVE BEEN THE USE OF THOSE NUMEROUS BODIES OF
+TROOPS, OF PRUSSIANS, AUSTRIANS, GERMANS, AND SPANIARDS, WHICH WERE
+ADVANCING BY FORCED MARCHES TO THE RHINE, THE ALPS, AND THE PYRENEES?"
+[Ibid.]
+
+The strength of the army under the Duke of Wellington at Waterloo was
+49,608 infantry, 12,402 cavalry, and 5,645 artillerymen with 156 guns.
+[Siborne, vol. i. p. 376.] But of this total of 67,655 men, scarcely
+24,000 were British, a circumstance of very serious importance, if
+Napoleon's own estimate of the relative value of troops of different
+nations is to be taken. In the Emperor's own words, speaking of this
+campaign, "A French soldier would not be equal to more than one English
+soldier, but he would not be afraid to meet two Dutchmen, Prussians, or
+soldiers of the Confederation." [Montholon's Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 41.]
+There were about 6,000 men of the old German Legion with the Duke; these
+were veteran troops, and of excellent quality. Of the rest of the
+army the Hanoverians and Brunswickers proved themselves deserving of
+confidence and praise. But the Nassauers, Dutch, and Belgians were
+almost worthless; and not a few of them were justly suspected of a
+strong wish to fight, if they fought at all, under the French eagles
+rather than against them.
+
+Napoleon's army at Waterloo consisted of 48,950 infantry, 15,765
+cavalry, 7,232 artillerymen, being a total of 71,947 men, and 246 guns.
+[See Siborne, UT SUPRA.] They were the flower of the national forces of
+France; and of all the numerous gallant armies which that martial land
+has poured forth, never was there one braver, or better disciplined, or
+better led, than the host that took up its position at Waterloo on the
+morning of the 18th of June, 1815.
+
+Perhaps those who have not seen the field of battle at Waterloo, or the
+admirable model of the ground, and of the conflicting armies, which was
+executed by Captain Siborne, may gain a generally accurate idea of the
+localities, by picturing to themselves a valley between two and three
+miles long, of various breadths at different points, but generally not
+exceeding half a mile. On each side of the valley there is a winding
+chain of low hills running somewhat parallel, with each other. The
+declivity from each of these ranges of hills to the intervening valley
+is gentle but not uniform, the undulations of the ground being frequent
+and considerable. The English army was posted on the northern, and the
+French army occupied the southern ridge. The artillery of each side
+thundered at the other from their respective heights throughout the day,
+and the charges of horse and foot were made across the valley that has
+been described. The village of Mont St. Jean is situate a little behind
+the centre of the northern chain of hills, and the village of La Belle
+Alliance is close behind the centre of the southern ridge. The high road
+from Charleroi to Brussels (a broad paved causeway) runs through both
+these villages, and bisects therefore both the English and the French
+positions. The line of this road was the line of Napoleon's intended
+advance on Brussels.
+
+There are some other local particulars connected with the situation of
+each army, which it is necessary to bear in mind. The strength of the
+British position did not consist merely in the occupation of a ridge of
+high ground. A village and ravine, called Merk Braine, on the Duke of
+Wellington's extreme right, secured his flank from being turned on that
+side; and on his extreme left, two little hamlets called La Haye and
+Papelotte, gave a similar, though a slighter, protection. Behind the
+whole British position is the extensive forest of Soignies. As no
+attempt was made by the French to turn either of the English flanks,
+and the battle was a day of straightforward fighting, it is chiefly
+important to ascertain what posts there were in front of the British
+line of hills, of which advantage could be taken either to repel or
+facilitate an attack; and it will be seen that there were two, and that
+each was of very great importance in the action. In front of the British
+right, that is to say, on the northern slope of the valley towards its
+western end, there stood an old-fashioned Flemish farm-house called
+Goumont, or Hougoumont, with out-buildings and a garden, and with a
+copse of beach trees of about two acres in extent round it. This was
+strongly garrisoned by the allied troops; and, while it was in their
+possession, it was difficult for the enemy to press on and force the
+British right wing. On the other hand, if the enemy could take it, it
+would be difficult for that wing to keep its ground on the heights, with
+a strong post held adversely in its immediate front, being one that;
+would give much shelter to the enemy's marksmen, and great facilities
+for the sudden concentration of attacking columns. Almost immediately
+in front of the British centre, and not so far down the slope as
+Hougoumont, there was another farm-house, of a smaller size, called La
+Haye Sainte, [Not to be confounded with the hamlet of La Haye at the
+extreme left of the British line.] which was also held by the British
+troops, and the occupation of which was found to be of very serious
+consequence.
+
+With respect to the French position, the principal feature to be noticed
+is the village of Planchenoit, which lay a little in the rear of their
+right (I.E. on the eastern side), and which proved to be of great
+importance in aiding them to check the advance of the Prussians.
+
+Napoleon, in his memoirs, and other French writers, have vehemently
+blamed the Duke for having given battle in such a position as that of
+Waterloo. They particularly object that the Duke fought without
+having the means of a retreat, if the attacks of his enemy had proved
+successful; and that the English army, if once broken, must have lost
+all its guns and MATERIEL in its flight through the Forest of Soignies,
+that lay in its rear. In answer to these censures, instead of merely
+referring to the event of the battle as proof of the correctness of the
+Duke's judgment, it is to be observed that many military critics of
+high authority, have considered the position of Waterloo to have been
+admirably adapted for the Duke's purpose of protecting Brussels by a
+battle; and that certainly the Duke's opinion in favour of it was not
+lightly or hastily formed. It is a remarkable fact (mentioned in the
+speech of Lord Bathurst when moving the vote of thanks to the Duke in
+the House of Lords), [Parliamentary Debates, vol. xxxi. p. 875.] that
+when the Duke of Wellington was passing through Belgium in the preceding
+summer of 1814, he particularly noticed the strength of the position of
+Waterloo, and made a minute of it at the time, stating to those who were
+with him, that if it ever should be his fate to fight a battle in that
+quarter for the protection of Brussels, he should endeavour to do so
+in that position. And with respect to the Forest of Soignies, which the
+French (and some few English) critics have thought calculated to prove
+so fatal to a retreating force, the Duke on the contrary believed it to
+be a post that might have proved of infinite value to his army in the
+event of his having been obliged to give way. The Forest of Soignies
+has no thicket or masses of close-growing trees. It consists of tall
+beeches, and is everywhere passable for men and horses. The artillery
+could have been withdrawn by the broad road which traverses it towards
+Brussels; and in the meanwhile a few regiments of resolute infantry
+could have held the forest and kept the pursuers in check. One of
+the best writers on the Waterloo campaign, Captain Pringle, [See the
+Appendix to the 8th volume of Scott's Life of Napoleon.] well observes
+that "every person, the least experienced in war, knows the extreme
+difficulty of forcing infantry from a wood which cannot be turned." The
+defence of the Bois de Bossu near Quatre Bras on the 16th of June had
+given a good proof of this; and the Duke of Wellington, when speaking
+in after years of the possible events that might have followed if he had
+been beaten back from the open field of Waterloo, pointed to the wood
+of Soignies as his secure rallying place, saying, "they never could have
+beaten us so, that we could not have held the wood against them." He was
+always confident that he could have made good that post until joined by
+the Prussians, upon whose co-operation he throughout depended. [See
+Lord Ellesmere's Life and Character of the Duke of Wellington, p. 40.]
+
+As has been already mentioned, the Prussians, on the morning of the
+18th, were at Wavre, which is about twelve miles to the east of the
+field of battle of Waterloo. The junction of Bulow's division had more
+than made up for the loss sustained at Ligny; and leaving Thielman
+with about seventeen thousand men to hold his ground, as he best could,
+against the attack which Grouchy was about to make on Wavre, Bulow and
+Blucher moved with the rest of the Prussians through St. Lambert upon
+Waterloo. It was calculated that they would be there by three o'clock;
+but the extremely difficult nature of the ground which they had to
+traverse, rendered worse by the torrents of rain that had just fallen,
+delayed them long on their twelve miles' march.
+
+An army indeed, less animated by bitter hate against the enemy than was
+the Prussians, and under a less energetic chief than Blucher, would have
+failed altogether in effecting a passage through the swamps, into
+which the incessant rain had transformed the greater part of the ground
+through which it was necessary to move not only with columns of foot,
+but with cavalry and artillery. At one point of the march, on entering
+the defile of St. Lambert, the spirits of the Prussians almost gave way.
+Exhausted in the attempts to extricate and drag forward the heavy guns,
+the men began to murmur. Blucher came to the spot, and heard cries from
+the ranks of--"We cannot get on." "But you must get on," was the old
+Field-Marshal's answer. "I have pledged my word to Wellington, and you
+surely will not make me break it. Only exert yourselves for a few hours
+longer, and we are sure of victory." This appeal from old "Marshal
+Forwards," as the Prussian soldiers loved to call Blucher, had its
+wonted affect. The Prussians again moved forward, slowly, indeed, and
+with pain and toil; but still they moved forward. [See Siborne, vol. ii.
+p. 137.]
+
+The French and British armies lay on the open field during the wet and
+stormy night of the 17th; and when the dawn of the memorable 18th of
+June broke, the rain was still descending heavily upon Waterloo. The
+rival nations rose from their dreary bivouacs, and began to form, each
+on the high ground which it occupied. Towards nine the weather grew
+clearer, and each army was able to watch the position and arrangements
+of the other on the opposite side of the valley.
+
+The Duke of Wellington drew up his army in two lines; the principal one
+being stationed near the crest of the ridge of hills already described,
+and the other being arranged along the slope in the rear of his
+position. Commencing from the eastward, on the extreme left of the first
+or main line, were Vivian's and Vandeleur's brigades of light cavalry,
+and the fifth Hanoverian brigade of infantry, under Von Vincke. Then
+came Best's fourth Hanoverian brigade. Detachments from these bodies of
+troops occupied the little villages of Papelotte and La Haye, down the
+hollow in advance of the left of the Duke's position. To the right of
+Best's Hanoverians, Bylandt's brigade of Dutch and Belgian infantry was
+drawn up on the outer slope of the heights. Behind them were the ninth
+brigade of British infantry under Pack; and to the right of these last,
+but more in advance, stood the eighth brigade of English infantry under
+Kempt. These were close to the Charleroi road, and to the centre of the
+entire position. These two English brigades, with the fifth Hanoverian,
+made up the fifth division, commanded by Sir Thomas Picton. Immediately
+to their right, and westward of the Charleroi road, stood the third
+division, commanded by General Alten, and consisting of Ompteda's
+brigade of the King's German legion, and Kielmansegge's Hanoverian
+brigade. The important post of La Haye Sainte, which it will be
+remembered lay in front of the Duke's centre, close to the Charleroi
+road, was garrisoned with troops from this division. Westward, and on
+the right of Kielmansegge's Hanoverians, stood the fifth British brigade
+under Halkett; and behind, Kruse's Nassau brigade was posted. On the
+right of Halkett's men stood the English Guards. They were in two
+brigades, one commanded By Maitland, and the other by Byng. The
+entire division was under General Cooke. The buildings and gardens of
+Hougoumont, which lay immediately under the height, on which stood
+the British Guards, were principally manned by detachments from Byng's
+Brigade, aided by some brave Hanoverian riflemen, and accompanied by
+a battalion of a Nassau regiment. On a plateau in the rear of Cooks's
+division of Guards, and inclining westward towards the village of Merk
+Braine, were Clinton's second infantry division, composed of Adams's
+third brigade of light infantry, Du Plat's first brigade of the King's
+German legion, and third Hanoverian brigade under Colonel Halkett.
+
+The Duke formed his second line of cavalry. This only extended behind
+the right and centre of his first line. The largest mass was drawn up
+behind the brigades of infantry in the centre, on either side of the
+Charleroi road. The brigade of household cavalry under Lord Somerset was
+on the immediate right of the road, and on the left of it was Ponsonby's
+brigade. Behind these were Trip's and Ghingy's brigades of Dutch and
+Belgian horse. The third Hussars of the King's German Legion were to
+the right of Somerset's brigade. To the right of these, and behind
+Maitland's infantry, stood the third brigade under Dornberg, consisting
+of the 23d English Light Dragoons, and the regiments of Light Dragoons
+of the King's German Legion. The last cavalry on the right was Grant's
+brigade, stationed in the rear of the Foot-Guards. The corps of
+Brunswickers, both horse and foot, and the 10th British brigade of foot,
+were in reserve behind the centre and right of the entire position. The
+artillery was distributed at convenient intervals along the front of
+the whole line. Besides the Generals who have been mentioned, Lord Hill,
+Lord Uxbridge (who had the general command of the cavalry), the Prince
+of Orange, and General Chasse, were present, and acting under the Duke.
+
+[Prince Frederick's force remained at Hal, and took no part in the
+battle of the 18th. The reason for this arrangement (which has been much
+cavilled at), may be best given in the words of Baron Muffling:--"The
+Duke had retired from Quatre Bras in three columns, by three chaussees;
+and on the evening of the 17th, Prince Frederick of Orange was at Hal,
+Lord Hill at Braine la Leud, and the Prince of Orange with the reserve,
+at Mont St. Jean. This distribution was necessary, as Napoleon could
+dispose of these three roads for his advance on Brussels. Napoleon on
+the 17th had pressed on by Genappe as far as Rossomme. On the two other
+roads no enemy had yet shown himself. On the 18th the offensive was
+taken by Napoleon on its greatest scale, but still the Nivelles road was
+not overstepped by his left wing. These circumstances made it possible
+to draw Prince Frederick to the army, which would certainly have
+been done if entirely new circumstances had not arisen. The Duke had,
+twenty-four hours before, pledged himself to accept a battle at Mont St.
+Jean if Blucher would assist him there with one corps, of 25,000 men.
+This being promised, the Duke was taking his measures for defence, when
+he learned that, in addition to the one corps promised, Blucher was
+actually already on the march with his whole force, to break in by
+Planchenoit on Napoleon's flank and rear. If three corps of the Prussian
+army should penetrate by the unguarded plateau of Rossomme, which was
+not improbable, Napoleon would be thrust from his line of retreat by
+Genappe, and might possibly lose even that by Nivelles. In this case
+Prince Frederick with his 18,000 men (who might be accounted superfluous
+at Mont St. Jean), might have rendered the most essential service."--See
+Muffling, p. 246 and the QUARTERLY REVIEW, No. 178. It is also worthy of
+observation that Napoleon actually detached a force of 2,000 cavalry to
+threaten Hal, though they returned to the main French army during the
+night of the 17th. See "Victoires at Conquetes des Francais," vol. xxiv.
+p 186.]
+
+On the opposite heights the French army was drawn up in two general
+lines, with the entire force of the Imperial Guards, cavalry as well as
+infantry, in rear of the centre, as a reserve.
+
+The first line of the French army was formed of the two corps commanded
+by Count d'Erlon and Count Reille. D'Erlon's corps was on the right,
+that is, eastward of the Charleroi road, and consisted of four divisions
+of infantry under Generals Durette, Marcognet, Alix, and Donzelot, and
+of one division of light cavalry under General Jaquinot. Count Reille's
+corps formed the left or western wing, and was formed of Bachelu's,
+Foy's, and Jerome Bonaparte's divisions of infantry, and of Pire's
+division of cavalry. The right wing of the second general French line
+was formed of Milhaud's corps, consisting of two divisions of heavy
+cavalry. The left wing of this line was formed by Kellerman's cavalry
+corps, also in two divisions. Thus each of the corps of infantry that
+composed the first line had a corps of cavalry behind it; but the
+second line consisted also of Lobau's corps of infantry, and Domont
+and Subervie's divisions of light cavalry; these three bodies of troops
+being drawn up on either side of La Belle Alliance, and forming the
+centre of the second line. The third, or reserve line, had its centre
+composed of the infantry of the Imperial Guard. Two regiments of
+grenadiers and two of chasseurs, formed the foot of the Old Guard under
+General Friant. The Middle Guard, under Count Morand, was similarly
+composed; while two regiments of voltigeurs, and two of tirailleurs,
+under Duhesme, constituted the Young Guard. The chasseurs and lancers of
+the Guard were on the right of the infantry, under Lefebvre Desnouettes;
+and the grenadiers and dragoons of the Guards, under Guyot, were on the
+left. All the French corps comprised, besides their cavalry and infantry
+regiments, strong batteries of horse artillery; and Napoleon's numerical
+superiority in guns was of deep importance throughout the action.
+
+Besides the leading generals who have been mentioned as commanding
+particular corps, Ney and Soult were present, and acted as the Emperor's
+lieutenants in the battle.
+
+English military critics have highly eulogised the admirable arrangement
+which Napoleon made of his forces of each arm, so as to give him the
+most ample means of sustaining, by an immediate and sufficient support,
+any attack, from whatever point he might direct it; and of drawing
+promptly together a strong force, to resist any attack that might be
+made on himself in any part of the field. [Siborne, vol. i. p. 376.]
+When his troops were all arrayed, he rode along the lines, receiving
+everywhere the most enthusiastic cheers from his men, of whose entire
+devotion to him his assurance was now doubly sure. On the northern side
+of the valley the Duke's army was also drawn up, and ready to meet the
+menaced attack.
+
+Wellington had caused, on the preceding night, every brigade and corps
+to take up its station on or near the part of the ground which it was
+intended to hold in the coming battle. He had slept a few hours at his
+headquarters in the village of Waterloo; and rising on the 18th, while
+it was yet deep night, he wrote several letters to the Governor of
+Antwerp, to the English Minister at Brussels, and other official
+personages, in which he expressed his confidence that all would go well,
+but "as it was necessary to provide against serious losses; should any
+accident occur," he gave a series of judicious orders for what should be
+done in the rear of the army, in the event of the battle going against
+the Allies. He also, before he left the village of Waterloo, saw to the
+distribution of the reserves of ammunition which had been parked there,
+so that supplies should be readily forwarded to every part of the line
+of battle, where they might be required, The Duke, also, personally
+inspected the arrangements that had been made for receiving the wounded,
+and providing temporary hospitals in the houses in the rear of the
+army. Then, mounting a favourite charger, a small thorough-bred chestnut
+horse, named "Copenhagen," Wellington rode forward to the range of hills
+where his men were posted. Accompanied by his staff and by the Prussian
+General Muffling, he rode along his lines, carefully inspecting all
+the details of his position. Hougoumont was the object of his special
+attention. He rode down to the south-eastern extremity of its
+enclosures, and after having examined the nearest French troops, he made
+some changes in the disposition of his own men, who were to defend that
+important post.
+
+Having given his final orders about Hougoumont, the Duke galloped back
+to the high ground in the right centre of his position; and halting
+there, sat watching the enemy on the opposite heights, and conversing
+with his staff with that cheerful serenity which was ever his
+characteristic in the hour of battle.
+
+Not all brave men are thus gifted; and many a glance of anxious
+excitement must have been cast across the valley that separated the two
+hosts during the protracted pause which ensued between the completion
+of Napoleon's preparations for attack and the actual commencement of
+the contest. It was, indeed, an awful calm before the coming storm, when
+armed myriads stood gazing on their armed foes, scanning their number,
+their array, their probable powers of resistance and destruction, and
+listening with throbbing hearts for the momentarily expected note
+of death; while visions of victory and glory came thronging on each
+soldier's high-strung brain, not unmingled with recollections of the
+home which his fall might soon leave desolate, nor without shrinking
+nature sometimes prompting the cold thought, that in a few moments he
+might be writhing in agony, or lie a trampled and mangled mass of clay
+on the grass now waving so freshly and purely before him.
+
+Such thoughts WILL arise in human breasts, though the brave man soon
+silences "the child within us that trembles before death," [See Plato,
+Phaedon, c. 60; and Grote's History of Greece, vol. viii. p. 656.] and
+nerves himself for the coming struggle by the mental preparation which
+Xenophon has finely called "the soldier's arraying his own soul for
+battle." [Hellenica, lib. vii. c. v. s. 22.] Well, too, may we hope and
+believe that many a spirit sought aid from a higher and holier source;
+and that many a fervent though silent prayer arose on that Sabbath morn
+(the battle of Waterloo was fought on a Sunday) to the Lord of Sabaoth,
+the God of Battles, from the ranks, whence so many thousands were about
+to appear that day before his judgment-seat.
+
+Not only to those who were thus present as spectators and actors in
+the dread drama, but to all Europe, the decisive contest then impending
+between the rival French and English nations, each under its chosen
+chief was the object of exciting interest and deepest solicitude.
+"Never, indeed, had two such generals as the Duke of Wellington and the
+Emperor Napoleon encountered since the day when Scipio and Hannibal met
+at Zama." [See SUPRA, p. 82.]
+
+The two great champions, who now confronted each other, were equals in
+years, and each had entered the military profession at the same early
+age. The more conspicuous stage, on which the French general's youthful
+genius was displayed, his heritage of the whole military power of the
+French Republic, the position on which for years he was elevated as
+sovereign head of an empire surpassing that of Charlemagne, and the
+dazzling results of his victories, which made and unmade kings, had
+given him a formidable pre-eminence in the eyes of mankind. Military men
+spoke with justly rapturous admiration of the brilliancy of his first
+Italian campaigns, when he broke through the pedantry of traditional
+tactics, and with a small but promptly-wielded force, shattered army
+after army of the Austrians, conquered provinces and capitals, dictated
+treaties, and annihilated or created states. The iniquity of his
+Egyptian expedition was too often forgotten in contemplating the
+skill and boldness with which he destroyed the Mameluke cavalry at the
+Pyramids, and the Turkish infantry at Aboukir. None could forget the
+marvellous passage of the Alps in 1800, or the victory of Marengo,
+which wrested Italy back from Austria, and destroyed the fruit of
+twenty victories, which the enemies of France had gained over her in the
+absence of her favourite chief. Even higher seemed the glories of
+his German campaigns, the triumphs of Ulm, of Austerlitz, of Jena, of
+Wagram. Napoleon's disasters in Russia, in 1812, were imputed by
+his admirers to the elements; his reverses in Germany, in 1813, were
+attributed by them to treachery: and even those two calamitous years had
+been signalised by his victories at Borodino, at Lutzen, at Bautzen, at
+Dresden, and at Hanau. His last campaign, in the early months of 1814,
+was rightly cited as the most splendid exhibition of his military
+genius, when, with a far inferior army, he long checked and frequently
+defeated the vast hosts that were poured upon France. His followers
+fondly hoped that the campaign of 1815 would open with another "week
+of miracles," like that which had seen his victories at Montmirail
+and Montereau. The laurel of Ligny was even now fresh upon his brows.
+Blucher had not stood before him; and who was the Adversary that now
+should bar the Emperor's way?
+
+That Adversary had already overthrown the Emperor's best generals, and
+the Emperor's best armies; and, like Napoleon himself, had achieved a
+reputation in more than European wars. Wellington was illustrious as the
+destroyer of the Mahratta power, as the liberator of Portugal and Spain,
+and the successful invader of Southern France. In early youth he had
+held high command in India; and had displayed eminent skill in planning
+and combining movements, and unrivalled celerity and boldness in
+execution. On his return to Europe several years passed away before any
+fitting opportunity was accorded for the exercise of his genius. In
+this important respect, Wellington, as a subject, and Napoleon, as a
+sovereign, were far differently situated. At length his appointment
+to the command in the Spanish Peninsula gave him the means of showing
+Europe that England had a general who could revive the glories of Crecy,
+of Poictiers, of Agincourt, of Blenheim, and of Ramilies. At the head of
+forces always numerically far inferior to the armies with which
+Napoleon deluged the Peninsula;--thwarted by jealous and incompetent
+allies;--ill-supported by friends, and assailed by factious enemies at
+home; Wellington maintained the war for several years, unstained by any
+serious reverse, and marked by victory in thirteen pitched battles,
+at Vimiera, the Douro, Talavera, Busaco, Fuentes d'Onore, Salamanca,
+Vittoria, the Pyrenees, the Bidassoa, the Nive, the Nivelle, Orthes, and
+Toulouse. Junot, Victor, Massena, Ney, Marmont, and Jourdain,--marshals
+whose names were the terrors of continental Europe--had been baffled
+by his skill, and smitten down by his energy, while he liberated the
+kingdoms of the Peninsula from them and their Imperial master. In vain
+did Napoleon at last despatch Soult, the ablest of his lieutenants,
+to turn the tide of Wellington's success and defend France against the
+English invader. Wellington met Soult's manoeuvres with superior skill,
+and his boldness with superior vigour. When Napoleon's first abdication,
+in 1814, suspended hostilities, Wellington was master of the fairest
+districts of Southern France; and had under him a veteran army, with
+which (to use his own expressive phrase) "he felt he could have gone
+anywhere and done anything." The fortune of war had hitherto kept
+separate the orbits in which Napoleon and he had moved. Now, on the ever
+memorable 18th of June, 1815, they met at last.
+
+It is, indeed, remarkable that Napoleon, during his numerous campaigns
+in Spain as well as other countries, not only never encountered the Duke
+of Wellington before the day of Waterloo, but that he was never until
+then personally engaged with British troops, except at the siege of
+Toulon, in 1793, which was the very first incident of his military
+career. Many, however, of the French generals who were with him in 1815,
+knew well, by sharp experience, what English soldiers were, and what
+the leader was who now headed them. Ney, Foy, and other officers who had
+served in the Peninsula, warned Napoleon that he would find the English
+infantry "very devils in fight." The Emperor, however, persisted in
+employing the old system of attack, with which the French generals
+often succeeded against continental troops, but which had always failed
+against the English in the Peninsula. He adhered to his usual tactics of
+employing the order of the column; a mode of attack probably favoured by
+him (as Sir Walter Scott remarks) on account of his faith in the extreme
+valour of the French officers by whom the column was headed. It is a
+threatening formation, well calculated to shake the firmness of ordinary
+foes; but which, when steadily met, as the English have met it, by heavy
+volleys of musketry from an extended line, followed up by a resolute
+bayonet charge, has always resulted in disaster to the assailants. [See
+especially Sir W. Napier's glorious pictures of the battles of Busaco
+and Albuera. The THEORETICAL advantages of the attack in column, and
+its peculiar fitness for a French army, are set forth in the Chevalier
+Folard's "Traite de la Colonne," prefixed to the first volume of his
+"Polybius," See also the preface to his sixth volume.]
+
+It was approaching noon before the action commenced. Napoleon, in his
+Memoirs, gives as the reason for this delay, the miry state of the
+ground through the heavy rain of the preceding night and day, which
+rendered it impossible for cavalry or artillery to manoeuvre on it till
+a few hours of dry weather had given it its natural consistency. It has
+been supposed, also, that he trusted to the effect which the sight of
+the imposing array of his own forces was likely to produce on the part
+of the allied army. The Belgian regiments had been tampered with;
+and Napoleon had well-founded hopes of seeing them quit the Duke of
+Wellington in a body, and range themselves under his own eagles. The
+Duke, however, who knew and did not trust them, had guarded against the
+risk of this, by breaking up the corps of Belgians, and distributing
+them in separate regiments among troops on whom he could rely. [Siborne,
+vol. i. p. 373.]
+
+At last, at about half-past eleven o'clock, Napoleon began the battle by
+directing a powerful force from his left wing under his brother, Prince
+Jerome, to attack Hougoumont. Column after column of the French now
+descended from the west of the southern heights, and assailed that
+post with fiery valour, which was encountered with the most determined
+bravery. The French won the copse round the house, but a party of the
+British Guards held the house itself throughout the day. The whole of
+Byng's brigade was required to man this hotly-contested post. Amid
+shell and shot, and the blazing fragments of part of the buildings,
+this obstinate contest was continued. But still the English were firm in
+Hougoumont; though the French occasionally moved forward in such numbers
+as enabled them to surround and mask it with part of their troops from
+their left wing, while others pressed onward up the slope, and assailed
+the British right.
+
+The cannonade, which commenced at first between the British right and
+the French left, in consequence of the attack on Hougoumont, soon became
+general along both lines; and about one o'clock, Napoleon directed a
+grand attack to be made under Marshal Ney upon the centre and left wing
+of the allied army. For this purpose four columns of infantry, amounting
+to about eighteen thousand men, were collected, supported by a strong
+division of cavalry under the celebrated Kellerman; and seventy-four
+guns were brought forward ready to be posted on the ridge of a little
+undulation of the ground in the interval between the two principal
+chains of heights, so as to bring their fire to bear on the Duke's line
+at a range of about seven hundred yards. By the combined assault of
+these formidable forces, led on by Ney, "the bravest of the brave,"
+Napoleon hoped to force the left centre of the British position, to take
+La Haye Sainte, and then pressing forward, to occupy also the farm of
+Mont St. Jean. He then could cut the mass of Wellington's troops off
+from their line of retreat upon Brussels, and from their own left,
+and also completely sever them from any Prussian troops that might be
+approaching.
+
+The columns destined for this great and decisive operation descended
+majestically from the French line of hills, and gained the ridge of the
+intervening eminence, on which the batteries that supported them were
+now ranged. As the columns descended again from this eminence, the
+seventy-four guns opened over their heads with terrible effect upon the
+troops of the Allies that were stationed on the heights to the left
+of the Charleroi road. One of the French columns kept to the east, and
+attacked the extreme left of the Allies; the other three continued to
+move rapidly forwards upon the left centre of the allied position. The
+front line of the Allies here was composed of Bylandt's brigade of Dutch
+and Belgians. As the French columns moved up the southward slope of the
+height on which the Dutch and Belgians stood, and the skirmishers in
+advance began to open their fire, Bylandt's entire brigade turned and
+fled in disgraceful and disorderly panic; but there were men more worthy
+of the name behind.
+
+In this part of-the second line of the Allies were posted Pack and
+Kempt's brigades of English infantry, which had suffered severely at
+Quatre Bras. But Picton was here as general of division, and not even
+Ney himself surpassed in resolute bravery that stern and fiery spirit.
+Picton brought his two brigades forward, side by side, in a thin,
+two-deep line. Thus joined together, they were not three thousand
+strong. With these Picton had to make head against the three victorious
+French columns, upwards of four times that strength, and who, encouraged
+by the easy rout of the Dutch and Belgians, now came confidently over
+the ridge of the hill. The British infantry stood firm; and as the
+French halted and began to deploy into line, Picton seized the critical
+moment. He shouted in his stentorian voice to Kempt's brigade: "A
+volley, and then charge!" At a distance of less than thirty yards that
+volley was poured upon the devoted first sections of the nearest column;
+and then, with a fierce hurrah, the British dashed in with the bayonet.
+Picton was shot dead as he rushed forward, but his men pushed on with
+the cold steel. The French reeled back in confusion. Pack's infantry had
+checked the other two columns and down came a whirlwind of British horse
+on the whole mass, sending them staggering from the crest of the hill,
+and cutting them down by whole battalions. Ponsonby's brigade of heavy
+cavalry (the Union Brigade as it was called, from its being made up of
+the British Royals, the Scots Greys, and the Irish Inniskillings), did
+this good service. On went the horsemen amid the wrecks of the French
+columns, capturing two eagles, and two thousand prisoners; onwards
+still they galloped, and sabred the artillerymen of Ney's seventy-four
+advanced guns; then severing the traces, and cutting the throats of the
+artillery horses, they rendered these guns totally useless to the French
+throughout the remainder of the day. While thus far advanced beyond the
+British position and disordered by success, they were charged by a
+large body of French lancers, and driven back with severe loss, till
+Vandeleur's Light horse came to their aid, and beat off the French
+lancers in their turn.
+
+Equally unsuccessful with the advance of the French infantry in this
+grand attack, had been the efforts of the French cavalry who moved
+forward in support of it, along the east of the Charleroi road.
+Somerset's cavalry of the English Household Brigade had been launched,
+on the right of Picton's division, against the French horse, at the same
+time that the English Union Brigade of heavy horse charged the French
+infantry columns on the left.
+
+Somerset's brigade was formed of the Life Guards, the Blues, and the
+Dragoon Guards. The hostile cavalry, which Kellerman led forward,
+consisted chiefly of Cuirassiers. This steel-clad mass of French
+horsemen rode down some companies of German infantry, near La Haye
+Sainte, and flushed with success, they bounded onward to the ridge of
+the British position. The English Household Brigade, led on by the
+Earl of Uxbridge in person, spurred forward to the encounter, and in
+an instant, the two adverse lines of strong swordsmen, on their
+strong steeds, dashed furiously together. A desperate and sanguinary
+hand-to-hand fight ensued, in which the physical superiority of the
+Anglo-Saxons, guided by equal skill, and animated with equal valour,
+was made decisively manifest. Back went the chosen cavalry of France;
+and after them, in hot pursuit, spurred the English Guards. They went
+forward as far and as fiercely as their comrades of the Union Brigade;
+and, like them, the Household cavalry suffered severely before they
+regained the British position, after their magnificent charge and
+adventurous pursuit.
+
+Napoleon's grand effort to break the English left centre had thus
+completely failed; and his right wing was seriously weakened by the
+heavy loss which it had sustained. Hougoumont was still being assailed,
+and was still successfully resisting. Troops were now beginning to
+appear at the edge of the horizon on Napoleon's right, which he too well
+knew to be Prussian, though he endeavoured to persuade his followers
+that they were Grouchy's men coming to their aid.
+
+Grouchy was in fact now engaged at Wavre with his whole force, against
+Thielmam's single Prussian corps, while the other three corps of the
+Prussian army were moving without opposition, save from the difficulties
+of the ground, upon Waterloo. Grouchy believed, on the 17th, and caused
+Napoleon to believe, that the Prussian army was retreating by lines of
+march remote from Waterloo upon Namur and Maestricht. Napoleon learned
+only on the 18th, that there were Prussians in Wavre, and felt jealous
+about the security of his own right. He accordingly, before he attacked
+the English, sent Grouchy orders to engage the Prussians at Wavre
+without delay, AND TO APPROACH THE MAIN FRENCH ARMY, SO AS TO UNITE HIS
+COMMUNICATIONS WITH THE EMPEROR'S. Grouchy entirely neglected this last
+part of his instructions; and in attacking the Prussians whom he found
+at Wavre, he spread his force more and more towards his right, that is
+to say, in the direction most remote from Napoleon. He thus knew nothing
+of Blucher's and Bulow's flank march upon Waterloo, till six in the
+evening of the 18th, when he received a note which Soult by Napoleon's
+orders had sent off from the field of battle at Waterloo at one o'clock,
+to inform Grouchy that Bulow was coming over the heights of St. Lambert,
+on the Emperor's right flank, and directing Grouchy to approach and join
+the main army instantly, and crush Bulow EN FLAGRANT DELIT. It was then
+too late for Grouchy to obey; but it is remarkable that as early as noon
+on the 18th, and while Grouchy had not proceeded as far as Wavre, he
+and his suite heard, the sound of heavy cannonading In the direction
+of Planchenoit and Mont St. Jean. General Gerard, who was with Grouchy,
+implored him to march towards the cannonade, and join his operations
+with those of Napoleon, who was evidently engaged with the English.
+Grouchy refused to do so, or even to detach part of his force in that
+direction. He said that his instructions were to fight the Prussians
+at Wavre. He marched upon Wavre and fought for the rest of the day
+with Thielman accordingly, while Blucher and Bulow were attacking the
+Emperor.
+
+[I have heard the remark made that Grouchy twice had in his hands the
+power of changing the destinies of Europe, and twice wanted nerve to
+act: first when he flinched from landing the French army at Bantry Bay
+in 1796 (he was second in command to Hoche, whose ship was blown back
+by a storm), and secondly, when he failed to lead his whole force from
+Wavre to the scene of decisive conflict at Waterloo. But such were the
+arrangements of the Prussian General, that even if Grouchy had marched
+upon Waterloo, he would have been held in check by the nearest Prussian
+corps, or certainly by the two nearest ones, while the rest proceeded
+to join Wellington. This, however, would have diminished the number of
+Prussians who appeared at Waterloo, and (what is still more important)
+would have kept them back to a later hour.--See Siborne, vol i. p. 323,
+and Gleig, p. 142.
+
+There are some very valuable remarks on this subject in the 70th No. of
+the QUARTERLY in an article on the "Life of Blucher," usually attributed
+to Sir Francis Head. The Prussian writer, General Clausewitz, is there
+cited as "expressing a positive opinion, in which every military critic
+but a Frenchman must concur, that, even had the whole of Grouchy's
+force been at Napoleon's disposal, the Duke had nothing to fear pending
+Blucher's arrival.
+
+"The Duke is often talked of as having exhausted his reserves in the
+action. This is another gross error, which Clausewitz has thoroughly
+disposed of. He enumerates the tenth British Brigade, the division of
+Chasse, and the cavalry of Collaert, as having been little or not at all
+engaged; and he might have also added two brigades of light cavalry."
+The fact, also, that Wellington did not at any part of the day order up
+Prince Frederick's corps from Hal, is a conclusive proof that the Duke
+was not so distressed as some writers have represented. Hal is not ten
+miles from the field of Waterloo.]
+
+Napoleon had witnessed with bitter disappointment the rout of his
+troops,--foot, horse, and artillery,--which attacked the left centre
+of the English, and the obstinate resistance which the garrison of
+Hougoumont opposed to all the exertions of his left wing. He now
+caused the batteries along the line of high ground held by him to be
+strengthened, and for some time an unremitting and most destructive
+cannonade raged across the valley, to the partial cessation of other
+conflict. But the superior fire of the French artillery, though it
+weakened, could not break the British line, and more close and summary
+measures were requisite.
+
+It was now about half-past three o'clock; and though Wellington's army
+had suffered severely by the unremitting cannonade, and in the late
+desperate encounter, no part of the British position had been forced.
+Napoleon determined therefore to try what effect he could produce on the
+British centre and right by charges of his splendid cavalry, brought on
+in such force that the Duke's cavalry could not check them. Fresh troops
+were at the same time sent to assail La Haye Sainte and Hougoumont, the
+possession of these posts being the Emperor's unceasing object. Squadron
+after squadron of the French cuirassiers accordingly ascended the slopes
+on the Duke's right, and rode forward with dauntless courage against
+the batteries of the British artillery in that part of the field. The
+artillery-men were driven from their guns, and the cuirassiers cheered
+loudly at their supposed triumph. But the Duke had formed his infantry
+in squares, and the cuirassiers charged in vain against the impenetrable
+hedges of bayonets, while the fire from the inner ranks of the squares
+told with terrible effect on their squadrons. Time after time they rode
+forward with invariably the same result: and as they receded from each
+attack the British artillerymen rushed forward from the centres of
+the squares, where they had taken refuge, and plied their guns on the
+retiring horsemen. Nearly the whole of Napoleon's magnificent body of
+heavy cavalry was destroyed in these fruitless attempts upon the British
+right. But in another part of the field fortune favoured him for a time.
+Two French columns of infantry from Donzelot's division took La Haye
+Sainte between six and seven o'clock, and the means were now given for
+organizing another formidable attack on the centre of the Allies.
+
+
+ ["On came the whirlwind--like the last
+ But fiercest sweep of tempest blast--
+ On came the whirlwind--steel-gleams broke
+ Like lightning through the rolling smoke;
+ The war was waked anew,
+ Three hundred cannon-mouths roar'd loud,
+ And from their throats, with flash and cloud,
+ Their showers of iron threw.
+ Beneath their fire in full career,
+ Rush'd on the ponderous cuirassier,
+ The lancer couch'd his ruthless spear,
+ And hurrying as to havoc near,
+ The cohorts' eagles flew.
+ In one dark torrent, broad and strong,
+ The advancing onset roll'd along,
+ Forth harbinger'd by fierce acclaim,
+ That, from the shroud of smoke and flame,
+ Peal'd wildly the imperial name.
+
+ "But on the British heart were lost
+ The terrors of the charging host;
+ For not an eye the storm that view'd
+ Changed its proud glance of fortitude,
+ Nor was one forward footstep staid,
+ As dropp'd the dying and the dead.
+ Fast as their ranks the thunders tear,
+ Fast they renew'd each serried square;
+ And on the wounded and the slain
+ Closed their diminish'd files again,
+ Till from their line scarce spears' lengths three,
+ Emerging from the smoke they see
+ Helmet, and plume, and panoply,--
+ Then waked their fire at once!
+ Each musketeer's revolving knell,
+ As fast, as regularly fell,
+ As when they practise to display
+ Their discipline on festal day.
+ Then down went helm and lance,
+ Down were the eagle banners sent,
+ Down reeling steeds and riders went,
+ Corslets were pierced, and pennons rent;
+ And, to augment the fray,
+ Wheeled full against their staggering flanks,
+ The English horsemen's foaming ranks
+ Forced their resistless way.
+ Then to the musket-knell succeeds
+ The clash of swords--the neigh of steeds--
+ As plies the smith his clanging trade,
+ Against the cuirass rang the blade;
+ And while amid their close array
+ The well-served cannon rent their way,
+ And while amid their scatter'd band
+ Raged the fierce rider's bloody brand,
+ Recoil'd in common rout and fear,
+ Lancer and guard and cuirassier,
+ Horseman and foot,--a mingled host,
+ Their leaders fall'n, their standards lost."--SCOTT.]
+
+
+There was no time to be lost--Blucher and Bulow were beginning to press
+hard upon the French right. As early as five o'clock, Napoleon had been
+obliged to detach Lobau's infantry and Domont's horse to check these new
+enemies. They succeeded in doing so for a time; but as larger numbers
+of the Prussians came on the field, they turned Lobau's right flank, and
+sent a strong force to seize the village of Planchenoit, which, it will
+be remembered, lay in the rear of the French right.
+
+The design of the Allies was not merely to prevent Napoleon from
+advancing upon Brussels, but to cut off his line of retreat and utterly
+destroy his army. The defence of Planchenoit therefore became absolutely
+essential for the safety of the French, and Napoleon was obliged to send
+his Young Guard to occupy that village, which was accordingly held
+by them with great gallantry against the reiterated assaults of the
+Prussian left, under Bulow. Three times did the Prussians fight their
+way into Planchenoit, and as often did the French drive them out: the
+contest was maintained with the fiercest desperation on both sides,
+such being the animosity between the two nations that quarter was seldom
+given or even asked. Other Prussian forces were now appearing on the
+field nearer to the English left; whom also Napoleon kept in check, by
+troops detached for that purpose. Thus a large part of the French army
+was now thrown back on a line at right angles with the line of that
+portion which still confronted and assailed the English position. But
+this portion was now numerically inferior to the force under the Duke
+of Wellington, which Napoleon had been assailing throughout the day,
+without gaining any other advantage than the capture of La Haye Sainte.
+It is true that, owing to the gross misconduct of the greater part of
+the Dutch and Belgian troops, the Duke was obliged to rely exclusively
+on his English and German soldiers, and the ranks of these had been
+fearfully thinned; but the survivors stood their ground heroically, and
+opposed a resolute front to every forward movement of their enemies.
+
+On no point of the British line was the pressure more severe than on
+Halkett's brigade in the right centre which was composed of battalions
+of the 30th, the 33d, the 69th, and the 73d British regiments. We
+fortunately can quote from the journal of a brave officer of the 30th, a
+narrative of what took place in this part of the field. [This excellent
+journal was published in the "United Service Magazine" during the year
+1852.] The late Major Macready served at Waterloo in the light company
+of the 30th. The extent of the peril and the carnage which Halkett's
+brigade had to encounter, may be judged of by the fact that this light
+company marched into the field three officers and fifty-one men, and
+that at the end of the battle they stood one officer and ten men. Major
+Macready's blunt soldierly account of what he actually saw and felt,
+gives a far better idea of the terrific scene, than can be gained from
+the polished generalisations which the conventional style of history
+requires, or even from the glowing stanzas of the poet. During the
+earlier part of the day Macready and his light company were thrown
+forward as skirmishers in front of the brigade; but when the French
+cavalry commenced their attacks on the British right centre, he and his
+comrades were ordered back. The brave soldier thus himself describes
+what passed:
+
+"Before the commencement of this attack our company and the Grenadiers
+of the 73d were skirmishing briskly in the low ground, covering our
+guns, and annoying those of the enemy. The line of tirailleurs
+opposed to us was not stronger than our own, but on a sudden they were
+reinforced by numerous bodies, and several guns began playing on us with
+canister. Our poor fellows dropped very fast, and Colonel Vigoureux,
+Rumley, and Pratt, were carried off badly wounded in about two minutes.
+I was now commander of our company. We stood under this hurricane of
+small shot till Halkett sent to order us in, and I brought away about a
+third of the light bobs; the rest were killed or wounded, and I really
+wonder how one of them escaped. As our bugler was killed, I shouted
+and made signals to move by the left, in order to avoid the fire of our
+guns, and to put as good a face upon the business as possible.
+
+"When I reached Lloyd's abandoned guns, I stood near them for about
+a minute to contemplate the scene: it was grand beyond description.
+Hougoumont and its wood sent up a broad flame through the dark masses
+of smoke that overhung the field; beneath this cloud the French were
+indistinctly visible. Here a waving mass of long red feathers could be
+seen; there, gleams as from a sheet of steel showed that the cuirassiers
+were moving; 400 cannon were belching forth fire and death on every
+side; the roaring and shouting were indistinguishably commixed--together
+they gave me an idea of a labouring volcano. Bodies of infantry and
+cavalry were pouring down on us, and it was time to leave contemplation,
+so I moved towards our columns, which were standing up in square. Our
+regiment and 73d formed one, and 33d and 69th another; to our right
+beyond them were the Guards, and on our left the Hanoverians and German
+legion of our division. As I entered the rear face of our square I
+had to step over a body, and looking down, recognised Harry Beers, an
+officer of our Grenadiers, who about an hour before shook hands with me,
+laughing, as I left the columns. I was on the usual terms of military
+intimacy with poor Harry--that is to say, if either of us had died a
+natural death, the other would have pitied him as a good fellow, and
+smiled at his neighbour as he congratulated him on the step; but seeing
+his herculean frame and animated countenance thus suddenly stiff and
+motionless before me (I know not whence the feeling could originate, for
+I had just seen my dearest friend drop, almost with indifference), the
+tears started in my eyes as I sighed out, 'Poor Harry!' The tear was
+not dry on my cheek when poor Harry was no longer thought of. In a few
+minutes after, the enemy's cavalry galloped up and crowned the crest of
+our position. Our guns were abandoned, and they formed between the two
+brigades, about a hundred paces in our front. Their first charge was
+magnificent. As soon as they quickened their trot into a gallop, the
+cuirassiers bent their heads so that the peaks of their helmets looked
+like vizors, and they seemed cased in armour from the plume to the
+saddle. Not a shot was fired till they were within thirty yards, when
+the word was given, and our men fired away at them. The effect was
+magical. Through the smoke we could see helmets falling, cavaliers
+starting from their seats with convulsive springs as they received our
+balls, horses plunging and rearing in the agonies of fright and pain,
+and crowds of the soldiery dismounted, part of the squadron in retreat,
+but the more daring remainder backing their horses to force them on
+our bayonets. Our fire soon disposed of these gentlemen. The main
+body re-formed in our front, and rapidly and gallantly repeated their
+attacks, In fact, from this time (about four o'clock) till near six, we
+had a constant repetition of these brave but unavailing charges. There
+was no difficulty in repulsing them, but our ammunition decreased
+alarmingly. At length an artillery wagon galloped up, emptied two or
+three casks of cartridges into the square, and we were all comfortable.
+
+"The best cavalry is contemptible to a steady and well-supplied
+infantry regiment; even our men saw this, and began to pity the useless
+perseverance of their assailants, and, as they advanced, would growl
+out, 'Here come these fools again!' One of their superior officers tried
+a RUSE DE GUERRE, by advancing and dropping his sword, as though he
+surrendered; some of us were deceived by him, but Halkett ordered the
+men to fire, and he coolly retired, saluting us. Their devotion was
+invincible. One officer whom we had taken prisoner was asked what force
+Napoleon might have in the field, and replied with a smile of mingled
+derision and threatening, 'Vous verrez bientot sa force, messieurs.' A
+private cuirassier was wounded and dragged into the square; his only cry
+was, 'Tuez donc, tuez, tuez moi, soldats!' and as one of our men dropped
+dead close to him, he seized his bayonet, and forced it into his own
+neck; but this not despatching him, he raised up his cuirass, and
+plunging the bayonet into his stomach, kept working it about till he
+ceased to breathe.
+
+"Though we constantly thrashed our steel-clad opponents, we found more
+troublesome customers in the round shot and grape, which all this time
+played on us with terrible effect, and fully avenged the cuirassiers.
+Often as the volleys created openings in our square would the cavalry
+dash on, but they were uniformly unsuccessful. A regiment on our
+right seemed sadly disconcerted, and at one moment was in considerable
+confusion. Halkett rode out to them, and seizing their colour, waved
+it over his head, and restored them to something like order, though not
+before his horse was shot under him. At the height of their unsteadiness
+we got the order to 'right face' to move to their assistance; some of
+the men mistook it for 'right about face,' and faced accordingly, when
+old Major M'Laine, 73d, called out, 'No, my boys, its "right face;"
+you'll never hear the right about as long as a French bayonet is in
+front of you!' In a few moments he was mortally wounded. A regiment of
+light Dragoons, by their facings either the 16th or 23d, came up to our
+left and charged the cuirassiers. We cheered each other as they passed
+us; they did all they could, but were obliged to retire after a few
+minutes at the sabre. A body of Belgian cavalry advanced for the same
+purpose, but on passing our square, they stopped short. Our noble
+Halkett rode out to them and offered to charge at their head; it was of
+no use; the Prince of Orange came up and exhorted them to do their duty,
+but in vain. They hesitated till a few shots whizzed through them, when
+they turned about, and galloped like fury, or, rather, like fear. As
+they passed the right face of our square the men, irritated by their
+rascally conduct, unanimously took up their pieces and fired a volley
+into them, and 'many a good fellow was destroyed so cowardly.'
+
+"The enemy's cavalry were by this time nearly disposed of, and as they
+had discovered the inutility of their charges, they commenced annoying
+us by a spirited and well-directed carbine fire. While we were employed
+in this manner it was impossible to see farther than the columns on our
+right and left, but I imagine most of the army were similarly situated:
+all the British and Germans were doing their duty. About six o'clock
+I perceived some artillery trotting up our hill, which I knew by their
+caps to belong to the Imperial Guard. I had hardly mentioned this to
+a brother officer when two guns unlimbered within seventy paces of us,
+and, by their first discharge of grape, blew seven men into the centre
+of the square. They immediately reloaded, and kept up a constant and
+destructive fire. It was noble to see our fellows fill up the gaps after
+every discharge. I was much distressed at this moment; having ordered up
+three of my light bobs, they had hardly taken their station when two
+of them fell horribly lacerated. One of them looked up in my face and
+uttered a sort of reproachful groan, and I involuntarily exclaimed, 'I
+couldn't help it.' We would willingly have charged these guns, but, had
+we deployed, the cavalry that flanked them would have made an example of
+us.
+
+"The 'vivida vis animi'--the glow which fires one upon entering into
+action--had ceased; it was now to be seen which side had most bottom,
+and would stand killing longest. The Duke visited us frequently at this
+momentous period; he was coolness personified. As he crossed the rear
+face of our square a shell fell amongst our grenadiers, and he checked
+his horse to see its effect. Some men were blown to pieces by the
+explosion, and he merely stirred the rein of his charger, apparently
+as little concerned at their fate as at his own danger. No leader ever
+possessed so fully the confidence of his soldiery: wherever he appeared,
+a murmur of 'Silence--stand to your front--here's the Duke,' was
+heard through the column, and then all was steady as on a parade. His
+aides-de-camp, Colonels Canning and Gordon, fell near our square, and
+the former died within it. As he came near us late in the evening,
+Halkett rode out to him and represented our weak state, begging his
+Grace to afford us a little support. 'It's impossible, Halkett,' said
+he. And our general replied, 'If so, sir, you may depend on the brigade
+to a man!'"
+
+All accounts of the battle show that the Duke was ever present at each
+spot where danger seemed the most pressing; inspiriting his men by a few
+homely and good-humoured words; and restraining their impatience to be
+led forward to attack in their turn.--"Hard pounding this, gentlemen: we
+will try who can pound the longest," was his remark to a battalion, on
+which the storm from the French guns was pouring with peculiar fury.
+Riding up to one of the squares, which had been dreadfully weakened, and
+against which a fresh attack of French cavalry was coming, he called to
+them: "Stand firm, my lads; what will they say of this in England?" As
+he rode along another part of the line where the men had for some time
+been falling fast beneath the enemy's cannonade, without having any
+close fighting, a murmur reached his ear of natural eagerness to advance
+and do something more than stand still to be shot at. The Duke called to
+them: "Wait a little longer, my lads, and you shall have your wish." The
+men were instantly satisfied and steady. It was, indeed, indispensable
+for the Duke to bide his time. The premature movement of a single corps
+down from the British line of heights, would have endangered the whole
+position, and have probably made Waterloo a second Hastings.
+
+But the Duke inspired all under him with his own spirit of patient
+firmness. When other generals besides Halkett sent to him, begging for
+reinforcements, or for leave to withdraw corps which were reduced to
+skeletons, the answer was the same: "It is impossible; you must hold
+your ground to the last man, and all will be well." He gave a similar
+reply to some of his staff; who asked instructions from him, so that,
+in the event of his falling, his successor might follow out his plan. He
+answered, "My plan is simply to stand my ground here to the last man."
+His personal danger was indeed imminent throughout the day; and though
+he escaped without injury to himself or horse, one only of his numerous
+staff was equally fortunate.
+
+["As far as the French accounts would lead us to infer, it appears that
+the losses among Napoleon's staff were comparatively trifling. On this
+subject perhaps the marked contrast afforded by the following anecdotes,
+which have been related to me on excellent authority, may tend to throw
+some light. At one period of the battle, when the Duke was surrounded by
+several of his staff, it was very evident that the group had become the
+object of the fire of a French battery. The shot fell fast about them,
+generally striking and turning up the ground on which they stood. Their
+horses became restive and 'Copenhagen' himself so fidgetty, that the
+Duke, getting impatient, and having reasons for remaining on the
+spot, said to those about him, 'Gentlemen we are rather too close
+together--better to divide a little.' Subsequently, at another point of
+the line, an officer of artillery came up to the Duke, and stated that
+he had a distinct view of Napoleon, attended by his staff; that he had
+the guns of his battery well pointed in that direction, and was prepared
+to fire. His Grace instantly and emphatically exclaimed, 'No! no! I'll
+not allow it. It is not the business of commanders to be firing upon
+each other.'"--Siborne, vol. ii. p. 263. How different is this from
+Napoleon's conduct at the battle of Dresden, when he personally directed
+the fire of the battery which, as he thought, killed the Emperor
+Alexander, and actually killed Moreau.]
+
+Napoleon had stationed himself during the battle on a little hillock
+near La Belle Alliance, in the centre of the French position. Here he
+was seated, with a large table from the neighbouring farm-house before
+him, on which maps and plans were spread; and thence with his telescope
+he surveyed the various points of the field. Soult watched his orders
+close at his left hand, and his staff was grouped on horseback a
+few paces in the rear. ["Souvenirs Militaires," par Col.
+Lemonnier-Delafosse, p. 407. "Ouvrard, who attended Napoleon as chief
+commissary of the French army on that occasion, told me that Napoleon
+was suffering from a complaint which made it very painful for him to
+ride."--Lord Ellesmere, p. 47.] Here he remained till near the close
+of the day, preserving the appearance at least of calmness, except some
+expressions of irritation which escaped him, when Ney's attack on the
+British left centre was defeated. But now that the crisis of the battle
+was evidently approaching, he mounted a white Persian charger, which
+he rode in action because the troops easily recognised him by the horse
+colour. He had still the means of effecting a retreat. His Old Guard
+had yet taken no part in the action. Under cover of it, he might have
+withdrawn his shattered forces and retired upon the French frontier. But
+this would only have given the English and Prussians the opportunity
+of completing their junction; and he knew that other armies were fast
+coming up to aid them in a march upon Paris, if he should succeed in
+avoiding an encounter with them, and retreating upon the capital. A
+victory at Waterloo was his only alternative from utter ruin, and he
+determined to employ his Guard in one bold stroke more to make that
+victory his own.
+
+Between seven and eight o'clock, the infantry of the Old Guard was
+formed into two columns, on the declivity near La Belle Alliance. Ney
+was placed at their head. Napoleon himself rode forward to a spot by
+which his veterans were to pass; and, as they approached, he raised his
+arm, and pointed to the position of the Allies, as if to tell them
+that their path lay there. They answered with loud cries of "Vive
+l'Empereur!" and descended the hill from their own side, into that
+"valley of the shadow of death" while the batteries thundered with
+redoubled vigour over their heads upon the British line. The line of
+march of the columns of the Guard was directed between Hougoumont and La
+Haye Sainte, against the British right centre; and at the same time the
+French under Donzelot, who had possession of La Haye Sainte, commenced
+a fierce attack upon the British centre, a little more to its left. This
+part of the battle has drawn less attention than the celebrated attack
+of the Old Guard; but it formed the most perilous crisis for the allied
+army; and if the Young Guard had been there to support Donzelot, instead
+of being engaged with the Prussians at Planchenoit, the consequences to
+the Allies in that part of the field must have been most serious. The
+French tirailleurs, who were posted in clouds in La Haye Sainte, and
+the sheltered spots near it, picked off the artillerymen of the English
+batteries near them: and taking advantage of the disabled state of the
+English guns, the French brought some field-pieces up to La Haye Sainte,
+and commenced firing grape from them on the infantry of the Allies, at
+a distance of not more than a hundred paces. The allied infantry here
+consisted of some German brigades, who were formed in squares, as it was
+believed that Donzelot had cavalry ready behind La Haye Sainte to charge
+them with, if they left that order of formation. In this state the
+Germans remained for some time with heroic fortitude, though the
+grape-shot was tearing gaps in their ranks and the side of one square
+was literally blown away by one tremendous volley which the French
+gunners poured into it. The Prince of Orange in vain endeavoured to lead
+some Nassau troops to the aid of the brave Germans. The Nassauers would
+not or could not face the French; and some battalions of Brunswickers,
+whom the Duke of Wellington had ordered up as a reinforcement, at first
+fell back, until the Duke in person rallied them, and led them on.
+Having thus barred the farther advance of Donzelot, the Duke galloped
+off to the right to head his men who were exposed to the attack of the
+Imperial Guard. He had saved one part of his centre from being routed;
+but the French had gained ground and kept it; and the pressure on the
+allied line in front of La Haye Sainte was fearfully severe, until it
+was relieved by the decisive success which the British in the right
+centre achieved over the columns of the Guard.
+
+The British troops on the crest of that part of the position, which the
+first column of Napoleon's Guards assailed, were Maitland's brigade of
+British Guards, having Adams's brigade (which had been brought forward
+during the action) on their right. Maitland's men were lying down, in
+order to avoid as far as possible the destructive effect of the French
+artillery, which kept up an unremitting fire from the opposite heights,
+until the first column of the Imperial Guard had advanced so far up
+the slope towards the British position, that any further firing of the
+French artillerymen would have endangered their own comrades. Meanwhile
+the British guns were not idle; but shot and shell ploughed fast through
+the ranks of the stately array of veterans that still moved imposingly
+on. Several of the French superior officers were at its head. Ney's
+horse was shot under him, but he still led the way on foot, sword in
+hand. The front of the massive column now was on the ridge of the hill.
+To their surprise they saw no troops before them. All they could discern
+through the smoke was a small band of mounted officers. One of them was
+the Duke himself. The French advanced to about fifty yards from where
+the British Guards were lying down when the voice of one of the group of
+British officers was heard calling, as if to the ground before him, "Up,
+Guards, and at them!" It was the Duke who gave the order; and at the
+words, as if by magic, up started before them a line of the British
+Guards four deep, and in the most compact and perfect order. They poured
+an instantaneous volley upon the head of the French column, by which
+no less than three hundred of those chosen veterans are said to have
+fallen. The French officers rushed forwards; and, conspicuous in front
+of their men, attempted to deploy them into a more extended line, so as
+to enable them to reply with effect to the British fire. But Maitland's
+brigade kept showering in volley after volley with deadly rapidity. The
+decimated column grew disordered in its vain efforts to expand itself
+into a more efficient formation. The right word was given at the right
+moment to the British for the bayonet-charge, and the brigade sprang
+forward with a loud cheer against their dismayed antagonists. In an
+instant the compact mass of the French spread out into a rabble, and
+they fled back down the hill, pursued by Maitland's men, who, however,
+returned to their position in time to take part in the repulse of the
+second column of the Imperial Guard.
+
+This column also advanced with great spirit and firmness under the
+cannonade which was opened on it; and passing by the eastern wall of
+Hougoumont, diverged slightly to the right as it moved up the slope
+towards the British position, so as to approach nearly the same spot
+where the first column had surmounted the height, and been defeated.
+This enabled the British regiments of Adams's brigade to form a line
+parallel to the left flank of the French column; so that while the front
+of this column of French Guards had to encounter the cannonade of the
+British batteries, and the musketry of Maitlands Guards, its left flank
+was assailed with a destructive fire by a four-deep body of British
+infantry, extending all along it. In such a position all the bravery
+and skill of the French veterans were vain. The second column, like its
+predecessor, broke and fled, taking at first a lateral direction along
+the front of the British line towards the rear of La Haye Sainte, and
+so becoming blended with the divisions of French infantry, which under
+Donzelot had been assailing the Allies so formidably in that quarter.
+The sight of the Old Guard broken and in flight checked the ardour which
+Donzelot's troops had hitherto displayed. They, too, began to waver.
+Adams's victorious brigade was pressing after the flying Guard, and now
+cleared away the assailants of the allied centre. But the battle was
+not yet won. Napoleon had still some battalions in reserve near La Belle
+Alliance. He was rapidly rallying the remains of the first column of his
+Guards, and he had collected into one body the remnants of the various
+corps of cavalry, which had suffered so severely in the earlier part of
+the day. The Duke instantly formed the bold resolution of now himself
+becoming the assailant, and leading his successful though enfeebled army
+forward, while the disheartening effect of the repulse of the Imperial
+Guard on the rest of the French army was still strong, and before
+Napoleon and Ney could rally the beaten veterans themselves for another
+and a fiercer charge. As the close approach of the Prussians now
+completely protected the Duke's left, he had drawn some reserves of
+horse from that quarter, and he had a brigade of Hussars under Vivian
+fresh and ready at hand. Without a moment's hesitation he launched these
+against the cavalry near La Belie Alliance. The charge was as successful
+as it was daring: and as there was now no hostile cavalry to check
+the British infantry in a forward movement, the Duke gave the
+long-wished-for command for a general advance of the army along the
+whole line upon the foe. It was now past eight o'clock, and for nearly
+nine deadly hours had the British and German regiments stood unflinching
+under the fire of artillery, the charge of cavalry, and every variety of
+assault, which the compact columns or the scattered tirailleurs of the
+enemy's infantry could inflict. As they joyously sprang forward against
+the discomfited masses of the French, the setting sun broke through the
+clouds which had obscured the sky during the greater part of the day,
+and glittered on the bayonets of the Allies, while they poured down into
+the valley and towards the heights that were held by the foe. The Duke
+himself was among the foremost in the advance, and personally directed
+the movements against each body of the French that essayed resistance.
+He rode in front of Adams's brigade, cheering it forward, and even
+galloped among the most advanced of the British skirmishers,
+speaking joyously to the men, and receiving their hearty shouts of
+congratulation. The bullets of both friends and foes were whistling fast
+round him; and one of the few survivors of his staff remonstrated with
+him for thus exposing a life of such value. "Never mind," was the Duke's
+answer;--"Never mind, let them fire away; the battle's won, and my life
+is of no consequence now." And, indeed, almost the whole of the French
+host was now in irreparable confusion. The Prussian army was coming more
+and more rapidly forwards on their right; and the Young Guard, which
+had held Planchenoit so bravely, was at last compelled to give way. Some
+regiments of the Old Guard in vain endeavoured to form in squares and
+stem the current. They were swept away, and wrecked among the waves of
+the flyers. Napoleon had placed himself in one of these squares: Marshal
+Soult, Generals Bertrand, Drouot, Corbineau, De Flahaut, and Gourgaud,
+were with him. The Emperor spoke of dying on the field, but Soult seized
+his bridle and turned his charger round, exclaiming, "Sire, are not the
+enemy already lucky enough?" [Colonel Lemonnier-Delafosse, "Memoires,"
+p. 388. The Colonel states that he heard these details from General
+Gourgaud himself. The English reader will be reminded of Charles I.'s
+retreat from Naseby.] With the greatest difficulty, and only by the
+utmost exertion of the devoted officers round him, Napoleon cleared the
+throng of fugitives, and escaped from the scene of the battle and the
+war, which he and France had lost past all recovery. Meanwhile the Duke
+of Wellington still rode forward with the van of his victorious troops,
+until he reined up on the elevated ground near Rossomme. The daylight
+was now entirely gone; but the young moon had risen, and the light which
+it cast, aided by the glare from the burning houses and other buildings
+in the line of the flying French and pursuing Prussians, enabled the
+Duke to assure himself that his victory was complete. He then rode back
+along the Charleroi road toward Waterloo: and near La Belle Alliance he
+met Marshal Blucher. Warm were the congratulations that were exchanged
+between the Allied Chiefs. It was arranged that the Prussians should
+follow up the pursuit, and give the French no chance of rallying.
+Accordingly the British army, exhausted by its toils and sufferings
+during that dreadful day, did not advance beyond the heights which the
+enemy had occupied. But the Prussians drove the fugitives before them
+in merciless chase throughout the night. Cannon, baggage, and all the
+materiel of the army were abandoned by the French; and many thousands
+of the infantry threw away their arms to facilitate their escape. The
+ground was strewn for miles with the wrecks of their host. There was no
+rear-guard; nor was even the semblance of order attempted, an attempt
+at resistance was made at the bridge and village of Genappe, the first
+narrow pass through which the bulk of the French retired. The situation
+was favourable; and a few resolute battalions, if ably commanded, might
+have held their pursuers at bay there for some considerable time. But
+despair and panic were now universal in the beaten army. At the first
+sound of the Prussian drums and bugles, Genappe was abandoned, and
+nothing thought of but headlong flight. The Prussians, under General
+Gneisenau, still followed and still slew; nor even when the Prussian
+infantry stopped in sheer exhaustion, was the pursuit given up.
+Gneisenau still pushed on with the cavalry; and by an ingenious
+stratagem, made the French believe that his infantry were still close on
+them, and scared them from every spot where they attempted to pause and
+rest. He mounted one of his drummers on a horse which had been taken
+from the captured carriage of Napoleon, and made him ride along with
+the pursuing cavalry, and beat the drum whenever they came on any large
+number of the French. The French thus fled, and the Prussians pursued
+through Quatre Bras, and even over the heights of Frasne; and when at
+length Gneisenau drew bridle, and halted a little beyond Frasne with the
+scanty remnant of keen hunters who had kept up the chace with him to
+the last, the French were scattered through Gosselies, Marchiennes,
+and Charleroi; and were striving to regain the left bank of the river
+Sambre, which they had crossed in such pomp and pride not a hundred
+hours before.
+
+Part of the French left wing endeavoured to escape from the field
+without blending with the main body of the fugitives who thronged
+the Genappe causeway. A French officer, who was among those who thus
+retreated across the country westward of the high-road, has
+vividly described what he witnessed and what he suffered. Colonel
+Lemonnier-Delafosse served in the campaign of 1815 in General Foy's
+staff, and was consequently in that part of the French army at Waterloo,
+which acted against Hougoumont and the British right wing. When the
+column of the Imperial Guard made their great charge at the end of
+the day, the troops of Foy's division advanced in support of them, and
+Colonel Lemonnier-Delafosse describes the confident hopes of victory
+and promotion with which he marched to that attack, and the fearful
+carnage and confusion of the assailants, amid which he was helplessly
+hurried back by his flying comrades. He then narrates the closing scene,
+[Col. Lemonnier-Delafosse, "Memoires," pp. 385-405. There are omissions
+and abridgments in the translation which I have given.]:
+
+"Near one of the hedges of Hougoumont farm, without even a drummer to
+beat the RAPPEL, we succeeded in rallying under the enemy's fire 300
+men: they were nearly all that remained of our splendid division,
+Thither came together a band of generals. There was Reille, whose horse
+had been shot under him; there were D'Erlon, Bachelu, Foy, Jamin, and
+others. All were gloomy and sorrowful, like vanquished men. Their words
+were,--'Here is all that is left of my corps, of my division, of
+my brigade. I, myself.' We had seen the fall of Duhesme, of
+Pelet-de-Morvan, of Michel--generals who had found a glorious death. My
+General, Foy, had his shoulder pierced through by a musket-ball: and out
+of his whole staff two officers only were left to him, Cahour Duhay and
+I. Fate had spared me in the midst of so many dangers, though the first
+charger I rode had been shot and had fallen on me.
+
+"The enemy's horse were coming down on us, and our little group was
+obliged to retreat. 'What had happened to our division of the left wing
+had taken place all along the line. The movement of the hostile cavalry,
+which inundated the whole plain, had demoralised our soldiers, who
+seeing all regular retreat of the army cut off, strove each man to
+effect one for himself. At each instant the road became more encumbered.
+Infantry, cavalry, and artillery, were pressing along pell-mell: jammed
+together like a solid mass. Figure to yourself 40,000 men struggling and
+thrusting themselves along a single causeway. We could not take that way
+without destruction; so the generals who had collected together near the
+Hougoumont hedge dispersed across the fields. General Foy alone remained
+with the 300 men whom he had gleaned from the field of battle, and
+marched at their head. Our anxiety was to withdraw from the scene of
+action without being confounded with the fugitives. Our general wished
+to retreat like a true soldier. Seeing three lights in the southern
+horizon, like beacons, General Foy asked me what I thought of the
+position of each. I answered, 'The first to the left is Genappe, the
+second is at Bois de Bossu, near the farm of Quatre Bras; the third is
+at Gosselies.' 'Let us march on the second one, then,' replied Foy, 'and
+let no obstacle stop us--take the head of the column, and do not lose
+sight of the guiding light.' Such was his order, and I strove to obey.
+
+"After all the agitation and the incessant din of a long day of battle,
+how imposing was the stillness of that night! We proceeded on our sad
+and lonely march. We were a prey to the most cruel reflections, we were
+humiliated, we were hopeless; but not a word of complaint was heard. We
+walked silently as a troop of mourners, and it might have been said
+that we were attending the funeral of our country's glory. Suddenly the
+stillness was broken by a challenge,--'QUI VIVE?' 'France!' 'Kellerman!'
+'Foy!' 'Is it you, General? come nearer to us.' At that moment we were
+passing over a little hillock, at the foot of which was a hut, in which
+Kellerman and some of his officers had halted. They came out to join
+as Foy said to me, 'Kellerman knows the country: he has been along here
+before with his cavalry; we had better follow him.' But we found that
+the direction which Kellerman chose was towards the first light, towards
+Genappe. That led to the causeway which our general rightly wished to
+avoid I went to the left to reconnoitre, and was soon convinced that
+such was the case. It was then that I was able to form a full idea of
+the disorder of a routed army. What a hideous spectacle! The mountain
+torrent, that uproots and whirls along with it every momentary obstacle,
+is a feeble image of that heap of men, of horses, of equipages, rushing
+one upon another; gathering before the least obstacle which dams up
+their way for a few seconds, only to form a mass which overthrows
+everything in the path which it forces for itself. Woe to him whose
+footing failed him in that deluge! He was crushed, trampled to death! I
+returned and told my general what I had seen, and he instantly abandoned
+Kellerman, and resumed his original line of march.
+
+"Keeping straight across the country over fields and the rough thickets,
+we at last arrived at the Bois de Bossu, where we halted. My General
+said to me, 'Go to the farm of Quatre Bras and announce that we are
+here. The Emperor or Soult must be there. Ask for orders, and recollect
+that I am waiting here for you. The lives of these men depend on your
+exactness.' To reach the farm I was obliged to cross the high road: I
+was on horseback, but nevertheless was borne away by the crowd that fled
+along the road, and it was long are I could extricate myself and reach
+the farmhouse. General Lobau was there with his staff, resting in
+fancied security. They thought that their troops had halted there; but,
+though a halt had been attempted, the men had soon fled forwards, like
+their comrades of the rest of the army. The shots of the approaching
+Prussians were now heard; and I believe that General Lobau was taken
+prisoner in that farmhouse. I left him to rejoin my general, which I
+did with difficulty. I found him alone. His men, as they came near the
+current of flight, were infected with the general panic, and fled also.
+
+"What was to be done? Follow that crowd of runaways? General Foy would
+not hear of it. There were five of us still with him, all officers. He
+had been wounded at about five in the afternoon, and the wound had not
+been dressed. He suffered severely; but his moral courage was unbroken.
+'Let us keep,' he said, 'a line parallel to the high road, and work our
+way hence as we best can.' A foot-track was before us, and we followed
+it.
+
+"The moon shone out brightly, and revealed the full wretchedness of the
+TABLEAU which met our eyes. A brigadier and four cavalry soldiers, whom
+we met with, formed our escort. We marched on; and, as the noise grew
+more distant, I thought that we were losing the parallel of the highway.
+Finding that we had the moon more and more on the left, I felt sure of
+this, and mentioned it to the General. Absorbed in thought, he made me
+no reply. We came in front of a windmill, and endeavoured to procure
+some information; but we could not gain an entrance, or make any one
+answer, and we continued our nocturnal march. At last we entered a
+village, but found every door closed against us, and were obliged to use
+threats in order to gain admission into a single house. The poor woman
+to whom it belonged, more dead than alive, received us as if we had been
+enemies. Before asking where we were, 'Food, give as some food!' was our
+cry. Bread and butter and beer were brought, and soon disappeared before
+men who had fasted for twenty-four hours. A little revived, we ask,
+'Where are we? what is the name of this village?'--'Vieville.'
+
+"On looking at the map, I saw that in coming to that village we had
+leaned too much to the right, and that we were in the direction of Mons.
+In order to reach the Sambre at the bridge of Marchiennes, we had four
+leagues to traverse; and there was scarcely time to march the distance
+before daybreak. I made a villager act as our guide, and bound him by
+his arm to my stirrup. He led us through Roux to Marchiennes. The
+poor fellow ran alongside of my horse the whole way. It was cruel, but
+necessary to compel him, for we had not an instant to spare. At six in
+the morning we entered Marchiennes.
+
+"Marshal Ney was there. Our general went to see him, and to ask what
+orders he had to give. Ney was asleep; and, rather than rob him of
+the first repose he had had for four days, our General returned to us
+without seeing him. And, indeed, what orders could Marshal Ney have
+given? The whole army was crossing the Sambre, each man where and now he
+chose; some at Charleroi, some at Marchiennes. We were about to do the
+same thing. When once beyond the Sambre we might safely halt; and both
+men and horses were in extreme need of rest. We passed through Thuin;
+and finding a little copse near the road, we gladly sought its shelter.
+While our horses grazed, we lay down and slept. How sweet was that sleep
+after the fatigues of the long day of battle, and after the night of
+retreat more painful still! We rested in the little copse till noon, and
+sate there watching the wrecks of our army defile along the road before
+us. It was a soul-harrowing sight! Yet the different arms of the service
+had resumed a certain degree of order amid their disorder; and our
+General, feeling his strength revive, resolved to follow a strong
+column of cavalry which was taking the direction of Beaumont, about four
+leagues off. We drew near Beaumont, when suddenly a regiment of horse
+was seen debouching from a wood on our left. The column that we followed
+shouted out, 'The Prussians! the Prussians!' and galloped off in utter
+disorder. The troops that thus alarmed them were not a tenth part of
+their number, and were in reality our own 8th Hussars, who wore
+green uniforms. But the panic had been brought even thus far from the
+battle-field, and the disorganized column galloped into Beaumont, which
+was already crowded with our infantry. We were obliged to follow that
+DEBACLE. On entering Beaumont we chose a house of superior appearance,
+and demanded of the mistress of it refreshments for the General. 'Alas!'
+said the lady, 'this is the tenth General who has been to this house
+since this morning. I have nothing left. Search, if you please, and
+see.' Though unable to find food for the General, I persuaded him to
+take his coat off and let me examine his wound. The bullet had gone
+through the twists of the left epaulette, and penetrating the skin, had
+run round the shoulder without injuring the bone. The lady of the house
+made some lint for me; and without any great degree of surgical skill I
+succeeded in dressing the wound.
+
+"Being still anxious to procure some food for the General and
+ourselves, if it were but a loaf of ammunition bread, I left the house
+and rode out into the town. I saw pillage going on in every direction:
+open caissons, stripped and half-broken, blocked up the streets. The
+pavement was covered with plundered and torn baggage. Pillagers and
+runaways, such were all the comrades I met with. Disgusted at them, I
+strove, sword in hand, to stop one of the plunderers; but, more active
+than I, he gave me a bayonet stab in my left arm, in which I fortunately
+caught his thrust, which had been aimed full at my body. He disappeared
+among the crowd, through which I could not force my horse. My spirit of
+discipline had made me forget that in such circumstances the soldier is
+a mere wild beast. But to be wounded by a fellow-countryman after
+having passed unharmed through all the perils of Quatre Bras and
+Waterloo!--this did seem hard, indeed. I was trying to return to General
+Foy, when another horde of flyers burst into Beaumont, swept me into the
+current of their flight, and hurried me out of the town with them. Until
+I received my wound I had preserved my moral courage in full force; but
+now, worn out with fatigue, covered with blood, and suffering
+severe pain from the wound, I own that I gave way to the general
+demoralisation, and let myself be inertly borne along with the rushing
+mass. At last I reached Landrecies, though I know not how or when. But
+I found there our Colonel Hurday, who had been left behind there in
+consequence of an accidental injury from a carriage. He took me with
+him to Paris, where I retired amid my family, and got cured of my wound,
+knowing nothing of the rest of political and military events that were
+taking place."
+
+No returns ever were made of the amount of the French loss in the battle
+of Waterloo; but it must have been immense, and may be partially judged
+of by the amount of killed and wounded in the armies of the conquerors.
+On this subject both the Prussian and British official evidence is
+unquestionably full and authentic. The figures are terribly emphatic.
+
+Of the army that fought under the Duke of Wellington nearly 15,000 men
+were killed and wounded on this single day of battle. Seven thousand
+Prussians also fell at Waterloo. At such a fearful price was the
+deliverance of Europe purchased.
+
+By none was the severity of that loss more keenly felt than by our great
+deliverer himself. As may be seen in Major Macready's narrative, the
+Duke, while the battle was raging, betrayed no sign of emotion at
+the most ghastly casualties; but, when all was over, the sight of the
+carnage with which the field was covered, and still more, the sickening
+spectacle of the agonies of the wounded men who lay moaning in their
+misery by thousands and tens of thousands, weighed heavily on the spirit
+of the victor, as he rode back across the scene of strife. On reaching
+his head-quarters in the village of Waterloo, the Duke inquired
+anxiously after the numerous friends who had been round him in the
+morning, and to whom he was warmly attached. Many he was told were dead;
+others were lying alive, but mangled and suffering, in the houses
+round him. It is in our hero's own words alone that his feelings can be
+adequately told. In a letter written by him almost immediately after his
+return from the field, he thus expressed himself:--"My heart is broken
+by the terrible loss I have sustained in my old friends and companions,
+and my poor soldiers. Believe me, nothing except a battle lost, can
+be half so melancholy as a battle won; the bravery of my troops has
+hitherto saved me from the greater evil; but to win such a battle as
+this of Waterloo, at the expense of so many gallant friends, could only
+be termed a heavy misfortune but for the result to the public."
+
+It is not often that a successful General in modern warfare is called
+on, like the victorious commander of the ancient Greek armies, to award
+a prize of superior valour to one of his soldiers. Such was to some
+extent the case with respect to the battle of Waterloo. In the August
+of 1818, an English clergyman offered to confer a small annuity on some
+Waterloo soldier, to be named by the Duke. [Siborne, vol. i. p. 391.]
+The Duke requested Sir John Byng to choose a man from the 2d Brigade
+of Guards, which had so highly distinguished itself in the defence of
+Hougoumont. There were many gallant candidates, but the election fell
+on Sergeant James Graham, of the light company of the Coldstreams. This
+brave man had signalised himself, throughout the day, in the defence of
+that important post, and especially in the critical struggle that
+took place at the period when the French, who had gained the wood, the
+orchard, and detached garden, succeeded in bursting open a gate of
+the courtyard of the chateau itself, and rushed in in large masses,
+confident of carrying all before them. A hand-to-hand fight, of the most
+desperate character, was kept up between them and the Guards for a few
+minutes; but at last the British bayonets prevailed. Nearly all the
+Frenchmen who had forced their way in were killed on the spot; and,
+as the few survivors ran back, five of the Guards, Colonel Macdonnell,
+Captain Wyndham, Ensign Gooch, Ensign Hervey, and Sergeant Graham, by
+sheer strength, closed the gate again, in spite of the efforts of the
+French from without, and effectually barricaded it against further
+assaults. Over and through the loopholed wall of the courtyard, the
+English garrison now kept up a deadly fire of musketry, which was
+fiercely answered by the French, who swarmed round the curtilage like
+ravening wolves. Shells, too, from their batteries, were falling fast
+into the besieged place, one of which set part of the mansion and some
+of the out-buildings on fire. Graham, who was at this time standing
+near Colonel Macdonnell at the wall, and who had shown the most perfect
+steadiness and courage, now asked permission of his commanding officer
+to retire for a moment. Macdonnell replied, "By all means, Graham; but
+I wonder you should ask leave now." Graham answered, "I would not, sir,
+only my brother is wounded, and he is in that out-building there, which
+has just caught fire." Laying down his musket, Graham ran to the blazing
+spot, lifted up his brother, and laid him in a ditch. Then he was back
+at his post, and was plying his musket against the French again, before
+his absence was noticed, except by his colonel.
+
+Many anecdotes of individual prowess have been preserved: but of all
+the brave men who were in the British army on that eventful day, none
+deserve more honour for courage and indomitable resolution than Sir
+Thomas Picton, who, as has been mentioned, fell in repulsing the great
+attack of the French upon the British left centre. It was not until the
+dead body was examined after the battle, that the full heroism of Picton
+was discerned. He had been wounded on the 16th, at Quatre Bras, by a
+musket-ball, which had broken two of his ribs, and caused also severe
+internal injuries; but he had concealed the circumstance, evidently in
+expectation that another and greater battle would be fought in a short
+time, and desirous to avoid being solicited to absent himself from the
+field. His body was blackened and swollen by the wound, which must have
+caused severe and incessant pain; and it was marvellous how his spirit
+had borne him up, and enabled him to take part in the fatigues and
+duties of the field. The bullet which, on the 18th, killed the renowned
+loader of "the fighting Division" of the Peninsula, entered the head
+near the left temple, and passed through the brain; so that Picton's
+death must have been instantaneous.
+
+One of the most interesting narratives of personal adventure at
+Waterloo, is that of Colonel Frederick Ponsonby, of the 12th Light
+Dragoons, who was severely wounded when Vandeleur's brigade, to which he
+belonged, attacked the French lancers, in order to bring off the Union
+Brigade, which was retiring from its memorable charge. [See p. 361,
+SUPRA.] The 12th, like those whom they rescued, advanced much further
+against the French position than prudence warranted. Ponsonby, with many
+others, was speared by a reserve of Polish lancers, and left for dead
+on the field. It is well to refer to the description of what he suffered
+(as he afterwards gave it, when almost miraculously recovered from his
+numerous wounds), because his fate, or worse, was the fate of thousands
+more; and because the narrative of the pangs of an individual, with whom
+we can identify ourselves, always comes more home to us than a general
+description of the miseries of whole masses. His tale may make us
+remember what are the horrors of war as well as its glories. It is to
+be remembered that the operations which he refers to, took place about
+three o'clock in the day, and that the fighting went on for at least
+five hours more. After describing how he and his men charged through the
+French whom they first encountered, and went against other enemies, he
+states:--
+
+"We had no sooner passed them than we were ourselves attacked before
+we could form, by about 300 Polish lancers, who had hastened to their
+relief; the French artillery pouring in among us a heavy fire of grape,
+though for one of our men they killed three of their own.
+
+"In the MELEE I was almost instantly disabled in both arms, losing
+first my sword, and then my reins, and followed by a few men, who were
+presently cut down, no quarter being allowed, asked or given, I was
+carried along by my horse, till, receiving a blow from a sabre, I fell
+senseless on my face to the ground.
+
+"Recovering, I raised myself a little to look round, being at that time,
+I believe, in a condition to get up and run away; when a lancer passing
+by, cried out, 'Tu n'est pas mort, coquin!' and struck his lance through
+my back. My head dropped, the blood gushed into my mouth, a difficulty
+of breathing came on, and I thought all was over.
+
+"Not long afterwards (it was impossible to measure time, but I must have
+fallen in less than ten minutes after the onset), a tirailleur
+stopped to plunder me, threatening my life. I directed him to a
+small side-pocket, in which he found three dollars, all I had; but
+he continued to threaten, and I said he might search me: this he did
+immediately, unloosing my stock and tearing open my waistcoat, and
+leaving me in a very uneasy posture.
+
+"But he was no sooner gone, than an officer bringing up some troops,
+to which probably the tirailleur belonged and happening to halt where
+I lay, stooped down and addressed me, saying, he feared I was badly
+wounded; I said that I was, and expressed a wish to be removed to the
+rear. He said it was against their orders to remove even their own men;
+but that if they gained the day (and he understood that the Duke of
+Wellington was killed, and that some of our battalions had surrendered),
+every attention in his power would be shown me. I complained of thirst,
+and he held his brandy-bottle to my lips, directing one of the soldiers
+to lay me straight on my side, and place a knapsack under my head. He
+then passed on into action--soon, perhaps, to want, though not receive,
+the same assistance; and I shall never know to whose generosity I was
+indebted, as I believe, for my life. Of what rank he was, I cannot say:
+he wore a great coat. By-and-by another tirailleur came up, a fine
+young man, full of ardour. He knelt down and fired over me, loading and
+firing many times, and conversing with me all the while." The Frenchman,
+with strange coolness, informed Ponsonby of how he was shooting, and
+what he thought of the progress of the battle. "At last he ran off,
+exclaiming, 'You will probably not be sorry to hear that we are going
+to retreat. Good day, my friend.' It was dusk," Ponsonby adds, "when two
+squadrons of Prussian cavalry, each of them two deep, came across the
+valley, and passed over me in full trot, lifting me from the ground,
+and tumbling me about cruelly. The clatter of of their approach and the
+apprehensions they excited, may be imagined; a gun taking that direction
+must have destroyed me.
+
+"The battle was now at an end, or removed to a distance. The shouts,
+the imprecations, the outcries of 'Vive l'Empereur!' the discharge of
+musketry and cannon, were over; and the groans of the wounded all around
+me, became every moment more and more audible. I thought the night would
+never end.
+
+"Much about this time I found a soldier of the Royals lying across my
+legs: he had probably crawled thither in his agony; and his weight, his
+convulsive motions, and the air issuing through a wound in his side,
+distressed me greatly; the last circumstance most of all, as I had
+a wound of the same nature myself. It was not a dark night, and the
+Prussians were wandering about to plunder; the scene in Ferdinand Count
+Fathom came into my mind, though no women appeared. Several stragglers
+looked at me, as they passed by, one after another, and at last one of
+them stopped to examine me. I told him as well as I could, for I spoke
+German very imperfectly, that I was a British officer, and had been
+plundered already; he did not desist, however, and pulled me about
+roughly.
+
+"An hour before midnight I saw a man in an English uniform walking
+towards me. He was, I suspect, on the same errand, and he came and
+looked in my face. I spoke instantly, telling him who I was, and
+assuring him of a reward if he would remain by me. He said he belonged
+to the 40th, and had missed his regiment; he released me from the dying
+soldier, and being unarmed, took up a sword from the ground, and stood
+over me, pacing backwards and forwards.
+
+"Day broke; and at six o'clock in the morning some English were seen at
+a distance, and he ran to them. A messenger being sent off to Hervey, a
+cart came for me, and I was placed in it, and carried to the village
+of Waterloo, a mile and a half off, and laid in the bed from which as I
+understood afterwards, Gordon had been just carried out. I had received
+seven wounds; a surgeon slept in my room, and I was saved by excessive
+bleeding."
+
+Major Macready, in the journal already cited, [See SUPRA. p. 368.]
+justly praises the deep devotion to their Emperor which, marked the
+French at Waterloo. Never, indeed, had the national bravery of the
+French people been more nobly shown. One soldier in the French ranks was
+seen, when his arm was shattered by a cannon-ball, to wrench it off with
+the other; and throwing it up in the air, he exclaimed to his comrades,
+"Vive l'Empereur jusqu'a la mort!" Colonel Lemonnier-Delafosse mentions
+in his Memoirs, [Page 388.] that at the beginning of the action, a
+French soldier who had had both legs carried off by a cannon-ball,
+was borne past the front of Foy's division, and called out to them, "Ca
+n'est rien, camarades; Vive l'Empereur! Gloire a la France!" The same
+officer, at the end of the battle, when all hope was lost, tells us that
+he saw a French grenadier, blackened with powder, and with his clothes
+torn and stained, leaning on his musket, and immoveable as a statue.
+The colonel called to him to join his comrades and retreat; but the
+grenadier showed him his musket and his hands; and said, "These
+hands have with this musket used to-day more than twenty packets of
+cartridges: it was more than my share: I supplied myself with ammunition
+from the dead. Leave me to die here on the field of battle. It is not
+courage that fails me, but strength." Then, as Colonel Delafosse left
+him, the soldier stretched himself on the ground to meet his fate,
+exclaiming, "Tout est perdu! pauvre France!" The gallantry of the French
+officers at least equalled that of their men. Ney, in particular, set
+the example of the most daring courage. Here, as in every French army
+in which he ever served or commanded, he was "le brave des braves."
+Throughout the day he was in the front of the battle; and was one of the
+very last Frenchmen who quitted the field. His horse was killed under
+him in the last attack made on the English position; but he was seen
+on foot, his clothes torn with bullets, his face smirched with powder,
+striving, sword in hand, first to urge his men forward, and at last to
+check their flight.
+
+There was another brave general of the French army, whose valour and
+good conduct on that day of disaster to his nation should never be
+unnoticed when the story of Waterloo is recounted. This was General
+Polet, who, about seven in the evening, led the first battalion of the
+2d regiment of the Chasseurs of the Guard to the defence of Planchenoit;
+and on whom Napoleon personally urged the deep importance of maintaining
+possession of that village. Pelet and his men took their post in the
+central part of the village, and occupied the church and churchyard in
+great strength. There they repelled every assault of the Prussians,
+who in rapidly increasing numbers rushed forward with infuriated
+pertinacity. They held their post till the utter rout of the main army
+of their comrades was apparent, and the victorious Allies were thronging
+around Planchenoit. When Pelet and his brave chasseurs quitted the
+churchyard, and retired with steady march, though they suffered
+fearfully from the moment they left their shelter, and Prussian cavalry
+as well as infantry dashed fiercely after them. Pelet kept together a
+little knot of 250 veterans, and had the eagle covered over, and borne
+along in the midst of them. At one time the inequality of the ground
+caused his ranks to open a little; and in an instant the Prussian
+horseman were on them, and striving to capture the eagle. Captain
+Siborne relates the conduct of Pelet with the admiration worthy of one
+brave soldier for another:--
+
+"Pelet, taking advantage of a spot of ground which afforded them some
+degree of cover against the fire of grape by which they were constantly
+assailed, halted the standard-bearer, and called out, "A moi chasseurs!
+sauvons l'aigle ou mourons autour d'elle!" The chasseurs immediately
+pressed around him, forming what is usually termed the rallying square,
+and, lowering their bayonets, succeeded in repulsing the charge of
+cavalry. Some guns were then brought to bear upon them, and subsequently
+a brisk fire of musketry; but notwithstanding the awful sacrifice which
+was thus offered up in defence of their precious charge, they succeeded
+in reaching the main line of retreat, favoured by the universal
+confusion, as also by the general obscurity which now prevailed; and
+thus saved alike the eagle and the honour of the regiment."
+
+French writers do injustice to their own army and general, when they
+revive malignant calumnies against Wellington, and speak of his having
+blundered into victory. No blunderer could have successfully encountered
+such troops as those of Napoleon, and under such a leader. It is
+superfluous to cite against these cavils the testimony which other
+continental critics have borne to the high military genius of our
+illustrious chief. I refer to one only, which is of peculiar value, on
+account of the quarter whence it comes. It is that of the great German
+writer Niebuhr, whose accurate acquaintance with every important scene
+of modern as well as ancient history was unparalleled: and who was no
+mere pedant, but a man practically versed in active life, and had been
+personally acquainted with most of the leading men in the great events
+of the early part of this century. Niebuhr, in the passage which I
+allude to, [Roman History, vol. v. p. 17.] after referring to the
+military "blunders" of Mithridates, Frederick the Great, Napoleon,
+Pyrrhus, and Hannibal, uses these remarkable words, "The Duke of
+Wellington is, I believe, the only general in whose conduct of war we
+cannot discover any important mistake." Not that it is to be supposed
+that the Duke's merits were simply of a negative order, or that he was
+merely a cautious, phlegmatic general fit only for defensive warfare,
+as some recent French historians have described him. On the contrary,
+he was bold even to audacity when boldness was required. "The intrepid
+advance and fight at Assaye, the crossing of the Douro, and the movement
+on Talavera in 1809, the advance to Madrid and Burgos in 1812, the
+actions before Bayonne in 1813, and the desperate stand made at Waterloo
+itself, when more tamely-prudent generals would have retreated beyond
+Brussels, place this beyond a doubt." [See the admirable parallel of
+Wellington and Marlborough at the end of Sir Archibald Alison's "Life of
+the Duke of Marlborough." Sir Archibald justly considers Wellington the
+more daring general of the two.]
+
+The overthrow of the French military power at Waterloo was so complete,
+that the subsequent events of the brief campaign have little interest.
+Lamartine truly says: "This defeat left nothing undecided in future
+events, for victory had given judgment. The war began and ended in a
+single battle." Napoleon himself recognised instantly and fully the
+deadly nature of the blow which had been dealt to his empire. In his
+flight from the battle-field he first halted at Charleroi, but the
+approach of the pursuing Prussians drove him thence before he had rested
+there an hour. With difficulty getting clear of the wrecks of his own
+army, he reached Philippeville, where he remained a few hours, and sent
+orders to the French generals in the various extremities of France to
+converge with their troops upon Paris. He ordered Soult to collect
+the fugitives of his own force, and lead them to Laon. He then hurried
+forward to Paris, and reached his capital before the news of his own
+defeat. But the stern truth soon transpired. At the demand of the
+Chambers of Peers and Representatives, he abandoned the throne by a
+second and final abdication on the 22d of June. On the 29th of June he
+left the neighbourhood of Paris, and proceeded to Rochefort in the hope
+of escaping to America; but the coast was strictly watched, and on the
+15th of July the ex-emperor surrendered himself on board of the English
+man-of-war the Bellerophon.
+
+Meanwhile the allied armies had advanced steadily upon Paris, driving
+before them Grouchy's corps, and the scanty force which Soult had
+succeeded in rallying at Laon. Cambray, Peronne, and other fortresses
+were speedily captured; and by the 29th of June the invaders were taking
+their positions in front of Paris. The Provisional Government, which
+acted in the French capital after the Emperor's abdication, opened
+negotiations with the allied chiefs. Blucher, in his quenchless hatred
+of the French, was eager to reject all proposals for a suspension of
+hostilities, and to assault and storm the city. But the sager and
+calmer spirit of Wellington prevailed over his colleague; the entreated
+armistice was granted; and on the 3d of July the capitulation of Paris
+terminated the War of the Battle of Waterloo.
+
+
+In closing our observations on this the last of the Decisive Battles of
+the World, it is pleasing to contrast the year which it signalized with
+the year that is now [Written in June 1851.] passing over our heads. We
+have not (and long may we be without) the stern excitement of martial
+strife, and we see no captive standards of our European neighbours
+brought in triumph to our shrines. But we behold an infinitely prouder
+spectacle. We see the banners of every civilized nation waving over the
+arena of our competition with each other, in the arts that minister
+to our race's support and happiness, and not to its suffering and
+destruction.
+
+ "Peace hath her victories
+ No less renowned than War;"
+
+and no battle-field ever witnessed a victory more noble than that which
+England, under her Sovereign Lady and her Royal Prince, is now teaching
+the peoples of the earth to achieve over selfish prejudices and
+international feuds, in the great cause of the general promotion of the
+industry and welfare of mankind.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fifteen Decisive Battles of The
+World From Marathon to Waterloo, by Edward Creasy
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Fifteen Decisive Battles of
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+Title: The Fifteen Decisive Battles of The World From Marathon to Waterloo
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+Author: Sir Edward Creasy, M.A.
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+Release Date: May, 2003 [Etext #4061]
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+Produced by John Hill
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE WORLD
+FROM MARATHON TO WATERLOO
+
+by Sir Edward Creasy, M.A.
+(Late Chief Justice of Ceylon)
+Author of 'The Rise and Progress of the English Constitution'
+
+
+
+
+Dedicated to ROBERT GORDON LATHAM, M.D., F.R.S.
+Late Fellow of King's College Cambridge; Fellow of the Royal
+College of Physicians, London.
+Member of the Ethnological Society, New York;
+Late Professor of the English Language and Literature, in
+University College, London.
+
+By his Friend THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+
+Notes:
+
+Capital letters have been used to replace text in italics in the
+printed text. Accents have been omitted.
+
+Footnotes have been inserted into the text enclosed in square
+'[]' brackets, near the point where they were indicated by a
+suffix in the text.
+
+Greek words in the text have been crudely translated into
+Western European capital letters. Sincere apologies to Greek
+scholars! Longer passages in Greek have been omitted and where
+possible replaced with a reference to the original from which
+they were taken.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+It is an honourable characteristic of the Spirit of this Age,
+that projects of violence and warfare are regarded among
+civilized states with gradually increasing aversion. The
+Universal Peace Society certainly does not, and probably never
+will, enrol the majority of statesmen among its members. But
+even those who look upon the Appeal of Battle as occasionally
+unavoidable in international controversies, concur in thinking it
+a deplorable necessity, only to be resorted to when all peaceful
+modes of arrangement have been vainly tried; and when the law of
+self-defence justifies a State, like an individual, in using
+force to protect itself from imminent and serious injury. For a
+writer, therefore, of the present day to choose battles for his
+favourite topic, merely because they were battles, merely because
+so many myriads of troops were arrayed in them, and so many
+hundreds or thousands of human beings stabbed, hewed, or shot
+each other to death during them, would argue strange weakness or
+depravity of mind. Yet it cannot be denied that a fearful and
+wonderful interest is attached to these scenes of carnage. There
+is undeniable greatness in the disciplined courage, and in the
+love of honour, which make the combatants confront agony and
+destruction. And the powers of the human intellect are rarely
+more strongly displayed than they are in the Commander, who
+regulates, arrays, and wields at his will these masses of armed
+disputants; who, cool yet daring, in the midst of peril reflects
+on all, and provides for all, ever ready with fresh resources and
+designs, as the vicissitudes of the storm of slaughter require.
+But these qualities, however high they may appear, are to be
+found in the basest as well as in the noblest of mankind.
+Catiline was as brave a soldier as Leonidas, and a much better
+officer. Alva surpassed the Prince of Orange in the field; and
+Suwarrow was the military superior of Kosciusko. To adopt the
+emphatic words of Byron:--
+
+"'Tis the Cause makes all,
+ Degrades or hallows courage in its fall."
+
+There are some battles, also, which claim our attention,
+independently of the moral worth of the combatants, on account of
+their enduring importance, and by reason of the practical
+influence on our own social and political condition, which we can
+trace up to the results of those engagements. They have for us
+an abiding and actual interest, both while we investigate the
+chain of causes and effects, by which they have helped to make us
+what we are; and also while we speculate on what we probably
+should have been, if any one of those battles had come to a
+different termination. Hallam has admirably expressed this in
+his remarks on the victory gained by Charles Martel, between
+Tours and Poictiers, over the invading Saracens.
+
+He says of it, that "it may justly be reckoned among those few
+battles of which a contrary event would have essentially varied
+the drama of the world in all its subsequent scenes: with
+Marathon, Arbela, the Metaurus, Chalons, and Leipsic." It was the
+perusal of this note of Hallam's that first led me to the
+consideration of my present subject. I certainly differ from
+that great historian as to the comparative importance of some of
+the battles which he thus enumerates, and also of some which he
+omits. It is probable, indeed, that no two historical inquirers
+would entirely agree in their lists of the Decisive Battles of
+the World. Different minds will naturally vary in the
+impressions which particular events make on them; and in the
+degree of interest with which they watch the career, and reflect
+on the importance, of different historical personages. But our
+concurrence in our catalogues is of little moment, provided we
+learn to look on these great historical events in the spirit
+which Hallam's observations indicate. Those remarks should teach
+us to watch how the interests of many states are often involved
+in the collisions between a few; and how the effect of those
+collisions is not limited to a single age, but may give an
+impulse which will sway the fortunes of successive generations of
+mankind. Most valuable also is the mental discipline which is
+thus acquired, and by which we are trained not only to observe
+what has been, and what is, but also to ponder on what might have
+been. [See Bolingbroke, On the Study and Use of History, vol.
+ii. p. 497 of his collected works.]
+
+We thus learn not to judge of the wisdom of measures too
+exclusively by the results. We learn to apply the juster
+standard of seeing what the circumstances and the probabilities
+were that surrounded a statesman or a general at the time when he
+decided on his plan: we value him not by his fortune, but by his
+PROAIRESIZ, to adopt the expressive Greek word, for which our
+language gives no equivalent.
+
+The reasons why each of the following Fifteen Battles has been
+selected will, I trust, appear when it is described. But it may
+be well to premise a few remarks on the negative tests which have
+led me to reject others, which at first sight may appear equal in
+magnitude and importance to the chosen Fifteen.
+
+I need hardly remark that it is not the number of killed and
+wounded in a battle that determines its general historical
+importance. It is not because only a few hundreds fell in the
+battle by which Joan of Arc captured the Tourelles and raised the
+siege of Orleans, that the effect of that crisis is to be judged:
+nor would a full belief in the largest number which Eastern
+historians state to have been slaughtered in any of the numerous
+conflicts between Asiatic rulers, make me regard the engagement
+in which they fell as one of paramount importance to mankind.
+But, besides battles of this kind, there are many of great
+consequence, and attended with circumstances which powerfully
+excite our feelings, and rivet our attention, and yet which
+appear to me of mere secondary rank, inasmuch as either their
+effects were limited in area, or they themselves merely confirmed
+some great tendency or bias which an earlier battle had
+originated. For example, the encounters between the Greeks and
+Persians, which followed Marathon, seem to me not to have been
+phenomena of primary impulse. Greek superiority had been already
+asserted, Asiatic ambition had already been checked, before
+Salamis and Platea confirmed the superiority of European free
+states over Oriental despotism. So, AEgos-Potamos, which finally
+crushed the maritime power of Athens, seems to me inferior in
+interest to the defeat before Syracuse, where Athens received her
+first fatal check, and after which she only struggled to retard
+her downfall. I think similarly of Zama with respect to
+Carthage, as compared with the Metaurus: and, on the same
+principle, the subsequent great battles of the Revolutionary war
+appear to me inferior in their importance to Valmy, which first
+determined the military character and career of the French
+Revolution.
+
+I am aware that a little activity of imagination, and a slight
+exercise of metaphysical ingenuity, may amuse us, by showing how
+the chain of circumstances is so linked together, that the
+smallest skirmish, or the slightest occurrence of any kind, that
+ever occurred, may be said to have been essential, in its actual
+termination, to the whole order of subsequent events. But when I
+speak of Causes and Effects, I speak of the obvious and important
+agency of one fact upon another, and not of remote and fancifully
+infinitesimal influences. I am aware that, on the other hand,
+the reproach of Fatalism is justly incurred by those, who, like
+the writers of a certain school in a neighbouring country,
+recognise in history nothing more than a series of necessary
+phenomena, which follow inevitably one upon the other. But when,
+in this work, I speak of probabilities, I speak of human
+probabilities only. When I speak of Cause and Effect, I speak of
+those general laws only, by which we perceive the sequence of
+human affairs to be usually regulated; and in which we recognise
+emphatically the wisdom and power of the Supreme Lawgiver, the
+design of The Designer.
+
+MITRE COURT CHAMBERS, TEMPLE,
+June 26, 1851.
+
+
+*
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE BATTLE OF MARATHON
+
+Explanatory Remarks on some of the circumstances of the Battle of
+Marathon.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Marathon, B.C. 490, and
+the Defeat of the Athenians at Syracuse, B.C. 413.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE, B.C. 413.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Defeat of the Athenians at Syracuse
+and the Battle of Arbela.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE BATTLE OF ARBELA, B.C. 331.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Arbela and the Battle of
+the Metaurus.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS, B.C. 207.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of the Metaurus, B.C. 207,
+and Arminius's Victory over the Roman Legions under Varus. A.D. 9.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+VICTORY OF ARMINIUS OVER THE ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS, A.D. 9.
+
+Arminius.
+Synopsis of Events between Arminius's Victory over Varus and the
+Battle of Chalons.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE BATTLE OF CHALONS, A.D. 451.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Chalons, A.D. 451, and
+the Battle of Tours, 732.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE BATTLE OF TOURS, A.D. 732.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Tours, A.D. 732 and the
+Battle of Hastings, 1066.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS, A.D. 1066.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Hastings, A.D. 1066, and
+Joan of Arc's Victory at Orleans, 1429.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY OVER THE ENGLISH AT ORLEANS, A.D. 1429.
+
+Synopsis of Events between Joan of Arc's Victory at Orleans,
+A.D. 1429, and the Defeat of the Spanish Armada, 1588.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588.
+
+Synopsis of events between the Defeat of the Spanish Armada
+A.D. 1588, and the Battle of Blenheim, 1704.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, A.D. 1704.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Blenheim, 1704, and the
+Battle of Pultowa, 1709.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, A.D. 1709.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Pultowa, 1709, and the
+Defeat of Burgoyne at Saratoga, 1777.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+VICTORY OF THE AMERICANS OVER BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA, A.D. 1777.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Defeat of Burgoyne at Saratoga, 1777,
+and the Battle of Valmy, 1792.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF VALMY.
+
+Synopsis of Events between the Battle of Valmy, 1792, and the Battle
+of Waterloo, 1815.
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO, 1815.
+
+
+*
+
+
+
+THE FIFTEEN DECISIVE BATTLES OF THE WORLD.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE BATTLE OF MARATHON.
+
+"Quibus actus uterque
+Europae atque Asiae fatis concurrerit orbis."
+
+Two thousand three hundred and forty years ago, a council of
+Athenian officers was summoned on the slope of one of the
+mountains that look over the plain of Marathon, on the eastern
+coast of Attica. The immediate subject of their meeting was to
+consider whether they should give battle to an enemy that lay
+encamped on the shore beneath them; but on the result of their
+deliberations depended not merely the fate of two armies, but the
+whole future progress of human civilization.
+
+There were eleven members of that council of war. Ten were the
+generals, who were then annually elected at Athens, one for each
+of the local tribes into which the Athenians were divided. Each
+general led the men of his own tribe, and each was invested with
+equal military authority. One also of the Archons was associated
+with them in the joint command of the collective force. This
+magistrate was termed the Polemarch or War-Ruler: he had the
+privilege of leading the right wing of the army in battle, and of
+taking part in all councils of war. A noble Athenian, named
+Callimachus, was the War-Ruler of this year; and as such, stood
+listening to the earnest discussion of the ten generals. They
+had, indeed, deep matter for anxiety, though little aware how
+momentous to mankind were the votes they were about to give, or
+how the generations to come would read with interest that record
+of their debate. They saw before them the invading forces of a
+mighty empire, which had in the last fifty years shattered and
+enslaved nearly all the kingdoms and principalities of the then
+known world. They knew that all the resources of their own
+country were comprised in the little army entrusted to their
+guidance. They saw before them a chosen host of the Great King
+sent to wreak his special wrath on that country, and on the other
+insolent little Greek community, which had dared to aid his
+rebels and burn the capital of one of his provinces. That
+victorious host had already fulfilled half its mission of
+vengeance. Eretria, the confederate of Athens in the bold march
+against Sardis nine years before, had fallen in the last few
+days; and the Athenian generals could discern from the heights
+the island of AEgilia, in which the Persians had deposited their
+Eretrian prisoners, whom they had reserved to be led away
+captives into Upper Asia, there to hear their doom from the lips
+of King Darius himself. Moreover, the men of Athens knew that in
+the camp before them was their own banished tyrant, Hippias, who
+was seeking to be reinstated by foreign scimitars in despotic
+sway over any remnant of his countrymen that might survive the
+sack of their town, and might be left behind as too worthless for
+leading away into Median bondage.
+
+The numerical disparity between the force which the Athenian
+commanders had under them, and that which they were called on to
+encounter, was fearfully apparent to some of the council. The
+historians who wrote nearest to the time of the battle do not
+pretend to give any detailed statements of the numbers engaged,
+but there are sufficient data for our making a general estimate.
+Every free Greek was trained to military duty: and, from the
+incessant border wars between the different states, few Greeks
+reached the age of manhood without having seen some service. But
+the muster-roll of free Athenian citizens of an age fit for
+military duty never exceeded thirty thousand, and at this epoch
+probably did not amount to two-thirds of that number. Moreover,
+the poorer portion of these were unprovided with the equipments,
+and untrained to the operations of the regular infantry. Some
+detachments of the best armed troops would be required to
+garrison the city itself, and man the various fortified posts in
+the territory; so that it is impossible to reckon the fully
+equipped force that marched from Athens to Marathon, when the
+news of the Persian landing arrived, at higher than ten thousand
+men. [The historians who lived long after the time of the
+battle, such as Justin, Plutarch and others, give ten thousand as
+the number of the Athenian army. Not much reliance could be
+placed on their authority, if unsupported by other evidence; but
+a calculation made from the number of the Athenian free
+population remarkably confirms it. For the data of this, see
+Boeck's "Public Economy of Athens," vol. i. p. 45. Some METOIKOI
+probably served as Hoplites at Marathon, but the number of
+resident aliens at Athens cannot have been large at this period.]
+
+With one exception, the other Greeks held back from aiding them.
+Sparta had promised assistance; but the Persians had landed on
+the sixth day of the moon, and a religious scruple delayed the
+march of Spartan troops till the moon should have reached its
+full. From one quarter only, and that a most unexpected one, did
+Athens receive aid at the moment of her great peril.
+
+For some years before this time, the little state of Plataea in
+Boeotia, being hard pressed by her powerful neighbour, Thebes,
+had asked the protection of Athens, and had owed to an Athenian
+army the rescue of her independence. Now when it was noised over
+Greece that the Mede had come from the uttermost parts of the
+earth to destroy Athens, the brave Plataeans, unsolicited,
+marched with their whole force to assist in the defence, and to
+share the fortunes of their benefactors. The general levy of the
+Plataeans only amounted to a thousand men: and this little
+column, marching from their city along the southern ridge of
+Mount Cithaeron, and thence across the Attic territory, joined
+the Athenian forces above Marathon almost immediately before the
+battle. The reinforcement was numerically small; but the gallant
+spirit of the men who composed it must have made it of tenfold
+value to the Athenians: and its presence must have gone far to
+dispel the cheerless feeling of being deserted and friendless,
+which the delay of the Spartan succours was calculated to create
+among the Athenian ranks.
+
+This generous daring of their weak but true-hearted ally was
+never forgotten at Athens. The Plataeans were made the fellow-
+countrymen of the Athenians, except the right of exercising
+certain political functions; and from that time forth in the
+solemn sacrifices at Athens, the public prayers were offered up
+for a joint blessing from Heaven upon the Athenians, and the
+Plataeans also. [Mr. Grote observes (vol. iv. p. 484), that
+"this volunteer march of the whole Plataean force to Marathon is
+one of the most affecting incidents of all Grecian history." In
+truth, the whole career of Plataea, and the friendship, strong
+even unto death, between her and Athens, form one of the most
+affecting episodes in the history of antiquity. In the
+Peloponnesian War the Plataeans again were true to the Athenians
+against all risks and all calculation of self-interest; and the
+destruction of Plataea was the consequence. There are few nobler
+passages in the classics than the speech in which the Plataean
+prisoners of war, after the memorable siege of their city,
+justify before their Spartan executioners their loyal adherence
+to Athens. (See Thucydides, lib. iii. secs. 53-60.)]
+
+After the junction of the column from Plataea, the Athenians
+commanders must have had under them about eleven thousand fully-
+armed and disciplined infantry, and probably a larger number of
+irregular light-armed troops; as, besides the poorer citizens who
+went to the field armed with javelins, cutlasses, and targets,
+each regular heavy-armed soldier was attended in the camp by one
+or more slaves, who were armed like the inferior freemen. [At
+the battle of Plataea, eleven years after Marathon, each of the
+eight thousand Athenian regular infantry who served there, was
+attended by a light-armed slave. (Herod. lib. viii. c. 28,29.)]
+Cavalry or archers the Athenians (on this occasion) had none:
+and the use in the field of military engines was not at that
+period introduced into ancient warfare.
+
+Contrasted with their own scanty forces, the Greek commanders saw
+stretched before them, along the shores of the winding bay, the
+tents and shipping of the varied nations that marched to do the
+bidding of the King of the Eastern world. The difficulty of
+finding transports and of securing provisions would form the only
+limit to the numbers of a Persian army. Nor is there any reason
+to suppose the estimate of Justin exaggerated, who rates at a
+hundred thousand the force which on this occasion had sailed,
+under the satraps Datis and Artaphernes, from the Cilician
+shores, against the devoted coasts of Euboea and Attica. And
+after largely deducting from this total, so as to allow for mere
+mariners and camp followers, there must still have remained
+fearful odds against the national levies of the Athenians. Nor
+could Greek generals then feel that confidence in the superior
+quality of their troops which ever since the battle of Marathon
+has animated Europeans in conflicts with Asiatics; as, for
+instance, in the after struggles between Greece and Persia, or
+when the Roman legions encountered the myriads of Mithridates and
+Tigranes, or as is the case in the Indian campaigns of our own
+regiments. On the contrary, up to the day of Marathon the Medes
+and Persians were reputed invincible. They had more than once
+met Greek troops in Asia Minor, in Cyprus, in Egypt, and had
+invariably beaten them. Nothing can be stronger than the
+expressions used by the early Creek writers respecting the terror
+which the name of the Medes inspired, and the prostration of
+men's spirits before the apparently resistless career of the
+Persian arms. It is therefore, little to be wondered at, that
+five of the ten Athenian generals shrank from the prospect of
+fighting a pitched battle against an enemy so superior in
+numbers, and so formidable in military renown. Their own
+position on the heights was strong, and offered great advantages
+to a small defending force against assailing masses. They deemed
+it mere foolhardiness to descend into the plain to be trampled
+down by the Asiatic horse, overwhelmed with the archery, or cut
+to pieces by the invincible veterans of Cambyses and Cyrus.
+Moreover, Sparta, the great war-state of Greece, had been applied
+to, and had promised succour to Athens, though the religious
+observance which the Dorians paid to certain times and seasons
+had for the present delayed their march. Was it not wise, at any
+rate, to wait till the Spartans came up, and to have the help of
+the best troops in Greece, before they exposed themselves to the
+shock of the dreaded Medes?
+
+Specious as these reasons might appear, the other five generals
+were for speedier and bolder operations. And, fortunately for
+Athens and for the world, one of them was a man, not only of the
+highest military genius, but also of that energetic character
+which impresses its own type and ideas upon spirits feebler in
+conception.
+
+Miltiades was the head of one of the noblest houses at Athens:
+he ranked the AEacidae among his ancestry, and the blood of
+Achilles flowed in the veins of the hero of Marathon. One of his
+immediate ancestors had acquired the dominion of the Thracian
+Chersonese, and thus the family became at the same time Athenian
+citizens and Thracian princes. This occurred at the time when
+Pisistratus was tyrant of Athens. Two of the relatives of
+Miltiades--an uncle of the same name, and a brother named
+Stesagoras--had ruled the Chersonese before Miltiades became its
+prince. He had been brought up at Athens in the house of his
+father Cimon, [Herodotus, lib. vi. c. 102] who was renowned
+throughout Greece for his victories in the Olympic chariot-races,
+and who must have been possessed of great wealth. The sons of
+Pisistratus, who succeeded their father in the tyranny at Athens,
+caused Cimon to be assassinated, but they treated the young
+Miltiades with favour and kindness; and when his brother
+Stesagoras died in the Chersonese, they sent him out there as
+lord of the principality. This was about twenty-eight years
+before the battle of Marathon, and it is with his arrival in the
+Chersonese that our first knowledge of the career and character
+of Miltiades commences. We find, in the first act recorded of
+him, proof of the same resolute and unscrupulous spirit that
+marked his mature age. His brother's authority in the
+principality had been shaken by war and revolt: Miltiades
+determined to rule more securely. On his arrival he kept close
+within his house, as if he was mourning for his brother. The
+principal men of the Chersonese, hearing of this, assembled from
+all the towns and districts, and went together to the house of
+Miltiades on a visit of condolence. As soon as he had thus got
+them in his power, he made them all prisoners. He then asserted
+and maintained his own absolute authority in the peninsula,
+taking into his pay a body of five hundred regular troops, and
+strengthening his interest by marrying the daughter of the king
+of the neighbouring Thracians.
+
+When the Persian power was extended to the Hellespont and its
+neighbourhood, Miltiades, as prince of the Chersonese, submitted
+to King Darius; and he was one of the numerous tributary rulers
+who led their contingents of men to serve in the Persian army in
+the expedition against Scythia. Miltiades and the vassal Greeks
+of Asia Minor were left by the Persian king in charge of the
+bridge across the Danube, when the invading army crossed that
+river, and plunged into the wilds of the country that now is
+Russia, in vain pursuit of the ancestors of the modern Cossacks.
+On learning the reverses that Darius met with in the Scythian
+wilderness, Miltiades proposed to his companions that they should
+break the bridge down, and leave the Persian king and his army to
+perish by famine and the Scythian arrows. The rulers of the
+Asiatic Greek cities whom Miltiades addressed, shrank from this
+bold and ruthless stroke against the Persian power, and Darius
+returned in safety. But it was known what advice Miltiades had
+given; and the vengeance of Darius was thenceforth specially
+directed against the man who had counselled such a deadly blow
+against his empire and his person. The occupation of the Persian
+arms in other quarters left Miltiades for some years after this
+in possession of the Chersonese; but it was precarious and
+interrupted. He, however, availed himself of the opportunity
+which his position gave him of conciliating the goodwill of his
+fellow-countrymen at Athens, by conquering and placing under
+Athenian authority the islands of Lemnos and Imbros, to which
+Athens had ancient claims, but which she had never previously
+been able to bring into complete subjection. At length, in 494
+B.C., the complete suppression of the Ionian revolt by the
+Persians left their armies and fleets at liberty to act against
+the enemies of the Great King to the west of the Hellespont. A
+strong squadron of Phoenician galleys was sent against the
+Chersonese. Miltiades knew that resistance was hopeless; and
+while the Phoenicians were at Tenedos, he loaded five galleys
+with all the treasure that he could collect, and sailed away for
+Athens. The Phoenicians fell in with him, and chased him hard
+along the north of the AEgean. One of his galleys, on board of
+which was his eldest son, Metiochus, was actually captured; but
+Miltiades, with the other four, succeeded in reaching the
+friendly coast of Imbros in safety. Thence he afterwards
+proceeded to Athens, and resumed his station as a free citizen of
+the Athenian commonwealth.
+
+The Athenians at this time had recently expelled Hippias, the son
+of Pisistratus, the last of their tyrants. They were in the full
+glow of their newly-recovered liberty and equality; and the
+constitutional changes of Cleisthenes had inflamed their
+republican zeal to the utmost. Miltiades had enemies at Athens;
+and these, availing themselves of the state of popular feeling,
+brought him to trial for his life for having been tyrant of the
+Chersonese. The charge did not necessarily import any acts of
+cruelty or wrong to individuals: it was founded on so specific
+law; but it was based on the horror with which the Greeks of that
+age regarded every man who made himself compulsory master of his
+fellow-men, and exercised irresponsible dominion over them. The
+fact of Miltiades having so ruled in the Chersonese was
+undeniable; but the question which the Athenians, assembled in
+judgment, must have tried, was, whether Miltiades, by becoming
+tyrant of the Chersonese, deserved punishment as an Athenian
+citizen. The eminent service that he had done the state in
+conquering Lemnos and Imbros for it, pleaded strongly in his
+favour. The people refused to convict him. He stood high in
+public opinion; and when the coming invasion of the Persians was
+known, the people wisely elected him one of their generals for
+the year.
+
+Two other men of signal eminence in history, though their renown
+was achieved at a later period than that of Miltiades, were also
+among the ten Athenian generals at Marathon. One was
+Themistocles, the future founder of the Athenian navy and the
+destined victor of Salamis: the other was Aristides, who
+afterwards led the Athenian troops at Plataea, and whose
+integrity and just popularity acquired for his country, when the
+Persians had finally been repulsed, the advantageous pre-eminence
+of being acknowledged by half of the Greeks as their impartial
+leader and protector. It is not recorded what part either
+Themistocles or Aristides took in the debate of the council of
+war at Marathon. But from the character of Themistocles, his
+boldness, and his intuitive genius for extemporizing the best
+measures in every emergency (a quality which the greatest of
+historians ascribes to him beyond all his contemporaries), we may
+well believe that the vote of Themistocles was for prompt and
+decisive action. [See the character of Themistocles in the 138th
+section of the first book of Thucydides, especially the last
+sentence.] On the vote of Aristides it may be more difficult to
+speculate. His predilection for the Spartans may have made him
+wish to wait till they came up; but, though circumspect, he was
+neither timid as a soldier nor as a politician; and the bold
+advice of Miltiades may probably have found in Aristides a
+willing, most assuredly it found in him a candid, hearer.
+
+Miltiades felt no hesitation as to the course which the Athenian
+army ought to pursue: and earnestly did he press his opinion on
+his brother-generals. Practically acquainted with the
+organization of the Persian armies, Miltiades was convinced of
+the superiority of the Greek troops, if properly handled: he saw
+with the military eye of a great general the advantage which the
+position of the forces gave him for a sudden attack, and as a
+profound politician he felt the perils of remaining inactive, and
+of giving treachery time to ruin the Athenian cause.
+
+One officer in the council of war had not yet voted. This was
+Callimachus, the War-Ruler. The votes of the generals were five
+and five, so that the voice of Callimachus would be decisive.
+
+On that vote, in all human probability, the destiny of all the
+nations of the world depended. Miltiades turned to him, and in
+simple soldierly eloquence, the substance of which we may read
+faithfully reported in Herodotus, who had conversed with the
+veterans of Marathon, the great Athenian thus adjured his
+countryman to vote for giving battle:--
+
+"It now rests with you, Callimachus, either to enslave Athens,
+or, by assuring her freedom, to win yourself an immortality of
+fame, such as not even Harmodius and Aristogeiton have acquired.
+For never, since the Athenians were a people, were they in such
+danger as they are in at this moment. If they bow the knee to
+these Medes, they are to be given up to Hippias, and you know
+what they then will have to suffer. But if Athens comes
+victorious out of this contest, she has it in her to become the
+first city of Greece. Your vote is to decide whether we are to
+join battle or not. If we do not bring on a battle presently,
+some factious intrigue will disunite the Athenians, and the city
+will be betrayed to the Medes. But if we fight, before there is
+anything rotten in the state of Athens, I believe that, provided
+the Gods will give fair play and no favour, we are able to get
+the best of it in the engagement." [Herodotus, lib. vi. sec.
+209. The 116th section is to my mind clear proof that Herodotus
+had personally conversed with Epizelus, one of the veterans of
+Marathon. The substance of the speech of Miltiades would
+naturally become known by the report of some of his colleagues.]
+
+The vote of the brave War-Ruler was gained; the council
+determined to give battle; and such was the ascendancy and
+military eminence of Miltiades, that his brother-generals, one
+and all, gave up their days of command to him, and cheerfully
+acted under his orders. Fearful, however, of creating any
+jealousy, and of so failing to obtain the co-operation of all
+parts of his small army, Miltiades waited till the day when the
+chief command would have come round to him in regular rotation,
+before he led the troops against the enemy.
+
+The inaction of the Asiatic commanders, during this interval,
+appears strange at first sight; but Hippias was with them, and
+they and he were aware of their chance of a bloodless conquest
+through the machinations of his partisans among the Athenians.
+The nature of the ground also explains, in many points, the
+tactics of the opposite generals before the battle, as well as
+the operations of the troops during the engagement.
+
+The plain of Marathon, which is about twenty-two miles distant
+from Athens, lies along the bay of the same name on the north-
+eastern coast of Attica. The plain is nearly in the form of a
+crescent, and about six miles in length. It is about two miles
+broad in the centre, where the space between the mountains and
+the sea is greatest, but it narrows towards either extremity, the
+mountains coming close down to the water at the horns of the bay.
+There is a valley trending inwards from the middle of the plain,
+and a ravine comes down to it to the southward. Elsewhere it, is
+closely girt round on the land side by rugged limestone
+mountains, which are thickly studded with pines, olive-trees, and
+cedars, and overgrown with the myrtle, arbutus, and the other low
+odoriferous shrubs that everywhere perfume the Attic air. The
+level of the ground is now varied by the mound raised over those
+who fell in the battle, but it was an unbroken plain when the
+Persians encamped on it. There are marshes at each end, which
+are dry in spring and summer, and then offer no obstruction to
+the horseman, but are commonly flooded with rain, and so rendered
+impracticable for cavalry, in the autumn, the time of year at
+which the action took place.
+
+The Greeks, lying encamped on the mountains, could watch every
+movement of the Persians on the plain below, while they were
+enabled completely to mask their own. Miltiades also had, from
+his position, the power of giving battle whenever he pleased, or
+of delaying it at his discretion, unless Datis were to attempt
+the perilous operation of storming the heights.
+
+If we turn to the map of the old world, to test the comparative
+territorial resources of the two states whose armies were now
+about to come into conflict, the immense preponderance of the
+material power of the Persian king over that of the Athenian
+republic is more striking than any similar contrast which history
+can supply. It has been truly remarked, that, in estimating mere
+areas, Attica, containing on its whole surface only seven hundred
+square miles, shrinks into insignificance if compared with many a
+baronial fief of the Middle Ages, or many a colonial allotment of
+modern times. Its antagonist, the Persian empire, comprised the
+whole of modern Asiatic and much of modern European Turkey, the
+modern kingdom of Persia, and the countries of modern Georgia,
+Armenia, Balkh, the Punjaub, Affghanistan, Beloochistan, Egypt,
+and Tripoli.
+
+Nor could a European, in the beginning of the fifth century
+before our era, look upon this huge accumulation of power beneath
+the sceptre of a single Asiatic ruler, with the indifference with
+which we now observe on the map the extensive dominions of modern
+Oriental sovereigns. For, as has been already remarked, before
+Marathon was fought, the prestige of success and of supposed
+superiority of race was on the side of the Asiatic against the
+European. Asia was the original seat of human societies and long
+before any trace can be found of the inhabitants of the rest of
+the world having emerged from the rudest barbarism, we can
+perceive that mighty and brilliant empires flourished in the
+Asiatic continent. They appear before us through the twilight of
+primeval history, dim and indistinct, but massive and majestic,
+like mountains in the early dawn.
+
+Instead, however, of the infinite variety and restless change
+which have characterised the institutions and fortunes of
+European states ever since the commencement of the civilization
+of our continent, a monotonous uniformity pervades the histories
+of nearly all Oriental empires, from the most ancient down to the
+most recent times. They are characterised by the rapidity of
+their early conquests; by the immense extent of the dominions
+comprised in them; by the establishment of a satrap or pacha
+system of governing the provinces; by an invariable and speedy
+degeneracy in the princes of the royal house, the effeminate
+nurslings of the seraglio succeeding to the warrior-sovereigns
+reared in the camp; and by the internal anarchy and
+insurrections, which indicate and accelerate the decline and fall
+of those unwieldy and ill-organized fabrics of power. It is also
+a striking fact that the governments of all the great Asiatic
+empires have in all ages been absolute despotisms. And Heeren is
+right in connecting this with another great fact, which is
+important from its influence both on the political and the social
+life of Asiatics. "Among all the considerable nations of Inner
+Asia, the paternal government of every household was corrupted by
+polygamy; where that custom exists, a good political constitution
+is impossible. Fathers being converted into domestic despots,
+are ready to pay the same abject obedience to their sovereign
+which they exact from their family and dependants in their
+domestic economy." We should bear in mind also the inseparable
+connexion between the state religion and all legislation, which
+has always prevailed in the East, and the constant existence of a
+powerful sacerdotal body, exercising some check, though
+precarious and irregular, over the throne itself, grasping at all
+civil administration, claiming the supreme control of education,
+stereotyping the lines in which literature and science must move,
+and limiting the extent to which it shall be lawful for the human
+mind to prosecute its inquiries.
+
+With these general characteristics rightly felt and understood.
+it becomes a comparatively easy task to investigate and
+appreciate the origin, progress, and principles of Oriental
+empires in general, as well as of the Persian monarchy in
+particular. And we are thus better enabled to appreciate the
+repulse which Greece gave to the arms of the East, and to judge
+of the probable consequences to human civilization, if the
+Persians had succeeded in bringing Europe under their yoke, as
+they had already subjugated the fairest portions of the rest of
+the then known world.
+
+The Greeks, from their geographical position, formed the natural
+vanguard of European liberty against Persian ambition; and they
+pre-eminently displayed the salient points of distinctive
+national character, which have rendered European civilization so
+far superior to Asiatic. The nations that dwelt in ancient times
+around and near the northern shores of the Mediterranean Sea,
+were the first in our continent to receive from the East the
+rudiments of art and literature, and the germs of social and
+political organization. Of these nations, the Greeks, through
+their vicinity to Asia Minor, Phoenicia, and Egypt, were among
+the very foremost in acquiring the principles and habits of
+civilized life; and they also at once imparted a new and wholly
+original stamp on all which they received. Thus, in their
+religion they received from foreign settlers the names of all
+their deities and many of their rites, but they discarded the
+loathsome monstrosities of the Nile, the Orontes, and the
+Ganges;--they nationalized their creed; and their own poets
+created their beautiful mythology. No sacerdotal caste ever
+existed in Greece. So, in their governments they lived long
+under hereditary kings, but never endured the permanent
+establishment of absolute monarchy. Their early kings were
+constitutional rulers, governing with defined prerogatives. And
+long before the Persian invasion the kingly form of government
+had given way in almost all the Greek states to republican
+institutions, presenting infinite varieties of the balancing or
+the alternate predominance of the oligarchical and democratical
+principles. In literature and science the Greek intellect
+followed no beaten track, and acknowledged no limitary rules.
+The Greeks thought their subjects boldly out; and the novelty of
+a speculation invested it in their minds with interest, and not
+with criminality. Versatile, restless, enterprising and self-
+confident, the Greeks presented the most striking contrast to the
+habitual quietude and submissiveness of the Orientals. And, of
+all the Greeks, the Athenians exhibited these national
+characteristics in the strongest degree. This spirit of activity
+and daring, joined to a generous sympathy for the fate of their
+fellow-Greeks in Asia, had led them to join in the last Ionian
+war; and now, mingling with their abhorrence of the usurping
+family of their own citizens, which for a period had forcibly
+seized on and exercised despotic power at Athens, it nerved them
+to defy the wrath of King Darius, and to refuse to receive back
+at his bidding the tyrant whom they had some years before driven
+from their land.
+
+The enterprise and genius of an Englishman have lately confirmed
+by fresh evidence, and invested with fresh interest, the might of
+the Persian monarch, who sent his troops to combat at Marathon.
+Inscriptions in a character termed the Arrow-headed, or
+Cuneiform, had long been known to exist on the marble monuments
+at Persepolis, near the site of the ancient Susa, and on the
+faces of rocks in other places formerly ruled over by the early
+Persian kings. But for thousands of years they had been mere
+unintelligible enigmas to the curious but baffled beholder: and
+they were often referred to as instances of the folly of human
+pride, which could indeed write its own praises in the solid
+rock, but only for the rock to outlive the language as well as
+the memory of the vain-glorious inscribers. The elder Niebuhr,
+Grotefend, and Lassen had made some guesses at the meaning of the
+Cuneiform letters; but Major Rawlinson, of the East India
+Company's service, after years of labour, has at last
+accomplished the glorious achievement of fully revealing the
+alphabet and the grammar of this long unknown tongue. He has, in
+particular, fully deciphered and expounded the inscriptions on
+the sacred rock of Behistun, on the western frontiers of Media.
+These records of the Achaemenidae have at length found their
+interpreter; and Darius himself speaks to us from the consecrated
+mountain, and tells us the names of the nations that obeyed him,
+the revolts that he suppressed, his victories, his piety, and his
+glory. [See the tenth volume of the "Journal of the Royal
+Asiatic Society."]
+
+Kings who thus seek the admiration of posterity are little likely
+to dim the record of their successes by the mention of their
+occasional defeats; and it throws no suspicion on the narrative
+of the Greek historians, that we find these inscriptions silent
+respecting the overthrow of Datis and Artaphernes, as well as
+respecting the reverses which Darius sustained in person during
+his Scythian campaigns. But these indisputable monuments of
+Persian fame confirm, and even increase, the opinion with which
+Herodotus inspires us, of the vast power which Cyrus founded and
+Cambyses increased; which Darius augmented by Indian and Arabian
+conquests, and seemed likely, when he directed his arms against
+Europe, to make the predominant monarchy of the world.
+
+With the exception of the Chinese empire, in which, throughout
+all ages down to the last few years, one-third of the human race
+has dwelt almost unconnected with the other portions, all the
+great kingdoms which we know to have existed in Ancient Asia,
+were, in Darius's time, blended with the Persian. The northern
+Indians, the Assyrians, the Syrians, the Babylonians, the
+Chaldees, the Phoenicians, the nations of Palestine, the
+Armenians, the Bactrians, the Lydians, the Phrygians, the
+Parthians, and the Medes,--all obeyed the sceptre of the Great
+King: the Medes standing next to the native Persians in honour,
+and the empire being frequently spoken of as that of the Medes,
+or as that of the Medes and Persians. Egypt and Cyrene were
+Persian provinces; the Greek colonists in Asia Minor and the
+islands of the AEgean were Darius's subjects; and their gallant
+but unsuccessful attempts to throw off the Persian yoke had only
+served to rivet it more strongly, and to increase the general
+belief: that the Greeks could not stand before the Persians in a
+field of battle. Darius's Scythian war, though unsuccessful in
+its immediate object, had brought about the subjugation of Thrace
+and the submission of Macedonia. From the Indus to the Peneus,
+all was his.
+
+We may imagine the wrath with which the lord of so many nations
+must have heard, nine years before the battle of Marathon, that a
+strange nation towards the setting sun, called the Athenians, had
+dared to help his rebels in Ionia against him, and that they had
+plundered and burnt the capital of one of his provinces. Before
+the burning of Sardis, Darius seems never to have heard of the
+existence of Athens; but his satraps in Asia Minor had for some
+time seen Athenian refugees at their provincial courts imploring
+assistance against their fellow-countrymen. When Hippias was
+driven away from Athens, and the tyrannic dynasty of the
+Pisistratidae finally overthrown in 510 B.C., the banished tyrant
+and his adherents, after vainly seeking to be restored by Spartan
+intervention, had betaken themselves to Sardis, the capital city
+of the satrapy of Artaphernes. There Hippias (in the expressive
+words of Herodotus) [Herod. lib. v. c. 96.] began every kind of
+agitation, slandering the Athenians before Artaphernes, and doing
+all he could to induce the satrap to place Athens in subjection
+to him, as the tributary vassal of King Darius. When the
+Athenians heard of his practices, they sent envoys to Sardis to
+remonstrate with the Persians against taking up the quarrel of
+the Athenian refugees. But Artaphernes gave them in reply a
+menacing command to receive Hippias back again if they looked for
+safety. The Athenians were resolved not to purchase safety at
+such a price; and after rejecting the satrap's terms, they
+considered that they and the Persians were declared enemies. At
+this very crisis the Ionian Greeks implored the assistance of
+their European brethren, to enable them to recover their
+independence from Persia. Athens, and the city of Eretria in
+Euboea, alone consented. Twenty Athenian galleys, and five
+Eretrian, crossed the AEgean Sea; and by a bold and sudden march
+upon Sardis the Athenians and their allies succeeded in capturing
+the capital city of the haughty satrap, who had recently menaced
+them with servitude or destruction. The Persian forces were soon
+rallied, and the Greeks were compelled to retire. They were
+pursued, and defeated on their return to the coast, and Athens
+took no further part in the Ionian war. But the insult that she
+had put upon the Persian power was speedily made known throughout
+that empire, and was never to be forgiven or forgotten. In the
+emphatic simplicity of the narrative of Herodotus, the wrath of
+the Great King is thus described:--"Now when it was told to King
+Darius that Sardis had been taken and burnt by the Athenians and
+Ionians, he took small heed of the Ionians, well knowing who they
+were, and that their revolt would soon be put down: but he asked
+who, and what manner of men, the Athenians were. And when he had
+been told, he called for his bow; and, having taken it, and
+placed an arrow on the string, he let the arrow fly towards
+heaven; and as he shot it into the air, he said, 'O Supreme God!
+grant me that I may avenge myself on the Athenians.' And when he
+had said this, he appointed one of his servants to say to him
+every day as he sat at meat, 'Sire, remember the Athenians.'"
+
+Some years were occupied in the complete reduction of Ionia. But
+when this was effected, Darius ordered his victorious forces to
+proceed to punish Athens and Eretria, and to conquer European
+Greece. The first armament sent for this purpose was shattered
+by shipwreck, and nearly destroyed off Mount Athos, But the
+purpose of King Darius was not easily shaken. A larger army was
+ordered to be collected in Cilicia; and requisitions were sent to
+all the maritime cities of the Persian empire for ships of war,
+and for transports of sufficient size for carrying cavalry as
+well as infantry across the AEgean. While these preparations
+were being made, Darius sent heralds round to the Grecian cities
+demanding their submission to Persia. It was proclaimed in the
+market-place of each little Hellenic state (some with territories
+not larger than the Isle of Wight), that King Darius, the lord of
+all men, from the rising to the setting sun, required earth and
+water to be delivered to his heralds, as a symbolical
+acknowledgment that he was head and master of the country.
+[Aeschines in Ctes. p. 622, ed. Reiske. Mitford, vol. i. p. 485.
+AEschines is speaking of Xerxes, but Mitford is probably right in
+considering it as the style of the Persian kings in their
+proclamations. In one of the inscriptions at Persepolis, Darius
+terms himself "Darius the great king, king of kings, the king of
+the many peopled countries, the supporter also of this great
+world." In another, he styles himself "the king of all inhabited
+countries." (See "Asiatic Journal vol. X pp. 287 and 292, and
+Major Rawlinson's Comments.)] Terror-stricken at the power of
+Persia and at the severe punishment that had recently been
+inflicted on the refractory Ionians, many of the continental
+Greeks and nearly all the islanders submitted, and gave the
+required tokens of vassalage. At Sparta and Athens an indignant
+refusal was returned: a refusal which was disgraced by outrage
+and violence against the persons of the Asiatic heralds.
+
+Fresh fuel was thus added to the anger of Darius against Athens,
+and the Persian preparations went on with renewed vigour. In the
+summer of 490 B.C., the army destined for the invasion was
+assembled in the Aleian plain of Cilicia, near the sea. A fleet
+of six hundred galleys and numerous transports was collected on
+the coast for the embarkation of troops, horse as well as foot.
+A Median general named Datis, and Artaphernes, the son of the
+satrap of Sardis, and who was also nephew of Darius, were placed
+in titular joint command of the expedition. That the real
+supreme authority was given to Datis alone is probable, from the
+way in which the Greek writers speak of him. We know no details
+of the previous career of this officer; but there is every reason
+to believe that his abilities and bravery had been proved by
+experience, or his Median birth would have prevented his being
+placed in high command by Darius. He appears to have been the
+first Mede who was thus trusted by the Persian kings after the
+overthrow of the conspiracy of the Median Magi against the
+Persians immediately before Darius obtained the throne. Datis
+received instructions to complete the subjugation of Greece, and
+especial orders were given him with regard to Eretria and Athens.
+He was to take these two cities; and he was to lead the
+inhabitants away captive, and bring them as slaves into the
+presence of the Great King.
+
+Datis embarked his forces in the fleet that awaited them; and
+coasting along the shores of Asia Minor till he was off Samos, he
+thence sailed due westward through the AEgean Sea for Greece,
+taking the islands in his way. The Naxians had, ten years
+before, successfully stood a siege against a Persian armament,
+but they now were too terrified to offer any resistance, and fled
+to the mountain-tops, while the enemy burnt their town and laid
+waste their lands. Thence Datis, compelling the Greek islanders
+to join him with their ships and men, sailed onward to the coast
+of Euboea. The little town of Carystus essayed resistance, but
+was quickly overpowered. He next attacked Eretria. The
+Athenians sent four thousand men to its aid. But treachery was
+at work among the Eretrians; and the Athenian force received
+timely warning from one of the leading men of the city to retire
+to aid in saving their own country, instead of remaining to share
+in the inevitable destruction of Eretria. Left to themselves,
+the Eretrians repulsed the assaults of the Persians against their
+walls for six days; on the seventh day they were betrayed by two
+of their chiefs and the Persians occupied the city. The temples
+were burnt in revenge for the burning of Sardis, and the
+inhabitants were bound and placed as prisoners in the
+neighbouring islet of AEgylia, to wait there till Datis should
+bring the Athenians to join them in captivity, when both
+populations were to be led into Upper Asia, there to learn their
+doom from the lips of King Darius himself.
+
+Flushed with success, and with half his mission thus
+accomplished, Datis reimbarked his troops, and crossing the
+little channel that separates Euboea from the mainland, he
+encamped his troops on the Attic coast at Marathon, drawing up
+his galleys on the shelving beach, as was the custom with the
+navies of antiquity. The conquered islands behind him served as
+places of deposit for his provisions and military stores. His
+position at Marathon seemed to him in every respect advantageous;
+and the level nature of the ground on which he camped was
+favourable for the employment of his cavalry, if the Athenians
+should venture to engage him. Hippias, who accompanied him, and
+acted as the guide of the invaders, had pointed out Marathon as
+the best place for a landing, for this very reason. Probably
+Hippias was also influenced by the recollection, that forty-seven
+years previously he, with his father Pisistratus, had crossed
+with an army from Eretria to Marathon, and had won an easy
+victory over their Athenian enemies on that very plain, which had
+restored them to tyrannic power. The omen seemed cheering. The
+place was the same; but Hippias soon learned to his cost how
+great a change had come over the spirit of the Athenians.
+
+But though "the fierce democracy" of Athens was zealous and true
+against foreign invader and domestic tyrant, a faction existed in
+Athens, as at Eretria, of men willing to purchase a party triumph
+over their fellow-citizens at the price of their country's ruin.
+Communications were opened between these men and the Persian
+camp, which would have led to a catastrophe like that of Eretria,
+if Miltiades had not resolved, and had not persuaded his
+colleagues to resolve, on fighting at all hazards.
+
+When Miltiades arrayed his men for action, he staked on the
+arbitrement of one battle not only the fate of Athens, but that
+of all Greece; for if Athens had fallen, no other Greek state,
+except Lacedaemon, would have had the courage to resist; and the
+Lacedaemonians, though they would probably have died in their
+ranks to the last man, never could have successfully resisted the
+victorious Persians, and the numerous Greek troops, which would
+have soon marched under the Persian satraps, had they prevailed
+over Athens.
+
+Nor was there any power to the westward of Greece that could have
+offered an effectual opposition to Persia, had she once conquered
+Greece, and made that country a basis for future military
+operations. Rome was at this time in her season of utmost
+weakness. Her dynasty of powerful Etruscan kings had been driven
+out, and her infant commonwealth was reeling under the attacks of
+the Etruscans and Volscians from without, and the fierce
+dissensions between the patricians and plebeians within.
+Etruria, with her Lucumos and serfs, was no match for Persia.
+Samnium had not grown into the might which she afterwards put
+forth: nor could the Greek colonies in South Italy and Sicily
+hope to survive when their parent states had perished. Carthage
+had escaped the Persian yoke in the time of Cambyses, through the
+reluctance of the Phoenician mariners to serve against their
+kinsmen. But such forbearance could not long have been relied
+on, and the future rival of Rome would have become as submissive
+a minister of the Persian power as were the Phoenician cities
+themselves. If we turn to Spain, or if we pass the great
+mountain chain which, prolonged through the Pyrenees, the
+Cevennes, the Alps, and the Balkan, divides Northern from
+Southern Europe, we shall find nothing at that period but mere
+savage Finns, Celts, Slaves, and Teutons. Had Persia beaten
+Athens at Marathon, she could have found no obstacle to prevent
+Darius, the chosen servant of Ormuzd, from advancing his sway
+over all the known Western races of mankind. The infant energies
+of Europe would have been trodden out beneath universal conquest;
+and the history of the world, like the history of Asia, would
+have become a mere record of the rise and fall of despotic
+dynasties, of the incursions of barbarous hordes, and of the
+mental and political prostration of millions beneath the diadem,
+the tiara, and the sword.
+
+Great as the preponderance of the Persian over the Athenian power
+at that crisis seems to have been, it would be unjust to impute
+wild rashness to the policy of Miltiades, and those who voted
+with him in the Athenian council of war, or to look on the after-
+current of events as the mere result of successful indiscretion.
+as before has been remarked, Miltiades, whilst prince of the
+Chersonese, had seen service in the Persian armies; and he knew
+by personal observation how many elements of weakness lurked
+beneath their imposing aspect of strength. He knew that the bulk
+of their troops no longer consisted of the hardy shepherds and
+mountaineers from Persia Proper and Kurdistan, who won Cyrus's
+battles: but that unwilling contingents from conquered nations
+now largely filled up the Persian muster rolls, fighting more
+from compulsion than from any zeal in the cause of their masters.
+He had also the sagacity and the spirit to appreciate the
+superiority of the Greek armour and organization over the
+Asiatic, notwithstanding former reverses. Above all, he felt and
+worthily trusted the enthusiasm of the men under his command.
+
+The Athenians, whom he led, had proved by their new-born valour
+in recent wars against the neighbouring states, that "Liberty and
+Equality of civic rights are brave spirit-stirring things: and
+they who, while under the yoke of a despot, had been no better
+men of war than any of their neighbours, as soon as they were
+free, became the foremost men of all; for each felt that in
+fighting for a free commonwealth, he fought for himself, and,
+whatever he took in hand, he was zealous to do the work
+thoroughly." So the nearly contemporaneous historian describes
+the change of spirit that was seen in the Athenians after their
+tyrants were expelled; [Herod. lib. v. c. 87.] and Miltiades
+knew that in leading them against the invading army, where they
+had Hippias, the foe they most hated, before them, he was
+bringing into battle no ordinary men, and could calculate on no
+ordinary heroism. As for traitors, he was sure, that whatever
+treachery might lurk among some of the higher-born and wealthier
+Athenians, the rank and file whom he commanded were ready to do
+their utmost in his and their own cause. With regard to future
+attacks from Asia, he might reasonably hope that one victory
+would inspirit all Greece to combine against common foe; and that
+the latent seeds of revolt and disunion in the Persian empire
+would soon burst forth and paralyse its energies, so as to leave
+Greek independence secure.
+
+With these hopes and risks, Miltiades, on the afternoon of a
+September day, 490 B.C., gave the word for the Athenian army to
+prepare for battle. There were many local associations connected
+with those mountain heights, which were calculated powerfully to
+excite the spirits of the men, and of which the commanders well
+knew how to avail themselves in their exhortations to their
+troops before the encounter. Marathon itself was a region sacred
+to; Hercules. Close to them was the fountain of Macaria, who had
+in days of yore devoted herself to death for the liberty of her
+people. The very plain on which they were to fight was the scene
+of the exploits of their national hero, Theseus; and there, too,
+as old legends told, the Athenians and the Heraclidae had routed
+the invader, Eurystheus. These traditions were not mere cloudy
+myths, or idle fictions, but matters of implicit earnest faith to
+the men of that day: and many a fervent prayer arose from the
+Athenian ranks to the heroic spirits who while on earth had
+striven and suffered on that very spot, and who were believed to
+be now heavenly powers, looking down with interest on their still
+beloved country, and capable of interposing with superhuman aid
+in its behalf.
+
+According to old national custom, the warriors of each tribe were
+arrayed together; neighbour thus fighting by the side of
+neighbour, friend by friend, and the spirit of emulation and the
+consciousness of responsibility excited to the very utmost. The
+War-Ruler, Callimachus, had the leading of the right wing; the
+Plataeans formed the extreme left; and Themistocles and Aristides
+commanded the centre. The line consisted of the heavy-armed
+spearmen only. For the Greeks (until the time of Iphicrates)
+took little or no account of light-armed soldiers in a pitched
+battle, using them only in skirmishes or for the pursuit of a
+defeated enemy. The panoply of the regular infantry consisted of
+a long spear, of a shield, helmet, breast-plate, greaves, and
+short sword. Thus equipped, they usually advanced slowly and
+steadily into action in an uniform phalanx of about eight spears
+deep. But the military genius of Miltiades led him to deviate on
+this occasion from the commonplace tactics of his countrymen. It
+was essential for him to extend his line so as to cover all the
+practicable ground, and to secure himself from being outflanked
+and charged in the rear by the Persian horse. This extension
+involved the weakening of his line. Instead of an uniform
+reduction of its strength, he determined on detaching principally
+from his centre, which, from the nature of the ground, would have
+the best opportunities for rallying if broken; and on
+strengthening his wings, so as to insure advantage at those
+points; and he trusted to his own skill, and to his soldiers'
+discipline, for the improvement of that advantage into decisive
+victory.
+
+[It is remarkable that there is no other instance of a Greek
+general deviating from the ordinary mode of bringing a phalanx of
+spearmen into action, until the battles of Leuctra and Mantineia,
+more than a century after Marathon, when Epaminondas introduced
+the tactics (which Alexander the Great in ancient times, and
+Frederic the Great in modern times, made so famous) of
+concentrating an overpowering force on some decisive point of the
+enemy's line, while he kept back, or, in military phrase, refused
+the weaker part of his own.]
+
+In this order, and availing himself probably of the inequalities
+of the ground, so as to conceal his preparations from the enemy
+till the last possible moment, Miltiades drew up the eleven
+thousand infantry whose spears were to decide this crisis in the
+struggle between the European and the Asiatic worlds. The
+sacrifices, by which the favour of Heaven was sought, and its
+will consulted, were announced to show propitious omens. The
+trumpet sounded for action, and, chanting the hymn of battle, the
+little army bore down upon the host of the foe. Then, too, along
+the mountain slopes of Marathon must have resounded the mutual
+exhortation which AEschylus, who fought in both battles, tells us
+was afterwards heard over the waves of Salamis,--"On, sons of the
+Greeks! Strike for the freedom of your country! strike for the
+freedom of your children and of your wives--for the shrines of
+your fathers' gods, and for the sepulchres of your sires. All--
+all are now staked upon the strife!"
+
+Instead of advancing at the usual slow pace of the phalanx,
+Miltiades brought his men on at a run. They were all trained in
+the exercises of the palaestra, so that there was no fear of
+their ending the charge in breathless exhaustion: and it was of
+the deepest importance for him to traverse as rapidly as possible
+the space of about a mile of level ground, that lay between the
+mountain foot and the Persian outposts, and so to get his troops
+into close action before the Asiatic cavalry could mount, form,
+and manoeuvre against him, or their archers keep him long under
+bow-shot, and before the enemy's generals could fairly deploy
+their masses.
+
+"When the Persians," says Herodotus, "saw the Athenians running
+down on them, without horse or bowmen, and scanty in numbers,
+they thought them a set of madmen rushing upon certain
+destruction." They began, however, to prepare to receive them
+and the Eastern chiefs arrayed, as quickly as time and place
+allowed, the varied races who served in their motley ranks.
+Mountaineers from Hyrcania and Affghanistan, wild horsemen from
+the steppes of Khorassan, the black archers of Ethiopia,
+swordsmen from the banks of the Indus, the Oxus, the Euphrates,
+and the Nile, made ready against the enemies of the Great King.
+But no national cause inspired them, except the division of
+native Persians; and in the large host there was no uniformity of
+language, creed, race, or military system. Still, among them
+there were many gallant men, under a veteran general; they were
+familiarized with victory; and in contemptuous confidence their
+infantry, which alone had time to form, awaited the Athenian
+charge. On came the Greeks, with one unwavering line of levelled
+spears, against which the light targets, the short lances and
+scymetars of the Orientals offered weak defence. The front rank
+of the Asiatics must have gone down to a man at the first shock.
+Still they recoiled not, but strove by individual gallantry, and
+by the weight of numbers, to make up for the disadvantages of
+weapons and tactics, and to bear back the shallow line of the
+Europeans. In the centre, where the native Persians and the
+Sacae fought, they succeeded in breaking through the weaker part
+of the Athenian phalanx; and the tribes led by Aristides and
+Themistocles were, after a brave resistance, driven back over the
+plain, and chased by the Persians up the valley towards the inner
+country. There the nature of the ground gave the opportunity of
+rallying and renewing the struggle: and meanwhile, the Greek
+wings, where Miltiades had concentrated his chief strength, had
+routed the Asiatics opposed to them; and the Athenian and
+Plataean officers, instead of pursuing the fugitives, kept their
+troops well in hand, and wheeling round they formed the two wings
+together. Miltiades instantly led them against the Persian
+centre, which had hitherto been triumphant, but which now fell
+back, and prepared to encounter these new and unexpected
+assailants. Aristides and Themistocles renewed the fight with
+their re-organized troops, and the full force of the Greeks was
+brought into close action with the Persian and Sacian divisions
+of the enemy. Datis's veterans strove hard to keep their ground,
+and evening [ARISTOPH. Vesvoe 1085.] was approaching before the
+stern encounter was decided.
+
+But the Persians, with their slight wicker shields, destitute of
+body-armour, and never taught by training to keep the even front
+and act with the regular movement of the Greek infantry, fought
+at grievous disadvantage with their shorter and feebler weapons
+against the compact array of well-armed Athenian and Plataean
+spearmen, all perfectly drilled to perform each necessary
+evolution in concert, and to preserve an uniform and unwavering
+line in battle. In personal courage and in bodily activity the
+Persians were not inferior to their adversaries. Their spirits
+were not yet cowed by the recollection of former defeats; and
+they lavished their lives freely, rather than forfeit the fame
+which they had won by so many victories. While their rear ranks
+poured an incessant shower of arrows over the heads of their
+comrades, the foremost Persians kept rushing forward, sometimes
+singly, sometimes in desperate groups of twelve or ten upon the
+projecting spears of the Greeks, striving to force a lane into
+the phalanx, and to bring their scimetars and daggers into play.
+But the Greeks felt their superiority, and though the fatigue of
+the long-continued action told heavily on their inferior numbers,
+the sight of the carnage that they dealt amongst their assailants
+nerved them to fight still more fiercely on.
+
+[See the description, in the 62nd section of the ninth book of
+Herodotus, of the gallantry shown by the Persian infantry against
+the Lacedaemonians at Plataea. We have no similar detail of the
+fight at Marathon, but we know that it was long and obstinately
+contested (see the 113th section of the sixth book of Herodotus,
+and the lines from the "Vespae" already quoted), and the spirit
+of the Persians must have been even higher at Marathon than at
+Plataea. In both battles it was only the true Persians and the
+Sacae who showed this valour; the other Asiatics fled like
+sheep.]
+
+At last the previously unvanquished lords of Asia turned their
+backs and fled, and the Greeks followed, striking them down, to
+the water's edge, where the invaders were now hastily launching
+their galleys, and seeking to embark and fly. Flushed with
+success, the Athenians dashed at the fleet.
+
+[The flying Mede, his shaftless broken bow;
+ The fiery Greek, his red pursuing spear;
+ Mountains above, Earth's, Ocean's plain below,
+ Death in the front, Destruction in the rear!
+ Such was the scene.--Byron's CHILDE HARROLD.]
+
+"Bring fire, bring fire," was their cry; and they began to lay
+hold of the ships. But here the Asiatics resisted desperately,
+and the principal loss sustained by the Greeks was in the assault
+on the fleet. Here fell the brave War-Ruler Callimachus, the
+general Stesilaus, and other Athenians of note. Conspicuous
+among them was Cynaegeirus, the brother of the tragic poet
+AEschylus. He had grasped the ornamental work on the stern of
+one of the galleys, and had his hand struck off by an axe. Seven
+galleys were captured; but the Persians succeeded in saving the
+rest. They pushed off from the fatal shore: but even here the
+skill of Datis did not desert him, and he sailed round to the
+western coast of Attica, in hopes to find the city unprotected,
+and to gain possession of it from some of the partisans of
+Hippias. Miltiades, however, saw and counteracted his manoeuvre.
+Leaving Aristides, and the troops of his tribe, to guard the
+spoil and the slain, the Athenian commander led his conquering
+army by a rapid night-march back across the country to Athens.
+And when the Persian fleet had doubled the Cape of Sunium and
+sailed up to the Athenian harbour in the morning, Datis saw
+arrayed on the heights above the city the troops before whom his
+men had fled on the preceding evening. All hope of further
+conquest in Europe for the time was abandoned, and the baffled
+armada returned to the Asiatic coasts.
+
+After the battle had been fought, but while the dead bodies were
+yet on the ground, the promised reinforcement from Sparta
+arrived. Two thousand Lacedaemonian spearmen, starting
+immediately after the full moon, had marched the hundred and
+fifty miles between Athens and Sparta in the wonderfully short
+time of three days. Though too late to share in the glory of the
+action, they requested to be allowed to march to the battle-field
+to behold the Medes. They proceeded thither, gazed on the dead
+bodies of the invaders, and then, praising the Athenians and what
+they had done, they returned to Lacedaemon.
+
+The number of the Persian dead was six thousand four hundred; of
+the Athenians, a hundred and ninety-two. The number of Plataeans
+who fell is not mentioned, but as they fought in the part of the
+army which was not broken, it cannot have been large.
+
+The apparent disproportion between the losses of the two armies
+is not surprising, when we remember the armour of the Greek
+spearmen, and the impossibility of heavy slaughter being
+inflicted by sword or lance on troops so armed, as long as they
+kept firm in their ranks. [Mitford well refers to Crecy,
+Poictiers, and Agincourt, as instances of similar disparity of
+loss between the conquerors and the conquered.]
+
+The Athenian slain were buried on the field of battle. This was
+contrary to the usual custom, according to which the bones of all
+who fell fighting for their country in each year were deposited
+in a public sepulchre in the suburb of Athens called the
+Cerameicus. But it was felt that a distinction ought to be made
+in the funeral honours paid to the men of Marathon, even as their
+merit had been distinguished over that of all other Athenians. A
+lofty mound was raised on the plain of Marathon, beneath which
+the remains of the men of Athens who fell in the battle were
+deposited. Ten columns were erected on the spot, one for each of
+the Athenian tribes; and on the monumental column of each tribe
+were graven the names of those of its members whose glory it was
+to have fallen in the great battle of liberation. The antiquary
+Pausanias read those names there six hundred years after the time
+when they were first graven. The columns have long perished, but
+the mound still marks the spot where the noblest heroes of
+antiquity, the MARATHONOMAKHOI repose. [Pausanias states, with
+implicit belief, that the battlefield was haunted at night by
+supernatural beings, and that the noise of combatants and the
+snorting of horses were heard to resound on it. The superstition
+has survived the change of creeds, and the shepherds of the
+neighbourhood still believe that spectral warriors contend on the
+plain at midnight, and they say that they have heard the shouts
+of the combatants and the neighing of the steeds. See Grote and
+Thirlwall.]
+
+A separate tumulus was raised over the bodies of the slain
+Plataeans, and another over the light-armed slaves who had taken
+part and had fallen in the battle. [It is probable that the
+Greek light-armed irregulars were active in the attack on the
+Persian ships and it was in this attack that the Greeks suffered
+their principal loss.] There was also a distinct sepulchral
+monument to the general to whose genius the victory was mainly
+due. Miltiades did not live long after his achievement at
+Marathon, but he lived long enough to experience a lamentable
+reverse of his popularity and good fortune. As soon as the
+Persians had quitted the western coasts of the AEgean, he
+proposed to an assembly of the Athenian people that they should
+fit out seventy galleys, with a proportionate force of soldiers
+and military stores, and place them at his disposal; not telling
+them whither he meant to proceed, but promising them that if they
+would equip the force he asked for, and give him discretionary
+powers, he would lead it to a land where there was gold in
+abundance to be won with ease. The Greeks of that time believed
+in the existence of Eastern realms teeming with gold, as firmly
+as the Europeans of the sixteenth century believed in Eldorado of
+the West. The Athenians probably thought that the recent victor
+of Marathon, and former officer of Darius, was about to guide
+them on a secret expedition against some wealthy and unprotected
+cities of treasure in the Persian dominions. The armament was
+voted and equipped, and sailed eastward from Attica, no one but
+Miltiades knowing its destination, until the Greek isle of Paros
+was reached, when his true object appeared. In former years,
+while connected with the Persians as prince of the Chersonese,
+Miltiades had been involved in a quarrel with one of the leading
+men among the Parians, who had injured his credit and caused some
+slights to be put upon him at the court of the Persian satrap,
+Hydarnes. The feud had ever since rankled in the heart of the
+Athenian chief, and he now attacked Paros for the sake of
+avenging himself on his ancient enemy. His pretext, as general
+of the Athenians, was, that the Parians had aided the armament of
+Datis with a war-galley. The Parians pretended to treat about
+terms of surrender, but used the time which they thus gained in
+repairing the defective parts of the fortifications of their
+city; and they then set the Athenians at defiance. So far, says
+Herodotus, the accounts of all the Greeks agree. But the
+Parians, in after years, told also a wild legend, how a captive
+priestess of a Parian temple of the Deities of the Earth promised
+Miltiades to give him the means of capturing Paros: how, at her
+bidding, the Athenian general went alone at night and forced his
+way into a holy shrine, near the city gate, but with what purpose
+it was not known: how a supernatural awe came over him, and in
+his flight he fell and fractured his leg: how an oracle
+afterwards forbad the Parians to punish the sacrilegious and
+traitorous priestess, "because it was fated that Miltiades should
+come to an ill end, and she was only the instrument to lead him
+to evil." Such was the tale that Herodotus heard at Paros.
+Certain it was that Miltiades either dislocated or broke his leg
+during an unsuccessful siege of that city, and returned home in
+evil plight with his baffled and defeated forces.
+
+The indignation of the Athenians was proportionate to the hope
+and excitement which his promises had raised. Xanthippus, the
+head of one of the first families in Athens, indicted him before
+the supreme popular tribunal for the capital offence of having
+deceived the people. His guilt was undeniable, and the Athenians
+passed their verdict accordingly. But the recollections of
+Lemnos and Marathon, and the sight of the fallen general who lay
+stretched on a couch before them, pleaded successfully in
+mitigation of punishment, and the sentence was commuted from
+death to a fine of fifty talents. This was paid by his son, the
+afterwards illustrious Cimon, Miltiades dying, soon after the
+trial, of the injury which he had received at Paros.
+
+[The common-place calumnies against the Athenians respecting
+Miltiades have been well answered by Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton in
+his "Rise and Fall of Athens," and Bishop Thirlwall in the second
+volume of his "History of Greece;" but they have received their
+most complete refutation from Mr. Grote in the fourth volume of
+his History, p.490 et seq., and notes. I quite concur with him
+that, "looking to the practice of the Athenian dicastery in
+criminal cases, fifty talents was the minor penalty actually
+proposed by the defenders of Miltiades themselves as a substitute
+for the punishment of death. In those penal cases at Athens,
+where the punishment was not fixed beforehand by the terms of the
+law, if the person accused was found guilty, it was customary to
+submit to the jurors subsequently and separately, the question as
+to the amount of punishment. First, the accuser named the
+penalty which he thought suitable; next, the accused person was
+called upon to name an amount of penalty for himself, and the
+jurors were constrained to take their choice between these two;
+no third gradation of penalty being admissible for consideration.
+Of course, under such circumstances, it was the interest of the
+accused party to name, even in his own case, some real and
+serious penalty, something which the jurors might be likely to
+deem not wholly inadequate to his crime just proved; for if he
+proposed some penalty only trifling, he drove them to far the
+heavier sentence recommended by his opponent." The stories of
+Miltiades having been cast into prison and died there, and of his
+having been saved from death only by the interposition of the
+Prytanis of the day, are, I think, rightly rejected by Mr. Grote
+as the fictions of after ages. The silence of Herodotus
+respecting them is decisive. It is true that Plato, in the
+Gorgias, says that the Athenians passed a vote to throw Miltiades
+into the Barathrum, and speaks of the interposition of the
+Prytanis in his favour; but it is to be remembered that Plato,
+with all his transcendent genius, was (as Niebuhr has termed him)
+a very indifferent patriot, who loved to blacken the character of
+his country's democratic institutions; and if the fact was that
+the Prytanis, at the trial of Miltiades, opposed the vote of
+capital punishment, and spoke in favour of the milder sentence,
+Plato (in a passage written to show the misfortunes that befell
+Athenian statesmen) would readily exaggerate this fact into the
+story that appears in his text.]
+
+The melancholy end of Miltiades, after his elevation to such a
+height of power and glory, must often have been recalled to the
+mind of the ancient Greeks by the sight of one, in particular, of
+the memorials of the great battle which he won. This was the
+remarkable statue (minutely described by Pausanias) which the
+Athenians, in the time of Pericles, caused to be hewn out of a
+huge block of marble, which, it was believed, had been provided
+by Datis to form a trophy of the anticipated victory of the
+Persians. Phidias fashioned out of this a colossal image of the
+goddess Nemesis, the deity whose peculiar function was to visit
+the exuberant prosperity both of nations and individuals with
+sudden and awful reverses. This statue was placed in a temple of
+the goddess at Rhamnus, about eight miles from Marathon, Athens
+herself contained numerous memorials of her primary great
+victory. Panenus, the cousin of Phidias, represented it in
+fresco on the walls of the painted porch; and, centuries
+afterwards, the figures of Miltiades and Callimachus at the head
+of the Athenians were conspicuous in the fresco. The tutelary
+deities were exhibited taking part in the fray. In the back-
+ground were seen the Phoenician galleys; and nearer to the
+spectator, the Athenians and the Plataeans (distinguished by
+their leathern helmets) were chasing routed Asiatics into the
+marshes and the sea. The battle was sculptured also on the
+Temple of Victory in the Acropolis; and even now there may be
+traced on the frieze the figures of the Persian combatants with
+their lunar shields, their bows and quivers, their curved
+scimetars, their loose trowsers, and Phrygian tiaras.
+[Wordsworth's "Greece," p. 115.]
+
+These and other memorials of Marathon were the produce of the
+meridian age of Athenian intellectual splendour--of the age of
+Phidias and Pericles. For it was not merely by the generation of
+men whom the battle liberated from Hippias and the Medes, that
+the transcendent importance of their victory was gratefully
+recognised. Through the whole epoch of her prosperity, through
+the long Olympiads of her decay, through centuries after her
+fall, Athens looked back on the day of Marathon as the brightest
+of her national existence.
+
+By a natural blending of patriotic pride with grateful piety, the
+very spirits of the Athenians who fell at Marathon were deified
+by their countrymen. The inhabitants of the districts of
+Marathon paid religious rites to them; and orators solemnly
+invoked them in their most impassioned adjurations before the
+assembled men of Athens. "Nothing was omitted that could keep
+alive the remembrance of a deed which had first taught the
+Athenian people to know its own strength, by measuring it with
+the power which had subdued the greater part of the known world.
+The consciousness thus awakened fixed its character, its station,
+and its destiny; it was the spring of its later great actions and
+ambitious enterprises. [Thirlwall.]
+
+It was not indeed by one defeat, however signal, that the pride
+of Persia could be broken, and her dreams of universal empire be
+dispelled. Ten years afterwards she renewed her attempts upon
+Europe on a grander scale of enterprise, and was repulsed by
+Greece with greater and reiterated loss. Larger forces and
+heavier slaughter than had been seen at Marathon signalised the
+conflicts of Greeks and Persians at Artemisium, Salamis, Plataea,
+and the Eurymedon. But mighty and momentous as these battles
+were, they rank not with Marathon in importance. They originated
+no new impulse. They turned back no current of fate. They were
+merely confirmatory of the already existing bias which Marathon
+had created. The day of Marathon is the critical epoch in the
+history of the two nations. It broke for ever the spell of
+Persian invincibility, which had paralysed men's minds. It
+generated among the Greeks the spirit which beat back Xerxes, and
+afterwards led on Xenophon, Agesilaus, and Alexander, in terrible
+retaliation, through their Asiatic campaigns. It secured for
+mankind the intellectual treasures of Athens, the growth of free
+institutions the liberal enlightenment of the Western world, and
+the gradual ascendency for many ages of the great principles of
+European civilisation.
+
+
+EXPLANATORY REMARKS ON SOME OF THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE BATTLE OF
+MARATHON.
+
+Nothing is said by Herodotus of the Persian cavalry taking any
+part in the battle, although he mentions that Hippias recommended
+the Persians to land at Marathon, because the plain was
+favourable for cavalry evolutions. In the life of Miltiades,
+which is usually cited as the production of Cornelius Nepos, but
+which I believe to be of no authority whatever, it is said that
+Miltiades protected his flanks from the enemy's horse by an
+abattis of felled trees. While he was on the high ground he
+would not have required this defence; and it is not likely that
+the Persians would have allowed him to erect it on the plain.
+
+Bishop Thirlwall calls our attention to a passage in Suidas,
+where the proverb KHORIS HIPPEIS is said to have originated from
+some Ionian Greeks, who were serving compulsorily in the army of
+Datis, contriving to inform Miltiades that the Persian cavalry
+had gone away, whereupon Miltiades immediately joined battle and
+gained the victory. There may probably be a gleam of truth in
+this legend. If Datis's cavalry was numerous, as the abundant
+pastures of Euboea were close at hand, the Persian general, when
+he thought, from the inaction of his enemy, that they did not
+mean to come down from the heights and give battle, might
+naturally send the larger part of his horse back across the
+channel to the neighbourhood of Eretria, where he had already
+left a detachment, and where his military stores must have been
+deposited. The knowledge of such a movement would of course
+confirm Miltiades in his resolution to bring on a speedy
+engagement.
+
+But, in truth, whatever amount of cavalry we suppose Datis to
+have had with him on the day of Marathon, their inaction in the
+battle is intelligible, if we believe the attack of the Athenian
+spearmen to have been as sudden as it was rapid. The Persian
+horse-soldier, on an alarm being given, had to take the shackles
+off his horse, to strap the saddle on, and bridle him, besides
+equipping himself (see Xenoph. Anab. lib.iii c.4); and when each
+individual horseman was ready, the line had to be formed; and the
+time that it takes to form the Oriental cavalry in line for a
+charge, has, in all ages, been observed by Europeans.
+
+The wet state of the marshes at each end of the plain, in the
+time of year when the battle was fought, has been adverted to by
+Mr Wordsworth; and this would hinder the Persian general from
+arranging and employing his horsemen on his extreme wings, while
+it also enabled the Greeks, as they came forward, to occupy the
+whole breadth of the practicable ground with an unbroken line of
+levelled spears, against which, if any Persian horse advanced
+they would be driven back in confusion upon their own foot.
+
+Even numerous and fully-arrayed bodies of cavalry have been
+repeatedly broken, both in ancient and modern warfare, by
+resolute charges of infantry. For instance, it was by an attack
+of some picked cohorts that Caesar routed the Pompeian cavalry,
+which had previously defeated his own at Pharsalia.
+
+I have represented the battle of Marathon as beginning in the
+afternoon, and ending towards evening. If it had lasted all day,
+Herodotus would have probably mentioned that fact. That it ended
+towards evening is, I think, proved by the line from the "Vespae"
+which I have already quoted, and to which my attention was called
+by Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton's account of the battle. I think
+that the succeeding lines in Aristophanes, also already quoted,
+justify the description which I have given of the rear-ranks of
+the Persians keeping up a flight of arrows over the heads of
+their comrades against the Greeks.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF MARATHON, B.C. 490, AND
+THE DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE, B.C. 413.
+
+B.C. 490 to 487. All Asia is filled with the preparations made
+by King Darius for a new expedition against Greece. Themistocles
+persuades the Athenians to leave off dividing the proceeds of
+their silver mines among themselves, and to employ the money in
+strengthening their navy.
+
+487. Egypt revolts from the Persians, and delays the expedition
+against Greece.
+
+485. Darius dies, and Xerxes his son becomes King of Persia in
+his stead.
+
+484 The Persians recover Egypt.
+
+480 Xerxes invades Greece. Indecisive actions between the
+Persian and Greek fleets at Artemisium. Destruction of the three
+hundred Spartans at Thermopyae. The Athenians abandon Attica and
+go on shipboard. Great naval victory of the Greeks at Salamis.
+Xerxes returns to Asia, leaving a chosen army under Mardonius, to
+carry on the war against the Greeks.
+
+478. Mardonius and his army destroyed by the Greeks at Plataea
+The Greeks land in Asia Minor, and defeat a Persian force at
+Mycale. In this and the following years the Persians lose all
+their conquests in Europe, and many on the coast of Asia.
+
+477. Many of the Greek maritime states take Athens as their
+leader, instead of Sparta.
+
+466. Victories of Cimon over the Persians at the Eurymedon.
+
+464. Revolt of the Helots against Sparta. Third Messenian war.
+
+460. Egypt again revolts against Persia. The Athenians send a
+powerful armament to aid the Egyptians, which, after gaining some
+successes, is destroyed, and Egypt submits. This war lasted six
+years.
+
+457. Wars in Greece between the Athenian and several
+Peloponnesian states. Immense exertions of Athens at this time.
+"There is an original inscription still preserved in the Louvre,
+which attests the energies of Athens at this crisis, when Athens,
+like England in modern wars, at once sought conquests abroad, and
+repelled enemies at home. At the period we now advert to (B.C.
+457), an Athenian armament of two hundred galleys was engaged in
+a bold though unsuccessful expedition against Egypt. The
+Athenian crews had landed, had won a battle; they had then re-
+embarked and sailed up the Nile, and were busily besieging the
+Persian garrison in Memphis. As the complement of a trireme
+galley was at least two hundred men, we cannot estimate the
+forces then employed by Athens against Egypt at less than forty
+thousand men. At the same time she kept squadrons on the coasts
+of Phoenicia and Cyprus, and yet maintained a home-fleet that
+enabled her to defeat her Peloponnesian enemies at Cecryphalae
+and AEgina, capturing in the last engagement seventy galleys.
+This last fact may give us some idea of the strength of the
+Athenian home-fleet that gained the victory; and by adopting the
+same ratio of multiplying whatever number of galleys we suppose
+to have been employed, by two hundred, so as to gain the
+aggregate number of the crews, we may form some estimate of the
+forces which this little, Greek state then kept on foot. Between
+sixty and seventy thousand men must have served in her fleets
+during that year. Her tenacity of purpose was equal to her
+boldness of enterprise. Sooner than yield or withdraw from any
+of their expeditions the Athenians at this very time, when
+Corinth sent an army to attack their garrison at Megara, did not
+recall a single crew or a single soldier from AEgina or from
+abroad; but the lads and old men, who had been left to guard the
+city, fought and won a battle against these new assailants. The
+inscription which we have referred to is graven on a votive
+tablet to the memory of the dead, erected in that year by the
+Erecthean tribe, one of the ten into which the Athenians were
+divided. It shows, as Thirlwall has remarked, "that the
+Athenians were conscious of the greatness of their own effort;"
+and in it this little civic community of the ancient world still
+"records to us with emphatic simplicity, that 'its slain fell in
+Cyprus, in Egypt, in Phoenicia, at Haliae, in AEgina, and in
+Megara, IN THE SAME YEAR.'" [Paeans of the Athenian Navy.]
+
+455. A thirty years' truce concluded between Athens and
+Lacedaemon.
+
+440. The Samians endeavour to throw off the supremacy of Athens.
+Samos completely reduced to subjection. Pericles is now sole
+director of the Athenian councils.
+
+431. Commencement of the great Peloponnesian war, in which
+Sparta, at the head of nearly all the Peloponnesian states, and
+aided by the Boeotians and some of the other Greeks beyond the
+Isthmus, endeavours to reduce the power of Athens, and to restore
+independence to the Greek maritime states who were the subject
+allies of Athens. At the commencement of the war the
+Peloponnesian armies repeatedly invade and ravage Attica, but
+Athens herself is impregnable, and her fleets secure her the
+dominion of the sea.
+
+430. Athens visited by a pestilence, which sweeps off large
+numbers of her population.
+
+426. The Athenians gain great advantages over the Spartans at
+Sphacteria, and by occupying Cythera; but they suffer a severe
+defeat in Boeotia, and the Spartan general Brasidas, leads an
+expedition to the Thracian coasts, and conquers many of the most
+valuable Athenian possessions in those regions.
+
+421. Nominal truce for thirty years between Athens and Sparta,
+but hostilities continue on the Thracian coast and in other
+quarters.
+
+415. The Athenians send an expedition to conquer Sicily.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT SYRACUSE, B.C.413.
+
+"The Romans knew not, and could not know, how deeply the
+greatness of their own posterity, and the fate of the whole
+Western world, were involved in the destruction of the fleet of
+Athens in the harbour of Syracuse. Had that great expedition
+proved victorious, the energies of Greece during the next
+eventful century would have found their field in the West no less
+than in the East; Greece, and not Rome, might have conquered
+Carthage; Greek instead of Latin might have been at this day the
+principal element of the language of Spain, of France, and of
+Italy; and the laws of Athens, rather than of Rome, might be the
+foundation of the law of the civilized world."--ARNOLD. "The
+great expedition to Sicily, one of the most decisive events in
+the history of the world."--NIEBUHR.
+
+Few cities have undergone more memorable sieges during ancient
+and mediaeval times, than has the city of Syracuse. Athenian,
+Carthaginian, Roman, Vandal, Byzantine, Saracen, and Norman, have
+in turns beleaguered her walls; and the resistance which she
+successfully opposed to some of her early assailants was of the
+deepest importance, not only to the fortunes of the generations
+then in being, but to all the subsequent current of human events.
+To adopt the eloquent expressions of Arnold respecting the check
+which she gave to the Carthaginian arms, "Syracuse was a
+breakwater, which God's providence raised up to protect the yet
+immature strength of Rome." And her triumphant repulse of the
+great Athenian expedition against her was of even more wide-
+spread and enduring importance. It forms a decisive epoch in the
+strife for universal empire, in which all the great states of
+antiquity successively engaged and failed.
+
+The present city of Syracuse is a place of little or no military
+strength, as the fire of artillery from the neighbouring heights
+would almost completely command it. But in ancient warfare its
+position, and the care bestowed on its walls, rendered it
+formidably strong against the means of offence which then were
+employed by besieging armies.
+
+The ancient city, in the time of the Peloponnesian war, was
+chiefly built on the knob of land which projects into the sea on
+the eastern coast of Sicily, between two bays; one of which, to
+the north, was called the bay of Thapsus, while the southern one
+formed the great harbour of the city of Syracuse itself. A small
+island, or peninsula (for such it soon was rendered), lies at the
+south-eastern extremity of this knob of land, stretching almost
+entirely across the mouth of the great harbour, and rendering it
+nearly land-locked. This island comprised the original
+settlement of the first Greek colonists from Corinth, who founded
+Syracuse two thousand five hundred years ago; and the modern city
+has shrunk again into these primary limits. But, in the fifth
+century before our era, the growing wealth and population of the
+Syracusans had led them to occupy and include within their city
+walls portion after portion of the mainland lying next to the
+little isle; so that at the time of the Athenian expedition the
+seaward part of the land between the two bays already spoken of
+was built over, and fortified from bay to bay; constituting the
+larger part of Syracuse.
+
+The landward wall, therefore, of the city traversed this knob of
+land, which continues to slope upwards from the sea, and which to
+the west of the old fortifications (that is, towards the interior
+of Sicily) rises rapidly for a mile or two, but diminishes in
+width, and finally terminates in a long narrow ridge, between
+which and Mount Hybla a succession of chasms and uneven low
+ground extend. On each flank of this ridge the descent is steep
+and precipitous from its summits to the strips of level land that
+lie immediately below it, both to the south-west and north-west.
+
+The usual mode of assailing fortified towns in the time of the
+Peloponnesian war, was to build a double wall round them,
+sufficiently strong to check any sally of the garrison from
+within, or any attack of a relieving force from without. The
+interval within the two walls of the circumvallation was roofed
+over, and formed barracks, in which the besiegers posted
+themselves, and awaited the effects of want or treachery among
+the besieged in producing a surrender. And, in every Greek city
+of those days, as in every Italian republic of the middle ages,
+the rage of domestic sedition between aristocrats and democrats
+ran high. Rancorous refugees swarmed in the camp of every
+invading enemy; and every blockaded city was sure to contain
+within its walls a body of intriguing malcontents, who were eager
+to purchase a party-triumph at the expense of a national
+disaster. Famine and faction were the allies on whom besiegers
+relied. The generals of that time trusted to the operation of
+these sure confederates as soon as they could establish a
+complete blockade. They rarely ventured on the attempt to storm
+any fortified post. For the military engines of antiquity were
+feeble in breaching masonry, before the improvements which the
+first Dionysius effected in the mechanics of destruction; and the
+lives of spearmen the boldest and most highly-trained would, of
+course, have been idly spent in charges against unshattered
+walls.
+
+A city built, close to the sea, like Syracuse, was impregnable,
+save by the combined operations of a superior hostile fleet and a
+superior hostile army. And Syracuse, from her size, her
+population, and her military and naval resources, not unnaturally
+thought herself secure from finding in another Greek city a foe
+capable of sending a sufficient armament to menace her with
+capture and subjection. But in the spring of 414 B.C. the
+Athenian navy was mistress of her harbour and the adjacent seas;
+an Athenian army had defeated her troops, and cooped them within
+the town; and from bay to bay a blockading wall was being rapidly
+carried across the strips of level ground and the high ridge
+outside the city (then termed Epipolae), which, if completed,
+would have cut the Syracusans off from all succour from the
+interior of Sicily, and have left them at the mercy of the
+Athenian generals. The besiegers' works were, indeed,
+unfinished; but every day the unfortified interval in their lines
+grew narrower, and with it diminished all apparent hope of safety
+for the beleaguered town.
+
+Athens was now staking the flower of her forces, and the
+accumulated fruits of seventy years of glory, on one bold throw
+for the dominion of the Western world. As Napoleon from Mount
+Coeur de Lion pointed to St. Jean d'Acre, and told his staff that
+the capture of that town would decide his destiny, and would
+change the face of the world; so the Athenian officers, from the
+heights of Epipolae, must have looked on Syracuse, and felt that
+with its fall all the known powers of the earth would fall
+beneath them. They must have felt also that Athens, if repulsed
+there, must pause for ever in her career of conquest, and sink
+from an imperial republic into a ruined and subservient
+community.
+
+At Marathon, the first in date of the Great Battles of the World,
+we beheld Athens struggling for self-preservation against the
+invading armies of the East. At Syracuse she appears as the
+ambitious and oppressive invader of others. In her, as in other
+republics of old and of modern times, the same energy that had
+inspired the most heroic efforts in defence of the national
+independence, soon learned to employ itself in daring and
+unscrupulous schemes of self-aggrandizement at the expense of
+neighbouring nations. In the interval between the Persian and
+Peloponnesian wars she had rapidly grown into a conquering and
+dominant state, the chief of a thousand tributary cities, and the
+mistress of the largest and best-manned navy that the
+Mediterranean had yet beheld. The occupations of her territory
+by Xerxes and Mardonius, in the second Persian war, had forced
+her whole population to become mariners; and the glorious results
+of that struggle confirmed them in their zeal for their country's
+service at sea. The voluntary suffrage of the Greek cities of
+the coasts and islands of the AEgean first placed Athens at the
+head of the confederation formed for the further prosecution of
+the war against Persia. But this titular ascendancy was soon
+converted by her into practical and arbitrary dominion. She
+protected them from piracy and the Persian power, which soon fell
+into decrepitude and decay; but she exacted in return implicit
+obedience to herself. She claimed and enforced a prerogative of
+taxing them at her discretion; and proudly refused to be
+accountable for her mode of expending their supplies.
+Remonstrance against her assessments was treated as factious
+disloyalty; and refusal to pay was promptly punished as revolt.
+Permitting and encouraging her subject allies to furnish all
+their contingents in money, instead of part consisting of ships
+and men, the sovereign republic gained the double object of
+training her own citizens by constant and well-paid service in
+her fleets, and of seeing her confederates lose their skill and
+discipline by inaction, and become more and more passive and
+powerless under her yoke. Their towns were generally dismantled;
+while the imperial city herself was fortified with the greatest
+care and sumptuousness: the accumulated revenues from her
+tributaries serving to strengthen and adorn to the utmost her
+havens, her docks, her arsenals, her theatres, and her shrines;
+and to array her in that plenitude of architectural magnificence,
+the ruins of which still attest the intellectual grandeur of the
+age and people, which produced a Pericles to plan and a Phidias
+to execute.
+
+All republics that acquire supremacy over other nations, rule
+them selfishly and oppressively. There is no exception to this
+in either ancient or modern times. Carthage, Rome, Venice,
+Genoa, Florence, Pisa, Holland, and Republican France, all
+tyrannized over every province and subject state where they
+gained authority. But none of them openly avowed their system of
+doing so upon principle, with the candour which the Athenian
+republicans displayed, when any remonstrance was made against the
+severe exactions which they imposed upon their vassal allies.
+They avowed that their empire was a tyranny, and frankly stated
+that they solely trusted to force and terror to uphold it. They
+appealed to what they called "the eternal law of nature, that the
+weak should be coerced by the strong." [THUC. i. 77.] Sometimes
+they stated, and not without some truth, that the unjust hatred
+of Sparta against themselves forced them to be unjust to others
+in self-defence. To be safe they must be powerful; and to be
+powerful they must plunder and coerce their neighbours. They
+never dreamed of communicating any franchise, or share in office,
+to their dependents; but jealously monopolized every post of
+command, and all political and judicial power; exposing
+themselves to every risk with unflinching gallantry; enduring
+cheerfully the laborious training and severe discipline which
+their sea-service required; venturing readily on every ambitious
+scheme; and never suffering difficulty or disaster to shake their
+tenacity of purpose. Their hope was to acquire unbounded empire
+for their country, and the means of maintaining each of the
+thirty thousand citizens who made up the sovereign republic, in
+exclusive devotion to military occupations, and to those
+brilliant sciences and arts in which Athens already had reached
+the meridian of intellectual splendour.
+
+Her great political, dramatist speaks of the Athenian empire as
+comprehending a thousand states. The language of the stage must
+not be taken too literally; but the number of the dependencies of
+Athens, at the time when the Peloponnesian confederacy attacked
+her, was undoubtedly very great. With a few trifling exceptions,
+all the islands of the AEgean, and all the Greek cities, which in
+that age fringed the coasts of Asia Minor, the Hellespont, and
+Thrace paid tribute to Athens, and implicitly obeyed her orders.
+The AEgean Sea was an Attic lake. Westward of Greece, her
+influence though strong, was not equally predominant. She had
+colonies and allies among the wealthy and populous Greek
+settlements in Sicily and South Italy, but she had no organized
+system of confederates in those regions; and her galleys brought
+her no tribute from the western seas. The extension of her
+empire over Sicily was the favourite project of her ambitious
+orators and generals. While her great statesman Pericles lived,
+his commanding genius kept his countrymen under control and
+forbade them to risk the fortunes of Athens in distant
+enterprises, while they had unsubdued and powerful enemies at
+their own doors. He taught Athens this maxim; but he also taught
+her to know and to use her own strength, and when Pericles had
+departed the bold spirit which he had fostered overleaped the
+salutary limits which he had prescribed. When her bitter
+enemies, the Corinthians, succeeded, in 431 B.C., in inducing
+Sparta to attack her, and a confederacy was formed of five-sixths
+of the continental Greeks, all animated by anxious jealousy and
+bitter hatred of Athens; when armies far superior in numbers and
+equipment to those which had marched against the Persians were
+poured into the Athenian territory, and laid it waste to the city
+walls; the general opinion was that Athens would, in two or three
+years at the farthest, be reduced to submit to the requisitions
+of her invaders. But her strong fortifications, by which she was
+girt and linked to her principal haven, gave her, in those ages,
+almost all the advantages of an insular position. Pericles had
+made her trust to her empire of the seas. Every Athenian in
+those days was a practised seaman. A state indeed whose members,
+of an age fit for service, at no time exceeded thirty thousand,
+and whose territorial extent did not equal half Sussex, could
+only have acquired such a naval dominion as Athens once held, by
+devoting, and zealously training, all its sons to service in its
+fleets. In order to man the numerous galleys which she sent out,
+she necessarily employed also large numbers of hired mariners and
+slaves at the oar; but the staple of her crews was Athenian, and
+all posts of command were held by native citizens. It was by
+reminding them of this, of their long practice in seamanship, and
+the certain superiority which their discipline gave them over the
+enemy's marine, that their great minister mainly encouraged them
+to resist the combined power of Lacedaemon and her allies. He
+taught them that Athens might thus reap the fruit of her zealous
+devotion to maritime affairs ever since the invasion of the
+Medes; "she had not, indeed, perfected herself; but the reward of
+her superior training was the rule of the sea--a mighty dominion,
+for it gave her the rule of much fair land beyond its waves, safe
+from the idle ravages with which the Lacedaemonians might harass
+Attica, but never could subdue Athens." [THUC. lib. i. sec. 144.]
+
+Athens accepted the war with which her enemies threatened her,
+rather than descend from her pride of place. And though the
+awful visitation of the Plague came upon her, and swept away more
+of her citizens than the Dorian spear laid low, she held her own
+gallantly against her foes. If the Peloponnesian armies in
+irresistible strength wasted every spring her corn lands, her
+vineyards, and her olive groves with fire and sword, she
+retaliated on their coasts with her fleets; which, if resisted,
+were only resisted to display the pre-eminent skill and bravery
+of her seamen. Some of her subject-allies revolted, but the
+revolts were in general sternly and promptly quelled. The genius
+of one enemy had, indeed, inflicted blows on her power in Thrace
+which she was unable to remedy; but he fell in battle in the
+tenth year of the war; and with the loss of Brasidas the
+Lacedaemonians seemed to have lost all energy and judgment. Both
+sides at length grew weary of the war; and in 421 B.C. a truce of
+fifty years was concluded, which, though ill kept, and though
+many of the confederates of Sparta refused to recognise it, and
+hostilities still continued in many parts of Greece, protected
+the Athenian territory from the ravages of enemies, and enabled
+Athens to accumulate large sums out of the proceeds of her annual
+revenues. So also, as a few years passed by, the havoc which the
+pestilence and the sword had made in her population was repaired;
+and in 415 B.C. Athens was full of bold and restless spirits, who
+longed for some field of distant enterprise, wherein they might
+signalize themselves, and aggrandize the state; and who looked on
+the alarm of Spartan hostility as a mere old woman's tale. When
+Sparta had wasted their territory she had done her worst; and the
+fact of its always being in her power to do so, seemed a strong
+reason for seeking to increase the transmarine dominion of
+Athens.
+
+The West was now the quarter towards which the thoughts of every
+aspiring Athenian were directed. From the very beginning of the
+war Athens had kept up an interest in Sicily; and her squadrons
+had from time to time appeared on its coasts and taken part in
+the dissensions in which the Sicilian Greeks were universally
+engaged one against the other. There were plausible grounds for
+a direct quarrel, and an open attack by the Athenians upon
+Syracuse.
+
+With the capture of Syracuse all Sicily, it was hoped, would be
+secured. Carthage and Italy were next to be assailed. With
+large levies of Iberian mercenaries she then meant to overwhelm
+her Peloponnesian enemies. The Persian monarchy lay in hopeless
+imbecility, inviting Greek invasion; nor did the known world
+contain the power that seemed capable of checking the growing
+might of Athens, if Syracuse once could be hers.
+
+The national historian of Rome has left us, as an episode of his
+great work, a disquisition on the probable effects that would
+have followed, if Alexander the Great had invaded Italy.
+Posterity has generally regarded that disquisition as proving
+Livy's patriotism more strongly than his impartiality or
+acuteness. Yet, right or wrong, the speculations of the Roman
+writer were directed to the consideration of a very remote
+possibility. To whatever age Alexander's life might have been
+prolonged, the East would have furnished full occupation for his
+martial ambition, as well as for those schemes of commercial
+grandeur and imperial amalgamation of nations, in which the truly
+great qualities of his mind loved to display themselves. With
+his death the dismemberment of his empire among his generals was
+certain, even as the dismemberment of Napoleon's empire among his
+marshals would certainly have ensued, if he had been cut off in
+the zenith of his power. Rome, also, was far weaker when the
+Athenians were in Sicily, than she was a century afterwards, in
+Alexander's time. There can be little doubt but that Rome would
+have been blotted out from the independent powers of the West,
+had she been attacked at the end of the fifth century B.C., by an
+Athenian army, largely aided by Spanish mercenaries, and flushed
+with triumphs over Sicily and Africa; instead of the collision
+between her and Greece having been deferred until the latter had
+sunk into decrepitude, and the Roman Mars had grown into full
+vigour.
+
+The armament which the Athenians equipped against Syracuse was in
+every way worthy of the state which formed such projects of
+universal empire; and it has been truly termed "the noblest that
+ever yet had been sent forth by a free and civilized
+commonwealth." [Arnold's History of Rome.] The fleet consisted
+of one hundred and thirty-four war galleys, with a multitude of
+store ships. A powerful force of the best heavy-armed infantry
+that Athens and her allies could furnish was sent on board,
+together with a smaller number of slingers and bowmen. The
+quality of the forces was even more remarkable than the number.
+The zeal of individuals vied with that of the republic in giving
+every galley the best possible crew, and every troop the most
+perfect accoutrements. And with private as well as public wealth
+eagerly lavished on all that could give splendour as well as
+efficiency to the expedition, the fated fleet began its voyage
+for the Sicilian shores in the summer of 415 B.C.
+
+The Syracusans themselves, at the time of the Peloponnesian war,
+were a bold and turbulent democracy, tyrannizing over the weaker
+Greek cities in Sicily, and trying to gain in that island the
+same arbitrary supremacy which Athens maintained along the
+eastern coast of the Mediterranean. In numbers and in spirit
+they were fully equal to the Athenians, but far inferior to them
+in military and naval discipline. When the probability of an
+Athenian invasion was first publicly discussed at Syracuse, and
+efforts were made by some of the wiser citizens to improve the
+state of the national defences, and prepare for the impending
+danger, the rumours of coming war and the proposals for
+preparation were received by the mass of the Syracusans with
+scornful incredulity. The speech of one of their popular orators
+is preserved to us in Thucydides, [Lib. vi. sec. 36 et seq.,
+Arnold's edition. I have almost literally transcribed some of
+the marginal epitomes of the original speech.] and many of its
+topics might, by a slight alteration of names and details, serve
+admirably for the party among ourselves at present which opposes
+the augmentation of our forces, and derides the idea of our being
+in any peril from the sudden attack of a French expedition. The
+Syracusan orator told his countrymen to dismiss with scorn the
+visionary terrors which a set of designing men among themselves
+strove to excite, in order to get power and influence thrown into
+their own hands. He told them that Athens knew her own interest
+too well to think of wantonly provoking their hostility:--"EVEN
+IF THE ENEMIES WERE TO COME," said he, "SO DISTANT FROM THEIR
+RESOURCES, AND OPPOSED TO SUCH A POWER AS OURS, THEIR DESTRUCTION
+WOULD BE EASY AND INEVITABLE. THEIR SHIPS WILL HAVE ENOUGH TO DO
+TO GET TO OUR ISLAND AT ALL, AND TO CARRY SUCH STORES OF ALL
+SORTS AS WILL BE NEEDED. THEY CANNOT THEREFORE CARRY, BESIDES,
+AN ARMY LARGE ENOUGH TO COPE WITH SUCH A POPULATION AS OURS.
+THEY WILL HAVE NO FORTIFIED PLACE FROM WHICH TO COMMENCE THEIR
+OPERATIONS; BUT MUST REST THEM ON NO BETTER BASE THAN A SET OF
+WRETCHED TENTS, AND SUCH MEANS AS THE NECESSITIES OF THE MOMENT
+WILL ALLOW THEM. BUT IN TRUTH I DO NOT BELIEVE THAT THEY WOULD
+EVEN BE ABLE TO EFFECT A DISEMBARKATION. LET US, THEREFORE, SET
+AT NOUGHT THESE REPORTS AS ALTOGETHER OF HOME MANUFACTURE; AND BE
+SURE THAT IF ANY ENEMY DOES COME, THE STATE WILL KNOW HOW TO
+DEFEND ITSELF IN A MANNER WORTHY OF THE NATIONAL HONOUR."
+
+Such assertions pleased the Syracusan assembly; and their
+counterparts find favour now among some portion of the English
+public. But the invaders of Syracuse came; made good their
+landing in Sicily; and, if they had promptly attacked the city
+itself, instead of wasting nearly a year in desultory operations
+in other parts of the island, the Syracusans must have paid the
+penalty of their self-sufficient carelessness in submission to
+the Athenian yoke. But, of the three generals who led the
+Athenian expedition, two only were men of ability, and one was
+most weak and incompetent. Fortunately for Syracuse, Alcibiades,
+the most skilful of the three, was soon deposed from his command
+by a factious and fanatic vote of his fellow-countrymen, and the
+other competent one, Lamachus, fell early in a skirmish: while,
+more fortunately still for her, the feeble and vacillating Nicias
+remained unrecalled and unhurt, to assume the undivided
+leadership of the Athenian army and fleet, and to mar, by
+alternate over-caution and over-carelessness, every chance of
+success which the early part of the operations offered. Still,
+even under him, the Athenians nearly won the town. They defeated
+the raw levies of the Syracusans, cooped them within the walls,
+and, as before mentioned, almost effected a continuous
+fortification from bay to bay over Epipolae, the completion of
+which would certainly have been followed by capitulation.
+
+Alcibiades, the most complete example of genius without principle
+that history produces, the Bolingbroke of antiquity, but with
+high military talents superadded to diplomatic and oratorical
+powers, on being summoned home from his command in Sicily to take
+his trial before the Athenian tribunal had escaped to Sparta; and
+he exerted himself there with all the selfish rancour of a
+renegade to renew the war with Athens, and to send instant
+assistance to Syracuse.
+
+When we read his words in the pages of Thucydides (who was
+himself an exile from Athens at this period, and may probably
+have been at Sparta, and heard Alcibiades speak), we are at loss
+whether most to admire or abhor his subtile and traitorous
+counsels. After an artful exordium, in which he tried to disarm
+the suspicions which he felt must be entertained of him, and to
+point out to the Spartans how completely his interests and theirs
+were identified, through hatred of the Athenian democracy, he
+thus proceeded:--"Hear me, at any rate, on the matters which
+require your grave attention, and which I, from the personal
+knowledge that I have of them, can and ought to bring before you.
+We Athenians sailed to Sicily with the design of subduing, first
+the Greek cities there, and next those in Italy. Then we
+intended to make an attempt on the dominions of Carthage, and on
+Carthage itself. [Arnold, in his notes on this passage, well
+reminds the reader that Agathocles, with a Greek force far
+inferior to that of the Athenians at this period, did, a century
+afterwards, very nearly conquer Carthage.] If all these projects
+succeeded (nor did we limit ourselves to them in these quarters),
+we intended to increase our fleet with the inexhaustible supplies
+of ship timber which Italy affords, to put in requisition the
+whole military force of the conquered Greek states, and also to
+hire large armies of the barbarians; of the Iberians, and others
+in those regions, who are allowed to make the best possible
+soldiers. [It will be remembered that Spanish infantry were the
+staple of the Carthaginian armies. Doubtless Alcibiades and
+other leading Athenians had made themselves acquainted with the
+Carthaginian system of carrying on war, and meant to adopt it.
+With the marvellous powers which Alcibiades possessed of
+ingratiating himself with men of every class and every nation,
+and his high military genius, he would have been as formidable a
+chief of an army of CONDOTTIERI as Hannibal afterwards was.]
+Then, when we had done all this, we intended to assail
+Peloponnesus with our collected force. Our fleets would blockade
+you by sea, and desolate your coasts; our armies would be landed
+at different points, and assail your cities. Some of these we
+expected to storm and others we meant to take by surrounding them
+with fortified lines. [Alcibiades here alluded to Sparta itself,
+which was unfortified. His Spartan hearers must have glanced
+round them at these words, with mixed alarm and indignation.] We
+thought that it would thus be an easy matter thoroughly to war
+you down; and then we should become the masters of the whole
+Greek race. As for expense, we reckoned that each conquered
+state would give us supplies of money and provisions sufficient
+to pay for its own conquest, and furnish the means for the
+conquest of its neighbours.
+
+"Such are the designs of the present Athenian expedition to
+Sicily, and you have heard them from the lips of the man who, of
+all men living, is most accurately acquainted with them. The
+other Athenian generals, who remain with the expedition, will
+endeavour to carry out these plans. And be sure that without
+your speedy interference they will all be accomplished. The
+Sicilian Greeks are deficient in military training; but still if
+they could be at once brought to combine in an organised
+resistance to Athens, they might even now be saved. But as for
+the Syracusans resisting Athens by themselves, they have already
+with the whole strength of their population fought a battle and
+been beaten; they cannot face the Athenians at sea; and it is
+quite impossible for them to hold out against the force of their
+invaders. And if this city falls into the hands of the
+Athenians, all Sicily is theirs, and presently Italy also: and
+the danger which I warned you of from that quarter will soon fall
+upon yourselves. You must, therefore, in Sicily fight for the
+safety of Peloponnesus. Send some galleys thither instantly.
+Put men on board who can work their own way over, and who, as
+soon as they land, can do duty as regular troops. But above all,
+let one of yourselves, let a man of Sparta, go over to take the
+chief command, to bring into order and effective discipline the
+forces that are in Syracuse, and urge those, who at present hang
+back to come forward and aid the Syracusans. The presence of a
+Spartan general at this crisis will do more to save the city than
+a whole army." [THUC., lib. vi sec. 90,91.] The renegade then
+proceeded to urge on them the necessity of encouraging their
+friends in Sicily, by showing that they themselves were earnest
+in hostility to Athens. He exhorted them not only to march their
+armies into Attica again, but to take up a permanent fortified
+position in the country: and he gave them in detail information
+of all that the Athenians most dreaded, and how his country might
+receive the most distressing and enduring injury at their hands.
+
+The Spartans resolved to act on his advice, and appointed
+Gylippus to the Sicilian command. Gylippus was a man who, to the
+national bravery and military skill of a Spartan, united
+political sagacity that was worthy of his great fellow-countryman
+Brasidas; but his merits were debased by mean and sordid vice;
+and his is one of the cases in which history has been austerely
+just, and where little or no fame has been accorded to the
+successful but venal soldier. But for the purpose for which he
+was required in Sicily, an abler man could not have been found in
+Lacedaemon. His country gave him neither men nor money, but she
+gave him her authority; and the influence of her name and of his
+own talents was speedily seen in the zeal with which the
+Corinthians and other Peloponnesian Greeks began to equip a
+squadron to act under him for the rescue of Sicily. As soon as
+four galleys were ready, he hurried over with them to the
+southern coast of Italy; and there, though he received such evil
+tidings of the state of Syracuse that he abandoned all hope of
+saving that city, he determined to remain on the coast, and do
+what he could in preserving the Italian cities from the
+Athenians.
+
+So nearly, indeed, had Nicias completed his beleaguering lines,
+and so utterly desperate had the state of Syracuse seemingly
+become, that an assembly of the Syracusans was actually convened,
+and they were discussing the terms on which they should offer to
+capitulate, when a galley was seen dashing into the great
+harbour, and making her way towards the town with all the speed
+that her rowers could supply. From her shunning the part of the
+harbour where the Athenian fleet lay, and making straight for the
+Syracusan side, it was clear that she was a friend; the enemy's
+cruisers, careless through confidence of success, made no attempt
+to cut her off; she touched the beach, and a Corinthian captain
+springing on shore from her, was eagerly conducted to the
+assembly of the Syracusan people, just in time to prevent the
+fatal vote being put for a surrender.
+
+Providentially for Syracuse, Gongylus, the commander of the
+galley, had been prevented by an Athenian squadron from following
+Gylippus to South Italy, and he had been obliged to push direct
+for Syracuse from Greece.
+
+The sight of actual succour, and the promise of more, revived the
+drooping spirits of the Syracusans. They felt that they were not
+left desolate to perish; and the tidings that a Spartan was
+coming to command them confirmed their resolution to continue
+their resistance. Gylippus was already near the city. He had
+learned at Locri that the first report which had reached him of
+the state of Syracuse was exaggerated; and that there was an
+unfinished space in the besiegers' lines through which it was
+barely possible to introduce reinforcements into the town.
+Crossing the straits of Messina, which the culpable negligence of
+Nicias had left unguarded, Gylippus landed on the northern coast
+of Sicily, and there began to collect from the Greek cities an
+army, of which the regular troops that he brought from
+Peloponnesus formed the nucleus. Such was the influence of the
+name of Sparta, [The effect of the presence of a Spartan officer
+on the troops of the other Greeks, seems to have been like the
+effect of the presence of an English officer upon native Indian
+troops.] and such were his own abilities and activity, that he
+succeeded in raising a force of about two thousand fully armed
+infantry, with a larger number of irregular troops. Nicias, as
+if infatuated, made no attempt to counteract his operations; nor,
+when Gylippus marched his little army towards Syracuse, did the
+Athenian commander endeavour to check him. The Syracusans
+marched out to meet him: and while the Athenians were solely
+intent on completing their fortifications on the southern side
+towards the harbour, Gylippus turned their position by occupying
+the high ground in the extreme rear of Epipolae. He then marched
+through the unfortified interval of Nicias's lines into the
+besieged town; and, joining his troops with the Syracusan forces,
+after some engagements with varying success, gained the mastery
+over Nicias, drove the Athenians from Epipolae, and hemmed them
+into a disadvantageous position in the low grounds near the great
+harbour.
+
+The attention of all Greece was now fixed on Syracuse; and every
+enemy of Athens felt the importance of the opportunity now
+offered of checking her ambition, and, perhaps, of striking a
+deadly blow at her power. Large reinforcements from Corinth,
+Thebes, and other cities, now reached the Syracusans; while the
+baffled and dispirited Athenian general earnestly besought his
+countrymen to recall him, and represented the further prosecution
+of the siege as hopeless.
+
+But Athens had made it a maxim never to let difficulty or
+disaster drive her back from any enterprise once undertaken, so
+long as she possessed the means of making any effort, however
+desperate, for its accomplishment. With indomitable pertinacity
+she now decreed, instead of recalling her first armament from
+before Syracuse, to send out a second, though her enemies near
+home had now renewed open warfare against her, and by occupying a
+permanent fortification in her territory, had severely distressed
+her population, and were pressing her with almost all the
+hardships of an actual siege. She still was mistress of the sea,
+and she sent forth another fleet of seventy galleys, and another
+army, which seemed to drain the very last reserves of her
+military population, to try if Syracuse could not yet be won, and
+the honour of the Athenian arms be preserved from the stigma of a
+retreat. Hers was, indeed, a spirit that might be broken, but
+never would bend. At the head of this second expedition she
+wisely placed her best general Demosthenes, one of the most
+distinguished officers whom the long Peloponnesian war had
+produced, and who, if he had originally held the Sicilian
+command, would soon have brought Syracuse to submission.
+
+The fame of Demosthenes the general, has been dimmed by the
+superior lustre of his great countryman, Demosthenes the orator.
+When the name of Demosthenes is mentioned, it is the latter alone
+that is thought of. The soldier has found no biographer. Yet
+out of the long list of the great men of the Athenian republic,
+there are few that deserve to stand higher than this brave,
+though finally unsuccessful, leader of her fleets and armies in
+the first half of the Peloponnesian war. In his first campaign
+in AEtolia he had shown some of the rashness of youth, and had
+received a lesson of caution, by which he profited throughout the
+rest of his career, but without losing any of his natural energy
+in enterprise or in execution. He had performed the eminent
+service of rescuing Naupactus from a powerful hostile armament in
+the seventh year of the war; he had then, at the request of the
+Acarnanian republics, taken on himself the office of commander-
+in-chief of all their forces, and at their head he had gained
+some important advantages over the enemies of Athens in Western
+Greece. His most celebrated exploits had been the occupation of
+Pylos on the Messenian coast, the successful defence of that
+place against the fleet and armies of Lacedaemon, and the
+subsequent capture of the Spartan forces on the isle of
+Sphacteria; which was the severest blow dealt to Sparta
+throughout the war, and which had mainly caused her to humble
+herself to make the truce with Athens. Demosthenes was as
+honourably unknown in the war of party politics at Athens, as he
+was eminent in the war against the foreign enemy. We read of no
+intrigues of his on either the aristocratic or democratic side.
+He was neither in the interest of Nicias, nor of Cleon. His
+private character was free from any of the stains which polluted
+that of Alcibiades. On all these points the silence of the comic
+dramatist is decisive evidence in his favour. He had also the
+moral courage, not always combined with physical of seeking to do
+his duty to his country, irrespectively of any odium that he
+himself might incur, and unhampered by any petty jealousy of
+those who were associated with him in command. There are few men
+named in ancient history, of whom posterity would gladly know
+more, or whom we sympathise with more deeply in the calamities
+that befel them, than Demosthenes, the son of Alcisthenes, who,
+in the spring of the year 413 B.C., left Piraeus at the head of
+the second Athenian expedition against Sicily.
+
+His arrival was critically timed; for Gylippus had encouraged the
+Syracusans to attack the Athenians under Nicias by sea as well as
+by land, and by an able stratagem of Ariston, one of the admirals
+of the Corinthian auxiliary squadron, the Syracusans and their
+confederates had inflicted on the fleet of Nicias the first
+defeat that the Athenian navy had ever sustained from a
+numerically inferior foe. Gylippus was preparing to follow up
+his advantage by fresh attacks on the Athenians on both elements,
+when the arrival of Demosthenes completely changed the aspect of
+affairs, and restored the superiority to the invaders. With
+seventy-three war-galleys in the highest state of efficiency, and
+brilliantly equipped, with a force of five thousand picked men of
+the regular infantry of Athens and her allies, and a still larger
+number of bowmen, javelin-men, and slingers on board, Demosthenes
+rowed round the great harbour with loud cheers and martial music,
+as if in defiance of the Syracusans and their confederates. His
+arrival had indeed changed their newly-born hopes into the
+deepest consternation. The resources of Athens seemed
+inexhaustible, and resistance to her hopeless. They had been
+told that she was reduced to the last extremities, and that her
+territory was occupied by an enemy; and yet, here they saw her,
+as if in prodigality of power, sending forth, to make foreign
+conquests, a second armament, not inferior to that with which
+Nicias had first landed on the Sicilian shores.
+
+With the intuitive decision of a great commander, Demosthenes at
+once saw that the possession of Epipolae was the key to the
+possession of Syracuse, and he resolved to make a prompt and
+vigorous attempt to recover that position, while his force was
+unimpaired, and the consternation which its arrival had produced
+among the besieged remained unabated. The Syracusans and their
+allies had run out an outwork along Epipolae from the city walls,
+intersecting the fortified lines of circumvallation which Nicias
+had commenced, but from which they had been driven by Gylippus.
+Could Demosthenes succeed in storming this outwork, and in re-
+establishing the Athenian troops on the high ground, he might
+fairly hope to be able to resume the circumvallation of the city,
+and become the conqueror of Syracuse: for, when once the
+besiegers' lines were completed, the number of the troops with
+which Gylippus had garrisoned the place would only tend to
+exhaust the stores of provisions, and accelerate its downfall.
+
+An easily-repelled attack was first made on the outwork in the
+day-time, probably more with the view of blinding the besieged to
+the nature of the main operations than with any expectation of
+succeeding in an open assault, with every disadvantage of the
+ground to contend against. But, when the darkness had set in,
+Demosthenes formed his men in columns, each soldier taking with
+him five days' provisions, and the engineers and workmen of the
+camp following the troops with their tools, and all portable
+implements of fortification, so as at once to secure any
+advantage of ground that the army might gain. Thus equipped and
+prepared, he led his men along by the foot of the southern flank
+of Epipolae, in a direction towards the interior of the island,
+till he came immediately below the narrow ridge that forms the
+extremity of the high ground looking westward. He then wheeled
+his vanguard to the right, sent them rapidly up the paths that
+wind along the face of the cliff, and succeeded in completely
+surprising the Syracusan outposts, and in placing his troops
+fairly on the extreme summit of the all-important Epipolae.
+Thence the Athenians marched eagerly down the slope towards the
+town, routing some Syracusan detachments that were quartered in
+their way, and vigorously assailing the unprotected part of the
+outwork. All at first favoured them. The outwork was abandoned
+by its garrison, and the Athenian engineers began to dismantle
+it. In vain Gylippus brought up fresh troops to check the
+assault: the Athenians broke and drove them back, and continued
+to press hotly forward, in the full confidence of victory. But,
+amid the general consternation of the Syracusans and their
+confederates, one body of infantry stood firm. This was a
+brigade of their Boeotian allies, which was posted low down the
+slope of Epipolae, outside the city walls. Coolly and steadily
+the Boeotian infantry formed their line, and, undismayed by the
+current of flight around them, advanced against the advancing
+Athenians. This was the crisis of the battle. But the Athenian
+van was disorganized by its own previous successes; and, yielding
+to the unexpected charge thus made on it by troops in perfect
+order, and of the most obstinate courage, it was driven back in
+confusion upon the other divisions of the army that still
+continued to press forward. When once the tide was thus turned,
+the Syracusans passed rapidly from the extreme of panic to the
+extreme of vengeful daring, and with all their forces they now
+fiercely assailed the embarrassed and receding Athenians. In
+vain did the officers of the latter strive to re-form their line.
+Amid the din and the shouting of the fight, and the confusion
+inseparable upon a night engagement, especially one where many
+thousand combatants were pent and whirled together in a narrow
+and uneven area, the necessary manoeuvres were impracticable; and
+though many companies still fought on desperately, wherever the
+moonlight showed them the semblance of a foe, [THUC. vii. 44.
+Compare Tacitus's description of the night engagement in the
+civil war between Vespasian and Vitellius: "Neutro inclinaverat
+fortuna, donec adulta nocte, LUNA OSTENDERET ACIES, FALERESQUE."
+--Hist. Lib. iii. sec. 23.] they fought without concert or
+subordination; and not unfrequently, amid the deadly chaos,
+Athenian troops assailed each other. Keeping their ranks close,
+the Syracusans and their allies pressed on against the
+disorganized masses of the besiegers; and at length drove them,
+with heavy slaughter, over the cliffs, which, scarce an hour
+before, they had scaled full of hope, and apparently certain of
+success.
+
+This defeat was decisive of the event of the siege. The
+Athenians afterwards struggled only to protect themselves from
+the vengeance which the Syracusans sought to wreak in the
+complete destruction of their invaders. Never, however, was
+vengeance more complete and terrible. A series of sea-fights
+followed, in which the Athenian galleys were utterly destroyed or
+captured. The mariners and soldiers who escaped death in
+disastrous engagements, and in a vain: attempt to force a
+retreat into the interior of the island, became prisoners of war.
+Nicias and Demosthenes were put to death in cold blood; and their
+men either perished miserably in the Syracusan dungeons, or were
+sold into slavery to the very persons whom, in their pride of
+power, they had crossed the seas to enslave.
+
+All danger from Athens to the independent nations of the West was
+now for ever at an end. She, indeed, continued to struggle
+against her combined enemies and revolted allies with
+unparalleled gallantry; and many more years of varying warfare
+passed away before she surrendered to their arms. But no success
+in subsequent conquests could ever have restored her to the pre-
+eminence in enterprise, resources, and maritime skill which she
+had acquired before her fatal reverses in Sicily. Nor among the
+rival Greek republics, whom her own rashness aided to crush her,
+was there any capable of reorganizing her empire, or resuming her
+schemes of conquest. The dominion of Western Europe was left for
+Rome and Carthage to dispute two centuries later, in conflicts
+still more terrible, and with even higher displays of military
+daring and genius, than Athens had witnessed either in her rise,
+her meridian, or her fall.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF THE EVENTS BETWEEN THE DEFEAT OF THE ATHENIANS AT
+SYRACUSE, AND THE BATTLE OF ARBELA.
+
+412 B.C. Many of the subject allies of Athens revolt from her,
+on her disasters before Syracuse being known; the seat of war is
+transferred to the Hellespont and eastern side of the AEgean.
+
+410. The Carthaginians attempt to make conquests in Sicily.
+
+407. Cyrus the Younger is sent by the king of Persia to take the
+government of all the maritime parts of Asia Minor, and with
+orders to help the Lacedaemonian fleet against the Athenian.
+
+406. Agrigentum taken by the Carthaginians.
+
+405. The last Athenian fleet destroyed by Lysander at
+AEgospotamos. Athens closely besieged. Rise of the power of
+Dionysius at Syracuse.
+
+404. Athens surrenders. End of the Peloponnesian war. The
+ascendancy of Sparta complete throughout Greece.
+
+403. Thrasybulus, aided by the Thebans and with the connivance
+of one of the Spartan kings, liberates Athens from the Thirty
+Tyrants, and restores the democracy.
+
+401. Cyrus the Younger commences his expedition into Upper Asia
+to dethrone his brother Artaxerxes Mnemon. He takes with him an
+auxiliary force of ten thousand Greeks. He in killed in battle
+at Cunaxa; and the ten thousand, led by Xenophon, effect their
+retreat in spite of the Persian armies and the natural obstacles
+of their march.
+
+399. In this, and the five following years, the Lacedaemonians
+under Agesilaus and other commanders, carry on war against the
+Persian satraps in Asia Minor.
+
+396. Syracuse is besieged by the Carthaginians, and successfully
+defended by Dionysius.
+
+394. Rome makes her first great stride in the career of conquest
+by the capture of Veii.
+
+393. The Athenian admiral Conon, in conjunction with the Persian
+satrap Pharnabazus, defeats the Lacedaemonian fleet off Cnidus,
+and restores the fortifications of Athens. Several of the former
+allies of Sparta in Greece carry on hostilities against her.
+
+388. The nations of Northern Europe now first appear in
+authentic history. The Gauls overrun great part of Italy, and
+burn Rome. Rome recovers from the blow, but her old enemies, the
+AEquians and Volscians, are left completely crushed by the Gallic
+invaders.
+
+387. The peace of Antalcidas is concluded among the Greeks by
+the mediation, and under the sanction, of the Persian king.
+
+378 to 361. Fresh wars in Greece. Epaminondas raises Thebes to
+be the leading state of Greece, and the supremacy of Sparta is
+destroyed at the battle of Leuctra. Epaminondas is killed in
+gaining the victory of Mantinea, and the power of Thebes falls
+with him. The Athenians attempt a balancing system between
+Sparta and Thebes.
+
+359. Philip becomes king of Macedon.
+
+357. The Social War breaks out in Greece, and lasts three years.
+Its result checks the attempt of Athens to regain her old
+maritime empire.
+
+356. Alexander the Great is born.
+
+343. Rome begins her wars with the Samnites: they extend over a
+period of fifty years. The result of this obstinate contest is
+to secure for her the dominion of Italy.
+
+340. Fresh attempts of the Carthaginians upon Syracuse.
+Timoleon defeats them with great slaughter.
+
+338. Philip defeats the confederate armies of Athens and Thebes
+at Chaeronea, and the Macedonian supremacy over Greece is firmly
+established.
+
+336. Philip is assassinated, and Alexander the Great becomes
+king of Macedon. He gains several victories over the northern
+barbarians who had attacked Macedonia, and destroys Thebes,
+which, in conjunction with Athens, had taken up arms against the
+Macedonians.
+
+334. Alexander passes the Hellespont.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE BATTLE OF ARBELA, B.C. 331.
+
+"Alexander deserves the glory which he has enjoyed for so many
+centuries and among all nations; but what if he had been beaten
+at Arbela having the Euphrates, the Tigris, and the deserts in
+his rear, without any strong places of refuge, nine hundred
+leagues from Macedonia?"--NAPOLEON.
+
+Asia beheld with astonishment and awe the uninterrupted progress
+of a hero, the sweep of whose conquests was as wide and rapid as
+that of her own barbaric kings, or the Scythian or Chaldaean
+hordes; but, far unlike the transient whirlwinds of Asiatic
+warfare, the advance of the Macedonian leader was no less
+deliberate than rapid; at every step the Greek power took root,
+and the language and the civilization of Greece were planted from
+the shores of the AEgean to the banks of the Indus, from the
+Caspian and the great Hyrcanian plain to the cataracts of the
+Nile; to exist actually for nearly a thousand years, and in their
+effects to endure for ever."--ARNOLD.
+
+A long and not uninstructive list might be made out of
+illustrious men, whose characters have been vindicated during
+recent times from aspersions which for centuries had been thrown
+on them. The spirit of modern inquiry, and the tendency of
+modern scholarship, both of which are often said to be solely
+negative and destructive, have, in truth, restored to splendour,
+and almost created anew, far more than they have assailed with
+censure, or dismissed from consideration as unreal. The truth of
+many a brilliant narrative of brilliant exploits has of late
+years been triumphantly demonstrated; and the shallowness of the
+sceptical scoffs with which little minds have carped at the great
+minds of antiquity, has been in many instances decisively
+exposed. The laws, the politics, and the lines of action adopted
+or recommended by eminent men and powerful nations have been
+examined with keener investigation, and considered with more
+comprehensive judgment, than formerly were brought to bear on
+these subjects. The result has been at least as often favourable
+as unfavourable to the persons and the states so scrutinized; and
+many an oft-repeated slander against both measures and men has
+thus been silenced, we may hope, for ever.
+
+The veracity of Herodotus, the pure patriotism of Pericles, of
+Demosthenes, and of the Gracchi, the wisdom of Cleisthenes and of
+Licinius as constitutional reformers, may be mentioned as facts
+which recent writers have cleared from unjust suspicion and
+censure. And it might be easily shown that the defensive
+tendency which distinguishes the present and recent best
+historians of Germany, France, and England, has been equally
+manifested in the spirit in which they have treated the heroes of
+thought and the heroes of action who lived during what we term
+the Middle Ages and whom it was so long the fashion to sneer at
+or neglect.
+
+The name of the victor of Arbela has led to these reflections;
+for, although the rapidity and extent of Alexander's conquests
+have through all ages challenged admiration and amazement, the
+grandeur of genius which he displayed in his schemes of commerce,
+civilization, and of comprehensive union and unity amongst
+nations, has, until lately, been comparatively unhonoured. This
+long-continued depreciation was of early date. The ancient
+rhetoricians--a class of babblers, a school for lies and scandal,
+as Niebuhr justly termed them--chose among the stock themes for
+their commonplaces, the character and exploits of Alexander.
+They had their followers in every age; and until a very recent
+period, all who wished to "point a moral or adorn a tale" about
+unreasoning ambition, extravagant pride, and the formidable
+frenzies of free will when leagued with free power, have never
+failed to blazon forth the so-called madman of Macedonia as one
+of the most glaring examples. Without doubt, many of these
+writers adopted with implicit credence traditional ideas and
+supposed, with uninquiring philanthropy, that in blackening
+Alexander they were doing humanity good service. But also,
+without doubt, many of his assailants, like those of other great
+men, have been mainly instigated by "that strongest of all
+antipathies, the antipathy of a second-rate mind to a first-rate
+one," [De Stael.] and by the envy which talent too often bears
+to genius.
+
+Arrian, who wrote his history of Alexander when Hadrian was
+emperor of the Roman world, and when the spirit of declamation
+and dogmatism was at its full height, but who was himself, unlike
+the dreaming pedants of the schools, a statesman and a soldier of
+practical and proved ability, well rebuked the malevolent
+aspersions which he heard continually thrown upon the memory of
+the great conqueror of the East. He truly says, "Let the man who
+speaks evil of Alexander not merely bring forward those passages
+of Alexander's life which were really evil, but let him collect
+and review all the actions of Alexander, and then let him
+thoroughly consider first who and what manner of man he himself
+is, and what has been his own career; and then let him consider
+who and what manner of man Alexander was, and to what an eminence
+of human grandeur HE arrived. Let him consider that Alexander
+was a king, and the undisputed lord of the two continents; and
+that his name is renowned throughout the whole earth. Let the
+evil-speaker against Alexander bear all this in mind, and then
+let him reflect on his own insignificance, the pettiness of his
+own circumstances and affairs, and the blunders that he makes
+about these, paltry and trifling as they are. Let him then ask
+himself whether he is a fit person to censure and revile such a
+man as Alexander. I believe that there was in his time no nation
+of men, no city, nay, no single individual, with whom Alexander's
+name had not become a familiar word. I therefore hold that such
+a man, who was like no ordinary mortal was not born into the
+world without some special providence." [Arrian, lib. vii. AD
+FINEM.]
+
+And one of the most distinguished soldiers and writers of our own
+nation, Sir Walter Raleigh, though he failed to estimate justly
+the full merits of Alexander, has expressed his sense of the
+grandeur of the part played in the world by "The Great Emathian
+Conqueror" in language that well deserves quotation:--"So much
+hath the spirit of some one man excelled as it hath undertaken
+and effected the alteration of the greatest states and
+commonwealths, the erection of monarchies, the conquest of
+kingdoms and empires, guided handfuls of men against multitudes
+of equal bodily strength, contrived victories beyond all hope and
+discourse of reason, converted the fearful passions of his own
+followers into magnanimity, and the valour of his enemies into
+cowardice; such spirits have been stirred up in sundry ages of
+the world, and in divers parts thereof, to erect and cast down
+again, to establish and to destroy, and to bring all things,
+persons, and states to the same certain ends, which the infinite
+spirit of the UNIVERSAL, piercing, moving, and governing all
+things, hath ordained. Certainly, the things that this king did
+were marvellous, and would hardly have been undertaken by any one
+else: and though his father had determined to have invaded the
+Lesser Asia, it is like that he would have contented himself with
+some part thereof, and not have discovered the river of Indus, as
+this man did." ["The Historie of the World," by Sir Walter
+Raleigh, Knight, p. 628.]
+
+A higher authority than either Arrian or Raleigh may now be
+referred to by those who wish to know the real merit of Alexander
+as a general, and how far the commonplace assertions are true,
+that his successes were the mere results of fortunate rashness
+and unreasoning pugnacity, Napoleon selected Alexander as one of
+the seven greatest generals whose noble deeds history has handed
+down to us, and from the study of whose campaigns the principles
+of war are to be learned. The critique of the greatest conqueror
+of modern times on the military career of the great conqueror of
+the old world, is no less graphic than true.
+
+"Alexander crossed the Dardanelles 334 B.C. with an army of about
+forty thousand men, of which one-eighth was cavalry; he forced
+the passage of the Granicus in opposition to an army under
+Memnon, the Greek, who commanded for Darius on the coast of Asia,
+and he spent the whole of the year 333 in establishing his power
+in Asia Minor. He was seconded by the Greek colonists, who dwelt
+on the borders of the Black Sea, and on the Mediterranean, and in
+Smyrna, Ephesus, Tarsus, Miletus, &c. The kings of Persia left
+their provinces and towns to be governed according to their own
+particular laws. Their empire was a union of confederated
+states, and did not form one nation; this facilitated its
+conquest. As Alexander only wished for the throne of the
+monarch, he easily effected the change, by respecting the
+customs, manners, and laws of the people, who experienced no
+change in their condition.
+
+"In the year 332, he met with Darius at the head of sixty
+thousand men, who had taken up a position near Tarsus, on the
+banks of the Issus, in the province of Cilicia. He defeated him,
+entered Syria, took Damascus, which contained all the riches of
+the Great King, and laid siege to Tyre. This superb metropolis
+of the commerce of the world detained him nine months. He took
+Gaza after a siege of two months; crossed the Desert in seven
+days; entered Pelusium and Memphis, and founded Alexandria. In
+less than two years, after two battles and four or five sieges,
+the coasts of the Black Sea from Phasis to Byzantium, those of
+the Mediterranean as far as Alexandria, all Asia Minor, Syria,
+and Egypt, had submitted to his arms.
+
+"In 331, he repassed the Desert, encamped in Tyre, recrossed
+Syria, entered Damascus, passed the Euphrates and Tigris, and
+defeated Darius on the field of Arbela, when he was at the head
+of a still stronger army than that which he commanded on the
+Issus, and Babylon opened her gates to him. In 330, he overran
+Susa, and took that city, Persepolis, and Pasargada, which
+contained the tomb of Cyrus. In 329, he directed his course
+northward, entered Ecbatana, and extended his conquests to the
+coasts of the Caspian, punished Bessus, the cowardly assassin of
+Darius, penetrated into Scythia, and subdued the Scythians. In
+328, he forced the passage of the Oxus, received sixteen thousand
+recruits from Macedonia, and reduced the neighbouring people to
+subjection. In 327, he crossed the Indus, vanquished Poros in a
+pitched battle, took him prisoner, and treated him as a king. He
+contemplated passing the Ganges, but his army refused. He sailed
+down the Indus, in the year 326, with eight hundred vessels;
+having arrived at the ocean, be sent Nearchus with a fleet to run
+along the coasts of the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf, as far
+as the mouth of the Euphrates. In 325, he took sixty days in
+crossing from Gedrosia, entered Keramania, returned to Pasargada,
+Persepolis, and Susa, and married Statira, the daughter of
+Darius. In 324, he marched once more to the north, passed
+Ecbatana, and terminated his career at Babylon." [See Count
+Montolon's Memoirs of Napoleon.]
+
+The enduring importance of Alexander's conquests is to be
+estimated not by the duration of his own life and empire, or even
+by the duration of the kingdoms which his generals after his
+death formed out of the fragments of that mighty dominion. In
+every region of the world that he traversed, Alexander planted
+Greek settlements, and founded cities, in the populations of
+which the Greek element at once asserted its predominance. Among
+his successors, the Seleucids and the Ptolemies imitated their
+great captain in blending schemes of civilization, of commercial
+intercourse, and of literary and scientific research with all
+their enterprises of military aggrandizement, and with all their
+systems of civil administration. Such was the ascendancy of the
+Greek genius, so wonderfully comprehensive and assimilating was
+the cultivation which it introduced, that, within thirty years
+after Alexander crossed the Hellespont, the language, the
+literature, and the arts of Hellas, enforced and promoted by the
+arms of semi-Hellenic Macedon, predominated in every country from
+the shores of that sea to the Indian waters. Even sullen Egypt
+acknowledged the intellectual supremacy of Greece; and the
+language of Pericles and Plato became the language of the
+statesmen and the sages who dwelt in the mysterious land of the
+Pyramids and the Sphinx. It is not to be supposed that this
+victory of the Greek tongue was so complete as to exterminate the
+Coptic, the Syrian, the Armenian, the Persian, or the other
+native languages of the numerous nations and tribes between the
+AEgean, the Iaxertes, the Indus, and the Nile; they survived as
+provincial dialects. Each probably was in use as the vulgar
+tongue of its own district. But every person with the slightest
+pretence to education spoke Greek. Greek was universally the
+State language, and the exclusive language of all literature and
+science, It formed also for the merchant, the trader, and the
+traveller, as well as for the courtier, the government official,
+and the soldier, the organ of intercommunication among the
+myriads of mankind inhabiting these large portions of the Old
+World. [See Arnold, Hist. Rome, ii. 406.] Throughout Asia
+Minor, Syria, and Egypt, the Hellenic character that was thus
+imparted, remained in full vigour down to the time of the
+Mahometan conquests. The infinite value of this to humanity in
+the highest and holiest point of view has often been pointed out;
+and the workings of the finger of Providence have been gratefully
+recognised by those who have observed how the early growth and
+progress of Christianity were aided by that diffusion of the
+Greek language and civilization throughout Asia Minor, Syria, and
+Egypt which had been caused by the Macedonian conquest of the
+East.
+
+In Upper Asia, beyond the Euphrates, the direct and material
+influence of Greek ascendancy was more short-lived. Yet, during
+the existence of the Hellenic kingdoms in these regions,
+especially of the Greek kingdom of Bactria, the modern Bokhara,
+very important effects were produced on the intellectual
+tendencies and tastes of the inhabitants of those countries and
+of the adjacent ones, by the animating contact of the Grecian
+spirit. Much of Hindoo science and philosophy, much of the
+literature of the later Persian kingdom of the Arsacidae, either
+originated from, or was largely modified by, Grecian influences.
+So, also, the learning and science of the Arabians were in a far
+less degree the result of original invention and genius, than the
+reproduction, in an altered form, of the Greek philosophy and the
+Greek lore, acquired by the Saracenic conquerors together with
+their acquisition of the provinces which Alexander had subjugated
+nearly a thousand years before the armed disciples of Mahomet
+commenced their career in the East. It is well known that
+Western Europe in the Middle ages drew its philosophy, its arts,
+and its science, principally from Arabian teachers. And thus we
+see how the intellectual influence of ancient Greece, poured on
+the Eastern world by Alexander's victories, and then brought back
+to bear on Mediaeval Europe by the spread of the Saracenic
+powers, has exerted its action on the elements of modern
+civilization by this powerful though indirect channel as well as
+by the more obvious effects of the remnants of classic
+civilization which survived in Italy, Gaul, Britain, and Spain,
+after the irruption of the Germanic nations. [See Humboldt's
+Cosmos.]
+
+These considerations invest the Macedonian triumphs in the East
+with never-dying interest, such as the most showy and sanguinary
+successes of mere "low ambition and the pride of kings," however
+they may dazzle for a moment, can never retain with posterity.
+Whether the old Persian empire, which Cyrus founded, could have
+survived much longer than it did, even if Darius had been
+victorious at Arbela, may safely be disputed. That ancient
+dominion, like the Turkish at the present time, laboured under
+every cause of decay and dissolution. The satraps, like the
+modern pachas, continually rebelled against the central power,
+and Egypt, in particular, was almost always in a state of
+insurrection against its nominal sovereign. There was no longer
+any effective central control, or any internal principle of unity
+fused through the huge mass of the empire, and binding it
+together. Persia was evidently about to fall; but, had it not
+been for Alexander's invasion of Asia, she would most probably
+have fallen beneath some other Oriental power, as Media and
+Babylon had formerly fallen before herself, and as, in after
+times, the Parthian supremacy gave way to the revived ascendancy
+of Persia in the East, under the sceptres of the Arsacidae. A
+revolution that merely substituted one Eastern power for another
+would have been utterly barren and unprofitable to mankind.
+
+Alexander's victory at Arbela not only overthrew an Oriental
+dynasty, but established European rulers in its stead. It broke
+the monotony, of the Eastern world by the impression of Western
+energy and superior civilization; even as England's present
+mission is to break up the mental and moral stagnation of India
+and Cathay, by pouring upon and through them the impulsive
+current of Anglo-Saxon commerce and conquest.
+
+Arbela, the city which has furnished its name to the decisive
+battle that gave Asia to Alexander, lies more than twenty miles
+from the actual scene of conflict. The little village then named
+Gaugamela is close to the spot where the armies met, but has
+ceded the honour of naming the battle to its more euphonious
+neighbour. Gaugamela is situate in one of the wide plains that
+lie between the Tigris and the mountains of Kurdistan. A few
+undulating hillocks diversify the surface of this sandy track;
+but the ground is generally level, and admirably qualified for
+the evolutions of cavalry, and also calculated to give the larger
+of two armies the full advantage of numerical superiority. The
+Persian King (who before he came to the throne, had proved his
+personal valour as a soldier, and his skill as a general) had
+wisely selected this region for the third and decisive encounter
+between his forces and the invaders. The previous defeats of his
+troops, however severe they had been, were not looked on as
+irreparable, The Granicus had been fought by his generals rashly
+and without mutual concert. And, though Darius himself had
+commanded and been beaten at Issus, that defeat might be
+attributed to the disadvantageous nature of the ground; where,
+cooped up between the mountains, the river, and the sea, the
+numbers of the Persians confused and clogged alike the general's
+skill and the soldiers' prowess, so that their very strength
+became their weakness. Here, on the broad plains of Kurdistan,
+there was scope for Asia's largest host to array its lines, to
+wheel, to skirmish, to condense or expand its squadrons, to
+manoeuvre, and to charge at will. Should Alexander and his
+scanty band dare to plunge into that living sea of war, their
+destruction seemed inevitable.
+
+Darius felt, however, the critical nature to himself as well as
+to his adversary of the coming encounter. He could not hope to
+retrieve the consequences of a third overthrow. The great cities
+of Mesopotamia and Upper Asia, the central provinces of the
+Persian empire, were certain to be at the mercy of the victor.
+Darius knew also the Asiatic character well enough to be aware
+how it yields to the prestige of success, and the apparent career
+of destiny. He felt that the diadem was now either to be firmly
+replaced on his own brow, or to be irrevocably transferred to the
+head of his European conqueror. He, therefore, during the long
+interval left him after the battle of Issus, while Alexander was
+subjugating Syria and Egypt, assiduously busied himself in
+selecting the best troops which his vast empire supplied, and in
+training his varied forces to act together with some uniformity
+of discipline and system.
+
+The hardy mountaineers of Affghanistan, Bokhara, Khiva, and
+Thibet, were then, as at present, far different from the
+generality of Asiatics in warlike spirit and endurance. From
+these districts Darius collected large bodies of admirable
+infantry; and the countries of the modern Kurds and Turkomans
+supplied, as they do now, squadrons of horsemen, strong, skilful,
+bold, and trained to a life of constant activity and warfare. It
+is not uninteresting to notice that the ancestors of our own late
+enemies, the Sikhs, served as allies of Darius against the
+Macedonians. They are spoken of in Arrian as Indians who dwelt
+near Bactria. They were attached to the troops of that satrapy,
+and their cavalry was one of the most formidable forces in the
+whole Persian army.
+
+Besides these picked troops, contingents also came in from the
+numerous other provinces that yet obeyed the Great King.
+Altogether, the horse are said to have been forty thousand, the
+scythe-bearing chariots two hundred, and the armed elephants
+fifteen in number. The amount of the infantry is uncertain; but
+the knowledge which both ancient and modern times supply of the
+usual character of Oriental armies, and of their populations of
+camp-followers, may warrant us in believing that many myriads
+were prepared to fight, or to encumber those who fought, for the
+last Darius.
+
+The position of the Persian king near Mesopotamia was chosen with
+great military skill. It was certain that Alexander on his
+return from Egypt must march northward along the Syrian coast,
+before he attacked the central provinces of the Persian empire.
+A direct eastward march from the lower part of Palestine across
+the great Syrian Desert was then, as now, utterly impracticable.
+Marching eastward from Syria, Alexander would, on crossing the
+Euphrates, arrive at the vast Mesopotamian plains. The wealthy
+capitals of the empire, Babylon, Susa, and Persepolis, would then
+lie to his south; and if he marched down through Mesopotamia to
+attack them, Darius might reasonably hope to follow the
+Macedonians with his immense force of cavalry, and, without even
+risking a pitched battle, to harass and finally overwhelm them.
+We may remember that three centuries afterwards a Roman army
+under Crassus was thus actually destroyed by the Oriental archers
+and horsemen in these very plains; [See Mitford.] and that the
+ancestors of the Parthians who thus vanquished the Roman legions,
+served by thousands under King Darius. If, on the contrary,
+Alexander should defer his march against Babylon, and first seek
+an encounter with the Persian army, the country on each side of
+the Tigris in this latitude was highly advantageous for such an
+army as Darius commanded; and he had close in his rear the
+mountainous districts of Northern Media, where he himself had in
+early life been satrap, where he had acquired reputation as a
+soldier and a general, and where he justly expected to find
+loyalty to his person, and a safe refuge in case of defeat.
+[Mitford's remarks on the strategy of Darius in his last campaign
+are very just. After having been unduly admired as an historian,
+Mitford is now unduly neglected. His partiality, and his
+deficiency in scholarship, have been exposed sufficiently to make
+him no longer a dangerous guide as to Greek polities; while the
+clearness and brilliancy of his narrative, and the strong common
+sense of his remarks (where his party prejudices do not
+interfere) must always make his volumes valuable as well as
+entertaining.]
+
+His great antagonist came on across the Euphrates against him, at
+the head of an army which Arrian, copying from the journals of
+Macedonian officers, states to have consisted of forty thousand
+foot, and seven thousand horse. In studying the campaigns of
+Alexander, we possess the peculiar advantage of deriving our
+information from two of Alexander's generals of division, who
+bore an important part in all his enterprises. Aristobulus and
+Ptolemy (who afterwards became king of Egypt) kept regular
+journals of the military events which they witnessed; and these
+journals were in the possession of Arrian, when he drew up his
+history of Alexander's expedition. The high character of Arrian
+for integrity makes us confident that he used them fairly, and
+his comments on the occasional discrepancies between the two
+Macedonian narratives prove that he used them sensibly. He
+frequently quotes the very words of his authorities: and his
+history thus acquires a charm such as very few ancient or modern
+military narratives possess. The anecdotes and expressions which
+he records we fairly believe to be genuine, and not to be the
+coinage of a rhetorician, like those in Curtius. In fact, in
+reading Arrian, we read General Aristobulus and General Ptolemy
+on the campaigns of the Macedonians; and it is like reading
+General Jomini or General Foy on the campaigns of the French.
+
+The estimate which we find in Arrian of the strength of
+Alexander's army, seems reasonable when we take into account both
+the losses which he had sustained, and the reinforcements which
+he had received since he left Europe. Indeed, to Englishmen, who
+know with what mere handfuls of men our own generals have, at
+Plassy, at Assaye, at Meeanee, and other Indian battles, routed
+large hosts of Asiatics, the disparity of numbers that we read of
+in the victories won by the Macedonians over the Persians
+presents nothing incredible. The army which Alexander now led
+was wholly composed of veteran troops in the highest possible
+state of equipment and discipline, enthusiastically devoted to
+their leader, and full of confidence in his military genius and
+his victorious destiny.
+
+The celebrated Macedonian phalanx formed the main strength of his
+infantry. This force had been raised and organized by his father
+Philip, who on his accession to the Macedonian throne needed a
+numerous and quickly-formed army, and who, by lengthening the
+spear of the ordinary Greek phalanx, and increasing the depth of
+the files, brought the tactic of armed masses to the greatest
+efficiency of which it was capable with such materials as he
+possessed. [See Niebuhr's Hist. of Rome, iii. 488.] He formed
+his men sixteen deep, and placed in their grasp the SARISSA, as
+the Macedonian pike was called, which was four-and-twenty feet in
+length, and when couched for action, reached eighteen feet in
+front of the soldier: so that, as a space of about two feet was
+allowed between the ranks, the spears of the five files behind
+him projected in advance of each front-rank man. The phalangite
+soldier was fully equipped in the defensive armour of the regular
+Greek infantry. And thus the phalanx presented a ponderous and
+bristling mass, which as long as its order was kept compact, was
+sure to bear down all opposition. The defects of such an
+organization are obvious, and were proved in after years, when
+the Macedonians were opposed to the Roman legions. But it is
+clear that, under Alexander, the phalanx was not the cumbrous
+unwieldy body which it was at Cynoscephalae and Pydna. His men
+were veterans; and he could obtain from them an accuracy of
+movement and steadiness of evolution, such as probably the
+recruits of his father would only have floundered in attempting,
+and such as certainly were impracticable in the phalanx when
+handled by his successors: especially as under them it ceased to
+be a standing force, and became only a militia. [See Niebuhr.]
+Under Alexander the phalanx consisted of an aggregate of
+eighteen thousand men, who were divided into six brigades of
+three thousand each. These were again subdivided into regiments
+and companies; and the men were carefully trained to wheel, to
+face about, to take more ground, or to close up, as the
+emergencies of the battle required. Alexander also arrayed in
+the intervals of the regiments of his phalangites, troops armed
+in a different manner, which could prevent their line from being
+pierced, and their companies taken in flank, when the nature of
+the ground prevented a close formation; and which could be
+withdrawn, when a favourable opportunity arrived for closing up
+the phalanx or any of its brigades for a charge, or when it was
+necessary to prepare to receive cavalry.
+
+Besides the phalanx, Alexander had a considerable force of
+infantry who were called shield-bearers: they were not so
+heavily armed as the phalangites, or as was the case with the
+Greek regular infantry in general; but they were equipped for
+close fight, as well as for skirmishing, and were far superior to
+the ordinary irregular troops of Greek warfare. They were about
+six thousand strong. Besides these, he had several bodies of
+Greek regular infantry; and he had archers, slingers, and
+javelin-men, who fought also with broadsword and target. These
+were principally supplied to him by the highlanders of Illyria
+and Thracia. The main strength of his cavalry consisted in two
+chosen corps of cuirassiers, one Macedonian, and one Thessalian
+each of which was about fifteen hundred strong. They were
+provided with long lances and heavy swords, and horse as well as
+man was fully equipped with defensive armour. Other regiments of
+regular cavalry were less heavily armed, and there were several
+bodies of light horsemen, whom Alexander's conquests in Egypt and
+Syria had enabled him to mount superbly.
+
+A little before the end of August, Alexander crossed the
+Euphrates at Thapsacus, a small corps of Persian cavalry under
+Mazaeus retiring before him. Alexander was too prudent to march
+down through the Mesopotamian deserts, and continued to advance
+eastward with the intention of passing the Tigris, and then, if
+he was unable to find Darius and bring him to action, of marching
+southward on the left side of that river along the skirts of a
+mountainous district where his men would suffer less from heat
+and thirst, and where provisions would be more abundant.
+
+Darius, finding that his adversary was not to be enticed into the
+march through Mesopotamia against his capital, determined to
+remain on the battle-ground which he had chosen on the left of
+the Tigris; where, if his enemy met a defeat or a check, the
+destruction of the invaders would be certain with two such rivers
+as the Euphrates and the Tigris in their rear. The Persian king
+availed himself to the utmost of every advantage in his power.
+He caused a large space of ground to be carefully levelled for
+the operation of his scythe-armed chariots; and he deposited his
+military stores in the strong town of Arbela, about twenty miles
+in his rear. The rhetoricians of after ages have loved to
+describe Darius Codomannus as a second Xerxes in ostentation and
+imbecility; but a fair examination of his generalship in this his
+last campaign, shows that he was worthy of bearing the same name
+as his great predecessor, the royal son of Hystaspes.
+
+On learning that Darius was with a large army on the left of the
+Tigris, Alexander hurried forward and crossed that river without
+opposition. He was at first unable to procure any certain
+intelligence of the precise position of the enemy, and after
+giving his army a short interval of rest, he marched for four
+days down the left bank of the river. A moralist may pause upon
+the fact, that Alexander must in this march have passed within a
+few miles of the remains of Nineveh, the great, city of the
+primaeval conquerors of the human race. Neither the Macedonian
+king nor any of his followers knew what those vast mounds had
+once been. They had already become nameless masses of grass-
+grown ruins; and it is only within the last few years that the
+intellectual energy of one of our own countrymen has rescued
+Nineveh from its long centuries of oblivion. [See Layard's
+"Nineveh," and also Vaux's "Nineveh and Persepolis," p. 16.]
+
+On the fourth day of Alexander's southward march, his advanced
+guard reported that a body of the enemy's cavalry was in sight.
+He instantly formed his army in order for battle, and directing
+them to advance steadily, he rode forward at the head of some
+squadrons of cavalry, and charged the Persian horse whom he found
+before him. This was a mere reconnoitring party, and they broke
+and fled immediately; but the Macedonians made some prisoners,
+and from them Alexander found that Darius was posted only a few
+miles off and learned the strength of the army that he had with
+him. On receiving this news, Alexander halted, and gave his men
+repose for four days, so that they should go into action fresh
+and vigorous. He also fortified his camp, and deposited in it
+all his military stores, and all his sick and disabled soldiers;
+intending to advance upon the enemy with the serviceable part of
+his army perfectly unencumbered. After this halt, he moved
+forward, while it was yet dark, with the intention of reaching
+the enemy, and attacking them at break of day. About half-way
+between the camps there were some undulations of the ground,
+which concealed the two armies from each other's view. But, on
+Alexander arriving at their summit, he saw by the early light the
+Persian host arrayed before him; and he probably also observed
+traces of some engineering operation having been carried on along
+part of the ground in front of them. Not knowing that these
+marks had been caused by the Persians having levelled the ground
+for the free use of their war-chariots, Alexander suspected that
+hidden pitfalls had been prepared with a view of disordering the
+approach of his cavalry. He summoned a council of war forthwith,
+some of the officers were for attacking instantly at all hazards,
+but the more prudent opinion of Parmenio prevailed, and it was
+determined not to advance farther till the battle-ground had been
+carefully surveyed.
+
+Alexander halted his army on the heights; and taking with him
+some light-armed infantry and some cavalry, he passed part of the
+day in reconnoitring the enemy, and observing the nature of the
+ground which he had to fight on. Darius wisely refrained from
+moving from his position to attack the Macedonians on eminences
+which they occupied, and the two armies remained until night
+without molesting each other. On Alexander's return to his head-
+quarters, he summoned his generals and superior officers
+together, and telling them that he well knew that THEIR zeal
+wanted no exhortation, he besought them to do their utmost in
+encouraging and instructing those whom each commanded, to do
+their best in the next day's battle. They were to remind them
+that they were now not going to fight for a province, as they had
+hitherto fought, but they were about to decide by their swords
+the dominion of all Asia. Each officer ought to impress this
+upon his subalterns and they should urge it on their men. Their
+natural courage required no long words to excite its ardour: but
+they should be reminded of the paramount importance of steadiness
+in action. The silence in the ranks must be unbroken as long as
+silence was proper; but when the time came for the charge, the
+shout and the cheer must be full of terror for the foe. The
+officers were to be alert in receiving and communicating orders;
+and every one was to act as if he felt that the whole result of
+the battle depended on his own single good conduct.
+
+Having thus briefly instructed his generals, Alexander ordered
+that the army should sup, and take their rest for the night.
+
+Darkness had closed over the tents of the Macedonians, when
+Alexander's veteran general, Parmenio, came to him, and proposed
+that they should make a night attack on the Persians. The King
+is said to have answered, that he scorned to such a victory, and
+that Alexander must conquer openly and fairly. Arrian justly
+remarks that Alexander's resolution was as wise as it was
+spirited. Besides the confusion and uncertainty which are
+inseparable from night engagements, the value of Alexander's
+victory would have been impaired, if gained under circumstances
+which might supply the enemy with any excuse for his defeat, and
+encourage him to renew the contest. It was necessary for
+Alexander not only to beat Darius, but to gain such a victory as
+should leave his rival without apology for defeat, and without
+hope of recovery.
+
+The Persians, in fact, expected, and were prepared to meet a
+night attack. Such was the apprehension that Darius entertained
+of it, that he formed his troops at evening in order of battle,
+and kept them under arms all night. The effect of this was, that
+the morning found them jaded and dispirited, while it brought
+their adversaries all fresh and vigorous against them.
+
+The written order of battle which Darius himself caused to he
+drawn up, fell into the hands of the Macedonians after the
+engagement, and Aristobulus copied it into his journal. We thus
+possess, through Arrian, unusually authentic information as to
+the composition and arrangement of the Persian army. On the
+extreme left were the Bactrian, Daan, and Arachosian cavalry.
+Next to these Darius placed the troops from Persia proper, both
+horse and foot. Then came the Susians, and next to these the
+Cadusians. These forces made up the left wing. Darius's own
+station was in the centre. This was composed of the Indians, the
+Carians, the Mardian archers, and the division of Persians who
+were distinguished by the golden apples that formed knobs of
+their spears. Here also were stationed the body-guard of the
+Persian nobility. Besides these, there were in the centre,
+formed in deep order, the Uxian and Babylonian troops, and the
+soldiers from the Red Sea. The brigade of Greek mercenaries,
+whom Darius had in his service, and who were alone considered fit
+to stand in the charge of the Macedonian phalanx, was drawn up on
+either side of the royal chariot. The right wing was composed of
+the Coelosyrians and Mesopotamians, the Medes, the Parthians, the
+Sacians, the Tapurians, Hyrcanians, Albanians, and Sacesinae. In
+advance of the line on the left wing were placed the Scythian
+cavalry, with a thousand of the Bactrian horse, and a hundred
+scythe-armed chariots. The elephants and fifty scythe-armed
+chariots were ranged in front of the centre; and fifty more
+chariots, with the Armenian and Cappadocian cavalry, were drawn
+up in advance of the right wing.
+
+Thus arrayed, the great host of King Darius passed the night,
+that to many thousands of them was the last of their existence.
+The morning of the first of October, two thousand one hundred and
+eighty-two years ago, dawned slowly to their wearied watching,
+and they could hear the note of the Macedonian trumpet sounding
+to arms, and could see King Alexander's forces descend from their
+tents on the heights, and form in order of battle on the plain.
+[See Clinton's "Fasti Hellenici." The battle was fought eleven
+days after an eclipse of the moon, which gives the means of
+fixing the precise date.]
+
+There was deep need of skill, as well as of valour, on
+Alexander's side; and few battle-fields have witnessed more
+consummate generalship than was now displayed by the Macedonian
+king. There were no natural barriers by which he could protect
+his flanks; and not only was he certain to be overlapped on
+either wing by the vast lines of the Persian army, but there was
+imminent risk of their circling round him and charging him in the
+rear, while he advanced against their centre. He formed,
+therefore, a second or reserve line, which was to wheel round, if
+required, or to detach troops to either flank; as the enemy's
+movements might necessitate: and thus, with their whole army
+ready at any moment to be thrown into one vast hollow square, the
+Macedonians advanced in two lines against the enemy, Alexander
+himself leading on the right wing, and the renowned phalanx
+forming the centre, while Parmenio commanded on the left.
+
+Such was the general nature of the disposition which Alexander
+made of his army. But we have in Arrian the details of the
+position of each brigade and regiment; and as we know that these
+details were taken from the journals of Macedonian generals, it
+is interesting to examine them, and to read the names and
+stations of King Alexander's generals and colonels in this the
+greatest of his battles.
+
+The eight troops of the royal horse-guards formed the right of
+Alexander's line. Their captains were Cleitus (whose regiment
+was on the extreme right, the post of peculiar danger), Graucias,
+Ariston, Sopolis, Heracleides, Demetrias, Meleager, and
+Hegelochus. Philotas was general of the whole division. Then
+came the shield-bearing infantry: Nicanor was their general.
+Then came the phalanx, in six brigades. Coenus's brigade was on
+the right, and nearest to the shield-bearers; next to this stood
+the brigade of Perdiccas, then Meleager's, then Polysperchon's;
+and then the brigade of Amynias, but which was now commanded by
+Simmias, as Amynias had been sent to Macedonia to levy recruits.
+Then came the infantry of the left wing, under the command of
+Craterus. Next to Craterus's infantry were placed the cavalry
+regiments of the allies, with Eriguius for their general. The
+Messalian cavalry, commanded by Philippus, were next, and held
+the extreme left of the whole army. The whole left wing was
+entrusted to the command of Parmenio, who had round his person
+the Pharsalian troop of cavalry, which was the strongest and best
+amid all the Thessalian horse-regiments.
+
+The centre of the second line was occupied by a body of
+phalangite infantry, formed of companies, which were drafted for
+this purpose from each of the brigades of their phalanx. The
+officers in command of this corps were ordered to be ready to
+face about, if the enemy should succeed in gaining the rear of
+the army. On the right of this reserve of infantry, in the
+second line, and behind the royal horse-guards, Alexander placed
+half the Agrian light-armed infantry under Attalus, and with them
+Brison's body of Macedonian archers, and Cleander's regiment of
+foot. He also placed in this part of his army Menidas's squadron
+of cavalry, and Aretes's and Ariston's light horse. Menidas was
+ordered to watch if the enemy's cavalry tried to turn the flank,
+and if they did so, to charge them before they wheeled completely
+round, and so take them in flank themselves. A similar force was
+arranged on the left of the second line for the same purpose, The
+Thracian infantry of Sitalces was placed there, and Coeranus's
+regiment of the cavalry of the Greek allies, and Agathon's troops
+of the Odrysian irregular horse. The extreme left of the second
+line in this quarter was held by Andromachus's cavalry. A
+division of Thracian infantry was left in guard of the camp. In
+advance of the right wing and centre was scattered a number of
+light-armed troops, of javelin-men and bowmen, with the intention
+of warding off the charge of the armed chariots. [Kleber's
+arrangement of his troops at the battle of Heliopolis, where,
+with ten thousand Europeans, he had to encounter eighty thousand
+Asiatics in an open plain, is worth comparing with Alexander's
+tactics at Arbela. See Thiers's "Histoire du Consulat," &c. vol.
+ii. livre v.]
+
+Conspicuous by the brilliancy of his armour, and by the chosen
+band of officers who were round his person, Alexander took his
+own station, as his custom was, in the right wing, at the head of
+his cavalry: and when all the arrangements for the battle were
+complete, and his generals were fully instructed how to act in
+each probable emergency, he began to lead his men towards the
+enemy.
+
+It was ever his custom to expose his life freely in battle, and
+to emulate the personal prowess of his great ancestor, Achilles.
+Perhaps in the bold enterprise of conquering Persia, it was
+politic for Alexander to raise his army's daring to the utmost by
+the example of his own heroic valour: and, in his subsequent
+campaigns, the love of the excitement, of "the rapture of the
+strife," may have made him, like Murat, continue from choice a
+custom which he commenced from duty. But he never suffered the
+ardour of the soldier to make him lose the coolness of the
+general; and at Arbela, in particular, he showed that he could
+act up to his favourite Homeric maxim.
+
+Great reliance had been placed by the Persian king on the effects
+of the scythe-bearing chariots. It was designed to launch these
+against the Macedonian phalanx, and to follow them up by a heavy
+charge of cavalry, which it was hoped would find the ranks of the
+spearmen disordered by the rush of the chariots, and easily
+destroy this most formidable part of Alexander's force. In
+front, therefore, of the Persian centre, where Darius took his
+station, and which it was supposed the phalanx would attack, the
+ground had been carefully levelled and smoothed, so as to allow
+the chariots to charge over it with their full sweep and speed.
+As the Macedonian army approached the Persian, Alexander found
+that the front of his whole line barely equalled the front of the
+Persian centre, so that he was outflanked on his right by the
+entire left; wing of the enemy, and by their entire right wing on
+his left. His tactics were to assail some one point of the
+hostile army, and gain a decisive advantage; while he refused, as
+far as possible, the encounter along the rest of the line. He
+therefore inclined his order of march to the right so as to
+enable his right wing and centre to come into collision with the
+enemy on as favourable terms as possible though the manoeuvre
+might in some respects compromise his left.
+
+The effect of this oblique movement was to bring the phalanx and
+his own wing nearly beyond the limits of the ground which the
+Persians had prepared for the operations of the chariots; and
+Darius, fearing to lose the benefit of this arm against the most
+important parts of the Macedonian force, ordered the Scythian and
+Bactrian cavalry, who were drawn up on his extreme left, to
+charge round upon Alexander's right wing, and check its further
+lateral progress. Against these assailants Alexander sent from
+his second line Menidas's cavalry. As these proved too few to
+make head against the enemy, he ordered Ariston also from the
+second line with his light horse, and Cleander with his foot, in
+support of Menidas. The Bactrians and Scythians now began to
+give way, but Darius reinforced them by the mass of Bactrian
+cavalry from his main line, and an obstinate cavalry fight now
+took place. The Bactrians and Scythians were numerous, and were
+better armed than the horseman under Menidas and Ariston; and the
+loss at first was heaviest on the Macedonian side. But still the
+European cavalry stood the charge of the Asiatics, and at last,
+by their superior discipline, and by acting in squadrons that
+supported each other, instead of fighting in a confused mass like
+the barbarians, the Macedonians broke their adversaries, and
+drove them off the field. [The best explanation of this may be
+found in Napoleon's account of the cavalry fights between the
+French and the Mamelukes:--"Two Mamelukes were able to make head
+against three Frenchmen, because they were better armed, better
+mounted, and better trained; they had two pair of pistols, a
+blunderbuss, a carbine, a helmet with a vizor, and a coat of
+mail; they had several horses, and several attendants on foot.
+One hundred cuirassiers, however were not afraid of one hundred
+Mamelukes; three hundred could beat; an equal number, and one
+thousand could easily put to the rout fifteen hundred, so great
+is the influence of tactics, order, and evolutions! Leclerc and
+Lasalle presented their men to the Mamelukes in several lines.
+When the Arabs were on the point of overwhelming the first, the
+second came to its assistance on the right and left; the
+Mamelukes then halted and wheeled, in order to turn the wings of
+this new line; this moment was always seized upon to charge them,
+and they were uniformly broken."--MONTHOLON'S HISTORY OF THE
+CAPTIVITY OF NAPOLEON, iv. 70.]
+
+Darius, now directed the scythe-armed chariots to be driven
+against Alexander's horse-guards and the phalanx; and these
+formidable vehicles were accordingly sent rattling across the
+plain, against the Macedonian line. When we remember the alarm
+which the war-chariots of the Britons created among Caesar's
+legions, we shall not be prone to deride this arm of ancient
+warfare as always useless. The object of the chariots was to
+create unsteadiness in the ranks against which they were driven,
+and squadrons of cavalry followed close upon them, to profit by
+such disorder. But the Asiatic chariots were rendered
+ineffective at Arbela by the light-armed troops whom Alexander
+had specially appointed for the service, and who, wounding the
+horses and drivers with their missile weapons, and running
+alongside so as to cut the traces or seize the reins, marred the
+intended charge; and the few chariots that reached the phalanx
+passed harmlessly through the intervals which the spearmen opened
+for them, and were easily captured in the rear.
+
+A mass of the Asiatic cavalry was now, for the second time,
+collected against Alexander's extreme right, and moved round it,
+with the view of gaining the flank of his army. At the critical
+moment, Aretes, with his horsemen from Alexander's second line,
+dashed on the Persian squadrons when their own flanks were
+exposed by this evolution. While Alexander thus met and baffled
+all the flanking attacks of the enemy with troops brought up from
+his second line, he kept his own horse-guards and the rest of the
+front line of his wing fresh, and ready to take advantage of the
+first opportunity for striking a decisive blow. This soon came.
+A large body of horse, who were posted on the Persian left wing
+nearest to the centre, quitted their station, and rode off to
+help their comrades in the cavalry fight that still was going on
+at the extreme right of Alexander's wing against the detachments
+from his second line. This made a huge gap in the Persian array,
+and into this space Alexander instantly dashed with his guard;
+and then pressing towards his left, he soon began to make havoc
+in the left flank of the Persian centre. The shield-bearing
+infantry now charged also among the reeling masses of the
+Asiatics; and five of the brigades of the phalanx, with the
+irresistible might of their sarissas, bore down the Greek
+mercenaries of Darius, and dug their way through the Persian
+centre. In the early part of the battle, Darius had showed skill
+and energy; and he now for some time encouraged his men, by voice
+and example, to keep firm. But the lances of Alexander's
+cavalry, and the pikes of the phalanx now gleamed nearer and
+nearer to him. His charioteer was struck down by a javelin at
+his side; and at last Darius's nerve failed him; and, descending
+from his chariot, he mounted on a fleet horse and galloped from
+the plain, regardless of the state of the battle in other parts
+of the field, where matters were going on much more favourably
+for his cause, and where his presence might have done much
+towards gaining a victory.
+
+Alexander's operations with his right and centre had exposed his
+left to an immensely preponderating force of the enemy. Parmenio
+kept out of action as long as possible; but Mazaeus, who
+commanded the Persian right wing, advanced against him,
+completely outflanked him, and pressed him severely with
+reiterated charges by superior numbers. Seeing the distress of
+Parmenio's wing, Simmias, who commanded the sixth brigade of the
+phalanx, which was next to the left wing, did not advance with
+the other brigades in the great charge upon the Persian centre,
+but kept back to cover Parmenio's troops on their right flank; as
+otherwise they would have been completely surrounded and cut off
+from the rest of the Macedonian army. By so doing, Simmias had
+unavoidably opened a gap in the Macedonian left centre; and a
+large column of Indian and Persian horse, from the Persian right
+centre, had galloped forward through this interval, and right
+through the troops of the Macedonian second line. Instead of
+then wheeling round upon Sarmenio, or upon the rear of
+Alexander's conquering wing, the Indian and Persian cavalry rode
+straight on to the Macedonian camp, overpowered the Thracians who
+were left in charge of it, and began to plunder. This was
+stopped by the phalangite troops of the second line, who, after
+the enemy's horsemen had rushed by them, faced about,
+countermarched upon the camp, killed many of the Indians and
+Persians in the act of plundering, and forced the rest to ride
+off again. Just at this crisis, Alexander had been recalled from
+his pursuit of Darius, by tidings of the distress of Parmenio,
+and of his inability to bear up any longer against the hot
+attacks of Mazaeus. Taking his horse-guards with him, Alexander
+rode towards the part of the field where his left wing was
+fighting; but on his way thither he encountered the Persian and
+Indian cavalry, on their return from his camp.
+
+These men now saw that their only chance of safety was to cut
+their way through; and in one huge column they charged
+desperately upon the Macedonians. There was here a close hand-
+to-hand fight, which lasted some time, and sixty of the royal
+horse-guards fell, and three generals, who fought close to
+Alexander's side, were wounded. At length the Macedonian,
+discipline and valour again prevailed, and a large number of the
+Persian and Indian horsemen were cut down; some few only
+succeeded in breaking through and riding away. Relieved of these
+obstinate enemies, Alexander again formed his horse-guards, and
+led them towards Parmenio; but by this time that general also was
+victorious. Probably the news of Darius's flight had reached
+Mazaeus, and had damped the ardour of the Persian right wing;
+while the tidings of their comrades' success must have
+proportionally encouraged the Macedonian forces under Parmenio.
+His Thessalian cavalry particularly distinguished themselves by
+their gallantry and persevering good conduct; and by the time
+that Alexander had ridden up to Parmenio, the whole Persian army
+was in full flight from the field.
+
+It was of the deepest importance to Alexander to secure the
+person of Darius, and he now urged on the pursuit. The river
+Lycus was between the field of battle and the city of Arbela,
+whither the fugitives directed their course, and the passage of
+this river was even more destructive to the Persians than the
+swords and spears of the Macedonians had been in the engagement.
+[I purposely omit any statement of the loss in the battle. There
+is a palpable error of the transcribers in the numbers which we
+find in our present manuscripts of Arrian; and Curtius is of no
+authority.] The narrow bridge was soon choked up by the flying
+thousands who rushed towards it, and vast numbers of the Persians
+threw themselves, or were hurried by others, into the rapid
+stream, and perished in its waters. Darius had crossed it, and
+had ridden on through Arbela without halting. Alexander reached
+that city on the next day, and made himself master of all
+Darius's treasure and stores; but the Persian king unfortunately
+for himself, had fled too fast for his conqueror: he had only
+escaped to perish by the treachery of his Bactrian satrap,
+Bessus.
+
+A few days after the battle Alexander entered Babylon, "the
+oldest seat of earthly empire" then in existence, as its
+acknowledged lord and master. There were yet some campaigns of
+his brief and bright career to be accomplished. Central Asia was
+yet to witness the march of his phalanx. He was yet to effect
+that conquest of Affghanistan in which England since has failed.
+His generalship, as well as his valour, were yet to be signalised
+on the banks of the Hydaspes, and the field of Chillianwallah;
+and he was yet to precede the Queen of England in annexing the
+Punjaub to the dominions of an European sovereign. But the
+crisis of his career was reached; the great object of his mission
+was accomplished; and the ancient Persian empire, which once
+menaced all the nations of the earth with subjection, was
+irreparably crushed, when Alexander had won his crowning victory
+at Arbela.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF ARBELA AND THE BATTLE OF
+THE METAURUS.
+
+B.C. 330. The Lacedaemonians endeavour to create a rising in
+Greece against the Macedonian power; they are defeated by
+Antipater, Alexander's viceroy; and their king, Agis, falls in
+the battle.
+
+330 to 327. Alexander's campaigns in Upper Asia. "Having
+conquered Darius, Alexander pursued his way, encountering
+difficulties which would have appalled almost any other general,
+through Bactriana, and taking Bactra, or Zariaspa, (now Balkh),
+the chief city of that province, where he spent the winter.
+Crossing the Oxus, he advanced in the following spring to
+Marakanda (Samarcand) to replace the loss of horses which he had
+sustained in crossing the Caucasus, to obtain supplies from the
+rich valley of Sogd (the Mahometan Paradise of Mader-al-Nahr),
+and to enforce the submission of Transoxiana. The northern limit
+of his march is probably represented by the modern Uskand, or
+Aderkand, a village on the Iaxartes, near the end of the Ferganah
+district. In Margiana he founded another Alexandria. Returning
+from the north, he led on his army in the hope of conquering
+India, till at length, marching in a line apparently nearly
+parallel with the Kabul river, he arrived at the celebrated rock
+Aornos, the position of which must have been on the right bank of
+the Indus, at some distance from Attock; and it may perhaps be
+represented by the modern Akora"--(VAUX.)
+
+327, 326. Alexander marches through, Affghanistan to the
+Punjaub. He defeats Porus. His troops refuse to march towards
+the Ganges, and he commences the descent of the Indus. On his
+march he attacks and subdues several Indian tribes, among others
+the Malli; in the storming of whose capital (Mooltan), he is
+severely wounded. He directs his admiral, Nearchus, to sail
+round from the Indus to the Persian Gulf; and leads the army back
+across Scinde and Beloochistan.
+
+324. Alexander returns to Babylon. "In the tenth year after he
+had crossed the Hellespont, Alexander, having won his vast
+dominion, entered Babylon; and resting from his career in that
+oldest seat of earthly empire, he steadily surveyed the mass of
+various nations which owned his sovereignty, and revolved in his
+mind the great work of breathing into this huge but inert body
+the living spirit of Greek civilization. In the bloom of
+youthful manhood, at the age of thirty-two, he paused from the
+fiery speed of his earlier course; and for the first time gave
+the nations an opportunity of offering their homage before his
+throne. They came from all the extremities of the earth to
+propitiate his anger, to celebrate his greatness, or to solicit
+his protection. . . . History may allow us to think that
+Alexander and a Roman ambassador did meet at Babylon; that the
+greatest man of the ancient world saw and spoke with a citizen of
+that great nation, which was destined to succeed him in his
+appointed work, and to found a wider and still more enduring
+empire. They met, too, in Babylon, almost beneath the shadow of
+the temple of Bel, perhaps the earliest monument ever raised by
+human pride and power, in a city stricken, as it were, by the
+word of God's heaviest judgment, as the symbol of greatness apart
+from and opposed to goodness."--(ARNOLD.)
+
+323. Alexander dies at Babylon. On his death being known at
+Greece, the Athenians, and others of the southern states, take up
+arms to shake off the domination of Macedon. They are at first
+successful; but the return of some of Alexander's veterans from
+Asia enables Antipater to prevail over them.
+
+317 to 289. Agathocles is tyrant of Syracuse; and carries on
+repeated wars with the Carthaginians; in the course of which
+(311) he invades Africa, and reduces the Carthaginians to great
+distress.
+
+306. After a long series of wars with each other, and after all
+the heirs of Alexander had been murdered, his principal surviving
+generals assume the title of king, each over the provinces which
+he has occupied. The four chief among them were Antigonus,
+Ptolemy, Lysimachus, and Seleucus. Antipater was now dead, but
+his son Cassander succeeded to his power in Macedonia and Greece.
+
+301. Seleucus and Lysimachus defeat Antigonus at Ipsus.
+Antigonus is killed in the battle.
+
+280. Seleucus, the last of Alexander's captains, is
+assassinated. Of all Alexander's successors, Seleucus had formed
+the most powerful empire. He had acquired all the provinces
+between Phrygia and the Indus. He extended his dominion in India
+beyond the limits reached by Alexander. Seleucus had some sparks
+of his great master's genius in promoting civilization and
+commerce, as well as in gaining victories. Under his successors,
+the Seleucidae, this vast empire rapidly diminished; Bactria
+became independent, and a separate dynasty of Greek kings ruled
+there in the year 125, when it was overthrown by the Scythian
+tribes. Parthia threw off its allegiance to the Seleucidae in
+250 B.C., and the powerful Parthian kingdom, which afterwards
+proved so formidable a foe to Rome, absorbed nearly all the
+provinces west of the Euphrates, that had obeyed the first
+Seleucus. Before the battle of Ipsus, Mithridates, a Persian
+prince of the blood-royal of the Achaemenidae, had escaped to
+Pontus, and founded there the kingdom of that name.
+
+Besides the kingdom of Seleucus, which, when limited to Syria,
+Palestine, and parts of Asia Minor, long survived; the most
+important kingdom formed by a general of Alexander was that of
+the Ptolemies in Egypt. The throne of Macedonia was long and
+obstinately contended for by Cassander, Polysperchon, Lysimachus,
+Pyrrhus, Antigonus, and others; but at last was secured by the
+dynasty of Antigonus Gonatas. The old republics of southern
+Greece suffered severely during these tumults, and the only
+Greek states that showed any strength and spirit were the cities
+of the Achaean league, the AEtolians, and the islanders of
+Rhodes.
+
+290. Rome had now thoroughly subdued the Samnites and the
+Etruscans, and had gained numerous victories over the Cisalpine
+Gauls. Wishing to confirm her dominion in Lower Italy, she
+became entangled in a war with Pyrrhus, fourth king of Epirus,
+who was called over by the Tarentines to aid them. Pyrrhus was
+at first victorious, but in the year 275 was defeated by the
+Roman legions in a pitched battle. He returned to Greece,
+remarking, "Rome becomes mistress of all Italy from the Rubicon
+to the Straits of Messina."
+
+264. The first Punic war begins. Its primary cause was the
+desire of both the Romans and the Carthaginians to possess
+themselves of Sicily. The Romans form a fleet, and successfully
+compete with the marine of Carthage. [There is at this present
+moment [written in June, 1851] in the Great Exhibition at Hyde
+Park a model of a piratical galley of Labuan, part of the mast of
+which can be let down on an enemy, and form a bridge for
+boarders. It is worth while to compare this with the account in
+Polybius of the boarding bridges which the Roman admiral Dullius,
+affixed to the masts of his galleys and by means of which he won
+his great victory over the Carthaginian fleet.] During the
+latter half of the war, the military genius of Hamilcar Barca
+sustains the Carthaginian cause in Sicily. At the end of twenty-
+four years, the Carthaginians sue for peace, though their
+aggregate loss in ships and men had been less than that sustained
+by the Romans since the beginning of the war. Sicily becomes a
+Roman province.
+
+240 to 218. The Carthaginian mercenaries who had been brought
+back from Sicily to Africa, mutiny against Carthage, and nearly
+succeed in destroying her. After a sanguinary and desperate
+struggle, Hamilcar Barca crushes them. During this season of
+weakness to Carthage, Rome takes from her the island of Sardinia.
+Hamilcar Barca forms the project of obtaining compensation by
+conquests in Spain, and thus enabling Carthage to renew the
+struggle with Rome. He takes Hannibal (then a child) to Spain
+with him. He and, after his death, his brother, win great part
+of southern Spain to the Carthaginian interest. Hannibal obtains
+the command of the Carthaginian armies in Spain, 221 B.C., being
+then twenty-six years old. He attacks Saguntum, a city on the
+Ebro in alliance with Rome, which is the immediate pretext for
+the second Punic war.
+
+During this interval Rome had to sustain a storm from the north.
+The Cisalpine Gauls, in 226, formed an alliance with one of the
+fiercest tribes of their brethren north of the Alps, and began a
+furious war against the Romans, which lasted six years. The
+Romans gave them several severe defeats, and took from them part
+of their territories near the Po. It was on this occasion that
+the Roman colonies of Cremona and Placentia were founded, the
+latter of which did such essential service to Rome in the second
+Punic war, by the resistance which it made to the army of
+Hasdrubal. A muster-roll was made in this war of the effective
+military force of the Romans themselves, and of those Italian
+states that were subject to them. The return showed a force of
+seven hundred thousand foot, and seventy thousand horse.
+Polybius mentions this muster.
+
+228. Hannibal crosses the Alps and invades Italy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS, B.C. 207.
+
+Quid debeas, 0 Roma, Neronibus,
+Testis Metaurum flumen, et Hasdrubal
+Devictus, et pulcher fugatis
+Ille dies Latio tenebris,
+
+Qui primus alma risit adorea;
+Dirus per urbes Afer ut Italas,
+Ceu flamma per taedas, vel Eurus
+Per Siculas equitavit undas.--HORATIUS, iv. Od. 4.
+
+". . . The consul Nero, who made the unequalled march which
+deceived Hannibal, and defeated Hasdrubal, thereby accomplishing
+an achievement almost unrivalled in military annals. The first
+intelligence of his return, to Hannibal, was the sight of
+Hasdrubal's head thrown into his camp. When Hannibal saw this,
+he exclaimed with a sigh, that 'Rome would now be the mistress of
+the world.' To this victory of Nero's it might be owing that his
+imperial namesake reigned at all. But the infamy of the one has
+eclipsed the glory of the other. When the name of Nero is heard,
+who thinks of the consul! But such are human things."--BYRON.
+
+About midway between Rimini and Ancona a little river falls into
+the Adriatic, after traversing one of those districts of Italy,
+in which a vain attempt has lately been made to revive, after
+long centuries of servitude and shame, the spirit of Italian
+nationality, and the energy of free institutions. That stream is
+still called the Metauro; and wakens by its name recollections of
+the resolute daring of ancient Rome, and of the slaughter that
+stained its current two thousand and sixty-three years ago, when
+the combined consular armies of Livius and Nero encountered and
+crushed near its banks the varied hosts which Hannibal's brother
+was leading from the Pyrenees, the Rhone, the Alps, and the Po,
+to aid the great Carthaginian in his stern struggle to annihilate
+the growing might of the Roman Republic, and make the Punic power
+supreme over all the nations of the world.
+
+The Roman historian, who termed that struggle the most memorable
+of all wars that ever were carried on, [Livy, Lib. xxi. sec. 1.]
+wrote-in no spirit of exaggeration. For it is not in ancient but
+in modern history, that parallels for its incidents and its
+heroes are to be found. The similitude between the contest which
+Rome maintained against Hannibal, and that which England was for
+many years engaged in against Napoleon, has not passed unobserved
+by recent historians. "Twice," says Arnold, [Vol. iii, p. 62.
+See also Alison--PASSIM.] "has there been witnessed the struggle
+of the highest individual genius against the resources and
+institutions of a great nation; and in both cases the nation has
+been victorious. For seventeen years Hannibal strove against
+Rome; for sixteen years Napoleon Bonaparte strove against
+England; the efforts of the first ended in Zama, those of the
+second in Waterloo." One point, however, of the similitude
+between the two wars has scarcely been adequately dwelt on. That
+is, the remarkable parallel between the Roman general who finally
+defeated the great Carthaginian, and the English general who gave
+the last deadly overthrow to the French emperor. Scipio and
+Wellington both held for many years commands of high importance,
+but distant from the main theatres of warfare. The same country
+was the scene of the principal military career of each. It was
+in Spain that Scipio, like Wellington, successively encountered
+and overthrew nearly all the subordinate generals of the enemy,
+before being opposed to the chief champion and conqueror himself.
+Both Scipio and Wellington restored their countrymen's confidence
+in arms, when shaken by a series of reverses. And each of them
+closed a long and perilous war by a complete and overwhelming
+defeat of the chosen leader and the chosen veterans of the foe.
+
+Nor is the parallel between them limited to their, military
+characters and exploits. Scipio, like Wellington, became an
+important leader of the aristocratic party among his countrymen,
+and was exposed to the unmeasured invectives of the violent
+section of his political antagonists. When, early in the last
+reign, an infuriated mob assaulted the Duke of Wellington in the
+streets of the English capital on the anniversary of Waterloo,
+England was even more disgraced by that outrage, than Rome was by
+the factious accusations which demagogues brought against Scipio,
+but which he proudly repelled on the day of trial, by reminding
+the assembled people that it was the anniversary of the battle of
+Zama. Happily, a wiser and a better spirit has now for years
+pervaded all classes of our community; and we shall be spared the
+ignominy of having worked out to the end the parallel of national
+iugratitude. Scipio died a voluntary exile from the malevolent
+turbulence of Rome. Englishmen of all ranks and politics have
+now long united in affectionate admiration of our modern Scipio:
+and even those who have most widely differed from the Duke on
+legislative or administrative questions, forget what they deem
+the political errors of that time-honoured head, while they
+gratefully call to mind the laurels that have wreathed it.
+
+Scipio at Zama trampled in the dust the power of Carthage; but
+that power had been already irreparably shattered in another
+field, where neither Scipio nor Hannibal commanded. When the
+Metaurus witnessed the defeat and death of Hasdrubal, it
+witnessed the ruin of the scheme by which alone Carthage could
+hope to organise decisive success,--the scheme of enveloping Rome
+at once from the north and the south of Italy by chosen armies,
+led by two sons of Hamilcar. [See Arnold, vol. iii, p. 387.]
+That battle was the determining crisis of the contest, not merely
+between Rome and Carthage, but between the two great families of
+the world, which then made Italy the arena of their oft-renewed
+contest for pre-eminence.
+
+The French historian Michelet whose "Histoire Romaine" would have
+been invaluable, if the general industry and accuracy of the
+writer had in any degree equalled his originality and brilliancy,
+eloquently remarks: "It is not without reason that so universal
+and vivid a remembrance of the Punic wars has dwelt in the
+memories of men. They formed no mere struggle to determine the
+lot of two cities or two empires; but it was a strife on the
+event of which depended the fate of two races of mankind, whether
+the dominion of the world should belong to the Indo-Germanic or
+to the Semitic family of nations. Bear in mind, that the first
+of these comprises, besides the Indians and the Persians, the
+Greeks, the Romans, and the Germans. In the other are ranked the
+Jews and the Arabs, the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians. On
+the one side is the genius of heroism, of art, and legislation:
+on the other is the spirit of industry, of commerce, of
+navigation. The two opposite races have everywhere come into
+contact, everywhere into hostility. In the primitive history of
+Persia and Chaldea, the heroes are perpetually engaged in combat
+with their industrious and perfidious, neighbours. The struggle
+is renewed between the Phoenicians and the Greeks on every coast
+of the Mediterranean. The Greek supplants the Phoenician in all
+his factories, all his colonies in the east: soon will the Roman
+come, and do likewise in the west. Alexander did far more
+against Tyre than Salmanasar or Nabuchodonosor had done. Not
+content with crushing her, he took care that she never should
+revive: for he founded Alexandria as her substitute, and changed
+for ever the track of commerce of the world. There remained
+Carthage--the great Carthage, and her mighty empire,--mighty in a
+far different degree than Phoenicia's had been. Rome annihilated
+it. Then occurred that which has no parallel in history,--an
+entire civilisation perished at one blow--vanished, like a
+falling star. The 'Periplus' of Hanno, a few coins, a score of
+lines in Plautus, and, lo, all that remains of the Carthaginian
+world!
+
+"Many generations must needs pass away before the struggle
+between the two races could be renewed; and the Arabs, that
+formidable rear-guard of the Semitic world, dashed forth from
+their deserts. The conflict between the two races then became
+the conflict of two religions. Fortunate was it that those
+daring Saracenic cavaliers encountered in the East the
+impregnable walls of Constantinople, in the West the chivalrous
+valour of Charles Martel and the sword of the Cid. The crusades
+were the natural reprisals for the Arab invasions, and form the
+last epoch of that great struggle between the two principal
+families of the human race."
+
+It is difficult amid the glimmering light supplied by the
+allusions of the classical writers to gain a full idea of the
+character and institutions of Rome's great rival. But we can
+perceive how inferior Carthage was to her competitor in military
+resources; and how far less fitted than Rome she was to become
+the founder of centralized and centralizing dominion, that should
+endure for centuries, and fuse into imperial unity the narrow
+nationalities of the ancient races that dwelt around and near the
+shores of the Mediterranean Sea.
+
+Carthage was originally neither the most ancient nor the most
+powerful of the numerous colonies which the Phoenicians planted
+on the coast of Northern Africa. But her advantageous position,
+the excellence of her constitution (of which, though ill-informed
+as to its details, we know that it commanded the admiration of
+Aristotle), and the commercial and political energy of her
+citizens, gave her the ascendancy over Hippo, Utica, Leptis, and
+her other sister Phoenician cities in those regions; and she
+finally seduced them to a condition of dependency, similar to
+that which the subject allies of Athens occupied relatively to
+that once imperial city. When Tyre and Sidon and the other
+cities of Phoenicia itself sank from independent republics into
+mere vassal states of the great Asiatic monarchies and obeyed by
+turns a Babylonian, a Persian, and a Macedonian master, their
+power and their traffic rapidly declined; and Carthage succeeded
+to the important maritime and commercial character which they had
+previously maintained. The Carthaginians did not seek to compete
+with the Greeks on the north-eastern shores of the Mediterranean,
+or in the three inland seas which are connected with it; but they
+maintained an active intercourse with the Phoenicians, and
+through them with lower and Central Asia; and they, and they
+alone, after the decline and fall of Tyre, navigated the waters
+of the Atlantic. They had the monopoly of all the commerce of
+the world that was carried on beyond the Straits of Gibraltar.
+We have yet extant (in a Greek translation) the narrative of the
+voyage of Hanno, one of their admirals, along the western coast
+of Africa as far as Sierra Leone. And in the Latin poem of
+Festus Avienus, frequent references are made to the records of
+the voyages of another celebrated Carthaginian admiral, Himilco,
+who had explored the north-western coast of Europe. Our own
+islands are mentioned by Himilco as the lands of the Hiberni and
+the Albioni. It is indeed certain that the Carthaginians
+frequented the Cornish coast (as the Phoenicians had done before
+them) for the purpose of procuring tin; and there is every reason
+to believe that they sailed as far as the coasts of the Baltic
+for amber. When it is remembered that the mariner's compass was
+unknown in those ages, the boldness and skill of the seamen of
+Carthage, and the enterprise of her merchants, may be paralleled
+with any achievements that the history of modern navigation and
+commerce can supply.
+
+In their Atlantic voyages along the African shores, the
+Carthaginians followed the double object of trade and
+colonization. The numerous settlements that were planted by them
+along the coast from Morocco to Senegal, provided for the needy
+members of the constantly-increasing population of a great
+commercial capital; and also strengthened the influence which
+Carthage exercised among the tribes of the African coast.
+Besides her fleets, her caravans gave her a large and lucrative
+trade with the native Africans; nor must we limit our belief of
+the extent of the Carthaginian trade with the tribes of Central
+and Western Africa, by the narrowness of the commercial
+intercourse which civilized nations of modern times have been
+able to create in those regions.
+
+Although essentially a mercantile and seafaring people, the
+Carthaginians by no means neglected agriculture. On the
+contrary, the whole of their territory was cultivated like a
+garden. The fertility of the soil repaid the skill and toil
+bestowed on it; and every invader, from Agathocles to Scipio
+AEmilianus, was struck with admiration at the rich pasture-lands
+carefully irrigated, the abundant harvests, the luxuriant
+vineyards, the plantations of fig and olive-trees, the thriving
+villages, the populous towns, and the splendid villas of the
+wealthy Carthaginians, through which his march lay, as long as he
+was on Carthaginian ground.
+
+The Carthaginians abandoned the Aegean and the Pontus to the
+Greeks, but they were by no means disposed to relinquish to those
+rivals the commerce and the dominion of the coasts of the
+Mediterranean westward of Italy. For centuries the Carthaginians
+strove to make themselves masters of the islands that lie between
+Italy and Spain. They acquired the Balearic islands, where the
+principal harbour, Port Mahon, still bears the name of the
+Carthaginian admiral. They succeeded in reducing the greater
+part of Sardinia; but Sicily could never be brought into their
+power. They repeatedly invaded that island, and nearly overran
+it; but the resistance which was opposed to them by the
+Syracusans under Gelon, Dionysius, Timoleon, and Agathocles,
+preserved the island from becoming Punic, though many of its
+cities remained under the Carthaginian rule, until Rome finally
+settled the question to whom Sicily was to belong, by conquering
+it for herself.
+
+With so many elements of success, with almost unbounded wealth
+with commercial and maritime activity, with a fertile territory,
+with a capital city of almost impregnable strength, with a
+constitution that ensured for centuries the blessings of, social
+order, with an aristocracy singularly fertile in men of the
+highest genius, Carthage yet failed signally and calamitously in
+her contest for power with Rome. One of the immediate causes of
+this may seem to have been the want, of firmness among her
+citizens, which made them terminate the first Punic war by
+begging peace, sooner than endure any longer the hardships and
+burdens caused by a state of warfare, although their antagonists
+had suffered far more severely than themselves. Another cause
+was the spirit of faction among their leading men, which
+prevented Hannibal in the second war from being properly
+reinforced and supported. But there were also more general
+causes why Carthage proved inferior to Rome. These were her
+position relatively to the mass of the inhabitants of the country
+which she ruled, and her habit of trusting to mercenary armies in
+her wars.
+
+Our clearest information as to the different races of men in and
+about Carthage is derived from Diodorus Siculus. [Vol. ii. p.
+447, Wesseling's ed.] That historian enumerates four different
+races: first, he mentions the Phoenicians who dwelt in Carthage:
+next, he speaks of the Liby-Phoenicians; these, he tells us,
+dwelt in many of the maritime cities, and were connected by
+intermarriages with the Phoenicians, which was the cause of their
+compound name: thirdly, he mentions the Libyans, the bulk and
+the most ancient part of the population, hating the Carthaginians
+intensely, on account of the oppressiveness of their domination:
+lastly, he names the Numidians, the nomad tribes of the frontier.
+
+It is evident, from this description, that the native Libyans
+were a subject class, without franchise or political rights; and,
+accordingly, we find no instance specified in history of a Libyan
+holding political office or military command. The half-castes,
+the Liby-Phoenicians, seem to have been sometimes sent out as
+colonists; [See the "Periplus" of Hanno.] but it may be
+inferred, from what Diodorus says of their residence, that they
+had not the right of the citizenship of Carthage: and only a
+solitary case occurs of one of this race being entrusted with
+authority, and that, too, not emanating from the home government.
+This is the instance of the officer sent by Hannibal to Sicily,
+after the fall of Syracuse; whom Polybius [Lib. ix. 22.] calls
+Myttinus the Libyan, but whom, from the fuller account in Livy,
+we find to have been a Liby-Phoenician [Lib. xxv. 40.] and it is
+expressly mentioned what indignation was felt by the Carthaginian
+commanders in the island that this half-caste should control
+their operations.
+
+With respect to the composition of their armies, it is observable
+that, though thirsting for extended empire, and though some of
+the leading men became generals of the highest order, the
+Carthaginians, as a people, were anything but personally warlike.
+As long as they could hire mercenaries to fight for them, they
+had little appetite for the irksome training, and they grudged
+the loss of valuable time, which military service would have
+entailed on themselves.
+
+As Michelet remarks, "The life of an industrious merchant, of a
+Carthaginian, was too precious to be risked, as long as it was
+possible to substitute advantageously for it that of a barbarian
+from Spain or Gaul. Carthage knew, and could tell to a drachma,
+what the life of a man of each nation came to. A Greek was worth
+more than a Campanian, a Campanian worth more than a Gaul or a
+Spaniard. When once this tariff of blood was correctly made out,
+Carthage began a war as a mercantile speculation. She tried to
+make conquests in the hope of getting new mines to work, or to
+open fresh markets for her exports. In one venture she could
+afford to spend fifty thousand mercenaries, in another, rather
+more. If the returns were good, there was no regret felt for the
+capital that had been lavished in the investment; more money got
+more men, and all went on well." [Histoire Romaine, vol. ii. p.
+40.]
+
+Armies composed of foreign mercenaries have, in all ages, been as
+formidable to their employers as to the enemy against whom they
+were directed. We know of one occasion (between the first and
+second Punic wars) when Carthage was brought to the very brink of
+destruction by a revolt of her foreign troops. Other mutinies of
+the same kind must from time to time have occurred. Probably one
+of these was the cause of the comparative weakness of Carthage at
+the time of the Athenian expedition against Syracuse; so
+different from the energy with which she attacked Gelon half a
+century earlier, and Dionysius half a century later. And even
+when we consider her armies with reference only to their
+efficiency in warfare, we perceive at once the inferiority of
+such bands of condottieri, brought together without any common
+bond of origin, tactics, or cause, to the legions of Rome, which
+at the time of the Punic wars were raised from the very flower of
+a hardy agricultural population trained in the strictest
+discipline, habituated to victory, and animated by the most
+resolute patriotism. And this shows also the transcendency of
+the genius of Hannibal, which could form such discordant
+materials into a compact organized force, and inspire them with
+the spirit of patient discipline and loyalty to their chief; so
+that they were true to him in his adverse as well as in his
+prosperous fortunes; and throughout the chequered series of his
+campaigns no panic rout ever disgraced a division under his
+command; no mutiny, or even attempt at mutiny, was ever known in
+his camp; and, finally, after fifteen years of Italian warfare,
+his men followed their old leader to Zama, "with no fear and
+little hope;" ["We advanced to Waterloo as the Greeks did to
+Thermopylae; all of us without fear and most of us without
+hope."--SPEECH OF GENERAL FOY.] and there, on that disastrous
+field, stood firm around him, his Old Guard, till Scipio's
+Numidian allies came up on their flank; when at last, surrounded
+and overpowered, the veteran battalions sealed their devotion to
+their general with their blood.
+
+"But if Hannibal's genius may be likened to the Homeric god, who,
+in his hatred to the Trojans, rises from the deep to rally the
+fainting Greeks, and to lead them against the enemy, so the calm
+courage with which Hector met his more than human adversary in
+his country's cause, is no unworthy image of the unyielding
+magnanimity displayed by the aristocracy of Rome. As Hannibal
+utterly eclipses Carthage, so, on the contrary, Fabius,
+Marcellus, Claudius Nero, even Scipio himself, are as nothing
+when compared to the spirit, and wisdom, and power of Rome. The
+senate, which voted its thanks to its political enemy, Varro,
+after his disastrous defeat, 'because he had not despaired of the
+commonwealth,' and which disdained either to solicit, or to
+reprove, or to threaten, or in any way to notice the twelve
+colonies which had refused their customary supplies of men for
+the army, is far more to be honoured than the conqueror of Zama.
+This we should the more carefully bear in mind because our
+tendency is to admire individual greatness far more than
+national; and, as no single Roman will bear comparison to
+Hannibal, we are apt to murmur at the event of the contest, and
+to think that the victory was awarded to the least worthy of the
+combatants. On the contrary, never was the wisdom of God's
+Providence more manifest than in the issue of the struggle
+between Rome and Carthage. It was clearly for the good of man
+kind that Hannibal should be conquered: his triumph would have
+stopped the progress of the world. For great men can only act
+permanently by forming great nations; and no one man, even though
+it were Hannibal himself, can in one generation effect such a
+work. But where the nation has been merely enkindled for a while
+by a great man's spirit, the light passes away with him who
+communicated it; and the nation, when he is gone, is like a dead
+body, to which magic power had, for a moment, given unnatural
+life: when the charm has ceased, the body is cold and stiff as
+before. He who grieves over the battle of Zama should carry on
+his thoughts to a period thirty years later, when Hannibal must,
+in the course of nature, have been dead, and consider how the
+isolated Phoenician city of Carthage was fitted to receive and to
+consolidate the civilization of Greece, or by its laws and
+institutions to bind together barbarians of every race and
+language into an organized empire, and prepare them for becoming,
+when that empire was dissolved, the free members of the
+commonwealth of Christian Europe." [Arnold, vol. iii. p. 61. The
+above is one of the numerous bursts of eloquence that adorn
+Arnold's third volume, and cause such deep regret that that
+volume should have been the last, and its great and good author
+have been cut off with his work thus incomplete.]
+
+It was in the spring of 207 B.C. that Hasdrubal, after skilfully
+disentangling himself from the Roman forces in Spain, and, after
+a march conducted with great judgment and little loss, through
+the interior of Gaul and the passes of the Alps, appeared in the
+country that now is the north of Lombardy, at the head of troops
+which he had partly brought out of Spain, and partly levied among
+the Gauls and Ligurians on his way. At this time Hannibal with
+his unconquered, and seemingly unconquerable army, had been
+eleven years in Italy, executing with strenuous ferocity the vow
+of hatred to Rome which had been sworn by him while yet a child
+at the bidding of his father, Hamilcar; who, as he boasted, had
+trained up his three sons, Hannibal, Hasdrubal, and Mago, Like
+three lion's whelps, to prey upon the Romans. But Hannibal's
+latter campaigns had not been signalised by any such great
+victories as marked the first years of his invasion of Italy.
+The stern spirit of Roman resolution, ever highest in disaster
+and danger, had neither bent nor despaired beneath the merciless
+blows which "the dire African" dealt her in rapid succession at
+Trebia, at Thrasymene, and at Cannae. Her population was thinned
+by repeated slaughter in the field; poverty and actual scarcity
+wore down the survivors, through the fearful ravages which
+Hannibal's cavalry spread through their corn-fields, their
+pasture-lands, and their vineyards; many of her allies went over
+to the invader's side; and new clouds of foreign war threatened
+her from Macedonia and Gaul. But Rome receded not. Rich and
+poor among her citizens vied with each other in devotion to their
+country. The wealthy placed their stores, and all placed their
+lives at the state's disposal. And though Hannibal could not be
+driven out of Italy, though every year brought its sufferings and
+sacrifices, Rome felt that her constancy had not been exerted in
+vain. If she was weakened by the continual strife, so was
+Hannibal also; and it was clear that the unaided resources of his
+army were unequal to the task of her destruction. The single
+deer-hound could not pull down the quarry which he had so
+furiously assailed. Rome not only stood fiercely at bay, but had
+pressed back and gored her antagonist, that still, however,
+watched her in act to spring. She was weary, and bleeding at
+every pore; and there seemed to be little hope of her escape, if
+the other hound of old Hamilcar's race should come up in time to
+aid his brother in the death-grapple.
+
+Hasdrubal had commanded the Carthaginian armies in Spain for some
+time, with varying but generally unpropitious fortune. He had
+not the full authority over the Punic forces in that country
+which his brother and his father had previously exercised. The
+faction at Carthage, which was at feud with his family, succeeded
+in fettering and interfering with his power; and other generals
+were from time to time sent into Spain, whose errors and
+misconduct caused the reverses that Hasdrubal met with. This is
+expressly attested by the Greek historian Polybius, who was the
+intimate friend of the younger Africanus, and drew his
+information respecting the second Punic war from the best
+possible authorities. Livy gives a long narrative of campaigns
+between the Roman commanders in Spain and Hasdrubal, which is so
+palpably deformed by fictions and exaggerations as to be hardly
+deserving of attention. [See the excellent criticisms of Sir
+Walter Raleigh on this, in his "History of the World," book v.
+chap. iii. sec. 11.]
+
+It is clear that in the year 208 B.C., at least, Hasdrubal
+outmanoeuvred Publius Scipio, who held the command of the Roman
+forces in Spain; and whose object was to prevent him from passing
+the Pyrenees and marching upon Italy. Scipio expected that
+Hasdrubal would attempt the nearest route, along the coast of the
+Mediterranean; and he therefore carefully fortified and guarded
+the passes of the eastern Pyrenees. But Hasdrubal passed these
+mountains near their western extremity; and then, with a
+considerable force of Spanish infantry, with a small number of
+African troops, with some elephants and much treasure, he
+marched, not directly towards the coast of the Mediterranean, but
+in a north-eastern line towards the centre of Gaul. He halted
+for the winter in the territory of the Arverni, the modern
+Auvergne; and conciliated or purchased the good-will of the Gauls
+in that region so far, that he not only found friendly winter
+quarters among them, but great numbers of them enlisted under
+him, and on the approach of spring marched with him to invade
+Italy.
+
+By thus entering Gaul at the south-west, and avoiding its
+southern maritime districts, Hasdrubal kept the Romans in
+complete ignorance of his precise operations and movements in
+that country; all that they knew was that Hasdrubal had baffled
+Scipio's attempts to detain him in Spain; that he had crossed the
+Pyrenees with soldiers, elephants, and money, and that he was
+raising fresh forces among the Gauls. The spring was sure to
+bring him into Italy; and then would come the real tempest of the
+war, when from the north and from the south the two Carthaginian
+armies, each under a son of the Thunderbolt, were to gather
+together around the seven hills of Rome. [Hamilcar was surnamed
+Barca, which means the Thunderbolt. Sultan Bajazet had the
+similar surname of Yilderim.]
+
+In this emergency the Romans looked among themselves earnestly
+and anxiously for leaders fit to meet the perils of the coming
+campaign.
+
+The senate recommended the people to elect, as one of their
+consuls, Caius Claudius Nero, a patrician of one of the families
+of the great Claudian house. Nero had served during the
+preceding years of the war, both against Hannibal in Italy, and
+against Hasdrubal in Spain; but it is remarkable that the
+histories, which we possess, record no successes as having been
+achieved by him either before or after his great campaign of the
+Metaurus. It proves much for the sagacity of the leading men of
+the senate, that they recognised in Nero the energy and spirit
+which were required at this crisis, and it is equally creditable
+to the patriotism of the people, that they followed the advice of
+the senate by electing a general who had no showy exploits to
+recommend him to their choice.
+
+It was a matter of greater difficulty to find a second consul;
+the laws required that one consul should be a plebeian; and the
+plebeian nobility had been fearfully thinned by the events of the
+war. While the senators anxiously deliberated among themselves
+what fit colleague for Nero could be nominated at the coming
+comitia, and sorrowfully recalled the names of Marcellus,
+Gracchus, and other plebeian generals who were no more--one
+taciturn and moody old man sat in sullen apathy among the
+conscript fathers. This was Marcus Livius, who had been consul
+in the gear before the beginning of this war, and had then gained
+a victory over the Illyrians. After his consulship he had been
+impeached before the people on a charge of peculation and unfair
+division of the spoils among his soldiers: the verdict was
+unjustly given against him, and the sense of this wrong, and of
+the indignity thus put upon him, had rankled unceasingly in the
+bosom of Livius, so that for eight years after his trial he had
+lived in seclusion at his country seat, taking no part in any
+affairs of state. Latterly the censors had compelled him to come
+to Rome and resume his place in the senate, where he used to sit
+gloomily apart, giving only a silent vote. At last an unjust
+accusation against one of his near kinsmen made him break
+silence; and he harangued the house in words of weight and sense,
+which drew attention to him, and taught the senators that a
+strong spirit dwelt beneath that unimposing exterior. Now, while
+they were debating on what noble of a plebeian house was fit to
+assume the perilous honours of the consulate, some of the elder
+of them looked on Marcus Livius, and remembered that in the very
+last triumph which had been celebrated in the streets of Rome
+this grim old man had sat in the car of victory; and that he had
+offered the last grand thanksgiving sacrifice for the success of
+the Roman arms that had bled before Capitoline Jove. There had
+been no triumphs since Hannibal came into Italy. [Marcellus had
+been only allowed an ovation for the conquest of Syracuse.] The
+Illyrian campaign of Livius was the last that had been so
+honoured; perhaps it might be destined for him now to renew the
+long-interrupted series. The senators resolved that Livius
+should be put in nomination as consul with Nero; the people were
+willing to elect him; the only opposition came from himself. He
+taunted them with their inconsistency is honouring a man they had
+convicted of a base crime. "If I am innocent," said he, "why did
+you place such a stain on me? If I am guilty, why am I more fit
+for a second consulship than I was for my first one?" The other
+senators remonstrated with him urging the example of the great
+Camillus, who, after an unjust condemnation on a similar charge,
+both served and saved his country. At last Livius ceased to
+object; and Caius Claudius Nero and Marcus Livius were chosen
+consuls of Rome.
+
+A quarrel had long existed between the two consuls, and the
+senators strove to effect a reconciliation between them before
+the campaign. Here again Livius for a long time obstinately
+resisted the wish of his fellow-senators. He said it was best
+for the state that he and Nero should continue to hate one
+another. Each would do his duty better, when he knew that he was
+watched by an enemy in the person of his own colleague. At last
+the entreaties of the senators prevailed, and Livius consented to
+forego the feud, and to co-operate with Nero in preparing for the
+coming struggle.
+
+As soon as the winter snows were thawed, Hasdrubal commenced his
+march from Auvergne to the Alps. He experienced none of the
+difficulties which his brother had met with from the mountain
+tribes. Hannibal's army had been the first body of regular
+troops that had ever traversed the regions; and, as wild animals
+assail a traveller, the natives rose against it instinctively, in
+imagined defence of their own habitations, which they supposed to
+be the objects of Carthaginian ambition. But the fame of the
+war, with which Italy had now been convulsed for eleven years,
+had penetrated into the Alpine passes; and the mountaineers
+understood that a mighty city, southward of the Alps, was to be
+attacked by the troops whom they saw marching among them. They
+not only opposed no resistance to the passage of Hasdrubal, but
+many of them, out of the love of enterprise and plunder, or
+allured by the high pay that he offered, took service with him;
+and thus he advanced upon Italy with an army that gathered
+strength at every league. It is said, also, that some of the
+most important engineering works which Hannibal had constructed,
+were found by Hasdrubal still in existence, and materially
+favoured the speed of his advance. He thus emerged into Italy
+from the Alpine valleys much sooner than had been anticipated.
+Many warriors of the Ligurian tribes joined him; and, crossing
+the river Po, he marched down its southern bank to the city of
+Placentia, which he wished to secure as a base for his future
+operations. Placentia resisted him as bravely as it had resisted
+Hannibal eleven years before; and for some time Hasdrubal was
+occupied with a fruitless siege before its walls.
+
+Six armies were levied for the defence of Italy when the long-
+dreaded approach of Hasdrubal was announced. Seventy thousand
+Romans served in the fifteen legions of which, with an equal
+number of Italian allies, those armies and the garrisons were
+composed. Upwards of thirty thousand more Romans were serving in
+Sicily, Sardinia, and Spain. The whole number of Roman citizens
+of an age fit for military duty scarcely exceeded a hundred and
+thirty thousand. The census taken before the war had shown a
+total of two hundred and seventy thousand, which had been
+diminished by more than half during twelve years. These numbers
+are fearfully emphatic of the extremity to which Rome was
+reduced, and of her gigantic efforts in that great agony of her
+fate. Not merely men, but money and military stores, were
+drained to the utmost; and if the armies of that year should be
+swept off by a repetition of the slaughters of Thrasymene and
+Cannae, all felt that Rome would cease to exist. Even if the
+campaign were to be marked by no decisive success on either side,
+her ruin seemed certain. In South Italy Hannibal had either
+detached Rome's allies from her, or had impoverished them by the
+ravages of his army. If Hasdrubal could have done the same in
+Upper Italy; if Etruria, Umbria, and Northern Latium had either
+revolted or been laid waste, Rome must have sunk beneath sheer
+starvation; for the hostile or desolated territory would have
+yielded no supplies of corn for her population; and money, to
+purchase it from abroad, there was none. Instant victory was a
+matter of life and death. Three of her six armies were ordered
+to the north, but the first of these was required to overawe the
+disaffected Etruscans. The second army of the north was pushed
+forward, under Porcius, the praetor, to meet and keep in, check
+the advanced troops of Hasdrubal; while the third, the grand army
+of the north, which was to be under the immediate command of the
+consul Livius, who had the chief command in all North Italy,
+advanced more slowly in its support. There were similarly three
+armies in the south, under the orders of the other consul
+Claudius Nero.
+
+The lot had decided that Livius was to be opposed to Hasdrubal,
+and that Nero should face Hannibal. And "when all was ordered as
+themselves thought best, the two consuls went forth of the city;
+each his several way. The people of Rome were now quite
+otherwise affected, than they had been, when L. AEmilius Paulus
+and C. Tarentius Varro were sent against Hannibal. They did no
+longer take upon them to direct their generals, or bid them
+dispatch, and win the victory betimes; but rather they stood in
+fear, lest all diligence, wisdom, and valour should prove too
+little. For since, few years had passed, wherein some one of
+their generals had not been slain; and since it was manifest,
+that if either of these present consuls were defeated, or put to
+the worst, the two Carthaginians would forthwith join, and make
+short work with the other: it seemed a greater happiness than
+could be expected, that each of them should return home victor;
+and come off with honour from such mighty opposition as he was
+like to find. With extreme difficulty had Rome held up her head
+ever since the battle of Cannae; though it were so, that Hannibal
+alone, with little help from Carthage, had continued the war in
+Italy. But there was now arrived another son of Amilcar; and one
+that, in his present expedition, had seemed a man of more
+sufficiency than Hannibal himself. For, whereas in that long and
+dangerous march through barbarous nations, over great rivers and
+mountains, that were thought unpassable, Hannibal had lost a
+great part of his army; this Asdrubal, in the same places, had
+multiplied his numbers; and gathering the people that he found in
+the way, descended from the Alps like a rolling snow-ball, far
+greater than he came over the Pyrenees at his first setting out
+of Spain. These considerations, and the like, of which fear
+presented many unto them, caused the people of Rome to wait upon
+their consuls out of the town, like a pensive train of mourners;
+thinking upon Marcellus and Crispinus, upon whom, in the like
+sort, they had given attendance the last year, but saw neither of
+them return alive from a less dangerous war. Particularly old Q.
+Fabius gave his accustomed advice to M. Livius, that he should
+abstain from giving or taking battle, until he well understood
+the enemies' condition. But the consul made him a froward
+answer, and said, that he would fight the very first day, for
+that he thought it long till he should either recover his honour
+by victory, or, by seeing the overthrow of his own unjust
+citizens, satisfy himself with the joy of a great, though not an
+honest revenge. But his meaning was better than his words."
+[Sir Walter Raleigh.]
+
+Hannibal at this period occupied with his veteran but much
+reduced forces the extreme south of Italy. It had not been
+expected either by friend or foe, that Hasdrubal would effect his
+passage of the Alps so early in the year as actually occurred.
+And even when Hannibal learned that his brother was in Italy, and
+had advanced as far as Placentia, he was obliged to pause for
+further intelligence, before he himself commenced active
+operations, as he could not tell whether his brother might not be
+invited into Etruria, to aid the party there that was disaffected
+to Rome or whether he would march down by the Adriatic Sea.
+Hannibal led his troops out of their winter quarters in Bruttium,
+and marched northward as far as Canusium. Nero had his head-
+quarters near Venusia, with an army which he had increased to
+forty thousand foot and two thousand five hundred horse, by
+incorporating under his own command some of the legions which had
+been intended to set under other generals in the south. There
+was another Roman army twenty thousand strong, south of Hannibal,
+at Tarentum. The strength of that city secured this Roman force
+from any attack by Hannibal, and it was a serious matter to march
+northward and leave it in his rear, free to act against all his
+depots and allies in the friendly part of Italy, which for the
+last two or three campaigns had served him for a base of his
+operations. Moreover, Nero's army was so strong that Hannibal
+could not concentrate troops enough to assume the offensive
+against it without weakening his garrisons, and relinquishing, at
+least for a time, his grasp upon the southern provinces. To do
+this before he was certainly informed of his brother's operations
+would have been an useless sacrifice; as Nero could retreat
+before him upon the other Roman armies near the capital, and
+Hannibal knew by experience that a mere advance of his army upon
+the walls of Rome would have no effect on the fortunes of the
+war. In the hope, probably, of inducing Nero to follow him, and
+of gaining an opportunity of outmanoeuvring the Roman consul and
+attacking him on his march, Hannibal moved into Lucania, and then
+back into Apulis;--he again marched down into Bruttium, and
+strengthened his army by a levy of recruits in that district.
+Nero followed him, but gave him no chance of assailing him at a
+disadvantage. Some partial encounters seem to have taken place;
+but the consul could not prevent Hannibal's junction with his
+Bruttian levies, nor could Hannibal gain an opportunity of
+surprising and crushing the consul. Hannibal returned to his
+former head-quarters at Canusium, and halted there in expectation
+of further tidings of his brother's movements. Nero also resumed
+his former position in observation of the Carthaginian army.
+
+[The annalists whom Livy copied, spoke of Nero's gaining repeated
+victories over Hannibal, and killing; and taking his men by tens
+of thousands. The falsehood of all this is self-evident. If
+Nero could thus always beat Hannibal, the Romans would not have
+been in such an agony of dread about Hasdrubal, as all writers
+describe. Indeed, we have the express testimony of Polybius that
+such statements as we read in Livy of Marcellus, Nero, and others
+gaining victories over Hannibal in Italy, must be all
+fabrications of Roman vanity. Polybius states (Lib. xv. sec. 16)
+that Hannibal was never defeated before the battle of Zama; and
+in another passage (Book ix. chap, 3) he mentions that after the
+defeats which Hannibal inflicted on the Romans in the early years
+of the war, they no longer dared face his army in a pitched
+battle on a fair field, and yet they resolutely maintained the
+war. He rightly explains this by referring to the superiority of
+Hannibal's cavalry the arm which gained him all his victories.
+By keeping within fortified lines, or close to the sides of the
+mountains when Hannibal approached them, the Romans rendered his
+cavalry ineffective; and a glance at the geography of Italy will
+show how an army can traverse the greater part of that country
+without venturing far from the high grounds.]
+
+Meanwhile, Hasdrubal had raised the siege of Placentia, and was
+advancing towards Ariminum on the Adriatic, and driving before
+him the Roman army under Porcina. Nor when the consul Livius had
+come up, and united the second and third armies of the north,
+could he make head against the invaders. The Romans still fell
+back before Hasdrubal, beyond Ariminum, beyond the Metaurus, and
+as far as the little town of Sena, to the southeast of that
+river. Hasdrubal was not unmindful of the necessity of acting in
+concert with his brother. He sent messengers to Hannibal to
+announce his own line of march and to propose that they should
+unite their armies in South Umbria, and then wheel round against
+Rome. Those messengers traversed the greater part of Italy in
+safety; but, when close to the object of their mission, were
+captured by a Roman detachment; and Hasdrubal's letter, detailing
+his whole plan of the campaign, was laid, not in his brother's
+hands, but in those of the commander of the Roman armies of the
+south. Nero saw at once the full importance of the crisis. The
+two sons of Hamilcar were now within two hundred miles of each
+other, and if Rome were to be saved, the brothers must never meet
+alive. Nero instantly ordered seven thousand picked men, a
+thousand being cavalry, to hold themselves in readiness for a
+secret expedition against one of Hannibal's garrisons; and as
+soon as night had set in, he hurried forward on his bold
+enterprise: but he quickly left the southern road towards
+Lucania, and wheeling round, pressed northward with the utmost
+rapidity towards Picenum. He had, during the preceding
+afternoon, sent messengers to Rome, who were to lay Hasdrubal's
+letters before the senate. There was a law forbidding a consul
+to make war or to march his army beyond the limits of the
+province assigned to him; but in such an emergency Nero did not
+wait for the permission of the senate to execute his project, but
+informed them that he was already on his march to join Livius
+against Hasdrubal. He advised them to send the two legions which
+formed the home garrison, on to Narnia, so as to defend that pass
+of the Flaminian road against Hasdrubal, in case he should march
+upon Rome before the consular armies could attack him. They were
+to supply the place of those two legions at Rome by a levy
+EN MASSE in the city, and by ordering up the reserve legion from
+Capua. These were his communications to the senate. He also
+sent horseman forward along his line of march, with orders to the
+local authorities to bring stores of; provisions and refreshments
+of every kind to the road-side, and to have relays of carriages
+ready for the conveyance of the wearied soldiers. Such were the
+precautions which he took for accelerating his march; and when he
+had advanced some little distance from his camp, he briefly
+informed his soldiers of the real object of their expedition. He
+told them that there never was a design more seemingly audacious,
+and more really safe. He said he was leading them to a certain
+victory, for his colleague had an army large enough to balance
+the enemy already, so that THEIR swords would decisively turn the
+scale. The very rumour that a fresh consul and a fresh army had
+come up, when heard on the battle-field (and he would take care
+that they should not be heard of before they were seen and felt)
+would settle the campaign. They would have all the credit of the
+victory, and of having dealt the final decisive blow, He appealed
+to the enthusiastic reception which they already met with on
+their line of march as a proof and an omen of their good fortune.
+[Livy. lib. xxvii. c. 45.] And, indeed, their whole path was
+amidst the vows and prayers and praises of their countrymen. The
+entire population of the districts through which they passed,
+flocked to the road-side to see and bless the deliverers of their
+country. Food, drink, and refreshments of every kind were
+eagerly pressed on their acceptance. Each peasant thought a
+favour was conferred on him, if one of Nero's chosen band would
+accept aught at his hands. The soldiers caught the full spirit
+of their leader. Night and day they marched forwards, taking
+their hurried meals in the ranks and resting by relays in the
+waggons which the zeal of the country-people provided, and which
+followed in the rear of the column.
+
+Meanwhile, at Rome, the news of Nero's expedition had caused the
+greatest excitement and alarm. All men felt the full audacity of
+the enterprise, but hesitated what epithet to apply to it. It
+was evident that Nero's conduct would be judged of by the event,
+that most unfair criterion, as the Roman historian truly terms
+it. ["Adparebat (quo nihil iniquius est) ex eventu famam
+habiturum."--LIVY, lib. xxvii. c. 44.] People reasoned on the
+perilous state in which Nero had left the rest of his army,
+without a general, and deprived of the core of its strength, in
+the vicinity of the terrible Hannibal. They speculated on how
+long it would take Hannibal to pursue and overtake Nero himself,
+and his expeditionary force. They talked over the former
+disasters of the war, and the fall of both the consuls of the
+last year. All these calamities had come on them while they had
+only one Carthaginian general and army to deal with in Italy.
+Now they had two Punic wars at one time. They had two
+Carthaginian armies; they had almost two Hannibals in Italy,
+Hasdrubal was sprung from the same father; trained up in the same
+hostility to Rome; equally practised in battle against its
+legions; and, if the comparative speed and success with which he
+had crossed the Alps was a fair test, he was even a better
+general than his brother. With fear for their interpreter of
+every rumour, they exaggerated the strength of their enemy's
+forces in every quarter, and criticised and distrusted their own.
+
+Fortunately for Rome, while she was thus a prey to terror and
+anxiety, her consul's nerves were strong, and he resolutely urged
+on his march towards Sena, where his colleague, Livius, and the
+praetor Portius were encamped; Hasdrubal's army being in position
+about half a mile to the north. Nero had sent couriers forward
+to apprise his colleague of his project and of his approach; and
+by the advice of Livius, Nero so timed his final march as to
+reach the camp at Sena by night. According to a previous
+arrangement, Nero's men were received silently into the tents of
+their comrades, each according to his rank. By these means there
+was no enlargement of the camp that could betray to Hasdrubal the
+accession of force which the Romans had received. This was
+considerable; as Nero's numbers had been increased on the march
+by the volunteers, who offered themselves in crowds, and from
+whom he selected the most promising men, and especially the
+veterans of former campaigns. A council of war was held on the
+morning after his arrival, in which some advised that time should
+be given for Nero's men to refresh themselves, after the fatigue
+of such a march. But Nero vehemently opposed all delay. "The
+officer," said he, "who is for giving time for my men here to
+rest themselves, is for giving time to Hannibal to attack my men,
+whom I have left in the camp in Apulia. He is for giving time to
+Hannibal and Hasdrubal to discover my march, and to manoeuvre for
+a junction with each other in Cisalpine Gaul at their leisure.
+We must fight instantly, while both the foe here and the foe in
+the south are ignorant of our movements. We must destroy this
+Hasdrubal, and I must be back In Apulia before Hannibal awakes
+from his torpor." [Livy, lib. xxvii. c. 45.] Nero's advice
+prevailed. It was resolved to fight directly; and before the
+consuls and praetor left the tent of Livius, the red ensign,
+which was the signal to prepare for immediate action, was
+hoisted, and the Romans forthwith drew up in battle array outside
+the camp.
+
+Hasdrubal had been anxious to bring Livius and Porcius to battle,
+though he had not judged it expedient to attack them in their
+lines. And now, on hearing that the Romans offered battle, he
+also drew up his men, and advanced towards them. No spy or
+deserter had informed him of Nero's arrival; nor had he received
+any direct information that he had more than his old enemies to
+deal with. But as he rode forward to reconnoitre the Roman
+lines, he thought that their numbers seemed to have increased,
+and that the armour of some-of them was unusually dull and
+stained. He noticed also that the horses of some of the cavalry
+appeared to be rough and out of condition, as if they had just
+come from a succession of forced marches. So also, though, owing
+to the precaution of Livius, the Roman camp showed no change of
+size, it had not escaped the quick ear of the Carthaginian
+general, that the trumpet, which gave the signal to the Roman
+legions, sounded that morning once oftener than usual, as if
+directing the troops of some additional superior officer.
+Hasdrubal, from his Spanish campaigns, was well acquainted with
+all the sounds and signals of Roman war; and from all that he
+heard and saw, he felt convinced that both the Roman consuls were
+before him. In doubt and difficulty as to what might have taken
+place between the armies of the south, and probably hoping that
+Hannibal also was approaching, Hasdrubal determined to avoid an
+encounter with the combined Roman forces, and to endeavour to
+retreat upon Insubrian Gaul, where he would be in a friendly
+country, and could endeavour to re-open his communications with
+his brother. He therefore led his troops back into their camp;
+and, as the Romans did not venture on an assault upon his
+entrenchments, and Hasdrubal did not choose to commence his
+retreat in their sight, the day passed away in inaction. At the
+first watch of the night, Hasdrubal led his men silently out of
+their camp, and moved northwards towards the Metaurus, in the
+hope of placing that river between himself and the Romans before
+his retreat was discovered. His guides betrayed him; and having
+purposely led him away from the part of the river that was
+fordable, they made their escape in the dark, and left Hasdrubal
+and his army wandering in confusion along the steep bank, and
+seeking in vain for a spot where the stream could be safely
+crossed. At last they halted; and when day dawned on them,
+Hasdrubal found that great numbers of his men, in their fatigue
+and impatience, had lost all discipline and subordination, and
+that many of his Gallic auxiliaries had got drunk, and were lying
+helpless in their quarters. The Roman cavalry was soon seen
+coming up in pursuit, followed at no great distance by the
+legions, which marched in readiness for an instant engagement.
+It was hopeless for Hasdrubal, to think of continuing his retreat
+before them. The prospect of immediate battle might recall the
+disordered part of his troops to a sense of duty, and revive the
+instinct of discipline. He therefore ordered his men to prepare
+for action instantly, and made the best arrangement of them that
+the nature of the ground would permit.
+
+Heeren has well described the general appearance of a
+Carthaginian army. He says: "It was an assemblage of the most
+opposite races of the human species, from the farthest parts of
+the globe. Hordes of half-naked Gauls were ranged next to
+companies of white clothed Iberians, and savage Ligurians next to
+the far-travelled Nasamones and Lotophagi. Carthaginians and
+Phoenici-Africans formed the centre; while innumerable troops of
+Numidian horse-men, taken from all the tribes of the Desert,
+swarmed about on unsaddled horses, and formed the wings; the van
+was composed of Balearic slingers; and a line of colossal
+elephants, with their Ethiopian guides, formed, as it were, a
+chain of moving fortresses before the whole army. Such were the
+usual materials and arrangements of the hosts that fought for
+Carthage; but the troops under Hasdrubal were not in all respects
+thus constituted or thus stationed. He seems to have been
+especially deficient in cavalry, and he had few African troops,
+though some Carthaginians of high rank were with him. His
+veteran Spanish infantry, armed with helmets and shields, and
+short cut-and-thrust swords, were the best part of his army.
+These, and his few Africans, he drew up on his right wing, under
+his own personal command. In the centre, he placed his Ligurian
+infantry, and on the left wing he placed or retained the Gauls,
+who were armed with long javelins and with huge broadswords and
+targets. The rugged nature of the ground in front and on the
+flank of this part of his line, made him hope that the Roman
+right wing would be unable to come to close quarters with these
+unserviceable barbarians, before he could make some impression
+with his Spanish veterans on the Roman left. This was the only
+chance that he had of victory or safety, and he seems to have
+done everything that good generalship could do to secure it. He
+placed his elephants in advance of his centre and right wing. He
+had caused the driver of each of them to be provided with a sharp
+iron spike and a mallet; and had given orders that every beast
+that became unmanageable, and ran back upon his own ranks, should
+be instantly killed, by driving the spike into the vertebra at
+the junction of the head and the spine. Hasdrubal's elephants
+were ten in number. We have no trustworthy information as to the
+amount of his infantry, but it is quite clear that he was greatly
+outnumbered by the combined Roman forces.
+
+The tactic of the Roman legions had not yet acquired the
+perfection which it received from the military genius of Marius,
+[Most probably during the period of his prolonged consulship,
+from B.C. 104 to B.C. 101, while he was training his army against
+the Cimbri and the Teutons.] and which we read of in the first
+chapter of Gibbon. We possess in that great work an account of
+the Roman legions at the end of the commonwealth, and during the
+early ages of the empire, which those alone can adequately
+admire, who have attempted a similar description. We have also,
+in the sixth and seventeenth books of Polybius, an elaborate
+discussion on the military system of the Romans in his time,
+which was not far distant from the time of the battle of the
+Metaurus. But the subject is beset with difficulties: and
+instead of entering into minute but inconclusive details, I would
+refer to Gibbon's first chapter, as serving for a general
+description of the Roman army in its period of perfection; and
+remark, that the training and armour which the whole legion
+received in the time of Augustus, was, two centuries earlier,
+only partially introduced. Two divisions of troops, called
+Hastati and Principes, formed the bulk of each Roman legion in
+the second Punic war. Each of these divisions was twelve hundred
+strong. The Hastatus and the Princeps legionary bore a breast-
+plate or coat of mail, brazen greaves, and a brazen helmet, with
+a lofty, upright crest of scarlet or black feathers. He had a
+large oblong shield; and, as weapons of offence, two javelins,
+one of which was light and slender, but the other was a strong
+and massive weapon, with a shaft about four feet long, and an
+iron head of equal length. The sword was carried on the right
+thigh, and was a short cut-and thrust weapon, like that which was
+used by the Spaniards. Thus armed, the Hastati formed the front
+division of the legion, and the Principes the second. Each
+division was drawn up about ten deep; a space of three feet being
+allowed between the files as well as the ranks, so as to give
+each legionary ample room for the use of his javelins, and of his
+sword and shield. The men in the second rank did not stand
+immediately behind those in the first rank, but the files were
+alternate, like the position of the men on a draught board. This
+was termed the quincunx order. Niebuhr considers that this
+arrangement enabled the legion to keep up a shower of javelins on
+the enemy for some considerable time. He says: "When the first
+line had hurled its pila, it probably stepped back between those
+who stood behind it, who with two steps forward restored the
+front nearly to its first position; a movement which, on account
+of the arrangement of the quincunx, could be executed without
+losing a moment. Thus one line succeeded the other in the front
+till it was time to draw the swords; nay, when it was found
+expedient, the lines which had already been in the front might
+repeat this change, since the stores of pila were surely not
+confined to the two which each soldier took with him into battle.
+
+"The same change must have taken place in fighting with the
+sword; which, when the same tactic was adopted on both sides, was
+anything but a confused MELEE; on the contrary, it was a series
+of single combats." He adds, that a military man of experience
+had been consulted by him on the subject, and had given it as his
+opinion, "that the change of the lines as described above was by
+no means impracticable; and in the absence of the deafening noise
+of gunpowder, it cannot have had even any difficulty with trained
+troops."
+
+The third division of the legion was six hundred strong, and
+acted as a reserve. It was always composed of veteran soldiers,
+who were called the Triarii. Their arms were the same as those
+of the Principes and Hastati; except that each Triarian carried a
+spear instead of javelins. The rest of the legion consisted of
+light armed troops, who acted as skirmishers. The cavalry of
+each legion was at this period about three hundred strong. The
+Italian allies, who were attached to the legion, seem to have
+been similarly armed and equipped, but their numerical proportion
+of cavalry was much larger.
+
+Such was the nature of the forces that advanced on the Roman side
+to the battle of the Metaurus. Nero commanded the right wing,
+Livius the left, and the praetor Porcius had the command of the
+centre. "Both Romans and Carthaginians well understood how much
+depended upon the fortune of this day, and how little hope of
+safety there was for the vanquished. Only the Romans herein
+seemed to have had the better in conceit and opinion, that they
+were to fight with men desirous to have fled from them. And
+according to this presumption came Livius the consul, with a
+proud bravery, to give charge on the Spaniards and Africans, by
+whom he was so sharply entertained that victory seemed very
+doubtful. The Africans and Spaniards were stout soldiers, and
+well acquainted with the manner of the Roman fight. The
+Ligurians, also, were a hardy nation, and not accustomed to give
+ground; which they needed the less, or were able now to do, being
+placed in the midst. Livius, therefore, and Porcius found great
+opposition; and, with great slaughter on both sides, prevailed
+little or nothing. Besides other difficulties, they were
+exceedingly troubled by the elephants, that brake their first
+ranks, and put them in such disorder, as the Roman ensigns were
+driven to fall back; all this while Claudius Nero, labouring in
+vain against a steep hill, was unable to come to blows with the
+Gauls that stood opposite him, but out of danger. This made
+Hasdrubal the more confident, who, seeing his own left wing safe,
+did the more boldly and fiercely make impression on the other
+side upon the left wing of the Romans." ["Historie of the
+World," by Sir Walter Raleigh, p. 946.]
+
+But at last Nero, who found that Hasdrubal refused his left wing,
+and who could not overcome the difficulties of the ground in the
+quarter assigned to him, decided the battle by another stroke of
+that military genius which had inspired his march. Wheeling a
+brigade of his best men round the rear of the rest of the Roman
+army, Nero fiercely charged the flank of the Spaniards and
+Africans. The charge was as successful as it was sudden. Rolled
+back in disorder upon each other, and overwhelmed by numbers, the
+Spaniards and Ligurians died, fighting gallantly to the last.
+The Gauls, who had taken little or no part in the strife of the
+day, were then surrounded, and butchered almost without
+resistance. Hasdrubal, after having, by the confession of his
+enemies, done all that a general could do, when he saw that the
+victory was irreparably lost, scorning to survive the gallant;
+host which he had led, and to gratify, as a captive, Roman
+cruelty and pride, spurred his horse into the midst of a Roman
+cohort; where, sword in hand, he met the death that was worthy of
+the son of Hamilcar and the brother of Hannibal.
+
+Success the most complete had crowned Nero's enterprise.
+Returning as rapidly as he had advanced, he was again facing the
+inactive enemies in the south, before they even knew of his
+march. But he brought with him a ghastly trophy of what he had
+done. In the true spirit of that savage brutality which deformed
+the Roman national character, Nero ordered Hasdrubal's head to be
+flung into his brother's camp. Eleven years had passed since
+Hannibal had last gazed on those features. The sons of Hamilcar
+had then planned their system of warfare against Rome, which they
+had so nearly brought to successful accomplishment. Year after
+year had Hannibal been struggling in Italy, in the hope of one
+day hailing the arrival of him whom he had left in Spain; and of
+seeing his brother's eye flash with affection and pride at the
+junction of their irresistible hosts. He now saw that eye glazed
+in death and, in the agony of his heart, the great Carthaginian
+groaned aloud that he recognised his country's destiny.
+
+[Carthagini jam non ego nuntios
+ Mittam superbos. Occidit, occidit
+ Spes omnis et fortuna nostri
+ Nominis, Hastrubale interemto.--HORACE.]
+
+Rome was almost delirious with joy: [See the splendid
+description in Livy, lib. xxvii. sec. 50, 51.] so agonising had
+been the suspense with which the battle's verdict on that great
+issue of a nation's life and death had been awaited; so
+overpowering was the sudden reaction to the consciousness of
+security, and to the full glow of glory and success. From the
+time when it had been known at Rome that the armies were in
+presence of each other, the people had never ceased to throng the
+forum, the Conscript Fathers had been in permanent sitting at the
+senate house. Ever and anon a fearful whisper crept among the
+crowd of a second Cannae won by a second Hannibal. Then came
+truer rumours that the day was Rome's; but the people were sick
+at heart, and heeded them not. The shrines were thronged with
+trembling women, who seemed to weary heaven with prayers to
+shield them from the brutal Gaul and the savage African.
+Presently the reports of good fortune assumed a more definite
+form. It was said that two Narnian horseman had ridden from the
+east into the Roman camp of observation in Umbria, and had
+brought tidings of the utter slaughter of the foe. Such news
+seemed too good to be true, Men tortured their neighbours and
+themselves by demonstrating its improbability and by ingeniously
+criticising its evidence. Soon, however, a letter came from
+Lucius Manlius Acidinus, who commanded in Umbria, and who
+announced the arrival of the Narnian horsemen in his camp, and
+the intelligence which they brought thither. The letter was
+first laid before the senate, and then before the assembly of the
+people. The excitement grew more and more vehement. The letter
+was read and re-read aloud to thousands. It confirmed the
+previous rumour. But even this was insufficient to allay the
+feverish anxiety that thrilled through every breast in Rome. The
+letter might be a forgery: the Narnian horseman might be
+traitors or impostors. "We must see officers from the army that
+fought, or hear despatches from the consuls themselves, and then
+only will we believe." Such was the public sentiment, though
+some of more hopeful nature already permitted themselves a
+foretaste of joy. At length came news that officers who really
+had been in the battle were near at hand. Forthwith the whole
+city poured forth to meet them, each person coveting to be the
+first to receive with his own eyes and ears convincing proofs of
+the reality of such a deliverance. One vast throng of human
+beings filled the road from Rome to the Milvian bridge. The
+three officers, Lucius Veturius Pollio, Publius Licinius Vasus,
+and Quintus Caecilius Metellus came riding on, making their way
+slowly through the living sea around them, As they advanced, each
+told the successive waves of eager questioners that Rome was
+victorious. "We have destroyed Hasdrubal and his army, our
+legions are safe, and our consuls are unhurt." Each happy
+listener, who caught the welcome sounds from their lips, retired
+to communicate his own joy to others, and became himself the
+centre of an anxious and inquiring group. When the officers had,
+with much difficulty, reached the senate house, and the crowd was
+with still greater difficulty put back from entering and mingling
+with the Conscript Fathers, the despatches of Livius and Nero
+were produced and read aloud. From the senate house the officers
+proceeded to the public assembly, where the despatches were read
+again; and then the senior officer, Lucius Veturius, gave in his
+own words a fuller detail of how went the fight. When he had
+done speaking to the people, an universal shout of rapture rent
+the air. The vast assembly then separated: some hastening to
+the temples to find in devotion a vent for the overflowing
+excitement of their hearts; others seeking their homes to gladden
+their wives and children with the good news, and to feast their
+own eyes with the sight of the loved ones, who now, at last, were
+safe from outrage and slaughter. The senate ordained a
+thanksgiving of three days for the great deliverance which had
+been vouchsafed to Rome; and throughout that period the temples
+were incessantly crowded with exulting worshippers; and the
+matrons, with their children round them, in their gayest attire,
+and with joyous aspects and voices, offered grateful praises to
+the immortal gods, as if all apprehension of evil were over, and
+the war were already ended.
+
+With the revival of confidence came also the revival of activity
+in traffic and commerce, and in all the busy intercourse of daily
+life. A numbing load was taken off each heart and brain, and
+once more men bought and sold, and formed their plans fleely, as
+had been done before the dire Carthaginians came into Italy.
+Hannibal was, certainly, still in the land; but all felt that his
+power to destroy was broken, and that the crisis of the war-fever
+was past. The Metaurus, indeed, had not only determined the
+event of the strife between Rome and Carthage, but it had ensured
+to Rome two centuries more of almost unchanged conquest.
+Hannibal did actually, with almost superhuman skill, retain his
+hold on Southern Italy for a few years longer, but the imperial
+city, and her allies, were no longer in danger from his arms;
+and, after Hannibal's downfall, the great military republic of
+the ancient world met in her career of conquest no other worthy
+competitor. Byron has termed Nero's march "unequalled," and, in
+the magnitude of its consequences, it is so. Viewed only as a
+military exploit, it remains unparalleled save by Marlborough's
+bold march from Flanders to the Danube, in the campaign of
+Blenheim, and perhaps also by the Archduke Charles's lateral
+march in 1796, by which he overwhelmed the French under Jourdain,
+and then, driving Moreau through the Black Forest and across the
+Rhine, for a while freed Germany from her invaders.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF THE METAURUS, B.C. 207,
+AND ARMININIUS'S VICTORY OVER THE ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS,
+A.D. 9.
+
+B.C. 205 to 201. Scipio is made consul, and carries the war into
+Africa. He gains several victories there, and the Carthaginians
+recall Hannibal from Italy to oppose him. Battle of Zama in 201:
+Hannibal is defeated, and Carthage sues for peace. End of the
+second Punic war, leaving Rome confirmed in the dominion of
+Italy, Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica, and also mistress of great
+part of Spain, and virtually predominant in North Africa.
+
+200. Rome makes war upon Philip, king of Macedonia. She
+pretends to take the Greek cities of the Achaean league and the
+AEtolians under her protection as allies. Philip is defeated by
+the proconsul Flaminius at Cynocephalae, 198; and begs for peace.
+The Macedonian influence is now completely destroyed in Greece,
+and the Roman established in its stead, though Rome nominally
+acknowledged the independence of the Greek cities.
+
+194. Rome makes war upon Antiochus, king of Syria. He is
+completely defeated at the battle of Magnesia, 192, and is glad
+to accept peace on conditions which leave him dependent upon
+Rome.
+
+200-190. "Thus, within the short; space of ten years, was laid
+the foundation of the Roman authority in the East, and the
+general state of affairs entirely changed. If Rome was not yet
+the ruler, she was at least the arbitress of the world from the
+Atlantic to the Euphrates. The power of the three principal
+states was so completely humbled, that they durst not, without
+the permission of Rome, begin any new war; the fourth, Egypt, had
+already, in the year 201, placed herself under the guardianship
+of Rome; and the lesser powers followed of themselves: esteeming
+it an honour to be called the allies of Rome. With this name the
+nations were lulled into security, and brought under the Roman
+yoke; the new political system of Rome was founded and
+strengthened partly by exciting and supporting the weaker states
+against the stronger, however unjust the cause of the former
+might be, and partly by factions which she found means to raise
+in every state, even the smallest."--(HEEREN.)
+
+172. War renewed between Macedon and Rome. Decisive defeat of
+Perses, the Macedonian king, by Paulus AEmilius at Pydna, 168,
+Destruction of the Macedonian monarchy.
+
+150. Rome oppresses the Carthaginians till they are driven to
+take up arms, and the third Punic war begins, Carthage is taken
+and destroyed by Scipio AEmilianus, 146, and the Carthaginian
+territory is made a Roman province.
+
+146. In the same year in which Carthage falls, Corinth is
+stormed by the Roman army under Mummius. The Achaean league had
+been goaded into hostilities with Rome, by means similar to those
+employed against Carthage. The greater part of Southern Greece
+is made a Roman province, under the name of Achaia.
+
+133. Numantium is destroyed by Scipio AEmilianus. "The war
+against the Spaniards, who, of all the nations subdued by the
+Romans, defended their liberty with the greatest obstinacy, began
+in the year 200, six years after the total expulsion of the
+Carthaginians from their country, 206. It was exceedingly
+obstinate, partly from the natural state of the country, which
+was thickly populated, and where every place became a fortress;
+partly from the courage of the inhabitants; but at last all,
+owing to the peculiar policy of the Romans, who yielded to employ
+their allies to subdue other nations. This war continued, almost
+without interruption, from the year 200 to 133, and was for the
+most part carried on at the same time in Hispania Citerior, where
+the Celtiberi were the most formidable adversaries, and in
+Hispania Ulterior, where the Lusitani were equally powerful.
+Hostilities were at the highest pitch in 195, under Cato, who
+reduced Hispania Citerior to a state of tranquillity in 185-179,
+when the Celtiberi were attacked in their native territory; and
+155-150, when the Romans in both provinces were so often beaten,
+that nothing was more dreaded by the soldiers at home than to be
+sent there. The extortions and perfidy of Servius Galba placed
+Viriathus, in the year 146, at the head of his nations, the
+Lusitani: the war, however, soon extended itself to Hispania
+Citerior, where many nations, particularly the Numantines, took
+up arms against Rome, 143. Viriathus, sometimes victorious and
+sometimes defeated, was never more formidable than in the moment
+of defeat; because he knew how to take advantage of his knowledge
+of the country and of the dispositions of his countrymen. After
+his murder, caused by the treachery of Saepio, 140, Lusitania was
+subdued; but the Numantine war became still more violent, and the
+Numantines compelled the consul Mancinus to a disadvantageous
+treaty, 137. When Scipio, in the year 133, put an end to this
+war, Spain was certainly tranquil; the northern parts, however,
+were still unsubdued, though the Romans penetrated as far as
+Galatia."--HEEREN.
+
+134. Commencement of the revolutionary century at Rome, I.E.
+from the time of the excitement produced by the attempts made by
+the Gracchi to reform the commonwealth, to the battle of Actium
+(B.C. 31), which established Octavianus Caesar as sole master of
+the Roman world. Throughout this period Rome was engaged in
+important foreign wars, most of which procured large accessions
+to her territory.
+
+118-106. The Jugurthine war. Numidia is conquered, and made a
+Roman province.
+
+113-101. The great and terrible war of the Cimbri and Teutones
+against Rome. These nations of northern warriors slaughter
+several Roman armies in Gaul, and in 102 attempt to penetrate
+into Italy, The military genius of Marius here saves his country;
+he defeats the Teutones near Aix, in Provence; and in the
+following year he destroys the army of the Cimbri, who had passed
+the Alps, near Vercellae.
+
+91-88. The war of the Italian allies against Rome. This was
+caused by the refusal of Rome to concede to them the rights of
+Roman citizenship. After a sanguine struggle, Rome gradually
+grants it.
+
+89-86. First war of the Romans against Mithridates the Great,
+king of Pontus, who had overrun Asia Minor, Macedonia, and
+Greece. Sylla defeats his armies, and forces him to withdraw his
+forces from Europe. Sylla returns to Rome to carry on the civil
+war against the son and partisans of Marius. He makes himself
+Dictator.
+
+74-64. The last Mithridatic wars. Lucullus, and after him
+Pompeius, command against the great King of Pontus, who at last
+is poisoned by his son, while designing to raise the warlike
+tribes of the Danube against Rome, and to invade Italy from the
+north-east. Great Asiatic conquests of the Romans. Besides the
+ancient province of Pergamus, the maritime countries of Bithynia,
+and nearly all Paphlagonia and Pontus, are formed into a Roman
+province, under the name of Bithynia; while on the southern coast
+Cilicia and Pamphylia form another, under the name of Cilicia;
+Phoenicia and Syria compose a third, under the name of Syria. On
+the other hand, Great Armenia is left to Tigranes; Cappodocia to
+Ariobarzanes; the Bosphorus to Pharnaces; Judaea to Hyrcanus; and
+some other small states are also given to petty princes, all of
+whom remain dependent on Rome.
+
+58-50. Caesar conquers Gaul.
+
+54. Crassus attacks the Parthians with a Roman army, but is
+overthrown and killed at Carrhae in Mesopotamia. His lieutenant
+Cassius collects the wrecks of the army, and prevents the
+Parthians from conquering Syria.
+
+49-45. The civil war between Caesar and the Pompeian party.
+Caesar drives Pompeius out of Italy, conquers his enemy's forces
+in Spain, and then passes into Greece, where Pompeius and the
+other aristocratic chiefs had assembled a large army. Caesar
+gives them a decisive defeat at the great battle of Pharsalia.
+Pompeius flies for refuge to Alexandria, where he is
+assassinated. Caesar, who had followed him thither, is involved
+in a war with the Egyptians, in which he is finally victorious.
+The celebrated Cleopatra is made Queen of Egypt. Caesar next
+marches into Pontus, and defeats the son of Mithridates, who had
+taken part in the war against him. He then proceeds to the Roman
+province of Africa, where some of the Pompeian chiefs had
+established themselves, aided by Juba, a native prince. He over
+throws them at the battle of Thapsus. He is again obliged to
+lead an army into Spain, where the sons of Pompeius had collected
+the wrecks of their father's party. He crushes the last of his
+enemies at the battle of Munda. Under the title of Dictator, he
+is the sole master of the Roman world.
+
+44. Caesar is killed in the Senate-house; the Civil wars are
+soon renewed, Brutus and Cassius being at the head of the
+aristocratic party, and the party of Caesar being led by Mark
+Antony and Octavianus Caesar, afterwards Augustus.
+
+42. Defeat and death of Brutus and Cassius at Philippi.
+Dissensions soon break out between Octavianus Caesar and Antony.
+
+31. Antony is completely defeated by Octavianus Caesar at
+Actium. He flies to Egypt with Cleopatra. Octavianus pursues
+him. Antony and Cleopatra kill themselves. Egypt becomes a
+Roman province, and Octavianus Caesar is left undisputed master
+of Rome, and all that is Rome's. The state of the Roman world at
+this time is best described in two lines of Tacitus:--"Postquam
+bellatum apud Actium, atque OMNEM POTESTATEM AD UNUM CONFERRI
+PACIS INTERFUIT." (Hist. lib. i. s. 1.)
+
+The 44th year of the reign of Augustus, and the 1st year of the
+195th Olympiad, is commonly assigned as the date of THE NATIVITY
+OF OUR LORD. There is much of the beauty of holiness in the
+remarks with which the American historian, Eliot, closes his
+survey of the conquering career and civil downfall of the Roman
+Commonwealth:--
+
+"So far as humility amongst men was necessary for the preparation
+of a truer freedom than could ever be known under heathenism, the
+part of Rome, however dreadful was yet sublime. It was not to
+unite, to discipline, or to fortify humanity, but to enervate, to
+loosen, and to scatter its forces, that the people whose history
+we have read were allowed to conquer the earth, and were then
+themselves reduced to deep submission. Every good labour of
+theirs that failed was, by reason of what we esteem its failure,
+a step gained nearer to the end of the well-nigh universal evil
+that prevailed; while every bad achievement that may seem to us
+to have succeeded, temporarily or lastingly, with them was
+equally, by reason of its success, a progress towards the good of
+which the coming would have been longed and prayed for, could it
+have been comprehended. Alike in the virtues and in the vices of
+antiquity, we may read the progress towards its humiliation.
+["The Christian revelation," says Leland, in his truly admirable
+work on the subject (vol. i. p. 488), "was made to the world at a
+time when it was most wanted; when the darkness and corruption of
+mankind were arrived at the height. . . . if it had been
+published much sooner, and before there had been a full trial
+made of what was to be expected from human wisdom and philosophy,
+the great need men stood in of such an extraordinary divine
+dispensation would not have been so apparent."] Yet, on the
+other hand, it must not seem, at the last, that the disposition
+of the Romans or of mankind to submission was secured solely
+through the errors, and the apparently ineffectual toils which we
+have traced back to these times of old. Desires too true to have
+been wasted, and strivings too humane to have been unproductive,
+though all were overshadowed by passing wrongs, still gleam as if
+in anticipation or in preparation of the advancing day.
+
+"At length, when it had been proved by ages of conflict and loss,
+that no lasting joy and no abiding truth could be procured
+through the power, the freedom, or the faith of mankind, the
+angels sang their song in which the glory of God and the good-
+will of men were together blended. The universe was wrapped In
+momentary tranquillity, and 'peaceful was the night' above the
+manger at Bethlehem. We may believe, that when the morning came,
+the ignorance, the confusion, and the servitude of humanity had
+left their darkest forms amongst the midnight clouds. It was
+still, indeed, beyond the power of man to lay hold securely of
+the charity and the regeneration that were henceforth to be his
+law; and the indefinable terrors of the future, whether seen from
+the West or from the East, were not at once to be dispelled. But
+before the death of the Emperor Augustus, in the midst of his
+fallen subjects, the business of THE FATHER had already been
+begun in the Temple at Jerusalem; and near by, THE SON was
+increasing in wisdom and in stature, and in favour with God and
+man." [Eliot's "Liberty of Rome," vol. ii. p. 521.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+VICTORY OF ARMINIUS OVER THE ROMAN LEGIONS UNDER VARUS, A.D. 9.
+
+"Hac clade factum, ut Imperium quod in littore oceani non
+steterat, in ripa Rheni fluminis staret."--FLORUS.
+
+To a truly illustrious Frenchman, whose reverses as a minister
+can never obscure his achievements in the world of letters, we
+are indebted for the most profound and most eloquent estimate
+that we possess of the importance of the Germanic element in
+European civilization, and of the extent to which the human race
+is indebted to those brave warriors, who long were the
+unconquered antagonists, and finally became the conquerors, of
+Imperial Rome.
+
+Twenty-three eventful years have passed away since M. Guizot
+delivered from the chair of modern history at Paris his course of
+lectures on the History of Civilization in Europe. During those
+years the spirit of earnest inquiry into the germs and early
+developments of existing institutions has become more and more
+active and universal; and the merited celebrity of M. Guizot's
+work has proportionally increased. Its admirable analysis of the
+complex political and social organizations of which the modern
+civilized world is made up, must have led thousands to trace with
+keener interest the great crises of times past, by which the
+characteristics of the present were determined. The narrative of
+one of these great crises, of the epoch A.D. 9, when Germany took
+up arms for her independence against Roman invasion, has for us
+this special attraction--that it forms part of our own national
+history. Had Arminius been supine or unsuccessful, our Germanic
+ancestors would have been enslaved or exterminated in their
+original seats along the Eyder and the Elbe; this island would
+never have borne the name of England, and "we, this great English
+nation, whose race and language are now over-running the earth,
+from one end of it to the other," [Arnold's Lectures on Modern
+History.] would have been utterly cut off from existence.
+
+Arnold may, indeed, go too far in holding that we are wholly
+unconnected in race with the Romans and Britons who inhabited
+this country before the coming over of the Saxons; that,
+"nationally speaking, the history of Caesar's invasion has no
+more to do with us than the natural history of the animals which
+then inhabited our forests." There seems ample evidence to prove
+that the Romanized Celts, whom our Teutonic forefathers found
+here, influenced materially the character of our nation. But the
+main stream of our people was and is Germanic. Our language
+alone decisively proves this. Arminius is far more truly one of
+our national heroes than Caractacus: and it was our own primeval
+fatherland that the brave German rescued, when he slaughtered the
+Roman legions eighteen centuries ago in the marshy glens between
+the Lippe and the Ems. [See post, remarks on the relationship
+between the Cherusci and the English.]
+
+Dark and disheartening, even to heroic spirits, must have seemed
+the prospects of Germany when Arminius planned the general rising
+of his countrymen against Rome. Half the land was occupied by
+Roman garrisons; and, what was worse, many of the Germans seemed
+patiently acquiescent in their state of bondage. The braver
+portion, whose patriotism could be relied on, was ill-armed and
+undisciplined; while the enemy's troops consisted of veterans in
+the highest state of equipment and training, familiarized with
+victory, and commanded by officers of proved skill and valour.
+The resources of Rome seemed boundless; her tenacity of purpose
+was believed to be invincible. There was no hope of foreign
+sympathy or aid; for "the self-governing powers that had filled
+the old world, had bent one after another before the rising power
+of Rome, and had vanished. The earth seemed left void of
+independent nations." [Ranke.]
+
+The (German) chieftain knew well the gigantic power of the
+oppressor. Arminius was no rude savage, fighting out of mere
+animal instinct, or in ignorance of the might of his adversary.
+He was familiar with the Roman language and civilization; he had
+served in the Roman armies; he had been admitted to the Roman
+citizenship, and raised to the dignity of the equestrian order.
+It was part of the subtle policy of Rome to confer rank and
+privileges on the youth of the leading families in the nations
+which she wished to enslave. Among other young German
+chieftains, Arminius and his brother, who were the heads of the
+noblest house in the tribe of the Cherusci, had been selected as
+fit objects for the exercise of this insidious system. Roman
+refinements and dignities succeeded in denationalizing the
+brother, who assumed the Roman name of Flavius, and adhered to
+Rome throughout all her wars against his country. Arminius
+remained unbought by honours or wealth, uncorrupted by refinement
+or luxury. He aspired to and obtained from Roman enmity a higher
+title than ever could have been given him by Roman favour. It is
+in the page of Rome's greatest historian, that his name has come
+down to us with the proud addition of "Liberator haud dubie
+Germaniae." [Tacitus, Annals, ii. 88.]
+
+Often must the young chieftain, while meditating the exploit
+which has thus immortalised him, have anxiously revolved in his
+mind the fate of the many great men who had been crushed in the
+attempt which he was about to renew,--the attempt to stay the
+chariot-wheels of triumphant Rome. Could he hope to succeed
+where Hannibal and Mithridates had perished? What had been the
+doom of Viriathus? and what warning against vain valour was
+written on the desolate site where Numantia once had fourished?
+Nor was a caution wanting in scenes nearer home and in more
+recent times. The Gauls had fruitlessly struggled for eight
+years against Caesar; and the valiant Vercingetorix, who in the
+last year of the war had roused all his countrymen to
+insurrection, who had cut off Roman detachments, and brought
+Caesar himself to the extreme of peril at Alesia--he, too, had
+finally succumbed, had been led captive in Caesar's triumph, and
+had then been butchered in cold blood in a Roman dungeon.
+
+It was true that Rome was no longer the great military republic
+which for so many ages had shattered the kingdoms of the world.
+Her system of government was changed; and, after a century of
+revolution and civil war, she had placed herself under the
+despotism of a single ruler. But the discipline of her troops
+was yet unimpaired, and her warlike spirit seemed unabated. The
+first wars of the empire had been signalised by conquests as
+valuable as any gained by the republic in a corresponding period.
+It is a great fallacy, though apparently sanctioned by great
+authorities, to suppose that the foreign policy pursued by
+Augustus was pacific. He certainly recommended such a policy to
+his successors, either from timidity, or from jealousy of their
+fame outshining his own; ["Incertum metu an per invidiam."--Tac.
+Ann. i. 11] but he himself, until Arminius broke his spirit, had
+followed a very different course. Besides his Spanish wars, his
+generals, in a series of principally aggressive campaigns, had
+extended the Roman frontier from the Alps to the Danube; and had
+reduced into subjection the large and important countries that
+now form the territories of all Austria south of that river, and
+of East Switzerland, Lower Wirtemberg, Bavaria, the Valteline,
+and the Tyrol. While the progress of the Roman arms thus pressed
+the Germans from the south, still more formidable inroads had
+been made by the Imperial legions in the west. Roman armies,
+moving from the province of Gaul, established a chain of
+fortresses along the right as well as the left bank of the Rhine,
+and, in a series of victorious campaigns, advanced their eagles
+as far as the Elbe; which now seemed added to the list of vassal
+rivers, to the Nile, the Rhine, the Rhone, the Danube, the Tagus,
+the Seine, and many more, that acknowledged the supremacy of the
+Tiber. Roman fleets also, sailing from the harbours of Gaul
+along the German coasts, and up the estuaries, co-operated with
+the land-forces of the empire; and seemed to display, even more
+decisively than her armies, her overwhelming superiority over the
+rude Germanic tribes. Throughout the territory thus invaded, the
+Romans had, with their usual military skill, established chains
+of fortified posts; and a powerful army of occupation was kept on
+foot, ready to move instantly on any spot where a popular
+outbreak might be attempted.
+
+Vast however, and admirably organized as the fabric of Roman
+power appeared on the frontiers and in the provinces, there was
+rottenness at the core. In Rome's unceasing hostilities with
+foreign foes, and, still more, in her long series of desolating
+civil wars, the free middle classes of Italy had almost wholly
+disappeared. Above the position which they had occupied, an
+oligarchy of wealth had reared itself: beneath that position a
+degraded mass of poverty and misery was fermenting. Slaves, the
+chance sweepings of every conquered country, shoals of Africans,
+Sardinians, Asiatics, Illyrians, and others, made up the bulk of
+the population of the Italian peninsula. The foulest profligacy
+of manners was general in all ranks. In universal weariness of
+revolution and civil war, and in consciousness of being too
+debased for self-government, the nation had submitted itself to
+the absolute authority of Augustus. Adulation was now the chief
+function the senate: and the gifts of genius and accomplishments
+of art were devoted to the elaboration of eloquently false
+panegyrics upon the prince and his favourite courtiers. With
+bitter indignation must the German chieftain have beheld all
+this, and contrasted with it the rough worth of his own
+countrymen;--their bravery, their fidelity to their word, their
+manly independence of spirit their love of their national free
+institutions, and their loathing of every pollution and meanness.
+Above all, he must have thought of the domestic virtues that
+hallowed a German home; of the respect there shown to the female
+character, and of the pure affection by which that respect was
+repaid. His soul must have burned within him at the
+contemplation of such a race yielding to these debased Italians.
+
+Still, to persuade the Germans to combine, in spite of their
+frequent feuds among themselves, in one sudden outbreak against
+Rome; to keep the scheme concealed from the Romans until the hour
+for action had arrived; and then, without possessing a single
+walled town, without military stores, without training, to teach
+his insurgent countrymen to defeat veteran armies, and storm
+fortifications, seemed so perilous an enterprise, that probably
+Arminius would have receded from it, had not a stronger feeling
+even than patriotism urged him on. Among the Germans of high
+rank who had most readily submitted to the invaders, and become
+zealous partisans of Roman authority, was a chieftain named
+Segestes. His daughter, Thusnelda, was pre-eminent among the
+noble maidens of Germany. Arminius had sought her hand in
+marriage; but Segestes, who probably discerned the young chief's
+disaffection to Rome, forbade his suit, and strove to preclude
+all communication between him and his daughter. Thusnelda,
+however, sympathised far more with the heroic spirit of her
+lover, than with the time serving policy of her father. An
+elopement baffled the precautions of Segestes; who, disappointed
+in his hope of preventing the marriage, accused Arminius, before
+the Roman governor, of having carried off his daughter, and of
+planning treason against Rome. Thus assailed, and dreading to
+see his bride torn from him by the officials of the foreign
+oppressor, Arminius delayed no longer, but bent all his energies
+to organize and execute a general insurrection of the great mass
+of his countrymen, who hitherto had submitted in sullen inertness
+to the Roman dominion.
+
+A change of governors had recently taken place, which, while it
+materially favoured the ultimate success of the insurgents,
+served, by the immediate aggravation of the Roman oppressions
+which it produced, to make the native population more universally
+eager to take arms. Tiberius, who was afterwards emperor, had
+lately been recalled from the command in Germany, and sent into
+Pannonia to put down a dangerous revolt which had broken out
+against the Romans in that province. The German patriots were
+thus delivered from the stern supervision of one of the most
+auspicious of mankind, and were also relieved from having to
+contend against the high military talents of a veteran commander,
+who thoroughly understood their national character, and the
+nature of the country, which he himself had principally subdued.
+In the room of Tiberius, Augustus sent into Germany Quintilius
+Varus, who had lately returned from the proconsulate of Syria.
+Varus was a true representative of the higher classes of the
+Romans; among whom a general taste for literature, a keen
+susceptibility to all intellectual gratifications, a minute
+acquaintance with the principles and practice of their own
+national jurisprudence, a careful training in the schools of the
+rhetoricians, and a fondness for either partaking in or watching
+the intellectual strife of forensic oratory, had become generally
+diffused; without, however, having humanized the old Roman spirit
+of cruel indifference for human feelings and human sufferings,
+and without acting as the least check on unprincipled avarice and
+ambition, or on habitual and gross profligacy. Accustomed to
+govern the depraved and debased natives of Syria, a country where
+courage in man, and virtue in woman, had for centuries been
+unknown, Varus thought that he might gratify his licentious and
+rapacious passions with equal impunity among the high-minded sons
+and pure-spirited daughters of Germany. When the general of an
+army sets the example of outrages of this description, he is soon
+faithfully imitated by his officers, and surpassed by his still
+more brutal soldiery. The Romans now habitually indulged in
+those violations of the sanctity of the domestic shrine, and
+those insults upon honour and modesty, by which far less gallant
+spirits than those of our Teutonic ancestors have often been
+maddened into insurrection.
+
+[I cannot forbear quoting Macaulay's beautiful lines, where he
+describes how similar outrages in the early times of Rome goaded
+the plebeians to rise against the patricians:--
+
+"Heap heavier still the fetters; bar closer still the grate;
+ Patient as sheep we yield us up unto your cruel hate.
+ But by the shades beneath us, and by the gods above,
+ Add not unto your cruel hate your still more cruel love.
+ * * * * * *
+ Then leave the poor plebeian his single tie to life--
+ The sweet, sweet love of daughter, of sister, and of wife,
+ The gentle speech, the balm for all that his vext soul endures,
+ The kiss in which he half forgets even such a yoke as yours.
+ Still let the maiden's beauty swell the father's breast with
+pride;
+ Still let the bridegroom's arms enfold an unpolluted bride.
+ Spare us the inexpiable wrong, the unutterable shame,
+ That turns the coward's heart to steel, the sluggard's blood to
+flame;
+ Lest when our latest hope is fled ye taste of our despair,
+ And learn by proof in some wild hour, how much the wretched
+dare."]
+
+Arminius found among the other German chiefs many who sympathised
+with him in his indignation at their country's debasement, and
+many whom private wrongs had stung yet more deeply. There was
+little difficulty in collecting bold leaders for an attack on the
+oppressors, and little fear of the population not rising readily
+at those leaders' call. But to declare open war against Rome,
+and to encounter Varus's army in a pitched battle, would have
+been merely rushing upon certain destruction. Varus had three
+legions under him, a force which, after allowing for detachments,
+cannot be estimated at less than fourteen thousand Roman
+infantry. He had also eight or nine hundred Roman cavalry, and
+at least an equal number of horse and foot sent from the allied
+states, or raised among those provincials who had not received
+the Roman franchise.
+
+It was not merely the number, but the quality of this force that
+made it formidable; and however contemptible Varus might be as a
+general, Arminius well knew how admirably the Roman armies were
+organized and officered, and how perfectly the legionaries
+understood every manoeuvre and every duty which the varying
+emergencies of a stricken field might require. Stratagem was,
+therefore, indispensable; and it was necessary to blind Varus to
+his schemes until a favourable opportunity should arrive for
+striking a decisive blow.
+
+For this purpose the German confederates frequented the
+headquarters of Varus, which seem to have been near the centre of
+the modern country of Westphalia, where the Roman general
+conducted himself with all the arrogant security of the governor
+of a perfectly submissive province. There Varus gratified at
+once his vanity, his rhetorical taste, and his avarice, by
+holding courts, to which he summoned the Germans for the
+settlement of all their disputes, while a bar of Roman advocates
+attended to argue the cases before the tribunal of the Proconsul;
+who did not omit the opportunity of exacting court-fees and
+accepting bribes. Varus trusted implicitly to the respect which
+the Germans pretended to pay to his abilities as a judge, and to
+the interest which they affected to take in the forensic
+eloquence of their conquerors. Meanwhile a succession of heavy
+rains rendered the country more difficult for the operations of
+regular troops; and Arminius, seeing that the infatuation of
+Varus was complete, secretly directed the tribes near the Weser
+and the Ems to take up arms in open revolt against the Romans.
+This was represented to Varus as an occasion which required his
+prompt attendance at the spot; but he was kept in studied
+ignorance of its being part of a concerted national rising; and
+he still looked on Arminius as his submissive vassal, whose aid
+he might rely on in facilitating the march of his troops against
+the rebels, and in extinguishing the local disturbance. He
+therefore set his army in motion, and marched eastward in a line
+parallel to the course of the Lippe. For some distance his route
+lay along a level plain; but on arriving at the tract between the
+curve of the upper part of that stream and the sources of the
+Ems, the country assumes a very different character; and here, in
+the territory of the modern little principality of Lippe, it was
+that Arminius had fixed the scene of his enterprise.
+
+A woody and hilly region intervenes between the heads of the two
+rivers, and forms the water-shed of their streams. This region
+still retains the name (Teutoberger wald--Teutobergiensis saltus)
+which it bore in the days of Arminius. The nature of the ground
+has probably also remained unaltered. The eastern part of it,
+round Detmoldt, the present capital of the principality of Lippe,
+is described by a modern German scholar, Dr. Plate, as being "a
+table-land intersected by numerous deep and narrow valleys, which
+in some places form small plains, surrounded by steep mountains
+and rocks, and only accessible by narrow defiles. All the
+valleys are traversed by rapid streams, shallow in the dry
+season, but subject to sudden swellings in autumn and winter.
+The vast forests which cover the summits and slopes of the hills
+consist chiefly of oak; there is little underwood, and both men
+and horse would move with ease in the forests if the ground were
+not broken by gulleys, or rendered impracticable by fallen
+trees." This is the district to which Varus is supposed to have
+marched; and Dr. Plate adds, that "the names of several
+localities on and near that spot seem to indicate that a great
+battle had once been fought there. We find the names 'das
+Winnefeld' (the field of victory), 'die Knochenbahn' (the bone-
+lane), 'die Knochenleke' (the bone-brook), 'der Mordkessel' (the
+kettle of slaughter), and others." [I am indebted for much
+valuable information on this subject to my friend Mr. Henry
+Pearson.]
+
+Contrary to the usual strict principles of Roman discipline,
+Varus had suffered his army to be accompanied and impeded by an
+immense train of baggage-waggons, and by a rabble of camp
+followers; as if his troops had been merely changing their
+quarters in a friendly country. When the long array quitted the
+firm level ground, and began to wind its way among the woods, the
+marshes, and the ravines, the difficulties of the march, even
+without the intervention of an armed foe, became fearfully
+apparent. In many places the soil, sodden with rain, was
+impracticable for cavalry and even for infantry, until trees had
+been felled, and a rude causeway formed through the morass.
+
+The duties of the engineer were familiar to all who served in the
+Roman armies. But the crowd and confusion of the columns
+embarrassed the working parties of the soldiery, and in the midst
+of their toil and disorder the word was suddenly passed through
+their ranks that the rear-guard was attacked by the barbarians.
+Varus resolved on pressing forward; but a heavy discharge of
+missiles from the woods on either flank taught him how serious
+was the peril, and he saw the best men falling round him without
+the opportunity of retaliation; for his light-armed auxiliaries,
+who were principally of Germanic race, now rapidly deserted, and
+it was impossible to deploy the legionaries on such broken ground
+for a charge against the enemy. Choosing one of the most open
+and firm spots which they could force their way to, the Romans
+halted for the night; and, faithful to their national discipline
+and tactics, formed their camp amid the harassing attacks of the
+rapidly thronging foes, with the elaborate toil and systematic
+skill, the traces of which are impressed permanently on the soil
+of so many European countries, attesting the presence in the
+olden time of the imperial eagles.
+
+On the morrow the Romans renewed their march; the veteran
+officers who served under Varus now probably directing the
+operations, and hoping to find the Germans drawn up to meet them;
+in which case they relied on their own superior discipline and
+tactics for such a victory as should reassure the supremacy of
+Rome. But Arminius was far too sage a commander to lead on his
+followers, with their unwieldy broadswords and inefficient
+defensive armour, against the Roman legionaries, fully armed with
+helmet, cuirass, greaves, and shield; who were skilled to
+commence the conflict with a murderous volley of heavy javelins,
+hurled upon the foe when a few yards distant, and then, with
+their short cut-and-thrust swords, to hew their way through all
+opposition; preserving the utmost steadiness and coolness, and
+obeying each word of command. In the midst of strife and
+slaughter with the same precision and alertness as if upon
+parade. [See Gibbon's description (vol. i, chap. 1) of the Roman
+legions in the time of Augustus; and see the description in
+Tacitus (Ann. lib. i) of the subsequent battles between Caecina
+and Arminius.] Arminius suffered the Romans to march out from
+their camp, to form first in line for action, and then in column
+for marching, without the show of opposition. For some distance
+Varus was allowed to move on, only harassed by slight skirmishes,
+but struggling with difficulty through the broken ground; the
+toil and distress of his men being aggravated by heavy torrents
+of rain, which burst upon the devoted legions as if the angry
+gods of Germany were pouring out the vials of their wrath upon
+the invaders. After some little time their van approached a
+ridge of high woody ground, which is one of the off-shoots of the
+great Hercynian forest, and is situate between the modern
+villages of Driburg and Bielefeld. Arminius had caused
+barricades of hewn trees to be formed here, so as to add to the
+natural difficulties of the passage. Fatigue and discouragement
+now began to betray themselves in the Roman ranks. Their line
+became less steady; baggage-waggons were abandoned from the
+impossibility of forcing them along; and, as this happened, many
+soldiers left their ranks and crowded round the waggons to secure
+the most valuable portions of their property; each was busy about
+his own affairs, and purposely slow in hearing the word of
+command from his officers. Arminius now gave the signal for a
+general attack. The fierce shouts of the Germans pealed through
+the gloom of the forests, and in thronging multitudes they
+assailed the flanks of the invaders, pouring in clouds of darts
+on the encumbered legionaries, as they struggled up the glens or
+floundered in the morasses, and watching every opportunity of
+charging through the intervals of the disjointed column, and so
+cutting off the communication between its several brigades.
+Arminius, with a chosen band of personal retainers round him,
+cheered on his countrymen by voice and example. He and his men
+aimed their weapons particularly at the horses of the Roman
+cavalry. The wounded animals, slipping about in the mire and
+their own blood, threw their riders, and plunged among the ranks
+of the legions, disordering all round them. Varus now ordered
+the troops to be countermarched, in the hope of reaching the
+nearest Roman garrison on the Lippe. [The circumstances of the
+early part of the battle which Arminius fought with Caecina six
+years afterwards, evidently resembled those of his battle with
+Varus, and the result was very near being the same: I have
+therefore adopted part of the description which Tacitus gives
+(Ann. lib. i. c. 65) of the last mentioned engagement: "Neque
+tamen Arminius, quamquam libero in cursu, statim prorupit: sed
+ut haesere caeno fossisque impedimenta, turbati circum milites;
+incertus signorum ordo; utque tali in tempore sibi quisque
+properus, et lentae adversum imperia aures, irrumpere Germanos
+jubet, clamitans 'En Varus, et eodem iterum fato victae
+legiones!' Simul haec, et cum delectis scindit agmen, equisque
+maxime vulnera ingerit; illi sanguine suo et lubrico paludum
+lapsantes, excussis rectoribus, disjicere obvios, proterere
+jacentes."] But retreat now was as impracticable as advance; and
+the falling back of the Romans only augmented the courage of
+their assailants, and caused fiercer and more frequent charges on
+the flanks of the disheartened army. The Roman officer who
+commanded the cavalry, Numonius Vala, rode off with his
+squadrons, in the vain hope of escaping by thus abandoning his
+comrades. Unable to keep together, or force their way across the
+woods and swamps, the horsemen were overpowered in detail and
+slaughtered to the last man. The Roman infantry still held
+together and resisted, but more through the instinct of
+discipline and bravery than from any hope of success or escape.
+Varus, after being severely wounded in a charge of the Germans
+against his part of the column, committed suicide to avoid
+falling into the hands of those whom he had exasperated by his
+oppressions. One of the lieutenant-generals of the army fell
+fighting; the other surrendered to the enemy. But mercy to a
+fallen foe had never been a Roman virtue, and those among her
+legions who now laid down their arms in hope of quarter, drank
+deep of the cup of suffering, which Rome had held to the lips of
+many a brave but unfortunate enemy. The infuriated Germans
+slaughtered their oppressors with deliberate ferocity; and those
+prisoners who were not hewn to pieces on the spot, were only
+preserved to perish by a more cruel death in cold blood.
+
+The bulk of the Roman army fought steadily and stubbornly,
+frequently repelling the masses of the assailants, but gradually
+losing the compactness of their array, and becoming weaker and
+weaker beneath the incessant shower of darts and the reiterated
+assaults of the vigorous and unencumbered Germans. At last, in a
+series of desperate attacks the column was pierced through and
+through, two of the eagles captured, and the Roman host, which on
+the yester morning had marched forth in such pride and might, now
+broken up into confused fragments, either fell fighting beneath
+the overpowering numbers of the enemy, or perished in the swamps
+and woods in unavailing efforts at flight. Few, very few, ever
+saw again the left bank of the Rhine. One body of brave
+veterans, arraying themselves in a ring on a little mound, beat
+off every charge of the Germans, and prolonged their honourable
+resistance to the close of that dreadful day. The traces of a
+feeble attempt at forming a ditch and mound attested in after
+years the spot where the last of the Romans passed their night of
+suffering and despair. But on the morrow this remnant also, worn
+out with hunger, wounds, and toil, was charged by the victorious
+Germans, and either massacred on the spot, or offered up in
+fearful rites at the alters of the deities of the old mythology
+of the North.
+
+A gorge in the mountain ridge, through which runs the modern road
+between Paderborn and Pyrmont, leads from the spot where the heat
+of the battle raged, to the Extersteine, a cluster of bold and
+grotesque rocks of sandstone; near which is a small sheet of
+water, overshadowed by a grove of aged trees. According to local
+tradition, this was one of the sacred groves of the ancient
+Germans, and it was here that the Roman captives were slain in
+sacrifice by the victorious warriors of Arminius. ["Lucis
+propinquis barbarae arae, apud quas tribunos ac primorum ordinam
+centuriones mactaverant."--TACITUS, Ann. lib. i. c. 61.]
+
+Never was victory more decisive, never was the liberation of an
+oppressed people more instantaneous and complete. Throughout
+Germany the Roman garrisons were assailed and cut off; and,
+within a few weeks after Varus had fallen, the German soil was
+freed from the foot of an invader.
+
+At Rome, the tidings of the battle was received with an agony of
+terror, the descriptions of which we should deem exaggerated, did
+they not come from Roman historians themselves. These passages
+in the Roman writers not only tell emphatically how great was the
+awe which the Romans felt of the prowess of the Germans, if their
+various tribes could be brought to reunite for a common purpose,
+but also they reveal bow weakened and debased the population of
+Italy had become. [It is clear that the Romans followed the
+policy of fomenting dissension and wars of the Germans among
+themselves. See the thirty-third section of the "Germania" of
+Tacitus, where he mentions the destruction of the Bructeri by the
+neighbouring tribes: "Favore quodam erga nos deorum: nam ne
+spectaculo quidem proelii invidere: super LX. millia non armis
+telisque Romanis, sed, quod magnificentius est, oblectationi
+oculisque ceciderunt. Maneat quaeso, duretque gentibus, si non
+amor nostri at certe odium sui quando urgentibus imperii fatis,
+nihil jam praestare fortuna majus potes quam hostiam
+discordiam."] Dion Cassius says: [Lib. lvi. sec. 23.] "Then
+Augustus, when he heard the calamity of Varus, rent his garments,
+and was in great affliction for the troops he had lost, and for
+terror respecting the Germans and the Gauls. And his chief alarm
+was, that he expected them to push on against Italy and Rome:
+and there remained no Roman youth fit for military duty, that
+were worth speaking of, and the allied populations that were at
+all serviceable had been wasted away. Yet he prepared for the
+emergency as well as his means allowed; and when none of the
+citizens of military age were willing to enlist he made them cast
+lots, and punished by confiscation of goods and disfranchisement
+every fifth man among those under thirty-five, and every tenth
+man of those above that age. At last, when he found that not
+even thus; could he make many come forward, he put some of them
+to death. So he made a conscription of discharged veterans and
+emancipated slaves, and collecting as large a force as he could,
+sent it, under Tiberius, with all speed into Germany."
+
+Dion mentions, also, a number of terrific portents that were
+believed to have occurred at the time; and the narration of which
+is not immaterial, as it shows the state of the public mind, when
+such things were so believed in, and so interpreted. The summits
+of the Alps were said to have fallen, and three columns of fire
+to have blazed up from them. In the Campus Martius, the temple
+of the War-God, from whom the founder of Rome had sprung, was
+struck by a thunderbolt. The nightly heavens glowed several
+times, as if on fire. Many comets blazed forth together; and
+fiery meteors shaped like spears, had shot from the northern
+quarter of the sky, down into the Roman camps. It was said, too,
+that a statue of Victory, which had stood at a place on the
+frontier, pointing the way towards Germany, had of its own accord
+turned round, and now pointed to Italy. These and other
+prodigies were believed by the multitude to accompany the
+slaughter of Varus's legions, and to manifest the anger of the
+gods against Rome, Augustus himself was not free from
+superstition; but on this occasion no supernatural terrors were
+needed to increase the alarm and grief that he felt; and which
+made him, even for months after the news of the battle had
+arrived, often beat his head against the wall, and exclaim,
+"Quintilius Varus, give me back my legions!" We learn this from
+his biographer, Suetonius; and, indeed, every ancient writer who
+alludes to the overthrow of Varus, attests the importance of the
+blow against the Roman power, and the bitterness with which it
+was felt. [Florus expresses its effect most pithily: "Hac clade
+factum est ut imperium quod in litore oceani non steterat, in
+ripa Rheni fluminis staret" (iv. 12).]
+
+The Germans did not pursue their victory beyond their own
+territory. But that victory secured at once and for ever the
+independence of the Teutonic race. Rome sent, indeed, her
+legions again into Germany, to parade a temporary superiority;
+but all hopes of permanent conquest were abandoned by Augustus
+and his successors.
+
+The blow which Arminius had struck never was forgotten, Roman
+fear disguised itself under the specious title of moderation; and
+the Rhine became the acknowledged boundary of the two nations
+until the fifth century of our era, when the Germans became the
+assailants, and carved with their conquering swords the provinces
+of Imperial Rome into the kingdoms of modern Europe.
+
+
+ARMINIUS.
+
+I have said above that the great Cheruscan is more truly one of
+our national heroes than Caractacus is. It may be added that an
+Englishman is entitled to claim a closer degree of relationship
+with Arminius than can be claimed by any German of modern
+Germany. The proof of this depends on the proof of four facts:
+first, that the Cherusci were Old Saxons, or Saxons of the
+interior of Germany; secondly, that the Anglo-Saxons, or Saxons
+of the coast of Germany, were more closely akin than other German
+tribes were to the Cheruscan Saxons; thirdly, that the Old Saxons
+were almost exterminated by Charlemagne; fourthly, that the
+Anglo-Saxons are our immediate ancestors. The last of these may
+be assumed as an axiom in English history. The proofs of the
+other three are partly philological, and partly historical. I
+have not space to go into them here, but they will be found in
+the early chapters of the great work of Dr. Robert Gordon Latham
+on the "English Language;" and in the notes to his edition of the
+"Germania of Tacitus." It may be, however, here remarked that
+the present Saxons of Germany are of the High Germanic division
+of the German race, whereas both the Anglo-Saxon and Old Saxon
+were of the Low Germanic.
+
+Being thus the nearest heirs of the glory of Arminius, we may
+fairly devote more attention to his career than, in such a work
+as the present, could be allowed to any individual leader. and
+it is interesting to trace how far his fame survived during the
+middle ages, both among the Germans of the Continent and among
+ourselves.
+
+It seems probable that the jealousy with which Maraboduus, the
+king of the Suevi and Marcomanni, regarded Arminius, and which
+ultimately broke out into open hostilities between those German
+tribes and the Cherusci, prevented Arminius from leading the
+confederate Germans to attack Italy after his first victory.
+Perhaps he may have had the rare moderation of being content with
+the liberation of his country, without seeking to retaliate on
+her former oppressors. When Tiberius marched into Germany in the
+year 10, Arminius was too cautious to attack him on ground
+favourable to the legions, and Tiberius was too skilful, to
+entangle his troops in difficult parts of the country. His march
+and counter-march were as unresisted as they were unproductive.
+A few years later, when a dangerous revolt of the Roman legions
+near the frontier caused their generals to find them active
+employment by leading them into the interior of Germany, we find
+Arminius again energetic in his country's defence. The old
+quarrel between him and his father-in-law, Segestes, had broken
+out afresh. Segestes now called in the aid of the Roman general,
+Germanicus, to whom he surrendered himself; and by his
+contrivance his daughter Thusnelda, the wife of Arminius, also
+came into the hands of the Romans, being far advanced in
+pregnancy. She showed, as Tacitus relates, [Ann. i. 57.] more
+of the spirit of her husband than of her father, a spirit that
+could not be subdued into tears or supplications. She was sent
+to Ravenna, and there gave birth to a son, whose life we find,
+from an allusion in Tacitus, to have been eventful and unhappy;
+but the part of the great historian's work which narrated his
+fate has perished, and we only know from another quarter that the
+son of Arminius was, at the age of four years, led captive in a
+triumphal pageant along the streets of Rome.
+
+The high spirit of Arminius was goaded almost into frenzy by
+these bereavements. The fate of his wife, thus torn from him,
+and of his babe doomed to bondage even before its birth, inflamed
+the eloquent invectives with which he roused his countrymen
+against the home traitors, and against their invaders, who thus
+made war upon women and children. Germanicus had marched his
+army to the place where Varus had perished, and had there paid
+funeral honours to the ghastly relics of his predecessor's
+legions that he found heaped around him. [In the Museum of
+Rhenish antiquities at Bonn there is a Roman sepulchral monument,
+the inscription on which records that it was erected to the
+memory of M. Coelius, who fell "BELLO VARIANO."] Arminius lured
+him to advance a little further into the country, and then
+assailed him, and fought a battle, which, by the Roman accounts,
+was a drawn one. The effect of it was to make Germanicus resolve
+on retreating to the Rhine. He himself, with part of his troops,
+embarked in some vessels on the Ems, and returned by that river,
+and then by sea; but part of his forces were entrusted to a Roman
+general, named Caecina, to lead them back by land to the Rhine.
+Arminius followed this division on its march, and fought several
+battles with it, in which he inflicted heavy loss on the Romans,
+captured the greater part of their baggage, and would have
+destroyed them completely, had not his skilful system of
+operations been finally thwarted by the haste of Inguiomerus, a
+confederate German chief who insisted on assaulting the Romans in
+their camp, instead of waiting till they were entangled in the
+difficulties of the country, and assailing their columns on the
+march.
+
+In the following year the Romans were inactive; but in the year
+afterwards Germanicus led a fresh invasion. He placed his army
+on ship-board, and sailed to the mouth of the Ems, where he
+disembarked, and marched to the Weser, where he encamped,
+probably in the neighbourhood of Minden. Arminius had collected
+his army on the other side of the river; and a scene occurred,
+which is powerfully told by Tacitus, and which is the subject of
+a beautiful poem by Praed. It has been already mentioned that
+the brother of Arminius, like himself, had been trained up, while
+young, to serve in the Roman armies; but, unlike Arminius, he not
+only refused to quit the Roman service for that of his country,
+but fought against his country with the legions of Germanicus.
+He had assumed the Roman name of Flavius, and had gained
+considerable distinction in the Roman service, in which he had
+lost an eye from a wound in battle. When the Roman outposts
+approached the river Weser, Arminius called out to them from the
+opposite bank, and expressed a wish to see his brother. Flavius
+stepped forward, and Arminius ordered his own followers to
+retire, and requested that the archers should be removed from the
+Roman bank of the river. This was done: and the brothers, who
+apparently had not seen each other for some years, began a
+conversation from the opposite sides of the stream, in which
+Arminius questioned his brother respecting the loss of his eye,
+and what battle it had been lost in, and what reward he had
+received for his wound. Flavius told him how the eye was
+destroyed, and mentioned the increased pay that he had on account
+of its loss, and showed the collar and other military decorations
+that had been given him. Arminius mocked at these as badges of
+slavery; and then each began to try to win the other over;
+Flavius boasting the power of Rome, and her generosity to the
+submissive; Arminius appealing to him in the name of their
+country's gods, of the mother that had borne them, and by the
+holy names of fatherland and freedom, not to prefer being the
+betrayer to being the champion of his country. They soon
+proceeded to mutual taunts and menaces, and Flavius called aloud
+for his horse and his arms, that he might dash across the river
+and attack his brother; nor would he have been checked from doing
+so, had not the Roman general, Stertinius, run up to him, and
+forcibly detained him. Arminius stood on the other bank,
+threatening the renegade, and defying him to battle.
+
+I shall not be thought to need apology for quoting here the
+stanzas in which Praed has described this scene--a scene among
+the most affecting, as well as the most striking, that history
+supplies. It makes us reflect on the desolate position of
+Arminius, with his wife and child captives in the enemy's hands,
+and with his brother a renegade in arms against him. The great
+liberator of our German race stood there, with every source of
+human happiness denied him, except the consciousness of doing his
+duty to his country.
+
+"Back, back! he fears not foaming flood
+ Who fears not steel-clad line:--
+ No warrior thou of German blood,
+ No brother thou of mine.
+ Go, earn Rome's chain to load thy neck,
+ Her gems to deck thy hilt;
+ And blazon honour's hapless wreck
+ With all the gauds of guilt.
+
+"But wouldst thou have ME share the prey?
+ By all that I have done,--
+ The Varian bones that day by day
+ Lie whitening in the sun,
+ The legion's trampled panoply,
+ The eagle's shattered wing,--
+ I would not be for earth or sky
+ So scorn'd and mean a thing.
+
+"Ho, call me here the wizard, boy,
+ Of dark and subtle skill,
+ To agonise but not destroy,
+ To curse, but not to kill.
+ When swords are out, and shriek and shout,
+ Leave little room for prayer,
+ No fetter on man's arm or heart
+ Hangs half so heavy there.
+
+"I curse him by the gifts the land
+ Hath won from him and Rome--
+ The riving axe, the wasting brand,
+ Rent forest, blazing home.
+ I curse him by our country's gods,
+ The terrible, the dark,
+ The breakers of the Roman rods,
+ The smiters of the bark.
+
+"Oh misery, that such a ban
+ On such a brow should be!
+ Why comes he not in battle's van
+ His country's chief to be?--
+ To stand a comrade by my side,
+ The sharer of my fame,
+ And worthy of a brother's pride
+ And of a brother's name?
+
+"But it is past!--where heroes press
+ And cowards bend the knee
+ Arminius is not brotherless;
+ His brethren are the free.
+ They come around: one hour, and light
+ Will fade from turf and tide,
+ Then onward, onward to the fight
+ With darkness for our guide.
+
+"To-night, to-night, when we shall meet
+ In combat face to face,
+ Then only would Arminius greet
+ The renegade's embrace.
+ The canker of Rome's guilt shall be
+ Upon his dying name;
+ And as he lived in slavery,
+ So shall he fall in shame.
+
+On the day after the Romans had reached the Weser, Germanicus led
+his army across that river, and a partial encounter took place,
+in which Arminius was successful. But on the succeeding day a
+general action was fought, in which Arminius was severely
+wounded, and the German infantry routed with heavy loss. The
+horsemen of the two armies encountered without either party
+gaining the advantage. But the Roman army remained master of the
+ground, and claimed a complete victory. Germanicus erected a
+trophy in the field, with a vaunting inscription, that the
+nations between the Rhine and the Elbe had been thoroughly
+conquered by his army. But that army speedily made a final
+retreat to the left bank of the Rhine; nor was the effect of
+their campaign more durable than their trophy. The sarcasm with
+which Tacitus speaks of certain other triumphs of Roman generals
+over Germans, may apply to the pageant which Germanicus
+celebrated on his return to Rome from his command of the Roman
+army of the Rhine. The Germans were "TRIUMPHATI POTIUS QUAM
+VICTI."
+
+After the Romans had abandoned their attempts on Germany, we find
+Arminius engaged in hostilities with Maroboduus, the king of the
+Suevi and Marcomanni who was endeavouring to bring the other
+German tribes into a state of dependency on him. Arminius was at
+the head of the Germans who took up arms against this home
+invader of their liberties. After some minor engagements, a
+pitched battle was fought between the two confederacies, A.D. 16,
+in which the loss on each side was equal; but Maroboduus
+confessed the ascendency of his antagonist by avoiding a renewal
+of the engagement, and by imploring the intervention of the
+Romans in his defence. The younger Drusus then commanded the
+Roman legions in the province of Illyricum, and by his mediation
+a peace was concluded between Arminius and Maroboduus, by the
+terms of which it is evident that the latter must have renounced
+his ambitious schemes against the freedom of the other German
+tribes.
+
+Arminius did not long survive this second war of independence,
+which he successfully waged for his country. He was assassinated
+in the thirty-seventh year of his age, by some of his own
+kinsmen, who conspired against him. Tacitus says that this
+happened while he was engaged in a civil war, which had been
+caused by his attempts to make himself king over his countrymen.
+It is far more probable (as one of the best biographers of
+Arminius has observed) that Tacitus misunderstood an attempt of
+Arminius to extend his influence as elective war-chieftain of the
+Cherusci, and other tribes, for an attempt to obtain the royal
+dignity. [Dr. Plate, in Biographical Dictionary commenced by
+the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge.] When we
+remember that his father-in-law and his brother were renegades,
+we can well understand that a party among his kinsmen may have
+been bitterly hostile to him, and have opposed his authority with
+the tribe by open violence, and when that seemed ineffectual, by
+secret assassination.
+
+Arminius left a name, which the historians of the nation against
+which he combated so long and so gloriously have delighted to
+honour. It is from the most indisputable source, from the lips
+of enemies, that we know his exploits. [See Tacitus, Ann. lib.
+ii. sec. 88; Velleius Paterculus, lib. ii. sec. 118.] His
+country men made history, but did not write it. But his memory
+lived among them in the lays of their bards, who recorded
+
+"The deeds he did, the fields he won,
+ The freedom he restored."
+
+Tacitus, many years after the death of Arminius, says of him,
+"Canitur adhuc barbaras apud gentes." As time passed on, the
+gratitude of ancient Germany to her great deliverer grew into
+adoration, and divine honours were paid for centuries to Arminius
+by every tribe of the Low Germanic division of the Teutonic
+races. The Irmin-sul, or the column of Herman, near Eresburg,
+the modern Stadtberg, was the chosen object of worship to the
+descendants of the Cherusci, the Old Saxons, and in defence of
+which they fought most desperately against Charlemagne and his
+christianized Franks. "Irmin, in the cloudy Olympus of Teutonic
+belief, appears as a king and a warrior; and the pillar, the
+'Irmin-sul,' bearing the statue, and considered as the symbol of
+the deity, was the Palladium of the Saxon nation, until the
+temple of Eresburg was destroyed by Charlemagne, and the column
+itself transferred to the monastery of Corbey, where, perhaps, a
+portion of the rude rock idol yet remains, covered by the
+ornaments of the Gothic era." [Palgrave on the English
+Commonwealth, vol. ii. p. 140.]
+
+Traces of the worship of Arminius are to be found among our
+Anglo-Saxon ancestors, after their settlement in this island.
+One of the four great highways was held to be under the
+protection of the deity, and was called the "Irmin-street." The
+name Arminius is, of course, the mere Latinized form of "Herman,"
+the name by which the hero and the deity were known by every man
+of Low German blood, on either side of the German Sea. It means,
+etymologically, the "War-man," the "man of hosts." No other
+explanation of the worship of the "Irmin-sul," and of the name of
+the "Irmin-street," is so satisfactory as that which connects
+them with the deified Arminius. We know for certain of the
+existence of other columns of an analogous character. Thus,
+there was the Roland-seule in North Germany; there was a Thor-
+seule in Sweden, and (what is more important) there was an
+Athelstan-seule in Saxon England." [See Lappenburg's Anglo-
+Saxons, p. 378. For nearly all the philological and
+ethnographical facts respecting Arminius, I am indebted to Dr. R.
+G. Latham.]
+
+There is at the present moment a song respecting the Irmin-sul
+current in the bishopric of Minden, one version of which might
+seem only to refer to Charlemagne having pulled down the Irmin-
+sul:--
+
+"Herman, sla dermen,
+ Sla pipen, sla trummen,
+ De Kaiser will kummen,
+ Met hamer un stangen,
+ Will Herman uphangen."
+
+But there is another version, which probably is the oldest, and
+which clearly refers to the great Arminius:--
+
+"Un Herman slaug dermen;
+ Slaug pipen, slaug trummen;
+ De fursten sind kammen,
+ Met all eren-mannen
+ Hebt VARUS uphangen."
+[See Grimm, Deutsche Mythologie, p. 329.]
+
+About ten centuries and a half after the demolition of the Irmin-
+sul, and nearly eighteen after the death of Arminius, the modern
+Germans conceived the idea of rendering tardy homage to their
+great hero; and, accordingly some eight or ten years ago, a
+general subscription was organized in Germany, for the purpose of
+erecting on the Osning--a conical mountain, which forms the
+highest summit of the Teutoberger Wald, and is eighteen hundred
+feet above the level of the sea--a colossal bronze statue of
+Arminius. The statue was designed by Bandel. The hero was to
+stand uplifting a sword in his right hand, and looking towards
+the Rhine. The height of the statue was to be eighty feet from
+the base to the point of the sword, and was to stand on a
+circular Gothic temple, ninety feet high, and supported by oak
+trees as columns. The mountain, where it was to be erected, is
+wild and stern, and overlooks the scene of the battle. It was
+calculated that the statue would be clearly visible at a distance
+of sixty miles. The temple is nearly finished, and the statue
+itself has been cast at the copper works at Lemgo. But there,
+through want of funds to set it up, it has lain for some years,
+in disjointed fragments, exposed to the mutilating homage of
+relic-seeking travellers. The idea of honouring a hero who
+belongs to ALL Germany, is not one which the present rulers of
+that divided country have any wish to encourage; and the statue
+may long continue to lie there, and present too true a type of
+the condition of Germany herself. [On the subject of this
+statue I must repeat an acknowledgment of my obligations to my
+friend Mr. Henry Pearson.]
+
+Surely this is an occasion in which Englishmen might well prove,
+by acts as well as words, that we also rank Arminius among our
+heroes.
+
+I have quoted the noble stanzas of one of our modern English
+poets on Arminius, and I will conclude this memoir with one of
+the odes of the great poet of modern Germany, Klopstock, on the
+victory to which we owe our freedom, and Arminius mainly owes his
+fame. Klopstock calls it the "Battle of Winfield." The epithet
+of "Sister of Cannae" shows that Klopstock followed some
+chronologers, according to whom, Varus was defeated on the
+anniversary of the day on which Paulus and Varro were defeated by
+Hannibal.
+
+SONG OF TRIUMPH AFTER THE VICTORY OF HERRMAN, THE DELIVERER OF
+GERMANY FROM THE ROMANS.
+
+FROM KLOPSTOCK'S "HERRMAN UND DIE FURSTEN."
+Supposed to be sung by a Chorus of Bards.
+
+A CHORUS.
+
+ Sister of Cannae! Winfield's fight!
+ We saw thee with thy streaming bloody hair,
+ With fiery eye, bright with the world's despair,
+ Sweep by Walhalla's bards from out our sight.
+ Herrman outspake--"Now Victory or Death!"
+ The Romans, . . . "Victory!"
+ And onward rushed their eagles with the cry.
+--So ended the FIRST day.
+
+ "Victory or Death!" began
+ Then, first, the Roman chief; and Herrman spake
+ Not, but home struck: the eagles fluttered--brake.
+--So sped the SECOND day.
+
+TWO CHORUSES.
+
+ And the third came. . . . The cry was "Flight or Death!"
+ Flight left they not for them who'd make them slaves--
+ Men who stab children!--flight for THEM! . . . no! graves!
+--'Twas their LAST day.
+
+TWO BARDS.
+
+ Yet spared they messengers: two came to Rome.
+ How drooped the plume! the lance was left to trail
+ Down in the dust behind: their cheek was pale:
+ So came the messengers to Rome.
+
+ High in his hall the Imperator sate--
+ OCTAVIANUS CAESAR AUGUSTUS sate.
+ They filled up wine-cups, wine-cups filled they up
+ For him the highest, Jove of all their state.
+
+ The flutes of Lydia hushed before their voice,
+ Before the messengers--the "Highest" sprung--
+ The god against the marble pillars, wrung
+ By the dred words, striking his brow, and thrice
+ Cried he aloud in anguish--"Varus! Varus!
+ Give back my legions, Varus!"
+
+ And now the world-wide conquerors shrunk and feared
+ For fatherland and home
+ The lance to raise; and 'mongst those false to Rome
+ The death-lot rolled, and still they shrunk and feared;
+
+ "For she her face hath turned,
+ The victor goddess," cried these cowards--(for aye
+ Be it!)--"from Rome and Romans, and her day
+ Is done!"--And still be mourned
+ And cried aloud in anguish--"Varus! Varus!
+ Give back my legions, Varus!"
+
+[Notes:--The battle of Cannae, B.C. 216--Hannibal's victory over
+the Romans.
+Winfield--the probable site of the "Herrmanschladt. See SUPRA.
+Augustus was worshipped as a deity in his lifetime.
+I have taken this translation from an anonymous writer in FRASER,
+two years ago.]
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN ARMINIUS'S VICTORY OVER VARUS, AND THE
+BATTLE OF CHALONS.
+
+A.D. 43. The Romans commence the conquest of Britain, Claudius
+being then Emperor of Rome. The population of this island was
+then Celtic. In about forty years all the tribes south of the
+Clyde were subdued, and their land made a Roman province.
+
+68-60. Successful campaigns of the Roman general Corbulo against
+the Parthians.
+
+64. First persecution of the Christians at Rome under Nero.
+
+68-70. Civil wars in the Roman World. The emperors Nero, Galba,
+Otho, and Vitellius, cut off successively by violent deaths.
+Vespasian becomes emperor.
+
+70. Jerusalem destroyed by the Romans under Titus.
+
+83. Futile attack of Domitian on the Germans.
+
+86. Beginning of the wars between the Romans and the Dacians.
+
+98-117. Trajan, emperor of Rome. Under him the empire acquires
+its greatest territorial extent by his conquests in Dacia and in
+the East. His successor, Hadrian, abandons the provinces beyond
+the Euphrates, which Trajan had conquered.
+
+138-180. Era of the Antonines.
+
+167-176. A long and desperate war between Rome and a great
+confederacy of the German nations. Marcus Antoninus at last
+succeeds in repelling them.
+
+192-197. Civil Wars throughout the Roman world. Severus becomes
+emperor. He relaxes the discipline of the soldiers. After his
+death in 211, the series of military insurrections, civil wars,
+and murders of emperors recommences.
+
+226. Artaxerxes (Ardisheer) overthrows the Parthian, and
+restores the Persian kingdom in Asia. He attacks the Roman
+possessions in the East.
+
+260. The Goths invade the Roman provinces. The emperor Decius
+is defeated and slain by them.
+
+253-260. The Franks and Alemanni invade Gaul, Spain, and Africa.
+The Goths attack Asia Minor and Greece. The Persians conquer
+Armenia. Their king, Sapor, defeats the Roman emperor Valerian,
+and takes him prisoner. General distress of the Roman empire.
+
+268-283. The emperors Claudius, Aurelian, Tacitus, Probus, and
+Carus defeat the various enemies of Rome, and restore order in
+the Roman state.
+
+285. Diocletian divides and reorganizes the Roman empire. After
+his abdication in 305 a fresh series of civil wars and confusion
+ensues. Constantine, the first Christian emperor, reunites the
+empire in 324.
+
+330. Constantine makes Constantinople the seat of empire instead
+of Rome.
+
+363. The emperor Julian is killed in action against the
+Persians.
+
+364-375. The empire is again divided, Valentinian being emperor
+of the West, and Valens of the East. Valentinian repulses the
+Alemanni, and other German invaders from Gaul. Splendour of the
+Gothic kingdom under Hermanric, north of the Danube.
+
+376-395. The Huns attack the Goths, who implore the protection
+of the Roman emperor of the East. The Goths are allowed to pass
+the Danube, and to settle in the Roman provinces. A war soon
+breaks out between them and the Romans, and the emperor Valens
+and his army are destroyed by them. They ravage the Roman
+territories. The emperor Theodosius reduces them to submission.
+They retain settlements in Thrace and Asia Minor.
+
+395. Final division of the Roman empire between Arcadius and
+Honorius, the two sons of Theodosius. The Goths revolt, and
+under Alaric attack various parts of both the Roman empires.
+
+410. Alaric takes the city of Rome.
+
+412. The Goths march into Gaul, and in 414 into Spain, which had
+been already invaded by hosts of Vandals, Suevi, Alani, and other
+Germanic nations. Britain is formally abandoned by the Roman
+emperor of the West.
+
+428. Genseric, king of the Vandals, conquers the Roman province
+of North Africa.
+
+441. The Huns attack the Eastern empire.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE BATTLE OF CHALONS, A.D. 451.
+
+"The discomfiture of the mighty attempt of Attila to found a new
+anti-Christian dynasty upon the wreck of the temporal power of
+Rome, at the end of the term of twelve hundred years, to which
+its duration had been limited by the forebodings of the
+heathen."--HERBERT.
+
+A broad expanse of plains, the Campi Catalaunici of the ancients,
+spreads far and wide around the city of Chalons, in the north-
+east of France. The long rows of poplars, through which the
+river Marne winds its way, and a few thinly-scattered villages,
+are almost the only objects that vary the monotonous aspect of
+the greater part of this region. But about five miles from
+Chalons, near the little hamlets of Chaps and Cuperly, the ground
+is indented and heaped up in ranges of grassy mounds and
+trenches, which attest the work of man's hand in ages past; and
+which, to the practised eye, demonstrate that this quiet spot has
+once been the fortified position of a huge military host.
+
+Local tradition gives to these ancient earthworks the name of
+Attila's Camp. Nor is there any reason to question the
+correctness of the title, or to doubt that behind these very
+ramparts it was that, 1400 years ago, the most powerful heathen
+king that ever ruled in Europe mustered the remnants of his vast
+army, which had striven on these plains against the Christian
+soldiery of Thoulouse and Rome. Here it was that Attila prepared
+to resist to the death his victors in the field; and here he
+heaped up the treasures of his camp in one vast pile, which was
+to be his funeral pyre should his camp be stormed. It was here
+that the Gothic and Italian forces watched but dared not assail,
+their enemy in his despair, after that great and terrible day of
+battle, when
+
+"The sound
+ Of conflict was o'erpast, the shout of all
+ Whom earth could send from her remotest bounds,
+ Heathen or faithful;--from thy hundred mouths,
+ That feed the Caspian with Riphean snows,
+ Huge Volga! from famed Hypanis, which once
+ Cradled the Hun; from all the countless realms
+ Between Imaus and that utmost strand
+ Where columns of Herculean rock confront
+ The blown Atlantic; Roman, Goth, and Hun,
+ And Scythian strength of chivalry, that tread
+ The cold Codanian shore, or what far lands
+ Inhospitable drink Cimmerian floods,
+ Franks, Saxons, Suevic, and Sarmartian chiefs,
+ And who from green Armorica or Spain
+ Flocked to the work of death."
+ [Herbert's Attila, book i. line 13.]
+
+The victory which the Roman general Aetius, with his Gothic
+allies, had then gained over the Huns, was the last victory of
+Imperial Rome. But among the long Fasti of her triumphs, few can
+be found that, for their importance and ultimate benefit to
+mankind, are comparable with this expiring effort of her arms.
+It did not, indeed, open to her any new career of conquest; it
+did not consolidate the relics of her power; it did not turn the
+rapid ebb of her fortunes. The mission of Imperial Rome was, in
+truth, already accomplished. She had received and transmitted
+through her once ample dominion the civilization of Greece. She
+had broken up the barriers of narrow nationalities among the
+various states and tribes that dwelt around the coast of the
+Mediterranean. She had fused these and many other races into one
+organized empire, bound together by a community of laws, of
+government and institutions. Under the shelter of her full power
+the True Faith had arisen in the earth and during the years of
+her decline it had been nourished to maturity, and had overspread
+all the provinces that ever obeyed her sway. [See the
+Introduction to Ranke's History of the Popes.] For no beneficial
+purpose to mankind could the dominion of the seven-hilled city
+have been restored or prolonged. But it was all-important to
+mankind what nations should divide among them Rome's rich
+inheritance of empire: whether the Germanic and Gothic warriors
+should form states and kingdoms out of the fragments of her
+dominions, and become the free members of the commonwealth of
+Christian Europe; or whether pagan savages from the wilds of
+Central Asia should crush the relics of classic civilization, and
+the early institutions of the christianized Germans, in one
+hopeless chaos of barbaric conquest. The Christian Vistigoths of
+King Theodoric fought and triumphed at Chalons, side by side with
+the legions of Aetius. Their joint victory over the Hunnish host
+not only rescued for a time from destruction the old age of Rome,
+but preserved for centuries of power and glory the Germanic
+element in the civilization of modern Europe.
+
+In order to estimate the full importance to mankind of the battle
+of Chalons, we must keep steadily in mind who and what the
+Germans were, and the important distinctions between them and the
+numerous other races that assailed the Roman Empire: and it is
+to be understood that the Gothic and the Scandinavian nations are
+included in the German race. Now, "in two remarkable traits the
+Germans differed from the Sarmatic, as well as from the Slavic
+nations, and, indeed, from all those other races to whom the
+Greeks and Romans gave the designation of barbarians. I allude
+to their personal freedom and regards for the rights of men;
+secondly, to the respect paid by them to the female sex and the
+chastity for which the latter were celebrated among the people of
+the North. These were the foundations of that probity of
+character, self-respect, and purity of manners which may be
+traced among the Germans and Goths even during pagan times, and
+which, when their sentiments were enlightened by Christianity,
+brought out those splendid traits of character which distinguish
+the age of chivalry and romance." [See Prichard's Researches
+into the Physical History of Mankind, vol iii. p. 423.] What the
+intermixture of the German stock with the classic, at the fall of
+the Western Empire, has done for mankind may be best felt by
+watching, with Arnold, over how large a portion of the earth the
+influence of the German element is now extended.
+
+"It affects, more or less, the whole west of Europe, from the
+head of the Gulf of Bothnia to the most southern promontory of
+Sicily, from the Oder and the Adriatic to the Hebrides and to
+Lisbon. It is true that the language spoken over a large portion
+of this space is not predominantly German; but even in France,
+and Italy, and Spain, the influence of the Franks, Burgundians,
+Visigoths, Ostrogoths, and Lombards, while it has coloured even
+the language, has in blood and institutions left its mark legibly
+and indelibly. Germany, the Low Countries, Switzerland for the
+most part, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, and our own islands, are
+all in language, in blood, and in institutions, German most
+decidedly. But all South America is peopled with Spaniards and
+Portuguese; all North America, and all Australia with Englishmen.
+I say nothing of the prospects and influence of the German race
+in Africa and in India: it is enough to say that half of Europe,
+and all America and Australia, are German, more or less
+completely, in race, in language, or in institutions, or in all."
+[Arnold's Lectures on Modern History, p. 35.]
+
+By the middle of the fifth century, Germanic nations had settled
+themselves in many of the fairest regions of the Roman empire,
+had imposed their yoke on the provincials, and had undergone, to
+a considerable extent, that moral conquest which the arts and
+refinements of the vanquished in arms have so often achieved over
+the rough victor. The Visigoths held the north of Spain and Gaul
+south of the Loire. Franks, Alemanni, Alans, and Burgundians had
+established themselves in other Gallic provinces, and the Suevi
+were masters of a large southern portion of the Spanish
+peninsula. A king of the Vandals reigned in North Africa, and
+the Ostrogoths had firmly planted themselves in the provinces
+north of Italy. Of these powers and principalities, that of the
+Visigoths, under their king Theodoric, son of Alaric, was by far
+the first in power and in civilization.
+
+The pressure of the Huns upon Europe had first been felt in the
+fourth century of our era. They had long been formidable to the
+Chinese empire; but the ascendency in arms which another nomadic
+tribe of Central Asia, the Sienpi gained over them, drove the
+Huns from their Chinese conquests westward; and this movement
+once being communicated to the whole chain of barbaric nations
+that dwelt northward of the Black Sea and the Roman empire, tribe
+after tribe of savage warriors broke in upon the barriers of
+civilized Europe, "velut unda supervenit undam." The Huns
+crossed the Tanais into Europe in 375, and rapidly reduced to
+subjection the Alans, the Ostrogoths, and other tribes that were
+then dwelling along the course of the Danube. The armies of the
+Roman emperor that tried to check their progress were cut to
+pieces by them; and Panonia and other provinces south of the
+Danube were speedily occupied by the victorious cavalry of these
+new invaders. Not merely the degenerate Romans, but the bold
+and hardy warriors of Germany and Scandinavia were appalled at
+the numbers, the ferocity, the ghastly appearance, and the
+lightning-like rapidity of the Huns. Strange and loathsome
+legends were coined and credited, which attributed their origin
+to the union of "Secret, black, and midnight hags" with the evil
+spirits of the wilderness.
+
+Tribe after tribe, and city after city, fell before them. Then
+came a pause in their career of conquest in South-western Europe
+caused probably by dissensions among their chiefs, and also by
+their arms being employed in attack upon the Scandinavian
+nations. But when Attila (or Atzel, as he is called in the
+Hungarian language) became their ruler, the torrent of their arms
+was directed with augmented terrors upon the west and the south;
+and their myriads marched beneath the guidance of one master-mind
+to the overthrow both of the new and the old powers of the earth.
+
+Recent events have thrown such a strong interest over everything
+connected with the Hungarian name, that even the terrible name of
+Attila now impresses us the more vividly through our sympathising
+admiration of the exploits of those who claim to be descended
+from his warriors, and "ambitiously insert the name of Attila
+among their native kings." The authenticity of this martial
+genealogy is denied by some writers, and questioned by more. But
+it is at least certain that the Magyars of Arpad, who are the
+immediate ancestors of the bulk of the modern Hungarians, and who
+conquered the country which bears the name of Hungary in A.D.
+889, were of the same stock of mankind as were the Huns of
+Attila, even if they did not belong to the same subdivision of
+that stock. Nor is there any improbability in the tradition,
+that after Attila's death many of his warriors remained in
+Hungary, and that their descendants afterwards joined the Huns of
+Arpad in their career of conquest. It is certain that Attila
+made Hungary the seat of his empire. It seems also susceptible
+of clear proof that the territory was then called Hungvar, and
+Attila's soldiers Hungvari. Both the Huns of Attila and those of
+Arpad came from the family of nomadic nations, whose primitive
+regions were those vast wildernesses of High Asia which are
+included between the Altaic and the Himalayan mountain-chains.
+The inroads of these tribes upon the lower regions of Asia and
+into Europe, have caused many of the most remarkable revolutions
+in the history of the world. There is every reason to believe
+that swarms of these nations made their way into distant parts of
+the earth, at periods long before the date of the Scythian
+invasion of Asia, which is the earliest inroad of the nomadic
+race that history records. The first, as far as we can
+conjecture, in respect to the time of their descent were the
+Finnish and Ugrian tribes, who appear to have come down from the
+Asiatic border of High Asia towards the north-west, in which
+direction they advanced to the Uralian mountains. There they
+established themselves: and that mountain chain, with its
+valleys and pasture-lands, became to them a new country, whence
+they sent out colonies on every side; but the Ugrian colony,
+which under Arpad occupied Hungary, and became the ancestors of
+the bulk of the present Hungarian nation, did not quit their
+settlements on the Uralian mountains till a very late period, not
+until four centuries after the time when Attila led from the
+primary seats of the nomadic races in High Asia the host with
+which he advanced into the heart of France. [See Prichard's
+Researches into the Physical History of Mankind.] That host was
+Turkish; but closely allied in origin, language, and habits, with
+the Finno-Ugrian settlers on the Ural.
+
+Attila's fame has not come down to us through the partial and
+suspicious medium of chroniclers and poets of his own race. It
+is not from Hunnish authorities that we learn the extent of his
+might: It is from his enemies, from the literature and the
+legends of the nations whom he afflicted with his arms, that we
+draw the unquestionable evidence of his greatness. Besides the
+express narratives of Byzantine, Latin, and Gothic writers, we
+have the strongest proof of the stern reality of Attila's
+conquests in the extent to which he and his Huns have been the
+themes of the earliest German and Scandinavian lays. Wild as
+many of these legends are, they bear concurrent and certain
+testimony to the awe with which the memory of Attila was regarded
+by the bold warriors who composed and delighted in them.
+Attila's exploits, and the wonders of his unearthly steed and
+magic sword, repeatedly occur in the Sagas of Norway and Iceland;
+and the celebrated Niebelungen Lied, the most ancient of Germanic
+poetry, is full of them. There Etsel or Attila, is described as
+the wearer of twelve mighty crowns, and as promising to his bride
+the lands of thirty kings, whom his irresistible sword has
+subdued. He is, in fact, the hero of the latter part of this
+remarkable poem; and it is at his capital city, Etselenburgh,
+which evidently corresponds to the modern Buda, that much of its
+action takes place.
+
+When we turn from the legendary to the historic Attila, we see
+clearly that he was not one of the vulgar herd of barbaric
+conquerors. Consummate military skill may be traced in his
+campaigns; and he relied far less on the brute force of armies
+for the aggrandizement of his empire, than on the unbounded
+influence over the affections of friends and the fears of foes
+which his genius enabled him to acquire. Austerely sober in his
+private life, severely just on the judgment-seat, conspicuous
+among a nation of warriors for hardihood, strength, and skill in
+every martial exercise, grave and deliberate in counsel, but
+rapid and remorseless in execution, he gave safety and security
+to all who were under his dominion, while he waged a warfare of
+extermination against all who opposed or sought to escape from
+it. He matched the national passions, the prejudices, the
+creeds, and the superstitions of the varied nations over which he
+ruled, and of those which he sought to reduce beneath his sway:
+and these feelings he had the skill to turn to his own account.
+His own warriors believed him to be the inspired favourite of
+their deities, and followed him with fanatic zeal: his enemies
+looked on him as the pre-appointed minister of Heaven's wrath
+against themselves; and, though they believed not in his creed,
+their own made them tremble before him.
+
+In one of his early campaigns he appeared before his troops with
+an ancient iron sword in his grasp, which he told them was the
+god of war whom their ancestors had worshipped. It is certain
+that the nomadic tribes of Northern Asia, whom Herodotus
+described under the name of Scythians, from the earliest times
+worshipped as their god a bare sword. That sword-God was
+supposed, in Attila's time, to have disappeared from earth; but
+the Hunnish king now claimed to have received it by special
+revelation. It was said that a herdsman, who was tracking in the
+desert a wounded heifer by the drops of blood, found the
+mysterious sword standing fixed in the ground, as if it had been
+darted down from heaven. The herdsman bore it to Attila, who
+thenceforth was believed by the Huns to wield the Spirit of Death
+in battle; and the seers prophesied that that sword was to
+destroy the world. A Roman, [Priscus.] who was on an embassy to
+the Hunnish camp, recorded in his memoirs Attila's acquisition of
+this supernatural weapon, and the immense influence over the
+minds of the barbaric tribes which its possession gave him. In
+the title which he assumed, we shall see the skill with which he
+availed himself of the legends and creeds of other nations as
+well as of his own. He designated himself "ATTILA, Descendant of
+the Great Nimrod. Nurtured in Engaddi. By the Grace of God,
+King of the Huns, the Goths, the Danes, and the Medes. The Dread
+of the World."
+
+Herbert states that Attila is represented on an old medallion
+with a Teraphim, or a head, on his breast; and the same writer
+adds: "We know, from the 'Hamartigenea' of Prudentius, that
+Nimrod, with a snaky-haired head, was the object of adoration to
+the heretical followers of Marcion; and the same head was the
+palladium set up by Antiochus Epiphanes over the gates of
+Antioch, though it has been called the visage of Charon. The
+memory of Nimrod was certainly regarded with mystic veneration by
+many; and by asserting himself to be the heir of that mighty
+hunter before the Lord, he vindicated to himself at least the
+whole Babylonian kingdom.
+
+"The singular assertion in his style, that he was nurtured in
+Engaddi where he certainly, had never been, will be more easily
+understood on reference to the twelfth chapter of the Book of
+Revelation, concerning the woman clothed with the sun, who was to
+bring forth in the wilderness--'where she hath a place prepared
+of God'--a man-child, who was to contend with the dragon having
+seven heads and ten horns, and rule all nations with a rod of
+iron. This prophecy was at that time understood universally by
+the sincere Christians to refer to the birth of Constantine, who
+was to overwhelm the paganism of the city on the seven hills, and
+it is still so explained; but it is evident that the heathens
+must have looked on it in a different light, and have regarded it
+as a foretelling of the birth of that Great One who should master
+the temporal power of Rome. The assertion, therefore, that he
+was nurtured in Engaddi, is a claim to be looked upon as that
+man-child who was to be brought forth in a place prepared of God
+in the wilderness. Engaddi means, a place of palms and vines, in
+the desert; it was hard by Zoar, the city of refuge, which was
+saved in the vale of Siddim, or Demons, when the rest were
+destroyed by fire and brimstone from the Lord in heaven, and
+might, therefore, be especially called a place prepared of God in
+the wilderness."
+
+It is obvious enough why he styled himself "By the grace of God,
+King of the Huns and Goths;" and it seems far from difficult to
+see why he added the names of the Medes and the Danes. His
+armies had been engaged in warfare against the Persian kingdom of
+the Sassanidae; and it is certain [See the narrative of Priscus.]
+that he meditated the attack and overthrow of the Medo-Persian
+power. Probably some of the northern provinces of that kingdom
+had been compelled to pay him tribute; and this would account for
+his styling himself King of the Medes, they being his remotest
+subjects to the south. From a similar cause he may have called
+himself King of the Danes, as his power may well have extended
+northwards as far as the nearest of the Scandinavian nations; and
+this mention of Medes and Danes as his subjects would serve at
+once to indicate the vast extent of his dominion." [In the
+"Niebelungen-Lied," the old poet who describes the reception of
+the heroine Chrimhild by Attila (Etsel) says that Attila's
+dominions were so vast, that among his subject-warriors there
+were Russian, Greek, Wallachian, Polish, and even DANISH
+KNIGHTS.]
+
+The extensive territory north of the Danube and Black sea, and
+eastward of Caucasus, over which Attila ruled, first in
+conjunction with his brother Bleda, and afterwards alone, cannot
+be very accurately defined; but it must have comprised within it,
+besides the Huns, many nations of Slavic, Gothic, Teutonic, and
+Finnish origin. South also of the Danube, the country from the
+river Sau as far as Novi in Thrace was a Hunnish province. Such
+was the empire of the Huns in A.D. 445; a memorable year, in
+which Attila founded Buda on the Danube as his capital city; and
+ridded himself of his brother by a crime, which seems to have
+been prompted not only by selfish ambition, but also by a desire
+of turning to his purpose the legends and forebodings which then
+were universally spread throughout the Roman empire, and must
+have been well known to the watchful and ruthless Hun.
+
+The year 445 of our era completed the twelfth century from the
+foundation of Rome, according to the best chronologers. It had
+always been believed among the Romans that the twelve vultures
+which were said to have appeared to Romulus when he founded the
+city, signified the time during which the Roman power should
+endure. The twelve vultures denoted twelve centuries. This
+interpretation of the vision of the birds of destiny was current
+among learned Romans, even when there were yet many of the twelve
+centuries to run, and while the imperial city was at the zenith
+of its power. But as the allotted time drew nearer and nearer to
+its conclusion, and as Rome grew weaker and weaker beneath the
+blows of barbaric invaders, the terrible omen was more and more
+talked and thought of; and in Attila's time, men watched for the
+momentary extinction of the Roman state with the last beat of the
+last vulture's wing. Moreover, among the numerous legends
+connected with the foundation of the city, and the fratricidal
+death of Remus, there was one most terrible one, which told that
+Romulus did not put his brother to death in accident, or in hasty
+quarrel, but that
+
+"He slew his gallant twin
+ With inexpiable sin."
+
+deliberately, and in compliance with the warnings of supernatural
+powers. The shedding of a brother's blood was believed to have
+been the price at which the founder of Rome had purchased from
+destiny her twelve centuries of existence. [See a curious
+justification of Attila's murder of his brother, by a zealous
+Hungarian advocate, in the note to Pray's "Annales Hunnorum,"
+p. 117. The example of Romulus is the main authority quoted.]
+
+We may imagine, therefore, with what terror in this, the twelve-
+hundredth year after the foundation of Rome, the inhabitants of
+the Roman empire must have heard the tidings that the royal
+brethren, Attila and Bleda, had founded a new capitol on the
+Danube, which was designed to rule over the ancient capitol on
+the Tiber; and that Attila, like Romulus, had consecrated the
+foundations of his new city by murdering his brother; so that,
+for the new cycle of centuries then about to commence, dominion
+had been bought from the gloomy spirits of destiny in favour of
+the Hun, by a sacrifice of equal awe and value with that which
+had formerly obtained it for the Romans.
+
+It is to be remembered that not only the pagans, but also the
+Christians of that age, knew and believed in these legends and
+omens, however they might differ as to the nature of the
+superhuman agency by which such mysteries had been made known to
+mankind. And we may observe, with Herbert, a modern learned
+dignitary of our Church, how remarkably this augury was
+fulfilled. For, "if to the twelve centuries denoted by the
+twelve vultures that appeared to Romulus, we add for the six
+birds that appeared to Remus six lustra, or periods of five years
+each, by which the Romans were wont to number their time, it
+brings us precisely to the year 476, in which the Roman empire
+was finally extinguished by Odoacer."
+
+An attempt to assassinate Attila, made, or supposed to have been
+made, at the instigation of Theodosius the Younger, the Emperor
+of Constantinople, drew the Hunnish armies, in 445, upon the
+Eastern empire, and delayed for a time the destined blow against
+Rome. Probably a more important cause of delay was the revolt of
+some of the Hunnish tribes to the north of the Black Sea against
+Attila, which broke out about this period, and is cursorily
+mentioned by the Byzantine writers. Attila quelled this revolt;
+and having thus consolidated his power, and having punished the
+presumption of the Eastern Roman emperor by fearful ravages of
+his fairest provinces, Attila, A.D. 450, prepared to set his vast
+forces in motion for the conquest of Western Europe. He sought
+unsuccessfully by diplomatic intrigues to detach the King of the
+Visigoths from his alliance with Rome, and he resolved first to
+crush the power of Theodoric, and then to advance with
+overwhelming power to trample out the last sparks of the doomed
+Roman empire.
+
+A strong invitation from a Roman princess gave him a pretext for
+the war, and threw an air of chivalric enterprise over his
+invasion. Honoria, sister of Valentinian III., the Emperor of
+the West, had sent to Attila to offer him her hand, and her
+supposed right to share in the imperial power. This had been
+discovered by Romans, and Honoria had been forthwith closely
+imprisoned, Attila now pretended to take up arms in behalf of his
+self-promised bride, and proclaimed that he was about to march to
+Rome to redress Honoria's wrongs. Ambition and spite against her
+brother must have been the sole motives that led the lady to woo
+the royal Hun for Attila's face and person had all the national
+ugliness of his race and the description given of him by a
+Byzantine ambassador must have been well known in the imperial
+courts. Herbert has well versified the portrait drawn by Priscus
+of the great enemy of both Byzantium and Rome:--
+
+"Terrific was his semblance, in no mould
+ Of beautiful proportion cast; his limbs
+ Nothing exalted, but with sinews braced
+ Of Chalybaean temper, agile, lithe,
+ And swifter than the roe; his ample chest
+ Was overbrowed by a gigantic head,
+ With eyes keen, deeply sunk, and small, that gleam'd
+ Strangely in wrath, as though some spirit unclean
+ Within that corporal tenement installed
+ Look'd from its windows, but with temper'd fire
+ Beam'd mildly on the unresisting. Thin
+ His beard and hoary; his flat nostrils crown'd
+ A cicatrised, swart visage,--but withal
+ That questionable shape such glory wore
+ That mortals quail'd beneath him."
+
+Two chiefs of the Franks, who were then settled on the lower
+Rhine, were at this period engaged in a feud with each other:
+and while one of them appealed to the Romans for aid, the other
+invoked the assistance and protection of the Huns. Attila thus
+obtained an ally whose co-operation secured for him the passage
+of the Rhine; and it was this circumstance which caused him to
+take a northward route from Hungary for his attack upon Gaul.
+The muster of the Hunnish hosts was swollen by warriors of every
+tribe that they had subjugated; nor is there any reason to
+suspect the old chroniclers of wilful exaggeration in estimating
+Attila's army at seven hundred thousand strong. Having crossed
+the Rhine, probably a little below Coblentz, he defeated the King
+of the Burgundians, who endeavoured to bar his progress. He then
+divided his vast forces into two armies,--one of which marched
+north-west upon Tongres and Arras, and the other cities of that
+part of France; while the main body, under Attila himself marched
+up the Moselle, and destroyed Besancon, and other towns in the
+country of the Burgundians. One of the latest and best
+biographers of Attila well observes, that, "having thus conquered
+the eastern part of France, Attila prepared for an invasion of
+the West Gothic territories beyond the Loire. He marched upon
+Orleans, where he intended to force the passage of that river;
+and only a little attention is requisite to enable us to perceive
+that he proceeded on a systematic plan: he had his right wing on
+the north, for the protection of his Frank allies; his left wing
+on the south, for the purpose of preventing the Burgundians from
+rallying, and of menacing the passes of the Alps from Italy; and
+he led his centre towards the chief object of the campaign--the
+conquest of Orleans, and an easy passage into the West Gothic
+dominion. The whole plan is very like that of the allied powers
+in 1814, with this difference, that their left wing entered
+France through the defiles of the Jura, in the direction of
+Lyons, and that the military object of the campaign was the
+capture of Paris." [Biographical Dictionary commenced by the
+Useful Knowledge Society in 1844.]
+
+It was not until the year 451 that the Huns commenced the siege
+of Orleans; and during their campaign in Eastern Gaul, the Roman
+general Aetius had strenuously exerted himself in collecting and
+organizing such an army as might, when united to the soldiery of
+the Visigoths, be fit to face the Huns in the field. He enlisted
+every subject of the Roman empire whom patriotism, courage, or
+compulsion could collect beneath the standards; and round these
+troops, which assumed the once proud title of the legions of
+Rome, he arrayed the large forces of barbaric auxiliaries whom
+pay, persuasion, or the general hate and dread of the Huns,
+brought to the camp of the last of the Roman generals. King
+Theodoric exerted himself with equal energy, Orleans resisted her
+besiegers bravely as in after times. The passage of the Loire
+was skilfully defended against the Huns; and Aetius and
+Theodoric, after much manoeuvring and difficulty, effected a
+junction of their armies to the south of that important river.
+
+On the advance of the allies upon Orleans, Attila instantly broke
+up the siege of that city, and retreated towards the Marne. He
+did not choose to risk a decisive battle with only the central
+corps of his army against the combined power of his enemies; and
+he therefore fell back upon his base of operations; calling in
+his wings from Arras and Besancon, and concentrating the whole of
+the Hunnish forces on the vast plains of Chalons-sur-Marne. A
+glance at the map will show how scientifically this place was
+chosen by the Hunnish general, as the point for his scattered
+forces to converge upon; and the nature of the ground was
+eminently favourable for the operations of cavalry, the arm in
+which Attila's strength peculiarly lay.
+
+It was during the retreat from Orleans that a Christian is
+reported to have approached the Hunnish king, and said to him,
+"Thou art the Scourge of God for the chastisement of Christians."
+Attila instantly assumed this new title of terror, which
+thenceforth became the appellation by which he was most widely
+and most fearfully known.
+
+The confederate armies of Romans and Visigoths at last met their
+great adversary, face to face, on the ample battle-ground of the
+Chalons plains. Aetius commanded on the right of the allies;
+King Theodoric on the left; and Sangipan, king of the Alans,
+whose fidelity was suspected, was placed purposely in the centre
+and in the very front of the battle. Attila commanded his centre
+in person, at the head of his own countrymen, while the
+Ostrogoths, the Gepidae, and the other subject allies of the
+Huns, were drawn up on the wings. Some manoeuvring appears to
+have occurred before the engagement, in which Attila had the
+advantage, inasmuch as he succeeded in occupying a sloping hill,
+which commanded the left flank of the Huns. Attila saw the
+importance of the position taken by Aetius on the high ground,
+and commenced the battle by a furious attack on this part of the
+Roman line, in which he seems to have detached some of his best
+troops from his centre to aid his left. The Romans having the
+advantage of the ground, repulsed the Huns, and while the allies
+gained this advantage on their right, their left, under King
+Theodoric, assailed the Ostrogoths, who formed the right of
+Attila's army. The gallant king was himself struck down by a
+javelin, as he rode onward at the head of his men, and his own
+cavalry charging over him trampled him to death in the confusion.
+But the Visigoths, infuriated, not dispirited, by their monarch's
+fall, routed the enemies opposed to them, and then wheeled upon
+the flank of the Hunnish centre, which had been engaged in a
+sanguinary and indecisive contest with the Alans.
+
+In this peril Attila made his centre fall back upon his camp; and
+when the shelter of its entrenchments and waggons had once been
+gained, the Hunnish archers repulsed, without difficulty, the
+charges of the vengeful Gothic cavalry. Aetius had not pressed
+the advantage which he gained on his side of the field, and when
+night fell over the wild scene of havoc, Attila's left was still
+unbroken, but his right had been routed, and his centre forced
+back upon his camp.
+
+Expecting an assault on the morrow, Attila stationed his best
+archers in front of the cars and waggons, which were drawn up as
+a fortification along his lines, and made every preparation for a
+desperate resistance. But the "Scourge of God" resolved that no
+man should boast of the honour of having either captured or slain
+him; and he caused to be raised in the centre of his encampment a
+huge pyramid of the wooden saddles of his cavalry: round it he
+heaped the spoils and the wealth that he had won; on it he
+stationed his wives who had accompanied him in the campaign; and
+on the summit he placed himself, ready to perish in the flames,
+and baulk the victorious foe of their choicest booty, should they
+succeed in storming his defences.
+
+But when the morning broke, and revealed the extent of the
+carnage, with which the plains were heaped for miles, the
+successful allies saw also and respected the resolute attitude of
+their antagonist. Neither were any measures taken to blockade
+him in his camp, and so to extort by famine that submission which
+it was too plainly perilous to enforce with the sword. Attila
+was allowed to march back the remnants of his army without
+molestation, and even with the semblance of success.
+
+It is probable that the crafty Aetius was unwilling to be too
+victorious. He dreaded the glory which his allies the Visigoths
+had acquired; and feared that Rome might find a second Alaric in
+Prince Thorismund, who had signalized himself in the battle, and
+had been chosen on the field to succeed his father Theodoric. He
+persuaded the young king to return at once to his capital: and
+thus relieved himself at the same time of the presence of a
+dangerous friend, as well as of a formidable though beaten foe.
+
+Attila's attacks on the Western, empire were soon renewed; but
+never with such peril to the civilized world as had menaced it
+before his defeat at Chalons. And on his death, two years after
+that battle, the vast empire which his genius had founded was
+soon dissevered by the successful revolts of the subject nations.
+The name of the Huns ceased for some centuries to inspire terror
+in Western Europe, and their ascendency passed away with the life
+of the great king by whom it had been so fearfully augmented.
+[If I seem to have given fewer of the details of the battle
+itself than its importance would warrant, my excuse must be, that
+Gibbon has enriched our language with a description of it, too
+long for quotation and too splendid for rivalry. I have not,
+however, taken altogether the same view of it that he has. The
+notes to Mr. Herbert's poem of "Attila" bring together nearly all
+the authorities on the subject.]
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF CHALONS, A.D. 451, AND
+THE BATTLE OF TOURS, 732.
+
+A.D. 476. The Roman Empire of the West extinguished by Odoacer.
+
+482. Establishment of the French monarchy in Gaul by Clovis.
+
+455-482. The Saxons, Angles, and Frisians conquer Britain
+except the northern parts, and the districts along the west
+coast. The German conquerors found eight independent kingdoms.
+
+533-568. The generals of Justinian, the Emperor of
+Constantinople, conquer Italy and North Africa; and these
+countries are for a short time annexed to the Roman Empire of the
+East.
+
+568-570. The Lombards conquer great part of Italy.
+
+570-627. The wars between the Emperors of Constantinople and
+the Kings of Persia are actively continued.
+
+622. The Mahometan era of the Hegira. Mahomet is driven from
+Mecca, and is received as prince of Medina.
+
+629-632. Mahomet conquers Arabia.
+
+632-651. The Mahometan Arabs invade and conquer Persia.
+
+632-709. They attack the Roman Empire of the East. They
+conquer Syria, Egypt, and Africa.
+
+709-713. They cross the straits of Gibraltar, and invade and
+conquer Spain.
+
+"At the death of Mohammad, in 632, his temporal and religious
+sovereignty embraced and was limited by the Arabian Peninsula.
+The Roman and Persian empires, engaged in tedious and indecisive
+hostility upon the rivers of Mesopotamia and the Armenian
+mountains, were viewed by the ambitious fanatics of his creed as
+their quarry. In the very first year of Mohammad's immediate
+successor, Abubeker, each of these mighty empires was invaded.
+The crumbling fabric of Eastern despotism is never secured
+against rapid and total subversion; a few victories, a few
+sieges, carried the Arabian arms from the Tigris to the Oxus, and
+overthrew, with the Sassanian dynasty, the ancient and famous
+religion they had professed. Seven years of active and unceasing
+warfare sufficed to subjugate the rich province of Syria, though
+defended by numerous armies and fortified cities; and the Khalif
+Omar had scarcely returned thanks for the accomplishment of this
+conquest, when Amrou, his lieutenant, announced to him the entire
+reduction of Egypt. After some interval, the Saracens won their
+way along the coast of Africa, as far as the Pillars of Hercules,
+and a third province was irretrievably torn from the Greek
+empire. These western conquests introduced them to fresh
+enemies, and ushered in more splendid successes. Encouraged by
+the disunion of the Visigoths, and invited by treachery, Musa,
+the general of a master who sat beyond the opposite extremity of
+the Mediterranean Sea, passed over into Spain, and within about
+two years the name of Mohammad was invoked under the Pyrenees."
+--[HALLAM.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE BATTLE OF TOURS, A.D. 732,
+
+"The events that rescued our ancestors of Britain, and our
+neighbours of Gaul, from the civil and religious yoke of the
+Koran."--GIBBON.
+
+The broad tract of champaign country which intervenes between the
+cities of Poictiers and Tours is principally composed of a
+succession of rich pasture lands, which are traversed and
+fertilized by the Cher, the Creuse, the Vienne, the Claine, the
+Indre, and other tributaries of the river Loire. Here and there,
+the ground swells into picturesque eminences; and occasionally a
+belt of forest land, a brown heath, or a clustering series of
+vineyards, breaks the monotony of the wide-spread meadows; but
+the general character of the land is that of a grassy plain, and
+it seems naturally adapted for the evolutions of numerous armies,
+especially of those vast bodies of cavalry which, principally
+decided the fate of nations during the centuries that followed
+the downfall of Rome, and preceded the consolidation of the
+modern European powers.
+
+This region has been signalized by more than one memorable
+conflict; but it is principally interesting to the historian, by
+having been the scene of the great victory won by Charles Martel
+over the Saracens, A.D. 732, which gave a decisive check to the
+career of Arab conquest in Western Europe, rescued Christendom
+from Islam, preserved the relics of ancient and the germs of
+modern civilization, and re-established the old superiority of
+the Indo-European over the Semitic family of mankind.
+
+Sismondi and Michelet have underrated the enduring interest of
+this great Appeal of Battle between the champions of the Crescent
+and the Cross. But, if French writers have slighted the exploits
+of their national hero, the Saracenic trophies of Charles Martel
+have had full justice done to them by English and German
+historians. Gibbon devotes several pages of his great work to
+the narrative of the battle of Tours, and to the consideration of
+the consequences which probably would have resulted, if
+Abderrahman's enterprise had not been crushed by the Frankish
+chief. [Vol, vii. p. 11, ET SEQ. Gibbon's remark, that if the
+Saracen conquest had not then been checked, "Perhaps the
+interpretation of the Koran would now be taught in the schools of
+Oxford, and her pulpits might demonstrate to a circumcised people
+the sanctity and truth of the revelation of Mahomat," has almost
+an air of regret.] Schlegel speaks of this "mighty victory" in
+terms of fervent gratitude; and tells how "the arms of Charles
+Martel saved and delivered the Christian nations of the West from
+the deadly grasp of all-destroying Islam;" [Philosophy of
+History, p. 331.] and Ranke points out, as "one of the most
+important epochs in the history of the world, the commencement of
+the eighth century; when, on the one side, Mahommedanism
+threatened to overspread Italy and Gaul, and on the other, the
+ancient idolatry of Saxony and Friesland once more forced its way
+across the Rhine. In this peril of Christian institutions, a
+youthful prince of Germanic race, Karl Martell, arose as their
+champion; maintained them with all the energy which the necessity
+for self-defence calls forth, and finally extended them into new
+regions." [History of the Reformation in Germany, vol. i. p. 5.]
+
+Arnold ranks the victory of Charles Martel even higher than the
+victory of Arminius, "among those signal deliverances which have
+affected for centuries the happiness of mankind." [History of
+the later Roman Commonwealth, vol ii. p. 317.] In fact, the more
+we test its importance, the higher we shall be led to estimate
+it; and, though the authentic details which we possess of its
+circumstances and its heroes are but meagre, we can trace enough
+of its general character to make us watch with deep interest this
+encounter between the rival conquerors of the decaying Roman
+empire. That old classic world, the history of which occupies so
+large a portion of our early studies, lay, in the eighth century
+of our era, utterly exanimate and overthrown. On the north the
+German, on the south the Arab, was rending away its provinces.
+At last the spoilers encountered one another, each striving for
+the full mastery of the prey. Their conflict brought back upon
+the memory of Gibbon the old Homeric simile, where the strife of
+Hector and Patroclus over the dead body of Cebriones is compared
+to the combat of two lions, that in their hate and hunger fight
+together on the mountain-tops over the carcass of a slaughtered
+stag: and the reluctant yielding of the Saracen power to the
+superior might of the Northern warriors, might not inaptly recall
+those other lines of the same book of the Iliad, where the
+downfall of Patroclus beneath Hector is likened to the forced
+yielding of the panting and exhausted wild boar, that had long
+and furiously fought with a superior beast of prey for the
+possession of the fountain among the rocks, at which each burned
+to drink.
+
+Although three centuries had passed away since the Germanic
+conquerors of Rome had crossed the Rhine, never to repass that
+frontier stream, no settled system of institutions or government,
+no amalgamation of the various races into one people, no
+uniformity of language or habits, had been established in the
+country, at the time when Charles Martel was called on to repel
+the menacing tide of Saracenic invasion from the south. Gaul was
+not yet France. In that, as in other provinces of the Roman
+empire of the West, the dominion of the Caesars had been
+shattered as early as the fifth century, and barbaric kingdoms
+and principalities had promptly arisen on the ruins of the Roman
+power. But few of these had any permanency; and none of them
+consolidated the rest, or any considerable number of the rest,
+into one coherent and organized civil and political society. The
+great bulk of the population still consisted of the conquered
+provincials, that is to say, of Romanized Celts, of a Gallic race
+which had long been under the dominion of the Caesars, and had
+acquired, together with no slight infusion of Roman blood, the
+language, the literature, the laws, and the civilization of
+Latium. Among these, and dominant over them, roved or dwelt the
+German victors: some retaining nearly all the rude independence
+of their primitive national character; others, softened and
+disciplined by the aspect and contact of the manners and
+institutions of civilized life. For it is to be borne in mind,
+that the Roman empire in the West was not crushed by any sudden
+avalanche of barbaric invasion. The German conquerors came
+across the Rhine, not in enormous hosts, but in bands of a few
+thousand warriors at a time. The conquest of a province was the
+result of an infinite series of partial local invasions, carried
+on by little armies of this description. The victorious warriors
+either retired with their booty, or fixed themselves in the
+invaded district, taking care to keep sufficiently concentrated
+for military purposes, and ever ready for some fresh foray,
+either against a rival Teutonic band, or some hitherto unassailed
+city of the provincials. Gradually, however, the conquerors
+acquired a desire for permanent landed possessions. They lost
+somewhat of the restless thirst for novelty and adventure which
+had first made them throng beneath the banner of the boldest
+captains of their tribe, and leave their native forests for a
+roving military Life on the left bank of the Rhine. They were
+converted to the Christian faith; and gave up with their old
+creed much of the coarse ferocity, which must have been fostered
+in the spirits of the ancient warriors of the North by a
+mythology which promised, as the reward of the brave on earth, an
+eternal cycle of fighting and drunkenness in heaven.
+
+But, although their conversion and other civilizing influences
+operated powerfully upon the Germans in Gaul; and although the
+Franks (who were originally a confederation of the Teutonic
+tribes that dwelt between the Rhine, the Maine, and the Weser)
+established a decided superiority over the other conquerors of
+the province, as well as over the conquered provincials, the
+country long remained a chaos of uncombined and shifting
+elements. The early princes of the Merovingian dynasty were
+generally occupied in wars against other princes of their house,
+occasioned by the frequent subdivisions of the Frank monarchy:
+and the ablest and best of them had found all their energies
+tasked to the utmost to defend the barrier of the Rhine against
+the Pagan Germans, who strove to pass that river and gather their
+share of the spoils of the empire.
+
+The conquests which the Saracens effected over the southern and
+eastern provinces of Rome were far more rapid than those achieved
+by the Germans in the north; and the new organizations of society
+which the Moslems introduced were summarily and uniformly
+enforced. Exactly a century passed between the death of Mohammed
+and the date of the battle of Tours. During that century the
+followers of the Prophet had torn away half the Roman empire; and
+besides their conquests over Persia, the Saracens had overrun
+Syria, Egypt, Africa, and Spain, in an unchequered and apparently
+irresistible career of victory. Nor, at the commencement of the
+eighth century of our era, was the Mohammedan world divided
+against itself, as it subsequently became. All these vast
+regions obeyed the Caliph; throughout them all, from the Pyrenees
+to the Oxus, the name of Mohammed was invoked in prayer, and the
+Koran revered as the book of the law.
+
+It was under one of their ablest and most renowned commanders,
+with a veteran army, and with every apparent advantage of time,
+place, and circumstance, that the Arabs made their great effort
+at the conquest of Europe north of the Pyrenees. The victorious
+Moslem soldiery in Spain,
+
+"A countless multitude;
+ Syrian, Moor, Saracen, Greek renegade,
+ Persian, and Copt, and Tartar, in one bond
+ Of erring faith conjoined--strong in the youth
+ And heat of zeal--a dreadful brotherhood,"
+
+were eager for the plunder of more Christian cities and shrines,
+and full of fanatic confidence in the invincibility of their
+arms.
+
+"Nor were the chiefs
+ Of victory less assured, by long success
+ Elate, and proud of that o'erwhelming strength
+ Which surely, they believed, as it had rolled
+ Thus far uncheck'd, would roll victorious on,
+ Till, like the Orient, the subjected West
+ Should bow in reverence at Mahommed's name;
+ And pilrims from remotest Arctic shores
+ Tread with religious feet the burning sands
+ Of Araby and Mecca's stony soil."
+ SOUTHEY'S RODERICK.
+
+It is not only by the modern Christian poet, but by the old
+Arabian chroniclers also, that these feelings of ambition and
+arrogance are attributed to the Moslems, who had overthrown the
+Visigoth power in Spain. And their eager expectations of new
+wars were excited to the utmost on the re-appointment by the
+Caliph of Abderrahman Ibn Abdillah Alghafeki to the government of
+that country, A.D. 729, which restored them a general who had
+signalized his skill and prowess during the conquests of Africa
+and Spain, whose ready valour and generosity had made him the
+idol of the troops, who had already been engaged in several
+expeditions into Gaul, so as to be well acquainted with the
+national character and tactics of the Franks; and who was known
+to thirst, like a good Moslem, for revenge for the slaughter of
+some detachments of the true believers, which had been cut off on
+the north of the Pyrenees.
+
+In addition to his cardinal military virtues, Abderrahman is
+described by the Arab writers as a model of integrity and
+justice. The first two years of his second administration in
+Spain were occupied in severe reforms of the abuses which under
+his predecessors had crept into the system of government, and in
+extensive preparations for his intended conquest of Gaul.
+Besides the troops which he collected from his province, he
+obtained from Africa a large body of chosen Barber cavalry,
+officered by Arabs of proved skill and valour: and in the summer
+of 732 he crossed the Pyrenees at the head of an army which some
+Arab writers rate at eighty thousand strong, while some of the
+Christian chroniclers swell its numbers to many hundreds of
+thousands more. Probably the Arab account diminishes, but of the
+two keeps nearer to the truth. It was from this formidable host,
+after Eudes, the Count of Acquitaine, had vainly striven to check
+it, after many strong cities had fallen before it, and half the
+land been overrun, that Gaul and Christendom were at last rescued
+by the strong arm of Prince Charles, who acquired a surname,
+[Martel--'The Hammer.' See the Scandinavian Sagas for an account
+of the favourite weapon of Thor.] like that of the war-god of
+his forefathers' creed, from the might with which he broke and
+shattered his enemies in the battle.
+
+The Merovingian kings had sunk into absolute insignificance, and
+had become mere puppets of royalty before the eighth century.
+Charles Martel like his father, Pepin Heristal, was Duke of the
+Austrasian Franks, the bravest and most thoroughly Germanic part
+of the nation: and exercised, in the name of the titular king,
+what little paramount authority the turbulent minor rulers of
+districts and towns could be persuaded or compelled to
+acknowledge. Engaged with his national competitors in perpetual
+conflicts for power, engaged also in more serious struggles for
+safety against the fierce tribes of the unconverted Frisians,
+Bavarians, Saxons, and Thuringians, who at that epoch assailed
+with peculiar ferocity the christianized Germans on the left bank
+of the Rhine, Charles Martel added experienced skill to his
+natural courage, and he had also formed a militia of veterans
+among the Franks. Hallam has thrown out a doubt whether, in our
+admiration of his victory at Tours, we do not judge a little too
+much by the event, and whether there was not rashness in his
+risking the fate of France on the result of a general battle with
+the invaders. But, when we remember that Charles had no standing
+army, and the independent spirit of the Frank warriors who
+followed his standard, it seems most probable that it was not in
+his power to adopt the cautious policy of watching the invaders,
+and wearing out their strength by delay. So dreadful and so
+wide-spread were the ravages of the Saracenic light cavalry
+throughout Gaul that it must have been impossible to restrain for
+any length of time the indignant ardour of the Franks. And, even
+if Charles could have persuaded his men to look tamely on while
+the Arabs stormed more towns and desolated more districts, he
+could not have kept an army together when the usual period of a
+military expedition had expired. If, indeed, the Arab account of
+the disorganization of the Moslem forces be correct, the battle
+was as well-timed on the part of Charles as it was beyond all
+question, well-fought.
+
+The monkish chroniclers, from whom we are obliged to glean a
+narrative of this memorable campaign, bear full evidence to the
+terror which the Saracen invasion inspired, and to the agony of
+that; great struggle. The Saracens, say they, and their king,
+who was called Abdirames, came out of Spain, with all their
+wives, and their children, and their substance, in such great
+multitudes that no man could reckon or estimate them. They
+brought with them all their armour, and whatever they had, as if
+they were thence forth always to dwell in France. ["Lors
+issirent d'Espaigne li Sarrazins, et un leur Roi qui avoit nom
+Abdirames, et ont leur fames et leur enfans at touts leur
+substance an si grand plente que nus ne le prevoit nombrer ne
+estimer: tout leur harnois et quanques il avoient amenement avec
+ents, aussi comme si ils deussent toujours mes habiter en
+France."]
+
+"Then Abderrahman, seeing the land filled with the multitude of
+his army, pierces through the mountains, tramples over rough and
+level ground plunders far into the country of the Franks, and
+smites all with the sword, insomuch that when Eudo came to battle
+with him at the river Garonne, and fled before him, God alone
+knows the number of the slain. Then Abderrahman pursued after
+Count Eudo, and while he strives to spoil and burn the holy
+shrine at Tours, he encounters the chief of the Austrasian
+Franks, Charles, a man of war from his youth up, to whom Eudo had
+sent warning. There for nearly seven days they strive intensely,
+and at last they set themselves in battle array; and the nations
+of the north standing firm as a wall, and impenetrable as a zone
+of ice, utterly slay the Arabs with the edge of the sword."
+["Tunc Abdirrahman, multitudine sui exercitus repletam
+prospiciane terram," &c.--SCRIPT. GEST. FRANC. p. 785.]
+
+The European writers all concur in speaking of the fall of
+Abderrahman as one of the principal causes of the defeat of the
+Arabs; who, according to one writer, after finding that their
+leader was slain, dispersed in the night, to the agreeable
+surprise of the Christians, who expected the next morning to see
+them issue from their tents, and renew the combat. One monkish
+chronicler puts the loss of the Arabs at 375,000 men, while he
+says that only 1,007 Christians fell--a disparity of loss which
+he feels bound to account for by a special interposition of
+Providence. I have translated above some of the most spirited
+passages of these writers; but it is impossible to collect from
+them anything like a full or authentic description of the great
+battle itself, or of the operations which preceded or followed
+it.
+
+Though, however, we may have cause to regret the meagreness and
+doubtful character of these narratives, we have the great
+advantage of being able to compare the accounts given of
+Abderrahman's expedition by the national writers of each side.
+This is a benefit which the inquirer into antiquity so seldom can
+obtain, that the fact of possessing it, in the instance of the
+battle of Tours, makes us think the historical testimony
+respecting that great event more certain and satisfactory than is
+the case in many other instances, where we possess abundant
+details respecting military exploits, but where those details
+come to us from the annalist of one nation only; and where we
+have, consequently, no safeguard against the exaggerations, the
+distortions, and the fictions which national vanity has so often
+put forth in the garb and under the title of history. The
+Arabian writers who recorded the conquests and wars of their
+countrymen in Spain, have narrated also the expedition into Gaul
+of their great Emir, and his defeat and death near Tours in
+battle with the host of the Franks under King Caldus, the name
+into which they metamorphose Charles. [The Arabian chronicles
+were compiled and translated into Spanish by Don Jose Antonio
+Conde, in his "Historia de la Dominacion de los Arabos an
+Espana," published at Madrid in 1820. Conde's plan, which I have
+endeavoured to follow, was to present both the style and spirit
+of his oriental authorities, so that we find in his pages a
+genuine Saracenic narrative of the wars in Western Europe between
+the Mahommedans and the Christians.]
+
+They tell us how there was war between the count of the Frankish
+frontier and the Moslems, and how the count gathered together all
+his people, and fought for a time with doubtful success. "But,"
+say the Arabian chroniclers, "Abderrahman drove them back; and
+the men of Abderrahman were puffed up in spirit by their repeated
+successes, and they were full of trust in the valour and the
+practice in war of their Emir. So the Moslems smote their
+enemies, and passed the river Garonne, and laid waste the
+country, and took captives without number. And that army went
+through all places like a desolating storm. Prosperity made
+those warriors insatiable. At the passage of the river,
+Abderrahman overthrew the count, and the count retired into his
+stronghold, but the Moslems fought against it, and entered it by
+force, and slew the count; for everything gave way to their
+scimetars, which were the robbers of lives. All the nations of
+the Franks trembled at that terrible army, and they betook them
+to their king Caldus, and told him of the havoc made by the
+Moslem horsemen, and how they rode at their will through all the
+land of Narbonne Toulouse, and Bordeaux, and they told the king
+of the death of their count. Then the king bade them be of good
+cheer, and offered to aid them. And in the 114th year [Of the
+Hegira.] he mounted his home, and he took with him a host that
+could not be numbered, and went against the Moslems. And he came
+upon them at the great city of Tours. And Abderrahman and other
+prudent cavaliers saw the disorder of the Moslem troops, who were
+loaded with spoil; but they did not venture to displease the
+soldiers by ordering them to abandon everything except their arms
+and war-horses. And Abderrahman trusted in the valour of his
+soldiers, and in the good fortune which had ever attended him.
+But (the Arab writer remarks) such defect of discipline always is
+fatal to armies. So Abderrahman and his host attacked Tours to
+gain still more spoil, and they fought against it so fiercely
+that they stormed the city almost before the eyes of the army
+that came to save it; and the fury and the cruelty of the Moslems
+towards the inhabitants of the city were like the fury and
+cruelty of raging tigers. It was manifest," adds the Arab, "that
+God's chastisement was sure to follow such excesses; and fortune
+thereupon turned her back upon the Moslems.
+
+"Near the river Owar, [Probably the Loire.] the two great hosts
+of the two languages and the two creeds were set in array against
+each other. The hearts of Abderrahman, his captains, and his men
+were filled with wrath and pride, and they were the first to
+begin the fight. The Moslem horseman dashed fierce and frequent
+forward against the battalions of the Franks, who resisted
+manfully, and many fell dead on either side, until the going down
+of the sun. Night parted the two armies: but in the grey of the
+morning the Moslems returned to the battle. Their cavaliers had
+soon hewn their way into the centre of the Christian host. But
+many of the Moslems were fearful for the safety of the spoil
+which they had stored in their tents, and a false cry arose in
+their ranks that some of the enemy were plundering the camp;
+whereupon several squadrons of the Moslem horseman rode off to
+protect their tents. But it seemed as if they fled; and all the
+host was troubled. And while Abderrahman strove to check their
+tumult, and to lead them back to battle, the warriors of the
+Franks came around him, and he was pierced through with many
+spears, so that he died. Then all the host fled before the
+enemy, and many died in the flight. This deadly defeat of the
+Moslems, and the loss of the great leader and good cavalier
+Abderrahman, took place in the hundred and fifteenth year.
+
+It would be difficult to expect from an adversary a more explicit
+confession of having been thoroughly vanquished, than the Arabs
+here accord to the Europeans. The points on which their
+narrative differs from those of the Christians,--as to how many
+days the conflict lasted, whether the assailed city was actually
+rescued or not, and the like,--are of little moment compared with
+the admitted great fact that there was a decisive trial of
+strength between Frank and Saracen, in which the former
+conquered. The enduring importance of the battle of Tours in the
+eyes of the Moslems, is attested not only by the expressions of
+"the deadly battle," and "the disgraceful overthrow," which their
+writers constantly employ when referring to it, but also by the
+fact that no further serious attempts at conquest beyond the
+Pyrenees were made by the Saracens. Charles Martel, and his son
+and grandson, were left at leisure to consolidate and extend
+their power. The new Christian Roman Empire of the West, which
+the genius of Charlemagne founded, and throughout which his iron
+will imposed peace on the old anarchy of creeds and races, did
+not indeed retain its integrity after its great ruler's death.
+Fresh troubles came over Europe; but Christendom, though
+disunited, was safe. The progress of civilization, and the
+development of the nationalities and governments of modern
+Europe, from that time forth, went forward in not uninterrupted,
+but, ultimately, certain career.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF TOURS, A.D. 732, AND THE
+BATTLE OF HASTINGS, 1066.
+
+A.D. 768-814. Reign of Charlemagne. This monarch has justly
+been termed the principal regenerator of Western Europe, after
+the destruction of the Roman empire. The early death of his
+brother, Carloman, left him sole master of the dominions of the
+Franks, which, by a succession of victorious wars, he enlarged
+into the new Empire of the West. He conquered the Lombards, and
+re-established the Pope at Rome, who, in return, acknowledged
+Charles as suzerain of Italy. and in the year 800, Leo III, in
+the name of the Roman people, solemnly crowned Charlemagne at
+Rome, as Emperor of the Roman Empire of the West. In Spain,
+Charlemagne ruled the country between the Pyrenees and the Ebro;
+but his most important conquests were effected on the eastern
+side of his original kingdom, over the Sclavonians of Bohemia,
+the Avars of Pannonia, and over the previously uncivilized German
+tribes who had remained in their fatherland. The old Saxons were
+his most obstinate antagonists, and his wars with them lasted for
+thirty years. Under him the greater part of Germany was
+compulsorily civilized, and converted from Paganism to
+Christianity, His empire extended eastward as far as the Elbe,
+the Saal, the Bohemian mountains, and a line drawn from thence
+crossing the Danube above Vienna, and prolonged to the Gulf of
+Istria. [Hallam's Middle Ages.]
+
+Throughout this vast assemblage of provinces, Charlemagne
+established an organized and firm government. But it is not as a
+mere conqueror that he demands admiration. "In a life restlessly
+active, we see him reforming the coinage, and establishing the
+legal divisions of money, gathering about him the learned of
+every country; founding schools and collecting libraries;
+interfering, with the air of a king, in religious controversies;
+attempting, for the sake of commerce, the magnificent enterprise
+of uniting the Rhine and the Danube, and meditating to mould the
+discordant code of Roman and barbarian laws into an uniform
+system." [Hallam, UT SUPRA.]
+
+814-888. Repeated partitions of the empire and civil wars
+between Charlemagne's descendants. Ultimately, the kingdom of
+France is finally separated from Germany and Italy. In 982, Otho
+the Great, of Germany, revives the imperial dignity.
+
+827. Egbert, king of Wessex, acquires the supremacy over the
+Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.
+
+832. The first Danish squadron attacks part of the English
+coast. The Danes, or Northmen, had begun their ravages in France
+a few years earlier. For two centuries Scandinavia sends out
+fleet after fleet of sea-rovers, who desolate all the western
+kingdoms of Europe, and in many cases effect permanent conquests.
+
+871-900. Reign of Alfred in England. After a long and varied
+struggle, he rescues England from the Danish invaders.
+
+911, The French king cedes Neustria to Hrolf the Northman. Hrolf
+(or Duke Rollo, as he thenceforth was termed) and his army of
+Scandinavian warriors, become the ruling class of the population
+of the province, which is called after them Normandy.
+
+1016. Four knights from Normandy, who had been on a pilgrimage
+to the Holy Land, while returning through Italy, head the people
+of Salerno in repelling an attack of a band of Saracen corsairs.
+In the next year many adventurers from Normandy settle in Italy,
+where they conquer Apulia (1040), and afterwards (1060) Sicily.
+
+1017. Canute, king of Denmark, becomes king of England. On the
+death of the last of his sons, in 1041, the Saxon line is
+restored, and Edward the Confessor (who had been bred in the
+court of the Duke of Normandy), is called by the English to the
+throne of this island, as the representative of the House of
+Cerdic.
+
+1035. Duke Robert of Normandy dies on his return from a
+pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and his son William (afterwards the
+conqueror of England) succeeds to the dukedom of Normandy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS, 1066.
+
+"Eis vos la Bataille assemblee,
+ Dunc encore est grant renomee."
+ ROMAN DE ROU, 1. 3183.
+
+Arletta's pretty feet twinkling in the brook gained her a duke's
+love, and gave us William the Conqueror. Had she not thus
+fascinated Duke Robert, the Liberal, of Normandy, Harold would
+not have fallen at Hastings, no Anglo-Norman dynasty could have
+arisen, no British empire. The reflection is Sir Francis
+Palgrave's: [History of Normandy and England, vol. i. p. 528.]
+and it is emphatically true. If any one should write a history
+of "Decisive loves that; have materially influenced the drama of
+the world in all its subsequent scenes," the daughter of the
+tanner of Falaise would deserve a conspicuous place in his pages.
+But it is her son, the victor of Hastings, who is now the object
+of our attention; and no one, who appreciates the influence of
+England and her empire upon the destinies of the world, will ever
+rank that victory as one of secondary importance.
+
+It is true that in the last century some writers of eminence on
+our history and laws mentioned the Norman Conquest in terms, from
+which it might be supposed that the battle of Hastings led to
+little more than the substitution of one royal family for another
+on the throne of this country, and to the garbling and changing
+of some of our laws through the "cunning of the Norman lawyers."
+But, at least since the appearance of the work of Augustin
+Thierry on the Norman Conquest, these forensic fallacies have
+been exploded. Thierry made his readers keenly appreciate the
+magnitude of that political and social catastrophe. He depicted
+in vivid colours the atrocious cruelties of the conquerors, and
+the sweeping and enduring innovations that they wrought,
+involving the overthrow of the ancient constitution, as well as
+of the last of the Saxon kings. In his pages we see new
+tribunals and tenures superseding the old ones, new divisions of
+race and class introduced, whole districts devastated to gratify
+the vengeance or the caprice of the new tyrant, the greater part
+of the lands of the English confiscated and divided among aliens,
+the very name of Englishmen turned into a reproach, the English
+language rejected as servile and barbarous, and all the high
+places in Church and State for upwards of a century filled
+exclusively by men of foreign race.
+
+No less true than eloquent is Thierry's summing up of the social
+effects of the Norman Conquest on the generation that witnessed
+it, and on many of their successors. He tells his reader that
+"if he would form a just idea of England conquered by William of
+Normandy, he must figure to himself, not a mere change of
+political rule, not the triumph of one candidate over another
+candidate, of the man of one party over the man of another party;
+but the intrusion of one people into the bosom of another people,
+the violent placing of one society over another society, which it
+came to destroy, and the scattered fragments of which it retained
+only as personal property, or (to use the words of an old act) as
+'the clothing of the soil:' he must not picture to himself on
+the one hand, William, a king and a despot--on the other,
+subjects of William's, high and low, rich and poor, all
+inhabiting England, and consequently all English; but he must
+imagine two nations, of one of which William is a member and the
+chief--two nations which (if the term must be used) were both
+subject to William, but as applied to which the word has quite
+different senses, meaning in the one case subordinate, in the
+other subjugated. He must consider that there are two countries,
+two soils, included in the same geographical circumference; that
+of the Normans rich and free, that of the Saxons poor and
+serving, vexed by RENT and TAILLAGE; the former full of spacious
+mansions, and walled and moated castles, the latter scattered
+over with huts and straw, and ruined hovels; that peopled with
+the happy and the idle, with men of the army and of the court,
+with knights and nobles,--this with men of pain and labour, with
+farmers and artizans: on the one side, luxury and insolence, on
+the other, misery and envy--not the envy of the poor at the sight
+of opulence they cannot reach, but the envy of the despoiled when
+in presence of the despoilers."
+
+Perhaps the effect of Thierry's work has been to cast into the
+shade the ultimate good effects on England of the Norman
+Conquest. Yet these are as undeniable as are the miseries which
+that conquest inflicted on our Saxon ancestors from the time of
+the battle of Hastings to the time of the signing of the Great
+Charter at Runnymede. That last is the true epoch of English
+nationality: it is the epoch when Anglo-Norman and Anglo-Saxon
+ceased to keep aloof from each other, the one in haughty scorn,
+the other in sullen abhorrence; and when all the free men of the
+land; whether barons, knights, yeomen, or burghers, combined to
+lay the foundations of English freedom.
+
+Our Norman barons were the chiefs of that primary constitutional
+movement; those "iron barons" whom Chatham has so nobly
+eulogized. This alone should make England remember her
+obligations to the Norman Conquest, which planted far and wide,
+as a dominant class in her land, a martial nobility of the
+bravest and most energetic race that ever existed.
+
+It may sound paradoxical, but it is in reality no exaggeration to
+say, with Guizot, [Essais sur l'Histoirs de France, p. 273, et
+seq.] that England owes her liberties to her having been
+conquered by the Normans. It is true that the Saxon institutions
+were the primitive cradle of English liberty, but by their own
+intrinsic force they could never have founded the enduring free
+English constitution. It was the Conquest that infused into them
+a new virtue; and the political liberties of England arose from
+the situation in which the Anglo-Saxon and the Anglo-Norman
+populations and laws found themselves placed relatively to each
+other in this island. The state of England under her last Anglo-
+Saxon kings closely resembled the state of France under the last
+Carlovingian, and the first Capetian princes. The crown was
+feeble, the great nobles were strong and turbulent. And although
+there was more national unity in Saxon England than in France;
+although the English local free institutions had more reality and
+energy than was the case with anything analogous to them on the
+Continent in the eleventh century, still the probability is that
+the Saxon system of polity, if left to itself, would have fallen
+into utter confusion, out of which would have arisen first an
+aristocratic hierarchy like that which arose in France, next an
+absolute monarchy, and finally a series of anarchical
+revolutions, such as we now behold around, but not among us.
+[See Guizot, UT SUPRA.]
+
+The latest conquerors of this island were also the bravest and
+the best. I do not except even the Romans. And, in spite of our
+sympathies with Harold and Hereward, and our abhorrence of the
+founder of the New Forest, and the desolator of Yorkshire, we
+must confess the superiority of the Normans to the Anglo-Saxons
+and Anglo-Danes, whom they met here in 1066, as well as to the
+degenerate Frank noblesse and the crushed and servile Romanesque
+provincials, from whom, in 912, they had wrested the district in
+the north of Gaul which still bears the name of Normandy.
+
+It was not merely by extreme valour and ready subordination or
+military discipline, that the Normans were pre-eminent among all
+the conquering races of the Gothic stock, but also by their
+instinctive faculty of appreciating and adopting the superior
+civilizations which they encountered. Thus Duke Rollo and his
+Scandinavian warriors readily embraced the creed, the language,
+the laws, and the arts which France, in those troubled and evil
+times with which the Capetian dynasty commenced, still inherited
+from imperial Rome and imperial Charlemagne. They adopted the
+customs, the duties, the obedience that the capitularies of
+emperors and kings had established; but that which they brought
+to the application of those laws, was the spirit of life, the
+spirit of liberty--the habits also of military subordination, and
+the aptness for a state politic, which could reconcile the
+security of all with the independence of each. [Sismondi,
+Histoire des Francais, vol. iii. p. 174.] So also in all
+chivalric feelings, in enthusiastic religious zeal, in almost
+idolatrous respect to females of gentle birth, in generous
+fondness for the nascent poetry of the time, in a keen
+intellectual relish for subtle thought and disputation, in a
+taste for architectural magnificence, and all courtly refinement
+and pageantry, the Normans were the Paladins of the world. Their
+brilliant qualities were sullied by many darker traits of pride,
+of merciless cruelty, and of brutal contempt for the industry,
+the rights, and the feelings of all whom they considered the
+lower classes of mankind.
+
+Their gradual blending with the Saxons softened these harsh and
+evil points of their national character, and in return they fired
+the duller Saxon mass with a new spirit of animation and power.
+As Campbell boldly expressed it, "THEY HIGH-METTLED THE BLOOD OF
+OUR VEINS." Small had been the figure which England made in the
+world before the coming over of the Normans; and without them she
+never would have emerged from insignificance. The authority of
+Gibbon may be taken as decisive when he pronounces that,
+"Assuredly England was a gainer by the Conquest." and we may
+proudly adopt the comment of the Frenchman Rapin, who, writing of
+the battle of Hastings more than a century ago, speaks of the
+revolution effected by it, as "the first step by which England
+has arrived to that height of grandeur and glory we behold it in
+at present." [Rapin, Hist. England, p. 164. See also Sharon
+Turner, vol. iv. p. 72; and, above all, Palgrave's Normandy and
+England.]
+
+The interest of this eventful struggle, by which William of
+Normandy became King of England, is materially enhanced by the
+high personal characters of the competitors for our crown. They
+were three in number. One was a foreign prince from the North.
+One was a foreign prince from the South: and one was a native
+hero of the land. Harald Hardrada, the strongest and the most
+chivalric of the kings of Norway, was the first; [See in Snerre
+the Saga of Harald Hardrada.] Duke William of Normandy was the
+second; and the Saxon Harold, the son of Earl Godwin, was the
+third. Never was a nobler prize sought by nobler champions, or
+striven for more gallantly. The Saxon triumphed over the
+Norwegian, and the Norman triumphed over the Saxon: but Norse
+valour was never more conspicuous than when Harald Hardrada and
+his host fought and fell at Stamford Bridge; nor did Saxons ever
+face their foes more bravely than our Harold and his men on the
+fatal day of Hastings.
+
+During the reign of King Edward the Confessor over this land, the
+claims of the Norwegian king to our Crown were little thought of;
+and though Hardrada's predecessor, King Magnus of Norway had on
+one occasion asserted that, by virtue of a compact with our
+former king, Hardicanute, he was entitled to the English throne,
+no serious attempt had been made to enforce his pretensions. But
+the rivalry of the Saxon Harold and the Norman William was
+foreseen and bewailed by the Confessor, who was believed to have
+predicted on his death-bed the calamities that were pending over
+England. Duke William was King Edward's kinsman. Harold was the
+head of the most powerful noble house, next to the royal blood,
+in England; and personally, he was the bravest and most popular
+chieftain in the land. King Edward was childless, and the
+nearest collateral heir was a puny unpromising boy. England had
+suffered too severely during royal minorities, to make the
+accession of Edgar Atheling desirable; and long before King
+Edward's death, Earl Harold was the destined king of the nation's
+choice, though the favour of the Confessor was believed to lean
+towards the Norman duke.
+
+A little time before the death of King Edward, Harold was in
+Normandy. The causes of the voyage of the Saxon earl to the
+continent are doubtful; but the fact of his having been, in 1065,
+at the ducal court, and in the power of his rival, is
+indisputable. William made skilful and unscrupulous use of the
+opportunity. Though Harold was treated with outward courtesy and
+friendship, he was made fully aware that his liberty and life
+depended on his compliance with the Duke's requests. William
+said to him, in apparent confidence and cordiality, "When King
+Edward and I once lived like brothers under the same roof, he
+promised that if ever be became King of England, he would make me
+heir to his throne. Harold, I wish that thou wouldst assist me
+to realize this promise." Harold replied with expressions of
+assent: and further agreed, at William's request, to marry
+William's daughter Adela, and to send over his own sister to be
+married to one of William's barons. The crafty Norman was not
+content with this extorted promise; he determined to bind Harold
+by a more solemn pledge, which if broken, would be a weight on
+the spirit of the gallant Saxon, and a discouragement to others
+from adopting his cause. Before a full assembly of the Norman
+barons, Harold was required to do homage to Duke William, as the
+heir-apparent of the English crown. Kneeling down, Harold placed
+his hands between those of the Duke, and repeated the solemn
+form, by which he acknowledged the Duke as his lord, and promised
+to him fealty and true service. But William exacted more. He
+had caused all the bones and relics of saints, that were
+preserved in the Norman monasteries and churches, to be collected
+into a chest, which was placed in the council-room, covered over
+with a cloth of gold. On the chest of relics, which were thus
+concealed, was laid a missal. The Duke then solemnly addressed
+his titular guest and real captive, and said to him, "Harold, I
+require thee, before this noble assembly, to confirm by oath the
+promises which thou hast made me, to assist me in obtaining the
+crown of England after King Edward's death, to marry my daughter
+Adela, and to send me thy sister, that I may give her in marriage
+to one of my barons." Harold, once more taken by surprise, and
+not able to deny his former words, approached the missal, and
+laid his hand on it, not knowing that the chest of relics was
+beneath. The old Norman chronicler, who describes the scene most
+minutely, [Wace, Roman de Rou. I have nearly followed his
+words.] says, when Harold placed his hand on it, the hand
+trembled, and the flesh quivered; but he swore, and promised upon
+his oath, to take Ele [Adela] to wife, and to deliver up England
+to the Duke, and thereunto to do all in his power, according to
+his might and wit, after the death of Edward, if he himself
+should live: so help him God. Many cried, "God grant it!" and
+when Harold rose from his knees, the Duke made him stand close to
+the chest, and took off the pall that had covered it, and showed
+Harold upon what holy relics he had sworn; and Harold was sorely
+alarmed at the sight.
+
+Harold was soon, after this permitted to return to England; and,
+after a short interval, during which he distinguished himself by
+the wisdom and humanity with which he pacified some formidable
+tumults of the Anglo-Danes in Northumbria, he found himself
+called on to decide whether he would keep the oath which the
+Norman had obtained from him, or mount the vacant throne of
+England in compliance with the nation's choice. King Edward the
+Confessor died on the 5th of January, 1066, and on the following
+day an assembly of the thanes and prelates present in London, and
+of the citizens of-the metropolis, declared that Harold should be
+their king. It was reported that the dying Edward had nominated
+him as his successor; but the sense which his countrymen
+entertained of his pre-eminent merit was the true foundation of
+his title to the crown. Harold resolved to disregard the oath
+which he made in Normandy, as violent and void, and on the 7th
+day of that January he was anointed King of England, and received
+from the archbishop's hands the golden crown and sceptre of
+England, and also an ancient national symbol, a weighty battle-
+axe. He had deep and speedy need of this significant part of the
+insignia of Saxon royalty.
+
+A messenger from Normandy soon arrived to remind Harold of the
+oath which he had sworn to the Duke "with his mouth, and his hand
+upon good and holy relics." "It is true," replied the Saxon
+king, "that I took an oath to William; but I took it under
+constraint: I promised what did not belong to me--what I could
+not in any way hold: my royalty is not my own; I could not lay
+it down against the will of the country, nor can I against the
+will of the country take a foreign wife. As for my sister, whom
+the Duke claims that he may marry her to one of his chiefs, she
+has died within the year; would he have me send her corpse?"
+
+William sent another message, which met with a similar answer;
+and then the Duke published far and wide through Christendom what
+he termed the perjury and bad faith of his rival; and proclaimed
+his intention of asserting his rights by the sword before the
+year should expire, and of pursuing and punishing the perjurer
+even in those places where he thought he stood most strongly and
+most securely.
+
+Before, however, he commenced hostilities, William, with deep
+laid policy submitted his claims to the decision of the Pope.
+Harold refused to acknowledge this tribunal, or to answer before
+an Italian priest for his title as an English king. After a
+formal examination of William's complaints by the Pope and the
+cardinals, it was solemnly adjudged at Rome that England belonged
+to the Norman duke; and a banner was sent to William from the
+holy see, which the Pope himself had consecrated and blessed for
+the invasion of this island. The clergy throughout the continent
+were now assiduous and energetic in preaching up William's
+enterprise as undertaken in the cause of God. Besides these
+spiritual arms (the effect of which in the eleventh century must
+not be measured by the philosophy or the indifferentism of the
+nineteenth), the Norman duke applied all the energies of his mind
+and body, all the resources of his duchy, and all the influence
+he possessed among vassals or allies, to the collection of "the
+most remarkable and formidable armament which the Western nations
+had witnessed." [Sir James Mackintosh's History of England, vol.
+i. p. 97.] All the adventurous spirits of Christendom flocked
+to the holy banner, under which Duke William, the most renowned
+knight and sagest general of the age, promised to lead them to
+glory and wealth in the fair domains of England. His army was
+filled with the chivalry of continental Europe, all eager to save
+their souls by fighting at the Pope's bidding, ardent to
+signalise their valour in so great an enterprise, and longing
+also for the pay and the plunder which William liberally
+promised. But the Normans themselves were the pith and the
+flower of the army; and William himself was the strongest, the
+sagest, and fiercest spirit of them all.
+
+Throughout the spring and summer of 1066, all the seaports of
+Normandy, Picardy, and Brittany rang with the busy sound of
+preparation. On the opposite side of the Channel, King Harold
+collected the army and the fleet with which he hoped to crush the
+southern invaders. But the unexpected attack of King Harald
+Hardrada of Norway upon another part of England, disconcerted the
+skilful measures which the Saxon had taken against the menacing
+armada of Duke William.
+
+Harold's renegade brother, Earl Tostig, had excited the Norse
+king to this enterprise, the importance of which has naturally
+been eclipsed by the superior interest attached to the victorious
+expedition of Duke William, but which was on a scale of grandeur
+which the Scandinavian ports had rarely, if ever, before
+witnessed. Hardrada's fleet consisted of two hundred war-ships,
+and three hundred other vessels, and all the best warriors of
+Norway were in his host. He sailed first to the Orkneys, where
+many of the islanders joined him, and then to Yorkshire. After a
+severe conflict near York, he completely routed Earls Edwin and
+Morcar, the governors of Northumbria. The city of York opened
+its gates, and all the country, from the Tyne to the Humber,
+submitted to him. The tidings of the defeat of Edwin and Morcar
+compelled Harold to leave his position an the southern coast, and
+move instantly against the Norwegians. By a remarkably rapid,
+march, he reached Yorkshire in four days, and took the Norse king
+and his confederates by surprise. Nevertheless, the battle which
+ensued, and which was fought near Stamford Bridge, was desperate,
+and was long doubtful. Unable to break the ranks of the
+Norwegian phalanx by force, Harold at length tempted them to quit
+their close order by a pretended flight. Then the English
+columns burst in among them, and a carnage ensued, the extent of
+which may be judged of by the exhaustion and inactivity of Norway
+for a quarter of a century afterwards. King Harald Hardrada, and
+all the flower of his nobility, perished on the 25th of
+September, 1066, at Stamford Bridge; a battle which was a Flodden
+to Norway.
+
+Harold's victory was splendid; but he had bought it dearly by the
+fall of many of his best officers and men; and still more dearly
+by the opportunity which Duke William had gained of effecting an
+unopposed landing on the Sussex coast. The whole of William's
+shipping had assembled at the mouth of the Dive, a little river
+between the Seine and the Orme, as early as the middle of August.
+The army which he had collected, amounted to fifty thousand
+knights, and ten thousand soldiers of inferior degree. Many of
+the knights were mounted, but many must have served on foot; as
+it is hardly possible to believe that William could have found
+transports for the conveyance of fifty thousand war-horses across
+the Channel. For a long time the winds were adverse; and the
+Duke employed the interval that passed before he could set sail
+in completing the organization and in improving the discipline of
+his army; which he seems to have brought into the same state of
+perfection, as was seven centuries and a half afterwards the
+boast of another army assembled on the same coast, and which
+Napoleon designed (but providentially in vain) for a similar
+descent upon England.
+
+It was not till the approach of the equinox that the wind veered
+from the north-east to the west, and gave the Normans an
+opportunity of quitting the weary shores of the Dive. They
+eagerly embarked, and set sail; but the wind soon freshened to a
+gale, and drove them along the French coast to St. Valery, where
+the greater part of them found shelter; but many of their vessels
+were wrecked and the whole coast of Normandy was strewn with the
+bodies of the drowned. William's army began to grow discouraged
+and averse to the enterprise, which the very elements thus seemed
+to fight against; though in reality the north-east wind which had
+cooped them so long at the mouth of the Dive, and the western
+gale which had forced them into St. Valery, were the best
+possible friends to the invaders. They prevented the Normans
+from crossing the Channel until the Saxon king and his army of
+defence had been called away from the Sussex coast to encounter
+Harald Hardrada in Yorkshire: and also until a formidable
+English fleet, which by King Harold's orders had been cruising in
+the Channel to intercept the Normans, had been obliged to
+disperse temporarily for the purpose of refitting and taking in
+fresh stores of provisions.
+
+Duke William used every expedient to re-animate the drooping
+spirits of his men at St. Valery; and at last he caused the body
+of the patron saint of the place to be exhumed and carried in
+solemn procession, while the whole assemblage of soldiers,
+mariners, and appurtenant priests implored the saint's
+intercession for a change of wind. That very night the wind
+veered, and enabled the mediaeval Agamemnon to quit his Aulia.
+
+With full sails, and a following southern breeze, the Norman
+armada left the French shores and steered for England. The
+invaders crossed an undefended sea, and found an undefended
+coast. It was in Pevensey Bay in Sussex, at Bulverhithe, between
+the castle of Pevensey and Hastings, that the last conquerors of
+this island landed, on the 29th of September, 1066.
+
+Harold was at York, rejoicing over his recent victory, which had
+delivered England from her ancient Scandinavian foes, and
+resettling the government of the counties which Harald Hardrada
+had overrun, when the tidings reached him that Duke William of
+Normandy and his host had landed on the Sussex shore. Harold
+instantly hurried southward to meet this long-expected enemy.
+The severe loss which his army had sustained in the battle with
+the Norwegians must have made it impossible for any large number
+of veteran troops to accompany him in his forced march to London,
+and thence to Sussex. He halted at the capital only six days;
+and during that time gave orders for collecting forces from his
+southern and midland counties, and also directed his fleet to
+reassemble off the Sussex coast. Harold was well received in
+London, and his summons to arms was promptly obeyed by citizen,
+by thane, by sokman, and by ceorl; for he had shown himself
+during his brief reign a just and wise king, affable to all men,
+active for the good of his country, and (in the words of the old
+historian) sparing himself from no fatigue by land or sea. [See
+Roger de Hoveden and William of Malmesbury, cited in Thierry,
+book iii.] He might have gathered a much more numerous force
+than that of William, but his recent victory had made, him over-
+confident, and he was irritated by the reports of the country
+being ravaged by the invaders. As soon therefore, as he had
+collected a small army in London, he marched off towards the
+coast: pressing forward as rapidly as his men could traverse
+Surrey and Sussex in the hope of taking the Normans unawares, as
+he had recently by a similar forced march succeeded in surprising
+the Norwegians. But he had now to deal with a foe equally brave
+with Harald Hardrada, and far more skilful and wary.
+
+The old Norman chroniclers describe the preparations of William
+on his landing, with a graphic vigour, which would be wholly lost
+by transfusing their racy Norman couplets and terse Latin prose
+into the current style of modern history. It is best to follow
+them closely, though at the expense of much quaintness and
+occasional uncouthness of expression. They tell us how Duke
+William's own ship was the first of the Norman fleet. "It was
+called the Mora, and was the gift of his duchess, Matilda. On
+the head of the ship in the front, which mariners call the prow,
+there was a brazen child bearing an arrow with a bended bow. His
+face was turned towards England, and thither he looked, as though
+he was about to shoot. The breeze became soft and sweet, and the
+sea was smooth for their landing. The ships ran on dry land, and
+each ranged by the other's side. There you might see the good
+sailors, the sergeants, and squires sally forth and unload the
+ships; cast the anchors, haul the ropes, bear out shields and
+saddles, and land the war-horses and palfreys. The archers came
+forth, and touched land the first, each with his bow strong and
+with his quiver full of arrows, slung at his side. All were
+shaven and shorn; and all clad in short garments, ready to
+attack, to shoot, to wheel about and skirmish. All stood well
+equipped, and of good courage for the fight; and they scoured the
+whole shore, but found not an armed man there. After the archers
+had thus gone forth, the knights landed all armed, with their
+hauberks on, their shields slung at their necks, and their
+helmets laced. They formed together on the shore, each armed,
+and mounted on his war-horse: all had their swords girded on,
+and rode forward into the country with their lances raised. Then
+the carpenters landed, who had great axes in their hands, and
+planes and adzes hung at their sides. They took counsel
+together, and sought for a good spot to place a castle on. They
+had brought with them in the fleet, three wooden castles from
+Normandy, in pieces, all ready for framing together, and they
+took the materials of one of these out of the ships, all shaped
+and pierced to receive the pins which they had brought cut and
+ready in large barrels; and before evening had set in, they had
+finished a good fort on the English ground, and there they placed
+their stores. All then ate and drank enough, and were right glad
+that they were ashore.
+
+"When Duke William himself landed, as he stepped on the shore, he
+slipped and fell forward upon his two hands. Forthwith all
+raised a loud cry of distress. 'An evil sign,' said they, 'is
+here.' But he cried out lustily, 'See, my lords! by the
+splendour of God, [William's customary oath.] I have taken
+possession of England with both my hands. It is now mine; and
+what is mine is yours.'
+
+"The next day they marched along the sea-shore to Hastings. Near
+that place the Duke fortified a camp, and set up the two other
+wooden castles. The foragers, and those who looked out for
+booty, seized all the clothing and provisions they could find,
+lest what had been brought by the ships should fail them. And
+the English were to be seen fleeing before them, driving off
+their cattle, and quitting their houses. Many took shelter in
+burying-places, and even there they were in grievous alarm."
+
+Besides the marauders from the Norman camp, strong bodies of
+cavalry were detached by William into the country, and these,
+when Harold and his army made their rapid march from London
+southward, fell, back in good order upon the main body of the
+Normans, and reported that the Saxon king was rushing on like a
+madman. But Harold, when he found that his hopes of surprising
+his adversary were vain changed his tactics, and halted about
+seven miles from the Norman lines. He sent some spies, who spoke
+the French language, to examine the number and preparations of
+the enemy, who, on their return, related with astonishment that
+there were more priests in William's camp than there were
+fighting men in the English army. They had mistaken for priests
+all the Norman soldiers who had short hair and shaven chins; for
+the English layman were then accustomed to wear long hair and
+mustachios, Harold, who knew the Norman usages, smiled at their
+words and said, "Those whom you have seen in such numbers are not
+priests, but stout soldiers, as they will soon make us feel."
+
+Harold's army was far inferior in number to that of the Normans,
+and some of his captains advised him to retreat upon London, and
+lay waste the country, so as to starve down the strength, of the
+invaders. The policy thus recommended was unquestionably the
+wisest; for the Saxon fleet had now reassembled, and intercepted
+all William's communications with Normandy; so that as soon as
+his stores of provisions were exhausted he must have moved
+forward upon London; where Harold, at the head of the full
+military strength of the kingdom, could have defied his assault,
+and probably might have witnessed his rival's destruction by
+famine and disease, without having to strike a single blow. But
+Harold's bold blood was up, and his kindly heart could not endure
+to inflict on his South Saxon subjects even the temporary misery
+of wasting the country. "He would not burn houses and villages,
+neither would he take away the substance of his people."
+
+Harold's brothers, Gurth and Leofwine, were with him in the camp,
+and Gurth endeavoured to persuade him to absent himself from the
+battle. The incident shows how well devised had been William's
+scheme of binding Harold by the oath on the holy relics. "My
+brother", said the young Saxon prince, "thou canst not deny that
+either by force or free-will thou hast made Duke William an oath
+on the bodies of saints. Why then risk thyself in the battle
+with a perjury upon thee? To us, who have sworn nothing, this is
+a holy and a just war, for we are fighting for our country.
+Leave us then, alone to fight this battle, and he who has the
+right will win." Harold replied that he would not look on while
+others risked their lives for him. Men would hold him a coward,
+and blame him for sending his best friends where he dared not go
+himself. He resolved, therefore, to fight, and to fight in
+person: but he was still too good a general to be the assailant
+in the action. He strengthened his position on the hill where he
+had halted, by a palisade of stakes interlaced with osier
+hurdles, and there, he said, he would defend himself against
+whoever should seek him.
+
+The ruins of Battle Abbey at this hour attest the place where
+Harold's army was posted. The high altar of the abbey stood on
+the very spot where Harold's own standard was planted during the
+fight, and where the carnage was the thickest. Immediately after
+his victory William vowed to build an abbey on the site; and a
+fair and stately pile soon rose there, where for many ages the
+monks prayed, and said masses for the souls of those who were
+slain in the battle, whence the abbey took its name. Before that
+time the place was called Senlac. Little of the ancient edifice
+now remains: but it is easy to trace among its relics and in the
+neighbourhood the scenes of the chief incidents in the action;
+and it is impossible to deny the generalship shown by Harold in
+stationing his men; especially when we bear in mind that he was
+deficient in cavalry, the arm in which his adversary's main
+strength consisted.
+
+A neck of hills trends inwards for nearly seven miles from the
+high ground immediately to the north-east of Hastings. The line
+of this neck of hills is from south-east to north-west, and the
+usual route from Hastings to London must, in ancient as in modern
+times, have been along its summits. At the distance from
+Hastings which has been mentioned, the continuous chain of hills
+ceases. A valley must be crossed, and on the other side of it,
+opposite to the last of the neck of hills, rises a high ground of
+some extent, facing to the south-east. This high ground, then
+termed Senlac, was occupied by Harold's army. It could not be
+attacked in front without considerable disadvantage to the
+assailants, and could hardly be turned without those engaged in
+the manoeuvre exposing themselves to a fatal charge in flank,
+while they wound round the base of the height, and underneath the
+ridges which project from it on either side. There was a rough
+and thickly-wooded district in the rear, which seemed to offer
+Harold great facilities for rallying his men, and checking the
+progress of the enemy, if they should succeed in forcing him back
+from his post. And it seemed scarcely possible that the Normans,
+if they met with any repulse, could save themselves from utter
+destruction. With such hopes and expectations (which cannot be
+termed unreasonable, though "Successum Dea dira negavit,") King
+Harold bade his standard be set up a little way down the slope of
+Senlac-hill, at the point where the ascent from the valley was
+least steep, and on which the fiercest attacks of the advancing
+enemy were sure to be directed.
+
+The foundation-stones of the high altar of Battle Abbey have,
+during late years, been discovered; and we may place our feet on
+the very spot where Harold stood with England's banner waving
+over him; where, when the battle was joined, he defended himself
+to the utmost; where the fatal arrow came down on him; where he
+"leaned in agony on his shield;" and where at last he was beaten
+to the earth, and with him the Saxon banner was beaten down, like
+him never to rise again. The ruins of the altar are a little to
+the west of the high road, which leads from Hastings along the
+neck of hills already described, across the valley, and through
+the modern town of Battle, towards London. Before a railway was
+made along this valley, some of the old local features were more
+easy than now to recognise. The eye then at once saw that the
+ascent from the valley was least steep at the point which Harold
+selected for his own post in the engagement. But this is still
+sufficiently discernible; and we can fix the spot, a little lower
+down the slope, immediately in front of the high altar, where the
+brave Kentish men stood, "whose right it was to strike first when
+ever the king went to battle," and who, therefore, were placed
+where the Normans would be most likely to make their first
+charge. Round Harold himself, and where the plantations wave
+which now surround the high altar's ruins, stood the men of
+London, "whose privilege it was to guard the king's body, to
+place themselves around it, and to guard his standard." On the
+right and left were ranged the other warriors of central and
+southern England, whose shires the old Norman chronicler distorts
+in his French nomenclature. Looking thence in the direction of
+Hastings, we can distinguish the "ridge of the rising ground over
+which the Normans appeared advancing." It is the nearest of the
+neck of hills. It is along that hill that Harold and his
+brothers saw approach in succession the three divisions of the
+Norman army. The Normans came down that slope, and then formed
+in the valley, so as to assault the whole front of the English
+position. Duke William's own division, with "the best men and
+greatest strength of the army, made the Norman centre, and
+charged the English immediately in front of Harold's banner, as
+the nature of the ground had led the Saxon king to anticipate.
+
+There are few battles the localities of which can be more
+completely traced; and the whole scene is fraught with
+associations of deep interest: but the spot which, most of all,
+awakens our sympathy and excites our feelings, is that where
+Harold himself fought and fell. The crumbling fragments of the
+grey altar-stones, with the wild flowers that cling around their
+base, seem fitting memorials of the brave Saxon who there bowed
+his head in death; while the laurel-trees that are planted near,
+and wave over the ruins, remind us of the Conqueror, who there,
+at the close of that dreadful day, reared his victorious standard
+high over the trampled banner of the Saxon, and held his
+triumphant carousal amid the corses of the slain, with his Norman
+chivalry exulting around him.
+
+When it was known in the invaders' camp at Hastings that King
+Harold had marched southward with his power, but a brief interval
+ensued before the two hosts met in decisive encounter.
+
+William's only chance of safety lay in bringing on a general
+engagement; and he joyfully advanced his army from their camp on
+the hill over Hastings, nearer to the Saxon position. But he
+neglected no means of weakening his opponent, and renewed his
+summonses and demands on Harold with an ostentatious air of
+sanctity and moderation.
+
+"A monk named Hugues Maigrot came in William's name to call upon
+the Saxon king to do one of three things--either to resign his
+royalty in favour of William, or to refer it to the arbitration
+of the Pope to decide which of the two ought to be king, or to
+let it be determined by the issue of a single combat. Harold
+abruptly replied, 'I will not resign my title, I will not refer
+it to the Pope, nor will I accept the single combat.' He was far
+from being deficient in bravery; but he was no more at liberty to
+stake the crown which he had received from a whole people on the
+chance of a duel, than to deposit it in the hands of an Italian
+priest. William was not at all ruffled by the Saxon's refusal,
+but steadily pursuing the course of his calculated measures, sent
+the Norman monk again, after giving him these instructions:--'Go
+and tell Harold, that if he will keep his former compact with me,
+I will leave to him all the country which is beyond the Humber,
+and will give his brother Gurth all the lands which Godwin held.
+If he still persist in refusing my offers, then thou shalt tell
+him, before all his people, that he is a perjurer and a liar;
+that he, and all who shall support him, are excommunicated by the
+mouth of the Pope; and that the bull to that effect is in my
+hands.'
+
+"Hugues Maigrot delivered this message in a solemn tone; and the
+Norman chronicle says that at the word EXCOMMUNICATION, the
+English chiefs looked at one another as if some great danger were
+impending. One of them then spoke as follows: 'We must fight,
+whatever may be the danger to us; for what we have to consider is
+not whether we shall accept and receive a new lord as if our king
+were dead: the case is quite otherwise. The Norman has given
+our lands to his captains, to his knights, to all his people, the
+greater part of whom have already done homage to him for them;
+they will all look for their gift, if their Duke become our king;
+and he himself is bound to deliver up to them our goods, our
+wives, and our daughters: all is promised to them beforehand.
+They come, not only to ruin us, but to ruin our descendants also,
+and to take from us the country of our ancestors and what shall
+we do--whither shall we go--when we have no longer a country?'
+The English promised by a unanimous oath, to make neither peace,
+nor truce nor treaty, with the invader, but to die, or drive away
+the Normans." [Thierry.]
+
+The 13th of October was occupied in these negotiations; and at
+night the Duke announced to his men that the next day would, be
+the day of battle. That night is said to have been passed by the
+two armies in very different manners. The Saxon soldiers spent
+it in joviality, singing their national songs, and draining huge
+horns of ale and wine round their camp-fires. The Normans, when
+they had looked to their arms and horses, confessed themselves to
+the priests, with whom their camp was thronged, and received the
+sacrament by thousands at a time.
+
+On Saturday, the 14th of October, was fought the great battle.
+
+It is not difficult to compose a narrative of its principal
+incidents, from the historical information which we possess,
+especially if aided by an examination of the ground. But it is
+far better to adopt the spirit-stirring words of the old
+chroniclers, who wrote while the recollections of the battle were
+yet fresh, and while the feelings and prejudices of the
+combatants yet glowed in the bosoms of their near descendants.
+Robert Wace, the Norman poet, who presented his "Roman de Rou" to
+our Henry II., is the most picturesque and animated of the old
+writers; and from him we can obtain a more vivid and full
+description of the conflict, than even the most brilliant
+romance-writer of the present time can supply. We have also an
+antique memorial of the battle, more to be relied on than either
+chronicler or poet (and which confirms Wace's narrative
+remarkably), in the celebrated Bayeux tapestry, which represents
+the principal scenes of Duke William's expedition, and of the
+circumstances connected with it, in minute though occasionally
+grotesque details, and which was undoubtedly the production of
+the same age in which the battle took place; whether we admit or
+reject the legend that Queen Matilda and the ladies of her court
+wrought it with their own hands in honour of the royal Conqueror.
+
+Let us therefore suffer the old Norman chronicler to transport
+our imaginations to the fair Sussex scenery, north-west of
+Hastings, with its breezy uplands, its grassy slopes, and ridges
+of open down swelling inland from the sparkling sea, its
+scattered copses, and its denser glades of intervening forests,
+clad in all the varied tints of autumn, as they appeared on the
+morning of the fourteenth of October, seven hundred and eighty-
+five years ago. The Norman host is pouring forth from its tents;
+and each troop, and each company, is forming fast under the
+banner of its leader. The masses have been sung, which were
+finished betimes in the morning; the barons have all assembled
+round Duke William; and the Duke has ordered that the army shall
+be formed in three divisions, so as to make the attack upon the
+Saxon position in three places. The Duke stood on a hill where
+he could best see his men; the barons surrounded him, and he
+spake to them proudly. He told them how he trusted them, and how
+all that he gained should be theirs; and how sure he felt of
+conquest, for in all the world there was not so brave an army or
+such good men and true as were then forming around him. Then
+they cheered him in turn, and cried out, "'You will not see one
+coward; none here will fear to die for love of you, if need be.'
+And he answered them, 'I thank you well. For God's sake spare
+not; strike hard at the beginning; stay not to take spoil; all
+the booty shall be in common, and there will be plenty for
+everyone. There will be no safety in asking quarter or in fight:
+the English will never love or spare a Norman. Felons they were,
+and felons they are; false they were, and false they will be.
+Show no weakness towards them, for they will have no pity on you.
+Neither the coward for running well, nor the bold man for smiting
+well, will be the better liked by the English, nor will any be
+the more spared on either account. You may fly to the sea, but
+you can fly no further; you will find neither ships nor bridge
+there; there will be no sailors to receive you; and the English
+will overtake you there and slay you in your shame. More of you
+will die in flight than in the battle. Then, as flight will not
+secure you, fight, and you will conquer. I have no doubt of the
+victory: we are come for glory, the victory is in our hands, and
+we may make sure of obtaining it if we so please.' As the Duke
+was speaking thus, and would yet have spoken more, William Fitz
+Osber rode up with his horse all coated with iron: 'Sire,' said
+he, 'we tarry here too long, let us all arm ourselves. ALLONS!
+ALLONS!'
+
+"Then all went to their tents and armed themselves as they best
+might; and the Duke was very busy, giving every one his orders;
+and he was courteous to all the vassals, giving away many arms
+and horses to them. When he prepared to arm himself, he called
+first for his good hauberk, and a man brought it on his arm, and
+placed it before him, but in putting his head in, to get it on,
+he unawares turned it the wrong way, with the back part in front.
+He soon changed it, but when he saw that those who stood by were
+sorely alarmed, he said, 'I have seen many a man who, if such a
+thing had happened to him, would not have borne arms, or entered
+the field the same day; but I never believed in omens, and I
+never will. I trust in God, for He does in all things His
+pleasure, and ordains what is to come to pass, according to His
+will. I have never liked fortune-tellers, nor believed in
+diviners; but I commend myself to our Lady. Let not this
+mischance give you trouble. The hauberk which was turned wrong,
+and then set right by me, signifies that a change will arise out
+of the matter which we are now stirring. You shall see the name
+of duke changed into king. Yea, a king shall I be, who hitherto
+have been but duke.' Then he crossed himself and straightway took
+his hauberk, stooped his head, and put it on aright, and laced
+his helmet, and girt on his sword, which a varlet brought him.
+Then the Duke called for his good horse--a better could not be
+found. It had been sent him by a king of Spain, out of very
+great friendship. Neither arms nor the press of fighting men did
+it fear, if its lord spurred it on. Walter Giffard brought it.
+The Duke stretched out his hand, took the reins, put foot in
+stirrup, and mounted; and the good horse pawed, pranced, reared
+himself up, and curvetted. The Viscount of Toarz saw how the
+Duke bore himself in arms, and said to his people that were
+around him, 'Never have I seen a man so fairly armed, nor one who
+rods so gallantly, or bore his arms or became his hauberk so
+well; neither any one who bore his lance so gracefully, or sat
+his horse and managed him so nobly. There is no such knight
+under heaven! a fair count he is, and fair king he will be. Let
+him fight, and he shall overcome: shame be to the man who shall
+fail him.'
+
+"Then the Duke called for the standard which the Pope had sent
+him, and he who bore it having unfolded it, the Duke took it,
+and, called to Raol de Conches. 'Bear my standard,' said he,
+'for I would not but do you right; by right and by ancestry your
+line are standard-bearers of Normandy, and very good knights have
+they all been.' But Raol said that he would serve the Duke that
+day in other guise, and would fight the English with his hand as
+long as life should last. Then the Duke bade Galtier Giffart
+bear the standard. But he was old and white-headed, and bade the
+Duke give the standard to some younger and stronger man to carry.
+Then the Duke said fiercely, 'By the splendour of God, my lords,
+I think you mean to betray and fail me in this great need.'--
+'Sire,' said Giffart, 'not so! we have done no treason, nor do I
+refuse from any felony towards you; but I have to lead a great
+chivalry, both hired men and the men of my fief. Never had I
+such good means of serving you as I now have; and if God please,
+I will serve you; if need be, I will die for you, and will give
+my own heart for yours.
+
+"'By my faith,' quoth the Duke, 'I always loved thee, and now I
+love thee more; if I survive this day, thou shalt be the better
+for it all thy days.' Then he called out a knight, whom he had
+heard much praised, Tosteins Fitz-Rou le Blanc by name, whose
+abode was at Bec-en-Caux. To him he delivered the standard; and
+Tosteins took it right cheerfully, and bowed low to him in
+thanks, and bore it gallantly, and with good heart. His kindred
+still have quittance of all service for their inheritance on that
+account, and their heirs are entitled so to hold their
+inheritance for ever.
+
+"William sat on his war-horse, and called on Rogier, whom they
+call De Mongomeri. 'I rely much upon you,' said he: 'lead your
+men thitherward, and attack them from that side. William, the
+son of Osber the seneschal, a right good vassal, shall go with
+you and help in the attack, and you shall have the men of
+Boulogne and Poix, and all my soldiers. Alain Fergert and Ameri
+shall attack on the other side; they shall lead the Poitevins and
+the Bretons, and all the Barons of Maine; and I, with my own
+great men, my friends and kindred, will fight in the middle
+throng, where the battle shall be the hottest.'
+
+"The barons, and knights, and men-at-arms were all now armed; the
+foot-soldiers were well equipped, each bearing bow and sword; on
+their heads were caps, and to their feet were bound buskins.
+Some had good hides which they had bound round their bodies; and
+many were clad in frocks, and had quivers and bows hung to their
+girdles. The knights had hauberks and swords, boots of steel and
+shining helmets; shields at their necks, and in their hands
+lances. And all had their cognizances, so that each might know
+his fellow, and Norman might not strike Norman, nor Frenchman
+kill his countryman by mistake. Those on foot led the way, with
+serried ranks, bearing their bows. The knights rode next,
+supporting the archers from behind. Thus both horse and foot
+kept their course and order of march as they began; in close
+ranks at a gentle pace, that the one might not pass or separate
+from the other. All went firmly and compactly, bearing
+themselves gallantly.
+
+"Harold had summoned his men, earls, barons, and vavassours,
+from, the castles and the cities; from the ports, the villages,
+and boroughs. The peasants were also called together from the
+villages, bearing such arms as they found; clubs and great picks,
+iron forge and stages. The English had enclosed the place where
+Harold was, with his friends and the barons of the country whom
+he had summoned and called together.
+
+"Those of London had come at once, and those of Kent, Hartfort,
+and of Essesse; those of Suree and Susesse, of St. Edmund and
+Sufoc; of Norwis and Norfoc; of Cantorbierre and Stanfort
+Bedefort and Hundetone. The men of Northanton also came; and
+those of Eurowic and Bokingkeham, of Bed and Notinkeham, Lindesie
+and Nichole. There came also from the west all, who heard the
+summons; and very many were to be seen coming from Salebiere and
+Dorset, from Bat and from Somerset. Many came, too, from about
+Glocestre, and many from Wirecestre, from Wincestre, Hontesire,
+and Brichesire; and many more from other counties that we have
+not named, and cannot indeed recount. All who could bear arms,
+and had learnt the news of the Duke's arrival, came to defend the
+land. But none came from beyond Humbre, for they had other
+business upon their hands; the Danes and Tosti having much
+damaged and weakened them.
+
+"Harold knew that the Normans would come and attack him hand to
+hand; so he had early enclosed the field in which he placed his
+men. He made them arm early, and range themselves for the
+battle; he himself having put on arms and equipments that became
+such a lord. The Duke, he said, ought to seek him, as he wanted
+to conquer England; and it became him to abide the attack who had
+to defend the land. He commanded the people, and counselled his
+barons to keep themselves altogether, and defend themselves in a
+body; for if they once separated, they would with difficulty
+recover themselves. 'The Normans,' he said, 'are good vassals,
+valiant on foot and on horseback; good knights are they on
+horseback, and well used to battle; all is lost if they once
+penetrate our ranks. They have brought long lances and swords,
+but you have pointed lances and keen-edged bills; and I do not
+expect that their arms can stand against yours. Cleave wherever
+you can; it will be ill done if you spare aught.'
+
+"The English had built up a fence before them with their shields,
+and with ash and other wood; and had well joined and wattled in
+the whole work, so as not to leave even a crevice; and thus they
+had a barricade in their front, through which any Norman who
+would attack them must first pass. Being covered in this way by
+their shields and barricades, their aim was to defend themselves:
+and if they had remained steady for that purpose, they would not
+have been conquered that day; for every Norman who made his way
+in, lost his life, either by hatchet, or bill, by club, or other
+weapons. They wore short and close hauberks, and helmets that
+hung over their garments. King Harold issued orders and made
+proclamation round, that all should be ranged with their faces
+towards the enemy; and that no one should move from where he was;
+so that, whoever came, might find them ready; and that whatever
+any one, be he Norman or other, should do, each should do his
+best to defend his own place. Then he ordered the men of Kent to
+go where the Normans were likely to make the attack; for they say
+that the men of Kent are entitled to strike first; and that
+whenever the king goes to battle, the first blow belongs to them.
+The right of the men of London is to guard the king's body, to
+place themselves around him, and to guard his standard; and they
+were accordingly placed by the standard to watch and defend it.
+
+"When Harold had made his reply, and given his orders, he came
+into the midst of the English, and dismounted by the side of the
+standard: Leofwin and Gurth, his brothers, were with him, and
+around him he had barons enough, as he stood by his standard,
+which was in truth a noble one, sparkling with gold and precious
+stones. After the victory, William sent it to the Pope, to prove
+and commemorate his great conquest and glory. The English stood
+in close ranks, ready and eager for the fight; and they moreover
+made a fosse, which went across the field, guarding one side of
+their army,
+
+"Meanwhile the Normans appeared advancing over the ridge of a
+rising ground; and the first division of their troops moved
+onwards along the hill and across a vallley. And presently
+another division, still larger, came in sight, close following
+upon the first, and they were led towards another part of the
+field, forming together as the first body had done. And while
+Harold saw and examined them, and was pointing them out to Gurth,
+a fresh company came in sight, covering all the plain; and in the
+midst of them was raised the standard that came from Rome. Near
+it was the Duke, and the best men and greatest strength of the
+army were there. The good knights, the good vassals, and brave
+warriors were there; and there were gathered together the gentle
+barons, the good archers, and the men-at-arms, whose duty it was
+to guard the Duke, and range themselves around him. The youths
+and common herd of the camp, whose business was not to join in
+the battle, but to take care of the harness and stores, moved on
+towards a rising ground. The priests and the clerks also
+ascended a hill, there to offer up prayers to God, and watch the
+event of the battle.
+
+"The English stood firm on foot in close ranks, and carried
+themselves right boldly. Each man had his hauberk on, with his
+sword girt, and his shield at his neck. Great hatchets were also
+slung at their necks, with which they expected to strike heavy
+blows.
+
+"The Normans brought on the three divisions of their army to
+attack at different places. They set out in three companies, and
+in three companies did they fight. The first and second had come
+up, and then advanced the third, which was the greatest; with
+that came the Duke with his own men, and all moved boldly
+forward.
+
+"As soon as the two armies were in full view of each other, great
+noise and tumult arose. You might hear the sound of many
+trumpets, of bugles, and of horns: and then you might see men
+ranging themselves in line, lifting their shields, raising their
+lances, bending their bows, handling their arrows, ready for
+assault and defence.
+
+"The English stood ready to their post, the Normans still moved
+on; and when they drew near, the English were to be seen stirring
+to and fro; were going and coming; troops ranging themselves in
+order; some with their colour rising, others turning pale; some
+making ready their arms, others raising their shields; the brave
+man rousing himself to fight, the coward trembling at the
+approach of danger.
+
+"Then Taillefer, who sang right well, rode mounted on a swift
+horse, before the Duke, singing of Charlemagne and of Roland, of
+Olivier and the Peers who died in Roncesvalles. and when they
+drew nigh to the English, 'A boon, sire !' cried Taillefer; 'I
+have long served you, and you owe me for all such service. To-
+day, so please you, you shall repay it. I ask as my guerdon, and
+beseech you for it earnestly, that you will allow me to strike
+the first blow in the battle!' And the Duke answered, 'I grant
+it.' Then Taillefer put his horse to a gallop, charging before
+all the rest, and struck an Englishman dead, driving his lance
+below the breast into his body, and stretching him upon the
+ground. Then he drew his sword, and struck another, crying out,
+'Come on, come on! What do ye, sirs! lay on, lay on!' At the
+second blow he struck, the English pushed forward, and surrounded
+and slew him. Forthwith arose the noise and cry of war, and on
+either side the people put themselves in motion.
+
+"The Normans moved on to the assault, and the English defended
+themselves well. Some were striking, others urging onwards; all
+were bold, and cast aside fear. And now, behold, that battle was
+gathered, whereof the fame is yet mighty.
+
+"Loud and far resounded the bray of the horns; and the shocks of
+the lances, the mighty strokes of maces, and the quick clashing
+of swords. One while the Englishmen rushed on, another while
+they fell back; one while the men from over the sea charged
+onwards, and again at other times retreated. The Normans shouted
+'Dex aie,' the English people 'Out.' Then came the cunning
+manoeuvres, the rude shocks and strokes of the lance and blows of
+the swords, among the sergeants and soldiers, both English and
+Norman.
+
+"When the English fall, the Normans shout. Each side taunts and
+defies the other, yet neither knoweth what the other saith; and
+the Normans say the English bark, because they understand not
+their speech.
+
+"Some wax strong, others weak: the brave exult, but the cowards
+tremble, as men who are sore dismayed. The Normans press on the
+assault, and the English defend their post well: they pierce the
+hauberks, and cleave the shields, receive and return mighty
+blows. Again, some press forwards, others yield; and thus in
+various ways the struggle proceeds. In the plain was a fosse,
+which the Normans had now behind them, having passed it in the
+fight without regarding it. But the English charged, and drove
+the Normans before them till they made them fall back upon this
+fosse, overthrowing into it horses and men. Many were to be seen
+falling therein, rolling one over the other, with their faces to
+the earth, and unable to rise. Many of the English, also, whom
+the Normans drew down along with them, died there. At no time
+during the day's battle did so many Normans die as perished in
+that fosse. So those said who saw the dead.
+
+"The varlets who were set to guard the harness began to abandon
+it as they saw the loss of the Frenchmen, when thrown back upon
+the fosse without power to recover themselves. Being greatly
+alarmed at seeing the difficulty in restoring order, they began
+to quit the harness, and sought around, not knowing where to find
+shelter. Then Duke William's brother, Odo, the good priest, the
+Bishop of Bayeux, galloped up, and said to them, 'Stand fast!
+stand fast! be quiet and move not! fear nothing, for if God
+please, we shall conquer yet.' So they took courage, and rested
+where they were; and Odo returned galloping back to where the
+battle was most fierce, and was of great service on that day. He
+had put hauberk on, over a white aube, wide in the body, with the
+sleeve tight; and sat on a white horse, so that all might
+recognise him. In his hand he held a mace, and wherever he saw
+most need he held up and stationed the knights, and often urged
+them on to assault and strike the enemy.
+
+"From nine o'clock in the morning, when the combat began, till
+three o'clock came, the battle was up and down, this way and
+that, and no one knew who would conquer and win the land. Both
+sides stood so firm and fought so well, that no one could guess
+which would prevail. The Norman archers with their bows shot
+thickly upon the English; but they covered themselves with their
+shields, so that the arrows could not reach their bodies, nor do
+any mischief, how true soever was their aim, or however well they
+shot. Then the Normans determined to shoot their arrows upwards
+into the air, so that they might fall on their enemies' heads,
+and strike their faces. The archers adopted this scheme, and
+shot up into the air towards the English; and the arrows in
+falling struck their heads and faces, and put out the eyes of
+many; and all feared to open their eyes, or leave their faces
+unguarded.
+
+"The arrows now flew thicker than rain before the wind; fast sped
+the shafts that the English called 'wibetes.' Then it was that
+an arrow, that had been thus shot upwards, struck Harold above his
+right eye and put it out. In his agony he drew the arrow and
+threw it away, breaking it with his hands; and the pain to his
+head was so great, that he leaned upon his shield. So the
+English were wont to say, and still say to the French, that the
+arrow was well shot which was so sent up against their king; and
+that the archer won them great glory, who thus put out Harold's
+eye.
+
+"The Normans saw that the English defended themselves well, and
+were so strong in their position that they could do little
+against them. So they consulted together privily, and arranged
+to draw off, and pretend to flee, till the English should pursue
+and scatter themselves over the field; for they saw that if they
+could once get their enemies to break: their ranks, they might
+be attacked and discomfited much more easily. As they had said,
+so they did. The Normans by little and little fled, the English
+following them. As the one fell back, the other pressed after;
+and when the Frenchmen retreated, the English thought and cried
+out that the men of France fled, and would never return.
+
+"Thus they were deceived by the pretended flight, and great
+mischief thereby befell them; for if they had not moved from
+their position, it is not likely that they would have been
+conquered at all; but like fools they broke their lines and
+pursued.
+
+"The Normans were to be seen following up their stratagem,
+retreating slowly so as to draw the English further on. As they
+still flee, the English pursue; they push out their lances and
+stretch forth their hatchets: following the Normans, as they go
+rejoicing in the success of their scheme, and scattering
+themselves over the plain. And the English meantime jeered and
+insulted their foes with words. 'Cowards,' they cried, 'you came
+hither in an evil hour, wanting our lands, and seeking to seize
+our property, fools that ye were to come! Normandy is too far
+off and you will not easily reach it. It is of little use to run
+back; unless you can cross the sea at a leap, or can drink it
+dry, your sons and daughters are lost to you.
+
+"The Normans bore it all, but in fact they knew not what the
+English said: their language seemed like the baying of dogs,
+which they could not understand. At length they stopped and
+turned round, determined to recover their ranks; and the barons
+might be heard crying 'Dex aie!' for a halt. Then the Normans
+resumed their former position, turning their faces towards the
+enemy; and their men were to be seen facing round and rushing
+onwards to a fresh MELEE; the one party assaulting the other;
+this man striking, another pressing onwards. One hits, another
+misses; one flies, another pursues; one is aiming a stroke, while
+another discharges his blow. Norman strives with Englishman
+again, and aims his blows afresh. One flies, another pursues
+swiftly: the combatants are many, the plain wide, the battle and
+the MELEE fierce. On every hand they fight hard, the blows are
+heavy, and the struggle becomes fierce.
+
+"The Normans were playing their part well, when an English knight
+came rushing up, having in his company a hundred men, furnished
+with various arms. He wielded a northern hatchet, with the blade
+a full foot long; and was well armed after his manner, being
+tall, bold, and of noble carriage. In the front of the battle
+where the Normans thronged most, he came bounding on swifter than
+the stag, many Normans falling before him and his company. He
+rushed straight upon a Norman who was armed and riding on a war-
+horse, and tried with, his hatchet of steel to cleave his helmet;
+but the blow miscarried and the sharp blade glanced down before
+the saddle-bow, driving through the horse's neck down to the
+ground, so that both horse and master fell together to the earth.
+I know not whether the Englishman struck another blow; but the
+Normans who saw the stroke were astonished and about to abandon
+the assault, when Roger de Mongomeri came galloping up, with his
+lance set, and heeding not the long-handled axe, which the
+English-man wielded aloft, struck him down, and left him
+stretched upon the ground. Then Roger cried out, 'Frenchmen,
+strike! the day is ours!' and again a fierce MELEE was to be
+seen, with many a blow of lance and sword; the English still
+defending themselves, killing the horses and cleaving the
+shields.
+
+"There was a French soldier of noble mien, who sat his horse
+gallantly. He spied two Englishmen who were also carrying
+themselves boldly. They were both men of great worth, and had
+become companions in arms and fought together, the one protecting
+the other. They bore two long and broad bills, and did great
+mischief to the Normans, killing both horses and men. The French
+soldier looked at them and their bills, and was sore alarmed, for
+he was afraid of losing his good horse, the best that he had; and
+would willingly have turned to some other quarter, if it would
+not have looked like cowardice. He soon, however, recovered his
+courage, and spurring his horse gave him the bridle, and galloped
+swiftly forward. Fearing the two bills, he raised his shield,
+and struck one of the Englishmen with his lance on the breast, so
+that the iron passed out at his back; at the moment that he fell
+the lance broke, and the Frenchmen seized the mace that hung at
+his right side, and struck the other Englishman a blow that
+completely broke his skull.
+
+"On the other side was an Englishman who much annoyed the French,
+continually assaulting them with a keen-edged hatchet. He had a
+helmet made of wood, which he had fastened down to his coat, and
+laced round his neck, so that no blows could reach his head. The
+ravage he was making was seen by a gallant Norman knight, who
+rode a horse that neither fire nor water could stop in its
+career, when its master urged it on. The knight spurred, and his
+horse carried him on well till he charged the Englishman,
+striking him over the helmet, so that it fell down over his eyes;
+and as he stretched out his hand to raise it and uncover the
+face, the Norman cut off his right hand, so that his hatchet fell
+to the ground. Another Norman sprang forward and eagerly seized
+the prize with both his hands, but he kept it little space, and
+paid dearly for it, for as he stooped to pick up the hatchet, an
+Englishman with his long-handled axe struck him over the back,
+breaking all his bones, so that his entrails and lungs gushed
+forth. The knight of the good horse meantime returned without
+injury; but on his way he met another Englishman, and bore him
+down under his his horse, wounding him grievously, and trampling
+him altogether under foot.
+
+"And now might be heard the loud clang and cry of battle, and the
+clashing of lances. The English stood firm in their barricades,
+and shivered the lances, beating them into pieces with their
+bills and maces. The Normans drew their swords, and hewed down
+the barricades, and the English in great trouble fell back upon
+their standard, where were collected the maimed and wounded.
+
+"There were many knights of Chauz, who jousted and made attacks.
+The English knew not how to joust, or bear arms on horseback but
+fought with hatchets and bills. A man when he wanted to strike
+with one of their hatchets, was obliged to hold it with both his
+hands, and could not at the same time, as it seems to me, both
+cover himself and strike with any freedom.
+
+"The English fell back towards the standard, which was upon a
+rising ground, and the Normans followed them across the valley,
+attacking them on foot and horseback. Then Hue de Mortemer, with
+the sires D'Auviler, D'Onebac, and St. Cler, rode up and charged,
+overthrowing many.
+
+"Robert Fitz Erneis fixed his lance, took his shield, and,
+galloping towards the standard, with his keen-edged sword struck
+an Englishman who was in front, killed him, and then drawing back
+his sword, attacked many others, and pushed straight for the
+standard, trying to beat it down, but the English surrounded it,
+and killed him with their bills. He was found on the spot, when
+they afterwards sought for him, dead, and lying at the standard's
+foot.
+
+"Duke William pressed close upon the English with his lance;
+striving hard to reach the standard with the great troop he led;
+and seeking earnestly for Harold, on whose account the whole war
+was. The Normans follow their lord, and press around him; they
+ply their blows upon the English; and these defend themselves
+stoutly, striving hard with their enemies, returning blow for
+blow.
+
+"One of them was a man of great strength, a wrestler, who did
+great mischief to the Normans with his hatchet; all feared him,
+for he struck down a great many Normans. The Duke spurred on his
+horse, and aimed a blow at him, but he stooped, and so escaped
+the stroke; then jumping on one side, he lifted his hatchet
+aloft, and as the Duke bent to avoid the blow the Englishman
+boldly struck him on the head, and beat in his helmet, though
+without doing much injury. He was very near falling, however,
+but bearing on his stirrups he recovered himself immediately; and
+when he thought to have revenged himself upon the churl by
+killing him, he had escaped, dreading the Duke's blow. He ran
+back in among the English, but he was not safe even there; for
+the Normans seeing him, pursued and caught him; and having
+pierced him through and through with their lances, left him dead
+on the ground.
+
+"Where the throng of the battle was greatest, the men of Kent and
+Essex fought wondrously well, and made the Normans again retreat,
+but without doing them much injury. And when the Duke saw his
+men fall back and the English triumphing over them, his spirit
+rose high, and he seized his shield and his lance, which a vassal
+handed to him, and took his post by his standard.
+
+"Then those who kept close guard by him and rode where he rode,
+being about a thousand armed men, came and rushed with closed
+ranks upon the English; and with the weight of their good horses,
+and the blows the knights gave, broke the press of the enemy, and
+scattered the crowd before them, the good Duke leading them on in
+front. Many pursued and many fled; many were the Englishmen who
+fell around, and were trampled under the horses, crawling upon
+the earth, and not able to rise. Many of the richest and noblest
+men fell in that rout, but the English still rallied in places;
+smote down those whom they reached, and maintained the combat the
+best they could; beating down the men and killing the horses.
+One Englishman watched the Duke, and plotted to kill him; he
+would have struck him with his lance, but he could not, for the
+Duke struck him first, and felled him to the earth.
+
+"Loud was now the clamour, and great the slaughter; many a soul
+then quitted the body it inhabited. The living marched over the
+heaps of dead, and each side was weary of striking. He charged
+on who could, and he who could no longer strike still pushed
+forward. The strong struggled with the strong; some failed,
+others triumphed; the cowards fell back, the brave pressed on;
+and sad was his fate who fell in the midst, for he had little
+chance of rising again; and many in truth fell, who never rose at
+all, being crushed under the throng.
+
+"And now the Normans pressed on so far, that at last they had
+reached the standard. There Harold had remained, defending
+himself to the utmost; but he was sorely wounded in his eye by
+the arrow, and suffered grievous pain from the blow. An armed
+man came in the throng of the battle, and struck him on the
+ventaille of his helmet, and beat him to the ground; and as he
+sought to recover himself, a knight beat him down again, striking
+him on the thick of his thigh, down to the bone.
+
+"Gurth saw the English falling around, and that there was no
+remedy. He saw his race hastening to ruin, and despaired of any
+aid; he would have fled but could not, for the throng continually
+increased and the Duke pushed on till he reached him, and struck
+him with great force. Whether he died of that blow I know not,
+but it was said that he fell under it, and rose no more.
+
+"The standard was beaten down, the golden standard was taken, and
+Harold and the best of his friends were slain; but there was so
+much eagerness, and throng of so many around, seeking to kill
+him, that I know not who it was that slew him.
+
+"The English were in great trouble at having lost their king, and
+at the Duke's having conquered and beat down the standard; but
+they still fought on, and defended themselves long, and in fact
+till the day drew to a close. Then it clearly appeared to all
+that the standard was lost, and the news had spread throughout
+the army that Harold for certain was dead; and all saw that there
+was no longer any hope, so they left the field, and those fled
+who could.
+
+"William fought well; many an assault did he lead, many a blow
+did he give, and many receive, and many fell dead under his hand.
+Two horses were killed under him, and he took a third at time of
+need, so that he fell not to the ground; and he lost not a drop
+of blood. But whatever any one did, and whoever lived or died,
+this is certain, that William conquered, and that many of the
+English fled from the field, and many died on the spot. Then he
+returned thanks to God, and in his pride ordered his standard to
+be brought and set up on high where the English standard had
+stood; and that was the signal of his having conquered and beaten
+down the foe. And he ordered his tent to be raised on the spot
+among the dead, and had his meat brought thither, and his supper
+prepared there.
+
+"Then he took off his armour; and the barons and knights, pages
+and squires came, when he had unstrung his shield: and they took
+the helmet from his head, and the hauberk from his back, and saw
+the heavy blows upon his shield, and how his helmet was dinted
+in. And all greatly wondered, and said, 'Such a baron never
+bestrode war-horse, or dealt such blows, or did such feats of
+arms; neither has there been on earth such a knight since Rollant
+and Olivier.'
+
+"Thus they lauded and extolled him greatly, and rejoiced in what
+they saw; but grieving also for their friends who were slain in
+the battle. And the Duke stood meanwhile among them of noble
+stature and mien; and rendered thanks to the King of Glory,
+through whom he had the victory; and thanked the knights around
+him, mourning also frequently for the dead. And he ate and drank
+among the dead, and made his bed that night upon the field.
+
+"The morrow was Sunday; and those who had slept upon the field of
+battle, keeping watch around, and suffering great fatigue,
+bestirred themselves at break of day and sought out and buried
+such of the bodies of their dead friends as they might find. The
+noble ladies of the land also came, some to seek their husbands,
+and others their fathers, sons, or brothers. They bore the
+bodies to their villages, and interred them at the churches; and
+the clerks and priests of the country were ready, and at the
+request of their friends, took the bodies that were found, and
+prepared graves and laid them therein.
+
+"King Harold was carried and buried at Varham; but I know not who
+it was that bore him thither, neither do I know who buried him.
+Many remained on the field, and many had fled in the night."
+
+Such is a Norman account of the battle of Hastings, which does
+full justice to the valour of the Saxons, as well as to the skill
+and bravery of the victors. [In the preceding pages, I have
+woven together the "purpureos pannos" of the old chronicler. In
+so doing, I have largely availed myself of Mr. Edgar Taylor's
+version of that part of the "Roman de Rou" which describes the
+conquest. By giving engravings from the Bayeux Tapestry, and
+excellent notes, Mr. Taylor has added much to the value and
+interest of his volume.] It is indeed evident that the loss of
+the battle to the English was owing to the wound which Harold
+received in the afternoon, and which must have incapacitated him
+from effective command. When we remember that he had himself
+just won the battle of Stamford Bridge over Harald Hardrada by
+the manoeuvre of a feigned flight, it is impossible to suppose
+that he could be deceived by the same stratagem on the part of
+the Normans at Hastings. But his men, when deprived of his
+control would very naturally be led by their inconsiderate ardour
+into the pursuit that proved so fatal to them. All the
+narratives of the battle, however much they may vary as to the
+precise time and manner of Harold's fall, eulogise the
+generalship and the personal prowess which he displayed, until
+the fatal arrow struck him. The skill with which he had posted
+his army was proved, both by the slaughter which it cost the
+Normans to force the position, and also by the desperate rally
+which some of the Saxons made, after the battle, in the forest in
+the rear, in which they cut off a large number of the pursuing
+Normans. This circumstance is particularly mentioned by William
+of Poictiers, the Conqueror's own chaplain. Indeed, if Harold,
+or either of his brothers, had survived, the remains of the
+English army might have formed again in the wood, and could at
+least have effected an orderly retreat, and prolonged the war.
+But both Gurth and Leofwine, and all the bravest thanes of
+Southern England, lay dead on Senlac, around their fallen king
+and the fallen standard of their country. The exact number of
+the slain on the Saxon side is unknown; but we read that on the
+side of the victors, out of sixty thousand men who had been
+engaged, no less than a fourth perished: so well had the English
+bill-men "plied the ghastly blow" and so sternly had the Saxon
+battle-axe cloven Norman casque and mail. [The Conqueror's
+chaplain calls the Saxon battle-axes "saevissimas secures."] The
+old historian Daniel justly as well as forcibly remarks, [As
+cited in the "Pictorial History."] "Thus was tried, by the great
+assize of God's judgment in battle, the right of power between
+the English and Norman nations; a battle the most memorable of
+all others; and, however miserably lost, yet most nobly fought on
+the part of England."
+
+Many a pathetic legend was told in after years respecting the
+discovery and the burial of the corpse of our last Saxon king.
+The main circumstances, though they seem to vary, are perhaps
+reconcilable. [See them collected in Lingard, vol. i p. 452, ET
+SEQ.; Thierry, vol i. p. 299; Sharon Turner, Vol. i. p. 82; and
+Histoire de Normandie par Lieguet, p. 242.] Two of the monks of
+Waltham abbey, which Harold had founded a little time before his
+election to the throne, had accompanied him to the battle. On
+the morning after the slaughter they begged and gained permission
+of the Conqueror to search for the body of their benefactor. The
+Norman soldiery and camp-followers had stripped and gashed the
+slain; and the two monks vainly strove to recognise from among
+the mutilated and gory heaps around them the features of their
+former king. They sent for Harold's mistress, Edith, surnamed
+"the Fair" and the "Swan-necked," to aid them. The eye of love
+proved keener than the eye of gratitude, and the Saxon lady, even
+in that Aceldama, knew her Harold.
+
+The king's mother now sought the victorious Norman, and begged
+the dead body of her son. But William at first answered in his
+wrath, and in the hardness of his heart, that a man who had been
+false to his word and his religion should have no other sepulchre
+than the sand of the shore. He added, with a sneer, "Harold
+mounted guard on the coast while he was alive; he may continue
+his guard now he is dead." The taunt was an unintentional
+eulogy; and a grave washed by the spray of the Sussex waves would
+have been the noblest burial-place for the martyr of Saxon
+freedom. But Harold's mother was urgent in her lamentations and
+her prayers: the Conqueror relented: like Achilles, he gave up
+the dead body of his fallen foe to a parent's supplications; and
+the remains of King Harold were deposited with regal honours in
+Waltham Abbey.
+
+On Christmas day of the same year, William the Conqueror was
+crowned at London, King of England.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS, A.D. 1066, AND
+JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY AT ORLEANS, 1429.
+
+A.D. 1066-1087. Reign of William the Conqueror. Frequent
+risings of the English against him, which are quelled with
+merciless rigour.
+
+1096. The first Crusade.
+
+1112. Commencement of the disputes about investitures between
+the emperors and the popes.
+
+1140. Foundation of the city of Lubeck, whence originated the
+Hanseatic League. Commencement of the feuds in Italy between the
+Guelphs and Ghibellines.
+
+1146. The second Crusade.
+
+1154. Henry II. becomes King of England. Under him Thomas a
+Becket is made Archbishop of Canterbury: the first instance of
+any man of the Saxon race being raised to high office in Church
+or State since the Conquest.
+
+1170. Strongbow, earl of Pembroke, lands with an English army in
+Ireland.
+
+1189. Richard Coeur de Lion becomes King of England. He and
+King Philip Augustus of France join in the third Crusade.
+
+1199-1204. On the death of King Richard, his brother John claims
+and makes himself master of England and Normandy and the other
+large continental possessions of the early Plantagenet princes.
+Philip Augustus asserts the cause of Prince Arthur, John's
+nephew, against him. Arthur is murdered, but the French king
+continues the war against John, and conquers from him Normandy,
+Brittany, Anjou, Maine, Touraine, and Poictiers.
+
+1216. The barons, the freeholders, the citizens, and the yeomen
+of England rise against the tyranny of John and his foreign
+favourites. They compel him to sign Magna Charta. This is the
+commencement of our nationality: for our history from this time
+forth is the history of a national life, then complete, and still
+in being. All English history before this period is a mere
+history of elements, of their collisions, and of the processes of
+their fusion. For upwards of a century after the Conquest,
+Anglo-Norman and Anglo-Saxon had kept aloof from each other: the
+one in haughty scorn, the other in sullen abhorrence. They were
+two peoples, though living in the same land. It is not until the
+thirteenth century, the period of the reigns of John and his son
+and grandson, that we can perceive the existence of any feeling
+of common patriotism among them. But in studying the history of
+these reigns, we read of the old dissensions no longer. The
+Saxon no more appears in civil war against the Norman; the Norman
+no longer scorns the language of the Saxon, or refuses to bear
+together with him the name of Englishman. No part of the
+community think themselves foreigners to another part. They feel
+that they are all one people, and they have learned to unite
+their efforts for the common purpose of protecting the rights and
+promoting the welfare of all. The fortunate loss of the Duchy of
+Normandy in John's reign greatly promoted these new feelings.
+Thenceforth our barons' only homes were in England. One language
+had, in the reign of Henry III., become the language of the land;
+and that, also, had then assumed the form in which we still
+possess it. One law, in the eye of which all freemen are equal
+without distinction of race, was modelled, and steadily enforced,
+and still continues to form the groundwork of our judicial
+system. [Creasy's Text-book of the Constitution, p. 4.]
+
+1273. Rudolph of Hapsburg chosen Emperor of Germany.
+
+1283. Edward I. conquers Wales.
+
+1346. Edward III. invades France, and gains the battle of
+Cressy.
+
+1356. Battle of Poictiers.
+
+1360. Treaty of Bretigny between England and France. By it
+Edward III. renounces his pretensions to the French crown. The
+treaty is ill kept, and indecisive hostilities continue between
+the forces of the two countries.
+
+1414. Henry V. of England claims the crown of France, and
+resolves to invade and conquer that kingdom. At this time France
+was in the most deplorable state of weakness and suffering, from
+the factions that raged among her nobility, and from the cruel
+oppressions which the rival nobles practised on the mass of the
+community. "The people were exhausted by taxes, civil wars, and
+military executions; and they had fallen into that worst of all
+states of mind, when the independence of one's country is thought
+no longer a paramount and sacred object. 'What can the English
+do to us worse than the things we suffer at the hands of our own
+princes?' was a common exclamation among the poor people of
+France." [Pictorial Hist. of England, vol. i. p. 28.]
+
+1415. Henry invades France, takes Harfleur, and wins the great
+battle of Agincourt.
+
+1417-1419. Henry conquers Normandy. The French Dauphin
+assassinates the Duke of Burgundy, the most powerful of the
+French nobles, at Montereau. The successor of the murdered duke
+becomes the active ally of the English.
+
+1420. The Treaty of Troyes is concluded between Henry V. of
+England and Charles VI. of France, and Philip, duke of Burgundy.
+By this treaty it was stipulated that Henry should marry the
+Princess Catherine of France; that King Charles, during his life-
+time, should keep the title and dignity of King of France, but
+that Henry should succeed him, and should at once be entrusted
+with the administration of the government, and that the French
+crown should descend to Henry's heirs; that France and England
+should for ever be united under one king, but should still retain
+their several usages, customs, and privileges; that all the
+princes, peers, vassals, and communities of France should swear
+allegiance to Henry as their future king, and should pay him
+present obedience as regent; that Henry should unite his arms to
+those of King Charles and the Duke of Burgundy, in order to
+subdue the adherents of Charles, the pretended dauphin; and that
+these three princes should make no truce or peace with the
+Dauphin, but by the common consent of all three.
+
+1421. Henry V. gains several victories over the French, who
+refuse to acknowledge the treaty of Troyes. His son, afterwards
+Henry VI., is born.
+
+1422. Henry V. and Charles VI. of France die. Henry VI. is
+proclaimed at Paris, King of England and France. The followers
+of the French Dauphin proclaim him Charles VII., King of France.
+The Duke of Bedford, the English Regent in France, defeats the
+army of the Dauphin at Crevant.
+
+1424. The Duke of Bedford gains the great victory of Verneuil
+over the French partizans of the Dauphin, and their Scotch
+auxiliaries.
+
+1428. The English begin the siege of Orleans.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY OVER THE ENGLISH AT ORLEANS, A.D. 1429.
+
+"The eyes of all Europe were turned towards this scene; where, it
+was reasonably supposed, the French were to make their last stand
+for maintaining the independence of their monarchy and the rights
+of their; sovereign"--HUME.
+
+When, after their victory at Salamis, the generals of the various
+Greek states voted the prizes for distinguished individual merit,
+each assigned the first place of excellence to himself, but they
+all concurred in giving their second votes to Themistocles.
+[Plutarch, Vit. Them. 17.] This was looked on as a decisive
+proof that Themistocles ought to be ranked first of all. If we
+were to endeavour, by a similar test, to ascertain which European
+nation has contributed the most to the progress of European
+civilization, we should find Italy, Germany, England, and Spain,
+each claiming the first degree, but each also naming France as
+clearly next in merit. It is impossible to deny her paramount
+importance in history. Besides the formidable part that she has
+for nearly three centuries played, as the Bellona of the European
+commonwealth of states, her influence during all this period over
+the arts, the literature, the manners and the feelings of
+mankind, has been such as to make the crisis of her earlier
+fortunes a point of world-wide interest; and it may be asserted
+without exaggeration, that the future career of every nation was
+involved in the result of the struggle by which the unconscious
+heroine of France, in the beginning of the fifteenth century,
+rescued her country from becoming a second Ireland under the yoke
+of the triumphant English.
+
+Seldom has the extinction of a a nation's independence appeared
+more inevitable than was the case in France, when the English
+invaders completed their lines round Orleans, four hundred and
+twenty-three years ago. A series of dreadful defeats had thinned
+the chivalry of France, and daunted the spirits of her soldiers.
+A foreign King had been proclaimed in her capital; and foreign
+armies of the bravest veterans, and led by the ablest captains
+then known in the world, occupied the fairest portions of her
+territory. Worse to her even than the fierceness and the
+strength of her foes were the factions, the vices, and the crimes
+of her own children. Her native prince was a dissolute trifler,
+stained with the assassination of the most powerful noble of the
+land, whose son, in revenge, had leagued himself with the enemy.
+Many more of her nobility, many of her prelates, her magistrates,
+and rulers, had sworn fealty to the English king. The condition
+of the peasantry amid the general prevalence of anarchy and
+brigandage, which were added to the customary devastations of
+contending armies, was wretched beyond the power of language to
+describe. The sense of terror and suffering seemed to have
+extended itself even to the brute creation.
+
+"In sooth, the estate of France was then most miserable. There
+appeared nothing but a horrible face, confusion, poverty,
+desolation, solitarinesse, and feare. The lean and bare
+labourers in the country did terrifie even theeves themselves,
+who had nothing left them to spoile but the carkasses of these
+poore miserable creatures, wandering up and down like ghostes
+drawne out of their graves. The least farmes and hamlets were
+fortified by these robbers, English, Bourguegnons, and French,
+every one striving to do his worst; all men-of-war were well
+agreed to spoile the countryman and merchant. EVEN THE CATTELL,
+ACCUSTOMED TO THE LARUME BELL, THE SIGNE OF THE ENEMY'S APPROACH,
+WOULD RUN HOME OF THEMSELVES WITHOUT ANY GUIDE BY THIS ACCUSTOMED
+MISERY." [De Serres, quoted in the notes to Southey's Joan of
+Arc.]
+
+In the autumn of 1428, the English, who were already masters of
+all France north of the Loire, prepared their forces for the
+conquest of the southern provinces, which yet adhered to the
+cause of the Dauphin. The city of Orleans, on the banks of that
+river, was looked upon as the last stronghold of the French
+national party. If the English could once obtain possession of
+it, their victorious progress through the residue of the kingdom
+seemed free from any serious obstacle. Accordingly, the Earl of
+Salisbury, one of the bravest and most experienced of the English
+generals, who had been trained under Henry V., marched to the
+attack of the all-important city; and, after reducing several
+places of inferior consequence in the neighbourhood, appeared
+with his army before its walls on the 12th of October, 1428.
+
+The city of Orleans itself was on the north side of the Loire,
+but its suburbs extended far on the southern side, and a strong
+bridge connected them with the town. A fortification which in
+modern military phrase would be termed a tete-du-pont, defended
+the bridge-head on the southern side, and two towers, called the
+Tourelles, were built on the bridge itself, where it rested on an
+island at a little distance from the tete-du-pont. Indeed, the
+solid masonry of the bridge terminated at the Tourelles; and the
+communication thence with the tete-du-pont on the southern shore
+was by means of a drawbridge. The Tourelles and the tete-du-pont
+formed together a strong fortified post, capable of containing a
+garrison of considerable strength; and so long as this was in
+possession of the Orleannais, they could communicate freely with
+the southern provinces, the inhabitants of which, like the
+Orleannais themselves, supported the cause of their Dauphin
+against the foreigners. Lord Salisbury rightly judged the
+capture of the Tourelles to be the most material step towards the
+reduction of the city itself. Accordingly he directed his
+principal operations against this post, and after some severe
+repulses, he carried the Tourelles by storm, on the 23d of
+October. The French, however, broke down the part of the bridge
+which was nearest to the north bank and thus rendered a direct
+assault from the Tourelles upon the city impossible. But the
+possession of this post enabled the English to distress the town
+greatly by a battery of cannon which they planted there, and
+which commanded some of the principal streets.
+
+It has been observed by Hume, that this is the first siege in
+which any important use appears to have been made of artillery.
+And even at Orleans both besiegers and besieged seem to have
+employed their cannons more as instruments of destruction against
+their enemy's men, than as engines of demolition against their
+enemy's walls and works. The efficacy of cannon in breaching
+solid masonry was taught Europe by the Turks, a few years after
+wards, at the memorable siege of Constantinople. In our French
+wars, as in the wars of the classic nations, famine was looked on
+as the surest weapon to compel the submission of a well-walled
+town and the great object of the besiegers was to effect a
+complete circumvallation. The great ambit of the walls of
+Orleans, and the facilities which the river gave for obtaining
+succour and supplies, rendered the capture of the place by this
+process a matter of great difficulty. Nevertheless, Lord
+Salisbury, and Lord Suffolk, who succeeded him in command of the
+English after his death by a cannon-ball, carried on the
+necessary works with great skill and resolution. Six strongly
+fortified posts, called bastillos, were formed at certain
+intervals round the town and the purpose of the English engineers
+was to draw strong lines between them. During the winter little
+progress was made with the entrenchments, but when the spring of
+1429 came, the English resumed their works with activity; the
+communications between the city and the country became more
+difficult, and the approach of want began already to be felt in
+Orleans.
+
+The besieging force also fared hardly for stores and provisions,
+until relieved by the effects of a brilliant victory which Sir
+John Fastolfe, one of the best English generals, gained at
+Rouvrai, near Orleans, a few days after Ash Wednesday, 1429.
+With only sixteen hundred fighting men, Sir John completely
+defeated an army of French and Scots, four thousand strong, which
+had been collected for the purpose of aiding the Orleannais, and
+harassing the besiegers. After this encounter, which seemed
+decisively to confirm the superiority of the English in battle
+over their adversaries, Fastolfe escorted large supplies of
+stores and food to Suffolk's camp, and the spirits of the English
+rose to the highest pitch at the prospect of the speedy capture
+of the city before them, and the consequent subjection of all
+France beneath their arms.
+
+The Orleannais now in their distress offered to surrender the
+city into the hands of the Duke of Burgundy, who, though the ally
+of the English, was yet one of their native princes. The Regent
+Bedford refused these terms, and the speedy submission of the
+city to the English seemed inevitable. The Dauphin Charles, who
+was now at Chinon with his remnant of a court, despaired of
+maintaining any longer the struggle for his crown; and was only
+prevented from abandoning the country by the more masculine
+spirits of his mistress and his queen. Yet neither they, nor the
+boldest of Charles's captains, could have shown him where to find
+resources for prolonging the war; and least of all could any
+human skill have predicted the quarter whence rescue was to come
+to Orleans and to France.
+
+In the village of Domremy, on the borders of Lorraine, there was
+a poor peasant of the name of Jacques d'Arc, respected in his
+station of life, and who had reared a family in virtuous habits
+and in the practice of the strictest devotion. His eldest
+daughter was named by her parents Jeannette, but she was called
+Jeanne by the French, which was Latinised into Johanna, and
+anglicised into Joan. ["Respondit quod in partibus suis
+vocabatur Johanneta, et postquam venit in Franciam vocata est
+Johanna."--PROCES DE JEANNE D'ARC, vol i. p. 46.]
+
+At the time when Joan first attracted attention, she was about
+eighteen years of age. She was naturally of a susceptible
+disposition, which diligent attention to the legends of saints,
+and tales of fairies, aided by the dreamy loneliness of her life
+while tending her father's flocks, had made peculiarly prone to
+enthusiastic fervour. At the same time she was eminent for piety
+and purity of soul, and for her compassionate gentleness to the
+sick and the distressed.
+
+[Southey, in one of the speeches which he puts in the mouth of
+his Joan of Arc, has made her beautifully describe the effect; on
+her mind of the scenery in which she dwelt:-
+
+"Here in solitude and peace
+ My soul was nurst, amid the loveliest scenes
+ Of-unpolluted nature. Sweet it was,
+ As the white mists of morning roll'd away,
+ To see the mountain's wooded heights appear
+ Dark in the early dawn, and mark its slope
+ With gorse-flowers glowing, as the rising sun
+ On the golden ripeness pour'd a deepening light.
+ Pleasant at noon beside the vocal brook
+ To lay me down, and watch the the floating clouds,
+ And shape to Fancy's wild similitudes
+ Their ever-varying forms; and oh, how sweet,
+ To drive my flock at evening to the fold,
+ And hasten to our little hut, and hear
+ The voice of kindness bid me welcome home!"
+
+The only foundation for the story told by the Burgundian partisan
+Monstrelet, and adopted by Hume, of Joan having been brought up
+as servant at an inn, is the circumstance of her having been
+once, with the rest of her family, obliged to take refuge in an
+AUBERGE in Neufchateau for fifteen days, when a party of
+Burgundian cavalry made an incursion into Domremy. (See the
+Quarterly Review, No. 138.)]
+
+The district where she dwelt had escaped comparatively free from
+the ravages of war, but the approach of roving bands of
+Burgundian or English troops frequently spread terror through
+Domremy. Once the village had been plundered by some of these
+marauders, and Joan and her family had been driven from their
+home, and forced to seek refuge for a time at Neufchateau. The
+peasantry in Domremy were principally attached to the House of
+Orleans and the Dauphin; and all the miseries which France
+endured, were there imputed to the Burgundian faction and their
+allies, the English, who were seeking to enslave unhappy France.
+
+Thus from infancy to girlhood Joan had heard continually of the
+woes of the war, and she had herself witnessed some of the
+wretchedness that it caused. A feeling of intense patriotism
+grew in her with her growth. The deliverance of France from the
+English was the subject of her reveries by day and her dreams by
+night. Blended with these aspirations were recollections of the
+miraculous interpositions of Heaven in favour of the oppressed,
+which she had learned from the legends of her Church. Her faith
+was undoubting; her prayers were fervent. "She feared no danger,
+for she felt no sin;" and at length she believed herself to have
+received the supernatural inspiration which, she sought.
+
+According to her own narrative, delivered by her to her merciless
+inquisitors in the time of her captivity and approaching death,
+she was about thirteen years old when her revelations commenced.
+Her own words describe them best: [Proces de Jeanne d'Arc,
+vol. i. p. 52.] "At the age of thirteen, a voice from God came
+near to her to help her in ruling herself, and that voice came to
+her about the hour of noon, in summer time, while she was in her
+father's garden. And she had fasted the day before. And she
+heard the voice on her right, in the direction of the church; and
+when she heard the voice she also saw a bright light.
+Afterwards, St. Michael and St. Margaret and St. Catherine
+appeared to her. They were always in a halo of glory; she could
+see that their heads were crowned with jewels: and she heard
+their voices, which were sweet and mild. She did not distinguish
+their arms or limbs. She heard them more frequently than she saw
+them; and the usual time when she heard them was when the church
+bells were sounding for prayer. And if she was in the woods when
+she heard them, she could plainly distinguish their voices
+drawing near to her. When she thought that she discerned the
+Heavenly Voices, she knelt down, and bowed herself to the ground.
+Their presence gladdened her even to tears; and after they
+departed she wept because they had not taken her with them back
+to Paradise. They always spoke soothingly to her. They told her
+that France would be saved, and that she was to save it." Such
+were the visions and the Voices that moved the spirit of the girl
+of thirteen; and as she grew older they became more frequent and
+more clear. At last the tidings of the siege of Orleans reached
+Domremy, Joan heard her parents and neighbours talk of the
+sufferings of its population, of the ruin which its capture would
+bring on their lawful sovereign, and of the distress of the
+Dauphin and his court. Joan's heart was sorely troubled at the
+thought of the fate of Orleans; and her Voices now ordered her to
+leave her home; and warned her that she was the instrument chosen
+by Heaven for driving away the English from that city, and for
+taking the Dauphin to be anointed king at Rheims. At length she
+informed her parents of her divine mission, and told them that
+she must go to the Sire de Baudricourt, who commanded at
+Vaucouleurs, and who was the appointed person to bring her into
+the presence of the king, whom she was to save. Neither the
+anger nor the grief of her parents, who said that they would
+rather see her drowned than exposed to the contamination of the
+camp, could move her from her purpose. One of her uncles
+consented to take her to Vaucouleurs, where De Baudricourt at
+first thought her mad, and derided her; but by degrees was led to
+believe, if not in her inspiration, at least in her enthusiasm
+and in its possible utility to the Dauphin's cause.
+
+The inhabitants of Vaucouleurs were completely won over to her
+side, by the piety and devoutness which she displayed and by her
+firm assurance in the truth of her mission. She told them that
+it was God's will that she should go to the King, and that no one
+but her could save the kingdom of France. She said that she
+herself would rather remain with her poor mother and spin; but
+the Lord had ordered her forth. The fame of "The Maid," as she
+was termed, the renown of her holiness, and of her mission,
+spread far and wide. Baudricourt sent her with an escort to
+Chinon, where the Dauphin Charles was dallying away his time.
+Her Voices had bidden her assume the arms and the apparel of a
+knight; and the wealthiest inhabitants of Vaucouleurs had vied
+with each other in equipping her with warhorse, armour, and
+sword. On reaching Chinon, she was, after some delay, admitted
+into the presence of the Dauphin. Charles designedly dressed
+himself far less richly than many of his courtiers were
+apparelled, and mingled with them, when Jean was introduced, in
+order to see if the Holy Maid would address her exhortations to
+the wrong person. But she instantly singled him out, and
+kneeling before him, said, "Most noble Dauphin, the King of
+Heaven announces to you by me, that you shall be anointed and
+crowned king in the city of Rheims, and that you shall be His
+viceregent in France." His features may probably have been seen
+by her previously in portraits, or have been described to her by
+others; but she herself believed that her Voices inspired her
+when she addressed the King; [Proces de Jeanne d'Arc, vol. i.
+p. 56.] and the report soon spread abroad that the Holy Maid had
+found the King by a miracle; and this, with many other similar
+rumours, augmented the renown and influence that she now rapidly
+acquired.
+
+The state of public feeling in France was not favourable to an
+enthusiastic belief in Divine interposition in favour of the
+party that had hitherto been unsuccessful and oppressed. The
+humiliations which had befallen the French royal family and
+nobility were looked on as the just judgments of God upon them
+for their vice and impiety. The misfortunes that had come upon
+France as a nation, were believed to have been drawn down by
+national sins. The English, who had been the instruments of
+Heaven's wrath against France, seemed now by their pride and
+cruelty to be fitting objects of it themselves. France in that
+age was a profoundly religious country. There was ignorance,
+there was superstition there was bigotry; but there was Faith--a
+Faith that itself worked true miracles, even while it believed in
+unreal ones. At this time, also, one of those devotional
+movements began among the clergy in France, which from time to
+time occur in national Churches, without it being possible for
+the historian to assign any adequate human cause for their
+immediate date or extension. Numberless friars and priests
+traversed the rural districts and towns of France, preaching to
+the people that they must seek from Heaven a deliverance from the
+pillages of the soldiery, and the insolence of the foreign
+oppressors. [See, Sismondi vol. xiii. p. 114; Michelet, vol. v.
+Livre x.] The idea of a Providence that works only by general
+laws was wholly alien to the feelings of the age. Every
+political event, as well as every natural phenomenon, was
+believed to be the immediate result of a special mandate of God.
+This led to the belief that His holy angels and saints were
+constantly employed in executing His commands and mingling in the
+affairs of men. The Church encouraged these feelings; and at the
+same time sanctioned; the concurrent popular belief that hosts of
+evil spirits were also ever actively interposing in the current
+of earthly events, with whom sorcerers and wizards could league
+themselves, and thereby obtain the exercise of supernatural
+power.
+
+Thus all things favoured the influence which Joan obtained both
+over friends and foes. The French nation, as well as the English
+and the Burgundians, readily admitted that superhuman beings
+inspired her: the only question was, whether these beings were
+good or evil angels; whether she brought with her "airs from
+heaven, or blasts from hell." This question seemed to her
+countrymen to be decisively settled in her favour, by the austere
+sanctity of her life, by the holiness of her conversation, but,
+still more, by her exemplary attention to all the services and
+rites of the Church. The dauphin at first feared the injury that
+might be done to his cause if he had laid himself open to the
+charge of having leagued himself with a sorceress. Every
+imaginable test, therefore, was resorted to in order to set
+Joan's orthodoxy and purity beyond suspicion. At last Charles
+and his advisers felt safe in accepting her services as those of
+a true and virtuous daughter of the Holy Church.
+
+It is indeed probable that Charles himself, and some of his
+counsellors, may have suspected Joan of being a mere enthusiast;
+and it is certain that Dunois, and others of the best generals,
+took considerable latitude in obeying or deviating from the
+military orders that she gave. But over the mass of the people
+and the soldiery, her influence was unbounded. While Charles and
+his doctors of theology, and court ladies, had been deliberating
+as to recognising or dismissing the Maid, a considerable period
+had passed away, during which a small army, the last gleanings,
+as it seemed, of the English sword, had been assembled at Blois,
+under Dunois, La Hire, Xaintrailles, and other chiefs, who to
+their natural valour were now beginning to unite the wisdom that
+is taught by misfortune. It was resolved to send Joan with this
+force and a convoy of provisions to Orleans. The distress of
+that city had now become urgent. But the communication with the
+open country was not entirely cut off: the Orleannais had heard
+of the Holy Maid whom Providence had raised up for their
+deliverance, and their messengers urgently implored the dauphin
+to send her to them without delay.
+
+Joan appeared at the camp at Blois, clad in a new suit of
+brilliant white armour, mounted on a stately black war-horse, and
+with a lance in her right hand, which she had learned to wield
+with skill and grace. [See the description of her by Gui de
+Laval, quoted in the note to Michelet, p. 69; and see the
+account of the banner at Orleans, which is believed to bear an
+authentic portrait of the Maid, in Murray's Handbook for France,
+p. 175.] Her head was unhelmeted; so that all could behold her
+fair and expressive features, her deep-set and earnest eyes, and
+her long black hair, which was parted across her forehead, and
+bound by a ribbon behind her back. She wore at her side a small
+battle-axe, and the consecrated sword, marked on the blade with
+five crosses, which had at her bidding been taken for her from
+the shrine of St. Catherine at Fierbois. A page carried her
+banner, which she had caused to be made and embroidered as her
+Voices enjoined. It was white satin [Proces de Jeanne d'Arc,
+vol. i. p. 238.] strewn with fleur-de-lis; and on it were the
+words "JHESUS MARIA," and the representation of the Saviour in
+His glory. Joan afterwards generally bore her banner herself in
+battle; she said that though she loved her sword much, she loved
+her banner forty times as much; and she loved to carry it because
+it could not kill any one.
+
+Thus accoutred, she came to lead the troops of France, who looked
+with soldierly admiration on her well-proportioned and upright
+figure, the skill with which she managed her war-horse, and the
+easy grace with which she handled her weapons. Her military
+education had been short, but she had availed herself of it well.
+She had also the good sense to interfere little with the
+manoeuvres of the troops, leaving those things to Dunois, and
+others whom she had the discernment to recognise as the best
+officers in the camp. Her tactics in action were simple enough.
+As she herself described it--"I used to say to them, 'Go boldly
+in among the English,' and then I used to go boldly in myself."
+[Ibid.] Such, as she told her inquisitors, was the only spell
+she used; and it was one of power. But while interfering little
+with the military discipline of the troops, in all matters of
+moral discipline she was inflexibly strict. All the abandoned
+followers of the camp were driven away. She compelled both
+generals and soldiers to attend regularly at confessional. Her
+chaplain and other priests marched with the army under her
+orders; and at every halt, an altar was set up and the sacrament
+administered. No oath or foul language passed without punishment
+or censure. Even the roughest and most hardened veterans obeyed
+her. They put off for a time the bestial coarseness which had
+grown on them during a life of bloodshed and rapine; they felt
+that they must go forth in a new spirit to a new career, and
+acknowledged the beauty of the holiness in which the heaven-sent
+Maid was leading them to certain victory.
+
+Joan marched from Blois on the 26th of April with a convoy of
+provisions for Orleans, accompanied by Dunois, La Hire, and the
+other chief captains of the French; and on the evening of the
+28th they approached the town. In the words of the old
+chronicler Hall: [Hall, f. 127.] "The Englishmen, perceiving
+that they within could not long continue for faute of vitaile and
+pouder, kepte not their watche so diligently as thei were
+accustomed, nor scoured now the countrey environed as thei before
+had ordained. Whiche negligence the citizens shut in perceiving,
+sente worde thereof to the French captaines, which with Pucelle
+in the dedde tyme of the nighte, and in a greats rayne and
+thunders, with all their vitaile and artillery entered into the
+citie."
+
+When it was day, the Maid rode in solemn procession through the
+city, clad in complete armour, and mounted on a white horse.
+Dunois was by her side, and all the bravest knights of her army
+and of the garrison followed in her train. The whole population
+thronged around her; and men, women, and children strove to touch
+her garments, or her banner, or her charger. They poured forth
+blessings on her, whom they already considered their deliverer.
+In the words used by two of them afterwards before the tribunal,
+which reversed the sentence, but could not restore the life of
+the Virgin-martyr of France, "the people of Orleans, when they
+first saw her in their city, thought that it was an angel from
+heaven that had come down to save them." Joan spoke gently in
+reply to their acclamations and addresses. She told them to fear
+God, and trust in Him for safety from the fury of their enemies.
+She first went to the principal church, where TE DEUM was
+chaunted; and then she took up her abode in the house of Jacques
+Bourgier, one of the principal citizens, and whose wife was a
+matron of good repute. She refused to attend a splendid banquet
+which had been provided for her, and passed nearly all her time
+in prayer.
+
+When it was known by the English that the Maid was in Orleans,
+their minds were not less occupied about her than were the minds
+of those in the city; but it was in a very different spirit. The
+English believed in her supernatural mission as firmly as the
+French did; but they thought her a sorceress who had come to
+overthrow them by her enchantments. An old prophecy, which told
+that a damsel from Lorraine was to save France, had long been
+current; and it was known and applied to Joan by foreigners as
+well as by the natives. For months the English had heard of the
+coming Maid; and the tales of miracles which she was said to have
+wrought, had been listened to by the rough yeomen of the English
+camp with anxious curiosity and secret awe. She had sent a
+herald to the English generals before she marched for Orleans;
+and he had summoned the English generals in the name of the Most
+High to give up to the Maid who was sent by Heaven, the keys of
+the French cities which they had wrongfully taken: and he also
+solemnly adjured the English troops, whether archers, or men of
+the companies of war, or gentlemen, or others, who were before
+the city of Orleans, to depart thence to their homes, under peril
+of being visited by the judgment of God. On her arrival in
+Orleans, Joan sent another similar message; but the English
+scoffed at her from their towers, and threatened to burn her
+heralds. She determined before she shed the blood of the
+besiegers, to repeat the warning with her own voice; and
+accordingly she mounted one of the boulevards of the town, which
+was within hearing of the Tourelles; and thence she spoke to the
+English, and bade them depart, otherwise they would meet with
+shame and woe. Sir William Gladsdale (whom the French call
+GLACIDAS) commanded the English post at the Tourelles, and he and
+another English officer replied by bidding her go home and keep
+her cows, and by ribald jests, that brought tears of shame and
+indignation into her eyes. But though the English leaders
+vaunted aloud, the effect produced on their army by Joan's
+presence in Orleans, was proved four days after her arrival;
+when, on the approach of reinforcements and stores to the town,
+Joan and La Hire marched out to meet them, and escorted the long
+train of provision waggons safely into Orleans, between the
+bastilles of the English, who cowered behind their walls, instead
+of charging fiercely and fearlessly, as had been their wont, on
+any French band that dared to show itself within reach.
+
+Thus far she had prevailed without striking a blow; but the time
+was now come to test her courage amid the horrors of actual
+slaughter. On the afternoon of the day on which she had escorted
+the reinforcements into the city, while she was resting fatigued
+at home, Dunois had seized an advantageous opportunity of
+attacking the English bastille of St. Loup: and a fierce assault
+of the Orleannais had been made on it, which the English garrison
+of the fort stubbornly resisted. Joan was roused by a sound
+which she believed to be that of Her Heavenly Voices; she called
+for her arms and horse, and quickly equipping herself she mounted
+to ride off to where the fight was raging. In her haste she had
+forgotten her banner; she rode back, and, without dismounting,
+had it given to her from the window, and then she galloped to the
+gate, whence the sally had been made. On her way she met some of
+the wounded French who had been carried back from the fight.
+"Ha," she exclaimed, "I never can see French blood flow, without
+my hair standing on end." She rode out of the gate, and met the
+tide of her countrymen, who had been repulsed from the English
+fort, and were flying back to Orleans in confusion. At the sight
+of the Holy Maid and her banner they rallied and renewed the
+assault. Joan rode forward at their head, waving her banner and
+cheering them on. The English quailed at what they believed to
+be the charge of hell; St. Loup was stormed, and its defenders
+put to the sword, except some few, whom Jean succeeded in saving.
+All her woman's gentleness returned when the combat was over. It
+was the first time that she had ever seen a battle-field. She
+wept at the sight of so many blood-stained and mangled corpses;
+and her tears flowed doubly when she reflected that they were the
+bodies of Christian men who had died without confession.
+
+The next day was ascension-day, and it was passed by Joan in
+prayer. But on the following morrow it was resolved by the
+chiefs of the garrison to attack the English forts on the south
+of the river. For this purpose they crossed the river in boats,
+and after some severe fighting, in which the Maid was wounded in
+the heel, both the English bastilles of the Augustins and St.
+Jean de Blanc were captured. The Tourelles were now the only
+post which the besiegers held on the south of the river. But
+that post was formidably strong, and by its command of the
+bridge, it was the key to the deliverance of Orleans. It was
+known that a fresh English army was approaching under Falstolfe
+to reinforce the besiegers, and should that army arrive, while
+the Tourelles were yet in the possession of their comrades, there
+was great peril of all the advantages which the French had gained
+being nullified, and of the siege being again actively carried
+on.
+
+It was resolved, therefore, by the French, to assail the
+Tourelles at once, while the enthusiasm which the presence and
+the heroic valour of the Maid had created was at its height. But
+the enterprise was difficult. The rampart of the tete-du-pont,
+or landward bulwark, of the Tourelles was steep and high; and Sir
+John Gladsdale occupied this all-important fort with five hundred
+archers and men-at-arms, who were the very flower of the English
+army.
+
+Early in the morning of the 7th of May, some thousands of the
+best French troops in Orleans heard mass and attended the
+confessional by Joan's orders; and then crossing the river in
+boats, as on the preceding day they assailed the bulwark of the
+Tourelles, "with light hearts and heavy hands." But Gladsdale's
+men, encouraged by their bold and skilful leader, made a resolute
+and able defence. The Maid planted her banner on the edge of the
+fosse, and then springing down into the ditch, she placed the
+first ladder against the wall, and began to mount. An English
+archer sent an arrow at her, which pierced her corslet and
+wounded her severely between the neck and shoulder. She fell
+bleeding from the ladder; and the English were leaping down from
+the wall to capture her, but her followers bore her off. She was
+carried to the rear, and laid upon the grass; her armour was
+taken off, and the anguish of her wound and the sight of her
+blood, made her at first tremble and weep. But her confidence in
+her celestial mission soon returned: her patron saints seemed to
+stand before her and reassure her. She sate up and drew the
+arrow out with her own hands. Some of the soldiers who stood by
+wished to stanch the blood, by saying a charm over the wound; but
+she forbade them, saying, that she did not wish to be cured by
+unhallowed means. She had the wound dressed with a little oil,
+and then bidding her confessor come to her, she betook herself to
+prayer.
+
+In the meanwhile, the English in the bulwark of the Tourelles,
+had repulsed the oft-renewed efforts of the French to scale the
+wall. Dunois, who commanded the assailants, was at first
+discouraged, and gave orders for a retreat to be sounded, Joan
+sent for him and the other generals, and implored them not to
+despair. "By my God" she said to them, "you shall soon enter in
+there. Do not doubt it. When you see my banner wave again up to
+the wall, to your arms again! the fort is yours. For the
+present rest a little, and take some food and drink. They did
+so," says the old chronicler of the siege, [Journal du Siege
+d'Orleans, p. 87.] "for they obeyed her marvellously." The
+faintness caused by her wound had now passed off, and she headed
+the French in another rush against the bulwark. The English, who
+had thought her slain, were alarmed at her reappearance; while
+the French pressed furiously and fanatically forward. A Biscayan
+soldier was carrying Joan's banner. She had told the troops that
+directly the banner touched the wall they should enter. The
+Biscayan waved the banner forward from the edge of the fosse, and
+touched the wall with it; and then all the French host swarmed
+madly up the ladders that now were raised in all directions
+against the English fort. At this crisis, the efforts of the
+English garrison were distracted by an attach from another
+quarter. The French troops who had been left in Orleans, had
+placed some planks over the broken part of the bridge, and
+advanced across them to the assault of the Tourelles on the
+northern side. Gladsdale resolved to withdraw his men from the
+landward bulwark, and concentrate his whole force in the
+Tourelles themselves. He was passing for this purpose across the
+drawbridge that connected the Tourelles and the tete-du-pont,
+when Joan, who by this time had scaled the wall of the bulwark,
+called out to him, "Surrender, surrender to the King of Heaven.
+Ah, Glacidas, you have foully wronged me with your words, but I
+have great pity on your soul and the souls of your men." The
+Englishman, disdainful of her summons, was striding on across the
+drawbridge, when a cannon-shot from the town carried it away, and
+Gladsdale perished in the water that ran beneath. After his
+fall, the remnant of the English abandoned all further
+resistance. Three hundred of them had been killed in the battle,
+and two hundred were made prisoners.
+
+The broken arch was speedily repaired by the exulting Orleannais;
+and Joan made her triumphal re-entry into the city by the bridge
+that had so long been closed. Every church in Orleans rang out
+its gratulating peal; and throughout the night the sounds of
+rejoicing echoed, and the bonfires blazed up from the city. But
+in the lines and forts which the besiegers yet retained on the
+northern shore, there was anxious watching of the generals, and
+there was desponding gloom among the soldiery. Even Talbot now
+counselled retreat. On the following morning, the Orleannais,
+from their walls, saw the great forts called "London" and "St.
+Lawrence," in flames; and witnessed their invaders busy in
+destroying the stores and munitions which had been relied on for
+the destruction of Orleans. Slowly and sullenly the English army
+retired; but not before it had drawn up in battle array opposite
+to the city, as if to challenge the garrison to an encounter.
+The French troops were eager to go out and attack, but Joan
+forbade it. The day was Sunday. "In the name of God," she said,
+"let them depart, and let us return thanks to God." She led the
+soldiers and citizens forth from Orleans, but not for the
+shedding of blood. They passed in solemn procession round the
+city walls; and then, while their retiring enemies were yet in
+sight, they knelt in thanksgiving to God for the deliverance
+which he had vouchsafed them.
+
+Within three months from the time of her first interview with the
+Dauphin, Joan had fulfilled the first part of her promise, the
+raising of the siege of Orleans. Within three months more she
+fulfilled the second part also; and she stood with her banner in
+her hand by the high altar at Rheims while he was anointed and
+crowned as King Charles VII. of France. In the interval she had
+taken Jargeau, Troyes, and other strong places; and she had
+defeated an English army in a fair field at Patay. The
+enthusiasm of her countrymen knew no bounds; but the importance
+of her services, and especially of her primary achievement at
+Orleans, may perhaps be best proved by the testimony of her
+enemies. There is extant a fragment of a letter from the Regent
+Bedford to his royal nephew, Henry VI., in which he bewails the
+turn that the war had taken, and especially attributes it to the
+raising of the siege of Orleans by Joan. Bedford's own words,
+which are preserved in Rymer, [Vol. x. p. 403.] are as follows:--
+
+"AND ALLE THING THERE PROSPERED FOR YOU TIL THE TYME OF THE SIEGE
+OF ORLEANS, TAKEN IN HAND, GOD KNOWETH BY WHAT ADVIS.
+
+"AT THE WHICHE TYME, AFTER THE ADVENTURE FALLEN TO THE PERSONE OF
+MY COUSIN OF SALISBURY, WHOM GOD ASSOILLE, THERE FELLE, BY THE
+HAND OF GOD AS IT SEEMETH, A GREAT STROOK UPON YOUR PEUPLE THAT
+WAS ASSEMBLED THERE IN GRETE NOMBRE, CAUSED IN GRETE PARTIE, AS Y
+TROWE, OF LAKKE OF SADDE BELEVE, AND OF UNLEVEFULLE DOUBTE, THAT
+THEI HADDE OF A DISCIPLE AND LYME OF THE FEENDE, CALLED THE
+PUCELLE, THAT USED FALS ENCHANTMENTS AND SORCERIE.
+
+"THE WHICHE STROOKE AND DISCOMFITURE NOT OONLY LESSED IN GRETE
+PARTIE THE NOMBRE OF YOUR PEUPLE THERE, BUT AS WELL WITHDREWE THE
+COURAGE OF THE REMENANT IN MERVEILLOUS WYSE, AND COURAIGED YOUR
+ADVERSE PARTIE AND ENNEMYS TO ASSEMBLE THEM FORTHWITH IN GRETE
+NOMBRE."
+
+When Charles had been anointed King of France, Joan believed that
+her mission was accomplished. And in truth the deliverance of
+France from the English, though not completed for many years
+afterwards, was then insured. The ceremony of a royal coronation
+and anointment was not in those days regarded as a mere costly
+formality. It was believed to confer the sanction and the grace
+of heaven upon the prince, who had previously ruled with mere
+human authority. Thenceforth he was the Lord's Anointed.
+Moreover, one of the difficulties that had previously lain in the
+way of many Frenchman when called on to support Charles VII. was
+now removed. He had been publicly stigmatised, even by his own
+parents, as no true son of the royal race of France. The queen-
+mother, the English, and the partisans of Burgundy, called him
+the "Pretender to the title of Dauphin;" but those who had been
+led to doubt his legitimacy, were cured of their scepticism by
+the victories of the Holy Maid, and by the fulfilment of her
+pledges. They thought that heaven had now declared itself in
+favour of Charles as the true heir of the crown of St. Louis; and
+the tales about his being spurious were thenceforth regarded as
+mere English calumnies. With this strong tide of national
+feeling in his favour, with victorious generals and soldiers
+round him, and a dispirited and divided enemy before him, he
+could not fail to conquer; though his own imprudence and
+misconduct, and the stubborn valour which some of the English
+still displayed, prolonged the war in France nearly to the time
+when the civil war of the Roses broke out in England, and insured
+for France peace and repose.
+
+Joan knelt before the new-crowned king in the cathedral of
+Rheims, and shed tears of joy. She said that she had then
+fulfilled the work which the Lord had commanded her. The young
+girl now asked for her dismissal. She wished to return to her
+peasant home, to tend her parent's flocks again, and to live at
+her own will in her native village. ["Je voudrais bien qu'il
+voulut me faire ramener aupres mes pere et mere, et garder leurs
+brebis et betail, et faire ce que je voudrois faire."] She had
+always believed that her career would be a short one. But
+Charles and his captains were loth to lose the presence of one
+who had such an influence upon the soldiery and the people. They
+persuaded her to stay with the army. She still showed the same
+bravery and zeal for the cause of France. She was as fervent as
+before in her prayers, and as exemplary in all religious duties.
+She still heard her Heavenly Voices, but; she now no longer
+thought herself the appointed minister of heaven to lead her
+countrymen to certain victory. Our admiration for her courage
+and patriotism ought to be increased a hundred-fold by her
+conduct throughout the latter part of her career, amid dangers,
+against which she no longer believed herself to be divinely
+secured. Indeed she believed herself doomed to perish in little
+more than a year; ["Des le commencement elle avait dit, 'Il me
+faut employer: je ne durerai qu'un an, ou guere plus."--
+MICHELAIT v. p. 101.] but she still fought on as resolutely, if
+not as exultingly as ever.
+
+As in the case of Arminius, the interest attached to individual
+heroism and virtue makes us trace the fate of Joan of Arc after
+she had saved her country. She served well with Charles's army
+in the capture of Laon, Soissons, Compeigne, Beauvais, and other
+strong places; but in a premature attack on Paris, in September
+1429, the French were repulsed, and Joan was severely wounded in
+the winter she was again in the field with some of the French
+troops; and in the following spring she threw herself into the
+fortress of Compeigne, which she had herself won for the French
+king in the preceding autumn, and which was now besieged by a
+strong Burgundian force.
+
+She was taken prisoner in a sally from Compeigne, on the 24th of
+May, and was imprisoned by the Burgundians first at Arras, and
+then at a place called Crotoy, on the Flemish coast, until
+November, when for payment of a large sum of money, she was given
+up to the English, and taken to Rouen, which was then their main
+stronghold in France.
+
+"Sorrow it were, and shame to tell,
+ The butchery that there befell:"
+
+And the revolting details of the cruelties practised upon this
+young girl may be left to those, whose duty as avowed
+biographers, it is to describe them. [The whole of the "Proces
+de Condamnation at de Rehabilitation de Jeanne d'Arc" has been
+published in five volumes, by the Societe de l'Histoire de
+France. All the passages from contemporary chroniclers and poets
+are added; and the most ample materials are thus given for
+acquiring full information on a subject which is, to an
+Englishman, one of painful interest. There is an admirable essay
+on Joan of Arc, in the 138th number of the QUARTERLY.] She was
+tried before an ecclesiastical tribunal on the charge of
+witchcraft, and on the 30th of May, 1431, she was burnt alive in
+the market-place at Rouen.
+
+I will add but one remark on the character of the truest heroine
+that the world has ever seen.
+
+If any person can be found in the present age who would join in
+the scoffs of Voltaire against the Maid of Orleans and the
+Heavenly Voices by which she believed herself inspired, let him
+read the life of the wisest and best man that the heathen nations
+ever produced. Let him read of the Heavenly Voice, by which
+Socrates believed himself to be constantly attended; which
+cautioned him on his way from the field of battle at Delium, and
+which from his boyhood to the time of his death visited him with
+unearthly warnings. [See Cicero, de Divinatione, lib. i. sec.
+41; and see the words of Socrates himself, in Plato, Apol. Soc.]
+Let the modern reader reflect upon this; and then, unless he is
+prepared to term Socrates either fool or impostor, let him not
+dare to deride or vilify Joan of Arc.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN JOAN OF ARC'S VICTORY AT ORLEANS, A.D.
+1429, AND THE DEFEAT OP THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588.
+
+A.D. 1452. Final expulsion of the English from France.
+
+1453. Constantinople taken, and the Roman empire of the East
+destroyed by the Turkish Sultan Mahomet II.
+
+1455. Commencement of the civil wars in England between the
+Houses of York and Lancaster.
+
+1479. Union of the Christian kingdoms of Spain under Ferdinand
+and Isabella.
+
+1492. Capture of Grenada by Ferdinand and Isabella, and end of
+the Moorish dominion in Spain.
+
+1492. Columbus discovers the New World.
+
+1494. Charles VIII. of France invades Italy.
+
+1497. Expedition of Vasco di Gama to the East Indies round the
+Cape of Good Hope.
+
+1503. Naples conquered from the French by the great Spanish
+general, Gonsalvo of Cordova.
+
+1508. League of Cambray, by the Pope, the Emperor, and the King
+of France, against Venice.
+
+1509. Albuquerque establishes the empire of the Portuguese in
+the East Indies.
+
+1516. Death of Ferdinand of Spain; he is succeeded by his
+grandson Charles, afterwards the Emperor Charles V.
+
+1517. Dispute between Luther and Tetzel respecting the sale of
+indulgences, which is the immediate cause of the Reformation.
+
+1519. Charles V. is elected Emperor of Germany.
+
+1520. Cortez conquers Mexico.
+
+1525. Francis I. of France defeated and taken prisoner by the
+imperial army at Pavia.
+
+1529. League of Smalcald formed by the Protestant princes of
+Germany.
+
+1533. Henry VIII. renounces the Papal supremacy.
+
+1533. Pizarro conquers Peru.
+
+1556. Abdication of the Emperor Charles V. Philip II. becomes
+King of Spain, and Ferdinand I. Emperor of Germany.
+
+1557.[sic] Elizabeth becomes Queen of England.
+
+1557. The Spaniards defeat the French at the battle of St.
+Quentin.
+
+1571. Don John of Austria at the head of the Spanish fleet,
+aided by the Venetian and the Papal squadrons, defeats the Turks
+at Lepanto.
+
+1572. Massacre of the Protestants in France on St. Bartholomew's
+day.
+
+1579. The Netherlands revolt against Spain.
+
+1580. Philip II. conquers Portugal.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D. 1588.
+
+"In that memorable year, when the dark cloud gathered round our
+coasts, when Europe stood by in fearful suspense to behold what
+should be the result of that great cast in the game of human
+politics, what the craft of Rome, the power of Philip, the genius
+of Farnese, could achieve against the island-queen, with her
+Drakes and Cecils,--in that agony of the Protestant faith and
+English name."--HALLAM, CONST. HIST. vol. i. p. 220.
+
+On the afternoon of the 19th of July, A.D. 1588, a group of
+English captains was collected at the Bowling Green on the Hoe at
+Plymouth, whose equals have never before or since been brought
+together, even at that favourite mustering-place of the heroes of
+the British navy. There was Sir Francis Drake, the first English
+circumnavigator of the globe, the terror of every Spanish coast
+in the Old World and the New; there was Sir John Hawkins, the
+rough veteran of many a daring voyage on the African and American
+seas, and of many a desperate battle; there was Sir Martin
+Frobisher, one of the earliest explorers of the Arctic seas in
+search of that North-West Passage which is still the darling
+object of England's boldest mariners. There was the high-admiral
+of England, Lord Howard of Effingham, prodigal of all things in
+his country's cause, and who had recently had the noble daring to
+refuse to dismantle part of the fleet, though the Queen had sent
+him orders to do so, in consequence of an exaggerated report that
+the enemy had been driven back and shattered by a storm. Lord
+Howard (whom contemporary writers describe as being of a wise and
+noble courage, skilful in sea matters, wary and provident, and of
+great esteem among the sailors) resolved to risk his sovereign's
+anger, and to keep the ships afloat at his own charge, rather
+than that England should run the peril of losing their
+protection.
+
+Another of our Elizabethan sea-kings, Sir Walter Raleigh, was at
+that time commissioned to raise and equip the land-forces of
+Cornwall; but, as he was also commander of Plymouth, we may well
+believe that he must have availed himself of the opportunity of
+consulting with the lord-admiral and other high officers which
+was offered by the English fleet putting into that port; and we
+may look on Raleigh as one of the group that was assembled at the
+Bowling Green on the Hoe. Many other brave men and skilful
+mariners, besides the chiefs whose names have been mentioned,
+were there, enjoying, with true sailor-like merriment, their
+temporary relaxation from duty. In the harbour lay the English
+fleet with which they had just returned from a cruise to Corunna
+in search of information respecting the real condition and
+movements of the hostile, Armada. Lord Howard had ascertained
+that our enemies, though tempest-tost, were still formidably
+strong; and fearing that part of their fleet might make for
+England in his absence, he had hurried back to the Devonshire
+coast. He resumed his station at Plymouth, and waited there for
+certain tidings of the Spaniard's approach.
+
+A match at bowls was being played, in which Drake and other high
+officers of the fleet were engaged, when a small armed vessel was
+seen running before the wind into Plymouth harbour, with all
+sails set. Her commander landed in haste, and eagerly sought the
+place where the English lord-admiral and his captains were
+standing. His name was Fleming; he was the master of a Scotch
+privateer; and he told the English officers that he had that
+morning seen the Spanish Armada off the Cornish coast. At this
+exciting information the captains began to hurry down to the
+water, and there was a shouting for the ship's boats: but Drake
+coolly checked his comrades, and insisted that the match should
+be played out. He said that there was plenty of time both to win
+the game and beat the Spaniards. The best and bravest match that
+ever was scored was resumed accordingly. Drake and his friends
+aimed their last bowls with the same steady calculating coolness
+with which they were about to point their guns. The winning cast
+was made; and then they went on board and prepared for action,
+with their hearts as light and their nerves as firm as they had
+been on the Hoe Bowling Green.
+
+Meanwhile the messengers and signals had been despatched fast and
+far through England, to warn each town and village that the enemy
+had come at last. In every seaport there was instant making
+ready by land and by sea; in every shire and every city there was
+instant mustering of horse and man. [In Macaulay's Ballad on the
+Spanish Armada, the transmission of the tidings of the Armada's
+approach, and the arming of the English nation, are magnificently
+described. The progress of the fire-signals is depicted in lines
+which are worthy of comparison with the renowned passage in the
+Agamemnon, which describes the transmission of the beacon-light
+announcing the fall of Troy, from Mount Ida to Argos.] But
+England's best defence then, as ever, was her fleet; and after
+warping laboriously out of Plymouth harbour against the wind, the
+lord-admiral stood westward under easy sail, keeping an anxious
+look-out for the Armada, the approach of which was soon announced
+by Cornish fishing-boats, and signals from the Cornish cliffs.
+
+The England of our own days is so strong, and the Spain of our
+own days is so feeble, that it is not possible, without some
+reflection and care, to comprehend the full extent of the peril
+which England then ran from the power and the ambition of Spain,
+or to appreciate the importance of that crisis in the history of
+the world. We had then no Indian or Colonial Empire save the
+feeble germs of our North American settlements, which Raleigh and
+Gilbert had recently planted. Scotland was a separate kingdom;
+and Ireland was then even a greater source of weakness, and a
+worse nest of rebellion than she has been in after times. Queen
+Elizabeth had found at her accession an encumbered revenue, a
+divided people and an unsuccessful foreign war, in which the last
+remnant of our possessions in France had been lost; she had also
+a formidable pretender to her crown, whose interests were
+favoured by all the Roman Catholic powers; and even some of her
+subjects were warped by religious bigotry to deny her title, and
+to look on her as an heretical usurper. It is true that during
+the years of her reign which had passed away before the attempted
+invasion of 1588, she had revived the commercial prosperity, the
+national spirit, and the national loyalty of England. But her
+resources, to cope with the colossal power of Philip II., still
+seemed most scanty; and she had not a single foreign ally, except
+the Dutch, who were themselves struggling hard, and, as it
+seemed, hopelessly, to maintain their revolt against Spain.
+
+On the other hand Philip II, was absolute master of an empire so
+superior to the other states of the world in extent, in resources
+and especially in military and naval forces, as to make the
+project of enlarging that empire into a universal monarchy seem a
+perfectly feasible scheme; and Philip had both the ambition to
+form that project, and the resolution to devote all his energies,
+and all his means, to its realization. Since the downfall of the
+Roman empire no such preponderating power had existed in the
+world. During the mediaeval centuries the chief European
+kingdoms were slowly moulding themselves out of the feudal chaos.
+And, though their wars with each other were numerous and
+desperate, and several of their respective kings figured for a
+time as mighty conquerors, none of them in those times acquired
+the consistency and perfect organization which are requisite for
+a long-sustained career of aggrandizement. After the
+consolidation of the great kingdoms, they for some time kept each
+other in mutual check. During the first half of the sixteenth
+century, the balancing system was successfully practised by
+European statesmen. But when Philip II. reigned, France had
+become so miserably weak through her civil wars, that he had
+nothing to dread from the rival state, which had so long curbed
+his father the Emperor Charles V. In Germany, Italy, and Poland
+he had either zealous friends and dependents, or weak and divided
+enemies. Against the Turks he had gained great and glorious
+successes; and he might look round the continent of Europe
+without discerning a single antagonist of whom he could stand in
+awe. Spain, when he acceded to the throne, was at the zenith of
+her power. The hardihood and spirit which the Arragonese, the
+Castilians, and the other nations of the peninsula had acquired
+during centuries of free institutions and successful war against
+the Moors, had not yet become obliterated. Charles V. had,
+indeed, destroyed the liberties of Spain; but that had been done
+too recently for its full evil to be felt in Philip's time. A
+people cannot be debased in a single generation; and the
+Spaniards under Charles V. and Philip II. proved the truth of the
+remark, that no nation is ever so formidable to its neighbours,
+for a time, as is a nation, which, after being trained up in
+self-government, passes suddenly under a despotic ruler. The
+energy of democratic institutions survives for a few generations,
+and to it are superadded the decision and certainty which are the
+attributes of government, when all its powers are directed by a
+single mind. It is true that this preter-natural vigour is
+short-lived: national corruption and debasement gradually follow
+the loss of the national liberties; but there is an interval
+before their workings are felt, and in that interval the most
+ambitious schemes of foreign conquest are often successfully
+undertaken.
+
+Philip had also the advantage of finding himself at the head of a
+large standing army in a perfect state of discipline and
+equipment, in an age when, except some few insignificant corps,
+standing armies were unknown in Christendom. The renown of the
+Spanish troops was justly high, and the infantry in particular
+was considered the best in the world. His fleet, also, was far
+more numerous, and better appointed, than that of any other
+European power; and both his soldiers and his sailors had the
+confidence in themselves and their commanders, which a long
+career of successful warfare alone can create.
+
+Besides the Spanish crown, Philip succeeded to the kingdom, of
+Naples and Sicily, the Duchy of Milan, Franche-Comte, and the
+Netherlands. In Africa he possessed Tunis, Oran, the Cape Verde
+and the Canary Islands; and in Asia, the Philippine and Sunda
+Islands and a part of the Moluccas. Beyond the Atlantic he was
+lord of the most splendid portions of the New world which
+"Columbus found for Castile and Leon." The empire of Peru and
+Mexico, New Spain, and Chili, with their abundant mines of the
+precious metals, Hispaniola and Cuba, and many other of the
+American Islands, were provinces of the sovereign of Spain.
+
+Philip had, indeed, experienced the mortification of seeing the
+inhabitants of the Netherlands revolt against his authority, nor
+could he succeed in bringing back beneath the Spanish sceptre all
+the possessions which his father had bequeathed to him. But he
+had reconquered a large number of the towns and districts that
+originally took up arms against him. Belgium was brought more
+thoroughly into implicit obedience to Spain than she had been
+before her insurrection, and it was only Holland and the six
+other Northern States that still held out against his arms. The
+contest had also formed a compact and veteran army on Philip's
+side, which, under his great general, the Prince of Parma, had
+been trained to act together under all difficulties and all
+vicissitudes of warfare; and on whose steadiness and loyalty
+perfect reliance might be placed throughout any enterprise,
+however difficult and tedious. Alexander Farnese, Prince of
+Parma, captain-general of the Spanish armies, and governor of the
+Spanish possessions in the Netherlands was beyond all comparison
+the greatest military genius of his age. He was also highly
+distinguished for political wisdom and sagacity, and for his
+great administrative talents. He was idolised by his troops,
+whose affections he knew how to win without relaxing their
+discipline or diminishing his own authority. Pre-eminently cool
+and circumspect in his plans, but swift and energetic when the
+moment arrived for striking a decisive blow, neglecting no risk
+that caution could provide against, conciliating even the
+populations of the districts which he attacked by his scrupulous
+good faith, his moderation, and his address, Farnese was one of
+the most formidable generals that ever could be placed at the
+head of an army designed not only to win battles, but to effect
+conquests. Happy it is for England and the world that this
+island was saved from becoming an arena for the exhibition of his
+powers.
+
+Whatever diminution the Spanish empire might have sustained in
+the Netherlands, seemed to be more than compensated by the
+acquisition of Portugal, which Philip had completely conquered in
+1580. Not only that ancient kingdom itself, but all the fruits
+of the maritime enterprises of the Portuguese had fallen into
+Philip's hands. All the Portuguese colonies in America, Africa,
+and the East Indies, acknowledged the sovereignty of the King of
+Spain; who thus not only united the whole Iberian peninsula under
+his single sceptre, but had acquired a transmarine empire, little
+inferior in wealth and extent to that which he had inherited at
+his accession. The splendid victory which his fleet, in
+conjunction with the Papal and Venetian galleys, had gained at
+Lepanto over the Turks, had deservedly exalted the fame of the
+Spanish marine throughout Christendom; and when Philip had
+reigned thirty-five years, the vigour of his empire seemed
+unbroken, and the glory of the Spanish arms had increased, and
+was increasing throughout the world.
+
+One nation only had been his active, his persevering, and his
+successful foe. England had encouraged his revolted subjects in
+Flanders against him, and given them the aid in men and money
+without which they must soon have been humbled in the dust.
+English ships had plundered his colonies; had denied his
+supremacy in the New World, as well as the Old; they had
+inflicted ignominious defeats on his squadrons; they had captured
+his cities, and burned his arsenals on the very coasts of Spain.
+The English had made Philip himself the object of personal
+insult. He was held up to ridicule in their stage plays and
+masks, and these scoffs at the man had (as is not unusual in such
+cases) excited the anger of the absolute king, even more
+vehemently than the injuries inflicted on his power. [See
+Ranke's Hist. Popes, vol. ii. p. 170.] Personal as well as
+political revenge urged him to attack England. Were she once
+subdued, the Dutch must submit; France could not cope with him,
+the empire would not oppose him; and universal dominion seemed
+sure to be the result of the conquest of that malignant island.
+
+There was yet another and a stronger feeling which armed King
+Philip against England. He was one of the sincerest and sternest
+bigots of his age. He looked on himself, and was looked on by
+others, as the appointed champion to extirpate heresy and re-
+establish the Papal power throughout Europe. A powerful reaction
+against Protestantism had taken place since the commencement of
+the second half of the sixteenth century, and Philip believed
+that he was destined to complete it. The Reform doctrines had
+been thoroughly rooted out from Italy and Spain. Belgium, which
+had previously been half Protestant, had been reconquered both in
+allegiance and creed by Philip, and had become one of the most
+Catholic countries in the world. Half Germany had been won back
+to the old faith. In Savoy, in Switzerland and many other
+countries, the progress of the counter-Reformation had been rapid
+and decisive. The Catholic league seemed victorious in France.
+The Papal Court itself had shaken off the supineness of recent
+centuries; and, at the head of the Jesuits and the other new
+ecclesiastical orders, was displaying a vigour and a boldness
+worthy of the days of Hildebrand or Innocent III.
+
+Throughout continental Europe, the Protestants, discomfited and
+dismayed, looked to England as their protector and refuge.
+England was the acknowledged central point of Protestant power
+and policy; and to conquer England was to stab Protestantism to
+the very heart. Sixtus V., the then reigning pope, earnestly
+exhorted Philip to this enterprise. And when the tidings reached
+Italy and Spain that the Protestant Queen of England had put to
+death her Catholic prisoner, Mary Queen of Scots, the fury of the
+Vatican and Escurial knew no bounds.
+
+The Prince of Parma, who was appointed military chief of the
+expedition, collected on the coast of Flanders a veteran force
+that was to play a principal part in the conquest of England.
+Besides the troops who were in his garrisons, or under his
+colours, five thousand infantry were sent to him from northern
+and central Italy, four thousand from the kingdom of Naples, six
+thousand from Castile, three thousand from Arragon, three
+thousand from Austria and Germany, together with four squadrons
+of heavy-armed horse; besides which he received forces from the
+Franche-Comte and the Walloon country. By his command, the
+forest of Waes was felled for the purpose of building flat-
+bottomed boats, which, floating down the rivers and canals to
+Meinport and Dunkerque, were to carry this large army of chosen
+troops to the mouth of the Thames, under the escort of the great
+Spanish fleet. Gun-carriages, fascines, machines used in sieges,
+together with every material requisite for building bridges,
+forming camps, and raising fortresses, were to be placed on board
+the flotillas of the Prince of Parma, who followed up the
+conquest of the Netherlands, whilst he was making preparations
+for the invasion of this island. Favoured by the dissensions
+between the insurgents of the United Provinces and Leicester, the
+Prince of Parma had recovered Deventer, as well as a fort before
+Zutphen, which the English commanders, Sir William Stanley, the
+friend of Babbington, and Sir Roland York, had surrendered to
+him, when with their troops they passed over to the service of
+Philip II., after the death of Mary Stuart, and he had also made
+himself master of the Sluys. His intention was to leave to the
+Count de Mansfeldt sufficient forces to follow up the war with
+the Dutch, which had now become a secondary object, whilst he
+himself went at the head of fifty thousand men of the Armada and
+the flotilla, to accomplish the principal enterprise--that
+enterprise, which, in the highest degree, affected the interests
+of the pontifical authority. In a bull, intended to be kept
+secret until the day of landing, Sixtus V., renewing the anathema
+fulminated against Elizabeth by Pius V. and Gregory XIII.,
+affected to depose her from our throne. [See Mignet's Mary Queen
+of Scots vol. ii.]
+
+Elizabeth was denounced as a murderous heretic whose destruction
+was an instant duty. A formal treaty was concluded (in June,
+1587), by which the pope bound himself to contribute a million of
+scudi to the expenses of the war; the money to be paid as soon as
+the king had actual possession of an English port. Philip, on
+his part, strained the resources of his vast empire to the
+utmost. The French Catholic chiefs eagerly co-operated with him.
+In the sea-ports of the Mediterranean, and along almost the whole
+coast from Gibraltar to Jutland, the preparations for the great
+armament were urged forward with all the earnestness of religious
+zeal, as well as of angry ambition.--"Thus," says the German
+historian of the Popes, [Ranke, vol ii. p. 172.] "thus did the
+united powers of Italy and Spain, from which such mighty
+influences had gone forth over the whole world, now rouse
+themselves for an attack upon England! The king had already
+compiled, from the archives of Simancas, a statement of the
+claims which he had to the throne of that country on the
+extinction of the Stuart line; the most brilliant prospects,
+especially that of an universal dominion of the seas, were
+associated in his mind with this enterprise. Everything seemed
+to conspire to such end; the predominance of Catholicism in
+Germany, the renewed attack upon the Huguenots in France, the
+attempt upon Geneva, and the enterprise against England. At the
+same moment a thoroughly Catholic prince, Sigismund III.,
+ascended the throne of Poland, with the prospect also of future
+succession to the throne of Sweden. But whenever any principle
+or power, be it what it may, aims at unlimited supremacy in
+Europe, some vigorous resistance to it, having its origin in the
+deepest springs of human nature, invariably arises. Philip II.
+had had, to encounter newly-awakened powers, braced by the vigour
+of youth, and elevated by a sense of their future destiny. The
+intrepid corsairs, who had rendered every sea insecure, now
+clustered round the coasts of their native island. The
+Protestants in a body,--even the Puritans, although they had been
+subjected to as severe oppressions as the Catholics,--rallied
+round their queen, who now gave admirable proof of her masculine
+courage, and her princely talent of winning the affections, and
+leading the minds, and preserving the allegiance of men."
+
+Ranke should have added that the English Catholics at this crisis
+proved themselves as loyal to their queen, and true to their
+country, as were the most vehement anti-Catholic zealots in the
+island. Some few traitors there were; but, as a body, the
+Englishmen who held the ancient faith, stood the trial of their
+patriotism nobly. The lord-admiral himself was a Catholic, and
+(to adopt the words of Hallam) "then it was that the Catholics in
+every county repaired to the standard of the lord-lieutenant,
+imploring that they might not be suspected of bartering the
+national independence for their religion itself." The Spaniard
+found no partisans in the country which he assailed, nor did
+England, self-wounded,
+
+ "Lie at the proud foot of her enemy."
+
+For some time the destination of the enormous armament of Philip
+was not publicly announced. Only Philip himself, the Pope
+Sixtus, the Duke of Guise, and Philip's favourite minister,
+Mendoza, at first knew its real object. Rumours were sedulously
+spread that it was designed to proceed to the Indies to realize
+vast projects of distant conquest. Sometimes hints were dropped
+by Philip's ambassadors in foreign courts, that his master had
+resolved on a decisive effort to crush his rebels in the Low
+Countries. But Elizabeth and her statesmen could not view the
+gathering of such a storm without feeling the probability of its
+bursting on their own shores. As early as the spring of 1587,
+Elizabeth sent Sir Francis Drake to cruise off the Tagus. Drake
+sailed into the Bay of Cadiz and the Lisbon Roads, and burnt much
+shipping and military stores, causing thereby an important delay
+in the progress of the Spanish preparations. Drake called this
+"Singeing the King of of Spain's beard." Elizabeth also
+increased her succours of troops to the Netherlanders, to prevent
+the Prince of Parma from overwhelming them, and from thence being
+at full leisure to employ his army against her dominions.
+
+Each party at this time thought it politic to try to amuse its
+adversary by pretending to treat for peace, and negotiations were
+opened at Ostend in the beginning of 1588, which were prolonged
+during the first six months of that year. Nothing real was
+effected, and probably nothing real had been intended to be
+effected by them. But, in the meantime, each party had been
+engaged in important communications with the chief powers in
+France, in which Elizabeth seemed at first to have secured a
+great advantage, but in which Philip ultimately prevailed.
+"Henry III. of France was alarmed at the negotiations that were
+going on at Ostend; and he especially dreaded any accommodation
+between Spain and England, in consequence of which Philip II.
+might be enabled to subdue the United Provinces, and make himself
+master of France. In order, therefore, to dissuade Elizabeth
+from any arrangement, he offered to support her, in case she were
+attacked by the Spaniards, with twice the number of troops, which
+he was bound by the treaty of 1574 to send to her assistance. He
+had a long conference with her ambassador, Stafford, upon this
+subject, and told him that the Pope and the Catholic King had
+entered into a league against the queen, his mistress, and had
+invited himself and the Venetians to join them, but they had
+refused to do so. 'If the Queen of England,' he added,
+'concludes a peace with the Catholic king, that peace will not
+last three months, because the Catholic king will aid the League
+with all his forces to overthrow her, and you may imagine what
+fate is reserved for your mistress after that.' On the other
+hand, in order most effectually to frustrate this negotiation, he
+proposed to Philip II. to form a still closer union between the
+two crowns of France and Spain: and, at the same time, he
+secretly despatched a confidential envoy to Constantinople to
+warn the Sultan, that if he did not again declare war against the
+Catholic King, that monarch, who already possessed the
+Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, the Indies, and nearly all Italy,
+would soon make himself master of England, and would then turn
+the forces of all Europe against the Turks." [Mignet's History
+of Mary Queen of Scots. vol. ii.]
+
+But Philip had an ally in France, who was far more powerful than
+the French king. This was the Duke of Guise, the chief of the
+League, and the idol of the fanatic partisans of the Romish
+faith. Philip prevailed on Guise openly to take up arms against
+Henry III. (who was reviled by the Leaguers as a traitor to the
+true Church, and a secret friend to the Huguenots); and thus
+prevent the French king from interfering in favour of Queen
+Elizabeth. "With this object, the commander, Juan Iniguez Moreo,
+was despatched by him in the early part of April to the Duke of
+Guise at Soissons. He met with complete success. He offered the
+Duke of Guise, as soon as he took the field against Henry III.,
+three hundred thousand crowns, six thousand infantry, and twelve
+hundred pikemen, on behalf of the king his master, who would, in
+addition, withdraw his ambassador from the court of France, and
+accredit an envoy to the Catholic party. A treaty was concluded
+on these conditions, and the Duke of Guise entered Paris, where
+he was expected by the Leaguers, and whence he expelled Henry
+III. on the 12th of May, by the insurrection of the barricades.
+A fortnight after this insurrection, which reduced Henry III. to
+impotence, and, to use the language of the Prince of Parma, did
+not even 'permit him to assist the Queen of England with his
+tears, as he needed them all to weep over his own misfortunes,'
+the Spanish fleet left the Tagus and sailed towards the British
+isles." [Mignet.]
+
+Meanwhile in England, from the sovereign on the throne to the
+peasant in the cottage, all hearts and hands made ready to meet
+the imminent deadly peril. Circular letters from the queen were
+sent round to the lord-lieutenants of the several counties
+requiring them "to call together the best sort of gentlemen under
+their lieutenancy, and to declare unto them these great
+preparations and arrogant threatenings, now burst forth in action
+upon the seas, wherein every man's particular state, in the
+highest degree, could be touched in respect of country, liberty,
+wives, children, lands, lives, and (which was specially to be
+regarded) the profession of the true and sincere religion of
+Christ: and to lay before them the infinite and unspeakable
+miseries that would fall out upon any such change, which miseries
+were evidently seen by the fruits of that hard and cruel
+government holden in countries not far distant. We do look,"
+said the queen, "that the most part of them should have, upon
+this instant extraordinary occasion, a larger proportion of
+furniture, both for horseman and footmen, but especially
+horsemen, than hath been certified; thereby to be in their best
+strength against any attempt, or to be employed about our own
+person, or otherwise. Hereunto as we doubt not but by your good
+endeavours they will be the rather conformable, so also we assure
+ourselves, that Almighty God will so bless these their loyal
+hearts borne towards us, their loving sovereign, and their
+natural country, that all the attempts of any enemy whatsoever
+shall he made void and frustrate, to their confusion, your
+comfort, and to God's high glory." [Strype, cited in Southey's
+Naval History.]
+
+Letters of a similar kind were also sent by the council to each
+of the nobility, and to the great cities. The primate called on
+the clergy for their contributions; and by every class of the
+community the appeal was responded to with liberal zeal, that
+offered more even than the queen required. The boasting threats
+of the Spaniards had roused the spirit of the nation; and the
+whole people "were thoroughly irritated to stir up their whole
+forces for their defence against such prognosticated conquests;
+so that, in a very short time, all the whole realm, and every
+corner were furnished with armed men, on horseback and on foot;
+and these continually trained, exercised, and put into bands, in
+warlike manner, as in no age ever was before in this realm.
+There was no sparing of money to provide horse, armour, weapons,
+powder, and all necessaries; no, nor want of provision of
+pioneers, carriages, and victuals, in every county of the realm,
+without exception, to attend upon the armies. And to this
+general furniture every man voluntarily offered, very many their
+services personally without wages, others money for armour and
+weapons, and to wage soldiers: a matter strange, and never the
+like heard of in this realm or else where. And this general
+reason moved all men to large contributions, that when a conquest
+was to be withstood wherein all should be lost, it was no time to
+spare a portion." [Copy of contemporary letter in the Harleian
+Collection, quoted by Southey.]
+
+Our lion-hearted queen showed herself worthy of such a people. A
+camp was formed at Tilbury; and there Elizabeth rode through the
+ranks, encouraging her captains and her soldiers by her presence
+and her words. One of the speeches which she addressed to them
+during this crisis has been preserved; and, though often quoted,
+it must not be omitted here.
+
+"My loving people," she said, "we have been persuaded by some
+that are careful of our safety, to take heed how we commit
+ourselves to armed multitudes for fear of treachery; but I assure
+you I do not desire to live to distrust my faithful and loving
+people. Let tyrants fear! I have always so behaved myself,
+that, under God, I have placed my chiefest strength and safeguard
+in the loyal hearts and good will of my subjects; and, therefore,
+I am come amongst you, as you see, at this time, not for my
+recreation or disport, but being resolved, in the midst and heat
+of the battle, to live or die amongst you all, to lay down for my
+God, for my kingdom, and for my people, my honour and my blood,
+even in the dust. I know I have the body but of a weak and
+feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a king, and of
+a King of England too; and think it foul scorn that Parma, or
+Spain, or any prince of Europe, should dare to invade the borders
+of my realm; to which, rather than any dishonour shall grow by
+me, I myself will take up arms, I myself will be your general,
+judge, and rewarder of every one of your virtues in the field. I
+know already for your forwardness you have deserved rewards and
+crowns; and we do assure you, on the word of a prince, they shall
+be duly paid you. In the meantime, my lieutenant-general shall
+be in my stead, than whom never prince commanded a more noble or
+worthy subject, not doubting but by your obedience to my general,
+by your concord in the camp, and your valour in the field, we
+shall shortly have a famous victory over those enemies of my God,
+of my kingdom, and of my people."
+
+We have minute proofs of the skill with which the government of
+Elizabeth made its preparations; for the documents still exist
+which were drawn up at that time by the ministers and military
+men who were consulted by Elizabeth respecting the defence of the
+country. [See note in Tytler's Life of Raleigh, p. 71.] Among
+those summoned to the advice of their queen at this crisis, were
+Sir Walter Raleigh, Lord Grey, Sir Francis Knolles, Sir Thomas
+Leighton, Sir John Norris, Sir Richard Grenville, Sir Richard
+Bingham, and Sir Roger Williams; and the biographer of Sir Walter
+Raleigh observes that "These councillors were chosen by the
+queen, as being not only men bred to arms, and some of them, as
+Grey, Norris, Bingham, and Grenville, of high military talents,
+but of grave experience in affairs of state, and in the civil
+government of provinces,--qualities by no means means
+unimportant, when the debate referred not merely to the leading
+of an army or the plan of a campaign, but to the organization of
+a militia, and the communication with the magistrates for arming
+the peasantry, and encouraging them to a resolute and
+simultaneous resistance. From some private papers of Lord
+Burleigh, it appears that Sir Walter took a principal share in
+these deliberations; and the abstract of their proceedings, a
+document still preserved, is supposed to have been drawn up by
+him. They first prepared a list of places where it was likely
+the Spanish army might attempt a descent, as well as of those
+which lay most exposed to the forces under the Duke of Parma.
+They next considered the speediest and most effectual means of
+defence, whether by fortification or the muster of a military
+array; and, lastly, deliberated on the course to be taken for
+fighting the enemy if he should land."
+
+Some of Elizabeth's advisers recommended that the whole care and
+resources of the government should be devoted to the equipment of
+the armies, and that the enemy, when he attempted to land, should
+be welcomed with a battle on the shore. But the wiser counsels
+of Raleigh and others prevailed, who urged the importance of
+fitting out a fleet, that should encounter the Spaniards at sea,
+and, if possible, prevent them from approaching the land at all.
+In Raleigh's great work on the "History of the World," he takes
+occasion, when discussing some of the events of the first Punic
+war, to give his reasonings on the proper policy of England when
+menaced with invasion. Without doubt, we have there the
+substance of the advice which he gave to Elizabeth's council; and
+the remarks of such a man, on such a subject, have a general and
+enduring interest, beyond the immediate peril which called them
+forth. Raleigh [Historie of the World pp. 799--801.] says:--
+"Surely I hold that the best way is to keep our enemies from
+treading upon our ground: wherein if we fail, then must we seek
+to make him wish that he had stayed at his own home. In such a
+case if it should happen, our judgments are to weigh many
+particular circumstances, that belongs not unto this discourse.
+But making the question general, the positive, WHETHER England,
+WITHOUT THE HELP OF HER FLEET, BE ABLE TO DEBAR AN ENEMY FROM
+LANDING; I hold that it is unable so to do; and therefore I think
+it most dangerous to make the adventure. For the encouragement
+of a first victory to an enemy, and the discouragement of being
+beaten, to the invaded, may draw after it a most perilous
+consequence.
+
+"Great difference I know there is, and a diverse consideration to
+be had, between such a country as France is, strengthened with
+many fortified places; and this of ours, where our ramparts are
+but the bodies of men. But I say that an army to be transported
+over sea, and to be landed again in an enemy's country, and the
+place left to the choice of the invader, cannot be resisted on
+the coast of England, without a fleet to impeach it; no, nor on
+the coast of France, or any other country; except every creek,
+port, or sandy bay, had a powerful army, in each of them, to make
+opposition. For let the supposition be granted that Kent is able
+to furnish twelve thousand foot, and that those twelve thousand
+be layed in the three best landing-places within that country, to
+wit, three thousand at Margat, three thousand at the Nesse, and
+six thousand at Foulkstone, that is, somewhat equally distant
+from them both; as also that two of these troops (unless some
+other order be thought more fit) be directed to strengthen the
+third, when they shall see the enemies' fleet to head towards it:
+I say, that notwithstanding this provision, if the enemy, setting
+sail from the Isle of Wight, in the first watch of the night, and
+towing their long boats at their sterns, shall arrive by dawn of
+day at the Nesse, and thrust their army on shore there, it will
+be hard for those three thousand that are at Margat (twenty-and-
+four long miles from thence), to come time enough to reinforce
+their fellows at the Nesse. Nay, how shall they at Foulkstone be
+able to do it, who are nearer by more than half the way? seeing
+that the enemy, at his first arrival, will either make his
+entrance by force, with three or four shot of great artillery,
+and quickly put the first three thousand that are entrenched at
+the Nesse to run, or else give them so much to do that they shall
+be glad to send for help to Foulkstone, and perhaps to Margat,
+whereby those places will be left bare. Now let us suppose that
+all the twelve thousand Kentish soldiers arrive at the Nesse, ere
+the enemy can be ready to disembarque his army, so that he will
+find it unsafe to land in the face of so many prepared to
+withstand him, yet must we believe that he will play the best of
+his own game (having liberty to go which way he list), and under
+covert of the night, set sail towards the east, where what shall
+hinder him to take ground either at Margat, the Downes, or
+elsewhere, before they, at the Nesse, can be well aware of his
+departure? Certainly there is nothing more easy than to do it.
+Yea, the like may be said of Weymouth, Purbeck, Poole, and of all
+landing-places on the south-west. For there is no man ignorant,
+that ships without putting themselves out of breath, will easily
+outrun the souldiers that coast them. 'LES ARMEES NE VOLENT
+POINT EN POSTE;'--'Armies neither flye, nor run post,' saith a
+marshal of France. And I know it to be true, that a fleet of
+ships may be seen at sunset, and after it at the Lizard, yet by
+the next morning they may recover Portland, whereas an army of
+foot shall not be able to march it in six dayes. Again, when
+those troops lodged on the sea-shores, shall be forced to run
+from place to place in vain, after a fleet of ships, they will at
+length sit down in the midway, and leave all at adventure. But
+say it were otherwise, that the invading enemy will offer to land
+in some such place, where there shall be an army of ours ready to
+receive him; yet it cannot be doubted, but that when the choice
+of all our trained bands, and the choice of our commanders and
+captains, shall be drawn together (as they were at Tilbury in the
+year 1588) to attend the person of the prince, and for the
+defence of the city of London; they that remain to guard the
+coast can be of no such force as to encounter an army like unto
+that wherewith it was intended that the Prince of Parma should
+have landed in England.
+
+"For end of this digression, I hope that this question shall
+never come to trial; his majestie's many moveable forts will
+forbid the experience. And although the English will no less
+disdain that any nation under heaven can do, to be beaten, upon
+their own ground, or elsewhere, by a foreign enemy; yet to
+entertain those that shall assail us with their own beef in their
+bellies, and before they eat of our Kentish capons, I take it to
+be the wisest way; to do which his majesty, after God, will
+employ his good ships on the sea, and not trust in any
+intrenchment upon the shore."
+
+The introduction of steam as a propelling power at sea, has added
+tenfold weight to these arguments of Raleigh, On the other hand,
+a well-constructed system of railways, especially of coast-lines,
+aided by the operation or the electric telegraph, would give
+facilities for concentrating a defensive army to oppose an enemy
+on landing, and for moving troops from place to place in
+observation of the movements of the hostile fleet, such as would
+have astonished Sir Walter even more than the sight of vessels
+passing rapidly to and fro without the aid of wind or tide. The
+observation of the French marshal, whom he quotes, is now no
+longer correct. Armies can be made to pass from place to place
+almost with the speed of wings, and far more rapidly than any
+post-travelling that was known in the Elizabethan or any other
+age. Still, the presence of a sufficient armed force at the
+right spot, at the right time, can never be made a matter of
+certainty; and even after the changes that have taken place, no
+one can doubt but that the policy of Raleigh is that which
+England should ever seek to follow in defensive war. At the time
+of the Armada, that policy certainly saved the country, if not
+from conquest, at least from deplorable calamities. If indeed
+the enemy had landed, we may be sure that be would have been
+heroically opposed. But history shows us so many examples of the
+superiority of veteran troops over new levies, however numerous
+and brave, that without disparaging our countrymen's soldierly
+merits, we may well be thankful that no trial of them was then
+made on English land. Especially must we feel this, when we
+contrast the high military genius of the Prince of Parma, who
+would have headed the Spaniards, with the imbecility of the Earl
+of Leicester, to whom the deplorable spirit of favouritism, which
+formed the greatest blemish in Elizabeth's character, had then
+committed the chief command of the English armies.
+
+The ships of the royal navy at this time amounted to no more than
+thirty-six; but the most serviceable merchant vessels were
+collected from all the ports of the country; and the citizens of
+London, Bristol, and the other great seats of commerce, showed as
+liberal a zeal in equipping and manning vessels as the nobility
+and gentry displayed in mustering forces by land. The seafaring
+population of the coast, of every rank and station, was animated
+by the same ready spirit; and the whole number of seamen who came
+forward to man the English fleet was 17,472. The number of the
+ships that were collected was 191; and the total amount of their
+tonnage 31,985. There was one ship in the fleet (the Triumph) of
+1100 tons, one of 1000, one of 900, two of 800 each, three of
+600, five of 600, five of 400, six of 300, six of 250, twenty of
+200, and the residue of inferior burden. Application was made to
+the Dutch for assistance; and, as Stows expresses it, "The
+Hollanders came roundly in, with threescore sail, brave ships of
+war, fierce and full of spleen, not so much for England's aid, as
+in just occasion for their own defence; these men foreseeing the
+greatness of the danger that might ensue, if the Spaniards should
+chance to win the day and get the mastery over them; in due
+regard whereof their manly courage was inferior to none."
+
+We have more minute information of the numbers and equipment of
+the hostile forces than we have of our own. In the first volume
+of Hakluyt's "Voyages," dedicated to Lord Effingham, who
+commanded against the Armada, there is given (from the
+contemporary foreign writer, Meteran) a more complete and
+detailed catalogue than has perhaps ever appeared of a similar
+armament.
+
+"A very large and particular description of this navie was put in
+print and published by the Spaniards; wherein was set downe the
+number, names, and burthens of the shippes, the number of
+mariners and soldiers throughout the whole fleete; likewise the
+quantitie of their ordinance, of their armour of bullets, of
+match, of gun-poulder, of victuals, and of all their navall
+furniture, was in the saide description particularized. Unto all
+these were added the names of the governours, captaines,
+noblemen, and gentlemen voluntaries, of whom there was so great a
+multitude, that scarce was there any family of accompt, or any
+one principall man throughout all Spaine, that had not a brother,
+sonne, or kinsman in that fleete; who all of them were in good
+hope to purchase unto themselves in that navie (as they termed
+it) invincible, endless glory and renown, and to possess
+themselves of great seigniories and riches in England, and in the
+Low Countreys. But because the said description was translated
+and published out of Spanish into divers other languages, we will
+here only make an abridgement or brief rehearsal thereof.
+
+"Portugal furnished and set foorth under the conduct of the Duke
+of Medina Sidonia, generall of the fleete, ten galeons, two
+zabraes, 1300 mariners, 3300 souldiers, 300 great pieces, with
+all requisite furniture.
+
+"Biscay, under the conduct of John Martines de Ricalde, admiral
+of the whole fleete, set forth tenne galeons, four pataches, 700
+mariners, 2000 souldiers, 260 great pieces, &c.
+
+"Guipusco, under the conduct of Michael de Orquendo, tenne
+galeons, four pataches, 700 mariners, 2000 souldiers, 310 great
+pieces.
+
+"Italy with the Levant Islands, under Martine de Vertendona, ten
+galeons, 800 mariners, 2000 souldiers, 310 great pieces, &c.
+
+"Castile, under Diego Flores de Valdez, fourteen galeons, two
+pataches, 1700 mariners, 2400 souldiers, and 388 great pieces,
+&c.
+
+"Andaluzia, under the conduct of Petro de Valdez, ten galeons,
+one patache, 800 mariners, 2400 souldiers, 280 great pieces, &c.
+
+"Item, under the conduct of John Lopez de Medina, twenty-three
+great Flemish hulkes, with 700 mariners, 3200 souldiers, and 400
+great pieces,
+
+"Item, under Hugo de Moncada, fours galliasses, containing 1200
+gally-slaves, 460 mariners, 870 souldiers, 200 great pieces, &c.
+
+"Item, under Diego de Mandrana, fours gallies of Portugall with
+888 gally-slaves, 360 mariners, twenty great pieces, and other
+requisite furniture.
+
+"Item, under Anthonie de Mendoza, twenty-two pataches and
+zabraes, with 574 mariners, 488 souldiers, and 193 great pieces.
+
+"Besides the ships aforementioned, there were twenty caravels
+rowed with oares, being appointed to perform necessary services
+under the greater ships, insomuch that all the ships appertayning
+to this navie amounted unto the summe of 150, eche one being
+sufficiently provided of furniture and victuals.
+
+"The number of mariners in the saide fleete were above 8000, of
+slaves 2088, of souldiers 20,000 (besides noblemen and gentlemen
+voluntaries), of great cast pieces 2600. The aforesaid ships
+were of an huge and incredible capacitie and receipt: for the
+whole fleete was large enough to contains the burthen of 60,000
+tunnes.
+
+"The galeons were 64 in number, being of an huge bignesse, and
+very flately built, being of marveilous force also, and so high,
+that they resembled great castles, most fit to defend themselves
+and to withstand any assault, but in giving any other ships the
+encounter farr inferiour unto the English and Dutch ships, which
+can with great dexteritie weild and turne themselves at all
+assayes. The upperworke of the said galeons was of thicknesse
+and strength sufficient to bear off musket-shot. The lower works
+and the timbers thereof were out of measure strong, being framed
+of plankes and ribs fours or five foote in thicknesse, insomuch
+that no bullets could pierce them, but such as were discharged
+hard at hand; which afterward prooved true, for a great number of
+bullets were found to sticke fast within the massie substance of
+those thicke plankes. Great and well pitched cables were twined
+about the masts of their shippes, to strengthen them against the
+battery of shot.
+
+"The galliasses were of such bignesse, that they contained within
+them chambers, chapels, turrets, pulpits, and other commodities
+of great houses. The galliasses were rowed with great oares,
+there being in eche one of them 300 slaves for the same purpose
+and were able to do great service with the force of their
+ordinance. All these, together with the residue aforenamed, were
+furnished and beautified with trumpets, streamers, banners,
+warlike ensignes, and other such like ornaments.
+
+"Their pieces of brazen ordinance were 1600, and of yron 1000.
+
+"The bullets thereto belonging were 120 thousand.
+
+"Item of gun-poulder, 5600 quintals. Of matche, 1200 quintals.
+Of muskets and kaleivers, 7000. Of haleberts and partisans,
+10,000.
+
+"Moreover they had great store of canons, double-canons,
+culverings and field-pieces for land services.
+
+"Likewise they were provided of all instruments necessary on land
+to conveigh and transport their furniture from place to place; as
+namely of carts, wheeles, wagons, &c. Also they had spades,
+mattocks, and baskets, to set pioners to works. They had in like
+sort great store of mules and horses, and whatsoever else was
+requisite for a land-armie. They were so well stored of biscuit,
+that for the space of halfe a yeere, they might allow eche person
+in the whole fleete halfe a quintall every month; whereof the
+whole summe amounteth unto an hundreth thousand quintals.
+
+"Likewise of wine they had 147 thousand pipes, sufficient also
+for halfe a yeeres expedition. Of bacon, 6500 quintals. Of
+cheese, three thousand quintals. Besides fish, rise, beanes,
+pease, oils, vinegar, &c.
+
+"Moreover they had 12,000 pipes of fresh water, and all other
+necessary provision, as, namely, candles, lanternes, lampes,
+sailes, hempe, oxe-hides, and lead to stop holes that should be
+made with the battery of gun-shot. To be short, they brought all
+things expedient, either for a fleete by sea, or for an armie by
+land.
+
+"This navie (as Diego Pimentelli afterward confessed) was
+esteemed by the king himselfe to containe 32,000 persons, and to
+cost him every day 30 thousand ducates.
+
+"There were in the said navie five terzaes of Spaniards (which
+terzaes the Frenchmen call regiments), under the command of five
+governours, termed by the Spaniards masters of the field, and
+amongst the rest there were many olde and expert souldiers chosen
+out of the garisons of Sicilie, Naples, and Tercera. Their
+captaines or colonels were Diego Pimentelli, Don Francisco de
+Toledo, Don Alonco de Lucon, Don Nicolas de Isla, Don Augustin de
+Mexia; who had each of them thirty-two companies under their
+conduct. Besides the which companies, there were many bands also
+of Castilians and Portugals, every one of which had their
+peculiar governours, captains, officers, colours, and weapons."
+
+While this huge armada was making ready in the southern ports of
+the Spanish dominions, the Prince of Parma, with almost
+incredible toil and skill, collected a squadron of war-ships at
+Dunkirk, and his flotilla of other ships and of flat-bottomed
+boats for the transport to England of the picked troops, which
+were designed to be the main instruments in subduing England.
+Thousands of workmen were employed, night and day, in the
+construction of these vessels, in the ports of Flanders and
+Brabant. One hundred of the kind called hendes, built at
+Antwerp, Bruges, and Ghent, and laden with provision and
+ammunition, together with sixty flat-bottomed boats, each capable
+of carrying thirty horses, were brought, by means of canals and
+fosses, dug expressly for the purpose, to Nieuport and Dunkirk.
+One hundred smaller vessels were equipped at the former place,
+and thirty-two at Dunkirk, provided with twenty thousand empty
+barrels, and with materials for making pontoons, for stopping up
+the harbours, and raising forts and entrenchments. The army
+which these vessels were designed to convey to England amounted
+to thirty thousand strong, besides a body of four thousand
+cavalry, stationed at Courtroi, composed chiefly of the ablest
+veterans of Europe; invigorated by rest, (the siege of Sluys
+having been the only enterprise in which they were employed
+during the last campaign,) and excited by the hopes of plunder
+and the expectation of certain conquest. [Davis's Holland, vol.
+ii. p. 219.] And "to this great enterprise and imaginary
+conquest, divers princes and noblemen came from divers countries;
+out of Spain came the Duke of Pestrana, who was said to be the
+son of Ruy Gomez de Silva, but was held to be the king's bastard;
+the Marquis of Bourgou, one of the Archduke Ferdinand's sons, by
+Philippina Welserine; Don Vespasian Gonzaga, of the house of
+Mantua, a great soldier, who had been viceroy in Spain; Giovanni
+de Medici, Bastard of Florence; Amedo, Bastard of Savoy, with
+many such like, besides others of meaner quality." [Grimstone,
+cited in Southey.]
+
+Philip had been advised by the deserter, Sir William Stanley, not
+to attack England in the first instance, but first to effect a
+landing and secure a strong position in Ireland; his admiral,
+Santa Cruz, had recommended him to make sure, in the first
+instance, of some large harbour on the coast of Holland or
+Zealand, where the Armada, having entered the Channel, might find
+shelter in case of storm, and whence it could sail without
+difficulty for England; but Philip rejected both these counsels,
+and directed that England itself should be made the immediate
+object of attack; and on the 20th of May the Armada left the
+Tagus, in the pomp and pride of supposed invincibility, and
+amidst the shouts of thousands, who believed that England was
+already conquered. But steering to the northward, and before it
+was clear of the coast of Spain, the Armada, was assailed by a
+violent storm, and driven back with considerable damage to the
+ports of Biscay and Galicia. It had, however, sustained its
+heaviest loss before it left the Tagus, in the death of the
+veteran admiral Santa Cruz, who had been destined to guide it
+against England.
+
+This experienced sailor, notwithstanding his diligence and
+success, had been unable to keep pace with the impatient ardour
+of his master. Philip II. had reproached him with his
+dilatoriness, and had said with ungrateful harshness, "You make
+an ill return for all my kindness to you." These words cut the
+veteran's heart, and proved fatal to Santa Cruz. Overwhelmed
+with fatigue and grief, he sickened and died. Philip II. had
+replaced him by Alonzo Perez de Gusman, Duke of Medina Sidonia,
+one of the most powerful of the Spanish grandees, but wholly
+unqualified to command such an expedition. He had, however, as
+his lieutenants, two sea men of proved skill and bravery, Juan de
+Martinez Recalde of Biscay, and Miguel Orquendo of Guipuzcoa.
+
+The report of the storm which had beaten back the Armada reached
+England with much exaggeration, and it was supposed by some of
+the queen's counsellors that the invasion would now be deferred
+to another year. But Lord Howard of Effingham, the lord high-
+admiral of the English fleet, judged more wisely that the danger
+was not yet passed, and, as already mentioned, had the moral
+courage to refuse to dismantle his principal ships, though he
+received orders to that effect. But it was not Howard's design
+to keep the English fleet in costly inaction, and to wait
+patiently in our own harbours, till the Spaniards had recruited
+their strength, and sailed forth again to attack us. The English
+seamen of that age (like their successors) loved to strike better
+than to parry, though, when emergency required, they could be
+patient and cautious in their bravery. It was resolved to
+proceed to Spain, to learn the enemy's real condition, and to
+deal him any blow for which there might be opportunity. In this
+bold policy we may well believe him to have been eagerly seconded
+by those who commanded under him. Howard and Drake sailed
+accordingly to Corunna, hoping to surprise and attack some part
+of the Armada in that harbour; but when near the coast of Spain,
+the north wind, which had blown up to that time, veered suddenly
+to the south; and fearing that the Spaniards might put to sea and
+pass him unobserved, Howard returned to the entrance of the
+Channel, where he cruised for some time on the look-out for the
+enemy. In part of a letter written by him at this period, he
+speaks of the difficulty of guarding so large a breadth of sea--a
+difficulty that ought not to be forgotten when modern schemes of
+defence against hostile fleets from the south are discussed. "I
+myself," he wrote, "do lie in the midst of the Channel, with the
+greatest force; Sir Francis Drake hath twenty ships, and four or
+five pinnaces, which lie towards Ushant; and Mr. Hawkins, with as
+many more, lieth towards Scilly. Thus we are fain to do, or else
+with this wind they might pass us by, and we never the wiser.
+The SLEEVE is another manner of thing than it was taken for: we
+find it by experience and daily observation to be 100 miles over:
+a large room for me to look unto!" But after some time further
+reports that the Spaniards were inactive in their harbour, where
+they were suffering severely from sickness, caused Howard also to
+relax in his vigilance; and he returned to Plymouth with the
+greater part of his fleet.
+
+On the 12th of July, the Armada having completely refitted,
+sailed again for the Channel, and reached it without obstruction
+or observation by the English.
+
+The design of the Spaniards was, that the Armada should give
+them, at least for a time, the command of the sea, and that it
+should join the squadron which Parma had collected, off Calais.
+Then, escorted by an overpowering naval force, Parma and his army
+were to embark in their flotilla, and cross the sea to England
+where they were to be landed, together with the troops which the
+Armada brought from the ports of Spain. The scheme was not
+dissimilar to one formed against England a little more than two
+centuries afterwards.
+
+As Napoleon, in 1805, waited with his army and flotilla at
+Boulogne, looking for Villeneuve to drive away the English
+cruisers, and secure him a passage across the Channel, so Parma,
+in 1588, waited for Medina Sidonia to drive away the Dutch and
+English squadrons that watched his flotilla, and to enable his
+veterans to cross the sea to the land that they were to conquer.
+Thanks to Providence, in each case England's enemy waited in
+vain!
+
+Although the numbers of sail which the queen's government, and
+the patriotic zeal of volunteers, had collected for the defence
+of England exceeded the number of sail in the Spanish fleet, the
+English ships were, collectively, far inferior in size to their
+adversaries; their aggregate tonnage being less by half than that
+of the enemy. In the number of guns, and weight of metal, the
+disproportion was still greater. The English admiral was also
+obliged to subdivide his force; and Lord Henry Seymour, with
+forty of the best Dutch and English ships, was employed in
+blockading the hostile ports in Flanders, and in preventing the
+Prince of Parma from coming out of Dunkirk.
+
+The orders of King Philip to the Duke de Medina Sidonia were,
+that he should, on entering the Channel, keep near the French
+coast, and, if attacked by the English ships, avoid an action,
+and steer on to Calais roads, where the Prince of Parma's
+squadron was to join him. The hope of surprising and destroying
+the English fleet in Plymouth, led the Spanish admiral to deviate
+from these orders, and to stand across to the English shore; but,
+on finding that Lord Howard was coming out to meet him, he
+resumed the original plan, and determined to bend his way
+steadily towards Calais and Dunkirk, and to keep merely on the
+defensive against such squadrons of the English as might come up
+with him.
+
+It was on Saturday, the 20th of July, that Lord Effingham came in
+sight of his formidable adversaries. The Armada was drawn up in
+form of a crescent, which from horn to horn measured some seven
+miles. There was a south-west wind; and before it the vast
+vessels sailed slowly on. The English let them pass by; and
+then, following in the rear, commenced an attack on them. A
+running fight now took place, in which some of the best ships of
+the Spaniards were captured; many more received heavy damage;
+while the English vessels, which took care not to close with
+their huge antagonists, but availed themselves of their superior
+celerity in tacking and manoeuvring, suffered little comparative
+loss. Each day added not only to the spirit, but to the number
+of Effingham's force. Raleigh, Oxford, Cumberland, and Sheffield
+joined him; and "the gentlemen of England hired ships from all
+parts at their own charge, and with one accord came flocking
+thither as to a set field, where glory was to be attained, and
+faithful service performed unto their prince and their country."
+
+Raleigh justly praises the English admiral for his skilful
+tactics. He says, [Historie of the World, p. 791.] "Certainly,
+he that will happily perform a fight at sea, must be skillful in
+making choice of vessels to fight in; he must believe that there
+is more belonging to a good man-of-war, upon the waters, than
+great daring; and must know that there is a great deal of
+difference between fighting loose or at large and grappling. The
+guns of a slow ship pierce as well, and make as great holes, as
+those in a swift. To clap ships together, without consideration,
+belongs rather to a madman than to a man of war; for by such an
+ignorant bravery was Peter Strossie lost at the Azores, when he
+fought against the Marquis of Santa Cruza. In like sort had the
+Lord Charles Howard, admiral of England, been lost in the year
+1588, if he had not been better advised, than a great many
+malignant fools were, that found fault with his demeanour. The
+Spaniards had an army aboard them, and he had none; they had more
+ships than he had, and of higher building and charging; so that,
+had he entangled himself with those great and powerful vessels,
+he had greatly endangered this kingdom of England. For, twenty
+men upon the defences are equal to a hundred that board and
+enter; whereas then, contrariwise, the Spaniards had a hundred,
+for twenty of ours, to defend themselves withall. But our
+admiral knew his advantage, and held it: which had he not done,
+he had not been worthy to have held his head."
+
+The Spanish admiral also showed great judgment and firmness in
+following the line of conduct that had been traced out for him;
+and on the 27th of July he brought his fleet unbroken, though
+sorely distressed, to anchor in Calais roads. But the King of
+Spain, had calculated ill the number and activity of the English
+and Dutch fleets; as the old historian expresses it, "It seemeth
+that the Duke of Parma and the Spaniards grounded upon a vain and
+presumptuous expectation, that all the ships of England and of
+the Low Countreys would at the first sight of the Spanish and
+Dunkerk navie have betaken themselves to flight, yeelding them
+sea-room, and endeavouring only to defend themselves, their
+havens, and sea-coasts from invasion. Wherefore their intent and
+purpose was, that the Duke of Parma, in his small and flat-
+bottomed ships should, as it were, under the shadow and wing of
+the Spanish fleet, convey over all his troupes, armour, and
+warlike provisions, and with their forces so united, should
+invade England; or, while the English fleet were busied in fight
+against the Spanish, should enter upon any part of the coast
+which he thought to be most convenient. Which invasion (as the
+captives afterwards confessed) the Duke of Parma thought first to
+have attempted by the river of Thames; upon the banks whereof,
+having at the first arrivall landed twenty or thirty thousand of
+his principall souldiers, he supposed that he might easily have
+wonne the citie of London; both because his small shippes should
+have followed and assisted his land-forces, and also for that the
+citie itselfe was but meanely fortified and easie to overcome, by
+reason of the citizens' delicacie and discontinuance from the
+warres, who, with continuall and constant labour, might be
+vanquished, if they yielded not at the first assault."
+[Hakluyt's Voyages, vol. i. 601.]
+
+But the English and Dutch found ships and mariners enough to keep
+the Armada itself in check, and at the same time to block up
+Parma's flotilla. The greater part of Seymour's squadron left
+its cruising ground off Dunkirk to join the English admiral off
+Calais; but the Dutch manned about five-and-thirty sail of good
+ships, with a strong force of soldiers on board, all well
+seasoned to the sea-service, and with these they blockaded the
+Flemish ports that were in Parma's power. Still it was resolved
+by the Spanish admiral and the prince to endeavour to effect a
+junction, which the English seamen were equally resolute to
+prevent: and bolder measures on our side now became necessary.
+
+The Armada lay off Calais, with its largest ships ranged outside,
+"like strong castles fearing no assault; the lesser placed in the
+middle ward." The English admiral could not attack them in their
+position without great disadvantage, but on the night of the
+29th he sent eight fire-ships among them, with almost equal
+effect to that of the fire-ships which the Greeks so often
+employed against the Turkish fleets in their late war of
+independence. The Spaniards cut their cables and put to sea in
+confusion. One of the largest galeasses ran foul of another
+vessel and was stranded. The rest of the fleet was scattered
+about on the Flemish coast, and when the morning broke, it was
+with difficulty and delay that they obeyed their admiral's signal
+to range themselves round him near Gravelines. Now was the
+golden opportunity for the English to assail them, and prevent
+them from ever letting loose Parma's flotilla against England;
+and nobly was that opportunity used. Drake and Fenner were the
+first English captains who attacked the unwieldy leviathans:
+then came Fenton, Southwell, Burton, Cross, Raynor, and then the
+lord admiral, with Lord Thomas Howard and Lord Sheffield. The
+Spaniards only thought of forming and keeping close together, and
+were driven by the English past Dunkirk, and far away from the
+Prince of Parma, who in watching their defeat from the coast,
+must, as Drake expressed it, have chafed like a bear robbed of
+her whelps. This was indeed the last and the decisive battle
+between the two fleets. It is, perhaps, best described in the
+very words of the contemporary writer as we may read them in
+Hakluyt. [Vol. i. p. 602.]
+
+"Upon the 29th of July in the morning, the Spanish fleet after
+the forsayd tumult, having arranged themselves againe into order,
+were, within sight of Greveling, most bravely and furiously
+encountered by the English; where they once again got the wind of
+the Spaniards; who suffered themselves to be deprived of the
+commodity of the place in Calais road, and of the advantage of
+the wind neer unto Dunkerk, rather than they would change their
+array or separate their forces now conjoyned and united together,
+standing only upon their defence.
+
+"And howbeit there were many excellent and warlike ships in the
+English fleet, yet scarce were there 22 or 23 among them all,
+which matched 90 of the Spanish ships in the bigness, or could
+conveniently assault them. Wherefore the English ships using
+their prerogative of nimble steerage, whereby they could turn and
+wield themselves with the wind which way they listed, came often
+times very near upon the Spaniards, and charged them so sore,
+that now and then they were but a pike's length asunder: and so
+continually giving them one broadside after another, they
+discharged all their shot both great and small upon them,
+spending one whole day from morning till night in that violent
+kind of conflict, untill such time as powder and bullets failed
+them. In regard of which want they thought it convenient not to
+pursue the Spaniards any longer, because they had many great
+vantages of the English, namely, for the extraordinary bigness of
+their ships, and also for that they were so neerley conjoyned,
+and kept together in so good array, that they could by no meanes
+be fought withall one to one. The English thought, therefore,
+that they had right well acquitted themselves, in chasing the
+Spaniards first from Caleis, and then from Dunkerk, and by that
+meanes to have hindered them from joyning with the Duke of Parma
+his forces, and getting the wind of them, to have driven them
+from their own coasts.
+
+"The Spaniards that day sustained great loss and damage, having
+many of their shippes shot thorow and thorow, and they discharged
+likewise great store of ordinance against the English; who,
+indeed, sustained some hindrance, but not comparable to the
+Spaniard's loss: for they lost not any one ship or person of
+account, for very diligent inquisition being made, the English
+men all that time wherein the Spanish navy sayled upon their
+seas, are not found to have wanted aboue one hundred of their
+people: albeit Sir Francis Drake's ship was pierced with shot
+above forty times, and his very cabben was twice shot thorow, and
+about the conclusion of the fight, the bed of a certaine
+gentleman, lying weary thereupon, was taken quite from under him
+with the force of a bullet. Likewise, as the Earle of
+Northumberland and Sir Charles Blunt were at dinner upon a time,
+the bullet of a demy-culverin brake thorow the middest of their
+cabben, touched their feet, and strooke downe two of the standers
+by, with many such accidents befalling the English shippes, which
+it were tedious to rehearse."
+
+It reflects little credit on the English Government that the
+English fleet was so deficiently supplied with ammunition, as to
+be unable to complete the destruction of the invaders. But
+enough was done to ensure it. Many of the largest Spanish ships
+were sunk or captured in the action of this day. And at length
+the Spanish admiral, despairing of success, fled northward with a
+southerly wind, in the hope of rounding Scotland, and so
+returning to Spain without a farther encounter with the English
+fleet. Lord Effingham left a squadron to continue the blockade
+of the Prince of Parma's armament; but that wise general soon
+withdrew his troops to more promising fields of action.
+Meanwhile the lord-admiral himself and Drake chased the vincible
+Armada, as it was now termed, for some distance northward; and
+then, when it seemed to bend away from the Scotch coast towards
+Norway, it was thought best, in the words of Drake, "to leave
+them to those boisterous and uncouth northern seas."
+
+The sufferings and losses which the unhappy Spaniards sustained
+in their flight round Scotland and Ireland, are well known. Of
+their whole Armada only fifty-three shattered vessels brought
+back their beaten and wasted crews to the Spanish coast which
+they had quitted in such pageantry and pride.
+
+Some passages from the writings of those who took part in the
+struggle, have been already quoted; and the most spirited
+description of the defeat of the Armada which ever was penned,
+may perhaps be taken from the letter which our brave vice-admiral
+Drake wrote in answer to some mendacious stories by which the
+Spaniards strove to hide their shame. Thus does he describe the
+scenes in which he played so important a part: [See Strypo, and
+the notes to the Life of Drake. in the "Biographia
+Britannica."]
+
+"They were not ashamed to publish, in sundry languages in print,
+great victories in words, which they pretended to have obtained
+against this realm, and spread the same in a most false sort over
+all parts of France, Italy, and elsewhere; when, shortly
+afterwards, it was happily manifested in very deed to all
+nations, how their navy, which they termed invincible, consisting
+of one hundred and forty sail of ships, not only of their own
+kingdom, but strengthened with the greatest argosies, Portugal
+carracks, Florentines, and large hulks of other countries, were
+by thirty of her majesty's own ships of war, and a few of our own
+merchants, by the wise, valiant, and advantageous conduct of the
+Lord Charles Howard, high-admiral of England, beaten and shuffled
+together even from the Lizard in Cornwall, first to Portland,
+when they shamefully left Don Pedro de Valdez with his mighty
+ship; from Portland to Calais, where they lost Hugh de Moncado,
+with the galleys of which he was captain; and from Calais driven
+with squibs from their anchors, were chased out of the sight of
+England, round about Scotland and Ireland. Where, for the
+sympathy of their religion, hoping to find succour and
+assistance, a great part of them were crushed against the rocks,
+and those others that landed, being very many in number, were,
+notwithstanding, broken, slain, and taken; and so sent from
+village to village, coupled in halters, to be shipped into
+England, where her majesty, of her princely and invincible
+disposition, disdaining to put them to death, and scorning either
+to retain or to entertain them, they were all sent back again to
+their countries, to witness and recount the worthy achievement of
+their invincible and dreadful navy. Of which the number of
+soldiers, the fearful burthen of their ships, the commanders'
+names of every squadron, with all others, their magazines of
+provision were put in print, as an army and navy irresistible and
+disdaining prevention: with all which their great and terrible
+ostentation, they did not in all their sailing round about
+England so much as sink or take one ship, bark, pinnace, or
+cockboat of ours, or even burn so much as one sheep-cote on this
+land."
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE DEFEAT OF THE SPANISH ARMADA, A.D.
+1588; AND THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, A.D. 1704.
+
+A.D. 1594. Henry IV. of France conforms to the Roman Catholic
+Church, and ends the civil wars that had long desolated France.
+
+1598. Philip II. of Spain dies, leaving a ruined navy and an
+exhausted kingdom.
+
+1603. Death of Queen Elizabeth. The Scotch dynasty of the
+Stuarts succeeds to the throne of England.
+
+1619. Commencement of the Thirty Years' War in Germany.
+
+1624-1642. Cardinal Richelieu is minister of France. He breaks
+the power of the nobility, reduces the Huguenots to complete
+subjection; and by aiding the Protestant German princes in the
+latter part of the Thirty Years' War, he humiliates France's
+ancient rival, Austria.
+
+1630. Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden, marches into Germany to
+the assistance of the Protestants, who ware nearly crushed by the
+Austrian armies. He gains several great victories, and, after
+his death, Sweden, under his statesmen and generals, continues to
+take a leading part in the war.
+
+1640. Portugal throws off the Spanish yoke: and the House of
+Braganza begins to reign.
+
+1642. Commencement of the civil war in England between Charles
+I. and his parliament.
+
+1648. The Thirty Years' War in Germany ended by the treaty of
+Westphalia.
+
+1653. Oliver Cromwell lord-protector of England.
+
+1660. Restoration of the Stuarts to the English throne.
+
+1661. Louis XIV. takes the administration of affairs in France
+into his own hands.
+
+1667-1668. Louis XVI. makes war in Spain, and conquers a large
+part of the Spanish Netherlands.
+
+1672. Louis makes war upon Holland, and almost overpowers it,
+Charles II. of England is his pensioner, and England helps the
+French in their attacks upon Holland until 1674. Heroic
+resistance of the Dutch under the Prince of Orange.
+
+1674. Louis conquers Franche-Comte.
+
+1679. Peace of Nimeguen.
+
+1681. Louis invades and occupies Alsace.
+
+1682. Accession of Peter the Great to the throne of Russia.
+
+1685. Louis commences a merciless persecution of his Protestant
+subjects.
+
+1688. The glorious Revolution in England. Expulsion of James
+II. William of Orange is made King of England. James takes
+refuge at the French court, and Louis undertakes to restore him.
+General war in the west of Europe.
+
+1691. Treaty of Ryswick. Charles XII. becomes King of Sweden.
+
+1700. Charles II. of Spain dies, having bequeathed his dominions
+to Philip of Anjou, Louis XIV.'s grandson. Defeat of the
+Russians at Narva, by Charles XII.
+
+1701. William III. forms a "Grand Alliance" of Austria, the
+Empire, the United Provinces, England, and other powers, against
+France.
+
+1702. King William dies; but his successor, Queen Anne, adheres
+to the Grand Alliance, and war is proclaimed against France.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, 1704.
+
+"The decisive blow struck at Blenheim resounded through every
+part of Europe: it at once destroyed the vast fabric of power
+which it had taken Louis XIV., aided by the talents of Turenne,
+and the genius of Vauban, so long to construct."--ALISON.
+
+Though more slowly moulded and less imposingly vast than the
+empire of Napoleon, the power which Louis XIV. had acquired and
+was acquiring at the commencement of the eighteenth century, was
+almost equally menacing to the general liberties of Europe. If
+tested by the amount of permanent aggrandisement which each
+procured for France, the ambition of the royal Bourbon was more
+successful than were the enterprises of the imperial Corsican.
+All the provinces that Bonaparte conquered, were rent again from
+France within twenty years from the date when the very earliest
+of them was acquired. France is not stronger by a single city or
+a single acre for all the devastating wars of the Consulate and
+the Empire. But she still possesses Franche-Comte, Alsace, and
+part of Flanders. She has still the extended boundaries which
+Louis XIV. gave her. And the royal Spanish marriages, a few
+years ago, proved clearly how enduring has been the political
+influence which the arts and arms of France's "Grand Monarque"
+obtained for her southward of the Pyrenees.
+
+When Louis XIV. took the reins of government into his own hands,
+after the death of Cardinal Mazarin, there was a union of ability
+with opportunity, such as France had not seen since the days of
+Charlemagne. Moreover, Louis's career was no brief one. For
+upwards of forty years, for a period nearly equal to the duration
+of Charlemagne's reign, Louis steadily followed an aggressive and
+a generally successful policy. He passed a long youth and
+manhood of triumph, before the military genius of Marlborough
+made him acquainted with humiliation and defeat. The great
+Bourbon lived too long. He should not have outstayed our two
+English kings--one his dependent, James II., the other his
+antagonist, William III. Had he died in the year within which
+they died, his reign would be cited as unequalled in the French
+annals for its prosperity. But he lived on to see his armies
+beaten, his cities captured, and his kingdom wasted by disastrous
+war. It is as if Charlemagne had survived to be defeated by the
+Northmen, and to witness the misery and shame that actually fell
+to the lot of his descendants.
+
+Still, Louis XIV. had forty years of success; and from the
+permanence of their fruits we may judge what the results would
+have been if the last fifteen years of his reign had been equally
+fortunate. Had it not been for Blenheim, all Europe might at
+this day suffer under the effect of French conquests resembling
+those of Alexander in extent, and those of the Romans in
+durability.
+
+When Louis XIV. began to govern, he found all the materials for a
+strong government ready to his hand. Richelieu had completely
+tamed the turbulent spirit of the French nobility, and had
+subverted the "imperium in imperio" of the Huguenots. The
+faction of the Frondeurs in Mazarin's time had had the effect of
+making the Parisian parliament utterly hateful and contemptible
+in the eyes of the nation. The assemblies of the States-General
+were obsolete. The royal authority alone remained. The King was
+the State. Louis knew his position. He fearlessly avowed it,
+and he fearlessly acted up to it. ["Quand Louis XIV. dit,
+'L'etat, c'est moi:' il n'y eut dans cette parole ni enflure, ni
+vanterie, mais la simple enonciation d'un fait."--MICHELET,
+HISTOIRE MODERNE vol. ii. p. 106.]
+
+Not only was his government a strong one, but the country which
+he governed was strong: strong in its geographical situation, in
+the compactness of its territory, in the number and martial
+spirit of its inhabitants, and in their complete and undivided
+nationality. Louis had neither a Hungary nor an Ireland in his
+dominions. and it was not till late in his reign, when old age
+had made his bigotry more gloomy, and had given fanaticism the
+mastery over prudence, that his persecuting intolerance caused
+the civil war in the Cevennes.
+
+Like Napoleon in after-times, Louis XIV. saw clearly that the
+great wants of France were "ships, colonies, and commerce." But
+Louis did more than see these wants: by the aid of his great
+minister, Colbert, he supplied them. One of the surest proofs of
+the genius of Louis was his skill in finding out genius in
+others, and his promptness in calling it into action. Under him,
+Louvois organized, Turenne, Conde, Villars and Berwick, led the
+armies of France; and Vauban fortified her frontiers. Throughout
+his reign, French diplomacy was marked by skilfulness and
+activity, and also by comprehensive far-sightedness, such as the
+representatives of no other nation possessed. Guizot's testimony
+to the vigour that was displayed through every branch of Louis
+XIV.'s government, and to the extent to which France at present
+is indebted to him, is remarkable. He says, that, "taking the
+public services of every kind, the finances, the departments of
+roads and public works, the military administration, and all the
+establishments which belong to every branch of administration,
+there is not one that will not be found to have had its origin,
+its development, or its greatest perfection, under the reign of
+Louis XIV." [History of European Civilization, Lecture 13.] And
+he points out to us, that "the government of Louis XIV. was the
+first that presented itself to the eyes of Europe as a power
+acting upon sure grounds, which had not to dispute its existence
+with inward enemies, but was at ease as to its territory and its
+people, and solely occupied with the task of administering
+government, properly so called. All the European governments had
+been previously thrown into incessant wars, which deprived them
+of all security as well as of all leisure, or so harassed by
+internal parties or antagonists, that their time was passed in
+fighting for existence. The government of Louis XIV. was the
+first to appear as a busy thriving administration of affairs, as
+a power at once definitive and progressive, which was not afraid
+to innovate, because it could reckon securely on the future.
+There have been in fact very few governments equally innovating.
+Compare it with a government of the same nature, the unmixed
+monarchy of Philip II. in Spain; it was more absolute than that
+of Louis XIV., and yet it was far less regular and tranquil. How
+did Philip II. succeed in establishing absolute power in Spain?
+By stifling all activity in the country, opposing himself to
+every species of amelioration, and rendering the state of Spain
+completely stagnant. The government of Louis XIV., on the
+contrary, exhibited alacrity for all sorts of innovations, and
+showed itself favourable to the progress of letters, arts, wealth
+in short, of civilization. This was the veritable cause of its
+preponderance in Europe, which arose to such a pitch, that it
+became the type of a government not only to sovereigns, but also
+to nations, during the seventeenth century."
+
+While France was thus strong and united in herself, and ruled by
+a martial, an ambitious, and (with all his faults) an enlightened
+and high-spirited sovereign, what European power was there fit to
+cope with her, or keep her in check?
+
+"As to Germany, the ambitious projects of the German branch of
+Austria had been entirely defeated, the peace of the empire had
+been restored, and almost a new constitution formed, or an old
+revived, by the treaties of Westphalia; NAY, THE IMPERIAL EAGLE
+WAS NOT ONLY FALLEN, BUT HER WINGS WERE CLIPPED." [Bolingbroke,
+vol. ii. p. 378. Lord Bolingbroke's "Letters on the Use of
+History," and his " Sketch of the History and State of Europe,"
+abound with remarks on Louis XIV. and his contemporaries, of
+which the substance is as sound as the style is beautiful.
+Unfortunately, like all his other works, they contain also a
+large proportion of sophistry and misrepresentation. The best
+test to use before we adopt any opinion or assertion of
+Bolingbroke's, is to consider whether in writing it he was
+thinking either of Sir Robert Walpole or of Revealed Religion.
+When either of these objects of his hatred was before his mind,
+he scrupled at no artifice or exaggeration that; might serve the
+purpose of his malignity. On most other occasions he may be
+followed with advantage, as he always may be read with pleasure.]
+
+As to Spain, the Spanish branch of the Austrian house had sunk
+equally low. Philip II. left his successors a ruined monarchy.
+He left them something worse; he left them his example and his
+principles of government, founded in ambition, in pride, in
+ignorance, in bigotry, and all the pedantry of state."
+[Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 378.]
+
+It is not, therefore, to be wondered at, that France, in the
+first war of Louis XIV., despised the opposition of both branches
+of the once predominant house of Austria. Indeed, in Germany the
+French king acquired allies among the princes of the Empire
+against the emperor himself. He had a still stronger support in
+Austria's misgovernment of her own subjects. The words of
+Bolingbroke on this are remarkable, and some of them sound as if
+written within the last three years. Bolingbroke says, "It was
+not merely the want of cordial co-operation among the princes of
+the Empire that disabled the emperor from acting with vigour in
+the cause of his family then, nor that has rendered the house of
+Austria a dead weight upon all her allies ever since. Bigotry,
+and its inseparable companion, cruelty, as well as the tyranny
+and avarice of the court of Vienna, created in those days, and
+has maintained in ours, almost a perpetual diversion of the
+imperial arms from all effectual opposition to France. I MEAN TO
+SPEAK OF THE TROUBLES IN HUNGARY. WHATEVER THEY BECAME IN THEIR
+PROGRESS, THEY WERE CAUSED ORIGINALLY BY THE USERPATIONS AND
+PERSECUTIONS OF THE EMPEROR; AND WHEN THE HUNGARIANS WERE CALLED
+REBELS FIRST, THEY WERE CALLED SO FOR NO OTHER REASON THAN THIS,
+THAT THEY WOULD NOT BE SLAVES. The dominion of the emperor being
+less supportable than that of the Turks, this unhappy people
+opened a door to the latter to infest the empire, instead of
+making their country, what it had been before, a barrier against
+the Ottoman power. France became a sure though secret ally of
+the Turks, as well as the Hungarians, and has found her account
+in it, by keeping the emperor in perpetual alarms on that side,
+while she has ravaged the Empire and the Low Countries on the
+other." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 397.]
+
+If, after having seen the imbecility of Germany and Spain against
+the France of Louis XIV., we turn to the two only remaining
+European powers of any importance at that time, to England and to
+Holland, we find the position of our own country as to European
+politics, from 1660 to 1688, most painful to contemplate. From
+1660 to 1688, "England, by the return of the Stuarts, was reduced
+to a nullity." The words are Michelet's, [Histoire Moderne, vol.
+ii. p.106.] and though severe they are just. They are, in fact,
+not severe enough: for when England, under her restored dynasty
+of the Stuarts, did take any part in European politics, her
+conduct, or rather her king's conduct, was almost invariably
+wicked and dishonourable.
+
+Bolingbroke rightly says that, previous to the Revolution of
+1688, during the whole progress that Louis XIV. made in obtaining
+such exorbitant power, as gave him well-grounded hopes of
+acquiring at last to his family the Spanish monarchy, England had
+been either an idle spectator of what passed on the continent, or
+a faint and uncertain ally against France, or a warm and sure
+ally on her side, or a partial mediator between her and the
+powers confederated together in their common defence. But though
+the court of England submitted to abet the usurpations of France,
+and the King of England stooped to be her pensioner, the crime
+was not national. On the contrary, the nation cried out loudly
+against it even whilst it was being committed." [Bolingbroke,
+vol. ii p. 418.]
+
+Holland alone, of all the European powers, opposed from the very
+beginning a steady and uniform resistance to the ambition and
+power of the French king. It was against Holland that the
+fiercest attacks of France were made, and though often apparently
+on the eve of complete success, they were always ultimately
+baffled by the stubborn bravery of the Dutch, and the heroism of
+their leader, William of Orange. When he became king of England,
+the power of this country was thrown decidedly into the scale
+against France; but though the contest was thus rendered less
+unequal, though William acted throughout "with invincible
+firmness, like a patriot and a hero," [Bolingbroke, vol, ii,
+p.404.] France had the general superiority in every war and in
+every treaty: and the commencement of the eighteenth century
+found the last league against her dissolved, all the forces of
+the confederates against her dispersed, and many disbanded; while
+France continued armed, with her veteran forces by sea and land
+increased, and held in readiness to act on all sides, whenever
+the opportunity should arise for seizing on the great prizes
+which, from the very beginning of his reign, had never been lost
+sight of by her king.
+
+This is not the place for any narrative of the first essay which
+Louis XIV. made of his power in the war of 1667; of his rapid
+conquest of Flanders and Franche-Comte; of the treaty of Aix-la-
+Chapelle, which "was nothing more than a composition between the
+bully and the bullied;" [Ibid p. 399.] of his attack on Holland
+in 1672; of the districts and barrier-towns of the Spanish
+Netherlands which were secured to him by the treaty of Nimeguen
+in 1678; of how, after this treaty, he "continued to vex both
+Spain and the Empire, and to extend his conquests in the Low
+Countries and on the Rhine, both by the pen and the sword; how he
+took Luxembourg by force, stole Strasburg, and bought Casal;" of
+how the league of Augsburg was formed against him in 1686, and
+the election of William of Orange to the English throne in 1688,
+gave a new spirit to the opposition which France encountered; of
+the long and chequered war that followed, in which the French
+armies were generally victorious on the continent, though his
+fleet was beaten at La Hogue, and his dependent, James II,, was
+defeated at the Boyne, or of the treaty of Ryswick, which left
+France in possession of Roussillon, Artois, and Strasburg, which
+gave Europe no security against her claims on the Spanish
+succession, and which Louis regarded as a mere truce, to gain
+breathing-time before a more decisive struggle. It must be borne
+in mind that the ambition of Louis in these wars was twofold. It
+had its immediate and its ulterior objects. Its immediate object
+was to conquer and annex to France the neighbouring provinces and
+towns that were most convenient for the increase of her strength;
+but the ulterior object of Louis, from the time of his marriage
+to the Spanish Infanta in 1659, was to acquire for the house of
+Bourbon the whole empire of Spain. A formal renunciation of all
+right to the Spanish succession had been made at the time of the
+marriage; but such renunciations were never of any practical
+effect, and many casuists and jurists of the age even held them
+to be intrinsically void, as time passed on, and the prospect of
+Charles II. of Spain dying without lineal heirs became more and
+more certain, so did the claims of the house of Bourbon to the
+Spanish crown after his death become matters of urgent interest
+to French ambition on the one hand, and to the other powers of
+Europe on the other. At length the unhappy King of Spain died.
+By his will he appointed Philip, Duke of Anjou, one of Louis
+XIV.'s grandsons, to succeed him on the throne of Spain, and
+strictly forbade any partition of his dominions. Louis well knew
+that a general European war would follow if he accepted for his
+house the crown thus bequeathed. But he had been preparing for
+this crisis throughout his reign. He sent his grandson into
+Spain as King Philip V. of that country, addressing to him on his
+departure the memorable words, "There are no longer any
+Pyrenees."
+
+The empire, which now received the grandson of Louis as its king,
+comprised, besides Spain itself, the strongest part of the
+Netherlands, Sardinia, Sicily, Naples, the principality of Milan,
+and other possessions in Italy, the Philippines and Marilla
+Islands in Asia, and, in the New World, besides California and
+Florida the greatest part of Central and of Southern America.
+Philip was well received in Madrid, where he was crowned as King
+Philip V. in the beginning of 1701. The distant portions of his
+empire sent in their adhesion; and the house of Bourbon, either
+by its French or Spanish troops, now had occupation both of the
+kingdom of Francis I., and of the fairest and amplest portion of
+the empire of the great rival of Francis, Charles V.
+
+Loud was the wrath of Austria, whose princes were the rival
+claimants of the Bourbons for the empire of Spain. The
+indignation of William III., though not equally loud, was far
+more deep and energetic. By his exertions a league against the
+house of Bourbon was formed between England, Holland, and the
+Austrian Emperor, which was subsequently joined by the kings of
+Portugal and Prussia, by the Duke of Savoy, and by Denmark.
+Indeed, the alarm throughout Europe was now general and urgent.
+It was clear that Louis aimed a consolidating France and the
+Spanish dominions into one preponderating empire. At the moment
+when Philip was departing to take possession of Spain, Louis had
+issued letters-patent in his favour to the effect of preserving
+his rights to the throne of France. And Louis had himself
+obtained possession of the important frontier of the Spanish
+Netherlands, with its numerous fortified cities, which were given
+up to his troops under pretence of securing them for the young
+King of Spain. Whether the formal union of the two crowns was
+likely to take place speedily or not, it was evident that the
+resources of the whole Spanish monarchy were now virtually at the
+French king's disposal.
+
+The peril that seemed to menace the empire, England, Holland, and
+the other independent powers, is well summed up by Alison:
+"Spain had threatened the liberties of Europe in the end of the
+sixteenth century, France had all but overthrown them in the
+close of the seventeenth. What hope was there of their being
+able to make head against them both, united under such a monarch
+as Louis XIV.?" [Military History of the Duke of Marlborough, p.
+32.]
+
+Our knowledge of the decayed state into which the Spanish power
+had fallen, ought not to make us regard their alarms as
+chimerical. Spain possessed enormous resources, and her strength
+was capable of being regenerated by a vigorous ruler. We should
+remember what Alberoni effected, even after the close of the War
+of Succession. By what that minister did in a few years, we may
+judge what Louis XIV. would have done in restoring the maritime
+and military power of that great country which nature has so
+largely gifted, and which man's misgovernment has so debased.
+
+The death of King William on the 8th of March, 1702, at first
+seemed likely to paralyse the league against France, for
+"notwithstanding the ill-success with which he made war
+generally, he was looked upon as the sole centre of union that
+could keep together the great confederacy then forming; and how
+much the French feared from his life, had appeared a few years
+before, in the extravagant and indecent joy they expressed on a
+false report of his death. A short time showed how vain the
+fears of some, and the hopes of others were." [Bolingbroke,
+vol. ii. p. 445.] Queen Anne, within three days after her
+accession, went down to the House of Lords, and there declared
+her resolution to support the measures planned by her
+predecessor, who had been "the great support, not only of these
+kingdoms, but of all Europe." Anne was married to Prince George
+of Denmark, and by her accession to the English throne the
+confederacy against Louis obtained the aid of the troops of
+Denmark; but Anne's strong attachment to one of her female
+friends led to far more important advantages to the anti-Gallican
+confederacy, than the acquisition of many armies, for it gave
+them MARLBOROUGH as their Captain-General.
+
+There are few successful commanders on whom Fame has shone so
+unwillingly as upon John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, Prince
+of the Holy Roman Empire,--victor of Blenheim, Ramilies,
+Oudenarde, and Malplaquet,--captor of Liege, Bonn, Limburg,
+Landau, Ghent, Bruges, Antwerp, Oudenarde, Ostend, Menin,
+Dendermonde, Ath, Lille, Tourney, Mons, Douay, Aire, Bethune, and
+Bouchain; who never fought a battle that he did not win, and
+never besieged a place that he did not take. Marlborough's own
+private character is the cause of this. Military glory may, and
+too often does, dazzle both contemporaries and posterity, until
+the crimes as well as the vices of heroes are forgotten. But
+even a few stains of personal meanness will dim a soldier's
+reputation irreparably; and Marlborough's faults were of a
+peculiarly base and mean order. Our feelings towards historical
+personages are in this respect like our feelings towards private
+acquaintances. There are actions of that shabby nature, that,
+however much they may be outweighed by a man's good deeds on a
+general estimate of his character, we never can feel any cordial
+liking for the person who has been guilty of them. Thus, with
+respect to the Duke of Marlborough, it goes against our feelings
+to admire the man, who owed his first advancement in life to the
+court-favour which he and his family acquired through his sister
+becoming one of the mistresses of the Duke of York. It is
+repulsive to know that Marlborough laid the foundation of his
+wealth by being the paid lover of one of the fair and frail
+favourites of Charles II. His treachery and ingratitude to his
+patron and benefactor, James II., stand out in dark relief, even
+in that age of thankless perfidy. He was almost equally disloyal
+to his new master, King William; and a more un-English act cannot
+be recorded than Godolphin's and Marlborough's betrayal to the
+French court in 1694 of the expedition then designed against
+Brest, an act of treason which caused some hundreds of English
+soldiers and sailors to be helplessly slaughtered on the beach in
+Camaret Bay.
+
+It is, however, only in his military career that we have now to
+consider him; and there are very few generals, of either ancient
+or modern times, whose campaigns will bear a comparison with
+those of Marlborough, either for the masterly skill with which
+they were planned, or for the bold yet prudent energy with which
+each plan was carried into execution. Marlborough had served
+while young under Turenne, and had obtained the marked praise of
+that great tactician. It would be difficult, indeed, to name a
+single quality which a general ought to have, and with which
+Marlborough was not eminently gifted. What principally attracted
+the notice of contemporaries, was the imperturbable evenness of
+his spirit. Voltaire [Siecle de Louis Quatorze.] says of him:--
+"He had, to a degree above all other generals of his time, that
+calm courage in the midst of tumult, that serenity of soul in
+danger, which the English call a COOL HEAD (que les Anglais
+appellant COOL HEAD, TETE FROID), and it was perhaps this
+quality, the greatest gift of nature for command, which formerly
+gave the English so many advantages over the French in the plains
+of Cressy, Poictiers, and Agincourt."
+
+King William's knowledge of Marlborough's high abilities, though
+he knew his faithlessness equally well, is said to have caused
+that sovereign in his last illness to recommend Marlborough to
+his successor as the fittest person to command her armies: but
+Marlborough's favour with the new queen by means of his wife was
+so high, that he was certain of obtaining the highest employment:
+and the war against Louis opened to him a glorious theatre for
+the display of those military talents, which he had before only
+had an opportunity of exercising in a subordinate character, and
+on far less conspicuous scenes.
+
+He was not only made captain-general of the English forces at
+home and abroad, but such was the authority of England in the
+council of the Grand Alliance, and Marlborough was so skilled in
+winning golden opinions from all whom he met with, that, on his
+reaching the Hague, he was received with transports of joy by the
+Dutch, and it was agreed by the heads of that republic, and the
+minister of the emperor, that Marlborough should have the chief
+command of all the allied armies.
+
+It must indeed, in justice to Marlborough, be borne in mind, that
+mere military skill was by no means all that was required of him
+in this arduous and invidious station. Had it not been for his
+unrivalled patience and sweetness of temper, and his marvellous
+ability in discerning the character of those with whom he had to
+act, his intuitive perception of those who were to be thoroughly
+trusted, and of those who were to be amused with the mere
+semblance of respect and confidence,--had not Marlborough
+possessed and employed, while at the head of the allied armies,
+all the qualifications of a polished courtier and a great
+statesman, he never would have led the allied armies to the
+Danube. The Confederacy would not have held together for a
+single year. His great political adversary, Bolingbroke, does
+him ample justice here. Bolingbroke, after referring to the loss
+which King William's death seemed to inflict on the cause of the
+Allies, observes that, "By his death the Duke of Marlborough was
+raised to the head of the army, and, indeed, of the Confederacy;
+where he, a new, a private man, a subject, acquired by merit and
+by management, a more deciding influence, than high birth,
+confirmed authority, and even the crown of Great Britain, had
+given to King William. Not only all the parts of that vast
+machine, the Grand Alliance, were kept more compact and entire;
+but a more rapid and vigorous motion was given to the whole; and
+instead of languishing and disastrous campaigns, we saw every
+scene of the war full of action. All those wherein he appeared
+and many of those wherein he was not then an actor, but abettor,
+however, of their action, were crowned with the most triumphant
+success.
+
+"I take with pleasure this opportunity of doing justice to that
+great man, whose faults I knew, whose virtues I admired; and
+whose memory, as the greatest general and as the greatest
+minister that our country, or perhaps any other, has produced, I
+honour." [Bolingbroke, vol. ii. p. 445.]
+
+War, was formally declared by the allies against France on the
+4th of May, 1702. The principal scenes of its operation were, at
+first, Flanders, the Upper Rhine, and North Italy. Marlborough
+headed the allied troops in Flanders during the first two years
+of the war, and took some towns from the enemy, but nothing
+decisive occurred. Nor did any actions of importance take place
+during this period, between the rival armies in Italy. But in
+the centre of that line from north to south, from the mouth of
+the Scheldt to the mouth of the Po, along which the war was
+carried on, the generals of Louis XIV. acquired advantages in
+1703, which threatened one chief member of the Grand Alliance
+with utter destruction. France had obtained the important
+assistance of Bavaria, as her confederate in the war. The
+Elector of this powerful German state made himself master of the
+strong fortress of Ulm, and opened a communication with the
+French armies on the Upper Rhine. By this junction, the troops
+of Louis were enabled to assail the Emperor in the very heart of
+Germany. In the autumn of the year 1703, the combined armies of
+the Elector and French king completely defeated the Imperialists
+in Bavaria; and in the following winter they made themselves
+masters of the important cities of Augsburg and Passau.
+Meanwhile the French army of the Upper Rhine and Moselle had
+beaten the allied armies opposed to them, and taken Treves and
+Landau. At the same time the discontents in Hungary with Austria
+again broke out into open insurrection, so as to distract the
+attention, and complete the terror of the Emperor and his council
+at Vienna.
+
+Louis XIV. ordered the next campaign to be commenced by his
+troops on a scale of grandeur and with a boldness of enterprise,
+such as even Napoleon's military schemes have seldom equalled.
+On the extreme left of the line of the war, in the Netherlands,
+the French armies were to act only on the defensive. The
+fortresses in the hands of the French there, were so many and so
+strong that no serious impression seemed likely to be made by the
+Allies on the French frontier in that quarter during one
+campaign; and that one campaign was to give France such triumphs
+elsewhere as would (it was hoped) determine the war. Large
+detachments were, therefore, to be made from the French force in
+Flanders, and they were to be led by Marshal Villeroy to the
+Moselle and Upper Rhine. The French army already in the
+neighbourhood of those rivers was to march under Marshal Tallard
+through the Black Forest, and join the Elector of Bavaria and the
+French troops that were already with the Elector under Marshal
+Marsin. Meanwhile the French army of Italy was to advance
+through the Tyrol into Austria, and the whole forces were to
+combine between the Danube and the Inn. A strong body of troops
+was to be despatched into Hungary, to assist and organize the
+insurgents in that kingdom; and the French grand army of the
+Danube was then, in collected and irresistible might, to march
+upon Vienna, and dictate terms of peace to the Emperor. High
+military genius was shown in the formation of this plan, but it
+was met and baffled by a genius higher still.
+
+Marlborough had watched, with the deepest anxiety, the progress
+of the French arms on the Rhine and in Bavaria, and he saw the
+futility of carrying on a war of posts and sieges in Flanders,
+while death-blows to the empire were being dealt on the Danube.
+He resolved therefore to let the war in Flanders languish for a
+year, while he moved with all the disposable forces that he could
+collect to the central scenes of decisive operations. Such a
+march was in itself difficult, but Marlborough had, in the first
+instance, to overcome the still greater difficulty of obtaining
+the consent and cheerful co-operation of the Allies, especially
+of the Dutch, whose frontier it was proposed thus to deprive of
+the larger part of the force which had hitherto been its
+protection. Fortunately, among the many slothful, the many
+foolish, the many timid, and the not few treacherous rulers,
+statesmen, and generals of different nations with whom he had to
+deal, there were two men, eminent both in ability and integrity,
+who entered fully into Marlborough's projects, and who, from the
+stations which they occupied, were enabled materially to forward
+them. One of these was the Dutch statesman Heinsius, who had
+been the cordial supporter of King William, and who now, with
+equal zeal and good faith, supported Marlborough in the councils
+of the Allies; the other was the celebrated general Prince
+Eugene, whom the Austrian cabinet had recalled from the Italian
+frontier, to take the command of one of the Emperor's armies in
+Germany. To these two great men, and a few more, Marlborough
+communicated his plan freely and unreservedly; but to the general
+councils of his allies he only disclosed part, of his daring
+scheme. He proposed to the Dutch that he should march from
+Flanders to the Upper Rhine and Moselle, with the British troops
+and part of the Foreign auxiliaries, and commence vigorous
+operations against the French armies in that quarter, whilst
+General Auverquerque, with the Dutch and the remainder of the
+auxiliaries, maintained a defensive war in the Netherlands.
+Having with difficulty obtained the consent of the Dutch to this
+portion of his project, he exercised the same diplomatic zeal,
+with the same success, in urging the King of Prussia, and other
+princes of the empire, to increase the number of the troops which
+they supplied, and to post them in places convenient for his own
+intended movements.
+
+Marlborough commenced his celebrated march on the 19th of May.
+The army, which he was to lead, had been assembled by his
+brother, General Churchill, at Bedburg, not far from Maestricht
+on the Meuse: it included sixteen thousand English troops, and
+consisted of fifty-one battalions of foot, and ninety-two
+squadrons of horse. Marlborough was to collect and join with him
+on his march the troops of Prussia, Luneburg, and Hesse,
+quartered on the Rhine, and eleven Dutch battalions that were
+stationed at Rothweil. [Coxe's Life of Marlborough.] He had
+only marched a single day, when the series of interruptions,
+complaints, and requisitions from the other leaders of the Allies
+began, to which he seemed doomed throughout his enterprise, and
+which would have caused its failure in the hands of any one not
+gifted with the firmness and the exquisite temper of Marlborough.
+One specimen of these annoyances and of Marlborough's mode of
+dealing with them may suffice. On his encamping at Kupen, on the
+20th, he received an express from Auverquerque pressing him to
+halt, because Villeroy, who commanded the French army in
+Flanders, had quitted the lines, which he had been occupying, and
+crossed the Meuse at Namur with thirty-six battalions and forty-
+five squadrons, and was threatening the town of Huys. At the
+same time Marlborough received letters from the Margrave of Baden
+and Count Wratislaw, who commanded the Imperialist forces at
+Stollhoffen near the left bank of the Rhine, stating that Tallard
+had made a movement, as if intending to cross the Rhine, and
+urging him to hasten his march towards the lines of Stollhoffen.
+Marlborough was not diverted by these applications from the
+prosecution of his grand design. Conscious that the army of
+Villeroy would be too much reduced to undertake offensive
+operations, by the detachments which had already been made
+towards the Rhine, and those which must follow his own march, he
+halted only a day to quiet the alarms of Auverquerque. To
+satisfy also the margrave he ordered the troops of Hompesch and
+Bulow to draw towards Philipsburg, though with private
+injunctions not to proceed beyond a certain distance. He even
+exacted a promise to the same effect from Count Wratislaw, who at
+this juncture arrived at the camp to attend him during the whole
+campaign. [Coxe.]
+
+Marlborough reached the Rhine at Coblentz, where he crossed that
+river, and then marched along its right bank to Broubach and
+Mentz. His march, though rapid, was admirably conducted, so as
+to save the troops from all unnecessary fatigue; ample supplies
+of provisions were ready, and the most perfect discipline was
+maintained. By degrees Marlborough obtained more reinforcements
+from the Dutch and the other confederates, and he also was left
+more at liberty by them to follow his own course. Indeed, before
+even a blow was struck, his enterprise had paralysed the enemy,
+and had materially relieved Austria from the pressure of the war.
+Villeroy, with his detachments from the French-Flemish army, was
+completely bewildered by Marlborough's movements; and, unable to
+divine where it was that the English general meant to strike his
+blow, wasted away the early part of the summer between Flanders
+and the Moselle without effecting anything. ["Marshal
+Villeroy," says Voltaire, "who had wished to follow Marlborough
+on his first marches, suddenly lost sight of him altogether, and
+only learned where he really was, on hearing of his victory at
+Donauwert."--SIECLE DE LOUIS XIV.]
+
+Marshal Tallard, who commanded forty-five thousand men at
+Strasburg, and who had been destined by Louis to march early in
+the year into Bavaria, thought that Marlborough's march along the
+Rhine was preliminary to an attack upon Alsace; and the marshal
+therefore kept his forty-five thousand men back in order to
+support France in that quarter. Marlborough skilfully encouraged
+his apprehensions by causing a bridge to be constructed across
+the Rhine at Philipsburg, and by making the Landgrave of Hesse
+advance his artillery at Manheim, as if for a siege of Landau.
+Meanwhile the Elector of Bavaria and Marshal Marsin, suspecting
+that Marlborough's design might be what it really proved to be,
+forbore to press upon the Austrians opposed to them, or to send
+troops into Hungary; and they kept back so as to secure their
+communications with France. Thus, when Marlborough, at the
+beginning of June, left the Rhine and marched for the Danube, the
+numerous hostile armies were uncombined, and unable to check him.
+
+"With such skill and science had this enterprise been concerted,
+that at the very moment when it assumed a specific direction, the
+enemy was no longer enabled to render it abortive. As the march
+was now to be bent towards the Danube, notice was given for the
+Prussians, Palatines, and Hessians, who were stationed on the
+Rhine, to order their march so as to join the main body in its
+progress. At the same time directions were sent to accelerate
+the advance of the Danish auxiliaries, who were marching from the
+Netherlands." [Coxe.]
+
+Crossing the river Neckar, Marlborough marched in a south-eastern
+direction to Mundelshene, where he had his first personal
+interview with Prince Eugene, who was destined to be his
+colleague on so many glorious fields. Thence, through a
+difficult and dangerous country, Marlborough continued his march
+against the Bavarians, whom he encountered on the 2d of July, on
+the heights of the Schullenberg near Donauwert. Marlborough
+stormed their entrenched camp, crossed the Danube, took several
+strong places in Bavaria, and made himself completely master of
+the Elector's dominions, except the fortified cities of Munich
+and Augsburg. But the Elector's army, though defeated at
+Donauwert, was still numerous and strong; and at last Marshal
+Tallard, when thoroughly apprised of the real nature of
+Marlborough's movements, crossed the Rhine. He was suffered
+through the supineness of the German general at Stollhoffen, to
+march without loss through the Black Forest, and united his
+powerful army at Biberach near Augsburg, with that of the Elector
+and the French troops under Marshal Marsin, who had previously
+been co-operating with the Bavarians. On the other hand,
+Marlborough re-crossed the Danube, and on the 11th of August
+united his army with the Imperialist forces under Prince Eugene.
+The combined armies occupied a position near Hochstadt, a little
+higher up the left bank of the Danube than Donauwert, the scene
+of Marlborough's recent victory, and almost exactly on the ground
+where Marshal Villars and the Elector had defeated an Austrian
+army in the preceding year. The French marshals and the Elector
+were now in position a little farther to the east, between
+Blenheim and Lutzingen, and with the little stream of the Nebel
+between them and the troops of Marlborough and Eugene. The
+Gallo-Bavarian army consisted of about sixty thousand men, and
+they had sixty-one pieces of artillery. The army of the Allies
+was about fifty-six thousand strong, with fifty-two guns." [A
+short time before the War of the Succession the musquet and
+bayonet had been made the arms of all the French infantry. It
+had formerly been usual to mingle pike-men with musqueteers. The
+other European nations followed the example of France, and the
+weapons used at Blenheim were substantially the same as those
+still employed.]
+
+Although the French army of Italy had been unable to penetrate
+into Austria, and although the masterly strategy of Marlborough
+had hitherto warded off the destruction with which the cause of
+the Allies seemed menaced at the beginning of the campaign, the
+peril was still most serious. It was absolutely necessary for
+Marlborough to attack the enemy, before Villeroy should be roused
+into action. There was nothing to stop that general and his army
+from marching into Franconia, whence the Allies drew their
+principal supplies; and besides thus distressing them, he might,
+by marching on and joining his army to those of Tallard and the
+Elector, form a mass which would overwhelm the force under
+Marlborough and Eugene. On the other hand, the chances of a
+battle seemed perilous, and the fatal consequences of a defeat
+were certain. The inferiority of the Allies in point of number
+was not very great, but still it was not to be disregarded; and
+the advantage which the enemy seemed to have in the composition
+of their troops was striking. Tallard and Marsin had forty-five
+thousand Frenchmen under them, all veterans, and all trained to
+act together: the Elector's own troops also were good soldiers.
+Marlborough, like Wellington at Waterloo, headed an army, of
+which the larger proportion consisted not of English, but of men
+of many different nations, and many different languages. He was
+also obliged to be the assailant in the action, and thus to
+expose his troops to comparatively heavy loss at the commencement
+of the battle, while the enemy would fight under the protection
+of the villages and lines which they were actively engaged in
+strengthening. The consequences of a defeat of the confederated
+army must have broken up the Grand Alliance, and realised the
+proudest hopes of the French king. Mr. Alison, in his admirable
+military history of the Duke of Marlborough, has truly stated the
+effects which would have taken place if France had been
+successful in the war. And, when the position of the
+Confederates at the time when Blenheim was fought is remembered;
+when we recollect the exhaustion of Austria, the menacing
+insurrection of Hungary, the feuds and jealousies of the German
+princes, the strength and activity of the Jacobite party in
+England, the imbecility of nearly all the Dutch statesmen of the
+time, and the weakness of Holland if deprived of her allies, we
+may adopt his words in speculating on what would have ensued, if
+France had been victorious in the battle, and "if a power,
+animated by the ambition, guided by the fanaticism and directed
+by the ability of that of Louis XIV., had gained the ascendancy
+in Europe. Beyond all question, a universal despotic dominion
+would have been established over the bodies, a cruel spiritual
+thraldom over the minds of men. France and Spain united under
+Bourbon princes, and in a close family alliance--the empire of
+Charlemagne with that of Charles V.--the power which revolted the
+edict of Nantes, and perpetrated the massacre of St. Bartholomew,
+with that which banished the Moriscoes, and established the
+Inquisition, would have proved irresistible, and beyond example
+destructive to the best interests of mankind.
+
+"The Protestants might have been driven, like the Pagan heathens
+of old by the son of Pepin, beyond the Elbe; the Stuart race, and
+with them Romish, ascendancy, might have been re-established in
+England; the fire lighted by Latimer and Ridley might have been
+extinguished in blood; and the energy breathed by religious
+freedom into the Anglo-Saxon race might have expired. The
+destinies of the world would have been changed. Europe, instead
+of a variety of independent states, whose mutual, hostility kept
+alive courage, while their national rivalry stimulated talent,
+would have sunk into the slumber attendant on universal dominion.
+The colonial empire of England would have withered away and
+perished, as that of Spain has done in the grasp of the
+Inquisition. The Anglo-Saxon race would have been arrested in
+its mission to overspread the earth and subdue it. The
+centralised despotism of the Roman empire would have been renewed
+on Continental Europe; the chains of Romish tyranny, and with
+them the general infidelity of France before the Revolution,
+would have extinguished or perverted thought in the British
+islands." [Alison's Life of Marlborough, p. 248.]
+
+Marlborough's words at the council of war, when a battle was
+resolved on, are remarkable, and they deserve recording. We know
+them on the authority of his chaplain, Mr. (afterwards Bishop)
+Hare, who accompanied him throughout the campaign, and in whose
+journal the biographers of Marlborough have found many of their
+best materials. Marborough's words to the officers who
+remonstrated with him on the seeming temerity of attacking the
+enemy in their position, were--"I know the danger, yet a battle
+is absolutely necessary; and I rely on the bravery and discipline
+of the troops, which will make amends for our disadvantages." In
+the evening orders were issued for a general engagement, and
+received by the army with an alacrity which justified his
+confidence.
+
+The French and Bavarians were posted behind a little stream
+called the Nebel, which runs almost from north to south into the
+Danube immediately in front of the village of Blenheim. The
+Nebel flows along a little valley, and the French occupied the
+rising ground to the west of it. The village of Blenheim was the
+extreme right of their position, and the village of Lutzingen,
+about three miles north of Blenheim, formed their left. Beyond
+Lutzingen are the rugged high grounds of the Godd Berg, and Eich
+Berg, on the skirts of which some detachments were posted so as
+to secure the Gallo-Bavarian position from being turned on the
+left flank. The Danube protected their right flank; and it was
+only in front that they could be attacked. The villages of
+Blenheim and Lutzingen had been strongly palisadoed and
+entrenched. Marshal Tallard, who held the chief command, took
+his station at Blenheim: Prince Maximilian the Elector, and
+Marshal Marsin commanded on the left. Tallard garrisoned
+Blenheim with twenty-six battalions of French infantry, and
+twelve squadrons of French cavalry. Marsin and the Elector had
+twenty-two battalions of infantry, and thirty-six squadrons of
+cavalry in front of the village of Lutzingen. The centre was
+occupied by fourteen battalions of infantry, including the
+celebrated Irish Brigade. These were posted in the little hamlet
+of Oberglau, which lies somewhat nearer to Lutzingen than to
+Blenheim. Eighty squadrons of cavalry and seven battalions of
+foot were ranged between Oberglau and Blenheim. Thus the French
+position was very strong at each extremity, but was comparatively
+weak in the centre. Tallard seems to have relied on the swampy
+state of the part of the valley that reaches from below Oberglau
+to Blenheim, for preventing any serious attack on this part of
+his line.
+
+The army of the Allies was formed into two great divisions: the
+largest being commanded by the Duke in person, and being destined
+to act against Tallard, while Prince Eugene led the other
+division, which consisted chiefly of cavalry, and was intended to
+oppose the enemy under Marsin and the Elector. As they
+approached the enemy, Marlborough's troops formed the left and
+the centre, while Eugene's formed the right of the entire army.
+Early in the morning of the 13th of August, the Allies left their
+own camp and marched towards the enemy. A thick haze covered the
+ground, and it was not until the allied right and centre had
+advanced nearly within cannon-shot of the enemy that Tallard was
+aware of their approach. He made his preparations with what
+haste he could, and about eight o'clock a heavy fire of artillery
+was opened from the French right on the advancing left wing of
+the British. Marlborough ordered up some of his batteries to
+reply to it, and while the columns that were to form the allied
+left and centre deployed, and took up their proper stations in
+the line, a warm cannonade was kept up by the guns on both sides.
+
+The ground which Eugene's columns had to traverse was peculiarly
+difficult, especially for the passage of the artillery; and it
+was nearly mid-day before he could get his troops into line
+opposite to Lutzingen. During this interval, Marlborough ordered
+divine service to be performed by the chaplains at the head of
+each regiment; and then rode along the lines, and found both
+officers and men in the highest spirits, and waiting impatiently
+for the signal for the the attack. At length an aide-de-camp
+galloped up from the right with the welcome news that Eugene was
+ready. Marlborough instantly sent Lord Cutts, with a strong
+brigade of infantry, to assault the village of Blenheim, while he
+himself led the main body down the eastward slope of the valley
+of the Nebel, and prepared to effect the passage of the stream.
+
+The assault on Blenheim, though bravely made, was repulsed with
+severe loss; and Marlborough, finding how strongly that village
+was garrisoned, desisted from any further attempts to carry it,
+and bent all his energies to breaking the enemy's line between
+Blenheim and Oberglau. Some temporary bridges had been prepared,
+and planks and fascinas had been collected; and by the aid of
+these and a little stone bridge which crossed the Nebel, near a
+hamlet called Unterglau, that lay in the centre of the valley,
+Marlborough succeeded in getting several squadrons across the
+Nebel, though it was divided into several branches, and the
+ground between them was soft, and in places, little better than a
+mere marsh. But the French artillery was not idle. The cannon
+balls plunged incessantly among the advancing squadrons of the
+allies; and bodies of French cavalry rode frequently down from
+the western ridge, to charge them before they had time to form on
+the firm ground. It was only by supporting his men by fresh
+troops, and by bringing up infantry, who checked the advance of
+the enemy's horse by their steady fire, that Marlborough was able
+to save his army in this quarter from a repulse, which, following
+the failure of the attack upon Blenheim, would probably have been
+fatal to the Allies. By degrees, his cavalry struggled over the
+blood-stained streams; the infantry were also now brought across,
+so as to keep in check the French troops who held Blenheim, and
+who, when no longer assailed in front, had begun to attack the
+Allies on their left with considerable effect.
+
+Marlborough had thus at last succeeded in drawing up the whole
+left wing of his army beyond the Nebel, and was about to press
+forward with it, when he was called away to another part of the
+field by a disaster that had befallen his centre. The Prince of
+Holstein-Beck had, with eleven Hanoverian battalions, passed the
+Nebel opposite to Oberglau, when he was charged and utterly
+routed by the Irish brigade which held that village. The Irish
+drove the Hanoverians back with heavy slaughter, broke completely
+through the line of the Allies, and nearly achieved a success as
+brilliant as that which the same brigade afterwards gained at
+Fontenoy. But at Blenheim their ardour in pursuit led them too
+far. Marlborough came up in person, and dashed in upon their
+exposed flank with some squadrons of British cavalry. The Irish
+reeled back, and as they strove to regain the height of Oberglau,
+their column was raked through and through by the fire of three
+battalions of the Allies, which Marlborough had summoned up from
+the reserve. Marlborough having re-established the order and
+communication of the Allies in this quarter, now, as he returned
+to his own left wing, sent to learn how his colleague fared
+against Marsin and the Elector, and to inform Eugene of his own
+success.
+
+Eugene had hitherto not been equally fortunate. He had made
+three attacks on the enemy opposed to him, and had been thrice
+driven back. It was only by his own desperate personal
+exertions, and the remarkable steadiness of the regiments of
+Prussian infantry which were under him, that he was able to save
+his wing from being totally defeated. But it was on the southern
+part of the battle-field, on the ground which Marlborough had won
+beyond the Nebel with such difficulty, that the crisis of the
+battle was to be decided.
+
+Like Hannibal, Marlborough relied principally on his cavalry for
+achieving his decisive successes, and it was by his cavalry that
+Blenheim, the greatest of his victories, was won. The battle had
+lasted till five in the afternoon. Marlborough had now eight
+thousand horseman drawn up in two lines, and in the most perfect
+order for a general attack on the enemy's line along the space
+between Blenheim and Oberglau. The infantry was drawn up in
+battalions in their rear, so as to support them if repulsed, and
+to keep in check the large masses of the French that still
+occupied the village of Blenheim. Tallard now interlaced his
+squadrons of cavalry with battalions of infantry; and Marlborough
+by a corresponding movement, brought several regiments of
+infantry, and some pieces of artillery, to his front line, at
+intervals between the bodies of horse. A little after five,
+Marlborough commenced the decisive movement, and the allied
+cavalry, strengthened and supported by foot and guns, advanced
+slowly from the lower ground near the Nebel up the slope to where
+the French cavalry, ten thousand strong, awaited them. On riding
+over the summit of the acclivity, the Allies were received with
+so hot a fire from the French artillery and small arms, that at
+first the cavalry recoiled, but without abandoning the high
+ground. The guns and the infantry which they had brought with
+them, maintained the contest with spirit and effect. The French
+fire seemed to slacken Marlborough instantly ordered a charge
+along the line. The allied cavalry galloped forward at the
+enemy's squadrons, and the hearts of the French horseman failed
+them. Discharging their carbines at an idle distance, they
+wheeled round and spurred from the field, leaving the nine
+infantry battalions of their comrades to be ridden down by the
+torrent of the allied cavalry. The battle was now won. Tallard
+and Marsin, severed from each other, thought only of retreat.
+Tallard drew up the squadrons of horse which he had left in a
+line extended towards Blenheim, and sent orders to the infantry
+in that village to leave and join him without delay. But long
+ere his orders could be obeyed, the conquering squadrons of
+Marlborough had wheeled to the left and thundered down on the
+feeble army of the French marshal. Part of the force which
+Tallard had drawn up for this last effort was driven into the
+Danube; part fled with their general to the village of
+Sonderheim, where they were soon surrounded by the victorious
+Allies, and compelled to surrender. Meanwhile, Eugene had
+renewed his attack upon the Gallo-Bavarian left, and Marsin,
+finding his colleague utterly routed, and his own right flank
+uncovered, prepared to retreat. He and the Elector succeeded in
+withdrawing a considerable part of their troops in tolerable
+order to Dillingen; but the large body of French who garrisoned
+Blenheim were left exposed to certain destruction. Marlborough
+speedily occupied all the outlets from the village with his
+victorious troops, and then, collecting his artillery round it,
+he commenced a cannonade that speedily would have destroyed
+Blenheim itself and all who were in it. After several gallant
+but unsuccessful attempts to cut their way through the Allies,
+the French in Blenheim were at length compelled to surrender at
+discretion; and twenty-four battalions, and twelve squadrons,
+with all their officers, laid down their arms, and became the
+captives of Marlborough.
+
+"Such," says Voltaire, "was the celebrated battle, which the
+French call the battle of Hochstet, the Germans Plentheim, and
+the English Blenheim, The conquerors had about five thousand
+killed, and eight thousand wounded, the greater part being on the
+side of Prince Eugene. The French army was almost entirely
+destroyed: of sixty thousand men, so long victorious, there
+never reassembled more than twenty thousand effective. About
+twelve thousand killed, fourteen thousand prisoners, all the
+cannon, a prodigious number of colours and standards, all the
+tents and equipages, the general of the army, and one thousand
+two hundred officers of mark, in the power of the conqueror,
+signalised that day!"
+
+Ulm, Landau, Treves, and Traerbach surrendered to the allies
+before the close of the year. Bavaria submitted to the emperor,
+and the Hungarians laid down their arms. Germany was completely
+delivered from France; and the military ascendancy of the arms of
+the Allies was completely established. Throughout the rest of
+the war Louis fought only in defence. Blenheim had dissipated
+for ever his once proud visions of almost universal conquest.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM, 1704, AND THE
+BATTLE OF PULTOWA, 1709.
+
+A.D. 1705. The Archduke Charles lands in Spain with a small
+English army under Lord Peterborough, who takes Barcelona.
+
+1706. Marlborough's victory at Ramilies.
+
+1707. The English army in Spain is defeated at the battle of
+Almanza.
+
+1708. Marlborough's victory at Oudenarde.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, 1709.
+
+"Dread Pultowa's day,
+ When fortune left the royal Swede,
+ Around a slaughtered army lay,
+ No more to combat and to bleed.
+ The power and fortune of the war
+ Had passed to the triumphant Czar."--BYRON.
+
+Napoleon prophesied at St. Helena, that all Europe would soon be
+either Cossack or Republican. Four years ago, the fulfilment of
+the last of these alternatives appeared most probable. But the
+democratic movements of 1848 were sternly repressed in 1849. The
+absolute authority of a single ruler, and the austere stillness
+of martial law, are now paramount in the capitals of the
+continent, which lately owned no sovereignty save the will of the
+multitude; and where that which the democrat calls his sacred
+right of insurrection, was so loudly asserted and so often
+fiercely enforced. Many causes have contributed to bring about
+this reaction, but the most effective and the most permanent have
+been Russian influence and Russian arms. Russia is now the
+avowed and acknowledged champion of Monarchy against Democracy;
+--of constituted authority, however acquired, against revolution
+and change for whatever purpose desired;--of the imperial
+supremacy of strong states over their weaker neighbours against
+all claims for political independence, and all striving for
+separate nationality. She has crushed the heroic Hungarians; and
+Austria, for whom nominally she crushed them, is now one of her
+dependents. Whether the rumours of her being about to engage in
+fresh enterprises be well or ill founded, it is certain that
+recent events must have fearfully augmented the power of the
+Muscovite empire, which, even previously, had been the object of
+well-founded anxiety to all Western Europe.
+
+It was truly stated, twelve years ago, that "the acquisitions
+which Russia has made within the [then] last sixty-four years,
+are equal in extent and importance to the whole empire she had in
+Europe before that time; that the acquisitions she had made from
+Sweden are greater than what remains of that ancient kingdom;
+that her acquisitions from Poland are as large as the whole
+Austrian empire; that the territory she has wrested from Turkey
+in Europe is equal to the dominions of Prussia, exclusive of her
+Rhenish provinces; and that her acquisitions from Turkey in Asia
+are equal in extent to all the smaller states of Germany, the
+Rhenish provinces of Prussia, Belgium, and Holland taken
+together; that the country she has conquered from Persia is about
+the size of England; that her acquisitions in Tartary have an
+area equal to Turkey in Europe, Greece, Italy, and Spain. In
+sixty-four years she has advanced her frontier eight hundred and
+fifty miles towards Vienna, Berlin, Dresden, Munich, and Paris;
+she has approached four hundred and fifty miles nearer to
+Constantinople; she has possessed herself of the capital of
+Poland, and has advanced to within a few miles of the capital of
+Sweden, from which, when Peter the Great mounted the throne, her
+frontier was distant three hundred miles. Since that time she
+has stretched herself forward about one thousand miles towards
+India, and the same distance towards the capital of Persia."
+[Progress of Russia in the East. p. 142.]
+
+Such, at that period, had been the recent aggrandisement of
+Russia; and the events of the last few years, by weakening and
+disuniting all her European neighbours, have immeasurably
+augmented the relative superiority of the Muscovite empire over
+all the other continental powers.
+
+With a population exceeding sixty millions, all implicitly
+obeying the impulse of a single ruling mind; with a territorial
+area of six millions and a half of square miles; with a standing
+army eight hundred thousand strong; with powerful fleets on the
+Baltic and Black Seas; with a skilful host of diplomatic agents
+planted in every court, and among every tribe; with the
+confidence which unexpected success creates, and the sagacity
+which long experience fosters, Russia now grasps with an armed
+right hand the tangled thread of European politics, and issues
+her mandate as the arbitress of the movements of the age. Yet a
+century and a half have hardly elapsed since she was first
+recognised as a member of the drama of modern European history--
+previously to the battle of Pultowa, Russia played no part.
+Charles V. and his great rival our Elizabeth and her adversary
+Philip of Spain, the Guises, Sully, Richelieu, Cromwell, De Witt,
+William of Orange, and the other leading spirits of the sixteenth
+and seventeenth centuries, thought no more about the Muscovite
+Czar than we now think about the King of Timbuctoo. Even as late
+as 1735, Lord Bollingbroke, in his admirable "Letters on
+History," speaks of the history of the Muscovites, as having no
+relation to the knowledge which a practical English statesman
+ought to acquire. [Bolingbroke's Works, vol ii. p. 374. In the
+same page he observes how Sweden had often turned her arms
+southwards with prodigious effect.] It may be doubted whether a
+cabinet council often takes place now in our Foreign Office,
+without Russia being uppermost in every English statesman's
+thoughts.
+
+But though Russia remained thus long unheeded amid her snows,
+there was a northern power, the influence of which was
+acknowledged in the principal European quarrels, and whose good
+will was sedulously courted by many of the boldest chiefs and
+ablest councillors of the leading states. This was Sweden;
+Sweden, on whose ruins Russia has risen; but whose ascendancy
+over her semi-barbarous neighbours was complete, until the fatal
+battle that now forms our subject.
+
+As early as 1542 France had sought the alliance of Sweden to aid
+her in her struggle against Charles V. And the name of Gustavus
+Adolphus is of itself sufficient to remind us, that in the great
+contest for religious liberty, of which Germany was for thirty
+years the arena, it was Sweden that rescued the falling cause of
+Protestantism; and it was Sweden that principally dictated the
+remodelling of the European state system at the peace of
+Westphalia.
+
+From the proud pre-eminence in which the valour of the "Lion of
+the North" and of Torstenston, Bannier, Wrangel and the other
+Generals of Gustavus, guided by the wisdom of Oxenstiern, had
+placed Sweden, the defeat of Charles XII. at Pultowa hurled her
+down at once and for ever. Her efforts during the wars of the
+French revolution to assume a leading part in European politics,
+met with instant discomfiture, and almost provoked derision. But
+the Sweden, whose sceptre was bequeathed to Christina, and whose
+alliance Cromwell valued so highly, was a different power from
+the Sweden of the present day. Finland, Ingria, Livonia,
+Esthonia, Carelia, and other districts east of the Baltic, then
+were Swedish provinces; and the possession of Pomerania, Rugen,
+and Bremen, made her an important member of the Germanic empire.
+These territories are now all reft from her; and the most
+valuable of them form the staple of her victorious rival's
+strength. Could she resume them, could the Sweden of 1648 be
+reconstructed, we should have a first-class Scandinavian State in
+the North, well qualified to maintain the balance of power, and
+check the progress of Russia; whose power, indeed, never could
+have become formidable to Europe, save by Sweden becoming weak.
+
+The decisive triumph of Russia over Sweden at Pultowa was
+therefore all-important to the world, on account of what it
+overthrew as well as for what it established; and it is the more
+deeply interesting because it was not merely the crisis of a
+struggle between two states, but it was a trial of strength
+between two great races of mankind. We must bear in mind, that
+while the Swedes, like the English, the Dutch, and others, belong
+to the Germanic race, the Russians are a Sclavonic people.
+Nations of Sclavonian origin have long occupied the greater part
+of Europe eastward of the Vistula, and the populations also of
+Bohemia, Croatia, Servia, Dalmatia, and other important regions
+westward of that river, are Sclavonic. In the long and varied
+conflicts between them and the Germanic nations that adjoin them,
+the Germanic race had, before Pultowa, almost always maintained a
+superiority. With the single but important exception of Poland,
+no Sclavonic state had made any considerable figure in history
+before the time when Peter the Great won his great victory over
+the Swedish king. [The Hussite wars may, perhaps, entitle
+Bohemia to be distinguished.] What Russia has done since that
+time we know and we feel. And some of the wisest and best men of
+our own age and nation, who have watched with deepest care the
+annals and the destinies of humanity, have believed that the
+Sclavonic element in the population of Europe has as yet only
+partially developed its powers: that, while other races of
+mankind (our own, the Germanic, included) have exhausted their
+creative energies, and completed their allotted achievements, the
+Sclavonic race has yet a great career to run: and, that the
+narrative of Sclavonic ascendancy is the remaining page that;
+will conclude the history of the world. [See Arnold's Lectures
+on Modern History, pp. 36-39.]
+
+Let it not be supposed that in thus regarding the primary triumph
+of Russia over Sweden as a victory of the Sclavonic over the
+Germanic race, we are dealing with matters of mere ethnological
+pedantry, or with themes of mere speculative curiosity. The fact
+that Russia is a Sclavonic empire, is a fact of immense practical
+influence at the present moment. Half the inhabitants of the
+Austrian empire are Sclavonian. The population of the larger
+part of Turkey in Europe is of the same race. Silesia, Posen,
+and other parts of the Prussian dominions are principally
+Sclavonic. And during late years an enthusiastic zeal for
+blending all Sclavonians into one great united Sclavonic empire,
+has been growing up in these countries, which, however we may
+deride its principle, is not the less real and active, and of
+which Russia, as the head and champion of the Sclavonic race,
+knows well how to take her advantage.
+
+["The idea of Panslavism had a purely literary origin. It was
+started by Pollar, a Protestant clergyman of the Sclavonic
+congregation at Pesth, in Hungary, who wished to establish a
+national literature, by circulating all works, written in the
+various Sclavonic dialects, through every country where any of
+them are spoken. He suggested, that all the Slavonic literati
+should become acguainted with the sister dialects, so that a
+Bohemian, or other work, might be read on the shores of the
+Adriatic, as well as on the banks of the Volga, or any other
+place where a Sclavonic language was spoken; by which means an
+extensive literature might be created, tending to advance
+knowledge in all Sclavonic countries; and he supported his
+arguments by observing, that the dialects of ancient Greece
+differed from each other, like those of his own language, and yet
+that they formed only one Hellenic literature. The idea of an
+intellectual union of all those nations naturally led to that of
+a political one; and the Sclavonians, seeing that their numbers
+amounted to about one-third part of the whole population of
+Europe, and occupied more than half its territory, began to be
+sensible that they might claim for themselves a position, to
+which they had not hitherto aspired.
+
+"The opinion gained ground; and the question now is, whether the
+Slavonians can form a nation independent of Russia; or whether
+they ought to rest satisfied in being part of one great race,
+with the most powerful member of it as their chief. The latter,
+indeed, is gaining ground amongst them; and some Poles are
+disposed to attribute their sufferings to the arbitrary will of
+the Czar, without extending the blame to the Russians themselves.
+These begin to think that, if they cannot exist as Poles, the
+best thing to be done is to rest satisfied with a position in the
+Sclavonic empire, and they hope that, when once they give up the
+idea of restoring their country, Russia may grant some
+concessions to their separate nationality.
+
+"The same idea has been put forward by writers in the Russian
+interest; great efforts are making among other Sclavonic people,
+to induce them to look upon Russia as their future head; and she
+has already gained considerable influence over the Sclavonic
+populations of Turkey.--WILKINSON'S DALMATIA.]
+
+It is a singular fact that Russia owes her very name to a band of
+Swedish invaders who conquered her a thousand years ago. They
+were soon absorbed in the Sclavonic population, and every trace
+of the Swedish character had disappeared in Russia for many
+centuries before her invasion by Charles XII. She was long the
+victim and the slave of the Tartars; and for many considerable
+periods of years the Poles held her in subjugation. Indeed, if
+we except the expeditions of some of the early Russian chiefs
+against Byzantium, and the reign of Ivan Vasilovitch, the history
+of Russia before the time of Peter the Great is one long tale of
+suffering and degradation.
+
+But whatever may have been the amount of national injuries that
+she sustained from Swede, from Tartar, or from Pole in the ages
+of her weakness, she has certainly retaliated ten-fold during the
+century and a half of her strength. Her rapid transition at the
+commencement of that period from being the prey of every
+conqueror to being the conqueror of all with whom she comes into
+contact, to being the oppressor instead of the oppressed, is
+almost without a parallel in the history of nations. It was the
+work of a single ruler; who, himself without education, promoted
+science and literature among barbaric millions; who gave them
+fleets, commerce, arts, and arms; who, at Pultowa, taught them to
+face and beat the previously invincible Swedes: and who made
+stubborn valour, and implicit subordination, from that time forth
+the distinguishing characteristics of the Russian soldiery, which
+had before his time been a mere disorderly and irresolute rabble.
+
+The career of Philip of Macedon resembles most nearly that of the
+great Muscovite Czar: but there is this important difference,
+that Philip had, while young, received in Southern Greece the
+best education in all matters of peace and war that the ablest
+philosophers and generals of the age could bestow. Peter was
+brought up among barbarians, and in barbaric ignorance. He
+strove to remedy this when a grown man, by leaving all the
+temptations to idleness and sensuality, which his court offered,
+and by seeking instruction abroad. He laboured with his own
+hands as a common artisan in Holland and in England, that he
+might return and teach his subjects how ships, commerce, and
+civilization could be acquired. There is a degree of heroism
+here superior to anything that we know of in the Macedonian king.
+But Philip's consolidation of the long disunited Macedonian
+empire,--his raising a people which he found the scorn of their
+civilized southern neighbours, to be their dread,--his
+organization of a brave and well-disciplined army, instead of a
+disorderly militia,--his creation of a maritime force, and his
+systematic skill in acquiring and improving sea-ports and
+arsenals,--his patient tenacity of purpose under reverses,--his
+personal bravery,--and even his proneness to coarse amusements
+and pleasures,--all mark him out as the prototype of the imperial
+founder of the Russian power. In justice, however, to the
+ancient hero, it ought to be added, that we find in the history
+of Philip no examples of that savage cruelty which deforms so
+grievously the character of Peter the Great.
+
+In considering the effects of the overthrow which the Swedish
+arms sustained at Pultowa, and in speculating on the probable
+consequences that would have followed if the invaders had been
+successful we must not only bear in mind the wretched state In
+which Peter found Russia at his accession, compared with her
+present grandeur, but we must also keep in view the fact, that,
+at the time when Pultowa was fought, his reforms were yet
+incomplete, and his new institutions immature. He had broken up
+the old Russia; and the New Russia, which he ultimately created,
+was still in embryo. Had he been crushed at Pultowa, his mighty
+schemes would have been buried with him; and (to use the words of
+Voltaire) "the most extensive empire in the world would have
+relapsed into the chaos from which it had been so lately taken."
+It is this fact that makes the repulse of Charles XII. the
+critical point in the fortunes of Russia. The danger which she
+incurred a century afterwards from her invasion by Napoleon was
+in reality far less than her peril when Charles attacked her;
+though the French Emperor, as a military genius, was infinitely
+superior to the Swedish King, and led a host against her,
+compared with which the armies of Charles seem almost
+insignificant. But, as Fouche well warned his imperial master,
+when he vainly endeavoured to dissuade him from his disastrous
+expedition against the empire of the Czars, the difference
+between the Russia of 1812 and the Russia of 1709 was greater,
+than the disparity between the power of Charles and the might of
+Napoleon. "If that heroic king," said Fouche, "had not, like
+your imperial Majesty, half Europe in arms to back him, neither
+had his opponent, the Czar Peter, 400,000 soldiers, and 60,000
+Cossacks." The historians, who describe the state of the
+Muscovite empire when revolutionary and imperial France
+encountered it, narrate with truth and justice, how "at the epoch
+of the French Revolution this immense empire, comprehending
+nearly half of Europe and Asia within its dominions, inhabited by
+a patient and indomitable race, ever ready to exchange the luxury
+and adventure of the south for the hardships and monotony of the
+north, was daily becoming more formidable to the liberties of
+Europe. The Russian infantry had then long been celebrated for
+its immoveable firmness. Her immense population, amounting then
+in Europe alone to nearly thirty-five millions, afforded an
+inexhaustible supply of men. Her soldiers, inured to heat and
+cold from their infancy, and actuated by a blind devotion to
+their Czar, united the steady valour of the English to the
+impetuous energy of the French troops." [Alison.] So, also, we
+read how the haughty aggressions of Bonaparte "went to excite a
+national feeling, from the banks of the Borysthenes to the wall
+of China, and to unite against him the wild and uncivilized
+inhabitants of an extended empire, possessed by a love to their
+religion, their government, and their country, and having a
+character of stern devotion, which he was incapable of
+estimating." [Scott's Life of Napoleon] But the Russia of 1709
+had no such forces to oppose to an assailant. Her whole
+population then was below sixteen millions; and, what is far more
+important, this population had neither acquired military spirit,
+nor strong nationality; nor was it united in loyal attachment to
+its ruler.
+
+Peter had wisely abolished the old regular troops of the empire,
+the Strelitzes; but the forces which he had raised in their stead
+on a new and foreign plan, and principally officered with
+foreigners, had, before the Swedish invasion, given no proof that
+they could be relied on. In numerous encounters with the Swedes,
+Peter's soldiery had run like sheep before inferior numbers.
+Great discontent, also, had been excited among all classes of the
+community by the arbitrary changes which their great emperor
+introduced, many of which clashed with the most cherished
+national prejudices of his subjects. A career of victory and
+prosperity had not yet raised Peter above the reach of that
+disaffection, nor had superstitious obedience to the Czar yet
+become the characteristic of the Muscovite mind. The victorious
+occupation of Moscow by Charles XII. would have quelled the
+Russian nation as effectually, as had been the case when Batou
+Khan, and other ancient invaders, captured the capital of
+primitive Muscovy. How little such a triumph could effect
+towards subduing modern Russia, the fate of Napoleon demonstrated
+at once and for ever.
+
+The character of Charles XII. has been a favourite theme with
+historians, moralists, philosophers, and poets. But it is his
+military conduct during the campaign in Russia that alone
+requires comment here. Napoleon, in the memoirs dictated by him
+at St. Helena, has given us a systematic criticism on that, among
+other celebrated campaigns, his own Russian campaign included.
+He labours hard to prove that he himself observed all the true
+principles of offensive war: and probably his censures of
+Charles's generalship were rather highly coloured, for the sake
+of making his own military skill stand out in more favourable
+relief. Yet, after making all allowances, we must admit the
+force of Napoleon's strictures on Charles's tactics, and own that
+his judgment, though severe, is correct, when he pronounces that
+the Swedish king, unlike his great predecessor Gustavus, knew
+nothing of the art of war, and was nothing more than a brave and
+intrepid soldier. Such, however, was not the light in which
+Charles was regarded by his contemporaries at the commencement of
+his Russian expedition. His numerous victories, his daring and
+resolute spirit, combined with the ancient renown of the Swedish
+arms, then filled all Europe with admiration and anxiety. As
+Johnson expresses it, his name was then one at which the world
+grew pale. Even Louis le Grand earnestly solicited his
+assistance; and our own Marlborough, then in the full career of
+his victories, was specially sent by the English court to the
+camp of Charles, to propitiate the hero of the north in favour of
+the cause of the allies and to prevent the Swedish sword from
+being flung into the scale in the French king's favour. But
+Charles at that time was solely bent on dethroning the sovereign
+of Russia, as he had already dethroned the sovereign of Poland,
+and all Europe fully believed that he would entirely crush the
+Czar, and dictate conditions of peace in the Kremlin. [Voltaire
+attests, from personal inspection of the letters of several
+public ministers to their respective courts, that such was the
+general expectation.] Charles himself looked on success as a
+matter of certainty; and the romantic extravagance of his views
+was continually increasing. "One year, he thought, would suffice
+for the conquest of Russia. The court of Rome was next to feel
+his vengeance, as the pope had dared to oppose the concession of
+religious liberty to the Silesian Protestants. No enterprise at
+that time appeared impossible to him. He had even dispatched
+several officers privately into Asia and Egypt, to take plans of
+the towns, and examine into the strength and resources of those
+countries." [Crighton's Scandinavia.]
+
+Napoleon thus epitomises the earlier operations of Charles's
+invasion of Russia:--
+"That prince set out from his camp at Aldstadt, near Leipsic, in
+September 1707, at the head of 46,000 men, and traversed Poland;
+20,000 men, under Count Lewenhaupt, disembarked at Riga; and
+15,000 were in Finland. He was therefore in a condition to have
+brought together 80,000 of the best troops in the world. He left
+10,000 men at Warsaw to guard King Stanislaus, and in January
+1708, arrived at Grodno, where he wintered. In June he crossed
+the forest of Minsk, and presented himself before Borisov; forced
+the Russian army, which occupied the left bank of the Beresina;
+defeated 20,000 Russians who were strongly entrenched behind
+marshes; passed the Borysthenes at Mohiloev, and vanquished a
+corps of 16,000 Muscovites near Smolensko, on the 22d of
+September. He was now advanced to the confines of Lithuania, and
+was about to enter Russia Proper: the Czar, alarmed at his
+approach, made him proposals of peace. Up to this time all his
+movements mere conformable to rule, and his communications were
+well secured. He was master of Poland and Riga, and only ten
+days' march distant from Moscow: and it is probable that he
+would have reached that capital, had he not quitted the high road
+thither, and directed his steps towards the Ukraine, in order to
+form a junction with Mazeppa, who brought him only 6,000 men. By
+this movement his line of operations, beginning at Sweden,
+exposed his flank to Russia for a distance of four hundred
+leagues, and he was unable to protect it, or to receive either
+reinforcements or assistance."
+
+Napoleon severely censures this neglect of one of the great rules
+of war. He points out that Charles had not organized his war
+like Hannibal, on the principle of relinquishing all
+communications with home, keeping all his forces concentrated,
+and creating a base of operations in the conquered country. Such
+had been the bold system of the Carthaginian general; but Charles
+acted on no such principle, inasmuch as he caused Lewenhaupt, one
+of his generals who commanded a considerable detachment, and
+escorted a most important convoy, to follow him at a distance of
+twelve days' march. By this dislocation of his forces he exposed
+Lewenhaupt to be overwhelmed separately by the full force of the
+enemy, and deprived the troops under his own command of the aid
+which that general's men and stores might have afforded, at the
+very crisis of the campaign.
+
+The Czar had collected an army of about a hundred thousand
+effective men; and though the Swedes, in the beginning of the
+invasion, were successful in every encounter, the Russian troops
+were gradually acquiring discipline; and Peter and his officers
+were learning generalship from their victors, as the Thebans of
+old learned it from the Spartans. When Lewenhaupt, in the
+October of 1708, was striving to join Charles in the Ukraine, the
+Czar suddenly attacked him near the Borysthenes with an
+overwhelming force of fifty thousand Russians. Lewenhaupt fought
+bravely for three days, and succeeded in cutting his way through
+the enemy, with about four thousand of his men, to where Charles
+awaited him near the river Desna; but upwards of eight thousand
+Swedes fell in these battles; Lewenhaupt's cannon and ammunition
+were abandoned; and the whole of his important convoy of
+provisions, on which Charles and his half-starved troops were
+relying, fell into the enemy's hands. Charles was compelled to
+remain in the Ukraine during the winter; but in the spring of
+1709 he moved forward towards Moscow, and invested the fortified
+town of Pultowa, on the river Vorskla, a place where the Czar had
+stored up large supplies of provisions and military stores, and
+which commanded the roads leading towards Moscow. The possession
+of this place would have given Charles the means of supplying all
+the wants of his suffering army, and would also have furnished
+him with a secure base of operations for his advance against the
+Muscovite capital. The siege was therefore hotly pressed by the
+Swedes; the garrison resisted obstinately; and the Czar, feeling
+the importance of saving the town, advanced in June to its
+relief, at the head of an army from fifty to sixty thousand
+strong.
+
+Both sovereigns now prepared for the general action, which each
+perceived to be inevitable, and which each felt would be decisive
+of his own and of his country's destiny. The Czar, by some
+masterly manoeuvres, crossed the Vorskla, and posted his army on
+the same side of that river with the besiegers, but a little
+higher up. The Vorskla falls into the Borysthenes about fifteen
+leagues below Pultowa, and the Czar arranged his forces in two
+lines, stretching from one river towards the other; so that if
+the Swedes attacked him and were repulsed, they would be driven
+backwards into the acute angle formed by the two streams at their
+junction. He fortified these lines with several redoubts, lined
+with heavy artillery; and his troops, both horse and foot, were
+in the best possible condition, and amply provided with stores
+and ammunition. Charles's forces were about twenty-four thousand
+strong. But not more than half of these were Swedes; so much had
+battle, famine, fatigue, and the deadly frosts of Russia, thinned
+the gallant bands which the Swedish king and Lewenhaupt had led
+to the Ukraine. The other twelve thousand men under Charles were
+Cossacks and Wallachians, who had joined him in that country. On
+hearing that the Czar was about to attack him, he deemed that his
+dignity required that he himself should be the assailant; and
+leading his army out of their entrenched lines before the town,
+he advanced with them against the Russian redoubts.
+
+He had been severely wounded in the foot in a skirmish a few days
+before; and was borne in a litter along the ranks, into the thick
+of the fight. Notwithstanding the fearful disparity of numbers
+and disadvantage of position, the Swedes never showed their
+ancient valour more nobly than on that dreadful day. Nor do
+their Cossack and Wallachian allies seem to have been unworthy of
+fighting side by side with Charles's veterans. Two of the
+Russian redoubts were actually entered, and the Swedish infantry
+began to raise the cry of victory. But on the other side,
+neither general nor soldiers flinched in their duty. The Russian
+cannonade and musketry were kept up; fresh masses of defenders
+were poured into the fortifications, and at length the exhausted
+remnants of the Swedish columns recoiled from the blood-stained
+redoubts. Then the Czar led the infantry and cavalry of his
+first line outside the works, drew them up steadily and
+skilfully, and the action was renewed along the whole fronts of
+the two armies on the open ground. Each sovereign exposed his
+life freely in the world-winning battle; and on each side the
+troops fought obstinately and eagerly under their ruler's eye.
+It was not till two hours from the commencement of the action
+that, overpowered by numbers, the hitherto invincible Swedes gave
+way. All was then hopeless disorder and irreparable rout.
+Driven downward to where the rivers join, the fugitive Swedes
+surrendered to their victorious pursuers, or perished in the
+waters of the Borysthenes. Only a few hundreds swam that river
+with their king and the Cossack Mazeppa, and escaped into the
+Turkish territory. Nearly ten thousand lay killed and wounded in
+the redoubts and on the field of battle.
+
+In the joy of his heart the Czar exclaimed, when the strife was
+over, "That the son of the morning had fallen from heaven; and
+that the foundations of St. Petersburg at length stood firm."
+Even on that battle-field, near the Ukraine, the Russian
+emperor's first thoughts were of conquests and aggrandisement on
+the Baltic. The peace of Nystadt, which transferred the fairest
+provinces of Sweden to Russia, ratified the judgment of battle
+which was pronounced at Pultowa. Attacks on Turkey and Persia by
+Russia commenced almost directly after that victory. And though
+the Czar failed in his first attempts against the Sultan, the
+successors of Peter have, one and all, carried on an uniformly
+aggressive and uniformly successful system of policy against
+Turkey, and against every other state, Asiatic as well as
+European, which has had the misfortune of having Russia for a
+neighbour.
+
+Orators and authors, who have discussed the progress of Russia,
+have often alluded to the similitude between the modern extension
+of the Muscovite empire and the extension of the Roman dominions
+in ancient times. But attention has scarcely been drawn to the
+closeness of the parallel between conquering Russia and
+conquering Rome, not only in the extent of conquests, but in the
+means of effecting conquest. The history of Rome during the
+century and a half which followed the close of the second Punic
+war, and during which her largest acquisitions of territory were
+made, should be minutely compared with the history of Russia for
+the last one hundred and fifty years. The main points of
+similitude can only be indicated in these pages; but they deserve
+the fullest consideration. Above all, the sixth chapter of
+Montesquieu's great Treatise on Rome, the chapter "DE LA CONDUITE
+QUE LES ROMAINS TINRENT POUR SOUMETTRE LES PEUPLES," should be
+carefully studied by every one who watches the career and policy
+of Russia. The classic scholar will remember the state-craft of
+the Roman Senate, which took care in every foreign war to appear
+in the character of a PROTECTOR. Thus Rome PROTECTED the
+AEtolians, and the Greek cities, against Macedon; she PROTECTED
+Bithynia, and other small Asiatic states, against the Syrian
+kings; she protected Numidia against Carthage; and in numerous
+other instances assumed the same specious character. But, "Woe
+to the people whose liberty depends on the continued forbearance
+of an over-mighty protector." [Malkin's History of Greece.]
+Every state which Rome protected was ultimately subjugated and
+absorbed by her. And Russia has been the protector of Poland,
+the protector of the Crimea,--the protector of Courland,--the
+protector of Georgia, Immeritia, Mingrelia, the Tcherkessian and
+Caucasian tribes. She has first protected, and then appropriated
+them all. She protects Moldavia and Wallachia. A few years ago
+she became the protector of Turkey from Mehemet Ali; and since
+the summer of 1849 she has made herself the protector of Austria.
+
+When the partisans of Russia speak of the disinterestedness with
+which she withdrew her protecting troops from Constantinople, and
+from Hungary, let us here also mark the ominous exactness of the
+parallel between her and Rome. While the ancient world yet
+contained a number of independent states, which might have made a
+formidable league against Rome if she had alarmed them by openly
+avowing her ambitious schemes, Rome's favourite policy was
+seeming disinterestedness and moderation. After her first war
+against Philip, after that against Antiochus, and many others,
+victorious Rome promptly withdrew her troops from the territories
+which they occupied. She affected to employ her arms only for
+the good of others; but, when the favourable moment came, she
+always found a pretext for marching her legions back into each
+coveted district, and making it a Roman province. Fear, not
+moderation, is the only effective check on the ambition of such
+powers as Ancient Rome and Modern Russia. The amount of that
+fear depends on the amount of timely vigilance and energy which
+other states choose to employ against the common enemy of their
+freedom and national independence.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS FROM THE BATTLE OF PULTOWA, 1709, AND THE
+DEFEAT OF BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA, 1777.
+
+A.D. 1713. Treaty of Utrecht. Philip is left by it in
+possession of the throne of Spain. But Naples, Milan, the
+Spanish territories on the Tuscan coast, the Spanish Netherlands,
+and some parts of the French Netherlands, are given to Austria.
+France cedes to England Hudson's Bay and Straits, the Island of
+St. Christopher, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland in America, Spain
+cedes to England Gibraltar and Minorca, which the English had
+taken during the war. The King of Prussia and the Duke of Savoy
+both obtain considerable additions of territory to their
+dominions.
+
+1714. Death of Queen Anne. The House of Hanover begins to reign
+in England. A rebellion in favour of the Stuarts is put down.
+Death of Louis XIV.
+
+1718. Charles XII. killed at the siege of Frederickshall.
+
+1725. Death of Peter the Great of Russia.
+
+1740. Frederick II, King of Prussia, begins his reign. He
+attacks the Austrian dominions, and conquers Silesia.
+
+1742. War between France and England.
+
+1743. Victory of the English at Dettingen.
+
+1745. Victory of the French at Fontenoy. Rebellion in Scotland
+in favour of the House of Stuart: finally quelled by the battle
+of Culloden in the next year.
+
+1748. Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle.
+
+1756-1763. The Seven Years' War, during which Prussia makes an
+heroic resistance against the allies of Austria, Russia, and
+France. England, under the administration of the elder Pitt
+(afterwards Lord Chatham), takes a glorious part in the war in
+opposition to France and Spain. Wolfe wins the battle of Quebec,
+and the English conquer Canada, Cape Breton, and St. John. Clive
+begins his career of conquest in India. Cuba, is taken by the
+English from Spain.
+
+1763. Treaty of Paris: which leaves the power of Prussia
+increased, and its military reputation greatly exalted.
+
+"France, by the treaty of Paris, ceded to England Canada, and the
+island of Cape Breton, with the islands and coasts of the gulf
+and river of St. Lawrence. The boundaries between the two
+nations in North America were fixed by a line drawn along the
+middle of the Mississippi, from its source to its mouth. All on
+the left or eastern bank of that river, was given up to England,
+except the city of New Orleans, which was reserved to France; as
+was also the liberty of the fisheries on a part of the coasts of
+Newfoundland and the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The islands of St.
+Peter and Miquelon were given them as a shelter for their
+fishermen, but without permission to raise fortifications. The
+islands of Martinico, Guadaloupe, Mariegalante, Desirada, and St.
+Lucia, were surrendered to France; while Grenada, the Grenadines,
+St. Vincent, Dominica, and Tobago, were ceded to England. This
+latter power retained her conquests on the Senegal, and restored
+to France the island of Gores, on-the coast of Africa. France
+was put in possession of the forts and factories which belonged
+to her in the East Indies, on the coasts of Coromandel, Orissa,
+Malabar, and Bengal under the restriction of keeping up no
+military force in Bengal.
+
+"In Europe, France restored all the conquests she had made in
+Germany; as also the island, of Minorca, England gave up to her
+Belleisle, on the coast of Brittany; while Dunkirk was kept in
+the same condition as had been determined by the peace of Aix-la-
+Chapelle. The island of Cuba, with the Havannah, were restored
+to the King of Spain, who, on his part, ceded to England Florida,
+with Port-Augustine and the Bay of Pensacola. The King of
+Portugal was restored to the same state in which he had been
+before the war. The colony of St. Sacrament in America, which
+the Spaniards had conquered, was given back to him.
+
+"The peace of Paris, of which we have just now spoken, was the
+era of England's greatest prosperity. Her commerce and
+navigation extended over all parts of the globe, and were
+supported by a naval force so much the more imposing, as it was
+no longer counter-balanced by the maritime power of France, which
+had been almost annihilated in the preceding war. The immense
+territories which that peace had secured her, both in Africa and
+America, opened up new channels for her industry: and what
+deserves specially to be remarked is, that she acquired at the
+same time vast and important possessions in the East Indies."
+[Koch's Revolutions of Europe.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+VICTORY OF THE AMERICANS OVER BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA, A.D. 1777.
+
+"Westward the course of empire takes its way;
+ The first four acts already past,
+ A fifth shall close the drama with the day:
+ TIME'S NOBLEST OFFSPRING IS ITS LAST."
+ BISHOP BERKELEY.
+
+"Even of those great conflicts, in which hundreds of thousands
+have been engaged and tens of thousands have fallen, none has
+been more fruitful of results than this surrender of thirty-five
+hundred fighting-men at Saratoga. It not merely changed the
+relations of England and the feelings of Europe towards these
+insurgent colonies, but it has modified, for all times to come,
+the connexion between every colony and every parent state."--LORD
+MAHON.
+
+Of the four great powers that now principally rule the political
+destinies of the world, France and England are the only two whose
+influence can be dated back beyond the last century and a half.
+The third great power, Russia, was a feeble mass of barbarism
+before the epoch of Peter the Great; and the very existence of
+the fourth great power, as an independent nation, commenced
+within the memory of living men. By the fourth great power of
+the world I mean the mighty commonwealth of the western
+continent, which now commands the admiration of mankind. That
+homage is sometimes reluctantly given, and accompanied with
+suspicion and ill-will. But none can refuse it. All the
+physical essentials for national strength are undeniably to be
+found in the geographical position and amplitude of territory
+which the United States possess: in their almost inexhaustible
+tracts of fertile, but hitherto untouched soil; in their stately
+forests, in their mountain-chains and their rivers, their beds of
+coal, and stores of metallic wealth; in their extensive seaboard
+along the waters of two oceans, and in their already numerous and
+rapidly increasing population. And, when we examine the
+character of this population, no one can look on the fearless
+energy, the sturdy determination, the aptitude for local self
+government, the versatile alacrity, and the unresting spirit of
+enterprise which characterise the Anglo-Americans, without
+feeling that he here beholds the true moral elements of
+progressive might.
+
+Three quarters of a century have not yet passed away since the
+United States ceased to be mere dependencies of England. And
+even if we date their origin from the period when the first
+permanent European settlements, out of which they grew, were made
+on the western coast of the North Atlantic, the increase of their
+strength is unparalleled, either in rapidity or extent.
+
+The ancient Roman boasted, with reason, of the growth of Rome
+from humble beginnings to the greatest magnitude which the world
+had then ever witnessed. But the citizen of the United States is
+still more justly entitled to claim this praise. In two
+centuries and a half his country has acquired ampler dominion
+than the Roman gained in ten. And even if we credit the legend
+of the band of shepherds and outlaws with which Romulus is said
+to have colonized the Seven Hills, we find not there so small a
+germ of future greatness, as we find in the group of a hundred
+and five ill-chosen and disunited emigrants who founded Jamestown
+in 1607, or in the scanty band of the Pilgrim-Fathers, who, a few
+years later, moored their bark on the wild and rock-bound coast
+of the wilderness that was to become New England. The power of
+the United States is emphatically the "Imperium quo neque ab
+exordio ullum fere minus, neque incrementis toto orbe amplius
+humans potest memoria recordari." [Eutropius, lib. i.
+(exordium).]
+
+Nothing is more calculated to impress the mind with a sense of
+the rapidity with which the resources of the American republic
+advance, than the difficulty which the historical inquirer finds
+in ascertaining their precise amount. If he consults the most
+recent works, and those written by the ablest investigators of
+the subject, he finds in them admiring comments on the change
+which the last few years, before those books were written, had
+made; but when he turns to apply the estimates in those books to
+the present moment, he finds them wholly inadequate. Before a
+book on the subject of the United States has lost its novelty,
+those states have outgrown the description which it contains.
+The celebrated work of the French statesman, De Tocqueville,
+appeared about fifteen years ago. In the passage which I am
+about to quote, it will be seen that he predicts the constant
+increase of the Anglo-American power, but he looks on the Rocky
+Mountains as their extreme western limit for many years to come.
+He had evidently no expectation of himself seeing that power
+dominant along the Pacific as well as along the Atlantic coast.
+He says:--
+
+"The distance from Lake Superior to the Gulf of Mexico extends
+from the 47th to the 30th degree of latitude, a distance of more
+than 1,200 miles, as the bird flies. The frontier of the United
+States winds along the whole of this immense line; sometimes
+falling within its limits, but more frequently extending far
+beyond it into the waste. It has been calculated that the
+Whites, advance every year a mean distance of seventeen miles
+along the whole of this vast boundary. Obstacles, such as an
+unproductive district, a lake, or an Indian nation unexpectedly
+encountered, are sometimes met with. The advancing column then
+halts for a while; its two extremities fall back upon themselves,
+and as soon as they are re-united they proceed onwards. This
+gradual and continuous progress of the European race towards the
+Rocky Mountains has the solemnity of a Providential event: it is
+like a deluge of men rising unabatedly, and daily driven onwards
+by the hand of God.
+
+"Within this first line of conquering settlers towns are built,
+and vast estates founded. In 1790 there were only a few thousand
+pioneers sprinkled along the valleys of the Mississippi: and at
+the present day these valleys contain as many inhabitants as were
+to be found in the whole Union in 1790. Their population amounts
+to nearly four millions. The city of Washington was founded in
+1800, in the very centre of the Union; but such are the changes
+which have taken place, that it now stands at one of the
+extremities; and the delegates of the most remote Western States
+are already obliged to perform a journey as long so that from
+Vienna to Paris.
+
+"It must not, then, be imagined that the impulse of the British
+race in the New World can be arrested. The dismemberment of the
+Union, and the hostilities which might ensue, the abolition of
+republican institutions, and the tyrannical government which
+might succeed it, may retard this impulse, but they cannot
+prevent it from ultimately fulfilling the destinies to which that
+race is reserved. No power upon earth can close upon the
+emigrants that fertile wilderness, which offers resources to all
+industry, and a refuge from all want. Future events, of whatever
+nature they may be, will not deprive the Americans of their
+climate or of their inland seas, or of their great rivers, or of
+their exuberant soil. Nor will bad laws, revolutions, and
+anarchy be able to obliterate that love of prosperity and that
+spirit of enterprise which seem to be the distinctive
+characteristics of their race, or to extinguish that knowledge
+which guides them on their way.
+
+"Thus, in the midst of the uncertain future, one event at least
+is sure. At a period which may be said to be near (for we are
+speaking of the life of a nation), the Anglo-Americans will alone
+cover the immense space contained between the Polar regions and
+the Tropics, extending from the coast of the Atlantic to the
+shores of the Pacific Ocean; the territory which will probably be
+occupied by the Anglo-Americans at some future time, may be
+computed to equal three-quarters of Europe in extent. The
+climate of the Union is upon the whole preferable to that of
+Europe, and its natural advantages are not less great; it is
+therefore evident that its population will at some future time be
+proportionate to our own. Europe, divided as it is between so
+many different nations, and torn as it has been by incessant wars
+and the barbarous manners of the Middle Ages, has notwithstanding
+attained a population of 410 inhabitants to the square league.
+What cause can prevent the United States from having as numerous
+a population in time?
+
+"The time will therefore come when one hundred and fifty millions
+of men will be living in North America, equal in condition, the
+progeny of one race, owing their origin to the same cause, and
+preserving the same civilization, the same language, the same
+religion, the same habits, the same manners, and imbued with the
+same opinions, propagated under the same forms. The rest is
+uncertain, but this is certain; and it is a fact new to the
+world, a fact fraught with such portentous consequences as to
+baffle the efforts even of the imagination."
+
+[The original French of these passages will be found in the
+chapter on "Quelles sont les chances de duree de l'Union
+Americaine--Quels dangers la menacent." in the third volume of
+the first part of De Tocqueville, and in the conclusion of the
+first part. They are (with others) collected and translated by
+Mr. Alison, in his "Essays," vol. iii. p. 374.]
+
+Let us turn from the French statesman writing in 1835, to an
+English statesman, who is justly regarded as the highest
+authority on all statistical subjects, and who described the
+United States only seven years ago. Macgregor [Macgregor's
+Commercial Statistics.] tells us--
+
+"The States which, on the ratification of independence, formed
+the American Republican Union, were thirteen, viz.:--
+
+"Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New
+York, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia,
+North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. "The foregoing
+thirteen states (THE WHOLE INHABITED TERRITORY OF WHICH, WITH THE
+EXCEPTION OF A FEW SMALL SETTLEMENTS, WAS CONFINED TO THE REGION
+EXTENDING BETWEEN THE ALLEGHANY MOUNTAINS AND THE ATLANTIC) were
+those which existed at the period when they became an
+acknowledged separate and independent federal sovereign power.
+The thirteen stripes of the standard or flag of the United
+States, continue to represent the original number, The stars have
+multiplied to twenty-six, [Fresh stars have dawned since this was
+written.] according as the number of States have increased.
+
+"The territory of the thirteen original States of the Union,
+including Maine and Vermont, comprehended a superficies of
+371,124 English square miles; that of the whole United Kingdom of
+Great Britain and Ireland, 120,354; that of France, including
+Corsica, 214,910; that of the Austrian Empire, including Hungary
+and all the Imperial States, 257,540 English square miles.
+
+"The present superficies of the twenty-six constitutional States
+of the Anglo-American Union, and the district of Columbia, and
+territories of Florida, include 1,029,025 square miles; to which
+if we add the north-west, or Wisconsin territory, east of the
+Mississippi, and bounded by Lake Superior on the north, and
+Michigan on the east, and occupying at least 100,000 square
+miles, and then add the great western region, not yet well-
+defined territories, but at the most limited calculation
+comprehending 700,000 square miles, the whole unbroken in its
+vast length and breadth by foreign nations, comprehends a portion
+of the earth's surface equal to 1,729,025 English, or 1,296,770
+geographical square miles."
+
+We may add that the population of the States, when they declared
+their independence, was about two millions and a half; it is now
+twenty-three millions.
+
+I have quoted Macgregor, not only on account of the clear and
+full view which he gives of the progress of America to the date
+when he wrote, but because his description may be contrasted with
+what the United States have become even since his book appeared.
+Only three years after the time when Macgregor thus wrote, the
+American President truly stated:--
+
+"Within less than four years the annexation of Texas to the Union
+has been consummated; all conflicting title to the Oregon
+territory, south of the 49th degree of north latitude, adjusted;
+and New Mexico and Upper California have been acquired by treaty.
+The area of these several territories contains 1,193,061 square
+miles, or 763,559,040 acres; while the area of the remaining
+twenty-nine States, and the territory not yet organized into
+States east of the Rocky Mountains, contains 2,059,513 square
+miles, or 1,318,126,058 acres. These estimates show that the
+territories recently acquired, and over which our exclusive
+jurisdiction and dominion have been extended, constitute a
+country more than half as large as all that which was held by the
+United States before their acquisition. If Oregon be excluded
+from the estimate, there will still remain within the limits of
+Texas, New Mexico, and California, 851,598 square miles, or
+545,012,720 acres; being an addition equal to more than one-third
+of all the territory owned by the United States before their
+acquisition; and, including Oregon, nearly as great an extent of
+territory as the whole of Europe, Russia only excepted. THE
+MISSISSIPPI, SO LATELY THE FRONTIER OF OUR COUNTRY, IS NOW ONLY
+ITS CENTRE. With the addition of the late acquisitions, the
+United States are now estimated to be nearly as large as the
+whole of Europe. The extent of the sea-coast of Texas, on the
+Gulf of Mexico, is upwards of 400 miles; of the coast of Upper
+California, on the Pacific, of 970 miles; and of Oregon,
+including the Straits of Fuca, of 650 miles; MAKING THE WHOLE
+EXTENT OF SEA-COAST ON THE PACIFIC 1,620 MILES; and the whole
+extent on both the Pacific and the Gulf of Mexico, 2,020 miles.
+The length of the coast on the Atlantic, from the northern limits
+of the United States, round the Capes of Florida to the Sabine on
+the eastern boundary of Texas, is estimated to be 3,100 miles, so
+that the addition of sea-coast, including Oregon, is very nearly
+two-thirds as great as all we possessed before; and, excluding
+Oregon, is an addition of 1,370 miles; being nearly equal to one-
+half of the extent of coast which we possessed before these
+acquisitions. We have now three great maritime fronts--on the
+Atlantic, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Pacific; making, in the
+whole, an extent of sea-coast exceeding 5,000 miles. This is the
+extent of the sea-coast of the United States, not including bays,
+sounds, and small irregularities of the main shore, and of the
+sea islands. If these be included, the length of the shore line
+of coast, as estimated by the superintendent of the Coast Survey,
+in his report, would be 33,063 miles."
+
+The importance of the power of the United States being then
+firmly planted along the Pacific applies not only to the New
+World, but to the Old. Opposite to San Francisco, on the coast
+of that ocean, lie the wealthy but decrepit empires of China and
+Japan. Numerous groups of islets stud the larger part of the
+intervening sea, and form convenient stepping-stones for the
+progress of commerce or ambition. The intercourse of traffic
+between these ancient Asiatic monarchies, and the young Anglo-
+American Republic, must be rapid and extensive. Any attempt of
+the Chinese or Japanese rulers to check it, will only accelerate
+an armed collision. The American will either buy or force his
+way. Between such populations as that of China and Japan on the
+one side, and that of the United States on the other--the former
+haughty, formal, and insolent, the latter bold, intrusive, and
+unscrupulous--causes of quarrel must, sooner or later, arise, The
+results of such a quarrel cannot be doubted. America will
+scarcely imitate the forbearance shown by England at the end of
+our late war with the Celestial Empire; and the conquests of
+China and Japan by the fleets and armies of the United States,
+are events which many now living are likely to witness. Compared
+with the magnitude of such changes in the dominion of the Old
+World, the certain ascendancy of the Anglo-Americans over Central
+and Southern America, seems a matter of secondary importance.
+Well may we repeat De Tocqueville's words, that the growing power
+of this commonwealth is, "Un fait entierement nouveau dans le
+monde, et dont l'imagination ellememe ne saurait saisir la
+portee." [These remarks were written in May 1851, and now, in
+May 1852, a powerful squadron of American war-steamers has been
+sent to Japan, for the ostensible purpose of securing protection
+for the crews of American vessels shipwrecked on the Japanese
+coasts, but also evidently for important ulterior purposes.]
+
+An Englishman may look, and ought to look, on the growing
+grandeur of the Americans with no small degree of generous
+sympathy and satisfaction. They, like ourselves, are members of
+the great Anglo-Saxon nation "whose race and language are now
+overrunning the world from one end of it to the other." [Arnold.]
+and whatever differences of form of government may exist between
+us and them; whatever reminiscences of the days when, though
+brethren, we strove together, may rankle in the minds of us, the
+defeated party; we should cherish the bonds of common nationality
+that still exist between us. We should remember, as the
+Athenians remembered of the Spartans at a season of jealousy and
+temptation, that our race is one, being of the same blood,
+speaking the same language, having an essential resemblance in
+our institutions and usages, and worshipping in the temples of
+the same God. [HERODOTUS, viii. 144.] All this may and should
+be borne in mind. And yet an Englishman can hardly watch the
+progress of America, without the regretful thought that America
+once was English, and that, but for the folly of our rulers, she
+might be English still. It is true that the commerce between the
+two countries has largely and beneficially increased; but this is
+no proof that the increase would not have been still greater, had
+the States remained integral portions of the same great empire.
+By giving a fair and just participation in political rights,
+these, "the fairest possessions" of the British crown, might have
+been preserved to it. "This ancient and most noble monarchy"
+[Lord Chatham.] would not have been dismembered; nor should we
+see that which ought to be the right arm of our strength, now
+menacing us in every political crisis, as the most formidable
+rival of our commercial and maritime ascendancy.
+
+The war which rent away the North American colonies of England
+is, of all subjects in history, the most painful for an
+Englishman to dwell on. It was commenced and carried on by the
+British ministry in iniquity and folly, and it was concluded in
+disaster and shame. But the contemplation of it cannot be evaded
+by the historian, however much it may be abhorred. Nor can any
+military event be said to have exercised more important influence
+on the future fortunes of mankind, than the complete defeat of
+Burgoyne's expedition in 1777; a defeat which rescued the
+revolted colonists from certain subjection; and which, by
+inducing the courts of France and Spain to attack England in
+their behalf, ensured the independence of the United States, and
+the formation of that trans-Atlantic power which, not only
+America, but both Europe and Asia, now see and feel.
+
+Still, in proceeding to describe this "decisive battle of the
+world," a very brief recapitulation of the earlier events of the
+war may be sufficient; nor shall I linger unnecessarily on a
+painful theme.
+
+The five northern colonies of Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode
+Island, New Hampshire, and Vermont, usually classed together as
+the New England colonies, were the strongholds of the
+insurrection against the mother-country. The feeling of
+resistance was less vehement and general in the central
+settlement of New York; and still less so in Pennsylvania,
+Maryland, and the other colonies of the south, although
+everywhere it was formidably active. Virginia should, perhaps,
+be particularised for the zeal which its leading men displayed in
+the American cause; but it was among the descendants of the stern
+Puritans that the spirit of Cromwell and Vane breathed in all its
+fervour; it was from the New Englanders that the first armed
+opposition to the British crown had been offered; and it was by
+them that the most stubborn determination to fight to the last,
+rather than waive a single right or privilege, had been
+displayed. In 1775, they had succeeded in forcing the British
+troops to evacuate Boston; and the events of 1776 had made New
+York (which the royalists captured in that year) the principal
+basis of operations for the armies of the mother-country.
+
+A glance at the map will show that the Hudson river, which falls
+into the Atlantic at New York, runs down from the north at the
+back of the New England States, forming an angle of about forty-
+five degrees with the line of the coast of the Atlantic, along
+which the New England states are situate. Northward of the
+Hudson, we see a small chain of lakes communicating with the
+Canadian frontier. It is necessary to attend closely to these
+geographical points, in order to understand the plan of the
+operations which the English attempted in 1777, and which the
+battle of Saratoga defeated.
+
+The English had a considerable force in Canada; and in 1776 had
+completely repulsed an attack which the Americans had made upon
+that province. The British ministry resolved to avail
+themselves, in the next year, of the advantage which the
+occupation of Canada gave them, not merely for the purpose of
+defence, but for the purpose of striking a vigorous and crushing
+blow against the revolted colonies. With this view, the army in
+Canada was largely reinforced. Seven thousand veteran troops
+were sent out from England, with a corps of artillery abundantly
+supplied, and led by select and experienced officers. Large
+quantities of military stores were also furnished for the
+equipment of the Canadian volunteers, who were expected to join
+the expedition. It was intended that the force thus collected
+should march southward by the line of the lakes, and thence along
+the banks of the Hudson river. The British army in New York (or
+a large detachment of it) was to make a simultaneous movement
+northward, up the line of the Hudson, and the two expeditions
+were to unite at Albany, a town on that river. By these
+operations all communication between the northern colonies and
+those of the centre and south would be cut off. An irresistible
+force would be concentrated, so as to crush all further
+opposition in New England; and when this was done, it was
+believed that the other colonies would speedily submit. The
+Americans had no troops in the field that seemed able to baffle
+these movements. Their principal army, under Washington, was
+occupied in watching over Pennsylvania and the south. At any
+rate it was believed that, in order to oppose the plan intended
+for the new campaign, the insurgents must risk a pitched battle,
+in which the superiority of the royalists, in numbers, in
+discipline, and in equipment, seemed to promise to the latter a
+crowning victory. Without question the plan was ably formed; and
+had the success of the execution been equal to the ingenuity of
+the design, the re-conquest or submission of the thirteen United
+States must, in all human probability, have followed; and the
+independence which they proclaimed in 1776 would have been
+extinguished before it existed a second year. No European power
+had as yet come forward to aid America. It is true that England
+was generally regarded with jealousy and ill-will, and was
+thought to have acquired, at the treaty of Paris, a preponderance
+of dominion which was perilous to the balance of power; but
+though many were willing to wound, none had yet ventured to
+strike; and America, if defeated in 1777, would have been
+suffered to fall unaided.
+
+[In Lord Albemarle's "Memoirs of the Marquis of Rockingham." is
+contained the following remarkable state paper, drawn up by King
+George III himself respecting the plan of Burgoyne's expedition.
+The original is in the king's own hand.
+
+"REMARKS ON THE CONDUCT OF THE WAR FROM CANADA.
+
+"The outlines of the plan seem to be on a proper foundation. The
+rank and file of the army now in Canada (including the 11th
+Regiment of British, M'Clean's corps, the Brunswicks and
+Hanover), amount to 10,527; add the eleven additional companies
+and four hundred Hanover Chasseurs, the total will be 11,443.
+
+"As sickness and other contingencies must be expected, I should
+think not above 7,000 effectives can be spared over Lake
+Champlain; for it would be highly imprudent to run any risk in
+Canada.
+
+"The fixing the stations of those left in the province may not be
+quite right, though the plan proposed may be recommended.
+Indians must be employed, and this measure must be avowedly
+directed, and Carleton must be in the strongest manner directed
+that the Apollo shall be ready by that day, to receive Burgoyne.
+
+"The magazines must be formed with the greatest expedition, at
+Crown Point.
+
+"If possible, possession must be taken of Lake George, and
+nothing but an absolute impossibility of succeeding in this, can
+be an excuse for proceeding by South Bay and Skeenborough.
+
+"As Sir W. Howe does not think of acting from Rhode island into
+the Massachusets, the force from Canada must join him in Albany.
+
+"The diversion on the Mohawk River ought at least to be
+strengthened by the addition of the four hundred Hanover
+Chasseurs.
+
+"The Ordnance ought to furnish a complete proportion of
+intrenching tools.
+
+"The provisions ought to be calculated for a third more than the
+effective soldiery, and the General ordered to avoid delivering
+these when the army can be subsisted by the country. Burgoyne
+certainly greatly undervalues the German recruits.
+
+"The idea of carrying the army by sea to Sir W. Howe, would
+certainly require the leaving a much larger part of it in Canada,
+as in that case the rebel army would divide that province from
+the immense one under Sir W. Howe. I greatly dislike this last
+idea."]
+
+Burgoyne had gained celebrity by some bold and dashing exploits
+in Portugal during the last war; he was personally as brave an
+officer as ever headed British troops; he had considerable skill
+as a tactician; and his general intellectual abilities and
+acquirements were of a high order. He had several very able and
+experienced officers under him, among whom were Major-General
+Phillips and Brigadier-General Fraser. His regular troops
+amounted, exclusively of the corps of artillery, to about seven
+thousand two hundred men, rank and file. Nearly half of these
+were Germans. He had also an auxiliary force of from two to
+three thousand Canadians. He summoned the warriors of several
+tribes of the Red Indians near the western lakes to join his
+army. Much eloquence was poured forth, both in America and in
+England, in denouncing the use of these savage auxiliaries. Yet
+Burgoyne seems to have done no more than Montcalm, Wolfe, and
+other French, American, and English generals had done before him.
+But, in truth, the lawless ferocity of the Indians, their
+unskilfulness in regular action, and the utter impossibility of
+bringing them under any discipline, made their services of little
+or no value in times of difficulty: while the indignation which
+their outrages inspired, went far to rouse the whole population
+of the invaded districts into active hostilities against
+Burgoyne's force.
+
+Burgoyne assembled his troops and confederates near the river
+Bouquet, on the west side of Lake Champlain. He then, on the
+21st of June, 1777, gave his Red Allies a war-feast, and
+harangued them on the necessity of abstaining from their usual
+cruel practices against unarmed people and prisoners. At the
+same time he published a pompous manifesto to the Americans, in
+which he threatened the refractory with all the horrors of war,
+Indian as well as European. The army proceeded by water to Crown
+Point, a fortification which the Americans held at the northern
+extremity of the inlet by which the water from Lake George is
+conveyed to Lake Champlain. He landed here without opposition;
+but the reduction of Ticonderoga, a fortification about twelve
+miles to the south of Crown Point, was a more serious matter, and
+was supposed to be the critical part of the expedition.
+Ticonderoga commanded the passage along the lakes, and was
+considered to be the key to the route which Burgoyne wished to
+follow. The English had been repulsed in an attack on it in the
+war with the French in 1768 with severe loss. But Burgoyne now
+invested it with great skill; and the American general, St.
+Clair, who had only an ill-equipped army of about three thousand
+men, evacuated it on the 5th of July. It seems evident that a
+different course would have caused the destruction or capture of
+his whole army; which, weak as it was, was the chief force then
+in the field for the protection of the New England states. When
+censured by some of his countrymen for abandoning Ticonderoga,
+St. Clair truly replied, "that he had lost a post, but saved a
+province." Burgoyne's troops pursued the retiring Americans,
+gained several advantages over them, and took a large part of
+their artillery and military stores.
+
+The loss of the British in these engagements was trifling. The
+army moved southward along Lake George to Skenesborough; and
+thence slowly, and with great difficulty, across a broken
+country, full of creeks and marshes, and clogged by the enemy
+with felled trees and other obstacles, to Fort Edward, on the
+Hudson river, the American troops continuing to retire before
+them.
+
+Burgoyne reached the left bank of the Hudson river on the 30th of
+July. Hitherto he had overcome every difficulty which the enemy
+and the nature of the country had placed in his way. His army
+was in excellent order and in the highest spirits; and the peril
+of the expedition seemed over, when they were once on the bank of
+the river which was to be the channel of communication between
+them and the British army in the south. But their feelings, and
+those of the English nation in general when their successes were
+announced, may best be learned from a contemporary writer.
+Burke, in the "Annual Register" for 1777, describes them thus:--
+
+"Such was the rapid torrent of success, which swept everything
+away before the northern army in its onset. It is not to be
+wondered at, if both officers and private men were highly elated
+with their good fortune, and deemed that and their prowess to be
+irresistible; if they regarded their enemy with the greatest
+contempt; considered their own toils to be nearly at an end;
+Albany to be already in their hands; and the reduction of the
+northern provinces to be rather a matter of some time, than an
+arduous task full of difficulty and danger.
+
+"At home, the joy and exultation was extreme; not only at court,
+but with all those who hoped or wished the unqualified
+subjugation, and unconditional submission of the colonies. The
+loss in reputation was greater to the Americans, and capable of
+more fatal consequences, than even that of ground, of posts, of
+artillery, or of men. All the contemptuous and most degrading
+charges which had been made by their enemies, of their wanting
+the resolution and abilities of men, even in their defence of
+whatever was dear to them, were now repeated and believed. Those
+who still regarded them as men, and who had not yet lost all
+affection to them as brethren, who also retained hopes that a
+happy reconciliation upon constitutional principles, without
+sacrificing the dignity or the just authority of government on
+the one side, or a dereliction of the rights of freemen on the
+other, was not even now impossible, notwithstanding their
+favourable dispositions in general, could not help feeling upon
+this occasion that the Americans sunk not a little in their
+estimation. It was not difficult to diffuse an opinion that the
+war in effect was over; and that any further resistance could
+serve only to render the terms of their submission the worse.
+Such were some of the immediate effects of the loss of those
+grand keys of North America, Ticonderoga and the lakes."
+
+The astonishment and alarm which these events produced among the
+Americans were naturally great; but in the midst of their
+disasters none of the colonists showed any disposition to submit.
+The local governments of the New England States, as well as the
+Congress, acted with vigour and firmness in their efforts to
+repel the enemy. General Gates was sent to take command of the
+army at Saratoga; and Arnold, a favourite leader of the
+Americans, was despatched by Washington to act under him, with
+reinforcements of troops and guns from the main American army.
+Burgoyne's employment of the Indians now produced the worst
+possible effects. Though he laboured hard to check the
+atrocities which they were accustomed to commit, he could not
+prevent the occurrence of many barbarous outrages, repugnant both
+to the feelings of humanity and to the laws of civilized warfare.
+The American commanders took care that the reports of these
+excesses should be circulated far and wide, well knowing that
+they would make the stern New Englanders not droop, but rage.
+Such was their effect; and though, when each man looked upon his
+wife, his children, his sisters, or his aged parents, the thought
+of the merciless Indian "thirsting for the blood of man, woman,
+and child," of "the cannibal savage torturing, murdering,
+roasting, and eating the mangled victims of his barbarous
+battles," [Lord Chatham's speech on the employment of Indians in
+the war.] might raise terror in the bravest breasts; this very
+terror produced a directly contrary effect to causing submission
+to the royal army. It was seen that the few friends of the royal
+cause, as well as its enemies, were liable to be the victims of
+the indiscriminate rage of the savages;" [See in the "Annual
+Register" for 1777, p.117, the "Narrative of the Murder of Miss
+M'Crea, the daughter of an American loyalist."] and thus "the
+inhabitants of the open and frontier countries had no choice of
+acting: they had no means of security left, but by abandoning
+their habitations and taking up arms. Every man saw the
+necessity of becoming a temporary soldier, not only for his own
+security, but for the protection and defence of those connexions
+which are dearer than life itself. Thus an army was poured forth
+by the woods, mountains, and marshes, which in this part were
+thickly sown with plantations and villages. The Americans
+recalled their courage; and when their regular army seemed to be
+entirely wasted, the spirit of the country produced a much
+greater and more formidable force." [Burke.]
+
+While resolute recruits, accustomed to the use of fire-arms, and
+all partially trained by service in the provincial militias, were
+thus flocking to the standard of Gates and Arnold at Saratoga;
+and while Burgoyne was engaged at Port Edward in providing the
+means for the further advance of his army through the intricate
+and hostile country that still lay before him, two events
+occurred, in each of which the British sustained loss, and the
+Americans obtained advantage, the moral effects of which were
+even more important than the immediate result of the encounters.
+When Burgoyne left Canada, General St. Leger was detached from
+that province with a mixed force of about one thousand men, and
+some light field-pieces, across Lake Ontario against Fort
+Stanwix, which the Americans held. After capturing this, he was
+to march along the Mohawk river to its confluence with the
+Hudson, between Saratoga and Albany, where his force and that of
+Burgoyne were to unite. But, after some successes, St. Leger was
+obliged to retreat, and to abandon his tents and large quantities
+of stores to the garrison. At the very time that General
+Burgoyne heard of this disaster, he experienced one still more
+severe in the defeat of Colonel Baum with a large detachment of
+German troops at Benington, whither Burgoyne had sent them for
+the purpose of capturing some magazines of provisions, of which
+the British army stood greatly in need. The Americans, augmented
+by continual accessions of strength, succeeded, after many
+attacks, in breaking this corps, which fled into the woods, and
+left its commander mortally wounded on the field: they then
+marched against a force of five hundred grenadiers and light
+infantry, which was advancing to Colonel Baum's assistance under
+Lieutenant-Colonel Breyman; who, after a gallant resistance, was
+obliged to retreat on the main army. The British loss in these
+two actions exceeded six hundred men: and a party of American
+loyalists, on their way to join the army, having attached
+themselves to Colonel Baum's corps, were destroyed with it.
+
+Notwithstanding these reverses, which added greatly to the spirit
+and numbers of the American forces, Burgoyne determined to
+advance. It was impossible any longer to keep up his
+communications with Canada by way of the lakes, so as to supply
+his army on his southward march; but having by unremitting
+exertions collected provisions for thirty days, he crossed the
+Hudson by means of a bridge of rafts, and, marching a short
+distance along its western bank, he encamped on the 14th of
+September on the heights of Saratoga, about sixteen miles from
+Albany. The Americans had fallen back from Saratoga, and were
+now strongly posted near Stillwater, about half way between
+Saratoga and Albany, and showed a determination to recede no
+farther.
+
+Meanwhile Lord Howe, with the bulk of the British army that had
+lain at New York, had sailed away to the Delaware, and there
+commenced a campaign against Washington, in which the English
+general took Philadelphia, and gained other showy, but
+unprofitable successes, But Sir Henry Clinton, a brave and
+skilful officer, was left with a considerable force at New York;
+and he undertook the task of moving up the Hudson to co-operate
+with Burgoyne. Clinton was obliged for this purpose to wait for
+reinforcements which had been promised from England, and these
+did not arrive till September. As soon as he received them,
+Clinton embarked about 3,000 of his men on a flotilla, convoyed
+by some ships of war under Commander Hotham, and proceeded to
+force his may up the river, but it was long before he was able to
+open any communication with Burgoyne.
+
+The country between Burgoyne's position at Saratoga and that of
+the Americans at Stillwater was rugged, and seamed with creeks
+and water-courses; but after great labour in making bridges and
+temporary causeways, the British army moved forward. About four
+miles from Saratoga, on the afternoon of the 19th of September, a
+sharp encounter took place between part of the English right
+wing, under Burgoyne himself, and a strong body of the enemy,
+under Gates and Arnold. The conflict lasted till sunset. The
+British remained masters of the field; but the loss on each side
+was nearly equal (from five hundred to six hundred men); and the
+spirits of the Americans were greatly raised by having withstood
+the best regular troops of the English army. Burgoyne now halted
+again, and strengthened his position by field-works and redoubts;
+and the Americans also improved their defences. The two armies
+remained nearly within cannon-shot of each other for a
+considerable time, during which Burgoyne was anxiously looking
+for intelligence of the promised expedition from New York, which,
+according to the original plan, ought by this time to have been
+approaching Albany from the south. At last, a messenger from
+Clinton made his way, with great difficulty, to Burgoyne's camp,
+and brought the information that Clinton was on his way up the
+Hudson to attack the American forts which barred the passage up
+that river to Albany. Burgoyne, in reply, on the 30th of
+September, urged Clinton to attack the forts as speedily as
+possible, stating that the effect of such an attack, or even the
+semblance of it, would be to move the American army from its
+position before his own troops. By another messenger, who
+reached Clinton on the 5th of October, Burgoyne informed his
+brother general that he had lost his communications with Canada,
+but had provisions which would last him till the 20th. Burgoyne
+described himself as strongly posted, and stated that though the
+Americans in front of him were strongly posted also, he made no
+doubt of being able to force them, and making his way to Albany;
+but that he doubted whether he could subsist there, as the
+country was drained of provisions. He wished Clinton to meet him
+there, and to keep open a communication with New York. [See the
+letters of General Clinton to General Harvey, published by Lord
+Albemarle in his "Memoirs of the Marquis of Rockingham," vol. ii.
+p. 335, ET SEQ.]
+
+Burgoyne had over-estimated his resources, and in the very
+beginning of October found difficulty and distress pressing him
+hard.
+
+The Indians and Canadians began to desert him; while, on the
+other hand, Gates's army was continually reinforced by fresh
+bodies of the militia. An expeditionary force was detached by
+the Americans, which made a bold, though unsuccessful, attempt to
+retake Ticonderoga. And finding the number and spirit of the
+enemy to increase daily, and his own stores of provision to
+diminish, Burgoyne determined on attacking the Americans in front
+of him, and by dislodging them from their position, to gain the
+means of moving upon Albany, or at least of relieving his troops
+from the straitened position in which they were cooped up.
+
+Burgoyne's force was now reduced to less than 6,000 men. The
+right of his camp was on some high ground a little to the west of
+the river; thence his entrenchments extended along the lower
+ground to the bank of the Hudson, the line of their front being
+nearly at a right angle with the course of the stream. The lines
+were fortified with redoubts and field-works, and on a height on
+the bank of the extreme right a strong redoubt was reared, and
+entrenchments, in a horse-shoe form, thrown up. The Hessians,
+under Colonel Breyman, were stationed here, forming a flank
+defence to Burgoyne's main army. The numerical force of the
+Americans was now greater than the British even in regular
+troops, and the numbers of the militia and volunteers which had
+joined Gates and Arnold were greater still.
+
+General Lincoln with 2,000 New England troops, had reached the
+American camp on the 29th of September. Gates gave him the
+command of the right wing, and took in person the command of the
+left wing, which was composed of two brigades under Generals Poor
+and Leonard, of Colonel Morgan's rifle corps, and part of the
+fresh New England Militia. The whole of the American lines had
+been ably fortified under the direction of the celebrated Polish
+general, Kosciusko, who was now serving as a volunteer in Gates's
+army. The right of the American position, that is to say, the
+part of it nearest to the river, was too strong to be assailed
+with any prospect of success: and Burgoyne therefore determined
+to endeavour to force their left. For this purpose he formed a
+column of 1,500 regular troops, with two twelve-pounders, two
+howitzers and six six-pounders. He headed this in person, having
+Generals Phillips, Reidesel, and Fraser under him. The enemy's
+force immediately in front of his lines was so strong that he
+dared not weaken the troops who guarded them, by detaching any
+more to strengthen his column of attack.
+
+It was on the 7th of October that Burgoyne led his column
+forward; and on the preceding day, the 6th, Clinton had
+successfully executed a brilliant enterprise against the two
+American forts which barred his progress up the Hudson. He had
+captured them both, with severe loss to the American forces
+opposed to him; he had destroyed the fleet which the Americans
+had been forming on the Hudson, under the protection of their
+forts; and the upward river was laid open to his squadron. He
+had also, with admirable skill and industry, collected in small
+vessels, such as could float within a few miles of Albany,
+provisions sufficient to supply Burgoyne's Army for six months.
+[See Clinton's letters in Lord Albemarle, p. 337.] He was now
+only a hundred and fifty-six miles distant from Burgoyne; and a
+detachment of 1,700 men actually advanced within forty miles of
+Albany. Unfortunately Burgoyne and Clinton were each ignorant of
+the other's movements; but if Burgoyne had won his battle on the
+7th, he must on advancing have soon learned the tidings of
+Clinton's success, and Clinton would have heard of his. A
+junction would soon have been made of the two victorious armies,
+and the great objects of the campaign might yet have been
+accomplished. All depended on the fortune of the column with
+which Burgoyne, on the eventful 7th of October, 1777, advanced
+against the American position. There were brave men, both
+English and German, in its ranks; and in particular it comprised
+one of the best bodies of grenadiers in the British service. [I
+am indebted for many of the details of the battle, to Mr
+Lossing's "Field-book of the Revolution."]
+
+Burgoyne pushed forward some bodies of irregular troops to
+distract the enemy's attention; and led his column to within
+three-quarters of a mile from the left of Gates's camp, and then
+deployed his men into line. The grenadiers under Major Ackland,
+and the artillery under Major Williams, were drawn up on the
+left; a corps of Germans under General Reidesel, and some British
+troops under General Phillips, were in the centre; and the
+English light infantry, and the 24th regiment under Lord
+Balcarres and General Fraser, were on the right. But Gates did
+not wait to be attacked; and directly the British line was formed
+and began to advance, the American general, with admirable skill,
+caused General Poor's brigade of New York and New Hampshire
+troops, and part of General Leonard's brigade, to make a sudden
+and vehement rush against its left, and at the same time sent
+Colonel Morgan, with his rifle corps and other troops, amounting
+to 1,500, to turn the right of the English. The grenadiers under
+Ackland sustained the charge of superior numbers nobly. But
+Gates sent more Americans forward, and in a few minutes the
+action became general along the centre, so as to prevent the
+Germans from detaching any help to the grenadiers. Morgan, with
+his riflemen, was now pressing Lord Balcarres and General Fraser
+hard, and fresh masses of the enemy were observed advancing from
+their extreme left, with the evident intention of forcing the
+British right, and cutting off its retreat. The English light
+infantry and the 24th now fell back, and formed an oblique second
+line, which enabled them to baffle this manoeuvre, and also to
+succour their comrades in the left wing, the gallant grenadiers,
+who were overpowered by superior numbers, and, but for this aid,
+must have been cut to pieces.
+
+The contest now was fiercely maintained on both sides. The
+English cannon were repeatedly taken and retaken; but when the
+grenadiers near them were forced back by the weight of superior
+numbers, one of the guns was permanently captured by the
+Americans, and turned upon the English. Major Williams and Major
+Ackland were both made prisoners, and in this part of the field
+the advantage of the Americans was decided. The British centre
+still held its ground; but now it was that the American general
+Arnold appeared upon the scene, and did more for his countrymen
+than whole battalions could have effected. Arnold, when the
+decisive engagement of the 7th of October commenced, had been
+deprived of his command by Gates, in consequence of a quarrel
+between them about the action of the 19th of September. He had
+listened for a short time in the American camp to the thunder of
+the battle, in which he had no military right to take part,
+either as commander or as combatant. But his excited spirit
+could not long endure such a state of inaction. He called for
+his horse, a powerful brown charger, and springing on it,
+galloped furiously to where the fight seemed to be the thickest.
+Gates saw him, and sent an aide-de-camp to recall him; but Arnold
+spurred far in advance, and placed himself at the head of three
+regiments which had formerly been under him, and which welcomed
+their old commander with joyous cheers. He led them instantly
+upon the British centre; and then galloping along the American
+line, he issued orders for a renewed and a closer attack, which
+were obeyed with alacrity, Arnold himself setting the example of
+the most daring personal bravery, and charging more than once,
+sword in hand, into the English ranks. On the British side the
+officers did their duty nobly; but General Fraser was the most
+eminent of them all, restoring order wherever the line began to
+waver, and infusing fresh courage into his men by voice and
+example. Mounted on an iron-grey charger, and dressed in the
+full uniform of a general officer, he was conspicuous to foes as
+well as to friends. The American Colonel Morgan thought that the
+fate of the battle rested on this gallant man's life, and calling
+several of his best marksman round him, pointed Fraser out, and
+said: "That officer is General Fraser; I admire him, but he must
+die. Our victory depends on it. Take your stations in that
+clump of bushes, and do your duty." Within five minutes Fraser
+fell mortally wounded, and was carried to the British camp by two
+grenadiers. Just previously to his being struck by the fatal
+bullet, one rifle-ball had cut the crupper of his saddle and
+smother had passed through his horse's mane close behind the
+ears. His aide-de-camp had noticed this, and said: "It is
+evident that you are marked out for particular aim; would it not
+be prudent; for you to retire from this place?" Fraser replied:
+"My duty forbids me to fly from danger;" and the next moment he
+fell. [Lossing.]
+
+Burgoyne's whole force was now compelled to retreat towards their
+camp; the left and centre were in complete disorder, but the
+light infantry and the 24th checked the fury of the assailants,
+and the remains of the column with great difficulty effected
+their return to their camp; leaving six of their cannons in the
+possession of the enemy, and great numbers of killed and wounded
+on the field; and especially a large proportion of the
+artillerymen, who had stood to their guns until shot down or
+bayoneted beside them by the advancing Americans.
+
+Burgoyne's column had been defeated, but the action was not yet
+over. The English had scarcely entered the camp, when the
+Americans, pursuing their success, assaulted it in several places
+with remarkable impetuosity, rushing in upon the intrenchments
+and redoubts through a severe fire of grape-shot and musketry.
+Arnold especially, who on this day appeared maddened with the
+thirst of combat and carnage, urged on the attack against a part
+of the intrenchments which was occupied by the light infantry
+under Lord Balcarres. [Botta's American War, book viii.] But
+the English received him with vigour and spirit. The struggle
+here was obstinate and sanguinary. At length, as it grew towards
+evening, Arnold, having forced all obstacles, entered the works
+with some of the most fearless of his followers. But in this
+critical moment of glory and danger, he received a painful wound
+in the same leg which had already been injured at the assault on
+Quebec. To his bitter regret he was obliged to be carried back.
+His party still continued the attack, but the English also
+continued their obstinate resistance, and at last night fell, and
+the assailants withdrew from this quarter of the British
+intrenchments. But, in another part the attack had been more
+successful. A body of the Americans, under Colonel Brooke,
+forced their way in through a part of the horse-shoe
+intrenchments on the extreme right, which was defended by the
+Hessian reserve under Colonel Breyman. The Germans resisted
+well, and Breyman died in defence of his post; but the Americans
+made good the ground which they had won, and captured baggage,
+tents, artillery, and a store of ammunition, which they were
+greatly in need of. They had by establishing themselves on this
+point, acquired the means of completely turning the right flank
+of the British, and gaining their rear. To prevent this
+calamity, Burgoyne effected during the night an entire change of
+position. With great skill he removed his whole army to some
+heights near the river, a little northward of the former camp,
+and he there drew up his men, expecting to be attacked on the
+following day. But Gates was resolved not to risk the certain
+triumph which his success had already secured for him. He
+harassed the English with skirmishes, but attempted no regular
+attack. Meanwhile he detached bodies of troops on both sides of
+the Hudson to prevent the British from recrossing that river, and
+to bar their retreat. When night fell, it became absolutely
+necessary for Burgoyne to retire again, and, accordingly, the
+troops were marched through a stormy and rainy night towards
+Saratoga, abandoning their sick and wounded, and the greater part
+of their baggage to the enemy.
+
+Before the rear-guard quitted the camp, the last sad honours were
+paid to the brave General Fraser, who expired on the day after
+the action.
+
+He had, almost with his last breath, expressed a wish to be
+buried in the redoubt which had formed the part of the British
+lines where he had been stationed, but which had now been
+abandoned by the English, and was within full range of the cannon
+which the advancing Americans were rapidly placing in position to
+bear upon Burgoyne's force. Burgoyne resolved, nevertheless, to
+comply with the dying wish of his comrade; and the interment took
+place under circumstances the most affecting that have ever
+marked a soldier's funeral. Still more interesting is the
+narrative of Lady Ackland's passage from the British to the
+American camp, after the battle, to share the captivity and
+alleviate the sufferings of her husband who had been severely
+wounded, and left in the enemy's power. The American historian,
+Lossing, has described both these touching episodes of the
+campaign, in a spirit that does honour to the writer as well as
+to his subject. After narrating the death of General Fraser on
+the 8th of October, he says that "It was just at sunset, on that
+calm October evening, that the corpse of General Fraser was
+carried up the hill to the place of burial within the 'great
+redoubt.' It was attended only by the military members of his
+family and Mr. Brudenell, the chaplain; yet the eyes of hundreds
+of both armies followed the solemn procession, while the
+Americans, ignorant of its true character, kept up a constant
+cannonade upon the redoubt. The chaplain, unawed by the danger
+to which he was exposed, as the cannon-balls that struck the hill
+threw the loose soil over him, pronounced the impressive funeral
+service of the Church of England with an unfaltering voice. The
+growing darkness added solemnity to the scene. Suddenly the
+irregular firing ceased, and the solemn voice of a single cannon,
+at measured intervals, boomed along the valley, and awakened the
+responses of the hills. It was a minute gun fired by the
+Americans in honour of the gallant dead. The moment the
+information was given that the gathering at the redoubt was a
+funeral company, fulfilling, at imminent peril, the last-breathed
+wishes of the noble Fraser, orders were issued to withhold the
+cannonade with balls, and to render military homage to the fallen
+brave.
+
+"The case of Major Ackland and his heroic wife presents kindred
+features. He belonged to the grenadiers, and was an accomplished
+soldier. His wife accompanied him to Canada in 1776; and during
+the whole campaign of that year, and until his return to England
+after the surrender of Burgoyne, in the autumn of 1777, endured
+all the hardships, dangers, and privations of an active campaign
+in an enemy's country. At Chambly, on the Sorel, she attended
+him in illness, in a miserable hut; and when he was wounded in
+the battle of Hubbardton, Vermont she hastened to him at
+Henesborough from Montreal, where she had been persuaded to
+remain, and resolved to follow the army hereafter. Just before
+crossing the Hudson, she and her husband had had a narrow escape
+from losing their lives in consequence of their tent accidentally
+taking fire.
+
+"During the terrible engagement of the 7th October, she heard all
+the tumult and dreadful thunder of the battle in which her
+husband was engaged; and when, on the morning of the 8th, the
+British fell back in confusion to their new position, she, with
+the other women, was obliged to take refuge among the dead and
+dying; for the tents were all struck, and hardly a shed was left
+standing. Her husband was wounded, and a prisoner in the
+American camp. That gallant officer was shot through both legs.
+When Poor and Learned's troops assaulted the grenadiers and
+artillery on the British left, on the afternoon of the 7th,
+Wilkinson, Gates's adjutant-general, while pursuing the flying
+enemy when they abandoned their battery, heard a feeble voice
+exclaim 'Protect me, sir, against that boy.' He turned and saw
+a lad with a musket taking deliberate aim at a wounded British
+officer, lying in a corner of a low fence. Wilkinson ordered the
+boy to desist, and discovered the wounded man to be Major
+Ackland. He had him conveyed to the quarters of General Poor
+(now the residence of Mr. Neilson) on the heights, where every
+attention was paid to his wants.
+
+"When the intelligence that he was wounded and a prisoner reached
+his wife, she was greatly distressed, and, by the advice of her
+friend, Baron Reidesel, resolved to visit the American camp, and
+implore the favour of a personal attendance upon her husband. On
+the 9th she sent a message to Burgoyne by Lord Petersham, his
+aide-de-camp, asking permission to depart. 'Though I was ready
+to believe,' says Burgoyne, 'that patience and fortitude, in a
+supreme degree, were to be found, as well as every other virtue,
+under the most tender forms, I was astonished at this proposal.
+After so long an agitation of spirits, exhausted not only for
+want of rest, but absolutely want of food, drenched in rain for
+twelve hours together, that a woman should be capable of such an
+undertaking as delivering herself to an enemy, probably in the
+night, and uncertain of what hands she might fall into, appeared
+an effort above human nature. The assistance I was able to give
+was small indeed. I had not even a cup of wine to offer her.
+All I could furnish her with was an open boat, and a few lines,
+written upon dirty wet paper, to General Gates, recommending her
+to his protection.' The following is a copy of the note sent by
+Burgoyne to General Gates:--'Sir,--Lady Harriet Ackland, a lady
+of the first distinction of family, rank, and personal virtues,
+is under such concern on account of Major Ackland, her husband,
+wounded and a prisoner in your hands, that I cannot refuse her
+request to commit her to your protection. Whatever general
+impropriety there may be in persons of my situation and yours to
+solicit favours, I cannot see the uncommon perseverance in every
+female grace, and the exaltation of character of this lady, and
+her very hard fortune, without testifying that your attentions to
+her will lay me under obligations. I am, sir, your obedient
+servant, J. Burgoyne.' She set out in an open boat upon the
+Hudson, accompanied by Mr. Brudenell, the chaplain, Sarah
+Pollard, her waiting maid, and her husband's valet, who had been
+severely wounded while searching for his master upon the battle-
+field. It was about sunset when they started, and a violent
+storm of rain and wind, which had been increasing since the
+morning, rendered the voyage tedious and perilous in the extreme.
+It was long after dark when they reached the American out-posts;
+the sentinel heard their oars, and hailed them, Lady Harriet
+returned the answer herself. The clear, silvery tones of a
+woman's voice amid the darkness, filled the soldier on duty with
+superstitious fear, and he called a comrade to accompany him to
+the river bank. The errand of the voyagers was made known, but
+the faithful guard, apprehensive of treachery, would not allow
+them to laud until they sent for Major Dearborn. They were
+invited by that officer to his quarters, where every attention
+was paid to them, and Lady Harriet was comforted by the joyful
+tidings that her husband was safe. In the morning she
+experienced parental tenderness from General Gates who sent her
+to her husband, at Poor's quarters, under a suitable escort.
+There she remained until he was removed to Albany."
+
+Burgoyne now took up his last position on the heights near
+Saratoga; and hemmed in by the enemy, who refused any encounter,
+and baffled in all his attempts at finding a path of escape, he
+there lingered until famine compelled him to capitulate. The
+fortitude of the British army during this melancholy period has
+been justly eulogised by many native historians, but I prefer
+quoting the testimony of a foreign writer, as free from all
+possibility of partiality. Botta says: [Botta, book viii.]
+
+"It exceeds the power of words to describe the pitiable condition
+to which the British army was now reduced. The troops were worn
+down by a series of toil, privation, sickness, and desperate
+fighting. They were abandoned by the Indians and Canadians; and
+the effective force of the whole army was now diminished by
+repeated and heavy losses, which had principally fallen on the
+best soldiers and the most distinguished officers, from ten
+thousand combatants to less than one-half that number. Of this
+remnant little more than three thousand were English.
+
+"In these circumstances, and thus weakened, they were invested by
+an army of four times their own number, whose position extended
+three parts of a circle round them; who refused to fight them, as
+knowing their weakness, and who, from the nature of the ground,
+could not be attacked in any part. In this helpless condition,
+obliged to be constantly under arms, while the enemy's cannon
+played on every part of their camp, and even the American rifle-
+balls whistled in many parts of the lines, the troops of Burgoyne
+retained their customary firmness, and, while sinking under a
+hard necessity, they showed themselves worthy of a better fate.
+They could not be reproached with an action or a word, which
+betrayed a want of temper or of fortitude."
+
+At length the 13th of October arrived, and as no prospect of
+assistance appeared, and the provisions were nearly exhausted,
+Burgoyne, by the unanimous advice of a council of war, sent a
+messenger to the American camp to treat of a convention.
+
+General Gates in the first instance demanded that the royal army
+should surrender prisoners of war. He also proposed that the
+British should ground their arms. Burgoyne replied, "This
+article is inadmissible in every extremity; sooner than this army
+will consent to ground their arms in their encampment, they will
+rush on the enemy, determined to take no quarter." After various
+messages, a convention for the surrender of the army was settled,
+which provided that "The troops under General Burgoyne were to
+march out of their camp with the honours of war, and the
+artillery of the intrenchments, to the verge of the river, where
+the arms and artillery were to be left. The arms to be piled by
+word of command from their own officers. A free passage was to
+be granted to the army under Lieutenant-General Burgoyne to Great
+Britain, upon condition of not serving again in North America
+during the present contest."
+
+The articles of capitulation were settled on the 15th of October:
+and on that very evening a messenger arrived from Clinton with an
+account of his successes, and with the tidings that part of his
+force had penetrated as far as Esopus, within fifty miles of
+Burgoyne's camp. But it was too late. The public faith was
+pledged; and the army was, indeed, too debilitated by fatigue and
+hunger to resist an attack if made; and Gates certainly would
+have made it, if the convention had been broken off.
+Accordingly, on the 17th, the convention of Saratoga was carried
+into effect. By this convention 5,790 men surrendered themselves
+as prisoners. The sick and wounded left in the camp when the
+British retreated to Saratoga, together with the numbers of the
+British, German, and Canadian troops, who were killed, wounded,
+or taken, and who had deserted in the preceding part of the
+expedition, were reckoned to be 4,689.
+
+The British sick and wounded who had fallen into the hands of the
+Americans after the battle of the 7th, were treated with
+exemplary humanity; and when the convention was executed, General
+Gates showed a noble delicacy of feeling which deserves the
+highest degree of honour. Every circumstance was avoided which
+could give the appearance of triumph. The American troops
+remained within their lines until the British had piled their
+arms; and when this was done, the vanquished officers and
+soldiers were received with friendly kindness by their victors,
+and their immediate wants were promptly and liberally supplied.
+Discussions and disputes afterwards arose as to some of the terms
+of the convention; and the American Congress refused for a long
+time to carry into effect the article which provided for the
+return of Burgoyne's men to Europe; but no blame was imputable to
+General Gates or his army, who showed themselves to be generous
+as they had proved themselves to be brave.
+
+Gates after the victory, immediately despatched Colonel Wilkinson
+to carry the happy tidings to Congress. On being introduced into
+the hall, he said, "The whole British army has laid down its arms
+at Saratoga; our own, full of vigour and courage, expect your
+order. It is for your wisdom to decide where the country may
+still have need for their service." Honours and rewards were
+liberally voted by the Congress to their conquering general and
+his men; "and it would be difficult" (says the Italian historian)
+"to describe the transports of joy which the news of this event
+excited among the Americans. They began to flatter themselves
+with a still more happy future. No one any longer felt any doubt
+about their achieving their independence. All hoped, and with
+good reason, that a success of this importance would at length
+determine France, and the other European powers that waited for
+her example, to declare themselves in favour of America. THERE
+COULD NO LONGER BE ANY QUESTION RESPECTING THE FUTURE; SINCE
+THERE WAS NO LONGER THE RISK OF ESPOUSING THE CAUSE OF A PEOPLE
+TOO FEEBLE TO DEFEND THEMSELVES."
+
+The truth of this was soon displayed in the conduct of France.
+When the news arrived at Paris of the capture of Ticonderoga, and
+of the victorious march of Burgoyne towards Albany, events which
+seemed decisive in favour of the English, instructions had been
+immediately despatched to Nantz, and the other ports of the
+kingdom, that no American privateers should be suffered to enter
+them, except from indispensable necessity, as to repair their
+vessels, to obtain provisions, or to escape the perils of the
+sea. The American commissioners at Paris, in their disgust and
+despair, had almost broken off all negotiations with the French
+government; and they even endeavoured to open communications with
+the British ministry. But the British government, elated with
+the first successes of Burgoyne, refused to listen to any
+overtures for accommodation. But when the news of Saratoga
+reached Paris, the whole scene was changed. Franklin and his
+brother commissioners found all their difficulties with the
+French government vanish. The time seemed to have arrived for
+the House of Bourbon to take a full revenge for all its
+humiliations and losses in previous wars. In December a treaty
+was arranged, and formally signed in the February following, by
+which France acknowledged the INDEPENDENT UNITED STATES OF
+AMERICA. This was, of course, tantamount to a declaration of war
+with England. Spain soon followed France; and before long
+Holland took the same course. Largely aided by French fleets and
+troops, the Americans vigorously maintained the war against the
+armies which England, in spite of her European foes, continued to
+send across the Atlantic. But the struggle was too unequal to be
+maintained by this country for many years: and when the treaties
+of 1783 restored peace to the world, the independence of the
+United States was reluctantly recognized by their ancient parent
+and recent enemy, England.
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OF EVENTS BETWEEN THE DEFEAT OF BURGOYNE AT SARATOGA,
+1777, AND THE BATTLE OF VALMY, 1792.
+
+A.D. 1781. Surrender of Lord Cornwallis and the British army to
+Washington.
+
+1782. Rodney's victory over the Spanish fleet. Unsuccessful
+siege of Gibraltar by the Spaniards and French.
+
+1783. End of the American war.
+
+1788. The States-General are convened in France:--beginning of
+the Revolution.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF VALMY.
+
+"Purpurei metuunt tyranni
+Injurioso ne pede proruas
+Stantem columnam; neu populus frequens
+Ad arma cessantes ad arma
+Concitet, imperiumque frangat."
+ HORAT. Od. i 35.
+
+"A little fire is quickly trodden out,
+Which, being suffered, rivers cannot quench."
+ SHAKESPEARE.
+
+A few miles distant from the little town of St. Menehould, in the
+north-east of France, are the village and hill of Valmy; and near
+the crest of that hill, a simple monument points out the burial-
+place of the heart of a general of the French republic, and a
+marshal of the French empire.
+
+The elder Kellerman (father of the distinguished officer of that
+name, whose cavalry-charge decided the battle of Marengo) held
+high commands in the French armies throughout the wars of the
+Convention, the Directory, the Consulate, and the Empire. He
+survived those wars, and the empire itself, dying in extreme old
+age in 1820. The last wish of the veteran on his death bed was
+that his heart should be deposited in the battle-field of Valmy,
+there to repose among the remains of his old companions in arms,
+who had fallen at his side on that spot twenty-eight years
+before, on the memorable day when they won the primal victory of
+revolutionary France, and prevented the armies of Brunswick and
+the emigrant bands of Conde from marching on defenceless Paris,
+and destroying the immature democracy in its cradle.
+
+The Duke of Valmy (for Kellerman, when made one of Napoleon's
+military peers in 1802, took his title from this same
+battlefield) had participated, during his long and active career,
+in the gaining of many a victory far more immediately dazzling
+than the the one, the remembrance of which he thus cherished. He
+had been present at many a scene of carnage, where blood flowed
+in deluges, compared with which the libations of slaughter poured
+out at Valmy would have seemed scant and insignificant. But he
+rightly estimated the paramount importance of the battle with
+which he thus wished his appellation while living, and his memory
+after his death, to be identified. The successful resistance,
+which the new Carmagnole levies, and the disorganized relics of
+the old monarchy's army, then opposed to the combined hosts and
+chosen leaders of Prussia, Austria, and the French refugee
+noblesse, determined at once and for ever the belligerent
+character of the revolution. The raw artisans and tradesmen, the
+clumsy burghers, the base mechanics and low peasant churls, as it
+had been the fashion to term the middle and lower classes in
+France, found that they could face cannon-balls, pull triggers,
+and cross bayonets, without having been drilled into military
+machines, and without being officered by scions of noble houses.
+They awoke to the consciousness of their own instinctive
+soldiership. They at once acquired confidence in themselves and
+in each other; and that confidence soon grew into a spirit of
+unbounded audacity and ambition. "From the cannonade of Valmy
+may be dated the commencement of that career of victory which
+carried their armies to Vienna and the Kremlin." [Alison.]
+
+One of the gravest reflections that arises from the contemplation
+of the civil restlessness and military enthusiasm which the close
+of the last century saw nationalised in France, is the
+consideration that these disturbing influences have become
+perpetual. No settled system of government, that shall endure
+from generation to generation, that shall be proof against
+corruption and popular violence, seems capable of taking root
+among the French. And every revolutionary movement in Paris
+thrills throughout the rest of the world. Even the successes
+which the powers allied against France gained in 1814 and 1815,
+important as they were, could not annul the effects of the
+preceding twenty-three years of general convulsion and war.
+
+In 1830, the dynasty which foreign bayonets had imposed on France
+was shaken off; and men trembled at the expected outbreak of
+French anarchy and the dreaded inroads of French ambition. They
+"looked forward with harassing anxiety to a period of destruction
+similar to that which the Roman world experienced about the
+middle of the third century of our era." [See Niebuhr's Preface
+to the second volume of the "History of Rome," written in October
+1830.] Louis Philippe cajoled revolution, and then strove with
+seeming success to stifle it. But in spite of Fieschi laws, in
+spite of the dazzle of Algerian razzias and Pyrenees-effacing
+marriages, in spite of hundreds of armed forts, and hundreds of
+thousands of coercing troops, Revolution lived, and struggled to
+get free. The old Titan spirit heaved restlessly beneath "the
+monarchy based on republican institutions." At last, four years
+ago, the whole fabric of kingcraft was at once rent and scattered
+to the winds, by the uprising of the Parisian democracy; and
+insurrections, barricades and dethronements, the downfall of
+coronets and crowns, the armed collisions of parties, systems,
+and populations, became the commonplaces of recent European
+history.
+
+France now calls herself a republic. She first assumed that
+title on the 20th of September, 1792, on the very day on which
+the battle of Valmy was fought and won. To that battle the
+democratic spirit which in 1848, as well as in 1792, proclaimed
+the Republic in Paris, owed its preservation, and it is thence
+that the imperishable activity of its principles may be dated.
+
+Far different seemed the prospects of democracy in Europe on the
+eve of that battle; and far different would have been the present
+position and influence of the French nation, if Brunswick's
+columns had charged with more boldness, or the lines of Dumouriez
+resisted with less firmness. When France, in 1792, declared war
+with the great powers of Europe, she was far from possessing that
+splendid military organization which the experience of a few
+revolutionary campaigns taught her to assume, and which she has
+never abandoned. The army of the old monarchy had, during the
+latter part of the reign of Louis XV. sunk into gradual decay,
+both in numerical force, and in efficiency of equipment and
+spirit. The laurels gained by the auxiliary regiments which
+Louis XVI. sent to the American war, did but little to restore
+the general tone of the army. The insubordination and licence,
+which the revolt of the French guards, and the participation of
+other troops in many of the first excesses of the Revolution
+introduced among the soldiery, were soon rapidly disseminated
+through all the ranks. Under the Legislative Assembly every
+complaint of the soldier against his officer, however frivolous
+or ill-founded, was listened to with eagerness, and investigated
+with partiality, on the principles of liberty and equality.
+Discipline accordingly became more and more relaxed; and the
+dissolution of several of the old corps, under the pretext of
+their being tainted with an aristocratic feeling, aggravated the
+confusion and inefficiency of the war department. Many of the
+most effective regiments during the last period of the monarchy
+had consisted of foreigners. These had either been slaughtered
+in defence of the throne against insurrections, like the Swiss;
+or had been disbanded, and had crossed the frontier to recruit
+the forces which were assembling for the invasion of France.
+Above all, the emigration of the noblesse had stripped the French
+army of nearly all its officers of high rank, and of the
+greatest portion of its subalterns. More than twelve thousand of
+the high-born youth of France, who had been trained to regard
+military command as their exclusive patrimony, and to whom the
+nation had been accustomed to look up as its natural guides and
+champions in the storm of war; were now marshalled beneath the
+banner of Conde and the other emigrant princes, for the overthrow
+of the French armies, and the reduction of the French capital.
+Their successors in the French regiments and brigades had as yet
+acquired neither skill nor experience: they possessed neither
+self-reliance nor the respect of the men who were under them.
+
+Such was the state of the wrecks of the old army; but the bulk of
+the forces with which France began the war, consisted of raw
+insurrectionary levies, which were even less to be depended on.
+The Carmagnoles, as the revolutionary volunteers were called,
+flocked, indeed, readily to the frontier from every department
+when the war was proclaimed, and the fierce leaders of the
+Jacobins shouted that the country was in danger. They were full
+of zeal and courage, "heated and excited by the scenes of the
+Revolution, and inflamed by the florid eloquence, the songs,
+dances, and signal-words with which it had been celebrated."
+[Scott, Life of Napoleon, vol. i c. viii.] But they were utterly
+undisciplined, and turbulently impatient of superior authority,
+or systematical control. Many ruffians, also, who were sullied
+with participation in the most sanguinary horrors of Paris,
+joined the camps, and were pre-eminent alike for misconduct
+before the enemy and for savage insubordination against their own
+officers. On one occasion during the campaign of Valmy, eight
+battalions of federates, intoxicated with massacre and sedition,
+joined the forces under Dumouriez, and soon threatened to uproot
+all discipline, saying openly that the ancient officers were
+traitors, and that it was necessary to purge the army, as they
+had Paris, of its aristocrats. Dumouriez posted these battalions
+apart from the others, placed a strong force of cavalry behind
+them, and two pieces of cannon on their flank. Then, affecting
+to review them, he halted at the head of the line, surrounded by
+all his staff, and an escort of a hundred hussars. "Fellows,"
+said he, "for I will not call you either citizens or soldiers,
+you see before you this artillery, behind you this cavalry; you
+are stained with crimes, and I do not tolerate here assassins or
+executioners. I know that there are scoundrels amongst you
+charged to excite you to crime. Drive them from amongst you, or
+denounce them to me, for I shall hold you responsible for their
+conduct." [Lamartine.]
+
+One of our recent historians of the Revolution, who narrates this
+incident, [Carlyle.] thus apostrophises the French general:--
+
+"Patience, O Dumouriez! This uncertain heap of shriekers,
+mutineers, were they once drilled and inured, will become a
+phalanxed mass of fighters; and wheel and whirl to order swiftly,
+like the wind or the whirlwind; tanned mustachio-figures; often
+barefoot, even barebacked, with sinews of iron; who require only
+bread and gunpowder; very sons of fire; the adroitest, hastiest,
+hottest, ever seen perhaps since Attila's time."
+
+Such phalanxed masses of fighters did the Carmagnoles ultimately
+become; but France ran a fearful risk in being obliged to rely on
+them when the process of their transmutation had barely
+commenced.
+
+The first events, indeed, of the war were disastrous and
+disgraceful to France, even beyond what might have been expected
+from the chaotic state in which it found her armies as well as
+her government. In the hopes of profiting by the unprepared
+state of Austria, then the mistress of the Netherlands, the
+French opened the campaign of 1792 by an invasion of Flanders,
+with forces whose muster-rolls showed a numerical overwhelming
+superiority to the enemy, and seemed to promise a speedy conquest
+of that old battle-field of Europe. But the first flash of an
+Austrian sabre, or the first sound of Austrian gun, was enough to
+discomfit the French. Their first corps, four thousand strong,
+that advanced from Lille across the frontier, came suddenly upon
+a far inferior detachment of the Austrian garrison of Tournay.
+Not a shot was fired, not a bayonet levelled. With one
+simultaneous cry of panic the French broke and ran headlong back
+to Lille, where they completed the specimen of insubordination
+which they had given in the field, by murdering their general and
+several of their chief officers. On the same day, another
+division under Biron, mustering ten thousand sabres and bayonets,
+saw a few Austrian skirmishers reconnoitering their position.
+The French advanced posts had scarcely given and received a
+volley, and only a few balls from the enemy's field-pieces had
+fallen among the lines, when two regiments of French dragoons
+raised the cry, "We are betrayed," galloped off, and were
+followed in disgraceful rout by the rest of the whole army.
+Similar panics, or repulses almost equally discreditable,
+occurred whenever Rochambeau, or Luckner, or La Fayette, the
+earliest French generals in the war, brought their troops into
+the presence of the enemy.
+
+Meanwhile, the allied sovereigns had gradually collected on the
+Rhine a veteran and finely-disciplined army for the invasion of
+France, which for numbers, equipment, and martial renown, both of
+generals and men, was equal to any that Germany had ever sent
+forth to conquer. Their design was to strike boldly and
+decisively at the heart of France, and penetrating the country
+through the Ardennes, to proceed by Chalons upon Paris. The
+obstacles that lay in their way seemed insignificant. The
+disorder and imbecility of the French armies had been even
+augmented by the forced flight of La Fayette, and a sudden change
+of generals. The only troops posted on or near the track by
+which the allies were about to advance, were the twenty-three
+thousand men at Sedan, whom La Fayette had commanded, and a corps
+of twenty thousand near Metz, the command of which had just been
+transferred from Luckner to Kellerman. There were only three
+fortresses which it was necessary for the allies to capture or
+mask--Sedan, Longwy, and Verdun. The defences and stores of
+these three were known to be wretchedly dismantled and
+insufficient; and when once these feeble barriers were overcome,
+and Chalons reached, a fertile and unprotected country seemed to
+invite the invaders to that "military promenade to Paris," which
+they gaily talked of accomplishing.
+
+At the end of July the allied army, having completed all
+preparations for the campaign, broke up from its cantonments, and
+marching from Luxembourg upon Longwy, crossed the French
+frontier. Eighty thousand Prussians, trained in the school, and
+many of them under the eye of the Great Frederick, heirs of the
+glories of the Seven Years' War, and universally esteemed the
+best troops in Europe, marched in one column against the central
+point of attack. Forty-five thousand Austrians, the greater part
+of whom were picked troops, and had served in the recent Turkish
+war, supplied two formidable corps that supported the flanks of
+the Prussians. There was also a powerful body of Hessians, and
+leagued with the Germans against the Parisian democracy, came
+fifteen thousand of the noblest and bravest amongst the sons of
+France. In these corps of emigrants, many of the highest born of
+the French nobility, scions of houses whose chivalric trophies
+had for centuries filled Europe with renown, served as rank and
+file. They looked on the road to Paris as the path which they
+were to carve out by their swords to victory, to honour, to the
+rescue of their king, to reunion with their families, to the
+recovery of their patrimony, and to the restoration of their
+order. [See Scott, Life of Napoleon, vol. i. c. xi.]
+
+Over this imposing army the allied sovereigns placed as
+generalissimo the Duke of Brunswick, one of the minor reigning
+princes of Germany, a statesman of no mean capacity, and who had
+acquired in the Seven Years' War, a military reputation second
+only to that of the Great Frederick himself. He had been deputed
+a few years before to quell the popular movements which then took
+place in Holland; and he had put down the attempted revolution in
+that country with a promptitude and completeness, which appeared
+to augur equal success to the army that now marched under his
+orders on a similar mission into France.
+
+Moving majestically forward, with leisurely deliberation, that
+seemed to show the consciousness of superior strength, and a
+steady purpose of doing their work thoroughly, the Allies
+appeared before Longwy on the 20th of August, and the dispirited
+and dependent garrison opened the gates of that fortress to them
+after the first shower of bombs. On the 2d of September the
+still more important stronghold of Verdun capitulated after
+scarcely the shadow of resistance.
+
+Brunswick's superior force was now interposed between Kellerman's
+troops on the left, and the other French army near Sedan, which
+La Fayette's flight had, for the time, left destitute of a
+commander. It was in the power of the German general, by
+striking with an overwhelming mass to the right and left, to
+crush in succession each of these weak armies, and the allies
+might then have marched irresistible and unresisted upon Paris.
+But at this crisis Dumouriez, the new commander-in-chief of the
+French, arrived at the camp near Sedan, and commenced a series of
+movements, by which he reunited the dispersed and disorganized
+forces of his country, checked the Prussian columns at the very
+moment when the last obstacles of their triumph seemed to have
+given way, and finally rolled back the tide of invasion far
+across the enemy's frontier.
+
+The French fortresses had fallen; but nature herself still
+offered to brave and vigorous defenders of the land, the means of
+opposing a barrier to the progress of the Allies. A ridge of
+broken ground, called the Argonne, extends from the vicinity of
+Sedan towards the south-west for about fifteen or sixteen
+leagues, The country of L'Argonne has now been cleared and
+drained; but in 1792 it was thickly wooded, and the lower
+portions of its unequal surface were filled with rivulets and
+marshes. It thus presented a natural barrier of from four to
+five leagues broad, which was absolutely impenetrable to an army,
+except by a few defiles, such as an inferior force might easily
+fortify and defend. Dumouriez succeeded in marching his army
+down from Sedan behind the Argonne, and in occupying its passes,
+while the Prussians still lingered on the north-eastern side of
+the forest line. Ordering Kellerman to wheel round from Metz to
+St. Menehould, and the reinforcements from the interior and
+extreme north also to concentrate at that spot, Dumouriez trusted
+to assemble a powerful force in the rear of the south-west
+extremity of the Argonne, while, with the twenty-five thousand
+men under his immediate command, he held the enemy at bay before
+the passes, or forced him to a long circumvolution round one
+extremity of the forest ridge, during which, favourable
+opportunities of assailing his flank were almost certain to
+occur. Dumouriez fortified the principal defiles, and boasted of
+the Thermopylae which he had found for the invaders; but the
+simile was nearly rendered fatally complete for the defending
+force. A pass, which was thought of inferior importance, had
+been but slightly manned, and an Austrian corps under Clairfayt,
+forced it after some sharp fighting. Dumouriez with great
+difficulty saved himself from being enveloped and destroyed by
+the hostile columns that now pushed through the forest. But
+instead of despairing at the failure of his plans, and falling
+back into the interior, to be completely severed from Kellerman's
+army, to be hunted as a fugitive under the walls of Paris by the
+victorious Germans, and to lose all chance of ever rallying his
+dispirited troops, he resolved to cling to the difficult country
+in which the armies still were grouped, to force a junction with
+Kellerman, and so to place himself at the head of a force, which
+the invaders would not dare to disregard, and by which he might
+drag them back from the advance on Paris, which he had not been
+able to bar. Accordingly, by a rapid movement to the south,
+during which, in his own words, "France was within a hair's-
+breadth of destruction," and after, with difficulty, checking
+several panics of his troops in which they ran by thousands at
+the sight of a few Prussian hussars, Dumouriez succeeded in
+establishing his head-quarters in a strong position at St.
+Menehould, protected by the marshes and shallows of the river
+Aisne and Aube, beyond which, to the north-west, rose a firm and
+elevated plateau, called Dampierre's Camp, admirably situated for
+commanding the road by Chalons to Paris, and where he intended to
+post Kellerman's army so soon as it came up. [Some late writers
+represent that Brunswick did not wish to check Dumouriez. There
+is no sufficient authority for this insinuation, which seems to
+have been first prompted by a desire to soothe the wounded
+military pride of the Prussians.]
+
+The news of the retreat of Dumouriez from the Argonne passes, and
+of the panic flight of some divisions of his troops, spread
+rapidly throughout the country; and Kellerman, who believed that
+his comrade's army had been annihilated, and feared to fall among
+the victorious masses of the Prussians, had halted on his march
+from Metz when almost close to St. Menehould. He had actually
+commenced a retrograde movement, when couriers from his
+commander-in-chief checked him from that fatal course; and then
+continuing to wheel round the rear and left flank of the troops
+at St. Menehould, Kellerman, with twenty thousand of the army of
+Metz, and some thousands of volunteers who had joined him in the
+march, made his appearance to the west of Dumouriez, on the very
+evening when Westerman and Thouvenot, two of the staff-officers
+of Dumouriez, galloped in with the tidings that Brunswick's army
+had come through the upper passes of the Argonne in full force,
+and was deploying on the heights of La Lune, a chain of eminences
+that stretch obliquely from south-west to north-east opposite the
+high ground which Dumouriez held, and also opposite, but at a
+shorter distance from, the position which Kellerman was designed
+to occupy.
+
+The Allies were now, in fact, nearer to Paris than were the
+French troops themselves; but, as Dumouriez had foreseen,
+Brunswick deemed it unsafe to march upon the capital with so
+large a hostile force left in his rear between his advancing
+columns and his base of operations. The young King of Prussia,
+who was in the allied camp, and the emigrant princes, eagerly
+advocated an instant attack upon the nearest French general.
+Kellerman had laid himself unnecessarily open, by advancing
+beyond Dampierre's Camp, which Dumouriez had designed for him,
+and moving forward across the Aube to the plateau of Valmy, a
+post inferior in strength and space to that which he had left,
+and which brought him close upon the Prussian lines, leaving him
+separated by a dangerous interval from the troops under Dumouriez
+himself. It seemed easy for the Prussian army to overwhelm him
+while thus isolated, and then they might surround and crush
+Dumouriez at their leisure.
+
+Accordingly, the right wing of the allied army moved forward, in
+the grey of the morning of the 20th of September, to gain
+Kellerman's left flank and rear, and cut him off from retreat
+upon Chalons, while the rest of the army, moving from the heights
+of La Lune, which here converge semi-circularly round the plateau
+of Valmy, were to assail his position in front, and interpose
+between him and Dumouriez. An unexpected collision between some
+of the advanced cavalry on each side in the low ground, warned
+Kellerman of the enemy's approach. Dumouriez had not been
+unobservant of the danger of his comrade, thus isolated and
+involved; and he had ordered up troops to support Kellerman on
+either flank in the event of his being attacked. These troops,
+however, moved forward slowly; and Kellerman's army, ranged on
+the plateau of Valmy, "projected like a cape into the midst of
+the lines of the Prussian bayonets." [See Lamartine, Hist.
+Girond. livre xvii. I have drawn much of the ensuing description
+from him.] A thick autumnal mist floated in waves of vapour over
+the plains and ravines that lay between the two armies, leaving
+only the crests and peaks of the hills glittering in the early
+light. About ten o'clock the fog began to clear off, and then
+the French from their promontory saw emerging from the white
+wreaths of mist, and glittering in the sunshine, the countless
+Prussian cavalry which were to envelops them as in a net if once
+driven from their position, the solid columns of the infantry
+that moved forward as if animated by a single will, the bristling
+batteries of the artillery, and the glancing clouds of the
+Austrian light troops, fresh from their contests with the Spahis
+of the east.
+
+The best and bravest of the French must have beheld this
+spectacle with secret apprehension and awe. However bold and
+resolute a man may be in the discharge of duty, it is an anxious
+and fearful thing to be called on to encounter danger among
+comrades of whose steadiness you can feel no certainty. Each
+soldier of Kellerman's army must have remembered the series of
+panic routs which had hitherto invariably taken place on the
+French side during the war; and must have cast restless glances
+to the right and left, to see if any symptoms of wavering began
+to show themselves, and to calculate how long it was likely to be
+before a general rush of his comrades to the rear would either
+harry him off with involuntary disgrace, or leave him alone and
+helpless, to be cut down by assailing multitudes.
+
+On that very morning, and at the self-same hour, in which the
+allied forces and the emigrants began to descend from La Lune to
+the attack of Valmy, and while the cannonade was opening between
+the Prussian and the Revolutionary batteries, the debate in the
+National Convention at Paris commenced on the proposal to
+proclaim France a Republic.
+
+The old monarchy had little chance of support in the hall of the
+Convention; but if its more effective advocates at Valmy had
+triumphed, there were yet the elements existing in France for a
+permanent revival of the better part of the ancient institutions,
+and for substituting Reform for Revolution. Only a few weeks
+before, numerously signed addresses from the middle classes in
+Paris, Rouen, and other large cities, had been presented to the
+king, expressive of their horror of the anarchists, and their
+readiness to uphold the rights of the crown, together with the
+liberties of the subject. And an armed resistance to the
+authority of the Convention, and in favour of the king, was in
+reality at this time being actively organized in La Vendee and
+Brittany, the importance of which may be estimated from the
+formidable opposition which the Royalists of these provinces made
+to the Republican party, at a later period, and under much more
+disadvantageous circumstances. It is a fact peculiarly
+illustrative of the importance of the battle of Valmy, that
+"during the summer of 1792, the gentlemen of Brittany entered
+into an extensive association for the purpose of rescuing the
+country from the oppressive yoke which had been imposed by the
+Parisian demagogues. At the head of the whole was the Marquis de
+la Rouarie, one of those remarkable men who rise into pre-
+eminence during the stormy days of a revolution, from conscious
+ability to direct its current. Ardent, impetuous, and
+enthusiastic, he was first distinguished in the American war,
+when the intrepidity of his conduct attracted the admiration of
+the Republican troops, and the same qualities rendered him at
+first an ardent supporter of the Revolution in France; but when
+the atrocities of the people began, he espoused with equal warmth
+the opposite side, and used the utmost efforts to rouse the
+noblesse of Brittany against the plebeian yoke which had been
+imposed upon them by the National Assembly. He submitted his
+plan to the Count d'Artois, and had organized one so extensive,
+as would have proved extremely formidable to the Convention, if
+the retreat of the Duke of Brunswick, in September 1792, had not
+damped the ardour of the whole of the west of France, then ready
+to break out into insurrection." [Alison, vol. iii. p. 323.]
+
+And it was not only among the zealots of the old monarchy that
+the cause of the king would then have found friends. The
+ineffable atrocities of the September massacres had just
+occurred, and the reaction produced by them among thousands who
+had previously been active on the ultra-democratic side, was
+fresh and powerful. The nobility had not yet been made utter
+aliens in the eyes of the nation by long expatriation and civil
+war. There was not yet a generation of youth educated in
+revolutionary principles, and knowing no worship-save that of
+military glory, Louis XVI. was just and humane, and deeply
+sensible of the necessity of a gradual extension of political
+rights among all classes of his subjects. The Bourbon throne, if
+rescued in 1792, would have had chances of stability, such as did
+not exist for it in 1814, and seem never likely to be found again
+in France.
+
+Serving under Kellerman on that day was one who experienced,
+perhaps the most deeply of all men, the changes for good and for
+evil which the French Revolution has produced. He who, in his
+second exile, bore the name of the Count de Neuilly in this
+country, and who lately was Louis Philippe, King of the French,
+figured in the French lines at Valmy, as a young and gallant
+officer, cool and sagacious beyond his years, and trusted
+accordingly by Kellerman and Dumouriez with an important station
+in the national army. The Duc de Chartres (the title he then
+bore) commanded the French right, General Valence was on the
+left, and Kellerman himself took his post in the centre, which
+was the strength and key of his position.
+
+Besides these celebrated men, who were in the French army, and
+besides the King of Prussia, the Duke of Brunswick, and other men
+of rank and power, who were in the lines of the Allies, there was
+an individual present at the battle of Valmy, of little political
+note, but who has exercised, and exercises, a greater influence
+over the human mind, and whose fame is more widely spread, than
+that of either duke, or general, or king. This was the German
+poet, Goethe, who had, out of curiosity, accompanied the allied
+army on its march into France as a mere spectator. He has given
+us a curious record of the sensations which he experienced during
+the cannonade. It must be remembered that many thousands in, the
+French ranks then, like Goethe, felt the "cannon-fever" for the
+first time. The German poet says, [Goethe's Campaign in France
+in 1792. Farie's translation, p.77.]--
+
+"I had heard so much of the cannon-fever, that I wanted to know
+what kind of thing it was. ENNUI, and a spirit which every kind
+of danger excites to daring, nay even to rashness, induced me to
+ride up quite coolly to the outwork of La Lune. This was again
+occupied by our people; but it presented the wildest aspect. The
+roofs were shot to pieces; the corn-shocks scattered about, the
+bodies of men mortally wounded stretched upon them here and
+there; and occasionally a spent cannon-ball fell and rattled
+among the ruins of the the roofs.
+
+"Quite alone, and left to myself, I rode away on the heights to
+the left, and could plainly survey the favourable position of the
+French; they were standing in the form of a semicircle in the
+greatest quiet and security; Kellerman, then on the left wing,
+being the easiest to reach.
+
+"I fell in with good company on the way, officers of my
+acquaintance, belonging to the general staff and the regiment,
+greatly surprised to find me here. They wanted to take me back
+again with them; but I spoke to them of particular objects I had
+in view, and they left me without further dissuasion, to my well-
+known singular caprice.
+
+"I had now arrived quite in the region where the balls were
+playing across me: the sound of them is curious enough, as if it
+were composed of the humming of tops, the gurgling of water, and
+the whistling of birds. They were less dangerous, by reason of
+the wetness of the ground: wherever one fell, it stuck fast.
+And thus my foolish experimental ride was secured against the
+danger at least of the balls rebounding.
+
+"In the midst of these circumstances, I was soon able to remark
+that something unusual was taking place within me. I paid close
+attention to it, and still the sensation can be described only by
+similitude. It appeared as if you were in some extremely hot
+place, and, at the same time, quite penetrated by the heat of it,
+so that you feel yourself, as it were, quite one with the element
+in which you are. The eyes lose nothing of their strength or
+clearness; but it is as if the world had a kind of brown-red
+tint, which makes the situation, as well as the surrounding
+objects, more impressive. I was unable to perceive any agitation
+of the blood; but everything seemed rather to be swallowed up in
+the glow of which I speak. From this, then, it is clear in what
+sense this condition can be called a fever. It is remarkable,
+however, that the horrible uneasy feeling arising from it is
+produced in us solely through the ears; for the cannon-thunder,
+the howling and crashing of the balls through the air, is the
+real cause of these sensations.
+
+"After I had ridden back, and was in perfect security, I remarked
+with surprise that the glow was completely extinguished, and not
+the slightest feverish agitation was left behind. On the whole,
+this condition is one of the least desirable; as, indeed, among
+my dear and noble comrades, I found scarcely one who expressed a
+really passionate desire to try it."
+
+Contrary to the expectations of both friends and foes, the French
+infantry held their ground steadily under the fire of the
+Prussian guns, which thundered on them from La Lune; and their
+own artillery replied with equal spirit and greater effect on the
+denser masses of the allied army. Thinking that the Prussians
+were slackening in their fire, Kellerman formed a column in
+charging order, and dashed down into the valley, in the hopes of
+capturing some of the nearest guns of the enemy. A masked
+battery opened its fire on the French column, and drove it back
+in disorder. Kellerman having his horse shot under him, and
+being with difficulty carried off by his men. The Prussian
+columns now advanced in turn. The French artillerymen began to
+waver and desert their posts, but were rallied by the efforts and
+example of their officers; and Kellerman, reorganizing the line
+of his infantry, took his station in the ranks on foot, and
+called out to his men to let the enemy come close up, and then to
+charge them with the bayonet. The troops caught the enthusiasm
+of their general, and a cheerful shout of VIVE LA NATION! taken
+by one battalion from another, pealed across the valley to the
+assailants. The Prussians flinched from a charge up-hill against
+a force that seemed so resolute and formidable; they halted for a
+while in the hollow, and then slowly retreated up their own side
+of the valley.
+
+Indignant at being thus repulsed by such a foe, the King of
+Prussia formed the flower of his men in person, and, riding along
+the column, bitterly reproached them with letting their standard
+be thus humiliated. Then he led them on again to the attack
+marching in the front line, and seeing his staff mowed down
+around him by the deadly fire which the French artillery re-
+opened. But the troops sent by Dumouriez were now co-operating
+effectually with Kellerman, and that general's own men, flushed
+by success, presented a firmer front than ever. Again the
+Prussians retreated, leaving eight hundred dead behind, and at
+nightfall the French remained victors on the heights of Valmy.
+
+All hopes of crushing the revolutionary armies, and of the
+promenade to Paris, had now vanished, though Brunswick lingered
+long in the Argonne, till distress and sickness wasted away his
+once splendid force, and finally but a mere wreck of it recrossed
+the frontier. France, meanwhile, felt that she possessed a
+giant's strength, and like a giant did she use it. Before the
+close of that year, all Belgium obeyed the National Convention at
+Paris, and the kings of Europe, after the lapse of eighteen
+centuries, trembled once more before a conquering military
+Republic.
+
+Goethe's description of the cannonade has been quoted. His
+observation to his comrades in the camp of the Allies, at the end
+of the battle, deserves citation also. It shows that the poet
+felt (and, probably, he alone of the thousands there assembled
+felt) the full importance of that day. He describes the
+consternation and the change of demeanour which he observed among
+his Prussian friends that evening, he tells us that "most of them
+were silent; and, in fact, the power of reflection and judgment
+was wanting to all. At last I was called upon to say what I
+thought of the engagement; for I had been in the habit of
+enlivening and amusing the troop with short sayings. This time I
+said: 'FROM THIS PLACE, AND FROM THIS DAY FORTH, COMMENCES A NEW
+ERA IN THE WORLD'S HISTORY, AND YOU CAN ALL SAY THAT YOU WERE
+PRESENT AT ITS BIRTH.'"
+
+
+SYNOPSIS OP EVENTS BETWEEN THE BATTLE OF VALMY, 1792, AND THE
+BATTLE OF WATERLOO, 1815.
+
+A.D. 1793. Trial and execution of Louis XVI. at Paris. England
+and Spain declare war against France. Royalist war in La Vendee.
+Second invasion of France by the Allies.
+
+1794. Lord Howe's victory over the French fleet. Final
+partition of Poland by Russia, Prussia, and Austria.
+
+1795. The French armies under Pichegru, conquer Holland.
+Cessation of the war in La Vendee.
+
+1796. Bonaparte commands the French army of Italy and gains
+repeated victories over the Austrians.
+
+1797. Victory of Jervis, off Cape St. Vincent. Peace of Campo
+Formio between France and Austria. Defeat of the Dutch off
+Camperdown by Admiral Duncan.
+
+1798. Rebellion in Ireland. Expedition of the French under
+Bonaparte to Egypt. Lord Nelson destroys the French fleet at the
+Battle of the Nile.
+
+1799. Renewal of the war between Austria and France. The
+Russian emperor sends an army in aid of Austria, under Suwarrow.
+The French are repeatedly defeated in Italy. Bonaparte returns
+from Egypt and makes himself First Consul of France. Massena
+wins the battle of Zurich. The Russian emperor makes peace with
+France.
+
+1800. Bonaparte passes the Alps and defeats the Austrians at
+Marengo. Moreau wins the battle of Hohenlinden.
+
+1801. Treaty of Luneville between France and Austria. The
+battle of Copenhagen.
+
+1802. Peace of Amiens.
+
+1803. War between England and France renewed.
+
+1804. Napoleon Bonaparte is made Emperor of France.
+
+1805. Great preparations of Napoleon to invade England.
+Austria, supported by Russia, renews war with France. Napoleon
+marches into Germany, takes Vienna, and gains the battle of
+Austerlitz. Lord Nelson destroys the combined French and Spanish
+fleets, and is killed at the battle of Trafalgar.
+
+1806. War between Prussia and France, Napoleon conquers Prussia
+in the battle of Jena.
+
+1807. Obstinate warfare between the French and Russian armies in
+East Prussia and Poland. Peace of Tilsit.
+
+1808. Napoleon endeavours to make his brother King of Spain.
+Rising of the Spanish nation against him. England sends troops
+to aid the Spaniards. Battles of Vimiera and Corunna.
+
+1809. War renewed between France and Austria. Battles of
+Asperne and Wagram. Peace granted to Austria. Lord Wellington's
+victory of Talavera, in Spain.
+
+1810. Marriage of Napoleon and the Arch-duchess Maria Louisa.
+Holland annexed to France.
+
+1812. War between England and the United States. Napoleon
+invades Russia. Battle of Borodino. The French occupy Moscow,
+which is burned. Disastrous retreat and almost total destruction
+of the great army of France.
+
+1813. Prussia and Austria take up arms again against France.
+Battles of Lutzen, Bautzen, Dresden, Culm, and Leipsic. The
+French are driven out of Germany. Lord Wellington gains the
+great battle of Vittoria, which completes the rescue of Spain
+from France.
+
+1814. The Allies invade France on the eastern, and Lord
+Wellington invades it on the southern frontier. Battles of Laon,
+Montmirail, Arcis-sur-Aube, and others in the north-east of
+France; and of Toulouse in the south. Paris surrenders to the
+Allies, and Napoleon abdicates. First restoration of the
+Bourbons. Napoleon goes to the isle of Elba, which is assigned
+to him by the Allies. Treaty of Ghent, between the United States
+and England.
+
+1815. Napoleon suddenly escapes from Elba, and lands in France.
+The French soldiery join him and Louis XVIII. is obliged to fly
+from the throne.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO, 1815.
+
+"Thou first and last of fields, king-making victory."--BYRON.
+
+England has now been blest with thirty-seven years of peace. At
+no other period of her history can a similarly long cessation
+from a state of warfare be found. It is true that our troops
+have had battles to fight during this interval for the protection
+and extension of our Indian possessions and our colonies; but
+these have been with distant and unimportant enemies. The danger
+has never been brought near our own shores, and no matter of
+vital importance to our empire has ever been at stake. We have
+not had hostilities with either France, America, or Russia; and
+when not at war with any of our peers, we feel ourselves to be
+substantially at peace. There has, indeed, throughout this long
+period, been no great war, like those with which the previous
+history of modern Europe abounds. There have been formidable
+collisions between particular states; and there have been still
+more formidable collisions between the armed champions of the
+conflicting principles of absolutism and democracy; but there has
+been no general war, like those of the French Revolution, like
+the American, or the Seven Years' War, or like the War of the
+Spanish Succession. It would be far too much to augur from this,
+that no similar wars will again convulse the world; but the value
+of the period of peace which Europe has gained, is incalculable;
+even if we look on it as only a truce, and expect again to see
+the nations of the earth recur to what some philosophers have
+termed man's natural state of warfare.
+
+No equal number of years can be found, during which science,
+commerce, and civilization have advanced so rapidly and so
+extensively, as has been the case since 1815. When we trace
+their progress, especially in this country, it is impossible not
+to feel that their wondrous development has been mainly due to
+the land having been at peace. [See the excellent Introduction
+to Mr. Charles Knight's "History of the Thirty Years' Peace."]
+Their good effects cannot be obliterated, even if a series of
+wars were to recommence. When we reflect on this, and contrast
+these thirty-seven years with the period that preceded them, a
+period of violence, of tumult, of unrestingly destructive
+energy,--a period throughout which the wealth of nations was
+scattered like sand, and the blood of nations lavished like
+water,--it is impossible not to look with deep interest on the
+final crisis of that dark and dreadful epoch; the crisis out of
+which our own happier cycle of years has been evolved. The great
+battle which ended the twenty-three years' war of the first
+French Revolution, and which quelled the man whose genius and
+ambition had so long disturbed and desolated the world, deserves
+to be regarded by us, not only with peculiar pride, as one of our
+greatest national victories, but with peculiar gratitude for the
+repose which it secured for us, and for the greater part of the
+human race.
+
+One good test for determining the importance of Waterloo, is to
+ascertain what was felt by wise and prudent statesmen before that
+battle, respecting the return of Napoleon from Elba to the
+Imperial throne of France, and the probable effects of his
+success. For this purpose, I will quote the words, not of any of
+our vehement anti-Gallican politicians of the school of Pitt, but
+of a leader of our Liberal party, of a man whose reputation as a
+jurist, a historian and a far-sighted and candid statesman, was,
+and is, deservedly high, not only in this country, but throughout
+Europe. Sir James Mackintosh, in the debate in the British House
+of Commons, on the 20th April, 1815, spoke thus of the return
+from Elba:--
+
+"Was it in the power of language to describe the evil. Wars
+which had raged for more than twenty years throughout Europe;
+which had spread blood and desolation from Cadiz to Moscow, and
+from Naples to Copenhagen; which had wasted the means of human
+enjoyment, and destroyed the instruments of social improvement;
+which threatened to diffuse among the European nations, the
+dissolute and ferocious habits of a predatory soldiery,--at
+length, by one of those vicissitudes which bid defiance to the
+foresight of man, had been brought to a close, upon the whole,
+happy beyond all reasonable expectation, with no violent shock to
+national independence, with some tolerable compromise between the
+opinions of the age and reverence due to ancient institutions;
+with no too signal or mortifying triumph over the legitimate
+interests or avowable feelings of any numerous body of men, and,
+above all, without those retaliations against nations or parties,
+which beget new convulsions, often as horrible as those which
+they close, and perpetuate revenge and hatred and bloodshed, from
+age to age. Europe seemed to breathe after her sufferings. In
+the midst of this fair prospect, and of these consolatory hopes,
+Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from Elba; three small vessels reached
+the coast of Provence; our hopes are instantly dispelled; the
+work of our toil and fortitude is undone; the blood of Europe is
+spilt in vain--
+
+"'Ibi omnis effusus labor!'"
+
+
+The Congress of Emperors, Kings, Princes, Generals, and
+Statesmen, who had assembled at Vienna to remodel the world after
+the overthrow of the mighty conqueror, and who thought that
+Napoleon had passed away for ever from the great drama of
+European politics, had not yet completed their triumphant
+festivities, and their diplomatic toils, when Talleyrand, on the
+11th of March, 1815, rose up among them, and announced that the
+ex-emperor had escaped from Elba, and was Emperor of France once
+more. It is recorded by Sir Walter Scott, as a curious
+physiological fact, that the first effect of the news of an event
+which threatened to neutralise all their labours, was to excite a
+loud burst of laughter from nearly every member of the Congress.
+[Life of Napoleon, vol. viii. chap. 1.] But the jest was a
+bitter one: and they soon were deeply busied in anxious
+deliberations respecting the mode in which they should encounter
+their arch-enemy, who had thus started from torpor and obscurity
+into renovated splendour and strength:
+
+"Qualis ubi in lucem coluber mala gramina pastus,
+ Frigida sub terra tumidum quem bruma tegebat,
+ Nunc positis novus exuviis nitidusque juventa,
+ Lubrica convolvit sublato pectore terga
+ Arduus ad solem, at linguis micat ore trisulcis." Virg. AEN.
+
+Napoleon sought to disunite the formidable confederacy, which he
+knew would be arrayed against him, by endeavouring to negotiate
+separately with each of the allied sovereigns. It is said that
+Austria and Russia were at first not unwilling to treat with him.
+Disputes and jealousies had been rife among several of the Allies
+on the subject of the division of the conquered countries; and
+the cordial unanimity with which they had acted during 1813 and
+the first months of 1814, had grown chill during some weeks of
+discussions. But the active exertions of Tralleyrand, who
+represented Louis XVIII. at the Congress, and who both hated and
+feared Napoleon with all the intensity of which his powerful
+spirit was capable, prevented the secession of any member of the
+Congress from the new great league against their ancient enemy.
+Still it is highly probable that, if Napoleon had triumphed in
+Belgium over the Prussians and the English, he would have
+succeeded in opening negotiations with the Austrians and
+Russians; and he might have thus gained advantages similar to
+those which he had obtained on his return from Egypt, when he
+induced the Czar Paul to withdraw the Russian armies from co-
+operating with the other enemies of France in the extremity of
+peril to which she seemed reduced in 1799. But fortune now had
+deserted him both in diplomacy and in war.
+
+On the 13th of March, 1815, the Ministers of the seven powers,
+Austria, Spain, England, Portugal, Prussia, Russia, and Sweden,
+signed a manifesto, by which they declared Napoleon an outlaw;
+and this denunciation was instantly followed up by a treaty
+between England, Austria, Prussia, and Russia (to which other
+powers soon acceded), by which the rulers of those countries
+bound themselves to enforce that decree, and to prosecute the war
+until Napoleon should be driven from the throne of France, and
+rendered incapable of disturbing the peace of Europe. The Duke
+of Wellington was the representative of England at the Congress
+of Vienna, and he was immediately applied to for his advice on
+the plan of military operations against France. It was obvious
+that Belgium would be the first battle-field; and by the general
+wish of the Allies, the English Duke proceeded thither to
+assemble an army from the contingents of Dutch, Belgian, and
+Hanoverian troops, that were most speedily available, and from
+the English regiments which his own Government was hastening to
+send over from this country. A strong Prussian corps was near
+Aix-la-Chapelle, having remained there since the campaign of the
+preceding year. This was largely reinforced by other troops of
+the same nation; and Marshal Blucher, the favourite hero of the
+Prussian soldiery, and the deadliest foe of France, assumed the
+command of this army, which was termed the Army of the Lower
+Rhine; and which, in conjunction with Wellington's forces, was to
+make the van of the armaments of the Allied Powers. Meanwhile
+Prince Swartzenburg was to collect 130,000 Austrians, and 124,000
+troops of other Germanic States, as "the Army of the Upper
+Rhine;" and 168,000 Russians, under the command of Barclay de
+Tolly, were to form "the Army of the Middle Rhine," and to repeat
+the march from Muscovy to that river's banks.
+
+The exertions which the Allied Powers thus made at this crisis to
+grapple promptly with the French emperor have truly been termed
+gigantic; and never were Napoleon's genius and activity more
+signally displayed, than in the celerity and skill by which he
+brought forward all the military resources of France, which the
+reverses of the three preceding years, and the pacific policy of
+the Bourbons during the months of their first restoration, had
+greatly diminished and disorganized. He re-entered Paris on the
+20th of March, and by the end of May, besides sending a force
+into La Vendee to put down the armed rising of the royalists in
+that province, and besides providing troops under Massena and
+Suchet for the defence of the southern frontiers of France,
+Napoleon had an army assembled in the north-east for active
+operations under his own command, which amounted to between one
+hundred and twenty, and one hundred and thirty thousand men, with
+a superb park of artillery and in the highest possible state of
+equipment, discipline, and efficiency. [See for these numbers
+Siborne's History of the Campaign of Waterloo, vol. i. p. 41.]
+
+The approach of the multitudinous Russian, Austrian, Bavarian,
+and other foes of the French Emperor to the Rhine was necessarily
+slow; but the two most active of the allied powers had occupied
+Belgium with their troops, while Napoleon was organizing his
+forces. Marshal Blucher was there with one hundred and sixteen
+thousand Prussians; and, before the end of May, the Duke of
+Wellington was there also with about one hundred and six thousand
+troops, either British or in British pay. [Ibid. vol. i. chap.
+3. Wellington had but a small part of his old Peninsular army in
+Belgium. The flower of it had been sent on the expeditions
+against America. His troops, in 1815, were chiefly second
+battalions, or regiments lately filled up with new recruits. See
+Scott, vol viii. p. 474.] Napoleon determined to attack these
+enemies in Belgium. The disparity of numbers was indeed great,
+but delay was sure to increase the proportionate numerical
+superiority of his enemies over his own ranks. The French
+Emperor considered also that "the enemy's troops were now
+cantoned under the command of two generals, and composed of
+nations differing both in interest and in feelings." [See
+Montholon's Memoirs, p. 45.] His own army was under his own sole
+command. It was composed exclusively of French soldiers, mostly
+of veterans, well acquainted with their officers and with each
+other, and full of enthusiastic confidence in their commander.
+If he could separate the Prussians from the British, so as to
+attack each singly, he felt sanguine of success, not only against
+these the most resolute of his many adversaries, but also against
+the other masses, that were slowly labouring up against his
+eastern dominions.
+
+The triple chain of strong fortresses, which the French possessed
+on the Belgian frontier, formed a curtain, behind which Napoleon
+was able to concentrate his army, and to conceal, till the very
+last moment, the precise line of attack which he intended to
+take. On the other hand, Blucher and Wellington were obliged to
+canton their troops along a line of open country of considerable
+length, so as to watch for the outbreak of Napoleon from
+whichever point of his chain of strongholds he should please to
+make it. Blucher, with his army, occupied the banks of the
+Sambre and the Meuse, from Liege on his left, to Charleroi on his
+right; and the Duke of Wellington covered Brussels; his
+cantonments being partly in front of that city and between it and
+the French frontier, and partly on its west their extreme right
+reaching to Courtray and Tournay, while the left approached
+Charleroi and communicated with the Prussian right. It was upon
+Charleroi that Napoleon resolved to level his attack, in hopes of
+severing the two allied armies from each other, and then pursuing
+his favourite tactic of assailing each separately with a superior
+force on the battle-field, though the aggregate of their numbers
+considerably exceeded his own.
+
+The first French corps d'armee, commanded by Count d'Erlon, was
+stationed in the beginning of June in and around the city of
+Lille, near to the north-eastern frontier of France. The second
+corps, under Count Reille, was at Valenciennes, to the right of
+the first one. The third corps, under Count Vandamme, was at
+Mezieres. The fourth, under Count Gerard, had its head-quarters
+at Metz, and the sixth under Count Lobau, was at Laon. [The
+fifth corps was under Count Rapp at Strasburg.] Four corps of
+reserve cavalry, under Marshal Grouchy, were also near the
+frontier, between the rivers Aisne and Sambre. The Imperial
+Guard remained in Paris until the 8th of June, when it marched
+towards Belgium, and reached Avesnes on the 13th; and in the
+course of the same and the following day, the five corps d'armee
+with the cavalry reserves which have been mentioned, were, in
+pursuance of skilfully combined orders, rapidly drawn together,
+and concentrated in and around the same place, on the right bank
+of the river Sambre. On the 14th Napoleon arrived among his
+troops, who were exulting at the display of their commander's
+skill in the celerity and precision with which they had been
+drawn together, and in the consciousness of their collective
+strength. Although Napoleon too often permitted himself to use
+language unworthy of his own character respecting his great
+English adversary, his real feelings in commencing this campaign
+may be judged from the last words which he spoke, as he threw
+himself into his travelling carriage to leave Paris for the army.
+"I go," he said, "to measure myself with Wellington."
+
+The enthusiasm of the French soldiers at seeing their Emperor
+among them, was still more excited by the "Order of the day," in
+which he thus appealed to them:
+
+"Napoleon, by the Grace of God, and the Constitution of the
+Empire, Emperor of the French, &c. to the Grand Army.
+
+AT THE IMPERIAL HEAD-QUARTERS, AVESNES, JUNE 14th, 1815.
+ "Soldiers! this day is the anniversary of Marengo and of
+Friedland, which twice decided the destiny of Europe. Then, as
+after Austerlitz, as after Wagram, we were too generous! We
+believed in the protestations and in the oaths of princes, whom
+we left on their thrones. Now, however, leagued together, they
+aim at the independence and the most sacred rights of France.
+They have commenced the most unjust of aggressions. Let us,
+then, march to meet them. Are they and we no longer the same
+men?
+
+"Soldiers! at Jena, against these same Prussians, now so
+arrogant, you were one to three, and at Montmirail one to six!
+
+"Let those among you who have been captives to the English,
+describe the nature of their prison ships, and the frightful
+miseries they endured.
+
+"The Saxons, the Belgians, the Hanoverians, the soldiers of the
+Confederation of the Rhine, lament that they are compelled to use
+their arms in the cause of princes, the enemies of justice and of
+the rights of all nations. They know that this coalition is
+insatiable! After having devoured twelve millions of Poles,
+twelve millions of Italians, one million of Saxons, and six
+millions of Belgians, it now wishes to devour the states of the
+second rank in Germany.
+
+"Madmen! one moment of prosperity has bewildered them. The
+oppression and the humiliation of the French people are beyond
+their power. If they enter France they will there find their
+grave.
+
+"Soldiers! we have forced marches to make, battles to fight,
+dangers to encounter; but, with firmness victory will, be ours.
+The rights, the honour, and the happiness of the country will be
+recovered!
+
+"To every Frenchman who has a heart, the moment is now arrived to
+conquer or to die. "NAPOLEON."
+
+"THE MARSHAL DUKE OF DALMATIA. MAJOR GENERAL."
+
+The 15th of June had scarcely dawned before the French army was
+in motion for the decisive campaign, and crossed the frontier in
+three columns, which were pointed upon Charleroi and its
+vicinity. The French line of advance upon Brussels, which city
+Napoleon resolved to occupy, thus lay right through the centre of
+the cantonments of the Allies.
+
+Much criticism has been expended on the supposed surprise of
+Wellington's army in its cantonments by Napoleon's rapid advance.
+These comments would hardly have been made if sufficient
+attention had been paid to the geography of the Waterloo
+campaign; and if it had been remembered that the protection of
+Brussels was justly considered by the allied generals a matter of
+primary importance. If Napoleon could, either by manoeuvring or
+fighting, have succeeded in occupying that city, the greater part
+of Belgium would unquestionably have declared in his favour; and
+the results of such a success, gained by the Emperor at the
+commencement of the campaign, might have decisively influenced
+the whole after-current of events. A glance at the map will show
+the numerous roads that lead from the different fortresses on the
+French north-eastern frontier, and converge upon Brussels; any
+one of which Napoleon might have chosen for the advance of a
+strong force upon that city. The Duke's army was judiciously
+arranged, so as to enable him to concentrate troops on any one of
+these roads sufficiently in advance of Brussels to check an
+assailing enemy. The army was kept thus available for movement
+in any necessary direction, till certain intelligence arrived on
+the 15th of June that the French had crossed the frontier in
+large force near Thuin, that they had driven back the Prussian
+advanced troops under General Ziethen, and were also moving
+across the Sambre upon Charleroi.
+
+Marshal Blucher now rapidly concentrated his forces, calling them
+in from the left upon Ligny, which is to the north-east of
+Charleroi. Wellington also drew his troops together, calling
+them in from the right. But even now, though it was certain that
+the French were in large force at Charleroi it was unsafe for the
+English general to place his army directly between that place and
+Brussels, until it was certain that no corps of the enemy was
+marching upon Brussels by the western road through Mons and Hal.
+The Duke therefore, collected his troops in Brussels and its
+immediate vicinity, ready to move due southward upon Quatre Bras,
+and co-operate with Blucher, who was taking his station at Ligny:
+but also ready to meet and defeat any manoeuvre, that the enemy
+might make to turn the right of the Allies, and occupy Brussels
+by a flanking movement. The testimony of the Prussian general,
+Baron Muffling, who was attached to the Duke's staff during the
+campaign, and who expressly states the reasons on which the
+English general acted, ought for ever to have silenced the "weak
+inventions of the enemy" about the Duke of Wellington having been
+deceived and surprised by his assailant, which some writers of
+our own nation, as well as foreigners, have incautiously repeated.
+[See "Passages from my Life and Writings," by Baron Muffling,
+p. 224 of the English Translation, edited by Col. Yorke. See
+also the 178th number of the QUARTERLY. It is strange that
+Lamartine should, after the appearance of Muffling's work, have
+repeated in his "History of the Restoration" the myth of
+Wellington having been surprised in the Brussels ball-room, &c.]
+
+It was about three o'clock in the afternoon of the 15th, that a
+Prussian officer reached Brussels, whom General Ziethen had sent
+to Muffling to inform him of the advance of the main French army
+upon Charleroi. Muffling immediately communicated this to the
+Duke of Wellington; and asked him whether he would now
+concentrate his army, and what would be his point of
+concentration; observing that Marshal Blucher in consequence of
+this intelligence would certainly concentrate the Prussians at
+Ligny. The Duke replied--"If all is as General Ziethen supposes,
+I will concentrate on my left wing, and so be in readiness to
+fight in conjunction with the Prussian army. Should, however, a
+portion of the enemy's force come by Mons, I must concentrate
+more towards my centre. This is the reason why I must wait for
+positive news from Mons before I fix the rendezvous. Since,
+however, it is certain that the troops MUST march, though it is
+uncertain upon what precise spot they must march, I will order
+all to be in readiness, and will direct a brigade to move at once
+towards Quatre Bras." [Muffling, p. 231.]
+
+Later in the same day a message from Blucher himself was
+delivered to Muffling, in which the Prussian Field-Marshal
+informed the Baron that he was concentrating his men at Sombref
+and Ligny, and charged Muffling to give him speedy intelligence
+respecting the concentration of Wellington. Muffling immediately
+communicated this to the Duke, who expressed his satisfaction
+with Blucher's arrangements, but added that he could not even
+then resolve upon his own point of concentration before he
+obtained the desired intelligence from Mons. About midnight this
+information arrived. The Duke went to the quarters of General
+Muffling, and told him that he now had received his reports from
+Mons, and was sure that no French troops were advancing by that
+route, but that the mass of the enemy's force was decidedly
+directed on Charleroi. He informed the Prussian general that he
+had ordered the British troops to move forward upon Quatre Bras;
+but with characteristic coolness and sagacity resolved not to
+give the appearance of alarm by hurrying on with them himself. A
+ball was to be given by the Duchess of Richmond at Brussels that
+night, and the Duke proposed to General Muffling that they should
+go to the ball for a few hours, and ride forward in the morning
+to overtake the troops at Quatre Bras.
+
+To hundreds, who were assembled at that memorable ball, the news
+that the enemy was advancing, and that the time for battle had
+come, must have been a fearfully exciting surprise, and the
+magnificent stanzas of Byron are as true as they are beautiful;
+but the Duke and his principal officers knew well the stern
+termination to that festive scene which was approaching. One by
+one, and in such a way as to attract as little observation as
+possible, the leaders of the various corps left the ball-room,
+and took their stations at the head of their men, who were
+pressing forward through the last hours of the short summer night
+to the arena of anticipated slaughter.
+
+[There was a sound of revelry by night,
+ And Belgium's capital had gather'd then
+ Her Beauty and her chivalry, and bright
+ The lamps shone o'er fair women and brave men;
+ A thousand hearts beat happily; and when
+ Music arose with its voluptuous swell,
+ Soft eyes look'd love to eyes which spake again,
+ And all went merry as a marriage bell;
+ But hush! hark! a deep sound strikes like a rising knell,
+
+ Did ye not hear it?--No; 'twas but; the wind,
+ Or the car rattling o'er the stony street;
+ On with the dance! let joy be unconfined;
+ No sleep till morn, when Youth and Pleasure meet
+ To chase the glowing Hours with flying feet--
+ But, hark!--that heavy sound breaks in once more,
+ As if the clouds its echo would repeat;
+ And nearer, clearer, deadlier than before!
+ Arm! Arm! it is--it is--the cannon's opening roar!
+
+ Within a window'd niche of that high hall
+ Sate Brunswick's fated chieftain; he did hear
+ That sound the first amidst the festival,
+ And caught its tone with Death's prophetic ear;
+ And when they smiled because he deem'd it near,
+ His heart more truly knew that peal too well
+ Which stretch'd his father on a bloody bier,
+ And roused the vengeance blood alone could quell;
+ He rush'd into the field, and, foremost fighting, fell.
+
+ Ah! then and there was hurrying to and fro,
+ And gathering tears, and tremblings of distress,
+ And cheeks all pale, which but an hour ago
+ Blush'd at the praise of their own loveliness;
+ And there were sudden partings, such as press
+ The life from out young hearts, and choking sighs
+ Which ne'er might be repeated; who could guess
+ If ever more should meet those mutual eyes,
+ Since upon night so sweet such awful morn could rise!
+
+ And there was mounting in hot haste: the steed,
+ The mustering squadron, and the clattering car,
+ Went pouring forward with impetuous speed,
+ And swiftly forming in the ranks of war;
+ And the deep thunder peal on peal afar;
+ And near, the beat of the alarming drum
+ Roused up the soldier ere the morning star;
+ While thronged the citizens with terror dumb,
+ Or whispering, with white lips--"The foe! They come! they
+come!"
+
+ And Ardennes waves above them her green leaves,
+ Dewy with nature's teardrops, as they pass,
+ Grieving, if aught inanimate e'er grieves,
+ Over the unreturning brave,--alas!
+ Ere evening to be trodden like the grass
+ Which now beneath them, but above shall grow
+ In its next verdure, when this fiery mass
+ Of living valour, rolling on the foe
+ And burning with high hope, shall moulder cold and low.
+
+ Last noon beheld them full of lusty life,
+ Last eve in Beauty's circle proudly gay,
+ The midnight brought the signal-sound of strife,
+ The morn the marshalling in arms,--the day
+ Battle's magnificently stern array!
+ The thunder-clouds close o'er it, which when rent
+ The earth is covered thick with other clay,
+ Which her own clay shall cover, heaped and pent,
+ Rider and horse,--friend, foe,--in one red burial blent.
+
+Napoleon's operations on the 16th had been conducted with signal
+skill and vigour; and their results had been very advantageous
+for his plan of the campaign. With his army formed in three vast
+columns, [Victoires et Conquetes des Francais, vol. xxv. p. 177.]
+he had struck at the centre of the line of cantonments of his
+allied foes; and he had so far made good his blow, that he had
+affected the passage of the Sambre, he had beaten with his left
+wing the Prussian corps of General Ziethen at Thuin, and with his
+centre he had in person advanced right through Charleroi upon
+Fleurus, inflicting considerable loss upon the Prussians that
+fell back before him. His right column had with little
+opposition moved forward as far as the bridge of Chatelet.
+
+Napoleon had thus a powerful force immediately in front of the
+point which Blucher had fixed for the concentration of the
+Prussian army, and that concentration was still incomplete. The
+French Emperor designed to attack the Prussians on the morrow in
+person, with the troops of his centre and right columns, and to
+employ his left wing in beating back such English troops as might
+advance to the help of their allies, and also in aiding his own
+attack upon Blucher. He gave the command of this left wing to
+Marshal Ney. Napoleon seems not to have originally intended to
+employ this celebrated General in the campaign. It was only on
+the night of the 11th of June, that Marshal Ney received at Paris
+an order to join the army. Hurrying forward to the Belgian
+frontier, he met the Emperor near Charleroi. Napoleon
+immediately directed him to take the command of the left wing,
+and to press forward with it upon Quatre Bras by the line of the
+road which leads from Charleroi to Brussels, through Gosselies,
+Frasne, Quatre Bras, Genappe, and Waterloo. Ney immediately
+proceeded to the post assigned him; and before ten on the night
+of the 15th he had occupied Gosselies and Frasne, driving out
+without much difficulty some weak Belgian detachments which had
+been stationed in those villages. The lateness of the hour, and
+the exhausted state of the French troops, who had been marching
+and fighting since ten in the morning, made him pause from
+advancing further to attack the much more important position of
+Quatre Bras. In truth, the advantages which the French gained by
+their almost superhuman energy and activity throughout the long
+day of the 15th of June, were necessarily bought at the price of
+more delay and inertness during the following night and morrow,
+than would have been observable if they had not been thus
+overtasked. Ney has been blamed for want of promptness in his
+attack upon Quatre Bras; and Napoleon has been criticised for not
+having fought at Ligny before the afternoon of the 16th: but
+their censors should remember that soldiers are but men ; and
+that there must be necessarily some interval of time, before
+troops, that have been worn and weakened by twenty hours of
+incessant fatigue and strife, can be fed, rested, reorganized,
+and brought again into action with any hope of success.
+
+Having on the night of the 15th placed the most advanced of the
+French under his command in position in front of Frasne, Ney rode
+back to Charleroi, where Napoleon also arrived about midnight,
+having returned from directing the operations of the centre and
+right column of the French. The Emperor and the Marshal supped
+together, and remained in earnest conversation till two in the
+morning. An hour or two afterwards Ney rode back to Frasne,
+where he endeavoured to collect tidings of the numbers and
+movements of the enemy in front of him; and also busied himself
+in the necessary duty of learning the amount and composition of
+the troops which he himself was commanding. He had been so
+suddenly appointed to his high station, that he did not know the
+strength of the several regiments under him, or even the names of
+their commanding officers. He now caused his aides-de-camp to
+prepare the requisite returns, and drew together the troops, whom
+he was thus learning before he used them.
+
+Wellington remained at the Duchess of Richmond's ball at Brussels
+till about three o'clock in the morning of the 16th, "showing
+himself very cheerful" as Baron Muffling, who accompanied him,
+observes. [Muffling, p. 233.] At five o'clock the Duke and the
+Baron were on horseback, and reached the position at Quatre Bras
+about eleven. As the French, who were in front of Frasne, were
+perfectly quiet, and the Duke was informed that a very large
+force under Napoleon in person was menacing Blucher, it was
+thought possible that only a slight detachment of the French was
+posted at Frasne in order to mask the English army. In that
+event Wellington, as he told Baron Muffling, would be able to
+employ his whole strength in supporting the Prussians: and he
+proposed to ride across from Quatre Bras to Blucher's position,
+in order to concert with him personally the measures which should
+be taken in order to bring on a decisive battle with the French.
+Wellington and Muffling rode accordingly towards Ligny, and found
+Marshal Blucher and his staff at the windmill of Bry, near that
+village. The Prussian army, 80,000 strong, was drawn up chiefly
+along a chain of heights, with the villages of Sombref, St.
+Amand, and Ligny in their front. These villages were strongly
+occupied by Prussian detachments, and formed the keys of
+Blucher's position. The heads of the columns which Napoleon was
+forming for the attack, were visible in the distance. The Duke
+asked Blucher and General Gneisenau (who was Blucher's adviser in
+matters of strategy) what they wished him to do, Muffling had
+already explained to them in a few words the Duke's earnest
+desire to support the Field-Marshal, and that he would do all
+that they wished, provided they did not ask him to divide his
+army, which was contrary to his principles. The Duke wished to
+advance with his army (as soon as it was concentrated) upon
+Frasne and Gosselies, and thence to move upon Napoleon's flank
+and rear. The Prussian leaders preferred that he should march
+his men from Quatre Bras by the Namur road, so as to form a
+reserve in rear of Blucher's army. The Duke replied, "Well, I
+will come if I am not attacked myself," and galloped back with
+Muffling to Quatre Bras, where the French attack was now actually
+raging.
+
+Marshal Ney began the battle about two o'clock in the afternoon.
+He had at this time in hand about 16,000 infantry, nearly 2,000
+cavalry, and 38 guns. The force which Napoleon nominally placed
+at his command exceeded 40,000 men. But more than one half of
+these consisted of the first French corps d'armee, under Count
+d'Erlon; and Ney was deprived of the use of this corps at the
+time that he most required it, in consequence of its receiving
+orders to march to the aid of the Emperor at Ligny. A
+magnificent body of heavy cavalry under Kellerman, nearly 5,000
+strong, and several more battalions of artillery were added to
+Ney's army during the battle of Quatre Bras; but his effective
+infantry force never exceeded 16,000.
+
+When the battle began, the greater part of the Duke's army was
+yet on its march towards Quatre Bras from Brussels and the other
+parts of its cantonments. The force of the Allies, actually in
+position there, consisted only of a Dutch and Belgian division of
+infantry, not quite 7,000 strong, with one battalion of foot, and
+one of horse-artillery. The Prince of Orange commanded them. A
+wood, called the Bois de Bossu, stretched along the right (or
+western) flank of the position of Quatre Bras; a farmhouse and
+building, called Gemiancourt, stood on some elevated ground in
+its front; and to the left (or east), were the inclosures of the
+village of Pierremont. The Prince of Orange endeavoured to
+secure these posts; but Ney carried Gemiancourt in the centre,
+and Pierremont on the east, and gained occupation of the southern
+part of the wood of Bossu. He ranged the chief part of his
+artillery on the high ground of Gemiancourt, whence it played
+throughout the action with most destructive effect upon the
+Allies. He was pressing forward to further advantages, when the
+fifth infantry division under Sir Thomas Picton and the Duke of
+Brunswick's corps appeared upon the scene. Wellington (who had
+returned to Quatre Bras from his interview with Blucher shortly
+before the arrival of these forces) restored the fight with them;
+and, as fresh troops of the Allies arrived, they were brought
+forward to stem the fierce attacks which Ney's columns and
+squadrons continued to make with unabated gallantry and zeal.
+The only cavalry of the anglo-allied army that reached Quatre
+Bras during the action, consisted of Dutch and Belgians, and a
+small force of Brunswickers, under their Duke, who was killed on
+the field. These proved wholly unable to encounter Kellerman's
+cuirassiers and Pire's lancers; the Dutch and Belgian infantry
+also gave way early in the engagement; so that the whole brunt of
+the battle fell on the British and German infantry. They
+sustained it nobly. Though repeatedly charged by the French
+cavalry, though exposed to the murderous fire of the French
+batteries, which from the heights of Gemiancourt sent shot and
+shell into the devoted squares whenever the French horseman
+withdrew, they not only repelled their assailants, but Kempt's
+and Pack's brigades, led, on by Picton, actually advanced against
+and through their charging foes, and with stern determination
+made good to the end of the day the ground which they had thus
+boldly won. Some, however, of the British regiments were during
+the confusion assailed by the French cavalry before they could
+form squares, and suffered severely. One regiment, the 92d, was
+almost wholly destroyed by the cuirassiers. A French private
+soldier, named Lami, of the 8th regiment of cuirassiers, captured
+one of the English colours, and presented it to Ney. It was a
+solitary trophy. The arrival of the English Guards about half-
+past six o'clock, enabled the Duke to recover the wood of Bossu,
+which the French had almost entirely won, and the possession of
+which by them would have enabled Ney to operate destructively
+upon the allied flank and rear. Not only was the wood of Bossu
+recovered on the British right, but the inclosures of Pierremont
+were also carried on the left. When night set in the French had
+been driven back on all points towards Frasne; but they still
+held the farm of Gemiancourt in front of the Duke's centre.
+Wellington and Muffling were unacquainted with the result of the
+collateral battle between Blucher and Napoleon, the cannonading
+of which had been distinctly audible at Quatre Bras throughout
+the afternoon and evening. The Duke observed to Muffling, that
+of course the two Allied armies would assume the offensive
+against the enemy on the morrow; and consequently, it would be
+better to capture the farm at once, instead of waiting till next
+morning. Muffling agreed in the Duke's views and Gemiancourt was
+forthwith attacked by the English and captured with little loss
+to its assailants. [Muffling, p. 242.]
+
+Meanwhile the French and the Prussians had been fighting in and
+round the villages of Ligny, Sombref, and St. Armand, from three
+in the afternoon to nine in the evening, with a savage inveteracy
+almost unparalleled in modern warfare. Blucher had in the field,
+when he began the battle, 83,417 men, and 224 guns. Bulow's
+corps, which was 25,000 strong, had not joined him; but the
+Field-Marshal hoped to be reinforced by it, or by the English
+army before the end of the action. But Bulow, through some error
+in the transmission of orders, was far in the rear; and the Duke
+of Wellington was engaged, as we have seen, with Marshal Ney.
+Blucher received early warning from Baron Muffling that the Duke
+could not come to his assistance; but, as Muffling observes,
+Wellington rendered the Prussians the great service of occupying
+more than 40,000 of the enemy, who otherwise would have crushed
+Blucher's right flank. For, not only did the conflict at Quatre
+Bras detain the French troops which actually took part in it, but
+d'Erlon received orders from Ney to join him, which hindered
+d'Erlon from giving effectual aid to Napoleon. Indeed, the whole
+of d'Erlon's corps, in consequence of conflicting directions from
+Ney and the Emperor, marched and countermarched, during the 16th,
+between Quatre Bras and Ligny without firing a shot in either
+battle.
+
+Blucher had, in fact, a superiority of more than 12,000 in number
+over the French army that attacked him at Ligny. The numerical
+difference was even greater at the beginning of the battle, as
+Lobau's corps did not come up from Charleroi till eight o'clock.
+After five hours and a half of desperate and long-doubtful
+struggle, Napoleon succeeded in breaking the centre of the
+Prussian line at Ligny, and in forcing his obstinate antagonists
+off the field of battle. The issue was attributable to his
+skill, and not to any want of spirit or resolution on the part of
+the Prussian troops; nor did they, though defeated, abate one jot
+in discipline, heart, or hope. As Blucher observed, it was a
+battle in which his army lost the day but not its honour. The
+Prussians retreated during the night of the 16th, and the early
+part of the 17th, with perfect regularity and steadiness, The
+retreat was directed not towards Maestricht, where their
+principal depots were established, but towards Wavre, so as to be
+able to maintain their communication with Wellington's army, and
+still follow out the original plan of the campaign. The heroism
+with which the Prussians endured and repaired their defeat at
+Ligny, is more glorious than many victories.
+
+The messenger who was sent to inform Wellington of the retreat of
+the Prussian army, was shot on the way; and it was not until the
+morning of the 17th that the Allies, at Quatre Bras, knew the
+result of the battle of Ligny. The Duke was ready at daybreak to
+take the offensive against the enemy with vigour, his whole army
+being by that time fully assembled. But on learning that Blucher
+had been defeated, a different course of action was clearly
+necessary. It was obvious that Napoleon's main army would now be
+directed against Wellington, and a retreat was inevitable. On
+ascertaining that the Prussian army had retired upon Wavre, that
+there was no hot pursuit of them by the French, and that Bulow's
+corps had taken no part in the action at Ligny, the Duke resolved
+to march his army back towards Brussels, still intending to cover
+that city, and to halt at a point in a line with Wavre, and there
+restore his communication with Blucher. An officer from
+Blucher's army reached the Duke about nine o'clock, from whom he
+learned the effective strength that Blucher still possessed, and
+how little discouraged his ally was by the yesterday's battle.
+Wellington sent word to the Prussian commander that he would halt
+in the position of Mont St. Jean, and accept a general battle
+with the French, if Blucher would pledge himself to come to his
+assistance with a single corps of 25,000 men. This was readily
+promised; and after allowing his men ample time for rest and
+refreshment, Wellington retired over about half the space between
+Quatre Bras and Brussels. He was pursued, but little molested,
+by the main French army, which about noon of the 17th moved
+laterally from Ligny, and joined Ney's forces, which had advanced
+through Quatre Bras when the British abandoned that position.
+The Earl of Uxbridge, with the British cavalry, covered the
+retreat of the Duke's army, with great skill and gallantry; and a
+heavy thunderstorm, with torrents of rain, impeded the operations
+of the French pursuing squadrons. The Duke still expected that
+the French would endeavour to turn his right, and march upon
+Brussels by the high road that leads through Mons and Hal. In
+order to counteract this anticipated manoeuvre, he stationed a
+force of 18,000 men, under Prince Frederick of the Netherlands,
+at Hal, with orders to maintain himself there if attacked, as
+long as possible. The Duke halted with the rest of his army at
+the position near Mont St. Jean, which, from a village in its
+neighbourhood, has received the ever-memorable name of the field
+of Waterloo.
+
+Wellington was now about twelve miles distant, on a line running
+from west to east, from Wavre, where the Prussian army had now
+been completely reorganised and collected, and where it had been
+strengthened by the junction of Bulow's troops, which had taken
+no part in the battle of Ligny. Blucher sent word from Wavre to
+the Duke, that he was coming to help the English at Mont St.
+Jean, in the morning, not with one corps, but with his whole
+army. The fiery old man only stipulated that the combined
+armies, if not attacked by Napoleon on the 18th, should
+themselves attack him on the 19th. So far were Blucher and his
+army from being in the state of annihilation described in the
+boastful bulletin by which Napoleon informed the Parisians of his
+victory at Ligny. Indeed, the French Emperor seems himself to
+have been misinformed as to the extent of loss which he had
+inflicted on the Prussians. Had he known in what good order and
+with what undiminished spirit they were retiring, he would
+scarcely have delayed sending a large force to press them in
+their retreat until noon on the 17th. Such, however, was the
+case. It was about that time that he confided to Marshal Grouchy
+the duty of pursuing the defeated Prussians, and preventing them
+from joining Wellington. He placed for this purpose 32,000 men
+and 96 guns under his orders. Violent complaints and
+recriminations passed afterwards between the Emperor and the
+marshal respecting the manner in which Grouchy attempted to
+perform this duty, and the reasons why he failed on the 18th to
+arrest the lateral movement of the Prussians from Wavre to
+Waterloo. It is sufficient to remark here, that the force which
+Napoleon gave to Grouchy (though the utmost that the Emperor's
+limited means would allow) was insufficient to make head against
+the entire Prussian army, especially after Bulow's junction with
+Blucher. We shall presently have occasion to consider what
+opportunities were given to Grouchy during the 18th, and what he
+might have effected if he had been a man of original military
+genius.
+
+But the failure of Grouchy was in truth mainly owing to the
+indomitable heroism of Blucher himself; who, though he had
+received severe personal injuries in the battle of Ligny, was as
+energetic and ready as ever in bringing his men into action
+again, and who had the resolution to expose a part of his army,
+under Thielman, to be overwhelmed by Grouchy at Wavre on the
+18th, while he urged the march of the mass of his troops upon
+Waterloo. "It is not at Wavre, but at Waterloo," said the old
+Field-Marshal, "that the campaign is to be decided;" and he
+risked a detachment, and won the campaign accordingly.
+Wellington and Blucher trusted each other as cordially, and co-
+operated as zealously, as formerly had been the case with
+Marlborough and Eugene. It was in full reliance on Blucher's
+promise to join him that the Duke stood his ground and fought at
+Waterloo; and those who have ventured to impugn the Duke's
+capacity as a general, ought to have had common-sense enough to
+perceive, that to charge the Duke with having won the battle of
+Waterloo by the help of the Prussians, is really to say that he
+won it by the very means on which he relied, and without the
+expectation of which the battle would not have been fought.
+
+Napoleon himself has found fault with Wellington for not having
+retreated further, so as to complete a junction of his army with
+Blucher's before he risked a general engagement. [See
+Montholon's Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 44.] But, as we have seen, the
+Duke justly considered it important to protect Brussels. He had
+reason to expect that his army could singly resist the French at
+Waterloo until the Prussians came up; and that, on the Prussians
+joining, there would be a sufficient force united under himself
+and Blucher for completely overwhelming the enemy. And while
+Napoleon thus censures his great adversary, he involuntarily
+bears the highest possible testimony to the military character of
+the English, and proves decisively of what paramount importance
+was the battle to which he challenged his fearless opponent.
+Napoleon asks, "IF THE ENGLISH ARMY HAD BEEN BEATEN AT WATERLOO,
+WHAT WOULD HAVE BEEN THE USE OF THOSE NUMEROUS BODIES OF TROOPS,
+OF PRUSSIANS, AUSTRIANS, GERMANS, AND SPANIARDS, WHICH WERE
+ADVANCING BY FORCED MARCHES TO THE RHINE, THE ALPS, AND THE
+PYRENEES?" [Ibid.]
+
+The strength of the army under the Duke of Wellington at Waterloo
+was 49,608 infantry, 12,402 cavalry, and 5,645 artillerymen with
+156 guns. [Siborne, vol. i. p. 376.] But of this total of
+67,655 men, scarcely 24,000 were British, a circumstance of very
+serious importance, if Napoleon's own estimate of the relative
+value of troops of different nations is to be taken. In the
+Emperor's own words, speaking of this campaign, "A French soldier
+would not be equal to more than one English soldier, but he would
+not be afraid to meet two Dutchmen, Prussians, or soldiers of the
+Confederation." [Montholon's Memoirs, vol. iv. p. 41.] There
+were about 6,000 men of the old German Legion with the Duke;
+these were veteran troops, and of excellent quality. Of the
+rest of the army the Hanoverians and Brunswickers proved
+themselves deserving of confidence and praise. But the
+Nassauers, Dutch, and Belgians were almost worthless; and not a
+few of them were justly suspected of a strong wish to fight, if
+they fought at all, under the French eagles rather than against
+them.
+
+Napoleon's army at Waterloo consisted of 48,950 infantry, 15,765
+cavalry, 7,232 artillerymen, being a total of 71,947 men, and 246
+guns. [See Siborne, UT SUPRA.] They were the flower of the
+national forces of France; and of all the numerous gallant armies
+which that martial land has poured forth, never was there one
+braver, or better disciplined, or better led, than the host that
+took up its position at Waterloo on the morning of the 18th of
+June, 1815.
+
+Perhaps those who have not seen the field of battle at Waterloo,
+or the admirable model of the ground, and of the conflicting
+armies, which was executed by Captain Siborne, may gain a
+generally accurate idea of the localities, by picturing to
+themselves a valley between two and three miles long, of various
+breadths at different points, but generally not exceeding half a
+mile. On each side of the valley there is a winding chain of low
+hills running somewhat parallel, with each other. The declivity
+from each of these ranges of hills to the intervening valley is
+gentle but not uniform, the undulations of the ground being
+frequent and considerable. The English army was posted on the
+northern, and the French army occupied the southern ridge. The
+artillery of each side thundered at the other from their
+respective heights throughout the day, and the charges of horse
+and foot were made across the valley that has been described.
+The village of Mont St. Jean is situate a little behind the
+centre of the northern chain of hills, and the village of La
+Belle Alliance is close behind the centre of the southern ridge.
+The high road from Charleroi to Brussels (a broad paved causeway)
+runs through both these villages, and bisects therefore both the
+English and the French positions. The line of this road was the
+line of Napoleon's intended advance on Brussels.
+
+There are some other local particulars connected with the
+situation of each army, which it is necessary to bear in mind.
+The strength of the British position did not consist merely in
+the occupation of a ridge of high ground. A village and ravine,
+called Merk Braine, on the Duke of Wellington's extreme right,
+secured his flank from being turned on that side; and on his
+extreme left, two little hamlets called La Haye and Papelotte,
+gave a similar, though a slighter, protection. Behind the whole
+British position is the extensive forest of Soignies. As no
+attempt was made by the French to turn either of the English
+flanks, and the battle was a day of straightforward fighting, it
+is chiefly important to ascertain what posts there were in front
+of the British line of hills, of which advantage could be taken
+either to repel or facilitate an attack; and it will be seen that
+there were two, and that each was of very great importance in the
+action. In front of the British right, that is to say, on the
+northern slope of the valley towards its western end, there stood
+an old-fashioned Flemish farm-house called Goumont, or
+Hougoumont, with out-buildings and a garden, and with a copse of
+beach trees of about two acres in extent round it. This was
+strongly garrisoned by the allied troops; and, while it was in
+their possession, it was difficult for the enemy to press on and
+force the British right wing. On the other hand, if the enemy
+could take it, it would be difficult for that wing to keep its
+ground on the heights, with a strong post held adversely in its
+immediate front, being one that; would give much shelter to the
+enemy's marksmen, and great facilities for the sudden
+concentration of attacking columns. Almost immediately in front
+of the British centre, and not so far down the slope as
+Hougoumont, there was another farm-house, of a smaller size,
+called La Haye Sainte, [Not to be confounded with the hamlet of
+La Haye at the extreme left of the British line.] which was also
+held by the British troops, and the occupation of which was found
+to be of very serious consequence.
+
+With respect to the French position, the principal feature to be
+noticed is the village of Planchenoit, which lay a little in the
+rear of their right (I.E. on the eastern side), and which proved
+to be of great importance in aiding them to check the advance of
+the Prussians.
+
+Napoleon, in his memoirs, and other French writers, have
+vehemently blamed the Duke for having given battle in such a
+position as that of Waterloo. They particularly object that the
+Duke fought without having the means of a retreat, if the attacks
+of his enemy had proved successful; and that the English army, if
+once broken, must have lost all its guns and MATERIEL in its
+flight through the Forest of Soignies, that lay in its rear. In
+answer to these censures, instead of merely referring to the
+event of the battle as proof of the correctness of the Duke's
+judgment, it is to be observed that many military critics of high
+authority, have considered the position of Waterloo to have been
+admirably adapted for the Duke's purpose of protecting Brussels
+by a battle; and that certainly the Duke's opinion in favour of
+it was not lightly or hastily formed. It is a remarkable fact
+(mentioned in the speech of Lord Bathurst when moving the vote of
+thanks to the Duke in the House of Lords), [Parliamentary
+Debates, vol. xxxi. p. 875.] that when the Duke of Wellington
+was passing through Belgium in the preceding summer of 1814, he
+particularly noticed the strength of the position of Waterloo,
+and made a minute of it at the time, stating to those who were
+with him, that if it ever should be his fate to fight a battle in
+that quarter for the protection of Brussels, he should endeavour
+to do so in that position. And with respect to the Forest of
+Soignies, which the French (and some few English) critics have
+thought calculated to prove so fatal to a retreating force, the
+Duke on the contrary believed it to be a post that might have
+proved of infinite value to his army in the event of his having
+been obliged to give way. The Forest of Soignies has no thicket
+or masses of close-growing trees. It consists of tall beeches,
+and is everywhere passable for men and horses. The artillery
+could have been withdrawn by the broad road which traverses it
+towards Brussels; and in the meanwhile a few regiments of
+resolute infantry could have held the forest and kept the
+pursuers in check. One of the best writers on the Waterloo
+campaign, Captain Pringle, [See the Appendix to the 8th volume of
+Scott's Life of Napoleon.] well observes that "every person, the
+least experienced in war, knows the extreme difficulty of forcing
+infantry from a wood which cannot be turned." The defence of the
+Bois de Bossu near Quatre Bras on the 16th of June had given a
+good proof of this; and the Duke of Wellington, when speaking in
+after years of the possible events that might have followed if he
+had been beaten back from the open field of Waterloo, pointed to
+the wood of Soignies as his secure rallying place, saying, "they
+never could have beaten us so, that we could not have held the
+wood against them." He was always confident that he could have
+made good that post until joined by the Prussians, upon whose co-
+operation he throughout depended." [See Lord Ellesmere's Life
+and Character of the Duke of Wellington, p. 40.]
+
+As has been already mentioned, the Prussians, on the morning of
+the 18th, were at Wavre, which is about twelve miles to the east
+of the field of battle of Waterloo. The junction of Bulow's
+division had more than made up for the loss sustained at Ligny;
+and leaving Thielman with about seventeen thousand men to hold
+his ground, as he best could, against the attack which Grouchy
+was about to make on Wavre, Bulow and Blucher moved with the rest
+of the Prussians through St. Lambert upon Waterloo. It was
+calculated that they would be there by three o'clock; but the
+extremely difficult nature of the ground which they had to
+traverse, rendered worse by the torrents of rain that had just
+fallen, delayed them long on their twelve miles' march.
+
+An army indeed, less animated by bitter hate against the enemy
+than was the Prussians, and under a less energetic chief than
+Blucher, would have failed altogether in effecting a passage
+through the swamps, into which the incessant rain had transformed
+the greater part of the ground through which it was necessary to
+move not only with columns of foot, but with cavalry and
+artillery. At one point of the march, on entering the defile of
+St. Lambert, the spirits of the Prussians almost gave way.
+Exhausted in the attempts to extricate and drag forward the heavy
+guns, the men began to murmur. Blucher came to the spot, and
+heard cries from the ranks of--"We cannot get on." "But you
+must get on," was the old Field-Marshal's answer. "I have
+pledged my word to Wellington, and you surely will not make me
+break it. Only exert yourselves for a few hours longer, and we
+are sure of victory." This appeal from old "Marshal Forwards," as
+the Prussian soldiers loved to call Blucher, had its wonted
+affect. The Prussians again moved forward, slowly, indeed, and
+with pain and toil; but still they moved forward. [See Siborne,
+vol. ii. p. 137.]
+
+The French and British armies lay on the open field during the
+wet and stormy night of the 17th; and when the dawn of the
+memorable 18th of June broke, the rain was still descending
+heavily upon Waterloo. The rival nations rose from their dreary
+bivouacs, and began to form, each on the high ground which it
+occupied. Towards nine the weather grew clearer, and each army
+was able to watch the position and arrangements of the other on
+the opposite side of the valley.
+
+The Duke of Wellington drew up his army in two lines; the
+principal one being stationed near the crest of the ridge of
+hills already described, and the other being arranged along the
+slope in the rear of his position. Commencing from the eastward,
+on the extreme left of the first or main line, were Vivian's and
+Vandeleur's brigades of light cavalry, and the fifth Hanoverian
+brigade of infantry, under Von Vincke. Then came Best's fourth
+Hanoverian brigade. Detachments from these bodies of troops
+occupied the little villages of Papelotte and La Haye, down the
+hollow in advance of the left of the Duke's position. To the
+right of Best's Hanoverians, Bylandt's brigade of Dutch and
+Belgian infantry was drawn up on the outer slope of the heights.
+Behind them were the ninth brigade of British infantry under
+Pack; and to the right of these last, but more in advance, stood
+the eighth brigade of English infantry under Kempt. These were
+close to the Charleroi road, and to the centre of the entire
+position. These two English brigades, with the fifth Hanoverian,
+made up the fifth division, commanded by Sir Thomas Picton.
+Immediately to their right, and westward of the Charleroi road,
+stood the third division, commanded by General Alten, and
+consisting of Ompteda's brigade of the King's German legion, and
+Kielmansegge's Hanoverian brigade. The important post of La Haye
+Sainte, which it will be remembered lay in front of the Duke's
+centre, close to the Charleroi road, was garrisoned with troops
+from this division. Westward, and on the right of Kielmansegge's
+Hanoverians, stood the fifth British brigade under Halkett; and
+behind, Kruse's Nassau brigade was posted. On the right of
+Halkett's men stood the English Guards. They were in two
+brigades, one commanded By Maitland, and the other by Byng. The
+entire division was under General Cooke. The buildings and
+gardens of Hougoumont, which lay immediately under the height, on
+which stood the British Guards, were principally manned by
+detachments from Byng's Brigade, aided by some brave Hanoverian
+riflemen, and accompanied by a battalion of a Nassau regiment.
+On a plateau in the rear of Cooks's division of Guards, and
+inclining westward towards the village of Merk Braine, were
+Clinton's second infantry division, composed of Adams's third
+brigade of light infantry, Du Plat's first brigade of the King's
+German legion, and third Hanoverian brigade under Colonel
+Halkett.
+
+The Duke formed his second line of cavalry. This only extended
+behind the right and centre of his first line. The largest mass
+was drawn up behind the brigades of infantry in the centre, on
+either side of the Charleroi road. The brigade of household
+cavalry under Lord Somerset was on the immediate right of the
+road, and on the left of it was Ponsonby's brigade. Behind these
+were Trip's and Ghingy's brigades of Dutch and Belgian horse.
+The third Hussars of the King's German Legion were to the right
+of Somerset's brigade. To the right of these, and behind
+Maitland's infantry, stood the third brigade under Dornberg,
+consisting of the 23d English Light Dragoons, and the regiments
+of Light Dragoons of the King's German Legion. The last cavalry
+on the right was Grant's brigade, stationed in the rear of the
+Foot-Guards. The corps of Brunswickers, both horse and foot, and
+the 10th British brigade of foot, were in reserve behind the
+centre and right of the entire position. The artillery was
+distributed at convenient intervals along the front of the whole
+line. Besides the Generals who have been mentioned, Lord Hill,
+Lord Uxbridge (who had the general command of the cavalry), the
+Prince of Orange, and General Chasse, were present, and acting
+under the Duke.
+
+[Prince Frederick's force remained at Hal, and took no part in
+the battle of the 18th. The reason for this arrangement (which
+has been much cavilled at), may be best given in the words of
+Baron Muffling:--"The Duke had retired from Quatre Bras in three
+columns, by three chaussees; and on the evening of the 17th,
+Prince Frederick of Orange was at Hal, Lord Hill at Braine la
+Leud, and the Prince of Orange with the reserve, at Mont St.
+Jean. This distribution was necessary, as Napoleon could dispose
+of these three roads for his advance on Brussels. Napoleon on
+the 17th had pressed on by Genappe as far as Rossomme. On the
+two other roads no enemy had yet shown himself. On the 18th the
+offensive was taken by Napoleon on its greatest scale, but still
+the Nivelles road was not overstepped by his left wing. These
+circumstances made it possible to draw Prince Frederick to the
+army, which would certainly have been done if entirely new
+circumstances had not arisen. The Duke had, twenty-four hours
+before, pledged himself to accept a battle at Mont St. Jean if
+Blucher would assist him there with one corps, of 25,000 men.
+This being promised, the Duke was taking his measures for
+defence, when be learned that, in addition to the one corps
+promised, Blucher was actually already on the march with his
+whole force, to break in by Planchenoit on Napoleon's flank and
+rear. If three corps of the Prussian army should penetrate by
+the unguarded plateau of Rossomme, which was not improbable,
+Napoleon would be thrust from his line of retreat by Genappe, and
+might possibly lose even that by Nivelles. In this case Prince
+Frederick with his 18,000 men (who might be accounted superfluous
+at Mont St.Jean), might have rendered the most essential
+service."--See Muffling, p. 246 and the QUARTERLY REVIEW, No.
+178. It is also worthy of observation that Napoleon actually
+detached a force of 2,000 cavalry to threaten Hal, though they
+returned to the main French army during the night of the 17th.
+See "Victoires at Conquetes des Francais," vol. xxiv. p 186.]
+
+On the opposite heights the French army was drawn up in two
+general lines, with the entire force of the Imperial Guards,
+cavalry as well as infantry, in rear of the centre, as a reserve.
+
+The first line of the French army was formed of the two corps
+commanded by Count d'Erlon and Count Reille. D'Erlon's corps was
+on the right, that is, eastward of the Charleroi road, and
+consisted of four divisions of infantry under Generals Durette,
+Marcognet, Alix, and Donzelot, and of one division of light
+cavalry under General Jaquinot. Count Reille's corps formed the
+left or western wing, and was formed of Bachelu's, Foy's, and
+Jerome Bonaparte's divisions of infantry, and of Pire's division
+of cavalry. The right wing of the second general French line was
+formed of Milhaud's corps, consisting of two divisions of heavy
+cavalry. The left wing of this line was formed by Kellerman's
+cavalry corps, also in two divisions. Thus each of the corps of
+infantry that composed the first line had a corps of cavalry
+behind it; but the second line consisted also of Lobau's corps of
+infantry, and Domont and Subervie's divisions of light cavalry;
+these three bodies of troops being drawn up on either side of La
+Belle Alliance, and forming the centre of the second line. The
+third, or reserve line, had its centre composed of the infantry
+of the Imperial Guard. Two regiments of grenadiers and two of
+chasseurs, formed the foot of the Old Guard under General Friant.
+The Middle Guard, under Count Morand, was similarly composed;
+while two regiments of voltigeurs, and two of tirailleurs, under
+Duhesme, constituted the Young Guard. The chasseurs and lancers
+of the Guard were on the right of the infantry, under Lefebvre
+Desnouettes; and the grenadiers and dragoons of the Guards, under
+Guyot, were on the left. All the French corps comprised, besides
+their cavalry and infantry regiments, strong batteries of horse
+artillery; and Napoleon's numerical superiority in guns was of
+deep importance throughout the action.
+
+Besides the leading generals who have been mentioned as
+commanding particular corps, Ney and Soult were present, and
+acted as the Emperor's lieutenants in the battle.
+
+English military critics have highly eulogised the admirable
+arrangement which Napoleon made of his forces of each arm, so as
+to give him the most ample means of sustaining, by an immediate
+and sufficient support, any attack, from whatever point he might
+direct it; and of drawing promptly together a strong force, to
+resist any attack that might be made on himself in any part of
+the field. [Siborne, vol. i. p. 376.] When his troops were all
+arrayed, he rode along the lines, receiving everywhere the most
+enthusiastic cheers from his men, of whose entire devotion to him
+his assurance was now doubly sure. On the northern side of the
+valley the Duke's army was also drawn up, and ready to meet the
+menaced attack.
+
+Wellington had caused, on the preceding night, every brigade and
+corps to take up its station on or near the part of the ground
+which it was intended to hold in the coming battle. He had slept
+a few hours at his headquarters in the village of Waterloo; and
+rising on the 18th, while it was yet deep night, he wrote several
+letters to the Governor of Antwerp, to the English Minister at
+Brussels, and other official personages, in which he expressed
+his confidence that all would go well, but "as it was necessary
+to provide against serious losses; should any accident occur, he
+gave a series of judicious orders for what should be done in the
+rear of the army, in the event of the battle going against the
+Allies. He also, before he left the village of Waterloo, saw to
+the distribution of the reserves of ammunition which had been
+parked there, so that supplies should be readily forwarded to
+every part of the line of battle, where they might be required,
+The Duke, also, personally inspected the arrangements that had
+been made for receiving the wounded, and providing temporary
+hospitals in the houses in the rear of the army. Then, mounting
+a favourite charger, a small thorough-bred chestnut horse, named
+"Copenhagen," Wellington rode forward to the range of hills where
+his men were posted. Accompanied by his staff and by the
+Prussian General Muffling, he rode along his lines, carefully
+inspecting all the details of his position. Hougoumont was the
+object of his special attention. He rode down to the south-
+eastern extremity of its enclosures, and after having examined
+the nearest French troops, he made some changes in the
+disposition of his own men, who were to defend that important
+post.
+
+Having given his final orders about Hougoumont, the Duke galloped
+back to the high ground in the right centre of his position; and
+halting there, sat watching the enemy on the opposite heights,
+and conversing with his staff with that cheerful serenity which
+was ever his characteristic in the hour of battle.
+
+Not all brave men are thus gifted; and many a glance of anxious
+excitement must have been cast across the valley that separated
+the two hosts during the protracted pause which ensued between
+the completion of Napoleon's preparations for attack and the
+actual commencement of the contest. It was, indeed, an awful
+calm before the coming storm, when armed myriads stood gazing on
+their armed foes, scanning their number, their array, their
+probable powers of resistance and destruction, and listening with
+throbbing hearts for the momentarily expected note of death;
+while visions of victory and glory came thronging on each
+soldier's high-strung brain, not unmingled with recollections of
+the home which his fall might soon leave desolate, nor without
+shrinking nature sometimes prompting the cold thought, that in a
+few moments he might be writhing in agony, or lie a trampled and
+mangled mass of clay on the grass now waving so freshly and
+purely before him.
+
+Such thoughts WILL arise in human breasts, though the brave man
+soon silences "the child within us that trembles before death,"
+[See Plato, Phaedon, c. 60; and Grote's History of Greece, vol.
+viii. p. 656.] and nerves himself for the coming struggle by the
+mental preparation which Xenophon has finely called "the
+soldier's arraying his own soul for battle." [Hellenica, lib.
+vii. c. v. s. 22.] Well, too, may we hope and believe that many
+a spirit sought aid from a higher and holier source; and that
+many a fervent though silent prayer arose on that Sabbath morn
+(the battle of Waterloo was fought on a Sunday) to the Lord of
+Sabaoth, the God of Battles, from the ranks, whence so many
+thousands were about to appear that day before his judgment-seat.
+
+Not only to those who were thus present as spectators and actors
+in the dread drama, but to all Europe, the decisive contest then
+impending between the rival French and English nations, each
+under its chosen chief was the object of exciting interest and
+deepest solicitude. "Never, indeed, had two such generals as the
+Duke of Wellington and the Emperor Napoleon encountered since the
+day when Scipio and Hannibal met at Zama." [See SUPRA, p. 82.]
+
+The two great champions, who now confronted each other, were
+equals in years, and each had entered the military profession at
+the same early age. The more conspicuous stage, on which the
+French general's youthful genius was displayed, his heritage of
+the whole military power of the French Republic, the position on
+which for years he was elevated as sovereign head of an empire
+surpassing that of Charlemagne, and the dazzling results of his
+victories, which made and unmade kings, had given him a
+formidable pre-eminence in the eyes of mankind. Military men
+spoke with justly rapturous admiration of the brilliancy of his
+first Italian campaigns, when he broke through the pedantry of
+traditional tactics, and with a small but promptly-wielded force,
+shattered army after army of the Austrians, conquered provinces
+and capitals, dictated treaties, and annihilated or created
+states. The iniquity of his Egyptian expedition was too often
+forgotten in contemplating the skill and boldness with which he
+destroyed the Mameluke cavalry at the Pyramids, and the Turkish
+infantry at Aboukir. None could forget the marvellous passage of
+the Alps in 1800, or the victory of Marengo, which wrested Italy
+back from Austria, and destroyed the fruit of twenty victories,
+which the enemies of France had gained over her in the absence of
+her favourite chief. Even higher seemed the glories of his
+German campaigns, the triumphs of Ulm, of Austerlitz, of Jena, of
+Wagram. Napoleon's disasters in Russia, in 1812, were imputed by
+his admirers to the elements; his reverses in Germany, in 1813,
+were attributed by them to treachery: and even those two
+calamitous years had been signalised by his victories at
+Borodino, at Lutzen, at Bautzen, at Dresden, and at Hanau. His
+last campaign, in the early months of 1814, was rightly cited as
+the most splendid exhibition of his military genius, when, with a
+far inferior army, he long checked and frequently defeated the
+vast hosts that were poured upon France. His followers fondly
+hoped that the campaign of 1815 would open with another "week of
+miracles," like that which had seen his victories at Montmirail
+and Montereau. The laurel of Ligny was even now fresh upon his
+brows. Blucher had not stood before him; and who was the
+Adversary that now should bar the Emperor's way?
+
+That Adversary had already overthrown the Emperor's best
+generals, and the Emperor's best armies; and, like Napoleon
+himself, had achieved a reputation in more than European wars.
+Wellington was illustrious as the destroyer of the Mahratta
+power, as the liberator of Portugal and Spain, and the successful
+invader of Southern France. In early youth he had held high
+command in India; and had displayed eminent skill in planning and
+combining movements, and unrivalled celerity and boldness in
+execution. On his return to Europe several years passed away
+before any fitting opportunity was accorded for the exercise of
+his genius. In this important respect, Wellington, as a subject,
+and Napoleon, as a sovereign, were far differently situated. At
+length his appointment to the command in the Spanish Peninsula
+gave him the means of showing Europe that England had a general
+who could revive the glories of Crecy, of Poictiers, of
+Agincourt, of Blenheim, and of Ramilies. At the head of forces
+always numerically far inferior to the armies with which Napoleon
+deluged the Peninsula;--thwarted by jealous and incompetent
+allies;--ill-supported by friends, and assailed by factious
+enemies at home; Wellington maintained the war for several years,
+unstained by any serious reverse, and marked by victory in
+thirteen pitched battles, at Vimiera, the Douro, Talavera,
+Busaco, Fuentes d'Onore, Salamanca, Vittoria, the Pyrenees, the
+Bidassoa, the Nive, the Nivelle, Orthes, and Toulouse. Junot,
+Victor, Massena, Ney, Marmont, and Jourdain,--marshals whose
+names were the terrors of continental Europe--had been baffled by
+his skill, and smitten down by his energy, while he liberated the
+kingdoms of the Peninsula from them and their Imperial master.
+In vain did Napoleon at last despatch Soult, the ablest of his
+lieutenants, to turn the tide of Wellington's success and defend
+France against the English invader. Wellington met Soult's
+manoeuvres with superior skill, and his boldness with superior
+vigour. When Napoleon's first abdication, in 1814, suspended
+hostilities, Wellington was master of the fairest districts of
+Southern France; and had under him a veteran army, with which (to
+use his own expressive phrase) "he felt he could have gone
+anywhere and done anything." The fortune of war had hitherto
+kept separate the orbits in which Napoleon and he had moved.
+Now, on the ever memorable 18th of June, 1815, they met at last.
+
+It is, indeed, remarkable that Napoleon, during his numerous
+campaigns in Spain as well as other countries, not only never
+encountered the Duke of Wellington before the day of Waterloo,
+but that he was never until then personally engaged with British
+troops, except at the siege of Toulon, in 1793, which was the
+very first incident of his military career. Many, however, of
+the French generals who were with him in 1815, knew well, by
+sharp experience, what English soldiers were, and what the leader
+was who now headed them. Ney, Foy, and other officers who had
+served in the Peninsula, warned Napoleon that he would find the
+English infantry "very devils in fight." The Emperor, however,
+persisted in employing the old system of attack, with which the
+French generals often succeeded against continental troops, but
+which had always failed against the English in the Peninsula. He
+adhered to his usual tactics of employing the order of the
+column; a mode of attack probably favoured by him (as Sir Walter
+Scott remarks) on account of his faith in the extreme valour of
+the French officers by whom the column was headed. It is a
+threatening formation, well calculated to shake the firmness of
+ordinary foes; but which, when steadily met, as the English have
+met it, by heavy volleys of musketry from an extended line,
+followed up by a resolute bayonet charge, has always resulted in
+disaster to the assailants. [See especially Sir W. Napier's
+glorious pictures of the battles of Busaco and Albuera. The
+THEORETICAL advantages of the attack in column, and its peculiar
+fitness for a French army, are set forth in the Chevalier
+Folard's "Traite de la Colonne," prefixed to the first volume of
+his "Polybius," See also the preface to his sixth volume.]
+
+It was approaching noon before the action commenced. Napoleon,
+in his Memoirs, gives as the reason for this delay, the miry
+state of the ground through the heavy rain of the preceding night
+and day, which rendered it impossible for cavalry or artillery to
+manoeuvre on it till a few hours of dry weather had given it its
+natural consistency. It has been supposed, also, that he trusted
+to the effect which the sight of the imposing array of his own
+forces was likely to produce on the part of the allied army. The
+Belgian regiments had been tampered with; and Napoleon had well-
+founded hopes of seeing them quit the Duke of Wellington in a
+body, and range themselves under his own eagles. The Duke,
+however, who knew and did not trust them, had guarded against the
+risk of this, by breaking up the corps of Belgians, and
+distributing them in separate regiments among troops on whom he
+could rely. [Siborne, vol. i. p. 373.]
+
+At last, at about half-past eleven o'clock, Napoleon began the
+battle by directing a powerful force from his left wing under his
+brother, Prince Jerome, to attack Hougoumont. Column after
+column of the French now descended from the west of the southern
+heights, and assailed that post with fiery valour, which was
+encountered with the most determined bravery. The French won the
+copse round the house, but a party of the British Guards held the
+house itself throughout the day. The whole of Byng's brigade was
+required to man this hotly-contested post. Amid shell and shot,
+and the blazing fragments of part of the buildings, this
+obstinate contest was continued. But still the English were firm
+in Hougoumont; though the French occasionally moved forward in
+such numbers as enabled them to surround and mask it with part of
+their troops from their left wing, while others pressed onward up
+the slope, and assailed the British right.
+
+The cannonade, which commenced at first between the British right
+and the French left, in consequence of the attack on Hougoumont,
+soon became general along both lines; and about one o'clock,
+Napoleon directed a grand attack to be made under Marshal Ney
+upon the centre and left wing of the allied army. For this
+purpose four columns of infantry, amounting to about eighteen
+thousand men, were collected, supported by a strong division of
+cavalry under the celebrated Kellerman; and seventy-four guns
+were brought forward ready to be posted on the ridge of a little
+undulation of the ground in the interval between the two
+principal chains of heights, so as to bring their fire to bear on
+the Duke's line at a range of about seven hundred yards. By the
+combined assault of these formidable forces, led on by Ney, "the
+bravest of the brave," Napoleon hoped to force the left centre of
+the British position, to take La Haye Sainte, and then pressing
+forward, to occupy also the farm of Mont St. Jean. He then could
+cut the mass of Wellington's troops off from their line of
+retreat upon Brussels, and from their own left, and also
+completely sever them from any Prussian troops that might be
+approaching.
+
+The columns destined for this great and decisive operation
+descended majestically from the French line of hills, and gained
+the ridge of the intervening eminence, on which the batteries
+that supported them were now ranged. As the columns descended
+again from this eminence, the seventy-four guns opened over their
+heads with terrible effect upon the troops of the Allies that
+were stationed on the heights to the left of the Charleroi road.
+One of the French columns kept to the east, and attacked the
+extreme left of the Allies; the other three continued to move
+rapidly forwards upon the left centre of the allied position.
+The front line of the Allies here was composed of Bylandt's
+brigade of Dutch and Belgians. As the French columns moved up
+the southward slope of the height on which the Dutch and Belgians
+stood, and the skirmishers in advance began to open their fire,
+Bylandt's entire brigade turned and fled in disgraceful and
+disorderly panic; but there were men more worthy of the name
+behind.
+
+In this part of-the second line of the Allies were posted Pack
+and Kempt's brigades of English infantry, which had suffered
+severely at Quatre Bras. But Picton was here as general of
+division, and not even Ney himself surpassed in resolute bravery
+that stern and fiery spirit. Picton brought his two brigades
+forward, side by side, in a thin, two-deep line. Thus joined
+together, they were not three thousand strong. With these Picton
+had to make head against the three victorious French columns,
+upwards of four times that strength, and who, encouraged by the
+easy rout of the Dutch and Belgians, now came confidently over
+the ridge of the hill. The British infantry stood firm; and as
+the French halted and began to deploy into line, Picton seized
+the critical moment. He shouted in his stentorian voice to
+Kempt's brigade: "A volley, and then charge!" At a distance of
+less than thirty yards that volley was poured upon the devoted
+first sections of the nearest column; and then, with a fierce
+hurrah, the British dashed in with the bayonet. Picton was shot
+dead as he rushed forward, but his men pushed on with the cold
+steel. The French reeled back in confusion. Pack's infantry had
+checked the other two columns and down came a whirlwind of
+British horse on the whole mass, sending them staggering from the
+crest of the hill, and cutting them down by whole battalions.
+Ponsonby's brigade of heavy cavalry (the Union Brigade as it was
+called, from its being made up of the British Royals, the Scots
+Greys, and the Irish Inniskillings), did this good service. On
+went the horsemen amid the wrecks of the French columns,
+capturing two eagles, and two thousand prisoners; onwards still
+they galloped, and sabred the artillerymen of Ney's seventy-four
+advanced guns; then severing the traces, and cutting the throats
+of the artillery horses, they rendered these guns totally useless
+to the French throughout the remainder of the day. While thus
+far advanced beyond the British position and disordered by
+success, they were charged by a large body of French lancers, and
+driven back with severe loss, till Vandeleur's Light horse came
+to their aid, and beat off the French lancers in their turn.
+
+Equally unsuccessful with the advance of the French infantry in
+this grand attack, had been the efforts of the French cavalry who
+moved forward in support of it, along the east of the Charleroi
+road. Somerset's cavalry of the English Household Brigade had
+been launched, on the right of Picton's division, against the
+French horse, at the same time that the English Union Brigade of
+heavy horse charged the French infantry columns on the left.
+
+Somerset's brigade was formed of the Life Guards, the Blues, and
+the Dragoon Guards. The hostile cavalry, which Kellerman led
+forward, consisted chiefly of Cuirassiers. This steel-clad mass
+of French horsemen rode down some companies of German infantry,
+near La Haye Sainte, and flushed with success, they bounded
+onward to the ridge of the British position. The English
+Household Brigade, led on by the Earl of Uxbridge in person,
+spurred forward to the encounter, and in an instant, the two
+adverse lines of strong swordsmen, on their strong steeds, dashed
+furiously together. A desperate and sanguinary hand-to-hand
+fight ensued, in which the physical superiority of the Anglo-
+Saxons, guided by equal skill, and animated with equal valour,
+was made decisively manifest. Back went the chosen cavalry of
+France; and after them, in hot pursuit, spurred the English
+Guards. They went forward as far and as fiercely as their
+comrades of the Union Brigade; and, like them, the Household
+cavalry suffered severely before they regained the British
+position, after their magnificent charge and adventurous pursuit.
+
+Napoleon's grand effort to break the English left centre had thus
+completely failed; and his right wing was seriously weakened by
+the heavy loss which it had sustained. Hougoumont was still
+being assailed, and was still successfully resisting. Troops
+were now beginning to appear at the edge of the horizon on
+Napoleon's right, which he too well knew to be Prussian, though
+he endeavoured to persuade his followers that they were Grouchy's
+men coming to their aid.
+
+Grouchy was in fact now engaged at Wavre with his whole force,
+against Thielmam's single Prussian corps, while the other three
+corps of the Prussian army were moving without opposition, save
+from the difficulties of the ground, upon Waterloo. Grouchy
+believed, on the 17th, and caused Napoleon to believe, that the
+Prussian army was retreating by lines of march remote from
+Waterloo upon Namur and Maestricht. Napoleon learned only on the
+18th, that there were Prussians in Wavre, and felt jealous about
+the security of his own right. He accordingly, before he
+attacked the English, sent Grouchy orders to engage the Prussians
+at Wavre without delay, AND TO APPROACH THE MAIN FRENCH ARMY, SO
+AS TO UNITE HIS COMMUNICATIONS WITH THE EMPEROR'S. Grouchy
+entirely neglected this last part of his instructions; and in
+attacking the Prussians whom he found at Wavre, he spread his
+force more and more towards his right, that is to say, in the
+direction most remote from Napoleon. He thus knew nothing of
+Blucher's and Bulow's flank march upon Waterloo, till six in the
+evening of the 18th, when he received a note which Soult by
+Napoleon's orders had sent off from the field of battle at
+Waterloo at one o'clock, to inform Grouchy that Bulow was coming
+over the heights of St. Lambert, on the Emperor's right flank,
+and directing Grouchy to approach and join the main army
+instantly, and crush Bulow EN FLAGRANT DELIT. It was then too
+late for Grouchy to obey; but it is remarkable that as early as
+noon on the 18th, and while Grouchy had not proceeded as far as
+Wavre, he and his suite heard, the sound of heavy cannonading In
+the direction of Planchenoit and Mont St. Jean. General Gerard,
+who was with Grouchy, implored him to march towards the
+cannonade, and join his operations with those of Napoleon, who
+was evidently engaged with the English. Grouchy refused to do
+so, or even to detach part of his force in that direction. He
+said that his instructions were to fight the Prussians at Wavre.
+He marched upon Wavre and fought for the rest of the day with
+Thielman accordingly, while Blucher and Bulow were attacking the
+Emperor.
+
+[I have heard the remark made that Grouchy twice had in his hands
+the power of changing the destinies of Europe, and twice wanted
+nerve to act: first when he flinched from landing the French
+army at Bantry Bay in 1796 (he was second in command to Hoche,
+whose ship was blown back by a storm), and secondly, when he
+failed to lead his whole force from Wavre to the scene of
+decisive conflict at Waterloo. But such were the arrangements of
+the Prussian General, that even if Grouchy had marched upon
+Waterloo, he would have been held in check by the nearest
+Prussian corps, or certainly by the two nearest ones, while the
+rest proceeded to join Wellington. This, however, would have
+diminished the number of Prussians who appeared at Waterloo, and
+(what is still more important) would have kept them back to a
+later hour.--See Siborne, vol i. p. 323, and Gleig, p. 142.
+
+There are some very valuable remarks on this subject in the 70th
+No. of the QUARTERLY in an article on the "Life of Blucher,"
+usually attributed to Sir Francis Head. The Prussian writer,
+General Clausewitz, is there cited as "expressing a positive
+opinion, in which every military critic but a Frenchman must
+concur, that, even had the whole of Grouchy's force been at
+Napoleon's disposal, the Duke had nothing to fear pending
+Blucher's arrival.
+
+"The Duke is often talked of as having exhausted his reserves in
+the action. This is another gross error, which Clausewitz has
+thoroughly disposed of. He enumerates the tenth British Brigade,
+the division of Chasse, and the cavalry of Collaert, as having
+been little or not at all engaged; and he might have also added
+two brigades of light cavalry." The fact, also, that Wellington
+did not at any part of the day order up Prince Frederick's corps
+from Hal, is a conclusive proof that the Duke was not so
+distressed as some writers have represented. Hal is not ten
+miles from the field of Waterloo.]
+
+Napoleon had witnessed with bitter disappointment the rout of his
+troops,--foot, horse, and artillery,--which attacked the left
+centre of the English, and the obstinate resistance which the
+garrison of Hougoumont opposed to all the exertions of his left
+wing. He now caused the batteries along the line of high ground
+held by him to be strengthened, and for some time an unremitting
+and most destructive cannonade raged across the valley, to the
+partial cessation of other conflict. But the superior fire of
+the French artillery, though it weakened, could not break the
+British line, and more close and summary measures were requisite.
+
+It was now about half-past three o'clock; and though Wellington's
+army had suffered severely by the unremitting cannonade, and in
+the late desperate encounter, no part of the British position had
+been forced. Napoleon determined therefore to try what effect he
+could produce on the British centre and right by charges of his
+splendid cavalry, brought on in such force that the Duke's
+cavalry could not check them. Fresh troops were at the same time
+sent to assail La Haye Sainte and Hougoumont, the possession of
+these posts being the Emperor's unceasing object. Squadron after
+squadron of the French cuirassiers accordingly ascended the
+slopes on the Duke's right, and rode forward with dauntless
+courage against the batteries of the British artillery in that
+part of the field. The artillery-men were driven from their
+guns, and the cuirassiers cheered loudly at their supposed
+triumph. But the Duke had formed his infantry in squares, and
+the cuirassiers charged in vain against the impenetrable hedges
+of bayonets, while the fire from the inner ranks of the squares
+told with terrible effect on their squadrons. Time after time
+they rode forward with invariably the same result: and as they
+receded from each attack the British artillerymen rushed forward
+from the centres of the squares, where they had taken refuge, and
+plied their guns on the retiring horsemen. Nearly the whole of
+Napoleon's magnificent body of heavy cavalry was destroyed in
+these fruitless attempts upon the British right. But in another
+part of the field fortune favoured him for a time. Two French
+columns of infantry from Donzelot's division took La Haye Sainte
+between six and seven o'clock, and the means were now given for
+organizing another formidable attack on the centre of the Allies.
+
+["On came the whirlwind--like the last
+ But fiercest sweep of tempest blast--
+ On came the whirlwind--steel-gleams broke
+ Like lightning through the rolling smoke;
+ The war was waked anew,
+ Three hundred cannon-mouths roar'd loud,
+ And from their throats, with flash and cloud,
+ Their showers of iron threw.
+ Beneath their fire in full career,
+ Rush'd on the ponderous cuirassier,
+ The lancer couch'd his ruthless spear,
+ And hurrying as to havoc near,
+ The cohorts' eagles flew.
+ In one dark torrent, broad and strong,
+ The advancing onset roll'd along,
+ Forth harbinger'd by fierce acclaim,
+ That, from the shroud of smoke and flame,
+ Peal'd wildly the imperial name.
+
+"But on the British heart were lost
+ The terrors of the charging host;
+ For not an eye the storm that view'd
+ Changed its proud glance of fortitude,
+ Nor was one forward footstep staid,
+ As dropp'd the dying and the dead.
+ Fast as their ranks the thunders tear,
+ Fast they renew'd each serried square;
+ And on the wounded and the slain
+ Closed their diminish'd files again,
+ Till from their line scarce spears' lengths three,
+ Emerging from the smoke they see
+ Helmet, and plume, and panoply,--
+ Then waked their fire at once!
+ Each musketeer's revolving knell,
+ As fast, as regularly fell,
+ As when they practise to display
+ Their discipline on festal day.
+ Then down went helm and lance,
+ Down were the eagle banners sent,
+ Down reeling steeds and riders went,
+ Corslets were pierced, and pennons rent;
+ And, to augment the fray,
+ Wheeled full against their staggering flanks,
+ The English horsemen's foaming ranks
+ Forced their resistless way.
+ Then to the musket-knell succeeds
+ The clash of swords--the neigh of steeds--
+ As plies the smith his clanging trade,
+ Against the cuirass rang the blade;
+ And while amid their close array
+ The well-served cannon rent their way,
+ And while amid their scatter'd band
+ Raged the fierce rider's bloody brand,
+ Recoil'd in common rout and fear,
+ Lancer and guard and cuirassier,
+ Horseman and foot,--a mingled host,
+ Their leaders fall'n, their standards lost."--SCOTT.]
+
+There was no time to be lost--Blucher and Bulow were beginning to
+press hard upon the French right. As early as five o'clock,
+Napoleon had been obliged to detach Lobau's infantry and Domont's
+horse to check these new enemies. They succeeded in doing so for
+a time; but as larger numbers of the Prussians came on the field,
+they turned Lobau's right flank, and sent a strong force to seize
+the village of Planchenoit, which, it will be remembered, lay in
+the rear of the French right.
+
+The design of the Allies was not merely to prevent Napoleon from
+advancing upon Brussels, but to cut off his line of retreat and
+utterly destroy his army. The defence of Planchenoit therefore
+became absolutely essential for the safety of the French, and
+Napoleon was obliged to send his Young Guard to occupy that
+village, which was accordingly held by them with great gallantry
+against the reiterated assaults of the Prussian left, under
+Bulow. Three times did the Prussians fight their way into
+Planchenoit, and as often did the French drive them out: the
+contest was maintained with the fiercest desperation on both
+sides, such being the animosity between the two nations that
+quarter was seldom given or even asked. Other Prussian forces
+were now appearing on the field nearer to the English left; whom
+also Napoleon kept in check, by troops detached for that purpose.
+Thus a large part of the French army was now thrown back on a
+line at right angles with the line of that portion which still
+confronted and assailed the English position. But this portion
+was now numerically inferior to the force under the Duke of
+Wellington, which Napoleon had been assailing throughout the day,
+without gaining any other advantage than the capture of La Haye
+Sainte. It is true that, owing to the gross misconduct of the
+greater part of the Dutch and Belgian troops, the Duke was
+obliged to rely exclusively on his English and German soldiers,
+and the ranks of these had been fearfully thinned; but the
+survivors stood their ground heroically, and opposed a resolute
+front to every forward movement of their enemies.
+
+On no point of the British line was the pressure more severe than
+on Halkett's brigade in the right centre which was composed of
+battalions of the 30th, the 33d, the 69th, and the 73d British
+regiments. We fortunately can quote from the journal of a brave
+officer of the 30th, a narrative of what took place in this part
+of the field. [This excellent journal was published in the
+"United Service Magazine" during the year 1852.] The late Major
+Macready served at Waterloo in the light company of the 30th.
+The extent of the peril and the carnage which Halkett's brigade
+had to encounter, may be judged of by the fact that this light
+company marched into the field three officers and fifty-one men,
+and that at the end of the battle they stood one officer and ten
+men. Major Macready's blunt soldierly account of what he
+actually saw and felt, gives a far better idea of the terrific
+scene, than can be gained from the polished generalisations which
+the conventional style of history requires, or even from the
+glowing stanzas of the poet. During the earlier part of the day
+Macready and his light company were thrown forward as skirmishers
+in front of the brigade; but when the French cavalry commenced
+their attacks on the British right centre, he and his comrades
+were ordered back. The brave soldier thus himself describes what
+passed:
+
+"Before the commencement of this attack our company and the
+Grenadiers of the 73d were skirmishing briskly in the low ground,
+covering our guns, and annoying those of the enemy. The line of
+tirailleurs opposed to us was not stronger than our own, but on a
+sudden they were reinforced by numerous bodies, and several guns
+began playing on us with canister. Our poor fellows dropped very
+fast, and Colonel Vigoureux, Rumley, and Pratt, were carried off
+badly wounded in about two minutes. I was now commander of our
+company. We stood under this hurricane of small shot till
+Halkett sent to order us in, and I brought away about a third of
+the light bobs; the rest were killed or wounded, and I really
+wonder how one of them escaped. As our bugler was killed, I
+shouted and made signals to move by the left, in order to avoid
+the fire of our guns, and to put as good a face upon the business
+as possible.
+
+"When I reached Lloyd's abandoned guns, I stood near them for
+about a minute to contemplate the scene: it was grand beyond
+description. Hougoumont and its wood sent up a broad flame
+through the dark masses of smoke that overhung the field; beneath
+this cloud the French were indistinctly visible. Here a waving
+mass of long red feathers could be seen; there, gleams as from a
+sheet of steel showed that the cuirassiers were moving; 400
+cannon were belching forth fire and death on every side; the
+roaring and shouting were indistinguishably commixed--together
+they gave me an idea of a labouring volcano. Bodies of infantry
+and cavalry were pouring down on us, and it was time to leave
+contemplation, so I moved towards our columns, which were
+standing up in square. Our regiment and 73d formed one, and 33d
+and 69th another; to our right beyond them were the Guards, and
+on our left the Hanoverians and German legion of our division.
+As I entered the rear face of our square I had to step over a
+body, and looking down, recognised Harry Beers, an officer of our
+Grenadiers, who about an hour before shook hands with me,
+laughing, as I left the columns. I was on the usual terms of
+military intimacy with poor Harry--that is to say, if either of
+us had died a natural death, the other would have pitied him as a
+good fellow, and smiled at his neighbour as he congratulated him
+on the step; but seeing his herculean frame and animated
+countenance thus suddenly stiff and motionless before me (I know
+not whence the feeling could originate, for I had just seen my
+dearest friend drop, almost with indifference), the tears started
+in my eyes as I sighed out, 'Poor Harry!' The tear was not dry on
+my cheek when poor Harry was no longer thought of. In a few
+minutes after, the enemy's cavalry galloped up and crowned the
+crest of our position. Our guns were abandoned, and they formed
+between the two brigades, about a hundred paces in our front.
+Their first charge was magnificent. As soon as they quickened
+their trot into a gallop, the cuirassiers bent their heads so
+that the peaks of their helmets looked like vizors, and they
+seemed cased in armour from the plume to the saddle. Not a shot
+was fired till they were within thirty yards, when the word was
+given, and our men fired away at them. The effect was magical.
+Through the smoke we could see helmets falling, cavaliers
+starting from their seats with convulsive springs as they
+received our balls, horses plunging and rearing in the agonies of
+fright and pain, and crowds of the soldiery dismounted, part of
+the squadron in retreat, but the more daring remainder backing
+their horses to force them on our bayonets. Our fire soon
+disposed of these gentlemen. The main body re-formed in our
+front, and rapidly and gallantly repeated their attacks, In fact,
+from this time (about four o'clock) till near six, we had a
+constant repetition of these brave but unavailing charges. There
+was no difficulty in repulsing them, but our ammunition decreased
+alarmingly. At length an artillery wagon galloped up, emptied
+two or three casks of cartridges into the square, and we were all
+comfortable.
+
+"The best cavalry is contemptible to a steady and well-supplied
+infantry regiment; even our men saw this, and began to pity the
+useless perseverance of their assailants, and, as they advanced,
+would growl out, 'Here come these fools again!' One of their
+superior officers tried a RUSE DE GUERRE, by advancing and
+dropping his sword, as though he surrendered; some of us were
+deceived by him, but Halkett ordered the men to fire, and he
+coolly retired, saluting us. Their devotion was invincible. One
+officer whom we had taken prisoner was asked what force Napoleon
+might have in the field, and replied with a smile of mingled
+derision and threatening, 'Vous verrez bientot sa force,
+messieurs.' A private cuirassier was wounded and dragged into
+the square; his only cry was, 'Tuez donc, tuez, tuez moi,
+soldats!' and as one of our men dropped dead close to him, he
+seized his bayonet, and forced it into his own neck; but this not
+despatching him, he raised up his cuirass, and plunging the
+bayonet into his stomach, kept working it about till he ceased to
+breathe.
+
+"Though we constantly thrashed our steel-clad opponents, we found
+more troublesome customers in the round shot and grape, which all
+this time played on us with terrible effect, and fully avenged
+the cuirassiers. Often as the volleys created openings in our
+square would the cavalry dash on, but they were uniformly
+unsuccessful. A regiment on our right seemed sadly disconcerted,
+and at one moment was in considerable confusion. Halkett rode
+out to them, and seizing their colour, waved it over his head,
+and restored them to something like order, though not before his
+horse was shot under him. At the height of their unsteadiness we
+got the order to 'right face' to move to their assistance; some
+of the men mistook it for 'right about face,' and faced
+accordingly, when old Major M'Laine, 73d, called out, 'No, my
+boys, its "right face;" you'll never hear the right about as long
+as a French bayonet is in front of you!' In a few moments he was
+mortally wounded. A regiment of light Dragoons, by their facings
+either the 16th or 23d, came up to our left and charged the
+cuirassiers. We cheered each other as they passed us; they did
+all they could, but were obliged to retire after a few minutes at
+the sabre. A body of Belgian cavalry advanced for the same
+purpose, but on passing our square, they stopped short. Our
+noble Halkett rode out to them and offered to charge at their
+head; it was of no use; the Prince of Orange came up and exhorted
+them to do their duty, but in vain. They hesitated till a few
+shots whizzed through them, when they turned about, and galloped
+like fury, or, rather, like fear. As they passed the right face
+of our square the men, irritated by their rascally conduct,
+unanimously took up their pieces and fired a volley into them,
+and 'many a good fellow was destroyed so cowardly.'
+
+"The enemy's cavalry were by this time nearly disposed of, and as
+they had discovered the inutility of their charges, they
+commenced annoying us by a spirited and well-directed carbine
+fire. While we were employed in this manner it was impossible to
+see farther than the columns on our right and left, but I imagine
+most of the army were similarly situated: all the British and
+Germans were doing their duty. About six o'clock I perceived
+some artillery trotting up our hill, which I knew by their caps
+to belong to the Imperial Guard. I had hardly mentioned this to
+a brother officer when two guns unlimbered within seventy paces
+of us, and, by their first discharge of grape, blew seven men
+into the centre of the square. They immediately reloaded, and
+kept up a constant and destructive fire. It was noble to see our
+fellows fill up the gaps after every discharge. I was much
+distressed at this moment; having ordered up three of my light
+bobs, they had hardly taken their station when two of them fell
+horribly lacerated. One of them looked up in my face and uttered
+a sort of reproachful groan, and I involuntarily exclaimed, 'I
+couldn't help it.' We would willingly have charged these guns,
+but, had we deployed, the cavalry that flanked them would have
+made an example of us.
+
+"The 'vivida vis animi'--the glow which fires one upon entering
+into action--had ceased; it was now to be seen which side had
+most bottom, and would stand killing longest. The Duke visited
+us frequently at this momentous period; he was coolness
+personified. As he crossed the rear face of our square a shell
+fell amongst our grenadiers, and he checked his horse to see its
+effect. Some men were blown to pieces by the explosion, and he
+merely stirred the rein of his charger, apparently as little
+concerned at their fate as at his own danger. No leader ever
+possessed so fully the confidence of his soldiery: wherever he
+appeared, a murmur of 'Silence--stand to your front--here's the
+Duke,' was heard through the column, and then all was steady as
+on a parade. His aides-de-camp, Colonels Canning and Gordon,
+fell near our square, and the former died within it. As he came
+near us late in the evening, Halkett rode out to him and
+represented our weak state, begging his Grace to afford us a
+little support. 'It's impossible, Halkett,' said he. And our
+general replied, 'If so, sir, you may depend on the brigade to a
+man!'"
+
+All accounts of the battle show that the Duke was ever present at
+each spot where danger seemed the most pressing; inspiriting his
+men by a few homely and good-humoured words; and restraining
+their impatience to be led forward to attack in their turn.--
+"Hard pounding this, gentlemen: we will try who can pound the
+longest," was his remark to a battalion, on which the storm from
+the French guns was pouring with peculiar fury. Riding up to one
+of the squares, which had been dreadfully weakened, and against
+which a fresh attack of French cavalry was coming, he called to
+them: "Stand firm, my lads; what will they say of this in
+England?" As he rode along another part of the line where the
+men had for some time been falling fast beneath the enemy's
+cannonade, without having any close fighting, a murmur reached
+his ear of natural eagerness to advance and do something more
+than stand still to be shot at. The Duke called to them: "Wait
+a little longer, my lads, and you shall have your wish." The men
+were instantly satisfied and steady. It was, indeed,
+indispensable for the Duke to bide his time. The premature
+movement of a single corps down from the British line of heights,
+would have endangered the whole position, and have probably made
+Waterloo a second Hastings.
+
+But the Duke inspired all under him with his own spirit of
+patient firmness. When other generals besides Halkett sent to
+him, begging for reinforcements, or for leave to withdraw corps
+which were reduced to skeletons, the answer was the same: "It is
+impossible; you must hold your ground to the last man, and all
+will be well." He gave a similar reply to some of his staff; who
+asked instructions from him, so that, in the event of his
+falling, his successor might follow out his plan. He answered,
+"My plan is simply to stand my ground here to the last man." His
+personal danger was indeed imminent throughout the day; and
+though he escaped without injury to himself or horse, one only of
+his numerous staff was equally fortunate.
+
+["As far as the French accounts would lead us to infer, it
+appears that the losses among Napoleon's staff were comparatively
+trifling. On this subject perhaps the marked contrast afforded
+by the following anecdotes, which have been related to me on
+excellent authority, may tend to throw some light. At one period
+of the battle, when the Duke was surrounded by several of his
+staff, it was very evident that the group had become the object
+of the fire of a French battery. The shot fell fast about them,
+generally striking and turning up the ground on which they stood.
+Their horses became restive and 'Copenhagen' himself so fidgetty,
+that the Duke, getting impatient, and having reasons for
+remaining on the spot, said to those about him, 'Gentlemen we are
+rather too close together--better to divide a little.'
+Subsequently, at another point of the line, an officer of
+artillery came up to the Duke, and stated that he had a distinct
+view of Napoleon, attended by his staff; that he had the guns of
+his battery well pointed in that direction, and was prepared to
+fire. His Grace instantly and emphatically exclaimed, 'No! no!
+I'll not allow it. It is not the business of commanders to be
+firing upon each other.'--Siborne, vol. ii. p. 263. How
+different is this from Napoleon's conduct at the battle of
+Dresden, when he personally directed the fire of the battery
+which, as he thought, killed the Emperor Alexander, and actually
+killed Moreau.]
+
+Napoleon had stationed himself during the battle on a little
+hillock near La Belle Alliance, in the centre of the French
+position. Here he was seated, with a large table from the
+neighbouring farm-house before him, on which maps and plans were
+spread; and thence with his telescope he surveyed the various
+points of the field. Soult watched his orders close at his left
+hand, and his staff was grouped on horseback a few paces in the
+rear. ["Souvenirs Militaires," par Col, Lemonnier-Delafosse, p.
+407. "Ouvrard, who attended Napoleon as chief commissary of the
+French army on that occasion, told me that Napoleon was suffering
+from a complaint which made it very painful for him to ride."
+--Lord Ellesmere, p. 47.] Here he remained till near the close
+of the day, preserving the appearance at least of calmness,
+except some expressions of irritation which escaped him, when
+Ney's attack on the British left centre was defeated. But now
+that the crisis of the battle was evidently approaching, he
+mounted a white Persian charger, which he rode in action because
+the troops easily recognised him by the horse colour. He had
+still the means of effecting a retreat. His Old Guard had yet
+taken no part in the action. Under cover of it, he might have
+withdrawn his shattered forces and retired upon the French
+frontier. But this would only have given the English and
+Prussians the opportunity of completing their junction; and he
+knew that other armies were fast coming up to aid them in a march
+upon Paris, if he should succeed in avoiding an encounter with
+them, and retreating upon the capital. A victory at Waterloo was
+his only alternative from utter ruin, and he determined to employ
+his Guard in one bold stroke more to make that victory his own.
+
+Between seven and eight o'clock, the infantry of the Old Guard
+was formed into two columns, on the declivity near La Belle
+Alliance. Ney was placed at their head. Napoleon himself rode
+forward to a spot by which his veterans were to pass; and, as
+they approached, he raised his arm, and pointed to the position
+of the Allies, as if to tell them that their path lay there.
+They answered with loud cries of "Vive l'Empereur!" and
+descended the hill from their own side, into that "valley of the
+shadow of death" while the batteries thundered with redoubled
+vigour over their heads upon the British line. The line of march
+of the columns of the Guard was directed between Hougoumont and
+La Haye Sainte, against the British right centre; and at the same
+time the French under Donzelot, who had possession of La Haye
+Sainte, commenced a fierce attack upon the British centre, a
+little more to its left. This part of the battle has drawn less
+attention than the celebrated attack of the Old Guard; but it
+formed the most perilous crisis for the allied army; and if the
+Young Guard had been there to support Donzelot, instead of being
+engaged with the Prussians at Planchenoit, the consequences to
+the Allies in that part of the field must have been most serious.
+The French tirailleurs, who were posted in clouds in La Haye
+Sainte, and the sheltered spots near it, picked off the
+artillerymen of the English batteries near them: and taking
+advantage of the disabled state of the English guns, the French
+brought some field-pieces up to La Haye Sainte, and commenced
+firing grape from them on the infantry of the Allies, at a
+distance of not more than a hundred paces. The allied infantry
+here consisted of some German brigades, who were formed in
+squares, as it was believed that Donzelot had cavalry ready
+behind La Haye Sainte to charge them with, if they left that
+order of formation. In this state the Germans remained for some
+time with heroic fortitude, though the grape-shot was tearing
+gaps in their ranks and the side of one square was literally
+blown away by one tremendous volley which the French gunners
+poured into it. The Prince of Orange in vain endeavoured to lead
+some Nassau troops to the aid of the brave Germans. The
+Nassauers would not or could not face the French; and some
+battalions of Brunswickers, whom the Duke of Wellington had
+ordered up as a reinforcement, at first fell back, until the Duke
+in person rallied them, and led them on. Having thus barred the
+farther advance of Donzelot, the Duke galloped off to the right
+to head his men who were exposed to the attack of the Imperial
+Guard. He had saved one part of his centre from being routed;
+but the French had gained ground and kept it; and the pressure on
+the allied line in front of La Haye Sainte was fearfully severe,
+until it was relieved by the decisive success which the British
+in the right centre achieved over the columns of the Guard.
+
+The British troops on the crest of that part of the position,
+which the first column of Napoleon's Guards assailed, were
+Maitland's brigade of British Guards, having Adams's brigade
+(which had been brought forward during the action) on their
+right. Maitland's men were lying down, in order to avoid as far
+as possible the destructive effect of the French artillery, which
+kept up an unremitting fire from the opposite heights, until the
+first column of the Imperial Guard had advanced so far up the
+slope towards the British position, that any further firing of
+the French artillerymen would have endangered their own comrades.
+Meanwhile the British guns were not idle; but shot and shell
+ploughed fast through the ranks of the stately array of veterans
+that still moved imposingly on. Several of the French superior
+officers were at its head. Ney's horse was shot under him, but
+he still led the way on foot, sword in hand. The front of the
+massive column now was on the ridge of the hill. To their
+surprise they saw no troops before them. All they could discern
+through the smoke was a small band of mounted officers. One of
+them was the Duke himself. The French advanced to about fifty
+yards from where the British Guards were lying down when the
+voice of one of the group of British officers was heard calling,
+as if to the ground before him, "Up, Guards, and at them!" It
+was the Duke who gave the order; and at the words, as if by
+magic, up started before them a line of the British Guards four
+deep, and in the most compact and perfect order. They poured an
+instantaneous volley upon the head of the French column, by which
+no less than three hundred of those chosen veterans are said to
+have fallen. The French officers rushed forwards; and,
+conspicuous in front of their men, attempted to deploy them into
+a more extended line, so as to enable them to reply with effect
+to the British fire. But Maitland's brigade kept showering in
+volley after volley with deadly rapidity. The decimated column
+grew disordered in its vain efforts to expand itself into a more
+efficient formation. The right word was given at the right
+moment to the British for the bayonet-charge, and the brigade
+sprang forward with a loud cheer against their dismayed
+antagonists. In an instant the compact mass of the French spread
+out into a rabble, and they fled back down the hill, pursued by
+Maitland's men, who, however, returned to their position in time
+to take part in the repulse of the second column of the Imperial
+Guard.
+
+This column also advanced with great spirit and firmness under
+the cannonade which was opened on it; and passing by the eastern
+wall of Hougoumont, diverged slightly to the right as it moved up
+the slope towards the British position, so as to approach nearly
+the same spot where the first column had surmounted the height,
+and been defeated. This enabled the British regiments of Adams's
+brigade to form a line parallel to the left flank of the French
+column; so that while the front of this column of French Guards
+had to encounter the cannonade of the British batteries, and the
+musketry of Maitlands Guards, its left flank was assailed with a
+destructive fire by a four-deep body of British infantry,
+extending all along it. In such a position all the bravery and
+skill of the French veterans were vain. The second column, like
+its predecessor, broke and fled, taking at first a lateral
+direction along the front of the British line towards the rear of
+La Haye Sainte, and so becoming blended with the divisions of
+French infantry, which under Donzelot had been assailing the
+Allies so formidably in that quarter. The sight of the Old Guard
+broken and in flight checked the ardour which Donzelot's troops
+had hitherto displayed. They, too, began to waver. Adams's
+victorious brigade was pressing after the flying Guard, and now
+cleared away the assailants of the allied centre. But the battle
+was not yet won. Napoleon had still some battalions in reserve
+near La Belle Alliance. He was rapidly rallying the remains of
+the first column of his Guards, and he had collected into one
+body the remnants of the various corps of cavalry, which had
+suffered so severely in the earlier part of the day. The Duke
+instantly formed the bold resolution of now himself becoming the
+assailant, and leading his successful though enfeebled army
+forward, while the disheartening effect of the repulse of the
+Imperial Guard on the rest of the French army was still strong,
+and before Napoleon and Ney could rally the beaten veterans
+themselves for another and a fiercer charge. As the close
+approach of the Prussians now completely protected the Duke's
+left, he had drawn some reserves of horse from that quarter, and
+he had a brigade of Hussars under Vivian fresh and ready at hand.
+Without a moment's hesitation he launched these against the
+cavalry near La Belie Alliance. The charge was as successful as
+it was daring: and as there was now no hostile cavalry to check
+the British infantry in a forward movement, the Duke gave the
+long-wished-for command for a general advance of the army along
+the whole line upon the foe. It was now past eight o'clock, and
+for nearly nine deadly hours had the British and German regiments
+stood unflinching under the fire of artillery, the charge of
+cavalry, and every variety of assault, which the compact columns
+or the scattered tirailleurs of the enemy's infantry could
+inflict. As they joyously sprang forward against the discomfited
+masses of the French, the setting sun broke through the clouds
+which had obscured the sky during the greater part of the day,
+and glittered on the bayonets of the Allies, while they poured
+down into the valley and towards the heights that were held by
+the foe. The Duke himself was among the foremost in the advance,
+and personally directed the movements against each body of the
+French that essayed resistance. He rode in front of Adams's
+brigade, cheering it forward, and even galloped among the most
+advanced of the British skirmishers, speaking joyously to the
+men, and receiving their hearty shouts of congratulation. The
+bullets of both friends and foes were whistling fast round him;
+and one of the few survivors of his staff remonstrated with him
+for thus exposing a life of such value. "Never mind," was the
+Duke's answer;--"Never mind, let them fire away; the battle's
+won, and my life is of no consequence now." And, indeed, almost
+the whole of the French host was now in irreparable confusion.
+The Prussian army was coming more and more rapidly forwards on
+their right; and the Young Guard, which had held Planchenoit so
+bravely, was at last compelled to give way. Some regiments of
+the Old Guard in vain endeavoured to form in squares and stem the
+current. They were swept away, and wrecked among the waves of
+the flyers. Napoleon had placed himself in one of these squares:
+Marshal Soult, Generals Bertrand, Drouot, Corbineau, De Flahaut,
+and Gourgaud, were with him. The Emperor spoke of dying on the
+field, but Soult seized his bridle and turned his charger round,
+exclaiming, "Sire, are not the enemy already lucky enough?"
+[Colonel Lemonnier-Delafosse, "Memoires," p. 388. The Colonel
+states that he heard these details from General Gourgaud himself.
+The English reader will be reminded of Charles I.'s retreat from
+Naseby.] With the greatest difficulty, and only by the utmost
+exertion of the devoted officers round him, Napoleon cleared the
+throng of fugitives, and escaped from the scene of the battle and
+the war, which he and France had lost past all recovery.
+Meanwhile the Duke of Wellington still rode forward with the van
+of his victorious troops, until he reined up on the elevated
+ground near Rossomme. The daylight was now entirely gone; but
+the young moon had risen, and the light which it cast, aided by
+the glare from the burning houses and other buildings in the line
+of the flying French and pursuing Prussians, enabled the Duke to
+assure himself that his victory was complete. He then rode back
+along the Charleroi road toward Waterloo: and near La Belle
+Alliance he met Marshal Blucher. Warm were the congratulations
+that were exchanged between the Allied Chiefs. It was arranged
+that the Prussians should follow up the pursuit, and give the
+French no chance of rallying. Accordingly the British army,
+exhausted by its toils and sufferings during that dreadful day,
+did not advance beyond the heights which the enemy had occupied.
+But the Prussians drove the fugitives before them in merciless
+chase throughout the night. Cannon, baggage, and all the
+materiel of the army were abandoned by the French; and many
+thousands of the infantry threw away their arms to facilitate
+their escape. The ground was strewn for miles with the wrecks of
+their host. There was no rear-guard; nor was even the semblance
+of order attempted, an attempt at resistance was made at the
+bridge and village of Genappe, the first narrow pass through
+which the bulk of the French retired. The situation was
+favourable; and a few resolute battalions, if ably commanded,
+might have held their pursuers at bay there for some considerable
+time. But despair and panic were now universal in the beaten
+army. At the first sound of the Prussian drums and bugles,
+Genappe was abandoned, and nothing thought of but headlong
+flight. The Prussians, under General Gneisenau, still followed
+and still slew; nor even when the Prussian infantry stopped in
+sheer exhaustion, was the pursuit given up. Gneisenau still
+pushed on with the cavalry; and by an ingenious stratagem, made
+the French believe that his infantry were still close on them,
+and scared them from every spot where they attempted to pause and
+rest. He mounted one of his drummers on a horse which had been
+taken from the captured carriage of Napoleon, and made him ride
+along with the pursuing cavalry, and beat the drum whenever they
+came on any large number of the French. The French thus fled,
+and the Prussians pursued through Quatre Bras, and even over the
+heights of Frasne; and when at length Gneisenau drew bridle, and
+halted a little beyond Frasne with the scanty remnant of keen
+hunters who had kept up the chace with him to the last, the
+French were scattered through Gosselies, Marchiennes, and
+Charleroi; and were striving to regain the left bank of the river
+Sambre, which they had crossed in such pomp and pride not a
+hundred hours before.
+
+Part of the French left wing endeavoured to escape from the field
+without blending with the main body of the fugitives who thronged
+the Genappe causeway. A French officer, who was among those who
+thus retreated across the country westward of the high-road, has
+vividly described what he witnessed and what he suffered.
+Colonel Lemonnier-Delafosse served in the campaign of 1815 in
+General Foy's staff, and was consequently in that part of the
+French army at Waterloo, which acted against Hougoumont and the
+British right wing. When the column of the Imperial Guard made
+their great charge at the end of the day, the troops of Foy's
+division advanced in support of them, and Colonel Lemonnier-
+Delafosse describes the confident hopes of victory and promotion
+with which he marched to that attack, and the fearful carnage and
+confusion of the assailants, amid which he was helplessly hurried
+back by his flying comrades. He then narrates the closing scene,
+[Col. Lemonnier-Delafosse, "Memoires," pp. 385-405. There are
+omissions and abridgments in the translation which I have
+given.]:
+
+"Near one of the hedges of Hougoumont farm, without even a
+drummer to beat the RAPPEL, we succeeded in rallying under the
+enemy's fire 300 men: they were nearly all that remained of our
+splendid division, Thither came together a band of generals.
+There was Reille, whose horse had been shot under him; there were
+D'Erlon, Bachelu, Foy, Jamin, and others. All were gloomy and
+sorrowful, like vanquished men. Their words were,--'Here is all
+that is left of my corps, of my division, of my brigade. I,
+myself.' We had seen the fall of Duhesme, of Pelet-de-Morvan, of
+Michel--generals who had found a glorious death. My General,
+Foy, had his shoulder pierced through by a musket-ball: and out
+of his whole staff two officers only were left to him, Cahour
+Duhay and I. Fate had spared me in the midst of so many dangers,
+though the first charger I rode had been shot and had fallen on
+me.
+
+"The enemy's horse were coming down on us, and our little group
+was obliged to retreat. 'What had happened to our division of
+the left wing had taken place all along the line. The movement
+of the hostile cavalry, which inundated the whole plain, had
+demoralised our soldiers, who seeing all regular retreat of the
+army cut off, strove each man to effect one for himself. At each
+instant the road became more encumbered. Infantry, cavalry, and
+artillery, were pressing along pell-mell: jammed together like a
+solid mass. Figure to yourself 40,000 men struggling and
+thrusting themselves along a single causeway. We could not take
+that way without destruction; so the generals who had collected
+together near the Hougoumont hedge dispersed across the fields.
+General Foy alone remained with the 300 men whom he had gleaned
+from the field of battle, and marched at their head. Our anxiety
+was to withdraw from the scene of action without being confounded
+with the fugitives. Our general wished to retreat like a true
+soldier. Seeing three lights in the southern horizon, like
+beacons, General Foy asked me what I thought of the position of
+each. I answered, 'The first to the left is Genappe, the second
+is at Bois de Bossu, near the farm of Quatre Bras; the third is
+at Gosselies.' 'Let us march on the second one, then,' replied
+Foy, 'and let no obstacle stop us--take the head of the column,
+and do not lose sight of the guiding light.' Such was his order,
+and I strove to obey.
+
+"After all the agitation and the incessant din of a long day of
+battle, how imposing was the stillness of that night! We
+proceeded on our sad and lonely march. We were a prey to the
+most cruel reflections, we were humiliated, we were hopeless; but
+not a word of complaint was heard. We walked silently as a troop
+of mourners, and it might have been said that we were attending
+the funeral of our country's glory. Suddenly the stillness was
+broken by a challenge,--'QUI VIVE?' 'France!' 'Kellerman!'
+'Foy!' 'Is it you, General? come nearer to us.' At that moment
+we were passing over a little hillock, at the foot of which was a
+hut, in which Kellerman and some of his officers had halted.
+They came out to join as Foy said to me, 'Kellerman knows the
+country: he has been along here before with his cavalry; we had
+better follow him.' But we found that the direction which
+Kellerman chose was towards the first light, towards Genappe.
+That led to the causeway which our general rightly wished to
+avoid I went to the left to reconnoitre, and was soon convinced
+that such was the case. It was then that I was able to form a
+full idea of the disorder of a routed army. What a hideous
+spectacle! The mountain torrent, that uproots and whirls along
+with it every momentary obstacle, is a feeble image of that heap
+of men, of horses, of equipages, rushing one upon another;
+gathering before the least obstacle which dams up their way for a
+few seconds, only to form a mass which overthrows everything in
+the path which it forces for itself. Woe to him whose footing
+failed him in that deluge! He was crushed, trampled to death! I
+returned and told my general what I had seen, and he instantly
+abandoned Kellerman, and resumed his original line of march.
+
+"Keeping straight across the country over fields and the rough
+thickets, we at last arrived at the Bois de Bossu, where we
+halted. My General said to me, 'Go to the farm of Quatre Bras
+and announce that we are here. The Emperor or Soult must be
+there. Ask for orders, and recollect that I am waiting here for
+you. The lives of these men depend on your exactness.' To reach
+the farm I was obliged to cross the high road: I was on
+horseback, but nevertheless was borne away by the crowd that fled
+along the road, and it was long are I could extricate myself and
+reach the farmhouse. General Lobau was there with his staff,
+resting in fancied security. They thought that their troops had
+halted there; but, though a halt had been attempted, the men had
+soon fled forwards, like their comrades of the rest of the army.
+The shots of the approaching Prussians were now heard; and I
+believe that General Lobau was taken prisoner in that farmhouse.
+I left him to rejoin my general, which I did with difficulty. I
+found him alone. His men, as they came near the current of
+flight, were infected with the general panic, and fled also.
+
+"What was to be done? Follow that crowd of runaways? General
+Foy would not hear of it. There were five of us still with him,
+all officers. He had been wounded at about five in the
+afternoon, and the wound had not been dressed. He suffered
+severely; but his moral courage was unbroken. 'Let us keep,' he
+said, 'a line parallel to the high road, and work our way hence
+as we best can.' A foot-track was before us, and we followed it.
+
+"The moon shone out brightly, and revealed the full wretchedness
+of the TABLEAU which met our eyes. A brigadier and four cavalry
+soldiers, whom we met with, formed our escort. We marched on;
+and, as the noise grew more distant, I thought that we were
+losing the parallel of the highway. Finding that we had the moon
+more and more on the left, I felt sure of this, and mentioned it
+to the General. Absorbed in thought, he made me no reply. We
+came in front of a windmill, and endeavoured to procure some
+information; but we could not gain an entrance, or make any one
+answer, and we continued our nocturnal march. At last we entered
+a village, but found every door closed against us, and were
+obliged to use threats in order to gain admission into a single
+house. The poor woman to whom it belonged, more dead than alive,
+received us as if we had been enemies. Before asking where we
+were, 'Food, give as some food!' was our cry. Bread and butter
+and beer were brought, and soon disappeared before men who had
+fasted for twenty-four hours. A little revived, we ask, 'Where
+are we? what is the name of this village?'--'Vieville.'
+
+"On looking at the map, I saw that in coming to that village we
+had leaned too much to the right, and that we were in the
+direction of Mons. In order to reach the Sambre at the bridge of
+Marchiennes, we had four leagues to traverse; and there was
+scarcely time to march the distance before daybreak. I made a
+villager act as our guide, and bound him by his arm to my
+stirrup. He led us through Roux to Marchiennes. The poor fellow
+ran alongside of my horse the whole way. It was cruel, but
+necessary to compel him, for we had not an instant to spare. At
+six in the morning we entered Marchiennes.
+
+"Marshal Ney was there. Our general went to see him, and to ask
+what orders he had to give. Ney was asleep; and, rather than rob
+him of the first repose he had had for four days, our General
+returned to us without seeing him. And, indeed, what orders
+could Marshal Ney have given? The whole army was crossing the
+Sambre, each man where and now he chose; some at Charleroi, some
+at Marchiennes. We were about to do the same thing. When once
+beyond the Sambre we might safely halt; and both men and horses
+were in extreme need of rest. We passed through Thuin; and
+finding a little copse near the road, we gladly sought its
+shelter. While our horses grazed, we lay down and slept. How
+sweet was that sleep after the fatigues of the long day of
+battle, and after the night of retreat more painful still! We
+rested in the little copse till noon, and sate there watching the
+wrecks of our army defile along the road before us. It was a
+soul-harrowing sight! Yet the different arms of the service had
+resumed a certain degree of order amid their disorder; and our
+General, feeling his strength revive, resolved to follow a strong
+column of cavalry which was taking the direction of Beaumont,
+about four leagues off. We drew near Beaumont, when suddenly a
+regiment of horse was seen debouching from a wood on our left.
+The column that we followed shouted out, 'The Prussians! the
+Prussians!' and galloped off in utter disorder. The troops that
+thus alarmed them were not a tenth part of their number, and were
+in reality our own 8th Hussars, who wore green uniforms. But the
+panic had been brought even thus far from the battle-field, and
+the disorganized column galloped into Beaumont, which was already
+crowded with our infantry. We were obliged to follow that
+DEBACLE. On entering Beaumont we chose a house of superior
+appearance, and demanded of the mistress of it refreshments for
+the General. 'Alas!' said the lady, 'this is the tenth General
+who has been to this house since this morning. I have nothing
+left. Search, if you please, and see.' Though unable to find
+food for the General, I persuaded him to take his coat off and
+let me examine his wound. The bullet had gone through the twists
+of the left epaulette, and penetrating the skin, had run round
+the shoulder without injuring the bone. The lady of the house
+made some lint for me; and without any great degree of surgical
+skill I succeeded in dressing the wound.
+
+"Being still anxious to procure some food for the General. and
+ourselves, if it were but a loaf of ammunition bread, I left the
+house and rode out into the town. I saw pillage going on in
+every direction: open caissons, stripped and half-broken,
+blocked up the streets. The pavement was covered with plundered
+and torn baggage. Pillagers and runaways, such were all the
+comrades I met with. Disgusted at them, I strove, sword in hand,
+to stop one of the plunderers; but, more active than I, he gave
+me a bayonet stab in my left arm, in which I fortunately caught
+his thrust, which had been aimed full at my body. He disappeared
+among the crowd, through which I could not force my horse. My
+spirit of discipline had made me forget that in such
+circumstances the soldier is a mere wild beast. But to be
+wounded by a fellow-countryman after having passed unharmed
+through all the perils of Quatre Bras and Waterloo!--this did
+seem hard, indeed. I was trying to return to General Foy, when
+another horde of flyers burst into Beaumont, swept me into the
+current of their flight, and hurried me out of the town with
+them. Until I received my wound I had preserved my moral courage
+in full force; but now, worn out with fatigue, covered with
+blood, and suffering severe pain from the wound, I own that I
+gave way to the general demoralisation, and let myself be inertly
+borne along with the rushing mass. At last I reached Landrecies,
+though I know not how or when. But I found there our Colonel
+Hurday, who had been left behind there in consequence of an
+accidental injury from a carriage. He took me with him to Paris,
+where I retired amid my family, and got cured of my wound,
+knowing nothing of the rest of political and military events that
+were taking place."
+
+No returns ever were made of the amount of the French loss in the
+battle of Waterloo; but it must have been immense, and may be
+partially judged of by the amount of killed and wounded in the
+armies of the conquerors. On this subject both the Prussian and
+British official evidence is unquestionably full and authentic.
+The figures are terribly emphatic.
+
+Of the army that fought under the Duke of Wellington nearly
+15,000 men were killed and wounded on this single day of battle.
+Seven thousand Prussians also fell at Waterloo. At such a
+fearful price was the deliverance of Europe purchased.
+
+By none was the severity of that loss more keenly felt than by
+our great deliverer himself. As may be seen in Major Macready's
+narrative, the Duke, while the battle was raging, betrayed no
+sign of emotion at the most ghastly casualties; but, when all was
+over, the sight of the carnage with which the field was covered,
+and still more, the sickening spectacle of the agonies of the
+wounded men who lay moaning in their misery by thousands and tens
+of thousands, weighed heavily on the spirit of the victor, as he
+rode back across the scene of strife. On reaching his head-
+quarters in the village of Waterloo, the Duke inquired anxiously
+after the numerous friends who had been round him in the morning,
+and to whom he was warmly attached. Many he was told were dead;
+others were lying alive, but mangled and suffering, in the houses
+round him. It is in our hero's own words alone that his feelings
+can be adequately told. In a letter written by him almost
+immediately after his return from the field, he thus expressed
+himself:--"My heart is broken by the terrible loss I have
+sustained in my old friends and companions, and my poor soldiers.
+Believe me, nothing except a battle lost, can be half so
+melancholy as a battle won; the bravery of my troops has hitherto
+saved me from the greater evil; but to win such a battle as this
+of Waterloo, at the expense of so many gallant friends, could
+only be termed a heavy misfortune but for the result to the
+public."
+
+It is not often that a successful General in modern warfare is
+called on, like the victorious commander of the ancient Greek
+armies, to award a prize of superior valour to one of his
+soldiers. Such was to some extent the case with respect to the
+battle of Waterloo. In the August of 1818, an English clergyman
+offered to confer a small annuity on some Waterloo soldier, to be
+named by the Duke. [Siborne, vol. i. p. 391.] The Duke
+requested Sir John Byng to choose a man from the 2d Brigade of
+Guards, which had so highly distinguished itself in the defence
+of Hougoumont. There were many gallant candidates, but the
+election fell on Sergeant James Graham, of the light company of
+the Coldstreams. This brave man had signalised himself,
+throughout the day, in the defence of that important post, and
+especially in the critical struggle that took place at the period
+when the French, who had gained the wood, the orchard, and
+detached garden, succeeded in bursting open a gate of the
+courtyard of the chateau itself, and rushed in in large masses,
+confident of carrying all before them. A hand-to-hand fight, of
+the most desperate character, was kept up between them and the
+Guards for a few minutes; but at last the British bayonets
+prevailed. Nearly all the Frenchmen who had forced their way in
+were killed on the spot; and, as the few survivors ran back, five
+of the Guards, Colonel Macdonnell, Captain Wyndham, Ensign Gooch,
+Ensign Hervey, and Sergeant Graham, by sheer strength, closed the
+gate again, in spite of the efforts of the French from without,
+and effectually barricaded it against further assaults. Over and
+through the loopholed wall of the courtyard, the English garrison
+now kept up a deadly fire of musketry, which was fiercely
+answered by the French, who swarmed round the curtilage like
+ravening wolves. Shells, too, from their batteries, were falling
+fast into the besieged place, one of which set part of the
+mansion and some of the out-buildings on fire. Graham, who was
+at this time standing near Colonel Macdonnell at the wall, and
+who had shown the most perfect steadiness and courage, now asked
+permission of his commanding officer to retire for a moment.
+Macdonnell replied, "By all means, Graham; but I wonder you
+should ask leave now." Graham answered, "I would not, sir, only
+my brother is wounded, and he is in that out-building there,
+which has just caught fire." Laying down his musket, Graham ran
+to the blazing spot, lifted up his brother, and laid him in a
+ditch. Then he was back at his post, and was plying his musket
+against the French again, before his absence was noticed, except
+by his colonel.
+
+Many anecdotes of individual prowess have been preserved: but of
+all the brave men who were in the British army on that eventful
+day, none deserve more honour for courage and indomitable
+resolution than Sir Thomas Picton, who, as has been mentioned,
+fell in repulsing the great attack of the French upon the British
+left centre. It was not until the dead body was examined after
+the battle, that the full heroism of Picton was discerned. He
+had been wounded on the 16th, at Quatre Bras, by a musket-ball,
+which had broken two of his ribs, and caused also severe internal
+injuries; but he had concealed the circumstance, evidently in
+expectation that another and greater battle would be fought in a
+short time, and desirous to avoid being solicited to absent
+himself from the field. His body was blackened and swollen by
+the wound, which must have caused severe and incessant pain; and
+it was marvellous how his spirit had borne him up, and enabled
+him to take part in the fatigues and duties of the field. The
+bullet which, on the 18th, killed the renowned loader of "the
+fighting Division" of the Peninsula, entered the head near the
+left temple, and passed through the brain; so that Picton's death
+must have been instantaneous.
+
+One of the most interesting narratives of personal adventure at
+Waterloo, is that of Colonel Frederick Ponsonby, of the 12th
+Light Dragoons, who was severely wounded when Vandeleur's
+brigade, to which he belonged, attacked the French lancers, in
+order to bring off the Union Brigade, which was retiring from its
+memorable charge. [See p. 361, SUPRA.] The 12th, like those
+whom they rescued, advanced much further against the French
+position than prudence warranted. Ponsonby, with many others,
+was speared by a reserve of Polish lancers, and left for dead on
+the field. It is well to refer to the description of what he
+suffered (as he afterwards gave it, when almost miraculously
+recovered from his numerous wounds), because his fate, or worse,
+was the fate of thousands more; and because the narrative of the
+pangs of an individual, with whom we can identify ourselves,
+always comes more home to us than a general description of the
+miseries of whole masses. His tale may make us remember what are
+the horrors of war as well as its glories. It is to be
+remembered that the operations which he refers to, took place
+about three o'clock in the day, and that the fighting went on for
+at least five hours more. After describing how he and his men
+charged through the French whom they first encountered, and went
+against other enemies, he states:--
+
+"We had no sooner passed them than we were ourselves attacked
+before we could form, by about 300 Polish lancers, who had
+hastened to their relief; the French artillery pouring in among
+us a heavy fire of grape, though for one of our men they killed
+three of their own.
+
+"In the MELEE I was almost instantly disabled in both arms,
+losing first my sword, and then my reins, and followed by a few
+men, who were presently cut down, no quarter being allowed, asked
+or given, I was carried along by my horse, till, receiving a blow
+from a sabre, I fell senseless on my face to the ground.
+
+"Recovering, I raised myself a little to look round, being at
+that time, I believe, in a condition to get up and run away; when
+a lancer passing by, cried out, 'Tu n'est pas mort, coquin!' and
+struck his lance through my back. My head dropped, the blood
+gushed into my mouth, a difficulty of breathing came on, and I
+thought all was over.
+
+"Not long afterwards (it was impossible to measure time, but I
+must have fallen in less than ten minutes after the onset), a
+tirailleur stopped to plunder me, threatening my life. I
+directed him to a small side-pocket, in which he found three
+dollars, all I had; but he continued to threaten, and I said he
+might search me: this he did immediately, unloosing my stock and
+tearing open my waistcoat, and leaving me in a very uneasy
+posture.
+
+"But he was no sooner gone, than an officer bringing up some
+troops, to which probably the tirailleur belonged and happening
+to halt where I lay, stooped down and addressed me, saying, he
+feared I was badly wounded; I said that I was, and expressed a
+wish to be removed to the rear. He said it was against their
+orders to remove even their own men; but that if they gained the
+day (and he understood that the Duke of Wellington was killed,
+and that some of our battalions had surrendered), every attention
+in his power would be shown me. I complained of thirst, and he
+held his brandy-bottle to my lips, directing one of the soldiers
+to lay me straight on my side, and place a knapsack under my
+head. He then passed on into action--soon, perhaps, to want,
+though not receive, the same assistance; and I shall never know
+to whose generosity I was indebted, as I believe, for my life.
+Of what rank he was, I cannot say: he wore a great coat. By-
+and-by another tirailleur came up, a fine young man, full of
+ardour. He knelt down and fired over me, loading and firing many
+times, and conversing with me all the while." The Frenchman,
+with strange coolness, informed Ponsonby of how he was shooting,
+and what he thought of the progress of the battle. "At last he
+ran off, exclaiming, 'You will probably not be sorry to hear that
+we are going to retreat. Good day, my friend.' It was dusk,"
+Ponsonby adds, "when two squadrons of Prussian cavalry, each of
+them two deep, came across the valley, and passed over me in full
+trot, lifting me from the ground, and tumbling me about cruelly.
+The clatter of of their approach and the apprehensions they
+excited, may be imagined; a gun taking that direction must have
+destroyed me.
+
+"The battle was now at an end, or removed to a distance. The
+shouts, the imprecations, the outcries of 'Vive l'Empereur!' the
+discharge of musketry and cannon, were over; and the groans of
+the wounded all around me, became every moment more and more
+audible. I thought the night would never end.
+
+"Much about this time I found a soldier of the Royals lying
+across my legs: he had probably crawled thither in his agony;
+and his weight, his convulsive motions, and the air issuing
+through a wound in his side, distressed me greatly; the last
+circumstance most of all, as I had a wound of the same nature
+myself. "It was not a dark night, and the Prussians were
+wandering about to plunder; the scene in Ferdinand Count Fathom
+came into my mind, though no women appeared. Several stragglers
+looked at me, as they passed by, one after another, and at last
+one of them stopped to examine me. I told him as well as I
+could, for I spoke German very imperfectly, that I was a British
+officer, and had been plundered already; he did not desist,
+however, and pulled me about roughly.
+
+"An hour before midnight I saw a man in an English uniform
+walking towards me. He was, I suspect, on the same errand, and
+he came and looked in my face. I spoke instantly, telling him
+who I was, and assuring him of a reward if he would remain by me.
+He said he belonged to the 40th, and had missed his regiment; he
+released me from the dying soldier, and being unarmed, took up a
+sword from the ground, and stood over me, pacing backwards and
+forwards.
+
+"Day broke; and at six o'clock in the morning some English were
+seen at a distance, and he ran to them. A messenger being sent
+off to Hervey, a cart came for me, and I was placed in it, and
+carried to the village of Waterloo, a mile and a half off, and
+laid in the bed from which as I understood afterwards, Gordon had
+been just carried out. I had received seven wounds; a surgeon
+slept in my room, and I was saved by excessive bleeding."
+
+Major Macready, in the journal already cited, [See SUPRA.
+p. 368.] justly praises the deep devotion to their Emperor which,
+marked the French at Waterloo. Never, indeed, had the national
+bravery of the French people been more nobly shown. One soldier
+in the French ranks was seen, when his arm was shattered by a
+cannon-ball, to wrench it off with the other; and throwing it up
+in the air, he exclaimed to his comrades, "Vive l'Empereur
+jusqu'a la mort!" Colonel Lemonnier-Delafosse mentions in his
+Memoirs, [Page 388.] that at the beginning of the action, a
+French soldier who had had both legs carried off by a cannon-
+ball, was borne past the front of Foy's division, and called out
+to them, "Ca n'est rien, camarades; Vive l'Empereur! Gloire a
+la France!" The same officer, at the end of the battle, when all
+hope was lost, tells us that he saw a French grenadier, blackened
+with powder, and with his clothes torn and stained, leaning on
+his musket, and immoveable as a statue. The colonel called to
+him to join his comrades and retreat; but the grenadier showed
+him his musket and his hands; and said, "These hands have with
+this musket used to-day more than twenty packets of cartridges:
+it was more than my share: I supplied myself with ammunition
+from the dead. Leave me to die here on the field of battle. It
+is not courage that fails me, but strength." Then, as Colonel
+Delafosse left him, the soldier stretched himself on the ground
+to meet his fate, exclaiming, "Tout est perdu! pauvre France!"
+The gallantry of the French officers at least equalled that of
+their men. Ney, in particular, set the example of the most
+daring courage. Here, as in every French army in which he ever
+served or commanded, he was "le brave des braves." Throughout
+the day he was in the front of the battle; and was one of the
+very last Frenchmen who quitted the field. His horse was killed
+under him in the last attack made on the English position; but he
+was seen on foot, his clothes torn with bullets, his face
+smirched with powder, striving, sword in hand, first to urge his
+men forward, and at last to check their flight.
+
+There was another brave general of the French army, whose valour
+and good conduct on that day of disaster to his nation should
+never be unnoticed when the story of Waterloo is recounted. This
+was General Polet, who, about seven in the evening, led the first
+battalion of the 2d regiment of the Chasseurs of the Guard to the
+defence of Planchenoit; and on whom Napoleon personally urged the
+deep importance of maintaining possession of that village. Pelet
+and his men took their post in the central part of the village,
+and occupied the church and churchyard in great strength. There
+they repelled every assault of the Prussians, who in rapidly
+increasing numbers rushed forward with infuriated pertinacity.
+They held their post till the utter rout of the main army of
+their comrades was apparent, and the victorious Allies were
+thronging around Planchenoit. When Pelet and his brave chasseurs
+quitted the churchyard, and retired with steady march, though
+they suffered fearfully from the moment they left their shelter,
+and Prussian cavalry as well as infantry dashed fiercely after
+them. Pelet kept together a little knot of 250 veterans, and had
+the eagle covered over, and borne along in the midst of them. At
+one time the inequality of the ground caused his ranks to open a
+little; and in an instant the Prussian horseman were on them, and
+striving to capture the eagle. Captain Siborne relates the
+conduct of Pelet with the admiration worthy of one brave soldier
+for another:--
+
+"Pelet, taking advantage of a spot of ground which afforded them
+some degree of cover against the fire of grape by which they were
+constantly assailed, halted the standard-bearer, and called out,
+"A moi chasseurs! sauvons l'aigle ou mourons autour d'elle!"
+The chasseurs immediately pressed around him, forming what is
+usually termed the rallying square, and, lowering their bayonets,
+succeeded in repulsing the charge of cavalry. Some guns were
+then brought to bear upon them, and subsequently a brisk fire of
+musketry; but notwithstanding the awful sacrifice which was thus
+offered up in defence of their precious charge, they succeeded in
+reaching the main line of retreat, favoured by the universal
+confusion, as also by the general obscurity which now prevailed;
+and thus saved alike the eagle and the honour of the regiment."
+
+French writers do injustice to their own army and general, when
+they revive malignant calumnies against Wellington, and speak of
+his having blundered into victory. No blunderer could have
+successfully encountered such troops as those of Napoleon, and
+under such a leader. It is superfluous to cite against these
+cavils the testimony which other continental critics have borne
+to the high military genius of our illustrious chief. I refer to
+one only, which is of peculiar value, on account of the quarter
+whence it comes. It is that of the great German writer Niebuhr,
+whose accurate acquaintance with every important scene of modern
+as well as ancient history was unparalleled: and who was no mere
+pedant, but a man practically versed in active life, and had been
+personally acquainted with most of the leading men in the great
+events of the early part of this century. Niebuhr, in the
+passage which I allude to, [Roman History, vol. v. p. 17.] after
+referring to the military "blunders" of Mithridates, Frederick
+the Great, Napoleon, Pyrrhus, and Hannibal, uses these remarkable
+words, "The Duke of Wellington is, I believe, the only general in
+whose conduct of war we cannot discover any important mistake."
+Not that it is to be supposed that the Duke's merits were simply
+of a negative order, or that he was merely a cautious, phlegmatic
+general fit only for defensive warfare, as some recent French
+historians have described him. On the contrary, he was bold even
+to audacity when boldness was required. "The intrepid advance
+and fight at Assaye, the crossing of the Douro, and the movement
+on Talavera in 1809, the advance to Madrid and Burgos in 1812,
+the actions before Bayonne in 1813, and the desperate stand made
+at Waterloo itself, when more tamely-prudent generals would have
+retreated beyond Brussels, place this beyond a doubt." [See the
+admirable parallel of Wellington and Marlborough at the end of
+Sir Archibald Alison's "Life of the Duke of Marlborough." Sir
+Archibald justly considers Wellington the more daring general of
+the two.]
+
+The overthrow of the French military power at Waterloo was so
+complete, that the subsequent events of the brief campaign have
+little interest. Lamartine truly says: "This defeat left
+nothing undecided in future events, for victory had given
+judgment. The war began and ended in a single battle." Napoleon
+himself recognised instantly and fully the deadly nature of the
+blow which had been dealt to his empire. In his flight from the
+battle-field he first halted at Charleroi, but the approach of
+the pursuing Prussians drove him thence before he had rested
+there an hour. With difficulty getting clear of the wrecks of
+his own army, he reached Philippeville, where he remained a few
+hours, and sent orders to the French generals in the various
+extremities of France to converge with their troops upon Paris.
+He ordered Soult to collect the fugitives of his own force, and
+lead them to Laon. He then hurried forward to Paris, and reached
+his capital before the news of his own defeat. But the stern
+truth soon transpired. At the demand of the Chambers of Peers
+and Representatives, he abandoned the throne by a second and
+final abdication on the 22d of June. On the 29th of June he left
+the neighbourhood of Paris, and proceeded to Rochefort in the
+hope of escaping to America; but the coast was strictly watched,
+and on the 15th of July the ex-emperor surrendered himself on
+board of the English man-of-war the Bellerophon.
+
+Meanwhile the allied armies had advanced steadily upon Paris,
+driving before them Grouchy's corps, and the scanty force which
+Soult had succeeded in rallying at Laon. Cambray, Peronne, and
+other fortresses were speedily captured; and by the 29th of June
+the invaders were taking their positions in front of Paris. The
+Provisional Government, which acted in the French capital after
+the Emperor's abdication, opened negotiations with the allied
+chiefs. Blucher, in his quenchless hatred of the French, was
+eager to reject all proposals for a suspension of hostilities,
+and to assault and storm the city. But the sager and calmer
+spirit of Wellington prevailed over his colleague; the entreated
+armistice was granted; and on the 3d of July the capitulation of
+Paris terminated the War of the Battle of Waterloo.
+
+
+In closing our observations on this the last of the Decisive
+Battles of the World, it is pleasing to contrast the year which
+it signalized with the year that is now [Written in June 1851.]
+passing over our heads. We have not (and long may we be without)
+the stern excitement of martial strife, and we see no captive
+standards of our European neighbours brought in triumph to our
+shrines. But we behold an infinitely prouder spectacle. We see
+the banners of every civilized nation waving over the arena of
+our competition with each other, in the arts that minister to our
+race's support and happiness, and not to its suffering and
+destruction.
+
+ "Peace hath her victories
+ No less renowned than War;"
+
+and no battle-field ever witnessed a victory more noble than that
+which England, under her Sovereign Lady and her Royal Prince, is
+now teaching the peoples of the earth to achieve over selfish
+prejudices and international feuds, in the great cause of the
+general promotion of the industry and welfare of mankind.
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Fifteen Decisive Battles of
+The World From Marathon to Waterloo, by Sir Edward Creasy, M.A.
+
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