|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The '45
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE '45
IN the '15, the Prince for whom the Jacobites risked or
lost their lives and property did not show himself till
all the fighting was over. I am now going
[98] to tell the story of the '45; we shall see that things
were very different. It was the Prince who began the
insurrection; if he had not come, it never would have
been made.
I must first say who this Prince was. In 1719 the "Old
Pretender," of whom you heard in the last chapter,
married Clementina Sobieski, daughter of the King of
Poland. In 1721 a son was born, who was named Charles
Edward, and is commonly known as the "Young Pretender."
It was he who was the hero of the '45.
On July 13 he set sail from Belle Isle, which is in the
north of the Bay of Biscay. He had with him two French
ships of war; the larger, the Elizabeth, carried
the stores which he had been able to collect; in the
smaller, La Doutelle, he himself sailed with a
few companions. On their way they fell in with a
British man-of-war, the Lion. A fierce fight took
place between the Elizabeth and the Lion,
in which both ships were so much injured that they had
to put back into harbour. La Doutelle took no
part in the fight, though the Prince was anxious to do
so. Accordingly he was able to proceed on his voyage,
but his stores were left behind in the Elizabeth.
On July 27 he landed on a small island among the
Hebrides. At first he found the chiefs anything but
eager to take up arms, for
[99] they thought that there was but little chance of
success.
THE YOUNG PRETENDER.
|
But the Prince persuaded many who began by refusing to
join him. He was a tall and handsome young man, who
charmed every one that came near him. One of the most
powerful chiefs in the
High- [100] lands, Cameron of Lochiel, felt quite sure the
attempt must fail. The Prince sent for him. On his way
he saw his brother, and told him where he was going,
and what he should say. "Don't go," said the brother,
"write to him. I know you better than you know
yourself. If this Prince once sets eyes upon you, he
will make you do whatever he pleases." And so it was.
For some time Lochiel stood firm. But when the Prince,
after a long argument, finished by saying, "Charles
Stuart is come over to claim the crown of his ancestors
or perish in the attempt; Lochiel, who, my father has
often told me, was our firmest friend, may stay at
home, and learn from the newspapers the fate of his
Prince," he gave way and promised his help. If Lochiel
had stood firm, there would have been no war.
On August 16 the first fighting took place. Two
companies of soldiers on their way to Fort William were
taken prisoners. Two days afterwards the Royal standard
was raised at Glenfinnan. Men continued to flock in
from various Highland clans. When the Prince set out on
the following day on his march southward he had 1600
men with him.
On August 16 General Cope, who was in command of the
English troops, set out from Edinburgh, intending to
march to Fort Augustus. He had got as far as
Dalwhinnie, which is about fifty miles
[101] north of Perth, when he heard that the Highlanders had
occupied a strong pass between that place and the Fort.
He then gave up his plan, and marched to Inverness. The
Prince, finding that there was no one to hinder him,
marched south. As he went on, chiefs and nobles
continued to join him, nor did he meet any resistance,
except a few cannon shot which were fired from Stirling
Castle. On September 14 he was only a few miles from
Edinburgh. This city was really without defence. The
walls were scarcely higher or stronger than a common
garden wall, and had no cannon mounted on them; there
were no regular troops, except some dragoons, and these
soon showed that they could not be trusted. General
Cope's army was, it is true, on its way back; but it
was doubted whether it could arrive in time. While the
magistrates were debating whether they should resist or
surrender, Lochiel with his Camerons made his way
within the walls without having to strike a blow. Thus,
on September 17, the Prince became possessed of
Edinburgh. At noon James VIII. was proclaimed king at
the Cross, and shortly after the Prince took possession
of Holyrood Palace. Only the Castle still remained in
the power of the English Government.
On the same day that the Prince entered Edinburgh
General Cope landed his army at Dunbar. The next day he
marched northward; the Prince, on the other
[102] hand, marched southward, and on September 20 the two
armies met. They were nearly equal in number, about
2500 on each side, but Cope's troops were better armed,
and had six cannon. The Highlanders had no cannon, and
many of the men were without firearms.
The battle lasted but a few minutes. The Highlanders
shouted, each clan its own war-cry, and ran furiously
forward. They came first to the cannon. The sailors who
served them fled without waiting to be attacked.
Colonel Gardiner, who commanded the dragoons on the
left wing, led them to the charge, but they would not
follow him. As soon as the Highlanders drew their
broadswords and came on, the men turned and fled. Very
much the same thing happened with the other regiment of
dragoons on the other wing. So the infantry was left
without either guns or cavalry to support them. They
stood firm for awhile, and fired a volley on the enemy.
But the Highlanders rushed upon them, thrust aside
their bayonets with their targets, and broke up their
line. The dragoons for the most part got away, for
there was no cavalry to follow them, but of the
infantry nearly all were killed or taken prisoners. The
Highlanders lost about a hundred men in killed and
wounded. Such was the battle of Prestonpans or
Gladsmuir.
[103] Some of his friends now advised the Prince to march
without delay into England, and even make his way to
London; but most of them were against this plan. If he
would wait awhile, they said, great numbers more would
join him. As it was, he had fewer soldiers with him
than he had before the battle, for many of the
Highlanders had gone back to their homes in the
mountains with the plunder which they had collected.
Indeed, at one time, he had no more than 1500 men left.
Nevertheless, it might have been better for him if he
had hurried on at once.
It was quite true, however, that great numbers were
ready to join him. Every day recruits flocked in both
from the Highlands and the Lowlands. In the course of a
few weeks as many as 6000 men were collected. The
officers did their best to drill them, and give them
proper arms, but it was impossible to make them into a
regular army.
The great question now was—what was to be done? Should
they stop in Scotland, or advance into England? The
Prince was for advancing. If he was to keep Scotland he
must conquer England. And, beyond all doubt, he was
quite right. But most of his advisers did not think so.
What they hoped to see was a Scottish kingdom under a
Stuart king, and they were altogether against any
attempt upon England. But the Prince was determined to
go. "I see,
[104] gentlemen, you are determined to stay in Scotland and
defend your country, but I am not less resolved to try
my fate in England, though I should go alone."
Then the chiefs gave way. On October 31 the Prince left
Edinburgh. Eight days later the army crossed the
Border. The Highlanders gave a great shout as they
passed into England, but it was thought to be a very
unlucky sign that Lochiel, in drawing his broadsword,
cut his hand. Carlisle was besieged and taken with very
little loss, one Highlander being killed and another
wounded. The Prince entered Carlisle on November 17.
Again there was the question whether he should return
to Scotland or proceed further into England. The Prince
was determined to go on, but many of his men left him.
When he reached Penrith only 4500 of his 6000 remained.
Everywhere as he passed he found the people curious to
see him, and even ready to cheer. But there were very
few willing to help. At Manchester, two or three
hundred men enlisted; but, on the whole, Lancashire was
far less zealous for the cause than it had been thirty
years before. There were, indeed, some zealous friends.
One old lady, who had been held up in her mother's arms
eighty-five years before to see Charles II. land at
Dover, and who had always devoted half her income to
the cause, sold all her jewels and
[105] brought the price to the Prince, saying, as she kissed
his hand, "Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in
peace." But the people cared little for King James,
though probably they cared no more for King George.
Still the Prince went on, and on December 11 entered
Derby. But he went no further. There had been no rising
of the English people in his favour, nor had a French
army been landed to give him help, and his councillors
declared that there was nothing left but to go back to
Scotland. They had good reasons to give for their
advice. The Prince had but 5000 men with him, and the
forces of the English Government were at least six
times as numerous. And then all his hopes of help had
been disappointed. Yet it is quite certain that the
Prince, who was still eager to go on, was right. And,
indeed, London, which was only one hundred and
twenty-seven miles distant, was in a great fright. The
shops were shut, the banks were thronged by people
drawing out all their money, and King George himself,
it is said, put his most valuable property on
shipboard. The day on which the news came that the
Pretender was at Derby, and that there was no army
between him and London, was long remembered as Black
Friday.
But the experiment of advancing was, happily, not
tried. "Happily," I say, because if it had succeeded,
it
[106] must have ended in a long civil war, for it is
impossible to suppose that England would have been
content to let the Stuarts rule again. Much against his
will, the Prince consented to retreat. On December 20
his army crossed the Border again. Six days later it
reached Glasgow. By this time it had dwindled down to
just over 4000 men. But now it was increased again.
Various nobles and chiefs had raised bodies of troops,
and these all joined the Prince. When he reached
Stirling he had as many as 9000 men.
The general in command of the English army was the Duke
of Cumberland, the second son of King George II. But he
had been called away to take charge of the forces on
the south coast of England, which the French were
preparing to invade. He appointed a certain General
Hawley to act for him, and Hawley had marched to attack
the Prince at Stirling. He halted at Falkirk, which is
about ten miles to the south. There a battle was
fought, and lost by the English, partly through the
folly and neglect of their general. He despised his
adversaries as being nothing better than an ill-armed
mob, and was actually absent from his place when the
battle began. The dragoons again behaved badly. They
were ordered to charge the right wing of the enemy. But
the Macdonalds who stood over against them kept back
their fire till the horsemen were near them,
[107] and then sent among them a destructive volley. Two of
the regiments broke at once; the third stood firm for a
while, but were soon compelled to retreat. Then the
Macdonalds charged and fell on the flank of the
infantry in the centre of the line, which was being
attacked at the same time in front. The soldiers had
been tired early in the day, by having to march through
a storm of wind and rain, and were now numbed with
standing still. They had little courage left, and, like
the cavalry, turned to fly. The Prince's left wing had
not done nearly so well; the English here were
sheltered by some rough ground, and the Highlanders'
attack was repulsed. Yet here, too, the English were
forced to retreat. They could not stand their ground
alone.
The conquerors did not make the best of their victory.
If they had, they might have almost destroyed the
defeated army. But they did not fully know what had
happened, and besides, the light failed them. At that
time of the year—the battle of Falkirk
was fought on January 17—the days are very short, and
it is very dangerous, especially with untrained troops,
to move in the dark. As it was, General Hawley lost 400
men killed, 100 prisoners, and all his artillery,
ammunition, and
[108] baggage, and was also compelled to burn his tents, lest
they should fall into the hands of the enemy. The
Prince, however, got little real advantage from his
victory. His officers quarrelled, blaming each other
that the English had not been more vigorously pursued,
and many of the Highlanders hurried home with their
plunder. An unlucky accident that happened on the day
after the battle also did him much harm. A gun which
one of the Macdonalds was examining, went off and
killed a son of Glengarry, who happened to be passing.
The Glengarry clan insisted upon the man being put to
death. Nor were they satisfied with this, for the
greater part left the army and returned home. Not long
after, the Prince was again compelled by his
counsellors to retreat. On February 1 the army left
Stirling, having first spiked the heavy guns and blown
up the powder magazine. On the 18th of the month it
reached Inverness. Here it was quartered for some eight
weeks, growing weaker and weaker every day. The Prince
could neither pay nor feed his army. The country about
Inverness was so poor that he could get little from it,
and most of the supplies which should have reached him
by sea were captured by British ships. It was only to
be expected that men who had neither food nor money to
buy it with should grow tired of the service. By April
15—on this day each man received nothing but a single
[109] biscuit—the 9000 men whom the Prince had with him at
Stirling had dwindled down to 5000. The English army
under the Duke of Cumberland was nearly twice as
numerous, consisting of 8000 infantry and 900 cavalry.
The Prince and his advisers planned a night attack on
the Duke's army. It failed; the troops started too
late, many of them having straggled away in search of
food, and moved too slowly, so that it was nearly dawn
when they reached the English camp. They fell back, and
took up the position which they had held before on
Culloden Moor, otherwise Drummossie, tired by their
useless march, and, as usual, hungry. The best officers
in the army were for withdrawing to a stronger
position, where the Duke would have to begin the
attack, but the Prince had a strange idea that he was
bound to fight where the ground gave no advantage to
either side. Everything was against him, even the order
of battle, for the Macdonalds were put on the left
wing, and were so offended by the slight, as they
thought it, that at a critical moment of the battle
they refused to advance.
The battle began with a cannonade. This was also in
favour of the English, whose guns were served by men
that knew their business. Then the Highlanders of the
right and centre charged. At first they did again what
they had done before at Prestonpans and
[110] at Falkirk, and broke the enemy's line. But the Duke
had provided for this chance. Behind the first line was
a second, three deep, the first rank kneeling, the
second bending forward, the third standing upright. The
line kept back its fire till the Highlanders were
close, and then poured a heavy volley into them. Like
other soldiers whose first charge is almost
irresistible, they had little spirit left for a second.
This part of the Prince's army was broken. On the left,
as has been said, the Macdonalds refused to fight.
Their chief advanced, but they would not follow him;
they were not moved even when they saw him fall.
One more chance was left. If the Prince had charged
with all that remained of his army, he might have even
then changed the fortune of the day. He had often said
that he would either conquer or die, and now was the
time to keep his word. That he did not do so is
certain; but it is not easy to say whether he was right
or wrong. We do not even know for certain what he did.
According to one account he was urged to charge and
refused; according to another he was forced against his
will from the field by two officers, who laid hold of
his horse's bridle, exactly as his great-grandfather
had been a hundred years before on the fatal field at
Naseby.
I must now bring this chapter to an end. I am glad
[111] to say nothing about the cruelty with which the Duke of
Cumberland used his victory, and I must leave you to
read elsewhere the romantic story of how the Prince
escaped. Now hiding, now wandering about in disguise
among the islands off the western coast, or on the
mainland, he continued to avoid his pursuers for nearly
half-a-year. Many helped him, some of them persons who
did not favour his cause, but two must be specially
mentioned, Flora Macdonald, of South Uist, and
Macdonald of Kingsburgh. At length, on September 20,
1746, he embarked at the very spot where he had landed
fourteen months before, and escaped to France.
|