登陆注册
19565500000030

第30章 THE FIRST GREAT BRITISH DISASTER(1)

John Burgoyne, in a measure a soldier of fortune, was the younger son of an impoverished baronet, but he had married the daughter of the powerful Earl of Derby and was well known in London society as a man of fashion and also as a man of letters, whose plays had a certain vogue.His will, in which he describes himself as a humble Christian, who, in spite of many faults, had never forgotten God, shows that he was serious minded.He sat in the House of Commons for Preston and, though he used the language of a courtier and spoke of himself as lying at the King's feet to await his commands, he was a Whig, the friend of Fox and others whom the King regarded as his enemies.One of his plays describes the difficulties of getting the English to join the army of George III.We have the smartly dressed recruit as a decoy to suggest an easy life in the army.Victory and glory are so certain that a tailor stands with his feet on the neck of the King of France.The decks of captured ships swim with punch and are clotted with gold dust, and happy soldiers play with diamonds as if they were marbles.The senators of England, says Burgoyne, care chiefly to make sure of good game laws for their own pleasure.The worthless son of one of them, who sets out on the long drive to his father's seat in the country, spends an hour in "yawning, picking his teeth and damning his journey" and when once on the way drives with such fury that the route is marked by "yelping dogs, broken-backed pigs and dismembered geese."It was under this playwright and satirist, who had some skill as a soldier, that the British cause now received a blow from which it never recovered.Burgoyne had taken part in driving the Americans from Canada in 1776 and had spent the following winter in England using his influence to secure an independent command.

To his later undoing he succeeded.It was he, and not, as had been expected, General Carleton, who was appointed to lead the expedition of 1777 from Canada to the Hudson.Burgoyne was given instructions so rigid as to be an insult to his intelligence.He was to do one thing and only one thing, to press forward to the Hudson and meet Howe.At the same time Lord George Germain, the minister responsible, failed to instruct Howe to advance up the Hudson to meet Burgoyne.Burgoyne had a genuine belief in the wisdom of this strategy but he had no power to vary it, to meet changing circumstances, and this was one chief factor in his failure.

Behold Burgoyne then, on the 17th of June, embarking on Lake Champlain the army which, ever since his arrival in Canada on the 6th of May, he had been preparing for this advance.He had rather more than seven thousand men, of whom nearly one-half were Germans under the competent General Riedesel.In the force of Burgoyne we find the ominous presence of some hundreds of Indian allies.They had been attached to one side or the other in every war fought in those regions during the previous one hundred and fifty years.In the war which ended in 1763 Montcalm had used them and so had his opponent Amherst.The regiments from the New England and other colonies had fought in alliance with the painted and befeathered savages and had made no protest.Now either times had changed, or there was something in a civil war which made the use of savages seem hideous.One thing is certain.

Amherst had held his savages in stern restraint and could say proudly that they had not committed a single outrage.Burgoyne was not so happy.

In nearly every war the professional soldier shows distrust, if not contempt, for civilian levies.Burgoyne had been in America before the day of Bunker Hill and knew a great deal about the country.He thought the "insurgents" good enough fighters when protected by trees and stones and swampy ground.But he thought, too, that they had no real knowledge of the science of war and could not fight a pitched battle.He himself had not shown the prevision required by sound military knowledge.If the British were going to abandon the advantage of sea power and fight where they could not fall back on their fleet, they needed to pay special attention to land transport.This Burgoyne had not done.

It was only a little more than a week before he reached Lake Champlain that he asked Carleton to provide the four hundred horses and five hundred carts which he still needed and which were not easily secured in a sparsely settled country.Burgoyne lingered for three days at Crown Point, half way down the lake.

Then, on the 2d of July, he laid siege to Fort Ticonderoga.Once past this fort, guarding the route to Lake George, he could easily reach the Hudson.

In command at Fort Ticonderoga was General St.Clair, with about thirty-five hundred men.He had long notice of the siege, for the expedition of Burgoyne had been the open talk of Montreal and the surrounding country during many months.He had built Fort Independence, on the east shore of Lake Champlain, and with a great expenditure of labor had sunk twenty-two piers across the lake and stretched in front of them a boom to protect the two forts.But he had neglected to defend Sugar Hill in front of Fort Ticonderoga, and commanding the American works.It took only three or four days for the British to drag cannon to the top, erect a battery and prepare to open fire.On the 5th of July, St.

Clair had to face a bitter necessity.He abandoned the untenable forts and retired southward to Fort Edward by way of the difficult Green Mountains.The British took one hundred and twenty-eight guns.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 股市教父

    股市教父

    中国首部揭秘股市黑幕纪实小说!首次全程披露中国金融期货违大案!全世界做什么破产最快?金融期货!中国什么最黑?黑社会?足球?股市!中国股市什么最亮?剪股民“羊毛”的剪刀!触目惊心!令人发指!散户看完一定惊恐!一部过目难忘的金融恐怖小说!
  • 战帝无双

    战帝无双

    我成不了天才,但是我却可以让天才都畏惧。我将在天地间留下我的足迹,万载之后我的威名将诸天万族传唱!感谢腾讯文学书评团提供书评支持!
  • 后宫深深深几许

    后宫深深深几许

    安素从未想过自己也会遇着这样荒唐的事。穿越到人家的后宫,成为人家的宠妃。勾心斗角的美人,阴谋诡计的爱恋,极致彪悍的人生她开着外挂,所向披靡,将所有算计她蔑视她的女人踩到脚下,成就宠极一时的辉煌她独立栏杆,慵懒无聊,感叹无敌是多么寂寞可她深宫之中,唯有爱不可求,唯有情是奢望。你可以猜得着开头,却一定猜不中结尾。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 学院争霸

    学院争霸

    李小明是要成为数学王的男人,一切阻止我的渣渣都要死
  • 绛雪园古方选注

    绛雪园古方选注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 圣罗兰校园侦探社

    圣罗兰校园侦探社

    圣罗兰贵族学院是一个离奇事件频发的地方。“雪樱侦探社”坐落在校园一角,作为社长的女生云璎珞,从小立志成为福尔摩斯那样的大侦探家。她带领着两个手下:从街边“捡”来的黑客高手Q和其貌不扬、昏昏欲睡却能在关键时刻给自己提醒的景夜莲,三个人通力合作,周旋于天敌怪盗KING和死对头学生会会长殷月辉的纠缠之中,揭开大大小小各种案件的真相,为正义而战……
  • 少女名侦探

    少女名侦探

    午夜凶铃,一滩血迹,诡异的现场!第六个妙龄少女,继而赤身被弃尸大街?变态杀手究竟是什么目的?娇滴滴的小萝莉,却是不死神探的后代。夜夜盗梦,惊叫连连,她抽丝剥茧,一层层解开种种谜团!组织神秘的考古队,寻找“预言经书”,解读世界末日的真相!僵尸,异能者,鬼心叵测,是惊悚,还是惊喜?!
  • 心航之路

    心航之路

    迈克的实验室有着惊人的称呼“美国国家人工智能研究院”。在迈克出生前几十年,美国曾经投入了举国之力妄图研制出一批具有人为意识的机器人。但面对着一次又一次的失败,从美国政界到商界都丧失了信心。要不是为了一点面子和幻想中的奇迹,这个实验室或许早就关闭了。
  • 梦醉千年

    梦醉千年

    目前已经写了4W个字了,快要5W字了,猛一发现,居然没评论,没票,仅仅只有三个落落的收藏,本打算5W字后申请签约的,就这状态,我都没脸申请了,前面只是铺垫,后面入京才是高潮,求给力,别让我没动力。
  • 郑成功传

    郑成功传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。