IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 I.I " lis III M 2.5 1.8 1.25 1.4 L6 — =. -• 6" ^ — ► Photographic Sciences Corporation 23 WEST MAIKi STREET WEBSTER, N.Y. 14SB0 (716) S73-4S03 CIHM/ICMH Microfiche Series. CIHM/ICMH Collection de microfiches. Canadian institute for Historical IN^icroreproductions / institut Canadian de microreproductions historiques Technical and Bibliographic Notes/Notes techniques et bibliographiques The institute has attempted to obtain the best original copy available for filming. Features of this copy which may be bibliographically unique, which may alter any of the images in the reproduction, or which may significantly change the usual method of filming, are checked below. v/ /, n D n n Coloured covers/ Couverture de couleur ~~l Covers damaged/ ■^ Couverture endommagee Covers restored and/or laminated/ Couverture restpurde et/ou pelliculde I I Cover title missing/ Le titre de couverture manque I I Coloured maps/ Cartes g6ographiques en couleur Coloured ink (i.e. other than blue or black)/ Encre de couleur (i.e. aut.'e que bleue ou noire) I I Coloured plates and/or kS*ustrations/ D Planches et/ou illustrations en couleur Bound with other material/ Reli^ avec d'autres documents Tight binding may cause shadows or distortion along interior margin/ La reliure serree peut causer de I'ombre ou de la distortion le long de la marge intdrieure Blank leaves added during restoration may appear within the text. W'l . .avei possible, these have been omitted from fiuning/ II se peut que certarnes pages blanches ajout6es lors d'une restauratinn apparaissent dans le texte, mais, lorsque cela 6tait possible, ces pages n'ont pas 6t6 filmdes. Additional comments:/ Commentaires suppldmentaires; L'Institut a microfilm^ le meilleur exemplaire qu'il lui a 6t6 possible de se procurer. Les details de cet exemplaire qui sont peut-dtre uniques du point de vue bibliographique, qui peu^ent modifier une image reproduite, ou qui peuvent exiger une modification dans la mdthode normale de filmage sont indiqu6s ci-dessous. r~~] Coloured pages/ Pages de couleur Pages damaged/ Pages endommag^es □ Pages restored and/or laminated/ Pages restaur^es et/ou pellicui^es Pages discoloured, stained or foxed/ Pages d6color6es, tachet^es ou piqu^es I I Pages detached/ D Pages d6tach6es Showthroughy Transparence Qi ality of prir Qu<>!it6 inggale de I'impression Includes supplementary materia Comprenu du mat.^riel supplementaire Only edition available/ Seule Edition disponible I 1 Showthrough/ I I Qi ality of print varies/ I I Includes supplementary material/ I I Only edition available/ Pages wholly or partially obscured by errata slips, tissues, etc., have been refilmed to ensure the best possible image/ Les oages totalsment ou partiellement obscurcies par un feuillet d'errata, une pelure, etc., ont 6X6 film6es d nouveau de facon d obtenir la meilleure image possible. This item is filmed at the reduction ratio checked below/ Ce document est film6 au taux de reduction indiqu6 ci-dessous. 10X 14X 18X 22X y 12X 16X 20X 26X 30X 24X 28X n 32X The copy filmed here has been reproduced thanks to the generosity of: Natior al Library of Canada L'exemplaire film6 fut reproduit grSce d la gdndrositd de: Bibl'or'^^que rationale du Canada The images appearing here are the best quality possible considering the condition and legibility of the original copy and in keeping with the filming contract specifications. Original copies in printed paper covers are filmed beginning with the front cover and ending on the last page with a printed or illustrated impres- sion, or the back cover when appropriate. All other original copies are filmed beginning on the first page with a printed or illustrated impres- sion, and ending on the last page with a printed or illustrated impression. The last recorded frame on each microfiche shall contain the symbol -^ (meaning "CON- TINUED"), or the symbol V (meaning "END"), whichever applies. Les images suivantes ont 6t6 reproduites avec le plus grand soin, compte tenu de la condition et de la nettet6 de Texsmplaire filmd, et en conformitd avec les conditions du contrat de filmage. Les exemplaires originaux dont la couverture en papier est imprimde sont film^s en commenpant par le premier plat et en terminant soit par la dernidre page qui comporte une empreinte d'impression ou d'illustration, soit par le second platp selon le cas. Tous les autres exemplai'es originaux sont film6s en commenpant par la premidre page qui comporte une empreinte d'impression ou d'illustration et en t&rminant par la dernidre page qui comporte une telle empreinte. Un des symboles suivants apparaitra sur la dernidre image de cheque microfiche, selon le cas: le symbole —^ signifie "A SUIVRE", le symbole V signifie "FIN". Maps, plates, charts, etc., may be filmed at different reduction ratios. Those too large to be entirely included in one exposure are filmed beginning in the upper left hand corner, left to right and top to bottom, as many frames as required. The following diagrams illustrate the method: Les cartes, planches, tableaux, etc., peuvent dtre film6s d des taux de rdduc^ion diffdrents. Lorsque le document est trop grand pour titre reproduit en un seul cliche, il est filmd d partir de Tangle sup^rieur gauche, de gauche d droite, Gt de haut en bas, en pre:iant le nombre d'images n^cessaire. Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la mdthode. 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 »V " i ^ ^»uy is ^Ikin? about it, and everybouy ir qi^te rigjit — saw anything batter in any magazine, or any better example of the mzisemhlance which a skilled artist can produce by a variety of minute touches. If the writer is, as reported, Colonel Hamley, then Colonel Hamley, when he wrote the charming story of * Lady Lee's Widowhood,' misconceived as a novelist the nature of his own powers. He should rival Defoe, not Anthony TroUope. The writer of this paper, living about 1925, gives his son an account of his adventures as a volunteer during the invasion of England fifty years before, and so powerful is the narrative, so intensely real the impression it produces, that the coolest disbe- liever in panics cannot read it without u flush of annoyance, or close it without the thought that after all, as the world now stands, some such day of humiliation for England is at least possible. The sug- gested condition precedent of invasion, the destruction of the fleet by torpedoes attached by a new invention to our ships has attracted many minds ; and with the destruction of the regulars, the helpless- ness of the brave but half organized volunteers, and the absence of arrangement, make up a picture which fanciful as it is, we seem, as we read it, almost to have seen. It describes so exactly what we all feel, that, under the circumstances, Englishmen, if refused time to organize, would probably do." — Spectator (London). " The extraordinary force and naturalness of the picture of the calamity itself, its consistency throughout, from the bits of the last Times leader, read by the unhappy volunteer in the city, to the de- scription of the conduct of the Germans in the fatal Battle of Dork- ing, and in the occupation of the English homes which follow, seems to us as natural in its touches as can well be conceived." — Pall Mall Gazette. * * The tale is most circumstantially told, and is painfully interest- ing to T8Ad."^The Graphic (London). '* The Britons are stirred up by it as they have been by no one magazine article of thip generation. The ' Fight at Dame Europa's School ' did not hit the bull's eye of English feeling more squarely than this clever shot from old Maga . The verisimilitude is won- derful. We have read nothing like it outside of Robinson Crusoe." — Journal of Commerce (New Yoi-k). " Such is the substance of this remarkable article. Fiercer and yet more quiet satire has been rarely penned. It draws blood at every touch, and yet so keen is the weapon that for the second the victim does not know how badly he is hurt. As a mere piece of story- telling it has been seldom equalled." — Eveniiig Telegraph (PhiladelpMa). 1 PBH^ THE / vir EEMA.N" CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875, AND BATTLE OF DORKING; OR, REMINISCENCES OF A VOLUNTEER, f. DESCRIBING THE ARRIVAL OF THE GERMAN ARMADA-DESTRUCTION OF THE BRITISH FLEET- THE DECISIVE BATTLE OF DORKING— CAPTURE OF LONDON-DOWN- FALL OF THE ENGLISH EMPIRE. (lieprinted from Blackwood's Magazine.) » k ADAM, STEVENSON & GO. 1871. \ K - \: •""Y^ y I THE GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN" 1875. [From Blackwood's Magazine for May.] jOU ask me to tell you, my grandchildren, some- thing about my own share in the great events that happened fifty years ago. 'Tis sad work turning back to that bitter page in our history, but you may perhaps take profit in your new homes from the lesson iC teaches. For us in England it came too late. And yet we had plenty of warnings, if we had only made Use of them. The danger did not come on us unawares. It burst on us suddenly, 'tis true, but its coming was fore- shadowed plainly enough to open our eyes, if we had not been wilfully blind. We English have only ourselves to blame for the humiliation which has been brought on the land. Venerable old age ! Dishonorable old age, I say, when it follows a manhood dishonored as ours has been. I declare, even now, though fifty years have passed, I can hardly look a young man in the face when I think I am one of those in whose youth happened this degradation of old England — one of those who betrayed the trust handed down to us unstained by our forefathers. What a proud and happy country was this fifty years , aE.M.K COKQtJESt or KKOUKD IN 1875. ter of a century, and there seeme ^.^^^ riches it was bringing us. ^-^ J^^.t enough for e^d bigger; you could ^°^ ^^Xeinthcm.thc «erchant« the rich people who wanted to hve m th ^^^ ^^^^^ .homadethemoney.andcamefromaUpa ^^^.^^^^^ to settle there, and the 1-7^^;^^X^ ,ure out of the a.d others,and tradespeople who got 1^^^^^^^ ^^, ^.„. profits. Tl^-^-^Xttrrel^^^^^^^^ ^l-^« --n^ bledon, which my father couia ^^^ j^.^^^^ places ; and people used to say that ^ " ^^ ,,„ia ^.ouldsoonbe joined ^^.^^"^^JZ. 4 true that go on building and mulUply^ng for ^ - ^^^^ l.n then there was no ^ ^g J^t as the rich, and had no money went on ^'^'^^ ^ ^iffieulty ; but if pauperis, was a^eadyb^^^^^^^^^ the rates were high, theie '^^ I ' .^^j^ ^i^ses, there .ith-. -d-f--'?^'^.:rS niease and prosperity really seemed no hm t to thetf ^^ ^^^^^^ People in those days thougnt it "I'"*; ^ h used to bring a dozen children ^^^^^^^^^ of babies- to be said. Providence sent them tn ^^^ and if thoy -Idn't al-y; St^sons.for there were they used to ^-^'^"^^^,2^1^ ,^, ^professions, or in the new openings to be found in "^^ "^ J ^^i^ larger. goverLent offices which went on stea;^^ J^^^^^ Besides, in those days yo^'-g ^^" ^,^^ then emigra- India, or into the --^ ^ ^J ' ^^t the regular custom tion wa. not uncommon, f^^J" professional classes, ' 5 GEBMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. ,r- he ;er for nts )rld eers the /"iiu- ntry igato could that 5 who ti, and hut if ^them J, there iperity course it used ahies — aghters, jre were )r in the g larger, it out to L emigra- tr custom al classes, much, to bo sure, but now schools with their four or five hundred boys were springing up all over the country. Fools that wo were ! Wo thought that all this wealth and prosperity were sent us by Providence, and could not stop coming. In our blindness we did not see that we were merely a big workshop, making up the things which came from all parts of the world ; and that if other nations stopped sending us raw goods to work up, we could not produce them ourselves. True, we had in those days an advantage ir* our cheap coal and iron ; and had we taken care not to waste the fuel, it might have lasted us longer. But even then there were signs that coal and iron would soon become cheaper in other parts ; while a8 to food and other things, England was not better off than it is now. We were so rich simply because other nations from all yt ^ parts of the world were in the habit of sending their goods to us to be sold or manufactured ; and we thought that this would last for ever. And so, perhaps, it might have lasted, if we had only taken proper means to keep it; but, in our folly, we were too careless even to insure our pros- perity, and after the course of trade was turned away, it would not come back again. And yet, if ever a nation had a plain warning, we had. If we were the greatest trading country, our neighbors were the leading military power in Europe. They were driving a good trade, too, for this was before their foolish communism (about which you will hear when you are older) had ruined the rich without benefiting the poor, and they were in many respects the first nation in Europe ; but it was on their army that they prided themselves most. And with reason. They had beaten the Russians and the i GEBMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. Austrians, and the Prussians too, in bygone years, and they thought they were invincible. "Well do I remember the great review held at Paris by the Emperor Napoleon during the great Exhibition, and how proud he looked showing off his splendid Guards to the assembled kings and princes. Yet, three years aftervrards, the force so long deemed the first in Europe was ignominiously beaten, and the whole army taken prisoners. Such a defeat had never happened before in the world's history; and with this proof before us of the folly of disbelieving in the possibility of disaster merely because it had never happened before, it might have been supposed that we should have the sense to take the lessoi. to heart. And the country was cer- tainly roused for a time, and a cry was roised that the army ought to be reorganized, and our defences strengthened against the enormous power for sudden attacks, which it was seen other nations were able to put forth. But our government had come into office on a cry of retrench- ment, and could not bring themselves to eat their own pledges. There was a radical section of their party, too, whose votes had to be secured by conciliation, and which blindly demanded a reduction of armaments as the price of allegiance. This party always decried military estab- lishments as part of a fixed policy for reducing the influence of the Crown and the aristocracy. They could not understand that the times had altogether changed, that the Crown had really no power, and that the govern- ment merely existed at the pleasure of the House of Commons, and that even Parliament-rule was beginning to give way to mob-law. At any rate, the Ministry were only too glad of this excuse to give up all the strong ! id >er on :ed r.gs 3ng Mid jver this ility iforo, 3 the 3 cer- army lened ich it it our [•ench- r own y, too, wliicli e price estab- ng the ^ could hanged, govern- ;ouse of jginning ,ry were 5 strong GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 7 points of a scheme which they were not really in earnest about. The fleet and the Channel, they said, were suffi- cient protection. So the army was kept down, and tho militia and volunteers were left untrained as before, because "i; to call them out for drill would " interfere with the indus- 1^ try of the country." We could have given up some of the * il industry of those days, forsooth, and yet be busier than we are now. But, why tell you a tale you have so often heard already ? The nation, although uneasy, was misled by the false security its leaders professed to feel; the warning given by the disasters that overtook France was allowed to pass by unheeded. The French trusted in their army and its great reputation, we in our fleet ; and in each case the result of this blind confidence was disaster, such as our forefathers, in their hardest struggles, could not have even imagined. . , I need hardly tell you how the crash came about. First, the rising in India drew away a part of our small army ; then came the difficulty with America, which had been threatening for years, and we sent off ten thousand men to defend Canada — a handful which did not go far to strengthen the real defences of that country, but formed an irresistible temptation to the Americans to try and take them prisoners, especially as the contingent included three battalions of the Guards. Thus the regular army at home was even smaller than usual, and nearly half of it was in Ireland to check the talked-of Fenian invasion fitting out in the West. Worse still — though I do not know it srould really have mattered as things turned out — the fleet was scattered abroad ; some ships to guard the West Indie?? others to check privateering in the China seas, and a large GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. party to try and protect our colonies on the northern Pacific shore of America, where, with incredible folly, we continued to retain possessions wiiich we could not pos- sibly defend. America was not the great power forty years ago that it is now ; but for us to try and hold terri- tory on her shores, which could only be reached by sailing round the Horn, was as absurd as if she had attempted to take the Isle of Man before the independence of Ireland. We see this plainly enough now, but we were all blind then, It was while we were in this state, with our ships all over the world, and our little bit of an army cut up into detachments, that the Secret Treaty was published, and Holland and Denmark were annexed. People say now that we might have escaped the troubles which came on us if we had at any rate kept quiet till our other difficul- ties were settled ; but the English were always an impul- sive lot ; the whole country was boiling over with indig- nation, and the Government, egged on by the press, and going with the stream, declared war. We had always got out of scrapes before, and we believed our old luck and pluck would somehow pull us through. Then, of course, there was bustle and huiTy all over the land. Not that the calling up of the army reserves caused much stir, for I think there were only about 5,000 altogether, and a good many of these were not to be found when the time came ; but recruiting was going on all over the country, with a tremendous high bounty, 50,000 more men having been voted for the army. Then there was a ballot bill passed for adding 55,000 men to the militia ; why a round number was not fixed on I don't know, but -'^ t If we )0S- ►rty srri- ling d to and. )lind 3S all » into [, and r liOW oae on fficul- rapul- indig- 3S, and a-lways d lack 11 over reserves It 6,000 ,e found all over 00 more re was a militia ; 10 w, V>ut GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875, 9 the Prime Minister said that this was the exact quota wanted to put the defences of the country on a sound footing. Then the shipbuilding that began ! Iron-dads, despatch boats, gunboats, monitors -^every building yard in the country got its job, and they were offering ten shillings a day wages for anybody who could drive a rivet. This didn't improve the recruiting, you may suppose. I remember, too, there was a squabble in the House of Commons about whether artisans should be drawn for the ballot, as they were so much wanted, and I think they got an exemption. This sent numbers to the yards ; and if we had had a couple of years to prepare, instead of a couple of weeks, I daresay we should have done very well. It was on a Monday that the declaration of war was announced, and in a few hours we got our first inkling of the sort of preparation the «nemy had made for the event which they had really brought about, although the actual declaration was made by us. A pious appeal to the God of Battles, whom it was said we had aroused, was tele- graphed back ; and from that moment all communication with the north of Europe was cut off. Our embassies ?nd legations were packed off at an hour's notice, and it was as if we had suddenly come back to the middle ages. The dumb astonishment visible all over London the next morning, when the papers came out void of news, merely hinting at what had happened, was one of the most startling thiiigs in this war of surprises. But everything had been ananged beforehand; nor ought we to have been surprised, for we had seen the same Power, only a few months before, move down a half a million of men, iO GEEMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. I on a few days' notice, to conquer the greatest military nation in Europe, with no more fuss than our War Office used to make over the transport of a hrigade from Alder- shot to Brighton — and this, too, without the allies i!, had now. What happened now was not a bit more wonderful in reality ; but people of this country could not bring themselves to believe that what had never occurred before to England could ever possibly happen. Like our neigh- bors, we became wise when it "^ as too late. Of course the papers were not long in getting news- even the mighty organization set at work could not shut out a special correspondent; and in a very few days, although the telegraphs and railways were intercepted right across Europe, the main facts oozed out. An em- bargo had been laid on all the shipping in every port from the Baltic to Ostend ; the fleets of the two great Powers had moved out, and it was supposed were assembled in the great northern harbor, and troops were hurrying on board all the steamers detained in these places, most of which were British vessels. It was clear that invasion v/as intended. Even then we might have been saved, if the fleet had been ready. The forts which guarded the flotilla were perhaps too strong for shipping to attempt; but an ironclad or two, handled as British sailors knew how to use them, might have destroyed or damaged a part of the transports, and delayed the expedition, giving us what we wanted — time. But then the best part of the fleet ho 1 been decoyed down to the Dar- danelles, and what remained of the Channel squadron was looking after Fenian filibusters oflf the west of Treland ; so it was ten days before the fleet was got to- rn GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. 11 Biry fice ler- had irful ring jfore jigh- svs — shut days, epted 1 em- r port great were 3 were these s clear t have which ping to sailors ,maged edition, he best le Dar- i^uadron west of 3 got to- gether, and by that time it was plain the enemy's pre- parations w. xe too far advanced to be stopped by a coup- de-main. Information, which came chiefly through Italy, came slowly, and was more or less vague and un- certain ; but this much was known, that at least a couple of hundred thousand men were embarked or ready to be put on board ships, and that the flotilla was guarded by more ironclads than we could then muster. I suppose it was the uncertainty as to the point the enemy would aim at for landing, and the fear lest he should give us the go-by, that kept the fleet for several days in the Downs, but it was not until the Tuesday fortnight after the declaratioi\ of war that it weighed anchor and steamed away for the North Sea. Of course you have read about the Queen's visit to the fleet the day before, and how she sailed around the ships in her yacht, and went on board the flagship to take leave of the admiral ; how, overcome with emotion, she told him that the safety of the country was committed to his keeping. You remember, too, the gallant old officer's reply, and how all the ships' yard were manned, and how lustily the tars cheered as her Majesty was rowed off". The account was of course tele- graphed to London, and the high spirits of the fleet iuiected the whole town. I was outside the Charing Cross station when the Queen's special train from Dover arrived, and from the cheering and shouting which greeted her as she drove away, you might have supposed we had already won a great victory. The journals which had gone in strongly for the army reduction earned out during the session, and had been nervous and desponding in tone during the past fortnight, suggested all sorts of compro- 12 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. mises as a way of getting out of the war, came out in a very jubilant form next morning. "Panic-stricken inquirers," they said, " ask now, where are the means of meeting the invasion ? We reply that the invasion wiJU never take place. A British fleet, manned by British sailors whose courage and enthusiasm are reflected in the people of this country, is already on the way to meet the presumptuous foe. The issue of a contest between British ships and those of any other country, under any- thing like equal odds, can never be doubtful. England awaits with calm confidence the issue of the impending action." Such were the words of the leading article, and so we all felt. It was on Tuesday, the 10th of August, that the fleet sailed from the Downs. It took with it a submarine cable to lay down as it advanced, so that continuous communication was kept up, and the papers were pub- lishing special editions every few minutes with the latest news. This was the first time such a thing had been done, and the feat was accepted as a good omen. Whether it was true that the Admiralty made use of the cable to keep on sending contradictory orders, which took the command out of the admiral's hands, I can't say ; but all that the admiral sent in return was a few messages of the briefest kind, which neither the Admiralty nor any one else could have made any use of Such a ship had gone oix reconnoitring ; such another had rejoined — fleet was in latitude so and so. This went on till the Thursday morning. I had just come up to town by train as usual, and was walking to my oflice, when the newsboys began to cry, " New edition — enemy's fleet in sight !" You may #' GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 13 imagine the scene in London ! Business still went on at the banks, for bills matured although the independence of the country was being fought out under our own eyes, so to say; and the speculators were active enough. But even with the people who were making and losing their fortunes, the interest in the fleet overcame everything else ; men who went to pay in or draw out their money stopped to show the last bulletin to the cashier. As for the street, you could hardly get along for the crowd stop- ping to buy and read the papers ; while at every house or office the members sat restlessly in the common room, as if to keep together for company, sending out some one of their number every few minuces to get the latest edition. At least this is what happened at our office ; but to sit still was as impossible as to do anything, and most of us went out and wandered about among the crowd, under a sort of feeling that the news was got quicker at in this way. Bad as were the times coming, I think the sickening suspense of that day, and the shock which followed, was almost the worst which we underwent. It was rbout ten o'clock that the first telegram came; an hour later the wire announced that the admiral had signalled to form line of battle, and shortly afterwards that the order was given to bear down on the enemy and engage. At twelve came the announcement, " Fleet opened fire about three miles to leeward of us," — that is the ship with the cable. So far all had been expectancy, then came the first token of calamity. " An ironclad has been blown up" — " the enemy's torpedoes are doing great damage" — " the flagship is laid aboard the enemy" — " the flagship appears to be sinking"— " the Yice- Admiral has signalled"— ^there the 14 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. cable became silent, and, as you know, we heard no more till two days afterwards. The solitary ironclad which escaped the disaster steamed into Portsmouth. Then the whole story came out — how our sailors, gallant has ever, had tried to close with the enemy ; how the latter evaded the conflict at close quarters, and, sheer- ing off, left behind them the fatal ergines which sent ou" ships one after the other, to the bottom ; how all this happened almost in a few minutes. The govermaent, it appears, had received warnings of this invention; but to the nation this stunning blow was utterly unexpected. That Thursday I had to go home early for regimental drill, but it was impossible to remain doing nothing, so when that was over I went up to the town again, and, after waiting in expectation of news which never came, and missing the midnight train, I walked home. It was a hot sultry night, and I did not arrive till near sunrise. The whole town was quite still — the lull before the storra ; and as I let myself in with my latch-key, and went softly up-stairs to my room to avoid waking the sleeping house- hold, I could not but contrast the peacefulness of the morning — no sound breaking the silence but the singing of the birds in the garden — with the passionate remorse and indignation that would break out with the day. Perhaps the inmates of the room were as wakeful as myself; but the house in its stillness was just as it used to be when I came home alone from balls or parties in the happy days gone by. Tired though I was, I could not deep) so I went down to the river and had a &wim ; and on returning found the household was assembled for early breakfast* A sorrowful household it was, although the l^m «m GERMAN CONQrEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 15 "t * burden pressing on each was partly an unseen one. My father, doubting whether his firm could last through the day : my mother, her distress about my brother, now wi'h his regiment on the coast, already exceeding that which she felt for the public misfortune, had come down, although hardly fit to leave her room. My sister Clara was worst of all, for she could not but try to disguise her special in- terest in the fleet ; and though we had all guessed that her heart was given to the young lieutenant in the flag- ship — the first to go down — a love unclaimed could not be told, nor could we express the sympathy we felt for the poor girl. That breakfast, the last meal we ever had together, was soon ended, and my father and I went up to town by an early train, and got there just as the fatal announcement of the loss of the fleet was telegraphed from Portsmouth. The panic and excitement of that day — how the funds went down to 35 ; the run upon the bank and its stoppage ; the fall of half the houses in the city ; how the govern- ment issued a notification suspending specie payment and the tendering of bills — this last precaution too late for most firms. Carter & Co. among the number, which stopped payment as soon as my father got to the office ; the call to arms and the unanimous response of the country — all this is history which I need not repeat. You wish to hear about my own share in the business of the time. Well, volunteering had increased immensely from the day war was proclaimed, and our regiment went up in a day or two from its usual strength of 600 to nearly 1000* But the stock of rifles was deficient. We were promised a further supply in a few days, which, however, We never received j ^^vmiFST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 1A GERMAN CONQUEST un vided into two parts, ^e i^^^ .^ ^he evening. The in the morning, and - ^^-^ J^^^^., ,i,a Friday threw failures and stoppage oj. ^"^"'^ ^^^ of employment. an i-ense XT" SuoZ.n, hy the next day ; aud we recruited up to ij^ ^.^^^^^ ^^ ? l,ut what was the use of ^W * J«^^, , i„t of smooth- On the Saturday it --—^ would be served out bore muskets in store at th^ Tower J ^ ^^^^^^^^ to regiments applying for th.m. ^ ,,a our people took place among he volunt m fo ^.^^^ ^^^^^^ got hold of a couple of hundied. _ J ^^^^^^^.,^ ^ Is well have tried to learn nfle dnU - ^^^^^^_^^^^ ^ith old Brown Bess ; I'-des^e^^^^i ,,b,,,iption was animunition in the --^^-^^^atrBirmingham, which openedforthemanu&^-c na^^ ,,Uke.very- ran up to a couple of milUons i ^^^ volunteers: thing else, this came too late To «t«^ ^^ ^^^^^^^ camps had been formed a f^tmgh ^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ Brighton, Harwich, aiid o*^'^ J ; ^j ^^e volunteer Jtia, and the ^^-^^"f":;' ^ of them, and the regiments were attached t. -« ^^^-^^^^ ,,ai from day volunteers themselves used o go down ^^ ^^^^^ to day, as they could spare Um. ^^ .^ J^^i/j^^^odied ; ^ent out that they should be peuB y ^^^^ hut the metropolitan voluntee we^ J J^^ ^^^, London as a sort of reserve, till ^ ^o'^'^ ^^^ ^y told point the invasion would take P^-^^.;^^;;,^^^^^^^ of 'off to Brigades and div^i^ns. O^^^Jg ^dminis- , the «hBoyal Surrey Mditia>eF„^t^ y^^^_ ^^^ trative BattaEon, as it was caUed, GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 17 1- rs Seventh Surrey Volunteers at South wark, and ourselves ; but only our battalion and the militia were quartered in the same place, and the whole brigade had merely two or three afternoons together at brigade exercise in Bushey Park before the march took place. Our brigadier be- longed to a line regiment in Ireland, and did not join till the very morning the order came. Meanwhile, during the preliminary fortnight, the militia colonel commanded. But though we volunteers were busy with our drill and preparations, those of us who, like myself, belonged to government offices, had more than enough office work to do, as you may suppose. The volunteer clerks were al- lowed to leave office at four o'clock, but the rest were kept hard at the desk far into the night. Orders to the lord-lieutenants, to the magistrates, notifications, all the arrangements for cleaning out the workhouses for hos- pitals — these and a hundred other things had to be managed in our office, and there was as much bustle indoors as out. Fortunate we were to be so busv — the •I people to be pitied were those who had nothing to do. And on Sunday (that was the 15th August) work went on just as usual. We had an early parade and drill, and I went up to town by the nine o'clock train in my uni- form, taking my rifle with me in case of accidents, and luckily, too, as it turned out, a mackintosh overcoat. When I got to Waterloo there were all sorts of rumours afloat. A fleet had been seen off the Downs, and some of the despatch boats which were hovering about the coasts brought news that there was a large flotilla off Harwich, but nothing could be seen from the shore, as the weather was hazy. The enemy's light ships had taken and sunk 18 OERK^N CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. all the fishing boats they could catch, to prevent the news of their whereabouts reaching us, but a few escaped during the night, and reported that the Inconstant frigate, coming home from North America, without any know- ledge of what had taken phicc, had sailed right into the enemy's fleet and been captured. In town the troops were all getting ready for a move ; the guards in the Wel- lington barracks were under arms, and their baggage waggons packed and drawn up in the Bird-cage Walk. The usual guard at the Horse Guards had been with- drawn, and orderlies and staff officers were going to and fro. All this I saw on the way to my office, where T worked away till twelve o'clock, and then feeling hungry after my early breakfast, I went across Parliament Street to my club to get some luncheon. There were about half a dozen men in the coffee room, none of whom I knew ; but in a minute or two, Danvers, of the Treasury, entered in a tremendous hurry. From him I got the first bit of authentic news I had had that day. The enemy had landed in force near Harwich, and the metropolitan regiments were ordered down there to reinforce the troops already collected in that neighbourhood; his regiment was to parade at one o'clock, and he had come to get something to eat before starting. We bolted a hurried lunch, and were just leaving the club, when a messenger from the Tr( ^ury came running into the hall. . - , p t ; " Oh, Mr. Danvers," said he, " I've come to look for you, sir ; the Secretary says that all the gentlemen are wanted at the office, and that you must please not one of you go with the regiments." "The devil !" cried Danvers, %Wk the GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1873. 19 " Do you know if that order extends to all the public offices ? " I asked. " I don't know," said the man, " but I believe it do. I know there's messengers gone round to all the clubs and luncheon bars to look for the gentlemen ; the Secretary says its quite impossible any one can be spared just now, there's so much work to do ; there's orders just come to send off our records to Birmingham to-night." I did not wait to condole with Danvers, but, just glan- cing up Whitehall to see if any of our messengers were in pursuit, I ran off as hard as I could for Westminster Bridge, and so to the Waterloo Station. The place had quite changed its aspect since the morn^ ing. The regular service of trains had ceased, and the station and approaches were full of troops, among them the Guards and artillery. Everything was very orderly ; the men had piled arms and were standing about in groups. There was no sign of high spirits or enthusiasm. Matters had become too serious. Every man's face re- flected the general feeling that we had neglected the warnings given us, and that now the danger so long de- rided as impossible and absurd had really come and found us unprepared. But the soldiers, if grave, looked deter- mined, like men who meant to do their duty whatever might happen. A train, full of Guardsmen, was just starting for Guildford. I was told it would stop at Sur- biton, and, with several other volunteers, hurrying like myself to join our regiment, got a place in it. We did not arrive a moment too soon, for the regiment was marching from Kingston down to the station. The des- tination of our brigade was the east coast. Empty i "-:i tH GKRMAN CONQUEST OF EKQUND IN 1875, carriages were drawn up in tlio siding, and our regiment was to go first. A largo crowd was assembled to see it off, including the recruits who had joined during the last fortnight, and who formed by far the largest part of our strength. They were to stay behind, and were certainly very much in the way already ; for as all the officers and sergeants belonged to the active part, there was no one to keep discipline among them, and they came crowding around us, breaking the ranks and making it difficult to get into the train. Here I saw our new brigadier for tho first time. He was a soldier-like man, and no doubt knew his duty, but he appeared new to volunteers, and did not seem to know how to deal with gentlemen pri- vates. I wanted very much to run home and get my greatcoat and knapsack, which I had bought a few days ago, but feared to be left behind ; a good-natured recruit volunteered to fetch them for me, but he had not returned before we started, and I began f,he campaign with a kit consisting of a mackintosh and i\ small pouch of tobacco. It was a tremendous squeeze in the train ; for, besides the ten men sitting down, there were three or four standing up in every compartment, and the afternoon was close and sultry, and there were so many stoppages on the way that we took nearly an hour and a half crawling up to Water- loo It was between five and six in the afternoon when we arrived there, and it was nearly seven before we marched up to the Shoreditch station. The whole place was filled up with stores and ammunition, to be sent off to the East, so we piled arms in the street and scattered about to get food and drink, of which most of us stood in need, especially the latter, for some were already feeling 11 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 21 the worse for the heat and crush. I was just stepping into a public house with Travers, when who should drive up but his pretty wife ! Most of our friends had paid their adieu at the Surbiton station, but she had driven up by the road in his brougham, bringing their little boy to have a last look at papa. She had also brought his knapsack and great coat, and, what was still more accept- able, a basket containing fowls, tongue, bread and butter, and biscuits, and a couple of bottles of claret — which priceless luxuries they insisted on my sharing. Meanwhile the hours went on. The 4th Surrey Militia, which had marched all the way from Kingston, had come up, as well as the other volunteer corps ; the station had been partly cleared of the stores that encumbered it; some artillery, two militia regiments, and a battalion of the line, had been despatched, and our turn to start had come, and long lines of carriages were drawn up ready for us ; but still we remained in the street. You may fancj'- the scene. There seemed to be as many people as ever in London, and we could hardly move for the crowds of spectators — fellows hawking fruits and volunteers* comforts, newsboys, and so forth, to say nothing of the cabs and omnibuses; while orderlies and staff officers were constantly riding up with messages. A good many of the militiamen, and some of our people, too, had taken more than enough to drink; perhaps a hot sun had told on empty stomachs ; anyhow, they became very noisy. The din, dirt and heat were indescribable. So the even- ing wore on, and all the information our officers could get from the brigadier, who appeared to be acting under another general, was, that orders had come to stand fast 1 w 22 GERMAN CONQlTfisT OF Ei^QLAND IN 1875. for the present. Gradually the street became quieter and cooler. The brigadier, who, by way of setting an ex- ample, had remained for some hours without leaving his saddle, had got a chair out of a shop, and sat nodding in it ; most of the men were lying down or sitting on the pavement — some sleeping, some smoking. In vain hnd Travers begged his wife to go home. She declared that, having come so far, she would stay and see the last of us. The brougham had been sent away to a by-street, as it blocked up the road ; so he sat on a doorstep, she by him on the knapsack. Little Arthur, who had been delighted at the bustle and the uniforms, and in L.igh spirits, be- came at last very cross, and eventually cried himself to sleep in his father's arms, his golden hair and one little dimpled arm hanging over his shoulder. Thus went on the weary hours, till suddenly the assembly sounded, and we all started up. We were to return to Waterloo. The landing on the east was only a feint — so ran the rumor — the real attack was on the south. Anything seemed better than indecision and delay, and, tired though we were, the march back was gladly hailed. Mrs. Travers, who made us take the remains of the luncheon with us, we left t/) look for her carriage ; little Arthur, who was awake again, but very good and quiet, in her arms. We did not reach Waterloo till nearly midnight, and there was some delay in starting again. Several volun- teer and militia regiments had arrived from the north ; the station and all its approaches were jammed up with men, and trains were being despatched away as fast as they could be made up. All this time no news had reached us since the first announcement ; but the excite- GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 23 4' i ment then aroused had now passed away under the in- fluence of fatigue and want of sleep, and most of us dozed off as soon as we got under way. I did, at any rate, and was awoke by the train stopping at Leatherhead. There was an up-train returning to town, and some persons in it were bringing up news from the coast. We could not, from our part of the train, hear what they said, but the rumor was passed up from one carriage to another. The enemy had landed in force at Worthing. Their position had been attacked by the troops from the camp near Brighton, and the action would be renewed in the morn- ing. The volunteers had behaved very well. This vras all the information we could get. So, then, the in\ asion had come at last. It was clear, at any rate, from what was said, that the enemy had not been driven back yet, and we should be in time most likely to take a share in the defence. It was sunrise when the train crawled into Dorking, for there had been numerous stoppages on the way ; and here it was pulled up for a long time, and w6 were told to get out and stretch ourselves — an order gladly responded to, for we had been very closely packed all night. Most of us, too, took the opportunity to make an early breakfast off the food we had brought from Shoreditch. I had the remains of Mrs. Travers's fowl and some bread wrapped up in my water-proof, which I shared with one or two less provident comrades. We could see from our halting-plrce that the line was blocked with trains beyond and behind. It must have been about eight o'clock when we got orders to take our seats again, and the train began to move slowly on towards Horsham. Horsham Junction was the point to be occupied — so the I M 24 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. rumor went ; bat at about ten o'clock, upon halting at a small station a few miles short of it, the order came to leave the train, and our brigade formed in column on the high road. Beyond us was some field artillery j and fur- ther on, so we were told by a staff officer, another bri- gade, which was to make up a division with ours. After more delays the line began to move, but not forwards ; our route was towards the north-west, and a sort of sus- picion of the state of affairs flashed across my mind. Horsham was already occupied by the enemy's advanced guard, and we were to fall back on Leith Common, and take up a position threatening his flank, should he ad- vance either to Guildford or Dorking. This was soon confirmed by what the colonel was told by the brigadier, and passed down the ranks; and just now, for the first time, the boom of artillery came up on the light south breeze. In about an hour the firing ceased. What did it mean ? We could not tell. Meanwhile our march con- tinued. The day was very close and sultry, and the clouds of dust stirred up by our feet almost suffocated us. I had saved a soda-water bottleful of yesterday's claret; but this went only a short way, for there were many mouths to share it with, and the thirst soon became at bad as ever. Several of the regiment fell out from faint- ness, and we made frequent halts to rpst and let the stragglers come up. At last we reached the top of Leith Hill. It is a striking spot, being the highest point in the south of England. The view from it is splendid, and most lovely did the country look this summer day, al- though the grass was brown from the long drought. It was a great relief to get from tho dusty road on to the GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. 25 common, and at the top of the hill there was a refreshing breeze. We could see now, for the first time, the whole of our division. Our own regiment did not muster more than 500, for it contained a large number of government office men who had been detained, like Danvers, for duty, in town, and others were not much larger; but the militia regiment was very strong, and the whole division, I was told, mustered nearly five thousand rank and file. We could see other troops also in extension of our division, and could count a couple of field batteries of royal artil- lery, besides some heavy guns, belonging to the volun- teers, apparently drawn by cart horses. The cooler air, the sense of numbers, and the evident strength of the po- sition we held, raised our spirits, which, I am not ashamed to say, had all the morning been depressed. It was not that we were not eager to close with the enemy, but that the counter-marching and halting ominously betokened a vacillation of purpose in those who had the guidance of afiairs. Here in two days the invaders had got more than twenty miles inland, and nothing effectual had been don© to stop them. And the ignorance in which we volunteers, from the colonel downwards, were kept of their move- ments, filled us with uneasiness. We could not but de- pict to ourselves the enemy as carrying out all the while firmly his well-considered scheme of attack, and contrast- ing it with our own uncertainty of purpose. The very silence with which his advance ivppeared to be conducted filled us with mysterious awe. Meanwhile the day wore on, and we became faint with hunger, for we had eaten nothing since daybreak. No provisions came up, and there were no signs of any commissariat officers* It seems V mm 26 GERMAN CONQttEST OF ENOtAND IN 1875. that when we were at the Waterloo station a whole train- ful of provisions were drawn up there, and our colonel proposed that one of the trucks should be taken off and attached to our trains, so that we might have some food at hand ; but the officer in charge, an assistant-comptroller, I think they call him — this coraptrol department was a new-fangled affair which did us almost as much harm as the enemy in the long run — said his orders were to keep all the stores together, and that he couldn't issue any without authority from the head of his department. So we had to go without. Those who had tobacco smoked — indeed there is no solace like a pipe under such circum- stances. The militia regiment, I heard afterwards, had two days' provisions in their haversacks ; it was we vol- unteers who had no haversacks, and nothing to put in them. All this time, I should tell you, while we were laying on the grass with our arms piled, the General with the brigadiers and staff, was riding about slowly from point to point of the edge of the common, looking out with his glass towards the south valley. Orderlies and staff-officers were constantly coming, and about three o'clock there arrived up a road that led towards Horsham a small body of lancera and a regiment of yeomanry, who had, it appears, been out in advance, and now drew up a short way in front of us in column facing to the south. Whether they could see anything in their front I could not tell, for we were behind the crest of the hill ourselves, and so could not look into the valley below; but shortly afterwards the assembly sounded. Commanding officers were called out by the General, and received some brief in- structiwis J and the column began to march again towards •1 ILL CJERMAlt CONQXtEST OF ilNGLAKD IN 18?5. 2? London, the militia this time cominr last in our brigade. A rumor regarding the object of this counter march soon spread through the ranks. The enemy was not going to attack us here, but was trying to turn the position on both sides, one column pointing to Reigate, the other to Aldershot ; and so we must fall back and take up a posi- tion at Dorking. The line of the great chalk range was to be defended. A large force was concentrating at Guild- ford, another at Reigate, and we should find supports at Dorking. The enemy would be awaited in these posi- tions. Such, so fiir as we privates could get at the facts, was to be the plan of operations. Down the hill, there- fore, we marched. From one or two points we could catch a brief sight of the railway in the valley below run- ning from Dorking to Horsham. Men in red were work- ing upon it here and there. They were the Royal Engin- eers, some one said, breaking up the line. On we marched. The dust seemed worse than ever. In one village through which we passed — I forget the name now — there was a pump on the green. Here we stopped and had a good drink ; and passing by a large farm, the farm- er's wife and two or three of her maids stood at the gate and handed us hunches of bread and cheese out of some baskets. I got the share of a bit, but the bottom of the baskets must soon have been reached. Not a thing else was to be had till we got to Dorking, about six o'clock ; indeed, most of the farmhouses appeared deserted already. On arriving there, we were drawn up in the street, and just opposite was a baker's shop. Our fellows asked leave, at first by twos and threes, to go in and buy some loaves, but soon others began to break oflf and crowd into *j|8 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875, the shop, and at last a regular scramble took place. If there had been any order preserved, and a regular distri- bution arranged, they would no doubt have been steady enough, but hunger makes men selfish; each man felt that his stopping behind vould do no good — he would simply lose his share ; so it ended by almost the whole regiment joining in the scrimmage, and the shop was cleared out in a couple of minutes ; while, as for paying, you could not get your hand into your pocket for the crush. The colonel tried in vain to stop the row ; some of the officers were as bad as the men. Just then a staff officer rode by ; he could scarcely make way for the crowd, and was pushed against rather rudely, and in a passion he called out to us to behave properly, like sol- diers, and not like a parcel of roughs. "Oh, blow it, gov- ernor," says Dick "Wake, "you arn't agoing to come be- tween a poor cove and his grub ?" Wake was an articled attorney, and, as we used to say in those days, a cheeky young chap, although a good natured fellow enough. At this speech, which was followed by some more remarks of the sort from those about him, the staff-officer became angrier still. " Orderly," cried he to the lancer riding be- . hind him, "take that man to the provost-marshal. As for you, sir," he said, turning to o'.ir colonel, who sat on his horse silent with astonishment, "if you don't want some of your men shot before their time, you and your precious officers had better keep this rabble in a little better or- der," and poor Dick, who looked crest-fallen enough, would certainly have been led off at the tail of the sergeant's horse, if the brigadier had not come up and arranged matters, and marched us off to the hill beyond the town. 11; GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 29 ' ♦ i'TiJ This incident made us both angry and crest-fallen. We were annoyed at being so roughly spoken to; at the same time we felt we had deserved it, and were ashamed of the misconduct. Then, too, we had lost confidence in our colonel, after the poor figure he cut in the affair. He was a good follow, the colonel, and showed himself a brave one next day; but he aimed too much at being popular, and didn't understand a bit how to command. - • X resume : We had scarcely reached the hill above the town, which we were told was to be our bivouac for the night, when the welcome news came that a food train had arrived at the station ; but there were no carts to bring the things up, so a fatigue party went down and carried back a supply to us in their arms — loaves, a barrel of rum, packets of tea, and joints of meat — abundance for all ; but there was not a kettle or a cooking pot in the regiment, and we could not eat the meat raw. The colonel and officers were no better off. They had arranged to have a regular mess, with crockery, steward, and all complete, but the establishment never turned up, and what had become of it no one knew. Some of us were sent back into the town to see what we could pro- cure in the way of cooking utensils. We found the street full of artillery, baggage waggons and mounted officers, and volunteers shopping like ourselves ; and all the houses appeared to be occupied by troops. We suc- ceeded in getting a few kettles and saucepans, and I obtaine d for myself a leather bag, with a strap to go over the shoulder, which proved very handy afterwards ; and, thus laden, we trudged back to our camp on the hill, fill- ing the kettles with dirty water from a little stream 30 GEEMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. ■which runs between the hill and the town, for there was none to be had above. It was nearly a couple of miles each way; and, exhausted as we were with marching and want jv rest, we were almost too tired to eat. The cooking was of the roughest, as you may suppose; all we could do was to cut off slices of the meat and boil them in the saucepans, using our fingers for forks. The tea, however, was very refreshing; and, thirsty as we were, we drank it by the gallon. Just before it grew dark, the brigade-major came round, and, with the adju- tant, showed our colonel how to set a picket in advance of our line a little way down the face of the hill. It was not necessary to place one, I suppose, because the town in our front was still occupied with troops ; but no doubt the practice would be useful. We had also a quarter-guard, and a line of sentries in front and rear of our line, communicating with those of the regiments on our flanks. Firewood was plentiful, for the hill was covered with beautiful wood ; but it took some time to collect it, for we had nothing but our pocket-knives to cut down the branches with. So we lay down to sleep. My company had no duty, and we had the night undisturbed to ourselves ; but, tired though I was, the excitement and the novelty of the situation made sleep difficult. And although the night was still and warm, and we were sheltered by the woods, I soon found it chilly with no better covering than my thin dust-coat, the more so as my clothes, saturated with perspiration during the day, had never dried; and before daylight I woke from a short nap, shivering with cold^ and was glad to get warm with others by a fire, I then • GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 31 'e noticed that the opposite hills on the south were dotted with fires ; and we thought at first they must belong to the enemy, but we were told that the ground up there was still held by a strong rear-guard of regulars, and that there need be no fear of a surprise. At the first sign of dawn the bugles of the regiments sounded the reveilld, and we were ordered to fall in, and the roll was called. About twenty men were absent, who had fallen out sick the day before ; they had been sent up to London by train during the night, I believe. After standing in column fox' about half an hour, the brigade- major came down with orders to pile arms and stand easy; and perhaps half an hour afterwards we were told to get breakfast as quickly as possible, and to cook a day's food at the same time. This operation was managed pretty much in the same way as the evening before, except that we had our cooking pots and kettles ready. Meantime there was leisure to look around, and from where we stood there was a commanding view of one of the most beautiful scenes in England. Our regiment was drawn up on the extremity of the ridge ^^hich runs from Guildford to Dorking. This is indeed merely a part of the great chalk range which extends from beyond Alder- shot east to the Medway ; but there is a gap in the ridge just here where the little stream that runs past Dorking turns suddenly to the north to find its way to the Thames. We stood on ti>e slope of the hill, as it trends down eastward toward this gap, and had passed our bivouac in what appeared to be a gentleman's park. A little way above us, and to our right, was a very fine country seat, to which the park was attached, now occu- Li 82 GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND JN 1875. pied by the headquarters of our division. From this house the hill sloped steeply down southward to the valley below, which runs nearly east and west, parallel to the ridge, and carries the railway and the road from Guildford to Reigate, and in which valley, immediately in front of the chateau, and perhaps a mile and a half distant from it, was the little town of Dorking, nestled in the trees, and rising up the foot of the slopes on the other side of the valley which stretched away to Leith Common, the scene of yesterday's march. Thus the main part of the town of Dorking was on our right front, but the suburbs stretched away eastward nearly to our proper front, culminating in a small railway station, from which the grassy slopes of the park rose up, dotted with shrubs and trees to where we were standing. Bound this railway station was a cluster of villas and one or two mills, of whose gardens we thus had a bird's-eye view, their little ornamental ponds glistening like look- ing-glasses in the morning sun. Immediately on our left the park sloped steeply down to the gap before mentioned, through which ran the little stream, as well as the railway from Epsom to Brighton, nearly due north and south, meeting the Guildford and Reigate line at right angles. Close to the point of intersection and the little station already mentioned, was the station of the former line where we had stopped the day before. Beyond the gap on the east (our left), and in continuation of our ridge, rose the chalk-hjll again. The shoulder of this ridge over- looking the gap is called Box Hill, from the shrubbery of box wood with which it was covered. Its sides were very steep, and the top of the ridge was covered with' GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 187^^. 83 troops. The natural strength of our position was mani- fested at a glance ; a high grassy ridge steep to the south, with a stream in front, and but little cover up the sides. It seemed made for a battlefield. The weak point was the gap; the ground at the junction of the railways and the roads immediately at the entrance of the gap forme i a little valley, dotted, as I have said, with buildings and gardens. This, in one sense, was the key of the position ; for although it would not be tenable while we held the ridge commanding it, the enemy by carrying this point and advancing through the gap would cut our line in two. But you must not suppose I scanned the ground thus cri- tically at the time. Anybody, indeed, might have been struck with the natural advantages of our position ; but what, as I remember, most impressed me, was the peaceful beauty of the scene — the little town with the outline of the houses obscured by a blue mist, the massive crispness of the foliage, the outlines of the great trees lighted up by the sun, and relieved by deep blue shade. So thick waa the timber here, rising up the southern slopes of the valley, that it looked almost as if it might have been a primeval forest, The quiet of the scene was the more impressive because contrasted in the mind with the scenes we expected to follow ; and I can remember, as if it were yesterday, the sensation of bitter regret that it should now be too late to avert this coming desecration of our country, which might so easily have been prevented. A little firmness, a little provision on the part of our rulers, even a little common sense, aud this great calamity would have been rendered utterly impossible. Too late, alas ! We were like the foolish virgins in the parable, 8 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. i But you must not suppose the scene immediately around was gloomy — the camp was brisk and bustling enough. We had got over the stress of weariness ; our stomachs were full ; wo felt a natural enthusiasm at the prospect of having so soon to take a part as the real defenders of tho country, and we were inspirited at the sight of the largo force that was now assembled. Along the slope which trended off to the rear of our ridge, troops came marching up — volunteers, militia, cavalry and guns — these, I heard, had come down from the North as far as Leatherhead the night before, and had marched over at daybreak. Long trains, too, began to arrive by the rail through the gap, one after the other, containing militia and volunteers, who moved up to the ridge to the right and left, and took up their position, massed for the most part on the slopes which ran up from, and in rear of, where we stood. We now formed part of an army corps, we were told, consist- ing of three divisions, but what regiments composed the other two divisions I never heard. All this movement we ' ould distinctly see from our position, for we had hur- ried over our breakfast, expecting every minute that the battle would begin, and now stood or sat about on the ground near our piled arms. Early in the morning, too, we saw a very long train come along the vc 'ley from the direction of Guildford, full of redcoats. It halted at the little station at our feet, and the troops alighted. We could soon make out their bear-skins. They were the Guards, coming to reinforce this part of the line. Leaving a detachment of skirmishers to hold the line of the rail- way embankment, the main body marched up with a springy step, and with the band playing, and drew up a GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. 85 across the gap on our left, in prolongation of our lino. Thoro appeared to bo throe battalions of them, for they formed up in that number of columns at short intervals. Shortly after this I was sent over to Box Hill with a message from our colonel to the colonel of a volunteer regiment stationed there, to know whether an ambulance cart was obtainable, as it was reported this regiment was well supplied with carriage, whereas we were without any ; my mission, however, was futile. Crossing the vallej', I found a scene of great confusion at the railway station. Trains were still coming in with stores, ammunition, guns and appliances of all sorts, which were being unloaded as fast as possible ; but there were scarcely any means of getting the things off. There were plenty of waggons of all sorts, but hardly any horses to draw them, and the whole place was blocked up ; while, to add to the confu- sion, a regular exodus had taken place of the people from the town, who had been warned that it was likely to be the scene of fighting. Ladies and women of all sorts and ages, and children, some with bundles, some empty-hand- ed, were seeking places in the train, but there appeared no one on the spot authorized to grant them, and these poor creatures were pushing their way up and down, vainly asking for information, and permission to get away. In the crowd I observed our surgeon, who likewise was in search of an ambulance of some sort ; his whole pro- fessional apparatus, he said, consisted of a case of instru- ments. Also in the crowd I stumbled upon Wood, Travers' old coachman. He had been sent down by his mistress to Guildford, because it was supposed our regiment had gone there, riding the horse, and laden with a supply of things T i f :S >.l 86 GKHMAN CONGEST OP .NGUND IN I875. pressed for artilirw^kll''"'''"^^ ^'^'^ ^o-e ,.«, in exchange, so .-e had £n obllr;?! '" " ^'^^ ''^ packages there, inuludi«g „,v t ? '^' '" '''^ ^^^V OH mn had brought 0^1^^?^'^ '"' ^'^^ ^-'^ful and hearing that we shouTd bTf f '' ^"^ "''"'^ <'^^. talked over thus laden Lr"",' '" ^""'^ P^'*' h'^d place was crowded witrt^o^s 1"^^ "'• ^' ^='<^ ^-^^ lined with them the who I'^j *'"""« ^^'^l^t^ -ere Jo, that some traina wUh Sfd'H ^^ '"" ^^^"^ ^ the coast in the night throulh P m. . '"'"'''^ "^ ^o™ to where our regiment ir,^'""''- ^ ^^"^ ^im oiT part of the load Cwlr;. "^ *^' ^^^ ""^"^ fro-' -a« not now so m„rne JStf r^ "^'^ ^""-^ -' and drinking vessels, prolted to h ! ' f '' '^""'"' '*'■• you may be sure, y.:fdZZJ, "^^ ^^^^^-and Tiuvei., couple of newspaper the fdmanrfK''"'^"^^^-^^^^^ ly competed for by all ev.n T*. ^'""^^^ ^«^e eager- - had heard no Imll^Z "''"^' '"°»'-*' ^o' Sunday. And even at S 7T ""'' ^^ ^^^' ^-^ndon on only glanced down th ^r'^^'::- ^' «-, although I very words I read there Se "''"' "''"°^' *»>« same paper; the first publish J '^''o ""P'*" of the the news had arrived of t ! °° T''^^ ''^^»'"^' -»>«» points, was written Vl ZeJT }'''''''S at three n^ust confess that it had bee^ f .<^««Pf»-. The country conqueror would be satted ""tur. ^"'P"^^• ^^^ hy a peace dictated on our o Jn V ^"""'''^«°" inflicted ^"ty of the government ocelur,: '! "" *'^ '^«- able, and to avoid further r^ t . '' *'™« ^l't«in- turther bloodshed and disaster, and !/ GERMAN CONQTTEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 37 avert the fall of our tottering mercantile credit. The next morning's issue was in quite a different tone. Ap- parently the enemy had received a check, for we were here exhorted to resistance. An impregnable position was to be taken up along the Downs, a force was concen- trating there far outnumbering the rash invaders, who, with an invincible line before them, and the sea behind, had no choice between destruction or surrender. Let there be no pusillanimous talk of negotiation, the fight must be fought out ; and there could be but one issue. England, expectant but calm , awaited with confidence the result of the attack on its unconquerable volunteers. The writing appeared to me eloquent, but rather inconsistent. The same paper said the government had sent off five hundred workmen from Woolwich to open a branch arsenal at Birmingham. All this time we had nothing to do, except to change our position, which we did every few minutes, now mov- ing up the hill farther to our right, now taking ground lower down to our left, as one order after another was brought down the line ; but the staff officers were gal- loping about perpetually with orders, while the rum- ble of the artillery, as they moved about from one part of the field to another, went on almost incessantly. At last the whole line stood to arms, the bands struck up, and the general commanding our army corps came riding down with his stafi. We had seen him several times before, as we had been moving frequently about the position during the morning ; but he now made a sort of formal inspection. He was a tall thin man, with long light hair, very well mounted, and as he sat his horse 1 \ 38 GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. with an erect seat, and came prancing down the line, at a little distance he looked as if he might be five-and- twenty ; but I believe he had served more than fifty years, and had been made a peer for services performed when quite an old man. I remember that he had more decorations than there was room for on the breast of his coat, and wore them suspended like a necklace round his neck. Like all the other generals, he was dressed in blue, with a cocked hat and feathers — a bad plan, I thought, for it made them very conspicuous. The general halted before our battalion, and after looking at us awhile, made a short address : We had a post of honor next Her Majesty's Guards, and would show ourselves worthy of it, and of the name of Englishmen. It did not need, he said, to be a general to see the strength of our position ; it was im- pregnable, if properly held. Let us wait till the enemy was well pounded, and then the word would be given to go at him. Above everything, we must be steady. He then shook hands with our colonel, we gave him a cheer, and he rode on to where the Guards were drawn up. Now then, we thought, the battle will begin. But still there were no signs of the enemy; and the air» though hot and sultry, began to be very hazy, so that you could scarcely see the town below, and the hills opposite were merely a confused blurr, in which no features could be distinctly made out. After a while, the tension of feeling which followed the general's address relaxed, and we began to feel less as if everything depended on keep- ing our rifles firmly grasped ; we were told to pile arms again, and got leave to go down by tens and twenties to the stream below to drink. This stream, and all the GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. 39 hedges and banks on our side of it, were held by our skirmishers, but the town had been abandoned. The position appeared an excellent one, except that the enemy when they came, would have almost better cover than our men. While I was down at the brook, a column emerged from the town, making for our position. We thought for a moment it was the enemy, and you could not make out the color of the uniforms for the dust ; but it turned out to be our rear-guard, falling back from the opposite hills, which they had occupied the previous night. One battalion of rifles halted for a few minutes at the stream to let the men drink, and I ha I a minute's talk with a couple of the officers. They had formed part of the force which had attacked the enemy on their first landing. They had it all their own way, they said, at first, and could have beaten the enemy back easily if they had been properly supported ; but the whole thing was mismanaged. The volunteers came on very pluckily, they said, but they got into confusion, and so did the militia, and the attacked failed with serious loss. It was the wounded of this force which had passed through Guildford in the night. The officers asked us eagerly about the arrangements for the battle, and when we said that the Guards were the only regular troops in this part of the field, shook their heads ominously. While we were talking, a third officer came up ; he was a dark man, with a smooth face and a curious, excited manner. "You are volunteers, I suppose," he said, quick- ly, his eye flashing the while. " Well, now, look here ; mind, I don't want to hurt your feelings, or to say any- thing unpleasant, but I'll tell you what, if all you gentle- In w "«« ^ere j„3t fo , , ^^«^AND i» i87o. . ;^-;,i^ wouM be al^';:^, f-e u„ to ,^, ,, „„, ^ PWcious deal better ^ithof, ^"^^ ^'^ <^°"ld do it ib r' ^°"'' h^'f. I cln tLr ^ ^^-^^ you. We tow us that the ene^i^T f '" '^^^''- The officer •""'that he had app^/entT^^-d ^a3 close behfed jent., a„d .ould pio'b ittt ^^ T'""»" ^^ ^-fo "e ' :"w'rr' ^^-'^t'^- X 5^^^^^^ '°"r -"^^ -- *or tM^elve houj. had we bl ^"'''"^ "^ «=^Pectancy «t™ggle, till at la,t it seem.J^ , '''"'""^ ^'>' the eomil* '^ew but a bad ^, ^"^ '''Most as if f i,» • ^ ti« K.J °''®^'"' and the ^n. ® "ivasion "'' ^f «o real existence So / ^' ^ ^«' ""seen by very different, but for the\utb *'"^^ ''^^ "o* been Jeen told, fro„, « volunteer " '"'' '■'' ^h** ^e haj I remefflber that these tl IT °" ^"-^hto" Doi, '-y '"ind as ^e lay do Vn • " *" ""'^ P^«-g throS ^hen the hstless state we had f.T, '• '""" '^«« a«leep, •^^'-Aed by a g^^n-shot Ld . ^^ '"'^ ^'^ ^^''denly o- nght, close by the igtusf^r^ ^^^ °' *^« ^^^^ on — .earsn----^^£ "'•» GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1075. 41 common enough. We all jumped up at the report, and fell in almost without the word being given, grasping our rifles tightly, and the leading files peering forward to look for the approaching enemy. This gun was apparently the signal to begin, for now our batteries opened fire all along the line. What they were firing V, I could not see, and I am sure the gunners could not see much themselves. I have told you what a haze had come over the air since the morning, and now the smoke from the guns settled like a pall over the hill, and soon we could see little but the men in our ranks, and the outline of some gunners in the battery drawn up next us on the slope on our right. This firing v/ent on, I should think, for nearly a couple of hours, and still there was no reply. We could see the gunners — it was a troop of horse-artillery — working away like fury, ramming, loading, and running up with cart- ridges, the officer in command riding slowly up and down just behind his guns, and peering out with his field-glass into the mist. Once or twice they ceased firing to let their smoke clear away, bat this did not do much good. For nearly two hours did this go on, and not a shot came in reply. If a battle is like this, said Dick Wake, who was my next-hand file, it's mild work, to say the least. The words were hardly uttered, when a rattle of mus- ketry was heard in front ; our skirmishers were at it, and very soon the bullets began to sing over our heads, and some struck the ground at our feet. Up to this time, we had been in column ; we were now deployed into line on the ground assigned to us. From the valley or gap on our left, there ran a lane right up the hill, almost due west, or along our front. This lane had a thick bank # ««B«AK coKQrEsr or .Ko,,^ ,, J3y^' about four feet hmh ni^^ *t, -- drawn „p behlndTt tumT ^^'^ '''""^ '^^■»-* lane trended back out of 'thV. "^'^ "P *'^'' '^'W the -ent here left it and occup Li'Th " ''^ "^'' "' "'« -^'- P«k. The bank had heeTZ "^'^ ^"^ ^^""^ "^ th« »i' of our going i„ and o„t 77 f ''" P°'"* *° ^- «orning. to cut down Lit ^ "'^ '''=*" '"'^ ^"^ th« - as to .ake the C^leJ^ X^^ "^^ °^ ^"^^ '^-^' no tools to work wi h • how! ""^ ''^'••' >"" ^^ had comedown and finished ^1^ m"'^ °' ^'^^P'^ ^^<^ the right, and was thus bevond V,! ^ ^ """'""^ ^'^^ °« bank. On our right ! ^ *'''"' °^ *he friendly '^Irea.y mention fbr::" 'l' ''^"^'"^ "^ -'ille^ then n>ore gnns, then a" ' ''''''"°" '' «« toe, tears, and a few iLT 'ToI, T f '""'*'^ ''"'^ -°1"»' <-«« the order before the firW b ^^ '"• ^' ^^^' this know what changes took S °"" ' '''" ''"''' '<> "^t And now the enemy's artillery be<.an fn their guns were posted we couldLf 1 °^'" ' ^^^''^ hear the rush of the sheU v^ J" IV ^' ''*^" ^ «« they bu..t,iust beyond IL " .'' ""^ *"■« »'«"S «=an really hardly teU you si . ''^** ^"""^ ^^^'^^ ••ecall the scene, it seems as ff ?""'' ^'''" ^ ^^"^ ^"d -''">tes;yet,Iknow aTwrw:„ r' '" °"'^ ^ ^^^ the hou.^ would neverjll T ^'■°"'^'' ^ "-""""ht g^nne.. still p,yi„g theblrT- "" ""^ ^"*'='^^'* "'« enemy, never stoppLfo ? ^^ ''^ *« '°"«ihle and again a dull Wow wLidTr' '^''''" ^^^^now. do..n, then three or flur'ftl T' ^"'^ ^ "-» &« to the rear. The capti 2 ."'""'^ ^^'^ ''''» ^hat had become of Ci 2 7^ "^' "^ ^"^ ^own ; '^m I do not know. Two of the guns GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. 48 ceased firing for a time ; they had got injured in some way, and up rode an artillery general. I think I see him now, a very handsome man, with straight features and a dark moustache, his breast covered with medals. He appeared in a great rage at the guns stopping '5tg. " "Who commands this batteiy ?" he cried. " I do, Sir Henry," said an officer riding forward, whom I had not noticed before. The group is before me at this ruoment, standing out clear against the background of smoke. Sir Henry erect on his splendid charger, his flashing eye, his left arm point- ing towards the enemy to enforce something he was going to say, the young officer reining in his horse just beside him, and saluting with his right hand raised to his busby. This, for a moment, then a dull thud, and both horses and riders are prostrate on the ground. A round shot had struck all four at the saddle line. Some of the gunners ran up to help, but neither officer could have lived many minutes. This was not the first I saw killed. Some time before this, almost immediately on the enemy's artillery opening, as we were lying, I heard something like the sound of steel striking steel, and at the same moment Dick Wake, who was next me in the ranks, leaning on his elbows, sank forward on his face. I looked round and saw what had happened : a shot fired at a high elevationj passing over his head, had struck the ground behind, nearly cutting his thigh off. It must have been the ball striking his sheathed bayonet which made the noise. Three of us carried the poor fellow to the rear, with difficulty for the shattered limb; but he was nearly dead from loss of blood when we got to the doctor, who was waiting ia a shel- «-B«M co.,.^, or ^CUKD XK 1875 tered holW about two hun , . We deposited our burden 1^' ^'"'' ''°'»« "P to help ^ake .a. sensible it : '.Jr'' *« «- ^ont. C f l^ken by the shock to bel,! t ' "' ^^ '^PP'^''^^^ too help-ng the doctors. I Jatl T'""- W°od was there -e s.t Wore the eveL;;r o^T '' ''' ^^ °^"'« A^J this time we were IriL .1 -'-„i„g a ,,,, for o„Tta'°'^« ««'»■•'* -ithout ;«eo w,„^^^^ enclosure bw"""^ h°M«g the Kotectedmostofus, and thet ,^°^'^-'"-' *he bank "ght company, whicL ^^ ' >'''"''• '"'^ O'-^ered our «ko.; and there we lay abLt f ?'"' *°^^' ^^^^d it ;ng and bullets whistling over ot , ?', ''' ^'^^^'^ -^''^^h- be.ngtouched. Our coCI IT ; ? i '"' ^^^'^'^ --"a- Po-d, for he rode up and do""' ^"'T'' *« ^'^ one ex- -steady as a rock /but he Lade tr "• '' ^ '°°'-P-« d-«ount, and take shelter b S b ' ff '' ^"^ «^J«*-'^' horses. We were al] pleased to ' ^!'«^' ^'^^''^^ their to try and see what ^.JZ'onT^T °^^' *^« ''^^k to be made out, fornow aC ^ ' "* ''^''^ ^«« Nothing h-dbeen gathering aU dlvb !"'"'''''"■"' ^^'-h ■^W blinding rait olf J^ '7 "r* ^"^ ^ *o-«»* of ^en more than the smoke whTl "^ °''''="'^'' "'« view *•• and the glare of the tbT ' ^" '''^'^'''^ "^ the thun- ;7'^Wetheroara!: '£S:r!;'^'^'^^'^^"''-" ' *he «.st lifted, and I saw f^r a 1 !' ^""""^''y- ^nce ^ *or a m,n„te an attack on Box .i GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 45 Hill, on the other side of the gap on our left. It was like the scene at a theatre — a curtain of smoke all round and a clear gap in the centre, with a sudden gleam of evening sunshine lighting it up. The steep smooth slope of the hill was crowded with the dark blue figures of the enemy, whom I now saw for the first time — an irregular t)utline in front, but very solid in rear; the whole body was moving forward by fits and starts, the men firing and ad- vancing, the officers waving their swords, the columns closing up and gradually making way. Our people were almost concealed by the bushes at the top, whence the smoke and their fire could be seen proceeding ; presently from these bushes on the crest came out a red line, and dashed down the brow of the hill, a flame of fire belching out from the front as it advanced. The enemy hesitated, gave way, and finally ran back in a confused crowd down the hill. Then the mist covered the scene, but the glimpse of this splendid charge was inspiriting, and I hoped we should show the same coolness when it came to our turn. It was about this time that our skirmishers fell back, a good many wounded, some limping along by themselves, others helped. The main body retired in very fair order, halting to turn round and fire; we could see a mounted officer of the Guards riding up and down encouraging them to be steady. Now came our turn. For a few minutes we saw nothing, but a rattle of bullets came through the rain and mist, mostly, however, passing over the bank. We began to fire in reply, stepping up against the bank to fire, and stooping down to load; but our brigade-major rode up with an order, and the word was passed through the men to reserve our fire. In a very 46 «»3aK CW,..ST 0. .,0.^, ^^ ^^^^ ■ fev,^ moments it ,„„,. ,. , ^^^^' «tand, wo could .,eo tj.o CZtTl ""'' ^^^«« -"ered to of tho .ka,,,„r, ,, the;::!?:' "■''''!'' *'"" *'"' «^-3 appeared to be, five or «ix deep iTh' "; °' °' '''<''» ">-«> order, each man stopping to iL'^""''' «''^' »»" in Joo.,o forward a little. Just ^the"™;"'' ^'"V"'' '''^n coming horseback up the lane. "Not .>""'"' "'""«'•«<» "n «'em hot," he cried; and fi,.; "' ^«""«fflen, give it - -re able. A e^ l^^^ f> - fast'^ e^r %;ng about us, too, and I ZZ[ T"" '"'"''' *" "« ;he ,a,t . ,3,^p^ ^ hough each moment must be fe«. for I was too busy, and ToT ''"' ^ ^''^ «» one «ght or left, but loadei 2 fi T'' ^^ ""' "> ^ook to the ong this went on I k„or„ot- ," '"* " ^ •=°«'''- hIw long; neither side could hal. "°"'^ ««' have been -h a flre, but it ende/r;;!' "'^"^ "'-'- - - ^K and as soon as we saw f J ™^ ^"^"«% falling «hout, and some of „« jlZ. ^ '^-ed a treme„do^: ' ;« parting shots. Su'ddX' he" ^ '''"'' *° ^- ^^ "'« hne to cease firing L ^ °'''''" ^*« P^^^^d down <^»^e; a battalion of the Gu«^ '"""^ "^'^^o^^red th^ ~ from our left a^ss J'^ ^"^ '^'''^^^"^ obliqu L ;h- flank attack as mTh a « ° ' '' "-' ^^ecT •-ck the enemy; and i^tr a ^ T'""'^'' '« the.r steady Ji„e a, ^^ ' ^^J «P«ndid sight to see ' ->°oth lawn below us, fl Igt I ^'""'^ ™ the «« 'f on parade. We felt a Lit tw"'"'' '"* *" ^'^-dy ' '' eemed as if the battle wrwl T "' "^'^ '"oment ; O'^Ued out to look to the wlrndTr ."'' "'^'^ ^^•"^body *»-ed to glance down thTint :,"' ^t' '"^ ^-' ""o I ^- that we had not beate^ S ttrri"^"^- ^^- ^ oacs the atta<;fc without loss. sred to iguros there loose ►ming id on ive it ever io be it be one the low een der ing )US )m m le y i. *■» d , 9 ^\ QEKMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 47 Immediately before me lay Lawford, of my office, dead on his back from a bullet through his forehead, his hand still grasping his rifle. At every step was some friend or ac- quaintance killed or wounded, and a few paces down the lane I found Travers, sitting with his back against the bank. A ball had gone through Ms lungs, and blood was coming from his mouth. I was lifting him, but the cry of agony he gave stopped me. I then saw that this was not his only wound — his thigh was smashed by a bullet (which must have hit him when standing on the bank), and the blood streaming down mixed in a muddy puddle with the rain water under him. Still he could not be left here, so, lifting him up as well as I could, I carried him through the gate which led out of the lane at the back to where our camp hospital was in the rear. The movement must have caused him awful agony, for I could not support the broken thigh, and he could not restrain his groans, brave fellow though he was ; but how I carried him at all I can- not make out, for he was a much bigger man than myself; but I had not gone far, one of a stream of our fellows, all on the same errand, when a bandsman and Wood met me, bringing a hurdle as a stretcher, and on this we placed him. Wood had just time to tell me that he had got a cart down in the hollow, and would endeavor to take off his master at once to Kingston, when a staff officer rode up to call us to the ranks. "You really must not straggle in this way, gentlemen," he said; "pray keep your ranks." "But we can't leave our wounded to be trodden down and die," cried one of our fellows. " Beat off the enemy first, sir," he replied. "Gentlemen, do, pray, join your regi- ments, or we shall be a regular mob." And no doubt he 48 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. } V I did not speak too soon ; for be.sides our fellows straggling to tho rear, lots of volunteers from the regiments in re- serve were running forward to help, till the whole gi'ound was dotted with groups of men. I hastened back to my post, but I had just time to notice that all the ground in our rear was occupied by a thick mass of troops much more numerous than in the morning, and a column was moving down to the left of our line, to the ground now held by the Guards. All this time, although the musketry had slackened, the artillery fire seemed heavier than ever ; the shells screamed overhead or burst around, and I confess to feeling quite a relief at getting back to the friendly shelter of the lane. Looking over the bank, I noticed for the first time the frightful execution our fire had created. The space in front was thickly strewed with dead and badly wounded, and beyond the bodies o. the fallen enemy could just be seen — for it was now get- ting dusk — the bear-skins and red coats of our own gallant Guards scattered over the slope, and marking the line of their victorious advance. But hardly a minute could have passed in thus looking over the field, when our brigade-major came moving up the lane on foot (I sup- pose his horse had been shot), crying, " Stand to your arms. Volunteers ! they're coming on again;" and we found ourselves a second time engaged in a hot musketry fire* How long it went on I cannot now remember, but we could distinguish clearly the thick line of skirmishers, about sixty paces off, and mounted officers among them ; and we seemed to be keeping them well in check, for they were quite exposed to our fire, while we were protected nearly up to our shoulders, when — I know not how — I became >*■»- ~'TS^ ; ■HH GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 49 linute when sup- your bund fire* could bout d we were early came sensible that something had gone wrong. " "We arc taken in flank !" called out some one; and looking along the left, sure enough there were dark figures jumping over the bank into the lane and firing up along our line. The volunteers in reserve, who had come down to take the place of the Guards, must have given way at this point ; the enemy's skirmishers had got through our line and turned our left flank. How the next move came about I cannot recollect, or whether it was without orders, but in a short time we found ourselves out of the lane and drawn up in a straggling line about thirty yards in rear of it— at our end, that is, the other flank had fallen back a good deal more — and the enemy were lining the hedge, and num- bers of them were passing over an'^ forming up on our side. Beyond our left, a confused mass were retreating, firing as they went, followed by the advancing line of the enemyi We stood in this way for a short space, firing at randohi as fast as we could. Our colonel and major must have been shot, for there was no one to give an order, when somebody on horseback called out from behind — I think it must have been the brigadier — "Now, then. Volunteers! give a British cheer, and go at them — charge ! " and with a shout, we rushed at the enemy. Some ran, some of them stopped to meet us, and for a moment it was a real hand-to-hand fight. I felt a sharp sting in my leg, as I drove my bayonet right through the man in front of me. I confess I shut my eyes, for I just got a glimpse of the poor wretch as he fell back, his eyes starting out of his . head, and, savage though we were, the sight was almost too horrible to look at. But the struggle was over in a second, and we had cleared the ground again right up to 4 ik',, '■...■ 50 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. the rear hedge of the lane. Had we gone on, I believe "we might have recovered the lane too, but we were now all out of order ; there was no one to say what to do ; the enemy began to line the hedge and open tire ; and they were streanning past our left; and, how it came about I know not, but we found ourselves falling back towards our right rear, scarce any semblance of a line remaining, and the volunteers Avho had given way on our left mixed up with us, and adding to the confusion. It was now nearly dark. On the slopes which we were retreating to was a large mass of reserves drawn up in columns. Some of the leading files of these, mistaking us for the enemy, began firing at us ; our ft liows, crying out to them to stop, ran towards their ranks, and in a few moments the whole slope of the l)ill became a scene of confusion that I cannot attempt to describe, regiments and detachments mixed up in hopeless disorder. Most of us, I believe, turned towards the enemy and fired away our few re- maining cart idges ; but it was too late to take aim, for- tunately for us, or tlie guns which the enemy had brought up through the gap, and were firing point-blank, would have doi\e more damage. As it was, we could see little more than the bright flashes of their fire. In our con- fusion we had jammed up a lino regiment immediately behind us, and it? colonel and some staff* officers were in vain trying to make a passage for it, and their shouts to us to march to the rear and clear a road could be heard above the roar of the g-uns and the confused Babel of Bound. At last a mounted officer pushed his way through, followed by a company in sections, the men brushing past with firm-set faces, as if on a desperate task ; and the 1* GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 51 battalion when it got clear appeared to deploy and ad- vance down the slope. I have also a dim recollection of seeing the Life Guards trot past the front and push on towards the town — a last desperate attempt to save the day — before we left the field. Our adjutant, who had got separated from our flank of the regiment in the con- fusion, now came up, and managed to lead us, or at any rate some of us, up to the crest of the hill in the rear, to re-form, as he said ; but there we met a vast crowd of volunteers, militia and waggons, all hurrying rear- ward from the direction of the big house, and we were borne in the stream for a mile at least before it was possible to stop. At the last the adjutant led us to an open space a little off the line of fugitives, and there we reformed the remains of the companies. Telling us to halt, he rode off to try and obtain orders, and find out where the rest of our brigade was. From this point, a spur of high ground running off from the main plateau, we looked down through the dim twilight into the battle-field below. Artillery fire was still going on. We ould see the flashes from the guns on both sides, and now and then a stray shell came screaming up and burst near us, brt we were beyond the sound of musketry. This halt first gave us, time to think about what nad happened. The long day of expect- ancy had been succeeded by the excitement of battle ; and when each minute may be your last, you do not think much about other people, nor when you are facing another man with a rifle have you time to consider whether he or you are the invader, or that yoii are fighting for your home and liearths. All fighting is pretty much alike, I suspect, as to sentiment, when once it begins* But now we had time 52 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. ■) I for reflection ; and although we did not yet quite under- stand how far the day had gone against us, an uneasy feel- ing of self-condemnat on must have come up in the minds of most of us ; while, above all, we now began to realize what the loss of this battle meant to the country. Then, too, we know not what had become of all our wounded com- rades. Reaction, too, set in after the fatigue and excite- ment. For myself, I had found out for the first time that besides the bayonet-wound in my leg, a bullet had gone through my left arm, just below the shoulder, and outside the bone. I remember feeling something like a blow just when we lost the lane, but the wound passed unnoticed till now, when the bleeding had stopped and the shirt was sticking to the wound. This half hour seemed an age, and while we stood on this knoll the endless tramp of men and rumbling of carts along the downs besides us told their own tale. The whole army was falling back. At last we could discern the adjutant riding up to us out of the dark. The army was to retreat and take up a position on Epsom Downs, he said; we should join the march and try and [find our brigade in the morn- ing; and so we turned into the throng again, and made our way on as best we could. A few scraps of news he gave us as he rode alongside of our leading section; the army had held its position well for a time, but the enemy had at last broken through the line between us and Guildford, as well as in our front, and had poured his men through the point gained, throwing the line into confusion, and the first army corps near Guildford were also falling back to avoid being outflanked. The regular troops were holding the rear j we were to push on as fast as possible to get out of ,*'-■• ^ \ GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. 58 their way, and allow them to make an orderly treat in the morning. The gallant old lord commanding our corps hacl been badly wounded early in the day, he heard, and carried off the field. The Guards had suffered dreadfully ; the household cavalry had ridden down the cuirassiers, but had got into broken ground and been awfully cut up. Such were the scraps of news passed down our weary column. What had become of our wounded no one knew, and no one liked to ask. So we trudged on. It must have been mid- night when we reached Leatherhead. Here we left the open ground and took to the road, and the block became greater. We pushed our way painfully along; several trains passed slowly ahead along the railway by the roadside containing the wounded, we supposed — such of them, at least, as were luckly enough to be picked up. It was daylight when we got to Epsom. The night had been bright and clear after the storm, with a cool air, which, blowing through my soak- ing clothes, chilled me to the bone. My wounded leg was stiff and sore, and I was read}- to drop with exhaustion and hunger. Nor were my comrades in much better case. We had eaten nothing since breakfast the day before, and the bread we had put by had been washed away by the storm, only a little pulp remained at the bottom of my bag. The tobacco was all too wet to smoke. In this plight we were creeping along, when the adjutant guided us into a field by the roadside to rest awhile, and we lay down exhausted on the sloppy grass. The roll was here taken, and only 180 answered out of nearly 500 present on the morning of the battle. How many of these were killed and wounded no one could tell; but it was certain many must have got separated in the confusion of the evening. 64 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. While resting here, we saw pass by in the crowd of vehicles and men a cart laden with commissariat stores driven by a man in uniform. "Food!" cried some one, and a dozen volunteers jumped up and surrounded the cart. The driver tried to whip them off, but he was pulled off his seat, and the contents of the cart thrown out in an instant. They were preserved meats in tins, which we tore open with our bayonets. The meat had been cooked before, I think ; at any rate we devoured it. Shortly after this a general came by with three or four staff officers. He stopped and spoke to our adjutant, and then rode into the field. "My lads," said he, "you shall join my division for the present ; fall in, and follow the regiment that is now passing." We rose up, fell in by companies, each about twenty strong, and turned once more into the stream moving along the road ; — regiments, detachments, single volunteers or militiamen, country people making off, some with bundles, some without, a few in carts, but most on foot ; here and there waggons of stores, with men sitting wherever there was room, others crammed with wounded soldiers. Many blocks occurred from horses falling, or carts breaking down and filling up the road. In the town the confusion was even worse, for all the houses seemed full of volunteers and militiamen, wounded or resting, or trying to find food, and the streets were almost choked up. Some officers were in vain try- ing to restore order, but the task seemed a hopeless one. One or two volunteer regiments, which had arrived from the north the previous night, and had been halted here for orders, were drawn up along the road side steadily enough, and some of the retreating regiments, including MM GEEMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 65 ours, may have preserved the semblance of discipline, but for the most part the mass pushing to the rear was a mere mob. The regulars, or what remained of them, were now, I believe, all in the rear, to hold the advancing enemy in check. A few officers among such a crowd, could do nothing. To add to the confusion, several houses were being emptied of their wounded brought here the night before, to prevent their falling into the hands of the enemy, some in carts, some being carried to the railway by men. The groans of these poor fellows as they were jostled through the street, went to our hearts, selfish though fatigue and suffering had made us. At last, fol- lowing the guidance of a staff officer who was standing to show the way^ we turned off from the main London road, and took that towards Kingston. Here the crush was less, and we managed to move along pretty steadily. The air had been cooled by the storm, and there was no dust. We passed through a village where our new gen- eral had seized all the public-houses, aud taken possession of the liquor ; and each regiment as it came up, was halted ; and each man got a drink of beer, served out by companies. Whether the owner got paid, I know not, but it was like nectar. It must have been about one o'clock in the afternoon, that we came in sight of King- ston. We had been on our legs sixteen hours, and had got over about twelve miles of ground. There is a hill a little south of the Surbiton station, covered then mostly with villas, but open at the western extremity, where there was a clump of trees on the summit. We had diverged from the road towards this, and here the gen- eral halted us and disposed the line of the divison along 56 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. his front, facing to the southwest, the right of the line reaching down to the Thames, the left extending along the southern slope of the hill, in the direction of the Ep- som road by which we had come. We were nearly in the centre, occupying the knoll just in front of the general, who dismounted on the top and tied his horse to a tree. It is not much of a hill, but commands an extensive view over the flat country around ; and as we lay wearily on the ground, we could see the Thames glittering like a sil- ver field in the bright sunshine, the palace at Hampton Court, the bridge at Kingston, and the old church tower rising above the haze of the bown, with the woods of Rich- mond Park behind it. To most of us the scene could not but call up the associations of happy days of peace — days now ended and peace destroyed through national infatua- tion. We did not say this to each other, but a deep de- pression had come upon us, partly due to weakness and fatigue, no doubt, but we saw that another stand was going to be made, and we had no longer any confidence in ourselves. If we could not hold our own when stationary in line, on a good position, but had been broken up into a rabble at the first shock, what chance had we now of manoeuvring against a victorious enemy in this open ground ? A feeling of desperation came over us, a deter- mination to struggle on against hope ; but anxiety for the future of the country, and our friends, and all dear to us, filled our thoughts now that we had time for reflection. We had had no news of any kind since Wood joined us the day before — we knew not what was doing in London, or what the govemmtnt was about, or anything else ; and exhausted though we were, we felt an intense craving to know what was happening in other parts of the country, GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. 67 Our general had expected to find a supply of food and ammunition here, but nothing turned up. Most of us had hardly a cartridge left, so he ordered the regiment next to us, which came from the north, and had not been engaged, to give us enough to make up twenty rounds a man, and he sent off a fatigue-party to Kingston to try and get provisions, while a detachment ui our fellows was allowed to go foraging among tlae villas in our rear, and in about an hour they brought back some bread and meat, which gave us a slender meal all around. They said most of the houses were empty, and that many had been stripped of all eatables, and a good deal damaged already. It must have been between three and four o'clock when the sound of cannonading began to be heard in the front, and we could see the smoke of the guns rising above the woods of Esher and Claremont, and soon afterwards some troops emerged from the fields below us. It was the rear- guard of regular troops. There were some guns also, which were driven up the slope, and took up their position round the knoll. There were three batteries, but they only counted eight guns amongst them. Behind them was posted the lino ; it was a brigade apparently of four regi- ments, but the whole did not look to be more than eight or nine hundred mei .. Our regiment and another had been moved a little to the rear, to make way for them, and presently we were ordered down to occupy the railway station on our right rear. My leg was now so stiff I could no longer march with the rest, and my left arm was very swollen and sore, and almost useless ; but anything seemed better than being left behind, so I limped after the bat- talion as best I could, down to the station. There was a m ,,J^ 58 QEilMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. ' goods shed a little in advance of it, down the line, a strong brick buildin J, and here my company was posted. The rest of our men lined the wall of the enclosure. A staff officer came with us to arrange the distribution ; we should be supported by line troops, he said : and in a few minutes a train full of them came slowly up from Guildford way. It was the last ; the men got out, the train passed on, and a party began to tear up the rails, Avhile the rest were dis- tributed among the houses on each side. A sergeant's party joined us in our shed, and an engineer officer with sappers came to knock holes in the walls for us to fire from ; but there were only half a dozen of them, so pro- gress was not rapid, and, as we had no tools, we could not help. It was while we were watching this job that the adju- tant, who was as active as ever, looked in, and told us to muster in the yard. The fatigue party had came back from Kingston, and a baker's small handcart of food was made over to us as our share. It contained loaves, flour, and some joints of meat. The meat and the flour we had not lime or means to cook. The loaves were devoured ; and there was a tap of water in the yard, so we felt refresh- ed by the meal. I should have liked to wash my wounds, which were becoming very offensive, but I dared not take off my coat, feeling sure I should not be able to get it on again. It was while we were eating our bread that the rumor first reached us of ar other disaster, even greater than that we had witnessed ourselves. Whence it came I know not ; but a whisper went down the ranks that Woolwich had been captured. We all knew that it was our only arsenal, and understood the significance of the GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 69 blow. No hope, if this were true, of saving the country. Thinking over this we went back to the shed. Although this was only our second day of war, I think we were already old soldiers, so far that we had come to be careless about fire, and the shot and shell that now be- gan to open on us made no sensation. We felt, indeed, our need of discipline, and we saw plainly enough the slender chance of success coming out of such a rabble as we were ; but I think we were all determined to fight on as long as we could. Our gallant adjutant gave his spirit to everybody ; and the staff officer commanding was a very cheery fellow, and went about as if he were certain of victory. Just as the firing began, he looked in to say that we were as safe as in a church, that we must be sure and pepper the enemy well, and that more cartridges would soon arrive. There were some steps and benches in the shed, and on these a part of our men were standing, to fire through the upper loop-holes, while the line soldiers and others stood on the ground guarding the second row. I sat on the floor, for I could not now use my rifle, and besides there were more men than loop-holes. The artillery fire, which had opened now on our position, was from a longish range ; and occupation for the riflemen had hardly begun, when there was a crash in the shed, and I was knocked down by a blow on the head. I ./as almost stunned for a time, and could not make out what had happened. A shot or shellhad hit the shed without quite penetrating the wall, but the blow had upset the steps resting against it, and the men standing on them, bringing down a cloud of plaster and brickbats, one of which had struck me. I felt now past being of use. I could not use my rifle, and could barely I'* *l:l 60 GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. stand; and after a time I thought I would make for my own house, on the chance of finding same one still there. I got up, therefore, and staggered homewards, Musketry fire had now commenced, and our side were blazing away from the windows of the houses, and from tehind walls, and from the shelter of some trucks still standing in the station. A couple of field pieces in the yard were firing, and in the open space in rear a reserve was drawn up. There, too, was the staff* officer on horseback, watching the fight through his field-glass. I remember having still enough sense to feel that the position was a hopeless one. That straggling line of houses and gardens would surely be broken through at some point, and then the line must give way like a rope of sand. It was about a mile to our house, and I was think- ing how I could possibly drag myself so far when I sud- denly recollected that I was passing Travers's house — one of the first of a row of villas then leading from the station to Kingston. Had he been brought home, I wondered, as his faithful old servant promised, and was his wife still here ? I remember to this day the sensation of shame I felt when I recollected that I had not once given him — my greatest friend — a thought since I carried him off* the field the day before. But war and suffering make men selfish, I would go in now at any rate and rest a while, and see if I could be of use. The little garden before the house was as trim as ever — I used to pass it every day on my ■\7ay to the train, and knew every shrub in it — and a blaze of flowers, but the hall-door stood ajar. I stepped in and saw little Arthur standing in the hall. He had been dressed as neatly as ever that day, and as he stood there in hia pretty blue frock and white trousers and GERMAN CONQTTEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. 61 socks showing his chubby little legs, with his golden locks, fair face, and large dark eyes, the picture of childish beauty in the quiet hall, just as it used to look — the vases of flowers, the hat and coats hanging up, the familiar pic- tures on the walls — this vision of peace in the midst of war made me wonder for a moment, faint and giddy as I was, if the pandemonium outside had any real existence, and was not merely a hideous dream. But the roar of the guns making the house shake, and the rushing of the shot, gave a ready answer. The little fellow appeared almost unconscious of the scene around him, and was walking up the stairs holding by the railing, one step at a time, as I had seen him do a hundred times before, but turned round as I came in. My appearance frightened him, and staggering as I did into the hall, my face and clothes covered with blood and dirt, I must have looked an awful object to the child, for he gave a cry and turned to run toward the basement stairs. But he stopped on hearing my voice calling him back to his god-papa, and after a while came timidly up to me. Papa had been to the battle, he said, and was very ill ; mamma was with papa ; Wood was out ; Lucy was in the cellar, and had taken him there, but he wanted to go to mamma. Tell- ing him to stay in the hall for a minute till I called him, I climbed up stairs and opened the bedroom door. My poor friend lay there, his body resting on the bed, his head supported on his wife's shoulder as she sat by the bedside. He breathed heavily, but the pallor of his face, the closed eyes, the prostrate arms, the clammy foam she was wiping from his mouth, all spoke of approaching death. The good old servant had done his duty, at least— 62 GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND IN 1875. I he had brought his master home to die in his wife's arms. The poor woman was too intent on her charge to notice the opening of the door, and as the child would be better away, I closed it gently and went down to the hall to take little Arthur to the shelter below, where the maid was hid- ing. Too late ! He lay at the foot of the stairs on his face, his little arms stretched out, his hair dabbled in blood. I had not noticed the crash among the other noises, but a splinter of a shell must have come through the open doorway ; it had carried away the back of his head. The poor child's death must have been instantane- ous. I tried to lift up the little corpse with my one arm, but even this load was too much for me, and while stoop- ing down I fainted away. When I came to my senses again it was qv. ^e dark, and for some time I could not make out where I was : I lay indeed for some time like one half asleep, feeling no in- clination to move. By degrees I became aware that I was on the carpeted floor of a room. All noise of battle had ceased, but there waj. a sound as of i^iany people close by. At last I sat up and gradually got to my feet. The move- ment gave me intense pain, for my wounds were now highly inflamed, and my clothes sticking to them made them dreadfully sore. At last I got up and groped my way to the door, and opening it at once saw where I was, for the pain had brought back my senses. I had been lying in Travers's little writing-room at the end of the passage, into which I made my way. There was no gas, and the drawing-room door was closed ; but from the open dining-room the glimmer of a candle feebly lighted up the hall, in which half a dozen sleeping figures could GERMAN CONQUEST OP ENGLAND TN 1875. 63 be discerned, while the room itself was crowded with men. The table was covered with plates, glasses and bottles ; but most of the men were asleep in the chairs or on the floor, a few were smokiii^ cigars, and one or two with their helmets on were still engaged at supper, occa- casionally grunting out an observation between the mouthfuls. " Sind wackere Soldaten, diese Englischen Freiwilligen," said a broad-shouldered brute, stuffing a great hunch of beef into his mouth with a silver fork — an implement, I should think, he must have been using for the first time in his life. " t,^a, ja," replied a comrade, who was lolling back in his chair, with a pair of very dirty legs on the table, and one of poor Travers's best cigars in his mouth ; ** Sie so gut laufen konnen." "Ja wohl," responded the first speaker; "aber sind nicht eben so schnell wie die Franzosischen Mobloten." " Gewiss," grunted a hulking lout from the floor, lean- ing on his elbow, and sending out a cloud of smoke from his ugly jaws, " und da il ind hier etwa gute Schiitzen." " Hast recht, lange Peter," answered number one ; " wenn die Schurken so gut exerciren wie Schutzen k6nnten, so waren pir heute nicht hier ! " " Recht ! recht ! " said the second ; " das exerciren macht den guten Soldaten." : , What more criticisms on the shortcomings of our unfor- tunate volunteers might have passed I did not stop to hear, being interrupted by a sound on the stairs. Mrs. Travers was standing on the landing-place ; I limped up the stairs to meet her* Among the many pictures of those I GEtlMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND iN 1S75. I fatal days engraven on my memory, I remember none more clearly than the mournful aspect of my poor friend, widowed and childless within a few moments as she stood there in her white dress, coming forth like a ghost from the chamber of the dead, the candle she held lighting up her face, and contrasting its pallor with the dark hair that fell disordered around it, its beauty radiant even through features worn with fatigue and sorrow. She was calm and even tearless, though the trembling lip told of the effort to restrain the emotion she felt. *'Dear friend," she said, taking my hand, " I was coming to seek you ; forgive my selfishness in neglecting you so long; but you will understand" — glanc- ing at the door above — " how occupied I have !)een." *' Where," I began, " is " " my boy ? " she answered, anticipating my question. " I have laid him by his father. But now your wounds must be cared for ; how pale and faint you look! — rest here a moment, — and, descending to the dining-room, she returned with some wine, which I gratefully drank, and then making me sit down on the top step of the stairs, she brought water and linen, and, cutting off the sleeve of my coat, bathed and bandaged my wounds. 'Twas I who felt selfish for thus adding to her troubles ; but in truth I was too weak to have much will left, and stood in need of the help which she forced me to accept; and the dressing of my wounds afforded indescriba- ble relief While tiius tending me she explained in broken sentences how matters stood. Every room but her own, and the little parlor into which she with Wood's help had carried me, was full of soldiers. Wood had been taken away to work at repairing the railroad, and Lucy had run off from fright; but the cook had stopped at her post, and GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 05 had served up supper, and opened the cellar for the sol- diers' use ; she did . .ot understand what they said, and they were rough and boorish, but not uncivil. I should now go, she said, when my wounds were dressed, to look after my own homo, where I might be wanted ; for herself, she wished only to be allowed to remain watching there — pointing to the room whore lay the bodies of her husband and child — where she would not be molested. I felt that her advice was good. I could be of no use as protection, and I had an anxious longing to k.iow what had become of mj^ sick mother and sister; besides, some arrangement must be made for the burial. I therefore limped away. There was no need to express thank.j on either side, and the grief was too deep to be reached by any outward show of sympathy. A Outside the house there was a good deal of movement Jind bustle ; many carts going along, the waggoners, from Sussex and Surrey, evidently impressed and guarded by soldiers ; and although no gas was burning, the road to- wards Kingston was well lighted by torches held by per- sons standing d short intervals in line, who had been seized for the duty, some of them the tenants of neighbor- ing villas. Almost the tirst of these torch-bearers I came to was on old gentlemajj whose Tace I Wiis well acquainted with, from having fre^picntjy travelled up and down in the same train with him. H« wah a senior clerk ir. a govern- ment office, I believe, and was a mild-looking old man, with a prim face and a long neck, which he used to wrap in a wide double neckcloth, a thing even in those days sel- dom seen. Even in that moment of oxtterness I could not 66 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. Iw t help being amused by the absurd figure this poor old fellow presented, with his solemn face and long cravat, doing penance with a torch in front of his own door, to light up the path of our conquerors. But a more serious object now presented itself, a corporal's guard pjissing by, with two English volunteers in charge, their hands tied behind their backs. They cast an imploring glance at me, and I stepped into the road to ask the corporal what was the matter, and even ventured, as he was passing on, to lay my hand on his sleeve. " Auf dem Wcge, Spitzbube !" cried the brute, lifting his rrtie as if to knock me down. " Must one prisoners who fire at us let shoot," he went on to add ; and shot the poor fellows would have been, I suppose, if I had not interceded with an officer who hap- pened to be riding by. " Horr Hauptmann," I cried, as loud as I could, " is this yx>ur discipline, to let unarmed prisonei'S be shot without orders ?" The officer, thus ap- pealed to, reined in hi« horse, and halted the guard till he heard what I had to say. My knowledge of other lan- guages here stood me in good stead, for the prisoners, north-country factory hands apparently, wore of course utterly unable to make themselves understood, and did not even know in what they had offijndcd. I therefore interpreted their explanation : they had been left behind while skirmishing near Ditton, in a barn, and coming out of their hiding-place in the midst of a p.'nfcy of the enemy, with their rilies in their hands, the latter thought they were going to fire at them from behind. It was a wonder thev were not shot down on the ft/ spot. The captain heard the tale, and then told th© i I.N GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 67 \ ^ard to lot tliein go, and they slunk off at cnce into a by-road. He was a fine, soldier-like man, but nothing could exceed the insolence of his manner, which was per- haps all the greater because it seemed not intentional, but to arise from a sense of innneasurable superiority. Be- tween the lame frekuilliger pleading for his comrades, and the captain of the conquering army, there was, in his view, an infinite gulf Had the two men been dogs, their fate coul(^ n'>t have been decided more contemptuously. They were iet go simply because they were not worth keep- ing as prisoners, and perhaps to kill any living thing with- out cause went against the Itauptinann's sense of justice- Bat why speak of this insult in particular ? Had not every man wlio lived tlmi his tale to tell of humiliation and de- gradation ? For it was the same story everywhere. After the first stand in line, and when once they had got us on the march, the enemy laughed at us. Our handful of regular troops was sacrificed almost to a man in a vain conflict with numbers ; our volunteers and militia, with officers wLo did not know their work, without ammunition or equipment, or ^aff to superintend, starving in the midst of plenty, we had soon become a helpless mob' figliting desperately here and there, but with whom, as a mancjeuviing army, the disei})lined invaders did just what they pleased. Happy those whose iK^nes whitened the fields of Surrey ; they, at least, were spared the disgrace we lived to endure. Even you, who have never known what it is to Uve otherwise than on sufferance, even your cheeks burn when we talk of these days ; think, then, what tLose endured who, like your grandfather, had been 68 GEllMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. I i It citizens of the proudest nation on earth, which had never known disgrace or defeat, and whose boast it used to be that they bore a flag on which the sun never set ! We had heard of generosity in war ; we found none ; the war was made by us, it was said, and we must take the con- sequences. London and our only arsenal captured, we were at the mercy of our captors, and right heavily did they tread on our necks. Need I tell you the rest ? — of the ransom we had to pay, and the taxes raised to cover it, which keeps us paupeiN to this day ? — the brutal frank- ness that announced we must give place to a new naval power, and be made harmless for revenge ? — the victorious troops living at free quarters, the yoke they put on us made the more galling that their requisitions had a sem- blance of method and legality ? Better have been robbed at first hand by the soldiery themselves, than through our own magistrates made tlu- instruments for extortion. How we lived througli the degnidation wo daily and hourly underwent, I hardly e\cn now understand. And what was there left to us to live for ? Stripped of our colonies ; Canada and the West Indies gone to America ; Australia foniud to separate ; India lost forever, after the English there had all been destroyed, vainly trying to hold the country when cut oft* from id by their country- men ; Gibraltar and Malta ceded to the new naval power ; Iieland independent and in })erpetun^ anarchy and revolu- tion. When I look at my country as it is now — its trade gone, its factories silent, its harbours empty, a prey to pauperism and decay — ^wheii I see all this, and think what Great Britain was in my youth, I aak my^self whether I 1 i GEEMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 69 have really a heart or any sense of patriotism that I should have witnessed such degredation and still care to live! France was different. There, too, they had to eat the bread of tribulation under the yoke of the conqueror : their fall was hardly more sudden or violent than ours ; but war could not take away their rh^^ oil ; they had no colonies to lose; their broad lands, which made their wealth, remained to them ; and they rose again from the blow. But our people could not be got to see how arti- ficial our prosperity was — that it all rested on foreign trade and financial credit ; that the course of trade once turned away from us, even for a time, it might never re- turn ; and that our credit, once shaken, might never be restored. To hear men talk in those days you would have thought that Providence had ordained that our govern- ment should always borrow at three per cent., and that trade came to us because we lived in a foggy little island set in a boisterous sea. They could not be got to see that the wealth heaped up on every side was not created in the country, but in India and China, and other parts of the worlf" ; and that it would be quite possible for the people, who made money by buying and selling the natural trea- sures of the earth, to go and live in other places, and take their profits with them. Nor could men believe that there could ever be an end to our coal and iron, or that they would get to be so much dearer than the coal and iron of America, that it would no longer be worth while to work them, and that therefore we ought to insure against the loss of our artificial position, as the great centre of trade, by making ourselves secure, and strong and respected. We thought mm m \ I 70 GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. we were living in a commercial millennium, which must last for a thousand years at least. After all, the bitterest part of our reflection is, that all this misery and decay might have been so easily prevented, and that we brought it about ourselves, by our own short-sighted recklessness. There, across the narrow straits, was the writing on the wall, but we would not choose to read it. The warnings of the few were drowned in the voice of the multitude. Power was then passing away from the class which had been used to rule, and to face political dangers, and which had brought the nation, with honor unsullied, through former struggles, into the hands of the lower classes, un- educated, untrainf^d to the use of political rights, and swayed by demagogues ; and the few who were wise in their generation, were denounced as alarmists, or as aris- tocrats, who sought their own aggrandisement by wast- ing public money on bloated armaments. The rich were idle and luxurious ; the poor grudged the cost of defence. Politics had become a mere bidding for radical votes, and those who should have led the nation, stooped rather to pander to the selfishness of the day, and humored the popular cry which denounced those who would secure the defence of the nation, by enforced arming of its manhood, as interfering with the liberties of the people. Truly the nation was ripe for a fall ; but when I reflect how a little firmness and self-denial, oi- political courage and fore- sight, might have averted the disaster, I feel that the judgment must have really been deserved. A nation too selfish to defend its liberty could not have been fit to retain it. To you, ray grandchildren, who are now GERMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND IN 1875. 71 going to seek a new homo in a more prosperous land, let not this bitter lesson be lost upon you in the country of your adoption. For me, I am too old to begin life again in a strange country ; and hard and evil as have been my days, it is not much to await in solitude the time which cannot now be far off, when my old bones will bo laid to rest in the soil I have loved so well, and whose happiness and honor I have so long survived. THE END. f --— ( r/ r 1 % % NEW AND POPULAI^ REPRINTS. OUR GIRLS, HY pR. Dio Lewis, 350 PAGES. PAPER COVKRS. PIIICE, 40 ots. l|s^ *' Di. Lewis is well known as an acute observer, a man «)f great i>ractical sagacity in sanitary reform, and a lively an