<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">PLEVNA (1877)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">An English boy as Turkish Lieutenant—A mêlée—Wounded by a
horseman—Takes letter to Russian camp—The Czar watches the
guns—Skobeleff’s charge—The great Todleben arrives—Skobeleff
deals with cowards—Pasting labels—The last sortie—Osman
surrenders—Prisoners in the snow—Bukarest ladies very kind.</p>
<p>After Turkey had put down the insurrection in Bulgaria
(1876) and had beaten Servia (October, 1876), Russia
made her tenth attempt to seize Constantinople. The
Czar, Alexander II., declared war against the Sultan,
Abdul Hamid II., and the result was a war which in
cruelty and horrors has had no equal since the first
Napoleon retired to St. Helena.</p>
<p>There were a few young Englishmen fighting on the
side of the Turks, one of whom, Lieutenant Herbert, has
left us a full account of the siege of Plevna. He says in
his preface:</p>
<p>“I have witnessed much that was heroic, much that
was grand, soul-stirring, sublime, but infinitely more of
what was hideous and terrible. If you have too firm a
belief in the glories of soldiering, try a war.”</p>
<p>Herbert was soon made Mulazim, or Lieutenant, and
his friend Jack Seymour was in the same company. The
first successes of the Russians were checked when Osman
Pasha stood at bay at Plevna, and the Turks literally<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</SPAN></span>
dug themselves into the hills around the city, while the
Russians lost thousands of men in vain assaults upon the
earthworks.</p>
<p>It was in the second battle of Plevna that a Bimbashi,
or Major, came up to Herbert and said:</p>
<p>“The General has sent for reinforcements. Take your
company; an orderly will show the way. Do your best,
Mulazim. You are but a boy, in a position which might
unnerve a man twice your age. Rise to the occasion, as
Englishmen are wont to do. The soldiers love you. You
and your compatriot have but to lead, and they will
follow. Remember the Czar Nicholas’ furious cry in the
Crimean War: ‘We have been beaten by a handful of
savages led by British boys!’”</p>
<p>As they climbed to a distant hill they suddenly overlooked
a battle-field of twenty square miles in area—terrible
to see, terrible to hear. The thunder of 240 guns
seemed like the crash of so many volcanoes; the earth
trembled like a living thing. It was like standing in the
centre of a raging fire. Presently the Russian troops drew
near. The Turks began a quick fire of three minutes’
duration. Deep gaps showed in their lines, but they
were soon filled up, and still they drew nearer. The
Russian “Hurrah!” and the wild Turkish cry of “Allah!”
mingled together. Now there were only 100 paces
between the charging lines, the Russians coming up hill,
the Turks rushing down. Then came a chaos of stabbing,
clubbing, hacking, shouting, cursing men: knots of two
or three on the ground, clinging to each other in a deadlier
Rugby football; butt-ends of rifles rising and falling like
the cranks of many engines; horses charging into solid
bodies of men; frantic faces streaming with blood. All
the mad-houses of the world might be discharging their
contents into this seething caldron of human passion.</p>
<p>“I remember nothing; all I know is that I discharged<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</SPAN></span>
the six chambers of my revolver, but at whom I have no
notion; that my sabre was stained with blood, but with
whose I cannot tell; that suddenly we looked at one
another in blank surprise, for the Russians had gone,
save those left on the ground, and we were among friends,
all frantic, breathless, perspiring, many bleeding, the
lines broken, all of us jabbering, laughing, dancing about
like maniacs. Fifteen minutes after the first charge the
Russians returned. Of this charge I remember one item
too well. A giant on a big horse—a Colonel, I think—galloped
up to me and dealt me a terrific blow from above.
I parried as well as I could, but his sword cut across my
upturned face, across nose and chin, where the mark is
visible to this day. I felt the hot blood trickle down my
throat. He passed on. Sergeant Bakal, my friend and
counsellor, spoke to me, pointing to my face. Jack said
something in a compassionate voice. I fainted. When
I came to myself, my head had been bandaged, the nose
plastered all over. Water was given me. How grateful I
was for that delicious drink! Then I was supported by
friends to the outskirts of Plevna. As we went along I
noticed a Russian Lieutenant who, after creeping along
for a space, had sat down by the side of the track, leaning
against the belly of a dead horse. He was calmly awaiting
death in awful forsakenness. He counted barely
twenty summers, poor boy! He looked at me, oh! so
wistfully and sadly, with the sweet, divine light of
deliverance shining in his tearful eyes. He said faintly:
‘De l’eau, monsieur?’</p>
<p>“I had some cold coffee left in my flask, which I got
my companion to pour down his throat. He bowed his
poor bruised head gratefully, and we left him to die.
The ground was strewn with haversacks, rifles, swords,
wounded men; riderless horses, neighing vehemently,
trotted about in search of food. These sights were revealed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</SPAN></span>
to me by the peaceful, dying golden light of a summer
sunset. Even war, that hell-born product of the iniquity
of monarchs and statesmen, receives its quota of sunshine.”</p>
<p>A few weeks later Herbert was summoned to the Ferik,
or General of Division, and asked if he could speak French
well enough to take a letter into the Russian camp. He
said “Yes,” made himself smart in new tunic and boots,
and flattered himself that his tanned, smooth, youthful
face looked well below the bright red fez with its jaunty
tassel, in spite of his chin being still under repair. A
corporal carrying a white flag and a bugler well mounted
rode with him. They were handsome, strapping fellows,
in the highest of spirits. After a ride of six miles they
came in sight of a detachment of Cossacks. A young
Russian Lieutenant rode to meet them, waving his handkerchief.
Herbert stated his business in French, was
asked to dismount while awaiting instructions. The
Russians crowded round out of curiosity; the horses were
fed and watered, cigarettes were exchanged, and friendly
talk ensued. In half an hour a horseman rode up, and
Herbert was bidden to mount. His eyes were bandaged,
his horse was led. After a sharp trot of twenty minutes
they halted, the handkerchief was taken off, and he found
himself in a battery. An officer came up and took the
letter, then handed Herbert over to an infantry Colonel,
who took him into a small tent. Here, with some other
officers, they had a cosy meal—wine, bread, and soup—a
pleasant chat and smiles all round. It was a fortnight
since the last battle, and the Russians were still lost in
admiration of the bravery with which the Turks had
defended their positions.</p>
<p>“Vos hommes, mon camarade, sont des diables.
Jamais je n’ai vu pareille chose.”</p>
<p>That was just a glimpse of the enemy, and proved that,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</SPAN></span>
though men may fight by order, they may yet be friends
at heart.</p>
<p>The Czar Alexander had been present, watching the
varied issues of every fight and assault. The sappers had
built for him a kind of outlook on a little hill beyond the
line of fire, where he could see far away on all sides. A
large tent was standing behind, supplied with food and
wine, where his suite made merry; but the poor, worn,
anxious Czar could not eat, could not bide in his safe
tower, but would go wandering round among the gunners
and the guns. It was his fête-day when the great September
battle was being fought. There he stood alone
on his little balcony, under the lowering sky of an autumn
day, gazing through his glass at the efforts of his soldiers
to storm the Gravitza redoubt. All the afternoon assault
had followed assault in vain, and now the last desperate
effort, the forlorn hope, was being pushed to the front.
The pale, drawn face on the balcony was now quivering
with agonized sorrow; the tall figure was bent and bowed,
and seemed to wince under the lash of some destroying
angel. With awful losses the Russian battalions staggered
and struggled up the slopes slippery with their
comrades’ blood.</p>
<p>“See, sire, they have entered the redoubt; it is carried
at last!”</p>
<p>Hardly has the Czar time to smile and breathe a prayer
of gratitude when from a second redoubt higher up a
terrible fire is turned on the Russians, and they are swept
out of the place they had so hardly won.</p>
<p>There was one Russian officer who seemed to have a
charmed life. He was the bravest of the brave, was
beloved by his men, and did marvels of heroic feats—Skobeleff.
On a day of battle Skobeleff always wore a
white frock-coat, with all his decorations. Seeing the
battalions coming back from the Gravitza in disorderly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</SPAN></span>
route, the tall white figure on the white horse dashed at
full speed down the slope, passed the linesmen, who gave
their loved chief a great cheer as he galloped by, caught
up the riflemen who were advancing in support, and
swept them on at the double. Men sprang to their feet
and rapturously cheered the white-clad leader. He
reached the wavering beaten mass, pointed upwards with
his sword, and imparted to daunted hearts some of his
own courage and enthusiasm. They turned with him
and tried yet once more. Then the white horse went
down. The glass trembled in the hands of Alexander.</p>
<p>“He is down!”</p>
<p>“No, sire; he rises—he mounts again! See, they are
over and into the Turkish entrenchments!”</p>
<p>What a medley of sights and sounds—flame and smoke
and shouts and screams! But the Russians were for the
present masters of the redoubt.</p>
<p>In the evening Skobeleff rode back without a scratch
on him, though his white coat was covered with blood
and froth and mud. His horse—his last white charger—was
shot dead on the edge of the ditch; his blade was
broken off short by the hilt. Every man of his staff was
killed or wounded, except Kuropatkin.</p>
<p>“General Skobeleff,” wrote MacGahan to the <i>Daily
News</i>, “was in a fearful state of excitement and fury.
His cross of St. George twisted over his shoulder, his face
black with powder and smoke, his eyes haggard and
bloodshot, his voice quite gone. I never saw such a
picture of battle as he presented.”</p>
<p>But a few hours later the General was calm and collected.
He said in a low, quiet voice:</p>
<p>“I have done my best; I could do no more. My detachment
is half destroyed; my regiments no longer exist;
I have no officers left. They sent me no reinforcements.
I have lost three guns!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Why did they send you no help? Who was to
blame?”</p>
<p>“I blame nobody,” said Skobeleff; then solemnly
crossing himself, he added: “It was the will of God—the
will of God!”</p>
<p>Skobeleff’s heroism was magnificent, and did much to
nerve the common soldier to face the Turkish batteries;
but success came not that way. Men and officers began
to ask one another why the Czar did not send them the
help of the great Todleben, who had defended Sebastopol
so brilliantly. It seems that the Grand Duke Nicholas
had nourished a grudge against Russia’s most eminent
engineer, and had kept him out of all honourable employment.
But Alexander had sent for Todleben, and this
was the turn of the tide. Todleben came in such haste
from Russia that he had brought no horses with him.
Now he was at last in the Russian camp—a handsome,
tall, dignified man of sixty, straight and active, and very
affable to all. The attack was to be changed. No more
deadly assaults in front, but a complete investment, and
wait till famine steps in to make Osman submit.</p>
<p>But Skobeleff had not yet finished with daring assaults.
One day the “Green Hill,” which the Russians had taken
under his command, was being endangered by Turkish
sharp-shooters. Russian recruits who were posted near
had fallen back in a scare, thrown down their rifles, and
simply run like hares. Skobeleff met them in full flight,
and in grim humour shouted: “Good health, my fine
fellows—my fine, brave fellows!”</p>
<p>The men halted and gave the customary salute, being
very shamefaced withal.</p>
<p>“You are all noble fellows; perfect heroes you are. I
am proud to command you!”</p>
<p>Silent and confounded, they shambled from one leg to
another.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“By the way,” said Skobeleff, still blandly smiling,
“I do not see your rifles!”</p>
<p>The men cast their eyes down and said not a word.</p>
<p>“Where are your rifles, I ask you?” in a sterner tone.</p>
<p>There was a painful silence, which Skobeleff broke with
a voice of thunder. His face changed to an awful frown,
his glance made the men cower.</p>
<p>“So you have thrown away your weapons! You are
cowards! You run away from Turks! You are a disgrace
to your country! My God! Right about face!
My children, follow me!”</p>
<p>The General marched them up to the spot where they
had left their rifles, and ordered them to take them up
and follow him. Then he led them out into the space in
front of the trench, right in the line of the Turkish fire,
and there he put them through their exercises, standing
with his back to the Turks, while the bullets could be
heard whistling over and around them. Only two of
them were hit during this strange drill. Then he let
them go back to their trenches, saying: “The next time
any one of you runs away, he will be shot!”</p>
<p>The investment of Plevna went on relentlessly through
October, November, and part of December. By the 9th
almost all their food was exhausted, and Osman determined
to try one last sortie before surrendering. Herbert
had charge of a train of a battalion outside the town. He
made up a fire, saw his men installed for the night, and
then walked to the town. A snowfall was coming down
lazily; bivouac fires lit up the gaunt figures of men and
beasts. The men, talking of to-morrow’s fight in a subdued
tone, were yet excited and eager. Many Turkish
residents, with their carts and vehicles, were spending the
night on the snow-covered plain, the men brooding and
gloomy, the veiled women sobbing, the children playing
hide-and-seek around the fires and among the carts. It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</SPAN></span>
was a weird sight—all these thousands eager to go out
after the army when the last struggle should have
carved them an open road through the surrounding
foe.</p>
<p>At head-quarters an officer met Herbert, and asked him
to post some labels at the ambulance doors of a certain
street. He says:</p>
<p>“Armed with a brush and paste-pot, I turned bill-sticker,
and affixed a notice on some twenty house doors
which were showing the ambulance flag. Anything more
dismal than that deserted town, abandoned by all but
dying and helpless men and some 400 starving Bulgarian
families, cannot be imagined. Desolate, dead, God-forsaken
Plevna during the night of the 9th and 10th of
December was no more like the thriving and pretty Plevna
of July than the decaying corpse of an old hag is like the
living body of a blooming girl. The streets, unlighted and
empty, save for a slouching outcast here and there bent
on rapine, echoed to the metallic ring of my solitary steps;
while occasional groans or curses proceeding from the
interior of the ambulances haunted me long afterwards
as sounding unearthly in the dark. Twice I stumbled
over corpses which had been thrust into the gutter as the
quickest way of getting rid of them.</p>
<p>“As I walked I had to shake myself and pinch my flesh,
so much like the phantasy of an ugly dream was the
scene to my mind. As I plied my brush on the door-panels,
I felt like one alive in a gigantic graveyard.</p>
<p>“At one of the ambulances I was bidden to enter, and
found, by the feeble light of a reeking oil-lamp, some
invalids fighting for a remnant of half-rotten food
which they had just discovered in a forgotten cupboard.
Men without legs, hands, or feet were clutching, scratching,
kicking, struggling for morsels that no respectable
dog or cat would look at twice. I pacified them, and dis<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</SPAN></span>tributed
the unsavoury bits of meat. As I turned to go
a man without legs caught hold of me from his mattress,
begging me to carry him to the train bivouac, that he
might follow the army. Happily an attendant turned up,
and I wrenched myself away.”</p>
<p>Herbert was returning by a narrow dark lane when
someone sprang upon him and tore the paste-pot away
from him. He had doubtless seen it by the light of the
Lieutenant’s lantern, and thought the vessel contained
food.</p>
<p>He belaboured the fellow’s face with his brush, making
it ghastly white, and setting him off to splutter and croak
and swear, and finally he rammed the bristles hard down
his throat. At this moment two other Bulgarians came
up; but, taking time by the forelock, Herbert pasted
their mouths and eyes before they could speak, then
shouted out, “Good-night, gentlemen, and I wish you a
very hearty appetite.” He then turned and ran for all
he was worth to the officers’ mess-room. It was about
ten o’clock p.m. when Osman Pasha and his staff rode up,
preceded by a mounted torch-bearer, and escorted by
a body of Saloniki cavalry.</p>
<p>When he came out again, the light from the torch fell
full upon his face. His features were drawn and care-worn,
the cheeks hollow; there were deep lines on the
forehead, and blue rings under his eyes. Their expression
was one of angry determination. He responded to the
salute with that peculiar nod which was more a frown
than a greeting. They all rose and went after him into
the street to see him mount his fine Arab horse. He and
his staff spent that last night in one of the farm-houses
on the western outskirts of Plevna.</p>
<p>After a supper of gruel and bread, Herbert and the others
walked in a body to the train bivouac. The night was
intensely dark; a few snowflakes were flying about; it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</SPAN></span>
was freezing a little. They did not talk, for each was
saying to himself, “It is all over with us now.” Hardly
any expected to see the next nightfall.</p>
<p>Herbert and two other Lieutenants slept in a hut by the
river’s brink; they could hear the water murmuring, and
every now and then a lump of ice made music against
the piles. A little after five in the morning he moved on,
crossed with the first division the shaky pontoon bridge,
and rejoined his company. Twenty-four crack battalions
of the First Division were marching on to face the ring of
Russian guns; the dark hoods of the great-coats drawn
over the fez and pointing upwards gave an element of
grotesqueness to the men. They were marching to certain
death, with hope in their hearts.</p>
<p>In front the Russian entrenchments rose out of the
vapours and fog in threatening silence; once beyond them,
and they were free! The country and military honour
called for this supreme sacrifice, and they offered it full
willingly.</p>
<p>At 9.30 a.m. the bugles sounded “Advance,” and the
whole line, two miles long, began to move in one grand
column. The Turks went at the quick, hurling a hail of
lead before them. The troops kept repeating the Arabic
phrase, “Bismillah rahmin!” (In the name of the merciful
God!), but the fire became so deadly that they came to a
dead-stop. The men in the front line lay down on their
stomachs. After an interval of ten minutes, the bugles
of the First Division sounded “Storm.”</p>
<p>The men jumped to their feet and rushed at the nearest
trench. A murderous discharge of rifle fire greeted them;
many bit the dust.</p>
<p>But very soon the Turks had the first trench in their
possession, then a second and third; and before they knew
what they were about, they were in the midst of the
Russian guns, hacking, clubbing, stabbing, shooting,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</SPAN></span>
whilst overhead flew countless shells, hissing and leaving
a white trail in their track.</p>
<p>Then they waited for the support of the second line,
which never came; but at noon the Russians came down
upon them in force. Herbert was ordered to ride and
report that they could not hold out longer without reinforcements.
He says:</p>
<p>“As I rode towards the centre, I was drawn into the
vortex of a most awful panic—a wild flight for safety to
the right bank of the river.</p>
<p>“I had never been in a general retreat. It is far more
terrible than the most desperate encounter. I was simply
drawn along in a mad stream of men, horses, and carts.
Officers, their faces streaming with perspiration in spite
of the cold, were trying to restore order; the train got
mixed with the infantry and the batteries, and the confusion
baffles description. My horse slipped into a ditch,
and I continued on foot. I heard that Osman had been
wounded and carted across the river; the pitiless shells
followed us even to the other side of the river. The
screams of the women in the carts unnerved many a sturdy
man. I came to a sort of barn, where two Saloniki
horsemen stood sentry. Being dead-beat and hungry to
starving-point, I sat down on a stone. Whilst I crunched
a biscuit a cart drove up, and a man badly wounded in
the leg was assisted into the building. So sallow and
pain-drawn was his face that at first I failed to recognize
Osman. There were tears in his eyes—tears of grief and
rage rather than of physical pain—and in their expression
lay that awful thought, ‘The game is up, the end is
come,’ which we see in Meissonier’s picture of Napoleon
in the retreat from Waterloo.”</p>
<p>The last sortie from Plevna was witnessed by Skobeleff
from the heights above. The Turkish infantry were
deploying with great smartness, taking advantage of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</SPAN></span>
cover afforded by the ground. The skirmishers were
already out in the open, driving before them the Russian
outposts.</p>
<p>Skobeleff was very excited.</p>
<p>“Were there ever more skilful tactics?” he said.
“They are born soldiers, those Turks—already half-way
to Ganetzky’s front, hidden first by the darkness and now
by the long bank under which they are forming in perfect
safety. Beautiful indeed! Never was a sortie more
skilfully prepared. How I should like to be in command
of it!”</p>
<p>Skobeleff then turned his glass on the Russian defence
line. He seldom swore, but now a torrent of oaths burst
from his lips.</p>
<p>“Oh, that ass—that consummate ass—Ganetzky!” he
shouted, striking his thigh with his clenched fist. “What
fool’s work! He had his orders; he was warned of the
intended sortie; he might have had any number of reinforcements.
And what preparation has he made? None.
He is confronting Osman’s army with six battalions when
he might have had twenty-four. Mark my words: the
Turks will carry our first line with a rush. We shall
retrieve it, but to have lost it for ever so short a time will
be our disgrace for ever.” Then Skobeleff spat angrily
and rode off at a gallop. How true those words were we
have seen already.</p>
<p>At 2 p.m. Osman had been obliged to surrender, and
shortly after he met the Russian Grand Duke Nicholas—Osman
in a carriage, Nicholas on horseback. They
looked one another long in the face, then Nicholas offered
his hand heartily, and said:</p>
<p>“General, I honour you for your noble defence of
Plevna. It has been among the most splendid examples
of skill and heroism in modern history!”</p>
<p>Osman’s face winced a little—perhaps a twitch of pain<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</SPAN></span>
crossed it—as, in spite of his wound, he struggled to his
feet and uttered a few broken words in a low tone. The
Russian officers saluted with great demonstration of respect,
and shouts of “Bravo!” rang out again and
again.</p>
<p>Poor victorious Osman! conquered at last by King
Famine. He had lived in a common green tent during
the whole period of the investment; his last night at
Plevna was the first he spent under a roof.</p>
<p>Lieutenant Herbert says concerning the surrender:
“As the Roumanian soldiers seized our weapons I became
possessed of an uncontrollable fury. I broke my sword,
thrust carbine, revolvers, and ammunition into the
waggon. A private with Semitic features perceived my
Circassian dagger, but I managed to spoil it by breaking
the point before handing it over. Another man annexed
my field-glass. I never saw my valise again, which had
been stored on one of the battalion’s carts. I had saved
a portion of my notes and manuscripts by carrying them
like a breast cuirass between uniform and vest. Having
given vent to rage, I fell into the opposite mood, and, sitting
down on a stone, I hid my face in my hands, and abandoned
myself to the bitterest half-hour of reflection I
have ever endured.”</p>
<p>Luckily Herbert fell in with a Roumanian Lieutenant
whom he knew, who took him to the Russian camp, and
gave him hot grog, bread, and cold meat. “How we
devoured the food!” he says. “We actually licked the
mugs out.”</p>
<p>As they walked away in the dark to their night quarters,
they happened to pass the spot where Herbert’s battalion
was encamped, without fires or tents, in an open, snow-covered
field, exposed to the north wind. Cries of distress
and rage greeted them, and they found that the
drunken Russian soldiers were robbing their Turkish<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</SPAN></span>
prisoners, not only of watches, money, etc., but also of
their biscuits—their only food.</p>
<p>Herbert stopped for a minute, and gave away all he
had left; but some Russians jumped upon him and rifled
his pockets, before he could recall his companions to his
aid. Everybody in camp seemed to be drunk. Herbert
went to sleep in a mud hut, and slept for twelve hours
without awaking, being very kindly treated by a Russian
Major.</p>
<p>But the Turks suffered terribly. They spent the night of
the 10th on the same cold spot. Their arms had been
taken from them, also their money, biscuits, and even their
great-coats. It froze and snowed, and they were allowed
no fires.</p>
<p>It was a fortnight before all the prisoners had left the
neighbourhood; during this time from 3,000 to 4,000
men had succumbed to their privations. The defence of
Plevna had lasted 143 days. As the Grand Duke Nicholas
told Osman, it was one of the finest things done in military
history. But it cost the Russians 55,000 men, the Roumanians
10,000, and the Turks 30,000.</p>
<p>There is a Turkish proverb, “Though your enemy be
as small as an ant, yet act as if he were as big as an elephant.”
Had the Russians been guided by this, they
might have saved many losses.</p>
<p>“One bitterly cold morning, with two feet of snow on
the ground, I joined a detachment of prisoners, escorted
by Roumanians. We travelled viâ Sistoon to Bukarest,
crossing the Danube by the Russian pontoon bridge.
This journey, which lasted eight days, was the most
dreadful part of my experience, lying as it did through
snow-clad country, with storms and bitter winds. I and
fifty others had seats on carts; the bulk of the prisoners
had to tramp. I saw at least 400 men drop, to be taken
as little notice of as if they were so much offal, to die of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</SPAN></span>
starvation, or be devoured by the wolves which prowled
around our column.</p>
<p>“Over each man who fell a hideous crowd of crows,
ravens, vultures, hovered until he was exhausted enough
to be attacked with impunity.</p>
<p>“Some of the soldiers of the escort were extremely
brutal; others displayed a touching kindness; most were as
stolid and apathetic as their captives. Of Osman’s army
of 48,000 men, only 15,000 reached Russian soil; only
12,000 returned to their homes.</p>
<p>“In Bukarest our sufferings were at an end. In the
streets ladies distributed coffee, broth, bread, tobacco,
cigarettes, spirit. Our quarters in the barracks appeared
to us like Paradise.”</p>
<p>Then by train to Kharkoff, where Herbert got a cheque
from his father, and was allowed much freedom on parole;
he made many friends, was lionized and feasted and fattened
“like a show beast.” “I was treated,” he says,
“with all the chivalrous kindness and open-handed hospitality
which are the characteristics of the educated
Russians. The effects of the brutal propensities developed
in warfare wore off speedily, and I am now a
mild and inoffensive being, whose conscience does not
allow the killing of a flea or the plucking of a flower!”</p>
<p class="source">From “The Defence of Plevna,” by W. V. Herbert, 1895, by
kind permission of Messrs. Longmans, Green and Co.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</SPAN></span></p>
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