<h2><SPAN href="#Contents">CHAPTER X</SPAN></h2>
<h3>France to the Rescue</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">During</span> 1778 and 1779 French effort had failed.
Now France resolved to do
something decisive. She never sent across the sea the eight thousand men
promised to La Fayette but by the spring of 1780 about this number were
gathered at Brest to find that transport was inadequate. The leader was a
French noble, the Comte de Rochambeau, an old campaigner, now in his
fifty-fifth year, who had fought against England before in the Seven
Years' War and had then been opposed by Clinton, Cornwallis, and Lord
George Germain. He was a sound and prudent soldier who shares with La
Fayette the chief glory of the French service in America. Rochambeau had
fought at the second battle of Minden, where the father of La Fayette had
fallen, and he had for the ardent young Frenchman the amiable regard of a
father and sometimes rebuked his impulsiveness in that spirit. He studied
the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">231</SPAN></span>
problem in America with the insight of a trained leader. Before he
left France he made the pregnant comment on the outlook: <q>Nothing
without naval supremacy.</q> About the same time Washington was writing
to La Fayette that a decisive naval supremacy was a fundamental need.</p>
<p>A gallant company it was which gathered at Brest. Probably no other land
than France could have sent forth on a crusade for democratic liberty a
band of aristocrats who had little thought of applying to their own land
the principles for which they were ready to fight in America. Over some of
them hung the shadow of the guillotine; others were to ride the storm of
the French Revolution and to attain fame which should surpass their
sanguine dreams. Rochambeau himself, though he narrowly escaped during the
Reign of Terror, lived to extreme old age and died a Marshal of France.
Berthier, one of his officers, became one of Napoleon's marshals and died
just when Napoleon, whom he had deserted, returned from Elba. Dumas became
another of Napoleon's generals. He nearly perished in the retreat from
Moscow but lived, like Rochambeau, to extreme old age. One of the gayest
of the company was the Duc de Lauzun, a noted libertine in France but, as
far as
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">232</SPAN></span>
the record goes, a man of blameless propriety in America. He died
on the scaffold during the French Revolution. So, too, did his companion,
the Prince de Broglie, in spite of the protest of his last words that he
was faithful to the principles of the Revolution, some of which he had
learned in America. Another companion was the Swedish Count Fersen, later
the devoted friend of the unfortunate Queen Marie Antoinette, the driver
of the carriage in which the royal family made the famous flight to
Varennes in 1791, and himself destined to be trampled to death by a
Swedish mob in 1810. Other old and famous names there were:
Laval-Montmorency, Mirabeau, Talleyrand, Saint-Simon. It has been said
that the names of the French officers in America read like a list of
medieval heroes in the Chronicles of Froissart.</p>
<p>Only half of the expected ships were ready at Brest and only five thousand
five hundred men could embark. The vessels were, of course, very crowded.
Rochambeau cut down the space allowed for personal effects. He took no
horse for himself and would allow none to go, but he permitted a few dogs.
Forty-five ships set sail, <q>a truly imposing sight,</q> said one of
those on board. We have reports of their <i>ennui</i> on the long voyage
of seventy
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">233</SPAN></span>
days,
of their amusements and their devotions, for twice daily were prayers read
on deck. They sailed into Newport on the 11th of July and the inhabitants
of that still primitive spot illuminated their houses as best they could.
Then the army settled down at Newport and there it remained for many weary
months. Reinforcements never came, partly through mismanagement in France,
partly through the vigilance of the British fleet, which was on guard
before Brest. The French had been for generations the deadly enemies of
the English Colonies and some of the French officers noted the reserve
with which they were received. The ice was, however, soon broken. They
brought with them gold, and the New England merchants liked this relief
from the debased continental currency. Some of the New England ladies were
beautiful, and the experienced Lauzun expresses glowing admiration for a
prim Quakeress whose simple dress he thought more attractive than the
elaborate modes of Paris.</p>
<p>The French dazzled the ragged American army by their display of waving
plumes and of uniforms in striking colors. They wondered at the quantities
of tea drunk by their friends and so do we when we remember the political
hatred for tea. They
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">234</SPAN></span>
made the blunder common in Europe of thinking that
there were no social distinctions in America. Washington could have told
him a different story. Intercourse was at first difficult, for few of the
Americans spoke French and fewer still of the French spoke English.
Sometimes the talk was in Latin, pronounced by an American scholar as not
too bad. A French officer writing in Latin to an American friend announces
his intention to learn English: <q><i>Inglicam linguam noscere
conabor.</i></q> He made the effort and he and his fellow officers
learned a quaint English speech. When Rochambeau and Washington first
met they conversed through La Fayette, as interpreter, but in time the
older man did very well in the language of his American comrade in arms.</p>
<p>For a long time the French army effected nothing. Washington longed to
attack New York and urged the effort, but the wise and experienced
Rochambeau applied his principle, <q>nothing without naval supremacy,</q>
and insisted that in such an attack a powerful fleet should act with a
powerful army, and, for the moment, the French had no powerful fleet
available. The British were blockading in Narragansett Bay the French
fleet which lay there. Had the French army moved away
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">235</SPAN></span>
from Newport their
fleet would almost certainly have become a prey to the British. For the
moment there was nothing to do but to wait. The French preserved an
admirable discipline. Against their army there are no records of outrage
and plunder such as we have against the German allies of the British. We
must remember, however, that the French were serving in the country of
their friends, with every restraint of good feeling which this involved.
Rochambeau told his men that they must not be the theft of a bit of wood,
or of any vegetables, or of even a sheaf of straw. He threatened the vice
which he called <q>sonorous drunkenness,</q> and even lack of cleanliness,
with sharp punishment. The result was that a month after landing he could
say that not a cabbage had been stolen. Our credulity is strained when we
are told that apple trees with their fruit overhung the tents of his
soldiers and remained untouched. Thousands flocked to see the French camp.
The bands played and Puritan maidens of all grades of society danced with
the young French officers and we are told, whether we believe it or not,
that there was the simple innocence of the Garden of Eden. The zeal of the
French officers and the friendly disposition of the men never failed.
There had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">236</SPAN></span>
been bitter quarrels in 1778 and 1779 and now the French were
careful to be on their good behavior in America. Rochambeau had been
instructed to place himself under the command of Washington, to whom were
given the honors of a Marshal of France. The French admiral, had, however,
been given no such instructions and Washington had no authority over the
fleet.</p>
<hr class="break" />
<p>Meanwhile events were happening which might have brought a British
triumph. On September 14, 1780, there arrived and anchored at Sandy Hook,
New York, fourteen British ships of the line under Rodney, the doughtiest
of the British admirals afloat. Washington, with his army headquarters at
West Point, on guard to keep the British from advancing up the Hudson, was
looking for the arrival, not of a British fleet, but of a French fleet,
from the West Indies. For him these were very dark days. The recent defeat
at Camden was a crushing blow. Congress was inept and had in it men, as
the patient General Greene said, <q>without principles, honor or
modesty.</q> The coming of the British fleet was a new and overwhelming
discouragement, and, on the 18th of September, Washington left West Point
for a long
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">237</SPAN></span>
ride
to Hartford in Connecticut, half way between the two headquarters, there
to take counsel with the French general. Rochambeau, it was said, had been
purposely created to understand Washington, but as yet the two leaders had
not met. It is the simple truth that Washington had to go to the French as
a beggar. Rochambeau said later that Washington was afraid to reveal the
extent of his distress. He had to ask for men and for ships, but he had
also to ask for what a proud man dislikes to ask, for money from the
stranger who had come to help him.</p>
<p>The Hudson had long been the chief object of Washington's anxiety and now
it looked as if the British intended some new movement up the river, as
indeed they did. Clinton had not expected Rodney's squadron, but it
arrived opportunely and, when it sailed up to New York from Sandy Hook, on
the 16th of September, he began at once to embark his army, taking pains
at the same time to send out reports that he was going to the Chesapeake.
Washington concluded that the opposite was true and that he was likely to
be going northward. At West Point, where the Hudson flows through a
mountainous gap, Washington had strong defenses on both shores of the
river. His
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">238</SPAN></span>
batteries commanded its whole width, but shore batteries were
ineffective against moving ships. The embarking of Clinton's army meant
that he planned operations on land. He might be going to Rhode Island or
to Boston but he might also dash up the Hudson. It was an anxious leader
who, with La Fayette and Alexander Hamilton, rode away from headquarters
to Hartford.</p>
<p>The officer in command at West Point was Benedict Arnold. No general on
the American side had a more brilliant record or could show more scars of
battle. We have seen him leading an army through the wilderness to Quebec,
and incurring hardships almost incredible. Later he is found on Lake
Champlain, fighting on both land and water. When in the next year the
Americans succeeded at Saratoga it was Arnold who bore the brunt of the
fighting. At Quebec and again at Saratoga he was severely wounded. In the
summer of 1778 he was given the command at Philadelphia, after the British
evacuation. It was a troubled time. Arnold was concerned with
confiscations of property for treason and with disputes about ownership.
Impulsive, ambitious, and with a certain element of coarseness in his
nature, he made enemies. He was involved in bitter strife with both
Congress
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">239</SPAN></span>
and the State government of Pennsylvania. After a period of
tension and privation in war, one of slackness and luxury is almost
certain to follow. Philadelphia, which had recently suffered for want of
bare necessities, now relapsed into gay indulgence. Arnold lived
extravagantly. He played a conspicuous part in society and, a widower of
thirty-five, was successful in paying court to Miss Shippen, a young lady
of twenty, with whom, as Washington said, all the American officers were
in love.</p>
<p>Malignancy was rampant and Arnold was pursued with great bitterness.
Joseph Reed, the President of the Executive Council of Pennsylvania, not
only brought charge against him of abusing his position for his own
advantage, but also laid the charges before each State government. In the
end Arnold was tried by court-martial and after long and inexcusable
delay, on January 26, 1780, he was acquitted of everything but the
imprudence of using, in an emergency, public wagons to remove private
property, and of granting irregularly a pass to a ship to enter the port
of Philadelphia. Yet the court ordered that for these trifles Arnold
should receive a public reprimand from the Commander-in-Chief. Washington
gave
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">240</SPAN></span>
the reprimand in terms as gentle as possible, and when, in July,
1780, Arnold asked for the important command at West Point, Washington
readily complied probably with relief that so important a position should
be in such good hands.</p>
<p>The treason of Arnold now came rapidly to a head. The man was embittered.
He had rendered great services and yet had been persecuted with spiteful
persistence. The truth seems to be, too, that Arnold thought America ripe
for reconciliation with Great Britain. He dreamed that he might be the
saviour of his country. Monk had reconciled the English republic to the
restored Stuart King Charles II; Arnold might reconcile the American
republic to George III for the good of both. That reconciliation he
believed was widely desired in America. He tried to persuade himself that
to change sides in this civil strife was no more culpable then to turn
from one party to another in political life. He forgot, however, that it
is never honorable to betray a trust.</p>
<p>It is almost certain that Arnold received a large sum in money for his
treachery. However this may be, there was treason in his heart when he
asked for and received the command at West Point, and he intended to use
his authority to surrender
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</SPAN></span>
that vital post to the British. And now on the
18th of September Washington was riding northeastward into Connecticut,
British troops were on board ships in New York and all was ready. On the
20th of September the <i>Vulture</i>, sloop of war, sailed up the Hudson
from New York and anchored at Stony Point, a few miles below West Point.
On board the <i>Vulture</i> was the British officer who was treating with
Arnold and who now came to arrange terms with him, Major John
André, Clinton's young adjutant general, a man of attractive
personality. Under cover of night Arnold sent off a boat to bring
André ashore to a remote thicket of fir trees, outside the American
lines. There the final plans were made. The British fleet, carrying an
army, was to sail up the river. A heavy chain had been placed across the
river at West Point to bar the way of hostile ships. Under pretense of
repairs a link was to be taken out and replaced by a rope which would
break easily. The defenses of West Point were to be so arranged that
they could not meet a sudden attack and Arnold was to surrender with his
force of three thousand men. Such a blow following the disasters at
Charleston and Camden might end the strife. Britain was
prepared to yield everything but
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</SPAN></span>
separation; and America, Arnold said, could now make an honorable peace.</p>
<p>A chapter of accidents prevented the testing. Had André been rowed
ashore by British tars they could have taken him back to the ship at his
command before daylight. As it was the American boatmen, suspicious
perhaps of the meaning of this talk at midnight between an American
officer and a British officer, both of them in uniform, refused to row
André back to the ship because their own return would be dangerous
in daylight. Contrary to his instructions and wishes André
accompanied Arnold to a house within the American lines to wait until he
could be taken off under cover of night. Meanwhile, however, an American
battery on shore, angry at the <i>Vulture</i>, lying defiantly within
range, opened fire upon her and she dropped down stream some miles. This
was alarming. Arnold, however, arranged with a man to row André
down the river and about midday went back to West Point.</p>
<p>It was uncertain how far the <i>Vulture</i> had gone. The vigilance of
those guarding the river was aroused and André's guide insisted
that he should go to the British lines by land. He was carrying
compromising papers and wearing civilian dress
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</SPAN></span>
when seized by an American party and held under close arrest. Arnold
meanwhile, ignorant of this delay, was waiting for the expected advance
up the river of the British fleet. He learned of the arrest of
André while at breakfast on the morning of the twenty-fifth,
waiting to be joined by Washington, who had just ridden in from Hartford.
Arnold received the startling news with extraordinary composure, finished
the subject under discussion, and then left the table under pretext of a
summons from across the river. Within a few minutes his barge was moving
swiftly to the <i>Vulture</i> eighteen miles away. Thus Arnold escaped.
The unhappy André was hanged as a spy on the 2d of October. He met
his fate bravely. Washington, it is said, shed tears at its stern
necessity under military law. Forty years later the bones of André
were reburied in Westminster Abbey, a tribute of pity for a fine officer.</p>
<p>The treason of Arnold is not in itself important, yet Washington wrote
with deep conviction that Providence had directly intervened to save the
American cause. Arnold might be only one of many. Washington said, indeed,
that it was a wonder there were not more. In a civil war every one of
importance is likely to have ties with both
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</SPAN></span>
sides, regrets for the friends
he has lost, misgivings in respect to the course he has adopted. In April,
1779, Arnold had begun his treason by expressing discontent at the
alliance with France then working so disastrously. His future lay before
him; he was still under forty; he had just married into a family of
position; he expected that both he and his descendants would spend their
lives in America and he must have known that contempt would follow them
for the conduct which he planned if it was regarded by public opinion as
base. Voices in Congress, too, had denounced the alliance with France as
alliance with tyranny, political and religious. Members praised the
liberties of England and had declared that the Declaration of Independence
must be revoked and that now it could be done with honor since the
Americans had proved their metal. There was room for the fear that the
morale of the Americans was giving way.</p>
<p>The defection of Arnold might also have military results. He had bargained
to be made a general in the British army and he had intimate knowledge of
the weak points in Washington's position. He advised the British that if
they would do two things, offer generous terms to soldiers serving in the
American army, and concentrate their effort,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">245</SPAN></span>
they could win the war. With
a cynical knowledge of the weaker side of human nature, he declared that
it was too expensive a business to bring men from England to serve in
America. They could be secured more cheaply in America; it would be
necessary only to pay them better than Washington could pay his army. As
matters stood the Continental troops were to have half pay for seven years
after the close of the war and grants of land ranging from one hundred
acres for a private to eleven hundred acres for a general. Make better
offers than this, urged Arnold; <q>Money will go farther than arms in
America.</q> If the British would concentrate on the Hudson where the
defenses were weak they could drive a wedge between North and South. If on
the other hand they preferred to concentrate in the South, leaving only a
garrison in New York, they could overrun Virginia and Maryland and then
the States farther south would give up a fight in which they were already
beaten. Energy and enterprise, said Arnold, will quickly win the war.</p>
<p>In the autumn of 1780 the British cause did, indeed, seem near triumph. An
election in England in October gave the ministry an increased majority and
with this renewed determination.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">246</SPAN></span>
When Holland, long a secret enemy, became
an open one in December, 1780, Admiral Rodney descended on the Dutch
island of St. Eustatius, in the West Indies, where the Americans were in
the habit of buying great quantities of stores and on the 3d of February,
1781, captured the place with two hundred merchant ships, half a dozen
men-of-war, and stores to the value of three million pounds. The capture
cut off one chief source of supply to the United States. By January, 1781,
a crisis in respect to money came to a head. Fierce mutinies broke out
because there was no money to provide food, clothing, or pay for the army
and the men were in a destitute condition. <q>These people are at the end
of their resources,</q> wrote Rochambeau in March. Arnold's treason, the
halting voices in Congress, the disasters in the South, the British
success in cutting off supplies of stores from St. Eustatius, the sordid
problem of money—all these were well fitted to depress the worn
leader so anxiously watching on the Hudson. It was the dark hour before
the dawn.</p>
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