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<h2> CHAPTER II — THE YOUNG SOLDIER, 1741-1748 </h2>
<p>Wolfe's short life may be divided into four periods, all easy to remember,
because all are connected with the same number-seven. He was fourteen
years a boy at home, with one attempt to be a soldier. This period lasted
from 1727 to 1741. Then he was seven years a young officer in time of war,
from 1741 to 1748. Then he served seven years more in time of peace, from
1748 to 1755. Lastly, he died in the middle, at the very climax, of the
world-famous Seven Years' War, in 1759.</p>
<p>After the royal review at Blackheath in the spring of 1742 the army
marched down to Deptford and embarked for Flanders. Wolfe was now off to
the very places he had heard his father tell about again and again. The
surly Flemings were still the same as when his father knew them. They
hated their British allies almost as much as they hated their enemies. The
long column of redcoats marched through a scowling mob of citizens, who
meanly grudged a night's lodging to the very men coming there to fight for
them. We may be sure that Wolfe thought little enough of such mean people
as he stepped out with the colours flying above his head. The army halted
at Ghent, an ancient city, famous for its trade and wealth, and defended
by walls which had once resisted Marlborough.</p>
<p>At first there was a good deal to do and see; and George Warde was there
too, as an officer in a cavalry regiment. But Warde had to march away; and
Wolfe was left without any companion of his own age, to pass his spare
time the best way he could. Like another famous soldier, Frederick the
Great, who first won his fame in this very war, he was fond of music and
took lessons on the flute. He also did his best to improve his French; and
when Warde came back the two friends used to go to the French theatre.
Wolfe put his French to other use as well, and read all the military books
he could find time for. He always kept his kit ready to pack; so that he
could have marched anywhere within two hours of receiving the order. And,
though only a mere boy-officer, he began to learn the duties of an
adjutant, so that he might be fit for promotion whenever the chance should
come.</p>
<p>Months wore on and Wolfe was still at Ghent. He had made friends during
his stay, and he tells his mother in September: 'This place is full of
officers, and we never want company. I go to the play once or twice a
week, and talk a little with the ladies, who are very civil and speak
French.' Before Christmas it had been decided at home—where the
war-worn father now was, after a horrible campaign at Cartagena—that
Edward, the younger son, was also to be allowed to join the Army. Wolfe
was delighted. 'My brother is much to be commended for the pains he takes
to improve himself. I hope to see him soon in Flanders, when, in all
probability, before next year is over, we may know something of our
trade.' And so they did!</p>
<p>The two brothers marched for the Rhine early in 1743, both in the same
regiment. James was now sixteen, Edward fifteen. The march was a terrible
one for such delicate boys. The roads were ankle-deep in mud; the weather
was vile; both food and water were very bad. Even the dauntless Wolfe had
to confess to his mother that he was 'very much fatigued and out of order.
I never come into quarters without aching hips and knees.' Edward, still
more delicate, was sent off on a foraging party to find something for the
regiment to eat. He wrote home to his father from Bonn on April 7: 'We can
get nothing upon our march but eggs and bacon and sour bread. I have no
bedding, nor can get it anywhere. We had a sad march last Monday in the
morning. I was obliged to walk up to my knees in snow, though my brother
and I have a horse between us. I have often lain upon straw, and should
oftener, had I not known some French, which I find very useful; though I
was obliged the other day to speak <i>Latin</i> for a good dinner. We send
for everything we want to the priest.'</p>
<p>That summer, when the king arrived with his son the Duke of Cumberland,
the British and Hanoverian army was reduced to 37,000 half-fed men. Worse
still, the old general, Lord Stair, had led it into a very bad place.
These 37,000 men were cooped up on the narrow side of the valley of the
river Main, while a much larger French army was on the better side,
holding bridges by which to cut them off and attack them while they were
all clumped together. Stair tried to slip away in the night. But the
French, hearing of this attempt, sent 12,000 men across the river to hold
the place the British general was leaving, and 30,000 more, under the Duc
de Gramont, to block the road at the place towards which he was evidently
marching. At daylight the British and Hanoverians found themselves cut
off, both front and rear, while a third French force was waiting to pounce
on whichever end showed weakness first. The King of England, who was also
Elector of Hanover, would be a great prize, and the French were eager to
capture him. This was how the armies faced each other on the morning of
June 27, 1743, at Dettingen, the last battlefield on which any king of
England has fought in person, and the first for Wolfe.</p>
<p>The two young brothers were now about to see a big battle, like those of
which their father used to tell them. Strangely enough, Amherst, the
future commander-in-chief in America, under whom Wolfe served at
Louisbourg, and the two men who succeeded Wolfe in command at Quebec—Monckton
and Townshend—were also there. It is an awful moment for a young
soldier, the one before his first great fight. And here were nearly a
hundred thousand men, all in full view of each other, and all waiting for
the word to begin. It was a beautiful day, and the sun shone down on a
splendidly martial sight. There stood the British and Hanoverians, with
wooded hills on their right, the river and the French on their left, the
French in their rear, and the French very strongly posted on the rising
ground straight in their front. The redcoats were in dense columns, their
bayonets flashing and their colours waving defiance. Side by side with
their own red cavalry were the black German cuirassiers, the blue German
lancers, and the gaily dressed green and scarlet Hungarian hussars. The
long white lines of the three French armies, varied with royal blue,
encircled them on three sides. On the fourth were the leafy green hills.</p>
<p>Wolfe was acting as adjutant and helping the major. His regiment had
neither colonel nor lieutenant-colonel with it that day; so he had plenty
to do, riding up and down to see that all ranks understood the order that
they were not to fire till they were close to the French and were given
the word for a volley. He cast a glance at his brother, standing straight
and proudly with the regimental colours that he himself had carried past
the king at Blackheath the year before. He was not anxious about 'Ned'; he
knew how all the Wolfes could fight. He was not anxious about himself; he
was only too eager for the fray. A first battle tries every man, and few
have not dry lips, tense nerves, and beating hearts at its approach. But
the great anxiety of an officer going into action for the first time with
untried men is for them and not for himself. The agony of wondering
whether they will do well or not is worse, a thousand times, than what he
fears for his own safety.</p>
<p>Presently the French gunners, in the centre of their position across the
Main, lit their matches and, at a given signal, fired a salvo into the
British rear. Most of the baggage wagons were there; and, as the shot and
shell began to knock them over, the drivers were seized with a panic.
Cutting the traces, these men galloped off up the hills and into the woods
as hard as they could go. Now battery after battery began to thunder, and
the fire grew hot all round. The king had been in the rear, as he did not
wish to change the command on the eve of the battle. But, seeing the
panic, he galloped through the whole of his army to show that he was going
to fight beside his men. As he passed, and the men saw what he intended to
do, they cheered and cheered, and took heart so boldly that it was hard
work to keep them from rushing up the heights of Dettingen, where
Gramont's 30,000 Frenchmen were waiting to shoot them down.</p>
<p>Across the river Marshal Noailles, the French commander-in-chief, saw the
sudden stir in the British ranks, heard the roaring hurrahs, and supposed
that his enemies were going to be fairly caught against Gramont in front.
In this event he could finish their defeat himself by an overwhelming
attack in flank. Both his own and Gramont's artillery now redoubled their
fire, till the British could hardly stand it. But then, to the rage and
despair of Noailles, Gramont's men, thinking the day was theirs, suddenly
left their strong position and charged down on to the same level as the
British, who were only too pleased to meet them there. The king, seeing
what a happy turn things were taking, galloped along the front of his
army, waving his sword and calling out, 'Now, boys! Now for the honour of
England!' His horse, maddened by the din, plunged and reared, and would
have run away with him, straight in among the French, if a young officer
called Trapaud had not seized the reins. The king then dismounted and put
himself at the head of his troops, where he remained fighting, sword in
hand, till the battle was over.</p>
<p>Wolfe and his major rode along the line of their regiment for the last
time. There was not a minute to lose. Down came the Royal Musketeers of
France, full gallop, smash through the Scots Fusiliers and into the line
in rear, where most of them were unhorsed and killed. Next, both sides
advanced their cavalry, but without advantage to either. Then, with a
clear front once more, the main bodies of the French and British infantry
rushed together for a fight to a finish. Nearly all of Wolfe's regiment
were new to war and too excited to hold their fire. When they were within
range, and had halted for a moment to steady the ranks, they brought their
muskets down to the 'present.' The French fell flat on their faces and the
bullets whistled harmlessly over them. Then they sprang to their feet and
poured in a steady volley while the British were reloading. But the second
British volley went home. When the two enemies closed on each other with
the bayonet, like the meeting of two stormy seas, the British fought with
such fury that the French ranks were broken. Soon the long white waves
rolled back and the long red waves rolled forward. Dettingen was reached
and the desperate fight was won.</p>
<p>Both the boy-officers wrote home, Edward to his mother; James to his
father. Here is a part of Edward's letter:</p>
<p>My brother and self escaped in the engagement and,<br/>
thank God, are as well as ever we were in our lives,<br/>
after not only being cannonaded two hours and<br/>
three-quarters, and fighting with small arms [muskets<br/>
and bayonets] two hours and one-quarter, but lay the<br/>
two following nights upon our arms; whilst it rained<br/>
for about twenty hours in the same time, yet are ready<br/>
and as capable to do the same again. The Duke of<br/>
Cumberland behaved charmingly. Our regiment has got<br/>
a great deal of honour, for we were in the middle of<br/>
the first line, and in the greatest danger. My brother<br/>
has wrote to my father and I believe has given him a<br/>
small account of the battle, so I hope you will excuse<br/>
it me.<br/></p>
<p>A manly and soldier-like letter for a boy of fifteen! Wolfe's own is much
longer and full of touches that show how cool and observant he was, even
in his first battle and at the age of only sixteen. Here is some of it:</p>
<p>The Gens d'Armes, or Mousquetaires Gris, attacked the<br/>
first line, composed of nine regiments of English<br/>
foot, and four or five of Austrians, and some<br/>
Hanoverians. But before they got to the second line,<br/>
out of two hundred there were not forty living. These<br/>
unhappy men were of the first families in France.<br/>
Nothing, I believe, could be more rash than their<br/>
undertaking. The third and last attack was made by<br/>
the foot on both sides. We advanced towards one another;<br/>
our men in high spirits, and very impatient for<br/>
fighting, being elated with beating the French Horse,<br/>
part of which advanced towards us; while the rest<br/>
attacked our Horse, but were soon driven back by the<br/>
great fire we gave them. The major and I (for we had<br/>
neither colonel nor lieutenant-colonel), before they<br/>
came near, were employed in begging and ordering the<br/>
men not to fire at too great a distance, but to keep<br/>
it till the enemy should come near us; but to little<br/>
purpose. The whole fired when they thought they could<br/>
reach them, which had like to have ruined us. However,<br/>
we soon rallied again, and attacked them with great<br/>
fury, which gained us a complete victory, and forced<br/>
the enemy to retire in great haste. We got the sad<br/>
news of the death of as good and brave a man as any<br/>
amongst us, General Clayton. His death gave us all<br/>
sorrow, so great was the opinion we had of him. He<br/>
had, 'tis said, orders for pursuing the enemy, and if<br/>
we had followed them, they would not have repassed<br/>
the Main with half their number. Their loss is computed<br/>
to be between six and seven thousand men, and ours<br/>
three thousand. His Majesty was in the midst of the<br/>
fight; and the duke behaved as bravely as a man could<br/>
do. I had several times the honour of speaking with<br/>
him just as the battle began and was often afraid of<br/>
his being dashed to pieces by the cannon-balls. He<br/>
gave his orders with a great deal of calmness and<br/>
seemed quite unconcerned. The soldiers were in high<br/>
delight to have him so near them. I sometimes thought<br/>
I had lost poor Ned when I saw arms, legs, and heads<br/>
beat off close by him. A horse I rid of the colonel's,<br/>
at the first attack, was shot in one of his hinder<br/>
legs and threw me; so I was obliged to do the duty of<br/>
an adjutant all that and the next day on foot, in a<br/>
pair of heavy boots. Three days after the battle I<br/>
got the horse again, and he is almost well.<br/></p>
<p>Shortly after Dettingen Wolfe was appointed adjutant and promoted to a
lieutenancy. In the next year he was made a captain in the 4th Foot while
his brother became a lieutenant in the 12th. After this they had very few
chances of meeting; and Edward, who had caught a deadly chill, died alone
in Flanders, not yet seventeen years old. Wolfe wrote home to his mother:</p>
<p>Poor Ned wanted nothing but the satisfaction of seeing<br/>
his dearest friends to leave the world with the greatest<br/>
tranquillity. It gives me many uneasy hours when I<br/>
reflect on the possibility there was of my being with<br/>
him before he died. God knows it was not apprehending<br/>
the danger the poor fellow was in; and even that would<br/>
not have hindered it had I received the physician's<br/>
first letter. I know you won't be able to read this<br/>
without shedding tears, as I do writing it. Though it<br/>
is the custom of the army to sell the deceased's<br/>
effects, I could not suffer it. We none of us want,<br/>
and I thought the best way would be to bestow them on<br/>
the deserving whom he had an esteem for in his lifetime.<br/>
To his servant—the most honest and faithful man I<br/>
ever knew—I gave all his clothes. I gave his horse<br/>
to his friend Parry. I know he loved Parry; and for<br/>
that reason the horse will be taken care of. His other<br/>
horse I keep myself. I have his watch, sash, gorget,<br/>
books, and maps, which I shall preserve to his memory.<br/>
He was an honest and good lad, had lived very well,<br/>
and always discharged his duty with the cheerfulness<br/>
becoming a good officer. He lived and died as a son<br/>
of you two should. There was no part of his life that<br/>
makes him dearer to me than what you so often<br/>
mentioned—<i>he pined after me</i>.<br/></p>
<p>It was this pining to follow Wolfe to the wars that cost poor Ned his
life. But did not Wolfe himself pine to follow his father?</p>
<p>The next year, 1745, the Young Pretender, 'Bonnie Prince Charlie,' raised
the Highland clans on behalf of his father, won several battles, and
invaded England, in the hope of putting the Hanoverian Georges off the
throne of Great Britain and regaining it for the exiled Stuarts. The Duke
of Cumberland was sent to crush him; and with the duke went Wolfe. Prince
Charlie's army retreated and was at last brought to bay on Culloden Moor,
six miles from Inverness. The Highlanders were not in good spirits after
their long retreat before the duke's army, which enjoyed an immense
advantage in having a fleet following it along the coast with plenty of
provisions, while the prince's wretched army was half starved. We may be
sure the lesson was not lost on Wolfe. Nobody understood better than he
that the fleet is the first thing to consider in every British war. And
nobody saw a better example of this than he did afterwards in Canada.</p>
<p>At daybreak on April 16, 1746, the Highlanders found the duke's army
marching towards Inverness, and drew up in order to prevent it. Both
armies halted, each hoping the other would make the mistake of charging.
At last, about one o'clock, the Highlanders in the centre and right could
be held back no longer. So eager were they to get at the redcoats that
most of them threw down their muskets without even firing them, and then
rushed on furiously, sword in hand. ''Twas for a time,' said Wolfe, 'a
dispute between the swords and bayonets, but the latter was found by far
the most destructable [sic] weapon.' No quarter was given or taken on
either side during an hour of desperate fighting hand to hand. By that
time the steady ranks of the redcoats, aided by the cavalry, had killed
five times as many as they had lost by the wild slashing of the claymores.
The Highlanders turned and fled. The Stuart cause was lost for ever.</p>
<p>Again another year of fighting: this time in Holland, where the British,
Dutch, and Austrians under the Duke of Cumberland met the French at the
village of Laffeldt, on June 21, 1747. Wolfe was now a brigade-major,
which gave him the same sort of position in a brigade of three battalions
as an adjutant has in a single one; that is, he was a smart junior officer
picked out to help the brigadier in command by seeing that orders were
obeyed. The fight was furious. As fast as the British infantry drove back
one French brigade another came forward and drove the British back. The
village was taken and lost, lost and taken, over and over again. Wolfe,
though wounded, kept up the fight. At last a new French brigade charged in
and swept the British out altogether. Then the duke ordered the Dutch and
Austrians to advance: But the Dutch cavalry, right in the centre, were
seized with a sudden panic and galloped back, knocking over their own men
on the way, and making a gap that certainly looked fatal. But the right
man was ready to fill it. This was Sir John Ligonier, afterwards
commander-in-chief of the British Army at the time of Wolfe's campaigns in
Canada. He led the few British and Austrian cavalry, among them the famous
Scots Greys, straight into the gap and on against the dense masses of the
French beyond. These gallant horsemen were doomed; and of course they knew
it when they dashed themselves to death against such overwhelming odds.
But they gained the few precious moments that were needed. The gap closed
up behind them; and the army was saved, though they were lost.</p>
<p>During the day Wolfe was several times in great danger. He was thanked by
the duke in person for the splendid way in which he had done his duty. The
royal favour, however, did not make him forget the gallant conduct of his
faithful servant, Roland: 'He came to me at the hazard of his life with
offers of his service, took off my cloak and brought a fresh horse; and
would have continued close by me had I not ordered him to retire. I
believe he was slightly wounded just at that time. Many a time has he
pitched my tent and made the bed ready to receive me, half-dead with
fatigue.' Nor did Wolfe forget his dumb friends: 'I have sold my poor
little gray mare. I lamed her by accident, and thought it better to
dismiss her the service immediately. I grieved at parting with so faithful
a servant, and have the comfort to know she is in good hands, will be very
well fed, and taken care of in her latter days.'</p>
<p>After recovering from a slight wound received at Laffeldt Wolfe was
allowed to return to England, where he remained for the winter. On the
morrow of New Year's Day, 1748, he celebrated his coming of age at his
father's town house in Old Burlington Street, London. In the spring,
however, he was ordered to rejoin the army, and was stationed with the
troops who were guarding the Dutch frontier. The war came to an end in the
same year, and Wolfe went home. Though then only twenty-one, he was
already an experienced soldier, a rising officer, and a marked man.</p>
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