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<h2> CHAPTER IV — THE SEVEN YEARS' WAR, 1756-1763 </h2>
<p>Wolfe's Quebec campaign marked the supreme crisis of the greatest war the
British Empire ever waged: the war, indeed, that made the Empire. To get a
good, clear view of anything so vast, so complex, and so glorious, we must
first look at the whole course of British history to see how it was that
France and England ever became such deadly rivals. It is quite wrong to
suppose that the French and British were always enemies, though they have
often been called 'historic' and 'hereditary' foes, as if they never could
make friends at all. As a matter of fact, they have had many more
centuries of peace than of war; and ever since the battle of Waterloo, in
1815, they have been growing friendlier year by year. But this happy state
of affairs is chiefly because, as we now say, their 'vital interests no
longer clash'; that is, they do not both desire the same thing so keenly
that they have to fight for it.</p>
<p>Their vital interests do not clash now. But they did clash twice in the
course of their history. The first time was when both governments wished
to rule the same parts of the land of France. The second time was when
they both wished to rule the same parts of the oversea world. Each time
there was a long series of wars, which went on inevitably until one side
had completely driven its rival from the field.</p>
<p>The first long series of wars took place chiefly in the fourteenth century
and is known to history as the Hundred Years' War. England held, and was
determined to hold, certain parts of France. France was determined never
to rest till she had won them for herself. Whatever other things the two
nations were supposed to be fighting about, this was always the one cause
of strife that never changed and never could change till one side or other
had definitely triumphed. France won. There were glorious English
victories at Cressy and Agincourt. Edward III and Henry V were two of the
greatest soldiers of any age. But, though the English often won the
battles, the French won the war. The French had many more men, they fought
near their own homes, and, most important of all, the war was waged
chiefly on land. The English had fewer men, they fought far away from
their homes, and their ships could not help them much in the middle of the
land, except by bringing over soldiers and food to the nearest coast. The
end of it all was that the English armies were worn out; and the French
armies, always able to raise more and more fresh men, drove them, step by
step, out of the land completely.</p>
<p>The second long series of wars took place chiefly in the eighteenth
century. These wars have never been given one general name; but they
should be called the Second Hundred Years' War, because that is what they
really were. They were very different from the wars that made up the first
Hundred Years' War, because this time the fight was for oversea dominions,
not for land in Europe. Of course navies had a good deal to do with the
first Hundred Years' War and armies with the second. But the navies were
even more important in the second than the armies in the first. The Second
Hundred Years' War, the one in which Wolfe did such a mighty deed, began
with the fall of the Stuart kings of England in 1688 and went on till the
battle of Waterloo in 1815. But the beginning and end that meant most to
the Empire were the naval battles of La Hogue in 1692 and Trafalgar in
1805. Since Trafalgar the Empire has been able to keep what it had won
before, and to go on growing as well, because all its different parts are
joined together by the sea, and because the British Navy has been, from
that day to this, stronger than any other navy in the world.</p>
<p>How the French and British armies and navies fought on opposite sides,
either alone or with allies, all over the world, from time to time, for
these hundred and twenty-seven years; how all the eight wars with
different names formed one long Second Hundred Years' War; and how the
British Navy was the principal force that won the whole of this war, made
the Empire, and gave Canada safety then, as it gives her safety now—all
this is much too long a story to tell here. But the gist of it may be told
in a very few words, at least in so far as it concerns the winning of
Canada and the deeds of Wolfe.</p>
<p>The name 'Greater Britain' is often used to describe all the parts of the
British Empire which lie outside of the old mother country. This 'Greater
Britain' is now so vast and well established that we are apt to forget
those other empires beyond the seas which, each in its own day, surpassed
the British Empire of the same period. There was a Greater Portugal, a
Greater Spain, a Greater Holland, and a Greater France. France and Holland
still have large oversea possessions; and a whole new-world continent
still speaks the languages of Spain and Portugal. But none of them has
kept a growing empire oversea as their British rival has. What made the
difference? The two things that made all the difference in the world were
freedom and sea-power. We cannot stop to discuss freedom, because that is
more the affair of statesmen; but, at the same time, we must not forget
that the side on which Wolfe fought was the side of freedom. The point for
us to notice here is that all the freedom and all the statesmen and all
the soldiers put together could never have made a Greater Britain,
especially against all those other rivals, unless Wolfe's side had also
been the side of sea-power.</p>
<p>Now, sea-power means more than fighting power at sea; it means trading
power as well. But a nation cannot trade across the sea against its rivals
if its own ships are captured and theirs are not. And long before the
Second Hundred Years' War with France the other sea-trading empires had
been gradually giving way, because in time of war their ships were always
in greater danger than those of the British were. After the English Navy
had defeated the Spanish Armada in 1588 the Spaniards began, slowly but
surely, to lose their chance of making a permanent Greater Spain. After
the great Dutch War, when Blake defeated Van Tromp in 1653, there was no
further chance of a permanent Greater Holland. And, even before the Dutch
War and the Armada, the Portuguese, who had once ruled the Indian Ocean
and who had conquered Brazil, were themselves conquered by Spain and shut
out from all chance of establishing a Greater Portugal.</p>
<p>So the one supreme point to be decided by the Second Hundred Years' War
lay between only two rivals, France and Britain. Was there to be a Greater
France or a Greater Britain across the seas? The answer depended on the
rival navies. Of course, it involved many other elements of national and
Imperial power on both sides. But no other elements of power could have
possibly prevailed against a hostile and triumphant navy.</p>
<p>Everything that went to make a Greater France or a Greater Britain had to
cross the sea—men, women, and children, horses and cattle, all the
various appliances a civilized people must take with them when they settle
in a new country. Every time there was war there were battles at sea, and
these battles were nearly always won by the British. Every British victory
at sea made it harder for French trade, because every ship between France
and Greater France ran more risk o being taken, while every ship between
Britain and Greater Britain stood a better chance of getting safely
through. This affected everything on both competing sides in America.
British business went on. French business almost stopped dead. Even the
trade with the Indians living a thousand miles inland was changed in
favour of the British and against the French, as all the guns and knives
and beads and everything else that the white man offered to the Indian in
exchange for his furs had to come across the sea, which was just like an
enemy's country to every French ship, but just like her own to every
British one. Thus the victors at sea grew continually stronger in America,
while the losers grew correspondingly weaker. When peace came, the French
only had time enough to build new ships and start their trade again before
the next war set them back once more; while the British had nearly all
their old ships, all those they had taken from the French, and many new
ones.</p>
<p>But where did Wolfe come in? He came in at the most important time and
place of all, and he did the most important single deed of all. This
brings us to the consideration of how the whole of the Second Hundred
Years' War was won, not by the British Navy alone, much less by the Army
alone, but by the united service of both, fighting like the two arms of
one body, the Navy being the right arm and the Army the left. The heart of
this whole Second Hundred Years' War was the Seven Years' War; the British
part of the Seven Years' War was then called the 'Maritime War'; and the
heart of the 'Maritime War' was the winning of Canada, in which the
decisive blow was dealt by Wolfe.</p>
<p>We shall see presently how Navy and Army worked together as a united
service in 'joint expeditions' by sea and land, how Wolfe took part in two
other joint expeditions before he commanded the land force of the one at
Quebec, and how the mighty empire-making statesman, William Pitt, won the
day for Britain and for Greater Britain, with Lord Anson at the head of
the Navy to help him, and Saunders in command at the front. It was thus
that the age-long vexed question of a Greater France or a Greater Britain
in America was finally decided by the sword. The conquering sword was that
of the British Empire as a whole. But the hand that wielded it was Pitt;
the hilt was Anson, the blade was Saunders, and the point was Wolfe.</p>
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