THE EARLY WAR
In order to grasp the strategic problem
presented to Marlborough and the allies in the spring
of 1704, it is first necessary to understand the diplomatic
position at the outbreak of the war, and the military
disposition of the two years 1702 and 1703, and thus
the general position of the armies which preceded
Marlborough’s march to the Danube.
Louis XIV. recognised his grandson
as king of Spain late in 1700. The coalition
immediately formed against him was at first imperfect.
Savoy, with its command of the passes over the Alps
into Austrian territory, was in Louis’ favour.
England, whose support of his enemies was (for reasons
to be described) a capital factor in the issue, had
not yet joined those enemies. But, from several
causes, among the chief of which was Louis’
recognition of the Pretender as king of England after
James the II.’s death, the opinion of the English
aristocracy, and perhaps of the English people, was
fixed, and in the last months of 1701 the weight of
England was thrown into the balance against France.
Why have I called this the
decision of the English Parliament a capital
factor in the issue of the war?
Excepting for a moment the military
genius of Marlborough whose great capacity
had not yet been tested in so large a field two
prime characters gave to Great Britain a deciding
voice in what was to follow. The first of these
was her wealth, the second that aristocratic constitution
of her polity which was now definitely established,
and which, for nearly a century and a half, was to
make her strength unique in its quality among all
the elements of European competition.
As to the first of these the
Wealth of England it is a matter
of such importance to the comprehension of all the
eighteenth century and most of the nineteenth that
it should merit a far longer analysis and affirmation
than can be devoted to it in these few lines.
It must be enough for our purpose to say that Great
Britain, from about 1680 onwards, was not only wealthier
(in proportion to her population) than the powers with
whom she had to deal as enemies or allies, but was
also proceeding to increase that wealth at a rate
far exceeding that of her rivals. Again, what
was perhaps, for the purposes of war, the chief point
of all, England held that wealth in a mobile, fluid
form, which could at once be translated into munitions,
the wages of mercenaries, or the hire of transports,
within the shortest time, and at almost any point in
Western and Northern Europe.
Essentially commercial, already possessed
of a solid line of enterprises beyond the seas, having
defeated and passed the Dutch in the race for mercantile
supremacy, England could afford or withhold at her
choice the most valuable and rapid form of support money.
How true this was, even those in Europe
who had not appreciated the changed conditions of
Great Britain immediately perceived when the determination
of Parliament, at the end of 1701, to support the alliance
against Louis XIV., took the form of voting 40,000
men, all of whom would be immediately supplied and
paid with English money.
True, of the 40,000 not half were
British; but (save for the excellent quality of the
British troops), the point was more or less indifferent.
The important thing was that England was able to provide
and to maintain this immense accretion to the coalition
against France, and to use it where she would.
We shall see later how this power turned the fate of
the war.
If I have insisted so strongly upon
the financial factor, it is both because that factor
is misappreciated in most purely military histories,
and also because, in the changed circumstances of our
own time, it is not easy for the reader to take for
granted, as did his ancestors, the overwhelming superiority
which England once enjoyed in mobilised wealth, usable
after this kind. It can best be compared to the
similar superiority enjoyed in the Middle Ages by
the Republic of Venice, to whose fortunes, both good
and ill, the story of modern England affords so strange
a parallel.
The second factor I have mentioned the
aristocratic constitution of the country though
almost equally important, is somewhat more elusive,
and might be more properly challenged by a critic.
England had not, in the first years
of the eighteenth century, reached that calm and undisturbed
solidity which is the mark of an aristocratic State
at its zenith. Faction was bitter, the opposition
between the old loyalty to the Crown and the new national
regime was so determined as to make civil war possible
at any moment. This condition of affairs was to
last for a generation, and it was not until the middle
of the eighteenth century was passed that it disappeared.
Nevertheless, compared with the Continental
States, Great Britain already presented by 1701 that
elasticity in substance and tenacity in policy which
accompany aristocratic institutions. Corruption
might be rife, but it was already growing difficult
to purchase the services of a member of the governing
class against the national interests. That knowledge
of public affairs, diffused throughout a small and
closely combined social class, which is the mark of
an aristocracy, was already apparent. The power
of choosing, from a narrow and well-known field, the
best talents for any particular office (which is another
mark of aristocracy), was already a power apparent
in the government of this country. The solidarity
which, in the face of a common enemy, an aristocracy
always displays, the long-livedness, as of a corporate
body, which an aristocracy enjoys, and which permits
it to follow with such strict continuity whatever line
of foreign policy it has undertaken, was clearly defining
itself at the moment of which I write.
In a word, the new settlement of English
life upon the basis of class government, the exclusion
of the mass of the people from public affairs, the
decay (if you will) of a lively public opinion, the
presence of that hopeless disinherited class which
now forms the majority of our industrial population;
the organisation of the universities, of justice, of
the legislature, of the executive, as parts of one
social class; the close grasp which that class now
had upon the land and capital of the whole country,
which it could utilise immediately for interior development
or for a war all this marked the youth
and vigour of an oligarchic England, which was for
so long to be at once invulnerable and impregnable.
At what expense in morals, and therefore
in ultimate strength and happiness, such experiments
are played, is no matter for discussion in a military
history. We must be content to remark what vigour
her new constitution gave to the efforts of England
in the field, while yet that constitution was young.
England, then, having thrown this
great weight into the scale of the Empire, and against
France, the campaign of 1702 was entered upon with
the chances in favour of the former, and with the
latter in an anxiety very different from the pride
which Louis XIV. had taken for granted in the early
part of his reign.
If the reader will consider the map
of Western Europe, the effect of England’s joining
the allies will be apparent.
The frontier between the Spanish Netherlands
and Holland that is, between modern Belgium
and Holland was the frontier between the
forces of Louis XIV. and those of opponents upon the
north. Thus Antwerp and Ostend were in the hands
of the Bourbon, for the Spanish Netherlands had passed
into the hands of the French king’s grandson,
and the French and Spanish forces were combined.
Further east, towards the Upper Rhine, a French force
lay in the district of Cleves, and all the fortresses
on the Meuse, running in a line south of that post,
with the exception of Maestricht, were in French hands.
French armies held or threatened the
Middle Rhine. Upon the Upper Rhine and upon the
Danube an element of the highest moment in favour of
France had appeared when the Elector of Bavaria had
declared for Louis XIV., and against Austria.
Had not England intervened with the
great weight of gold and that considerable contingent
of men (in all, eighteen of the new forty thousand),
France would have easily held her northern position
upon the frontier of Holland and the Lower Rhine,
while the Elector of Bavaria, joining forces with
the French army upon the Upper Rhine, would have marched
upon Vienna.
The Emperor was harried by the rising
of the Hungarians behind him; and as the principal
forces of the French king would not have been detained
in the north, the whole weight of France, combined
with her new ally the Elector of Bavaria, would have
been thrown upon the Upper Danube.
As it was, this plan was, in its inception
at least, partially successful, but only in its inception,
and only partially.
For, with the summer of 1702, Marlborough,
though hampered by the fears of the Dutch with whom
he had to act in concert, cleared the French out of
Cleves, caused them to retire southward in the face
of the great accession of strength which he brought
with the new troops in English pay and the English
contingents. Following the French retirement,
he swept the whole valley of the Meuse, and took
its fastnesses from Liege downwards, all along the
course of the stream.
By the end of the year this northern
front of the French armies was imperilled, and Marlborough
and his allies in that part hoped to undertake with
the next season the reduction of the Spanish Netherlands.
It must be remembered, in connection
with this plan, that France has always been nervous
with regard to her north-eastern frontier; that the
loss of this frontier leaves a way open to Paris:
an advance from Belgium was to the French monarchy
what an advance along the Danube was to Austria the
prime peril of all. As yet, France was nowhere
near grave peril in this quarter, but pressure there
marred her general plans upon the Danube.
Nevertheless, the march upon Vienna
by the Upper Danube had been prepared with some success.
While part of the northern frontier was thus being
pressed and part menaced, while the Meuse was being
cleared of French garrisons, and the French fortresses
on it taken by Marlborough and his allies, the Elector
of Bavaria had seized Ulm. The French upon the
Upper Rhine, under Villars, defeated the Prince of
Baden at Friedlingen, and established a road through
the New Forest by which Louis XIV.’s forces,
combined with those of the Elector of Bavaria, could
advance eastward upon the Emperor’s capital.
It was designed that in the next year, 1703, the troops
of Savoy, in alliance with those of France, should
march from North Italy through the passes of the Alps
and the Tyrol upon Vienna, while at the same time
the Franco-Bavarian forces should march down the Danube
towards the same objective.
When the campaign of 1703 opened,
however, two unexpected events determined what was
to follow.
The first was the failure of Marlborough
in the north to take Antwerp, and in general his inability
to press France further at that point; the second,
the defection of Savoy from the French alliance.
As to the first Marlborough’s
failure against Antwerp. The Spanish Netherlands
were now solidly held; the forces of the allies were
indeed increasing perpetually in this neighbourhood,
but it appeared as though the attempt to reduce Brabant,
Hainault, and Flanders, which are here the bulwark
of France, would be tedious, and perhaps barren.
A sort of “consolation” advance was indeed
made upon the Rhine, and Bonn was captured; but no
more was done in this quarter.
As to the second point, the solid
occupation of the Upper Danube by the Franco-Bavarians
was indeed fully accomplished. The imperial forces
were defeated upon the bank of that river at Hochstadt,
but the advance upon Vienna failed, for the second
half of the plan, the march from Northern Italy upon
Austria, through the Tyrol, had come to nothing, through
the defection of Savoy. The turning of the scale
against Louis by the action of England was beginning
to have its effect; Portugal had already joined the
coalition, and now Savoy had refused to continue her
help of the Bourbons.
The year 1704 opened, therefore, with
this double situation: to the south Austria had
been saved for the moment, but was open to immediate
attack in the campaign to come; meanwhile, the French
had proved so solidly seated in the Spanish Netherlands
(or Belgium) that repeated attacks on them in this
quarter would in all probability prove barren.
It was under these circumstances that
Eugene of Savoy came to the great decision which marked
the year of Blenheim. He determined that it was
best if he could persuade his colleagues to
carry the war into that territory which was particularly
menaced. He conceived the plan of marching a
great force from the Netherlands right down to the
field of the Upper Danube. There could be checked
the proposed march upon the heart of the coalition,
which was Vienna. There, if fortune served the
allies, they would by victory make all further chance
of marching a Franco-Bavarian force down the Danube
impossible; meanwhile, and at any rate, the new step
would alarm all French effort towards the Upper Rhine,
weaken the French organisation upon its northern frontier,
and so permit of a return of the allies to an attack
there at a later time.
Eugene of Savoy was a member of the
cadet branch of that royal house. His grandfather,
the younger son of Charles Emmanuel, had founded the
family called Savoy Carignan. His father had
been married to one of Mazarin’s nieces.
Eugene was her fifth son, and at this moment not quite
forty years of age.
His character, motives, and genius
must be clearly seized if we are to appreciate the
campaign and the battle of Blenheim.
It was the Italian blood which formed
that character most, but he was thoroughly French
by birth and training. Born in Paris, and desiring
a career in the French army, it was a slight offered
to his mother by the French king that gave his whole
life a personal hatred of Louis XIV. for its motive.
From boyhood till his death, between sixty and seventy,
this great captain directed his energies uniquely
against the fortunes of the French king. When,
later in life, there was an attempt to acquire his
talents for the French service, he replied that he
hoped to re-enter France, but only as an invader.
It has been complained that he lacked precision in
detail, and that as an organiser he was somewhat at
fault; but he had no equal for rapidity of vision,
and for seizing the essential point in a strategic
problem. From that day in his twentieth year when
he had assisted at Sobiesky’s destruction of
the Turks before Vienna, through his own great victory
which crushed that same enemy somewhat later at Zenta,
in all his career this quality of immediate perception
had been supremely apparent.
He was at this moment the
end of the campaign of 1703 the head of
the imperial council of war; and he it was who first
grasped the strategic necessity which 1703 had created.
The determination to carry the defence of the empire
into the valley of the Upper Danube was wholly his
own. He wrote to Marlborough suggesting a withdrawal
of forces as considerable as possible from the northern
field to the southern.
By a happy accident, the judgment
of the Englishman exactly coincided with his own,
and indeed there was so precise a sympathy between
these two very different men that when they met in
the course of the ensuing campaign there sprang up
between them not only a lasting friendship, but a mutual
comprehension which made the combination of their talents
invincible during those half dozen years of the war
which all but destroyed the French power.
Such was the origin of Marlborough’s
advance southward from the Netherlands in the early
summer of 1704, an advance famous in history under
the title of “the march to the Danube.”