THE POLITICAL CIRCUMSTANCE
The Battle of Tourcoing is one of
those actions upon which European history in general
is somewhat confused, and English history, in particular,
ignorant.
That British troops formed part of
those who suffered defeat, and that a British commander,
the Duke of York, was the chief figure in the reverse,
affords no explanation; for the almost exactly parallel
case of Fontenoy in which another royal
duke, also the son of the reigning King of England,
also very young, also an excellent general officer,
and also in command was defeated is among
the most familiar of actions in this country.
In both battles the posture of the British troops earned
them as great and as deserved a fame as they had acquired
in victory; in both was work done by the Guards in
particular, which called forth the admiration of the
enemy. Yet Tourcoing remains unknown to the English
general reader of history, while Fontenoy is one of
the few stock names of battles which he can at once
recall.
The reason that British historians
neglect this action is not, then, as foreign and rival
historians are too inclined to pretend, due to the
fact that among the forces that suffered disaster
were present certain British contingents.
Again, as will be seen in the sequel,
the overwhelming of the Duke of York’s forces
at Tourcoing, by numbers so enormously superior to
his own, was not due to any tactical fault of his,
though it is possible that the faulty plan of the
whole action may in some measure be ascribed to him.
Now Tourcoing is a battle which Englishmen
should know, both for its importance in the military
history of Europe, and for the not unworthy demeanour
which the British troops, though defeated, maintained
upon its field.
The true reason that Tourcoing is
so little known in this country is to be discovered
in that other historical fact attaching to the battle,
which I have mentioned. It occupied but a confused
and an uncertain place in the general history of Europe;
though perhaps, were its military significance fully
understood, it would stand out in sharper relief.
For though the Battle of Tourcoing was not the beginning
of any great military series, nor the end of one;
though no very striking immediate political consequence
followed upon it, yet it was Tourcoing which made Fleurus
possible, and it was Fleurus that opened the victorious
advancing march of the French which, looked at as
a whole, proceeded triumphantly thenceforward for
nearly eighteen years and achieved the transformation
of European society.
What, then, was the political circumstance
under which this action was fought?
The French Revolution, by the novelty
of its doctrines, by the fierceness and rapidity of
its action, and by that military character in it which
was instinctively divined upon the part of its opponents,
challenged, shortly after its inception, the armed
interference of those ancient traditional governments,
external to and neighbouring upon French territory,
which felt themselves threatened by the rapid advance
of democracy.
With the steps that led from the first
peril of conflict to its actual outbreak, we are not
concerned. That outbreak took place in April 1792,
almost exactly three years after the meeting of the
first Revolutionary Parliament in Versailles.
The first stages of the war (which
was conducted by Austria and Prussia upon the one
side, against the French forces upon the other) were
singularly slow. No general action was engaged
in until the month of September, and even then the
struggle between the rival armies took the form not
so much of a pitched battle as of an inconclusive cannonade
known to history as that of Valmy. This
inconclusive cannonade took place in the heart of
French territory during the march of the invaders upon
Paris. Disease, and the accident of weather,
determined the retreat of the invaders immediately
afterwards. In the autumn of the year, the French
forces largely recruited by enthusiastic volunteer
levies, but of low military value, poured over the
country then called the Austrian Netherlands and now
Belgium. But their success was shortlived.
A mere efflux of numbers could not hold against the
trained and increasing resistance of the Imperial
soldiers. In the spring of 1793 the retreat began,
and through the summer of that year the military position
of Revolutionary France grew graver and graver.
Internal rebellions of the most serious character
broke out over the whole territory of the Republic.
In Normandy, in the great town of Lyons, in Marseilles,
and particularly in the Western districts surrounding
the mouth of the Loire, these rebellions had each
in turn their moment of success, while the great naval
station of Toulon opened its port to the enemy, and
received the combined English and Spanish Fleets.
Coincidently with the enormous task
of suppressing this widespread domestic rebellion,
the Revolutionary Government was compelled to meet
the now fully organised advance of its foreign enemies.
It was at war no longer with Austria and Prussia alone,
but with England, with Holland, with Spain as well,
and the foreign powers not only thrust back the incursion
which the French had made beyond their frontiers, but
proceeded to attack and to capture, one after the
other, that barrier of fortresses in the north-east
which guarded the advance on Paris.
The succession of misfortune after
misfortune befalling the French arms was checked,
and the tide turned by the victory won at Wattignies
in October 1793. After that victory the immediate
peril of a successful invasion, coupled with the capture
of Paris, was dissipated. But it was yet uncertain
for many months which way the tide would turn whether
the conflict would end in a sort of stale-mate by
which the French should indeed be left independent
for the moment, but the armed governments of Europe
their enemies also left powerful to attack and in the
end to ruin them; or whether (as was actually the
case) the French should ultimately be able to take
the offensive, to re-cross their frontiers, and to
dictate to their foes a triumphant peace.
As I have said, the great action from
which history must date the long series of French
triumphs, bears the name of Fleurus; but before Fleurus
there came that considerable success which made Fleurus
possible, to which history gives the name of tourcoing
(from the town standing in the midst of the very large
and uncertain area over which the struggle was maintained),
and which provides the subject of these pages.
Fleurus was decided in June 1794.
It was not a battle in which British troops were concerned,
and therefore can form no part of this series.
Tourcoing was decided in the preceding May, and though,
I repeat, it cannot be made the fixed and striking
starting-point from which to date the long years of
the French advantages, yet it was, as it were, the
seed of those advantages, and it was Tourcoing, in
its incomplete and complicated success, which made
possible all that was to follow.
Tourcoing, then, must be regarded
as an unexpected, not wholly conclusive, but none
the less fundamental phase in the development of political
forces which led to the establishment of the modern
world. Its immediate result, though not decisive,
was appreciable. To use a metaphor, it was felt
in Paris, and to a less extent in London, Berlin,
and in Vienna, that the door against which the French
were desperately pushing, though not fully open, was
thrust ajar. The defeat of a portion of the allied
forces in this general action, the inefficacy of the
rest, the heartening which it put into the French
defence, and the moral effect of such trophies gained,
and such a rout inflicted, were of capital import to
the whole story of the war.
This is the political aspect in which
we must regard the Battle of Tourcoing, but its chief
interest by far lies in its purely military aspect;
in the indiscretion which so nearly led the French
forces to annihilation; in the plan which was laid
to surround and to destroy those forces by the convergence
of the English, Prussian, and Austrian columns; in
the way in which that plan came to nothing, and resulted
only in a crushing disaster to one advanced portion
of the forces so converging.
Tourcoing is rather a battle for military
than for civilian historians, but those who find recreation
in military problems upon their own account, apart
from their political connection, will always discover
the accidents of this engagement, its unexpected developments,
and its final issue to be of surpassing interest.