The particular story which I have
set myself to relate, of how Sir Terence O’Moy
was taken in the snare of his own jealousy, may very
properly be concluded here. But the greater story
in which it is enshrined and with which it is interwoven,
the story of that other snare in which my Lord Viscount
Wellington took the French, goes on. This story
is the history of the war in the Peninsula. There
you may pursue it to its very end and realise the
iron will and inflexibility of purpose which caused
men ultimately to bestow upon him who guided that
campaign the singularly felicitous and fitting sobriquet
of the Iron Duke.
Ciudad Rodrigo’s Spanish garrison
capitulated on the 10th of July of that year 1810,
and a wave of indignation such as must have overwhelmed
any but a man of almost superhuman mettle swept up
against Lord Wellington for having stood inactive
within the frontiers of Portugal and never stirred
a hand to aid the Spaniards. It was not only from
Spain that bitter invective was hurled upon him; British
journalism poured scorn and rage upon his incompetence,
French journalism held his pusillanimity up to the
ridicule of the world. His own officers took
shame in their general, and expressed it. Parliament
demanded to know how long British honour was to be
imperilled by such a man. And finally the Emperor’s
great marshal, Massena, gathering his hosts to overwhelm
the kingdom of Portugal, availed himself of all this
to appeal to the Portuguese nation in terms which
the facts would seem to corroborate.
He issued his proclamation denouncing
the British for the disturbers and mischief-makers
of Europe, warning the Portuguese that they were the
cat’s-paw of a perfidious nation that was concerned
solely with the serving of its own interests and the
gratification of its predatory ambitions, and finally
summoning them to receive the French as their true
friends and saviours.
The nation stirred uneasily.
So far no good had come to them of their alliance
with the British. Indeed Wellington’s policy
of devastation had seemed to those upon whom it fell
more horrible than any French invasion could have
been.
But Wellington held the reins, and
his grip never relaxed or slackened. And here
let it be recorded that he was nobly and stoutly served
in Lisbon by Sir Terence O’Moy. Pressure
upon the Council resulted in the measures demanded
being carried out. But much time had been lost
through the intrigues of the Souza faction, with the
result that those measures, although prosecuted now
more vigorously, never reached the full extent which
Wellington had desired. Treachery, too, stepped
in to shorten the time still further. Almeida,
garrisoned by Portuguese and commanded by Colonel
Cox and a British staff, should have held a month.
But no sooner had the French appeared before it, on
the 26th August, than a powder magazine traitorously
fired exploded and breached the wall, rendering the
place untenable.
To Wellington this was perhaps the
most vexatious of all things in that vexatious time.
He had hoped to detain Massena before Almeida until
the rains should have set in, when the French would
have found themselves struggling through a sodden,
water-logged country, through bridgeless floods and
a land bereft of all that could sustain the troops.
Still, what could be done Wellington did, and did
it nobly. Fighting a rearguard action, he fell
back upon the grim and naked ridges of Busaco, where
at the end of September he delivered battle and a murderous
detaining wound upon the advancing hosts of France.
That done, he continued the retreat through Coimbra.
And now as he went he saw to it that the devastation
was completed along the line of march. What corn
and provisions could not be carried off were burnt
or buried, and the people forced to quit their dwellings
and march with the army a pathetic, southward
exodus of men and women, old and young, flocks of
sheep, and herds of cattle, creaking bullock-carts
laden with provender and household goods, leaving
behind them a country bare as the Sahara, where hunger
before long should grip the French army too far committed
now to pause. In advancing and overtaking must
lie Massena’s hope. Eventually in Lisbon
he must bring the British to bay, and, breaking them,
open out at last his way into a land of plenty.
Thus thought Massena, knowing nothing
of the lines of Torres Vedras; and thus, too, thought
the British Government at home, itself declaring that
Wellington was ruining the country to no purpose, since
in the end the British must be driven out with terrible
loss and infamy that must make their name an opprobrium
in the world.
But Wellington went his relentless
way, and at tire end of the first week of October
brought his army and the multitude of refugees safely
within the amazing lines. The French, pressing
hard upon their heels and confident that the end was
near, were brought up sharply before those stupendous,
unsuspected, impregnable fortifications.
After spending best part of a month
in vain reconnoitering, Massena took up his quarters
at Santarem, and thence the country was scoured for
what scraps of victuals had been left to relieve the
dire straits of the famished host of France.
How the great marshal contrived to hold out so long
in Santarem against the onslaught of famine and concomitant
disease remains something of a mystery. An appeal
to the Emperor for succour eventually brought Drouet
with provisions, but these were no more than would
keep his men alive on a retreat into Spain, and that
retreat he commenced early in the following March,
by when no less than ten thousand of his army had
fallen sick.
Instantly Wellington was up and after
him. The French retreat became a flight.
They threw away baggage and ammunition that they might
travel the lighter. Thus they fled towards Spain,
harassed by the British cavalry and scarcely less
by the resentful peasantry of Portugal, their line
of march defined by an unbroken trail of carcasses,
until the tattered remnants of that once splendid
army found shelter across the Coira. Beyond this
Wellington could not continue the pursuit for lack
of means to cross the swollen river and also because
provisions were running short.
But there for the moment he might
rest content, his immediate object achieved and his
stern strategy supremely vindicated.
On the heights above the yellow, turgid
flood rode Wellington with a glittering staff that
included O’Moy and Murray, the quartermaster-general.
Through his telescope he surveyed with silent satisfaction
the straggling columns of the French that were being
absorbed by the evening mists from the sodden ground.
O’Moy, at his side, looked on
without satisfaction. To him the close of this
phase of the campaign which had justified his remaining
in office meant the reopening of that painful matter
that had been left in suspense by circumstances since
that June day of last year at Monsanto. The resignation
then refused from motives of expediency must again
be tendered and must now be accepted.
Abruptly upon the general stillness
came a sharply humming sound. Within a yard of
the spot where Wellington sat his horse a handful of
soil heaved itself up and fell in a tiny scattered
shower. Immediately elsewhere in a dozen places
was the phenomenon repeated. There was too much
glitter about the staff uniforms and vindictive French
sharpshooters were finding them an attractive mark.
“They are firing on us, sir!”
cried O’Moy on a note of sharp alarm.
“So I perceive,” Lord
Wellington answered calmly, and leisurely he closed
his glass, so leisurely that O’Moy, in impatient
fear of his chief, spurred forward and placed himself
as a screen between him and the line of fire.
Lord Wellington looked at him with
a faint smile. He was about to speak when O’Moy
pitched forward and rolled headlong from the saddle.
They picked him up unconscious but
alive, and for once Lord Wellington was seen to blench
as he flung down from his horse to inquire the nature
of O’Moy’s hurt. It was not fatal,
but, as it afterwards proved, it was grave enough.
He had been shot through the body, the right lung had
been grazed and one of his ribs broken.
Two days later, after the bullet had
been extracted, Lord Wellington went to visit him
in the house where he was quartered. Bending over
him and speaking quietly, his lordship said that which
brought a moisture to the eyes of Sir Terence and
a smile to his pale lips. What actually were
his lordship’s words may be gathered from the
answer he received.
“Ye’re entirely wrong,
then, and it’s mighty glad I am. For now
I need no longer hand you my resignation. I can
be invalided home.”
So he was; and thus it happens that
not until now when this chronicle makes
the matter public does the knowledge of
Sir Terence’s single but grievous departure
from the path of honour go beyond the few who were
immediately concerned with it. They kept faith
with him because they loved him; and because they
had understood all that went to the making of his
sin, they condoned it.
If I have done my duty as a faithful
chronicler, you who read, understanding too, will
take satisfaction in that it was so.