In all French works of
the period, Hepburn’s name is invariably spelt Hebron, and sometimes
Esbron, Pere Daniel gives the following reason:—
"Le Chevalier Hepburn,” says he, when writing of the regiment de
Douglas, "etoit un homme d’un mdrite distingu, qui fut fort aim£ du
Roy Henri IV. et de Louis XIII.; on l’appelloit en France le
Chevalier d’Hebron,’ son nom de Hepbume Stant difficile ci prononcer.”
But the reverend father was mistaken, so far as regarded Henry IV.
On the fall of La Mothe, as no other place in Lorraine dared to hold
out for the ancient lords of the province, Sir John Hepburn received
orders to rejoin and cooperate with the Marshal de la Force, who,
with twenty-five thousand infantry and four thousand cavalry, was on
his march towards the German frontier, to oppose the Imperial army
which was preparing to enter Lorraine.
In obedience to these orders, at the head of his own and six other
regiments of pikemen and musketeers, seven squadrons of horse and a
train of artillery, on the 19th December he crossed the Rhine and
advanced to Mannheim, where he took up a position near the river and
town, which had been strongly fortified thirty years before; but its
situation, being lower than the Rhine, was so unhealthy as to render
active operations immediately necessary, and he sent forward parties
of cavalry to reconnoitre the Imperialists, who were about to form a
junction with the troops of the Marquis d’Aytona, and those of
Prince Thomas de Carignan, brother of the Duke of Savoy.
Having thus with the vanguard so boldly secured the passage of the
Rhine, and enabled the Marshal de la Force to cross that important
river with all his army, Hepburn next pushed on with his column to
relieve Heidelberg, marching by the beautiful vale of the Neckar, in
view of the ruin-crowned rocks of the Oden-wald, which were covered
with vineyards, forests, and moss-grown orchards, then, however,
leafless and bare, for the season was winter. One day’s journey
brought him to that ancient city, which is situated on the margin of
the Neckar, and is overshadowed by the dark mountain of the
Geissberg. There a small garrison of his old brothers in arms, the
Swedish veterans of Gustavus Adolphus, were defending themselves
with characteristic resolution against an overwhelming force of
Imperialists.
The famous capuchin, Father Joseph du Tremblay, usually accompanied
the French army at this time, and, as he pretended to have great
skill in military matters, frequently contrived to thrust himself
into councils of war, and would there give his opinion with the
utmost confidence to the oldest and most distinguished of the French
marshals.
As the army approached the Rhine, he was one day, during a halt on
the march, exhibiting his talents in this manner to Hepburn, and,
with a large map spread before him, was pointing out a number of
strongly-fortified towns, which he affirmed could be reduced with
the greatest ease. Leaning against a culverin with a baton in his
hand, and his helmet open, Hepburn listened for a time to the
garrulous capuchin, as he pointed from fortress to fortress, and
then said with a smile—
"Go not so fast, good Father Joseph, for, believe me, towns are not
taken with a finger-end,” a reply which became a current jest or
anecdote in the French army for many years after. This capuchin was
the spy, the friend, and tyrannical favourite of Cardinal Richelieu,
that terrible Father Joseph, who was then styled “his "Grey
Eminence,” and who now figures so prominently in the romances of de
Vigny and Dumas. Acting as the Cardinal’s secret informer, he kept a
strict watch over all the leading nobles and the generals of the
army.
A frightful character is given of him in a work published in 1635,
entitled La Verits Defendue, and in his own memoirs, which are also
given to the world.
The season, we have said, was winter; the mountains were mantled
with snow, and, swollen by the dissolving ice, the Neckar foamed on
its winding way towards the Rhine through the rocky gorges of the
valley; and the boom of the adverse cannon reverberated incessantly
among the oak-covered summits of the Geissberg, and the darker rocks
of the Kaiserstuhl. High and hoary, the stately electoral palace,
from the steep brow of the Juttenbuhl, overlooked the city, on the
close roofs of which a stone might have been thrown from its broad
paved terraces. It was then, or shortly after, according to Ray, an
old traveller, enclosed by a strong wall and deep ditch. An
inscription over the gate imported it to have been built by Louis V.
in 1519, but several parts, called the English Buildings, had been
added. These were erected immediately under the eye of the same
Elizabeth Stuart for whom Hepburn and so many Scottish cavaliers had
drawn the sword; and she had tastefully fashioned it after the
florid architecture of her happy Scottish home—the old palace by the
loch of Linlithgow. Now the Heidelberg is one of the most imposing
ruins in Europe, and is embalmed in the annals of renown for its
long-passed glories and its mighty tun, which held five hundred and
twenty-eight hogsheads of wine.
Hepburn broke the blockade of the Imperialists sword in hand, and
after several sharp conflicts, in which he always fought at the head
of his own regiment, and showed the most brilliant courage, he drove
them completely out of the vale of the Neckar, and relieved the
exhausted Swedish veterans, who, on the 23d December, gladly
delivered over to him the strong city and castle of Heidelberg, with
all their cannon.
On thus obtaining this important post from his allies, King Louis
sent orders to the Marshals de la Force, de Br£z£, and Hepburn, not
to move beyond the mountains of the Bergstrasse until both Mannheim
and Heidelberg were fortified as well as their situation would
permit and in the mean time one hundred and fifty thousand more
troops were levied in France for the next campaign. The expenses of
the war were so enormous that the treasury soon became exhausted;
and such vast bodies of troops were poured toward the German
frontier that Paris was left open and defenceless.
However, the Marshal de la Force and Hepburn, whether with or
without orders it is impossible to say, marched to Landau, where
they formed a junction with the Swedish army of Duke Bernard of
Saxe-Weimar, who had long been hovering on the Rhine, and holding at
bay the Counts of Galas and Mansfeldt, two generals of the Empire.
By the result of the Diet of Worms, it was decided that the troops
of Duke Bernard should be taken into the pay of France. They
consisted of four thousand horse and seven thousand foot, the latter
being almost entirely Scotsmen. "This was a small army,” says the
old author of Richelieu’s Memoirs, "but there were none save brave
and experienced men in it; and the officers were all soldiers of
fortune, who expected to raise their fame by the sword alone.”
These veterans were the remnants of the thirteen gallant Scottish
regiments that had served Gustavus Adolphus so long, and among these
were all that survived of the Green Brigade, (the regiments of
Bamsay and Munro, the latter reduced, as we have said, to one
company after the slaughter of Nordlingen,) and Hepburn’s own corps,
which had served with him twice in Bohemia. All greeted their old
commander with acclamation and joy, by beating the Scottish march as
he approached, while a deafening cheer rang along their sunburnt
lines, and the last solitary piper of Mackays Highlanders blew long
and loudly a note of welcome on the great war-pipe of the north and,
as they all wished to "take service” under him in France, the whole
were incorporated into one corps, to be styled in future Le Rigiment
de Hebron.
It consisted of 3 field-officers—viz., the colonel, the
Lieutenant-Colonel Munro, and Major Sir Patrick Monteith; 45
captains; 1 captain-lieutenant; 45 lieutenants; 48 ensigns; 4
surgeons; 6 adjutants; 2 chaplains; 1 drum-major; 1 piper; 88
sergeants; 288 corporals; 288 lance-pesades; 96 drummers; and 48
companies, consisting of 150 musketeers and pikemen each—making a
grand total of 8316 men; and forming altogether, when their
experience and valour, spirit, bearing, and splendour of equipment
are considered, one of the finest regiments that ever unfurled its
banners in battle. In itself, it represented many other corps; the
Bohemian bands of Sir Andrew Gray, all the Scottish regiments of
Gustavus, and even the Scottish Archer Guard of the French kings, to
which venerable body many of its officers belonged.
This regiment was ordered by Louis XIII. to take the right of all
others then being embodied.
“The king has granted to Colonel Hepburn,” says Richelieu in a
letter to the Cardinal de la Valette, "the ransom of Metternich, and
to his regiment precedence before all the new ones of twenty
companies that have been raised since.”
Several Scottish officers still remained in the service of Sweden,
but Marshal Leslie quitted the army of Queen Christiana two years
after this period. At Melville House in Fifeshire there is still
preserved a document entitled, “Passport, under the seal and
signature of King Charles, to Sir Alexander Leslie of Balgonie,
Equitem Auratumdated at Westminster, 20th March, 1637,” by which
that wary old Presbyterian chief secured a safe-conduct home, to
unsheath his sword against the very monarch who granted it. Many who
never returned to Scotland attained the highest honours in the land
of their adoption: the chief of these was Field-Marshal Sir Robert
Douglas, of the house of Whittinghame in East Lothian, who became
Councillor of Sweden, and of the college of war, Lord of Shalby,
Hochstaten, and Earl of Schonengem. He died on the 14th June 1662 at
Stockholm, where he was solemnly interred, his magnificent funeral
being attended by the queen and court. “First marched four companies
of horse in their armour, carrying the muzzles of their pistols
downward, one beating the kettle-drums, and three trumpets riding
before them; five companies of foot carrying their muskets under
their left arms and trailing their pikes.” His obsequies were of the
most gorgeous description; the several pieces of his armour were
borne on cushions of velvet, together with a hundred standards taken
by his brigade in battle, each being borne by an officer in black.
The funeral sermon lasted three hours; and, when the body was
lowered into the vault, one hundred and twenty pieces of cannon were
twice discharged, while “all the horse and foot souldiers gave two
pales of shot.”
He was among the last surviving of the Scottish veterans of Gustavus
Adolphus. |