James Keith, the
younger brother of the Earl Marischal, was born at Inverugie Castle,
near Peterhead, on June 16, 1696. His father was William, ninth Earl
Marischal (who died in 1712), and his mother was Lady Marie
Drummond, daughter of the Earl of Perth—a zealous adherent of the
old faith and the old dynasty.
James was educated for the law, and had prosecuted his studies at
Aberdeen and Edinburgh, where he was induced to join his brother in
the Jacobite rising of 1715. After the dispersion of the Highland
clans, he made his way to the Western Isles, and concealed himself
there for some months, until he was taken on board a French vessel,
and conveyed to Brittany. Thence he made his way to Paris, where, at
first, his experiences were of the harshest. It is true that he was
well received by the Queen-Mother, Mary of Modena, who told him that
he must stay in Paris, and that as he was so young, she would send
him to the Academy to learn his sword exercise; but royal memories
are proverbially short. He received no assistance from her for some
time, and was reduced to pitiful straits. “Having left Scotland,” he
says, “so abruptly that I had no time to provide any money to bring
along with me, what I had was soon at an end, and my friends there,
not knowing to what part of the world I was gone, had sent no bills
for me. I lived most of that time by selling horse furniture and
other things of that nature which an officer commonly carries with
him; and though I had relations enough in Paris, who could have
supplied me, and who would have done it with pleasure, yet was I
then either so bashful or so vain, that I would not own the want I
was in.”
Thus he had to suffer for the proud shame of young manhood, until at
length he received supplies from Scotland, as well as donations from
James and his Queen, in whose unlucky cause he had ventured and lost
so much. The young adventurer went to the Academy, learned his
exercises, and was favoured with a commission as Colonel of horse.
But he was of a more restless temper than his elder brother, and
thinking it was high time— at the advanced age of twenty-one!—to
establish himself somewhere, and begin to carve out his fortune, he
turned his eyes towards Spain, the Government of which was preparing
to invade Sicily and make war against the Empire. But in the spring
of life a young man’s fancy lightly turns to—other things. “I was
then too much in love,” he naively says, “to think of quitting
Paris, and though shame to my friends forced me to take some steps
towards it, yet I managed it so slowly that I set out only in the
end of the year (1718), and had not my mistress and I quarrelled,
it’s probable I had lost many years of my time to very little
purpose, so much was I taken up with my passion.”
But at last, early in
1719, he went to Spain, in company with his brother, the Earl
Marischal; bound on a secret mission from King James to the Court of
Madrid. Landing at Palamos, on the coast of Catalonia, they were
subjected at first to a pretty close examination and
cross-examination by the authorities, who, unable to make out the
mystery of the two strangers, sent them on to Don Tiberio Caraffa,
Governor of Giron, and the Duke of Leria, commandant of the
garrison. “We arrived there in the evening,” says the future
Marshal, “and were carried to the Duke’s quarters, who was no little
surprised at our appearance, and immediately sent to acquaint the
Governor that he answered for the two gentlemen, but concealed our
names at the desire of the Earl Marischal. We lodged that night with
him, and finding him ignorant of any intended enterprise in England,
we concluded that we were sent for only to enter into the King of
Spain’s service, and therefore resolved to continue our route slowly
to Madrid, without fatiguing ourselves by going post. We accordingly
hired chairs (sedan) there, and two days after arrived at San Andren,
hard by Barcelona, and from thence sent a letter from the Duke of
Leria to Prince Pio of Savoy, who was then Captain-General of that
province, begging him to allow us to come into the town without
being examined at the ports; and about an hour after we saw a coach
and six mules (the first equipage of the kind we had ever seen),
with the Prince’s livery, at the door of our inn. This surprised us,
and still more the respect his doctor, whom he had sent in his coach
to receive us, paid to two strangers he had never (before) seen.”
Long afterwards they discovered the secret of this extraordinary
courtesy. Cardinal Alberoni had sent word to Prince Pio that King
James might shortly be expected incognito at one of the Catalonian
ports, and had given directions for his becoming reception; and on
the advent of the two young Scotchmen, tall, well-favoured, with the
air noble about them, the Prince had too hastily concluded that they
were King James and his confidential attendant. “This,” says Keith,
“with the Duke of Leria’s letter, occasioned our entry into
Barcelona in this manner; and I believe he was sorry to have given
himself so much trouble about us, when he knew who we were; yet he
received us very civilly, though with some embarrass The young
Scotchmen duly arrived at Madrid, and on the following day were
received by Cardinal Alberoni, who informed them of his design to
support the Jacobite cause, and sent them to Valladolid to arrange
the details of an expedition with the Duke of Ormond. They demanded,
as essential to its success, 4000 stand of arms and 18,000 pistoles;
but were obliged to be content with half of each. The Cardinal,
however, also undertook to lend them six companies of infantry to
protect a landing. Leaving George Keith to accompany the expedition
from San Sebastian, where it was to embark, James set out for
France, to open up secret communications with Tullibardine, Seaforth,
and the other Jacobite exiles, and engage their co-operation. It was
both a difficult and a dangerous task, as France and Spain were then
at war, but James Keith carried it out successfully; and he and his
friends sailed for Havre, in a small boat of twenty-five tons, on
March 19, 1719, and after narrowly escaping capture by the British
fleet, landed at Stornoway, in the Lewis, a few days later. Here
they found George Keith, with the small body of Spanish troops
promised by the Cardinal. Alberoni had intended that the Earl
Marischal should take the chief command; but Tullibardine suddenly
produced a commission from Prince James Edward, empowering him to
act as Generalissimo. The Earl Marischal gave way so far as the land
forces were concerned; but insisted on directing the movements of
the ships of the expedition, as these had specially been entrusted
to him by the Cardinal.
The plan of action decided upon was to disembark on the west coast,
advance through the glens to Inverness, which was known to be very
feebly garrisoned, and carrying it by a coup de main, assemble there
the Highland clans. But the disputes and quarrels of the leaders so
delayed their progress that the British Government obtained
information of their movements, and were enabled to forestall them.
It was the middle of May before the little Jacobite flotilla sailed
into Loch Alsh, which lies, deep and still, among the green
mountains of Ross-shire. The troops having been landed, the vessels
returned to Spain. Some fortifications were then thrown up at the
mouth of the inner reach of the loch ; and a garrison was placed in
Ulandonan Castle, once the stronghold of the “high chiefs of Kintail.”
But the ancient fortress, though impregnable in the rude Highland
warfare, could offer no effective resistance to modern artillery;
and their English men-of-war, which broke into the loch, soon
crumbled it into ruins. The Scotch, and their Spanish auxiliaries,
about 1500 in all, then moved by Loch Duich into the high grounds of
Glenshiel; where, on June 11, they were surprised and defeated by
General Wightman, with 1600 regular troops. The Spaniards
surrendered as prisoners of war; the Scots disappeared among the
mountain ravines.
“As I was then sick of a fever,” writes James Keith, “I was forced
to lurk some months in the mountains, and in the beginning of
September, having got a ship, I embarked at Peterhead, and four days
after landed in Holland at the Texel; and from there, with the Earl
Marischal, went to the Hague, to know if the King of Spain’s
minister at that Court had any orders for us. And his advice being
that we should return with all haste to Spain, we set out next day
by the way of Liege, to shun the Imperial Netherlands and enter
France by Sedan, judging that route to be the least suspected; but,
on arriving there, the town-major, finding we had no passports,
stopped us, and without inquiring either our names or qualities,
ordered us immediately to be carried to prison, which was executed
with the greatest exactitude. I made no doubt but that at the same
time he would have ordered our pockets to be searched, in which we
both had our commissions from the King of Spain, then at war with
France; but he was contented with having done the half of his duty,
which was our good fortune,”—since it allowed time for their
destruction. Afterwards, when a demand was made for papers, nothing
was found upon them but a letter which the Earl Marischal had
received from the Prince de Conti. This seemed so satisfactory a
credential to the town-major that he ordered their release; and next
day they set out for Paris. They arrived there during the fever of
excitement caused by Law’s Mississippi scheme; but as they had no
money with which to speculate in them, and neither gained or lost,
Keith does not think it incumbent upon him either to praise or
condemn.
Early in January 1720, the two brothers resolved on a visit to
Prince James Edward, or the Chevalier, as he was called, at Rome.
They embarked at Genoa on board a galley bound for Leghorn; and soon
had an opportunity of ascertaining how sadly the Genoese seamen had
deteriorated since the days of Doria, when Genoa contended with
Venice for the mastery of the seas. They had a favourable breeze at
starting; and about midday made Porto Fino, where, to the surprise
of our young Scots, they dropped anchor. When one of the officers
was asked the reason, he replied, that the galleys of the Republic
never kept the sea at night, except in the middle of summer, and
that the next harbour, Porto Vumo, was too far distant to be reached
before nightfall. Next day they got into Porto Vumo about the same
hour, and as it does not lie more than seventy miles from Leghorn,
it would have been possible to have made the latter port before
midnight. But the bold Genoese could not be induced to run the
hazard; and as the wind veered round during the night, the Keiths
were detained at Porto Vumo for ten weary days. At last, the weather
becoming settled, the galley again put to sea; about half-way the
wind freshened, and the heroic captain, in a panic, gave orders to
return; nor was he persuaded very easily that there was no danger.
At Rome they received a gracious welcome from the Chevalier, and
spent six weeks very pleasantly. James Edward soon discovered that
their funds were very low; and in order to relieve the wants of two
such faithful partisans, applied to the Pope to advance him a
thousand crowns on his ordinary pension. Clement XI. prudently
excused himself on the plea of poverty, “which I mention,” says
James Keith, “only to show the genius of the Pope, and how little
regard Churchmen have for those who have abandoned all for
religion.” The Chevalier eventually borrowed the money from a
trustful banker, and sent away his two young Scots rejoicing.
They were back in Madrid in July 1720, and there, among courteous
senhors and fascinating senhoras, James Keith lingered for many
months, holding the commission of Colonel, but unattached to any
regiment; finding no one to assist his advancement; and reduced
eventually to such distress that, had not an old friend arrived in
Madrid, and offered him his hospitality, it is probable that our
adventurer’s career would have come to an unhappy and a premature
end.
In 1722, at his mother’s urgent request, he was preparing to return
to Scotland on business affairs; but on making known his intention
to Mr. Stanhope, the British Ambassador, he was strongly dissuaded
from it. Mr. Stanhope reminded him that the British Government was
acquainted with his share in the Spanish expedition; and he added
that just at that moment they were much embittered against all
Jacobites by the discovery of the abortive conspiracy in which
Bishop Atterbury and other leading men had been engaged. James
Keith, therefore, changed his plans and went to Paris; where he
loitered about the Court and the salons for a couple of years,
seeking employment but finding none; and supporting himself on such
small sums of money as reached him from Scotland.
In June 1726 the scent of battle rose in the gladdened nostrils of
our adventurer. Hostilities were again on the point of being resumed
between Great Britain and Spain. An English squadron had already
sailed for the West Indies to lie in wait for the huge Panama
treasure-ship; and another, carrying three regiments of foot, was
cruising in the Bay of Biscay, with the intention, it was supposed,
of making a descent upon the sea-fort of San Anders. As a
counter-demonstration, Spain dispatched an army of twenty thousand
men into Andalusia with instructions to attempt the recapture of
Gibraltar. Keith flew at once to the scene of action; and late in
December rode into the Spanish camp at San Roque, within three miles
of the great fortress. To deceive the English garrison there, the
army was employed in the erection of new defences at Algesiras.
“The English at first began to suspect,” says Keith, “that we had
some design on the place; but when they saw how weak we were, they
concluded that the new fort was all we had in view, and I don’t know
if this presumption might not have cost them dear, had we had a more
enterprising general at our head, for the garrison was then not full
a thousand men, and the service of the place so negligently
observed, that very often the guard of the port was not above a
dozen men. They allowed our soldiers to come into the town in what
numbers they pleased, without even searching them for hidden arms;
and at less than four hundred yards from the place, there are
sand-banks where a thousand men may lay concealed, and which they
then had not the precaution to reconnoitre in the morning: how easy
would it have been to have rendered ourselves masters of the gate,
for sometimes we had above two hundred soldiers and forty or fifty
officers at a time in the place, and then have made our grenadiers,
hid amongst the sand-banks, advance ; but this was not the design of
the Count de Las Torres, our General, who said that would the
English give him the town, he would not take it but by the breach.”
When all the Spanish forces were assembled, it was naturally
supposed that the trenches would be opened ; but, unfortunately for
the Spaniards, they had no cannon. To send them by sea was
impossible on account of the vigilance of the English cruisers; they
were therefore dragged across the mountains by rugged and difficult
paths, which heavy rains had rendered almost impracticable. The
collection of this battering-train made known to the garrison the
ultimate object of the Spaniards, while the delay afforded them
opportunity of communicating with Admiral Sir Charles Wager, who was
in command of the British fleet. He immediately bore up for
Gibraltar, and landed his three regiments of infantry. The besiegers
then perceived that they had lost their chance, and would have
retired; but the Court at Madrid insisted that the siege should go
on, and on the night of February 21, a strong battery was raised to
cover the men at work in the trenches. The British immediately
opened a vigorous fire, but the battery proved to be out of range,
and therefore innocuous. That night the Spanish troops began to
break ground, and so near the Rock that our guns could not be
pointed low enough, nor did our musketry do much execution.
But in the morning it was discovered that the engineers had mistaken
their position—a blunder which does not give one a very high opinion
of Spanish military science !—and had drawn the parallel where it
was exposed to the full observation of the garrison. At the same
time three British men-of-war dropped out of the harbour, and
sailing into the bay, let go their anchors in the rear of the
Spanish position at a point where was such deep water that they were
able to unite within a cable’s length of the shore. Throughout the
day they kept up a heavy fire, killing or wounding two of the
Spanish officers and seventy-two soldiers. At nightfall they weighed
anchor, and returned to their former moorings.
Shortly afterwards a curious contretemps occurred, which might have
had disastrous consequences. To obtain cover from the British
cannonade, the Spanish troops had lain prone on their faces all day
in the lines which they had occupied the night before ; and in a gap
in the trenches which there had not been time to fill up, a
battalion of the Guards sought shelter without being noticed or even
remembered by the main body of the troops. On the departure of the
British ships, the officer in command of the battalion marched them
to rejoin their comrades. The way lying under the musketry of the
town, they advanced with rapid step—an alacrity which, in the
darkness, led the regiment nearest to them to conjecture that they
were a British column which had sallied from the town. They
accordingly fired a volley; but as the battalion continued their
advance, most of these gallant Spaniards threw down their arms and
took to their heels. The example proved contagious; and had not the
nationality of the advancing troops been quickly discovered, it
seems probable that the greater part of the Spanish army would have
run away from an imaginary enemy. One can hardly believe that these
poltroons were the countrymen of the Cid!
“We continued our works,” says the Field-Marshal, “above three weeks
before our batteries were in condition to fire; and when they did,
we found the effect did not answer our expectation, they being at
too great a distance from the works of the place to do much
execution. In this manner we continued cannonading one another till
June 22, without any hopes of taking the town, which, by the works
the Earl of Portmore had raised during the siege, was soon in a
better condition than when we began it. At last, June 23, orders
came from Court to cease all acts of hostility, and to agree on a
suspension of arms with the Governor; and thus ended a siege of five
months, in which we had about two thousand men killed or wounded,
and in which all we gained was the knowledge that the place was
impregnable by land.”
In 1747 George II. entered into an arrangement with the Czar for the
hire of thirty thousand Russian infantry, four thousand Russian
cavalry, and one thousand Cossacks, for an annual subsidy of
£15,000. This force marched out of Moscow on Christmas Day, 1747,
and all through the winter crept on through the “frozen peaty
wildernesses” of Lithuania and Poland, in order to confront the
French in the Rhineland in the early spring. It was supposed that
the command would have been given to Keith, who was entitled to it
by his services, his renown, his seniority; but owing to Court
intrigues he was dishonourably passed over, and Repnin, his junior
and inferior, obtained the coveted post. Keith, who had already
undergone several slights, immediately threw up his commission, and
departing from Russia without regret, sought employment in a more
congenial field. On arriving at Hamburg, in September 1747, he wrote
to Frederick the Great to offer him his sword. Frederick eagerly
welcomed him, promising him the rank of Field-Marshal, and an income
of £1200 a year. Negotiations, when both parties were willing, came
to a swift conclusion, and in the following month I find the
Field-Marshal writing from Potsdam to his brother, the Earl—
“1 have now the honour, and, which is still more, the pleasure, of
being with the King at Potsdam; where he ordered me to come, two
days after he declared me Field-Marshal; where I have the honour to
dine and sup with him almost every day. He has more wit than I have
wit to tell you ; speaks solidly and knowingly on all kinds of
subjects; and I am much mistaken if, with the experience of four
campaigns, he is not the best officer of his army. He has several
persons with whom he lives in almost the familiarity of a friend;
but has no favourite;—and shows a natural politeness for everybody
who is about him. For one who has been four days about his person,
you will say I pretend to know a great deal of his character: but
what I tell you, you may depend upon. With more time, I shall know
as much of him as he will let me know; and—all his Ministry knows no
more.”
Keith seems to have become sincerely attached to Frederick, who, on
his part, placed the greatest trust in both him and his
ambassadorial brother, and included them in the narrow circle of his
intimates. It was said by some that the Earl Marischal was the only
human being whom Frederick ever loved.
James Keith’s military talents shone conspicuously in the earlier
stages of that great European conflict which historians designate
the Seven Years’ War. The chief combatants in this prolonged
struggle were Prussia and Austria, supported by Great Britain and
France respectively. But Austria had also on her side Russia,
Saxony, Sweden, and the Germanic body; so that the position of
Frederick was both difficult and dangerous. With him it was a
contest for everything that was dearest. If his antagonist
prevailed, Silesia would return to Austria, East Prussia would go to
the Russian Empress, Sweden would acquire part of Pomerania; and
Augustus of Saxony, Magdeburg ; so that the House of Hohenzollern
would at once fall back into the obscurity from which it had been
raised by the ability of its successive chiefs. Relying on his
genius, on the courage and discipline of his troops, and the unity
of his councils, Frederick resolved on striking the first blow; and
in the month of August 1756, suddenly poured into Saxony an army of
sixty-five thousand troops, who quickly overflowed the country,
captured Dresden, and laid siege to Pirna. Learning that a force of
Austrians, under Marshal Browne, was preparing to traverse the
mountain passes which connect Bohemia with Saxony, he left at Pirna
a division strong enough to wrestle with the Saxons, and,
accompanied by Field-Marshal Keith, invaded Bohemia.
Keith had been growing in the King’s favour, and in everybody’s
confidence, since he first entered the Prussian service. Our great
historian describes him, with picturesque felicity, as a man of
Scottish type, whose broad accent, with its sagacities, vivacities,
its steadily-fixed moderation, and its sly twinkles of defensive
humour, is still audible to us through the foreign wrappages. Not
given to talk, unless he had something to say; but then he talked
well and wisely, and there were few subjects on which his opinion
was not worth hearing, and his judgment worth taking.
Frederick, seizing the heights on either side of the Bohemian pass,
threw himself across Browne’s line of march at Lobositz (October
1756), and inflicted upon the old Marshal a severe defeat, the
Prussians fighting with extraordinary steadiness. “Never have my
troops,” wrote Frederick, “done such miracles of valour, cavalry as
well as infantry, since I had the honour to command them. By this
tour de force—this masterly achievement—they have shown what they
can do.” This notable victory placed all Saxony at Frederick’s feet.
The Elector fled to Poland, and the whole Saxon army capitulated.
Thenceforward, to the end of the war, he treated Saxony as a
conquered province, levying troops and exacting contributions with
merciless severity.
For the campaign of 1757 the King’s plans were well conceived. He
left the Duke of Cumberland, with his British and Hanoverian force,
to operate in Western Germany, and keep the French employed. The
Russians were immured in their snows until spring opened. Saxony was
prostrated, and Sweden ineffectual. There was time and opportunity,
therefore, to attack Austria alone, though even in this
single-handed contest the odds were against him. Early in 1757 he
sent his army in four divisions through the Bohemian passes,
intending to fall upon Prague, where Marshal Browne was encamped,
expecting the arrival of Daun, the ablest and wariest of the
Imperialist captains, with heavy reinforcements. Frederick resolved
to attack and overhelm Browne before Daun could come up. On May 6
was fought the bloodiest battle which Europe witnessed during the
long interval—nearly a century—between Malplaquet and Eylau. The
King and Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick distinguished themselves in
its fiercest throes by their hot and indomitable courage, but the
honour of the day was with the veteran Marshal Schwerin, who had
command of the Prussian infantry.
He and his fighting men advanced upon the Austrian front through a
storm of case-shot. The general Prussian order of the day was, “By
push of bayonet: no firing; none, at any rate, until you see the
whites of their eyes.” Swift, steady as on the parade-ground,
rapidly filling up the gaps torn in their close-set ranks, the
Prussians continued to press forward, until they saw before them an
expanse of “fine, sleek pasture-grounds, unusually green for the
season.” But when they stepped upon them, they proved, alas! to be
mere “mud-tanks,” verdant with “bearding oat-crop,” sown there as
carp-provender!“ Figure the sinking of whole regiments to the knee;
to the middle, some of them; the steady march become a wild scrawl
through viscous mud, mere case-shot singing round you, tearing you
away at its ease! Even on those terrible terms, the Prussians, by
dams, by footpaths, sometimes one man abreast, sprawl steadily
forward, trailing their cannon with them; only a few regiments, in
the footpath parts, cannot bring their cannon. Forward; rank again,
when the ground will carry; ever forward, the case-shot getting ever
more murderous! No human pen can describe the deadly chaos which
ensued in that quarter; which lasted, in desperate fury, issue
dubious, for above three hours; and was the crisis, or essential
agony, of the battle.”
In this fiery trial it is no matter of wonder that some of the
Prussian regiments lost heart, and for a time fell back—recovering
themselves thereafter, and returning to the field of slaughter. One
of these was Schwerin’s regiment. The fiery veteran immediately
seized the colours, and shouting, Heran, meineKinder,—“This way, my
sons,”—rode straight into the chaos of the fight, followed by his
“sons” in swift repentance. Five bits of grape-shot struck the
white-haired hero, who fell dead upon his flag, clutching it with
tenacious hands; but his spirit, as it were, continued to lead the
desperate charge, and the Prussians, mad with grief and rage, fell
so fiercely upon the enemy, that he was compelled to yield.
Keith, in this great battle, commanded three thousand men, on the
Moldau side of the battlefield, and when the Austrian retreat began,
prevented them from escaping up the Moldau, and helped to shut up
part of them in Prague. The remainder fled to swell the ranks of
Daun’s army, which was rapidly approaching.
Frederick’s victory was dearly won. He admitted that he had lost
eighteen thousand men. The loss of the Austrians was a third
greater— twenty-four thousand killed, wounded, or taken prisoners;
but then the Austrians had another great army in the field, and
Frederick had not.
Leaving a large force, under Keith, to besiege Prague, Frederick,
with three thousand men, marched against Daun, who, though he had
the superiority in numbers, was resolved to risk nothing, and had
encamped in a very strong position at Kolin. The battle began before
noon on June 1, and was maintained on both sides with terrible
resolution and great shedding of blood. The Prussians behaved with a
gallantry worthy of their fame ; but the deadly fire of the Austrian
batteries from every point of vantage proved too much for them, and
at length their decimated regiments could no longer be brought up to
the attack. Even then, Frederick was unwilling to admit the
indispensableness of retreat, and the officers of his personal staff
were constrained to put the question to him straight —“Will your
Majesty storm the batteries alone?” Entering the battle thirty-four
thousand strong, he lost thirteen thousand seven hundred and
seventy-three, of whom the prisoners (including all the wounded)
numbered five thousand three hundred and eighty. They lost also
forty-five cannon and twenty-two flags, but held so resolute an
attitude even in defeat, that the victors meddled not with their
baggage. The Austrian forces in the field are estimated at sixty
thousand; their killed, wounded, and missing amounted to eight
thousand one hundred and fourteen.
Retiring upon Prague, Frederick immediately raised the siege, and by
different routes marched his army out of Bohemia, Keith bringing up
the rear, and having charge of the magazines and stores.
In November, having recruited his weakened army, Frederick opened a
new campaign. He himself led the van; the main body was under
Marshal Keith; and the rear under Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick, one
of the ablest captains of the time. A great French army was moving
up from the west, under the command of Marshal Soubise, a prince of
the great house of Rohan; this was the enemy at whom Frederick
resolved to aim his first blow. He came up with him at Rosbach on
November 5, and though considerably inferior in numbers, obtained a
complete victory. The French lost three thousand killed and wounded,
and five thousand taken prisoners, with about seventy cannon,
besides standards, flags, kettledrums, and meaner baggage. Those who
fled, fled in the greatest confusion. The Prussians had only one
hundred and sixty-five killed, and three hundred and seventy-six
wounded. In number they had been little more than one to three;
twenty-two thousand of all arms, and of these not more than half
were under fire.
Victorious in the West, Frederick next turned his arms towards
Silesia, which had been overrun by the Austrians, under Duke Charles
of Lorraine. He marched thither with indefatigable energy, and on
December 5, exactly one month after the battle of Rosbach, fought
the battle of Leuthen —perhaps the most signal of his victories.
Recognizing the magnitude of the issue, he had summoned Keith and
his principal officers to his presence a day before; and made known
to them his intentions in terse and forcible language. After
commenting on the critical position of affairs in Silesia, he
remarked that his embarrassments would be insuperable but for the
entire confidence he had in them, and in their high military
qualities.
Hardly one among them but had distinguished himself by some nobly
memorable action ; but all their services to the State and to
himself he knew well, and would never forget. He flattered himself,
therefore, that on the present occasion nothing would be wanting
which the State had a right to expect of their valour. The hour was
at hand. He should think nothing done if he left the Austrians in
possession of Silesia. He wished to inform them, therefore, that he
intended, in spite of the Rules of Art, to attack Prince Charles’s
army, though it was nearly thrice their strength, wherever and
whenever he found it. Of its numbers or the strength of its position
he should take no account. He hoped to neutralize these advantages
by his tactical skill and the courage of his soldiers. This step, he
said, he must risk, or all was lost. “We must beat the enemy,” he
cried, “or perish, all of us, in front of his batteries. Make this
my resolve known to all the officers of the army; prepare the men
for the work they will have to do, and say that I expect absolute
fulfilment of my orders.”
There was no mistake about the temper of this Prussian army; it was
as dogged and inflexible as if its ranks had been filled with
Keith’s countrymen. And then it had such a noble faith in its kingly
leader! “Never mind,” the soldiers used to say in Marlborough’s
time, “Corporal John will get us through it!” And this, too, was the
feeling of the Prussian fighting-men as regarded their “Vater
Fritz.” That same evening (I am condensing from Carlyle) he rode
into the camp, and went from regiment to regiment, exchanging frank
soldierly speech with all. The first he came upon was the Life Guard
Cuirassiers: the men, in their wonted manner, gave him good-evening,
which he returned cheerily. Some of the veterans addressed him
confidentially: “What is thy news, then, at this late hour?” “Good
news, children: to-morrow you will drub the Austrians soundly” “That
we will" they said, “by Heaven!” “But look how many of them there
are yonder, and how strongly they have entrenched themselves!” “If
they had the devil in their front, and all round them, we would
knock them out: only thou lead us on!” “Well, I shall see what you
can do! Now, lay down, and sleep soundly; good sleep to you!”
“Good-night, Fritz,” they cried with one consent; and the King moved
on to the next regiment, the Pommern or Pomeranian. “Well, children,
how do you think it will go to-morrow? They are twice as strong as
we.” “Never thou mind that; there are no Pommerners among them; thou
knowest what the Pommerners can do!” “Yea, truly,” answered the
King, “that I do, or I durst not risk the battle. Now, good sleep to
you! to-morrow, then, by this time, we shall either have beaten the
enemy, or shall all be dead.” “Yes,” resumed the regiment, in
chorus, “dead, or else the enemy beaten.”
I do not propose to describe the battle of Leuthen. To the
non-professional reader the description of one battle is very much
like that of another, and even when it is written by a brilliant
expert, it carries no conviction to the mind. He understands that A
is beaten, and that B conquers; but he does not understand the why
or the wherefore; nor can he separate the part played by the
stubborn courage of the men from the part played by the genius of
their leader. At Leuthen it would be difficult to do so; for though
it was Frederick’s manoeuvres1 which conferred upon forty thousand
men an insuperable superiority over sixty thousand, these manoeuvres
could have been carried out only by troops of the highest discipline
and courage. The Austrian overthrow was complete; they left three
thousand killed and seven thousand wounded on the field, and twenty
thousand to twenty-one thousand were taken prisoners. Necessarily
such a victory was not cheaply won; it cost the victors one thousand
one hundred and forty-one killed, and five thousand one hundred and
eighteen wounded. “Gentlemen,” said Frederick that night, when the
hurly-burly was over, “after such a spell of work you deserve rest.
This day will hand down the renown of your name and your nation to
the latest posterity.”
Marshal Keith’s share in these notable military achievements I have
not attempted to indicate. He was a lieutenant, and, therefore, can
claim little of the glory that on such occasions surrounds the
commander. He had to obey orders, and he obeyed them with sagacity,
promptitude, and resolution. There was no one of his officers whom
Frederick more thoroughly trusted; no one whose counsel carried
greater weight with him; but his was not the initiative genius, and
Rosbach and Leuthen are Frederick’s victories, and neither Keith’s
nor Schwerin’s nor any other of the Prussian generals, except in so
far as each did his duty with true soldierly instinct.
Having recovered Silesia, Frederick passed the winter at Breslau in
the studies he loved, and in making vigorous preparations for his
next campaign. Fresh levies brought up the fighting strength of his
army to the normal standard, and in the spring of 1758 he again took
the field. Leaving Prince Ferdinand to deal with the French, he
marched to encounter the Russians, who had sided with Austria, and
slaying, ravaging, and burning, had penetrated into the heart of his
dominions. His first movement was against Olmtitz. Starting from
Neisse, on April 27, with vanguard and first division under his own
command—Keith, with second division and rearguard, following at a
day’s march distance,—he silently threaded the mountain villages and
upper streamlets of the Oder and Morawa, and on May 12 suddenly
debouched in front of Olmiitz, near which (at Leutomischl) Marshal
Daun lay entrenched with a strong force. Frederick at once invested
Olmtitz, entrusting the general direction of the siege to Keith, who
pressed it with unconquerable tenacity; but was ill served by his
engineers, and inadequately supplied with ammunition. The capture of
an important convoy by Daun made Frederick’s position untenable; and
on July 1 he ordered Keith to raise the siege, and began his
retreat. Keith, who covered the retreat, is acknowledged to have
behaved with masterly tactical skill. He was suffering from asthma
at the time, but exhibited his usual vigilance, energy, and
judgment, and though upwards of sixty, much of the elasticity and
promptitude of youth. The hosts under Loudon made some attacks upon
his long column; he brushed them off quite easily. It was at Holitz,
within a march of Konigsgratz, that Loudon struck most heavily, and
at one time there was some risk of disaster. But Keith, hearing the
brisk artillery combat in front of him, galloped to the scene of
action with his cavalry, and by a series of skilful manoeuvres drove
back the enemy in confusion. “A man fiery enough,” says Carlyle,
“and prompt with his stroke when wanted, though commonly so quiet.
‘Tell Monsieur,’—some general who seemed too stupid or too languid
on this occasion,—‘Tell Monsieur from me,’ said Keith to his
aide-de-camp, ‘he may be a very pretty thing, but he is not a man (giCil
pent Ure une bonne chose, mais qu'il n'est pas un Jiomme’). The
excellent vernacular Keith — still a fine breadth of accent in him,
one perceives!”
Frederick now marched to encounter the Russians, and gave them
battle, 011 August 25, at Zorndorf, near Frankfort-on-the-Oder. The
fight was “long and bloody" but it ended in a great victory for the
Prussians and their King. The Russian loss amounted to eight
thousand killed, and thirteen thousand five hundred wounded and
taken prisoners. The Prussian loss was about half, namely three
thousand six hundred and eighty killed, and seven thousand seven
hundred wounded or missing. Zorndorf was the bloodiest field of the
Seven Years’ War, and one of the most furious recorded in military
annals. On both sides men were animated by a feeling of personal
hate; and the sight of the ravages committed by the ruthless
invaders had filled the breast of every Prussian with an insatiable
thirst of vengeance.
Having thus disposed of his enemies from the east, the indefatigable
Frederick swept round against the Austrians, who, under the command
of the two most brilliant Imperialist generals, Daun and Loudon,
were advancing into Saxony. As Frederick approached, Daun drew back,
and encamped at Stolpen, one of the strongest posts in Germany, with
Pirna on his left, and Loudon’s division on his right, barring the
road to Bautzen, which was Frederick’s objective. By a series of
skilful manoeuvres Frederick passed Loudon, and got round to
Bautzen, where he pushed forward on the road to Weissenberg, but
finding that Daun was again ahead of him, he halted at Hochkirch,
and posted his troops on a low range of hills directly opposite to
the Austrian camp. But Frederick, unwisely contemptuous of the
Austrian commander, had allowed his army to slip into a dangerous
position. “The Austrian generals deserve to be hanged,” cried Keith,
“if they don’t attack us here!” They did attack them there! During
the night of Friday, October 13, Daun, dexterously manoeuvring, and
helped by a thick fog, drew his ninety thousand men in a silent
circle round the Prussian camp, and at five o’clock next morning,
fell suddenly on the astonished Prussians, under cover of a
tremendous fire. Though taken by surprise, they made an obstinate
resistance; and Frederick exercising all his genius for war, they
contrived to extricate themselves from what seemed certain
destruction, though not without defeat and carnage.
About six, or half-past, Keith, who had command of the right wing,
ascertained that his main battery had been captured, and prepared to
recover it. Mounting his horse in hot haste, he assembled a couple
of battalions, and through the heavy mist which obscured the
battle-field, led them forward. After a sharp struggle, the battery
was retaken. But fresh Austrian troops came upon the ground, and
Keith began to look round him anxiously for assistance. “Where are
my aides-de-camp?” he repeatedly inquired; but obtaining neither
reply nor reinforcement, was at length compelled to fall back, his
men clearing the way with levelled bayonets. Suddenly he stopped
short, and, with a bullet through the heart, dropped dead into the
arms of his groom, John Tebay, thus closing, amid the gloom and
clang of the fight, his adventurous career.
Tebay endeavoured to carry off his body, but failed; and the
Austrians conveyed it into Hochkirch church, where, on the morrow,
the Field-Marshal was honourably buried. Four months after, his
remains were removed, by Frederick’s order, to Berlin, and interred
with full military honours in the Garnison Kirche—where they still
lie, far from the bonnie glades of Inverugie and the ruins of
Dunnottar. A statue of him was erected (about 1780) on the Wilhelm
Platz. He has also a memorial in Hochkirch church; an urn of black
marble on a pedestal of grey; with an inscription which records how
he “Dum in praslio non procul hinc, inclinatam suorum aciem, mente
manu voce et exemplo restituebat, pugnans ut heros decet, occubuit.”
That he was no mere soldier of fortune—no unscrupulous mercenary,
intent on selling his sword to the highest bidder—is proved by the
record of his career. “My brother,” said the aged Earl Marshal,
“leaves me a noble legacy; last year he had Bohemia under ransom;
and his personal estate is seventy ducats” Yes; that was the fortune
he left behind him—about twenty-five pounds—the result of so many
years of adventure and so much gallant service. |