Colonel Monro himself is
not wholly unknown to those who remember their Scott; for it was he
who provided a good deal of the material for the immortal Dugald Dalgetty
— "Rittmaster Dugald Dalgetty of Drumthwacket", the valorous soldier of
fortune and military theorist, who returned to Scotland just in time to
take part in Montrose’s campaigns, and to edify his brothers-in-arms with
endless reminiscences of the time when he followed "the invincible
Gustavus Adolphus, the Lion of the North, and the Bulwark of the
Protestant Faith". Dalgetty is of course by no means a mere copy of our
Colonel: Scott has in great measure stylised him. As a rhetorician he has
been made better than his model, and can at any moment produce well-turned
periods of preposterous phraseology, to the frequent imperilment of the
gravity of his audience, while Monro keeps to a more modest level and
achieves the sublimely comic only by way of exception. On the other hand
Scott’s hero, for artistic reasons, has been made of coarser moral fibre
than his original. Dalgetty is a pure mercenary without ideals of any
sort, pushing, valiant, and jealous of his honour; proud of his
profession, and imbued with the most minute interest for its etiquette and
technique, but completely devoid of any idea that the trade of war may
have a more ideal side. He fights as cheerfully for Papists, Arminians and
Anabaptists as for Protestants —provided only that his wages be honestly
paid, or at least that he be given now and then a decent chance of
plunder; for a moment he has even contemplated entering the Turkish
service; the religious element in him is limited to the Biblical
phraseology of his descriptions of Gustavus Adolphus. Monro, on the other
hand, takes a personal interest in the success of the Protestant Cause,
and is in general very ready to speak of religion: he could never have
reconciled himself to serving with Tilly or Wallenstein; he notes with
satisfaction that English and Scottish soldiers of fortune prefer to
follow the Swedish standard. On the battlefield of Breitenfeld, where
Monro had intervened effectively in the hand-to-hand struggle which
brought Tilly’s great infantry attack to a standstill, he applied to the
King after the victory was won for permission to reinforce his depleted
regiment by incorporating all prisoners of British nationality. He
obtained leave to do so, and applied to Banér, who had charge of the
sorting-out of the prisoners. And when, among all the thousands of
prisoners available, the two of them succeeded in dredging up only three
Irishmen — then Monro was indeed somewhat downcast at a recruiment so poor
from the point of view of the service, but derived none the less a certain
moral satisfaction from telling the King of his ill-success, as being
proof that the British Isles produced in the main men who fought for the
cause of righteousness.
The sword and the half-pike
were instruments whose use Monro understood down to the smallest
particular; with the pen he felt himself less at ease, and his manoeuvres
to get to grips with what he wishes to say can often become somewhat
tedious. His subject is akin to Xenophon’s, his enthusiasm for Gustavus
Adolphus is reminiscent of Joinville’s for St Louis; but while the
lucidity of the Athenian and the easy conversational style of the Sénéchal
of Champagne have put their military memoirs among the fixed stars in the
literary firmament, Monro has not succeeded in making his narrative of the
campaigns in which he took part much more than a forgotten curiosity of
literature. No subject is great enough in itself to make a book readable.
It may be treated as seriously and conscientiously as you please; but a
certain literary instinct — often almost impossible to detect, but still
decisive for the reader — must have been operative at the moment when
events were clothed in words, if any such narrative is to escape the fate
of becoming no more than a source for the historian. Few men have been
less affected with literary arrière-pensée than a man such as
Joinville when he dictated his book on King Louis; in so far as he
troubled himself about the arrangement of his material at all, he usually
succeeded in putting the cart before the horse, and in his narrative he
chattered away, just as things occurred to him, with supreme disregard of
other considerations. Nevertheless his book emerged as great literature,
partly perhaps because he had in comparison with a writer such as Monro
one great advantage: as became a gentilhomme in his day, he could
neither read nor write. He spoke to his secretary in the tone of a man of
the world, easily and with a charming lightness, entirely fascinated by
his subject, and the result was readable from start to finish. But Monro,
full of Latin quotations, and with Frontinus and Quintus Curtius at his
finger-ends, saw (thanks to his studies) the portals of the land of
pedantry open wide before him; and with much painful care he has succeeded
in rendering his book largely unreadable, unless the reader bring
considerable patience to the task. Parallel to every narrative chapter in
his book runs a chapter of Observations, highly repetitious and
packed with didactic verbiage; but containing nevertheless matter which
makes it impossible simply to skip them in the reading. Thus Monro spreads
over the events he describes a veil of heaviest baroque ornamentation,
obscuring them from the eye of the reader; and it is only rarely that he
permits a more or less clear image to slip through.
Nevertheless Monro is a
writer worthy of all respect — a barbarized Xenophon from an age when
literary products blossomed only with extreme rarity in the tented field.
In bibliographies of the Thirty Year’s War his book occupies an almost
unique place: memoir-writing by active participants — whether in war or
politics — seems to have been almost exclusively confined to France. He
stands therefore as a virtually unique spokesman for a great
confraternity: many inarticulate spirits, many simple-minded men of the
sword in him find a voice, and the uncomplicated philosophy and ethics of
the honourable craft of arms is given clear expression in his reflections
and commentaries.
The regiment whose fortunes
Monro relates (he commanded one half of it throughout the period of its
Swedish service) was levied by Lord Reay, and was originally intended to
be used as reinforcement for Count Mansfeld, at that time Protestantism’s
one remaining champion in Germany. But by the time it was brought up to
full strength and embarked at Cromarty — in the autumn of 1626 —
Mansfeld’s restless life had already closed, and instead they steered
their course to Christian IV of Denmark, then busily engaged in raising
men for his German war. Monro began his career as Lieutenant under "the
worthie and well-born Captaine, Thomas McKenzie of Kildon"; but his own
merits — assisted by sword and pestilence — brought him quick promotion,
and after little more than a year he became Lieutenant-Colonel, and
commanded the regiment in Lord Reay’s absence. Lord Reay tended to be
mainly absent. Men of rank such as himself raised regiments and lent them
the lustre of their name, and arranged the details of high finance with
any Kings who might be interested; but for routine service on the
battlefield or at the head of the storming-columns they rarely had the
time to spare: such things fell to the lot of simpler folk such as Monro.
The clan of Monro was numerously represented in the regiment: the
subalterns, N.C.S.’s and privates of that name, whom the conscientious
Colonel notes down in the course of his narrative as dead, are the sands
of the sea in number. The regiment included no less than three members of
the family who afterwards became Colonels under Gustavus Adolphus: Robert
Monro the Lord of Fowles, head of the house, called "the Black Baron", who
had been compelled by financial difficulties to mortgage his estate and
enlist as a soldier, and who died of wounds at Ulm; John Monro of Obstell,
who fell at Wetterau on the Rhine; and the author himself, longer-lived
than most of the others — though he was rarely out of the way when an
important action was to be fought.
During the Danish period of
the war the regiment’s experiences in the field were certainly extremely
arduous, but on the whole they were satisfactory to Monro, who looked at
them wholly from the regiment’s point of view. The campaign itself was as
unfortunate as possible; but the regiment covered itself with glory at the
storm of sundry places and in a number of reaguards actions. The Scots
soon won the reputation of a picked regiment; and the Danish command
relied largely upon them in moments of difficulty, gave them the posts of
danger, and allowed them to bear the brunt of the fighting without
reinforcement for much longer periods than in the case of other troops.
All of which is no doubt very honourable for a regiment, and redounds to
the glory of Scotland too; but even Scots have limits to their endurance
and their taste for fighting, and once or twice in Oldenburg Monro seems
to have felt that here was too much of a good thing. When Tilly advanced
into Holstein the regiment sustained a serious disaster. Three of its
companies were defending Bredenberg, a fortified castle in those parts;
after a summons to capitulate had been rejected, the Imperialists stormed
the castle and put to death every man, woman and child inside it; only one
ensign escaped to carry a report to the regiment. What particularly
irritated the Scots about this was that their regimental chaplain had been
slain with the rest, although he had been found on his knees, praying for
his life with uplifted hands. Shortly after this Monro in his turn stormed
a place in Holstein garrisoned by the Imperialists (disguised in his
narrative under the name of Aickilfourd); the Scots now, by way of quid
pro quo, refused to give quar the imperialists at last barricaded
themselves in a church; and Monro, after a short struggle with his
conscience, caused the door to be broken open with battering-rams: no
place, he felt, could be sufficiently sacred to afford sanctuary to people
who killed regimental chaplains. These two episodes provided a sort of
prelude in miniature to the similar incidents at Neu-Brandenburg and
Frankfurt on the Oder in which the regiment was to play a part a few years
later.
With the King of Denmark
Monro was well-pleased; he was not, perhaps, much of a commander, but
wages were punctually paid, and he took pains to arrange for good
quartering. His standing epithet with Monro is "the Magnanimous", his
appearance was truly regal; his wisdom, carefulness and tenacity win
Monro’s commendation. He was, besides, in his dealings with honourable
cavaliers an amiable and loquacious gentleman; Monro ate at his table, and
even on one occasion, when they were quartered on Laaland, had the honour
of a visit from the King which lasted until 3 o’clock in the morning; upon
which Monro’s only comment is that the King departed without saying
farewell — a piece of absent-mindedness which is not perhaps entirely
incapable of explanation, in view of the hour and His Danish Majesty’s
prowess with the bottle. Monro, it is clear, never had better quarters
than those he enjoyed in Denmark — at least until the march through the
Rhineland in the autumn of 1631. Minor clashes with their Danish
hosts and with other regiments did indeed occur from time to time, but
they appeared almost as an agreeable break in an existence which might
otherwise have declined into torpid luxuriousness. Upon his return from
Holstein, Monro (he had just got his majority) was sent with a portion of
the regiment to Assens, on the island of Fyn, where he found another Major
with some squadrons of the Rhinegrave’s cavalry. The question as to which
of them had the right to command the garrison soon produced a coolness
between the two Majors, a coolness which communicated itself to their
devoted troops; so that the ensuing street-fights soon showed a daily
casualty-return of from four to five killed per regiment. Major-General
Slammersdorff was forced to quit his headquarters at Odense, to hold a
court-martial, and to pronounce a verdict in Monro’s favour, before this
civil war could be brought to a conclusion. When next these two regiments
encountered one another — both were by that time in Swedish service —
these little irrations seem to have been forgotten; or perhaps Gustavus
Adolphus and his order-loving Field-Marshal Horn had effective
prophylactics against private diversions of this sort.
When from time to time
Danish burghers and peasants grew exasperated at the Scots billetted upon
them, they had at first recourse to the obvious remedy of thrashing such
of them as they encountered alone; but when this proved in the long run
not to be a very paying proposition, they hit upon a better method, and
brought accusations of rape. In one case Monro lost three men at a stroke,
on account of a single peasant girl; the court-martial in Copenhagen,
which had called in Monro as assessor, allowed itself to be persuaded to
defer sentence on grounds of insufficient evidence. However, when this had
been agreed on, and Monro had left Copenhagen, the court nevertheless
caused the accused to be summarily hanged. Monro shook his head at this
way of doing business, partly because he considered the accusations to be
false, but mainly because he felt that the court-martial had acted in an
ungentlemanly fashion towards him by arranging for the hanging privily and
in his absence.
Monro in this connection is
concerned to point out that the machinery for the administration of
justice was by no means lacking in such a regiment as his; and his account
of how it was organized is of its kind a good picture of his age:
"To conclude this
observation, there are lawes and justice observed as well among souldiers,
as in other governments, and the strictest justice, that is, with least
partiality: our lawes are the Kings Articles, we are sworne to obey our
President or Judge, he amongst us present having the command, to whom his
Majesty joynes, as assessor to the Judge, an Auditor for doing of justice,
our Assisers of Jury we have not to seeke (viz.) a competent number
of thirteene of our owne Regiment, Officers, Captaines, Lievetenants,
Antients, Sergeants and Corporalls, till our number be full: our Proforce
or Gavilliger brings in the complaints, and desires justice, in his
Majesties name, to the party offended, and to his Master the Kings Majesty
or Generall, that fuers or leads the warre; and every Regiment is bound to
have an executioner of their owne, which if the Regiment wants, the
Colonell is obliged to hire another to doe the execution for paiment, and
sometimes as the crime and the person is respected, that is to suffer, he
is honoured to be shot by his camerades, or beheaded, not suffering an
executioner to come neare him. Other slight punishments we enjoyne for
slight faults, put in execution by their Camerades; as the Lowpegarthe,
when a Souldier is stripped naked above the waste, and is made to
runne a furlong betwixt two hundred Souldiers, ranged alike opposite to
others, leaving a space in the midst for the Souldier to runne through,
where his Camerades whip him with small rods, ordained and cut for the
purpose by the Gavilliger, and all to keepe good order and
discipline; for other lesser faults, there is ordaited slighter
punishments, as Irons, standing at a jost, his hands bound up above his
head; likewise sitting on a Treen or woodden Mare, in some publicke place,
to make him ashamed of his fault: At also sometimes to stand six or seaven
hours longer than ordinary at the centrie posture; as I was once made to
stand in my younger years at the Louver gate in Paris, being
then in the Kings Regiment of the Guards, passing my prenticeship, for
sleeping in the morning, when I ought to have beene at my excercise, for
punishment I was made stand from eleven before noone, to eight of the
Clocke in the night Centry, Armed with Corslet, Head-piece, Bracelets,
being Iron to the teeth, in a hot summers day, till I was weary of my
life, which ever after made me the more strict in punishing those under my
Command."
In May 1628 the regiment
received orders to march with all speed to Elsinore, whence it was shipped
to serve as garrison in Stralsund, which at that time was menaced by the
attacks of Wallenstein, and had been taken under the protection of
Christian IV. Here Monro and his men were to experience their severest
trials in the Danish service. Wallenstein, who had sworn to take the town
"were it grappled to Heaven with iron chains", pushed the siege with great
fury. Three attempts at storm were made upon the positions held by Monro;
outworks were taken and retaken in desperate nocturnal encounters with
pike, club and partisan; the regiment in a few weeks lost more than half
its strength. But Scottish blood did not flow in vain: the town was held,
despite Wallenstein’s efforts, and the Imperialists, as Monro points out
with satisfaction, lost in their attacks at least thrice as many men as
he. When the crisis was at its worst, he was cheered by the arrival of a
famous fellow-countryman, Alexander Leslie, Major-General in the Swedish
service, who had been sent with sufficient aid by Gustavus Adolphus; and
Monro in reporting this unexpected deliverance compares Stralsund with
Sara the wife of Abraham, who was made fruitful when she least expected
it. The Danish troops were now withdrawn; and with such of his men as
survived — and, for his own part, with a musket-ball in one knee — Monro
returned to Copenhagen. Here Lord Reay now appeared with a large number of
new levies which he had raised on a recruiting tour in Scotland, and the
regiment was again brought up to its full strength of twelve companies. In
the winter of 1628-1629 Monro lay in quarters in "Malline [Malmo] in
Skonland", with a couple of companies in "Alzenburg" [Halsingborg] and one
in "London" [Lund] in the same kingdom. Malmö makes a favourable
impression on the observant Lieutenant-Colonel: The food in burgher homes
he finds excellent without being extravagant; silver articles were
plentiful and servants numerous; while the better class of people made
laudable efforts to imitate the King, as far as possible, in dress,
manners and appearance.