AMONG the many
gallant Scots who won distinction under “the Invincible Gustavus
Adolphus, the Lion of the North, and Bulwark of the Protestant
Religion,” the most eminent was, undoubtedly, the renowned captain,
Sir John Hepburn. We may not all of us agree with his biographer
that, in the age of the Thirty Years’ War—an age illustrated by the
military genius of Tilly, Mansfeldt, Duke Bernard of Saxe-Weimar,
Pappenheim, and Wallenstein—he, as a commander, ranked next to
Gustavus; but we will not refuse the tribute of admiration that is
due to his courage and capacity. He was of the stuff of which great
generals are made; and under different conditions, and on a wider
field, might have risen to a foremost position.
Sir John came of the Hepburns of Athelstaneford, in Haddingtonshire—the
quiet secluded village associated with the memory of Home, the
author of Douglas—where he was born in the year 1598 or 1600, in his
father’s house, which, I believe, is still in existence. A tall,
active, handsome, and high-spirited young fellow, he seems from his
earliest 39 years to have displayed a spirit of adventure—a restless
temper that nothing but action could satisfy. He rode with skill,
grace, and boldness, was famous among his comrades as nn beau
sabreur, and in all athletic exercises easily gained distinction.
His great friend and class-fellow was Robert Monro, who afterwards
shared with him in the campaigns of Gustavus Adolphus; and in the
latter months of 1618 the two travelled on the Continent, visiting
Paris and Poitiers, picking up a colloquial knowledge of French and
German, and gaining some insight into Continental methods of
warfare. They heard, too, much talk of the genius of the great King
of Sweden, and the reports of his achievements kindled in the breast
of young Hepburn “a spark of military ardour which was never
extinguished till his death.”
The young gentlemen of Scotland were necessarily attracted to the
field of war in Bohemia ; for the cause that struggled there against
the House of Austria was one that commended itself alike to their
religious, chivalrous, and loyal sympathies. The Elector Frederick,
who had been raised to the throne of Bohemia,1 represented the
Calvinism of Germany; his wife was Elizabeth Stuart, the fair and
accomplished daughter of James VI., on behalf of whose beauty and
misfortunes a thousand swords leaped from their scabbards. When the
drums of Sir Andrew Gray, a gallant soldier of fortune, beat up for
volunteers in East Lothian to serve under her standard, we need not
wonder, therefore, that one of the first to ride into his camp was
young Hepburn of Athelstancford. Having raised a force of one
thousand five hundred men, Sir Andrew, in May 1620, embarked at
Leith, and crossed over to Holland, whence by way of Frankfort he
proceeded to join the Bohemian army. Young Hepburn was then promoted
to the command of a company of pikes, which was selected for the
honour of guarding King Frederick’s person ; but the disastrous
battle under the walls of Prague, on November I, ruined the
Protestant cause in Bohemia. The defeated sovereign fled from the
field like a craven, seeking safety first in Denmark, then in
Holland, in England, and finally in France. Thus suddenly deserted,
Sir Andrew’s Scottish companies rallied to the flag of the Count of
Mansfeldt, and smelt the smoke of battle in Germany and Alsace. In
1622, they proved their constancy in the defence of Bergen-op-Zoom
against the Spanish army under the famous Marquis de Spinola; and
side by side fought “ old Morgan with his English brigade. Scotchmen
and Englishmen being no longer divided by the old national enmities.
The garrison fired “two hundred thousand cannon-shot” on the
besiegers, who on the approach of Prince Maurice with an army of
relief, suddenly struck their tents and retired, leaving twelve
thousand dead in their abandoned trenches.
The German princes making peace with the Emperor, Mansfeldt and his
fighting-men found themselves without employment, and, what was now
more irksome, without pay. To keep his followers in heart, Mansfeldt
led them into Lorraine, where they pillaged and burnt and ravaged
without stint, until the Dutch, who were hard pressed by the
Spaniards, agreed to hire their services, whereupon, with blare of
trumpets and roll of drums, they marched, horse and foot, twelve
thousand veteran soldiers, into the fertile plains of the
Netherlands. Spinola dispatched a powerful force to intercept them,
and a desperate engagement took place near Namur, on August 30,
1622. Mansfeldt and the Bishop of Halberstadt charged at the head of
their condottieri with singular resolution, and succeeded in
breaking through the Spanish steel-clad lines, although not without
heavy loss. “Many gentlemen, both English and Scots,” says Wilson,
“out of love to the Queen of Bohemia, behaved themselves gallantly,
and let the Spaniard know it was more than an ordinary shock they
encountered; among whom Sir Charles Rich, brother to the Earl of
Warwick, was a principal person; Sir James Hayes, Knevet, Hume,
Hepburn, and other commanders, all striving for co-rivalship in
bravery."
Entering Holland, Mansfeldt compelled Spinola to raise for the
second time the siege of Bergen-op-Zoom; and then cantoned his
battle-weary troops among the well-to-do towns and fat villages of
East Friesland as long as the Dutch would provide them with free
quarters. Then he harried the valley of the Lower Rhine, until his
army gradually disbanded itself in the summer of 1623 for want of a
common cause and a good paymaster. Thereupon Sir Andrew Gray
returned to Scotland, while the remains of the Scottish companies
found a new and more active leader in Captain Hepburn, and under his
command, offered their swords to the great King of Sweden, Gustavus
Adolphus, for whose genius Hepburn had long cherished a fervent
admiration. Gustavus had a keen eye for capable soldiers, and at
once appointed Hepburn colonel of a Scottish regiment, composed of
his old Bohemian comrades—of which regiment the First Foot, or Loyal
Scots Regiment of the British line, is now, it is said, the direct
representative. In this important command his high soldierly
qualities were brilliantly tested, and secured for him the esteem
and confidence of his royal master. Defoe, in his Memoirs of a
Cavalier (which, if partly fictitious, would seem to have been based
on an authentic narrative), says—“He was a complete soldier indeed,
and so well-beloved by the gallant king that he hardly knew how to
go about any great action without him.”
Some of the best families of Scotland had their representatives in
the Swedish army: Hamiltons, Seatons, Ruthvens, Mackays, Leslies,
Monros, Sinclairs, Drummonds, Campbells, Montgomeries, Gordons,
Duffs, Douglasses—we meet with all these historic names. In the
Atlas GeograpJms (London, 1711) we read that in 1633, two Scottish
regiments were employed to guard the Swede King’s person, though at
that time he had both Swedes and Dutch in camp. In the conquered
provinces of Germany he gave the command of sixty towns, castles,
and forts to Scottish soldiers. Another authority states that at one
time Gustavus had in his service no fewer than four field-marshals,
three generals, one lieutenant-general, thirteen major-generals,
three brigadier-generals, twenty-seven colonels, fifty-one
lieutenant-colonels, and fourteen majors, “with an unknown number of
captains and subalterns ; besides seven regiments of Scots that lay
in Sweden and Livonia (and six elsewhere). The Dutch in Gustavus’s
service were many times glad to beat ‘the old Scots march' when they
designed to frighten or alarm the enemy; and ’tis observed that Sir
John Hamilton abandoned the army, though earnestly pressed by
Gustavus to stay, only because the Swedes and the Dutch were ordered
to storm the enemy's works before him at Wurtzburg, after he and his
men had boldly hewn out the way for them." In such repute were these
brave Scotchmen held, and such was the proud temper in which they
did their service.
As a colonel of infantry, Hepburn’s yearly pay was £380—which, of
course, would now-a-days be represented by a much larger sum. He was
also entitled to a coach as part of his equipage; but though he had
one “for form’s sake, or the convenience of a wounded comrade,” he
himself always rode at the head of his Scottish musketeers. A
lieutenant-colonel received £1000 per annum; a captain, £128; a
musketeer or pikeman, 6d. per diem; and a cuirassier, 11d. Under
Gustavus Adolphus, a regiment consisted of eight companies, and each
company of seventy-two musketeers and fifty-four pikemen, or a total
of one thousand and eight men, exclusive of officers.
In 1625, Hepburn served in the Swede King’s campaign against
Sigismund, King of Poland, his regiment forming part of the army
which broke into Courland and Livonia, captured the strong places in
both provinces, and totally defeated the Polish generals, Sapieha
and Gosieowski, at Wallhof, on January 6, 1626. Hepburn specially
distinguished himself at the relief of Mewe, a fortified town,
situated on the river Vistula, which King Sigismund had blockaded
with three thousand Foies, entrenching them on a steep green hill,
so as to cut off communication between the town and the surrounding
country, and command all the approaches. He strengthened the post
with a couple of heavy batteries ; while the whole line of his
entrenched infantry, with their bows and matchlocks, swept the
rugged slopes which lay below their earthen parapets.
Gustavus Adolphus threw forward three Scottish regiments of foot
under Hepburn, and five hundred horse under Count Thurn, with
instructions to force the passage of this fortified hill, and cut
their way into the town. It was dusk when Hepburn, who had marched
by a secret road, in perfect silence, came in view of it. Finding
that his advance had not been discovered, he swept round on the
Polish flank, and climbed the steep acclivity, through trees and
bushes and rocks, with incredible patience, the soldiers helping
themselves upward by clinging to the overhanging branches, like
sailors climbing the shrouds of a ship. The Poles had never dreamed
of an attack from this side, which seemed accessible only to goats,
and were taken by surprise when the Scots, with a loud shout, fell
upon them. The trenches were stormed at push of pike; but then the
Poles recovered themselves, and opened such a terrible fire of
musketry, mingled with showers of arrows, stones, and other
missiles, that the Scots were forced to fall back; whereupon
squadrons of Cossacks and Heyducks, clad in mail shirts and steel
caps, dashed headlong upon them, with levelled lances and waving
scimitars. Hepburn slowly and steadily withdrew his men to an ascent
that seemed defensible, beating back the charges of these wild
horsemen, who yelled, “These curs shall feel the bite of the Polish
wolves!”
On this rocky eminence the brave Scottish pike-men stood shoulder to
shoulder, “immovable as a wall of brass,” placing in their front the
sharpened stakes, or chevanx-de-frise, which they always carried
with them—the “Swedish feathers” of Captain Dalgetty. Here, for two
whole days, Hepburn resisted the attack of the Polish army, while
Gustavus succeeded in relieving the town by throwing into it
supplies of men and ammunition. Thus baffled in their aim, the Poles
slowly retreated, leaving all the honours of war with Hepburn and
his gallant Scots.
“The Swedish feathers, whilk your honour must conceive to be
double-pointed stakes, shod with iron at each end, and planted
before the squad of pikes to prevent an outfall of the cavalry. The
whilk Swedish feathers, although they look gay to the eye,
resembling the shrubs or lesser trees of ane forest, as the puissant
pikes, arranged in battalia behind them, correspond to the tall
pines thereof.
I have not the space for a detailed narrative of the campaigns in
which Hepburn bore a part, nor would such a narrative now-a-days
tend to the reader’s entertainment. Most of the battle-fields which
witnessed his victorious charges are now forgotten; their names
suggest no associations of interest to the minds of men. Let us pass
on to the stirring events which are still full of vitality, because
their issues affected the course of history, and determined the
fortunes of Europe even to our own time—of the Thirty Years’ War—a
war which saved Protestantism in Germany, and with it the cause of
religious tolerance and intellectual development ; a war which by
its far-reaching consequences rendered German unity possible when
the opportunity came, as we have seen it come.
Supported by France for political reasons with some cordiality, but
with more or less coldness by the Protestant States of North
Germany, and by England and Holland, who ought to have been his
strongest allies, Gustavus Adolphus, in 1630, appeared as the
champion of Protestantism against the great Catholic league, of
which the Emperor are not altogether so soft to encounter as the
plumage of a goose.”
Ferdinand II. was the head. I believe that he undertook the task in
a nobly unselfish spirit—not, perhaps, without some design to
strengthen the European position of his own kingdom, but mainly in
defence of the persecuted Gospel in which he was a devout believer.
“To extend the power of Sweden, to support the princes of Germany
against the Emperor’s encroachments, to give a firm and unassailable
standing-ground to German Protestantism, were all to him,” says
Gardiner, " parts of one great work, scarcely ever in thought to be
separated from one another.”
Gustavus had at this time in his service upwards of a thousand
officers and twelve thousand men— all Scots—men inured to danger,
experienced in arms, and faithful to one another and their leaders.
They formed the heart and brain of his army; and upon these choice
soldiers he devolved the most serious duties and desperate
enterprises. “Amongst these forces,” says the historian of the
British Army, “Colonel Hepburn’s Scots regiment appears to have held
a distinguished character for gallantry on all occasions; and no
troops appear to have been found better qualified for this important
enterprise than the Scots, who proved brave, hardy, patient of
fatigue and privation, frugal, obedient, and sober soldiers.”
Hepburn, who by this time had been knighted for his services,
embarked (June 6, 1630) with the Swedish main army at Elfsknaben,
where he was detained for nearly three weeks, until the wind veered
round and enabled the fleet to creep across the Baltic. On the
evening of the 26th they dropped anchor off the point of Usedom, on
the coast of Pomerania. The King, on stepping ashore, knelt down and
prayed aloud for a blessing on his arms; and then, before his
troops, took in hand a spade and began to work at the entrenchments
of the first camp on German soil. During the night nearly all the
troops were landed, and mustering these in regular array, Gustavus
addressed them, telling them that the enemy were largely the same
men whom they had beaten in Prussia; that he would share with them
all their dangers and privations, and that they should share with
him all luxuries, comforts, and booty. “For booty,” said he, “you
must not look to the land or people. The enemy hold it all in their
own hands, and it is for you to take it from them.” The next day he
began his march, and in less than eight months overran Pomerania and
Mecklenburg, capturing as many as eighty strong places in those two
duchies. In March 1631, Colberg was blockaded; and one of the first
important services rendered by Sir John Hepburn in this war, was in
preventing its relief by the Imperialists. The garrison then
surrendered. Shortly afterwards he was promoted to the command of a
brigade of four chosen Scottish regiments—Mackay's Highlanders, Sir
James Lumsden’s musketeers, Stargate’s corps, and his own, which
came to be known as Hepburns Scots Brigade, or The Green Brigade,
from the colour of the doublets, scarves, plumes, and standards of
its soldiers.
Into the mouth of Rittmaster Dugald Dalgetty, Scott puts the words
of an old soldier’s lied—
“When cannons are roaring and colours
are flying,
The lads that seek honour must never fear dying;
Then, stout cavaliers, let us toil our brave trade in,
And fight for the Gospel and bold King of Sweden."
It was no doubt in
the spirit of this admirable song, even if they chanced not to know
the words, that Sir John’s brigade—with carried pikes, matches
lighted, half-a-dozen standards displayed, and drums and fifes
beating and whistling “the old Scots March”—led the van of the great
Protestant army, under the Lion of the North, on its march for
Frankfort-on-the-Oder. They were thirsting to revenge six hundred of
their countrymen, who had been slain at New Brandenburg by an
overwhelming Imperialist force, all mercy and quarter being denied
them; and there was no action, however desperate, which they were
not prepared to undertake. In the storm of Frankfort they bore the
chief part of the peril and won the chief part of the honour.
Hepburn, as at their head he pushed through a great sallying port
(the Guben gate), was hit in the knee, “which, dazzling his senses
with great pain, forced him to retire, who said to me, ‘bully Monro,
I am shot, whereat I was wondrous sorry.’ His Major was next shot
dead, and the pikemen halted for a moment. Then up came the
impetuous Baner, and urged them to go forward: “whereat Colonel
Lumsden and I,” says Monro, “being both alike at the head of our own
colours, he having a partisan in his hand, and I a half-pike, with a
head-piece that covered my head, commanding our pikes to advance, we
led on shoulder to shoulder/’ and carried the gate. The enemy fell
back in great confusion, never pausing to lower the portcullis ; and
after them, in hot pursuit, went the Scots, entering the street at
their heels, and making a stand till their body of pikes were drawn
up orderly and flanked with musketeers; then they again advanced.
“Quarter! quarter!” cried the Imperialists. “New Brandenburg! New
Brandenburg!” was the ominous reply. With such fury did the Scots
avenge their slaughtered countrymen, that a pikeman with his own
hand slew eighteen of the enemy; and Lumsden’s regiment captured no
fewer than nine pairs of colours—so much to the liking of Gustavus
Adolphus that he bade this brave Fifeshire cavalier ask whatever he
wished that a king could bestow, and he should have it. Fort by fort
the brigade won its way into the town, pushing forward in close
column of regiments, shoulder to shoulder, with long pikes levelled
in front like a moving wall of steel, and the musketeers in the rear
ranks firing over their heads.
Nobody could resist these stern, inflexible Scots— not even Tilly’s
veterans. The Imperialist generals, with a few cuirassiers, made for
the bridge across the Oder, and rode full speed to Glogau, leaving
four colonels, thirty-six junior officers, and three thousand
soldiers dead in the blood-red streets. So headlong was their flight
that their caissons blocked up the approach to the bridge, which was
further obstructed by cannon, tumbrils, ammunition-chests, battered
coats of mail, and dead bodies. Three hours were allowed by the King
for plunder; but the troops got out of hand, and when the time was
up, he was compelled in person to rush in among some of the
companies, with his drawn sword, before he could restore discipline.
Monro was greatly vexed at this scene of disorder—
“In some regiments,” he says, “I am confident there was not one man
with the colours.”
After this sharp experience, Landsberg quickly surrendered, and
Gustavus then marched upon Berlin to compel the Elector of
Brandenburg to join the Protestant League. In July 1631 he moved in
the direction of the Elbe, striking southwards by Old Brandenburg,
Barnow, and Tangermiinde. Monro describes the march with much
particularity. He mentions that at Barnow he found the beer
remarkably good, but not so good as that of Soest,—“a good Calvinist
town, which brews liquor best for the body and clearest from all
filth or barm, as their religion is best for the soul,” says the
stout old Presbyterian, “and clearest from the dregs of
superstition.” At Tangermtinde, Gustavus crossed the Elbe, and
advanced to Werben, where “he did resolve to set down his leaguer ;
and spying a parcel of ground, the most commodious that could be had
for situation and air, having first the commodity of transportation
by water on the river of Haggle (Havel), running into the Elbe at
the leaguer, he had also the whole country on the other side of the
Elbe behind him as his friends.” In his camp at Werben he was
reinforced by six thousand Scots, under the Marquis of Hamilton ;
whom he then dispatched on service in Silesia. The arrival of this
body of auxiliaries encouraged the Elector of Saxony and the
Landgrave of Hesse to join Gustavus, who, on August 23, broke up his
camp, and advanced towards Wittenberg, in order to throw himself
upon Tilly and the Imperialists, wherever he should find them.
Crossing the Elbe at Wittenberg he marched towards Leipzig, which
had just been taken by the Imperialists. “On September 6,” says
Gustavus, “we went in early twilight through Diiben, and towards
evening reached the village of Wolkau, within seven miles from
Leipzig, where we rested the night. On the 7th, as soon as the sky
began to turn grey, I gave the order for the trumpets to blow for
the advance, and, because between us and Leipzig there was no wood,
but only great flat fields, I drew out my army in full battle array
and marched towards the city. The march lasted a short hour and a
half, when we came in sight of the advanced guard of the enemy with
his artillery on a hill, and behind it the whole mass of his army.”
Thus were the two hosts brought within touch of each other on the
great plain in front of Leipzig, which, about a hundred and
eighty-one years later, was to be the scene of another important
battle, in which Napoleon was defeated by the Allies.
The army of Gustavus was twenty-six thousand strong; that of Tilly
about forty thousand ; but the Swedes were reinforced by the troops
of the Elector of Saxony, who, however, if they brought numbers,
brought nothing else. They had had no experience of fighting, and
were wholly unfit to cope with Tilly’s seasoned veterans. Gustavus
took up his position close to the village of Breiten-feld, with the
Saxons on his extreme left. His own left was under Field-marshal
Horn. Between each division of cavalry in its first line was posted
a body of two hundred musketeers; the second line was composed
wholly of cavalry. A similar formation was observed on the right
wing, where Gustavus commanded in person. In the centre was posted
the Swedish foot; four half battalions in the first line, a cavalry
regiment, and two divisions of the Scots foot under Monro and Ramsay
in reserve between the lines; in the second line, three brigades of
infantry, namely, the German, the Green, and Count Thurn’s. There
was also a final reserve of infantry behind the second line of the
centre. The artillery, under Torstenson, lay a little to the left of
the centre, with the exception of the light regimental pieces, which
were stationed in front of each regiment.
I give these details because they illustrate the new system of
tactics introduced by Gustavus; yet I fear they will mean little or
nothing to the non-military intelligence. Nor would a minute
description of the battle mean much more. Not even Kinglake or
Napier succeeds in making the various movements of a battle obvious
to the civilian reader, unless he keeps to the broadest lines. And,
therefore, about this famous victory of Breitenfeld or Leipzig I
shall be content to say that it was won by Gustavus because he was a
greater general than Tilly, and because his Swedes and Scots were
better soldiers than the Imperialists —better disciplined, more
intelligent, and therefore steadier and more resolved. At first the
Imperialists were successful; their heavy cavalry smashed in upon
the poor inexperienced Saxons and sent them flying from the field.
But when they swept round to attack Gustavus, he swiftly withdrew
the Green and German brigades from the centre, and formed a new
front to the enemy, who, assailed by these splendid soldiers in the
front and by the Swedish troopers in the rear, and torn and
shattered by Torstenson’s powerful artillery, gave way and fled. All
was soon over. Leaving seven thousand dead on the field, and
probably as many prisoners in Gustavus’s hands, Tilly sullenly
retreated, some six hundred of his veterans forming round their aged
chief in an iron ring, and beating off the opposition.
It has been well said that this victory marks both an epoch in war
and an epoch in history ; because in it was first displayed on a
large scale the superiority of disciplined intelligence over
traditional routine ; an epoch in history, because it broke the
force on which the revival of Catholicism had relied for the
extension of its empire over Europe. It gave the Gospel and freedom
to Northern Germany.
Having put down these generalities about the battle, I must say
something more particularly in reference to Hepburn and his
brigade’s share in it.
When Gustavus prepared to check the onset of Tilly’s soldiers, after
their defeat of the Saxons, he called, as we have seen, upon the
Green Brigade, which, under Sir John Hepburn, immediately advanced,
and formed on the left flank. Sir John was in full armour, with
laurel on his helmet and his drawn sword in his hand, a conspicuous
figure as he rode his richly-caparisoned horse, and led his
fighting-men against the Imperialists, amid volleys of musketry, and
the roar and rattle of calivers, falcons, and culverins. It was
then, says Harte, that the Scots first practised firing in platoons,
“ which amazed the Imperialists to such a degree, that they hardly
knew how to conduct themselves.” In dense columns, with their pikes
in front, and behind them three ranks of musketeers stooping and
three erect, so that six volleys crashed simultaneously from' the
faces of their squares, and tore great gaps in the masses before
them, they marched onward, until so close to the Imperialists that,
as Gustavus had advised them, they could see the very colour of
their eyes; then Hepburn shouted, in a voice that rose above all the
din, “Forward, pikes!” The musketeers clubbed their muskets, the
pikemen levelled their weapons, and, with that loud Scottish cheer
which has rung out so often over victorious battle-fields, the
regiments of Hepburn, Lumsden, and Lord Reay, each led by its
colonel, broke through the columns of Tilly, and drove them back
pell-mell with terrible carnage.
Lord Reay’s Highlanders—a thousand strong, and all of his own
clan—formed the leading column, and had the honour of first charging
the enemy’s ranks. The Imperialists regarded them with terror, and
named them “the invincible old regiment.” The right wing of the
brigade was under Monro; it carried the breastworks of the Walloons,
captured their artillery, and turned it against the Imperialists.
Great as was the slaughter, it would have been greater but for the
clouds of dust which a strong west wind blew off the dry and
newly-ploughed ground. “We were as in a dark cloud,” says Monro,
“not seeing half our actions, much less discerning either the way of
our enemies or the rest of our brigades; whereupon, having a drummer
by me, I caused him beat ‘The Scots March’ [This old national air
was first composed for the guard of James V. when attacking
Tantallon in 1527.] till it cleared up, which re-collected our
friends unto us.”
For its services on this occasion the Green Brigade was called to
the front and publicly thanked by Gustavus. As Monro quaintly says
—“ The battle was happily won, his Majesty did principally under God
ascribe the glory of the victory to the Swedes and Fynnes horsemen,
who were led by the valorous Field-marshal Gustavus Horn; for though
the Dutch horsemen did behave themselves valorously divers times
that day, yet it was not their fortune to put the enemy to flight;
and though there were brave brigades of Swedes and Dutch in the
field, yet it was the Scots brigade’s fortune to have gotten the
praise for the fort service, and not without cause, having behaved
themselves well, being led and conducted by an expert cavalier and
fortunate, the valiant Hepburn” A few days later when, after the
investment of Leipzig and capture of Merseburg, Gustavus held a
general review of his troops on the plain of Halle, the King rode up
to his Scotch brigade, which was posted on the right wing, with Sir
John Hepburn in command; and, dismounting, made a long address,
fervently commending their gallant conduct, thanking them for their
share in the victory at Leipzig, and promising never to forget the
debt he owed to their valour and constancy. Hepburn, Lumsden, Monro,
and the other field-officers, leaped from their horses and kissed
his hand, while the drums beat and the green standards were lowered,
and the soldiers cried again and again and yet again, “Long live
Gustavus! We hope to do your Majesty better service yet!" (September
11.) |