AMONG the numerous
Scots who figured in the court and camp of Peter the Great the most
distinguished was General Patrick Gordon ; and it so happens that of
him we know the most, since he took the precaution to write the
record of his career, with its more stirring experiences, in the
form of a Diary. From its unpretending, and, I think, veracious
pages I have chiefly gathered the particulars which I have woven
into the following narrative.
Patrick Gordon was a native of Buchan—a land of granite, worthy to
have produced a man with such granitic strength of character. He was
the son of the gudeman [For the benefit of English readers I may
explain that a “laird” was one who held his estate direct from the
Crown; a “gudeman” held it from a great house, like the Dukes of
Gordon or the Earls of Sutherland.] of Auchleuchries, and was born
in 1635, on the eve of the great contest which was to convulse both
England and Scotland with its throes. At the age of five he was sent
to school at Crochdan, at nine he was removed to one at Achridy; and
when the war-troubles between the two countries broke out, he went
with his family to reside at Achmade.
He was only sixteen when he resolved to go out into the world, and
see what it had to offer to a young fellow with a clear brain, a
stout heart, and an iron will. Some kind of equipment was provided
for him by his father and uncle, though neither had much money to
spare, and embarking at Aberdeen, he sailed for Dantzic. As a matter
of course he happened upon one of his own countrymen, whose heart
warmed towards the young adventurer, and supplied him with “bite and
sup,” until he pushed on to Konigsberg. Then he fell in with a
zealous Jesuit priest—another Scot—Father Alexander Menzies, who
induced him to enter a Jesuit college at Braunsburg, hard by, but
the close watch and ward under which he was kept proved intolerable
to a youth of Gordon’s temper. Moreover, he had no ambition to
become either priest or scholar; he longed for the life adventurous;
and quickly resolved to bid his custodians an unceremonious
farewell. Slipping out of the college, one fine Tuesday morning,
with a staff in one hand, a little bag (containing his linen and
some books) in the other, and seven and a half dollars in his
pocket, he “pilgrimed it away all alone.” It was a bright fresh
morning, and the enterprise suited his disposition; so that he had
no misgiving until, in a patch of woodland, he came to a dividing of
the ways, and stood hesitating which to choose—which led to fortune,
which to failure.
After he had made his choice, a spasm of doubt possessed him, as it
takes possession of all of us under similar circumstances. For
though we have decided, and have no intention of going back, we
cannot help a momentary apprehension that the other may have been
the right way after all. “I began,” he says, “with serious thoughts
to consider my present condition, calling to mind from whence I was
come—from my good, loving parents and friends—and where I was now,
among strangers whose language I understood not, travelling, myself
knew not well whither, having but seven dollars by me, which could
not last long, and when that was gone I knew not where to get a
farthing more for the great [homeward] journey and voyage which I
intended. To serve or work, I thought it a disparagement [such was
the pride of the Gordons !]; and to beg, a greater. With these and
such-like thoughts ”—natural enough to a lad of seventeen— “I grew
so pensive and sad that, sitting down, I began to lament and bewail
my miserable condition. Then, having my recourse to God Almighty, I,
with many tears, implored His assistance, craving also the
intercession of the Blessed Virgin, and all the saints in heaven.”
At this moment, he says, an old man came riding up on the right
hand, and perceiving that he wept, said to him in Dutch— “Cry not,
my child; God will comfort you.” With which words being much
consoled, he sprang to his feet, and resumed his journey.
That night he lodged in a Krue (“Kroog”), or village tavern, and
indulged himself at supper with half a stoup of beer. On asking for
a bed he was conducted to an empty waggon in the stable, where he
laid himself down, with his cloak partly over and partly under him,
and his coat and valise as a pillow; but by and by the maid of the
inn, prepossessed perhaps by the tall, well-favoured young Scot,
brought him a proper pillow, and he slept so comfortably that he
woke not until half-an-hour before sunrise. Resuming his journey, he
was greatly troubled by sore feet, and this trouble increasing upon
him, he was at length compelled to hire a seat in a waggon which
carried him to Dantzic. There he discovered that the last ship bound
for a British port had sailed, and that he would have to wait some
months for another chance. What was to be done? In Dantzic and its
neighbourhood quite a little colony of Scotchmen was planted, and
its hospitality did not fail him; but it was a kind of hospitality
that young Gordon did not relish; and being advised that Poland
offered the chances of a career, he set out on a journey to Warsaw.
On arriving there, he obtained lodgings in the Luzinski suburb; then
looked about him. He recognized not a few of his own countrymen, but
his poverty induced him to hold back from their society; and he saw
none who were likely to employ him. So he worked his way to Posen by
assisting a man in charge of a team of horses; found there some more
Scots, and being recommended by them to the kindly notice of a young
Polish noble, travelled with him to Hamburg.
Gordon was now on the verge of twenty—a mere youth in years, but in
knowledge of the world, in knowledge of men and manners, as old as
the wisest of old men, or the oldest of wise men, and well able to
hold his own among his fellows. At the moment of his arrival Hamburg
was full of recruiting officers, who were levying men for the great
Swedish army; and the streets echoed with the din of cavaliers
ranting and carousing in every ale-house. A tall, strongly built,
athletic young Scot, like this hero of ours, with resolution in the
poise of his head and the carriage of his body, intelligence in the
keen glance, and fearlessness on the firm-set lips, became at once
an object of interest to the Swedes, who made every effort to secure
him. “In all their discourses they extolled a soldier’s life;
telling that riches, honours, and all sorts of worldly blessings lay
prostrate at a soldier’s feet, wanting only his will to stoop and
take them up; then, falling out in commendation of our countrymen,
than whom no better sojers were of any nation to be found, and that
albeit nature had endowed them with a genius fit for anything, yet
did they despise the ease, advantage, or contentment any other trade
might bring, and embraced that of a soldier, which, without all
dispute, is the most honourable.” Gordon, however, turned a deaf ear
to these advances. He was not minded to enlist in the ranks; nothing
less than an officers commission would satisfy his young ambition.
It is not true, perhaps, that Fortune always favours the bold; but
it favoured young Gordon, for it brought him into contact with one
of his own class, a Gordon of Troup, who held the rank of Rittmaster,
or captain, in the Swedish army. Through this man’s good services he
was happily started on what proved to be a prosperous career. On
July 25, 1655, he joined the Swedish army in its camp near Stettin,
in command of a company. Thence he followed that brilliant but
erratic meteor of war in his iniquitously aggressive campaign
against the Poles. To Gordon, as to other soldiers of fortune, the
right or wrong of the quarrel in which he fought mattered little.
His sole principle of military morality was loyal service to his
employers, and this he was rigid in his observance of. More than
once taken prisoner by the Poles, and pressed to join them, he
refused their liberal offers, and when an exchange took place
returned to the Swedish flag. It was not until 1659, when, having
once more fallen into their hands, the Poles refused to exchange
him, that he yielded to their solicitations, and the force of
circumstances; and after a good deal of huxtering accepted the
lucrative post of quartermaster. That such an appointment should
have been given to a young man of twenty-four is a convincing proof
that he had already come to be known as a brave soldier and a good
officer.
That he was a man of hard temper, with 110 scruple about bloodshed,
we know from his projected attempt on the life of the individual
whom he mistook for the regicide Bradshaw. This was in 1658, when
the Poles were encamped at Werder.
“An English ambassador,” he says, “called Bradshaw, having been on
his journey to Moscovia and not admitted, returned that way, and was
lodged in Lamehand’s tavern. We getting notice thereof, and judging
him to be that Bradshaw who sat President in the Highest Court of
Justice upon our sovereign King Charles I. of blessed memory, were
resolved, come what will, to make an end of him; and being about
fifteen with servants, six whereof might be accounted trusty weight,
the others also indifferent, we concluded that, doing the feat in
the evening, we could easily make our escape by benefit of the
strait ground and darkness of the night, and so, being resolved, we
took our way thither. Being come near, and asking a boor come from
thence some questions, he told us that just now some officers were
come from Elbing to the ambassador, and some forty dragoons who were
to guard and convey him to Marienburgh, which made us despair of
doing any good (?), and so we returned. We had resolved to make our
addresses to him, as sent with a commission from Field-marshal Von
der Linde to him; and being admitted, seven or eight of us, to have
gone in and stabbed him, the rest guarding our horses and the door;
and so, being come to horse, make our escape to Dantzic.”
I do not quote this autobiographical passage with any intention of
asking the reader to admire it, and assuredly I do not quote it as
reflecting the slightest credit upon Quartermaster Patrick Gordon.
It describes what seems to me a really dastardly project for
committing a great crime with the least possible risk of life or
limb to those engaged in it; and no amount of royal favour can be
held to have justified it. We learn from it the extent to which the
stormy influences of the age deadened men’s moral sense; so that
when they planned with the utmost coolness the murder of a political
opponent, they were not at all concerned if the blow aimed at him
struck somebody else. I can find no ground for believing that if
Gordon had slain the ambassador, and afterwards discovered that he
was not the regicide, he would have felt very great regret.
Gordon had been only a few months in the Polish service when he
heard of the restoration of the Stuarts, and for a moment thought of
carrying his ambition and experience into the pay of his own
country. But his father wrote to him that the army had been
disbanded, and that Britain offered no field for military
enterprise. He remained, therefore, in Poland, but discontentedly;
for he wanted opportunities of distinction—ample room and verge
enough to beat his daring wings. There must have been an air of
command about the man, young as he was, for he was treated even by
his superiors with marked deference. The Russian ambassadors showed
as much eagerness to secure him as the Poles had done, and earnestly
desired their colonels to engage him in the Czar’s service,
promising that he should not be delayed longer than three years, one
year with the rank of major, and two years with that oflieutenant-colonel.
He did not accept their offers at the time, but held them in reserve
that he might have another string to his bow.
He seems to have had some thought of entering the Emperor’s service
in the hope of fighting against the Turks; but when an opportunity
offered he began to dwell on the Russian bid, and to obtain a better
knowledge of the Muscovite system he made his way to Riga to consult
with an experienced soldier, one General Douglas. Him, however, he
missed, but, as usual, Scotchmen were there; two of his old comrades
and friends, as he calls them, Alexander Landells and Walter Airth,
to whom, over a cup of wine, he revealed his position and prospects.
They told him that the Muscovite pay was not very liberal, but it
was sure; that promotion was speedy; that many Scotchmen of high
quality were serving under his standard; and that they themselves,
with many others, were about to join. “So that the consideration,”
says Gordon, “of at least a certain livelihood, preferment, good
company, and my former promises and engagements, confirmed me in my
resolution to go to Moscow.”
At Koluminsko, a country house belonging to the Czar, Gordon had his
first interview with Peter the Great, whom he was to serve for so
many years with equal capacity and faithfulness, and assist in the
great work of building up and consolidating the Russian empire. He
was at once placed upon the Imperial staff; and at the head of a
regiment,
which he was to train and discipline, was dispatched to Novogorod.
There he gave an example of his very practical and resolute temper.
The rich burgesses of that opulent city were exceedingly reluctant
to admit the officers and soldiers into their houses. “Amongst the
rest,” says Gordon, “a merchant, by whom my quarters were taken up,
whilst my servants were cleansing the inner room; he broke down the
oven in the outer room which served to warm both, so that I was
forced to go to another quarter. But, to teach him better manners, I
sent the provost-marshal to quarter by him, with twenty prisoners
and a corporalship of sojours, who, by connivance, did grievously
plague him a week; and it cost him near a hundred dollars before he
could procure an order out of the right office to have them removed,
and was well laughed at besides for his incivility and obstinacy.”
At the outset his position in the service had its inconveniences.
The Muscovites regarded these Scotch soldiers of fortune who were
crowding into their regiments with not unnatural dislike. A foreign
immigration is seldom popular with the natives. “Our country for
ourselves!” is a sentiment to which everybody but a cosmopolitan
philosopher will respond, and with which the Muscovites of those
days were in cordial agreement. “Strangers,” writes Gordon, “are
looked upon as a company of hirelings, and at the best (as they say
of women) ”— O churlish Patrick!—“ but necessaria mala (necessary
evils). No'honour or degree of preferment here to be expected but
military, and that with a limited command, in the attainment whereof
a good mediator or mediatory, and a piece of money or other bribe,
is more available than the merit or sufficiency of the person ; a
faint heart under fair plumes, and a cuckoo in gay clothes, b?ing as
ordinary here as a counterfeited or painted visage.”
Some of the earlier entries in his Diary at this period seem worth
transcribing—
“1661. September 17.—I got orders to receive from a Russ 700 men to
be in one regiment, being runaway sojours out of several regiments,
and fetched back from divers places. Having received them, I marched
through the Sloboda of the strangers to Krasira Villa, where we got
our quarters, and exercised these soldiers twice a day in fine
weather.
“September 20.—I received money (25 roubles) for my welcome, and the
next day sables, and two days thereafter damask and cloth.
“September 25.—I received a month’s means in cursed copper money, as
did those who came along with me.
“September 27.—About thirty officers, most whereof I had bespoke in
Riga, came to Moscow, most of them being our countrymen, as Walter
Airth, William Guild, George Keith, Andrew Burnet, Andrew
Calderwood, Robert Stuart, and others, most whereof were enrolled in
our regiment.”
For more than a twelvemonth after his arrival in Moscow, Gordon
suffered from depression of spirits.
He had a severe illness—an attack of intermittent fever, and was
exposed to frequent annoyances from the ignorant jealousy of the
Muscovites. Of their ignorance he records a striking sample—A
Lithuanian officer was advised by his Italian doctor to sprinkle
cream-of-tartar upon his food. They spoke in Latin, and the Russian
captain of the guard, overhearing the words “cremor tartari"
reported that the patient and his physician had been discussing the
affairs of Crim Tartary. The physician with difficulty escaped
torture.
Through these and other trials Gordon steadily did his duty after
the old Scottish fashion, and steadily rose in the esteem and
confidence of his employers. In 1662 he was made a
lieutenant-colonel. He then determined that “it would be for his
advantage to take unto himself a wife; that he should be much
happier as a married man than he was as a bachelor.” After looking
carefully around, he fixed his choice on the daughter of Colonel
Philip Albrecht von Bockhoven—a handsome, amiable, well-educated
girl, who, however, was only thirteen, while Gordon was
twenty-seven. Neither the young lady nor her parents raised any
objection; and, after a two years’ courtship, Gordon and she were
happily married.
In 1666 the Czar sent him on a mission to Charles II. He thus
describes his interview with the so-callcd Merry Monarch—
“October 9.—I found his Majesty standing under a canopy bareheaded,
with many nobles about him. Having entered the room, and performed
the usual reverences, I took the Emperor’s letters from my
brother-in-law. After I had the short compliment, his Majesty was
pleased to receive the letters with his own hand, and gave them up
immediately to one standing by, and asked me for the good health of
his Majesty, which I answered after the ordinary way. Then his
Majesty was pleased to say that this message was so much the more
acceptable that the Czar had been pleased to entrust one of his own
subjects with it, and caused tell me that I might use the freedom of
the Court.”
As regards the latter privilege he notes, two days later, that the
King’s locksmith, by order, brought a key which opened the doors to
the park, galleries, and other passages in the Court. His name was
engraved upon it, and it cost him a fee of twenty shillings to the
locksmith, and five shillings to the locksmith’s man. Twenty-five
shillings seems little enough for the freedom of the Court!
Gordon remained in London until the following January, when, having
fulfilled the mission with which he had been entrusted, he took
leave of the King on the 22nd, gave a farewell dinner—“a valete
dinner,” as he calls it—to his friends at The Cock Tavern in Suffolk
Street; left London on the 29th, embarked at Dover on February 6,
and landed at Nieuport on the following evening. But he did not
reach Warsaw until June 6, when he was received by his wife and
comrades with great rejoicing.
One of the experiences of his long journey is not without interest.
It occurred on the road from Gluckstadt to Hamburg, March 8.
He had hired a great waggon with four horses, and had for his
companions a sea-captain, and another who was travelling with his
wife. The weather being very cold, they caused a good deal of straw
to be put in, which, by and by, occasioned a disaster. For the
captain’s wife, sitting beside her husband, had with her, as the
fashion then was, a pot with coals in a wooden case. By some
accident the coals ignited the straw, and compelled a general
retreat. While the captains and others were striving with their hats
and cloaks to damp and stifle the fire, Gordon threw out the
cloak-bags, but not before some holes were made in his new Ferendine
cloak, and a Mr. Deeri’s little bag of linen, worth fifteen or
twenty dollars, completely destroyed. The two captains’ hats and
cloaks were also ruined.
For nearly ten years, from June 1667 to January 1677, a great gap
occurs in the General’s Diary; and for information as to this period
of his life we must turn to other sources. From these we know that
he lost favour with the Czar, for some unexplained reason, and had
to wait until the next reign before he could even obtain payment of
the expenses he had incurred on his English mission. From 1670 to
1677 he had command in the Ukraine, and assisted in subduing the
Cossacks of Little Russia. In 1678 he made vigorous efforts to
obtain permission to leave Russia, but in vain; his value being too
well understood. In the same year he acquired fresh laurels by his
successful defence of Tschigerin against the combined forces of the
Turks and Tartars. In 1683, when he held the chief command in the
Ukraine, he was raised to the rank of Lieutenant-General. Three
years later he obtained six months’ leave of absence, and visited
Scotland, to look after the inheritance which had come to him by the
death of his parents; but was compelled to leave his wife and
children behind him as hostages for his return. He reached London in
the middle of April, and was graciously received by James II. and
his Queen. The freedom of the Court was again granted to him.
To follow the General in all his doings in England and Scotland
would be superfluous. With true Scottish caution he carefully noted
down all his disbursements during his stay, and some of these items
have an interest as illustrating the different prices of commodities
then and now. For example. On May 4, 1686, he writes—“This day I
went to the City, and by the way did meet the Scots battalion,
marching through the City, well-clothed, armed, and disciplined. I
took my leave of friends in the City, and, returning, saw the
tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, acted in Whitehall, in the
presence of the King, Queen, and all the Court. Expended this day
for freight and meat for two servants to Scotland, forty shillings;
on the way to thence, twelve shillings; for my two servants’ diet,
while I was at Chertsey, four shillings; for dinner, eightpence; tea
and ale, sixpence.
“May 6.—I began to look about me for horse furniture, and Major
Dougall bought for me a saddle, with furniture and saddle-cloth, for
seventeen shillings tenpence. Gave to a poor widow, two shillings;
to Shenton, fourpence; for trimming, sixpence; for dinner, with
wine, two shillings sixpence; to the boy, at night, fourpence; for
carrying things to the boat, one shilling. I saw the Scots battalion
exercised in the Hyde Park before the King and Queen, and saw the
comedy, Rehearsal [the Duke of Buckingham’s celebrated burlesque]
acted.
“May 7.—I hired another more private lodging at a brazier’s in Pall
Mall, paying for a chamber, five shillings sixpence a week, and a
bed for my servants. . . . May 8.—I moved to my new lodgings, paying
house-hire and some books which I bought, two pounds eighteen
shillings threepence; for dinner, two shillings sixpence; for a
trunk mail, seven shillings sixpence; for two pair of stockings,
eight shillings; for candle, sixpence.”
On May 17, accompanied by Sir Ewan Campbell, Lord of Lochiel,
General Patrick Gordon left London, and travelled northward. Next
day he rode through Godmanchester, where he saw “the most, in such a
place, handsome and beautiful woman he ever saw in his lifetime.”Is
Godmanchester still favoured in this way. Crossing the Ouse, he and
his friend found their horses fading, and “were forced to think of
swapping.” In the end they effected a bargain, but not a profitable
one, and Gordon exclaims, with a sigh, “so are travellers preyed
upon everywhere.” On the 2ist they rode through the green glades of
Sherwood, with its memories of Robin Hood and Maid Marian. They
reached Newcastle on the 25th; Wooler the next day; crossed the
Border on the 27th, and spent the night at Lauder. About three
o’clock the next day they entered Edinburgh, and Gordon took up his
residence in the Canongate at the sign of the King’s Arms.
In the Scottish capital he visited everybody of note, and saw
everything of interest. He had been absent from his native country
so long that the attraction of the dimly-remembered scenes which
caught his eye was enhanced by their air of novelty. On June 21 he
crossed to Burntisland. On the 23rd he was at Arbroath, and next day
at Aberdeen, where kith and kin, and the men of his clan, gave a
great welcome to the veteran soldier who had so well sustained the
good repute of the name of Gordon.
At Aberdeen he was very busy.
“July 7.—I went to see the College in the Old Town, and was very
well received, and showed all worth the seeing there. I went to the
Links afterwards. In the evening the Earl of Aberdeen came, to whom
I paid a visit.
“July 8.—I was invited to a collation by the Lord Provost and
Magistrates, when, with my friends, I was heartily entertained, and
all my relations who were there made burgesses. My sister and
sister-in-law being come into the town to see me, we made very merry
with good music.
“July 12.—In the evening the Lord Marshal came to town, whom I
visited, he coming over to my lodging, where we supped and were
merry.
“July 13.—I went with some friends to the Bridge of Dee, and dined
in a tavern upon excellent fresh salmon.”
But the end soon came to Gordon’s merrymaking and junketing, to the
fresh salmon and the old wine; and having arranged his private
affairs to his satisfaction, he prepared to return to his Muscovite
employers. He left on the 1 Sth, being escorted to his vessel by the
magistrates of the city; but owing to the stormy weather which
prevailed, did not arrive at Riga until August 2. Thence he went on
to Moscow, and husband, wife, and children were reunited on December
27. |