Chapter
XVIII
Quebec
[Click on map for a larger version]
In the following
spring, the
French
prepared to resist the serious attack which they expected would be
made by way of Lake Champlain and Ontario. But a greater danger was
threatening them, for, in the midst of their preparations, the news
arrived from France that a great fleet was on its way, from England,
to attack Quebec. The town was filled with consternation and
surprise, for the Canadians had believed that the navigation of the
Saint Lawrence was too difficult and dangerous for any hostile fleet
to attempt. Their spirits rose however when, a few days later, a
fleet of twenty-three ships, ladened with supplies from France,
sailed up the river.
A day or two later,
the British
fleet
was at the mouth of the Saint Lawrence, and the whole forces of the
colony, except three battalions posted at Ticonderoga, and a strong
detachment placed so as to resist any hostile movement from Lake
Ontario, were mustered at Quebec. Here were gathered five French
battalions, the whole of the Canadian troops and militia, and upwards
of a thousand Indians, in all amounting to more than sixteen
thousand.
The position was an
extremely
strong
one. The main force was encamped on the high ground below Quebec,
with their right resting on the Saint Charles River, and the left on
the Montmorenci, a distance of between seven and eight miles. The
front was covered by steep ground, which rose nearly from the edge of
the Saint Lawrence, and the right was covered by the guns of the
citadel of Quebec.
A boom of logs,
chained together,
was
laid across the mouth of the Saint Charles, which was further guarded
by two hulks mounted with cannon. A bridge of boats, crossing the
river a mile higher up, connected the city with the camp. All the
gates of Quebec, except that of Saint Charles, which faced the
bridge, were closed and barricaded. A hundred and six cannon were
mounted on the walls, while a floating battery of twelve heavy
pieces, a number of gunboats, and eight fire ships formed the river
defences.
The frigates, which
had convoyed
the
merchant fleet, were taken higher up the river, and a thousand of
their seamen came down, from Quebec, to man the batteries and
gunboats. Against this force of sixteen thousand men, posted behind
defensive works, on a position almost impregnable by nature, General
Wolfe was bringing less than nine thousand troops. The steep and
lofty heights, that lined the river, rendered the cannon of the ships
useless to him, and the exigencies of the fleet, in such narrow and
difficult navigation, prevented the sailors being landed to assist
the troops.
A large portion of
Montcalm's
army,
indeed, consisted of Canadians, who were of little use in the open
field, but could be trusted to fight well behind intrenchments. Wolfe
was, unfortunately, in extremely bad health when he was selected, by
Pitt, to command the expedition against Quebec; but under him were
Brigadier Generals Monckton, Townshend, and Murray, all good
officers. The fleet consisted of twenty-two ships of war, with
frigates and sloops, and a great number of transports. It was, at
first, divided into three squadrons. That under Admiral Durell sailed
direct for the Saint Lawrence, to intercept the ships from France,
but arrived at its destination a few days too late. That of Admiral
Holmes sailed for New York, to take on board a portion of the army of
Amherst and Abercromby. That of Admiral Saunders sailed to
Louisbourg, but, finding the entrance blocked with ice, went on to
Halifax, where it was joined by the squadron with the troops from New
York. They then sailed again to Louisbourg, where they remained until
the 6th of June, 1759, and then joined Durell at the mouth of the
Saint Lawrence.
Wolfe's force had
been intended to
be
larger, and should have amounted to fourteen thousand men; but some
regiments which were to have joined him from the West Indies were, at
the last moment, countermanded, and Amherst, who no doubt felt some
jealousy, at the command of this important expedition being given to
an officer who had served under his orders at the taking of
Louisbourg, sent a smaller contingent of troops than had been
expected.
Among the regiments
which sailed
was
that of James Walsham. After the fight at Ticonderoga, in which
upwards of half of his force had fallen, the little corps had been
broken up, and the men had returned to duty with their regiments.
Owing to the number of officers who had fallen, James now stood high
on the list of lieutenants. He had had enough of scouting, and was
glad to return to the regiment, his principal regret being that he
had to part from his two trusty scouts.
There was great joy,
in the
regiment,
when the news was received that they were to go with the expedition
against Quebec. They had formed part of Wolf''s division at
Louisbourg, and, like all who had served with him, regarded with
enthusiasm and confidence the leader whose frail body seemed wholly
incapable of sustaining fatigue or hardship, but whose indomitable
spirit and courage placed him ever in the front, and set an example
which the bravest of his followers were proud to imitate.
From time to time,
James had
received
letters from home. Communication was irregular; but his mother and
Mr. Wilks wrote frequently, and sometimes he received half a dozen
letters at once. He had now been absent from home for four years, and
his mother told him that he would scarcely recognize Aggie, who was
now as tall as herself. Mrs. Walsham said that the girl was almost as
interested as she was in his letters, and in the despatches from the
war, in which his name had several times been mentioned, in
connection with the services rendered by his scouts.
Richard Horton had
twice, during
James's absence, returned home. The squire, Mrs. Walsham said, had
received him very coolly, in consequence of the letter he had written
when James was pressed as a seaman, and she said that Aggie seemed to
have taken a great objection to him. She wondered, indeed, that he
could stay an hour in the house after his reception there; but he
seemed as if he didn't notice it, and took especial pains to try and
overcome Aggie's feeling against him.
While waiting at the
mouth of the
Saint Lawrence, Admiral Durell had succeeded in obtaining pilots to
take the fleet up the river. He had sailed up the river to the point
where the difficult navigation began, and where vessels generally
took on board river pilots. Here he hoisted the French flag at the
masthead, and the pilots, believing the ships to be a French
squadron, which had eluded the watch of the English, came off in
their boats, and were all taken prisoners, and forced, under pain of
death, to take the English vessels safely up. The first difficulty of
the passage was at Cape Tourmente, where the channel describes a
complete zigzag.
Had the French
planted some guns
on a
plateau, high up on the side of the mountains, they could have done
great damage by a plunging fire; but Vaudreuil had neglected to take
this measure, and the fleet passed up in safety, the manner in which
they were handled and navigated astonishing the Canadians, who had
believed it to be impossible that large ships could be taken up. On
the 26th, the whole fleet were anchored off the Island of Orleans, a
few miles below Quebec. The same night, a small party landed on the
island. They were opposed by the armed inhabitants, but beat them
off, and, during the night, the Canadians crossed to the north shore.
The whole army then landed.
From the end of the
island, Wolfe
could see the full strength of the position which he had come to
attack. Three or four miles in front of him, the town of Quebec stood
upon its elevated rock. Beyond rose the loftier height of Cape
Diamond, with its redoubts and parapets. Three great batteries looked
threateningly from the upper rock of Quebec, while three others were
placed, near the edge of the water, in the lower town. On the right
was the great camp of Montcalm, stretching from the Saint Charles, at
the foot of the city walls, to the gorge of the Montmorenci.
From the latter point
to the
village
of Beauport, in the centre of the camp, the front was covered with
earthworks, along the brink of a lofty height; and from Beauport to
the Saint Charles were broad flats of mud, swept by the fire of
redoubts and intrenchments, by the guns of a floating battery, and by
those of the city itself. Wolfe could not see beyond Quebec, but,
above the city, the position was even stronger than below. The river
was walled by a range of steeps, often inaccessible, and always so
difficult that a few men could hold an army in check.
Montcalm was
perfectly confident
of
his ability to resist any attack which the British might make.
Bougainville had long before examined the position, in view of the
possibility of an English expedition against it, and reported that,
with a few intrenchments, the city would be safe if defended by three
or four thousand men. Sixteen thousand were now gathered there, and
Montcalm might well believe the position to be impregnable.
He was determined to
run no risk,
by
advancing to give battle, but to remain upon the defensive till the
resources of the English were exhausted, or till the approach of
winter forced them to retire. His only source of uneasiness lay in
the south, for he feared that Amherst, with his army, might capture
Ticonderoga and advance into the colony, in which case he must weaken
his army, by sending a force to oppose him.
On the day after the
army landed
on
the island, a sudden and very violent squall drove several of the
ships ashore, and destroyed many of the flatboats. On the following
night, the sentries at the end of the island saw some vessels coming
down the river. Suddenly these burst into flames. They were the fire
ships, which Vaudreuil had sent down to destroy the fleet. They were
filled with pitch, tar, and all sorts of combustibles, with shell and
grenades mixed up with them, while on their decks were a number of
cannon, crammed to the mouth with grapeshot and musketballs.
Fortunately for the
English, the
French naval officer in command lost his nerve, and set fire to his
ship half an hour too soon; the other captains following his example.
This gave the English time to recover from the first feeling of
consternation at seeing the fire ships, each a pillar of flame,
advancing with tremendous explosion and noise against them. The
troops at once got under arms, lest the French should attack them,
while the vessels lowered their boats, and the sailors rowed up to
meet the fire ships. When they neared them, they threw grapnels on
board, and towed them towards land until they were stranded, and then
left them to burn out undisturbed.
Finding that it would
be
impossible to
effect a landing, under the fire of the French guns, Wolfe
determined, as a first step, to seize the height of Point Levi
opposite Quebec. From this point he could fire on the town across the
Saint Lawrence, which is, here, less than a mile wide. On the
afternoon of the 29th, Monckton's brigade crossed, in the boats, to
Beaumont on the south shore. His advanced guard had a skirmish with a
party of Canadians, but these soon fell back, and no further
opposition was offered to the landing.
In the morning a
proclamation,
issued
by Wolfe, was posted on the doors of the parish churches. It called
upon the Canadians to stand neutral in the contest, promising them,
if they did so, full protection to their property and religion; but
threatening that, if they resisted, their houses, goods, and harvest
should be destroyed, and their churches sacked.
The brigade marched
along the
river to
Point Levi, and drove off a body of French and Indians posted there,
and, the next morning, began to throw up intrenchments and to form
batteries. Wolfe did not expect that his guns here could do any
serious damage to the fortifications of Quebec. His object was partly
to discourage the inhabitants of the city exposed to his fire, partly
to keep up the spirits of his own troops by setting them to work.
The guns of Quebec
kept up a
continual
fire against the working parties, but the batteries continued to
rise, and the citizens, alarmed at the destruction which threatened
their houses, asked the governor to allow them to cross the river,
and dislodge the English. Although he had no belief that they would
succeed, he thought it better to allow them to try. Accordingly, some
fifteen hundred armed citizens, and Canadians from the camp, with a
few Indians, and a hundred volunteers from the regulars, marched up
the river, and crossed on the night of the 12th of July.
The courage of the
citizens
evaporated
very quickly, now they were on the same side of the river as the
English, although still three miles from them. In a short time a wild
panic seized them. They rushed back in extreme disorder to their
boats, crossed the river, and returned to Quebec. The English guns
soon opened, and carried destruction into the city. In one day
eighteen houses, and the cathedral, were burned by exploding shells;
and the citizens soon abandoned their homes, and fled into the
country.
The destruction of
the city,
however,
even if complete, would have advanced Wolfe's plans but little. It
was a moral blow at the enemy, but nothing more. On the 8th of July,
several frigates took their station before the camp of General Levis,
who, with his division of Canadian militia, occupied the heights
along the Saint Lawrence next to the gorge of Montmorenci. Here they
opened fire with shell, and continued it till nightfall. Owing to the
height of the plateau on which the camp was situated, they did but
little damage, but the intention of Wolfe was simply to keep the
enemy occupied and under arms.
Towards evening, the
troops on the
island broke up their camp, and, leaving a detachment of marines to
hold the post, the brigades of Townshend and Murray, three thousand
strong, embarked after nightfall in the boats of the fleet, and
landed a little below the Montmorenci, At daybreak, they climbed the
heights, and, routing a body of Canadians and Indians who opposed
them, gained the plateau and began to intrench themselves there.
A company of rangers,
supported by
the
regulars, was sent into the neighbouring forests; to prevent the
parties from cutting bushes for the fascines, to explore the bank of
the Montmorenci, and, if possible, to discover a ford across the
river. Levis, with his aide-de-camp, a Jacobite Scotchman named
Johnston, was watching the movements of Wolfe from the heights above
the gorge. Levis believed that no ford existed, but Johnston found a
man who had, only that morning, crossed.
A detachment was at
once sent to
the
place, with orders to intrench themselves, and Levis posted eleven
hundred Canadians, under Repentigny, close by in support. Four
hundred Indians passed the ford, and discovered the English
detachment in the forest, and Langlade, their commander, recrossed
the river, and told Repentigny that there was a body of English, in
the forest, who might be destroyed if he would cross at once with his
Canadians. Repentigny sent to Levis, and Levis to Vaudreuil, then
three or four miles distant.
Before Vaudreuil
arrived on the
spot,
the Indians became impatient and attacked the rangers; and drove them
back, with loss, upon the regulars, who stood their ground, and
repulsed the assailants. The Indians, however, carried thirty-six
scalps across the ford. If Repentigny had advanced when first called
upon, and had been followed by Levis with his whole command, the
English might have suffered a very severe check, for the Canadians
were as much superior to the regulars, in the forest, as the regulars
to the Canadians in the open.
Vaudreuil called a
council of war,
but
he and Montcalm agreed not to attack the English, who were, on their
part, powerless to injure them. Wolfe's position on the heights was
indeed a dangerous one. A third of his force was six miles away, on
the other side of the Saint Lawrence, and the detachment on the
island was separated from each by a wide arm of the river. Any of the
three were liable to be attacked and overpowered, before the others
could come to its assistance.
Wolfe, indeed, was
soon well
intrenched, but, although safe against attack, he was powerless to
take the offensive. The fact, however, that he had taken up his
position so near their camp, had discomfited the Canadians, and his
battery played, with considerable effect, on the left of their camp.
The time passed slowly. The deep and impassable gulf of the
Montmorenci separated the two enemies, but the crests of the opposite
cliffs were within easy gunshot of each other, and men who showed
themselves near the edge ran a strong chance of being hit.
Along the river, from
the
Montmorenci
to Point Levi, continued fighting went on between the guns of the
frigates, and the gunboats and batteries on shore. The Indians
swarmed in the forest, near the English camp, and constant
skirmishing went on between them and the rangers. The steady work of
destruction going on in the city of Quebec, by the fire from Point
Levi, and the ceaseless cannonade kept up by the ships and Wolfe's
batteries; added to the inactivity to which they were condemned,
began to dispirit the Canadian militia, and many desertions took
place, the men being anxious to return to their villages and look
after the crops; and many more would have deserted, had it not been
for the persuasion of the priests, and the fear of being maltreated
by the Indians, whom the governor threatened to let loose upon any
who should waver in their resistance.
On the 18th of July a
fresh move
was
made by the English. The French had believed it impossible for any
hostile ships to pass the batteries of Quebec; but, covered by a
furious cannonade from Point Levi, the man-of-war Sutherland,
with a frigate and several small vessels, aided by a favouring wind,
ran up the river at night and passed above the town. Montcalm at once
despatched six hundred men, under Dumas, to defend the accessible
points in the line of precipices above Quebec, and on the following
day, when it became known that the English had dragged a fleet of
boats over Point Levi, and had launched them above the town, a
reinforcement of several hundreds more was sent to Dumas.
On the night of the
20th Colonel
Carleton, with six hundred men, rowed eighteen miles up the river,
and landed at Pointe aux Trembles on the north shore. Here, many of
the fugitives from Quebec had taken refuge, and a hundred women,
children and old men were taken prisoners by Carleton, and brought
down the next day with the retiring force. Wolfe entertained the
prisoners kindly, and sent them, on the following day, with a flag of
truce into Quebec. On the night of the 28th, the French made another
attempt to burn the English fleet, sending down a large number of
schooners, shallops, and rafts, chained together, and filled, as
before, with combustibles.
This time, the fire
was not
applied
too soon, and the English fleet was for some time in great danger,
but was again saved by the sailors, who, in spite of the storm of
missiles, vomited out by cannon, swivels, grenades, shell, and gun
and pistol barrels loaded up to the muzzle, grappled with the burning
mass, and towed it on shore.
It was now the end of
July, and
Wolfe
was no nearer taking Quebec than upon the day when he first landed
there. In vain he had tempted Montcalm to attack him. The French
general, confident in the strength of his position, refused to leave
it. Wolfe therefore determined to attack the camp in front. The plan
was a desperate one, for, after leaving troops enough to hold his two
camps, he had less than five thousand men to attack a position of
commanding strength, where Montcalm could, at an hour's notice,
collect twice as many to oppose him. At a spot about a mile above the
gorge of the Montmorenci a flat strip of ground, some two hundred
yards wide, lay between the river and the foot of the precipices,
and, at low tide, the river left a flat of mud, nearly half a mile
wide, beyond the dry ground. Along the edge of the high-water mark,
the French had built several redoubts. From the river, Wolfe could
not see that these redoubts were commanded by the musketry of the
intrenchments along the edge of the heights above, which also swept
with their fire the whole face of the declivity, which was covered
with grass, and was extremely steep. Wolfe hoped that, if he attacked
one of the redoubts, the French would come down to defend it, and
that a battle might be so brought on; or that, if they did not do so,
he might find a spot where the heights could be stormed with some
chance of success.
At low tide, it was
possible to
ford
the mouth of the Montmorenci, and Wolfe intended that the troops from
his camp, on the heights above that river, should cross here, and
advance along the strand to cooperate with Monckton's brigade, who
were to cross from Point Levi.
On the morning of the
31st of
July,
the Centurion, of 64 guns; and two armed transports, each with 14
guns, stood close in to one of the redoubts, and opened fire upon it;
while the English batteries, from the heights of the Montmorenci,
opened fire across the chasm upon the French lines.
At eleven o'clock,
the troops from
Point Levi put off in their boats, and moved across the river, as if
they intended to make a landing between Beauport and the city. For
some hours, Montcalm remained ignorant as to the point on which the
English attack was to be made, but became presently convinced that it
would be delivered near the Montmorenci, and he massed the whole of
his army on that flank of his position. At half-past five o'clock the
tide was low, and the English boats dashed forward, and the troops
sprang ashore on to the broad tract of mud, left bare by the tide;
while, at the same moment, a column 2000 strong moved down from the
height towards the ford at the mouth of the Montmorenci.
The first to land
were thirteen
companies of Grenadiers, and a detachment of Royal Americans, who,
without waiting for the two regiments of Monckton's brigade, dashed
forward against the redoubt at the foot of the hill. The French at
once abandoned it, but the Grenadiers had no sooner poured into it,
than a storm of bullets rained down upon them, from the troops who
lined the heights above.
Without a moment's
hesitation, the
Grenadiers and Americans dashed forward, and strove to climb the
steep ascent, swept as it was by a terrific hail of bullets and
buckshot from the French and Canadians. Numbers rolled, dead or
wounded, to the bottom of the hill, but the others struggled on.
But at this moment,
the cloud,
which
had been threatening all day, suddenly opened, and the rain poured
down in a torrent. The grassy slopes instantly became so slippery
that it was absolutely impossible to climb them, and the fire from
above died away, as the wet rendered the firelocks unserviceable.
The Grenadiers fell
back into the
redoubt. Wolfe, who had now arrived upon the spot, saw that it was
absolutely impossible to carry the heights under the present
conditions, and ordered the troops to retreat. Carrying off many of
the wounded with them, they fell back in good order. Those of the
Grenadiers and Americans who survived recrossed, in their boats, to
the island; the 15th Regiment rowed back to Point Levi; and the 78th
Highlanders, who belonged to Monckton's brigade, joined the column
from below the Montmorenci, and slowly retired along the flats and
across the ford.
The loss fell
entirely upon the
Grenadiers and Americans, and was, in proportion to their number,
enormous — four hundred and forty-three, including one colonel,
eight captains, twenty-one lieutenants, and three ensigns, being
killed, wounded, or missing. The blow to the English was a severe
one, and even Wolfe began to despair, and meditated leaving a portion
of his troops on Isle aux Coudres and fortifying them there, and
sailing home, with the rest, to prepare another expedition in the
following year.
In the middle of
August, he issued
a
third proclamation to the Canadians, declaring, as they had refused
his offers of protection, and had practised the most unchristian
barbarity against his troops on all occasions, he could no longer
refrain, in justice to himself and his army, in chastising them as
they deserved. The barbarities consisted in the frequent scalping and
mutilating of sentinels, and men on outpost duty, which were
perpetrated alike by the Canadians and Indians. Wolfe's object was
twofold: first, to cause the militia to desert, and secondly, to
exhaust the colony.
Accordingly the
rangers, light
infantry and Highlanders were sent out, in all directions, to waste
the settlements wherever resistance was offered. Farm houses and
villages were laid in ashes, although the churches were generally
spared. Wolfe's orders were strict that women and children were to be
treated with honour. "If any violence is offered to a woman, the
offender shall be punished with death." These orders were
obeyed, and, except in one instance, none but armed men, in the act
of resistance, were killed.
Vaudreuil, in his
despatches home,
loudly denounced these barbarities; but he himself was answerable for
atrocities incomparably worse, and on a far larger scale, for he had,
for years, sent his savages, red and white, along a frontier of 600
miles, to waste, burn, and murder at will, and these, as he was
perfectly aware, spared neither age nor sex. Montcalm was not to be
moved from his position by the sight of the smoke of the burning
villages. He would not risk the loss of all Canada, for the sake of a
few hundred farmhouses.
Seeing the
impossibility of a
successful attack below the town, Wolfe determined to attempt
operations on a large scale above it. Accordingly, with every fair
wind and tide, ships and transports ran the gauntlet of the batteries
of Quebec, and, covered by a hot fire from Point Levi, generally
succeeded, with more or less damage, in getting above the town. A
fleet of flatboats was also sent up, and 1200 troops marched
overland, under Brigadier Murray, to embark in them.
To meet this danger
above the
town,
Bougainville was sent from the camp at Beaufort with 1500 men. Murray
made another descent at Pointe-aux-Trembles, but was repulsed with
loss. He tried a second time at another place, but a body of ambushed
Canadians poured so heavy a fire into the boats, that he was forced
to fall back again with considerable loss.
His third attempt was
more
successful,
for he landed at Deschambault, and burned a large building filled
with stores, and with all the spare baggage of the officers of the
French regular troops. Vaudreuil now regretted having sent the French
frigates up the river, and withdrawing their crews to work in the
batteries. Had they been kept just above the town, they could have
overpowered the English vessels as they passed up.
The sailors were now
sent up to
man
their ships again; but Admiral Holmes, who had taken command of the
ships of war above Quebec, was already too strong for them, and the
sailors were recalled to Quebec. Both armies were suffering.
Dysentery and fever had broken out in the English camp, and the
number of effective men was greatly reduced. Upon the other hand, the
French were suffering from shortness of supplies. The English
frigates above the town prevented food being brought down from
Montreal in boats, and the difficulties of land carriage were very
great.
The Canadians
deserted in great
numbers, and Montcalm's force had been weakened by the despatch of
Levis, to assist in checking the advance of Amherst. The latter had
captured Ticonderoga and Crown Point. Niagara had also been taken by
the English. Amherst, however, fell back again, and Levis was able to
rejoin Montcalm. But the greatest misfortune which befell the English
was the dangerous illness of Wolfe, who, always suffering from
disease, was for a time utterly prostrate.
At the end of August,
however, he
partially recovered, and dictated a letter to his three brigadier
generals, asking them to fix upon one of three plans, which he laid
before them, for attacking the enemy. The first was that the army
should march eight or ten miles up the Montmorenci, ford the river,
and fall upon the rear of the enemy. The second was to cross the ford
at the mouth of the Montmorenci, and march along the shore, until a
spot was found where the heights could be climbed. The third was to
make a general attack from the boats upon Beauport.
Monckton, Townshend,
and Murray
met in
consultation, and considered all the plans to be hopeless; but they
proposed that an attempt should be made to land above the town, and
so to place the army between Quebec and its base of supplies, thereby
forcing Montcalm to fight or to surrender. The attempt seemed a
desperate one, but Wolfe determined to adopt it. He had not much hope
of its succeeding, but should it not do so, there was nothing for him
but to sail, with his weakened army, back to England.
He therefore
determined at last to
make the attempt, and implored his physician to patch him up, so that
he could, in person, take the command.
"I know perfectly
well that you
cannot cure me," he wrote; "but pray make me up, so that I
may be without pain for a few days, and able to do my duty. That is
all I want."
On the 3rd of
September, Wolfe
took
the first steps towards the carrying out of his plans, by evacuating
the camp at Montmorenci. Montcalm sent a strong force to attack him,
as he was moving; but Monckton at Point Levi saw the movement, and,
embarking two battalions in boats, made a feint of landing at
Beauport. Montcalm recalled his troops to repulse the threatened
attack, and the English were able to draw off from Montmorenci
without molestation.
On the night of the
4th, a fleet
of
flatboats passed above the town, with the baggage and stores. On the
5th the infantry marched up by land, and the united force, of some
3600 men, embarked on board the ships of Admiral Holmes. The French
thought that the abandonment of Montmorenci, and the embarkation of
the troops, was a sign that the English were about to abandon their
enterprise, and sail for England. Nevertheless, Montcalm did not
relax his vigilance, being ever on the watch, riding from post to
post, to see that all was in readiness to repel an attack.
In one of his letters
at this
time, he
mentioned that he had not taken off his clothes since the 23d of
June.
He now reinforced the
troops under
Bougainville, above Quebec, to 3000 men. He had little fear for the
heights near the town, believing them to be inaccessible, and that a
hundred men could stop a whole army. This he said, especially, in
reference to the one spot which presented at least a possibility of
being scaled. Here Captain de Vergor, with a hundred Canadian troops,
were posted.
The battalion of
Guienne had been
ordered to encamp close at hand, and the post, which was called Anse
du Foulon, was but a mile and a half distant from Quebec. Thus,
although hoping that the English would soon depart, the French,
knowing the character of Wolfe, made every preparation against a last
attack before he started.
From the 7th to the
12th, Holmes'
fleet sailed up and down the river, threatening a landing, now at one
point and now at another, wearing out the French, who were kept night
and day on the qui vive, and were exhausted by following the ships up
and down, so as to be ready to oppose a landing wherever it might be
made.
James Walsham's
regiment formed
part
of Monckton's brigade, and his colonel had frequently selected him to
command parties who went out to the Canadian villages, as, from the
knowledge he had acquired of irregular warfare, he could be trusted
not to suffer himself to be surprised by the parties of Canadians or
Indians, who were always on the watch to cut off detachments sent out
from the British camp. There were still ten men in the regiment who
had formed part of his band on the lakes. These were drafted into his
company, and, whatever force went out, they always accompanied him.
Although James had
seen much, and
heard more, of the terrible barbarities perpetrated by the Canadians
and their Indian allies on the frontier, he lamented much the
necessity which compelled Wolfe to order the destruction of Canadian
villages; and when engaged on this service, whether in command of the
detachment, or as a subaltern if more than one company went out, he
himself never superintended the painful work; but, with his ten men,
scouted beyond the village, and kept a vigilant lookout against
surprise.
In this way, he had
several
skirmishes
with the Canadians, but the latter never succeeded in surprising any
force to which he was attached. Walsham and his scouts were often
sent out with parties from other regiments, and General Monckton was
so pleased with his vigilance and activity, that he specially
mentioned him to General Wolfe, at the same time telling him of the
services he had performed on the lakes, and the very favourable
reports which had been made by Johnson, Monro, Lord Howe, and
Abercromby, of the work done by the corps which he had organized and
commanded.
"I wish we had a few
more
officers trained to this sort of warfare," General Wolfe said.
"Send him on board the Sutherland
tomorrow. I have some service which he is well fitted to carry out."
James accordingly
repaired on
board
the Sutherland,
and was conducted to the general's cabin.
"General Monckton has
spoken to
me in high terms of you, Lieutenant Walsham, and he tells me that you
have been several times mentioned in despatches, by the generals
under whom you served; and you were with Braddock as well as with
Johnson, Howe, and Abercromby, and with Monro at the siege of Fort
William Henry. How is it that so young an officer should have seen so
much service?"
James informed him
how, having
been
pressed on board a man of war, he had been discharged, in accordance
with orders from home, and, hearing that his friends were going to
obtain a commission for him, in a regiment under orders for America,
he had thought it best to utilize his time by accompanying General
Braddock as a volunteer, in order to learn something of forest
warfare; that, after that disastrous affair, he had served with
Johnson in a similar capacity, until, on his regiment arriving, he
had been selected to drill a company of scouts, and had served with
them on the lakes, until the corps was broken up when the regiment
sailed for Canada.
"In fact, you have
seen more of
this kind of warfare than any officer in the army," General
Wolfe said. "Your special services ought to have been recognized
before. I shall have you put in orders, tomorrow, as promoted to the
rank of captain. And now, I am about to employ you upon a service
which, if you are successful, will give you your brevet majority.
There must be some points at which those precipices can be climbed. I
want you to find out where they are. It is a service of great danger.
You will go in uniform, otherwise, if caught, you would meet with the
fate of a spy; but at the same time, even in uniform you would
probably meet with but little mercy, if you fell into the hands of
the Canadians or Indians. Would you be willing to undertake such a
duty?"
"I will try, sir,"
James
said. "Do you wish me to start to-night?"
"No," the general
replied.
"You had better think the matter over, and let me know tomorrow
how you had best proceed. It is not an enterprise to be undertaken
without thinking it over in every light. You will have to decide
whether you will go alone, or take anyone with you; when and how you
will land; how you will regain the ships. You will, of course, have
carte blanche in all respects."
After James had
returned on shore,
he
thought the matter over in every light. He knew that the French had
many sentries along the edge of the river, for boats which, at night,
went over towards that side of the river, were always challenged and
fired upon. The chance of landing undetected, therefore, seemed but
slight; nor, even did he land, would he be likely, at night, to
discover the paths, which could be little more than tracks up the
heights.
Had he been able to
speak Canadian
French, the matter would have been easy enough, as he could have
landed higher up the river and, dressed as a Canadian farmer, have
made his way through the French lines without suspicion. But he knew
nothing of French, and, even had he spoken the language fluently,
there was sufficient difference between the Canadian French and the
language of the old country, for the first Canadian who spoke to him
to have detected the difference. Nor could he pass as an Indian; for,
although he had picked up enough of the language to converse with the
redskin allies of the English on the lakes, the first Indian who
spoke to him would detect the difference; and, indeed, it needed a
far more intimate acquaintance with the various tribes, than he
possessed, for him to be able to paint and adorn himself so as to
deceive the vigilant eyes of the French Indians.
Had his two
followers, Nat and
Jonathan, been with him, they could have painted and dressed him so
that he could have passed muster, but, in their absence, he abandoned
the idea as out of the question. The prospect certainly did not seem
hopeful.
After long thought,
it seemed to
him
that the only way which promised even a chance of success would be
for him to be taken prisoner by the French soldiers. Once fairly
within their lines, half the difficulty was over. He had learned to
crawl as noiselessly as an Indian, and he doubted not that he should
be able to succeed in getting away from any place of confinement in
which they might place him. Then he could follow the top of the
heights, and the position of the sentries or of any body of men
encamped there would, in itself, be a guide to him as to the
existence of paths to the strand below. The first step was the most
difficult. How should he manage to get himself taken prisoner? And
this was the more difficult, as it was absolutely necessary that he
should fall into the hands of French regulars, and not of the
Canadians, who would finish the matter at once by killing and
scalping him.
The next morning, he
again went
off to
the Sutherland.
He was in high spirits, for his name had appeared in orders as
captain, and as appointed assistant quartermaster general on the
headquarter staff. On entering the general's cabin, he thanked him
for the promotion.
"You have earned it
over and over
again," the general said. "There are no thanks due to me.
Now, have you thought out a plan?"
James briefly stated
the
difficulties
which he perceived in the way of any other scheme than that of
getting himself taken prisoner by the French, and showed that that
was the only plan that seemed to offer even a chance of success.
"But you may not be
able to
escape," Wolfe said.
"I may not," James
replied,
"and in that case, sir, I must of course remain a prisoner until
you take Quebec, or I am exchanged. Even then you would be no worse
off than you are at present, for I must, of course, be taken prisoner
at some point where the French are in force, and where you do not
mean to land. My presence there would give them no clue whatever to
your real intentions, whereas, were I taken prisoner anywhere along
the shore, they would naturally redouble their vigilance, as they
would guess that I was looking for some way of ascending the
heights."
"How do you propose
being taken?"
Wolfe asked.
"My idea was," James
replied, "that I should land with a party near Cap Rouge, as if
to reconnoitre the French position there. We should, of course, be
speedily discovered, and would then retreat to the boats. I should
naturally be the last to go, and might well manage to be cut off."
"Yes," Wolfe replied,
"but
you might also, and that far more easily, manage to get shot. I don't
think that would do, Captain Walsham. The risks would be twenty to
one against your escaping being shot. Can you think of no other
plan?"
"The only other plan
that I can
think of," James said, "might involve others being taken
prisoners. I might row in towards Cap Rouge in broad daylight, as if
to examine the landing place, and should, of course, draw their fire
upon the boat. Before starting, I should fire two or three shots into
the boat close to the water line, and afterwards plug them up with
rags. Then, when their fire became heavy, I should take the plugs out
and let the boat fill. As she did so, I could shout that I
surrendered, and then we could drift till we neared the shore in the
water-logged boat, or swim ashore. I can swim well myself, and
should, of course, want four men, who could swim well also, picked
out as the crew."
"The plan is a
dangerous one,"
Wolfe said, "but less so than the other."
"One cannot win a
battle without
risking life, sir," James said quietly. "Some of us might,
of course, be hit, but as we risk our lives whenever we get within
range of the enemy, I do not see that that need be considered; at any
rate, sir, I am ready to make the attempt, if the plan has your
approval."
"I tell you frankly,
Captain
Walsham, that I think your chances of success are absolutely nil. At
the same time, there is just a faint possibility that you may get
ashore alive, escape from the French, discover a pathway, and bring
me the news; and, as the only chance of the expedition being
successful now depends upon our discovering such a path, I am not
justified in refusing even this faint chance."
The general touched a
bell which
stood
on the table before him.
"Will you ask the
captain to come
here," he said to the officer who answered the summons.
"Captain Peters," he
said
when the captain appeared, "I want you to pick out for me four
men, upon whom you can thoroughly rely. In the first place they must
be good swimmers, in the second place they must be able to hold their
tongues, and lastly they must be prepared to pass some months in a
French prison. A midshipman, with the same qualifications, will be
required to go with them."
The captain naturally
looked
surprised
at so unusual a request.
"Captain Walsham is
going to be
taken prisoner by the French," General Wolfe explained, "and
the only way it can be done is for a whole boat's crew to be taken
with him," and he then detailed the plan which had been
arranged. "Of course, you can offer the men any reward you may
think fit, and can promise the midshipman early promotion," he
concluded.
"Very well, general.
I have no
doubt I can find four men and a midshipman willing to volunteer for
the affair, especially as, if you succeed, their imprisonment will be
a short one. When will the attempt be made?"
"If you can drift up
the river as
far as Cap Rouge before daylight," James said, in answer to an
inquiring look from the general, "we will attempt it tomorrow
morning. I should say that the best plan would be for me to appear
opposite their camp when day breaks, as if I was trying to obtain a
close view of it in the early morning."
"The sooner the
better,"
General Wolfe said. "Every day is of importance. But how do you
propose to get back again, that is, supposing that everything goes
well?"
"I propose, general,
that I
should conceal myself somewhere on the face of the heights. I will
spread a handkerchief against a rock or tree, so that it will not be
seen either from above or below, but will be visible from the ships
in the river. I cannot say, of course, whether it will be near Cap
Rouge or Quebec; but, if you will have a sharp lookout kept through a
glass, as the ships drift up and down, you are sure to see it, and
can let me know that you do so by dipping the ensign. At night I will
make my way down to the shore, and if, at midnight exactly, you will
send a boat for me, I shall be ready to swim off to her, when they
show a lantern as they approach the shore. Of course, I cannot say on
what day I may be in a position to show the signal, but at, any rate,
if a week passes without your seeing it, you will know that I have
failed to make my escape, or that I have been killed after getting
out."
|