Micah Clarke<br />His Statement as made to his three grandchildren Joseph, Gervas and Reuben During by Arthur Conan Doyle (read e books online free txt) ๐
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- Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
Read book online ยซMicah Clarke<br />His Statement as made to his three grandchildren Joseph, Gervas and Reuben During by Arthur Conan Doyle (read e books online free txt) ๐ยป. Author - Arthur Conan Doyle
โYour advice, in short, is that we march on!โ said Monmouth.
โThat we march on, your Majesty, and that we prepare oorselves tae be the vessels oโ grace, and forbear frae polluting the cause oโ the Gospel by wearing the livery oโ the devilโโhere he glared at a gaily attired cavalier at the other side of the tableโโor by the playing oโ cairds, the singing oโ profane songs and the swearing oโ oaths, all which are nichtly done by members oโ this army, wiโ the effect oโ giving much scandal tae Godโs ain folk.โ
A hum of assent and approval rose up from the more Puritan members of the council at this expression of opinion, while the courtiers glanced at each other and curled their lips in derision. Monmouth took two or three turns and then called for another opinion.
โYou, Lord Grey,โ he said, โare a soldier and a man of experience. What is your advice? Should we halt here or push forward towards London?โ
โTo advance to the East would, in my humble judgment, be fatal to us,โ Grey answered, speaking slowly, with the manner of a man who has thought long and deeply before delivering an opinion. โJames Stuart is strong in horse, and we have none. We can hold our own amongst hedgerows or in broken country, but what chance could we have in the middle of Salisbury Plain? With the dragoons round us we should be like a flock of sheep amid a pack of wolves. Again, every step which we take towards London removes us from our natural vantage ground, and from the fertile country which supplies our necessities, while it strengthens our enemy by shortening the distance he has to convey his troops and his victuals. Unless, therefore, we hear of some great outbreak elsewhere, or of some general movement in London in our favour, we would do best to hold our ground and wait an attack.โ
โYou argue shrewdly and well, my Lord Grey,โ said the King. โBut how long are we to wait for this outbreak which never comes, and for this support which is ever promised and never provided? We have now been seven long days in England, and during that time of all the House of Commons no single man hath come over to us, and of the lords none gave my Lord Grey, who was himself an exile. Not a baron or an earl, and only one baronet, hath taken up arms for me. Where are the men whom Danvers and Wildman promised me from London? Where are the brisk boys of the City who were said to be longing for me? Where are the breakings out from Berwick to Portland which they foretold? Not a man hath moved save only these good peasants. I have been deluded, ensnared, trappedโtrapped by vile agents who have led me into the shambles.โ He paced up and down, wringing his hands and biting his lips, with despair stamped upon his face. I observed that Buyse smiled and whispered something to Saxonโa hint, I suppose, that this was the cold fit of which he spoke.
โTell me, Colonel Buyse,โ said the King, mastering his emotion by a strong effort. โDo you, as a soldier, agree with my Lord Grey?โ
โAsk Saxon, your Majesty,โ the German answered. โMy opinion in a Raths-Versammlung is, I have observed, ever the same as his.โ
โThen we turn to you, Colonel Saxon,โ said Monmouth. โWe have in this council a party who are in favour of an advance and a party who wish to stand their ground. Their weight and numbers are, methinks, nearly equal. If you had the casting vote how would you decide?โ All eyes were bent upon our leader, for his martial bearing, and the respect shown to him by the veteran Buyse, made it likely that his opinion might really turn the scale. He sat for a few moments in silence with his hands before his face.
โI will give my opinion, your Majesty,โ he said at last. โFeversham and Churchill are making for Salisbury with three thousand foot, and they have pushed on eight hundred of the Blue Guards, and two or three dragoon regiments. We should, therefore, as Lord Grey says, have to fight on Salisbury Plain, and our foot armed with a medley of weapons could scarce make head against their horse. All is possible to the Lord, as Dr. Ferguson wisely says. We are as grains of dust in the hollow of His hand. Yet He hath given us brains wherewith to choose the better course, and if we neglect it we must suffer the consequence of our folly.โ
Ferguson laughed contemptuously, and breathed out a prayer, but many of the other Puritans nodded their heads to acknowledge that this was not an unreasonable view to take of it.
โOn the other hand, sire,โ Saxon continued, โit appears to me that to remain here is equally impossible. Your Majestyโs friends throughout England would lose all heart if the army lay motionless and struck no blow. The rustics would flock off to their wives and homes. Such an example is catching. I have seen a great army thaw away like an icicle in the sunshine. Once gone, it is no easy matter to collect them again. To keep them we must employ them. Never let them have an idle minute. Drill them. March them. Exercise them. Work them. Preach to them. Make them obey God and their Colonel. This cannot be done in snug quarters. They must travel. We cannot hope to end this business until we get to London. London, then, must be our goal. But there are many ways of reaching it. You have, sire, as I have heard, many friends at Bristol and in the Midlands. If I might advise, I should say let us march round in that direction. Every day that passes will serve to swell your forces and improve your troops, while all will feel something is astirring. Should we take Bristolโand I hear that the works are not very strongโit would give us a very good command of shipping, and a rare centre from which to act. If all goes well with us, we could make our way to London through Gloucestershire and Worcestershire. In the meantime I might suggest that a day of fast and humiliation be called to bring down a blessing on the cause.โ
This address, skilfully compounded of worldly wisdom and of spiritual zeal, won the applause of the whole council, and especially that of King Monmouth, whose melancholy vanished as if by magic.
โBy my faith, Colonel,โ said he, โyou make it all as clear as day. Of course, if we make ourselves strong in the West, and my uncle is threatened with disaffection elsewhere, he will have no chance to hold out against us. Should he wish to fight us upon our own ground, he must needs drain his troops from north, south, and east, which is not to be thought of. We may very well march to London by way of Bristol.โ
โI think that the advice is good,โ Lord Grey observed; โbut I should like to ask Colonel Saxon what warrant he hath for saying that Churchill and Feversham are on their way, with
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