Mr. Fortescue eBook

William Westall
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Mr. Fortescue.

Mr. Fortescue eBook

William Westall
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Mr. Fortescue.

When the war came to an end my occupation was gone, for both circumstances and my own will compelled me to leave the army.  My allowance could no longer be continued.  At the best, the life of a lieutenant of dragoons in peace time would have been little to my liking; with no other resource than my pay, it would have been intolerable.  So I sent in my papers, and resolved to seek my fortune in South America.  After the payment of my debts (incurred partly in the purchase of my first commission) and the provision of my outfit, the sum left at my disposal was comparatively trifling.  But I possessed a valuable asset in the ring given me by the French lady on the field of Vittoria.  It was heavy, of antique make, curiously wrought, and set with a large sapphire of incomparable beauty.  A jeweler, to whom I showed it, said he had never seen a finer.  I could have sold it for a hundred guineas.  But as the gem was property in a portable shape and more convertible than a bill of exchange, I preferred to keep it, taking, however, the precaution to have the sapphire covered with a composition, in order that its value might not be too readily apparent to covetous eyes.

At this time the Spanish colonies of Colombia (including the countries now known as Venezuela, New Granada, and Ecuador, as also the present republic of southern Central America) were in full revolt against the mother country.  The war had been going on for several years with varying fortunes; but latterly the Spaniards had been getting decidedly the best of it.  Caracas and all the seaport towns were in their possession, and the patriot cause was only maintained by a few bands of irregulars, who were waging a desperate and almost hopeless contest in the forests and on the llanos of the interior.

My sympathies were on the popular side, and I might have joined the volunteer force which was being raised in England for service with the insurgents.  But this did not suit my purpose.  If I accepted a commission in the Legion I should have to go where I was ordered.  I preferred to go where I listed.  I had no objection to fighting, but I wanted to do it in my own way and at my own time, and rather in the ranks of the rebels themselves than as officer in a foreign force.

This view of the case I represented to Senor Morena, one of the “patriot” agents in London, and asked his advice.

“Why not go to Caracas?” he said.

“What would be the use of that?  Caracas is in the hands of the Spaniards.”

“You could get from Caracas into the interior, and do the cause an important service.”

“How?”

Senor Morena explained that the patriots of the capital, being sorely oppressed by the Spaniards, were losing courage, and he wished greatly to send them a message of hope and the assurance that help was at hand.  It was also most desirable that the insurgent leaders on the field should be informed of the organization of a British liberating Legion, and of other measures which were being taken to afford them relief and turn the tide of victory in their favor.

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Mr. Fortescue from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.