Sir John French eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about Sir John French.

Sir John French eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 123 pages of information about Sir John French.

Sir Evelyn Wood was also sent with reinforcements from Korti to strengthen the force at Gakdul Wells.  There he met French for the first time.  “I saw him,” Sir Evelyn relates, “when our people were coming back across the desert after our failure, the whole force depressed by the death of Gordon.  I came on him about a hundred miles from the river—­the last man of the last section of the rear guard!  We were followed by bands of Arabs.  They came into our bivouac on the night of which I am speaking, and the night following they carried off some of our slaughter cattle."[4]

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Major French was quickly able to distinguish himself in the retreat.  For Buller was a believer in cavalry and used it wherever possible.  In his dispatch on the retreat he paid French the following handsome tribute: 

“I wish expressly to remark on the excellent work that has been done by a small detachment of the 19th Hussars, both during our occupation of Abu Klea and during our retirement.  Each man has done the work of ten; and it is not too much to say that the force owes much to Major French and his thirteen troopers.”

The flying column occupied just two months in its fruitless expedition.  But no more trying experience was ever packed into so short a time.  On that march across the Bayuda desert history has only one verdict.  It is that pronounced by Count von Moltke on the men who accomplished it:—­“They were not soldiers but heroes.”  None of the men earned the title more thoroughly than Major French and his troopers.  “During the whole march from Korti,” says Colonel Biddulph, “the entire scouting duty had been taken by the 19th Hussars, so that each day they covered far more ground than the rest of the force."[5] The enemy themselves came to respect the little force of cavalrymen.  “Even the fierce Baggara horsemen appeared unwilling to cross swords with our Hussars,” wrote one who accompanied the column.  Major French and his regiment had firmly established their reputation.

FOOTNOTES: 

[1] With the Camel Corps up the Nile, by Count Gleichen, by permission of Messrs. Chapman and Hall.

[2] With the Camel Corps up the Nile, by Count Gleichen, by permission of Messrs. Chapman and Hall.

[3] With the Camel Corps up the Nile, by Count Gleichen, by permission of Messrs. Chapman and Hall.

[4] For this and much other valuable information the writer is indebted to Field-Marshal Sir Evelyn Wood.

[5] The Nineteenth and their Times, by Col.  J. Biddulph, by permission of Mr. John Murray.

CHAPTER III

YEARS OF WAITING

    Second in Command—­Maintaining the Barrow tradition—­The
    Persistent Student—­Service in India—­Retires on
    Half-pay—­Renewed Activities—­Rehearsing for South Africa.

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Sir John French from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.