<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">THE CAPTURE OF CIUDAD RODRIGO (1812)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">A night march—Waiting for scaling-ladders—The assault—Ladders
break—Shells and grenades—A magazine explodes—Street fighting—Drink
brings disorder and plunder—Great spoil.</p>
<p>After Talavera Sir Arthur Wellesley became Lord Wellington;
he was opposed by Soult, Marmont, and Masséna.
On the 1st of January Wellington crossed the
Agueda, and advanced to the assault of Ciudad Rodrigo,
which had to be hurried on because Marmont was advancing
to its relief. Fortunately, we have descriptions
from more than one eyewitness of the siege. Ciudad
Rodrigo is built on rising ground, on the right bank of
the Agueda. The inner wall, 32 feet high, is without
flanks, and has weak parapets and narrow ramparts.
Without the town, at the distance of 300 yards, the
suburbs were enclosed by a weak earthen entrenchment,
hastily thrown up.</p>
<p>It was six o’clock on the evening of the 19th of January.
The firing on both sides had slackened, but not ceased.
The chiefs were all bustle and mystery. They had had
their instructions. Soon the 5th and 77th were ordered to
fall in, and halted on the extreme right of the division.
Whilst the men hammered at their flints the order was
read to the troops. They were to take twelve axes in
order to cut down the gate by which the ditch was entered.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</SPAN></span>
The 5th Regiment were to have twelve scaling-ladders,
25 feet long, to scale the Fausse Brage, clear it of the
enemy, throw over any guns, and wait for General
M’Kinnon’s column in the main attack.</p>
<p>“Whilst waiting in the gloom for the return of the men
sent for the ladders, we mingled in groups of officers,
conversing and laughing together with that callous
thoughtlessness which marks the old campaigner.</p>
<p>“I well remember how poor McDougall of the 5th
was quizzed about his dandy moustaches. When next
I saw him, in a few short hours, he was a lifeless and a
naked corpse.</p>
<p>“Suddenly a horseman galloped heavily towards us.
It was Picton. He made a brief and inspiriting speech
to us—said he knew the 5th were men whom a severe
fire would not daunt, and that he reposed equal confidence
in the 77th. A few kind words to our commander
and he bade us God-speed, pounding the sides of his hog-maned
cob as he trotted off.”</p>
<p>Major Sturgeon and the ladders having arrived, the
troops again moved off about half-past six. The night
was rather dark, the stars lending but little light.</p>
<p>They were enjoined to observe the strictest silence.
It was a time of thrilling excitement as they wound
their way by the right, at first keeping a distance of
1,200 yards from the town, then bending in towards the
convent of Santa Cruz and the river. The awful stillness
of the hour was unbroken save by the soft, measured
tread of the little columns as they passed over the green
turf, or by the occasional report of a cannon from the
walls, and the rush and whizz of its ball as it flew past,
or striking short, bounded from the earth over their
heads, receiving, perhaps, most respectful, though involuntary,
salaams. Every two or three minutes a gun
was fired at some suspicious quarter.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>They had approached the convent and pushed on
nearer the walls, which now loomed high and near. They
reached the low glacis, through which was discovered a
pass into the ditch, heavily palisaded with a gate in the
centre. Through the palisades were visible the dark
and lofty old Moorish walls, whilst high overhead was
the great keep or citadel, a massive square tower, which
looked like a giant frowning on the scene. The English
still were undiscovered, though they could distinguish
the arms of the men on the ramparts, as they fired in idle
bluster over their heads.</p>
<p>Eagerly, though silently, they all pressed towards the
palisades as the men with hatchets began to cut a way
through them. The sound of the blows would not have
been heard by the enemy, who were occupied by their
own noises, had it not been for the enthusiasm, so characteristic
of his country, which induced a newly-joined
ensign, fresh from the wilds of Kerry, to utter a tremendous
war-whoop as he saw the first paling fall before the
axes. The cheer was at once taken up by the men, and,
as they instantly got convincing proofs that they were
discovered—the men on the walls began to pepper them
soundly—they all rushed through the opening. In the
ditch the assailants were heavily fired on from rampart
and tower. The French tossed down lighted shells and
hand-grenades, which spun about hissing and fizzing
amongst their feet. Some of these smashed men’s
heads as they fell, whilst others, exploding on the ground,
tossed unlucky wretches into the air, tearing them
asunder. Seldom could any men have passed three or
four minutes more uncomfortably than the time which
was consumed in bringing in and fixing the ladders
against a wall, towards which they all crowded.</p>
<p>Amongst the first to mount was the gallant chieftain
of the 5th, but the love they bore him caused so many of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</SPAN></span>
the soldiers to follow on the same ladder that it broke in
two, and they all fell, many being hurt by the bayonets
of their own comrades round the foot of the ladder.</p>
<p>“I was not one of the last in ascending,” writes an
officer of the 77th, “and as I raised my head to the level
of the top of the wall, I beheld some of our fellows demolishing
a picket which had been stationed at that
spot, and had stood on the defensive.</p>
<p>“They had a good fire of wood to cheer themselves by,
and on revisiting the place in the morning, I saw their
dead bodies, stripped, strangely mingled with wounded
English officers and men, who had lain round the fire all
night, the fortune of war having made them acquainted
with strange bed-fellows.</p>
<p>“Our ascent of the ladders placed us in the Fausse
Brage—a broad, deep ditch—in which we were for the
moment free from danger.</p>
<p>“When about 150 men had mounted, we moved
forward at a rapid pace along this ditch, cowering close
to the wall, whilst overhead we heard the shouts and
cries of alarm. Our course was soon arrested by the
massive fragments and ruins of the main breach made
by our men, and here we were in extreme danger, for
instead of falling into the rear of a column supposed to
have already carried the breach, we stood alone at its
base, exposed to a tremendous fire of grape and musketry
from its defences.</p>
<p>“For a minute or two we seemed destined to be sacrificed
to some mistake as to the hour of attack, but suddenly
we heard a cheer from a body of men who flung
down bags of heather to break their fall, and leaped on
them into the ditch.</p>
<p>“It was the old Scots Brigade, which, like us, having
been intended as a support, was true to its time, and was
placed in the same predicament as we were.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="img_3" src="images/i_059.jpg" width-obs="380" height-obs="600" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="header">The Night Assault of Ciudad Rodrigo</p>
<p>The enemy, immediately on discovering the presence of the British soldiers, commenced
firing and throwing lighted shells and hand grenades at them.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>On the appearance of the 94th the fire of the garrison
was redoubled, but it was decided by the officers that it
was better to die like men on the breach than like dogs
in a ditch, and so, with a wild “Hurrah!” they all sprang
up, absolutely eating fire. The breach must have been
70 feet wide, and consisted of a nearly perpendicular
mass of loose rubbish, in which it was very difficult to
obtain a footing.</p>
<p>The enemy lost no time. They pointed two guns
downwards from the flanks and had time to fire several
rounds of grape, working fearful destruction on the
British. On the margin of the breach were ranged a
quantity of shells, which were lighted and rolled down
on them; but they acted rather as a stimulus to push
up, and so avoid their explosion. The top of the
breach was defended by a strong body of the garrison,
who maintained a heavy fire of musketry, and hurled
down hand-grenades and fire-balls. However, a night
attack, with all its defects, has the advantage of concealing
from the view much of danger and of difficulty
that, if seen, might shake the nerve.</p>
<p>But there was no time for hesitation, no choice for the
timid. The front ranks were forced onwards by the
pressure of those in the rear, and as men fell wounded on
the breach, there they lay, being trodden into and
covered by the shifting rubbish displaced by the feet of
their comrades. Some few, more lucky, when wounded
fell or rolled down the slope into the ditch, and they
added by their outcries to the wildness of the scene.
The enemy’s resistance slackened, and they suddenly
fled. Some guns they left behind in their panic.</p>
<p>It was now seven o’clock; the breach was carried, and
the town virtually ours. About that time a wooden
magazine placed on the rampart blew up, destroying our
General and many with him, as well as a number of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</SPAN></span>
garrison. Patterson of the 43rd and Uniacke of the
95th were of the number.</p>
<p>“I distinctly remember the moment of the explosion
and the short pause it occasioned in our proceedings—a
pause that enabled us to hear the noise of the attack
still going forward near the little breach. I met Uniacke
walking between two men. One of his eyes was blown
out, and the flesh was torn from his arms and legs.</p>
<p>“I asked who it was. He replied, ‘Uniacke,’ and
walked on.</p>
<p>“He had taken chocolate with our mess an hour before!</p>
<p>“At this time a gigantic young Irish volunteer attached
to our regiment, observing a gallant artilleryman still
lingering near his gun, dashed at him with bayonet fixed
and at the charge.</p>
<p>“The man stepped backwards, facing his foe; but his
foot slipping, he fell against the gun, and in a moment
the young Irish fellow’s bayonet was through his heart.
The yell with which he gave up the ghost so terrified B——
that he started back, the implement of death in his hands,
and, apostrophizing it, said, ‘Holy Moses! how aisy you
went into him!’ This saying became celebrated afterwards
through the whole division.</p>
<p>“Colonel McLeod caused Lieutenant Madden of the
43rd to descend the small breach with twenty-five men,
to prevent soldiers leaving the town with plunder. At
eleven o’clock I went to see him. He had very judiciously
made a large fire, which, of course, showed up the plunderers
to perfection. He told me that no masquerade
could, in point of costume and grotesque figures, rival
the characters he stripped that night.”</p>
<p>Well, to go back to the storming party. The men who
lined the breastwork having fled, our men dropped from
the wall into the town and advanced in pursuit. At first
they were among ruins, but gradually made their way<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</SPAN></span>
into a large street which led nearly in a straight line from
the principal breach to the <i>plaza</i>, or square. Up this
street they fought their way, the enemy slowly retiring
before them. At about half the length of the street was
a large open space on the left hand, where was deposited
the immense battering train of “the army of Portugal.”</p>
<p>Amongst this crowd of carriages a number of men
ensconced themselves, firing on the British as they
passed, and it required no small exertion on their part to
dislodge them. In the meantime many of the French
ahead of them had entered the square, for which place
our fellows pushed on with as many men as they could
lay hands on, formed without distinction of regiment,
into two or three platoons. For the great proportion of
the men who had started with the column had sneaked
off into the by-streets for the purpose of plundering—a
business which was already going on merrily.</p>
<p>As they reached the head of the street, which entered
the square at one angle, and wheeled to the left into the
open space, they received a shattering volley, which
quickly spoiled their array. The French were drawn up
in force under the colonnade of the cathedral, and we
were for the moment checked by their fire.</p>
<p>At length, when they were meditating a dash at the
fellows, they heard fire opened from another quarter,
which seemed to strike the French with a panic, for on
our men giving a cheer and running forward, they to a
man threw away their arms as if by word of command,
and vanished in the gloom like magic.</p>
<p>It was the Light Division who entered the square by
a street leading from the little breach, and their opportune
arrival had frightened away the game which had
been brought to bay, leaving the pavement of the square
littered with arms and accoutrements.</p>
<p>But now begins a part of the story which does not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</SPAN></span>
reflect much credit on our fellows. When the men had
sipped the wine and brandy in the stores which they
plundered, most extreme disorders began, which it was
impossible to check. A whole division could not have
restored order.</p>
<p>Three or four large houses were on fire—two of them
were in the market-place—and the streets were illuminated
by the flames.</p>
<p>The soldiers were growing very drunk, and many of
them for amusement were firing from the windows into
the streets.</p>
<p>“I was myself talking to the barber Evans in the
square, when a ball passed through his head. This was
at one o’clock in the morning. He fell at my feet dead,
and his brains lay on the pavement. I then sought
shelter, and found Colonel McLeod with a few officers in
a large house, where we remained until the morning.</p>
<p>“I did not enter any other house in Ciudad Rodrigo.
If I had not seen it, I never could have supposed that
British soldiers would become so wild and furious.</p>
<p>“It was quite alarming to meet groups of them in the
streets, flushed as they were with drink, and desperate
in mischief, singing, yelling, dealing blows at man, woman,
or child like so many mad things loose from Bedlam.</p>
<p>“In the morning the scene was dismal and dreary.
The fires were just going out; all over street and square
were lying the corpses of many men who had met their
death hours after the town had been taken.</p>
<p>“At eleven o’clock I went to look at the great breach.
The ascent was not so steep as that of the small one, but
there was a traverse thrown up at each side of it on the
rampart. I counted ninety-three men of the Third
Division lying dead on the rampart between the traverses.
I did not see one dead man on the French side of those
traverses.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I saw General McKinnon lying dead. He was on
his back just under the rampart. He had, I think,
rushed forward and fallen down the perpendicular wall,
probably at the moment of receiving his mortal wound.
He was stripped of everything except his shirt and blue
pantaloons; even his boots were taken off.</p>
<p>“There were no others dead near him, and he was not
on the French side either. It is said that he was blown
up, but I should say not. There was no appearance
indicating that such had been his fate. Neither his skin
nor the posture in which he was lying led me to suppose
it. When a man is blown up, his hands and face, I
should think, could not escape. McKinnon’s face was
pale and free from the marks of fire. How strange! but
with his exception I did not see a man of the Third
Division who had been stripped.”</p>
<p>Besides possession of the fortress, the whole of Masséna’s
battering-train had become prize, as well as an
immense quantity of light artillery which Marmont
brought against us on the retreat from El Boden.</p>
<p>The fortress was so well supplied with warlike stores
that not an article of any kind was wanting, in spite of
the great expenditure during the siege.</p>
<p>What would not the French and English say now?</p>
<p>Ciudad invested, bombarded, stormed, and taken in
twelve days! and this it cost Masséna fifty-one days to
do, sixteen of which he was bombarding the town. Every
part of the proceeding seems to have astonished the
garrison, as in erecting works, opening batteries, etc.,
they were always a day or two out in their calculations.</p>
<p>The George and Dragon had nearly disappeared from
the King’s colours by a shell passing through it, but “the
men were splendid” in attack, and followed their leaders
unto death.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</SPAN></span></p>
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