<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">SIEGE OF KHARTOUM (1884)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">Gordon invited to the Soudan—The Mahdi—Chinese Gordon—His
religious feeling—Not supported by England—Arabs attack—Blacks
as cowards—Pashas shot—The <i>Abbas</i> sent down with
Stewart—Her fate—Relief coming—Provisions fail—A sick
steamer—<i>Bordein</i> sent down to Shendy—Alone on the house-top—Sir
Charles Wilson and Beresford steam up—The rapids and
sand-bank—“Do you see the flag?”—“Turn and fly”—Gordon’s
fate.</p>
<p>In January, 1884, Charles Gordon was asked by the
British Government to go to Egypt and withdraw from
the Soudan the garrisons, the civil officials, and any of
the inhabitants who might wish to be taken away. It
was a dangerous duty he had to perform, as the Mahdi,
a religious pretender in whom many believed, had just
annihilated an Egyptian army led by an Englishman,
Hicks Pasha, and, supported by the Arab slave-dealers,
had revolted against Egyptian rule.</p>
<p>Gordon had some years before been Governor-General
of the Soudan for the Khedive Ismail. He had been
then offered £10,000 a year, but would not take more
than £2,000, for he knew it would be “blood money
wrung from the wretches under his rule.” When previously
“Chinese Gordon,” as he was called, had put
down the Taiping rebels for the Chinese Government, he
refused the enormous treasure which was offered him, in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</SPAN></span>
order to mark his resentment at the treachery of the
Emperor for having executed the rebel chiefs after Gordon
had promised them their lives.</p>
<p>Gordon was a man of simple piety. “God dwells in
us”—this was the doctrine he most valued. After the
Bible, the “Imitation of Christ,” the writings of Epictetus
and Marcus Aurelius, seem to have been his
favourites. He once wrote: “Amongst troubles and
worries no one can have peace till he stays his soul upon
his God. It gives a man superhuman strength....
The quiet, peaceful life of our Lord was solely due to His
submission to God’s will.”</p>
<p>Such was the man whom England sent out too late to
face the rising storm of Arab rebellion. Gordon reached
Khartoum on the 18th of February, taking up his quarters
in the palace which had been his home in years before.
He had come, he said, without troops, nor would he fight
with any weapons but justice. The chains were struck
off from the limbs of the prisoners in the dungeons.</p>
<p>“I shall make them love me,” he said; and the black
people came in their thousands to kiss his feet, calling
him “the Sultan of the Soudan.”</p>
<p>But time went by, and Gordon could not get the
Government at home to second his schemes, so that the
natives began to lose confidence in him, and sided with
the Mahdi.</p>
<p>The Arabs began to attack Khartoum on the 12th of
March, and from that date until his death Gordon was
engaged in defending the city. Khartoum is situated on
the western bank of the Blue Nile, on a spit of sand
between the junction of that river with the White Nile.
Nearly all the records of this period have been lost, but
it is proved that wire entanglements were stretched in
front of the earthworks, mines were laid down, the
Yarrow-built steamers were made bullet-proof and fur<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</SPAN></span>nished
with towers, guns were mounted on the public
buildings, and expeditions in search of food were sent
out.</p>
<p>It was Gordon’s habit to go up on the roof at sunrise
and scan the country around.</p>
<p>“I am not alone,” he would say, “for He is ever with
me.”</p>
<p>On the 16th of March he had to look upon his native
troops retiring before the rebel horsemen. He writes:</p>
<p>“Our gun with the regulars opened fire. Very soon a
body of about sixty rebel horsemen charged down upon
my Bashi-Bazouks, who fired a volley, then turned and
fled. The horsemen galloped towards my square of
regulars, which they immediately broke. The whole
force then retreated slowly towards the fort with their
rifles shouldered. The men made no effort to stand, and
the gun was abandoned. Pursuit ceased about a mile
from stockade, and there the men rallied. We brought
in the wounded. Nothing could be more dismal than
seeing these horsemen, and some men even on camels,
pursuing close to troops, who with arms shouldered
plodded their way back.”</p>
<p>But Gordon was no weak humanitarian. Two Pashas
were tried, and found guilty of cowardice, and were
promptly shot—<i>pour encourager les autres</i>. After that he
tried to train his men to face the enemy by little skirmishes,
and he made frequent sallies with his river
steamers.</p>
<p>“You see,” he wrote, “when you have steam on the
men can’t run away.”</p>
<p>Then began a long and weary waiting for the relief
which came not until it was too late. The Arabs kept
on making attacks, which they never pressed home,
expecting to effect a surrender from scarcity of food.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="img_12" src="images/i_303.jpg" width-obs="396" height-obs="600" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="header">A Strange Weapon of Offence</p>
<p>Lieut. Herbert was ordered to paste some labels at the ambulance doors in Plevna.
In passing a dark lane someone sprang at him and seized his paste-pot, no doubt taking
it for food. To defend himself he belaboured and plastered his opponents’ face with
the paste-brush, and later on those of two others. He then turned and ran.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>In September only three months’ food remained. No<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</SPAN></span>
news came from England; they knew not if England even
thought of them. The population of Khartoum was at
first about 60,000 souls; nearly 20,000 of these were sent
away as the siege went on as being friends of the Mahdi.</p>
<p>On the 9th of September Gordon sent down the Nile,
in a small paddle-boat named the <i>Abbas</i>, Colonel Stewart,
Mr. Power, M. Herbin, the French Consul, some Greeks,
and about fifty soldiers. They took with them letters,
journals, dispatches which were to be sent from Dongola.
The <i>Abbas</i> drew little water, the river was in full flood,
and they seemed likely to be able to get over the rapids
with safety. Henceforth Gordon was alone with his
black and Egyptian troops. One might have thought
that his heart would have sunk within him at the loneliness
of his situation, at the feeling of desertion by England,
and of treachery in his own garrison. He had no
friend to speak to, no sympathetic companion left at
Khartoum. Yes, he had one Friend left, and in his
journal he tells us that he was happier and more peaceful
now than in the earlier months of the siege.</p>
<p>“He is always with me. May our Lord not visit us
as a nation for our sins, but may His wrath fall on me,
hid in Christ. This is my frequent prayer, and may He
spare these people and bring them to peace.”</p>
<p>The ill-fated <i>Abbas</i> was wrecked, her passengers and
crew were murdered, her papers were taken to the Mahdi,
who now knew exactly how long Khartoum could hold
out against famine.</p>
<p>On the 21st of September Gordon first heard the news
of a relief expedition being sent from England, and three
days later he resolved to dispatch armed steamers to
Metemma down the Nile to await the arrival of our troops.
They started on the 30th, taking with them many of
Gordon’s best men; but Gordon went on, drilling, feeding
the hungry, visiting the sick, writing hopefully, and some<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</SPAN></span>times
merrily, in his journals. For instance, writing of an
official who had telegraphed, “I should like to be informed
exactly when Gordon expects to be in difficulties
as to provisions and ammunition,” Gordon remarks:</p>
<p>“This man must be preparing a great statistical work.
If he will only turn to his archives he will see we have
been in difficulties for provisions for some months. It is
as if a man on the bank, having seen his friend in a river
already bobbed down two or three times, hails, ‘I say,
old fellow, let us know when we are to throw you the
life-buoy. I know you have bobbed down two or three
times, but it is a pity to throw you the life-buoy until
you are <i>in extremis</i>, and I want to know exactly.’”</p>
<p>On the 21st of October the Mahdi arrived before Khartoum,
and Gordon was informed of the loss of the <i>Abbas</i>
and the death of his friends. To this Gordon replied:</p>
<p>“Tell the Mahdi that it is all one to me whether he has
captured 20,000 steamers like the <i>Abbas</i>—I am here like
iron.”</p>
<p>On the 2nd of November there were left provisions for
six weeks, and he could not put the troops on half rations,
lest they should desert.</p>
<p>On the 12th an attack was made upon Omdurman, a
little way down the river, and on Gordon’s steamers
<i>Ismailia</i> and <i>Hussineyeh</i>. The latter was struck by shells,
and had to be run aground. In the journal we read:</p>
<p>“From the roof of the palace I saw that poor little beast
<i>Hussineyeh</i> fall back, stern foremost, under a terrific fire
of breechloaders. I saw a shell strike the water at her
bows; I saw her stop and puff off steam, and then I gave
the glass to my boy, <i>sickened unto death</i>. My boy (he is
thirty) said, ‘<i>Hussineyeh</i> is sick.’ I knew it, but said
quietly, ‘Go down and telegraph to Mogrim, “Is <i>Hussineyeh</i>
sick?”’”</p>
<p>On the 22nd of November Gordon summed up his losses.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</SPAN></span>
He had lost nearly 1,900 men, and 242 had been wounded.
And where were the English boats that were to hurry up
the Nile to his rescue?</p>
<p>On the 30th of November only one boat had passed the
third cataract, the remaining 600 were creaking and
groaning under the huge strain that was hauling them
painfully through the “Womb of Rocks.”</p>
<p>In December the desertions from the garrison increased,
as the food-supply decreased. There was not fifteen days’
food left now in Khartoum. So the steamer <i>Bordein</i> was
sent down to Shendy with letters and his journal. In a
letter to his sister he writes:</p>
<p>“I am quite happy, thank God! and, like Lawrence, I
have <i>tried</i> to do my duty.”</p>
<p>The last entry in his journal runs as follows:</p>
<p>“I have done the best for the honour of our country.
Good-bye. You send me no information, though you
have lots of money.”</p>
<p>Evidently this high-souled man was cut to the heart
by what he thought was the ingratitude and neglect of
England. He could not know that thousands of Englishmen
and Canadians were toiling up the Nile flood to save
him, if it were possible. But alas! they all started too
late, since valuable time had been wasted in long arguments
held in London as to which might be the best
route to Khartoum.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, starvation was beginning: strange things
were eaten by those who still remained faithful to the
last. Only 14,000 now were left in the city. But
Omdurman had been taken, the Arabs were pressing
closer and fiercer, and Egyptian officers came to Gordon
clamouring for surrender. Then he would go up upon
the roof, his face set, his teeth clenched. He would strain
his eyes in looking to the north for some sign, some tiny
sign of help coming. He cared not for his own life—<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</SPAN></span>“The
Almighty God will help me,” he wrote—but he did
care for the honour of England, and that honour seemed
to him to be sullied by our leaving him here at bay—and
all alone!</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the English had fought their way to Gubat,
where they found the steamers which Gordon had sent
to meet them. So tired were the men that, after a drink
of river-water, they fell down like logs. Four of Gordon’s
steamers, with Sir Charles Wilson and Captain C. Beresford,
started from Gubat on the 24th of January with
twenty English soldiers and some undisciplined blacks.
They were like the London penny steamers, that one shell
would have sent to the bottom. They were heavily laden
with Indian corn, fuel, and dura for the Khartoum garrison.
Each steamer flew two Egyptian flags, one at the
foremast and one at the stern. Every day they had to
stop for wood to supply the engines, when the men would
be off after loot or fresh meat.</p>
<p>When they reached the cataract and rapids the <i>Bordein</i>
struck on a rock, and could not be moved for many hours,
the Nile water running like a mill-race under her keel.
Arabs on the bank were taking pot-shots at her, and the
blacks on board grinned good-humouredly, and replied
with a wasteful fusillade. After shifting the guns and
stores, the crew got the <i>Bordein</i> to move on the 26th of
January, but only to get fast upon a sand-bank. Precious
time was thus lost, and on the 27th of January a camel
man shouted from the bank that Khartoum was taken
and Gordon killed. No one believed this news.</p>
<p>Near Halfiyeh a heavy fire was opened upon them at
600 yards from four guns and many rifles. The gunners
on the steamers were naked, and looked like demons in
the smoke.</p>
<p>“One huge giant was the very incarnation of savagery
drunk with war,” writes Sir Charles Wilson.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When the steamers had passed the batteries the
Soudanese crews screamed with delight, lifting up their
rifles and shaking them above their heads.</p>
<p>Soon they saw the Government House at Khartoum
above the trees, and excitement stirred every heart.
The Soudanese commander, Khashm el Mus, kept on
saying, “Do you see the flag?”</p>
<p>No one could see the flag.</p>
<p>“Then something has happened!” he muttered.</p>
<p>However, there was no help for it; they had to go on
past Tuti Island and Omdurman, spattered and flogged
with thousands of bullets.</p>
<p>“It is all over—all over!” groaned Khashm, as to the
sound of the Nordenfeldt was added the deeper note of
the Krupp guns from Khartoum itself.</p>
<p>As they reached the “Elephant’s Trunk”—so the
sand-spit was called below Khartoum—they saw hundreds
of Dervishes ranged under their banners in order to resist
a landing; so the order was given with a heavy heart:
“Turn her, and run full speed down.” Then the Soudanese
on board, who till now had been fighting enthusiastically,
collapsed and sank wearily on the deck. The poor fellows
had lost their all—wives, families, houses!</p>
<p>“What is the use of firing? I have lost all,” said
Khashm, burying his face in his mantle.</p>
<p>But they got him upon his legs, and the moment of
sorrowful despair changed again to desperate revenge.
After all the steamers got safely back.</p>
<p>And General Gordon—we left him alone in command
of a hungry garrison—what of him? From examinations
of Gordon’s officers taken later it seems that before daylight
on the 26th of January the Arabs attacked one of
the gates, and met with little or no resistance. There
was reason to fear treachery. For some three hours the
Arabs went through the city killing every one they met.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</SPAN></span>
Some of them went to the palace, and there met Gordon
walking in front of a small party of men. He was probably
going to the church, where the ammunition was
stored, to make his last stand. The rebels fired a volley,
and Gordon fell dead. It is reported that his head was
cut off and exposed above the gate at Omdurman. We
may be glad that it was a sudden death—called away by
the God in whom he trusted so simply. Thus died one
of England’s greatest heroes, one of the world’s most
holy men.</p>
<p>The siege had lasted 317 days, nine days less than the
siege of Sebastopol, and the Mahdi ascribed the result to
his God. In a letter sent to the British officers on the
steamers he says:</p>
<p>“God has destroyed Khartoum and other places by
our hands. Nothing can withstand His power and might,
and by the bounty of God all has come into our hands.
There is no God but God.</p>
<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Muhammed, the Son of Abdullah.</span>”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />