登陆注册
5246300000643

第643章 CHAPTER XIII(32)

But those very institutions which made a tribe of highlanders, all bearing the same name, and all subject to the same ruler, so formidable in battle, disqualified the nation for war on a large scale. Nothing was easier than to turn clans into efficient regiments; but nothing was more difficult than to combine these regiments in such a manner as to form an efficient army. From the shepherds and herdsmen who fought in the ranks up to the chiefs, all was harmony and order. Every man looked up to his immediate superior, and all looked up to the common head. But with the chief this chain of subordination ended. He knew only how to govern, and had never learned to obey. Even to royal proclamations, even to Acts of Parliament, he was accustomed to yield obedience only when they were in perfect accordance with his own inclinations. It was not to be expected that he would pay to any delegated authority a respect which he was in the habit of refusing to the supreme authority. He thought himself entitled to judge of the propriety of every order which he received. Of his brother chiefs, some were his enemies and some his rivals. It was hardly possible to keep him from affronting them, or to convince him that they were not affronting him. All his followers sympathized with all his animosities, considered his honour as their own, and were ready at his whistle to array themselves round him in arms against the commander in chief. There was therefore very little chance that by any contrivance any five clans could be induced to cooperate heartily with one another during a long campaign. The best chance, however, was when they were led by a Saxon. It is remarkable that none of the great actions performed by the Highlanders during our civil wars was performed under the command of a Highlander. Some writers have mentioned it as a proof of the extraordinary genius of Montrose and Dundee that those captains, though not themselves of Gaelic race or speech, should have been able to form and direct confederacies of Gaelic tribes. But in truth it was precisely because Montrose and Dundee were not Highlanders, that they were able to lead armies composed of Highland clans. Had Montrose been chief of the Camerons, the Macdonalds would never have submitted to his authority. Had Dundee been chief of Clanronald, he would never have been obeyed by Glengarry. Haughty and punctilious men, who scarcely acknowledged the king to be their superior, would not have endured the superiority of a neighbour, an equal, a competitor. They could far more easily bear the preeminence of a distinguished stranger, yet even to such a stranger they would allow only a very limited and a very precarious authority. To bring a chief before a court martial, to shoot him, to cashier him, to degrade him, to reprimand him publicly, was impossible.

Macdonald of Keppoch or Maclean of Duart would have struck dead any officer who had demanded his sword, and told him to consider himself as under arrest; and hundreds of claymores would instantly have been drawn to protect the murderer. All that was left to the commander under whom these potentates condescended to serve was to argue with them, to supplicate them, to flatter them, to bribe them; and it was only during a short time that any human skill could preserve harmony by these means. For every chief thought himself entitled to peculiar observance; and it was therefore impossible to pay marked court to any one without disobliging the rest. The general found himself merely the president of a congress of petty kings. He was perpetually called upon to hear and to compose disputes about pedigrees, about precedence, about the division of spoil. His decision, be it what it might, must offend somebody. At any moment he might hear that his right wing had fired on his centre in pursuance of some quarrel two hundred years old, or that a whole battalion had marched back to its native glen, because another battalion had been put in the post of honour. A Highland bard might easily have found in the history of the year 1689 subjects very similar to those with which the war of Troy furnished the great poets of antiquity. One day Achilles is sullen, keeps his tent, and announces his intention to depart with all his men. The next day Ajax is storming about the camp, and threatening to cut the throat of Ulysses.

Hence it was that, though the Highlanders achieved some great exploits in the civil wars of the seventeenth century, those exploits left no trace which could be discerned after the lapse of a few weeks. Victories of strange and almost portentous splendour produced all the consequences of defeat. Veteran soldiers and statesmen were bewildered by those sudden turns of fortune. It was incredible that undisciplined men should have performed such feats of arms. It was incredible that such feats of arms, having been performed, should be immediately followed by the triumph of the conquered and the submission of the conquerors. Montrose, having passed rapidly from victory to victory, was, in the full career of success, suddenly abandoned by his followers. Local jealousies and local interests had brought his army together. Local jealousies and local interests dissolved it. The Gordons left him because they fancied that he neglected them for the Macdonalds. The Macdonalds left him because they wanted to plunder the Campbells. The force which had once seemed sufficient to decide the fate of a kingdom melted away in a few days; and the victories of Tippermuir and Kilsyth were followed by the disaster of Philiphaugh. Dundee did not live long enough to experience a similar reverse of fortune; but there is every reason to believe that, had his life been prolonged one fortnight, his history would have been the history of Montrose retold.

同类推荐
  • 海陬冶游录

    海陬冶游录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宗门拈古汇集

    宗门拈古汇集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • ON THE SURGERY

    ON THE SURGERY

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Foreigner

    The Foreigner

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • TALES FROM TWO HEMISPHERES

    TALES FROM TWO HEMISPHERES

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 代嫁丑娘

    代嫁丑娘

    因为她丑,所以不受家人的宠爱,本是嫡出的她常受庶出妹妹的欺负。因为她丑,所以指腹为婚俊美无比的心上人要让给集万千宠爱于一身的妹妹。因为她丑,所以要替嫁给那个杀人如麻的大魔头。因为她丑,所以可以不被别人尊重。因为她丑,所以要被剥夺做母亲的权利。因为她乖,所以在受到妹妹欺负的时候从不告状。因为她乖,所以心仪已久指腹为婚的人另娶她人,她也毫无怨言。因为她乖,所以嫁给杀人如麻的大魔头也默默忍受。因为她乖,所以尊严被践踏也毫不在乎。因为她乖,所以只因他不希望孩子生下来和她一样的丑而被迫流产。她的丑颜善良惊叹了何人又收复了几人?她的柔顺乖巧顺应了几人又感动了何人?片段1:“就凭你这副丑模样,还妄想嫁给天下第一公子沈玉廷,你简直是癞蛤蟆想吃天鹅肉,赶快回房不要出来吓人了!”“我不是妄想,这是我娘生前指腹为婚的!”“指腹为婚?你娘已经死了,谁还和你指腹为婚!就你这丑八怪的样子,不怕洞房的时候,把玉廷公子吓坏了吗?还是我做些好事代你嫁了吧!”“妹妹不是要嫁给‘雷残宫’的曲冰邪吗?”“谁要嫁给那个大魔头?”“那曲冰邪不是已经下了聘礼了吗?”“那就要有劳姐姐代为嫁给他了。”“为什么?”“因为我要嫁给沈玉廷,而姐姐自然就要嫁给曲冰邪了!”片段2:曲冰邪看着掀开盖头下一张惊慌的丑颜,立刻恼羞成怒,他上前抓住上官静莫的手,声音冰冷至极:“你是谁?”“我…我是上官静莫…”曲冰邪咬牙一笑,残忍的说道:“上官寻那个老东西敢用你来欺骗我?片段3:“喝下去!”曲冰邪把一碗黑乎乎的药汁递到了上官静莫的面前。上官静莫犹豫的接过药碗,满脸哀求的对曲冰邪说道:“我想留下这个孩子,求求你让我留下他(她)好吗?”“我不想让我的孩子生下来和你一样的丑!”无情的话语就这么直直的射了过来。上官静莫将药碗放于唇边,眼泪一滴,两滴,…滴滴掉落到碗中,她闭上眼睛无助的强压下涌上的呕吐感将满碗的药汁喝了下去。曲冰邪看着碗底见空才转身无情的走了出去。
  • 蓝裙子杀人事件

    蓝裙子杀人事件

    犯罪心理师麦涛的导师艾莲犯罪伏法自杀后,留下了一个奇怪的遗嘱。遗嘱涉及两位继承人,但奇怪的是,两位继承人似乎都对充满诱惑力的遗产无动于衷。遗产的继承问题悬而未决,B市再现连环杀手,恰值青春年华的少女接连遇害——最让麦涛头疼的是,此案竟与3年前的悬案如出一辙!是凶杀再次作案,还是有人模仿杀人?而最让人匪夷所思的是,另一继承人唐彼得居然也与本案有着千丝万缕的联系。这是不是精明的犯罪人艾莲玩弄的又一个心理游戏?
  • 次元小说系统

    次元小说系统

    前世没去那二次元和小说的世界,今世分身去看看那些世界。
  • 留心术:留住金牌员工的十大秘诀

    留心术:留住金牌员工的十大秘诀

    本书从十个方面全面地介绍了企业的“留人”艺术,系统阐释了现代企业的“管人”秘诀。作者从结果出发寻找问题,结合中国特色的人情关系,给管理者上了一堂生动的“用人”课。
  • 续红楼梦新编

    续红楼梦新编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 乔爷的世纪豪宠

    乔爷的世纪豪宠

    初次见时,她7岁,他15岁。“咦,被这个小东西咬到了,竟然没晕倒还保持清醒,还蛮厉害的”女孩面带好奇的看著眼前的少年。“救我”嘶,到吸一口气,睁开渐眯的双眼看着眼前的小女孩“你怎么知道我可以救你,我只一个8岁的小孩子而已”嘲讽的说到。“救我”“。。。。。。。”“喂,你这个人真是奇怪,我都说了我只一个8岁的小孩子而已,怎么救你,再说就算我可以救你,又凭什么救你,我们素不相识”“你认识它,所以请你救我”“哼”小女孩无奈的拿出随身带的手帕,从口袋拿出一瓶黑黑的药,看着极为诡异,轻轻的将药撒在伤口上,用手帕稍微包扎了一下。“哼,看什么看,这个手帕很干净的,洋洋哥哥都没有,问我要我都没给,现在给你拿来包扎脚,你还嫌弃”当女孩抬起头来,看到眼前人盯着自己的手帕,以为是他嫌弃自己的手帕脏,心中有说不出的怒火“不是的,我不嫌弃,谢谢你”女孩的怒火打断了看她的眼神,听到女孩的话,此时男孩的眼中有着一絲的无措“哼,忘恩负义,不可原谅”“。。。。。。。”再见面时:她18岁,他26岁“Sorry”女孩低着头不知道在想什么嘴角挂着浅浅的笑,却一不小心撞到了男人的身上。当一股似曾相识的香味迎面扑来,男人很自然的抓住女孩的手,往身边拉了拉。此时,女孩察觉到不对劲终于抬头见自己的手被另一只手抓着说到“先生,我都说了对不起了,你还抓着我的手干吗?可以放开我吗?”“。。。。。。。”男人只是抓着女孩的手不言。“这位先生,放开你的手,要不然我就喊非礼了”“。。。。。。。”“喂,能不能先放开我的手”“。。。。。。。”“嗯?不会是聋子吧”女孩小声的说到,在昏暗的环境下看不清男人的面容,只能看到一只修长有力,骨节分明的手。年少初见,却留下了最深的印记,给彼此种了最美、最深的缘份和牵绊。本文宠宠宠,可以甜齁人心,女主强大、男主更强大。文文刺激、惊险,亲情、友情、爱情满足一切美好,最重要的超虐单身狗的男女主情。
  • THE TIME MACHINE

    THE TIME MACHINE

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 月似乱

    月似乱

    一把乱世的琴,一曲红尘的歌,曲终人散,再也不会有个阴沉的少女,举着那把冰河势不可挡……
  • 巧合未解之谜(世界未解之谜精编)

    巧合未解之谜(世界未解之谜精编)

    本书是《世界未解之谜精编》系列之一,该系列精心收集了众多千奇百怪、扑朔迷离的世界未解之谜,内容涉及宇宙、生物、地理、飞碟、人体、恐龙、宝藏、百慕大、历史、金字塔、文化等多个领域,书中令人耳目一新和不可思议的未解之谜,给予了人类新的思索。人类究竟创造了多少奇迹,又留下了多少谜团,有待我们进一步探索和研究……我们深信,通过不断的努力,未知一定会变为已知。让无数探寻声化做利刃,刺破一桩桩人类千年未解之谜。
  • 彻悟禅师语录

    彻悟禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。