登陆注册
5649500000010

第10章

We will suppose, however, that this difficulty was, upon the whole, overcome; that the civilian colonels, with their uniforms, had also acquired the knowledge, experience, and tact required in the performance of their duties -- at least, as far as the infantry is concerned. But how will it be for the cavalry? To train a regiment of cavalry, requires more time, and more experience in the training officers, than to get a regiment of infantry into shape. Suppose the men join their corps, all of them, with a sufficient knowledge of horsemanship -- that is to say, they can stick on their horses, have command over them, and know how to groom and feed them -- this will scarcely shorten the time required for training. Military riding, that control over your horse by which you make him go through all the movements necessary in cavalry evolutions, is a very different thing from the riding commonly practised by civilians. Napoleon's cavalry, which Sir William Napier ( History of the Peninsular War ) considered almost better than the English cavalry of the time, notoriously consisted of the very worst riders that ever graced a saddle; and many of our best cross-country riders found, on entering mounted volunteer corps, that they had a deal to learn yet. We need not be astonished, then, to find that the Americans are very deficient in cavalry, and that what little they have consists of a kind of Cossacks or Indian irregulars (rangers), unfit for a charge in a body.

For artillery, they must be worse off still; and equally so for engineers.

Both these are highly scientific arms, and require a long and careful training in both officers and non-commissioned officers, and certainly more training in the men too, than infantry does. Artillery, moreover, is a more complicated arm than even cavalry; you require guns, horses broken in for this kind of driving, and two classes of trained men -- gunners and drivers; you require, besides, numerous ammunition-waggons, and large laboratories for the ammunition, forges, workshops, &c.; the whole provided with complicated machinery. The Federals are stated to have, altogether, 600 guns in the field; but how these may be served, we can easily imagine, knowing that it is utterly impossible to turn out 100 complete, well-appointed, and well-served batteries out of nothing in six months.

But suppose, again, that all these difficulties had been overcome, and that the fighting portion of the two hostile sections of Americans was in fair condition for their work, could they move even then? Certainly not. An army must be fed; and a large army in a comparatively thinly-populated country such as Virginia, Kentucky, and Missouri, must be chiefly fed from magazines. Its supply of ammunition has to be replenished; it must be followed by gunsmiths, saddlers, joiners, and other artisans, to keep its fighting tackle in good order. All these requisites shone by their absence in America;they had to be organised out of almost nothing; and we have no evidence whatever to show that even now the commissariat and transport of either army has emerged from babyhood.

America, both North and South, Federal and Confederate, had no military organisation, so to speak. The army of the line was totally inadequate, by its numbers, for service against any respectable enemy; the militia was almost non-existent. The former wars of the Union never put the military strength of the country on its mettle; England, between 1812 and 1814, had not many men to spare, and Mexico defended herself chiefly by the merest rabble. The fact is, from her geographical position, America had no enemies who could anywhere attack her with more than 30,000 or 40,000 regulars at the very worst; and to such numbers the immense extent of the country would soon prove a more formidable obstacle than any troops America could bring against them; while her army was sufficient to form a nucleus for some 100,000 volunteers, and to train them in reasonable time. But when a civil war called forth more than a million of fighting men, the whole system broke down, and everything had to be begun at the beginning. The results are before us. Two immense, unwieldy bodies of men, each afraid of the other, and almost as afraid of victory as of defeat, are facing each other, trying, at an immense cost, to settle down into something like a regular organisation. The waste of money, frightful as it is, is quite unavoidable, from the total absence of that organised groundwork upon which the structure could have been built. With ignorance and inexperience ruling supreme in every department, how could it be otherwise? On the other hand, the return for the outlay, in efficiency and organisation, is extremely poor; and could that be otherwise?

The British volunteers may thank their stars that they found, on starting, a numerous, well-disciplined, and experienced army to take them under its wings. Allowing for the prejudices inherent to all trades, that army has received and treated them well. It is to be hoped that neither the volunteers nor the public will ever think that the new service can ever supersede, in any degree, the old one. If there are any such, a glance at the state of the two American volunteer armies ought to prove to them their own ignorance and folly. No army newly formed out of civilians can ever subsist in an efficient state unless it is trained and supported by the immense intellectual and material resources which are deposited at the hands of a proportionately strong regular army, and principally by that organisation which forms the chief strength of the regulars. Suppose an invasion to threaten England, and compare what would be then done with what is unavoidably done in America.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 最好的年纪遇见最爱的你

    最好的年纪遇见最爱的你

    初三中考后的一个早晨。华宇只因多看了一眼,便从此陷进了那个如车铃脆响般女子的眼眸中。……男女主角的感情写的是甜文。请放心入坑。
  • 宸璃梦:公主倒追记

    宸璃梦:公主倒追记

    吝星璃,她是拂菻国唯一的公主,简单而不单纯,坚强却也害怕受伤,热情起来仿佛是灼灼地烈火,冷漠起来似寒冷的冰。她就是这样一个洒脱、倔强的女子。因为一系列与皇甫宸相关的梦境——他们前世的一些刻苦铭心的经历。而恋上那个让她醉心的男子。遇到他,她变得很低很低,低到了尘埃里。但她心里是欣喜的,从尘埃里开出了花。
  • 绝色除妖师这个妖王有点甜

    绝色除妖师这个妖王有点甜

    他,京九,作为除妖师的后代,他的资质逆天,领悟力也是惊人,九岁便甩了同龄一大圈,更是独自跑去妖物横行的西北捉回了一只作乱大妖,称之为天之骄子也不为过。但是,他从未想过,有一天他竟也会被一只大妖所救,他…不是应该对他恨之入骨才对吗?
  • 铁窗难锁钢铁心:革命先烈王若飞

    铁窗难锁钢铁心:革命先烈王若飞

    《中华魂》是一套故事丛书。它汇集了我国自鸦片战争以来一百七十余年间的96位民族英雄、仁人志士、革命、先进模范人物的生动感人史迹,表现了作为中华民族很好传统的伟大的爱国主义精神。
  • 欢迎进入炼狱游戏

    欢迎进入炼狱游戏

    某一天,凌辰在一个意想不到的地方,捡到一部奇怪的手机。与此同时,他与未知的存在签订了契约……从此,被卷入了一场极度危险的游戏中。为了完成心底里的执念,他别无选择,更没有中途退出的可能。炼狱游戏,是一个超越想像的神秘游戏。在特定的时间,会将人传送到随机的位面……请问,在你的内心深处,有没有不为人知的愿望?如果答应是肯定的……那么,欢迎进入炼狱游戏。在生死的边缘挣扎,将智与力发挥到极限!
  • 重生后锦鲤先生向我求婚了

    重生后锦鲤先生向我求婚了

    推荐新书《穿书之我成了男配的红娘》~【甜宠虐渣,1V1双洁】艾笑被死对头暗算命丧黄泉。穿越时空附身在了另一个自己身上,踏上了她的复仇逆袭之路。虐对头,怼黑粉,整恶妇,拍戏复仇两不误。所有人都以为她性格大变,却不知这才是她的本性。本以为日子会这么美滋滋得过下去,谁想到半路突然杀出个原主的暗恋对象,令她躲避不及。艾笑:“萧先生,我不接受捆绑!”萧靳骁:“网友都称我为大锦鲤,遇上我是你运气好,你确定要和我解绑吗?”艾笑:“捆绑捆绑!”后来……什么鬼?说好的励志男青年呢?怎么摇身一变,变成了自己的大老板?这上得厅堂下得厨房的模样,确定是传闻中含着金汤匙长大的贵少爷吗?艾笑:“惹不起我还躲不起?”萧靳骁邪笑:“爱上我是你的福分,你不抱紧我的大腿,还想逃哪里去?”艾笑:“抱紧抱紧。”再后来,别人问萧靳骁是怎么把艾笑追到手的。他答:“宠她,宠她,继续宠她。宠到她生活无法自理为止。”艾笑欲哭无泪:“千逃万逃,还是逃不过真香定律!”
  • 沟通力就是执行力

    沟通力就是执行力

    多数管理者对于执行力存在误区,认为只要自己和下属具备做事的能力(思路、技术等方面),就能提升团队的执行力。事实上,要想使团队具备强大的执行力,通畅沟通比做事更为重要,因为通畅沟通让执行更加迅速,并且通畅沟通也能增强团队凝聚力、合作协调性、保持目标一致性、有效节省时间成本,从而真正地提高执行力。本书是作者对众多知名企业深入考察和研究,并结合大量实际案例,总结出的一套系统性方法。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 我在大唐遇见你

    我在大唐遇见你

    考古学家李涟漪误入唐朝,成为编写《推背图》主人之一李淳风的孙女。读人心、算命运、遇逻盛炎,本以为经过了重重苦难能和逻盛炎长相厮守,奈何算缘算命,算不过天意,婆罗断却今生幽情。ps:女强交流群912175200
  • 帝王权术

    帝王权术

    打着穿越的幌子来到一个王朝时代,不认识什么超级名将,也不是什么学霸造不出飞机大炮和火药。他有的不过是初中学过的历史课。他能做的不过是运用数千年的帝王权术。秦皇汉武唐宗宋祖,又能否做到取其精华去其糟粕?且看一个现代普通人如何做一个皇帝。