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reach Kartoum on the 25th; and the imputation on Wilson conveyed by the passage is, in any case, without foundation. But it is to be noted that here Lord Wolseley is taking absolutely new ground; for, having sent Wilson to communicate with Gordon, he is here implying that his duty was to relieve him.

At this time the Government seems to have become alive to the careful avoidance by Lord Wolseley of all approval of Wilson; not one word of commendation had he given to the victor of Gubat,-a fact which had been noticed early in February in the London press. On the 11th February Lord Hartington telegraphs to Lord Wolseley: "Express warm recognition of Government of brilliant services of Sir Charles Wilson, and satisfaction at gallant rescue of his party." Now it is a remarkable fact that this telegram is omitted from the published parliamentary papers. More than a month later, Wilson seems to have been called on for a statement of the occupation of the interval between his arrival on the Nile and his departure for Kartoum. Accordingly, on the 23d March he wrote the report which, in reply to a question, Lord Hartington, on 15th May, said should be laid on the table, and which is now before us. In it Wilson sets forth the situation of his force on the 21st, when the steamers reached him. It had been much weakened by the heavy losses of the 17th and 19th; it was to be further diminished by the return of the convoy and escort to Gakdul, and it was hampered by the large number of wounded. The men, too (this be does not say in the report, but elsewhere), were quite exhausted with the fighting and want of sleep -horses and camels were knocked up. And besides the presence of

the enemy's garrison in Metammeh, there were rumours of hostile forces advancing on both sides. He had, therefore, urgently to provide for the defence of his camp. This anxious condition of affairs continued up to the afternoon of the 22d, when the steamers were repaired and ready. "The only day," says Wilson, "that might have been saved was the 22d, as the reconnaissance showed that the force had nothing to fear from the Berber direction." He means that it might have been saved had he known the real state of the case; but he did not know it, and it was most necessary to ascertain it. There remains the 23d. Of this day he says

"General Gordon, in a most characteristic letter, addressed to the Chief of the Staff, or to the Officer Commanding the British advanced-guard, insisted strongly on our taking actual command of the steamers, and removmen of Turk, or Egyptian origin. ing from them all Pashas, Beys, and He wrote in strong terms of the uselessness of these men in action, and begged that, if the boats were not manned by British sailors, they should be sent back to him with none but Soudanese crews and soldiers. It was. should be manned by the Naval Brioriginally intended that the steamers gade, but Lord Charles Beresford was in hospital, unable to walk, and all the other officers of the Brigade, and several of the best petty officers and men, had been killed or wounded. It was therefore impossible to carry out the original plan; and though Lord Charles Beresford, in the most gallant

way,

that I could not deprive the force of offered to accompany me, I felt the only naval officer with it, especially as the steamers left behind might be called upon at any time to take part in active operations against the enemy. It was therefore necessary to select

Soudanese officers, crews, and soldiers them to the two steamers going to from the four ships, and to transfer Kartoum. This was the chief reason for the delay on the 23d."

Now, even supposing that a few hours of daylight could have been saved on the 23d-and we do not know that they could; on the contrary, we gather from the report that they could not-yet, even then, the steamers could not have reached Kartoum till late on the 27th, the day after the fall of the place. The point is therefore of absolutely no importance to the issue. Unless Wilson had left his exhausted force unfortified and exposed to attack, and had embarked in steamers unprepared for the voyage, which Gordon held to be so perilous, he could not have reached Kartoum even on the 26th. It appears not only an absurdity, but a mischievous absurdity, to charge a man who had done so much in such harassing circumstances with not doing more. To our mind he needed no defence, and ought not to have undergone the imputation implied in the demand for explanation.

This report was sent home by Lord Wolseley, with a letter from himself, which we here give entire.

"CAIRO, 13th April, 1885. "MY LORD,-I have the honour to forward a letter from Colonel Sir C. Wilson, R.E., giving the reasons for the delay in the departure of the

steamers from Gubat.

"I do not propose to add any remarks of my own to this letter. The reasons given by Sir Charles Wilson must speak for themselves--I have, &c., WOLSELEY, General. "The Right Hon.

MARQUIS OF HARTINGTON, M.P." Now this is a letter which may be read in two ways. Had Lord Wolseley made previous mention of Sir C. Wilson's conduct with approval, it might mean that it was obviously and completely satisfacBut it must be taken in tory. connection not only with careful avoidance of approval, but of what

is implied in Lord Wolseley's despatch of the 15th February, and must be read as declining to say a word which might tend to absolve Wilson.

We need hardly say that the whole theory that Gordon's rescue was possible, even by Wolseley's whole force, had it reached the Nile before Nelson's scanty column got there, rests upon nothing but wild assumption. The truth of the matter is, we doubt not, that put forth as his opinion by Lord Granville in the House of Lords on the 18th May. 'He said :

"The noble earl said it did not signify what the cause was that took us to the Soudan. I am bound to say it signifies very much. It was, if possible, to save General Gordon. I do not believe it was a question of time

that is purely a matter of opinion. I believe that treachery would have had effect at whatever time the relief expedition might have arrived."

So say we, and we will give a reason for the belief which Lord Granville would naturally abstain from. The Mahdi (as will be found, we believe, in Gordon's diary) knew of our declared intention to abandon the Soudan after the rescue of Gordon. He had

municating with the troops in means of constantly comKartoum, He would therefore argue with them in this cogent fashion : The English are coming to take away Gordon, and will then quit the Soudan. The defence of the place depends upon Gordon. Without him and without the English you cannot keep me out. If I capture the place by force, I will kill every man. But if you agree to admit me when I shall desire it, I will spare you and take you into my service." It is no wonder that these poor Egyptians, who owed no fealty to us, or even to Gordon, if he

should depart and leave them, took this proposal into serious consideration, and that some at least were ready to accept the conditions. And as to the time, the Mahdi desired to defer the surrender till some of our troops should be lured to cross the desert, when he hoped to destroy them a result nearly accomplished. The city, with Gordon in it, was used as a bait. What finally decided him was the arrival of our troops on the Nile. For all he knew, we might advance in force to raise the siege and thereupon he put his foot down.

It is fortunate for Sir Charles Wilson that the vague charges against him have been brought to a head in a cruel and unwarrantable attack published in a monthly periodical. A Mr Williams, the correspondent with Stewart's column of the Daily Chronicle,' has written a paper ascribing to Sir Charles Wilson the whole blame for the failure to rescue Gordon, in language so injurious that nobody can suppose it to be inspired only by a desire to impart unbiassed facts. All the delays that took place in resolving on the expedition, in starting it, and in conducting it, so far as it went, are as nothing (according to this writer) compared with the space of two days between the time of the arrival of the steamers at Gubat and Wilson's departure in them to Kartoum. The most offensive charges are made with reference to his conduct both at Gubat and in sight of Kartoum. But this Mr Williams is actually the same person who has already written accounts of the expedition to the Daily Chronicle,' speaking of the object of his spite in very

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different terms. Thus, he said in that paper of January 29th: "Sir C. Wilson has now in command, cool, collected, meeting each move of the enemy, noting weak points. . . . A commander of weaker fibre might well have hesitated, but not so Colonel Wilson, who did not fear to realise that the risk must be taken." Will it be believed that he now writes in the periodical: "A soldier should not have hesitated; Sir Charles Wilson hesitated"! Again, he said in the Daily Chronicle' of February 12: "Sir Charles Wilson, .. with that boldness and resolution which characterized his conduct at the battle of Gubat"; but now in the periodical: "If I differ from this, it is only in wondering if he had any nerve to lose." Lieutenant Stuart-Wortley's diary, published in the 'London Gazette,' says: January 24.-Left Metammeh at 8 A.M. in steamers.' Mr Williams says: "It was high noon on Saturday the 24th before he went." But it is unnecessary to pursue this distasteful subject further. No one who has read what we have written will think the attack worthy of the slightest credit, and its readers will be disposed to agree with us that nothing but the competition for notoriety could have induced a periodical which valued its own self-respect to be made the vehicle of such aspersions on a brave and devoted officer.

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We trust we have said enough to induce any reader, even if prejudiced on the other side, to pause before imputing any failure to perform his duty to an officer whose devotion to Gordon was well known, and who would have rejoiced to make any sacrifice in his behalf.

INDEX TO VOL. CXXXVII.

A BLACK YEAR FOR INVESTORS, 269.

A forgotten household word, 727.

Adventure, a torpedo, 742.

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Carlyle on Mr Gladstone, 558.

Afghans, advantages of alliance with, Carmel, Mount, the vineyards of, 242.

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Angler's April, The, 492.
Angler's Wish, The, 496.

Annual procession of mail-coaches, 623.
Antiquarian remains in Malta, 71.
ARMAMENT, WHY HAVE WE NO PROPER?
569-improvements in sharpnel-shells
by Mr Hope, 579, 591-Moncrieff's hydro-
pneumatic gun-carriage, 585-machine-
guns, 586.

Armstrong, Sir W., and the Government,
575.

Assize gossip and penalties, 545.

Central Asia, Russian advances in, 550-her
strength, 553.

Chamberlain, Mr, and the rights of pro-
perty, 422- Birmingham and Ipswich
speeches, 423 -"private ownership,'
526-his reckless misrepresentations of
history and facts, 429-"rights of the
poor, 430 encouragement of small
cultivators, ib, on natural rights,"
433 secret of his admission to the
Cabinet, 434 dangerous result of his
speeches, 435.

CHEAP TELEGRAMS, 707-French, German,
and Swiss systems, 708-examples of new
plan, 711.

Childers, Mr, his "sweating" scheme,

270.

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88.

Colombi, Marchesa, review of her works,
COLONIAL AND FOREIGN FAILURES, 298.

ATROCITIES, OUR EGYPTIAN: From Capel Commons, public rights to, 432.

Communistic doctrines of the Cabinet,
436.

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Beaconsfield, Lord, on the redistribution of Compleat Angler,' Song from the, 498.

Court to Kartoum, 309.

Bait-beds, and food of fishes, 666.

seats, 147.

Beam-trawling, 671.

Beatrice, by Lady Martin, 203.

Beers, M. Van, Belgian painter, 699.

Compulsory retirement in the army, 30.
Condottiero of the fifteenth century, 460.
Counties, effect of subdivision at elections,
149.

Chamberlain, 423, 435.

Birmingham and Ispwich speeches of Mr Country or the Ministry which shall we

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save? 733.
CURIOSITIES OF POLITICS: the evil eye on
the landlord, 713 the employment of
cant in public affairs, 717-hot and cold
fits of the nation, 720 - the irony of
Kismet, 725-a forgotten household word,
727-social schism in Ireland, 730-the
Ministry or the country; which shall we
save? 733.

DANGER, WITHIN HIS : a Tale from the
Chinese, 111.

Dante, the "other poet" of Shakespeare's
Sonnets, 774.

Dash Kepri incident, the, 857.

'Defence of Poesy,' by Sir Philip Sidney,

792.

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Derby, Lord, as Colonial Secretary, 299-
his want of decision, 303-the 'Times' on
his policy, 304-the Daily News,' 305
Destruction of spawn by trawling, 665.
Don John of Austria, by the late Sir
William Stirling-Maxwell, Bart., reviewed,
393.

DOYLE, RICHARD, THE PICTURES OF, 485.
DRUSE VILLAGE, LIFE IN A, Part II.,
232-my "house-warming," ib.-- facili-
ties of divorce, ib.-excessive taxation,
234- conduct of the zaptichs, 236
a family row," ib.-secular and spirit-
ual sheikhs, 237 desire for improve-
ment, 241- system of barter, 242
the Mukrakha festival, ib.- Carmelite
monastery, ib. trip to the Neby
Schaib, 243-worship of the Druses,

244.

Dufferin, Lord, his spirited conduct, 557.
Dynamite and America, 544.

EGYPTIAN ATROCITIES, OUR: From Capel
Court to Khartoum, 309.

Egypt's ruinous debt, 312, 313-pressure
put upon the Khedive, 317-our benefac-
tions to, 323.

ELIOT, THE LIFE AND LETTERS

OF

GEORGE, 155-her early studies, 156
scenes and characters of her childhood,
157-her opinion regarding fiction, 159-
-changes in her religious views, 160---
first visit to the Continent, 161-assis-
tant editor of Westminster Review,'
162-her union with George Lewes, ib.
-her characters in 'Adam Bede,' 165
-as a poet, 168-"Positivism" in her
works, 172-her later life, 176.
END OF THE STRUGGLE, THE, 144.
ENGLAND: Under the Foreign and Colon-
ial administration of Mr. Gladstone,
Lord Granville, and Lord Derby, 420.
ENGLISH POLITICS, A RUSSIAN PHILOSO-
PHER ON, 354.

Epidemics and alcohol, 528.

Erasmus, The Familiar Colloquies of, 784.
Esraelon, the plains of, 233.

EXPEDITION, THE NILE: FROM GEMAI TO
KORTI IN A WHALER, 177 - Diary, 178
et seq.

FALL OF KHARTOUM, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES,
THE, 558.

Farina, Salvatore, review of his works, 73.
FEMALE CHARACTERS OF SHAKESPEARE, ON
SOME BEATRICE, 203.

Ferry, M., his tactics with England, 321.
Fiction versus Science, 535.

Field officers in foreign armies, 34.

Frontier, necessity for a new British Indian,

868.

Galley-slaves, their condition, 403.
GARLAND, AN ANGLER'S, 492.

Gascoigne's 'Certayne Notes,' &c., 775.
Gemai to Korti in a Whaler, from, 177.
General Post-Office, London, 626.
German telegrams, 708.

Germany and South Africa, 300.
Gladstone's foreign policy, 152, 310-his
cost to the country, 311-his "heritage
of woe," 319-communistic doctrines of
his colleagues, 436-his " arrangement
with Russia, 553-Carlyle's opinion of,
558.

GLADSTONE'S SAGACITY UNFOLDING, 843-
influence on India by Mr. Gladstone's
surrender, 844 et seq.-charge against
him, 845, et seq.-discredit of the Ca-
binet, 850.

Gordon, General, his treatment by the
Government, 325.

GORDON, WOLSELEY, AND SIR CHARLES

WILSON, 872-Sir C. Wilson's mission,
873-the position at Omdurman, 874-
cause of delay, 877-attack on Wilson
confuted, 878.
Gortschakoff's

549.

"imperious necessity,"

Government, present and former, con-
trasted, 299.

Grand Masters, their oppressive rule in
Malta, 67.

GRANT, SIR ALEXANDER, 133-early life,
134, 137-his Indian career, 135, 139
-as Principal of Edinburgh University,
141.

Granville, Lord, as Foreign Secretary, 299.
Gun Foundry Board, Report of American,

572.

Hanley, Sir E., on the Egyptian cam-
paign, 561-on the British Indian Fron-
tier, 868.

Hermitage, St. Petersburg, the, 837.
HERCULES, THE WATERS OF, Part VI.,
41- Part VII., 186 - Part VIII., 368-
Part IX., 500-Part X., 631-Part XI.,
801.

Higginson, C. B., General, at the Russian
military manoeuvres, 824, et seq.
Highland home-coming, a, 437.

Hill, Sir Rowland, and Post-office reform,
624.

'History of the Knights of Malta,' by
Wintworth Porter, Major-General, Royal
Engineers, reviewed, 64.

Hobart Pacha on the effect of torpedoes,
737 et seq.

Honorary promotion on retirement of
officers, objections to, 39.

Hope, Mr, his improvement in shrapnel-
shells, 579, 591.

Household word, a forgotten, 727.

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Hot and cold fits of the nation, 720.

of the Conference, 301.

FORTUNE, A SOLDIER OF, 460.

594-Part III., 748.

Indian border policy, 94

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Hunt, Mr Holman, his last picture, 692.

FORTUNE'S WHEEL, Part I., 437-Part II., Hydro-pneumatic gun-carriages, 585.

French telegrams, charges for, 708.

FRONTIER, RUSSIA IN SEARCH OF A, 549.

VOL. CXXXVII. NO. DCCCXXXVI.

Mutiny, its

lessons forgotten, 286-native press,

556.

INSURANCE, NATIONAL, 285.

INVESTORS, A BLACK YEAR FOR, 269-de-
pression in British funds, 270 in the
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