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Unit 1
Painting War
Scotland for Ever
Geoff Dyer on Gassed
The Charge of the
Light Brigade
William Howell Russell's report
in 'The Times'
Dulce et Decorum Est
Baron Gros and Matthew Brady
Dyer on War Photos
Unit 2
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HEIGHTS
BEFORE SEBASTOPOL, OCTOBER 25 -- If the exhibition of the most brilliant
valor, of the excess of courage, and of a daring which would have reflected
luster on the best days of chivalry can afford full consolation for
the disaster of today, we can have no reason to regret the melancholy
loss which we sustained in a contest with a savage and barbarian enemy.
I shall proceed to describe, to the best of my power, what occurred
under my own eyes, and to state the facts which I have heard from men
whose veracity is unimpeachible, reserving to myself the right of private
judgement in making public and in surpressing the details of what occurred
on this memorable day...
[After losing ground to a British force half its size, the Russians
retreated to the heights above Sebastopol, a port town on the Black
sea] .
At 11:00 our Light Cavalry Brigade rushed to the front... The Russians
opened on them with guns from the redoubts on the right, with volleys
of musketry and rifles.
They swept proudly past, glittering in the morning sun in all the pride
and splendor of war. We could hardly believe the evidence of our senses.
Surely that handful of men were not going to charge an army in position?
Alas! It was but too true -- their desperate valor knew no bounds, and
far indeed was it removed from it so-called better part -- discretion.
They advanced in two lines, quickening the pace as they closed towards
the enemy. A more fearful spectacle was never witnessed than by those
who, without the power to aid, beheld their heroic countrymen rushing
to the arms of sudden death. At the distance of 1200 yards the whole
line of the enemy belched forth, from thirty iron mouths, a flood of
smoke and flame through which hissed the deadly balls. Their flight
was marked by instant gaps in our ranks, the dead men and horses, by
steeds flying wounded or riderless across the plain. The firsst likne
was broken -- it was joined by the second, they never halted or checked
their speed an instant. With diminished ranks, thinned by those thirty
guns, which the Russians had laid with the most deadly accuracy, with
a halo of flashing steel above their heads, and with a cheer which was
many a noble fellow's death cry, they flew into the smoke of the batteries;
bgut ere they were lost from view, the plain was strewed with their
bodies and with the carcasses of horses. They were exposed to an oblique
fire from the batteries on the hills on both sides, as well as to a
direct fire of musketry.
Through the clouds of smoke we could see their sabers flashing as they
rode up to the guns and dashed between them, cutting down the gunners
as they stood. The blaze of their steel, like an officer standing near
me said, "was like the turn of a shaol of mackerel." We saw
them riding through the guns, as I have said; to our delight, we saw
them returning, after breaking through a column of Russian infantry
and scattering them like chaff, when the flank fire of the battery on
the hill swept them down, scattered and broken as they were. Wounded
men and dismounted troopers flying towards us told the sad tale -- demigods
could not have done what they had failed to do.
At the very moment when they were about to retreat, a regiment of lancers
was hurled upon their flank. Colonel Shewell, of the 8th Hussars, saw
the danger and rode his men straight at them, cutting his way through
with fearful loss. The other regiments turned and engaged in a desperate
encounter. With courage too great almost for credence, they were breaking
their way through the columns which enveloped themn, whern there took
place an act of atrocity without parallel in modern warfare of civilized
nationw. The Russian gunners, when the storm of cavalry passed, returned
to their guns. They saw their own cavalry mingled with the troopers
who had just ridden over them, and to the eternal disgrace of the Russian
name, the miscreants poured a murderous volley of grape and canister
on the mass of struggling men and horses, mingling friend and foe in
one common ruin. It was as much as our Heavy Cavalry Brigade could do
to cover the retreat of the miserable remnants of that band of heroes
as they returned to the place they had so lately quitted in all the
pride of life.
At 11:35 not a British soldier, except the dead and dying, was left
in front of those bloody Muscovite guns...
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