Quote of the Day: “Theirs Not to Reason Why, Theirs But to Do and Die”

 

Some things never change.

On 25th October 1854, during the Battle of Balaclava, 670 British soldiers under the command of Lord Cardigan, launched an ill-fated attack upon a well-defended Russian artillery battery and sustained 40 percent casualties in the form of approximately 120 killed, and at least 160 wounded. Fifty were taken prisoner. Also killed were 375 horses. The carnage must have been unimaginable. For most of us, anyway.

The circumstances surrounding the “blunder” which caused the troops to engage, not in a series of quick forays to deter the Russians from making off with Ottoman guns, but in a full-on frontal assault on a well dug-in position, are still unclear, and revolve around personal antipathies among the commanders (Lord Cardigan, Lord Lucan and Lord Raglan), vague and unverified orders, and misunderstandings (and perhaps some ill-feeling) among the aides-de-camps communicating them. The ADC who took the initial order from Lord Raglan (whatever that order was) was killed in the first few minutes of fighting, and was therefore unavailable to help sort out the mess afterwards. Not that there was much sorting outdone, no-one being eager to accept responsibility for the SNAFU.

In 2016, however, a researcher at the British Museum discovered a letter written by Frederick Maxse, a Lieutenant on Lord Raglan’s staff. Maxse’s letter said that Lord Raglan’s initial order had simply been to “follow the enemy and try to prevent the enemy from carrying away the guns.” A Captain Nolan, who carried the order to Lord Lucan and the cavalry, changed it, making it much more arbitrary, saying to Lucan, “There, my lord is your enemy! There are your guns!” and ordering the troops to “Attack!” His version of the order was further changed in the field as Lord Lucan approached Lord Cardigan (with whom he was barely on speaking terms) and ordered him to attack. Infantry and cavalry joined together, and the stage was set for disaster as the Light Brigade began it’s slightly more than one-mile charge, under Russian fire from three sides. Nolan was killed in the first minute or two of the Charge.

Lieutenant Maxse said in his letter that Nolan was unimpressed with the performance of the Light Brigade, and that he was angry with Lord Lucan, who he felt had not used the cavalry to best advantage during the entire Crimean War. Corroboration of Maxse’s story came from another of Raglan’s staff officers, along with the belief that, had Nolan survived the battle, he would have been court-martialed and suffered the severest penalties.

The valor of the soldiers, and the ferocity with which they fought, quickly caught the public’s imagination, a fascination that continues to this day. The Charge was memorialized on film in 1912, 1936 (starring Errol Flynn and Melanie Wilkes Olivia de Havilland), and most accurately, but rather affectedly, in Tony Richardson’s 1968 effort. Television programs and series, and books about the deadly encounter, number in the dozens.

The most famous retelling of the battle, though, is much briefer and more poignant than any of these. Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s poem, published the following year, evokes the chaos and confusion of the battlefield, and hymns the bravery of the soldiers who, knowing full well that “someone had blunder’d” marched bravely into their valley of Death, sabres flashing, fighting heroically in their already lost cause.

In 1890, Thomas Edison, who’d been testing and practicing with a new technology for a couple of decades, sent several of his employees round to Tennyson’s home to record the then 81-year-old poet laureate’s reading of his own poem onto a series of wax cylinders. The recording survives.

Here it is. A voice from the century before last, reading one of the great poems of the Victorian era, eleven years before the death of the Queen ended it. Just extraordinary.

As is this recording, also made in 1890, of Trumpeter Landfried, a bugler of the Light Brigade, who, using a bugle from the Battle of Waterloo, sounds the “Charge” just as he did at Balaclava in 1854.

We live at a time in which the entire world of our parents, grandparents, and even our great-grandparents, is spread out before us and available to us–to horrify, to entertain, and to teach. You’d think, with that in our wheelhouse, by now we’d get everything right, every time. But just as the lessons of the Charge of the Light Brigade, which have been studied for over a century-and-a-half, sometimes seem not to have been learned at all, we all-too-often seem to repeat the mistakes of the past, even when we are faced with incontrovertible evidence of their existence and of their inevitable and disastrous consequences.

Some things never change.

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  1. She Member
    She
    @She

    David Foster (View Comment):

    There is a vivid description, and the events leading up to it & following it, in George MacDonald Fraser’s picaresque novel ‘Flashman at the Charge’

    I’ve not read any of the Flashman books.  I probably should.  They were favorites of my Dad’s.

    • #31
  2. Seawriter Contributor
    Seawriter
    @Seawriter

    She (View Comment):

    David Foster (View Comment):

    There is a vivid description, and the events leading up to it & following it, in George MacDonald Fraser’s picaresque novel ‘Flashman at the Charge’

    I’ve not read any of the Flashman books. I probably should. They were favorites of my Dad’s.

    You really should. They are great. I almost mentioned them earlier in the thread because Fraser had Flashman participate in the Thin Red Line, the Charge of the Heavy Brigade, and the Charge of the Light Brigade in that battle. (He gets captured during the Charge of the Light Brigade. Not really a spoiler because you know Flashman is not going to die, since these are purportedly memoirs.)

    • #32
  3. Percival Thatcher
    Percival
    @Percival

    David Foster (View Comment):

    There is a vivid description, and the events leading up to it & following it, in George MacDonald Fraser’s picaresque novel ‘Flashman at the Charge’

     

    That was the book that got me reading about the battle and the war.

    • #33
  4. She Member
    She
    @She

    Percival (View Comment):

    David Foster (View Comment):

    There is a vivid description, and the events leading up to it & following it, in George MacDonald Fraser’s picaresque novel ‘Flashman at the Charge’

     

    That was the book that got me reading about the battle and the war.

    Funny how that works.  I grew up in a very historically-aware family, so had that going for me, but the book that really piqued my interest (to a limited extent) in the military history of certain periods was An Infamous Army, by Georgette Heyer (she of tasteful Regency bodice-ripper fame, sort of the ‘thinking girl’s Barbara Cartland,’ a reference I should think almost all British women of my generation, and quite a few American ones, will get).

    Her description of the battle, and the events leading up to it are so meticulously researched and accurate that it was on the recommended reading list for officer cadets at Sandhurst for decades (may still be for all I know).  Perhaps those who took advantage of the opportunity learned something about women and love, while perusing it, as well.  Couldn’t hurt, right? 

     

    • #34
  5. Nanda Pajama-Tantrum Member
    Nanda Pajama-Tantrum
    @

    She (View Comment):

    Percival (View Comment):

    David Foster (View Comment):

    There is a vivid description, and the events leading up to it & following it, in George MacDonald Fraser’s picaresque novel ‘Flashman at the Charge’

     

    That was the book that got me reading about the battle and the war.

    Funny how that works. I grew up in a very historically-aware family, so had that going for me, but the book that really piqued my interest (to a limited extent) in the military history of certain periods was An Infamous Army, by Georgette Heyer (she of tasteful Regency bodice-ripper fame, sort of the ‘thinking girl’s Barbara Cartland,’ a reference I should think almost all British women of my generation, and quite a few American ones, will get).

    Her description of the battle, and the events leading up to it are so meticulously researched and accurate that it was on the recommended reading list for officer cadets at Sandhurst for decades (may still be for all I know). Perhaps those who took advantage of the opportunity learned something about women and love, while perusing it, as well. Couldn’t hurt, right?

    Friend Martin in Kensington introduced me to GH – and to this book.  Wonderful stuff!

     

    • #35
  6. Steve C. Member
    Steve C.
    @user_531302

    Seawriter (View Comment):

    She (View Comment):

    David Foster (View Comment):

    There is a vivid description, and the events leading up to it & following it, in George MacDonald Fraser’s picaresque novel ‘Flashman at the Charge’

    I’ve not read any of the Flashman books. I probably should. They were favorites of my Dad’s.

    You really should. They are great. I almost mentioned them earlier in the thread because Fraser had Flashman participate in the Thin Red Line, the Charge of the Heavy Brigade, and the Charge of the Light Brigade in that battle. (He gets captured during the Charge of the Light Brigade. Not really a spoiler because you know Flashman is not going to die, since these are purportedly memoirs.)

    I loved the series. But at some point they did get a bit formulaic. Fraser was a prolific, good and very clever writer. You really can’t go wrong with anything he wrote. Don’t overlook his memoir of his time as a private in Burma during WW 2. 

    • #36
  7. Seawriter Contributor
    Seawriter
    @Seawriter

    Steve C. (View Comment):
    I loved the series. But at some point they did get a bit formulaic. Fraser was a prolific, good and very clever writer. You really can’t go wrong with anything he wrote. Don’t overlook his memoir of his time as a private in Burma during WW 2. 

    Quartered Safe Out Here. Also recommended is his novel The Candlemass Road and his trilogy of short stories about life as an officer in a Scots regiment after WWII: The General Danced at DawnMcAuslan in the Rough, and The Sheikh and the Dustbin.

    • #37
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