wounded in action. Thus disgracefully ended the first expedition of Pitt and Dundas to the Low Countries.
Authorities.—The British despatches relating to the
expeditions to Flanders will be found in W.O. Orig. Corresp.
46-48, and in Entry Book No. 11. The number of private
letters included in this collection makes it of unusual value.
For the campaigns at large the best accounts known to me are
in Ditfurth's Die Hessen in den Feldzügen, 1793, 1794, und 1795
(Kassel, 1839), and in Witzleben's Prinz Friedrich Josias von Coburg-Saalfeld (Berlin, 1859), which is not a little built upon
Ditfurth, but contains much that is valuable of its own and a
superb atlas of maps. On the French side the short memoir
of David and the life of Pichegru are of little worth compared
with the narrative of Jomini. Marshal Macdonald's Mémoires
are disappointing at this period. Of English printed accounts
the most important is Jones's Historical Journal of the British Campaign in 1794. The Journal of Corporal James Brown
of the Coldstream Guards supplies a few interesting details.
Sir H. Calvert's Journal and Correspondence is often of value;
and there is a great deal of most useful information in the foot-*notes
to the miserable doggerel called the Narrative of an Officer of the Guards. Unfortunately the author, like Brown
and Calvert, was a Coldstreamer, for which reason all three
confine themselves chiefly to the doings of the brigade of
Guards. The regimental histories of the 14th Foot and 15th
Hussars have occasionally interesting material, but, taken
altogether, the regimental records are disappointing.
THE END
Printed by R. & R. Clark, Limited, Edinburgh.