Page:The invasion of the Crimea Vol 7.djvu/367

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

TIIK DEMEANOUR OF ENGLAND. 323 itself with the state of the road by which our en a P. troops on the Chersonese were forced to draw ^^' their supplies ; and accordingly, upon that last subject they undertook to report. They re- ported that, from want of hands, it had been impossible to make such a road.(^^) Whilst reporting upon subjects connected with Commissariat arrangements, the Commissioners were performing a task distinctly within their competence ; but whether from mere inadvert- ence, or from the difficulty of disentangling connected subjects, or from construing their written instructions with a good deal of freedom, they trespassed beyond what appar- ently must have been their set bounds, and put into their final (^) report some little stray ' animadversions ' which applied to three general officers — Lord Lucan, Lord Cardigan, and Sir Richard Airey — and to one with the rank oi Colonel — that is, Colonel Alexander Gordon.(^^) Their report was laid before Parliament. A whole year had by this time elapsed since the painful, calamitous weeks of our earlier winter campaign. And of late, too, the war had so languished that the subject of ' the ' Crimea,' with all its glories and sorrows, might have soon been relaxing its hold upon the hearts and minds of our people, but an ' animadversion ' directed against General Airey by two State Commissioners gave the men of the ' Times ' an enticingly sweet opportunity of . , , p . . . , Their ' an revivmg against two oi its survivors their attacks ; iinacUer- on the Headquarter Staff; and this the more, by the