登陆注册
25635000000094

第94章

Nor was the adoption of that policy by the English Government by any means out of the question. For, in the meantime, events had been taking place in the Eastern Sudan, in the neighbourhood of the Red Sea port of Suakin, which were to have a decisive effect upon the prospects of Khartoum. General Baker, the brother of Sir Samuel Baker, attempting to relieve the beleaguered garrisons of Sinkat and Tokar, had rashly attacked the forces of Osman Digna, had been defeated, and obliged to retire. Sinkat and Tokar had then fallen into the hands of the Mahdi's general. There was a great outcry in England, and a wave of warlike feeling passed over the country. Lord Wolseley at once drew up a memorandum advocating the annexation of the Sudan. In the House of Commons even Liberals began to demand vengeance and military action, whereupon the Government dispatched Sir Gerald Graham with a considerable British force to Suakin. Sir Gerald Graham advanced, and in the battles of El Teb and Tamai inflicted two bloody defeats upon the Mahdi's forces. It almost seemed as if the Government was now committed to a policy of interference and conquest; as if the imperialist section of the Cabinet were at last to have their way. The dispatch of Sir Gerald Graham coincided with Gordon's sudden demand for British and Indian troops with which to 'smash up the Mahdi'. The business, he assured Sir Evelyn Baring, in a stream of telegrams, could very easily be done. It made him sick, he said, to see himself held in check and the people of the Sudan tyrannised over by 'a feeble lot of stinking Dervishes'. Let Zobeir at once be sent down to him, and all would be well.

The original Sultans of the country had unfortunately proved disap-pointing. Their place should be taken by Zobeir. After the Mahdi had been smashed up, Zobeir should rule the Sudan as a subsidised vassal of England, on a similar footing to that of the Amir of Afghanistan. The plan was perhaps feasible; but it was clearly incompatible with the policy of evacuation, as it had been hitherto laid down by the English Government. Should they reverse that policy? Should they appoint Zobeir, reinforce Sir Gerald Graham, and smash up the Mahdi? They could not make up their minds. So far as Zobeir was concerned, there were two counterbalancing considerations; on the one hand, Evelyn Baring now declared that he was in favour of the appointment; but, on the other hand, would English public opinion consent to a man, described by Gordon himself as 'the greatest slave-hunter who ever existed', being given an English subsidy and the control of the Sudan? While the Cabinet was wavering, Gordon took a fatal step. The delay was intolerable, and one evening, in a rage, he revealed his desire for Zobeir-- which had hitherto been kept a profound official secret-- to Mr Power, the English Consul at Khartoum, and the special correspondent of "The Times." Perhaps he calculated that the public announcement of his wishes would oblige the Government to yield to them; if so, he was completely mistaken, for the result was the very reverse. The country, already startled by the proclamation in favour of slavery, could not swallow Zobeir. The Anti-Slavery Society set on foot a violent agitation, opinion in the House of Commons suddenly stiffened, and the Cabinet, by a substantial majority, decided that Zobeir should remain in Cairo. The imperialist wave had risen high, but it had not risen high enough; and now it was rapidly subsiding. The Government's next action was decisive. Sir Gerald Graham and his British Army were withdrawn from the Sudan.

The critical fortnight during which these events took place was the first fortnight of March. By the close of it, Gordon's position had undergone a rapid and terrible change. Not only did he find himself deprived, by the decision of the Government, both of the hope of Zobeir's assistance and of the prospect of smashing up the Mahdi with the aid of British troops; the military movements in the Eastern Sudan produced, at the very same moment, a yet more fatal consequence. The adherents of the Mahdi had been maddened, they had not been crushed, by Sir Gerald Graham's victories. When, immediately afterwards, the English withdrew to Suakin, from which they never again emerged, the inference seemed obvious; they had been defeated, and their power was at an end. The warlike tribes to the north and the northeast of Khartoum had long been wavering. They now hesitated no longer, and joined the Mahdi. From that moment-- it was less than a month from Gordon's arrival at Khartoum-- the situation of the town was desperate. The line of communications was cut. Though it still might be possible for occasional native messengers, or for a few individuals on an armed steamer, to win their way down the river into Egypt, the removal of a large number of persons--the loyal inhabitants or the Egyptian garrison-- was henceforward an impossibility. The whole scheme of the Gordon mission had irremediably collapsed; worse still, Gordon himself, so far from having effected the evacuation of the Sudan, was surrounded by the enemy. 'The question now is,' Sir Evelyn Baring told Lord Granville, on March 24th, 'how to get General Gordon and Colonel Stewart away from Khartoum.'

The actual condition of the town, however, was not, from a military point of view, so serious as Colonel Coetlogon, in the first moments of panic after the Hicks disaster, had supposed.

同类推荐
  • 天香传

    天香传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 道德经注释

    道德经注释

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 喉科指掌

    喉科指掌

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Four Million

    The Four Million

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 王舍人诗集

    王舍人诗集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 魅黑

    魅黑

    感受世界的摇晃,感知世界的精彩。清新迥异的人物个性,丰厚的时代的背景,难以诉说的向往。
  • 星源界域

    星源界域

    自太古过后,已有百万年不见仙迹,仙路断长生难续,大道蹦众生沉沦。叶天一本来星脉枯竭,意外得星源泪种,开万古难寻的十四星府,创无上之法,重启星源界门......
  • 禁诀

    禁诀

    万恶为根,苍生做本。邪念心生,魔力自在。天不怜我,屠戮人间。顺可为人,逆则成仙。浩瀚大地,谁主沉浮。禁诀若现,天地突变。在这个世界上,拥有人类的地方,就同样存在着贪婪,虚伪,无耻等极为丑陋的形态,这些本就源自于人的内心。金钱的欲望,权势的斗争,谁来制止这一切的发生?那些永无休止的悲剧尚未酿成之前,是否会有人为其划上一个终止的符号?石隆推荐《三国新史》《走向和谐之门》《傲视三国风云录》《感变》《阳修有限的日子》《无限石》《吸烟的来历》《日德青岛战争》石隆新书《道中盗之穿越千年之战》正式连载,书号1445994!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • 武神冢

    武神冢

    世间万象由阵而生世间万物皆为阵驱
  • 若有来世再也不见

    若有来世再也不见

    第一世:“紫落,对不起!紫儿!原谅我行吗?只求你不要离开我!”泪水滴落,无法挽回一切……第二世:问世间情为何物?直叫人生死相许。既然如此,我又何必活下去?但愿黄泉下,你我还能再续着前缘……还有最后一世,若不成功,本尊将灰飞烟灭,违背了当初的山盟海誓,违背了我们的爱情,这是上天对本尊的最后一项考验,残忍的考验——情劫。世人都为情所困,本尊也难逃这一劫,何况还要去面对,你不能再承受这么大的痛了,这种噬心的痛!更何况,本尊与你,不是一路人……因此,XXX,希望你可以忘记我,你还有美好的未来,但愿这一世,我们不再相见……
  • 无良杀手

    无良杀手

    他是这一代的白夜,谜一样的男子游走在黑白两道,几乎没人知道他的姓名与真容,所以又被称为“千幻白夜”。浮云千幻,白夜亦然。厌倦杀戮后,白夜想过着低调平静的生活,但事与愿违……且看白夜如何纵横都市掀起风云,身入花海牛逼闪闪
  • 弃后有毒:傲娇王爷吃定你

    弃后有毒:傲娇王爷吃定你

    燕云衫倾尽全力辅佐自己的丈夫登上帝位,却在一切尘埃落定之后被夺了后位,还被自己同侍一夫的闺蜜剜眼割舌,砍去手脚,一条白绫送了性命。再次重生,燕云衫誓要让渣男渣女尝到输光一切的惨败。但是,本来自己耍手段勾引来的夫君,怎么这么专情?人前傲娇,人后生猛。一言不合就是“春宵”,这让臣妾怎么做到一心只想复仇、不谈风月呢?爱妃,本王吃定你了。殿下,只要是你,臣妾愿意…………那还等什么,春宵一刻值千金!殿下……
  • 桀骜千金

    桀骜千金

    她是从雪苑圣槿儿贵族学院转来沁琼海缇儿的学生,桀骜不驯,美丽无双!他是海缇儿的四大校草之首,高冷淡漠,玉树临风,风华绝代!当绝代学霸遇上桀骜校花,不知会怎么样呢???【云离】他握住她的柔荑,轻声说:“烟儿,你就是我的一切,永远永远……不会改变!”说罢,便用健臂轻轻缆住她的细腰,把她往怀里搂。她却使劲儿挣开他的怀抱,有些生气地说道:“离,你怎么了?开什么玩笑?!”他的目光陡然黯淡了下来,缓缓地说:“我知道,也许你的心里只有南宫浅墨,但给我一次机会,让我证明,证明我并不比他差,好吗?烟儿……”
  • 女特工失踪之谜

    女特工失踪之谜

    《女特工失踪之谜》是墨微悬疑小说《误入军统的女人》第二部。作品描写了几个军统局的高级女特工,与戴笠单线联系,在得知戴笠飞机失事后,不愿意继续为军统局效力,与军统局玩失踪的故事。而军统局是有严格的制度的,比如,参加军统局的女特工不允许结婚,不允许叛变,出卖组织等。这种玩失踪的做法,属于叛变行为。军统局改为保密局后,毛人凤命令各地特务组织,秘密寻找这些玩失踪的女特工,抓回她们,免得她们掌握的大量机密流失,还有就是惩戒她们,以儆效尤,杀鸡给猴看。这些玩失踪的女特工,开始了逃匿之旅。她们希望过正常人的生活,希望恋爱结婚生子,做人妻人母的最卑微的愿望,是否能实现呢?
  • 星海狂潮

    星海狂潮

    过去他是被誉为“历史上难得一见的战略天才”,现在他变成了一个生物脑,他变成了它。它成为了杨永的传家宝。杨永将利用它,一步步的迈向了胜利!不论是哪个时代,战争永远存在。不论是哪个时代,战争留下的永远是无人的废墟。战争的痕迹则消失在时光的浪潮中。目到这个激流,纪录下来的恐怕是满天的星星。然而就连星星,终有一天也会化成流星消失。