A Morte do General Gordon, Cartum, Sudão (General Gordon's Last Stand) - George W. Joy
Cartum - Sudão
Leeds Art Gallery, Leeds, Inglaterra
OST - 236x175 - 1893
The painting
is a dramatic and enduring image, one which depicts extraordinary bravery at a
crucial moment in the history of the British Empire. It shows the heroic figure
of General Charles Gordon, tall and straight-backed, defiant to the last in the
face of certain death from the massed spears of the rebels as they lay siege to
Khartoum.
The rebels,
the painting suggests, are frozen in awe at the sight of this great
warrior-diplomat standing at the top of a flight of steps - the eternal symbol
of the might of the Empire. Only their overwhelming numbers, it implies, will
let them to prevail.
Unfortunately,
General Gordon's Last Stand, by George William Joy, now hanging in the Leeds
City Art Gallery is a piece of Victorian myth-making. Iconic it may be, but the
events it depicts may not have happened.
Athough there
is some variation in the accounts, there is general agreement as to the
circumstances under which General Gordon met his fate at Khartoum on 26
January, 1885. He was hacked to pieces and his head paraded through the town on
the end of a pike. Which is not the kind of image the Victorian public really
wanted, nor did they want to be reminded of the less palatable aspects of
keeping an Empire under control.
But Joy's
romanticised painting was more about pandering to public opinion, rather than a
need to put a gloss on colonial adventures. During the siege of Khartoum, the
decision by Gladstone's Government not to send troops to relieve General Gordon
was greeted with widespread protests from a public for whom he was already a
national hero.
The fact that
this was a Gordon who was let down by the Prime Minister of the day was a point
not lost on many MPs in the House of Commons on Wednesday when David Cameron,
leader of the Opposition, mischievously reminded Tony Blair that, on a trip to
Khartoum in 2004, he had spoken of serving a full term. "Presumably,"
Cameron asked him amid widespread laughter, "you wanted to see the place
where Gordon was murdered?" (Blair had held talks in the Sudanese
presidential palace, built on the site where Gordon had met his end.)
While it
wasn't a bad joke, there is actually very little in common between the dour
Scottish leader-in-waiting and the Victorian folk hero. While General Gordon is
mostly remembered now in connection with Khartoum, long before that ill-fated
campaign, he had become renowned for his personal bravery, his sterling service
to the Empire around the world and his work for the poor in Britain.
His help was
sought by heads of state and he was feted where ever he went. When he met his
death at Khartoum, still waiting for the relief forces, it was two days before
his 52nd birthday. Gordon Brown is 56 and still waiting to make his major
contribution to history, when Blair finally relieves himself of his post.
It was
inevitable that the young Charles Gordon would join the Army. He was born on
January 1833, in Woolwich, the son of Major-General Henry Gordon, an officer in
the Royal Artillery. He was expected to join his father's regiment after the
Royal Military Academy, but was instead commissioned as a Lieutenant in the
Royal Engineers and received further training at their school at Chatham.
He saw active
service at the outbreak of the Crimean War; he took part in the siege of
Sebastopol and after the conflict worked with the commission drawing up the
boundary between Russia and Turkey.
Ordered to
China where Britain was involved in the Second Opium War, Gordon became part of
the successful defence of Shanghai, eventually becoming commander of a militia
group known as "The Ever Victorious Army". He won the title of titu,
the highest grade in the Chinese army, from the Emperor. The British Government
promoted him to Lieutenant-Colonel, he was made a companion of the Bath and
earned the popular nickname, "Chinese" Gordon.
After China,
Gordon returned to Britain, where he was put in charge of the defence of the
Thames around Gravesend. He also began to be active in charity work, helping
the poor and campaigning against slavery.
According to
Dr David Brooks, lecturer in history at Queen Mary, University of London,
Gordon's fame was based more on his reputation as a Christian evangelist,
rather than as a military commander. "He became a folk hero in the minds
of the public. He was a rather clean-living figure, where in the past the Army
had a hard-drinking, rough reputation."
In 1873, at
the request of the Egyptian authorities, Gordon was appointed governor of the
province of Equatoria in Sudan, a country then occupied by Egypt. Gordon
proceeded to map the upper Nile, establishing a line of posts as far south as
Uganda and fighting the slave trade along the way; his endeavours ended in him
being governor-general of the entire Sudan. In 1880, ill and exhausted after
years of work, he returned to Britain.
He had little
respite, finding that his reputation as an administrator and adventurer had
created a demand for his services. King Leopold II of Belgium asked him to take
charge of the Congo Free State, while the Governor of the Cape wanted him to
command the local forces. The Governor-General of India required him as his
secretary; he accepted the last post, but served only briefly. Promoted to
Major-General, he was ordered to China, where he helped broker peace with
Russia and then Basutoland in South Africa. "Gordon became a kind of
trouble-shooter, a hired gun," said Dr Brooks.
In his book,
Eminent Victorians, Lytton Strachey describes Gordon thus: "He was by
nature farouche; his soul revolted against dinner parties and stiff shirts; and
the presence of ladies - especially of fashionable ladies - filled him with
uneasiness. The easy luxuries of his class and station were unknown to him: his
clothes verged upon the shabby; and his frugal meals were eaten at a table with
a drawer, into which the loaf and plate were quickly swept at the approach of
his poor visitors." The only book he read was the Bible.
There were
intense contradictions, said Strachey, which grew as Gordon aged: "He was
an English gentleman, an officer, a man of energy and action, a lover of danger
and the audacities that defeat danger, a passionate creature."
However,
continued Strachey, his subordinates dreaded his temper. "There were
moments when his passion became utterly ungovernable; and the gentle soldier of
God, who had spent the day in quoting texts ... would slap the face of his Arab
aide-de-camp in a sudden access of fury, or set upon his Alsatian servant and
kick him till he screamed."
In 1884,
Gordon returned to the Sudan, where there was an Islamic uprising. He was
appointed Governor-General by the British Government and given a brief to sort
things out and oversee the evacuation of Khartoum. "Gladstone was against
expansion of the Empire," explained Dr Brooks, "but Britain had
become involved in Egyptian affairs, even though it was nominally part of the
Ottoman Empire. The Prime Minister didn't want to foot the bill to send any
more troops there and hoped that Gordon would deal with the problems."
With typical
energy, Gordon set about evacuating women, children and the sick and organised
Khartoum's defences, building fortifications andplanting mines of his own
design. He was twice let down by Gladstone, who refused to endorse his
suggestion of an influential local leader as the head of a new government and
then withdrew the only British troops in the area, leaving Khartoum isolated.
One of the
most famous sieges in history began on 13 March 1884. The city had supplies,
there were still lines of communication and there were 8,000 local troops,
commanded by Gordon and two other British officials.
When news of
Gordon's plight reached Britain, there was public anger, with mass meetings in
London and Manchester, calls for a public fund-raising campaign to send more
troops or, as one person put it, "to bribe the tribes to secure the
General's personal safety". Prayers were offered in churches and there was
a vote of censure in the House of Commons. "It is alarming," Queen
Victoria wrote to Lord Hartington, the Secretary of State for War,
"General Gordon is in danger; you are bound to try to save him ..."
Gladstone was unmoved, maintaining that Gordon was not in real danger. It was
not until August, when Lord Hartington threatened to resign, that Gladstone was
persuaded to raise a relief force.
By this time,
supplies in Khartoum had begun to run low. Gordon insisted on eating only the
same rations as his troops. As the year wore on, Gordon wrote to a friend that
he "feared treachery in the garrison". It came on 26 January 1885,
when a traitor opened the gates to the city and let the rebels in.
Gordon,
watching from a rooftop, quickly changed from his dressing gown into a white
uniform, grabbed a revolver and a sword and went down to confront the hordes.
He was killed, Khartoum fell, and the relief force arrived two days later. When
news of his death reached London, the general was acclaimed not as
"Chinese" Gordon, but Gordon of Khartoum.
At home, there
was uproar. Gladstone was forced to attempt to re-assert his authority by
investing heavily in another military campaign in the region. At this point,
Gladstone was a Prime Minister embroiled in an unpopular conflict in a Middle
Eastern country in whose affairs Britain had intervened with the promise that
any involvement would be strictly short-term.
Sudan
descended into turmoil as Islamic fundamentalists ran riot and rebel groups
flocked to their cause. Plans to raise taxes to fund the venture were defeated
by the House of Commons and Gladstone was thrown out of office, his political
career destroyed by his refusal to help Gordon. Perhaps David Cameron might be
saving that joke for later ...

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