On the 2nd two large Turkish transports started at night from Constantinople for Salonica with stores, provisions, and details of troops. Two other steamers left the same night, one for Smyrna, the other for the Dardanelles. On the 3rd other transports, with soldiers on board, left also at night, and two more transports commenced taking on board stores, ammunition, &c. On the 5th two transports with men and stores left the Golden Horn for Suda Bay, in Crete. A third was to leave the same evening. It became known that Dervish Pasha was to command the force, taking four other generals with him. They were to leave in the _Izzedin_ for Salonica. The fleet was to rendezvous either at Rhodes or Suda Bay.
In consequence of the foregoing, Admiral Seymour was instructed, if any vessel with Turkish troops appeared at Port Sad, Alexandria, or elsewhere, to request the officer in command, with the utmost courtesy, to proceed to Crete or some other place, and apply to the Turkish Government for further instructions, as Seymour was precluded from inviting them to land in Egypt. He was further instructed to prevent their landing if they declined to comply with his advice.
On the 7th the Ottoman delegates made the following declaration to the Conference: "The Sublime Porte accepts the invitation for a military intervention in Egypt made to it by the Identic Note of the 15th July, as well as the clauses and conditions contained therein."
On the 8th Said Pasha informed Lord Dufferin that the Sublime Porte was disposed to issue the Proclamation against Arabi, and that he, the Minister, was authorized to negotiate the Military Convention.
He also stated that, by reason of the importance of the events in Egypt, the Ottoman troops would leave on the 10th.
Lord Dufferin, on the 9th August, informed the Sultan"s Government that before any other step was taken the British Government adhered to the necessity for the issue of a properly-worded Proclamation. On the 9th the draft of the proposed Proclamation was sent to Lord Dufferin for approval.
On the 15th Sir Garnet Wolseley arrived at Alexandria.
At the meeting of the Conference on the 14th of August, the representatives of the Powers having expressed their opinion that the moment had come to suspend the labours of the Conference, the Ottoman delegates, apparently still anxious to be on the opposition side, stated that they did not share in this opinion, and reserved the right of informing the others of the date of the next meeting.
On the 16th August, Lord Dufferin was informed, with reference to the negotiations for the Military Convention, that Her Majesty"s Government would have no objection to a part of the Turkish troops being landed at Damietta or Rosetta, should the Turkish Government desire it.
On the next day the Turkish Government, instead of accepting at once the Military Convention, began to make efforts to get it laid before the Conference. These failed, however, thanks to Lord Dufferin, who contended that the engagement was one between England and Turkey alone.
The foregoing brings the narrative of events down to the eve of Sir Garnet Wolseley"s sailing for the Ca.n.a.l.
CHAPTER XVII.
WOLSELEY"S MOVE TO THE Ca.n.a.l.
On the 7th August the Khedive issued a Proclamation against Arabi and the rebels generally.
The same day the Khedive addressed a letter to the President of the Council of Ministers, announcing his intention to indemnify the sufferers by the recent events.
At this period the European population was flocking back to Alexandria in such numbers that Mr. Cartwright, the British Consul-General, deemed it necessary to make strong representations on the subject to the representatives in Egypt of the several Powers. A system of examination of pa.s.sports was now established, and people of suspicious character, or who were unable to show that they had some employment, or other means of subsistence, were forced by the authorities to re-embark.
Alexandria was now fast filling with British troops, and fresh detachments were disembarking daily. On the 10th August, Sir John Adye, Chief of the Staff, arrived at Alexandria with the Duke of Connaught.
The whole of the Brigade of Guards arrived two days later, and astonished the people by their size and martial appearance as they marched through the town to Ramleh. The Duke of Connaught rode at their head. Egypt in the present generation had never seen such soldiers before, and loud were the expressions of admiration on all sides. The stalwart pipers particularly impressed the natives.
The brigade consisted of the 2nd battalions of the Grenadier and Coldstream Guards, and the 1st battalion of the Scots Guards. The force was encamped on a piece of desert land at Ramleh, near the sea, between the stations of Bulkeley and Fleming on the Ramleh Railway.
Sir Garnet Wolseley reached Egypt on the 15th in the _Calabria_. He had made the voyage by sea on account of his health.
Major-General Sir Evelyn Wood arrived the same day. Transports were coming in rapidly, and everything pointed to an immediate advance upon Kinje Osman and Kafr Dowar. The following is a list of the princ.i.p.al officers in the expeditionary force:--
General-Commanding-in-Chief: Sir Garnet J. Wolseley.
Chief of the Staff: General Sir John Adye.
Officer Commanding Royal Artillery: Brigadier-General W. H. Goodenough.
Officer Commanding Royal Engineers: Brigadier-General C. B. P. N. H.
Nugent.
Command of Base and Lines of Communication: Major-General W. Earle.
1st Division: Lieutenant-General G. H. S. Willis.
1st Brigade: Major-General H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught.
2nd Brigade: Major-General G. Graham.
2nd Division: Lieutenant-General Sir E. B. Hamley.
3rd Brigade: Major-General Sir Archibald Alison.
4th Brigade: Major-General Sir H. Evelyn Wood.
Garrison of Alexandria: Major-General G. B. Harman. Cavalry Division: Major-General Drury-Lowe.
Sir Garnet Wolseley lost but little time after landing. He made a hasty inspection of the position at Ramleh, and gave his orders.
On the 18th August the Guards Division, the Household Cavalry, the 60th Rifles, and the 46th Regiment marched in from Ramleh and commenced embarking, the troops of the Second Division taking their places at Ramleh. The Manchester Regiment landed and took over police duty in the town, relieving the Berkshire Regiment, which joined General Wood"s Division at Ramleh.
At 11.15 a.m. the greater part of the British force was embarking. The troops selected were the First Division under General Willis. Several transports the same day steamed out of harbour and anch.o.r.ed off the Boghaz Pa.s.s. The following day, the 19th, the transports, escorted by the ironclads _Alexandra_, _Inflexible_, _Minotaur_, _Superb_, and _Temeraire_, steamed away in a stately procession to the eastward. Both Sir Garnet Wolseley and Admiral Seymour accompanied the force.
It was given out that Aboukir was to be the place of attack, and at 3.30 p.m., on arriving off the bay, the ships, with the exception of the _Alexandra_, _Euphrates_, _Rhosina_, and _Nerissa_, which pushed on to Port Sad, anch.o.r.ed in regular lines according to a prearranged plan, the men-of-war being nearest the sh.o.r.e. The ironclads struck their topmasts, and made other preparations for an attack. Every facility had been given to newspaper correspondents to obtain such details as might prudently be made public without exciting too much suspicion of a _ruse de guerre_. It succeeded perfectly. Not only the Europeans, but the enemy, were completely deceived. The gunners in the forts at Aboukir stood to their guns, expecting every moment the fleet would open fire.
After dark the troopships moved off to the east, followed later on by the men-of-war. When day broke the whole fleet had disappeared.
As rapidly as possible the fleet steamed for Port Sad. The transports _Rhosina_ and _Nerissa_ had singularly bad luck, the last two breaking down _en route_. The delay was not serious, for their escort the _Alexandra_ towed the _Nerissa_ at the rate of twelve knots an hour, whilst the _Euphrates_ helped the _Rhosina_.
The next morning the whole fleet arrived at Port Sad, when they found the entire Maritime Ca.n.a.l in the hands of the British Navy.
It may now be convenient to refer to what had in the meantime been taking place on the Ca.n.a.l.
On the 9th July, Mr. J. E. Wallis, the British Consul at Port Sad, received instructions to warn British subjects to embark. Next morning a large number of Europeans took refuge in vessels in the harbour. A report was spread of troops being ordered from Damietta, and some alarm prevailing, the Governor issued a circular a.s.suring everybody that there was no danger.
On the 11th, whilst the bombardment was going on at Alexandria, the Port Sad refugees remained on board ship. The town was quiet and orderly.
The British despatch vessel _Iris_ acted as guardship during this period. The Egyptian corvette _Sakha_ had arrived from Alexandria a day or two previous to the bombardment. Her captain was an Arabist of the most p.r.o.nounced type. Immediately after her arrival telegraphic information reached the authorities and the Ca.n.a.l Company"s officials that the _Sakha_ had a considerable quant.i.ty of dynamite on board, intended to be used against vessels entering the Ca.n.a.l. The _Iris_, which had taken up a berth inside the harbour, shifted berth, and her commander, Captain Seymour, moored his ship opposite the _Sakha_, the better to watch her movements. A great noise was observed on board the Egyptian vessel at night, the men moving up and down as if transporting heavy cases. The next morning Captain Seymour called on her captain, and on inquiring the reason of the commotion, was informed that the men were "practising." Captain Seymour replied that, considering the troubled state of the country, practising at such an unusual hour was calculated to create an alarm on sh.o.r.e, and expressed a hope that it would be discontinued. "I am the only master on board my own ship," was the Egyptian Commander"s reply. "In that case," Captain Seymour replied, "I shall be under the painful necessity of either seizing your ship or of sinking her." From that moment no further night exercise was indulged in, and hostilities were avoided, though both ships remained with their guns pointed at each other. The commander of the _Iris_ took the further precaution of placing a torpedo in a position which would enable him to blow up the Egyptian vessel at any moment. After this, nothing of importance occurred for some days.
The naval force at Port Sad was strengthened by the arrival of the _Penelope_--the flagship of Admiral Hoskins--and the _Monarch_, _Agincourt_, and _Achilles_.
On the 13th July the British Government notified that British merchant ships might go through the Ca.n.a.l if clear. On the 14th British gunboats commenced to convoy vessels. On the 15th the French Government authorized their gunboats to be employed on similar service. This was followed by the like arrangements on the part of Germany and Italy.
The English ironclad _Orion_, Captain R. O. B. Fitz-Roy, arrived from Alexandria, _en route_ to Ismailia, on the 26th, and at once attempted to enter the Ca.n.a.l. Several objections were made by the Ca.n.a.l Company to her doing so. More than once she got under way, and was stopped under various pretexts. The last objection was that the _Coquette_ being already in Lake Timsah, there was no room for another vessel of war.
Eventually, having embarked 142 officers and men from the _Agincourt_, the _Orion_ entered the Ca.n.a.l, ostensibly bound for Suez, and at 3 p.m.
on the 27th she reached Lake Timsah. Captain Fitz-Roy took his ship out of the hands of the pilot, and anch.o.r.ed her about 800 yards from the town of Ismailia.
On the 28th the Governor and Sub-Governor of Port Sad, fearing that their lives were in danger from the military party, took refuge on board the P. and O. s.s. _Poonah_. The town of Port Sad was, in consequence, left completely in the hands of the supporters of Arabi. Nevertheless, though considerable anxiety prevailed, no outbreak took place.