[Both Sides the Border by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link book
Both Sides the Border

CHAPTER 2: Across The Border
13/26

I have often wondered how it was that the Percys, being three to one against you, were yet defeated; fighting on their own ground, as it were.

'Tis long, indeed, since we suffered so great a reverse." "That is true enough, Oswald.

In the days of Wallace and Bruce, we Scots often won battles with long odds against us; but that was because we fought on foot, and the English for the most part on horseback--a method good enough on an open plain, but ill fitted for a land of morass and hill, like Scotland.

Since the English also took to fighting on foot, the chances have been equal; and we have repulsed invasions not so much by force, as by falling back, and so wasting the country that the English had but the choice of retreating or starving.
"There is reason, indeed, why, when equal forces are arrayed against each other, the chances should also be equal; for we are come of the same stock, and the men of the northern marches of England, and those of Scotland, are alike hardy and accustomed to war.

Were we but a united people, as you English are, methinks that there would never have been such constant wars between us; for English kings would not have cared to have invaded a country where they would find but little spoil, and have hard work to take it.


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