summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/old/8mly210h.htm
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:31:59 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:31:59 -0700
commit47a3b695e3d7c4316b5089aecc4b87615a18303b (patch)
treed333dd491f05798c246385c250f92c7b0fbb1a06 /old/8mly210h.htm
initial commit of ebook 8674HEADmain
Diffstat (limited to 'old/8mly210h.htm')
-rw-r--r--old/8mly210h.htm29829
1 files changed, 29829 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/old/8mly210h.htm b/old/8mly210h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7e5ca9d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/8mly210h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,29829 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>CHARLES O'MALLEY, Vol. 2</title>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
+"text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+<style type="text/css">
+<!--
+body {margin:10%; text-align:justify}
+blockquote {font-size:14pt}
+P {font-size:14pt}
+-->
+</style>
+</head>
+<body>
+
+<h2>CHARLES O'MALLEY, Vol. 2, by Charles Lever</h2>
+
+<p>The Project Gutenberg EBook of Charles O'Malley, Vol. 2, by
+Charles Lever<br>
+#3 in our series by Charles Lever</p>
+
+<p>Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to
+check the<br>
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or
+redistributing<br>
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.</p>
+
+<p>This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this
+Project<br>
+Gutenberg file.  Please do not remove it.  Do not change or edit
+the<br>
+header without written permission.</p>
+
+<p>Please read the "legal small print," and other information
+about the<br>
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file.  Included
+is<br>
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions
+in<br>
+how the file may be used.  You can also find out about how to
+make a<br>
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.</p>
+
+<p>**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic
+Texts**</p>
+
+<p>**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since
+1971**</p>
+
+<p>*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of
+Volunteers!*****</p>
+
+<p>Title: Charles O'Malley, Vol. 2</p>
+
+<p>Author: Charles Lever</p>
+
+<p>Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8674]<br>
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]<br>
+[This file was first posted on July 31, 2003]</p>
+
+<p>Edition: 10</p>
+
+<p>Language: English</p>
+
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+
+<p>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHARLES O'MALLEY,
+VOL. 2 ***</p>
+
+<p>Produced by David Widger, Jonathan Ingram, Charles Franks<br>
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team</p>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<h1>CHARLES O'MALLEY</h1>
+<br><br>
+<h3>The Irish Dragoon</h3>
+<br><br><br>
+<h2>BY CHARLES LEVER.</h2>
+<br><br>
+<h3>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY PHIZ.</h3>
+<br><br><br>
+<h3>IN TWO VOLUMES.</h3>
+
+<h1>VOL. II.</h1>
+
+<a name="0001"></a>
+<img alt="0001.jpg (163K)" src="0001.jpg" height="1059" width="706">
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<p>CHAPTER</p>
+
+<pre>
+I.       THE DOCTOR'S TALE
+II.      THE SKIRMISH
+III.     THE LINES OF CIUDAD RODRIGO
+IV.      THE DOCTOR
+V.       THE COA
+VI.      THE NIGHT MARCH
+VII.     THE JOURNEY
+VIII.    THE GHOST
+IX.      LISBON
+X.       A PLEASANT PREDICAMENT
+XI.      THE DINNER
+XII.     THE LETTER
+XIII.    THE VILLA
+XIV.     THE VISIT
+XV.      THE CONFESSION
+XVI.     MY CHARGER
+XVII.    MAURICE
+XVIII.   THE MASQUERADE
+XIX.     THE LINES
+XX.      THE RETREAT OF THE FRENCH
+XXI.     PATRICK'S DAY IN THE PENINSULA
+XXII.    FUENTES D'ONORO
+XXIII.   THE BATTLE OF FUENTES D'ONORO
+XXIV.    A RENCONTRE
+XXV.     ALMEIDA
+XXVI.    A NIGHT ON THE AZAVA
+XXVII.   MIKE'S MISTAKE
+XXVIII.  MONSOON IN TROUBLE
+XXIX.    THE CONFIDENCE
+XXX.     THE CANTONMENT
+XXXI.    MICKEY FREE'S ADVENTURE
+XXXII.   THE SAN PETRO
+XXXIII.  THE COUNT'S LETTER
+XXXIV.   THE TRENCHES
+XXXV.    THE STORMING OF CIUDAD RODRIGO
+XXXVI.   THE RAMPART
+XXXVII.  THE DESPATCH
+XXXVIII. THE LEAVE
+XXXIX.   LONDON
+XL.      THE BELL AT BRISTOL
+XLI.     IRELAND
+XLII.    THE RETURN
+XLIII.   HOME
+XLIV.    AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE
+XLV.     A SURPRISE
+XLVI.    NEW VIEWS
+XLVII.   A RECOGNITION
+XLVIII.  A MISTAKE
+XLIX.    BRUSSELS
+L.       AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE
+LI.      THE DUCHESS OF RICHMOND'S BALL
+LII.     QUATRE BRAS
+LIII.    WATERLOO
+LIV.     BRUSSELS
+LV.      CONCLUSION
+         L'ENVOI
+
+</pre>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS BY PHIZ IN VOL. II</h2>
+
+<p>Etchings *<br><br>
+<a href="#0001">*EXORCISING A SPIRIT</a><br>
+<a href="#0034">A FLYING SHOT</a><br>
+<a href="#0083">O'MALLEY FOLLOWING THE CUSTOM OF HIS COUNTRY</a><br>
+<a href="#0102">MR. FREE TURNED SPANIARD</a><br>
+<a href="#0124">CHARLEY TRYING A CHARGER</a><br>
+<a href="#0158">GOING OUT TO DINNER</a><br>
+<a href="#0163">DISADVANTAGE OF BREAKFASTING OVER A DUELLING-PARTY</a><br>
+<a href="#0217">*THE TABLES TURNED</a><br>
+<a href="#0225">MR. FREE PIPES WHILE HIS FRIENDS PIPE-CLAY</a><br>
+<a href="#0247">A HUNTING TURN-OUT IN THE PENINSULA</a><br>
+<a href="#0255">MIKE CAPTURING THE TRUMPETER</a><br>
+<a href="#0317">CAPTAIN MICKEY FREE RELATING HIS HEROIC DEEDS</a><br>
+<a href="#0362">BABY BLAKE</a><br>
+<a href="#0410">MICKEY ASTONISHES THE NATIVES</a><br>
+<a href="#0412">*THE GENTLEMEN WHO NEVER SLEEP</a><br>
+<a href="#0471">DEATH OF HAMMERSLEY</a><br>
+<a href="#0481">*THE WELCOME HOME</a></p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<h1>CHARLES O'MALLEY.</h1>
+<br>
+<h2>THE IRISH DRAGOON.</h2>
+
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER I.</p>
+
+<p>THE DOCTOR'S TALE.[1]</p>
+
+<p>"It is now some fifteen years since&mdash;if it wasn't for
+O'Shaughnessy's<br>
+wrinkles, I could not believe it five&mdash;we were quartered in
+Loughrea. There<br>
+were, besides our regiment, the Fiftieth and the Seventy-third,
+and a troop<br>
+or two of horse artillery, and the whole town was literally a
+barrack, and<br>
+as you may suppose, the pleasantest place imaginable. All the
+young ladies,<br>
+and indeed all those that had got their brevet some years before,
+came<br>
+flocking into the town, not knowing but the Devil might persuade
+a raw<br>
+ensign or so to marry some of them.</p>
+
+<p>"Such dinner parties, such routs and balls, never were heard
+of west of<br>
+Athlone. The gayeties were incessant; and if good feeding, plenty
+of<br>
+claret, short whist, country dances, and kissing could have done
+the thing,<br>
+there wouldn't have been a bachelor with a red coat for six miles
+around.</p>
+
+<p>[Footnote 1: I cannot permit the reader to fall into the same
+blunder,<br>
+with regard to the worthy "Maurice," as my friend Charles
+O'Malley has<br>
+done. It is only fair to state that the doctor in the following
+tale was<br>
+hoaxing the "dragoon." A braver and a better fellow than Quill
+never<br>
+existed, equally beloved by his brother officers, as delighted in
+for his<br>
+convivial talents. His favorite amusement was to invent some
+story or<br>
+adventure in which, mixing up his own name with that of some
+friend or<br>
+companion, the veracity of the whole was never questioned. Of
+this nature<br>
+was the pedigree he devised in the last chapter of Vol. I. to
+impose upon<br>
+O'Malley, who believed implicitly all he told him.]</p>
+
+<p>"You know the west, O'Mealey, so I needn't tell you what the
+Galway girls<br>
+are like: fine, hearty, free-and-easy, talking, laughing devils,
+but as<br>
+deep and 'cute as a Master in Chancery; ready for any fun or
+merriment, but<br>
+always keeping a sly look-out for a proposal or a tender
+acknowledgment,<br>
+which&mdash;what between the heat of a ball-room, whiskey negus, white
+satin<br>
+shoes, and a quarrel with your guardian&mdash;it's ten to one you fall
+into<br>
+before you're a week in the same town with them.</p>
+
+<p>"As for the men, I don't admire them so much: pleasant and
+cheerful enough<br>
+when they're handicapping the coat off your back, and your new
+tilbury for<br>
+a spavined pony and a cotton umbrella, but regular devils if you
+come to<br>
+cross them the least in life; nothing but ten paces, three shots
+apiece, to<br>
+begin and end with something like Roger de Coverley, when every
+one has a<br>
+pull at his neighbor. I'm not saying they're not agreeable,
+well-informed,<br>
+and mild in their habits; but they lean overmuch to corduroys and
+coroners'<br>
+inquests for one's taste farther south. However, they're a fine
+people,<br>
+take them all in all; and if they were not interfered with, and
+their<br>
+national customs invaded with road-making, petty-sessions,
+grand-jury laws,<br>
+and a stray commission now and then, they are capable of great
+things, and<br>
+would astonish the world.</p>
+
+<p>"But as I was saying, we were ordered to Loughrea after being
+fifteen<br>
+months in detachments about Birr, Tullamore, Kilbeggan, and all
+that<br>
+country; the change was indeed a delightful one, and we soon
+found<br>
+ourselves the centre of the most marked and determined
+civilities. I told<br>
+you they were wise people in the west; this was their
+calculation: the<br>
+line&mdash;ours was the Roscommon militia&mdash;are here to-day, there
+to-morrow;<br>
+they may be flirting in Tralee this week, and fighting on the
+Tagus the<br>
+next; not that there was any fighting there in those times, but
+then there<br>
+was always Nova Scotia and St. John's, and a hundred other places
+that a<br>
+Galway young lady knew nothing about, except that people never
+came back<br>
+from them. Now, what good, what use was there in falling in love
+with them?<br>
+Mere transitory and passing pleasure that was. But as for us:
+there we<br>
+were; if not in Kilkenny we were in Cork. Safe out and come
+again; no<br>
+getting away under pretence of foreign service; no excuse for not
+marrying<br>
+by any cruel pictures of the colonies, where they make
+spatch-cocks of the<br>
+officers' wives and scrape their infant families to death with a
+small<br>
+tooth-comb. In a word, my dear O'Mealey, we were at a high
+premium; and<br>
+even O'Shaughnessy, with his red head and the legs you see, had
+his<br>
+admirers. There now, don't be angry, Dan; the men, at least, were
+mighty<br>
+partial to you.</p>
+
+<p>"Loughrea, if it was a pleasant, was a very expensive place.
+White gloves<br>
+and car hire,&mdash;there wasn't a chaise in the town,&mdash;short whist,
+too (God<br>
+forgive me if I wrong them, but I wonder were they honest), cost
+money; and<br>
+as our popularity rose, our purses fell; till at length, when the
+one was<br>
+at the flood, the other was something very like low water.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, the Roscommon was a beautiful corps; no petty
+jealousies, no little<br>
+squabbling among the officers, no small spleen between the
+major's wife<br>
+and the paymaster's sister,&mdash;all was amiable, kind, brotherly,
+and<br>
+affectionate. To proceed, I need only mention one fine trait of
+them,&mdash;no<br>
+man ever refused to indorse a brother officer's bill. To think of
+asking<br>
+the amount or even the date would be taken personally; and thus
+we went on<br>
+mutually aiding and assisting each other,&mdash;the colonel drawing on
+me, I<br>
+on the major, the senior captain on the surgeon, and so on, a
+regular<br>
+cross-fire of 'promises to pay,' all stamped and regular.</p>
+
+<p>"Not but the system had its inconveniences; for sometimes an
+obstinate<br>
+tailor or bootmaker would make a row for his money, and then we'd
+be<br>
+obliged to get up a little quarrel between the drawer and the
+acceptor of<br>
+the bill; they couldn't speak for some days, and a mutual friend
+to both<br>
+would tell the creditor that the slightest imprudence on his part
+would<br>
+lead to bloodshed; 'and the Lord help him! if there was a duel,
+he'd be<br>
+proved the whole cause of it.' This and twenty other plans were
+employed;<br>
+and finally, the matter would be left to arbitration among our
+brother<br>
+officers, and I need not say, they behaved like trumps. But
+notwithstanding<br>
+all this, we were frequently hard pressed for cash; as the
+colonel said,<br>
+'It's a mighty expensive corps.' Our dress was costly; not that
+it had much<br>
+lace and gold on it, but that, what between falling on the road
+at night,<br>
+shindies at mess, and other devilment, a coat lasted no time.
+Wine, too,<br>
+was heavy on us; for though we often changed our wine merchant,
+and rarely<br>
+paid him, there was an awful consumption at the mess!</p>
+
+<p>"Now, what I have mentioned may prepare you for the fact that
+before<br>
+we were eight weeks in garrison, Shaugh and myself, upon an
+accurate<br>
+calculation of our conjoint finances, discovered that except some
+vague<br>
+promises of discounting here and there through the town, and
+seven and<br>
+fourpence in specie, we were innocent of any pecuniary treasures.
+This was<br>
+embarrassing; we had both embarked in several small schemes of
+pleasurable<br>
+amusement, had a couple of hunters each, a tandem, and a running
+account&mdash;I<br>
+think it <i>galloped</i>&mdash;at every shop in the town.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me pause for a moment here, O'Mealey, while I moralize a
+little in a<br>
+strain I hope may benefit you. Have you ever considered&mdash;of
+course you have<br>
+not, you're too young and unreflecting&mdash;how beautifully every
+climate<br>
+and every soil possesses some one antidote or another to its own
+noxious<br>
+influences? The tropics have their succulent and juicy fruits,
+cooling and<br>
+refreshing; the northern latitudes have their beasts with fur and
+warm skin<br>
+to keep out the frost-bites; and so it is in Ireland. Nowhere on
+the face<br>
+of the habitable globe does a man contract such habits of small
+debt, and<br>
+nowhere, I'll be sworn, can he so easily get out of any scrape
+concerning<br>
+them. They have their tigers in the east, their antelopes in the
+south,<br>
+their white bears in Norway, their buffaloes in America; but we
+have an<br>
+animal in Ireland that beats them all hollow,&mdash;a country
+attorney!</p>
+
+<p>"Now, let me introduce you to Mr. Matthew Donevan. Mat, as he
+was<br>
+familiarly called by his numerous acquaintances, was a short,
+florid, rosy<br>
+little gentleman of some four or five-and-forty, with a
+well-curled wig of<br>
+the fairest imaginable auburn, the gentle wave of the front
+locks, which<br>
+played in infantine loveliness upon his little bullet forehead,
+contrasting<br>
+strongly enough with a cunning leer of his eye, and a certain
+<i>nisi prius</i><br>
+laugh that however it might please a client, rarely brought
+pleasurable<br>
+feelings to his opponent in a cause.</p>
+
+<p>"Mat was a character in his way; deep, double, and tricky in
+everything<br>
+that concerned his profession, he affected the gay fellow,&mdash;liked
+a jolly<br>
+dinner at Brown's Hotel, would go twenty miles to see a
+steeple-chase and<br>
+a coursing match, bet with any one when the odds were strong in
+his favor,<br>
+with an easy indifference about money that made him seem, when
+winning,<br>
+rather the victim of good luck than anything else. As he kept a
+rather<br>
+pleasant bachelor's house, and liked the military much, we soon
+became<br>
+acquainted. Upon him, therefore, for reasons I can't explain,
+both our<br>
+hopes reposed; and Shaugh and myself at once agreed that if Mat
+could not<br>
+assist us in our distresses, the case was a bad one.</p>
+
+<p>"A pretty little epistle was accordingly concocted, inviting
+the worthy<br>
+attorney to a small dinner at five o'clock the next day,
+intimating that we<br>
+were to be perfectly alone, and had a little business to discuss.
+True to<br>
+the hour, Mat was there; and as if instantly guessing that ours
+was no<br>
+regular party of pleasure, his look, dress, and manner were all
+in keeping<br>
+with the occasion,&mdash;quiet, subdued, and searching.</p>
+
+<p>"When the claret had been superseded by the whiskey, and the
+confidential<br>
+hours were approaching, by an adroit allusion to some heavy wager
+then<br>
+pending, we brought our finances upon the <i>tapis</i>. The thing was
+done<br>
+beautifully,&mdash;an easy <i>adagio</i> movement, no violent transition;
+but hang me<br>
+if old Mat didn't catch the matter at once.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, it's there ye are, Captain!' said he, with his peculiar
+grin.<br>
+'Two-and-sixpence in the pound, and no assets.'</p>
+
+<p>"'The last is nearer the mark, my old boy,' said Shaugh,
+blurting out the<br>
+whole truth at once. The wily attorney finished his tumbler
+slowly, as<br>
+if giving himself time for reflection, and then, smacking his
+lips in a<br>
+preparatory manner, took a quick survey of the room with his
+piercing green<br>
+eye.</p>
+
+<p>"'A very sweet mare of yours that little mouse-colored one is,
+with the dip<br>
+in the back; and she has a trifling curb&mdash;may be it's a spavin,
+indeed&mdash;in<br>
+the near hind-leg. You gave five-and-twenty for her, now, I'll be
+bound?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Sixty guineas, as sure as my name's Dan,' said Shaugh, not
+at all pleased<br>
+at the value put upon his hackney; 'and as to spavin and curb,
+I'll wager<br>
+double the sum she has neither the slightest trace of one nor the
+other.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I'll not take the bet,' said Mat, dryly. 'Money's scarce in
+these parts.'</p>
+
+<p>"This hit silenced us both; and our friend continued,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Then there's the bay horse,&mdash;a great strapping, leggy beast
+he is for a<br>
+tilbury; and the hunters, worth nothing here; they don't know
+this country.<br>
+Them's neat pistols; and the tilbury is not bad&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'Confound you!' said I, losing all patience; 'we didn't ask
+you here to<br>
+appraise our movables. We want to raise the wind without
+that.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I see, I perceive,' said Mat, taking a pinch of snuff very
+leisurely as<br>
+he spoke,&mdash;'I see. Well, that is difficult, very difficult just
+now. I've<br>
+mortgaged every acre of ground in the two counties near us, and a
+sixpence<br>
+more is not to be had that way. Are you lucky at the races?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Never win a sixpence.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What can you do at whist?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Revoke, and get cursed by my partner; devil a more!'</p>
+
+<p>"'That's mighty bad, for otherwise, we might arrange something
+for you.<br>
+Well, I only see one thing for it; you must marry. A wife with
+some money<br>
+will get you out of your present difficulties; and we'll manage
+that easily<br>
+enough.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Come, Dan,' said I, for Shaugh was dropping asleep; 'cheer
+up, old<br>
+fellow. Donevan has found the way to pull us through our
+misfortunes. A<br>
+girl with forty thousand pounds, the best cock shooting in
+Ireland, an old<br>
+family, a capital cellar, all await ye,&mdash;rouse up, there!'</p>
+
+<p>"'I'm convanient,' said Shaugh, with a look intended to be
+knowing, but<br>
+really very tipsy.</p>
+
+<p>"'I didn't say much for her personal attractions, Captain,'
+said Mat; 'nor,<br>
+indeed, did I specify the exact sum; but Mrs. Rogers Dooley, of
+Clonakilty,<br>
+might be a princess&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'And so she shall be, Mat; the O'Shaughnessys were Kings of
+Ennis in the<br>
+time of Nero and I'm only waiting for a trifle of money to revive
+the<br>
+title. What's her name?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Mrs. Rogers Dooley.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Here's her health, and long life to her,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    'And may the Devil cut the toes<br>
+    Of all her foes,<br>
+    That we may know them by their limping.'</p>
+
+<p>"This benevolent wish uttered, Dan fell flat upon the
+hearth-rug, and was<br>
+soon sound asleep. I must hasten on; so need only say that,
+before we<br>
+parted that night, Mat and myself had finished the half-gallon
+bottle of<br>
+Loughrea whiskey, and concluded a treaty for the hand and fortune
+of Mrs.<br>
+Rogers Dooley. He being guaranteed a very handsome percentage on
+the<br>
+property, and the lady being reserved for choice between Dan and
+myself,<br>
+which, however, I was determined should fall upon my more
+fortunate friend.</p>
+
+<p>"The first object which presented itself to my aching senses
+the following<br>
+morning was a very spacious card of invitation from Mr. Jonas
+Malone,<br>
+requesting me to favor him with the seductions of my society the
+next<br>
+evening to a ball; at the bottom of which, in Mr. Donevan's hand,
+I read,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Don't fail; you know who is to be there. I've not been idle
+since I saw<br>
+you. Would the captain take twenty-five for the mare?'</p>
+
+<p>"'So far so good,' thought I, as entering O'Shaughnessy's
+quarters, I<br>
+discovered him endeavoring to spell out his card, which, however,
+had no<br>
+postscript. We soon agreed that Mat should have his price; so
+sending a<br>
+polite answer to the invitation, we despatched a still more civil
+note to<br>
+the attorney, and begged of him, as a weak mark of esteem, to
+accept the<br>
+mouse-colored mare as a present."</p>
+
+<p>Here O'Shaughnessy sighed deeply, and even seemed affected by
+the souvenir.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Dan, we did it all for the best. Oh, O'Mealey, he was a
+cunning<br>
+fellow; but no matter. We went to the ball, and to be sure, it
+was a great<br>
+sight. Two hundred and fifty souls, where there was not good room
+for the<br>
+odd fifty; such laughing, such squeezing, such pressing of hands
+and waists<br>
+in the staircase, and then such a row and riot at the top,&mdash;four
+fiddles, a<br>
+key bugle, and a bagpipe, playing 'Haste to the wedding,' amidst
+the crash<br>
+of refreshment-trays, the tramp of feet, and the sounds of
+merriment on all<br>
+sides!</p>
+
+<p>"It's only in Ireland, after all, people have fun. Old and
+young, merry and<br>
+morose, the gay and cross-grained, are crammed into a lively
+country-dance;<br>
+and ill-matched, ill-suited, go jigging away together to the
+blast of a bad<br>
+band, till their heads, half turned by the noise, the heat, the
+novelty,<br>
+and the hubbub, they all get as tipsy as if they were really deep
+in<br>
+liquor.</p>
+
+<p>"Then there is that particularly free-and-easy tone in every
+one about.<br>
+Here go a couple capering daintily out of the ball-room to take a
+little<br>
+fresh air on the stairs, where every step has its own separate
+flirtation<br>
+party; there, a riotous old gentleman, with a boarding-school
+girl for<br>
+his partner, has plunged smack into a party at loo, upsetting
+cards and<br>
+counters, and drawing down curses innumerable. Here are a merry
+knot round<br>
+the refreshments, and well they may be; for the negus is strong
+punch,<br>
+and the biscuit is tipsy cake,&mdash;and all this with a running fire
+of good<br>
+stories, jokes, and witticisms on all sides, in the laughter for
+which even<br>
+the droll-looking servants join as heartily as the rest.</p>
+
+<p>"We were not long in finding out Mrs. Rogers, who sat in the
+middle of a<br>
+very high sofa, with her feet just touching the floor. She was
+short,<br>
+fat, wore her hair in a crop, had a species of shining yellow
+skin, and a<br>
+turned-up nose, all of which were by no means prepossessing.
+Shaugh and<br>
+myself were too hard-up to be particular, and so we invited her
+to dance<br>
+alternately for two consecutive hours, plying her assiduously
+with negus<br>
+during the lulls in the music.</p>
+
+<p>"Supper was at last announced, and enabled us to recruit for
+new efforts;<br>
+and so after an awful consumption of fowl, pigeon-pie, ham, and
+brandy<br>
+cherries, Mrs. Rogers brightened up considerably, and professed
+her<br>
+willingness to join the dancers. As for us, partly from
+exhaustion, partly<br>
+to stimulate our energies, and in some degree to drown
+reflection, we drank<br>
+deep, and when we reached the drawing-room, not only the
+agreeable guests<br>
+themselves, but even the furniture, the venerable chairs, and the
+stiff old<br>
+sofa seemed performing 'Sir Roger de Coverley.' How we conducted
+ourselves<br>
+till five in the morning, let our cramps confess; for we were
+both<br>
+bed-ridden for ten days after. However, at last Mrs. Rogers gave
+in, and<br>
+reclining gracefully upon a window-seat, pronounced it a most
+elegant<br>
+party, and asked me to look for her shawl. While I perambulated
+the<br>
+staircase with her bonnet on my head, and more wearing apparel
+than would<br>
+stock a magazine, Shaugh was roaring himself hoarse in the
+street, calling<br>
+Mrs. Rogers' coach.</p>
+
+<p>"'Sure, Captain,' said the lady, with a tender leer, 'it's
+only a chair.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And here it is,' said I, surveying a very portly-looking old
+sedan, newly<br>
+painted and varnished, that blocked up half the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"'You'll catch cold, my angel,' said Shaugh, in a whisper, for
+he was<br>
+coming it very strong by this; 'get into the chair. Maurice,
+can't you find<br>
+those fellows?' said he to me, for the chairmen had gone
+down-stairs, and<br>
+were making very merry among the servants.</p>
+
+<p>"'She's fast now,' said I, shutting the door to. 'Let us do
+the gallant<br>
+thing, and carry her home ourselves.' Shaugh thought this a great
+notion;<br>
+and in a minute we mounted the poles and sallied forth, amidst a
+great<br>
+chorus of laughing from all the footmen, maids, and teaboys that
+filled the<br>
+passage.</p>
+
+<p>"'The big house, with the bow-window and the pillars,
+Captain,' said a<br>
+fellow, as we issued upon our journey. "'I know it,' said I.
+'Turn to the<br>
+left after you pass the square.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Isn't she heavy?' said Shaugh, as he meandered across the
+narrow streets<br>
+with a sidelong motion that must have suggested to our fair
+inside<br>
+passenger some notions of a sea voyage. In truth, I must confess
+our<br>
+progress was rather a devious one,&mdash;now zig-zagging from side to
+side, now<br>
+getting into a sharp trot, and then suddenly pulling up at a dead
+stop, or<br>
+running the machine chuck against a wall, to enable us to stand
+still and<br>
+gain breath.</p>
+
+<p>"'Which way now?' cried he, as we swung round the angle of a
+street and<br>
+entered the large market-place; 'I'm getting terribly tired.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Never give in, Dan. Think of Clonakilty and the old lady
+herself.' Here<br>
+I gave the chair a hoist that evidently astonished our fair
+friend, for a<br>
+very imploring cry issued forth immediately after.</p>
+
+<p>"'To the right, quick-step, forward, charge!' cried I; and we
+set off at a<br>
+brisk trot down a steep narrow lane.</p>
+
+<p>"'Here it is now,&mdash;the light in the window. Cheer up.'</p>
+
+<p>"As I said this we came short up to a fine, portly-looking
+doorway, with<br>
+great stone pillars and cornice.</p>
+
+<p>"'Make yourself at home, Maurice,' said he; 'bring her in.' So
+saying,<br>
+we pushed forward&mdash;for the door was open&mdash;and passed boldly into
+a great<br>
+flagged hall, silent and cold, and dark as the night itself.</p>
+
+<p>"'Are you sure we're right?' said he.</p>
+
+<p>"'All right,' said I; 'go ahead.'</p>
+
+<p>"And so we did, till we came in sight of a small candle that
+burned dimly<br>
+at a distance from us.</p>
+
+<p>"'Make for the light,' said I; but just as I said so Shaugh
+slipped and<br>
+fell flat on the flagway. The noise of his fall sent up a hundred
+echoes<br>
+in the silent building, and terrified us both dreadfully. After a
+minute's<br>
+pause, by one consent we turned and made for the door, falling
+almost at<br>
+every step, and frightened out of our senses, we came tumbling
+together<br>
+into the porch, and out in the street, and never drew breath till
+we<br>
+reached the barracks. Meanwhile let me return to Mrs. Rogers. The
+dear<br>
+old lady, who had passed an awful time since she left the ball,
+had just<br>
+rallied out of a fainting fit when we took to our heels; so after
+screaming<br>
+and crying her best, she at last managed to open the top of the
+chair, and<br>
+by dint of great exertions succeeded in forcing the door, and at
+length<br>
+freed herself from bondage. She was leisurely groping her way
+round it<br>
+in the dark, when her lamentations, being heard without, woke up
+the old<br>
+sexton of the chapel,&mdash;for it was there we placed her,&mdash;who,
+entering<br>
+cautiously with a light, no sooner caught a glimpse of the great
+black<br>
+sedan and the figure beside it than he also took to his heels,
+and ran like<br>
+a madman to the priest's house.</p>
+
+<p>"'Come, your reverence, come, for the love of marcy! Sure
+didn't I see him<br>
+myself! Oh, wirra, wirra!'</p>
+
+<p>"'What is it, ye ould fool?' said M'Kenny.</p>
+
+<p>"'It's Father Con Doran, your reverence, that was buried last
+week, and<br>
+there he is up now, coffin and all, saying a midnight Mass as
+lively as<br>
+ever.'</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Mrs. Rogers, God help her! It was a trying sight for her
+when the<br>
+priest and the two coadjutors and three little boys and the
+sexton all came<br>
+in to lay her spirit; and the shock she received that night, they
+say, she<br>
+never got over.</p>
+
+<p>"Need I say, my dear O'Mealey, that our acquaintance with Mrs.
+Rogers was<br>
+closed? The dear woman had a hard struggle for it afterwards. Her
+character<br>
+was assailed by all the elderly ladies in Loughrea for going off
+in our<br>
+company, and her blue satin, piped with scarlet, utterly ruined
+by a deluge<br>
+of holy water bestowed on her by the pious sexton. It was in vain
+that she<br>
+originated twenty different reports to mystify the world; and
+even ten<br>
+pounds spent in Masses for the eternal repose of Father Con Doran
+only<br>
+increased the laughter this unfortunate affair gave rise to. As
+for us, we<br>
+exchanged into the line, and foreign service took us out of the
+road of<br>
+duns, debts, and devilment, and we soon reformed, and eschewed
+such low<br>
+company."</p>
+
+<p>The day was breaking ere we separated; and amidst the rich and
+fragrant<br>
+vapors that exhaled from the earth, the faint traces of sunlight
+dimly<br>
+stealing told of the morning. My two friends set out for
+Torrijos, and I<br>
+pushed boldly forward in the direction of the Alberche.</p>
+
+<p>It was a strange thing that although but two days before the
+roads we were<br>
+then travelling had been the line of retreat of the whole French
+army, not<br>
+a vestige of their equipment nor a trace of their
+<i>mat&eacute;riel</i> had been left<br>
+behind. In vain we searched each thicket by the wayside for some
+straggling<br>
+soldier, some wounded or wearied man; nothing of the kind was to
+be seen.<br>
+Except the deeply-rutted road, torn by the heavy wheels of the
+artillery,<br>
+and the white ashes of a wood fire, nothing marked their
+progress.</p>
+
+<p>Our journey was a lonely one. Not a man was to be met with.
+The houses<br>
+stood untenanted; the doors lay open; no smoke wreathed from
+their deserted<br>
+hearths. The peasantry had taken to the mountains; and although
+the plains<br>
+were yellow with the ripe harvest, and the peaches hung
+temptingly upon the<br>
+trees, all was deserted and forsaken. I had often seen the
+blackened walls<br>
+and broken rafters, the traces of the wild revenge and reckless
+pillage of<br>
+a retiring army. The ruined castle and the desecrated altar are
+sad things<br>
+to look upon; but, somehow, a far heavier depression sunk into my
+heart<br>
+as my eye ranged over the wide valleys and broad hills, all
+redolent of<br>
+comfort, of beauty, and of happiness, and yet not one man to say,
+"This is<br>
+my home; these are my household gods." The birds carolled gayly
+in each<br>
+leafy thicket; the bright stream sung merrily as it rippled
+through the<br>
+rocks; the tall corn, gently stirred by the breeze, seemed to
+swell the<br>
+concert of sweet sounds; but no human voice awoke the echoes
+there. It<br>
+was as if the earth was speaking in thankfulness to its Maker,
+while<br>
+man,&mdash;ungrateful and unworthy man,&mdash;pursuing his ruthless path
+of<br>
+devastation and destruction, had left no being to say, "I thank
+Thee for<br>
+all these."</p>
+
+<p>The day was closing as we drew near the Alberche, and came in
+sight of the<br>
+watch-fires of the enemy. Far as the eye could reach their column
+extended,<br>
+but in the dim twilight nothing could be seen with accuracy; yet
+from the<br>
+position their artillery occupied, and the unceasing din of
+baggage wagons<br>
+and heavy carriages towards the rear, I came to the conclusion
+that a still<br>
+farther retreat was meditated. A picket of light cavalry was
+posted upon<br>
+the river's bank, and seemed to watch with vigilance the
+approaches to the<br>
+stream.</p>
+
+<p>Our bivouac was a dense copse of pine-trees, exactly opposite
+to the French<br>
+advanced posts, and there we passed the night,&mdash;fortunately a
+calm and<br>
+starlight one; for we dared not light fires, fearful of
+attracting<br>
+attention.</p>
+
+<p>During the long hours I lay patiently watching the movements
+of the enemy<br>
+till the dark shadows hid all from sight; and even then, as my
+ears caught<br>
+the challenge of a sentry or the footsteps of some officer in his
+round,<br>
+my thoughts were riveted upon them, and a hundred vague fancies
+as to the<br>
+future were based upon no stronger foundation than the clink of a
+firelock<br>
+or the low-muttered song of a patrol.</p>
+
+<p>Towards morning I slept; and when day broke my first glance
+was towards the<br>
+river-side. But the French were gone, noiselessly, rapidly. Like
+one man<br>
+that vast army had departed, and a dense column of dust towards
+the<br>
+horizon alone marked the long line of march where the martial
+legions were<br>
+retreating.</p>
+
+<p>My mission was thus ended; and hastily partaking of the humble
+breakfast my<br>
+friend Mike provided for me, I once more set out and took the
+road towards<br>
+headquarters.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER II.</p>
+
+<p>THE SKIRMISH.</p>
+
+<p>For several months after the battle of Talavera my life
+presented nothing<br>
+which I feel worth recording. Our good fortune seemed to have
+deserted us<br>
+when our hopes were highest; for from the day of that splendid
+victory we<br>
+began our retrograde movement upon Portugal. Pressed hard by
+overwhelming<br>
+masses of the enemy, we saw the fortresses of Ciudad Rodrigo and
+Almeida<br>
+fall successively into their hands. The Spaniards were defeated
+wherever<br>
+they ventured upon a battle; and our own troops, thinned by
+sickness and<br>
+desertion, presented but a shadow of that brilliant army which
+only a few<br>
+months previous had followed the retiring French beyond the
+frontiers of<br>
+Portugal.</p>
+
+<p>However willing I now am&mdash;and who is not&mdash;to recognize the
+genius and<br>
+foresight of that great man who then held the destinies of the
+Peninsula<br>
+within his hands, I confess at the time I speak of I could ill
+comprehend<br>
+and still less feel contented with the successive retreats our
+forces made;<br>
+and while the words Torres Vedras brought nothing to my mind but
+the last<br>
+resting-place before embarkation, the sad fortunes of Corunna
+were now<br>
+before me, and it was with a gloomy and desponding spirit I
+followed the<br>
+routine of my daily duty.</p>
+
+<p>During these weary months, if my life was devoid of stirring
+interest or<br>
+adventure, it was not profitless. Constantly employed at the
+outposts,<br>
+I became thoroughly inured to all the roughing of a soldier's
+life, and<br>
+learned in the best of schools that tacit obedience which alone
+can form<br>
+the subordinate or ultimately fit its possessor for command
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>Humble and unobtrusive as such a career must ever be, it was
+not without<br>
+its occasional rewards. From General Crawfurd I more than once
+obtained<br>
+most kind mention in his despatches, and felt that I was not
+unknown or<br>
+unnoticed by Sir Arthur Wellesley himself. At that time these
+testimonies,<br>
+slight and passing as they were, contributed to the pride and
+glory of my<br>
+existence; and even now&mdash;shall I confess it?&mdash;when some gray
+hairs are<br>
+mingling with the brown, and when my old dragoon swagger is
+taming down<br>
+into a kind of half-pay shamble, I feel my heart warm at the
+recollection<br>
+of them.</p>
+
+<p>Be it so; I care not who smiles at the avowal. I know of
+little better<br>
+worth remembering as we grow old than what pleased us while we
+were young.<br>
+With the memory of the kind words once spoken come back the still
+kinder<br>
+looks of those who spoke them, and better than all, that early
+feeling of<br>
+budding manhood, when there was neither fear nor distrust. Alas!
+these are<br>
+the things, and not weak eyes and tottering limbs, which form the
+burden of<br>
+old age. Oh, if we could only go on believing, go on trusting, go
+on hoping<br>
+to the last, who would shed tears for the bygone feats of his
+youthful<br>
+days, when the spirit that evoked them lived young and vivid as
+before?</p>
+
+<p>But to my story. While Ciudad Rodrigo still held out against
+the besieging<br>
+French,&mdash;its battered walls and breached ramparts sadly
+foretelling the<br>
+fate inevitably impending,&mdash;we were ordered, together with the
+16th Light<br>
+Dragoons, to proceed to Gallegos, to reinforce Crawfurd's
+division, then<br>
+forming a corps of observation upon Massena's movements.</p>
+
+<p>The position he occupied was a most commanding one,&mdash;the crown
+of a long<br>
+mountain ridge, studded with pine-copse and cork-trees,
+presenting every<br>
+facility for light-infantry movements; and here and there gently
+sloping<br>
+towards the plain, offering a field for cavalry manoeuvres.
+Beneath, in<br>
+the vast plain, were encamped the dark legions of France, their
+heavy<br>
+siege-artillery planted against the doomed fortress, while clouds
+of their<br>
+cavalry caracoled proudly before us, as if in taunting sarcasm at
+our<br>
+inactivity.</p>
+
+<p>Every artifice which his natural cunning could suggest, every
+taunt a<br>
+Frenchman's vocabulary contains, had been used by Massena to
+induce Sir<br>
+Arthur Wellesley to come to the assistance of the beleagured
+fortress:<br>
+but in vain. In vain he relaxed the energy of the siege, and
+affected<br>
+carelessness. In vain he asserted that the English were either
+afraid or<br>
+else traitors to their allies. The mind of him he thus assailed
+was neither<br>
+accessible to menace nor to sarcasm. Patiently abiding his time,
+he watched<br>
+the progress of events, and provided for that future which was to
+crown his<br>
+country's arms with success and himself with undying glory.</p>
+
+<p>Of a far different mettle was the general formed under whose
+orders we were<br>
+now placed. Hot, passionate, and impetuous, relying upon bold and
+headlong<br>
+heroism rather than upon cool judgment and well-matured plans,
+Crawfurd<br>
+felt in war all the asperity and bitterness of a personal
+conflict. Ill<br>
+brooking the insulting tone of the wily Frenchman, he thirsted
+for any<br>
+occasion of a battle, and his proud spirit chafed against the
+colder<br>
+counsels of his superior.</p>
+
+<p>On the very morning we joined, the pickets brought in the
+intelligence that<br>
+the French patrols were nightly in the habit of visiting the
+villages at<br>
+the outposts and committing every species of cruel indignity upon
+the<br>
+wretched inhabitants. Fired at this daring insult, our general
+resolved to<br>
+cut them off, and formed two ambuscades for the purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Six squadrons of the 14th were despatched to Villa del Puerco,
+three of<br>
+the 16th to Baguetto, while some companies of the 95th, and the
+ca&ccedil;adores,<br>
+supported by artillery, were ordered to hold themselves in
+reserve, for the<br>
+enemy were in force at no great distance from us.</p>
+
+<p>The morning was just breaking as an aide-de-camp galloped up
+with the<br>
+intelligence that the French had been seen near the Villa del
+Puerco, a<br>
+body of infantry and some cavalry having crossed the plain, and
+disappeared<br>
+in that direction. While our colonel was forming us, with the
+intention of<br>
+getting between them and their main body, the tramp of horses was
+heard in<br>
+the wood behind, and in a few moments two officers rode up. The
+foremost,<br>
+who was a short, stoutly-built man of about forty, with a bronzed
+face and<br>
+eye of piercing black, shouted out as we wheeled into
+column:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Halt, there! Why, where the devil are you going? That's your
+ground!" So<br>
+saying, and pointing straight towards the village with his hand,
+he would<br>
+not listen to our colonel's explanation that several stone fences
+and<br>
+enclosures would interfere with cavalry movements, but added,
+"Forward, I<br>
+say! Proceed!"</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, the nature of the ground separated our
+squadron, as the<br>
+colonel anticipated; and although we came on at a topping pace,
+the French<br>
+had time to form in square upon a hill to await us, and when we
+charged,<br>
+they stood firmly, and firing with a low and steady aim, several
+of our<br>
+troopers fell. As we wheeled round, we found ourselves exactly in
+front<br>
+of their cavalry coming out of Baguilles; so dashing straight at
+them,<br>
+we revenged ourselves for our first repulse by capturing
+twenty-nine<br>
+prisoners, and wounding several others.</p>
+
+<p>The French infantry were, however, still unbroken; and Colonel
+Talbot rode<br>
+boldly up with five squadrons of the 14th; but the charge,
+pressed home<br>
+with all its gallantry, failed also, and the colonel fell
+mortally wounded,<br>
+and fourteen of his troopers around him. Twice we rode round the
+square,<br>
+seeking for a weak point, but in vain; the gallant Frenchman who
+commanded,<br>
+Captain Guache, stood fearlessly amidst his brave followers, and
+we could<br>
+hear him, as he called out from time to time,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>C'est &ccedil;a mes enfans! Tr&eacute;s bien fait, mes
+braves!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>And at length they made good their retreat, while we returned
+to the camp,<br>
+leaving thirty-two troopers and our brave colonel dead upon the
+field in<br>
+this disastrous affair.</p>
+
+<p>The repulse we had met with, so contrary to all our hopes and
+expectations,<br>
+made that a most gloomy day to all of us. The brave fellows we
+had left<br>
+behind us, the taunting cheer of the French infantry, the
+unbroken ranks<br>
+against which we rode time after time in vain, never left our
+minds; and a<br>
+sense of shame of what might be thought of us at headquarters
+rendered the<br>
+reflection still more painful.</p>
+
+<p>Our bivouac, notwithstanding all our efforts, was a sad one,
+and when the<br>
+moon rose, some drops of heavy rain falling at intervals in the
+still,<br>
+unruffled air threatened a night of storm; gradually the sky grew
+darker<br>
+and darker, the clouds hung nearer to the earth, and a dense,
+thick mass<br>
+of dark mist shrouded every object. The heavy cannonade of the
+siege was<br>
+stilled; nothing betrayed that a vast army was encamped near us;
+their<br>
+bivouac fires were even imperceptible; and the only sound we
+heard was the<br>
+great bell of Ciudad Rodrigo as it struck the hour, and seemed,
+in the<br>
+mournful cadence of its chime, like the knell of the doomed
+citadel.</p>
+
+<p>The patrol which I commanded had to visit on its rounds the
+most advanced<br>
+post of our position. This was a small farm-house, which,
+standing upon a<br>
+little rising ledge of ground, was separated from the French
+lines by a<br>
+little stream tributary to the Aguda. A party of the 14th were
+picketed<br>
+here, and beneath them in the valley, scarce five hundred yards
+distant,<br>
+was the detachment of cuirassiers which formed the French
+outpost. As we<br>
+neared our picket the deep voice of the sentry challenged us; and
+while<br>
+all else was silent as the grave, we could hear from the opposite
+side<br>
+the merry chorus of a French <i>chanson &agrave; boire</i>, with its
+clattering<br>
+accompaniment of glasses, as some gay companions were making
+merry<br>
+together.</p>
+
+<p>Within the little hut which contained <i>our</i> fellows, the scene
+was a<br>
+different one. The three officers who commanded sat moodily over
+a wretched<br>
+fire of wet wood; a solitary candle dimly lighted the dismantled
+room,<br>
+where a table but ill-supplied with cheer stood unminded and
+uncared for.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, O'Malley," cried Baker, as I came in, "what is the
+night about? And<br>
+what's Crawfurd for next?"</p>
+
+<p>"We hear," cried another, "that he means to give battle
+to-morrow; but<br>
+surely Sir Arthur's orders are positive enough. Gordon himself
+told me<br>
+that he was forbidden to fight beyond the Coa, but to retreat at
+the first<br>
+advance of the enemy."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid," replied I, "that retreating is his last thought
+just now.<br>
+Ammunition has just been served out, and I know the horse
+artillery have<br>
+orders to be in readiness by daybreak."</p>
+
+<p>"All right," said Hampden, with a half-bitter tone. "Nothing
+like going<br>
+through with it. If he is to be brought to court-martial for
+disobedience,<br>
+he'll take good care we sha'n't be there to see it."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, the French are fifty thousand strong!" said Baker. "Look
+there, what<br>
+does that mean, now? That's a signal from the town."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke a rocket of great brilliancy shot up into the sky,
+and bursting<br>
+at length fell in millions of red lustrous sparks on every side,
+showing<br>
+forth the tall fortress, and the encamped army around it, with
+all the<br>
+clearness of noonday. It was a most splendid sight; and though
+the next<br>
+moment all was dark as before, we gazed still fixedly into the
+gloomy<br>
+distance, straining our eyes to observe what was hid from our
+view forever.</p>
+
+<p>"That must be a signal," repeated Baker.</p>
+
+<p>"Begad! if Crawfurd sees it he'll interpret it as a reason for
+fighting. I<br>
+trust he's asleep by this time," said Hampden. "By-the-bye,
+O'Malley, did<br>
+you see the fellows at work in the trenches? How beautifully
+clear it was<br>
+towards the southward!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I remarked that! and what surprised me was the openness
+of their<br>
+position in that direction. Towards the San Benito mole I could
+not see a<br>
+man."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, they'll not attack on that side; but if we really
+are&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Stay, Hampden!" said I, interrupting him, "a thought has just
+struck me.<br>
+At sunset, I saw, through my telescope, the French engineers
+marking with<br>
+their white tape the line of a new entrenchment in that quarter.
+Would it<br>
+not be a glorious thing to move the tape, and bring the fellows
+under the<br>
+fire of San Benito?"</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, O'Malley, that is a thought worth a troop to
+you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Far more likely to forward his promotion in the next world
+than in this,"<br>
+said Baker, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"By no means," added I. "I marked the ground this evening, and
+have it<br>
+perfectly in my mind. If we were to follow the bend of the river,
+I'll be<br>
+bound to come right upon the spot; by nearing the fortress we'll
+escape the<br>
+sentries; and all this portion is open to us."</p>
+
+<p>The project thus loosely thrown out was now discussed in all
+its bearings.<br>
+Whatever difficulties it presented were combated so much to our
+own<br>
+satisfaction, that at last its very facility damped our ardor.
+Meanwhile<br>
+the night wore on, and the storm of rain so long impending began
+to descend<br>
+in very torrents; hissing along the parched ground, it rose in a
+mist,<br>
+while overhead the heavy thunder rolled in long unbroken peals;
+the crazy<br>
+door threatened to give way at each moment, and the whole
+building trembled<br>
+to its foundation.</p>
+
+<p>"Pass the brandy down here, Hampden, and thank your stars
+you're where you<br>
+are. Eh, O'Malley? You'll defer your trip to San Benito for finer
+weather."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, to come to the point," said Hampden, "I'd rather begin
+my<br>
+engineering at a more favorable season; but if O'Malley's for
+it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And O'Malley <i>is</i> for it," said I, suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then faith, I'm not the man to balk his fancy; and as
+Crawfurd is so bent<br>
+upon fighting to-morrow, it don't make much difference. Is it a
+bargain?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is; here's my hand on it."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, boys, I'll have none of this; we've been prettily
+cut up this<br>
+morning already. You shall not go upon this foolish
+excursion."</p>
+
+<p>"Confound it, old fellow! it's all very well for you to talk,
+with the<br>
+majority before you, next step; but here we are, if peace came
+to-morrow,<br>
+scarcely better than we left England. No, no; if O'Malley's
+ready&mdash;and I<br>
+see he is so before me&mdash;What have you got there? Oh, I see;
+that's our tape<br>
+line; capital fun, by George! The worst of it is, they'll make us
+colonels<br>
+of engineers. Now then, what's your plan&mdash;on foot or
+mounted?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mounted, and for this reason, the country is all open; if we
+are to have a<br>
+run for it, our thoroughbreds ought to distance them; and as we
+must expect<br>
+to pass some of their sentries, our only chance is on
+horseback."</p>
+
+<p>"My mind is relieved of a great load," said Hampden; "I was
+trembling in my<br>
+skin lest you should make it a walking party. I'll do anything
+you like in<br>
+the saddle, from robbing the mail to cutting out a frigate; but I
+never was<br>
+much of a foot-pad."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mike," said I, as I returned to the room with my trusty
+follower,<br>
+"are the cattle to be depended on?"</p>
+
+<p>"If we had a snaffle in Malachi Daly's mouth [my brown horse],
+I'd be<br>
+afeared of nothing, sir; but if it comes to fencing, with that
+cruel<br>
+bit,&mdash;but sure, you've a light hand, and let him have his head,
+if it's<br>
+wall."</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, he thinks it a fox-chase!" said Hampden.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it the same, sir?" said Mike, with a seriousness that
+made the whole<br>
+party smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I hope we shall not be earthed, any way," said I. "Now,
+the next<br>
+thing is, who has a lantern? Ah! the very thing; nothing better.
+Look to<br>
+your pistols, Hampden; and Mike, here's a glass of grog for you;
+we'll want<br>
+you. And now, one bumper for good luck. Eh, Baker, won't you
+pledge us?"</p>
+
+<p>"And spare a little for me," said Hampden. "How it does rain!
+If one didn't<br>
+expect to be water-proofed before morning, one really wouldn't go
+out in<br>
+such weather."</p>
+
+<p>While I busied myself in arranging my few preparations,
+Hampden proceeded<br>
+gravely to inform Mike that we were going to the assistance of
+the besieged<br>
+fortress, which could not possibly go on without us.</p>
+
+<p>"Tare and ages!" said Mike, "that's mighty quare; and the blue
+rocket was a<br>
+letter of invitation, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly," said Hampden; "and you see there's no ceremony
+between us. We'll<br>
+just drop in, in the evening, in a friendly way."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, upon my conscience, I'd wait, if I was you, till
+the family<br>
+wasn't in confusion. They have enough on their hands just
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"So you'll not be persuaded?" said Baker. "Well, I frankly
+tell you, that<br>
+come what will of it, as your senior officer I'll report you
+to-morrow.<br>
+I'll not risk myself for any such hair-brained expeditions."</p>
+
+<p>"A mighty pleasant look-out for me," said Mike; "if I'm not
+shot to-night,<br>
+I may be flogged in the morning."</p>
+
+<p>This speech once more threw us into a hearty fit of laughter,
+amidst which<br>
+we took leave of our friends, and set forth upon our way.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER III.</p>
+
+<p>THE LINES OF CIUDAD RODRIGO.</p>
+
+<p>The small, twinkling lights which shone from the ramparts of
+Ciudad Rodrigo<br>
+were our only guide, as we issued forth upon our perilous
+expedition. The<br>
+storm raged, if possible, even more violently than before, and
+gusts of<br>
+wind swept along the ground with the force of a hurricane; so
+that at<br>
+first, our horses could scarcely face the tempest. Our path lay
+along the<br>
+little stream for a considerable way; after which, fording the
+rivulet, we<br>
+entered upon the open plain, taking care to avoid the French
+outpost on the<br>
+extreme left, which was marked by a bivouac fire, burning under
+the heavy<br>
+downpour of rain, and looking larger through the dim atmosphere
+around it.</p>
+
+<p>I rode foremost, followed closely by Hampden and Mike; not a
+word was<br>
+spoken after we crossed the stream. Our plan was, if challenged
+by a<br>
+patrol, to reply in French and press on; so small a party could
+never<br>
+suggest the idea of attack, and we hoped in this manner to
+escape.</p>
+
+<p>The violence of the storm was such that many of our
+precautions as to<br>
+silence were quite unnecessary; and we had advanced to a
+considerable<br>
+extent into the plain before any appearance of the encampment
+struck us.<br>
+At length, on mounting a little rising ground, we perceived
+several fires<br>
+stretching far away to the northward; while still to our left,
+there blazed<br>
+one larger and brighter than the others. We now found that we had
+not<br>
+outflanked their position as we intended, and learning from the
+situation<br>
+of the fires, that we were still only at the outposts, we pressed
+sharply<br>
+forward, directing our course by the twin stars that shone from
+the<br>
+fortress.</p>
+
+<p>"How heavy the ground is here!" whispered Hampden, as our
+horses sunk above<br>
+the fetlocks. "We had better stretch away to the right; the rise
+of the<br>
+hill will favor us."</p>
+
+<p>"Hark!" said I; "did you not hear something? Pull up,&mdash;silence
+now. Yes,<br>
+there they come. It's a patrol; I hear their tramp." As I spoke,
+the<br>
+measured tread of infantry was heard above the storm, and soon
+after a<br>
+lantern was seen coming along the causeway near us. The column
+passed<br>
+within a few yards of where we stood. I could even recognize the
+black<br>
+covering of the shakos as the light fell on them. "Let us follow
+them,"<br>
+whispered I; and the next moment we fell in upon their track,
+holding our<br>
+cattle well in hand, and ready to start at a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Qui va l&agrave;?</i>" a sentry demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>La deuxi&egrave;me division</i>," cried a hoarse voice.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Halte l&agrave;! la consigne?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Wagram!</i>" repeated the same voice as before, while his party
+resumed<br>
+their march; and the next moment the patrol was again upon his
+post, silent<br>
+and motionless as before.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>En avant, Messieurs!</i>" said I, aloud, as soon as the
+infantry had<br>
+proceeded some distance,&mdash;"<i>en avant!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Qui va l&agrave;?</i>" demanded the sentry, as we came along at
+a sharp trot.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>L'&eacute;tat-major, Wagram!</i>" responded I, pressing on
+without drawing rein;<br>
+and in a moment we had regained our former position behind the
+infantry. We<br>
+had scarcely time to congratulate ourselves upon the success of
+our scheme,<br>
+when a tremendous clattering noise in front, mingled with the
+galloping of<br>
+horses and the cracking of whips, announced the approach of the
+artillery<br>
+as they came along by a narrow road which bisected our path; and
+as they<br>
+passed between us and the column, we could hear the muttered
+sentences of<br>
+the drivers, cursing the unseasonable time for an attack, and
+swearing at<br>
+their cattle in no measured tones.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you hear that?" whispered Hampden; "the battery is about
+to be<br>
+directed against the San Benito, which must be far away to the
+left.<br>
+I heard one of the troop saying that they were to open their fire
+at<br>
+daybreak."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, now," said I; "look there!"</p>
+
+<p>From the hill we now stood upon a range of lanterns was
+distinctly visible,<br>
+stretching away for nearly half a mile.</p>
+
+<p>"There are the trenches; they must be at work, too. See how
+the lights are<br>
+moving from place to place! Straight now. Forward!"</p>
+
+<p>So saying, I pressed my horse boldly on.</p>
+
+<p>We had not proceeded many minutes when the sounds of galloping
+were heard<br>
+coming along behind us.</p>
+
+<p>"To the right, in the hollow," cried I. "Be still."</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had we moved off when several horsemen galloped up,
+and drawing<br>
+their reins to breathe their horses up the hill, we could hear
+their voices<br>
+as they conversed together.</p>
+
+<p>In the few broken words we could catch, we guessed that the
+attack upon San<br>
+Benito was only a feint to induce Crawfurd to hold his position,
+while<br>
+the French, marching upon his flank and front, were to attack him
+with<br>
+overwhelming masses and crush him.</p>
+
+<p>"You hear what's in store for us, O'Malley?" whispered
+Hampden. "I think we<br>
+could not possibly do better than hasten back with the
+intelligence."</p>
+
+<p>"We must not forget what we came for, first," said I; and the
+next moment<br>
+we were following the horsemen, who from their helmets seemed to
+be<br>
+horse-artillery officers.</p>
+
+<p>The pace our guides rode at showed us that they knew their
+ground. We<br>
+passed several sentries, muttering something at each time, and
+seeming as<br>
+if only anxious to keep up with our party.</p>
+
+<p>"They've halted," said I. "Now to the left there; gently here,
+for we must<br>
+be in the midst of their lines. Ha! I knew we were right. See
+there!"</p>
+
+<p>Before us, now, at a few hundred yards, we could perceive a
+number of men<br>
+engaged upon the field. Lights were moving from place to place
+rapidly,<br>
+while immediately in front a strong picket of cavalry were
+halted.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove! there's sharp work of it to-night," whispered
+Hampden. "They do<br>
+intend to surprise us to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Gently now, to the left," said I, as cautiously skirting the
+little hill,<br>
+I kept my eye firmly fixed upon the watch-fire.</p>
+
+<p>The storm, which for some time had abated considerably, was
+now nearly<br>
+quelled, and the moon again peeped forth amidst masses of black
+and watery<br>
+clouds.</p>
+
+<p>"What good fortune for us!" thought I, at this moment, as I
+surveyed the<br>
+plain before me.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, O'Malley, what are those fellows at yonder, where the
+blue light is<br>
+burning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! the very people we want; these are the sappers. Now for
+it; that's our<br>
+ground. We'll soon come upon their track now."</p>
+
+<p>We pressed rapidly forward, passing an infantry party as we
+went. The blue<br>
+light was scarcely a hundred yards off; we could even hear the
+shouting of<br>
+the officers to their men in the trenches, when suddenly my horse
+came down<br>
+upon his head, and rolling over, crushed me to the earth.</p>
+
+<p>"Not hurt, my boy," cried I, in a subdued tone, as Hampden
+jumped down<br>
+beside me.</p>
+
+<p>It was the angle of a trench I had fallen into; and though
+both my horse<br>
+and myself felt stunned for the moment, we rallied the next
+minute.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is the very spot," said I. "Now, Mike, catch the bridles
+and follow<br>
+us closely."</p>
+
+<p>Guiding ourselves along the edge of the trench, we crept
+stealthily<br>
+forward; the only watch-fire near was where the engineer party
+was halted,<br>
+and our object was to get outside of this.</p>
+
+<p>"My turn this time," said Hampden, as he tripped suddenly, and
+fell head<br>
+foremost upon the grass.</p>
+
+<p>As I assisted him to rise, something caught my ankle, and on
+stooping I<br>
+found it was a cord pegged fast into the ground, and lying only a
+few<br>
+inches above it.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, steady! See here; this is their working line. Pass your
+hand along it<br>
+there, and let us follow it out."</p>
+
+<p>While Hampden accordingly crept along on one side, I tracked
+the cord upon<br>
+the other. Here I found it terminating upon a small mound, where
+probably<br>
+some battery was to be erected. I accordingly gathered it
+carefully up, and<br>
+was returning towards my friend, when what was my horror to hear
+Mike's<br>
+voice, conversing, as it seemed to me, with some one in
+French.</p>
+
+<p>I stood fixed to the spot, my very heart beating almost in my
+mouth as I<br>
+listened.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Qui &ecirc;tes-vous done, mon ami?</i>" inquired a hoarse, deep
+voice, a few yards<br>
+off.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Bon cheval, non</i> beast, <i>sacr&eacute; nom de Dieu!</i>" A
+hearty burst of laughter<br>
+prevented my hearing the conclusion of Mike's French.</p>
+
+<p>I now crept forward upon my hands and knees, till I could
+catch the dark<br>
+outline of the horses, one hand fixed upon my pistol trigger, and
+my sword<br>
+drawn in the other. Meanwhile the dialogue continued.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Vous &ecirc;tes d'Alsace, n'est-ce-pas?</i>" asked the
+Frenchman, kindly supposing<br>
+that Mike's French savored of Strasburg.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, blessed Virgin! av I might shoot him," was the muttered
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>Before I had time to see the effect of the last speech, I
+pressed forward<br>
+with a bold spring, and felled the Frenchman to the earth. My
+hand had<br>
+scarcely pressed upon his mouth, when Hampden was beside me.
+Snatching up<br>
+the pistol I let fall, he held it to the man's chest and
+commanded him to<br>
+be silent. To unfasten his girdle and bind the Frenchman's hands
+behind<br>
+him, was the work of a moment; and as the sharp click of the
+pistol-cock<br>
+seemed to calm his efforts to escape, we soon succeeded in
+fastening a<br>
+handkerchief tight across his mouth, and the next minute he was
+placed<br>
+behind Mike's saddle, firmly attached to this worthy individual
+by his<br>
+sword-belt.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, a clear run home for it, and a fair start," said
+Hampden, as he<br>
+sprang into the saddle.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, then, for it," I replied, as turning my horse's head
+towards our<br>
+lines, I dashed madly forward.</p>
+
+<p>The moon was again obscured, but still the dark outline of the
+hill which<br>
+formed our encampment was discernible on the horizon. Riding side
+by side,<br>
+on we hurried,&mdash;now splashing through the deep wet marshes, now
+plunging<br>
+through small streams. Our horses were high in mettle, and we
+spared them<br>
+not. By taking a wide <i>d&eacute;tour</i> we had outflanked the
+French pickets, and<br>
+were almost out of all risk, when suddenly on coming to the verge
+of rather<br>
+a steep hill, we perceived beneath us a strong cavalry picket
+standing<br>
+around a watch-fire; their horses were ready saddled, the men
+accoutred,<br>
+and quite prepared for the field. While we conversed together in
+whispers<br>
+as to the course to follow, our deliberations were very rapidly
+cut short.<br>
+The French prisoner, who hitherto had given neither trouble nor
+resistance,<br>
+had managed to free his mouth from the encumbrance of the
+handkerchief; and<br>
+as we stood quietly discussing our plans, with one tremendous
+effort he<br>
+endeavored to hurl himself and Mike from the saddle, shouting out
+as he did<br>
+so,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>A moi camarades! &agrave; moi!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Hampden's pistol leaped from the holster as he spoke, and
+levelling it with<br>
+a deadly aim, he pulled the trigger; but I threw up his arm, and
+the ball<br>
+passed high above his head. To have killed the Frenchman would
+have been to<br>
+lose my faithful follower, who struggled manfully with his
+adversary, and<br>
+at length by throwing himself flatly forward upon the mane of his
+horse,<br>
+completely disabled him. Meanwhile the picket had sprung to their
+saddles,<br>
+and looked wildly about on every side.</p>
+
+<p>Not a moment was to be lost; so turning our horses' heads
+towards the<br>
+plain, away we went. One loud cheer announced to us that we had
+been seen,<br>
+and the next instant the clash of the pursuing cavalry was heard
+behind us.<br>
+It was now entirely a question of speed, and little need we have
+feared<br>
+had Mike's horse not been doubly weighted. However, as we still
+had<br>
+considerably the start, and the gray dawn of day enabled us to
+see the<br>
+ground, the odds were in our favor. "Never let your horse's head
+go," was<br>
+my often repeated direction to Mike, as he spurred with all the
+desperation<br>
+of madness. Already the low meadow-land was in sight which
+flanked the<br>
+stream we had crossed in the morning, but unfortunately the heavy
+rains had<br>
+swollen it now to a considerable depth, and the muddy current,
+choked with<br>
+branches of trees and great stones, was hurrying down like a
+torrent. "Take<br>
+the river! never flinch it!" was my cry to my companions, as I
+turned my<br>
+head and saw a French dragoon, followed by two others, gaining
+rapidly upon<br>
+us. As I spoke, Mike dashed in, followed by Hampden, and the same
+moment<br>
+the sharp ring of a carbine whizzed past me. To take off the
+pursuit from<br>
+the others, I now wheeled my horse suddenly round, as if I feared
+to take<br>
+the stream, and dashed along by the river's bank.</p>
+
+<a name="0034"></a>
+<img alt="0034.jpg (173K)" src="0034.jpg" height="601" width="820">
+
+[A FLYING SHOT]
+<br><br>
+
+<p>Beneath me in the foaming current the two horsemen
+labored,&mdash;now stemming<br>
+the rush of water, now reeling almost beneath. A sharp cry burst
+from Mike<br>
+as I looked, and I saw the poor fellow bend nearly to his saddle.
+I could<br>
+see no more, for the chase was now hot upon myself. Behind me
+rode a French<br>
+dragoon, his carbine pressed tightly to his side, ready to fire
+as he<br>
+pressed on in pursuit. I had but one chance; so drawing my pistol
+I wheeled<br>
+suddenly in my saddle, and fired straight at him. The Frenchman
+fell, while<br>
+a regular volley from his party rung around me, one ball striking
+my horse,<br>
+and another lodging in the pommel of my saddle. The noble animal
+reeled<br>
+nearly to the earth, but as if rallying for a last effort, sprang
+forward<br>
+with renewed energy, and plunged boldly into the river. For a
+moment,<br>
+so sudden was my leap, my pursuers lost sight of me; but the bank
+being<br>
+somewhat steep, the efforts of my horse to climb again discovered
+me, and<br>
+before I reached the field two pistol-balls took effect upon
+me,&mdash;one<br>
+slightly grazed my side, but my bridle-arm was broken by the
+other, and<br>
+my hand fell motionless to my side. A cheer of defiance was,
+however, my<br>
+reply, as I turned round in my saddle, and the next moment I was
+far beyond<br>
+the range of their fire.</p>
+
+<p>Not a man durst follow, and the last sight I had of them was
+the dismounted<br>
+group who stood around their dead comrade. Before me rode Hampden
+and Mike,<br>
+still at top speed, and never turning their heads backwards. I
+hastened<br>
+after them; but my poor, wounded horse, nearly hamstrung by the
+shot,<br>
+became dead lame, and it was past daybreak ere I reached the
+first outposts<br>
+of our lines.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER IV.</p>
+
+<p>THE DOCTOR.</p>
+
+<p>"And his wound? Is it a serious one?" said a round, full
+voice, as the<br>
+doctor left my room at the conclusion of his visit.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; a fractured bone is the worst of it,&mdash;the bullet
+grazed, but did<br>
+not cut the artery, and as&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, how soon will he be about again?"</p>
+
+<p>"In a few weeks, if no fever sets in."</p>
+
+<p>"There's no objection to my seeing him?&mdash;a few minutes
+only,&mdash;I'll be<br>
+cautious." So saying, and as it seemed to me, without waiting for
+a reply,<br>
+the door was opened by an aide-de-camp, who, announcing General
+Crawfurd,<br>
+closed it again, and withdrew.</p>
+
+<p>The first glance I threw upon the general enabled me to
+recognize the<br>
+officer who, on the previous morning, had ridden up to the picket
+and given<br>
+us the orders to charge. I essayed to rise a little as he came
+forward; but<br>
+he motioned me with his hand to lie still, while, placing a chair
+close<br>
+beside my bed, he sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"Very sorry for your mishap, sir, but glad it is no worse.
+Moreton says<br>
+that nothing of consequence is injured; there, you mustn't speak
+except I<br>
+ask you. Hampden has told me everything necessary; at least as
+far as he<br>
+knew. Is it your opinion, also, that any movement is in
+contemplation; and<br>
+from what circumstance?"</p>
+
+<p>I immediately explained, and as briefly as I was able, the
+reasons for<br>
+suspecting such, with which he seemed quite satisfied. I detailed
+the<br>
+various changes in the positions of the troops that were taking
+place<br>
+during the night, the march of the artillery, and the strong
+bodies of<br>
+cavalry that were posted in reserve along the river.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, sir; they'll not move; your prisoner,
+quartermaster of an<br>
+infantry battalion, says not, also. Yours was a bold stroke, but
+could not<br>
+possibly have been of service, and the best thing I can do for
+you is not<br>
+to mention it,&mdash;a court-martial's but a poor recompense for a
+gun-shot<br>
+wound. Meanwhile, when this blows over, I'll appoint you on my
+personal<br>
+staff. There, not a word, I beg; and now, good-by."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, and waving me an adieu with his hand, the gallant
+veteran<br>
+withdrew before I could express my gratitude for his
+kindness.</p>
+
+<p>I had little time for reflecting over my past adventure, such
+numbers of my<br>
+brother officers poured in upon me. All the doctor's cautions
+respecting<br>
+quietness and rest were disregarded, and a perfect levee sat the
+entire<br>
+morning in my bed-room. I was delighted to learn that Mike's
+wound, though<br>
+painful at the moment, was of no consequence; and indeed Hampden,
+who<br>
+escaped both steel and shot, was the worst off among us,&mdash;his
+plunge in the<br>
+river having brought on an ague he had labored under years
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"The illustrious Maurice has been twice here this morning, but
+they<br>
+wouldn't admit him. Your Scotch physician is afraid of his
+Irish<br>
+<i>confr&egrave;re</i>, and they had a rare set-to about Galen and
+Hippocrates<br>
+outside," said Baker.</p>
+
+<p>"By-the-bye," said another, "did you see how Sparks looked
+when Quill<br>
+joined us? Egad, I never saw a fellow in such a fright; he
+reddened up,<br>
+then grew pale, turned his back, and slunk away at the very first
+moment."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I remember it. We must find out the reason; for Maurice,
+depend upon<br>
+it, has been hoaxing the poor fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, O'Malley," growled out the senior major, "you certainly
+did give<br>
+Hampden a benefit. He'll not trust himself in such company again;
+and<br>
+begad, he says, the man is as bad as the master. That fellow of
+yours never<br>
+let go his prisoner till he reached the quartermaster-general,
+and they<br>
+were both bathed in blood by that time."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Mike! we must do something for him."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he's as happy as a king! Maurice has been in to see him,
+and they've<br>
+had a long chat about Ireland, and all the national pastimes of
+whiskey<br>
+drinking and smashing skulls. My very temples ache at the
+recollection."</p>
+
+<p>"Is Mister O'Mealey at home?" said a very rich Cork accent, as
+the<br>
+well-known and most droll features of Dr. Maurice Quill appeared
+at the<br>
+door.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, Maurice," said the major; "and for Heaven's sake,
+behave<br>
+properly. The poor fellow must not have a row about his
+bedside."</p>
+
+<p>"A row, a row! Upon my conscience, it is little you know about
+a row, and<br>
+there's worse things going than a row. Which leg is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's an arm, Doctor, I'm happy to say."</p>
+
+<p>"Not your punch hand, I hope. No; all's right. A neat fellow
+you have for<br>
+a servant, that Mickey Free. I was asking him about a townsman of
+his<br>
+own&mdash;one Tim Delany,&mdash;the very cut of himself, the best servant I
+ever had.<br>
+I never could make out what became of him. Old Hobson of the
+95th, gave<br>
+him to me, saying, 'There he is for you, Maurice, and a bigger
+thief and a<br>
+greater blackguard there's not in the 60th.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Strong words,' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'And true' said he; 'he'd steal your molar tooth while you
+were laughing<br>
+at him.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Let me have him, and try my hand on him, anyway. I've got no
+one just<br>
+now. Anything is better than nothing.'</p>
+
+<p>"Well I took Tim, and sending for him to my room I locked the
+door, and<br>
+sitting down gravely before him explained in a few words that I
+was quite<br>
+aware of his little propensities.</p>
+
+<p>"'Now,' said I, 'if you like to behave well, I'll think you as
+honest as<br>
+the chief-justice; but if I catch you stealing, if it be only the
+value of<br>
+a brass snuff-box, I'll have you flogged before the regiment as
+sure as my<br>
+name's Maurice.'</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I wish you heard the volley of protestations that fell
+from him fast<br>
+as hail. He was a calumniated man the world conspired to wrong
+him; he was<br>
+never a thief nor a rogue in his life. He had a weakness, he
+confessed, for<br>
+the ladies; but except that, he hoped he might die so thin that
+he could<br>
+shave himself with his shin-bone if he ever so much as took a
+pinch of salt<br>
+that wasn't his own.</p>
+
+<p>"However this might be, nothing could be better than the way
+Tim and I got<br>
+on together. Everything was in its place, nothing missing; and in
+fact, for<br>
+upwards of a year, I went on wondering when he was to show out in
+his true<br>
+colors, for hitherto he had been a phoenix.</p>
+
+<p>"At last,&mdash;we were quartered in Limerick at the time,&mdash;every
+morning used<br>
+to bring accounts of all manner of petty thefts in the
+barrack,&mdash;one fellow<br>
+had lost his belt, another his shoes, a third had
+three-and-sixpence in<br>
+his pocket when he went to bed and woke without a farthing, and
+so on.<br>
+Everybody save myself was mulet of something. At length some
+rumors of<br>
+Tim's former propensities got abroad; suspicion was excited; my
+friend<br>
+Delany was rigidly watched, and some very dubious circumstances
+attached to<br>
+the way he spent his evenings.</p>
+
+<p>"My brother officers called upon me about the matter, and
+although nothing<br>
+had transpired like proof, I sent for Tim, and opened my mind on
+the<br>
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>"You may talk of the look of conscious innocence, but I defy
+you to<br>
+conceive anything finer than the stare of offended honor Tim gave
+me as I<br>
+began.</p>
+
+<p>"'They say it's me, Doctor,' said he, 'do they? And you,&mdash;you
+believe them.<br>
+You allow them to revile me that way? Well, well, the world is
+come to a<br>
+pretty pass, anyhow! Now, let me ask your honor a few questions?
+How many<br>
+shirts had yourself when I entered your service? Two, and one was
+more like<br>
+a fishing net! And how many have ye now? Eighteen; ay, eighteen
+bran new<br>
+cambrie ones,&mdash;devil a hole in one of them! How many pair of
+stockings had<br>
+you? Three and an odd one. You have two dozen this minute. How
+many pocket<br>
+handkerchiefs? One,&mdash;devil a more! You could only blow your nose
+two days<br>
+in the week, and now you may every hour of the twenty-four! And
+as to<br>
+the trilling articles of small value, snuff-boxes, gloves,
+bootjacks,<br>
+nightcaps, and&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'Stop, Tim, that's enough&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, sir, it is not,' said Tim, drawing himself up to his
+full height;<br>
+'you have wounded my feelings in a way I can't forget. It is
+impossible<br>
+we can have that mutual respect our position demands. Farewell,
+farewell,<br>
+Doctor, and forever!'</p>
+
+<p>"Before I could say another word, the fellow had left the
+room, and closed<br>
+the door after him; and from that hour to this I never set eyes
+on him."</p>
+
+<p>In this vein did the worthy doctor run on till some more
+discreet friend<br>
+suggested that however well-intentioned the visit, I did not seem
+to be<br>
+fully equal to it,&mdash;my flushed cheek and anxious eye betraying
+that the<br>
+fever of my wound had commenced. They left me, therefore, once
+more alone,<br>
+and to my solitary musings over the vicissitudes of my
+fortune.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER V.</p>
+
+<p>THE COA.</p>
+
+<p>Within a week from the occurrence of the events just
+mentioned, Ciudad<br>
+Rodrigo surrendered, and Crawfurd assumed another position
+beneath the<br>
+walls of Almeida. The Spanish contingent having left us, we were
+reinforced<br>
+by the arrival of two battalions, renewed orders being sent not
+to risk a<br>
+battle, but if the French should advance, to retire beyond the
+Coa.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the 21st of July a strong body of French
+cavalry advanced<br>
+into the plain, supported by some heavy guns; upon which Crawfurd
+retired<br>
+upon the Coa, intending, as we supposed, to place that river
+between<br>
+himself and the enemy. Three days, however, passed over without
+any<br>
+movement upon either side, and we still continued, with a force
+of scarcely<br>
+four thousand infantry and a thousand dragoons, to stand opposite
+to an<br>
+army of nearly fifty thousand men. Such was our position as the
+night of<br>
+the 24th set in. I was sitting alone in my quarters. Mike, whose
+wound had<br>
+been severer than at first was supposed, had been sent to
+Almeida, and I<br>
+was musing in solitude upon the events of the campaign, when the
+noise and<br>
+bustle without excited my attention,&mdash;the roll of artillery
+wagons, the<br>
+clash of musketry, and the distant sounds of marching, all proved
+that the<br>
+troops were effecting some new movement, and I burned with
+anxiety to<br>
+learn what it was. My brother officers, however, came not as
+usual to my<br>
+quarters; and although I waited with impatience while the hours
+rolled by,<br>
+no one appeared.</p>
+
+<p>Long, low moaning gusts of wind swept along the earth,
+carrying the leaves<br>
+as they tore them from the trees, and mingling their sad sounds
+with the<br>
+noises of the retiring troops; for I could perceive that
+gradually the<br>
+sounds grew more and more remote, and only now and then could I
+trace their<br>
+position as the roll of a distant drum swelled upon the breeze,
+or the<br>
+more shrill cry of a pibroch broke upon my ear. A heavy downpour
+of rain<br>
+followed soon after, and in its unceasing plash drowned all other
+sounds.</p>
+
+<p>As the little building shook beneath the peals of loud
+thunder, the<br>
+lightning flashed in broad sheets upon the rapid river, which,
+swollen and<br>
+foaming, dashed impetuously beside my window. By the uncertain
+but vivid<br>
+glare of the flashes, I endeavored to ascertain where our force
+was posted,<br>
+but in vain. Never did I witness such a night of storm,&mdash;the deep
+booming<br>
+of the thunder seeming never for a moment to cease, while the
+rush of the<br>
+torrent grew gradually louder, till at length it swelled into one
+deep and<br>
+sullen roar like that of distant artillery.</p>
+
+<p>Weak and nervous as I felt from the effects of my wound,
+feverish and<br>
+exhausted by days of suffering and sleepless nights, I paced my
+little room<br>
+with tottering but impatient steps. The sense of my sad and
+imprisoned<br>
+state impressed me deeply; and while from time to time I
+replenished my<br>
+fire, and hoped to hear some friendly step upon the stair, my
+heart grew<br>
+gradually heavier, and every gloomy and depressing thought
+suggested itself<br>
+to my imagination. My most constant impression was that the
+troops were<br>
+retiring beyond the Coa, and that, forgotten in the haste and
+confusion of<br>
+a night march, I had been left behind to fall a prisoner to the
+enemy.</p>
+
+<p>The sounds of the troops retiring gradually farther and
+farther favored the<br>
+idea, in which I was still more strengthened on finding that the
+peasants<br>
+who inhabited the little hut had departed, leaving me utterly
+alone. From<br>
+the moment I ascertained this fact, my impatience knew no bounds;
+and in<br>
+proportion as I began to feel some exertion necessary on my part,
+so much<br>
+more did my nervousness increase my debility, and at last I sank
+exhausted<br>
+upon my bed, while a cold perspiration broke out upon my
+temples.</p>
+
+<p>I have mentioned that the Coa was immediately beneath the
+house; I must<br>
+also add that the little building occupied the angle of a steep
+but narrow<br>
+gorge which descended from the plain to the bridge across the
+stream. This,<br>
+as far as I knew, was the only means we possessed of passing the
+river; so<br>
+that, when the last retiring sounds of the troops were heard by
+me, I began<br>
+to suspect that Crawfurd, in compliance with his orders, was
+making a<br>
+backward movement, leaving the bridge open to the French, to draw
+them<br>
+on to his line of march, while he should cross over at some more
+distant<br>
+point.</p>
+
+<p>As the night grew later, the storm seemed to increase; the
+waves of the<br>
+foaming river dashed against the frail walls of the hut, while
+its roof,<br>
+rent by the blast, fell in fragments upon the stream, and all
+threatened a<br>
+speedy and perfect ruin.</p>
+
+<p>How I longed for morning! The doubt and uncertainty I suffered
+nearly drove<br>
+me distracted. Of all the casualties my career as a soldier
+opened, none<br>
+had such terrors for me as imprisonment; the very thought of the
+long years<br>
+of inaction and inglorious idleness was worse than any death. My
+wounds,<br>
+and the state of fever I was in, increased the morbid dread upon
+me, and<br>
+had the French captured me at the time, I know not that madness
+of which<br>
+I was not capable. Day broke at last, but slowly and sullenly;
+the gray<br>
+clouds hurried past upon the storm, pouring down the rain in
+torrents as<br>
+they went, and the desolation and dreariness on all sides was
+scarcely<br>
+preferable to the darkness and gloom of night. My eyes were
+turned ever<br>
+towards the plain, across which the winter wind bore the plashing
+rain in<br>
+vast sheets of water; the thunder crashed louder and louder; but
+except the<br>
+sounds of the storm none others met my ear. Not a man, not a
+human figure<br>
+could I see, as I strained my sight towards the distant
+horizon.</p>
+
+<p>The morning crept over, but the storm abated not, and the same
+unchanged<br>
+aspect of dreary desolation prevailed without. At times I thought
+I could<br>
+hear, amidst the noises of the tempest, something like the roll
+of distant<br>
+artillery; but the thunder swelled in sullen roar above all, and
+left me<br>
+uncertain as before.</p>
+
+<p>At last, in a momentary pause of the storm, a tremendous peal
+of heavy<br>
+guns caught my ear, followed by the long rattling of small-arms.
+My heart<br>
+bounded with ecstasy. The thoughts of the battle-field, with all
+its<br>
+changing fortunes, was better, a thousand times better, than the
+despairing<br>
+sense of desertion I labored under. I listened now with
+eagerness, but<br>
+the rain bore down again in torrents, and the crumbling walls and
+falling<br>
+timbers left no other sounds to be heard. Far as my eye could
+reach,<br>
+nothing could still be seen save the dreary monotony of the vast
+plain,<br>
+undulating slightly here and there, but unmarked by a sign of
+man.</p>
+
+<p>Far away towards the horizon I had remarked for some time past
+that the<br>
+clouds resting upon the earth grew blacker and blacker, spreading
+out to<br>
+either side in vast masses, and not broken or wafted along like
+the rest.<br>
+As I watched the phenomenon with an anxious eye, I perceived the
+dense mass<br>
+suddenly appear, as it were, rent asunder, while a volume of
+liquid flame<br>
+rushed wildly out, throwing a lurid glare on every side. One
+terrific clap,<br>
+louder than any thunder, shook the air at this moment, while the
+very earth<br>
+trembled beneath the shock.</p>
+
+<p>As I hesitated what it might be, the heavy din of great guns
+again was<br>
+heard, and from the midst of the black smoke rode forth a dark
+mass,<br>
+which I soon recognized as the horse-artillery at full gallop.
+They were<br>
+directing their course towards the bridge.</p>
+
+<p>As they mounted the little rising ground, they wheeled and
+unlimbered with<br>
+the speed of lightning, just as a strong column of cavalry showed
+above the<br>
+ridge. One tremendous discharge again shook the field, and ere
+the smoke<br>
+cleared away they were again far in retreat.</p>
+
+<p>So much was my attention occupied with this movement that I
+had not<br>
+perceived the long line of infantry that came from the extreme
+left, and<br>
+were now advancing also towards the bridge at a brisk quick-step;
+scattered<br>
+bodies of cavalry came up from different parts, while from the
+little<br>
+valley, every now and then, a rifleman would mount the rising
+ground,<br>
+turning to fire as he retreated. All this boded a rapid and
+disorderly<br>
+retreat; and although as yet I could see nothing of the pursuing
+enemy, I<br>
+knew too well the relative forces of each to have a doubt for the
+result.</p>
+
+<p>At last the head of a French column appeared above the mist,
+and I could<br>
+plainly distinguish the gestures of the officers as they hurried
+their men<br>
+onwards. Meanwhile a loud hurra attracted my attention, and I
+turned my eye<br>
+towards the road which led to the river. Here a small body of the
+95th had<br>
+hurriedly assembled, and formed again, were standing to cover the
+retreat<br>
+of the broken infantry as they passed on eagerly to the bridge;
+in a second<br>
+after the French cuirassiers appeared. Little anticipating
+resistance from<br>
+a flying and disordered mass, they rode headlong forward, and
+although the<br>
+firm attitude and steady bearing of the Highlanders might have
+appalled<br>
+them, they rode heedlessly down upon the square, sabring the very
+men in<br>
+the front rank. Till now not a trigger had been pulled, when
+suddenly the<br>
+word "Fire!" was given, and a withering volley of balls sent the
+cavalry<br>
+column in shivers. One hearty cheer broke from the infantry in
+the rear,<br>
+and I could hear "Gallant Ninety-fifth!" shouted on every side
+along the<br>
+plain.</p>
+
+<p>The whole vast space before me was now one animated
+battle-ground. Our own<br>
+troops, retiring in haste before the overwhelming forces of the
+French,<br>
+occupied every little vantage ground with their guns and light
+infantry,<br>
+charges of cavalry coursing hither and thither; while, as the
+French<br>
+pressed forward, the retreating columns again formed into squares
+to<br>
+permit stragglers to come up. The rattle of small-arms, the heavy
+peal of<br>
+artillery, the earth-quake crash of cavalry, rose on every side,
+while the<br>
+cheers which alternately told of the vacillating fortune of the
+fight rose<br>
+amidst the wild pibroch of the Highlanders.</p>
+
+<p>A tremendous noise now took place on the floor beneath me; and
+looking<br>
+down, I perceived that a sergeant and party of sappers had taken
+possession<br>
+of the little hut, and were busily engaged in piercing the walls
+for<br>
+musketry; and before many minutes had elapsed, a company of the
+Rifles were<br>
+thrown into the building, which, from its commanding position
+above the<br>
+road, enfiladed the whole line of march. The officer in command
+briefly<br>
+informed me that we had been attacked that morning by the French
+in force,<br>
+and "devilishly well thrashed;" that we were now in retreat
+beyond the Coa,<br>
+where we ought to have been three days previously, and desired me
+to cross<br>
+the bridge and get myself out of the way as soon as I possibly
+could.</p>
+
+<p>A twenty-four pounder from the French lines struck the angle
+of the house<br>
+as he spoke, scattering the mortar and broken bricks about us on
+all sides.<br>
+This was warning sufficient for me, wounded and disabled as I
+was; so<br>
+taking the few things I could save in my haste, I hurried from
+the hut, and<br>
+descending the path, now slippery by the heavy rain, I took my
+way across<br>
+the bridge, and established myself on a little rising knoll of
+ground<br>
+beyond, from which a clear view could be obtained of the whole
+field.</p>
+
+<p>I had not been many minutes in my present position ere the
+pass which led<br>
+down to the bridge became thronged with troops, wagons,
+ammunition carts,<br>
+and hospital stores, pressing thickly forward amidst shouting and
+uproar;<br>
+the hills on either side of the way were crowded with troops, who
+formed<br>
+as they came up, the artillery taking up their position on every
+rising<br>
+ground. The firing had already begun, and the heavy booming of
+the large<br>
+guns was heard at intervals amidst the rattling crash of
+musketry. Except<br>
+the narrow road before me, and the high bank of the stream, I
+could see<br>
+nothing; but the tumult and din, which grew momentarily louder,
+told that<br>
+the tide of battle raged nearer and nearer. Still the retreat
+continued;<br>
+and at length the heavy artillery came thundering across the
+narrow bridge<br>
+followed by stragglers of all arms, and wounded, hurrying to the
+rear. The<br>
+sharpshooters and the Highlanders held the heights above the
+stream, thus<br>
+covering the retiring columns; but I could plainly perceive that
+their fire<br>
+was gradually slackening, and that the guns which flanked their
+position<br>
+were withdrawn, and everything bespoke a speedy retreat. A
+tremendous<br>
+discharge of musketry at this moment, accompanied by a deafening
+cheer,<br>
+announced the advance of the French, and soon the head of the
+Highland<br>
+brigade was seen descending towards the bridge, followed by the
+Rifles and<br>
+the 95th; the cavalry, consisting of the 11th and 14th Light
+Dragoons, were<br>
+now formed in column of attack, and the infantry deployed into
+line; and in<br>
+an instant after, high above the din and crash of battle, I heard
+the word<br>
+"Charge!" The rising crest of the hill hid them from my sight,
+but my heart<br>
+bounded with ecstasy as I listened to the clanging sound of the
+cavalry<br>
+advance. Meanwhile the infantry pressed on, and forming upon the
+bank,<br>
+took up a strong position in front of the bridge; the heavy guns
+were<br>
+also unlimbered, riflemen scattered through the low copse-wood,
+and every<br>
+precaution taken to defend the pass to the last. For a moment all
+my<br>
+attention was riveted to the movements upon our own side of the
+stream,<br>
+when suddenly the cavalry bugle sounded the recall, and the same
+moment<br>
+the staff came galloping across the bridge. One officer I could
+perceive,<br>
+covered with orders and trappings, his head was bare, and his
+horse,<br>
+splashed with blood and foam, moved lamely and with difficulty;
+he turned<br>
+in the middle of the bridge, as if irresolute whether to retreat
+farther.<br>
+One glance at him showed me the bronzed, manly features of our
+leader.<br>
+Whatever his resolve, the matter was soon decided for him, for
+the cavalry<br>
+came galloping swiftly down the slope, and in an instant the
+bridge was<br>
+blocked up by the retreating forces, while the French as suddenly
+appearing<br>
+above the height, opened a plunging fire upon their defenceless
+enemies;<br>
+their cheer of triumph was answered by our fellows from the
+opposite bank,<br>
+and a heavy cannonade thundered along the rocky valley, sending
+up a<br>
+hundred echoes as it went.</p>
+
+<p>The scene now became one of overwhelming interest; the French,
+posting<br>
+their guns upon the height, replied to our fire, while their
+line, breaking<br>
+into skirmishers, descended the banks to the river's edge, and
+poured<br>
+in one sheet of galling musketry. The road to the bridge, swept
+by our<br>
+artillery, presented not a single file; and although a movement
+among<br>
+the French announced the threat of an attack, the deadly service
+of the<br>
+artillery seemed to pronounce it hopeless.</p>
+
+<p>A strong cavalry force stood inactively spectators of the
+combat, on the<br>
+French side, among whom I now remarked some bustle and
+preparation, and as<br>
+I looked an officer rode boldly to the river's edge, and spurring
+his horse<br>
+forward, plunged into the stream. The swollen and angry torrent,
+increased<br>
+by the late rains, boiled like barm, and foamed around him as he
+advanced;<br>
+when suddenly his horse appeared to have lost its footing, and
+the rapid<br>
+current, circling around him, bore him along with it. He labored
+madly, but<br>
+in vain, to retrace his steps; the rolling torrent rose above his
+saddle,<br>
+and all that his gallant steed could do was barely sufficient to
+keep<br>
+afloat; both man and horse were carried down between the
+contending<br>
+armies. I could see him wave his hand to his comrades, as if in
+adieu. One<br>
+deafening cheer of admiration rose from the French lines, and the
+next<br>
+moment he was seen to fall from his seat, and his body, shattered
+with<br>
+balls, floated mournfully upon the stream.</p>
+
+<p>This little incident, to which both armies were witnesses,
+seemed to have<br>
+called forth all the fiercer passions of the contending forces; a
+loud yell<br>
+of taunting triumph rose from the Highlanders, responded to by a
+cry of<br>
+vengeance from the French, and the same moment the head of a
+column was<br>
+seen descending the narrow causeway to the bridge, while an
+officer with a<br>
+whole blaze of decorations and crosses sprang from his horse and
+took the<br>
+lead. The little drummer, a child of scarcely ten years old,
+tripped gayly<br>
+on, beating his little <i>pas des charge</i>, seeming rather like the
+play of<br>
+infancy than the summons to death and carnage, as the heavy guns
+of the<br>
+French opened a volume of fire and flame to cover the attacking
+column. For<br>
+a moment all was hid from our eyes; the moment after the
+grape-shot swept<br>
+along the narrow causeway; and the bridge, which but a second
+before was<br>
+crowded with the life and courage of a noble column, was now one
+heap of<br>
+dead and dying. The gallant fellow who led them on fell among the
+first<br>
+rank, and the little child, as if kneeling, was struck dead
+beside the<br>
+parapet; his fair hair floated across his cold features, and
+seemed in its<br>
+motion to lend a look of life where the heart's throb had ceased
+forever.<br>
+The artillery again re-opened upon us; and when the smoke had
+cleared away,<br>
+we discovered that the French had advanced to the middle of the
+bridge and<br>
+carried off the body of their general. Twice they essayed to
+cross, and<br>
+twice the death-dealing fire of our guns covered the narrow
+bridge with<br>
+slain, while by the wild pibroch of the 42d, swelling madly into
+notes of<br>
+exultation and triumph, the Highlanders could scarcely be
+prevented from<br>
+advancing hand to hand with the foe. Gradually the French
+slackened their<br>
+fire, their great guns were one by one withdrawn from the
+heights, and a<br>
+dropping, irregular musketry at intervals sustained the fight,
+which, ere<br>
+sunset, ceased altogether; and thus ended "The Battle of the
+Coa!"</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER VI.</p>
+
+<p>THE NIGHT MARCH.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had the night fallen when our retreat commenced.
+Tired and weary<br>
+as our brave fellows felt, but little repose was allowed them;
+their<br>
+bivouac fires were blazing brightly, and they had just thrown
+themselves<br>
+in groups around them, when the word to fall in was passed from
+troop to<br>
+troop, and from battalion to battalion,&mdash;no trumpet, no bugle
+called them<br>
+to their ranks. It was necessary that all should be done
+noiselessly and<br>
+speedily; while, therefore, the wounded were marched to the
+front, and<br>
+the heavy artillery with them, a brigade of light four pounders
+and two<br>
+squadrons of cavalry held the heights above the bridge, and the
+infantry,<br>
+forming into three columns, began their march.</p>
+
+<p>My wound, forgotten in the heat and excitement of the
+conflict, was now<br>
+becoming excessively painful, and I gladly availed myself of a
+place in a<br>
+wagon, where, stretched upon some fresh straw, with no other
+covering save<br>
+the starry sky, I soon fell sound asleep, and neither the heavy
+jolting of<br>
+the rough conveyance, nor the deep and rutty road, were able to
+disturb my<br>
+slumbers. Still through my sleep I heard the sounds around me,
+the heavy<br>
+tramp of infantry, the clash of the moving squadrons, and the
+dull roll of<br>
+artillery; and ever and anon the half-stifled cry of pain,
+mingling with<br>
+the reckless carol of some drinking-song, all flitted through my
+dreams,<br>
+lending to my thoughts of home and friends a memory of glorious
+war.</p>
+
+<p>All the vicissitudes of a soldier's life passed then in review
+before me,<br>
+elicited in some measure by the things about. The pomp and
+grandeur, the<br>
+misery and meanness, the triumph, the defeat, the moment of
+victory, and<br>
+the hour of death were there, and in that vivid dream I lived a
+life long.</p>
+
+<p>I awoke at length, the cold and chilling air which follows
+midnight blew<br>
+around me, and my wounded arm felt as though it were frozen. I
+tried to<br>
+cover myself beneath the straw, but in vain; and as my limbs
+trembled and<br>
+my teeth chattered, I thought again of home, where, at that
+moment, the<br>
+poorest menial of my uncle's house was better lodged than I; and
+strange to<br>
+say, something of pride mingled with the thought, and in my
+lonely heart a<br>
+feeling of elation cheered me.</p>
+
+<p>These reflections were interrupted by the sound of a voice
+near me, which I<br>
+at once knew to be O'Shaughnessy's; he was on foot, and speaking
+evidently<br>
+in some excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you, Maurice, some confounded blunder there must be;
+sure, he was<br>
+left in the cottage near the bridge, and no one ever saw him
+after."</p>
+
+<p>"The French took it from the Rifles before we crossed the
+river. By Jove!<br>
+I'll wager my chance of promotion against a pint of sherry, he'll
+turn up<br>
+somewhere in the morning; those Galway chaps have as many lives
+as a cat."</p>
+
+<p>"See, now, Maurice, I wouldn't for a full colonelcy anything
+would happen<br>
+to him; I like the boy."</p>
+
+<p>"So do I myself; but I tell you there's no danger of him. Did
+you ask<br>
+Sparks anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ask Sparks! God help you! Sparks would go off in a fit at the
+sight of me.<br>
+No, no, poor creature! it's little use it would be my speaking to
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"Why so, Doctor!" cried I, from my straw couch.</p>
+
+<p>"May I never, if it's not him! Charley, my son, I'm glad
+you're safe.<br>
+'Faith, I thought you were on your way to Verdun by this
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, I told you he'd find his way here&mdash;But, O'Mealey, dear,
+you're<br>
+mighty could,&mdash;a rigor, as old M'Lauchlan would call it."</p>
+
+<p>"E'en sae, Maister Quill," said a broad Scotch accent behind
+him; "and I<br>
+canna see ony objection to giein' things their right names."</p>
+
+<p>"The top of the morning to you," said Quill, familiarly
+patting him on the<br>
+back; "how goes it, old Brimstone?"</p>
+
+<p>The conversation might not have taken a very amicable turn had
+M'Lauchlan<br>
+heard the latter part of this speech; but, as happily he was
+engaged<br>
+unpacking a small canteen which he had placed in the wagon, it
+passed<br>
+unnoticed.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll nae dislike a toothfu' of something warm, Major," said
+he,<br>
+presenting a glass to O'Shaughnessy; "and if ye'll permit me, Mr.
+O'Mealey,<br>
+to help you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A thousand thanks, Doctor; but I fear a broken arm&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There's naething in the whiskey to prevent the proper
+formation of<br>
+callus."</p>
+
+<p>"By the rock of Cashel, it never made any one callous," said
+O'Shaughnessy,<br>
+mistaking the import of the phrase.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye are nae drinking frae the flask?" said the doctor, turning
+in some<br>
+agitation towards Quill.</p>
+
+<p>"Devil a bit, my darling. I've a little horn convaniency here,
+that holds<br>
+half-a-pint, nice measure."</p>
+
+<p>I don't imagine that our worthy friend participated in Quill's
+admiration<br>
+of the "convaniency," for he added, in a dry tone:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ye may as weel tak your liquor frae a glass, like a
+Christian, as stick<br>
+your nose in a coo's horn."</p>
+
+<p>"By my conscience, you're no small judge of spirits, wherever
+you learned<br>
+it," said the major; "it's like Islay malt!"</p>
+
+<p>"I was aye reckoned a gude ane," said the doctor, "and my
+mither's brither<br>
+Caimbogie had na his like in the north country. Ye may be heerd
+tell what<br>
+he aince said to the Duchess of Argyle, when she sent for him to
+taste her<br>
+claret."</p>
+
+<p>"Never heard of it," quoth Quill; "let's have it by all means.
+I'd like to<br>
+hear what the duchess said to him."</p>
+
+<p>"It was na what the duchess said to him, but what he said to
+the duchess,<br>
+ye ken. The way of it was this: My uncle Caimbogie was aye up at
+the<br>
+castle, for besides his knowledge of liquor, there was nae his
+match for<br>
+deer-stalking, or spearing a salmon, in those parts. He was a
+great, rough<br>
+carle, it's true; but ane ye'd rather crack wi' than fight
+wi'.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, ae day they had a grand dinner at the duke's, and there
+were plenty<br>
+o' great southern lords and braw leddies in velvets and satin;
+and vara<br>
+muckle surprised they were at my uncle, when he came in wi' his
+tartan<br>
+kilt, in full Highland dress, as the head of a clan ought to do.
+Caimbogie,<br>
+however, pe'd nae attention to them; but he eat his dinner, and
+drank his<br>
+wine, and talked away about fallow and red deer, and at last the
+duchess,<br>
+for she was aye fond o' him, addressed him frae the head o' the
+table:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Cambogie,' quoth she, 'I'd like to hae your opinion about
+that wine. It's<br>
+some the duke has just received, and we should like to hear what
+you think<br>
+of it.'</p>
+
+<p>"'It's nae sae bad, my leddy,' said my uncle; for ye see he
+was a man of<br>
+few words, and never flattered onybody.</p>
+
+<p>"'Then you don't approve much of it?' said the duchess.</p>
+
+<p>"'I've drank better, and I've drank waur,' quo' he.</p>
+
+<p>"'I'm sorry you don't like it, Caimbogie,' said the duchess,
+'for it can<br>
+never be popular now,&mdash;we have such a dependence upon your
+taste.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I cauna say ower muckle for my <i>taste</i>, my leddy, but ae
+thing I <i>will</i><br>
+say,&mdash;I've a most damnable <i>smell!</i>'</p>
+
+<p>"I hear that never since the auld walls stood was there ever
+the like o'<br>
+the laughing that followed; the puir duke himsel' was carried
+away, and<br>
+nearly had a fit, and a' the grand lords and leddies a'most died
+of it. But<br>
+see here, the earle has nae left a drap o' whiskey in the
+flask."</p>
+
+<p>"The last glass I drained to your respectable uncle's health,"
+said Quill,<br>
+with a most professional gravity. "Now, Charlie, make a little
+room for me<br>
+in the straw."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor soon mounted beside me, and giving me a share of
+his ample<br>
+cloak, considerably ameliorated my situation.</p>
+
+<p>"So you knew Sparks, Doctor?" said I, with a strong curiosity
+to hear<br>
+something of his early acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>"That I did: I knew him when he was an ensign in the 10th
+Foot; and, to say<br>
+the truth, he is not much changed since that time,&mdash;the same
+lively look of<br>
+a sick cod-fish about his gray eyes; the same disorderly wave of
+his yellow<br>
+hair; the same whining voice, and that confounded apothecary's
+laugh."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, Doctor, Sparks is a good fellow at heart; I won't
+have him<br>
+abused. I never knew he had been in the infantry; I should think
+it must<br>
+have been another of the same name."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all; there's only one like him in the service, and
+that's himself.<br>
+Confound it, man, I'd know his skin upon a bush; he was only
+three weeks<br>
+in the Tenth, and, indeed, your humble servant has the whole
+merit of his<br>
+leaving it so soon."</p>
+
+<p>"Do let us hear how that happened."</p>
+
+<p>"Simply thus: The jolly Tenth were some four years ago the
+pleasantest<br>
+corps in the army; from the lieutenant-colonel down to the last
+joined<br>
+sub., all were out-and-outers,&mdash;real gay fellows. The mess was,
+in fact,<br>
+like a pleasant club, and if you did not suit it, the best thing
+you could<br>
+do was to sell out or exchange into a slower regiment; and,
+indeed, this<br>
+very wholesome truth was not very long in reaching your ears some
+way or<br>
+other, and a man that could remain after being given this hint,
+was likely<br>
+to go afterwards without one."</p>
+
+<p>Just as Dr. Quill reached this part of his story, an orderly
+dragoon<br>
+galloped furiously past, and the next moment an aide-de-camp rode
+by,<br>
+calling as he passed us,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Close up, there! Close up! Get forward, my lads! get
+forward!"</p>
+
+<p>It was evident, from the stir and bustle about, that some
+movement was<br>
+being made; and soon after, a dropping, irregular fire from the
+rear showed<br>
+that our cavalry were engaged with the enemy. The affair was
+scarcely of<br>
+five minutes' duration, and our march resumed all its former
+regularity<br>
+immediately after.</p>
+
+<p>I now turned to the doctor to resume his story, but he was
+gone; at what<br>
+moment he left I could not say, but O'Shaughnessy was also
+absent, nor did<br>
+I again meet with them for a considerable time after.</p>
+
+<p>Towards daybreak we halted at Bonares, when, my wound
+demanding rest and<br>
+attention, I was billeted in the village, and consigned to all
+the miseries<br>
+of a sick bed.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER VII.</p>
+
+<p>THE JOURNEY.</p>
+
+<p>With that disastrous day my campaigning was destined, for some
+time<br>
+at least, to conclude. My wound, which grew from hour to hour
+more<br>
+threatening, at length began to menace the loss of the arm, and
+by the<br>
+recommendation of the regimental surgeons, I was ordered back to
+Lisbon.</p>
+
+<p>Mike, by this time perfectly restored, prepared everything for
+my<br>
+departure, and on the third day after the battle of the Coa, I
+began my<br>
+journey with downcast spirits and depressed heart. The poor
+fellow was,<br>
+however, a kind and affectionate nurse, and unlike many others,
+his cares<br>
+were not limited to the mere bodily wants of his patient,&mdash;he
+sustained,<br>
+as well as he was able, my drooping resolution, rallied my
+spirits, and<br>
+cheered my courage. With the very little Portuguese he possessed,
+he<br>
+contrived to make every imaginable species of bargain; always
+managed a<br>
+good billet; kept every one in good humor, and rarely left his
+quarters in<br>
+the morning without a most affective leave-taking, and reiterated
+promises<br>
+to renew his visit.</p>
+
+<p>Our journeys were usually short ones, and already two days had
+elapsed,<br>
+when, towards nightfall, we entered the little hamlet of Jaffra.
+During the<br>
+entire of that day, the pain of my wounded limb had been
+excruciating; the<br>
+fatigue of the road and the heat had brought back violent
+inflammation, and<br>
+when at last the little village came in sight, my reason was fast
+yielding<br>
+to the torturing agonies of my wound. But the transports with
+which I<br>
+greeted my resting-place were soon destined to a change; for as
+we drew<br>
+near, not a light was to be seen, not a sound to be heard, not
+even a dog<br>
+barked as the heavy mule-cart rattled over the uneven road. No
+trace of<br>
+any living thing was there. The little hamlet lay sleeping in the
+pale<br>
+moonlight, its streets deserted, and its homes tenantless; our
+own<br>
+footsteps alone echoed along the dreary causeway. Here and there,
+as we<br>
+advanced farther, we found some relics of broken furniture and
+house-gear;<br>
+most of the doors lay open, but nothing remained within save bare
+walls;<br>
+the embers still smoked in many places upon the hearth, and
+showed us that<br>
+the flight of the inhabitants had been recent. Yet everything
+convinced<br>
+us that the French had not been there; there was no trace of the
+reckless<br>
+violence and wanton cruelty which marked their footsteps
+everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>All proved that the desertion had been voluntary; perhaps in
+compliance<br>
+with an order of our commander-in-chief, who frequently desired
+any<br>
+intended line of march of the enemy to be left thus a desert. As
+we<br>
+sauntered slowly on from street to street, half hoping that some
+one human<br>
+being yet remained behind, and casting our eyes from side to side
+in search<br>
+of quarters for the night, Mike suddenly came running up,
+saying,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have it, sir; I've found it out. There's people living down
+that small<br>
+street there; I saw a light this minute as I passed."</p>
+
+<p>I turned immediately, and accompanied by the mule-driver,
+followed Mike<br>
+across a little open square into a small and narrow street, at
+the end<br>
+of which a light was seen faintly twinkling. We hurried on and in
+a few<br>
+minutes reached a high wall of solid masonry, from a niche of
+which we now<br>
+discovered, to our utter disappointment, the light proceeded. It
+was a<br>
+small lamp placed before a little waxen image of the Virgin, and
+was<br>
+probably the last act of piety of some poor villager ere he left
+his home<br>
+and hearth forever. There it burned, brightly and tranquilly,
+throwing its<br>
+mellow ray upon the cold, deserted stones.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever impatience I might have given way to in a moment of
+chagrin was<br>
+soon repressed, as I saw my two followers, uncovering their heads
+in silent<br>
+reverence, kneel down before the little shrine. There was
+something at once<br>
+touching and solemn in this simultaneous feeling of homage from
+the hearts<br>
+of those removed in country, language, and in blood. They bent
+meekly down,<br>
+their heads bowed upon their bosoms, while with muttering voices
+each<br>
+offered up his prayer. All sense of their disappointment, all
+memory of<br>
+their forlorn state, seemed to have yielded to more powerful and
+absorbing<br>
+thoughts, as they opened their hearts in prayer.</p>
+
+<p>My eyes were still fixed upon them when suddenly Mike, whose
+devotion<br>
+seemed of the briefest, sprang to his legs, and with a spirit of
+levity<br>
+but little in accordance with his late proceedings, commenced a
+series of<br>
+kicking, rapping, and knocking at a small oak postern sufficient
+to have<br>
+aroused a whole convent from their cells. "House there! Good
+people<br>
+within!"&mdash;bang, bang, bang; but the echoes alone responded to his
+call,<br>
+and the sounds died away at length in the distant streets,
+leaving all as<br>
+silent and dreary as before.</p>
+
+<p>Our Portuguese friend, who by this time had finished his
+orisons, now began<br>
+a vigorous attack upon the small door, and with the assistance of
+Mike,<br>
+armed with a fragment of granite about the size of a man's head,
+at length<br>
+separated the frame from the hinges, and sent the whole mass
+prostrate<br>
+before us.</p>
+
+<p>The moon was just rising as we entered the little park, where
+gravelled<br>
+walks, neatly kept and well-trimmed, bespoke recent care and
+attention;<br>
+following a handsome alley of lime-trees, we reached a little
+<i>jet d'eau</i>,<br>
+whose sparkling fountain shone diamond-like in the moonbeams, and
+escaping<br>
+from the edge of a vast shell, ran murmuring amidst mossy stones
+and<br>
+water-lilies that, however naturally they seemed thrown around,
+bespoke<br>
+also the hand of taste in their position. On turning from the
+spot, we came<br>
+directly in front of an old but handsome ch&acirc;teau, before
+which stretched<br>
+a terrace of considerable extent. Its balustraded parapet lined
+with<br>
+orange-trees, now in full blossom, scented the still air with
+delicious<br>
+odor; marble statues peeped here and there amidst the foliage,
+while a rich<br>
+acacia, loaded with flowers, covered the walls of the building,
+and hung in<br>
+vast masses of variegated blossom across the tall windows.</p>
+
+<p>As leaning on Mike's arm I slowly ascended the steps of the
+terrace, I was<br>
+more than ever struck with the silence and death-like stillness
+around;<br>
+except the gentle plash of the fountain, all was at rest; the
+very plants<br>
+seemed to sleep in the yellow moonlight, and not a trace of any
+living<br>
+thing was there.</p>
+
+<p>The massive door lay open as we entered the spacious hall
+flagged with<br>
+marble and surrounded with armorial bearings. We advanced farther
+and came<br>
+to a broad and handsome stair, which led us to a long gallery,
+from which<br>
+a suit of rooms opened, looking towards the front part of the
+building.<br>
+Wherever we went, the furniture appeared perfectly untouched;
+nothing was<br>
+removed; the very chairs were grouped around the windows and the
+tables;<br>
+books, as if suddenly dropped from their readers' hands, were
+scattered<br>
+upon the sofas and the ottomans; and in one small apartment,
+whose blue<br>
+satin walls and damask drapery bespoke a boudoir, a rich mantilla
+of<br>
+black velvet and a silk glove were thrown upon a chair. It was
+clear the<br>
+desertion had been most recent, and everything indicated that no
+time had<br>
+been given to the fugitives to prepare for flight. What a sad
+picture of<br>
+war was there! To think of those whose home was endeared to them
+by all<br>
+the refinements of cultivated life and all the associations of
+years of<br>
+happiness sent out upon the wide world wanderers and houseless,
+while<br>
+their hearth, sacred by every tie that binds us to our kindred,
+was to<br>
+be desecrated by the ruthless and savage hands of a ruffian
+soldiery. I<br>
+thought of them,&mdash;perhaps at that very hour their thoughts were
+clinging<br>
+round the old walls, remembering each well-beloved spot, while
+they took<br>
+their lonely path through mountain and through valley,&mdash;and felt
+ashamed<br>
+and abashed at my own intrusion there. While thus my revery ran
+on, I<br>
+had not perceived that Mike, whose views were very practical upon
+all<br>
+occasions, had lighted a most cheerful fire upon the hearth, and
+disposing<br>
+a large sofa before it, had carefully closed the curtains; and
+was, in<br>
+fact, making himself and his master as much at home as though he
+had spent<br>
+his life there.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it a beautiful place, Misther Charles? And this little
+room, doesn't<br>
+it remind you of the blue bed-room in O'Malley Castle, barrin'
+the elegant<br>
+view out upon the Shannon, and the mountain of Scariff?"</p>
+
+<p>Nothing short of Mike's patriotism could forgive such a
+comparison; but,<br>
+however, I did not contradict him as he ran on:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I knew well there was luck in store for us this
+evening; and ye see<br>
+the handful of prayers I threw away outside wasn't lost.
+Jos&eacute;'s making<br>
+the beasts comfortable in the stable, and I'm thinking we'll none
+of us<br>
+complain of our quarters. But you're not eating your supper; and
+the<br>
+beautiful hare-pie that I stole this morning, won't you taste it?
+Well, a<br>
+glass of Malaga? Not a glass of Malaga? Oh, mother of Moses!
+what's this<br>
+for?"</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, the fever produced by the long and toilsome
+journey had<br>
+gained considerably on me, and except copious libations of cold
+water, I<br>
+could touch nothing; my arm, too, was much more painful than
+before. Mike<br>
+soon perceived that rest and quietness were most important to me
+at the<br>
+moment, and having with difficulty been prevailed upon to swallow
+a few<br>
+hurried mouthfuls, the poor fellow disposed cushions around me in
+every<br>
+imaginable form for comfort; and then, placing my wounded limb in
+its<br>
+easiest position, he extinguished the lamp, and sat silently down
+beside<br>
+the hearth, without speaking another word.</p>
+
+<p>Fatigue and exhaustion, more powerful than pain, soon produced
+their<br>
+effects upon me, and I fell asleep; but it was no refreshing
+slumber which<br>
+visited my heavy eyelids; the, slow fever of suffering had been
+hour by<br>
+hour increasing, and my dreams presented nothing but scenes of
+agony and<br>
+torture. Now I thought that, unhorsed and wounded, I was trampled
+beneath<br>
+the clanging hoofs of charging cavalry; now I felt the sharp
+steel piercing<br>
+my flesh, and heard the loud cry of a victorious enemy; then,
+methought, I<br>
+was stretched upon a litter, covered by gore and mangled by a
+grape-shot.<br>
+I thought I saw my brother officers approach and look sadly upon
+me, while<br>
+one, whose face I could not remember, muttered: "I should not
+have known<br>
+him." The dreadful hospital of Talavera, and all its scenes of
+agony, came<br>
+up before me, and I thought that I lay waiting my turn for
+amputation. This<br>
+last impression, more horrible to me than all the rest, made me
+spring from<br>
+my couch, and I awoke. The cold drops of perspiration stood upon
+my brow,<br>
+my mouth was parched and open, and my temples throbbed so that I
+could<br>
+count their beatings; for some seconds I could not throw off the
+frightful<br>
+illusion I labored under, and it was only by degrees I
+recovered<br>
+consciousness and remembered where I was. Before me, and on one
+side of the<br>
+bright wood-fire, sat Mike, who, apparently deep in thought,
+gazed fixedly<br>
+at the blaze. The start I gave on awaking had not attracted his
+attention,<br>
+and I could see, as the flickering glare fell upon his features,
+that he<br>
+was pale and ghastly, while his eyes were riveted upon the fire;
+his lips<br>
+moved rapidly, as if in prayer, and his locked hands were
+pressed<br>
+firmly upon his bosom; his voice, at first inaudible, I could
+gradually<br>
+distinguish, and at length heard the following muttered
+sentences:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mother of mercy! So far from his home and his people, and
+so young to<br>
+die in a strange land&mdash;There it is again." Here he appeared
+listening<br>
+to some sounds from without. "Oh, wirra, wirra, I know it
+well!&mdash;the<br>
+winding-sheet, the winding-sheet! There it is; my own eyes saw
+it!"<br>
+The tears coursed fast upon his pale cheeks, and his voice grew
+almost<br>
+inaudible, as rocking to and fro, for some time he seemed in a
+very stupor<br>
+of grief; when at last, in a faint, subdued tone, he broke into
+one of<br>
+those sad and plaintive airs of his country, which only need the
+moment of<br>
+depression to make them wring the very heart in agony.</p>
+
+<p>His song was that to which Moore has appended the beautiful
+lines, "Come<br>
+rest on this bosom." The following imperfect translation may
+serve to<br>
+convey some impression of the words, which in Mike's version were
+Irish:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "The day was declining,<br>
+    The dark night drew near,<br>
+    And the old lord grew sadder<br>
+    And paler with fear:<br>
+    'Come listen, my daughter,<br>
+    Come nearer, oh, near!<br>
+    Is't the wind or the water<br>
+    That sighs in my ear?'</p>
+
+<p>    "Not the wind nor the water<br>
+    Now stirred the night air,<br>
+    But a warning far sadder,&mdash;.<br>
+    The Banshee was there!<br>
+    Now rising, now swelling,<br>
+    On the night wind it bore<br>
+    One cadence, still telling,<br>
+    'I want thee, Rossmore!'</p>
+
+<p>    "And then fast came his breath,<br>
+    And more fixed grew his eye;<br>
+    And the shadow of death<br>
+    Told his hour was nigh.<br>
+    Ere the dawn of that morning<br>
+    The struggle was o'er,<br>
+    For when thrice came the warning<br>
+    A corpse was Rossmore!"</p>
+
+<p>The plaintive air to which these words were sung fell heavily
+upon my<br>
+heart, and it needed but the low and nervous condition I was in
+to make me<br>
+feel their application to myself. But so it is; the very
+superstition your<br>
+reason rejects and your sense spurns, has, from old association,
+from<br>
+habit, and from mere nationality too, a hold upon your hopes and
+fears that<br>
+demands more firmness and courage than a sick-bed possesses to
+combat with<br>
+success; and I now listened with an eager ear to mark if the
+Banshee<br>
+cried, rather than sought to fortify myself by any recurrence to
+my own<br>
+convictions. Meanwhile Mike's attitude became one of listening
+attention.<br>
+Not a finger moved; he scarce seemed even to breathe; the state
+of suspense<br>
+I suffered from was maddening; and at last, unable to bear it
+longer, I<br>
+was about to speak, when suddenly, from the floor beneath us,
+one<br>
+long-sustained note swelled upon the air and died away again,
+and<br>
+immediately after, to the cheerful sounds of a guitar, we heard
+the husky<br>
+voice of our Portuguese guide indulging himself in a
+love-ditty.</p>
+
+<p>Ashamed of myself for my fears, I kept silent; but Mike, who
+felt only one<br>
+sensation,&mdash;that of unmixed satisfaction at his mistake,&mdash;rubbed
+his hands<br>
+pleasantly, filled up his glass, drank it, and refilled; while
+with an<br>
+accent of reassured courage, he briefly remarked,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Jos&eacute;, if that be singing, upon my conscience
+I wonder what<br>
+crying is like!"</p>
+
+<p>I could not forbear a laugh at the criticism; and in a moment,
+the poor<br>
+fellow, who up to that moment believed me sleeping, was beside
+me. I saw<br>
+from his manner that he dreaded lest I had been listening to his
+melancholy<br>
+song, and had overheard any of his gloomy forebodings; and as he
+cheered<br>
+my spirits and spoke encouragingly, I could remark that he made
+more than<br>
+usual endeavors to appear light-hearted and at ease. Determined,
+however,<br>
+not to let him escape so easily, I questioned him about his
+belief in<br>
+ghosts and spirits, at which he endeavored, as he ever did when
+the subject<br>
+was an unpleasing one, to avoid the discussion; but rather
+perceiving that<br>
+I indulged in no irreverent disrespect of these matters, he grew
+gradually<br>
+more open, treating the affair with that strange mixture of
+credulity and<br>
+mockery which formed his estimate of most things,&mdash;now seeming to
+suppose<br>
+that any palpable rejection of them might entail sad consequences
+in<br>
+future, now half ashamed to go the whole length in his
+credulity.</p>
+
+<p>"And so, Mike, you never saw a ghost yourself?&mdash;that you
+acknowledge?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, I never saw a real ghost; but sure there's many a
+thing I never<br>
+saw; but Mrs. Moore, the housekeeper, seen two. And your
+grandfather that's<br>
+gone&mdash;the Lord be good to him!&mdash;used to walk once a year in Lurra
+Abbey;<br>
+and sure you know the story about Tim Clinchy that was seen every
+Saturday<br>
+night coming out of the cellar with a candle and a mug of wine
+and a pipe<br>
+in his mouth, till Mr. Barry laid him. It cost his honor your
+uncle ten<br>
+pounds in Masses to make him easy; not to speak of a new lock and
+two bolts<br>
+on the cellar door."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard all about that; but as you never yourself saw
+any of these<br>
+things&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But sure my father did, and that's the same any day. My
+father seen the<br>
+greatest ghost that ever was seen in the county Cork, and spent
+the evening<br>
+with him, that's more."</p>
+
+<p>"Spent the evening with him!&mdash;what do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just that, devil a more nor less. If your honor wasn't so
+weak, and the<br>
+story wasn't a trying one, I'd like to tell it to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Out with it by all means, Mike; I am not disposed to sleep;
+and now that<br>
+we are upon these matters, my curiosity is strongly excited by
+your worthy<br>
+father's experience."</p>
+
+<p>Thus encouraged, having trimmed the fire and reseated himself
+beside the<br>
+blaze, Mike began; but as a ghost is no every-day personage in
+our history,<br>
+I must give him a chapter to himself.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER VIII.</p>
+
+<p>THE GHOST.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I believe your honor heard me tell long ago how my
+father left the<br>
+army, and the way that he took to another line of life that was
+more to his<br>
+liking. And so it was, he was happy as the day was long; he drove
+a hearse<br>
+for Mr. Callaghan of Cork for many years, and a pleasant place it
+was; for<br>
+ye see, my father was a 'cute man, and knew something of the
+world; and<br>
+though he was a droll devil, and could sing a funny song when he
+was among<br>
+the boys, no sooner had he the big black cloak on him and the
+weepers, and<br>
+he seated on the high box with the six long-tailed blacks before
+him, you'd<br>
+really think it was his own mother was inside, he looked so
+melancholy and<br>
+miserable. The sexton and gravedigger was nothing to my father;
+and he had<br>
+a look about his eye&mdash;to be sure there was a reason for it&mdash;that
+you'd<br>
+think he was up all night crying; though it's little indulgence
+he took<br>
+that way.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, of all Mr. Callaghan's men, there was none so great a
+favorite as my<br>
+father. The neighbors were all fond of him.</p>
+
+<p>"'A kind crayture, every inch of him!' the women would say.
+'Did ye see his<br>
+face at Mrs. Delany's funeral?'</p>
+
+<p>"'True for you,' another would remark; 'he mistook the road
+with grief, and<br>
+stopped at a shebeen house instead of Kilmurry church.'</p>
+
+<p>"I need say no more, only one thing,&mdash;that it was principally
+among the<br>
+farmers and the country people my father was liked so much. The
+great<br>
+people and the quality&mdash;ax your pardon; but sure isn't it true,
+Mister<br>
+Charles?&mdash;they don't fret so much after their fathers and
+brothers, and<br>
+they care little who's driving them, whether it was a decent,
+respectable<br>
+man like my father, or a chap with a grin on him like a rat-trap.
+And so<br>
+it happened that my father used to travel half the county; going
+here and<br>
+there wherever there was trade stirring; and faix, a man didn't
+think<br>
+himself rightly buried if my father wasn't there; for ye see, he
+knew all<br>
+about it: he could tell to a quart of spirits what would be
+wanting for a<br>
+wake; he knew all the good criers for miles round; and I've heard
+it was a<br>
+beautiful sight to see him standing on a hill, arranging the
+procession as<br>
+they walked into the churchyard, and giving the word like a
+captain,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Come on, the stiff; now the friends of the stiff; now the
+pop'lace.'</p>
+
+<p>"That's what he used to say, and troth he was always repeating
+it, when he<br>
+was a little gone in drink,&mdash;for that's the time his spirits
+would rise,<br>
+and he'd think he was burying half Munster.</p>
+
+<p>"And sure it was a real pleasure and a pride to be buried in
+them times;<br>
+for av it was only a small farmer with a potato garden, my father
+would<br>
+come down with the black cloak on him, and three yards of crape
+behind his<br>
+hat, and set all the children crying and yelling for half a mile
+round;<br>
+and then the way he'd walk before them with a spade on his
+shoulder, and<br>
+sticking it down in the ground, clap his hat on the top of it, to
+make it<br>
+look like a chief mourner. It was a beautiful sight!"</p>
+
+<p>"But Mike, if you indulge much longer in this flattering
+recollection of<br>
+your father, I'm afraid we shall lose sight of the ghost
+entirely."</p>
+
+<p>"No fear in life, your honor; I'm coming to him now. Well, it
+was this<br>
+way it happened: In the winter of the great frost, about
+forty-two or<br>
+forty-three years ago, the ould priest of Tullonghmurray took ill
+and died.<br>
+He was sixty years priest of the parish, and mightily beloved by
+all<br>
+the people, and good reason for it; a pleasanter man, and a
+more<br>
+social crayture never lived,&mdash;'twas himself was the life of the
+whole<br>
+country-side. A wedding nor a christening wasn't lucky av he
+wasn't there,<br>
+sitting at the top of the table, with may be his arm round the
+bride<br>
+herself, or the baby on his lap, a smoking jug of punch before
+him, and as<br>
+much kindness in his eye as would make the fortunes of twenty
+hypocrites if<br>
+they had it among them. And then he was so good to the poor; the
+Priory was<br>
+always so full of ould men and ould women sitting around the big
+fire in<br>
+the kitchen that the cook could hardly get near it. There they
+were, eating<br>
+their meals and burning their shins till they were speckled like
+a trout's<br>
+back, and grumbling all the time; but Father Dwyer liked them,
+and he would<br>
+have them.</p>
+
+<p>"'Where have they to go,' he'd say, 'av it wasn't to me? Give
+Molly<br>
+Kinshela a lock of that bacon. Tim, it's a could morning; will ye
+have a<br>
+taste of the "dew?"'</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, that's the way he'd spake to them; but sure goodness is
+no warrant<br>
+for living, any more than devilment, and so he got could in his
+feet at a<br>
+station, and he rode home in the heavy snow without his big
+coat,&mdash;for he<br>
+gave it away to a blind man on the road; in three days he was
+dead.</p>
+
+<p>"I see you're getting impatient, so I'll not stop to say what
+grief was<br>
+in the parish when it was known; but troth, there never was seen
+the like<br>
+before,&mdash;not a crayture would lift a spade for two days, and
+there was more<br>
+whiskey sold in that time than at the whole spring fair. Well, on
+the third<br>
+day the funeral set out, and never was the equal of it in them
+parts:<br>
+first, there was my father,&mdash;he came special from Cork with the
+six horses<br>
+all in new black, and plumes like little poplar-trees,&mdash;then came
+Father<br>
+Dwyer, followed by the two coadjutors in beautiful surplices,
+walking<br>
+bare-headed, with the little boys of the Priory school,
+two-and-two."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mike, I'm sure it was very fine; but for Heaven's sake,
+spare me all<br>
+these descriptions, and get on to the ghost!"</p>
+
+<p>"'Faith, yer honor's in a great hurry for the ghost,&mdash;may be
+ye won't like<br>
+him when ye have him; but I'll go faster, if ye please. Well,
+Father Dwyer,<br>
+ye see, was born at Aghan-lish, of an ould family, and he left it
+in his<br>
+will that he was to be buried in the family vault; and as
+Aghan-lish was<br>
+eighteen miles up the mountains, it was getting late when they
+drew near.<br>
+By that time the great procession was all broke up and gone home.
+The<br>
+coadjutors stopped to dine at the 'Blue Bellows' at the
+cross-roads; the<br>
+little boys took to pelting snowballs; there was a fight or two
+on the way<br>
+besides,&mdash;and in fact, except an ould deaf fellow that my father
+took to<br>
+mind the horses, he was quite alone. Not that he minded that
+same; for when<br>
+the crowd was gone, my father began to sing a droll song, and
+told the deaf<br>
+chap that it was a lamentation. At last they came in sight of
+Aghan-lish.<br>
+It was a lonesome, melancholy-looking place with nothing near it
+except two<br>
+or three ould fir-trees and a small slated house with one window,
+where the<br>
+sexton lived, and even that was shut up and a padlock on the
+door. Well,<br>
+my father was not over much pleased at the look of matters; but
+as he was<br>
+never hard put to what to do, he managed to get the coffin into
+the vestry,<br>
+and then when he had unharnessed the horses, he sent the deaf
+fellow with<br>
+them down to the village to tell the priest that the corpse was
+there, and<br>
+to come up early in the morning and perform Mass. The next thing
+to do was<br>
+to make himself comfortable for the night; and then he made a
+roaring fire<br>
+on the ould hearth,&mdash;for there was plenty of bog-fir
+there,&mdash;closed the<br>
+windows with the black cloaks, and wrapping two round himself, he
+sat down<br>
+to cook a little supper he brought with him in case of need.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you may think it was melancholy enough to pass the
+night up there<br>
+alone with a corpse, in an ould ruined church in the middle of
+the<br>
+mountains, the wind howling about on every side, and the
+snowdrift beating<br>
+against the walls; but as the fire burned brightly, and the
+little plate of<br>
+rashers and eggs smoked temptingly before him, my father mixed a
+jug of the<br>
+strongest punch, and sat down as happy as a king. As long as he
+was eating<br>
+away he had no time to be thinking of anything else; but when all
+was done,<br>
+and he looked about him, he began to feel very low and melancholy
+in his<br>
+heart. There was the great black coffin on three chairs in one
+corner; and<br>
+then the mourning cloaks that he had stuck up against the windows
+moved<br>
+backward and forward like living things; and outside, the wild
+cry of the<br>
+plover as he flew past, and the night-owl sitting in a nook of
+the old<br>
+church. 'I wish it was morning, anyhow,' said my father, 'for
+this is a<br>
+lonesome place to be in; and faix, he'll be a cunning fellow that
+catches<br>
+me passing the night this way again.' Now there was one thing
+distressed<br>
+him most of all,&mdash;my father used always to make fun of the ghosts
+and<br>
+sperits the neighbors would tell of, pretending there was no such
+thing;<br>
+and now the thought came to him, 'May be they'll revenge
+themselves on me<br>
+to-night when they have me up here alone;' and with that he made
+another<br>
+jug stronger than the first, and tried to remember a few prayers
+in case of<br>
+need, but somehow his mind was not too clear, and he said
+afterwards he<br>
+was always mixing up ould songs and toasts with the prayers, and
+when he<br>
+thought he had just got hold of a beautiful psalm, it would turn
+out to be<br>
+'Tatter Jack Walsh' or 'Limping James' or something like that.
+The storm,<br>
+meanwhile, was rising every moment, and parts of the old abbey
+were falling<br>
+as the wind shook the ruin; and my father's spirits,
+notwithstanding the<br>
+punch, wore lower than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"'I made it too weak,' said he, as he set to work on a new
+jorum; and<br>
+troth, this time that was not the fault of it, for the first sup
+nearly<br>
+choked him.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah,' said he, now, 'I knew what it was; this is like the
+thing; and Mr.<br>
+Free, you are beginning to feel easy and comfortable. Pass the
+jar. Your<br>
+very good health and song. I'm a little hoarse, it's true, but if
+the<br>
+company will excuse&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"And then he began knocking on the table with his knuckles, as
+if there was<br>
+a room full of people asking him to sing. In short, my father was
+drunk as<br>
+a fiddler; the last brew finished him; and he began roaring away
+all kinds<br>
+of droll songs, and telling all manner of stories as if he was at
+a great<br>
+party.</p>
+
+<p>"While he was capering this way about the room, he knocked
+down his hat,<br>
+and with it a pack of cards he put into it before leaving home,
+for he was<br>
+mighty fond of a game.</p>
+
+<p>"'Will ye take a hand, Mr. Free?' said he, as he gathered them
+up and sat<br>
+down beside the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"'I'm convanient,' said he, and began dealing out as if there
+was a partner<br>
+fornenst him.</p>
+
+<p>"When my father used to get this far in the story, he became
+very confused.<br>
+He says that once or twice he mistook the liquor, and took a pull
+at the<br>
+bottle of poteen instead of the punch; and the last thing he
+remembers was<br>
+asking poor Father Dwyer if he would draw near to the fire, and
+not be<br>
+lying there near the door.</p>
+
+<p>"With that he slipped down on the ground and fell fast asleep.
+How long he<br>
+lay that way he could never tell. When he awoke and looked up,
+his hair<br>
+nearly stood on an end with fright. What do you think he seen
+fornenst him,<br>
+sitting at the other side of the fire, but Father Dwyer himself.
+There he<br>
+was, divil a lie in it, wrapped up in one of the mourning cloaks,
+trying to<br>
+warm his hands at the fire. "'<i>Salve hoc nomine patri!</i>' said my
+father,<br>
+crossing himself, 'av it's your ghost, God presarve me!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Good-evening t'ye, Mr. Free,' said the ghost; 'and av I
+might be bould,<br>
+what's in the jug?'&mdash;for ye see, my father had it under his arm
+fast, and<br>
+never let it go when he was asleep.</p>
+
+<p>"'<i>Pater noster qui es in</i>,&mdash;poteen, sir,' said my father; for
+the ghost<br>
+didn't look pleased at his talking Latin.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ye might have the politeness to ax if one had a mouth on
+him, then,' says<br>
+the ghost.</p>
+
+<p>"'Sure, I didn't think the likes of you would taste
+sperits.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Try me,' said the ghost; and with that he filled out a
+glass, and tossed<br>
+it off like a Christian.</p>
+
+<p>"'Beamish!' says the ghost, smacking his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"'The same,' says my father; 'and sure what's happened you has
+not spoiled<br>
+your taste.'</p>
+
+<p>"'If you'd mix a little hot,' says the ghost, 'I'm thinking it
+would be<br>
+better,&mdash;the night is mighty sevare.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Anything that your reverance pleases,' says my father, as he
+began to<br>
+blow up a good fire to boil the water.</p>
+
+<p>"'And what news is stirring?' says the ghost.</p>
+
+<p>"'Devil a word, your reverance,&mdash;your own funeral was the only
+thing doing<br>
+last week. Times is bad; except the measles, there's nothing in
+our parts.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And we're quite dead hereabouts, too,' says the ghost.</p>
+
+<p>"'There's some of us so, anyhow, says my father, with a sly
+look. 'Taste<br>
+that, your reverance.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Pleasant and refreshing,' says the ghost; 'and now, Mr.
+Free, what do you<br>
+say to a little "spoilt five," or "beggar my neighbor"?'</p>
+
+<p>"'What will we play for? 'says my father, for a thought just
+struck<br>
+him,&mdash;'may be it's some trick of the Devil to catch my soul.'</p>
+
+<p>"'A pint of Beamish,' says the ghost.</p>
+
+<p>"'Done!' says my father; 'cut for deal. The ace of clubs,&mdash;you
+have it.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now the whole time the ghost was dealing the cards, my father
+never took<br>
+his eyes off of him, for he wasn't quite aisy in his mind at all;
+but when<br>
+he saw him turn up the trump, and take a strong drink afterwards,
+he got<br>
+more at ease, and began the game.</p>
+
+<p>"How long they played it was never rightly known; but one
+thing is sure,<br>
+they drank a cruel deal of sperits. Three quart bottles my father
+brought<br>
+with him were all finished, and by that time his brain was so
+confused with<br>
+the liquor, and all he lost,&mdash;for somehow he never won a
+game,&mdash;that he was<br>
+getting very quarrelsome.</p>
+
+<p>"'You have your own luck to it,' says he, at last.</p>
+
+<p>"'True for you; and besides, we play a great deal where I come
+from.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I've heard so,' says my father. 'I lead the knave, sir;
+spades! Bad cess<br>
+to it, lost again!'</p>
+
+<p>"Now it was really very distressing; for by this time, though
+they only<br>
+began for a pint of Beamish, my father went on betting till he
+lost the<br>
+hearse and all the six horses, mourning cloaks, plumes, and
+everything.</p>
+
+<p>"'Are you tired, Mr. Free? May be you'd like to stop?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Stop! faith it's a nice time to stop; of course not.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, what will ye play for now?'</p>
+
+<p>"The way he said these woods brought a trembling all over my
+father, and<br>
+his blood curdled in his heart. 'Oh, murther!' says he to
+himself, 'it's my<br>
+sowl he's wanting all the time.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I've mighty little left,' says my father, looking at him
+keenly, while he<br>
+kept shuffling the cards quick as lightning.</p>
+
+<p>"'Mighty little; no matter, we'll give you plenty of time to
+pay,&mdash;and if<br>
+you can't do it, it shall never trouble you as long as you
+live.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, you murthering devil!' says my father, flying at him
+with a spade<br>
+that he had behind his chair, 'I've found you out.'</p>
+
+<p>"With one blow he knocked him down, and now a terrible fight
+begun, for the<br>
+ghost was very strong, too; but my father's blood was up, and
+he'd have<br>
+faced the Devil himself then. They rolled over each other several
+times,<br>
+the broken bottles cutting them to pieces, and the chairs and
+tables<br>
+crashing under them. At last the ghost took the bottle that lay
+on the<br>
+hearth, and levelled my father to the ground with one blow. Down
+he fell,<br>
+and the bottle and the whiskey were both dashed into the fire.
+That was<br>
+the end of it, for the ghost disappeared that moment in a blue
+flame that<br>
+nearly set fire to my father as he lay on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"Och, it was a cruel sight to see him next morning, with his
+cheek cut open<br>
+and his hands all bloody, lying there by himself,&mdash;all the broken
+glass and<br>
+the cards all round him,&mdash;the coffin, too, was knocked down off
+the chair,<br>
+may be the ghost had trouble getting into it. However that was,
+the funeral<br>
+was put off for a day, for my father couldn't speak; and as for
+the sexton,<br>
+it was a queer thing, but when they came to call him in the
+morning, he had<br>
+two black eyes, and a gash over his ear, and he never knew how he
+got them.<br>
+It was easy enough to know the ghost did it; but my father kept
+the secret,<br>
+and never told it to any man, woman, or child in them parts."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER IX.</p>
+
+<p>LISBON.</p>
+
+<p>I have little power to trace the events which occupied the
+succeeding three<br>
+weeks of my history. The lingering fever which attended my wound
+detained<br>
+me during that time at the ch&acirc;teau; and when at last I did
+leave for<br>
+Lisbon, the winter was already beginning, and it was upon a cold
+raw<br>
+evening that I once more took possession of my old quarters at
+the Quay de<br>
+Soderi.</p>
+
+<p>My eagerness and anxiety to learn something of the campaign
+was ever<br>
+uppermost, and no sooner had I reached my destination than I
+despatched<br>
+Mike to the quartermaster's office to pick up some news, and hear
+which of<br>
+my friends and brother officers were then at Lisbon. I was
+sitting in a<br>
+state of nervous impatience watching for his return, when at
+length I heard<br>
+footsteps approaching my room, and the next moment Mike's voice,
+saying,<br>
+"The ould room, sir, where he was before." The door suddenly
+opened, and my<br>
+friend Power stood before me.</p>
+
+<p>"Charley, my boy!"&mdash;"Fred, my fine fellow!" was all either
+could say for<br>
+some minutes. Upon my part, the recollection of his bold and
+manly bearing<br>
+in my behalf choked all utterance; while upon his, my haggard
+cheek and<br>
+worn look produced an effect so sudden and unexpected that he
+became<br>
+speechless.</p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes, however, we both rallied, and opened our
+store of mutual<br>
+remembrances since we parted. My career I found he was perfectly
+acquainted<br>
+with, and his consisted of nothing but one unceasing round of
+gayety and<br>
+pleasure. Lisbon had been delightful during the summer,&mdash;parties
+to Cintra,<br>
+excursions through the surrounding country, were of daily
+occurrence; and<br>
+as my friend was a favorite everywhere, his life was one of
+continued<br>
+amusement.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know, Charley, had it been any other man than
+yourself, I should<br>
+not have spared him; for I have fallen head over ears in love
+with your<br>
+little dark-eyed Portuguese."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Donna Inez, you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is she I mean, and you need not affect such an air of
+uncommon<br>
+<i>nonchalance</i>. She's the loveliest girl in Lisbon, and with
+fortune to pay<br>
+off all the mortgages in Connemara."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, faith! I admire her amazingly; but as I never flattered
+myself upon<br>
+any preference&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, Charley, no concealment, my old fellow; every one
+knows the<br>
+thing's settled. Your old friend, Sir George Dashwood, told me
+yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Yesterday! Why, is he here, at Lisbon?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure he is; didn't I tell you that before? Confound it,
+what a head<br>
+I have! Why, man, he's come out as deputy adjutant-general; but
+for him I<br>
+should not have got renewed leave."</p>
+
+<p>"And Miss Dashwood, is she here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she came with him. By Jove, how handsome she is,&mdash;quite
+a different<br>
+style of thing from our dark friend, but, to my thinking, even
+handsomer.<br>
+Hammersley seems of my opinion, too."</p>
+
+<p>"How! Is Hammersley at Lisbon?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the staff here. But, confound it, what makes you so red,
+you have no<br>
+ill-feeling towards him now. I know he speaks most warmly of you;
+no later<br>
+than last night, at Sir George's&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>What Power was about to add I know not, for I sprang from my
+chair with a<br>
+sudden start, and walked to the window, to conceal my agitation
+from him.</p>
+
+<p>"And so," said I, at length regaining my composure in some
+measure, "Sir<br>
+George also spoke of my name in connection with the senhora?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure he did. All Lisbon does. What can you mean? But I
+see, my dear<br>
+boy; you know you are not of the strongest, and we've been
+talking far too<br>
+long. Come now, Charley, I'll say good-night. I'll be with you at
+breakfast<br>
+to-morrow, and tell you all the gossip; meanwhile promise me to
+get quietly<br>
+to bed, and so good-night."</p>
+
+<p>Such was the conflicting state of feeling I suffered from that
+I made no<br>
+effort to detain Power. I longed to be once more alone, to think,
+calmly if<br>
+I could, over the position I stood in, and to resolve upon my
+plans for the<br>
+future.</p>
+
+<p>My love for Lucy Dashwood had been long rather a devotion than
+a hope. My<br>
+earliest dawn of manly ambition was associated with the first
+hour I met<br>
+her. She it was who first touched my boyish heart, and suggested
+a sense<br>
+of chivalrous ardor within me; and even though lost to me
+forever, I could<br>
+still regard her as the mainspring of my actions, and dwell upon
+my passion<br>
+as the thing that hallowed every enterprise of my life.</p>
+
+<p>In a word, my love, however little it might reach her heart,
+was everything<br>
+to mine. It was the worship of the devotee to his protecting
+saint. It was<br>
+the faith that made me rise above misfortune and mishap, and led
+me onward;<br>
+and in this way I could have borne anything, everything, rather
+than the<br>
+imputation of fickleness.</p>
+
+<p>Lucy might not&mdash;nay, I felt she did not&mdash;love me. It was
+possible that some<br>
+other was preferred before me; but to doubt my own affection, to
+suspect my<br>
+own truth, was to destroy all the charm of my existence, and to
+extinguish<br>
+within me forever the enthusiasm that made me a hero to my own
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>It may seem but poor philosophy; but alas, how many of our
+happiest, how<br>
+many of our brightest thoughts here are but delusions like this!
+The<br>
+dayspring of youth gilds the tops of the distant mountains before
+us, and<br>
+many a weary day through life, when clouds and storms are
+thickening around<br>
+us, we live upon the mere memory of the past. Some fast-flitting
+prospect<br>
+of a bright future, some passing glimpse of a sunlit valley,
+tinges all our<br>
+after-years.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that he will suffer fewer disappointments, he will
+incur fewer<br>
+of the mishaps of the world, who indulges in no fancies such as
+these; but<br>
+equally true is it that he will taste none of that exuberant
+happiness<br>
+which is that man's portion who weaves out a story of his life,
+and who, in<br>
+connecting the promise of early years with the performance of
+later, will<br>
+seek to fulfil a fate and destiny.</p>
+
+<p>Weaving such fancies, I fell sound asleep, nor woke before the
+stir and<br>
+bustle of the great city aroused me. Power, I found, had been
+twice at my<br>
+quarters that morning, but fearing to disturb me, had merely left
+a few<br>
+lines to say that, as he should be engaged on service during the
+day,<br>
+we could not meet before the evening. There were certain
+preliminaries<br>
+requisite regarding my leave which demanded my appearing before a
+board of<br>
+medical officers, and I immediately set about dressing; resolving
+that, as<br>
+soon as they were completed, I should, if permitted, retire to
+one of the<br>
+small cottages on the opposite bank of the Tagus, there to remain
+until my<br>
+restored health allowed me to rejoin my regiment.</p>
+
+<p>I dreaded meeting the Dashwoods. I anticipated with a heavy
+heart how<br>
+effectually one passing interview would destroy all my day-dreams
+of<br>
+happiness, and I preferred anything to the sad conviction of
+hopelessness<br>
+such a meeting must lead to.</p>
+
+<p>While I thus balanced with myself how to proceed, a gentle
+step came to the<br>
+door, and as it opened slowly, a servant in a dark livery
+entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. O'Malley, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said I, wondering to whom my arrival could be thus
+early known.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir George Dashwood requests you will step over to him as
+soon as you go<br>
+out," continued the man; "he is so engaged that he cannot leave
+home, but<br>
+is most desirous to see you."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not far from here?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; scarcely five minutes' walk."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, if you will show me the way, I'll follow
+you."</p>
+
+<p>I cast one passing glance at myself to see that all was right
+about my<br>
+costume, and sallied forth.</p>
+
+<p>In the middle of the Black Horse Square, at the door of a
+large,<br>
+stone-fronted building, a group of military men were assembled,
+chatting<br>
+and laughing away together,&mdash;some reading the lately-arrived
+English<br>
+papers; others were lounging upon the stone parapet, carelessly
+puffing<br>
+their cigars. None of the faces were known to me; so threading my
+way<br>
+through the crowd, I reached the steps. Just as I did so, a
+half-muttered<br>
+whisper met my ear:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Who did you say?"</p>
+
+<p>"O'Malley, the young Irishman who behaved so gallantly at the
+Douro."</p>
+
+<p>The blood rushed hotly to my cheek, my heart bounded with
+exultation; my<br>
+step, infirm and tottering but a moment before, became fixed and
+steady,<br>
+and I felt a thrill of proud enthusiasm playing through my veins.
+How<br>
+little did the speaker of those few and random words know what
+courage he<br>
+had given to a drooping heart, what renewed energy to a breaking
+spirit!<br>
+The voice of praise, too, coming from those to whom we had
+thought<br>
+ourselves unknown, has a magic about it that must be felt to be
+understood.<br>
+So it happened that in a few seconds a revolution had taken place
+in all<br>
+my thoughts and feelings, and I, who had left my quarters
+dispirited and<br>
+depressed, now walked confidently and proudly forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. O'Malley, sir," said the servant to the officer waiting,
+as we entered<br>
+the antechamber.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Mr. O'Malley," said the aide-de-damp, in his blandest
+accent, "I hope<br>
+you're better. Sir George is most anxious to see you; he is at
+present<br>
+engaged with the staff&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A bell rang at that moment, and cut short the sentence; he
+flew to the door<br>
+of the inner room, and returning in an instant, said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Will you follow me? This way, if you please."</p>
+
+<p>The room was crowded with general officers and aides-de-camp,
+so that for<br>
+a second or two I could not distinguish the parties; but no
+sooner was my<br>
+name announced, than Sir George Dashwood, forcing his way
+through, rushed<br>
+forward to meet me.</p>
+
+<p>"O'Malley, my brave fellow, delighted to shake your hand
+again! How much<br>
+grown you are,&mdash;twice the man I knew you; and the arm, too, is it
+getting<br>
+on well?"</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely giving me a moment to reply, and still holding my
+hand tightly in<br>
+his grasp, he introduced me on every side.</p>
+
+<p>"My young Irish friend, Sir Edward, the man of the Douro. My
+Lord, allow me<br>
+to present Lieutenant O'Malley, of the Fourteenth."</p>
+
+<p>"A very dashing thing, that of yours, sir, at Ciudad
+Rodrigo."</p>
+
+<p>"A very senseless one, I fear, my Lord."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, I don't agree with you at all; even when no great
+results follow,<br>
+the <i>morale</i> of an army benefits by acts of daring."</p>
+
+<p>A running fire of kind and civil speeches poured in on me from
+all<br>
+quarters, and amidst all that crowd of bronzed and war-worn
+veterans, I<br>
+felt myself the lion of the moment. Crawfurd, it appeared, had
+spoken most<br>
+handsomely of my name, and I was thus made known to many of those
+whose own<br>
+reputations were then extending over Europe.</p>
+
+<p>In this happy trance of excited pleasure I passed the morning.
+Amidst<br>
+the military chit-chat of the day around me, treated as an equal
+by the<br>
+greatest and the most distinguished, I heard all the confidential
+opinions<br>
+upon the campaign and its leaders; and in that most entrancing
+of<br>
+all flatteries,&mdash;the easy tone of companionship of our elders
+and<br>
+betters,&mdash;forgot my griefs, and half believed I was destined for
+great<br>
+things.</p>
+
+<p>Fearing, at length, that I had prolonged my visit too far, I
+approached<br>
+Sir George to take my leave, when, drawing my arm within his, he
+retired<br>
+towards one of the windows.</p>
+
+<p>"A word, O'Malley, before you go. I've arranged a little plan
+for you;<br>
+mind, I shall insist upon obedience. They'll make some difficulty
+about<br>
+your remaining here, so that I have appointed you one of our
+extra<br>
+aides-de-camp. That will free you from all trouble, and I shall
+not be very<br>
+exacting in my demands upon you. You must, however, commence your
+duties<br>
+to-day, and as we dine at seven precisely, I shall expect you. I
+am<br>
+aware of your wish to stay in Lisbon, my boy, and if all I hear
+be true,<br>
+congratulate you sincerely; but more of this another time, and so
+good-by."<br>
+So saying, he shook my hand once more, warmly; and without well
+feeling how<br>
+or why, I found myself in the street.</p>
+
+<p>The last few words Sir George had spoken threw a gloom over
+all my<br>
+thoughts. I saw at once that the report Power had alluded to had
+gained<br>
+currency at Lisbon. Sir George believed it; doubtless, Lucy, too;
+and<br>
+forgetting in an instant all the emulative ardor that so lately
+stirred my<br>
+heart, I took my path beside the river, and sauntered slowly
+along, lost in<br>
+my reflections.</p>
+
+<p>I had walked for above an hour before paying any attention to
+the path I<br>
+followed. Mechanically, as it were, retreating from the noise and
+tumult-of<br>
+the city, I wandered towards the country. My thoughts fixed but
+upon<br>
+one theme, I had neither ears nor eyes for aught around me; the
+great<br>
+difficulty of my present position now appearing to me in this
+light,&mdash;my<br>
+attachment to Lucy Dashwood, unrequited and unreturned as I felt
+it,<br>
+did not permit of my rebutting any report which might have
+reached her<br>
+concerning Donna Inez. I had no right, no claim to suppose her
+sufficiently<br>
+interested about me to listen to such an explanation, had I even
+the<br>
+opportunity to make it. One thing was thus clear to me,&mdash;all my
+hopes had<br>
+ended in that quarter; and as this conclusion sank into my mind,
+a species<br>
+of dogged resolution to brave my fortune crept upon me, which
+only waited<br>
+the first moment of my meeting her to overthrow and destroy
+forever.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile I walked on,&mdash;now rapidly, as some momentary rush of
+passionate<br>
+excitement, now slowly, as some depressing and gloomy notion
+succeeded;<br>
+when suddenly my path was arrested by a long file of bullock cars
+which<br>
+blocked up the way. Some chance squabble had arisen among the
+drivers, and<br>
+to avoid the crowd and collision, I turned into a gateway which
+opened<br>
+beside me, and soon found myself in a lawn handsomely planted and
+adorned<br>
+with flowering shrubs and ornamental trees.</p>
+
+<p>In the half-dreamy state my musings had brought me to, I
+struggled to<br>
+recollect why the aspect of the place did not seem altogether
+new. My<br>
+thoughts were, however, far away,&mdash;now blending some memory of my
+distant<br>
+home with scenes of battle and bloodshed, or resting upon my
+first<br>
+interview with her whose chance word, carelessly and lightly
+spoken, had<br>
+written the story of my life. From this revery I was rudely
+awakened by a<br>
+rustling noise in the trees behind me, and before I could turn my
+head, the<br>
+two fore-paws of a large stag-hound were planted upon my
+shoulders, while<br>
+the open mouth and panting tongue were close beside my face. My
+day-dream<br>
+was dispelled quick as lightning; it was Juan, himself, the
+favorite dog of<br>
+the senhora, who gave me this rude welcome, and who now, by a
+thousand wild<br>
+gestures and bounding caresses, seemed to do the honors of his
+house. There<br>
+was something so like home in these joyful greetings that I
+yielded myself<br>
+at once his prisoner, and followed, or rather was accompanied by
+him<br>
+towards the villa.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, sooner or later, I should have called upon my kind
+friends; then<br>
+why not now, when chance has already brought me so near? Besides,
+if I<br>
+held to my resolution, which I meant to do,&mdash;of retiring to some
+quiet and<br>
+sequestered cottage till my health was restored,&mdash;the opportunity
+might not<br>
+readily present itself again. This line of argument perfectly
+satisfied my<br>
+reason; while a strong feeling of something like curiosity piqued
+me to<br>
+proceed, and before many minutes elapsed, I reached the house.
+The door, as<br>
+usual, lay wide open; and the ample hall, furnished like a
+sitting-room,<br>
+had its customary litter of books, music, and flowers scattered
+upon the<br>
+tables. My friend Juan, however, suffered me not to linger here,
+but<br>
+rushing furiously at a door before me, began a vigorous attack
+for<br>
+admittance.</p>
+
+<p>As I knew this to be the drawing-room, I opened the door and
+walked in, but<br>
+no one was to be seen; a half-open book lay upon an ottoman, and
+a fan,<br>
+which I recognized as an old acquaintance, was beside it, but the
+owner was<br>
+absent.</p>
+
+<p>I sat down, resolved to wait patiently for her coming, without
+any<br>
+announcement of my being there. I was not sorry, indeed, to have
+some<br>
+moments to collect my thoughts, and restore my erring faculties
+to<br>
+something like order.</p>
+
+<p>As I looked about the room, it seemed as if I had been there
+but yesterday.<br>
+The folding-doors lay open to the garden, just as I had seen them
+last; and<br>
+save that the flowers seemed fewer, and those which remained of a
+darker<br>
+and more sombre tint, all seemed unchanged. There lay the guitar
+to whose<br>
+thrilling chords my heart had bounded; there, the drawing over
+which I had<br>
+bent in admiring pleasure, suggesting some tints of light or
+shadow, as the<br>
+fairy fingers traced them; every chair was known to me, and I
+greeted them<br>
+as things I cared for.</p>
+
+<p>While thus I scanned each object around me, I was struck by a
+little china<br>
+vase which, unlike its other brethren, contained a bouquet of
+dead and<br>
+faded flowers; the blood rushed to my cheek; I started up; it was
+one I had<br>
+myself presented to her the day before we parted. It was in that
+same vase<br>
+I placed it; the very table, too, stood in the same position
+beside that<br>
+narrow window. What a rush of thoughts came pouring on me! And
+oh!&mdash;shall I<br>
+confess it?&mdash;how deeply did such a mute testimony of remembrance
+speak<br>
+to my heart, at the moment that I felt myself unloved and uncared
+for by<br>
+another! I walked hurriedly up and down, a maze of conflicting
+resolves<br>
+combating in my mind, while one thought ever recurred: "Would
+that I had<br>
+not come there!" and yet after all it may mean nothing; some
+piece of<br>
+passing coquetry which she will be the very first to laugh at. I
+remembered<br>
+how she spoke of poor Howard; what folly to take it otherwise!
+"Be it so,<br>
+then," said I, half aloud; "and now for my part of the game;" and
+with this<br>
+I took from my pocket the light-blue scarf she had given me the
+morning we<br>
+parted, and throwing it over my shoulder, prepared to perform my
+part in<br>
+what I had fully persuaded myself to be a comedy. The time,
+however, passed<br>
+on, and she came not; a thousand high-flown Portuguese phrases
+had time to<br>
+be conned over again and again by me, and I had abundant leisure
+to enact<br>
+my coming part; but still the curtain did not rise. As the day
+was wearing,<br>
+I resolved at last to write a few lines, expressive of my regret
+at not<br>
+meeting her, and promising myself an early opportunity of paying
+my<br>
+respects under more fortunate circumstances. I sat down
+accordingly, and<br>
+drawing the paper towards me, began in a mixture of French and
+Portuguese,<br>
+as it happened, to indite my billet.</p>
+
+<p>"Senhora Inez&mdash;" no&mdash;"Ma ch&egrave;re Mademoiselle Inez&mdash;"
+confound it, that's too<br>
+intimate; well, here goes: "Monsieur O'Malley presente ses
+respects&mdash;" that<br>
+will never do; and then, after twenty other abortive attempts, I
+began<br>
+thoughtlessly sketching heads upon the paper, and scribbling with
+wonderful<br>
+facility in fifty different ways: "Ma charmante amie&mdash;Ma plus
+ch&egrave;re Inez,"<br>
+etc., and in this most useful and profitable occupation did I
+pass another<br>
+half-hour.</p>
+
+<p>How long I should have persisted in such an employment it is
+difficult to<br>
+say, had not an incident intervened which suddenly but most
+effectually put<br>
+an end to it. As the circumstance is one which, however little
+striking in<br>
+itself, had the greatest and most lasting influence upon my
+future career,<br>
+I shall, perhaps, be excused in devoting another chapter to its
+recital.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER X.</p>
+
+<p>A PLEASANT PREDICAMENT.</p>
+
+<p>As I sat vainly endeavoring to fix upon some suitable and
+appropriate<br>
+epithet by which to commence my note, my back was turned towards
+the door<br>
+of the garden; and so occupied was I in my meditations, that even
+had any<br>
+one entered at the time, in all probability I should not have
+perceived it.<br>
+At length, however, I was aroused from my study by a burst of
+laughter,<br>
+whose girlish joyousness was not quite new to me. I knew it well;
+it was<br>
+the senhora herself; and the next moment I heard her voice.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you, I'm quite certain I saw his face in the mirror as
+I passed.<br>
+Oh, how delightful! and you'll be charmed with him; so, mind, you
+must not<br>
+steal him from me; I shall never forgive you if you do; and look,
+only<br>
+look! he has got the blue scarf I gave him when he marched to the
+Douro."</p>
+
+<p>While I perceived that I was myself seen, I could see nothing
+of the<br>
+speaker, and wishing to hear something further, appeared more
+than ever<br>
+occupied in the writing before me.</p>
+
+<p>What her companion replied I could not, however, catch, but
+only guess at<br>
+its import by the senhora's answer. "<i>Fi done!</i>&mdash;I really am very
+fond of<br>
+him; but, never fear, I shall be as stately as a queen. You shall
+see how<br>
+meekly he will kiss my hand, and with what unbending reserve I'll
+receive<br>
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" thought I; "mayhap, I'll mar your plot a little; but
+let us<br>
+listen."</p>
+
+<p>Again her friend spoke, but too low to be heard.</p>
+
+<p>"It is so provoking," continued Inez; "I never can remember
+names, and his<br>
+was something too absurd; but never mind, I shall make him a
+grandee of<br>
+Portugal. Well, but come along, I long to present him to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>Here a gentle struggle seemed to ensue; for I heard the
+senhora coaxingly<br>
+entreat her, while her companion steadily resisted.</p>
+
+<p>"I know very well you think I shall be so silly, and perhaps
+wrong; eh, is<br>
+it not so? but you are quite mistaken. You'll be surprised at my
+cold and<br>
+dignified manner. I shall draw myself proudly up, thus, and
+curtsying<br>
+deeply, say, 'Monsieur, j'ai l' honneur de vous saluer.'"</p>
+
+<p>A laugh twice as mirthful as before interrupted her account of
+herself,<br>
+while I could hear the tones of her friend evidently in
+expostulation.</p>
+
+<a name="0083"></a>
+<img alt="0083.jpg (166K)" src="0083.jpg" height="641" width="777">
+
+<p>[O'MALLEY FOLLOWING THE CUSTOM OF HIS COUNTRY.]</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>"Well, then, to be sure, you are provoking, but you really
+promise to<br>
+follow me. Be it so; then give me that moss-rose. How you have
+fluttered<br>
+me; now for it!"</p>
+
+<p>So saying, I heard her foot upon the gravel, and the next
+instant upon the<br>
+marble step of the door. There is something in expectation that
+sets the<br>
+heart beating, and mine throbbed against my side. I waited,
+however, till<br>
+she entered, before lifting my head, and then springing suddenly
+up, with<br>
+one bound clasped her in my arms, and pressing my lips upon her
+roseate<br>
+cheek, said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Mar charmante amie!</i>" To disengage herself from me, and to
+spring<br>
+suddenly back was her first effort; to burst into an immoderate
+fit of<br>
+laughing, her second; her cheek was, however, covered with a deep
+blush,<br>
+and I already repented that my malice had gone so far.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon, Mademoiselle," said I, in affected innocence, "if I
+have so far<br>
+forgotten myself as to assume a habit of my own country to a
+stranger."</p>
+
+<p>A half-angry toss of the head was her only reply, and turning
+towards the<br>
+garden, she called to her friend:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Come here, dearest, and instruct my ignorance upon your
+national customs;<br>
+but first let me present to you,&mdash;never know his name,&mdash;the
+Chevalier de<br>
+&mdash;&mdash;What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>The glass door opened as she spoke; a tall and graceful figure
+entered, and<br>
+turning suddenly round, showed me the features of Lucy Dashwood.
+We both<br>
+stood opposite each other, each mute with amazement. <i>My</i>
+feelings let me<br>
+not attempt to convey; shame, for the first moment stronger than
+aught<br>
+else, sent the blood rushing to my face and temples, and the next
+I was<br>
+cold and pale as death. As for her, I cannot guess at what passed
+in<br>
+her mind. She curtsied deeply to me, and with a half-smile of
+scarce<br>
+recognition passed by me, and walked towards a window.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Comme vous &ecirc;tes amiable!</i>" said the lively Portuguese,
+who comprehended<br>
+little of this dumb show; "here have I been flattering myself
+what friends<br>
+you'd be the very moment you meet, and now you'll not even look
+at each<br>
+other."</p>
+
+<p>What was to be done? The situation was every instant growing
+more and more<br>
+embarrassing; nothing but downright effrontery could get through
+with<br>
+it now; and never did a man's heart more fail him than did mine
+at this<br>
+conjuncture. I made the' effort, however, and stammered out
+certain<br>
+unmeaning commonplaces. Inez replied, and I felt myself
+conversing with the<br>
+headlong recklessness of one marching to a scaffold, a coward's
+fear at his<br>
+heart, while he essayed to seem careless and indifferent.</p>
+
+<p>Anxious to reach what I esteemed safe ground, I gladly
+adverted to the<br>
+campaign; and at last, hurried on by the impulse to cover my
+embarrassment,<br>
+was describing some skirmish with a French outpost. Without
+intending, I<br>
+had succeeded in exciting the senhora's interest, and she
+listened with<br>
+sparkling eye and parted lips to the description of a sweeping
+charge in<br>
+which a square was broken, and several prisoners carried off.
+Warming with<br>
+the eager avidity of her attention, I grew myself more excited,
+when just<br>
+as my narrative reached its climax, Miss Dashwood walked gently
+towards the<br>
+bell, rang it, and ordered her carriage. The tone of perfect
+<i>nonchalance</i><br>
+of the whole proceeding struck me dumb; I faltered, stammered,
+hesitated,<br>
+and was silent. Donna Inez turned from one to the other of us
+with a look<br>
+of unfeigned astonishment and I heard her mutter to herself
+something<br>
+like a reflection upon "national eccentricities." Happily,
+however,<br>
+her attention was now exclusively turned towards her friend, and
+while<br>
+assisting her to shawl, and extorting innumerable promises of an
+early<br>
+visit, I got a momentary reprieve; the carriage drew up also, and
+as the<br>
+gravel flew right and left beneath the horses' feet, the very
+noise and<br>
+bustle relieved me. "<i>Adios</i>," then said Inez, as she kissed her
+for the<br>
+last time, while she motioned to me to escort her to her
+carriage. I<br>
+advanced, stopped, made another step forward, and again grew
+irresolute;<br>
+but Miss Dashwood speedily terminated the difficulty; for making
+me a<br>
+formal curtsey, she declined my scarce-proffered attention, and
+left the<br>
+room.</p>
+
+<p>As she did so, I perceived that on passing the table, her eyes
+fell upon<br>
+the paper I had been scribbling over so long, and I thought that
+for<br>
+an instant an expression of ineffable scorn seemed to pass across
+her<br>
+features, save which&mdash;and perhaps even in this I was
+mistaken&mdash;her manner<br>
+was perfectly calm, easy, and indifferent.</p>
+
+<p>Scarce had the carriage rolled from the door, when the
+senhora, throwing<br>
+herself upon her chair, clapped her hands in childish ecstasy,
+while she<br>
+fell into a fit of laughing that I thought would never have an
+end. "Such<br>
+a scene!" cried she; "I would not have lost it for the world;
+what<br>
+cordiality! what <i>empressement</i> to form acquaintance! I shall
+never forget<br>
+it, Monsieur le Chevalier; your national customs seem to run
+sadly in<br>
+extremes. One would have thought you deadly enemies; and poor me,
+after a<br>
+thousand delightful plans about you both!"</p>
+
+<p>As she ran on thus, scarce able to control her mirth at each
+sentence, I<br>
+walked the room with impatient strides, now, resolving to hasten
+after the<br>
+carriage, stop it, explain in a few words how all had happened,
+and then<br>
+fly from her forever; then the remembrance of her cold, impassive
+look<br>
+crossed me, and I thought that one bold leap into the Tagus might
+be the<br>
+shortest and easiest solution to all my miseries. Perfect
+abasement,<br>
+thorough self-contempt had broken all my courage, and I could
+have cried<br>
+like a child. What I said, or how I comforted myself after, I
+know not; but<br>
+my first consciousness came to me as I felt myself running at the
+top of my<br>
+speed far upon the road towards Lisbon.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XI.</p>
+
+<p>THE DINNER.</p>
+
+<p>It may easily be imagined that I had little inclination to
+keep my promise<br>
+of dining that day with Sir George Dashwood. However, there was
+nothing<br>
+else for it; the die was cast,&mdash;my prospects as regarded Lucy
+were ruined<br>
+forever. We were not, we never could be anything to each other;
+and as for<br>
+me, the sooner I braved my altered fortunes the better; and after
+all, why<br>
+should I call them altered. She evidently never had cared for me;
+and even<br>
+supposing that my fervent declaration of attachment had
+interested her, the<br>
+apparent duplicity and falseness of my late conduct could only
+fall the<br>
+more heavily upon me.</p>
+
+<p>I endeavored to philosophize myself into calmness and
+indifference. One by<br>
+one I exhausted every argument for my defence, which, however
+ingeniously<br>
+put forward, brought no comfort to my own conscience. I pleaded
+the<br>
+unerring devotion of my heart, the uprightness of my motives, and
+when<br>
+called on for the proofs,&mdash;alas! except the blue scarf I wore in
+memory of<br>
+another, and my absurd conduct at the villa, I had none. From the
+current<br>
+gossip of Lisbon, down to my own disgraceful folly, all, all was
+against<br>
+me.</p>
+
+<p>Honesty of intention, rectitude of purpose, may be, doubtless
+they are,<br>
+admirable supports to a rightly constituted mind; but even then
+they must<br>
+come supported by such claims to probability as make the injured
+man feel<br>
+he has not lost the sympathy of all his fellows. Now, I had none
+of these,<br>
+had even my temperament, broken by sickness and harassed by
+unlucky<br>
+conjectures, permitted my appreciating them.</p>
+
+<p>I endeavored to call my wounded pride to my aid, and thought
+over the<br>
+glance of haughty disdain she gave me as she passed on to her
+carriage; but<br>
+even this turned against me, and a humiliating sense of my own
+degraded<br>
+position sank deeply into my heart. "This impression at least,"
+thought I,<br>
+"must be effaced. I cannot permit her to believe&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"His Excellency is waiting dinner, sir," said a lackey,
+introducing a<br>
+finely powdered head gently within the door. I looked at my
+watch, it was<br>
+eight o'clock; so snatching my sabre, and shocked at my delay,
+I<br>
+hastily followed the servant down-stairs, and thus at once cut
+short my<br>
+deliberations.</p>
+
+<p>The man must be but little observant or deeply sunk in his own
+reveries,<br>
+who, arriving half-an-hour too late for dinner, fails to detect
+in the<br>
+faces of the assembled and expectant guests a very palpable
+expression of<br>
+discontent and displeasure. It is truly a moment of awkwardness,
+and one<br>
+in which few are found to manage with success; the blushing,
+hesitating,<br>
+blundering apology of the absent man, is scarcely better than
+the<br>
+ill-affected surprise of the more practised offender. The
+bashfulness of<br>
+the one is as distasteful as the cool impertinence of the other;
+both are<br>
+so thoroughly out of place, for we are thinking of neither; our
+thoughts<br>
+are wandering to cold soups and rechauff&eacute;d
+p&acirc;t&eacute;s, and we neither care for<br>
+nor estimate the cause, but satisfy our spleen by cursing the
+offender.</p>
+
+<p>Happily for me I was clad in a triple insensibility to such
+feelings,<br>
+and with an air of most perfect unconstraint and composure walked
+into<br>
+a drawing-room where about twenty persons were busily discussing
+what<br>
+peculiar amiability in my character could compensate for my
+present<br>
+conduct.</p>
+
+<p>"At last, O'Malley, at last!" said Sir George. "Why, my dear
+boy, how very<br>
+late you are!"</p>
+
+<p>I muttered something about a long walk,&mdash;distance from Lisbon,
+etc.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! that was it. I was right, you see!" said an old lady in a
+spangled<br>
+turban, as she whispered something to her friend beside her, who
+appeared<br>
+excessively shocked at the information conveyed; while a fat,
+round-faced<br>
+little general, after eying me steadily through his glass,
+expressed a<br>
+<i>sotto voce</i> wish that I was upon <i>his</i> staff. I felt my cheek
+reddening<br>
+at the moment, and stared around me like one whose trials were
+becoming<br>
+downright insufferable, when happily dinner was announced, and
+terminated<br>
+my embarrassment.</p>
+
+<p>As the party filed past, I perceived that Miss Dashwood was
+not among them;<br>
+and with a heart relieved for the moment by the circumstance, and
+inventing<br>
+a hundred conjectures to account for it, I followed with the
+aides-de-camp<br>
+and the staff to the dinner-room.</p>
+
+<p>The temperament is very Irish, I believe, which renders a man
+so elastic<br>
+that from the extreme of depression to the very climax of high
+spirits,<br>
+there is but one spring. To this I myself plead guilty, and thus,
+scarcely<br>
+was I freed from the embarrassment which a meeting with Lucy
+Dashwood must<br>
+have caused, when my heart bounded with lightness.</p>
+
+<p>When the ladies withdrew, the events of the campaign became
+the subject of<br>
+conversation, and upon these, very much to my astonishment, I
+found myself<br>
+consulted as an authority. The Douro, from some fortunate
+circumstance, had<br>
+given me a reputation I never dreamed of, and I heard my opinions
+quoted<br>
+upon topics of which my standing as an officer, and my rank in
+the service,<br>
+could not imply a very extended observation. Power was absent on
+duty; and<br>
+happily for my supremacy, the company consisted entirely of
+generals in the<br>
+commissariat or new arrivals from England, all of whom knew still
+less than<br>
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>What will not iced champagne and flattery do? Singly, they are
+strong<br>
+impulses; combined, their power is irresistible. I now heard for
+the first<br>
+time that our great leader had been elevated to the peerage by
+the title of<br>
+Lord Wellington, and I sincerely believe&mdash;however now I may smile
+at the<br>
+confession&mdash;that, at the moment, I felt more elation at the
+circumstance<br>
+than he did. The glorious sensation of being in any way, no
+matter how<br>
+remotely, linked with the career of those whose path is a high
+one, and<br>
+whose destinies are cast for great events, thrilled through me;
+and in<br>
+all the warmth of my admiration and pride for our great captain,
+a secret<br>
+pleasure stirred within me as I whispered to myself, "And I, too,
+am a<br>
+soldier!"</p>
+
+<p>I fear me that very little flattery is sufficient to turn the
+head of a<br>
+young man of eighteen; and if I yielded to the "pleasant
+incense," let my<br>
+apology be that I was not used to it; and lastly, let me avow, if
+I did get<br>
+tipsy, I liked the liquor. And why not? It is the only tipple I
+know of<br>
+that leaves no headache the next morning to punish you for the
+glories of<br>
+the past night. It may, like all other strong potations, it is
+true, induce<br>
+you to make a fool of yourself when under its influence; but like
+the<br>
+nitrous-oxide gas, its effects are passing, and as the pleasure
+is an<br>
+ecstasy for the time, and your constitution none the worse when
+it is over,<br>
+I really see no harm in it.</p>
+
+<p>Then the benefits are manifest; for while he who gives becomes
+never the<br>
+poorer for his benevolence, the receiver is made rich indeed. It
+matters<br>
+little that some dear, kind friend is ready with his bitter
+draught to<br>
+remedy what he is pleased to call its unwholesome sweetness; you
+betake<br>
+yourself with only the more pleasure to the "blessed elixir,"
+whose<br>
+fascinations neither the poverty of your pocket, nor the penury
+of your<br>
+brain, can withstand, and by the magic of whose spell you are
+great and<br>
+gifted. "<i>Vive la bagatelle!</i>" saith the Frenchman. "Long live
+flattery!"<br>
+say I, come from what quarter it will,&mdash;the only wealth of the
+poor man,<br>
+the only reward of the unknown one; the arm that supports us in
+failure;<br>
+the hand that crowns us in success; the comforter in our
+affliction; the<br>
+gay companion in our hours of pleasure; the lullaby of the
+infant; the<br>
+staff of old age; the secret treasure we lock up in our own
+hearts, and<br>
+which ever grows greater as we count it over. Let me not be told
+that the<br>
+coin is fictitious, and the gold not genuine; its clink is as
+musical to<br>
+the ear as though it bore the last impression of the mint, and
+I'm not the<br>
+man to cast an aspersion upon its value.</p>
+
+<p>This little digression, however seemingly out of place, may
+serve to<br>
+illustrate what it might be difficult to convey in other
+words,&mdash;namely,<br>
+that if Charles O'Malley became, in his own estimation, a very
+considerable<br>
+personage that day at dinner, the fault lay not entirely with
+himself, but<br>
+with his friends, who told him he was such. In fact, my good
+reader, I was<br>
+the lion of the party, the man who saved Laborde, who charged
+through a<br>
+brigade of guns, who performed feats which newspapers quoted,
+though he<br>
+never heard of them himself. At no time is a man so successful in
+society<br>
+as when his reputation heralds him; and it needs but little
+conversational<br>
+eloquence to talk well, if you have but a willing and ready
+auditory. Of<br>
+mine, I could certainly not complain; and as, drinking deeply, I
+poured<br>
+forth a whole tide of campaigning recital, I saw the old colonels
+of<br>
+recruiting districts exchanging looks of wonder and admiration
+with<br>
+officers of the ordnance; while Sir George himself, evidently
+pleased at my<br>
+<i>d&eacute;but</i>, went back to an early period of our acquaintance,
+and related the<br>
+rescue of his daughter in Galway.</p>
+
+<p>In an instant the whole current of my thoughts was changed. My
+first<br>
+meeting with Lucy, my boyhood's dream of ambition, my plighted
+faith,<br>
+my thought of our last parting in Dublin, when, in a moment of
+excited<br>
+madness, I told my tale of love. I remembered her downcast look,
+as her<br>
+cheek now flushing, now growing pale, she trembled while I spoke.
+I thought<br>
+of her, as in the crash of battle her image flashed across my
+brain, and<br>
+made me feel a rush of chivalrous enthusiasm to win her heart by
+"doughty<br>
+deeds."</p>
+
+<p>I forgot all around and about me. My head reeled, the wine,
+the excitement,<br>
+my long previous illness, all pressed upon me; and as my temples
+throbbed<br>
+loudly and painfully, a chaotic rush of discordant, ill-connected
+ideas<br>
+flitted across my mind. There seemed some stir and confusion in
+the room,<br>
+but why or wherefore I could not think, nor could I recall my
+scattered<br>
+senses, till Sir George Dashwood's voice roused me once again
+to<br>
+consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>"We are going to have some coffee, O'Malley. Miss Dashwood
+expects us in<br>
+the drawing-room. You have not seen her yet?"</p>
+
+<p>I know not my reply; but he continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"She has some letters for you, I think."</p>
+
+<p>I muttered something, and suffered him to pass on; no sooner
+had he done<br>
+so, however, than I turned towards the door, and rushed into the
+street.<br>
+The cold night air suddenly recalled me to myself, and I stood
+for a moment<br>
+endeavoring to collect myself; as I did so, a servant stopped,
+and saluting<br>
+me, presented me with a letter. For a second, a cold chill came
+over me; I<br>
+knew not what fear beset me. The letter, I at last remembered,
+must be that<br>
+one alluded to by Sir George, so I took it in silence, and walked
+on.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XII.</p>
+
+<p>THE LETTER.</p>
+
+<p>As I hurried to my quarters, I made a hundred guesses from
+whom the letter<br>
+could have come; a kind of presentiment told me that it bore, in
+some<br>
+measure, upon the present crisis of my life, and I burned with
+anxiety to<br>
+read it.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had I reached the light, than all my hopes on this
+head vanished;<br>
+the envelope bore the well-known name of my old college chum,
+Frank Webber,<br>
+and none could, at the moment, have more completely dispelled all
+chance<br>
+of interesting me. I threw it from me with disappointment, and
+sat moodily<br>
+down to brood over my fate.</p>
+
+<p>At length, however, and almost without knowing it, I drew the
+lamp towards<br>
+me, and broke the seal. The reader being already acquainted with
+my amiable<br>
+friend, there is the less indiscretion in communicating the
+contents, which<br>
+ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN, No. 2,</p>
+
+<p>    October 5, 1810.</p>
+
+<p>    My Dear O'Malley,&mdash;Nothing short of your death and
+burial,<br>
+    with or without military honors, can possibly excuse your
+very<br>
+    disgraceful neglect of your old friends here. Nesbitt has
+never<br>
+    heard of you, neither has Smith. Ottley swears never to have
+seen<br>
+    your handwriting, save on the back of a protested bill. You
+have<br>
+    totally forgotten <i>me</i>, and the dean informs me that you have
+never<br>
+    condescended a single line to him; which latter inquiry on my
+part<br>
+    nearly cost me a rustication.</p>
+
+<p>    A hundred conjectures to account for your silence&mdash;a new
+feature<br>
+    in you since you were here&mdash;are afloat. Some assert that
+your<br>
+    soldiering has turned your head, and that you are above
+corresponding<br>
+    with civilians. Your friends, however, who know you better
+and<br>
+    value your worth, think otherwise; and having seen a
+paragraph<br>
+    about a certain O'Malley being tried by court-martial for
+stealing a<br>
+    goose, and maltreating the woman that owned it, ascribe your
+not<br>
+    writing to other motives. Do, in any case, relieve our minds;
+say,<br>
+    is it yourself, or only a relative that's mentioned?<br>
+    Herbert came over from London with a long story about
+your<br>
+    doing wonderful things,&mdash;capturing cannon and general
+officers by<br>
+    scores,&mdash;but devil a word of it is extant; and if you have
+really<br>
+    committed these acts, they have "misused the king's press
+damnably,"<br>
+    for neither in the "Times" nor the "Post" are you heard
+of.<br>
+    Answer this point, and say also if you have got promotion;
+for what<br>
+    precise sign you are algebraically expressed by at this
+writing, may<br>
+    serve Fitzgerald for a fellowship question. As for us, we are
+jogging<br>
+    along, <i>semper eadem</i>,&mdash;that is, worse and worse. Dear
+Cecil<br>
+    Cavendish, our gifted friend, slight of limb and soft of
+voice, has<br>
+    been rusticated for immersing four bricklayers in that
+green<br>
+    receptacle of stagnant water and duckweed, yeleped the
+"Haha."<br>
+    Roper, equally unlucky, has taken to reading for honors, and
+obtained<br>
+    a medal, I fancy,&mdash;at least his friends shy him, and it must
+be<br>
+    something of that kind. Belson&mdash;poor Belson (fortunately for
+him he<br>
+    was born in the nineteenth, not the sixteenth century, or
+he'd be most<br>
+    likely ornamenting a pile of fagots) ventured upon some
+stray<br>
+    excursions into the Hebrew verbs,&mdash;the professor himself
+never having<br>
+    transgressed beyond the declensions, and the consequence is,
+he is<br>
+    in disgrace among the seniors. And as for me, a heavy charge
+hangs<br>
+    over my devoted head even while I write. The senior lecturer,
+it<br>
+    appears, has been for some time instituting some very
+singular<br>
+    researches into the original state of our goodly college at
+its<br>
+    founding. Plans and specifications showing its extent and
+magnificence<br>
+    have been continually before the board for the last month;
+and in such<br>
+    repute have been a smashed door-sill or an old arch, that
+freshmen<br>
+    have now abandoned conic sections for crowbars, and instead
+of the<br>
+    "Principia" have taken up the pickaxe. You know, my dear
+fellow,<br>
+    with what enthusiasm I enter into any scheme for the
+aggrandizement<br>
+    of our Alma Mater, so I need not tell you how ardently I<br>
+    adventured into the career now opened to me. My time was
+completely<br>
+    devoted to the matter; neither means nor health did I
+spare,<br>
+    and in my search for antiquarian lore, I have actually
+undermined<br>
+    the old wall of the fellows' garden, and am each morning in
+expectation<br>
+    of hearing that the big bell near the commons-hall has
+descended<br>
+    from its lofty and most noisy eminence, and is snugly
+reposing in<br>
+    the mud. Meanwhile accident put me in possession of a
+most<br>
+    singular and remarkable discovery. Our chambers&mdash;I call
+them<br>
+    ours for old association sake&mdash;are, you may remember, in the
+Old<br>
+    Square. Well, I have been fortunate enough, within the very
+precincts<br>
+    of my own dwelling, to contribute a very wonderful fact to
+the<br>
+    history of the University; alone, unassisted, unaided, I
+labored<br>
+    at my discovery. Few can estimate the pleasure I felt, the
+fame<br>
+    and reputation I anticipated. I drew up a little memoir for
+the<br>
+    board, most respectfully and civilly worded, having for title
+the<br>
+    following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    ACCOUNT<br>
+    Of a remarkable Subterranean Passage lately discovered in
+the<br>
+    Old Building of Trinity College, Dublin;<br>
+    With Observations upon its Extent, Antiquity, and Probable
+Use.<br>
+    By F. WEBBER, Senior Freshman.</p>
+
+<p>    My dear O'Malley, I'll not dwell upon the pride I felt in
+my new<br>
+    character of antiquarian; it is enough to state, that my
+very<br>
+    remarkable tract was well considered and received, and a
+commission<br>
+    appointed to investigate the discovery, consisting of the<br>
+    vice-provost, the senior lecturer, old Woodhouse, the
+sub-dean, and<br>
+    a few more.</p>
+
+<p>    On Tuesday last they came accordingly in full academic
+costume.<br>
+    I, being habited most accurately in the like manner,
+conducted<br>
+    them with all form into my bed-room, where a large screen
+concealed<br>
+    from view the entrance to the tunnel alluded to. Assuming a
+very<br>
+    John Kembleish attitude, I struck this down with one hand,
+pointing<br>
+    with the other to the wall, as I exclaimed, "There! look<br>
+    there!"</p>
+
+<p>    I need only quote Barret's exclamation to enlighten you
+upon my<br>
+    discovery as, drawing in his breath with a strong effort, he
+burst<br>
+    out:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "May the Devil admire me, but it's a rat-hole!"</p>
+
+<p>    I fear, Charley, he's right, and what's more, that the
+board will<br>
+    think so, for this moment a very warm discussion is going on
+among<br>
+    that amiable and learned body whether I shall any longer
+remain an<br>
+    ornament to the University. In fact, the terror with which
+they<br>
+    fled from my chambers, overturning each other in the
+passage,<br>
+    seemed to imply that they thought me mad, and I do believe
+my<br>
+    voice, look, and attitude would not have disgraced a blue
+cotton<br>
+    dressing-gown and a cell in "Swift's." Be this as it may, few
+men<br>
+    have done more for college than I have. The sun never stood
+still<br>
+    for Joshua with more resolution than I have rested in my
+career of<br>
+    freshman; and if I have contributed little to the fame, I
+have done<br>
+    much for the funds of the University; and when they come to
+compute<br>
+    the various sums I have paid in, for fines, penalties, and
+what<br>
+    they call properly "impositions," if they don't place a
+portrait of me<br>
+    in the examination hall, between Archbishop Ussher and Flood,
+then<br>
+    do I say there is no gratitude in mankind; not to mention the
+impulse<br>
+    I have given to the various artisans whose business it is
+to<br>
+    repair lamps, windows, chimneys, iron railings, and watchmen,
+all<br>
+    of which I have devoted myself to with an enthusiasm for
+political<br>
+    economy well known, and registered in the College Street
+police-office.</p>
+
+<p>    After all, Charley, I miss you greatly. Your second in a
+ballad is<br>
+    not to be replaced; besides, Carlisle Bridge has got low;
+medical<br>
+    students and young attorneys affect minstrelsy, and actually
+frequent<br>
+    the haunts sacred to our muse.</p>
+
+<p>    Dublin is, upon the whole, I think, worse; though one
+scarcely<br>
+    ever gets tired laughing at the small celebrities&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Master Frank gets here indiscreet, so I shall skip.</p>
+
+<p>    And so the Dashwoods are going too; this will make mine
+a<br>
+    pitiable condition, for I really did begin to feel tender in
+that<br>
+    quarter. You may have heard that she refused me; this,
+however, is not<br>
+    correct, though I have little doubt it might have been,&mdash;had
+I<br>
+    asked her.</p>
+
+<p>    Hammersley has, you know, got his dismissal. I wonder how
+the<br>
+    poor fellow took it when Power gave him back his letters and
+his<br>
+    picture. How <i>you</i> are to be treated remains to be seen; in
+any<br>
+    case, you certainly stand first favorite.</p>
+
+<p>I laid down the letter at this passage, unable to read
+farther. Here, then,<br>
+was the solution of the whole chaos of mystery; here the full
+explanation<br>
+of what had puzzled my aching brain for many a night long. These
+were the<br>
+very letters I had myself delivered into Hammersley's hands; this
+the<br>
+picture he had trodden to dust beneath his heel the morning of
+our meeting.<br>
+I now felt the reason of his taunting allusion to my "success,"
+his cutting<br>
+sarcasm, his intemperate passion. A flood of light poured at once
+across<br>
+all the dark passages of my history; and Lucy, too,&mdash;dare I think
+of her! A<br>
+rapid thought shot through my brain. What if she had really cared
+for me!<br>
+What if for me she had rejected another's love! What if, trusting
+to my<br>
+faith, my pledged and sworn faith, she had given me her heart!
+Oh, the<br>
+bitter agony of that thought! To think that all my hopes were
+shipwrecked<br>
+with the very land in sight.</p>
+
+<p>I sprang to my feet with some sudden impulse, but as I did so
+the blood<br>
+rushed madly to my face and temples, which beat violently; a
+parched and<br>
+swollen feeling came about my throat; I endeavored to open my
+collar<br>
+and undo my stock, but my disabled arm prevented me. I tried to
+call<br>
+my servant, but my utterance was thick and my words would not
+come; a<br>
+frightful suspicion crossed me that my reason was tottering. I
+made towards<br>
+the door; but as I did so, the objects around me became confused
+and<br>
+mingled, my limbs trembled, and I fell heavily upon the floor. A
+pang of<br>
+dreadful pain shot through me as I fell; my arm was rebroken.
+After this I<br>
+knew no more; all the accumulated excitement of the evening bore
+down with<br>
+one fell swoop upon my brain. Ere day broke, I was delirious.</p>
+
+<p>I have a vague and indistinct remembrance of hurried and
+anxious faces<br>
+around my bed, of whispered words and sorrowful looks; but my own
+thoughts<br>
+careered over the bold hills of the far west as I trod them in
+my<br>
+boyhood, free and high of heart, or recurred to the din and crash
+of the<br>
+battle-field, with the mad bounding of the war-horse, and the
+loud clang of<br>
+the trumpet. Perhaps the acute pain of my swollen and suffering
+arm gave<br>
+the character to my mental aberration; for I have more than once
+observed<br>
+among the wounded in battle, that even when torn and mangled by
+grape<br>
+from a howitzer, their ravings have partaken of a high feature
+of<br>
+enthusiasm,&mdash;shouts of triumph and exclamations of pleasure,
+even<br>
+songs have I heard, but never once the low muttering of despair
+or the<br>
+half-stifled cry of sorrow and affliction.</p>
+
+<p>Such were the few gleams of consciousness which visited me;
+and even to<br>
+such as these I soon became insensible.</p>
+
+<p>Few like to chronicle, fewer still to read, the sad history of
+a sick-bed.<br>
+Of mine, I know but little. The throbbing pulses of the erring
+brain, the<br>
+wild fancies of lunacy, take no note of time. There is no past
+nor future;<br>
+a dreadful present, full of its hurried and confused impressions,
+is all<br>
+that the mind beholds; and even when some gleams of returning
+reason flash<br>
+upon the mad confusion of the brain, they come like sunbeams
+through a<br>
+cloud, dimmed, darkened, and perverted.</p>
+
+<p>It is the restless activity of the mind in fever that
+constitutes its<br>
+most painful anguish; the fast-flitting thoughts that rush ever
+onwards,<br>
+crowding sensation on sensation, an endless train of exciting
+images<br>
+without purpose or repose; or even worse, the straining effort to
+pursue<br>
+some vague and shadowy conception which evades us ever as we
+follow, but<br>
+which mingles with all around and about us, haunting us at
+midnight as in<br>
+the noontime. Of this nature was a vision which came constantly
+before<br>
+me, till at length, by its very recurrence, it assumed a kind of
+real and<br>
+palpable existence; and as I watched it, my heart thrilled with
+the high<br>
+ardor of enthusiasm and delight, or sunk into the dark abyss of
+sorrow and<br>
+despair. "The dawning of morning, the daylight sinking," brought
+no other<br>
+image to my aching sight; and of this alone, of all the
+impressions of the<br>
+period, has my mind retained any consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>Methought I stood within an old and venerable cathedral, where
+the dim<br>
+yellow light fell with a rich but solemn glow upon the fretted
+capitals,<br>
+or the grotesque tracings of the oaken carvings, lighting up the
+fading<br>
+gildings of the stately monuments, and tinting the varied hues of
+time-worn<br>
+banners. The mellow notes of a deep organ filled the air, and
+seemed to<br>
+attune the sense to all the awe and reverence of the place, where
+the very<br>
+footfall, magnified by its many echoes, seemed half a
+profanation. I stood<br>
+before an altar, beside me a young and lovely girl, whose bright
+brown<br>
+tresses waved in loose masses upon a neck of snowy whiteness; her
+hand,<br>
+cold and pale, rested within my own; we knelt together, not in
+prayer, but<br>
+a feeling of deep reverence stole over my heart, as she repeated
+some few<br>
+half-uttered words after me; I knew that she was mine. Oh, the
+ecstasy of<br>
+that moment, as, springing to my feet, I darted forward to press
+her to my<br>
+heart! When, suddenly, an arm was interposed between us, while a
+low but<br>
+solemn voice rang in my ears, "Stir not; for thou art false and
+traitorous,<br>
+thy vow a perjury, and thy heart a lie!" Slowly and silently the
+fair form<br>
+of my loved Lucy&mdash;for it was her&mdash;receded from my sight. One
+look, one last<br>
+look of sorrow&mdash;it was scarce reproach&mdash;fell upon me, and I sank
+back upon<br>
+the cold pavement, broken-hearted and forsaken.</p>
+
+<p>This dream came with daybreak, and with the calm repose of
+evening; the<br>
+still hours of the waking night brought no other image to my
+eyes, and when<br>
+its sad influence had spread a gloom and desolation over my
+wounded heart,<br>
+a secret hope crept over me, that again the bright moment of
+happiness<br>
+would return, and once more beside that ancient altar I'd kneel
+beside my<br>
+bride, and call her mine.</p>
+
+<p>For the rest, my memory retains but little; the kind looks
+which came<br>
+around my bedside brought but a brief pleasure, for in their
+affectionate<br>
+beaming I could read the gloomy prestige of my fate. The hurried
+but<br>
+cautious step, the whispered sentences, the averted gaze of those
+who<br>
+sorrowed for me, sunk far deeper into my heart than my friends
+then thought<br>
+of. Little do they think, who minister to the sick or dying, how
+each<br>
+passing word, each flitting glance is noted, and how the pale and
+stilly<br>
+figure which lies all but lifeless before them counts over the
+hours he has<br>
+to live by the smiles or tears around him!</p>
+
+<p>Hours, days, weeks rolled over, and still my fate hung in the
+balance; and<br>
+while in the wild enthusiasm of my erring faculties, I wandered
+far in<br>
+spirit from my bed of suffering and pain, some well-remembered
+voice beside<br>
+me would strike upon my ear, bringing me back, as if by magic, to
+all the<br>
+realities of life, and investing my almost unconscious state with
+all the<br>
+hopes and fears about me.</p>
+
+<p>One by one, at length, these fancies fled from me, and to the
+delirium of<br>
+fever succeeded the sad and helpless consciousness of illness,
+far, far<br>
+more depressing; for as the conviction of sense came back, the
+sorrowful<br>
+aspect of a dreary future came with it.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XIII.</p>
+
+<p>THE VILLA.</p>
+
+<p>The gentle twilight of an autumnal evening, calm, serene, and
+mellow, was<br>
+falling as I opened my eyes to consciousness of life and being,
+and looked<br>
+around me. I lay in a large and handsomely-furnished apartment,
+in which<br>
+the hand of taste was as evident in all the decorations as the
+unsparing<br>
+employment of wealth; the silk draperies of my bed, the inlaid
+tables, the<br>
+ormolu ornaments which glittered upon the chimney, were one by
+one so many<br>
+puzzles to my erring senses, and I opened and shut my eyes again
+and again,<br>
+and essayed by every means in my power to ascertain if they were
+not the<br>
+visionary creations of a fevered mind. I stretched out my hands
+to feel the<br>
+objects; and even while holding the freshly-plucked flowers in my
+grasp I<br>
+could scarce persuade myself that they were real. A thrill of
+pain at this<br>
+instant recalled me to other thoughts, and I turned my eyes upon
+my wounded<br>
+arm, which, swollen and stiffened, lay motionless beside me.
+Gradually, my<br>
+memory came back, and to my weak faculties some passages of my
+former<br>
+life were presented, not collectedly it is true, nor in any
+order, but<br>
+scattered, isolated scenes. While such thoughts flew past, my
+ever-rising<br>
+question to myself was, "Where am I now?" The vague feeling which
+illness<br>
+leaves upon the mind, whispered to me of kind looks and soft
+voices; and<br>
+I had a dreamy consciousness about me of being watched and cared
+for, but<br>
+wherefore, or by whom, I knew not.</p>
+
+<p>From a partly open door which led into a garden, a mild and
+balmy air<br>
+fanned my temples and soothed my heated brow; and as the light
+curtain<br>
+waved to and fro with the breeze, the odor of the rose and the
+orange-tree<br>
+filled the apartment.</p>
+
+<p>There is something in the feeling of weakness which succeeds
+to long<br>
+illness of the most delicious and refined enjoyment. The spirit
+emerging as<br>
+it were from the thraldom of its grosser prison, rises high and
+triumphant<br>
+above the meaner thoughts and more petty ambitions of daily life.
+Purer<br>
+feelings, more ennobling hopes succeed; and dreams of our
+childhood,<br>
+mingling with our promises for the future, make up an ideal
+existence<br>
+in which the low passions and cares of ordinary life enter not or
+are<br>
+forgotten. 'Tis then we learn to hold converse with ourselves;
+'tis then we<br>
+ask how has our manhood performed the promises of its youth, or
+have our<br>
+ripened prospects borne out the pledges of our boyhood? 'Tis
+then, in<br>
+the calm justice of our lonely hearts, we learn how our failures
+are but<br>
+another name for our faults, and that what we looked on as the
+vicissitudes<br>
+of fortune are but the fruits of our own vices. Alas, how
+short-lived are<br>
+such intervals! Like the fitful sunshine in the wintry sky, they
+throw one<br>
+bright and joyous tint over the dark landscape: for a moment the
+valley and<br>
+the mountain-top are bathed in a ruddy glow; the leafless tree
+and the dark<br>
+moss seem to feel a touch of spring; but the next instant it is
+past; the<br>
+lowering clouds and dark shadows intervene, and the cold blast,
+the moaning<br>
+wind, and the dreary waste are once more before us.</p>
+
+<p>I endeavored to recall the latest events of my career, but in
+vain; the<br>
+real and the visionary were inextricably mingled, and the scenes
+of my<br>
+campaigns were blended with hopes and fears and doubts which had
+no<br>
+existence save in my dreams. My curiosity to know where I was
+grew now my<br>
+strongest feeling, and I raised myself with one arm to look
+around me. In<br>
+the room all was still and silent, but nothing seemed to intimate
+what I<br>
+sought for. As I looked, however, the wind blew back the curtain
+which<br>
+half-concealed the sash-door, and disclosed to me the figure of a
+man<br>
+seated at a table; his back was towards me, but his broad
+sombrero hat<br>
+and brown mantle bespoke his nation; the light blue curl of
+smoke<br>
+which wreathed gently upwards, and the ample display of
+long-necked,<br>
+straw-wrapped flasks, also attested that he was enjoying himself
+with true<br>
+Peninsular gusto, having probably partaken of a long siesta.</p>
+
+<p>It was a perfect picture in its way of the indolent luxury of
+the<br>
+South,&mdash;the rich and perfumed flowers, half-closing to the night
+air, but<br>
+sighing forth a perfumed <i>buonas noches</i> as they betook
+themselves to rest;<br>
+the slender shadows of the tall shrubs, stretching motionless
+across the<br>
+walks; the very attitude of the figure himself was in keeping as
+supported<br>
+by easy chairs he lounged at full length, raising his head ever
+and anon as<br>
+if to watch the wreath of eddying smoke as it rose upwards from
+his cigar<br>
+and melted away in the distance.</p>
+
+<a name="0102"></a>
+<img alt="0102.jpg (150K)" src="0102.jpg" height="638" width="803">
+
+<p>[MR. FREE TURNED SPANIARD.]</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>"Yes", thought I, as I looked for some time, "such is the very
+type of his<br>
+nation. Surrounded by every luxury of climate, blessed with all
+that earth<br>
+can offer of its best and fairest, and yet only using such gifts
+as mere<br>
+sensual gratifications." Starting with this theme, I wove a whole
+story for<br>
+the unknown personage whom, in my wandering fancy, I began by
+creating<br>
+a grandee of Portugal, invested with rank honors, and riches; but
+who,<br>
+effeminated by the habits and usages of his country, had become
+the mere<br>
+idle voluptuary, living a life of easy and inglorious indolence.
+My further<br>
+musings were interrupted at this moment for the individual to
+whom I<br>
+had been so complimentary in my revery, slowly arose from his
+recumbent<br>
+position, flung his loose mantle carelessly across his left
+shoulder, and<br>
+pushing open the sash-door, entered my chamber. Directing his
+steps to a<br>
+large mirror, he stood for some minutes contemplating himself
+with what,<br>
+from his attitude, I judged to be no small satisfaction. Though
+his back<br>
+was still towards me, and the dim twilight of the room too
+uncertain to see<br>
+much, yet I could perceive that he was evidently admiring himself
+in the<br>
+glass. Of this fact I had soon the most complete proof; for as I
+looked,<br>
+he slowly raised his broad-leafed Spanish hat with an air of most
+imposing<br>
+pretension, and bowed reverently to himself.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Come sta vostra senoria?</i>" said he.</p>
+
+<p>The whole gesture and style of this proceeding struck me as so
+ridiculous,<br>
+that in spite of all my efforts I could scarcely repress a laugh.
+He turned<br>
+quickly round and approached the bed. The deep shadow of the
+sombrero<br>
+darkened the upper part of his features, but I could distinguish
+a pair of<br>
+fierce-looking mustaches beneath, which curled upwards towards
+his eyes,<br>
+while a stiff point beard stuck straight from his chin. Fearing
+lest my<br>
+rude interruption had been overheard, I was framing some polite
+speech in<br>
+Portuguese, when he opened the dialogue by asking in that
+language how I<br>
+did.</p>
+
+<p>I replied, and was about to ask some questions relative to
+where, and<br>
+under whose protection I then was, when my grave-looking friend,
+giving a<br>
+pirouette upon one leg, sent his hat flying into the air, and
+cried out in<br>
+a voice that not even my memory could fail to recognize,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"By the rock of Cashel he's cured!&mdash;he's cured!&mdash;the fever's
+over! Oh,<br>
+Master Charles, dear! oh, Master, darling, and you ain't mad,
+after all?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mad! no, faith! but I shrewdly suspect you must be."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, devil a taste! But spake to me, honey; spake to me,
+acushla!"</p>
+
+<p>"Where am I? Whose house is this? What do you mean by that
+disguise, that<br>
+beard&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Whisht, I'll tell you all, av you have patience? But are you
+cured? Tell<br>
+me that first. Sure they was going to cut the arm off you, till
+you got out<br>
+of bed, and with your pistols, sent them flying, one out of the
+window and<br>
+the other down-stairs; and I bate the little chap with the saw
+myself till<br>
+he couldn't know himself in the glass."</p>
+
+<p>While Mike ran on at this rate, I never took my eyes from him,
+and it was<br>
+all my poor faculties were equal to, to convince myself that the
+whole<br>
+scene was not some vision of a wandering intellect. Gradually,
+however, the<br>
+well-known features recalled me to myself, and as my doubts gave
+way at<br>
+length, I laughed long and heartily at the masquerade absurdity
+of his<br>
+appearance.</p>
+
+<p>Mike, meanwhile, whose face expressed no small mistrust at the
+sincerity of<br>
+my mirth, having uncloaked himself, proceeded to lay aside his
+beard and<br>
+mustaches, saying, as he did so,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"There now, darling; there now, Master, dear,&mdash;don't be
+grinning that<br>
+way,&mdash;I'll not be a Portigee any more, av you'll be quiet and
+listen to<br>
+reason."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Mike, where am I? Answer me that one question."</p>
+
+<p>"You're at home, dear; where else would you be?"</p>
+
+<p>"At home?" said I, with a start, as my eye ranged over the
+various articles<br>
+of luxury and elegance around, so unlike the more simple and
+unpretending<br>
+features of my uncle's house,&mdash;"at home?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, just so; sure, isn't it the same thing. It's ould Don
+Emanuel that<br>
+owns it; and won't it be your own when you're married to that
+lovely<br>
+crayture herself?"</p>
+
+<p>I started up, and placing my hand upon my throbbing temples,
+asked myself<br>
+if I were really awake, or if some flight of fancy had not
+carried me away<br>
+beyond the bounds of reason and sense. "Go on, go on!" said I, at
+length,<br>
+in a hollow voice, anxious to gather from his words something
+like a clew<br>
+to this mystery. "How did this happen?"</p>
+
+<p>"Av ye mean how you came here, faith, it was just this way.
+After you got<br>
+the fever, and beat the doctors, devil a one would go near you
+but myself<br>
+and the major."</p>
+
+<p>"The major,&mdash;Major Monsoon?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Major Power himself. Well, he told your friends up here
+how it was<br>
+going very hard with you, and that you were like to die; and the
+same<br>
+evening they sent down a beautiful litter, as like a hearse as
+two peas,<br>
+for you, and brought you up here in state,&mdash;devil a thing was
+wanting but<br>
+a few people to raise the cry to make it as fine a funeral as
+ever I seen.<br>
+And sure, I set up a whillilew myself in the Black Horse Square,
+and the<br>
+devils only laughed at me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you see they put you into a beautiful, elegant bed, and
+the young<br>
+lady herself sat down beside you, betune times fanning you with a
+big<br>
+fan, and then drying her eyes, for she was weeping like a
+waterfall. 'Don<br>
+Miguel,' says she to me,&mdash;for ye see, I put your cloak on by
+mistake when I<br>
+was leaving the quarters,&mdash;'Don Miguel, questa hidalgo &eacute;
+vostro amigo?'</p>
+
+<p>"'My most particular friend,' says I; 'God spare him many
+years to be so.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Then take up your quarters here,' says she, 'and don't leave
+him; we'll<br>
+do everything in our power to make you comfortable.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I'm not particular,' says I; 'the run of the house&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"Then this is the Villa Nuova?" said I, with a faint sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"The same," replied Mike; "and a sweet place it is for eating
+and<br>
+drinking,&mdash;for wine in buckets full, av ye axed for it, for
+dancing and<br>
+singing every evening, with as pretty craytures as ever I set
+eyes upon.<br>
+Upon my conscience, it's as good as Galway; and good manners it
+is they<br>
+have. What's more, none of your liberties or familiarities with
+strangers;<br>
+but it's Don Miguel, devil a less. 'Don Miguel, av it's plazing
+to you to<br>
+take a drop of Xeres before your meat?' or, 'Would you have a
+shaugh of a<br>
+pipe or cigar when you're done?' That's the way of it."</p>
+
+<p>"And Sir George Dashwood," said I, "has he been here? Has he
+inquired for<br>
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Every day either himself or one of the staff comes galloping
+up at<br>
+luncheon time to ask after you; and then they have a bit of
+tender<br>
+discourse with the senhora herself. Oh, devil a bit need ye fear
+them,<br>
+she's true blue; and it isn't the major's fault,&mdash;upon my
+conscience it<br>
+isn't,&mdash;for he does be coming the blarney over her in beautiful
+style."</p>
+
+<p>"Does Miss Dashwood ever visit here?" said I, with a voice
+faltering and<br>
+uncertain enough to have awakened suspicion in a more practised
+observer.</p>
+
+<p>"Never once; and that's what I call unnatural behavior, after
+you saving<br>
+her life; and if she wasn't&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Be silent, I say."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well, there, I won't say any more; and sure it's time
+for me to be<br>
+putting on my beard again. I'm going to the Casino with Catrina,
+and sure<br>
+it's with real ladies I might be going av it wasn't for Major
+Power, that<br>
+told them I wasn't a officer; but it's all right again. I gave
+them a great<br>
+history of the Frees from the time of Cuilla na Toole, that was
+one of the<br>
+family and a cousin of Moses, I believe; and they behave well to
+one that<br>
+comes from an ould stock."</p>
+
+<p>"Don Miguel! Don Miguel!" said a voice from the garden.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm coming, my angel! I'm coming, my turtle-dove!" said Mike,
+arranging<br>
+his mustaches and beard with amazing dexterity. "Ah, but it would
+do your<br>
+heart good av you could take a peep at us about twelve o'clock,
+dancing<br>
+'Dirty James' for a bolero, and just see Miss Catrina, the lady's
+maid,<br>
+doing 'cover the buckle' as neat as Nature. There now, there's
+the lemonade<br>
+near your hand, and I'll leave you the lamp, and you may go
+asleep as soon<br>
+as you please, for Miss Inez won't come in to-night to play the
+guitar, for<br>
+the doctor said it might do you harm now."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, and before I could summon presence of mind to ask
+another<br>
+question, Don Miguel wrapped himself in the broad folds of his
+Spanish<br>
+cloak, and strode from the room with the air of an hidalgo.</p>
+
+<p>I slept but little that night; the full tide of memory,
+rushing in upon me,<br>
+brought back the hour of my return to Lisbon and the wreck of all
+my hopes,<br>
+which from the narrative of my servant I now perceived to be
+complete. I<br>
+dare not venture upon recording how many plans suggested
+themselves to my<br>
+troubled spirit, and were in turn rejected. To meet Lucy
+Dashwood; to make<br>
+a full and candid declaration; to acknowledge that flirtation
+alone with<br>
+Donna Inez (a mere passing, boyish flirtation) had given the
+coloring to<br>
+my innocent passion, and that in heart and soul I was hers, and
+hers<br>
+only,&mdash;this was my first resolve; but alas! if I had not courage
+to sustain<br>
+a common interview, to meet her in the careless crowd of a
+drawing-room,<br>
+what could I do under circumstances like these? Besides, the
+matter would<br>
+be cut very short by her coolly declaring that she had neither
+right nor<br>
+inclination to listen to such a declaration. The recollection of
+her look<br>
+as she passed me to her carriage came flashing across my brain
+and decided<br>
+this point. No, no! I'll not encounter that; however appearances
+for the<br>
+moment had been against me, she should not have treated me thus
+coldly and<br>
+disdainfully. It was quite clear she had never cared for
+me,&mdash;wounded pride<br>
+had been her only feeling; and so as I reasoned I ended by
+satisfying<br>
+myself that in that quarter all was at end forever.</p>
+
+<p>Now then for dilemma number two, I thought. The senhora, my
+first impulse<br>
+was one of anything but gratitude to her by whose kind, tender
+care my<br>
+hours of pain and suffering had been soothed and alleviated. But
+for her,<br>
+I should have been spared all my present embarrassment, all my
+shipwrecked<br>
+fortunes; but for her I should now be the aide-de-camp residing
+in Sir<br>
+George Dashwood's own house, meeting with Lucy every hour of the
+day,<br>
+dining beside her, riding out with her, pressing my suit by every
+means and<br>
+with every advantage of my position; but for her and her dark
+eyes&mdash;and,<br>
+by-the-bye, what eyes they are! how full of brilliancy, yet how
+teeming<br>
+with an expression of soft and melting sweetness; and her mouth,
+too,<br>
+how perfectly chiselled those full lips,&mdash;how different from the
+cold,<br>
+unbending firmness of Miss Dashwood's! Not but I have seen Lucy
+smile too,<br>
+and what a sweet smile! How it lighted up her fair cheek, and
+made her blue<br>
+eyes darken and deepen till they looked like heaven's own vault.
+Yes, there<br>
+is more poetry in a blue eye. But still Inez is a very lovely
+girl, and<br>
+her foot never was surpassed. She is a coquette, too, about that
+foot and<br>
+ankle,&mdash;I rather like a woman to be so. What a sensation she
+would make in<br>
+England; how she would be the rage! And then I thought of home
+and Galway,<br>
+and the astonishment of some, the admiration of others, as I
+presented her<br>
+as my wife,&mdash;the congratulations of my friends, the wonder of the
+men, the<br>
+tempered envy of the women. Methought I saw my uncle, as he
+pressed her in<br>
+his arms, say, "Yes, Charley, this is a prize worth campaigning
+for."</p>
+
+<p>The stray sounds of a guitar which came from the garden broke
+in upon my<br>
+musings at this moment. It seemed as if a finger was straying
+heedlessly<br>
+across the strings. I started up, and to my surprise perceived it
+was Inez.<br>
+Before I had time to collect myself, a gentle tap at the window
+aroused me;<br>
+it opened softly, while from an unseen hand a bouquet of fresh
+flowers was<br>
+thrown upon my bed. Before I could collect myself to speak, the
+sash closed<br>
+again and I was alone.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XIV.</p>
+
+<p>THE VISIT.</p>
+
+<p>Mike's performances at the masquerade had doubtless been of
+the most<br>
+distinguished character, and demanded a compensating period of
+repose, for<br>
+he did not make his appearance the entire morning. Towards noon,
+however,<br>
+the door from the garden gently opened, and I heard a step upon
+the stone<br>
+terrace, and something which sounded to my ears like the clank of
+a sabre.<br>
+I lifted my head, and saw Fred Power beside me.</p>
+
+<p>I shall spare my readers the recital of my friend, which,
+however, more<br>
+full and explanatory of past events, contained in reality little
+more than<br>
+Mickey Free had already told me. In fine, he informed me that our
+army, by<br>
+a succession of retreating movements, had deserted the northern
+provinces,<br>
+and now occupied the intrenched lines of Torres Vedras. That
+Massena, with<br>
+a powerful force, was still in march, reinforcements daily
+pouring in<br>
+upon him, and every expectation pointing to the probability that
+he would<br>
+attempt to storm our position.</p>
+
+<p>"The wise-heads," remarked Power, "talk of our speedy
+embarkation, the<br>
+sanguine and the hot-brained rave of a great victory and the
+retreat of<br>
+Massena; but I was up at headquarters last week with despatches,
+and saw<br>
+Lord Wellington myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what did you make out? Did he drop any hint of his own
+views?"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I can't say he did. He asked me some questions about
+the troops<br>
+just landed; he spoke a little of the commissary department,
+damned the<br>
+blankets, said that green forage was bad food for the artillery
+horses,<br>
+sent me an English paper to read about the O. P. riots, and said
+the<br>
+harriers would throw off about six o'clock, and that he hoped to
+see me at<br>
+dinner."</p>
+
+<p>I could not restrain a laugh at Power's catalogue of his
+lordship's topics.<br>
+"So," said I, "he at least does not take any gloomy views of our
+present<br>
+situation."</p>
+
+<p>"Who can tell what he thinks? He's ready to fight if fighting
+will do<br>
+anything, and to retreat, if that be better. But that he'll sleep
+an hour<br>
+less, or drink a glass of claret more&mdash;come what will of it&mdash;I'll
+believe<br>
+from no man living.</p>
+
+<p>"We've lost one gallant thing in any case, Charley," resumed
+Power. "Busaco<br>
+was, I'm told, a glorious day, and our people were in the heat of
+it. So<br>
+that, if we do leave the Peninsula now, that will be a confounded
+chagrin.<br>
+Not for you, my poor fellow, for you could not stir; but I was so
+cursed<br>
+foolish to take the staff appointment,&mdash;thus one folly ever
+entails<br>
+another."</p>
+
+<p>There was a tone of bitterness in which these words were
+uttered that left<br>
+no doubt upon my mind some <i>arri&egrave;re pens&eacute;e</i>
+remained lurking behind them.<br>
+My eyes met his; he bit his lip, and coloring deeply, rose from
+the chair,<br>
+and walked towards the window.</p>
+
+<p>The chance allusion of my man Mike flashed upon me at the
+moment, and I<br>
+dared not trust myself to break silence. I now thought I could
+trace in my<br>
+friend's manner less of that gay and careless buoyancy which ever
+marked<br>
+him. There was a tone, it seemed, of more grave and sombre
+character, and<br>
+even when he jested, the smile his features bore was not his
+usual frank<br>
+and happy one, and speedily gave way to an expression I had never
+before<br>
+remarked. Our silence which had now lasted for some minutes was
+becoming<br>
+embarrassing; that strange consciousness that, to a certain
+extent, we were<br>
+reading each other's thoughts, made us both cautious of breaking
+it; and<br>
+when at length, turning abruptly round, he asked, "When I hoped
+to be up<br>
+and about again?" I felt my heart relieved from I knew not well
+what load<br>
+of doubt and difficulty that oppressed it. We chatted on for some
+little<br>
+time longer, the news of Lisbon, and the daily gossip finishing
+our topics.</p>
+
+<p>"Plenty of gayety, Charley, dinners and balls to no end! so
+get well, my<br>
+boy, and make the most of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I replied, "I'll do my best; but be assured the first
+use I'll make<br>
+of health will be to join the regiment. I am heartily ashamed of
+myself for<br>
+all I have lost already,&mdash;though not altogether my fault."</p>
+
+<p>"And will you really join at once?" said Power, with a look of
+eager<br>
+anxiety I could not possibly account for.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I will; what have I, what can I have to detain me
+here?"</p>
+
+<p>What reply he was about to make at this moment I know not, but
+the door<br>
+opened, and Mike announced Sir George Dashwood.</p>
+
+<p>"Gently, my worthy man, not so loud, if you please?" said the
+mild voice of<br>
+the general, as he stepped noiselessly across the room, evidently
+shocked<br>
+at the indiscreet tone of my follower. "Ah, Power, you here! and
+our poor<br>
+friend, how is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Able to answer for himself at last, Sir George," said I,
+grasping his<br>
+proffered hand.</p>
+
+<p>"My poor lad! you've had a long bout of it; but you've saved
+your arm, and<br>
+that's well worth the lost time. Well, I've come to bring you
+good news;<br>
+there's been a very sharp cavalry affair, and our fellows have
+been the<br>
+conquerors."</p>
+
+<p>"There again, Power,&mdash;listen to that! We are losing
+everything!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, not so, my boy," said Sir George, smiling blandly,
+but archly.<br>
+"There are conquests to be won here, as well as there; and in
+your present<br>
+state, I rather think you better fitted for such as these."</p>
+
+<p>Power's brow grew clouded; he essayed a smile, but it failed,
+and he rose<br>
+and hurried towards the window.</p>
+
+<p>As for me, my confusion must have led to a very erroneous
+impression of my<br>
+real feelings, and I perceived Sir George anxious to turn the
+channel of<br>
+the conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"You see but little of your host, O'Malley," he resumed; "he
+is ever from<br>
+home; but I believe nothing could be kinder than his arrangements
+for you.<br>
+You are aware that he kidnapped you from us? I had sent Forbes
+over to<br>
+bring you to us; your room was prepared, everything in readiness,
+when he<br>
+met your man Mike, setting forth upon a mule, who told him you
+had just<br>
+taken your departure for the villa. We both had our claim upon
+you and, I<br>
+believe, pretty much on the same score. By-the-bye, you have not
+seen Lucy<br>
+since your arrival. I never knew it till yesterday, when I asked
+if she did<br>
+not find you altered."</p>
+
+<p>I blundered out some absurd reply, blushed, corrected myself,
+and got<br>
+confused. Sir George attributing this, doubtless, to my weak
+state, rose<br>
+soon after, and taking Power along with him, remarked as he left
+the<br>
+room,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We are too much for him yet, I see that; so we'll leave him
+quiet some<br>
+time longer."</p>
+
+<p>Thanking him in my heart for his true appreciation of my
+state, I sank back<br>
+upon my pillow to think over all I had heard and seen.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mister Charles," said Mike as he came forward with a
+smile, "I<br>
+suppose you heard the news? The Fourteenth bate the French down
+at Merca<br>
+there, and took seventy prisoners; but sure it's little good
+it'll do,<br>
+after all."</p>
+
+<p>"And why not, Mike?"</p>
+
+<p>"Musha! isn't Boney coming himself? He's bringing all the
+Roossians down<br>
+with him, and going to destroy us entirely."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all, man; you mistake. He's nothing to do with Russia,
+and has<br>
+quite enough on his hands at this moment."</p>
+
+<p>"God grant it was truth you were talking! But, you see, I read
+it myself in<br>
+the papers (or Sergeant Haggarty did, which is the same thing)
+that he's<br>
+coming with the Cusacks."</p>
+
+<p>"With who?&mdash;with what?"</p>
+
+<p>"With the Cusacks."</p>
+
+<p>"What the devil do you mean? Who are they?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Tower of Ivory! did you never hear of the Cusacks, with
+the red beards<br>
+and the red breeches and long poles with pike-heads on them, that
+does all<br>
+the devilment on horseback,&mdash;spiking and spitting the people like
+larks?"</p>
+
+<p>"The Cossacks, is it, you mean? The Cossacks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, just so, the Cusacks. They're from Clare Island, and
+thereabouts; and<br>
+there's more of them in Meath. They're my mother's people, and
+was always<br>
+real devils for fighting."</p>
+
+<p>I burst out into an immoderate fit of laughing at Mike's
+etymology, which<br>
+thus converted Hetman Platoff into a Galway man.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, murder! isn't it cruel to hear you laugh that way! There
+now, alanna!<br>
+be asy, and I'll tell you more news. We've the house to ourselves
+to-day.<br>
+The ould gentleman's down at Behlem, and the daughter's in
+Lisbon, making<br>
+great preparations for a grand ball they're to give when you are
+quite<br>
+well."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope I shall be with the army in a few days, Mike; and
+certainly, if I'm<br>
+able to move about, I'll not remain longer in Lisbon."</p>
+
+<p>"Arrah, don't say so, now! When was you ever so comfortable?
+Upon my<br>
+conscience, it's more like Paradise than anything else. If ye see
+the<br>
+dinner we sit down to every day; and as for drink,&mdash;if it wasn't
+that I<br>
+sleep on a ground-floor, I'd seldom see a blanket!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, certainly, Mike, I agree with you, these are hard
+things to tear<br>
+ourselves away from."</p>
+
+<p>"Aren't they now, sir? And then Miss Catherine, I'm taching
+her Irish!"</p>
+
+<p>"Teaching her Irish! for Heaven's sake, what use can she make
+of Irish?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, the crayture, she doesn't know better; and as she was
+always bothering<br>
+me to learn her English, I promised one day to do it; but ye see,
+somehow,<br>
+I never was very proficient in strange tongues; so I thought to
+myself<br>
+Irish will do as well. So, you perceive, we're taking a course of
+Irish<br>
+literature, as Mr. Lynch says in Athlone; and, upon my
+conscience, she's an<br>
+apt scholar."</p>
+
+<p>"'Good-morning to you, Katey,' says Mr. Power to her the other
+day, as he<br>
+passed through the hall. 'Good-morning, my dear; I hear you speak
+English<br>
+perfectly now?'</p>
+
+<p>"'<i>Honia mon diaoul</i>,' says she, making a curtsey.</p>
+
+<p>"Be the powers, I thought he'd die with the laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, my dear, I hope you don't mean it,&mdash;do you know what
+you're<br>
+saying?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Honor bright, Major!' says I,&mdash;'honor bright!' and I gave
+him a wink at<br>
+the same time.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, that's it!' said he, 'is it!' and so he went off holding
+his hands to<br>
+his sides with the bare laughing; and your honor knows it wasn't
+a blessing<br>
+she wished him, for all that."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XV.</p>
+
+<p>THE CONFESSION.</p>
+
+<p>"What a strange position this of mine!" thought I, a few
+mornings after<br>
+the events detailed in the last chapter. "How very fascinating in
+some<br>
+respects, how full of all the charm of romance, and how
+confoundly<br>
+difficult to see one's way through!"</p>
+
+<p>To understand my cogitation right, <i>figurez-vous</i>, my dear
+reader, a large<br>
+and splendidly furnished drawing-room, from one end of which an
+orangery<br>
+in full blossom opens; from the other is seen a delicious little
+boudoir,<br>
+where books, bronzes, pictures and statues, in all the artistique
+disorder<br>
+of a lady's sanctum, are bathed in a deep purple light from a
+stained glass<br>
+window of the seventeenth century.</p>
+
+<p>On a small table beside the wood fire, whose mellow light is
+flirting with<br>
+the sunbeams upon the carpet, stands an antique silver
+breakfast-service,<br>
+which none but the hand of Benvenuto could have chiselled; beside
+it sits<br>
+a girl, young and beautiful; her dark eyes, beaming beneath their
+long<br>
+lashes, are fixed with an expression of watchful interest upon a
+pale and<br>
+sickly youth, who, lounging upon a sofa opposite, is carelessly
+turning<br>
+over the leaves of a new journal, or gazing steadfastly on the
+fretted<br>
+gothic of the ceiling, while his thoughts are travelling many a
+mile away.<br>
+The lady being the Senhora Inez; the nonchalant invalid, your
+unworthy<br>
+acquaintance, Charles O'Malley.</p>
+
+<p>What a very strange position to be sure.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you are not equal to this ball to-night?" said she,
+after a pause of<br>
+some minutes.</p>
+
+<p>I turned as she spoke; her words had struck audibly upon my
+ear, but, lost<br>
+in my revery, I could but repeat my own fixed thought,&mdash;how
+strange to be<br>
+so situated!</p>
+
+<p>"You are really very tiresome, Signor; I assure you, you are.
+I have<br>
+been giving you a most elegant description of the Casino
+<i>f&ecirc;te</i>, and the<br>
+beautiful costume of our Lisbon belles, but I can get nothing
+from you but<br>
+this muttered something, which may be very shocking for aught I
+know. I'm<br>
+sure your friend, Major Power, would be much more attentive to
+me; that<br>
+is," added she, archly, "if Miss Dashwood were not present."</p>
+
+<p>"What! why! You don't mean that there is anything there&mdash;that
+Tower is<br>
+paying attention to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Madre divina</i>, how that seems to interest you, and how red
+you are! If it<br>
+were not that you never met her before, and that your
+acquaintance did not<br>
+seem to make rapid progress, then I should say you are in love
+with her<br>
+yourself."</p>
+
+<p>I had to laugh at this, but felt my face flushing more. "And
+so," said I,<br>
+affecting a careless and indifferent tone, "the gay Fred Power is
+smitten<br>
+at last!"</p>
+
+<p>"Was it so very difficult a thing to accomplish?" said she,
+slyly.</p>
+
+<p>"He seems to say so, at least. And the lady, how does she
+appear to receive<br>
+his attentions?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I should say with evident pleasure and satisfaction, as
+all girls do<br>
+the advances of men they don't care for, nor intend to care
+for."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed," said I, slowly, "indeed, Senhora?" looking into her
+eyes as I<br>
+spoke, as if to read if the lesson were destined for my
+benefit.</p>
+
+<p>"There, don't stare so!&mdash;every one knows that."</p>
+
+<p>"So you don't think, then, that Lucy,&mdash;I mean Miss
+Dashwood&mdash;Why are you<br>
+laughing so?"</p>
+
+<p>"How can I help it; your calling her Lucy is so good, I wish
+she heard it;<br>
+she's the very proudest girl I ever knew."</p>
+
+<p>"But to come back; you really think she does not care for
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not more than for you; and I may be pardoned for the simile,
+having seen<br>
+your meeting. But let me give you the news of our own
+<i>f&ecirc;te</i>. Saturday is<br>
+the day fixed; and you must be quite well,&mdash;I insist upon it.
+Miss Dashwood<br>
+has promised to come,&mdash;no small concession; for after all she has
+never<br>
+once been here since the day you frightened her. I can't help
+laughing at<br>
+my blunder,&mdash;the two people I had promised myself should fall
+desperately<br>
+in love with each other, and who will scarcely meet."</p>
+
+<p>"But I trusted," said I, pettishly, "that you were not
+disposed to resign<br>
+your own interest in me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither was I," said she, with an easy smile, "except that I
+have so many<br>
+admirers. I might even spare to my friends; though after all I
+should be<br>
+sorry to lose you, I like you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said I half bitterly, "as girls do those they never
+intend to care<br>
+for; is it not so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps, yes, and perhaps&mdash;But is it going to rain? How
+provoking! and I<br>
+have ordered my horse. Well, Signor Carlos, I leave you to your
+delightful<br>
+newspaper, and all the magnificent descriptions of battles and
+sieges and<br>
+skirmishes of which you seem doomed to pine without ceasing.
+There, don't<br>
+kiss my hand twice; that's not right."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, let me begin again&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not breakfast with you any more. But tell me, am I to
+order a<br>
+costume for you in Lisbon; or will you arrange all that yourself?
+You must<br>
+come to the <i>f&ecirc;te</i>, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"If you would be so very kind."</p>
+
+<p>"I will, then, be so very kind; and once more, <i>adios</i>." So
+saying, and<br>
+with a slight motion of her hand, she smiled a good-by, and left
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"What a lovely girl!" thought I, as I rose and walked to the
+window,<br>
+muttering to myself Othello's line, and&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "When I love thee not, chaos is come again."</p>
+
+<p>In fact, it was the perfect expression of my feeling; the only
+solution<br>
+to all the difficulties surrounding me, being to fall
+desperately,<br>
+irretrievably in love with the fair senhora, which, all things
+considered,<br>
+was not a very desperate resource for a gentleman in trouble. As
+I thought<br>
+over the hopelessness of one attachment, I turned calmly to
+consider all<br>
+the favorable points of the other. She was truly beautiful,
+attractive in<br>
+every sense; her manner most fascinating, and her disposition, so
+far as<br>
+I could pronounce, perfectly amiable. I felt already something
+more than<br>
+interest about her; how very easy would be the transition to a
+stronger<br>
+feeling! There was an <i>&eacute;clat</i>, too, about being her
+accepted lover that had<br>
+its charm. She was the belle <i>par excellence</i> of Lisbon; and then
+a sense<br>
+of pique crossed my mind as I reflected what would Lucy say of
+him whom<br>
+she had slighted and insulted, when he became the husband of the
+beautiful<br>
+millionnaire Senhora Inez?</p>
+
+<p>As my meditations had reached thus far, the door opened
+stealthily, and<br>
+Catherine appeared, her finger upon her lips, and her gesture
+indicating<br>
+caution. She carried on her arm a mass of drapery covered by a
+large<br>
+mantle, which throwing off as she entered, she displayed before
+me a rich<br>
+blue domino with silver embroidery. It was large and loose in its
+folds, so<br>
+as thoroughly to conceal the figure of any wearer. This she held
+up before<br>
+me for an instant without speaking; when at length, seeing my
+curiosity<br>
+fully excited, she said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This is the senhora's domino. I should be ruined if she knew
+I showed it;<br>
+but I promised&mdash;that is, I told&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes, I understand," relieving her embarrassment about
+the source of<br>
+her civilities; "go on."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there are several others like it, but with this small
+difference,<br>
+instead of a carnation, which all the others have embroidered
+upon the<br>
+cuff, I have made it a rose,&mdash;you perceive? La Senhora knows
+nothing of<br>
+this,&mdash;none save yourself knows it. I'm sure I may trust you with
+the<br>
+secret."</p>
+
+<p>"Fear not in the least, Catherine; you have rendered me a
+great service.<br>
+Let me look at it once more; ah, there's no difficulty in
+detecting it. And<br>
+you are certain she is unaware of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly so; she has several other costumes, but in this one
+I know she<br>
+intends some surprise, so be upon your guard."</p>
+
+<p>With these words, carefully once more concealing the rich
+dress beneath the<br>
+mantle, she withdrew; while I strolled forth to wonder what
+mystery might<br>
+lie beneath this scheme, and speculate how far I myself was
+included in the<br>
+plot she spoke of.</p>
+
+<p>For the few days which succeeded, I passed my time much alone.
+The senhora<br>
+was but seldom at home; and I remarked that Power rarely came to
+see me. A<br>
+strange feeling of half-coolness had latterly grown between us,
+and instead<br>
+of the open confidence we formerly indulged in when together, we
+appeared<br>
+now rather to chat over things of mere every-day interest than of
+our own<br>
+immediate plans and prospects. There was a kind of
+pre-occupation, too, in<br>
+his manner that struck me; his mind seemed ever straying from the
+topics he<br>
+talked of to something remote, and altogether, he was no longer
+the frank<br>
+and reckless dragoon I had ever known him. What could be the
+meaning of<br>
+this change? Had he found out by any accident that I was to blame
+in my<br>
+conduct towards Lucy; had any erroneous impression of my
+interview with her<br>
+reached his ears? This was most improbable; besides, there was
+nothing in<br>
+that to draw down his censure or condemnation, however
+represented; and was<br>
+it that he was himself in love with her, that, devoted heart and
+soul to<br>
+Lucy, he regarded me as a successful rival, preferred before him!
+Oh, how<br>
+could I have so long blinded myself to the fact! This was the
+true solution<br>
+of the whole difficulty. I had more than once suspected this to
+be so; now<br>
+all the circumstances of proof poured in upon me. I called to
+mind his<br>
+agitated manner the night of my arrival in Lisbon, his thousand
+questions<br>
+concerning the reasons of my furlough; and then, lately, the look
+of<br>
+unfeigned pleasure with which he heard me resolve to join my
+regiment the<br>
+moment I was sufficiently recovered. I remembered also how
+assiduously he<br>
+pressed his intimacy with the senhora, Lucy's dearest friend
+here; his<br>
+continual visits at the villa; those long walks in the garden,
+where his<br>
+very look betokened some confidential mission of the heart. Yes,
+there was<br>
+no doubt of it, he loved Lucy Dashwood! Alas, there seemed to be
+no end to<br>
+the complication of my misfortunes; one by one I appeared fated
+to lose<br>
+whatever had a hold upon my affections, and to stand alone,
+unloved and<br>
+uncared for in the world. My thoughts turned towards the senhora,
+but<br>
+I could not deceive myself into any hope there. My own feelings
+were<br>
+untouched, and hers I felt to be equally so. Young as I was,
+there was no<br>
+mistaking the easy smile of coquetry, the merry laugh of
+flattered vanity,<br>
+for a deeper and holier feeling. And then I did not wish it
+otherwise. One<br>
+only had taught me to feel how ennobling, how elevating in all
+its impulses<br>
+can be a deep-rooted passion for a young and beautiful girl! From
+her<br>
+eyes alone had I caught the inspiration that made me pant for
+glory and<br>
+distinction. I could not transfer the allegiance of my heart,
+since it had<br>
+taught that very heart to beat high and proudly. Lucy, lost to me
+forever<br>
+as she must be, was still more than any other woman ever could
+be; all the<br>
+past clung to her memory, all the prestige of the future must
+point to it<br>
+also.</p>
+
+<p>And Power, why had he not trusted, why had he not confided in
+me? Was this<br>
+like my old and tried friend? Alas! I was forgetting that in his
+eye I was<br>
+the favored rival, and not the despised, rejected suitor.</p>
+
+<p>"It is past now," thought I, as I rose and walked into the
+garden; "the<br>
+dream that made life a fairy tale is dispelled; the cold reality
+of the<br>
+world is before me, and my path lies a lonely and solitary one."
+My first<br>
+resolution was to see Power, and relieve his mind of any
+uneasiness as<br>
+regarded my pretentions; they existed no longer. As for me, I was
+no<br>
+obstacle to his happiness; it was, then, but fair and honorable
+that I<br>
+should tell him so; this done, I should leave Lisbon at once. The
+cavalry<br>
+had for the most part been ordered to the rear; still there was
+always<br>
+something going forward at the outposts.</p>
+
+<p>The idea of active service, the excitement of a campaigning
+life, cheered<br>
+me, and I advanced along the dark alley of the garden with a
+lighter and a<br>
+freer heart. My resolves were not destined to meet delay; as I
+turned the<br>
+angle of a walk, Power was before me. He was leaning against a
+tree, his<br>
+hands crossed upon his bosom, his head bowed forward, and his
+whole air and<br>
+attitude betokening deep reflection.</p>
+
+<p>He started as I came up, and seemed almost to change
+color.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Charley," said he, after a moment's pause, "you look
+better this<br>
+morning. How goes the arm?"</p>
+
+<p>"The arm is ready for service again, and its owner most
+anxious for it. Do<br>
+you know, Fred, I'm thoroughly weary of this life."</p>
+
+<p>"They're little better, however, at the lines. The French are
+in position,<br>
+but never adventure a movement; and except some few affairs at
+the pickets,<br>
+there is really nothing to do."</p>
+
+<p>"No matter, remaining here can never serve one's interests,
+and besides, I<br>
+have accomplished what I came for&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I was about to add, "the restoration of my health," when he
+suddenly<br>
+interrupted me, eying me fixedly as he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! indeed! Is that so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said I, half puzzled at the tone and manner of the
+speech; "I can<br>
+join now when I please; meanwhile, Fred, I have been thinking of
+you. Yes,<br>
+don't be surprised, at the very moment we met you were in my
+thoughts."</p>
+
+<p>I took his arm as I said this, and led him down the alley.</p>
+
+<p>"We are too old and, I trust, too true friends, Fred, to have
+secrets from<br>
+each other, and yet we have been playing this silly game for some
+weeks<br>
+past. Now, my dear fellow, I have yours, and it is only fair
+justice you<br>
+should have mine, and, faith, I feel you'd have discovered it
+long since,<br>
+had your thoughts been as free as I have known them to be. Fred,
+you are in<br>
+love; there, don't wince, man, I know it; but hear me out. You
+believe me<br>
+to be so also; nay, more, you think that my chances of success
+are better,<br>
+stronger than your own; learn, then, that I have
+none,&mdash;absolutely none.<br>
+Don't interrupt me now, for this avowal cuts me deeply; my own
+heart alone<br>
+knows what I suffer as I record my wrecked fortunes; but I repeat
+it, my<br>
+hopes are at end forever; but, Fred, my boy, I cannot lose my
+friend too.<br>
+If I have been the obstacle to your path, I am so no more. Ask me
+not why;<br>
+it is enough that I speak in all truth and sincerity. Ere three
+days I<br>
+shall leave this, and with it all the hopes that once beamed upon
+my<br>
+fortunes, and all the happiness,&mdash;nay, not all, my boy, for I
+feel some<br>
+thrill at my heart yet, as I think that I have been true to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>I know not what more I spoke nor how he replied to me. I felt
+the warm<br>
+grasp of his hand, I saw his delighted smile; the words of
+grateful<br>
+acknowledgment his lips uttered conveyed but an imperfect meaning
+to my<br>
+ear, and I remembered no more.</p>
+
+<p>The courage which sustained me for the moment sank gradually
+as I meditated<br>
+over my avowal, and I could scarce help accusing Power of a
+breach of<br>
+friendship for exacting a confession which, in reality, I had
+volunteered<br>
+to give him. How Lucy herself would think of my conduct was ever
+occurring<br>
+to my thoughts, and I felt, as I ruminated upon the conjectures
+it might<br>
+give rise to, how much more likely a favorable opinion might now
+be formed<br>
+of me, than when such an estimation could have crowned me with
+delight.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," thought I, "she will at last learn to know him who
+loved her with<br>
+truth and with devoted affection; and when the blight of all his
+hopes is<br>
+accomplished, the fair fame of his fidelity will be proved. The
+march,<br>
+the bivouac, the battle-field, are now all to me; and the
+campaign alone<br>
+presents a prospect which may fill up the aching void that
+disappointed and<br>
+ruined hopes have left behind them."</p>
+
+<p>How I longed for the loud call of the trumpet, the clash of
+the steel, the<br>
+tramp of the war-horse; though the proud distinction of a
+soldier's life<br>
+were less to me in the distance than the mad and whirlwind
+passion of a<br>
+charge, and the loud din of the rolling artillery.</p>
+
+<p>It was only some hours after, as I sat alone in my chamber,
+that all the<br>
+circumstances of our meeting came back clearly to my memory, and
+I could<br>
+not help muttering to myself,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is indeed a hard lot, that to cheer the heart of my
+friend, I must bear<br>
+witness to the despair that shed darkness on my own."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XVI.</p>
+
+<p>MY CHARGER.</p>
+
+<p>Although I felt my heart relieved of a heavy load by the
+confession I had<br>
+made to Power, yet still I shrank from meeting him for some days
+after;<br>
+a kind of fear lest he should in any way recur to our
+conversation<br>
+continually beset me, and I felt that the courage which bore me
+up for my<br>
+first effort would desert me on the next occasion.</p>
+
+<p>My determination to join my regiment was now made up, and I
+sent forward a<br>
+resignation of my appointment to Sir George Dashwood's staff,
+which I<br>
+had never been in health to fulfil, and commenced with energy all
+my<br>
+preparations for a speedy departure.</p>
+
+<p>The reply to my rather formal letter was a most kind note
+written by<br>
+himself. He regretted the unhappy cause which had so long
+separated us, and<br>
+though wishing, as he expressed it, to have me near him,
+perfectly approved<br>
+of my resolution.</p>
+
+<p>    "Active service alone, my dear boy, can ever place you in
+the<br>
+    position you ought to occupy; and I rejoice the more at your
+decision<br>
+    in this matter, as I feared the truth of certain reports
+here,<br>
+    which attributed to you other plans than those which a
+campaign<br>
+    suggests. My mind is now easy on this score, and I pray you
+forgive<br>
+    me if my congratulations are <i>mal &agrave; propos</i>."</p>
+
+<p>After some hints for my future management, and a promise of
+some letters to<br>
+his friends at headquarters, he concluded:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "As this climate does not seem to suit my daughter, I
+have<br>
+    applied for a change, and am in daily hope of obtaining it.
+Before<br>
+    going, however, I must beg your acceptance of the charger
+which my<br>
+    groom will deliver to your servant with this. I was so struck
+with<br>
+    his figure and action that I purchased him before leaving
+England<br>
+    without well knowing why or wherefore. Pray let him see
+some<br>
+    service under your auspices, which he is most unlikely to do
+under<br>
+    mine. He has plenty of bone to be a weight carrier, and they
+tell<br>
+    me also that he has speed enough for anything."</p>
+
+<p>Mike's voice in the lawn beneath interrupted my reading
+farther, and on<br>
+looking out, I perceived him and Sir George Dashwood's servant
+standing<br>
+beside a large and striking-looking horse, which they were both
+examining<br>
+with all the critical accuracy of adepts.</p>
+
+<p>"Arrah, isn't he a darling, a real beauty, every inch of
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"That 'ere splint don't signify nothing; he aren't the worse
+of it," said<br>
+the English groom.</p>
+
+<p>"Of coorse it doesn't," replied Mike. "What a fore-hand, and
+the legs,<br>
+clean as a whip!"</p>
+
+<p>"There's the best of him, though," interrupted the other,
+patting the<br>
+strong hind-quarters with his hand. "There's the stuff to push
+him along<br>
+through heavy ground and carry him over timber."</p>
+
+<p>"Or a stone wall," said Mike, thinking of Galway.</p>
+
+<p>My own impatience to survey my present had now brought me into
+the<br>
+conclave, and before many minutes were over I had him saddled,
+and was<br>
+cantering around the lawn with a spirit and energy I had not felt
+for<br>
+months long. Some small fences lay before me, and over these he
+carried me<br>
+with all the ease and freedom of a trained hunter. My courage
+mounted with<br>
+the excitement, and I looked eagerly around for some more bold
+and dashing<br>
+leap.</p>
+
+<p>"You may take him over the avenue gate," said the English
+groom, divining<br>
+with a jockey's readiness what I looked for; "he'll do it, never
+fear him."</p>
+
+<p>Strange as my equipment was, with an undress jacket flying
+loosely open,<br>
+and a bare head, away I went. The gate which the groom spoke of
+was a<br>
+strongly-barred one of oak timber, nearly five feet high,&mdash;its
+difficulty<br>
+as a leap only consisted in the winding approach, and the fact
+that it<br>
+opened upon a hard road beyond it.</p>
+
+<p>In a second or two a kind of half fear came across me. My long
+illness had<br>
+unnerved me, and my limbs felt weak and yielding; but as I
+pressed into the<br>
+canter, that secret sympathy between the horse and his rider shot
+suddenly<br>
+through me, I pressed my spurs to his flanks, and dashed him at
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Unaccustomed to such treatment, the noble animal bounded madly
+forward.<br>
+With two tremendous plunges he sprang wildly in the air, and
+shaking his<br>
+long mane with passion, stretched out at the gallop.</p>
+
+<a name="0124"></a>
+<img alt="0124.jpg (204K)" src="0124.jpg" height="719" width="805">
+
+<p>[CHARLEY TRYING A CHARGER.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<p>My own blood boiled now as tempestuously as his; and with a
+shout of<br>
+reckless triumph, I rose him at the gate. Just at the instant two
+figures<br>
+appeared before it,&mdash;the copse had concealed their approach
+hitherto,&mdash;but<br>
+they stood now as if transfixed. The wild attitude of the horse,
+the not<br>
+less wild cry of his rider, had deprived them for a time of all
+energy; and<br>
+overcome by the sudden danger, they seemed rooted to the ground.
+What I<br>
+said, spoke, begged, or imprecated, Heaven knows&mdash;not I. But they
+stirred<br>
+not! One moment more and they must lie trampled beneath my
+horse's<br>
+hoofs,&mdash;he was already on his haunches for the bound,&mdash;when,
+wheeling half<br>
+aside, I faced him at the wall. It was at least a foot higher and
+of solid<br>
+stone masonry, and as I did so I felt that I was perilling my
+life to save<br>
+theirs. One vigorous dash of the spur I gave him, as I lifted him
+to the<br>
+leap. He bounded beneath it quick as lightning; still, with a
+spring like<br>
+a rocket, he rose into the air, cleared the wall, and stood
+trembling and<br>
+frightened on the road outside.</p>
+
+<p>"Safe, by Jupiter! and splendidly done, too," cried a voice
+near me, that I<br>
+immediately recognized as Sir George Dashwood's.</p>
+
+<p>"Lucy, my love, look up,&mdash;Lucy, my dear, there's no danger
+now. She has<br>
+fainted! O'Malley, fetch some water,&mdash;fast. Poor fellow, your own
+nerves<br>
+seem shaken. Why, you've let your horse go! Come here, for
+Heaven's sake!<br>
+Support her for an instant. I'll fetch some water."</p>
+
+<p>It appeared to me like a dream; I leaned against the pillar of
+the gate;<br>
+the cold and death-like features of Lucy Dashwood lay motionless
+upon my<br>
+arm; her hand, falling heavily upon my shoulder, touched my
+cheek. The<br>
+tramp of my horse, as he galloped onward, was the only sound that
+broke the<br>
+silence, as I stood there, gazing steadfastly upon the pale brow
+and paler<br>
+cheek, down which a solitary tear was slowly stealing. I knew not
+how the<br>
+minutes passed; my memory took no note of time, but at length a
+gentle<br>
+tremor thrilled her frame, a slight, scarce-perceptible blush
+colored her<br>
+fair face, her lips slightly parted, and heaving a deep sigh, she
+looked<br>
+around her. Gradually her eyes turned and met mine. Oh, the
+bliss<br>
+unutterable of that moment! It was no longer the look of cold
+scorn she had<br>
+given me last; the expression was one of soft and speaking
+gratitude. She<br>
+seemed to read my very heart, and know its truth; there was a
+tone of deep<br>
+and compassionate interest in the glance; and forgetting
+all,&mdash;everything<br>
+that had passed,&mdash;all save my unaltered, unalterable love, I
+kneeled beside<br>
+her, and in words burning as my own heart burned, poured out my
+tale<br>
+of mingled sorrow and affection with all the eloquence of
+passion. I<br>
+vindicated my unshaken faith,&mdash;reconciling the conflicting
+evidences with<br>
+the proofs I proffered of my attachment. If my moments were
+measured, I<br>
+spent them not idly. I called to witness how every action of my
+soldier's<br>
+life emanated from her; how her few and chance words had decided
+the<br>
+character of my fate; if aught of fame or honor were my portion,
+to her I<br>
+owed it. As, hurried onwards by my ardent hopes, I forgot Power
+and all<br>
+about him, a step up the gravel walk came rapidly nearer, and I
+had but<br>
+time to assume my former attitude beside Lucy as her father came
+up.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Charley, is she better? Oh, I see she is. Here, we have
+the whole<br>
+household at our heels." So saying, he pointed to a string of
+servants<br>
+pressing eagerly forward with every species of restorative that
+Portuguese<br>
+ingenuity has invented.</p>
+
+<p>The next moment we were joined by the senhora, who, pale with
+fear, seemed<br>
+scarcely less in need of assistance than her friend.</p>
+
+<p>Amidst questions innumerable; explanations sought for on all
+sides;<br>
+mistakes and misconceptions as to the whole occurrence,&mdash;we took
+our way<br>
+towards the villa, Lucy walking between Sir George and Donna
+Inez, while I<br>
+followed, leaning upon Power's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"They've caught him again, O'Malley," said the general,
+turning half round<br>
+to me; "he, too, seemed as much frightened as any of us."</p>
+
+<p>"It is time, Sir George, I should think of thanking you. I
+never was so<br>
+mounted in my life&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A splendid charger, by Jove!" said Power; "but, Charley, my
+lad, no more<br>
+feats of this nature, if you love me. No girl's heart will stand
+such<br>
+continual assaults as your winning horsemanship submits it
+to."</p>
+
+<p>I was about making some half-angry reply, when he continued:
+"There, don't<br>
+look sulky; I have news for you. Quill has just arrived. I met
+him at<br>
+Lisbon; he has got leave of absence for a few days, and is coming
+to our<br>
+masquerade here this evening."</p>
+
+<p>"This evening!" said I, in amazement; "why, is it so
+soon?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it is. Have you not got all your trappings ready?
+The Dashwoods<br>
+came out here on purpose to spend the day; but come, I'll drive
+you into<br>
+town. My tilbury is ready, and we'll both look out for our
+costumes." So<br>
+saying, he led me along towards the house, when, after a rapid
+change of my<br>
+toilet, we set out for Lisbon.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XVII.</p>
+
+<p>MAURICE.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed a conceded matter between Power and myself that we
+should never<br>
+recur to the conversation we held in the garden; and so, although
+we dined<br>
+<i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> that day, neither of us
+ventured, by any allusion the most<br>
+distant, to advert to what it was equally evident was uppermost
+in the<br>
+minds of both.</p>
+
+<p>All our endeavors, therefore, to seem easy and unconcerned
+were in vain;<br>
+a restless anxiety to seem interested about things and persons we
+were<br>
+totally indifferent to, pervaded all our essays at conversation.
+By<br>
+degrees, we grew weary of the parts we were acting, and each
+relapsed<br>
+into a moody silence, thinking over his plans and projects, and
+totally<br>
+forgetting the existence of the other.</p>
+
+<p>The decanter was passed across the table without speaking, a
+half nod<br>
+intimated the bottle was standing; and except an occasional
+malediction<br>
+upon an intractable cigar, nothing was heard.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the agreeable occupation we were engaged in, when,
+towards nine<br>
+o'clock, the door opened, and the great Maurice himself stood
+before us.</p>
+
+<p>"Pleasant fellows, upon my conscience, and jovial over their
+liquor!<br>
+Confound your smoking! That may do very well in a bivouac. Let us
+have<br>
+something warm!"</p>
+
+<p>Quill's interruption was a most welcome one to both parties,
+and we<br>
+rejoiced with a sincere pleasure at his coming.</p>
+
+<p>"What shall it be, Maurice? Port or sherry mulled, and an
+anchovy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Or what say you to a bowl of bishop?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Hurrah for the Church, Charley! Let us have the bishop; and
+not to<br>
+disparage Fred's taste, we'll be eating the anchovy while the
+liquor's<br>
+concocting."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Maurice, and now for the news. How are matters at
+Torres Vedras?<br>
+Anything like movement in that quarter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing very remarkable. Massena made a reconnoissance some
+days since,<br>
+and one of our batteries threw a shower of grape among the staff,
+which<br>
+spoiled the procession, and sent them back in very disorderly
+time. Then<br>
+we've had a few skirmishes to the front with no great results,&mdash;a
+few<br>
+courts-martial, bad grub, and plenty of grumbling."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what would they have? It's a great thing to hold the
+French army in<br>
+check within a few marches of Lisbon."</p>
+
+<p>"Charley, my man, who cares twopence for the French army or
+Lisbon or the<br>
+Portuguese or the Junta or anything about it?&mdash;every man is
+pondering over<br>
+his own affairs. One fellow wants to get home again, and be sent
+upon some<br>
+recruiting station. Another wishes to get a step or two in
+promotion, to<br>
+come to Torres Vedras, where even the <i>grande arm&eacute;e</i>
+can't. Then some of us<br>
+are in love, and some of us are in debt. Their is neither glory
+nor profit<br>
+to be had. But here's the bishop, smoking and steaming with an
+odor of<br>
+nectar!"</p>
+
+<p>"And our fellows, have you seen them lately?"</p>
+
+<p>"I dined with yours on Tuesday. Was it Tuesday? Yes. I dined
+with them.<br>
+By-the-bye, Sparks was taken prisoner that morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Sparks taken prisoner! Poor fellow. I am sincerely sorry. How
+did it<br>
+happen, Maurice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very simply. Sparks had a forage patrol towards Vieda, and
+set out early<br>
+in the morning with his party. It seemed that they succeeded
+perfectly, and<br>
+were returning to the lines, when poor Sparks, always susceptible
+where the<br>
+sex are concerned, saw, or thought he saw, a lattice gently open
+as he rode<br>
+from the village, and a very taper finger make a signal to him.
+Dropping a<br>
+little behind the rest, he waited till his men had debouched upon
+the road,<br>
+when riding quietly up, he coughed a couple of times to attract
+the fair<br>
+unknown; a handkerchief waved from the lattice in reply, which
+was speedily<br>
+closed, and our valiant cornet accordingly dismounted and entered
+the<br>
+house.</p>
+
+<p>"The remainder of the adventure is soon told; for in a few
+seconds after,<br>
+two men mounted on one horse were seen galloping at top speed
+towards the<br>
+French lines,&mdash;the foremost being a French officer of the 4th
+Cuirassiers,<br>
+the gentleman with his face to the tail, our friend Sparks; the
+lovely<br>
+unknown being a, <i>vieille moustache</i> of Loison's corps, who had
+been<br>
+wounded in a skirmish some days before, and lay waiting an
+opportunity of<br>
+rejoining his party. One of our prisoners knew this fellow well;
+he had<br>
+been promoted from the ranks, and was a Hercules for feats of
+strength; so<br>
+that, after all, Sparks could not help himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm really sorry; but as you say, Sparks's tender
+nature is always<br>
+the ruin of him."</p>
+
+<p>"Of him! ay, and of you; and of Power; and of myself; of all
+of us. Isn't<br>
+it the sweet creatures that make fools of us from Father Adam
+down to<br>
+Maurice Quill, neither sparing age nor rank in the service,
+half-pay nor<br>
+the veteran battalion&mdash;it's all one? Pass the jug, there.
+O'Shaughnessy&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, by-the-bye, how's the major?"</p>
+
+<p>"Charmingly; only a little bit in a scrape just now. Sir
+Arthur&mdash;Lord<br>
+Wellington, I mean&mdash;had him up for his fellows being caught
+pillaging, and<br>
+gave him a devil of a rowing a few days ago.</p>
+
+<p>"'Very disorderly corps yours, Major O'Shaughnessy,' said the
+general;<br>
+'more men up for punishment than any regiment in the
+service.'</p>
+
+<p>"Shaugh muttered something; but his voice was lost in a
+loud<br>
+cock-a-doo-do-doo, that some bold chanticleer set up at the
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>"'If the officers do their duty, Major O'Shaughnessy, these
+acts of<br>
+insubordination do not occur.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Cock-a-doo-do-doo,' was the reply. Some of the staff found
+it hard not to<br>
+laugh; but the general went on,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'If, therefore, the practice does not cease, I'll draft the
+men into West<br>
+India regiments.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Cock-a-doo-do-doo.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And if any articles pillaged from the inhabitants are
+detected in the<br>
+quarters, or about the person of the troops&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'Cock-a-doo-do-<i>doo</i>,' screamed louder here than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"'Damn that cock! Where is it?'</p>
+
+<p>"There was a general look around on all sides, which seemed in
+vain; when<br>
+a tremendous repetition of the cry resounded from O'Shaughnessy's
+coat<br>
+pocket,&mdash;thus detecting the valiant major himself in the very
+practice of<br>
+his corps. There was no standing this: every one burst out into a
+peal of<br>
+laughing; and Lord Wellington himself could not resist, but
+turned away,<br>
+muttering to himself as he went, 'Damned robbers&mdash;every man of
+them!' while<br>
+a final war-note from the major's pocket closed the
+interview."</p>
+
+<p>"Confound you, Maurice, you've always some villanous narrative
+or other.<br>
+You never crossed a street for shelter without making something
+out of it."</p>
+
+<p>"True this time, as sure as my name's Maurice; but the bowl is
+empty."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, here comes its successor. How long can you stay
+among us?"</p>
+
+<p>"A few days at most. Just took a run off to see the sights. I
+was all over<br>
+Lisbon this morning; saw the Inquisition and the cells and the
+place where<br>
+they tried the fellows,&mdash;the kind of grand jury room with the
+great picture<br>
+of Adam and Eve at the end of it. What a beautiful creature she
+is; hair<br>
+down to her waist, and such eyes! 'Ah, ye darling!' said I to
+myself,<br>
+'small blame to him for what he did. Wouldn't I ate every crab in
+the<br>
+garden, if ye asked me!'"</p>
+
+<p>"I must certainly go to see her, Maurice. Is she very
+Portuguese in her<br>
+style?"</p>
+
+<p>"Devil a bit of it! She might be a Limerick-woman with elegant
+brown hair<br>
+and blue eyes and a skin like snow."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, they've pretty girls in Lisbon too, Doctor."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, faith," said Power, "that they have."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing like Ireland, boys; not a bit of it; they're the
+girls for my<br>
+money; and where's the man can resist them? From Saint Patrick,
+that had to<br>
+go and live in the Wicklow mountains&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Saint Kevin, you mean, Doctor."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure it's all the same, they were twins. I made a little song
+about them<br>
+one evening last week,&mdash;the women I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"Let us have it, Maurice; let us have it, old fellow. What's
+the measure?"</p>
+
+<p>"Short measure; four little verses, devil a more!"</p>
+
+<p>"But the time, I mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whenever you like to sing it; here it is,"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    THE GIRLS OF THE WEST.</p>
+
+<p>    Air,&mdash;"<i>Teddy, ye Gander</i>."</p>
+
+<p>    (<i>With feeling: but not too slow</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>    You may talk, if you please,<br>
+    Of the brown Portuguese,<br>
+    But wherever you roam, wherever you roam,<br>
+    You nothing will meet,<br>
+    Half so lovely or sweet,<br>
+    As the girls at home, the girls at home.</p>
+
+<p>    Their eyes are not sloes,<br>
+    Nor so long is their nose,<br>
+    But between me and you, between me and you,<br>
+    They are just as alarming,<br>
+    And ten times more charming,<br>
+    With hazel and blue, with hazel and blue.</p>
+
+<p>    They don't ogle a man,<br>
+    O'er the top of their fan<br>
+    Till his heart's in a flame, till his heart's in a flame<br>
+    But though bashful and shy,<br>
+    They've a look in their eye<br>
+    That just comes to the same, just comes to the same.</p>
+
+<p>    No mantillas they sport,<br>
+    But a petticoat short<br>
+    Shows an ankle the best, an ankle the best,<br>
+    And a leg&mdash;but, O murther!<br>
+    I dare not go further;<br>
+    So here's to the west, so here's to the west.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that really is a sweet little thing. Moore's isn't
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it; my own muse, every word of it."</p>
+
+<p>"And the music?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"My own, too. Too much spice in that bowl; that's an
+invariable error in<br>
+your devisers of drink, to suppose that the tipple you start with
+can<br>
+please your palate to the last; they forget that as we advance,
+either in<br>
+years or lush, our tastes simplify."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Nous revenons &agrave; nos premi&egrave;res amours</i>. Isn't
+that it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, not exactly, for we go even further; for if you mark the
+progression<br>
+of a sensible man's fluids, you'll find what an emblem of life it
+presents<br>
+to you. What is his initiatory glass of 'Chablis' that he throws
+down with<br>
+his oysters but the budding expectancy of boyhood,&mdash;the
+appetizing sense of<br>
+pleasure to come; then follows the sherry with his soup, that
+warming glow<br>
+which strength and vigor in all their consciousness impart, as a
+glimpse of<br>
+life is opening before him. Then youth succeeds&mdash;buoyant, wild,
+tempestuous<br>
+youth&mdash;foaming and sparkling like the bright champagne whose
+stormy surface<br>
+subsides into a myriad of bright stars."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Oeil de perdrix</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it; woman's own eye, brilliant, sparkling,
+life-giving&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Devil take the fellow, he's getting poetical!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Fred! if that could only last; but one must come to the
+burgundies<br>
+with his maturer years. Your first glass of hermitage is the
+algebraic sign<br>
+for five-and-thirty,&mdash;the glorious burst is over; the pace is
+still good,<br>
+to be sure, but the great enthusiasm is past. You can afford to
+look<br>
+forward, but confound it, you've along way to look back
+also."</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Charley, our friend has contrived to finish the bishop
+during his<br>
+disquisition; the bowl's quite empty."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't say so, Fred. To be sure, how a man does forget
+himself in<br>
+abstract speculations; but let us have a little more, I've not
+concluded my<br>
+homily."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a glass, Maurice; it's already past nine. We are all
+pledged to<br>
+the masquerade, and before we've dressed and got there, 't will
+be late<br>
+enough."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm not disguised yet, my boy, nor half."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, they must take you <i>au naturel</i>, as our countrymen do
+their<br>
+potatoes."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Doctor, Fred's right; we had better start."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I can't help it; I've recorded my opposition to the
+motion, but I<br>
+must submit; and now that I'm on my legs, explain to me what's
+that very<br>
+dull-looking old lamp up there?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's the moon, man; the full moon."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I've no objection; I'm full too: so come along,
+lads."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XVIII.</p>
+
+<p>THE MASQUERADE.</p>
+
+<p>To form one's impression of a masked ball from the attempts at
+this mode<br>
+of entertainment in our country, is but to conceive a most
+imperfect and<br>
+erroneous notion. With us, the first <i>coup d'oeil</i> is everything;
+the<br>
+nuns, the shepherdesses, the Turks, sailors, eastern princes,
+watchmen,<br>
+moonshees, milestones, devils, and Quakers are all very well in
+their way<br>
+as they pass in the review before us, but when we come to mix in
+the<br>
+crowd, we discover that, except the turban and the cowl, the
+crook and<br>
+the broad-brim, no further disguise is attempted or thought of.
+The nun,<br>
+forgetting her vow and her vestments, is flirting with the devil;
+the<br>
+watchman, a very fastidious elegant, is ogling the fishwomen
+through his<br>
+glass; while the Quaker is performing a <i>pas seul</i> Alberti might
+be proud<br>
+of, in a quadrille of riotous Turks and half-tipsy Hindoos; in
+fact, the<br>
+whole wit of the scene consists in absurd associations. Apart
+from this,<br>
+the actors have rarely any claims upon your attention; for even
+supposing<br>
+a person clever enough to sustain his character, whatever it be,
+you must<br>
+also supply the other personages of the drama, or, in stage
+phrase, he'll<br>
+have nothing to "play up to." What would be Bardolph without
+Pistol; what<br>
+Sir Lucius O'Triuger without Acres? It is the relief which throws
+out the<br>
+disparities and contradictions of life that afford us most
+amusement; hence<br>
+it is that one swallow can no more make a summer, than one
+well-sustained<br>
+character can give life to a masquerade. Without such sympathies,
+such<br>
+points of contact, all the leading features of the individual,
+making him<br>
+act and be acted upon, are lost; the characters being mere
+parallel lines,<br>
+which, however near they approach, never bisect or cross each
+other.</p>
+
+<p>This is not the case abroad: the domino, which serves for mere
+concealment,<br>
+is almost the only dress assumed, and the real disguise is
+therefore thrown<br>
+from necessity upon the talents, whatever they be, of the wearer.
+It is<br>
+no longer a question of a beard or a spangled mantle, a Polish
+dress or<br>
+a pasteboard nose; the mutation of voice, the assumption of a
+different<br>
+manner, walk, gesture, and mode of expression, are all necessary,
+and no<br>
+small tact is required to effect this successfully.</p>
+
+<p>I may be pardoned this little digression, as it serves to
+explain in some<br>
+measure how I felt on entering the splendidly lit up <i>salons</i> of
+the<br>
+villa, crowded with hundreds of figures in all the varied
+costumes of a<br>
+carnival,&mdash;the sounds of laughter mingled with the crash of the
+music;<br>
+the hurrying hither and thither of servants with refreshments;
+the crowds<br>
+gathered around fortune-tellers, whose predictions threw the
+parties<br>
+at each moment into shouts of merriment; the eager following of
+some<br>
+disappointed domino, interrogating every one to find out a lost
+mask.<br>
+For some time I stood an astonished spectator at the kind of
+secret<br>
+intelligence which seemed to pervade the whole assemblage, when
+suddenly a<br>
+mask, who for some time had been standing beside me, whispered in
+French,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If you pass your time in this manner, you must not feel
+surprised if your<br>
+place be occupied."</p>
+
+<p>I turned hastily round, but she was gone. She, I say, for the
+voice was<br>
+clearly a woman's; her pink domino could be no guide, for
+hundreds of the<br>
+same color passed me every instant. The meaning of the allusion I
+had<br>
+little doubt of. I turned to speak to Power, but he was gone; and
+for the<br>
+first moment of my life, the bitterness of rivalry crossed my
+mind. It was<br>
+true I had resigned all pretensions in his favor. My last meeting
+with Lucy<br>
+had been merely to justify my own character against an impression
+that<br>
+weighed heavily on me; still, I thought he might have
+waited,&mdash;another day<br>
+and I should be far away, neither to witness nor grieve over his
+successes.</p>
+
+<p>"You still hesitate," whispered some one near me.</p>
+
+<p>I wheeled round suddenly, but could not detect the speaker,
+and was again<br>
+relapsing into my own musings, when the same voice
+repeated,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The white domino with the blue cape. Adieu."</p>
+
+<p>Without waiting to reflect upon the singularity of the
+occurrence, I now<br>
+hurried along through the dense crowd, searching on every side
+for the<br>
+domino.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't that O'Malley?" said an Englishman to his friend.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied the other; "the very man we want. O'Malley,
+find a partner;<br>
+we have been searching a <i>vis-&agrave;-vis</i> this ten
+minutes."</p>
+
+<p>The speaker was an officer I had met at Sir George Dashwood's.
+"How did you<br>
+discover me?" said I, suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a very difficult thing if you carry your mask in your
+hand that way,"<br>
+was the answer.</p>
+
+<p>And I now perceived that in the distraction of my thoughts I
+had been<br>
+carrying my mask in this manner since my coming into the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>"There now, what say you to the blue domino? I saw her foot,
+and a girl<br>
+with such an instep must be a waltzer."</p>
+
+<p>I looked round, a confused effort at memory passing across my
+mind; my eyes<br>
+fell at the instant upon the embroidered sleeve of the domino,
+where a<br>
+rosebud worked in silver at once reminded me of Catrina's secret.
+"Ah,"<br>
+thought I, "La Senhora herself!" She was leaning upon the arm of
+a tall and<br>
+portly figure in black; who this was I knew not, nor sought to
+discover,<br>
+but at once advancing towards Donna Inez asked her to waltz.</p>
+
+<p>Without replying to me she turned towards her companion, who
+seemed as it<br>
+were to press her acceptance of my offer; she hesitated, however,
+for an<br>
+instant, and curtsying deeply, declined it. "Well," thought I,
+"she at<br>
+least has not recognized me."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet, Senhora," said I, half jestingly, "I <i>have</i> seen you
+join a<br>
+bolero before now."</p>
+
+<p>"You evidently mistake me," was the reply, but in a voice so
+well feigned<br>
+as almost to convince me she was right.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, more," said I, "under your own fair auspices did I
+myself first<br>
+adventure one."</p>
+
+<p>"Still in error, believe me; I am not known to you."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet I have a talisman to refresh your memory, should you
+dare me<br>
+further."</p>
+
+<p>At this instant my hand was grasped warmly by a passing mask.
+I turned<br>
+round rapidly, and Power whispered in my ear,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Yours forever, Charley; you've made my fortune."</p>
+
+<p>As he hurried on I could perceive that he supported a lady on
+his arm, and<br>
+that she wore a loose white domino with a deep blue cape. In a
+second all<br>
+thought of Inez was forgotten, and anxious only to conceal my
+emotion, I<br>
+turned away and mingled in the crowd. Lost to all around me, I
+wandered<br>
+carelessly, heedlessly on, neither noticing the glittering throng
+around,<br>
+nor feeling a thought in common with the gay and joyous spirits
+that<br>
+flitted by. The night wore on, my melancholy and depression
+growing ever<br>
+deeper, yet so spell-bound was I that I could not leave the
+place. A<br>
+secret sense that it was the last time we were to meet had gained
+entire<br>
+possession of me, and I longed to speak a few words ere we parted
+forever.</p>
+
+<p>I was leaning on a window which looked out upon the courtyard,
+when<br>
+suddenly the tramp of horses attracted my attention, and I saw by
+the<br>
+clear moonlight a group of mounted men, whose long cloaks and
+tall helmets<br>
+announced dragoons, standing around the porch. At the same moment
+the<br>
+door of the <i>salon</i> opened, and an officer in undress, splashed
+and<br>
+travel-stained, entered. Making his way rapidly through the
+crowd, he<br>
+followed the servant, who introduced him towards the supper-room.
+Thither<br>
+the dense mass now pressed to learn the meaning of the singular
+apparition;<br>
+while my own curiosity, not less excited, led me towards the
+door. As<br>
+I crossed the hall, however, my progress was interrupted by a
+group of<br>
+persons, among whom I saw an aide-de-camp of Lord Wellington's
+staff,<br>
+narrating, as it were, some piece of newly-arrived intelligence.
+I had<br>
+no time for further inquiry, when a door opened near me, and Sir
+George<br>
+Dashwood, accompanied by several general officers, came forth,
+the officer<br>
+I had first seen enter the ball-room along with them. Every one
+was by this<br>
+unmasked, and eagerly looking to hear what had occurred.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Dashwood, you'll send off an orderly at once?" said an
+old general<br>
+officer beside me.</p>
+
+<p>"This instant, my Lord. I'll despatch an aide-de-camp. The
+troops shall be<br>
+in marching order before noon. Oh, here's the man I want!
+O'Malley, come<br>
+here. Mount your horse and dash into town. Send for Brotherton
+and M'Gregor<br>
+to quarters, and announce the news as quickly as possible."</p>
+
+<p>"But what am I to announce, Sir George?"</p>
+
+<p>"That the French are in retreat,&mdash;Massena in retreat, my
+lad."</p>
+
+<p>A tremendous cheer at this instant burst from the hundreds in
+the<br>
+<i>salon</i>, who now heard the glorious tidings. Another cheer and
+another<br>
+followed,&mdash;ten thousand <i>vivas</i> rose amidst the crash of the
+band, as it<br>
+broke into a patriotic war chant. Such a scene of enthusiasm and
+excitement<br>
+I never witnessed. Some wept with joy. Others threw themselves
+into their<br>
+friends' arms.</p>
+
+<p>"They're all mad, every mother's son of them!" said Maurice
+Quill, as he<br>
+elbowed his way through the mass; "and here's an old vestal won't
+leave my<br>
+arm. She has already embraced me three times, and we've finished
+a flask of<br>
+Malaga between us."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, O'Malley, are you ready for the road?"</p>
+
+<p>My horse was by this time standing saddled at the front. I
+sprang at once<br>
+to the saddle, and without waiting for a second order, set out
+for Lisbon.<br>
+Ten minutes had scarce elapsed,&mdash;the very shouts of joy of the
+delighted<br>
+city were still ringing in my ears,&mdash;when I was once again back
+at the<br>
+villa. As I mounted the steps into the hall, a carriage drew
+up,&mdash;it was<br>
+Sir George Dashwood's. He came forward, his daughter leaning upon
+his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, O'Malley, I thought you had gone."</p>
+
+<p>"I have returned, Sir George. Colonel Brotherton is in
+waiting, and the<br>
+staff also. I have received orders to set out for Benejos, where
+the 14th<br>
+are stationed, and have merely delayed to say adieu."</p>
+
+<p>"Adieu, my dear boy, and God bless you!" said the warm-hearted
+old man, as<br>
+he pressed my hand between both his. "Lucy, here's your old
+friend about to<br>
+leave; come and say good-by."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Dashwood had stopped behind to adjust her shawl. I flew
+to her<br>
+assistance. "Adieu, Miss Dashwood, and forever!" said I, in a
+broken voice,<br>
+as I took her hand in mine. "This is not your domino," said I,
+eagerly, as<br>
+a blue silk one peeped from beneath her mantle; "and the sleeve,
+too,&mdash;did<br>
+you wear this?" She blushed slightly, and assented.</p>
+
+<p>"I changed with the senhora, who wore mine all the
+evening."</p>
+
+<p>"And Power, then, was not your partner?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should think not,&mdash;for I never danced."</p>
+
+<p>"Lucy, my love, are you ready? Come, be quick."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-by, Mr. O'Malley, and <i>au revoir, n'est-ce pas?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>I drew her glove from her hand as she spoke, and pressing my
+lips upon her<br>
+fingers, placed her within the carriage. "Adieu, and <i>au
+revoir!</i>" said I.<br>
+The carriage turned away, and a white glove was all that remained
+to me of<br>
+Lucy Dashwood!</p>
+
+<p>The carriage had turned the angle of the road, and its
+retiring sounds were<br>
+growing gradually fainter, ere I recovered myself sufficiently to
+know<br>
+where I stood. One absorbing thought alone possessed me. Lucy was
+not lost<br>
+to me forever; Power was not my rival in that quarter,&mdash;that was
+enough for<br>
+me. I needed no more to nerve my arm and steel my heart. As I
+reflected<br>
+thus, the long loud blast of a trumpet broke upon the silence of
+the<br>
+night, and admonished me to depart. I hurried to my room to make
+my few<br>
+preparations for the road; but Mike had already anticipated
+everything<br>
+here, and all was in readiness.</p>
+
+<p>But one thing now remained,&mdash;to make my adieu to the senhora.
+With this<br>
+intent, I descended a narrow winding stair which led from my
+dressing-room,<br>
+and opened by a little terrace upon the flower-garden beside
+her<br>
+apartments.</p>
+
+<p>As I crossed the gravelled alley, I could not but think of the
+last time I<br>
+had been there. It was on the eve of departure for the Douro. I
+recalled<br>
+the few and fleeting moments of our leave-taking, and a thought
+flashed<br>
+upon me,&mdash;what if she cared for me! What if, half in coquetry,
+half in<br>
+reality, her heart was mixed up in those passages which daily
+association<br>
+gives rise to?</p>
+
+<p>I could not altogether acquit myself of all desire to make her
+believe me<br>
+her admirer; nay, more, with the indolent <i>abandon</i> of my
+country, I had<br>
+fallen into a thousand little schemes to cheat the long hours
+away, which,<br>
+having no other object than the happiness of the moment, might
+yet color<br>
+all her after-life with sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>Let no one rashly pronounce me a coxcomb, vain and
+pretentious, for all<br>
+this. In my inmost heart I had no feeling of selfishness mingled
+with the<br>
+consideration. It was from no sense of my own merits, no
+calculation of my<br>
+own chances of success, that I thought thus. Fortunately, at
+eighteen one's<br>
+heart is uncontaminated with such an alloy of vanity. The first
+emotions of<br>
+youth are pure and holy things, tempering our fiercer passions,
+and calming<br>
+the rude effervescence of our boyish spirit; and when we strive
+to please,<br>
+and hope to win affection, we insensibly fashion ourselves to
+nobler and<br>
+higher thoughts, catching from the source of our devotion a
+portion of that<br>
+charm that idealizes daily life, and makes our path in it a
+glorious and a<br>
+bright one.</p>
+
+<p>Who would not exchange all the triumph of his later days, the
+proudest<br>
+moments of successful ambition, the richest trophies of
+hard-won<br>
+daring,&mdash;for the short and vivid flash that first shot through
+his heart<br>
+and told him he was loved. It is the opening consciousness of
+life, the<br>
+first sense of power that makes of the mere boy a man,&mdash;a man in
+all his<br>
+daring and his pride; and hence it is that in early life we feel
+ever prone<br>
+to indulge those fancied attachments which elevate and raise us
+in our own<br>
+esteem. Such was the frame of my mind when I entered the little
+boudoir<br>
+where once before I had ventured on a similar errand.</p>
+
+<p>As I closed the sash-door behind me, the gray dawn of breaking
+day scarcely<br>
+permitted my seeing anything around me, and I felt my way towards
+the door<br>
+of an adjoining room, where I supposed it was likely I should
+find the<br>
+senhora. As I proceeded thus, with cautious step and beating
+heart, I<br>
+thought I heard a sound near me. I stopped and listened, and was
+about<br>
+again to move on, when a half-stifled sob fell upon my ear.
+Slowly and<br>
+silently guiding my steps towards the sounds, I reached a sofa,
+when, my<br>
+eyes growing by degrees more accustomed to the faint light, I
+could detect<br>
+a figure which, at a glance, I recognized as Donna Inez. A
+cashmere shawl<br>
+was loosely thrown around her, and her face was buried in her
+hands. As she<br>
+lay, to all seeming, still and insensible before me, her
+beautiful hair<br>
+fell heavily upon her back and across her arm, and her whole
+attitude<br>
+denoted the very abandonment of grief. A short convulsive shudder
+which<br>
+slightly shook her frame alone gave evidence of life, except when
+a sob,<br>
+barely audible in the death-like silence, escaped her.</p>
+
+<p>I knelt silently down beside her, and gently withdrawing her
+hand, placed<br>
+it within mine. A dreadful feeling of self-condemnation shot
+through me as<br>
+I felt the gentle pressure of her taper fingers, which rested
+without a<br>
+struggle in my grasp. My tears fell hot and fast upon that pale
+hand, as<br>
+I bent in sadness over it, unable to utter a word. A rush of
+conflicting<br>
+thoughts passed through my brain, and I knew not what to do. I
+now had no<br>
+doubt upon my mind that she loved me, and that her present
+affliction was<br>
+caused by my approaching departure.</p>
+
+<p>"Dearest Inez!" I stammered out at length, as I pressed her
+hands to my<br>
+lips,&mdash;"dearest Inez!"&mdash;a faint sob, and a slight pressure of her
+hand, was<br>
+the only reply. "I have come to say good-by," continued I,
+gaining a little<br>
+courage as I spoke; "a long good-by, too, in all likelihood. You
+have heard<br>
+that we are ordered away,&mdash;there, don't sob, dearest, and,
+believe me, I<br>
+had wished ere we parted to have spoken to you calmly and openly;
+but,<br>
+alas, I cannot,&mdash;I scarcely know what I say."</p>
+
+<p>"You will not forget me?" said she, in a low voice, that sank
+into my very<br>
+heart. "You will not forget me?" As she spoke, her hand dropped
+heavily<br>
+upon my shoulder, and her rich luxuriant hair fell upon my cheek.
+What a<br>
+devil of a thing is proximity to a downy cheek and a black
+eyelash, more<br>
+especially when they belong to one whom you are disposed to
+believe not<br>
+indifferent to you! What I did at this precise moment there is no
+necessity<br>
+for recording, even had not an adage interdicted such
+confessions, nor can<br>
+I now remember what I said; but I can well recollect how,
+gradually warming<br>
+with my subject, I entered into a kind of half-declaration of
+attachment,<br>
+intended most honestly to be a mere <i>expos&eacute;</i> of my own
+unworthiness to win<br>
+her favor, and my resolution to leave Lisbon and its neighborhood
+forever.</p>
+
+<p>Let not any one blame me rashly if he has not experienced the
+difficulty of<br>
+my position. The impetus of love-making is like the ardor of a
+fox-hunt.<br>
+You care little that the six-bar gate before you is the boundary
+of another<br>
+gentleman's preserves or the fence of his pleasure-ground. You go
+slap<br>
+along at a smashing-pace, with your head up, and your hand low,
+clearing<br>
+all before you, the opposing difficulties to your progress giving
+half<br>
+the zest, because all the danger to your career. So it is with
+love; the<br>
+gambling spirit urges one ever onward, and the chance of failure
+is a<br>
+reason for pursuit, where no other argument exists.</p>
+
+<p>"And you do love me?" said the senhora, with a soft, low
+whisper that most<br>
+unaccountably suggested anything but comfort to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Love you, Inez? By this kiss&mdash;I'm in an infernal scrape!"
+said I,<br>
+muttering this last half of my sentence to myself.</p>
+
+<p>"And you'll never be jealous again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never, by all that's lovely!&mdash;your own sweet lips. That's the
+very last<br>
+thing to reproach me with."</p>
+
+<p>"And you promise me not to mind that foolish boy? For, after
+all, you know,<br>
+it was mere flirtation,&mdash;if even that."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll never think of him again," said I, while my brain was
+burning to make<br>
+out her meaning. "But, dearest, there goes the
+trumpet-call&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And, as for Pedro Mascarenhas, I never liked him."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you quite sure, Inez?"</p>
+
+<p>"I swear it!&mdash;so no more of him. Gonzales Cordenza&mdash;I've broke
+with him<br>
+long since. So that you see, dearest Frederic&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Frederic!" said I, starting almost to my feet with,
+amazement, while she<br>
+continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I'm your own,&mdash;all your own!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, the coquette, the heartless jilt!" groaned I,
+half-aloud.</p>
+
+<p>"And O'Malley, Inez, poor Charley!&mdash;what of him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Poor thing! I can't help him. But he's such a puppy, the
+lesson may do him<br>
+good."</p>
+
+<p>"But perhaps he loved you, Inez?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure he did; I wished him to do so,&mdash;I can't bear not
+to be loved.<br>
+But, Frederic, tell me, may I trust you,&mdash;will you keep faithful
+to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sweetest Inez! by this last kiss I swear that such as I kneel
+before you<br>
+now, you'll ever find me."</p>
+
+<p>A foot upon the gravel-walk without now called me to my feet;
+I sprang<br>
+towards the door, and before Inez had lifted her head from the
+sofa, I had<br>
+reached the garden. A figure muffled in a cavalry cloak passed
+near me, but<br>
+without noticing me, and the next moment I had cleared the
+paling, and was<br>
+hurrying towards the stable, where I had ordered Mike to be in
+waiting.</p>
+
+<p>The faint streak of dull pink which announces the coming day
+stretched<br>
+beneath the dark clouds of the night, and the chill air of the
+morning was<br>
+already stirring in the leaves.</p>
+
+<p>As I passed along by a low beech hedge which skirted the
+avenue, I was<br>
+struck by the sound of voices near me. I stopped to listen, and
+soon<br>
+detected in one of the speakers my friend Mickey Free; of the
+other I was<br>
+not long in ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>"Love you, is it, bathershin? It's worship you, adore you,
+my<br>
+darling,&mdash;that's the word! There, acushla, don't cry; dry your
+eyes&mdash;Oh,<br>
+murther, it's a cruel thing to tear one's self away from the best
+of<br>
+living, with the run of the house in drink and kissing! Bad luck
+to it for<br>
+campaigning, any way, I never liked it!"</p>
+
+<p>Catrina's reply,&mdash;for it was she,&mdash;I could not gather; but
+Mike resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, just so, sore bones and wet grass, <i>accadent&eacute;</i>,
+and half-rations. Oh,<br>
+that I ever saw the day when I took to it! Listen to me now,
+honey; here it<br>
+is, on my knees I am before you, and throth it's not more nor
+three, may be<br>
+four, young women I'd say the like to; bad scran to me if I
+wouldn't marry<br>
+you out of a face this blessed morning just as soon as I'd look
+at ye.<br>
+Arrah, there now, don't be screeching and bawling; what'll the
+neighbors<br>
+think of us, and my own heart's destroyed with grief
+entirely."</p>
+
+<p>Poor Catrina's voice returned an inaudible answer, and not
+wishing any<br>
+longer to play the eavesdropper, I continued my path towards the
+stable.<br>
+The distant noises from the city announced a state of movement
+and<br>
+preparation, and more than one orderly passed the road near me at
+a gallop.<br>
+As I turned into the wide courtyard, Mike, breathless and
+flurried with<br>
+running, overtook me.</p>
+
+<p>"Are the horses ready, Mike?" said I; "we must start this
+instant?"</p>
+
+<p>"They've just finished a peck of oats apiece, and faix, that
+same may be a<br>
+stranger to them this day six months."</p>
+
+<p>"And the baggage, too?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the cars, with the staff and the light brigade. It was
+down there I was<br>
+now, to see all was right."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'm quite aware; and now bring out the cattle. I hope
+Catrina received<br>
+your little consolations well. That seems a very sad affair."</p>
+
+<p>"Murder, real murder, devil a less! It's no matter where you
+go, from<br>
+Clonmel to Chayney, it's all one; they've a way of getting round
+you. Upon<br>
+my soul, it's like the pigs they are."</p>
+
+<p>"Like pigs, Mike? That appears a strange compliment you've
+selected to pay<br>
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, just like the pigs, no less. May be you've heard what
+happened to<br>
+myself up at Moronha?"</p>
+
+<p>"Look to that girth there. Well, go on."</p>
+
+<p>"I was coming along one morning, just as day was beginning to
+break, when I<br>
+sees a slip of a pig trotting before me, with nobody near him;
+but as the<br>
+road was lonely, and myself rather down in heart, I thought,
+Musha! but yer<br>
+fine company, anyhow, av a body could only keep you with him.
+But, ye see,<br>
+a pig&mdash;saving your presence&mdash;is a baste not easily flattered, so
+I didn't<br>
+waste time and blarney upon him, but I took off my belt, and put
+it round<br>
+its neck as neat as need be; but, as the devil's luck would have
+it, I<br>
+didn't go half an hour when a horse came galloping up behind me.
+I turned<br>
+round, and, by the blessed light, it was Sir Dinny himself was on
+it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Dennis Pack?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, bad luck to his hook nose. 'What are you doing there, my
+fine<br>
+fellow?' says he. 'What's that you have dragging there behind
+you?'</p>
+
+<p>"'A boneen, sir,' says I. 'Isn't he a fine crayture?&mdash;av he
+wasn't so<br>
+troublesome.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Troublesome, troublesome&mdash;what do you mean?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Just so,' says I. 'Isn't he parsecutiug the life out of me
+the whole<br>
+morning, following me about everywhere I go? Contrary bastes they
+always<br>
+was.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I advise you to try and part company, my friend,
+notwithstanding,' says<br>
+he; 'or may be it's the same end you'll be coming to, and not
+long either.'<br>
+And faix, I took his advice; and ye see, Mister Charles, it's
+just as I was<br>
+saying, they're like the women, the least thing in life is enough
+to bring<br>
+them after us, <i>av ye only put the 'comether'</i> upon them."</p>
+
+<p>"And now adieu to the Villa Nuova," said I, as I rode slowly
+down the<br>
+avenue, turning ever and anon in my saddle to look back on each
+well-known<br>
+spot.</p>
+
+<p>A heavy sigh from Mike responded to my words.</p>
+
+<p>"A long, a last farewell!" said I, waving my hand towards the
+trellised<br>
+walls, now half-hidden by the trees; and, as I spoke, that
+heaviness of the<br>
+heart came over me that seems inseparable from leave-taking. The
+hour of<br>
+parting seems like a warning to us that all our enjoyments and
+pleasures<br>
+here are destined to a short and merely fleeting existence; and
+as each<br>
+scene of life passes away never to return, we are made to feel
+that youth<br>
+and hope are passing with them; and that, although the fair world
+be as<br>
+bright, and its pleasures as rich in abundance, our capacity of
+enjoyment<br>
+is daily, hourly diminishing; and while all around us smiles in
+beauty and<br>
+happiness, that we, alas! are not what we were.</p>
+
+<p>Such was the tenor of my thoughts as I reached the road, when
+they were<br>
+suddenly interrupted by my man Mike, whose meditations were
+following<br>
+a somewhat similar channel, though at last inclining to
+different<br>
+conclusions. He coughed a couple of times as if to attract my
+attention,<br>
+and then, as it were half thinking aloud, he muttered,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if we treated the young ladies well, anyhow, Mister
+Charles, for,<br>
+faix, I've my doubts on it."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XIX.</p>
+
+<p>THE LINES.</p>
+
+<p>When we reached Lescas, we found that an officer of Lord
+Wellington's staff<br>
+had just arrived from the lines, and was occupied in making known
+the<br>
+general order from headquarters; which set forth, with customary
+brevity,<br>
+that the French armies, under the command of Massena, had retired
+from<br>
+their position, and were in full retreat,&mdash;the second and third
+corps,<br>
+which had been stationed at Villa Franca, having marched, during
+the<br>
+night of the 15th, in the direction of Manal. The officers in
+command of<br>
+divisions were ordered to repair instantly to Pero Negro, to
+consult upon a<br>
+forward movement, Admiral Berkeley being written to to provide
+launches to<br>
+pass over General Hill's, or any other corps which might be
+selected, to<br>
+the left bank of the Tagus. All now was excitement, heightened by
+the<br>
+unexpected nature of an occurrence which not even speculation
+had<br>
+calculated upon. It was but a few days before, and the news had
+reached<br>
+Torres Vedras that a powerful reinforcement was in march to join
+Massena's<br>
+army, and their advanced guard had actually reached Santarem. The
+confident<br>
+expectation was, therefore, that an attack upon the lines was
+meditated.<br>
+Now, however, this prospect existed no longer; for scarcely had
+the heavy<br>
+mists of the lowering day disappeared, when the vast plain, so
+lately<br>
+peopled by the thickened ranks and dark masses of a great army,
+was seen in<br>
+its whole extent deserted and untenanted.</p>
+
+<p>The smouldering fires of the pickets alone marked where the
+troops had been<br>
+posted, but not a man of that immense force was to be seen.
+General Fane,<br>
+who had been despatched with a brigade of Portuguese cavalry and
+some<br>
+artillery, hung upon the rear of the retiring army, and from him
+we learned<br>
+that the enemy were continuing their retreat northward, having
+occupied<br>
+Santarem with a strong force to cover the movement. Crawfurd was
+ordered<br>
+to the front with the light division, the whole army following in
+the same<br>
+direction, except Hill's corps, which, crossing the river at
+Velada, was<br>
+intended to harass the enemy's flank, and assist our future
+operations.</p>
+
+<p>Such, in brief, was the state of affairs when I reached Villa
+Franca<br>
+towards noon, and received orders to join my regiment, then
+forming part of<br>
+Sir Stapleton Cotton's brigade.</p>
+
+<p>It must be felt to be thoroughly appreciated, the enthusiastic
+pleasure<br>
+with which one greets his old corps after some months of
+separation: the<br>
+bounding ecstasy with which the weary eye rests on the old
+familiar faces,<br>
+dear by every association of affection and brotherhood; the
+anxious look<br>
+for this one and for that; the thrill of delight sent through the
+heart as<br>
+the well-remembered march swells upon the ear; the very notes of
+that rough<br>
+voice which we have heard amidst the crash of battle and the
+rolling of<br>
+artillery, speak softly to our senses like a father's welcome;
+from the<br>
+well-tattered flag that waves above us to the proud steed of the
+war-worn<br>
+trumpeter, each has a niche in our affection.</p>
+
+<p>If ever there was a corps calculated to increase and foster
+these<br>
+sentiments, the 14th Light Dragoons was such. The warm affection,
+the truly<br>
+heart-felt regard, which existed among my brother officers, made
+of our<br>
+mess a happy home. Our veteran colonel, grown gray in
+campaigning, was like<br>
+a father to us; while the senior officers, tempering the warm
+blood of<br>
+impetuous youth with their hard-won experience, threw a charm of
+peace and<br>
+tranquillity over all our intercourse that made us happy when
+together, and<br>
+taught us to feel that, whether seated around the watch-fire or
+charging<br>
+amidst the squadrons of the enemy, we were surrounded by those
+devoted<br>
+heart and soul to aid us.</p>
+
+<p>Gallant Fourteenth!&mdash;ever first in every gay scheme of
+youthful jollity, as<br>
+foremost in the van to meet the foe&mdash;how happy am I to recall the
+memory<br>
+of your bright looks and bold hearts; of your manly daring and
+your bold<br>
+frankness; of your merry voices, as I have heard them in the
+battle or in<br>
+the bivouac! Alas and alas, that I should indulge such
+recollections alone!<br>
+How few&mdash;how very few&mdash;are left of those with whom I trod the
+early steps<br>
+of life, whose bold cheer I have heard above the clashing sabres
+of the<br>
+enemy, whose broken voice I have listened to above the grave of a
+comrade!<br>
+The dark pines of the Pyrenees wave above some, the burning sands
+of India<br>
+cover others, and the wide plains of Salamanca are the
+abiding-place of<br>
+still more.</p>
+
+<p>"Here comes O'Malley!" shouted a well-known voice, as I rode
+down the<br>
+little slope at the foot of which a group of officers were
+standing beside<br>
+their horses.</p>
+
+<p>"Welcome, thou man of Galway!" cried Hampden; "delighted to
+have you once<br>
+more among us. How confoundedly well the fellow is looking!"</p>
+
+<p>"Lisbon beef seems better prog than commissariat biscuit!"
+said another.</p>
+
+<p>"A'weel, Charley?" said my friend the Scotch doctor; "how's a'
+wi' ye man?<br>
+Ye seem to thrive on your mishaps! How cam' ye by that braw
+beastie ye're<br>
+mounted on?"</p>
+
+<p>"A present, Doctor; the gift of a very warm friend."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you invited him to the mess, O'Malley! For, by Jove,
+our stables<br>
+stand in need of his kind offices! There he goes! Look at him!
+What a<br>
+slashing pace for a heavy fellow!" This observation was made
+with<br>
+reference to a well-known officer on the commander-in-chief's
+staff, whose<br>
+weight&mdash;some two and twenty stone&mdash;never was any impediment to
+his bold<br>
+riding.</p>
+
+<p>"Egad, O'Malley, you'll soon be as pretty a light-weight as
+our friend<br>
+yonder. Ah, there's a storm going on there! Here comes the
+colonel!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, O'Malley, are you come back to us? Happy to see you,
+boy! Hope<br>
+we shall not lose you again in a hurry! We can't spare the
+scapegraces!<br>
+There's plenty of skirmishing going on! Crawfurd always asks for
+the<br>
+scapegraces for the pickets!"</p>
+
+<p>I shook my gallant colonel's hand, while I acknowledged, as
+best I might,<br>
+his ambiguous compliment.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, lads," resumed the colonel, "squad your men and form
+on the road!<br>
+Lord Wellington's coming down this way to have a look at you!
+O'Malley, I<br>
+have General Crawfurd's orders to offer you your old appointment
+on his<br>
+staff; without you prefer to remaining with the regiment!"</p>
+
+<p>"I can never be sufficiently grateful, sir, to the general:
+but, in fact&mdash;I<br>
+think&mdash;that is, I believe&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You'd rather be among your own fellows. Out with it boy! I
+like you all<br>
+the better! But come, we mustn't let the general know that; so
+that I shall<br>
+forget to tell you all about it. Eh, isn't that best? But join
+your troop<br>
+now; I hear the staff coming this way."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, a crowd of horseman were seen advancing towards
+us at a sharp<br>
+trot, their waving plumes and gorgeous aiguillettes denoting
+their rank<br>
+as generals of division. In the midst, as they came nearer, I
+could<br>
+distinguish one whom once seen there was no forgetting; his plain
+blue<br>
+frock and gray trousers, unstrapped beneath his boots, not a
+little unlike<br>
+the trim accuracy of costume around him. As he rode to the head
+of the<br>
+leading squadron, the staff fell back and he stood alone before
+us; for a<br>
+second there was a dead silence, but the next instant&mdash;by what
+impulse tell<br>
+who can&mdash;one tremendous cheer burst from the entire regiment. It
+was like<br>
+the act of one man; so sudden, so spontaneous. While every cheek
+glowed,<br>
+and every eye sparkled with enthusiasm, he alone seemed cool and
+unexcited,<br>
+as, gently raising his hand, he motioned them to silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Fourteenth, you are to be where you always desire to be,&mdash;in
+the advanced<br>
+guard of the army. I have nothing to say on the subject of your
+conduct<br>
+in the field. I know <i>you</i>; but if in pursuit of the enemy, I
+hear of any<br>
+misconduct towards the people of the country, or any
+transgression of the<br>
+general orders regarding pillage, by G&mdash;&mdash;, I'll punish you as
+severely as<br>
+the worst corps in the service, and you know <i>me!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, tear an ages, listen to that; and there's to be no
+plunder after all!"<br>
+said Mickey Free; and for an instant the most I could do was not
+to burst<br>
+into a fit of laughter. The word, "Forward!" was given at the
+moment, and<br>
+we moved past in close column, while that penetrating eye, which
+seemed to<br>
+read our very thoughts, scanned us from one end of the line to
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Charley," said the captain of my troop, in a
+whisper,&mdash;"I say, that<br>
+confounded cheer we gave got us that lesson; he can't stand that
+kind of<br>
+thing."</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove! I never felt more disposed than to repeat it," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, my boy, we'll give him the honors, nine times nine;
+but wait till<br>
+evening. Look at old Merivale there. I'll swear he's saying
+something<br>
+devilish civil to him. Do you see the old fellow's happy
+look?"</p>
+
+<p>And so it was; the bronzed, hard-cast features of the veteran
+soldier<br>
+were softened into an expression of almost boyish delight, as he
+sat,<br>
+bare-headed, bowing to his very saddle, while Lord Wellington was
+speaking.</p>
+
+<p>As I looked, my heart throbbed painfully against my side, my
+breath came<br>
+quick, and I muttered to myself, "What would I not give to be in
+his place<br>
+now!"</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XX.</p>
+
+<p>THE RETREAT OF THE FRENCH.</p>
+
+<p>It is not my intention, were I even adequate to the task, to
+trace with<br>
+anything like accuracy the events of the war at this period. In
+fact, to<br>
+those who, like myself, were performing a mere subaltern
+character, the<br>
+daily movements of our own troops, not to speak of the continual
+changes<br>
+of the enemy, were perfectly unknown, and an English newspaper
+was more<br>
+ardently longed for in the Peninsula than by the most eager crowd
+of a<br>
+London coffee-room; nay, the results of the very engagements we
+were<br>
+ourselves concerned in, more than once, first reached us through
+the press<br>
+of our own country. It is easy enough to understand this. The
+officer in<br>
+command of the regiment, and how much more, the captain of a
+troop, or the<br>
+subaltern under him, knows nothing beyond the sphere of his own
+immediate<br>
+duty; by the success or failure of his own party his knowledge is
+bounded,<br>
+but how far he or his may influence the fortune, of the day, or
+of what is<br>
+taking place elsewhere, he is totally ignorant; and an old
+Fourteenth man<br>
+did not badly explain, his ideas on the matter, who described
+Busaco as "a<br>
+great noise and a great smoke, booming artillery and rattling
+small-arms,<br>
+infernal confusion, and to all seeming, incessant blundering,
+orders<br>
+and counter-orders, ending with a crushing charge; when, not
+being hurt<br>
+himself, nor having hurt anybody, he felt much pleased to learn
+that they<br>
+had gained a victory." It is then sufficient for all the purposes
+of my<br>
+narrative, when I mention that Massena continued his retreat by
+Santarem<br>
+and Thomar, followed by the allied army, who, however desirous of
+pressing<br>
+upon the rear of their enemy, were still obliged to maintain
+their<br>
+communication with the lines, and also to watch the movement of
+the large<br>
+armies which, under Ney and Soult, threatened at any unguarded
+moment to<br>
+attack them in flank.</p>
+
+<p>The position which Massena occupied at Santarem, naturally one
+of great<br>
+strength, and further improved by intrenchments, defied any
+attack on<br>
+the part of Lord Wellington, until the arrival of the
+long-expected<br>
+reinforcements from England. These had sailed in the early part
+of January,<br>
+but delayed by adverse winds, only reached Lisbon on the 2d of
+March; and<br>
+so correctly was the French marshal apprised of the circumstance,
+and so<br>
+accurately did he anticipate the probable result, that on the
+fourth he<br>
+broke up his encampment, and recommenced his retrograde movement,
+with an<br>
+army now reduced to forty thousand fighting men, and with two
+thousand<br>
+sick, destroying all his baggage and guns that could not be
+horsed. By a<br>
+demonstration of advancing upon the Zezere, by which he held the
+allies<br>
+in check, he succeeded in passing his wounded to the rear, while
+Ney,<br>
+appearing with a large force suddenly at Leiria, seemed bent upon
+attacking<br>
+the lines. By these stratagems two days' march were gained, and
+the French<br>
+retreated upon Torres Novas and Thomar, destroying the bridges
+behind them<br>
+as they passed.</p>
+
+<p>The day was breaking on the 12th of March, when the British
+first came in<br>
+sight of the retiring enemy. We were then ordered to the front,
+and broken<br>
+up into small parties, threw out our skirmishers. The French
+chasseurs,<br>
+usually not indisposed to accept this species of encounter,
+showed now less<br>
+of inclination than usual, and either retreated before us, or
+hovered in<br>
+masses to check our advance; in this way the morning was passed,
+when<br>
+towards noon we perceived that the enemy was drawn up in battle
+array,<br>
+occupying the height above the village of Redinha. This little
+straggling<br>
+village is situated in a hollow traversed by a narrow causeway
+which opens<br>
+by a long and dangerous defile upon a bridge, on either side of
+which a<br>
+dense wood afforded a shelter for light troops, while upon the
+commanding<br>
+eminence above a battery of heavy guns was seen in position.</p>
+
+<p>In front of the village a brigade of artillery and a division
+of infantry<br>
+were drawn up so skilfully as to give the appearance of a
+considerable<br>
+force, so that when Lord Wellington came up he spent some time in
+examining<br>
+the enemy's position. Erskine's brigade was immediately ordered
+up, and the<br>
+Fifty-second and Ninety-fourth, and a company of the Forty-third
+were led<br>
+against the wooded slopes upon the French right. Picton
+simultaneously<br>
+attacked the left, and in less than an hour, both were
+successful, and<br>
+Ney's position was laid bare; his skirmishers, however, continued
+to hold<br>
+their ground in front, and La Ferri&egrave;re, a colonel of
+hussars, dashing<br>
+boldly forward at this very moment, carried off fourteen
+prisoners from<br>
+the very front of our line. Deceived by the confidence of the
+enemy, Lord<br>
+Wellington now prepared for an attack in force. The infantry were
+therefore<br>
+formed into line, and, at the signal of three shots fired from
+the centre,<br>
+began their foremost movement.</p>
+
+<p>Bending up a gentle curve, the whole plain glistened with the
+glancing<br>
+bayonets, and the troops marched majestically onward; while the
+light<br>
+artillery and the cavalry, bounding forward from the left and
+centre,<br>
+rushed eagerly towards the foe. One deafening discharge from the
+French<br>
+guns opened at the moment, with a general volley of small-arms.
+The smoke<br>
+for an instant obscured everything, and when that cleared away,
+no enemy<br>
+was to be seen.</p>
+
+<p>The British pressed madly on, like heated blood-hounds; but
+when they<br>
+descended the slope, the village of Redinha was in flames, and
+the French<br>
+in full retreat beyond it. A single howitzer seemed our only
+trophy, and<br>
+even this we were not destined to boast of, for from the midst of
+the<br>
+crashing flame and dense smoke of the burning village, a troop of
+dragoons<br>
+rushed forward, and charging our infantry, carried it off. The
+struggle,<br>
+though but for a moment, cost them dear: twenty of their comrades
+lay dead<br>
+upon the spot; but they were resolute and determined, and the
+officer who<br>
+led them on, fighting hand to hand with a soldier of the
+Forty-second,<br>
+cheered them as they retired. His gallant bearing, and his coat
+covered<br>
+with decorations, bespoke him one of note, and well it might; he
+who<br>
+thus perilled his life to maintain the courage of his soldiers at
+the<br>
+commencement of a retreat, was none other than Ney himself, <i>le
+plus brave<br>
+des braves</i>. The British pressed hotly on, and the light troops
+crossed the<br>
+river almost at the same time with the French. Ney, however, fell
+back upon<br>
+Condeixa, where his main body was posted, and all farther pursuit
+was for<br>
+the present abandoned.</p>
+
+<p>At Casa Noval and at Foz d'Aronce, the allies were successful;
+but the<br>
+French still continued to retire, burning the towns and villages
+in their<br>
+rear, and devastating the country along the whole line of march
+by every<br>
+expedient of cruelty the heart of man has ever conceived. In the
+words of<br>
+one whose descriptions, however fraught with the most wonderful
+power of<br>
+painting, are equally marked by truth, "Every horror that could
+make war<br>
+hideous attended this dreadful march. Distress, conflagration,
+death in<br>
+all modes,&mdash;from wounds, from fatigue, from water, from the
+flames, from<br>
+starvation,&mdash;vengeance, unlimited vengeance, was on every side."
+The<br>
+country was a desert!</p>
+
+<p>Such was the exhaustion of the allies, who suffered even
+greater privations<br>
+than the enemy, that they halted upon the 16th, unable to proceed
+farther;<br>
+and the river Ceira, swollen and unfordable, flowed between the
+rival<br>
+armies.</p>
+
+<p>The repose of even one day was a most grateful interruption to
+the<br>
+harassing career we had pursued for some time past; and it seemed
+that my<br>
+comrades felt, like myself, that such an opportunity was by no
+means to<br>
+be neglected; but while I am devoting so much space and
+trespassing on my<br>
+reader's patience thus far with narrative of flood and field, let
+me steal<br>
+a chapter for what will sometimes seem a scarcely less congenial
+topic, and<br>
+bring back the recollection of a glorious night in the
+Peninsula.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXI.</p>
+
+<p>PATRICK'S DAY IN THE PENINSULA.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>r&eacute;veil</i> had not yet sounded, when I felt my
+shoulder shaken gently as<br>
+I lay wrapped up in my cloak beneath a prickly pear-tree.</p>
+
+<p>"Lieutenant O'Malley, sir; a letter, sir; a bit of a note,
+your honor,"<br>
+said a voice that bespoke the bearer and myself were countrymen.
+I opened<br>
+it, and with difficulty, by the uncertain light, read as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    Dear Charley,&mdash;As Lord Wellington, like a good Irishman
+as<br>
+    he is, wouldn't spoil Patrick's Day by marching, we've got a
+little<br>
+    dinner at our quarters to celebrate the holy times, as my
+uncle would<br>
+    call it. Maurice, Phil Grady, and some regular trumps will
+all come,<br>
+    so don't disappoint us. I've been making punch all night,
+and<br>
+    Casey, who has a knack at pastry, has made a goose-pie as big
+as a<br>
+    portmanteau. Sharp seven, after parade. The second battalion
+of<br>
+    the Fusiliers are quartered at Melant&eacute;, and we are
+next them. Bring<br>
+    any of yours worth their liquor. Power is, I know, absent
+with the<br>
+    staff; perhaps the Scotch doctor would come; try him. Carry
+over<br>
+    a little mustard with you, if there be such in your
+parts.</p>
+
+<p>    Yours,</p>
+
+<p>    D. O'SHAUGHNESSY.</p>
+
+<p>    Patrick's day, and raining like blazes.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing that the bearer expected an answer, I scrawled the
+words, "I'm<br>
+there," with my pencil on the back of the note, and again turned
+myself<br>
+round to sleep. My slumbers were, however, soon interrupted once
+more; for<br>
+the bugles of the light infantry and the hoarse trumpet of the
+cavalry<br>
+sounded the call, and I found to my surprise that, though halted,
+we were<br>
+by no means destined to a day of idleness. Dragoons were already
+mounted,<br>
+carrying orders hither and thither, and staff-officers were
+galloping right<br>
+and left. A general order commanded an inspection of the troops,
+and within<br>
+less than an hour from daybreak the whole army was drawn up under
+arms. A<br>
+thin, drizzling rain continued to fall during the early part of
+the day,<br>
+but the sun gradually dispelled the heavy vapor; and as the
+bright verdure<br>
+glittered in its beams, sending up all the perfumes of a southern
+clime, I<br>
+thought I had never seen a more lovely morning. The staff were
+stationed<br>
+upon a little knoll beside the river, round the base of which the
+troops<br>
+defiled, at first in orderly, then in quick time, the bands
+playing and the<br>
+colors flying. In the same brigade with us the Eighty-eighth
+came, and as<br>
+they neared the commander-in-chief, their quick-step was suddenly
+stopped,<br>
+and after a pause of a few seconds, the band struck up "St.
+Patrick's Day;"<br>
+the notes were caught up by the other Irish regiments, and amidst
+one<br>
+prolonged cheer from the whole line, the gallant fellows moved
+past.</p>
+
+<p>The grenadier company were drawn up beside the road, and I was
+not long in<br>
+detecting my friend O'Shaughnessy, who wore a tremendous shamrock
+in his<br>
+shako.</p>
+
+<p>"Left face, wheel! Quick march! Don't forget the mustard!"
+said the bold<br>
+major; and a loud roar of laughing from my brother officers
+followed him<br>
+off the ground. I soon explained the injunction, and having
+invited some<br>
+three or four to accompany me to the dinner, waited with all
+patience for<br>
+the conclusion of the parade.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was setting as I mounted, and joined by Hampden,
+Baker, the doctor,<br>
+and another, set out for O'Shaughnessy's quarters. As we rode
+along, we<br>
+were continually falling in with others bent upon the same errand
+as<br>
+ourselves, and ere we arrived at Melant&eacute; our party was
+some thirty strong;<br>
+and truly a most extraordinary procession did we form. Few of
+the<br>
+invited came without some contribution to the general stock; and
+while a<br>
+staff-officer flourished a ham, a smart hussar might be seen with
+a plucked<br>
+turkey, trussed for roasting; most carried bottles, as the
+consumption of<br>
+fluid was likely to be considerable; and one fat old major jogged
+along on<br>
+a broken-winded pony, with a basket of potatoes on his arm. Good
+fellowship<br>
+was the order of the day, and certainly a more jovial squadron
+seldom was<br>
+met together than ours. As we turned the angle of a rising
+ground, a hearty<br>
+cheer greeted us, and we beheld in front of an old ordnance
+marquee a party<br>
+of some fifty fellows engaged in all the pleasing duties of the
+<i>cuisine</i>.<br>
+Maurice, conspicuous above all, with a white apron and a ladle in
+his hand,<br>
+was running hither and thither, advising, admonishing,
+instructing, and<br>
+occasionally imprecating. Ceasing for a second his functions, he
+gave us a<br>
+cheer and a yell like that of an Indian savage, and then resumed
+his duties<br>
+beside a huge boiler, which, from the frequency of his
+explorations into<br>
+its contents, we judged to be punch.</p>
+
+<p>"Charley, my son, I've a place for you; don't forget. Where's
+my learned<br>
+brother?&mdash;haven't you brought him with you? Ah, Doctor, how goes
+it?"</p>
+
+<a name="0158"></a>
+<img alt="0158.jpg (139K)" src="0158.jpg" height="505" width="811">
+
+<p>[GOING OUT TO DINNER.]</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>"Nae that bad, Master Quell: a' things considered, we've had
+an awfu' time<br>
+of it lately."</p>
+
+<p>"You know my friend Hampden, Maurice. Let me introduce Mr.
+Baker, Mr.<br>
+Maurice Quill. Where's the major?"</p>
+
+<p>"Here I am, my darling, and delighted to see you. Some of
+yours, O'Malley,<br>
+ain't they? Proud to have you, gentlemen. Charley, we are obliged
+to have<br>
+several tables; but you are to be beside Maurice, so take your
+friends with<br>
+you. There goes the 'Roast Beef;' my heart warms to that old
+tune."</p>
+
+<p>Amidst a hurried recognition, and shaking of hands on every
+side, I elbowed<br>
+my way into the tent, and soon reached a corner, where, at a
+table for<br>
+eight, I found Maurice seated at one end; a huge, purple-faced
+old major,<br>
+whom he presented to us as Bob Mahon, occupied the other.
+O'Shaughnessy<br>
+presided at the table next to us, but near enough to join in all
+the<br>
+conviviality of ours.</p>
+
+<p>One must have lived for some months upon hard biscuit and
+harder beef<br>
+to relish as we did the fare before us, and to form an estimate
+of our<br>
+satisfaction. If the reader cannot fancy Van Amburgh's lions in
+red coats<br>
+and epaulettes, he must be content to lose the effect of the
+picture. A<br>
+turkey rarely fed more than two people, and few were abstemious
+enough to<br>
+be satisfied with one chicken. The order of the viands, too,
+observed no<br>
+common routine, each party being happy to get what he could, and
+satisfied<br>
+to follow up his pudding with fish, or his tart with a sausage.
+Sherry,<br>
+champagne, London porter, Malaga, and even, I believe, Harvey's
+sauce were<br>
+hobnobbed in; while hot punch, in teacups or tin vessels, was
+unsparingly<br>
+distributed on all sides. Achilles himself, they say, got tired
+of eating,<br>
+and though he consumed something like a prize ox to his own
+cheek, he at<br>
+length had to call for cheese, so that we at last gave in, and
+having<br>
+cleared away the broken tumbrels and baggage-carts of our army,
+cleared for<br>
+a general action.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, lads!" cried the major, "I'm not going to lose your time
+and mine by<br>
+speaking; but there are a couple of toasts I must insist upon
+your drinking<br>
+with all the honors; and as I like despatch, we'll couple them.
+It so<br>
+happens that our old island boasts of two of the finest fellows
+that<br>
+ever wore Russia ducks. None of your nonsensical geniuses, like
+poets or<br>
+painters or anything like that; but downright, straightforward,
+no-humbug<br>
+sort of devil-may-care and bad-luck-to-you kind of chaps,&mdash;real
+Irishmen!<br>
+Now, it's a strange thing that they both had such an antipathy to
+vermin,<br>
+they spent their life in hunting them down and destroying them;
+and whether<br>
+they met toads at home or Johnny Crapaud abroad, it was all one.
+[Cheers.]<br>
+Just so, boys; they made them leave that; but I see you are
+impatient, so<br>
+I'll not delay you, but fill to the brim, and with the best cheer
+in your<br>
+body, drink with me the two greatest Irishmen that ever lived,
+'Saint<br>
+Patrick and Lord Wellington.'"</p>
+
+<p>The Englishmen laughed long and loud, while we cheered with an
+energy that<br>
+satisfied even the major.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is to give us the chant? Who is to sing Saint Patrick?"
+cried Maurice.<br>
+"Come, Bob, out with it."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm four tumblers too low for that yet," growled out the
+major.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, Charley, be you the man; or why not Dennis
+himself? Come,<br>
+Dennis, we cannot better begin our evening than with a song; let
+us have<br>
+our old friend 'Larry M'Hale.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Larry M'Hale!" resounded from all parts of the room, while
+O'Shaughnessy<br>
+rose once more to his legs.</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, boys, I'm always ready to follow your lead; but what
+analogy can<br>
+exist between 'Larry M'Hale' and the toast we have just drank I
+can't see<br>
+for the life of me; not but Larry would have made a strapping
+light company<br>
+man had he joined the army."</p>
+
+<p>"The song, the song!" cried several voices.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if you will have it, here goes:"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    LARRY M'HALE.</p>
+
+<p>    AIR,&mdash;<i>"It's a bit of a thing</i>," <i>etc</i>.</p>
+
+<p>    Oh, Larry M'Hale he had little to fear,<br>
+    And never could want when the crops didn't fail;<br>
+    He'd a house and demesne and eight hundred a year,<br>
+    And the heart for to spend it, had Larry M'Hale!<br>
+    The soul of a party, the life of a feast,<br>
+    And an illigant song he could sing, I'll be bail;<br>
+    He would ride with the rector, and drink with the priest,<br>
+    Oh, the broth of a boy was old Larry M'Hale!</p>
+
+<p>    It's little he cared for the judge or recorder,<br>
+    His house was as big and as strong as a jail;<br>
+    With a cruel four-pounder, he kept in great order,<br>
+    He'd murder the country, would Larry M'Hale.<br>
+    He'd a blunderbuss too, of horse-pistols a pair;<br>
+    But his favorite weapon was always a flail.<br>
+    I wish you could see how he'd empty a fair,<br>
+    For he handled it neatly, did Larry M'Hale.</p>
+
+<p>    His ancestors were kings before Moses was born,<br>
+    His mother descended from great Grana Uaile;<br>
+    He laughed all the Blakes and the Frenches to scorn;<br>
+    They were mushrooms compared to old Larry M'Hale.<br>
+    He sat down every day to a beautiful dinner,<br>
+    With cousins and uncles enough for a tail;<br>
+    And, though loaded with debt, oh, the devil a thinner,<br>
+    Could law or the sheriff make Larry M'Hale!</p>
+
+<p>    With a larder supplied and a cellar well stored,<br>
+    None lived half so well, from Fair-Head to Kinsale,<br>
+    As he piously said, "I've a plentiful board,<br>
+    And the Lord he is good to old Larry M'Hale."<br>
+    So fill up your glass, and a high bumper give him,<br>
+    It's little we'd care for the tithes or repale;<br>
+    For ould Erin would be a fine country to live in,<br>
+    If we only had plenty like LARRY M'HALE.</p>
+
+<p>"Very singular style of person your friend Mr. M'Hale," lisped
+a<br>
+spooney-looking cornet at the end of the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the country he belongs to, I assure you," said
+Maurice; "but I<br>
+presume you were never in Ireland."</p>
+
+<p>"You are mistaken there," resumed the other; "I was in
+Ireland, though I<br>
+confess not for a long time."</p>
+
+<p>"If I might be so bold," cried Maurice, "how long?"</p>
+
+<p>"Half an hour, by a stop-watch," said the other, pulling up
+his stock; "and<br>
+I had quite enough of it in that time."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray give us your experiences," cried out Bob Mahon; "they
+should be<br>
+interesting, considering your opportunities."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," said the cornet; "they were so; and as they
+illustrate a<br>
+feature in your amiable country, you shall have them."</p>
+
+<p>A general knocking upon the table announced the impatience of
+the company,<br>
+and when silence was restored the cornet began:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>When the 'Bermuda' transport sailed from Portsmouth for
+Lisbon, I happened<br>
+to make one of some four hundred interesting individuals who,
+before they<br>
+became food for powder, were destined to try their constitutions
+on pickled<br>
+pork. The second day after our sailing, the winds became adverse;
+it blew<br>
+a hurricane from every corner of the compass but the one it
+ought, and the<br>
+good ship, that should have been standing straight for the Bay of
+Biscay,<br>
+was scudding away under a double-reefed topsail towards the coast
+of<br>
+Labrador. For six days we experienced every sea-manoeuvre that
+usually<br>
+preludes a shipwreck, and at length, when, what from sea-sickness
+and fear,<br>
+we had become utterly indifferent to the result, the storm
+abated, the sea<br>
+went down, and we found ourselves lying comfortably in the harbor
+of Cork,<br>
+with a strange suspicion on our minds that the frightful scenes
+of the past<br>
+week had been nothing but a dream.</p>
+
+<p>"'Come, Mr. Medlicot,' said the skipper to me, 'we shall be
+here for a<br>
+couple of days to refit; had you not better go ashore and see the
+country?'</p>
+
+<p>"I sprang to my legs with delight; visions of cowslips, larks,
+daisies, and<br>
+mutton-chops floated before my excited imagination, and in ten
+minutes I<br>
+found myself standing at that pleasant little inn at Cove which,
+opposite<br>
+Spike Island, rejoices in the name of the 'Goat and Garters.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Breakfast, waiter,' said I; 'a beefsteak,&mdash;fresh beef, mark
+ye,&mdash;fresh<br>
+eggs, bread, milk, and butter, all fresh. No more hard tack,'
+thought I;<br>
+'no salt butter, but a genuine land breakfast.'</p>
+
+<p>"Up-stairs, No. 4, sir,' said the waiter, as he flourished a
+dirty napkin,<br>
+indicating the way.</p>
+
+<p>"Up-stairs I went, and in due time the appetizing little meal
+made its<br>
+appearance. Never did a minor's eye revel over his broad acres
+with more<br>
+complacent enjoyment than did mine skim over the mutton and the
+muffin,<br>
+the tea-pot, the trout, and the devilled kidney, so invitingly
+spread out<br>
+before me. 'Yes,' thought I, as I smacked my lips, 'this is the
+reward of<br>
+virtue; pickled pork is a probationary state that admirably fits
+us for<br>
+future enjoyments.' I arranged my napkin upon my knee, seized my
+knife<br>
+and fork, and proceeded with most critical acumen to bisect a
+beefsteak.<br>
+Scarcely, however, had I touched it, when, with a loud crash, the
+plate<br>
+smashed beneath it, and the gravy ran piteously across the cloth.
+Before I<br>
+had time to account for the phenomenon, the door opened hastily,
+and the<br>
+waiter rushed into the room, his face beaming with smiles, while
+he rubbed<br>
+his hands in an ecstasy of delight.</p>
+
+<p>"'It's all over, sir,' said he; 'glory be to God! it's all
+done.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What's over? What's done?' inquired I, with impatience.</p>
+
+<p>"'Mr. M'Mahon is satisfied,' replied he, 'and so is the other
+gentleman.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Who and what the devil do you mean?'</p>
+
+
+<a name="0163"></a>
+<img alt="0163.jpg (181K)" src="0163.jpg" height="660" width="810">
+
+<p>
+
+[DISADVANTAGE OF BREAKFASTING OVER A
+DUELLING-PARTY.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>"'It's over, sir, I say,' replied the waiter again; 'he fired
+in the air.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Fired in the air! Was there a duel in the room below
+stairs?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, sir,' said the waiter, with a benign smile.</p>
+
+<p>"'That will do,' said I, as seizing my hat, I rushed out of
+the house, and<br>
+hurrying to the beach, took a boat for the ship. Exactly half an
+hour had<br>
+elapsed since my landing, but even those short thirty minutes had
+fully as<br>
+many reasons that although there may be few more amusing, there
+are some<br>
+safer places to live in than the Green Isle."</p>
+
+<p>A general burst of laughter followed the cornet's story, which
+was<br>
+heightened in its effect by the gravity with which he told
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"And after all," said Maurice Quill, "now that people have
+given up making<br>
+fortunes for the insurance companies by living to the age of
+Methuselah,<br>
+there's nothing like being an Irishman. In what other part of the
+habitable<br>
+globe can you cram so much adventure into one year? Where can you
+be so<br>
+often in love, in liquor, or in debt; and where can you get so
+merrily out<br>
+of the three? Where are promises to marry and promises to pay
+treated with<br>
+the same gentleman-like forbearance; and where, when you have
+lost your<br>
+heart and your fortune, are people found so ready to comfort you
+in your<br>
+reverses? Yes," said Maurice, as he filled his glass up to the
+brim, and<br>
+eyed it lusciously for a moment,&mdash;"yes, darling, here's your
+health; the<br>
+only girl I ever loved&mdash;in that part of the country, I mean. Give
+her a<br>
+bumper, lads, and I'll give you a chant."</p>
+
+<p>"Name! name! name!" shouted several voices from different
+parts of the<br>
+table.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary Draper!" said Maurice, filling his glass once more,
+while the name<br>
+was re-echoed by every lip at table.</p>
+
+<p>"The song! the song!"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I hope I haven't forgotten it," quoth Maurice. "No;
+here it is."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, after a couple of efforts to assure the pitch of
+his voice, the<br>
+worthy doctor began the following words to that very popular
+melody, "Nancy<br>
+Dawson:"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    MARY DRAPER.</p>
+
+<p>    AIR,&mdash;<i>Nancy Dawson</i>.</p>
+
+<p>    Don't talk to me of London dames,<br>
+    Nor rave about your foreign flames,<br>
+    That never lived, except in drames,<br>
+    Nor shone, except on paper;<br>
+    I'll sing you 'bout a girl I knew,<br>
+    Who lived in Ballywhacmacrew,<br>
+    And let me tell you, mighty few<br>
+    Could equal Mary Draper.</p>
+
+<p>    Her cheeks were red, her eyes were blue,<br>
+    Her hair was brown of deepest hue,<br>
+    Her foot was small, and neat to view,<br>
+    Her waist was slight and taper;<br>
+    Her voice was music to your ear,<br>
+    A lovely brogue, so rich and clear,<br>
+    Oh, the like I ne'er again shall hear,<br>
+    As from sweet Mary Draper.</p>
+
+<p>    She'd ride a wall, she'd drive a team,<br>
+    Or with a fly she'd whip a stream,<br>
+    Or may be sing you "Rousseau's Dream,"<br>
+    For nothing could escape her;<br>
+    I've seen her, too,&mdash;upon my word,&mdash;<br>
+    At sixty yards bring down her bird,<br>
+    Oh, she charmed all the Forty-third,<br>
+    Did lovely Mary Draper.</p>
+
+<p>    And at the spring assizes' ball,<br>
+    The junior bar would one and all<br>
+    For all her fav'rite dances call,<br>
+    And Harry Dean would caper;<br>
+    Lord Clare would then forget his lore;<br>
+    King's Counsel, voting law a bore,<br>
+    Were proud to figure on the floor,<br>
+    For love of Mary Draper.</p>
+
+<p>    The parson, priest, sub-sheriff too,<br>
+    Were all her slaves, and so would you,<br>
+    If you had only but one view,<br>
+    Of such a face and shape, or<br>
+    Her pretty ankles&mdash;But, ohone,<br>
+    It's only west of old Athlone<br>
+    Such girls were found&mdash;and now they're gone&mdash;<br>
+    So here's to Mary Draper!</p>
+
+<p>"So here's to Mary Draper!" sang out every voice, in such
+efforts to catch<br>
+the tune as pleased the taste of the motley assembly.</p>
+
+<p>"For Mary Draper and Co., I thank you," said Maurice. "Quill
+drinks to<br>
+Dennis," added he, in a grave tone, as he nodded to
+O'Shaughnessy. "Yes,<br>
+Shaugh, few men better than ourselves know these matters; and few
+have had<br>
+more experience of the three perils of Irishmen,&mdash;love, liquor,
+and the law<br>
+of arrest."</p>
+
+<p>"It's little the latter has ever troubled my father's son,"
+replied<br>
+O'Shaughnessy. "Our family have been writ proof for centuries,
+and he'd<br>
+have been a bold man who would have ventured with an original or
+a true<br>
+copy within the precincts of Killinahoula."</p>
+
+<p>"Your father had a touch of Larry M'Hale in him," said I,
+"apparently."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly so," replied Dennis; "not but they caught him at
+last, and a<br>
+scurvy trick it was and well worthy of him who did it! Yes," said
+he, with<br>
+a sigh, "it is only another among the many instances where the
+better<br>
+features of our nationality have been used by our enemies as
+instruments<br>
+for our destruction; and should we seek for the causes of
+unhappiness in<br>
+our wretched country, we should find them rather in our virtues
+than in<br>
+our vices, and in the bright rather than in the darker phases of
+our<br>
+character."</p>
+
+<p>"Metaphysics, by Jove!" cried Quill; "but all true at the same
+time. There<br>
+was a mess-mate of mine in the 'Roscommon' who never paid
+car-hire in his<br>
+life. 'Head or harp, Paddy!' he would cry. 'Two tenpennies or
+nothing.'<br>
+'Harp, for the honor of ould Ireland!' was the invariable
+response, and my<br>
+friend was equally sure to make head come uppermost; and, upon my
+soul,<br>
+they seem to know the trick at the Home Office."</p>
+
+<p>"That must have been the same fellow that took my father,"
+cried<br>
+O'Shaughnessy, with energy.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us hear the story, Dennis," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Maurice, "for the benefit of self and fellows, let
+us hear the<br>
+stratagem!"</p>
+
+<p>"The way of it was this," resumed O'Shaughnessy. "My father,
+who for<br>
+reasons registered in the King's Bench spent a great many years
+of his life<br>
+in that part of Ireland geographically known as lying west of the
+law,<br>
+was obliged, for certain reasons of family, to come up to Dublin.
+This he<br>
+proceeded to do with due caution. Two trusty servants formed an
+advance<br>
+guard, and patrolled the country for at least five miles in
+advance; after<br>
+them came a skirmishing body of a few tenants, who, for the
+consideration<br>
+of never paying rent, would have charged the whole Court of
+Chancery, if<br>
+needful. My father himself, in an old chaise victualled like a
+fortress,<br>
+brought up the rear; and as I said before, he were a bold man who
+would<br>
+have attempted to have laid siege to him. As the column advanced
+into the<br>
+enemy's country, they assumed a closer order, the patrol and the
+picket<br>
+falling back upon the main body; and in this way they reached
+that most<br>
+interesting city called Kilbeggan. What a fortunate thing it is
+for us in<br>
+Ireland that we can see so much of the world without foreign
+travel, and<br>
+that any gentleman for six-and-eightpence can leave Dublin in the
+morning,<br>
+and visit Timbuctoo against dinner-time. Don't stare! it's truth
+I'm<br>
+telling; for dirt, misery, smoke, unaffected behavior, and black
+faces,<br>
+I'll back Kilbeggan against all Africa. Free-and-easy, pleasant
+people ye<br>
+are, with a skin, as begrimed and as rugged as your own potatoes!
+But, to<br>
+resume. The sun was just rising in a delicious morning of June,
+when my<br>
+father,&mdash;whose loyal antipathies I have mentioned made him also
+an early<br>
+riser,&mdash;was preparing for the road. A stout escort of his
+followers were<br>
+as usual under arms to see him safe in the chaise, the passage to
+and from<br>
+which every day being the critical moment of my father's
+life.</p>
+
+<p>"'It's all right, your honor,' said his own man, as, armed
+with a<br>
+blunderbuss, he opened the bed-room door.</p>
+
+<p>"'Time enough, Tim,' said my father; 'close the door, for I
+haven't<br>
+finished my breakfast.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now, the real truth was, that my father's attention was at
+that moment<br>
+withdrawn from his own concerns by a scene which was taking place
+in a<br>
+field beneath his window.</p>
+
+<p>"But a few minutes before, a hack-chaise had stopped upon the
+roadside, out<br>
+of which sprang three gentlemen, who, proceeding into the field,
+seemed<br>
+bent upon something, which, whether a survey or a duel, my father
+could not<br>
+make out. He was not long, however, to remain in ignorance. One,
+with an<br>
+easy, lounging gait, strode towards a distant corner; another
+took an<br>
+opposite direction; while a third, a short, pursy gentleman, in a
+red<br>
+handkerchief and rabbit-skin waistcoat, proceeded to open a
+mahogany<br>
+box, which, to the critical eyes of my respected father, was
+agreeably<br>
+suggestive of bloodshed and murder.</p>
+
+<p>"'A duel, by Jupiter!' said my father, rubbing his hands.
+'What a heavenly<br>
+morning the scoundrels have,&mdash;not a leaf stirring, and a sod like
+a<br>
+billiard-table!'</p>
+
+<p>"Meanwhile the little man who officiated as second, it would
+appear to<br>
+<i>both</i> parties, bustled about with an activity little congenial
+to his<br>
+shape; and what between snapping the pistols, examining the
+flints, and<br>
+ramming down the charges, had got himself into a sufficient
+perspiration<br>
+before he commenced to measure the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"'Short distance and no quarter!' shouted one of the
+combatants, from the<br>
+corner of the field.</p>
+
+<p>"'Across a handkerchief, if you like!' roared the other.</p>
+
+<p>"'Gentlemen, every inch of them!' responded my father.</p>
+
+<p>"'Twelve paces!' cried the little man. 'No more and no less.
+Don't forget<br>
+that I am alone in this business!'</p>
+
+<p>"'A very true remark!' observed my father; 'and an awkward
+predicament<br>
+yours will be if they are not both shot!'</p>
+
+<p>"By this time the combatants had taken their places, and the
+little man,<br>
+having delivered the pistols, was leisurely retiring to give the
+word.<br>
+My father, however, whose critical eye was never at fault,
+detected a<br>
+circumstance which promised an immense advantage to one at the
+expense of<br>
+the other; in fact, one of the parties was so placed with his
+back to the<br>
+sun, that his shadow extended in a straight line to the very foot
+of his<br>
+antagonist.</p>
+
+<p>"'Unfair, unfair!' cried my father, opening the window as he
+spoke, and<br>
+addressing himself to him of the rabbit-skin. 'I crave your
+pardon for the<br>
+interruption,' said he; 'but I feel bound to observe that that
+gentleman's<br>
+shadow is likely to make a shade of him.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And so it is,' observed the short man; 'a thousand thanks
+for your<br>
+kindness, but the truth is, I am totally unaccustomed to this
+kind of<br>
+thing, and the affair will not admit of delay.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Not an hour!' said one.</p>
+
+<p>"'No, not five minutes!' growled the other of the
+combatants.</p>
+
+<p>"'Put them up north and south,' said my father.</p>
+
+<p>"'Is it thus?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Exactly so. But now, again, the gentleman in the brown coat
+is covered<br>
+with the ash-tree.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And so he is!' said rabbit-skin, wiping his forehead with
+agitation.</p>
+
+<p>"'Move them a little to the left,' said he.</p>
+
+<p>"'That brings me upon an eminence,' said the gentleman in
+blue. 'I'll be<br>
+d&mdash;d if I be made a cock shot of!'</p>
+
+<p>"'What an awkward little thief it is in the hairy waistcoat!'
+said my<br>
+father; 'he's lucky if he don't get shot himself!'</p>
+
+<p>"'May I never, if I'm not sick of you both!' ejaculated
+rabbit-skin, in a<br>
+passion. 'I've moved you round every point of the compass, and
+the devil a<br>
+nearer we are than ever!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Give us the word,' said one.</p>
+
+<p>"'The word!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Downright murder,' said my father.</p>
+
+<p>"'I don't care,' said the little man; 'we shall be here till
+doomsday.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I can't permit this,' said my father; 'allow me.' So saying,
+he stepped<br>
+upon the window-sill, and leaped down into the field.</p>
+
+<p>"'Before I can accept of your politeness,' said he of the
+rabbit-skin, 'may<br>
+I beg to know your name and position in society?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Nothing more reasonable,' said my father. 'I'm Miles
+O'Shaughnessy,<br>
+Colonel of the Royal Raspers,&mdash;here is my card.'</p>
+
+<p>"The piece of pasteboard was complacently handed from one to
+the other of<br>
+the party, who saluted my father with a smile of most courteous
+benignity.</p>
+
+<p>"'Colonel O'Shaughnessy,' said one.</p>
+
+<p>"'Miles O'Shaughnessy,' said the other.</p>
+
+<p>"'Of Killinahoula Castle,' said the third.</p>
+
+<p>"'At your service,' said my father, bowing, as he presented
+his snuff-box;<br>
+'and now to business, if you please, for my time also is
+limited.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Very true,' observed he of the rabbit-skin; 'and, as you
+observe, now to<br>
+business; in virtue of which, Colonel Miles O'Shaughnessy, I
+hereby arrest<br>
+you in the King's name. Here is the writ; it's at the suit of
+Barnaby<br>
+Kelly, of Loughrea, for the sum of &pound;1,482 19s. 7-1/2d.,
+which&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"Before he could conclude the sentence, my father discharged
+one obligation<br>
+by implanting his closed knuckles in his face. The blow, well
+aimed and<br>
+well intentioned, sent the little fellow summersetting like a
+sugar<br>
+hogshead. But, alas! it was of no use; the others, strong and
+able-bodied,<br>
+fell both upon him, and after a desperate struggle succeeded in
+getting him<br>
+down. To tie his hands, and convey him to the chaise, was the
+work of a few<br>
+moments; and as my father drove by the inn, the last object which
+caught<br>
+his view was a bloody encounter between his own people and the
+myrmidons<br>
+of the law, who, in great numbers, had laid siege to the house
+during his<br>
+capture. Thus was my father taken; and thus, in reward for
+yielding to a<br>
+virtuous weakness in his character, was he consigned to the
+ignominious<br>
+durance of a prison. Was I not right, then, in saying that such
+is the<br>
+melancholy position of our country, the most beautiful traits in
+our<br>
+character are converted into the elements of our ruin?"</p>
+
+<p>"I dinna think ye ha'e made out your case, Major?" said the
+Scotch doctor,<br>
+who felt sorely puzzled at my friend's logic. "If your faether
+had na gi'en<br>
+the bond&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There is no saying what he wouldn't have done to the
+bailiffs,"<br>
+interrupted Dennis, who was following up a very different train
+of<br>
+reasoning.</p>
+
+<p>"I fear me, Doctor," observed Quill, "you are much behind us
+in Scotland.<br>
+Not but that some of your chieftains are respectable men, and
+wouldn't get<br>
+on badly even in Galway."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank ye muckle for the compliment," said the doctor,
+dryly; "but I ha'e<br>
+my doubts they'd think it ane, and they're crusty carls that's
+no' ower<br>
+safe to meddle wi'."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd as soon propose a hand of 'spoiled five' to the Pope of
+Rome, as a<br>
+joke to one of them," returned Maurice.</p>
+
+<p>"May be ye are na wrang there, Maister Quell."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," cried Hampden, "if I may be allowed an opinion, I can
+safely aver I<br>
+know no quarters like Scotland. Edinburgh beyond anything or
+anywhere I was<br>
+ever placed in."</p>
+
+<p>"Always after Dublin," interposed Maurice; while a general
+chorus of voices<br>
+re-echoed the sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>"You are certainly a strong majority," said my friend,
+"against me; but<br>
+still I recant not my original opinion. Edinburgh before the
+world. For a<br>
+hospitality that never tires; for pleasant fellows that improve
+every day<br>
+of your acquaintance; for pretty girls that make you long for a
+repeal of<br>
+the canon about being only singly blessed, and lead you to long
+for a score<br>
+of them, Edinburgh,&mdash;I say again, before the world."</p>
+
+<p>"Their ankles are devilish thick," whispered Maurice.</p>
+
+<p>"A calumny, a base calumny!"</p>
+
+<p>"And then they drink&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; they drink very strong tea."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall we ha'e a glass o' sherry together, Hampden?" said the
+Scotch<br>
+doctor, willing to acknowledge his defence of auld Reekie.</p>
+
+<p>"And we'll take O'Malley in," said Hampden; "he looks
+imploringly."</p>
+
+<p>"And now to return to the charge," quoth Maurice. "In what
+particular dare<br>
+ye contend the palm with Dublin? We'll not speak of beauty. I
+can't suffer<br>
+any such profane turn in the conversation as to dispute the
+superiority of<br>
+Irishwomen's lips, eyes, noses, and eyebrows, to anything under
+heaven.<br>
+We'll not talk of gay fellows; egad, we needn't. I'll give you
+the<br>
+garrison,&mdash;a decent present,&mdash;and I'll back the Irish bar for
+more genuine<br>
+drollery, more wit, more epigram, more ready sparkling fun, than
+the whole<br>
+rest of the empire&mdash;ay, and all her colonies&mdash;can boast of."</p>
+
+<p>"They are nae remarkable for passing the bottle, if they
+resemble their<br>
+very gifted advocate," observed the Scotchman.</p>
+
+<p>"But they are for filling and emptying both, making its
+current, as it<br>
+glides by, like a rich stream glittering in the sunbeams with the
+sparkling<br>
+lustre of their wit. Lord, how I'm blown! Fill my pannikin,
+Charley.<br>
+There's no subduing a Scot. Talk with him, drink with him, fight
+with him,<br>
+and he'll always have the last of it; there's only one way of
+concluding<br>
+the treaty&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And that is&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Blarney him. Lord bless you, he can't stand it! Tell him
+Holyrood's like<br>
+Versailles, and the Trossach's finer than Mont Blanc; that
+Geordie Buchanan<br>
+was Homer, and the Canongate, Herculaneum,&mdash;then ye have him on
+the hip.<br>
+Now, ye never can humbug an Irishman that way; he'll know you're
+quizzing<br>
+him when you praise his country."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye are right, Hampden," said the Scotch doctor, in reply to
+some<br>
+observation. "We are vara primitive in the Hielands, and we keep
+to our ain<br>
+national customs in dress and everything; and we are vara slow to
+learn,<br>
+and even when we try we are nae ower successfu' in our
+imitations, which<br>
+sometimes cost us dearly enough. Ye may have heard, may be, of
+the M'Nab o'<br>
+that ilk, and what happened him with the king's equerry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not quite certain," said Hampden, "if I ever heard the
+story."</p>
+
+<p>"It's nae muckle of a story; but the way of it was this. When
+Montrose came<br>
+back from London, he brought with him a few Englishers to show
+them the<br>
+Highlands, and let them see something of deer-stalking,&mdash;among
+the rest, a<br>
+certain Sir George Sowerby, an aide-de-camp or an equerry of the
+prince.<br>
+He was a vara fine gentleman, that never loaded his ain gun, and
+a'most<br>
+thought it too much trouble to pull the trigger. He went out
+every<br>
+morning to shoot with his hair curled like a woman, and dressed
+like a<br>
+dancing-master. Now, there happened to be at the same time at the
+castle<br>
+the Laird o' M'Nab; he was a kind of cousin of the Montrose, and
+a rough<br>
+old tyke of the true Hieland breed, wha' thought that the head of
+a clan<br>
+was fully equal to any king or prince. He sat opposite to Sir
+George at<br>
+dinner the day of his arrival, and could not conceal his surprise
+at the<br>
+many new-fangled ways of feeding himself the Englisher adopted.
+He ate his<br>
+saumon wi' his fork in ae hand, and a bittock of bread in the
+other. He<br>
+would na touch the whiskey; helped himself to a cutlet wi' his
+fingers. But<br>
+what was maist extraordinary of all, he wore a pair o' braw white
+gloves<br>
+during the whole time o' dinner and when they came to tak' away
+the cloth,<br>
+he drew them off with a great air, and threw them into the middle
+of it,<br>
+and then, leisurely taking anither pair off a silver salver which
+his ain<br>
+man presented, he pat them on for dessert. The M'Nab, who,
+although an<br>
+auld-fashioned carl, was aye fond of bringing something new hame
+to his<br>
+friends, remarked the Englisher's proceeding with great care, and
+the next<br>
+day he appeared at dinner wi' a huge pair of Hieland mittens,
+which he<br>
+wore, to the astonishment of all and the amusement of most,
+through the<br>
+whole three courses; and exactly as the Englishman changed his
+gloves, the<br>
+M'Nab produced a fresh pair of goats' wool, four times as large
+as the<br>
+first, which, drawing on with prodigious gravity, he threw the
+others into<br>
+the middle of the cloth, remarking, as he did so,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Ye see, Captain, we are never ower auld to learn.'</p>
+
+<p>"All propriety was now at an end, and a hearty burst of
+laughter from one<br>
+end of the table to the other convulsed the whole company,&mdash;the
+M'Nab and<br>
+the Englishman being the only persons who did not join in it, but
+sat<br>
+glowering at each other like twa tigers; and, indeed, it needed,
+a'<br>
+the Montrose's interference that they had na quarrelled upon it
+in the<br>
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>"The M'Nab was a man after my own heart," said Maurice; "there
+was<br>
+something very Irish in the lesson he gave the Englishman."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd rather ye'd told him that than me," said the doctor,
+dryly; "he would<br>
+na hae thanked ye for mistaking him for ane of your
+countrymen."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Doctor," said Dennis, "could not ye give us a stave?
+Have ye nothing<br>
+that smacks of the brown fern and the blue lakes in your
+memory?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have na a sang in my mind just noo except 'Johnny Cope,'
+which may be<br>
+might na be ower pleasant for the Englishers to listen to."</p>
+
+<p>"I never heard a Scotch song worth sixpence," quoth Maurice,
+who seemed<br>
+bent on provoking the doctor's ire. "They contain nothing save
+some<br>
+puling sentimentality about lasses with lint-white locks, or some
+absurd<br>
+laudations of the Barley Bree."</p>
+
+<p>"Hear till him, hear till him!" said the doctor, reddening
+with impatience.</p>
+
+<p>"Show me anything," said Maurice, "like the 'Cruiskeen Lawn'
+or the 'Jug<br>
+of Punch;' but who can blame them, after all? You can't expect
+much from a<br>
+people with an imagination as naked as their own knees."</p>
+
+<p>"Maurice! Maurice!" cried O'Shaughnessy, reprovingly, who saw
+that he was<br>
+pushing the other's endurance beyond all bounds.</p>
+
+<p>"I mind weel," said the Scotchman, "what happened to ane o'
+your countrymen<br>
+wha took upon him to jest as you are doing now. It was to Laurie
+Cameron he<br>
+did it."</p>
+
+<p>"And what said the redoubted Laurie in reply?"</p>
+
+<p>"He did na say muckle, but he did something."</p>
+
+<p>"And what might it be?" inquired Maurice.</p>
+
+<p>"He threw him ower the brig of Ayr into the water, and he was
+drowned."</p>
+
+<p>"And did Laurie come to no harm about the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, they tried him for it, and found him guilty; but when
+they asked<br>
+him what he had to say in his defence, he merely replied, 'When
+the carl<br>
+sneered about Scotland, I did na suspect that he did na ken how
+to swim;'<br>
+and so the end of it was, they did naething to Laurie."</p>
+
+<p>"Cool that, certainly," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I prefer your friend with the mittens, I confess," said
+Maurice, "though<br>
+I'm sure both were most agreeable companion. But come, Doctor,
+couldn't you<br>
+give us,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    Sit ye down, my heartie, and gie us a crack,<br>
+    Let the wind tak' the care o' the world on his back.'"</p>
+
+<p>"You maunna attempt English poethry, my freend Quell; for it
+must be<br>
+confessed ye'e a damnable accent of your ain."</p>
+
+<p>"Milesian-Phoenician-Corkacian; nothing more, my boy, and a
+coaxing kind<br>
+of recitative it is, after all. Don't tell me of your soft
+Etruscan, your<br>
+plethoric. <i>Hoch</i>-Deutsch, your flattering French. To woo and win
+the<br>
+girl of your heart, give me a rich brogue and the least taste in
+life of<br>
+blarney! There's nothing like it, believe me,&mdash;every inflection
+of your<br>
+voice suggesting some tender pressure of her soft hand or taper
+waist,<br>
+every cadence falling on her gentle heart like a sea-breeze on a
+burning<br>
+coast, or a soft sirocco over a rose-tree. And then, think, my
+boys,&mdash;and<br>
+it is a fine thought after all,&mdash;what a glorious gift that is,
+out of the<br>
+reach of kings to give or to take, what neither depends upon the
+act of<br>
+Union nor the <i>Habeas Corpus</i>. No! they may starve us, laugh at
+us, tax us,<br>
+transport us. They may take our mountains, our valleys, and our
+bogs; but,<br>
+bad luck to them, they can't steal our 'blarney;' that's the
+privilege one<br>
+and indivisible with our identity. And while an Englishman raves
+of his<br>
+liberty, a Scotchman of his oaten meal, blarney's <i>our</i>
+birthright, and a<br>
+prettier portion I'd never ask to leave behind me to my sons. If
+I'd as<br>
+large a family as the ould gentleman called Priam we used to hear
+of at<br>
+school, it's the only inheritance I'd give them, and one comfort
+there<br>
+would be besides, the legacy duty would be only a trifle.
+Charley, my<br>
+son, I see you're listening to me, and nothing satisfies me more
+than to<br>
+instruct inspiring youth; so never forget the old song,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    'If at your ease, the girls you'd please,<br>
+    And win them, like Kate Kearney,<br>
+    There's but one way, I've heard them say,<br>
+    Go kiss the Stone of Blarney.'"</p>
+
+<p>"What do you say, Shaugh, if we drink it with all the
+honors?"</p>
+
+<p>"But gently: do I hear a trumpet there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, there go the bugles. Can it be daybreak already?"</p>
+
+<p>"How short the nights are at this season!" said Quill.</p>
+
+<p>"What an infernal rumpus they're making! It's not possible the
+troops are<br>
+to march so early."</p>
+
+<p>"It wouldn't surprise me in the least," quoth Maurice; "there
+is no knowing<br>
+what the commander-in-chief's not capable of,&mdash;the reason's clear
+enough."</p>
+
+<p>"And why, Maurice?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's not a bit of blarney about him."</p>
+
+<p>The <i>r&eacute;veil</i> sang out from every brigade, and the drums
+beat to fall in,<br>
+while Mike came galloping up at full speed to say that the bridge
+of boats<br>
+was completed, and that the Twelfth were already ordered to
+cross. Not a<br>
+moment was therefore to be lost; one parting cup we drained to
+our next<br>
+meeting, and amidst a hundred "good-bys" we mounted our horses.
+Poor<br>
+Hampden's brains, sadly confused by the wine and the laughing, he
+knew<br>
+little of what was going on around him, and passed the entire
+time of our<br>
+homeward ride in a vain endeavor to adapt "Mary Draper" to the
+air of "Rule<br>
+Britannia."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXII.</p>
+
+<p>FUENTES D'ONORO.</p>
+
+<p>From this period the French continued their retreat, closely
+followed by<br>
+the allied armies, and on the 5th of April, Massena once more
+crossed the<br>
+frontier into Spain, leaving thirty thousand of his bravest
+troops behind<br>
+him, fourteen thousand of whom had fallen or been taken
+prisoners.<br>
+Reinforcements, however, came rapidly pouring in. Two divisions
+of the<br>
+Ninth corps had already arrived, and Drouet, with eleven thousand
+infantry<br>
+and cavalry, was preparing to march to his assistance. Thus
+strengthened,<br>
+the French army marched towards the Portuguese frontier, and
+Lord<br>
+Wellington, who had determined not to hazard much by his blockade
+of Ciudad<br>
+Rodrigo, fell back upon the large table-land beyond the Turones
+and the Dos<br>
+Casas, with his left at Fort Conception, and his right resting
+upon Fuentes<br>
+d'Onoro. His position extended to about five miles; and here,
+although<br>
+vastly inferior in numbers, yet relying upon the bravery of the
+troops, and<br>
+the moral ascendency acquired by their pursuit of the enemy, he
+finally<br>
+resolved upon giving them battle.</p>
+
+<p>Being sent with despatches to Pack's brigade, which formed the
+blockading<br>
+force at Almeida, I did not reach Fuentes d'Onoro until the
+evening of the<br>
+3d. The thundering of the guns, which, even at the distance I was
+at, was<br>
+plainly heard, announced that an attack had taken place, but it
+by no means<br>
+prepared me for the scene which presented itself on my
+return.</p>
+
+<p>The village of Fuentes d'Onoro, one of the most beautiful in
+Spain, is<br>
+situated in a lovely valley, where all the charms of verdure so
+peculiar to<br>
+the Peninsula seemed to have been scattered with a lavish hand.
+The citron<br>
+and the arbutus, growing wild, sheltered every cottage door, and
+the<br>
+olive and the laurel threw their shadows across the little
+rivulet which<br>
+traversed the village. The houses, observing no uniform
+arrangement,<br>
+stood wherever the caprice or the inclination of the builder
+suggested,<br>
+surrounded with little gardens, the inequality of the ground
+imparting a<br>
+picturesque feature to even the lowliest hut, while upon a craggy
+eminence<br>
+above the rest, an ancient convent and a ruined chapel looked
+down upon the<br>
+little peaceful hamlet with an air of tender protection.</p>
+
+<p>Hitherto this lovely spot had escaped all the ravages of war.
+The light<br>
+division of our army had occupied it for months long; and every
+family was<br>
+gratefully remembered by some one or other of our officers, and
+more than<br>
+one of our wounded found in the kind and affectionate watching of
+these<br>
+poor peasants the solace which sickness rarely meets with when
+far from<br>
+home and country.</p>
+
+<p>It was, then, with an anxious heart I pressed my horse forward
+into a<br>
+gallop as the night drew near. The artillery had been distinctly
+heard<br>
+during the day, and while I burned with eagerness to know the
+result, I<br>
+felt scarcely less anxious for the fate of that little hamlet
+whose name<br>
+many a kind story had implanted in my memory. The moon was
+shining brightly<br>
+as I passed the outpost, and leading my horse by the bridle,
+descended the<br>
+steep and rugged causeway to the village beneath me. The lanterns
+were<br>
+moving rapidly to and fro; the measured tread of infantry at
+night&mdash;that<br>
+ominous sound, which falls upon the heart so sadly&mdash;told me that
+they<br>
+were burying the dead. The air was still and breathless; not a
+sound was<br>
+stirring save the step of the soldiery, and the harsh clash of
+the shovel<br>
+as it struck the earth. I felt sad and sick at heart, and leaned
+against a<br>
+tree; a nightingale concealed in the leaves was pouring forth its
+plaintive<br>
+notes to the night air, and its low warble sounded like the dirge
+of the<br>
+departed. Far beyond, in the plain, the French watch-fires were
+burning,<br>
+and I could see from time to time the fatigue-parties moving in
+search of<br>
+their wounded. At this moment the clock of the convent struck
+eleven, and a<br>
+merry chime rang out, and was taken up by the echoes till it
+melted away in<br>
+the distance. Alas, where were those whose hearts were wont to
+feel cheered<br>
+at that happy peal; whose infancy it had gladdened; whose old age
+it has<br>
+hallowed? The fallen walls, the broken roof-trees, the ruin and
+desolation<br>
+on every side, told too plainly that they had passed away
+forever! The<br>
+smoking embers, the torn-up pathway, denoted the hard-fought
+struggle; and<br>
+as I passed along, I could see that every garden, where the
+cherry and the<br>
+apple-blossom were even still perfuming the air, had now its
+sepulchre.</p>
+
+<p>"Halt, there!" cried a hoarse voice in front. "You cannot pass
+this<br>
+way,&mdash;the commander-in-chief's quarters."</p>
+
+<p>I looked up and beheld a small but neat-looking cottage, which
+seemed to<br>
+have suffered less than the others around. Lights were shining
+brightly<br>
+from the windows, and I could even detect from time to time a
+figure<br>
+muffled up in a cloak passing to and fro across the window; while
+another,<br>
+seated at a table, was occupied in writing. I turned into a
+narrow path<br>
+which led into the little square of the village, and here, as I
+approached,<br>
+the hum and murmur of voices announced a bivouac party. Stopping
+to ask<br>
+what had been the result of the day, I learned that a tremendous
+attack<br>
+had been made by the French in column upon the village, which was
+at first<br>
+successful; but that afterwards the Seventy-first and
+Seventy-ninth,<br>
+marching down from the heights, had repulsed the enemy, and
+driven them<br>
+beyond the Dos Casas. Five hundred had fallen in that fierce
+encounter,<br>
+which was continued through every street and alley of the little
+hamlet.<br>
+The gallant Highlanders now occupied the battle-field; and
+hearing that the<br>
+cavalry brigade was some miles distant, I willingly accepted
+their offer to<br>
+share their bivouac, and passed the remainder of the night among
+them.</p>
+
+<p>When day broke, our troops were under arms, but the enemy
+showed no<br>
+disposition to renew the attack. We could perceive, however, from
+the road<br>
+to the southward, by the long columns of dust, that
+reinforcements were<br>
+still arriving; and learned during the morning, from a deserter,
+that<br>
+Massena himself had come up, and Bessi&eacute;res also, with
+twelve hundred<br>
+cavalry, and a battery of the Imperial Guard.</p>
+
+<p>From the movements observable in the enemy, it was soon
+evident that the<br>
+battle, though deferred, was not abandoned; and the march of a
+strong<br>
+force towards the left of their position induced our
+commander-in-chief to<br>
+despatch the Seventh Division, under Houston, to occupy the
+height of Naval<br>
+d'Aver&mdash;our extreme right&mdash;in support of which our brigade of
+cavalry<br>
+marched as a covering force. The British position was thus
+unavoidably<br>
+extended to the enormous length of seven miles, occupying a
+succession of<br>
+small eminences, from the division at Fort Conception to the
+height of<br>
+Naval d'Aver,&mdash;Fuentes d'Onoro forming nearly the centre of the
+line.</p>
+
+<p>It was evident, from the thickening combinations of the
+French, that a more<br>
+dreadful battle was still in reserve for us; and yet never did
+men look<br>
+more anxiously for the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>As for myself, I felt a species of exhilaration I had never
+before<br>
+experienced; the events of the preceding day came dropping in
+upon me from<br>
+every side, and at every new tale of gallantry or daring I felt
+my heart<br>
+bounding with excited eagerness to win also my need of honorable
+praise.</p>
+
+<p>Crawfurd, too, had recognized me in the kindest manner; and
+while saying<br>
+that he did not wish to withdraw me from my regiment on a day of
+battle,<br>
+added that he would make use of me for the present on his staff.
+Thus was<br>
+I engaged, from early in the morning till late in the evening,
+bringing<br>
+orders and despatches along the line. The troop-horse I rode&mdash;for
+I<br>
+reserved my gray for the following day&mdash;was scarcely able to
+carry me<br>
+along, as towards dusk I jogged along in the direction of Naval
+d'Aver.<br>
+When I did reach our quarters, the fires were lighted, and around
+one of<br>
+them I had the good fortune to find a party of the Fourteenth
+occupied in<br>
+discussing a very appetizing little supper. The clatter of
+plates, and the<br>
+popping of champagne corks were most agreeable sounds. Indeed,
+the latter<br>
+appeared to me so much too flattering an illusion, that I
+hesitated giving<br>
+credit to my senses in the matter, when Baker called out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Charley, sit down; you're just in the nick. Tom Marsden
+is giving us<br>
+a benefit. You know Tom?"</p>
+
+<p>And here he presented me in due form to that best of
+commissaries and most<br>
+hospitable of horse-dealers.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't introduce you to my friend on my right," continued
+Baker, "for my<br>
+Spanish is only a skeleton battalion; but he's a trump,&mdash;that
+I'll vouch<br>
+for; never flinches his glass, and looks as though he enjoyed all
+our<br>
+nonsense."</p>
+
+<p>The Spaniard, who appeared to comprehend that he was alluded
+to, gravely<br>
+saluted me with a low bow, and offered his glass to hobnob with
+me. I<br>
+returned the curtesy with becoming ceremony, while Hampden
+whispered in my<br>
+ear,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"A fine-looking fellow. You know who he is? Julian, the
+Guerilla chief."</p>
+
+<p>I had heard much of both the strangers. Tom Marsden was a
+household word<br>
+in every cavalry brigade; equally celebrated were his contracts
+and his<br>
+claret. He knew every one, from Lord Wellington to the
+last-joined cornet;<br>
+and while upon a march, there was no piece of better fortune than
+to be<br>
+asked to dine with him. So in the very thick of battle, Tom's
+critical eye<br>
+was scanning the squadrons engaged, with an accuracy as to the
+number of<br>
+fresh horses that would be required upon the morrow that nothing
+but long<br>
+practice and infinite coolness could have conferred.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Guerilla I need not speak. The bold feats he
+accomplished, the aid<br>
+he rendered to the cause of his country, have made his name
+historical. Yet<br>
+still with all this, fatigue, more powerful than my curiosity,
+prevailed,<br>
+and I sank into a heavy sleep upon the grass, while my merry
+companions<br>
+kept up their revels till near morning. The last piece of
+consciousness I<br>
+am sensible of was seeing Julian spreading his wide mantle over
+me as I<br>
+lay, while I heard his deep voice whisper a kind wish for my
+repose.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXIII.</p>
+
+<p>THE BATTLE OF FUENTES D'ONORO.</p>
+
+<p>So soundly did I sleep that the tumult and confusion of the
+morning never<br>
+awoke me; and the Guerilla, whose cavalry were stationed along
+the edge of<br>
+the ravine near the heights of Echora, would not permit of my
+being roused<br>
+before the last moment. Mike stood near me with my horses, and it
+was only<br>
+when the squadrons were actually forming that I sprang to my feet
+and<br>
+looked around me.</p>
+
+<p>The day was just breaking; a thick mist lay upon the parched
+earth, and<br>
+concealed everything a hundred yards from where we stood. From
+this dense<br>
+vapor the cavalry defiled along the base of the hill, followed by
+the<br>
+horse artillery and the Guards, disappearing again as they passed
+us,<br>
+but proving, by the mass of troops now assembled, that our
+position was<br>
+regarded as the probable point of attack.</p>
+
+<p>While the troops continued to take up their position, the sun
+shone out,<br>
+and a slight breeze blowing at the same, moment, the heavy clouds
+moved<br>
+past, and we beheld the magnificent panorama of the battle-field.
+Before<br>
+us, at the distance of less than half a league, the French
+cavalry were<br>
+drawn up in three strong columns; the Cuirassiers of the Guard,
+plainly<br>
+distinguished by their steel cuirasses, flanked by the Polish
+Lancers and a<br>
+strong huzzar brigade; a powerful artillery train supported the
+left, and<br>
+an infantry force occupied the entire space between the right and
+the<br>
+rising ground opposite Po&ccedil;o Velho. Farther to the right
+again, the column<br>
+destined for the attack of Fuentes d'Onoro were forming, and we
+could see<br>
+that, profiting by their past experience, they were bent upon
+attacking the<br>
+village with an overwhelming force.</p>
+
+<p>For above two hours the French continued to manoeuvre, more
+than one<br>
+alteration having taken place in their disposition; fresh
+battalions were<br>
+moved towards the front, and gradually the whole of their cavalry
+was<br>
+assembled on the extreme left in front of our position. Our
+people were<br>
+ordered to breakfast where we stood; and a little after seven
+o'clock a<br>
+staff officer came riding down the line, followed in a few
+moments after by<br>
+General Crawfurd, when no sooner was his well-known brown cob
+recognized by<br>
+the troops than a hearty cheer greeted him along the whole
+division.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank ye, boys; thank ye, boys, with all my heart. No man
+feels more<br>
+sensibly what that cheer means than I do. Guards, Lord Wellington
+relies<br>
+upon your maintaining this position, which is essential to the
+safety of<br>
+the whole line. You will be supported by the light division. I
+need say<br>
+no more. If such troops cannot keep their ground, none can.
+Fourteenth,<br>
+there's your place; the artillery and the Sixteenth are with you.
+They've<br>
+the odds of us in numbers, lads; but it will tell all the better
+in the<br>
+'Gazette.' I see they're moving; so fall in now, fall in; and
+Merivale,<br>
+move to the front. Ramsey, prepare to open your fire on the
+attacking<br>
+squadrons."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, the low murmuring sound of distantly moving
+cavalry crept<br>
+along the earth, growing louder and louder, till at length we
+could detect<br>
+the heavy tramp of the squadrons as they came on in a trot, our
+pace<br>
+being merely a walk. While we thus advanced into the plain, the
+artillery<br>
+unlimbered behind us, and the Spanish cavalry, breaking into
+skirmishers,<br>
+dashed boldly to the front.</p>
+
+<p>It was an exciting moment. The ground dipped between the two
+armies so<br>
+as to conceal the head of the advancing column of the French, and
+as the<br>
+Spanish skirmishers disappeared down the ridge, our beating
+hearts and<br>
+straining eyes followed their last horseman.</p>
+
+<p>"Halt! halt!" was passed from squadron to squadron, and the
+same instant<br>
+the sharp ring of the pistol shots and the clash of steel from
+the valley,<br>
+told us the battle had begun. We could hear the Guerilla war-cry
+mingle<br>
+with the French shout, while the thickening crash of fire-arms
+implied a<br>
+sharper conflict. Our fellows were already manifesting some
+impatience<br>
+to press on, when a Spanish horseman appeared above the ridge,
+another<br>
+followed, and another, and then pell-mell, broken and disordered,
+they<br>
+fell back before the pursuing cavalry in flying masses; while the
+French,<br>
+charging them hotly home, utterly routed and repulsed them.</p>
+
+<p>The leading squadrons of the French now fell back upon their
+support; the<br>
+column of attack thickened, and a thundering noise between their
+masses<br>
+announced their brigade of light guns as they galloped to the
+front. It was<br>
+then for the first time that I felt dispirited; far as my eye
+could stretch<br>
+the dense mass of sabres extended, defiling from the distant
+hills and<br>
+winding its slow length across the plain. I turned to look at our
+line,<br>
+scarce one thousand strong, and could not help feeling that our
+hour was<br>
+come: the feeling flashed vividly across my mind, but the next
+instant I<br>
+felt my cheek redden with shame as I gazed upon the sparkling
+eyes and bold<br>
+looks around me, the lips compressed, the hands knitted to their
+sabres;<br>
+all were motionless, but burning to advance.</p>
+
+<p>The French had halted on the brow of the hill to form, when
+Merivale came<br>
+cantering up to us.</p>
+
+<p>"Fourteenth, are you ready? Are you ready, lads?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ready, sir! ready!" re-echoed along the line.</p>
+
+<p>"Then push them home and charge! Charge!" cried he, raising
+his voice to a<br>
+shout at the last word.</p>
+
+<p>Heavens, what a crash was there! Our horses, in top condition,
+no sooner<br>
+felt the spur than they bounded madly onwards. The pace&mdash;for the
+distance<br>
+did not exceed four hundred yards&mdash;was like racing. To resist the
+impetus<br>
+of our approach was impossible; and without a shot fired,
+scarcely a<br>
+sabre-cut exchanged, we actually rode down their advanced
+squadrons,<br>
+hurling them headlong upon their supporting division, and rolling
+men and<br>
+horses beneath us on every side. The French fell back upon their
+artillery;<br>
+but before they could succeed in opening their fire upon us, we
+had<br>
+wheeled, and carrying off about seventy prisoners, galloped back
+to our<br>
+position with the loss of but two men in the affair. The whole
+thing was so<br>
+sudden, so bold, and so successful, that I remember well, as we
+rode<br>
+back, a hearty burst of laughter was ringing through the squadron
+at the<br>
+ludicrous display of horsemanship the French presented as they
+tumbled<br>
+headlong down the hill; and I cannot help treasuring the
+recollection,<br>
+for from that moment, all thought of anything short of victory
+completely<br>
+quitted my mind, and many of my brother officers, who had
+participated in<br>
+my feelings at the commencement of the day, confessed to me
+afterwards that<br>
+it was then for the first time they felt assured of beating the
+enemy.</p>
+
+<p>While we slowly fell back to our position, the French were
+seen advancing<br>
+in great force from the village of Almeida, to the attack of
+Po&ccedil;o Velho;<br>
+they came on at a rapid pace, their artillery upon their front
+and flank,<br>
+large masses of cavalry hovering around them. The attack upon the
+village<br>
+was now opened by the large guns; and amidst the booming of the
+artillery<br>
+and the crashing volleys of small fire-arms, rose the shout of
+the<br>
+assailants, and the wild cry of the Guerilla cavalry, who had
+formed in<br>
+front of the village. The French advanced firmly, driving back
+the pickets,<br>
+and actually inundated the devoted village with a shower of
+grape; the<br>
+blazing fires burst from the ignited roofs; and the black, dense
+smoke,<br>
+rising on high, seemed to rest like a pall over the little
+hamlet.</p>
+
+<p>The conflict was now a tremendous one; our Seventh Division
+held the<br>
+village with the bayonet; but the French continuing to pour in
+mass upon<br>
+mass, drove them back with loss, and at the end of an hour's hard
+fighting,<br>
+took possession of the place.</p>
+
+<p>The wood upon the left flank was now seen to swarm with light
+infantry, and<br>
+the advancement of their whole left proved that they meditated to
+turn our<br>
+flank; the space between the village and the hill of Naval d'Aver
+became<br>
+thus the central position; and here the Guerilla force, led on by
+Julian<br>
+Sanches, seemed to await the French with confidence. Soon,
+however, the<br>
+cuirassiers came galloping to the spot, and almost without
+exchanging a<br>
+sabre-cut, the Guerillas fell back, and retired behind the
+Turones. This<br>
+movement of Julian was more attributable to anger than to fear;
+for his<br>
+favorite lieutenant, being mistaken for a French officer, was
+shot by a<br>
+soldier of the Guards a few minutes before.</p>
+
+<p>Montbrun pursued the Guerillas with some squadrons of horse,
+but they<br>
+turned resolutely upon the French, and not till overwhelmed by
+numbers did<br>
+they show any disposition to retreat.</p>
+
+<p>The French, however, now threw forward their whole cavalry,
+and driving<br>
+back the English horse, succeeded in turning the right of the
+Seventh<br>
+Division. The battle by this time was general. The staff officers
+who came<br>
+up from the left informed us that Fuentes d'Onoro was attacked in
+force,<br>
+Massena himself leading the assault in person; while thus for
+seven miles<br>
+the fight was maintained hotly at intervals, it was evident that
+upon the<br>
+maintenance of our position the fortune of the day depended.
+Hitherto we<br>
+had been repulsed from the village and the wood; and the dark
+masses of<br>
+infantry which were assembled upon our right, seemed to threaten
+the hill<br>
+of Naval d'Aver with as sad a catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>Crawfurd came now galloping up among us, his eye flashing
+fire, and his<br>
+uniform splashed and covered with foam:</p>
+
+<p>"Steady Sixteenth, steady! Don't blow your horses! Have your
+fellows<br>
+advanced, Malcolm?" said he, turning to an officer who stood
+beside him.<br>
+"Ay, there they go!" pointing with his finger to the wood where,
+as he<br>
+spoke, the short ringing of the British rifle proclaimed the
+advance of<br>
+that brigade. "Let the cavalry prepare to charge! And now,
+Ramsey, let us<br>
+give it them home!"</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely were the words spoken, when the squadrons were
+formed, and in an<br>
+instant after, the French light infantry were seen retreating
+from the<br>
+wood, and flying in disorderly masses across the plain. Our
+squadrons<br>
+riding down among them, actually cut them to atoms, while the
+light<br>
+artillery, unlimbering, threw in a deadly discharge of
+grape-shot.</p>
+
+<p>"To the right, Fourteenth, to the right!" cried General
+Stewart. "Have at<br>
+their hussars!"</p>
+
+<p>Whirling by them, we advanced at a gallop, and dashed towards
+the enemy,<br>
+who, not less resolutely bent, came boldly forward to meet us.
+The shock<br>
+was terrific! The leading squadrons on both sides went down
+almost to a<br>
+man, and all order being lost, the encounter became one of hand
+to hand.</p>
+
+<p>The struggle was deadly; neither party would give way; and
+while fortune<br>
+now inclined hither and thither, Sir Charles Stewart singled out
+the French<br>
+general, Lamotte, and carried him off his prisoner. Meanwhile
+Montbrun's<br>
+cavalry and the cuirassiers came riding up, and the retreat now
+sounding<br>
+through our ranks, we were obliged to fall back upon the
+infantry. The<br>
+French pursued us hotly; and so rapid was their movement, that
+before<br>
+Ramsey's brigade could limber up and away, their squadrons had
+surrounded<br>
+him and captured his guns.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Ramsey?" cried Crawfurd, as he galloped to the head
+of our<br>
+division. "Cut off&mdash;cut off! Taken, by G&mdash;&mdash;! There he goes!"
+said he,<br>
+pointing with his finger, as a dense cloud of mingled smoke and
+dust moved<br>
+darkly across the plain. "Form into column once more!"</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, the dense mass before us seemed agitated by some
+mighty<br>
+commotion; the flashing of blades, and the rattling of
+small-arms, mingled<br>
+with shouts of triumph or defiance, burst forth, and the ominous
+cloud<br>
+lowering more darkly, seemed peopled by those in deadly strife.
+An English<br>
+cheer pealed high above all other sounds; a second followed; the
+mass was<br>
+rent asunder, and like the forked lightning from a thunder-cloud,
+Ramsey<br>
+rode forth at the head of his battery, the horses bounding madly,
+while the<br>
+guns sprang behind them like things of no weight; the gunners
+leaped to<br>
+their places, and fighting hand to hand with the French cavalry,
+they flew<br>
+across the plain.</p>
+
+<p>"Nobly done, gallant Ramsey!" said a voice behind me. I turned
+at the<br>
+sound; it was Lord Wellington who spoke. My eye fixed upon his
+stern<br>
+features, I forgot all else; when he suddenly recalled me to
+my<br>
+recollection by saying,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Follow your brigade, sir. Charge!"</p>
+
+<p>In an instant I was with my people, who, intervening betwixt
+Ramsey and his<br>
+pursuers, repulsed the enemy with loss, and carried off several
+prisoners.<br>
+The French, however, came up in greater strength; overwhelming
+masses of<br>
+cavalry came sweeping upon us, and we were obliged to retire
+behind the<br>
+light division, which rapidly formed into squares to resist the
+cavalry.<br>
+The Seventh Division, which was more advanced, were, however, too
+late for<br>
+this movement, and before they could effect their formation, the
+French<br>
+were upon them. At this moment they owed their safety to the
+Chasseurs<br>
+Britanniques, who poured in a flanking fire, so close, and with
+so deadly<br>
+an aim, that their foes recoiled, beaten and bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the French had become masters of Pogo Velho; the
+formidable<br>
+masses had nearly outflanked us on the right. The battle was lost
+if we<br>
+could not fall back upon our original position, and concentrate
+our force<br>
+upon Fuentes d'Onoro. To effect this was a work of great
+difficulty; but<br>
+no time was to be lost. The Seventh Division were ordered to
+cross the<br>
+Turones, while Crawfurd, forming the light division into squares,
+covered<br>
+their retreat, and supported by the cavalry, sustained the whole
+force of<br>
+the enemy's attack.</p>
+
+<p>Then was the moment to witness the cool and steady bravery of
+British<br>
+infantry; the squares dotted across the enormous plain seemed as
+nothing<br>
+amidst that confused and flying multitude, composed of
+commissariat<br>
+baggage, camp-followers, peasants, and finally, broken pickets
+and videttes<br>
+arriving from the wood. A cloud of cavalry hovered and darkened
+around<br>
+them; the Polish Lancers shook their long spears, impatient of
+delay, and<br>
+the wild huzzas burst momentarily from their squadrons as they
+waited for<br>
+the word to attack. But the British stood firm and undaunted; and
+although<br>
+the enemy rode round their squares, Montbrun himself at their
+head, they<br>
+never dared to charge them. Meanwhile the Seventh Division fell
+back, as<br>
+if on a parade, and crossing the river, took up their ground at
+Frenada,<br>
+pivoting upon the First Division; the remainder of the line also
+fell back,<br>
+and assumed a position at right angles with their former one, the
+cavalry<br>
+forming in front, and holding the French in check during the
+movement. This<br>
+was a splendid manoeuvre, and when made in face of an
+overnumbering enemy,<br>
+one unmatched during the whole war.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of this new front, the French stopped short, and
+opened a fire<br>
+from their heavy guns. The British batteries replied with vigor
+and<br>
+silenced the enemy's cannon. The cavalry drew out of range, and
+the<br>
+infantry gradually fell back to their former position. While this
+was going<br>
+on, the attack upon Fuentes d'Onoro was continued with unabated
+vigor.<br>
+The three British regiments in the lower town were pierced by
+the<br>
+French tirailleurs, who poured upon them in overwhelming numbers;
+the<br>
+Seventy-ninth were broken, ten companies taken, and Cameron,
+their colonel,<br>
+mortally wounded. Thus the lower village was in the hands of the
+enemy,<br>
+while from the upper town the incessant roll of musketry
+proclaimed the<br>
+obstinate resistance of the British.</p>
+
+<p>At this period the reserves were called up from the right, in
+time to<br>
+resist the additional troops which Drouet continued to bring on.
+The<br>
+French, reinforced by the whole Sixth Corps, now came forward at
+a<br>
+quick-step. Dashing through the ruined streets of the lower town,
+they<br>
+crossed the rivulet, fighting bravely, and charged against the
+height.<br>
+Already their leading files had gained the crag beside the
+chapel. A French<br>
+colonel holding his cap upon his sword-point waved on his
+men.</p>
+
+<p>The grizzly features of the grenadiers soon appeared, and the
+dark column,<br>
+half-climbing, half-running, were seen scaling the height. A
+rifle-bullet<br>
+sent the French leader tumbling from the precipice; and a
+cheer&mdash;mad and<br>
+reckless as the war-cry of an Indian&mdash;rent the sky, as the 71st
+and 79th<br>
+Highlanders sprang upon the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>Our part was a short one; advancing in half squadrons, we were
+concealed<br>
+from the observation of the enemy by the thick vineyards which
+skirted the<br>
+lower town, waiting, with impatience, the moment when our gallant
+infantry<br>
+should succeed in turning the tide of battle. We were ordered to
+dismount,<br>
+and stood with our bridles on our arms, anxious and expectant.
+The charge<br>
+of the French column was made close to where we were
+standing,&mdash;the<br>
+inspiriting cheers of the officers, the loud <i>vivas</i> of the men,
+were<br>
+plainly heard by us as they rushed to the assault; but the space
+between<br>
+us was intersected by walls and brushwood, which totally
+prevented the<br>
+movements of cavalry.</p>
+
+<p>Fearlessly their dark column moved up the heights, fixing the
+bayonets<br>
+as they went. No tirailleurs preceded them, but the tall shako of
+the<br>
+Grenadier of the Guard was seen in the first rank. Long before
+the end of<br>
+the column had passed us, the leading files were in action. A
+deafening<br>
+peal of musketry&mdash;so loud, so dense, it seemed like
+artillery&mdash;burst forth.<br>
+A volume of black smoke rolled heavily down from the heights and
+hid all<br>
+from our view, except when the vivid lightning of the platoon
+firing rent<br>
+the veil asunder, and showed us the troops almost in hand to hand
+conflict.</p>
+
+<p>"It's Picton's Division, I'm certain," cried Merivale; "I hear
+the bagpipes<br>
+of the Highlanders."</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, sir," said Hampden, "the Seventy-first are in
+the same<br>
+brigade, and I know their bugles well. There they go again!"</p>
+
+<p>"Fourteenth! Fourteenth!" cried a voice from behind, and at
+the same<br>
+moment, a staff officer, without his hat, and his horse bleeding
+from a<br>
+recent sabre-cut, came up. "You must move to the rear, Colonel
+Merivale;<br>
+the French have gained the heights! Move round by the causeway;
+bring up<br>
+your squadrons as quickly as you can, and support the
+infantry!"</p>
+
+<p>In a moment we were in our saddles; but scarcely was the word
+"to fall in"<br>
+given, when a loud cheer rent the very air; the musketry seemed
+suddenly<br>
+to cease, and the dark mass which continued to struggle up the
+heights<br>
+wavered, broke, and turned.</p>
+
+<p>"What can that be?" said Merivale. "What can it mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can tell you, sir," said I, proudly, while I felt my heart
+throb as<br>
+though it would bound from my bosom.</p>
+
+<p>"And what is it, boy? Speak!"</p>
+
+<p>"There it goes again! That was an Irish shout! The
+Eighty-eighth are at<br>
+them!"</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, here they come!" said Hampden. "God help the
+Frenchmen now!"</p>
+
+<p>The words were not well spoken, when the red coats of our
+gallant fellows<br>
+were seen dashing through the vineyard.</p>
+
+<p>"The steel, boys; nothing but the steel!" shouted a loud voice
+from the<br>
+crag above our heads.</p>
+
+<p>I looked up. It was the stern Picton himself who spoke. The
+Eighty-eighth<br>
+now led the pursuit, and sprang from rock to rock in all the
+mad<br>
+impetuosity of battle; and like some mighty billow rolling before
+the gale,<br>
+the French went down the heights.</p>
+
+<p>"Gallant Eighty-eighth! Gloriously done!" cried Picton, as he
+waved his<br>
+hat.</p>
+
+<p>"Aren't we Connaught robbers, now?" shouted a rich brogue, as
+its owner,<br>
+breathless and bleeding, pressed forward in the charge.</p>
+
+<p>A hearty burst of laughter mingled with the din of the
+battle.</p>
+
+<p>"Now for it, boys! Now for <i>our</i> work!" said old Merivale,
+drawing his<br>
+sabre as he spoke. "Forward! and charge!"</p>
+
+<p>We waited not a second bidding, but bursting from our
+concealment,<br>
+galloped down into the broken column. It was no regular charge,
+but an<br>
+indiscriminate rush. Scarcely offering resistance, the enemy fell
+beneath<br>
+our sabres, or the still more deadly bayonets of the infantry,
+who were<br>
+inextricably mingled up in the conflict.</p>
+
+<p>The chase was followed up for above half a mile, when we fell
+back,<br>
+fortunately in good time; for the French had opened a heavy fire
+from their<br>
+artillery, and regardless of their own retreating column, poured
+a shower<br>
+of grape among our squadrons. As we retired, the struggling files
+of the<br>
+Rangers joined us,&mdash;their faces and accoutrements blackened and
+begrimed<br>
+with powder; many of them, themselves wounded, had captured
+prisoners; and<br>
+one huge fellow of the grenadier company was seen driving before
+him a<br>
+no less powerful Frenchman, and to whom, as he turned from time
+to time<br>
+reluctantly, and scowled upon his jailer, the other vociferated
+some Irish<br>
+imprecation, whose harsh intentions were made most palpably
+evident by a<br>
+flourish of a drawn bayonet.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is he?" said Mike; "who is he, ahagur?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sorra one o' me knows," said the other; "but it's the chap
+that shot<br>
+Lieutenant Mahony, and I never took my eye off him after; and if
+the<br>
+lieutenant's not dead, sure it'll be a satisfaction to him that I
+cotch<br>
+him."</p>
+
+<p>The lower town was now evacuated by the French, who retired
+beyond the<br>
+range of our artillery; the upper continued in the occupation of
+our<br>
+troops; and worn out and exhausted, surrounded by dead and dying,
+both<br>
+parties abandoned the contest, and the battle was over.</p>
+
+<p>Both sides laid claim to the victory; the French, because,
+having taken the<br>
+village of Po&ccedil;o Velho, they had pierced the British line,
+and compelled<br>
+them to fall back and assume a new position; the British, because
+the<br>
+attack upon Fuentes d'Onoro has been successfully resisted, and
+the<br>
+blockade of Almeida&mdash;the real object of the battle&mdash;maintained.
+The loss<br>
+to each was tremendous; fifteen hundred men and officers, of whom
+three<br>
+hundred were prisoners, were lost by the allies, and a far
+greater number<br>
+fell among the forces of the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>After the action, a brigade of the light division released the
+troops in<br>
+the village, and the armies bivouacked once more in sight of each
+other.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXIV.</p>
+
+<p>A RENCONTRE.</p>
+
+<p>"LIEUTENANT O'MALLEY, 14th Light Dragoons, to serve as extra
+aide-de-camp<br>
+to Major-General Crawfurd, until the pleasure of his Royal
+Highness the<br>
+Prince Regent is known." Such was the first paragraph of a
+general order,<br>
+dated Fuentes d'Onoro, the day after the battle, which met me as
+I woke<br>
+from a sound and heavy slumber, the result of thirteen hours on
+horseback.</p>
+
+<p>A staff appointment was not exactly what I desired at the
+moment; but I<br>
+knew that with Crawfurd my duties were more likely to be at the
+pickets and<br>
+advanced posts of the army, than in the mere details of
+note-writing or<br>
+despatch-bearing; besides that, I felt, whenever anything of
+importance<br>
+was to be done, I should always obtain his permission to do duty
+with my<br>
+regiment.</p>
+
+<p>Taking a hurried breakfast, therefore, I mounted my horse, and
+cantered<br>
+over to Villa Formosa, where the general's quarters were, to
+return my<br>
+thanks for the promotion, and take the necessary steps for
+assuming my new<br>
+functions.</p>
+
+<p>Although the sun had risen about two hours, the fatigue of the
+previous day<br>
+had impressed itself upon all around. The cavalry, men and
+horses, were<br>
+still stretched upon the sward, sunk in sleep; the videttes,
+weary and<br>
+tired, seemed anxiously watching for the relief; and the
+disordered and<br>
+confused appearance of everything bespoke that discipline had
+relaxed its<br>
+stern features, in compassion for the bold exertions of the
+preceding day.<br>
+The only contrast to this general air of exhaustion and weariness
+on every<br>
+side was a corps of sappers, who were busily employed upon the
+high grounds<br>
+above the village. Early as it was, they seemed to have been at
+work<br>
+some hours,&mdash;at least so their labors bespoke; for already a
+rampart<br>
+of considerable extent had been thrown up, stockades implanted,
+and a<br>
+breastwork was in a state of active preparation. The officer of
+the party,<br>
+wrapped up in a loose cloak, and mounted upon a sharp-looking
+hackney, rode<br>
+hither and thither as the occasion warranted, and seemed, as well
+as from<br>
+the distance I could guess, something of a tartar. At least I
+could not<br>
+help remarking how, at his approach, the several inferior
+officers seemed<br>
+suddenly so much more on the alert, and the men worked with an
+additional<br>
+vigor and activity. I stopped for some minutes to watch him, and
+seeing<br>
+an engineer captain of my acquaintance among the party, couldn't
+resist<br>
+calling out:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Hatchard, your friend on the chestnut mare must have
+had an easier<br>
+day yesterday than some of us, or I'll be hanged if he'd be so
+active this<br>
+morning." Hatchard hung his head in some confusion, and did not
+reply;<br>
+and on my looking round, whom should I see before me but the
+identical<br>
+individual I had so coolly been criticising, and who, to my utter
+horror<br>
+and dismay, was no other than Lord Wellington himself. I did not
+wait for a<br>
+second peep. Helter-skelter, through water, thickets, and
+brambles, away I<br>
+went, clattering down the causeway like a madman. If a French
+squadron had<br>
+been behind me, I should have had a stouter heart, although I did
+not fear<br>
+pursuit. I felt his eye was upon me,&mdash;his sharp and piercing
+glance, that<br>
+shot like an arrow into me; and his firm look stared at me in
+every object<br>
+around.</p>
+
+<p>Onward I pressed, feeling in the very recklessness of my
+course some relief<br>
+to my sense of shame, and ardently hoping that some
+accident&mdash;some smashed<br>
+arm or broken collar-bone&mdash;might befall me and rescue me from any
+notice<br>
+my conduct might otherwise call for. I never drew rein till I
+reached the<br>
+Villa Formosa, and pulled up short at a small cottage where a
+double sentry<br>
+apprised me of the general's quarters. As I came up, the low
+lattice sprang<br>
+quickly open, and a figure, half dressed, and more than half
+asleep,<br>
+protruded his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what has happened? Anything wrong?" said he, whom I now
+recognized<br>
+to be General Crawfurd.</p>
+
+<p>"No, nothing wrong, sir," stammered I, with evident confusion.
+"I'm merely<br>
+come to thank you for your kindness in my behalf."</p>
+
+<p>"You seemed in a devil of a hurry to do it, if I'm to judge by
+the pace<br>
+you came at. Come in and take your breakfast with us; I shall be
+dressed<br>
+presently, and you'll meet some of your brother
+aides-de-camp."</p>
+
+<p>Having given my horse to an orderly, I walked into a little
+room, whose<br>
+humble accommodations and unpretending appearance seemed in
+perfect<br>
+keeping with the simple and unostentatious character of the
+general. The<br>
+preparations for a good and substantial breakfast were, however,
+before<br>
+me, and an English newspaper of a late date spread its most ample
+pages<br>
+to welcome me. I had not been long absorbed in my reading, when
+the door<br>
+opened, and the general, whose toilet was not yet completed, made
+his<br>
+appearance.</p>
+
+<p>"Egad, O'Malley, you startled me this morning. I thought we
+were in for it<br>
+again."</p>
+
+<p>I took this as the most seasonable opportunity to recount my
+mishap of the<br>
+morning, and accordingly, without more ado, detailed the unlucky
+meeting<br>
+with the commander-in-chief. When I came to the end, Crawfurd
+threw himself<br>
+into a chair and laughed till the very tears coursed down his
+bronzed<br>
+features.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't say so, boy? You don't really tell me you said
+that? By Jove! I<br>
+had rather have faced a platoon of musketry than have stood in
+your shoes!<br>
+You did not wait for a reply, I think?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, faith, sir, that I did not!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suspect he knows you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I trust not, sir; the whole thing passed so rapidly!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's most unlucky in more ways than one!" He paused for
+a few<br>
+moments as he said this, and then added, "Have you seen the
+general order?"<br>
+pushing towards me a written paper as he spoke. It ran
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    G.O.      ADJUTANT-GENERAL'S OFFICE, VILLA FORMOSA,</p>
+
+<p>    May 6, 1811.</p>
+
+<p>    <i>Memorandum</i>.&mdash;Commanding officers are requested to send
+in to<br>
+    the military secretary, as soon as possible, the names of
+officers they<br>
+    may wish to have promoted in succession to those who have
+fallen<br>
+    in action."</p>
+
+<p>"Now look at this list. The Honorable Harvey Howard, Grenadier
+Guards,<br>
+to be first lieutenant, <i>vice</i>&mdash;No, not that. Henry
+Beauchamp&mdash;George<br>
+Villiers&mdash;ay, here it is! Captain Lyttleton, Fourteenth Light
+Dragoons,<br>
+to be major in the Third Dragoon Guards, <i>vice</i> Godwin, killed in
+action;<br>
+Lieutenant O'Malley to be captain, <i>vice</i> Lyttleton, promoted.
+You see,<br>
+boy, I did not forget you; you were to have had the vacant troop
+in your<br>
+own regiment. Now I almost doubt the prudence of bringing your
+name under<br>
+Lord Wellington's notice. He may have recognized you; and if he
+did so,<br>
+why, I rather think&mdash;that is, I suspect&mdash;I mean, the quieter you
+keep the<br>
+better."</p>
+
+<p>While I poured forth my gratitude as warmly as I was able for
+the general's<br>
+great kindness to me, I expressed my perfect concurrence in his
+views.</p>
+
+<p>"Believe me, sir," said I, "I should much rather wait any
+number of years<br>
+for my promotion, than incur the risk of a reprimand; the more
+so, as it is<br>
+not the first time I have blundered with his lordship." I here
+narrated<br>
+my former meeting with Sir Arthur, at which Crawfurd's mirth
+again burst<br>
+forth, and he paced the room, holding his sides in an ecstasy of
+merriment.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, lad, we'll hope for the best; we'll give you the
+chance that<br>
+he has not seen your face, and send the list forward as it is.
+But here<br>
+come our fellows."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, the door opened, and three officers of his staff
+entered, to<br>
+whom, being severally introduced, we chatted away about the news
+of the<br>
+morning until breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>"I've frequently heard of you from my friend Hammersley," said
+Captain<br>
+Fitzroy, addressing me. "You were intimately acquainted, I
+believe?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes! Pray, where is he now? We have not met for a long
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"The poor fellow's invalided; that sabre-cut upon his head has
+turned out<br>
+a sad affair, and he's gone back to England on a sick leave. Old
+Dashwood<br>
+took him back with him as private secretary, or something of that
+sort."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said another, "Dashwood has daughters, hasn't he? No bad
+notion of<br>
+his; for Hammersley will be a baronet some of these days, with a
+rent-roll<br>
+of eight or nine thousand per annum."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir George Dashwood," said I, "has but one daughter, and I am
+quite sure<br>
+that in his kindness to Hammersley no intentions of the kind you
+mention<br>
+were mixed up."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I don't know," said the third, a pale, sickly youth,
+with handsome<br>
+but delicate features. "I was on Dashwood's staff until a few
+weeks ago,<br>
+and certainly I thought there was something going on between
+Hammersley<br>
+and Miss Lucy, who, be it spoken, is a devilish fine girl, though
+rather<br>
+disposed to give herself airs."</p>
+
+<p>I felt my cheek and my temples boiling like a furnace; my hand
+trembled as<br>
+I lifted my coffee to my lips; and I would have given my expected
+promotion<br>
+twice over to have had any reasonable ground of quarrel with the
+speaker.</p>
+
+<p>"Egad, lads," said Crawfurd, "that's the very best thing I
+know about a<br>
+command. As a bishop is always sure to portion off his daughters
+with<br>
+deaneries and rectories, so your knowing old general always
+marries his<br>
+among his staff."</p>
+
+<p>This sally was met with the ready laughter of the
+subordinates, in which,<br>
+however little disposed. I was obliged to join.</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite right, sir," rejoined the pale youth; "and Sir
+George has no<br>
+fortune to give his daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"How came it, Horace, that you got off safe?" said Fitzroy,
+with a certain<br>
+air of affected seriousness in his voice and manner. "I wonder
+they let<br>
+such a prize escape them."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it was not exactly their fault, I do confess. Old
+Dashwood did the<br>
+civil towards me, and <i>la belle Lucie</i> herself was condescending
+enough to<br>
+be less cruel than to the rest of the staff. Her father threw us
+a good<br>
+deal together; and in fact, I believe&mdash;I fear&mdash;that is&mdash;that I
+didn't<br>
+behave quite well."</p>
+
+<p>"You may rest perfectly assured of it, sir," said I; "whatever
+your<br>
+previous conduct may have been, you have completely relieved your
+mind on<br>
+this occasion, and behaved most shamefully."</p>
+
+<p>Had a shell fallen in the midst of us, the faces around me
+could not have<br>
+been more horror-struck than when, in a cool, determined tone, I
+spoke<br>
+these few words. Fitzroy pushed his chair slightly back from the
+table, and<br>
+fixed his eyes full upon me. Crawfurd grew dark-purple over his
+whole face<br>
+and forehead, and looked from one to the other of us without
+speaking;<br>
+while the Honorable Horace Delawar, the individual addressed,
+never changed<br>
+a muscle of his wan and sickly features, but lifting his eyes
+slowly from<br>
+his muffin, lisped softly out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You think so? How very good!"</p>
+
+<p>"General Crawfurd," said I, the moment I could collect myself
+sufficiently<br>
+to speak, "I am deeply grieved that I should so far have
+forgotten myself<br>
+as to disturb the harmony of your table; but when I tell you that
+Sir<br>
+George Dashwood is one of my warmest friends on earth; that from
+my<br>
+intimate knowledge of him, I am certain that gentleman's
+statements are<br>
+either the mere outpourings of folly or worse&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, O'Malley! you have a very singular mode of
+explaining away the<br>
+matter. Delawar, sit down again. Gentlemen, I have only one word
+to say<br>
+about this transaction; I'll have no squabbles nor broils here;
+from this<br>
+room to the guard-house is a five minutes' walk. Promise me, upon
+your<br>
+honors, this altercation ends here, or as sure as my name's
+Crawfurd, you<br>
+shall both be placed under arrest, and the man who refuses to
+obey me shall<br>
+be sent back to England."</p>
+
+<p>Before I well knew in what way to proceed, Mr. Delawar rose
+and bowed<br>
+formally to the general, while I imitated his example; silently
+we resumed<br>
+our places, and after a pause of a few moments, the current of
+conversation<br>
+was renewed, and other topics discussed, but with such evident
+awkwardness<br>
+and constraint that all parties felt relieved when the general
+rose from<br>
+table.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, O'Malley, have you forwarded the returns to the
+adjutant-general's<br>
+office?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; I despatched them this morning before leaving my
+quarters."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad of it; the irregularities on this score have called
+forth a<br>
+heavy reprimand at headquarters."</p>
+
+<p>I was also glad of it, and it chanced that by mere accident I
+remembered to<br>
+charge Mike with the papers, which, had they not been lying
+unsealed upon<br>
+the table before me, would, in all likelihood, have escaped my
+attention.<br>
+The post started to Lisbon that same morning, to take advantage
+of which<br>
+I had sat up writing for half the night. Little was I aware at
+the<br>
+moment what a mass of trouble and annoyance was in store for me
+from the<br>
+circumstance.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXV.</p>
+
+<p>ALMEIDA.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the 7th we perceived, from a movement in the
+French camp,<br>
+that the wounded were being sent to the rear, and shortly
+afterwards the<br>
+main body of their army commenced its retreat. They moved with
+slow, and as<br>
+it were, reluctant steps; and Bessi&eacute;res, who commanded the
+Imperial Guard,<br>
+turned his eyes more than once to that position which all the
+bravery of<br>
+his troops was unavailing to capture. Although our cavalry lay in
+force to<br>
+the front of our line, no attempt was made to molest the
+retreating French;<br>
+and Massena, having retired beyond the Aguada, left a strong
+force to watch<br>
+the ford, while the remainder of the army fell back upon Cuidad
+Rodrigo.</p>
+
+<p>During this time we had succeeded in fortifying our position
+at Fuentes<br>
+d'Onoro so strongly as to resist any new attack, and Lord
+Wellington now<br>
+turned his whole attention to the blockade of Almeida, which, by
+Massena's<br>
+retreat, was abandoned to its fate.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the 10th I accompanied General Crawfurd in
+a<br>
+reconnoissance of the fortress, which, from the intelligence we
+had lately<br>
+received, could not much longer hold out against our blockade.
+The fire<br>
+from the enemy's artillery was, however, hotly maintained; and as
+night<br>
+fell, some squadrons of the Fourteenth, who were picketed near,
+were unable<br>
+to light their watch-fires, being within reach of their shot. As
+the<br>
+darkness increased so did the cannonade, and the bright flashes
+from the<br>
+walls and the deep booming of the artillery became incessant.</p>
+
+<p>A hundred conjectures were afloat to account for the
+circumstance; some<br>
+asserting that what we heard were mere signals to Massena's army;
+and<br>
+others, that Brennier was destroying and mutilating the fortress
+before he<br>
+evacuated it to the allies.</p>
+
+<p>It was little past midnight when, tired from the fatigues of
+the day, I had<br>
+fallen asleep beneath a tree, an explosion, louder than any which
+preceded<br>
+it, burst suddenly forth, and as I awoke and looked about me, I
+perceived<br>
+the whole heavens illuminated by one bright glare, while the
+crashing<br>
+noise of falling stones and crumbling masonry told me that a mine
+had been<br>
+sprung; the moment after, all was calm and still and motionless;
+a thick<br>
+black smoke increasing the sombre darkness of the night shut out
+every star<br>
+from view, and some drops of heavy rain began to fall.</p>
+
+<p>The silence, ten times more appalling than the din which
+preceded it,<br>
+weighed heavily upon my senses, and a dread of some unknown
+danger crept<br>
+over me; the exhaustion, however, was greater than my fear, and
+again I<br>
+sank into slumber.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had I been half an hour asleep, when the blast of a
+trumpet again<br>
+awoke me, and I found, amidst the confusion and excitement about,
+that<br>
+something of importance had occurred. Questions were eagerly
+asked on all<br>
+sides, but no one could explain what had happened. Towards the
+town all was<br>
+as still as death, but a dropping, irregular fire of musketry
+issued from<br>
+the valley beside the Aguada. "What can this mean; what can it
+be?" we<br>
+asked of each other. "A sortie from the garrison," said one; "A
+night<br>
+attack by Massena's troops," cried another; and while thus we
+disputed and<br>
+argued, a horseman was heard advancing along the road at the top
+of his<br>
+speed.</p>
+
+<p>"Where are the cavalry?" cried a voice I recognized as one of
+my brother<br>
+aides-de-camp. "Where are the Fourteenth?"</p>
+
+<p>A cheer from our party answered this question, and the next
+moment,<br>
+breathless and agitated, he rode in among us.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it? Are we attacked?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would to Heaven that were all! But come along, lads, follow
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"What can it be, then?" said I again; while my anxiety knew no
+bounds.</p>
+
+<p>"Brennier has escaped; burst his way through Pack's Division,
+and has<br>
+already reached Valde Mula."</p>
+
+<p>"The French have escaped!" was repeated from mouth to mouth;
+while,<br>
+pressing spurs to our horses, we broke into a gallop, and dashed
+forward in<br>
+the direction of the musketry. We soon came up with the 36th
+Infantry, who,<br>
+having thrown away their knapsacks, were rapidly pressing the
+pursuit. The<br>
+maledictions which burst from every side proved how severely the
+misfortune<br>
+was felt by all, while the eager advance of the men bespoke how
+ardently<br>
+they longed to repair the mishap.</p>
+
+<p>Dark as was the night, we passed them in a gallop, when
+suddenly the<br>
+officer who commanded the leading squadron called out to
+halt.</p>
+
+<p>"Take care there, lads!" cried he; "I hear the infantry before
+us; we shall<br>
+be down upon our own people."</p>
+
+<p>The words were hardly spoken, when a bright flash blazed out
+before us, and<br>
+a smashing volley was poured into the squadron.</p>
+
+<p>"The French! the French, by Jove!" said Hampden. "Forward,
+boys! charge<br>
+them!"</p>
+
+<p>Breaking into open order, to avoid our wounded comrades,
+several of whom<br>
+had fallen by the fire, we rode down among them. In a moment
+their order<br>
+was broken, their ranks pierced, and fresh squadrons coming up at
+the<br>
+instant, they were sabred to a man.</p>
+
+<p>After this the French pursued their march in silence, and even
+when<br>
+assembling in force we rode down upon their squares, they never
+halted nor<br>
+fired a shot. At Barba del Puerco, the ground being unfit for
+cavalry, the<br>
+Thirty-sixth took our place, and pressed them hotly home. Several
+of<br>
+the French were killed, and above three hundred made prisoners,
+but our<br>
+fellows, following up the pursuit too rashly, came upon an
+advanced body of<br>
+Massena's force, drawn up to await and cover Brennier's retreat;
+the result<br>
+was the loss of above thirty men in killed and wounded.</p>
+
+<p>Thus were the great efforts of the three preceding days
+rendered fruitless<br>
+and nugatory. To maintain this blockade, Lord Wellington, with an
+inferior<br>
+force, and a position by no means strong, had ventured to give
+the enemy<br>
+battle; and now by the unskilfulness of some, and the negligence
+of others,<br>
+were all his combinations thwarted, and the French general
+enabled to march<br>
+his force through the midst of the blockading columns almost
+unmolested and<br>
+uninjured.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Wellington's indignation was great, as well it might be;
+the prize for<br>
+which he had contested was torn from his grasp at the very moment
+he had<br>
+won it, and although the gallantry of the troops in the pursuit
+might,<br>
+under other circumstances, have called forth eulogium, his only
+observation<br>
+on the matter was a half-sarcastic allusion to the inconclusive
+effects of<br>
+undisciplined bravery. "Notwithstanding," says the general order
+of the<br>
+day, "what has been printed in gazettes and newspapers, we have
+never seen<br>
+small bodies, unsupported, successfully opposed to large; nor has
+the<br>
+experience of any officer realized the stories which all have
+read, of<br>
+whole armies being driven by a handful of light infantry and
+dragoons."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXVI.</p>
+
+<p>A NIGHT ON THE AZAVA.</p>
+
+<p>Massena was now recalled, and Marmont, having assumed the
+command of<br>
+the French, army, retired towards Salamanca, while our troops
+went into<br>
+cantonments upon the Aguada. A period of inaction succeeded to
+our previous<br>
+life of bustle and excitement, and the whole interest of the
+campaign was<br>
+now centred in Beresford's army, exposed to Soult in
+Estramadura.</p>
+
+<p>On the 15th Lord Wellington set out for that province, having
+already<br>
+directed a strong force to march upon Badajos.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, O'Malley," said Crawfurd, as he returned from bidding
+Lord<br>
+Wellington good-by, "your business is all right; the
+commander-in-chief has<br>
+signed my recommendation, and you will get your troop."</p>
+
+<p>While I continued to express my grateful acknowledgments for
+his kindness,<br>
+the general, apparently inattentive to all I was saying, paced
+the room<br>
+with hurried steps, stopping every now and then to glance at a
+large map of<br>
+Spain which covered one wall of the apartment, while he muttered
+to himself<br>
+some broken and disjointed sentences.</p>
+
+<p>"Eight leagues&mdash;too weak in cavalry&mdash;with the left upon Fuenta
+Grenaldo&mdash;a<br>
+strong position. O'Malley, you'll take a troop of dragoons and
+patrol the<br>
+country towards Castro; you'll reconnoitre the position the Sixth
+Corps<br>
+occupies, but avoid any collision with the enemy's pickets,
+keeping the<br>
+Azava between you and them. Take rations for three days."</p>
+
+<p>"When shall I set out, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now!" was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>Knowing with what pleasure the hardy veteran recognized
+anything like<br>
+alacrity and despatch, I resolved to gratify him; and before half
+an hour<br>
+had elapsed, was ready with my troop to receive his final
+orders.</p>
+
+<p>"Well done, boy!" said he, as he came to the door of the hut,
+"you've lost<br>
+no time. I don't believe I have any further instructions to give
+you; to<br>
+ascertain as far as possible the probable movement of the enemy
+is my<br>
+object, that's all." As he spoke this, he waved his hand, and
+wishing me<br>
+"Good-by," walked leisurely back into the house. I saw that his
+mind was<br>
+occupied by other thoughts; and although I desired to obtain some
+more<br>
+accurate information for my guidance, knowing his dislike to
+questions, I<br>
+merely returned his salute, and set forth upon my journey.</p>
+
+<p>The morning was beautiful; the sun had risen about an hour,
+and the earth,<br>
+refreshed by the heavy dew of the night, was breathing forth all
+its<br>
+luxuriant fragrance. The river which flowed beside us was clear
+as crystal,<br>
+showing beneath its eddying current the shining, pebbly bed,
+while upon<br>
+the surface, the water-lilies floated or sank as the motion of
+the stream<br>
+inclined. The tall cork-trees spread their shadows about us, and
+the richly<br>
+plumed birds hopped from branch to branch awaking the echoes with
+their<br>
+notes.</p>
+
+<p>It is but seldom that the heart of man is thoroughly attuned
+to the<br>
+circumstances of the scenery around him. How often do we need a
+struggle<br>
+with ourselves to enjoy the rich and beautiful landscape which
+lies smiling<br>
+in its freshness before us! How frequently do the blue sky and
+the calm air<br>
+look down upon the heart darkened and shadowed with affliction!
+And how<br>
+often have we felt the discrepancy between the lowering look of
+winter and<br>
+the glad sunshine of our hearts! The harmony of the world without
+with our<br>
+thoughts within is one of the purest, as it is one of the
+greatest, sources<br>
+of happiness. Our hopes and our ambitions lose their selfish
+character when<br>
+we feel that fortune smiles upon us from all around, and the
+flattery which<br>
+speaks to our hearts from the bright stars and the blue sky, the
+peaked<br>
+mountain or the humble flower, is greater in its mute eloquence
+than all<br>
+the tongue of man can tell us.</p>
+
+<p>This feeling did I experience in all its fulness as I
+ruminated upon my<br>
+bettered fortunes, and felt within myself that secret instinct
+that tells<br>
+of happiness to come. In such moods of mind my thoughts strayed
+ever<br>
+homewards, and I could not help confessing how little were all my
+successes<br>
+in my eyes, did I not-hope for the day when I should pour forth
+my tale of<br>
+war and battle-field to the ears of those who loved me.</p>
+
+<p>I resolved to write home at once to my uncle. I longed to tell
+him each<br>
+incident of my career, and my heart glowed as I thought over the
+broken<br>
+and disjointed sentences which every cotter around would whisper
+of my<br>
+fortunes, far prouder as they would be in the humble deeds of one
+they<br>
+knew, than in the proudest triumphs of a nation's glory.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, Mike himself gave the current to my thoughts. After
+riding beside<br>
+me for some time in silence, he remarked,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"And isn't it Father Rush will be proud when he sees your
+honor's a<br>
+captain; to think of the little boy that he used to take before
+him on the<br>
+ould gray mare for a ride down the avenue,&mdash;to think of him being
+a real<br>
+captain, six feet two without his boots, and galloping over the
+French as<br>
+if they were lurchers! Peggy Mahon, that nursed you, will be the
+proud<br>
+woman the day she hears it; and there won't be a soldier sober in
+his<br>
+quarters that night in Portumna barracks! 'Pon my soul, there's
+not a thing<br>
+with a red coat on it, if it was even a scarecrow to frighten the
+birds<br>
+from the barley, that won't be treated with respect when they
+hear of the<br>
+news."</p>
+
+<p>The country through which we travelled was marked at every
+step by the<br>
+traces of a retreating army: the fields of rich corn lay
+flattened beneath<br>
+the tramp of cavalry, or the wheels of the baggage-wagons; the
+roads, cut<br>
+up and nearly impassable, were studded here and there with marks
+which<br>
+indicated a bivouac. At the same time, everything around bore a
+very<br>
+different aspect from what we had observed in Portugal; there,
+the<br>
+vindictive cruelty of the French soldiery had been seen in full
+sway: the<br>
+ruined ch&acirc;teau, the burned villages, the desecrated altars,
+the murdered<br>
+peasantry,&mdash;all attested the revengeful spirit of a beaten and
+baffled<br>
+enemy. No sooner, however, had they crossed the frontiers, than,
+as if by<br>
+magic, their character became totally changed. Discipline and
+obedience<br>
+succeeded to recklessness and pillage; and instead of treating
+the natives<br>
+with, inhumanity and cruelty, in all their intercourse with the
+Spaniards<br>
+the French behaved with moderation and even kindness. Paying
+for<br>
+everything, obtaining their billets peaceably and quietly,
+marching with<br>
+order and regularity, they advanced into the heart of the
+country, showing,<br>
+by the most irrefragable proof, the astonishing evidences of a
+discipline<br>
+which, by a word, could convert the lawless irregularities of a
+ruffian<br>
+soldiery into the orderly habits and obedient conduct of a
+highly-organized<br>
+army.</p>
+
+<p>As we neared the Azava, the tracks of the retiring enemy
+became gradually<br>
+less perceptible, and the country, uninjured by the march,
+extended for<br>
+miles around us in all the richness and abundance of a favored
+climate. The<br>
+tall corn, waving its yellow gold, reflected like a sea the
+clouds that<br>
+moved slowly above it. The wild gentian and the laurel grew
+thickly around,<br>
+and the cattle stood basking in the clear streams, while some
+listless<br>
+peasant lounged upon the bank beside them. Strange as all these
+evidences<br>
+of peace and tranquillity were, so near to the devastating track
+of a<br>
+mighty army, yet I have more than once witnessed the fact, and
+remarked<br>
+how, but a short distance from the line of our hurried march, the
+country<br>
+lay untouched and uninjured; and though the clank of arms and the
+dull roll<br>
+of the artillery may have struck upon the ear of the far-off
+dweller in his<br>
+native valley, he listened as he would have done to the passing
+thunder as<br>
+it crashed above him; and when the bright sky and pure air
+succeeded to<br>
+the lowering atmosphere and the darkening storm, he looked forth
+upon his<br>
+smiling fields and happy home, while he muttered to his heart a
+prayer of<br>
+thanksgiving that the scourge was passed.</p>
+
+<p>We bivouacked upon the bank of the river, a truly Salvator
+Rosa scene;<br>
+the rocks, towering high above us, were fissured by the channel
+of many a<br>
+trickling stream, seeking, in its zigzag current, the bright
+river below.<br>
+The dark pine-tree and the oak mingled their foliage with the
+graceful<br>
+cedar, which spread its fan-like branches about us. Through the
+thick shade<br>
+some occasional glimpses of a starry sky could yet be seen, and a
+faint<br>
+yellow streak upon the silent river told that the queen of night
+was there.</p>
+
+<p>When I had eaten my frugal supper, I wandered forth alone upon
+the bank<br>
+of the stream, now standing to watch its bold sweeps as it
+traversed the<br>
+lonely valley before me, now turning to catch a passing glance at
+our<br>
+red watch-fires and the hardy features which sat around. The
+hoarse and<br>
+careless laugh, the deep-toned voice of some old campaigner
+holding forth<br>
+his tale of flood and field, were the only sounds I heard; and
+gradually I<br>
+strolled beyond the reach of even these. The path beside the
+river, which<br>
+seemed scarped from the rock, was barely sufficient for the
+passage of<br>
+one man, a rude balustrade of wood being the only defence against
+the<br>
+precipice, which, from a height of full thirty feet, looked down
+upon the<br>
+stream. Here and there some broad gleam of moonlight would fall
+upon the<br>
+opposite bank, which, unlike the one I occupied, stretched out
+into rich<br>
+meadow and pasturage, broken by occasional clumps of ilex and
+beech. River<br>
+scenery has been ever a passion with me. I can glory in the bold
+and broken<br>
+outline of a mighty mountain; I can gaze with delighted eyes upon
+the<br>
+boundless seas, and know not whether to like it more in all the
+mighty<br>
+outpouring of its wrath, when the white waves lift their heads to
+heaven<br>
+and break themselves in foam upon the rocky beach, or in the calm
+beauty of<br>
+its broad and mirrored surface, in which the bright world of sun
+and sky<br>
+are seen full many a fathom deep. But far before these, I love
+the happy<br>
+and tranquil beauty of some bright river, tracing its winding
+current<br>
+through valley and through plain, now spreading into some calm
+and waveless<br>
+lake, now narrowing to an eddying stream with mossy rocks and
+waving trees<br>
+darkening over it. There's not a hut, however lowly, where the
+net of the<br>
+fisherman is stretched upon the sward, around whose hearth I do
+not picture<br>
+before me the faces of happy toil and humble contentment, while,
+from the<br>
+ruined tower upon the crag, methinks I hear the ancient sounds of
+wassail<br>
+and of welcome; and though the keep be fissured and the curtain
+fallen, and<br>
+though for banner there "waves some tall wall-flower," I can
+people its<br>
+crumbling walls with images of the past; and the merry laugh of
+the warder,<br>
+and the clanking tread of the mailed warrior, are as palpably
+before me as<br>
+the tangled lichen that now trails from its battlements.</p>
+
+<p>As I wandered on, I reached the little rustic stair which led
+downward from<br>
+the path to the river's side; and on examining farther, perceived
+that at<br>
+this place the stream was fordable; a huge flat rock, filling up
+a great<br>
+part of the river's bed, occupied the middle, on either side of
+which the<br>
+current ran with increased force.</p>
+
+<p>Bent upon exploring, I descended the cliff, and was preparing
+to cross,<br>
+when my attention was attracted by the twinkle of a fire at some
+distance<br>
+from me, on the opposite side; the flame rose and fell in fitful
+flashes,<br>
+as though some hand were ministering to it at the moment. As it
+was<br>
+impossible, from the silence on every side, that it could proceed
+from a<br>
+bivouac of the enemy, I resolved on approaching it, and examining
+it for<br>
+myself. I knew that the shepherds in remote districts were
+accustomed thus<br>
+to pass the summer nights, with no other covering save the blue
+vault above<br>
+them. It was not impossible, too, that it might prove a Guerilla
+party, who<br>
+frequently, in small numbers, hang upon the rear of a retreating
+army. Thus<br>
+conjecturing, I crossed the stream, and quickening my pace,
+walked forward<br>
+in the direction of the blaze. For a moment a projecting rock
+obstructed my<br>
+progress; and while I was devising some means of proceeding
+farther, the<br>
+sound of voices near me arrested my attention. I listened, and
+what was my<br>
+astonishment to hear that they spoke in French. I now crept
+cautiously to<br>
+the verge of the rock and looked over; the moon was streaming in
+its full<br>
+brilliancy upon a little shelving strand beside the stream, and
+here I<br>
+now beheld the figure of a French officer. He was habited in the
+undress<br>
+uniform of a <i>chasseur &aacute; cheval</i>, but wore no arms; indeed
+his occupation<br>
+at the moment was anything but a warlike one, he being leisurely
+employed<br>
+in collecting some flasks of champagne which apparently had been
+left to<br>
+cool within the stream.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Eh bien, Alphonse!</i>" said a voice in the direction of the
+fire, "what are<br>
+you delaying for?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm coming, I'm coming," said the other; "but, <i>par Dieu!</i> I
+can only find<br>
+five of our bottles; one seems to have been carried away by the
+stream."</p>
+
+<p>"No matter," replied the other, "we are but three of us, and
+one is, or<br>
+should be, on the sick list."</p>
+
+<p>The only answer to this was the muttered chorus of a French
+drinking-song,<br>
+interrupted at intervals by an imprecation upon the missing
+flask. It<br>
+chanced, at this moment, that a slight clinking noise attracted
+me, and on<br>
+looking down, I perceived at the foot of the rock the prize he
+sought for.<br>
+It had been, as he conceived, carried away by an eddy of the
+stream and was<br>
+borne, as a true prisoner-of-war, within my grasp. I avow that
+from this<br>
+moment my interest in the scene became considerably heightened;
+such a waif<br>
+as a bottle of champagne was not to be despised in circumstances
+like mine;<br>
+and I watched with anxious eyes every gesture of the impatient
+Frenchman,<br>
+and alternately vibrated between hope and fear, as he neared or
+receded<br>
+from the missing flask.</p>
+
+<p>"Let it go to the devil," shouted his companion, once more.
+"Jacques has<br>
+lost all patience with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Be it so, then," said the other, as he prepared to take up
+his burden. At<br>
+this instant I made a slight effort so to change my position as
+to obtain<br>
+a view of the rest of the party. The branch by which I supported
+myself,<br>
+however, gave way beneath my grasp with a loud crash. I lost my
+footing,<br>
+and slipping downward from the rock, came plump into the stream
+below. The<br>
+noise, the splash, and more than all, the sudden appearance of a
+man beside<br>
+him, astounded the Frenchman, who almost let fall his pannier,
+and thus we<br>
+stood confronting each other for at least a couple of minutes in
+silence. A<br>
+hearty burst of laughter from both parties terminated this
+awkward moment,<br>
+while the Frenchman, with the readiness of his country, was the
+first to<br>
+open the negotiation.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Sacr&eacute; Dieu!</i>" said he, "what can you be doing here?
+You're English,<br>
+without doubt."</p>
+
+<p>"Even so," said I; "but that is the very question I was about
+to ask you;<br>
+what are you doing here?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Eh bien</i>," replied the other, gayly, "you shall be answered
+in all<br>
+frankness. Our captain was wounded in the action of the 8th, and
+we heard<br>
+had been carried up the country by some peasants. As the army
+fell back, we<br>
+obtained permission to go in search of him. For two days all was
+fruitless;<br>
+the peasantry fled at our approach; and although we captured some
+of our<br>
+stolen property&mdash;among other things, the contents of this
+basket&mdash;yet we<br>
+never came upon the track of our comrade till this evening. A
+good-hearted<br>
+shepherd had taken him to his hut, and treated him with every
+kindness,<br>
+but no sooner did he hear the gallop of our horses and the clank
+of our<br>
+equipments, than, fearing himself to be made a prisoner, he fled
+up the<br>
+mountains, leaving our friend behind him; <i>voil&agrave; notre
+histoire</i>. Here we<br>
+are, three in all, one of us with a deep sabre-cut in his
+shoulder. If you<br>
+are the stronger party, we are, I suppose, your prisoners; if
+not&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>What was to have followed I know not, for at this moment his
+companion, who<br>
+had finally lost all patience, came suddenly to the spot.</p>
+
+<p>"A prisoner," cried he, placing a heavy hand upon my shoulder,
+while with<br>
+the other he held his drawn sword pointed towards my breast.</p>
+
+<p>To draw a pistol from my bosom was the work of a second; and
+while gently<br>
+turning the point of his weapon away, I coolly said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Not so fast, my friend, not so fast! The game is in my hands,
+not yours. I<br>
+have only to pull this trigger, and my dragoons are upon you;
+whatever fate<br>
+befall me, yours is certain."</p>
+
+<p>A half-scornful laugh betrayed the incredulity of him I
+addressed, while<br>
+the other, apparently anxious to relieve the awkwardness of the
+moment,<br>
+suddenly broke in with,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"He is right, Auguste, and you are wrong; we are in his power;
+that is,"<br>
+added he, smiling, "if he believes there is any triumph in
+capturing such<br>
+<i>pauvres diables</i> as ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>The features of him he addressed suddenly lost their scornful
+expression,<br>
+and sheathing his sword with an air of almost melodramatic
+solemnity,<br>
+he gravely pulled up his mustaches, and after a pause of a few
+seconds,<br>
+solemnly ejaculated a malediction upon his fortune.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>C'est toujours ainsi</i>," said he, with a bitterness that only
+a Frenchman<br>
+can convey when cursing his destiny. "<i>Soyez bon enfant</i>, and see
+what will<br>
+come of it. Only be good-natured, only be kind, and if you
+haven't bad luck<br>
+at the end of it, it's only because fortune has a heavier stroke
+in reserve<br>
+for you hereafter."</p>
+
+<p>I could not help smiling at the Frenchman's philosophy, which,
+assuming<br>
+as a good augury, he gayly said, "So, then, you'll not make us
+prisoners.<br>
+Isn't it so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Prisoners," said the other, "nothing of the kind. Come and
+sup with us;<br>
+I'll venture to say our larder is as well stocked as your own; in
+any case<br>
+an omelette, a cold chicken, and a glass of champagne are not bad
+things in<br>
+our circumstances."</p>
+
+<p>I could not help laughing outright at the strangeness of the
+proposal.<br>
+"I fear I must decline," said I; "you seem to forget I am placed
+here to<br>
+watch, not to join you."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>A la bonne heure</i>," cried the younger of the two; "do both.
+Come along;<br>
+<i>soyez bon camarade</i>; you are always near your own people, so
+don't refuse<br>
+us."</p>
+
+<p>In proportion as I declined, they both became more pressing in
+their<br>
+entreaties, and at last, I began to dread lest my refusal might
+seem to<br>
+proceed from some fear as to the good faith of the invitation,
+and I never<br>
+felt so awkwardly placed as when one plumply pressed me by
+saying,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Mais pourquoi pas, mon cher?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>I stammered out something about duty and discipline, when they
+both<br>
+interrupted me by a long burst of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come!" said they; "in an hour&mdash;in half an hour, if you
+will&mdash;you<br>
+shall be back with your own people. We've had plenty of fighting
+latterly,<br>
+and we are likely to have enough in future; we know something of
+each other<br>
+by this time in the field; let us see how we get on in the
+bivouac!"</p>
+
+<p>Resolving not to be outdone in generosity, I replied at once,
+"Here goes,<br>
+then!"</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes afterwards I found myself seated at their bivouac
+fire. The<br>
+captain, who was the oldest of the party, was a fine soldier-like
+fellow of<br>
+some forty years old; he had served in the Imperial Guard through
+all the<br>
+campaigns of Italy and Austria, and abounded in anecdotes of the
+French<br>
+army. From him I learned many of those characteristic traits
+which so<br>
+eminently distinguish the imperial troops, and saw how completely
+their<br>
+bravest and boldest feats of arms depended upon the personal
+valor of him<br>
+who led them on. From the daring enterprise of Napoleon at Lodi
+to the<br>
+conduct of the lowest corporal in the <i>grande arm&eacute;e</i>, the
+picture presents<br>
+nothing but a series of brilliant and splendid chivalry; while,
+at the same<br>
+time, the warlike character of the nation is displayed by that
+instinctive<br>
+appreciation of courage and daring which teaches them to follow
+their<br>
+officers to the very cannon's mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"It was at Elchingen," said the captain, "you should have seen
+them. The<br>
+regiment in which I was a lieutenant was ordered to form close
+column, and<br>
+charge through a narrow ravine to carry a brigade of guns, which,
+by a<br>
+flanking fire, were devastating our troops. Before we could reach
+the<br>
+causeway, we were obliged to pass an open plain in which the
+ground dipped<br>
+for about a hundred yards; the column moved on, and though it
+descended one<br>
+hill, not a man ever mounted the opposite one. A very avalanche
+of balls<br>
+swept the entire valley; and yet amidst the thunder and the
+smoke, the red<br>
+glare of the artillery, and the carnage around them, our
+grenadiers marched<br>
+firmly up. At last, Marshal Ney sent an aide-de-camp with orders
+to the<br>
+troops to lie flat down, and in this position the artillery
+played over<br>
+us for above half an hour. The Austrians gradually slackened, and
+finally<br>
+discontinued their fire; this was the moment to resume the
+attack. I crept<br>
+cautiously to my knees and looked about. One word brought my men
+around me;<br>
+but I found to my horror that of a battalion who came into action
+fourteen<br>
+hundred strong, not five hundred remained; and that I myself, a
+mere<br>
+lieutenant, was now the senior officer of the regiment. Our
+gallant colonel<br>
+lay dead beside my feet. At this instant a thought struck me. I
+remembered<br>
+a habit he possessed in moments of difficulty and danger, of
+placing in his<br>
+shako a small red plume which he commonly carried in his belt. I
+searched<br>
+for it, and found it. As I held it aloft, a maddening cheer burst
+around<br>
+me, while from out the line each officer sprang madly forward,
+and rushed<br>
+to the head of the column. It was no longer a march. With a loud
+cry of<br>
+vengeance, the mass rushed forward, the men trying to outstrip
+their<br>
+officers, and come first in contact with the foe. Like tigers on
+the<br>
+spring, they fell upon the enemy, who, crushed, overwhelmed, and
+massacred,<br>
+lay in slaughtered heaps around the cannon. The cavalry of the
+Guard came<br>
+thundering on behind us; a whole division followed; and three
+thousand five<br>
+hundred prisoners, and fourteen pieces of artillery were
+captured.</p>
+
+<p>"I sat upon the carriage of a gun, my face begrimed with
+powder, and my<br>
+uniform blackened and blood-stained. The whole thing appeared
+like some<br>
+shocking dream. I felt a hand upon my shoulder, while a rough
+voice called<br>
+in my ear, '<i>Capitaine du soixante-neuvi&egrave;me, tu es mon
+fr&egrave;re!</i>'</p>
+
+<p>"It was Ney who spoke. This," added the brave captain, his
+eyes filling as<br>
+he said the words,&mdash;"this is the sabre he gave me."</p>
+
+<p>I know not why I have narrated this anecdote; it has little in
+itself, but<br>
+somehow, to me it brings back in all its fulness the recollection
+of that<br>
+night.</p>
+
+<p>There was something so strongly characteristic of the old
+Napoleonist<br>
+in the tone of his narrative that I listened throughout with
+breathless<br>
+attention. I began to feel too, for the first time, what a
+powerful arm<br>
+in war the Emperor had created by fostering the spirit of
+individual<br>
+enterprise. The field thus opened to fame and distinction left no
+bounds<br>
+to the ambition of any. The humble conscript, as he tore himself
+from the<br>
+embraces of his mother, wiped his tearful eyes to see before him
+in the<br>
+distance the b&acirc;ton of a marshal. The bold soldier who
+stormed a battery<br>
+felt his heart beat more proudly and more securely beneath the
+cordon of<br>
+the Legion than behind a cuirass of steel; and to a people in
+whom the<br>
+sense of duty alone would seem cold, barren, and inglorious, he
+had<br>
+substituted a highly-wrought chivalrous enthusiasm; and by the
+<i>prestige</i><br>
+of his own name, the proud memory of his battles, and the glory
+of those<br>
+mighty tournaments at which all Europe were the spectators, he
+had<br>
+converted a nation into an army.</p>
+
+<p>By a silent and instinctive compact we appeared to avoid those
+topics of<br>
+the campaign in which the honor of our respective arms was
+interested; and<br>
+once, when, by mere accident, the youngest of the party adverted
+to Fuentes<br>
+d'Onoro, the old captain adroitly turned the current of the
+conversation by<br>
+saying, "Come, Alphonse, let's have a song."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the other. "<i>Les Pas de Charge</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," said the captain; "if I am to have a choice, let it
+be that<br>
+little Breton song you gave us on the Danube."</p>
+
+<p>"So be it then," said Alphonse. "Here goes!"</p>
+
+<p>I have endeavored to convey, by a translation, the words he
+sang; but I<br>
+feel conscious how totally their feeling and simplicity are lost
+when<br>
+deprived of their own <i>patois</i>, and the wild but touching melody
+that<br>
+accompanied them.</p>
+
+<p>    THE BRETON HOME.</p>
+
+<p>    When the battle is o'er, and the sounds of fight<br>
+    Have closed with the closing day,<br>
+    How happy around the watch-fire's light<br>
+    To chat the long hours away;<br>
+    To chat the long hours away, my boy,<br>
+    And talk of the days to come,<br>
+    Or a better still and a purer joy,<br>
+    To think of our far-off home.</p>
+
+<p>    How many a cheek will then grow pale,<br>
+    That never felt a tear!<br>
+    And many a stalwart heart will quail,<br>
+    That never quailed in fear!<br>
+    And the breast that like some mighty rock<br>
+    Amidst the foaming sea<br>
+    Bore high against the battle's shock<br>
+    Now heaves like infancy.</p>
+
+<p>    And those who knew each other not<br>
+    Their hands together steal,<br>
+    Each thinks of some long hallowed spot,<br>
+    And all like brothers feel:<br>
+    Such holy thoughts to all are given;<br>
+    The lowliest has his part;<br>
+    The love of home, like love of heaven,<br>
+    Is woven in our heart.</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause as he concluded, each sank in his own
+reflections. How<br>
+long we should have thus remained, I know not; but we were
+speedily aroused<br>
+from our reveries by the tramp of horses near us. We listened,
+and could<br>
+plainly detect in their rude voices and coarse laughter the
+approach of a<br>
+body of Guerillas. We looked from one to the other in silence and
+in fear.<br>
+Nothing could be more unfortunate should we be discovered. Upon
+this point<br>
+we were left little time to deliberate; for with a loud cheer,
+four Spanish<br>
+horsemen galloped up to the spot, their carbines in the rest. The
+Frenchmen<br>
+sprang to their feet, and seized their sabres, bent upon making a
+resolute<br>
+resistance. As for me, my determination was at once taken.
+Remaining<br>
+quietly seated upon the grass, I stirred not for a moment, but
+addressing<br>
+him who appeared to be the chief of the Guerillas, said, in
+Spanish:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"These are my prisoners; I am a British officer of dragoons,
+and my party<br>
+is yonder."</p>
+
+<p>This evidently unexpected declaration seemed to surprise them,
+and they<br>
+conferred for a few moments together. Meanwhile they were joined
+by two<br>
+others, in one of whom we could recognize, by his costume, the
+real leader<br>
+of the party.</p>
+
+<p>"I am captain in the light dragoons," said I, repeating my
+declaration.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Morte de Dios!</i>" replied he; "it is false; you are a
+spy!"</p>
+
+<p>The word was repeated from lip to lip by his party, and I saw,
+in their<br>
+lowering looks and darkened features, that the moment was a
+critical one<br>
+for me.</p>
+
+<p>"Down with your arms!" cried he, turning to the Frenchmen.
+"Surrender<br>
+yourselves our prisoners; I'll not bid ye twice!"</p>
+
+<p>The Frenchmen turned upon me an inquiring look, as though to
+say that upon<br>
+me now their hopes entirely reposed.</p>
+
+<p>"Do as he bids you," said I; while at the same moment I sprang
+to my legs,<br>
+and gave a loud, shrill whistle, the last echo of which had not
+died away<br>
+in the distance ere it was replied to.</p>
+
+
+<a name="0217"></a>
+<img alt="0217.jpg (167K)" src="0217.jpg" height="1043" width="677">
+
+<p>[THE TABLES TURNED.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>"Make no resistance now," said I to the Frenchmen; "our safety
+depends on this."</p>
+
+<p>While this was passing two of the Spaniards had dismounted,
+and detaching a<br>
+coil of rope which hung from their saddle-peak, were proceeding
+to tie the<br>
+prisoners wrist to wrist; the others, with their carbines to the
+shoulder,<br>
+covered us man by man, the chief of the party having singled out
+me as his<br>
+peculiar prey.</p>
+
+<p>"The fate of Mascarenhas might have taught you better," said
+he, "than to<br>
+play this game." And then added with a grim smile, "But we'll see
+if an<br>
+Englishman will not make as good a carbonado as a
+Portuguese!"</p>
+
+<p>This cruel speech made my blood run cold, for I knew well to
+what he<br>
+alluded. I was at Lisbon at the time it happened, but the
+melancholy fate<br>
+of Julian Mascarenhas, the Portuguese spy, had reached me there.
+He was<br>
+burned to death at Torres Vedras!</p>
+
+<p>The Spaniard's triumph over my terror was short-lived, indeed,
+for scarcely<br>
+had the words fallen from his lips, when a party of the
+Fourteenth,<br>
+dashing through the river at a gallop, came riding up. The
+attitude of the<br>
+Guerillas, as they sat with presented arms, was sufficient for my
+fellows<br>
+who needed not the exhortation of him who rode foremost of the
+party:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ride them down, boys! Tumble them over! Flatten their broad
+beavers, the<br>
+infernal thieves!"</p>
+
+<p>"Whoop!" shouted Mike, as he rode at the chief with the force
+of a<br>
+catapult. Down went the Spaniard, horse and all; and before he
+could<br>
+disentangle himself, Mike was upon him, his knee pressed upon his
+neck.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it enough for ye to pillage the whole country without
+robbing the<br>
+king's throops!" cried he, as he held him fast to the earth with
+one hand,<br>
+while he presented a loaded pistol to his face.</p>
+
+<p>By this time the scene around me was sufficiently ludicrous.
+Such of the<br>
+Guerillas as had not been thrown by force from their saddles, had
+slid<br>
+peaceably down, and depositing their arms upon the ground,
+dropped upon<br>
+their knees in a semicircle around us, and amidst the hoarse
+laughter of<br>
+the troopers, and the irrepressible merriment of the Frenchmen,
+rose up the<br>
+muttered prayers of the miserable Spaniards, who believed that
+now their<br>
+last hour was come.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Madre de Dios</i>, indeed!" cried Mike, imitating the tone of a
+repentant<br>
+old sinner in a patched mantle; "it's much the blessed Virgin
+thinks of<br>
+the like o' ye, thieves and rogues as ye are; it a'most puts me
+beyond my<br>
+senses to see ye there crossing yourselves like <i>rale</i>
+Christians."</p>
+
+<p>If I could not help indulging myself in this retributive
+cruelty towards<br>
+the chief, and leaving him to the tender mercies of Mike, I
+ordered the<br>
+others to rise and form in line before me. Affecting to occupy
+myself<br>
+entirely with them, I withdrew the attention of all from the
+French<br>
+officers, who remained quiet spectators of the scene around
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Point de fa&ccedil;ons</i>, gentlemen," said I, in a whisper.
+"Get to your horses<br>
+and away! Now's your time. Good-by!"</p>
+
+<p>A warm grasp of the hand from each was the only reply, and I
+turned once<br>
+more to my discomforted friends the Guerillas.</p>
+
+<p>"There, Mike, let the poor devil rise. I confess appearances
+were strong<br>
+against me just now."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Captain, are you convinced by this time that I was not
+deceiving<br>
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>The Guerilla muttered some words of apology between his teeth,
+and while he<br>
+shook the dust from his cloak, and arranged the broken feather of
+his<br>
+hat, cast a look of scowling and indignant meaning upon Mike,
+whose rough<br>
+treatment he had evidently not forgiven.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be looking at me that way, you black thief! or
+I'll&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold there!" said I; "no more of this. Come, gentlemen, we
+must be<br>
+friends. If I mistake not, we've got something like refreshment
+at our<br>
+bivouac. In any case you'll partake of our watch-fire till
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>They gladly accepted our invitation, and ere half an hour
+elapsed Mike's<br>
+performance in the part of host had completely erased every
+unpleasant<br>
+impression his first appearance gave rise to; and as for myself,
+when I did<br>
+sleep at last, the confused mixture of Spanish and Irish airs
+which issued<br>
+from the thicket beside me, proved that a most intimate alliance
+had grown<br>
+up between the parties.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXVII.</p>
+
+<p>MIKE'S MISTAKE.</p>
+
+<p>An hour before daybreak the Guerillas were in motion, and
+having taken a<br>
+most ceremonious leave of us, they mounted their horses and set
+out upon<br>
+their journey. I saw their gaunt figures wind down the valley,
+and watched<br>
+them till they disappeared in the distance. "Yes, brigands though
+they be,"<br>
+thought I, "there is something fine, something heroic in the
+spirit of<br>
+their unrelenting vengeance." The sleuth-hound never sought the
+lair of<br>
+his victim with a more ravening appetite for blood than they
+track the<br>
+retreating columns of the enemy. Hovering around the line of
+march, they<br>
+sometimes swoop down in masses, and carry off a part of the
+baggage, or the<br>
+wounded. The wearied soldier, overcome by heat and exhaustion,
+who drops<br>
+behind his ranks, is their certain victim; the sentry on an
+advanced post<br>
+is scarcely less so. Whole pickets are sometimes attacked and
+carried off<br>
+to a man; and when traversing the lonely passes of some mountain
+gorge, or<br>
+defiling through the dense shadows of a wooded glen, the stoutest
+heart has<br>
+felt a fear, lest from behind the rock that frowned above him, or
+from the<br>
+leafy thicket whose branches stirred without a breeze, the sharp
+ring of a<br>
+Guerilla carbine might sound his death-knell.</p>
+
+<p>It was thus in the retreat upon Corunna fell Colonel Lefebvre.
+Ever<br>
+foremost in the attack upon our rear-guard, this gallant youth
+(he was<br>
+scarce six-and-twenty), a colonel of his regiment, and decorated
+with the<br>
+Legion of Honor, he led on every charge of his bold "<i>sabreurs</i>,"
+riding<br>
+up to the very bayonets of our squares, waving his hat above his
+head, and<br>
+seeming actually to court his death-wound; but so struck were our
+brave<br>
+fellows with his gallant bearing, that they cheered him as he
+came on.</p>
+
+<p>It was in one of these moments as, rising high in his
+stirrups, he bore<br>
+down upon the unflinching ranks of the British infantry, the
+shrill whistle<br>
+of a ball strewed the leaves upon the roadside, the exulting
+shout of a<br>
+Guerilla followed it, and the same instant Lefebvre fell forward
+upon his<br>
+horse's mane, a deluge of blood bursting from his bosom. A broken
+cry<br>
+escaped his lips,&mdash;a last effort to cheer on his men; his noble
+charger<br>
+galloped forward between our squares, bearing to us our prisoner,
+the<br>
+corpse of his rider.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain O'Malley," said a mounted dragoon to the advanced
+sentry at the<br>
+bottom of the little hill upon which I was standing. "Despatches
+from<br>
+headquarters, sir," delivering into my hands a large sealed
+packet from the<br>
+adjutant-general's office. While he proceeded to search for
+another letter<br>
+of which he was the bearer, I broke the seal and read as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    ADJUTANT-GENERAL'S OFFICE.</p>
+
+<p>    May 15.</p>
+
+<p>    Sir,&mdash;On the receipt of this order you are directed,
+having previously<br>
+    resigned your command to the officer next in seniority,
+to<br>
+    repair to headquarters at Fueutes d'Onoro, there to report
+yourself<br>
+    under arrest.</p>
+
+<p>    I have the honor to be your obedient servant,</p>
+
+<p>    GEORGE HOPETON,</p>
+
+<p>    <i>Military Secretary</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"What the devil can this mean?" said I to myself, as I read
+the lines over<br>
+again and again. "What have I done lately, or what have I left
+undone to<br>
+involve me in this scrape? Ah!" thought I, "to be sure, it can be
+nothing<br>
+else. Lord Wellington <i>did</i> recognize me that unlucky morning,
+and has<br>
+determined not to let me pass unpunished. How unfortunate.
+Scarcely<br>
+twenty-four hours have elapsed since fortune seemed to smile upon
+me from<br>
+every side, and now the very destiny I most dreaded stares me
+fully in the<br>
+face." A reprimand, or the sentence of a court-martial, I shrank
+from with<br>
+a coward's fear. It mattered comparatively little from what
+source arising,<br>
+the injury to my pride as a man and my spirit as a soldier would
+be almost<br>
+the same.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the letter, sir," said the orderly, presenting me
+with a packet,<br>
+the address of which was in Power's hand-writing. Eagerly tearing
+it open,<br>
+I sought for something which might explain my unhappy position.
+It bore the<br>
+same date as the official letter, and ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    My Dear Charley,&mdash;I joined yesterday, just in time to
+enjoy the<br>
+    heartiest laugh I have had since our meeting. If notoriety
+can gratify<br>
+    you, by Jove, you have it; for Charles O'Malley and his man
+Mickey<br>
+    Free are bywords in every mess from Villa Formosa to the
+rear-guard.<br>
+    As it's only fair you should participate a little in the fun
+you've<br>
+    originated, let me explain the cause. Your inimitable man
+Mike, to<br>
+    whom it appears you intrusted the report of killed and
+wounded for<br>
+    the adjutant-general, having just at that moment accomplished
+a<br>
+    letter to his friends at home, substituted his correspondence
+for your<br>
+    returns, and doubtless, sent the list of the casualties as
+very<br>
+    interesting information to his sweetheart in Ireland. If such
+be the<br>
+    case, I hope and trust she has taken the blunder in better
+part than<br>
+    old Colbourn, who swears he'll bring you to a court-martial,
+under<br>
+    Heaven knows what charges. In fact, his passion has known no
+bounds<br>
+    since the event; and a fit of jaundice has given his face a
+kind of<br>
+    neutral tint between green and yellow, like nothing I know of
+except<br>
+    the facings of the "dirty half-hundred." [2]</p>
+
+<p>[Footnote 2: For the information of my unmilitary readers, I
+may<br>
+remark that this sobriquet was applied to the 50th Regiment.]</p>
+
+<p>    As Mr. Free's letter may be as great a curiosity to you as
+it has<br>
+    been to us, I enclose you a copy of it, which Hopeton
+obtained for<br>
+    me. It certainly places the estimable Mike in a strong light
+as a<br>
+    despatch-writer. The occasional interruption to the current
+of the<br>
+    letter, you will perceive, arises from Mike having used the
+pen of a<br>
+    comrade, writing being, doubtless, an accomplishment
+forgotten in<br>
+    the haste of preparing Mr. Free for the world; and the
+amanuensis<br>
+    has, in more than one instance, committed to paper more than
+was<br>
+    meant by the author:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>      Mrs. M'Gra,&mdash;Tear an' ages, sure I need not be treating
+he<br>
+      way. Now, just say Mrs. Mary&mdash;ay, that'll do&mdash;Mrs. Mary,
+it's may be<br>
+      surprised you'll be to be reading a letter from your humble
+servant,<br>
+      sitting on the top of the Alps,&mdash;arrah, may be it's not the
+Alps; but<br>
+      sure she'll never know,&mdash;fornent the whole French army,
+with Bony<br>
+      himself and all his jinnerals&mdash;God be between us and
+harm&mdash;ready to<br>
+      murther every mother's son of us, av they were able, Molly
+darlin';<br>
+      but, with the blessing of Providence, and Lord Wellington
+and Mister<br>
+      Charles, we'll bate them yet, as we bate them afore.</p>
+
+<p>      My lips is wathering at the thought o' the plunder. I
+often<br>
+      of Tim Riley, that was hanged for sheep-stealing; he'd be
+worth his<br>
+      weight in gold here.</p>
+
+<p>      Mr. Charles is now a captain&mdash;devil a less&mdash;and myself
+might be<br>
+      somethin' that same, but ye see I was always of a bashful
+n<br>
+      and recommended the master in my place. "He's mighty young,
+Mister<br>
+      Charles is," says my Lord Wellington to me,&mdash;"He's mighty
+young, Mr.<br>
+      Free." "He is, my lord," says I; "he's young, as you
+obsarve, but<br>
+      he's as much divilment in him as many that might be his
+father."<br>
+      "That's somethin', Mr. Free," says my lord; "ye say he
+comes from a<br>
+      good stock?" "The <i>rale</i> sort, my lord," says I; "an ould,
+ancient<br>
+      family, that's spent every sixpence they had in treating
+their<br>
+      neighbors. My father lived near him for years,"&mdash;you see,
+Molly, I<br>
+      said that to season the discourse. "We'll make him a
+captain," says<br>
+      my lord; "but, Mr. Free, could we do nothing for you?"
+"Nothing, at<br>
+      present, my lord. When my friends comes into power," says
+I, "they'll<br>
+      think of me. There's many a little thing to give away in
+Ireland, and<br>
+      they often find it mighty hard to find a man for
+lord-lieutenant; and<br>
+      if that same, or a tide-waiter's place was vacant&mdash;" "Just
+tell me,"<br>
+      says my lord. "It's what I'll do," says I. "And now,
+wishing you<br>
+      happy dreams, I'll take my lave." Just so, Molly, it's hand
+and glove<br>
+      we are. A pleasant face, agreeable manners seasoned with
+natural<br>
+      modesty, and a good pair of legs, them's the gifts to push
+a man's<br>
+      way in the world. And even with the ladies&mdash;but sure I am
+forgetting,<br>
+      my master was proposed for, and your humble servant too, by
+two<br>
+      illigant creatures in Lisbon; but it wouldn't do, Molly,
+it's higher<br>
+      nor that we'll be looking,&mdash;<i>rale</i> princesses, the devil a
+less. Tell<br>
+      Kitty Hannigan I hope she's well; she was a disarving
+young<br>
+      in her situation in life. Shusey Dogherty, at the cross
+roa<br>
+      I don't forget the name&mdash;was a good-looking slip too; give
+her my<br>
+      affectionate salutations, as we say in the Portuguese. I
+hope I'll be<br>
+      able to bear the inclementuous nature of your climate when
+I go back;<br>
+      but I can't expect to stay long&mdash;for Lord Wellington can't
+do without<br>
+      me. We play duets on the guitar together every evening. The
+master is<br>
+      shouting for a blanket, so no more at present from,</p>
+
+<p>      Your very affectionate friend,</p>
+
+<p>      MICKEY FREE.</p>
+
+<p>      P. S.&mdash;I don't write this myself, for the Spanish tongue
+p<br>
+      out o' the habit of English. Tell Father Rush, if he'd
+study the<br>
+      Portuguese, I'd use my interest for him with the Bishop of
+Toledo.<br>
+      It's a country he'd like&mdash;no regular stations, but
+promiscuous eating<br>
+      and drinking, and as pretty girls as ever confessed their
+sins.</p>
+
+<p>    My poor Charley, I think I am looking at you. I think I
+can<br>
+    see the struggle between indignation, and laughter, which
+every line<br>
+    of this letter inflicts upon you. Get back as quickly as you
+can, and<br>
+    we'll try if Crawfurd won't pull you through the business. In
+any<br>
+    case, expect no sympathy; and if you feel disposed to be
+angry with<br>
+    all who laugh at you, you had better publish a challenge in
+the next<br>
+    general order. George Scott, of, the Greys, bids me say, that
+if<br>
+    you're hard up for cash, he'll give you a couple of hundred
+for<br>
+    Mickey Free. I told him I thought you'd accept it, as your
+uncle<br>
+    has the breed of those fellows upon his estate, and might
+have no<br>
+    objection to weed his stud. Hammersley's gone back with the
+Dashwoods;<br>
+    but I don't think you need fear anything in that quarter.<br>
+    At the same time, if you wish for success, make a bold push
+for the<br>
+    peerage and half-a-dozen decorations, for Miss Lucy is most
+decidedly<br>
+    gone wild about military distinction. As for me, my affairs
+go on<br>
+    well: I've had half-a-dozen quarrels with Inez, but we parted
+good<br>
+    friends, and my bad Portuguese has got me out of all
+difficulties with<br>
+    papa, who pressed me tolerably close as to fortune. I shall
+want<br>
+    your assistance in this matter yet. If parchments will
+satisfy him, I<br>
+    think I could get up a qualification; but somehow the matter
+must<br>
+    be done, for I'm resolved to have his daughter.</p>
+
+<p>    The orderly is starting, so no more till we meet.</p>
+
+<p>    Yours ever,            FRED POWER.</p>
+
+<p>"Godwin," said I, as I closed the letter, "I find myself in a
+scrape at<br>
+headquarters; you are to take the command of the detachment, for
+I must set<br>
+out at once."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing serious, I hope. O'Malley?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no; nothing of consequence. A most absurd blunder of my
+rascally<br>
+servant."</p>
+
+<p>"The Irish fellow yonder?"</p>
+
+<p>"The same."</p>
+
+<p>"He seems to take it easily, however."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, confound him! he does not know what trouble he has
+involved me in; not<br>
+that he'll care much when he does."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he does not seem to be of a very desponding temperament.
+Listen to<br>
+the fellow! I'll be hanged, if he's not singing!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm devilishly disposed to spoil his mirth. They tell me,
+however, he<br>
+always keeps the troop in good humor; and see, the fellows are
+actually<br>
+cleaning his horses for him, while he is sitting on the
+bank!"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, O'Malley, that fellow knows the world. Just hear
+him."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Free was, as described, most leisurely reposing on a bank,
+a mug of<br>
+something drinkable beside him, and a pipe of that curtailed
+proportion<br>
+which an Irishman loves held daintily between his fingers. He
+appeared to<br>
+be giving his directions to some soldiers of the troop, who were
+busily<br>
+cleaning his horses and accoutrements for him.</p>
+
+
+<a name="0225"></a>
+<img alt="0225.jpg (189K)" src="0225.jpg" height="656" width="798">
+
+<p>[MR. FREE PIPES WHILE HIS FRIENDS
+PIPE-CLAY.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>"That's it, Jim! Rub 'em down along the hocks; he won't kick;
+it's only<br>
+play. Scrub away, honey; that's the devil's own carbine to get
+clean."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I say, Mr. Free, are you going to give us that ere
+song?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I'll be danged if I burnish your sabre, if you don't
+sing."</p>
+
+<p>"Tear an' ages! ain't I composing it? Av I was Tommy Moore, I
+couldn't be<br>
+quicker."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, come along, my hearty; let's hear it."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, murther!" said Mike, draining the pot to its last few
+drops, which he<br>
+poured pathetically upon the grass before him; and then having
+emptied the<br>
+ashes from his pipe, he heaved a deep sigh, as though to say life
+had no<br>
+pleasures in store for him. A brief pause followed, after which,
+to the<br>
+evident delight of his expectant audience, he began the following
+song, to<br>
+the popular air of "Paddy O'Carroll":&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    BAD LUCK TO THIS MARCHING.</p>
+
+<p>    Air,&mdash;<i>Paddy O'Carroll</i>.</p>
+
+<p>    Bad luck to this marching,<br>
+    Pipe-claying, and starching,<br>
+    How neat one must be to be killed by the French,<br>
+    I'm sick of parading,<br>
+    Through wet and cowld wading,<br>
+    Or standing all night to be shot in a trench.<br>
+    To the tune of a fife<br>
+    They dispose of your life,<br>
+    You surrender your soul to some illigant lilt;<br>
+    Now, I like Garryowen,<br>
+    When I hear it at home,<br>
+    But it's not half so sweet when you're going to be kilt.</p>
+
+<p>    Then, though up late and early,<br>
+    Our pay comes so rarely,<br>
+    The devil a farthing we've ever to spare;<br>
+    They say some disaster<br>
+    Befell the paymaster;<br>
+    On my conscience, I think that the money's not there.<br>
+    And just think what a blunder,<br>
+    They won't let us plunder,<br>
+    While the convents invite us to rob them, 'tis clear;<br>
+    Though there isn't a village,<br>
+    But cries, "Come and pillage,"<br>
+    Yet we leave all the mutton behind for Mounseer.</p>
+
+<p>    Like a sailor that's nigh land,<br>
+    I long for that island<br>
+    Where even the kisses we steal if we please;<br>
+    Where it is no disgrace<br>
+    If you don't wash your face,<br>
+    And you've nothing to do but to stand at your ease.<br>
+    With no sergeant t'abuse us,<br>
+    We fight to amuse us;<br>
+    Sure, it's better bate Christians than kick a baboon.<br>
+    How I'd dance like a fairy<br>
+    To see ould Dunleary,<br>
+    And think twice ere I'd leave it to be a dragoon!</p>
+
+<p>"There's a sweet little bit for you," said Mike, as he
+concluded; "thrown<br>
+off as aisy as a game at football."</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Mr. Free, the captain's looking for you; he's just
+received<br>
+despatches from the camp, and wants his horses."</p>
+
+<p>"In that case, gentlemen, I must take my leave of you; with
+the more<br>
+regret, too, that I was thinking of treating you to a supper this
+evening.<br>
+You needn't be laughing; it's in earnest I am. Coming, sir,
+coming!"<br>
+shouted he, in a louder tone, answering some imaginary call, as
+an excuse<br>
+for his exit.</p>
+
+<p>When he appeared before me, an air of most business-like
+alacrity had<br>
+succeeded to his late appearance, and having taken my orders to
+get the<br>
+horses in readiness, he left me at once, and in less than half an
+hour we<br>
+were upon the road.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXVIII.</p>
+
+<p>MONSOON IN TROUBLE.</p>
+
+<p>As I rode along towards Fuentes d'Onoro, I could not help
+feeling provoked<br>
+at the absurd circumstances in which I was involved. To be made
+the subject<br>
+of laughter for a whole army was by no means a pleasant
+consideration; but<br>
+what I felt far worse was the possibility that the mention of my
+name in<br>
+connection with a reprimand might reach the ears of those who
+knew nothing<br>
+of the cause.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Free himself seemed little under the influence of similar
+feelings; for<br>
+when, after a silence of a couple of hours, I turned suddenly
+towards him<br>
+with a half-angry look, and remarked, "You see, sir, what your
+confounded<br>
+blundering has done," his cool reply was,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then! won't Mrs. M'Gra be frightened out of her life when
+she reads<br>
+all about the killed and wounded in your honor's report? I wonder
+if they<br>
+ever had the manners to send my own letter afterwards, when they
+found out<br>
+their mistake!"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Their</i> mistake, do you say? rather <i>yours!</i> You appear to
+have a happy<br>
+knack of shifting blame from your own shoulders. And do you fancy
+that<br>
+they've nothing else to do than to trouble their heads about your
+absurd<br>
+letters?"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, it's easily seen you never saw my letter, or you
+wouldn't be saying<br>
+that. And sure, it's not much trouble it would give Colonel
+Fitzroy or any<br>
+o' the staff that write a good hand just to put in a line to Mrs.
+M'Gra, to<br>
+prevent her feeling alarmed about that murthering paper. Well,
+well; it's<br>
+God's blessing! I don't think there's anybody of the name of
+Mickey Free<br>
+high up in the army but myself; so that the family won't be going
+into<br>
+mourning for me on a false alarm."</p>
+
+<p>I had not patience to participate in this view of the case; so
+that I<br>
+continued my journey without speaking. We had jogged along for
+some time<br>
+after dark, when the distant twinkle of the-watch-fires announced
+our<br>
+approach to the camp. A detachment of the Fourteenth formed the
+advanced<br>
+post, and from the officer in command I learned that Power was
+quartered<br>
+at a small mill about half a mile distant; thither I accordingly
+turned my<br>
+steps, but finding that the path which led abruptly down to it
+was broken<br>
+and cut up in many places, I sent Mike back with the horses, and
+continued<br>
+my way alone on foot.</p>
+
+<p>The night was deliciously calm; and as I approached the little
+rustic mill,<br>
+I could not help feeling struck with Power's taste in a
+billet.</p>
+
+<p>A little vine-clad cottage, built close against a rock, nearly
+concealed<br>
+by the dense foliage around it, stood beside a clear rivulet
+whose eddying<br>
+current supplied water to the mill, and rose in a dew-like spray
+which<br>
+sparkled like gems in the pale moonlight. All was still within,
+but as I<br>
+came nearer I thought I could detect the chords of a guitar. "Can
+it be,"<br>
+thought I, "that Master Fred has given himself up to minstrelsy;
+or is<br>
+it some little dress rehearsal for a serenade? But no," thought
+I, "that<br>
+certainly is not Power's voice." I crept stealthily down the
+little path,<br>
+and approached the window; the lattice lay open, and as the
+curtain waved<br>
+to and fro with the night air, I could see plainly all who were
+in the<br>
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Close beside the window sat a large, dark-featured Spaniard,
+his hands<br>
+crossed upon his bosom and his head inclined heavily forward, the
+attitude<br>
+perfectly denoting deep sleep, even had not his cigar, which
+remained<br>
+passively between his lips, ceased to give forth its blue smoke
+wreath. At<br>
+a little distance from him sat a young girl, who, even by the
+uncertain<br>
+light, I could perceive was possessed of all that delicacy of
+form and<br>
+gracefulness of carriage which characterize her nation.</p>
+
+<p>Her pale features&mdash;paler still from the contrast with her jet
+black<br>
+hair and dark costume&mdash;were lit up with an expression of
+animation and<br>
+enthusiasm as her fingers swept rapidly and boldly across the
+strings of a<br>
+guitar.</p>
+
+<p>"And you're not tired of it yet?" said she, bending her head
+downwards<br>
+towards one whom I now for the first time perceived.</p>
+
+<p>Reclining carelessly at her feet, his arm leaning upon her
+chair, while his<br>
+hand occasionally touched her taper fingers, lay my good friend,
+Master<br>
+Fred Power. An undress jacket, thrown loosely open, and a black
+neck-cloth,<br>
+negligently knotted, bespoke the easy <i>nonchalance</i> with which
+he<br>
+prosecuted his courtship.</p>
+
+<p>"Do sing it again?" said he, pressing her fingers to his
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>What she replied, I could not catch; but Fred resumed: "No,
+no; he never<br>
+wakes. The infernal clatter of that mill is his lullaby."</p>
+
+<p>"But your friend will be here soon," said she. "Is it not
+so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, poor Charley! I'd almost forgotten him. By-the-bye, you
+mustn't fall<br>
+in love with him. There now, do not look angry; I only meant
+that, as I<br>
+knew he'd be desperately smitten, you shouldn't let him fancy he
+got any<br>
+encouragement."</p>
+
+<p>"What would you have me do?" said she, artlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been thinking over that, too. In the first place,
+you'd better<br>
+never let him hear you sing; scarcely ever smile; and as far as
+possible,<br>
+keep out of his sight."</p>
+
+<p>"One would think, Senhor, that all these precautions were to
+be taken more<br>
+on my account than on his. Is he so very dangerous, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it! Good-looking enough he is, but, only a boy;
+at the same<br>
+time, a devilish bold one! And he'd think no more of springing
+through that<br>
+window and throwing his arms round your neck, the very first
+moment of his<br>
+arrival, than I should of whispering how much I love you."</p>
+
+<p>"How very odd he must be! I'm sure I should like him."</p>
+
+<p>"Many thanks to both for your kind hints; and now to take
+advantage of<br>
+them." So saying, I stepped lightly upon the window-sill, cleared
+the<br>
+miller with one spring, and before Power could recover his legs
+or<br>
+Margeritta her astonishment, I clasped her in my arms, and kissed
+her on<br>
+either cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"Charley! Charley! Damn it, man, it won't do!" cried Fred;
+while the young<br>
+lady, evidently more amused at his discomfiture than affronted at
+the<br>
+liberty, threw herself into a seat, and laughed immoderately.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! Hilloa there! What is't?" shouted the miller, rousing
+himself from his<br>
+nap, and looking eagerly round. "Are they coming? Are the French
+coming?"</p>
+
+<p>A hearty renewal of his daughter's laughter was the only
+reply; while Power<br>
+relieved his anxiety by saying,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, Pedrillo, not the French; a mere marauding
+party,&mdash;nothing more. I<br>
+say, Charley," continued he, in a lower tone, "you had better
+lose no time<br>
+in reporting yourself at headquarters. We'll walk up together.
+Devilish<br>
+awkward scrape, yours."</p>
+
+<p>"Never fear, Fred; time enough for all that. For the present,
+if you permit<br>
+me, I'll follow up my acquaintance with our fair friend
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"Gently, gently!" said he, with a look of most imposing
+seriousness. "Don't<br>
+mistake her; she's not a mere country girl: you understand?&mdash;been
+bred in a<br>
+convent here,&mdash;rather superior kind of thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, Fred, I'm not the man to interfere with you for a
+moment."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night, Senhor," said the old miller, who had been
+waiting patiently<br>
+all this time to pay his respects before going.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that's it!" cried Power, eagerly. "Good-night,
+Pedrillo."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Buonos noches</i>," lisped out Margeritta, with a slight
+curtsy.</p>
+
+<p>I sprang forward to acknowledge her salutation, when Power
+coolly<br>
+interposed between us, and closing the door after them, placed
+his back<br>
+against it.</p>
+
+<p>"Master Charley, I must read you a lesson&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You inveterate hypocrite, don't attempt this nonsense with
+<i>me</i>. But come,<br>
+tell me how long you have been here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just twenty-four of the shortest hours I ever passed at an
+outpost. But<br>
+listen,&mdash;do you know that voice? Isn't it O'Shaughnessy?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure it is. Hear the fellow's song."</p>
+
+<p>    "My father cared little for shot or shell,<br>
+    He laughed at death and dangers;<br>
+    And he'd storm the very gates of hell<br>
+    With a company of the 'Rangers.'<br>
+    So sing tow, row, row, row, row," etc.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then, Mister Power, it's twice I'd think of returning
+your visit, if I<br>
+knew the state of your avenue. If there's a grand jury in Spain,
+they might<br>
+give you a presentment for this bit of road. My knees are as bare
+as a<br>
+commissary's conscience, and I've knocked as much flesh off my
+shin-bones<br>
+as would make a cornet in the hussars!"</p>
+
+<p>A regular roar of laughter from both of us apprized Dennis of
+our vicinity.</p>
+
+<p>"And it's laughing ye are? Wouldn't it be as polite just to
+hold a candle<br>
+or lantern for me in this confounded watercourse?"</p>
+
+<p>"How goes it, Major?" cried I, extending my hand to him
+through the window.</p>
+
+<p>"Charley&mdash;Charley O'Malley, my son! I'm glad to see you. It's
+a hearty<br>
+laugh you gave us this morning. My friend Mickey's a pleasant
+fellow for a<br>
+secretary-at-war. But it's all settled now; Crawfurd arranged it
+for you<br>
+this afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't say so! Pray tell me all about it."</p>
+
+<p>"That's just what I won't; for ye see I don't know it; but I
+believe old<br>
+Monsoon's affair has put everything out of their heads."</p>
+
+<p>"Monsoon's affair! What is that? Out with it, Dennis."</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I'll be just as discreet about that as your own
+business. All I can<br>
+tell you is, that they brought him up to headquarters this
+evening with<br>
+a sergeant's guard, and they say he's to be tried by
+court-martial; and<br>
+Picton is in a blessed humor about it."</p>
+
+<p>"What could it possibly have been? Some plundering affair,
+depend on it."</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, you may swear it wasn't for his little charities, as
+Dr. Pangloss<br>
+calls them, they've pulled him up," cried Power.</p>
+
+<p>"Maurice is in high feather about it," said Dennis. "There are
+five of them<br>
+up at Fuentes, making a list of the charges to send to Monsoon;
+for Bob<br>
+Mahon, it seems, heard of the old fellow's doings up the
+mountains."</p>
+
+<p>"What glorious fun!" said Tower. "Let's haste and join them,
+boys."</p>
+
+<p>"Agreed," said I. "Is it far from this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Another stage. When we've got something to eat," said the
+major, "if Power<br>
+has any intentions that way&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I really did begin to fear Fred's memory was lapsing;
+but somehow,<br>
+poor fellow, smiles have been more in his way than sandwiches
+lately."</p>
+
+<p>An admonishing look from Power was his only reply, as he
+walked towards the<br>
+door. Bent upon teasing him, however, I continued,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My only fear is, he may do something silly."</p>
+
+<p>"Who? Monsoon, is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no. Not Monsoon; another friend of ours."</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I scarcely thought your fears of old Monsoon were
+called for. He's<br>
+a fox&mdash;the devil a less."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, Dennis. I wasn't thinking of him. My anxieties were
+for a most<br>
+soft-hearted young gentleman,&mdash;one Fred Power."</p>
+
+<p>"Charley, Charley!" said Fred, from the door, where he had
+been giving<br>
+directions to his servant about supper. "A man can scarce do a
+more silly<br>
+thing than marry in the army; all the disagreeables of married
+life, with<br>
+none of its better features."</p>
+
+<p>"Marry&mdash;marry!" shouted O'Shaughnessy, "upon my conscience,
+it's<br>
+incomprehensible to me how a man can be guilty of it. To be sure,
+I don't<br>
+mean to say that there are not circumstances,&mdash;such as half-pay,
+old age,<br>
+infirmity, the loss of your limbs, and the like; but that, with
+good health<br>
+and a small balance at your banker's, you should be led into such
+an<br>
+embarrassment&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Men will flirt," said I, interrupting; "men will press taper
+fingers, look<br>
+into bright eyes, and feel their witchery; and although the fair
+owners be<br>
+only quizzing them half the time, and amusing themselves the
+other, and<br>
+though they be the veriest hackneyed coquettes&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Did you ever meet the Dalrymple girls, Dennis?" said Fred,
+with a look I<br>
+shall never forget.</p>
+
+<p>What the reply was I cannot tell. My shame and confusion were
+overwhelming,<br>
+and Power's victory complete.</p>
+
+<p>"Here comes the prog," cried Dennis, as Power's servant
+entered with a very<br>
+plausible-looking tray, while Fred proceeded to place before us a
+strong<br>
+army of decanters.</p>
+
+<p>Our supper was excellent, and we were enjoying ourselves to
+the utmost,<br>
+when an orderly sergeant suddenly opened the door, and raising
+his hand to<br>
+his cap, asked if Major Power was there.</p>
+
+<p>"A letter for you, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Monsoon's writing, by Jove! Come, boys, let us see what it
+means. What a<br>
+hand the old fellow writes! The letters look all crazy, and are
+tumbling<br>
+against each other on every side. Did you ever see anything half
+so tipsy<br>
+as the crossing of that <i>t?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Read it. Read it out, Fred!"</p>
+
+<p>    Tuesday Evening.</p>
+
+<p>    Dear Power,&mdash;I'm in such a scrape! Come up and see me
+at<br>
+    once, bring a little sherry with you, and we'll talk over
+what's to be<br>
+    done.</p>
+
+<p>    Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>    B. MONSOON.</p>
+
+<p>    Quarter-General.</p>
+
+<p>We resolved to finish our evening with the major; so that,
+each having<br>
+armed himself with a bottle or two, and the remnants of our
+supper, we set<br>
+out towards his quarters, under the guidance of the orderly.
+After a sharp<br>
+walk of half an hour, we reached a small hut, where two sentries
+of the<br>
+Eighty-eighth were posted at the door.</p>
+
+<p>O'Shaughnessy procured admittance for us, and in we went. At a
+small table,<br>
+lighted by a thin tallow candle, sat old Monsoon, who, the
+weather being<br>
+hot, had neither coat nor wig on; an old cracked china tea-pot,
+in which<br>
+as we found afterwards he had mixed a little grog, stood before
+him, and a<br>
+large mass of papers lay scattered around on every side,&mdash;he
+himself being<br>
+occupied in poring over their contents, and taking occasional
+draughts from<br>
+his uncouth goblet.</p>
+
+<p>As we entered noiselessly, he never perceived us, but
+continued to mumble<br>
+over, in a low tone, from the documents before him:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my life, it's like a dream to me! What infernal stuff
+this brandy<br>
+is!"</p>
+
+<p>    CHARGE No. 8.&mdash;For conduct highly unbecoming an officer
+and<br>
+    a gentleman, in forcing the cellar of the San Nicholas
+convent at<br>
+    Banos, taking large quantities of wine therefrom, and
+subsequently<br>
+    compelling the prior to dance a bolero, thus creating a riot,
+and<br>
+    tending to destroy the harmony between the British and the
+Portuguese,<br>
+    so strongly inculcated to be preserved by the general
+orders.</p>
+
+<p>"Destroy the harmony! Bless their hearts! How little they know
+of it! I've<br>
+never passed a jollier night in the Peninsula! The prior's a
+trump, and<br>
+as for the bolero, he <i>would</i> dance it. I hope they say nothing
+about my<br>
+hornpipe."</p>
+
+<p>    CHARGE No. 9.&mdash;For a gross violation of his duty as an
+officer, in<br>
+    sending a part of his brigade to attack and pillage the
+alcalde of<br>
+    Banos; thereby endangering the public peace of the town,
+being a<br>
+    flagrant breach of discipline and direct violation of the
+articles of<br>
+    war.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm afraid I was rather sharp on the alcalde, but we
+did him no harm<br>
+except the fright. What sherry the fellow had! 't would have been
+a sin to<br>
+let it fall into the hands of the French."</p>
+
+<p>    CHARGE No. 10.&mdash;For threatening, on or about the night of
+the<br>
+    3d, to place the town of Banos under contribution, and
+subsequently<br>
+    forcing the authorities to walk in procession before him, in
+absurd<br>
+    and ridiculous costumes.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord, how good it was! I shall never forget the old alcalde!
+One of my<br>
+fellows fastened a dead lamb round his neck, and told him it was
+the golden<br>
+fleece. The commander-in-chief would have laughed himself if he
+had been<br>
+there. Picton's much too grave,&mdash;never likes a joke."</p>
+
+<p>    CHARGE No. 11.&mdash;For insubordination and disobedience, in
+refusing<br>
+    to give up his sword, and rendering it necessary for the
+Portuguese<br>
+    guard to take it by force,&mdash;thereby placing himself in a<br>
+    situation highly degrading to a British officer.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't I lay about me before they got it! Who's that? Who's
+laughing<br>
+there? Ah, boys, I'm glad to see you! How are you, Fred? Well,
+Charley,<br>
+I've heard of your scrape; very sad thing for so young a fellow
+as you are.<br>
+I don't think you'll be broke; I'll do what I can. I'll see what
+I can do<br>
+with Picton; we are very old friends, were at Eton together."</p>
+
+<p>"Many thanks, Major; but I hear your own affairs are not
+flourishing.<br>
+What's all this court-martial about?"</p>
+
+<p>"A mere trifle; some little insubordination in the legion.
+Those Portuguese<br>
+are sad dogs. How very good of you, Fred, to think of that little
+supper."</p>
+
+<p>While the major was speaking, his servant, with a dexterity
+the fruit of<br>
+long habit, had garnished the table with the contents of our
+baskets, and<br>
+Monsoon, apologizing for not putting on his wig, sat down among
+us with a<br>
+face as cheerful as though the floor was not covered with the
+charges of<br>
+the court-martial to be held on him.</p>
+
+<p>As we chatted away over the campaign and its chances, Monsoon
+seemed little<br>
+disposed to recur to his own fortunes. In fact, he appeared to
+suffer much<br>
+more from what he termed my unlucky predicament than from his own
+mishaps.<br>
+At the same time, as the evening wore on, and the sherry began to
+tell upon<br>
+him, his heart expanded into its habitual moral tendency, and by
+an easy<br>
+transition, he was led from the religious association of convents
+to the<br>
+pleasures of pillaging them.</p>
+
+<p>"What wine they have in their old cellars! It's such fun
+drinking it out of<br>
+great silver vessels as old as Methuselah. 'There's much treasure
+in the<br>
+house of the righteous,' as David says; and any one who has ever
+sacked a<br>
+nunnery knows that."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to have seen that prior dancing the bolero,"
+said Power.</p>
+
+<p>"Wasn't it good, though! He grew jealous of me, for I
+performed a hornpipe.<br>
+Very good fellow the prior; not like the alcalde,&mdash;there was no
+fun in him.<br>
+Lord bless him! he'll never forget me."</p>
+
+<p>"What did you do with him, Major?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll tell you; but you mustn't let it be known, for I
+see they have<br>
+not put it in the court-martial. Is there no more sherry there?
+There, that<br>
+will do; I'm always contented. 'Better a dry morsel with
+quietness,' as<br>
+Moses says. Ay, Charley, never forget that 'a merry heart is just
+like<br>
+medicine.' Job found out that, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, but the alcalde, Major."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! the alcalde, to be sure. These pious meditations make me
+forget<br>
+earthly matters."</p>
+
+<p>"This old alcalde at Banos, I found out, was quite spoiled by
+Lord<br>
+Wellington. He used to read all the general orders, and got an
+absurd<br>
+notion in his head that because we were his allies, we were not
+allowed to<br>
+plunder. Only think, he used to snap his fingers at Beresford,
+didn't care<br>
+twopence about the legion, and laughed outright at Wilson. So,
+when I was<br>
+ordered down there, I took another way with him. I waited till
+night-fall,<br>
+ordered two squadrons to turn their jackets, and sent forward one
+of my<br>
+aides-de-camp, with a few troopers, to the alcalde's house. They
+galloped<br>
+into the courtyard, blowing trumpets and making an infernal
+hubbub. Down<br>
+came the alcalde in a passion. 'Prepare quarters quickly, and
+rations for<br>
+eight hundred men.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Who dares to issue such an order?' said he.</p>
+
+<p>"The aide-de-camp whispered one word in his ear, and the old
+fellow<br>
+grew pale as death. 'Is he here; is he coming,&mdash;is he coming?'
+said he,<br>
+trembling from head to foot.</p>
+
+<p>"I rode in myself at this moment looking thus,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'<i>O&ugrave; est le malheureux?</i>' said I, in French,&mdash;you know
+I speak French like<br>
+Portuguese."</p>
+
+<p>"Devilish like, I've no doubt," muttered Power.</p>
+
+<p>"'<i>Pardon, gracias eccellenza!</i>' said the alcalde, on his
+knees."</p>
+
+<p>"Who the deuce did he take you for, Major?"</p>
+
+<p>"You shall hear; you'll never guess, though. Lord, I shall
+never forget it!<br>
+He thought I was Marmont; my aide-de-camp told him so."</p>
+
+<p>One loud burst of laughter interrupted the major at this
+moment, and it was<br>
+some considerable time before he could continue his
+narrative.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you really mean," said I, "that you personated the
+Duke de Raguse?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did I not, though? If you had only seen me with a pair of
+great mustaches,<br>
+and a drawn sabre in my hand, pacing the room up and down in
+presence of<br>
+the assembled authorities. Napoleon himself might have been
+deceived. My<br>
+first order was to cut off all their heads; but I commuted the
+sentence<br>
+to a heavy fine. Ah, boys, if they only understood at
+headquarters how to<br>
+carry on a war in the Peninsula, they'd never have to grumble in
+England<br>
+about increased taxation! How I'd mulet the nunneries! How I'd
+grind the<br>
+corporate towns! How I'd inundate the country with exchequer
+bills! I'd<br>
+sell the priors at so much a head, and put the nuns up to auction
+by the<br>
+dozen."</p>
+
+<p>"You sacrilegious old villain! But continue the account of
+your exploits."</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, I remember little more. After dinner I grew somewhat
+mellow, and<br>
+a kind of moral bewilderment, which usually steals over me about
+eleven<br>
+o'clock, induced me to invite the alcalde and all the aldermen to
+come and<br>
+sup. Apparently, we had a merry night of it, and when morning
+broke,<br>
+we were not quite clear in our intellects. Hence came that
+infernal<br>
+procession; for when the alcalde rode round the town with a paper
+cap, and<br>
+all the aldermen after him, the inhabitants felt offended, it
+seems, and<br>
+sent for a large Guerilla force, who captured me and my staff,
+after a very<br>
+vigorous resistance. The alcalde fought like a trump for us, for
+I promised<br>
+to make him Prefect of the Seine; but we were overpowered,
+disarmed, and<br>
+carried off. The remainder you can read in the court-martial, for
+you may<br>
+think that after sacking the town, drinking all night, and
+fighting in the<br>
+morning, my memory was none of the clearest."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you not explain that you were not the
+marshal-general?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, faith, I know better than that; they'd have murdered me
+had they known<br>
+their mistake. They brought me to headquarters in the hope of a
+great<br>
+reward, and it was only when they reached this that they found
+out I<br>
+was not the Duke de Raguse; so you see, boys, it's a very
+complicated<br>
+business."</p>
+
+<p>"'Gad, and so it is," said Power, "and an awkward one,
+too."</p>
+
+<p>"He'll be hanged, as sure as my name's Dennis!" vociferated
+O'Shaughnessy,<br>
+with an energy that made the major jump from his chair. "Picton
+will hang<br>
+him!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not afraid," said Monsoon; "they know me so well. Lord
+bless you,<br>
+Beresford couldn't get on without me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Major," said I, "in any case, you certainly take no
+gloomy nor<br>
+desponding view of your case."</p>
+
+<p>"Not I, boy. You know what Jeremiah says: 'a merry heart is a
+continual<br>
+feast;' and so it is. I may die of repletion, but they'll never
+find me<br>
+starved with sorrow."</p>
+
+<p>"And, faith, it's a strange thing!" muttered O'Shaughnessy,
+thinking aloud;<br>
+"a most extraordinary thing! An honest fellow would be sure to be
+hanged;<br>
+and there's that old rogue, that's been melting down more saints
+and<br>
+blessed Virgins than the whole army together, he'll escape. Ye'll
+see he<br>
+will!"</p>
+
+<p>"There goes the patrol," said Fred; "we must start."</p>
+
+<p>"Leave the sherry, boys; you'll be back again. I'll have it
+put up<br>
+carefully."</p>
+
+<p>We could scarcely resist a roar of laughter as we said,
+"Good-night."</p>
+
+<p>"Adieu, Major," said I; "we shall meet soon."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, I followed Power and O'Shaughnessy towards their
+quarters.</p>
+
+<p>"Maurice has done it beautifully!" said Power. "Pleasant
+revelations the<br>
+old fellow will make on the court-martial, if he only remembers
+what we've<br>
+heard to-night! But here we are, Charley; so good-night, and
+remember, you<br>
+breakfast with me to-morrow."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXIX.</p>
+
+<p>THE CONFIDENCE.</p>
+
+<p>"I have changed the venue, Charley," said Power, as he came
+into my room<br>
+the following morning,&mdash;"I've changed the venue, and come to
+breakfast with<br>
+you."</p>
+
+<p>I could not help smiling as a certain suspicion crossed my
+mind; perceiving<br>
+which, he quickly added,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, boy! I guess what you're thinking of. I'm not a bit
+jealous in<br>
+that quarter. The fact is, you know, one cannot be too
+guarded."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor too suspicious of one's friends, apparently."</p>
+
+<p>"A truce with quizzing. I say, have you reported
+yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; and received this moment a most kind note from the
+general. But it<br>
+appears I'm not destined to have a long sojourn among you, for
+I'm desired<br>
+to hold myself in readiness for a journey this very day."</p>
+
+<p>"Where the deuce are they going to send you now?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not certain of my destination. I rather suspect there are
+despatches<br>
+for Badajos. Just tell Mike to get breakfast, and I'll join
+you<br>
+immediately."</p>
+
+<p>When I walked into the little room which served as my <i>salon</i>,
+I found<br>
+Power pacing up and down, apparently wrapped in meditation.</p>
+
+<p>"I've been thinking, Charley," said he, after a pause of about
+ten<br>
+minutes,&mdash;"I've been thinking over our adventures in Lisbon.
+Devilish<br>
+strange girl that senhora! When you resigned in my favor, I took
+it for<br>
+granted that all difficulty was removed. Confound it! I no sooner
+began to<br>
+profit by your absence, in pressing my suit, than she turned
+short round,<br>
+treated me with marked coldness, exhibited a hundred wilful and
+capricious<br>
+fancies, and concluded one day by quietly confessing to me you
+were the<br>
+only man she cared for."</p>
+
+<p>"You are not serious in all this, Fred?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ain't I though, by Jove! I wish to Heaven I were not! My dear
+Charley,<br>
+the girl is an inveterate flirt,&mdash;a decided coquette. Whether she
+has a<br>
+particle of heart or not, I can't say; but certainly her greatest
+pleasure<br>
+is to trifle with that of another. Some absurd suspicion that you
+were in<br>
+love with Lucy Dashwood piqued her vanity, and the anxiety to
+recover a<br>
+lapsing allegiance led her to suppose herself attached to you,
+and made her<br>
+treat all my advances with the most frigid indifference or
+wayward caprice;<br>
+the more provoking," continued he, with a kind of bitterness in
+his tone,<br>
+"as her father was disposed to take the thing favorably; and, if
+I must say<br>
+it, I felt devilish spooney about her myself.</p>
+
+<p>"It was only two days before I left, that in a conversation
+with Don<br>
+Emanuel, he consented to receive my addresses to his daughter on
+my<br>
+becoming lieutenant-colonel. I hastened back with delight to
+bring her the<br>
+intelligence, and found her with a lock of hair on the book
+before her,<br>
+over which she was weeping. Confound me, if it was not yours! I
+don't<br>
+know what I said, nor what she replied; but when we parted, it
+was with a<br>
+perfect understanding we were never to meet again. Strange girl!
+She came<br>
+that evening, put her arm within mine as I was walking alone in
+the garden,<br>
+and half in jest, half in earnest, talked me out of all my
+suspicions, and<br>
+left me fifty times more in love with her than ever. Egad! I
+thought I used<br>
+to know something about women, but here is a chapter I've yet to
+read.<br>
+Come, now, Charley, be frank with me; tell me all you know."</p>
+
+<p>"My poor Fred, if you were not head and ears in love, you
+would see as<br>
+plainly as I do that your affairs prosper. And after all, how
+invariable<br>
+is it that the man who has been the veriest flirt with
+women,&mdash;sighing,<br>
+serenading, sonneteering, flinging himself at the feet of every
+pretty girl<br>
+he meets with,&mdash;should become the most thorough dupe to his own
+feelings<br>
+when his heart is really touched. Your man of eight-and-thirty is
+always<br>
+the greatest fool about women."</p>
+
+<p>"Confound your impertinence! How the devil can a fellow with a
+mustache not<br>
+stronger that a Circassian's eyebrow read such a lecture to
+<i>me?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Just for the very reason you've mentioned. You <i>glide</i> into
+an attachment<br>
+at <i>my</i> time of life; you <i>fall</i> in love at <i>yours</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Power, musingly, "there is some truth in that.
+This flirting is<br>
+sad work. It is just like sparring with a friend; you put on the
+gloves in<br>
+perfect good humor, with the most friendly intentions of
+exchanging a few<br>
+amicable blows; you find yourself insensibly warm with the
+enthusiasm of<br>
+the conflict, and some unlucky hard knock decides the matter, and
+it ends<br>
+in a downright fight.</p>
+
+<p>"Few men, believe me, are regular seducers; and among those
+who behave<br>
+'vilely' (as they call it), three-fourths of the number have been
+more<br>
+sinned against than sinning. You adventure upon love as upon a
+voyage to<br>
+India. Leaving the cold northern latitudes of first acquaintance
+behind<br>
+you, you gradually glide into the warmer and more genial climate
+of<br>
+intimacy. Each day you travel southward shortens the miles and
+the hours of<br>
+your existence; so tranquil is the passage, and so easy the
+transition, you<br>
+suffer no shock by the change of temperature about you. Happy
+were it for<br>
+us that in our courtship, as in our voyage, there were some
+certain Rubicon<br>
+to remind us of the miles we have journeyed! Well were it if
+there were<br>
+some meridian in love!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not sure, Fred, that there is not that same shaving
+process they<br>
+practise on the line, occasionally performed for us by parents
+and<br>
+guardians at home; and I'm not certain that the iron hoop of old
+Neptune is<br>
+not a pleasanter acquaintance than the hair-trigger of some
+indignant<br>
+and fire-eating brother. But come, Fred, you have not told me the
+most<br>
+important point,&mdash;how fare your fortunes now; or in other words,
+what are<br>
+your present prospects as regards the senhora?"</p>
+
+<p>"What a question to ask me! Why not request me to tell you
+where Soult will<br>
+fight us next, and when Marmont will cross the frontier? My dear
+boy, I<br>
+have not seen her for a week, an entire week,&mdash;seven full days
+and nights,<br>
+each with their twenty-four hours of change and vacillation."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, give me the last bulletin from the seat of war;
+that at least<br>
+you can do. Tell me how you parted."</p>
+
+<p>"Strangely enough. You must know we had a grand dinner at the
+villa the<br>
+day before I left; and when we adjourned for our coffee to the
+garden, my<br>
+spirits were at the top of their bent. Inez never looked so
+beautiful,<br>
+never was one half so gracious; and as she leaned upon my arm,
+instead<br>
+of following the others towards the little summer-house, I
+turned, as if<br>
+inadvertently, into a narrow, dark alley that skirts the
+lake."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it well; continue."</p>
+
+<p>Power reddened slightly, and went on:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Why are we taking this path?' said Donna Inez; 'this is,
+surely, not a<br>
+short way?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, I wished to make my adieux to my old friends the swans.
+You know I go<br>
+to-morrow.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah, that's true,' added she. 'I'd quite forgotten it.'</p>
+
+<p>"This speech was not very encouraging; but as I felt myself in
+for the<br>
+battle, I was not going to retreat at the skirmish. 'Now or
+never,' thought<br>
+I. I'll not tell you what I said. I couldn't, if I would. It is
+only with<br>
+a pretty woman upon one's arm; it is only when stealing a glance
+at her<br>
+bright eyes, as you bend beyond the border of her bonnet,&mdash;that
+you know<br>
+what it is to be eloquent. Watching the changeful color of her
+cheek with<br>
+a more anxious heart than ever did mariner gaze upon the fitful
+sky above<br>
+him, you pour out your whole soul in love; you leave no time for
+doubt, you<br>
+leave no space for reply. The difficulties that shoot across her
+mind you<br>
+reply to ere she is well conscious of them; and when you feel her
+hand<br>
+tremble, or see her eyelids fall, like the leader of a storming
+party when<br>
+the guns slacken in their fire, you spring boldly forward in the
+breach,<br>
+and blind to every danger around you, rush madly on, and plant
+your<br>
+standard upon the walls."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope you allow the vanquished the honors of war," said I,
+interrupting.</p>
+
+<p>Without noticing my observation, he continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I was on my knee before her, her hand passively resting in
+mine, her eyes<br>
+bent <i>upon</i> me softly and tearfully&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The game was your own, in fact."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall hear.</p>
+
+<p>"'Have we stood long enough thus, Senhor?' said she, bursting
+into a fit of<br>
+laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"I sprang to my legs in anger and indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"'There, don't be passionate; it is so tiresome. What do you
+call that tree<br>
+there?'</p>
+
+<p>"'It is a tulip-tree,' said I, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"'Then, to put your gallantry to the test, do climb up there
+and pluck me<br>
+that flower. No, the far one. If you fall into the lake and are
+drowned,<br>
+why it would put an end to this foolish interview.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And if not?' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, then I shall take twelve hours to consider of it; and if
+my decision<br>
+be in your favor, I'll give you the flower ere you leave
+to-morrow.'</p>
+
+<p>"It's somewhat about thirty years since I went bird-nesting,
+and hang me,<br>
+if a tight jacket and spurs are the best equipment for climbing a
+tree; but<br>
+up I went, and, amidst a running fire of laughter and quizzing,
+reached the<br>
+branch and brought it down safely.</p>
+
+<p>"Inez took especial care to avoid me the rest of the evening.
+We did not<br>
+meet until breakfast the following morning. I perceived then that
+she wore<br>
+the flower in her belt; but, alas! I knew her too well to augur
+favorably<br>
+from that; besides that, instead of any trace of sorrow or
+depression at my<br>
+approaching departure, she was in high spirits, and the life of
+the party.<br>
+'How can I manage to speak with her?' said I to myself. 'But one
+word,&mdash;I<br>
+already anticipate what it must be; but let the blow
+fall&mdash;anything is<br>
+better than this uncertainty.'</p>
+
+<p>"'The general and the staff have passed the gate, sir,' said
+my servant at<br>
+this moment.</p>
+
+<p>"'Are my horses ready?'</p>
+
+<p>"'At the door, sir; and the baggage gone forward.'</p>
+
+<p>"I gave Inez one look&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Did you say more coffee?' said she, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"I bowed coldly, and rose from the table. They all assembled
+upon the<br>
+terrace to see me ride away.</p>
+
+<p>"'You'll let us hear from you,' said Don Emanuel.</p>
+
+<p>"'And pray don't forget the letter to my brother,' cried old
+Madame Forjas.</p>
+
+<p>"Twenty similar injunctions burst from the party, but not a
+word said Inez.</p>
+
+<p>"'Adieu, then!' said I. 'Farewell.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Adios! Go with God!' chorused the party.</p>
+
+<p>"'Good-by, Senhora,' said I. 'Have <i>you</i> nothing to tell me
+ere we part?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Not that I remember,' said she, carelessly. 'I hope you'll
+have good<br>
+weather.'</p>
+
+<p>"'There is a storm threatening,' said I, gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, a soldier cares little for a wet jacket.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Adieu!' said I, sharply, darting at her a look that spoke my
+meaning.</p>
+
+<p>"'Farewell!' repeated she, curtsying slightly, and giving one
+of her<br>
+sweetest smiles.</p>
+
+<p>"I drove the spurs into my horse's flanks, but holding him
+firmly on the<br>
+curb at the same moment, instead of dashing forward, he bounded
+madly in<br>
+the air.</p>
+
+<p>"'What a pretty creature!' said she, as she turned towards the
+house; then<br>
+stopping carelessly, she looked round,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Should you like this bouquet?'</p>
+
+<p>"Before I could reply, she disengaged it from her belt, and
+threw it<br>
+towards me. The door closed behind her as she spoke. I galloped
+on to<br>
+overtake the staff, <i>et voil&agrave; tout</i>. Now, Charley, read my
+fate for me, and<br>
+tell me what this portends."</p>
+
+<p>"I confess I only see one thing certain in the whole."</p>
+
+<p>"And that is?" said Power.</p>
+
+<p>"That Master Fred Power is more irretrievably in love than any
+gentleman on<br>
+full pay I ever met with."</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, I half fear as much! Is that orderly waiting for
+you, Charley?<br>
+Who do you want my man?"</p>
+
+<p>"Captain O'Malley, sir. General Crawfurd desires to see you at
+headquarters<br>
+immediately."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Charley, I'm going towards Fuentes. Take your cap;
+we'll walk down<br>
+together."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, we cantered towards the village, where we
+separated,&mdash;Power to<br>
+join some Fourteenth men stationed there on duty, and I to the
+general's<br>
+quarters to receive my orders.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXX.</p>
+
+<p>THE CANTONMENT.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after this the army broke up from Caja, and went into
+cantonments<br>
+along the Tagus, the headquarters being at Portalegre. We were
+here joined<br>
+by four regiments of infantry lately arrived from England, and
+the 12th<br>
+Light Dragoons. I shall not readily forget the first impression
+created<br>
+among our reinforcements by the habits of our life at this
+period.</p>
+
+<a name="0247"></a>
+<img alt="0247.jpg (127K)" src="0247.jpg" height="514" width="812">
+
+<p>[A HUNTING TURN-OUT IN THE PENINSULA.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>Brimful of expectation, they had landed at Lisbon, their minds
+filled with<br>
+all the glorious expectancy of a brilliant campaign; sieges,
+storming, and<br>
+battle-fields floated before their excited imagination.
+Scarcely,<br>
+however, had they reached the camp, when these illusions were
+dissipated.<br>
+Breakfasts, dinners, private theatricals, pigeon matches, formed
+our daily<br>
+occupation. Lord Wellington's hounds threw off regularly twice a
+week;<br>
+and here might be seen every imaginable species of equipment,
+from the<br>
+artillery officer mounted on his heavy troop horse, to the
+infantry<br>
+subaltern on a Spanish jennet. Never was anything more ludicrous
+than our<br>
+turn-out. Every quadruped in the army was put into requisition.
+And even<br>
+those who rolled not from their saddles from sheer necessity,
+were most<br>
+likely to do so from laughing at their neighbors. The pace may
+not have<br>
+equalled Melton, nor the fences have been as stubborn as in
+Leicestershire,<br>
+but I'll be sworn there was more laughter, more fun, and more
+merriment,<br>
+in one day with us, than in a whole season with the best
+organized pack in<br>
+England. With a lively trust that the country was open and the
+leaps easy,<br>
+every man took the field. Indeed, the only anxiety evinced at
+all, was to<br>
+appear at the meet in something like jockey fashion, and I must
+confess<br>
+that this feeling was particularly conspicuous among the
+infantry. Happy<br>
+the man whose kit boasted a pair of cords or buck skins; thrice
+happy he<br>
+who sported a pair of tops. I myself was in that enviable
+position, and<br>
+well remember with what pride of heart I cantered up to cover in
+all the<br>
+superior <i>&eacute;clat</i> of my costume, though, if truth were to
+be spoken, I doubt<br>
+if I should have passed muster among my friends of the "Blazers."
+A round<br>
+cavalry jacket and a foraging cap with a hanging tassel were the
+strange<br>
+accompaniments of my more befitting nether garments. Whatever our
+costumes,<br>
+the scene was a most animated one. Here the shell-jacket of a
+heavy dragoon<br>
+was seen storming the fence of a vineyard; there the dark green
+of a<br>
+rifleman was going the pace over the plain. The unsportsmanlike
+figure of<br>
+a staff officer might be observed emerging from a drain, while
+some<br>
+neck-or-nothing Irishman, with light infantry wings, was flying
+at every<br>
+fence before him, and overturning all in his way. The rules and
+regulations<br>
+of the service prevailed not here; the starred and gartered
+general, the<br>
+plumed and aiguilletted colonel obtained but little deference and
+less<br>
+mercy from his more humble subaltern. In fact, I am half disposed
+to think<br>
+that many an old grudge of rigid discipline or severe duty met
+with its<br>
+retribution here. More than once have I heard the muttered
+sentences around<br>
+me which boded like this,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Go the pace, Harry, never flinch it! There's old
+Colquhoun&mdash;take him in<br>
+the haunches; roll him over!"</p>
+
+<p>"See here, boys&mdash;watch how I'll scatter the staff&mdash;Beg your
+pardon,<br>
+General, hope I haven't hurt you. Turn about&mdash;fair play&mdash;I have
+taught<br>
+<i>you</i> to take up a position now."</p>
+
+<p>I need scarcely say there was one whose person was sacred from
+all such<br>
+attacks. He was well mounted upon a strong, half-breed horse;
+rode always<br>
+foremost, following the hounds with the same steady pertinacity
+with which<br>
+he would have followed the enemy, his compressed lip rarely
+opening for a<br>
+laugh when even the most ludicrous misadventure was enacting
+before him;<br>
+and when by chance he would give way, the short ha! ha! was over
+in a<br>
+moment, and the cold, stern features were as fixed and impassive
+as before.</p>
+
+<p>All the excitement, all the enthusiasm of a hunting-field,
+seemed powerless<br>
+to turn his mind from the pre-occupation which the mighty
+interests he<br>
+presided over, exacted. I remember once an incident which,
+however trivial<br>
+in itself, is worth recording as illustrative of what I mean. We
+were going<br>
+along at a topping pace, the hounds, a few fields in advance,
+were hidden<br>
+from our view by a small beech copse. The party consisted of not
+more than<br>
+six persons, one of whom was Lord Wellington himself. Our run had
+been a<br>
+splendid one, and as we were pursuing the fox to earth, every man
+of us<br>
+pushed his horse to his full stride in the hot enthusiasm of such
+a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"This way, my lord, this way," said Colonel Conyers, an old
+Melton man, who<br>
+led the way. "The hounds are in the valley; keep to the left." As
+no reply<br>
+was made, after a few moments' pause Conyers repeated his
+admonition, "You<br>
+are wrong, my lord, the hounds are hunting yonder."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it!" was the brief answer given, with a shortness that
+almost<br>
+savored of asperity; for a second or two not a word was
+spoken.</p>
+
+<p>"How far is Niza, Gordon?" inquired Lord Wellington.</p>
+
+<p>"About five leagues, my lord," replied the astonished
+aide-de-camp.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the direction, is it not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"Let's go over and inspect the wounded."</p>
+
+<p>No more was said, and before a second was given for
+consideration, away<br>
+went his lordship, followed by his aide-de-camp, his pace the
+same<br>
+stretching gallop, and apparently feeling as much excitement, as
+he dashed<br>
+onwards towards the hospital, as though following in all the
+headlong<br>
+enthusiasm of a fox chase.</p>
+
+<p>Thus passed our summer; a life of happy ease and recreation
+succeeding to<br>
+the harassing fatigues and severe privations of the preceding
+campaign.<br>
+Such are the lights and shadows of a soldier's life; such the
+checkered<br>
+surface of his fortunes. Constituting, by their very change, that
+buoyant<br>
+temperament, that happy indifference, which enables him to derive
+its full<br>
+enjoyment from each passing incident of his career.</p>
+
+<p>While thus we indulged in all the fascinations of a life of
+pleasure, the<br>
+rigid discipline of the army was never for a moment forgotten.
+Reviews,<br>
+parades, and inspections were of daily occurrence, and even a
+superficial<br>
+observer could not fail to detect that under this apparent
+devotion to<br>
+amusement and enjoyment, our commander-in-chief concealed a deep
+stroke of<br>
+his policy.</p>
+
+<p>The spirits of both men and officers, broken, in spite of
+their successes,<br>
+by the incessant privations they had endured, imperatively
+demanded this<br>
+period of rest and repose. The infantry, many of whom had served
+in the<br>
+ill-fated campaign of Walcharen, wore still suffering from the
+effects of<br>
+the intermittent fever. The cavalry, from deficient forage,
+severe marches,<br>
+and unremitting service, were in great part unfit for duty. To
+take the<br>
+field under circumstances like these was therefore impossible;
+and with the<br>
+double object of restoring their wonted spirit to his troops, and
+checking<br>
+the ravages which sickness and the casualties of war had made
+within his<br>
+ranks, Lord Wellington embraced the opportunity of the enemy's
+inaction to<br>
+take up his present position on the Tagus.</p>
+
+<p>But while we were enjoying all the pleasures of a country
+life, enhanced<br>
+tenfold by daily association with gay and cheerful companions,
+the<br>
+master-mind, whose reach extended from the profoundest
+calculations of<br>
+strategy to minutest details of military organization, was never
+idle.<br>
+Foreseeing that a period of inaction, like the present, must only
+be like<br>
+the solemn calm that preludes the storm, he prepared for the
+future by<br>
+those bold conceptions and unrivalled combinations which were to
+guide him<br>
+through many a field of battle and of danger to end his career of
+glory in<br>
+the liberation of the Peninsula.</p>
+
+<p>The failure of the attack upon Badajos had neither damped his
+ardor nor<br>
+changed his views; and he proceeded to the investment of Ciudad
+Rodrigo<br>
+with the same intense determination of uprooting the French
+occupation in<br>
+Spain by destroying their strongholds and cutting off their
+resources.<br>
+Carrying aggressive war in one hand, he turned the other towards
+the<br>
+maintenance of those defences which, in the event of disaster or
+defeat,<br>
+must prove the refuge of the army.</p>
+
+<p>To the lines of Torres Vedras he once more directed his
+attention. Engineer<br>
+officers were despatched thither; the fortresses were put into
+repair; the<br>
+bridges broken or injured during the French invasion were
+restored; the<br>
+batteries upon the Tagus were rendered more effective, and
+furnaces for<br>
+heating shot were added to them.</p>
+
+<p>The inactivity and apathy of the Portuguese government but ill
+corresponded<br>
+with his unwearied exertions; and despite of continual
+remonstrances and<br>
+unceasing representations, the bridges over the Leira and Alva
+were left<br>
+unrepaired, and the roads leading to them, so broken as to be
+almost<br>
+impassable, might seriously have endangered the retreat of the
+army, should<br>
+such a movement be deemed necessary.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the first week of September. I was sent with
+despatches for the<br>
+engineer officer in command at the lines, and during the
+fortnight of my<br>
+absence, was enabled for the first time to examine those
+extraordinary<br>
+defences which, for the space of thirty miles, extended over a
+country<br>
+undulating in hill and valley, and presenting, by a succession of
+natural<br>
+and artificial resources, the strongest and most impregnable
+barrier that<br>
+has ever been presented against the advance of a conquering
+army.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXXI.</p>
+
+<p>MICKEY FREE'S ADVENTURE.</p>
+
+<p>When I returned to the camp, I found the greatest excitement
+prevailing on<br>
+all sides. Each day brought in fresh rumors that Marmont was
+advancing<br>
+in force; that sixty thousand Frenchmen were in full march upon
+Ciudad<br>
+Rodrigo, to raise the blockade, and renew the invasion of
+Portugal.<br>
+Intercepted letters corroborated these reports; and the Guerillas
+who<br>
+joined us spoke of large convoys which they had seen upon the
+roads from<br>
+Salamanca and Tamanes.</p>
+
+<p>Except the light division, which, under the command of
+Crawfurd, were<br>
+posted upon the right of the Aguada, the whole of our army
+occupied the<br>
+country from El Bodon to Gallegos; the Fourth Division being
+stationed at<br>
+Fuente Guenaldo, where some intrenchments had been hastily thrown
+up.</p>
+
+<p>To this position Lord Wellington resolved upon retreating, as
+affording<br>
+points of greater strength and more capability of defence than
+the other<br>
+line of road, which led by Almeida upon the Coa. Of the enemy's
+intentions<br>
+we were not long to remain in doubt; for on the morning of the
+24th, a<br>
+strong body were seen descending from the pass above Ciudad
+Rodrigo, and<br>
+cautiously reconnoitring the banks of the Aguada. Far in the
+distance a<br>
+countless train of wagons, bullock-cars, and loaded mules were
+seen winding<br>
+their slow length along, accompanied by several squadrons of
+dragoons.</p>
+
+<p>Their progress was slow, but as evening fell they entered the
+gates of<br>
+the fortress; and the cheering of the garrison mixing with the
+strains<br>
+of martial music, faint from distance, reached us where we lay
+upon the<br>
+far-off heights of El Bodon. So long as the light lasted, we
+could perceive<br>
+fresh troops arriving; and even when the darkness came on, we
+could detect<br>
+the position of the reinforcing columns by the bright watch-fires
+which<br>
+gleamed along the plain.</p>
+
+<p>By daybreak we were under arms, anxiously watching for the
+intentions of<br>
+our enemy, which soon became no longer dubious. Twenty-five
+squadrons of<br>
+cavalry, supported by a whole division of infantry, were seen to
+defile<br>
+along the great road from Ciudad Rodrigo to Guenaldo. Another
+column,<br>
+equally numerous, marched straight upon Espeja; nothing could be
+more<br>
+beautiful, nothing more martial, than their appearance: emerging
+from a<br>
+close mountain gorge, they wound along the narrow road and
+appeared upon<br>
+the bridge of the Aguada just as the morning sun was bursting
+forth,<br>
+its bright beams tipping the polished cuirassiers and their
+glittering<br>
+equipments, they shone in their panoply like the gay troop of
+some ancient<br>
+tournament. The lancers of Berg, distinguished by their scarlet
+dolmans<br>
+and gorgeous trappings, were followed by the Cuirassiers of the
+Guard,<br>
+who again were succeeded by the <i>chasseurs &agrave; cheval</i>,
+their bright steel<br>
+helmets and light-blue uniforms, their floating plumes and
+dappled<br>
+chargers, looking the very <i>beau id&eacute;al</i> of light horsemen;
+behind, the dark<br>
+masses of the infantry pressed forward and deployed into the
+plain; while,<br>
+bringing up the rear, the rolling din, like distant thunder,
+announced the<br>
+"dread artillery."</p>
+
+<p>On they came, the seemingly interminable line converging on to
+that one<br>
+spot upon whose summit now we assembled a force of scarcely ten
+thousand<br>
+bayonets.</p>
+
+<p>While this brilliant panorama was passing before our eyes, we
+ourselves<br>
+were not idle. Orders had been sent to Picton to come up from the
+left with<br>
+his division. Alten's cavalry and a brigade of artillery were
+sent to the<br>
+front, and every preparation which the nature of the ground
+admitted was<br>
+made to resist the advance of the enemy. While these movements on
+either<br>
+side occupied some hours, the scene was every moment increasing
+in<br>
+interest. The large body of cavalry was now seen forming into
+columns of<br>
+attack. Nine battalions of infantry moved up to their support,
+and forming<br>
+into columns, echelons, and squares, performed before us all the
+manoeuvres<br>
+of a review with the most admirable precision and rapidity; but
+from these<br>
+our attention was soon taken by a brilliant display upon our
+left. Here,<br>
+emerging from the wood which flanked the Aguada, were now to be
+seen the<br>
+gorgeous staff of Marmont himself. Advancing at a walk, they came
+forward<br>
+amidst the <i>vivas</i> of the assembled thousands, burning with ardor
+and<br>
+thirsting for victory. For a moment, as I looked, I could detect
+the<br>
+marshal himself, as, holding his plumed hat above his head, he
+returned the<br>
+salute of a lancer regiment, who proudly waved their banners as
+he passed;<br>
+but, hark, what are those clanging sounds which, rising high
+above the<br>
+rest, seem like the war-cry of a warrior?</p>
+
+<p>"I can't mistake those tones," said a bronzed old veteran
+beside me; "those<br>
+are the brass bands of the Imperial Guard. Can Napoleon be there?
+See,<br>
+there they come!" As he spoke, the head of a column emerged from
+the wood,<br>
+and deploying as they came, poured into the plain. For above an
+hour that<br>
+mighty tide flowed on, and before noon a force of sixty thousand
+men was<br>
+collected in the space beneath us.</p>
+
+<p>I was not long to remain an unoccupied spectator of this
+brilliant display,<br>
+for I soon received orders to move down with my squadron to the
+support of<br>
+the Eleventh Light Dragoons, who were posted at the base of the
+hill. The<br>
+order at the moment was anything but agreeable, for I was mounted
+upon a<br>
+hack pony, on which I had ridden over from Crawfurd's Division
+early in the<br>
+morning, and suspecting that there might be some hot work during
+the day,<br>
+had ordered Mike to follow with my horse. There was no time,
+however, for<br>
+hesitation, and I moved my men down the slope in the direction of
+the<br>
+skirmishers.</p>
+
+<p>The position we occupied was singularly favorable,&mdash;our flanks
+defended on<br>
+either side by brushwood, we could only be assailed in front; and
+here,<br>
+notwithstanding our vast inferiority of force, we steadily
+awaited the<br>
+attack. As I rode from out the thick wood, I could not help
+feeling<br>
+surprised at the sounds which greeted me. Instead of the usual
+low and<br>
+murmuring tones, the muttered sentences which precede a cavalry
+advance,&mdash;a<br>
+roar of laughter shook the entire division, while exclamations
+burst from<br>
+every side around me: "Look at him now!" "They have him, by
+heavens, they<br>
+have him!" "Well done, well done!" "How the fellow rides!" "He's
+hit, he's<br>
+hit!" "No, no!" "Is he down?" "He's down!"</p>
+
+<p>A loud cheer rent the air at this moment, and I reached the
+front in time<br>
+to learn, the reason of all this excitement. In the wide plain
+before me a<br>
+horseman was seen, having passed the ford of the Aguada, to
+advance at<br>
+the top of his speed towards the British lines. As he came
+nearer, it was<br>
+perceived that he was accompanied by a led horse, and apparently
+with total<br>
+disregard of the presence of an enemy, rode boldly and carelessly
+forward.<br>
+Behind him rode three lancers, their lances couched, their horses
+at speed;<br>
+the pace was tremendous, and the excitement intense: for
+sometimes, as the<br>
+leading horseman of the pursuit neared the fugitive, he would
+bend suddenly<br>
+upon the saddle, and swerving to the right or the left, totally
+evade him,<br>
+while again at others, with a loud cry of bold defiance, rising
+in his<br>
+stirrups, he would press on, and with a shake of his bridle that
+bespoke<br>
+the jockey, almost distance the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>"That must be your fellow, O'Malley; that must be your Irish
+groom!" cried<br>
+a brother officer. There could be no doubt of it. It was Mike
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll be hanged, if he's not playing with them!" said Baker.
+"Look at the<br>
+villain! He's holding in; that's more than the Frenchmen are
+doing. Look!<br>
+look at the fellow on the gray horse! He has flung his trumpet to
+his back,<br>
+and drawn his sabre."</p>
+
+<p>A loud cheer burst from the French lines; the trumpeter was
+gaining at<br>
+every stride. Mike had got into deep ground, and the horses would
+not keep<br>
+together. "Let the brown horse go! Let him go, man!" shouted the
+dragoons,<br>
+while I re-echoed the cry with my utmost might. But not so, Mike
+held<br>
+firmly on, and spurring madly, he lifted his horse at each
+stride, turning<br>
+from time to time a glance at his pursuer. A shout of triumph
+rose from the<br>
+French side; tin; trumpeter was beside him; his arm was uplifted;
+the sabre<br>
+above his head. A yell broke from the British, and with
+difficulty could<br>
+the squadron be restrained. For above a minute the horses went
+side by<br>
+side, but the Frenchman delayed his stroke until he could get a
+little in<br>
+the front. My excitement had rendered me speechless; if a word
+could have<br>
+saved my poor fellow, I could not have spoken. A mist seemed to
+gather<br>
+across my eyes, and the whole plain and its peopled thousands
+danced before<br>
+my vision.</p>
+
+<p>"He's down!" "He's down, by heavens!" "No! no, no!" "Look
+there! Nobly<br>
+done!" "Gallant fellow!" "He has him! he has him, by &mdash;&mdash;!" A
+cheer that<br>
+rent the very air above us broke from the squadrons, and Mike
+galloped in<br>
+among us, holding the Frenchman by the throat with one hand; the
+bridle of<br>
+his horse he firmly grasped with his own in the other.</p>
+
+<a name="0255"></a>
+<img alt="0255.jpg (154K)" src="0255.jpg" height="627" width="820">
+
+<p>[MIKE CAPTURING THE TRUMPETER.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>"How was it? How did he do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"He broke his sword-arm with a blow, and the Frenchman's sabre
+fell to the<br>
+earth."</p>
+
+<p>"Here he is, Mister Charles; and musha, but it's trouble he
+gave me to<br>
+catch him! And I hope your honor won't be displeased at me losing
+the brown<br>
+horse. I was obliged to let him go when the thief closed on me;
+but sure,<br>
+there he is! May I never, if he's not galloping into the lines by
+himself!"<br>
+As he spoke, my brown charger came cantering up to the squadrons,
+and took<br>
+his place in the line with the rest.</p>
+
+<p>I had scarcely time to mount my horse, amidst a buzz of
+congratulations,<br>
+when our squadron was ordered to the front. Mixed up with
+detachments from<br>
+the Eleventh and Sixteenth, we continued to resist the enemy for
+about two<br>
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>Our charges were quick, sharp, and successive, pouring in our
+numbers<br>
+wherever the enemy appeared for a moment to be broken, and then
+retreating<br>
+under cover of our infantry when the opposing cavalry came down
+upon us in<br>
+overwhelming numbers.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could be more perfect than the manner in which the
+different troops<br>
+relieved each other during this part of the day. When the French
+squadrons<br>
+advanced, ours met them as boldly. When the ground became no
+longer<br>
+tenable, we broke and fell back, and the bayonets of the infantry
+arrested<br>
+their progress. If the cavalry pressed heavily upon the squares,
+ours came<br>
+up to the relief, and as they were beaten back, the artillery
+opened upon<br>
+them with an avalanche of grape-shot.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen many battles of greater duration and more
+important in result;<br>
+many there have been in which more tactic was displayed, and
+greater<br>
+combinations called forth,&mdash;but never did I witness a more
+desperate<br>
+hand-to-hand conflict than on the heights of El Bodon.</p>
+
+<p>Baffled by our resistance, Montbrun advanced with the
+Cuirassiers of the<br>
+Guard. Riding down our advanced squadrons, they poured upon us
+like some<br>
+mighty river, overwhelming all before it, and charged, cheering,
+up the<br>
+heights. Our brave troopers were thrown back upon the artillery,
+and many<br>
+of them cut down beside the guns. The artillerymen and the
+drivers shared<br>
+the same fate, and the cannon were captured. A cheer of
+exultation burst<br>
+from the French, and their <i>vivas</i> rent the air. Their exultation
+was<br>
+short-lived, and that cheer their death-cry; for the Fifth Foot,
+who had<br>
+hitherto lain concealed in the grass, sprang madly to their feet,
+their<br>
+gallant Major Ridge at their head. With a yell of vengeance they
+rushed<br>
+upon the foe; the glistening bayonets glanced amidst the cavalry
+of the<br>
+French; the troops pressed hotly home; and while the cuirassiers
+were<br>
+driven down the hill, the guns were recaptured, limbered up, and
+brought<br>
+away. This brilliant charge was the first recorded instance of
+cavalry<br>
+being assailed by infantry in line.</p>
+
+<p>But the hill could no longer be held; the French were
+advancing on either<br>
+flank; overwhelming numbers pressed upon the front, and retreat
+was<br>
+unavoidable. The cavalry were ordered to the rear, and Picton's
+Division,<br>
+throwing themselves into squares, covered the retreating
+movement.</p>
+
+<p>The French dragoons bore down upon every face of those devoted
+battalions;<br>
+the shouts of triumph cheered them as the earth trembled beneath
+their<br>
+charge,&mdash;but the British infantry, reserving their fire until the
+sabres<br>
+clanked with the bayonet, poured in a shattering volley, and the
+cry of the<br>
+wounded and the groans of the dying rose from the smoke around
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Again and again the French came on; and the same fate ever
+awaited then.<br>
+The only movement in the British squares was closing up the
+spaces as their<br>
+comrades fell or sank wounded to the earth.</p>
+
+<p>At last reinforcements came up from the left; the whole
+retreated across<br>
+the plain, until as they approached Guenaldo, our cavalry,
+having<br>
+re-formed, came to their aid with one crushing charge, which
+closed the<br>
+day.</p>
+
+<p>That same night Lord Wellington fell back, and concentrating
+his troops<br>
+within a narrow loop of land bounded on either flank by the Coa,
+awaited<br>
+the arrival of the light division, which joined us at three in
+the morning.</p>
+
+<p>The following day Marmont again made a demonstration of his
+force, but no<br>
+attack followed. The position was too formidable to be easily
+assailed, and<br>
+the experience of the preceding day had taught him that, however
+inferior<br>
+in numbers, the troops he was opposed to were as valiant as they
+were ably<br>
+commanded.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after this, Marmont retired on the valley of the Tagus.
+Dorsenne also<br>
+fell back, and for the present at least, no further effort was
+made to<br>
+prosecute the invasion of Portugal.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXXII.</p>
+
+<p>THE SAN PETRO.</p>
+
+<p>"Not badly wounded, O'Malley, I hope?" said General Crawfurd,
+as I waited<br>
+upon him soon after the action.</p>
+
+<p>I could not help starting at the question, while he repeated
+it, pointing<br>
+at the same time to my left shoulder, from which a stream of
+blood was now<br>
+flowing down my coat-sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>"I never noticed it, sir, till this moment. It can't be of
+much<br>
+consequence, for I have been on horseback the entire day, and
+never felt<br>
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Look to it at once, boy; a man wants all his blood for this
+campaign. Go<br>
+to your quarters. I shall not need you for the present; so pray
+see the<br>
+doctor at once."</p>
+
+<p>As I left the general's quarters, I began to feel sensible of
+pain, and<br>
+before a quarter of an hour had elapsed, had quite convinced
+myself that my<br>
+wound was a severe one. The hand and arm were swollen, heavy, and
+distended<br>
+with hemorrhage beneath the skin, my thirst became great, and a
+cold,<br>
+shuddering sensation passed over me from time to time.</p>
+
+<p>I sat down for a moment upon the grass, and was just
+reflecting within<br>
+myself what course I should pursue, when I heard the tramp of
+feet<br>
+approaching. I looked up, and perceived some soldiers in fatigue
+dresses,<br>
+followed by a few others who, from their noiseless gestures and
+sad<br>
+countenances, I guessed were carrying some wounded comrade to the
+rear.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is it, boys?" cried I.</p>
+
+<p>"It's the major, sir, the Lord be good to him!" said a
+hardy-looking<br>
+Eighty-eighth man, wiping his eye with the cuff of his coat as he
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Not your major? Not Major O'Shaughnessy?" said I, jumping up
+and rushing<br>
+forward towards the litter. Alas, too true, it was the gallant
+fellow<br>
+himself! There he lay, pale and cold; his bloodless cheek and
+parted lips<br>
+looking like death itself. A thin blue rivulet trickled from his
+forehead,<br>
+but his most serious wound appeared to be in the side; his coat
+was open,<br>
+and showed a mass of congealed and clotted blood, from the midst
+of which,<br>
+with every motion of the way, a fresh stream kept welling upward.
+Whether<br>
+from the shock or my loss of blood or from both together, I know
+not, but I<br>
+sank fainting to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>It would have needed a clearer brain and a cooler judgment
+than I possessed<br>
+to have conjectured where I was, and what had occurred to me,
+when next<br>
+I recovered my senses. Weak, fevered, and with a burning thirst,
+I lay,<br>
+unable to move, and could merely perceive the objects which lay
+within the<br>
+immediate reach of my vision. The place was cold, calm, and still
+as the<br>
+grave. A lamp, which hung high above my head, threw a faint light
+around,<br>
+and showed me, within a niche of the opposite wall, the figure of
+a<br>
+gorgeously dressed female; she appeared to be standing
+motionless, but as<br>
+the pale light flickered upon her features, I thought I could
+detect the<br>
+semblance of a smile. The splendor of her costume and the
+glittering gems<br>
+which shone upon her spotless robe gleamed through the darkness
+with an<br>
+almost supernatural brilliancy, and so beautiful did she look, so
+calm her<br>
+pale features, that as I opened and shut my eyes and rubbed my
+lids, I<br>
+scarcely dared to trust to my erring senses, and believe it could
+be<br>
+real. What could it mean? Whence this silence; this cold sense of
+awe<br>
+and reverence? Was it a dream; was it the fitful vision of a
+disordered<br>
+intellect? Could it be death? My eyes were riveted upon that
+beautiful<br>
+figure. I essayed to speak, but could not; I would have beckoned
+her<br>
+towards me, but my hands refused their office. I felt I know not
+what charm<br>
+she possessed to calm my throbbing brain and burning heart; but
+as I turned<br>
+from the gloom and darkness around to gaze upon her fair brow and
+unmoved<br>
+features, I felt like the prisoner who turns from the cheerless
+desolation<br>
+of his cell, and looks upon the fair world and the smiling
+valleys lying<br>
+sunlit and shadowed before him.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep at length came over me; and when I awoke, the day seemed
+breaking,<br>
+for a faint gray tint stole through a stained-glass window, and
+fell in<br>
+many colored patches upon the pavement. A low muttering sound
+attracted me;<br>
+I listened, it was Mike's voice. With difficulty raising myself
+upon one<br>
+arm, I endeavored to see more around me. Scarcely had I assumed
+this<br>
+position, when my eyes once more fell upon the white-clad figure
+of the<br>
+preceding night. At her feet knelt Mike, his hands clasped, and
+his head<br>
+bowed upon his bosom. Shall I confess my surprise, my
+disappointment! It<br>
+was no other than an image of the blessed Virgin, decked out in
+all the<br>
+gorgeous splendor which Catholic piety bestows upon her saints.
+The<br>
+features, which the imperfect light and my more imperfect
+faculties had<br>
+endowed with an expression of calm, angelic beauty, were, to my
+waking<br>
+senses, but the cold and barren mockery of loveliness; the eyes,
+which my<br>
+excited brain gifted with looks of tenderness and pity, stared
+with no<br>
+speculation in them; yet contrasting my feelings of the night
+before, full<br>
+as they were of, their deceptions, with my now waking thoughts, I
+longed<br>
+once more for that delusion which threw a dreamy pleasure over
+me, and<br>
+subdued the stormy passions of my soul into rest and repose.</p>
+
+<p>"Who knows," thought I, "but he who kneels yonder feels now as
+I did then?<br>
+Who can tell how little the cold, unmeaning reality before him
+resembles<br>
+the spiritualized creation the fervor of his love and the ardor
+of his<br>
+devotion may have placed upon that altar? Who can limit or bound
+the depth<br>
+of that adoration for an object whose attributes appeal not only
+to every<br>
+sentiment of the heart, but also to every sense of the brain? I
+fancy<br>
+that I can picture to myself how these tinselled relics, these
+tasteless<br>
+waxworks, changed by the magic of devotion and of dread, become
+to the<br>
+humble worshipper images of loveliness and beauty. The dim
+religious light;<br>
+the reverberating footsteps echoed along those solemn aisles; the
+vaulted<br>
+arches, into whose misty heights the sacred incense floats
+upward, while<br>
+the deep organ is pealing its notes of praise or prayer,&mdash;these
+are no<br>
+slight accessories to all the pomp and grandeur of a church whose
+forms and<br>
+ceremonial, unchanged for ages and hallowed by a thousand
+associations,<br>
+appeal to the mind of the humblest peasant or the proudest noble
+by all the<br>
+weaknesses as by all the more favored features of our
+nature."</p>
+
+<p>How long I might have continued to meditate in this strain I
+know not, when<br>
+a muttered observation from Mike turned the whole current of my
+thoughts.<br>
+His devotion over, he had seated himself upon the steps of the
+altar, and<br>
+appeared to be resolving some doubts within himself concerning
+his late<br>
+pious duties.</p>
+
+<p>"Masses is dearer here than in Galway. Father Rush would be
+well pleased<br>
+at two-and-sixpence for what I paid three doubloons for, this
+morning.<br>
+And sure it's droll enough. How expensive an amusement it is to
+kill the<br>
+French! Here's half a dollar I gave for the soul of a cuirassier
+that I<br>
+kilt yesterday, and nearly twice as much for an artilleryman I
+cut down at<br>
+the guns; and because the villain swore like a heythen, Father
+Pedro told<br>
+me he'd cost more nor if he died like a decent man."</p>
+
+<p>At these words he turned suddenly round towards the Virgin,
+and crossing<br>
+himself devoutly, added,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>And sure it's yourself knows if it's fair to make me pay for
+devils that<br>
+don't know their duties; and after all, if you don't understand
+English nor<br>
+Irish, I've been wasting my time here this two hours."</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Mike, how's my friend the major! How's Major
+O'Shaughnessy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Charmingly, sir. It was only loss of blood that ailed him. A
+thief with<br>
+a pike&mdash;one of the chaps they call Poles, bekase of the long
+sticks they<br>
+carry with them&mdash;stuck the major in the ribs; but Doctor
+Quill&mdash;God reward<br>
+him! he's a great doctor and a funny divil too&mdash;he cured him in
+no time."</p>
+
+<p>"And where is he now, Mike?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just convanient, in a small chapel off the sacristy; and
+throuble enough<br>
+we have to keep him quiet. He gave up the <i>con</i>fusion of roses,
+and took<br>
+to punch; and faith, it isn't hymns nor paslams [psalms] he's
+singing all<br>
+night. And they had me there, mixing materials and singing songs,
+till I<br>
+heard the bell for matins; and what between the punch and the
+prayers, I<br>
+never closed my eyes."</p>
+
+<p>"What do they call this convent?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is a hard word, I misremember. It's something like
+saltpetre. But how's<br>
+your honor? It's time to ask."</p>
+
+<p>"Much better, Mike, much better. But as I see that either your
+drink or<br>
+your devotion seems to have affected your nerves, you'd better
+lie down for<br>
+an hour or two. I shall not want you."</p>
+
+<p>"That's just what I can't; for you see I'm making a song for
+this evening.<br>
+The Rangers has a little supper, and I'm to be there; and though
+I've made<br>
+one, I'm not sure it'll do. May be your honor would give me your
+opinion<br>
+about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"With all my heart, Mike; let's hear it."</p>
+
+<p>"Arrah, is it here, before the Virgin and the two blessed
+saints that's<br>
+up there in the glass cases? But sure, when they make an hospital
+of the<br>
+place, and after the major's songs last night&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly so, Mike; out with it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Ma'am," said he, turning towards the Virgin, "as I
+suspect you don't<br>
+know English, may be you'll think it's my offices I'm singing.
+So, saving<br>
+your favor, here it is."</p>
+
+<p>    MR. FREE'S SONG.</p>
+
+<p>    AIR,&mdash;"<i>Arrah, Catty, now can't you be asy?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>    Oh, what stories I'll tell when my sodgering's o'er,<br>
+    And the gallant Fourteenth is disbanded;<br>
+    Not a drill nor parade will I hear of no more,<br>
+    When safely in Ireland landed.<br>
+    With the blood that I spilt, the Frenchmen I kilt,<br>
+    I'll drive the young girls half crazy;<br>
+    And some cute one will cry, with a wink of her eye,<br>
+    "Mister Free, now <i>why can't you be asy?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>    I'll tell how we routed the squadrons in fight,<br>
+    And destroyed them all at "Talavera,"<br>
+    And then I'll just add how we finished the night,<br>
+    In learning to dance the "bolera;"<br>
+    How by the moonshine we drank raal wine,<br>
+    And rose next day fresh as a daisy;<br>
+    Then some one will cry, with a look mighty sly,<br>
+    "Arrah, Mickey, <i>now can't you lie asy?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>    I'll tell how the nights with Sir Arthur we spent,<br>
+    Around a big fire in the air too,<br>
+    Or may be enjoying ourselves in a tent,<br>
+    Exactly like Donnybrook fair too.<br>
+    How he'd call out to me: "Pass the wine, Mr. Free,<br>
+    For you're a man never is lazy!"<br>
+    Then some one will cry, with a wink of her eye,<br>
+    "Arrah, Mickey, dear, <i>can't you be asy?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>    I'll tell, too, the long years in fighting we passed,<br>
+    Till Mounseer asked Bony to lead him;<br>
+    And Sir Arthur, grown tired of glory at last,<br>
+    Begged of one Mickey Free to succeed him.<br>
+    "But, acushla," says I, "the truth is I'm shy!<br>
+    There's a lady in Ballymacrazy!<br>
+    And I swore on the book&mdash;" He gave me a look,<br>
+    And cried: "Mickey, <i>now can't you be asy?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Arrah, Mickey, now can't you be <i>asy?</i>" sang out a voice in
+chorus, and<br>
+the next moment Dr. Quill himself made his appearance.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, O'Malley, is it a penitential psalm you're singing, or
+is my friend<br>
+Mike endeavoring to raise your spirits with a Galway sonata?"</p>
+
+<p>"A little bit of his own muse, Doctor, nothing more; but tell
+me, how goes<br>
+it with the major,&mdash;is the poor fellow out of danger?"</p>
+
+<p>"Except from the excess of his appetite, I know of no risk he
+runs. His<br>
+servant is making gruel for him all day in a thing like the
+grog-tub of a<br>
+frigate. But you've heard the news,&mdash;Sparks has been exchanged.
+He came<br>
+here last night; but the moment he caught sight of me, he took
+his<br>
+departure. Begad, I'm sure he'd rather pass a month in Verdun
+than a week<br>
+in my company!"</p>
+
+<p>"By-the-bye, Doctor, you never told me how this same antipathy
+of Sparks<br>
+for you had its origin."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure I drove him out of the Tenth before he was three weeks
+with the<br>
+regiment."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, I remember; you began the story for me one night on the
+retreat from<br>
+the Coa, but something broke it off in the middle."</p>
+
+<p>"Just so, I was sent for to the rear to take off some
+gentleman's legs that<br>
+weren't in dancing condition; but as there's no fear of
+interruption now,<br>
+I'll finish the story. But first, let us have a peep at the
+wounded. What<br>
+beautiful anatomists they are in the French artillery! Do you
+feel the<br>
+thing I have now in my forceps? There,&mdash;don't jump,&mdash;that's a bit
+of the<br>
+brachial nerve most beautifully displayed. Faith, I think I'll
+give Mike a<br>
+demonstration."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Mister Quill, dear! Oh, Doctor, darling!"</p>
+
+<p>"Arrah, Mickey, now can't ye be asy?" sang out Maurice, with a
+perfect<br>
+imitation of Mike's voice and manner.</p>
+
+<p>"A little lint here! Bend your arm,&mdash;that's it&mdash;Don't move
+your fingers.<br>
+Now, Mickey, make me a cup of coffee with a glass of brandy in
+it. And now,<br>
+Charley, for Sparks. I believe I told you what kind of fellows
+the Tenth<br>
+were,&mdash;regular out-and-outers. We hadn't three men in the
+regiment that<br>
+were not from the south of Ireland,&mdash;the <i>bocca Corkana</i> on their
+lips, fun<br>
+and devilment in their eyes, and more drollery and humbug in
+their hearts<br>
+than in all the messes in the service put together. No man had
+any chance<br>
+among them if he wasn't a real droll one; every man wrote his own
+songs and<br>
+sang them too. It was no small promotion could tempt a fellow to
+exchange<br>
+out of the corps. You may think, then, what a prize your friend
+Sparks<br>
+proved to us; we held a court-martial upon him the week after he
+joined. It<br>
+was proved in evidence that he had never said a good thing in his
+life,<br>
+and had about as much notion of a joke as a Cherokee has of the
+Court of<br>
+Chancery; and as to singing, Lord bless you, he had a tune with
+wooden<br>
+turns to it,&mdash;it was most cruel to hear; and then the look of
+him, those<br>
+eyes, like dropsical oysters, and the hair standing every way,
+like a field<br>
+of insane flax, and the mouth with a curl in it like the slit in
+the side<br>
+of a fiddle. A pleasant fellow that for a mess that always
+boasted the<br>
+best-looking chaps in the service.</p>
+
+<p>"'What's to be done with him?' said the major; 'shall we tell
+him we are<br>
+ordered to India, and terrify him about his liver?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Or drill him into a hectic fever?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Or drink him dry?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Or get him into a fight and wing him?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, no,' said I, 'leave him to me; we'll laugh him out of
+the corps.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, we'll leave him to you, Maurice,' said the rest.</p>
+
+<p>"And that day week you might read in the 'Gazette,' 'Pierce
+Flynn<br>
+O'Haygerty, to be Ensign, 10th Foot, <i>vice</i> Sparks,
+exchanged.'"</p>
+
+<p>"But how was it done, Maurice; you haven't told me that."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing easier. I affected great intimacy with Sparks,
+bemoaned our hard<br>
+fate, mutually, in being attached to such a regiment: 'A damnable
+corps<br>
+this,&mdash;low, vulgar fellows, practical jokes; not the kind of
+thing one<br>
+expects in the army. But as for me, I've joined it partly from
+necessity.<br>
+You, however, who might be in a crack regiment, I can't conceive
+your<br>
+remaining in it.'</p>
+
+<p>"'But why did you join, Doctor?' said he; 'what necessity
+could have<br>
+induced you?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah, my friend,' said I, '<i>that</i> is the secret,&mdash;<i>that</i> is
+the hidden<br>
+grief that must lie buried in my own bosom.'</p>
+
+<p>"I saw that his curiosity was excited, and took every means to
+increase it<br>
+farther. At length, as if yielding to a sudden impulse of
+friendship, and<br>
+having sworn him to secrecy, I took him aside, and began
+thus,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'I may trust you, Sparks, I feel I may; and when I tell you
+that my<br>
+honor, my reputation, my whole fortune is at stake, you will
+judge of the<br>
+importance of the trust.'</p>
+
+<p>"The goggle eyes rolled fearfully, and his features exhibited
+the most<br>
+craving anxiety to hear my story.</p>
+
+<p>"'You wish to know why I left the Fifty-sixth. Now I'll tell
+you; but mind,<br>
+you're pledged, you're sworn, never to divulge it.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Honor bright.'</p>
+
+<p>"'There, that's enough; I'm satisfied. It was a slight
+infraction of the<br>
+articles of war; a little breach of the rules and regulations of
+the<br>
+service; a trifling misconception of the mess code,&mdash;they caught
+me one<br>
+evening leaving the mess with&mdash;What do you think in my pocket?
+But<br>
+you'll never tell! No, no, I know you'll not; eight forks and
+a<br>
+gravy-spoon,&mdash;silver forks every one of them. There now,' said I,
+grasping<br>
+his hand, 'you have my secret; my fame and character are in your
+hands, for<br>
+you see they made me quit the regiment,&mdash;a man can't stay in a
+corps where<br>
+he is laughed at.'</p>
+
+<p>"Covering my face with my handkerchief, as if to conceal my
+shame, I turned<br>
+away, and left Sparks to his meditations. That same evening we
+happened to<br>
+have some strangers at mess; the bottle was passing freely round,
+and as<br>
+usual the good spirits of the party at the top of their bent,
+when suddenly<br>
+from the lower end of the table, a voice was heard demanding, in
+tones of<br>
+the most pompous importance, permission to address the president
+upon a<br>
+topic where the honor of the whole regiment was concerned.</p>
+
+<p>"'I rise, gentlemen,' said Mr. Sparks, 'with feelings the most
+painful;<br>
+whatever may have been the laxity of habit and freedom of
+conversation<br>
+habitual in this regiment, I never believed that so flagrant an
+instance as<br>
+this morning came to my ears&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, murder!' said I. 'Oh, Sparks, darling, sure you're not
+going to<br>
+tell?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Doctor Quill,' replied he, in an austere tone, 'it is
+impossible for me<br>
+to conceal it.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, Sparks, dear, will you betray me?'</p>
+
+<p>"I gave him here a look of the most imploring entreaty, to
+which he replied<br>
+by one of unflinching sternness.</p>
+
+<p>"'I have made up my mind, sir,' continued he; 'it is possible
+the officers<br>
+of this corps may look more leniently than I do upon this
+transaction; but<br>
+know it they shall.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Out with it, Sparks; tell it by all means!' cried a number
+of voices; for<br>
+it was clear to every one, by this time, that he was involved in
+a hoax.</p>
+
+<p>"Amidst, therefore, a confused volley of entreaty on one side,
+and my<br>
+reiterated prayers for his silence, on the other, Sparks thus
+began:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Are you aware, gentlemen, why Dr. Quill left the
+Fifty-sixth?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, no, no!' rang from all sides; 'let's have it!'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, sir,' said he, turning towards me, 'concealment is
+impossible; an<br>
+officer detected with the mess-plate in his pocket&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"They never let him finish, for a roar of laughter shook the
+table from one<br>
+end to the other; while Sparks, horror-struck at the lack of
+feeling and<br>
+propriety that could make men treat such a matter with ridicule,
+glared<br>
+around him on every side.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, Maurice, Maurice!' cried the major, wiping his eyes,
+'this is too<br>
+bad; this is too bad!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Gracious Heaven!' screamed Sparks, 'can you laugh at
+it?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Laugh at it!' re-echoed the paymaster, 'God grant I only
+don't burst a<br>
+blood-vessel!' And once more the sounds of merriment rang out
+anew, and<br>
+lasted for several minutes.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, Maurice Quill,' cried an old captain, 'you've been too
+heavy on the<br>
+lad. Why, Sparks, man, he's been humbugging you.'</p>
+
+<p>"Scarcely were the words spoken when he sprang from the room.
+The whole<br>
+truth flashed at once upon his mind; in an instant he saw that he
+had<br>
+exposed himself to the merciless ridicule of a mess-table and
+that all<br>
+peace for him, in that regiment at least, was over.</p>
+
+<p>"We got a glorious fellow in exchange for him; and Sparks
+descended into<br>
+a cavalry regiment,&mdash;I ask your pardon, Charley,&mdash;where, as you
+are well<br>
+aware, sharp wit and quick intellect are by no means
+indispensable. There<br>
+now, don't be angry or you'll do yourself harm. So good-by, for
+an hour or<br>
+two."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXXIII.</p>
+
+<p>THE COUNT'S LETTER.</p>
+
+<p>O'Shaughnessy's wound, like my own, was happily only
+formidable from the<br>
+loss of blood. The sabre or the lance are rarely, indeed, so
+death-dealing<br>
+as the musket or the bayonet; and the murderous fire from a
+square of<br>
+infantry is far more terrific in its consequences than the
+heaviest charge<br>
+of a cavalry column. In a few weeks, therefore, we were once more
+about and<br>
+fit for duty; but for the present the campaign was ended. The
+rainy season<br>
+with its attendant train of sickness and sorrow set in. The
+troops were<br>
+cantoned along the line of the frontier,&mdash;the infantry occupying
+the<br>
+villages, and the cavalry being stationed wherever forage could
+be<br>
+obtained.</p>
+
+<p>The Fourteenth were posted at Avintas, but I saw little of
+them. I was<br>
+continually employed upon the staff; and as General Crawfurd's
+activity<br>
+suffered no diminution from the interruption of the campaign,
+rarely passed<br>
+a day without eight or nine hours on horseback.</p>
+
+<p>The preparations for the siege of Ciudad Rodrigo occupied our
+undivided<br>
+attention. To the reduction of this fortress and of Badajos,
+Lord<br>
+Wellington looked as the most important objects, and prosecuted
+his plans<br>
+with unremitting zeal. To my staff appointment I owed the
+opportunity of<br>
+witnessing that stupendous feature of war, a siege; and as many
+of my<br>
+friends formed part of the blockading force, I spent more than
+one night in<br>
+the trenches. Indeed, except for this, the tiresome monotony of
+life was<br>
+most irksome at this period. Day after day the incessant rain
+poured down.<br>
+The supplies were bad, scanty, and irregular; the hospitals
+crowded with<br>
+sick; field-sports impracticable; books there were none; and a
+dulness and<br>
+spiritless depression prevailed on every side. Those who were
+actively<br>
+engaged around Ciudad Rodrigo had, of course, the excitement and
+interest<br>
+which the enterprise involved: but even there the works made slow
+progress.<br>
+The breaching artillery was defective in every way: the rain
+undermined the<br>
+faces of the bastions; the clayey soil sank beneath the weight of
+the heavy<br>
+guns; and the storms of one night frequently destroyed more than
+a whole<br>
+week's labor had effected.</p>
+
+<p>Thus passed the dreary months along; the cheeriest and gayest
+among us<br>
+broken in spirit, and subdued in heart by the tedium of our life.
+The very<br>
+news which reached us partook of the gloomy features of our
+prospects. We<br>
+heard only of strong reinforcements marching to the support of
+the French<br>
+in Estramadura. We were told that the Emperor, whose successes in
+Germany<br>
+enabled him to turn his entire attention to the Spanish campaign,
+would<br>
+himself be present in the coming spring, with overwhelming odds
+and a firm<br>
+determination to drive us from the Peninsula.</p>
+
+<p>In that frame of mind which such gloomy and depressing
+prospects are well<br>
+calculated to suggest, I was returning one night to my quarters
+at Mucia,<br>
+when suddenly I beheld Mike galloping towards me with a large
+packet in his<br>
+hand, which he held aloft to catch my attention. "Letters from
+England,<br>
+sir," said he, "just arrived with the general's despatches." I
+broke the<br>
+envelope at once, which bore the war-office seal, and as I did
+so, a<br>
+perfect avalanche of letters fell at my feet. The first which
+caught my eye<br>
+was an official intimation from the Horse Guards that the Prince
+Regent had<br>
+been graciously pleased to confirm my promotion to the troop, my
+commission<br>
+to bear date from the appointment, etc., etc. I could not help
+feeling<br>
+struck, as my eye ran rapidly across the lines, that although the
+letter<br>
+came from Sir George Dashwood's office, it contained not a word
+of<br>
+congratulation nor remembrance on his part, but was couched in
+the usual<br>
+cold and formal language of an official document. Impatient,
+however, to<br>
+look over my other letters, I thought but little of this; so,
+throwing them<br>
+hurriedly into my sabretasche, I cantered on to my quarters
+without delay.<br>
+Once more alone in silence, I sat down to commune with my far-off
+friends,<br>
+and yet with all my anxiety to hear of home, passed several
+minutes in<br>
+turning over the letters, guessing from whom they might have
+come, and<br>
+picturing to myself their probable contents. "Ah, Frank Webber, I
+recognize<br>
+your slap-dash, bold hand without the aid of the initials in the
+corner;<br>
+and this&mdash;what can this be?&mdash;this queer, misshapen thing,
+representing<br>
+nothing save the forty-seventh proposition of Euclid, and the
+address<br>
+seemingly put on with a cat's-tail dipped in lampblack? Yes, true
+enough,<br>
+it is from Mister Free himself. And what have we here? This
+queer, quaint<br>
+hand is no new acquaintance; how many a time have I looked upon
+it as the<br>
+<i>ne plus ultra</i> of caligraphy! But here is one I'm not so sure
+of. Who<br>
+could have written this bolt-upright, old-fashioned
+superscription, not<br>
+a letter of which seems on speaking terms with its neighbor? The
+very O<br>
+absolutely turns its back upon the M in O'Malley, and the final Y
+wags his<br>
+tail with a kind of independent shake, as if he did not care a
+curse for<br>
+his predecessors! And the seal, too,&mdash;surely I know that
+griffin's head,<br>
+and that stern motto, <i>Non rogo sed capio</i>. To be sure, it is
+Billy<br>
+Considine's, the count himself. The very paper, yellow and
+time-stained,<br>
+looks coeval with his youth; and I could even venture to wager
+that his<br>
+sturdy pen was nibbed half a century since. I'll not look farther
+among<br>
+this confused mass of three-cornered billets, and long,
+treacherous-looking<br>
+epistles, the very folding of which denote the dun. Here goes for
+the<br>
+count!" So saying to myself, I drew closer to the fire, and began
+the<br>
+following epistle:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    O'MALLEY CASTLE, November 3.</p>
+
+<p>    Dear Charley,&mdash;Here we sit in the little parlor with your
+last<br>
+    letter, the "Times," and a big map before us, drinking your
+health,<br>
+    and wishing you a long career of the same glorious success
+you have<br>
+    hitherto enjoyed. Old as I am&mdash;eighty-two or eighty-three (I
+forget<br>
+    which) in June&mdash;I envy you with all my heart. Luck has
+stood<br>
+    to you, my boy; and if a French sabre or a bayonet finish you
+now,<br>
+    you've at least had a splendid burst of it. I was right in my
+opinion<br>
+    of you, and Godfrey himself owns it now,&mdash;a lawyer, indeed!
+Bad<br>
+    luck to them! we've had enough of lawyers. There's old
+Hennesy,&mdash;honest<br>
+    Jack, as they used to call him,&mdash;that your uncle trusted<br>
+    for the last forty years, has raised eighteen thousand pounds
+on the<br>
+    title-deeds, and gone off to America. The old scoundrel! But
+it's<br>
+    no use talking; the blow is a sore one to Godfrey, and the
+gout<br>
+    more troublesome than ever. Drumgold is making a motion
+in<br>
+    Chancery about it, to break the sale, and the tenants are in
+open<br>
+    rebellion and swear they'll murther a receiver, if one is
+sent down<br>
+    among them. Indeed, they came in such force into Galway
+during<br>
+    the assizes, and did so much mischief, that the cases for
+trial were<br>
+    adjourned, and the judges left with a military escort to
+protect them.<br>
+    This, of course, is gratifying to our feelings; for, thank
+Providence,<br>
+    there is some good in the world yet. Kilmurry was sold last
+week<br>
+    for twelve thousand. Andy Blake would foreclose the
+mortgage,<br>
+    although we offered him every kind of satisfaction. This has
+done<br>
+    Godfrey a deal of harm; and some pitiful economy&mdash;taking
+only<br>
+    two bottles of claret after his dinner&mdash;has driven the gout
+to his<br>
+    head. They've been telling him he'd lengthen his days by
+this, and<br>
+    I tried it myself, and, faith, it was the longest day I ever
+spent in<br>
+    my life. I hope and trust you take your liquor like a
+gentleman and<br>
+    an Irish gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>    Kinshela, we hear, has issued an execution against the
+house and<br>
+    furniture; but the attempt to sell the demesne nearly killed
+your<br>
+    uncle. It was advertised in a London paper, and an offer made
+for it<br>
+    by an old general whom you may remember when down here.
+Indeed,<br>
+    if I mistake not, he was rather kind to you in the beginning.
+It<br>
+    would appear he did not wish to have his name known, but we
+found<br>
+    him out, and such a letter as we sent him! It's little liking
+he'll<br>
+    have to buy a Galway gentleman's estate over his head, that
+same Sir<br>
+    George Dashwood! Godfrey offered to meet him anywhere he<br>
+    pleased, and if the doctor thought he could bear the sea
+voyage,<br>
+    he'd even go over to Holyhead; but the sneaking fellow sent
+an<br>
+    apologetic kind of a letter, with some humbug excuse about
+very<br>
+    different motives, etc. But we've done with him, and I think
+he<br>
+    with us.</p>
+
+<p>When I had read thus far, I laid down the letter, unable to go
+on; the<br>
+accumulated misfortunes of one I loved best in the world,
+following so fast<br>
+one upon another, the insult&mdash;unprovoked, gratuitous insult&mdash;to
+him upon<br>
+whom my hopes of future happiness so much depended, completely
+overwhelmed<br>
+me. I tried to continue. Alas, the catalogue of evils went on;
+each line<br>
+bore testimony to some farther wreck of fortune, some clearer
+evidence of a<br>
+ruined house.</p>
+
+<p>All that my gloomiest and darkest forebodings had pictured was
+come to<br>
+pass; sickness, poverty, harassing unfeeling creditors,
+treachery, and<br>
+ingratitude were goading to madness and despair a spirit whose
+kindliness<br>
+of nature was unequalled. The shock of blasted fortunes was
+falling upon<br>
+the dying heart; the convictions which a long life had never
+brought<br>
+home&mdash;that men were false and their words a lie&mdash;were stealing
+over the<br>
+man upon the brink of the grave; and he who had loved his
+neighbor like a<br>
+brother was to be taught, at the eleventh hour, that the beings
+he trusted<br>
+were perjured and forsworn.</p>
+
+<p>A more unsuitable adviser than Considine, in difficulties like
+these, there<br>
+could not be; his very contempt for all the forms of law and
+justice was<br>
+sufficient to embroil my poor uncle still farther; so that I
+resolved at<br>
+once to apply for leave, and if refused, and no other alternative
+offered,<br>
+to leave the service. It was not without a sense of sorrow
+bordering on<br>
+despair, that I came to this determination. My soldier's life had
+become<br>
+a passion with me. I loved it for its bold and chivalrous
+enthusiasm, its<br>
+hour of battle and strife, its days of endurance and hardship,
+its trials,<br>
+its triumphs; its very reverses were endeared by those they were
+shared<br>
+with; and the spirit of adventure and the love of danger&mdash;that
+most<br>
+exciting of all gambling&mdash;had now entwined themselves in my very
+nature. To<br>
+surrender all these at once, and to exchange the daily, hourly
+enthusiasm<br>
+of a campaign for the prospects now before me, was almost
+maddening. But<br>
+still a sustaining sense of duty of what I owed to him, who, in
+his love,<br>
+had sacrificed all for me, overpowered every other consideration.
+My mind<br>
+was made up.</p>
+
+<p>Father Rush's letter was little more than a recapitulation of
+the count's.<br>
+Debt, distress, sickness, and the heart-burnings of altered
+fortunes filled<br>
+it; and when I closed it, I felt like one over all whose views in
+life a<br>
+dark and ill-omened cloud was closing forever. Webber's I could
+not read;<br>
+the light and cheerful raillery of a friend would have seemed, at
+such a<br>
+time, like the cold, unfeeling sarcasm of an enemy. I sat down at
+last to<br>
+write to the general, enclosing my application for leave, and
+begging of<br>
+him to forward it, with a favorable recommendation, to
+headquarters.</p>
+
+<p>This done, I lay down upon my bed, and overcome by fatigue and
+fretting,<br>
+fell asleep to dream of my home and those I had left there;
+which,<br>
+strangely too, were presented to my mind with all the happy
+features that<br>
+made them so dear to my infancy.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXXIV.</p>
+
+<p>THE TRENCHES.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not had time, O'Malley, to think of your application,"
+said<br>
+Crawfurd, "nor is it likely I can for a day or two. Read that."
+So saying,<br>
+he pushed towards me a note, written, in pencil, which ran
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    CIUDAD RODRIGO, December 18.</p>
+
+<p>    Dear C.,&mdash;Fletcher tells me that the breaches will be
+practicable<br>
+    by to-morrow evening, and I think so myself. Come over, then,
+at<br>
+    once, for we shall not lose any time.</p>
+
+<p>    Yours,           W.</p>
+
+<p>"I have some despatches for your regiment, but if you prefer
+coming along<br>
+with me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear General, dare I ask for such a favor?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, come along; only remember that, although my division
+will be<br>
+engaged, I cannot promise you anything to do. So now, get your
+horses<br>
+ready; let's away."</p>
+
+<p>It was in the afternoon of the following day that we rode into
+the large<br>
+plain before Ciudad Rodrigo, and in which the allied armies were
+now<br>
+assembled to the number of twelve thousand men. The loud booming
+of<br>
+the siege artillery had been heard by me for some hours before;
+but<br>
+notwithstanding this prelude and my own high-wrought
+expectations, I<br>
+was far from anticipating the magnificent spectacle which burst
+upon my<br>
+astonished view. The air was calm and still; a clear, blue,
+wintry sky<br>
+stretched overhead, but below, the dense blue smoke of the
+deafening guns<br>
+rolled in mighty volumes along the earth, and entirely concealed
+the lower<br>
+part of the fortress; above this the tall towers and battlemented
+parapets<br>
+rose into the thin, transparent sky like fairy palaces. A bright
+flash of<br>
+flame would now and then burst forth from the walls, and a
+clanging crash<br>
+of the brass metal be heard; but the unceasing roll of our
+artillery nearly<br>
+drowned all other sounds, save when a loud cheer would burst from
+the<br>
+trenches, while the clattering fall of masonry, and the crumbling
+stones<br>
+as they rolled down, bespoke the reason of the cry. The utmost
+activity<br>
+prevailed on all sides; troops pressed forward to the reliefs in
+the<br>
+parallels; ammunition wagons moved to the front; general and
+staff officers<br>
+rode furiously about the plain; and all betokened that the hour
+of attack<br>
+was no longer far distant.</p>
+
+<p>While all parties were anxiously awaiting the decision of our
+chief, the<br>
+general order was made known, which, after briefly detailing the
+necessary<br>
+arrangements, concluded with the emphatic words, "Ciudad Rodrigo
+<i>must</i> be<br>
+stormed to-night." All speculation as to the troops to be engaged
+in this<br>
+daring enterprise was soon at an end; for with his characteristic
+sense of<br>
+duty, Lord Wellington made no invidious selection, but merely
+commanded<br>
+that the attack should be made by whatever divisions might chance
+to be<br>
+that day in the trenches. Upon the Third and Light Divisions,
+therefore,<br>
+this glorious task devolved. The former was to attack the main
+breach;<br>
+to Crawfurd's Division was assigned the, if possible, more
+difficult<br>
+enterprise of carrying the lesser one; while Pack's Portuguese
+Brigade were<br>
+to menace the convent of La Caridad by a feint attack, to be
+converted into<br>
+a real one, if circumstances should permit.</p>
+
+<p>The decision, however matured and comprehensive in all its
+details, was<br>
+finally adopted so suddenly that every staff officer upon the
+ground was<br>
+actively engaged during the entire evening in conveying the
+orders to the<br>
+different regiments. As the day drew to a close, the cannonade
+slackened on<br>
+either side, a solitary gun would be heard at intervals, and in
+the calm<br>
+stillness around, its booming thunder re-echoed along the valleys
+of the<br>
+Sierra; but as the moon rose and night set in, these were no
+longer heard,<br>
+and a perfect stillness and tranquillity prevailed around. Even
+in the<br>
+trenches, crowded with armed and anxious soldiers, not a whisper
+was heard;<br>
+and amidst that mighty host which filled the plain, the tramp of
+a patrol<br>
+could be distinctly noted, and the hoarse voice of the French
+sentry upon<br>
+the walls, telling that all was well in Ciudad Rodrigo.</p>
+
+<p>The massive fortress, looming larger as its dark shadow stood
+out from the<br>
+sky, was still as the grave; while in the greater breach a faint
+light was<br>
+seen to twinkle for a moment, and then suddenly to disappear,
+leaving all<br>
+gloomy and dark as before.</p>
+
+<p>Having been sent with orders to the Third Division, of which
+the<br>
+Eighty-eighth formed a part, I took the opportunity of finding
+out<br>
+O'Shaughnessy, who was himself to lead an escalade party in
+M'Kinnon's<br>
+Brigade. He sprang towards me as I came forward, and grasping my
+hand with<br>
+a more than usual earnestness, called out, "The very man I
+wanted! Charley,<br>
+my boy, do us a service now!"</p>
+
+<p>Before I could reply, he continued in a lower tone, "A young
+fellow of<br>
+ours, Harry Beauclerc, has been badly wounded in the trenches;
+but by some<br>
+blunder, his injury is reported as a slight one, and although the
+poor<br>
+fellow can scarcely stand, he insists upon going with the
+stormers."</p>
+
+<p>"Come here, Major, come here!" cried a voice at a little
+distance.</p>
+
+<p>"Follow me, O'Malley," cried O'Shaughnessy, moving in the
+direction of the<br>
+speaker.</p>
+
+<p>By the light of a lantern we could descry two officers
+kneeling upon the<br>
+ground; between them on the grass lay the figure of a third, upon
+whose<br>
+features, as the pale light fell, the hand of death seemed
+rapidly<br>
+stealing. A slight froth, tinged with blood, rested on his lip,
+and the<br>
+florid blood which stained the buff facing of his uniform
+indicated that<br>
+his wound was through the lungs.</p>
+
+<p>"He has fainted," said one of the officers, in a low tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you certain it is fainting?" said the other, in a still
+lower.</p>
+
+<p>"You see how it is, Charley," said O'Shaughnessy; "this poor
+boy must be<br>
+carried to the rear. Will you then, like a kind fellow, hasten
+back to<br>
+Colonel Campbell and mention the fact. It will kill Beauclerc
+should any<br>
+doubt rest upon his conduct, if he ever recover this."</p>
+
+<p>While he spoke, four soldiers of the regiment placed the
+wounded officer in<br>
+a blanket. A long sigh escaped him, and he muttered a few broken
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor fellow, it's his mother he's talking of! He only joined
+a month<br>
+since, and is a mere boy. Come, O'Malley, lose no time. By Jove!
+it is too<br>
+late; there goes the first rocket for the columns to form. In ten
+minutes<br>
+more the stormers must fall in."</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter, Giles?" said he to one of the officers,
+who had stopped<br>
+the soldiers as they were moving off with their burden,&mdash;"what is
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have been cutting the white tape off his arm; for if he
+sees it on<br>
+waking, he'll remember all about the storming."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite right&mdash;thoughtfully done!" said the other; "but who is
+to lead his<br>
+fellows? He was in the forlorn hope."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do it," cried I, with eagerness. "Come, O'Shaughnessy,
+you'll not<br>
+refuse me."</p>
+
+<p>"Refuse you, boy!" said he, grasping my hand within both of
+his, "never!<br>
+But you must change your coat. The gallant Eighty-eighth will
+never mistake<br>
+their countryman's voice. But your uniform would be devilish
+likely to get<br>
+you a bayonet through it; so come back with me, and we'll make
+you a Ranger<br>
+in no time."</p>
+
+<p>"I can give your friend a cap."</p>
+
+<p>"And I," said the other, "a brandy flask, which, after all, is
+not the<br>
+worst part of a storming equipage."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope," said O'Shaughnessy, "they may find Maurice in the
+rear.<br>
+Beauclerc's all safe in his hands."</p>
+
+<p>"That they'll not," said Giles, "you may swear. Quill is this
+moment in the<br>
+trenches, and will not be the last man at the breach."</p>
+
+<p>"Follow me now, lads," said O'Shaughnessy, in a low voice.
+"Our fellows are<br>
+at the angle of this trench. Who the deuce can that be, talking
+so loud?"</p>
+
+<p>"It must be Maurice," said Giles.</p>
+
+<p>The question was soon decided by the doctor himself, who
+appeared giving<br>
+directions to his hospital-sergeant.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Peter, take the tools up to a convenient spot near the
+breach.<br>
+There's many a snug corner there in the ruins; and although we
+mayn't have<br>
+as good an operation-room as in old 'Steevens's,' yet we'll beat
+them<br>
+hollow in cases."</p>
+
+<p>"Listen to the fellow," said Giles, with a shudder. "The
+thought of his<br>
+confounded thumbscrews and tourniquets is worse to me than a
+French<br>
+howitzer."</p>
+
+<p>"The devil a kinder-hearted fellow than Maurice," said
+O'Shaughnessy, "for<br>
+all that; and if his heart was to be known this moment, he'd
+rather handle<br>
+a sword than a saw."</p>
+
+<p>"True for you, Dennis," said Quill, overhearing him, "but we
+are both<br>
+useful in our way, as the hangman said to Lord Clare."</p>
+
+<p>"But should you not be in the rear, Maurice?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, O'Malley," said he, in a whisper; "but, you
+see, I owe the<br>
+Cork Insurance Company a spite for making me pay a gout premium,
+and that's<br>
+the reason I'm here. I warned them at the time that their
+stinginess would<br>
+come to no good."</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Captain O'Malley," said Giles, "I find I can't be as
+good as my<br>
+word with you; my servant has moved to the rear with all my
+traps."</p>
+
+<p>"What is to be done?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it shaving utensils you want?" said Maurice. "Would a
+scalpel serve<br>
+your turn?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Doctor, I'm going to take a turn of duty with your
+fellows to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"In the breach, with the stormers?"</p>
+
+<p>"With the forlorn hope," said O'Shaughnessy. "Beauclerc is so
+badly wounded<br>
+that we've sent him back; and Charley, like a good fellow, has
+taken his<br>
+place."</p>
+
+<p>"Martin told me," said Maurice, "that Beauclerc was only
+stunned; but,<br>
+upon my conscience, the hospital-mates, now-a-days, are no better
+than the<br>
+watchmakers; they can't tell what's wrong with the instrument
+till they<br>
+pick it to pieces. Whiz! there goes a blue light."</p>
+
+<p>"Move on, move on," whispered O'Shaughnessy; "they're telling
+off the<br>
+stormers. That rocket is the order to fall in."</p>
+
+<p>"But what am I to do for a coat?"</p>
+
+<p>"Take mine, my boy," said Maurice, throwing off an upper
+garment of coarse<br>
+gray frieze as he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a neat bit of uniform," continued he, turning himself
+round for<br>
+our admiration; "don't I look mighty like the pictures of George
+the First<br>
+at the battle of Dettingen!"</p>
+
+<p>A burst of approving laughter was our only answer to this
+speech, while<br>
+Maurice proceeded to denude himself of his most extraordinary
+garment.</p>
+
+<p>"What, in the name of Heaven, is it?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't despise it, Charley; it knows the smell of gunpowder as
+well as any<br>
+bit of scarlet in the service;" while he added, in a whisper,
+"it's the<br>
+ould Roscommon Yeomanry. My uncle commanded them in the year '42,
+and this<br>
+was his coat. I don't mean to say that it was new then; for you
+see it's a<br>
+kind of heirloom in the Quill family, and it's not every one I'd
+be giving<br>
+it to."</p>
+
+<p>"A thousand thanks, Maurice," said I, as I buttoned it on,
+amidst an<br>
+ill-suppressed titter of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"It fits you like a sentry-box," said Maurice, as he surveyed
+me with a<br>
+lantern. "The skirts separate behind in the most picturesque
+manner; and<br>
+when you button the collar, it will keep your head up so high
+that the<br>
+devil a bit you'll see except the blessed moon. It's a thousand
+pities you<br>
+haven't the three-cocked hat with the feather trimming. If you
+wouldn't<br>
+frighten the French, my name's not Maurice. Turn about here till
+I admire<br>
+you. If you only saw yourself in a glass, you'd never join the
+dragoons<br>
+again. And look now, don't be exposing yourself, for I wouldn't
+have those<br>
+blue facings destroyed for a week's pay."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then, it's yourself is the darling, Doctor, dear!" said a
+voice behind<br>
+me. I turned round; it was Mickey Free, who was standing with a
+most<br>
+profound admiration of Maurice beaming in every feature of his
+face. "It's<br>
+yourself has a joke for every hour o' the day."</p>
+
+<p>"Get to the rear, Mike, get to the rear with the cattle; this
+is no place<br>
+for you or them."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night, Mickey," said Maurice.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night, your honor," muttered Mike to himself; "may I
+never die till<br>
+you set a leg for me."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you dressed for the ball?" said Maurice, fastening the
+white tape upon<br>
+my arm. "There now, my boy, move on, for I think I hear Picton's
+voice; not<br>
+that it signifies now, for he's always in a heavenly temper when
+any one's<br>
+going to be killed. I'm sure he'd behave like an angel, if he
+only knew the<br>
+ground was mined under his feet."</p>
+
+<p>"Charley, Charley!" called out O'Shaughnessy, in a suppressed
+voice, "come<br>
+up quickly!"</p>
+
+<p>"No. 24, John Forbes&mdash;here! Edward Gillespie&mdash;here!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who leads this party, Major O'Shaughnessy?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Beauclerc, sir," replied O'Shaughnessy, pushing me
+forward by the arm<br>
+while he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep your people together, sir; spare the powder, and trust
+to your cold<br>
+iron." He grasped my hand within his iron grip, and rode on.</p>
+
+<p>"Who was it, Dennis?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you know him, Charley? That was Picton."</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXXV.</p>
+
+<p>THE STORMING OF CIUDAD RODRIGO.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever the levity of the previous moment, the scene before
+us now<br>
+repressed it effectually. The deep-toned bell of the cathedral
+tolled<br>
+seven, and scarcely were its notes dying away in the distance,
+when the<br>
+march of the columns was heard stealing along the ground. A low
+murmuring<br>
+whisper ran along the advanced files of the forlorn hope; stocks
+were<br>
+loosened; packs and knapsacks thrown to the ground; each man
+pressed his<br>
+cap more firmly down upon his brow, and with lip compressed and
+steadfast<br>
+eye, waited for the word to move.</p>
+
+<p>It came at last: the word "March!" passed in whispers from
+rank to rank,<br>
+and the dark mass moved on. What a moment was that as we advanced
+to the<br>
+foot of the breach! The consciousness that at the same instant,
+from<br>
+different points of that vast plain, similar parties were moving
+on; the<br>
+feeling that at a word the flame of the artillery and the flash
+of steel<br>
+would spring from that dense cloud, and death and carnage, in
+every shape<br>
+our imagination can conceive, be dealt on all sides; the hurried,
+fitful<br>
+thought of home; the years long past compressed into one minute's
+space;<br>
+the last adieu of all we've loved, mingling with the muttered
+prayer to<br>
+Heaven, while, high above all, the deep pervading sense that
+earth has no<br>
+temptation strong enough to turn us from that path whose ending
+must be a<br>
+sepulchre!</p>
+
+<p>Each heart was too full for words. We followed noiselessly
+along the turf,<br>
+the dark figure of our leader guiding us through the gloom. On
+arriving<br>
+at the ditch, the party with the ladders moved to the front.
+Already some<br>
+hay-packs were thrown in, and the forlorn hope sprang
+forward.</p>
+
+<p>All was still and silent as the grave. "Quietly, my men,
+quietly!" said<br>
+M'Kinnon; "don't press." Scarcely had he spoken when a musket
+whose charge,<br>
+contrary to orders, had not been drawn, went off. The whizzing
+bullet could<br>
+not have struck the wall, when suddenly a bright flame burst
+forth from the<br>
+ramparts, and shot upward towards the sky. For an instant the
+whole scene<br>
+before us was bright as noonday. On one side, the dark ranks and
+glistening<br>
+bayonets of the enemy; on the other, the red uniform of the
+British<br>
+columns: compressed like some solid wall, they stretched along
+the plain.</p>
+
+<p>A deafening roll of musketry from the extreme right announced
+that the<br>
+Third Division was already in action, while the loud cry of our
+leader, as<br>
+he sprang into the trench, summoned us to the charge. The leading
+sections,<br>
+not waiting for the ladders, jumped down, others pressing rapidly
+behind<br>
+them, when a loud rumbling thunder crept along the earth, a
+hissing,<br>
+crackling noise followed, and from the dark ditch a forked and
+livid<br>
+lightning burst like the flame from a volcano, and a mine
+exploded.<br>
+Hundreds of shells and grenades scattered along the ground were
+ignited at<br>
+the same moment; the air sparkled with the whizzing fuses, the
+musketry<br>
+plied incessantly from the walls, and every man of the leading
+company<br>
+of the stormers was blown to pieces. While this dreadful
+catastrophe was<br>
+enacting before our eyes, the different assaults were made on all
+sides;<br>
+the whole fortress seemed girt around with fire. From every part
+arose the<br>
+yells of triumph and the shouts of the assailants. As for us, we
+stood upon<br>
+the verge of the ditch, breathless, hesitating, and
+horror-struck. A sudden<br>
+darkness succeeded to the bright glare, but from the midst of the
+gloom the<br>
+agonizing cries of the wounded and the dying rent our very
+hearts.</p>
+
+<p>"Make way there! make way! here comes Mackie's party," cried
+an officer<br>
+in the front, and as he spoke the forlorn hope of the
+Eighty-eighth came<br>
+forward at a run; jumping recklessly into the ditch, they made
+towards the<br>
+breach; the supporting division of the stormers gave one
+inspiring cheer,<br>
+and sprang after them. The rush was tremendous; for scarcely had
+we reached<br>
+the crumbling ruins of the rampart, when the vast column,
+pressing on like<br>
+some mighty torrent, bore down upon our rear. Now commenced a
+scene to<br>
+which nothing I ever before conceived of war could in any degree
+compare:<br>
+the whole ground, covered with combustibles of every deadly and
+destructive<br>
+contrivance, was rent open with a crash; the huge masses of
+masonry bounded<br>
+into the air like things of no weight; the ringing clangor of the
+iron<br>
+howitzers, the crackling of the fuses, the blazing splinters, the
+shouts of<br>
+defiance, the more than savage yell of those in whose ranks alone
+the dead<br>
+and the dying were numbered, made up a mass of sights and sounds
+almost<br>
+maddening with their excitement. On we struggled; the mutilated
+bodies of<br>
+the leading files almost filling the way.</p>
+
+<p>By this time the Third Division had joined us, and the crush
+of our<br>
+thickening ranks was dreadful; every moment some well-known
+leader fell<br>
+dead or mortally wounded, and his place was supplied by some
+gallant fellow<br>
+who, springing from the leading files, would scarcely have
+uttered his<br>
+cheer of encouragement, ere he himself was laid low. Many a voice
+with<br>
+whose notes I was familiar, would break upon my ear in tones of
+heroic<br>
+daring, and the next moment burst forth in a death-cry. For above
+an hour<br>
+the frightful carnage continued, fresh troops continually
+advancing, but<br>
+scarcely a foot of ground was made; the earth belched forth its
+volcanic<br>
+fires, and that terrible barrier did no man pass. In turn the
+bravest and<br>
+the boldest would leap into the whizzing flame, and the taunting
+cheers of<br>
+the enemy triumphed in derision at the effort.</p>
+
+<p>"Stormers to the front! Only the bayonet! trust to nothing but
+the<br>
+bayonet!" cried a voice whose almost cheerful accents contrasted
+strangely<br>
+with the dead-notes around, and Gurwood, who led the forlorn hope
+of<br>
+the Fifty-second, bounded into the chasm; all the officers
+sprang<br>
+simultaneously after him; the men pressed madly on; a roll of
+withering<br>
+musketry crashed upon them; a furious shout replied to it. The
+British,<br>
+springing over the dead and dying, bounded like blood-hounds on
+their prey.<br>
+Meanwhile the ramparts trembled beneath the tramp of the light
+division,<br>
+who, having forced the lesser breach, came down upon the flank of
+the<br>
+French. The garrison, however, thickened their numbers, and
+bravely held<br>
+their ground. Man to man now was the combat. No cry for quarter,
+no<br>
+supplicating look for mercy; it was the death struggle of
+vengeance and<br>
+despair. At this instant an explosion louder than the loudest
+thunder shook<br>
+the air; the rent and torn up ramparts sprang into the sky; the
+conquering<br>
+and the conquered were alike the victims; for one of the greatest
+magazines<br>
+had been ignited by a shell; the black smoke, streaked with a
+lurid flame,<br>
+hung above the dead and the dying. The artillery and the
+murderous musketry<br>
+were stilled, paralyzed, as it were, by the ruin and devastation
+before<br>
+them. Both sides stood leaning upon their arms; the pause was
+but<br>
+momentary; the cries of wounded comrades called upon their
+hearts. A fierce<br>
+burst of vengeance rent the air; the British closed upon the foe;
+for one<br>
+instant they were met; the next, the bayonets gleamed upon the
+ramparts,<br>
+and Ciudad Rodrigo was won.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXXVI.</p>
+
+<p>THE RAMPART.</p>
+
+<p>While such were the scenes passing around me, of my own part
+in them, I<br>
+absolutely knew nothing; for until the moment that the glancing
+bayonets<br>
+of the light division came rushing on the foe, and the loud, long
+cheer of<br>
+victory burst above us, I felt like one in a trance. Then I
+leaned against<br>
+an angle of the rampart, overpowered and exhausted; a bayonet
+wound, which<br>
+some soldier of our own ranks had given me when mounting the
+breach, pained<br>
+me somewhat; my uniform was actually torn to rags; my head bare;
+of my<br>
+sword, the hilt and four inches of the blade alone remained,
+while my left<br>
+hand firmly grasped the rammer of a cannon, but why or wherefore
+I could<br>
+not even guess. As thus I stood, the unceasing tide of soldiery
+pressed on;<br>
+fresh divisions came pouring in, eager for plunder, and thirsting
+for the<br>
+spoil. The dead and the dying were alike trampled beneath the
+feet of that<br>
+remorseless mass, who, actuated by vengeance and by rapine,
+sprang fiercely<br>
+up the breach.</p>
+
+<p>Weak and exhausted, faint from my wound, and overcome by my
+exertions, I<br>
+sank among the crumbling ruin. The loud shouts which rose from
+the town,<br>
+mingled with cries and screams, told the work of pillage was
+begun; while<br>
+still a dropping musketry could be heard on the distant rampart,
+where even<br>
+yet the French made resistance. At last even this was hushed, but
+to it<br>
+succeeded the far more horrifying sounds of rapine and of murder;
+the<br>
+forked flames of burning houses rose here and there amidst the
+black<br>
+darkness of the night; and through the crackling of the timbers,
+and the<br>
+falling crash of roofs, the heart-rending shriek of women rent
+the very<br>
+air. Officers pressed forward, but in vain were their efforts to
+restrain<br>
+their men; the savage cruelty of the moment knew no bounds of
+restraint.<br>
+More than one gallant fellow perished in his fruitless endeavor
+to enforce<br>
+obedience; and the most awful denunciations were now uttered
+against those<br>
+before whom, at any other time, they dared not mutter.</p>
+
+<p>Thus passed the long night, far more terrible to me than all
+the dangers of<br>
+the storm itself, with all its death and destruction dealing
+around it. I<br>
+know not if I slept: if so, the horrors on every side were
+pictured in my<br>
+dreams; and when the gray dawn was breaking, the cries from the
+doomed city<br>
+were still ringing in my ears. Close around me the scene was
+still<br>
+and silent; the wounded had been removed during the night, but
+the<br>
+thickly-packed dead lay side by side where they fell. It was a
+fearful<br>
+sight to see them as, blood-stained and naked (for already
+the<br>
+camp-followers had stripped the bodies), they covered the entire
+breach.<br>
+From the rampart to the ditch, the ranks lay where they had stood
+in life.<br>
+A faint phosphoric flame flickered above their ghastly corpses,
+making even<br>
+death still more horrible. I was gazing steadfastly, with all
+that stupid<br>
+intensity which imperfect senses and exhausted faculties possess,
+when the<br>
+sound of voices near aroused me.</p>
+
+<p>"Bring him along,&mdash;this way, Bob. Over the breach with the
+scoundrel, into<br>
+the fosse."</p>
+
+<p>"He shall die no soldier's death, by Heaven!" cried another
+and a deeper<br>
+voice, "if I lay his skull open with my axe."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, mercy, mercy! as you hope for&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Traitor! don't dare to mutter here!" As the last words were
+spoken, four<br>
+infantry soldiers, reeling from drunkenness, dragged forward a
+pale and<br>
+haggard wretch, whose limbs trailed behind him like those of
+palsy, his<br>
+uniform was that of a French chasseur, but his voice bespoke him
+English.</p>
+
+<p>"Kneel down there, and die like a man! You were one once!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, Bill, never. Fix bayonets, boys! That's right! Now
+take the word<br>
+from me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, forgive me! for the love of Heaven, forgive me!" screamed
+the voice of<br>
+the victim; but his last accents ended in a death-cry, for as he
+spoke, the<br>
+bayonets flashed for an instant in the air, and the next were
+plunged into<br>
+his body. Twice I had essayed to speak, but my voice, hoarse from
+shouting,<br>
+came not; and I could but look upon this terrible murder with
+staring eyes<br>
+and burning brain. At last speech came, as if wrested by the very
+excess of<br>
+my agony, and I muttered aloud, "O God!" The words were not
+well-spoken,<br>
+when the muskets were brought to the shoulders, and reeking with
+the blood<br>
+of the murdered man, their savage faces scowled at me as I
+lay.</p>
+
+<p>A short and heart-felt prayer burst from my lips, and I was
+still. The<br>
+leader of the party called out, "Be steady, and together. One,
+two! Ground<br>
+arms, boys! Ground arms!" roared he, in a voice of thunder; "it's
+the<br>
+captain himself!" Down went the muskets with a crash; while,
+springing<br>
+towards me, the fellows caught me in their arms, and with one
+jerk mounted<br>
+me upon their shoulders, the cheer that accompanied the sudden
+movement<br>
+seeming like the yell of maniacs. "Ha, ha, ha! we have him now!"
+sang their<br>
+wild voices, as, with blood-stained hands and infuriated
+features, they<br>
+bore me down the rampart. My sensations of disgust and repugnance
+to the<br>
+party seemed at once to have evidenced themselves, for the
+corporal,<br>
+turning abruptly round, called out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Don't <i>pity</i> him, Captain; the scoundrel was a deserter; he
+escaped from<br>
+the picket two nights ago, and gave information of all our plans
+to the<br>
+enemy."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," cried another, "and what's worse, he fired through an
+embrasure near<br>
+the breach, for two hours, upon his own regiment. It was there we
+found<br>
+him. This way, lads."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, they turned short from the walls, and dashed down a
+dark<br>
+and narrow lane into the town. My struggles to get free were
+perfectly<br>
+ineffectual, and to my entreaties they were totally
+indifferent.</p>
+
+<p>In this way, therefore, we made our entrance into the Plaza,
+where some<br>
+hundred soldiers, of different regiments, were bivouacked. A
+shout of<br>
+recognition welcomed the fellows as they came; while suddenly a
+party of<br>
+Eighty-eighth men, springing from the ground, rushed forward with
+drawn<br>
+bayonets, calling out, "Give him up this minute, or, by the
+Father of<br>
+Moses, we'll make short work of ye!"</p>
+
+<p>The order was made by men who seemed well disposed to execute
+it; and I was<br>
+accordingly grounded with a shock and a rapidity that savored
+much more<br>
+of ready compliance than any respect for my individual comfort. A
+roar of<br>
+laughter rang through the motley mass, and every powder-stained
+face around<br>
+me seemed convulsed with merriment. As I sat passively upon the
+ground,<br>
+looking ruefully about, whether my gestures or my words
+heightened the<br>
+absurdity of my appearance, it is hard to say; but certainly the
+laughter<br>
+increased at each moment, and the drunken wretches danced round
+me in<br>
+ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is your major? Major O'Shaughnessy, lads?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"He's in the church, with the general, your honor," said the
+sergeant of<br>
+the regiment, upon whom the mention of his officer's name seemed
+at once<br>
+to have a sobering influence. Assisting me to rise (for I was
+weak as a<br>
+child), he led me through the dense crowd, who, such is the
+influence of<br>
+example, now formed into line, and as well as their state
+permitted, gave<br>
+me a military salute as I passed. "Follow me, sir," said the
+sergeant;<br>
+"this little dark street to the left will take us to the private
+door of<br>
+the chapel."</p>
+
+<p>"Wherefore are they there, Sergeant?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's a general of division mortally wounded."</p>
+
+<p>"You did not hear his name?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir. All I know is, he was one of the storming party at
+the lesser<br>
+breach."</p>
+
+<p>A cold, sickening shudder came over me; I durst not ask
+farther, but<br>
+pressed on with anxious steps towards the chapel.</p>
+
+<p>"There, sir, yonder, where you see the light. That's the
+door."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, the sergeant stopped suddenly, and placed his hand
+to his cap. I<br>
+saw at once that he was sufficiently aware of his condition not
+to desire<br>
+to appear before his officers; so, hurriedly thanking him, I
+walked<br>
+forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Halt, there! and give the countersign," cried a sentinel, who
+with fixed<br>
+bayonet stood before the door.</p>
+
+<p>"I am an officer," said I, endeavoring to pass in.</p>
+
+<p>"Stand bock, stand bock!" said the harsh voice of the
+Highlander, for such<br>
+he was.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Major O'Shaughnessy in the church?"</p>
+
+<p>"I dinna ken," was the short, rough answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is the officer so badly wounded?"</p>
+
+<p>"I dinna ken," repeated he, as gruffly as before; while he
+added, in a<br>
+louder key, "Stand bock, I tell ye, man! Dinna ye see the staff
+coming?"</p>
+
+<p>I turned round hastily, and at the same instant several
+officers, who<br>
+apparently from precaution had dismounted at the end of the
+street, were<br>
+seen approaching. They came hurriedly forward, but without
+speaking. He<br>
+who was in advance of the party wore a short, blue cape over an
+undress<br>
+uniform. The rest were in full regimentals. I had scarcely time
+to throw a<br>
+passing glance upon him, when the officer I have mentioned as
+coming first<br>
+called out in a stern voice,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Who are you, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>I started at the sounds; it was not the first time those
+accents had been<br>
+heard by me.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain O'Malley, Fourteenth Light Dragoons."</p>
+
+<p>"What brings you here, sir? Your regiment is at Caya."</p>
+
+<p>"I have been employed as acting aide-de-camp to General
+Crawfurd," said I,<br>
+hesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that your staff uniform?" said he, as with compressed brow
+and stern<br>
+look he fixed his eyes upon my coat. Before I had time to reply,
+or,<br>
+indeed, before I well knew how to do so, a gruff voice from
+behind called<br>
+out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Damn me! if that ain't the fellow that led the stormers
+through a broken<br>
+embrasure! I say, my lord, that's the yeoman I was telling you
+of. Is it<br>
+not so, sir?" continued he, turning towards me.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. I led a party of the Eighty-eight at the
+breach."</p>
+
+<p>"And devilish well you did it, too!" added Picton, for it was
+he who<br>
+recognized me. "I saw him, my lord, spring down from the parapet
+upon a<br>
+French gunner, and break his sword as he cleft his helmet in two.
+Yes, yes;<br>
+I shall not forget in a hurry how you laid about you with the
+rammer of the<br>
+gun! By Jove! that's it he has in his hand!"</p>
+
+<p>While Picton ran thus hurriedly on, Lord Wellington's calm but
+stern<br>
+features never changed their expression. The looks of those
+around were<br>
+bent upon me with interest and even admiration; but his evinced
+nothing of<br>
+either.</p>
+
+<p>Reverting at once to my absence from my post, he asked
+me,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Did you obtain leave for a particular service, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lord. It was simply from an accidental circumstance
+that&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then, report yourself at your quarters as under arrest."</p>
+
+<p>"But, my lord&mdash;" said Picton. Lord Wellington waited not for
+the<br>
+explanation, but walked firmly forward, and strode into the
+church. The<br>
+staff followed in silence, Picton turning one look of kindness on
+me as he<br>
+went, as though to say, "I'll not forget you."</p>
+
+<p>"The devil take it," cried I, as I found myself once more
+alone, "but<br>
+I'm unlucky! What would turn out with other men the very basis of
+their<br>
+fortune, is ever with me the source of ill-luck."</p>
+
+<p>It was evident, from Picton's account, that I had
+distinguished myself<br>
+in the breach; and yet nothing was more clear than that my
+conduct had<br>
+displeased the commander-in-chief. Picturing him ever to my
+mind's eye as<br>
+the <i>beau id&eacute;al</i> of a military leader, by some fatality of
+fortune I was<br>
+continually incurring his displeasure, for whose praise I would
+have<br>
+risked my life. "And this confounded costume&mdash;What, in the name
+of every<br>
+absurdity, could have ever persuaded me to put it on. What
+signifies it,<br>
+though a man should cover himself with glory, if in the end he is
+to be<br>
+laughed at? Well, well, it matters not much, now my soldiering's
+over! And<br>
+yet I could have wished that the last act of my campaigning had
+brought<br>
+with it pleasanter recollections."</p>
+
+<p>As thus I ruminated, the click of the soldier's musket near
+aroused me:<br>
+Picton was passing out. A shade of gloom and depression was
+visible upon<br>
+his features, and his lip trembled as he muttered some sentences
+to<br>
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! Captain&mdash;I forget the name. Yes, Captain O'Malley; you
+are released<br>
+from arrest. General Crawfurd has spoken very well of you, and
+Lord<br>
+Wellington has heard the circumstances of your case."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it General Crawfurd, then, that is wounded, sir?" said I,
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>Picton paused for a moment, while, with an effort, he
+controlled his<br>
+features into their stern and impassive expression, then added
+hurriedly<br>
+and almost harshly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Yes, sir; badly wounded through the arm and in the lung. He
+mentioned you<br>
+to the notice of the commander-in-chief, and your application for
+leave is<br>
+granted. In fact, you are to have the distinguished honor of
+carrying back<br>
+despatches. There, now; you had better join your brigade."</p>
+
+<p>"Could I not see my general once more? It may be for the last
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir!" sternly replied Picton. "Lord Wellington believes
+you under<br>
+arrest. It is as well he should suppose you obeyed his
+orders."</p>
+
+<p>There was a tone of sarcasm in these words that prevented my
+reply; and<br>
+muttering my gratitude for his well-timed and kindly interference
+in my<br>
+behalf, I bowed deeply and turned away.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, sir!" said Picton, as he returned towards the church,
+"should<br>
+anything befall,&mdash;that is, if, unfortunately, circumstances
+should make you<br>
+in want and desirous of a staff appointment, remember that you
+are known to<br>
+General Picton."</p>
+
+<p>Downcast and depressed by the news of my poor general, I
+wended my way with<br>
+slow and uncertain steps towards the rampart. A clear, cold,
+wintry sky and<br>
+a sharp, bracing air made my wound, slight as it was, more
+painful, and<br>
+I endeavored to reach the reserves, where I knew the
+hospital-staff had<br>
+established, for the present, their quarters. I had not gone far
+when, from<br>
+a marauding party, I learned that my man Mike was in search of me
+through<br>
+the plain. A report of my death had reached him, and the poor
+fellow was<br>
+half distracted.</p>
+
+<p>Longing anxiously to allay his fears on my account, which I
+well knew<br>
+might lead him into any act of folly or insanity, I pressed
+forward;<br>
+besides&mdash;shall I confess it?&mdash;amidst the manifold thoughts of
+sorrow and<br>
+affliction which weighed me down, I could not divest myself of
+the feeling<br>
+that so long as I wore my present absurd costume, I could be
+nothing but an<br>
+object of laughter and ridicule to all who met me.</p>
+
+<p>I had not long to look for my worthy follower, for I soon
+beheld him<br>
+cantering about the plain. A loud shout brought him beside me;
+and<br>
+truly the poor fellow's delight was great and sincere. With a
+thousand<br>
+protestations of his satisfaction, and reiterated assurances of
+what he<br>
+would not have done to the French prisoners if anything had
+happened me, we<br>
+took our way together towards the camp.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXXVII.</p>
+
+<p>THE DESPATCH.</p>
+
+<p>I was preparing to visit the town on the following morning,
+when my<br>
+attention was attracted by a dialogue which took place beneath my
+window.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, my good friend," cried a mounted orderly to Mike, who
+was busily<br>
+employed in brushing a jacket,&mdash;"I say, are you Captain
+O'Malley's man?"</p>
+
+<p>"The least taste in life o' that same," replied he, with a
+half-jocular<br>
+expression.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then," said the other, "take up these letters to your
+master. Be<br>
+alive, my fine fellow, for they are despatches, and I must have a
+written<br>
+return for them."</p>
+
+<p>"Won't ye get off and take a drop of somethin' refreshing; the
+air is cowld<br>
+this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't stay, my good friend, but thank you all the same; so
+be alive,<br>
+will you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Arrah, there's no hurry in life. Sure, it's an invitation to
+dinner to<br>
+Lord Wellington or a tea-party at Sir Denny's; sure, my master's
+bothered<br>
+with them every day o' th' week: that's the misfortune of being
+an<br>
+agreeable creature; and I'd be led into dissipation myself, if I
+wasn't<br>
+rear'd prudent."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, come along, take these letters, for I must be off; my
+time is<br>
+short."</p>
+
+<p>"That's more nor your nose is, honey," said Mike, evidently
+piqued at the<br>
+little effect his advances had produced upon the Englishman.
+"Give them<br>
+here," continued he, while he turned the various papers in every
+direction,<br>
+affecting to read their addresses.</p>
+
+<p>"There's nothing for me here, I see. Did none of the generals
+ask after<br>
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>are</i> a queer one!" said the dragoon, not a little
+puzzled what to<br>
+make of him.</p>
+
+<p>Mike meanwhile thrust the papers carelessly into his pocket,
+and strode<br>
+into the house, whistling a quick-step as he went, with the air
+of a man<br>
+perfectly devoid of care or occupation. The next moment, however,
+he<br>
+appeared at my door, wiping his forehead with the back of his
+hand, and<br>
+apparently breathless with haste.</p>
+
+<p>"Despatches, Mister Charles, despatches from Lord Wellington.
+The orderly<br>
+is waiting below for a return."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell him he shall have it in one moment," replied I. "And now
+bring me a<br>
+light."</p>
+
+<p>Before I had broken the seal of the envelope, Mike was once
+more at the<br>
+porch.</p>
+
+<p>"My master is writing a few lines to say he'll do it. Don't be
+talking<br>
+of it," added he, dropping his voice, "but they want him to take
+another<br>
+fortress."</p>
+
+<p>What turn the dialogue subsequently took, I cannot say, for I
+was entirely<br>
+occupied by a letter which accompanied the despatches. It ran as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    QUARTER-GENERAL,</p>
+
+<p>    CIUDAD RODRIGO, Jan. 20, 1812.</p>
+
+<p>    Dear Sir,&mdash;The commander-in-chief has been kind enough to
+accord you<br>
+    the leave of absence you applied for, and takes the
+opportunity<br>
+    of your return to England to send you the accompanying
+letters<br>
+    for his Royal Highness the Duke of York. To his approval
+of<br>
+    your conduct in the assault last night you owe this
+distinguished<br>
+    mark of Lord Wellington's favor, which, I hope, will be
+duly<br>
+    appreciated by you, and serve to increase your zeal for that
+service<br>
+    in which you have already distinguished yourself.</p>
+
+<p>    Believe me that I am most happy in being made the medium
+of<br>
+    this communication, and have the honor to be,</p>
+
+<p>    Very truly yours,</p>
+
+<p>    T. PICTON.</p>
+
+<p>I read and re-read this note again and again. Every line was
+conned over by<br>
+me, and every phrase weighed and balanced in my mind. Nothing
+could be more<br>
+gratifying, nothing more satisfactory to my feelings; and I would
+not have<br>
+exchanged its possession for the brevet of a
+lieutenant-colonel.</p>
+
+<p>"Halloo, Orderly!" cried I, from the window, as I hurriedly
+sealed my few<br>
+words of acknowledgment, "take this note back to General Picton,
+and here's<br>
+a guinea for yourself." So saying, I pitched into his ready hand
+one of the<br>
+very few which remained to me in the world. "This is, indeed,
+good news!"<br>
+said I, to myself. "This is, indeed, a moment of unmixed
+happiness!"</p>
+
+<p>As I closed the window, I could hear Mike pronouncing a
+glowing eulogium<br>
+upon my liberality, from which he could not, however, help in
+some degree<br>
+detracting, as he added:</p>
+
+<p>"But the devil thank him, after all! Sure, it's himself has
+the illigant<br>
+fortune and the fine place of it!"</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely were the last sounds of the retiring horseman dying
+away in the<br>
+distance, when Mike's meditations took another form, and he
+muttered<br>
+between his teeth, "Oh, holy Agatha! a guinea, a raal gold guinea
+to a<br>
+thief of a dragoon that come with the letter, and here am I
+wearing a<br>
+picture of the holy family for a back to my waistcoat, all out of
+economy;<br>
+and sure, God knows, but may be they'll take their dealing trick
+out of<br>
+me in purgatory for this hereafter; and faith, it's a beautiful
+pair of<br>
+breeches I'd have had, if I wasn't ashamed to put the twelve
+apostles on<br>
+my legs."</p>
+
+<p>While Mike ran on at this rate, my eyes fell upon a few lines
+of postscript<br>
+in Picton's letter, which I had not previously noticed.</p>
+
+<p>    "The official despatches of the storming are, of course,
+intrusted to<br>
+    senior officers, but I need scarcely remind you that it will
+be a<br>
+    polite and proper attention to his Royal Highness to present
+your<br>
+    letters with as little delay as possible. Not a moment is to
+be lost<br>
+    on your landing in England."</p>
+
+<p>"Mike!" cried I, "how look the cattle for a journey?"</p>
+
+<p>"The chestnut is a little low in flesh, but in great wind,
+your honor; and<br>
+the black horse is jumping like a filly."</p>
+
+<p>"And Badger?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Howld him, if you can, that's all; but it's murthering work
+this, carrying<br>
+despatches day after day."</p>
+
+<p>"This time, however, Mike, we must not grumble."</p>
+
+<p>"May be it isn't far?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, as to that, I shall not promise much. I'm bound for
+England, Mickey."</p>
+
+<p>"For England!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mike, and for Ireland."</p>
+
+<p>"For Ireland! whoop!" shouted he, as he shied his cap into one
+corner of<br>
+the room, the jacket he was brushing into the other, and began
+dancing<br>
+round the table with no bad imitation of an Indian war dance.</p>
+
+<p>    "How I'll dance like a fairy,<br>
+    To see ould Dunleary,<br>
+    And think twice ere I leave it to be a dragoon."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, blessed hour! Isn't it beautiful to think of the
+illuminations and<br>
+dinners and speeches and shaking of hands, huzzaing, and
+hip-hipping. May<br>
+be there won't be pictures of us in all the shops,&mdash;Mister
+Charles and his<br>
+man Mister Free. May be they won't make plays out of us; myself
+dressed in<br>
+the gray coat with the red cuffs, the cords, the tops, and the
+Caroline hat<br>
+a little cocked, with a phiz in the side of it." Here he made a
+sign with<br>
+his expanded fingers to represent a cockade, which he designated
+by this<br>
+word. "I think I see myself dining with the corporation, and the
+Lord Major<br>
+of Dublin getting up to propose the health of the hero of El
+Bodon, Mr.<br>
+Free; and three times three, hurra! hurra! hurra! Musha, but it's
+dry I am<br>
+gettin' with the thoughts of the punch and the poteen negus."</p>
+
+<p>"If you go on at this rate, we're not likely to be soon at our
+journey's<br>
+end. So be alive now; pack up my kit; I shall start by twelve
+o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>With one spring Mike cleared the stairs, and overthrowing
+everything and<br>
+everybody in his way, hurried towards the stable, chanting at the
+top of<br>
+his voice the very poetical strain he had indulged me with a few
+minutes<br>
+before.</p>
+
+<p>My preparations were rapidly made; a few hurried lines of
+leave-taking to<br>
+the good fellows I had lived so much with and felt so strongly
+attached to,<br>
+with a firm assurance that I should join them again ere long, was
+all<br>
+that my time permitted. To Power I wrote more at length,
+detailing the<br>
+circumstances which my own letters informed me of, and also those
+which<br>
+invited me to return home. This done, I lost not another moment,
+but set<br>
+out upon my journey.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</p>
+
+<p>THE LEAVE.</p>
+
+<p>After an hour's sharp riding we reached the Aguada, where the
+river was yet<br>
+fordable; crossing this, we mounted the Sierra by a narrow and
+winding pass<br>
+which leads through the mountains towards Almeida. Here I turned
+once more<br>
+to cast a last and farewell look at the scene of our late
+encounter. It<br>
+was but a few hours that I had stood almost on the same spot, and
+yet how<br>
+altered was all around. The wide plain, then bustling with all
+the life and<br>
+animation of a large army, was now nearly deserted,&mdash;some
+dismounted guns,<br>
+some broken-up, dismantled batteries, around which a few
+sentinels seemed<br>
+to loiter rather than to keep guard; a strong detachment of
+infantry could<br>
+be seen wending their way towards the fortress, and a confused
+mass of<br>
+camp-followers, sutlers, and peasants following their steps for
+protection<br>
+against the pillagers and the still ruder assaults of their own
+Guerillas.<br>
+The fortress, too, was changed indeed. Those mighty walls before
+whose<br>
+steep sides the bravest fell back baffled and beaten, were now a
+mass of<br>
+ruin and decay; the muleteer could be seen driving his mule along
+through<br>
+the rugged ascent of that breach to win whose top the best blood
+of<br>
+Albion's chivalry was shed; and the peasant child looked timidly
+from those<br>
+dark enclosures in the deep fosse below, where perished hundreds
+of our<br>
+best and bravest. The air was calm, clear, and unclouded; no
+smoke obscured<br>
+the transparent atmosphere; the cannon had ceased; and the voices
+that rang<br>
+so late in accents of triumphant victory were stilled in death.
+Everything,<br>
+indeed, had undergone a mighty change; but nothing brought the
+altered<br>
+fortunes of the scene so vividly to my mind as when I remembered
+that when<br>
+last I had seen those walls, the dark shako of the French
+grenadiers<br>
+peered above their battlements, and now the gay tartan of the
+Highlanders<br>
+fluttered above them, and the red flag of England waved boldly in
+the<br>
+breeze.</p>
+
+<p>Up to that moment my sensations were those of unmixed
+pleasure. The thought<br>
+of my home, my friends, my country, the feeling that I was
+returning with<br>
+the bronze of the battle upon my cheek, and the voice of praise
+still<br>
+ringing in my heart,&mdash;these were proud thoughts, and my bosom
+heaved short<br>
+and quickly as I revolved them; but as I turned my gaze for the
+last time<br>
+towards the gallant army I was leaving, a pang of sorrow, of
+self-reproach,<br>
+shot through me, and I could not help feeling how far less
+worthily was<br>
+I acting in yielding to the impulse of my wishes, than had I
+remained to<br>
+share the fortunes of the campaign.</p>
+
+<p>So powerfully did these sensations possess me, that I sat
+motionless for<br>
+some time, uncertain whether to proceed; forgetting that I was
+the bearer<br>
+of important information, I only remembered that by my own desire
+I was<br>
+there; my reason but half convinced me that the part I had
+adopted was<br>
+right and honorable, and more than once my resolution to proceed
+hung in<br>
+the balance. It was just at this critical moment of my doubts
+that Mike,<br>
+who had been hitherto behind, came up.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it the upper road, sir?" said he, pointing to a steep and
+rugged path<br>
+which led by a zigzag ascent towards the crest of the
+mountain.</p>
+
+<p>I nodded in reply, when he added:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't this remind your honor of Sleibh More, above the
+Shannon, where we<br>
+used to be grouse shooting? And there's the keeper's house in the
+valley;<br>
+and that might be your uncle, the master himself, waving his hat
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>Had he known the state of my conflicting feelings at the
+moment, he could<br>
+not more readily have decided this doubt. I turned abruptly away,
+put<br>
+spurs to my horse, and dashed up the steep pass at a pace which
+evidently<br>
+surprised, and as evidently displeased, my follower.</p>
+
+<p>How natural it is ever to experience a reaction of depression
+and lowness<br>
+after the first burst of unexpected joy! The moment of happiness
+is<br>
+scarce experienced ere come the doubts of its reality, the fears
+for its<br>
+continuance; the higher the state of pleasurable excitement, the
+more<br>
+painful and the more pressing the anxieties that await on it; the
+tension<br>
+of delighted feelings cannot last, and our overwrought faculties
+seek<br>
+repose in regrets. Happy he who can so temper his enjoyments as
+to view<br>
+them in their shadows as in their sunshine; he may not, it is
+true, behold<br>
+the landscape in the blaze of its noonday brightness, but he need
+not fear<br>
+the thunder-cloud nor the hurricane. The calm autumn of <i>his</i>
+bliss, if it<br>
+dazzle not in its brilliancy, will not any more be shrouded in
+darkness and<br>
+in gloom.</p>
+
+<p>My first burst of pleasure over, the thought of my uncle's
+changed fortunes<br>
+pressed deeply on my heart, and a hundred plans suggested
+themselves in<br>
+turn to my mind to relieve his present embarrassments; but I knew
+how<br>
+impracticable they would all prove when opposed by his
+prejudices. To<br>
+sell the old home of his forefathers, to wander from the roof
+which had<br>
+sheltered his name for generations, he would never consent to;
+the law<br>
+might by force expel him, and drive him a wanderer and an exile,
+but of<br>
+his own free will the thing was hopeless. Considine, too, would
+encourage<br>
+rather than repress such feelings; his feudalism would lead him
+to any<br>
+lengths; and in defence of what he would esteem a right, he would
+as soon<br>
+shoot a sheriff as a snipe, and, old as he was, ask for no better
+amusement<br>
+than to arm the whole tenantry and give battle to the king's
+troops on the<br>
+wide plain of Scariff. Amidst such conflicting thought, I
+travelled on<br>
+moodily and in silence, to the palpable astonishment of Mike, who
+could not<br>
+help regarding me as one from whom fortune met the most
+ungrateful returns.<br>
+At every new turn of the road he would endeavor to attract my
+attention by<br>
+the objects around,&mdash;no white-turreted ch&acirc;teau, no tapered
+spire in the<br>
+distance, escaped him; he kept up a constant ripple of
+half-muttered praise<br>
+and censure upon all he saw, and instituted unceasing comparisons
+between<br>
+the country and his own, in which, I am bound to say, Ireland
+rarely, if<br>
+ever, had to complain of his patriotism.</p>
+
+<p>When we arrived at Almeida, I learned that the "Medea"
+sloop-of-war was<br>
+lying off Oporto, and expected to sail for England in a few days.
+The<br>
+opportunity was not to be neglected. The official despatches, I
+was aware,<br>
+would be sent through Lisbon, where the "Gorgon" frigate was in
+waiting to<br>
+convey them; but should I be fortunate enough to reach Oporto in
+time, I<br>
+had little doubt of arriving in England with the first
+intelligence of the<br>
+fall of Ciudad Rodrigo. Reducing my luggage, therefore, to the
+smallest<br>
+possible compass, and having provided myself with a juvenile
+guide for the<br>
+pass of La Reyna, I threw myself, without undressing, upon the
+bed, and<br>
+waited anxiously for the break of day to resume my journey.</p>
+
+<p>As I ruminated over the prospect my return presented, I
+suddenly remembered<br>
+Frank Webber's letter, which I had hastily thrust into a
+portfolio without<br>
+reading, so occupied was I by Considine's epistle; with a little
+searching<br>
+I discovered it, and trimming my lamp, as I felt no inclination
+to sleep, I<br>
+proceeded to the examination of what seemed a more than usually
+voluminous<br>
+epistle. It contained four closely-written pages, accompanied by
+something<br>
+like a plan in an engineering sketch. My curiosity becoming
+further<br>
+stimulated by this, I sat down to peruse it. It began thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    Official Despatch of Lieutenant-General Francis Webber to
+Lord<br>
+    Castlereagh, detailing the assault and capture of the old
+pump, in<br>
+    Trinity College, Dublin, on the night of the second of
+December,<br>
+    eighteen hundred and eleven, with returns of killed,
+wounded,<br>
+    and missing, with other information from the seat of war.</p>
+
+<p>    HEADQUARTERS, No. 2, OLD SQUARE.</p>
+
+<p>    My Lord,&mdash;In compliance with the instructions contained in
+your<br>
+    lordship's despatch of the twenty-first ultimo, I
+concentrated the<br>
+    force under my command, and assembling the generals of
+division,<br>
+    made known my intentions in the following general
+order:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>      A. G. O.</p>
+
+<p>      The following troops will this evening assemble at
+headquarters, and<br>
+      having partaken of a sufficient dinner for the next two
+days, with<br>
+      punch for four, will hold themselves in readiness to march
+in the<br>
+      following order:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>      Harry Nesbitt's Brigade of Incorrigibles will form a
+blockading<br>
+      force, in the line extending from the vice-provost's house
+to the<br>
+      library. The light division, under Mark Waller, will
+skirmish from<br>
+      the gate towards the middle of the square, obstructing the
+march of<br>
+      the Cuirassiers of the Guard, which, under the command of
+old Duncan<br>
+      the porter, are expected to move in that direction. Two
+columns of<br>
+      attack will be formed by the senior sophisters of the Old
+Guard, and<br>
+      a forlorn hope of the "cautioned" men at the last four
+examinations<br>
+      will form, under the orders of Timothy O'Rourke, beneath
+the shadow<br>
+      of the dining-hall.</p>
+
+<p>      At the signal of the dean's bell the stormers will move
+forward. A<br>
+      cheer from the united corps will then announce the moment
+of attack.</p>
+
+<p>      The word for the night will be, "May the Devil admire
+me!"</p>
+
+<p>      The commander-of-the-forces desires that the different
+corps should<br>
+      be as strong as possible, and expects that no man will
+rema<br>
+      any pretence whatever, in the rear with the lush. During
+the main<br>
+      assault, Cecil Cavendish will make a feint upon the
+provost's<br>
+      windows, to be converted into a real attack if the ladies
+scream.</p>
+
+<p>      GENERAL ORDER.</p>
+
+<p>      The commissary-general, Foley, will supply the following
+articles for<br>
+      the use of the troops: Two hams; eight pair of chickens,
+the same to<br>
+      be roasted; a devilled turkey; sixteen lobsters; eight
+hundred of<br>
+      oysters, with a proportionate quantity of cold sherry and
+hot punch.</p>
+
+<p>      The army will get drunk by ten o'clock to-night.</p>
+
+<p>    Having made these dispositions, my lord, I proceeded to
+mislead<br>
+    the enemy as to our intentions, in suffering my servant to be
+taken<br>
+    with an intercepted despatch. This, being a prescription by
+Doctor<br>
+    Colles, would convey to the dean's mind the impression that I
+was<br>
+    still upon the sick list. This being done, and four canisters
+of<br>
+    Dartford gunpowder being procured on tick, our military chest
+being in<br>
+    a most deplorable condition, I waited for the moment of
+attack.</p>
+
+<p>    A heavy rain, accompanied with a frightful hurricane,
+prevailed<br>
+    during the entire day, rendering the march of the troops who
+came<br>
+    from the neighborhood of Merrion Square and Fitzwilliam
+Street, a<br>
+    service of considerable fatigue. The outlying pickets in
+College Green,<br>
+    being induced probably by the inclemency of the season, were
+rather<br>
+    tipsy on joining, and having engaged in a skirmish with old
+M'Calister,<br>
+    tying his red uniform over his head, the moment of attack<br>
+    was precipitated, and we moved to the trenches by half-past
+nine<br>
+    o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>    Nothing could be more orderly, nothing more perfect, than
+the<br>
+    march of the troops. As we approached the corner of the
+commons-hall,<br>
+    a skirmish on the rear apprised us that our intentions had
+become<br>
+    known; and I soon learned from my aide-de-camp, Bob
+Moore,<br>
+    that the attack was made by a strong column of the enemy,
+under<br>
+    the command of old Fitzgerald.</p>
+
+<p>    Perpendicular (as your lordship is aware he is styled by
+the army)<br>
+    came on in a determined manner, and before many minutes
+had<br>
+    elapsed had taken several prisoners, among others Tom
+Drummond,&mdash;Long<br>
+    Tom,&mdash;who, having fallen on all fours, was mistaken for a<br>
+    long eighteen. The success, however, was but momentary;
+Nesbitt's<br>
+    Brigade attacked them in flank, rescued the prisoners,
+extinguished<br>
+    the dean's lantern, and having beaten back the heavy porters,
+took<br>
+    Perpendicular himself prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>    An express from the left informed me that the attack upon
+the<br>
+    provost's house had proved equally successful; there wasn't a
+whole<br>
+    pane of glass in the front, and from a footman who deserted,
+it was<br>
+    learned that Mrs. Hutchinson was in hysterics.</p>
+
+<p>    While I was reading this despatch, a strong feeling of the
+line<br>
+    towards the right announced that something was taking place
+in that<br>
+    direction. Bob Moore, who rode by on Drummond's back,
+hurriedly<br>
+    informed me that Williams had put the lighted end of his
+cigar to<br>
+    one of the fuses, but the powder, being wet, did not
+explode<br>
+    notwithstanding his efforts to effect it. Upon this, I
+hastened to the<br>
+    front, where I found the individual in question kneeling upon
+the<br>
+    ground, and endeavoring, as far as punch would permit him, to
+kindle a<br>
+    flame at the portfire. Before I could interfere, the spark
+had caught;<br>
+    a loud, hissing noise followed; the different magazines
+successively<br>
+    became ignited, and at length the fire reached the great
+four-pound<br>
+    charge.</p>
+
+<p>    I cannot convey to your lordship, by any words of mine, an
+idea of<br>
+    this terrible explosion; the blazing splinters were hurled
+into the<br>
+    air, and fell in fiery masses on every side from the park to
+King<br>
+    William; Ivey the bell-ringer, was precipitated from the
+scaffold<br>
+    beside the bell, and fell headlong into the mud beneath;
+the<br>
+    surrounding buildings trembled at the shock; the windows
+were<br>
+    shattered, and in fact a scene of perfect devastation ensued
+on all<br>
+    sides.</p>
+
+<p>    When the smoke cleared away, I rose from my recumbent
+position,<br>
+    and perceived with delight that not a vestige of the pump
+remained.<br>
+    The old iron handle was imbedded in the wall of the
+dining-hall, and<br>
+    its round knob stood out like the end of a queue.</p>
+
+<p>    Our loss was, of course, considerable; and ordering the
+wounded<br>
+    to the rear, I proceeded to make an orderly and regular
+retreat. At<br>
+    this time, however, the enemy had assembled in force. Two
+battalions<br>
+    of porters, led on by Dr. Dobbin, charged us on the flank;
+a<br>
+    heavy brigade poured down upon us from the battery, and but
+for<br>
+    the exertions of Harry Nesbitt, our communication with our
+reserves<br>
+    must have been cut off. Cecil Cavendish also came up; for
+although<br>
+    beaten in his great attack, the forces under his command had
+penetrated<br>
+    by the kitchen windows, and carried oil a considerable
+quantity<br>
+    of cold meat.</p>
+
+<p>    Concentrating the different corps, I made an echelon
+movement<br>
+    upon the chapel, to admit of the light division coming up.
+This they<br>
+    did in a few moments, informing me that they had left
+Perpendicular<br>
+    in the haha, which, as your lordship is aware, is a fosse of
+the<br>
+    very greenest and most stagnant nature. We now made good our
+retreat<br>
+    upon number "2," carrying our wounded with us. The
+plunder<br>
+    we also secured; but we kicked the prisoners, and suffered
+them to<br>
+    escape.</p>
+
+<p>    Thus terminated, my lord, one of the brightest
+achievements of the<br>
+    undergraduate career. I enclose a list of the wounded, as
+also an<br>
+    account of the various articles returned in the
+commissary-general's<br>
+    list.</p>
+
+<p>    Harry Nesbitt: severely wounded; no coat nor hat; a
+black-eye;<br>
+    left shoe missing.</p>
+
+<p>    Cecil Cavendish: face severely scratched; supposed to have
+received<br>
+    his wound in the attack upon the kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>    Tom Drummond: not recognizable by his friends; his
+features<br>
+    resembling a transparency disfigured by the smoke of the
+preceding<br>
+    night's illumination.</p>
+
+<p>    Bob Moore: slightly wounded.</p>
+
+<p>    I would beg particularly to recommend all these officers
+to your<br>
+    lordship's notice; indeed, the conduct of Moore, in kicking
+the dean's<br>
+    lantern out of the porter's hand, was marked by great
+promptitude<br>
+    and decision. This officer will present to H. R. H. the
+following<br>
+    trophies, taken from the enemy: The dean's cap and tassel;
+the key<br>
+    of his chambers; Dr. Dobbin's wig and bands; four porters'
+helmets,<br>
+    and a book on the cellar.</p>
+
+<p>    I have the honor to remain, my lord, etc.,</p>
+
+<p>    FRANCIS WEBBER.</p>
+
+<p>      G. O.</p>
+
+<p>      The commander-of-the-forces returns his thanks to the
+various<br>
+      officers and soldiers employed in the late assault, for
+their<br>
+      persevering gallantry and courage. The splendor of the
+achievement<br>
+      can only be equalled by the humanity and good conduct of
+the troops.<br>
+      It only remains for him to add, that the less they say
+about the<br>
+      transaction, and the sooner they are severally confined to
+their beds<br>
+      with symptoms of contagious fever, the better.</p>
+
+<p>      Meanwhile, to concert upon the future measures of the
+campaign, the<br>
+      army will sup to-night at Morrison's.</p>
+
+<p>Here ended this precious epistle, rendering one fact
+sufficiently<br>
+evident,&mdash;that, however my worthy friend advanced in years, he
+had not<br>
+grown in wisdom.</p>
+
+<p>While ruminating upon the strange infatuation which could
+persuade a gifted<br>
+and an able man to lavish upon dissipation and reckless absurdity
+the<br>
+talents that must, if well directed, raise him to eminence and
+distinction,<br>
+a few lines of a newspaper paragraph fell from the paper I was
+reading. It<br>
+ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>      LATE OUTRAGE IN TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN.</p>
+
+<p>      We have great pleasure in stating that the serious
+disturbance which<br>
+      took place within the walls of our University a few
+evenings since,<br>
+      was in no wise attributable to the conduct of the students.
+A party<br>
+      of ill-disposed townspeople were, it would appear, the
+instigators<br>
+      and perpetrators of the outrage. That their object was the
+total<br>
+      destruction of our venerated University there can be but
+little<br>
+      doubt. Fortunately, however, they did not calculate upon
+the <i>esprit<br>
+      de corps</i> of the students, a body of whom, under the
+direction of Mr.<br>
+      Webber, successfully opposed the assailants, and finally
+drove them<br>
+      from the walls.</p>
+
+<p>      It is, we understand, the intention of the board to
+confer some mark<br>
+      of approbation upon Mr. Webber, who, independently of this,
+has<br>
+      strong claims upon their notice, his collegiate success
+pointing him<br>
+      out as the most extraordinary man of his day.</p>
+
+<p>    This, my dear Charley, will give you some faint conception
+of one<br>
+    of the most brilliant exploits of modern days. The bulletin,
+believe<br>
+    me, is not Napoleonized into any bombastic extravagance of
+success.<br>
+    The tiling was splendid; from the brilliant firework of the
+old pump<br>
+    itself, to the figure of Perpendicular dripping with
+duckweed, like<br>
+    an insane river-god, it was unequalled. Our fellows behaved
+like<br>
+    trumps; and to do them justice, so did the enemy. But
+unfortunately,<br>
+    notwithstanding this, and the plausible paragraphs of the<br>
+    morning papers, I have been summoned before the board for
+Tuesday<br>
+    next.</p>
+
+<p>    Meanwhile I employ myself in throwing off a shower of
+small<br>
+    squibs for the journals, so that if the board deal not
+mercifully with<br>
+    me, I may meet with sympathy from the public. I have just
+despatched<br>
+    a little editorial bit for the "Times," calling, in terms
+of<br>
+    parental tenderness, upon the University to say&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>      "How long will the extraordinary excesses of a learned
+funct<br>
+      be suffered to disgrace college? Is Doctor &mdash;&mdash; to be
+permitted to<br>
+      exhibit an example of more riotous insubordination than
+would be<br>
+      endured in an undergraduate? More on this subject
+hereafter."</p>
+
+<p>      "'Saunders' News-letter.'&mdash;Dr. Barret appeared at the
+head<br>
+      police-office, before Alderman Darley, to make oath that
+neither he<br>
+      nor Catty were concerned in the late outrage upon the
+pump." etc.,<br>
+      etc.</p>
+
+<p>    Paragraphs like these are flying about in every provincial
+paper of<br>
+    the empire. People shake their heads when they speak of the
+University,<br>
+    and respectable females rather cross over by King William
+and<br>
+    the Bank than pass near its precincts.</p>
+
+<p>    Tuesday Evening.</p>
+
+<p>    Would you believe it, they've expelled me! Address your
+next<br>
+    letter as usual, for they haven't got rid of me yet.</p>
+
+<p>    Yours,                   F. W.</p>
+
+<p>"So I shall find him in his old quarters," thought I, "and
+evidently not<br>
+much altered since we parted." It was not without a feeling of (I
+trust<br>
+pardonable) pride that I thought over my own career in the
+interval. My<br>
+three years of campaigning life had given me some insight into
+the world,<br>
+and some knowledge of myself, and conferred upon me a boon, of
+which I know<br>
+not the equal,&mdash;that, while yet young, and upon the very
+threshold of life,<br>
+I should have tasted the enthusiastic pleasures of a soldier's
+fortune, and<br>
+braved the dangers and difficulties of a campaign at a time when,
+under<br>
+other auspices, I might have wasted my years in unprofitable
+idleness or<br>
+careless dissipation.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XXXIX.</p>
+
+<p>LONDON.</p>
+
+<p>Twelve hours after my arrival in England I entered London. I
+cannot attempt<br>
+to record the sensations which thronged my mind as the din and
+tumult of<br>
+that mighty city awoke me from a sound sleep I had fallen into in
+the<br>
+corner of the chaise. The seemingly interminable lines of
+lamplight, the<br>
+crash of carriages, the glare of the shops, the buzz of voices,
+made up a<br>
+chaotic mass of sights and sounds, leaving my efforts at thought
+vain and<br>
+fruitless.</p>
+
+<p>Obedient to my instructions, I lost not a moment in my
+preparations to<br>
+deliver my despatches. Having dressed myself in the full uniform
+of my<br>
+corps, I drove to the Horse Guards. It was now nine o'clock, and
+I learned<br>
+that his Royal Highness had gone to dinner at Carlton House. In a
+few words<br>
+which I spoke with the aide-de-camp, I discovered that no
+information of<br>
+the fall of Ciudad Rodrigo had yet reached England. The greatest
+anxiety<br>
+prevailed as to the events of the Peninsula, from which no
+despatches had<br>
+been received for several weeks past.</p>
+
+<p>To Carlton House I accordingly bent my steps, without any
+precise<br>
+determination how I should proceed when there, nor knowing how
+far<br>
+etiquette might be an obstacle to the accomplishment of my
+mission. The<br>
+news of which I was the bearer was, however, of too important a
+character<br>
+to permit me to hesitate, and I presented myself to the
+aide-de-camp in<br>
+waiting, simply stating that I was intrusted with important
+letters to his<br>
+Royal Highness, the purport of which did not admit of delay.</p>
+
+<p>"They have not gone to dinner yet," lisped out the
+aide-de-camp, "and if<br>
+you would permit me to deliver the letters&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mine are despatches," said I, somewhat proudly, and in no way
+disposed to<br>
+cede to another the honor of personally delivering them into the
+hands of<br>
+the duke.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you had better present yourself at the levee to-morrow
+morning,"<br>
+replied he, carelessly, while he turned into one of the window
+recesses,<br>
+and resumed the conversation with one of the
+gentlemen-in-waiting.</p>
+
+<p>I stood for some moments uncertain and undecided; reluctant on
+the one<br>
+part to relinquish my claim as the bearer of the despatches, and
+equally<br>
+unwilling to defer their delivery till the following day.</p>
+
+<p>Adopting the former alternative, I took my papers from my
+sabretasche,<br>
+and was about to place them in the hands of the aide-de-camp,
+when the<br>
+folding-doors at the end of the apartment suddenly flew open, and
+a large<br>
+and handsome man with a high bald forehead entered hastily.</p>
+
+<p>The different persons in waiting sprang from their lounging
+attitudes upon<br>
+the sofas, and bowed respectfully as he passed on towards another
+door.<br>
+His dress was a plain blue coat, buttoned to the collar, and his
+only<br>
+decoration a brilliant star upon the breast. There was that air,
+however,<br>
+of high birth and bearing about him that left no doubt upon my
+mind he was<br>
+of the blood royal.</p>
+
+<p>As the aide-de-camp to whom I had been speaking opened the
+door for him to<br>
+pass out, I could hear some words in a low voice, in which the
+phrases,<br>
+"letters of importance" and "your Royal Highness" occurred. The
+individual<br>
+addressed turned suddenly about, and casting a rapid glance
+around the<br>
+room, without deigning a word in reply, walked straight up to
+where I was<br>
+standing.</p>
+
+<p>"Despatches for me, sir?" said he, shortly, taking, as he
+spoke, the packet<br>
+from my hand.</p>
+
+<p>"For his Royal Highness the commander-in-chief," said I,
+bowing<br>
+respectfully, and still uncertain in whose presence I was
+standing. He<br>
+broke the seal without answering, and as his eye caught the first
+lines of<br>
+the despatch, broke out into an exclamation of&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Ha, Peninsular news! When did you arrive, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"An hour since, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"And these letters are from&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"General Picton, your Royal Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"How glorious! How splendidly done!" muttered he to himself,
+as he ran his<br>
+eyes rapidly over the letter. "Are you Captain O'Malley, whose
+name is<br>
+mentioned here so favorably?"</p>
+
+<p>I bowed deeply in reply.</p>
+
+<p>"You are most highly spoken of, and it will give me sincere
+pleasure to<br>
+recommend you to the notice of the Prince Regent. But stay a
+moment," so<br>
+saying, he hurriedly passed from the room, leaving me overwhelmed
+at the<br>
+suddenness of the incident, and a mark of no small astonishment
+to the<br>
+different persons in waiting, who had hitherto no other idea but
+that my<br>
+despatches were from Hounslow or Knightsbridge.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain O'Malley," said an officer covered with decorations,
+and whose<br>
+slightly foreign accent bespoke the Hanoverian, "his Royal
+Highness<br>
+requests you will accompany me." The door opened as he spoke, and
+I found<br>
+myself in a most splendidly lit-up apartment,&mdash;the walls covered
+with<br>
+pictures, and the ceiling divided, into panels resplendent with
+the richest<br>
+gilding. A group of persons in court dresses were conversing in a
+low tone<br>
+as we entered, but suddenly ceased, and saluting my conductor
+respectfully,<br>
+made way for us to pass on. The folding-doors again opened as
+we<br>
+approached, and we found ourselves in a long gallery, whose
+sumptuous<br>
+furniture and costly decorations shone beneath the rich tints of
+a massive<br>
+lustre of ruby glass, diffusing a glow resembling the most
+gorgeous sunset.<br>
+Here also some persons in handsome uniform were conversing, one
+of whom<br>
+accosted my companion by the title of "Baron;" nodding familiarly
+as he<br>
+muttered a few words in German, he passed forward, and the next
+moment the<br>
+doors were thrown suddenly wide, and we entered the
+drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>The buzz of voices and the sound of laughter reassured me as I
+came<br>
+forward, and before I had well time to think where and why I was
+there, the<br>
+Duke of York advanced towards me, with a smile of peculiar
+sweetness in its<br>
+expression, and said, as he turned towards one side:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Your Royal Highness&mdash;Captain O'Malley!"</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke the Prince moved forward, and bowed slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"You've brought us capital news, Mr. O'Malley. May I beg, if
+you're not<br>
+too much tired, you'll join us at dinner. I am most anxious to
+learn the<br>
+particulars of the assault."</p>
+
+<p>As I bowed my acknowledgments to the gracious invitation, he
+continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Are you acquainted with my friend here?&mdash;but of course you
+can scarcely<br>
+be; you began too early as a soldier. So let me present you to my
+friend,<br>
+Mr. Tierney," a middle-aged man, whose broad, white forehead and
+deep-set<br>
+eyes gave a character to features that were otherwise not
+remarkable in<br>
+expression, and who bowed rather stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>Before he had concluded a somewhat labored compliment to me,
+we were joined<br>
+by a third person, whose strikingly-handsome features were lit up
+with an<br>
+expression of the most animated kind. He accosted the Prince with
+an air<br>
+of easy familiarity, and while he led him from the group,
+appeared to be<br>
+relating some anecdote which actually convulsed his Royal
+Highness with<br>
+laughter.</p>
+
+<p>Before I had time or opportunity to inquire who the individual
+could<br>
+be, dinner was announced, and the wide folding-doors being thrown
+open,<br>
+displayed the magnificent dining-room of Carlton House in all the
+blaze and<br>
+splendor of its magnificence.</p>
+
+<p>The sudden change from the rough vicissitudes of campaigning
+life to all<br>
+the luxury and voluptuous elegance of a brilliant court, created
+too much<br>
+confusion in my mind to permit of my impressions being the most
+accurate<br>
+or most collected. The splendor of the scene, the rank, but even
+more the<br>
+talent of the individuals by whom I was surrounded, had all their
+full<br>
+effect upon me. And although I found, from the tone of the
+conversation<br>
+about, how immeasurably I was their inferior, yet by a delicate
+and<br>
+courteous interest in the scene of which I had lately partaken,
+they took<br>
+away the awkwardness which in some degree was inseparable from
+the novelty<br>
+of my position among them.</p>
+
+<p>Conversing about the Peninsula with a degree of knowledge
+which I could<br>
+in no wise comprehend from those not engaged in the war, they
+appeared<br>
+perfectly acquainted with all the details of the campaign; and I
+heard on<br>
+every side of me anecdotes and stories which I scarcely believed
+known<br>
+beyond the precincts of a regiment. The Prince himself&mdash;the grace
+and charm<br>
+of whose narrative talents have seldom been excelled&mdash;was
+particularly<br>
+conspicuous, and I could not help feeling struck with his
+admirable<br>
+imitations of voice and manner. The most accomplished actor could
+not have<br>
+personated the canny, calculating spirit of the Scot, or the
+rollicking<br>
+recklessness of the Irishman, with more tact and <i>finesse</i>. But
+far above<br>
+all this, shone the person I have already alluded to as speaking
+to his<br>
+Royal Highness in the drawing-room. Combining the happiest
+conversational<br>
+eloquence with a quick, ready, and brilliant fancy, he threw from
+him in<br>
+all the careless profusion of boundless resource a shower of
+pointed and<br>
+epigrammatic witticisms. Now illustrating a really difficult
+subject by one<br>
+happy touch, as the blaze of the lightning will light up the
+whole surface<br>
+of the dark landscape beneath it; now turning the force of an
+adversary's<br>
+argument by some fallacious but unanswerable jest, accompanying
+the whole<br>
+by those fascinations of voice, look, gesture, and manner which
+have made<br>
+those who once have seen, never able to forget Brinsley
+Sheridan.</p>
+
+<p>I am not able, were I even disposed, to record more
+particularly the<br>
+details of that most brilliant evening of my life. On every side
+of me I<br>
+heard the names of those whose fame as statesmen or whose repute
+as men of<br>
+letters was ringing throughout Europe. They were then, too, not
+in the easy<br>
+indolence of ordinary life, but displaying with their utmost
+effort those<br>
+powers of wit, fancy, imagination, and eloquence which had won
+for them<br>
+elsewhere their high and exalted position. The masculine
+understanding<br>
+and powerful intellect of Tierney vied with the brilliant and
+dazzling<br>
+conceptions of Sheridan. The easy <i>bonhomie</i> and English
+heartiness of Fox<br>
+contrasted with the cutting sarcasm and sharp raillery of
+O'Kelly. While<br>
+contesting the palm with each himself, the Prince evinced powers
+of mind<br>
+and eloquent facilities of expression that, in any walk of life,
+must<br>
+have made their possessor a most distinguished man. Politics,
+war, women,<br>
+literature, the turf, the navy, the opposition, architecture, and
+the<br>
+drama, were all discussed with a degree of information and
+knowledge that<br>
+proved to me how much of real acquirements can be obtained by
+those whose<br>
+exalted station surrounds them with the collective intellect of a
+nation.<br>
+As for myself, the time flew past unconsciously. So brilliant a
+display of<br>
+all that was courtly and fascinating in manner, and all that was
+brightest<br>
+in genius, was so novel to me, that I really felt like one
+entranced. To<br>
+this hour, my impression, however confused in details, is as
+vivid as<br>
+though that evening were but yesternight; and although since that
+period<br>
+I have enjoyed numerous opportunities of meeting with the great
+and the<br>
+gifted, yet I treasure the memory of that evening as by far the
+most<br>
+exciting of my whole life.</p>
+
+<p>While I abstain from any mention of the many incidents of the
+evening,<br>
+I cannot pass over one which, occurring to myself, is valuable
+but as<br>
+showing, by one slight and passing trait, the amiable and kind
+feeling of<br>
+one whose memory is hallowed in the service.</p>
+
+<p>A little lower than myself, on the opposite side of the table,
+I perceived<br>
+an old military acquaintance whom I had first met in Lisbon. He
+was then on<br>
+Sir Charles Stewart's staff, and we met almost daily. Wishing to
+commend<br>
+myself to his recollection, I endeavored for some time to catch
+his eye,<br>
+but in vain; but at last when I thought I had succeeded, I called
+to him,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Fred, a glass of wine with you."</p>
+
+<p>When suddenly the Duke of York, who was speaking to Lord
+Hertford, turned<br>
+quickly round, and taking the decanter in his hand,
+replied,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"With pleasure, O'Malley. What shall it be, my boy?"</p>
+
+<p>I shall never forget the manly good-humor of his look as he
+sat waiting for<br>
+my answer. He had taken my speech as addressed to himself, and
+concluding<br>
+that from fatigue, the novelty of the scene, my youth, etc., I
+was not over<br>
+collected, vouchsafed in this kind way to receive it.</p>
+
+<p>"So," said he, as I stammered out my explanation, "I was
+deceived. However,<br>
+don't cheat me out of my glass of wine. Let us have it now."</p>
+
+<p>With this little anecdote, whose truth I vouch for, I shall
+conclude. More<br>
+than one now living was a witness to it, and my only regret in
+the mention<br>
+of it is my inability to convey the readiness with which he
+seized the<br>
+moment of apparent difficulty to throw the protection of his kind
+and<br>
+warm-hearted nature over the apparent folly of a boy.</p>
+
+<p>It was late when the party broke up, and as I took my leave of
+the Prince,<br>
+he once more expressed himself in gracious terms towards me, and
+gave<br>
+me personally an invitation to a breakfast at Hounslow on the
+following<br>
+Saturday.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XL.</p>
+
+<p>THE BELL AT BRISTOL.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning after my dinner at Carlton House, I found my
+breakfast-table<br>
+covered with cards and invitations. The news of the storming of
+Ciudad<br>
+Rodrigo was published in all the morning papers, and my own
+humble name, in<br>
+letters of three feet long, was exhibited in placards throughout
+the city.<br>
+Less to this circumstance, however, than to the kind and gracious
+notice of<br>
+the Prince, was I indebted for the attentions which were shown me
+by<br>
+every one; and indeed, so flattering was the reception I met
+with, and so<br>
+overwhelming the civility showered on me from all sides, that it
+required<br>
+no small effort on my part not to believe myself as much a hero
+as they<br>
+would make me. An eternal round of dinners, balls, breakfasts,
+and<br>
+entertainments filled up the entire week. I was included in
+every<br>
+invitation to Carlton House, and never appeared without receiving
+from his<br>
+Royal Highness the most striking marks of attention. Captivating
+as all<br>
+this undoubtedly was, and fascinated as I felt in being the lion
+of London,<br>
+the courted and sought after by the high, the titled, and the
+talented of<br>
+the great city of the universe, yet amidst all the splendor and
+seduction<br>
+of that new world, my heart instinctively turned from the glare
+and<br>
+brilliancy of gorgeous saloons, from the soft looks and softer
+voice of<br>
+beauty, from the words of praise as they fell from the lips of
+those whose<br>
+notice was fame itself,&mdash;to my humble home amidst the mountains
+of the<br>
+west. Delighted and charmed as I felt by that tribute of flattery
+which<br>
+associated my name with one of the most brilliant actions of my
+country,<br>
+yet hitherto I had experienced no touch of home or fatherland.
+England was<br>
+to me as the high and powerful head of my house, whose greatness
+and whose<br>
+glory shed a halo far and near, from the proudest to the humblest
+of those<br>
+that call themselves Britons; but Ireland was-the land of my
+birth,&mdash;the<br>
+land of my earliest ties, my dearest associations,&mdash;the kind
+mother whose<br>
+breath had fanned my brow in infancy, and for her in my manhood
+my heart<br>
+beat with every throb of filial affection. Need I say, then, how
+ardently<br>
+I longed to turn homeward; for independent of all else, I could
+not avoid<br>
+some self-reproach on thinking what might be the condition of
+those I<br>
+prized the most on earth, at that very moment I was engaging in
+all the<br>
+voluptuous abandonment, and all the fascinating excesses of a
+life of<br>
+pleasure. I wrote several letters home, but received no answer;
+nor did I,<br>
+in the whole round of London society, meet with a single person
+who could<br>
+give me information of my family or my friends. The Easter recess
+had sent<br>
+the different members of Parliament to their homes; and thus,
+within a<br>
+comparatively short distance of all I cared for, I could learn
+nothing of<br>
+their fate.</p>
+
+<p>The invitations of the Prince Regent, which were, of course,
+to be regarded<br>
+as commands, still detained me in London; and I knew not in what
+manner<br>
+to escape from the fresh engagements which each day heaped upon
+me. In<br>
+my anxiety upon the subject, I communicated my wishes to a friend
+on the<br>
+duke's staff, and the following morning, as I presented myself at
+his<br>
+levee, he called me towards him and addressed me:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What leave have you got, Captain O'Malley?"</p>
+
+<p>"Three months, your Royal Highness."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you desire an unattached troop; for if so, an opportunity
+occurs just<br>
+at this moment."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you most sincerely, sir, for your condescension in
+thinking of me;<br>
+but my wish is to join my regiment at the expiration of my
+leave."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I thought they told me you wanted to spend some time in
+Ireland?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only sufficient to see my friends, your Royal Highness. That
+done, I'd<br>
+rather join my regiment immediately."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, that alters the case! So then, probably, you'd like to
+leave us at<br>
+once. I see how it is; you've been staying here against your will
+all this<br>
+while. Then, don't say a word. I'll make your excuses at Carlton
+House; and<br>
+the better to cover your retreat, I'll employ you on service.
+Here, Gordon,<br>
+let Captain O'Malley have the despatches for Sir Henry Howard, at
+Cork." As<br>
+he said this, he turned towards me with an air of affected
+sternness in his<br>
+manner, and continued: "I expect, Captain O'Malley, that you will
+deliver<br>
+the despatches intrusted to your care without a moment's loss of
+time. You<br>
+will leave London within an hour. The instructions for your
+journey will<br>
+be sent to your hotel. And now," said he, again changing his
+voice to its<br>
+natural tone of kindliness and courtesy,&mdash;"and now, my boy,
+good-by, and a<br>
+safe journey to you. These letters will pay your expenses, and
+the occasion<br>
+save you all the worry of leave-taking."</p>
+
+<p>I stood confused and speechless, unable to utter a single word
+of gratitude<br>
+for such unexpected kindness. The duke saw at once my difficulty,
+and as he<br>
+shook me warmly by the hand, added, in a laughing tone,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Don't wait, now; you mustn't forget that your despatches are
+pressing."</p>
+
+<p>I bowed deeply, attempted a few words of acknowledgment,
+hesitated,<br>
+blundered, broke down, and at last got out of the room, Heaven
+knows how,<br>
+and found myself running towards Long's at the top of my speed.
+Within that<br>
+same hour I was rattling along towards Bristol as fast as four
+posters<br>
+could burn the pavement, thinking with ecstasy over the pleasures
+of my<br>
+reception in England; but far more than all, of the kindness
+evinced<br>
+towards me by him who, in every feeling of his nature, and in
+every feature<br>
+of his deportment was "every inch a prince."</p>
+
+<p>However astonished I had been at the warmth, by which I was
+treated in<br>
+London, I was still less prepared for the enthusiasm which
+greeted me in<br>
+every town through which I passed. There was not a village where
+we stopped<br>
+to change horses whose inhabitants did not simultaneously pour
+forth to<br>
+welcome me with every demonstration of delight. That the fact of
+four<br>
+horses and a yellow chaise should have elicited such testimonies
+of<br>
+satisfaction, was somewhat difficult to conceive; and even had
+the<br>
+important news that I was the bearer of despatches been
+telegraphed from<br>
+London by successive postboys, still the extraordinary excitement
+was<br>
+unaccountable. It was only on reaching Bristol that I learned to
+what<br>
+circumstance my popularity was owing. My friend Mike, in humble
+imitation<br>
+of election practices, had posted a large placard on the back of
+the<br>
+chaise, announcing, in letters of portentous length, something
+like the<br>
+following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "Bloody news! Fall of Ciudad Rodrigo! Five thousand
+prisoners<br>
+    and two hundred pieces of cannon taken!"</p>
+
+<p>This veracious and satisfactory statement, aided by Mike's
+personal<br>
+exertions, and an unwearied performance on the trumpet he had
+taken from<br>
+the French dragoon, had roused the population of every hamlet,
+and made our<br>
+journey from London to Bristol one scene of uproar, noise, and
+confusion.<br>
+All my attempts to suppress Mike's oratory or music were
+perfectly<br>
+unavailing. In fact, he had pledged my health so many times
+during the day;<br>
+he had drunk so many toasts to the success of the British arms,
+so many to<br>
+the English nation, so many in honor of Ireland, and so many in
+honor of<br>
+Mickey Free himself,&mdash;that all respect for my authority was lost
+in his<br>
+enthusiasm for my greatness, and his shouts became wilder, and
+the blasts<br>
+from the trumpet more fearful and incoherent; and finally, on the
+last<br>
+stage of our journey, having exhausted as it were every tribute
+of his<br>
+lungs, he seemed (if I were to judge by the evidence of my ears)
+to be<br>
+performing something very like a hornpipe on the roof of the
+chaise.</p>
+
+<p>Happily for me there is a limit to all human efforts, and even
+<i>his</i> powers<br>
+at length succumbed; so that, when we arrived at Bristol, I
+persuaded him<br>
+to go to bed, and I once more was left to the enjoyment of some
+quiet. To<br>
+fill up the few hours which intervened before bedtime, I strolled
+into the<br>
+coffee room. The English look of every one, and everything
+around, had<br>
+still its charm for me; and I contemplated, with no small
+admiration, that<br>
+air of neatness and propriety so observant from the bright-faced
+clock that<br>
+ticked unwearily upon the mantelpiece, to the trim waiter
+himself, with<br>
+noiseless step and a mixed look of vigilance and vacancy. The
+perfect<br>
+stillness struck me, save when a deep voice called for
+"another<br>
+brandy-and-water," and some more modestly-toned request would
+utter a<br>
+desire for "more cream." The attention of each man, absorbed in
+the folds<br>
+of his voluminous newspaper, scarcely deigning a glance at the
+new-comer<br>
+who entered, was in keeping with the general
+surroundings,&mdash;giving, in<br>
+their solemnity and gravity, a character of almost religious
+seriousness,<br>
+to what, in any other land, would be a scene of riotous and
+discordant<br>
+tumult. I was watching all this with a more than common interest,
+when the<br>
+door opened, and the waiter entered with a large placard. He was
+followed<br>
+by another with a ladder, by whose assistance he succeeded in
+attaching the<br>
+large square of paper to the wall above the fireplace. Every one
+about rose<br>
+up, curious to ascertain what was going forward; and I myself
+joined in the<br>
+crowd around the fire. The first glance of the announcement
+showed me<br>
+what it meant; and it was with a strange mixture of shame and
+confusion I<br>
+read:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "<i>Fall of Ciudad Rodrigo: with a full and detailed account
+of the<br>
+    storming of the great breach, capture of the enemy's cannon,
+etc., by<br>
+    Michael Free, 14th Light Dragoons</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Leaving the many around me busied in conjecturing who the
+aforesaid Mr.<br>
+Free might be, and what peculiar opportunities he might have
+enjoyed for<br>
+his report, I hurried from the room and called the waiter.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the meaning of the announcement you've just put up in
+the<br>
+coffee-room? Where did it come from?"</p>
+
+<p>"Most important news, sir; exclusively in the columns of the
+'<i>Bristol<br>
+Telegraph</i>,'&mdash;the gentleman has just arrived&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Who, pray? What gentleman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Free, sir, No. 13&mdash;large bed-room&mdash;blue damask&mdash;supper
+for<br>
+two&mdash;oysters&mdash;a devil&mdash;brandy-and-water-mulled port."</p>
+
+<p>"What the devil do you mean? Is the fellow at supper?"</p>
+
+<p>Somewhat shocked by the tone I ventured to assume towards the
+illustrious<br>
+narrator, the waiter merely bowed his reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Show me to his room," said I; "I should like to see him."</p>
+
+<p>"Follow me, if you please, sir,&mdash;this way. What name shall I
+say, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"You need not mind announcing me,&mdash;I'm an old
+acquaintance,&mdash;just show me<br>
+the room."</p>
+
+<p>"I beg pardon, sir, but Mr. Meekins, the editor of the
+'<i>Telegraph</i>,' is<br>
+engaged with him at present; and positive orders are given not to
+suffer<br>
+any interruption."</p>
+
+<p>"No matter; do as I bid you. Is that it? Oh, I hear his voice.
+There, that<br>
+will do. You may go down-stairs, I'll introduce myself."</p>
+
+<a name="0317"></a>
+<img alt="0317.jpg (203K)" src="0317.jpg" height="689" width="801">
+
+<p>[CAPTAIN MICKEY FREE RELATING HIS HEROIC
+DEEDS.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>So saying, and slipping a crown into the waiter's hand, I
+proceeded<br>
+cautiously towards the door, and opened it stealthily. My caution
+was,<br>
+however, needless; for a large screen was drawn across this part
+of the<br>
+room, completely concealing the door, closing which behind me, I
+took my<br>
+place beneath the shelter of this ambuscade, determined on no
+account to be<br>
+perceived by the parties.</p>
+
+<p>Seated in a large arm-chair, a smoking tumbler of mulled port
+before him,<br>
+sat my friend Mike, dressed in my full regimentals, even to the
+helmet,<br>
+which, unfortunately however for the effect, he had put on back
+foremost; a<br>
+short "dudeen" graced his lip, and the trumpet so frequently
+alluded to lay<br>
+near him.</p>
+
+<p>Opposite him sat a short, puny, round-faced little gentleman
+with rolling<br>
+eyes and a turned up nose. Numerous sheets of paper, pens, etc.,
+lay<br>
+scattered about; and he evinced, by his air and gesture, the most
+marked<br>
+and eager attention to Mr. Free's narrative, whose frequent
+interruptions,<br>
+caused by the drink and the oysters, were viewed with no small
+impatience<br>
+by the anxious editor.</p>
+
+<p>"You must remember, Captain, time's passing; the placards are
+all out. Must<br>
+be at press before one o'clock to-night,&mdash;the morning edition is
+everything<br>
+with us. You were at the first parallel, I think."</p>
+
+<p>"Devil a one o' me knows. Just ring that bell near you. Them's
+elegant<br>
+oysters; and you're not taking your drop of liquor. Here's a
+toast for you:<br>
+'May&mdash;' Whoop! raal Carlingford's, upon my conscience! See now,
+if I won't<br>
+hit the little black chap up there the first shot."</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely were the words spoken, when a little painted bust of
+Shakespeare<br>
+fell in fragments on the floor, as an oyster-shell laid him
+low.</p>
+
+<p>A faint effort at a laugh at the eccentricities of his friend
+was all the<br>
+poor editor could accomplish, while Mike's triumph knew no
+bounds.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't I tell you? But come now, are you ready? Give the pen
+a drink, if<br>
+you won't take one yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I am ready, quite ready," responded the editor.</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, and it's more nor I am. See now, here it is: The night
+was<br>
+murthering dark; you could not see a stim."</p>
+
+<p>"Not see a&mdash;a what?"</p>
+
+<p>"A stim, bad luck to you; don't you know English? Hand me the
+hot water.<br>
+Have you that down yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Pray proceed."</p>
+
+<p>"The Fifth Division was orthered up, bekase they were fighting
+chaps; the<br>
+Eighty-eighth was among them; the Rangers&mdash;Oh, upon my soul, we
+must drink<br>
+the Rangers! Here, devil a one o' me will go on till we give them
+all the<br>
+honors&mdash;Hip!&mdash;begin."</p>
+
+<p>"Hip!" sighed the luckless editor, as he rose from his chair,
+obedient to<br>
+the command.</p>
+
+<p>"Hurra! hurra! hurra! Well done! There's stuff in you yet,
+ould foolscap!<br>
+The little bottle's empty; ring again, if ye plaze.</p>
+
+<p>    'Oh, Father Magan<br>
+    Was a beautiful man,<br>
+    But a bit of a rogue, a bit of a rogue!<br>
+    He was just six feet high,<br>
+    Had a cast in his eye,<br>
+    And an illigint brogue, an illigint brogue!</p>
+
+<p>    'He was born in Killarney,<br>
+    And reared up in blarney&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"Arrah, don't be looking miserable and dissolute that way.
+Sure, I'm only<br>
+screwing myself up for you; besides, you can print the song av
+you like.<br>
+It's a sweet tune, 'Teddy, you Gander,'"</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Mr. Free, I see no prospect of our ever getting
+done."</p>
+
+<p>"The saints in Heaven forbid!" interrupted Mike, piously; "the
+evening's<br>
+young, and drink plenty. Here now, make ready!"</p>
+
+<p>The editor once more made a gesture of preparation.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, as I was saying," resumed Mike, "it was pitch dark when
+the columns<br>
+moved up, and a cold, raw night, with a little thin rain falling.
+Have you<br>
+that down?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Pray go on."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, just as it might be here, at the corner of the trench,
+I met Dr.<br>
+Quill. 'They're waiting for you, Mr. Free,' says he, 'down there.
+Picton's<br>
+asking for you.' 'Faith, and he must wait,' says I, 'for I'm
+terrible<br>
+dry.' With that, he pulled out his canteen and mixed me a
+little<br>
+brandy-and-water. 'Are you taking it without a toast?' says
+Doctor Maurice.<br>
+'Never fear,' says I; 'here's Mary Brady&mdash;'"</p>
+
+<p>"But, my dear sir," interposed Mr. Meekins, "pray <i>do</i>
+remember this is<br>
+somewhat irrelevant. In fifteen minutes it will be twelve
+o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it, ould boy, I know it. I see what you're at. You
+were going to<br>
+observe how much better we'd be for a broiled bone."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing of the kind, I assure you. For Heaven's sake, no more
+eating and<br>
+drinking!"</p>
+
+<p>"No more eating nor drinking! Why not? You've a nice notion of
+a convivial<br>
+evening. Faith, we'll have the broiled bone sure enough, and,
+what's more,<br>
+a half gallon of the strongest punch they can make us; an' I hope
+that,<br>
+grave as you are, you'll favor the company with a song."</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Mr. Free&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Arrah, none of your blarney! Don't be misthering me! Call me
+Mickey, or<br>
+Mickey Free, if you like better."</p>
+
+<p>"I protest," said the editor, with dismay, "that here we are
+two hours at<br>
+work, and we haven't got to the foot of the great breach."</p>
+
+<p>"And wasn't the army three months and a half in just getting
+that far, with<br>
+a battering train and mortars and the finest troops ever were
+seen? And<br>
+there you sit, a little fat creature, with your pen in your hand,
+grumbling<br>
+that you can't do more than the whole British army. Take care you
+don't<br>
+provoke me to beat you; for I am quiet till I'm roused. But, by
+the Rock o'<br>
+Cashel&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Here he grasped the brass trumpet with an energy that made the
+editor<br>
+spring from his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"For mercy's sake, Mr. Free&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I won't; but sit down there, and don't be bothering me
+about sieges<br>
+and battles and things you know nothing about."</p>
+
+<p>"I protest," rejoined Mr. Meekins, "that, had you not sent to
+my office<br>
+intimating your wish to communicate an account of the siege, I
+never should<br>
+have thought of intruding myself upon you. And now, since you
+appear<br>
+indisposed to afford the information in question, if you will
+permit me,<br>
+I'll wish you a very good-night."</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, and so you shall, and help me to pass one too; for not
+a step out<br>
+o' that chair shall you take till morning. Do ye think I am going
+to be<br>
+left here by myself all alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"I must observe&mdash;" said Mr. Meekins.</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure, to be sure," said Mickey; "I see what you mean.
+You're not the<br>
+best of company, it's true; but at a pinch like this&mdash;There now,
+take, your<br>
+liquor."</p>
+
+<p>"Once for all, sir," said the editor, "I would beg you to
+recollect that,<br>
+on the faith of your message to me, I have announced an account
+of the<br>
+storming of Ciudad Rodrigo for our morning edition. Are you
+prepared, may I<br>
+ask, for the consequences of my disappointing ten thousand
+readers?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's little I care for one of them. I never knew much of
+reading myself."</p>
+
+<p>"If you think to make a jest of me&mdash;" interposed Mr. Meekins,
+reddening<br>
+with passion.</p>
+
+<p>"A jest of you! Troth, it's little fun I can get out of you;
+you're as<br>
+tiresome a creature as ever I spent an evening with. See now, I
+told you<br>
+before not to provoke me; we'll have a little more drink; ring
+the bell.<br>
+Who knows but you'll turn out better by-and-by?"</p>
+
+<p>As Mike rose at these words to summon the waiter, Mr. Meekins
+seized the<br>
+opportunity to make his escape. Scarcely had he reached the door,
+however,<br>
+when he was perceived by Mickey, who hurled the trumpet at him
+with all his<br>
+force, while he uttered a shout that nearly left the poor editor
+lifeless<br>
+with terror. This time, happily, Mr. Free's aim failed him, and
+before he<br>
+could arrest the progress of his victim, he had gained the
+corridor,<br>
+and with one bound, cleared the first flight of the staircase,
+his pace<br>
+increasing every moment as Mike's denunciations grew louder and
+louder,<br>
+till at last, as he reached the street, Mr. Free's delight
+overcame his<br>
+indignation, and he threw himself upon a chair and laughed
+immoderately.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, may I never! if I didn't frighten the editor. The little
+spalpeen<br>
+couldn't eat his oysters and take his punch like a man. But sure
+if he<br>
+didn't, there's more left for his betters." So saying, he filled
+himself<br>
+a goblet and drank it off. "Mr. Free, we won't say much for
+your<br>
+inclinations, for maybe they are not the best; but here's bad
+luck to the<br>
+fellow that doesn't think you good company; and here," added he,
+again<br>
+filling his glass,&mdash;"and here's may the devil take editors and
+authors and<br>
+compositors, that won't let us alone, but must be taking our
+lives and our<br>
+songs and our little devilments, that belongs to one's own
+family, and tell<br>
+them all over the world. A lazy set of thieves you are, every one
+of you;<br>
+spending your time inventing lies, devil a more nor less; and
+here," this<br>
+time he filled again,&mdash;"and here's a hot corner and Kilkenny
+coals, that's<br>
+half sulphur, to the villain&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>For what particular class of offenders Mike's penal code was
+now devised, I<br>
+was not destined to learn; for overcome by punch and indignation,
+he gave<br>
+one loud whoop, and measured his length upon the floor. Having
+committed<br>
+him to the care of the waiters, from whom I learned more fully
+the<br>
+particulars of his acquaintance with Mr. Meekins, I enjoined
+them,<br>
+strictly, not to mention that I knew anything of the matter; and
+betook<br>
+myself to my bed sincerely rejoicing that in a few hours more
+Mike would<br>
+be again in that laud where even his eccentricities and excesses
+would be<br>
+viewed with a favorable and forgiving eye.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XLI.</p>
+
+<p>IRELAND.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd better call your master up," said the skipper to Mickey
+Free, on the<br>
+second evening after our departure from Bristol; "he said he'd
+like to have<br>
+a look at the coast."</p>
+
+<p>The words were overheard by me, as I lay between sleeping and
+waking in the<br>
+cabin of the packet, and without waiting for a second invitation,
+I rushed<br>
+upon deck. The sun was setting, and one vast surface of yellow
+golden light<br>
+played upon the water, as it rippled beneath a gentle gale. The
+white foam<br>
+curled at our prow, and the rushing sound told the speed we were
+going at.<br>
+The little craft was staggering under every sheet of her canvas,
+and her<br>
+spars creaked as her white sails bent before the breeze. Before
+us, but to<br>
+my landsman's eyes scarcely perceptible, were the ill-defined
+outlines of<br>
+cloudy darkness they called land, and which I continued to gaze
+at with a<br>
+strange sense of interest, while I heard the names of certain
+well-known<br>
+headlands assigned to apparently mere masses of fog-bank and
+vapor.</p>
+
+<p>He who has never been separated in early years, while yet the
+budding<br>
+affections of his heart are tender shoots, from the land of his
+birth and<br>
+of his home, knows nothing of the throng of sensations that crowd
+upon him<br>
+as he nears the shore of his country. The names, familiar as
+household<br>
+words, come with a train of long-buried thoughts; the feeling of
+attachment<br>
+to all we call our own&mdash;that patriotism of the heart&mdash;stirs
+strongly within<br>
+him, as the mingled thrills of hope and fear alternately move him
+to joy or<br>
+sadness.</p>
+
+<p>Hard as are the worldly struggles between the daily cares of
+him who carves<br>
+out his own career and fortune, yet he has never experienced the
+darkest<br>
+poverty of fate who has not felt what it is to be a wanderer,
+without a<br>
+country to lay claim to. Of all the desolations that visit us,
+this is the<br>
+gloomiest and the worst. The outcast from the land of his
+fathers, whose<br>
+voice must never be heard within the walls where his infancy was
+nurtured,<br>
+nor his step be free upon the mountains where he gambolled in his
+youth,<br>
+this is indeed wretchedness. The instinct of country grows and
+strengthens<br>
+with our years; the joys of early life are linked with it; the
+hopes of<br>
+age point towards it; and he who knows not the thrill of ecstasy
+some<br>
+well-remembered, long-lost-sight-of place can bring to his heart
+when<br>
+returning after years of absence, is ignorant of one of the
+purest sources<br>
+of happiness of our nature.</p>
+
+<p>With what a yearning of the heart, then, did I look upon the
+dim and misty<br>
+cliffs, that mighty framework of my island home, their stern
+sides lashed<br>
+by the blue waters of the ocean, and their summits lost within
+the clouds!<br>
+With what an easy and natural transition did my mind turn from
+the wild<br>
+mountains and the green valleys to their hardy sons, who toiled
+beneath<br>
+the burning sun of the Peninsula; and how, as some twinkling
+light of the<br>
+distant shore would catch my eye, did I wonder within myself
+whether<br>
+beside that hearth and board there might not sit some whose
+thoughts<br>
+were wandering over the sea beside the bold steeps of El Bodon,
+or the<br>
+death-strewn plain of Talavera,&mdash;their memories calling up some
+trait of<br>
+him who was the idol of his home; whose closing lids some fond
+mother had<br>
+watched over; above whose peaceful slumber her prayers had
+fallen; but<br>
+whose narrow bed was now beneath the breach of Badajos, and his
+sleep the<br>
+sleep that knows not waking!</p>
+
+<p>I know not if in my sad and sorrowing spirit I did not envy
+him who thus<br>
+had met a soldier's fate,&mdash;for what of promise had my own! My
+hopes of<br>
+being in any way instrumental to my poor uncle's happiness grew
+hourly<br>
+less. His prejudices were deeply rooted and of long standing; to
+have asked<br>
+him to surrender any of what he looked upon as the prerogatives
+of his<br>
+house and name, would be to risk the loss of his esteem. What
+then remained<br>
+for me? Was I to watch, day by day and hour by hour, the falling
+ruin of<br>
+our fortunes? Was I to involve myself in the petty warfare of
+unavailing<br>
+resistance to the law? And could I stand aloof from my best, my
+truest, my<br>
+earliest friend, and see him, alone and unaided, oppose his weak
+and final<br>
+struggle to the unrelenting career of persecution. Between these
+two<br>
+alternatives the former could be my only choice; and what a
+choice!</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how I thought over the wild heroism of the battle-field,
+the reckless<br>
+fury of the charge, the crash, the death-cry, and the sad picture
+of the<br>
+morrow, when all was past, and a soldier's glory alone remained
+to shed its<br>
+high halo over the faults and the follies of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>As night fell, the twinkling of the distant lighthouses&mdash;some
+throwing<br>
+a column of light from the very verge of the horizon, others
+shining<br>
+brightly, like stars, from some lofty promontory&mdash;marked the
+different<br>
+outlines of the coast, and conveyed to me the memory of that
+broken and<br>
+wild mountain tract that forms the bulwark of the Green Isle
+against the<br>
+waves of the Atlantic. Alone and silently I trod the deck, now
+turning to<br>
+look towards the shore, where I thought I could detect the
+position of some<br>
+well-known headland, now straining my eyes seaward to watch some
+bright<br>
+and flitting star, as it rose from or merged beneath the foaming
+water,<br>
+denoting the track of the swift pilot-boat, or the hardy lugger
+of the<br>
+fisherman; while the shrill whistle of the floating sea-gull was
+the only<br>
+sound save the rushing waves that broke in spray upon our
+quarter.</p>
+
+<p>What is it that so inevitably inspires sad and depressing
+thoughts as we<br>
+walk the deck of some little craft in the silence of the night's
+dark<br>
+hours? No sense of danger near, we hold on our course swiftly and
+steadily,<br>
+cleaving the dark waves and bending gracefully beneath the
+freshening<br>
+breeze. Yet still the motion, which, in the bright sunshine of
+the noonday<br>
+tells of joy and gladness, brings now no touch of pleasure to our
+hearts.<br>
+The dark and frowning sky, the boundless expanse of gloomy water,
+spread<br>
+like some gigantic pall around us, and our thoughts either turn
+back upon<br>
+the saddest features of the past or look forward to the future
+with a<br>
+sickly hope that all may not be as we fear it.</p>
+
+<p>Mine were, indeed, of the gloomiest; and the selfishness alone
+of the<br>
+thought prevented me from wishing that, like many another, I had
+fallen by<br>
+a soldier's death on the plains of the Peninsula!</p>
+
+<p>As the night wore on, I wrapped myself in my cloak and lay
+down beneath the<br>
+bulwark. The whole of my past life came in review before me, and
+I thought<br>
+over my first meeting with Lucy Dashwood; the thrill of boyish
+admiration<br>
+gliding into love; the hopes, the fears, that stirred my heart;
+the firm<br>
+resolve to merit her affection, which made me a soldier. Alas,
+how little<br>
+thought she of him to whose whole life she had been a guide-star
+and a<br>
+beacon! And as I thought over the hard-fought fields, the long,
+fatiguing<br>
+marches, the nights around the watch-fires, and felt how, in the
+whirl<br>
+and enthusiasm of a soldier's life, the cares and sorrows of
+every day<br>
+existence are forgotten, I shuddered to reflect upon the career
+that might<br>
+now open before me. To abandon, perhaps forever, the glorious
+path I had<br>
+been pursuing for a life of indolence and weariness, while my
+name, that<br>
+had already, by the chance of some fortunate circumstances, begun
+to be<br>
+mentioned with a testimony of approval, should be lost in
+oblivion or<br>
+remembered but as that of one whose early promise was not borne
+out by the<br>
+deeds of his manhood.</p>
+
+<p>As day broke, overcome by watching, I slept, but was soon
+awoke by the stir<br>
+and bustle around me. The breeze had freshened, and we were
+running under<br>
+a reefed mainsail and foresail; and as the little craft bounded
+above the<br>
+blue water, the white foam crested above her prow, and ran in
+boiling<br>
+rivulets along towards the after-deck. The tramp of the seamen,
+the hoarse<br>
+voice of the captain, the shrill cry of the sea-birds, betokened,
+however,<br>
+nothing of dread or danger; and listlessly I leaned upon my elbow
+and asked<br>
+what was going forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, sir; only making ready to drop our anchor."</p>
+
+<p>"Are we so near shore, then?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You've only to round that point to windward, and have a clear
+run into<br>
+Cork harbor."</p>
+
+<p>I sprang at once to my legs. The land-fog prevented my seeing
+anything<br>
+whatever, but I thought that in the breeze, fresh and balmy as it
+blew, I<br>
+could feel the wind off shore. "At last," said I,&mdash;"at last!" as
+I stepped<br>
+into the little wherry which shot alongside of us, and we glided
+into the<br>
+still basin of Cove. How I remember every white-walled cottage,
+and the<br>
+beetling cliffs, and that bold headland beside which the valley
+opens, with<br>
+its dark-green woods, and then Spike Island. And what a stir is
+yonder,<br>
+early as it is; the men-of-war tenders seem alive with people,
+while still<br>
+the little village is sunk in slumber, not a smoke-wreath rising
+from its<br>
+silent hearths. Every plash of the oars in the calm water as I
+neared the<br>
+land, every chance word of the bronzed and hardy fisherman, told
+upon my<br>
+heart. I felt it was my home.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it beautiful, sir? Isn't it illigant?" said a voice
+behind me, which<br>
+there could be little doubt in my detecting, although I had not
+seen the<br>
+individual since I left England.</p>
+
+<p>"Is not what beautiful?" replied I, rather harshly, at the
+interruption of<br>
+my own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"Ireland, to be sure; and long life to her!" cried he, with a
+cheer that<br>
+soon found its responsive echoes in the hearts of our sailors,
+who seconded<br>
+the sentiment with all their energy.</p>
+
+<p>"How am I to get up to Cork, lads?" said I. "I am pressed for
+time, and<br>
+must get forward."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll row your honor the whole way, av it's plazing to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, thank you, I'd rather find some quicker mode of
+proceeding."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe you'd have a chaise? There's an elegant one at
+M'Cassidy's."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, the blind mare's in foal," said the bow oar. "The devil
+a step she<br>
+can go out of a walk; so, your honor, take Tim Riley's car, and
+you'll get<br>
+up cheap. Not that you care for money; but he's going up at eight
+o'clock<br>
+with two young ladies."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, be-gorra!" said the other, "and so he is. And faix, ye
+might do worse;<br>
+they're nice craytures."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "your advice seems good; but perhaps they
+might object to<br>
+my company."</p>
+
+<p>"I've no fear; they're always with the officers. Sure, the
+Miss<br>
+Dalrymples&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The Miss Dalrymples! Push ahead, boys; it must be later than
+I thought. We<br>
+must get the chaise; I can't wait."</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes more brought us to land.</p>
+
+<p>My arrangements were soon made, and as my impatience to press
+forward<br>
+became greater the nearer I drew to my destination, I lost not a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>The yellow chaise&mdash;sole glory of Cove&mdash;was brought forth at my
+request; and<br>
+by good fortune, four posters which had been down the preceding
+evening<br>
+from Cork to some gentleman's seat near were about to return.
+These were<br>
+also pressed into my service; and just as the first early riser
+of the<br>
+little village was drawing his curtain to take a half-closed
+eye-glance<br>
+upon the breaking morning, I rattled forth upon my journey at a
+pace which,<br>
+could I only have secured its continuance, must soon have
+terminated my<br>
+weary way.</p>
+
+<p>Beautiful as the whole line of country is, I was totally
+unconscious of it;<br>
+and even Mike's conversational powers, divided as they were
+between myself<br>
+and the two postilions, were fruitless in arousing me from the
+deep<br>
+pre-occupation of my mind by thoughts of home.</p>
+
+<p>It was, then, with some astonishment I heard the boy upon the
+wheeler ask<br>
+whither he should drive me to.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell his honor to wake up; we're in Cork now."</p>
+
+<p>"In Cork! Impossible, already!"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, may be so; but it's Cork, sure enough."</p>
+
+<p>"Drive to the 'George.' It's not far from the
+commander-in-chief's<br>
+quarters."</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis five minutes' walk, sir. You'll be there before they're
+put to<br>
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"Horses for Fermoy!" shouted out the postilions, as we tore up
+to the door<br>
+in a gallop. I sprang out, and by the assistance of the waiter,
+discovered<br>
+Sir Henry Howard's quarters, to whom my despatches were
+addressed. Having<br>
+delivered them into the hands of an aide-de-camp, who sat bolt
+upright in<br>
+his bed, rubbing his eyes to appear awake, I again hurried
+down-stairs, and<br>
+throwing myself into the chaise, continued my journey.</p>
+
+<p>"Them's beautiful streets, any how!" said Mike, "av they
+wasn't kept so<br>
+dirty, and the houses so dark, and the pavement bad. That's Mr.
+Beamish's,<br>
+that fine house there with the brass rapper and the green lamp
+beside it;<br>
+and there's the hospital. Faix, and there's the place we beat the
+police<br>
+when I was here before; and the house with the sign of the
+Highlander is<br>
+thrown down; and what's the big building with the stone posts at
+the door?"</p>
+
+<p>"The bank, sir," said the postilion, with a most deferential
+air as Mike<br>
+addressed him. "What bank, acushla?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a one of me knows, sir; but they call it the bank, though
+it's only an<br>
+empty house."</p>
+
+<p>"Cary and Moore's bank, perhaps?" said I, having heard that in
+days long<br>
+past some such names had failed in Cork for a large amount.</p>
+
+<p>"So it is; your honor's right," cried the postilion; while
+Mike, standing<br>
+up on the box, and menacing the house with his clinched fist,
+shouted out<br>
+at the very top of his voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, bad luck to your cobwebbed windows and iron railings!
+Sure, it's my<br>
+father's son ought to hate the sight of you."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope, Mike, your father never trusted his property in such
+hands?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't suspect he did, your honor. He never put much belief
+in the banks;<br>
+but the house cost him dear enough without that."</p>
+
+<p>As I could not help feeling some curiosity in this matter, I
+pressed Mickey<br>
+for an explanation.</p>
+
+<p>"But maybe it's not Cary and Moore's, after all; and I may be
+cursing<br>
+dacent people."</p>
+
+<p>Having reassured his mind by telling him that the reservation
+he made by<br>
+the doubt would tell in their favor should he prove mistaken, he
+afforded<br>
+me the following information:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"When my father&mdash;the heavens be his bed!&mdash;was in the 'Cork,'
+they put him<br>
+one night on guard at that same big house you just passed, av it
+was the<br>
+same; but if it wasn't that, it was another. And it was a
+beautiful fine<br>
+night in August and the moon up, and plenty of people walking
+about,<br>
+and all kinds of fun and devilment going on,&mdash;drinking and
+dancing and<br>
+everything.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my father was stuck up there with his musket, to walk
+up and down,<br>
+and not say, 'God save you kindly,' or the time of day or
+anything, but<br>
+just march as if he was in the barrack-yard; and by reason of his
+being the<br>
+man he was he didn't like it half, but kept cursing and swearing
+to himself<br>
+like mad when he saw pleasant fellows and pretty girls going by,
+laughing<br>
+and joking.</p>
+
+<p>"'Good-evening, Mickey,' says one. 'Fine sport ye have all to
+yourself,<br>
+with your long feather in your cap.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Arrah, look how proud he is,' says another, 'with his head
+up as if he<br>
+didn't see a body.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Shoulder, hoo!' cried a drunken chap, with a shovel in his
+hand. Then<br>
+they all began laughing away at my father.</p>
+
+<p>"'Let the dacent man alone,' said an ould fellow in a wig.
+'Isn't he<br>
+guarding the bank, wid all the money in it?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Faix, he isn't,' says another; 'for there's none left.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What's that you're saying?' says my father.</p>
+
+<p>"'Just that the bank's broke; devil a more!' says he.</p>
+
+<p>"'And there's no goold in it?' says my father.</p>
+
+<p>'"Divil a guinea.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Nor silver?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, nor silver; nor as much as sixpence, either.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Didn't ye hear that all day yesterday when the people was
+coming in with<br>
+their notes, the chaps there were heating the guineas in a
+frying-pan,<br>
+pretending that they were making them as fast as they could; and
+sure, when<br>
+they had a batch red-hot they spread them out to cool; and what
+betune the<br>
+hating and the cooling, and the burning the fingers counting
+them, they<br>
+kept the bank open to three o'clock, and then they ran away.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Is it truth yer telling?' says my father.</p>
+
+<p>"'Sorra word o' lie in it! Myself had two-and-fourpence of
+their notes.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And so they're broke,' says my father, 'and nothing
+left?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Not a brass farden.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And what am I staying here for, I wonder, if there's nothing
+to guard?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Faix, if it isn't for the pride of the thing&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, sorra taste!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, may be for divarsion.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Nor that either.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Faix, then you're a droll man, to spend the evening that
+way,' says he;<br>
+and all the crowd&mdash;for there was a crowd&mdash;said the same. So with
+that my<br>
+father unscrewed his bayonet, and put his piece on his shoulder,
+and walked<br>
+off to his bed in the barrack as peaceable as need be. But well,
+when they<br>
+came to relieve him, wasn't there a raal commotion? And faith,
+you see, it<br>
+went mighty hard with my father the next morning; for the bank
+was open<br>
+just as usual, and my father was sintinced to fifty lashes, but
+got<br>
+off with a week in prison, and three more rowling a big stone in
+the<br>
+barrack-yard."</p>
+
+<p>Thus chatting away, the time passed over, until we arrived at
+Fermoy.<br>
+Here there was some little delay in procuring horses; and during
+the<br>
+negotiation, Mike, who usually made himself master of the
+circumstances of<br>
+every place through which he passed, discovered that the grocer's
+shop of<br>
+the village was kept by a namesake, and possibly a relation of
+his own.</p>
+
+<p>"I always had a notion, Mister Charles, that I came from a
+good stock; and<br>
+sure enough, here's 'Mary Free' over the door there, and a
+beautiful place<br>
+inside; full of tay and sugar and gingerbread and glue and coffee
+and bran,<br>
+pickled herrings, soap, and many other commodities."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you'd like to claim kindred, Mike," said I,
+interrupting; "I'm<br>
+sure she'd feel flattered to discover a relative in a Peninsular
+hero."</p>
+
+<p>"It's just what I'm thinking; av we were going to pass the
+evening here,<br>
+I'd try if I couldn't make her out a second cousin at least."</p>
+
+<p>Fortune, upon this occasion, seconded Mike's wishes, for when
+the horses<br>
+made their appearance, I learned, to my surprise, that the near
+side one<br>
+would not bear a saddle, and the off-sider could only run on his
+own<br>
+side. In this conjuncture, the postilion was obliged to drive
+from what,<br>
+<i>Hibernic&egrave;</i> speaking, is called the perch,&mdash;no ill-applied
+denomination to<br>
+a piece of wood which, about the thickness of one's arm, is hung
+between<br>
+the two fore-springs, and serves as a resting-place in which the
+luckless<br>
+wight, weary of the saddle, is not sorry to repose himself.</p>
+
+<p>"What's to be done?" cried I. "There's no room within; my
+traps barely<br>
+leave space for myself among them."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, sir," said the postilion, "the other gentleman can
+follow in the<br>
+morning coach; and if any accident happens to yourself on the
+road, by<br>
+reason of a break-down, he'll be there as soon as yourself."</p>
+
+<p>This, at least, was an agreeable suggestion, and as I saw it
+chimed with<br>
+Mike's notions, I acceded at once; he came running up at the
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I had a peep at her through the window, Mister Charles, and,
+faix, she has<br>
+a great look of the family."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mickey, I'll leave you twenty-four hours to cultivate
+the<br>
+acquaintance; and to a man like you the time, I know, is ample.
+Follow me<br>
+by the morning's coach. Till then, good-by."</p>
+
+<p>Away we rattled once more, and soon left the town behind us.
+The wild<br>
+mountain tract which stretched on either side of the road
+presented one<br>
+bleak and brown surface, unrelieved by any trace of tillage or
+habitation;<br>
+an apparently endless succession of fern-clad hills lay on every
+side;<br>
+above, the gloomy sky of leaden, lowering aspect, frowned darkly;
+the sad<br>
+and wailing cry of the pewet or the plover was the only sound
+that broke<br>
+the stillness, and far as the eye could reach, a dreary waste
+extended.<br>
+The air, too, was cold and chilly; it was one of those days
+which, in our<br>
+springs, seemed to cast a retrospective glance towards the winter
+they have<br>
+left behind them. The prospect was no cheering one; from heaven
+above or<br>
+earth below there came no sight nor sound of gladness. The rich
+glow of the<br>
+Peninsular landscape was still fresh in my memory,&mdash;the luxurious
+verdure;<br>
+the olive, the citron, and the vine; the fair valleys teeming
+with<br>
+abundance; the mountains terraced with their vineyards; the
+blue<br>
+transparent sky spreading o'er all; while the very air was rife
+with the<br>
+cheering song of birds that peopled every grove. What a contrast
+was here!<br>
+We travelled on for miles, but no village nor one human face did
+we see.<br>
+Far in the distance a thin wreath of smoke curled upward; but it
+came from<br>
+no hearth; it arose from one of those field-fires by which
+spendthrift<br>
+husbandry cultivates the ground. It was, indeed, sad; and yet, I
+know not<br>
+how, it spoke more home to my heart than all the brilliant
+display and all<br>
+the voluptuous splendor I had witnessed in London. By degrees
+some traces<br>
+of wood made their appearance, and as we descended the mountain
+towards<br>
+Cahir, the country assumed a more cultivated and cheerful
+look,&mdash;patches of<br>
+corn or of meadow-land stretched on either side, and the voice of
+children<br>
+and the lowing of oxen mingled with the cawing of the rooks, as
+in dense<br>
+clouds they followed the ploughman's track. The changed features
+of the<br>
+prospect resembled the alternate phases of temperament of the
+dweller on<br>
+the soil,&mdash;the gloomy determination; the smiling carelessness;
+the dark<br>
+spirit of boding; the reckless jollity; the almost savage
+ferocity of<br>
+purpose, followed by a child-like docility and a womanly
+softness; the<br>
+grave, the gay, the resolute, the fickle; the firm, the yielding,
+the<br>
+unsparing, and the tender-hearted,&mdash;blending their contrarieties
+into one<br>
+nature, of whose capabilities one cannot predicate the bounds,
+but to whom,<br>
+by some luckless fatality of fortune, the great rewards of life
+have been<br>
+generally withheld until one begins to feel that the curse of
+Swift was<br>
+less the sarcasm wrung from indignant failures than the cold and
+stern<br>
+prophecy of the moralist.</p>
+
+<p>But how have I fallen into this strain! Let me rather turn my
+eyes forward<br>
+towards my home. How shall I find all there? Have his altered
+fortunes<br>
+damped the warm ardor of my poor uncle's heart? Is his smile
+sicklied over<br>
+by sorrow; or shall I hear his merry laugh and his cheerful voice
+as in<br>
+days of yore? How I longed to take my place beside that hearth,
+and in the<br>
+same oak-chair where I have sat telling the bold adventures of a
+fox-chase<br>
+or some long day upon the moors, speak of the scenes of my
+campaigning<br>
+life, and make known to him those gallant fellows by whose side I
+have<br>
+charged in battle, or sat in the bivouac! How will he glory in
+the<br>
+soldier-like spirit and daring energy of Fred Power! How will he
+chuckle<br>
+over the blundering earnestness and Irish warmth of
+O'Shaughnessy! How will<br>
+he laugh at the quaint stories and quainter jests of Maurice
+Quill! And how<br>
+often will he wish once more to be young in hand as in heart to
+mingle with<br>
+such gay fellows, with no other care, no other sorrow, to depress
+him, save<br>
+the passing fortune of a soldier's life!</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XLII.</p>
+
+<p>THE RETURN.</p>
+
+<p>A rude shock awoke me as I lay asleep in the corner of the
+chaise; a shout<br>
+followed, and the next moment the door was torn open, and I heard
+the<br>
+postilion's voice crying to me:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Spring out! Jump out quickly, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>A whole battery of kicks upon the front panel drowned the rest
+of his<br>
+speech; but before I could obey his injunction, he was pitched
+upon the<br>
+road, the chaise rolled over and the pole snapped short in the
+middle,<br>
+while the two horses belabored the carriage and each other with
+all their<br>
+might. Managing, as well as I was able, to extricate myself, I
+leaped out<br>
+upon the road, and by the aid of a knife, and at the cost of some
+bruises,<br>
+succeeded in freeing the horses from their tackle. The postboy,
+who had<br>
+escaped without any serious injury, labored manfully to aid me,
+blubbering<br>
+the whole time upon the consequences his misfortune would bring
+down upon<br>
+his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Bad luck to ye!" cried he, apostrophizing the off-horse, a
+tall, raw-boned<br>
+beast, with a Roman nose, a dipped back, and a tail ragged and
+jagged like<br>
+a hand-saw,&mdash;"bad luck to ye! there never was a good one of your
+color!"</p>
+
+<p>This, for the information of the "unjockeyed," I may add, was
+a species of<br>
+brindled gray.</p>
+
+<p>"How did it happen, Patsey; how did it happen, my lad?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was the heap o' stones they left in the road since last
+autumn; and<br>
+though I riz him at it fairly, he dragged the ould mare over it
+and broke<br>
+the pole. Oh, wirra, wirra!" cried he, wringing his hands in an
+agony of<br>
+grief, "sure there's neither luck nor grace to be had with ye
+since the day<br>
+ye drew the judge down to the last assizes!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what's to be done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sorra a bit o' me knows; the shay's ruined intirely, and the
+ould divil<br>
+there knows he's conquered us. Look at him there, listening to
+every word<br>
+we're saying! You eternal thief, may be its ploughing you'd like
+better!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come," said I, "this will never get us forward. What
+part of the<br>
+country are we in?"</p>
+
+<p>"We left Banagher about four miles behind us; that's Killimur
+you see with<br>
+the smoke there in the hollow."</p>
+
+<p>Now, although I did not see Killimur (for the gray mist of the
+morning<br>
+prevented me recognizing any object a few hundred yards distant),
+yet from<br>
+the direction in which he pointed, and from the course of the
+Shannon,<br>
+which I could trace indistinctly, I obtained a pretty accurate
+notion of<br>
+where we were.</p>
+
+<p>"Then we are not very far from Portumna?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just a pleasant walk before your breakfast."</p>
+
+<p>"And is there not a short cut to O'Malley Castle over that
+mountain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Faix, and so there is; and ye can be no stranger to these
+parts if ye know<br>
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"I have travelled it before now. Just tell me, is the wooden
+bridge<br>
+standing over the little stream? It used to be carried away every
+winter in<br>
+my time."</p>
+
+<p>"It's just the same now. You'll have to pass by the upper
+ford; but it<br>
+comes to the same, for that will bring you to the back gate of
+the demesne,<br>
+and one way is just as short as the other."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it, I know it; so now, do you follow me with my
+luggage to the<br>
+castle, and I'll set out on foot."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, I threw off my cloak, and prepared myself for a
+sharp walk of<br>
+some eight miles over the mountain. As I reached the little knoll
+of land<br>
+which, overlooking the Shannon, affords a view of several miles
+in every<br>
+direction, I stopped to gaze upon the scene where every object
+around was<br>
+familiar to me from infancy: the broad, majestic river, sweeping
+in bold<br>
+curves between the wild mountains of Connaught and the wooded
+hills and<br>
+cultivated slopes of the more fertile Munster, the tall chimneys
+of many a<br>
+house rose above the dense woods where in my boyhood I had spent
+hours and<br>
+days of happiness. One last look I turned towards the scene of my
+late<br>
+catastrophe ere I began to descend the mountain. The postboy,
+with the<br>
+happy fatalism of his country, and a firm trust in the future,
+had<br>
+established himself in the interior of the chaise, from which a
+blue curl<br>
+of smoke wreathed upward from his pipe; the horses grazed
+contentedly by<br>
+the roadside; and were I to judge from the evidence before me, I
+should say<br>
+that I was the only member of the party inconvenienced by the
+accident. A<br>
+thin sleeting of rain began to fall; the wind blew sharply in my
+face, and<br>
+the dark clouds, collecting in masses above, seemed to threaten a
+storm.<br>
+Without stopping for even a passing look at the many well-known
+spots<br>
+about, I pressed rapidly on. My old experience upon the moors had
+taught<br>
+me that sling trot in which jumping from hillock to hillock over
+the<br>
+boggy surface, you succeed in accomplishing your journey not only
+with<br>
+considerable speed, but perfectly dryshod.</p>
+
+<p>By the lonely path which I travelled, it was unlikely I should
+meet any<br>
+one. It was rarely traversed except by the foot of the sportsman,
+or some<br>
+stray messenger from the castle to the town of Banagher. Its
+solitude,<br>
+however, was in no wise distasteful to me; my heart was full to
+bursting.<br>
+Each moment as I walked some new feature of my home presented
+itself<br>
+before me. Now it was all happiness and comfort; the scene of its
+ancient<br>
+hospitable board, its warm hearth, its happy faces, and its ready
+welcome<br>
+were all before me, and I increased my speed to the utmost, when
+suddenly a<br>
+sense of sad and sorrowing foreboding would draw around me, and
+the image<br>
+of my uncle's sick-bed, his worn features, his pallid look, his
+broken<br>
+voice would strike upon my heart, and all the changes that
+poverty,<br>
+desertion, and decay can bring to pass would fall upon my heart,
+and weak<br>
+and trembling I would stand for some moments unable to
+proceed.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, how many a reproachful thought came home to me at what I
+scrupled<br>
+not to call to myself the desertion of my home! Oh, how many a
+prayer I<br>
+uttered, in all the fervor of devotion, that my selfish
+waywardness and<br>
+my yearning for ambition might not bring upon me, in after-life,
+years<br>
+of unavailing regret! As I thought thus, I reached the brow of a
+little<br>
+mountain ridge, beneath which, at a distance of scarcely more
+than a mile,<br>
+the dark woods of O'Malley Castle stretched, before me. The house
+itself<br>
+was not visible, for it was situated in a valley beside the
+river. But<br>
+there lay the whole scene of my boyhood: there the little creek
+where my<br>
+boat was kept, and where I landed on the morning after my duel
+with Bodkin;<br>
+there stretched for many a mile the large, callow meadows, where
+I trained<br>
+my horses, and schooled them for the coming season; and far in
+the<br>
+distance, the brown and rugged peak of old Scariff was lost in
+the clouds.<br>
+The rain by this time had ceased, the wind had fallen, and an
+almost<br>
+unnatural stillness prevailed around; but yet the heavy masses of
+vapor<br>
+frowned ominously, and the leaden hue of land and water wore a
+gloomy and<br>
+depressing aspect. My impatience to get on increased every
+moment, and<br>
+descending the mountain at the top of my speed, I at length
+reached the<br>
+little oak paling that skirted the wood, opened the little
+wicket, and<br>
+entered the path. It was the self-same one I had trod in revery
+and<br>
+meditation the night before I left my home. I remember, too,
+sitting down<br>
+beside the little well which, enclosed in a frame of rock, ran
+trickling<br>
+across the path to be lost among the gnarled roots and fallen
+leaves<br>
+around. Yes, this was the very spot.</p>
+
+<p>Overcome for the instant by my exertion and by my emotion, I
+sat down upon<br>
+the stone, and taking off my cap, bathed my heated and throbbing
+temples in<br>
+the cold spring, Refreshed at once, I was about to rise and press
+onward,<br>
+when suddenly my attention was caught by a sound which, faint
+from<br>
+distance, scarce struck upon my ear. I listened again; but all
+was still<br>
+and silent, the dull splash of the river as it broke upon the
+reedy shore<br>
+was the only sound I heard. Thinking it probably some mere
+delusion of my<br>
+heated imagination, I rose to push forward; but at the moment a
+slight<br>
+breeze stirred in the leaves around me, the light branches
+rustled and bent<br>
+beneath it, and a low moaning sound swelled upward, increasing
+each instant<br>
+as it came; like the distant roar of some mighty torrent it grew
+louder as<br>
+the wind bore it towards me, and now falling, now swelling, it
+burst<br>
+forth into one loud, prolonged cry of agony and grief. O God! it
+was the<br>
+death-wail! I fell upon my knees, my hands clasped in agony; the
+sweat<br>
+of misery dropped off my brow, and with a heart bleeding and
+breaking I<br>
+prayed&mdash;I know not what. Again the terrible cry smote upon my
+ear, and I<br>
+could mark the horrible cadences of the death-song, as the voices
+of the<br>
+mourners joined in chorus.</p>
+
+<p>My suspense became too great to bear. I dashed madly forward,
+one sound<br>
+still ringing in my ears, one horrid image before my eyes. I
+reached the<br>
+garden wall; I cleared the little rivulet beside the
+flower-garden; I<br>
+traversed its beds (neglected and decayed); I gained the avenue,
+taking<br>
+no heed of the crowds before me,&mdash;some on foot, some on
+horseback, others<br>
+mounted upon the low country car, many seated in groups upon the
+grass,<br>
+their heads bowed upon their bosoms, silent and speechless. As I
+neared the<br>
+house the whole approach was crowded with carriages and horsemen.
+At the<br>
+foot of the large flight of steps stood the black and mournful
+hearse,<br>
+its plumes nodding in the breeze. With the speed of madness and
+the<br>
+recklessness of despair I tore my way through the thickly
+standing groups<br>
+upon the steps; I could not speak, I could not utter. Once more
+the<br>
+frightful cry swelled upward, and in its wild notes seemed to
+paralyze me;<br>
+for with my hands upon my temples, I stood motionless and still.
+A heavy<br>
+footfall as of persons marching in procession came nearer and
+nearer, and<br>
+as the sounds without sank into sobs of bitterness and woe, the
+black pall<br>
+of a coffin, borne on men's shoulders, appeared at the door, and
+an old man<br>
+whose gray hair floated in the breeze, and across whose stern
+features a<br>
+struggle for self-mastery&mdash;a kind of spasmodic effort&mdash;was
+playing, held<br>
+out his hand to enforce silence. His eye, lack-lustre and dimmed
+with age,<br>
+roved over the assembled multitude, but there was no recognition
+in his<br>
+look until at last he turned it on me. A slight hectic flush
+colored his<br>
+pale cheek, his lip trembled, he essayed to speak, but could not.
+I sprang<br>
+towards him, but choked by agony, I could not utter; my look,
+however,<br>
+spoke what my tongue could not. He threw his arms around me, and
+muttering<br>
+the words, "Poor Godfrey!" pointed to the coffin.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XLIII.</p>
+
+<p>HOME.</p>
+
+<p>Many, many years have passed away since the time I am now
+about to speak<br>
+of, and yet I cannot revert, even for a moment, to the period
+without a sad<br>
+and depressing feeling at my heart. The wreck of fortune, the
+thwarting of<br>
+ambition, the failure in enterprise, great though they be, are
+endurable<br>
+evils. The never-dying hope that youth is blessed with will find
+its<br>
+resting-place still within the breast, and the baffled and beaten
+will<br>
+struggle on unconquered; but for the death of friends, for the
+loss of<br>
+those in whom our dearest affections were centred, there is no
+solace,&mdash;the<br>
+terrible "never" of the grave knows no remorse, and even memory,
+that in<br>
+our saddest hours can bring bright images and smiling faces
+before us,<br>
+calls up here only the departed shade of happiness, a passing
+look at that<br>
+Eden of our joys from which we are separated forever. And the
+desolation of<br>
+the heart is never perfect till it has felt the echoes of a last
+farewell<br>
+on earth reverberating within it.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, with what tortures of self-reproach we think of all former
+intercourse<br>
+with him that is gone! How would we wish to live our lives once
+more,<br>
+correcting each passage of unkindness or neglect! How deeply do
+we blame<br>
+ourselves for occasions of benefit lost, and opportunities
+unprofited by;<br>
+and how unceasingly, through after-life, the memory of the
+departed recurs<br>
+to us! In all the ties which affection and kindred weave around
+us, one<br>
+vacant spot is there, unseen and unknown by others, which no
+blandishments<br>
+of love, no caresses of friendship can fill up; although the rank
+grass<br>
+and the tall weeds of the churchyard may close around the humble
+tomb,<br>
+the cemetery of the heart is holy and sacred, pure from all the
+troubled<br>
+thoughts and daily cares of the busy world. To that hallowed spot
+do we<br>
+retire as into our chamber, and when unrewarded efforts bring
+discomfiture<br>
+and misery to our minds, when friends are false, and cherished
+hopes are<br>
+blasted, we think on those who never ceased to love till they had
+ceased to<br>
+live; and in the lonely solitude of our affliction we call upon
+those who<br>
+hear not, and may never return.</p>
+
+<p>Mine was a desolate hearth. I sat moodily down in the old oak
+parlor, my<br>
+heart bowed down with grief. The noiseless steps, the mourning
+garments of<br>
+the old servants; the unnatural silence of those walls within
+which from<br>
+my infancy the sounds of merriment and mirth had been familiar;
+the large<br>
+old-fashioned chair where he was wont to sit, now placed against
+the<br>
+wall,&mdash;all spoke of the sad past. Yet, when some footsteps would
+draw near,<br>
+and the door would open, I could not repress a thrill of hope
+that he was<br>
+coming; more than once I rushed to the window and looked out; I
+could have<br>
+sworn I heard his voice.</p>
+
+<p>The old cob pony he used to ride was grazing peacefully before
+the door;<br>
+poor Carlo, his favorite spaniel, lay stretched upon the terrace,
+turning<br>
+ever and anon a look towards the window, and then, as if wearied
+of<br>
+watching for him who came not, he would utter a long, low,
+wailing cry, and<br>
+lie down again to sleep. The rich lawn, decked with field flowers
+of many<br>
+a hue, stretched away towards the river, upon whose calm surface
+the<br>
+white-sailed lugger scarce seemed to move; the sounds of a
+well-known Irish<br>
+air came, softened by distance, as some poor fisherman sat
+mending his net<br>
+upon the bank, and the laugh of children floated on the breeze.
+Yes, they<br>
+were happy.</p>
+
+<p>Two months had elapsed since my return home; how passed by me
+I know not; a<br>
+lethargic stupor had settled upon me. Whole days long I sat at
+the window,<br>
+looking listlessly at the tranquil river, and watching the white
+foam as,<br>
+borne down from the rapids, it floated lazily along. The count
+had left me<br>
+soon, being called up to Dublin by some business, and I was
+utterly alone.<br>
+The different families about called frequently to ask after me,
+and would,<br>
+doubtless, have done all in their power to alleviate my sorrow,
+and lighten<br>
+the load of my affliction; but with a morbid fear, I avoided
+every one, and<br>
+rarely left the house except at night-fall, and then only to
+stroll by some<br>
+lonely and deserted path.</p>
+
+<p>Life had lost its charm for me; my gratified ambition had
+ended in the<br>
+blackest disappointment, and all for which I had labored and
+longed was<br>
+only attained that I might feel it valueless.</p>
+
+<p>Of my circumstances as to fortune I knew nothing, and cared
+not more;<br>
+poverty and riches could matter little now; all my day dreams
+were<br>
+dissipated now, and I only waited for Considine's return to leave
+Ireland<br>
+forever. I had made up my mind, if by any unexpected turn of fate
+the war<br>
+should cease in the Peninsula, to exchange into an Indian
+regiment. The<br>
+daily association with objects which recalled but one image to my
+brain,<br>
+and that ever accompanied by remorse of conscience, gave me not a
+moment's<br>
+peace. My every thought of happiness was mixed up with scenes
+which now<br>
+presented nothing but the evidences of blighted hope; to remain,
+then,<br>
+where I was, would be to sink into the heartless misanthropist,
+and I<br>
+resolved that with my sword I would carve out a soldier's fortune
+and a<br>
+soldier's grave.</p>
+
+<p>Considine came at last. I was sitting alone, at my usual post
+beside the<br>
+window, when the chaise rattled up to the door; for an instant I
+started to<br>
+my legs; a vague sense of something like hope shot through me,
+the whole<br>
+might be a dream, and <i>he</i>&mdash;The next moment I became cold and
+sick, a<br>
+faintish giddiness obscured my sight, and though I felt his grasp
+as he<br>
+took my hand, I saw him not. An indistinct impression still
+dwells upon my<br>
+mind of his chiding me for my weakness in thus giving way; of his
+calling<br>
+upon me to assert my position, and discharge the duties of him
+whose<br>
+successor I now was. I heard him in silence; and when he
+concluded, faintly<br>
+pledging myself to obey him, I hurried to my room, and throwing
+myself upon<br>
+my bed burst into an agony of tears. Hitherto my pent up sorrow
+had wasted<br>
+me day by day; but the rock was now smote, and in that gush of
+misery my<br>
+heart found relief.</p>
+
+<p>When I appeared the following morning, the count was struck
+with my altered<br>
+looks; a settled sorrow could not conceal the changes which time
+and<br>
+manhood had made upon me; and as from a kind of fear of showing
+how deeply<br>
+I grieved, I endeavored to conceal it, by degrees I was enabled
+to converse<br>
+calmly and dispassionately upon my fortunes.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Godfrey," said he, "appointed me his sole executor a few
+days before<br>
+it happened; he knew the time was drawing near, and strange
+enough,<br>
+Charley, though he heard of your return to England, he would not
+let us<br>
+write. The papers spoke of you as being at Carlton House almost
+daily; your<br>
+name appeared at every great festival; and while his heart warmed
+at your<br>
+brilliant success, he absolutely dreaded your coming home.
+'Poor<br>
+fellow,' he would say, 'what a change for him, to leave the
+splendor<br>
+and magnificence of his Prince's board for our meagre fare and
+altered<br>
+fortunes! And then,' he added, 'as for me&mdash;God forgive me!&mdash;I can
+go now;<br>
+but how should I bear to part with him if he comes back to me.'
+And now,"<br>
+said the count, when he had concluded a detailed history of my
+dear uncle's<br>
+last illness,&mdash;"and now, Charley, what are your plans?"</p>
+
+<p>Briefly, and in a few words, I stated to him my intentions.
+Without placing<br>
+much stress upon the strongest of my reasons&mdash;my distaste to what
+had once<br>
+been home&mdash;I avowed my wish to join my regiment at once.</p>
+
+<p>He heard me with evident impatience, and as I finished, seized
+my arm<br>
+in his strong grasp. "No, no, boy, none of this; your tone of
+assumed<br>
+composure cannot impose on Bill Considine. You must not return to
+the<br>
+Peninsula&mdash;at least not yet awhile; the disgust of life may be
+strong at<br>
+twenty, but it's not lasting; besides, Charley," here his voice
+faltered<br>
+slightly, "<i>his</i> wishes you'll not treat lightly. Read this."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, he took a blotted and ill-written letter from
+his<br>
+breast-pocket, and handed it to me. It was in my poor uncle's
+hand, and<br>
+dated the very morning of his death. It ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    Dear Bill,&mdash;Charley must never part with the old
+house,<br>
+    come what will; I leave too many ties behind for a stranger's
+heritage;<br>
+    he must live among my old friends, and watch, protect<br>
+    and comfort them. He has done enough for fame; let him
+now<br>
+    do something for affection. We have none of us been over
+good<br>
+    to these poor people; one of the name must try and save
+our<br>
+    credit. God bless you both! It is, perhaps, the last time I
+shall<br>
+    utter it.</p>
+
+<p>    G. O'M.</p>
+
+<p>I read these few and, to me, affecting lines over and over,
+forgetful of<br>
+all save of him who penned them; when Considine, who supposed
+that my<br>
+silence was attributable to doubt and hesitation, called
+out:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what now?"</p>
+
+<p>"I remain," said I, briefly.</p>
+
+<p>He seized me in his arms with transport, as he said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I knew it, boy, I knew it. They told me you were spoiled by
+flattery, and<br>
+your head turned by fortune; they said that home and country
+would weigh<br>
+lightly in the balance against fame and glory; but I said no, I
+knew you<br>
+better. I told them indignantly that I had nursed you on my knee;
+that I<br>
+watched you from infancy to boyhood, from boy to man; that he of
+whose<br>
+stock you came had one feeling paramount to all, his love of his
+own<br>
+fatherland, and that you would not disgrace him. Besides,
+Charley, there's<br>
+not an humble hearth for many a long mile around us, where,
+amidst the<br>
+winter's blast, tempered not excluded, by frail walls and
+poverty,&mdash;there's<br>
+not one such but where poor Godfrey's name rises each night in
+prayer, and<br>
+blessings are invoked on him by those who never felt them
+themselves."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll not desert them."</p>
+
+<p>"I know you'll not, boy, I know you'll not. Now for the
+means."</p>
+
+<p>Here he entered into a long and complicated exposure of my
+dear uncle's<br>
+many difficulties, by which it appeared that, in order to leave
+the estate<br>
+free of debt to me, he had for years past undergone severe
+privations.<br>
+These, however,&mdash;such is the misfortune of an unguided
+effort,&mdash;had but<br>
+ill succeeded, and there was scarcely a farm on the property
+without its<br>
+mortgage. Upon the house and demesne a bond for three thousand
+pounds still<br>
+remained; and to pay off this, Considine advised my selling a
+portion of<br>
+the property.</p>
+
+<p>"It's old Blake lent the money; and only a week before your
+uncle died,<br>
+he served a notice for repayment. I never told Godfrey; it was no
+use. It<br>
+could only embitter his last few hours; and, besides, we had six
+months to<br>
+think of it. The half of that time has now elapsed, however; we
+must see to<br>
+this."</p>
+
+<p>"And did Blake really make this demand, knowing my poor
+uncle's<br>
+difficulties?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I half think he did not; for Godfrey was too fine a
+fellow ever to<br>
+acknowledge anything of the sort. He had twelve sheep killed for
+the poor<br>
+in Scariff, at a time when not a servant of the house tasted meat
+for<br>
+months; ay, and our own table, too, none of the most abundant, I
+assure<br>
+you."</p>
+
+<p>What a picture was this, and how forcibly did it remind me of
+what I had<br>
+witnessed in times past. Thus meditating, we returned to the
+house; and<br>
+Considine, whose activity never slumbered, sat down to con over
+the<br>
+rent-roll with old Maguire the steward.</p>
+
+<p>When I joined the count in the evening, I found him surrounded
+by maps,<br>
+rent-rolls, surveys, and leases. He had been poring over these
+various<br>
+documents, to ascertain from which portion of the property we
+could best<br>
+recruit our failing finances. To judge from the embarrassed look
+and manner<br>
+with which he met me, the matter was one of no small difficulty.
+The<br>
+encumbrances upon the estate had been incurred with an unsparing
+hand; and<br>
+except where some irreclaimable tract of bog or mountain rendered
+a loan<br>
+impracticable, each portion of the property had its share of
+debt.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't sell Killantry, for Basset has above six thousand
+pounds on it<br>
+already. To be sure, there's the Priest's Meadows,&mdash;fine land and
+in good<br>
+heart; but Malony was an old tenant of the family, and I cannot
+recommend<br>
+your turning him over to a stranger. The widow M'Bride's farm is
+perhaps<br>
+the best, after all, and it would certainly bring the sum we
+want; still,<br>
+poor Mary was your nurse, Charley, and it would break her heart
+to do it."</p>
+
+<p>Thus, wherever we turned, some obstacle presented itself, if
+not from<br>
+moneyed causes, at least from those ties and associations which,
+in an<br>
+attached and faithful tenantry, are sure to grow up between them
+and the<br>
+owner of the soil.</p>
+
+<p>Feeling how all-important these things were&mdash;endeavoring as I
+was to fulfil<br>
+the will and work out the intentions of my uncle&mdash;I saw at once
+that to<br>
+sell any portion of the property must separate me, to a certain
+extent,<br>
+from those who long looked up to our house, and who, in the
+feudalism of<br>
+the west, could ill withdraw their allegiance from their own
+chief to swear<br>
+fealty to a stranger. The richer tenants were those whose
+industry and<br>
+habits rendered them objects of worth and attachment; to the
+poorer ones,<br>
+to whose improvidence and whose follies (if you will) their
+poverty was<br>
+owing, I was bound by those ties which the ancient habit of my
+house had<br>
+contracted for centuries. The bond of benefit conferred can be
+stronger<br>
+than the debt of gratitude itself. What was I then to do? My
+income would<br>
+certainly permit of my paying the interest upon my several
+mortgages, and<br>
+still retaining wherewithal to live; the payment of Blake's bond
+was my<br>
+only difficulty, and small as it was, it was still a
+difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>"I have it, Charley!" said Considine; "I've found out the way
+of doing it.<br>
+Blake will have no objection, I'm sure, to take the widow's farm
+in payment<br>
+of his debt, giving you a power of redemption within five years.
+In that<br>
+time, what with economy, some management, perhaps," added he,
+smiling<br>
+slightly,&mdash;"perhaps a wife with money may relieve all your
+embarrassments<br>
+at once. Well, well, I know you are not thinking of that just
+now; but<br>
+come, what say you to my plan?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know not well what to say. It seems to be the best; but
+still I have my<br>
+misgivings."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course you have, my boy; nor could I love you if you'd
+part with an old<br>
+and faithful follower without them. But, after all, she is only a
+hostage<br>
+to the enemy; we'll win her back, Charley."</p>
+
+<p>"If you think so&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I do. I know it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, be it so; only one thing I bargain,&mdash;she must
+herself consent<br>
+to this change of masters. It will seem to her a harsh measure
+that the<br>
+child she had nursed and fondled in her arms should live to
+disunite her<br>
+from those her oldest attachments upon earth. We must take care,
+sir, that<br>
+Blake cannot dispossess her; this would be too hard."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no; that we'll guard against. And now, Charley, with
+prudence and<br>
+caution, we'll clear off every encumbrance, and O'Malley Castle
+shall yet<br>
+be what it was in days of yore. Ay, boy, with the descendant of
+the old<br>
+house for its master, and not that general&mdash;how do you call
+him?&mdash;that came<br>
+down here to contest the county, who with his offer of thirty
+thousand<br>
+pounds thought to uproot the oldest family of the west. Did I
+ever show you<br>
+the letter we wrote him?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," replied I, trembling with agitation as I spoke;
+"you merely<br>
+alluded to it in one of yours."</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, lad!" said he, drawing it from the recesses of a
+black leather<br>
+pocket-book. "I took a copy of it; read that."</p>
+
+<p>The document was dated, "O'Malley Castle, December 9th." It
+ran thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    Sir,&mdash;I have this moment learned from my agent, that you,
+or<br>
+    some one empowered by you for the purpose, made an offer of
+several<br>
+    thousand pounds to buy up the different mortgages upon my
+property,<br>
+    with a subsequent intention of becoming its possessor. Now,
+sir, I<br>
+    beg to tell you, that if your ungentlemanlike and underhand
+plot<br>
+    had succeeded, you dared not darken with your shadow the
+door-sill<br>
+    of the house you purchased. Neither your gold nor your
+flattery&mdash;and<br>
+    I hear you are rich in both&mdash;could wipe out from the
+minds<br>
+    and hearts of my poor tenantry the kindness of centuries. Be
+advised,<br>
+    then, sir; withdraw your offer; let a Galway gentleman
+settle<br>
+    his own difficulties his own way; his troubles and cares are
+quite<br>
+    sufficient, without your adding to them. There can be but
+one<br>
+    mode in which your interference with him could be deemed
+acceptable:<br>
+    need I tell you, sir, who are a soldier, how that is? As
+I<br>
+    know your official duties are important, and as my
+nephew&mdash;who<br>
+    feels with me perfectly in this business&mdash;is abroad, I can
+only say<br>
+    that failing health and a broken frame shall not prevent my
+undertaking<br>
+    a journey to England, should my doing so meet your wishes<br>
+    on this occasion. I am, sir,</p>
+
+<p>    Your obedient servant,              GODFREY O'MALLEY.</p>
+
+<p>"This letter," continued Considine, "I enclosed in an
+envelope, with the<br>
+following few lines of my own:"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "Count Considine presents his compliments to
+Lieutenant-General<br>
+    Dashwood; and feeling that as the friend of Mr. Godfrey
+O'Malley,<br>
+    the mild course pursued by that gentleman may possibly be
+attributed<br>
+    to his suggestion, he begs to assure General Dashwood that
+the reverse<br>
+    was the case, and that he strenuously counselled the
+propriety<br>
+    of laying a horsewhip upon the general's shoulders, as a
+preliminary<br>
+    step in the transaction.</p>
+
+<p>    "Count Considine's address is No. 16 Kildare Street."</p>
+
+<p>"Great God!" said I, "is this possible?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well may you say so, my boy: for&mdash;would you believe
+it?&mdash;after all that,<br>
+he writes a long blundering apology, protesting I know not what
+about<br>
+motives of former friendship, and terminating with a civil hint
+that we<br>
+have done with him forever. And of my paragraph he takes no
+notice; and<br>
+thus ends the whole affair."</p>
+
+<p>"And with it my last hope also!" muttered I to myself.</p>
+
+<p>That Sir George Dashwood's intentions had been misconstrued
+and mistaken I<br>
+knew perfectly well; that nothing but the accumulated evils of
+poverty and<br>
+sickness could have induced my poor uncle to write such a letter
+I was<br>
+well aware; but now the mischief was accomplished, the evil was
+done, and<br>
+nothing remained but to bear with patience and submission, and to
+endeavor<br>
+to forget what thus became irremediable.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir George Dashwood made no allusion to me, sir, in his
+reply?" inquired<br>
+I, catching at anything like a hope.</p>
+
+<p>"Your name never occurs in his letter. But you look pale, boy;
+all these<br>
+discussions come too early upon you; besides, you stay too much
+at home,<br>
+and take no exercise."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, Considine bustled off towards the stables to look
+after some<br>
+young horses that had just been taken up; and I walked out alone
+to ponder<br>
+over what I had heard, and meditate on my plans for the
+future.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XLIV.</p>
+
+<p>AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE.</p>
+
+<p>As I wandered on, the irritation of my spirit gradually
+subsided. It was,<br>
+to be sure, distressing to think over the light in which my
+uncle's letter<br>
+had placed me before Sir George Dashwood, had even my reputation
+only with<br>
+him been at stake; but with my attachment to his daughter, it
+was<br>
+almost maddening. And yet there was nothing to be done; to
+disavow my<br>
+participation would be to throw discredit upon my uncle. Thus
+were my hopes<br>
+blighted; and thus, at that season when life was opening upon me,
+did I<br>
+feel careless and indifferent to everything. Had my military
+career still<br>
+remained to me, that at least would have suggested scenes
+sufficient to<br>
+distract me from the past; but now my days must be spent where
+every spot<br>
+teemed with memories of bygone happiness and joys never to come
+back again.</p>
+
+<p>My mind was, however, made up; and without speaking a word to
+Considine, I<br>
+turned homeward, and sat down at my writing-table. In a few brief
+lines I<br>
+informed my army agent of my intention of leaving the service,
+and desired<br>
+that he would sell out for me at once. Fearing lest my resolution
+might not<br>
+be proof against the advice and solicitation of my friends, I
+cautioned him<br>
+against giving my address, or any clew by which letters might
+reach me.</p>
+
+<p>This done, I addressed a short note to Mr. Blake, requesting
+to know the<br>
+name of his solicitor, in whose hands the bond was placed, and
+announcing<br>
+my intention of immediate repayment.</p>
+
+<p>Trifling as these details were in themselves, I cannot help
+recording how<br>
+completely they changed the whole current of my thoughts. A new
+train of<br>
+interests began to spring up within me; and where so lately the
+clang of<br>
+the battle, the ardor of the march, the careless ease of the
+bivouac, had<br>
+engrossed every feeling, now more humble and homely thoughts
+succeeded; and<br>
+as my personal ambition had lost its stimulant, I turned with
+pleasure to<br>
+those of whose fate and fortunes I was in some sort the guardian.
+There may<br>
+be many a land where the verdure blooms more in fragrance and in
+richness,<br>
+where the clime breathes softer, and a brighter sky lights up
+the<br>
+landscape; but there is none&mdash;I have travelled through many a
+one&mdash;where<br>
+more touching and heart-bound associations are blended with the
+features<br>
+of the soil than in Ireland, and cold must be the spirit, and
+barren the<br>
+affections of him who can dwell amidst its mountains and its
+valleys, its<br>
+tranquil lakes, its wooded fens, without feeling their humanizing
+influence<br>
+upon him. Thus gradually new impressions and new duties
+succeeded; and ere<br>
+four months elapsed, the quiet monotony of my daily life healed
+up the<br>
+wounds of my suffering, and in the calm current of my present
+existence, a<br>
+sense of content, if not of happiness, crept gently over me, and
+I ceased<br>
+to long for the clash of arms and the loud blast of the
+trumpet.</p>
+
+<p>Unlike all my former habits, I completely abandoned the sports
+of the<br>
+field. He who had participated in them with me was no longer
+there; and the<br>
+very sight of the tackle itself suggested sad and depressing
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>My horses I took but little pleasure in. To gratify the good
+and kind<br>
+people about, I would walk through the stables, and make some
+passing<br>
+remark, as if to show some interest; but I felt it not. No; it
+was only by<br>
+the total change of all the ordinary channels of my ideas that I
+could bear<br>
+up; and now my days were passed in the fields, either listlessly
+strolling<br>
+along, or in watching the laborers as they worked. Of my
+neighbors I saw<br>
+nothing; returning their cards, when they called upon me, was the
+extent of<br>
+our intercourse; and I had no desire for any further. As
+Considine had left<br>
+me to visit some friends in the south, I was quite alone, and for
+the first<br>
+time in my life, felt how soothing can be such solitude. In each
+happy<br>
+face, in every grateful look around me, I felt that I was
+fulfilling my<br>
+uncle's last behest; and the sense of duty, so strong when it
+falls upon<br>
+the heart accompanied by the sense of power, made my days pass
+rapidly<br>
+away.</p>
+
+<p>It was towards the close of autumn, when I one morning
+received a letter<br>
+from London, informing me that my troop had been sold, and the
+purchase<br>
+money&mdash;above four thousand pounds&mdash;lodged to my credit at my
+banker's.</p>
+
+<p>As Mr. Blake had merely answered my former note by a civil
+message that the<br>
+matter in question was by no means pressing, I lost not a moment,
+when<br>
+this news reached me, to despatch Mike to Gurt-na-Morra with a
+few lines,<br>
+expressing my anxious desire to finish the transaction, and
+begging of Mr.<br>
+Blake to appoint a day for the purpose.</p>
+
+<p>To this application Mr. Blake's reply was, that he would do
+himself the<br>
+honor of waiting upon me the following day, when the arrangements
+I desired<br>
+could be agreed upon. Now this was exactly what I wished, if
+possible,<br>
+to avoid. Of all my neighbors, he was the one I predetermined to
+have no<br>
+intercourse with; I had not forgotten my last evening at his
+house, nor had<br>
+I forgiven his conduct to my uncle. However, there was nothing
+for it but<br>
+submission; the interview need not be a long, and it should be a
+last one.<br>
+Thus resolving, I waited in patience for the morrow.</p>
+
+<p>I was seated at my breakfast the next morning, conning between
+whiles the<br>
+columns of the last paper, and feeding my spaniel, who sat upon a
+large<br>
+chair beside me, when the door opened, and the servant announced,
+"Mr.<br>
+Blake;" and the instant after that gentleman bustled in holding
+out both<br>
+his hands with all evidences of most friendly warmth, and calling
+out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Charley O'Malley, my lad! I'm delighted to see you at
+last!"</p>
+
+<p>Now, although the distance from the door to the table at which
+I sat<br>
+was not many paces, yet it was quite sufficient to chill down all
+my<br>
+respectable relative's ardor before he approached: his rapid pace
+became<br>
+gradually a shuffle, a slide, and finally a dead stop; his
+extended arms<br>
+were reduced to one hand, barely advanced beyond his waistcoat;
+his voice,<br>
+losing the easy confidence of its former tone, got husky and dry,
+and broke<br>
+into a cough; and all these changes were indebted to the mere
+fact of<br>
+my reception of him consisting in a cold and distant bow, as I
+told the<br>
+servant to place a chair and leave the room.</p>
+
+<p>Without any preliminary whatever, I opened the subject of our
+negotiation,<br>
+expressed my regret that it should have waited so long, and my
+desire to<br>
+complete it.</p>
+
+<p>Whether it was that the firm and resolute tone I assumed had
+its effect at<br>
+once, or that disappointed at the mode in which I received his
+advances he<br>
+wished to conclude our interview as soon as need be, I know not;
+but he<br>
+speedily withdrew from a capacious pocket a document in
+parchment, which,<br>
+having spread at large upon the table, and having leisurely put
+on his<br>
+spectacles, he began to hum over its contents to himself in an
+undertone.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, here it is," said he. "'Deed of conveyance between
+Godfrey<br>
+O'Malley, of O'Malley Castle, Esq., on the one part'&mdash;perhaps
+you'd like<br>
+your solicitor to examine it,&mdash;'and Blake, of Gurt'&mdash;because
+there is no<br>
+hurry, Captain O'Malley&mdash;'on the other.' In fact, after all, it
+is a mere<br>
+matter of form between relatives," said he, as I declined the
+intervention<br>
+of a lawyer. "I'm not in want of the money&mdash;'all the lands and
+tenements<br>
+adjoining, in trust, for the payment of the said three
+thousand'&mdash;thank<br>
+God, Captain, the sum is a trifle that does not inconvenience me!
+The boys<br>
+are provided for; and the girls&mdash;the pickpockets, as I call them,
+ha,<br>
+ha, ha!&mdash;not ill off neither;&mdash;'with rights of turbary on the
+said<br>
+premises'&mdash;who are most anxious to have the pleasure of seeing
+you. Indeed,<br>
+I could scarcely keep Jane from coming over to-day. 'Sure he's my
+cousin,'<br>
+says she; 'and what harm would it be if I went to see him?'
+Wild,<br>
+good-natured girls, Captain! And your old friend Matthew&mdash;you
+haven't<br>
+forgot Matthew?&mdash;has been keeping three coveys of partridge for
+you<br>
+this fortnight. 'Charley,' says he,&mdash;they call you Charley
+still,<br>
+Captain,&mdash;'shall have them, and no one else.' And poor Mary&mdash;she
+was<br>
+a child when you were here&mdash;Mary is working a sash for you. But
+I'm<br>
+forgetting&mdash;I know you have so much business on your hands&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Pray, Mr. Blake, be seated. I know nothing of any more
+importance than the<br>
+matter before us. If you will permit me to give you a check for
+this money.<br>
+The papers, I'm sure, are perfectly correct."</p>
+
+<p>"If I only thought it did not inconvenience you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing of the kind, I assure you. Shall I say at sight, or
+in ten days<br>
+hence?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whenever you please, Captain. But it's sorry I am to come
+troubling you<br>
+about such things, when I know you are thinking of other matters.
+And, as<br>
+I said before, the money does not signify to me; the times, thank
+God, are<br>
+good, and I've never been very improvident."</p>
+
+<p>"I think you'll find that correct."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, to be sure it is! Well, well; I'm going away without
+saying half what<br>
+I intended."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray do not hurry yourself. I have not asked have you
+breakfasted, for I<br>
+remember Galway habits too well for that. But if I might offer
+you a glass<br>
+of sherry and water after your ride?"</p>
+
+<p>"Will you think me a beast if I say yes, Captain? Time was
+when I didn't<br>
+care for a canter of ten or fifteen miles in the morning no more
+than<br>
+yourself; and that's no small boast; God forgive me, but I never
+see that<br>
+clover-field where you pounded the Englishman, without swearing
+there never<br>
+was a leap made before or since. Is this Mickey, Captain? Faith,
+and it's<br>
+a fine, brown, hearty-looking chap you're grown, Mickey. That's
+mighty<br>
+pleasant sherry, but where would there be good wine if it wasn't
+here? Oh,<br>
+I remember now what it was I wanted. Peter,&mdash;my son Peter, a slip
+of a boy,<br>
+he's only sixteen,&mdash;well, d'you see, he's downright deranged
+about the<br>
+army: he used to see your name in the papers every day, and that
+terrible<br>
+business at&mdash;what's the name of the place?&mdash;where you rode on the
+chap's<br>
+back up the breach."</p>
+
+<p>"Ciudad Rodrigo, perhaps," said I, scarcely able to repress a
+laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, since that he'll hear of nothing but going into
+the army; ay,<br>
+and into the dragoons too. Now, Captain, isn't it mighty
+expensive in the<br>
+dragoons?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, no, not particularly so,&mdash;at least in the regiment I
+served with."</p>
+
+<p>"I promised him I'd ask you; the boy's mad, that's the fact. I
+wish,<br>
+Captain, you'd just reason with him a little; he'll mind what you
+say,<br>
+there's no fear of that. And you see, though I'd like to do
+what's fair,<br>
+I'm not going to cut off the girls for the sake of the boys; with
+the<br>
+blessing of Providence, they'll never be able to reproach me for
+that. What<br>
+I say is this: treat <i>me</i> well, and I'll treat you the same.
+Marry the man<br>
+my choice would pick out for you, and it's not a matter of a
+thousand or<br>
+two I'll care for. There was Bodkin&mdash;you remember him?" said he,
+with a<br>
+grin; "he proposed for Mary, but since the quarrel with you, she
+could<br>
+never bear the sight of him, and Alley wouldn't come down to
+dinner if he<br>
+was in the house. Mary's greatly altered; I wish you heard her
+sing 'I'd<br>
+mourn the hopes that leave me.' Queer girl she is; she was little
+more<br>
+than a child when you were here, and she remembers you just as if
+it was<br>
+yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>While Mr. Blake ran on at this rate, now dilating upon my own
+manifold<br>
+virtues and accomplishments, now expatiating upon the more
+congenial<br>
+theme,&mdash;the fascinations of his fair daughters, and the various
+merits of<br>
+his sons,&mdash;I could not help feeling how changed our relative
+position was<br>
+since our last meeting; the tone of cool and vulgar patronage he
+then<br>
+assumed towards the unformed country lad was now converted into
+an air of<br>
+fawning and deferential submission, still more distasteful.</p>
+
+<p>Young as I was, however, I had already seen a good deal of the
+world; my<br>
+soldiering had at least taught me something of men, and I had far
+less<br>
+difficulty in deciphering the intentions and objects of my worthy
+relative,<br>
+than I should have had in the enigmatical mazes of the parchment
+bond of<br>
+which he was the bearer. After all, to how very narrow an extent
+in life<br>
+are we fashioned by our own estimate of ourselves! My changed
+condition<br>
+affected me but little until I saw how it affected others; that
+the<br>
+position I occupied should seem better now that life had lost the
+great<br>
+stimulus of ambition, was somewhat strange; and that flattery
+should pay<br>
+its homage to the mourning coat which it would have refused to my
+soldier's<br>
+garb, somewhat surprised me. Still my bettered fortunes shone
+only brightly<br>
+by reflected light; for in my own heart I was sad, spiritless,
+and<br>
+oppressed.</p>
+
+<p>Feeling somewhat ashamed at the coldness with which I treated
+a man so much<br>
+my elder, I gradually assumed towards Mr. Blake a manner less
+reserved. He<br>
+quickly availed himself of the change, and launched out into an
+eloquent<br>
+<i>expos&eacute;</i> of my advantages and capabilities; the only
+immediate effect of<br>
+which was to convince me that my property and my prospects must
+have been<br>
+very accurately conned over and considered by that worthy
+gentleman before<br>
+he could speak of the one or the other with such perfect
+knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>"When you get rid of these little encumbrances, your rent-roll
+will be<br>
+close on four thousand a year. There's Bassett, sure, by only
+reducing his<br>
+interest from ten to five per cent, will give you a clear eight
+hundred per<br>
+annum; let him refuse, and I'll advance the money. And, besides,
+look at<br>
+Freney's farm; there's two hundred acres let for one third of the
+value,<br>
+and you must look to these tilings; for, you see, Captain, we'll
+want you<br>
+to go into Parliament; you can't help coming forward at the next
+election,<br>
+and by the great gun of Athlone, we'll return you."</p>
+
+<p>Here Mr. Blake swallowed a full bumper of sherry, and getting
+up a little<br>
+false enthusiasm for the moment, grasped me by both hands and
+shook me<br>
+violently; this done, like a skilful general, who, having fired
+the last<br>
+shot of his artillery, takes care to secure his retreat, he
+retired towards<br>
+the door, where his hat and coat were lying.</p>
+
+<p>"I've a hundred apologies to make for encroaching upon your
+time; but, upon<br>
+my soul, Captain, you are so agreeable, and the hours have passed
+away so<br>
+pleasantly&mdash;May I never, if it is not one o'clock!&mdash;but you must
+forgive<br>
+me."</p>
+
+<p>My sense of justice, which showed me that the agreeability had
+all been on<br>
+Mr. Blake's side, prevented me from acknowledging this compliment
+as it<br>
+deserved; so I merely bowed stiffly, without speaking. By this
+time he had<br>
+succeeded in putting on his great-coat, but still, by some
+mischance or<br>
+other, the moment of his leaving-taking was deferred; one time he
+buttoned<br>
+it awry, and had to undo it all again; then, when it was properly
+adjusted,<br>
+he discovered that his pocket-handkerchief was not available,
+being left in<br>
+the inner coat-pocket; to this succeeded a doubt as to the safety
+of the<br>
+check, which instituted another search, and it was full ten
+minutes before<br>
+he was completely caparisoned and ready for the road.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-by, Captain, good-by!" said he warmly, yet warily, not
+knowing at<br>
+what precise temperature the metal of my heart was fusible. At a
+mild heat<br>
+I had been evidently unsinged, and the white glow of his flattery
+seemed<br>
+only to harden me. The interview was now over, and as I thought
+sufficient<br>
+had been done to convince my friend that the terms of distant
+acquaintance<br>
+were to be the limits of our future intercourse, I assumed a
+little show of<br>
+friendliness, and shook his hand warmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-by, Mr. Blake; pray present my respectful compliments to
+your<br>
+friends. Allow me to ring for your horse; you are not going to
+have a<br>
+shower, I hope."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, Captain, only a passing cloud," said he, warming up
+perceptibly<br>
+under the influence of my advances, "nothing more. Why, what is
+it I'm<br>
+forgetting now! Oh, I have it! May be I'm too bold; but sure an
+old friend<br>
+and relation may take a liberty sometimes. It was just a little
+request<br>
+of Mrs. Blake, as I was leaving the house." He stopped here as if
+to take<br>
+soundings, and perceiving no change in my countenance, continued:
+"It was<br>
+just to beg, that, in a kind and friendly way, you'd come over
+and eat your<br>
+dinner with us on Sunday; nobody but the family, not a soul&mdash;Mrs.
+Blake and<br>
+the girls; a boiled leg of mutton; Matthew; a fresh trout, if we
+can catch<br>
+one! Plain and homely, but a hearty welcome, and a bottle of old
+claret,<br>
+may be, too&mdash;ah! ah! ah!"</p>
+
+<p>Before the cadence of Mr. Blake's laugh had died away, I
+politely but<br>
+resolutely declined the proffered invitation, and by way of
+setting the<br>
+question at rest forever, gave him to understand that, from
+impaired health<br>
+and other causes, I had resolved upon strictly confining myself
+to the<br>
+limits of my own house and grounds, at least for the present.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blake then saluted me for the last time, and left the
+room. As he<br>
+mounted his hackney, I could not help overhearing an abortive
+effort he<br>
+made to draw Mike into something like conversation; but it proved
+an utter<br>
+failure, and it was evident he deemed the man as incorrigible as
+the<br>
+master.</p>
+
+<p>"A very fine young man the captain is&mdash;remarkable!&mdash;and it's
+proud I am to<br>
+have him for a nephew!"</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he cantered down the avenue, while Mickey, as he
+looked after<br>
+him, muttered between his teeth, "And faix, it's prouder you'd be
+av he was<br>
+your son-in-law!"</p>
+
+<p>Mike's soliloquy seemed to show me, in a new light, the
+meaning of my<br>
+relative's manner. It was for the first time in my life that such
+a thought<br>
+had occurred to me, and it was not without a sense of shame that
+I now<br>
+admitted it.</p>
+
+<p>If there be something which elevates and exalts us in our
+esteem, tinging<br>
+our hearts with heroism and our souls with pride, in the love
+and<br>
+attachment of some fair and beautiful girl, there is something
+equally<br>
+humiliating in being the object of cold and speculative
+calculation to a<br>
+match-making family: your character studied; your pursuits
+watched; your<br>
+tastes conned over; your very temperament inquired into;
+surrounded<br>
+by snares; environed by practised attentions; one eye fixed upon
+the<br>
+registered testament of your relative, the other riveted upon
+your own<br>
+caprices; and then those thousand little cares and kindnesses
+which come so<br>
+pleasurably upon the heart when the offspring of true affection,
+perverted<br>
+as they are by base views and sordid interest, are so many shocks
+to the<br>
+feeling and understanding. Like the Eastern sirocco, which seems
+to breathe<br>
+of freshness and of health, and yet bears but pestilence and
+death upon its<br>
+breezes,&mdash;so these calculated and well-considered traits of
+affection only<br>
+render callous and harden the heart which had responded warmly,
+openly, and<br>
+abundantly to the true outpourings of affection. At how many a
+previously<br>
+happy hearth has the seed of this fatal passion planted its
+discord! How<br>
+many a fair and lovely girl, with beauty and attractions
+sufficient to<br>
+win all that her heart could wish of fondness and devotion, has,
+by this<br>
+pernicious passion, become a cold, heartless, worldly coquette,
+weighing<br>
+men's characters by the adventitious circumstances of their birth
+and<br>
+fortune, and scrutinizing the eligibility of a match with the
+practised<br>
+acumen with which a notary investigates the solvency of a
+creditor. How do<br>
+the traits of beauty, gesture, voice, and manner become converted
+into the<br>
+common-place and distasteful trickery of the world! The very
+hospitality of<br>
+the house becomes suspect, their friendship is but fictitious;
+those rare<br>
+and goodly gifts of fondness and sisterly affection which grow up
+in<br>
+happier circumstances, are here but rivalry, envy, and
+ill-conceived<br>
+hatred. The very accomplishments which cultivate and adorn life,
+that light<br>
+but graceful frieze which girds the temple of homely happiness,
+are here<br>
+but the meditated and well-considered occasions of display. All
+the bright<br>
+features of womanhood, all the freshness of youth, and all its
+fascinations<br>
+are but like those richly-colored and beautiful fruits, seductive
+to the<br>
+eye and fair to look upon, but which within contain nothing but a
+core of<br>
+rottenness and decay.</p>
+
+<p>No, no; unblessed by all which makes a hearth a home, I may
+travel on my<br>
+weary way through life; but such a one as this I will not make
+the partner<br>
+of my sorrows and my joys, come what will of it!</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XLV.</p>
+
+<p>A SURPRISE.</p>
+
+<p>From the hour of Mr. Blake's departure, my life was no longer
+molested. My<br>
+declaration, which had evidently, under his auspices, been made
+the subject<br>
+of conversation through the country, was at least so far
+successful, as<br>
+it permitted me to spend my time in the way I liked best, and
+without the<br>
+necessity of maintaining the show of intercourse, when in reality
+I kept<br>
+up none, with the neighborhood. While thus, therefore, my life
+passed on<br>
+equably and tranquilly, many mouths glided over, and I found
+myself already<br>
+a year at home, without it appearing more than a few weeks.
+Nothing seems<br>
+so short in retrospect as monotony; the number, the variety, the
+interest<br>
+of the events which occupy us, making our hours pass glibly and
+flowingly,<br>
+will still suggest to the mind the impressions of a longer period
+than<br>
+when the daily routine of our occupations assumes a character of
+continued<br>
+uniformity. It seems to be the <i>amende</i> made by hours of
+weariness and<br>
+tedium, that, in looking back upon them, they appear to have
+passed rapidly<br>
+over. Not that my life, at the period I speak of, was devoid of
+interest;<br>
+on the contrary, devoting myself with zeal and earnestness to the
+new<br>
+duties of my station, I made myself thoroughly acquainted with
+the<br>
+condition of my property, the interest of my tenantry, their
+prospects,<br>
+their hopes, their objects. Investigating them as only he can who
+is<br>
+the owner of the soil, I endeavored to remedy the ancient vices
+of the<br>
+land,&mdash;the habits of careless, reckless waste, of indifference
+for the<br>
+morrow; and by instilling a feature of prudent foresight into
+that<br>
+boundless confidence in the future upon which every Irishman of
+every<br>
+rank lives and trusts, I succeeded at last in so far ameliorating
+their<br>
+situation, that a walk through my property, instead of
+presenting&mdash;as it<br>
+at first did&mdash;a crowd of eager and anxious supplicants,
+entreating for<br>
+abatements in rent, succor for their sick, and sometimes even
+food itself,<br>
+showed me now a happy and industrious people, confident in
+themselves, and<br>
+firmly relying on their own resources.</p>
+
+<p>Another spring was now opening, and a feeling of calm and
+tranquil<br>
+happiness, the result of my successful management of my estate,
+made my<br>
+days pass pleasantly along. I was sitting at a late breakfast in
+my little<br>
+library; the open window afforded a far and wide prospect of the
+country,<br>
+blooming in all the promise of the season, while the drops of the
+passing<br>
+shower still lingered upon the grass, and were sparkling like
+jewels under<br>
+the bright sunshine. Masses of white and billowy cloud moved
+swiftly<br>
+through the air, coloring the broad river with many a shadow as
+they<br>
+passed. The birds sang merrily, the trees shook their leaves in
+concert,<br>
+and there was that sense of movement in everything on earth and
+sky which<br>
+gives to spring its character of lightness and exhilaration. The
+youth of<br>
+the year, like the youth of our own existence, is beautiful in
+the restless<br>
+activity which marks it. The tender flower that seems to open as
+we look;<br>
+the grass that springs before our eyes,&mdash;all speak of promise.
+The changing<br>
+phases of the sky, like the smiles and tears of infancy, excite
+without<br>
+weariness, and while they engage our sympathies, they fatigue not
+our<br>
+compassion.</p>
+
+<p>Partly lost in thought as I looked upon the fair and varied
+scene before<br>
+me, now turning to the pages of the book upon the
+breakfast-table, the<br>
+hours of the morning passed quickly over, and it was already
+beyond noon. I<br>
+was startled from my revery by sounds which I could scarcely
+trust my<br>
+ears to believe real. I listened again, and thought I could
+detect them<br>
+distinctly. It seemed as though some one were rapidly running
+over the keys<br>
+of a pianoforte, essaying with the voice to follow the notes, and
+sometimes<br>
+striking two or three bold and successive chords; then a merry
+laugh would<br>
+follow, and drown all other sounds. "What can it be?" thought I.
+"There is,<br>
+to be sure, a pianoforte in the large drawing-room; but then, who
+would<br>
+venture upon such a liberty as this? Besides, who is capable of
+it? There,<br>
+it can be no inexperienced performer gave that shake; my worthy
+housekeeper<br>
+never accomplished that!" So saying, I jumped from the
+breakfast-table,<br>
+and set off in the direction of the sound. A small drawing-room
+and the<br>
+billiard-room lay between me and the large drawing-room; and as I
+traversed<br>
+them, the music grew gradually louder. Conjecturing that, whoever
+it might<br>
+be, the performance would cease on my entrance, I listened for a
+few<br>
+moments before opening the door. Nothing could be more singular,
+nothing<br>
+more strange, than the effect of those unaccustomed sounds in
+that silent<br>
+and deserted place. The character of the music, too, contributed
+not<br>
+a little to this; rapidly passing from grave to gay, from the
+melting<br>
+softness of some plaintive air to the reckless hurry and
+confusion of an<br>
+Irish jig, the player seemed, as it were, to run wild through all
+the<br>
+floating fancies of his memory; now breaking suddenly off in the
+saddest<br>
+cadence of a song, the notes would change into some quaint,
+old-fashioned<br>
+crone, in which the singer seemed so much at home, and gave the
+queer<br>
+drollery of the words that expression of archness so eminently
+the<br>
+character of certain Irish airs. "But what the deuce is this?"
+said I, as,<br>
+rattling over the keys with a flowing but brilliant finger,
+she,&mdash;for<br>
+it was unquestionably a woman,&mdash;with a clear and sweet voice,
+broken by<br>
+laughter, began to sing the words of Mr. Bodkin's song, "The Man
+for<br>
+Galway." When she had finished the last verse, her hand strayed,
+as it<br>
+were, carelessly across the instrument, while she herself gave
+way to a<br>
+free burst of merriment; and then, suddenly resuming the air, she
+chanted<br>
+forth the following words, with a spirit and effect I can convey
+no idea<br>
+of:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "To live at home,<br>
+    And never roam;<br>
+    To pass his days in sighing;<br>
+    To wear sad looks,<br>
+    Read stupid books,<br>
+    And look half dead or dying;<br>
+    Not show his face,<br>
+    Nor join the chase,<br>
+    But dwell a hermit always:<br>
+    Oh, Charley, dear!<br>
+    To me 'tis clear,<br>
+    You're not the man for Galway!"</p>
+
+<p>"You're not the man for Galway!" repeated she once more, while
+she closed<br>
+the piano with a loud bang.</p>
+
+<p>"And why not, my dear, why not the man for Galway?" said I,
+as, bursting<br>
+open the door, I sprang into the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, it's you, is it?&mdash;at last! So I've unearthed you, have
+I?"</p>
+
+<p>With these words she burst into an immoderate fit of laughter;
+leaving me,<br>
+who intended to be the party giving the surprise, amazed,
+confused, and<br>
+speechless, in the middle of the floor.</p>
+
+<a name="0362"></a>
+<img alt="0362.jpg (178K)" src="0362.jpg" height="733" width="789">
+
+<p>[BABY BLAKE.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>That my reader may sympathize a little in my distresses, let
+me present him<br>
+with the <i>tableau</i> before me. Seated upon the piano-stool was a
+young-lady<br>
+of at most eighteen years: her face, had it not been for its
+expression of<br>
+exuberant drollery and malicious fun, would have been downright
+beautiful;<br>
+her eyes, of the deepest blue, and shaded by long lashes, instead
+of<br>
+indulging the character of pensive and thoughtful beauty for
+which Nature<br>
+destined them, sparkled with a most animated brightness; her
+nose,<br>
+which, rather short, was still beautifully proportioned, gave,
+with<br>
+her well-curled upper lip, a look of sauciness to the features
+quite<br>
+bewitching; her hair&mdash;that brilliant auburn we see in a <i>Carlo
+Dolci</i>&mdash;fell<br>
+in wild and massive curls upon her shoulders. Her costume was a
+dark-green<br>
+riding-habit, not of the newest in its fashion, and displaying
+more than<br>
+one rent in its careless folds; her hat, whip, and gloves lay on
+the floor<br>
+beside her, and her whole attitude and bearing indicated the most
+perfect<br>
+ease and carelessness.</p>
+
+<p>"So you are caught&mdash;taken alive!" said she, as she pressed her
+hands upon<br>
+her sides in a fresh burst of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove! this is a surprise indeed!" said I. "And, pray, into
+whose fair<br>
+hands have I fallen a captive?" recovering myself a little, and
+assuming a<br>
+half air of gallantry.</p>
+
+<p>"So you don't know me, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my life I do not!"</p>
+
+<p>"How good! Why, I'm Baby Blake."</p>
+
+<p>"Baby Blake?" said I, thinking that a rather strange
+appellation for one<br>
+whose well-developed proportions betokened nothing of
+infancy,&mdash;"Baby<br>
+Blake?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure; your cousin Baby."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" said I, springing forward. "Let me embrace my
+relative."<br>
+Accepting my proffered salutation with the most exemplary
+coolness, she<br>
+said:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Get a chair, now, and let's have a talk together."</p>
+
+<p>"Why the devil do they call you Baby?" said I, still puzzled
+by this<br>
+palpable misnomer.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I am the youngest, and I was always the baby,"
+replied she,<br>
+adjusting her ringlets with a most rural coquetry. "Now tell me
+something.<br>
+Why do you live shut up here like a madman, and not come near us
+at<br>
+Gurt-na-Morra?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's a long story, Baby. But, since we are asking
+questions, how did<br>
+you get in here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just through the window, my dear; and I've torn my habit, as
+you see."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, she exhibited a rent of about two feet long,
+thrusting through<br>
+it a very pretty foot and ankle at the same time.</p>
+
+<p>"As my inhospitable customs have cost you a habit, you must
+let me make you<br>
+a present of one."</p>
+
+<p>"No, will you though? That's a good fellow. Lord! I told them
+I knew you<br>
+weren't a miser; that you were only odd, that's all."</p>
+
+<p>"And how did you come over, Baby?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just cantered over with little Paddy Byrne. I made him take
+all the walls<br>
+and ditches we met, and they're scraping the mud off him ever
+since. I'm<br>
+glad I made you laugh, Charley; they say you are so sad. Dear me,
+how<br>
+thirsty I am! Have you any beer?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure, Baby. But wouldn't you like some luncheon?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of all things. Well, this is fun!" said she, as taking my
+arm, I led her<br>
+from the drawing-room. "They don't know where I'm gone,&mdash;not one
+of them;<br>
+and I've a great mind not to tell them, if you wouldn't
+blab."</p>
+
+<p>"Would it be quite proper?"</p>
+
+<p>"Proper!" cried she, imitating my voice. "I like that! as if I
+was going to<br>
+run away with you! Dear me, what a pretty house, and what nice
+pictures!<br>
+Who is the old fellow up there in the armor?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's Sir Hildebrand O'Malley," said I, with some pride in
+recognizing an<br>
+ancestor of the thirteenth century.</p>
+
+<p>"And the other old fright with the wig, and his hands stuck in
+his<br>
+pockets?"</p>
+
+<p>"My grandfather, Baby."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord, how ugly he is! Why, Charley, he hasn't the look of
+you. One would<br>
+think, too, he was angry at us. Ay, old gentleman, you don't like
+to see me<br>
+leaning on Cousin Charley's arm! That must be the luncheon; I'm
+sure I hear<br>
+knives and forks rattling there."</p>
+
+<p>The old butler's astonishment was not inferior to my own a few
+minutes<br>
+before, when I entered the dining-room with my fair cousin upon
+my arm.<br>
+As I drew a chair towards the table, a thought struck me that
+possibly<br>
+it might only be a due attention to my fair guest if I invited
+the<br>
+housekeeper, Mrs. Magra, to favor us with her presence; and
+accordingly, in<br>
+an undertone, so as not to be overheard by old Simon, I
+said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps, Baby, you'd like to have Mrs. Magra to keep us
+company?"</p>
+
+<p>"Who's she?" was the brief answer.</p>
+
+<p>"The housekeeper; a very respectable old matron."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she funny?"</p>
+
+<p>"Funny! not a bit."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, then, never mind her. What made you think of her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I thought, perhaps you'd think&mdash;That is people might
+say&mdash;In fact I<br>
+was doing a little bit proper on your account."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that was it, was it? Thank you for nothing, my dear; Baby
+Blake can<br>
+take care of herself. And now just help me to that wing there. Do
+you know,<br>
+Cousin Charley, I think you're an old quiz, and not half as good
+a fellow<br>
+as you used to be?"</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, Baby, don't be in such a hurry to pronounce upon
+me. Let us<br>
+take a glass of wine. Fill Miss Blake's glass, Simon."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you may be better when one comes to know you. I detest
+sherry. No,<br>
+never mind, I'll take it, as it's here. Charley, I'll not
+compliment you<br>
+upon your ham; they don't know how to save them here. I'll give
+you such<br>
+a receipt when you come over to see us. But will you come? That's
+the<br>
+question."</p>
+
+<p>"How can you ask me! Don't you think I'll return your
+visit?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, hang your ceremony! Come and see us, like a good-natured
+fellow that<br>
+knew us since we played together and quarrelled over our toys on
+the grass.<br>
+Is that your sword up there? Did you hear that noise? That was
+thunder:<br>
+there it comes. Look at that!"</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke, a darkness like night overspread the landscape;
+the waves of<br>
+the river became greatly agitated, and the rain, descending in
+torrents,<br>
+beat with tremendous force against the windows; clap after clap
+of thunder<br>
+followed; the lightning flashed fearfully through the gloom; and
+the wind,<br>
+growing every moment stronger, drove the rain with redoubled
+violence<br>
+against the glass. For a while we amused ourselves with watching
+the<br>
+effects of the storm without: the poor laborers flying from their
+work; the<br>
+dripping figures seeking shelter beneath the trees; the barques;
+the very<br>
+loaded carts themselves,&mdash;all interested Miss Baby, whose eye
+roved from<br>
+the shore to the Shannon, recognizing with a practised eye every
+house upon<br>
+its banks, and every barque that rocked and pitched beneath the
+gale.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, this is pleasant to look out at," said she, at length,
+and after the<br>
+storm had lasted for above an hour, without evincing any show of
+abatement;<br>
+"but what's to become of <i>me?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Now that was the very question I had been asking myself for
+the last twenty<br>
+minutes without ever being able to find the answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, Charley, what's to become of me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, never fear; one thing's quite certain, you cannot leave
+this in such<br>
+weather. The river is certainly impassable by this time at the
+ford, and to<br>
+go by the road is out of the question; it is fully twelve miles.
+I have it,<br>
+Baby; you, as I've said before, can't leave this, but I can. Now,
+I'll go<br>
+over to Gurt-na-Morra, and return in the morning to bring you
+back; it will<br>
+be fine by that time."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I like your notion. You'll leave me all alone here to
+drink tea, I<br>
+suppose, with your friend Mrs. Magra. A pleasant evening I'd have
+of it;<br>
+not a bit&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Baby, don't be cross; I only meant this arrangement
+really for your<br>
+sake. I needn't tell you how very much I'd prefer doing the
+honors of my<br>
+poor house in person."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I see what you mean,&mdash;more propers. Well, well, I've a
+great deal to<br>
+learn; but look, I think its growing lighter."</p>
+
+<p>"No, far from it; it's only that gray mass along the horizon
+that always<br>
+bodes continual rain."</p>
+
+<p>As the prospect without had little cheering to look upon, we
+sat down<br>
+beside the fire and chatted away, forgetting very soon in a
+hundred mutual<br>
+recollections and inquiries, the rain and the wind, the thunder
+and the<br>
+hurricane. Now and then, as some louder crash would resound above
+our<br>
+heads, for a moment we would turn to the window, and comment upon
+the<br>
+dreadful weather; but the next, we had forgotten all about it,
+and were<br>
+deep in our confabulations.</p>
+
+<p>As for my fair cousin, who at first was full of contrivances
+to pass<br>
+the time,&mdash;such as the piano, a game at backgammon, chicken
+hazard,<br>
+battledoor,&mdash;she at last became mightily interested in some of
+my<br>
+soldiering adventures, and it was six o'clock ere we again
+thought that<br>
+some final measure must be adopted for restoring Baby to her
+friends, or at<br>
+least, guarding against the consequences her simple and guileless
+nature<br>
+might have involved her in.</p>
+
+<p>Mike was called into the conference, and at his suggestion, it
+was decided<br>
+that we should have out the phaeton, and that I should myself
+drive<br>
+Miss Blake home; a plan which offered no other difficulties than
+this<br>
+one,&mdash;namely, that of above thirty horses in my stables, I had
+not a single<br>
+pair which had ever been harnessed.</p>
+
+<p>This, so far from proving the obstacle I deemed it, seemed, on
+the<br>
+contrary, to overwhelm Baby with delight.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's have them. Come, Charley, this will be rare fun; we
+couldn't have a<br>
+team of four, could we?"</p>
+
+<p>"Six, if you like it, my dear coz&mdash;only who's to hold them?
+They're young<br>
+thorough-breds,&mdash;most of them never backed; some not bitted. In
+fact, I<br>
+know nothing of my stable. I say, Mike, is there anything fit to
+take out?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; there's Miss Wildespin, she's in training, to be
+sure; but we<br>
+can't help that; and the brown colt they call, 'Billy the
+Bolter,'&mdash;they're<br>
+the likeliest we have; without your honor would take the two
+chestnuts we<br>
+took up last week; they're raal devils to go; and if the tackle
+will hold<br>
+them, they'll bring you to Mr. Blake's door in forty
+minutes."</p>
+
+<p>"I vote for the chestnuts," said Baby, slapping her boot with
+her<br>
+horsewhip.</p>
+
+<p>"I move an amendment in favor of Miss Wildespin," said I,
+doubtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"He'll never do for Galway," sang Baby, laying her whip on my
+shoulder with<br>
+no tender hand; "yet you used to cross the country in good style
+when you<br>
+were here before."</p>
+
+<p>"And might do so again, Baby."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, no; that vile dragoon seat, with your long stirrup, and
+your heel<br>
+dropped, and your elbow this way, and your head that! How could
+you ever<br>
+screw your horse up to his fence, lifting him along as you came
+up through<br>
+the heavy ground, and with a stroke of your hand sending him pop
+over, with<br>
+his hind-legs well under him?" Here she burst into a fit of
+laughter at my<br>
+look of amazement, as with voice, gesture, and look she actually
+dramatized<br>
+the scene she described.</p>
+
+<p>By the time that I had costumed my fair friend in my dragoon
+cloak and a<br>
+foraging cap, with a gold band around it, which was the extent of
+muffling<br>
+my establishment could muster, a distant noise without apprised
+us that the<br>
+phaeton was approaching. Certainly, the mode in which that
+equipage came<br>
+up to the door might have inspired sentiments of fear in any
+heart less<br>
+steeled against danger than my fair cousin's. The two blood
+chestnuts (for<br>
+it was those Mike harnessed, having a groom's dislike to take a
+racer out<br>
+of training) were surrounded by about twenty people: some at
+their heads;<br>
+some patting them on the flanks; some spoking the wheels; and a
+few, the<br>
+more cautious of the party, standing at a respectable distance
+and offering<br>
+advice. The mode of progression was simply a spring, a plunge, a
+rear,<br>
+a lounge, and a kick; and considering it was the first time they
+ever<br>
+performed together, nothing could be more uniform than their
+display.<br>
+Sometimes the pole would be seen to point straight upward, like a
+lightning<br>
+conductor, while the infuriated animals appeared sparring with
+their<br>
+fore-legs at an imaginary enemy. Sometimes, like the pictures in
+a<br>
+school-book on mythology, they would seem in the act of diving,
+while<br>
+with their hind-legs they dashed the splash-board into fragments
+behind<br>
+them,&mdash;their eyes flashing fire, their nostrils distended, their
+flanks<br>
+heaving, and every limb trembling with passion and
+excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I call a rare turn-out," said Baby, who enjoyed
+the proceeding<br>
+amazingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but remember," said I, "we're not to have all these
+running footmen<br>
+the whole way."</p>
+
+<p>"I like that near-sider with the white fetlock."</p>
+
+<p>"You're right, Miss," said Mike, who entered at the moment,
+and felt quite<br>
+gratified at the criticism,&mdash;"you're right, Miss; it's himself
+can do it."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Baby, are you ready?"</p>
+
+<p>"All right, sir," said she, touching her cap knowingly with
+her forefinger.</p>
+
+<p>"Will the tackle hold, Mike?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll take this with us, at any rate," pointing, as he spoke,
+to a<br>
+considerable coil of rope, a hammer, and a basket of nails, he
+carried on<br>
+his arm. "It's the break harness we have, and it ought to be
+strong enough;<br>
+but sure if the thunder comes on again, they'd smash a chain
+cable."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Charley," cried Baby, "keep their heads straight; for
+when they go<br>
+that way, they mean going."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Baby, let's start; but pray remember one thing,&mdash;if I'm
+not as<br>
+agreeable on the journey as I ought to be, if I don't say as many
+pretty<br>
+things to my pretty coz, it's because these confounded beasts
+will give me<br>
+as much as I can do."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, look after the cattle, and take another time for
+squeezing my<br>
+hand. I say, Charley, you'd like to smoke, now, wouldn't you? If
+so, don't<br>
+mind me."</p>
+
+<p>"A thousand thanks for thinking of it; but I'll not commit
+such a trespass<br>
+on good breeding."</p>
+
+<p>When we reached the door, the prospect looked dark and dismal
+enough. The<br>
+rain had almost ceased, but masses of black clouds were hurrying
+across<br>
+the sky, and the low rumbling noise of a gathering storm crept
+along the<br>
+ground. Our panting equipage, with its two mounted grooms
+behind,&mdash;for to<br>
+provide against all accident, Mike ordered two such to follow
+us,&mdash;stood<br>
+in waiting. Miss Blake's horse, held by the smallest imaginable
+bit of<br>
+boyhood, bringing up the rear.</p>
+
+<p>"Look at Paddy Byrne's face," said Baby, directing my
+attention to the<br>
+little individual in question.</p>
+
+<p>Now, small as the aforesaid face was, it contrived, within its
+limits, to<br>
+exhibit an expression of unqualified fear. I had no time,
+however, to give<br>
+a second look, when I jumped into the phaeton and seized the
+reins. Mike<br>
+sprang up behind at a look from me, and without speaking a word,
+the<br>
+stablemen and helpers flew right and left. The chestnuts, seeing
+all free<br>
+before them, made one tremendous plunge, carrying the
+fore-carriage clear<br>
+off the ground, and straining every nut, bolt, screw, and strap
+about us<br>
+with the effort.</p>
+
+<p>"They're off now," cried Mickey.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, they are off now," said Baby. "Keep them going."</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could be easier to follow than this advice; and in
+fact so little<br>
+merit had I in obeying it, that I never spoke a word. Down the
+avenue we<br>
+went, at the speed of lightning, the stones and the water from
+the late<br>
+rain flying and splashing about us. In one series of plunges,
+agreeably<br>
+diversified by a strong bang upon the splash-board, we reached
+the gate.<br>
+Before I had time to utter a prayer for our safety, we were
+through and<br>
+fairly upon the high road.</p>
+
+<p>"Musha, but the master's mad!" cried the old dame of the
+gate-lodge; "he<br>
+wasn't out of this gate for a year and a half, and look
+now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The rest was lost in the clear ringing laugh of Baby, who
+clapped her hands<br>
+in ecstasy and delight.</p>
+
+<p>"What a spanking pair they are! I suppose you wouldn't let me
+get my hand<br>
+on them?" said she, making a gesture as if to take the reins.</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven forbid, my dear!" said I; "they've nearly pulled my
+wrists off<br>
+already."</p>
+
+<p>Our road, like many in the west of Ireland, lay through a
+level tract of<br>
+bog; deep ditches, half filled with water, on either side of us,
+but,<br>
+fortunately, neither hill nor valley for several miles.</p>
+
+<p>"There's the mail," said Baby, pointing to a dark speck at a
+long distance<br>
+off.</p>
+
+<p>Ere many minutes elapsed, our stretching gallop, for such had
+our pace<br>
+sobered into, brought us up with it, and as we flew by, at top
+speed, Baby<br>
+jumped to her feet, and turning a waggish look at our beaten
+rivals, burst<br>
+out into a fit of triumphant laughter.</p>
+
+<p>Mike was correct as to time; in some few seconds less than
+forty minutes we<br>
+turned into the avenue of Gurt-na-Morra. Tearing along like the
+very moment<br>
+of their starting, the hot and fiery animals galloped up the
+approach, and<br>
+at length came to a stop in a deep ploughed field, into which,
+fortunately<br>
+for us, Mr. Blake, animated less by the picturesque than the
+profitable,<br>
+had converted his green lawn. This check, however, was less owing
+to my<br>
+agency than to that of my servants; for dismounting in haste,
+they flew to<br>
+the horses' heads, and with ready tact, and before I had helped
+my cousin<br>
+to the ground, succeeded in unharnessing them from the carriage,
+and led<br>
+them, blown and panting, covered with foam, and splashed with
+mud, into the<br>
+space before the door.</p>
+
+<p>By this time we were joined by the whole Blake family, who
+poured forth in<br>
+astonishment at our strange and sudden appearance. Explanation on
+my part<br>
+was unnecessary, for Baby, with a volubility quite her own, gave
+the whole<br>
+recital in less than three minutes. From the moment of her advent
+to her<br>
+departure, they had it all; and while she mingled her ridicule at
+my<br>
+surprise, her praise of my luncheon, her jests at my prudence,
+the whole<br>
+family joined heartily in her mirth, while they welcomed, with
+most<br>
+unequivocal warmth, my first visit to Gurt-na-Morra.</p>
+
+<p>I confess it was with no slight gratification I remarked that
+Baby's visit<br>
+was as much a matter of surprise to them as to me. Believing her
+to have<br>
+gone to visit at Portumna Castle, they felt no uneasiness at her
+absence;<br>
+so that, in her descent upon me, she was really only guided by
+her own<br>
+wilful fancy, and that total absence of all consciousness of
+wrong which<br>
+makes a truly innocent girl the hardiest of all God's creatures.
+I was<br>
+reassured by this feeling, and satisfied that, whatever the
+intentions of<br>
+the elder members of the Blake family, Baby was, at least, no
+participator<br>
+in their plots or sharer in their intrigues.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XLVI.</p>
+
+<p>NEW VIEWS.</p>
+
+<p>When I found myself the next morning at home, I could not help
+ruminating<br>
+over the strange adventures of the preceding day, and felt a kind
+of<br>
+self-reproach at the frigid manner in which I had hitherto
+treated all the<br>
+Blake advances, contrasting so ill for me with the unaffected
+warmth and<br>
+kind good-nature of their reception. Never alluding, even by
+accident, to<br>
+my late estrangement; never, by a chance speech, indicating that
+they<br>
+felt any soreness for the past,&mdash;they talked away about the
+gossip of<br>
+the country: its feuds, its dinners, its assizes, its balls,
+its<br>
+garrisons,&mdash;all the varied subjects of country life were gayly
+and<br>
+laughingly discussed; and when, as I entered my own silent and
+deserted<br>
+home, and contrasted its look of melancholy and gloom with the
+gay and<br>
+merry scene I so lately parted from, when my echoing steps
+reverberated<br>
+along the flagged hall,&mdash;I thought of the happy family picture I
+left<br>
+behind me, and could not help avowing to myself that the goods of
+fortune<br>
+I possessed were but ill dispensed, when, in the midst of every
+means and<br>
+appliance for comfort and happiness, I lived a solitary man,
+companionless<br>
+and alone.</p>
+
+<p>I arose from breakfast a hundred times,&mdash;now walking
+impatiently towards<br>
+the window, now strolling into the drawing-room. Around, on every
+side, lay<br>
+scattered the prints and drawings, as Baby had thrown them
+carelessly<br>
+upon the floor; her handkerchief was also there. I took it up; I
+know not<br>
+why,&mdash;some lurking leaven of old romance perhaps suggested
+it,&mdash;but I hoped<br>
+it might prove of delicate texture, and bespeaking that lady-like
+coquetry<br>
+which so pleasantly associates with the sex in our minds. Alas,
+no! Nothing<br>
+could be more palpably the opposite: torn, and with a knot&mdash;some
+hint to<br>
+memory&mdash;upon one corner, it was no aid to my careering fancy. And
+yet&mdash;and<br>
+yet, what a handsome girl she is; how finely, how delicately
+formed that<br>
+Greek outline of forehead and brow; how transparently soft that
+downy pink<br>
+upon her cheek! With what varied expression those eyes can
+beam!&mdash;ay, that<br>
+they can: but, confound it, there's this fault, their very
+archness, their<br>
+sly malice, will be interpreted by the ill-judging world to any
+but the<br>
+real motive. "How like a flirt!" will one say. "How impertinent!
+How<br>
+ill-bred!" The conventional stare of cold, patched, and painted
+beauty,<br>
+upon whose unblushing cheek no stray tinge of modesty has
+wandered, will be<br>
+tolerated, even admired; while the artless beamings of the soul
+upon the<br>
+face of rural loveliness will be condemned without appeal.</p>
+
+<p>Such a girl may a man marry who destines his days to the wild
+west; but woe<br>
+unto him!&mdash;woe unto him, should he migrate among the more
+civilized and<br>
+less charitable <i>coteries</i> of our neighbors!</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, here are the papers, and I was forgetting. Let me
+see&mdash;'Bayonne'&mdash;ay,<br>
+'march of the troops&mdash;Sixth Corps.' What can that be without? I
+say, Mike,<br>
+who is cantering along the avenue?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's me, sir. I'm training the brown filly for Miss Mary, as
+your honor<br>
+bid me last night."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, very true. Does she go quietly?"</p>
+
+<p>"Like a lamb, sir; barrin' she does give a kick now and then
+at the sheet,<br>
+when it bangs against her legs."</p>
+
+<p>"Am I to go over with the books now, sir?" said a wild-looking
+shockhead<br>
+appearing within the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, take them over, with my compliments; and say I hope Miss
+Mary Blake<br>
+has caught no cold."</p>
+
+<p>"You were speaking about a habit and hat, sir?" said Mrs.
+Magra, curtsying<br>
+as she entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mrs. Magra; I want your advice. Oh, tell Barnes I really
+cannot be<br>
+bored about those eternal turnips every day of my life. And,
+Mike, I wish<br>
+you'd make them look over the four-horse harness. I want to try
+those<br>
+grays; they tell me they'll run well together. Well, Freney,
+more<br>
+complaints, I hope? Nothing but trespasses! I don't care, so
+you'd not<br>
+worry me, if they eat up every blade of clover in the grounds;
+I'm sick<br>
+of being bored this way. Did you say that we'd eight couple of
+good<br>
+dogs?&mdash;quite enough to begin with. Tell Jones to ride into
+Banagher and<br>
+look after that box; Buckmaster sent it from London two months
+ago, and it<br>
+has been lying there ever since. And, Mrs. Magra, pray let the
+windows be<br>
+opened, and the house well aired; that drawing-room would be all
+the better<br>
+for new papering."</p>
+
+<p>These few and broken directions may serve to show my
+readers&mdash;what<br>
+certainly they failed to convince myself of&mdash;that a new chapter
+of my life<br>
+had opened before me; and that, in proportion to the length of
+time<br>
+my feelings had found neither vent nor outlet, they now rushed
+madly,<br>
+tempestuously into their new channels, suffering no impediment to
+arrest,<br>
+no obstacle to oppose their current.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing can be conceived more opposite to my late, than my
+present habits<br>
+now became. The house, the grounds, the gardens, all seemed to
+participate<br>
+in the new influence which beamed upon myself; the stir and
+bustle of<br>
+active life was everywhere perceptible; and amidst numerous
+preparations<br>
+for the moors and the hunting-field, for pleasure parties upon
+the river,<br>
+and fishing excursions up the mountains, my days were spent. The
+Blakes,<br>
+without even for a moment pressing their attentions upon me,
+permitted me<br>
+to go and come among them unquestioned and unasked. When, nearly
+every<br>
+morning, I appeared in the breakfast-room, I felt exactly like a
+member of<br>
+the family; the hundred little discrepancies of thought and habit
+which<br>
+struck me forcibly at first, looked daily less apparent; the
+careless<br>
+inattentions of my fair cousins as to dress, their free-and-easy
+boisterous<br>
+manner, their very accents, which fell so harshly on my ear,
+gradually made<br>
+less and less impression, until at last, when a raw English
+Ensign, just<br>
+arrived in the neighborhood, remarked to me in confidence, "What
+devilish<br>
+fine girls they were, if they were not so confoundedly Irish!" I
+could not<br>
+help wondering what the fellow meant, and attributed the
+observation more<br>
+to his ignorance than to its truth.</p>
+
+<p>Papa and Mamma Blake, like prudent generals, so long as they
+saw the forces<br>
+of the enemy daily wasting before them; so long as they could
+with impunity<br>
+carry on the war at his expense,&mdash;resolved to risk nothing by a
+pitched<br>
+battle. Unlike the Dalrymples, they could leave all to time.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, tell me not of dark eyes swimming in their own ethereal
+essence;<br>
+tell me not of pouting lips, of glossy ringlets, of taper
+fingers, and<br>
+well-rounded insteps; speak not to me of soft voices, whose
+seductive<br>
+sounds ring sweetly in our hearts; preach not of those thousand
+womanly<br>
+graces so dear to every man, and doubly to him who lives apart
+from all<br>
+their influences and their fascinations; neither dwell upon
+congenial<br>
+temperament, similarity of taste, of disposition, and of thought;
+these are<br>
+not the great risks a man runs in life. Of all the temptations,
+strong as<br>
+these may be, there is one greater than them all, and that is,
+propinquity!</p>
+
+<p>Show me the man who has ever stood this test; show me the man,
+deserving<br>
+the name of such, who has become daily and hourly exposed to the
+breaching<br>
+artillery of flashing eyes, of soft voices, of winning smiles,
+and kind<br>
+speeches, and who hasn't felt, and that too soon too, a breach
+within<br>
+the rampart of his heart. He may, it is true,&mdash;nay, he will, in
+many<br>
+cases,&mdash;make a bold and vigorous defence; sometimes will he
+re-intrench<br>
+himself within the stockades of his prudence; but, alas! it is
+only to<br>
+defer the moment when he must lay down his arms. He may, like a
+wise man<br>
+who sees his fate inevitable, make a virtue of necessity, and
+surrender at<br>
+discretion; or, like a crafty foe, seeing his doom before him,
+under the<br>
+cover of the night he may make a sortie from the garrison, and
+run for his<br>
+life. Ignominious as such a course must be, it is often the only
+one left.</p>
+
+<p>But to come back. Love, like the small-pox, is most dangerous
+when you take<br>
+it in the natural way. Those made matches, which Heaven is
+supposed to<br>
+have a hand in, when placing an unmarried gentleman's property in
+the<br>
+neighborhood of an unmarried lady's, which destine two people for
+each<br>
+other in life, because their well-judging friends have agreed,
+"They'll do<br>
+very well; they were made for each other,"&mdash;these are the mild
+cases of the<br>
+malady. This process of friendly vaccination takes out the poison
+of the<br>
+disease, substituting a more harmless and less exciting
+affection; but the<br>
+really dangerous instances are those from contact, that same
+propinquity,<br>
+that confounded tendency every man yields to, to fall into a
+railroad of<br>
+habit; that is the risk, that is the danger. What a bore it is to
+find that<br>
+the absence of one person, with whom you're in no wise in love,
+will spoil<br>
+your morning's canter, or your rowing party upon the river! How
+much put<br>
+out are you, when she, to whom you always gave your arm in to
+dinner,<br>
+does not make her appearance in the drawing-room; and your tea,
+too, some<br>
+careless one, indifferent to your taste, puts a lump of sugar too
+little,<br>
+or cream too much, while she&mdash;But no matter; habit has done for
+you what<br>
+no direct influence of beauty could do, and a slave to your own
+selfish<br>
+indulgences, and the cultivation of that ease you prize so
+highly, you fall<br>
+over head and ears in love.</p>
+
+<p>Now, you are not, my good reader, by any means to suppose that
+this was my<br>
+case. No, no; I was too much what the world terms the "old
+soldier" for<br>
+that. To continue my illustration: like the fortress that has
+been often<br>
+besieged, the sentry upon the walls keeps more vigilant watch;
+his ear<br>
+detects the far-off clank of the dread artillery; he marks each
+parallel;<br>
+he notes down every breaching battery; and if he be captured, at
+least it<br>
+is in fair fight.</p>
+
+<p>Such were some of my reflections as I rode slowly home one
+evening from<br>
+Gurt-na-Morra. Many a time, latterly, had I contrasted my own
+lonely and<br>
+deserted hearth with the smiling looks, the happy faces, and the
+merry<br>
+voices I had left behind me; and many a time did I ask myself,
+"Am I never<br>
+to partake of a happiness like this?" How many a man is seduced
+into<br>
+matrimony from this very feeling! How many a man whose hours have
+passed<br>
+fleetingly at the pleasant tea-table, or by the warm hearth of
+some old<br>
+country-house, going forth into the cold and cheerless night,
+reaches his<br>
+far-off home only to find it dark and gloomy, joyless and
+companionless?<br>
+How often has the hard-visaged look of his old butler, as, with
+sleepy eyes<br>
+and yawning face, he hands a bed-room candle, suggested thoughts
+of married<br>
+happiness? Of the perils of propinquity I have already spoken;
+the risks of<br>
+contrast are also great. Have you never, in strolling through
+some fragrant<br>
+and rich conservatory, fixed your eye upon a fair and lovely
+flower, whose<br>
+blossoming beauty seems to give all the lustre and all the
+incense of<br>
+the scene around? And how have you thought it would adorn and
+grace the<br>
+precincts of your home, diffusing fragrance on every side. Alas,
+the<br>
+experiment is not always successful. Much of the charm and many
+of the<br>
+fascinations which delight you are the result of association of
+time and of<br>
+place. The lovely voice, whose tones have spoken to your heart,
+may, like<br>
+some instrument, be delightful in the harmony of the orchestra,
+but, after<br>
+all, prove a very middling performer in a duet.</p>
+
+<p>I say not this to deter men from matrimony, but to warn them
+from a<br>
+miscalculation which may mar their happiness. Flirtation is a
+very fine<br>
+thing, but it's only a state of transition after all. The tadpole
+existence<br>
+of the lover would be great fun, if one was never to become a
+frog under<br>
+the hands of the parson. I say all this dispassionately and
+advisedly. Like<br>
+the poet of my country, for many years of my life,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "My only books were woman's looks,"</p>
+
+<p>and certainly I subscribe to a circulating library.</p>
+
+<p>All this long digression may perhaps bring the reader to where
+it brought<br>
+me,&mdash;the very palpable conviction, that, though not in love with
+my cousin<br>
+Baby, I could not tell when I might eventually become so.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XLVII.</p>
+
+<p>A RECOGNITION.</p>
+
+<p>The most pleasing part about retrospect is the memory of our
+bygone hopes.<br>
+The past, however happy, however blissful, few would wish to live
+over<br>
+again; but who is there that does not long for, does not pine
+after the<br>
+day-dream which gilded the future, which looked ever forward to
+the time to<br>
+come as to a realization of all that was dear to us, lightening
+our present<br>
+cares, soothing our passing sorrows by that one thought?</p>
+
+<p>Life is marked out in periods in which, like stages in a
+journey, we rest<br>
+and repose ourselves, casting a look, now back upon the road we
+have been<br>
+travelling, now throwing a keener glance towards the path left
+us. It is at<br>
+such spots as these remembrance comes full upon us, and that we
+feel how<br>
+little our intentions have swayed our career or influenced our
+actions;<br>
+the aspirations, the resolves of youth, are either looked upon as
+puerile<br>
+follies, or a most distant day settled on for their realization.
+The<br>
+principles we fondly looked to, like our guide-stars, are dimly
+visible,<br>
+not seen; the friends we cherished are changed and gone; the
+scenes<br>
+themselves seem no longer the sunshine and the shade we loved;
+and, in<br>
+fact, we are living in a new world, where our own altered
+condition gives<br>
+the type to all around us; the only link that binds us to the
+past being<br>
+that same memory that like a sad curfew tolls the twilight of our
+fairest<br>
+dreams and most cherished wishes.</p>
+
+<p>That these glimpses of the bygone season of our youth should
+be but fitful<br>
+and passing&mdash;tinging, not coloring the landscape of our life&mdash;we
+should be<br>
+engaged in all the active bustle and turmoil of the world,
+surrounded by<br>
+objects of hope, love, and ambition, stemming the strong tide in
+whose<br>
+fountain is fortune.</p>
+
+<p>He, however, who lives apart, a dreary and a passionless
+existence, will<br>
+find that in the past, more than in the future, his thoughts have
+found<br>
+their resting-place; memory usurps the place of hope, and he
+travels<br>
+through life like one walking onward; his eyes still turning
+towards some<br>
+loved forsaken spot, teeming with all the associations of his
+happiest<br>
+hours, and preserving, even in distance, the outline that he
+loved.</p>
+
+<p>Distance in time, as in space, smooths down all the
+inequalities of<br>
+surface; and as the cragged and rugged mountain, darkened by
+cliff and<br>
+precipice, shows to the far-off traveller but some blue and misty
+mass,<br>
+so the long-lost-sight-of hours lose all the cares and griefs
+that tinged<br>
+them, and to our mental eye, are but objects of uniform
+loveliness and<br>
+beauty; and if we do not think of</p>
+
+<p>    "The smiles, the tears,<br>
+    Of boyhood's years,"</p>
+
+<p>it is because, like April showers, they but checker the spring
+of our<br>
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>For myself, baffled in hope at a period when most men but
+begin to feel it,<br>
+I thought myself much older than I really was; the
+disappointments of the<br>
+world, like the storms of the ocean, impart a false sense of
+experience to<br>
+the young heart, as he sails forth upon his voyage; and it is an
+easy error<br>
+to mistake trials for time.</p>
+
+<p>The goods of fortune by which I was surrounded, took nothing
+from the<br>
+bitterness of my retrospect; on the contrary, I could not help
+feeling that<br>
+every luxury of my life was bought by my surrender of that career
+which had<br>
+elated me in my own esteem, and which, setting a high and noble
+ambition<br>
+before me, taught me to be a man.</p>
+
+<p>To be happy, one must not only fulfil the duties and exactions
+of his<br>
+station, but the station itself must answer to his views and
+aspirations<br>
+in life. Now, mine did not sustain this condition: all that my
+life had<br>
+of promise was connected with the memory of her who never could
+share my<br>
+fortunes; of her for whom I had earned praise and honor; becoming
+ambitious<br>
+as the road to her affection, only to learn after, that my hopes
+were but a<br>
+dream, and my paradise a wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>While thus the inglorious current of my life ran on, I was not
+indifferent<br>
+to the mighty events the great continent of Europe was
+witnessing. The<br>
+successes of the Peninsular campaign; the triumphant entry of
+the<br>
+British into France; the downfall of Napoleon; the restoration of
+the<br>
+Bourbons,&mdash;followed each other with the rapidity of the most
+common-place<br>
+occurrences; and in the few short years in which I had sprung
+from boyhood<br>
+to man's estate, the whole condition of the world was altered.
+Kings<br>
+deposed; great armies disbanded; rightful sovereigns restored to
+their<br>
+dominions; banished and exiled men returned to their country,
+invested with<br>
+rank and riches; and peace, in the fullest tide of its blessings,
+poured<br>
+down upon the earth devastated and blood-stained.</p>
+
+<p>Years passed on; and between the careless abandonment to the
+mere amusement<br>
+of the hour, and the darker meditation upon the past, time
+slipped away.<br>
+From my old friends and brother officers I heard but rarely.
+Power, who at<br>
+first wrote frequently, grew gradually less and less
+communicative. Webber,<br>
+who had gone to Paris at the peace, had written but one letter;
+while, from<br>
+the rest, a few straggling lines were all I received. In truth be
+it told,<br>
+my own negligence and inability to reply cost me this apparent
+neglect.</p>
+
+<p>It was a fine evening in May, when, rigging up a sprit-sail, I
+jumped into<br>
+my yawl, and dropped easily down the river. The light wind gently
+curled<br>
+the crested water, the trees waved gently and shook their
+branches in the<br>
+breeze, and my little barque, bending slightly beneath, rustled
+on her<br>
+foamy track with that joyous bounding motion so inspiriting to
+one's<br>
+heart. The clouds were flying swiftly past, tinging with their
+shadows the<br>
+mountains beneath; the Munster shore, glowing with a rich
+sunlight, showed<br>
+every sheep-cot and every hedge-row clearly out, while the deep
+shadow of<br>
+tall Scariff darkened the silent river where Holy Island, with
+its ruined<br>
+churches and melancholy tower, was reflected in the still
+water.</p>
+
+<p>It was a thoroughly Irish landscape: the changeful sky; the
+fast-flitting<br>
+shadows; the brilliant sunlight; the plenteous fields; the broad
+and<br>
+swelling stream; the dark mountain, from whose brown crest a
+wreath of thin<br>
+blue smoke was rising,&mdash;were all there smiling yet sadly, like
+her own<br>
+sons, across whose lowering brow some fitful flash of fancy ever
+playing<br>
+dallies like sunbeams on a darkening stream, nor marks the depth
+that lies<br>
+below.</p>
+
+<p>I sat musing over the strange harmony of Nature with the
+temperament of<br>
+man, every phase of his passionate existence seeming to have its
+type in<br>
+things inanimate, when a loud cheer from the land aroused me, and
+the<br>
+words, "Charley! Cousin Charley!" came wafted over the water to
+where<br>
+I lay. For some time I could but distinguish the faint outline of
+some<br>
+figures on the shore; but as I came nearer, I recognized my fair
+cousin<br>
+Baby, who, with a younger brother of some eight or nine years
+old, was<br>
+taking an evening walk.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know, Charley," said she, "the boys have gone over to
+the castle to<br>
+look for you; we want you particularly this evening."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, Cousin Baby! Well, I fear you must make my
+excuses."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, once for all, I will not. I know this is one of your
+sulky moods,<br>
+and I tell you frankly I'll not put up with them any more."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, Baby, not so; out of spirits if you will, but not out
+of temper."</p>
+
+<p>"The distinction is much too fine for me, if there be any. But
+there now,<br>
+do be a good fellow; come up with us&mdash;come up with me!"</p>
+
+<p>As she said this she placed her arm within mine. I thought,
+too,&mdash;perhaps<br>
+it was but a thought,&mdash;she pressed me gently. I know she blushed
+and turned<br>
+away her head to hide it.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't pretend to be proof to your entreaty, Cousin Baby,"
+said I, with<br>
+half-affected gallantry, putting her fingers to my lips.</p>
+
+<p>"There, how can you be so foolish; look at William yonder; I
+am sure he<br>
+must have seen you!" But William, God bless him! was
+bird's-nesting or<br>
+butterfly-hunting or daisy-picking or something of that kind.</p>
+
+<p>O ye young brothers, who, sufficiently old to be deemed
+companions and<br>
+<i>chaperons</i>, but yet young enough to be regarded as having
+neither eyes nor<br>
+ears, what mischief have ye to answer for; what a long reckoning
+of tender<br>
+speeches, of soft looks, of pressed hands, lies at your door!
+What an<br>
+incentive to flirtation is the wily imp who turns ever and anon
+from his<br>
+careless gambols to throw his laughter-loving eyes upon you,
+calling up the<br>
+mantling blush to both your cheeks! He seems to chronicle the
+hours of your<br>
+dalliance, making your secrets known unto each other. We have
+gone through<br>
+our share of flirtation in this life: match-making mothers,
+prying aunts,<br>
+choleric uncles, benevolent and open-hearted fathers, we
+understand to the<br>
+life, and care no more for such man-traps than a Melton man, well
+mounted<br>
+on his strong-boned thorough-bred, does for a four-barred
+ox-fence that<br>
+lies before him. Like him, we take them flying; never relaxing
+the slapping<br>
+stride of our loose gallop, we go straight ahead, never turning
+aside,<br>
+except for a laugh at those who flounder in the swamps we sneer
+at. But we<br>
+confess honestly, we fear the little, brother, the small urchin
+who, with<br>
+nankeen trousers and three rows of buttons, performs the part of
+Cupid. He<br>
+strikes real terror into our heart; he it is who, with a cunning
+wink or<br>
+sly smile, seems to confirm the soft nonsense we are weaving; by
+some<br>
+slight gesture he seems to check off the long reckoning of our
+attentions,<br>
+bringing us every moment nearer to the time when the score must
+be settled<br>
+and the debt paid. He it is who, by a memory delightfully
+oblivious of<br>
+his task and his table-book, is tenacious to the life of what you
+said<br>
+to Fanny; how you put your head under Lucy's bonnet; he can
+imitate to<br>
+perfection the way you kneeled upon the grass; and the wretch has
+learned<br>
+to smack his lips like a <i>gourmand</i>, that he, may convey another
+stage of<br>
+your proceeding.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, for infant schools for everything under the age of ten!
+Oh, for<br>
+factories for the children of the rich! The age of prying
+curiosity is from<br>
+four-and-a-half to nine, and Fonch&eacute; himself might get a
+lesson in <i>police</i><br>
+from an urchin in his alphabet.</p>
+
+<p>I contrived soon, however, to forget the presence of even the
+little<br>
+brother. The night was falling; Baby appeared getting fatigued
+with her<br>
+walk, for she leaned somewhat more heavily upon my arm, and I&mdash;I
+cannot<br>
+tell wherefore&mdash;fell into that train of thinking aloud, which
+somehow, upon<br>
+a summer's eve, with a fair girl beside one, is the very nearest
+thing to<br>
+love-making.</p>
+
+<p>"There, Charley, don't now&mdash;ah, don't! Do let go my hand; they
+are coming<br>
+down the avenue."</p>
+
+<p>I had scarcely time to obey the injunction, when Mr. Blake
+called out:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Well, indeed! Charley, this is really fortunate; we have got
+a friend to<br>
+take tea with us, and wanted you to meet him."</p>
+
+<p>Muttering an internal prayer for something not exactly the
+welfare of the<br>
+aforesaid friend, whom I judged to be some Galway squire, I
+professed aloud<br>
+the pleasure I felt in having come in so opportunely.</p>
+
+<p>"He wishes particularly to make your acquaintance."</p>
+
+<p>"So much the worse," thought I to myself; "it rarely happens
+that this<br>
+feeling is mutual."</p>
+
+<p>Evidently provoked at the little curiosity I exhibited, Blake
+added,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"He's on his way to Fermoy with a detachment."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! what regiment, pray?"</p>
+
+<p>"The 28th Foot."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, I don't know them."</p>
+
+<p>By this time we reached the steps of the hall-door, and just
+as we did so,<br>
+the door opened suddenly, and a tall figure in uniform presented
+himself.<br>
+With one spring he seized my hand and nearly wrung it off.</p>
+
+<p>"Why what," said I, "can this be? Is it really&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sparks," said he,&mdash;"your old friend Sparks, my boy; I've
+changed into the<br>
+infantry, and here I am. Heard by chance you were in the
+neighborhood; met<br>
+Mr. Blake, your friend here, at the inn, and accepted his
+invitation to<br>
+meet you."</p>
+
+<p>Poor Sparks, albeit the difference in his costume, was the
+same as ever.<br>
+Having left the Fourteenth soon after I quitted them, he knew but
+little of<br>
+their fortunes; and he himself had been on recruiting stations
+nearly the<br>
+whole time since we had met before.</p>
+
+<p>While we each continued to extol the good fortune of the
+other,&mdash;he mine as<br>
+being no longer in the service, and I his for still being so,&mdash;we
+learned<br>
+the various changes which had happened to each of us during our
+separation.<br>
+Although his destination was ultimately Fermoy, Portumua was
+ordered to<br>
+be his present quarter; and I felt delighted to have once more an
+old<br>
+companion within reach, to chat over former days of campaigning
+and nights<br>
+of merriment in the Peninsula.</p>
+
+<p>Sparks soon became a constant visitor and guest at
+Gurt-na-Morra; his good<br>
+temper, his easy habits, his simplicity of character, rapidly
+enabled him<br>
+to fall into all their ways; and although evidently not what Baby
+would<br>
+call "the man for Galway," he endeavored with all his might to
+please every<br>
+one, and certainly succeeded to a considerable extent.</p>
+
+<p>Baby alone seemed to take pleasure in tormenting the poor sub.
+Long before<br>
+she met with him having heard much from me of his exploits
+abroad, she was<br>
+continually bringing up some anecdote of his unhappy loves or
+mis-placed<br>
+passions; which he evidently smarted under the more, from the
+circumstance<br>
+that he appeared rather inclined to like my fair cousin.</p>
+
+<p>As she continued this for some time, I remarked that Sparks,
+who at<br>
+first was all gayety and high spirits, grew gradually more
+depressed and<br>
+dispirited. I became convinced that the poor fellow was in love;
+very<br>
+little management on my part was necessary to obtain his
+confession; and<br>
+accordingly, the same evening the thought first struck me, as we
+were<br>
+riding slowly home towards O'Malley Castle, I touched at first
+generally<br>
+upon the merits of the Blakes, their hospitality, etc., then
+diverged to<br>
+the accomplishments and perfections of the girls, and lastly,
+Baby herself,<br>
+in all form, came up for sentence.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, yes!" said Sparks, with a deep sigh, "it is quite as you
+say; she is a<br>
+lovely girl; and that liveliness in her character, that
+elasticity in her<br>
+temperament, chastened down as it might be, by the feeling of
+respect for<br>
+the man she loved! I say, Charley, is it a very long attachment
+of yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"A long attachment of mine! Why, my dear Sparks, you can't
+suppose that<br>
+there is anything between us! I pledge you my word most
+faithfully."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, don't tell me that; what good can there be in
+mystifying me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no such intention, believe me. My cousin Baby, however
+I like and<br>
+admire her, has no other place in my affection than a very
+charming girl<br>
+who has lightened a great many dreary and tiresome hours, and
+made my<br>
+banishment from the world less irksome than I should have found
+it without<br>
+her."</p>
+
+<p>"And you are really not in love?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nor going to marry her either?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not the least notion of it!&mdash;a fact. Baby and I are excellent
+friends, for<br>
+the very reason that we were never lovers; we have had no <i>petits
+jeux</i><br>
+of fallings out and makings up; no hide-and-seek trials of
+affected<br>
+indifference and real disappointments; no secrets, no griefs, nor
+grudges;<br>
+neither quarrels nor keepsakes. In fact, we are capital cousins;
+quizzing<br>
+every one for our own amusement; riding, walking, boating
+together; in<br>
+fact, doing and thinking of everything save sighs and
+declarations; always<br>
+happy to meet, and never broken-hearted when we parted. And I can
+only add,<br>
+as a proof of my sincerity, that if you feel as I suspect you do
+from your<br>
+questions, I'll be your ambassador to the court of Gurt-na-Morra
+with<br>
+sincere pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you really? Will you, indeed, Charley, do this for me?
+Will you<br>
+strengthen my wishes by your aid, and give me all your influence
+with the<br>
+family?"</p>
+
+<p>I could scarcely help smiling at poor Sparks's eagerness, or
+the<br>
+unwarrantable value he put upon my alliance, in a case where his
+own<br>
+unassisted efforts did not threaten much failure.</p>
+
+<p>"I repeat it, Sparks, I'll make a proposal for you in all
+form, aided and<br>
+abetted by everything recommendatory and laudatory I can think
+of; I'll<br>
+talk of you as a Peninsular of no small note and promise; and
+observe rigid<br>
+silence about your Welsh flirtation and your Spanish
+elopement."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll not blab about the Dalrymples, I hope?"</p>
+
+<p>"Trust me; I only hope you will be always equally discreet:
+but now&mdash;when<br>
+shall it be? Should you like to consider the matter more?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, nothing of the kind; let it be to-morrow, at once, if
+I am to<br>
+fail; even that&mdash;anything's better than suspense."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, to-morrow be it," said I.</p>
+
+<p>So I wished him a good-night, and a stout heart to hear his
+fortune withal.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XLVIII.</p>
+
+<p>A MISTAKE.</p>
+
+<p>I ordered my horses at an early hour; and long before
+Sparks&mdash;lover that<br>
+he was&mdash;had opened his eyes to the light, was already on my way
+towards<br>
+Gurt-na-Morra. Several miles slipped away before I well
+determined how I<br>
+should open my negotiations: whether to papa Blake, in the first
+instance,<br>
+or to madame, to whose peculiar province these secrets of the
+home<br>
+department belonged; or why not at once to Baby?&mdash;because, after
+all, with<br>
+her it rested finally to accept or refuse. To address myself to
+the heads<br>
+of the department seemed the more formal course; and as I was
+acting<br>
+entirely as an "envoy extraordinary," I deemed this the fitting
+mode of<br>
+proceeding.</p>
+
+<p>It was exactly eight o'clock as I drove up to the door. Mr.
+Blake was<br>
+standing at the open window of the breakfast-room, sniffing the
+fresh air<br>
+of the morning. The Blake mother was busily engaged with the
+economy of the<br>
+tea-table; a very simple style of morning costume, and a nightcap
+with a<br>
+flounce like a petticoat, marking her unaffected toilet. Above
+stairs, more<br>
+than one head <i>en papillate</i> took a furtive peep between the
+curtains; and<br>
+the butler of the family, in corduroys and a fur cap, was weeding
+turnips<br>
+in the lawn before the door.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Blake had barely time to take a hurried departure, when
+her husband<br>
+came out upon the steps to bid me welcome. There is no
+physiognomist like<br>
+your father of a family, or your mother with marriageable
+daughters.<br>
+Lavater was nothing to them, in reading the secret springs of
+action, the<br>
+hidden sources of all character. Had there been a good
+respectable bump<br>
+allotted by Spurzheim to "honorable intentions," the matter had
+been<br>
+all fair and easy,&mdash;the very first salute of the gentleman would
+have<br>
+pronounced upon his views. But, alas! no such guide is
+forthcoming; and the<br>
+science, as it now exists, is enveloped in doubt and difficulty.
+The gay,<br>
+laughing temperament of some, the dark and serious composure of
+others; the<br>
+cautious and reserved, the open and the candid, the witty, the
+sententious,<br>
+the clever, the dull, the prudent, the reckless,&mdash;in a word,
+every variety<br>
+which the innumerable hues of character imprint upon the human
+face divine<br>
+are their study. Their convictions are the slow and patient
+fruits of<br>
+intense observation and great logical accuracy. Carefully noting
+down<br>
+every lineament and feature,&mdash;their change, their action, and
+their<br>
+development,&mdash;they track a lurking motive with the scent of a
+bloodhound,<br>
+and run down a growing passion with an unrelenting speed. I have
+been<br>
+in the witness-box, exposed to the licensed badgering and
+privileged<br>
+impertinence of a lawyer, winked, leered, frowned, and sneered at
+with all<br>
+the long-practised tact of a <i>nisi prius</i> torturer; I have stood
+before the<br>
+cold, fish-like, but searching eye of a prefect of police, as he
+compared<br>
+my passport with my person, and thought he could detect a
+discrepancy in<br>
+both,&mdash;but I never felt the same sense of total exposure as when
+glanced at<br>
+by the half-cautious, half-prying look of a worthy father or
+mother, in a<br>
+family where there are daughters to marry, and "nobody coming to
+woo."</p>
+
+<p>"You're early, Charley," said Mr. Blake, with an affected
+mixture of<br>
+carelessness and warmth. "You have not had breakfast?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir. I have come to claim a part of yours; and if I
+mistake not, you<br>
+seem a little later than usual."</p>
+
+<p>"Not more than a few minutes. The girls will be down
+presently; they're<br>
+early risers, Charley; good habits are just as easy as bad ones;
+and, the<br>
+Lord be praised! my girls were never brought up with any
+other."</p>
+
+<p>"I am well aware of it, sir; and indeed, if I may be permitted
+to take<br>
+advantage of the <i>apropos</i>, it was on the subject of one of your
+daughters<br>
+that I wished to speak to you this morning, and which brought me
+over at<br>
+this uncivilized hour, hoping to find you alone."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Blake's look for a moment was one of triumphant
+satisfaction; it was<br>
+but a glance, however, and repressed the very instant after, as
+he said,<br>
+with a well got-up indifference,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Just step with me into the study, and we're sure not to be
+interrupted."</p>
+
+<p>Now, although I have little time or space for such dallying, I
+cannot help<br>
+dwelling for a moment upon the aspect of what Mr. Blake dignified
+with the<br>
+name of his study. It was a small apartment with one window, the
+panes of<br>
+which, independent of all aid from a curtain, tempered the
+daylight through<br>
+the medium of cobwebs, dust, and the ill-trained branches of some
+wall-tree<br>
+without.</p>
+
+<p>Three oak chairs and a small table were the only articles of
+furniture,<br>
+while around, on all sides, lay the <i>disjecta membra</i> of Mr.
+Blake's<br>
+hunting, fishing, shooting, and coursing equipments,&mdash;old
+top-boots,<br>
+driving whips, odd spurs, a racing saddle, a blunderbuss, the
+helmet of the<br>
+Galway Light Horse, a salmon net, a large map of the county with
+a marginal<br>
+index to several mortgages marked with a cross, a stable lantern,
+the<br>
+rudder of a boat, and several other articles representative of
+his daily<br>
+associations; but not one book, save an odd volume of Watty
+Cox's<br>
+Magazine, whose pages seemed as much the receptacle of brown
+hackles for<br>
+trout-fishing as the resource of literary leisure.</p>
+
+<p>"Here we'll be quite cosey, and to ourselves," said Mr. Blake,
+as, placing<br>
+a chair for me, he sat down himself, with the air of a man
+resolved to<br>
+assist, by advice and counsel, the dilemma of some dear
+friend.</p>
+
+<p>After a few preliminary observations, which, like a breathing
+canter before<br>
+a race, serves to get your courage up, and settle you well in
+your seat,<br>
+I opened my negotiation by some very broad and sweeping truisms
+about the<br>
+misfortunes of a bachelor existence, the discomforts of his
+position,<br>
+his want of home and happiness, the necessity for his one day
+thinking<br>
+seriously about marriage; it being in a measure almost as
+inevitable<br>
+a termination of the free-and-easy career of his single life
+as<br>
+transportation for seven years is to that of a poacher. "You
+cannot go on,<br>
+sir," said I, "trespassing forever upon your neighbors'
+preserves; you must<br>
+be apprehended sooner or later; therefore, I think, the better
+way is to<br>
+take out a license."</p>
+
+<p>Never was a small sally of wit more thoroughly successful. Mr.
+Blake<br>
+laughed till he cried, and when he had done, wiped his eyes with
+a snuffy<br>
+handkerchief, and cried till he laughed again. As, somehow, I
+could not<br>
+conceal from myself a suspicion as to the sincerity of my
+friend's mirth,<br>
+I merely consoled myself with the French adage, that "he laughs
+best who<br>
+laughs last;" and went on:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It will not be deemed surprising, sir, that a man should come
+to the<br>
+discovery I have just mentioned much more rapidly by having
+enjoyed the<br>
+pleasure of intimacy with your family; not only by the example of
+perfect<br>
+domestic happiness presented to him, but by the prospect held out
+that<br>
+a heritage of the fair gifts which adorn and grace a married life
+may<br>
+reasonably be looked for among the daughters of those themselves
+the<br>
+realization of conjugal felicity."</p>
+
+<p>Here was a canter, with a vengeance; and as I felt blown, I
+slackened my<br>
+pace, coughed, and resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Mary Blake, sir, is, then, the object of my present
+communication; she<br>
+it is who has made an existence that seemed fair and pleasurable
+before,<br>
+appear blank and unprofitable without her. I have, therefore, to
+come at<br>
+once to the point, visited you this morning, formally to ask her
+hand in<br>
+marriage; her fortune, I may observe at once, is perfectly
+immaterial, a<br>
+matter of no consequence [so Mr. Blake thought also]; a
+competence fully<br>
+equal to every reasonable notion of expenditure&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There, there; don't, don't!" said Mr. Blake, wiping his eyes,
+with a sob<br>
+like a hiccough,&mdash;"don't speak of money! I know what you would
+say, a<br>
+handsome settlement,&mdash;a well-secured jointure, and all that. Yes,
+yes, I<br>
+feel it all."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes, sir, I believe I may add that everything in this
+respect will<br>
+answer your expectations."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course; to be sure. My poor dear Baby! How to do without
+her, that's<br>
+the rub! You don't know, O'Malley, what that girl is to me&mdash;you
+can't know<br>
+it; you'll feel it one day though&mdash;that you will!"</p>
+
+<p>"The devil I shall!" said I to myself. "The great point is,
+after all, to<br>
+learn the young lady's disposition in the matter&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Charley, none of this with me, you sly dog! You think I
+don't know<br>
+you. Why, I've been watching,&mdash;that is, I have seen&mdash;no, I mean
+I've<br>
+heard&mdash;They&mdash;they,&mdash;people will talk, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Very true, sir. But, as I was going to remark&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Just at this moment the door opened, and Miss Baby herself,
+looking most<br>
+annoyingly handsome, put in her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Papa, we're waiting breakfast. Ah, Charley, how d'ye do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Come in, Baby," said Mr. Blake; "you haven't given me my kiss
+this<br>
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>The lovely girl threw her arms around his neck, while her
+bright and<br>
+flowing locks fell richly upon his shoulder. I turned rather
+sulkily away;<br>
+the thing always provokes me. There is as much cold, selfish
+cruelty in<br>
+such <i>coram publico</i> endearments, as in the luscious display of
+rich rounds<br>
+and sirloins in a chop-house to the eyes of the starved and
+penniless<br>
+wretch without, who, with dripping rags and watering lip, eats
+imaginary<br>
+slices, while the pains of hunger are torturing him!</p>
+
+<p>"There's Tim!" said Mr. Blake, suddenly. "Tim Cronin!&mdash;Tim!"
+shouted he<br>
+to, as it seemed to me, an imaginary individual outside; while,
+in the<br>
+eagerness of pursuit, he rushed out of the study, banging the
+door as he<br>
+went, and leaving Baby and myself to our mutual edification.</p>
+
+<p>I should have preferred it being otherwise; but as the Fates
+willed it<br>
+thus, I took Baby's hand, and led her to the window. Now, there
+is one<br>
+feature of my countrymen which, having recognized strongly in
+myself, I<br>
+would fain proclaim; and writing as I do&mdash;however little people
+may suspect<br>
+me&mdash;solely for the sake of a moral, would gladly warn the
+unsuspecting<br>
+against. I mean, a very decided tendency to become the consoler,
+the<br>
+confidant of young ladies; seeking out opportunities of assuaging
+their<br>
+sorrow, reconciling their afflictions, breaking eventful passages
+to<br>
+their ears; not from any inherent pleasure in the tragic phases
+of<br>
+the intercourse, but for the semi-tenderness of manner, that
+harmless<br>
+hand-squeezing, that innocent waist-pressing, without which
+consolation is<br>
+but like salmon without lobster,&mdash;a thing maimed, wanting, and
+imperfect.</p>
+
+<p>Now, whether this with me was a natural gift, or merely a "way
+we have in<br>
+the army," as the song says, I shall not pretend to say; but I
+venture<br>
+to affirm that few men could excel me in the practice I speak of
+some<br>
+five-and-twenty years ago. Fair reader, do pray, if I have the
+happiness<br>
+of being known to you, deduct them from my age before you
+subtract from my<br>
+merits.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Baby, dear, I have just been speaking about you to
+papa. Yes,<br>
+dear&mdash;don't look so incredulous&mdash;even of your own sweet self.
+Well, do you<br>
+know, I almost prefer your hair worn that way; those same silky
+masses look<br>
+better falling thus heavily&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There, now, Charley! ah, don't!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Baby, as I was saying, before you stopped me, I have
+been asking<br>
+your papa a very important question, and he has referred me to
+you for the<br>
+answer. And now will you tell me, in all frankness and honesty,
+your mind<br>
+on the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>She grew deadly pale as I spoke these words, then suddenly
+flushed up<br>
+again, but said not a word. I could perceive, however, from her
+heaving<br>
+chest and restless manner, that no common agitation was stirring
+her bosom.<br>
+It was cruelty to be silent, so I continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"One who loves you well, Baby, dear, has asked his own heart
+the question,<br>
+and learned that without you he has no chance of happiness; that
+your<br>
+bright eyes are to him bluer than the deep sky above him; that
+your soft<br>
+voice, your winning smile&mdash;and what a smile it is!&mdash;have taught
+him that he<br>
+loves, nay, adores you! Then, dearest&mdash;what pretty fingers those
+are! Ah,<br>
+what is this? Whence came that emerald? I never saw that ring
+before,<br>
+Baby!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that," said she, blushing deeply,&mdash;"that is a ring the
+foolish<br>
+creature Sparks gave me a couple of days ago; but I don't like
+it&mdash;I don't<br>
+intend to keep it."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, she endeavored to draw it from her finger, but in
+vain.</p>
+
+<p>"But why, Baby, why take it off? Is it to give him the
+pleasure of putting<br>
+it on again? There, don't look angry; we must not fall out,
+surely."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Charley, if you are not vexed with me&mdash;if you are
+not&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, my dear Baby; nothing of the kind. Sparks was quite
+right in not<br>
+trusting his entire fortune to my diplomacy; but at least, he
+ought to have<br>
+told me that he had opened the negotiation. Now, the question
+simply is:<br>
+Do you love him? or rather, because that shortens matters: Will
+you accept<br>
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Love who?"</p>
+
+<p>"Love whom? Why Sparks, to be sure!"</p>
+
+<p>A flash of indignant surprise passed across her features, now
+pale as<br>
+marble; her lips were slightly parted, her large full eyes were
+fixed<br>
+upon me steadfastly, and her hand, which I had held in mine, she
+suddenly<br>
+withdrew from my grasp.</p>
+
+<p>"And so&mdash;and so it is of Mr. Sparks's cause you are so
+ardently the<br>
+advocate?" she said at length, after a pause of most awkward
+duration.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course, my dear cousin. It was at his suit and
+solicitation I<br>
+called on your father; it was he himself who entreated me to take
+this<br>
+step; it was he&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But before I could conclude, she burst into a torrent of tears
+and rushed<br>
+from the room.</p>
+
+<p>Here was a situation! What the deuce was the matter? Did she,
+or did she<br>
+not, care for him? Was her pride or her delicacy hurt at my being
+made the<br>
+means of the communication to her father? What had Sparks done or
+said to<br>
+put himself and me in such a devil of a predicament? Could she
+care for any<br>
+one else?</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Charley!" cried Mr. Blake, as he entered, rubbing his
+hands in a<br>
+perfect paroxysm of good temper,&mdash;"well, Charley, has love-making
+driven<br>
+breakfast out of your head?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, faith, sir, I greatly fear I have blundered my mission
+sadly. My<br>
+cousin Mary does not appear so perfectly satisfied; her
+manner&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't tell me such nonsense. The girl's manner! Why, man, I
+thought you<br>
+were too old a soldier to be taken in that way."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, sir, the best thing, under the circumstances, is
+to send over<br>
+Sparks himself. Your consent, I may tell him, is already
+obtained."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my boy; and my daughter's is equally sure. But I don't
+see what we<br>
+want with Sparks at all. Among old friends and relatives as we
+are, there<br>
+is, I think, no need of a stranger."</p>
+
+<p>"A stranger! Very true, sir, he is a stranger; but when that
+stranger is<br>
+about to become your son-in-law&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"About to become what?" said Mr. Blake, rubbing his
+spectacles, and placing<br>
+them leisurely on his nose to regard me,&mdash;"to become what?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your son-in-law. I hope I have been sufficiently explicit,
+sir, in making<br>
+known Mr. Sparks's wishes to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Sparks! Why damn me, sir&mdash;that is&mdash;I beg pardon for
+the<br>
+warmth&mdash;you&mdash;you never mentioned his name to-day till now. You
+led me to<br>
+suppose that&mdash;in fact, you told me most clearly&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Here, from the united effects of rage and a struggle for
+concealment, Mr.<br>
+Blake was unable to proceed, and walked the room with a
+melodramatic stamp<br>
+perfectly awful.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, sir," said I at last, "while I deeply regret any
+misconception or<br>
+mistake I have been the cause of, I must, in justice to myself,
+say that<br>
+I am perfectly unconscious of having misled you. I came here this
+morning<br>
+with a proposition for the hand of your daughter in behalf
+of&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yourself, sir. Yes, yourself. I'll be&mdash;no! I'll not swear;
+but&mdash;but just<br>
+answer me, if you ever mentioned one word of Mr. Sparks, if you
+ever<br>
+alluded to him till the last few minutes?"</p>
+
+<p>I was perfectly astounded. It might be, alas, it was exactly
+as he stated!<br>
+In my unlucky effort at extreme delicacy, I became only so very
+mysterious<br>
+that I left the matter open for them to suppose that it might be
+the Khan<br>
+of Tartary was in love with Baby.</p>
+
+<p>There was but one course now open. I most humbly apologized
+for my blunder;<br>
+repeated by every expression I could summon up, my sorrow for
+what had<br>
+happened; and was beginning a renewal of negotiation "in re
+Sparks," when,<br>
+overcome by his passion, Mr. Blake could hear no more, but
+snatched up his<br>
+hat and left the room.</p>
+
+<p>Had it not been for Baby's share in the transaction I should
+have laughed<br>
+outright. As it was, I felt anything but mirthful; and the only
+clear and<br>
+collected idea in my mind was to hurry home with all speed, and
+fasten a<br>
+quarrel on Sparks, the innocent cause of the whole mishap. Why
+this thought<br>
+struck me let physiologists decide.</p>
+
+<p>A few moments' reflection satisfied me that under present
+circumstances,<br>
+it would be particularly awkward to meet with any others of the
+family.<br>
+Ardently desiring to secure my retreat, I succeeded, after some
+little<br>
+time, in opening the window-sash; consoling myself for any injury
+I was<br>
+about to inflict upon Mr. Blake's young plantation in my descent,
+by the<br>
+thought of the service I was rendering him while admitting a
+little fresh<br>
+air into his sanctum.</p>
+
+<p>For my patriotism's sake I will not record my sensations as I
+took my way<br>
+through the shrubbery towards the stable. Men are ever so prone
+to revenge<br>
+their faults and their follies upon such inoffensive agencies as
+time and<br>
+place, wind or weather, that I was quite convinced that to any
+other but<br>
+Galway ears my <i>expos&eacute;</i> would have been perfectly clear
+and intelligible;<br>
+and that in no other country under heaven would a man be expected
+to marry<br>
+a young lady from a blunder in his grammar.</p>
+
+<p>"Baby may be quite right," thought I; "but one thing is
+assuredly true,&mdash;if<br>
+I'll never do for Galway, Galway will never do for me. No, hang
+it! I have<br>
+endured enough for above two years. I have lived in banishment,
+away from<br>
+society, supposing that, at least, if I isolated myself from the
+pleasures<br>
+of the world I was exempt from its annoyances." But no; in the
+seclusion of<br>
+my remote abode troubles found their entrance as easily as
+elsewhere, so<br>
+that I determined at once to leave home; wherefor, I knew not. If
+life had<br>
+few charms, it had still fewer ties for me. If I was not bound by
+the bonds<br>
+of kindred, I was untrammelled by their restraints.</p>
+
+<p>The resolution once taken, I burned to put it into effect; and
+so<br>
+impatiently did I press forward as to call forth more than one
+remonstrance<br>
+on the part of Mike at the pace we were proceeding. As I neared
+home, the<br>
+shrill but stirring sounds of drum and fife met me; and shortly
+after a<br>
+crowd of country people filled the road. Supposing it some mere
+recruiting<br>
+party, I was endeavoring to press on, when the sounds of a full
+military<br>
+band, in the exhilarating measure of a quick-step, convinced me
+of my<br>
+error; and as I drew to one side of the road, the advanced guard
+of an<br>
+infantry regiment came forward. The men's faces were flushed,
+their<br>
+uniforms dusty and travel-stained, their knapsacks strapped
+firmly on, and<br>
+their gait the steady tramp of the march. Saluting the subaltern,
+I asked<br>
+if anything of consequence had occurred in the south that the
+troops were<br>
+so suddenly under orders. The officer stared at me for a moment
+or two<br>
+without speaking, and while a slight smile half-curled his lip,
+answered:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Apparently, sir, you seem very indifferent to military news,
+otherwise you<br>
+can scarcely be ignorant of the cause of our route."</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary," said I, "I am, though a young man, an old
+soldier, and<br>
+feel most anxious about everything connected with the
+service."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it is very strange, sir, you should not have heard the
+news.<br>
+Bonaparte has returned from Elba, has arrived at Paris, been
+received with<br>
+the most overwhelming enthusiasm, and at this moment the
+preparations for<br>
+war are resounding from Venice to the Vistula. All our forces,
+disposable,<br>
+are on the march for embarkation. Lord Wellington has taken the
+command,<br>
+and already, I may say, the campaign has begun."</p>
+
+<p>The tone of enthusiasm in which the young officer spoke, the
+astounding<br>
+intelligence itself, contrasting with the apathetic indolence of
+my own<br>
+life, made me blush deeply, as I, muttered some miserable apology
+for my<br>
+ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>"And you are now <i>en route?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"For Fermoy; from which we march to Cove for embarkation. The
+first<br>
+battalion of our regiment sailed for the West Indies a week
+since, but a<br>
+frigate has been sent after them to bring them back; and we hope
+all to<br>
+meet in the Netherlands before the month is over. But I must beg
+your<br>
+pardon for saying adieu. Good-by, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-by, sir; good-by," said I, as still standing in the
+road, I was so<br>
+overwhelmed with surprise that I could scarcely credit my
+senses.</p>
+
+<p>A little farther on, I came up with the main body of the
+regiment, from<br>
+whom I learned the corroboration of the news, and also the
+additional<br>
+intelligence that Sparks had been ordered off with his detachment
+early in<br>
+the morning, a veteran battalion being sent into garrison in the
+various<br>
+towns of the south and west.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you happen to know a Mr. O'Malley, sir?" said the major,
+coming up with<br>
+a note in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg to present him to you," said I, bowing.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, Sparks gave me this note, which he wrote with a
+pencil as we<br>
+crossed each other on the road this morning. He told me you were
+an old<br>
+Fourteenth man. But your regiment is in India, I believe; at
+least Power<br>
+said they were under orders when we met him."</p>
+
+<p>"Fred Power! Are you acquainted with him? Where is he now,
+pray?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fred is on the staff with General Vandeleur, and is now in
+Belgium."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" said I, every moment increasing my surprise at some
+new piece of<br>
+intelligence. "And the Eighty-eighth?" said I, recurring to my
+old friends<br>
+in that regiment.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, the Eighty-eighth are at Gibraltar, or somewhere in the
+Mediterranean;<br>
+at least, I know they are not near enough to open the present
+campaign<br>
+with us. But if you'd like to hear any more news, you must come
+over to<br>
+Borrisokane; we stop there to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'll certainly do so."</p>
+
+<p>"Come at six then, and dine with us."</p>
+
+<p>"Agreed," said I; "and now, good-morning."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, I once more drove on; my head full of all that I
+had been<br>
+hearing, and my heart bursting with eagerness to join the gallant
+fellows<br>
+now bound for the campaign.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER XLIX.</p>
+
+<p>BRUSSELS.</p>
+
+<p>I must not protract a tale already far too long, by the
+recital of my<br>
+acquaintance with the gallant Twenty-sixth. It is sufficient that
+I should<br>
+say that, having given Mike orders to follow me to Cove, I joined
+the<br>
+regiment on their march, and accompanied them to Cork. Every hour
+of<br>
+each day brought us in news of moment and importance; and amidst
+all the<br>
+stirring preparations for the war, the account of the splendid
+spectacle<br>
+of the <i>Champ de Mai</i> burst upon astonished Europe, and the
+intelligence<br>
+spread far and near that the enthusiasm of France never rose
+higher in<br>
+favor of the Emperor. And while the whole world prepared for the
+deadly<br>
+combat, Napoleon surpassed even himself, by the magnificent
+conceptions for<br>
+the coming conflict, and the stupendous nature of those plans by
+which he<br>
+resolved on resisting combined and united Europe.</p>
+
+<p>While our admiration and wonder of the mighty spirit that
+ruled the<br>
+destinies of the continent rose high, so did our own ardent and
+burning<br>
+desire for the day when the open field of fight should place us
+once more<br>
+in front of each other.</p>
+
+<p>Every hard-fought engagement of the Spanish war was thought of
+and talked<br>
+over; from Talavera to Toulouse, all was remembered. And while
+among the<br>
+old Peninsulars the military ardor was so universally displayed,
+among the<br>
+regiments who had not shared the glories of Spain and Portugal,
+an equal,<br>
+perhaps a greater, impulse was created for the approaching
+campaign.</p>
+
+<p>When we arrived at Cork, the scene of bustle and excitement
+exceeded<br>
+anything I ever witnessed. Troops were mustering in every
+quarter;<br>
+regiments arriving and embarking; fresh bodies of men pouring in;
+drills,<br>
+parades, and inspections going forward; arms, ammunition, and
+military<br>
+stores distributing; and amidst all, a spirit of burning
+enthusiasm<br>
+animated every rank for the approaching glory of the newly-arisen
+war.</p>
+
+<p>While thus each was full of his own hopes and expectations, I
+alone felt<br>
+depressed and downhearted. My military caste was lost to me
+forever, my<br>
+regiment many, many a mile from the scene of the coming strife;
+though<br>
+young, I felt like one already old and bygone. The last-joined
+ensign<br>
+seemed, in his glowing aspiration, a better soldier than I, as,
+sad and<br>
+dispirited, I wandered through the busy crowds, surveying with
+curious eye<br>
+each gallant horseman as he rode proudly past. What was wealth
+and fortune<br>
+to me? What had they ever been, compared with all they cost
+me?&mdash;the<br>
+abandonment of the career I loved, the path in life I sought and
+panted<br>
+for. Day after day I lingered on, watching with beating heart
+each<br>
+detachment as they left the shore; and when their parting cheer
+rang high<br>
+above the breeze, turned sadly back to mourn over a life that had
+failed in<br>
+its promise, and an existence now shorn of its enjoyment.</p>
+
+<p>It was on the evening of the 3d of June that I was slowly
+wending my way<br>
+back towards my hotel. Latterly I had refused all invitations to
+dine<br>
+at the mess. And by a strange spirit of contradiction, while I
+avoided<br>
+society, could yet not tear myself away from the spot where
+every<br>
+remembrance of my past life was daily embittered by the scenes
+around me.<br>
+But so it was; the movement of the troops, their reviews, their
+arrivals,<br>
+and departures, possessed the most thrilling interest for me.
+While I could<br>
+not endure to hear the mention of the high hopes and glorious
+vows each<br>
+brave fellow muttered.</p>
+
+<p>It was, as I remember, on the evening of the 3d of June, I
+entered my hotel<br>
+lower in spirits even than usual. The bugles of the gallant
+Seventy-first,<br>
+as they dropped down with the tide, played a well-known march I
+had heard<br>
+the night before Talavera. All my bold and hardy days came
+rushing madly to<br>
+my mind; and my present life seemed no longer endurable. The last
+army<br>
+list and the newspaper lay on my table, and I turned to read the
+latest<br>
+promotions with that feeling of bitterness by which an unhappy
+man loves to<br>
+tamper with his misery.</p>
+
+<p>Almost the first paragraph I threw my eyes upon ran
+thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    OSTEND, May 24.</p>
+
+<p>    The "Vixen" sloop-of-war, which arrived at our port this
+morning,<br>
+    brought among several other officers of inferior note<br>
+    Lieutenant-General Sir George Dashwood, appointed as<br>
+    Assistant-Adjutant-General<br>
+    on the staff of his Grace the Duke of Wellington. The
+gallant<br>
+    general was accompanied by his lovely and accomplished
+daughter,<br>
+    and his military secretary and aide-de-camp, Major
+Hammersley,<br>
+    of the 2d Life Guards. They partook of a hurried
+<i>d&eacute;jeun&eacute;</i><br>
+    with the Burgomaster, and left immediately after for
+Brussels.</p>
+
+<p>Twice I read this over, while a burning, hot sensation settled
+upon my<br>
+throat and temples. "So Hammersley still persists; he still
+hopes. And<br>
+what then?&mdash;what can it be to me?&mdash;my prospects have long since
+faded and<br>
+vanished! Doubtless, ere this, I am as much forgotten as though
+we had<br>
+never met,&mdash;would that we never had!" I threw up the window-sash;
+a light<br>
+breeze was gently stirring, and as it fanned my hot and bursting
+head, I<br>
+felt cooled and relieved. Some soldiers were talking beneath the
+window and<br>
+among them I recognized Mike's voice.</p>
+
+<p>"And so you sail at daybreak, Sergeant?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mister Free; we have our orders to be on board before
+the flood-tide.<br>
+The 'Thunderer' drops down the harbor to-night, and we are merely
+here to<br>
+collect our stragglers."</p>
+
+<p>"Faix, it's little I thought I'd ever envy a sodger any more;
+but someway,<br>
+I wish I was going with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing easier, Mike," said another, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, true for you, but that's not the way I'd like to do it.
+If my master,<br>
+now, would just get over his low spirits, and spake a word to the
+Duke of<br>
+York, devil a doubt but he'd give him his commission back again,
+and then<br>
+one might go in comfort."</p>
+
+<p>"Your master likes his feather pillow better than a mossy
+stone under his<br>
+head, I'm thinking; and he ain't far wrong either."</p>
+
+<p>"You're out there, Neighbor. It's himself cares as little for
+hardship as<br>
+any one of you; and sure it's not becoming me to say it, but the
+best blood<br>
+and the best bred was always the last to give in for either cold
+or hunger,<br>
+ay, or even complain of it."</p>
+
+<p>Mike's few words shot upon me a new and a sudden
+conviction,&mdash;what was to<br>
+prevent my joining once more? Obvious as such a thought now was,
+yet never<br>
+until this moment did it present itself so palpably. So
+habituated does<br>
+the mind become to a certain train of reasoning, framing its
+convictions<br>
+according to one preconceived plan, and making every fact and<br>
+every circumstance concur in strengthening what often may be but
+a<br>
+prejudice,&mdash;that the absence of the old Fourteenth in India, the
+sale of<br>
+my commission, the want of rank in the service, all seemed to
+present an<br>
+insurmountable barrier to my re-entering the army. A few chance
+words now<br>
+changed all this, and I saw that as a volunteer at least, the
+path of glory<br>
+was still open, and the thought was no sooner conceived, than the
+resolve<br>
+to execute it. While, therefore, I walked hurriedly up and down,
+devising,<br>
+planning, plotting, and contriving, each instant I would stop to
+ask myself<br>
+how it happened I had not determined upon this before.</p>
+
+<p>As I summoned Mike before me, I could not repress a feeling of
+false shame,<br>
+as I remembered how suddenly so natural a resolve must seem to
+have<br>
+been adopted; and it was with somewhat of hesitation that I
+opened the<br>
+conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"And so, sir, you are going after all,&mdash;long life to you? But
+I never<br>
+doubted it. Sure, you wouldn't be your father's son, and not join
+divarsion<br>
+when there was any going on."</p>
+
+<p>The poor fellow's eyes brightened up, his look gladdened, and
+before he<br>
+reached the foot of the stairs, I heard his loud cheer of delight
+that once<br>
+more we were off to the wars.</p>
+
+<p>The packet sailed for Liverpool the next morning. By it we
+took our<br>
+passage, and on the third morning I found myself in the
+waiting-room at<br>
+the Horse Guards, expecting the moment of his Royal Highness's
+arrival; my<br>
+determination being to serve as a volunteer in any regiment the
+duke might<br>
+suggest, until such time as a prospect presented itself of
+entering the<br>
+service as a subaltern.</p>
+
+<p>The room was crowded by officers of every rank and arm in the
+service. The<br>
+old, gray-headed general of division; the tall, stout-looking
+captain of<br>
+infantry; the thin and boyish figure of the newly-gazetted
+cornet,&mdash;were<br>
+all there; every accent, every look that marked each trait of
+national<br>
+distinction in the empire, had its representative. The reserved
+and distant<br>
+Scotchman; the gay, laughing, exuberant Patlander; the dark-eyed,
+and<br>
+dark-browed North Briton,&mdash;collected in groups, talked eagerly
+together;<br>
+while every instant, as some new arrival would enter, all eyes
+would turn<br>
+to the spot, in eager expectation of the duke's coming. At last
+the clash<br>
+of arms, as the guard turned out, apprised us of his approach,
+and we<br>
+had scarcely time to stand up and stop the buzz of voices, when
+the door<br>
+opened, and an aide-de-camp proclaimed in a full tone,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"His Royal Highness the Commander-in-Chief!"</p>
+
+<p>Bowing courteously on every side, he advanced through the
+crowd, turning<br>
+his rapid and piercing look here and there through the room,
+while with<br>
+that tact, the essential gift of his family, he recognized each
+person by<br>
+his name, directing from one to the other some passing
+observation.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Sir George Cockburn, how d' ye do?&mdash;your son's
+appointment is made<br>
+out. Major Conyers, that application shall be looked to. Forbes,
+you must<br>
+explain that I cannot possibly put men in the regiment of their
+choice; the<br>
+service is the first thing. Lord L&mdash;&mdash;, your memorial is before
+the Prince<br>
+Regent; the cavalry command will, I believe, however, include
+your name."</p>
+
+<p>While he spoke thus, he approached the place where I was
+standing, when,<br>
+suddenly checking himself, he looked at me for a moment somewhat
+sternly.<br>
+"Why not in uniform, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"Your Royal Highness, I am not in the army."</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the army&mdash;not in the army? And why, may I beg to know,
+have<br>
+you&mdash;But I'm speaking to <i>Captain</i> O'Malley, if I mistake
+not?"</p>
+
+<p>"I held that rank, sir, once; but family necessities compelled
+me to sell<br>
+out. I have now no commission in the service, but am come to
+beseech your<br>
+Royal Highness's permission to serve as a volunteer."</p>
+
+<p>"As a volunteer, eh&mdash;a volunteer? Come, that's right, I like
+that; but<br>
+still, we want such fellows as you,&mdash;the man of Ciudad Rodrigo.
+Yes, my<br>
+Lord L&mdash;&mdash;, this is one of the stormers; fought his way through
+the trench<br>
+among the first; must not be neglected. Hold yourself in
+readiness,<br>
+Captain&mdash;hang it, I was forgetting; Mr. O'Malley, I mean&mdash;hold
+yourself<br>
+in readiness for a staff appointment. Smithson, take a note of
+this."<br>
+So saying, he moved on; and I found myself in the street, with a
+heart<br>
+bounding with delight, and a step proud as an emperor's.</p>
+
+<p>With such rapidity the events of my life now followed one upon
+the other,<br>
+that I could take no note of time as it passed. On the fourth day
+after<br>
+my conversation with the duke I found myself in Brussels. As yet
+I heard<br>
+nothing of the appointment, nor was I gazetted to any regiment or
+any<br>
+situation on the staff. It was strange enough, too, I met but few
+of my old<br>
+associates, and not one of those with whom I had been most
+intimate in my<br>
+Peninsular career; but it so chanced that very many of the
+regiments who<br>
+most distinguished themselves in the Spanish campaigns, at the
+peace of<br>
+1814 were sent on foreign service. My old friend Power was, I
+learned,<br>
+quartered at Courtrai; and as I was perfectly at liberty to
+dispose of my<br>
+movements at present, I resolved to visit him there.</p>
+
+<p>It was a beautiful evening on the 12th of June. I had been
+inquiring<br>
+concerning post-horses for my journey, and was returning slowly
+through<br>
+the park. The hour was late&mdash;near midnight&mdash;but a pale moonlight,
+a calm,<br>
+unruffled air, and stronger inducements still, the song of the
+nightingales<br>
+that abound in this place, prevailed on many of the loungers to
+prolong<br>
+their stay; and so from many a shady walk and tangled arbor, the
+clank of<br>
+a sabre would strike upon the ear, or the low, soft voice of
+woman would<br>
+mingle her dulcet sound with the deep tones of her companion. I
+wandered<br>
+on, thoughtful and alone; my mind pre-occupied so completely with
+the<br>
+mighty events passing before me, I totally forgot my own humble
+career, and<br>
+the circumstances of my fortune. As I turned into an alley which
+leads from<br>
+the Great Walk towards the Palace of the Prince of Orange, I
+found my path<br>
+obstructed by three persons who were walking slowly along in
+front of me.<br>
+I was, as I have mentioned, deeply absorbed in thought, so that I
+found<br>
+myself close behind them before I was aware of their presence.
+Two of the<br>
+party were in uniform, and by their plumes, upon which a passing
+ray of<br>
+moonlight flickered, I could detect they were general officers;
+the<br>
+third was a lady. Unable to pass them, and unwilling to turn
+back, I<br>
+was unavoidably compelled to follow, and however unwilling, to
+overhear<br>
+somewhat of their conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"You mistake, George, you mistake! Depend upon it, this will
+be no<br>
+lengthened campaign; victory will soon decide for one side or the
+other.<br>
+If Napoleon beats the Prussians one day, and beat us the next,
+the German<br>
+States will rally to his standard, and the old confederation of
+the Rhine<br>
+will spring up once more in all the plenitude of its power. The
+<i>Champ de<br>
+Mai</i> has shown the enthusiasm of France for their Emperor. Louis
+XVIII fled<br>
+from his capital, with few to follow, and none to say, 'God bless
+him!' The<br>
+warlike spirit of the nation is roused again; the interval of
+peace, too<br>
+short to teach habits of patient and enduring industry, is yet
+sufficient<br>
+to whet the appetite for carnage; and nothing was wanting, save
+the<br>
+presence of Napoleon alone, to restore all the brilliant
+delusions and<br>
+intoxicating splendors of the empire."</p>
+
+<p>"I confess," said the other, "I take a very different view
+from yours in<br>
+this matter; to me, it seems that France is as tired of battles
+as of the<br>
+Bourbons&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I heard no more; for though the speaker continued, a misty
+confusion passed<br>
+across my mind. The tones of his voice, well-remembered as they
+were by me,<br>
+left me unable to think; and as I stood motionless on the spot, I
+muttered<br>
+half aloud, "Sir George Dashwood." It was he, indeed; and she who
+leaned<br>
+upon his arm could be no other than Lucy herself. I know not how
+it was;<br>
+for many a long month I had schooled my heart, and taught myself
+to believe<br>
+that time had dulled the deep impression she had made upon me,
+and that,<br>
+were we to meet again, it would be with more sorrow on my part
+for my<br>
+broken dream of happiness than of attachment and affection for
+her who<br>
+inspired it; but now, scarcely was I near her&mdash;I had not gazed
+upon her<br>
+looks, I had not even heard her voice&mdash;and yet, in all their
+ancient force,<br>
+came back the early passages of my love; and as her footfall
+sounded gently<br>
+upon the ground, my heart beat scarce less audibly. Alas, I could
+no<br>
+longer disguise from myself the avowal that she it was, and she
+only, who<br>
+implanted in my heart the thirst for distinction; and the moment
+was ever<br>
+present to my mind in which, as she threw her arms around her
+father's<br>
+neck, she muttered, "Oh, why not a soldier!"</p>
+
+<p>As I thus reflected, an officer in full dress passed me
+hurriedly,<br>
+and taking off his hat as he came up with the party before me,
+bowed<br>
+obsequiously.</p>
+
+<p>"My Lord &mdash;&mdash;, I believe, and Sir George Dashwood?" They
+replied by a<br>
+bow. "Sir Thomas Picton wishes to speak with you both for a
+moment; he is<br>
+standing beside the 'Basin.' If you will permit&mdash;" said he,
+looking towards<br>
+Lucy.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir," said Sir George; "if you will have the
+goodness to<br>
+accompany us, my daughter will wait our coming here. Sit down,
+Lucy, we<br>
+shall not be long away."</p>
+
+<p>The next moment she was alone. The last echoes of their
+retiring footsteps<br>
+had died away in the grassy walk, and in the calm and death-like
+stillness<br>
+I could hear every rustle of her silk dress. The moonlight fell
+in<br>
+fitful, straggling gleams between the leafy branches, and showed
+me her<br>
+countenance, pale as marble. Her eyes were upturned slightly; her
+brown<br>
+hair, divided upon her fair forehead, sparkled with a wreath of
+brilliants,<br>
+which heightened the lustrous effect of her calm beauty; and now
+I could<br>
+perceive her dress bespoke that she had been at some of the
+splendid<br>
+entertainments which followed day after day in the busy
+capital.</p>
+
+<p>Thus I stood within a few paces of <i>her</i>, to be near to whom,
+a few hours<br>
+before, I would willingly have given all I possessed in the
+world; and yet<br>
+now a barrier, far more insurmountable than time and space,
+intervened<br>
+between us; still it seemed as though fortune had presented this
+incident<br>
+as a last farewell between us. Why should I not take advantage of
+it? Why<br>
+should I not seize the only opportunity that might ever occur of
+rescuing<br>
+myself from the apparent load of ingratitude which weighed on my
+memory?<br>
+I felt in the cold despair of my heart that I could have no hold
+upon her<br>
+affection; but a pride, scarce less strong that the attachment
+that gave<br>
+rise to it, urged me to speak. By one violent effort I summoned
+up my<br>
+courage; and while I resolved to limit the few words I should say
+merely<br>
+to my vindication, I prepared to advance. Just at this instant,
+however, a<br>
+shadow crossed the path; a rustling sound was heard among the
+branches, and<br>
+the tall figure of a man in a dragoon cloak stood before me. Lucy
+turned<br>
+suddenly at the sound; but scarcely had her eyes been bent in
+the<br>
+direction, when, throwing off his cloak, he sprang forward and
+dropped at<br>
+her feet. All my feeling of shame at the part I was performing
+was now<br>
+succeeded by a sense of savage and revengeful hatred. It was
+enough that<br>
+I should be brought to look upon her whom I had lost forever
+without the<br>
+added bitterness of witnessing her preference for a rival. The
+whirlwind<br>
+passion of my brain stunned and stupefied me. Unconsciously I
+drew my sword<br>
+from my scabbard, and it was only as the pale light fell upon the
+keen<br>
+blade that the thought flashed across me, "What could I mean to
+do?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Hammersley,"&mdash;it was he indeed,&mdash;said she, "it is unkind,
+it is<br>
+unfair, nay, it is unmanly to press me thus; I would not pain
+you, were<br>
+it not that, in sparing you now, I should entail deeper injury
+upon you<br>
+hereafter. Ask me to be your sister, your friend; ask me to feel
+proudly<br>
+in your triumphs, to glory in your success; all this I do feel;
+but, oh! I<br>
+beseech you, as you value your happiness, as you prize mine, ask
+me no more<br>
+than this."</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause of some seconds; and at length, the low
+tones of a man's<br>
+voice, broken and uncertain in their utterance, said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I know it&mdash;I feel it&mdash;my heart never bade me hope&mdash;and
+now&mdash;'tis over."</p>
+
+<p>He stood up as he spoke, and while he threw the light folds of
+his mantle<br>
+round him, a gleam of light fell upon his features. They were
+pale as<br>
+death; two dark circles surrounded his sunken eyes, and his
+bloodless lip<br>
+looked still more ghastly, from the dark mustache that drooped
+above it.</p>
+
+<p>"Farewell!" said he, slowly, as he crossed his arms sadly upon
+his breast;<br>
+"I will not pain you more."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, go not thus from me!" said she, as her voice became
+tremulous with<br>
+emotion; "do not add to the sorrow that weighs upon my heart! I
+cannot,<br>
+indeed I cannot, be other than I am; and I do but hate myself to
+think that<br>
+I cannot give my love where I have given all my esteem. If
+time&mdash;" But<br>
+before she could continue further, the noise of approaching
+footsteps was<br>
+heard, and the voice of Sir George, as he came near. Hammersley
+disappeared<br>
+at once, and Lucy, with rapid steps, advanced to meet her father,
+while I<br>
+remained riveted upon the spot. What a torrent of emotions then
+rushed upon<br>
+my heart! What hopes, long dead or dying, sprang up to life
+again! What<br>
+visions of long-abandoned happiness flitted before me! Could it
+be<br>
+then&mdash;dare I trust myself to think it&mdash;that Lucy cared for me?
+The thought<br>
+was maddening! With a bounding sense of ecstasy, I dashed across
+the park,<br>
+resolving, at all hazards, to risk everything upon the chance,
+and wait<br>
+the next morning upon Sir George Dashwood. As I thought thus, I
+reached my<br>
+hotel, where I found Mike in waiting with a letter. As I walked
+towards the<br>
+lamp in the <i>porte cochere</i>, my eyes fell upon the address. It
+was General<br>
+Dashwood's hand; I tore it open, and read as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    Dear Sir,&mdash;Circumstances into which you will excuse me
+entering,<br>
+    having placed an insurmountable barrier to our former terms
+of<br>
+    intimacy, you will, I trust, excuse me declining the honor of
+any<br>
+    nearer acquaintance, and also forgive the liberty I take in
+informing<br>
+    you of it, which step, however unpleasant to my feelings,
+will save<br>
+    us both the great pain of meeting.</p>
+
+<p>    I have only this moment heard of your arrival in Brussels,
+and<br>
+    take thus the earliest opportunity of communicating with
+you.<br>
+    With every assurance of my respect for you personally, and
+an<br>
+    earnest desire to serve you in your military career, I beg to
+remain,</p>
+
+<p>    Very faithfully yours,</p>
+
+<p>    GEORGE DASHWOOD</p>
+
+<p>"Another note, sir," said Mike, as he thrust into my
+unconscious hands a<br>
+letter he had just received from an orderly.</p>
+
+<p>Stunned, half stupefied, I broke the seal. The contents were
+but three<br>
+lines:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    Sir,&mdash;I have the honor to inform you that Sir Thomas
+Picton has<br>
+    appointed you an extra aide-de-camp on his personal staff.
+You will,<br>
+    therefore, present yourself to-morrow morning at the
+Adjutant-General's<br>
+    office, to receive your appointment and instructions.<br>
+    I have the honor to be, etc.,</p>
+
+<p>    G. FITZROY.</p>
+
+<p>Crushing the two letters in my fevered hand, I retired to my
+room, and<br>
+threw myself, dressed as I was, upon my bed. Sleep, that seems to
+visit us<br>
+in the saddest as in the happiest times of our existence, came
+over me,<br>
+and I did not wake until the bugles of the Ninety-fifth were
+sounding the<br>
+reveille through the park, and the brightest beams of the morning
+sun were<br>
+peering through the window.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER L.</p>
+
+<p>AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. O'Malley," said a voice, as my door opened, and an
+officer in undress<br>
+entered,&mdash;"Mr. O'Malley, I believe you received your appointment
+last night<br>
+on General Picton's staff?"</p>
+
+<p>I bowed in reply, as he resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Thomas desires you will proceed to Courtrai with these
+despatches in<br>
+all haste. I don't know if you are well mounted, but I recommend
+you, in<br>
+any case, not to spare your cattle."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he wished me a good-morning, and left me, in a
+state of no small<br>
+doubt and difficulty, to my own reflections. What the deuce was I
+to do?<br>
+I had no horse; I knew not where to find one. What uniform should
+I wear?<br>
+For, although appointed on the staff, I was not gazetted to any
+regiment<br>
+that I knew of, and hitherto had been wearing an undress frock
+and a<br>
+foraging cap; for I could not bring myself to appear as a
+civilian among<br>
+so many military acquaintances. No time was, however, to be lost;
+so I<br>
+proceeded to put on my old Fourteenth uniform, wondering whether
+my costume<br>
+might not cost me a reprimand in the very outset of my career.
+Meanwhile<br>
+I despatched Mike to see after a horse, caring little for the
+time, the<br>
+merits, or the price of the animal provided he served my present
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>In less than twenty minutes my worthy follower appeared
+beneath my window,<br>
+surrounded by a considerable mob, who seemed to take no small
+interest in<br>
+the proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>"What the deuce is the matter?" cried I, as I opened the sash
+and looked<br>
+out.</p>
+
+<p>"Mighty little's the matter, your honor; it's the savages,
+here,<br>
+that's admiring my horsemanship," said Mike, as he belabored a
+tall,<br>
+scraggy-looking mule with a stick which bore an uncommon
+resemblance to a<br>
+broom-handle.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean to do with that beast?" said I. "You surely
+don't expect<br>
+me to ride a mule to Courtrai?"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, and if you don't, you are likely to walk the journey;
+for there<br>
+isn't a horse to be had for love or money in the town; but I am
+told that<br>
+Mr. Marsden is coming up to-morrow with plenty, so that you may
+as well<br>
+take the journey out of the soft horns as spoil a better; and if
+he only<br>
+makes as good use of his fore-legs as he does of his hind ones,
+he'll think<br>
+little of the road."</p>
+
+<a name="0410"></a>
+<img alt="0410.jpg (191K)" src="0410.jpg" height="656" width="808">
+
+<p>[MICKEY ASTONISHES THE NATIVES.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>A vicious lash out behind served in a moment to corroborate
+Mike's<br>
+assertion, and to scatter the crowd on every side.</p>
+
+<p>However indisposed to exhibit myself with such a turn-out, my
+time did not<br>
+admit of any delay; and so, arming myself with my despatches, and
+having<br>
+procured the necessary information as to the road, I set out from
+the Belle<br>
+Vue, amidst an ill-suppressed titter of merriment from the mob,
+which<br>
+nothing but fear of Mike and his broomstick prevented becoming a
+regular<br>
+shout of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>It was near night-fall as, tired and weary of the road, I
+entered the<br>
+little village of Halle. All was silent and noiseless in the
+deserted<br>
+streets; nor a lamp threw its glare upon the pavement, nor even a
+solitary<br>
+candle flickered through the casement. Unlike a town, garrisoned
+by troops,<br>
+neither sentry nor outpost was to be met with; nothing gave
+evidence that<br>
+the place was held by a large body of men; and I could not help
+feeling<br>
+struck, as the footsteps of my mule were echoed along the
+causeway, with<br>
+the silence almost of desolation around me. By the creaking of a
+sign, as<br>
+it swung mournfully to and fro, I was directed to the door of the
+village<br>
+inn, where, dismounting, I knocked for some moments, but without
+success.<br>
+At length, when I had made an uproar sufficient to alarm the
+entire<br>
+village, the casement above the door slowly opened, and a head
+enveloped<br>
+in a huge cotton nightcap&mdash;so, at least, it appeared to me from
+the<br>
+size&mdash;protruded itself. After muttering a curse in about the most
+barbarous<br>
+French I ever heard, he asked me what I wanted there; to which I
+replied,<br>
+most nationally, by asking in return, where the British dragoons
+were<br>
+quartered.</p>
+
+<p>"They have left for Nivelle this morning, to join some
+regiments of your<br>
+own country."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! ah!" thought I, "he mistakes me for a Brunswicker;" to
+which, by<br>
+the uncertain light, my uniform gave me some resemblance. As it
+was now<br>
+impossible for me to proceed farther, I begged to ask where I
+could procure<br>
+accommodation for the night.</p>
+
+<p>"At the burgomaster's. Turn to your left at the end of this
+street, and<br>
+you will soon find it. They have got some English officers there,
+who, I<br>
+believe in my soul, never sleep."</p>
+
+<p>This was, at least, pleasant intelligence, and promised a
+better<br>
+termination to my journey than I had begun to hope for; so
+wishing my<br>
+friend a good-night, to which he willingly responded, I resumed
+my way<br>
+down the street. As he closed the window, once more leaving me to
+my own<br>
+reflections, I began to wonder within myself to what arm of the
+service<br>
+belonged these officers to whose convivial gifts he bore
+testimony. As I<br>
+turned the corner of the street, I soon discovered the
+correctness of his<br>
+information. A broad glare of light stretched across the entire
+pavement<br>
+from a large house with a clumsy stone portico before it. On
+coming nearer,<br>
+the sound of voices, the roar of laughter, the shouts of
+merriment that<br>
+issued forth, plainly bespoke that a jovial party were seated
+within.<br>
+The half-shutter which closed the lower part of the windows
+prevented my<br>
+obtaining a view of the proceedings; but having cautiously
+approached the<br>
+casement, I managed to creep on the window-sill and look into the
+room.</p>
+
+<a name="0412"></a>
+<img alt="0412.jpg (154K)" src="0412.jpg" height="1043" width="672">
+
+<p>[THE GENTLEMEN WHO NEVER SLEEP.]</p>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>There the scene was certainly a curious one. Around a large
+table sat a<br>
+party of some twenty persons, the singularity of whose appearance
+may<br>
+be conjectured when I mention that all those who appeared to be
+British<br>
+officers were dressed in the robes of the <i>&eacute;chevins</i> (or
+aldermen) of the<br>
+village; while some others, whose looks bespoke them as sturdy
+Flemings,<br>
+sported the cocked hats and cavalry helmets of their associates.
+He who<br>
+appeared the ruler of the feast sat with his back towards me, and
+wore, in<br>
+addition to the dress of burgomaster, a herald's tabard, which
+gave him<br>
+something the air of a grotesque screen at its potations. A huge
+fire<br>
+blazed upon the ample hearth, before which were spread several
+staff<br>
+uniforms, whose drabbled and soaked appearance denoted the reason
+of the<br>
+party's change of habiliments. Every imaginable species of
+drinking-vessel<br>
+figured upon the board, from the rich flagon of chased silver to
+the humble<br>
+<i>cruche</i> we see in a Teniers picture. As well as I could hear,
+the language<br>
+of the company seemed to be French, or, at least, such an
+imitation of that<br>
+language as served as a species of neutral territory for both
+parties to<br>
+meet in.</p>
+
+<p>He of the tabard spoke louder than the others, and although,
+from the<br>
+execrable endeavors he made to express himself in French, his
+natural voice<br>
+was much altered, there was yet something in his accents which
+seemed<br>
+perfectly familiar to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Mosheer l'Abbey," said he, placing his arm familiarly on the
+shoulder of<br>
+a portly personage, whose shaven crown strangely contrasted with
+a pair<br>
+of corked moustachios,&mdash;"Mosheer l'Abbey, nous sommes
+fr&egrave;res, et moi,<br>
+savez-vous, suis &eacute;v&egrave;que,&mdash;'pon my life it's true; I
+might have been Bishop<br>
+of Saragossa, if I only consented to leave the Twenty-third. Je
+suis bong<br>
+Catholique. Lord bless you, if you saw how I loved the nunneries
+in Spain!<br>
+J'ai tres jolly souvenirs of those nunneries; a goodly company of
+little<br>
+silver saints; and this waistcoat you see&mdash;mong gilet&mdash;was a
+satin<br>
+petticoat of our Lady of Loretto."</p>
+
+<p>Need I say, that before this speech was concluded, I had
+recognized in the<br>
+speaker nobody but that inveterate old villain, Monsoon
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Permettez, votre Excellence," said a hale, jolly-looking
+personage on his<br>
+left, as he filled the major's goblet with obsequious
+politeness.</p>
+
+<p>"Bong engfong," replied Monsoon, tapping him familiarly on the
+head.<br>
+"Burgomaster, you are a trump; and when I get my promotion, I'll
+make<br>
+you prefect in a wine district. Pass the lush, and don't look
+sleepy!<br>
+'Drowsiness,' says Solomon, 'clothes a man in rags;' and no man
+knew the<br>
+world better than Solomon. Don't you be laughing, you raw boys.
+Never mind<br>
+them, Abbey; ils sont petits gar&ccedil;ongs&mdash;fags from Eton and
+Harrow; better<br>
+judges of mutton broth than sherry negus."</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Major, you are forgetting this song you promised
+us."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes," said several voices together; "the song, Major!
+the song!"</p>
+
+<p>"Time enough for that; we're doing very well as it is. Upon my
+life,<br>
+though, they hold a deal of wine. I thought we'd have had them
+fit to<br>
+bargain with before ten, and see, it's near midnight; and I must
+have my<br>
+forage accounts ready for the commissary-general by to-morrow
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>This speech having informed me the reason of the Major's
+presence there,<br>
+I resolved to wait no longer a mere spectator of their
+proceedings; so<br>
+dismounting from my position, I commenced a vigorous attack upon
+the door.</p>
+
+<p>It was some time before I was heard; but at length the door
+was opened, and<br>
+I was accosted by an Englishman, who, in a strange compound of
+French and<br>
+English, asked, "What the devil I meant by all that uproar?"
+Determining<br>
+to startle my old friend the major, I replied, that "I was
+aide-de-camp to<br>
+General Picton, and had come down on very unpleasant business."
+By this<br>
+time the noise of the party within had completely subsided, and
+from a few<br>
+whispered sentences, and their thickened breathing, I perceived
+that they<br>
+were listening.</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask, sir," continued I, "if Major Monsoon is here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," stammered out the ensign, for such he was.</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry for it, for his sake," said I; "but my orders are
+peremptory."</p>
+
+<p>A deep groan from within, and a muttered request to pass down
+the sherry,<br>
+nearly overcame my gravity; but I resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"If you will permit me, I will make the affair as short as
+possible. The<br>
+major, I presume, is here?"</p>
+
+<p>So saying, I pushed forward into the room, where now a slight
+scuffling<br>
+noise and murmur of voices had succeeded silence. Brief as was
+the<br>
+interval of our colloquy, the scene within had, notwithstanding,
+undergone<br>
+considerable change. The English officers, hastily throwing off
+their<br>
+aldermanic robes, were busily arraying themselves in their
+uniforms, while<br>
+Monsoon himself, with a huge basin of water before him, was
+endeavoring to<br>
+wash the cork from his countenance in the corner of his
+tabard.</p>
+
+<p>"Very hard upon me, all this; upon my life, so it is! Picton
+is always at<br>
+me, just as if we had not been school-fellows. The service is
+getting worse<br>
+every day. Regardez-moi, Curey, mong face est propre? Eh? There,
+thank you.<br>
+Good fellow the Curey is, but takes a deal of fluid. Oh,
+Burgomaster! I<br>
+fear it is all up with me! No more fun, no more jollification, no
+more<br>
+plunder&mdash;and how I did do it. Nothing like watching one's little
+chances!<br>
+'The poor is hated even by his neighbor.' Oui, Curey, it is
+Solomon says<br>
+that, and they must have had a heavy poor-rate in his day to make
+him say<br>
+so. Another glass of sherry!"</p>
+
+<p>By this time I approached the back of the chair, and slapping
+him heartily<br>
+on the shoulder, called out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Major, old boy, how goes it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eh?&mdash;what&mdash;how!&mdash;who is this? It can't be&mdash;egad, sure it is,
+though.<br>
+Charley! Charley O'Malley, you scapegrace, where have you been?
+When did<br>
+you join?"</p>
+
+<p>"A week ago, Major. I could resist it no longer. I did my best
+to be a<br>
+country gentleman, and behave respectably, but the old temptation
+was too<br>
+strong for me. Fred Power and yourself, Major, had ruined my
+education; and<br>
+here I am once more among you."</p>
+
+<p>"And so Picton and the arrest and all that, was nothing but a
+joke?" said<br>
+the old fellow, rolling his wicked eyes with a most cunning
+expression.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing more, Major, set your heart at rest."</p>
+
+<p>"What a scamp you are," said he, with another grin. "Il est
+mon fils&mdash;il<br>
+est mon fils, Curey," presenting me, as he spoke, while the
+burgomaster, in<br>
+whose eyes the major seemed no inconsiderable personage, saluted
+me with<br>
+profound respect.</p>
+
+<p>Turning at once towards this functionary, I explained that I
+was the<br>
+bearer of important despatches, and that my horse&mdash;I was ashamed
+to say my<br>
+mule&mdash;having fallen lame, I was unable to proceed.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you procure me a remount, Monsieur?" said I, "for I must
+hasten on to<br>
+Courtrai."</p>
+
+<p>"In half an hour you shall be provided, as well as with a
+mounted guide for<br>
+the road. Le fils de son Excellence," said he, with emphasis,
+bowing to the<br>
+major as he spoke; who, in his turn, repaid the courtesy with a
+still lower<br>
+obeisance.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down, Charley; here is a clean glass. I am delighted to
+see you, my<br>
+boy! They tell me you have got a capital estate and plenty of
+ready. Lord,<br>
+we so wanted you, as there's scarcely a fellow with sixpence
+among us. Give<br>
+me the lad that can do a bit of paper at three months, and always
+be ready<br>
+for a renewal. You haven't got a twenty-pound note?" This was
+said <i>sotto<br>
+voce</i>. "Never mind; ten will do. You can give me the remainder at
+Brussels.<br>
+Strange, is it not, I have not seen a bit of clean bank paper
+like this for<br>
+above a twelvemonth!" This was said as he thrust his hand into
+his pocket,<br>
+with one of those peculiar leers upon his countenance which,
+unfortunately,<br>
+betrayed more satisfaction at his success than gratitude for the
+service.<br>
+"You are looking fat&mdash;too fat, I think," said he, scrutinizing me
+from head<br>
+to foot; "but the life we are leading just now will soon take
+that off. The<br>
+slave-trade is luxurious indolence compared to it. Post haste to
+Nivelle<br>
+one day; down to Ghent the next; forty miles over a paved road in
+a<br>
+hand-gallop, and an aide-de-camp with a watch in his hand at the
+end of it,<br>
+to report if you are ten minutes too late. And there is
+Wellington has his<br>
+eye everywhere. There is not a truss of hay served to the
+cavalry, nor a<br>
+pair of shoes half-soled in the regiment, that he don't know of
+it. I've<br>
+got it over the knuckles already."</p>
+
+<p>"How so, Major? How was that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he ordered me to picket two squadrons of the Seventh,
+and a supper<br>
+was waiting. I didn't like to leave my quarters, so I took up my
+telescope<br>
+and pitched upon a sweet little spot of ground on a hill; rather
+difficult<br>
+to get up, to be sure, but a beautiful view when you're on it.
+'There is<br>
+your ground, Captain,' said I, as I sent one of my people to mark
+the spot.<br>
+He did not like it much; however, he was obliged to go. And,
+would you<br>
+believe it?&mdash;so much for bad luck!&mdash;there turned out to be no
+water within<br>
+two miles of it&mdash;not a drop, Charley; and so, about eleven at
+night, the<br>
+two squadrons moved down into Grammont to wet their lips, and
+what is<br>
+worse, to report me to the commanding officer. And only think!
+They put me<br>
+under arrest because Providence did not make a river run up a
+mountain!"</p>
+
+<p>Just as the major finished speaking, the distant clatter of
+horses' feet<br>
+and the clank of cavalry was heard approaching. We all rushed
+eagerly to<br>
+the door; and scarcely had we done so, when a squadron of
+dragoons came<br>
+riding up the street at a fast trot.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, good people," cried the officer, in French, "where
+does the<br>
+burgomaster live here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fred Power, 'pon my life!" shouted the major.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, Monsoon, that you? Give me a tumbler of wine, old boy;
+you are sure to<br>
+have some, and I am desperately blown."</p>
+
+<p>"Get down, Fred, get down! We have an old friend here."</p>
+
+<p>"Who the deuce d'ye mean?" said he, as throwing himself from
+the saddle he<br>
+strode into the room. "Charley O'Malley, by all that's
+glorious!"</p>
+
+<p>"Fred, my gallant fellow!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"It was but this morning, Charley, that I so wished for you
+here. The<br>
+French are advancing, my lad. They have crossed the frontier;
+Zeithen's<br>
+corps have been attacked and driven in; Blucher is falling back
+upon Ligny;<br>
+and the campaign is opened. But I must press forward. The
+regiment is close<br>
+behind me, and we are ordered to push for Brussels in all
+haste."</p>
+
+<p>"Then these despatches," said I, showing my packet, "'tis
+unnecessary to<br>
+proceed with?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so. Get into the saddle and come back with us."</p>
+
+<p>The burgomaster had kept his word with me; so mounted upon a
+strong<br>
+hackney, I set out with Power on the road to Brussels. I have had
+occasion<br>
+more than once to ask pardon of my reader for the prolixity of
+my<br>
+narrative, so I shall not trespass on him here by the detail of
+our<br>
+conversation as we jogged along. Of me and my adventures he
+already knows<br>
+enough&mdash;perhaps too much. My friend Power's career, abounding as
+it did in<br>
+striking incidents, and all the light and shadow of a soldier's
+life,<br>
+yet not bearing upon any of the characters I have presented to
+your<br>
+acquaintance, except in one instance,&mdash;of that only shall I
+speak.</p>
+
+<p>"And the senhora, Fred; how goes your fortune in that
+quarter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gloriously, Charley! I am every day expecting the promotion
+in my regiment<br>
+which is to make her mine."</p>
+
+<p>"You have heard from her lately, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Heard from her! Why, man, she is in Brussels."</p>
+
+<p>"In Brussels?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure. Don Emanuel is in high favor with the duke, and
+is now<br>
+commissary-general with the army; and the senhora is the <i>belle</i>
+of the<br>
+Rue Royale, or at least, it's a divided sovereignty between her
+and Lucy<br>
+Dashwood. And now, Charley, let me ask, what of her? There,
+there, don't<br>
+blush, man. There is quite enough moonlight to show how tender
+you are in<br>
+that quarter."</p>
+
+<p>"Once for all, Fred, pray spare me on that subject. You have
+been far too<br>
+fortunate in your <i>affaire de coeur</i>, and I too much the reverse,
+to permit<br>
+much sympathy between us."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you not visit, then; or is it a cut between you?" "I have
+never met her<br>
+since the night of the masquerade of the villa&mdash;at least, to
+speak to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I must confess, you seem to manage your own affairs
+much worse than<br>
+your friends'; not but that in so doing you are exhibiting a very
+Irish<br>
+feature of your character. In any case, you will come to the
+ball? Inez<br>
+will be delighted to see you; and I have got over all my
+jealousy."</p>
+
+<p>"What ball? I never heard of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Never heard of it! Why, the Duchess of Richmond's, of course.
+Pooh, pooh,<br>
+man! Not invited?&mdash;of course you are invited; the staff are never
+left out<br>
+on such occasions. You will find your card at your hotel on your
+return."</p>
+
+<p>"In any case, Fred&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall insist upon your going. I have no <i>arri&egrave;re
+pens&eacute;e</i> about a<br>
+reconciliation with the Dashwoods, no subtle scheme, on my honor;
+but<br>
+simply I feel that you will never give yourself fair chances in
+the world,<br>
+by indulging your habit of shrinking from every embarrassment.
+Don't be<br>
+offended, boy. I know you have pluck enough to storm a battery; I
+have seen<br>
+you under fire before now. What avails your courage in the field,
+if you<br>
+have not presence of mind in the drawing-room? Besides,
+everything else out<br>
+of the question, it is a breach of etiquette towards your chief
+to decline<br>
+such an invitation."</p>
+
+<p>"You think so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Think so?&mdash;no; I am sure of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, as to uniform, Fred?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, as to that, easily managed. And now I think of it, they
+have sent me<br>
+an unattached uniform, which you can have; but remember, my boy,
+if I put<br>
+you in my coat, I don't want you to stand in my shoes. Don't
+forget also<br>
+that I am your debtor in horseflesh, and fortunately able to
+repay you. I<br>
+have got such a charger; your own favorite color, dark chestnut,
+and<br>
+except one white leg, not a spot about him; can carry sixteen
+stone over a<br>
+five-foot fence, and as steady as a rock under fire."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Fred, how are you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, never mind me; I have six in my stable, and intend to
+share with you.<br>
+The fact is, I have been transferred from one staff to another
+for the last<br>
+six months, and four of my number are presents. Is Mike with you?
+Ah, glad<br>
+to hear it; you will never get on without that fellow. Besides,
+it is a<br>
+capital thing to have such a connecting link with one's
+nationality. No<br>
+fear of your ever forgetting Ireland with Mr. Free in your
+company. You<br>
+are not aware that we have been correspondents. A fact, I assure
+you. Mike<br>
+wrote me two letters; and such letters they were! The last was a
+Jeremiad<br>
+over your decline and fall, with a very ominous picture of a
+certain Miss<br>
+Baby Blake."</p>
+
+<p>"Confound the rascal!"</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, though, Charley, you were coming it rather strong
+with Baby. Inez<br>
+saw the letter, and as well as she could decipher Mike's
+hieroglyphics, saw<br>
+there was something in it; but the name Baby puzzled her
+immensely, and she<br>
+set the whole thing down to your great love of children. I don't
+think that<br>
+Lucy quite agreed with her."</p>
+
+<p>"Did she tell it to Miss Dashwood?" I inquired, with fear and
+trembling.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that she did; in fact, Inez never ceases talking of you
+to Lucy. But<br>
+come, lad, don't look so grave. Let's have another brush with the
+enemy;<br>
+capture a battery of their guns; carry off a French marshal or
+two; get the<br>
+Bath for your services, and be thanked in general orders,&mdash;and I
+will wager<br>
+all my <i>ch&acirc;teau en Espagne</i> that everything goes well."</p>
+
+<p>Thus chatting away, sometimes over the past, of our former
+friends and<br>
+gay companions, of our days of storm and sunshine; sometimes
+indulging in<br>
+prospects for the future, we trotted along, and as the day was
+breaking,<br>
+mounted the ridge of low hills, from whence, at the distance of a
+couple of<br>
+leagues, the city of Brussels came into view.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER LI.</p>
+
+<p>THE DUCHESS OF RICHMOND'S BALL.</p>
+
+<p>Whether we regard the illustrious and distinguished personages
+who thronged<br>
+around, or we think of the portentous moment in which it was
+given, the<br>
+Duchess of Richmond's ball, on the night of the 15th of June,
+1815, was not<br>
+only one of the most memorable, but, in its interest, the most
+exciting<br>
+entertainment that the memory of any one now living can
+compass.</p>
+
+<p>There is always something of no common interest in seeing the
+bronzed and<br>
+war-worn soldier mixing in the crowd of light-hearted and
+brilliant<br>
+beauty. To watch the eye whose proud glance has flashed over the
+mail-clad<br>
+squadrons now bending meekly beneath the look of some timid girl;
+to hear<br>
+the voice that, high above the battle or the breeze, has shouted
+the<br>
+hoarse word "Charge!" now subdued into the low, soft murmur of
+flattery or<br>
+compliment. This, at any rate, is a picture full of its own
+charm; but when<br>
+we see these heroes of a hundred fights; when we look upon these
+hardy<br>
+veterans, upon whose worn brows the whitened locks of time are
+telling,<br>
+indulging themselves in the careless gayety of a moment, snatched
+as it<br>
+were from the arduous career of their existence, while the tramp
+of the<br>
+advancing enemy shakes the very soil they stand on, and where it
+may be<br>
+doubted whether each aide-de-camp who enters comes a new votary
+of pleasure<br>
+or the bearer of tidings that the troops of the foe are
+advancing, and<br>
+already the work of death has begun: this is, indeed, a scene to
+make the<br>
+heart throb, and the pulse beat high; this is a moment second in
+its proud<br>
+excitement only to the very crash and din of battle itself. And
+into this<br>
+entrancing whirlwind of passion and of pleasure, of brilliant
+beauty<br>
+and ennobled greatness, of all that is lovely in woman and all
+that is<br>
+chivalrous and heroic in man, I brought a heart which, young in
+years, was<br>
+yet tempered by disappointment; still, such was the fascination,
+such the<br>
+brilliancy of the spectacle, that scarcely had I entered, than I
+felt a<br>
+change come over me,&mdash;the old spirit of my boyish ardor, that
+high-wrought<br>
+enthusiasm to do something, to be something which men may speak
+of, shot<br>
+suddenly through me, and I felt my cheek tingle and my temples
+throb, as<br>
+name after name of starred and titled officers were announced, to
+think<br>
+that to me, also, the path of glorious enterprise was
+opening.</p>
+
+<p>"Come along, come along," said Power, catching me by the arm,
+"you've not<br>
+been presented to the duchess. I know her. I'll do it for you; or
+perhaps<br>
+it is better Sir Thomas Picton should. In any case, <i>filez</i> after
+me, for<br>
+the dark-eyed senhora is surely expecting us. There, do you see
+that dark,<br>
+intelligent-looking fellow leaning over the end of the sofa? That
+is Alava.<br>
+And there, you know who that is, that <i>beau ideal</i> of a hussar?
+Look how<br>
+jauntily he carries himself; see the careless but graceful sling
+with which<br>
+he edges through the crowd; and look! Mark his bow! Did you see
+that,<br>
+Charley? Did you catch the quick glance he shot yonder, and the
+soft smile<br>
+that showed his white teeth? Depend upon it, boy, some fair heart
+is not<br>
+the better nor the easier for that look."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is it?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Uxbridge, to be sure; the handsomest fellow in the
+service; and there<br>
+goes Vandeleur, talking with Vivian; the other, to the left, is
+Ponsonby."</p>
+
+<p>"But stay, Fred, tell me who that is?" For a moment or two, I
+had some<br>
+difficulty in directing his attention to the quarter I desired.
+The<br>
+individual I pointed out was somewhat above the middle size; his
+uniform of<br>
+blue and gold, though singularly plain, had a look of richness
+about it;<br>
+besides that, among the orders which covered his breast, he wore
+one star<br>
+of great brilliancy and size. This, however, was his least
+distinction; for<br>
+although surrounded on every side by those who might be deemed
+the very<br>
+types and pictures of their <i>caste</i>, there was something in the
+easy but<br>
+upright carriage of his head, the intrepid character of his
+features, the<br>
+bold and vigorous flashing of his deep blue eye, that marked him
+as no<br>
+common man. He was talking with an old and prosy-looking
+personage in<br>
+civilian dress; and while I could detect an anxiety to get free
+from<br>
+a tiresome companion, there was an air of deferential, and even
+kind<br>
+attention in his manner, absolutely captivating.</p>
+
+<p>"A thorough gentleman, Fred, whoever he be," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I should think so," replied Power, dryly; "and as our
+countrymen would<br>
+say, 'The Devil thank him for it!' That is the Prince of Orange;
+but see,<br>
+look at him now, his features have learned another fashion." And
+true it<br>
+was; with a smile of the most winning softness, and with a voice,
+whose<br>
+slightly foreign accent took nothing from its interest, I heard
+him<br>
+engaging a partner for a waltz.</p>
+
+<p>There was a flutter of excitement in the circle as the lady
+rose to take<br>
+his arm, and a muttered sound of, "How very beautiful, quelle est
+belle,<br>
+c'est un ange!" on all sides. I leaned forward to catch a glance
+as she<br>
+passed; it was Lucy Dashwood. Beautiful beyond anything I had
+ever seen<br>
+her, her lovely features lit up with pleasure and with pride, she
+looked in<br>
+every way worthy to lean upon the arm of royalty. The graceful
+majesty of<br>
+her walk, the placid loveliness of her gentle smile, struck every
+one<br>
+as she passed on. As for me, totally forgetting all else, not
+seeing or<br>
+hearing aught around me, I followed her with my eye until she was
+lost<br>
+among the crowd, and then, with an impulse of which I was not
+master,<br>
+followed in her steps.</p>
+
+<p>"This way, this way," said Power; "I see the senhora." So
+saying, we<br>
+entered a little boudoir, where a party was playing at cards.
+Leaning on<br>
+the back of a chair, Inez was endeavoring, with that mixture of
+coquetry<br>
+and half malice she possessed, to distract the attention of the
+player. As<br>
+Power came near, she scarcely turned her head to give him a kind
+of saucy<br>
+smile; while, seeing me, she held out her hand with friendly
+warmth, and<br>
+seemed quite happy to meet me.</p>
+
+<p>"Do, pray, take her away; get her to dance, to eat ice, or
+flirt with you,<br>
+for Heaven's sake!" said the half-laughing voice of her victim.
+"I have<br>
+revoked twice, and misdealt four times since she has been here.
+Believe me,<br>
+I shall take it as the greatest favor, if you'll&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As he got thus far he turned round towards me, and I perceived
+it was Sir<br>
+George Dashwood. The meeting was as awkward for him as for me;
+and while a<br>
+deep flush covered my face, he muttered some unintelligible
+apology, and<br>
+Inez burst into a fit of laughter at the ludicrous <i>contretemps</i>
+of our<br>
+situation.</p>
+
+<p>"I will dance with you now, if you like," said she, "and that
+will be<br>
+punishing all three. Eh, Master Fred?"</p>
+
+<p>So saying, she took my arm as I led her toward the
+ball-room.</p>
+
+<p>"And so you really are not friends with the Dashwoods? How
+very provoking,<br>
+and how foolish, too! But really, Chevalier, I must say you treat
+ladies<br>
+very ill. I don't forget your conduct to me. Dear me, I wish we
+could move<br>
+forward, there is some one pushing me dreadfully!"</p>
+
+<p>"Get on, Ma'am, get on!" said a sharp, decided voice behind
+me. I turned,<br>
+half smiling, to see the speaker. It was the Duke of Wellington
+himself,<br>
+who, with his eye fixed upon some person at a distance, seemed to
+care<br>
+very little for any intervening obstruction. As I made way for
+him to pass<br>
+between us, he looked hardly at me, while he said in a short,
+quick way,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Know your face very well: how d'ye do?" With this brief
+recognition he<br>
+passed on, leaving me to console Inez for her crushed sleeve, by
+informing<br>
+her who had done it.</p>
+
+<p>The ball was now at its height. The waltzers whirled past in
+the wild<br>
+excitement of the dance. The inspiriting strains of the music,
+the sounds<br>
+of laughter, the din, the tumult, all made up that strange medley
+which,<br>
+reacting upon the minds of those who cause it, increases the
+feeling<br>
+of pleasurable abandonment, making the old feel young, and the
+young<br>
+intoxicated with delight.</p>
+
+<p>As the senhora leaned upon me, fatigued with waltzing, I was
+endeavoring to<br>
+sustain a conversation with her; while my thoughts were wandering
+with my<br>
+eyes to where I had last seen Lucy Dashwood.</p>
+
+<p>"It must be something of importance; I'm sure it is," said
+she, at the<br>
+conclusion of a speech of which I had not heard one word. "Look
+at General<br>
+Picton's face!"</p>
+
+<p>"Very pretty, indeed," said I; "but the hair is unbecoming,"
+replying to<br>
+some previous observation she had made, and still lost in a
+revery. A<br>
+hearty burst of laughter was her answer as she gently shook my
+arm,<br>
+saying,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You really are too bad! You've never listened to one word
+I've been<br>
+telling you, but keep continually staring with your eyes here and
+there,<br>
+turning this way and looking that, and with a dull, vacant, and
+unmeaning<br>
+smile, answering at random, in the most provoking manner. There
+now, pray<br>
+pay attention, and tell me what that means." As she said this,
+she pointed<br>
+with her fan to where a dragoon officer, in splashed and
+spattered uniform,<br>
+was standing talking to some three or four general officers. "But
+here<br>
+comes the duke; it can't be anything of consequence."</p>
+
+<p>At the same instant the Duke of Wellington passed with the
+Duchess of<br>
+Richmond on his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Duchess; nothing to alarm you. Did you say ice?"</p>
+
+<p>"There, you heard that, I hope!" said Inez; "there is nothing
+to alarm us."</p>
+
+<p>"Go to General Picton at once; but don't let it be remarked,"
+said an<br>
+officer, in a whisper, as he passed close by me.</p>
+
+<p>"Inez, I have the greatest curiosity to learn what that new
+arrival has to<br>
+say for himself; and if you will permit me, I'll leave you with
+Lady Gordon<br>
+for one moment&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Delighted, of all things. You are without exception, the
+most<br>
+tiresome&mdash;Good-by."</p>
+
+<p>"Sans adieu," said I, as I hurried through the crowd towards
+an open<br>
+window, on the balcony outside of which Sir Thomas Picton was
+standing.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Mr. O'Malley, have you a pencil? There, that'll do. Ride
+down to<br>
+Etterbeeck with this order for Godwin. You have heard the news, I
+suppose,<br>
+that the French are in advance? The Seventy-ninth will muster in
+the Grando<br>
+Place. The Ninety-second and the Twenty-eighth along the Park and
+the<br>
+Boulevard. Napoleon left Fresnes this morning. The Prussians have
+fallen<br>
+back. Zeithen has been beaten. We march at once."</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, to-night. There, don't delay! But above all, let
+everything be<br>
+done quietly and noiselessly. The duke will remain here for an
+hour longer<br>
+to prevent suspicion. When you've executed your orders, come back
+here."</p>
+
+<p>I mounted the first horse I could find at the door, and
+galloped with top<br>
+speed over the heavy causeway to Etterbeeck. In two minutes the
+drum beat<br>
+to arms, and the men were mustering as I left. Thence I hastened
+to the<br>
+barracks of the Highland Brigade and the 28th Regiment; and
+before half an<br>
+hour, was back in the ball-room, where, from the din and tumult,
+I guessed<br>
+the scene of pleasure and dissipation continued unabated. As I
+hurried up<br>
+the staircase a throng of persons were coming down, and I was
+obliged to<br>
+step aside to let them pass.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, come here, pray," said Picton, who, with a lady cloaked
+and hooded<br>
+leaning upon his arm, was struggling to make way through the
+crowd. "The<br>
+very man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Will you excuse me if I commit you to the care of my
+aide-de-camp, who<br>
+will see you to your carriage? The duke has just desired to see
+me." This<br>
+he said in a hurried and excited tone; and the same moment
+beckoned to me<br>
+to take the lady's arm.</p>
+
+<p>It was with some difficulty I succeeded in reaching the spot,
+and had only<br>
+time to ask whose carriage I should call for, ere we arrived in
+the hall.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir George Dashwood's," said a low, soft voice, whose accents
+sank into<br>
+my very heart. Heaven! it was Lucy herself; it was her arm that
+leaned on<br>
+mine, her locks that fluttered beside me, her hand that hung so
+near, and<br>
+yet I could not speak. I tried one word; but a choking feeling in
+my throat<br>
+prevented utterance, and already we were upon the door-steps.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir George Dashwood's carriage," shouted the footman, and the
+announcement<br>
+was repeated by the porter. The steps were hurried down; the
+footman stood<br>
+door in hand; and I led her forward, mute and trembling. Did she
+know me? I<br>
+assisted her as she stepped in; her hand touched mine: it was the
+work of a<br>
+second; to me it was the bliss of years. She leaned a little
+forward; and<br>
+as the servant put up the steps, said in her soft, sweet tone,
+"Thank you,<br>
+sir. Good-night."</p>
+
+<p>I felt my shoulder touched by some one who, it appeared, was
+standing close<br>
+to me for some seconds; but so occupied was I in gazing at her
+that I paid<br>
+no attention to the circumstance. The carriage drove away and
+disappeared<br>
+in the thick darkness of a starless night. I turned to re-enter
+the house,<br>
+and as I did so, the night lamp of the hall fell upon the
+features of<br>
+the man beside me, and showed me the pale and corpse-like face of
+Fred<br>
+Hammersley. His eye was bent upon me with an expression of fierce
+and fiery<br>
+passion, in which the sadness of long-suffering also mingled. His
+bloodless<br>
+lips parted, moved as though speaking, while yet no sound issued;
+and his<br>
+nostril, dilating and contracting by turns, seemed to denote some
+deep and<br>
+hidden emotion that worked within him.</p>
+
+<p>"Hammersley," said I, holding out my hand towards
+him,&mdash;"Hammersley, do not<br>
+always mistake me?"</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head mournfully as it fell forward upon his
+breast, and<br>
+covering his arm, moved slowly away without speaking.</p>
+
+<p>General Picton's voice as he descended the stairs, accompanied
+by Generals<br>
+Vandeleur and Vivian, aroused me at once, and I hurried towards
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, sir, to horse. The troops will defile by the Namur gate,
+and meet me<br>
+there in an hour. Meanwhile tell Colonel Cameron that he must
+march with<br>
+the light companies of his own and the Ninety-second at
+once."</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Picton, they'll say we were taken by surprise in
+England; won't<br>
+they?" said a sharp, strong voice, in a half-laughing tone from
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>"No, your Grace," said Sir Thomas, bowing slightly; "they'll
+scarcely do so<br>
+when they hear the time we took to get under arms."</p>
+
+<p>I heard no more; but throwing myself into the saddle of my
+troop horse,<br>
+once more rode back to the Belle Vue to make ready for the
+road.</p>
+
+<p>The thin pale crescent of a new moon, across which masses of
+dark and inky<br>
+clouds were hurrying, tipped with its faint and sickly light the
+tall<br>
+minarets of the Hotel de Ville, as I rode into the Grande Place.
+Although<br>
+midnight, the streets were as crowded as at noonday; horse, foot,
+and<br>
+dragoons passing and hurrying hither; the wild pibroch of the
+Highlander;<br>
+the mellow bugle of the Seventy-first; the hoarse trumpet of the
+cavalry;<br>
+the incessant roll of the drum,&mdash;mingled their sounds with the
+tide of<br>
+human voices, in which every accent was heard, from the reckless
+cheer of<br>
+anticipated victory, to the heart-piercing shriek of woman's
+agony. Lights<br>
+gleamed from every window; from the doors of almost every house
+poured<br>
+forth a crowd of soldiers and townsfolk. The sergeants, on one
+side,<br>
+might be seen telling off their men, their cool and steady
+countenances<br>
+evidencing no semblance of emotion; while near them some young
+ensign,<br>
+whose beardless cheek and vacant smile bespoke the mere boy,
+looked on with<br>
+mingled pride and wonder at the wild scene before him. Every now
+and then<br>
+some general officer with his staff came cantering past; and as
+the efforts<br>
+to muster and form the troops grew more pressing, I could mark
+how soon we<br>
+were destined to meet the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>There are few finer monuments of the architecture of the
+Middle Ages than<br>
+the Grande Place of Brussels,&mdash;the rich fa&ccedil;ade of the
+H&ocirc;tel de Ville, with<br>
+its long colonnade of graceful arches, upon every keystone of
+which some<br>
+grim, grotesque head is peering; the massive cornices; the heavy
+corbels<br>
+carved into ten thousand strange and uncouth fancies; but finer
+than all,<br>
+the taper and stately spire, fretted and perforated like some
+piece of<br>
+silver filigree, stretches upward towards the sky, its airy
+pinnacle<br>
+growing finer and more beautiful as it nears the stars it points
+to.<br>
+How full of historic associations is every dark embrasure, every
+narrow<br>
+casement around! Here may have stood the great emperor, Charles
+the Fifth,<br>
+meditating upon that greatness he was about to forego forever;
+here from<br>
+this tall window, may have looked the sad and sickly features of
+Jeanne<br>
+Laffolle, as with wandering eye and idiot smile she gazed upon
+the gorgeous<br>
+procession beneath. There is not a stone that has not echoed to
+the tread<br>
+of haughty prince or bold baron; yet never, in the palmiest days
+of ancient<br>
+chivalry, did those proud dwellings of the great of old look out
+upon a<br>
+braver and more valiant host than now thronged beneath their
+shadow. It was<br>
+indeed a splendid sight, where the bright gleams of torch and
+lantern threw<br>
+the red light around, to watch the measured tread and steady
+tramp of the<br>
+Highland regiments as they defiled into the open space; each
+footstep as it<br>
+met the ground, seeming in its proud and firm tread, to move in
+more than<br>
+sympathy with the wild notes of their native mountains; silent
+and still<br>
+they moved along; no voice spoke within their ranks, save that of
+some<br>
+command to "Close up&mdash;take ground&mdash;to the right&mdash;rear rank&mdash;close
+order."<br>
+Except such brief words as these, or the low muttered praise of
+some<br>
+veteran general as he rode down the line, all was orderly and
+steady as<br>
+on a parade. Meanwhile, from an angle of the square, the band of
+an<br>
+approaching regiment was heard; and to the inspiriting quickness
+of "The<br>
+Young May Moon," the gallant Twenty-eighth came forward and took
+up their<br>
+ground opposite to the Highlanders.</p>
+
+<p>The deep bell of the H&ocirc;tel de Ville tolled one. The
+solemn sound rang out<br>
+and died away in many an echo, leaving upon the heart a sense of
+some<br>
+unknown depression; and there was something like a knell in the
+deep<br>
+cadence of its bay; and over many a cheek a rapid trace of gloomy
+thought<br>
+now passed; and true&mdash;too true, alas!&mdash;how many now listened for
+the last<br>
+time!</p>
+
+<p>"March! march!" passed from front to rear; and as the bands
+burst forth<br>
+again in streams of spirit-stirring harmony, the Seventy-ninth
+moved on;<br>
+the Twenty-eighth followed; and as they debouched from the
+"Place" the<br>
+Seventy-first and the Ninety-second succeeded them. Like wave
+after wave,<br>
+the tide of armed men pressed on, and mounted the steep and
+narrow street<br>
+towards the upper town of Brussels. Here Pack's Brigade was
+forming in the<br>
+Place Royale; and a crowd of staff officers dictating orders, and
+writing<br>
+hurriedly on the drum-heads, were also seen. A troop of dragoons
+stood<br>
+beside their horses at the door of the Belle Vue, and several
+grooms with<br>
+led horses walked to and fro.</p>
+
+<p>"Ride forward, sir, to the Bois de Cambre," said Picton, "and
+pivot the<br>
+troops on the road to Mont St. Jean. You will then wait for my
+coming up,<br>
+or further orders."</p>
+
+<p>This command, which was given to me, I hastened to obey; and
+with<br>
+difficulty forcing my way through the opposing crowd, at length
+reached the<br>
+Namur gate. Here I found a detachment of the Guards, who as yet
+had got no<br>
+orders to march, and were somewhat surprised to learn the forward
+movement.<br>
+Ten minutes' riding brought me to the angle of the wood, whence I
+wrote a<br>
+few lines to my host of the Belle Vue, desiring him to send Mike
+after me<br>
+with my horses and my kit. The night was cold, dark, and
+threatening; the<br>
+wind howled with a low and wailing cry through the dark
+pine-trees; and as<br>
+I stood alone and in solitude, I had time to think of the
+eventful hours<br>
+before me, and of that field which ere long was to witness the
+triumph or<br>
+the downfall of my country's arms. The road which led through the
+forest of<br>
+Soignies caught an additional gloom from the dark, dense woods
+around. The<br>
+faint moon only showed at intervals; and a lowering sky, without
+a single<br>
+star, stretched above us. It was an awful and a solemn thing to
+hear the<br>
+deep and thundering roll of that mighty column, awakening the
+echoes of<br>
+the silent forest as they went. So hurried was the movement that
+we had<br>
+scarcely any artillery, and that of the lightest calibre; but the
+clash and<br>
+clank of the cavalry, the heavy, monotonous tramp of infantry
+were there;<br>
+and as division followed after division, staff officers rode
+hurriedly to<br>
+and fro, pressing the eager troops still on.</p>
+
+<p>"Move up there, Ninety-fifth. Ah, Forty-second, we've work
+before us!" said<br>
+Picton, as he rode up to the head of his brigade. The air of
+depression<br>
+which usually sat upon his careworn features now changed for a
+light and<br>
+laughing look, while his voice was softened and subdued into a
+low and<br>
+pleasing tone. Although it was midsummer, the roads were heavy
+and deep<br>
+with mud. For some weeks previously the weather had been rainy;
+and<br>
+this, added to the haste and discomfort of the night march,
+considerably<br>
+increased the fatigue of the troops. Notwithstanding these
+disadvantages,<br>
+not a murmur nor complaint was heard on any side.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm unco glad to get a blink o' them, onyhow," said a tall,
+raw-boned<br>
+sergeant, who marched beside me.</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, and may be you won't be over pleased at the expression
+of their<br>
+faces, when you see them," said Mike, whose satisfaction at the
+prospect<br>
+before him was still as great as that of any other amidst the
+thousands<br>
+there.</p>
+
+<p>The day was slowly breaking, as a Prussian officer, splashed
+and covered<br>
+with foam, came galloping up at full speed past us. While I was
+yet<br>
+conjecturing what might be the intelligence he brought, Power
+rode up to my<br>
+side.</p>
+
+<p>"We're in for it, Charley," said he. "The whole French army
+are in march;<br>
+and Blucher's aide-de-camp, who has arrived, gives the number at
+one<br>
+hundred and fifty thousand men. The Prussians are drawn up
+between St.<br>
+Amand and Sombref, and the Nassau and Dutch troops are at Quatre
+Bras, both<br>
+expecting to be attacked."</p>
+
+<p>"Quatre Bras was the original rallying spot for our troops,
+was it not?"<br>
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes. It is that we're now marching upon; but our
+Prussian friend<br>
+seems to think we shall arrive too late. Strong French corps are
+already at<br>
+Fresnes, under the command, it is said, of Marshal Ney."</p>
+
+<p>The great object of the British commander-in-chief was to
+arrive at Quatre<br>
+Bras in sufficient time to effect his junction with Blucher
+before a battle<br>
+should be fought. To effect this no exertion was spared: efforts
+almost<br>
+super-human were made; for, however prepared for a forward
+movement, it was<br>
+impossible to have anticipated anything until the intentions of
+Napoleon<br>
+became clearly manifest. While Nivelles and Charleroi were
+exposed to him<br>
+on one side, Namur lay open on the other; and he could either
+march upon<br>
+Brussels, by Mons or Halle, or, as he subsequently attempted, by
+Quatre<br>
+Bras and Waterloo. No sooner, however, were his intentions
+unmasked, and<br>
+the line of his operations manifested, than Lord Wellington, with
+an energy<br>
+equal to the mighty occasion that demanded it, poured down with
+the whole<br>
+force under his command to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>The march was a most distressing one; upward of
+three-and-twenty miles,<br>
+with deep and cut-up roads, in hot, oppressive weather, in a
+country almost<br>
+destitute of water. Still the troops pressed forward, and by noon
+came<br>
+within hearing of the heavy cannonade in front, which indicated
+the<br>
+situation of the battle. From this time aide-de-camp followed
+aide-de-camp<br>
+in quick succession, who, from their scared looks and hurried
+gestures,<br>
+seemed to bode but ill-fortune to the cause we cared for. What
+the precise<br>
+situation of the rival armies might be we knew not; but we heard
+the French<br>
+were in overwhelming numbers; that the Dutch troops had abandoned
+their<br>
+position; the Hanoverians being driven back, the Duke of
+Brunswick&mdash;the<br>
+brave sovereign of a gallant people&mdash;fell charging at the head of
+his black<br>
+hussars. From one phrase which constantly met our ears, it seemed
+that<br>
+the Bois de Bossu was the key of the position. This had been won
+and lost<br>
+repeatedly by both sides; and as we neared the battle-field a
+despatch<br>
+hurriedly announced to Picton the importance of at once
+recovering this<br>
+contested point. The Ninety-fifth were ordered up to the attack.
+Scarcely<br>
+was the word given, when fatigue, thirst, and exhaustion were
+forgotten;<br>
+with one cheer the gallant regiment formed into line, and
+advanced upon<br>
+the wood. Meanwhile the Highland Brigade moved down towards the
+right; the<br>
+Royals and the Twenty-eighth debouched upon the left of the road;
+and in<br>
+less than half an hour after our arrival our whole force was in
+action.</p>
+
+<p>There is something appalling, to the bravest army, in coming
+up to battle<br>
+at the time that an overwhelming and conquering foe are carrying
+victory<br>
+triumphantly before them: such was our position at Quatre Bras.
+Bravely and<br>
+gloriously as the forces of the Prince of Orange fought, the day,
+however,<br>
+was not theirs. The Bois de Bossu, which opened to the enemy the
+road to<br>
+Brussels, was held by their tirailleurs; the valley to the right
+was rode<br>
+over by their mounted squadrons, who with lance and sabre carried
+all<br>
+before them; their dark columns pressed steadily on; and a
+death-dealing<br>
+artillery swept the allied ranks from flank to flank. Such was
+the field<br>
+when the British arrived, and throwing themselves into squares,
+opposed<br>
+their unaided force to the dreadful charges of the enemy. The
+batteries<br>
+showered down their storms of grape; Milhaud's Heavy Dragoons,
+assisted by<br>
+crowds of lancers, rushed upon the squares, but they stood
+unbroken and<br>
+undaunted, as sometimes upon three sides of their position the
+infuriated<br>
+horsemen of the enemy came down. Once, and once only, were the
+French<br>
+successful; the 42d, who were stationed amidst tall corn-fields,
+were<br>
+surrounded with cavalry before they knew it. The word was given
+to form<br>
+square; the Lancers were already among them, and fighting back to
+back, the<br>
+gallant Highlanders met the foe. Fresh numbers poured down upon
+them, and<br>
+already half the regiment was disabled and their colonel killed.
+These<br>
+brave fellows were rescued by the 44th, who, throwing in a
+withering<br>
+volley, fixed bayonets and charged. Meanwhile the 95th had won
+and lost the<br>
+wood, which, now in the possession of the French tirailleurs,
+threatened to<br>
+turn the left of our position. It was at this time that a body of
+cavalry<br>
+were seen standing to the left of the Enghien road, as if in
+observation.<br>
+An officer sent forward to reconnoitre, returned with the
+intelligence that<br>
+they were British troops, for he had seen their red uniforms.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't think it, sir," said Picton. "It is hardly possible
+that any<br>
+regiment from Enghien could have arrived already. Ride forward,
+O'Malley,<br>
+and if they be our fellows, let them carry that height yonder;
+there are<br>
+two guns there cutting the 92d to pieces."</p>
+
+<p>I put spurs to my horse, cleared the road at once, and dashing
+across<br>
+the open space to the left of the wood, rode on in the direction
+of the<br>
+horsemen. When I came within the distance of three hundred yards
+I examined<br>
+them with my glass, and could plainly detect the scarlet coats
+and bright<br>
+helmets. "Ha," thought I, "the 1st Dragoon Guards, no doubt."
+Muttering<br>
+to myself thus much, I galloped straight on; and waving my hand
+as I came<br>
+near, announced that I was the bearer of an order. Scarcely had I
+done so,<br>
+when four horsemen, dashing spurs into their steeds, plunged
+hastily out<br>
+from the line, and before I could speak, surrounded me. While the
+foremost<br>
+called out, as he flourished his sabre above his head,
+"Rendez-vous!" At<br>
+the same moment I was seized on each side, and led back a captive
+into the<br>
+hands of the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>"We guess your mistake, Capitaine," said the French officer
+before whom I<br>
+was brought. "We are the regiment of Berg, and our scarlet
+uniform cost us<br>
+dearly enough yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>This allusion, I afterwards learned, was in reference to a
+charge by a<br>
+cuirassier regiment, which, in mistaking them for English, poured
+a volley<br>
+into them, and killed and wounded about twenty of their
+number.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER LII.</p>
+
+<p>QUATRE BRAS.</p>
+
+<p>Those who have visited the field of Quatre Bras will remember
+that on the<br>
+left of the high road, and nearly at the extremity of the Bois de
+Bossu,<br>
+stands a large Flemish farm-house, whose high pitched roof,
+pointed gables,<br>
+and quaint, old-fashioned chimneys, remind one of the
+architecture<br>
+so frequently seen in Tenier's pictures. The house, which, with
+its<br>
+dependencies of stables, granaries, and out-houses, resembles a
+little<br>
+village, is surrounded by a large, straggling orchard of aged
+fruit-trees,<br>
+through which the approach from the high road leads. The interior
+of this<br>
+quaint dwelling, like all those of its class, is only remarkable
+for a<br>
+succession of small, dark, low-ceiled rooms, leading one into
+another;<br>
+their gloomy aspect increased by the dark oak furniture, the
+heavy<br>
+armories, and old-fashioned presses, carved in the grotesque
+taste of the<br>
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Those who visit it now may
+mark the<br>
+trace of cannon-shot here and there through the building; more
+than<br>
+one deep crack will attest the force of the dread artillery.
+Still the<br>
+traveller will feel struck with the rural peace and quietude of
+the scene;<br>
+the speckled oxen that stand lowing in the deep meadows; the
+splash of the<br>
+silvery trout as he sports in the bright stream that ripples
+along over its<br>
+gravelly bed; the cawing of the old rooks in the tall
+beech-trees; but more<br>
+than all, the happy laugh of children,&mdash;speak of the spot as one
+of retired<br>
+and tranquil beauty; yet when my eyes opened upon it on the
+morning of the<br>
+17th of June, the scene presented features of a widely different
+interest.<br>
+The day was breaking as the deep, full sound of the French bugles
+announced<br>
+the reveille. Forgetful of where I was, I sprang from my bed and
+rushed to<br>
+the window; the prospect before me at once recalled me to my
+recollection,<br>
+and I remembered that I was a prisoner. The exciting events
+around left me<br>
+but little time and as little inclination to think over my old
+misfortunes;<br>
+and I watched, with all the interest of a soldier, the movement
+of the<br>
+French troops in the orchard beneath. A squadron of dragoons, who
+seemed to<br>
+have passed the night beside their horses, lay stretched or
+seated in all<br>
+the picturesque groupings of a bivouac,&mdash;some already up and
+stirring;<br>
+others leaned half listlessly upon their elbows, and looked about
+as if<br>
+unwilling to believe the night was over; and some, stretched in
+deep<br>
+slumber, woke not with the noise and tumult around them. The room
+in which<br>
+I was confined looked out upon the road to Charleroi; I could
+therefore<br>
+see the British troops; and as the French army had fallen back
+during the<br>
+night, only an advanced guard maintaining the position, I was
+left to my<br>
+unaided conjectures as to the fortune of the preceding day of
+battle. What<br>
+a period of anxiety and agitation was that morning to me; what
+would I<br>
+not have given to learn the result of the action since the moment
+of my<br>
+capture! Stubborn as our resistance had been, we were evidently
+getting the<br>
+worst, of it; and if the Guards had not arrived in time, I knew
+we must<br>
+have been beaten.</p>
+
+<p>I walked up and down my narrow room, tortured and agonized by
+my doubts,<br>
+now stopping to reason over the possibilities of success, now
+looking from<br>
+the window to try if, in the gesture and bearing of those
+without, I could<br>
+conjecture anything that passed. Too well I knew the vaunting
+character<br>
+of the French soldier, in defeat as in victory, to put much
+confidence in<br>
+their bearing. While, however, I watched them with an eager eye,
+I heard<br>
+the tramp of horsemen coming along the paved causeway. From the
+moment my<br>
+ear caught the sound to that of their arrival at the gate of the
+orchard,<br>
+but few minutes elapsed; their pace was indeed a severe one, and
+as they<br>
+galloped through the narrow path that led to the farm-house, they
+never<br>
+drew rein till they reached the porch. The party consisted of
+about a dozen<br>
+persons whose plumed hats bespoke them staff officers; but their
+uniforms<br>
+were concealed beneath their great-coats. As they came along the
+picket<br>
+sprang to their feet, and the guard at the door beneath presented
+arms.<br>
+This left no doubt upon my mind that some officer of rank was
+among them,<br>
+and as I knew that Ney himself commanded on the preceding day, I
+thought<br>
+it might be he. The sound of voices beneath informed me that the
+party<br>
+occupied the room under that in which I was, and although I
+listened<br>
+attentively I could hear nothing but the confused murmur of
+persons<br>
+conversing together without detecting even a word. My thoughts
+now fell<br>
+into another channel, and as I ruminated over my old position, I
+heard the<br>
+noise of the sentry at my door as he brought his musket to the
+shoulder,<br>
+and the next moment an officer in the uniform of the Chasseurs of
+the Guard<br>
+entered. Bowing politely as he advanced to the middle of the
+room, he<br>
+addressed me thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You speak French, sir?" and as I replied in the affirmative,
+continued:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Will you, then, have the goodness to follow me this way?"</p>
+
+<p>Although burning with anxiety to learn what had taken place,
+yet somehow I<br>
+could not bring myself to ask the question. A secret pride
+mingled with my<br>
+fear that all had not gone well with us, and I durst not expose
+myself to<br>
+hear of our defeat from the lips of an enemy. I had barely time
+to ask into<br>
+whose presence I was about to be ushered, when with a slight
+smile of a<br>
+strange meaning, he opened the door and introduced me into the
+saloon.<br>
+Although I had seen at least twelve or fourteen horsemen arrive,
+there were<br>
+but three persons in the room as I entered. One of these, who sat
+writing<br>
+at a small table near the window, never lifted his head on my
+entrance, but<br>
+continued assiduously his occupation. Another, a tall,
+fine-looking man<br>
+of some sixty years or upward, whose high, bald forehead and
+drooping<br>
+mustache, white as snow, looked in every way the old soldier of
+the empire,<br>
+stood leaning upon his sabre; while the third, whose stature,
+somewhat<br>
+below the middle size, was yet cast in a strong and muscular
+mould, stood<br>
+with his back to the fire, holding on his arms the skirts of a
+gray surtout<br>
+which he wore over his uniform; his legs were cased in the tall
+<i>bottes &agrave;<br>
+l'&eacute;cuy&egrave;re</i> worn by the <i>chasseur &agrave; cheval</i>,
+and on his head a low cocked<br>
+hat, without plume or feather, completed his costume. There was
+something<br>
+which, at the very moment of my entrance, struck me as uncommon
+in his air<br>
+and bearing, so much so that when my eyes had once rested on his
+pale but<br>
+placid countenance, his regular, handsome, but somewhat stern
+features, I<br>
+totally forgot the presence of the others and looked only at
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"What's your rank, sir?" said he, hurriedly, and with a tone
+which bespoke<br>
+command.</p>
+
+<p>"I have none at present, save&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you wear your epaulettes then, sir?" said he, harshly,
+while from<br>
+his impatient look, and hurried gesture, I saw that he put no
+faith in my<br>
+reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I am an aide-de-camp to General Picton, but without
+regimental rank."</p>
+
+<p>"What was the British force under arms yesterday?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not feel at liberty to give you any information as to
+the number or<br>
+the movements of our army."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Diantre! Diantre!</i>" said he, slapping his boot with his
+horsewhip, "do<br>
+you know what you've been saying there, eh? Cambronne, you heard
+him, did<br>
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sire, and if your Majesty would permit me to deal with
+him, I would<br>
+have his information, if he possess any, and that ere long,
+too."</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, <i>gaillard</i>," said he, laughing, as he pinched the old
+general's ear in<br>
+jest, "I believe you, with all my heart."</p>
+
+<p>The full truth flashed upon my mind. I was in presence of the
+Emperor<br>
+himself. As, however, up to this moment I was unconscious of his
+presence,<br>
+I resolved now to affect ignorance of it throughout.</p>
+
+<p>"Had you despatches, sir?" said he, turning towards me with a
+look of stern<br>
+severity. "Were any despatches found upon him when he was taken?"
+This<br>
+latter question was directed to the aide-de-camp who introduced
+me, and who<br>
+still remained at the door.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Sire, nothing was found upon him except this locket."</p>
+
+<p>As he said these words he placed in Napoleon's hands the
+keepsake which St.<br>
+Croix had left with me years before in Spain, and which, as the
+reader may<br>
+remember, was a miniature of the Empress Josephine.</p>
+
+<p>The moment the Emperor threw his eyes upon it, the flush which
+excitement<br>
+had called into his cheek disappeared at once. He became pale as
+death, his<br>
+very lips as bloodless as his wan cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"Leave me, Lefebvre; leave me, Cambronne, for a moment. I will
+speak with<br>
+this gentleman alone."</p>
+
+<p>As the door closed upon them he leaned his arm upon the
+mantelpiece, and<br>
+with his head sunk upon his bosom, remained some moments without
+speaking.</p>
+
+<p>"Augure sinistre!" muttered he within his teeth, as his
+piercing gaze was<br>
+riveted upon the picture before him. "Voil&agrave; la
+troisi&egrave;me fois peut-&ecirc;tre<br>
+la derni&egrave;re." Then suddenly rousing himself, he advanced
+close to me, and<br>
+seizing me by the arm with a grasp like iron, inquired:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"How came you by this picture? The truth, sir; mark me, the
+truth!"</p>
+
+<p>Without showing any sign of feeling hurt at the insinuation of
+this<br>
+question, I detailed, in as few words as I could, the
+circumstance by which<br>
+the locket became mine. Long before I had concluded, however, I
+could mark<br>
+that his attention flagged, and finally wandered far away from
+the matter<br>
+before him.</p>
+
+<p>"Why will you not give me the information I look for? I seek
+for no breach<br>
+of faith. The campaign is all but over. The Prussians were beaten
+at Ligny,<br>
+their army routed, their artillery captured, ten thousand
+prisoners taken.<br>
+Your troops and the Dutch were conquered yesterday, and they are
+in full<br>
+retreat on Brussels. By to-morrow evening I shall date my
+bulletin from<br>
+the palace at Laeken. Antwerp will be in my possession within
+twenty-four<br>
+hours. Namur is already mine. Cambronne, Lefebvre," cried he,
+"cet homme-l&agrave;<br>
+n'en sait rien," pointing to me as he spoke; "let us see the
+other." With<br>
+this he motioned slightly with his hand as a sign for me to
+withdraw, and<br>
+the next moment I was once more in the solitude of my
+prison-room, thinking<br>
+over the singular interview I had just had with the great
+Emperor.</p>
+
+<p>How anxiously pass the hours of one who, deprived of other
+means of<br>
+information, is left to form his conjectures by some passing
+object or some<br>
+chance murmur. The things which, in the ordinary course of life,
+are passed<br>
+by unnoticed and unregarded, are now matters of moment,&mdash;with
+what scrutiny<br>
+he examines the features of those whom he dare not question; with
+what<br>
+patient ear he listens to each passing word. Thus to me, a
+prisoner,<br>
+the hours went by tardily yet anxiously; no sabre clanked; no
+war-horse<br>
+neighed; no heavy-booted cuirassier tramped in the courtyard
+beneath my<br>
+window, without setting a hundred conjectures afloat as to what
+was about<br>
+to happen. For some time there had been a considerable noise and
+bustle in<br>
+and about the dwelling. Horsemen came and went continually. The
+sounds of<br>
+galloping could be heard along the paved causeway; then the
+challenge of<br>
+the sentry at the gate; then the nearer tread of approaching
+stops, and<br>
+many voices speaking together, would seem to indicate that some
+messenger<br>
+had arrived with despatches. At length all these sounds became
+hushed and<br>
+still. No longer were the voices heard; and except the measured
+tread of<br>
+the heavy cuirassier, as he paced on the flags beneath, nothing
+was to be<br>
+heard. My state of suspense, doubly greater now than when the
+noise and<br>
+tumult suggested food for conjecture, continued till towards
+noon, when<br>
+a soldier in undress brought me some breakfast, and told me to
+prepare<br>
+speedily for the road.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had he left the room, when the rumbling noise of
+wagons was heard<br>
+below, and a train of artillery carts moved into the little
+courtyard<br>
+loaded with wounded men. It was a sad and frightful sight to see
+these poor<br>
+fellows, as, crammed side by side in the straw of the
+<i>charrette</i>, they<br>
+lay, their ghastly wounds opening with every motion of the wagon,
+while<br>
+their wan, pale faces were convulsed with agony and suffering. Of
+every<br>
+rank, from the sous-lieutenant to the humble soldier, from every
+arm of the<br>
+service, from the heavy cuirassier of the guard to the light and
+intrepid<br>
+tirailleur, they were there. I well remember one, an
+artillery-man of<br>
+the guard, who, as they lifted him forth from the cart, presented
+the<br>
+horrifying spectacle of one both of whose legs had been carried
+away by a<br>
+cannon-shot. Pale, cold, and corpse-like, ha lay in their arms;
+his head<br>
+lay heavily to one side, his arms fell passively as in death. It
+was at<br>
+this moment a troop of lancers, the advanced guard of D'Erlon's
+Division,<br>
+came trotting up the road; the cry of "Vive l'Empereur!" burst
+from them<br>
+as they approached; its echo rang within the walls of the
+farm-house, when<br>
+suddenly the dying man, as though some magic touch had called him
+back to<br>
+life and vigor, sprang up erect between his bearers, his filmy
+eye flashing<br>
+fire, a burning spot of red coloring his bloodless cheek. He cast
+one wild<br>
+and hurried look around him, like one called back from death to
+look<br>
+upon the living; and as he raised his blood-stained hand above
+his head,<br>
+shouted, in a heart-piercing cry, "Vive l'Empereur!" The effort
+was his<br>
+last. It was the expiring tribute of allegiance to the chief he
+adored. The<br>
+blood spouted in cataracts from his half-closed wounds, a
+convulsive spasm<br>
+worked through his frame, his eyes rolled fearfully, as his
+outstretched<br>
+hands seemed striving to clutch some object before them, and he
+was dead.<br>
+Fresh arrivals of wounded continued to pour in; and now I thought
+I could<br>
+detect at intervals the distant noise of a cannonade. The wind,
+however,<br>
+was from the southward, and the sounds were too indistinct to be
+relied on.</p>
+
+<p>"Allons, aliens, mon cher!" said a rough but good-humored
+looking fellow,<br>
+as he strode into my room. He was the quartermaster of Milhaud's
+Dragoons,<br>
+under whose care I was now placed, and came to inform me that we
+were to<br>
+set out immediately.</p>
+
+<p>Monsieur Bonnard was a character in his way; and if it were
+not so near the<br>
+conclusion of my history, I should like to present him to my
+readers. As<br>
+it is, I shall merely say he was a thorough specimen of one class
+of<br>
+his countrymen,&mdash;a loud talker, a louder swearer, a vaporing,
+boasting,<br>
+overbearing, good-natured, and even soft-hearted fellow, who
+firmly<br>
+believed that Frenchmen were the climax of the species, and
+Napoleon the<br>
+climax of Frenchmen. Being a great <i>bavard</i>, he speedily told me
+all that<br>
+had taken place during the last two days. From him I learned that
+the<br>
+Prussians had really been beaten at Ligny, and had fallen back,
+he knew<br>
+not where. They were, however, he said, hotly pursued by Grouchy,
+with<br>
+thirty-five thousand men, while the Emperor himself was now
+following the<br>
+British and Dutch armies with seventy thousand more.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," continued he, "l'affaire est faite! Who can resist
+the Emperor?"</p>
+
+<p>These were sad tidings for me; and although I did not place
+implicit<br>
+confidence in my informant, I had still my fears that much of
+what he said<br>
+was true.</p>
+
+<p>"And the British, now," said I, "what direction have they
+taken?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bah, they're in retreat on Brussels, and will probably
+capitulate<br>
+to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Capitulate!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oui, oui; ne vous f&acirc;chez pas, camarade," said he,
+laughing. "What could<br>
+you do against Napoleon? You did not expect to beat him, surely?
+But come,<br>
+we must move on; I have my orders to bring you to Planchenoit
+this evening,<br>
+and our horses are tired enough already."</p>
+
+<p>"Mine, methinks, should be fresh," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Parbleu, mon!</i>" replied he; "he has twice made the journey
+to Fresnes<br>
+this morning with despatches for Marshal Ney; the Emperor is
+enraged<br>
+with the marshal for having retreated last night, having the wood
+in his<br>
+possession; he says he should have waited till daybreak, and then
+fallen<br>
+upon your retreating columns. As it is, you are getting away
+without much<br>
+loss. <i>Sacristie</i>, that was a fine charge!" These last words he
+muttered to<br>
+himself, adding, between his teeth, "Sixty-four killed and
+wounded."</p>
+
+<p>"What was that? Who were they?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Our fellows," replied he, frankly; "the Emperor ordered up
+two<br>
+twelve-pounders, and eight squadrons of lancers; they fell upon
+your light<br>
+dragoons in a narrow part of the high road. But suddenly we heard
+a noise<br>
+in front; your hussars fell back, and a column of your heavy
+dragoons came<br>
+thundering down upon us. <i>Parbleu!</i> they swept over us as if we
+were broken<br>
+infantry; and there! there!" said he, pointing to the courtyard,
+from<br>
+whence the groans of the wounded still rose,&mdash;"there are the
+fruits of that<br>
+terrible charge."</p>
+
+<p>I could not restrain an outbreak of triumphant pleasure at
+this gallant<br>
+feat of my countrymen.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes," said the honest quartermaster; "it was a fine
+thing; but a<br>
+heavy reckoning is at hand. But come, now, let us take the
+road."</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments more I found myself seated upon a heavy
+Norman horse,<br>
+whose lumbering demi-peak saddle was nearly cleft in two by a
+sabre-cut.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay," said Monsieur Bonnard, as he saw my eye fixed on the
+spot, "it<br>
+was one of your fellows did that; and the same cut clove poor
+Pierre from<br>
+the neck to the seat."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope," said I, laughing, "the saddle may not prove an
+unlucky one."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," said the Frenchman, seriously; "it has paid its debt
+to fate."</p>
+
+<p>As we pressed on our road, which, broken by the heavy guns,
+and ploughed up<br>
+in many places by the artillery, was nearly impassable, we could
+distinctly<br>
+hear from time to time the distant boom of the large guns, as the
+retiring<br>
+and pursuing armies replied to each other; while behind us, but
+still a<br>
+long way off, a dark mass appeared on the horizon: they were the
+advancing<br>
+columns of Ney's Division.</p>
+
+<p>"Have the troops come in contact more than once this
+morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not closely," said the quartermaster; "the armies have kept a
+respectful<br>
+distance; they were like nothing I can think of," said the
+figurative<br>
+Frenchman, "except two hideous serpents wallowing in mire, and
+vomiting at<br>
+each other whole rivers of fire and flame."</p>
+
+<p>As we approached Planchenoit, we came up to the rear-guard of
+the French<br>
+army; from them we learned that Ney's Division, consisting of the
+Eighth<br>
+Corps, had joined the Emperor; that the British were still in
+retreat, but<br>
+that nothing of any importance had occurred between the rival
+armies, the<br>
+French merely firing their heavy guns from time to time to
+ascertain by<br>
+the reply the position of the retreating forces. The rain poured
+down in<br>
+torrents; gusts of cold and stormy wind swept across the wide
+plains, or<br>
+moaned sorrowfully through the dense forest. As I rode on by the
+side of my<br>
+companion, I could not help remarking how little the effects of a
+fatiguing<br>
+march and unfavorable weather were apparent on those around me.
+The spirit<br>
+of excited gayety pervaded every rank; and unlike the stern
+features which<br>
+the discipline of our service enforces, the French soldiers were
+talking,<br>
+laughing and even singing, as they marched; the canteens passed
+freely from<br>
+hand to hand, and jests and toasts flew from front to rear along
+the dark<br>
+columns; many carried their loaves of dark rye-bread on the tops
+of their<br>
+bayonets; and to look upon that noisy and tumultuous mass as they
+poured<br>
+along, it would have needed a practised eye to believe them the
+most<br>
+disciplined of European armies.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was just setting, as mounting a ridge of high land
+beside the high<br>
+road, my companion pointed with his finger to a small farm-house,
+which,<br>
+standing alone in the plain, commands an extensive view on every
+side of<br>
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"There," said he,&mdash;"there is the <i>quartier
+g&eacute;n&eacute;ral</i>; the Emperor sleeps<br>
+there to-night. The King of Holland will afford him a bed
+to-morrow night."</p>
+
+<p>The dark shadows of the coming night were rapidly falling as I
+strained my<br>
+eyes to trace the British position. A hollow, rumbling sound
+announced the<br>
+movement of artillery in our front.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Arnotte?" said the quartermaster to a dragoon
+officer who rode<br>
+past.</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing," replied the other, laughing, "but a <i>ruse</i> of
+the Emperor.<br>
+He wishes to ascertain if the enemy are in force, or if we have
+only a<br>
+strong rear-guard before us."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke fifteen heavy guns opened there fire, and the
+still air<br>
+reverberated with a loud thunder. The sound had not died away,
+the very<br>
+smoke lay yet heavily upon the moist earth, when forty pieces of
+British<br>
+cannon rang out their answer, and the very plain trembled beneath
+the<br>
+shock.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha, they are there, then!" exclaimed the dragoon, as his eyes
+flashed with<br>
+ecstasy. "Look! see! the artillery are limbering up already. The
+Emperor is<br>
+satisfied."</p>
+
+<p>And so it was. A dark column of twelve hundred horse that
+accompanied the<br>
+guns into the plain, now wheeled slowly round, and wound their
+long track<br>
+far away to the right. The rain fell in torrents; the wind was
+hushed;<br>
+and as the night fell in darkness, the columns moved severally to
+their<br>
+destinations. The bivouacs were formed; the watch-fires were
+lighted; and<br>
+seventy thousand men and two hundred pieces of cannon occupied
+the heights<br>
+of Planchenoit.</p>
+
+<p>"My orders are to bring you to La Caillon," said the
+quartermaster; "and if<br>
+you only can spur your jaded horse into a trot, we shall soon
+reach it."</p>
+
+<p>About a hundred yards from the little farm-house, stood a
+small cottage of<br>
+a peasant. Here some officers of Marshal Soult's staff had taken
+up their<br>
+quarters; and thither my guide now bent his steps.</p>
+
+<p>"Comment, Bonnard!" said an aide-de-camp, as we rode up.
+"Another prisoner?<br>
+<i>Sacrebleu!</i> We shall have the whole British staff among us. You
+are<br>
+in better luck than your countryman, the general, I hope," said
+the<br>
+aide-decamp. "His is a sad affair; and I'm sorry for it, too.
+He's a fine,<br>
+soldier-like looking fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray, what has happened?" said I. "To what do you
+allude?"</p>
+
+<p>"Merely to one of your people who has just been taken with
+some letters and<br>
+papers of Bourmont's in his possession. The Emperor is in no very
+amicable<br>
+humor towards the traitor, and resolves to pay off some part of
+his debt on<br>
+his British correspondent."</p>
+
+<p>"How cruel! How unjust!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes, it is hard, I confess, to be shot for the fault of
+another.<br>
+Mais, que voulez-vous?"</p>
+
+<p>"And when is this atrocious act to take place?"</p>
+
+<p>"By daybreak to-morrow," said he, bowing, as he turned towards
+the hut.<br>
+"Meanwhile, let me counsel you, if you would not make another in
+the party,<br>
+to reserve your indignation for your return to England."</p>
+
+<p>"Come along," said the quartermaster; "I find they have got
+quarters for<br>
+you in the granary of the farm. I'll not forget you at
+supper-time."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he gave his horse to an orderly, and led me by a
+little path<br>
+to a back entrance of the dwelling. Had I time or inclination for
+such a<br>
+scene, I might have lingered long to gaze at the spectacle before
+me. The<br>
+guard held their bivouac around the quarters of the Emperor; and
+here,<br>
+beside the watch-fires, sat the bronzed and scarred veterans who
+had braved<br>
+every death and danger, from the Pyramids to the Kremlin. On
+every side I<br>
+heard the names of those whom history has already consigned to
+immortality;<br>
+and as the fitful blaze of a wood-fire flashed from within the
+house, I<br>
+could mark the figure of one who, with his hands behind his back,
+walked<br>
+leisurely to and fro, his head leaned a little forward as though
+in deep<br>
+thought; but as the light fell upon his pale and placid features,
+there was<br>
+nothing there to indicate the stormy strife of hope and fear that
+raged<br>
+beneath. From the rapid survey I took around I was roused by an
+officer,<br>
+who, saluting me, politely desired me to follow him. We mounted a
+flight of<br>
+stone steps which, outside the wall of the building, led to the
+upper story<br>
+of a large but ruined granary. Here a sentry was posted, who
+permitting us<br>
+to pass forward, I found myself in a small, mean-looking
+apartment, whose<br>
+few articles of coarse furniture were dimly lighted by the feeble
+glimmer<br>
+of a lamp. At the farther end of the room sat a man wrapped in a
+large blue<br>
+cavalry cloak, whose face, covered with his hands as he bent
+downward,<br>
+was completely concealed from view. The noise of the opening door
+did not<br>
+appear to arouse him, nor did he notice my approach. As I
+entered, a faint<br>
+sigh broke from him, as he turned his back upon the light; but he
+spoke not<br>
+a word.</p>
+
+<p>I sat for some time in silence, unwilling to obtrude myself
+upon the<br>
+sorrows of one to whom I was unknown; and as I walked up and down
+the<br>
+gloomy chamber, my thoughts became riveted so completely upon my
+own<br>
+fortunes that I ceased to remember my fellow-prisoner. The hours
+passed<br>
+thus lazily along, when the door suddenly opened, and an officer
+in the<br>
+dress of a lancer of the guard stood for an instant before me,
+and then,<br>
+springing forward, clasped me by both hands, and called
+out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Charles, mon ami, c'est bien toi?"</p>
+
+<p>The voice recalled to my recollections what his features,
+altered by time<br>
+and years, had failed to do. It was Jules St. Croix, my former
+prisoner in<br>
+the Peninsula. I cannot paint the delight with which I saw him
+again; his<br>
+presence now, while it brought back the memory of some of my
+happiest days,<br>
+also assured me that I was not friendless.</p>
+
+<p>His visit was a brief one, for he was in attendance on Marshal
+Lobau's<br>
+staff. In the few minutes, however, of his stay, he said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have a debt to pay, Charles, and have come to discharge it.
+In an hour<br>
+hence I shall leave this with despatches for the left of our
+line. Before<br>
+I go, I'll come here with two or three others, as it were, to
+wish you a<br>
+good-night. I'll take care to carry a second cloak and a foraging
+cap; I'll<br>
+provide a fast horse; you shall accompany us for some distance.
+I'll see<br>
+you safe across our pickets; for the rest, you must trust to
+yourself.<br>
+C'est arrang&eacute;, n'est-ce-pas?"</p>
+
+<p>One firm grasp of his hand, to which I responded by another,
+followed, and<br>
+he was gone.</p>
+
+<p>Everything concurred to show me that a tremendous battle must
+ensue on the<br>
+morrow, if the British forces but held their position. It was,
+then, with a<br>
+feeling of excitement approaching to madness that I saw my
+liberty before<br>
+me; that once more I should join in the bold charge and the rude
+shock<br>
+of arms, hear the wild cry of my gallant countrymen, and either
+live to<br>
+triumph with them in victory, or wait not to witness our defeat.
+Fast flew<br>
+my hopes, as with increasing impatience I waited St. Croix's
+coming, and<br>
+with anxious heart listened to every sound upon the stairs which
+might<br>
+indicate his approach. At length he came. I heard the gay and
+laughing<br>
+voices of his companions as they came along; the door opened, and
+affecting<br>
+the familiarity of old acquaintance to deceive the sentry, they
+all shook<br>
+me by the hand and spoke in terms of intimacy.</p>
+
+<p>"Labedoy&egrave;re is below," said St. Croix, in a whisper;
+"you must wait here a<br>
+few moments longer, and I'll return for you; put on the cloak and
+cap, and<br>
+speak not a word as you pass out. The sentry will suppose that
+one of our<br>
+party has remained behind; for I shall call out as if speaking to
+him, as I<br>
+leave the room."</p>
+
+<p>The voice of an officer calling in tones of impatience for the
+party<br>
+to come down, cut short the interview; and again assuring me of
+their<br>
+determination to stand by me, they left the chamber and descended
+into the<br>
+court. Scarcely had the door closed behind them, when my
+fellow-prisoner,<br>
+whom I had totally forgotten, sprang on his legs and came towards
+me. His<br>
+figure screening the lamplight as he stood, prevented my
+recognizing his<br>
+features, but the first tones of his voice told me who he
+was.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay, sir," cried he, as he placed his hand upon my arm; "I
+have overheard<br>
+your project. In an hour hence you will be free. Can you&mdash;-will
+you perform<br>
+a service for one who will esteem it not the less that it will be
+the last<br>
+that man can render him? The few lines which I have written here
+with my<br>
+pencil are for my daughter."</p>
+
+<p>I could bear no more, and called out in a voice broken as his
+own,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, be not deceived, sir. Will you, even in an hour like
+this, accept a<br>
+service from one whom you have banished from your house?"</p>
+
+<p>The old man started as I spoke; his hand trembled till it
+shook my very<br>
+arm, and after a pause and with an effort to seem calm and
+collected, he<br>
+added,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My hours are few. Some despatches of General Bourmont with
+which the duke<br>
+intrusted me were found in my possession. My sentence is a
+hurried one, and<br>
+it is death. By to-morrow's sunrise&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Stay, stay!" said I. "You shall escape; my life is in no
+danger. I have,<br>
+as you see, even friends among the staff. Besides, I have done
+nothing to<br>
+compromise or endanger my position."</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," said he, sternly, "I will not act such a part as
+this. The tears<br>
+you have seen in these old eyes are not for myself. I fear not
+death.<br>
+Better it were it should have come upon the field of glorious
+battle; but<br>
+as it is, my soldier's honor is intact, untainted."</p>
+
+<p>"You refuse the service on account of him who proffers it,"
+said I, as I<br>
+fell heavily upon a seat, my head bowed upon my bosom.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so, not so, my boy," replied he, kindly. "The near
+approach of death,<br>
+like the fading light of day, gives us a longer and a clearer
+view before<br>
+us. I feel that I have wronged you; that I have imputed to you
+the errors<br>
+of others; but, believe me, if I have wronged you, I have
+punished my own<br>
+heart; for, Charles, I have loved you like a son."</p>
+
+<p>"Then prove it," said I, "and let me act towards you as
+towards a father.<br>
+You will not? You refuse me still? Then, by Heaven, I remain to
+share your<br>
+fate! I well know the temper of him who has sentenced you, and
+that, by one<br>
+word of mine, my destiny is sealed forever."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, boy! This is but rash and insane folly. Another year
+or two, nay,<br>
+perhaps a few months more, and in the common course of Nature I
+had ceased<br>
+to be; but you, with youth, with fortune, and with hope&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, not with hope!" said I, in a voice of agony.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, say not so," replied he, calmly, while a sickly smile
+played sadly<br>
+over his face; "you will give this letter to my daughter, you
+will tell her<br>
+that we parted as friends should part; and if after that, when
+time shall<br>
+have smoothed down her grief, and her sorrow be rather a dark
+dream of the<br>
+past than a present suffering,&mdash;if then you love her, and
+if&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, tempt me not thus!" said I, as the warm tears gushed from
+my eyes.<br>
+"Lead me not thus astray from what my honor tells me I should do.
+Hark!<br>
+They are coming already. I hear the clank of their sabres; they
+are<br>
+mounting the steps; not a moment is to be lost! Do you refuse me
+still?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do," replied he, firmly; "I am resolved to bide my
+fate."</p>
+
+<p>"Then so do I," cried I, as folding my arms, I sat down beside
+the window,<br>
+determined on my course.</p>
+
+<p>"Charley, Charley," said he, stooping over me, "my friend, my
+last hope,<br>
+the protector of my child&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I will not go," said I, in a hollow whisper.</p>
+
+<p>Already they were at the door; I heard their voices as they
+challenged the<br>
+sentry; I heard his musket as he raised it to his shoulder. The
+thought<br>
+flashed across me. I jumped up, and throwing the loose mantle of
+the French<br>
+dragoon around him, and replacing his own with the foraging cap
+of St.<br>
+Croix, I sprang into a corner of the room, and seating myself so
+as to<br>
+conceal my face, waited the result. The door opened, the party
+entered<br>
+laughing and talking together.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Eug&egrave;ne," said one, taking Sir George by the arm,
+"you have spent<br>
+long enough time here to learn the English language. We shall be
+late at<br>
+the outpost. Messieurs les Anglais, good-night, good-night!"</p>
+
+<p>This was repeated by the others as they passed out with Sir
+George Dashwood<br>
+among them, who, seeing that my determination was not to be
+shaken, and<br>
+that any demur on his part must necessarily compromise both,
+yielded to a<br>
+<i>coup-de-main</i> what he never would have consented to from an
+appeal to his<br>
+reason. The door closed; their steps died away in the distance.
+Again a<br>
+faint sound struck my ear; it was the challenge of the sentry
+beneath,<br>
+and I heard the tramp of horses' feet. All was still, and in a
+burst of<br>
+heart-felt gratitude I sank upon my knees, and thanked God that
+he was<br>
+safe.</p>
+
+<p>So soundly did I sleep, that not before I was shaken several
+times by the<br>
+shoulder could I awake on the following morning.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought there were two prisoners here," said a gruff voice,
+as an old<br>
+mustached-looking veteran cast a searching look about the room.
+"However,<br>
+we shall have enough of them before sunset. Get&mdash;get up; Monsieur
+le Duc de<br>
+Dalmatie desires some information you can give him."</p>
+
+<p>As he said this, he led me from the room; and descending the
+flight of<br>
+stone steps, we entered the courtyard. It was but four o'clock,
+the rain,<br>
+still falling in torrents, yet every one was up and stirring.</p>
+
+<p>"Mount this horse," said my gruff friend, "and come with me
+towards the<br>
+left; the marshal has already gone forward."</p>
+
+<p>The heavy mist of the morning, darkened by the lowering clouds
+which almost<br>
+rested on the earth, prevented our seeing above a hundred yards
+before<br>
+us; but the hazy light of the watch-fires showed me extent of the
+French<br>
+position, as it stretched away along the, ridge towards the Halle
+road. We<br>
+rode forward at a trot, but in the deep clayey soil we sank at
+each moment<br>
+to our horses' fetlocks. I turned my head as I heard the tramp
+and splash<br>
+of horsemen behind, and perceived that I was followed by two
+dragoons,<br>
+who, with their carbines on the rest, kept their eyes steadily
+upon me to<br>
+prevent any chance of escape. In a slight hollow of the ground
+before us<br>
+stood a number of horsemen, who conversed together in a low tone
+as we came<br>
+up.</p>
+
+<p>"There, that is the marshal," said my companion, in a whisper,
+as we joined<br>
+the party.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Monsieur le Duc," said an engineer colonel, who stood
+beside Soult's<br>
+horse with a colored plan in his hand,&mdash;"yes, that is the
+Ch&acirc;teau de<br>
+Goumont, yonder. It is, as you perceive, completely covered by
+the rising<br>
+ground marked here. They will doubtless place a strong artillery
+force in<br>
+this quarter."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, who is this?" said the marshal, turning his eyes suddenly
+upon me, and<br>
+then casting a look of displeasure around him, lest I should have
+overheard<br>
+any portion of their conversation. "You are deficient in cavalry,
+it would<br>
+appear, sir," said he to me.</p>
+
+<p>"You must feel, Monsieur le Duc," said I, calmly, "how
+impossible it is for<br>
+me, as a man of honor and a soldier, to afford you any
+information as to<br>
+the army I belong to."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not see that, sir. You are a prisoner in our hands; your
+treatment,<br>
+your fortune, your very life depends on us. Besides, sir, when
+French<br>
+officers fall into the power of your people, I have heard they
+meet with no<br>
+very ceremonious treatment."</p>
+
+<p>"Those who say so, say falsely," said I, "and wrong both your
+countrymen<br>
+and mine. In any case&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The Guards are an untried force in your service," said he,
+with a mixture<br>
+of inquiry and assertion.</p>
+
+<p>I replied not a word.</p>
+
+<p>"You must see, sir," continued he, "that all the chances are
+against you.<br>
+The Prussians beaten, the Dutch discouraged, the Belgians only
+waiting for<br>
+victory to incline to our standard, to desert your ranks and pass
+over to<br>
+ours; while your troops, scarcely forty thousand,&mdash;nay, I might
+say, not<br>
+more than thirty-five thousand. Is it not so?"</p>
+
+<p>Here was another question so insidiously conveyed that even a
+change of<br>
+feature on my part might have given the answer. A half smile,
+however, and<br>
+a slight bow was all my reply; while Soult muttered something
+between his<br>
+teeth, which called forth a laugh from those around him.</p>
+
+<p>"You may retire, sir, a little," said he, dryly, to me.</p>
+
+<p>Not sorry to be freed from the awkwardness of my position, I
+fell back to<br>
+the little rising ground behind. Although the rain poured down
+without<br>
+ceasing, the rising sun dispelled, in part, the heavy vapor, and
+by degrees<br>
+different portions of the wide plain presented themselves to
+view; and<br>
+as the dense masses of fog moved slowly along, I could detect,
+but still<br>
+faintly, the outline of the large, irregular building which I had
+heard<br>
+them call the Ch&acirc;teau de Goumont, and from whence I could
+hear the clank of<br>
+masonry, as, at intervals, the wind bore the sounds towards me.
+These were<br>
+the sappers piercing the walls for musketry; and this I could now
+perceive<br>
+was looked upon as a position of no small importance. Surrounded
+by a<br>
+straggling orchard of aged fruit-trees, the ch&acirc;teau lay
+some hundred yards<br>
+in advance of the British line, commanded by two eminences,&mdash;one
+of which,<br>
+in the possession of the French, was already occupied by a park
+of eleven<br>
+guns; of the other I knew nothing, except the passing glance I
+had obtained<br>
+of its position on the map. The Second Corps, under Jerome
+Bonaparte, with<br>
+Foy and Kellermann's Brigade of light artillery, stretched behind
+us. On<br>
+the right of these came D'Erlon's Corps, extending to a small
+wood, which<br>
+my companion told me was Frischermont; while Lobau's Division was
+stationed<br>
+to the extreme right towards St. Lambert, to maintain the
+communication<br>
+with Grouchy at Wavre, or, if need be, to repel the advance of
+the<br>
+Prussians and prevent their junction with the Anglo-Dutch army.
+The<br>
+Imperial Guard, with the cavalry, formed the reserve. Such was,
+in<br>
+substance, the information given me by my guide, who seemed to
+expatiate<br>
+with pleasure over the magnificent array of battle, while he felt
+a pride<br>
+in displaying his knowledge of the various divisions and their
+leaders.</p>
+
+<p>"I see the marshal moving towards the right," said he; "we had
+better<br>
+follow him."</p>
+
+<p>It was now about eight o'clock as from the extremity of the
+line I could<br>
+see a party of horsemen advancing at a sharp canter.</p>
+
+<p>"That must be Ney," said my companion. "See how rashly he
+approaches the<br>
+English lines!"</p>
+
+<p>And so it was. The party in question rode fearlessly down the
+slope, and<br>
+did not halt until they reached within about three hundred yards
+of what<br>
+appeared a ruined church.</p>
+
+<p>"What is that building yonder?"</p>
+
+<p>"That&mdash;that," replied he, after a moment's thought,&mdash;"that
+must be La Haye<br>
+Sainte; and yonder, to the right of it, is the road to Brussels.
+There,<br>
+look now! Your people are in motion. See, a column is moving
+towards the<br>
+right, and the cavalry are defiling on the other side of the
+road! I was<br>
+mistaken, that cannot be Ney. <i>Sacre Dieu!</i> it was the Emperor
+himself, and<br>
+here he comes."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, the party galloped forward and pulled up short
+within a few<br>
+yards of where we stood.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha!" cried he, as his sharp glance fell upon me, "there is my
+taciturn<br>
+friend of Quatre Bras. You see, sir, I can dispense with your
+assistance<br>
+now; the chess-board is before me;" and then added, in a tone he
+intended<br>
+not to be overheard, "Everything depends on Grouchy."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Haxo," he called out to an officer who galloped up,
+<i>chapeau</i> in<br>
+hand, "what say you? Are they intrenched in that position?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Sire, the ground is open, and in two hours more will be
+firm enough<br>
+for the guns to manoeuvre."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, then, for breakfast," said Napoleon, as with an easy and
+tranquil<br>
+smile he turned his horse's head and cantered gently up the
+heights<br>
+towards La Belle Alliance. As he approached the lines, the cry of
+"Vive<br>
+l'Empereur!" burst forth. Regiment after regiment took it up; and
+from the<br>
+distant wood of Frischermont to the far left beside Merke-braine,
+the<br>
+shout resounded. So sudden, so simultaneous the outbreak, that he
+himself,<br>
+accustomed as he well was to the enthusiasm of his army, seemed
+as he<br>
+reined in his horse, and looked with proud and elated eye upon
+the<br>
+countless thousands, astounded and amazed. He lifted with slow
+and graceful<br>
+action his unplumed hat above his head, and while he bowed that
+proud front<br>
+before which kings have trembled, the acclamation burst forth
+anew, and<br>
+rent the very air.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment the sun shone brilliantly from out the dark
+clouds, and<br>
+flashed upon the shining blades and glistening bayonets along the
+line. A<br>
+dark and lowering shadow hung gloomily over the British position,
+while the<br>
+French sparkled and glittered in the sunbeams. His quick glance
+passed with<br>
+lightning speed from one to the other; and I thought that, in his
+look,<br>
+upturned to heaven, I could detect the flitting thought which
+bade him hope<br>
+it was an augury. The bands of the Imperial Guard burst forth in
+joyous and<br>
+triumphant strains; and amidst the still repeated cries of
+"L'Empereur!<br>
+l'Empereur!" he rode slowly along towards La Belle Alliance.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER LIII.</p>
+
+<p>WATERLOO.</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon's first intention was to open the battle by an attack
+upon the<br>
+extreme right; but Ney, who returned from an observation of the
+ground,<br>
+informed him that a rivulet swollen by the late rains had now
+become a<br>
+foaming torrent perfectly impassable to infantry. To avoid this
+difficulty<br>
+he abandoned his favorite manoeuvre of a flank movement, and
+resolved to<br>
+attack the enemy by the centre. Launching his cavalry and
+artillery by the<br>
+road to Brussels, he hoped thus to cut off the communication of
+the British<br>
+with their own left, as well as with the Prussians, for whom he
+trusted<br>
+that Grouchy would be more than a match.</p>
+
+<p>The reserves were in consequence all brought up to the centre.
+Seven<br>
+thousand cavalry and a massive artillery assembled upon the
+heights of La<br>
+Belle Alliance, and waited but the order to march. It was eleven
+o'clock,<br>
+and Napoleon mounted his horse and rode slowly along the line;
+again the<br>
+cry of "Vive l'Empereur!" resounded, and the bands of the various
+regiments<br>
+struck up their spirit-stirring strains as the gorgeous staff
+moved along.<br>
+On the British side all was tranquil; and still the different
+divisions<br>
+appeared to have taken up their ground, and the long ridge from
+Ter-la-Haye<br>
+to Merke-braine bristled with bayonets. Nothing could possibly be
+more<br>
+equal than the circumstances of the field. Each army possessed an
+eminence<br>
+whence their artillery might play. A broad and slightly
+undulating valley<br>
+lay between both. The ground permitted in all places both cavalry
+and<br>
+infantry movements, and except the crumbling walls of the
+Ch&acirc;teau of<br>
+Hougoumont. or the farm-house of La Haye Sainte, both of which
+were<br>
+occupied by the British, no advantage either by Nature or art
+inclined to<br>
+either side. It was a fair stand-up fight. It was the mighty
+tournament,<br>
+not only of the two greatest nations, but the two deadliest
+rivals and<br>
+bitterest enemies, led on by the two greatest military geniuses
+that the<br>
+world has ever seen; it might not be too much to say, or ever
+will see.<br>
+As for me, condemned to be an inactive spectator of the mighty
+struggle,<br>
+doomed to witness all the deep-laid schemes and well-devised
+plans of<br>
+attack which were destined for the overthrow of my country's
+arms, my state<br>
+was one of torture and suspense. I sat upon the little rising
+ground of<br>
+Rossomme; before me in the valley, where yet the tall corn waved
+in ripe<br>
+luxuriance, stood the quiet and peaceful-looking old
+Ch&acirc;teau of Hougoumont,<br>
+and the blossoming branches of the orchard; the birds were gayly
+singing<br>
+their songs; the shrill whistle of the fatal musketry was to be
+heard; and<br>
+through my glass I could detect the uniform of the soldiers who
+held the<br>
+position, and my heart beat anxiously and proudly as I recognized
+the<br>
+Guards. In the orchard and the garden were stationed some
+riflemen,&mdash;at<br>
+least their dress and the scattered order they assumed bespoke
+them such.<br>
+While I looked, the tirailleurs of Jerome's Division advanced
+from the<br>
+front of the line, and descending the hill in a sling trot, broke
+into<br>
+scattered parties, keeping up as they went a desultory and
+irregular fire.<br>
+The English skirmishers, less expert in this peculiar service,
+soon fell<br>
+back, and the head of Reille's Brigade began their march towards
+the<br>
+ch&acirc;teau. The English artillery is unmasked and opens its
+fire. Kellermann<br>
+advances at a gallop his twelve pieces of artillery; the
+ch&acirc;teau is<br>
+concealed from view by the dense smoke, and as the attack
+thickens, fresh<br>
+troops pour forward, the artillery thundering on either side; the
+entire<br>
+lines of both armies stand motionless spectators of the terrific
+combat,<br>
+while every eye is turned towards that devoted spot from whose
+dense mass<br>
+of cloud and smoke the bright glare of artillery is flashing, as
+the<br>
+crashing masonry, the burning rafters, and the loud yell of
+battle add<br>
+to the frightful interest of the scene. For above an hour the
+tremendous<br>
+attack continues without cessation; the artillery stationed upon
+the height<br>
+has now found its range, and every ringing shot tells upon the
+tottering<br>
+walls; some wounded soldiers return faint and bleeding from the
+conflict,<br>
+but there are few who escape. A crashing volley of fire-arms is
+now heard<br>
+from the side where the orchard stands; a second, and a third
+succeed, one<br>
+after the other as rapid as lightning itself. A silence follows,
+when,<br>
+after a few moments, a deafening cheer bursts forth, and an
+aide-de-camp<br>
+gallops up to say that the orchard has been carried at the point
+of the<br>
+bayonet, the Nassau sharp-shooters who held it having, after a
+desperate<br>
+resistance, retired before the irresistible onset of the French
+infantry.<br>
+"A moi! maintenant!" said General Foy, as he drew his sabre and
+rode down<br>
+to the head of his splendid division, which, anxious for the word
+to<br>
+advance, was standing in the valley. "En avant! mes braves!"
+cried he,<br>
+while, pointing to the ch&acirc;teau with his sword, he dashed
+boldly forward.<br>
+Scarcely had he advanced a hundred yards, when a cannon-shot,
+"ricocheting"<br>
+as it went, struck his horse in the counter and rolled him dead
+on the<br>
+plain. Disengaging himself from the lifeless animal, at once he
+sprang to<br>
+his feet, and hurried forward. The column was soon hid from my
+view, and I<br>
+was left to mourn over the seemingly inevitable fate that
+impended over my<br>
+gallant countrymen.</p>
+
+<p>In the intense interest which chained me to this part of the
+field, I had<br>
+not noticed till this moment that the Emperor and his staff were
+standing<br>
+scarcely thirty yards from where I was. Napoleon, seated upon a
+gray,<br>
+almost white, Arabian, had suffered the reins to fall loosely on
+the neck<br>
+as he held with both hands his telescope to his eye; his dress,
+the usual<br>
+green coat with white facings, the uniform of the <i>chasseurs
+&agrave; cheval</i>,<br>
+was distinguished merely by the cross of the legion; his high
+boots were<br>
+splashed and mud-stained from riding through the deep and clayey
+soil; his<br>
+compact and clean-bred charger looked also slightly blown and
+heated, but<br>
+he himself, and I watched his features well, looked calm,
+composed, and<br>
+tranquil. How anxiously did I scrutinize that face; with what a
+throbbing<br>
+heart did I canvass every gesture, hoping to find some passing
+trait of<br>
+doubt, of difficulty, or of hesitation; but none was there.
+Unlike one who<br>
+looked upon the harrowing spectacle of the battle-field, whose
+all was<br>
+depending on the game before him; gambling with one throw his
+last his only<br>
+stake, and that the empire of the world. Yet, could I picture to
+myself one<br>
+who felt at peace within himself,&mdash;naught of reproach, naught of
+regret to<br>
+move or stir his spirit, whose tranquil barque had glided over
+the calm sea<br>
+of life, unruffled by the breath of passion,&mdash;I should have
+fancied such<br>
+was he.</p>
+
+<p>Beside him sat one whose flashing eye and changing features
+looked in every<br>
+way his opposite; watching with intense anxiety the scene of the
+deadly<br>
+struggle round the ch&acirc;teau, every look, every gesture told
+the changing<br>
+fortune of the moment; his broad and brawny chest glittered with
+orders and<br>
+decorations, but his heavy brow and lowering look, flushed almost
+black<br>
+with excitement, could not easily be forgotten. It was Soult,
+who, in his<br>
+quality of major-general, accompanied the Emperor throughout the
+day.</p>
+
+<p>"They have lost it again, Sire," said the marshal,
+passionately; "and see,<br>
+they are forming beneath the cross-fire of the artillery; the
+head of the<br>
+column keeps not its formation two minutes together; why does he
+not move<br>
+up?"</p>
+
+<p>"Domont, you know the British; what troops are those in the
+orchard? They<br>
+use the bayonet well."</p>
+
+<p>The officer addressed pointed his glass for a moment to the
+spot. Then,<br>
+turning to the Emperor, replied, as he touched his hat, "They are
+the<br>
+Guards, Sire."</p>
+
+<p>During this time Napoleon spoke not a word; his eye ever bent
+upon the<br>
+battle, he seemed to pay little if any attention to the
+conversation about<br>
+him. As he looked, an aide-de-camp, breathless and heated,
+galloped up.</p>
+
+<p>"The columns of attack are formed, Sire; everything is ready,
+and the<br>
+marshal only waits the order."</p>
+
+<p>Napoleon turned upon his saddle, and directing his glass
+towards Ney's<br>
+Division, looked fixedly for some moments at them. His eye moved
+from front<br>
+to rear slowly, and at last, carrying his telescope along the
+line, he<br>
+fixed it steadily upon the far left. Here, towards St. Lambert, a
+slight<br>
+cloud seemed to rest on the horizon, as the Emperor continued to
+gaze<br>
+steadfastly at it. Every glass of the staff was speedily turned
+in that<br>
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>"It is nothing but a cloud; some exhalation from the low
+grounds in that<br>
+quarter," whispered one.</p>
+
+<p>"To me," said another, "they look like trees, part of the Bois
+de Wavre."</p>
+
+<p>"They are men," said the Emperor, speaking for the first time.
+"Est-ce<br>
+Grouchy? Est-ce Blucher?"</p>
+
+<p>Soult inclines to believe it to be the former, and proceeds to
+give his<br>
+reasons; but the Emperor, without listening, turns towards
+Domont, and<br>
+orders him, with his division of light cavalry and Subervic's
+Brigade, to<br>
+proceed thither at once. If it be Grouchy, to establish a
+junction with<br>
+him; to resist, should it prove to be the advanced guard of
+Marshal<br>
+Blucher. Scarcely is the order given when a column of cavalry,
+wheeling<br>
+"fours about," unravels itself from the immense mass, and seems
+to<br>
+serpentine like an enormous snake between the squares of the
+mighty army.<br>
+The pace increases at every moment, and at length we see them
+emerge from<br>
+the extreme right and draw up, as if on parade, above half a mile
+from the<br>
+wood. This movement, by its precision and beauty, attracted our
+entire<br>
+attention, not only from the attack upon Hougoumont, but also
+from an<br>
+incident which had taken place close beside us. This was the
+appearance<br>
+of a Prussian hussar who had been taken prisoner between Wavre
+and<br>
+Planchenoit; he was the bearer of a letter from Bulow to
+Wellington,<br>
+announcing his arrival at St. Lambert, and asking for orders.</p>
+
+<p>This at once explains the appearance on the right; but the
+prisoner also<br>
+adds, that the three Prussian corps were at Wavre, having pushed
+their<br>
+patrols two leagues from that town without ever encountering any
+portion of<br>
+the force under the command of Grouchy. For a moment not a word
+is spoken.<br>
+A silence like a panic pervades the staff; the Emperor himself is
+the first<br>
+to break it.</p>
+
+<p>"This morning," said he, turning towards Soult, "the chances
+were ninety to<br>
+one in our favor; Bulow's arrival has already lost us thirty of
+the number;<br>
+but the odds are still sufficient, if Grouchy but repair the
+<i>horrible<br>
+fault</i> he has committed."</p>
+
+<p>He paused for a moment, and as he lifted up his own hand, and
+turned a look<br>
+of indignant passion towards the staff, added, in a voice the
+sarcasm of<br>
+whose tone there is no forgetting:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Il s'amuse &agrave; Gembloux! Still," said he, speaking
+rapidly and with more<br>
+energy than I had hitherto noticed, "Bulow may be entirely cut
+off. Let<br>
+an officer approach. Take this letter, sir," giving as he spoke,
+Bulow's<br>
+letter to Lord Wellington,&mdash;"give this letter to Marshal Grouchy;
+tell him<br>
+that at this moment he should be before Wavre; tell him that
+already, had<br>
+he obeyed his orders&mdash;but no, tell him to march at once, to press
+forward<br>
+his cavalry, to come up in two hours, in three at farthest. You
+have but<br>
+five leagues to ride; see, sir, that you reach him within an
+hour."</p>
+
+<p>As the officer hurries away at the top of his speed, an
+aide-de-camp from<br>
+General Domont confirms the news; they are the Prussians whom he
+has before<br>
+him. As yet, however, they are debouching from the wood, and have
+attempted<br>
+no forward movement.</p>
+
+<p>"What's Bulow's force, Marshal?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thirty thousand, Sire."</p>
+
+<p>"Let Lobau take ten thousand, with the Cuirassiers of the
+Young Guard, and<br>
+hold the Prussians in check."</p>
+
+<p>"Maintenant, pour les autres," this he said with a smile, as
+he turned his<br>
+eyes once more towards the field of battle. The aide-de-camp of
+Marshal<br>
+Ney, who, bare-headed and expectant, sat waiting for orders,
+presented<br>
+himself to view. The Emperor turned towards him as he said, with
+a clear<br>
+and firm voice:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Tell the marshal to open the fire of his batteries; to carry
+La Haye<br>
+Sainte with the bayonet, and leaving an infantry division for
+its<br>
+protection, to march against La Papelotte and La Haye. They must
+be carried<br>
+by the bayonet."</p>
+
+<p>The aide-de-camp was gone; Napoleon's eye followed him as he
+crossed the<br>
+open plain and was lost in the dense ranks of the dark columns.
+Scarcely<br>
+five minutes elapsed when eighty guns thundered out together, and
+as the<br>
+earth shook and trembled beneath, the mighty movement of the day
+began its<br>
+execution. From Hougoumont, where the slaughter and the carnage
+continued<br>
+unslackened and unstayed, every eye was now turned towards the
+right. I<br>
+knew not what troops occupied La Haye Sainte, or whether they
+were British<br>
+who crowned the heights above it; but in my heart how fervently
+did I pray<br>
+that they might be so. Oh, in that moment of suspense and
+agonizing doubt,<br>
+what would I not have given to know that Picton himself and the
+fighting<br>
+Fifth were there; that behind that ridge the Greys, the Royals,
+and the<br>
+Enniskilleners sat motionless, but burning to advance; and the
+breath<br>
+of battle waved among the tartans of the Highlanders, and blew
+upon the<br>
+flashing features of my own island countrymen. Had I known this,
+I could<br>
+have marked the onset with a less failing spirit.</p>
+
+<p>"There goes Marcognet's Division," said my companion,
+springing to his<br>
+legs; "they're moving to the right of the road. I should like to
+see the<br>
+troops that will stand before them."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he mounted his horse, and desiring me to accompany
+him, rode to<br>
+the height beside La Belle Alliance. The battle was now raging
+from the<br>
+Ch&acirc;teau de Hougoumont to St. Lambert, where the Prussian
+tirailleurs, as<br>
+they issued from the wood, were skirmishing with the advanced
+posts of<br>
+Lobau's Brigade. The attack upon the centre, however, engrossed
+all my<br>
+attention, and I watched the dark columns as they descended into
+the plain,<br>
+while the incessant roll of the artillery played about them. To
+the right<br>
+of Ney's attack, D'Erlon advanced with three divisions, and the
+artillery<br>
+of the Guard. Towards this part of the field my companion moved.
+General le<br>
+Vasseur desired to know if the division on the Brussels road were
+English<br>
+or Hanoverian troops, and I was sent for to answer the question.
+We passed<br>
+from square to square until at length we found ourselves upon the
+flank of<br>
+D'Erlon's Division. Le Vasseur, who at the head of his
+cuirassiers waited<br>
+but the order to charge, waved impatiently with his sword for us
+to<br>
+approach. We were now to the right of the high road, and about
+four hundred<br>
+yards from the crest of the hill where, protected by a slight
+hedge,<br>
+Picton, with Kempt's Brigade, waited the attack of the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>Just at this moment an incident took place which, while in
+itself one of<br>
+the most brilliant achievements of the day, changed in a signal
+manner my<br>
+own fortunes. The head of D'Erlon's column pressed with fixed
+bayonets up<br>
+the gentle slope. Already the Belgian infantry give way before
+them. The<br>
+brave Brunswickers, overwhelmed by the heavy cavalry of France,
+at first<br>
+begin to waver, then are broken; and at last retreat in disorder
+up the<br>
+road, a whirlwind of pursuing squadrons thundering behind them.
+"En avant!<br>
+en avant! la victoire est &egrave;nous," is shouted madly through
+the impatient<br>
+ranks; and the artillery is called up to play upon the British
+squares;<br>
+upon which, fixed and immovable, the cuirassiers have charged
+without<br>
+success. Like a thunderbolt, the flying artillery dashes to the
+front;<br>
+but scarcely has it reached the bottom of the ascent, when, from
+the deep<br>
+ground, the guns become embedded in the soil, the wheels refuse
+to move. In<br>
+vain the artillery drivers whip and spur their laboring cattle.
+Impatiently<br>
+the leading files of the column prick with their bayonets the
+struggling<br>
+horses. The hesitation is fatal; for Wellington, who, with eager
+glance,<br>
+watches from an eminence beside the high road the advancing
+column, sees<br>
+the accident. An order is given; and with one fell swoop, the
+heavy cavalry<br>
+brigade pour down. Picton's Division deploys into line; the
+bayonets glance<br>
+above the ridge; and with a shout that tells above the battle, on
+they<br>
+come, the fighting Fifth. One volley is exchanged; but the
+bayonet is now<br>
+brought to the charge, and the French division retreat in close
+column,<br>
+pursued by their gallant enemy. Scarcely have the leading
+divisions fallen<br>
+back, and the rear pressed down upon, or thrown into disorder,
+when the<br>
+cavalry trumpets sound a charge; the bright helmets of the
+Enniskilleners<br>
+come flashing in the sunbeams, and the Scotch Greys, like a
+white-crested<br>
+wave, are rolling upon the foe. Marcognet's Division is
+surrounded; the<br>
+dragoons ride them down on every side; the guns are captured; the
+drivers<br>
+cut down; and two thousand prisoners are carried off. A sudden
+panic seems<br>
+to seize upon the French, as cavalry, infantry, and artillery are
+hurried<br>
+back on each other. Vainly the French attempt to rally; the
+untiring enemy<br>
+press madly on; the household brigade, led on by Lord Uxbridge,
+came<br>
+thundering down the road, riding down with their gigantic force
+the mailed<br>
+cuirassiers of France. Borne along with the retreating torrents,
+I was<br>
+carried on amidst the densely commingled mass. The British
+cavalry, which,<br>
+like the lightnings that sever the thunder-cloud, pierces through
+in every<br>
+direction, plunged madly upon us. The roar of battle grew louder,
+as hand<br>
+to hand they fought. Milhaud's Heavy Dragoons, with the 4th
+Lancers, came<br>
+up at a gallop. Picton presses forward, waving his plumed hat
+above his<br>
+head; his proud eye flashes with the fire of victory. That moment
+is his<br>
+last. Struck in the forehead by a musket-ball, he falls dead from
+the<br>
+saddle; and the wild yell of the Irish regiments, as they ring
+his<br>
+death-cry, are the last sounds which he hears. Meanwhile the Life
+Guards<br>
+are among us; prisoners of rank are captured on every side; and
+I, seizing<br>
+the moment, throw myself among the ranks of my countrymen, and am
+borne to<br>
+the rear with the retiring squadrons.</p>
+
+<p>As we reached the crest of the hill above the road, a loud
+cheer in the<br>
+valley beneath us burst forth, and from the midst of the dense
+smoke a<br>
+bright and pointed flame shot up towards the sky. It was the
+farm-house La<br>
+Haye Sainte, which the French had succeeded in setting fire to
+with hot<br>
+shot. For some time past the ammunition of the corps that held it
+had<br>
+failed, and a dropping irregular musketry was the only reply to
+the<br>
+incessant rattle of the enemy. As the smoke cleared away we
+discovered that<br>
+the French had carried the position; and as no quarter was given
+in that<br>
+deadly hand-to-hand conflict, not one returned to our ranks to
+toll the<br>
+tale of their defeat.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the officer that I spoke of," said an aide-decamp, as
+he rode up<br>
+to where I was standing bare-headed and without a sword. "He has
+just made<br>
+his escape from the French lines, and will be able to give your
+lordship<br>
+some information."</p>
+
+<p>The handsome features and gorgeous costume of Lord Uxbridge
+were known<br>
+to me; but I was not aware, till afterward, that a
+soldier-like,<br>
+resolute-looking officer beside him was General Graham. It was
+the latter<br>
+who first addressed me.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you aware, sir," said he, "if Grouchy's force have
+arrived?"</p>
+
+<p>"They have not; on the contrary, shortly before I escaped, an
+aide-de-camp<br>
+was despatched to Gembloux, to hasten his coming. And the troops,
+for they<br>
+must be troops, were debouching from the wood yonder. They seem
+to form a<br>
+junction with the corps to the right; they are the Prussians.
+They arrived<br>
+there before noon from St. Lambert, and are part of Bulow's
+Corps. Count<br>
+Lobau and his division of ten thousand men were despatched, about
+an hour<br>
+since, to hold them in check."</p>
+
+<p>"This is great news," said Lord Uxbridge. "Fitzroy must know
+it at once."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he dashed spurs into his horse, and soon
+disappeared amidst the<br>
+crowd on the hill-top.</p>
+
+<p>"You had better see the duke, sir," said Graham. "Your
+information is too<br>
+important to be delayed. Captain Calvert, let this officer have a
+horse;<br>
+his own is too tired to go much farther."</p>
+
+<p>"And a cap, I beg of you," added I in an undertone, "for I
+have already<br>
+found a sabre."</p>
+
+<p>By a slightly circuitous route we reached the road, upon which
+a mass<br>
+of dismounted artillery-carts, baggage-wagons, and tumbrils were
+heaped<br>
+together as a barricade against the attack of the French
+dragoons, who more<br>
+than once had penetrated to the very crest of our position. Close
+to this<br>
+and on a little rising ground, from which a view of the entire
+field<br>
+extended, from Hougoumont to the far left, the Duke of Wellington
+stood<br>
+surrounded by his staff. His eye was bent upon the valley before
+him, where<br>
+the advancing columns of Ney's attack still pressed onward; while
+the fire<br>
+of sixty great guns poured death and carnage into his lines. The
+Second<br>
+Belgian Division, routed and broken, had fallen back upon the
+27th<br>
+Regiment, who had merely time to throw themselves into square,
+when<br>
+Milhaud's cuirassiers, armed with their terrible long, straight
+swords,<br>
+came sweeping down upon them. A line of impassable bayonets, a
+living<br>
+<i>chevaux-de-frise</i> of the best blood of Britain, stood firm and
+motionless<br>
+before the shock. The French <i>mitraille</i> played mercilessly on
+the ranks;<br>
+but the chasms were filled up like magic, and in vain the bold
+horsemen of<br>
+Gaul galloped round the bristling files. At length the word,
+"Fire!" was<br>
+heard within the square, and as the bullets at pistol-range
+rattled upon<br>
+them, the cuirass afforded them no defence against the deadly
+volley. Men<br>
+and horses rolled indiscriminately upon the earth. Then would
+come a charge<br>
+of our clashing squadrons, who, riding recklessly upon the foe,
+were in<br>
+their turn to be repulsed by numbers, and fresh attacks poured
+down upon<br>
+our unshaken infantry.</p>
+
+<p>"That column yonder is wavering. Why does he not bring up his
+supporting<br>
+squadrons?" inquired the duke, pointing to a Belgian regiment of
+light<br>
+dragoons, who were formed in the same brigade with the 7th
+Hussars.</p>
+
+<p>"He refuses to oppose his light cavalry to cuirassiers, my
+lord," said an<br>
+aide-de-camp, who had just returned from the division in
+question.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell him to march his men off the ground," said the duke in a
+quiet and<br>
+impassive tone.</p>
+
+<p>In less than ten minutes the "Belgian regiment" was seen to
+defile from the<br>
+mass and take the road to Brussels, to increase the panic of that
+city by<br>
+circulating and strengthening the report that the English were
+beaten, and<br>
+Napoleon in full march upon the capital.</p>
+
+<p>"What's Ney's force; can you guess, sir?" said the Duke of
+Wellington,<br>
+turning to me.</p>
+
+<p>"About twelve thousand men, my lord."</p>
+
+<p>"Are the Guard among them?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; the Guard are in reserve above La Belle
+Alliance."</p>
+
+<p>"In what part of the field is Bonaparte?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nearly opposite to where we stand."</p>
+
+<p>"I told you, gentlemen, Hougoumont never was the great attack.
+The battle<br>
+must be decided here," pointing as he spoke to the plain beneath
+us, where<br>
+Ney still poured on his devoted columns, where yet the French
+cavalry rode<br>
+down upon our firm squares.</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, an aide-de-camp rode up from the valley.</p>
+
+<p>"The Ninety-second requires support, my lord. They cannot
+maintain their<br>
+position half an hour longer with out it."</p>
+
+<p>"Have they given way, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, they must stand where they are. I hear cannon
+towards the<br>
+left; yonder, near Frischermont."</p>
+
+<p>At this moment the light cavalry swept past the base of the
+hill on which<br>
+we stood, hotly followed by the French heavy cuirassier brigade.
+Three<br>
+of our guns were taken; and the cheering of the French infantry,
+as they<br>
+advanced to the charge, presaged their hope of victory.</p>
+
+<p>"Do it, then," said the duke, in reply to some whispered
+question of Lord<br>
+Uxbridge; and shortly after the heavy trot of advancing squadrons
+was heard<br>
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>They were the Life Guards and the Blues, who, with the 1st
+Dragoon Guards<br>
+and the Enniskilleners, were formed into close column.</p>
+
+<p>"I know the ground, my lord," said I to Lord Uxbridge.</p>
+
+<p>"Come along, sir, come along," said he, as he threw his hussar
+jacket<br>
+loosely behind him to give freedom to his sword arm. "Forward, my
+men,<br>
+forward; but steady, hold your horses in hand, threes about, and
+together,<br>
+charge!</p>
+
+<p>"Charge!" he shouted; while as the word flew from squadron to
+squadron,<br>
+each horseman bent upon his saddle, and that mighty mass, as
+though<br>
+instinct with but one spirit, dashed like a thunderbolt upon the
+column<br>
+beneath them. The French, blown and exhausted, inferior besides
+in weight,<br>
+both of man and horse, offered but a short resistance. As the
+tall corn<br>
+bends beneath the sweeping hurricane, wave succeeding wave, so
+did the<br>
+steel-clad squadrons of France fall before the nervous arm of
+Britain's<br>
+cavalry. Onward they went, carrying death and ruin before them,
+and never<br>
+stayed their course until the guns were recaptured, and the
+cuirassiers,<br>
+repulsed, disordered, and broken, had retired beneath the
+protection of<br>
+their artillery.</p>
+
+<p>There was, as a brilliant and eloquent writer on the subject
+mentions, a<br>
+terrible sameness in the whole of this battle. Incessant charges
+of cavalry<br>
+upon the squares of our infantry, whose sole manoeuvre consisted
+in either<br>
+deploying into line to resist the attack of the infantry, or
+falling back<br>
+into square when the cavalry advanced; performing those two
+evolutions<br>
+under the devastating fire of artillery, before the unflinching
+heroism of<br>
+that veteran infantry whose glories have been reaped upon the
+blood-stained<br>
+fields of Austerlitz, Marengo, and Wagram, or opposing an
+unbroken front<br>
+to the whirlwind swoop of infuriated cavalry. Such were the
+enduring and<br>
+devoted services demanded from the English troops; and such they
+failed not<br>
+to render. Once or twice had temper nearly failed them, and the
+cry ran<br>
+through the ranks, "Are we never to move forward? Only let us at
+them!" But<br>
+the word was not yet spoken which was to undam the pent-up
+torrent, and<br>
+bear down with unrelenting vengeance upon the now exulting
+columns of the<br>
+enemy.</p>
+
+<p>It was six o'clock; the battle had continued with unchanged
+fortune for<br>
+three hours. The French, masters of La Haye Sainte, could never
+advance<br>
+farther into our position. They had gained the orchard of
+Hougoumont; but<br>
+the ch&acirc;teau was still held by the British Guards, although
+its blazing<br>
+roof and crumbling walls made its occupation rather the desperate
+stand of<br>
+unflinching valor than the maintenance of an important position.
+The smoke<br>
+which hung upon the field rolled in slow and heavy masses back
+upon the<br>
+French lines, and gradually discovered to our view the entire of
+the army.<br>
+We quickly perceived that a change was taking place in their
+position. The<br>
+troops, which on their left stretched far beyond Hougoumont, were
+now moved<br>
+nearer to the centre. The attack upon the ch&acirc;teau seemed
+less vigorously<br>
+supported, while the oblique direction of their right wing,
+which, pivoting<br>
+upon Planchenoit, opposed a face to the Prussians, all denoted a
+change in<br>
+their order of battle. It was now the hour when Napoleon, at last
+convinced<br>
+that nothing but the carnage he could no longer support could
+destroy the,<br>
+unyielding ranks of British infantry; that although Hougoumont
+had been<br>
+partially, La Haye Sainte completely won; that upon the right of
+the road<br>
+the farm-houses Papolotte and La Haye were nearly surrounded by
+his troops,<br>
+which with any other army must prove the forerunner of
+defeat,&mdash;yet still<br>
+the victory was beyond his grasp. The bold stratagems, whose
+success the<br>
+experience of a life had proved, were here to be found powerless.
+The<br>
+decisive manoeuvre of carrying one important point of the enemy's
+lines, of<br>
+turning him upon the flank, or piercing him through the centre,
+were here<br>
+found impracticable. He might launch his avalanche of grape-shot,
+he might<br>
+pour down his crashing columns of cavalry, he might send forth
+the iron<br>
+storm of his brave infantry; but though death in every shape
+heralded their<br>
+approach, still were others found to fill the fallen ranks, and
+feed with<br>
+their hearts' blood the unslaked thirst for slaughter. Well might
+the<br>
+gallant leader of this gallant host, as he watched the reckless
+onslaught<br>
+of the untiring enemy, and looked upon the unflinching few who,
+bearing the<br>
+proud badge of Britain, alone sustained the fight, well might he
+exclaim,<br>
+"Night or Blucher!"</p>
+
+<p>It was now seven o'clock, when a dark mass was seen to form
+upon the<br>
+heights above the French centre, and divide into three gigantic
+columns,<br>
+of which the right occupied the Brussels road. These were the
+reserves,<br>
+consisting of the Old and Young Guards, and amounting to
+twelve<br>
+thousand,&mdash;the <i>&eacute;lite</i> of the French army,&mdash;reserved by
+the Emperor for<br>
+a great <i>coup-de-main</i>. These veterans of a hundred battles had
+been<br>
+stationed from the beginning of the day, inactive spectators of
+the fight;<br>
+their hour was now come, and with a shout of "Vive l'Empereur!"
+which rose<br>
+triumphantly over the din and crash of battle, they began their
+march.<br>
+Meanwhile aides-de-camp galloped along the lines announcing the
+arrival of<br>
+Grouchy, to reanimate the drooping spirits of the men; for at
+last a doubt<br>
+of victory was breaking upon the minds of those who never before,
+in the<br>
+most adverse hour of fortune, deemed <i>his</i> star could be set that
+led them<br>
+on to glory.</p>
+
+<p>"They are coming; the attack will be made on the centre, my
+lord," said<br>
+Lord Fitzroy Somerset, as he directed his glass upon the column.
+Scarcely<br>
+had he spoken when the telescope fell from his hand, as his arm,
+shattered<br>
+by a French bullet, fell motionless to his side.</p>
+
+<p>"I see it," was the cool reply of the duke, as he ordered the
+Guards to<br>
+deploy into line and lie down behind the ridge, which now the
+French<br>
+artillery had found the range of, and were laboring at their
+guns. In front<br>
+of them the Fifty-second, Seventy-first, and Ninety-fifth were
+formed; the<br>
+artillery stationed above and partly upon the road, loaded with
+grape, and<br>
+waited but the word to open.</p>
+
+<p>It was an awful, a dreadful moment. The Prussian cannon
+thundered on our<br>
+left; but so desperate was the French resistance, they made but
+little<br>
+progress. The dark columns of the Guard had now commenced the
+ascent, and<br>
+the artillery ceased their fire as the bayonets of the grenadiers
+showed<br>
+themselves upon the slope. Then began that tremendous cheer from
+right<br>
+to left of our line, which those who heard never can forget. It
+was the<br>
+impatient, long-restrained burst of unslaked vengeance. With the
+instinct<br>
+which valor teaches, they knew the hour of trial was come; and
+that wild<br>
+cry flew from rank to rank, echoing from the, blood-stained walls
+of<br>
+Hougoumont to the far-off valley of La Papelotte. "They come!
+they come!"<br>
+was the cry; and the shout of "Vive l'Empereur!" mingled with the
+out-burst<br>
+of the British line.</p>
+
+<p>Under an overwhelming shower of grape, to which succeeded a
+charge of<br>
+cavalry of the Imperial Guard, the head of Ney's column fired its
+volley<br>
+and advanced with the bayonet. The British artillery now opened
+at half<br>
+range, and although the plunging fire scathed and devasted the
+dark ranks<br>
+of the Guard, on they came, Ney himself on foot at their head.
+Twice the<br>
+leading division of that gallant column turned completely round,
+as the<br>
+withering fire wasted and consumed them; but they were resolved
+to win.</p>
+
+<p>Already they gained the crest of the hill, and the first line
+of the<br>
+British were falling back before them. The artillery closes up;
+the<br>
+flanking fire from the guns upon the road opens upon them; the
+head of<br>
+their column breaks like a shell; the duke seizes the moment, and
+advances<br>
+on foot towards the ridge.</p>
+
+<p>"Up, Guards, and at them!" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>The hour of triumph and vengeance had arrived. In a moment the
+Guards were<br>
+on their feet; one volley was poured in; the bayonets were
+brought to<br>
+the charge; they closed upon the enemy; then was seen the most
+dreadful<br>
+struggle that the history of all war can present. Furious
+with<br>
+long-restrained passion, the Guards rushed upon the leading
+divisions; the<br>
+Seventy-first and Ninety-fifth and Twenty-sixth overlapped them
+on the<br>
+flanks. Their generals fell thickly on every side; Michel,
+Jamier, and<br>
+Mallet are killed; Friant lies wounded upon the ground; Ney, his
+dress<br>
+pierced and ragged with balls, shouts still to advance; but the
+leading<br>
+files waver; they fall back; the supporting divisions thicken;
+confusion,<br>
+panic succeeds. The British press down; the cavalry come
+galloping up to<br>
+their assistance; and at last, pell-mell, overwhelmed and beaten,
+the<br>
+French fell back upon the Old Guard. This was the decisive moment
+of the<br>
+day; the duke closed his glass, as he said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The field is won. Order the whole line to advance."</p>
+
+<p>On they came, four deep, and poured like a torrent from the
+height.</p>
+
+<p>"Let the Life Guards charge them," said the duke; but every
+aide-de-camp on<br>
+his staff was wounded, and I myself brought the order to Lord
+Uxbridge.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Uxbridge had already anticipated his orders, and bore
+down with four<br>
+regiments of heavy cavalry upon the French centre. The Prussian
+artillery<br>
+thundered upon their flank and at their rear. The British bayonet
+was in<br>
+their front; while a panic fear spread through their ranks, and
+the cry of<br>
+"Sauve qui peut!" resounded on all sides. In vain Ney, the
+bravest of the<br>
+brave, in vain Soult, Bertrand, Gourgaud, and Labedoy&egrave;re,
+burst from the<br>
+broken, disorganized mass, and called on them to stand fast. A
+battalion<br>
+of the Old Guard, with Cambronne at their head, alone obeyed the
+summons;<br>
+forming into square, they stood between the pursuers and their
+prey,<br>
+offering themselves a sacrifice to the tarnished honor of their
+arms. To<br>
+the order to surrender they answered with a cry of defiance; and
+as our<br>
+cavalry, flushed and elated with victory, rode round their
+bristling<br>
+ranks, no quailing look, no craven spirit was there. The Emperor
+himself<br>
+endeavored to repair the disaster; he rode with lightning speed
+hither and<br>
+thither, commanding, ordering, nay, imploring, too; but already
+the night<br>
+was falling, the confusion became each moment more inextricable,
+and the<br>
+effort was a fruitless one. A regiment of the Guards, and two
+batteries<br>
+were in reserve behind Planchenoit. He threw them rapidly into
+position;<br>
+but the overwhelming impulse of flight drove the mass upon them,
+and they<br>
+were carried away upon the torrent of the beaten army. No sooner
+did the<br>
+Emperor see this his last hope desert him, than he dismounted
+from his<br>
+horse, and drawing his sword, threw himself into a square, which
+the first<br>
+regiment of Chasseurs of the Old Guard had formed with a remnant
+of the<br>
+battalion. Jerome followed him, as he called out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, brother; here should perish all who bear the
+name of<br>
+Bonaparte."</p>
+
+<p>The same moment the Prussian light artillery rend the ranks
+asunder, and<br>
+the cavalry charge down upon the scattered fragments. A few of
+his staff,<br>
+who never left him, place the Emperor upon a horse and fly
+through the<br>
+death-dealing artillery and musketry. A squadron of the Life
+Guards, to<br>
+which I had attached myself, came up at the moment, and as
+Blucher's<br>
+hussars rode madly here and there, where so lately the crowd of
+staff<br>
+officers had denoted the presence of Napoleon, expressed their
+rage and<br>
+disappointment in curses and cries of vengeance.</p>
+
+<p>Cambronne's battalion stood yet unbroken, and seemed to defy
+every attack<br>
+that was brought against them. To the second summons to surrender
+they<br>
+replied as indignantly as at first; and Vivian's Brigade was
+ordered to<br>
+charge them. A cloud of British horse bore down on every face of
+the<br>
+devoted square; but firm as in their hour of victory, the heroes
+of Marengo<br>
+never quailed; and twice the bravest blood of Britian recoiled,
+baffled and<br>
+dismayed. There was a pause for some minutes, and even then, as
+we surveyed<br>
+our broken and blood-stained squadrons, a cry of admiration burst
+from our<br>
+ranks at the gallant bearing of that glorious infantry. Suddenly
+the tramp<br>
+of approaching cavalry was heard; I turned my head and saw two
+squadrons of<br>
+the Second Life Guards. The officer who led them on was
+bare-headed; his<br>
+long dark hair streaming wildly behind him, and upon his pale
+features,<br>
+to which not even the headlong enthusiasm of battle had lent one
+touch of<br>
+color. He rode straight to where I was standing, his dark eyes
+fixed upon<br>
+me with a look so fierce, so penetrating, that I could not look
+away.<br>
+The features, save in this respect, had almost a look of idiocy.
+It was<br>
+Hammersley.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha!" he cried at last, "I have sought you out the entire day,
+but in vain.<br>
+It is not yet too late. Give me your hand, boy. You once called
+on me to<br>
+follow <i>you</i>, and I did not refuse; I trust you'll do the like by
+<i>me</i>. Is<br>
+it not so?"</p>
+
+
+<a name="0471"></a>
+<img alt="0471.jpg (155K)" src="0471.jpg" height="533" width="784">
+
+<p>[DEATH OF HAMMERSLEY.]</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>A terrible perception of his meaning shot through my mind as I
+clasped his<br>
+clay-cold hand in mine, and for a moment I did not speak.</p>
+
+<p>"I hoped for better than this," said he, bitterly, and as a
+glance of<br>
+withering scorn flashed from his eye. "I did trust that he who
+was<br>
+preferred before me was at least not a coward."</p>
+
+<p>As the word fell from his lips I nearly leaped from my saddle,
+and<br>
+mechanically raised my sabre to cleave him on the spot.</p>
+
+<p>"Then follow me!" shouted he, pointing with his sword to the
+glistening<br>
+ranks before us.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on!" said I, with a voice hoarse with passion, while
+burying my spurs<br>
+in my horse's flanks, I sprang on a full length before him, and
+bore down<br>
+upon the enemy. A loud shout, a deafening volley, the agonizing
+cry of the<br>
+wounded and the dying, were all I heard, as my horse, rearing
+madly upward,<br>
+plunged twice into the air, and then fell dead upon the earth,
+crushing me<br>
+beneath his cumbrous weight, lifeless and insensible.</p>
+
+<p>The day was breaking; the cold, gray light of morning was
+struggling<br>
+through the misty darkness, when I once more recovered my
+consciousness.<br>
+There are moments in life when memory can so suddenly conjure up
+the whole<br>
+past before us, that there is scarcely time for a doubt ere the
+disputed<br>
+reality is palpable to our senses. Such was this to me. One
+hurried glance<br>
+upon the wide, bleak plain before me, and every circumstance of
+the<br>
+battle-field was present to my recollection. The dismounted guns,
+the<br>
+broken wagons, the heaps of dead or dying, the straggling parties
+who on<br>
+foot or horseback traversed the field, and the dark litters which
+carried<br>
+the wounded, all betokened the sad evidences of the preceding
+day's battle.</p>
+
+<p>Close around me where I lay the ground was marked with the
+bodies of our<br>
+cavalry, intermixed with the soldiers of the Old Guard. The broad
+brow and<br>
+stalwart chest of the Saxon lay bleaching beside the bronzed and
+bearded<br>
+warrior of Gaul, while the torn-up ground attested the
+desperation of that<br>
+struggle which closed the day.</p>
+
+<p>As my eye ranged over this harrowing spectacle, a dreadful
+anxiety shot<br>
+through me as I asked myself whose had been the victory. A
+certain confused<br>
+impression of flight and of pursuit remained in my mind; but at
+the moment,<br>
+the circumstances of my own position in the early part of the day
+increased<br>
+the difficulty of reflection, and left me in a state of intense
+and<br>
+agonizing uncertainty. Although not wounded, I had been so
+crushed by my<br>
+fall that it was not without pain I got upon my legs. I soon
+perceived<br>
+that the spot around me had not yet been visited by those
+vultures of the<br>
+battle-field who strip alike the dead and dying. The distance of
+the place<br>
+from where the great conflict of the battle had occurred was
+probably the<br>
+reason; and now, as the straggling sunbeams fell upon the earth,
+I could<br>
+trace the helmet of the Enniskilleners, or the tall bearskin of
+the Scotch<br>
+Greys, lying in thick confusion where the steel cuirass and long
+sword of<br>
+the French dragoons showed the fight had been hottest. As I
+turned my eyes<br>
+hither and thither I could see no living thing near me. In every
+attitude<br>
+of struggling agony they lay around; some buried beneath their
+horses, some<br>
+bathed in blood, some, with clinched hands and darting eyeballs,
+seemed<br>
+struggling even in death; but all was still,&mdash;not a word, not a
+sigh, not a<br>
+groan was there. I was turning to leave the spot, and uncertain
+which way<br>
+to direct my steps, looked once more around, when my glance
+rested upon<br>
+the pale and marble features of one who, even in that moment of
+doubt and<br>
+difficulty, there was no mistaking. His coat, torn widely open,
+was grasped<br>
+in either hand, while his breast was shattered with balls and
+bathed in<br>
+gore. Gashed and mutilated as he lay, still the features wore no
+trace of<br>
+suffering; cold, pale, motionless, but with the tranquil look of
+sleep, his<br>
+eyelids were closed, and his half-parted lips seemed still to
+quiver in<br>
+life. I knelt down beside him; I took his hand in mine; I bent
+over and<br>
+whispered his name; I placed my hand upon his heart, where even
+still the<br>
+life blood was warm,&mdash;but he was dead. Poor Hammersley! His was a
+gallant<br>
+soul; and as I looked upon his blood-stained corpse, my tears
+fell fast and<br>
+hot upon his brow to think how far I had myself been the cause of
+a life<br>
+blighted in its hope, and a death like his.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER LIV.</p>
+
+<p>BRUSSELS.</p>
+
+<p>Once more I would entreat my reader's indulgence for the
+prolixity of<br>
+a narrative which has grown beneath my hands to a length I had
+never<br>
+intended. This shall, however, be the last time for either the
+offence or<br>
+the apology. My story is now soon concluded.</p>
+
+<p>After wandering about for some time, uncertain which way to
+take, I at<br>
+length reached the Charleroi road, now blocked by carriages and
+wagons<br>
+conveying the wounded towards Brussels. Here I learned, for the
+first time,<br>
+that we had gained the battle, and heard of the total
+annihilation of the<br>
+French army, and the downfall of the Emperor. On arriving at the
+farm-house<br>
+of Mont St. Jean, I found a number of officers, whose wounds
+prevented<br>
+their accompanying the army in its forward movement. One of them,
+with whom<br>
+I was slightly acquainted, informed me that General Dashwood had
+spent<br>
+the greater part of the night upon the field in search of me and
+that my<br>
+servant Mike was in a state of distraction at my absence that
+bordered on<br>
+insanity. While he was speaking, a burst of laughter and the
+tones of a<br>
+well-remembered voice behind attracted my attention.</p>
+
+<p>"Made a very good thing of it, upon my life. A
+dressing-case,&mdash;not gold,<br>
+you know, but silver-gilt,&mdash;a dozen knives with blood-stone
+handles, and a<br>
+little coffee-pot, with the imperial arms,&mdash;not to speak of three
+hundred<br>
+Naps in a green silk purse&mdash;Lord! it reminds me of the Peninsula.
+Do you<br>
+know those Prussians are mere barbarians, haven't a notion of
+civilized<br>
+war. Bless your heart, my fellows in the Legion would have
+ransacked the<br>
+whole coach, from the boot to the sword-case, in half the time
+they took to<br>
+cut down the coachman."</p>
+
+<p>"The major, as I live!" said I. "How goes it, Major?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, Charley! when did you turn up? Delighted see you. They
+told me you<br>
+were badly wounded or killed or something of that kind. But I
+should have<br>
+paid the little debt to your executors all the same."</p>
+
+<p>"All the same, no doubt, Major; but where, in Heaven's name,
+did you fall<br>
+upon that mine of pillage you have just been talking of?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the Emperor's carriage, to be sure, boy. While the duke
+was watching<br>
+all day the advance of Ney's column and keeping an anxious
+look-out for the<br>
+Prussians, I sat in a window in this old farm-house, and never
+took my eye<br>
+off the garden at Planchenoit. I saw the imperial carriage there
+in the<br>
+morning; it was there also at noon; and they never put the horses
+to it<br>
+till past seven in the evening. The roads were very heavy, and
+the crowd<br>
+was great. I judged the pace couldn't be a fast one; and with
+four of the<br>
+Enniskilleners I charged it like a man. The Prussians, however,
+had the<br>
+start of us; and if they hadn't thought, from my seat on
+horseback and<br>
+my general appearance, that I was Lord Uxbridge, I should have
+got but a<br>
+younger son's portion. However, I got in first, filled my pockets
+with a<br>
+few little <i>souvenirs</i> of the Emperor, and then laying my hands
+upon what<br>
+was readiest, got out in time to escape being shot; for two of
+Blucher's<br>
+hussars, thinking I must be the Emperor, fired at me through the
+window."</p>
+
+<p>"What an escape you had!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hadn't I though? Fortunate, too, my Enniskilleners saw the
+whole thing;<br>
+for I intend to make the circumstance the ground of an
+application for a<br>
+pension. Hark ye, Charley, don't say anything about the
+coffee-pot and<br>
+the knives. The duke, you know, has strange notions of his own on
+these<br>
+matters. But isn't that your fellow fighting his way yonder?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tear and ages! don't howld me&mdash;that's himself,&mdash;devil a one
+else!"</p>
+
+<p>This exclamation came from Mickey Free, who, with his dress
+torn and<br>
+dishevelled, his eyes bloodshot and strained, was upsetting and
+elbowing<br>
+all before him, as he made his way towards me through the
+crowd.</p>
+
+<p>"Take that fellow to the guard-house! Lay hold of him,
+Sergeant! Knock him<br>
+down! Who is the scoundrel?"</p>
+
+<p>Such were the greetings he met with on every side. Regardless
+of everything<br>
+and everybody, he burst his way through the dense mass.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, murther! oh, Mary! oh, Moses! Is he safe here after
+all?"</p>
+
+<p>The poor fellow could say no more, but burst into a torrent of
+tears.<br>
+A roar of laughter around him soon, however, turned the current
+of his<br>
+emotions; when, dashing the scalding drops from his eyelids, he
+glared<br>
+fiercely like a tiger on every side.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye're laughing at me, are ye," cried he, "bekase I love the
+hand that fed<br>
+me, and the master that stood to me? But let us see now which of
+us two has<br>
+the stoutest heart,&mdash;you with your grin on you, or myself with
+the salt<br>
+tears on my face."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, he sprang upon them like a madman, striking right
+and left at<br>
+everything before him. Down they went beneath his blows, levelled
+with the<br>
+united strength of energy and passion, till at length, rushing
+upon him<br>
+in numbers, he was overpowered and thrown to the ground. It was
+with some<br>
+difficulty I accomplished his rescue; for his enemies felt by no
+means<br>
+assured how far his amicable propensities for the future could be
+relied<br>
+upon; and, indeed, Mike himself had a most constitutional
+antipathy to<br>
+binding himself by any pledge. With some persuasion, however, I
+reconciled<br>
+all parties; and having, by the kindness of a brother officer,
+provided<br>
+myself with a couple of troop horses, I mounted, and set out for
+Brussels,<br>
+followed by Mickey, who had effectually cured his auditory of any
+tendency<br>
+to laughter at his cost.</p>
+
+<p>As I rode up to the Belle Vue, I saw Sir George Dashwood in
+the window. He<br>
+was speaking to the ambassador, Lord Clancarty, but the moment he
+caught my<br>
+eye, he hurried down to meet me.</p>
+
+<p>"Charley, safe,&mdash;safe, my boy! Now am I really happy. The
+glorious day had<br>
+been one of sorrow to me for the rest of my life had anything
+happened to<br>
+you. Come up with me at once; I have more than one friend here
+who longs to<br>
+thank you."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he hurried me along; and before I could well
+remember where I<br>
+was, introduced me to a number of persons in the saloon.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, very happy to know you, sir," said Lord Clancarty.
+"Perhaps we had<br>
+better walk this way. My friend Dashwood has explained to me the
+very<br>
+pressing reasons there are for this step; and I, for my part, see
+no<br>
+objection."</p>
+
+<p>"What, in Heaven's name, can he mean?" thought I, as he
+stopped short,<br>
+expecting me to say something, while, in utter confusion, I
+smiled,<br>
+simpered, and muttered some common-places.</p>
+
+<p>"Love and war, sir," resumed the ambassador, "very admirable
+associates,<br>
+and you certainly have contrived to couple them most closely
+together. A<br>
+long attachment, I believe?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir, a very long attachment," stammered I, not knowing
+which of us<br>
+was about to become insane.</p>
+
+<p>"A very charming person, indeed; I have seen the lady,"
+replied his<br>
+lordship, as he opened the door of a small room, and beckoned me
+to follow.<br>
+The table was covered with paper and materials for writing; but
+before<br>
+I had time to ask for any explanation of this unaccountable
+mystery, he<br>
+added, "Oh, I was forgetting; this must be witnessed. Wait one
+moment."</p>
+
+<p>With these words he left the room, while I, amazed and
+thunderstruck,<br>
+vacillating between fear and hope, trembling lest the delusive
+glimmering<br>
+of happiness should give way at every moment, and yet totally
+unable to<br>
+explain by any possible supposition how fortune could so far have
+favored<br>
+me.</p>
+
+<p>While yet I stood hesitating and uncertain, the door opened,
+and the<br>
+senhora entered. She looked a little pale though not less
+beautiful than<br>
+ever; and her features wore a slight trace of seriousness, which
+rather<br>
+heightened than took from the character of her loveliness.</p>
+
+<p>"I heard you had come, Chevalier," said she, "and so I ran
+down to shake<br>
+hands with you. We may not meet again for some time."</p>
+
+<p>"How so, Senhora? You are not going to leave us, I trust?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you have not seen Fred. Oh, I forgot; you know nothing
+of our plans."</p>
+
+<p>"Here we are at last," said the ambassador, as he came in
+followed by Sir<br>
+George, Power, and two other officers. "Ah, <i>ma belle</i>, how
+fortunate to<br>
+find you here! I assure you, it is a matter of no small
+difficulty to get<br>
+people together at such a time as this."</p>
+
+<p>"Charley, my dear friend," cried Power, "I scarcely hoped to
+have had a<br>
+shake hands with you ere I left."</p>
+
+<p>"Do, Fred, tell me what all this means? I am in a perfect maze
+of doubt and<br>
+difficulty, and cannot comprehend a word I hear about me."</p>
+
+<p>"Faith, my boy, I have little time for explanation. The man
+who was at<br>
+Waterloo yesterday, is to be married to-morrow, and to sail for
+India in a<br>
+week, has quite enough upon his hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Colonel Power, you will please to put your signature here,"
+said Lord<br>
+Clancarty, addressing himself to me.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will allow me," said Fred, "I had rather represent
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Is not this the colonel, then? Why, confound it, I have been
+wishing him<br>
+joy the last quarter of an hour!"</p>
+
+<p>A burst of laughter from the whole party, in which it was
+pretty evident I<br>
+took no part, followed this announcement.</p>
+
+<p>"And so you are not Colonel Power? Nor going to be married,
+either?"</p>
+
+<p>I stammered out something, while, overwhelmed with confusion,
+I stooped<br>
+down to sign the paper. Scarcely had I done so, when a renewed
+burst of<br>
+laughter broke from the party.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing but blunders, upon my soul," said the ambassador, as
+he handed the<br>
+paper from one to another.</p>
+
+<p>What was my confusion to discover that instead of Charles
+O'Malley, I had<br>
+written the name of Lucy Dashwood. I could bear no more. The
+laughing and<br>
+raillery of my friends came upon my wounded and irritated
+feelings like the<br>
+most poignant sarcasm. I seized my cap and rushed from the room.
+Desirous<br>
+of escaping from all that knew me, anxious to bury my agitated
+and<br>
+distracted thoughts in solitude and quiet, I opened the first
+door before<br>
+me, and seeing it an empty and unoccupied room, throw myself upon
+a sofa,<br>
+and buried my head within my hands. Oh, how often had the phantom
+of<br>
+happiness passed within my reach, but still glided from my grasp!
+How often<br>
+had I beheld the goal I aimed at, as it were before me, and the
+next moment<br>
+all the bleak reality of my evil fortune was lowering around
+me!</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Lucy, Lucy!" I exclaimed aloud, "but for you and a few
+words<br>
+carelessly spoken, I had never trod that path of ambition whose
+end has<br>
+been the wreck of all my happiness. But for you, I had never
+loved so<br>
+fondly; I had never filled my mind with one image which,
+excluding every<br>
+other thought, leaves no pleasure but in it alone. Yes, Lucy, but
+for you I<br>
+should have gone tranquilly down the stream of life with naught
+of grief or<br>
+care, save such as are inseparable from the passing chances of
+mortality;<br>
+loved, perhaps, and cared for by some one who would have deemed
+it no<br>
+disgrace to have linked her fortune to my own. But for you, and I
+had never<br>
+been&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A soldier, you would say," whispered a soft voice, as a light
+hand gently<br>
+touched my shoulder. "I had come," continued she, "to thank you
+for a gift<br>
+no gratitude can repay,&mdash;my father's life; but truly, I did not
+think to<br>
+hear the words you have spoken; nor having heard them, can I feel
+their<br>
+justice. No, Mr. O'Malley, deeply grateful as I am to you for the
+service<br>
+you once rendered myself, bound as I am by every tie of
+thankfulness, by<br>
+the greater one to my father, yet do I feel that in the impulse I
+had given<br>
+to your life, if so be that to me you owe it, I have done more to
+repay<br>
+my debt to you, than by all the friendship, all the esteem I owe
+you; if,<br>
+indeed, by my means, you became a soldier, if my few and random
+words<br>
+raised within your breast that fire of ambition which has been
+your<br>
+beacon-light to honor and to glory, then am I indeed proud."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, alas, Lucy!&mdash;Miss Dashwood, I would say,&mdash;forgive me,
+if I know not<br>
+the very words I utter. How has my career fulfilled the promise
+that gave<br>
+it birth? For you, and you only, to gain your affection, to win
+your heart,<br>
+I became a soldier; hardship, danger, even death itself were
+courted by me,<br>
+supported by the one thought that you had cared for or had pitied
+me; and<br>
+now, and now&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And now," said she, while her eyes beamed upon me with a very
+flood of<br>
+tenderness, "is it nothing that in my woman's heart I have glowed
+with<br>
+pride at triumphs I could read of, but dared not share in? Is it
+nothing<br>
+that you have lent to my hours of solitude and of musing the
+fervor of that<br>
+career, the maddening enthusiasm of that glorious path my sex
+denied me?<br>
+I have followed you in my thoughts across the burning plains of
+the<br>
+Peninsula, through the long hours of the march in the dreary
+nights, even<br>
+to the battle-field. I have thought of you; I have dreamed of
+you; I have<br>
+prayed for you."</p>
+
+<p>"Alas, Lucy, but not loved me!"</p>
+
+<p>The very words, as I spoke them, sank with a despairing
+cadence upon my<br>
+heart. Her hand, which had fallen upon mine, trembled violently;
+I pressed<br>
+my lips upon it, but she moved it not. I dared to look up; her
+head was<br>
+turned away, but her heaving bosom betrayed her emotion.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, Lucy," cried I, passionately, "I will not deceive
+myself; I ask<br>
+for more than you can give me. Farewell!"</p>
+
+<p>Now, and for the last time, I pressed her hand once more to my
+lips; my hot<br>
+tears fell fast upon it. I turned to go, and threw one last look
+upon her.<br>
+Our eyes met; I cannot say what it was, but in a moment the whole
+current<br>
+of my thoughts was changed; her look was bent upon me beaming
+with softness<br>
+and affection, her hand gently pressed my own, and her lips
+murmured my<br>
+name.</p>
+
+<p>The door burst open at this moment, and Sir George Dashwood
+appeared. Lucy<br>
+turned one fleeting look upon her father, and fell fainting into
+my arms.</p>
+
+<p>"God bless you, my boy!" said the old general, as he hurriedly
+wiped a tear<br>
+from his eye; "I am now, indeed, a happy father."</p>
+
+
+<a name="0481"></a>
+<img alt="0481.jpg (184K)" src="0481.jpg" height="1043" width="665">
+
+<p>[THE WELCOME HOME.]</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br><p>CHAPTER LV.</p>
+
+<p>CONCLUSION.</p>
+
+<p>       *       *       *       *       *</p>
+
+<p>The sun had set about half an hour. Already were the dusky
+shadows blending<br>
+with the faint twilight, as on a lovely July evening we entered
+the little<br>
+village of Portumna,&mdash;we, I say; for Lucy was beside me. For the
+last few<br>
+miles of the way I had spoken little; thoughts of the many times
+I had<br>
+travelled that same road, in how many moods, occupied my mind;
+and<br>
+although, as we flew rapidly along, some well-known face would
+every now<br>
+and then present itself, I had but time for the recognition ere
+we were<br>
+past. Arousing myself from my revery, I was pointing out to Lucy
+certain<br>
+well-known spots in the landscape, and directing her attention to
+places<br>
+with the names of which she had been for some time familiar, when
+suddenly<br>
+a loud shout rent the air, and the next moment the carriage was
+surrounded<br>
+by hundreds of country people, some of whom brandished blazing
+pine<br>
+torches; others carried rude banners in their hands,&mdash;but all
+testified<br>
+the most fervent joy as they bade us welcome. The horses were
+speedily<br>
+unharnessed, and their places occupied by a crowd of every age
+and sex,<br>
+who hurried us along through the straggling street of the
+village, now a<br>
+perfect blaze of bonfires.</p>
+
+<p>Mounds of turf, bog-fir, and tar-barrels sent up their ruddy
+blaze, while<br>
+hundreds of wild, but happy faces, flitted around and through
+them,&mdash;now<br>
+dancing merrily in chorus; now plunging madly into the midst of
+the fire,<br>
+and scattering the red embers on every side. Pipers were there
+too, mounted<br>
+upon cars or turf-kishes; even the very roof-tops rang out their
+merry<br>
+notes; the ensigns of the little fishing-craft waved in the
+breeze, and<br>
+seemed to feel the general joy around them; while over the door
+of the<br>
+village inn stood a brilliantly lighted transparency,
+representing the head<br>
+of the O'Malleys holding a very scantily-robed young lady by the
+tips of<br>
+the fingers; but whether this damsel was intended to represent
+the genius<br>
+of the west, or my wife, I did not venture to inquire.</p>
+
+<p>If the welcome were rude, assuredly it was a hearty one. Kind
+wishes and<br>
+blessings poured in on every side, and even our own happiness
+took a<br>
+brighter coloring from the beaming looks around us. The scene was
+wild;<br>
+the lurid glare of the red torchlight, the frantic gestures, the
+maddening<br>
+shouts, the forked flames rising amidst the dark shadows of the
+little<br>
+hamlet, had something strange and almost unearthly in their
+effect; but<br>
+Lucy showed no touch of fear. It is true she grasped my hand a
+little<br>
+closer, but her fair cheek glowed with pleasure, and her eye
+brightened as<br>
+she looked; and as the rich light fell upon her beauteous
+features, how<br>
+many a blessing, heart-felt and deep, how many a word of fervent
+praise was<br>
+spoken.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then, the Lord be good to you; it's yourself has the
+darling blue<br>
+eyes! Look at them, Mary; ain't they like the blossoms on a
+peacock's tail?<br>
+Musha, may sorrow never put a crease in that beautiful cheek! The
+saints<br>
+watch over you, for your mouth is like a moss-rose! Be good to
+her, yer<br>
+honor, for she's a raal gem: devil fear you, Mr. Charles, but
+you'd have a<br>
+beauty!"</p>
+
+<p>We wended our way slowly, the crowd ever thickening around us,
+until we<br>
+reached the market-place. Here the procession came to a stand,
+and I could<br>
+perceive, by certain efforts around me, that some endeavor was
+making to<br>
+enforce silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Whisht, there! Hould your prate! Be still, Paddy! Tear an'
+ages, Molly<br>
+Blake, don't be holding me that way; let us hear his reverence.
+Put him up<br>
+on the barrel. Haven't you got a chair for the priest? Run, and
+bring a<br>
+table out of Mat Haley's. Here, Father&mdash;here, your reverence;
+take care,<br>
+will you,&mdash;you'll have the holy man in the blaze!"</p>
+
+<p>By this time I could perceive that my worthy old friend Father
+Rush was in<br>
+the midst of the mob with what appeared to be a written oration,
+as long as<br>
+the tail of a kite, between his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Be aisy, there, ye savages! Who's tearing the back of my
+neck? Howld me up<br>
+straight! Steady, now&mdash;hem!"</p>
+
+<p>"Take the laste taste in life to wet your lips, your
+riverence," said a<br>
+kind voice, while at the same moment a smoking tumbler of what
+seemed to be<br>
+punch appeared on the heads of the crowd.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank ye, Judy," said the father, as he drained the cup.
+"Howld the light<br>
+up higher; I can't read my speech. There now, be quiet, will ye!
+Here goes.<br>
+Peter, stand to me now and give me the word."</p>
+
+<p>This admonition was addressed to a figure on a barrel behind
+the priest,<br>
+who, as well as the imperfect light would permit me to descry,
+was the<br>
+coadjutor of the parish, Peter Nolan. Silence being perfectly
+established,<br>
+Father Rush began:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "When Mars, the god of war, on high,<br>
+    Of battles first did think,<br>
+    He girt his sword upon his thigh,<br>
+    And&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>and&mdash;what is't, Peter?"</p>
+
+<p>    "And mixed a drop of drink."</p>
+
+<p>"And mixed a drop of drink," quoth Father Rush, with great
+emphasis; when<br>
+scarcely were the spoken words than a loud shout of laughter
+showed him his<br>
+mistake, and he overturned upon the luckless curate the full vial
+of his<br>
+wrath.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it you mean, Father Peter? I'm ashamed of ye; faith,
+it's may be<br>
+yourself, not Mars, you are speaking of."</p>
+
+<p>The roar of merriment around prevented me hearing what passed;
+but I could<br>
+see by Peter's gestures&mdash;for it was too dark to see his
+face&mdash;that he was<br>
+expressing deep sorrow for the mistake. After a little time,
+order was<br>
+again established, and Father Rush resumed:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>    "But love drove battles from his head,<br>
+    And sick of wounds and scars,<br>
+    To Venus bright he knelt, and said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>and said&mdash;and said; what the blazes did he say?"</p>
+
+<p>    "I'll make you Mrs. Mars,"</p>
+
+<p>shouted Peter, loud enough to be heard.</p>
+
+<p>"Bad luck to you, Peter Nolan, it's yourself's the ruin of me
+this blessed<br>
+night! Here have I come four miles with my speech in my pocket,
+<i>per imbres<br>
+et ignes</i>." Here the crowd crossed themselves devoutly. "Ay, just
+so; and<br>
+he spoiled it for me entirely." At the earnest entreaty, however,
+of the<br>
+crowd, Father Rush, with renewed caution to his unhappy prompter,
+again<br>
+returned to the charge:</p>
+
+<p>    "Thus love compelled the god to yield<br>
+    And seek for purer joys;<br>
+    He laid aside his helm and shield,<br>
+    And took&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>took&mdash;took&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>    "And took to corduroys,"</p>
+
+<p>cried Father Nolan.</p>
+
+<p>This time, however, the good priest's patience could endure no
+more, and he<br>
+levelled a blow at his luckless colleague, which, missing his
+aim, lost him<br>
+his own balance, and brought him down from his eminence upon the
+heads of<br>
+the mob.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had I recovered the perfect convulsion of laughter
+into which this<br>
+scene had thrown me, when the broad brim of Father Nolan's hat
+appeared at<br>
+the window of the carriage. Before I had time to address him, he
+took it<br>
+reverently from his head, disclosing in the act the
+ever-memorable features<br>
+of Master Frank Webber!</p>
+
+<p>"What! Eh! Can it be?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"It is surely not&mdash;" said Lucy, hesitating at the name.</p>
+
+<p>"Your aunt, Miss Judy Macan, no more than the Rev. Peter
+Nolan, I assure<br>
+you; though, I confess, it has cost me much more to personate the
+latter<br>
+character than the former, and the reward by no means so
+tempting."</p>
+
+<p>Here poor Lucy blushed deeply at the remembrance of the scene
+alluded to;<br>
+and anxious to turn the conversation, I asked by what stratagem
+he had<br>
+succeeded to the functions of the worthy Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"At the cost of twelve tumblers of the strongest punch ever
+brewed at the<br>
+O'Malley Arms. The good father gave in only ten minutes before
+the oration<br>
+began, and I had barely time to change my dress and mount the
+barrel,<br>
+without a moment's preparation."</p>
+
+<p>The procession once more resumed its march; and hurried along
+through the<br>
+town, we soon reached the avenue. Here fresh preparations for
+welcoming us<br>
+had also been made; but regardless of blazing tar-barrels and
+burning logs,<br>
+the reckless crowd pressed madly on, their wild cheers waking the
+echoes as<br>
+they went. We soon reached the house; but with a courtesy which
+even<br>
+the humblest and poorest native of this country is never devoid
+of, the<br>
+preparations of noise and festivity had not extended to the
+precincts of<br>
+the dwelling. With a tact which those of higher birth and older
+blood might<br>
+be proud of, they limited the excesses of their reckless and
+careless<br>
+merriment to their own village; so that as we approached the
+terrace, all<br>
+was peaceful, still, and quiet.</p>
+
+<p>I lifted Lucy from the carriage, and passing my arm around
+her, was<br>
+assisting her to mount the steps, when a bright gleam of
+moonlight burst<br>
+forth and lit up the whole scene. It was, indeed, an impressive
+one. Among<br>
+the assembled hundreds there who stood bare-headed, beneath the
+cold<br>
+moonlight, not a word was now spoken, not a whisper heard. I
+turned from<br>
+the lawn, where the tall beech-trees were throwing their gigantic
+shadows,<br>
+to where the river, peering at intervals through the foliage, was
+flowing<br>
+on its silvery track, plashing amidst the tall flaggers that
+lined its<br>
+banks,&mdash;all were familiar, all were dear to me from childhood.
+How doubly<br>
+were they so now! I lifted up my eyes towards the door, and what
+was my<br>
+surprise at the object before them! Seated in a large chair was
+an old man,<br>
+whose white hair, flowing in straggling masses upon his neck and
+shoulders,<br>
+stirred with the night air; his hands rested upon his knees, and
+his eyes,<br>
+turned slightly upward, seemed to seek for some one he found it
+difficult<br>
+to recognize. Changed as he was by time, heavily as years had
+done their<br>
+work upon him, the stern features were not to be mistaken; but as
+I looked,<br>
+he called out in a voice whose unshaken firmness seemed to defy
+the touch<br>
+of time,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Charley O'Malley, come here, my boy! Bring her to me, till I
+bless you<br>
+both. Come here, Lucy,&mdash;I may call you so. Come here, my
+children. I have<br>
+tried to live on to see this day, when the head of an old house
+comes back<br>
+with honor, with fame, and with fortune, to dwell amidst his own
+people in<br>
+the old home of his fathers."</p>
+
+<p>The old man bent above us, his white hair falling upon the
+fair locks of<br>
+her who knelt beside him, and pressed his cold and quivering hand
+within<br>
+her own.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Lucy," said I, as I led her within the house, "this is
+home."</p>
+
+<p>Here now ends my story. The patient reader who has followed me
+so far<br>
+deserves at my hands that I should not trespass upon his kindness
+one<br>
+moment beyond the necessity; if, however, any lurking interest
+may remain<br>
+for some of those who have accompanied me through this my
+history, it<br>
+may be as well that I should say a few words farther, ere they
+disappear<br>
+forever.</p>
+
+<p>Power went to India immediately after his marriage,
+distinguished himself<br>
+repeatedly in the Burmese war, and finally rose to a high command
+that he<br>
+this moment holds, with honor to himself and advantage to his
+country.</p>
+
+<p>O'Shaughnessy, on half-pay, wanders about the Continent,
+passing his<br>
+summers on the Rhine, his winters at Florence or Geneva. Known to
+and by<br>
+everybody, his interest in the service keeps him <i>au courant</i> to
+every<br>
+change and regulation, rendering him an invaluable companion to
+all to whom<br>
+an army list is inaccessible. He is the same good fellow he ever
+was, and<br>
+adds to his many excellent qualities the additional one of being
+the only<br>
+man who can make a bull in French!</p>
+
+<p>Monsoon, the major, when last I saw him, was standing on the
+pier at<br>
+Calais, endeavoring, with a cheap telescope, to make out the
+Dover cliffs,<br>
+from a nearer prospect of which certain little family
+circumstances might<br>
+possibly debar him. He recognized me in a moment, and held out
+his hand,<br>
+while his eye twinkled with its ancient drollery.</p>
+
+<p>"Charley, my son, how goes it? Delighted to see you. What a
+pity I did not<br>
+meet you yesterday! Had a little dinner at Crillon's. Harding,
+Vivian, and<br>
+a few others. They all wished for you; 'pon my life they
+did."</p>
+
+<p>"Civil, certainly," thought I, "as I have not the honor of
+being known to<br>
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"You are at Meurice's," resumed he; "a very good house, but
+give you bad<br>
+wine, if they don't know you. They know me," added he, in a
+whisper; "never<br>
+try any tricks upon me. I'll just drop in upon you at six."</p>
+
+<p>"It is most unfortunate, Major; I can't have the pleasure you
+speak of; we<br>
+start in half an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, Charley, never mind; another time. By-the-bye,
+now I think of<br>
+it, don't you remember something of a ten-pound note you owe
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>"As well as I remember, Major, the circumstance was reversed.
+You are the<br>
+debtor."</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my life, you are right; how droll. No matter; let me
+have the ten,<br>
+and I'll give you a check for the whole."</p>
+
+<p>The major thrust his tongue into his cheek as he spoke, gave
+another leer,<br>
+pocketed the note, and sauntered down the pier, muttering
+something to<br>
+himself about King David and greenhorns; but how they were
+connected I<br>
+could not precisely overhear.</p>
+
+<p>Baby Blake, or Mrs. Sparks,&mdash;to call her by her more
+fitting<br>
+appellation,&mdash;is as handsome as ever, and not less good-humored
+and<br>
+light-hearted, her severest trials being her ineffectual efforts
+to convert<br>
+Sparks into something like a man for Galway.</p>
+
+<p>Last of all, Mickey Free. Mike remains attached to our fortune
+firmly, as<br>
+at first he opened his career; the same gay, rollicksome
+Irishman, making<br>
+songs, making love, and occasionally making punch, he spends his
+days and<br>
+his nights pretty much as he was wont to do some thirty years
+ago. He<br>
+obtains an occasional leave of absence for a week or so, but for
+what<br>
+precise purpose, or with what exact object, I have never been
+completely<br>
+able to ascertain. I have heard, it as true, that a very
+fascinating<br>
+companion and a most agreeable gentleman frequents a certain
+oyster-house<br>
+in Dublin called Burton Bindon's. I have also been told of a
+distinguished<br>
+foreigner, whose black mustache and broken English were the
+admiration of<br>
+Cheltenham for the last two winters. I greatly fear from the high
+tone of<br>
+the conversation in the former, and for the taste in continental
+characters<br>
+in the latter resort, that I could fix upon the individual whose
+convivial<br>
+and social gifts have won so much of their esteem and admiration;
+but were<br>
+I to run on thus, I should recur to every character of my story,
+with each<br>
+and all of whom you have, doubtless, grown well wearied. So here
+for the<br>
+last time, and with every kind wish, I say, adieu!</p>
+
+<p>L'ENVOI.</p>
+
+<p>Kind friends,&mdash;It is somewhat unfortunate that the record of
+the happiest<br>
+portion of my friend's life should prove the saddest part of my
+duty as<br>
+his editor, and for this reason, that it brings me to that spot
+where my<br>
+acquaintance with you must close, and sounds the hour when I must
+say,<br>
+good-bye.</p>
+
+<p>They, who have never felt the mysterious link that binds the
+solitary<br>
+scribe in his lonely study, to the circle of his readers, can
+form no<br>
+adequate estimate of what his feelings are when that chain is
+about to be<br>
+broken; they know not how often, in the fictitious garb of his
+narrative,<br>
+he has clothed the inmost workings of his heart; they know not
+how<br>
+frequently he has spoken aloud his secret thoughts, revealing, as
+though to<br>
+a dearest friend, the springs of his action, the causes of his
+sorrow, the<br>
+sources of his hope; they cannot believe by what a sympathy he is
+bound to<br>
+those who bow their heads above his pages; they do not think how
+the ideal<br>
+creations of his brain are like mutual friends between him and
+the world,<br>
+through whom he is known and felt and thought of, and by whom he
+reaps in<br>
+his own heart the rich harvest of flattery and kindness that are
+rarely<br>
+refused to any effort to please, however poor, however humble.
+They know<br>
+not this, nor can they feel the hopes, the fears, that stir
+within him, to<br>
+earn some passing word of praise; nor think they, when won, what
+brightness<br>
+around his humble hearth it may be shedding. These are the
+rewards for<br>
+nights of toil and days of thought; these are the recompenses
+which pay the<br>
+haggard cheek, the sunken eye, the racked and tired head. These
+are the<br>
+stakes for which one plays his health, his leisure, and his life,
+yet not<br>
+regrets the game.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly three years have now elapsed since I first made my bow
+before you.<br>
+How many events have crowded into that brief space! How many
+things of<br>
+vast moment have occurred! Only think that in the last few months
+you've<br>
+frightened the French; terrified M. Thiers; worried the Chinese;
+and are,<br>
+at this very moment, putting the Yankees into a "<i>most uncommon
+fix</i>;" not<br>
+to mention the minor occupations of ousting the Whigs;
+reinstating the<br>
+Tories, and making O'Connell Lord Mayor,&mdash;and yet, with all these
+and a<br>
+thousand other minor cares, you have not forgotten your poor
+friend, the<br>
+Irish Dragoon. Now this was really kind of you, and in my heart I
+thank you<br>
+for it.</p>
+
+<p>Do not, I entreat you, construe my gratitude into any sense of
+future<br>
+favors,&mdash;no such thing; for whatever may be my success with you
+hereafter,<br>
+I am truly deeply grateful for the past. Circumstances, into
+which I<br>
+need not enter, have made me for some years past a resident in a
+foreign<br>
+country, and as my lot has thrown me into a land where the
+reputation of<br>
+writing a book is pretty much on a par with that of picking a
+pocket, it<br>
+may readily be conceived with what warm thankfulness I have
+caught at any<br>
+little testimonies of your approval which chance may have thrown
+in my way.</p>
+
+<p>Like the reduced gentlewoman who, compelled by poverty to cry
+fresh eggs<br>
+through the streets, added after every call, "I hope nobody hears
+me;" so<br>
+I, finding it convenient, for a not very dissimilar reason, to
+write books,<br>
+keep my authorship as quietly to myself as need be, and comfort
+me with the<br>
+assurance that nobody knows me.</p>
+
+<p>A word now to my critics. Never had any man more reason to be
+satisfied<br>
+with that class than myself. As if you knew and cared for the
+temperament<br>
+of the man you were reviewing; as if you were aware of the fact
+that it was<br>
+at any moment in your power, by a single article of severe
+censure, to have<br>
+extinguished in him forever all effort, all ambition for
+success,&mdash;you have<br>
+mercifully extended to him the mildest treatment, and meted out
+even your<br>
+disparagement, with a careful measure.</p>
+
+<p>While I have studied your advice with attention, and read your
+criticisms<br>
+with care, I confess I have trembled more than once before your
+more<br>
+palpable praise; for I thought you might be hoaxing me.</p>
+
+<p>Now and then, to be sure, I have been accused of impressing
+real<br>
+individuals, and compelling them to serve in my book; that this
+reproach<br>
+was unjust, they who know me can best vouch for, while I myself
+can<br>
+honestly aver, that I never took a portrait without the consent
+of the<br>
+sitter.</p>
+
+<p>Others again have fallen foul of me, for treating of things,
+places, and<br>
+people with which I had no opportunity of becoming personally
+acquainted.<br>
+Thus one of my critics has showed that I could not have been a
+Trinity<br>
+College man; and another has denied my military matriculation.
+Now,<br>
+although both my Latin and my learning are on the peace
+establishment, and<br>
+if examined in the movements for cavalry, it is perfectly
+possible I should<br>
+be cautioned, yet as I have both a degree and a commission I
+might have<br>
+been spared this reproach.</p>
+
+<p>"Of coorse," says Father Malachi Brennan, who leans over my
+shoulder while<br>
+I write,&mdash;"of coorse you ought to know all about these things as
+well as<br>
+the Duke of Wellington or Marshal Soult himself. UNDE DERYVATUR
+MILES.<br>
+Ain't you in the Derry militia?" I hope the Latin and the
+translation will<br>
+satisfy every objection.</p>
+
+<p>While, then, I have nothing but thankfulness in my heart
+respecting the<br>
+entire press of my own country, I have a small grudge with my
+friends of<br>
+the far west; and as this is a season of complaint against the
+Yankees,<br>
+"Why shouldn't I roll my tub also?" A certain New York paper,
+called the<br>
+"Sunday Times," has thought fit for some time past to fill its
+columns with<br>
+a story of the Peninsular war, announcing it as "by the author of
+Charles<br>
+O'Malley." Heaven knows that injured individual has sins enough
+of his own<br>
+to answer for, without fathering a whole foundling hospital of
+American<br>
+balderdash; but this kidnapping spirit of brother Jonathan would
+seem to be<br>
+the fashion of the day! Not content with capturing Macleod, who
+unhappily<br>
+ventured within his frontier, he must come over to Ireland and
+lay hands<br>
+on Harry Lorrequer. Thus difficulties are thickening every day.
+When they<br>
+dispose of the colonel, then comes the boundary question; after
+that there<br>
+is Grogan's affair, then me. They may liberate Macleod; [3] they
+may<br>
+abandon the State of Maine,&mdash;but what recompense can be made to
+me for this<br>
+foul attack on my literary character? It has been suggested to me
+from the<br>
+Foreign Office that the editor might be hanged. I confess I
+should like<br>
+this; but after all it would be poor satisfaction for the injury
+done me.<br>
+Meanwhile, as Macleod has the <i>pas</i> of me, I'll wait patiently,
+and think<br>
+the matter over.</p>
+
+<p>[Footnote 3: I have just read that Macleod and Grogan have
+been liberated.<br>
+May I indulge a hope that <i>my</i> case will engage the sympathies of
+the<br>
+world during the Christmas holidays. H. L.]</p>
+
+<p>It was my intention, before taking leave of you, to have
+apologized<br>
+separately for many blunders in my book; but the errors of the
+press are<br>
+too palpable to be attributed to me. I have written letters
+without end,<br>
+begged, prayed, and entreated that more care might be bestowed;
+but<br>
+somehow, after all, they have crept in in spite of me. Indeed,
+latterly I<br>
+began to think I had found out the secret of it. My publisher,
+excellent<br>
+man, has a kind of pride about printing in Ireland, and he thinks
+the<br>
+blunders, like the green cover to the volume, give the thing a
+national<br>
+look. I think it was a countryman of mine of whom the story is
+told, that<br>
+he apologized for his spelling by the badness of his pen. This
+excuse, a<br>
+little extended, may explain away anacronisms, and if it won't I
+am sorry<br>
+for it, for I have no other.</p>
+
+<p>Here then I conclude: I must say, adieu! Yet can I not do so
+before I<br>
+again assure you that if perchance I may have lightened an hour
+of <i>your</i><br>
+solitude, you, my kind friends, have made happy whole weeks and
+days of<br>
+<i>mine</i>; and if happily I have called up a passing smile upon
+<i>your</i> lip,<br>
+your favor has spoken joy and gladness to many a heart around
+<i>my</i> board.<br>
+Is it, then, strange that I should be grateful for the past; be
+sorrowful<br>
+for the present?</p>
+
+<p>To one and all, then, a happy Christmas; and if before the new
+year, you<br>
+have not forgotten me, I shall be delighted to have your company
+at OUR<br>
+MESS.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile believe me most respectfully and faithfully
+yours,</p>
+
+<p>    HARRY LORREQUER.</p>
+
+<p>    BRUSSELS, November, 1841.</p>
+
+<p>THE END.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<p>End of Project Gutenberg's Charles O'Malley, Vol. 2, by
+Charles Lever</p>
+
+<p>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHARLES O'MALLEY, VOL.
+2 ***</p>
+
+<p>This file should be named 8mly210h.htm or 8mly210h.zip<br>
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER,
+8mly211h.htm<br>
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER,
+8mly210ah.htm</p>
+
+<p>Produced by David Widger, Jonathan Ingram, Charles Franks<br>
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team</p>
+
+<p>Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several
+printed<br>
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the
+US<br>
+unless a copyright notice is included.  Thus, we usually do
+not<br>
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.</p>
+
+<p>We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in
+advance<br>
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better
+editing.<br>
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or
+corrections,<br>
+even years after the official publication date.</p>
+
+<p>Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final
+til<br>
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such
+announcement.<br>
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is
+at<br>
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month.
+ A<br>
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion,
+comment<br>
+and editing by those who wish to do so.</p>
+
+<p>Most people start at our Web sites at:<br>
+http://gutenberg.net or<br>
+http://promo.net/pg</p>
+
+<p>These Web sites include award-winning information about
+Project<br>
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our
+new<br>
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).</p>
+
+<p>Those of you who want to download any eBook before
+announcement<br>
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date.  This
+is<br>
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as
+the<br>
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after
+an<br>
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.</p>
+
+<p>http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or<br>
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03</p>
+
+<p>Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or
+90</p>
+
+<p>Just search by the first five letters of the filename you
+want,<br>
+as it appears in our Newsletters.</p>
+
+<p>Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)</p>
+
+<p>We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work.
+ The<br>
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty
+hours<br>
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited,
+copyright<br>
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc.
+  Our<br>
+projected audience is one hundred million readers.  If the
+value<br>
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce
+$2<br>
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new
+text<br>
+files per month:  1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of
+4000+<br>
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in
+2002<br>
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the
+total<br>
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's
+end.</p>
+
+<p>The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion
+eBooks!<br>
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million
+readers,<br>
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer
+users.</p>
+
+<p>Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means
+estimated):</p>
+
+<p>eBooks Year Month</p>
+
+<p>    1  1971 July<br>
+   10  1991 January<br>
+  100  1994 January<br>
+ 1000  1997 August<br>
+ 1500  1998 October<br>
+ 2000  1999 December<br>
+ 2500  2000 December<br>
+ 3000  2001 November<br>
+ 4000  2001 October/November<br>
+ 6000  2002 December*<br>
+ 9000  2003 November*<br>
+10000  2004 January*</p>
+
+<p>The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been
+created<br>
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next
+millennium.</p>
+
+<p>We need your donations more than ever!</p>
+
+<p>As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from
+people<br>
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,<br>
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii,
+Illinois,<br>
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine,
+Massachusetts,<br>
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada,
+New<br>
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina,
+Ohio,<br>
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
+South<br>
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington,
+West<br>
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.</p>
+
+<p>We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only
+ones<br>
+that have responded.</p>
+
+<p>As the requirements for other states are met, additions to
+this list<br>
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional
+states.<br>
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.</p>
+
+<p>In answer to various questions we have received on this:</p>
+
+<p>We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to
+legally<br>
+request donations in all 50 states.  If your state is not listed
+and<br>
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you
+have,<br>
+just ask.</p>
+
+<p>While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where
+we are<br>
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against
+accepting<br>
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an
+offer to<br>
+donate.</p>
+
+<p>International donations are accepted, but we don't know
+ANYTHING about<br>
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made<br>
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there
+are<br>
+ways.</p>
+
+<p>Donations by check or money order may be sent to:</p>
+
+<p>Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation<br>
+PMB 113<br>
+1739 University Ave.<br>
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109</p>
+
+<p>Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or
+payment<br>
+method other than by check or money order.</p>
+
+<p>The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been
+approved by<br>
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with
+EIN<br>
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154.  Donations are<br>
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law.  As
+fund-raising<br>
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be<br>
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.</p>
+
+<p>We need your donations more than ever!</p>
+
+<p>You can get up to date donation information online at:</p>
+
+<p>http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html</p>
+
+<p>***</p>
+
+<p>If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,<br>
+you can always email directly to:</p>
+
+<p>Michael S. Hart &lt;hart@pobox.com&gt;</p>
+
+<p>Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.</p>
+
+<p>We would prefer to send you information by email.</p>
+
+<p>**The Legal Small Print**</p>
+
+<p>(Three Pages)</p>
+
+<p>***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN
+EBOOKS**START***<br>
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.<br>
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong
+with<br>
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from<br>
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our<br>
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement<br>
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how<br>
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.</p>
+
+<p>*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK<br>
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm<br>
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept<br>
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive<br>
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by<br>
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the
+person<br>
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical<br>
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your
+request.</p>
+
+<p>ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS<br>
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBooks,<br>
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S.
+Hart<br>
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").<br>
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States
+copyright<br>
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and<br>
+distribute it in the United States without permission and<br>
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth<br>
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook<br>
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.</p>
+
+<p>Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to
+market<br>
+any commercial products without permission.</p>
+
+<p>To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable<br>
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain<br>
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any<br>
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other<br>
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate
+or<br>
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other<br>
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged<br>
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer<br>
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.</p>
+
+<p>LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES<br>
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,<br>
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you
+may<br>
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook)
+disclaims<br>
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses,
+including<br>
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR<br>
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR
+CONTRACT,<br>
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL,
+PUNITIVE<br>
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE<br>
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.</p>
+
+<p>If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of<br>
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)<br>
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that<br>
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it<br>
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and<br>
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a
+replacement<br>
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may<br>
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to<br>
+receive it electronically.</p>
+
+<p>THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER<br>
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU
+AS<br>
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT<br>
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A<br>
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.</p>
+
+<p>Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties
+or<br>
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the<br>
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and
+you<br>
+may have other legal rights.</p>
+
+<p>INDEMNITY<br>
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,<br>
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated<br>
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm<br>
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense,
+including<br>
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the<br>
+following that you do or cause:  [1] distribution of this
+eBook,<br>
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,<br>
+or [3] any Defect.</p>
+
+<p>DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"<br>
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by<br>
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this<br>
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,<br>
+or:</p>
+
+<p>[1]  Only give exact copies of it.  Among other things,
+this<br>
+     requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the<br>
+     eBook or this "small print!" statement.  You may
+however,<br>
+     if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable<br>
+     binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,<br>
+     including any form resulting from conversion by word<br>
+     processing or hypertext software, but only so long as<br>
+     *EITHER*:</p>
+
+<p>     [*]  The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable,
+and<br>
+          does *not* contain characters other than those<br>
+          intended by the author of the work, although tilde<br>
+          (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may<br>
+          be used to convey punctuation intended by the<br>
+          author, and additional characters may be used to<br>
+          indicate hypertext links; OR</p>
+
+<p>     [*]  The eBook may be readily converted by the reader
+at<br>
+          no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent<br>
+          form by the program that displays the eBook (as is<br>
+          the case, for instance, with most word processors);<br>
+          OR</p>
+
+<p>     [*]  You provide, or agree to also provide on request
+at<br>
+          no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the<br>
+          eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in
+EBCDIC<br>
+          or other equivalent proprietary form).</p>
+
+<p>[2]  Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of
+this<br>
+     "Small Print!" statement.</p>
+
+<p>[3]  Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of
+the<br>
+     gross profits you derive calculated using the method you<br>
+     already use to calculate your applicable taxes.  If you<br>
+     don't derive profits, no royalty is due.  Royalties are<br>
+     payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation"<br>
+     the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were<br>
+     legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent<br>
+     periodic) tax return.  Please contact us beforehand to<br>
+     let us know your plans and to work out the details.</p>
+
+<p>WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE
+TO?<br>
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of<br>
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely
+distributed<br>
+in machine readable form.</p>
+
+<p>The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money,
+time,<br>
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.<br>
+Money should be paid to the:<br>
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."</p>
+
+<p>If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment
+or<br>
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:<br>
+hart@pobox.com</p>
+
+<p>[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted
+only<br>
+when distributed free of all fees.  Copyright (C) 2001, 2002
+by<br>
+Michael S. Hart.  Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not
+be<br>
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials
+be<br>
+they hardware or software or any other related product
+without<br>
+express permission.]</p>
+
+<p>*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN
+EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*</p>
+</body>
+</html>
+
+
+