Blue Lights: Hot Work in the Soudan by R. M. Ballantyne (famous ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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Mind is not so easily controlled as matter. Like a statue he stood there in body, but in mind he had again deserted his post. Yet not to so great a distance as before. He only went the length of Alexandria, and thought of Marion! The thought produced a glow, not of physical heatâthat was impossible to one whose temperature had already risen to the utmost attainable heightâbut a glow of soul. He became heroic! He remembered Marionâs burning words, and resolved that Duty should henceforth be his guiding-star!
Duty! His heart sank as he thought of the word, for the Something within him became suddenly active, and whispered, âHow about your duty to parents? You left them in a rage. You spent some time in Portsmouth, surrounded by good influences, and might have written home, but you didnât. You made some feeble attempts, indeed, but failed. You might have done it several times since you landed in this country, but you havenât. You know quite well that you have not fully repented even yet!â
While the whispering was going on, the active fancy of the youth saw the lovely face of Marion looking at him with mournful interest, as it had been the face of an angel, and then there came to his memory words which had been spoken to him that very day by his earnest friend Stevenson the marine: âNo man can fully do his duty to his fellows until he has begun to do his duty to God.â
The words had not been used in reference to himself but in connection with a discussion as to the motives generally which influence men. But the words were made use of by the Spirit as arrows to pierce the youthâs heart.
âGuilty!â he exclaimed aloud, and almost involuntary followed, âGod forgive me!â
Again the watchful ear distinguished unwonted sounds, and the sharp eyeâwonderfully sharpened by frequent dangerâperceived objects in motion on the plain. This time the objects were real. They approached. It was âthe roundsâ who visited the sentries six times during each night.
In another part of the ground, at a considerable distance from the spot where our hero mounted guard, stood a youthful soldier, also on guard, and thinking, no doubt, of home. He was much too young for service in such a climateâalmost a boy. He was a ruddy, healthy lad, with plenty of courage and high spirit, who was willing to encounter anything cheerfully, so long as, in so doing, he could serve his Queen and country. But he was careless of his own comfort and safety. Several times he had been found fault with for going out in the sun without his white helmet. Miles had taken a fancy to the lad, and had spoken seriously but very kindly to him that very day about the folly of exposing himself in a way that had already cost so many men their lives.
But young Lewis laughed good-naturedly, and said that he was too tough to be killed by the sun.
The suffocating heat of that night told upon him, however, severelyâtough though he was or supposed himself to beâwhile he kept his lonely watch on the sandy plain.
Presently a dark figure was seen approaching. The sentinel at once challenged, and brought his rifle to the âready.â The man, who was a native, gave the password all right, and made some apparently commonplace remark as he passed, which, coupled with his easy manner and the correct countersign, threw the young soldier off his guard. Suddenly a long sharp knife gleamed in the faint light and was drawn across the body of Lewis before he could raise a hand to defend himself. He fell instantly, mortally wounded, with his entrails cut open. At the same moment the tramp of the rounds was heard, and the native glided back into the darkness from which he had so recently emerged.
When the soldiers came to the post they found the poor young soldier dying. He was able to tell what had occurred while they were making preparations to carry him away, but when they reached the fort they found that his brief career had ended.
A damp was cast on the spirits of the men of his company when they learned next day what had occurred, for the lad had been a great favourite; but soldiers in time of war are too much accustomed to look upon death in every form to be deeply or for long affected by incidents of the kind. Only the comrades who had become unusually attached to this poor youth mourned his death as if he had been a brother in the flesh as well as in the ranks.
âHe was a good lad,â said Sergeant Gilroy, as they kept watch on the roof of the fort that night. âSince we came here he has never missed writing to his mother a single mail. It is true, being an amiable lad, and easily led through his affections, he had given way to drink to some extent, but no later than yesterday I prevailed upon him to join our temperance bandââ
âWhat? become a Blue Light!â exclaimed Sutherland, with something of a sneer in his tone.
âAh, comrade; and I hope to live to see you join our band also, and become one of the bluest lights among us,â returned the sergeant good-humouredly.
âNever!â replied Sutherland, with emphasis; âyouâll never live to see that.â
âPerhaps not, but if I donât live to see it some one else will,â rejoined the sergeant, laying his hand gently on the manâs shoulder.
âIs that you again? Itâs wishinâ I am that I had you in ould Ireland,â growled Corporal Flynn, referring to Osman Digna, whose men had opened fire on the neighbouring fort, and again roused the whole garrison. âSlape is out oâ the question wiâ such a muskitos buzzinâ about. Bad luck to âee!â
âWhat good would it do to send him to Ireland?â asked Simkin, as he yawned, rolled over, and, like the rest of his comrades, loaded his rifle.
âWhy, man, donât ye see, av he was in ould Ireland he couldnât be disturbinâ our nightâs rest here. Moreover, theyâd make a dacent man of âim there in no time. Itâs always the way; if an English blackguard goes over to Ireland heâs almost sure to return home more or less of a gintleman. Thatâs why Iâve always advised you to go over, boy. Anâ maybe if Osman wint heâdâ Hallo!â
A flash of light and whistling of bullets overhead effectually stopped the Irishmanâs discourse. Not that he was at all alarmed by the familiar incident, but being a change of subject it became more absorbingly interesting than the conversation, besides necessitating some active precautions.
The firing seemed to indicate an attack in several places along the line of defence. At one of the posts called the New House the attack was very sharp. The enemy could not have been much, if at all, over three hundred yards distant in the shelter of three large pits. Of course the fire was vigorously returned. A colonel and major were there on the redoubt, with powerful field-glasses, and directed the men where to fire until the General himself appeared on the scene and took command. On the left, from Quarantine Island, the Royal Engineers kept up a heavy cross-fire, and on the right they were helped by a fort which was manned by Egyptian troops. From these three points a heavy fire was kept up, and continued till six oâclock in the morning.
By that time, the enemy having been finally driven out of the pits, a party was sent across to see what execution had been done. It was wonderfully little, considering the amount of ammunition and energy expended. In the first pit one man was found dead; a bullet had entered his forehead and come out at the back of his head. Moving him a little on one side they found another man under him, shot in the same way. All round the pit inside were large pools of blood, but no bodies, for the natives invariably dragged or carried away their dead when that was possible. In the other two pits large pools of blood were also found, but no bodies. Beyond them, however, one man was discovered shot through the heart. He had evidently been dragged along the sand, but the tremendous fire of the defenders had compelled the enemy to drop him. Still further on they found twelve more corpses which had been dragged a short way and then left.
Close to these they observed that the sand had been disturbed, and on turning it up found that a dozen of bodies had been hastily buried there. Altogether they calculated that at least fifty of the enemy had been killed on that occasionâa calculation which was curiously verified by the friendly tribes asking permission to bury the dead according to the Soudanese custom. This was granted, of course, and thus the exact number killed was ascertained, but how many had been wounded no one could tell.
âFifty desolated homes!â remarked one of the men, when the number of killed was announced at mess that day. He was a cynical, sour-visaged man, who had just come out of hospital after a pretty severe illness. âFifty widows, may-hap,â he continued, âto say nothinâ oâ childânâthat are just as fond oâ husbands anâ fathers as ours are!â
âWhy, Jack Hall, if these are your sentiments you should never have enlisted,â cried Simkin, with a laugh.
âI âlisted when I was drunk,â returned Hall savagely.
âOch, then, it sarves ye right!â said Flynn. âEven a pig would be ashamed to do anythinâ whin it was in liquor.â
The corporalâs remark prevented the conversation taking a lugubrious turn, to the satisfaction of a few of the men who could not endure to look at anything from a serious point of view.
âWhatâs the use,â one of them asked, âof pullinâ a long face over what you canât change? Here we are, boys, to kill or be killed. My creed is, âTake things as they come, and be jolly!â It wonât mend matters to think about wives and childân.â
âWonât it?â cried Armstrong, looking up with a bright expression from a sheet of paper on which he had just been writing. âHere am I writinâ home to my wifeâin a hurry too, for Iâve only just heard that word has been passed, the mail for England goes to-day. Iâm warned for guard to-night, too; anâ if the night takes after the day weâre in for a chance oâ suffocation, to say nothing oâ insectsâas you all know. Now, wonât it mend matters that Iâve got a dear girl over the sea to think about, and to say âGod bless her, body and soul?ââ
âNo doubt,â retorted the take-things-as-they-come-and-be-jolly man, âbutâbutââ
âBut,â cried Hall, coming promptly to his rescue, âhave not the Soudanese got wives anâ children as well as us?â
âI daresay they haveâsome of âem.â
âWell, does the thought of your respective wives anâ children prevent your shooting or sticking each other when you get the chance?â
âOf course it donât!â returned Armstrong, with a laugh as he resumed his pencil. âWhat would be the use oâ cominâ here if we didnât do that? But I havenât time to argue with you just now, Hall. All I know is that itâs my duty to write to my wife, anâ I wonât let the chance slip when Iâve got it.â
âBah!â exclaimed the cynic, relighting his pipe, which in the heat of debate he had allowed to go out.
Several of the other men, having been reminded of the mail by the conversation, also betook themselves to pen and pencil, though their hands were more familiar with rifle and bayonet. Among these was Miles Milton. Mindful of his recent thoughts, and re-impressed with the word Duty, which his friend had just emphasised, he sat down and wrote a distinctly self-condemnatory letter
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