It was a dull October morning, and
heavy, rolling fog-wreaths lay low over the wet grey
roofs of the Woolwich houses. Down in the long,
brick-lined streets all was sodden and greasy and cheerless.
From the high dark buildings of the arsenal came
the whirr of many wheels, the thudding of weights,
and the buzz and babel of human toil. Beyond,
the dwellings of the workingmen, smoke-stained and
unlovely, radiated away in a lessening perspective
of narrowing road and dwindling wall.
There were few folk in the streets,
for the toilers had all been absorbed since break
of day by the huge smoke-spouting monster, which sucked
in the manhood of the town, to belch it forth weary
and work-stained every night. Little groups
of children straggled to school, or loitered to peep
through the single, front windows at the big, gilt-edged
Bibles, balanced upon small, three-legged tables, which
were their usual adornment. Stout women, with
thick, red arms and dirty aprons, stood upon the whitened
doorsteps, leaning upon their brooms, and shrieking
their morning greetings across the road. One
stouter, redder, and dirtier than the rest, had gathered
a small knot of cronies around her and was talking
energetically, with little shrill titters from her
audience to punctuate her remarks.
“Old enough to know better!”
she cried, in answer to an exclamation from one of
the listeners. “If he hain’t no sense
now, I ’specs he won’t learn much on this
side o’ Jordan. Why, ’ow old is he
at all? Blessed if I could ever make out.”
“Well, it ain’t so hard
to reckon,” said a sharp-featured pale-faced
woman with watery blue eyes. “He’s
been at the battle o’ Waterloo, and has the
pension and medal to prove it.”
“That were a ter’ble long
time agone,” remarked a third. “It
were afore I were born.”
“It were fifteen year after
the beginnin’ of the century,” cried a
younger woman, who had stood leaning against the wall,
with a smile of superior knowledge upon her face.
“My Bill was a-saying so last Sabbath, when
I spoke to him o’ old Daddy Brewster, here.”
“And suppose he spoke truth,
Missus Simpson, ’ow long agone do that make
it?”
“It’s eighty-one now,”
said the original speaker, checking off the years
upon her coarse red fingers, “and that were fifteen.
Ten and ten, and ten, and ten, and ten why,
it’s only sixty-and-six year, so he ain’t
so old after all.”
“But he weren’t a newborn
babe at the battle, silly!” cried the young
woman with a chuckle. “S’pose he
were only twenty, then he couldn’t be less than
six-and-eighty now, at the lowest.”
“Aye, he’s that every day of
it,” cried several.
“I’ve had ’bout
enough of it,” remarked the large woman gloomily.
“Unless his young niece, or grandniece, or whatever
she is, come to-day, I’m off, and he can find
some one else to do his work. Your own ’ome
first, says I.”
“Ain’t he quiet, then,
Missus Simpson?” asked the youngest of the group.
“Listen to him now,” she
answered, with her hand half raised and her head turned
slantwise towards the open door. From the upper
floor there came a shuffling, sliding sound with a
sharp tapping of a stick. “There he go
back and forrards, doing what he call his sentry go.
’Arf the night through he’s at that game,
the silly old juggins. At six o’clock
this very mornin there he was beatin’ with a
stick at my door. ‘Turn out, guard!’
he cried, and a lot more jargon that I could make
nothing of. Then what with his coughin’
and ‘awkin’ and spittin’, there
ain’t no gettin’ a wink o’ sleep.
Hark to him now!”
“Missus Simpson, Missus Simpson!”
cried a cracked and querulous voice from above.
“That’s him!” she
cried, nodding her head with an air of triumph.
“He do go on somethin’ scandalous.
Yes, Mr. Brewster, sir.”
“I want my morning ration, Missus Simpson.”
“It’s just ready, Mr. Brewster, sir.”
“Blessed if he ain’t like
a baby cryin’ for its pap,” said the young
woman.
“I feel as if I could shake
his old bones up sometimes!” cried Mrs. Simpson
viciously. “But who’s for a ’arf
of fourpenny?”
The whole company were about to shuffle
off to the public house, when a young girl stepped
across the road and touched the housekeeper timidly
upon the arm. “I think that is N Arsenal
View,” she said. “Can you tell me
if Mr. Brewster lives here?”
The housekeeper looked critically
at the newcomer. She was a girl of about twenty,
broad-faced and comely, with a turned-up nose and large,
honest grey eyes. Her print dress, her straw
hat, with its bunch of glaring poppies, and the bundle
she carried, had all a smack of the country.
“You’re Norah Brewster,
I s’pose,” said Mrs. Simpson, eyeing her
up and down with no friendly gaze.
“Yes, I’ve come to look after my Granduncle
Gregory.”
“And a good job too,”
cried the housekeeper, with a toss of her head.
“It’s about time that some of his own folk
took a turn at it, for I’ve had enough of it.
There you are, young woman! In you go and make
yourself at home. There’s tea in the caddy
and bacon on the dresser, and the old man will be
about you if you don’t fetch him his breakfast.
I’ll send for my things in the evenin’.”
With a nod she strolled off with her attendant gossips
in the direction of the public house.
Thus left to her own devices, the
country girl walked into the front room and took off
her hat and jacket. It was a low-roofed apartment
with a sputtering fire upon which a small brass kettle
was singing cheerily. A stained cloth lay over
half the table, with an empty brown teapot, a loaf
of bread, and some coarse crockery. Norah Brewster
looked rapidly about her, and in an instant took over
her new duties. Ere five minutes had passed the
tea was made, two slices of bacon were frizzling on
the pan, the table was rearranged, the antimacassars
straightened over the sombre brown furniture, and the
whole room had taken a new air of comfort and neatness.
This done she looked round curiously at the prints
upon the walls. Over the fireplace, in a small,
square case, a brown medal caught her eye, hanging
from a strip of purple ribbon. Beneath was a
slip of newspaper cutting. She stood on her
tiptoes, with her fingers on the edge of the mantelpiece,
and craned her neck up to see it, glancing down from
time to time at the bacon which simmered and hissed
beneath her. The cutting was yellow with age,
and ran in this way:
“On Tuesday an interesting ceremony
was performed at the barracks of the Third Regiment
of Guards, when, in the presence of the Prince Regent,
Lord Hill, Lord Saltoun, and an assemblage which comprised
beauty as well as valour, a special medal was presented
to Corporal Gregory Brewster, of Captain Haldane’s
flank company, in recognition of his gallantry in
the recent great battle in the Lowlands. It appears
that on the ever-memorable 18th of June four companies
of the Third Guards and of the Coldstreams, under
the command of Colonels Maitland and Byng, held the
important farmhouse of Hougoumont at the right of
the British position. At a critical point of
the action these troops found themselves short of
powder. Seeing that Generals Foy and Jerome
Buonaparte were again massing their infantry for an
attack on the position, Colonel Byng dispatched Corporal
Brewster to the rear to hasten up the reserve ammunition.
Brewster came upon two powder tumbrils of the Nassau
division, and succeeded, after menacing the drivers
with his musket, in inducing them to convey their powder
to Hougoumont. In his absence, however, the
hedges surrounding the position had been set on fire
by a howitzer battery of the French, and the passage
of the carts full of powder became a most hazardous
matter. The first tumbril exploded, blowing the
driver to fragments. Daunted by the fate of
his comrade, the second driver turned his horses, but
Corporal Brewster, springing upon his seat, hurled
the man down, and urging the powder cart through the
flames, succeeded in forcing his way to his companions.
To this gallant deed may be directly attributed the
success of the British arms, for without powder it
would have been impossible to have held Hougoumont,
and the Duke of Wellington had repeatedly declared
that had Hougoumont fallen, as well as La Haye Sainte,
he would have found it impossible to have held his
ground. Long may the heroic Brewster live to
treasure the medal which he has so bravely won, and
to look back with pride to the day when, in the presence
of his comrades, he received this tribute to his valour
from the august hands of the first gentleman of the
realm.”
The reading of this old cutting increased
in the girl’s mind the veneration which she
had always had for her warrior kinsman. From
her infancy he had been her hero, and she remembered
how her father used to speak of his courage and his
strength, how he could strike down a bullock with
a blow of his fist and carry a fat sheep under either
arm. True, she had never seen him, but a rude
painting at home which depicted a square-faced, clean
shaven, stalwart man with a great bearskin cap, rose
ever before her memory when she thought of him.
She was still gazing at the brown
medal and wondering what the “Dulce et decorum
est” might mean, which was inscribed upon
the edge, when there came a sudden tapping and shuffling
upon the stair, and there at the door was standing
the very man who had been so often in her thoughts.
But could this indeed be he?
Where was the martial air, the flashing eye, the
warrior face which she had pictured? There, framed
in the doorway, was a huge twisted old man, gaunt
and puckered, with twitching hands and shuffling,
purposeless feet. A cloud of fluffy white hair,
a red-veined nose, two thick tufts of eyebrow and
a pair of dimly questioning, watery blue eyes these
were what met her gaze. He leaned forward upon
a stick, while his shoulders rose and fell with his
crackling, rasping breathing.
“I want my morning rations,”
he crooned, as he stumped forward to his chair.
“The cold nips me without ’em. See
to my fingers!” He held out his distorted hands,
all blue at the tips, wrinkled and gnarled, with huge,
projecting knuckles.
“It’s nigh ready,”
answered the girl, gazing at him with wonder in her
eyes. “Don’t you know who I am, granduncle?
I am Norah Brewster from Witham.”
“Rum is warm,” mumbled
the old man, rocking to and fro in his chair, “and
schnapps is warm, and there’s ‘eat in soup,
but it’s a dish o’ tea for me. What
did you say your name was?”
“Norah Brewster.”
“You can speak out, lass.
Seems to me folk’s voices isn’t as loud
as they used.”
“I’m Norah Brewster, uncle.
I’m your grandniece come down from Essex way
to live with you.”
“You’ll be brother Jarge’s
girl! Lor, to think o’ little Jarge having
a girl!” He chuckled hoarsely to himself, and
the long, stringy sinews of his throat jerked and
quivered.
“I am the daughter of your brother
George’s son,” said she, as she turned
the bacon.
“Lor, but little Jarge was a
rare un!” he continued. “Eh, by Jimini,
there was no chousing Jarge. He’s got a
bull pup o’ mine that I gave him when I took
the bounty. You’ve heard him speak of it,
likely?”
“Why, grandpa George has been
dead this twenty year,” said she, pouring out
the tea.
“Well, it was a bootiful pup aye,
a well-bred un, by Jimini! I’m cold for
lack o’ my rations. Rum is good, and so
is schnapps, but I’d as lief have tea as either.”
He breathed heavily while he devoured
his food. “It’s a middlin’
goodish way you’ve come,” said he at last.
“Likely the stage left yesternight.”
“The what, uncle?”
“The coach that brought you.”
“Nay, I came by the mornin’ train.”
“Lor, now, think o’ that!
You ain’t afeard o’ those newfangled things!
By Jimini, to think of you comin’ by railroad
like that! What’s the world a-comin’
to!”
There was silence for some minutes
while Norah sat stirring her tea and glancing sideways
at the bluish lips and champing jaws of her companion.
“You must have seen a deal o’
life, uncle,” said she. “It must
seem a long, long time to you!”
“Not so very long neither.
I’m ninety, come Candlemas; but it don’t
seem long since I took the bounty. And that battle,
it might have been yesterday. Eh, but I get
a power o’ good from my rations!” He did
indeed look less worn and colourless than when she
first saw him. His face was flushed and his
back more erect.
“Have you read that?”
he asked, jerking his head towards the cutting.
“Yes, uncle, and I’m sure you must be
proud of it.”
“Ah, it was a great day for
me! A great day! The Regent was there,
and a fine body of a man too! ‘The ridgment
is proud of you,’ says he. ‘And I’m
proud of the ridgment,’ say I. ‘A
damned good answer too!’ says he to Lord Hill,
and they both bu’st out a-laughin’.
But what be you a-peepin’ out o’ the
window for?”
“Oh, uncle, here’s a regiment
of soldiers coming down the street with the band playing
in front of them.”
“A ridgment, eh? Where
be my glasses? Lor, but I can hear the band,
as plain as plain! Here’s the pioneers
an’ the drum-major! What be their number,
lass?” His eyes were shining and his bony yellow
fingers, like the claws of some fierce old bird, dug
into her shoulder.
“They don’t seem to have
no number, uncle. They’ve something wrote
on their shoulders. Oxfordshire, I think it
be.”
“Ah, yes!” he growled.
“I heard as they’d dropped the numbers
and given them newfangled names. There they
go, by Jimini! They’re young mostly, but
they hain’t forgot how to march. They have
the swing-aye, I’ll say that for them.
They’ve got the swing.” He gazed
after them until the last files had turned the corner
and the measured tramp of their marching had died
away in the distance.
He had just regained his chair when
the door opened and a gentleman stepped in.
“Ah, Mr. Brewster! Better to-day?”
he asked.
“Come in, doctor! Yes,
I’m better. But there’s a deal o’
bubbling in my chest. It’s all them toobes.
If I could but cut the phlegm, I’d be right.
Can’t you give me something to cut the phlegm?”
The doctor, a grave-faced young man,
put his fingers to the furrowed, blue-corded wrist.
“You must be careful,”
he said. “You must take no liberties.”
The thin tide of life seemed to thrill rather than
to throb under his finger.
The old man chuckled.
“I’ve got brother Jarge’s
girl to look after me now. She’ll see I
don’t break barracks or do what I hadn’t
ought to. Why, darn my skin, I knew something
was amiss!
“With what?”
“Why, with them soldiers.
You saw them pass, doctor eh? They’d
forgot their stocks. Not one on ’em had
his stock on.” He croaked and chuckled
for a long time over his discovery. “It
wouldn’t ha’ done for the Dook!”
he muttered. “No, by Jimini! the Dook would
ha’ had a word there.”
The doctor smiled. “Well,
you are doing very well,” said he. “I’ll
look in once a week or so, and see how you are.”
As Norah followed him to the door, he beckoned her
outside.
“He is very weak,” he
whispered. “If you find him failing you
must send for me.”
“What ails him, doctor?”
“Ninety years ails him.
His arteries are pipes of lime. His heart is
shrunken and flabby. The man is worn out.”
Norah stood watching the brisk figure
of the young doctor, and pondering over these new
responsibilities which had come upon her. When
she turned a tall, brown-faced artilleryman, with the
three gold chevrons of sergeant upon his arm,
was standing, carbine in hand, at her elbow.
“Good-morning, miss,”
said he, raising one thick finger to his jaunty, yellow-banded
cap. “I b’lieve there’s an
old gentleman lives here of the name of Brewster,
who was engaged in the battle o’ Waterloo?”
“It’s my granduncle, sir,”
said Norah, casting down her eyes before the keen,
critical gaze of the young soldier. “He
is in the front parlour.”
“Could I have a word with him,
miss? I’ll call again if it don’t
chance to be convenient.”
“I am sure that he would be
very glad to see you, sir. He’s in here,
if you’ll step in. Uncle, here’s
a gentleman who wants to speak with you.”
“Proud to see you, sir proud
and glad, sir,” cried the sergeant, taking three
steps forward into the room, and grounding his carbine
while he raised his hand, palm forwards, in a salute.
Norah stood by the door, with her mouth and eyes
open, wondering if her granduncle had ever, in his
prime, looked like this magnificent creature, and whether
he, in his turn, would ever come to resemble her granduncle.
The old man blinked up at his visitor,
and shook his head slowly. “Sit ye down,
sergeant,” said he, pointing with his stick to
a chair. “You’re full young for the
stripes. Lordy, it’s easier to get three
now than one in my day. Gunners were old soldiers
then and the grey hairs came quicker than the three
stripes.”
“I am eight years’ service,
sir,” cried the sergeant. “Macdonald
is my name Sergeant Macdonald, of H Battery,
Southern Artillery Division. I have called as
the spokesman of my mates at the gunner’s barracks
to say that we are proud to have you in the town,
sir.”
Old Brewster chuckled and rubbed his
bony hands. “That were what the Regent
said,” he cried. “‘The ridgment
is proud of ye,’ says he. ’And I
am proud of the ridgment,’ says I. ‘And
a damned good answer too,’ says he, and he and
Lord Hill bu’st out a-laughin’.”
“The non-commissioned mess would
be proud and honoured to see you, sir,” said
Sergeant Macdonald; “and if you could step as
far you’ll always find a pipe o’ baccy
and a glass o’ grog a-waitin’ you.”
The old man laughed until he coughed.
“Like to see me, would they? The dogs!”
said he. “Well, well, when the warm weather
comes again I’ll maybe drop in. Too grand
for a canteen, eh? Got your mess just the same
as the orficers. What’s the world a-comin’
to at all!”
“You was in the line, sir, was
you not?” asked the sergeant respectfully.
“The line?” cried the
old man, with shrill scorn. “Never wore
a shako in my life. I am a guardsman, I am.
Served in the Third Guards the same they
call now the Scots Guards. Lordy, but they have
all marched away every man of them from
old Colonel Byng down to the drummer boys, and here
am I a straggler that’s what I am,
sergeant, a straggler! I’m here when I
ought to be there. But it ain’t my fault
neither, for I’m ready to fall in when the word
comes.”
“We’ve all got to muster
there,” answered the sergeant. “Won’t
you try my baccy, sir?” handing over a sealskin
pouch.
Old Brewster drew a blackened clay
pipe from his pocket, and began to stuff the tobacco
into the bowl. In an instant it slipped through
his fingers, and was broken to pieces on the floor.
His lip quivered, his nose puckered up, and he began
crying with the long, helpless sobs of a child.
“I’ve broke my pipe,” he cried.
“Don’t, uncle; oh, don’t!”
cried Norah, bending over him, and patting his white
head as one soothes a baby. “It don’t
matter. We can easy get another.”
“Don’t you fret yourself,
sir,” said the sergeant. “’Ere’s
a wooden pipe with an amber mouth, if you’ll
do me the honour to accept it from me. I’d
be real glad if you will take it.”
“Jimini!” cried he, his
smiles breaking in an instant through his tears.
“It’s a fine pipe. See to my new
pipe, Norah. I lay that Jarge never had a pipe
like that. You’ve got your firelock there,
sergeant?”
“Yes, sir. I was on my
way back from the butts when I looked in.”
“Let me have the feel of it.
Lordy, but it seems like old times to have one’s
hand on a musket. What’s the manual, sergeant,
eh? Cock your firelock look to your
priming present your firelock eh,
sergeant? Oh, Jimini, I’ve broke your musket
in halves!”
“That’s all right, sir,”
cried the gunner laughing. “You pressed
on the lever and opened the breech-piece. That’s
where we load ’em, you know.”
“Load ’em at the wrong
end! Well, well, to think o’ that!
And no ramrod neither! I’ve heard tell
of it, but I never believed it afore. Ah! it
won’t come up to brown Bess. When there’s
work to be done, you mark my word and see if they
don’t come back to brown Bess.”
“By the Lord, sir!” cried
the sergeant hotly, “they need some change out
in South Africa now. I see by this mornin’s
paper that the Government has knuckled under to these
Boers. They’re hot about it at the non-com.
mess, I can tell you, sir.”
“Eh eh,” croaked
old Brewster. “By Jimini! it wouldn’t
ha’ done for the Dook; the Dook would ha’
had a word to say over that.”
“Ah, that he would, sir!”
cried the sergeant; “and God send us another
like him. But I’ve wearied you enough for
one sitting. I’ll look in again, and I’ll
bring a comrade or two with me, if I may, for there
isn’t one but would be proud to have speech with
you.”
So, with another salute to the veteran
and a gleam of white teeth at Norah, the big gunner
withdrew, leaving a memory of blue cloth and of gold
braid behind him. Many days had not passed, however,
before he was back again, and during all the long
winter he was a frequent visitor at Arsenal View.
There came a time, at last, when it might be doubted
to which of the two occupants his visits were directed,
nor was it hard to say by which he was most anxiously
awaited. He brought others with him; and soon,
through all the lines, a pilgrimage to Daddy Brewster’s
came to be looked upon as the proper thing to do.
Gunners and sappers, linesmen and dragoons, came
bowing and bobbing into the little parlour, with clatter
of side arms and clink of spurs, stretching their
long legs across the patchwork rug, and hunting in
the front of their tunics for the screw of tobacco
or paper of snuff which they had brought as a sign
of their esteem.
It was a deadly cold winter, with
six weeks on end of snow on the ground, and Norah
had a hard task to keep the life in that time-worn
body. There were times when his mind would leave
him, and when, save an animal outcry when the hour
of his meals came round, no word would fall from him.
He was a white-haired child, with all a child’s
troubles and emotions. As the warm weather came
once more, however, and the green buds peeped forth
again upon the trees, the blood thawed in his veins,
and he would even drag himself as far as the door to
bask in the life-giving sunshine.
“It do hearten me up so,”
he said one morning, as he glowed in the hot May sun.
“It’s a job to keep back the flies, though.
They get owdacious in this weather, and they do plague
me cruel.”
“I’ll keep them off you, uncle,”
said Norah.
“Eh, but it’s fine!
This sunshine makes me think o’ the glory to
come. You might read me a bit o’ the Bible,
lass. I find it wonderful soothing.”
“What part would you like, uncle?”
“Oh, them wars.”
“The wars?”
“Aye, keep to the wars!
Give me the Old Testament for choice. There’s
more taste to it, to my mind. When parson comes
he wants to get off to something else; but it’s
Joshua or nothing with me. Them Israelites was
good soldiers good growed soldiers, all
of ’em.”
“But, uncle,” pleaded Norah, “it’s
all peace in the next world.”
“No, it ain’t, gal.”
“Oh, yes, uncle, surely!”
The old corporal knocked his stick
irritably upon the ground. “I tell ye
it ain’t, gal. I asked parson.”
“Well, what did he say?”
“He said there was to be a last
fight. He even gave it a name, he did.
The battle of Arm Arm ”
“Armageddon.”
“Aye, that’s the name
parson said. I ’specs the Third Guards’ll
be there. And the Dook the Dook’ll
have a word to say.”
An elderly, grey-whiskered gentleman
had been walking down the street, glancing up at the
numbers of the houses. Now as his eyes fell upon
the old man, he came straight for him.
“Hullo!” said he; “perhaps you are
Gregory Brewster?”
“My name, sir,” answered the veteran.
“You are the same Brewster,
as I understand, who is on the roll of the Scots Guards
as having been present at the battle of Waterloo?”
“I am that man, sir, though
we called it the Third Guards in those days.
It was a fine ridgment, and they only need me to make
up a full muster.”
“Tut, tut! they’ll have
to wait years for that,” said the gentleman
heartily. “But I am the colonel of the
Scots Guards, and I thought I would like to have a
word with you.”
Old Gregory Brewster was up in an
instant, with his hand to his rabbit-skin cap.
“God bless me!” he cried, “to think
of it! to think of it!”
“Hadn’t the gentleman
better come in?” suggested the practical Norah
from behind the door.
“Surely, sir, surely; walk in,
sir, if I may be so bold.” In his excitement
he had forgotten his stick, and as he led the way into
the parlour his knees tottered, and he threw out his
hands. In an instant the colonel had caught
him on one side and Norah on the other.
“Easy and steady,” said
the colonel, as he led him to his armchair.
“Thank ye, sir; I was near gone
that time. But, Lordy I why, I can scarce believe
it. To think of me the corporal of the flank
company and you the colonel of the battalion!
How things come round, to be sure!”
“Why, we are very proud of you
in London,” said the colonel. “And
so you are actually one of the men who held Hougoumont.”
He looked at the bony, trembling hands, with their
huge, knotted knuckles, the stringy throat, and the
heaving, rounded shoulders. Could this, indeed,
be the last of that band of heroes? Then he
glanced at the half-filled phials, the blue liniment
bottles, the long-spouted kettle, and the sordid details
of the sick room. “Better, surely, had
he died under the blazing rafters of the Belgian farmhouse,”
thought the colonel.
“I hope that you are pretty
comfortable and happy,” he remarked after a
pause.
“Thank ye, sir. I have
a good deal o’ trouble with my toobes a
deal o’ trouble. You wouldn’t think
the job it is to cut the phlegm. And I need
my rations. I gets cold without ’em.
And the flies! I ain’t strong enough
to fight against them.”
“How’s the memory?” asked the colonel.
“Oh, there ain’t nothing
amiss there. Why, sir, I could give you the
name of every man in Captain Haldane’s flank
company.”
“And the battle you remember it?”
“Why, I sees it all afore me
every time I shuts my eyes. Lordy, sir, you
wouldn’t hardly believe how clear it is to me.
There’s our line from the paregoric bottle
right along to the snuff box. D’ye see?
Well, then, the pill box is for Hougoumont on the right where
we was and Norah’s thimble for La
Haye Sainte. There it is, all right, sir; and
here were our guns, and here behind the reserves and
the Belgians. Ach, them Belgians!”
He spat furiously into the fire. “Then
here’s the French, where my pipe lies; and over
here, where I put my baccy pouch, was the Proosians
a-comin’ up on our left flank. Jimini,
but it was a glad sight to see the smoke of their guns!”
“And what was it that struck
you most now in connection with the whole affair?”
asked the colonel.
“I lost three half-crowns over
it, I did,” crooned old Brewster. “I
shouldn’t wonder if I was never to get that money
now. I lent ’em to Jabez Smith, my rear
rank man, in Brussels. ‘Only till pay-day,
Grig,’ says he. By Gosh! he was stuck
by a lancer at Quatre Bras, and me with not so much
as a slip o’ paper to prove the debt! Them
three half-crowns is as good as lost to me.”
The colonel rose from his chair laughing.
“The officers of the Guards want you to buy
yourself some little trifle which may add to your
comfort,” he said. “It is not from
me, so you need not thank me.” He took
up the old man’s tobacco pouch and slipped a
crisp banknote inside it.
“Thank ye kindly, sir.
But there’s one favour that I would like to
ask you, colonel.”
“Yes, my man.”
“If I’m called, colonel,
you won’t grudge me a flag and a firing party?
I’m not a civilian; I’m a guardsman I’m
the last of the old Third Guards.”
“All right, my man, I’ll
see to it,” said the colonel. “Good-bye;
I hope to have nothing but good news from you.”
“A kind gentleman, Norah,”
croaked old Brewster, as they saw him walk past the
window; “but, Lordy, he ain’t fit to hold
the stirrup o’ my Colonel Byng!”
It was on the very next day that the
old corporal took a sudden change for the worse.
Even the golden sunlight streaming through the window
seemed unable to warm that withered frame. The
doctor came and shook his head in silence. All
day the man lay with only his puffing blue lips and
the twitching of his scraggy neck to show that he still
held the breath of life. Norah and Sergeant
Macdonald had sat by him in the afternoon, but he
had shown no consciousness of their presence.
He lay peacefully, his eyes half closed, his hands
under his cheek, as one who is very weary.
They had left him for an instant and
were sitting in the front room, where Norah was preparing
tea, when of a sudden they heard a shout that rang
through the house. Loud and clear and swelling,
it pealed in their ears a voice full of
strength and energy and fiery passion. “The
Guards need powder!” it cried; and yet again,
“The Guards need powder!”
The sergeant sprang from his chair
and rushed in, followed by the trembling Norah.
There was the old man standing up, his blue eyes
sparkling, his white hair bristling, his whole figure
towering and expanding, with eagle head and glance
of fire. “The Guards need powder!”
he thundered once again, “and, by God, they shall
have it!” He threw up his long arms, and sank
back with a groan into his chair. The sergeant
stooped over him, and his face darkened.
“Oh, Archie, Archie,”
sobbed the frightened girl, “what do you think
of him?”
The sergeant turned away. “I
think,” said he, “that the Third Guards
have a full muster now.”