Of my travelling companions I have
already told my readers something. Power is now
an old acquaintance; to Sparks I have already presented
them; of the adjutant they are not entirely ignorant;
and it therefore only remains for me to introduce
to their notice Major Monsoon. I should have some
scruple for the digression which this occasions in
my narrative, were it not that with the worthy major
I was destined to meet subsequently; and indeed served
under his orders for some months in the Peninsula.
When Major Monsoon had entered the army or in what
precise capacity, I never yet met the man who could
tell. There were traditionary accounts of his
having served in the East Indies and in Canada in
times long past. His own peculiar reminiscences
extended to nearly every regiment in the service,
“horse, foot, and dragoons.” There
was not a clime he had not basked in; not an engagement
he had not witnessed. His memory, or, if you will,
his invention, was never at fault; and from the siege
of Seringapatam to the battle of Corunna he was perfect.
Besides this, he possessed a mind retentive of even
the most trifling details of his profession, from
the formation of a regiment to the introduction of
a new button, from the laying down of a parallel to
the price of a camp-kettle, he knew it all. To
be sure, he had served in the commissary-general’s
department for a number of years, and nothing instils
such habits as this.
“The commissaries are to the
army what the special pleaders are to the bar,”
observed my friend Power, “dry dogs,
not over creditable on the whole, but devilish useful.”
The major had begun life a two-bottle
man; but by a studious cultivation of his natural
gifts, and a steady determination to succeed, he had,
at the time I knew him, attained to his fifth.
It need not be wondered at, then, that his countenance
bore some traces of his habits. It was of a deep
sunset-purple, which, becoming tropical, at the tip
of the nose verged almost upon a plum-color; his mouth
was large, thick-lipped, and good-humored; his voice
rich, mellow, and racy, and contributed, with the
aid of a certain dry, chuckling laugh, greatly to increase
the effect of the stories which he was ever ready
to recount; and as they most frequently bore in some
degree against some of what he called his little failings,
they were ever well received, no man being so popular
with the world as he who flatters its vanity at his
own expense. To do this the major was ever ready,
but at no time more so than when the evening wore late,
and the last bottle of his series seemed to imply
that any caution regarding the nature of his communication
was perfectly unnecessary. Indeed, from the commencement
of his evening to the close, he seemed to pass through
a number of mental changes, all in a manner preparing
him for this final consummation, when he confessed
anything and everything; and so well regulated had
those stages become, that a friend dropping in upon
him suddenly could at once pronounce from the tone
of his conversation on what precise bottle the major
was then engaged.
Thus, in the outset he was gastronomic, discussed
the dinner from the soup to the Stilton; criticised
the cutlets; pronounced upon the merits of the mutton;
and threw out certain vague hints that he would one
day astonish the world by a little volume upon cookery.
With bottle N he took leave of
the cuisine, and opened his battery upon the
wine. Bordeaux, Burgundy, hock, and hermitage,
all passed in review before him, their
flavor discussed, their treatment descanted upon,
their virtues extolled; from humble port to imperial
tokay, he was thoroughly conversant with all,
and not a vintage escaped as to when the sun had suffered
eclipse, or when a comet had wagged his tail over it.
With N he became pipeclay, talked
army list and eighteen manoeuvres, lamented the various
changes in equipments which modern innovation had
introduced, and feared the loss of pigtails might sap
the military spirit of the nation.
With N his anecdotic powers came
into play, he recounted various incidents
of the war with his own individual adventures and experience,
told with an honest naïveté, that proved personal
vanity; indeed, self-respect never marred the interest
of the narrative, besides, as he had ever regarded
a campaign something in the light of a foray, and esteemed
war as little else than a pillage excursion, his sentiments
were singularly amusing.
With his last bottle, those feelings
that seemed inevitably connected with whatever is
last appeared to steal over him, a tinge
of sadness for pleasures fast passing and nearly passed,
a kind of retrospective glance at the fallacy of all
our earthly enjoyments, insensibly suggesting moral
and edifying reflections, led him by degrees to confess
that he was not quite satisfied with himself, though
“not very bad for a commissary;” and finally,
as the decanter waxed low, he would interlard his meditations
by passages of Scripture, singularly perverted by
his misconception from their true meaning, and alternately
throwing out prospects of censure or approval.
Such was Major Monsoon; and to conclude in his own
words this brief sketch, he “would have been
an excellent officer if Providence had not made him
such a confounded, drunken, old scoundrel.”
“Now, then, for the King of
Spain’s story. Out with it, old boy; we
are all good men and true here,” cried Power,
as we slowly came along upon the tide up the Tagus,
“so you’ve nothing to fear.”
“Upon my life,” replied
the major, “I don’t half like the tone
of our conversation. There is a certain freedom
young men affect now a-days regarding morals that
is not at all to my taste. When I was five or
six and twenty ”
“You were the greatest scamp in the service,”
cried Power.
“Fie, fie, Fred. If I was a
little wild or so,” here the major’s
eyes twinkled maliciously, “it was
the ladies that spoiled me; I was always something
of a favorite, just like our friend Sparks there.
Not that we fared very much alike in our little adventures;
for somehow, I believe I was generally in fault in
most of mine, as many a good man and many an excellent
man has been before.” Here his voice dropped
into a moralizing key, as he added, “David,
you know, didn’t behave well to old Uriah.
Upon my life he did not, and he was a very respectable
man.”
“The King of Spain’s sherry!
the sherry!” cried I, fearing that the major’s
digression might lose us a good story.
“You shall not have a drop of it,” replied
the major.
“But the story, Major, the story!”
“Nor the story, either.”
“What,” said Power, “will you break
faith with us?”
“There’s none to be kept with reprobates
like you. Fill my glass.”
“Hold there! stop!” cried
Power. “Not a spoonful till he redeems his
pledge.”
“Well, then, if you must have
a story, for most assuredly I must drink, I
have no objection to give you a leaf from my early
reminiscences; and in compliment to Sparks there,
my tale shall be of love.”
“I dinna like to lose the king’s
story. I hae my thoughts it was na a bad
ane.”
“Nor I neither, Doctor; but ”
“Come, come, you shall have
that too, the first night we meet in a bivouac, and
as I fear the time may not be very far distant, don’t
be impatient; besides a love-story ”
“Quite true,” said Power,
“a love-story claims precedence; place aux
dames. There’s a bumper for you, old
wickedness; so go along.”
The major cleared off his glass, refilled
it, sipped twice, and ogled it as though he would
have no peculiar objection to sip once more, took a
long pinch of snuff from a box nearly as long as,
and something the shape of a child’s coffin,
looked around to see that we were all attention, and
thus began:
“When I have been in a moralizing
mood, as I very frequently am about this hour in the
morning, I have often felt surprised by what little,
trivial, and insignificant circumstances our lot in
life seems to be cast; I mean especially as regards
the fair sex. You are prospering, as it were,
to-day; to-morrow a new cut of your whiskers, a novel
tie of your cravat, mars your destiny and spoils your
future, varium et mutabile, as Horace has it.
On the other hand, some equally slight circumstance
will do what all your ingenuity may have failed to
effect. I knew a fellow who married the greatest
fortune in Bath, from the mere habit he had of squeezing
one’s hand. The lady in question thought
it particular, looked conscious, and all that; he
followed up the blow; and, in a word, they were married
in a week. So a friend of mine, who could not
help winking his left eye, once opened a flirtation
with a lively widow which cost him a special license
and a settlement. In fact you are never safe.
They are like the guérillas, and they pick you
off when you least expect it, and when you think there
is nothing to fear. Therefore, as young fellows
beginning life, I would caution you. On this
head you can never be too circumspect. Do you
know, I was once nearly caught by so slight a habit
as sitting thus, with my legs across.”
Here the major rested his right foot
on his left knee, in illustration, and continued:
“We were quartered in Jamaica.
I had not long joined, and was about as raw a young
gentleman as you could see; the only very clear ideas
in my head being that we were monstrous fine fellows
in the 50th, and that the planters’ daughters
were deplorably in love with us. Not that I was
much wrong on either side. For brandy-and-water,
sangaree, Manilla cigars, and the ladies of color,
I’d have backed the corps against the service.
Proof was, of eighteen only two ever left the island;
for what with the seductions of the coffee plantations,
the sugar canes, the new rum, the brown skins, the
rainy season, and the yellow fever, most of us settled
there.”
“It’s very hard to leave
the West Indies if once you’ve been quartered
there.”
“So I have heard,” said Power.
“In time, if you don’t
knock under to the climate, you become soon totally
unfit for living anywhere else. Preserved ginger,
yams, flannel jackets, and grog won’t bear exportation;
and the free-and-easy chuck under the chin, cherishing,
waist-pressing kind of way we get with the ladies would
be quite misunderstood in less favored regions, and
lead to very unpleasant consequences.”
“It is a curious fact how much
climate has to do with love-making. In our cold
country the progress is lamentably slow. Fogs,
east winds, sleet, storms, and cutting March weather
nip many a budding flirtation; whereas warm, sunny
days and bright moonlight nights, with genial air and
balmy zéphyrs, open the heart like the cup
of a camelia, and let us drink in the soft dew of ”
“Devilish poetical, that,”
said Power, evolving a long blue line of smoke from
the corner of his mouth.
“Isn’t it, though?”
said the major, smiling graciously. “’Pon
my life, I thought so myself. Where was I?”
“Out of my latitude altogether,”
said the poor skipper, who often found it hard to
follow the thread of a story.
“Yes, I remember. I was
remarking that sangaree and calipash, mangoes and
guava jelly, dispose the heart to love, and so they
do. I was not more than six weeks in Jamaica
when I felt it myself. Now, it was a very dangerous
symptom, if you had it strong in you, for this reason.
Our colonel, the most cross-grained old crabstick
that ever breathed, happened himself to be taken in
when young, and resolving, like the fox who lost his
tail and said it was not the fashion to wear one,
to pretend he did the thing for fun, determined to
make every fellow marry upon the slightest provocation.
Begad, you might as well enter a powder magazine with
a branch of candles in your hand, as go into society
in the island with a leaning towards the fair sex.
Very hard this was for me particularly; for like poor
Sparks there, my weakness was ever for the petticoats.
I had, besides, no petty, contemptible prejudices
as to nation, habits, language, color, or complexion;
black, brown, or fair, from the Muscovite to the Malabar,
from the voluptuous embonpoint of the adjutant’s
widow, don’t be angry old boy, to
the fairy form of Isabella herself, I loved them all
round. But were I to give a preference anywhere
I should certainly do so to the West Indians, if it
were only for the sake of the planters’ daughters.
I say it fearlessly, these colonies are the brightest
jewels in the crown. Let’s drink their
health, for I’m as husky as a lime-kiln.”
This ceremony being performed with
suitable enthusiasm, the major cried out, “Another
cheer for Polly Hackett, the sweetest girl in Jamaica.
By Jove, Power, if you only saw her as I did five
and forty years ago, with eyes black as jet, twinkling,
ogling, leering, teasing, and imploring, all at once,
do you mind, and a mouthful of downright pearls pouting
and smiling at you, why, man, you’d have proposed
for her in the first half-hour, and shot yourself
the next, when she refused you. She was, indeed,
a perfect little beauty, rayther dark, to be
sure, a little upon the rosewood tinge,
but beautifully polished, and a very nice piece of
furniture for a cottage orne, as the French
call it. Alas, alas, how these vanities do catch
hold of us! My recollections have made me quite
feverish and thirsty. Is there any cold punch
in the bowl? Thank you, O’Malley, that
will do, merely to touch my lips. Well,
well, it’s all past and gone now; but I was
very fond of Tolly Hackett, and she was of me.
We used to take our little evening walks together through
the coffee plantation: very romantic little strolls
they were, she in white muslin with a blue sash and
blue shoes; I in a flannel jacket and trousers, straw
hat and cravat, a Virginia cigar as long as a walking-stick
in my mouth, puffing and courting between times; then
we’d take a turn to the refining-house, look
in at the big boilers, quiz the niggers, and come back
to Twangberry Moss to supper, where old Hackett, the
father, sported a glorious table at eleven o’clock.
Great feeding it was; you were always sure of a preserved
monkey, a baked land-crab, or some such delicacy.
And such Madeira; it makes me dry to think of it.
“Talk of West India slavery,
indeed. It’s the only land of liberty.
There is nothing to compare with the perfect free-and-easy,
devil-may-care-kind-of-a-take-yourself way that every
one has there. If it would be any peculiar comfort
for you to sit in the saddle of mutton, and put your
legs in a soup tureen at dinner, there would be found
very few to object to it. There is no nonsense
of any kind about etiquette. You eat, drink,
and are merry, or, if you prefer, are sad; just as
you please. You may wear uniform, or you may
not, it’s your own affair; and consequently,
it may be imagined how insensibly such privileges gain
upon one, and how very reluctant we become ever to
resign or abandon them.
“I was the man to appreciate
it all. The whole course of proceeding seemed
to have been invented for my peculiar convenience,
and not a man in the island enjoyed a more luxurious
existence than myself, not knowing all the while how
dearly I was destined to pay for my little comforts.
Among my plenary after-dinner indulgences I had contracted
an inveterate habit of sitting cross-legged, as I
showed you. Now, this was become a perfect necessity
of existence to me. I could have dispensed with
cheese, with my glass of port, my pickled mango, my
olive, my anchovy toast, my nutshell of curacoa, but
not my favorite lounge. You may smile; but I’ve
read of a man who could never dance except in a room
with an old hair-brush. Now, I’m certain
my stomach would not digest if my legs were perpendicular.
I don’t mean to defend the thing. The attitude
was not graceful, it was not imposing; but it suited
me somehow, and I liked it.
“From what I have already mentioned,
you may suppose that West India habits exercised but
little control over my favorite practice, which I indulged
in every evening of my life. Well, one day old
Hackett gave us a great blow-out, a dinner
of two-and-twenty souls; six days’ notice; turtle
from St. Lucie, guinea-fowl, claret of the year forty,
Madeira a discretion, and all that. Very
well done the whole thing; nothing wrong, nothing
wanting. As for me, I was in great feather.
I took Polly in to dinner, greatly to the discomfiture
of old Belson, our major, who was making up in that
quarter; for you must know, she was an only daughter,
and had a very nice thing of it in molasses and niggers.
The papa preferred the major, but Polly looked sweetly
upon me. Well, down we went, and really a most
excellent feed we had. Now, I must mention here
that Polly had a favorite Blenheim spaniel the old
fellow detested; it was always tripping him up and
snarling at him, for it was, except to herself,
a beast of rather vicious inclinations. With
a true Jamaica taste, it was her pleasure to bring
the animal always into the dinner-room, where, if
papa discovered him, there was sure to be a row.
Servants sent in one direction to hunt him out, others
endeavoring to hide him, and so on; in fact, a tremendous
hubbub always followed his introduction and accompanied
his exit, upon which occasions I invariably exercised
my gallantry by protecting the beast, although I hated
him like the devil all the time.
“To return to our dinner.
After two mortal hours of hard eating, the pace began
to slacken, and as evening closed in, a sense of peaceful
repose seemed to descend upon our labors. Pastels
shed an aromatic vapor through the room. The
well-iced decanters went with measured pace along;
conversation, subdued to the meridian of after-dinner
comfort, just murmured; the open jalousies
displayed upon the broad veranda the orange-tree in
full blossom, slightly stirring with the cool sea-breeze.”
“And the piece of white muslin beside you, what
of her?”
“Looked twenty times more bewitching
than ever. Well, it was just the hour when, opening
the last two buttons of your white waistcoat (remember
we were in Jamaica), you stretch your legs to the
full extent, throw your arm carelessly over the back
of your chair, look contemplatively towards the ceiling,
and wonder, within yourself, why it is not all ‘after
dinner’ in this same world of ours. Such,
at least, were my reflections as I assumed my attitude
of supreme comfort, and inwardly ejaculated a health
to Sneyd and Barton. Just at this moment I heard
Polly’s voice gently whisper,
“‘Isn’t he a love? Isn’t
he a darling?’
“‘Zounds!’ thought
I, as a pang of jealousy shot through my heart, ’is
it the major she means?’ For old Belson, with
his bag wig and rouged cheeks, was seated on the other
side of her.
“‘What a dear thing it is!’ said
Polly.
“‘Worse and worse,’ said I; ‘it
must be him.’
“‘I do so love his muzzy face.’
“‘It is him!’ said
I, throwing off a bumper, and almost boiling over with
passion at the moment.
“‘I wish I could take
one look at him,’ said she, laying down her head
as she spoke.
“The major whispered something
in her ear, to which she replied,
“‘Oh, I dare not; papa will see me at
once.’
“‘Don’t be afraid,
Madam,’ said I, fiercely; ’your father
perfectly approves of your taste.’
“‘Are you sure of it?’ said she,
giving me such a look.
“‘I know it,’ said I, struggling
violently with my agitation.
“The major leaned over as if
to touch her hand beneath the cloth. I almost
sprang from my chair, when Polly, in her sweetest accents,
said,
“’You must be patient,
dear thing, or you may be found out, and then there
will be such a piece of work. Though I’m
sure, Major, you would not betray me.’
The major smiled till he cracked the paint upon his
cheeks. ’And I am sure that Mr. Monsoon ’
“‘You may rely upon me,’ said I,
half sneeringly.
“The major and I exchanged glances of defiance,
while Polly continued,
“’Now, come, don’t
be restless. You are very comfortable there.
Isn’t he, Major?’ The major smiled again
more graciously than before, as he added,
“‘May I take a look?’
“‘Just one peep, then,
no more!’ said she, coquettishly; ’poor
dear Wowski is so timid.’
“Scarcely had these words borne
balm and comfort to my heart, for I now
knew that to the dog, and not to my rival, were all
the flattering expressions applied, when
a slight scream from Polly, and a tremendous oath
from the major, raised me from my dream of happiness.
“‘Take your foot down,
sir. Mr. Monsoon, how could you do so?’
cried Polly.
“‘What the devil, sir, do you mean?’
shouted the major.
“‘Oh, I shall die of shame,’ sobbed
she.
“‘I’ll shoot him like a riddle,’
muttered old Belson.
“By this time the whole table
had got at the story, and such peals of laughter,
mingled with suggestions for my personal maltreatment,
I never heard. All my attempts at explanation
were in vain. I was not listened to, much less
believed; and the old colonel finished the scene by
ordering me to my quarters, in a voice I shall never
forget, the whole room being, at the time I made my
exit, one scene of tumultuous laughter from one end
to the other. Jamaica after this became too hot
for me. The story was repeated on every side;
for, it seems, I had been sitting with my foot on Polly’s
lap; but so occupied was I with my jealous vigilance
of the major I was not aware of the fact until she
herself discovered it.
“I need not say how the following
morning brought with it every possible offer of amende
upon my part; anything from a written apology to a
proposition to marry the lady I was ready for, and
how the matter might have ended I know not; for in
the middle of the negotiations, we were ordered off
to Halifax where, be assured, I abandoned my Oriental
attitude for many a long day after.”