The events of the last few days had
impressed me with a weight of years. The awful
circumstances of that evening lay heavily at my heart;
and though guiltless of Trevyllian’s blood,
the reproach that conscience ever carries when one
has been involved in a death-scene never left my thoughts.
For some time previously I had been
depressed and dis-spirited, and the awful shock
I had sustained broke my nerve and unmanned me greatly.
There are times when our sorrows tinge
all the colorings of our thoughts, and one pervading
hue of melancholy spreads like a pall upon what we
have of fairest and brightest on earth. So was
it now: I had lost hope and ambition; a sad feeling
that my career was destined to misfortune and mishap
gained hourly upon me; and all the bright aspirations
of a soldier’s glory, all my enthusiasm for
the pomp and circumstance of glorious war, fell coldly
upon my heart, and I looked upon the chivalry of a
soldier’s life as the empty pageant of a dream.
In this sad frame of mind, I avoided
all intercourse with my brother officers; their gay
and joyous spirits only jarred upon my brooding thoughts,
and feigning illness, I kept almost entirely to my
quarters.
The inactivity of our present life
weighed also heavily upon me. The stirring events
of a campaign the march, the bivouac, the
picket call forth a certain physical exertion
that never fails to react upon the torpid mind.
Forgetting all around me, I thought
of home; I thought of those whose hearts I felt were
now turning towards me, and considered within myself
how I could have exchanged the home, the days of peaceful
happiness there, for the life of misery and disappointment
I now endured.
A brooding melancholy gained daily
more and more upon me. A wish, to return to Ireland,
a vague and indistinct feeling that my career was not
destined for aught of great and good crept upon me,
and I longed to sink into oblivion, forgotten and
forgot.
I record this painful feeling here,
while it is still a painful memory, as one of the
dark shadows that cross the bright sky of our happiest
days.
Happy, indeed, are they, as we look
back to them and remember the times we have pronounced
ourselves “the most miserable of mankind.”
This, somehow, is a confession we never make later
on in life, when real troubles and true afflictions
assail us. Whether we call in more philosophy
to our aid, or that our senses become less acute and
discerning, I’m sure I know not.
As for me, I confess by far the greater
portion of my sorrows seemed to come in that budding
period of existence when life is ever fairest and most
captivating. Not, perhaps, that the fact was really
so, but the spoiled and humored child, whose caprices
were a law, felt heavily the threatening difficulties
of his first voyage; while as he continued to sail
over the ocean of life, he braved the storm and the
squall, and felt only gratitude for the favoring breeze
that wafted him upon his course.
What an admirable remedy for misanthropy
is the being placed in a subordinate condition in
life! Had I, at the period that I write, been
Sir Arthur Wellesley; had I even been Marshal Beresford, to
all certainty I’d have played the very devil
with his Majesty’s forces; I’d have brought
my rascals to where they’d have been well-peppered,
that’s certain.
But as, luckily for the sake of humanity
in general and the well-being of the service in particular,
I was merely Lieutenant O’Malley, 14th Light
Dragoons, the case was very different. With what
heavy censure did I condemn the commander of the forces
in my own mind for his want of daring and enterprise!
Whole nights did I pass in endeavoring to account for
his inactivity and lethargy. Why he did not seriatim
fall upon Soult, Ney, and Victor, annihilate the French
forces, and sack Madrid, I looked upon as little less
than a riddle; and yet there he waited, drilling, exercising,
and foraging, as if he were at Hounslow. Now most
fortunately here again I was not Sir Arthur.
Something in this frame of mind, I
was taking one evening a solitary ride some miles
from the camp. Without noticing the circumstance,
I had entered a little mountain tract, when, the ground
being broken and uneven, I dismounted and proceeded
a-foot, with the bridle within my arm. I had not
gone far when the clatter of a horse’s hoofs
came rapidly towards me, and though there was something
startling in the pace over such a piece of road, I
never lifted my eyes as the horseman came up, but continued
my slow progress onwards, my head sunk upon my bosom.
“Hallo, sir!” cried a
sharp voice, whose tones seemed, somehow, not heard
for the first time. I looked up, saw a slight
figure closely buttoned up in a blue horseman’s
cloak, the collar of which almost entirely hid his
features; he wore a plain, cocked hat without a feather,
and was mounted upon a sharp, wiry-looking hack.
“Hallo, sir! What regiment do you belong
to?”
As I had nothing of the soldier about
me, save a blue foraging cap, to denote my corps,
the tone of the demand was little calculated to elicit
a very polished reply; but preferring, as most impertinent,
to make no answer, I passed on without speaking.
“Did you hear, sir?” cried
the same voice, in a still louder key. “What’s
your regiment?”
I now turned round, resolved to question
the other in turn; when, to my inexpressible shame
and confusion, he had lowered the collar of his cloak,
and I saw the features of Sir Arthur Wellesley.
“Fourteenth Light Dragoons,
sir,” said I, blushing as I spoke.
“Have you not read the general
order, sir? Why have you left the camp?”
Now, I had not read a general order
nor even heard one for above a fortnight. So
I stammered out some bungling answer.
“To your quarters, sir, and
report yourself under arrest. What’s your
name?”
“Lieutenant O’Malley, sir.”
“Well, sir, your passion for
rambling shall be indulged. You shall be sent
to the rear with despatches; and as the army is in
advance, probably the lesson may be serviceable.”
So saying, he pressed spurs to his horse, and was
out of sight in a moment.