“I have not had time, O’Malley,
to think of your application,” said Crawfurd,
“nor is it likely I can for a day or two.
Read that.” So saying, he pushed towards
me a note, written, in pencil, which ran thus:
CIUDAD RODRIGO, December 18.
Dear C., Fletcher
tells me that the breaches will be practicable
by to-morrow evening, and
I think so myself. Come over, then, at
once, for we shall not lose
any time.
Yours, W.
“I have some despatches for
your regiment, but if you prefer coming along with
me ”
“My dear General, dare I ask for such a favor?”
“Well, come along; only remember
that, although my division will be engaged, I cannot
promise you anything to do. So now, get your horses
ready; let’s away.”
It was in the afternoon of the following
day that we rode into the large plain before Ciudad
Rodrigo, and in which the allied armies were now assembled
to the number of twelve thousand men. The loud
booming of the siege artillery had been heard by me
for some hours before; but notwithstanding this prelude
and my own high-wrought expectations, I was far from
anticipating the magnificent spectacle which burst
upon my astonished view. The air was calm and
still; a clear, blue, wintry sky stretched overhead,
but below, the dense blue smoke of the deafening guns
rolled in mighty volumes along the earth, and entirely
concealed the lower part of the fortress; above this
the tall towers and battlemented parapets rose into
the thin, transparent sky like fairy palaces.
A bright flash of flame would now and then burst forth
from the walls, and a clanging crash of the brass
metal be heard; but the unceasing roll of our artillery
nearly drowned all other sounds, save when a loud
cheer would burst from the trenches, while the clattering
fall of masonry, and the crumbling stones as they
rolled down, bespoke the reason of the cry. The
utmost activity prevailed on all sides; troops pressed
forward to the reliefs in the parallels; ammunition
wagons moved to the front; general and staff officers
rode furiously about the plain; and all betokened that
the hour of attack was no longer far distant.
While all parties were anxiously awaiting
the decision of our chief, the general order was made
known, which, after briefly detailing the necessary
arrangements, concluded with the emphatic words, “Ciudad
Rodrigo must be stormed to-night.”
All speculation as to the troops to be engaged in this
daring enterprise was soon at an end; for with his
characteristic sense of duty, Lord Wellington made
no invidious selection, but merely commanded that
the attack should be made by whatever divisions might
chance to be that day in the trenches. Upon the
Third and Light Divisions, therefore, this glorious
task devolved. The former was to attack the main
breach; to Crawfurd’s Division was assigned
the, if possible, more difficult enterprise of carrying
the lesser one; while Pack’s Portuguese Brigade
were to menace the convent of La Caridad by a feint
attack, to be converted into a real one, if circumstances
should permit.
The decision, however matured and
comprehensive in all its details, was finally adopted
so suddenly that every staff officer upon the ground
was actively engaged during the entire evening in
conveying the orders to the different regiments.
As the day drew to a close, the cannonade slackened
on either side, a solitary gun would be heard at intervals,
and in the calm stillness around, its booming thunder
re-echoed along the valleys of the Sierra; but as
the moon rose and night set in, these were no longer
heard, and a perfect stillness and tranquillity prevailed
around. Even in the trenches, crowded with armed
and anxious soldiers, not a whisper was heard; and
amidst that mighty host which filled the plain, the
tramp of a patrol could be distinctly noted, and the
hoarse voice of the French sentry upon the walls,
telling that all was well in Ciudad Rodrigo.
The massive fortress, looming larger
as its dark shadow stood out from the sky, was still
as the grave; while in the greater breach a faint light
was seen to twinkle for a moment, and then suddenly
to disappear, leaving all gloomy and dark as before.
Having been sent with orders to the
Third Division, of which the Eighty-eighth formed
a part, I took the opportunity of finding out O’Shaughnessy,
who was himself to lead an escalade party in M’Kinnon’s
Brigade. He sprang towards me as I came forward,
and grasping my hand with a more than usual earnestness,
called out, “The very man I wanted! Charley,
my boy, do us a service now!”
Before I could reply, he continued
in a lower tone, “A young fellow of ours, Harry
Beauclerc, has been badly wounded in the trenches;
but by some blunder, his injury is reported as a slight
one, and although the poor fellow can scarcely stand,
he insists upon going with the stormers.”
“Come here, Major, come here!”
cried a voice at a little distance.
“Follow me, O’Malley,”
cried O’Shaughnessy, moving in the direction
of the speaker.
By the light of a lantern we could
descry two officers kneeling upon the ground; between
them on the grass lay the figure of a third, upon whose
features, as the pale light fell, the hand of death
seemed rapidly stealing. A slight froth, tinged
with blood, rested on his lip, and the florid blood
which stained the buff facing of his uniform indicated
that his wound was through the lungs.
“He has fainted,” said one of the officers,
in a low tone.
“Are you certain it is fainting?” said
the other, in a still lower.
“You see how it is, Charley,”
said O’Shaughnessy; “this poor boy must
be carried to the rear. Will you then, like a
kind fellow, hasten back to Colonel Campbell and mention
the fact. It will kill Beauclerc should any doubt
rest upon his conduct, if he ever recover this.”
While he spoke, four soldiers of the
regiment placed the wounded officer in a blanket.
A long sigh escaped him, and he muttered a few broken
words.
“Poor fellow, it’s his
mother he’s talking of! He only joined a
month since, and is a mere boy. Come, O’Malley,
lose no time. By Jove! it is too late; there
goes the first rocket for the columns to form.
In ten minutes more the stormers must fall in.”
“What’s the matter, Giles?”
said he to one of the officers, who had stopped the
soldiers as they were moving off with their burden, “what
is it?”
“I have been cutting the white
tape off his arm; for if he sees it on waking, he’ll
remember all about the storming.”
“Quite right thoughtfully
done!” said the other; “but who is to lead
his fellows? He was in the forlorn hope.”
“I’ll do it,” cried
I, with eagerness. “Come, O’Shaughnessy,
you’ll not refuse me.”
“Refuse you, boy!” said
he, grasping my hand within both of his, “never!
But you must change your coat. The gallant Eighty-eighth
will never mistake their countryman’s voice.
But your uniform would be devilish likely to get you
a bayonet through it; so come back with me, and we’ll
make you a Ranger in no time.”
“I can give your friend a cap.”
“And I,” said the other,
“a brandy flask, which, after all, is not the
worst part of a storming equipage.”
“I hope,” said O’Shaughnessy,
“they may find Maurice in the rear. Beauclerc’s
all safe in his hands.”
“That they’ll not,”
said Giles, “you may swear. Quill is this
moment in the trenches, and will not be the last man
at the breach.”
“Follow me now, lads,”
said O’Shaughnessy, in a low voice. “Our
fellows are at the angle of this trench. Who
the deuce can that be, talking so loud?”
“It must be Maurice,” said Giles.
The question was soon decided by the
doctor himself, who appeared giving directions to
his hospital-sergeant.
“Yes, Peter, take the tools
up to a convenient spot near the breach. There’s
many a snug corner there in the ruins; and although
we mayn’t have as good an operation-room as
in old ‘Steevens’s,’ yet we’ll
beat them hollow in cases.”
“Listen to the fellow,”
said Giles, with a shudder. “The thought
of his confounded thumbscrews and tourniquets is worse
to me than a French howitzer.”
“The devil a kinder-hearted
fellow than Maurice,” said O’Shaughnessy,
“for all that; and if his heart was to be known
this moment, he’d rather handle a sword than
a saw.”
“True for you, Dennis,”
said Quill, overhearing him, “but we are both
useful in our way, as the hangman said to Lord Clare.”
“But should you not be in the rear, Maurice?”
said I.
“You are right, O’Malley,”
said he, in a whisper; “but, you see, I owe the
Cork Insurance Company a spite for making me pay a
gout premium, and that’s the reason I’m
here. I warned them at the time that their stinginess
would come to no good.”
“I say, Captain O’Malley,”
said Giles, “I find I can’t be as good
as my word with you; my servant has moved to the rear
with all my traps.”
“What is to be done?” said I.
“Is it shaving utensils you
want?” said Maurice. “Would a scalpel
serve your turn?”
“No, Doctor, I’m going
to take a turn of duty with your fellows to-night.”
“In the breach, with the stormers?”
“With the forlorn hope,”
said O’Shaughnessy. “Beauclerc is
so badly wounded that we’ve sent him back; and
Charley, like a good fellow, has taken his place.”
“Martin told me,” said
Maurice, “that Beauclerc was only stunned; but,
upon my conscience, the hospital-mates, now-a-days,
are no better than the watchmakers; they can’t
tell what’s wrong with the instrument till they
pick it to pieces. Whiz! there goes a blue light.”
“Move on, move on,” whispered
O’Shaughnessy; “they’re telling off
the stormers. That rocket is the order to fall
in.”
“But what am I to do for a coat?”
“Take mine, my boy,” said
Maurice, throwing off an upper garment of coarse gray
frieze as he spoke.
“There’s a neat bit of
uniform,” continued he, turning himself round
for our admiration; “don’t I look mighty
like the pictures of George the First at the battle
of Dettingen!”
A burst of approving laughter was
our only answer to this speech, while Maurice proceeded
to denude himself of his most extraordinary garment.
“What, in the name of Heaven, is it?”
said I.
“Don’t despise it, Charley;
it knows the smell of gunpowder as well as any bit
of scarlet in the service;” while he added, in
a whisper, “it’s the ould Roscommon Yeomanry.
My uncle commanded them in the year ’42, and
this was his coat. I don’t mean to say
that it was new then; for you see it’s a kind
of heirloom in the Quill family, and it’s not
every one I’d be giving it to.”
“A thousand thanks, Maurice,”
said I, as I buttoned it on, amidst an ill-suppressed
titter of laughter.
“It fits you like a sentry-box,”
said Maurice, as he surveyed me with a lantern.
“The skirts separate behind in the most picturesque
manner; and when you button the collar, it will keep
your head up so high that the devil a bit you’ll
see except the blessed moon. It’s a thousand
pities you haven’t the three-cocked hat with
the feather trimming. If you wouldn’t frighten
the French, my name’s not Maurice. Turn
about here till I admire you. If you only saw
yourself in a glass, you’d never join the dragoons
again. And look now, don’t be exposing yourself,
for I wouldn’t have those blue facings destroyed
for a week’s pay.”
“Ah, then, it’s yourself
is the darling, Doctor, dear!” said a voice behind
me. I turned round; it was Mickey Free, who was
standing with a most profound admiration of Maurice
beaming in every feature of his face. “It’s
yourself has a joke for every hour o’ the day.”
“Get to the rear, Mike, get
to the rear with the cattle; this is no place for
you or them.”
“Good-night, Mickey,” said Maurice.
“Good-night, your honor,”
muttered Mike to himself; “may I never die till
you set a leg for me.”
“Are you dressed for the ball?”
said Maurice, fastening the white tape upon my arm.
“There now, my boy, move on, for I think I hear
Picton’s voice; not that it signifies now, for
he’s always in a heavenly temper when any one’s
going to be killed. I’m sure he’d
behave like an angel, if he only knew the ground was
mined under his feet.”
“Charley, Charley!” called
out O’Shaughnessy, in a suppressed voice, “come
up quickly!”
“N, John Forbes here! Edward
Gillespie here!”
“Who leads this party, Major O’Shaughnessy?”
“Mr. Beauclerc, sir,”
replied O’Shaughnessy, pushing me forward by
the arm while he spoke.
“Keep your people together,
sir; spare the powder, and trust to your cold iron.”
He grasped my hand within his iron grip, and rode on.
“Who was it, Dennis?” said I.
“Don’t you know him, Charley? That
was Picton.”