“Let’s pretend,”
suggested Harold, “that we’re Cavaliers
and Roundheads; and you be a Roundhead!”
“O bother,” I replied
drowsily, “we pretended that yesterday; and it’s
not my turn to be a Roundhead, anyhow.”
The fact is, I was lazy, and the call to arms fell
on indifferent ears. We three younger ones were
stretched at length in the orchard. The sun was
hot, the season merry June, and never (I thought)
had there been such wealth and riot of buttercups
throughout the lush grass. Green-and-gold was
the dominant key that day. Instead of active
“pretence” with its shouts and perspiration,
how much better I held to lie
at ease and pretend to one’s self, in green
and golden fancies, slipping the husk and passing,
a careless lounger, through a sleepy imaginary world
all gold and green! But the persistent Harold
was not to be fobbed of.
“Well, then,” he began
afresh, “let’s pretend we’re Knights
of the Round Table; and (with a rush) I’ll
be Lancelot!”
“I won’t play unless I’m
Lancelot,” I said. I didn’t mean it
really, but the game of Knights always began with
this particular contest.
“O please,” implored
Harold. “You know when Edward’s here
I never get a chance of being Lancelot. I haven’t
been Lancelot for weeks!”
Then I yielded gracefully. “All
right,” I said. “I’ll be Tristram.”
“O, but you can’t,” cried Harold
again.
“Charlotte has always been Tristram.
She won’t play unless she’s allowed to
be Tristram! Be somebody else this time.”
Charlotte said nothing, but breathed
hard, looking straight before her. The peerless
hunter and harper was her special hero of romance,
and rather than see the part in less appreciative
hands, she would even have returned sadly to the stuffy
schoolroom.
“I don’t care,”
I said: “I’ll be anything. I’ll
be Sir Kay. Come on!”
Then once more in this country’s
story the mail-clad knights paced through the greenwood
shaw, questing adventure, redressing wrong; and bandits,
five to one, broke and fled discomfited to their caves.
Once again were damsels rescued, dragons disembowelled,
and giants, in every corner of the orchard, deprived
of their already superfluous number of heads; while
Palamides the Saracen waited for us by the well, and
Sir Breuse Saunce Pite vanished in craven flight
before the skilled spear that was his terror and his
bane. Once more the lists were dight in Camelot,
and all was gay with shimmer of silk and gold; the
earth shook with thunder of horses, ash-staves flew
in splinters; and the firmament rang to the clash
of sword on helm. The varying fortune of the day
swung doubtful now on this side, now on
that; till at last Lancelot, grim and great, thrusting
through the press, unhorsed Sir Tristram (an easy
task), and bestrode her, threatening doom; while the
Cornish knight, forgetting hard-won fame of old, cried
piteously, “You’re hurting me, I tell
you! and you’re tearing my frock!” Then
it happed that Sir Kay, hurtling to the rescue, stopped
short in his stride, catching sight suddenly, through
apple-boughs, of a gleam of scarlet afar off; while
the confused tramp of many horses, mingled with talk
and laughter, was borne to our ears.
“What is it?” inquired
Tristram, sitting up and shaking out her curls; while
Lancelot forsook the clanging lists and trotted nimbly
to the hedge.
I stood spell-bound for a moment longer,
and then, with a cry of “Soldiers!” I
was off to the hedge, Charlotte picking herself up
and scurrying after.
Down the road they came, two and two,
at an easy walk; scarlet flamed in the eye, bits jingled
and saddles squeaked delightfully; while the men,
in a halo of dust, smoked their short clays like the
heroes they were. In a swirl of intoxicating
glory the troop clinked and clattered by, while we
shouted and waved, jumping up and down, and the big
jolly horsemen acknowledged the salute with easy condescension.
The moment they were past we were through the hedge
and after them. Soldiers were not the common
stuff of everyday life. There had been nothing
like this since the winter before last, when on a
certain afternoon bare of leaf and monochrome
in its hue of sodden fallow and frost-nipt copse suddenly
the hounds had burst through the fence with their mellow
cry, and all the paddock was for the minute reverberant
of thudding hoof and dotted with glancing red.
But this was better, since it could only mean that
blows and bloodshed were in the air.
“Is there going to be a battle?”
panted Harold, hardly able to keep up for excitement.
“Of course there is,”
I replied. “We’re just in time.
Come on!”
Perhaps I ought to have known better;
and yet The pigs and poultry,
with whom we chiefly consorted, could instruct us little
concerning the peace that in these latter days lapped
this sea-girt realm. In the schoolroom we were
just now dallying with the Wars of the Roses; and
did not legends of the country-side inform us how Cavaliers
had once galloped up and down these very lanes from
their quarters in the village? Here, now, were
soldiers unmistakable; and if their business was not
fighting, what was it? Sniffing the joy of battle,
we followed hard on their tracks.
“Won’t Edward be sorry,”
puffed Harold, “that he’s begun that beastly
Latin?”
It did, indeed, seem hard. Edward,
the most martial spirit of us all, was drearily conjugating
Amo (of all verbs) between four walls; while
Selina, who ever thrilled ecstatic to a red coat, was
struggling with the uncouth German tongue. “Age,”
I reflected, “carries its penalties.”
It was a grievous disappointment to
us that the troop passed through the village unmolested.
Every cottage, I pointed out to my companions, ought
to have been loopholed, and strongly held. But
no opposition was offered to the soldiers, who, indeed,
conducted themselves with a recklessness and a want
of precaution that seemed simply criminal.
At the last cottage a transitory gleam
of common sense flickered across me, and, turning
on Charlotte, I sternly ordered her back.
The small maiden, docile but exceedingly
dolorous, dragged reluctant feet homewards, heavy
at heart that she was to behold no stout fellows slain
that day; but Harold and I held steadily on, expecting
every instant to see the environing hedges crackle
and spit forth the leaden death.
“Will they be Indians?”
inquired my brother (meaning the enemy); “or
Roundheads, or what?”
I reflected. Harold always required
direct, straightforward answers not faltering
suppositions.
“They won’t be Indians,”
I replied at last; “nor yet Roundheads.
There haven’t been any Roundheads seen about
here for a long time. They’ll be Frenchmen.”
Harold’s face fell. “All
right,” he said; “Frenchmen’ll do;
but I did hope they’d be Indians.”
“If they were going to be Indians,”
I explained, “I I don’t think
I’d go on. Because when Indians take you
prisoner they scalp you first, and then burn you at
a stake. But Frenchmen don’t do that sort
of thing.”
“Are you quite sure?” asked Harold doubtfully.
“Quite,” I replied.
“Frenchmen only shut you up in a thing called
the Bastille; and then you get a file sent in to you
in a loaf of bread, and saw the bars through, and
slide down a rope, and they all fire at you but
they don’t hit you and you run down
to the seashore as hard as you can, and swim off to
a British frigate, and there you are!”
Harold brightened up again. The
programme was rather attractive.
“If they try to take us prisoner,”
he said, “we we won’t run, will
we?”
Meanwhile, the craven foe was a long
time showing himself; and we were reaching strange
outland country, uncivilised, wherein lions might be
expected to prowl at nightfall. I had a stitch
in my side, and both Harold’s stockings had
come down. Just as I was beginning to have gloomy
doubts of the proverbial courage of Frenchmen, the
officer called out something, the men closed up, and,
breaking into a trot, the troops already
far ahead vanished out of our sight.
With a sinking at the heart, I began to suspect we
had been fooled.
“Are they charging?” cried
Harold, weary, but rallying gamely.
“I think not,” I replied
doubtfully. “When there’s going to
be a charge, the officer always makes a speech, and
then they draw their swords and the trumpets blow,
and but let’s try a short cut.
We may catch them up yet.”
So we struck across the fields and
into another road, and pounded down that, and then
over more fields, panting, down-hearted, yet hoping
for the best. The sun went in, and a thin drizzle
began to fall; we were muddy, breathless, almost dead
beat; but we blundered on, till at last we struck
a road more brutally, more callously unfamiliar than
any road I ever looked upon. Not a hint nor a
sign of friendly direction or assistance on the dogged
white face of it. There was no longer any disguising
it we were hopelessly lost. The small
rain continued steadily, the evening began to come
on. Really there are moments when a fellow is
justified in crying; and I would have cried too, if
Harold had not been there. That right-minded
child regarded an elder brother as a veritable god;
and I could see that he felt himself as secure as if
a whole Brigade of Guards hedged him round with protecting
bayonets. But I dreaded sore lest he should begin
again with his questions.
As I gazed in dumb appeal on the face
of unresponsive nature, the sound of nearing wheels
sent a pulse of hope through my being; increasing to
rapture as I recognised in the approaching vehicle
the familiar carriage of the old doctor. If ever
a god emerged from a machine, it was when this heaven-sent
friend, recognising us, stopped and jumped out with
a cheery hail. Harold rushed up to him at once.
“Have you been there?” he cried.
“Was it a jolly fight? who beat? were there many
people killed?”
The doctor appeared puzzled.
I briefly explained the situation.
“I see,” said the doctor,
looking grave and twisting his face this way and that.
“Well, the fact is, there isn’t going to
be any battle to-day. It’s been put off,
on account of the change in the weather. You will
have due notice of the renewal of hostilities.
And now you’d better jump in and I’ll
drive you home. You’ve been running a fine
rig! Why, you might have both been taken and
shot as spies!”
This special danger had never even
occurred to us. The thrill of it accentuated
the cosey homelike feeling of the cushions we nestled
into as we rolled homewards. The doctor beguiled
the journey with blood-curdling narratives of personal
adventure in the tented field, he having followed
the profession of arms (so it seemed) in every quarter
of the globe. Time, the destroyer of all things
beautiful, subsequently revealed the baselessness
of these legends; but what of that? There are
higher things than truth; and we were almost reconciled,
by the time we were dropped at our gate, to the fact
that the battle had been postponed.