WOE TO THE “AUBURN HAIR!”
AFTER THE BATTLE-PROWLING VILLAINS PUNISHED
When the white flag was seen a loud
shout went up from the Russian army. Then a party
of officers rode forward, and two Turkish horsemen
were seen advancing. They stated that Osman
himself was coming to treat with the Russians.
The spot on which they stood was covered
with the grim relics of battle. The earth had
been uptorn by exploding shells. Here lay a horse
groaning and struggling in its agony. Close to
it lay an ox, silently bleeding to death, his great,
round, patient eyes looking mournfully at the scene
around him. Close by, was a cart with a dead
horse lying in the yoke as he had fallen, and a Turkish
soldier, stretched alongside, whose head had been
carried away by a cannon shot. Under the wagon
was a wounded man, and close to him four others, who,
drained of nearly all their life-blood, lay crouched
together in helplessness, with the hoods of their
ragged grey overcoats drawn down on their faces.
These latter gazed at the murky sky in listless indifference,
or at what was going on in a sort of weary surprise.
Among them was Nicholas Naranovitsch.
Russian surgeons were already moving
about the field of battle, doing what they could,
but their efforts were trifling compared with the vast
necessity.
At last there was a shout of “Osman!”
“He comes!”
“We will give him a respectful
reception,” exclaimed one Russian officer, in
what is supposed by some to be the “gallant spirit
of true chivalry.”
“That we will,” cried
another; “we must all salute him, and the soldiers
must present arms.”
“He is a great soldier,”
exclaimed a third, “and has made a heroic defence.”
Even Skobeleff himself seems to have
been carried away by the feeling of the moment, if
we may credit report, for he is said to have exclaimed
“He is the greatest general
of the age, for he has saved the honour of his country:
I will proffer him my hand and tell him so.”
“So,” thought I, when
afterwards meditating on this subject, “the Turks
have for centuries proved themselves to be utterly
unworthy of self-government; they have shown themselves
to be ignorant of the first principles of righteousness, meum
and tuum; they (or rather their rulers) have
violated their engagements and deceived those who trusted
them; have of late repudiated their debts, and murdered,
robbed, violated, tortured those who differed from
them in religious opinions, as is generally admitted, nevertheless
now, because one of their generals has shown somewhat
superior ability to the rest, holding in check a powerful
enemy, and exhibiting, with his men, a degree of bull-dog
courage which, though admirable in itself, all history
proves to be a common characteristic of all nations that
`honour,’ which the country never possessed,
is supposed to have been `saved’!”
All honour to the brave, truly, but
when I remember the butcheries that are admitted,
by friend and foe of the Turk, to have been committed
on the Russian wounded by the army of Plevna (and
which seem to have been conveniently forgotten at
this dramatic incident of the surrender),
when I reflect on the frightful indifference of Osman
Pasha to his own wounded, and the equally horrible
disregard of the same hapless wounded by the Russians
after they entered Plevna, I cannot but
feel that a desperate amount of error is operating
here, and that multitudes of mankind, especially innocent,
loving, and gentle mankind, to say nothing of tender,
enthusiastic, love-blinded womankind, are to some extent
deceived by the false ring of that which is not metal,
and the falser glitter of a tinsel which is anything
but gold.
However, Osman did not come after
all. He had been wounded, and the Russian generals
were obliged to go to a neighbouring cottage to transact
the business of surrender.
As the cavalcade rode away in the
direction of the cottage referred to, a Russian surgeon
turned aside to aid a wounded man. He was a tall
strapping trooper. His head rested on the leg
of his horse, which lay dead beside him. He
could not have been more than twenty years of age,
if so much. He had carefully wrapped his cloak
round him. His carbine and sabre were drawn
close to his side, as if to protect the weapons which
it had always been his pride to keep bright and clean.
He was a fresh handsome lad, with courage and loveableness
equally stamped upon his young brow. He opened
his eyes languidly as the doctor attended to him.
“Come, my fine fellow, keep
up your heart,” said the doctor tenderly; “you
will perhaps that is to say, the ambulance-wagons
will be round immediately, and ”
“Thank you,” interrupted
the trooper quietly, “God’s blessing rest
upon you. I know what you mean. Look,
sir.”
He tried to take a locket from his
neck as he spoke, but could not. The doctor
gently assisted him. “See,” he said,
“take this to Dobri Petroff the scout.
You know him? Every one knows dashing Dobri!”
“I know him. Well?”
“Tell him to give it to her he
knows who and and say
it has kept me in in heaven when sometimes
it seemed to me as if I had got into hell.”
“From whom?” asked the
doctor, anxiously, as the youth’s head sank
forward, and the terrible pallor of approaching death
came on.
“From Andre ”
Alas! alas for Maria with the auburn hair!
The doctor rose. His services
were no longer needed. Mounting his horse, he
rode away.
The ground over which he galloped
was strewn with weapons. The formal surrender
had been made, and each Turk, obeying literally the
order to lay down his arms, had deposited his rifle
in the mud where he stood.
That night a faint light shone through
the murky clouds, and dimly illumined the grim battle-field.
It was deserted by all but the dead
and dying, with now and then a passing picket or fatigue-party.
As the night advanced, and the cold became piercing,
even these seemed to have finally retired from the
ghastly scene. Towards morning the moon rose
high, and, piercing the clouds, at times lit up the
whole battle-field. Ah! there was many a pale
countenance turned wistfully on the moon that night,
gazing at it until the eyes became fixed in death.
There was one countenance, which, deadly white, and
gashed by a Turkish sabre, had been ruddy with young
life in the morning. It was that of Nicholas
Naranovitsch. He lay on his back near his dead
horse, and close to a heap of slaughtered men.
He was so faint and so shattered by sabre-cuts and
bullets as to be utterly unable to move anything but
his eyes. Though almost in a state of stupor,
he retained sufficient consciousness to observe what
went on around him. The night, or rather the
early morning, had become very still, but it was not
silent, for deep sighs and low moanings, as of men
suffering from prolonged and weary pain, struck on
his listening ear. Now and then some wretch,
unable to bear his misery, would make a desperate
effort to rise, only, however, to fall back with a
sharp cry or a deep-despairing groan. Here and
there a man might be seen creeping a few paces on
his hands and knees, and then dropping to rest for
a time, after which the creeping was resumed, in the
vain hope, no doubt, that some place of shelter or
an ambulance might be reached at last. One of
these struggling men passed close to Nicholas, and
stopped to rest almost at his side. In a few
minutes he rose again, and attempted to advance, but
instead of doing so writhed in a hideous contortion
over on his back, and stretching himself with a convulsive
shudder, died with his teeth clenched and his protruding
eyeballs glaring at the sky.
Suddenly a low sweet sound broke on
Nicholas’s ear. It swelled gradually,
and was at length recognised as a hymn with which he
had been familiar in childhood. Some dying Christian
soldier near him had apparently sought relief in singing
praise to God. Nicholas wept as he listened.
He soon found that there were sympathetic listeners
besides himself, for the strains were taken up by
one and another, and another, until the hymn appeared
to rise from all parts of the battle-field. It
was faint, however, and tremulous, for the life-blood
was draining rapidly from the hearts of those who
raised it. Ere long it altogether ceased.
For some time Nicholas had been aware
that a wounded man was slowly gasping out his life
quite close to him, but, from the position in which
he lay, it was not possible to see more than his red
fez. Presently the man made a powerful effort,
raised himself on one elbow, and displayed the ghastly
black countenance of Hamed Pasha. He looked unsteadily
round him for a moment, and then sank backward with
a long-drawn sigh.
Close to him, under a heap of slain,
Dobri Petroff himself lay. For a long time he
was unconscious, and had been nearly crushed to death
by the weight of those above him. But the life
which had been so strong in his huge body seemed to
revive a little, and after a time he succeeded in
freeing himself from the load, and raising himself
on his hands, but he could not get up on his feet.
A wound in the neck, which had partly closed while
he was in a recumbent position, now burst out afresh.
He looked at the blood with a faint sad smile, and
sank down again.
Nicholas recognised him, and tried
to speak, but he could neither speak nor move.
It seemed to him that every part of his frame had
been paralysed except his brain and eyes.
Presently the scout felt for something
at his side. His flask was there; putting it
to his lips he drank a little and was evidently refreshed,
for he raised himself again and began to look about
him.
Another moment and Petroff had discovered
the Pasha, who lay near him with a look of intense
longing in his eyes as he saw the flask and heard
the gurgling water. A fierce frown crossed the
scout’s brow for a moment, but it was instantly
chased away by a look of pity. He dragged himself
slowly towards the dying Turk, and held the flask to
his lips.
With a murmur of thankfulness and
a look of gratitude at his late enemy, the Pasha uttered
a faint sigh and closed his eyes in the last long
sleep of death.
The effort to drag himself even a
few paces served to show Petroff how severely he had
been wounded. He was in the act of raising the
flask to his lips a second time, when Nicholas, by
a desperate effort, succeeded in uttering a low groan.
The scout turned quickly, observed
his master, and crept to his side.
“Drink, sir,” he said,
knowing well that water was what Nicholas required
most at such a time.
The avidity with which the latter
obeyed prevented him observing that the scout was
almost sinking. The successive efforts he had
made had caused the blood to pour copiously from his
wounds.
“You are badly hurt, Dobri,
I fear,” he said, when the life-giving draught
had sent new vigour into his frame, and loosed his
tongue.
“Ay,” replied the scout,
with a faint smile. “I shall soon
be with you now, Marika, and with the little ones
and the dear Lord you loved so well and tried so hard
to make me follow too. And you succeeded, Marika,
though you little th ”
He stopped abruptly, swayed a moment
to and fro, then fell heavily forward with his head
on the bosom of his friend.
“Take some more water, Dobri,”
said Nicholas anxiously. “Quick, before
you lose consciousness. I have not power to move
a limb to help you. Dobri!”
He called in vain, the scout had fainted.
Nicholas had not power at first to
remove the poor fellow’s head from his chest,
and he felt as if he should be suffocated. By
degrees, however, he managed to roll it slightly to
one side, and, at the same time, returning vigour
enabled him to raise his right arm. He observed
that his hand still grasped a revolver, but for some
time he had no power to unclasp it. At last
he succeeded, and raising Petroff’s flask with
difficulty to his lips obtained another draught.
Just at that moment the moon, which
had passed behind a dark cloud, shone through an opening,
and he saw three men not far off searching among the
dead. He was about to call to them, but a thought
occurred and he restrained himself.
He was right; the three men, one of
whom was habited like a priest, were rifling the dead.
He saw them come up to a prostrate form which struggled
on being touched. One of the three men instantly
drew a knife and stabbed the wounded man. When
they had searched the body and taken from it what
they required they came towards the spot where Nicholas
lay.
A feeling of horror came over him
for a moment, but that seemed to give him strength,
for he instantly grasped his revolver. Hoping,
however that they might pass without observing him,
he shut his eyes and lay quite still.
The three murderers drew near, talking
in low tones, and seemed about to pass, when one of
them stopped.
“Here’s a big-looking
fellow whose boots will just fit me,” he said,
stooping and seizing the scout’s leg.
“There’s an officer behind
him,” said the villain in the priest’s
dress; “he will be more worth stripping.”
Nicholas pointed his revolver full
in the man’s face and fired, but his aim was
unsteady. He had missed. Again he pulled
the trigger, but it had been the last shot.
The man sprang upon him. The report, however,
had attracted the notice of a picket of Russian soldiers,
who, well aware of the deeds of foul villainy that
are practised by the followers of an army on battle-fields
at night, immediately rushed up and secured the three
men.
“They are murderers,”
exclaimed Nicholas in reply to a question from the
sergeant in command.
“Lead them out,” said the sergeant promptly.
The men were bound and set up in a row.
“Ready present!”
A volley rang out in the night air,
and three more corpses were added to the death-roll
of the day.
It was summary justice, but richly
deserved. Thereafter the soldiers made a rough-and-ready
stretcher of muskets, on which Nicholas, who had fainted,
was carefully laid and borne from the field.