Oh! Where would I be when
my froat was dry?
Oh! Where would I be when the bullets fly?
Oh! Where would I be when I come to die?
Why,
Somewheres anigh my chum.
If ’e’s liquor ’e’ll
give me some,
If I’m dyin’ ’e’ll
’old my ’ead,
An’ ’e’ll write ’em
’Ome when I’m dead.
Gawd send us a trusty chum!
Barrack Room
Ballad.
My friends Mulvaney and Ortheris had
gone on a shooting expedition for one day. Learoyd
was still in hospital, recovering from fever picked
up in Burma. They sent me an invitation to join
them, and were genuinely pained when I brought beer almost
enough beer to satisfy two Privates of the Line and
Me.
‘’Twasn’t for that
we bid you welkim, Sorr,’ said Mulvaney sulkily.
‘’Twas for the pleasure av your comp’ny.’
Ortheris came to the rescue with ’Well,
’e won’t be none the worse for bringin’
liquor with ‘im. We ain’t a file o’
Dooks. We’re bloomin’ Tommies,
ye cantankris Hirishman; an’ ’ere’s
your very good ‘ealth!’
We shot all the forenoon, and killed
two pariah-dogs, four green parrots, sitting, one
kite by the burning-ghaut, one snake flying, one mud-turtle,
and eight crows. Game was plentiful. Then
we sat down to tiffin ’bull-mate
an’ bran bread,’ Mulvaney called it by
the side of the river, and took pot shots at the crocodiles
in the intervals of cutting up the food with our only
pocket-knife. Then we drank up all the beer,
and threw the bottles into the water and fired at them.
After that, we eased belts and stretched ourselves
on the warm sand and smoked. We were too lazy
to continue shooting.
Ortheris heaved a big sigh, as he
lay on his stomach with his head between his fists.
Then he swore quietly into the blue sky.
‘Fwhat’s that for?’
said Mulvaney. ‘Have ye not drunk enough?’
‘Tott’nim Court Road,
an’ a gal I fancied there. Wot’s the
good of sodgerin’?’
‘Orth’ris, me son,’
said Mulvaney hastily, ’’tis more than
likely you’ve got throuble in your inside wid
the beer. I feel that way mesilf whin my liver
gets rusty.’
Ortheris went on slowly, not heeding
the interruption:
‘I’m a Tommy a
bloomin’, eight-anna, dog-stealin’ Tommy,
with a number instead of a decent name. Wot’s
the good o’ me? If I ’ad a stayed
at ‘Ome, I might a married that gal and a kep’
a little shorp in the ’Ammersmith ’Igh. “S.
Orth’ris, Prac-ti-cal Taxi-der-mist.”
With a stuff’ fox, like they ’as in the
Haylesbury Dairies, in the winder, an’ a little
case of blue and yaller glass-heyes, an’ a little
wife to call “shorp!” “shorp!”
when the door-bell rung. As it his, I’m
on’y a Tommy a Bloomin’ Gawd-forsaken
Beer-swillin’ Tommy. “Rest on your
harms ’versed. Stan’
at hease; ’shun.
’Verse harms. Right an’
lef’ tarrn. Slow march.
’Alt front. Rest on your
harms ’versed. With blank-cartridge load.”
An’ that’s the end o’ me.’
He was quoting fragments from Funeral Parties’
Orders.
‘Stop ut!’ shouted
Mulvaney. ‘Whin you’ve fired into
nothin’ as often as me, over a better man than
yoursilf, you will not make a mock av thim orders.
‘Tis worse than whistlin’ the Dead March
in barricks. An’ you full as a tick, an’
the sun cool, an’ all an’ all! I take
shame for you. You’re no better than a Pagin you
an’ your firin’-parties an’ your
glass-eyes. Won’t you stop ut,
Sorr?’
What could I do? Could I tell
Ortheris anything that he did not know of the pleasures
of his life? I was not a Chaplain nor a Subaltern,
and Ortheris had a right to speak as he thought fit.
‘Let him run, Mulvaney,’ I said.
‘It’s the beer.’
’No! ‘Tisn’t
the beer,’ said Mulvaney. ‘I know
fwhat’s comin’. He’s tuk this
way now an’ agin, an’ it’s bad it’s
bad for I’m fond av the bhoy.’
Indeed, Mulvaney seemed needlessly
anxious; but I knew that he looked after Ortheris
in a fatherly way.
‘Let me talk, let me talk,’
said Ortheris dreamily. ’D’you stop
your parrit screamin’ of a ‘ot day when
the cage is a-cookin’ ’is pore little
pink toes orf, Mulvaney?’
’Pink toes! D’ye
mane to say you’ve pink toes undher your bullswools,
ye blandanderin’,’ Mulvaney
gathered himself together for a terrific denunciation ’school-misthress!
Pink toes! How much Bass wid the label did that
ravin’ child dhrink?’
‘’Tain’t Bass,’
said Ortheris. ’It’s a bitterer beer
nor that. It’s ‘ome-sickness!’
‘Hark to him! An’
he goin’ Home in the Sherapis in the inside
av four months!’
’I don’t care. It’s
all one to me. ’Ow d’you know I ain’t
‘fraid o’ dyin’ ‘fore I gets
my discharge paipers?’ He recommenced, in a
sing-song voice, the Orders.
I had never seen this side of Ortheris’s
character before, but evidently Mulvaney had, and
attached serious importance to it. While Ortheris
babbled, with his head on his arms, Mulvaney whispered
to me:
’He’s always tuk this
way whin he’s been checked overmuch by the childher
they make Sarjints nowadays. That an’ havin’
nothin’ to do. I can’t make ut
out anyways.’
‘Well, what does it matter?
Let him talk himself through.’
Ortheris began singing a parody of
The Ramrod Corps, full of cheerful allusions
to battle, murder, and sudden death. He looked
out across the river as he sang; and his face was
quite strange to me. Mulvaney caught me by the
elbow to ensure attention.
’Matther? It matthers everything!
’Tis some sort av fit that’s
on him. I’ve seen ut. ‘Twill
hould him all this night, an’ in the middle av
it he’ll get out av his cot an’ go
rakin’ in the rack for his ‘courtremints.
Thin he’ll come over to me an’ say, “I’m
goin’ to Bombay. Answer for me in the mornin’.”
Thin me an’ him will fight as we’ve done
before him to go an’ me to hould him an’
so we’ll both come on the books for disturbin’
in barricks. I’ve belted him, an’
I’ve bruk his head, an’ I’ve talked
to him, but ’tis no manner av use
whin the fit’s on him. He’s as good
a bhoy as ever stepped whin his mind’s clear.
I know fwhat’s comin’, though, this night
in barricks. Lord send he doesn’t loose
on me whin I rise to knock him down. ’Tis
that that’s in my mind day an’ night.’
This put the case in a much less pleasant
light, and fully accounted for Mulvaney’s anxiety.
He seemed to be trying to coax Ortheris out of the
fit; for he shouted down the bank where the boy was
lying:
‘Listen now, you wid the “pore
pink toes” an’ the glass-eyes! Did
you shwim the Irriwaddy at night, behin’ me,
as a bhoy shud; or were you hidin’ under a bed,
as you was at Ahmid Kheyl?’
This was at once a gross insult and
a direct lie, and Mulvaney meant it to bring on a
fight. But Ortheris seemed shut up in some sort
of trance. He answered slowly, without a sign
of irritation, in the same cadenced voice as he had
used for his firing-party orders:
’Hi swum the Irriwaddy
in the night, as you know, for to take the town of
Lungtungpen, nakid an’ without fear. Hand
where I was at Ahmed Kheyl you know, and four bloomin’
Paythans know too. But that was summat to do,
an’ I didn’t think o’ dyin’.
Now I’m sick to go ’Ome go
’Ome go ’Ome! No, I ain’t
mammysick, because my uncle brung me up, but I’m
sick for London again; sick for the sounds of ‘er,
an’ the sights of ’er, and the stinks
of ’er; orange-peel and hasphalte an’
gas comin’ in over Vaux’all Bridge.
Sick for the rail goin’ down to Box ‘Ill,
with your gal on your knee an’ a new clay pipe
in your face. That, an’ the Stran’
lights where you knows ev’ry one, an’ the
Copper that takes you up is a old friend that tuk you
up before, when you was a little, smitchy boy lying
loose ‘tween the Temple an’ the Dark Harches.
No bloomin’ guard-mountin’, no bloomin’
rotten-stone, nor khaki, an’ yourself your own
master with a gal to take an’ see the Humaners
practisin’ a-hookin’ dead corpses out of
the Serpentine o’ Sundays. An’ I
lef’ all that for to serve the Widder beyond
the seas, where there ain’t no women and there
ain’t no liquor worth ‘avin’, and
there ain’t nothin’ to see, nor do, nor
say, nor feel, nor think. Lord love you, Stanley
Orth’ris, but you’re a bigger bloomin’
fool than the rest o’ the reg’ment and
Mulvaney wired together! There’s the Widder
sittin’ at ’Ome with a gold crownd on ’er
’ead; and ’ere am Hi, Stanley Orth’ris,
the Widder’s property, a rottin’ FOOL!’
His voice rose at the end of the sentence,
and he wound up with a six-shot Anglo-Vernacular oath.
Mulvaney said nothing, but looked at me as if he expected
that I could bring peace to poor Ortheris’s
troubled brain.
I remembered once at Rawal Pindi having
seen a man, nearly mad with drink, sobered by being
made a fool of. Some regiments may know what I
mean. I hoped that we might slake off Ortheris
in the same way, though he was perfectly sober.
So I said:
‘What’s the use of grousing
there, and speaking against The Widow?’
‘I didn’t!’ said
Ortheris. ’S’elp me, Gawd, I never
said a word agin ‘er, an’ I wouldn’t not
if I was to desert this minute!’
Here was my opening. ’Well,
you meant to, anyhow. What’s the use of
cracking-on for nothing? Would you slip it now
if you got the chance?’
‘On’y try me!’ said
Ortheris, jumping to his feet as if he had been stung.
Mulvaney jumped too. ‘Fwhat
are you going to do?’ said he.
’Help Ortheris down to Bombay
or Karachi, whichever he likes. You can report
that he separated from you before tiffin, and left
his gun on the bank here!’
‘I’m to report that am
I?’ said Mulvaney slowly. ’Very well.
If Orth’ris manes to desert now, and will desert
now, an’ you, Sorr, who have been a frind to
me an’ to him, will help him to ut, I, Terence
Mulvaney, on my oath which I’ve never bruk yet,
will report as you say. But ’
here he stepped up to Ortheris, and shook the stock
of the fowling-piece in his face ’your
fistes help you, Stanley Orth’ris, if ever I
come across you agin!’
‘I don’t care!’
said Ortheris. ‘I’m sick o’
this dorg’s life. Give me a chanst.
Don’t play with me. Le’ me go!’
‘Strip,’ said I, ’and
change with me, and then I’ll tell you what to
do.’
I hoped that the absurdity of this
would check Ortheris; but he had kicked off his ammunition-boots
and got rid of his tunic almost before I had loosed
my shirt-collar. Mulvaney gripped me by the arm:
‘The fit’s on him:
the fit’s workin’ on him still! By
my Honour and Sowl, we shall be accessiry to a desartion
yet. Only twenty-eight days, as you say, Sorr,
or fifty-six, but think o’ the shame the
black shame to him an’ me!’ I had never
seen Mulvaney so excited.
But Ortheris was quite calm, and,
as soon as he had exchanged clothes with me, and I
stood up a Private of the Line, he said shortly, ’Now!
Come on. What nex’? D’ye
mean fair. What must I do to get out o’
this ‘ere a-Hell?’
I told him that, if he would wait
for two or three hours near the river, I would ride
into the Station and come back with one hundred rupees.
He would, with that money in his pocket, walk to the
nearest side-station on the line, about five miles
away, and would there take a first-class ticket for
Karachi. Knowing that he had no money on him
when he went out shooting, his regiment would not immediately
wire to the seaports, but would hunt for him in the
native villages near the river. Further, no one
would think of seeking a deserter in a first-class
carriage. At Karachi, he was to buy white clothes
and ship, if he could, on a cargo-steamer.
Here he broke in. If I helped
him to Karachi, he would arrange all the rest.
Then I ordered him to wait where he was until it was
dark enough for me to ride into the station without
my dress being noticed. Now God in His wisdom
has made the heart of the British Soldier, who is
very often an unlicked ruffian, as soft as the heart
of a little child, in order that he may believe in
and follow his officers into tight and nasty places.
He does not so readily come to believe in a ‘civilian,’
but, when he does, he believes implicitly and like
a dog. I had had the honour of the friendship
of Private Ortheris, at intervals, for more than three
years, and we had dealt with each other as man by
man. Consequently, he considered that all my words
were true, and not spoken lightly.
Mulvaney and I left him in the high
grass near the river-bank, and went away, still keeping
to the high grass, towards my horse. The shirt
scratched me horribly.
We waited nearly two hours for the
dusk to fall and allow me to ride off. We spoke
of Ortheris in whispers, and strained our ears to catch
any sound from the spot where we had left him.
But we heard nothing except the wind in the plume-grass.
‘I’ve bruk his head,’
said Mulvaney earnestly, ‘time an’ agin.
I’ve nearly kilt him wid the belt, an’
yet I can’t knock thim fits out av
his soft head. No! An’ he’s not
soft, for he’s reasonable an’ likely by
natur’. Fwhat is ut? Is ut
his breedin’ which is nothin’, or his
edukashin which he niver got? You that think ye
know things, answer me that.’
But I found no answer. I was
wondering how long Ortheris, in the bank of the river,
would hold out, and whether I should be forced to help
him to desert, as I had given my word.
Just as the dusk shut down and, with
a very heavy heart, I was beginning to saddle up my
horse, we heard wild shouts from the river.
The devils had departed from Private
Stanley Ortheris, N, B company. The loneliness,
the dusk, and the waiting had driven them out as I
had hoped. We set off at the double and found
him plunging about wildly through the grass, with
his coat off my coat off, I mean. He
was calling for us like a madman.
When we reached him he was dripping
with perspiration, and trembling like a startled horse.
We had great difficulty in soothing him. He complained
that he was in civilian kit, and wanted to tear my
clothes off his body. I ordered him to strip,
and we made a second exchange as quickly as possible.
The rasp of his own ‘grayback’
shirt and the squeak of his boots seemed to bring
him to himself. He put his hands before his eyes
and said:
‘Wot was it? I ain’t
mad, I ain’t sunstrook, an’ I’ve
bin an’ gone an’ said, an’ bin an’
gone an’ done Wot
‘ave I bin an’ done!’
‘Fwhat have you done?’
said Mulvaney. ’You’ve dishgraced
yourself though that’s no matter.
You’ve dishgraced B comp’ny, an’
worst av all, you’ve dishgraced Me!
Me that taught you how for to walk abroad like a man whin
you was a dhirty little, fish-backed little, whimperin’
little recruity. As you are now, Stanley Orth’ris!’
Ortheris said nothing for a while.
Then he unslung his belt, heavy with the badges of
half-a-dozen regiments that his own had lain with,
and handed it over to Mulvaney.
‘I’m too little for to
mill you, Mulvaney,’ said he, ‘an’
you’ve strook me before; but you can take an’
cut me in two with this ’ere if you like.’
Mulvaney turned to me.
‘Lave me to talk to him, Sorr,’ said Mulvaney.
I left, and on my way home thought
a good deal over Ortheris in particular, and my friend
Private Thomas Atkins, whom I love, in general.
But I could not come to any conclusion of any kind
whatever.