Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason
  • Dec. 7, 1895
  • Page 10
Current:

The Freemason, Dec. 7, 1895: Page 10

  • Back to The Freemason, Dec. 7, 1895
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article The Cross Of honour, ← Page 2 of 5
    Article The Cross Of honour, Page 2 of 5 →
Page 10

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Cross Of Honour,

due deliberation it was decided that none , of ours , either ollicers or men , should be recommended for the Order . Now don't misunderstand me . It wasn ' t because the ollicers and men of the Forty-second didn ' t think themselves as daring and as deserving as the rest of the troops engaged ( here . Oh , no ! for . 1 . knew both 'ollicers and men declared in ( heir cups that'their own names should have , been

forwarded to head quarters it strict justice was to be meted out , But , as 1 have indicated , flu ' s was only the drunken opinion of the regiment ; the sober one was that the commanding ollicer had done perfectly right in not recommending any one of us for the distinction . Asa mailer of fact , we all Haltered ourselves afterwards that we were the only regiment for the Crimea which had not got one solitary Victoria Cross .

" However , during our stay in England , several decorations fell to fhe regiment , the gifts of the foreign Powers with whom we had come in contact during the Crimean War . There was nothing singular in this , but there was something remarkably singular in the fact that all these decorations , or nearly all , were showered upon a certain man , a , sergeant whom I prefer to call Shavden . Of course , that wasn ' t his name , but that ' s no matter . Now this Sergeant Shardcn was not a bright and particular star in the regiment . As a matter

of fact , be had never been very sober—was a regular " ale-can , " as the colliers say in Coletownc , and had been , more or less drunk during the twenty years be bad been in the service .

"But his decided predilection for booze wonldu t have mattered much had he been splendidly courageous ; but , he was neither very intelligent' nor very brave ; besides , he had not served ' at the front ' much more than half the time of sonic of his comrades ; and yet honours fell thick upon him as leaves in Vallombrosa . "

••Very strange that-very strange that , sir ! " the Druggist exclaimed , as he si ruck a match to re-light the half yard of clay he had foi gotten to keep ignited . " So we all thought , " the Old Soldier replied , with a sombre smile flickering a moment across his cynical face , " but stranger things were to happen , as you'll hear shortly . Well , as I was telling , the

good things simply rained down upon him . _ rom onr own government he had already received the Crimean War medal with one , clasp ; the Good Service Medal , which brought him ; C 20 per annum ; and the Long Service and Good Conduct Medal , which brought with it a donation of £ 20 . A Cross of the Legion of Honour was now sent to the regimen ! by lhe Emperor of the French , and this , with its 400 francs a year , was handed without ceremony to Sergeant Shardcn .

But that wasn ' t all he got by a long shot . A decoration of the Order of the Mcdjidie ; one of six French war medals ; one of three Sardinian war medals ( hat came to the regiment almost simultaneousl y were handed over to the gentleman I have referred to , and by the time the distribution of the Turkish war medal came about there was not much room left on ( he breast of the Sergeant for further display of the evidences < if his—well , suppose we call it good fortune !"

" 1 dare say the men of the Forty-second culled it by another and a stronger name , " the brawny Draper ventured to remark , as be ran his lingers along his brown beard . " But after all , Mac , that Sergeant of yours did not get hold of the Victoria Cross , did he Y " "If you'll have patience , my sonsie Scot , I'll tell you all about it , " the Old Soldier retorted , gruffly . "Fellows , you know , " he went on

' •will say anything , and when the order came for ns to sail to India , where the Mutiny had broken out , some of our chaps did not scruple to say that'Auhl Wall Shardcn' was going with us merel y for an opportunity to obtain the Victoria Cross , when he would be at once sen ! home again . This was , of course , a mistake , perhaps pardonable , but still a mistake . We were in India some time , and bad seen considerable service before anyone was recommended for the Victoria

Cross , and the ( irsf man , contrary to expectation , was not Sergeant Shardcn . "A . certain friend of my own , a Sergeant Tom Rigby , who deliberately made up his mind to win the decoration or perish in the attempt , would have been the first but he perished in the effort ,

which was especially foolhardy . We had barel y succeeded in carrying the rather formidable works thrown up by the Mutineers for the defence of Luckuow when night fell , and quite a lot of our regiment-, of different companies , found ourselves , and were ordered to make good our position till morning , in a kind of walled enclosure , which has always remained in niv mind as a garden .

' There was onl y one gateway , and about twenty yards in front of if was a gun , which had been abandoned by the Mutineers in the hurry of retreat . Somewhere about midnight , and for reasons best known lo themselves , the Paiulies made an attempt Io recover this abandoned gun . Our orders wore simply to hold the enclosure wherein we were penned ; but no soldier , let his orders be what , they might ,

could calmly look on while lhe enemy was carrying away the gun . Sergeant Tom Rigb y couldn ' t do anyhow , and aided and abetted by a young ollicer named , say , l- ' razer . a handful of men were got together , and a charge made on the insolent Pandies :. The poor devils simply lircd their pieces anywhere , ami ran oil ' , and our men were halted and sent back into the enclosure . But in Sergeant Tom

; tuil his ollicer the ardour of battle had , meanwhile , got into a glow ; 11 iiI l- ' ra / . er looked on approvingly , while liigby jumped upon ( he gun with lhe intention of spiking it , and hurling deliance at ( lie foe . lie succeeded after a fashion in doing both things , but at the expense ol his life . While madly shouting and gesticulating , poor Tom was shot through ( he heart , ami in less than half an hour was buried beneath lhe gateway of the garden . "And Frazer ' r" the Surveyor broke in , in an undertone of excitement .

The Cross Of Honour,

"Oh , Lieutenant Frazor had his right arm broken by a bullet : and for this sill y adventure ho was the very lirst of ours who evin wore the Victoria Cross . " " But what about" Sergeant Shardcn ? the Travelling- Drapei queried . " Did he get the Cross at Lucknow ? I thought this story was concerning him ,. Mae . "

" This story isn't finished yet , my man o ' . Ayr , " was the veteran ' s retort ; " and when you close your pretty month I ' m read y to resume my plain unvarnished chronicle . Well , if any of our men earned the V . C . at Lucknow I have forgotten both themselves and their deeds ; but at a little place called Rooya , in Onde , shortly after the fall of the Capital , wo gathered quite a decent , cro p of the Crosses—some of which were well earned , although one or two certainly were not

An ouiccv ' s servant who was decorated for carrying his wounded master out of action was , or as we thought , sufficiently rewarded for his humanit y by the privilege he allowed himself of remaining under cover , or out of range for the rest of that day . And a certain Quartermaster-Sergeant , who came into action , with ammunition , on the lee side of a camel , and got the coveted V . C . therefore , did no more than his duty , and not very bravely at that .

" But I wanted to tell about Bareilly . There we had what was called in ours a very pretty 'Shoofast' ; and out of it came a thick crap of envy , hatred , evil speaking , and all nncharitableness . At the time of our approach , the station of Bareilly was in possesion of the native Raj ah of the district , who had under him a largo number of Sepoys , with two or three fully-equipped and manned batteries of field artillery and a somewhat formidable siege train . He had also

with him , as a guest , the notorious Nana Sahib ; but as to whether Nana added to the Rajah's strength or weakness I am not in a position to say . Certain it is , however , that from that day to this European eyes have never beheld the infamous wretch , and the mysterious fate of the " Nana Dundoo Punt , chief b y adoption of the Rohillas , and known as Nana Sahib , " remains one of the unsolved puw . les of the world .

"You will excuse me , I hope , resumed the narrator , after moistening his lips from the tumbler before him , "for bringing in the Nana , who has really nothing to do with my story . I was following my own thoughts , my own recollections of thirty odd years ago , and had forgotten for the time that I was speaking aloud ,

Where were we ? Oh , yes , we were approaching Bareilly from the south-east ; and besides being defended by all the men and gnus 1 have mentioned , this station was protected by a stream , the somewhat preci p itous bank ' s of which afforded difficulties to the safu passage of troops in the face of an enemy .

"The bridge which carried the Grand Trunk Road over this watercourse was held by a bod y of the Rajah's infantry , a couple of troops of his cavalry , and half a battery of smooth bore ninepounders . To make himself master of this bridge without . incurring any serious loss was the problem Sir Colin Campbell had set himself as soon as he had grasped the situation ; and while the problem was being worked out to a practical solution the great body of the army under his control was being brought to a halt .

" During this halt , " said the Old Soldier , and his eyes showed that he was wanning up with a subdued kind of enthusiasm , " we hail an opportunity such as few of us had enjoyed before of seeing how an experienced and skilful military commander sets about to overcome a dilueulfv . 1 need not trouble you with the details ; bill

after some short time spent m cautious and careful preparation , the wil y old Scotchman launched his bolt , and , by the Lord , gentlemen , that unhappy detachment in charge of the bridge was broken to pieces and swept away as you may have seen stubble whirled into space by the fierce blasts of heaven .

"Then after having endured passively for almost an hour the pounding of a large number of fairl y well-served gnus we were set in motion once again , and mighty glad we were of ( he chance , I can assure yon . There is absolutely nothing more trying to the soldit-i

than this standing to be shot at without a chance being given linn to retaliate ; but ( his , of course , you can ' t understand , am ) it ' s apart from the mutter anyhow . Wo were , as I said , put in motion , onr orders being to cross the bridge in fours and form line while advancing on the , cantonments , on the plains beyond .

"The entire regiment had got across , but the line formation was very far from being complete , several companies being behind , and others widel y out of touch , when a horde , several hundreds strong , of madly fanatical Mussulman rebels , hurst like a torrent out of tin ' cantonments , and bore down on us at full speed , wildl y nourishing their glittering tulwars , and savagely shouting , ' Deen ! Deeu ! ' We

at once opened lire on them with murderous effect and little loss In ourselves , very few of the foe having other arms than tulwars and shields ; but the disfanee between ourselves and the cantonment *' was not great—say a hundred yards—and steadily decreasing ; mul some of our men were actually killed and many wounded by swoid

cuts in the ranks before we were able to destroy the assailants i " front of us . And from the iiieoitiploloiiess of our line , of which I have spoken , several of the fanatics , who were , as we afterward * learned , excited with bhang and vowed to death , succeeded in making their w :: v right through our ranks lo fhe rear .

"Here , at the rear , three sturd y and savage rebels attacked oat Colonel , about whom , alas ! there was nothing heroic . He , pool devil , forgot to draw cither his sword or his pistol , and in trying i ' dodge a sword out , the Colonel slid out of his saddle . I'Yoin tin ranks nothing was to be seen of him except one boot high in the an ' when Private Jem Garvin , a , splendid young fellow , Hew to hi * officer ' s assistance . Garvin promptly shot one of the three rebels .

“The Freemason: 1895-12-07, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fvl/issues/fvl_07121895/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CONTENTS. Article 1
Freemasonry in 1895. Article 1
CRAFT MASONRY. Article 1
The Cross Of honour, Article 9
The "Langdale " Masonic MS. Article 13
The Distinguishing Characteristic of a freemason's beart. Article 17
The Permit of Dunstanborough. A Legend of Nortbumbria. Article 17
SIGNS OF THE TIMES. Article 21
RIDING THE GOAT. Article 21
THE FIFTH CITY MASONIC BENEVOLENT ASSOCIATION. Article 21
TWO CURIOUS CERTIFICATES. Article 22
Untitled Article 23
OCCURRENCES OF THE YEAR. Article 24
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 26
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
Untitled Ad 27
To Correspondents . Article 27
Untitled Article 27
Masonic Notes. Article 27
Correspondence. Article 28
Masonic Notes and Queries. Article 28
BRO. ALDERMAN V. MORGAN AND THE GRAND TREASURERSHIP. Article 28
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 28
Untitled Ad 28
GRAND LODGE OF MARK MASTER MASONS. Article 30
Untitled Ad 31
Untitled Ad 32
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF DERBYSHIRE. Article 33
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF HERTFORDSHIRE. Article 33
Untitled Ad 33
ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS. Article 34
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF JERSEY. Article 34
Untitled Ad 34
PROVINCIAL GRAND CHAPTER OF BERKSHIRE. Article 35
FREEMASONRY IN SOUTH AFRICA. Article 35
Untitled Ad 35
AMUSING EPISODES IN "ANCIENT" HISTORY. Article 36
Untitled Ad 36
Untitled Ad 37
The Craft Abroad. Article 38
Untitled Ad 38
CHRISTMAS AND THE KNIGHT TEMPLARS. Article 39
Craft Masonry. Article 39
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 39
Untitled Ad 40
FREEMASONRY BY LIMELIGHT. Article 40
Mark Masonry. Article 40
Untitled Ad 41
Masonic and General Tidings. Article 42
Untitled Ad 42
Untitled Ad 42
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Untitled Ad 43
Ballad. Article 44
Untitled Ad 44
Page 1

Page 1

4 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

2 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

2 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

2 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

2 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

2 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

2 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

3 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

2 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

2 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

2 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

3 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

1 Article
Page 15

Page 15

1 Article
Page 16

Page 16

2 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

4 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

2 Articles
Page 19

Page 19

1 Article
Page 20

Page 20

2 Articles
Page 21

Page 21

5 Articles
Page 22

Page 22

2 Articles
Page 23

Page 23

1 Article
Page 24

Page 24

3 Articles
Page 25

Page 25

3 Articles
Page 26

Page 26

24 Articles
Page 27

Page 27

13 Articles
Page 28

Page 28

5 Articles
Page 29

Page 29

2 Articles
Page 30

Page 30

3 Articles
Page 31

Page 31

1 Article
Page 32

Page 32

1 Article
Page 33

Page 33

4 Articles
Page 34

Page 34

4 Articles
Page 35

Page 35

5 Articles
Page 36

Page 36

4 Articles
Page 37

Page 37

3 Articles
Page 38

Page 38

3 Articles
Page 39

Page 39

5 Articles
Page 40

Page 40

4 Articles
Page 41

Page 41

1 Article
Page 42

Page 42

4 Articles
Page 43

Page 43

7 Articles
Page 44

Page 44

4 Articles
Page 10

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Cross Of Honour,

due deliberation it was decided that none , of ours , either ollicers or men , should be recommended for the Order . Now don't misunderstand me . It wasn ' t because the ollicers and men of the Forty-second didn ' t think themselves as daring and as deserving as the rest of the troops engaged ( here . Oh , no ! for . 1 . knew both 'ollicers and men declared in ( heir cups that'their own names should have , been

forwarded to head quarters it strict justice was to be meted out , But , as 1 have indicated , flu ' s was only the drunken opinion of the regiment ; the sober one was that the commanding ollicer had done perfectly right in not recommending any one of us for the distinction . Asa mailer of fact , we all Haltered ourselves afterwards that we were the only regiment for the Crimea which had not got one solitary Victoria Cross .

" However , during our stay in England , several decorations fell to fhe regiment , the gifts of the foreign Powers with whom we had come in contact during the Crimean War . There was nothing singular in this , but there was something remarkably singular in the fact that all these decorations , or nearly all , were showered upon a certain man , a , sergeant whom I prefer to call Shavden . Of course , that wasn ' t his name , but that ' s no matter . Now this Sergeant Shardcn was not a bright and particular star in the regiment . As a matter

of fact , be had never been very sober—was a regular " ale-can , " as the colliers say in Coletownc , and had been , more or less drunk during the twenty years be bad been in the service .

"But his decided predilection for booze wonldu t have mattered much had he been splendidly courageous ; but , he was neither very intelligent' nor very brave ; besides , he had not served ' at the front ' much more than half the time of sonic of his comrades ; and yet honours fell thick upon him as leaves in Vallombrosa . "

••Very strange that-very strange that , sir ! " the Druggist exclaimed , as he si ruck a match to re-light the half yard of clay he had foi gotten to keep ignited . " So we all thought , " the Old Soldier replied , with a sombre smile flickering a moment across his cynical face , " but stranger things were to happen , as you'll hear shortly . Well , as I was telling , the

good things simply rained down upon him . _ rom onr own government he had already received the Crimean War medal with one , clasp ; the Good Service Medal , which brought him ; C 20 per annum ; and the Long Service and Good Conduct Medal , which brought with it a donation of £ 20 . A Cross of the Legion of Honour was now sent to the regimen ! by lhe Emperor of the French , and this , with its 400 francs a year , was handed without ceremony to Sergeant Shardcn .

But that wasn ' t all he got by a long shot . A decoration of the Order of the Mcdjidie ; one of six French war medals ; one of three Sardinian war medals ( hat came to the regiment almost simultaneousl y were handed over to the gentleman I have referred to , and by the time the distribution of the Turkish war medal came about there was not much room left on ( he breast of the Sergeant for further display of the evidences < if his—well , suppose we call it good fortune !"

" 1 dare say the men of the Forty-second culled it by another and a stronger name , " the brawny Draper ventured to remark , as be ran his lingers along his brown beard . " But after all , Mac , that Sergeant of yours did not get hold of the Victoria Cross , did he Y " "If you'll have patience , my sonsie Scot , I'll tell you all about it , " the Old Soldier retorted , gruffly . "Fellows , you know , " he went on

' •will say anything , and when the order came for ns to sail to India , where the Mutiny had broken out , some of our chaps did not scruple to say that'Auhl Wall Shardcn' was going with us merel y for an opportunity to obtain the Victoria Cross , when he would be at once sen ! home again . This was , of course , a mistake , perhaps pardonable , but still a mistake . We were in India some time , and bad seen considerable service before anyone was recommended for the Victoria

Cross , and the ( irsf man , contrary to expectation , was not Sergeant Shardcn . "A . certain friend of my own , a Sergeant Tom Rigby , who deliberately made up his mind to win the decoration or perish in the attempt , would have been the first but he perished in the effort ,

which was especially foolhardy . We had barel y succeeded in carrying the rather formidable works thrown up by the Mutineers for the defence of Luckuow when night fell , and quite a lot of our regiment-, of different companies , found ourselves , and were ordered to make good our position till morning , in a kind of walled enclosure , which has always remained in niv mind as a garden .

' There was onl y one gateway , and about twenty yards in front of if was a gun , which had been abandoned by the Mutineers in the hurry of retreat . Somewhere about midnight , and for reasons best known lo themselves , the Paiulies made an attempt Io recover this abandoned gun . Our orders wore simply to hold the enclosure wherein we were penned ; but no soldier , let his orders be what , they might ,

could calmly look on while lhe enemy was carrying away the gun . Sergeant Tom Rigb y couldn ' t do anyhow , and aided and abetted by a young ollicer named , say , l- ' razer . a handful of men were got together , and a charge made on the insolent Pandies :. The poor devils simply lircd their pieces anywhere , ami ran oil ' , and our men were halted and sent back into the enclosure . But in Sergeant Tom

; tuil his ollicer the ardour of battle had , meanwhile , got into a glow ; 11 iiI l- ' ra / . er looked on approvingly , while liigby jumped upon ( he gun with lhe intention of spiking it , and hurling deliance at ( lie foe . lie succeeded after a fashion in doing both things , but at the expense ol his life . While madly shouting and gesticulating , poor Tom was shot through ( he heart , ami in less than half an hour was buried beneath lhe gateway of the garden . "And Frazer ' r" the Surveyor broke in , in an undertone of excitement .

The Cross Of Honour,

"Oh , Lieutenant Frazor had his right arm broken by a bullet : and for this sill y adventure ho was the very lirst of ours who evin wore the Victoria Cross . " " But what about" Sergeant Shardcn ? the Travelling- Drapei queried . " Did he get the Cross at Lucknow ? I thought this story was concerning him ,. Mae . "

" This story isn't finished yet , my man o ' . Ayr , " was the veteran ' s retort ; " and when you close your pretty month I ' m read y to resume my plain unvarnished chronicle . Well , if any of our men earned the V . C . at Lucknow I have forgotten both themselves and their deeds ; but at a little place called Rooya , in Onde , shortly after the fall of the Capital , wo gathered quite a decent , cro p of the Crosses—some of which were well earned , although one or two certainly were not

An ouiccv ' s servant who was decorated for carrying his wounded master out of action was , or as we thought , sufficiently rewarded for his humanit y by the privilege he allowed himself of remaining under cover , or out of range for the rest of that day . And a certain Quartermaster-Sergeant , who came into action , with ammunition , on the lee side of a camel , and got the coveted V . C . therefore , did no more than his duty , and not very bravely at that .

" But I wanted to tell about Bareilly . There we had what was called in ours a very pretty 'Shoofast' ; and out of it came a thick crap of envy , hatred , evil speaking , and all nncharitableness . At the time of our approach , the station of Bareilly was in possesion of the native Raj ah of the district , who had under him a largo number of Sepoys , with two or three fully-equipped and manned batteries of field artillery and a somewhat formidable siege train . He had also

with him , as a guest , the notorious Nana Sahib ; but as to whether Nana added to the Rajah's strength or weakness I am not in a position to say . Certain it is , however , that from that day to this European eyes have never beheld the infamous wretch , and the mysterious fate of the " Nana Dundoo Punt , chief b y adoption of the Rohillas , and known as Nana Sahib , " remains one of the unsolved puw . les of the world .

"You will excuse me , I hope , resumed the narrator , after moistening his lips from the tumbler before him , "for bringing in the Nana , who has really nothing to do with my story . I was following my own thoughts , my own recollections of thirty odd years ago , and had forgotten for the time that I was speaking aloud ,

Where were we ? Oh , yes , we were approaching Bareilly from the south-east ; and besides being defended by all the men and gnus 1 have mentioned , this station was protected by a stream , the somewhat preci p itous bank ' s of which afforded difficulties to the safu passage of troops in the face of an enemy .

"The bridge which carried the Grand Trunk Road over this watercourse was held by a bod y of the Rajah's infantry , a couple of troops of his cavalry , and half a battery of smooth bore ninepounders . To make himself master of this bridge without . incurring any serious loss was the problem Sir Colin Campbell had set himself as soon as he had grasped the situation ; and while the problem was being worked out to a practical solution the great body of the army under his control was being brought to a halt .

" During this halt , " said the Old Soldier , and his eyes showed that he was wanning up with a subdued kind of enthusiasm , " we hail an opportunity such as few of us had enjoyed before of seeing how an experienced and skilful military commander sets about to overcome a dilueulfv . 1 need not trouble you with the details ; bill

after some short time spent m cautious and careful preparation , the wil y old Scotchman launched his bolt , and , by the Lord , gentlemen , that unhappy detachment in charge of the bridge was broken to pieces and swept away as you may have seen stubble whirled into space by the fierce blasts of heaven .

"Then after having endured passively for almost an hour the pounding of a large number of fairl y well-served gnus we were set in motion once again , and mighty glad we were of ( he chance , I can assure yon . There is absolutely nothing more trying to the soldit-i

than this standing to be shot at without a chance being given linn to retaliate ; but ( his , of course , you can ' t understand , am ) it ' s apart from the mutter anyhow . Wo were , as I said , put in motion , onr orders being to cross the bridge in fours and form line while advancing on the , cantonments , on the plains beyond .

"The entire regiment had got across , but the line formation was very far from being complete , several companies being behind , and others widel y out of touch , when a horde , several hundreds strong , of madly fanatical Mussulman rebels , hurst like a torrent out of tin ' cantonments , and bore down on us at full speed , wildl y nourishing their glittering tulwars , and savagely shouting , ' Deen ! Deeu ! ' We

at once opened lire on them with murderous effect and little loss In ourselves , very few of the foe having other arms than tulwars and shields ; but the disfanee between ourselves and the cantonment *' was not great—say a hundred yards—and steadily decreasing ; mul some of our men were actually killed and many wounded by swoid

cuts in the ranks before we were able to destroy the assailants i " front of us . And from the iiieoitiploloiiess of our line , of which I have spoken , several of the fanatics , who were , as we afterward * learned , excited with bhang and vowed to death , succeeded in making their w :: v right through our ranks lo fhe rear .

"Here , at the rear , three sturd y and savage rebels attacked oat Colonel , about whom , alas ! there was nothing heroic . He , pool devil , forgot to draw cither his sword or his pistol , and in trying i ' dodge a sword out , the Colonel slid out of his saddle . I'Yoin tin ranks nothing was to be seen of him except one boot high in the an ' when Private Jem Garvin , a , splendid young fellow , Hew to hi * officer ' s assistance . Garvin promptly shot one of the three rebels .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 9
  • You're on page10
  • 11
  • 44
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy