Her Majesty’s Servants
You can work it out
by Fractions or by simple Rule of Three,
But the way of Tweedle-dum
is not the way of Tweedle-dee.
You can twist it, you
can turn it, you can plait it till you drop,
But the way of Pilly
Winky’s not the way of Winkie Pop!
It had been raining heavily for one
whole month—raining on a camp of thirty
thousand men and thousands of camels, elephants, horses,
bullocks, and mules all gathered together at a place
called Rawal Pindi, to be reviewed by the Viceroy
of India. He was receiving a visit from the Amir
of Afghanistan—a wild king of a very wild
country. The Amir had brought with him for a
bodyguard eight hundred men and horses who had never
seen a camp or a locomotive before in their lives—savage
men and savage horses from somewhere at the back of
Central Asia. Every night a mob of these horses
would be sure to break their heel ropes and stampede
up and down the camp through the mud in the dark, or
the camels would break loose and run about and fall
over the ropes of the tents, and you can imagine how
pleasant that was for men trying to go to sleep.
My tent lay far away from the camel lines, and I thought
it was safe. But one night a man popped his head
in and shouted, “Get out, quick! They’re
coming! My tent’s gone!”
I knew who “they” were,
so I put on my boots and waterproof and scuttled out
into the slush. Little Vixen, my fox terrier,
went out through the other side; and then there was
a roaring and a grunting and bubbling, and I saw the
tent cave in, as the pole snapped, and begin to dance
about like a mad ghost. A camel had blundered
into it, and wet and angry as I was, I could not help
laughing. Then I ran on, because I did not know
how many camels might have got loose, and before long
I was out of sight of the camp, plowing my way through
the mud.
At last I fell over the tail-end of
a gun, and by that knew I was somewhere near the artillery
lines where the cannon were stacked at night.
As I did not want to plowter about any more in the
drizzle and the dark, I put my waterproof over the
muzzle of one gun, and made a sort of wigwam with
two or three rammers that I found, and lay along the
tail of another gun, wondering where Vixen had got
to, and where I might be.
Just as I was getting ready to go
to sleep I heard a jingle of harness and a grunt,
and a mule passed me shaking his wet ears. He
belonged to a screw-gun battery, for I could hear
the rattle of the straps and rings and chains and
things on his saddle pad. The screw-guns are tiny
little cannon made in two pieces, that are screwed
together when the time comes to use them. They
are taken up mountains, anywhere that a mule can find
a road, and they are very useful for fighting in rocky
country.
Behind the mule there was a camel,
with his big soft feet squelching and slipping in
the mud, and his neck bobbing to and fro like a strayed
hen’s. Luckily, I knew enough of beast language—not
wild-beast language, but camp-beast language, of course—from
the natives to know what he was saying.
He must have been the one that flopped
into my tent, for he called to the mule, “What
shall I do? Where shall I go? I have fought
with a white thing that waved, and it took a stick
and hit me on the neck.” (That was my broken
tent pole, and I was very glad to know it.) “Shall
we run on?”
“Oh, it was you,” said
the mule, “you and your friends, that have been
disturbing the camp? All right. You’ll
be beaten for this in the morning. But I may
as well give you something on account now.”
I heard the harness jingle as the
mule backed and caught the camel two kicks in the
ribs that rang like a drum. “Another time,”
he said, “you’ll know better than to run
through a mule battery at night, shouting `Thieves
and fire!’ Sit down, and keep your silly neck
quiet.”
The camel doubled up camel-fashion,
like a two-foot rule, and sat down whimpering.
There was a regular beat of hoofs in the darkness,
and a big troop-horse cantered up as steadily as though
he were on parade, jumped a gun tail, and landed close
to the mule.
“It’s disgraceful,”
he said, blowing out his nostrils. “Those
camels have racketed through our lines again—the
third time this week. How’s a horse to
keep his condition if he isn’t allowed to sleep.
Who’s here?”
“I’m the breech-piece
mule of number two gun of the First Screw Battery,”
said the mule, “and the other’s one of
your friends. He’s waked me up too.
Who are you?”
“Number Fifteen, E troop, Ninth
Lancers—Dick Cunliffe’s horse.
Stand over a little, there.”
“Oh, beg your pardon,”
said the mule. “It’s too dark to see
much. Aren’t these camels too sickening
for anything? I walked out of my lines to get
a little peace and quiet here.”
“My lords,” said the camel
humbly, “we dreamed bad dreams in the night,
and we were very much afraid. I am only a baggage
camel of the 39th Native Infantry, and I am not as
brave as you are, my lords.”
“Then why didn’t you stay
and carry baggage for the 39th Native Infantry, instead
of running all round the camp?” said the mule.
“They were such very bad dreams,”
said the camel. “I am sorry. Listen!
What is that? Shall we run on again?”
“Sit down,” said the mule,
“or you’ll snap your long stick-legs between
the guns.” He cocked one ear and listened.
“Bullocks!” he said. “Gun bullocks.
On my word, you and your friends have waked the camp
very thoroughly. It takes a good deal of prodding
to put up a gun-bullock.”
I heard a chain dragging along the
ground, and a yoke of the great sulky white bullocks
that drag the heavy siege guns when the elephants won’t
go any nearer to the firing, came shouldering along
together. And almost stepping on the chain was
another battery mule, calling wildly for “Billy.”
“That’s one of our recruits,”
said the old mule to the troop horse. “He’s
calling for me. Here, youngster, stop squealing.
The dark never hurt anybody yet.”
The gun-bullocks lay down together
and began chewing the cud, but the young mule huddled
close to Billy.
“Things!” he said.
“Fearful and horrible, Billy! They came
into our lines while we were asleep. D’you
think they’ll kill us?”
“I’ve a very great mind
to give you a number-one kicking,” said Billy.
“The idea of a fourteen-hand mule with your training
disgracing the battery before this gentleman!”
“Gently, gently!” said
the troop-horse. “Remember they are always
like this to begin with. The first time I ever
saw a man (it was in Australia when I was a three-year-old)
I ran for half a day, and if I’d seen a camel,
I should have been running still.”
Nearly all our horses for the English
cavalry are brought to India from Australia, and are
broken in by the troopers themselves.
“True enough,” said Billy.
“Stop shaking, youngster. The first time
they put the full harness with all its chains on my
back I stood on my forelegs and kicked every bit of
it off. I hadn’t learned the real science
of kicking then, but the battery said they had never
seen anything like it.”
“But this wasn’t harness
or anything that jingled,” said the young mule.
“You know I don’t mind that now, Billy.
It was Things like trees, and they fell up and down
the lines and bubbled; and my head-rope broke, and
I couldn’t find my driver, and I couldn’t
find you, Billy, so I ran off with—with
these gentlemen.”
“H’m!” said Billy.
“As soon as I heard the camels were loose I came
away on my own account. When a battery—a
screw-gun mule calls gun-bullocks gentlemen, he must
be very badly shaken up. Who are you fellows on
the ground there?”
The gun bullocks rolled their cuds,
and answered both together: “The seventh
yoke of the first gun of the Big Gun Battery.
We were asleep when the camels came, but when we were
trampled on we got up and walked away. It is
better to lie quiet in the mud than to be disturbed
on good bedding. We told your friend here that
there was nothing to be afraid of, but he knew so
much that he thought otherwise. Wah!”
They went on chewing.
“That comes of being afraid,”
said Billy. “You get laughed at by gun-bullocks.
I hope you like it, young un.”
The young mule’s teeth snapped,
and I heard him say something about not being afraid
of any beefy old bullock in the world. But the
bullocks only clicked their horns together and went
on chewing.
“Now, don’t be angry after
you’ve been afraid. That’s the worst
kind of cowardice,” said the troop-horse.
“Anybody can be forgiven for being scared in
the night, I think, if they see things they don’t
understand. We’ve broken out of our pickets,
again and again, four hundred and fifty of us, just
because a new recruit got to telling tales of whip
snakes at home in Australia till we were scared to
death of the loose ends of our head-ropes.”
“That’s all very well
in camp,” said Billy. “I’m not
above stampeding myself, for the fun of the thing,
when I haven’t been out for a day or two.
But what do you do on active service?”
“Oh, that’s quite another
set of new shoes,” said the troop horse.
“Dick Cunliffe’s on my back then, and
drives his knees into me, and all I have to do is
to watch where I am putting my feet, and to keep my
hind legs well under me, and be bridle-wise.”
“What’s bridle-wise?” said the young
mule.
“By the Blue Gums of the Back
Blocks,” snorted the troop-horse, “do you
mean to say that you aren’t taught to be bridle-wise
in your business? How can you do anything, unless
you can spin round at once when the rein is pressed
on your neck? It means life or death to your man,
and of course that’s life and death to you.
Get round with your hind legs under you the instant
you feel the rein on your neck. If you haven’t
room to swing round, rear up a little and come round
on your hind legs. That’s being bridle-wise.”
“We aren’t taught that
way,” said Billy the mule stiffly. “We’re
taught to obey the man at our head: step off
when he says so, and step in when he says so.
I suppose it comes to the same thing. Now, with
all this fine fancy business and rearing, which must
be very bad for your hocks, what do you do?”
“That depends,” said the
troop-horse. “Generally I have to go in
among a lot of yelling, hairy men with knives—long
shiny knives, worse than the farrier’s knives—and
I have to take care that Dick’s boot is just
touching the next man’s boot without crushing
it. I can see Dick’s lance to the right
of my right eye, and I know I’m safe. I
shouldn’t care to be the man or horse that stood
up to Dick and me when we’re in a hurry.”
“Don’t the knives hurt?” said the
young mule.
“Well, I got one cut across
the chest once, but that wasn’t Dick’s
fault—”
“A lot I should have cared whose
fault it was, if it hurt!” said the young mule.
“You must,” said the troop
horse. “If you don’t trust your man,
you may as well run away at once. That’s
what some of our horses do, and I don’t blame
them. As I was saying, it wasn’t Dick’s
fault. The man was lying on the ground, and I
stretched myself not to tread on him, and he slashed
up at me. Next time I have to go over a man lying
down I shall step on him—hard.”
“H’m!” said Billy.
“It sounds very foolish. Knives are dirty
things at any time. The proper thing to do is
to climb up a mountain with a well-balanced saddle,
hang on by all four feet and your ears too, and creep
and crawl and wriggle along, till you come out hundreds
of feet above anyone else on a ledge where there’s
just room enough for your hoofs. Then you stand
still and keep quiet—never ask a man to
hold your head, young un—keep quiet while
the guns are being put together, and then you watch
the little poppy shells drop down into the tree-tops
ever so far below.”
“Don’t you ever trip?” said the
troop-horse.
“They say that when a mule trips
you can split a hen’s ear,” said Billy.
“Now and again perhaps a badly packed saddle
will upset a mule, but it’s very seldom.
I wish I could show you our business. It’s
beautiful. Why, it took me three years to find
out what the men were driving at. The science
of the thing is never to show up against the sky line,
because, if you do, you may get fired at. Remember
that, young un. Always keep hidden as much as
possible, even if you have to go a mile out of your
way. I lead the battery when it comes to that
sort of climbing.”
“Fired at without the chance
of running into the people who are firing!”
said the troop-horse, thinking hard. “I
couldn’t stand that. I should want to charge—with
Dick.”
“Oh, no, you wouldn’t.
You know that as soon as the guns are in position
they’ll do all the charging. That’s
scientific and neat. But knives—pah!”
The baggage-camel had been bobbing
his head to and fro for some time past, anxious to
get a word in edgewise. Then I heard him say,
as he cleared his throat, nervously:
“I—I—I
have fought a little, but not in that climbing way
or that running way.”
“No. Now you mention it,”
said Billy, “you don’t look as though you
were made for climbing or running—much.
Well, how was it, old Hay-bales?”
“The proper way,” said the camel.
“We all sat down—”
“Oh, my crupper and breastplate!”
said the troop-horse under his breath. “Sat
down!”
“We sat down—a hundred
of us,” the camel went on, “in a big square,
and the men piled our packs and saddles, outside the
square, and they fired over our backs, the men did,
on all sides of the square.”
“What sort of men? Any
men that came along?” said the troop-horse.
“They teach us in riding school to lie down
and let our masters fire across us, but Dick Cunliffe
is the only man I’d trust to do that. It
tickles my girths, and, besides, I can’t see
with my head on the ground.”
“What does it matter who fires
across you?” said the camel. “There
are plenty of men and plenty of other camels close
by, and a great many clouds of smoke. I am not
frightened then. I sit still and wait.”
“And yet,” said Billy,
“you dream bad dreams and upset the camp at
night. Well, well! Before I’d lie down,
not to speak of sitting down, and let a man fire across
me, my heels and his head would have something to
say to each other. Did you ever hear anything
so awful as that?”
There was a long silence, and then
one of the gun bullocks lifted up his big head and
said, “This is very foolish indeed. There
is only one way of fighting.”
“Oh, go on,” said Billy.
“Please don’t mind me. I suppose you
fellows fight standing on your tails?”
“Only one way,” said the
two together. (They must have been twins.) “This
is that way. To put all twenty yoke of us to the
big gun as soon as Two Tails trumpets.” (“Two
Tails” is camp slang for the elephant.)
“What does Two Tails trumpet for?” said
the young mule.
“To show that he is not going
any nearer to the smoke on the other side. Two
Tails is a great coward. Then we tug the big gun
all together—Heya—Hullah!
Heeyah! Hullah! We do not climb like cats
nor run like calves. We go across the level plain,
twenty yoke of us, till we are unyoked again, and
we graze while the big guns talk across the plain
to some town with mud walls, and pieces of the wall
fall out, and the dust goes up as though many cattle
were coming home.”
“Oh! And you choose that
time for grazing?” said the young mule.
“That time or any other.
Eating is always good. We eat till we are yoked
up again and tug the gun back to where Two Tails is
waiting for it. Sometimes there are big guns
in the city that speak back, and some of us are killed,
and then there is all the more grazing for those that
are left. This is Fate. None the less, Two
Tails is a great coward. That is the proper way
to fight. We are brothers from Hapur. Our
father was a sacred bull of Shiva. We have spoken.”
“Well, I’ve certainly
learned something tonight,” said the troop-horse.
“Do you gentlemen of the screw-gun battery feel
inclined to eat when you are being fired at with big
guns, and Two Tails is behind you?”
“About as much as we feel inclined
to sit down and let men sprawl all over us, or run
into people with knives. I never heard such stuff.
A mountain ledge, a well-balanced load, a driver you
can trust to let you pick your own way, and I’m
your mule. But—the other things—no!”
said Billy, with a stamp of his foot.
“Of course,” said the
troop horse, “everyone is not made in the same
way, and I can quite see that your family, on your
father’s side, would fail to understand a great
many things.”
“Never you mind my family on
my father’s side,” said Billy angrily,
for every mule hates to be reminded that his father
was a donkey. “My father was a Southern
gentleman, and he could pull down and bite and kick
into rags every horse he came across. Remember
that, you big brown Brumby!”
Brumby means wild horse without any
breeding. Imagine the feelings of Sunol if a
car-horse called her a “skate,” and you
can imagine how the Australian horse felt. I
saw the white of his eye glitter in the dark.
“See here, you son of an imported
Malaga jackass,” he said between his teeth,
“I’d have you know that I’m related
on my mother’s side to Carbine, winner of the
Melbourne Cup, and where I come from we aren’t
accustomed to being ridden over roughshod by any parrot-mouthed,
pig-headed mule in a pop-gun pea-shooter battery.
Are you ready?”
“On your hind legs!” squealed
Billy. They both reared up facing each other,
and I was expecting a furious fight, when a gurgly,
rumbly voice, called out of the darkness to the right—“Children,
what are you fighting about there? Be quiet.”
Both beasts dropped down with a snort
of disgust, for neither horse nor mule can bear to
listen to an elephant’s voice.
“It’s Two Tails!”
said the troop-horse. “I can’t stand
him. A tail at each end isn’t fair!”
“My feelings exactly,”
said Billy, crowding into the troop-horse for company.
“We’re very alike in some things.”
“I suppose we’ve inherited
them from our mothers,” said the troop horse.
“It’s not worth quarreling about.
Hi! Two Tails, are you tied up?”
“Yes,” said Two Tails,
with a laugh all up his trunk. “I’m
picketed for the night. I’ve heard what
you fellows have been saying. But don’t
be afraid. I’m not coming over.”
The bullocks and the camel said, half
aloud, “Afraid of Two Tails—what
nonsense!” And the bullocks went on, “We
are sorry that you heard, but it is true. Two
Tails, why are you afraid of the guns when they fire?”
“Well,” said Two Tails,
rubbing one hind leg against the other, exactly like
a little boy saying a poem, “I don’t quite
know whether you’d understand.”
“We don’t, but we have
to pull the guns,” said the bullocks.
“I know it, and I know you are
a good deal braver than you think you are. But
it’s different with me. My battery captain
called me a Pachydermatous Anachronism the other day.”
“That’s another way of
fighting, I suppose?” said Billy, who was recovering
his spirits.
“You don’t know what that
means, of course, but I do. It means betwixt
and between, and that is just where I am. I can
see inside my head what will happen when a shell bursts,
and you bullocks can’t.”
“I can,” said the troop-horse.
“At least a little bit. I try not to think
about it.”
“I can see more than you, and
I do think about it. I know there’s a great
deal of me to take care of, and I know that nobody
knows how to cure me when I’m sick. All
they can do is to stop my driver’s pay till I
get well, and I can’t trust my driver.”
“Ah!” said the troop horse.
“That explains it. I can trust Dick.”
“You could put a whole regiment
of Dicks on my back without making me feel any better.
I know just enough to be uncomfortable, and not enough
to go on in spite of it.”
“We do not understand,” said the bullocks.
“I know you don’t.
I’m not talking to you. You don’t
know what blood is.”
“We do,” said the bullocks.
“It is red stuff that soaks into the ground
and smells.”
The troop-horse gave a kick and a bound and a snort.
“Don’t talk of it,”
he said. “I can smell it now, just thinking
of it. It makes me want to run—when
I haven’t Dick on my back.”
“But it is not here,”
said the camel and the bullocks. “Why are
you so stupid?”
“It’s vile stuff,”
said Billy. “I don’t want to run,
but I don’t want to talk about it.”
“There you are!” said
Two Tails, waving his tail to explain.
“Surely. Yes, we have been
here all night,” said the bullocks.
Two Tails stamped his foot till the
iron ring on it jingled. “Oh, I’m
not talking to you. You can’t see inside
your heads.”
“No. We see out of our
four eyes,” said the bullocks. “We
see straight in front of us.”
“If I could do that and nothing
else, you wouldn’t be needed to pull the big
guns at all. If I was like my captain—he
can see things inside his head before the firing begins,
and he shakes all over, but he knows too much to run
away—if I was like him I could pull the
guns. But if I were as wise as all that I should
never be here. I should be a king in the forest,
as I used to be, sleeping half the day and bathing
when I liked. I haven’t had a good bath
for a month.”
“That’s all very fine,”
said Billy. “But giving a thing a long name
doesn’t make it any better.”
“H’sh!” said the
troop horse. “I think I understand what
Two Tails means.”
“You’ll understand better
in a minute,” said Two Tails angrily. “Now
you just explain to me why you don’t like this!”
He began trumpeting furiously at the top of his trumpet.
“Stop that!” said Billy
and the troop horse together, and I could hear them
stamp and shiver. An elephant’s trumpeting
is always nasty, especially on a dark night.
“I shan’t stop,”
said Two Tails. “Won’t you explain
that, please? Hhrrmph! Rrrt! Rrrmph!
Rrrhha!” Then he stopped suddenly, and I heard
a little whimper in the dark, and knew that Vixen had
found me at last. She knew as well as I did that
if there is one thing in the world the elephant is
more afraid of than another it is a little barking
dog. So she stopped to bully Two Tails in his
pickets, and yapped round his big feet. Two Tails
shuffled and squeaked. “Go away, little
dog!” he said. “Don’t snuff
at my ankles, or I’ll kick at you. Good
little dog—nice little doggie, then!
Go home, you yelping little beast! Oh, why doesn’t
someone take her away? She’ll bite me in
a minute.”
“Seems to me,” said Billy
to the troop horse, “that our friend Two Tails
is afraid of most things. Now, if I had a full
meal for every dog I’ve kicked across the parade-ground
I should be as fat as Two Tails nearly.”
I whistled, and Vixen ran up to me,
muddy all over, and licked my nose, and told me a
long tale about hunting for me all through the camp.
I never let her know that I understood beast talk,
or she would have taken all sorts of liberties.
So I buttoned her into the breast of my overcoat,
and Two Tails shuffled and stamped and growled to himself.
“Extraordinary! Most extraordinary!”
he said. “It runs in our family. Now,
where has that nasty little beast gone to?”
I heard him feeling about with his trunk.
“We all seem to be affected
in various ways,” he went on, blowing his nose.
“Now, you gentlemen were alarmed, I believe,
when I trumpeted.”
“Not alarmed, exactly,”
said the troop-horse, “but it made me feel as
though I had hornets where my saddle ought to be.
Don’t begin again.”
“I’m frightened of a little
dog, and the camel here is frightened by bad dreams
in the night.”
“It is very lucky for us that
we haven’t all got to fight in the same way,”
said the troop-horse.
“What I want to know,”
said the young mule, who had been quiet for a long
time—“what I want to know is, why
we have to fight at all.”
“Because we’re told to,”
said the troop-horse, with a snort of contempt.
“Orders,” said Billy the mule, and his
teeth snapped.
“Hukm hai!” (It is an
order!), said the camel with a gurgle, and Two Tails
and the bullocks repeated, “Hukm hai!”
“Yes, but who gives the orders?” said
the recruit-mule.
“The man who walks at your head—Or
sits on your back—Or holds the nose rope—Or
twists your tail,” said Billy and the troop-horse
and the camel and the bullocks one after the other.
“But who gives them the orders?”
“Now you want to know too much,
young un,” said Billy, “and that is one
way of getting kicked. All you have to do is to
obey the man at your head and ask no questions.”
“He’s quite right,”
said Two Tails. “I can’t always obey,
because I’m betwixt and between. But Billy’s
right. Obey the man next to you who gives the
order, or you’ll stop all the battery, besides
getting a thrashing.”
The gun-bullocks got up to go.
“Morning is coming,” they said. “We
will go back to our lines. It is true that we
only see out of our eyes, and we are not very clever.
But still, we are the only people to-night who have
not been afraid. Good-night, you brave people.”
Nobody answered, and the troop-horse
said, to change the conversation, “Where’s
that little dog? A dog means a man somewhere about.”
“Here I am,” yapped Vixen,
“under the gun tail with my man. You big,
blundering beast of a camel you, you upset our tent.
My man’s very angry.”
“Phew!” said the bullocks. “He
must be white!”
“Of course he is,” said
Vixen. “Do you suppose I’m looked
after by a black bullock-driver?”
“Huah! Ouach! Ugh!”
said the bullocks. “Let us get away quickly.”
They plunged forward in the mud, and
managed somehow to run their yoke on the pole of an
ammunition wagon, where it jammed.
“Now you have done it,”
said Billy calmly. “Don’t struggle.
You’re hung up till daylight. What on earth’s
the matter?”
The bullocks went off into the long
hissing snorts that Indian cattle give, and pushed
and crowded and slued and stamped and slipped and
nearly fell down in the mud, grunting savagely.
“You’ll break your necks
in a minute,” said the troop-horse. “What’s
the matter with white men? I live with ’em.”
“They—eat—us!
Pull!” said the near bullock. The yoke snapped
with a twang, and they lumbered off together.
I never knew before what made Indian
cattle so scared of Englishmen. We eat beef—a
thing that no cattle-driver touches—and
of course the cattle do not like it.
“May I be flogged with my own
pad-chains! Who’d have thought of two big
lumps like those losing their heads?” said Billy.
“Never mind. I’m
going to look at this man. Most of the white men,
I know, have things in their pockets,” said
the troop-horse.
“I’ll leave you, then.
I can’t say I’m over-fond of ’em
myself. Besides, white men who haven’t
a place to sleep in are more than likely to be thieves,
and I’ve a good deal of Government property on
my back. Come along, young un, and we’ll
go back to our lines. Good-night, Australia!
See you on parade to-morrow, I suppose. Good-night,
old Hay-bale!—try to control your feelings,
won’t you? Good-night, Two Tails! If
you pass us on the ground tomorrow, don’t trumpet.
It spoils our formation.”
Billy the Mule stumped off with the
swaggering limp of an old campaigner, as the troop-horse’s
head came nuzzling into my breast, and I gave him
biscuits, while Vixen, who is a most conceited little
dog, told him fibs about the scores of horses that
she and I kept.
“I’m coming to the parade
to-morrow in my dog-cart,” she said. “Where
will you be?”
“On the left hand of the second
squadron. I set the time for all my troop, little
lady,” he said politely. “Now I must
go back to Dick. My tail’s all muddy, and
he’ll have two hours’ hard work dressing
me for parade.”
The big parade of all the thirty thousand
men was held that afternoon, and Vixen and I had a
good place close to the Viceroy and the Amir of Afghanistan,
with high, big black hat of astrakhan wool and the
great diamond star in the center. The first part
of the review was all sunshine, and the regiments
went by in wave upon wave of legs all moving together,
and guns all in a line, till our eyes grew dizzy.
Then the cavalry came up, to the beautiful cavalry
canter of “Bonnie Dundee,” and Vixen cocked
her ear where she sat on the dog-cart. The second
squadron of the Lancers shot by, and there was the
troop-horse, with his tail like spun silk, his head
pulled into his breast, one ear forward and one back,
setting the time for all his squadron, his legs going
as smoothly as waltz music. Then the big guns
came by, and I saw Two Tails and two other elephants
harnessed in line to a forty-pounder siege gun, while
twenty yoke of oxen walked behind. The seventh
pair had a new yoke, and they looked rather stiff
and tired. Last came the screw guns, and Billy
the mule carried himself as though he commanded all
the troops, and his harness was oiled and polished
till it winked. I gave a cheer all by myself
for Billy the mule, but he never looked right or left.
The rain began to fall again, and
for a while it was too misty to see what the troops
were doing. They had made a big half circle across
the plain, and were spreading out into a line.
That line grew and grew and grew till it was three-quarters
of a mile long from wing to wing—one solid
wall of men, horses, and guns. Then it came on
straight toward the Viceroy and the Amir, and as it
got nearer the ground began to shake, like the deck
of a steamer when the engines are going fast.
Unless you have been there you cannot
imagine what a frightening effect this steady come-down
of troops has on the spectators, even when they know
it is only a review. I looked at the Amir.
Up till then he had not shown the shadow of a sign
of astonishment or anything else. But now his
eyes began to get bigger and bigger, and he picked
up the reins on his horse’s neck and looked
behind him. For a minute it seemed as though he
were going to draw his sword and slash his way out
through the English men and women in the carriages
at the back. Then the advance stopped dead, the
ground stood still, the whole line saluted, and thirty
bands began to play all together. That was the
end of the review, and the regiments went off to their
camps in the rain, and an infantry band struck up
with—
The animals went in
two by two,
Hurrah!
The animals went in
two by two,
The elephant and the
battery mul’,
and they all got into
the Ark
For
to get out of the rain!
Then I heard an old grizzled, long-haired
Central Asian chief, who had come down with the Amir,
asking questions of a native officer.
“Now,” said he, “in
what manner was this wonderful thing done?”
And the officer answered, “An
order was given, and they obeyed.”
“But are the beasts as wise as the men?”
said the chief.
“They obey, as the men do.
Mule, horse, elephant, or bullock, he obeys his driver,
and the driver his sergeant, and the sergeant his
lieutenant, and the lieutenant his captain, and the
captain his major, and the major his colonel, and
the colonel his brigadier commanding three regiments,
and the brigadier the general, who obeys the Viceroy,
who is the servant of the Empress. Thus it is
done.”
“Would it were so in Afghanistan!”
said the chief, “for there we obey only our
own wills.”
“And for that reason,”
said the native officer, twirling his mustache, “your
Amir whom you do not obey must come here and take orders
from our Viceroy.”