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I count myself good for a thousand, for so I was regularly rated in the army: with this great benefit to it, that I only consumed as much as an ordinary mortal. We were then, as far as the victuals went, 126 mouths; as combatants we numbered 1,040 gallant men, with 12 guns and a fort, against Holkar and his 12,000. No such alarming odds, if If!ay, there was the rubif we had shot, as well as powder for our guns; if we had not only men but meat. Of the former commodity we had only three rounds for each piece. Of the latter, upon my sacred honor, to feed 126 souls, we had but Two drumsticks of fowls, and a bone of ham. This was the provision for the whole garrison! The men after supper had seized upon the relics of the repast, as they were carried off from the table; and these were the miserable remnants I found and counted on my return, taking good care to lock the door of the supper-room, and treasure what little sustenance still remained in it. When I appeared in the saloon, now lighted up by the morning sun, I not only caused a sensation
myself, but felt one in my own bosom, which was of the most painful description. Oh, my reader! may
you never behold such a sight as that which presented itself: eighty-three men and women in ball-dresses; the former with their lank powdered locks streaming over their faces; the latter with faded flowers, uncurled wigs, smudged rouge, blear eyes, draggling feathers, rumpled satinseach more desperately melancholy and hideous than the othereach, except my beloved Belinda Bulcher, whose raven ringlets never having been in curl, could of course never go out of curl; whose cheek, pale as the lily, could, as it may naturally be supposed, grow no paler; whose neck and beauteous arms, dazzling as alabaster, needed no pearl-powder, and therefore, as I need not state, did not suffer because the pearl-powder had come off. Joy (deft link-boy!) lit his lamps in each of her eyes as I entered. As if I had been her sun, her spring, lo! blushing roses mantled in her cheek! Seventy-three ladies, as I entered, opened their fire upon me, and stunned me with cross-questions, regarding my adventures in the campshe, as she saw me, gave a faint scream, (the sweetest, sure, that ever gurgled through the throat of a
woman!) then started upthen made as if she would sit downthen moved backwardsthen tottered forwardsthen tumbled into myPsha! why recall, why attempt to describe that deliciousthat passionate greeting of two young hearts? What was the surrounding crowd to us? What cared we for the sneers of the men, the titters of the jealous women, the shrill "Upon my word!" of the elder Miss Bulcher, and the loud expostulations of Belinda's mamma? The brave girl loved me, and wept in my arms. "Goliah! my Goliah!" said she, "my brave, my beautiful, thou art returned, and hope comes back with thee. Oh! who can tell the anguish of my soul, during this dreadful, dreadful night!" Other similar ejaculations of love and joy she uttered; and if I had perilled life in her service, if I did believe that hope of escape there was none, so exquisite was the moment of our meeting, that I forgot all else in
this overwhelming joy! [The Major's description of this meeting, which lasted at the very most not ten seconds, occupies
thirteen pages of writing. We have been compelled to dock off twelve and a half; for the whole
passage, though highly creditable to his feelings, might possibly be tedious to the reader.] As I said, the ladies and gentlemen were inclined to sneer, and were giggling audibly. I led the dear girl to a chair, and, scowling round with a tremendous fierceness, which those who know me know I can sometimes put on, I shouted out, "Hark ye! men and womenI am this lady's truest knighther husband I hope one day to be. I am commander, too, in this fortthe enemy is without it; another word of mockeryanother glance of scornand, by heaven, I will hurl every man and woman from the battlements, a prey to the ruffianly Holkar!" This quieted them. I am a man of my word, and none of them stirred or looked disrespectfully from that moment. It was now my turn to make them look foolish. Mrs. Vandegobbleschroy (whose unfailing appetite is pretty well known to every person who has been in India) cried, "Well, Captain Gahagan, your ball has been so pleasant, and the supper was despatched so long ago, that myself and the ladies would be very glad of a little breakfast." And Mrs. Van giggled as if she had made a very witty and reasonable speech. "Oh! breakfast, breakfast by all means," said the rest; "we really are dying for a warm cup of tea." "Is it bohay tay or souchong tay that you'd like, ladies?" says I. "Nonsense, you silly man; any tea you like," said fat Mrs. Van. "What do you say, then, to some prime gunpowder?" Of course they said it was the very thing. "And do yoo like hot rowls or cowldmuffins or crumpetsfresh butter or salt? And you, gentlemen, what do you say to some ilegant divvled-kidneys for yourselves, and just a trifle of grilled turkeys, and a couple of hundthred new-laid eggs for the ladies?" "Pooh, pooh! be it as you will, my dear fellow," answered they all. "But stop," says I. "O ladies, O ladies: O gentlemen, gentlemen, that you should ever have come to the quarters of Goliah Gahagan, and he been without" "What?" said they, in a breadth. "Alas! alas! I have not got a single stick of chocolate in the whole house." "Well, well, we can do without it." "Or a single pound of coffee." "Never mind; let that pass too." (Mrs. Van and the rest were beginning to look alarmed.) "And about the kidneysnow I remember, the black divvles outside the fort have seized upon all the sheep; and how are we to have kidneys without them?" (Here there was a slight o-o-o!) "And with regard to the milk and crame, it may be remarked that the cows are likewise in pawn, and not a single drop can be had for money or love: but we can beat up eggs, you know, in the tay, which will be just as good." "Oh! just as good." "Only the divvle's in the luck, there's not a fresh egg to be hadno, nor a fresh chicken," continued I, "nor a stale one either; nor a tayspoonful of souchong, nor a thimbleful of bohay; nor the laste taste in life of butther, salt, or fresh; nor hot rowls or cowld!" "In the name of heaven!" said Mrs. Van, growing very pale, "what is there, then?" "Ladies and gentlemen, I'll tell you what there is now," shouted I. "There's Fourteen bottles of ginger-beer," &c. &c. &c. And I went through the whole list of eatables as before, ending with the ham-sandwiches and the pot of jelly. "Law! Mr. Gahagan," said Mrs. Colonel Vandegobbleschroy, "give me the ham-sandwichesI must manage to breakfast off them." And you should have heard the pretty to-do there was at this modest proposition! Of course I did not accede to itwhy should I? I was the commander of the fort, and intended to keep these three very sandwiches for the use of myself and my dear Belinda. "Ladies," said I, "there are in this fort one hundred and twenty-six souls, and this is all the food which is to last us during the siege. Meat there is noneof drink there is a tolerable quantity; and at one o'clock punctually, a glass of wine and one olive shall be served out to each woman; the men will receive two glasses, and an olive and a figand this must be your food during the siege. Lord Lake cannot be absent more than three days; and if he be why, still there is a chancewhy do I say a chance?a certainty of escaping from the hands of these ruffians." "Oh, name it, name it, dear Captain Gahagan!" screeched the whole covey at a breath. "It lies," answered I, "in the powder magazine. I will blow this fort, and all it contains, to atoms, ere it becomes the prey of Holkar." The women, at this, raised a squeal that might have been heard in Holkar's camp, and fainted in
different directions; but my dear Belinda whispered in my ear, "Well, done, thou noble knight! bravely
said, my heart's Goliah!" I felt I was right: I could have blown her up twenty times for the luxury of
that single moment! "And now, ladies," said I, "I must leave you. The two chaplains will remain with
you to administer professional consolationthe other gentlemen will follow me up stairs to the
ramparts, where I shall find plenty of work for them."
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