<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">THE DEFENCE OF LUCKNOW (<span class="smcap">31st of May to 25th of September, 1857</span>)</span></h2>
<p class="summary">Firing at close quarters—Adventures of fugitives—Death of Sir H.
Lawrence—His character—Difficulty of sending letters—Mines
and counter-mines—Fulton killed—Signs of the relief coming—A
great welcome—Story of the escape from Cawnpore.</p>
<p>For about ten days previous to the outbreak at Lucknow
daily reports were made that an <i>émeute</i> was intended,
and Sir Henry Lawrence, the brother of Sir John Lawrence,
had ordered all kinds of stores to be bought and
stored. The ladies and children had been removed from
the cantonments to the Residency in the city, which was
already occupied by a party of the 32nd foot and two
guns.</p>
<p>The 9 p.m. gun on the 30th of May was evidently the
signal for the mutiny to begin, as a few minutes after
it had been fired, whilst Sir Henry and his staff were at
dinner at the Residency, a sepoy came running in, and
reported a disturbance in the lines.</p>
<p>Sir Henry took two guns and a company of the 32nd,
and took post on the road leading to the town. Meanwhile
bands of insurgents began to plunder and burn our
officers’ bungalows. Many officers had wonderful escapes
from death; some were killed by the rebels. Muchee
Bhawun, the residence of the late King, had been selected<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</SPAN></span>
as a fitting place of security and retreat: it was being
strengthened and supplied with stores.</p>
<p>On <i>June 10</i> houses and buildings around began to be
demolished; tents were set apart for the European
refugees who arrived daily from the districts.</p>
<p>On <i>June 12</i> the military police mutinied in a body,
and went off to Cawnpore; they were pursued for eight
miles and about twenty were killed.</p>
<p>On <i>June 15</i> a hundred barrels of gunpowder were
brought from the Muchee Bhawun and buried in the
Residency enclosure; twenty-three lacs of rupees were
also buried in front of the Residency to save the use of
sentries. Cash payments were now suspended, the men
being paid by promissory notes.</p>
<p>On <i>June 20</i> large stacks of firewood, covered with
earth, were placed to protect the front of the Residency:
they formed an embankment 6 feet high, and embrasures
were cut through them for the guns, of which there
were four 9-pounders on that side.</p>
<p>A letter arrived from Cawnpore giving very bad
news. The enemy had shelled them for the last eight
days with fearful effect within their crowded trenches,
and one-third of their number had been killed. More
guns are brought in. They hear that eight or ten
regiments of rebels are within twenty miles of Lucknow.</p>
<p>On <i>June 28</i> Mrs. Dorin, wife of Lieutenant Dorin,
arrived at evening in a country cart, disguised as a native
and accompanied by some clerks. The enemy are nine
miles off. Though a force was sent out to meet them,
we had to retire before overwhelming numbers, with the
loss of the 8-inch howitzer and three 9-pounders.</p>
<p>The rebels came boldly on, investing the English on
all sides, and firing from all the houses round, which
they rapidly loopholed.</p>
<p><i>July 1.</i>—We managed to send message to blow up<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</SPAN></span>
the Muchee Bhawun fort and come to the Residency
at 12 p.m., bringing the treasure and guns. We opened
fire from our batteries in order to distract the attention
of the enemy from them.</p>
<p>At 12.15 they were at the Lower Water Gate. Here
there was some delay, as the gates had not yet been
opened. A very serious accident had nearly happened,
for the leading men, finding the gate closed, shouted out,
“Open the gates!” but the artillerymen at the guns
above, which covered the entrance, mistook the words
for “Open with grape,” and were on the point to fire
when an officer ran up and put them right. The whole
force came in safely, not a shot being fired. The explosion
which had been ordered had not yet taken place,
but soon a tremor of the earth, a volume of fire, a terrific
report, and a mass of black smoke shooting up into the
air announced to Lucknow that 240 barrels of gunpowder
and 594,000 rounds of ball and gun ammunition
had completed the destruction of Muchee Bhawun, which
we had fortified with so much labour.</p>
<p>Strange stories were told by some of the refugees
from outlying districts. Here is one told by the wife
of a surgeon: “I heard a number of shots fired in our
station, and looking out, I saw my husband driving furiously
from the mess-house. I ran to him, and, catching
up my child, got into the buggy. At the mess-house
we found all the officers assembled, with sixty sepoys
who had remained faithful.</p>
<p>“As we went our homes were seen to be on fire. Next
morning our sepoy escort deserted us. We were fired on
by matchlock men and lost one officer. We had no food.
An officer kindly lent us a horse. We were very faint.
Our party now was only nine gentlemen, two children,
the sergeant, and his wife. On the 20th Captain Scott
took my little two-year-old Lottie on to his horse. Soon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</SPAN></span>
after sunrise we were followed by villagers armed with
clubs and spears. One of them struck Captain Scott’s
horse on the leg. He galloped off with Lottie, and my
poor husband never saw his child again.</p>
<p>“We rode on several miles, keeping away from villages,
and then crossed the river. Our thirst was extreme.
Soon I saw water in a ravine. I climbed down the steep
descent. Our only drinking-vessel was M.’s cap (which
had once been a sepoy’s). Our horse got water and I
bathed my neck. I had no stockings and my feet were
torn and blistered. My husband was very weak, and,
I thought, dying. He wished me good-bye as he lay on
the ground. My brain seemed burnt up: no tears came.
Our horse cantered away, so that escape was cut off.
We sat down on the ground waiting for death. Poor
fellow! he was very weak; his thirst was frightful, and I
went to get him water. Some villagers came and took
my rupees and watch. I took off my wedding-ring,
twisted it in my hair and replaced the guard. I tore off
the skirt of my dress to bring water in; but it was no use,
for when I returned, my beloved’s eyes were fixed, and,
though I called and tried to restore him and poured water
into his mouth, it only rattled in his throat. He never
spoke to me again, and he gradually sank down and
died. I was alone. In an hour or so about thirty
villagers came. They dragged me out of the ravine and
took off my jacket; then they dragged me to a village,
mocking me all the way. The whole village came to
look at me. I lay down outside the door of a hut. They
had dozens of cows, and yet refused me milk. When
night came and the village was quiet, some old woman
brought me a leafful of rice. The next morning a
neighbouring Rajah sent a palanquin and a horseman to
fetch me, who told me that a little child and three sahibs
had come to his master’s house. That little child was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</SPAN></span>
my Lottie! She was sorely blistered, but, thank God!
alive and well.”</p>
<p>That is the sort of experience some ladies went through—ladies
that had never before known what thirst or privation
or insult was like.</p>
<p><i>July 2.</i>—About 8 a.m. Sir Henry returned to the
Residency and lay down on his bed. Soon after an
8-inch shell from the enemy’s howitzer entered the room
at the window and exploded. A fragment struck the
Brigadier-General on the upper part of the right thigh
near the hip, inflicting a fearful wound.</p>
<p>Captain Wilson, who was standing alongside the bed
with one knee on it, reading a memorandum to Sir Henry,
was knocked down by falling bricks. Mr. Lawrence,
Sir Henry’s nephew, had an equally narrow escape,
but was not hurt. The fourth person in the room, a
native servant, lost one of his feet by a fragment of the
shell. The ceiling and the punkah all came down, and
the dust and smoke prevented anyone seeing what had
happened.</p>
<p>Neither Sir Henry nor his nephew uttered a sound,
and Captain Wilson, as soon as he recovered from the
concussion, called out in alarm: “Sir Henry, are you
hurt?”</p>
<p>Twice he thus called out and got no reply. After
the third time Sir Henry said in a low tone: “I am
killed.”</p>
<p>His bed was being soaked with blood. Some soldiers
of the 32nd soon came in and placed Sir Henry in a chair.
When the surgeon came he saw that human aid was
useless. Lucknow and England had lost what could
never be replaced. For all who ever came in contact
with Sir Henry Lawrence recognized in him a man of
unstained honour, a lover of justice, pure, unselfish and
noble. His successor, Brigadier Inglis, wrote of him:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</SPAN></span>
“Few men have ever possessed to the same extent the
power which he enjoyed of winning the hearts of all those
with whom he came in contact.” He gained also by his
frankness the trust of the natives, who said of him:
“When Sir Henry looks twice up to heaven and once
down to earth, and then strokes his beard, he knows
what to do.” His dying wish was that, if any epitaph
were placed on his tomb, it should be this: “Here lies
Henry Lawrence, who tried to do his duty.” He had
indeed tried to do his duty towards the defence of
Lucknow. Three weeks before anyone else thought of a
siege he began to collect supplies, and even paid for them
much over their market value. He collected and buried
much treasure in the grounds of the Residency; he
stored up in underground cellars guns and mortars,
shot and shell and grain; strengthened the outworks,
and cleared the ground of small buildings around. Even
then the assailants and the besieged were quite close
to each other, and no man on either side dared expose
himself to fire his musket: they fired through loopholes
in the walls. This placed a never-ending strain on the
besieged, for they never knew when to expect an assault.
On the one side of a narrow lane were myriads of swarthy
foemen, on the other side a few hundreds, who were
bound always to be ready, day and night, to meet a storming
party. All through the siege officers and men alike
stood sentry; all bore an equal burden of toil and fighting.</p>
<p>The stench, too, from dead animals was dreadful:
they had so few servants, and the fighting men were so
harassed, that they were helpless to bury them.</p>
<p>Heavy showers night and day kept the garrison
drenched to the skin, and they had no change of clothes.
The sick and wounded were much crowded, as they could
not use the upper story of the hospital because it was
under fire of round shot.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</SPAN></span></p>
<p><i>August 12.</i>—A letter to General Havelock, rolled up
and put inside a quill, was despatched by the hands of
an old woman. She left the position about 9 p.m.,
and it was hoped she would be permitted to pass the
enemy’s sentries. During the past forty-five days they
had sent by different hands, in a similar manner, some
twenty letters. To only one of these was any reply
received.</p>
<p><i>August 18.</i>—At daylight the enemy exploded a large
mine under one of the principal posts. The three officers
and three sentries on the top of the house were blown up
into the air; the guard below were all buried in the ruins.
The officers, though much stunned, recovered and escaped.
A clear breach had been made in our defences to the
extent of 30 feet in breadth. One of the enemy’s leaders
sprung on the top of the breach and called on his comrades
to follow; but when he and another had been shot
the rest hung back. Boxes, doors, planks, etc., were
rapidly carried down to make cover to protect the men.</p>
<p><i>August 23.</i>—There was work nightly for at least 300
men, as they had the defences to repair daily, mines
to countermine, guns to remove, corpses to bury, rations
to serve out. The Europeans were not capable of much
exertion, as from want of sleep, hard work, and
constant exposure, their bodily strength was greatly
diminished. The ladies had to be removed, as the upper
story of Mr. Gubbins’ house was no longer safe, owing
to the number of round shot through it. It was difficult
to find quarters for them, every place being so crowded,
and the ladies were already four and five together in small,
badly ventilated native dwellings. Dreadful smells pervaded
the whole place, from the half-buried bodies of
men, horses, and bullocks, and also from the drains.</p>
<p><i>September 9.</i>—During the night a shell exploded in a
room occupied by a lady and some children, and, though<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</SPAN></span>
almost every article in the room was destroyed, they all
escaped unhurt. Finding that the enemy were rapidly
mining towards the Cawnpore battery, they sprung a
mine containing 200 pounds of powder. The effect was
tremendous, and it evidently astonished the enemy to
see their miners going up skywards in fragments.</p>
<p>As the uniforms wore out they clothed themselves as
they could. One officer had a coat made out of an old
billiard cloth; another wore a shirt made out of a floor-cloth.
They had no tobacco, and had to smoke dried tea-leaves.</p>
<p>“<i>September 14.</i>—A grievous loss to-day: Captain Fulton,
of the Engineers, while reconnoitring from a battery, was
killed by a round shot which struck him on the head.
He had conducted all the engineering operations of the
siege for a long time. He was a highly gifted, brave and
chivalrous officer, and a great favourite.”</p>
<p><i>September 22.</i>—About 11 p.m. Ungud, pensioner, returned
to Lucknow, bringing a letter containing the glad
tidings that the relieving force, under General Outram,
had crossed the Ganges, and would arrive in a few days.</p>
<p>His arrival and the cheering news he brought of speedy
aid was well timed, for daily desertions of servants were
becoming the rule. All the garrison were greatly elated
at the news, and on many of the sick and wounded the
speedy prospect of a change of air and security exercised
a most beneficial effect.</p>
<p><i>September 25.</i>—About 11 a.m. increasing agitation was
visible among the people in the town. An hour later they
heard guns and saw the smoke. All the garrison was on
the alert; the excitement amongst many of the officers
and men was quite painful to witness. At 1.30 p.m.
many were leaving the city with bundles of clothes on
their heads. The rebels’ bridge of boats had evidently
been destroyed, for they could see many swimming across<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</SPAN></span>
the river, most of them cavalry, with their horses’ bridles
in their hands. During all this apparent panic the guns
of the enemy in position all round were keeping up a
heavy cannonade, and the riflemen never ceased firing
from their loopholes.</p>
<p>At 4 p.m. report was made that some officers dressed
in shooting-coats and caps, a regiment of Europeans in
blue pantaloons and shirts, could be seen near Mr. Martin’s
house. At 5 p.m. volleys of musketry, rapidly growing
louder, were heard in the city. But soon the firing of a
minie-ball over their heads gave notice of the still nearer
approach of their friends. It was very exciting, but
they as yet could see little of them, though they could
hear the rebels firing on them from the roofs of the houses.</p>
<p>Will they again be repulsed? The heart sickens at
the thought. No. Five minutes later, and our troops
are seen fighting their way through one of the principal
streets, and though men are falling at almost every step,
yet on they come. Nothing can withstand the headlong
gallantry of our reinforcements. Once fairly seen and
all doubts and fears are ended. And now the garrison’s
long pent-up feelings of anxiety and suspense burst
forth in a succession of deafening cheers. From every
pit, trench and battery, from behind the sand-bags piled
up on shattered houses, from every post still held by a
few gallant spirits, rose cheer on cheer—aye, even from
the hospital.</p>
<p>Many of the wounded were crawling forth to join in
that glad shout of welcome to those who had so bravely
come to their assistance. The ladies were in tears—tears
of joy; some were on their knees, already thanking God
for a deliverance from unspeakable horrors. It was a
moment never to be forgotten. Soon all the rearguard
and heavy guns were inside our position, and then ensued
a scene which baffles description. For eighty-seven days<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</SPAN></span>
the Lucknow garrison had lived in utter ignorance of all
that had taken place outside. Wives who had mourned
their husbands as dead were again restored to them;
others, fondly looking forward to glad meetings with
those near and dear to them, now for the first time
learnt that they were alone in the world. On all sides
eager inquiries were made for relations and friends.
Oh, what a hubbub of voices, what exclamations of delight,
what sad silences!</p>
<p>The force under the command of Sir James Outram
and Havelock had suffered heavily. Out of 2,600 who
had left Cawnpore nearly one-third had been either killed
or wounded in forcing their way through the city.
Indeed, their losses were so heavy that they could effect
little towards the relief, for the rebels were in overpowering
force, so that the garrison remained on three-quarter
rations, as closely besieged as before, looking for a day
when they might be more effectually relieved by a larger
and stronger force.</p>
<p>Then, after the personal inquiries had died down, with
bated breath they asked for news of Cawnpore. What
a tale of horror, of pride, of shame! On the 5th of June,
so they were told, the Cawnpore regiments mutinied and
set off for Delhi. On the 6th they were brought back
by Nana Sahib, a man who had once been well received
in London drawing-rooms, now the arch-traitor and
murderer.</p>
<p>Not less than 1,000 persons took refuge in the Residency,
which Nana proceeded to invest. It was a poor,
weak place to defend, yet they kept the flag flying till
the 24th of June, when their ammunition and provisions
were all gone. Time after time the gallant little garrison
repulsed all the Nana’s attacks. At length he approached
them with treacherous smiles, and offered to transmit
them safely to Allahabad on conditions of surrender.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</SPAN></span>
General Sir Hugh Wheeler undertook to deliver up the
fortifications, the treasure, and the artillery on condition
that our force should march out under arms, with sixty
rounds of ammunition to every man; that carriages
should be provided for the conveyance of the wounded,
the women, and the children; that boats provided with
flour should be in readiness at the landing-place.</p>
<p>What happened was described by one who had been on
the spot. He said:</p>
<p>“The whole of Cawnpore was astir at an early hour to
see the English depart. They poured down to the
landing-place in thousands. Meanwhile a crowd of
carriages and beasts of burden had been collected outside
the entrenchments. The bullock-carts were soon
filled with women and children. A fine elephant had
been sent for the General, but he put his wife and
daughters in the state howdah, and contented himself
with a simple palanquin. The wounded were placed in
litters with such care as soldiers could employ. Many
sepoys mingling with the crowd expressed admiration
for the British defence; some even wept over the sufferings
of their late masters. Eleven dying Europeans were
left behind, too ill to be moved.</p>
<p>“They set off, with the men of the 32nd Regiment at
their head; then came a throng of naked bearers,
carrying the palanquins full of sick and wounded; then
came the bullock-carts crowded with ladies and children;
and next, musket on shoulder, came all who could still
walk and fight. Major Vibart of the Second Cavalry
came last. Colonel and Mrs. Ewart started late, she on
foot, walking beside her husband, who was borne by four
native porters. As they dropped astern some natives
belonging to the Colonel’s own battalion approached him.
They began to mock him, and then cut him in pieces with
their swords. They did the same to his wife.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“The road to the landing-place, which is about a mile
from the entrenchments, runs down a ravine, which in
summer is dry, and is enclosed on either side by high
banks and crumbling fences. As the van turned down
this ravine a great mob of natives watched them go in a
strange silence.</p>
<p>“Rather disorderly, with swaying howdahs and grunting
beasts, the unwieldy caravan wound along the sandy
lane. When they were all entangled in the little defile
some sepoys quietly formed a double line across the
mouth of the gorge, shutting, as it were, the top of the
trap.</p>
<p>“Meanwhile the head of the caravan had reached the
landing-place, being a little surprised at the want of a
pier or planks to serve as gangway.</p>
<p>“But the English officers went in knee-deep and
hoisted the wounded and the women into the covered
barges, which had been hauled into the shallows, and were
in many cases grounded on the sandy bottom. The
boats were 30 feet from stem to stern and 12 feet in beam,
roofed with straw, having a space at each end for the
rowers and the steersman. They looked very old and
dilapidated, but beggars may not choose. Hindoo boatmen
were waiting sullenly and silently, not deigning to
return a smile to the little English children, who already
began to scent fun and enjoyment in a long river excursion.</p>
<p>“All at once a bugle rang out from the top of the
defile. Away splashed the native rowers, jumping from
their boats into the water.</p>
<p>“The rebels put up their muskets and fired point-blank
into the laden boats; but the English had their
rifles, and returned the fire.</p>
<p>“Yet another surprise! Suddenly the straw roofs of
the native boats burst into flame, and from either shore<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</SPAN></span>
of the river grape and musket shot were poured in relentlessly.
The wounded lay still and were burnt to
death. Ladies and children sought the protection of the
water, and crouched in the shallows under the sterns of
the barges. The men tried to push off, but the keels
stuck fast. Out of two dozen boats only three drifted
slowly down from the stage. Of these three two went
across to the Oude bank, where stood two cannon,
guarded by a battalion of infantry and some cavalry.
The third boat, containing Vibart and Whiting and Ushe,
Delafosse and Bolton, Burney and Glanville and Moore,
the bravest of the brave, got clear away, and drifted
down the main channel.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Bradshaw thus describes what she saw: “In
the boat where I was to have gone were the school-mistress
and twenty-two missies. General Wheeler came
last in a palkee. They carried him into the water near
a boat. I was standing close by. He said, ‘Carry me
a little further near the boat.’ But a trooper said, ‘No;
get out here.’ As the General got out of the palkee,
head foremost, the trooper gave him a cut with his sword
into the neck, and he fell into the water. My son was
killed near him. I saw it—alas! alas! Some were
stabbed with bayonets; others were cut down with
swords and knives. Little infants were torn in pieces.
We saw it, we did, and tell you only what we saw. Other
children were stabbed and thrown into the river. The
school-girls were burnt to death. I saw their clothes and
hair catch fire. In the water, a few paces off, by the
next boat, we saw the youngest daughter of Colonel
Williams. A sepoy was going to kill her with his bayonet,
when she said, ‘My father was always kind to sepoys.’
He turned away, and just then a villager struck her on
the head with his club, and she fell into the water.”</p>
<p>After a time the women and children who had not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</SPAN></span>
been shot, stabbed, or burnt were collected and brought
to shore, some of them being rudely handled by the
sowars, who tore from ear or finger such jewels as caught
their fancy.</p>
<p>About 120 sat or lay on the shore or on logs of timber,
full of misery, fear, and despair. There they waited in
the blinding sun on the Ganges shore all that morning.
Then they were herded back along the narrow lane by
which they had come with hope in their bosoms, while
the sepoys who guarded them grinned with fiendish
delight, and showed gleefully all their spoils. Past the
bazaar and the chapel and the racquet-court and the
entrenchments they limped along, until they were paraded
before the pavilion of the Maharajah, who looked
them well over, and ordered them to be confined in the
Savada House. Two good-sized rooms, which had been
used by native soldiers for a month, were given them to
live in, and a guard was placed over them.</p>
<p>One witness says: “I saw that many of the ladies were
wounded. Their clothes had blood on them. Some
were wet, covered with mud and blood, and some had
their dresses badly torn, but all had clothes. I saw one
or two children without clothes. There were no men in
the party, but only some boys of twelve or thirteen years
of age. Some of the ladies were barefoot and lame.
Two I saw were wounded in the leg.”</p>
<p>And what of the third boat which floated down-stream?</p>
<p>More than 100 persons had taken refuge in it. Some
officers and men, seeing how hopeless was the fight
on the bank, had swum out to Vibart and his crew.
Now they stranded on a mud-bank, now they drifted
towards the guns on the other shore, ever under a hot
fire of canister and shell, and continually losing brave
men who were shot at point-blank range. Down in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</SPAN></span>
bottom of the great barge lay dying and dead, till at
last the survivors were compelled to throw the bodies
overboard.</p>
<p>At night a fire-ship was sent down to set them alight,
and fire-tipped arrows were shot into the thatched roof,
forcing our people to cut them away. Then they came
under a fierce fire from the militia of Ram Bux. Pelting
rains came down, and they drifted up a backwater, and
soon after a host of rebels surrounded the poor, stricken
fugitives and took them back to Cawnpore.</p>
<p>The doomed boat-load were seen to be drawing near
the landing-place early on the morning of the 30th. This
is what a native spy said of them:</p>
<p>“There were brought back sixty sahibs, twenty-five
mem sahibs, and four children. The Nana ordered the
sahibs to be separated from the mem sahibs, and shot
by the 1st Bengal Native Infantry. But they said, ‘We
will not kill the sahibs; put them in prison.’ Then said
the Nadiree Regiment: ‘What word is this—put them
in prison? We will kill the males ourselves.’</p>
<p>“So the sahibs were seated on the ground. Two companies
stood with their muskets, ready to fire. Then
said one of the mem sahibs, the doctor’s wife: ‘I
will not leave my husband. If he must die, I will die
with him.’ So she ran and sat down behind her husband,
clasping him round the waist.</p>
<p>“When she said this the other mem sahibs said: ‘We
also will die with our husbands;’ and they all sat down,
each by her husband.</p>
<p>“Then their husbands said: ‘Go back;’ but they
would not do so.</p>
<p>“So then the Nana gave order, and his soldiers went in
and pulled them away by force. But they could not pull
away the doctor’s wife, who stayed there. Then the
padre asked leave to read prayers before they died. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</SPAN></span>
did so, and then shut the book. Then all the sahibs
shook hands and bid good-bye. Then the sepoys fired.
One sahib rolled one way, one another, but they were
not quite dead; so the sepoys went at them and finished
them off with their swords.”</p>
<p>Can you imagine the breathless horror with which the
garrison of Lucknow listened to these details of a most
cruel and treacherous onslaught upon wounded men,
upon refined ladies, and innocent children? How they
sighed for a force strong enough to take an adequate
revenge upon these miscreants! But for the present
they were besieged themselves, though reinforced; and
who of them could count upon a day’s security? Perhaps,
if the bullet spared them at Lucknow their would-be
rescuers might be unable to fight their way through the
city, and these poor ladies and children of the Lucknow
garrison might be reserved for a lot even worse than
death. “Will they come?—will they come to help us
here at Lucknow? That is our anxious thought night
and day.”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</SPAN></span></p>
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