登陆注册
4610500000012

第12章

there goes poor Jack Delamere's head off! The ball chose a soft one, anyhow. Come here, Tim, till I mend your leg. Your wife has need only knit half as many stockings next year, Doolan my boy.

Faix! there goes a big one had wellnigh stopped my talking: bedad!

it has snuffed the feather off my cocked hat!"In this way, with eighty-four-pounders roaring over us like hail, the undaunted little Doctor pursued his jokes and his duty. That he had a feeling heart, all who served with him knew, and none more so than Philip Fogarty, the humble writer of this tale of war.

Our embrasure was luckily bomb-proof, and the detachment of the Onety-oneth under my orders suffered comparatively little. "Be cool, boys," I said; "it will be hot enough work for you ere long."The honest fellows answered with an Irish cheer. I saw that it affected our prisoner.

"Countryman," said I, "I know you; but an Irishman was never a traitor.""Taisez-vous!" said he, putting his finger to his lip. "C'est la fortune de la guerre: if ever you come to Paris, ask for the Marquis d' O'Mahony, and I may render you the hospitality which your tyrannous laws prevent me from exercising in the ancestral halls of my own race."I shook him warmly by the hand as a tear bedimmed his eye. It was, then, the celebrated colonel of the Irish Brigade, created a Marquis by Napoleon on the field of Austerlitz!

"Marquis," said I, "the country which disowns you is proud of you;but--ha! here, if I mistake not, comes our signal to advance." And in fact, Captain Vandeleur, riding up through the shower of shot, asked for the commander of the detachment, and bade me hold myself in readiness to move as soon as the flank companies of the Ninety-ninth, and Sixty-sixth, and the Grenadier Brigade of the German Legion began to advance up the echelon. The devoted band soon arrived; Jack Bowser heading the Ninety-ninth (when was he away and a storming-party to the fore?), and the gallant Potztausend, with his Hanoverian veterans.

The second rocket flew up.

"Forward, Onety-oneth!" cried I, in a voice of thunder. "Killaloo boys, follow your captain!" and with a shrill hurray, that sounded above the tremendous fire from the fort, we sprung upon the steep;Bowser with the brave Ninety-ninth, and the bold Potztausend, keeping well up with us. We passed the demilune, we passed the culverin, bayoneting the artillerymen at their guns; we advanced across the two tremendous demilunes which flank the counterscarp, and prepared for the final spring upon the citadel. Soult I could see quite pale on the wall; and the scoundrel Cambaceres, who had been so nearly my prisoner that day, trembled as he cheered his men. "On, boys, on!" I hoarsely exclaimed. "Hurroo!" said the fighting Onety-oneth.

But there was a movement among the enemy. An officer, glittering with orders, and another in a gray coat and a cocked hat, came to the wall, and I recognized the Emperor Napoleon and the famous Joachim Murat.

"We are hardly pressed, methinks," Napoleon said sternly. "I must exercise my old trade as an artilleryman;" and Murat loaded, and the Emperor pointed the only hundred-and-twenty-four-pounder that had not been silenced by our fire.

"Hurray, Killaloo boys!" shouted I. The next moment a sensation of numbness and death seized me, and I lay like a corpse upon the rampart.

II.

"Hush!" said a voice, which I recognized to be that of the Marquis d' O'Mahony. "Heaven be praised, reason has returned to you. For six weeks those are the only sane words I have heard from you.""Faix, and 'tis thrue for you, Colonel dear," cried another voice, with which I was even more familiar; 'twas that of my honest and gallant Lanty Clancy, who was blubbering at my bedside overjoyed at his master's recovery.

"O musha, Masther Phil agrah! but this will be the great day intirely, when I send off the news, which I would, barrin' I can't write, to the lady your mother and your sisters at Castle Fogarty;and 'tis his Riv'rence Father Luke will jump for joy thin, when he reads the letther! Six weeks ravin' and roarin' as bould as a lion, and as mad as Mick Malony's pig, that mistuck Mick's wig for a cabbage, and died of atin' it!""And have I then lost my senses?" I exclaimed feebly.

"Sure, didn't ye call me your beautiful Donna Anna only yesterday, and catch hould of me whiskers as if they were the Signora's jet-black ringlets?" Lanty cried.

At this moment, and blushing deeply, the most beautiful young creature I ever set my eyes upon, rose from a chair at the foot of the bed, and sailed out of the room.

"Confusion, you blundering rogue," I cried; "who is that lovely lady whom you frightened away by your impertinence? Donna Anna?

Where am I?"

"You are in good hands, Philip," said the Colonel; "you are at my house in the Place Vendome, at Paris, of which I am the military Governor. You and Lanty were knocked down by the wind of the cannon-ball at Burgos. Do not be ashamed: 'twas the Emperor pointed the gun;" and the Colonel took off his hat as he mentioned the name darling to France. "When our troops returned from the sally in which your gallant storming party was driven back, you were found on the glacis, and I had you brought into the City.

Your reason had left you, however, when you returned to life; but, unwilling to desert the son of my old friend, Philip Fogarty, who saved my life in '98, I brought you in my carriage to Paris.""And many's the time you tried to jump out of the windy, Masther Phil," said Clancy.

"Brought you to Paris," resumed the Colonel, smiling; "where, by the soins of my friends Broussais, Esquirol, and Baron Larrey, you have been restored to health, thank heaven!""And that lovely angel who quitted the apartment?" I cried.

"That lovely angel is the Lady Blanche Sarsfield, my ward, a descendant of the gallant Lucan, and who may be, when she chooses, Madame la Marechale de Cambaceres, Duchess of Illyria.""Why did you deliver the ruffian when he was in my grasp?" I cried.

"Why did Lanty deliver you when in mine?" the Colonel replied.

同类推荐
  • 佛祖宗派世谱

    佛祖宗派世谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蜜蜂计

    蜜蜂计

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 憨山老人梦游全集

    憨山老人梦游全集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 瓜庐集

    瓜庐集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上洞真安灶经

    太上洞真安灶经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 上阳子金丹大要图

    上阳子金丹大要图

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 劫后余生,你好,总裁大人

    劫后余生,你好,总裁大人

    浴火重生,她化身女王,众星捧月,带着满心复仇华丽而归。蓄谋的算计,她胆大的轻薄了莲城第一权少!他本是纵横莲城的言少,掌控商业帝国,更能主宰一方生死。却被这个嚣张的女人,一而再再而三的,肆无忌惮的各种轻薄,各种欺负。想想,真是抓耳挠腮,好不委屈。终于有一天,某人备受良心谴责,准备连夜逃跑时,失控的言少动了怒了,“叶笙歌,你别想走!”叶笙歌:“凭什么?”言易山提溜着她的衣领,闷闷的说道:“就凭你偷了我的东西...”我偷了那你什么?”心!”
  • 神魔志

    神魔志

    世间浩渺,无奇不有,诸般妖魔鬼怪,各种飞禽走兽,又有能人异士,构成瑰丽仙侠,造就茶间奇谭。
  • 乾坤双璧之纵横天下

    乾坤双璧之纵横天下

    霸业雄图引英雄用事,时世艰危叹生灵微贱。明末清初,王道坏尽,天昏地暗。一时,沧海横流,豪杰并起。岁月无情,四百年易逝。时至今日,尘埃落定,风烟散尽,人事已定论,英雄垂千古。天下江湖分属东盟、西盟,东盟乾元堂堂主金寓北、坤厚堂堂主上官苏儿,世称“乾坤双璧”。二人大战女真、纵横天下的江湖侠义故事,令人拍案惊奇,理当传世。作者鸥迹,虽胸无珠玉,怀揣鄙陋,却无知亦无畏,掇拾史海陈迹,以无文小字,虚拟江湖,再现一段明末清初乱世图谱,内中移花接木、断章取义之处在所难免,姑妄言之,姑妄听之……
  • 毛诗指说

    毛诗指说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 北苑别录

    北苑别录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 杂式

    杂式

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 繁之羽

    繁之羽

    ‘在最好的时候遇见你是我的幸运人生只要有两次幸运就好一次遇见你,一次走到底不知道下辈子是否还能遇见所以今生想把最好的自己给你愿你听见我的名字时眉开眼笑愿你在看到我时不管不顾给我个拥抱若不是深情似海,相思又怎会如痴如醉’
  • 快穿之上神大人别黑化

    快穿之上神大人别黑化

    什么神界大BOSS要灭世?神界大佬们都慌了,至于大人为什么灭世,据说是因为觉得自己成神以前的几十世太惨了,加上生活太过无聊。那个谁?只有你的气场与上神大人最合适,就你了。一定要阻止大人。童谣一脸懵逼……为了救家人,我去。但是抱住我不撒手的这个人形犬是什么鬼?童谣“你生病了快吃药!”上神大人:“不吃不吃,吃了你就会离开我。”童谣……
  • 心态决定状态

    心态决定状态

    西方有智者说过,你改变不了客观,但可以改变主观;你改变不了环境,但可以改变心境;你改变不了他人,但可以改变自己;你改变不了事实,但可以改变态度;你改变不了过去,但可以改变现在;你不能控制他人,但可以掌控自己;你不能样样顺利,但可以事事尽心;你不能左右天气,但可以改变心情;你不能选择容貌,但可以展现笑容。心态决定状态,这就是你主导人生境况的砝码。