Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: "Fair play and no favor won us our honors, mind you! though the chance didn't come until later on. True, we helped Sir Harry Smith to pound the Sikhs at Ferozshahr and at Aliwal, when the cavalry of his Right had driven the Khalsas back across the Red Ford. Waiting for the elephants with the heavy siege-guns and the ammunition and stores to come up from Delhi, took a hell of a time. Seven long weeks of broiling by day and freezing o' nights, while Tij Sinh and his thirty-five thousand Khalsas entrenched themselves, mounted their heavy artillerymade their bridge of boats, and encamped their cavalry up the river. But the day cameour day!and I don't forget that foggy tenth of February while I'm breathing." Captain Breagh sucked at his pipe and reflectively pulled a whisker. And the silent voice went on: "We were with the Left Division under General Dick, and led the assault, while Gilbert and Smith feigned to attack on the enemy's left and center. And in that charge, when the General got his death-wound from a swivel- ball,I was the second red-coat to cross the ditch, and scramble over the big mud rampart, and saber a Sikh gunner with his linstock in his hand! ..." Mrs. Breagh, chagrined at remaining so long the object of her husband's inattention, picked up his fallen newspaper and almost timidly laid it on his knee. And the child under the table kept as quiet as a mouse, almost . . . "Thank ye, my dear!" said the Captain, while the other Breagh went on: "And when the Treaty was signed and the rumpus all overfor the time!because Dalhousie 's bungling brought the hornets about our ears again!we marched from Lahore to Calcutta with Britain's victorious armybarring the force we 'd left with Lawrence at Mian Mir.'' The silence continuing, Mrs. Breagh drew her ...