Corporal Sam and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Corporal Sam and Other Stories.

Corporal Sam and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 256 pages of information about Corporal Sam and Other Stories.

‘Hi, sergeant!’ spoke up the young Engineer officer very sharply and clearly, at the same time stepping a couple of paces down from the ridge over which a frontal fire of bullets now flew whistling from the loopholed houses in the town.  ’For God’s sake, shout and hurry up your men, or our chance this night is gone.’

‘I know it, sir—­I know it,’ groaned Wilkes.

’Then shout, man!  Fifty men might do it yet, but every moment is odds against.  See the swarm on the rampart there, to the right!’

They shouted together, but in vain.  Four or five ladder-bearers mounted the slope, but only to be shot down almost at their feet.  The Engineer officer, reaching forward to seize one of the ladder-lengths and drag it behind a pile of masonry under which he had taken cover, and thus for an instant exposing himself, dropped suddenly upon his face.  And now but Sergeant Wilkes and Corporal Sam were left clinging, waiting for the help that still tarried.

What had happened was this.  The supporting columns, disordered by the scramble along the foreshore, arrived at the foot of the breach in straggling twos and threes; and here, while their officers tried to form them up, the young soldiers behind, left for the moment without commanders and exasperated by the fire from the flanking tower, halted to exchange useless shots with its defenders and with the enemy on the rampart.  Such fighting was worse than idle:  it delayed them full in the path of the 38th, which now overtook them on its way to the lesser breach, and in five minutes the two columns were inextricably mixed, blocking the narrow space between wall and river, and exposed in all this dark confusion to a murderous fire.

At length, and though less than a third of his men followed him, Captain Archimbeau led the supporters up the breach; but by this time the enemy had packed the ramparts on either side.  No soldiery could stand the hail of musketry, grape, and hand-grenades that rained upon the head of the column.  It hesitated, pushed forward again, and broke some fifteen feet from the summit, like a spent wave.  Then, as the Royals came pouring back, Lieutenant Campbell of the 9th, with all that could be collected of his picked detachment, forced his way up through the sheer weight of them, won clear, and made a fling for the crest.  In vain!  His first rush carried him abreast of the masonry under which Sergeant Wilkes and the corporal clung for cover.  They rushed out to join him; but they had scarcely gained his side before the whole detachment began to give ground.  It was not that the men fell back; rather, the apex of the column withered down as man after man dropped beside its leader.  He himself had taken a wound.  Yet he waved his sword and carried them forward on a second charge, only to reach where he had reached before, and be laid there by a second bullet.

Meanwhile the Royals, driven to the foot of the slope, were flung as a fresh obstacle in the path of the 38th still striving to press on for the lesser breach.  From his perch half-way up the ruins, Sergeant Wilkes descried Captain Archimbeau endeavouring to rally them, and climbed down to help him.  The corporal followed, nursing his wounded hand.  As they reached him a bugle sounded the recall.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Corporal Sam and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.