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قراءة كتاب The French Prisoners of Norman Cross: A Tale

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The French Prisoners of Norman Cross: A Tale

The French Prisoners of Norman Cross: A Tale

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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The French Prisoners of Norman Cross, by Arthur Brown

Transcribed from the [1895] Hodder Brothers edition by David Price, email [email protected]

Yaxley Church from the S.E. From photo. by Rev. E. H. Brown

Weep sore for him that goeth away: for he shall return no more, nor see his native country.”

the
French Prisoners
of
Norman Cross.

A TALE.

by the
REV. ARTHUR BROWN,
Rector of Catfield, Norfolk.

London:
HODDER BROTHERS,
18 New Bridge Street, E.C.

Printed by
nops & tarrant,
19, Ludgate Hill, London, E.C.

CHAPTER I.—THE ARRIVAL.

The tramp of feet was heard one afternoon late in the Autumn of 1808, on the road that leads from Peterborough to Yaxley.  A body of men, four abreast, and for the most part in the garb and with the bearing of soldiers, was marching along.  But the sight was not exhilarating.  The swing and springy step of soldiers on the march is always a pleasant sight; but there was a downcast look on most of these men’s faces, and a general shabbiness of appearance that was not attractive.  And no wonder: for they had come from the battlefield,

and crossed the sea in crowded ships, not too comfortable; and were drawing near, as prisoners of war, to the dreary limbo which, unless they chanced to die, was to be their abode for they knew not how long.  To be prisoners of war is an honourable estate, almost the only captivity to which no shame attaches: yet this is but cold comfort to compensate for loss of freedom.

All down the column and on each side of it marched a file of red-coated militia-men with guns loaded and bayonets fixed, not as a complimentary escort, but a stern necessity, a fact that had been proved not an hour before, when some desperate fellow had broken through the guard, and flung himself from the parapet of the bridge over the Nene at Peterborough, and was shot the moment he rose to the surface of the water.  Alas! for him, poor fellow, they could aim well in those days with even the old “Brown Bess.”

Many a sad procession of unfortunates like

these had travelled the same road before, during the last five years, but they had consisted for the most part of prisoners taken in naval engagements, such as the seamen and marines captured from the four Spanish frigates, with a million sterling on board; and the men brought to England from both French and Spanish possessions in the West Indies, besides crews of privateers, floating “Caves of Adullam,” where everyone that was in distress, or in debt, or discontented, were gathered together, along with many who had taken to that wild life to escape political troubles.  Perhaps, also, there had been some of those twelve thousand prisoners who had been sent after Trafalgar’s fight was over in 1805.

It was now, as we have said, the year 1808.  The Peninsular war had begun, and the prisoners we are describing were some of those brave Frenchmen who had fought against us in one of the first engagements, the short but incisive battle of Vimiero.

“Why, Tournier, my friend,” cried a young fellow, marching with the officers at the head of the column, “how miserable you look!  Who would think you were almost at the end of your journey, and about to find repose in the hotel the English have provided for us?  I have not seen a smile on your face since the day you left Portugal.  Courage, man, or we shall all have the blue-devils!”

Those who heard him seemed amused, but Tournier did not deign to notice the raillery, though it was not meant ill-naturedly.

An English officer, riding at the side a little in advance, and overheard what was said, looked round on Tournier, and, struck with his soldierly figure, said quietly, “Let us hope it will not be for long.”

“Long, sir?” exclaimed the other; “long as the grave: we are marching there.”

“Mercy on us!” cried the lively Frenchman, “that’s a pleasant idea!  We are going to that ‘undiscovered country,’ as your Shakspeare

says, ‘from whose bourn no traveller returns.’  Bah! let us change the subject, and hope for another ‘Peace of Amiens,’ and as short a one.”

And then the light-hearted fellow—for a light heart is often a kind one—seeing that open raillery was powerless, tried gentler means to cheer his companion up.

“Look, Tournier,” he whispered, after a pause, “what a charming view is on the left there.  We must be on high ground.  What a panorama for poor flat England!  If we are good boys, we shall be out on parole, and be able to stroll about the country, and chat with the cherry-lipped maidens at the farms, and drink the farm-house milk, and, what is better, their famous English beer.  And look, there is a lake, I declare.  It seems a good-sized one.  We will go fishing.”

So he ran on; and though the words pattered down in vain, like rain upon the pavement, yet the evident intention unconsciously pleased, as kind intentions often, if not always, do,

however awkward the way in which they are displayed.

And now, as the column passed a clump of trees at a bend in the road, the barracks and their surroundings suddenly came into view.  All eyes were directed towards them; and if any of those unhappy sons of France had indulged in fancy on the way, and pictured their future place of confinement as some romantic fortress, with towering walls and gates of iron, they must have been greatly disappointed.

Nothing could be less romantic than the appearance of these Norman Cross Barracks.  They looked from outside exactly like a vast congeries of large, high, carpenters’ shops, with roofs of glaring red tiles, and surrounded by wooden palisades, very lofty and of prodigious strength.  In fact, the place was like an entrenched camp of a rather more permanent type.  But if there was no architectural beauty, there was the perfection of security.  It looked like business.  The prisoners were in no wise to escape:—

“All hope abandon, ye who enter here.”

Another regiment of militia, besides the men who formed the prisoners’ escort, was quartered in what we call the soldiers’ barracks, to distinguish them from those occupied by the prisoners.  Of these, a strong body were drawn up right and left of the principal entrance, which was in the Peterborough Road, and as the column passed between them the soldiers were ordered to salute the

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