Tom Burke Of "Ours", Volume II
Transcriber's Note : Two print editions have been used for this Project Gutenberg Edition of “Tom Burke of 'Ours'”: The Little Brown edition (Boston) of 1913 with illustrations by Phiz; and the Chapman and Hall editon (London) of 1853 with illustrations by Browne. Illegible and missing pages were found in both print editions.
“What is it, Minette?” said I, for the third time, as I saw her lean her head from out the narrow casement, and look down into the valley beside the river; “what do you see there?”
“I see a regiment of infantry coming along the road from Ulm,” said she, after a pause; “and now I perceive the lancers are following them, and the artillery too. Ah! and farther again, I see a great cloud of dust. Mère de Ciél! how tired and weary they all look! It surely cannot be a march in retreat; and, now that I think of it, they have no baggage, nor any wagons with them.”
“That was a bugle call, Minette! Did you not hear it?”
“Yes, it's a halt for a few minutes. Poor fellows! they are sadly exhausted; they cannot even reach the side of the way, but are lying down on the very road. I can bear it no longer. I must find out what it all means.” So saying, she threw round her a mantle which, Spanish fashion, she wore over her head, and hurried from the room.
For some time I waited patiently for her return; but when half an hour elapsed, I arose and crept to the window. A succession of rocky precipices descended from the terrace on which the house stood, down to the very edge of the Danube, and from the point where I sat the view extended for miles in every direction. What, then, was my astonishment to see the wide plain, not marked by regular columns in marching array, but covered with straggling detachments, hurrying onward as if without order or discipline. Here was an infantry battalion mixed up with a cavalry corps, the foot-soldiers endeavoring to keep up with the ambling trot of the dragoons; there, the ammunition wagons were covered with weary soldiers, too tired to march. Most of the men were without their firelocks, which were piled in a confused heap on the limbers of the guns. No merry chant, no burst of warlike music, cheered them on. They seemed like the scattered fragments of a routed army hurrying onward in search of some place of refuge,-sad and spiritless.
Charles James Lever
TOM BURKE OF “OURS”
With Illustrations By Phiz. and H. Browne
In Two Volumes, Vol. II.
TOM BURKE OF “OURS”
CHAPTER I. THE SICK LEAVE.
CHAPTER II. LINTZ
CHAPTER III. AUSTERLITZ
CHAPTER IV. THE FIELD AT MIDNIGHT.
CHAPTER V. A MAÎTRE D'ARMES.
CHAPTER VI. THE MILL ON THE HOLITSCH ROAD
CHAPTER VII. THE ARMISTICE.
CHAPTER VIII. THE COMPAGNIE D'ELITE
CHAPTER IX. PARIS IN 1800
CHAPTER X. THE HÔTEL DE CLICHY
CHAPTER XI. A SALLE DE POLICE
CHAPTER XII. THE RETURN OF THE WOUNDED
CHAPTER XIII. THE CHEVALIER.
CHAPTER XIV. A BOYISH REMINISCENCE
CHAPTER XV. A GOOD-BY
CHAPTER XVI. AN OLD FRIEND UNCHANGED
CHAPTER XVII. THE RUE DES CAPUCINES
CHAPTER XVIII. THE MOISSON d'OR
CHAPTER XIX. THE TWO SOIREES
CHAPTER XX. A SUDDEN DEPARTURE
CHAPTER XXI. THE SUMMIT OF THE LANDGRAFENBERG
CHAPTER XXII. L'HOMME ROUGE
CHAPTER XXII. JENA AND AUERSTÄDT.
CHAPTER XXIV. A FRAGMENT OF A MAÎTRE d'ARMES EXPERIENCES
CHAPTER XXV. BERLIN AFTER “JENA.”
CHAPTER XXVI. A FOREST PATH.
CHAPTER XXVII. A CHANCE MEETING.
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE PENSION DE LA RUE MI-CARÊME.
CHAPTER XXIX. MY NAMESAKE
CHAPTER XXX. AN OLD SAILOR OF THE EMPIRE
CHAPTER XXXI. A MOONLIGHT RECOGNITION
CHAPTER XXXII. THE FALAISE DE BIVILLE.
CHAPTER XXXIII. THE LANDING
CHAPTER XXXIV. A CHARACTER OF OLD DUBLIN
CHAPTER XXXV. AN UNFORSEEN EVIL
CHAPTER XXXVI. THE PERIL AVERTED
CHAPTER XXXVII. HASTY RESOLUTION
CHAPTER XXXVIII. THE LAST CAMPAIGN
CHAPTER XXXIX. THE BRIDGE OF MONTEREAU
CHAPTER XL. FONTAINEBLEAU
CHAPTER XLI. THE CONCLUSION
A PARTING WORD.