A Changed Man; and other tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about A Changed Man; and other tales.

A Changed Man; and other tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about A Changed Man; and other tales.

‘O yes.  It all came out at the inquest.’

The singers drew close, and the Sidlinch men, pausing to rest after their labours, told the story.  ’It was all owing to that son of his, poor old man.  It broke his heart.’

’But the son is a soldier, surely; now with his regiment in the East Indies?’

’Ay.  And it have been rough with the army over there lately.  ’Twas a pity his father persuaded him to go.  But Luke shouldn’t have twyted the sergeant o’t, since ‘a did it for the best.’

The circumstances, in brief, were these:  The sergeant who had come to this lamentable end, father of the young soldier who had gone with his regiment to the East, had been singularly comfortable in his military experiences, these having ended long before the outbreak of the great war with France.  On his discharge, after duly serving his time, he had returned to his native village, and married, and taken kindly to domestic life.  But the war in which England next involved herself had cost him many frettings that age and infirmity prevented him from being ever again an active unit of the army.  When his only son grew to young manhood, and the question arose of his going out in life, the lad expressed his wish to be a mechanic.  But his father advised enthusiastically for the army.

‘Trade is coming to nothing in these days,’ he said.  ’And if the war with the French lasts, as it will, trade will be still worse.  The army, Luke—­that’s the thing for ’ee.  ’Twas the making of me, and ’twill be the making of you.  I hadn’t half such a chance as you’ll have in these splendid hotter times.’

Luke demurred, for he was a home-keeping, peace-loving youth.  But, putting respectful trust in his father’s judgment, he at length gave way, and enlisted in the —–­d Foot.  In the course of a few weeks he was sent out to India to his regiment, which had distinguished itself in the East under General Wellesley.

But Luke was unlucky.  News came home indirectly that he lay sick out there; and then on one recent day when his father was out walking, the old man had received tidings that a letter awaited him at Casterbridge.  The sergeant sent a special messenger the whole nine miles, and the letter was paid for and brought home; but though, as he had guessed, it came from Luke, its contents were of an unexpected tenor.

The letter had been written during a time of deep depression.  Luke said that his life was a burden and a slavery, and bitterly reproached his father for advising him to embark on a career for which he felt unsuited.  He found himself suffering fatigues and illnesses without gaining glory, and engaged in a cause which he did not understand or appreciate.  If it had not been for his father’s bad advice he, Luke, would now have been working comfortably at a trade in the village that he had never wished to leave.

After reading the letter the sergeant advanced a few steps till he was quite out of sight of everybody, and then sat down on the bank by the wayside.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Changed Man; and other tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.