Barry Lyndon eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 464 pages of information about Barry Lyndon.

Barry Lyndon eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 464 pages of information about Barry Lyndon.

I was not near so unhappy, in spite of all, as I had been on my first enlisting in Ireland.  At least, thought I, if I am degraded to be a private soldier there will be no one of my acquaintance who will witness my shame; and that is the point which I have always cared for most.  There will be no one to say, ’There is young Redmond Barry, the descendant or the Barrys, the fashionable young blood of Dublin, pipeclaying his belt and carrying his brown Bess.’  Indeed, but for that opinion of the world, with which it is necessary that every man of spirit should keep upon equal terms, I, for my part, would have always been contented with the humblest portion.  Now here, to all intents and purposes, one was as far removed from the world as in the wilds of Siberia, or in Robinson Crusoe’s Island.  And I reasoned with myself thus:—­’Now you are caught, there is no use in repining:  make the best of your situation, and get all the pleasure you can out of it.  There are a thousand opportunities of plunder, &c., offered to the soldier in war-time, out of which he can get both pleasure and profit:  make use of these, and be happy.  Besides, you are extraordinarily brave, handsome, and clever:  and who knows but you may procure advancement in your new service?’

In this philosophical way I looked at my misfortunes, determining not to be cast down by them; and bore woes and my broken head with perfect magnanimity.  The latter was, for the moment, an evil against which it required no small powers of endurance to contend; for the jolts of the waggon were dreadful, and every shake caused a throb in my brain which I thought would have split my skull.  As the morning dawned, I saw that the man next me, a gaunt yellow-haired creature, in black, had a cushion of straw under his head.

‘Are you wounded, comrade?’ said I.

‘Praised be the Lord,’ said he, ’I am sore hurt in spirit and body, and bruised in many members; wounded, however, am I not.  And you, poor youth?’

‘I am wounded in the head,’ said I, ’and I want your pillow:  give it me—­I’ve a clasp-knife in my pocket!’ and with this I gave him a terrible look, meaning to say (and mean it I did, for look you, A la GUERRE C’EST A la GUERRE, and I am none of your milksops) that, unless he yielded me the accommodation, I would give him a taste of my steel.

‘I would give it thee without any threat, friend,’ said the yellow-haired man meekly, and handed me over his little sack of straw.

He then leaned himself back as comfortably as he could against the cart, and began repeating, ‘Ein’ feste Burg ist unser Gott,’ by which I concluded that I had got into the company of a parson.  With the jolts of the waggon, and accidents of the journey, various more exclamations and movements of the passengers showed what a motley company we were.  Every now and then a countryman would burst into tears; a French voice would be heard to say, ’O mon Dieu!—­mon Dieu!’ a couple more of the same nation were jabbering oaths and chattering incessantly; and a certain allusion to his own and everybody else’s eyes, which came from a stalwart figure at the far corner, told me that there was certainly an Englishman in our crew.

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Barry Lyndon from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.