ELDER LADY
I was sound asleep till the thumping of the drums set me fantastically dreaming, and when I awoke I found they were real. Did they wake you too, my dear?
Younger Lady [reluctantly]
I didn"t require waking. I hadn"t slept since we came home.
ELDER LADY
That was from the excitement of the ball. There are dark rings round your eye. [The fifes and drums are now opposite, and thrill the air in the room.] Ah--that "Girl I"ve left behind me!"--which so many thousands of women have throbbed an accompaniment to, and will again to-day if ever they did!
YOUNGER LADY [her voice faltering]
It is rather cruel to say that just now, mamma. There, I can"t look at them after it! [She turns and wipes her eyes.]
ELDER LADY
I wasn"t thinking of ourselves--certainly not of you.--How they press on--with those great knapsacks and firelocks and, I am told, fifty-six rounds of ball-cartridge, and four days" provisions in those haversacks. How can they carry it all near twenty miles and fight with it on their shoulders!... Don"t cry, dear. I thought you would get sentimental last night over somebody. I ought to have brought you home sooner. How many dances did you have? It was impossible for me to look after you in the excitement of the war-tidings.
YOUNGER LADY
Only three--four.
ELDER LADY
Which were they?
YOUNGER LADY
"Enrico," the "Copenhagen Waltz" and the "Hanoverian," and the "Prime of Life."
ELDER LADY
It was very foolish to fall in love on the strength of four dances.
YOUNGER LADY [evasively]
Fall in love? Who said I had fallen in love? What a funny idea!
ELDER LADY
Is it?... Now here come the Highland Brigade with their pipes and their "Hieland Laddie." How the sweethearts cling to the men"s arms. [Reaching forward.] There are more regiments following.
But look, that gentleman opposite knows us. I cannot remember his name. [She bows and calls across.] Sir, which are these?
GENTLEMAN OPPOSITE
The Ninety-second. Next come the Forty-ninth, and next the Forty- second--Sir Denis Pack"s brigade.
ELDER LADY
Thank you.--I think it is that gentleman we talked to at the d.u.c.h.ess"s, but I am not sure. [A pause: another band.]
GENTLEMAN OPPOSITE
That"s the Twenty-eighth. [They pa.s.s, with their band and colours.]
Now the Thirty-second are coming up--part of Kempt"s brigade. Endless, are they not?
ELDER LADY
Yes, Sir. Has the Duke pa.s.sed out yet?
GENTLEMAN OPPOSITE
Not yet. Some cavalry will go by first, I think. The foot coming up now are the Seventy-ninth. [They pa.s.s.]... These next are the Ninety-fifth. [They pa.s.s.]... These are the First Foot- guards now. [They pa.s.s, playing "British Grenadiers."]... The Fusileer-guards now. [They pa.s.s.] Now the Coldstreamers. [They pa.s.s. He looks up towards the Parc.] Several Hanoverian regiments under Colonel Best are coming next. [They pa.s.s, with their bands and colours. An interval.]
ELDER LADY [to daughter]
Here are the hussars. How much more they carry to battle than at reviews. The hay in those great nets must enc.u.mber them. [She turns and sees that her daughter has become pale.] Ah, now I know!
HE has just gone by. You exchanged signals with him, you wicked girl! How do you know what his character is, or if he"ll ever come back?
[The younger lady goes and flings herself on her face upon the bed, sobbing silently. Her mother glances at her, but leaves her alone. An interval. The prancing of a group of hors.e.m.e.n is heard on the cobble-stones without.]
GENTLEMAN OPPOSITE [calling]
Here comes the Duke!
ELDER LADY [to younger]
You have left the window at the most important time! The Duke of Wellington and his staff-officers are pa.s.sing out.