Talbot Mundy

Hira Singh : when India came to fight in Flanders


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       Talbot Mundy

      Hira Singh : when India came to fight in Flanders

      Published by Good Press, 2021

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664635556

       PREFACE

       Hira Singh

       CHAPTER I

       CHAPTER II

       CHAPTER III

       CHAPTER IV

       CHAPTER V

       CHAPTER VI

       CHAPTER VII

       CHAPTER VIII

       Table of Contents

      I take leave to dedicate this book to Mr. Elmer Davis, through whose friendly offices I was led to track down the hero of these adventures and to find the true account of them even better than the daily paper promised.

      Had Ranjoor Singh and his men been Muhammadans their accomplishment would have been sufficiently wonderful. For Sikhs to attempt what they carried through, even under such splendid leadership as Ranjoor Singh's, was to defy the very nth degree of odds. To have tried to tell the tale otherwise than in Hira Singh's own words would have been to varnish gold. Amid the echoes of the roar of the guns in Flanders, the world is inclined to overlook India's share in it all and the stout proud loyalty of Indian hearts. May this tribute to the gallant Indian gentlemen who came to fight our battles serve to remind its readers that they who give their best, and they who take, are one.

      T. M.

      One hundred Indian troops of the

       British Army have arrived at Kabul,

       Afghanistan, after a four months'

       march from Constantinople. The men

       were captured in Flanders by the

       Germans and were sent to Turkey in the

       hope that, being Mohammedans, they

       might join the Turks. But they

       remained loyal to Great Britain and

       finally escaped, heading for Afghanistan.

       They now intend to join their

       regimental depot in India, so it

       is reported.

       New York Times, July, 1915

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Let a man, an arrow, and an answer each go straight. Each is his own witness. God is judge.—EASTERN PROVERB.

      A Sikh who must have stood about six feet without his turban—and only imagination knows how stately he was with it—loomed out of the violet mist of an Indian morning and scrutinized me with calm brown eyes. His khaki uniform, like two of the medal ribbons on his breast, was new, but nothing else about him suggested rawness. Attitude, grayness, dignity, the unstudied strength of his politeness, all sang aloud of battles won. Battles with himself they may have been—but they were won.

      I began remembering ice-polished rocks that the glaciers once dropped along Maine valleys, when his quiet voice summoned me back to India and the convalescent camp beyond whose outer gate I stood. Two flags on lances formed the gate and the boundary line was mostly imaginary; but one did not trespass, because at about the point where vision no longer pierced the mist there stood a sentry, and the grounding of a butt on gravel and now and then a cough announced others beyond him again.

      "I have permission," I said, "to find a certain Risaldar-major Ranjoor Singh, and to ask him questions."

      He smiled. His eyes, betraying nothing but politeness, read the very depths of mine.

      "Has the sahib credentials?" he asked. So I showed him the permit covered with signatures that was the one scrap of writing left in my possession after several searchings.

      "Thank you," he said gravely. "There were others who had no permits. Will you walk with me through the camp?"

      That was new annoyance, for with such a search as I had in mind what interest could there be in a camp for convalescent Sikhs? Tents pitched at intervals—a hospital marquee—a row of trees under which some of the wounded might sit and dream the day through-these were all things one could imagine without journeying to India. But there was nothing to do but accept, and I walked beside him, wishing I could stride with half his grace.

      "There are no well men here," he told me. "Even the heavy work about the camp is done by convalescents."

      "Then why are you here?" I asked, not trying to conceal admiration for his strength and stature.

      "I, too, am not yet quite recovered."

      "From what?" I asked, impudent because I felt desperate. But I drew no fire.

      "I do not know the English name for my complaint," he said. (But he spoke English better than I, he having mastered it, whereas I was only born to its careless use.)

      "How long do you expect to remain on the sick list?" I asked, because a woman once told me that the way to make a man talk is to seem to be interested in himself.

      "Who knows?" said he.

      He showed me about the camp, and we came to a stand at last under the branches of an enormous mango tree. Early though it was, a Sikh non-commissioned officer was already sitting propped against the trunk with his bandaged feet stretched out in front of him—a peculiar attitude for a Sikh.

      "That one knows English," my guide said, nodding. And making me a most profound salaam, he added: "Why not talk with him? I have duties. I must go."

      The officer turned away, and I paid him the courtesy due from one man to another. It shall always be a satisfying memory that I raised my hat to him and that he saluted me.

      "What is that officer's name?" I asked, and the man on the ground seemed astonished that I did not know.

      "Risaldar-major Ranjoor Singh bahadur!" he said.