<h2>I. WHAT WAS SEEN FROM THE WINDOW OVERLOOKING THE DOWN</h2>
<p>In the days of high-waisted and muslin-gowned women, when the
vast amount of soldiering going on in the country was a cause of
much trembling to the sex, there lived in a village near the
Wessex coast two ladies of good report, though unfortunately of
limited means. The elder was a Mrs. Martha Garland, a
landscape-painter’s widow, and the other was her only
daughter Anne.</p>
<p>Anne was fair, very fair, in a poetical sense; but in
complexion she was of that particular tint between blonde and
brunette which is inconveniently left without a name. Her
eyes were honest and inquiring, her mouth cleanly cut and yet not
classical, the middle point of her upper lip scarcely descending
so far as it should have done by rights, so that at the merest
pleasant thought, not to mention a smile, portions of two or
three white teeth were uncovered whether she would or not.
Some people said that this was very attractive. She was
graceful and slender, and, though but little above five feet in
height, could draw herself up to look tall. In her manner,
in her comings and goings, in her ‘I’ll do
this,’ or ‘I’ll do that,’ she combined
dignity with sweetness as no other girl could do; and any
impressionable stranger youths who passed by were led to yearn
for a windfall of speech from her, and to see at the same time
that they would not get it. In short, beneath all that was
charming and simple in this young woman there lurked a real
firmness, unperceived at first, as the speck of colour lurks
unperceived in the heart of the palest parsley flower.</p>
<p>She wore a white handkerchief to cover her white neck, and a
cap on her head with a pink ribbon round it, tied in a bow at the
front. She had a great variety of these cap-ribbons, the
young men being fond of sending them to her as presents until
they fell definitely in love with a special sweetheart elsewhere,
when they left off doing so. Between the border of her cap
and her forehead were ranged a row of round brown curls, like
swallows’ nests under eaves.</p>
<p>She lived with her widowed mother in a portion of an ancient
building formerly a manor-house, but now a mill, which, being too
large for his own requirements, the miller had found it
convenient to divide and appropriate in part to these highly
respectable tenants. In this dwelling Mrs. Garland’s
and Anne’s ears were soothed morning, noon, and night by
the music of the mill, the wheels and cogs of which, being of
wood, produced notes that might have borne in their minds a
remote resemblance to the wooden tones of the stopped diapason in
an organ. Occasionally, when the miller was bolting, there was
added to these continuous sounds the cheerful clicking of the
hopper, which did not deprive them of rest except when it was
kept going all night; and over and above all this they had the
pleasure of knowing that there crept in through every crevice,
door, and window of their dwelling, however tightly closed, a
subtle mist of superfine flour from the grinding room, quite
invisible, but making its presence known in the course of time by
giving a pallid and ghostly look to the best furniture. The
miller frequently apologized to his tenants for the intrusion of
this insidious dry fog; but the widow was of a friendly and
thankful nature, and she said that she did not mind it at all,
being as it was, not nasty dirt, but the blessed staff of
life.</p>
<p>By good-humour of this sort, and in other ways, Mrs. Garland
acknowledged her friendship for her neighbour, with whom Anne and
herself associated to an extent which she never could have
anticipated when, tempted by the lowness of the rent, they first
removed thither after her husband’s death from a larger
house at the other end of the village. Those who have lived
in remote places where there is what is called no society will
comprehend the gradual levelling of distinctions that went on in
this case at some sacrifice of gentility on the part of one
household. The widow was sometimes sorry to find with what
readiness Anne caught up some dialect-word or accent from the
miller and his friends; but he was so good and true-hearted a
man, and she so easy-minded, unambitious a woman, that she would
not make life a solitude for fastidious reasons. More than
all, she had good ground for thinking that the miller secretly
admired her, and this added a piquancy to the situation.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>On a fine summer morning, when the leaves were warm under the
sun, and the more industrious bees abroad, diving into every blue
and red cup that could possibly be considered a flower, Anne was
sitting at the back window of her mother’s portion of the
house, measuring out lengths of worsted for a fringed rug that
she was making, which lay, about three-quarters finished, beside
her. The work, though chromatically brilliant, was tedious:
a hearth-rug was a thing which nobody worked at from morning to
night; it was taken up and put down; it was in the chair, on the
floor, across the hand-rail, under the bed, kicked here, kicked
there, rolled away in the closet, brought out again, and so on
more capriciously perhaps than any other home-made article.
Nobody was expected to finish a rug within a calculable period,
and the wools of the beginning became faded and historical before
the end was reached. A sense of this inherent nature of
worsted-work rather than idleness led Anne to look rather
frequently from the open casement.</p>
<p>Immediately before her was the large, smooth millpond,
over-full, and intruding into the hedge and into the road.
The water, with its flowing leaves and spots of froth, was
stealing away, like Time, under the dark arch, to tumble over the
great slimy wheel within. On the other side of the
mill-pond was an open place called the Cross, because it was
three-quarters of one, two lanes and a cattle-drive meeting
there. It was the general rendezvous and arena of the
surrounding village. Behind this a steep slope rose high
into the sky, merging in a wide and open down, now littered with
sheep newly shorn. The upland by its height completely
sheltered the mill and village from north winds, making summers
of springs, reducing winters to autumn temperatures, and
permitting myrtle to flourish in the open air.</p>
<p>The heaviness of noon pervaded the scene, and under its
influence the sheep had ceased to feed. Nobody was standing
at the Cross, the few inhabitants being indoors at their
dinner. No human being was on the down, and no human eye or
interest but Anne’s seemed to be concerned with it.
The bees still worked on, and the butterflies did not rest from
roving, their smallness seeming to shield them from the
stagnating effect that this turning moment of day had on larger
creatures. Otherwise all was still.</p>
<p>The girl glanced at the down and the sheep for no particular
reason; the steep margin of turf and daisies rising above the
roofs, chimneys, apple-trees, and church tower of the hamlet
around her, bounded the view from her position, and it was
necessary to look somewhere when she raised her head. While
thus engaged in working and stopping her attention was attracted
by the sudden rising and running away of the sheep squatted on
the down; and there succeeded sounds of a heavy tramping over the
hard sod which the sheep had quitted, the tramp being accompanied
by a metallic jingle. Turning her eyes further she beheld
two cavalry soldiers on bulky grey chargers, armed and accoutred
throughout, ascending the down at a point to the left where the
incline was comparatively easy. The burnished chains,
buckles, and plates of their trappings shone like little
looking-glasses, and the blue, red, and white about them was
unsubdued by weather or wear.</p>
<p>The two troopers rode proudly on, as if nothing less than
crowns and empires ever concerned their magnificent minds.
They reached that part of the down which lay just in front of
her, where they came to a halt. In another minute there
appeared behind them a group containing some half-dozen more of
the same sort. These came on, halted, and dismounted
likewise.</p>
<p>Two of the soldiers then walked some distance onward together,
when one stood still, the other advancing further, and stretching
a white line of tape between them. Two more of the men
marched to another outlying point, where they made marks in the
ground. Thus they walked about and took distances,
obviously according to some preconcerted scheme.</p>
<p>At the end of this systematic proceeding one solitary
horseman—a commissioned officer, if his uniform could be
judged rightly at that distance—rode up the down, went over
the ground, looked at what the others had done, and seemed to
think that it was good. And then the girl heard yet louder
tramps and clankings, and she beheld rising from where the others
had risen a whole column of cavalry in marching order. At a
distance behind these came a cloud of dust enveloping more and
more troops, their arms and accoutrements reflecting the sun
through the haze in faint flashes, stars, and streaks of
light. The whole body approached slowly towards the plateau
at the top of the down.</p>
<p>Anne threw down her work, and letting her eyes remain on the
nearing masses of cavalry, the worsteds getting entangled as they
would, said, ‘Mother, mother; come here! Here’s
such a fine sight! What does it mean? What can they
be going to do up there?’</p>
<p>The mother thus invoked ran upstairs and came forward to the
window. She was a woman of sanguine mouth and eye, unheroic
manner, and pleasant general appearance; a little more tarnished
as to surface, but not much worse in contour than the girl
herself.</p>
<p>Widow Garland’s thoughts were those of the period.
‘Can it be the French,’ she said, arranging herself
for the extremest form of consternation. ‘Can that
arch-enemy of mankind have landed at last?’ It should
be stated that at this time there were two arch-enemies of
mankind—Satan as usual, and Buonaparte, who had sprung up
and eclipsed his elder rival altogether. Mrs. Garland
alluded, of course, to the junior gentleman.</p>
<p>‘It cannot be he,’ said Anne. ‘Ah!
there’s Simon Burden, the man who watches at the
beacon. He’ll know!’</p>
<p>She waved her hand to an aged form of the same colour as the
road, who had just appeared beyond the mill-pond, and who, though
active, was bowed to that degree which almost reproaches a
feeling observer for standing upright. The arrival of the
soldiery had drawn him out from his drop of drink at the
‘Duke of York’ as it had attracted Anne. At her
call he crossed the mill-bridge, and came towards the window.</p>
<p>Anne inquired of him what it all meant; but Simon Burden,
without answering, continued to move on with parted gums, staring
at the cavalry on his own private account with a concern that
people often show about temporal phenomena when such matters can
affect them but a short time longer. ‘You’ll
walk into the millpond!’ said Anne. ‘What are
they doing? You were a soldier many years ago, and ought to
know.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t ask me, Mis’ess Anne,’ said the
military relic, depositing his body against the wall one limb at
a time. ‘I were only in the foot, ye know, and never
had a clear understanding of horses. Ay, I be a old man,
and of no judgment now.’ Some additional pressure,
however, caused him to search further in his worm-eaten magazine
of ideas, and he found that he did know in a dim irresponsible
way. The soldiers must have come there to camp: those men
they had seen first were the markers: they had come on before the
rest to measure out the ground. He who had accompanied them
was the quartermaster. ‘And so you see they have got
all the lines marked out by the time the regiment have come
up,’ he added. ‘And then they
will—well-a-deary! who’d ha’ supposed that
Overcombe would see such a day as this!’</p>
<p>‘And then they will—’</p>
<p>‘Then— Ah, it’s gone from me again!’
said Simon. ‘O, and then they will raise their tents,
you know, and picket their horses. That was it; so it
was.’</p>
<p>By this time the column of horse had ascended into full view,
and they formed a lively spectacle as they rode along the high
ground in marching order, backed by the pale blue sky, and lit by
the southerly sun. Their uniform was bright and attractive;
white buckskin pantaloons, three-quarter boots, scarlet shakos
set off with lace, mustachios waxed to a needle point; and above
all, those richly ornamented blue jackets mantled with the
historic pelisse—that fascination to women, and encumbrance
to the wearers themselves.</p>
<p>‘’Tis the York Hussars!’ said Simon Burden,
brightening like a dying ember fanned. ‘Foreigners to
a man, and enrolled long since my time. But as good hearty
comrades, they say, as you’ll find in the King’s
service.’</p>
<p>‘Here are more and different ones,’ said Mrs.
Garland.</p>
<p>Other troops had, during the last few minutes, been ascending
the down at a remoter point, and now drew near. These were
of different weight and build from the others; lighter men, in
helmet hats, with white plumes.</p>
<p>‘I don’t know which I like best,’ said
Anne. ‘These, I think, after all.’</p>
<p>Simon, who had been looking hard at the latter, now said that
they were the --th Dragoons.</p>
<p>‘All Englishmen they,’ said the old man.
‘They lay at Budmouth barracks a few years ago.’</p>
<p>‘They did. I remember it,’ said Mrs.
Garland.</p>
<p>‘And lots of the chaps about here ‘listed at the
time,’ said Simon. ‘I can call to mind that
there was—ah, ’tis gone from me again! However,
all that’s of little account now.’</p>
<p>The dragoons passed in front of the lookers-on as the others
had done, and their gay plumes, which had hung lazily during the
ascent, swung to northward as they reached the top, showing that
on the summit a fresh breeze blew. ‘But look across
there,’ said Anne. There had entered upon the down
from another direction several battalions of foot, in white
kerseymere breeches and cloth gaiters. They seemed to be
weary from a long march, the original black of their gaiters and
boots being whity-brown with dust. Presently came
regimental waggons, and the private canteen carts which followed
at the end of a convoy.</p>
<p>The space in front of the mill-pond was now occupied by nearly
all the inhabitants of the village, who had turned out in alarm,
and remained for pleasure, their eyes lighted up with interest in
what they saw; for trappings and regimentals, war horses and men,
in towns an attraction, were here almost a sublimity.</p>
<p>The troops filed to their lines, dismounted, and in quick time
took off their accoutrements, rolled up their sheep-skins,
picketed and unbitted their horses, and made ready to erect the
tents as soon as they could be taken from the waggons and brought
forward. When this was done, at a given signal the canvases
flew up from the sod; and thenceforth every man had a place in
which to lay his head.</p>
<p>Though nobody seemed to be looking on but the few at the
window and in the village street, there were, as a matter of
fact, many eyes converging upon that military arrival in its high
and conspicuous position, not to mention the glances of birds and
other wild creatures. Men in distant gardens, women in
orchards and at cottage-doors, shepherds on remote hills,
turnip-hoers in blue-green enclosures miles away, captains with
spy-glasses out at sea, were regarding the picture keenly.
Those three or four thousand men of one machine-like movement,
some of them swashbucklers by nature; others, doubtless, of a
quiet shop-keeping disposition who had inadvertently got into
uniform—all of them had arrived from nobody knew where, and
hence were matter of great curiosity. They seemed to the
mere eye to belong to a different order of beings from those who
inhabited the valleys below. Apparently unconscious and
careless of what all the world was doing elsewhere, they remained
picturesquely engrossed in the business of making themselves a
habitation on the isolated spot which they had chosen.</p>
<p>Mrs. Garland was of a festive and sanguine turn of mind, a
woman soon set up and soon set down, and the coming of the
regiments quite excited her. She thought there was reason
for putting on her best cap, thought that perhaps there was not;
that she would hurry on the dinner and go out in the afternoon;
then that she would, after all, do nothing unusual, nor show any
silly excitements whatever, since they were unbecoming in a
mother and a widow. Thus circumscribing her intentions till
she was toned down to an ordinary person of forty, Mrs. Garland
accompanied her daughter downstairs to dine, saying,
‘Presently we will call on Miller Loveday, and hear what he
thinks of it all.’</p>
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