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    Corporal Dick's Promotion

    by Arthur Conan Doyle
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    From Songs of Action (1898).

    A Ballad of '82

    The Eastern day was well-nigh o'er
    When, parched with thirst and travel sore,
    Two of McPherson's flanking corps
    Across the Desert were tramping.
    They had wandered off from the beaten track
    And now were wearily harking back,
    Ever staring round for the signal jack
    That marked their comrades camping.

    The one was Corporal Robert Dick,
    Bearded and burly, short and thick,
    Rough of speech and in temper quick,
    A hard-faced old rapscallion.
    The other, fresh from the barrack square,
    Was a raw recruit, smooth-cheeked and fair
    Half grown, half drilled, with the weedy air
    Of a draft from the home battalion.

    Weary and parched and hunger-torn,
    They had wandered on from early morn,
    And the young boy-soldier limped forlorn,
    Now stumbling and now falling.
    Around the orange sand-curves lay,
    Flecked with boulders, black or grey,
    Death-silent, save that far away
    A kite was shrilly calling.

    A kite? Was THAT a kite? The yell
    That shrilly rose and faintly fell?
    No kite's, and yet the kite knows well
    The long-drawn wild halloo.
    And right athwart the evening sky
    The yellow sand-spray spurtled high,
    And shrill and shriller swelled the cry
    Of 'Allah! Allahu!'


    The Corporal peered at the crimson West,
    Hid his pipe in his khaki vest.
    Growled out an oath and onward pressed,
    Still glancing over his shoulder.
    'Bedouins, mate!' he curtly said;
    'We'll find some work for steel and lead,
    And maybe sleep in a sandy bed,
    Before we're one hour older.

    'But just one flutter before we're done.
    Stiffen your lip and stand, my son;
    We'll take this bloomin' circus on:
    Ball-cartridge load! Now, steady!'
    With a curse and a prayer the two faced round,
    Dogged and grim they stood their ground,
    And their breech-blocks snapped with a crisp clean sound
    As the rifles sprang to the 'ready.'

    Alas for the Emir Ali Khan!
    A hundred paces before his clan,
    That ebony steed of the prophet's breed
    Is the foal of death and of danger.
    A spurt of fire, a gasp of pain,
    A blueish blurr on the yellow plain,
    The chief was down, and his bridle rein
    Was in the grip of the stranger.

    With the light of hope on his rugged face,
    The Corporal sprang to the dead man's place,
    One prick with the steel, one thrust with the heel,
    And where was the man to outride him?
    A grip of his knees, a toss of his rein,
    He was settling her down to her gallop again,
    When he stopped, for he heard just one faltering word
    From the young recruit beside him.

    One faltering word from pal to pal,
    But it found the heart of the Corporal.
    He had sprung to the
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