In Times of Peril

G.A. Henty
In Times of Peril

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Title: In Times of Peril
Author: G. A. Henty
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IN TIMES OF PERIL A TALE OF INDIA.
BY G. A. HENTY

CONTENTS.

CHAPTER I.
Life in Cantonments

CHAPTER II.
The Outbreak

CHAPTER III.
The Flight

CHAPTER IV.
Broken Down

CHAPTER V.
Back Under the Flag

CHAPTER VI.
A Dashing Expedition

CHAPTER VII.
Delhi

CHAPTER VIII.
A Desperate Defense

CHAPTER IX.
Saved by a Tiger

CHAPTER X.
Treachery

CHAPTER XI.
Retribution Begins

CHAPTER XII.
Dangerous Service

CHAPTER XIII
Lucknow

CHAPTER XIV.
The Besieged Residency

CHAPTER XV.
Spiking the Guns

CHAPTER XVI.
A Sortie and its Consequences

CHAPTER XVII.

Out of Lucknow

CHAPTER XVIII.
The Storming of Delhi

CHAPTER XIX.
A Riot at Cawnpore

CHAPTER XX.
The Relief of Lucknow

CHAPTER XXI.
A Sad Parting

CHAPTER XXII.
The Last Capture of Lucknow

CHAPTER XXIII.
A Desperate Defense

CHAPTER XXIV.
Rest after Labor

CHAPTER I.
LIFE IN CANTONMENTS.
Very bright and pretty, in the early springtime of the year 1857, were
the British cantonments of Sandynugghur. As in all other British
garrisons in India, they stood quite apart from the town, forming a
suburb of their own. They consisted of the barracks, and of a maidan,
or, as in England it would be called, "a common," on which the troops
drilled and exercised, and round which stood the bungalows of the
military and civil officers of the station, of the chaplain, and of the one
or two merchants who completed the white population of the place.
Very pretty were these bungalows, built entirely upon the ground floor,
in rustic fashion, wood entering largely into their composition. Some
were thatched; others covered with slabs of wood or stone. All had
wide verandas running around them, with tatties, or blinds, made of
reeds or strips of wood, to let down, and give shade and coolness to the
rooms therein. In some of them the visitor walked from the compound,
or garden, directly into the dining-room; large, airy, with neither
curtains, nor carpeting, nor matting, but with polished boards as
flooring. The furniture here was generally plain and almost scanty, for,
except at meal- times, the rooms were but little used.
Outside, in the veranda, is the real sitting-room of the bungalow. Here
are placed a number of easy-chairs of all shapes, constructed of cane or
bamboo--light, cool, and comfortable; these are moved, as the sun
advances, to the shady side of the veranda, and in them the ladies read
and work, the gentlemen smoke. In all bungalows built for the use of
English families, there is, as was the case at Sandynugghur, a drawing-

room as well as a dining-room, and this, being the ladies' especial
domain, is generally furnished in European style, with a piano, light
chintz chair-covers, and muslin curtains.
The bedroom opens out of the sitting-room; and almost every bedroom
has its bathroom--that all-important adjunct in the East--attached to it.
The windows all open down to the ground, and the servants generally
come in and out through the veranda. Each window has its Venetian
blind, which answers all purposes of a door, and yet permits the air to
pass freely.
The veranda, in addition to serving as the general sitting-room to the
family, acts as a servants' hall. Here at the side not used by the
employers, the servants, when not otherwise engaged, sit
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