Camps, Quarters, and Casual 
Places 
 
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Title: Camps, Quarters, and Casual Places 
Author: Archibald Forbes 
Release Date: December, 2005 [EBook #9460] [Yes, we are more than 
one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on October 3, 
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAMPS, 
QUARTERS, AND CASUAL PLACES *** 
 
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CAMPS, QUARTERS AND CASUAL PLACES 
BY ARCHIBALD FORBES, LL.D. 
 
NOTE 
My obligations for permission to incorporate some of the articles in this 
volume are due to Messrs. George Routledge and Sons, Mr. James 
Knowles of the Nineteenth Century, Mr. Percy Bunting of the 
Contemporary Review, and the Proprietor of _McClure's Magazine_. 
LONDON, June 1896. 
 
CONTENTS 
1. MATRIMONY UNDER FIRE 
2. REVERENCING THE GOLDEN FEET 
3. GERMAN WAR PRAYERS 
4. MISS PRIEST'S BRIDECAKE 
5. A VERSION OF BALACLAVA 
6. HOW I "SAVED FRANCE" 
7. CHRISTMAS IN A CAVALRY REGIMENT 
8. THE MYSTERY OF MONSIEUR REGNIER 
9. RAILWAY LIZZ 
10. MY NATIVE SALMON RIVER 
11. THE CAWNPORE OF TO-DAY 
12. BISMARCK BEFORE AND DURING THE FRANCO-GERMAN 
WAR 
13. THE INVERNESS "CHARACTER" FAIR
14. THE WARFARE OF THE FUTURE 
15. GEORGE MARTELL'S BANDOBAST 
16. THE LUCKNOW OF TO-DAY 
17. THE MILITARY COURAGE OF ROYALTY 
18. PARADE OF THE COMMISSIONAIRES 
19. THE INNER HISTORY OF THE WATERLOO CAMPAIGN 
 
MATRIMONY UNDER FIRE 
The interval between the declaration of the Franco-German war of 
1870-71, and the "military promenade," at which the poor Prince 
Imperial received his "baptism of fire," was a pleasant, lazy time at 
Saarbrücken; to which pretty frontier town I had early betaken myself, 
in the anticipation, which proved well founded, that the tide of war 
would flow that way first. What a pity it is that all war cannot be like 
this early phase of it, of which I speak! It was playing at warfare, with 
just enough of the grim reality cropping up occasionally, to give the 
zest which the reckless Frenchwoman declared was added to a pleasure 
by its being also a sin. The officers of the Hohenzollerns--our only 
infantry regiment in garrison-- drank their beer placidly under the 
lime-tree in the market-place, as their men smoked drowsily, lying 
among the straw behind the stacked arms ready for use at a moment's 
notice. The infantry patrol skirted the frontier line every morning in the 
gray dawn, occasionally exchanging with little result a few shots with 
the French outposts on the Spicheren or down in the valley bounded by 
the Schönecken wood. The Uhlans, their piebald lance-pennants 
fluttering in the wind, cantered leisurely round the crests of the little 
knolls which formed the vedette posts, despising mightily the 
straggling chassepot bullets which were pitched at them from time to 
time in a desultory way; but which, desultory as they were, now and 
then brought lance-pennant and its bearer to the ground--an occurrence 
invariably followed by a little spurt of lively hostility. 
I had my quarters at the Rheinischer Hof, a right comfortable hotel on 
the St. Johann side of the Saar, where most of the Hohenzollern officers 
frequented the _table d'hôte_ and where quaint little Max, the drollest 
imp of a waiter imaginable, and pretty Fraülein Sophie the landlord's 
niece, did all that in them lay to contribute to the pleasantness and 
comfort of the house. Not a few pleasant evenings did I spend at the
table of the long dining-room, with the close-cropped red head of silent 
and genial Hauptmann von Krehl looming large over the great ice-pail, 
with its chevaux de frise of long-necked Niersteiner bottles--the worthy 
Hauptmann supported by blithe Lieutenant von Klipphausen, ever 
ready with the _Wacht am Rhein_; quaint Dr. Diestelkamp, brimful of 
recollections of "six-and-sixty" and as ready to amputate your leg as to 
crack a joke or clink a glass; gay young Adjutant von Zülow--he who 
one day brought    
    
		
	
	
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