[On the Irrawaddy by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link book
On the Irrawaddy

CHAPTER 10: The Advance
2/30

Trade is improving again for, now that Bandoola's army has marched away from Ramoo, the scare among the natives has pretty well subsided.

Still, I can manage very well without you, and it will certainly be a great advantage to you to serve for a year in the army; and to have been one of Campbell's aides-de-camp will be a feather in your cap, and will give you a good position at all the military stations.
"I am very glad, now, that I abstained from writing to your mother after the battle at Ramoo.

I thought it over and over, and concluded that it was just as well to leave the matter alone for a time; not that I had the slightest idea, or even a hope, that you were alive, but because I thought that the cessation of letters from you would, to some extent, prepare her mind for the blow, when it came.

It would be very improbable that she would see the gazette, with the list of killed and wounded at Ramoo and, even if she did so, she would not associate the death of Ensign Brooke in any way with you.

When we have been trading up country, there have been, once or twice, no means of sending off a letter for a couple of months and, therefore, she could not have begun to feel seriously anxious about you before she received your letter from Rangoon.
"Everyone says that you will not be able to advance until February; so that, no doubt, this letter will reach you long before you leave.


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