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IN TIMES OF PERIL.
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men of your troop will hold the other three walls; but if you hear my dog-whistle, every man is to leave his post and come on here at a run. Thirty men more will man this front wall and towers. They are to direct their fire to check the crowd pushing forward behind those immediately assaulting. The remaining forty will fire through the loopholes as long as possible, and will then form round the breastwork and hold it to the last. One man in each gate-tower, when the enemy reach the gate, will lay down his carbine and attend to the boiling water. Let them each have a small pot as a ladle. But let them throw the water on those pressing toward the gate, not on those who have reached it. Those are our affair."

In five minutes every man was at his post, and a sharp fire from the seventy men along the front wall opened upon the masses of the enemy, who came swarming toward the gate. The effect on the crowd, many thousands strong, was very severe, for each shot told; but the Mussulmans of Oude are courageous, and the rush toward the gate continued. Fast as those in front fell the gaps were imperceptible in the swarming crowd. Major Warrener's band of forty men were called away from the loopholes and were drawn up behind the ditch; and as the head of the assaulting crowd neared the gate volley after volley rang out, and swept away the leaders, foremost among whom were a number of Sepoys, who, when their regiments mutinied, had returned to their homes, and now headed the peasantry in their attack upon the British force. When the dense mass arrived within thirty yards of the gate Major Warrener gave tha word and a retreat was made behind the breastwork. On, with wild shouts, came the assailants; the first few saw the trench and leaped it; those who followed fell in, until the trench was full; then the crowd swept in un-