CHAPTER V
THE CITIES OF REFUGE
Minor disturbances on the outskirts left out
of sight, the stress of the storm may now be
considered as confined to the region between
Delhi and Allahabad, where in Agra, Cawnpore,
and Lucknow were still havens of refuge, that,
it was to be feared, could not long hold out
against the turbulent elements surging around
and against them.
At Agra, one of the most magnificent cities in India, and the seat of the Government of the North-Western Provinces, there reigned the liveliest alarm among the large Christian community, though Lieutenant-Governor Colvin at first tried to make too light of the danger. When the neighbouring stations burst into mutiny, a panic set in, the Sepoys were disarmed, and by the end of June the Europeans took refuge within the high red walls of the fort, some mile and a half in circuit, that enclose