IN TIMES OF PERIL
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 maiden, 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 round 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.