"(Birds singing)" " Afternoon, Parker." " Good afternoon, sir." "General Faversham is waiting for you on the terrace." " Dr Sutton, sir." " You've had a long journey, Doctor." "Ah!" "It's worth the journey to join old comrades." " Are they all coming?" " Same crowd, a year older." " Sit down, help yourself." " Thank you." "Well, what's the news from London?" "Haven't you heard?" "Gordon's dead, murdered in Khartoum." "That's no news to me." "I said that was going to happen years ago, when they first sent Gordon to Egypt." "He wasn't hard enough." "They wanted someone like you out there." "Just what I was going to say meself." "First time for 100 years there hasn't been a Faversham in the army   and look at the mess they make!" "I'm too old and the boy's too young." "Me own fault for not marrying sooner." "You remember the boy, he's 15 years old today." "I'm going to let him dine with us tonight." " Oh, good." " I don't mind telling you, Doctor   I'm worried about him." " Oh?" " I can't understand the boy." "I sent him to the best army school in England, spend half me time   telling him about his famous ancestors ... and what do you think, I found him this morning reading a poetry book!" "Shelley, of all people!" "So, I want you to help me lick this boy into shape - make him hard." "(General chatter)" "Gentlemen, the Crimea!" " Old comrades!" " (All) Old comrades!" "Arnold, Raglan... (Sighing and coughing)" "Crimea, by Jove." "War was war in those days." "And men were men, No room for weaklings." "Balaclava, for instance." "Here!" "You fellows remember the positions." "Now ..." "Here, these nuts were the Russians." "Guns, guns, guns." "On the right, the British infantry   the Thin Red Line." "There was the Commander in Chief   and here was I, at the head of the old 68th." "The right was impassable, the left was blocked   behind us was the Commander in Chief." "I realised the position in a flash." "I said, "The 68th will move forward."" "Immediately, one of my subalterns came to me, shaking." "Absolutely shaking." "I said, "What's wrong, Travers?" "I'm afraid to face those guns, sir."" "I said, "Would you rather face me?"" "Hmpf!" "He took one look at my face and off he went." "Ten minutes later, he was shot to pieces at the head of his men   as a soldier should be, eh?" "I quite agree with you General." "I can tolerate nerves before a battle   but I can't stand cowardice." "I remember a soldier at Inkerman when a Cossack charged down on him." "I saw a man raise his musket, fumble with the trigger, and then turn and run." "The Cossack's lance went in at the back of his neck and came out in his throat." "Best thing that could've happened to him." "Do you remember Wilmington?" " (Faversham) Wilmington?" " Fine old service family." "Father killed at Inkerman, grandfather blown up under Nelson   an uncle scalped by Indians." "Oh splendid record." "Splendid." "(Faversham) What happened?" "The General ordered him to gallop through the lines with a message." "Paralysed with funk, couldn't move." "General sent his adjutant - killed before he'd gone 50 yards." "Sent his ADC - head blown off." "And then he took the message himself, lost his arm." " Ruined his cricket." " Oh, yes, I remember now." "He disgraced his family." "His father disowned him." "Hung about a year or two, and then blew his brains out." "Ah!" "He had the courage to blow his brains out." "Courage?" "Last spark of decency, that's all." "There's no place in England for a coward." "Harry, past 11." "Time you were in your bed." "No, no - sit ye down, my boy, sit ye down." "Hey!" "It's the boy's birthday and we've not drunk his health." "Go ahead, General." "A toast to Harry, and may he prove the bravest of the Favershams." "(All) To Harry!" " Thank you." " (Laughing) That's right, boy." " Good night, Father." " Good night, Harry." " Good night, gentlemen." " (All) Good night, my boy." "(Dr Sutton) Harry?" "You don't remember me." "I remember you, though, when you were about so long." "I was doctor in your father's regiment in the Crimea." "I knew your mother too, Harry." "She was my friend." "And, I'd like you to think of me as your friend too." "If ever you should need me, here's my card." "It's not much use to anybody nowadays but   but if ever you feel the need, write to me." "Come and see me." "That's very kind of you, sir." "Thank you." " Good night, sir." " Good night, Harry." "(Man) Section!" "Left!" "Wheel!" "Stand at...ease!" "Ten years ago, General Gordon was murdered in Khartoum   and the British Army was withdrawn into Egypt without punishing the crime." "Today, the Royal North Surrey Regiment ... is under orders to join Sir Herbert Kitchener's Anglo-Egyptian army" " ... for the reconquest of the Sudan." " (Cheering)" "What's Egypt like, John?" " Principally sand, sweat and sunstroke." " Oh lovely." "When do we start?" " Can't say." " But not before next Thursday?" "Heavens no." "It took them 10 years to make up their minds." "We'll be lucky if we start in a month." "David, then I can give you these." "Mr Harry Faversham, Capt John Durrance ..." " ... and one for Fat-face Willoughby." " Oh, what's all this?" "An invitation to the Burroughs family beanfeast, complete with regimental   string band, strawberry ices and a performing troupe of hired waiters." "Yes, my sister's coming of age." "Ethne's 21 next Thursday   so Father's letting himself go." " Champagne?" " Gallons." " Oysters?" " Oysters in June?" "Don't be a fool." "I had them at my coming out." "I had the sense to be born in March." "Father's going to be terrific." "He's written four speeches already, and he's been rehearsing them in the bathroom." ""My Lords, Ladies and Gentlemen, and officers of my old regiment ..." ""... this is an occasion for double rejoicing."" ""I am proud to announce not only my daughter's coming of age ..." ""... but also her engagement to the son of my old comrade in arms," ""Mr Harry Faversham of the Royal North Surrey Regiment."" " What, him?" " Our own Harry Faversham." " This is very sudden." " They've been signalling for it for months." " Good luck, Harry." " Thanks." "Good luck, Harry." " Thanks, John." " (Willoughby) What about this Egypt business?" "You can't take her with you, you know." "When the dervishes catch a white man   they cut his nose off and hang him up by the toes." "Oh disgusting business." "All the money falling out of your pockets." "I'll see you at dinner." " Oh." "Did I frighten the poor lamb?" " Shouldn't be surprised." "I don't know what's come over the lad?" "Can't take a joke." "Never takes a drink." "Moons about all day." "Reads poetry all night." "If that's love, give me indigestion." "Oh." "Time to get changed." "So long." "So long." "I'm sorry John." "I was a fool to make a joke of it like that, I know how you feel about it." "That's all right, Peter." "It was for her to decide." "I wish it had been you all the same." "See you at mess." "After all, there are plenty of other girls." "Plenty." "For other men." "Umm ..." "Many years ago, I fought in the Crimea   beside that very gallant soldier, General Faversham   whose death last year was such a loss to us." "(All) Hear, hear." "Tonight I am proud to announce the engagement of my daughter   to Harry Faversham, my dear old friend's only son." "(All) Bravo!" "10 years ago, when Harry was a boy, I raised my glass in his honour   with the toast "May he prove the bravest of all the Favershams."" "Harry Faversham, coupled with the name of my daughter Ethne." "(All) To Harry!" "Good luck, Harry!" "The company is now dismissed," "The business of dancing will now commence." "(Murmurs of approval, music begins)" "(All chattering)" "(Upbeat waltz)" "Well, Colonel, you're off on this Egyptian affair, eh?" "Of course, it's only a minor campaign." "It'll do you a world of good." " The army's too soft nowadays." " You mean not hard enough?" "Of course!" "Now, the Crimea." "Ah!" "War was war in those days and men were men." "Let me tell you what happened at Balaclava." " You remember the positions, Doctor." "Don't you." " Only too well." "I was over there, on the extreme left." "Here were the Russian batteries, behind the nuts." "Guns, guns, guns, guns." "On the right, the British infantry - the Thin Red Line." " I suppose they didn't get much to eat." " What are you talking about?" "You said they were so thin." " The line, I meant!" "Not the men." " Oh." "Now here was the commander in chief." "And here was I, at the head of the old 68th." " Sorry Father had to drag Egypt into it." " Tired of Egypt already?" "We have it for breakfast and lunch, the honour of the regiment for supper." "I suppose he quite understands you're marrying me and not the regiment?" "He's not quite sure about that." "Are you quite sure?" "When we're old and creaking with rheumatism   we shall look back and think of this night." " Ethne, you'll never creak." "Never in your life." " We shall creak with the best of them   and through the creaks will come the sound of this dance music   and the light of the moon and the scent of the flowers." "This is a solemn occasion, Harry." "A memory is being born tonight." "A memory that will stand the test of all the years." "Moments like this are better than all the memories in the world." "The memories will be the best   because they'll be right out of reach of uncertainty and care." "Memories just float about on their own, with no shadows upon them." "Dance music, the moon and evening primroses, that's all." "(Dancers applauding)" "You're not going to rob me of my solitary dance, Ethne?" "I'm sorry, it's my fault." "Is this your dance going on?" " It's just started." " Oh dear, I have a partner waiting." "Excuse me." "It wasn't his fault, John." "It was mine." "I talk too much." " Shall we dance?" " It's a polka." " Don't you like a polka?" " Bit jerky, isn't it?" "Rather like saying goodbye in Morse code." " I'm sorry." " There's no need to be sorry." " It's terribly hard to explain." " There's nothing to explain." "You don't expect a girl to write out a catalogue   points why I love Mr A and don't love Mr B." "It's only Mr B who sits down and puzzles out the points against him." "You never saw such an impressive list." "Reasons why Ethne Burroughs doesn't love John Durrance." " Reason one..." " Don't, John." "Oh, I put down about 40." "Reason 41 was "she loves the other man"." " So I crossed the rest out." " Thank you." "Harry's a fine fellow." "With you to help him, he should have a splendid career." "You'll enjoy helping him?" " I hope I shall be able to." " You will." "I think you'll be very happy." "And I think I shall always love you." "Oh, John, dear ..." " I'm so sorry." " Oh rubbish, I shall be all right." "You're not going to be sorry for anything tonight." "Come and dance that polka." "I've just earned it." "Faversham?" "See what he wants, Lubbock." "He wants to see you privately, sir." "Oh, very well." "(Door closes)" "Well, Faversham?" "I want you to accept this, sir." " What is it?" " I am resigning my commission." "Resigning your commission?" "What do you mean?" "I mean just that, sir." "I don't understand you Faversham." "I should've taken this action months ago." "I only accepted a commission for my father's sake   because all his family have been soldiers." "But when he died my duty towards him was done." "Your duty towards him?" "!" "Have you no duty towards your country?" "Oh, go and lie down in a dark room, my boy." "You'll be all right in the morning." "I've made up my mind, sir." "Faversham, if you do this, you'll regret it for the rest of your life." "I'm sorry, sir, I've made up my mind." "You're deliberately shirking your duty, sir!" "I refuse to accept your resignation." "I am within my rights to resign, sir." "You cannot refuse." "I never thought I should live to see a Faversham play the coward." " May I go, sir?" " Yes." "Go." " The officers ..." " Well?" "!" "... are waiting, sir." "(Relieved whistle)" " Gentlemen, final orders have just arrived." " (Murmuring)" "The regiment leaves on Thursday." "We march to Portsmouth and embark at midday." "I've just received this telegram from General Kitchener." ""Glad to welcome your regiment to my command."" " That's very nice, isn't it?" " Gentlemen." "There will be one change in regimental orders for the 15th." "Mr Faversham has seen fit to send in his papers ... on the eve of his regiment sailing for active service." "His place will be taken by Mr Parker, who was to have remained at the depot." " Congratulations." " Glad you're coming with us." "(Crowd cheering)" " Well, I must be off." " Goodbye, John." " Goodbye." " Good luck to you." " You'll keep an eye on young Peter for me won't you?" " I will, sir." "Both eyes." "There's a luvvie ducks." "What's she crying for?" "There." "Well, goodbye, Aggie." "Take care of your ma." "(Baby crying)" " Goodbye, Fred." " Goodbye, luvvie." "Don't take on, now." "I'm all right." "The kids are going to miss you." " Goodbye, my boy." " Goodbye, Father." " The dogs are going to miss you." " Yes, sir." "(All singing) Should auld acquaintance be forgot" "In the days of auld lang syne?" "For auld lang syne, my dear" "For auld lang syne" "We'll take a cup o' kindness yet" "For the sake of auld lang syne" "(Ship's horn)" "Harry!" "What's happened?" "Peter left last night, Father went with him to see you all off." "They've cancelled it?" "You're not going after all?" "They've gone." "The regiment sailed this morning." " But I haven't gone with them." " I don't understand." "We've discussed it so often." "The futility of this idiotic Egyptian adventure   the madness of it all, the ghastly waste of time that we can never have again." " What have you done, Harry?" " I've resigned my commission." "I should've done it sooner, long ago." "It's released me from the life of an impostor." "That's all a man is if he fails to be true to the things he believes in." "I believe in our happiness ..." "I believe in the work to be done here to save an estate that's near to ruin." "To save all those people who've been neglected by my family   because they preferred glory in India, glory in China, glory in Africa." "(Knock at door)" "Excuse me, miss." "This package has just arrived for Mr Faversham   addressed in your care and marked "urgent"." "Thank you." "Mr Thomas Willoughby ..." "Mr Peter Burroughs ..." "Captain John Durrance." "Well, they had a fine send off, Ethne." "I went aboard and had lunch with them before they sailed." "Peter has a cabin with John Durrance and Willoughby." "I'm glad the three boys are going to be together." " Father..." " Yes, it was a wonderful sight   the vessel steaming out into the channel and all those men cheering and ..." "May I speak to you a moment, sir?" "It was cruel to send these." "Cruel, but just." "That's what you think, isn't it?" "You needn't tell me, Ethne, I can see it quite clearly in your eyes." "We agreed always to be honest with each other, Harry, to keep no secrets from each other." "When you did this   did you believe that I should be proud of you?" "I thought you'd understand." "We've so often talked of these things and we've always understood each other." "I know, Harry, we've talked and we've dreamed of things we'd do if we were free." "Some people are born free   they can do as they like without concern for consequences." "But you were not born free, Harry, and nor was I." "We were born into a tradition   a code, which we must obey even if we do not believe." "And, we must obey it, Harry, because the pride and happiness of everyone surrounding us ... depends upon our obedience." "I quite understand." "There should be four feathers here." "We agreed always to be honest with each other." "Give it to me." "(Reveille)" "Come on!" "Brigade!" "Attention!" "Shoulder...arms!" "Present...arms!" "(Military band begins)" "Shoulder...arms!" "(Horses whinnying)" " You've served here before." " Abu Klea, sir." "Then you know what to expect." " And you too?" " I've been out here ever since, sir." " Married?" " Yes, sir." " Children?" " Four, sir." "When I left home." " Harry Faversham?" " Hello, Doctor." "Why what's happened?" "I thought your regiment had gone?" "Yes, they've gone." "Like the guards have gone tonight." "Years ago, I gave you my card." "Do you remember?" " Yes, Doctor, I remember." " In case you ever needed any help." "Come along, we'll have a quiet supper at my club   it's just across the park - the Naval And Military." "No, not there, if you don't mind, Doctor." " Let's go to my rooms." " Very well." "You tell me you left the army because your duty to your home   was greater than your duty towards a crowd of African peasants?" "There's nothing dishonourable in that, Harry." "If that's all, if that's the whole truth, then these feathers are an insult   to be treated with the contempt they deserve." "If that were all, I should have put them on the fire, and you would have never seen them." "But you know that it's not all." "Just as Ethne knew." "(Distant cheering, military drumming)" "I was told a ghastly story when I was a boy, and you were there when it was told." "An officer who failed to carry a message because he was paralysed with fear   an officer disgraced and hounded out of society   who shot himself in a back room off the Haymarket, because his life was ruined." "That story haunted me." "Many a man is haunted by some fear." "With me, it was more than fear." "My father despised me." "He believed me to be a coward." "His belief turned fear into reality." "I knew if ever fate put me in the same position   I should behave like that man and meet the same end." "I am a coward, Doctor." "If I'd been anything but a soldier, I might have lived my whole life and concealed it." "But to be a soldier and a coward is to be an imposter   a menace to the men whose lives are in your hands." "When orders came for Egypt I knew that fate was closing in round me   just as it closed round that other man." "I fought against it." "I believed in all the reasons I gave for shirking my job." "I deceived myself, but I didn't deceive my friends." "The men who sent me these feathers knew me better than I knew myself." "The man who tries to cheat his fate is more than a coward, he's a fool as well!" "Now you're wrong there, Harry." "I never met a fool who had the imagination to be a coward." "If I thought you were a coward, Harry, I should take this with me." "Fight you for it if necessary." "It's because I know you've no intention of using it on yourself   that I leave it here." "Harry, is there anything I can do?" " Yes Doctor, there is something you can do." " Yes?" "I shall be leaving England tomorrow." "I shall write to you from time to time, just to tell you that I'm alive." "If you don't hear from me for a year   you'll know that I'm dead." "If that happens, I should like you to go to Ethne   and tell her that at least I tried to put right   the shame and humiliation that I caused her." "Can you tell me where you're going?" "Egypt." "(General chatter)" "(Speaking Arabic)" " Dr Harraz?" " Yes." "I've come from England, from an old friend of yours" " Dr Sutton." "Dr Sutton!" "I remember him, I served with him in the hospital in India." "How is he?" " He's well." "He sends you his greetings." " What may I do for you?" "I have a mission to reach the army of General Kitchener." "I want your help to disguise me as a native." " You speak Arabic?" " No." " You have some native tongue?" " No." "The army of General Kitchener is 400 miles away, across country in the hands of the enemy." "How then can a doctor help you, except to certify you as mad?" "I'm told there is a native tribe called the Sangali, that once revolted against the Khalifa." "And in revenge, the Khalifa branded them, cut out their tongues from their heads and made them outcasts." " You know the brand?" " All men know the brand of the Sangali." "Then you understand the reason of my visit, Doctor." "But my dear young man, you will miss your tongue in many ways." "I will keep my tongue - no one will look for it if I am branded." "I can stain your skin   but I cannot imitate a scar that would escape detection." " That I understand." " Is your mission then of such importance?" "May I stay in your house until the wound has healed?" "(Harry yelping in pain)" "You are a brave man." " Ah, Durrance." " Told to report, sir." "Kitchener's been talking to me." "Now you know what the situation is." "The main army and provision ships must get up the Nile." "Now, it's the only feasible route up-country towards Omdurman   but the river's blocked by the Khalifa's army and our ships can't get through the gorge." "Now, the Khalifa must be drawn away by some sort of bluff, into the desert." " Yes, sir." " Now if one of our brigades appeared on his flank   he'd have to turn away and face it, and that would leave the river unguarded." "Yes, sir." "Now General Kitchener can't spare a regiment much less a brigade   but he can spare a company." "Number 5 Company of the Royal North Surreys." "Thank you, sir." "Number 1 Section, by the left, quick march!" " Number 2 Section, by the left, quick march!" " Number 3 Section, by the left, quick march!" "Number 4 Section, by the left, quick march!" "(Bugle)" "(Military drumming)" "(Speaking Arabic)" "Who is this man?" "How much did he overhear?" "(Grunts unintelligibly)" "Sangali." "(Continue speaking in Arabic)" "That was a very bad performance, Mr Faversham." "No true Sangali would enter a room with the self-assurance of an Englishman." " Why was that fellow in such a funk?" " He was terrified you might betray him." " Oh, I see." " For myself, I have no such fears ... but I must admit, I should feel a little more comfortable if you would tell me frankly   why all this - the wandering, the disguise." "In England, four people gave me a white feather apiece." "They've got to take them back." "A mad race, the English." "Oh, not so mad." "In England, a white feather is the mark of a coward." "Ah, I see." "Then why worry?" "Be a coward and be happy." "No, Doctor." "I have been a coward and I wasn't happy." "Tell me, did he bring any news?" "Yes, he says the North Surrey Regiment has left Abu Hamed." "By crossing the desert you could pick them up at the Nile, perhaps near the 5th Cataract." "Part of Kitchener's army is going up The river in boats." "They will be hauled up the Cataract by native labour." "There is your chance." "(Chanting)" "(Native choral singing)" "(Native singing, slow drumbeats)" "(Singing, whip cracking)" "(Native chattering intensifies)" "(Native singing continues)" "(Native singing fades)" " All right, Sergeant?" " All correct, sir." "We've rigged up enough scarecrows to look like the entire blooming army." "Ah!" "That ought to draw them alright, The men can rest, but they're ready to move   without delay, the moment we're spotted." "We won't have time to sit about and admire the view." " No, sir." " Now, take the men back to the camp   and you watch from that jebel over there." "Very good, sir." "(Locusts fluttering)" "(Speaking Arabic)" "Your watch, no fuzzies round here." " I'm gonna have a word with the captain." " Right ho, Sarge." "Blimey!" "Two men!" "At the double!" "Put down your rifles!" "Come on, give me a hand." "Shouldn't we ought to start him back to camp at once?" "His orders were to stay until we see dervishes, and we ain't seen none." "It's ice we want to slap on the back of his neck." "Yes, and a couple of saucy nurses to slap it on, for him!" "(All chattering)" " Can you see anything?" " No." "Can't make it out." "He said he'd be back by dawn at the latest." "Oh well, perhaps he's spotted a covey of dervishes and wants to keep an eye on it." "No, if he had spotted any dervishes he'd be back in no time." "(Native singing and drumming)" "(Calls out in native tongue)" "(Men on horseback whooping)" "(Speaking Arabic)" "News to me of Kitchener?" "(Shouts orders in Arabic)" "(All shouting)" "(Whooping and shouting)" " Who's there?" " Corporal Evans, sir." " How long have I been lying here?" " Since this time yesterday, sir." " What's the time now?" " About 3 o'clock, sir." "Call Sergeant Brown the moment it's daylight." "But it's light now, sir." "It's afternoon." "What?" " Call Sergeant Brown." " Yes, sir." " Sergeant Brown, the captain wants you." " All right." " Sergeant Brown here, sir." " Come in, come in." "Glad to see you're better, sir." "No sign of Dervishes yet, sir." "Yes." "Now strike the camp immediately, I spotted Dervish yesterday." "There's not one moment to lose." "Very good, sir." "Corporal Clark, call in your men!" "Hughes, bring the captain's horse." "Come on." "Double there." " Ready to march off, sir." " Sergeant, come here, don't go away." " I want you to help me to my horse." " Very good, sir." "Attention!" "Flower and Bardell strike the tent, put it on the mule and follow behind." "Section at ease, quick march." "(Camels braying)" "(Durrance) Take me right up to my tent." "(Brown) Very good, sir." "(Burroughs) Glad to see you back, sir." "We were getting a little worried." "Ah!" "Need to worry." "I spotted some Dervish yesterday." "That's why I stayed up there to keep watch." "They saw us all right, so that's half our work done." "Sergeant, give the men some food;" "see they get to sleep immediately." "Very good, sir" "Willoughby!" "Parker, put those fires out will you." "Double the sentries around here." "There's no immediate danger, but we've got to keep on alert from now on." "(Both) Yes, sir." " Brown, put your fire out." " Oy, Bill, give us a hand with this fire!" "Simper, Curtis, Gamble - bring your equipment." "Peter, I got a touch of the sun out there yesterday." "Oh hard luck, old boy." "I know what it is." "I had sunstroke when I was a kid at school." " Oh?" "How did it affect you?" " Well, it gave me a devil of a headache." "You know, you look a bit done in, John." "You ought to take a good rest." "Yes now listen, Peter, we're not in a healthy spot here." "Things may be a good deal worse, before we're through." "I'm feeling a bit groggy, I'm going in to rest now." " Will you look after things for me here tonight?" " Yes, of course." " Shall I help you in?" " No, I'll be all right in the morning." "(Sobbing quietly)" "(All chattering)" " Seen anything?" " No, sir." " Well, keep your eyes open." " Very good, sir." "The mules are restless, sir." "A bad sign." " Yes I know." "I shall be glad when the sun rises." " Yes, sir." "(Bird call)" "(Speaking native language)" "Alarm!" " (Gunfire) - (Man) Alarm!" "Bugler!" "Alarm!" "(Bugler playing)" "Alarm!" "Alarm!" "Alarm!" "(All shouting)" "(Man) Alarm!" "Make a square!" "(Bugler playing)" "Fire!" "Load!" "Present!" "Fire!" "Present!" "Fire!" "Present!" "Fire!" " Peter, where are you?" " Here, John." "Are they all round us?" "I can't see in this smoke!" "Fire!" "Load!" "Present!" "Fire!" "Load!" "Present!" "Fire!" "(Durrance) Load!" "Present!" "Fire!" "Load!" "Fire!" "(Shouting in native language)" "(All shouting)" "(Gunfire continues)" " Sir, Ali has news sir." " Good, what does he know?" "(Speaking Arabic)" "The Khalifa's left the Nile with his whole army." "Fine!" "That's the news we're waiting for." "Swenson, give orders to sail at once." "Now this is grand." "Well soon be up to Omdurman, and Kitchener   can have his battle where he wants it." "Thanks to Durrance." "He's done a magnificent job." "(Speaking native language)" "(Speaking native language)" "(Cawing)" "(Cawing)" "Peter?" "(Gourd stopper pops)" "Is that you, Peter?" "Peter?" "Peter?" "Peter?" " Peter!" " (Cawing)" "Willoughby?" "!" "Burroughs!" "Peter!" "For God's sake, answer me!" "Oh, is that you, Peter?" "I'm blasted near mad!" "I..." "I can't see, Peter." "It's no good pretending any more, I can't see." "I'm blind." "The sun got me out there in the mountains." "Why don't you speak?" "What's the matter?" "Who are you?" "!" "What, are you all dumb?" "You've never seen a blind man before?" "Who the devil are you?" "!" "Speak!" "If you can't English, speak Arabic but speak." "Speak!" "So it's true, then." "They're all dead." "All my company wiped out." "Nothing but a blind man and a dumb lunatic." "There's nothing left but death from thirst." "Come here." "Come here!" "Lean your head against the one cool thing left in this blasted furnace." "You won't?" "All right, well   go to the devil alone!" "(Gunshot)" "(Gunshot)" "(Grunting) Give it..." "Give it to me!" "Give it to me!" "I'll kill you!" "(Yelling)" "Hello!" "Hello!" "Company, stand to!" "Company, fall in!" "Load!" "Present!" "Fire!" "Load!" "Present!" "Fire!" "Fire!" "Load!" "Present!" "Fire!" "Fire!" "Load!" "Present ...!" "Give me my helmet, Sergeant, will you?" "Ethne ..." ""Don't you like the polka?" "A bit jerky, isn't it?"" "Ethne, I shall love you always." "(Cawing)" "Hello, Doctor." "I'm glad to find you alone, Ethne." " I really came here to talk to you." " Well, doctor?" "I want to know if you have heard from Harry Faversham?" "I've heard nothing." "It was his own wish and my wish that the break should be complete." "I've no idea where he is or what he's doing." "I promised to give you a message when I saw him on the night before he left England, a year ago." "A year ago?" "Then ..." "I don't understand, Doctor." "He left England for one purpose only   if he succeeded he said that you would learn by means that would need no explanation." "If he failed then he asked me to let you know that at least he'd done his best." "I see." "He promised to write to me now and then, just to show he was still alive." "If I heard nothing for a year then his silence would show that he was dead." "My dear." "So that's the end." " You think I behaved brutally to him, Doctor." " No." "I did behave brutally." "I behaved like the worst kind of coward." "I failed to help him when he was so terribly in need of help." "Nothing that you'd have done would've made him alter his decision." " I could have helped him!" " If you'd gone on your knees   you could have done nothing." "His mind was made up." "You must always remember that." "For the sake of his memory and for your own happiness." "Oh, Ethne!" "What are you two mooching about outside for?" "Just having a dose of your country air, General." "It'll be a dose of bronchitis if you don't take care." "Come on in, Ethne." "Give us some sherry." "Look, there's an Arab." "He's got an officer" " Blimey!" "He's trying to rob him!" " Come on." "Let's get him!" "(Soldiers approaching)" "Abdul, ask him what he has to say." "(Speaking Arabic)" "(Groans)" "It is useless, Your Excellency, He is from the Sangali tribe." "He cannot speak." "Put him in with those two horse thieves, we got yesterday   and send them to Abu Hali to mend the roads." " March him out, Sergeant." " Sir." "(Man) The doctor, sir." " Now, Doctor, how's Durrance?" " He'll pull through." "Splendid." "He's a fine officer." "The regiment can't spare a man like that." "He's blind." "Blind?" "Sunstroke." "Exposure of the eyes to the sun." "I've seen it before, Colonel." "A man alone bowled over suddenly lies there exposed." "But with rest and care he'll get better?" "With immediate attention, there might have been a chance in a hundred." "Now there's none." "The nerves are completely destroyed." "Jump!" " Bravo!" " Good work, Johnny, good work." "Good work." "(Laughs) You'll have me riding to hounds in a couple of weeks." " Up another six inches, Joe." " No more today." " Just one more." "Just a tiny little bit more." " Tomorrow, John." "Time to dress for dinner." "Dress?" "!" "I can dress in ten minutes now." "Knocked two minutes off my record this morning." " There's your shaving lesson before dinner, too, sir." " Ah ha yes, my shaving lesson." "Also my lesson in making bow ties." "Lots of fun in going back to school again, Ethne." " Joe's a great teacher." "Ought to be a professor." " Easy with a good pupil, sir." "And no more of those infernal chopped up meals." "I'm feeling like a lesson   in carving roast chicken, tonight!" "I'll see you at dinner." "Come on, Joe." "Thank you." "Brave man." "I hope I can make him very happy." "Alright Joe, you do it for me, will you?" "Look here, Ethne, I've been wanting to say something to you for a long time." "Beastly difficult to know how to put it." "Of course, it's no business of mine but are you sure you're right in what you're doing?" "Quite sure." "You know, a man becomes a soldier with all the knowledge of the risks ahead of him." "If misfortune comes, it's all part of the game he doesn't ask for any pity or sympathy   but you've got your whole life before you." "I know it's a noble, unselfish impulse - but for 30 or 40 years, maybe 50 years!" "Father, please don't talk about being noble." "There's nothing like that about it, it's just   well, it's just that I've made up my mind." "Yes, the Arab is a strange, unexpected creature." "Yes yes, wait a minute." "You haven't heard the end yet." "Here's a solitary Arab." "Heaven knows where he comes from or how he's alive." "He packs my map, slings my water bottle round my neck   and never says a word from beginning to end." " That must have been uncanny." " Uncanny?" "It nearly drove me mad." "Yet I knew all the time he was trying to save me." "How many days we travelled I shall never know - I was crazy with fever   must have been the best part of a week." "He gets me in a boat, floats me down the Nile   until he comes within sight of the camp - and then ..." "Now here's the extraordinary part ..." "Having done enough to win the Victoria Cross, he lays me down outside the camp   and calmly begins to rob me." "Nothing strange in that, just eastern business mentality." "He'd done a job of work and was taking payment." "Poor devil, got less than he bargained for, I carry no papers on active service and no money." "He got nothing, then?" "He nearly got one thing - the only thing I was carrying." " Remember this?" " My letter!" "Your letter." "There's a funny thing in this letter." "Ethne, read the postscript you wrote." "It's still got some sand in it!" "Keep the sand as a souvenir." "Thank you." " Go on, read the postscript." " Let me." ""P.S. Take care not to get sunstroke."" "You always said I knew too much to take advice." "Ethne, darling, I'm sorry, you're trembling." "You mustn't take it like that." "It's all over now." "It might have been a lot worse." "I'd have been dead six months ago if it hadn't been for my little Arab friend." "And what happened to your little Arab friend?" "Wish I knew." "They sent the poor devil to a convict gang." "When I came to my senses, it was too late to find him." "He'd escaped and I was never able to trace him." "Now for a turn in the garden." "Stay here, I'll get my coat   and fetch yours, Ethne." "Oh, my letter." "Thank you." "So Harry's alive, or was when he paid that debt." "(Laughing, shouting in Arabic)" " Who is it?" " (Crowd laughing)" "Hi Peter, good of them to entertain us for nothing." "(Shouting and laughing)" "If I had my hands free I'd applaud." "If I had my hands free for 10seconds, I'd strangle that filthy little blighter with the monkey." "Willoughby, do I still look sane?" "No." "Do I?" "(Shouting in Arabic)" "(Whispers) Don't despair." "Peter ..." "Peter?" "Perhaps our message got through." "Perhaps Durrance did get away and sent this fellow to give us some help   with escape from this cell." "Escape?" "I wonder." "I wonder what his plan is?" "Karaga." "Karaga Pasha." "Tell me, which do you think would give the better chance of escape   the desert or the river?" "How should I know?" "Nobody has ever escaped from here." "But surely some attempts must have been made to free you?" "Yes, years and years ago." "But they all failed." "How long have you been here?" " Since Gordon was killed." " 13 years." "(Prisoners yelling)" "(Guards laugh)" "(Creaking)" " Swim?" "Swim?" " Yes." "See island?" " (Speaking Arabic)" " Tomorrow, boat waiting." "(Speaking Arabic)" "So the mad musician of Omdurman was a British spy." "What message did you give to your British friends?" "The Khalifa will reward you, sir, if you will do his bidding." "What do you know of Kitchener's army?" "He wants answer or we'll flog you until you do!" " Answer!" " (Speaking Arabic)" "(Whip cracking, Faversham crying out)" " There you are." " Thank heavens for that." "(Guards yelling)" " Well, that's the end of that." " No pork for dinner." "Poor devil, they've flogged him." "I wonder who he is." "Looks like an Arab." "Probably paid by our people to help us." " I wonder if he's got any papers on him?" " Spies don't usually carry papers about." "Well, I made a nice mess of that, didn't I?" "Faversham!" "Harry, how the devil did you get here?" "Who sent you?" " Nobody." " Then what are you doing here?" " For heaven's sake, explain, Harry." " There's no time to explain." "We're in an infernal mess but there's still a chance." "Now, listen to me." "The Khalifa has gone out to meet Kitchener." "If he's gets beaten he'll slit our throats in revenge." "If he wins he'll slit them out of pure joy." "Right opposite the prison gates is the arsenal of the Khalifa." "That's our one chance   just a couple of guards and a few storekeepers and that's about all." " Have you got that file?" " Yes, that file's an absolute brainwave!" "Now is there anybody here who understands the language of these poor devils?" "Yes, that old fellow over there." "I'll go and fetch him." " You all right, Harry?" " Yes, I'm alright, Fat-face." "Harry, this is Karaga Pasha, once governor of the province of Kordofan." "You speak English and the language of these people?" "I speak Arabic and the Greek." "They all understand one or the other." "Then you can do a great favour for yourself and all these people." "Will you tell them that I have brought the means of setting them free?" "Tell them that once they are freed, on no account must they make a sign or a move   until they get the word from me." "We must work very fast." "Tom, break that file in two." "Bring me the strongest man first." "Attention!" "Fix   bayonets!" "(Drum rolls)" "(1st drum roll stops)" " (2nd drum roll stops)" " Attention!" "(Horse whinnies)" "They're deploying to attack, sir." "It's their whole army." "(Speaking Arabic)" "Perkins, go to the right." "Cranley, go to the left." "Tell the brigade to   take up their positions." "Tell them to hold their fire until the last possible moment." "(Shouting orders, indistinct)" " Load!" " Kneel!" "(All shouting)" " Grand sight, ain't it?" " Getting horrible close." "When do we fire?" "When we're told." "Stick it lad." "If you can't look at 'em coming' on, shut your eyes." "I'll nudge you when to open 'em." "Present!" "Fire!" "Fire!" "(Distant gunfire)" "(Muttering)" "(Whooping)" " Get your chains off." " Karaga, tell them it's now or never." "Tell them they mustn't move an inch until the guards reach us." "(Speaking Arabic)" "(Yelling in Arabic)" "(All yelling)" " They're rallying again, sir." " (Yelling in Arabic)" " Not so many of them now." " Nor of us, sir." "Lengthen range 350." "We'll have that tower with the black flag on it." " That's the arsenal, sir." " Good!" "Then we'll blow it up!" "Lengthen range 350!" " That's not a dervish gun." "That's our guns." " They'll blow us to pieces!" "Wait here." "They're firing at the black flag!" "We must get it down and put something else up instead!" "Anything!" " This'll do." " Harry, look here!" "The one they took from us!" " Alright, I'll take it." " Right." "They're lowering the flag - surrendering - hauling up a white one." " It isn't white, sir, it's ours!" " What?" "!" "(Church bells)" "Paper!" "Khartoum recaptured!" "Paper!" "Paper!" "Khartoum recaptured!" "Paper!" "(Knock at door)" "Come in." " Hello, John." " Hello, Doctor." "How are you?" "Have a drink - on the table there." " Do you mind if I light the gas?" " Sorry, old man." "I should have done it before you came." " No no." "Give me the matches, I'll light it." " You heard the news?" "I've been listening." "Is it true we've got Khartoum?" "It's just come through." "Kitchener broke the dervishes army at Omdurman." "Good, good!" "Splendid." "Well, that's that." "Sit down, Doctor." " Whisky?" " Not just now, John." "You've seen Dr Wesley?" "I've just left him." "Heine, the German specialist, was there too." "Oh nice fellow that German, took a lot of trouble." "You needn't tell me the verdict, Doctor, I quite understand." "I think it's what you expected, John." " He doesn't feel that an operation ..." " Neither did I." "A man gets to understand these things." "If there's any sort of spark left inside that could be fanned up again   I'm certain I should've felt it there." "I've known for some time that they were stone dead." "Heine explained that the trouble sometimes comes   from a lesion that can be repaired by operation." "In your case ..." "In my case it's a complete blackout." "No harm in getting the best man, anyway." " You've earned your whisky now, Doctor." " Thanks." "(Durrance) Might've been a lot worse." "If I had known from the start, it was hopeless, I'd probably have blown my brains out." "Today it isn't half so bad." "I've been learning to read this Braille stuff." "Funny how quickly the fingers get sensitive." "Listen ..." ""Be not afeared, the isle is full of noises, sounds and sweet airs" ""that give delight and hurt not." ""Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments will hum about mine ears" ""and sometimes voices that if I had then waked after a long sleep" ""will make me sleep again," ""and then in dreaming, the clouds me thought would open" ""and show riches ready to drop upon me" ""that when I wake I cried to sleep again."" " Splendid." " Marvellous, isn't it?" " I knew that bit by heart anyway." " (Laughing)" "Here..." "Here's to your health, doctor." " And here's to you, John." " Kitchener and his bright lads in Khartoum." "Now, stretch out your legs and read the news." "There's a report by Mallinson, the war correspondent." " "Khartoum, 2nd September."" " Good good." "Now do read it." ""From the shadow of Gordon's Palace I am proud to send news of a glorious victory." ""At dawn this morning, after a wild night of storm and rain ..." ""... scouts reported that the Dervish army was massing to give battle upon the hills above Kerreri."" "That's where the legend said the British would be destroyed, now if   the Dervish had ignored that silly rot and fought ..." " Oh, shut up and listen." " Sorry." ""At six o'clock the Dervish army advanced en masse ..." ""... and flung themselves with fanatical bravery upon the British squares." ""Within two hours, the Dervish forces were broken and in flight." ""A full report from the fighting at Kerreri will be sent when details are available." ""But your correspondent, who accompanied the Royal North Surrey regiment..."" " Good old Surreys." " "... was privileged to witness   the most dramatic and astonishing scene in this inspiring day." ""During the battle the prisoners in the Omdurman dungeons overwhelmed their guards ..." ""... captured the arsenal and held it until relieved by Anglo-Egyptian troops."" " Bravo!" " "The achievement were led and inspired ..." ""... by two British officers of the Royal North Surrey regiment" ""... captured in the fight at Gakdul Well, Lieutenants Burroughs and Willoughby."" "Peter, alive!" "And good old Willoughby!" "Isn't that splendid?" "!" " What's the time?" " Just on seven." "We'll go tonight." "I shall be the first to tell Ethne and the old man!" "Ha!" "He'll be crazy with excitement about this!" " Joe!" "Joe!" " Yes, sir?" "Pack my bag!" "Get a message round to Dr Sutton's house and send his bags round here!" "We're going to General Burroughs'." "The 8:15 from Paddington." "(Sutton) Oh but I've got an important appointment in the morning, John." "And Joe, tell Dr Sutton's man to cancel all his appointments tomorrow!" "(Sutton) Oh but Ethne and the General will know before we get there!" "They won't." "They never get the evening papers in that place until the morning." " We'll just walk in and break the news!" " The War Office will certainly send a telegram." "You've always got some confoundedly cold-blooded reason for doing nothing!" "Anyway, we'll be the first to congratulate them." "Don't you realise what this means?" "Peter's alive - and done a grand job of work, into the bargain." "Is there any more?" "Read that last bit again." ""..." "Lieutenants Burroughs and Willoughby ..." ""... whose release from prison was due to an act of heroism ..." ""... described to me personally by Lieutenant Burroughs." ""A man posing as a dumb Sangali native ..." ""... gained entrance to the prison with means of cutting the chains of the captives." ""He suffered torture and faced death to do so because in reality ..." ""... he was, until recently, an officer of their own regiment."" "Lieutenant Faversham." "Why should he try to rob me?" " Doctor." " Yes, John?" "There's some notepaper on my desk there, I want you to write a letter for me." " I'm ready, John." " To Ethne Burroughs." ""Dear Ethne ..." ""I've just had some splendid news ..." ""I've been to a famous German eye doctor ..." ""... and my sight can be restored."" "Got that?" "I've got that, John." ""It means a long treatment in Germany and I leave tomorrow." ""When I can see again I shall return to the army ..." ""... with the happy memory of all you have done to help me through."" "I'll sign it myself." "And add a postscript." ""P.S." ""Just heard the splendid news of Peter and Willoughby ..." ""... and Harry Faversham." ""I enclose a little souvenir ..." ""... of a journey through the desert with a dumb Sangali native." ""If you give him the chance that he deserves you'll find he's not ..." ""... as mute as I thought he was."" "That's all." "(Joe) Your bags are packed, sir." "There's just time for a bite of dinner if you hurry." "All right, Joe, we're not going after all." "I ..." "I still say the army of today is soft compared with our time." "Soft, that's your trouble." "Still, you did your best." "And as Harry's made you two young rascals take your feathers back   well, he'd better marry the girl and have done with it, eh, doc?" "It's not as easy as all that." "There's my feather too." "What deed of reckless daring are you going to do to make me take back my feather?" "Must I?" "Deeds of reckless twaddle!" "Stuff and nonsense!" "No such thing nowadays." "All you boys had to do was deal with fuzzy-wuzzies." "But the Crimea was different." "War was war in those days." "No room for weaklings." "Take Balaclava, for instance." "You won't remember the positions ..." "It was this." "Ah, thank you." "Here were the Russians." "Guns, guns, guns." " On the right, the British infantry..." " One moment, sir." "Your famous account of Balaclava is not accurate, you know." " Not...?" " Not accurate, sir." " Not accurate?" "!" " No, sir." "Let me recall the position." "Out of the way, Peter." "Here are the Russians, behind the walnuts." "Guns, guns, guns." "Here's the British infantry - the Thin Red Line." "Here's the Commander in Chief." "And here are you, at the head of the old 68th." " Correct?" " Absolutely." "You were riding a horse called Caesar   which my father sold you because, fine horseman though he was   he could never hold him himself." "Quite right, quite right." "Then according to your story you said, "The 68th will move forward."" " Quite right, quite right." " Yes, but the trouble is you never said it." " Nev...?" " You never said it, sir." " Never said it?" "!" " No, sir, you never had time." "At that moment my father told me, Caesar ..." "Er, Caesar." "Caesar  startled by a stray bullet, took the bit between his teeth   and dashed straight at the Russian lines." "Away went Caesar." "Away went you." "Away went the 68th." "Away went the Commander in Chief." "Away went everybody!" "And another magnificent mistake was added to an already magnificent record." "But nobody ever told the 68th to move forward   unless it was the horse(!" ") Come on, sir, own up." "Well ... after all these years it's rather difficult to remember all the details but ..." "Confound the boy, I shall never be able to tell that story again!" "Ethne, your feather."