the fort.
In due course the 33rd were similarly treated, though not without a
vigorous protest from their old colonel, Sandeman. "I will answer with
my life for the loyalty of every man in the regiment," he declared.
But the order was final. It was all over in a very few minutes, and
Nicholson was impressing upon the disarmed sepoys the warning that
desertion would be punished by death.
[Illustration: Portrait of John Nicholson]
Some days before this dramatic scene a notable incident took place at
Jalandhar in which Nicholson was the chief figure. The city was found
to be in no little confusion on the arrival of the Movable Column,
mutiny being rampant among the troops, and the military authorities
taking scarcely any precautions to prevent an outbreak. In the streets
it was apparent from the swagger of the native soldiers that they
believed the _sahibs_ were powerless through fear.
To strengthen his hands, Major Lake, the Commissioner, invited
Nicholson to a durbar at which the officers of the Kapurthala troops
were to be present. Nicholson attended, and at the close of the
ceremony observed that Mehtab Singh, a native general, was leaving the
room with his shoes on. This was an act that implied great disrespect.
Lord Roberts, who was a spectator, tells the story of what happened in
a graphic manner.[1]
Stalking to the door, Nicholson, he says, "put himself in front of
Mehtab Singh, and waved him back with an authoritative air. The rest
of the company then passed out, and when they had gone, Nicholson said
to Lake, 'Do you see that General Mehtab Singh has his shoes on?' Lake
replied that he had noticed the fact, but tried to excuse it.
Nicholson, however, speaking in Hindustani, said, 'There is no possible
excuse for such an act of gross impertinence. Mehtab Singh knows
perfectly well that he would not venture to step on his own father's
carpet save barefooted, and he has only committed this breach of
etiquette to-day because he thinks we are not in a position to resent
the insult, and that he can treat us as he would not have dared to do a
month ago.'
"Mehtab Singh looked extremely foolish, and stammered some kind of
apology; but Nicholson was not to be appeased, and continued, 'If I
were the last Englishman left in Jalandhar, you should not come into my
room with your shoes on!' Then, politely turning to Lake, he added, 'I
hope the Commissioner will now allow me to order you to take your s
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