Those marble plaques in the cemetery hold no dead beneath them yet in the rising mists of winter evenings when night like loose dark pebbles fall from the sky can be heard hooves of trotting horses from the rows of cold white stones and on nights favored by moon is visible cavalry in scarlet serge with pith helmets and carbine rifles piercing the terror paused wind with cries of vengeance mirthful in washing blood with blood on the fields of Cawnpore dissolving into marble white stones steeped in the peace of moonlight.
Sepoy Mutiny (1857) On 27 June, 1857 in the town of Cawnpore (now Kanpur), India, sepoy mutineers laid siege to a British army encampment reportedly massacring British women and children. Two days later, a company of British soldiers captured the town and extracted bloodied revenge. This work is inspired from the time many years ago when I used to spend the evening hours alone at a cemetery in Calcutta where stand the war memorials of the British soldiers killed in the mutiny.