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_With the Camel Corps up the Nile_, by Count Gleichen, by permission of Messrs. Chapman and Hall. [2] _With the Camel Corps up the Nile_, by Count Gleichen, by permission of Messrs. Chapman and Hall. [3] _With the Camel Corps up the Nile_, by Count Gleichen, by permission of Messrs. Chapman and Hall. [4] For this and much other valuable information the writer is indebted to Field-Marshal Sir Evelyn Wood. [5] _The Nineteenth and their Times_, by Col. J. Biddulph, by permission of Mr. John Murray. CHAPTER III YEARS OF WAITING Second in Command--Maintaining the Barrow tradition--The Persistent Student--Service in India--Retires on Half-pay--Renewed Activities--Rehearsing for South Africa. After the success in the Soudan Major French had not long to wait for promotion. A few days after General Buller's tribute he was appointed Lieutenant-Colonel of his regiment. So that he came back to England as second in command of the 19th Hussars. From this time onward he became entirely absorbed in his profession. It is true that he had always been interested in it; but there is no question that Barrow was the man who had shown him the fascination of scientific generalship. While making the reputation of the 19th, Barrow had unhappily lost his own life. He died as the result of re-opening an internal wound while tent-pegging in the following year. French determined to carry on his work, and at Norwich the training of the 19th Hussars rapidly became famous throughout the Army. One young officer, now General Bewicke Copley,[6] was attached to the 19th from another regiment in order to study their methods. He tells how he was greatly struck by the brilliant work which French was doing. His strict discipline and his terrific ideas of what training meant, may have struck some of his young subalterns as scarcely yielding them the ideal existence of the _beau sabreur_. Probably they were right; but they were being licked into a state of amazing efficiency. In 1887 it fell to Sir Evelyn Wood's lot to inspect the regiment. Pointing to French, he asked his Colonel, "Of what value is that man?" The reply was, "He is for ever reading military books." And he has been reading them ever since! A couple of years later he attained the rank of Colonel, with command of his regiment. Very soon Sir Evelyn was to discover the answer to his question. For he was anxious at that time to introduce the squadron sy
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