SIMLA AFTER RETURN FROM EGYPT—THE HURNAI RAILWAY—PRELIMINARY
MEASURES—THE CUTCHEE MESS— DIFFICULTIES OF THE ENGINEERING WORK.
FOR the Egyptian campaign Browne was twice mentioned in
dispatches, and received the C.B. and other honours He used to contrast
sarcastically the numerous decorations given for this business with the
solitary clasp which represented the far more real and arduous fighting of
the Umbeyla struggle. Certainly this campaign gave no indication of the
severities and difficulties of the subsequent African wars, which would have
suited his bent more thoroughly—the Soudan, Suakim, Khartoum, South Africa
On returning to India he rejoined the Military Works Office at Simla, .and
then found that he had been selected and had forthwith to prepare for a
stupendous engineering task, the construction of the Humai Railway from the
plains of Beloochistan to the Pesheen Plateau on the borders of Afghanistan.
But for this nearly a year of preparation was necessary. Meanwhile Russia,
with her customary astute diplomacy, was now (1883) taking advantage of
England’s difficulties in Africa to press her own interests in Asia and to
advance towards Merv; while in Africa matters were in a state of severe
tension— Hicks’s force was annihilated, the Mahdi had seized Bara and El
Obeid, and Sinkat was separated from Suakim. At the same time, on the other
hand, our relations with Afghanistan itself were improved; and the chief
danger seemed, to experts, to lie in a tendency to conform in India to the
Gladstonian sentiments that had characterised the Majuba policy.
Before, however, concluding this chapter of the closing
features of the Egyptian war, one incident of Browne’s stay at Simla may be
mentioned. He was taking all the rest and amusement he could get, while
setting to work at the preparations for his new task in the Military Office
at Simla; and this lay, as usual with him, not in quiet repose, but in
vigorous social amusements and in music. There was a very musical society at
that time at Simla; concerts and oratorios were the rage, and there used to
be weekly afternoon performances. Browne joined in the oratorios, but could
not afford the time for practice or preparation; so that on one of these
occasions he prolonged the chorus of “Stone him to death” in the oratorio
of St. Paul by an additional solo, somewhat disturbing the gravity of the
meeting, and leading to a bandsman’s remark that the event of the concert
had been “Colonel Browne’s Brickbat Chorus.” Then, at the ensuing weekly
concert, when Browne entered the room he was greeted with “Stone him to
death” from a dark corner of the room, and on going there to find out the
delinquent, who should it prove to be but his old friend and leader, Sir
Donald Stewart, the Commander-in-chief.
Selected as he had now been for the Hurnai task, his career,
thenceforward, was never disconnected with the Russo-Afghan question, in one
or more of its branches or bearings. During the Egyptian war, and for a few
months later, the difficulties in the political world continued. In India
itself the situation had become very unpleasant. The Viceroy, Lord Ripon,
one of the wisest and most far-seeing men that ever held that post, had been
misled, and by his premature proposals for the Ilbert Bill, and the share to
be assigned by it to educated natives in the administration and courts of
the country, had seriously damaged his aim and greatly delayed the politic
end he had in view; though he was still studiously carrying out some very
valuable measures. No ruler ever left India so beloved, respected, and
honoured by the native community of all ranks as did Lord Ripon. But in some
points of practical administration, such as that of the frontier especially,
he had occasionally allowed matters to slide, and to fall into untrained and
unsuitable hands; and this, as it turned out, greatly affected the
operations on which Browne was to be engaged before the year was over.
This chapter deals with the start of Browne’s greatest feat
in engineering, but the following introductory and preliminary remarks are
meant to throw light not so much on the task itself as on the state of
affairs in the Hurnai neighbourhood during the four years which had elapsed
since Browne had last been there. There had been little change at first, or
until the Afghan war came to an end. Then came our retirement, when the
cessation of the war was characterised by exceptional scenes and episodes
which will be shown presently, culminating in the destruction, sale, or
removal of nearly all the arrangements and plant which had been organised or
constructed for our connection with the Quetta and other hill districts.
This was suddenly checked by the aspect of affairs from the
Russian quarter, and the consequent volte-face of our Government, stopping
the withdrawals which had been begun, and restoring and increasing the
facilities for a renewal of our recent occupation of those districts—and
that in a more permanent fashion than before. The Bolan route for light
traffic, under Colonel Lindsay, was one of the measures then taken in hand;
while the Hurnai route, for heavy traffic, a much graver undertaking, was to
be entrusted to Browne. His local experience and influence with the frontier
men, and his exceptional and paramount power with the Ghilzyes in
particular, besides his repute for mastering difficulties, had led to his
selection for the task. Another point that carried weight towards this
decision was that troubles with the Russians were again brooding—this time
with reference to the delimitation of the boundary of Afghanistan; and an
able and resolute soldier was needed to meet any special difficulties that
might arise either locally or generally in the conduct of the important
charge which the work was felt to be.
It has been mentioned that the line had been already
reconnoitred and decided on. The circumstances under which this had been
done were as follows. In Lord Lytton’s usual fashion of selecting some
special person, however unprofessional, for any extraordinary task, he had,
in 1879, desired Sir Richard Temple, the Governor of Bombay, to proceed to
Beloochistan, go to the Bolan Pass, see to the needs of the transport
towards Candahar, cause a railway to be constructed across the Cutchee Plain
to Sibi—a railway, that is, of a more permanent character than the temporary
lines which had been, till then, carrying the needful war transport; and,
further, to investigate the question of the route for a railway for heavy
traffic from the plains to Quetta.
Sir Richard’s preliminary discussions with Colonel Sandeman,
who, it will be remembered, was the ruler of Beloochistan before and during
the Afghan war, had led him to concur fully in his view that the proposed
railway could not be made through the steep passes of the Bolan; and
therefore, at his suggestion and that of Colonel Lindsay, the local chief
Engineer, he now examined, on horseback, the routes through the Humai
passes. Starting from Sibi, to the west of which the Bolan lay, and trending
first to the east and then circling round, he soon reached and went onwards
by passes nearly parallel to the Bolan route, till eventually he reached the
Pesheen Plateau. It may be incidentally noted that the wildness of the local
tribes, and of the country defiles, made the journey one of serious danger,
and demanded great care and watchfulness as well as boldness and resolution.
To reach the Pesheen Plateau, after traversing the Humai
defiles, he had explored thence by side routes to the foot of the pass which
led to it, and had then ascended upwards through the pass till he attained
to the plateau itself. In so doing he detected the cross rifts between the
parallel valleys, and it was this feature—the existence of the rifts—that
seems to have guided Sir Richard to the plan or route which he proposed;
but, as will be eventually seen, the task of negotiating those rifts in the
course of the eventual work proved a stupendous one. Still it obviously gave
an opening for a through line, at a reasonable slope—the essential
desideratum for which his proposals were to provide, and for which no
alternative route could then be heard of or has ever since been suggested.
In due course he submitted his scheme or sketch proposals;
and in the interval between that date and 1883 more detailed, but still only
preliminary, surveys and proposals for the route and the work were sent to
Government. But, as will be seen, and as was unavoidable under the
circumstances, they were quite worthless and misleading as to the
difficulties to be overcome, the gravity of the work to be carried out, and
the cost that would be involved. Such was the stage of the engineering
information when Browne was proposed for the charge of the undertaking.
Before leaving the subject of Sir Richard Temple’s report,
two points may be mentioned, not affecting that report, but bearing on the
lines he dealt with. One is that when the war with Afghanistan broke out, in
1878, the nearest point of railway communication to Afghanistan was at
Sukkur, where the railway from Lahore to Kurrachee crosses the Indus, and
that its trains were taken then, and for some time afterwards, across that
great river on steam ferries, there being no bridge there till many years
afterwards. The other point is that, in continuation of the work done by
Browne in 1876 in facilitating the crossing of the Cutchee Plain, Colonel
Lindsay had carried his temporary railway to completion, and with great
rapidity. But at the date which the story of Browne’s career has now
reached—i.e. when he was back at Simla and under orders to prepare for the
Hurnai work—confusion had long been prevailing in those border districts
ever since the close of the Afghan war. This unhappy circumstance was
consequent on the change of ministry in England and of the viceroyalty in
India, accompanied by the exaggerated sentiments, the bitter spirit, and the
drastic action that ensued on and characterised the change. The attitude
seemed to imply a desire not for construction, but for destruction, for the
sweeping away, as it were, of some disgraceful episode. The railways and
tramways were torn up and all existing transport arrangements were set
aside. In fact, while Lord Roberts was being glorified in England, the
results of his and Stewart’s successes in India were being treated as if
sheer oblivion was the only future they merited. Rails and plant, invaluable
for the task that Browne would soon have to undertake, were being sold off
for a song, and had in a few months to be replaced at fabulous prices under
the emergency that had then arisen.
Browne had of course become aware very early of the policy
and characteristics of Lord Ripon’s rule, and of the instructions with which
he had undertaken his high office—the policy of hasty withdrawal, and the
orders that Candahar and Quetta were to be given up, and with them the
incomplete or temporary railways. As a fact, Candahar was absolutely
abandoned, but happily the logic of facts and his own good sense were
stronger with Lord Ripon than even his sense of allegiance to Mr.
Gladstone’s policy; and hence the withdrawal of the British troops stopped
short at Quetta, which was after all retained as the capital of the frontier
province and the basis of the frontier defence.
Such, as have now been described, were the antecedents of the
Hurnai project when Browne returned from Egypt to Simla early in 1883, and
was warned that he would have the charge of the undertaking. At first the
aspect of affairs did not seem to lead to any more serious idea than that
the task would be a very heavy and difficult one, and while he was still at
work on the Defence Committee, his special preparations for the Hurnai
fitted in very conveniently with the duties of his actual post
Soon, however, the aspect changed, quite apart from the
confusion in the Cutchee itself. The Russians’ advance from their more
westerly position towards Merv had been going on in a somewhat treacherous
manner, and with false avowals of their real intentions; till towards the
end of 1883 it began to be clearly seen that the Russian general, apparently
a Mahomedan adventurer named Alikhanoif, was coercing the people of Merv and
its neighbourhood, so as to form a basis or starting-point for more advanced
operations, and to come within striking distance of the positions that
intervened between Merv and Herat. On this now becoming obvious, the
preparations for starting the Hurnai work were hastened on; and one of the
points arranged was that the work, though an Engineer operation, should be
under the Military, and not the Public Works Department of the Government,
and should be conducted under the guidance of the Commander-in-chief, Sir
Donald Stewart.
But Browne’s preparations had to be more and more expedited,
and expanded so as to include measures not previously contemplated, and all
these were carried on in full concert with Sir Donald Stewart and, in many
matters, at his suggestion. The essential features of the arrangements for
Browne’s conduct of the work were these: his one imperative aim, to which
all else was to be subordinated, was to drive on the work with the greatest
speed possible, so as to complete the task by the earliest date in his
power; he was not to be hampered with the customary official work, including
the claims of estimates; he was to have at least one brigade of troops for
the protection of the work, and to command it with the rank and the
customary authority of a brigadier; he was to have a considerable body of
Sappers and Miners and of Pioneers as part of his brigade; and he was to be
wholly uncontrolled and untrammelled in his conduct of the work, and to have
an absolutely free hand. These were great, unusually great, powers; but they
were necessary for even the happiest conditions under which the task could
be carried on.
But, as will be seen, wholly unforeseen and portentous
difficulties arose, amounting to catastrophes, which rendered the work one
of quite extraordinary difficulty.
Browne, on preparing to start, was, as has been mentioned, to
be free from all the customary routine of Public Works business, owing to
the emergency of the case. He was in the position of a chief Engineer as
regards work and responsibility, but he was never provided either at first
or afterwards with the customary establishment office and officers for a
chief Engineer’s charge, owing obviously at first to the understanding that
he was not to be hampered with the customary office duties of the post. It
was to be essentially an urgent piece of war engineering to be carried
through as rapidly as possible.
It must be very clearly and explicitly understood that when
the task was assigned to Browne, and when he left Simla to start the work,
the matter was entirely a military undertaking, and lay in the hands of the
military members of the Viceroys Council, and still more of Sir Donald
Stewart, from whom both officially and personally he received full
instructions and advice on all points. It was a work of military urgency,
and, as already noted, estimates for it were not to be an essential matter
any more than for the expenses of war; speed! speed! again speed! was the
essential desideratum.
But owing, it may be assumed, to some special exigencies of
the state, Browne had no sooner left Simla than an entire revolution in the
arrangements took place; another member was added to the Council of the
Viceroy and put in control of the Public Works Department, to which, too,
the Hurnai Railway was suddenly transferred from the Military Department,
under which it had heretofore been fully arranged that it should be carried
out. Hence Browne, on reaching Sibi, whence the railway was to start, found
that he was not to be under Sir D. Stewart or the Military Department, but
under the new special member for Public Works; and that the arrangements,
conditions, and understandings settled with Sir Donald and the Military
Secretariat were to be ignored, especially in respect of Browne’s own
latitude and freedom from control in details. This entirely altered Browne’s
position, doing away with the powers which had been promised and were
requisite, without, on the other hand, lessening his responsibility for the
results.
It may be assumed that public exigencies, arising chiefly
from the Russian storm cloud, had made it necessary to have this additional
member and to place Browne’s charge under him; but it was a pity that the
exceptional position of that charge was not explicitly recorded by
Government. This omission, however, was only one symptom of the general
confusion that prevailed.
Browne had of course been aware that this muddling had been
prevalent, but he had hoped that his position under the Military Department
would have saved him from being affected by it; and he now raised no decided
objection to the change, trusting, of course, that the great feature of the
arrangement, freedom from interference, would be adhered to; but,
unfortunately, this was not to be. His new chief, zealous and energetic, and
with the enthusiasm of an amateur, began interfering from the very start in
details respecting chiefly the business arrangements; and Browne, trusting
to an improvement on these points in the course of time, and relying on the
support of those by whom he had heretofore been guided, drove on the actual
work as hard as he could. This was the essential need—other matters he left
to time; but he could not help the delay or the extra outlay entailed by the
new arrangements, to which he had at once objected, in the conduct of the
enterprise. It is to be understood that when Browne joined at Sibi he learnt
at once that he was to be under—not Stewart— but the new member of Council.
But it was only by degrees that he learnt or found what this meant— viz.
that the free hand, the basis of his position, was to be first of all
ignored, next discountenanced, thirdly paralysed, and lastly upset. Hence
Browne, acting on the principle of the superior claims of the urgency of the
needs of the state, while endeavouring to carry out the orders he received
from time to time, steadily and undeviatingly carried on his work at the
utmost speed, so as to complete it at the earliest possible date, in despite
of all difficulties and obstructions.
When, however, he was transferred from military control to
that of the Public Works Department, it may be at once said that he looked
forthwith at such estimates as already existed, and found them wholly
unreliable and useless, as the works that were now found to be absolutely
necessary exceeded, to a degree that cannot be adequately described, what
had been provided for in those preliminary estimates.
It may be mentioned here, as a matter personally affecting
Browne, that with this new task—the Humai Railway—he was being advanced from
the executive duties and grades of the service to the highest class of
responsible functions under the Government, of which he was to hold three in
succession. The first was this one, the charge of the construction of the
Humai Railway, which was of itself to involve four functions of grave
responsibility—Engineer, Military, Administrative, and Diplomatic, or
Political, as it is called in India. The next of the three posts was that of
Quartermaster-General of the army, directly under the Commander-in-chief;
and the third was the Government of Beloochistan, which involved a still
wider range of duties and responsibilities than even the Hurnai Railway, and
which ended with his death, after a short and sudden illness.
As Browne was now about to start the operations, the position
must be clearly and explicitly stated. Without any idea of an impending
change in the supervising department, he had, when asked if he would
undertake the task, expressed his willingness to do so on conditions, which
had been fully and heartily agreed to—viz. that his funds were to be
unlimited, that he was not to be cramped by estimates nor by sanctioned
designs, and that the speedy execution of the work was the one essential
desideratum. A particular feature of the case that—in truth—made these
conditions an absolute necessity was the wholly unknown character and nature
of the work that would have to be carried out in that part of the
undertaking which had to pierce the rift section of the projected route and
to tunnel through that deep barrier of limestone rock While Browne was to
carry out the broad gauge line for heavy traffic through the Hurnai passes,
Colonel Lindsay, it may be mentioned, was to construct at the same time the
light Bolan line. Both were to start from Sibi at the foot of the mountains,
diverging there to re-unite at Quetta, the two lines forming an oval, with
the stations of Sibi and Bostan at the opposite ends; the length of the
Hurnai line, which was never to exceed a fixed maximum gradient, being about
double that of the Bolan, which was to have steeper gradients and carry only
light traffic. The limit of the gradients of the Hurnai was fixed at 1 in 45
and the minimum radius for curves was 600 feet. Browne’s own sketch of
Lindsay’s line will be found in the next chapter.
In October, 1883, Browne started his operations for the
construction of the railway. The urgency of the work and of the position has
been already dwelt on, but it may be further explained that this urgency was
based less on the danger from any hostile features in the movements that had
already occurred on the part of the Russians than on that of the strategical
position which the Russian advance had reached and of the facilities it
afforded for further and rapid aggression. They had not yet reached Merv,
though they were approaching it. But they had coerced Persia on the west,
and would not allow either her or Afghanistan on the east and south to
occupy any longer some of the sites they had always previously held, and
General Komaroff was now planted in the Tejend oasis with a brigade. The
Simla Government judged correctly of the military significance of the
position, and of the probability of a very sudden advance by the Russians in
force, with the customary accompaniment of claims to the sovereignty of the
tracts reached in the advance. Hence the need for the summary stoppage of
that destruction, which had been going on, of the facilities for transport;
for fresh construction instead, for the strengthening of the frontier; and
for vigorous progress with the Hurnai.
Browne, on reaching Sibi, naturally looked forthwith into the
existing state of matters and the proposals that had been already made for
the work to be done; and took a rapid trip over the route. During the few
months of that cold weather the actual construction work that could be
started—in which he was much hampered by official interference—had to be
confined to the lower sections of the line, but equally important business
work could be carried on for the whole line in respect of the collection of
workmen and staff, of the designs for the bridges, and of arrangements or
the supply of the ironwork from England. As the promised Pioneer and other
regiments joined him, and he began to post them to their duties, there was
at first, somewhat naturally, a tendency to minimise his military control;
but his tact, common sense, thorough military instincts, and old
experiences, at once put matters on a sound footing. So that not only did no
hitch ever occur in the employment of the troops from first to last, but it
was recognised before long that their physique, discipline, and health had
benefited, and their spirit was excellent The strength of these troops,
small at first, was shortly raised to that of a full brigade, and this
proved to be no empty arrangement, from a military point, as some had at
first expected; for their presence did, in fact, actually avert and prevent
any single instance of molestation from the wild Kakur and other marauding
tribes of the neighbourhood.
We have noted above the state of affairs in regard to the
Russian advance on the north-east of Afghanistan during 1883, at the start
and in the first year of Browne’s work on the Humai; but latterly the
anxiety in regard thereto had begun to diminish in consequence of the
arrangements now in progress for the formal settlement and alignment of the
boundaries near Penjdeh. So, leaving that subject, we may turn to Browne’s
own work and describe the duties which he had to carry out in the course of
the task before him.
Its engineering features and its special difficulties may be
first dealt with. The work and the climate were so exceptional that he could
not assign to his officers any permanent charges and spheres of work; for,
instead of being constant, these had to change with the season. In the
winter they were assigned work in the lower sections of the route; in the
summer they were transferred to the higher and cooler level, while Browne,
himself seeming impervious to climatic difficulties, moved about or halted
according as the exigencies of the work and the calls of his officers
demanded. So serious were the difficulties, so great the breakdown in
health, as will be shown in greater detail, so wild the country and so unfit
for large bodies of labourers or employees, so overwhelming the catastrophes
that occurred, that the pluck and determination which carried it all through
must seem beyond all praise.
To turn now to the engineering task before Browne. It may be
thus described. The height above the sea level at the base, Sibi, is about
300 feet; at the summit level near Kach, 120 miles from Sibi the height is
6,500 feet The construction of a broad gauge line over so great a height in
so short a distance was a task hitherto unknown in any part of the world,
except in Peru, and there were, in the case of this particular line, certain
circumstances which offered peculiar difficulties. The line had to traverse
no such lovely scenery as is found in Switzerland, where the railway passes
from one scene of Alpine peacefulness to another, where the inhabitants are
industrious and law-abiding, and where the climate is fairly temperate and
at least bearable and salubrious. The country from Sibi to Garkhai is a
rugged wilderness of rocks and stone, with hardly a blade of grass the whole
way, excepting some small patches near Hurnai and Sharigh, where cultivation
in 1883 extended round a few watch-towers as far as the range of the
watchman’s matchlock. There the people were continually engaged in plunder
and intertribal warfare—every man’s hand was against that of his neighbour.
As regards the climate, the intense heat of the rocky gorges, on the lowest
parts of the line, during the summer months, was only a little less
endurable than the bitter cold of the upper passes in winter. The temperate
zone of the line, near Hurnai and Sharigh, though enjoying a more equable
climate, was shunned and dreaded on account of the malaria and pestilence
which seemed to be always infesting it.
The engineering difficulties might be divided into four
groups: (1) The Nari Gorge; (2) the Gundakinduf Defile; (3) the Chuppur
Rift; (4) the summit portion, including the Mud Gorge.
(1) The Nari Gorge extended from the place where the Nari
River debouches on the plains for some fourteen miles. The whole of this
wild gorge is formed by the tortuous channel of the Nari River, a stream
some 300 yards wide in flood, with a depth of about 10 feet and a velocity
of some 5 feet a second. It is particularly subject to violent floods at
irregular intervals. The railway crosses the Nari five times in the course
of these fourteen miles, and at other places pursues a tortuous course round
the bends of the gorge.
(2) The Gundakinduf Defile is only some eight miles long, but
involves two tunnels through most treacherous material, and four large
bridges.
(3) The Chuppur Rift is in the higher region of the line. It
is a chasm some two and a half miles long joining two parallel valleys. Down
this chasm, which in some parts is only a few yards wide and 300 feet high,
a small stream flows over a boulder-strewn bed, with a longitudinal slope of
1 in 20. As the ruling gradient of the railway is 1 in 45, the entrance at
the lower end had to be arranged for at a great height above the bed of the
stream, so as to enable the line to issue at a proper level at the upper
end. This work involved a crowd of tunnels (aggregating over a mile in
length), and one large bridge 290 feet above the stream below.
(4) The summit portion, some twenty-five miles in length, had
in it the most difficult part of the line— viz. a length of five miles along
“ Mud Gorge,” where a narrow valley between precipitous mountains, and with
a fairly steep longitudinal fslope, was filled with soil of an exceedingly
treacherous nature, and of most irregular contour. Beyond this the rugged
character of the mountain necessitated many heavy works, and a most careful
examination of all possible routes, so as to cross the summit with the least
work.
Browne decided that during the cold weather season, from
October to April, attention should be specially directed to the works in the
Nari Gorge and Gundakinduf Defile, while in the summer months the difficult
portions in the higher parts of the line would be negotiated. It thus came
to pass that certain of his officers were in charge of two distinct parts of
the line, work on which (though never absolutely at a standstill) was
carried on at the period of the year when the weather was most favourable
for progress.
During the summer of 1884 attention was chiefly directed to
the survey and tunnel work in the Chuppur Rift, the alignment of the summit
portion and much of the earthwork there, and the survey of the last
thirty-three miles into Quetta. There was a good deal of sickness, fever,
and scurvy among the workmen and troops, but on the whole the work had gone
on without much hindrance.
With the autumn months and the beginning of the campaign new
difficulties cropped up in the lower part of the line. Fresh troops had now
come to aid in the work—three full battalions of Pioneers—but hardly had
they entered on the scene when cholera made its dire appearance. The result
was a most serious stoppage of the works at a time when the weather was
lovely and most favourable for pushing everything on. The Afghan workmen
made a regular stampede, followed by many skilled artisans from various
parts of India. To replace these losses Captain Moncrieff was sent to
collect labour in the Eastern Punjab, and returned on the scene with some
two or three hundred masons and bricklayers, but not until grievous delays
had been caused and-much precious time wasted. Then sickness broke out among
many of the Engineers.
Two army corps were now warned in India for mobilisation at
the front, near Quetta, and the railway works under Brigadier-General Browne
were ordered to be pushed on with the utmost dispatch. All the three Pioneer
regiments under his command were to assemble in the Pesheen Valley and await
further orders.
While in the midst of this intense pressure, Nature seemed to
join with other forces to present difficulties in the progress of the works.
Floods, the most violent and unexpected, suddenly burst upon them at the
beginning of April, sweeping away bridges and miles of temporary roads,
interrupting communication for days, rendering camping-grounds unfit for
use, and making the supply of food most difficult. Yet the work went on. The
Pioneer brigade assembled at its rendezvous with only some twenty sick out
of 2,000, all equipped and ready for anything. |