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Title: With the Guns
Author: Street, Cecil John Charles
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "With the Guns" ***


WITH THE GUNS



  With the Guns

  BY
  F.O.O.


  _SECOND IMPRESSION_


  LONDON
  EVELEIGH NASH COMPANY
  LIMITED

  1916



  TO
  D.C.



CONTENTS


                               PAGE

  I ARTILLERY                    9

  II 'O.P.'                     25

  III OBSERVATION               42

  IV THE FOUR DAYS              61

  V THE DAY OF ASSAULT          77

  VI STRAIGHTENING THE LINE     96

  VII LOOS                     117

  VIII IN FRENCH TERRITORY     137

  IX CHANGING POSITION         156

  X TELEPHONES                 171

  XI BEHIND THE LINE           189

  XII A WAR MESS               208



WITH THE GUNS



I

ARTILLERY


As these sketches of the changing phases of modern war are largely
concerned with the work of the artillery, as, indeed, they are written
from the standpoint of that branch of the Service, this would seem to
be a favourable place to explain shortly the significance of the arm.
My excuse, if any be needed, may be sought in the mind of the average
man who, terrified as ever of the contemplation of anything technical,
puzzled by the grandiloquence of the self-appointed "expert," regards
the art of the artilleryman as written in a book sealed to him for ever
by its own abstruseness.

Yet the general principles that guide the employment of the man with
the gun, as distinguished from the man with the rifle, are very simple.
In the first place, whereas the latter is only concerned with the
incapacitating of _personnel_, the former has in addition the task of
the destruction of _matériel_. The old and still popular idea of a
battle, wherein each arm engages exclusively the similar arm of the
enemy, has, since the middle of the last century, entirely disappeared.
In a few words it may be said that the function of the artillery of the
attack is to prepare the way for the infantry assault by the demolition
of the enemy's defences, so far as that may be possible, and during
this actual assault to prevent the enemy's troops from leaving their
shelter and offering resistance. The artillery of the defence, on the
other hand, must endeavour to check the fire of the hostile guns,
either by overwhelming the batteries themselves by a fire so intense
that the detachments cannot work the guns, or by the destruction of
their observation posts. During the assault, their object must be to
cover the space over which the hostile infantry must advance with
so continuous a rain of shell that they are unable to reach their
objective.

In order to perform these various duties with the greatest attainable
efficiency artillery must possess two essentials. In the first place,
it must be able to project the greatest possible weight of shell in
a given time, and in the second it must be capable of rapid movement
from one point to another so that it may be rapidly brought into use
whenever the need for it is greatest. Now, obviously, the heavier the
shell to be thrown, the greater must be the energy of the cartridge,
and the greater the energy of the cartridge, the greater the strength
(and consequently size and weight) of the gun necessary to withstand
the pressures produced upon its discharge. On the other hand, if a
gun is to be mobile, it must be as light as possible, both so that
it can be moved at the required speed, and also that it can be taken
over soft or difficult ground. Mobility and shell-power are therefore
naturally antagonistic, the two cannot be combined in the same gun.
The modern army, therefore, carries a range of guns, wherein maximum
mobility controls one end of the scale and maximum shell-power the
other. The former is represented by the mountain gun, firing a shell
weighing some ten pounds and capable of being moved with great rapidity
over practically any ground that a man can traverse laden, the latter
by pieces of ordnance throwing a shell whose weight approximates to
a ton, capable of very slow movement over good roads and requiring
elaborately prepared positions from which to fire.

Suppose, however, that we were to take a six-inch gun, that is to say
a gun firing a shell six inches in diameter and weighing a hundred
pounds, with a range of say twenty thousand yards. This gun will
require a cartridge consisting of about twenty pounds of propellant,
to withstand the explosion of which the gun must be made of such
massiveness that it will weigh some seven tons. Now instead of
requiring so great a range, we determine to be satisfied with a range
of six or seven thousand yards. We now find that a charge of only some
two pounds of propellant will give us this range, and that the gun can
now be built very much shorter and less massive, so that its weight
is reduced to a ton and a half. We have retained the same weight of
shell, but have sacrificed range to increased mobility, and the fruit
of our labours is no longer a six-inch gun, but a six-inch howitzer.
But in the process of conversion from a gun, the howitzer has acquired
a new characteristic. Owing to its heavy charge of propellant, a gun
projectile leaves the bore with great velocity, and consequently the
gun requires relatively little elevation to hit a target at any given
range. A howitzer, owing to its small charge, requires a far greater
elevation. Now a projectile reaches its mark travelling at very much
the same angle with the horizontal as when it started on its journey.
At a range within the capacity of both, therefore, if fired say at a
house, the shell from the gun will tend to hit the front wall, whereas
the shell from the howitzer will tend to drop upon the roof. This
tendency, combined with their difference in mobility, determines the
choice of a gun or howitzer with which to attack a given target. It may
be added that by still further reducing the range to be attained, say
to a few hundred yards, a charge of only a few ounces need be employed,
and a weapon produced, capable of being carried by a couple of men, yet
still throwing a comparatively heavy shell. The German _Minenwerfers_
and our own trench-mortars are the representatives of this class.

All these various types and sizes of ordnance (the word "gun" is a
generic term that covers them all) employ two main types of projectile,
shrapnel and high explosive. Shrapnel may be considered as a sort of
shot gun fired from a rifled gun. It consists of a steel case filled
with round bullets except for a chamber in the base containing a small
quantity of powder. The head of the shell is fitted with a fuse which
can be set to act at any given time after the gun is fired. This fuse
ignites the powder in the base of the shell, which projects the bullets
from the case in the form of a cone whose axis is the direction in
which the shell is moving at the time. Shrapnel, therefore, depends
for its effect upon the destructive power of the flying bullets.
High-explosive projectiles consist of a very strong and heavy shell,
entirely filled with a high-explosive compound, and fitted with a
percussion fuse that acts when the shell strikes anything. The fuse
ignites a primer which detonates the high-explosive charge, and the
body of the shell splits up into pieces of various sizes which are
hurled in all directions with considerable velocity. This type of shell
has a double destructive power, that of the high explosive itself and
of the flying fragments. The Germans employ a compromise in addition,
known as "universal" shell, which may be described as a shrapnel with
a high-explosive charge, which can be used with either a time or
percussion fuse. They have also combined with the explosive charge of
some of their projectiles a substance which on combustion produces
an irritant gas with the property of attacking the eyes, and thereby
making a position untenable, and have also added phosphorus to produce
incendiary effects. It may be accepted as a general rule that howitzers
employ only high explosive, guns both shrapnel and high explosive.

We are now in a position to consider how artillery can best engage the
various types of target that offer themselves. The gunner's dream, a
mass of infantry in the open, is now but seldom seen, and when it is
no battery within range can restrain itself from hurling anything it
possesses at such a heaven-sent objective. The most suitable method
of procedure is to overwhelm it with a cloud of light shrapnel, burst
well above and in front of it, so as to produce a hail of bullets
beneath which nothing can live. In the case of the attack of a trench,
the method usually employed is a preliminary bombardment by light and
medium howitzers, with the object of destroying it and its occupants,
or at all events rendering it untenable, by dropping high explosive
into it; as soon as the infantry commence the assault, the field guns
cover the face of the trench with shrapnel to prevent its defenders
manning the parapet with their rifles. It has been found that wire
entanglements can be most easily and efficiently destroyed by light
shrapnel burst just above or if possible amongst them, followed if
necessary by a few light high-explosive shells to uproot the standards
without forming deep craters that would impede the assaulting infantry.

A hostile battery in position under cover is usually engaged with high
explosive from guns or howitzers. It is impossible to count upon a
direct hit destroying any of the guns composing it, although such lucky
shots have occurred. But the detachments may be forced to remain under
cover and the battery communications disorganized. Either result will
put the battery out of action so long as the fire continues. The real
difficulty of such a target is to discover its exact position.

Fortified positions such as redoubts and buildings may be destroyed by
the high-explosive fire of heavy guns and howitzers; observation posts
by guns, as they are usually small, and, speaking generally, it is
easier to hit a small mark with a gun than with a howitzer, owing to
the former possessing greater accuracy. A somewhat peculiar feature of
modern warfare is retaliation, of which the general principle is that
if the enemy incommodes one by the use of his artillery, one or more
batteries are ordered to fire a given number of rounds into some place
where his troops are known to collect, such as a town or large village
behind his lines. Guns firing high explosive are most suitable for
this, as the point selected for retaliation is usually beyond the range
of howitzers. It is often desired, more usually at night, to prevent
the enemy from sending reinforcements to his front line. To effect
this end, a "barrage" is established, usually by means of howitzers,
which draw a curtain of high explosive between the massing-place of the
reinforcements and their goal.

The first concern of any battery, once it is in position, is to be
capable of maintaining fire as long as it is called upon to do so,
and whenever necessary. To be able to do this presupposes immunity
from hostile fire, and, it having been found in practice impossible
to secure adequate protection from determined shelling, this involves
concealment, not alone from direct view from the enemy's positions, but
also from his aeroplanes and observation balloons. It is comparatively
easy to find some natural or artificial feature behind which to place
a battery, but it is almost a life study so to disguise that battery
that it will not be detected from above. Pits may have to be dug to
hold the gun and its detachment, spanned by iron rails carrying a load
of earth artistically planted with shrubs and flowers, the inside
of a hay-stack may be torn out so that a heavy howitzer can just be
manipulated in the space so formed, an innocent heap of beetroots may
conceal the long graceful contour of a sixty-pounder. Yet, however
careful the disguise, unless the detachments themselves hide under any
cover available and remain absolutely still when a hostile aeroplane
is overhead, or if by mischance the tell-tale flash of the gun betray
it, suddenly and without warning the heart-gripping whirr of heavy
shell will be heard, and before there is time for everybody to find
the dug-outs, the battery will be an inferno of unendurable explosions
and deadly flying splinters. Then, happy the battery commander whose
casualties are but slight!

If the battery is so concealed from the enemy's positions that it
cannot be seen from them, it follows that neither can they be seen
from the battery. In order, therefore, to be able to bring fire to
bear upon any given point, the officer controlling the battery must
have recourse to one of three expedients. He must either go himself
to some point from which he can see his target, and from which he can
communicate with the battery, or he must plot the position of battery
and target on a map, and work on that, or he must have an observer
in an aeroplane who can see the target and can communicate with him.
The first of these methods is known as direct observation, and may be
described as one of the most important things that the war is teaching,
and the most absorbing phase of the artilleryman's life. The principles
underlying the second and third are self-evident, and the details of
their application too lengthy for description.

Finally, let me try to convey an impression of the gunner's
performances from various points of view. The infantryman is the
gunner's keenest critic, and here let me say once and for all that the
infantryman is at the same time the hero and the decisive factor of
every war. Artillery but exists to smooth his path to victory, on him
falls every brunt and every hardship, the gunner is a mere accessory
to his accomplishments. No battle and no war can ever be won except
by infantry, superiority in any other arm is useless if the enemy's
infantry gain the upper hand by greater numbers or efficiency. He
therefore has a right to weigh us in the balance, and it is the Allies'
brightest star that their infantry, after endless weary months of
suffering under vastly superior gun-fire, know at last that behind them
are men and weapons that daily exhibit their newly-won preponderance.

It is the prerogative of all good soldiers to grumble when they are
satisfied and contented, presumably as a reaction from the cheerful
and unmurmuring endurance of hardship. The infantryman of to-day,
although reposing every confidence in the artillery behind him, still
believes the gunner to be a man of bad habits and occasional lapses.
It is no use explaining to him that the round that fell so short as
to burst in his trench instead of the enemy's was merely an evidence
of senile decay on the part of the gun, and it would be mere waste of
time to attempt to convey to the clay-plastered working-party who are
busy shovelling up the parapet that it knocked down that accidents
will happen even in the best regulated batteries. I have heard higher
praise bestowed on our efforts than that of a group of senior officers,
who whilst walking down a communication trench at night, contrived so
firmly to entangle themselves in the telephone wire to my observing
station that it took a whole platoon armed with wire-cutters to unbind
them--they irresistibly reminded me of the Laocoon when I arrived upon
the scene. Further, it is easy to understand that men who wade along a
muddy ditch to the prospect of five long days and nights in a morass
are apt to speak slightingly of others sleeping the sleep of the just
in warm dry dug-outs a mile or so back.

The gunner, on his part, admires the infantry with an admiration no
less deep because it is hidden. Of course, he lacks soul, thinks the
gunner, he has no imagination to see that yesterday's bombardment of
the enemy's trench, although it _did_ send a few splinters whizzing
into his own, must have a subtle and profound bearing upon the issue of
the war entirely outweighing any temporary inconvenience it may have
caused him. Besides, he is an incurable marauder, nothing that can be
made to burn in a bucket fire is safe for an unguarded moment. Lastly,
he _will_ clamour for vengeance upon an offending _Minenwerfer_ just as
the light is getting too bad for observation and one's servant appears
with tea. But--one can turn in and dream of home in the knowledge that
he is between oneself and the enemy.

It is interesting to follow the variations of German military opinion
on the subject of the Allied artillery. Bernhardi, writing a year or
two before the war, gives it as his opinion that the Krupp gun is
slightly superior to all other weapons, as, at that time, before the
perfection of the French "_soixante-quinze_," it probably was. He
advocates the abandonment of shrapnel for "universal" shell, and throws
doubts upon the ability of a German commander to use efficiently all
the batteries at his disposal. The outbreak of war found the Allies, as
regards "field" artillery, that is to say mobile ordnance throwing a
shell of from fifteen to twenty pounds, in the possession of superior
weapons in slightly inferior numbers. As regards "heavy" artillery,
grouping under that heading all natures of ordnance heavier than a
field gun, to every twenty pieces brought into action by the enemy we
possibly had one. It will probably be the verdict of history that the
rapidity of the hostile advance up to the Marne, and the ability of
the enemy to establish himself, practically unmolested, upon a strong
defensive line, were due entirely to this fact. Documents captured
lately, however, have revealed that the higher German artillery
advisers consider that, weapon for weapon, our guns have a slight
superiority, and in numbers available upon the Western front a distinct
preponderance. They also impress upon battery commanders the need of
study of our method of concealment and observation, as being in many
ways preferable to their own.

Of the gunner himself a few words will suffice. He is of a traditional
type, big, burly and equipped with a vocabulary that has been known to
fuse the delicate windings of an over-sensitive telephone. His gun,
for which his terms of endearment are expressed in profanity, is his
only care, in his spare time he will sit in its emplacement as in his
natural home. The "limber-gunner," an old soldier selected for each gun
to keep it groomed and immaculate, is jealous of his charge as he has
been for all time, since the day when Alfonso d'Este of Ferrara hurled
the brazen statue of Pope Julius II into the melting-pot wherewith
to cast more cannon. Hear him discoursing to a group of youngsters
on the regimental motto. "Ubique," he says, "ubique, that means, my
sons, that whenever there's a scrap on you an' me an' the bloomin' old
pop-gun's got to up an' trek an' earn our blessed rum ration doin' ten
days' work in one." And I think he speaks the truth.



II

'O.P.'


The mystifying habit of speaking in abbreviations, the result of a
constant use of rapid means of communication, is one that is developed
to its maximum degree in the jargon of artillery. For instance, "L.X.C.
El. 25° 30´, 15´ M L ORD BYF 40´´" is a very common type of order, and
is the form in which that order would be transmitted. Consequently,
whether in writing or in speech, the Observation Post is invariably
referred to as the O.P. What more fitting than that these two letters
should stand at the head of a sketch that proposes to deal with some of
the aspects of these same observation posts?

The modern battery is so concealed that the view from it is often
restricted to a few hundred yards in any direction. It therefore
follows that the officer who wishes to direct its fire must discover
some place from where he can see the target he proposes to engage,
and from whence he can establish communication, in practice almost
invariably by telephone, with his battery. He may be lucky enough to
find some point near at hand, such as a church tower, from which he can
obtain the necessary range of vision, and such points certainly have
the advantage that they usually afford an extended view. But far more
frequently, especially if his target is a hostile trench only a few
yards from our own lines, some point right up forward must be selected,
for preference just behind our own front line. This usually involves
the selection of alternative positions, both because the view from each
is usually restricted to a very small section of the hostile line, and
also in the not-uncommon event of the observation officer being shelled
out of his post, the battery is out of action until he has established
himself somewhere else. The forward observation officer (F.O.O.) is
the eye of the artillery, it is his business to observe not only the
shooting of his own battery, but also to keep a watch over the whole
of the enemy's territory visible from his post; to learn by constant
inspection every detail, to perceive the smallest alteration or
movement that may give a hint from which enemy plans or dispositions
may be deduced. Hence it is clear that the selection of a good
observation post is one that demands no small skill and experience.
Nor is this selection altogether devoid of humour. A battery arrives,
apparently from nowhere, its officers have a bundle of unfamiliar maps
thrust into their hands, and are told to go and find as many O.P.s
as they require to see a certain prescribed area. "So-and-so will go
with you, if you like, he knows all about this part of the world."
So-and-so is eventually, after a prolonged search, unearthed from the
one comfortable chair in his mess, it being, as he bitterly explains,
the only afternoon he has had off for a month. We start, preferably
along a road pitted with shell-holes that look disconcertingly recent.
Our guide informs us with melancholy pride that two telephonists of the
652nd Battery were killed there yesterday. "But it's usually pretty
healthy----" A small and particularly vicious shell whizzes apparently
just over our heads and bursts a hundred yards or so away. We change
the conversation. We come to a place where the road ends, and where it
seems as though some lover of beauty had cut a narrow winding course
for a merry little streamlet that murmurs contentedly between its
banks. Some yards away stands what was once a house, but the doors
have been wrenched off their hinges, the windows are blocked up--no
loss to internal illumination, for a dozen huge gaps in the wall amply
supply the deficiency--and the roof has collapsed, leaving only the
chimney-stacks standing. "That might do for you," says our guide,
"750th Battery used it for months." "How do we get there?"--for the
country looks suspiciously open and deserted beyond our present retreat
behind the hedge. "Oh, they don't often snipe here, we can walk across
one at a time, or there's the communication trench," pointing to the
streamlet. Heroes all, we elect a soldier's death rather than wet feet,
and the first of our party starts to walk across the open. Before he
reaches the shelter of the house, zip! comes a bullet with the ugly
sound that marks the rifle fired in one's own direction. He makes a
wild dive for shelter, from which he subsequently watches us as we
wade, cursing its maker, knee-deep along the communication trench, and
exhorts us to be careful to change our socks when we get home. After
much argument, we decide that the house will suit us, and we splash
homewards through our clay-coloured rivulet, by no means comforted
by the thought that this is the only safe means of access to our
new-found property, unless we propose to go there before daylight and
stay till after dark. Small things provoke humour where amusements are
few. I subsequently discovered that the depth of water in this trench
was about two inches less than the length of my gum-boots, and that,
therefore, by careful progression, I could navigate it safely. Whilst
doing this one day, a large dog, presumably frightened by a shell
bursting near him--although animals of all kinds get extraordinarily
accustomed to such things as a rule--plunged into the water within
a foot of me. The wave of his impact overflowed my boots--they have
never been really dry since--and the splash soaked me to the skin. As
I stood telling the world at large what I thought of war and dogs and
trenches, a gentle voice, near at hand but unseen, demanded of me, in
the catchword of the day, "Daddy, what did _you_ do in the great war?"
A sense of humour will make, even of war, the finest game in the world.

Frequently the guide is young and enthusiastic, apt to let his
confidence outstrip his local knowledge. A representative of this type
volunteered to take one of us to a place from whence he declared we
could see a particular point that puzzled us. The two set out smiling,
and promptly entangled themselves in a maze of unfamiliar trenches.
The guide declared he knew every inch of them, and for many hours as
it seemed the two wandered in and out, like trippers in the maze at
Hampton Court. At last they reached the ruins of a farmhouse. "If you
climb up there you can see all right," said the guide. The unwary
pilgrim did so, and found himself, outlined against the evening sky,
gazing at the German trenches not thirty yards away. My friend is the
soul of discretion, he hurled himself rather than jumped into the
security of the trench, followed by a _rafale_ of machine-gun and rifle
fire. Nor was he mollified by the words of a choleric and indignant
infantry major, who came up and wanted to know what the devil he meant
by acting like an infernal clown and drawing fire on his trench--I
soften his epithets. There was a marked coolness between the three for
many days to come.

More harrowing still is the whispered legend of two adventurous spirits
who, in the early days of the war, when the armies were not, as now,
divided by an unbroken line of trenches, set out to seek for some
commanding position from which to survey the surrounding country. At
dusk they found a piece of rising ground, that seemed to promise the
fulfilment of all their hopes. Seeing a group of men at work upon it,
they strolled up to them and enquired whether it were possible to
observe the Germans from there. "I know of but one place more suitable,
gentlemen, and that is Berlin," was the reply, and in a very short time
they were on their way thither. They had chanced upon the headquarters
of a German division!

The observation post once found, the next step is to make it tenable.
It may be, if Fate is kindly disposed, the upper storey or garret of a
house, from whence through a hole in the roof or walls the necessary
view can be obtained. Happy the man who finds such available! The
alternative is a straw-stack, on the top of which one must lie,
covering oneself as much as possible with straw; a tree, amongst whose
branches one must perch like a disconsolate and clumsy bird for whom
there is no close time; or, worse than all, a spot in some particularly
exposed trench, over whose parapet one pops one's head at the longest
possible intervals for the shortest possible time, wondering the while
whether the man opposite will pull his trigger before one gets it down
again. Generally speaking, all these latter are to be avoided. Any sort
of ruin is preferable, and the more of a ruin it is, the less likely is
the enemy to sit up and take notice of it. It is as well to make it as
bullet-proof as possible, by judicious strengthening with timbers and
sandbags. Anything more ambitious is waste of time; if a shell of any
size hits it directly, it is coming down and oneself inside it, despite
the most elaborate fortifications, which in this case only serve to
bury one the deeper. All one can hope for is a little box wherein to
sit and observe, proof as far as possible from rain and bullets, and a
dug-out for one's telephonists, in which one may take shelter oneself
if shelled--that is, if one is lucky enough to get there in time. The
most important thing to remember is that the exact appearance of every
single object within view is known to the observers on the other side,
and that consequently it is a remarkably sure form of suicide to alter
the exterior view of anything that one proposes to occupy. A careful
man, however, can establish quite a home-like resort almost anywhere.
I have known observation posts within two or three hundred yards of
the German trenches whose occupants have lived in profound peace and
contentment for weeks at a time.

A church tower, or even the remains of one, is an ideal place. It
is, certainly, sure to be shelled periodically, but the first round
is not going to hit it, and a rapid (and, for preference, carefully
rehearsed) descent into a cellar or dug-out at its foot usually averts
a _contretemps_. Of course, as happened once in my experience, a lucky
round may carry away the stairs or ladders inside the tower below the
observing officer, who then spends a _mauvis quart d'heure_ whilst the
enemy leisurely shells him. It is surprising, though, how many direct
hits from even heavy ordnance a tower will stand without falling. If no
church is available, the tallest house or ruin that can be found must
be adapted, by making a tiny slit in the wall or roof, invisible at a
distance of a hundred yards or so, and rigging up a platform inside
on which to sit whilst observing. A very ingenious method that I once
saw employed by a French battery was to make a wooden box the exact
shape and size of the chimney stack of a cottage, and painted brick
red. The box was hollow and had small peep-holes cut in it. One night
they skilfully removed the real stack and substituted the imitation
one, which served them admirably for many months. In another case all
that was left of what had been a fair-sized house was a wall facing
towards the enemy. A neighbouring ruined village was ransacked for a
dovecot and a long ladder. A band of amateur carpenters fitted the
dovecot to the inside of the wall, as high up as possible, cut a small
hole through the wall, and arranged the ladder as a means of access to
it. I can vouch from personal experience for the comfort and general
excellence of the completed work.

Of the delights of a certain pear-tree, behind whose ample trunk was a
most rickety ladder, up whose rotten rungs one climbed fearfully--the
tree was about seventy yards behind our front trenches, and in full
view from the German line--I will not speak. As autumn pursued its
sorrowful course we watched the leaves of our tree fall off one by
one, until to the prejudiced eyes of the man who had to climb into it
there seemed hardly enough cover to hide a caterpillar. Finally, when
an enthusiastic sportsman dumped a trench-mortar--the surest thing in
the world to provoke a long-suffering enemy to fury--into a pit some
twenty yards away, we shook our heads sadly and left it to its fate.
It stands there still, waving its bare arms mockingly at us, but I, for
one, shall not tempt its embraces until May has seen fit to dress it
decently again.

The enemy, on his side, is no less ingenious and probably more
painstaking. There was a certain water-tower that stood in a wood,
with its top just visible above the surrounding trees. Imperceptibly,
as the days went by, it seemed to grow out of the wood, until a month
or so after we first noticed it, about ten feet of it were visible.
The solution appears to have been that, to increase the field of view,
all the trees in front of it, and there must have been two or three
hundred of them, were very cautiously pruned every night, so as to show
no apparent alteration from day to day, but gradually to allow the
required observation.

It sometimes happens that it is necessary for the observing officer
to remain night and day in the post, and under such circumstances
continual interest is necessary if life is not to become very dull.
Frequently the enemy are good enough to provide this interest, an
unexpected shell now and again either just over or just short is a
powerful antidote against ennui. More often our own headquarters,
with a laudable intention of preventing one's interest from flagging,
send one encouraging messages--"Can you see a hostile working party
at such-and-such a place? If so, kindly keep under observation and
report half-hourly," or "Infantry report flashes of hostile battery
in the direction of Hill 0, observe and locate if possible." One
observes till one's eyes ache as the light grows too bad to see, when
a second message comes, "Flashes reported by infantry ascertained to
be caused by summer lightning." At night one crawls into the dug-out
and endeavours to slumber with one ear glued to the telephone,
and, strangely enough, despite the presence of two loud-sleeping
telephonists, one usually does.

Or perhaps it is only necessary for the observing officer to be at
his post during the hours of daylight, which involves a pleasant walk
an hour before sunrise and another an hour after sunset, both times
at which the approaches to the O.P. are being shelled, or swept by a
machine gun, or at all events are receiving some sort of attention from
the enemy, who appear to take a kindly interest in one's movements.
Still, this system secures one a night in bed, which is a luxury by no
means to be despised, and one is rewarded for one's early rising and
walk by the prospect from the observation post during what is often the
clearest part of the day, just before and after sunrise. There, right
in front, are the two lines of trenches, seemingly deserted, except
where a faint curl of blue smoke denotes preparation for breakfast.
Over the whole space of country before one there is no sign of life
or movement, unless perhaps at some point from a communication trench
a spade-full of earth rises regularly. In the middle distance over a
cross-roads a succession of white puffs shows the suspicious nature of
one of our field batteries, but further back still smoke rises from a
tall chimney as though the world knew of no war. The aeroplanes are
up, of course, each cruising about in the centre of a constellation
of greyish wisps of shrapnel, like flashes of cotton-wool against the
greenish blue of the sky. Rifles crack startlingly near at hand. The
drone of spent bullets rises and falls, the distant sound of guns
blends with the bursting of the shrapnel far overhead and the hum of
the aeroplanes. Surely all this noise is of another world, it cannot
have any relation to the peaceful scene before our eyes? The treachery
of the quicksand is the calm serenity of this Forbidden Land.

Observation posts have each their own legend, which clings to them
through successive tenancies. We shared one once with a very youthful
officer whose nervousness was only excelled by his ignorance. I fancy
myself that he was only there to keep a claim on the place for his
battery, but it so happened one fatal afternoon that he had to observe
a series. The first round was fired, and the young man, suddenly
discovering that observation of fire is one of the most difficult
things in the world, and being utterly at sea as to where the shot had
fallen, hesitated in his report. The rest of the tale is best told by
the telephone. The battery commander is the first speaker. "Ask the
observing officer to report where that round fell." "Mr. Jones reports
that was a very good shot, sir." "Tell Mr. Jones I don't want criticism
of my shooting, I want to know where the rounds fall. No. 2 is just
firing." "Mr. Jones reports the last round fell about an inch from the
target." "Then I can assume that as a hit?" "Mr. Jones says he means an
inch on the map, not an inch on the ground." Threatenings and slaughter
_ad lib_!

Of course, it is an unpardonable crime to do anything in or near an
O.P. which might draw the enemy's attention to it. A battery of my
acquaintance had for some weeks been installed in a pretty little villa
residence of which they were very proud, situated on the outskirts
of a mining village. They had certainly spared no pains to make it
comfortable or safe; indeed, the interior was a solid mass of sandbags
through which a sort of tunnel ran to the little observation chamber,
elaborately reached by a series of ladders and passages. One day the
battery commander was conducting a deliberate and deeply calculated
series, his mind too full of figures and angles to allow room for
any idea of possible molestation by the enemy. Suddenly, directly
behind the house, he heard a series of violent explosions. In rather
less than the proverbial twinkling of an eye he was down below in
the dug-out, nearly flayed by violent contact with ladders and other
unyielding substances, but still alive and safe. Still the explosions
continued, but no shell seemed to strike the house. At last one of his
telephonists, more daring than the rest, ventured to peer out, and
there, right in the sacred enclosure, was an armoured car in full and
noisy action. The scene that followed baffles description. Two heads,
one thrust through the hatchway of the car, one cautiously hidden
behind a projecting sandbag, discussed the question of unmentionable
idiots who wheeled their indescribable tin perambulators into other
people's preserves, until the hardy navigators in the car and the
stalwart gunners in the O.P. blushed to hear them. Finally, upon a
reiterated threat from the major to turn his own battery on to the car
if it did not move off, the nuisance was abated. But "Sans Souci," as
we called the place, was never its old self again, its restful charm
had departed. Some hostile battery had seen the flashes of the car's
gun, and afterwards, at uncertain intervals, presumably when things
were dull with it, would fire a few rounds in friendly greeting.

The gunner's appreciation of these things is usually keener even than
one's own. One day when reconnoitring for an O.P. with a couple of
telephonists, I came upon a house that had once been used for the
purpose, but out of which its occupants had been driven by heavy
shell-fire. The interior of the place presented an indescribable
appearance. Its original owners had fled early in the war, leaving
everything as it stood, and a succession of inquisitive searchers
had been all through it to see if they could find anything of value.
Dresses, broken bottles, letters, rags of all descriptions, a sewing
machine, blended with the plaster from the walls and clay from the
burst sandbags. Very little of the roof was left, and heavy rain had
made of this mass a peculiarly evil-smelling mud, from which protruded
here and there lumps of bread, bully-beef and cheese, whose increasing
age was apparent. Some sort of cesspit had burst and flooded the
cellar, which had been used as a dug-out, and in the centre of the
savoury flood floated a mattress that looked as if it held the germs
of all the plagues of Egypt. Outside, shrapnel were bursting freely,
I fancy the enemy had seen us enter the place. I overheard one of
my telephonists apostrophizing it: "You're a nice 'ouse, you are,"
he said. "Blowed if I don't advertise yer in the bloomin' papers,
'Charming bijou residence, quiet 'ealthy situation, perfect repair,
hevery convenience, pleasant garden.' I _don't_ think!"



III

OBSERVATION


It has been said in a previous chapter that the fire of any given
battery is, in the majority of cases, directed by an officer in an
observation post from whence he can see the target and the ground
surrounding it. The general principles of this observation are as
follows. The position of the battery and target are ascertained upon
a map, and by means of it the range and direction of the target from
the battery are obtained. A calculation based upon this information is
made, and a certain elevation and direction given to the guns. A round
is then fired, and the position of the point where it falls relative
to the target noted by the observation officer, who gives a correction
based upon the error. This correction is transmitted to the battery
by methods depending on the distance between it and the observation
post, but almost invariably by telephone, and applied to the guns.
Another round is then fired, which is again observed and a fresh
correction made as before. This process continues until the rounds are
falling at or very close to the target. It sounds remarkably simple,
but is in practice extremely difficult. To hit an unknown target with
the expenditure of the minimum possible number of rounds requires
considerable experience in observation, for the puff of a bursting
shell lasts only for the fraction of a second, and is apt to look
very small at a distance of more than a few hundred yards. Further,
knowledge of the vagaries of each individual gun is required, and
also a keen appreciation of the nature of the country round about the
target. Observation of fire may be truly said to be an art, in that it
comes naturally to some people, whilst others may spend a lifetime in
its practice without ever becoming proficient.

The second part of an observation officer's duty, that of keeping a
general watch on the ground spread out in front of him, is considerably
easier, as it only requires a keen eye and a good memory. After a
little practice, it is soon found that the apparent changeless calm of
a deserted land is in the highest degree deceptive. Although they are
utterly invisible, that land is thickly populated with hidden troops,
whose object it is perpetually to turn every feature of it, natural
and artificial, to the best possible use for attack or defence. The
ruins of a barn stand some little way back from the enemy's line,
roofless and abandoned. The telescope shows it to have some part of
its walls yet standing, and within them a ladder. Now ladders are
precious things in a strip of country where everything is made to
serve a useful purpose. Examine the place daily and perhaps at dawn
a single figure may be seen scurrying up the ladder, or perhaps its
position may have altered slightly. For weeks, perhaps, one has noticed
a dilapidated house, so broken down that through the shell-holes that
breach the front wall one can see the horizon beyond. Yet one morning
one of these shell-holes shows dark, or perhaps a new one has appeared
higher up, although no battery has been seen to fire at it. A flock
of starlings pours suddenly from the stump of what was once a church
tower, and for a long time the birds circle in clamorous flight about
it, seemingly afraid to re-enter their accustomed haunt. Hints, all of
these, indicating that some use is being made of these places, either
as observation stations or snipers' posts.

Even the innocent-looking surface of a weed-grown field is not above
suspicion. The naked eye is suddenly drawn to it by what seems at first
almost inspiration, but one becomes conscious as one watches of an
indeterminable movement taking place on its surface. Mark the place
very carefully and bring the telescope to bear upon it. The sense of
movement resolves itself into the periodic sprinkling of brown earth
thrown up as by an industrious mole. These are spadefuls of earth,
showing that a trench is being dug. Natural features themselves have a
habit of changing their positions with the same disconcerting effect
as that phenomenon had upon Macbeth. Of course, one is never lucky
enough to catch them actually in motion, but a morning of surprises
will often reveal the disappearance of a well-known hedge, or the
sudden apparition of an orchard of full-grown trees in the middle of
a ploughed field, or even a stately plantation of elms on what was
formerly a _pavé_ road. The hedge was removed to provide something with
a field of fire, or to allow somebody to see a particular part of our
line; the game is now to discover the whereabouts and nature of that
something or somebody. The orchard and the elm trees were required as
cover, probably for guns; the surest plan is to shell them and await
developments. It may be possible to drive the detachments out into the
open, when every weapon that can be brought to bear will sing its own
particular song of triumph.

A certain redoubt was located by our aeroplanes, and its position
indicated to us by the fact that it lay right in front of the seventh
from the northern end of a row of trees such as occur at intervals
along the side of most French _Routes Nationales_. For many days
we used this mark, until it suddenly struck one of our observation
officers that the trees looked somehow different to what they did when
first he noticed them. Suspicion being thus aroused, further aeroplane
reconnaissance was undertaken, when it was found that the third tree of
the row now marked the position of the redoubt. The enemy, seeing that
they had been "spotted" by the first aeroplane, had dug up the four
trees at the northern end of the row and replanted them at the southern
end, and must consequently have watched, with a delight not very
difficult to imagine, our shells raising a little inferno of their own
a couple of hundred yards away from them.

All this is a part of the great game of war that it is most difficult
to learn in times of peace. "Pretending to look for something you
know isn't there," as I have heard it described, is an occupation
that palls upon the dullest mind. Well do I remember many years ago
forming one of a class of young officers under instruction in the use
of the "Observation of Fire Instrument," which consists of a telescope
fearfully and wonderfully mounted on a gigantic tripod--it is now, in
the language beloved of the text-books, "becoming obsolescent," may it
soon be relegated to the limbo of forgotten things! Our instructor,
a highly capable but choleric major (majors always were apt to be
petulant, I thought, in those days), had spent the best part of a
warm June morning explaining the use of the cumbrous toy, until the
whole class were sick at heart. At last he sent one of our number some
distance away with orders to observe and report upon some object in
the distance out to sea, the while he discoursed to the remainder. The
minutes slipped by, and no word came from the keeper of the lonely
vigil. "Go and see what that dam! fool is up to, sergeant-major,"
said our instructor. Anon the sergeant-major returned, with a face as
impassive as the metal of the instrument itself. "Well?" rapped out the
major. "If you please, sir, Mr. Robinson is a-studying observation on
the ladies' bathing-place!"

Observation, it may be repeated, is an art, but every art requires
considerable training, if only in technique, before the artist can
acquire perfect and instinctive expression. Where, as in the case of
the art of the gunner, art leans for its support upon the strong arm of
science, the probationary stage requires even more time and application
on the part of the tyro. It has been said that it takes three years
to teach an artillery officer the elements of his profession. It
will doubtless be claimed as a triumph of foresight for our military
administration that, although at the outbreak of war our heavy
artillery _matériel_ was, in equipment and numbers, such as would not
inspire pride in a Central American Republic, we had a large reserve of
highly-trained artillery officers and men languishing in the enforced
sloth of our coast fortresses all over the world. Well it is for us
that this was so, for this is a war of heavy artillery, and without
these men to train, command and leaven the newly formed batteries that
we were forced so hurriedly to raise, our artillery would never have
attained its present admitted dominance. Splendid indeed is the new
material; the artillery manage to secure officers of the higher and
better educated classes, and men, thanks to rigidly-enforced physical
standards, of the sturdier build; all ranks are full of the interest
of their new profession, enthusiastic, keen to learn, absorbing in the
sharp days of war knowledge that others required the leisurely weeks
of peace to acquire. Still, may the country, in its just pride in
the performances of these men, never forget the debt that it owes to
that little band whose pay it loved to curtail and whose ambitions to
discourage in the old forgotten years of peace!

But this is a digression, typical of the observation officer, whose
thoughts stray into strange channels during the course of the long days
of watching. How keenly he longs sometimes for "something to happen,"
especially during his first experiences of the work, before he realizes
that something is always happening under his eyes, if he can only
detect it. My own pet longing was to see my first real live Hun in
his natural surroundings, a longing conceived in much the same sort of
inquiring spirit that inspires the naturalist. I saw him at last, he
sprang from a trench in which a shell had just fallen, ran literally
as if his life depended on it, which, in grim earnest, it did, and
dived like a rabbit into a support trench a few yards away, followed
by cheers and bullets from our own lines. My observation post was at
that time not more than a hundred yards behind our front line, but,
owing to the intricate nature of the country, no signs of immediate
war could be seen except from the little slit in the wall from which I
observed. One day I was stretching my legs in the road outside, when a
staff officer, somewhat of a _rara avis_ in so advanced a spot, came
by, having evidently lost his way. Now a staff officer was once defined
to me by a very distinguished regimental officer as "a being whose
natural common sense was buried for ever beneath the vast mountain of
his own ignorance." This magnificent gentleman--he had probably been
a distinguished grocer, the pride of the local volunteers, before the
war--informed me that observation was impossible from where I then
was, and, indicating a ruin, the remains of whose roof could just be
seen above the hedges, expressed his intention of surveying the country
from its more favourable eminence. Bowing before his superior wisdom,
I saluted and we parted, he to pursue the even tenor of his way, I to
my seat behind the window to watch the fun, knowing that his objective
was about half a mile behind the German lines. With an unholy delight,
I saw him blunder into our trenches, exchange a hurried word with an
officer who came forward to meet him, and then beat a precipitate
retreat pursued by a most audible titter that ran swiftly along the
line.

He took care to avoid on his return the Bath Club, as we called that
O.P., from the number of flooded cellars it contained.

The study of nomenclature at the front is a very fascinating one, if
only for the light that it throws upon the psychology of nostalgia.
Every road, every communication trench is christened with some name
around which hang the memories of the men who gave it, so that the
native origins of these shrewd godfathers is never for a moment in
doubt. Who but a native-born Londoner would have evolved a Harrow
Road, off which, in an orgy of local geography, branch Edgware Road,
Finchley Road, Maida Vale and a dozen other familiar names? Who but
a young subaltern--his heart still unforgetful of the old _joie de
vivre_, having established an O.P. at the end of a muddy ditch already
known as Burlington Arcade, would have proudly labelled it "The
Bristol," or who, but his envious friends near Shaftesbury Avenue,
would have emulated him with "Maxime's" and "The Villa-villa"! Moray
Avenue, Prince's Street, Deansgate, Dale Street, College Green, all
tell their own story. And where association ends, description begins.
Stink Farm, is, I believe, now marked as such on the official maps.
Quality Street has already a place in history that may one day be
shared by Mud Cottage, Canadian Orchard, la Maison des Mitrailleurs,
Rue d'Enfer, and Le Tirebouchon. Sometimes the names of places have
been anglicized almost out of recognition. Wingles and Hinges are
pronounced as they appear to an English eye, Choques is Chokes, Gris
Pot is Grease Pot, Lozinghem is Lozenges, to quote a very few examples.
The same may be found on the German side. The Hohenzollern Redoubt
is familiar by name to everybody. Near it is Breslauer Chausée Loos
contained Unter den Linden, Friedrichstrasse, and, rather curiously,
Ringstrasse; Vendin le Vieil is Alt-Vendin, Lens, Lenze. But this is
yet another digression, the wandering thoughts of the idle observer;
let us suppose him suddenly recalled to the affairs of the moment by
the insistent voice of the telephone.

"Message for you, sir--from headquarters," says the telephonist,
bearing a piece of pink paper in his hand. I take it, and read, "Fire
twenty rounds at intersection of communication trenches at----" Here
follow a combination of figures and letters that denote the position
on the map. "Very well, call up the battery and give 'action.' Tell
them to report when ready." Out comes the map, and the point mentioned
in the message found. A road runs east and west close by it, yes, I
know that road, have often noticed it. A communication trench runs
along it for some way, then turns off at right angles by a hedge, which
it follows for a couple of hundred yards till it meets its fellow,
which place of meeting I am ordered, in the parlance of the front, to
"strafe." Can I see that hedge, I wonder? Prolonged inspection through
the glasses assures me that I cannot. There is nothing for it but to
take a bearing. One hundred and seventeen degrees from my position,
five degrees left of the church tower. Compass and sextant agree,
giving me the line to the corner of a wood on the horizon, on which
line my target must somewhere be situated. Out come the glasses again.
There certainly is a mound right in line with my mark in the centre
of that meadow, but it might be anything. Yes, the telescope shows it
to be earth thrown up from some excavation or other, it must be the
trench junction. It looks hopelessly foreshortened, nothing like the
map, but then the map seems to look down on things with a calm judicial
air, whilst I can only peer at them from their own level. A very little
practice in observation soon shows one that the human eye is utterly
unreliable as a gauge of the length of anything that stretches away
from it. "Battery reports ready for action, sir," says the telephonist.
"Thank you. No. 1 gun ranging, elevation nineteen degrees, etc., etc."
Back comes the warning, "No. 1 reports ready to fire, sir." "Fire No.
1!" "No. 1 fired, sir!" and then an eternity of breathless anxiety,
during which all the fabled deadly sins of gunners long since condemned
to everlasting execration rush upon my memory. Suppose I have read
the map wrong, and that is not the place at all? An instant's piercing
scrutiny, which fails to reassure me in the least. Even if that is
the place, it is not very far from our own trenches. Did I give the
right elevation? Did I allow enough for wind? Were my orders perfectly
clear to the section commander? Did the layer lay correctly? Shall I
be "broke" if I slaughter a whole platoon in our own trenches, or only
shot?... Eternity comes to an end at last after a life of some ten
seconds, and I hear the whistle of the shell coming ever nearer--safely
over my head, anyhow, thank heaven! Yes, she must have passed the
trenches by now; where's she going to fall? The whistle ends abruptly,
but nowhere is there any sign of smoke, nor does the sound of the burst
reach me. A blind, I suppose, the shell must have fallen into something
soft, but I'd give ten years of my life to know _where_. Well, there is
nothing for it--"No. 1, repeat, fire!" "No. 1 fired, sir!" The whistle
again, then right in line with the target, and hiding it, a bright
flash, a spout of earth and a cloud of black smoke, followed by a
peculiar, sharp crash, and the hell of doubt gives way to the heaven of
satisfaction. Such are the delights of observation.

And variously the excitement infects the blood of the observer. One
will sit far back from his window, lest prying eyes should detect him
through it, and give his orders slowly and methodically, weighing each
carefully and making elaborate calculations the while, and occasionally
exhorting the battery to care and deliberation. Another will thrust a
telescope through a chink between two sandbags so that it shines like
a heliograph in the morning sun and one wonders if some well-disposed
angel has smitten the enemy with blindness for that every battery
within range does not open fire on him. He, meanwhile, oblivious of
such minor dangers, roars contradictory orders as through a megaphone,
calling on the inhabitants of Tophet with strange formulæ because
his orders are not obeyed before he gives them. I have seen a French
Territorial battery in action for the first time in their lives, Mons.
le capitaine subdued, almost tearful, but resolved to die in his O.P.
as befits a soldier. His telephonists and assistants (he appeared to
have dozens) equally anxious to see the fray, festoon themselves all
over the building, hanging out of windows, clambering on to the roof,
expressing their delight at the top of their voices. Eventually he
restores some degree of order, and, rushing to the telephone, sweeps
aside the operators, and gives the word himself. "Tirez, tirez, pour
l'honneur de la belle France!" The shot falls apparently in a totally
different direction to where he anticipates. Again he rushes to the
instrument, more perhaps in sorrow than in anger, and demands the
presence of the section commander. "Mon lieutenant!" he says, "ce n'est
pas juste, c'est épouvantable! Je me sens brisé! Nom d'un nom, que vous
êtes maladroit! Dirigez la pièce encore vous même!" He finishes his
series at last, and as he turns to go, he salutes me gravely, saying,
"Au revoir, monsieur, j'aimerais bien travailler ici à coté de vous,
mais, hélas! c'est fort impossible. Dans cette observatoire il y en a
toujours de bruit!" It must not for a moment be supposed that I speak
disparagingly of the French gunners. They are, as a matter of fact,
far better artillerists than ourselves, and we have much to learn from
them. Possibly they lack something of our insular calm, as we certainly
lack the vivid power of imagination and discernment that contributes
very largely to their success. For this same calm the British gunner
is hard to beat. On one occasion a heavy shell hit an O.P. fair and
square, bringing it down in a heap of ruins. The observer, who by some
miracle was not hurt, extricated himself from the pile of rubbish
under which he found himself, and rushed down to the cellar, where he
expected to find the mangled remains of his telephonist. There was
the man, his hands full of fragments that had once been a telephone,
standing with a puzzled expression on his face. "I 'ardly know what to
do with this 'ere instrument, sir," was his greeting. "I don't see as
'ow I'm goin' to mend it without goin' back to the battery for some
spare parts."

Observation by night is sometimes useful, as then the flashes of
hostile batteries can be seen most distinctly. It is, however, a
peculiarity of modern propellants that the actinic power of the flame
produced on their combustion is such as to attract attention in broad
daylight. I have had my eye caught by the flash of a ten-centimetre
gun about four miles away at four o'clock on a sunny afternoon in
September, and there is no doubt that this distance has frequently
been exceeded. Still, night of course is the best time, although then
it is very much easier to mistake the flash of a bursting shell for
that of a gun, and even if flashes are observed, nothing can be noted
except their direction, their surroundings being invisible. And a few
hours at night in an O.P. have their compensations. Over the trenches
rise continually the searching lights, throwing everything into sudden
contrast of light and shade, making of the familiar scene whose every
stone and blade of grass one thought to know by heart, a strange land
of white snow islands standing sheer out of yawning black gulfs. Every
now and then sharp tongues of flame dart out from the parapet, a sudden
lurid flash in the air shows a bursting shrapnel, or a brighter one
on the ground the more violent detonation of high explosive. Perhaps
a rocket signal of green and red goes up, followed by a quicker
succession of flashes of all kinds as a patrol between the trenches is
discovered. Perhaps one may be lucky enough to see a chance shell start
a huge fire, such as burnt once for three days and three nights in
Cité St. Pierre, producing a glow as of twilight two good miles away.
Whatever may be seen, night has its fascination in this strange world
of sleepless activity as much as in a land of quiet, but here its
fascination is a stirring into life of eager pulses, a whispering in
the ear of that ever-ready lust of battle that makes of war the finest
sport that man ever devised. Somehow at night all deeds seem possible.



IV

THE FOUR DAYS

(September 21-24, 1915)


Although many descriptions and maps of the country round about Loos
have been issued, it may not be out of place to attempt one more brief
outline, from which the general trend of the operations from September
25, 1915, onward can be followed. Descriptions of a country that one
does not know being invariably flat and unconvincing, it may suffice
to lay down the main features in a very few words. From the La Bassée
Canal southward to Souchez is a purely coal-mining district, one of
the most important in France, an undulating country devoid of natural
features, but abounding in artificial ones, such as chimney-stacks,
mine-shafts and dump-heaps. The miners' villages, locally termed
_corons_, group themselves about the pit-heads, and form two long
lines of almost continuous brick and mortar, separated by a shallow
valley, normally under cultivation, but now lying fallow and deserted,
varying in width from a few hundred yards to a couple of miles or so.
In the centre of this valley lies Loos, a village of some two thousand
inhabitants, conspicuous for miles round from the huge double shaft,
the famous Pylons, that rise nearly three hundred feet above the
surface of the plain.

Of the two lines of villages, that surrounding the mines owned by
the Compagnie des Mines de Béthune, and consisting of Cambrin,
Vermelles, Philosophe, Mazingarbe, Les Brebis, Grenay, Maroc, and Aix
Noulette, was, about the middle of September, held by the Allies. The
eastern line, consisting of Auchy, Haisnes, Cité St. Elie, Hulluch,
Benifontaine, Vendin, Cité St. Auguste, Lens and its countless suburbs,
and Liévin, was, at the same period, held by the enemy. Along the
course of the valley, but well up the western slope of it, so that the
village of Loos lay a mile within them on the German side, ran the
two opposing lines, with their maze of support and reserve trenches,
their sinuous lines of communication trenches leading up the slopes
of the valley to the villages in rear. From our observation posts in
Maroc the whole of the southern sector of these parallel works could
be plainly seen, the line of each trench through the green overgrowth
of weeds being conspicuously marked by the white chalk thrown up in
excavating them. Behind these again, two long black arms stretched
out towards us, with a sinister look as though inviting us to leave
the comparative security of our trenches and rush to the attack of
the body from which they grew, the city of Lens. In reality nothing
but embankments formed by the continual deposition of refuse from the
mines, these two arms, the northern known as the Double Crassier, the
southern as the Puits XVI embankment, had been transformed by the enemy
into exceedingly strong positions, mined, entrenched, fortified by
every known means, the westernmost ramifications of the fortress into
which Lens had been converted. Opposite the extremity of the Puits XVI
embankment the Allied armies met, the right of the British line resting
upon the Tenth French Army, the first of that great chain of armies
that spreads, with one short gap, to the faraway Swiss mountains.

All through August and September the roads behind the Allied front
had been covered by infantry and artillery, and even towards the end
by cavalry, all moving eastwards through the all-pervading chalk dust.
Rumour, as ever, was busy with conjecture. This was merely a feint,
maintained the pessimists, the real advance is to lie with the French
in Champagne. Nonsense, replied the optimists, this is at last the
long-looked-for general advance, the death-blow of trench warfare, the
dawning of the millennium when the Battle of Position shall give way to
the Battle of Movement, the beginning of the final struggle that will
end only with the death-throes of the enemy on the Rhine! Whatever were
one's individual opinions, the scent of battle, the glorious prospect
of a "scrap," was in the air, and spirits rose accordingly.

Slowly, from the august sources wherein the strategy of armies has
its birth, the true intentions of the Allies percolated. Looking back
now, it seems that too much was allowed to be known from the first.
Documents containing detailed programmes of the proposed operations
were circulated in some cases as much as a fortnight before the
selected day, and in the field it is impossible to prevent the contents
of such documents becoming common knowledge within an incredibly
short time, which is practically equivalent to sending the originals
across to the enemy with one's compliments. It was subsequently
established by the examination of prisoners that the German General
Staff had full knowledge of our plans many days before the attack
took place, and had, indeed, made dispositions to meet it. It is
undoubtedly essential to circulate beforehand exact instructions as
to the part that each unit is to perform in contemplated operations,
but it is extremely doubtful if it is expedient to do so until the
last possible moment. Apart from the danger of leakage to the enemy,
it is always found, as indeed in this case, that the interval that
elapses between the receipt of instructions and their execution is
filled with a storm of amplifications, contradictions and amendments,
poured out by intermediate commanders, until the unfortunate commander
of a unit is faced, when called upon to act, by an accumulation of
mutually incompatible orders. If a strong man, he throws them all
indiscriminately into the fire, and, acting by the light of his own
commonsense and initiative, stands a fair chance of succeeding; if
a weak man, he endeavours to act upon them all, and, with deadly
certainty, fails.

The ultimate intention of the General Staff will not be revealed until
long after the end of the war, if even then, nor need we concern
ourselves with anything but the general instructions issued to the
Fourth Corps, the southernmost portion of the First British Army,
the army that held the line from the canal southward to the junction
with the French. Briefly, these were to seize Loos, Hill 70, which is
merely the eastern slope of the valley behind Loos, and to establish
themselves on this slope in such a position as to command Lens from the
north. It was understood that the French were to make a simultaneous
attack from the direction of Souchez, occupy the Vimy ridge, and
similarly threaten Lens from the south.

In order to attain these objects, a four days' bombardment of the
enemy's position was to be undertaken, to be immediately followed by
an assault upon the fifth day. Of the actual details of the targets to
be engaged by each battery it is unnecessary to speak in a sketch of
this nature. Our own battery, in common with the rest, was allotted
targets to be engaged at different periods of each of the four days,
these days being not specified, but described as days V, W, X, and Y.
Throughout a breathless week we elaborated our plans, each day bringing
as a rule some modification of our original instructions. We spent our
daylight hours peering out of our observation slits, and our evenings
measuring ever new angles and ranges on our maps, until each one of
us knew every stone in the country that lay in front of us by some
pet name, and our maps developed strange diagrams in every possible
combination of coloured chalks, for all the world like the diagram of
the London Tubes. Thus we possessed our souls in a greater or less
degree of impatience, till at last the message came: "To-morrow is
day V," and on the night of September 20 I at least sought the genial
warmth of my valise feeling that the curtain was about to rise upon the
finest spectacle that the world had ever seen.

That night was the lull before the storm. All along our line the
restless field guns woke but fitfully, as a watch-dog to bark at the
moon, and then fell off to sleep again. Even the incomparable French
_soixante-quinzes_ on our right, whose voices are hushed neither by
day nor night, seemed restless, impatient, restrained, keeping long
silences, until in sheer desperation they burst into uncontrollable
passion, ceasing again as suddenly as they began, as though appalled
by their own act. Only the vivid lights soared brilliantly as ever
above the trenches, failing, however, to evoke the usual salutation
from their unsleeping wardens. So the morning dawned, unheralded by the
noisy "morning hate" with which the opposing armies invariably greeted
one another, the still air seeming to cower silently, awaiting the
shocks that were to come.

The spirit of expectancy had penetrated into the battery itself. The
gun detachments stood to their guns, polishing and oiling for the
twentieth time each smallest detail. The men off duty stood about in
groups, talking in hushed voices, broken suddenly now and then by a
loud laugh quickly checked, as men will when something is expected to
happen. In the telephone dug-out sat the officers, silent save for
spasmodic efforts at general conversation, starting nervously at each
note of the buzzer. At last a sudden stiffening of the telephonist on
duty, "Yes, I'm battery, yes--battery action, sir!" and the tension
ceased. Instantly the battery leapt into life. "Right section,
lyddite, full charge, load! Switch angle four degrees right----"
Strings of order pour from the section commanders, echoed by the
"numbers one" in the gun-pits, dying away to silence again. Then
the voice of the senior subaltern, "Report battery ready to fire!"
a breathless minute, seemingly interminable; at last a faint buzz
from the telephone, the sharp cry "Fire No. 1 gun!" and before the
last sound of the order dies away the flash and roar of the howitzer
proclaim that for us, at least, the Battle of Loos has begun.

So as the day passes on we fall into our usual routine. The battery is
seemingly uninhabited but for the strident section commanders standing
between their hidden guns, except when reliefs descend into the pits
as into Avernus, out of which presently appear a knot of men dusty,
grimy and incredibly thirsty. Sometimes an officer comes up to the
section commander, stands reading his notebook over his shoulder for
a few seconds, nods as he receives a terse word or so as to rate of
fire, takes over the notebook, pencil and megaphone and carries on the
ceaseless clamour. All the time, at regular intervals, the guns fire
and the orders pass. Sometimes a keener note is heard, "Left section,
cease loading! Fresh target----" and a new string of orders, soon
followed by a resumption of the periodic roaring, as of a thunderstorm
controlled by an angel with a stop-watch. Or perhaps "Fire No. 3 gun!"
and no instant report. "What's the matter, No. 3?" "Missfire, sir!"
"All right, look sharp!" "All ready, sir!" "Fire No. 3, then!" and the
rhythm commences again. After a time it all has a strangely soothing
effect on the senses. First one loses the din of the surrounding
batteries, then fails to notice the report of one's own guns a few feet
away, giving orders mechanically notwithstanding. Perhaps a stifled
yawn and a glance at the watch--is that infernal fellow never coming
to relieve me? Then the warning voice of the telephonist, "Fresh
target coming through, sir!" and the wandering attention leaps into
watchfulness again.

Up at the observation post things are very different. There the
observing officer sits, watching the black and yellow smoke clouds
of the bursting high explosive, or the cotton-wool-like puffs of the
shrapnel. "No. 1 fired, sir!" The words of the telephonists seem to
come as from some other world. Here she comes, far away behind,
the whistle of the shell shrieking louder as she passes right
overhead--splendid! in the very trench itself; see the black smoke
spread out and rise slowly from a long section of trench, whilst the
green vegetation grows white with the falling chalk. No correction can
be made to that, "No. 1, repeat!" "No. 2 fired, sir!" Here she comes,
ah, a little to the right--"No. 2, ten minutes more left, fire!" So
it goes on, until this particular section of trench has practically
disappeared, leaving only a white scar. Then a change of target and
a repetition of the destruction. A fascinating business this on so
fine an autumn day, so fascinating that all sense of time is lost,
all conjecture as to whether the enemy will take it into his head to
select our observation post as a target is forgotten. The only thing
in the world is the measured fall of the shell and the swift framing
of the consequent order, the only pleasure the deep satisfaction of
a well-placed round, the only despair the haunting memory of a shot
wasted that might have been saved by a different procedure.

During those four days of ceaseless bombardment, the enemy made very
little reply except at certain points; we subsequently discovered why.
He made no attempt to distribute his fire along our front line, nor
did he make a systematic search for our observation posts, the vital
organ of every battery and its most vulnerable one. Certain spots he
selected, and with magnificent gunnery rendered them utterly untenable.
Shell after shell fell with mathematical accuracy into Vermelles, Le
Rutoire, Quality Street, but when once we had learnt these favoured
spots, our casualties were very few, being avoided by the simple
expedient of removing to places that appeared to be more suitable in
the capacity of health-resorts, or, where that was impossible, taking
to the cellars and remaining there.

Through four long days, from early in the morning until it became
too dark to observe the fall of the rounds, the pitiless shelling
continued, nor was the enemy allowed any respite at night. In the
batteries we were then busy replenishing ammunition and overhauling
every detail of the equipment, but still one gun per battery at least
fired steadily throughout the hours of darkness, not now on the enemy's
positions, but on his billets and on certain places through which
his reinforcements must pass on their way to the firing line. A few
rounds per hour only, sufficient to keep men crouching huddled in
cellars wherein was no possibility of sleep, or to shake the _morale_
of working parties faced with the necessity of running the gauntlet
of that steady rain. The moral effect upon troops already shaken by
bombardment is enormous, as we ourselves have had bitter cause to know
in the earlier months of the war. The effect of these days and nights
upon the enemy is vividly shown in the diary of a private in the Second
Reserve Infantry Regiment (Prussian) which fell into our hands later. A
few extracts will suffice. On the 21st he writes: "Towards mid-day the
trenches had already fallen in in many places. Dug-outs were completely
overwhelmed ... most of them fled, leaving rifles and ammunition behind
... the air was becoming heated from so many explosions." On the 22nd:
"Shells and shrapnel (_granatschuss_) are bursting all round ... in
places where the trench had disappeared I crawled on my hands and knees
amid a hail of bullets." On the 23rd: "Our look-out post was completely
destroyed, and my comrades killed in it ... even the strongest man may
lose his brain and nerves in a time like this." On the 24th: "The
fourth day of this terrible bombardment.... I am sorry to say that
there is no reply from our artillery."

Other prisoners, on being interrogated, testified to the awful effects
of our fire. Upon one in particular, an artillery officer, was found an
order that revealed the secret of the ineffectiveness of the enemy's
reply. After briefly setting out the measures to be taken in case of a
British offensive, it goes on as follows: "Owing to the fact that the
preponderance of hostile artillery in this sector is probably more than
two to one, and owing to the vital necessity of economy in ammunition,
battery commanders will confine their fire to targets whose importance
is known to them, and upon which they can count on producing a good
effect. They will under no circumstances allow themselves to be drawn
into anything approaching to an artillery duel." It was also stated
by many captured officers that during the night September 23-24 a
deserter from our line had conveyed to the German Staff the time and
date of the coming assault, and that to this fact they owed much of the
effectiveness of the measures taken to resist it. Yet another captured
document was of somewhat disconcerting interest to us gunners, namely,
a map upon which was very accurately shown the position of every allied
battery, with only two exceptions, in the whole of our sector. It seems
fairly certain that this was due to the most efficient espionage, and
not to aerial observation.

The material effect of such a bombardment is harder to judge, for it
must be remembered that, despite the high science of modern gunnery,
the percentage of direct hits upon a given objective is still
comparatively small. When, however, a heavy shell detonates under
favourable conditions, its destructive power is enormous. For instance,
on the third day I saw a direct hit by one of our largest howitzers
upon the boiler-house of Puits XVI. The shell penetrated the roof
and burst inside the building, sending up an enormous cloud of black
smoke tinged with the pink of pulverized brick, that hung for several
minutes. When it cleared, nothing but a gaunt and twisted framework of
steel girders remained, a heap of rubbish alone showing where the walls
had stood. A smaller howitzer was ordered to fell a brick wall, some
thirty feet high and many courses thick. The shell burst in regular
sequence at its foot, at roughly ten yards interval, each round
bringing down an equivalent section of the wall, until nothing remained
but a long pile of smoking rubble. And, more impressive, perhaps,
than all is the sight of a medium lyddite shell bursting in a narrow
trench. Out of the centre of a vivid flash fly heavy timbers, sandbags,
revetments, all that once formed the trench, sometimes the mangled
fragments of its occupants, whilst to right and left rolls the choking
smoke, driving its way into the deepest dug-outs, overcoming men many
yards away from the point of impact, spreading death in every form. Is
it to be wondered at that when our infantry reached these trenches they
found a few survivors, living indeed still, but struggling and raving
as the inmates of some ghastly Bedlam?



V

THE DAY OF ASSAULT

(September 25, 1915)


During the night of September 24-25, infantry patrols left the trenches
to explore the condition of the enemy's wire entanglements, upon the
destruction of which our field batteries had been engaged during the
previous day. Artillery fire was therefore reduced as much as could be
done with safety, and was chiefly directed upon reserves and billets,
in order to make the chance of rounds falling short injuring the
patrols as small as possible. During the evening the batteries opposed
to us had shown far greater liveliness than they had hitherto. Possibly
the enemy had got information as to where the decisive attack was
to be made, as it seems to be the fact that owing to the four days'
bombardment having taken place along the whole of the British front,
they had hitherto hesitated to reinforce any particular sector, but
had kept their reserves in a state of immediate readiness at their
various railway centres. If this was the case, it is very probable
that during the 23rd and 24th fresh batteries were placed in position
between Vendin-le-Vieil and Lens, and that these came into action on
the afternoon and evening of the 24th. This supposition is borne out
by the fact of the enemy's ability to bring a terrific fire to bear on
Loos as soon as we entered it.

Until the light failed, we had been busily engaged dropping shell
along the Double Crassier, upon whose grim black crest the enemy were
suspected of having mounted a number of machine guns. I had been in
the observation post nearly the whole day--it is, by the way, worthy
of remark as showing the immunity from retaliation that we had enjoyed
in our sector, that we used to walk to and from our O.P. at all hours
of the day through country literally covered with batteries, none
of whom up till now had suffered any casualties--but at about seven
o'clock duty recalled me to the battery. So absorbed had I been in the
difficult business of observing in the failing light, that although
I was conscious that shells were bursting all round, I had no idea
that anything out of the ordinary was taking place until one of our
telephonists, who had been out repairing the line, returned somewhat
shaken, having been blown off his feet and thrown some distance by a
high-explosive detonating close to him. His only complaint, I may say,
was that he had lost a pair of wire-cutters in the adventure!

However, as soon as I started my walk homewards along the "Harrow
Road," I found things still fairly lively. Several houses had been
destroyed since the morning, and some very fine examples of shell-holes
in the middle of the road added to the joys of the transport drivers,
whose wagons of all descriptions were now beginning to pour along it.
At one point a medium shell burst about twenty yards away from me--I
had heard it coming and found friendly refuge in the ditch--and before
the smoke had fairly cleared an armoured car and a motor cyclist
orderly drove simultaneously into it from opposite directions. Nobody
was hurt, but the road was most effectively obstructed, and the effect
produced was exactly like that of a block in Piccadilly, including the
language. I reached the battery safely, to find that the shelling
had not reached so far back, but that another form of excitement had
supervened. We had received orders to be ready to move at the shortest
possible notice, in case a general advance upon the morrow should
render a change in our position necessary. Of course, we had been
prepared for this for days, but even so this official pronouncement of
our hopes sent a thrill through every one of us. This was, then, the
decisive struggle, the Waterloo of the campaign at last!

Moving a battery of heavy guns is, however, no small matter, and one
that involves a vast amount of labour, not to be lightly undertaken.
A story is told of a certain major, distinguished alike for his
capability and his piety, who, knowing from bitter experience the
difficulties that attended a change of position of his battery, added
on this night to his usual formula of prayer these heart-felt words, "O
Lord, grant us victory in the coming struggle--_but not in my sector_!"

I think that despite the fact that the guns were silent for the first
time since the beginning of the bombardment, very few of us slept much
that night. Our schemes were perfect, certainly, every detail of our
actions of the morrow had been long worked out, each phase starting a
definite time after an empiric zero, which we now learnt was fixed for
5.50 a.m. But--would the enemy consent to fall in with those schemes?
Suppose they anticipated our offensive by an attack of their own? The
wire in front of their trenches was already destroyed, even now our
infantry were busy cutting wide passages through our own. How strong
were they in reality? Was their passive endurance of our fire only a
blind to lull us into security? These and a thousand other conjectures
troubled our minds all night, and it was with a deep feeling of relief
that we stood in the battery, no untoward incident having marred our
plans, at 5.30 a.m. on the 25th--the eagerly awaited Day Z!

Then were the scenes at the opening of the bombardment repeated. Along
our line all was again quiet, only from our right came the distant
echoes of the fighting round Souchez and the Labyrinth, a deep roar
that had now been continuous for over a week. Again we sit in the
telephone dug-out, tense and expectant. "Official time coming, sir!"
Watches are taken out in readiness. "Five thirty-five--now!" Quarter
of an hour to go! One by one we creep out to see for the last time that
all is ready. One minute more--"Hook your lanyards!" slowly the hand
ticks round--time zero--"Fire!" This was no deliberate bombardment,
every gun must in the short interval allowed it work to its utmost
capacity, every man sweating in the dust-laden pits must toil as he
never toiled before to feed it; into the luckless trenches in front
of us must pour such a blasting hurricane of fire that the resistance
prepared for our attack shall wither away in its deadly breath. But
soon our own troops will be pouring out of their trenches, charging
over the dividing ground to hurl themselves upon the trenches into
which our wrath is now being poured, and then our fire must be lifted
lest we do more harm than good. All is arranged for in the time-table.
At forty minutes past zero, or 6.30 a.m., every battery lifts its fire
from the front line to the second line, and still the furious fire
continues. But now we know that the blow is being struck--what would
we all not give to be in action in the open as in old days so that we
could see the assault, watch the joining of the battle? Unprofitable
thoughts! let us rather devote every fibre of our beings to the only
task by which we can help, the task of pouring an ever-increasing
weight of shell upon the defenders. That morning dawned grey and dull.
From the observing post it was hardly possible to see further than
the front line trenches at half-past five, and until the moment of
the assault visibility did not greatly increase. However, this was to
be the battlefield, we knew, at all events in the first stages of the
struggle. The expectancy of viewing the greatest battle in history was
to our little party in the O.P. strangely _banal_; I, for one, could
not grasp the reality of it; I felt as though I were in a box waiting
for the actors to come upon a stage before which the curtain had risen
prematurely. There was no sign of battle, no movement that the eye
could detect over the whole of the wide prospect before us. And then
suddenly came time zero, bringing with it a scene that could never
be forgotten. From the whole length of our front trench, as far as
the eye could reach, rose, vertically at first, a grey cloud of smoke
and gas, that, impelled by a gentle wind, spread slowly towards the
enemy's trenches, very soon enveloping the whole of our range of vision
in its opaque veil. This was our view of the assault, this dismal
vapour the aura that was to surround a thousand sacrifices, the cloak
that was to hide a thousand gallant deeds, the winding-sheet that was
to enwrap so many a hero. Modern war holds no dramatic spectacles to
enchant the brush of a Meisonnier, no drama is wrought upon a lime-lit
stage to arrest the pulses of the watching nations. Yet none the less
is its fascination omnipotent; its magnetic attraction, that draws
into its vortex every man that owns a soul to plague him, is none the
less irresistible; its influence still has the power to weld a chain
of heroes out of a dirty, blasphemous, footsore crowd of sinners. War
tends to the uplifting of the race, not to its debasement, let him who
has faced it deny it if he can!

At 6.30 a.m. the infantry left their trenches and, so far as we were
concerned, vanished into the smoke. All we could see were the columns
scaling the ladders and starting to double across the open. Some seemed
to trip as they ran, and fell in various attitudes from which they did
not trouble to rise. At first we thought that our wire had not been
thoroughly cut, and that these men had fallen over some unseen strands.
But the red pools that slowly surrounded each soon undeceived us, the
while that the roar of rifle-fire from the enemy's side grew ever more
menacing. We could not see what success attended those who went on, but
we heard subsequently that practically no resistance was encountered
on the enemy's first and second line, but that the third line was very
strongly held and considerably delayed, in some sectors permanently
arrested, our advance.

The battery and the O.P. were equally desirable as far as vision went,
the battery being blind by nature and the O.P. by science. It has,
incidentally, yet to be proved that the hindrance to the enemy caused
by the use of smoke is not more than counterbalanced by the paralysing
of the initiative of one's own artillery, who are entirely dependent,
when this method of warfare is employed, upon time-tables and such
messages as the advancing infantry may be able to send back. However,
that is not a question meet for discussion except in works devoted
to the abstruse study of strategy and tactics. Let us return to the
passage of events in the battery.

Here hopes and fears fought for the mastery throughout the morning,
in accordance with the portents of the day. An order to lift fire on
to a more distant point seemed to mean that our attack was developing
against it, and the men in the pits paused to cheer in the midst of
their unceasing labour. Then suddenly fire would be swept back on to
a point that we had determined in our own minds to have been captured
long ago, and our spirits fell, the detachments setting their teeth
and straining at the heated guns to force by sheer weight of metal the
taking of the disputed point. Or, saddest sight of all, down the road
flowed an ever-widening stream of casualties, ambulances laden with
stretchers upon which twisted forms lay very still, others with the
less severely wounded, and a motley crowd on foot with minor injuries,
supporting one another as one imagines the scriptural halt, maimed and
blind to have done. I think that none of us realized till we saw the
magnitude of this stream, how fierce a fight was raging in front of us.
If this sight hardened our determination, the next procession went far
to cheer us. A few hundred prisoners were marched past us on the way to
the rear, fine upstanding men enough, looking perfectly fit and in the
prime of life, disposing effectually, in my mind at least, of the fable
born of our national love for self-deceit that the enemy were hard put
to it to find men fit for service.

The German batteries were now devoting their attention to our advancing
infantry, endeavouring at the same time to create a barrage behind
them on our main arteries of communication. The Harrow Road suffered
to a certain extent, but the greatest slaughter took place on the
Lens-Béthune and Vermelles-Hulluch roads. On the former the whole of
a divisional train was overwhelmed by shrapnel, blocking the road for
a quarter of a mile with shattered wagons and dead horses (a picture
of which debris subsequently went the round of the illustrated Press
under the heading "Captured German Battery at Loos"). Two of our
field batteries that endeavoured to come into action in the open
between Quality Street and La Chapelle de Notre Dame de Consolation
suffered very heavily and were silenced. Of the losses of the infantry,
nobody who did not see the procession of casualties and, worse
still, the burial parties of the next few days, can form an adequate
picture. "British Offensive in the West," we read, "Gain of five
miles of trench." Each foot of that five miles cost us a life and a
sum of human agony such as this world has never known. Watch that
communication trench marked "Stretchers to rear only." Here they come,
two stretcher-bearers, one limping painfully, the sleeve of the other
growing ever darker with a purple stain that spreads slowly over it.
Between them they carry a poor wretch with both legs broken, whose low
moan of agony rises to a sharp wail at each jolting step. Supporting
themselves on the shoulders of the stretcher-bearers are two more,
one with his breath gurgling through a throat choked with blood, one
with a shattered shoulder and side. Through the treacherous clay that
covers the bottom of the trench they make their way of agony, reeling
from side to side as their feet fail to find a foothold, cursing their
Maker for the horror of their torture. See, the first stretcher-bearer
slips--his wounded foot will bear him no longer--and down falls the
whole party in one screaming, writhing mass. Two miles more: is there
no end to human suffering? is heaven so pitiless? There is the answer,
a sharp whistle, a low report, a puff of smoke just over the trench,
and all is quiet, save for one form that crawls very slowly on hands
and knees through the yellow clay that grows dark crimson in his
track. In these terms must we reckon the price of victory.

This is not the place, nor is it within my ability, to give an
historical study of the varying phases of the battle. Suffice it to
say that by noon the 15th Division had swept through the northern end
of Loos, and were engaged upon that part of the eastern slope of the
valley known as Hill 70. There had been considerable street-fighting
in the village, but the enemy had evidently realized that this was not
the place to make a determined stand. Their strategy appears to have
been to concentrate their forces on the edge of the valley, leaving
within it only detachments of such strengths that the loss occasioned
by their sacrifice would be altogether outweighed by the gain in time
that they secured to the main defence. And nobly these detachments
performed the task allotted to them. One battery took up a position
along the Loos-Benifontaine road, and remained in action under a fire
whose intensity it is impossible to describe until our troops were
almost upon it, when its fire ceased, not from lack of courage to
continue, but because no single man was left alive to serve the guns.
Let us give the enemy his due, we are not fighting a nation of cowards
and assassins, as we are so fond of trying to believe, but of brave and
determined men, whom to defeat will call from us our utmost energies.

As soon as we had taken Loos, the enemy opened a steady artillery
fire upon the village, in order to prevent its use by us as a _point
d'appui_ for further attack, and to hinder observation from the
various landmarks it contained. There is so little natural cover that
this must have been a serious disadvantage to us, as by this time the
communication trenches leading from the German front line trenches that
we now held up the slopes of the valley were choked with dead, and
reinforcements had to run the gauntlet of a well-directed fire in order
to reach our line of attack. This may have something to do with that
fatal delay that left the attacking divisions unsupported and checked
an advance that might well have resulted in the capture of Lens, which
would probably in turn have sealed the fate of Lille. We have learnt
from prisoners that the enemy anticipated the worst in the early hours
of the morning, and that the feebleness of the final blow amazed them.
Had fresh divisions poured down the Lens road through Cité St. Auguste
and Cité St. Laurent, rolling the enemy back upon the French who
were advancing towards Vimy, who knows what might not have happened?
Conjecture is useless, regret of a lost opportunity must take its place.

The facts so far as known--and no two accounts, even of those who
took part in the struggle, quite agree--are as follows: The 47th
Division, London Territorials all of them, the heroes of the day, but
of whose performances, because less showy, little has been heard, had
by 9.30 a.m. surmounted a series of obstacles, the storming of any
one of which would have earned them lasting fame. Like a tide they
poured over the western end of the dreaded Double Crassier, utterly
regardless of withering machine-gun fire, and swept to the attack of
the walled cemetery that stands to the south-west of Loos. From here,
after a titanic struggle, they dislodged the strong party of its
defenders, and, gaining fresh impetus from the check, irresistibly
fought their way through the outskirts of the village, in which every
point of vantage was held against them, right up to its heart, the
mine buildings that cluster at the foot of the Pylons. This fortress
they stormed and won, and the rush of their assault carried them on
its crest over the Loos Crassier--another high embankment of refuse
and slag--over the exposed surface of the plain, into the copse that
stretches westward from Loos Chalk Pit. Here at last for a while they
rested, and here for the present we may leave them. May the great
city be for ever proud of the achievements of her sons this day, the
thousand forgotten deeds of heroism of which her ears will never hear!

Meanwhile the 15th Division, having captured the Lens Road Redoubt
that straddled the Lens-Béthune road, were engaged in clearing the
northern portion of the village of Loos. The 1st Division, the left
wing of the Fourth Corps, had met with varying fortune. The 1st Brigade
had penetrated to the enemy's reserve trenches in front of Cité St.
Elie and Hulluch, roughly upon the line of the Lens-La Bassée road.
The 2nd Brigade, impeded by a mass of concealed wire that our fire had
failed to destroy, were held up in the direction of Lone Tree and Bois
Carrée. This necessitated the bringing up of the divisional reserve,
who managed to advance between the left flank of the 15th Division and
the Loos Road Redoubt, a strong point in the German line on the track
leading from Loos to Vermelles. This relieved the pressure on the
2nd Brigade, and the Loos Road Redoubt, attacked from the front and
both flanks, fell into our hands, compelling some six or seven hundred
of the enemy to surrender. But the delay had enabled the Germans to
reinforce Hulluch and the Crassier of Puits XIII bis to such an extent
that the attack was diverted to the right, in which direction it
advanced as far as the Bois Hugo and Puits XIV bis, both being situated
on the eastern slope of the valley to the north of Hill 70. Of the
events of the afternoon it is impossible to speak with any degree of
certainty. It seems most probable that the paths of the three divisions
having brought them all on to the rising ground to the eastward and
north-eastward of Loos, an attack was made upon the redoubt that
existed on Hill 70 at the point where a track from Loos to Cité St.
Auguste crosses the Lens-La Bassée road. It also seems probable that
after many vicissitudes this redoubt was captured and subsequently
held, though by a force utterly inadequate for the purpose. About 8
p.m. a messenger reached one of our batteries, having lost his way in
the dark, bearing a message addressed to the headquarters of one of the
Brigades forming the 15th Division, to the effect that the sender was
holding Hill 70 with a mixed handful of men, numbering a thousand in
all, and urgently requesting the immediate supply of sandbags and other
material for defence.

In the battery we were, of course, ignorant of all these things at
the time, and the progress of events could only be conjectured by
the position of the spots upon which we were ordered to fire and the
reports of wounded passing by us on their way to the rear. We knew of
the fall of Loos by the forlorn procession of refugees who had been
living in the village all through the German occupation, but who were
sent back immediately upon the capture of the place by our troops. Be
it noted in parenthesis that much consternation was caused in a certain
office by the arrival of a telephone message to this effect: "The loose
women are expected shortly, please arrange for their accommodation!"
From the observation post came the news of the taking of the Double
Crassier and the Cemetery, but beyond that, and the information that
no attack had been launched towards the Puits XVI ridge, the observing
officer had nothing further to tell us. But I think that in the ominous
absence of any further reference to our projected advance, we all felt
something of the chill breath of disappointment, that whispered that
our high hopes had somehow failed of their realization.



VI

STRAIGHTENING THE LINE


Straightening out the line is an expression frequently found in
official dispatches, and it may usually be understood to cover the
operations that take place after a definite attack. In the case of
the Battle of Loos, these operations extended into the third week
of October, and as a corollary to an account of this great event,
and as a study of what was in effect a series of minor battles, the
following sketch is intended. There were many events during these days
that are not yet fully understood, the time has not yet come when a
dispassionate history may be written. Controversy is yet busy with the
names of many disputed positions. I make no attempt at contribution to
any opinion expressed, but merely endeavour to convey some faint idea
of such portions of the drama as were played before the eyes of the
artillery observers.

During the night of September 25-26, the general position was
something as follows. The enemy, from a point not far south of Fosse
8 to the Double Crassier, had been driven out of his front line to a
greater or less distance in rear. Here, many months before this time,
he had already constructed a second line of defence in anticipation of
such a possibility. We, finding ourselves confronted by this line, were
obliged to make some sort of cover for our advanced infantry, using
the abandoned German front line and communication trenches as far as
they could be adapted for our reserves and supports. Along the whole
of this front of advance, therefore, both sides were busily engaged
upon strengthening their respective positions, covering meanwhile their
working parties with rifle fire. The artillery could not render much
direct assistance, the light had failed before the final positions of
the infantry on either side were determined, and the risk of injuring
friends as much as foes was too great. The function of the guns was
to keep a steady fire directed upon the possible lines of approach of
hostile reinforcements, which were pouring up on both sides during the
whole of the night. The front of advance was something as follows: From
the south of the canal we remained in our old trenches to a point just
north of the quarries, and from here the position we held ran through
the front line of the Hohenzollern Redoubt, of which we held the front
and the enemy the rear, thence somewhat to the west of the Lens-La
Bassée road in front of Cité St. Elie and Hulluch, through Chalk Pit
Wood and Puits XIV his, somewhere over the western slopes of Hill 70,
then abruptly back to the Double Crassier, where it joined our old line
again.

Up till midnight both sides worked comparatively undisturbed, except on
Hill 70, where attacks and counter-attacks followed one another without
intermission. But at about 12.30 a.m., the enemy, having apparently
succeeded in bringing up sufficient troops for the purpose, made a
series of local attacks, the fiercest of which seems to have been on
our line from the Bois Hugo to Hill 70. This attack was repulsed, as
were the remainder of the series made at the same time. The weather
now became even more misty than before, and the cold drizzle that had
been falling all the evening increased in intensity. Shortly after
dawn, at 5.30 a.m., the enemy made a more determined attack from much
the same part of his line, in which he scored some initial successes,
afterwards retrieved, and by 6.30 a.m. the position was the same as it
had been all night. Observation was extremely bad on the morning of
the 26th, so much so that it was fully 8 a.m. before artillery could
be effectively used. But at this hour we again assumed the offensive,
and opened a furious bombardment upon the redoubt on the summit of Hill
70, a work already of extreme strength, and now doubly so after the
feverish energies of large working parties during the night. At nine
o'clock the bombardment ceased, and the infantry rushed to the assault,
but were unable to penetrate the hostile defences. They were re-formed
and the attempt was repeated, again unsuccessfully.

Towards mid-day the local offensive passed into the hands of the enemy,
who made a determined attack from the Bois Hugo and succeeded in
driving our line back a considerable distance and recapturing Puits XIV
bis. This was a distinct advantage to him, for it gave him a point of
vantage from which he could direct machine-gun fire upon the flank of
troops moving to the assault of Hill 70. No further determined attacks
were made by either side on the afternoon of the 26th or the night
26th-27th, although desultory fighting continued, and various reliefs
and reinforcements were made amongst our own troops. The 3rd Cavalry
Division, who up till now had been waiting for the chance that would
have been theirs had we succeeded in piercing the German line, were
dismounted and relieved the troops holding Loos, where they remained
for a couple of days, some of them taking part in the final assault
upon Hill 70 on the 27th.

On the afternoon of the 27th every gun that could possibly be brought
to bear opened a furious fire upon the Hill 70 Redoubt. For two hours
the bombardment continued in a light that nearly broke the observers'
hearts, so early did the evening close in, and so persistently hung the
mist. Then, with one earth-shaking salvo from the massed batteries,
it ceased, and the Guards Division rushed to the assault. What they
achieved will probably never be accurately known, undoubtedly they
penetrated the first line of the redoubt, but the enemy, continually
reinforced from his fortress of Cité St. Auguste, contrived to expel
them, and slowly they were swept back, in the gathering darkness of
night, to the positions from which they had sprung. The attack had
failed, Hill 70, the key of Lens, was still in the enemy's hands.

The strength of this position lay perhaps not so much in its natural
advantages, as in the artificial means which had been employed to
render it capable of effective defence. Its position upon one of
the main arteries leading from the fortress of Lens made it easy to
reinforce from Cité St. Auguste, one of the outliers of that fortress.
The western slopes of the hill, up which the attack must come, formed
a sort of glacis to the redoubt, on to which observers in the redoubt
itself or in the woods around La Ferme des Mines de Lens could direct
fire from their batteries at Pont-a-Vendin, Cité St. Emile and Cité St.
Laurent. The work itself was of considerable extent and exceptionally
formidable, and was probably impregnable by frontal attack when fully
manned. Further, all possible approaches to it were enfiladed from the
northward by machine-gun fire from Puits XIV bis and some ruined houses
at the edge of a small wood, and from the southward by the strong works
at the edge of Cité St. Auguste, namely Puits XI and a building known
as the Dynamitière. Our failure to capture this important strategical
point was therefore regrettable, but not incomprehensible.

A couple of days after the failure of our last attack upon Hill 70, a
redistribution of the front took place between the Allied Armies. The
Tenth French Army took over the new line up to a point near the Chalk
Pit Wood, the boundary of their territory, which included the village
of Loos, being now roughly a line drawn from this point through Quality
Street, and thence along the Lens-Béthune Road. From this time Hill 70
ceased to be a British objective, and the whole of the line in front of
Lens came under one command, instead of being divided right in front of
the fortress, a change of considerable administrative advantage.

During these days, from the 25th to the end of the month, there had
been spasmodic fighting along the rest of the front of advance,
especially about the quarries and the Hohenzollern Redoubt. This latter
work, in which we had gained a footing on the 25th, was repeatedly
reported lost and re-captured, but eventually it was found to be
untenable under the enemy's fire from Auchy and Fosse 8, and to a
lesser degree from Cité St. Elie and Hulloch. The actual new line as
now consolidated was therefore the same as on the evening of the 25th,
except that it ran to the westward of the Hohenzollern and at the foot
of the slopes of Hill 70.

During the succeeding week no events of outstanding importance took
place, the infantry were busy in the improvement of their new trenches,
and the artillery in keeping the hostile batteries quiet while they
did so. But on October 8, "the lid suddenly came off Hell," as Gunner
Wolverhampton aptly expressed it. During the early part of the morning
the enemy had been unusually quiet, but about ten o'clock he opened a
bombardment upon the whole of the new line, more especially upon that
part of it in front of Loos, upon the village itself, and upon the
trenches between Hill 70 and the Double Crassier. This bombardment
grew in intensity, and towards noon we were ordered to retaliate
upon certain parts of his line. A few minutes later, the wind being
in his favour, he let loose a dense cloud of smoke and gas, and at
the same time lifted his fire on to our batteries and observation
stations, employing a large percentage of lachrymatory gas shell. Very
shortly after this, his counter-attack was launched. As on the 25th,
very little was visible from our observation stations, owing to the
obscurity caused by the smoke. It appears, however, that he developed
two separate attacks, one issuing from the Bois Hugo and the other
from the directions of the Dynamentière and Puits XI. These attacking
columns were composed of waves of men in close order, each wave,
according to the French observers, who were more suitably placed as far
as noting details went than our own, as the smoke did not blow in their
direction, being composed of a mass of men six abreast and twenty-five
deep. The French field batteries were at that time massed close
together, and their commander held their fire until the attackers were
well clear of the cover from which they issued. As soon as this was
the case, every battery was ordered to open fire at its maximum rate,
which they did with results that were nothing short of appalling. Our
battery happened to be just in front of them, and anything like their
fire cannot be imagined. For fully an hour the continuous roar was
such that telephones were useless, orders shouted through a megaphone
into the recipient's ear absolutely inaudible. The effect of such a
cannonade upon a slow moving mass of men in the open may be imagined.
It is said that the loss of one of the attacking columns in dead alone
was upwards of six thousand, and this estimate was subsequently largely
increased. The hopeless position of these unfortunates, was, curiously
enough, enhanced by an accident. One French battery had suffered
severely a few days before, having been badly shelled, whereby it had
lost all its officers and had had to change its position. Being at this
time still somewhat disorganized, it was late in opening fire, and when
it did so, opened at the same range as the other batteries had done
some minutes before, thereby directing its fire upon a point that the
attackers had already passed over, so placing a curtain of fire behind
them. Caught thus between two hail-storms of shell, the massed columns
had no escape, and were mown down where they stood.

The conditions in the battery during this affair were curious and
extremely interesting. Each gun was firing as fast as the shell could
be loaded and the round laid, orders being passed by gesticulation
as best they could. Behind us the roar of the French batteries grew
until it was only by watching for the flashes that we could tell when
our own guns had fired. All round the hostile shells were bursting,
filling the air with a sweet ether-like vapour that sent a sharp pain
shooting through one's eyes until it seemed as if complete blindness
must shortly supervene. The tears coursing down the men's faces made
strange white tracks through the grime of battle, till the detachments
became fierce, ghost-like and terrible, the reeking demons of the
pit, striving and sweating that they might slay ever more and more,
that the bitter screams of their mutilated victims might swell ever
louder into the livid heavens. And the endless succession of ammunition
wagons, their drivers clad in gas-helmets till they resembled the
Inquisitors of old, lashing their horses into a yet more frantic gallop
as they neared their goal, seemed as the shell burst all about them
like monstrous chariots of hell. And all the time the French reserves
were massing behind us, passing in turn down the _boyaux_ into the
threatened trenches, each party as they passed cheering the roaring
guns, and winning from the detachments a hoarse shout in return, as for
a moment they rested from their ceaseless labour.

Slowly the inferno of sound died away, and with its first ebb came
the voice of rumour. We had lost the Double Crassier, and the enemy
had gained a footing on the slag-heap of Fosse 5, he was close to us,
and we should have to save the guns as best we could! The French had
repelled the attack, and, following up their advantage, had swept into
Lens! The truth of the affair we did not discover till later, when it
appeared that a portion of our new line from the middle of the Double
Crassier northwards had been captured, re-occupied and captured again,
that the enemy had been finally driven out, but that the trench was
now so full of dead as to afford no cover to the living. But for this
minor success, if success it was, the furious counter-attack had failed
with great loss to the enemy. If our total losses during the operations
of September and October were between eighty and ninety thousand,
it is believed that the enemy lost about ten thousand upon this one
day alone. During the night of the 8th-9th the Germans contrived to
establish themselves in the disputed length of trench, but otherwise
the position remained for the next two days the same as before the
counter-attack.

On the 11th the French developed a fresh attack in this sector, with
the primary object of retaking the lost trench, and the secondary
object of pushing such successes they might achieve right up past the
end of the Double Crassier and Puits XI until they should rest upon
the mineral railway running past Puits XI and Cité St. Pierre as far
as Cité St. Elisabeth, thus forming an offensive line from which to
threaten the Dynamitière and the enemy's approaches to Hill 70. We were
called upon to assist in this enterprise, and at 2 p.m. commenced to
drop shell along the Lens-La Bassée and Lens-Béthune roads, from their
junction in Lens up to Cité St. Auguste and Cité St. Laurent. We also
kept the church in the latter place under fire to prevent its use as
an observation station. About 3 p.m. the French launched their troops
to the assault, and succeeded in recapturing the lost trench, but
owing to intense machine-gun fire from Puits XI and XII and from Cité
St. Pierre, they failed to advance any further along the line of the
Double Crassier towards the mineral railway.

The primary object of the operations so far had been the capture of
Lens. The importance of the place can hardly be over-estimated. If
we imagine England with Lancashire and the West Riding in hostile
occupation, we shall have a parallel to the case of France deprived of
the Department du Nord and part of Pas de Calais, except that in our
own case we should still have left to us many manufacturing districts,
and France has but few. The importance to the economic life of France
of the three towns of Lille, Roubaix and Tourcoing is comparable to the
importance of Manchester to us, and the coal-mining districts lying
round Lens, which include such fields as those of Courrières, Drocourt
and Dourges occupy relatively a far more important position than
those of the West Riding. Lens itself is the key to this productive
area, whose energies are at least as valuable to the enemy as to its
rightful owners, and Lens has in skilful hands become a fortress in the
modern sense, far more difficult of capture than older works at one
time deemed impregnable. It is comparatively easy to concentrate fire
upon guns whose position is known, as they must be when permanently
mounted in the fortifications of the text-books, and once a sufficient
concentration of fire has been obtained, guns so sited, being incapable
of removal, must sooner or later be put out of action, but it is
impossible so utterly to destroy a city and its suburbs that its ruins
are no longer sufficient to afford cover to mobile ordnance and machine
guns. It has been found that a building that in itself is merely a
screen from direct observation, becomes, when destroyed by artillery
fire, a heap of ruins amongst which may be concealed artillery and
machine guns, and which by its very mass is an excellent protection
against hostile fire. Bombard this type of fortress as you will, its
defenders are not tied by their gun-mountings to any one position,
but can move their batteries from place to place, knowing full well
that the attackers, with each round they fire, are preparing fresh
situations wherein they may be concealed. It will surely be found that
this war has sounded the knell of permanently fixed guns except for
purposes of coast defence, where alone the immobile gun has triumphed
in the face of many years' accumulation of scornful criticism.

The last phase of the operations was due to a desire on our part to
strengthen as much as possible our position from the quarries to the
new point of junction with the French. On October 13 our battery was
ordered to open a bombardment upon the German trenches that lay along
the Lens-La Bassée road to the west of Hulluch. This bombardment
continued for an hour or so, and at two o'clock the infantry advanced
to the assault, we at the same time lifting our fire on to the village
of Hulluch itself, starting at the western end and slowly increasing
the range so as gradually to drive through the whole place. But at
half-past three our hopes of a capture of Hulluch similar to that
of Loos were dashed to the ground by an order from headquarters to
come back on to the western edge of the village. This we did until
darkness supervened, and we were ordered to cease firing. As far as
we were concerned, this was the most exacting day we had yet known,
our expenditure of ammunition during the five or six hours that we
were in action being greater than that of any previous day. So rapidly
were the guns worked that the continual concussion broke the platform
of one of the guns, so that in the middle of the action it had to be
hauled out of its pit on to a hard road close by, and fired without
concealment of any kind, regardless of the risk of observation from
hostile captive balloons or aeroplanes. It may be added that next day
the detachment found some rafters in a ruined building and from these
constructed a new platform for themselves without any form of skilled
assistance.

It was not until the next day that we learnt the history of the attack.
The intention had been to capture the Hohenzollern Redoubt, and from
that as a _point d'appui_ to extend our line along the Lens-La Bassée
road as far as Chalk Pit Wood, with the possibility of capturing Cité
St. Elie and Hulluch as advance posts. The attempt only partially
succeeded. We contrived to advance our line in front of Hulluch almost
on to the road, but failed to occupy permanently any of the German
trenches. The Hohenzollern was apparently taken, but could not be held,
as upon September 25, under concentrated fire from Fosse 8. Between
Cité St. Elie and Hulluch, also, history repeated itself. Concealed
wire, so placed that the artillery observers could find no place from
which satisfactorily to observe the effect of their fire, held up the
infantry assault. An attempt had been made to destroy this wire by
map shooting combined with the use of high-explosive shell, but the
destruction was not complete, and the attack failed. It was said that
a handful of men actually penetrated into Hulluch but were never seen
again, and that for a short time our infantry held the German trenches
in front of the village. But with the enemy established in houses
overlooking them, and occupying a strong commanding line along the
crassier of Puits XIII bis, these trenches were untenable and had to be
evacuated. The net gain of ground during the day was a depth of some
two hundred yards on a front of rather less than a mile. At the same
time the French, who had been supporting our attack upon the right,
reported that the northern suburbs of Lens, Cités St. Auguste, St.
Laurent and St. Pierre, had been so carefully prepared and were held
in such strength that for the moment a frontal attack upon them was
inadvisable.

Here, then, the offensive operations that began with the Four Days'
bombardment, may be said to have ended. Although the gain of ground
seemed insignificant, consisting as it did of one ruined village
and a few square miles of fallowland, and although Lens still stood
triumphant and untaken, there is still much to be reckoned in the
Allies' favour. Victory it was not, and no amount of advertisement
will ever make it so. But it was an exhibition of strength on the
part of the Allies, and a stern reminder to the enemy that their
power of offensive on the Western Front had permanently passed into
our hands. The resources in men, money and munitions of the Central
Powers are decreasing, those of the Allies increasing; equal losses
on either side, therefore, is a condition favourable to the latter.
It is maintained that our losses were too great in proportion to the
results achieved. Yes, perhaps they were, but, had they been only
slightly greater, had more men been flung into the struggle at the
critical time, it is impossible to forecast what the issue of the
fighting might have been. The enemy knew this, and was prepared for a
substantial retirement. Conjecture is unprofitable, but let us as a
nation learn the lesson that men and men alone will terminate this
war. Other factors may check it temporarily; it may be to the advantage
of the enemy to agree to an apparently disastrous peace in order to
gain a respite for fresh preparation. But a certain page of history
should harden our resolution, should make us convinced of the bitter
fact that there is no peace for the world except in the disappearance
of the German Empire or our own. _Delenda est Carthago_--let us preach
the lessons of the Punic wars in season and out of season till every
soul in these islands realizes their significance at the present day.
The world is no larger than it was then, there is still no room in
it for two rival World Powers, one must sink into obscurity before
the might of its rival. And, accepting this incontrovertible fact as
an axiom, let us face our position, let us remember how the power of
Rome trembled in the balance as she strained every nerve in her system
during Hannibal's Italian campaign, and let us realize at last that
the destruction of our rival will demand of us sacrifices compared to
which the efforts that we have yet made are nothing, are as the puny
efforts of a feeble infant contrasted with the struggle of a strong
man wrestling for his life. And if the operations that have been named
the Battle of Loos have any share in bringing these things home to us,
their effects will be far more beneficial than those of a spectacular
victory.



VII

LOOS


One of our officers was fortunate enough, very shortly after the events
of September 25, to have the opportunity of reconnoitring the village
of Loos, with a double purpose in view, namely to verify some landmarks
that were doubtful from our observation posts, and to discover if any
points existed suitable for permanent occupation as O.P.s. There were
two ways open to him of reaching the village from his battery position,
of which the first was to proceed to North Maroc and thence take the
road to Les Cabarets and from there the track that runs into Loos at
its south-western corner, and the second was to walk to Quality Street,
thence along the Lens-Béthune road to the old German front-line, and
so through their communication trenches into any required part of the
village. Time being of importance, he chose the former method, and
set out one morning at about 8 a.m. The narrative of his adventures
in Loos, as throwing light upon the conditions obtaining in a place
that had been heavily shelled by us until our capture of it, and has
ever since been equally heavily shelled by the enemy, may be of some
interest.

Once clear of the houses that screened his movements from the hostile
lines, the road seemed very lonely and deserted. So far as the eye
could see he was the only living person in the whole of the wide
valley, and the sense of being under the observation of many pairs of
eyes that were to him invisible produced in him a strangely nervous
reaction, as though he were the principal actor in some horrible
nightmare. It seemed as though every footstep rang upon the hard road
with a note audible for miles, as though he were a gigantic black
figure upon an unbroken background of white, as though the watching
eyes bent such burning rays upon him that he could feel them pierce him
as he moved. I have walked that road myself many times since, more than
once when it has been under fire, and know now that it is as safe or
safer than many others whose dangers never concern the most nervous,
yet an echo of these first sensations of his has invariably struck me
when I have done so, and I can understand his feelings. It can only be
attributed to the fact that being alone in the middle of the valley one
imagines that one is a conspicuous target for any one who will to spend
a round upon.

The road crosses first our own old front line, then the German, over
both of which substantial bridges had been built directly after the
advance. It was not until he had crossed our own line that the cost
of the battle became evident to him. Then he began to understand.
Between the lines a burial party was at work, busy with the task of
identifying and interring our own dead. Behind the German line the
operation of clearing the battlefield had scarcely begun. Here the
dead lay thick, our own and the enemy's in inextricable confusion.
Here was a group of three or four, showing where a well-timed shrapnel
had burst, there four or five in a line, stricken down as they charged
by rifle fire from some fiercely-held support trench. And everywhere,
mingling with the dead, were all the many insignia of war, rifles,
ammunition, tins of beef, biscuits, cases of bombs, some unopened,
some with their contents scattered round them, everything that is
carried forward in a modern battle. At Les Cabarets itself, which is
in reality the junction of the Lens-Béthune and Grenay-Hulluch roads,
and which lies a few hundred yards south-east of the Lens Road Redoubt,
the struggle seemed to have been fiercer. It is probable that the
ruins of the houses that once stood at the cross-road had been held by
a detachment of the enemy, for lying round them were a heap of dead
Germans, their rifles in many cases still in their hands, and about
these in a narrow circle the bodies of our attacking troops, some lying
as they had fired, their legs spread out, their rifles fallen from
their shoulders and their heads resting on them, as though an angel
of sleep had touched them even as they pulled the trigger. Close by,
two horses bearing the brand of the broad arrow were quietly grazing
on the rank grass that covered the fallow land, their broken harness
still hanging on their backs, evidently the team of a shell-shattered
wagon that lay near by. My friend was tempted to pause and investigate
further, but a dozen bullets whizzing by quickly convinced him that
the locality was not healthy, and he made haste upon his way. Nor was
he more lucky with the track that led from here towards Loos. Some
persevering sniper evidently regarded him as fair game, and after
this enthusiast had displayed his marksmanship by narrowly missing him
twice in quick succession, my friend abandoned the field to him and
took to a communication trench that ran in the required direction. He
says that he hopes never to take a more hideous walk. The trench was
literally paved with dead Germans--it must have been used as a line of
defence against the advance of the 47th Division--some lying on their
backs with their eyes staring heavenwards, others horribly buried in
the thick clay that lay in the lower stretches of the trench, so that
his attention was only called to their presence by a sudden dreadful
yielding beneath his feet. They lay too thick for it to be possible
to avoid treading upon them, and though more than once he deserted
the trench for the clean earth of the plains, his friend the sniper
was bent on each occasion upon showing him that he was still a happy
memory to him, and he was forced to descend again. However, it was over
at last, and with the greatest relief that he had ever experienced he
found himself in the shelter of the outlying houses of Loos.

Here for a few minutes he stood and studied a plan with which he had
been provided. His objective was the Pylons, easy enough to see,
certainly, but unfortunately on the far side of an open square or
market-place by the church, upon which the German gunners were making
very pretty practice with field guns and light howitzers. There was
nothing for it but to find a way round, along the streets choked with
rubbish and torn by great craters, taking short cuts through gardens
converted into cemeteries, in which the dead lying on the surface were
more numerous than those below, across courtyards wherein the horses
who had been stabled there lay where the flying bullets had found
them. Strange work, this threading of the city of the dead, the sense
of isolation growing as one advanced until one seemed a visitant to
a world struck by a celestial bombardment that had left none alive
to tell the tale. Troops there were in plenty, but they remained in
the wonderful excavations that had been made; none, save rarely a
messenger, crouching behind a wall as the whizz and roar of the shell
echoed amongst the torn buildings, racing across an open space in a
brief interval of quiet, ventured forth, unless before dawn to relieve
his companions who were stationed in the hastily-dug trenches in front
of the village. But during the course of this expedition my friend
discovered a very valuable fact, namely, that the principal fire of
the enemy was directed only upon certain spots, and was not being
distributed indiscriminately over the village. Avoid these spots,
and except for a few casual "universal" bursting overhead, one was
perfectly safe, _voilà tout_! But that same casual universal is a very
jumpy toy. You hear it coming, certainly, but far too quickly for you
to do anything, and before you know where you are it has burst just
over you with an ear-splitting crack, and small fragments hit the
ground all round you with a most unpleasant thud. "Woolly bears," the
men call them, for they leave a curious cotton-wool-like wreath of
smoke in the air for some seconds, much larger and more lasting than
the puff of a shrapnel.

Very shortly after this first discovery, my friend made another, which
somewhat counterbalanced his relief in the first, which was that one of
the points most distinctly to be avoided was the very place he wished
to reach, the Pylons themselves. Round about their base a howitzer
battery was methodically placing high-explosive shell, and amongst
the upper works a field battery was making very accurate practice
with those most undesirable "woolly bears." There was nothing for
it, however, and the longer one stopped and looked at it the worse
it seemed, so, with feelings utterly unlike those that are popularly
supposed to steel the heart of the hero who boldly faces death for
his country's sake, he made his way under cover of such houses as
still remained, to the mine buildings at the foot of the great steel
structure. Here was destruction such as he had never seen. The
buildings, strongly as they had been built to withstand the weight of
the machinery within them, were completely shattered, their contents
strewing the floors like scrap iron in a merchant's yard. Great iron
girders were cut as by a knife, the bridge leading from the Pylons
to the loading stages on the end of the Crassier, a riveted steel
structure, was broken in half, the ends torn and frayed as though made
of paper. The towers themselves are so massive and their weight is so
distributed among many uprights, that, although many of these latter
were bent or broken, the edifice they supported still stood gaunt and
menacing, dominating the country-side. But their foot was no place to
sit in idle conjecture that morning, as a shell that nearly blocked
up the entrance to the shelter into which he had made his way abruptly
reminded him. Waiting until its last fragments had fallen--a process
that takes a surprisingly long time--he made a bolt over the ruins,
climbing and scrambling up a refuse-covered slope, until he reached
the foot of the winding stairs that rose up the centre of one of the
towers. Fortunately for him, this stairway was partly enclosed by
sheets of boiler-plate, for the next shell burst uncomfortably close
and the fragments hit the boiler-plate with a sound that left no doubt
in his mind of what his fate would have been had this shield not been
there. Up the spiral stairway then--was ever such an interminable
flight? Surely, notwithstanding the friendly morning mist, the whole
German army must see him as he climbed ever higher! Those friendly
steel sheets had been hit direct more than once at various times,
leaving several turns of the stairway open, plain to everybody's view.
However, nothing alarming happened, and the goal was reached--not the
top of the tower where the winding pulleys hung, but a gallery that
had formed the upper limit of travel of the cage, where the trolleys
were unloaded and pushed across the bridge to the loading sheds. This
gallery or platform stood perhaps a hundred and fifty feet above the
ground, and had once been glazed, but long ago every pane of glass
had been shattered and the steel floor was thickly carpeted with the
fragments. Once in the gallery one was fairly safe, for the floor and
roof were of steel and so was the circular wall up to the level of the
glazing. Nothing but pieces of shell coming through the windows--and
the place was full of fragments showing where this had happened--or
a direct hit from a heavy shell could do much damage. But it was not
the place for a rest-cure, the moral effect of "woolly bears" bursting
amongst the girder-work close to one, although one knew that by the
time one heard the report the danger was over, was most disturbing.
Once, too, a fairly heavy shell hit the tower itself, causing it to
rock like a sapling in a gale, as my friend expressed it afterwards.
His first thought was of the delights of his situation had it carried
away part of the staircase, when he would be faced by the prospect of
staying where he was till dusk or of swarming down the steelwork in
full view of the German trenches, but fortunately this contingency did
not arise.

But the view that he obtained amply compensated for everything. From
the grim black mass of Fosse 8, past the tower of Cité St. Elie, the
cupola of Douvrin, the trees, magnificent in their thick verdure, that
clothe the banks of a little stream that flows past Hulluch, to the
strange medley of chimneys and elevators that gives to the works of the
Société Métallurgique de Pont-à-Vendin the appearance of a fore-and-aft
rigged vessel under sail, the whole country lay spread as on a map.
Further south still, Lens and its thickly-built suburbs could be seen,
and towards the west, the well-known country that we held, the high
land of the Vimy Ridge, with Souchez at its feet, the tall slag-heaps
of Noeux-les-Mines and Auchel, the dark mass of the Bois des Dames, the
square tower of Béthune. What an observation post! No wonder that the
enemy, whose use of the place for that very purpose was apparent by
the presence of German newspapers and a broken table with some scraps
of paper upon it, were determined to make it untenable by constant
shelling.

For utterly impossible as a permanent observation post it undoubtedly
was, and my friend, having verified his geography, left it with a
feeling of deep thankfulness at having escaped unhurt. But his
adventures were by no means at an end, he had still to find a situation
of comparative safety from which he could observe when required under
more restful conditions. The first place he selected was a house in
the Enclosure, as the buildings near the foot of the Pylons have been
termed. This also had been used by the enemy for the same purpose,
for the walls were sandbagged, the lower floors were shored up with
pit-props, and the basement had evidently been occupied by a fairly
large party. Curiously enough, the house was in quite good repair, the
walls and half the roof were standing, in contrast to the wreckage
that lay around it. Here the explorer received what he describes as
"the shock of his life," for on opening the door of one of the upper
rooms he found, sprawling over a table as though just fallen asleep,
the body of a German officer, still holding a pencil with which he
had been addressing a post-card to a girl in Magdeburg. So lifelike
was the attitude that it was impossible to realize at first that he
was dead, notwithstanding the jagged hole above the temple where the
fragment had entered and the blood that stained his right side. From
this room a good view of the desired stretch of country could be
obtained, there was a plentiful supply of sandbags ready filled in the
house, and it seemed in every way desirable. But, just as my friend
had determined upon converting it to his own uses, a (fortunately)
small shell, evidently intended for the Pylons, but a little "over,"
entered the ground floor and burst there, wrecking the staircase,
bringing down ceilings and tiles all over the house and smashing what
was probably the last pane of glass in Loos. If this place was going
to play long-stop for all the byes that passed the Pylons, it was
distinctly unhealthy. He clambered down the wreckage of the stairs and
looked round for a more likely spot, settling upon a tall house some
little distance away. But here again he was doomed to disappointment.
As he walked towards it a light howitzer shell sang over his head
and burst a hundred yards beyond his goal. Instinct told him that
this was the first round of a series of which his projected O.P. was
the target. Even as he realized that he was standing about the same
distance short of the place as the first round had fallen over, and in
a direct line, the second shell passed so close to him that he swears
he felt the wind of it, and burst in a manure-heap not ten yards away.
Thanking heaven that it had found a soft billet that muffled the force
of its explosion, he turned and bolted, having no further interest in
observing that particular series, the components of the manure-heap
dropping in a shower about him.

The next place he came to was a biggish building in a part of the town
that seemed to be immune from shelling. He walked boldly into it and
climbed up to an attic in the roof. Here were more signs of German
occupation, a window that faced towards our old line being heavily
sandbagged, whilst behind it was a neatly constructed platform and
rest. Hundreds of empty cartridge-cases scattered over the floor and
a few loaded clips still lying on the platform showed that the sniper
whose lair it had been had known good sport there. But even here my
friend was not destined to rest undisturbed. Hardly had his eye taken
in these details than a sound of hurried whispers below burst upon his
ears, and a peremptory voice bade him "Descendez, vite!" "Qu'est-ce
qu'il-y-a?" he replied. "Descendez, vite, vite, ou nous allons tirer!"
Discretion was by far the better part of valour, so down he came, to be
surrounded at once by a number of French soldiers armed with rifles
and fixed bayonets. To his enquiries as to what they wanted, the only
reply was, "Vous pouvez dire ce que vous voulez à M. le Commandant."
The latter gentleman was very comfortably installed in a roomy cellar,
and my friend was ushered into his presence with the significant words,
"C'est un espion que nous avons attrapé en haut, mon Commandant,
regardez ces machines-là qu'il porte!" The latter presumably in
reference to the sextant, compass and other strange-looking impedimenta
that he carried. It was an uncomfortable moment, but he managed to
establish his identity, and mutual explanations followed, to the
satisfaction of all parties, and my friend was told that he might make
himself free of the place whenever he liked--"Mais, monsieur, je crains
que vous avez trouvé en Loos que les français sont plus dangereux que
les allemands. Mais, peste, vous êtes vraiment monté dans les Pylons!
J'ose bien dire, comme disent les Anglais, que c'etait un endroit 'not
sanitary'!" As a variant upon the hackneyed phrase "not healthy," I
think that this is hard to beat.

The next question was the best way of getting home. The friendly mist
had by now disappeared, and it was hardly advisable to face the open
road again, even if this had not involved the ghastly walk along the
death-strewn communication trench. My friend finally decided to find
the end of a communication trench that, starting from a point in the
north-western corner of the village, led into the old German front
line between the Lens Road and the Loos Road Redoubts. To reach this
the greater part of Loos had to be traversed, but the streets in this
direction were fairly safe. They were, however, even more encumbered
with the dead bodies of men and horses than those in the other half
of the town. It seems that a large number of men had been driven to
the dug-outs and bombed there, and that when these same dug-outs were
required for Allied occupation, their former tenants were evicted into
the road, for the burial parties to deal with when time permitted.
Wonderful structures were these dug-outs, examples of the enemy's
thoroughness. Not content with the protection afforded by a cellar,
in many places they had excavated large chambers below the cellars
themselves, whose floors they had paved with bricks and whose walls
they had lined with boards. Once in them the garrison was perfectly
safe from the most furious bombardment.

A further example of method was to be seen in the treatment of shells
that had fallen blind. When these were of medium size, they had been
collected in small heaps and surrounded with barbed wire to prevent
inquisitive fingers experimenting with them. In the back yard of
a cottage lay the enormous bulk of a fifteen-inch shell, that had
judiciously been left where it fell, and had been honoured by a
complicated stockade of its own. All this seemed to contrast with the
present state of the town, which was everywhere littered with military
stores of every conceivable kind. Some attempt had been made to collect
them into heaps, but even this attempt had been very half-hearted. War
is, anyhow, an expensive amusement, and it seems a pity to make it more
so by sheer lack of method. For not only Loos itself, but the whole of
the country over which the advance was made was littered with arms,
ammunition, equipment, bombs, in prodigious numbers. My friend, having
occasion to go into Loos again some weeks later, found these heaps
still untouched, and was foolish enough to report their existence and
their exact position. As a reward for this unwarranted officiousness,
he was requested to escort a wagon to Loos and indicate the localities
where these various stores lay, on an evening when the battery was at
its busiest, an invitation that he firmly declined.

The way home, although much longer, proved to be cleaner and more
secure, besides having the interest of leading through the old German
front line. This was then in the occupation of our reserves, and had
consequently been considerably tidied up, but large parts of it were
still completely broken down, showing the effect of our bombardment.
The shooting had been distinctly good, very few shell-craters were
far from the trenches, and a large proportion of the projectiles had
either fallen into them or blown in the parapet. But here again the
dug-outs must have afforded very excellent protection. Wide shafts,
driven straight down from the front wall of the trench at an angle of
forty-five degrees with the horizontal, led into hollowed-out chambers
twenty feet below the surface that would easily accommodate a couple
of dozen men. Each dug-out had more than one shaft, to reduce the
chances of men being buried by an explosion filling in the only means
of exit. The trenches were everywhere revetted with timber or hurdles,
and had a false bottom of wooden gratings to keep the men's feet as dry
as possible. If only from the point of view of comfort they contrasted
very favourably with our own, through which the homeward track next lay.

Loos, City of the Dead! If in years to come you are ever rebuilt, a
task that to the observer of your utter destruction and desolation
seems impossible, what strange and gruesome relics will your workmen
find! Surely the Spirit of Carnage will for ever haunt those narrow
streets and open widespread fields, surely your inhabitants of the
future will wake in terror in the September nights to hear ghostly
echoes of the then-forgotten struggle, the unceasing whistle and
roar of the shells, the rushing footsteps of the charging men, the
despairing cries of the bombed wretches in the cellars! And if timid
eyes dare lift the curtain to peep fearfully through the windows, will
they not see a blood-red moon shining upon streets through which pour
the serried columns of the victors, and scent the night air tainted
with a faint sickening odour of slaughter? But not alone shall Loos
bear its burden of horror, for in how many towns and villages must
these scenes be repeated before Peace comes again!



VIII

IN FRENCH TERRITORY


At the beginning of October our battery, owing to reasons of
strategy and convenience, changed its position by a matter of about
a mile-and-a-half, and by so doing entered an area where the right
of the British line joined the left of the French line. The actual
point of junction of the lines varies from time to time, as much owing
to the two armies' requirements in the matter of billets as for any
other reason, and, as it happened, on the very day we moved into our
new position, this point was in process of being moved a mile or so
northwards. We saw, therefore, the familiar khaki give place to the
looped-up blue greatcoat, and when, the desperate struggle to get the
battery in order in the minimum time being over, we had time to look
round and take note of our surroundings, we found ourselves in French
Territory.

I think that the weeks we spent there were the happiest we have ever
known, although the life of a gunner is a rough paradise for a man with
health and strength--plenty of work, plenty of sport, and complete
freedom from the cares of an artificial existence, there being nothing
artificial about war. Our position was amongst ruined _corons_, not
so badly damaged but that they could with very little trouble be made
into very comfortable billets, and owing to the fact that it was in
French territory, was immune from the visits of predatory "brass
hats." Further, in our group commander we had a strong buckler against
interference and aggression, and one in whom we all placed implicit
confidence. His kindness to us all will be amongst the most precious
memories of those happy days.

We found the change of tenants in the villages round us extremely
advantageous in many ways, not the least of which was the amount of
loot we acquired. It seems curious that the British Army, equipped as
it is with a more copious transport than has ever before been imagined,
should invariably leave in its wake enormous quantities of perfectly
serviceable stores. On this particular occasion we found abandoned
more than enough overcoats and waterproof capes to fit out the whole
battery, and collected from the billets into which we moved over a
hundred thousand rounds of small-arm ammunition alone. Although these
matters were reported, no steps were ever taken to remove the stores,
and subsequent discoveries of hundreds of boxes of unused bombs met
with the same indifference. What wonder that the thrifty French regard
it as the best fortune that can befall them to take over any part of
our line, or that French officers to whom I have spoken are inclined
to base their opinions of our conduct of the war upon such indications
of our national habits. "No army before has ever wasted as you waste,"
said one to me; "the food you reject would feed half the French Forces,
the rifles you failed to collect after Loos would equip many battalions
of your New Army. What is your proverb--'Straws show which way the wind
blows'--is it not?" Nor did the British troops leave only stores behind
in their evacuation. Two days after the exchange, an officer arrived in
the battery with a strange tale of woe. He was in command of a picquet
in a certain village, from where he had watched his own people depart
and the French arrive, expecting every moment to be relieved. Since
that time he had received neither orders nor rations, and he and his
men had lived upon the charity of a French regiment. We fed him and
sent him back to his lonely vigil with an armful of provisions and
a promise to report his troubles through our headquarters. I heard
subsequently that his patrol had been forgotten and never missed, so
presumably he might have been there now but for his own action.

The first and greatest Commandment when on active service is this,
"Thou shalt covet thy neighbour's goods, and if he doesn't keep his eye
on them, thou shalt possess them." Nationality seems to have no effect
upon the speed with which the soldier assimilates this doctrine. The
French _piou-piou_ is as great a follower of it as the British Tommy,
but his native politeness lends to the act a more distinguished air. Of
course, British troops with their wasteful ways are to him lawful game,
and the first couple of days in his company taught our people habits
of carefulness that were never learnt before. Our most experienced
marauders returned empty-handed from raids into the French lines, and
this bred a respect for our Allies that rapidly blossomed into genuine
friendship. And undoubtedly the French soldier, taking him all round,
is a most charming person and an almost perfect fighting man. He takes
life very seriously, and is frequently scandalized by our behaviour,
not quite understanding that a mask of frivolity may be only the result
of a desire to make light of difficulties and to hearten others, hiding
in reality an immovable determination to do one's duty. "Pour vous,
la guerre n'est pas sérieuse," said a big Breton to me once, and I,
knowing the melancholy tendencies of his race, knew not what to reply.
But next day a party of which he formed one, doubled past the battery.
"Que faites-vous?" I called as he passed. With a face wreathed in
smiles he replied, "Nous allons donner aux Bosches un petit coup de
fusil, ça sera très amusant, hein?"

Of the picturesque appearance of these French troops a few words may
be said. There is an entry in my diary about this time, "Walked down
to headquarters this morning. Saw two Frenchmen dressed alike." And to
the eyes of those accustomed to unvarying khaki, the extraordinary
kaleidoscopic effect of steel helmet, képi, coats of all conceivable
colours, breeches and trousers likewise, putties that shame the
rainbow, and an increasing note of khaki with a dash of colour on the
collar or sleeve, strikes very strangely. Even the men of the same
regiment do not seem to wear the same kit. One will be met in steel
helmet, dark blue coat and red trousers, the next in képi, light blue
coat and breeches, and grass-green putties. The authorities knew better
than to waste the stocks of clothing that they already had on hand.

It would be impertinent to discuss the fighting qualities of these
superb troops. The English Tommy, invariably a keen and usually a
perspicacious critic of everything that comes into his range of vision,
is apt to comment unfavourably upon what appears to his eye as an
undisciplined mob strolling along the roads. But his eyes are gradually
opened as first of all he discovers that these men, laden with a far
greater weight than he is ever called upon to carry, are travelling
quite as fast as he cares to, and then, at the end of the day, he finds
that they have made themselves thoroughly comfortable and are enjoying
a good meal long before he has thought of anything but the contents of
his water-bottle. After that the revelation of their fighting qualities
does not come as such a shock to him. Who that has seen them at work,
for instance round Souchez or in their magnificent attack on the Double
Crassier on October 11, can refrain from blessing our historic national
luck for the Allies it has brought us?

And throughout his nature runs the Frenchman's traditional love for the
turning of an honest penny. No sooner were we settled in our position
than a bearded French soldier, probably a newsvendor in civil life,
saw his golden opportunity. In his hours off duty he used to walk back
many miles from the position, and return with an armful of English
newspapers of the day before. How he procured them was a mystery we
never solved, for he always arrived with them hours before we could
obtain them anywhere ourselves. "Délé peppers!" he would cry, and the
whole battery turned out as one man to greet him and buy his wares,
which, by the way, he sold cheaper than their price in the neighbouring
towns. How much English he understood I never knew; he would talk it
freely with the men, but never with the officers--"Non compris" and
a shake of the head was his invariable reply to our advances in this
direction. But he always knew the contents of the papers he sold,
especially the _Daily Mail_. Certainly his ideas occasionally got a
little mixed. I am convinced, for instance, that he was under the
impression that Lord Northcliffe was either Dictator of England or had
changed places with Lord Kitchener. "Monsieur Lor' Notcliffe il va bien
ce matin!" he would say with great satisfaction, "il va finir la guerre
sur-le-champ." His politics swayed him to the extent that he always
refused to bring us French dailies. "Mais non, je vous dis, monsieur.
Vous aimez les journaux français? Bien, demain je vous apporterai
peut-être _La Vie Parisienne_, _Le Rire_, ce que vous voulez. Mais _Le
Temps_, _Le Matin_? Ceux sont les organes honteuses des capitalistes.
_L'Homme Enchaîné_, si vous voulez----"

He or one of his assistants (for it always seemed to me that half the
French Army helped to carry his papers round for him) it was that
first introduced us to the fascinations of the ring-making industry.
It appears that an industrious Frenchman, one supposes a jeweller
by trade, early in the war hit upon the idea of collecting the fuses
of hostile shells that fell near him, melting down the aluminium of
which they are largely made, and casting it into rings, which he
ornamented by letting in pieces of brass or copper, also components
of the fuse. The practice spread like wildfire through the French
troops, it gave a congenial occupation to their busy fingers, and
brought them a gratifying increase of income. Our men were at first
ready customers--there was little enough for them to spend money upon,
the inhabitants had been cleared out of the surrounding villages, and
no civilian population means no _estaminets_. But some of the more
commercially-minded among us--the whole story is as a microcosm of
our commercial supremacy as a nation--loath to see this profitable
trade passing them by, determined to enter into competition. The first
experiments were dramatic enough. A band of telephonists collected a
large store of wood torn from ruined houses, and of coal, fetched at no
small risk from a mine that was usually under fire, in the observation
post, which happened then to be a fairly large house well back from
the hostile lines, so that a fire was allowed in the telephonists'
room. Here one evening they collected, like a band of alchemists for
the fusion of the Philosopher's Stone, and here I chanced upon them,
the room lit only by the glare of a huge fire, around which they all
crouched, their eyes fixed upon a saucepan that held in its depths
one small fuse, which the Master of the Black Arts periodically poked
enquiringly with the point of his bayonet. I believe that attempt ended
in the necessity for a sudden and disastrous quenching, brought about
by the fact that the house itself showed ominous signs of catching
fire. After many vicissitudes the art became centred in the battery
cooks, who, having the unfair advantage that in the natural course of
events they worked by a fire all day, formed a sort of Guild of Ring
Makers, and some very creditable work was produced. Their first step
was to undersell the French, and they succeeded to such an extent
that the cook-house became a miniature Birmingham, and orders had to
be placed early to secure delivery. Souvenirs these rings became in a
land where everybody seems to ask everybody else for a "souvenir," a
term that has become so wide that it covers everything portable. One
day I was standing in a doorway when surely the youngest soldier in
the French army--he could not have been more than fourteen; I suppose
he was a drummer boy, but how he reached so close to the firing line
has always puzzled me--passed me and saluted gravely. My smile must
have reassured him, for he stopped and after some hesitation looked at
me and saluted again. "Souvenir, monsieur!" he blurted out at last.
"Souvenir?" said I, "Quelle espèce de souvenir désirez-vous?" With a
grin that threatened to sever the top of his head from the rest of his
body, he replied, "Souvenir de bully-beef, monsieur!" He got it.

The flies that marred the soothing ointment of this position were
certain mysterious bullets that flew about at strange hours of the
night and day. Nobody was ever actually hit, but people strolling
about between the guns heard a whirr overhead that made then duck
involuntarily, and heated officers would dash into the mess swearing
that they had seen bullets flatten themselves against brick walls
within an inch of their noses. Scepticism, or even a suggestion
that they were spent bullets from the firing line, was treated as
insubordination. A sniper it must be, a snark who crept into our
lines, shot his bolt, then softly and silently vanished away. One
evening the combined patience of the battery could bear it no longer--I
think somebody had staggered into the mess in a condition of collapse,
and upon being revived with a rum ration, proceeded to explain how
his cigarette had been shot out of his mouth by a bullet that passed
between his teeth. At all events, it was decided to inform the French
and request them to take steps to abate the nuisance. They, in the
expressive jargon of the day, were all over it. Parties of men from
their lines and our own crept out in the dusk to hunt the sniper--what
a glorious opportunity of winning fame by returning with his scalp,
or one of his ears, or whatever part of a sniper one does bring back
as a trophy! Dozens of parties, each more subtle than the other in
their proposed methods of action, crept out in the rapidly-falling
dusk, and with them the greater number of our officers, armed with
looted rifles and more subtlety than all the rest of the parties put
together. Then night fell dark and moonless, and the fun began. Each
party, busily engaged in its own game of blind-man's-buff, caught sight
of some other party, and opened a hot and furious fire upon them.
The remaining parties, seeing the flashes, emptied their magazines in
their direction. By an hour or so after dark, the battle was in full
swing. At ten o'clock such of the battery as were not engaged in the
chase were cowering in their dug-outs and there was not a whole pane of
glass for miles around. At half-past ten, a telephonist going to the
O.P. to relieve his comrade was forced to take shelter in a disused
communication trench, and to remain there all night, any attempt on
his part to climb out being met by rapid fire from every direction
at once. At eleven, a mitrailleuse was dragged up by an excited knot
of men, and opened fire in the direction from which there seemed to
come most noise. At half-past, fire had become general all along
the line, everybody, supposing that his neighbour knew what he was
aiming at, firing in the same direction as he did. At midnight the
Germans, thinking it a shame to be left so long out of the picture,
and possibly tired of being kept awake, opened with a field battery,
an inconsiderate action that effectually damped the proceedings. By
one o'clock all was quiet again, and, much to my astonishment, every
one returned whole, each man having seen the sniper and had at least
a dozen shots at him, every one of which by his own account must have
been fatal. Subsequent inquiries revealed the amazing fact that the
French also had suffered no casualties. Yet alas! no more, apparently,
had the sniper, for the bullets continued to whizz and valuable
officers to have hair-breadth escapes until the time came for us to
leave the place.

On the next night we were shelled, probably by way of retaliation
for the disturbance of the previous night. The enemy seemed to know
our approximate position, and "searched and swept" all round us with
heavy shell, but never contrived to burst one within twenty yards of
the guns. It happened to be my business to walk about the battery,
exhorting men to keep under cover. In the middle of it all a party
of French soldiers walked nonchalantly through our lines. "Prenez
garde," I shouted, "Il y a des obus qui tombe par ici, descendez dans
les abris!" They thanked me and ran into the dug-outs. The next shell
burst pretty close, covering everything with fragments. Out dashed my
Frenchmen, and in answer to my expostulations, "Nous en voulons un
souvenir," they replied, and forthwith began to hunt for the fuse.

Magnificent as are the French infantry, their artillery far surpass
them. To those who have any knowledge of artillery work, the French
appear as performers of miracles. Their equipment, their incomparable
_soixante-quinze_, is a frail-looking cheaply constructed affair,
giving the impression of weakness and inefficiency. Their _personnel_
seems utterly inadequate, both in men and officers, their methods of
ammunition supply are rudimentary. But a French battery will come into
action in an inconceivably short time, and will continue in action
night and day at a rate of fire that is unbelievable to one who has
not heard it. Minor technical details, such as sights, are far in
advance of our own, even in the case of some old heavy pieces, whose
mirror sight utterly shames by its convenience and simplicity our
extraordinary device for the same purpose. And the officers, how keen
they were! Scarcely a day passed but some two or three came into the
battery and courteously enquired if they might examine _les pièces_.
Of course they could, we were only too happy to exhibit them, and
then what explanations and comparisons between theirs and ours! "Ce
frein-ci n'est pas mal, mais pourquoi les ressorts sont-ils d'une telle
longueur?" or "Mon dieu, que cet appareil de portage est compliqué!"
Keen men and keen critics, equally eager to show us their weapons and
to hear our criticisms upon them. Their colonel included us in his
command at such times as we supported the French batteries, which
was fairly frequently. A spare figure in a close-fitting jacket, a
bullet-shaped head set with a pair of piercing eyes that discovered
everything without the assistance of the tongue, he was the ideal of
an artillery officer. He had the scientific mind that absorbs every
detail and stores it away in a pigeon-hole ready for immediate use.
Never once after the first time that I was introduced to him, did he
fail, wherever we met, to stop, shake hands and address me by name. In
a hurried quarter of an hour I once recited to him all the technical
details of the howitzer with which we were armed. Weeks afterwards I
heard him repeat faultlessly all the details, with others which he had
noticed for himself. If he be a type of the senior artillery officer,
happy are our Allies in the possession of such men.

Another incident that occurred to us will show the unvarying
promptitude and courtesy with which the French treated us. It happened
that close to the battery and in the middle of the French infantry
billets was a ruined church tower, of which a certain portion still
stood, enough, we discovered, to make it worth our while to build a
series of ladders within it, and to use the bell-beam as an emergency
observation post. But Monsieur le Poilu thought that this was a capital
spot into which to climb, and from thence to wave his képi to his
friends and generally to behave in such a manner as to attract the
attention of hostile observers, with the not unnatural result that one
fine evening the enemy fired a few rounds at it, narrowly missing our
senior subaltern, and, which was a matter for far deeper concern, the
ration lorry. Complaint being made to the colonel, he, after several
complimentary remarks as to our skill in using so unfavourable a place,
promised that there should be no repetition of the offence. Ever
afterwards an armed guard was posted at the base of the tower, with
orders to admit no one but ourselves.

Those French soldiers, what children they were, as their behaviour
in the tower showed! Whenever we were in action, a crowd of them
would gather behind the guns to watch the shell in its flight, as is
perfectly easy with any low-velocity howitzer. "Venez voir l'obus!"
they would cry, and, as the gun fired, "Le voila, voyez, voyez! ah, il
tombe----" and a shriek of delight would almost drown one's subsequent
orders. What children and what men! Perfect fighters, eager to rush
to the attack, yet patient under the iron discipline of the trenches,
easily moved to a wild display of nervous energy, possessing creative
imagination, yet stoical under agony to a surpassing degree. And not
the men only, but every class--peasants, doctors, priests, each in
his own sphere, are imbued with the highest spirit of which man can
boast, the spirit of self-sacrifice. I hold no brief for any form of
doctrine, being one of those who hold that all religions are nothing
but quibbles round a central truth that no sane man denies, but the
devotion of the French priest strikes me with the deepest admiration.
I have seen a battery heavily shelled and suffer many casualties, so
that the detachments were forced to take to their dug-outs. The doctor
galloped up on horseback, but the priest on foot, running with his
soutane tucked up round his waist, was there first, out in the open
administering extreme unction to the mortally wounded, helping others
to a place of safety. "Greater love hath no man than this----"



IX

CHANGING POSITION


The preparation of a battery position is a business that requires much
labour and considerable time, if anything more elaborate than mere
screening from view is attempted. Deep pits must be dug for the guns,
and slopes cut into these pits by which the said guns may be hauled
in and out. These pits must be floored with an elaborate platform,
their sides must be revetted, that is to say that boards, corrugated
iron or some similar substance must be fixed against them to prevent
their falling in, and, most difficult feat of all, they must be roofed
over with as much earth as such roof beams as can be procured can be
made to bear. When the pits are completed, deep caverns must be dug
and prepared to serve as refuges for the detachments in case of the
battery being shelled. Other shelters must be provided as magazines
for ammunition, as a room for the telephone and its operators, as
a refuge for the section commanders. Billets must be found for the
men and officers, if no billets are available dug-outs must be made.
Places must be found for cook-houses, washing-places, work-shops,
stores. A battery position prepared for lengthy occupation is a most
elaborate work, and one does not light-heartedly desert it for an open
plain where everything remains to be done. But sooner or later the
dread message comes: "The battery will be prepared to move at 6 p.m.
to-morrow. An officer will proceed forthwith to such-and-such a place
where he will be shown the new position selected." Off goes the officer
in the car, he meets some deputy from headquarters, and the two trudge
off together through the ever-present mud. "Here you are," says the
deputy cheerfully; "how does this suit you? Splendid place. Look at
that orchard; you could hide the guns under the trees." The battery
officer stares glumly at a dozen apple trees, each of which is of a
size to flourish contentedly in a fair-sized flower-pot, and makes some
dubious reply. "I never knew such difficult fellows to please as you
siege battery fellows are in my life! Well, come and look over here.
There's a natural pit, ready dug for you; it'll hold all the battery
easily." With this the guide indicates with no little pride a gully, at
the bottom of which stagnates rather than flows a greenish liquid with
an odour of the most clinging type. "Yes, it might be a bit difficult
to get the guns in and out, certainly. What about concealment behind
that hedge?" But the hedge proves to be separated from the only road
by an impassable morass. At last the orchard is selected as the least
impossible under the circumstances, and the officer returns to his
battery thoroughly convinced that he has selected the worst possible
position on the whole front, and wondering what on earth will be said
to him when he exhibits it to the rest of the battery.

Or else the proposed site is in the middle of a village, a place with
a reputation for being shelled that is notorious from Ypres to Loos. A
fabulous arc of fire is demanded from the battery, and weary hours are
spent looking for a more or less concealed spot that will allow of the
trajectory clearing houses and trees in all the required directions.
At last it is found, the necessary measurements made and found
satisfactory, when an officer strolls up. "Good-afternoon. You're
not going to stop here long, are you? Going to put a battery here! I
wouldn't be you for something, then. I've been about here for weeks,
and they always strafe the schoolhouse there every day about this time.
Look out, here she comes----" and a "woolly bear" or a "whizz-bang"
or some other fiendish and aptly named projectile bursts neatly over
the building that one had appropriated in one's mind's eye for a mess.
Wearily the search begins again--this might do, perhaps--but by now
the "evening hate" is in full swing, and a heavy shell settles with a
self-satisfied "crrrump!" in the middle of one's oasis, digging one's
gun-pits before one's eyes, as it were.

On one occasion the position chosen for us was the really beautiful
garden of a medium-sized château. The front was a well-planned mass of
shrubbery, intersected with paths and flower-beds, the back a walled
vegetable garden, most scrupulously maintained, planted with every
sort of vegetable and fruit and provided with a good range of glass.
The owner of the place lived in the château, and his gardener worked
on the premises. The dismay of these good people when they were told
that the place was to be turned into a battery and the men billeted
in the château can better be imagined than described. The owner was
a philosopher, and took matters calmly. "Enfin, c'est la guerre, que
voulez-vous?" he said sadly as we expressed our horror at the necessity
of ruining this little paradise. The gardener was no philosopher, and
when I look back upon the mutilated shrubberies, the trodden-down grass
plots, the hotbeds with their boarding torn up for revetment, the old
wall breached in many places for easy access, the broken panes in the
greenhouses and, worst of all, four yawning chasms where once the
asparagus, the strawberries and the artichokes dwelt together in amity,
I do not wonder at the hostile spirit he displayed. I can see him
now dancing round the sergeant-major, an imperturbable person of few
words in his own tongue, and of none in French, whom he found cutting
a few cabbages for the sergeants' dinner. "Sacré nom d'un cochon,
regardez-là le voleur qui arrache mes petits choux! Ah, les anglais
sont incroyables!" "No compree," says the sergeant-major, and goes on
with his garnering. The gardener got something of his own back that
night, however, for the garden had a very complete system of hydrants
all over it, which same hydrants our friend stealthily visited with
the turn-key, which he then disposed of and departed. It was pitch
dark and we were all busy working, so that it was some time before we
noticed the gathering floods, and the whole place was inches deep in
mud and water by the time that we had discovered how to turn it off
again. We never brought the crime home to the criminal, but a certain
hidden gleam of triumph in that gardener's wholly disapproving eye has
always convinced me of his guilt.

We had much to contend with in occupying that position. Several times
we were held up in our work, first by somebody who said the situation
was too exposed and that it was sheer suicide to occupy a house that
was conspicuous for miles round; then by the urgent representations
of a French officer who commanded a battery near by, and who declared
that we should draw down fire upon the devoted heads of his people;
and finally by a conference who debated for some time whether we were
really required in that sector at all. However, we got all these
matters satisfactorily settled at last, and set to work in earnest. And
digging pits by night in the light of a few hurricane lamps is work
indeed, especially if it rains persistently, as it almost invariably
does. Unskilful wielders of the pick are apt to drive their lethal
weapons into everything but the ground they mean to excavate, their
favourite targets being such parts of their neighbours as get in
their way. This leads to acrimonious wrangling and consequent delay.
Better this, however, than the adventure of one lusty champion, who
with a mighty effort drove his pick clean through the cast-iron main
that supplied the delinquent hydrants, whereby he converted, in an
incredibly short space of time, that half-completed pit into a sea of
mud and water some four feet deep. To any one who expresses a fondness
for bathing I recommend the plugging of a four-inch main, with a good
pressure behind it, lying at the bottom of four feet of a cream-like
mixture of chalk, clay and water at three o'clock on an autumn morning.

Geology, we are told, is the science that deals with the constitutents
of the earth. A new chapter should be written to the text-books, a new
branch of the science has been rendered necessary by the war, the study
of the properties of mud. Mud is now elevated to the dignity of a
fifth element, but surpasses the other four by its perpetual presence,
equalled only by that of the ether which pervades everything we know.
Mud shares its motto with the Royal Regiment of Artillery, one lives
in it, sleeps in it, and not infrequently eats it--indeed, competent
experts with carefully trained palates are said to be able to tell
from the flavour of the bacon at breakfast the exact part of the line
in which it has been rolled before issue. Surely in all the ancient
mythologies some student may find for mud some presiding deity that we
may suitably propitiate?

Nor were such more or less natural phenomena our only hindrances.
No sooner were the pits completed, than somebody more perspicacious
than his fellows discovered that we had been ordered to lay them out
in the wrong direction, and they had to be cut out still further to
allow the platforms to be slewed round through the required angle.
This order reached us one evening just as we were promising ourselves
a night in bed after our strenuous labours, and the despair of all
ranks spread like a mephitic vapour over the country-side in a mist of
strange profanity. The men, however, whose spirits are proof against
continued despondency under the most depressing circumstances, set to
work with a will, and the tedious digging was finished at last. Then
came the far more interesting business of revetting and roofing. Now,
obviously revetting and roofing require planks, beams, iron sheets,
and material of that nature, and equally obviously the department that
professes to provide stores of this description, and whose imagination
rarely soars above the level of sandbags, is utterly unable to supply
such things. The only course left is to find them for oneself, and
fortunately a row of houses whose inhabitants had been evicted stood
on this occasion near at hand, and these we gutted. Doors, shutters,
floor-boards, rafters, everything but the bricks themselves, we
contrived to utilize, until we had everything we could desire except
girders for our roofs, which were to be of earth. Now a fifteen-foot
span of earth two feet in thickness requires a good deal of supporting,
and after several experiments with rafters, experiments that sometimes
had unpleasant results for those who conducted them, we decided that
something stronger was required. Here, again, almost in the manner of
the Swiss Family Robinson, we found what we required at our very door,
but not before one adventurous spirit had invited an early death (from
which may he long be spared!) by driving a particularly noisy lorry
into a coal mine overlooking the German lines in search of pit-props.
Our discovery was due to an eagle eye that discovered a notice-board
bearing the words "Défense de circuler sur la voie," whose owner,
realizing that there could be no temptation to circulate on the line
if there was no line upon which to circulate, investigated further and
found a grass-grown colliery siding. Here were our long-sought girders,
and with their discovery our troubles were practically over. Certainly
the guns had yet to be lowered into the pits, and hauling heavy guns
over soft garden mould on a dark night is an undertaking to try the
most angelic patience, but on this occasion, for the first and last
time, the Mud-god smiled upon us, and that midnight we knew the true
happiness that comes of the successful completion of strenuous labour.

Here we remained for some weeks, until again disturbed by the order to
change position. Again everything has to be done by night, the guns
hauled out of the pits, the thousand and one small stores necessary to
the interior economy of the battery packed each in its proper place,
the heavy platforms raised and loaded into the lorries. The ease with
which any particular article can be mislaid under those circumstances
is incredible. Relative weight or importance seems to have no bearing
on the matter at all, one is just as likely, upon arriving at dawn
in some unknown land, to discover that one has left behind a spare
wheel or a handcart or even a battery quartermaster-sergeant, as
one is to find a small screwdriver missing. After a while the whole
business becomes a nightmare in which one is condemned eternally to
spend one's time counting handspikes and lorries and men, and to make
the total utterly different every time. And then the line of march!
A procession of heavy lorries, some drawing the guns, the rest laden
with men, stores and ammunition, looking for all the world like some
huge travelling circus, sets off upon a dark foggy night, carrying of
course no lights, over roads already laden to their utmost capacity
with troops and supply columns, and plentifully besprinkled with shell
holes. At the head of the procession rides a group of officers in a
car, one of whom has possibly been over the road once by daylight,
and about the length of the convoy are scattered here and there men
wrestling with recalcitrant motor-bicycles, which they vainly try to
restrict to the speed of the column, perhaps four or five miles an
hour. Much can happen under these circumstances. Perhaps the rearmost
lorry has to stop for adjustment, and by the time the word has passed
along the line the car at the head is far away, and the column strung
out over a mile or so of road. Or the foremost lorry commences to
boil frantically and slows down, whereupon the remainder tread upon
one another's heels, until it stops altogether, when the column forms
a compact mass that nothing can attempt to pass. Or the geographical
instinct of the leader of the expedition fails at a cross-roads, and
recourse has to be had to the sentry who stands there. One of two
things then happens. Either the man does not know the way and says so,
or he does not know the way and with the utmost positiveness declares
the route to be by the first road that strikes his fancy. Those to
whom the former of these certainties happens are by far the most
fortunate, for the attempt to turn a column of lorries on a narrow
road, especially if it consists, as it usually does, of a central
strip of pavé bordered by fathomless mud, is certain to be fraught with
disaster. A fully-loaded ammunition lorry stuck in a ditch is a most
heartbreaking sight, particularly (if the bull may be forgiven) if the
night is so dark that one cannot see it. It must be unloaded, dragged
out by the help of another lorry, which sometimes slides into the
ditch itself in the process, and then loaded up again, usually to the
accompaniment of uncomplimentary observations from the traffic that it
is holding up.

Certainly the accidents that may happen to mechanical transport are
many and various, but there are some to which it is not liable. One
of the first messages that we received upon our arrival in a certain
new position ran as follows, "Report at once all cases of glanders
occurring amongst your transport." One has trouble enough without
infectious disease to contend with. A motor lorry is a capital thing
on a road, even if that road is in a very bad state, but, once take it
on to soft or slippery ground, and its imperfections become manifest.
First of all its wheels start to slip, and chains are fixed round the
felloes to give them a grip. This answers for a while, but suddenly
the wheels begin to revolve at a terrific speed, and the chains fly
hurtling through the air to the obvious disadvantage of any one who
gets in their way. A few men with lamps are sent to look for these,
whilst the rest endeavour to give the lorry a start by pushing behind.
Start she does, with a sudden leap, and, before she can be stopped,
finds the softest part of the whole field and sinks gently but firmly
into it until supported on her axles. By this time the search party,
having taken all the lanterns with them, is far away, and you feel the
lorry sinking without a possibility of doing anything by the light of
the one match that the battery possesses. The only thing left to do is
to dig her out, support her wheels on planks, and haul her on to the
road again with ropes.

But the march ends at last, usually at about two o'clock in the
morning, and one arrives tired, cold and very sleepy, in the unknown
land. This village is the place we were told to stop at, and the men's
billets are said to be somewhere over there. Glad of a walk, I set
out to find them, and find in succession a row of tents knee-deep in
mud, apparently completely surrounded by barbed wire entanglements,
a barn without a roof, and a shed tenanted by two inquisitive and
particularly skittish cows. I return to the lorries and find the men
drawn up at the side of the road. Having explained the situation, I
call for volunteers to spend the night with the cows. The country-bred
members of the battery fall out and are marched off to deal with
the fierce beasts as best they can. The remainder are carefully
shepherded into the roofless barn and the bottomless tents. Judging
by the language that arises, this latter party are foiled in their
first attack by the wire. But the gunner is an adaptable person, and
all contrive to settle themselves as comfortably as possible in a
wonderfully short time, leaving me free to find the officer's billet,
which turns out to be the drawing-room of a small miller's house. The
only corner left is under the grand piano, and there I lay out my
valise and am soon fast asleep. Let the troubles of the morning care
for themselves!



X

TELEPHONES


The Field Telephone system, that is to say a series of portable
telephone instruments connected by a wire laid as required, forms the
nervous system of every battery, without which it is useless, or at all
events so heavily handicapped that it might as well be out of action.
The observing officer depends upon it to transmit his orders to the
guns, the group or brigade commander transmits his instructions to
his battery commander by its means, and in the battery itself it is
used for intercommunication between the control station, the section
commanders, billets and other points. All these various lines must be
laid as soon as the battery comes into position, and once laid they
must be kept under constant supervision. The test of the efficiency
of any battery is first the accuracy of its shooting, and second its
ability to bring fire to bear upon any point in its area immediately
it is ordered to do so. And experience shows that failure in either
of these respects can be traced in nearly every case to some factor
connected with the telephone system, an instrument or line being
out of order at the critical moment, or an inattentive or careless
telephonist. It is easy to realize, therefore, the importance of the
part played by this instrument in modern artillery practice, and some
account of its habits may not be out of place as throwing light upon a
particularly interesting phase of life in the zone of war.

The line between the battery and the observation post is the most
important of the whole system, for, without it, properly directed fire
is impossible. It is also, from the fact that the observation post
is usually close to the front line, the most exposed, and therefore
most liable to accident. To lay a wire between two given points may
seem to be the simplest thing in the world, as indeed it is, but so
to lay that wire that it will not constantly be cut is a fine art.
There are two ways of laying it, overhead amongst trees and other
supports, or underground, digging a narrow trench in which to bury
it. The first method is the quickest, and if a line is required for
use immediately, the best plan is to lay it overhead, and bury it
subsequently if required. But many perils lie in wait for an overhead
line. Lay it by any route you will, some wandering shrapnel will burst
near by, and one of the bullets, singling out the wire as though it
were its especial target, will cut it neatly through, for preference
at its most inaccessible point. But the enemy is by no means its
greatest danger. There are roads to cross, along which come heavy
lorries laden high with stores of all kinds. Put the line up as high
as you think absolutely safe, and sooner or later an extra tall load
brings it down. Or natural support, such as trees or houses, fails,
and at considerable pains you plant a row of light posts. The next
party of wire layers that comes along, finding these convenient to
their purpose, lay their own line on them in addition. So the process
continues, until the light posts, that you designed to carry one wire
only, collapse under the strain, and down comes the whole tangle. Worst
of all are the unpardonable crimes of some miscreants, who, running
short of wire, cut off as much from your line as they require, leaving
the cable with a yawning gulf in the middle, or, as a variation, tap
their own instruments on to the wire, when the unfortunate observation
officer is left to play a maddening game of cross questions and crooked
answers with some strange unknown battery. If, on the other hand, the
wire is laid underground, a high-explosive shell is sure to find it
and make a neat crater in the middle of it, or else the infantry dig a
communication trench across it, or its insulation breaks down late one
evening and the ensuing night is spent digging it up and looking for
the fault.

The best method of ensuring unbroken communication between two points
is, of course, to lay more than one line, but wire is usually scarce,
and this course is not always possible. Even if this is done, there
must be places where the lines run close together, and these are
just the places where the shells are sure to drop. During the Four
Days' bombardment we had three lines between the battery and our
observation post, and on two separate occasions all three were cut at
the same time by shell-fire. The quiet deeds of heroism performed by
artillery telephonists that are never heard of would fill a volume by
themselves. There is very little of the excitement and emulation that
makes many a man in the midst of his comrades the hero of a glorious
moment, none of the intoxication of battle that banishes all thought
of personal safety, in the experiences of a man who goes out to repair
a wire under fire. He has plenty of time to think of the dangers he is
running, to anticipate the fall of every shell without being able to
get out of its way, to wonder what it feels like to lie in agony on the
ground, torn by a splinter. Slowly and alone he must follow the track
of the wire until he finds the break, and having found it he must set
to work to repair it where it lies, a proceeding that may often take a
very considerable time. And it is more than probable that nobody but
himself and his chum ever knows anything about it. Yet there is never
the least hesitation on his part to go out; on one of the occasions
mentioned when our lines were cut, the linesman picked up his tools and
started along the line as a matter of course, although the determined
nature of the hostile shelling was plainly visible, and some of the
projectiles were charged with gas. He finished his job and came back
to us full of his adventures, which seemed to afford him immense
amusement; indeed, I think he was one of those who have learnt that the
surest safeguard against fear is a sense of humour, and that danger, if
treated as a huge joke, ceases to have any terrors.

And quite apart from actual danger, the linesman's life is a troubled
one. As one never knows when the lines may not be required in a hurry,
telephonists and linesmen relieve one another day and night. Every
few minutes the stations ring one another up, and if no reply can be
obtained, the linesman at the calling station starts along the line
to find the fault and repair it. It may be that the wire has been
cut by shell-fire, or by accidents inherent to its nature, or by the
sinful practices of others. Or again, it may sometimes happen that
the linesman proceeds on his way, testing as he goes, and finding all
correct, until at last he reaches the other station, to discover that
the operator there has for some reason disconnected his instrument
and forgotten to connect it up again, in which case a lurid and fiery
scene takes place, consisting of picturesque recrimination on the part
of the outraged linesman, and no less picturesque expostulation on
the part of the telephonist, to the effect that it was somebody else's
fault. The acrimony displayed varies directly as the temper of the
disputants and the distance between the two stations.

It is extremely difficult to train men to use a telephone
intelligently, far more so than to teach them the mere technical
details of its construction. Because the thing appears to talk, very
few people can resist the impulse to treat it as a sentient being,
intentionally perverse for the express purpose of annoyance. Ring up
your best friend in peace time on a slightly defective instrument
and observe how he or she treats the irresponsive toy. If a man, he
will grow purple in the face and swear, he may even end by casting
the offending thing on the ground and trampling upon it in his fury,
if a woman she will grow tearful and excessively petulant, and will
certainly pour the vials of her wrath upon you, as being the proximate
cause of the trouble. Even so in time of war it is the tendency of
the trained telephonist to use harsh words and report the instrument
out of action instead of sitting down quietly and finding the cause
of the trouble, which he knows perfectly well how to do. Even the
best of them can never refrain from shaking the receiver viciously by
way of punctuating every sentence, they having been rashly taught by
their instructor that a gentle tap on the speaking end of the concern
is often useful if speech is faint. And even when this tendency to
violence, apparently a component of human nature, is eradicated, there
comes the surpassing difficulty of inducing men to speak clearly and
distinctly. Of course men of clear speech must be selected in the first
place, the uncouth dialects of certain parts of the United Kingdom
being not susceptible to the gentlest treatment. For instance, two
telephonists, one hailing from Glasgow and the other from the wilds of
Glamorgan, will utterly fail to make themselves intelligible to one
another. On one occasion a certain dour Scotch subaltern was told to
select from his section the six men with the clearest voice and purest
accent for training as telephonists. He did so, and they were duly
tested--they all spoke a strange tongue which proved upon investigation
to be the broadest Scotch! To this day that subaltern cannot understand
why they were rejected and he himself loaded with opprobrious epithets.

At one time we were in a position where the French wireless bulletin
was transmitted to us in the original over the telephone. The state
in which it reached us frequently defied translation, as may well
be imagined. I once overheard a reference to the Hartmansweilerkopf
coming through. "Are man's wily coughs _wot_? 'Ere, is this a patent
medicine advertisement, or wot? Hullo, hullo! Goin' to spell it, are
yer? Yes, haitch for 'energy, eye for what? Oh, eye for hass, r for
rum, toc, emma, eye for hass, n for Nellie, esses, w for water--'ere,
hullo, hullo! What the 'ell are yer gettin' at?" After that they took
to sending it by Morse code on the buzzer, and things went along more
smoothly, but even then it was a mutilated word that eventually reached
me. From which it may be inferred that telephone messages do not always
find the recipient in the same form in which they started, especially
if they have to be repeated more than once during transmission. The
story of the Loos refugees is a case in point.

In addition to the complexities introduced by human failings, the
telephone in the field suffers from aberrations of technical origin.
Owing to the fact that the earth is used as the path for the return
current in nearly every case, an instrument, if sufficiently sensitive,
will pick up scraps of conversation between two stations speaking to
one another, if the line joining them crosses or approaches to the line
joining its own stations. In the case of the territory occupied by a
modern army, wherein the chief means of communication is the telephone,
extraordinary results are sometimes obtained. I have frequently
slept with the receiver of a telephone close to my ear, and in the
silence of the night have heard it whispering all sorts of fragmentary
messages--"Hullo, hullo, brigade, are you brigade? brigade!--yes, and
the old man was awfully fed up about it--brigade, brigade, hullo, can
you hear me?--lengthen a hundred, fuse forty-two and a half!" and so
on, _pianissimo_, throughout the night. Both sides have frequently
obtained valuable information by putting specially sensitive telephones
as near as possible to the opposing trenches and listening to the
messages they picked up. It is believed that the apparently miraculous
knowledge that the Germans at some parts of the line possessed as to
the regiments opposed to them--they would often call out, "Hullo,
Rutlandshires, are you in yet?" when a totally fresh battalion took
over a section of trenches--was obtained by this method. Nor is this
earth leakage the only way in which conversations are overheard. If
two or more lines run together for any considerable distance, as in
practice they often must, owing to an electrical phenomenon known as
induction, a conversation taking place along one line is audible in the
receivers attached to the remainder. Further, it frequently happens
that owing to a shell burst or to carelessness on the part of some line
layer, a pole or other support to which a large number of lines are
fixed is brought down, and in its fall all the lines are broken. It
may often be very difficult to discover, amongst all the ends, which
belongs to which, and an inexperienced man, actuated by a sincere and
laudable desire to put matters right, is very apt to connect them up by
the light of nature. The consequent confusion that arises must provoke
to demoniac laughter the denizens of hell. One observation officer
finds himself in direct and clear communication with the officer in
charge of supplies and transport, another with an advanced dressing
station. Infantry headquarters hold long and heated converse with
the wagon line of a field battery, the G.$1.$2. Divisional Artillery
threatens to place the quartermaster of a territorial battalion under
arrest because he steadfastly refuses to open fire immediately on
target Z. And a considerable time elapses before all these various
people are again connected to the proper quarter.

The very form of the telephonic message lends itself to
misinterpretation and misunderstanding. There is a story of an officer
named Close, who as forward observation officer for his battery laid
out a line to an observation post of his own choosing, and whose
linesmen by some accident contrived to get their wire touching one
belonging to a different system. His major, wishing to speak to him,
called him up, and hearing a "Hullo!" in reply, began "Are you Close?"
To his astonishment and delight a strange voice replied, "No, you dam!
fool, I'm five thousand yards away!" This same crossing of wires is
another common cause of mixed conversations, they chafe one another
until the insulation is worn away and a good connection established,
when the two sets of instruments respond to one another's calls. This
very trouble was the cause of my once being awakened from sleep by
the urgent summons of the buzzer. I jumped for the instrument--"Yes,
hullo?" And then distinctly came the amazing query "Are you St.
Paul?" I think the terms of my reply, in which I convinced my
unknown questioner of my utter inability to follow that gentleman's
advice about suffering fools gladly, satisfied him that I was not. I
found out afterwards that a neighbouring battery had two observing
stations, which they had christened Westminster Abbey and St. Paul's
respectively. An error in transcription, whereby the singular became
substituted for the plural, was probably the cause of my receiving a
written message, warning me that certain experiments were to be tried
that evening, and beginning in the emphatic terms, "At 6 p.m. some
rocket will be fired."

Of the whole complex system of lines, that between headquarters (which
in our case is the group commander, batteries being usually organized
in groups under a senior officer) and the battery commander is by far
the most fertile in trouble. It is not so much the line itself that is
to blame, as a sort of nervous feeling that it connects one with one's
superior officer, a feeling that in a wholly indefinable way pervades
everybody who comes in contact with it. If, as frequently occurs,
wire is saved by leading the various battery lines to an exchange,
whence a single line runs back to headquarters, the possibility of
complication is enormously increased. The process of getting a message
through is then a nerve-racking one. I was once assisting the battery
commander in the observation post, observing a series that was of
some considerable importance--it was during the fighting round Hill
70. In the middle of the transmission of orders to the battery, an
interruption comes through from them. "Headquarters want to speak to
the major, sir!" "Never mind headquarters, you take my message." Three
minutes elapse, during which we get off a few more rounds. Then the
battery calls through again, "Headquarters say it's urgent, sir!" "All
right, stop firing, switch them through." A long pause, during which
the receiver echoes, "Hullo, hullo, exchange! Hullo, can you hear
me? I want headquarters. Hullo! Speaking to another battery are they?
Hullo, is that headquarters? I'm 320th Siege--here you are, sir." Then
a still small voice, "Am I speaking to the major?" "I'm taking the
message for him; go on." "Message from G.O.C. Corps Artillery, begins.
Please report by noon on 30th instant number of Army Forms XY 9999 in
your possession, ends. For your information and compliance please."
Fortunately Job was a hasty and impetuous individual compared with the
major, or his remarks on having wasted a quarter of an hour of rapidly
failing light to receive such a message might have been unthinkable.

I remember also on that same line another regrettable incident. We had
to render a certain report daily at a certain hour, and one day the
headquarters line suddenly went out of action a few minutes before this
time. The report was sent off by hand, and the linesman started on his
weary journey of investigation. He reached the exchange eventually,
testing every inch as he went, and found at last that the wire was not
properly connected to the switchboard in the exchange itself. Now all
this took some considerable time, and it was not till some hours later
that a scared-looking telephonist found me in the battery and asked
me to come to the telephone, as there was somebody at headquarters
"a-carrying-on something hawful." So I went and found an infuriated
and temporary officer demanding that I should immediately put all the
telephonists under arrest and myself into the bargain--I think all the
officers were included. Explaining that there might be difficulties in
working the battery if those instructions were faithfully carried out,
I asked what our crime had been. It then appeared that our messenger
had arrived five minutes late with the report. I explained how this
happened, pointed out that his own people at the exchange were to
blame, and offered, should he consider mere arrest to be too trivial
a punishment for men who had delayed the receipt of a purely routine
report--it consisted of one word, nil!--by five minutes, to send him
down a firing party at once. We never had any further trouble on that
particular score.

As an alternative to the telephone, it is sometimes possible to arrange
relays of signallers with visual means of communication, such as lamps
or signalling discs, a method very much more freely employed by the
Germans than by ourselves.

We established a chain of this nature along a line of a total length
of about a mile and a half, as an emergency measure in case the wires
should be cut, and on the occasion of a very critical moment when this
disaster actually occurred, we found the system to work admirably. For
general use, however, it is too slow and requires too many trained
signallers. The telephone, in spite of all its peculiar idiosyncrasies,
is the only method in practice it is possible to employ.

It will be gathered from the above that a battery requires a very
large number of instruments and apparatus of all descriptions, and the
strain upon the manufacturers to supply them fast enough to equip new
formations was at one time very great. In our own case, some of these
stores only reached us on the quay of the port of embarkation an hour
before the transport sailed. We had been toiling since early morning on
one of the hottest days of the year, with no possible opportunity for
refreshment. A car dashed up and unloaded a box of instruments, which
we proceeded to unpack for the purpose of checking. The first thing to
be produced was a large aneroid barometer, of which the hand pointed
significantly to the words "Very dry." A sagacious instrument was that.



XI

BEHIND THE LINE


"Upon the Western Front there is nothing to report." So runs the
official news from day to day; it is a period of comparative quiet in
which neither army finds it expedient to make a move, but each lies
watching and waiting for the next sign of activity on the part of the
other. It is not inactivity, the perpetual crack of rifles and the
occasional bursts of artillery fire that rise suddenly by day and night
are the surest guarantees of that, but merely the temporary abandonment
of offensive tactics on either side. Modern trench warfare has
strengthened the defence at the expense of the offence to so great an
extent that such periods must be the natural state of things. There is
no such thing as a flank attack, for the flanks of the opposing forces
rest upon positions that cannot be turned, in one case the sea, in the
other a neutral country. Many years ago, long before such an extended
double defensive was contemplated, an extremely clever parody upon the
art of war as laid down in the text-books was produced, in which the
author sets forth three possible means of collision, first when two
armies meet, both of which are in motion, second when two armies meet,
one of which is in motion and the other is stationary, and third when
two armies meet both of which are stationary. The latter situation,
ridiculous as it appears and as the author intended it to appear, is
the best definition of the state of things which actually occurs daily
along all the gigantic fronts. "Nothing doing," says the gunner; "we
fired a few rounds yesterday at a place where somebody said the Bosches
had a battery, but that's all." "Haven't seen a bullet or a shell for
days," says the infantryman. "Believe there's nobody but the caretaker
and his wife opposite." In the battery we have meals at regular hours,
we discuss the war instead of our own infinitesimal contribution to it,
the more enterprising amongst us hint at the glorious possibilities
of having a hot bath. Life, in short, begins to slip into a groove of
routine.

Yet we are in a state of constant readiness, and the appearance of
inactivity is wholly misleading. Eyes are perpetually on the watch
in the observation station, a telephonist sits with the head receiver
of the instrument fixed on his head, the detachments on duty sit in
the gun-pits or in the dug-outs close at hand, busy upon some work,
improving the head cover, polishing the fittings of the gun, or else
writing letters to their friends that tell strange tales of battle,
murder and sudden death. In the control room by the telephone dug-out
sits an officer, studying the map, recording the results of a previous
day's fire, or entering particulars of targets and ranges in his
notebook. Perhaps the wind is blowing towards the firing line, carrying
away from the battery all sounds of war, so that nothing can be heard
but the strains of an amateur band (of mouth-organs, concertinas and
a triangle) from one of the gun-pits, and the monotonous call of
the crier in that strange game of "House" that pervades the British
Army--"nineteen, forty-one, number three, sixty-four," and a sudden
excited voice "'ouse!"

But suddenly the buzzer in the telephone room wakes into life. Dash dot
dot dash, dash dot dot, dash dash dot--X D G, it calls imperiously.
That is our call, and the telephonist throws away the novel he was
reading and seizes pencil and paper. "320th Siege! Yes, go on,
yes--fire six rounds at once on Puits thirty-seven. R.D." The message
reaches the officer in the control room, who dashes out of the door
with a megaphone through which he roars one word, "Action!" Instantly
the detachments vanish into the pits, from which a sound of urgent
preparation rises, the band stops abruptly upon an excruciating chord,
the players of "House" scatter to their respective stations. Then comes
the regular sequence of orders, and in something less than a minute
from the receipt of the message the first gun roars into pulsing life
again.

Sudden calls such as these are only incidents that disturb the quiet
of the daily life of the battery, which pursues the even tenor of
its way as soon as the number of rounds ordered has been fired. And
even when the word "Action!" sounds, it only affects the officers
and men actually on duty. The remainder are free to follow their own
vocations until it is their turn to be ready to answer the summons.
There is usually plenty of work for officers off duty to do, in the
battery itself, but still several opportunities occur for exploration
of the neighbouring country, of which the most interesting form is
reconnaissance of the ground from the front line trenches in one's own
neighbourhood. I have had many most interesting excursions to places
from whence a different view of the country could be obtained from that
presented from our own observation stations, and a different angle
of view often clears up many doubtful points. It is a most difficult
matter to recognize every feature on the ground by the aid of a map
from one point alone, but if angles can be taken to a doubtful object
from two or more points, its position can be fixed and identified upon
the map with comparative ease. And the interest of an expedition taken
with this primary object in view lies in the unexpected discoveries
that one often makes, of objects and incidents that would otherwise
be unknown to one. In the southern sector the village of Loos was a
favourite object for a walk. The enemy kept the place continuously
under fire after his repulse from it, to such an extent that the
establishment there of a permanent observation station was sternly
discouraged by the higher artillery command. It is useless to risk the
lives of telephonists and linesmen in a place that is under fire night
and day, and where, even if one's observation station is spared, one's
lines are certain to be repeatedly cut, unless the objects to be gained
by so doing are of counterbalancing importance. We were lucky enough
to possess other and safer observation posts, so that we only used the
village in cases of necessity. And we were by no means sorry, for, to
use the deathless expression of Monsieur le Commandant, the place was
"not sanitary," not only from the effects of the enemy's fire, but from
the fact that for many weeks after the operations of September 25 the
streets were still encumbered with dead horses and other odoriferous
objects. Even as late as the third week in October the dead lay thickly
strewn outside the cover afforded by the houses, and on a still day the
stench in the particular building that we used as a watch-tower was
utterly insupportable unless one smoked without intermission. It used
to be said that it was possible to find one's way about the place in
the dark purely by the use of one's nose alone.

During another of these journeys of exploration, one of our officers
was in the front line trenches, which had recently been slightly
pushed forward, engaged in marking them in on his map. The trenches
were newly dug and not yet finished, and the enemy, knowing this,
kept up a slow but fairly steady rain of shrapnel upon them. As my
friend was making his way along the trench, he saw a brigadier and
his entourage advancing in the opposite direction towards him. Having
an instinctive mistrust of "brass-hats" and of the inane questions
that they are so fond of asking, he stopped where he was, hoping that
they would pass by without noticing him. But the fates were against
him. When not more than twenty yards separated him from the splendid
company, a shell burst fairly in the trench not a couple of yards
from the brigadier himself, damaging neither him nor his staff, but
unfortunately killing one of the defenders. Almost at the same moment
one of the lynx-eyed suite discovered my friend's presence and also
the fact that he was an artillery officer. "Just the man we want!
Order your battery to open fire at once on the gun that fired that
shot." To the average staff officer politeness is a sign of weakness,
nothing but a peremptory order is possible from one of such high mental
attainments. My friend explained with some asperity that he was not in
communication with his battery, being merely on a reconnaissance for
the purpose of discovering information that the Staff had neglected to
render, information that was of vital importance, namely the position
of our own trenches. But that if he would be good enough to inform him
of the exact position of the offending battery, he would walk back
and open fire upon it. Then all the members of the entourage--the
brigadier himself maintained an amused silence throughout--pointed in
different directions, each swearing that they had seen the flash of
the gun in the place he indicated, some of them displaying a happy
ignorance by selecting places well within our own lines. My friend
was to take a compass bearing of the direction, he was to stand where
the shell fell and wait for the next flash (not a bad idea that),
they themselves would get into touch with the artillery group through
their own telephone system. Finally they drifted on, still, like the
heathen, furiously raging together. My friend forgot all about them in
the course of investigating more important matters, until he arrived
that evening at the office of his group commander to report upon his
observations. He was greeted with the words, "Hullo, what have you been
up to?" "Nothing particularly heinous, I hope, sir." "What did you
tell that parcel of lunatics to ring me up and request me to open fire
on nothing for?" "I didn't, sir," and then the whole story came out,
much to the amusement of the group commander. Nor did this close the
incident by any means. Somebody having decided that the battery that
had the presumption to fire upon a brigadier and his staff was probably
situated in a certain wood, on the morrow of the affair at a given
hour every battery within range was ordered to fire a certain number
of rounds into the said wood. The result must have saved the enemy the
trouble of cutting firewood for the rest of the winter.

When not engaged upon reconnaissance, there is always plenty of
interest in the battery itself, of which a large proportion is provided
by the aeroplanes of both sides. However carefully the battery itself
may be concealed, this precaution is useless unless the _personnel_
keep out of sight when hostile aeroplanes are about. Men do not
stand about in groups for the fun of the thing, there must be some
military reason for it, or, everything else failing, it is probably
an indication of a billeting area. At all events, it is worth trying
a few rounds at for luck, or so the German gunners seem to think.
An aeroplane sentry armed with a pair of glasses and a whistle is
consequently perpetually on duty, and the blast of his whistle is the
signal for everybody to get under cover at once. It becomes very trying
to get into the habit of leaving whatever one is doing and take shelter
under the nearest tree several times in the hour, and if, for instance,
one is digging gun-pits against time the annoyance is maddening. But
neglect of this precaution is sure sooner or later to have fatal
results. On one occasion the men of a French battery in a field close
to us treated a reconnoitring Taube with the most profound contempt,
they were building shelters and refused to stop work for so trivial a
cause. We, more cautious, bolted for cover and stayed there while the
hostile aeroplane, having evidently noticed something, circled round
once or twice, and then, when directly over the French battery, dropped
some tinsel substance that sparkled in the sun, as an indication to
the artillery of the whereabouts of its quarry. And sure enough next
morning we were treated to a really magnificent display of accurate
shooting. A German battery opened fire without warning, leaving just
sufficient time for the men to rush into their dug-outs before the
second shell burst fairly in the centre of the battery. They fired
very few rounds, but a lucky shell burst in a hay-stack behind which
were hidden the battery ammunition wagons, setting it on fire. The
result was very interesting. For an hour or more the air was thick with
cartridge cases and fragments of shell, as the ammunition in the wagons
slowly caught fire. There was no sudden explosion, and beyond the utter
destruction of the wagons very little damage was done, but regarded as
a pyrotechnic display the scene in that field was very hard to beat.

But the reconnoitring aeroplane is by no means allowed to have things
all its own way. Anti-aircraft guns fill the space about it with
bursting shrapnel, other aeroplanes rise to attack it, machine guns
spit bullets at it. If no damage is done, the unfortunate observer
is kept far too busy to worry about what is going on down below him.
On one occasion we were conducting a series by the help of aerial
observation. It was a beautifully clear day, and to our astonishment
our first three rounds were signalled "Not observed." Then came a
message, "Observation impossible, am coming home," and in about a
minute we saw our aeroplane "coming home" at top speed, closely pursued
by three hostile machines. Sometimes one is fortunate enough to witness
an air duel, which is one of the most magnificent sights imaginable.
The anti-aircraft guns are silent, the risk of hitting their friends
is too great, and high up above the ground the machines wheel and
turn and dive at angles that seem incredible to the watchers below.
Very faintly comes the roar of the engines and the staccato rattle
of machine guns and automatic pistols. At last one of the machines,
finding itself overpowered, dives suddenly, and then, straightening its
course, makes a long vol plané to the safety of its own lines, followed
by its antagonists till the anti-aircraft fire becomes too hot for
them. Or there is a sudden silence, a curious fluttering as of a winged
bird, and, quite slowly as it seems, a torn mass of metal and canvas
dives headlong to earth. Or perhaps one morning a dull drone attracts
one's attention, and, looking up, one sees against the deep blue of
the sky an aerial squadron, their wings almost pure white in the sun,
a flight of sinister wild geese, carrying bombs to the destruction of
some important railway centre. Flanders is much to be recommended as a
suitable spot in which to undergo the cure of ennui.

The men off duty seem also to find plenty of occupation. For one thing
there is always something to grumble at--either it rains, and the
billets leak water through their broken-down roofs, or the mail does
not arrive one day, or something of the kind happens--for the gunner is
an inveterate "grouser" at trifles, although such incidents as being
shelled only seem to amuse him. And then he can go to the nearest spot
in which the inhabitants have still been allowed to remain, where he
finds every cottage converted into an _estaminet_. There he may sit
with a group of his friends drinking that strange beer that is about
as intoxicating as tea and not quite so harmful, and he can grumble
at that. Gunner Wolverhampton, the sheen upon whose nose indicates
that he is probably something of a connoisseur in the matter of beer,
says that it tastes like the water that mother washes the onions in,
and I daresay it does. Here, sitting in these cottage parlours, you
find him holding long conversations with their owners and perhaps a
handful of French soldiers, in the curious language that is rapidly
growing up. If there should be a girl in the place (her age or looks
are quite immaterial) he cannot refrain from chaff. "You compree
promnade?" he says. "Si, si," she replies. "Well, you come promnade
with moi down the route, savvy?" She shakes her head. "You no bon,"
he says gravely. "Mais oui, moi j'suis bonne, mais vous méchant." "No
bon, my dear, but portez two beers, twoppence, compree?" The way the
two nations understand one another is amazing. "The old girl at the
farm was telling me last night all about the time when the Bosches
was here," said Gunner Wolverhampton to me one day. "How on earth did
you manage to understand her?" I asked. "Oh, we got along famous," he
replied, and very soon showed me that she had made him understand her
remarks thoroughly. On one occasion, finding a party of French linesmen
stranded for a length of wire, one of our telephonists gave them a
piece, and ever afterwards the two batteries were on terms of the
greatest intimacy. The men used to go and sit in one another's billets,
frequently, after the manner of their kind, exchanging headgear as they
did so, with the most curious effects, as when a burly gunner clad in
a brown sweater and a French steel helmet, and carrying a long French
rifle, strolled across the road. The startling resemblance he bore to a
Cromwellian soldier made us all turn out to see him.

Gunner Wolverhampton, as the archetype of his fellows, deserves more
than passing notice. He had served twelve years in the regiment, had
taken his discharge, and was in civilian employment when the war broke
out. As soon as recruiting regulations allowed, that is about the third
week of the war, he re-enlisted. These re-enlisted men were allotted
regimental numbers from one upwards in the order in which they offered
themselves, and Gunner Wolverhampton is justly proud of his single
figure number. In appearance he is about forty-five, with a grave face,
a well-built figure, and a slow and weighty method of speech. His
peculiarity lies in his nose, which is a rich crimson--it must have
been a most expensive acquisition. When asked his civilian trade, he
gives it as sign-painter, a statement that once surprised one of his
comrades into remarking _sotto voce_, "Gawd love us, chum, I thought
you was a whisky-taster!" An old soldier of the finest type, knowing
all the ropes and imbued with that highest form of self-respect that
only the traditions of the service can propagate, he is perfectly
invaluable by the mere force of his example in these days when soldiers
are turned out by the million in a few months. A certain proportion
of the battery _matériel_ and stores were entirely in his hands, and
he has never throughout the campaign been found deficient by so much
as a pick-handle, nor has his gun ever failed to be spotlessly clean
and in perfect order. Without the inclination or necessary educational
qualifications for promotion, he is useful and contented as a gunner,
and in times of emergency the whole of his section, including the
non-commissioned officers themselves, instinctively turn to him for
guidance. He it is that when the detachments are worn out after a long
period of digging or of working the gun, keeps them hard at it by his
example and by caustic criticism of their relative feebleness; he it
was that walked calmly down to where a neighbouring battery was being
shelled and led a party out, as though he were taking some friends to
get a drink, to where the shells were falling viciously round two or
three wounded men, bringing them in with utter unconcern for his own
danger. Ah, Gunner Wolverhampton, if this war makes of all who serve in
it men such as you, then the cost of it in blood and treasure will be
as nothing when set by the side of the freshly won strength of a nation
rejuvenated!

Happy hours are those spent just behind the line between the strenuous
days of strife, when one feels merely a spectator of the pageantry
of war, when one can study men at their best, for the strain of war
brings out the good qualities of human nature and atrophies the bad.
Hours they are of leisure, when one may drive into a town of perhaps
some considerable local importance, where, even under the strange forms
that war has cast upon it, the old peace-time life of the community
yet lives. Not all the jostling crowd of khaki, the long trains of
supply columns that block the narrow mediæval streets of Béthune, have
essentially altered the character of the place as the market-town of
the neighbouring district; the old square tower, the graceful belfry,
still look down upon a crowd of _gamins_, of hatless women and girls,
of old men standing in the market-place. Only the young men are
wanting, and their place is taken by this surging crowd of the young
men of another nation. Commercially, all such towns must be reaping a
golden harvest. See how every pastry-cook's window bears the legend
"Tea Rooms," extending below it a tempting array of _pâtisserie_ that
would shame the best of those dreadful "tea-shops" of our native land.
And, when sufficiently allured, elbow your way in amongst the hungry
rabble that speak a curious tongue they believe to be French--it does
not matter, the proprietress and her daughter learnt English long ago,
and have now almost acquired this same curious tongue--and try to get a
seat. So it is with all the shops, and the Frenchman, with his instinct
to provide what is required, has contrived that the most exacting of
these English officers with their innumerable and most peculiar wants,
shall rarely go away unsatisfied. In such towns as these will be found
the representatives of those peculiar units that are raised (or do
they raise themselves?) apparently for the sole purpose of encumbering
the roads. But perhaps in the villages is seen the more amusing side
of international commerce. In the towns everybody seems to know by
instinct what the soldier wants--I have heard a gunner ask for fried
fish and chips in the vernacular of Newcastle, and get it--but in the
villages considerable parleying is sometimes necessary. There is a
story of a man who rode to a farmhouse where eggs were to be obtained,
and demanded "oofs." But madame was unresponsive. "Non compris,
monsieur, peut-être il veut du lait, de la beurre----?" Desperate,
the man dismounted, and, picking up his horse's foot, tapped it
significantly. "No, ma'am, not lay or burr, oofs, oofs, can't you see?"



XII

A WAR MESS


More amusement is usually to be derived from the Battery Mess than
from any other side of the not uninteresting life of the campaign.
Let half-a-dozen officers of varying ages, temperaments and ideas be
collected at random from half the civilized globe, and set them down in
a situation where their only relaxation must be found in one another's
company, and watch the result. It can readily be imagined that there
are endless piquant possibilities, a vast field of quiet entertainment
for the student of the lighter side of existence.

As a rule, for the care of its material side, some heavenborn genius
arises from amongst the ruck of his fellows, whose well-ordered brain
revels in the details of cooks, and ration beef and the most convenient
hour for dinner. Happy is the mess in its possession of him, how
willingly its members forego any say in the matters pertaining to
sustenance, in how docile a spirit do they submit to his autocratic
ruling that marmalade is to be kept for breakfast alone, that lunch
shall consist of bully-beef and cheese! Our own battery was blessed
beyond its fellows in a tyrant of dazzling capabilities, who coaxed
mysterious dishes, of course with the collusion of the mess-cook, from
the most unpromising materials, who fed us bountifully from secret
stores of his own such time as we wandered forlorn over the face of
the land, who allowed no comment upon the quality of the bacon or
the resilience of the bread. We all looked blindly to him for our
daily needs, much as the Children of Israel looked to Moses in the
wilderness, and we were never disappointed. May his memory be for ever
associated with these precious words--he fed us well!

Mess premises may be divided into two classes, the first being found in
cases where the battery position is in a locality where the inhabitants
are still in occupation of their houses, and consisting of some room
in an _estaminet_ or farmhouse, the second being improvised in a ruin
or dug-out. Both are capable of providing both trouble and comfort,
in both a stern resolution to take things cheerfully as they come
results wonderfully quickly in the discovery that one is getting on
very well considering. I have a vivid picture in my memory of a mess
of the first type, once the public room of an _estaminet_, now given
over for our use. A few chairs and a table furnished it, its doors
opened upon a courtyard of extraordinary capabilities in the way of
mud, wherein stood the battery car, a horse or two, and several fowls,
one or more of which items one invariably fell over in the dark. Next
to the mess-room was the kitchen, of whose stove we had the use, and
wherein perpetually _madame_ and the two mess servants bickered for
space for their culinary operations. And yet perhaps we were even
more comfortable in a home that we made for ourselves in an abandoned
miner's cottage. We glazed the windows, repaired the shell-holes in
the roof, stole doors and a stove, and made the place thoroughly
weatherproof and comfortable. And then, the furnishing and decoration!
No newly-engaged couple, who, if we may believe the posters, spend
their hours of bliss in arguing whether they shall confide their
savings to Messrs. Deal & Glue or to the Houndsditch Furnishing Co.,
ever furnished with such a zest as did we. Abandoned villages lay
all around us, ours was the freedom to loot as we would. The only
trouble was that we were by no means the first comers--"our wants
had all been felt, our errors made before"--and it required diligent
search to find anything of any use. Our wheeler mended a broken table,
two triumphant servants struggled in with a gigantic sideboard, the
roofless and abandoned church was raided for cane-seated chairs,
we descended like vultures upon a rival mess when the battery that
owned it, being ordered to another position, abandoned it. Growing
ambitious, we refused to be contented with mere use, our cultivated
taste demanded ornament, decoration of the bare walls, and our craving
was gratified. Out of every house we took the marvellous examples of
the photographer's art that we found there, wonderful enlargements
of the owner, his wife, his children, in their Sunday best, and hung
them indiscriminately, the more prepossessing "on the line," the rest
grouped with artistic abandon. Should their exiled owners ever return
to them, what delight will be theirs to find those two old enemies
Monsieur Malbranque and Madame Rietz hanging lovingly side by side,
or that stern old maid, Mademoiselle Dalbine, surrounded by a group
of miscellaneous children! What litigation may not ensue when Madame
Apelghem finds her mahogany chest-of-drawers in Madame Puchon's cellar,
or Monsieur Verlane his brand-new cooking-stove firmly cemented into
the bedroom of that doubtful lady Ma'm'selle Frisson! With what regret
did we leave this home-like mess to take the road once more, and with
what true instinct did the senior subaltern insist upon the loading
into the last lorry of the best loved of the portraits, so that it
might follow the battery in all its wanderings as a perpetual memory
of happy days! It was a truly fearsome enlargement of a terribly
ugly little girl, her face, with the mouth hanging open, bearing an
expression of acute agony, her hands crossed over the region where the
pain might be expected to be, her toes turned in despondently. "The
Flatulent Child" we christened her, yet perhaps none of us, gazing into
those inexpressive eyes, can fail to remember days whose happiness will
always be a precious memory to us all.

The food question practically solves itself; rations of surpassing
quality are provided in quantities that tax the keenest appetite
to consume, all that remains is to cook them and to provide such
delicate extras as may be desired. And in that same provision of extras
there lies many a snare. France is not a desert and savage land, as,
judging by the preparations that a conscientious mess secretary makes
before he embarks, one might expect to find it, and nearly everything
that one wants can be obtained in the towns behind the line at very
reasonable prices. We had arranged with a large firm in England to
send us fortnightly supplies, and there our troubles began. The firm
played their part nobly, and beginning with the day we set out upon
our adventures, sent regularly the fortnightly consignments. But heavy
artillery owes no allegiance to division or army corps, but wanders
like some distended bumblebee about the line, sipping honey in the
shape of rations now from this point, now from that, until the Military
Forwarding Officers, the Railway Transport Officers, and all the
host of curiously termed people whose business it is to play trains
in this distracted land, lose all count of the whereabouts of any
particular battery. The result of this to us was that for six weeks
after our arrival in France we heard nothing of our long-expected
delicacies, despite frantic journeys to railhead after railhead, and
piteous applications to supply officers all over the country. By
this time we had learnt that we could get what we wanted close at
hand, and had ceased to worry about them, when one day we received a
message that some stores were awaiting us at a certain station forty
miles away. Seizing a favourable opportunity, we dashed over there in
the battery car and secured the first consignment, and being by that
time fairly well settled, we left instructions for the forwarding of
any subsequent lots that might turn up. Then the accumulation of the
fruitless weeks began to pour in upon us. At every tactical crisis the
ration-lorry would dash up to the battery, amidst a tempest of shot
and shell, and unload numberless cases of things of which we already
had a superfluity. Box after box was dumped upon us, packed tight with
tins of cold and sodden fruit, of strange cereal foods, of desiccated
and strange-tasting soups. Who, in a country where food is treated as
a fine art, would wish to live upon such things? Yet our stern tyrant,
his mind rebelling at the mere thought of waste, ordained that it must
be so, and so it was. Alas, for the flesh-pots of France, the omelettes
and coffee of _Madame_! How tragic that you must vanish to appear no
more!

Of sleeping quarters much might be written. What in theory could be
more delightful than to sleep in one's valise in the open air--the
thing is supposed to be waterproof--to wake up fresh in the early
morning and roll on the dewy grass by way of a bath? What indeed? The
romance of the proceeding appeals to the man allured by the specious
prospect of campaigning, and he invariably attempts it for a few
nights, until he grows strangely silent towards bed-time and furtively
steals away to some billet he has found. After that he fluctuates
between spreading his valise in a chicken-run (it was night when we
spread out our valises, and the major's language on discovering in
the morning that he had been trying to hatch out a likely-looking
brood of chickens was, to put it respectfully, bracing) and crawling
luxuriously, in the full glory of pyjamas, between real sheets. The
valise itself is all right, there is nothing more comfortable, the
only trouble is that it is bed and portmanteau combined, so that one's
night's rest is shared by all one's belongings, including one's spare
pair of boots. And I never met a pair of boots in such circumstances
that had not the power of being in several places at once, till one's
valise, whichever way one turned, did not seem to be as closely packed
with boots as a cobbler's shop. I repeat, the valise is all right,
that is if one's servant knows how to fold the blankets in it, and
how to dispose the softer of its contents under one's head. But the
occasional luxury of a real bed is very welcome, only--treat the casual
mattress with caution until you know it thoroughly. If etymology means
in Flanders the study of the language of the trenches, entomology is
likewise the study of a doubtful mattress, and both sciences are often
more extensive than it would appear. Better in most billets is the
bare floor with a valise upon it than the most tempting bed. Usually,
however, one has to use both. For many nights two of us occupied a
room exactly six feet by eight, more than half of which was occupied
by the bed. Our process of turning-in was interesting and extremely
scientific. We had tossed up for the bed, and my friend had won it, so
he retired to rest first. When he was safely in bed, I came in, put
all the remaining furniture outside the door, shut it, laid down my
valise, and crawled into it, my head jammed against the door, and my
feet up the stove pipe, like Alice in the house of the White Rabbit.
He slept with his feet out of the window, until early one morning a
passing horse, of inquisitive temperament, seeing the blanket, gave it
a sharp tug. My friend woke up convinced the Huns were upon us.

My most comfortable nights were spent in a coal cellar, which two of
us had cleared out and adapted to our uses. My stable companion, being
something of a sybarite, looted an iron bedstead on which to spread his
valise--it was a new and improved type, and when extended in all its
glory had a curious canopy of its own, the effect of the whole being
like nothing so much as Noah's Ark. Into this, with much difficulty and
objurgation he would crawl, when the mysterious concern would promptly
convert itself into a portable washingstand or some other fitment of
extreme utility, whence it had to be coaxed into the Ark-like form
again. I, less ambitious, supported a shutter on some bricks, and laid
my very ordinary valise on that. It was far less ostentatious, and I
had fewer adventurous nights. It was cold in that cellar, so we raided
a stove that we lit every evening, finding plenty of broken rafters
in the ruined houses round us to serve for fuel. We shall neither of
us know again such nights as those, lulled to sleep as we were by the
sleepless batteries around us, although in profound peace we might rest
in the most sumptuous bed that Tottenham Court Road ever produced.

In this ideal spot we had a bathroom with a huge stove in it, on which
to boil many gallons of water in petrol cans, and no luxury could equal
the luxury of those hot baths. There was a tragedy connected with it,
though. One young officer was wallowing in a glorious sea of foaming
lather, when a shell burst a few yards from the door. Not being sure
where and when to expect the next, he dashed as he was through the
battery to his dug-out, the soap-suds flying from him as foam from the
limbs of some swift-footed sea-god. Nor was the major more fortunate.
Condemned to spend many weary days and nights in his O.P., and missing
the bathroom, he constructed one on the same plan, but less the stove,
in the house he used for the purpose. But unfortunately there was
only a wooden partition between him and the enemy, and one day stray
bullets began to come through this with alarming frequency. He, too,
was compelled to beat a hurried retreat.

Strange, too, are the messes that two or three officers, alone together
on detachment, establish for their own convenience. I know of one in
the dark low hall of an old farmhouse, that is in itself mess-room,
kitchen and sleeping apartment for the servants of the two officers who
lived in the little room opening off it. Life there was very much as we
imagine it in mediæval times, the officers had their meals with their
servants standing behind their chairs--not from a desire for wanton
display, but because there was nowhere else to go--by the light of
two candles and the red glow of the stove in the background. Upon the
oaken beams of the ceiling hung strange shapes that were the implements
of war, looted German rifles and bayonets, haversacks, water-bottles,
binoculars, sextants and other lethal weapons. A dripping oilskin dried
by the fire, the faint smell of warm wet gum-boots mingled with that
of the boiling cabbage. Perhaps the telephone that buzzed incessantly
introduced a modern element, but everything else, seen in the gloom of
the shaded candles, looked ghostly, unreal, a scene from some forgotten
haunt of a robber baron. And the rats ran fearlessly across the floor,
or sat very still in the corners, their fierce eyes shining as the
light caught them. Tea was the meal of the day in that mess, for then
one of the two came in from his observation post at Suicide Corner,
for which he had set out at half-past five in the morning, tired and
hungry, and tea when the light has failed and the rising mist of late
autumn foretells a white frost is a worthy meal. Suicide Corner was
a bleak spot, too, and eight hours in such a place with nothing but
bully-beef sandwiches for lunch gives one an amazing appetite. And if
one's companion is Scotch with an apparently limitless acquaintance who
send him shortbread and oat-cake, then one's cup of delight is full
indeed.

Suicide Corner is not the name of that cross-roads where the
observation post stands, but, as it stands there still, or part of
it does at all events, its real name is best left unsaid. A feeble
imitator of the immortal "Ruthless Rhymes" in his intervals of
observation produced the following--

  To a cross-roads that I know
  Careful Colonels rarely go.
  'Tis a pity; if the sniper
  Potted men whose years were riper,
  Our artillery promotion
  Would be quicker, I've a notion!

and was wounded in that very spot on the next morning, which possibly
he richly deserved. Yet close by was the Hidden Garden, a little
plot of a few square feet hidden from prying eyes by a thick hedge,
wherein grew chrysanthemums that were a never-failing delight to a
pair of eyes tired of the ugliness of war's destruction, and a bush
of rosemary that smelt of our own West Country. What loving hand had
planted it, and will the owner of that hand return some day to find
all the familiar houses in heaps of blackened ruins, the well-known
trees cut down or mutilated by shell-fire, the peaceful fields furrowed
with long trenches and strewn with fragments of shell? If so, perhaps
the little garden will still show signs of the unknown who, in return
for the beauty with which it gladdened his heart, tore up the weeds
that bid fair to choke it and tended the flowers as best he could. And
perhaps the very hand that planted the flowers will, on a more peaceful
November 1, lay a bunch of them on each of the nameless graves that
lie near by. And perhaps Suicide Corner will again become the centre
of a wayside village, and the troubled air will forget the ceaseless
song of the sniper's bullet and the sharp crack of rifle and roar of
bursting shell. Only the thickly strewn graves will remain, witnesses
that over this quiet spot was once the hunting-ground of Death.


  Printed in Great Britain by Richard Clay & Sons, Limited,
  brunswick st., stamford st., s.e., and bungay, suffolk.



WHAT I SAW IN BERLIN

AND OTHER EUROPEAN CAPITALS DURING WAR TIME

By "PIERMARINI"

  Crown 8vo. Price 5/-net


This arresting volume contains the impressions produced on the mind
of "a neutral" who at considerable risk has visited Berlin (twice),
Vienna, Constantinople, Pesth, Amsterdam, Brussels, Antwerp, and Paris
on different occasions, after several months of war. It is full of
first-hand information regarding the state of affairs in the capitals
of our foes.

 _Globe_:--"A thoroughly enjoyable book of enormous interest in these
 stirring times."

 _Truth_:--"Vivid and interesting."

 _Sunday Times_:--"Piermarini's vivacity of style is as unexceptional
 as his daring in action."


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THE DIARY OF AN ENGLISH RESIDENT IN FRANCE

DURING TWENTY-TWO WEEKS OF WAR TIME

By ROWLAND STRONG

  Crown 8vo. Price 6/-net


Mr. Strong is well known as a keen and judicial critic of current
events. Owing to his long residence in France he understands our Ally
thoroughly, and his instructive volume reveals the true soul of the
people in arms. At the same time he criticises freely her failings and
idiosyncrasies.

 _Evening Standard_:--"Many interesting side-lights on the war are cast
 by this wayfarer in France."

 _Yorkshire Post_:--"Can be cordially recommended."


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