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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54312 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54312)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mons, Anzac and Kut, by Aubrey Herbert
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Mons, Anzac and Kut
-
-Author: Aubrey Herbert
-
-Release Date: March 9, 2017 [EBook #54312]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MONS, ANZAC AND KUT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brian Coe, Wayne Hammond and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Transcriber’s Note:
-
-This project uses utf-8 encoded characters. If some characters are not
-readable, check your settings of your reader to ensure you have a
-default font installed that can display utf-8 characters.]
-
-
-
-
-MONS, ANZAC AND KUT
-
-BY AN M.P.
-
-LONDON
-
-EDWARD ARNOLD
-
-1919
-
-[_All rights reserved_]
-
-
-
-
-THIS BOOK
-
-IS DEDICATED TO
-
-LORD ROBERT CECIL
-
-AND
-
-THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-Journals, in the eyes of their author, usually require an introduction
-of some kind, which, often, may be conveniently forgotten. The reader
-is invited to turn to this one if, after persevering through the pages
-of the diary, he wishes to learn the reason of the abrupt changes and
-chances of war that befell the writer. They are explained by the fact
-that his eyesight did not allow him to pass the necessary medical
-tests. He was able, through some slight skill, to evade these obstacles
-in the first stage of the war; later, when England had settled down
-to routine, they defeated him, as far as the Western Front was
-concerned. He was fortunately compensated for this disadvantage by a
-certain knowledge of the East, that sent him in various capacities to
-different fronts, often at critical times. It was as an Interpreter
-that the writer went to France. After a brief imprisonment, it was as
-an Intelligence Officer that he went to Egypt, the Dardanelles and
-Mesopotamia.
-
-The first diary was dictated in hospital from memory and rough notes
-made on the Retreat from Mons. For the writing of the second diary,
-idle hours were provided in the Dardanelles between times of furious
-action. The third diary, which deals with the fall of Kut, was written
-on the Fly boats of the River Tigris.
-
-In a diary egotism is inevitable. Julius Cæsar cloaked it by using the
-third person and Lord French by preferring to blame others, rather than
-to praise himself, but these devices are no precedents for one who is
-not a generalissimo. There remains anonymity. True, it is a very thin
-covering for modesty, but, like a modern bathing-dress, it may serve
-its purpose.
-
-When dots occur in the journal, they have their usual significance. The
-author was thinking his private thoughts, or, perhaps, criticizing some
-high authority, or concealing what, for the moment, at any rate, is
-better not revealed.
-
-In the Retreat from Mons, only Christian or nicknames have generally
-been used. In the case of the other two Expeditions, names have been
-used freely, though where it was considered advisable, they have
-occasionally been disguised or initials substituted for them.
-
-This diary claims to be no more than a record of great and small
-events, a chronicle of events within limited horizons--a retreat, a
-siege and an attack. Writing was often hurried and difficult, and the
-diary was sometimes neglected for a period. If inaccuracies occur, the
-writer offers sincere apologies.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- MONS, 1914 5
-
- ANZAC, 1915 61
-
- KUT, 1916 189
-
-
-
-
-MONS
-
-1914
-
-[Illustration: SIFTON, PRAED & CO. LTD. ST JAMES’ ST LONDON S. W.]
-
-
-
-
-MONS
-
-AUGUST 12-SEPTEMBER 13, 1914
-
-
-On Wednesday, August 12, 1914, my regiment left Wellington Barracks at
-seven in the morning. I fell into step in the ranks as they went out of
-the gateway, where I said good-bye to my brother, who left that day. It
-was very quiet in the streets, as the papers had said nothing about the
-movement of troops. On the march the wives and relations of men said
-good-bye to them at intervals, and some of our people came to see us
-off at the station, but we missed them.
-
-We entrained for Southampton--Tom, Robin, Valentine and I got into the
-same carriage. We left Southampton without much delay. I was afraid of
-a hitch, but got on to the ship without any trouble. On board everybody
-was very cheerful. Most people thought that the first big engagement
-would have begun and very likely have ended before we arrived. Some
-were disappointed and some cheered by this thought. The men sang
-without ceasing and nobody thought of a sea attack.
-
-The next day (the 13th) we arrived very early at Le Havre in a blazing
-sun. As we came in, the French soldiers tumbled out of their barracks
-and came to cheer us. Our men had never seen foreign uniforms before,
-and roared with laughter at their colours. Stephen Burton of the
-Coldstream Guards rebuked his men. He said: “These French troops are
-our Allies; they are going to fight with us against the Germans.”
-Whereupon one man said: “Poor chaps, they deserve to be encouraged,”
-and took off his cap and waved it and shouted “Vive l’Empereur!” He was
-a bit behind the times. I believe if the Germans beat us and invaded
-England they would still be laughed at in the villages as ridiculous
-foreigners.
-
-We were met by a Colonel of the French Reserves, a weak and ineffective
-man, two Boy Scouts, and a semi-idiotic interpreter. We shed this
-man as soon as we were given our own two excellent interpreters. We
-had no wood to cook the men’s dinners, and I was sent off with Jumbo
-and a hundred men to see what I could find. A French corporal came
-reluctantly with us. We marched a mile, when we found an English
-quartermaster at a depot, who let us requisition a heap of great
-faggots, which we carried back.
-
-After breakfast I was sent with Hickie to arrange for billeting the
-men. Hickie rode a bicycle and lent me his horse, which was the most
-awful brute I have ever mounted in any country. It walked ordinarily
-like a crab; when it was frightened it walked backwards, and it was
-generally frightened. It would go with the troop, but not alone, and
-neither whip nor reins played any part in guiding the beast. Hickie
-couldn’t ride it. Some French soldiers threw some stones at it and hit
-me. Finally we got a crawling cab, then a motor, and went off about 11
-kilometres to the Café des Fleurs, where the camp was to be. It was a
-piping hot day. We got a house for the Colonel and Desmond belonging
-to Monsieur Saville, who said he was a friend of Mr. Yoxall, M.P. He
-had a very jolly arbour, where we dined. In the afternoon the troops
-came marching up the steep hill in great heat. Hickie and I found a man
-rather drunk, with a very hospitable Frenchman. The Frenchman said: “We
-have clean sheets and a well-aired bed, coffee, wine or beer for him,
-if he desires them.” There was no question about the man’s desiring
-them. Hickie almost wept, and said: “How can you keep an army together
-if they are going to be treated like this?” The sun had been delightful
-in the morning at Le Havre, but was cruel on the troops, especially on
-the Reservists, coming up the long hill.
-
-The French had been very hospitable. They had given the men, where they
-had been able to do so free of observation, wine, coffee and beer. The
-result was distressing. About twenty of the men collapsed at the top of
-the hill in a ditch, some of them unconscious, seeming almost dying,
-like fish out of water. The French behaved very well, especially the
-women, and stopped giving them spirits. I got hold of cars and carried
-the men off to their various camps. Jack, Tom and I slept all right in
-a tent on the ground. The next day I was sent down by the Colonel with
-the drum-major, to buy beer for the regiment at 1s. 1d. a gallon, which
-seemed cheap. I met Stephen while I was buying things. He told me we
-were off that night, that we were to start at ten, but that we should
-not be entrained till 4.30. I lunched with Churchill, who very kindly
-tried to help me to get a horse. Long sent me back in his motor. At the
-camp, the Colonel complained that the beer had not come, and that the
-drum-major and the men had been lost. I commandeered a private motor
-and went back at a tremendous rate into the town, all but killing the
-drum-major at a corner. We had a capital dinner. M. Saville gave us
-excellent wine, and the Colonel told me to make him a speech. We then
-lay down before the march.
-
-The next camp captured a spy, but nobody paid any attention. About
-10.30 we moved off. It was a warm night with faint moonlight. Coming
-into the town the effect was operatic. As we marched or were halted all
-the windows opened and the people put their heads out to try and talk
-to us. At about half-past eleven it began to rain, but the men whistled
-the Marseillaise and “It’s a long way to Tipperary.” The people came
-out of the houses, trying to catch the hands of the men and walking
-along beside them. We were halted in front of the station, and waited
-endlessly in the rain. We then had an almost unspeakable march over
-cobbles, past interminable canals, over innumerable bridges, through
-what seemed to be the conglomeration of all the slums of all the world,
-to light that always promised us rest but never came. It poured without
-ceasing. At last we arrived at the station, and when we saw the train
-pandemonium followed. Everybody jumped into carriages and tried to keep
-other people out, so as to have more room. We were all soaked to the
-skin, and nobody bothered about any one else. After that we got out
-and packed the men in. Tom, Charles, Jack, Hickie and I got into one
-carriage. Lieutenants who tried to follow were hurled out. It was very
-cold. Tom had a little brandy, which did us some good. At about 5 a.m.
-we moved off. The next day we arrived at Amiens.
-
-Saturday, the 15th, we arrived at Amiens to see a great stir and
-bustle. We had not had much to eat. We found several officers of the
-Coldstream Guards in their shirt-sleeves, who had got left trying to
-get food. I got masses later on at a wayside station, and a stream of
-people to carry it, and returned with rousing cheers from the men. At
-every station we were met by enormous crowds that cheered and would
-have kissed our hands if we had let them. They made speeches and piled
-wreaths of flowers upon the Colonel, who was at first very shy, but
-driven to make a speech, liked it, and became almost garrulous. At
-Arras we had the greatest ovation of all. An old man in the crowd gave
-me a post-card, which I directed to a relation at home and asked him
-to post. This he did, adding a long letter of his own, to say that I
-was well and in good spirits. This letter and my post-card got past the
-censor.
-
-Late that night we came to a place called Wassigny, where, after a lot
-of standing about, we went up to a farmhouse. Hickie and I lay down on
-the floor in a sort of an office at about half-past two, with orders
-to be off at five. The Colonel slept outside, half on and half off a
-bench. He never seemed to need sleep.
-
-We left the next morning, Sunday, the 16th, at five, for Vadencourt. I
-was wearing Cretan boots, and my feet already began to trouble me.
-
-At Vadencourt we met the Maire and his colleague, Monsieur Lesur. He
-took us first of all to the most beautiful place for a camp, a splendid
-field by a river for bathing, wooded with poplars, but no sooner had we
-got there than we were told the Coldstreamers had the right to it.
-
-In Vadencourt everybody helped us. The people threw open their houses,
-their barns and their orchards. They could not do enough; but it was a
-long business and we had not finished until 1 o’clock, by which time
-we were pretty tired. Then the troops turned up, and we had to get
-them into billets. After that we lunched with the Colonel. The French
-cottages were extraordinarily clean, never an insect, but plenty of
-mice rioting about at night. There were many signs of religion in all
-these cottages. Most of the rooms were filled with crucifixes and
-pictures of the Saints. The priests seemed to have a great deal of
-influence. Vadencourt was very religious, and the morning we went off
-they had a special service for the men, which was impressive. All the
-people seemed saintly, except the Maire, who was very much of this
-world.
-
-The men had fraternized with the people and, to the irritation of
-the Colonel, wore flowers in their hair and caps. There was no
-drunkenness--in fact the men complained that there was nothing strong
-enough to make a man drunk. Generally there was not much to do, though
-one day the men helped with the harvest. The people could not have been
-kinder. It was, as one of the men said, a great “overtation.” Every day
-there was a paper published in amazing English. In one paper we found
-a picture of Alex Thynne, with contemptuous and angry references to a
-speech he had made against English tourists going to France; he wanted
-them to go instead to Bath, in his constituency, and so to please both
-him and his constituents.
-
-It was a quiet life. There was very little soldiering, and that,
-as some one said, was more like manœuvres in the millennium than
-anything else. Everywhere corn was offered for our horses and wine for
-ourselves, but there was a great fear underlying the quiet. We were
-constantly asked whether the Germans would ever get to Vadencourt, and
-always said we were quite sure they would not. We used to mess at the
-inn close to my house. Of French troops we saw practically nothing,
-except our two interpreters, Charlot, who talked very good English,
-and Bernard, a butcher from Havre, a most excellent fellow, who was
-more English than the English, though he could only talk a few words
-of the language. There was also another interpreter, head master of a
-girls’ school in Paris. He said to me: “Vous trouverez toutes espèces
-d’infames parmi les interprets, même des M.P.s.”
-
-One day Hugo said that it would be interesting, before going into
-battle, to have our fortunes told. I told him he could not get a
-fortune-teller at Vadencourt. “Not at all, there is one in the
-village; I saw it written over her shop, ‘Sage Femme’.” ... I was very
-comfortable in my house, which was just out of bounds, but not enough
-to matter.
-
-Monsieur Louis Prevot came in one day, with a beautiful mare, brown to
-bay, Moonshine II, by Troubadour out of Middlemas. He said that she
-could jump two metres. Her disadvantages were that she jumped these two
-metres at the wrong time and in the wrong place, that she hated being
-saddled and kicked when she was groomed: while Monsieur Prevot was
-showing me how to prevent her kicking she kicked right through the barn
-door. I bought her for £40. I think Prevot thought that the French
-authorities were going to take his stables and that I was his only
-chance. When she settled down to troops she became a beautiful mount.
-
-That day I went with Hickie through Etreux to Boué, foraging. I drove
-with a boy called Vanston behind a regular man-killer. It was far worse
-than anything that happened at Mons. Vanston talked all the time of
-the virtue of Irishwomen, of the great advantage of having medals and
-the delight old men found in looking at them, of the higher courage
-of the unmarried man and his keen anxiety to get into battle, and of
-the goodness of God. Hickie was upset because he thought that the
-man-killing horse was going to destroy the Maltese cart, which was,
-apparently, harder to replace than Vanston or me.
-
-The night before we left the Colonel gave us a lecture. As an
-additional preparation for the march we were also inoculated against
-typhoid, which made some people light-headed.
-
-We left Vadencourt on August 19th, Hickie and Hubert both ill,
-travelling on a transport cart. I rode ahead, through pretty and
-uneventful country. At Oisy, Hickie was very ill, and I got him some
-brandy. We were to camp beyond Oisy. When we got to the appointed place
-the Maire was ill and half dotty. S. and I laboured like mad to find
-houses, but at last, when our work was finished we found that they
-had already been given to the Coldstreamers. Some of the people were
-excellent. One old fellow of seventy wept and wished that his house
-was as big as a barn, that he might put up the soldiers in it. A rough
-peasant boy took me round and stayed with us all the afternoon and
-refused to take a penny. But some of them were not so kind. In the end,
-billets were not found for a number of officers and men, who slept
-quite comfortably in the new-mown hay. We passed a big monastery where
-two Germans, disguised as priests, had been taken and shot the week
-before. I slept in a house belonging to three widows, all like stage
-creatures. They had one of the finest cupboards I have ever seen.
-
-The next morning (August 20th) we marched off to Maroilles--a big dull
-town, and again some of the people were not overpleased to see us. Here
-we had an excellent dinner. I slept at a chemist’s. Hickie was sent
-back from Maroilles to Amiens with rheumatic fever. We got up at 4
-o’clock the next morning (August 21st), and had a pretty long march to
-Longueville by Malplaquet.
-
-As we crossed the frontier the men wanted a cheer, but they were
-ordered to be quiet, “so as not to let the Germans hear them.” This
-order gave an unpleasant impression of the proximity of the Germans.
-
-The men began to fall out a great deal on the road. The heat was very
-great. Many of the reservists were soft, and their feet found them
-out. Their rough clothes rubbed them. Tom carried rifles all day, and
-I carried rifles and kit on my horse, while the men held on to the
-stirrups.
-
-By this time the Maires of France seemed to be growing faint under the
-strain of billeting. We never saw the Maire of Longueville. The country
-made a wonderful picture that I shall never forget. We marched past
-fields of rich, tall grass, most splendid pasture, and by acres and
-acres of ripe corn which was either uncut or, if cut, uncarried.
-
-There was any amount of food for our horses, but one felt reluctant at
-first at feeding them in the standing corn. I went ahead when I could
-to forage for the mess, and because Moonshine danced continuously and
-produced confusion.
-
-We lived chiefly on hard-boiled eggs, chocolate and beer, but we did
-better than most other companies, because generally, as Valentine said,
-the officers’ vocabulary was limited to “omelette” and “bière.”
-
-Longueville is a very long town, with fine houses, and we did capitally
-there, but the men were tired. No. 3 dined luxuriously at a farm. Hugo
-and I billeted at two houses close to each other. At 6 o’clock I went
-to get some rest, when my servant told me that the order had come to
-stand to arms at once, as the Germans were close upon us.
-
-I went outside and heard one cannon boom very faintly in the distance.
-Women were wringing their hands and crying in the streets, and the
-battalion was ordered to stand to arms. Then, after a time, we were
-ordered to march at ten, and went back to quarters. At this time we
-began to curse the Germans for disturbing the peace of Europe.
-
-The women of the village brought us milk, bread, everything they could
-for the march. While we were dining the order came to make ready for a
-German attack. We went out at once. Bernard took me up and down various
-roads, and we put iron and wire and everything we could lay hold of,
-across them, making a flimsy defence. When we returned we heard that
-we were to march at 2 a.m., and at 11 those who could lay down to
-sleep. The woman in my house was very kind in getting bread and milk.
-At 2 o’clock we began marching. The horses were all over the place.
-Moonshine nearly kicked a man behind her heels, and Tom just missed
-being killed by the ammunition horse in front. It was very dark.
-
-We marched to a place called Senlis. Dawn came, and then an enemy
-aeroplane appeared over us, which everybody at once shot at. Moonshine
-broke up two companies in the most casual way. The aeroplane went on.
-In Belgium the people were very good to us, during the week-end that
-we spent there. They were honest and pathetic. There were no signs of
-panic, but there was a ghastly silence in the towns.
-
-Beyond Senlis we were halted on a plain near a big town which we did
-not then know was Mons. We were drawn up and told that the Germans
-were close to us and that we had to drive them back. Valentine and
-I lay down under the shelter of a haystack, as it was raining. It
-was a mournful day in its early hours. At about 10 a.m. I was sent
-for by the Colonel, who had been looking for me, he said, for some
-time. He told me to ride after S. to Quevy-le-Grand. I rode fast, and
-caught up S. We stabled our horses and went round the town. Soames,
-a Staff officer, told us we could have both sides of the road--as we
-understood, the pompous main road. Unfortunately he meant both sides
-of an insignificant road we had not even noticed. We took one of the
-biggest and most beautiful farms I have ever seen for Headquarters, and
-proposed to put seven or eight officers in it. We then, as usual, found
-that this house and all the rest had been given to the Coldstreamers,
-and we went to hunt for other billets. I thought I heard cannon, faint
-and dim. As we went on with our work the noise grew louder and louder.
-There was a big battle going on within four or five miles. Then in came
-the battalion from Senlis (which was burnt twenty-four hours later) at
-about twelve, and got into billets, while, at last, we had luncheon.
-Valentine and I were eating an omelette and talking Shakespeare, when
-suddenly we saw the battalion go past. We both got cursed because we
-had not been able to prophesy that the battalion would start within
-twenty minutes. We marched on till about half-past three, through
-rising and falling land, under a very hot sun. We were getting nearer
-to the battle. The sky was filled with smoke-wreaths from shells. “We
-are going slap-bang at them,” said Hubert. At 3.30 we found ourselves
-on a hill, by a big building which looked like a monastery. The road
-was crowded with troops and frightened peasants. Below the road lay the
-green valley with the river winding through it, and on the crest of the
-wooded hills beyond were the Germans.
-
-We left our horses and marched down to the valley. As we passed the
-village of Harveng I inconsiderately tried to get a drink of water from
-a house. The men naturally followed, but we were all ordered on, and I
-had nothing to drink until 7 o’clock the next morning. The men, or some
-of them, got a little water that night.
-
-From behind us by the monastery the shells rose in jerks, three at a
-time. The Germans answered from the belt of trees above the cliffs. Our
-feelings were more violently moved against Germany as the disturber of
-Europe. I went into the first fight prepared only for peace, as I had
-left my revolver and sword on my horse. Tom said: “For goodness’ sake
-don’t get away from our company; those woods will be full of Germans
-with bayonets to-night.” We never doubted that we should drive them
-back. The Colonel called the officers together and told us that the
-trees above the chalk cliffs were our objective. We then lay down in
-some lucerne and waited and talked. The order to move came about 5.30,
-I suppose. We went down through the fields rather footsore and came
-to a number of wire fences which kept in cattle. These fences we were
-ordered to cut. My agricultural instinct revolted at this destruction.
-We marched on through a dark wood to the foot of the cliffs and,
-skirting them, came to the open fields, on the flank of the wood,
-sloping steeply upwards. Here we found our first wounded man, though
-I believe as we moved through the wood an officer had been reported
-missing.
-
-The first stretch was easy. Some rifle bullets hummed and buzzed round
-and over us, but nothing to matter. We almost began to vote war a dull
-thing. We took up our position under a natural earthwork. We had been
-there a couple of minutes when a really terrific fire opened. We were
-told afterwards that we were not the target--that it was an accident
-that they happened to have stumbled on the exact range. But even if we
-had known this at the time, it would not have made much difference. It
-was as if a scythe of bullets passed directly over our heads about a
-foot above the earthworks. It came in gusts, whistling and sighing.
-The men behaved very well. A good many of them were praying and
-crossing themselves. A man next to me said: “It’s hell fire we’re going
-into.” It seemed inevitable that any man who went over the bank must be
-cut neatly in two. Valentine was sent to find out if Bernard was ready
-on the far left. Then, in a lull, Tom gave the word and we scrambled
-over and dashed on to the next bank. Bullets were singing round us like
-a swarm of bees, but we had only a short way to go, and got, all of
-us, I think, safely to the next shelter, where we lay and gasped and
-thought hard.
-
-Our next rush was worse, for we had a long way to go through turnips.
-The prospect was extremely unattractive; we thought that the fire came
-from the line of trees which we were ordered to take, and that we
-should have to stand the almost impossible fire from which the first
-bank had sheltered us. This was not the case, as the German trenches,
-we heard afterwards, were about 300 yards behind the trees, but their
-rifle fire and their shells cut across. We had not gone more than
-about 100 yards, at a rush and uphill, when a shell burst over my
-head. I jumped to the conclusion that I was killed, and fell flat. I
-was ashamed of myself before I reached the ground, but, looking round,
-found that everybody else had done the same.
-
-The turnips seemed to offer a sort of cover, and I thought of the
-feelings of the partridges, a covey of which rose as we sank. Tom gave
-us a minute in which to get our wind--we lay gasping in the heat, while
-the shrapnel splashed about--and then told us to charge, but ordered
-the men not to fire until they got the word. As we rose, with a number
-of partridges, the shooting began again, violently, but without much
-effect. I think we had six or seven men hit. We raced to the trees.
-Valentine was so passionately anxious to get there that he discarded
-his haversack, scabbard and mackintosh, and for days afterwards walked
-about with his naked sword as a walking-stick.
-
-When we reached the trees in a condition of tremendous sweat we found
-an avenue and a road with a ditch on either side. We were told that our
-trenches were a few yards over the farther hedge, faced by the German
-trenches, about 250 yards off. There was fierce rifle and machine-gun
-fire. Night fell; the wounded were carried back on stretchers; we
-sat very uncomfortably in a ditch. I was angry with Tom for the only
-time on the march, as he was meticulous about making us take cover in
-this beastly ditch when outside it there was a bank of grass like a
-sofa, which to all intents and purposes was safe from fire. We were
-extremely thirsty, but there was nothing to drink and no prospect of
-getting water. After some time we moved down the road upon which we
-lay, getting what sleep we could. In the earlier part of the night
-there were fierce duels of rifle fire and machine-guns between the two
-trenches. It sounded as if the Germans were charging. Our men in the
-road never got a chance of letting off their guns. Most of us dozed
-coldly and uncomfortably on the hard road. I woke up about 2 a.m.,
-dreaming that a mule was kicking the splash-board of a Maltese wagon
-to pieces, and then realized that it was the German rifle fire beyond
-the hedge, hitting the road. I walked up the road for a few yards
-and heard two men talking, one of whom was, I suppose, Hubert, and
-the other must have been C. Hubert said: “Have I your leave, sir, to
-retire?” “Yes, you have; everybody else has gone; it is clear that we
-are outflanked on the left, and it is suicide to stay.” The battalion
-was then ordered to retire; No. 3 Company, doing rearguard, was ordered
-back to the fields which we had already crossed. I said to Tom: “I hear
-upon the best authority that this is suicide.” Tom said: “Of course it
-is; we shall get an awful slating.” We moved back. There was a faint
-light and a spasmodic rifle fire from the Germans as we went back to
-the fields we had crossed. We could not make out why they did not open
-on us with shrapnel, as they had the range. We lay down on the new-cut
-hay, which smelt delicious. It seemed almost certain that we should be
-wiped out when dawn came, but most of us went fast asleep. I did. At 4
-o’clock we were hurried off. We went down into the blinding darkness of
-the wood by the road we had gone the evening before. We went through
-the wood, past the monastery, up into the village. There we waited. The
-road was blocked, the villagers were huddled, moaning, in the streets.
-
-The men were very pleased to have been under fire, and compared notes
-as to how they felt. Every one was pleased. But they felt that more of
-this sort of thing would be uncivilized, and it ought to be stopped by
-somebody now. In the dawn we crossed a high down, where we expected to
-be shelled, but nothing happened. We were very tired and footsore.
-
-At 7 o’clock we got to Quevy-le-Petit and had a long drink, the first
-for seventeen hours. The smell of powder and the heat had made us
-very thirsty. Two companies were set to dig trenches. We were held
-in reserve, and all the hot morning we shelled the Germans from
-Quevy-le-Petit, while their guns answered our fire without much effect.
-One shell was a trouble. The remainder of the ---- Regiment (men
-without officers), who had had a bad time at Mons, had a shell burst
-over them and rushed through our ranks, taking some of our men with
-them. This was put right at once.
-
-We were told that a tremendous German attack was to take place in the
-evening; we disliked the idea, as, even to an amateur like myself, it
-was obvious that there was hardly any means of defence. To stay was to
-be destroyed, as the Colonel said casually, causing “une impression
-bien pénible.”
-
-We wrote farewell letters which were never sent. I kept mine in my
-pocket, as I thought it would do for a future occasion. They began to
-shell us heavily while we helped ourselves from neighbouring gardens.
-We did this with as much consideration as possible, and Valentine and I
-went off to cook some potatoes in an outhouse by a lane.
-
-The peasants were flying, and offered us all their superfluous goods.
-They were very kind. Then an order to retire came, and in hot haste
-we left our potatoes. We retired at about 1 o’clock in the afternoon
-and marched to Longueville, or rather to a camp near it called Bavai.
-We reached this camp at about 10.30 at night. Moonshine behaved like
-the war-horse in the Bible. She had hysterics which were intolerable;
-smelling the battle a long way off. She must have done this the night
-before, when it was much nearer and I had left her with Ryan, for when
-I found her again she had only one stirrup. A sergeant-major captured
-her and picketed her for the night.
-
-The orchard in which we camped blazed with torch-light and camp-fires
-and was extremely cheerful. Every now and then a rifle went off by
-accident, and this was always greeted with tremendous cheers.
-
-I was very tired, and threw myself down to sleep under a tree, when up
-came the Colonel and said: “Come along, have some rum before you go to
-bed.” I went and drank it, and with all the others lay down thoroughly
-warm and contented in the long wet grass, and slept soundly for three
-hours. Next morning we were woken about 3 o’clock, but did not march
-off till 6 o’clock.
-
-From Bavai we marched to Landrecies. Hubert rode ahead with me to
-do the billeting. We pastured our horses in the luxuriant grass and
-got milk at the farms. We did not see much sign of panic amongst the
-people, but coming to a big railway station we saw that all the engines
-of the heavy ammunition wagons had been turned round. Hubert saw and
-swore. In the morning we occupied a farm, where I tried to buy a strap
-to replace my lost stirrup. We lay about under haystacks and talked
-to the farmer and his son. After about an hour it was reported that
-two hundred Germans were coming down the road, and Eric went off after
-them, with machine-guns.
-
-The retreat had begun in real earnest. This whole retreat was curiously
-normal. Everybody got very sick of it, and all day long one was hearing
-officers and men saying how they wanted to turn and fight. I used to
-feel that myself, though when one was told to do so and realized that
-we were unchaperoned by the French and faced by about two million
-Germans, it did something to cool one’s pugnacity, and one received
-the subsequent order to retire in a temperate spirit. Men occasionally
-fell out from bad feet, but the regiment marched quite splendidly.
-There was never any sign of flurry or panic anywhere. I think that
-most people, when they realized what had happened, accepted things
-rather impersonally. They thought that as far as our Army in France was
-concerned, disaster, in the face of the enormous numbers that we had to
-fight, was inevitable, but that this disaster was not vital as long as
-the Navy was safe.
-
-My dates are not quite accurate here, as I cannot account for one day.
-It was Sunday, August 23rd, that we had the fight at Mons; I remember
-several men said: “Our people are now going to Evening Service at
-home,” as we marched out; and it was Tuesday, September 1st, that we
-had the fight in which I and the others were taken prisoners.
-
-Hubert and I arrived at Landrecies about 1 o’clock. Going in, we met
-S., a Staff officer, who told us where we could quarter the men. We
-went to a big house belonging to a man called Berlaimont, which Hubert
-wanted to have as Headquarters. Berlaimont was offensive and did not
-wish to give his house. We went on to the Maire, who gave us permission
-to take it. After lunch we went on billeting, finding some very fine
-houses. We had a mixed reception. Berlaimont gave in ungraciously,
-and wrote up rather offensive orders as to what was not to be done:
-“Ne pas cracher dans les corridors.” In other houses, too, they made
-difficulties. I said: “After all, we are better than the Germans.”
-They soon had the chance of judging. The troops came in to be billeted.
-At 6 o’clock fire suddenly broke out in the town, and the cry was
-raised that the Germans were upon us. I ran back and got my sword and
-revolver at Headquarters, and going out, found a body of unattached
-troops training a Maxim on the estaminet that was my lodgings. I
-prevented them firing. Troops took up positions all over the town. The
-inhabitants poured out pell-mell. It was like a flight in the Balkans.
-They carried their all away in wheelbarrows, carts, perambulators and
-even umbrellas. I met and ran into M. Berlaimont, very pale and fat,
-trotting away from the town; he said to me with quivering cheeks: “What
-is it?” I said: “It is the Prussians, M. Berlaimont. And they will
-probably spit in your corridors.”
-
-We had some dinner in a very hospitable house. At 8 o’clock there was
-some very fierce fighting; the Coldstreamers had been ordered outside
-the town. The Germans came up, talking French, and called out to
-Monk, a Coldstream officer: “Ne tirez pas; nous sommes des amis,” and
-“Vive les Anglais.” A German knocked Monk under a transport wagon.
-Then our men grasped what was happening; they charged the Germans and
-the Germans charged them, three times, I believe. They brought up
-machine-guns. Afterwards one of our medical officers said that we had
-lost 150 men, killing 800 to 1,000 Germans. It was there that Archer
-Clive was killed.
-
-Just before dinner I met an officer of the regiment. I asked him if
-he had a billet. He told me he could not get one, and I said he could
-have mine and that I would find another. However, I found that my
-kit had already been put into the estaminet, and took him up to the
-market-place to find a lodging. We first went to an empty café, where
-all the liquor was left out, with no master or servants. We left money
-for what beer we drank. I then found a room in a tradesman’s house.
-After dinner I went down to the main barricade with Jack. Wagons,
-including one of our own that carried our kit, had been dragged across
-the road and defences were put up like lightning. We loopholed the
-houses and some houses were pulled down. It was an extraordinarily
-picturesque scene. The town was pitch-black except where the torches
-glowed on the faces and on the bayonets of the men, or where shells
-flashed and burst. I thought of the taking of Italian towns in the
-seventeenth century. The Germans shelled us very heavily. It did not
-seem as if there was much chance of getting away, but no one was
-despondent. At about 1 a.m. there was a lull in the firing, and I went
-back to lie down in my room. There I fell asleep, and the shelling of
-the town did not wake me, though the house next to me was hit. About
-2.30, in my sleep I heard my name, and found Desmond calling me loudly
-in the street outside. He said: “We have lost two young officers, L.
-and W. Come out and find them at once. The Germans are coming into
-the town, and we shall have to clear out instantly.” I said to him:
-“I don’t know either L. or W. by sight, and if I did it is far too
-dark to see them.” “Well,” he said, “you must do your best.” I went
-out and walked about the town, which was still being shelled, but I
-was far more afraid of being run over in the darkness than of being
-hit. Troops were pouring out in great confusion--foot, artillery,
-transport mixed--and there were great holes in the road made by the
-German shells. I met Eric, who said: “Come along with me to Guise”;
-also the driver of a great transport wagon, who said he had no orders,
-and begged me to come with him: he felt lonely without an officer.
-
-It was quite clear to me that it was impossible to find these two
-officers. I met Desmond by Headquarters and told him so; he said: “Very
-well, fall in and come along.” The regiment passed at that moment.
-Hubert and Tom told me to fall in, but I would not leave Moonshine,
-though there did not seem to be much more chance of finding her than
-W. and L. My groom and servant had both disappeared. The houses were
-all locked or deserted. I battered on a door with my revolver. Two old
-ladies timidly came out with a light. They pointed to a house where
-I could find a man, but at that moment a Frenchman came up, whom I
-commandeered. I went off to Headquarters to see if a sergeant was left.
-
-There was nobody there. The dinner left looked like Belshazzar’s feast.
-I had a good swig of beer from a jug. My saddle and sword had gone. I
-went out with the Frenchman and saw that the troops were nearly all
-out of the town. I determined to stay, if necessary, and hide until I
-could find my horse, but the Frenchman turned up trumps and we found
-her. We were terrified of her heels in the dark. I thanked the old
-ladies and apologized for having threatened them with my revolver.
-There was no question of riding Moonshine bare-back. I went back to
-get a saddle, below Headquarters, but the Germans were there, so the
-Frenchman swore. It was too dark to see, but they weren’t our men. I
-took her back to where the medical officer was billeted. He had been
-waiting with a dying man and was about to leave the town. I asked him
-to let one of his men lead her, and went forward to see if I could get
-a saddle. In this I failed. As I got out of the town dawn was breaking.
-For some obscure reason one of our gunners fired a shell. Everybody
-said: “I suppose that is to tell them where we are.” We all thought
-that the German artillery fire must catch us going out of the town. For
-the second time they let us off. By that time we had grasped the fact
-that they could outmarch us, but we did not know that they had come on
-motor-cars, and ascribed their greater pace to what we believed to be
-the fact--that we were entirely unsupported by the French. My regiment
-were a good long way ahead. I joined an officer who was leading a
-detachment, and he was anxious that I should stay with him. As I walked
-along, pretty footsore, an unshaven man came up and asked me if I liked
-this sort of thing better than politics. I didn’t say much, as I had
-heard the soldiers discussing politicians in the dark at Landrecies,
-cursing all politicians every time a shell fell, and saying: “Ah,
-that’s another one we owe to them. Why aren’t they here?” He offered
-me a horse. He was the Colonel of the Irish Horse, Burns-Lindow. I
-took the horse gratefully, which had a slight wound on its shoulder
-and was as slow as an ox, poor beast. This drove me almost mad after
-Moonshine, and, meeting another officer, I fell into conversation with
-him. I asked if he saw anything wrong in my taking the saddle off this
-horse and putting it on to Moonshine, when I found her. He said it
-was certainly irregular, and I then recognized who he was. I got away
-from him as soon as possible and, finding another officer of the Irish
-Horse, persuaded him to help me to take off the saddle and put it on to
-Moonshine, whom I had regained fairly chastened. I found the Colonel,
-and we rode on to Etreux. Here we brought down an aeroplane after
-it had dropped a bomb on us. The officers tried to prevent the men
-shooting, but the noise made their commands useless. The C.O. was very
-angry. He said: “I will teach you to behave like a lot of ... s. Off
-you go and dig trenches.” One of the men said as we marched off: “If
-that was a friendly aeroplane, what did it want to drop that bomb on us
-for?” He was quite right. It had done this, and the shell had fallen
-about thirty yards away. Our fire prevented us hearing it. Stephen came
-down in a Balaclava helmet and said that officers were the best shots
-at aeroplanes because pheasants had taught them to swing in firing.
-
-At Etreux we were ordered to dig trenches, which we did. After this I
-slept under a hedge, where Bernard, the Frenchman, gave me some rum,
-which was very welcome, as it was raining. At about 9 o’clock I felt
-Hubert, very angry, thumping me, as he thought I was a private who had
-taken his haversack to lie on.
-
-The next morning everybody was in tremendous spirits. They had slept
-very well in the trenches and those outside had been housed in nests
-of straw. The officers were called up and spoken to by the Colonel. He
-read out a message from Joffre to say that the British Army had saved
-France. He told us that the retreat had been inevitable and had given
-the French time to take up adequate defensive positions. The impression
-I think most of us had was that we had been used as a bait. Then we
-were once more ordered to retire.
-
-As I rode along in the morning going to La Fère an aeroplane passed
-fairly close over us; everybody fired at it at once; thousands of
-rounds must have been fired, and I found it useful in teaching
-Moonshine to stand fire. She took her first lesson well, though she
-broke up the formation of half a company. We often saw aeroplanes, and
-they were nearly always shot at, whether they belonged to friend or foe.
-
-That day we marched to Origny, where we camped below a hill with a
-steep cliff to it. I went into the town and bought eggs, brandy,
-etc. There was every kind of rumour about: that we were completely
-surrounded by the Germans; that there were millions of them in front
-and behind; also that there had been a great French defeat at Charleroi.
-
-We were all very jolly. At night the artillery poured past with the
-sound of a great cataract. We lay down on the hillside, and every
-man going to get straw to cover him walked over Tom’s face, who
-swore himself almost faint with rage. All our kit had been lost at
-Landrecies, and many of us had not great-coats.
-
-We started at dawn; but had to wait to let other troops pass us. I was
-sent back to look for communicating files of the regiment that had been
-lost. I found them with difficulty and brought them on. The Germans
-were too near to us. That day we marched through great avenues of tall
-poplars and through a pleasant smiling country to La Fère. Moonshine
-began to grow lame. I stayed behind to get food for my company and lost
-the regiment, only finding them again after long wanderings and with
-the greatest difficulty. We camped near La Fère. The regiment forgot
-its tiredness in a hunt after a strange horse which strayed into our
-camp and which Eric finally captured for the transport. Both Desmond
-and he tried hard to take my saddle from me; for the saddle which I
-had first put upon Moonshine was Hickie’s harness. Then Hickie was
-invalided, and I lost his saddle at Landrecies and then got the saddle
-from B. L., Colonel of the Irish Horse. I beat them in argument, but
-thought they were quite capable of taking the saddle in spite of that.
-
-We stopped some time to smoke and rest. The men were drawn up on a
-torrid cornfield. Valentine was overdone. He volunteered, like the
-man in the Bible, to get water. Finding that he would have to wait
-in a long queue, he returned without the water. Tom’s anger beat all
-records. A deputation from another regiment came and asked him to
-repeat what he had said. They were surprised to find that it was his
-brother-in-law who had provoked these comments.
-
-I saw John Manners and George Cecil, and gave them cigarettes. Near a
-great factory of some kind we marched past Sir Douglas Haig. I hurried
-past him.
-
-La Fère was an old fortified city. We were told we were to have a rest
-and the next day’s march was to be a very short one. We camped near
-Berteaucourt. It was very hot. I hobbled up to the village to get
-provisions, and found a French girl, the daughter of a farmer, who
-talked fair English. Near the village I spoke to a number of people. I
-told one peasant I thought it was a mistake that everybody should fly
-from their houses if they did not mean to clear out altogether, and
-that it was an invitation to the Germans to loot and burn. He said:
-“Monsieur, I quite agree with you. Moi, je vais agir en patriote quand
-ils viendront. Je vais tout bonnement descendre dans ma cave.” The next
-day (the 29th) we camped above the village of Pasly. On the road I got
-boracic cream for my horse’s cracked heel. We passed through a big
-town, Coucy, crowded with curious, frightened, silent people. It had a
-very fine castle. I bought some cigarette-holders, with cinema pictures
-inside, for the Colonel. People pressed chocolate and all they could
-get into my hands, taking payment unwillingly. Moonshine lost a shoe,
-but I managed to get her shod there. Reluctantly at Pasly I lent her
-to Robin, who went off to post his men in the village. The moment he
-had gone the O.C. sent for me and told me we had got outside the area
-of our maps, and asked if I could get him a map. I started off at once
-to walk to Soissons. When he discovered where I was going he said it
-was out of the question; so I walked down to Pasly either to get a map
-there or to take the Maire’s carriage and drive to Soissons. In Pasly
-there was a tenth-rate Maire and a schoolmaster. They provided me with
-an ancient map, the date of which was 1870. It did not even mark the
-monument of the schoolmasters whom the Germans had lightheartedly shot
-on their last visit to the village.
-
-I found a half-wit, and paid him to carry up some wine, bread and eggs.
-
-We camped above a quarry and talked of what was going to happen. There
-seemed only two alternatives. One was that we should get into Paris and
-take first-class tickets home to England, and the other that we should
-stay and get wiped out. For we still saw no French troops; we still
-believed ourselves to be 100,000 against a force of anything from one
-to two millions.
-
-Eric had met a Lancer who had been full of the German atrocities. I
-met him and talked to him afterwards. His stories sounded improbable.
-Eric had also seen an extraordinary thing happen that morning. He had
-seen an aeroplane which we were bombarding. It was flying in the blue
-sky when it was struck. It was there, and then it was not. It just
-disappeared.
-
-_August 31st._ We got up fairly early, and I rode with Eric past caves
-in which there were houses and quarries down the steep hillside to the
-plain of Soissons. It was a beautiful morning, very peaceful, and the
-air was scented. There was bright sunlight over the marching soldiers
-and the fields of green, tall grass. The C.O. told me that our camping
-ground was at Cœuvre. I asked leave to ride into Soissons and see if
-I could not get clean shirts and handkerchiefs to replace what we had
-lost at Landrecies.
-
-Soissons was like a sunlit town of the dead. Four out of five houses
-were shut. Most of the well-to-do people had gone. It was silent
-streets and blind houses. The clattering which Moonshine made on the
-cobbles was almost creepy. I stopped first of all at a saddler’s shop
-and tried to get a proper bridle. The saddler was a rough democratic
-Frenchman, not a bad fellow, the sort of man who made the Republic. He
-took me to a boot shop which was my first need, where the people were
-very kind, and I bought a capital pair of boots for twelve francs. I
-went into the “Lion d’Or.” They refused me a stall for Moonshine on the
-ground that the landlord and all his family were going. I insisted,
-and bought her some fodder, also some food for myself. They drove hard
-bargains.
-
-Out of doors I met some English officers having breakfast. They had
-only just arrived. I left a man called Gustave to look after Moonshine
-and went out to spend a most laborious morning of shopping. After going
-to many different shops I found a bazaar like a mortuary, with two
-old women and a boy. They said to me: “Take whatever you want and pay
-as much or as little as pleases you. If the Germans come we shall set
-fire to this place.” They pressed every kind of souvenir on me, but
-it was extraordinary, with plenty lying round, how difficult it was
-to get what one needed. I was buying mostly for other people. It was
-like being turned loose in Selfridge’s--boots, scissors, pocket-knives,
-electric torches, watches, bags, vests, etc. I also bought an
-alpenstock, as I had lost my sword and thought it might be useful as a
-light bayonet.
-
-I then went and had a bath, the first proper one since England. The
-heat was very great. I felt dirty and wanted to shave my beard, as the
-men said every day that I became more like King Edward. I then intended
-to go to the Cathedral, but found the few English soldiers in the town
-moving out hurriedly. They said the Germans were coming in an hour.
-So I gave up the Cathedral and went and had lunch in a jolly little
-inn. There were some very excitable Frenchmen, one of whom asked me
-if I would sell him a lucky sixpence for a franc which he could wear
-round his neck. I suppose he was really pathetic; at the moment he
-only irritated me. He said: “J’ai confiance--même s’ils vont à Paris
-j’aurais confiance.” “But,” he said, “where is the French Army?” They
-were all saying that by this time.
-
-I went back to my boot shop. All the women there were crying.
-They insisted upon giving me some wine. At the hotel I found the
-hotel-keeper and his family going off, squeaking with anger at the
-ostler, Gustave, who was helping me to carry all I had bought in two
-great bags. The weight was very oppressive in the heat, and I was
-afraid of making Moonshine’s tender foot worse on the hard road. Before
-I had got outside the town I had to get off and readjust everything,
-with the help of some very kind French people. While I was doing
-this, Westminster, with Hugh Dawnay, drove up in his beautiful car. I
-suggested his taking my things on to Cœuvre. He said, unfortunately he
-had other orders, and wanted to know where to lunch. I told him where
-I had lunched, but said that he would probably have to share his lunch
-with the Germans if he went into the town, as they must now be close
-behind us.
-
-Riding on, I met some French troops evacuating the town and with them
-a man of my regiment, who had hurt his knee. He could not walk, so I
-put him under the charge of a French sergeant. While I was talking to
-him two other men of my regiment came up. They had fallen out on the
-previous day and had had nothing to eat since yesterday’s breakfast. I
-took them into a French house, where the people were very hospitable;
-gave them food at once and insisted on giving them champagne, which
-they said was “déchampagnisé.” The men ate like wolves. One of them was
-a splendidly built fellow, called Sheridan.
-
-Then we marched slowly on in the heat, for about two hours, when
-Sheridan said: “What is it is happening yonder, sir?” pointing to the
-horizon about a mile away. Soon rifle fire broke out, and Sheridan
-said: “There are Uhlans coming down the road.” There was a wood on
-our left, and we made preparations to get into this; the other man
-had fallen behind. They were both very done, but Sheridan was like
-a different man at the prospect of a fight. Our people, however, or
-rather the French, drove the German cavalry back at this moment, and
-we went on quietly. I was glad to be able to turn to the left, as the
-fighting on our right was pretty hot and I was weighed down with all
-the extra things I carried.
-
-I fell into conversation with a medical officer, and asked him if he
-knew where Cœuvre was. Then an R.A.M.C. Colonel came up and looked at
-my kit very suspiciously. He asked me who the General in command of the
-Division was. I said I had forgotten his name; I could not keep my head
-filled with these details. He said to me: “You don’t seem to know who
-you are.” I said to him: “I know who I am; I don’t know who you are, I
-don’t want to. I hope to God I shall never see you again. Go to hell
-and stay there.” This made him angry, and he said: “Your regiment is
-ahead on the left, but the Germans are in front of you, if you wish to
-rejoin them,” pointing in the direction from which I had come.
-
-All this time I had been waiting for Sheridan and other now numerous
-stragglers behind me, and at this point I turned round and rode off
-to see what had happened, thoroughly irritated with the R.A.M.C.
-Colonel. This apparently convinced him that I really was a German,
-as the engagement in the rear was going on fairly close, and he came
-after me with a Major of the K.R.R., who was unhappy. He said: “Will
-you come with me to my Colonel?” I said: “I will go with you anywhere
-to get away from this fussy little man, but if you think that a German
-spy would come on a racehorse, dressed like the White Knight, with
-an alpenstock, you are greatly mistaken.” He promised to have my
-stragglers looked after, and then I rode up to his regiment with him,
-when Blank came up and shook hands. We had not met since Eton. He
-cleared my character. After that I went on as fast as I could. I picked
-up some more of my regiment, including a sergeant who had sprained his
-ankle. I told him to ride, but found a motor and put him in that.
-
-Soon we were stopped by a sentry in a wood, as it was growing dark. He
-said that his officer had told him to stop all on the road and to send
-for him. Then came General Monro, who was also stopped. He was with a
-sad man. He forced his way through, and I asked permission to take on
-the men of my regiment. He told me that I should find my regiment at
-Soucy, and gave me the permission I wanted. In a few moments I met the
-officer who had had us stopped. He said the Germans were very close to
-us. We could hear firing near by.
-
-I reached my regiment as night was falling. They were delighted with
-my arrest. We spent our last night very comfortably, though there was
-heavy dew. Tom, who had been frightfully overdone, always carrying
-rifles, was recovering, and every one was cheerful and very keen to
-have a fight. Until now only Hickie had been invalided. The rum at
-night after a long march made a wonderful difference. The men got in
-very tired, footsore, cold and hungry, and had to sleep on the wet
-ground. A tot of rum sent them to sleep, and sent them to sleep feeling
-warm. Teetotalism on the march is an excellent thing, better still to
-drink nothing, but that nip at night made the difference between health
-and sickness, comfort and misery.
-
-_September 1st._ The next morning we got up at 2 o’clock. The Army
-was passing all round us already. It was like the sound of deep, slow
-rivers. For the first and last time we took a wrong turning, only for
-a couple of hundred yards. This was the only mistake I saw at all in
-the long march. After two hours we halted, and S. and I sat under a
-dripping tree and talked about the West Country. At the beginning S.
-had said to me: “I shall be very disappointed if I go home without
-seeing a fight, but the worst of it is you can’t make an omelette
-without breaking eggs, and I don’t want to see my friends killed.” I
-said to him: “You are going to get your omelette all right now.” Some
-constituents passed me. They said: “This be terrible dangerous. Do’ee
-come along with we.”
-
-Moonshine would eat nothing, and this worried me. I had become very
-fond of her.
-
-At about 6 o’clock we halted on what I knew to be a tragic plain. In
-my mind I associate this plain with turnips, though I am not sure that
-any grew there. There was stubble, high and wet lucerne, and a mournful
-field where corn had been cut but not carried. We sat about on the wet,
-muddy ground for breakfast, while a thin, dismal rain fell.
-
-The C.O. called us round and gave us our orders. He said: “We are
-required to hold this wood until 2 o’clock in the afternoon. We may
-have to fight a rearguard action until a later hour if there is a block
-in the road. We are to retire upon Rond de la Reine.” After this we
-breakfasted on hot cocoa; it tasted of vaseline or paraffin, but it was
-warm.
-
-It was apparent that if the First Division took long over their
-luncheon we should be wiped out. By this time every one had got their
-second wind, their feet were hard and they were cheerful. Jumbo said he
-could go on walking for ever. I talked to Alex and agreed that we had
-seen a great deal of fun together. He had said, while we were crossing
-the Channel, that it was long odds, not, of course, against some of us
-going back, but against any particular one of us seeing it through.
-This was now visibly true; we believed that we were three divisions
-against twenty-one or even twenty-eight German divisions. I wrote two
-letters, one of them a eulogy of Moonshine. I went to Desmond, asking
-him to post them. He said crossly: “You seem to think that Adjutants
-can work miracles. Charles asks for letters under fire, you want to
-post them on the battlefield. It is quite useless to write letters now.”
-
-He then borrowed some of my paper and wrote a letter. I have the
-picture in my mind of Desmond constantly sitting, in very tidy
-breeches, writing and calling for sergeants. We had little sleep. He
-never seemed to sleep at all. He was woken all the time and was always
-cheerful. We had nothing to do for a bit, and I read scraps about
-cemeteries from Shakespeare, to irritate the others. They remained
-cheerful. Then we moved off to the wood. Nobody had any illusions about
-the immediate future. One man said to me: “I may live to see many
-battles; I think I shall, for I am very keen on my profession, but
-I shall never forget this plain or this morning.” It must have been
-about 7.30 when we went into the wood. No. 4 held the extreme right;
-they were protected by a wall, which they loopholed, and a wire fence
-outside. No. 3 was next on a road that ran through the heart of the
-wood to Rond de la Reine. I did not see Tom; I thought I was sure to
-see him some time in the morning. Stubbs was behind No. 3, down in the
-village (I forget the name). The C.O. said to me: “I want you to gallop
-for me to-day, so stick to me.” I lost him at once in the wood behind
-No. 4, but rode right down to a deserted farm and, swinging to my
-right, found him at the cross-roads.
-
-I had seen a good deal of him the last days. He had a very attractive
-personality, and it was a delight to hear him talk about anything.
-I asked him what chance he thought we had of getting more than half
-of us away. He said he thought a fairly good chance. Then he said to
-me: “How is your rest-cure getting on now? There is very little that
-looks like manœuvres in the millennium about this, is there?” I had
-told him some time before that I looked upon this expedition as a
-rest-cure, as in some ways it was. We talked about Ireland and Home
-Rule, riding outside the wood. The grey, damp mist had gone and the day
-was beautiful.
-
-He sent me first to Hubert, Second-in-Command, with the order that in
-the retreat every officer was to retire down the main road, with the
-exception of Stubbs, who was to retire as he liked. I imagine that he
-was afraid that men would be lost in the wood. By this time the firing
-had begun, some way off, but our men could see the Germans coming
-over the rising land. The C.O. ordered me to find Colonel Pereira of
-the Coldstream Guards and tell him that, as soon our own troops, now
-fighting the Germans in front of him, would fall back through his
-lines, after this he was to fall back himself.
-
-I went off at a hand gallop, and had got half-way there, with the
-wood on my left and open land on my right, when the Germans began
-shooting at about three-quarters of a mile. Our men were firing at
-them from the wood, and I felt annoyed at being between two fires and
-the only thing visible to amuse our men and the Germans. I turned
-into the wood, and, galloping down a sandy way, found the road filled
-with refugees with haunted faces. We had seen crowds of refugees for
-days, but I felt sorrier for these. I suppose it was that the Germans
-were so very near them. I gave my message to Pereira, who advised me
-to go back through the wood, but I knew the other way and thought I
-should soon be past the German fire. I had not, however, counted on
-their advancing so quickly. When I came to the edge of the wood they
-were firing furiously--shrapnel, machine-gun and rifle fire. Our men
-had excellent cover, and were answering. I then tried to make my way
-through the wood, but it was abominably rough. There were ferns and
-brambles waist-high, and great ditches; the wood was very beautiful
-with its tall trees, but that, at the moment, was irrelevant. Moonshine
-stood like a goat on the stump of a tree that made an island among the
-ditches, and I turned back to take the way by the open fields. When I
-got outside the fire had grown very bad. I raced for an orchard that
-jutted out of the wood. Bullets hummed and buzzed. Coming to it, I
-found that there was wire round it. I then popped at full speed, like a
-rabbit, into the wood again, through a thicket, down an enormous ditch,
-up the other side, bang into some barbed wire, which cut my horse. It
-was like diving on horseback. I turned round and galloped delicately
-out again, riding full tilt round the orchard.
-
-I found the Colonel, who was standing under shelter at the cross-roads
-to the left of the road, facing the enemy, that led through the heart
-of the wood. He mounted the bank and watched the Germans advancing. I
-sat under the bank with M. and Alex. The German shells began to fall
-close to us, knocking the trees about in the wood. There were some
-sergeants very excited and pleased at the idea of a fight. They said:
-“Now has come the time for deeds, not words.” They felt that they were
-the men of the moment.
-
-We considered whether the Germans were likely to charge down the road
-along which I had come, but thought we could hold them effectively in
-check from our corner and that the fire from the wood would reach them.
-
-It was, I suppose, now about 10.30. Desmond, the Colonel and I rode
-back into the big, green wood. It was very peaceful. The sun was
-shining through the beech-trees, and for a bit the whole thing seemed
-unreal. The C.O. talked to the men, telling them to reserve their fire
-till the Germans were close on them. “Then you will kill them and
-they won’t get up again.” That made them laugh. The German advance
-began very rapidly. The Coldstreamers must have begun falling back
-about this time. The Germans came up in front and on our left flank.
-There was a tremendous fire. The leaves, branches, etc., rained upon
-one. One’s face was constantly fanned by the wind from their bullets.
-This showed how bad their fire was. My regiment took cover very well,
-and after the first minute or two fired pretty carefully. Moonshine
-was startled to begin with by the fire, but afterwards remained very
-still and confidential. Desmond did not get off his horse; he told me
-to lead my horse back into the wood and then come back to the firing
-line. The Colonel then told me to gallop up to the Brigadier to say
-that the retreat was being effectively carried out; that there were
-two squadrons advancing and he did not know what force of infantry. In
-this estimate he was very much out, as subsequent events proved. Eric,
-now at home wounded, said to me: “The Germans seemed hardly to have
-an advance guard; it was an army rolling over us.” When I found the
-Brigadier he wanted to know if the C.O. seemed happy about things. I
-said I thought on the whole he did. There were bullets everywhere and
-men falling, but the fire was still too high. One bullet in about half
-a million must have hit a man. I returned to the Colonel. Our men had
-then begun to retire down the main road to Rond de la Reine. A galloper
-came up and, as far as I heard, said that we were to hang on and not
-retreat yet. This officer was, I think, killed immediately after giving
-his message. The Colonel said that the Coldstreamers had already begun
-to retreat, that we couldn’t hold on there, but must go back to the
-position we had left. We were ordered to resume the position which
-Hubert had been told to leave. The Germans were by this time about
-250 yards away, firing on us with machine-guns and rifles. The noise
-was perfectly awful. In a lull the C.O. said to the men: “Do you hear
-that? Do you know what they are doing that for? They are doing that to
-frighten you.” I said to him: “If that’s all, they might as well stop.
-As far as I am concerned, they have succeeded, two hours ago.”
-
-The men were ordered to charge, but the order was not heard in the
-noise, and after we had held this position for some minutes a command
-was given to retreat. Another galloper brought it, who also, I think,
-was shot. Guernsey, whom I met with his company, asked me to gallop
-back and tell Valentine he must retire his platoon; he had not received
-the order. I found Valentine and got off my horse and walked him some
-yards down the road, the Germans following. He, like everybody else,
-was very pleased at the calm way the men were behaving.
-
-I mounted and galloped after the Colonel, who said: “If only we could
-get at them with the bayonet I believe one of our men is as good as
-three of theirs.” He started in the direction of the Brigadier. Men
-were now falling fast. I happened to see one man drop with a bayonet
-in his hand a few yards off, and reined in my horse to see if I could
-help him, but the C.O. called me and I followed him. The man whom I had
-seen was Hubert, though I did not know it at the time. The C.O. said:
-“It is impossible now to rescue wounded men; we have all we can do.”
-He had a charmed life. He raced from one place to another through the
-wood; cheering the men and chaffing them, and talking to me; smoking
-cigarette after cigarette. Under ordinary conditions one would have
-thought it mad to ride at the ridiculous pace we did over the very
-broken ground, but the bullets made everything else irrelevant. At
-about 1 o’clock we went up to the Brigadier at the corner of the road.
-The fighting there was pretty hot. One of the men told the Colonel that
-Hubert was killed. The Colonel said: “Are you sure?” The man said:
-“Well, I can’t swear.” I was sent back to see. The man said he was
-about 400 yards away, and as I galloped as hard as I could, G. called
-to me: “To the right and then to the left.” As I raced through the wood
-there was a cessation of the firing, though a number of shots came from
-both sides. They snapped very close. I found Hubert in the road we had
-been holding. I jumped off my horse and put my hand on his shoulder and
-spoke to him. He must have been killed at once, and looked absolutely
-peaceful. He cannot have suffered at all. I leant over to see if he
-had letters in his pocket, when I heard a whistle 25 or 30 yards behind
-me in the wood. I stood up and called: “If that is an Englishman, get
-outside the wood and up to the corner like hell; you will be shot if
-you try and join the rest through the wood. The Germans are between
-us.” I bent over to pick up Hubert’s bayonet, when again a whistle came
-and the sound of low voices, talking German. I then thought the sooner
-I was away the better. As I swung into the saddle a shot came from just
-behind me, missing me. I rode back as fast as Moonshine could go. The
-lull in the firing had ceased, and the Germans were all round us. One
-could see them in the wood, and they were shooting quite close. The
-man who finally got me was about 15 to 20 yards away; his bullet must
-have passed through a tree or through Bron’s great-coat, because it
-came into my side broken up. It was like a tremendous punch. I galloped
-straight on to my regiment and told the Colonel that Hubert was dead.
-He said: “I am sorry, and I am sorry that you are hit. I am going to
-charge.” He had told me earlier that he meant to if he got the chance.
-
-I got off and asked them to take on my horse. Then I lay down on
-the ground and an R.A.M.C. man dressed me. The Red Cross men gave a
-loud whistle when they saw my wound, and said the bullet had gone
-through me. The fire was frightfully hot. The men who were helping me
-were crouching down, lying on the ground. While he was dressing me a
-horse--his, I suppose--was shot just behind us. I asked them to go, as
-they could do me no good and would only get killed or taken themselves.
-The doctor gave me some morphia, and I gave them my revolver. They
-put me on a stretcher, leaving another empty stretcher beside me. This
-was hit several times. Shots came from all directions, and the fire
-seemed to be lower than earlier in the day. The bullets were just above
-me and my stretcher. I lost consciousness for a bit; then I heard my
-regiment charging. There were loud cries and little spurts of spasmodic
-shooting; then everything was quiet and a deep peace fell upon the
-wood. It was very dreamlike.
-
-It is really very difficult to reconstruct this fight. I think every
-man’s attention was fixed like iron on doing his own job, otherwise
-they would all have noticed more. I carry in my mind a number of very
-vivid pictures--Desmond on his horse, Valentine and I discussing
-fatalism, the C.O. smoking cigarettes in the cinema holders that I had
-bought for him a few days before.
-
-As I lay on the stretcher a jarring thought came to me. I had in my
-pocket the flat-nosed bullets which the War Office had served out to us
-as revolver ammunition. They are not dum-dum bullets, but they would
-naturally not make as pleasant a wound as the sharp-nosed ones, and
-it occurred to me that those having them would be shot. I searched my
-pockets and flung mine away. I did not discover one which remained and
-was buried later on,--but neither did the Germans. It was first hearing
-German voices close by that jogged my memory about these bullets, and
-the Germans were then so close that I felt some difficulty in throwing
-the bullets away. The same idea must have occurred to others, for later
-I heard the Germans speaking very angrily about the flat bullets they
-had picked up in the wood, and saying how they would deal with any one
-in whose possession they were found.
-
-The glades became resonant with loud, raucous German commands and
-occasional cries from wounded men. After about an hour and a half,
-I suppose, a German with a red beard, with the sun shining on his
-helmet and bayonet, came up looking like an angel of death. He walked
-round from behind, and put his serrated bayonet on the empty stretcher
-by me, so close that it all but touched me. The stretcher broke and
-his bayonet poked me. I enquired in broken but polite German what he
-proposed to do next; after reading the English papers and seeing the
-way he was handling his bayonet, it seemed to me that there was going
-to be another atrocity. He was extraordinarily kind and polite. He
-put something under my head; offered me wine, water and cigarettes.
-He said: “Wir sind kamaraden.” Another soldier came up and said: “Why
-didn’t you stay in England--you who made war upon the Boers?” I said:
-“We obeyed orders, just as you do; as for the Boers, they were our
-enemies and are now our friends, and it is not your business to insult
-wounded men.” My first friend then cursed him heartily, and he moved on.
-
-The Germans passed in crowds. They seemed like steel locusts. Every
-now and then I would hear: “Here is an officer who talks German,” and
-the crowd would swerve in like a steel eddy. Then: “Schnell Kinder!”
-and they would be off. They gave a tremendous impression of lightness
-and iron. After some hours, when my wound was beginning to hurt, some
-carriers came up to take me to a collecting place for the wounded.
-These men were rather rough. They dropped me and my stretcher once, but
-were cursed by an officer. They then carried me some distance, and took
-me off the stretcher, leaving me on the ground. The Germans continued
-to pass in an uninterrupted stream. One motor cyclist, but with a
-bayonet in his hand, was very unpleasant. He said: “I would like to put
-this in your throat and turn it round and round,” waving it down to my
-nose. That sort of thing happened more than once or twice, but there
-were always more friends than enemies, though as night fell the chance
-of being left without friends increased. As it grew dark, I got rather
-cold. One of the Germans saw this, covered me with his coat and said:
-“Wait a moment, I will bring you something else.” He went off, and,
-I suppose, stripped a dead Englishman and a dead German. The German
-jersey which he gave me had no holes in it; the Englishman’s coat had
-two bayonet cuts.
-
-The wounded began to cry dreadfully in the darkness. I found myself
-beside Robin, who was very badly wounded in the leg. The Germans gave
-me water when I asked for it, but every time I drank it made me sick.
-At, I suppose, 9.30 or 10 p.m. they took us off into an ambulance and
-carried us to a house that had been turned into a hospital. I was left
-outside, talking to a Dane who was very anti-German, though he was
-serving with them as a Red Cross man. He cursed them loudly in German.
-He said it was monstrous that I hadn’t been attended to, that the
-Germans had had a defeat and would be beaten. I said: “Yes, it’s all
-true, but please stop talking, because they’ll hear you and punish me.”
-
-Just before 12 o’clock they carried me into the hospital on to the
-operating table, and dressed my wound quickly.
-
-Then I was helped out to an outhouse and lay beside Robin. It was full
-of English and German wounded. They gave us one drink of water and
-then shut and locked the door and left us for the night. One man cried
-and cried for water until he died. It was a horrible night. The straw
-was covered with blood, and there was never a moment when men were not
-groaning and calling for help. In the morning the man next to Robin
-went off his head and became animal with pain. I got the Germans to
-do what was possible for him. I asked the Germans to let me out, and
-they helped me outside into a chair, and I talked to an officer called
-Brandt. He sent a telegram to the German authorities to say that Robin
-and I were lightly wounded, and asking them to let our families know.
-He would not let me pay. I would have liked to have done it for every
-one, but that wasn’t possible. They took us away in an ambulance at
-about 11 o’clock. It was a beautiful September day, very hot indeed.
-The heat in the covered ambulance was suffocating, and Robin must have
-suffered horribly. He asked me the German for “quick,” and when I told
-him, urged the Germans on. There were great jolts and....
-
-At Viviers I found Shields, who said to me: “Hullo, you wounded, and
-you a volunteer, too?”--as if a volunteer ought to be immune from
-wounds. We were carried upstairs and told that Valentine and Buddy,
-whom I had last met under the cedars, were in the same hospital.
-Valentine had the point of his elbow shot away just after I had
-left him. He raised his hand to brush a wasp off his neck, and only
-remembered pitching forward when a bullet struck his elbow. He woke
-up in a pool of blood. A German came up and took the flask of brandy
-that I had given him after my visit to Soissons. He gave Valentine a
-drink, and then, when Valentine had said he did not want any more,
-swigged the whole of the rest off. It was enough to make two men drunk,
-solidly, for hours. Later, five Germans came up to Valentine and ragged
-him. One of them kicked him, but an officer arrived, took all their
-names, promised Valentine they should be punished, and attached an
-orderly to him for the night. Buddy was badly wounded in the back and
-arm. He found his servant in the church at Viviers. Then we all met at
-the house in Viviers. The doctors gave Robin and me a strong dose of
-morphia. That afternoon a German doctor, whose name was Hillsparck,
-came in and woke me. He gave me a gold watch with a crest on it, and
-a silver watch and a purse of gold (£8 in it). He said that a Colonel
-to whom the watch belonged had been buried close by in the village of
-Haraman, and asked me if I could say who he was. We heard that the
-Colonel had been killed, and I imagined it must have been him, but
-we could not tell, as apparently every single man of the seventy odd
-who had charged with him had been killed. The doctor left this watch
-with me. In the hospital we believed that the General of the Division,
-Monro, and also our own Brigadier, General Scott Kerr, were wounded,
-and that the Colonel and T. were killed; Hubert we knew was killed.
-
-Our experiences on the field were all the same. We were all well
-treated, though occasionally we were insulted. In hospital an old
-_ober-stadt_ was in command of the doctors. He was very good to us. The
-English doctors were W., in command, S. next, Rankin and Shields. They
-were all good doctors. W., Rankin and Shields were excellent fellows.
-Rankin, who has been killed since, himself wounded, was dressing the
-wounded on the field and was recommended for the V.C. Shields has been
-killed in the same way, and I believe would have been recommended but
-that his C.O. was also killed. They were both the best sort of man you
-can find.
-
-After a couple of days I moved into Buddy and Valentine’s room. A
-little way down the street there was the château, full of wounded
-Germans. Our men were carried there to be operated upon.
-
-W. and the other doctors who went to help discovered that there were
-311 wounded Germans as against 92 of our own, so we didn’t do badly.
-
-Every morning the German sentries used to come in and talk to us. My
-German and Buddy’s was very weak, but we managed to get along all
-right. Downstairs those who were lightly wounded sat outside in the
-chairs they took from the house, in the sunny garden. It was a fairly
-luxurious house, with paper marked “F. H.” I thought it was a girls’
-school, for the only books we could find were the _Berger de Valence_
-and Jules Verne. My side was painful the first few days. Then they cut
-me open and took out the bullet, which was all in bits. It was rather
-hard lines on the others to perform an operation in the room, but I
-felt much better after it. The food difficulty was rather acute. There
-was very little food, and what there was was badly cooked. We lived
-principally on things that S. called “chupatti”--thick, unleavened
-biscuits. The men began to give trouble. There was nobody in command of
-them. There was an ex-comedian who was particularly tiresome. We had to
-ask the Germans to punish one man for us. About the fourth day one of
-the orderlies escaped--Drummer McCoy. He passed for four days through
-the German lines, and on one occasion watched a whole Army Corps go by
-from the boughs of a tree. Then he found the French, who passed him on
-to the English, where he went to the Staff and told them of us. That is
-how we were picked up so quickly on the 11th.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here is a copy of my diary for September 9th:--
-
-The people are beginning to return, but not the priest, who is with the
-Army. We want him for the regiment. Up till this time only six of the
-wounded have died. The Germans tell us every kind of story--the United
-States are declaring war on Japan, Italy on France, Denmark on England,
-etc., etc. Also that Paris has been given twelve hours to accept or
-reject the German terms, and if the French Government is obdurate
-the town will be bombarded. We are told that we are to be taken as
-prisoners to Magdeburg. It is a week since I have had a cigarette.
-
-_Thursday, September 10th._ We are all very anxious to get news home,
-but there is no chance. Last night S. Herbert died. I had a Testament,
-and Valentine and I found verses which W. read over his grave.
-Valentine has bad pain. Three bones broken in his arm and the point of
-his elbow gone. Buddy is better, but hit cruel hard. Robin has a bad
-wound, and is very restless. They don’t like giving us morphia. Luckily
-I have got my own medicine chest, which is a good thing for all of us,
-as I can give the others sleeping draughts. Last night a French cavalry
-patrol came within two miles of us. Early this morning there was rifle
-fire close by. It sounded in the wood that we suppose is Haraman. We
-think the Germans may evacuate this place any time. The bandages have
-given out. Stores are not coming in. There is a big aeroplane depot
-quite close by, and the whole air is full of aeroplanes. It looks and
-feels as if there might be a big battle round here soon. They have shot
-an old man wandering about the aerodrome. But he was asking for it.
-
-_9 a.m._ The aeroplanes are being shifted from the depot. Last night we
-heard that arms were issued to all the wounded Germans in hospital who
-could carry them. This morning the Germans are digging trenches hard.
-There are Red Crosses everywhere. The doctors want us to go down to the
-cellars if we are shelled. The French women in the village say that the
-French are coming. The firing is increasing.
-
-_9.15 a.m._ The German hospital across the way is ordered to be ready
-to move at once.
-
-_10.25 a.m._ An order has come for all prisoners to parade at the
-church at 12 o’clock. The German lightly wounded are being sent on. We
-are very anxious as to whether they mean to take us too. More of our
-wounded who have died are being buried.
-
-_11.10 a.m._ A German doctor has come. He said: “They are going and
-taking all (of our) prisoners, 18 (of our) lightly wounded, and leaving
-25 (of their) badly wounded.” French wounded are now coming in. We have
-no more bandages at all. A German sentry with whom I had talked has
-just come in. I asked him some days ago to buy some handkerchiefs. He
-said: “I have not been able to buy you any handkerchiefs, or to get the
-cigarettes you wanted, but here is one of my own handkerchiefs, which I
-have washed. We have got to go.”
-
-_8 p.m._ The last order is that the previous orders are countermanded
-and the Germans are to stay on ten days.
-
-_Friday, September 11th._ Our English prisoners were marched off this
-morning. We are full of speculation as to what has really happened.
-Valentine, Buddy and I are well.
-
-_10.10 a.m._ There are machine-guns about four miles away.
-
-_10.30 a.m._ There is a heavy rifle fire within a mile. It is very
-trying lying here in bed. We have nothing to read except _The
-Rajah’s Heir_ which V. sent to me and which has become known as the
-treasure-house of fun. It is a sort of mixture of Hymns Ancient and
-Modern and the _Fairchild Family_.
-
-_2 p.m._ There is a Maxim within a few hundred yards of the house.
-Rifle volleys outside in the garden. A rising wind and rain threatening.
-
-_3 p.m._ Heavy rain. The French are visible, advancing.
-
-_3.10 p.m._ The French are here. They came in in fine style, like
-conquerors; one man first, riding, his hand on his hip. The German
-sentries who had been posted to protect us wounded walked down and
-surrendered their bayonets. The German doctors came to us for help.
-I offered to go, but W. went. The French infantry and cavalry came
-streaming through. Our wounded went out into the pouring rain to cheer
-them. They got water from our men, whose hands they kissed. The German
-guns are on the skyline. The Germans are in full retreat, and said to
-be cut off by the English.
-
-_5 p.m._ A heavy bombardment of the German guns began from here. I have
-come upstairs to a long low garret with skylights, in order to leave
-Valentine and Buddy more room. Through the skylight one can see every
-flash of the French and German guns. The doctors all come up here to
-watch with their field-glasses through my skylights.
-
-_Saturday, September 12th._ Yesterday, when W. went down, he found
-the German doctors receiving cavalier treatment from the French. He
-explained to the French that they had treated us with the greatest
-kindness; after that the French treated with courtesy the old
-_ober-stadt_. Shields carved a great wooden tombstone for the thirteen
-men who had died up to date. It is a month to-day since I left England.
-
-This afternoon Colonel Thompson, English Staff Officer attached to
-General Manoury, who had been attached to the Serbian Army through the
-last war, came in. McCoy, who had escaped, had found him and told him
-about us at Viviers. He said he would take me into Villers Cotterets
-after he had done some other business. We talked a lot about the
-Balkans, but I finally went back and lay down in my garret and shall
-not get up again to-day.
-
-_Sunday, September 13th._ I went off with Thompson this morning. We
-passed through the wood where we had had the fight, and a long grave of
-120 men was shown to me by McCoy.
-
-
-
-
- ANZAC
- 1915
-
-[Illustration:
-
-_SIFTON, PRAED & CO LTD ST JAMES’ ST LONDON S W_ ]
-
-
-
-
-ANZAC, 1915
-
-
-When I was passed fit for Active Service, after some time in hospital,
-I left England for Egypt with five other officers. Four of these had
-strange histories. One is, perhaps, the most romantic figure of the
-war, another now governs a great Province, while two, after many
-adventures, were prisoners of war in Turkey, for different but dreary
-periods.
-
-I was sent to the East because it had been my fortune to have travelled
-widely, and I had a fairly fluent smattering of several Eastern
-languages. On arriving at Gibraltar about December 14, 1914, we heard
-the first news of submarines. One of these was reported to have passed
-through into the Mediterranean a few days previously.
-
-When I reached Egypt just before Christmas, superficially everything
-was calm. This calm did not last very long. I was given Intelligence
-work to do, under Colonel Clayton, who has played a very great part
-in achieving our success in the East. Reports constantly came in from
-Minia, Zagazig and Tanta of Turkish and German intrigues. General Sir
-J. Maxwell commanded the Forces in Egypt. Prince Hussein had just been
-proclaimed Sultan, and Egypt had been declared to be under British
-protection. Rushdy Pasha was Prime Minister and a triumvirate of Sir
-Milne Cheetham at the Residency, Sir R. Graham as Adviser to the
-Ministry of the Interior, and Lord Edward Cecil as Adviser to the
-Ministry of Finance, directed the Government.
-
-It was difficult to believe that the Egyptian, who then had all the
-advantages of neutrals without any of the disadvantages, really meant
-mischief. Most people, I think, agreed with Lord Cromer, and believed
-that his policy of making taxes light and life easy for the Egyptian
-had succeeded, but the East is never logical, as we all know, and the
-natural consequence constantly does not follow the parental cause.
-Mecca rose to join us after Kut had fallen; the rebellion in Egypt
-only took place when the English had achieved a complete victory over
-Turkey, and held Palestine and Syria. I quote the following incident
-as an illustration of the difficulty of sometimes following this
-mentality:--
-
-A Syrian reported to me that a great Egyptian family, whom I will call
-the Ashakas, had conspired to bring 15,000 rifles into the country and
-to engineer a rising. The rifles were to be imported from the Greek
-islands and from Greece, by means of Greek sponge-fishers. One of
-these, who had the pleasant and appropriate name of Son-of-the-Dagger,
-met me in a café in an obscure side street in Cairo. There he revealed
-the conspiracy, explaining that only the landing-place for the arms
-had still to be decided upon. He and his companions were to receive
-a commission on every rifle landed, and he wanted to know what the
-British Government would be ready to pay for his betrayal of his
-patrons.
-
-On reporting this to the proper authorities, I was told that they were
-aware of the existence of this plot. The next day frantic messages from
-the Greek came, and I met him, disturbed in his mind. He said that the
-Ashakas had become suspicious of him and the other Greeks, and that
-he feared for his life. He asked to be arrested immediately after the
-seizure of the arms and thrown into prison with the Egyptians, and
-then to be flogged before them, in order to convince them that he was
-acting honourably by them. He was very anxious to be paid for both
-pieces of treachery, by the Egyptians and by us. On making my report to
-the authorities I learned that the Ashakas had betrayed the Greeks by
-denouncing them as traitors.
-
-The whole affair had been a result of Levantine nerves. The Ashakas in
-the past had been strong Nationalists. When the war between the Turks
-and ourselves broke out, in spite of the fact that it seemed possible,
-and indeed likely, that Egypt might again become a Turkish province,
-their politics changed, and they hastily became Anglophile, but their
-past record haunted them. They feared the British Government almost as
-much as the Turks, and yearned to prove themselves loyal.
-
-After much thought it appeared to them that the simplest way of
-achieving this would be to supply valuable military information
-to the British. That, however, was an article which they did not
-possess, and they therefore hit upon the idea of getting up a bogus
-conspiracy in order to be able to denounce it. This seemed the simplest
-way to safeguard themselves, and they hurriedly adopted the plan.
-The instruments that they chose were subtle Greeks, who were more
-proficient in the art of intrigue than the Ashakas, and had an even
-more degraded morality. It took only a few days for the Ashakas to
-realize the infidelity of the Greeks, and to inform against them still
-more hurriedly, but meanwhile the Greeks had spoken first. In the end,
-when the hair of the Ashakas had turned grey, they made a clean breast
-of the whole affair to the British authorities, and were, I believe,
-forgiven.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Happy is the country that has no history” is a proverb which is
-often untrue, but Egypt was certainly happy, compared with the rest
-of the world, early in 1915. Then history moved rapidly towards us.
-The thunder of the guns in France was no longer something remote
-and irrelevant. The Turks massed across the desert, and prepared to
-attack the Canal. Many of the English thought that we were living on a
-sleeping volcano, but there was general confidence, and no one doubted
-our power to cope with the situation. The Turks attacked skilfully and
-bravely, but the odds against them were too heavy. They were, however,
-able to shell H.M.S. _Harding_ in the Canal, and a few of their men
-swam across to Egypt. Complete serenity reigned in Cairo. I remember
-going to the Opera that night. General Sir John Maxwell was listening,
-quite unruffled, to the performance. I heard a civilian say in a
-scandalized voice to him: “They have gone and broken the _Harding_.
-What next?” To which Sir John answered: “Well, they’ll have to mend it,
-I suppose.” Two ladies landed at Port Said and had their train shelled
-as it steamed slowly along the banks of the Canal to Cairo. They
-wondered placidly if this was the normal state of things in Egypt.
-
-These attacks added to the labours and quickened the energies of the
-Intelligence in Egypt, but still there were only vague rumours to be
-heard. One of these foretold that there was to be a general rising of
-Islam on April 27th.
-
-I remember long conversations with a specialist with regard to this
-possibility; he disbelieved in it, then or at any time, for, as he
-said very rightly, Islam had to contend with great difficulties from
-the point of view of communications--waterless deserts, impassable
-seas, mountain ranges, unbridged by our telegraph. My friend, who
-was remarkable, would not have an office like any other man in his
-position; he disconcerted friend and foe alike by changing his address
-every few days, and when one wished to see him, and after the unusual
-event of catching him, he would make an appointment such as: “The third
-lamp-post in the Street of Mohammed Ali at dusk.” When he had gone
-beyond recall, one remembered that the Mohammed Ali Street was several
-miles long, and that he had not said at which end was the appointed
-lamp-post; so he was well qualified to speak of the disadvantages
-accruing from lack of communications.
-
-Prisoners began coming in, but not much news was to be obtained from
-them. They were mostly shattered and rather pathetic men. The first to
-arrive were some escaped Syrian schoolmasters, who had been conscripted
-by the Turks, and gave a very graphic account of a hot and harassing
-journey ahead of their comrades to Egypt, where their friends and
-relations lived. Then came a blind old gentleman of eighty, who fell
-into our front-line trench. It had been his habit, every two years, to
-visit his son in Egypt, and he had not realized that there was a war
-going on.
-
-Amongst the Turkish prisoners of the first attack there was one old
-quartermaster seriously ill, whose manners and courage made him the
-friend of all his captors, but, like the rest, he told us nothing.
-There was probably more information amongst the prisoners who had been
-interned, if they had been willing to speak, but they were not. I met
-one of these to whom fate had been unusually cruel. He was an Albanian
-whose home had been in Montenegro. When the amiable Montenegrins seized
-the land of the Albanians, he had been beaten and cast out; thence he
-had gone to Turkey, but the Albanians had been the first to attack the
-Turks, and were, indeed, the main cause of the ruin of the Ottoman
-Empire, so in Turkey he was bastinadoed and thrown into prison. Somehow
-he managed to escape and arrived in Egypt. In Egypt he was arrested
-as a Turk, and again thrown into prison. In prison he was continually
-beaten by his fellow-prisoners, who were Turks, as an Albanian and an
-enemy of Islam.
-
-There were no tangible proofs of a conspiracy; one used sometimes
-to get black looks in the bazaar, and scowls from the class of the
-Effendis. On the other hand, we were very strongly supported by men of
-the type of the late Sultan Hussein and Adly Yeghen Pasha.
-
-It would be difficult to meet a more attractive or courteous gentleman
-than the late Sultan. He was of the advanced school of enlightened
-Islam; neither his literary tastes, his philosophy, nor his pleasure in
-European society allowed him to forget his own people for a moment.
-Adly Yeghen Pasha, then Minister of Education, is an exceptional and
-outstanding figure in Egypt, with a marked personality. The other
-Ministers mixed freely with European society, and there was no sign of
-anything but friendliness.
-
-At the end of February I was sent on the battleship _Bacchante_,
-commanded by Captain Boyle,[1] which lay for about a fortnight off
-Alexandretta, occasionally bombarding telegraphs, or wagons that were
-said to be loaded with artillery wheels. One morning we saw two carts
-crawling along, drawn by bullocks, carrying the alleged wheels of
-artillery northward from Alexandretta. In order to warn the two drivers
-shells were fired from the great battleship a hundred yards ahead of
-them. The men left their oxen, taking refuge in a neighbouring ditch,
-while the oxen went slowly forward alone, like automata. Our guns then
-fired upon the carts, which were about half a mile distant, and one
-of the oxen was immediately hit. On this one of the two Turks left
-the ditch, cut the wounded animal free, and continued to lead the two
-carts. Again our guns fired ahead of him to give him warning, but he
-went on steadfastly at about a mile an hour to what was certain death.
-In the end he was left lying by his dead oxen and his broken cart. We
-had given him every chance that we could, and if the admiration of a
-British ship for his courage could reward a dead Anatolian muleteer,
-that reward was his.
-
-Life outside Alexandretta was uneventful. Occasionally a Turkish
-official came out to discuss various questions that arose. He used to
-sway and bow from the tiller of his boat while I swayed and bowed
-from the platform below the gangway of the cruiser. It is perhaps
-worth saying that when I expressed to him Captain Boyle’s regret for
-the death of the Turkish muleteer it was an event that he would not
-condescend to notice.
-
-We discovered one curious fact of natural history, that with a
-searchlight you can see the eyes of dogs or jackals at night more than
-half a mile away. A previous ship had reported that men came down to
-the shore with electric torches, and it was only after some days that
-we discovered that these will-o’-the-wisp appearances were in reality
-the eyes of dogs.
-
-But though life was uneventful, it was very pleasant on the ship, and
-all were sorry when the cruise came to an end.
-
-I remember the last night at dinner in the wardroom the name of a
-distinguished Admiral occurred in the conversation. He was a man who
-had a great reputation for capacity and also eccentricity, that came
-mainly from his habit of concentrated thinking. When he was deep in
-thought and his eyes caught any bright object, he would go up to it
-like a magpie and play with it. He would sometimes go up and fiddle
-with the button of a junior officer on the quarter-deck, looking at it
-very attentively, to the great discomfort of the junior officer, or
-even with that of a stranger to whom he had been introduced. The legend
-grew from this idiosyncrasy, that those may believe who wish to. It was
-said that one night at a dance he sat out for a long time with a girl
-in a black dress. His eye caught a white thread on her shoulder, and
-unconsciously while he talked he began pulling at it. The story goes
-on to say that when the girl went home she said to her mother: “I know
-I went out with a vest to-night, and now I wonder what has happened to
-it.”
-
-I remember at the same dinner Dr. Levick, who had been with Captain
-Scott in the Antarctic voyage, told a curious story of prophecy. He had
-been to a fortune-teller after the idea of going with Captain Scott had
-occurred to him, but before he had taken any steps. The fortune-teller
-gave a description of the melancholy place where he was to live for
-two years, of the unknown men who were to be his companions, and
-particularly one who had strangely flecked hair.
-
-I returned to Cairo and office work with some reluctance. Friends
-of mine and I took a house, which somehow managed to run itself, in
-Gezireh. It was covered with Bougainvillea and flowers of every colour,
-and was a delight to see. Sometimes it lacked servants completely, and
-at other times there was a black horde. Gardeners sprang up as if by
-enchantment, and made things grow almost before one’s eyes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I quote from my diary of March 8, 1915:--
-
-News to-day that King Constantine won’t have Greece come in, and that
-Venizelos has resigned. At a guess, this means that either Greece or
-King Constantine is lost. If Constantine goes, Venizelos might shepherd
-his son through his minority.
-
-_March 14, 1915._ I left Luxor Tuesday night, after a wonderful time.
-My guide was a Senoussi--something-or-other Galleel. He had a tip of
-white turban hanging, which he said was a sign of his people. He was
-rather like one of the Arabs out of a Hichens book, and I expect about
-as genuine. A snake-charmer came with us. He gave me the freedom of the
-snakes as a man is given the freedom of a city, but as one scorpion
-and two snakes--one of them a so-to-speak soi-disant cobra--stung and
-bit him during the day, it’s not likely to be of much help to me. He
-did some very mysterious things, and called snakes from every kind of
-place--one from a window in the wall, a 5-foot long cobra, and a Coptic
-cook found its old skin in the next window.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In justice to the snake-charmer it ought to be said that he was only
-stung and bitten as a consequence of a quarrel with an archæologist.
-
-In Egypt every archæologist looks upon the local magician or
-snake-charmer as his competitor, and hates him. When the archæologist
-is telling the tourist the history of Rameses II the attention of the
-tourist is distracted by a half-naked man doing the mango trick. My
-archæologist friend, irritated by the presence of the snake-charmer,
-declared that his snakes were all doped and his scorpions were tame
-town scorpions, green, and not yellow like the country scorpions. He
-found a bucolic scorpion under a stone, of the proper colour, which
-instantly stung the snake-charmer; he then insisted upon stirring up
-his snakes with a stick, with the unfortunate results that have already
-been mentioned.
-
-The Egyptian has always seemed to me harder to understand than his
-neighbours. It may be because there is less in him to understand. The
-Greeks, Turks, and Arabs have all got very salient characteristic
-qualities, but though the characteristics of the Egyptians are
-probably as strongly marked, they are less conspicuous to the
-foreigner’s eye; in other words, the Egyptian has less in common with
-the outer world than any of the Asiatic, or even African, peoples who
-surround him. Lane, in his _Modern Egyptians_, says that they refused
-to believe that the ordinary traveller was not an agent for the
-Government, because they could not understand the desire for travel,
-and their character has not changed since his day. Here is a story of
-Egyptian guile and credulity:--
-
-An Egyptian was anxious to get some job profitable to himself done,
-and he went to one of the kavasses (guards) at the Agency for advice.
-The kavass professed himself able to help. He said: “The man for you
-to go to is Mr. Jones, that high English official. He will get what
-you want done, but I warn you that Mr. Jones is an expensive man. Give
-me three hundred pounds, and I will see what can be done.” The three
-hundred pounds was duly paid, and for a long time nothing happened. The
-petitioner grew impatient and importunate, and was eventually satisfied
-for the moment by an invitation to lunch with a Levantine who passed
-himself off as Mr. Jones. At luncheon the Levantine, who was of German
-extraction, wore his hat, banged his fist on the table, smoked a pipe,
-interrupted, and generally acted as an Englishman abroad is supposed by
-some to behave. Then occurred an interval of inaction; the petitioner
-again grew restive, and this time he complained to the authorities.
-Finally the transaction was discovered, and the kavass was sent to gaol.
-
-Events moved in Egypt. The Australian and New Zealand troops poured in,
-and splendid men they were. But there was little love lost between
-the Australians and the Egyptians, though the British troops and the
-natives fraternized occasionally. The native Egyptian was, it must be
-admitted, constantly very roughly treated, for the average Australian,
-while he was at first apt to resent superiority in others, felt little
-doubt about his own claim to it. The Australian and New Zealand Corps
-was commanded by General Birdwood, and the New Zealand and Australian
-Division by General Godley.
-
-I joined the New Zealand Division as Interpreter and Intelligence
-officer, and we all made preparations to start early in April. I was
-anxious to buy a beautiful snow-white Arab, that had won most of the
-races at Cairo, from a friend of mine, but General Godley spoke simply
-but firmly. “You aren’t the Duke of Marlborough,” he said. “You can’t
-have that white pony unless he’s dyed, and even then it would wash off
-in any rain-storm. You may get yourself shot, but not me.” I agreed
-with the less reluctance because I had found that the pony pulled
-furiously and would certainly lead any advance or retreat by many miles.
-
-The day for our departure approached. The golden sunlight and
-tranquillity of Egypt was tragic in its contrast to what was coming.
-
-Every Intelligence officer was a Cassandra with an attentive audience.
-In every discussion there was, as far as I saw, unanimity between
-military, naval, and political officers, who all wished the landing to
-take place at Alexandretta, and deplored (not to use a stronger word)
-the project of the Dardanelles, which the Turks had been given ample
-time to fortify.
-
-The heat increased, and the English officers’ wives, who had come to
-Egypt to be with their husbands, were given a taste of a ferocious
-khamsin that affected their complexions. In the spring of 1915 this
-wind came in waves and gusts of lurid heat. It was like a Nessus shirt,
-scorching the skin and making slow fire of one’s blood. After the
-khamsin, which has the one advantage of killing insects with its heat,
-locusts came. They made a carpet on the ground and a shadow against the
-sun. Life was intolerable out of doors, and they followed one into the
-recesses of the house. A friend of mine said to me: “What on earth had
-they got to grumble about in Egypt in the time of the Pharaohs? They
-had one plague at a time then; we are having all the lot at once.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-I quote from my diary:--
-
-Yesterday I saw Todd, who had been on the _Annie Rickmers_ when she was
-torpedoed off Smyrna. The crew was Greek. There were five Englishmen on
-board, and a good many wounded. The Greeks were all off at once, taking
-all the boats. They had no interpreter with them. He said the English
-in Smyrna were angry at being bombarded, and came aboard with Rahmy
-Bey, the Vali, to complain. Rahmy was always Anglophile.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Early in April Sir Ian Hamilton came and went. He had a great review
-of the troops in the desert on a glorious day. It was a very splendid
-sight, and one I should have enjoyed better if I had not been riding a
-mountainous roan horse that bolted through the glittering Staff.
-
-Many old friends, Ock Asquith, Patrick Shaw-Stewart, Charles Lister,
-and Rupert Brooke, had come out to Egypt in the Naval Division, and we
-lunched, dined, and went to the Pyramids by moonlight.
-
-The first week in April we made our preparations for leaving, and I
-went to say good-bye to native friends. One of them was an old Albanian
-Abbot of the Bektashi sect, whose monastery was in the living rock
-in a huge cave behind the Mokattan Hills. He had a fine face and a
-venerable beard, and I spent much time talking to him, drinking his
-coffee, by a fountain in the cool garden outside his home. I was sorry
-to say goodbye to the delightful Zoo in Cairo, with the hawks calling
-unceasingly in the sunlight, and a hundred different birds. Another
-pleasure there was Said, an attractive and intellectual hippopotamus,
-who performed a number of tricks.
-
-On April 10th I went to Alexandria to report aboard the German prize
-ship _Lutzow_, and on the 12th we sailed. We discovered that night at
-dinner that the puritanical New Zealand Government had ordained that
-this boat should be a dry one, but it made no difference to our mess,
-which was very pleasant. On April 13th we made a new discovery, that
-the boat was even drier than we expected, as there was not enough
-water, and the men had to shave in salt water. On April 15th we came
-into Lemnos Harbour, with a keen wind and a rustling deep blue sea,
-and white-crested waves, with cheer on cheer from French and English
-warships, from German prizes with British crews, from submarines, and
-even from anchored balloons.
-
-The next day I went ashore with a couple of other officers to buy
-donkeys, who were to carry our kits. Mudros was not too bad a town,
-and was a very curious spectacle in those days. There were great black
-Senegalese troops with filed teeth who chased the children in play,
-though if the children had known what their home habits were the games
-would probably have ceased abruptly.
-
-There were Greeks dressed in fantastic costume and British troops
-of all sorts. Many old friends from the East were there, among them
-Colonel Doughty Wylie, who in a few days was to win his V.C. and lose a
-life of great value to his country.
-
-I met a friend, Bettelheim, nicknamed “Beetle,” whose life had been
-one long adventure. When last I had seen him he had been an official
-in Turkey, and in a rising had been dragged from his carriage on
-Galata Bridge in Constantinople by the mob, with his companion, the
-Emir Arslan. Emir Arslan was torn to pieces, but “Beetle,” with his
-marvellous luck, escaped.
-
-Many of us lunched together under a vine, drinking excellent wine at a
-penny a glass. Everybody was extremely cheerful, and there was great
-elation in the island air. The talk was, of course, about the landing.
-A friend of mine said: “This is a terrible business; entire Staffs
-will be wiped out.” He seemed to think that the Staffs were the most
-important thing.
-
-After lunch I went to see the Mayor, to help me buy all that I wanted.
-He was rather shaky with regard to his own position, as Lemnos had not
-yet been recognized by us as Greek, and our recognition was contingent
-on the behaviour of the Greek Government. He was a very good linguist,
-talking French, a little English, Italian, Greek, Turkish and Arabic.
-I think it was he who quoted to me the story of the Khoja Nasr-ed-Din.
-Nasr-ed-Din was lent a saucepan by a friend; he returned it with
-another small saucepan, saying it had produced a child. Next year the
-friend offered a huge saucepan at the same date, which the friend
-considered the breeding time of saucepans. Later on, when his friend
-applied for the return of the saucepan, Nasr-ed-Din said: “It is
-dead.” His friend expostulated: “How can a saucepan die?” “Well,” said
-Nasr-ed-Din, “if it can have a child, why can’t it die?”
-
-Lemnos itself, though then it was a pageant, is on the whole a dreary
-island. The land was green, as all lands are in the spring, but there
-was not the carpet of anemones that one finds in Crete, Cyprus, and
-other islands, nor was there even asphodel.
-
-On Friday, April 16th, we heard that the _Manitou_ had been torpedoed,
-and that a number of men had been drowned. This was not the case,
-though she had had three torpedoes fired at her.
-
-At this time we believed that we were to make three simultaneous
-attacks, the New Zealanders taking the centre of the Peninsula. A
-rather melancholy call to arms was issued by General Birdwood, the pith
-of which was that for the first few days there would be no transport of
-any kind. This made it all the more necessary to obtain the donkeys,
-and with the help of the Mayor of Mudros I bought six, and one little
-one for £1 as a mascot. It was a great deal of trouble getting them on
-board. The Greek whose boat I had commandeered was very unfriendly, and
-I had to requisition the services of some Senegalese troops.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _April 21, 1915._ _Mudros._ Inner Bay. Monday, the 19th, I
-tried to dine on H.M.S. _Bacchante_, but failed to find her. Dined
-on the _Arcadia_. Came back with Commodore Keyes.... Met ---- (a
-journalist turned censor). He said that the Turks had thirty 15-inch
-howitzers on Gallipoli, also wire entanglements everywhere. The general
-impression is that we shall get a very bad knock, and that it may set
-the war back a year, besides producing an indefinite amount of trouble
-in the East.
-
-_Tuesday, April 20th._ I went ashore to get porters, but the Mayor
-was in a nervous state, and I failed. I tried to get back in a dinghy
-with a couple of Greeks, and we nearly swamped. A gale got up. Finally
-I made the _Imogen_, tied up by the _Hussar_, and at last reached my
-destination. Great gale in the night. I hope we don’t suffer the fate
-of the Armada. It is said that our orders are to steam for the outer
-harbour at once.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was curious to see the _Imogen_, once the Ambassador’s yacht at
-Constantinople. In those days she was treated with reverent care. The
-Mediterranean had to be calmed by the finest of weather before she
-travelled. Now she had to sink or swim with the rest. Her adventures
-did not end at Lemnos. Travellers may see her name written proudly
-on the harsh cliffs of Muscat in the Persian Gulf, and to-day she is
-probably at Kurna, the site of the Garden of Eden.
-
-On Thursday, April 22nd, I was able to get two Greek porters, Kristo
-Keresteji (which being interpreted means Kristo the Timber-merchant)
-and Yanni, of the little island of Ayo Strati. Kristo was with me
-until I was invalided in the middle of October. He showed the greatest
-fidelity and courage after the first few days. The other man was a
-natural coward, and had to be sent away when an opportunity offered,
-after the landing.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Friday, April 23rd._ I have just seen the most wonderful
-procession of ships I shall ever see. In the afternoon we left for the
-outer harbour. The wind was blowing; there was foam upon the sea and
-the air of the island was sparkling. With the band playing and flags
-flying, we steamed past the rest of the fleet. Cheers went from one end
-of the harbour to the other. Spring and summer met. Everybody felt it
-more than anything that had gone before.
-
-After we had passed the fleet, the pageant of the fleet passed us.
-First the _Queen Elizabeth_, immense, beautiful lines, long, like
-a snake, straight as an arrow. This time there was silence. It was
-grim and very beautiful. We would rather have had the music and the
-cheers.... This morning instructions were given to the officers and
-landing arrangements made. We leave at 1.30 to-night. The Australians
-are to land first. This they should do to-night. Then we land.... Naval
-guns will have to cover our advance, and the men are to be warned that
-the naval fire is very accurate. They will need some reassuring if the
-fire is just over our heads. The 29th land at Helles, the French in
-Asia near Troy. This is curious, as they can’t support us or we them.
-The Naval Division goes north and makes a demonstration.... The general
-opinion is that very many boats must be sunk from the shore. Having
-got ashore, we go on to a rendezvous. We have no native guides.... The
-politicians are very unpopular.
-
-The sea was very quiet between Lemnos and Anzac on April 24th. There
-were one or two alterations in plans, but nothing very material. We
-expected to have to land in the afternoon, but this was changed, and we
-were ordered to land after the Australians, who were to attack at 4.30
-a.m. Some proposed to get up to see the first attack at dawn. I thought
-that we should see plenty of the attack before we had done with it, and
-preferred to sleep.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Sunday, April 25th._ I got up at 6.30. Thoms, who shared my
-cabin, had been up earlier. There was a continuous roll of thunder
-from the south. Opposite to us the land rose steeply in cliffs and
-hills covered with the usual Mediterranean vegetation. The crackle of
-rifles sounded and ceased in turns.... Orders were given to us to start
-at 8.30 a.m.... The tows were punctual.... We were ordered to take
-practically nothing but rations. I gave my sleeping-bag to Kyriakidis,
-the old Greek interpreter whom I had snatched from the _Arcadia_, and
-took my British warm and my Burberry.... The tow was unpleasantly open
-to look at; there was naturally no shelter of any kind. We all packed
-in, and were towed across the shining sea towards the land fight.... We
-could see some still figures lying on the beach to our left, one or two
-in front. Some bullets splashed round.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As we were all jumping into the sea to flounder ashore, I heard cries
-from the sergeant at the back of the tow. He said to me: “These two men
-refuse to go ashore.” I turned and saw Kristo Keresteji and Yanni of
-Ayo Strati with mesmerized eyes looking at the plops that the bullets
-made in the water, and with their minds evidently fixed on the Greek
-equivalent of “Home, Sweet Home.” They were, however, pushed in, and
-we all scrambled on to that unholy land. The word was then, I thought
-rather unnecessarily, passed that we were under fire.
-
-It was difficult to understand why the Turkish fire developed so late.
-If they had started shelling us during our landing as they shelled
-us later, our losses would have been very heavy. We frequently owed
-our salvation in the Peninsula to a Turkish weakness and a Turkish
-mistake. They were constantly slow to appreciate a position and take
-full advantage of it, and their shrapnel was generally fused too high.
-Hardly any man who landed escaped being thumped and bumped on different
-occasions by shrapnel, which would, of course, have killed or seriously
-wounded him if the burst had not been so high. I remember on the
-afternoon of the first landing a sailor was knocked down beside me, and
-I and another man carried him to what shelter there was. We found that,
-while the bullet had pierced his clothes, it had not even broken his
-skin. Said the sailor: “This is the third time that that’s ’appened to
-me to-day. I’m beginning to think of my little grey ’ome in the West.”
-So were others.
-
-We had landed on a spit of land which in those days we called Shrapnel
-Point, to the left of what afterwards became Corps Headquarters, though
-later the other spit on the right usurped that name. I took cover under
-a bush with a New Zealand officer, Major Browne. This officer had risen
-from the ranks. He fought through the whole of the Gallipoli campaign,
-and in the end, to the sorrow of all who knew him, was killed as a
-Brigadier in France.
-
-The shrapnel fire became too warm to be pleasant, and I said: “Major,
-a soldier’s first duty is to save his life for his country.” He said:
-“I quite agree, but I don’t see how it’s to be done.” We were driven
-from Shrapnel Point to the north, round the cliff, but were almost
-immediately driven back again by the furious fire that met us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ We were being shot at from three sides. All that morning
-we kept moving. There were lines of men clinging like cockroaches
-under the cliffs or moving silently as the guns on the right and left
-enfiladed us. The only thing to be done was to dig in as soon as
-possible, but a good many men were shot while they were doing this.
-General Godley landed about twelve, and went up Monash Gully with
-General Birdwood. We remained on the beach.... We had no artillery to
-keep the enemy’s fire down.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We spent a chilly night, sometimes lying down, sometimes walking, as
-the rain began to fall after dark, and we had not too much food. My
-servant, Jack, who was a very old friend, and I made ourselves as
-comfortable as we could.
-
-There was a great deal of inevitable confusion. We were very hard
-pressed; as every draft landed it was hurried off to that spot in the
-line where reinforcements were most needed. This naturally produced
-chaos amongst the units, and order was not re-established for some
-time. It was a terrible night for those in authority. I believe that,
-had it been possible, we should have re-embarked that night, but the
-sacrifices involved would have been too great. Preparations for the
-expedition had been totally inadequate. The chief R.A.M.C. officer
-had told me the ridiculously small number of casualties he had been
-ordered to make preparations for, and asked my opinion, which I gave
-him with some freedom. As it was, we had to put 600 men on the ship
-from which we had disembarked in the morning, to go back to hospital in
-Egypt, a four days’ journey, under the charge of one officer, who was a
-veterinary surgeon.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Monday, April 26th._ At 5 o’clock yesterday our artillery
-began to land. It’s a very rough country; the Mediterranean macchia
-everywhere, and steep, winding valleys. We slept on a ledge a few feet
-above the beach.... Firing went on all night. In the morning it was
-very cold, and we were all soaked. The Navy, it appeared, had landed
-us in the wrong place. This made the Army extremely angry, though as
-things turned out it was the one bright spot. Had we landed anywhere
-else, we should have been wiped out.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I believe the actual place decided on for our landing was a mile
-farther south, which was an open plain, and an ideal place for a
-hostile landing from the Turkish point of view.
-
-Next morning I walked with General Godley and Tahu Rhodes, his A.D.C.,
-up the height to the plateau which was afterwards called Plugges
-Plateau. The gullies and ravines were very steep, and covered with
-undergrowth. We found General Walker, General Birdwood’s Chief of the
-Staff, on the ridge that bears his name. Bullets were whining about,
-through the undergrowth, but were not doing much harm, though the
-shelling on the beach was serious.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ We believed that the Turks were using 16-inch shells from the
-Dardanelles, and we were now able to reply. The noise was deafening,
-and our firing knocked down our own dugouts. The Generals all behaved
-as if the whole thing was a tea-party. Their different Staffs looked
-worried for their chiefs and themselves. Generals Godley and Walker
-were the most reckless, but General Birdwood also went out of his way
-to take risks. The sun was very hot, and our clothes dried while the
-shrapnel whistled over us into the sea.
-
-At noon we heard the rumour that the 29th were fighting their way
-up from Helles, and everybody grew happy. We also heard that two
-Brigadiers had been wounded and one killed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Australians had brought with them two ideas, which were only
-eliminated by time, fighting, and their own good sense. The “eight
-hours’ day” was almost a holy principle, and when they had violated it
-by holding on for two or three days heroically, they thought that they
-deserved a “spell.” Their second principle was not to leave their pals.
-When a man was wounded his friends would insist upon bringing him down,
-instead of leaving him to the stretcher-bearers. When they had learned
-the practical side of war, both these dogmas were jettisoned. In Egypt
-the Australians had human weaknesses, and had shown them; in Gallipoli
-they were the best of companions. Naturally, with the New Zealand
-Division, I saw more of the New Zealanders, who had the virtues of the
-Australians and the British troops. They had all the dash and _élan_ of
-the Australians, and the discipline of the Englishmen.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Tuesday, April 27th._ Last night, or rather this morning at
-about 1 o’clock, I was called up by C. He said: “We are sending up
-40,000 rounds of ammunition to Colonel Pope.” Greek donkey-boys, with
-an Indian escort, were to go up with this ammunition. I asked if any
-officer was going, and was answered “No”; that there was no officer to
-go. I said that I would go if I could get a guide, but that I did not
-talk Hindustani, and that the whole thing was risky, as we were just
-as likely without a guide to wander into the Turks as to find our own
-people; also that if we were attacked we should be without means of
-communicating, and that the Greeks would certainly bolt. At the Corps
-Headquarters I found an absolutely gaga officer. He had an A.D.C. who
-was on the spot, however, and produced a note from Colonel Pope which
-stated that he had all the ammunition he wanted. The officer, in spite
-of this, told me to carry on. I said it was nonsense without a guide,
-when Pope had his ammunition. He then told me to take the mules to one
-place and the ammunition to another. I said that I had better take them
-both back to my own Headquarters, from which I had come. He then tried
-to come with me, after saying that he would put me under arrest, but
-fell over two tent-ropes and was nearly kicked by a mule, and gave up
-in mute despair.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I may add that this officer was sent away shortly afterwards. The next
-night he was found with a revolver stalking one of the Staff officers,
-who was sleeping with a night-cap that looked like a turban, to shelter
-his head from the dew. My persecutor said that he thought he was a Turk.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ Three of us slept crowded in one dugout on Monday night. The
-cliff is becoming like a rookery, with ill-made nests. George Lloyd
-and Ian Smith have a charming view, only no room to lie down in.
-Everybody’s dugout is falling on his neighbour’s head. I went round
-the corner of the cliff to find a clean place to wash in the sea, but
-was sniped, and had to come back quick. The Gallipoli Division of
-Turks, 18,000 strong, is supposed to be approaching, while we listened
-to a great artillery duel not far off. An Armenian who was captured
-yesterday reported the Gallipoli Division advancing on us. On Tuesday
-night things were better. I think most men were then of the opinion
-that we ought to be able to hold on, but we were clinging by our
-eyelids on to the ridge. The confusion of units and the great losses in
-officers increased the difficulty.
-
-This was the third day of battle. My dugout was twice struck. A tug was
-sunk just in front of us.... The interpreters have all got three days’
-beards which are turning white from worry. The shells to-day did not do
-so much damage; they whirled over us in coveys, sometimes hitting the
-beach and flying off singing, sometimes splashing in the sea, but a lot
-of dead and wounded were carried by.
-
- * * * * *
-
-About this time the spy mania started, which is one of the inevitable
-concomitants of war. Spies were supposed to be everywhere. In the
-popular belief, that is “on the beach,” there were enough spies to
-have made an opera. The first convincing proof of treachery which we
-had was the story of a Turkish girl who had painted her face green in
-order to look like a tree, and had shot several people at Helles from
-the boughs of an oak. Next came the story of the daily pigeon post from
-Anzac to the Turkish line; but as a matter of fact, the pigeons were
-about their own business of nesting.
-
-We had with us, too, a remarkable body of men who were more than
-suspect, and whose presence fed the wildest rumours. These were called
-Zionists, Zionites, and many other names. They were the Jewish exiles
-from Syria, who looked after the mules, and constituted the Mule Corps,
-under Colonel Patterson, of lion-hunting fame. They performed very fine
-service, and gave proof of the greatest courage. On several occasions
-I saw the mules blown to bits, and the men of the Mule Corps perfectly
-calm, among their charges. One night it did seem to me that at last we
-had got the genuine article. A panting Australian came to say that they
-had captured a German disguised as a member of the Mule Corps, but that
-he had unfortunately killed one man before being taken. When I examined
-this individual he gave his name as Fritz Sehmann, and the language
-in which we conversed most easily was German. He was able to justify
-himself in his explanation, which turned out to be true. He had been
-walking along the cliff at night with his mule, when the mule had been
-shot and had fallen over the cliff with Fritz Sehmann. Together they
-had fallen upon an unfortunate soldier, who had been killed by the same
-burst.
-
-It was a work of some difficulty to explain to the Colonial troops
-that many of the prisoners that we took--as, for instance, Greeks and
-Armenians--were conscripts who hated their masters. On one occasion,
-speaking of a prisoner, I said to a soldier: “This man says he is a
-Greek, and that he hates the Turks.” “That’s a likely story, that is,”
-said the soldier; “better put a bayonet in the brute.”
-
-The trouble that we had with the native interpreters is even now a
-painful memory. If they were arrested once a day, they were arrested
-ten times. Those who had anything to do with them, if they were not
-suspected of being themselves infected by treachery, were believed to
-be in some way unpatriotic. It was almost as difficult to persuade the
-officers as the men that the fact that a man knew Turkish did not make
-him a Turk. There was one moment when the interpreters were flying over
-the hills like hares.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Wednesday, April 28th._ I got up at 4 a.m. this morning,
-after a fine, quiet night, and examined a Greek deserter from the
-Turkish Army. He said many would desert if they did not fear for their
-lives. The New Zealanders spare their prisoners.
-
-Last night, while he was talking to me, Colonel C. was hit by a bit of
-shell on his hat. He stood quite still while a man might count three,
-wondering if he was hurt. He then stooped down and picked it up. At
-8 p.m last night there was furious shelling in the gully. Many men
-and mules hit. General Godley was in the Signalling Office, on the
-telephone, fairly under cover. I was outside with Pinwell, and got
-grazed, just avoiding the last burst. Their range is better. Before
-this they have been bursting the shrapnel too high. It was after 4
-p.m. their range improved so much. My dugout was shot through five
-minutes before I went there. So was Shaw’s....
-
-Colonel Chaytor was knocked down by shrapnel, but not hurt. The same
-happened to Colonel Manders. We heard that the Indian troops were to
-come to-night. Twenty-three out of twenty-seven Auckland officers
-killed and wounded.
-
-_11 a.m._ All firing except from Helles has ceased. Things look better.
-The most the men can do is to hang on. General Godley has been very
-fine. The men know it.
-
-_4.30 p.m._ Turks suddenly reported to have mounted huge howitzer on
-our left flank, two or three miles away. We rushed all the ammunition
-off the beach, men working like ants, complete silence and furious
-work. We were absolutely enfiladed, and they could have pounded us,
-mules and machinery, to pulp, or driven us into the gully and up the
-hill, cutting us off from our water and at the same time attacking us
-with shrapnel. The ships came up and fired on the new gun, and proved
-either that it was a dummy or had moved, or had been knocked out. It
-was a cold, wet night.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The material which General Birdwood and General Godley had to work
-upon was very fine. The Australians and the New Zealanders were born
-fighters and natural soldiers, and learnt quickly on Active Service
-what it would have taken months of training to have taught them. But
-like many another side-show, Anzac was casual in many ways, as the
-following excerpt from this diary will show:--
-
-_Diary._ _Thursday, April 29th._ _Kaba Tepé._ I was woken at 2.30 a.m.,
-when the New Zealanders stood to arms. It was wet and cold, and a wind
-blew which felt as if it came through snowy gorges. The alarm had been
-given, and the Turks were supposed to be about to rush the beach from
-the left flank in force. Colonel Chaytor was sent to hold the point.
-He told me to collect stragglers and form them up. It was very dark,
-and the stragglers were very straggly. I found an Australian, Quinn,
-and told him to fetch his men along to the gun emplacement, beyond the
-graves, on the point where Chaytor was. Every one lost every one.
-
-I found Colonel Chaytor with an Australian officer. He said to him: “Go
-out along the flank and find out where the Canterbury Battalion is, and
-how strong. On the extreme left there is a field ambulance. They must
-be told to lie down, so that the Turks will not shoot them.” I said I
-would look after them. We started. I heard the Australian, after we
-had gone some hundreds of yards, ordering the Canterburys in support
-to retire. I said: “But are your orders to that effect? A support is
-there to support. The Canterburys will be routed or destroyed if you
-take this support away.” He said: “Well, that’s a bright idea.” He went
-back, and I heard him say, in the darkness: “This officer thinks you
-had better stay where you are.” I don’t know if he was a Colonel, or
-what he was, and he did not know what I was.
-
-I found the field ambulance, a long way off, and went on to the
-outposts. The field ambulance were touchingly grateful for nothing, and
-I had some tea and yarned with them till morning, walking back after
-dawn along the beach by the graves. No one fired at me.
-
-When I got back I heard the news of Doughty’s[2] death, which grieved
-me a great deal.... He seems to have saved the situation. The
-description of Helles is ghastly, of the men looking down into the red
-sea, and the dying drowned in a foot of water. That is what might have,
-and really ought to have happened to us.
-
-One hears the praise of politicians in all men’s mouths....
-
-A beautiful night, last night, and a fair amount of shrapnel. Every
-evening now they send over a limited number of howitzers from the great
-guns in the Dardanelles, aimed at our ships. That happens also in the
-early morning, as this morning. To-night an aeroplane is to locate
-these guns, and when they let fly to-morrow we are to give them an
-immense broadside from all our ships.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At this time the weather had improved, but we were living in a good
-deal of discomfort. We were not yet properly supplied with stores, the
-water was brackish, occasionally one had to shave in salt water, and
-all one’s ablutions had to be done on the beach, with the permission of
-the Turkish artillery.
-
-The beach produced a profound impression on almost all of us, and
-has in some cases made the seaside distasteful for the rest of our
-lives. It was, when we first landed, I suppose, about 30 yards broad,
-and covered with shingle. Upon this narrow strip depended all our
-communications: landing and putting off, food and water, all came and
-went upon the beach--and the Turkish guns had got the exact range.
-Later, shelters were put up, but life was still precarious, and the
-openness of the beach gave men a greater feeling of insecurity than
-they had in the trenches.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ Our hair and eyes and mouths are full of dust and sand, and
-our nostrils of the smell of dead mules.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There were also colonies of ants that kept in close touch with us, and
-our cigarettes gave out. Besides these trials, we had no news of the
-war or of the outer world.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ Tahu and I repacked the provisions this morning. While we did
-so one man was shot on the right and another on the left. We have been
-expecting howitzers all the time, and speculating as to whether there
-would be any panic if they really get on to us. The Turks have got
-their indirect, or rather enfilading, fire on us, and hit our mules.
-One just hit a few yards away.... Imbros and Samothrace are clear and
-delicate between the blue sea and the hot sky. The riband of beach is
-crowded with transport, and Jews, Greeks, Armenians, New Zealanders,
-Australians, scallywag officers, and officers that still manage to keep
-a shadow of dandyism between their disreputable selves and immaculate
-past. And there’s the perpetual ripple of the waves that is sometimes
-loud enough to be mistaken for the swish of shrapnel, which is also
-perpetual, splashing in the sea or rattling on the beach. There is
-very little noise on the beach in the way of talk and laughter. The
-men never expected to be up against this. When we left Lemnos we
-saw one boat with an arrow and in front of it “TO CONSTANTINOPLE
-AND THE HAREM.” Precious few of those poor fellows will ever see
-Constantinople, let alone the Harem.
-
-_May 1st._ A beautiful dawn, but defiled by a real hymn of hate from
-the Turks. Last night the _Torgut Reiss_ sent us some shells. This
-morning it was supposed to be the _Goeben_ that was firing. I woke to
-hear the howitzers that everybody had been talking of here droning
-over us, and watched them lifting great columns of water where they
-hit the sea. Then there came the sigh and the snarl of shrapnel, but
-that to the other is like the rustle of a lady’s fan to the rumble of
-a brewer’s dray. This hymn of hate went on for an unusually long time
-this morning from the big stuff. A lot of men were hit all round, and
-it has been difficult to wash in the sea. All the loading, unloading,
-etc., is done at night. The picket-boats are fairly well protected. The
-middies are the most splendid boys. We are all very cramped and the
-mules add to the congestion. We shall have a plague of flies before we
-are done, if we don’t have a worse plague than that. The New Zealanders
-are all right....
-
-Colonel White, Rickes and Murphy, all hit at breakfast this morning,
-but not hurt. One of the Greek donkey-boys says he is a barber. This
-would be a great advantage if he wasn’t so nervous and did not start so
-much whenever there is a burst.
-
-There is a fleet of boats in front of us, and even more at Helles; the
-Turks must feel uncomfortable, but another landing, between us, would
-be pretty risky. They are fighting splendidly. Opinions are divided as
-to what would happen if we fought our way to Maidos. Many think we
-could be shelled out again by the _Goeben_. This expedition needed at
-least three times the number of men. The Indians have not come, and the
-Territorials cannot come for a long time.
-
-General Godley wants to change Headquarters for us. Colonel Artillery
-Johnston’s battery is on our right, facing the Turks, and only a few
-yards away. The Turks spend a lot of time shooting at it, missing it,
-and hitting us. Another man killed just now. Shrapnel, heaps of it, is
-coming both ways on us. Nobody speaks on the beach. We have two tables
-on the top of the dugout. One is safe, and the other can be hit. The
-punctual people get the safe table.
-
-B. has lunched. He says that Rupert Brooke died at Lemnos. I am very
-sorry; he was a good fellow, and a poet with a great future. B. was
-blown up by a shell yesterday. He has to go back to-night. While we
-lunched a man had his head blown off 20 yards away....
-
-Orders have come that we are to entrench impregnably. We are
-practically besieged, for we can’t re-embark without sacrificing our
-rear-guard, and if the howitzers come up we shall be cut off from the
-beach and our water. A lot more men have been killed on the beach....
-
-_Sunday, May 2nd. 6 a.m._ Shrapnel all round as I washed. Beach opinion
-is if this siege lasts they must be able to get up their heavy guns.
-The Indians have gone to Helles, and the Naval Division is being taken
-away from us. New Turkish Divisions are coming against us. There are no
-chaplains here for burial or for anything else.
-
-Waite took a dozen prisoners this morning--gendarmes, nice fellows.
-They hadn’t much to tell us. One of them complained that he had been
-shot through a mistake after he had surrendered. There ought to be an
-interpreter on these occasions....
-
-It is a fiery hot day, without a ripple on the clear sea, and all still
-but for the thunder coming from Helles. I bathed and got clean. The
-beach looks like a mule fair of mutes, for it is very silent. We are to
-attack to-night at seven. We have now been here a week, and advanced a
-hundred yards farther than the first rush carried us. There is a great
-bombardment going on, a roaring ring of fire, and the Turks are being
-shelled and shelled.
-
-At night the battleships throw out two lines of searchlights, and
-behind them there gleam the fires of Samothrace and Imbros. Up and down
-the cliffs here, outside the dugouts, small fires burn. The rifle fire
-comes over the hill, echoing in the valleys and back from the ships.
-Sometimes it is difficult to tell whether it is the sound of ripples on
-the beach or firing.
-
-_Monday, May 3rd._ I was called up at 3 a.m. to examine three
-prisoners. Our attack has failed, and we have many casualties, probably
-not less than 1,000. The wounded have been crying on the beach
-horribly. A wounded Arab reported that our naval gun fire did much
-damage.
-
-The complaint is old and bitter now. We insist that the Turks are
-Hottentots. We give them notice before we attack them. We tell them
-what we are going to do with their Capital. We attack them with an
-inadequate force of irregular troops, without adequate ammunition (we
-had one gun in our landing) in the most impregnable part of their
-Empire. We ask for trouble all over the East by risking disaster here.
-
-The _Goeben_ is shelling the fleet, and (11.30) has just struck a
-transport. The sea is gay, and a fresh wind is blowing, and the beach
-is crowded, but there is not a voice upon it, except for an occasional
-order....
-
-The Turks are now expected to attack us. We suppose people realize what
-is happening here in London, though it isn’t easy to see how troops and
-reinforcements can be sent us in time--that is, before the Turks have
-turned all this into a fortification. A good many men hit on the beach
-to-day. The mules cry like lost souls.
-
-_Tuesday, May 4th._ The sea like a looking-glass, not a cloud in the
-sky, and Samothrace looking very clear and close. The moon is like a
-faint shadow of light in the clear sky over the smoke of the guns.
-Heavy fighting between us and Helles. A landing is being attempted.
-Pessimists say it is our men being taken off because their position is
-impossible. The boats coming back seem full of wounded. It may have
-been an attempt at a landing and entrenching, or simply a repetition of
-what we did the other day at Falcon Hill or Nebronesi, or whatever the
-place is.
-
-The attack has failed this morning. Perfect peace here, except for
-rifles crackling on the hill. Ian Smith and I wandered off up a valley
-through smilax, thyme, heath and myrtle, to a high ridge. We went
-through the Indians and found a couple of very jolly officers, one of
-them since killed. There are a good many bodies unburied. Not many men
-hit. We helped to carry one wounded man back. The stretcher-bearers
-are splendid fellows, good to friend and enemy. At one place we saw
-a beastly muddy little pond with a man standing in it in trousers,
-shovelling out mud. But the water in a tin was clear and cool and very
-good....
-
-General Godley and Tahu Rhodes got up to the Turkish trenches, quite
-close to them. The Turks attacked, threw hand-grenades, and our
-supports broke. The General rallied the men, but a good many were
-killed, amongst them the General’s orderly, a gentleman ranker and a
-first-rate fellow.
-
-_Wednesday, May 5th._ _Kaba Tepé._ The other day, when our attack below
-failed, the Turks allowed us to bring off our wounded. This was after
-that unfortunate landing.
-
-Went on board the _Lutzow_ to-day, and got some of my things off.
-Coming back the tow rope parted, and we thought that we should drift
-into captivity. It was rough and unpleasant.
-
-_Thursday, May 6th._ Very cold night. The dead are unburied and the
-wounded crying for water between the trenches. Talked to General
-Birdwood about the possibility of an armistice for burying the dead and
-bringing in the wounded. He thinks that the Germans would not allow the
-Turks to accept.
-
-Colonel Esson[3] landed this morning. He brought the rumour that 8,000
-Turks had been killed lower down on the Peninsula. We attacked Achi
-Baba at 10 a.m. There was an intermittent fire all night.
-
-This morning I went up to the trenches with General Godley by Walker’s
-Ridge. The view was magnificent. The plain was covered with friendly
-olives.... General Birdwood and General Mercer, commanding the Naval
-Brigade were also there. The trenches have become a perfect maze. As we
-went along the snipers followed us, seeing Onslow’s helmet above the
-parapet, and stinging us with dirt. Many dead. I saw no wounded between
-the lines. On the beach the shrapnel has opened from a new direction.
-The Turks were supposed to be making light railways to bring up their
-howitzers and then rub us off this part of the Peninsula. This last
-shell that has just struck the beach has killed and wounded several men
-and a good many mules....
-
-_Friday, May 7th._ A bitter night and morning.... This morning a shell
-burst overhead, when I heard maniac peals of laughter and found the
-cook flying up, hit in the boot and his kitchen upset; he was laughing
-like a madman. It’s a nuisance one has to sit in the shade in our
-dining place and not in the sun. They have got our exact range, and are
-pounding in one shell after another. A shell has just burst over our
-heads, and hit a lighter and set her on fire.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The mules, most admirable animals, had now begun to give a good deal
-of trouble, alive and dead. There were hundreds of them on the beach
-and in the gullies. Alive, they bit precisely and kicked accurately;
-dead, they were towed out to sea, but returned to us faithfully on the
-beach, making bathing unpleasant and cleanliness difficult. The dead
-mule was not only offensive to the Army; he became a source of supreme
-irritation to the Navy, as he floated on his back, with his legs
-sticking stiffly up in the air. These legs were constantly mistaken
-for periscopes of submarines, causing excitement, exhaustive naval
-manœuvres and sometimes recriminations.
-
-My special duties now began to take an unusual form. Every one was
-naturally anxious for Turkish troops to surrender, in order to get
-information, and also that we might have fewer men to fight. Those
-Turks who had been captured had said that the general belief was
-that we took no prisoners, but killed all who fell into our hands,
-ruthlessly. I said that I believed that this impression, which did us
-much harm, could be corrected. The problem was how to disabuse the
-Turks of this belief. I was ordered to make speeches to them from those
-of our trenches which were closest to theirs, to explain to them that
-they would be well treated and that our quarrel lay with the Germans,
-and not with them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Friday, May 7th._ At 1.30 I went up Monash Valley, which the
-men now call the “Valley of Death,” passing a stream of haggard men,
-wounded and unwounded, coming down in the brilliant sunlight. I saw
-Colonel Monash[4] at his headquarters, and General Godley with him,
-and received instructions. The shelling overhead was terrific, but did
-no damage, as the shells threw forward, but the smoke made a shadow
-between us and the sun. It was like the continuous crashing of a train
-going over the sleepers of a railway bridge.
-
-Monash, whom I had last seen at the review in the desert, said: “We
-laugh at this shrapnel.” He tried to speak on the telephone to say I
-was coming, but it was difficult, and the noise made it impossible.
-Finally I went up the slope to Quinn’s Post, with an escort, running
-and taking cover, and panting up the very steep hill. It felt as if
-bullets rained, but the fact is that they came from three sides and
-have each got about five echoes. There’s a _décolleté_ place in the
-hill that they pass over. I got into the trench, and found Quinn, tall
-and openfaced, swearing like a trooper, much respected by his men. The
-trenches in Quinn’s Post were narrow and low, full of exhausted men
-sleeping. I crawled over them and through tiny holes. There was the
-smell of death everywhere. I spoke in three places.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In conversations with the Turks across the trenches I generally said
-the same thing: that we took prisoners and treated them well; that
-the essential quarrel was between us and the Germans and not between
-England and the Turks; that the Turks had been our friends in the
-Crimea; and I ended by quoting the Turkish proverb “Eski dost dushman
-olmaz” (An old friend cannot be an enemy). These speeches probably
-caused more excitement amongst our men than in the ranks of the Turks,
-though the Constantinople Press declared that a low attempt to copy
-the muezzin’s call to prayer had been made from our lines. There were
-many pictures drawn of the speech-maker and the shower of hand-grenades
-that answered his kindly words. It must be admitted that there was
-some reason for these caricatures. Upon this first occasion nothing
-very much happened--to me, at any rate. Our lines were very close to
-the Turkish lines, and I was able to speak clearly with and without a
-megaphone, and the Turks were good enough to show some interest, and in
-that neighbourhood to keep quiet for a time. I got through my business
-quickly, and went back to the beach. It was then that the consequences
-of these blandishments developed, for the places from which I had
-spoken were made the object of a very heavy strafe, of which I had been
-the innocent cause, and for which others suffered. When I returned two
-days later to make another effort at exhortation, I heard a groan go
-up from the trench. “Oh, Lord, here he comes again. Now for the bally
-bombs.” On the first occasion when not much had happened it had been:
-“Law, I’d like to be able to do that meself.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Friday, May 7th._ On getting back here we had a very heavy
-fire, which broke up our dinner party, wounded Jack Anderson, stung
-Jack (my servant), hit me. Jack is sick.... Here are three unpleasant
-possibilities:--
-
-1. Any strong attack on the height. The Navy could not help then. We
-should be too mixed in the fighting.
-
-2. The expected blessed big guns to lollop over howitzers.
-
-3. Disease. The Turks have dysentery already.
-
-There is an uncanny whistling overhead. It must come from the bullets
-and machine-guns or Maxims a long way off. It sounds eldritch. T. very
-sick after seeing some wounded on the beach, and yet his nerves are
-very good. Eastwood told me that he was sure to get through. I told
-him not to say such things. He had three bullets through his tunic the
-other day. I went on the _Lutzow_ to get the rest of my stuff off, and
-found Colonel Ryan (“Turkish Charlie”)[5] full of awful descriptions
-of operations. Many wounded on the boat, all very quiet.... Had a
-drink with a sailor, the gloomiest man that ever I met. He comes from
-Southampton, and thinks we cannot possibly win the war. It’s become
-very cold.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Most of the diary of May 9th is too indiscreet for publication, but
-here are some incidents of the day:--
-
-Worsley[6] says it’s very hard to get work done on the beach; in
-fact its almost impossible. It was said that the gun which had been
-enfilading us was knocked out, but it is enfilading us now, and it
-looks as if we shall have a pretty heavy bill to pay to-day. The beach
-is holding its breath, and between the sound of the shrapnel and the
-hiss there is only the noise of the waves and a few low voices....
-Harrison, who was slightly wounded a few days ago, was yesterday
-resting in his dugout when he was blown out of it by a shell. To-day he
-was sent to the _Lutzow_, and we watched him being shelled the whole
-way, his boat wriggling. It seems as if the shells know and love him.
-I am glad he won’t be dining with us any more; a magnet like that is a
-bore, though he is a very good fellow. The land between us and the 29th
-is reported to be full of barbed wire entanglements.
-
-_Monday, May 10th._ Raining and cold. Jack better.
-
-Colonel Braithwaite woke me last night with the news of the sinking of
-the _Lusitania_. Last night we took three trenches, but lost them again
-this morning. S. B. came last night; I was glad to see him.
-
-S. B. had been a great friend of mine in Egypt and brought me and
-others letters, of which we were badly in need, and stores, which were
-very welcome. We met upon the beach, and decided to celebrate the
-occasion in the Intelligence dugout, for my friend had actually got
-some soda and a bottle of whisky, two very rare luxuries on the beach.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ We went into the Intelligence dugout and sat there. Then a
-shell hit the top of the dugout. The next one buzzed a lot of bullets
-in through the door. The third ricochetted all over the place and one
-bullet grazed my head. I then said: “We’d better put up a blanket to
-save us from the ricochets.” At the same time J. was shot next door
-and Onslow’s war diary was destroyed. A pot of jam was shot in General
-Cunliffe Owen’s hand, which made him very angry. V., the beachmaster,
-dashed into our Intelligence dugout gasping while we held blankets in
-front of him. Two days ago a man was killed in his dugout next door,
-and another man again yesterday. Now two fuses had come straight
-through his roof and spun like a whipping-top on the floor, dancing a
-sort of sarabande before the hypnotized eyes of the sailors....
-
-Also S. B.’s whisky was destroyed in the luncheon basket. He broke into
-furious swearing in Arabic.
-
-_Wednesday, May 12th._ Rain, mud, grease, temper all night, but we
-shall long for this coolness when it really gets hot. No bombardment
-this morning, but the Greek cook, Christopher of the Black Lamp, came
-and gave two hours’ notice, with the rain and tears running down his
-face. I am not surprised at his giving notice, but why he should
-be meticulous about the time I can’t think. Conversation about the
-shelling is getting very boring.
-
-Had a picturesque walk through the dark last night, past Greeks,
-Indians, Australians, across a rain-swept, wind-swept, bullet-swept
-hillside. Many of the Colonels here are business men, who never in
-their wildest dreams contemplated being in such a position, and they
-have risen to the occasion finely. The Generals have at last been
-prevailed upon not to walk about the beach in the daytime.... Two
-German and one Austrian submarine expected here. The transports have
-been ordered to Mudros.
-
-_Thursday, May 13th._ Very calm morning, the echoes of rifle fire on
-the sea. I went with C. to take General Russell[7] up from Reserve
-Gully to Walker’s Ridge. It was a beautiful morning, with the sky
-flaming softly, not a cloud anywhere, and the sea perfectly still.
-The scrub was full of wild flowers; not even the dead mules could
-spoil it. Guns thundered far off.... After breakfast examined an
-intelligent Greek prisoner, Nikolas, the miller from Ali Kenì. Then I
-was telephoned for by Colonel Monash in great haste, and went off up
-his valley with a megaphone as quickly as possible. In the valley the
-men were in a state of nerves along the road because of the snipers.
-The Turks had put up a white flag above their trenches opposite Quinn’s
-Post. I think this was an artillery flag and that they hoped to avoid
-the fire of the fleet by this means.... The people at Helles aren’t
-making headway, and it seems unlikely, except at tremendous cost, and
-probably not then, that they will. We are pretty well hung up except
-on our left; why not try there? The Turks are not yet entrenched or dug
-in there as in other places.... I had to bully Yanni of Ayo Strati till
-he sobbed on the cliff. I then threatened to dismiss him, after which
-he grew cheerful, for it was what he wanted....
-
-The Turks have again got white flags out. Have been ordered to go up at
-dawn.
-
-_Friday, May 14th. 4 a.m._ Walked up the valley. The crickets
-were singing in the bushes at the opening of the valley and the
-place was cool with the faint light of coming dawn. Then a line of
-stretcher-bearers with the wounded, some quiet, some groaning. Then
-came the dawn and the smell of death that infects one’s hands and
-clothes and haunts one.
-
-They weren’t over-pleased to see me at first, as after my speech the
-other day they had had an awful time from hand-grenades, and their
-faces fell when I appeared. I spoke from the same place. Then I went
-to another, and lastly to a trench that communicated with the Turkish
-trench. The Greek who had surrendered last night came down this trench
-and the Turks were said to be five to ten yards off. It was partly
-roofed, and there were some sandbags, between two and three feet high,
-that separated us from them. Leading into this was a big circular
-dugout, open to heaven. I got the men cleared out of this before
-speaking. In the small trench there were two men facing the Turks and
-lying on the ground with revolvers pointed at the Turks. I moved one
-man back out of the way and lay on the other--there wasn’t anything
-else to be done--and spoke for five minutes with some intervals. Once
-a couple of hand-grenades fell outside and the ground quivered, but
-that was all. I then got the guard changed....
-
-The loss of the _Goliath_ is confirmed and the fleet has gone, leaving
-a considerable blank on the horizon and a depression on the sunlit
-beach. Four interpreters were arrested to-day and handed over to me.
-
-I put them on to dig me a new dugout, round which a colony of
-interpreters is growing: Kyriakidis, who is a fine man and a gentleman;
-Ashjian, a young Armenian boy, aristocratic-looking, but very soft,
-whom I want to send away as soon as possible; and others. My dugout is
-in the middle of wild flowers, with the sea splashing round. Since the
-ships have all gone we are, as a consequence, short of water.... The
-Turks have been shelling our barges hard for an hour. We are to make an
-attack to-night and destroy their trenches.
-
-_Saturday, May 15th._ The attack has failed. There are many of our
-wounded outside our lines. Have been told to go out with a white flag.
-Was sent for by Skeen[8] to see General Birdwood in half an hour. While
-Colonel Skeen and I were talking a shell hit one man in the lungs and
-knocked Colonel Knox on the back without hurting him. General Birdwood
-was hit yesterday in the head, but won’t lie up, General Trottman the
-day before. While we talked water arrived. A message came from Colonel
-Chauvel to say there were only two wounded lying out.... In a few
-minutes a telephone message arrived from the doctor in the trenches
-that the two wounded had died.... I came back to Headquarters, and
-heard General Bridges[9] asking the General if he might go up Monash
-Valley. In a few minutes we heard that he was shot in the thigh. The
-snipers are getting many of our men. If the Germans were running this
-show they would have had 200,000 men for it.
-
-Last night Kyriakidis heard a nightingale. I notice that the cuckoo
-has changed his note, worried by the shrapnel. I don’t blame the bird.
-My new dugout is built. It has a corridor and a patio, and is sort of
-Louis Quinze. The food is good, but we are always hungry.
-
-Went out with Colonel N. He is a very great man for his luxuries, and
-looks on cover as the first of these. He is very funny about shelling,
-and is huffy, like a man who has received an insult, if he gets hit by
-a spent bullet or covered with earth. They have got the range of our
-new Headquarters beautifully--two shells before lunch, one on either
-side of the kitchen range. The men and the mess table covered with dust
-and stones. The fact is our ships have gone; they can now do pretty
-much as they like.
-
-Most people here agree that the position is hopeless, unless we drive
-the Turks back on our left and get reinforcements from Helles, where
-they could quite well spare them.
-
-_Sunday, May 16th._ A day fit for Trojan heroes to fight on. As a
-matter of fact, there is a good deal of Trojan friction. Went into the
-Intelligence dugout, as five men were hit below it. They have just hit
-another interpreter, and are pounding away at us again. I was warned to
-go out with a flag of truce and a bugler this afternoon.
-
-_Monday, May 17th._ I walked out to the left with S. B., and bathed in
-a warm, quiet sea. Many men bathing too, and occasionally shrapnel
-also. There was a scent of thyme, and also the other smell from the
-graves on the beach, which are very shallow. I got a touch of the sun,
-and had to lie down. When I got back I heard that Villiers Stuart had
-been killed this morning, instantaneously. He was a very good fellow,
-and very good to me.
-
-_Tuesday, May 18th._ Last night Villiers Stuart was buried. The
-funeral was to have been at sunset, but at that time we were savagely
-shelled and had to wait. We formed up in as decent a kit as we could
-muster, and after the sun had set in a storm of red, while the young
-moon was rising, the procession started. We stumbled over boulders,
-and met stretcher-bearers with dead and wounded, we passed Indians
-driving mules, and shadowy Australians standing at attention, till we
-came to the graves by the sea. The prayers were very short and good,
-interrupted by the boom of our guns and the whining of Turkish bullets
-overhead. His salute was fired above his head from both the trenches....
-
-We shelled the village of Anafarta yesterday, which I don’t much care
-about. A good many here want to destroy the minaret of the mosque. I
-can see no difference in principle between this and the destruction of
-Rheims Cathedral. Kyriakidis told me a Greek cure for sunstroke. You
-fill the ears of the afflicted one with salt water; it makes a noise
-like thunder in his head, but the sunstroke passes. Christo thereupon
-got me salt water in a jug without telling me, and several thirsty
-people tried to drink it....
-
-A German submarine seen here.... A day of almost perfect peace; rifle
-fire ceased sometimes for several minutes together, but 8-inch shells
-were fired into the trenches.... Men are singing on the beach for the
-first time, and there is something cheerful in the air. The enfilading
-gun has been, as usual, reported to be knocked out, but gunners are
-great optimists. No news from Helles.... Turkish reinforcements just
-coming up. Attack expected at 3 a.m. We stand to arms here.
-
-_Wednesday, May 19th._ Work under heavy shell fire. This grew worse
-about 6.30. Several heavy shells hit within a few yards of this
-dugout and the neighbouring ones, but did not burst. A little farther
-off they did explode, or striking the sea, raised tall columns and
-high fountains of white water. Colonel Chaytor badly wounded in the
-shoulder. A great loss to us. He talked very cheerfully. I have got
-leave to send away Ashjian.... This, after all, is a quarrel for those
-directly concerned. The Germans have brought up about twelve more
-field-guns and four or five Jack Johnsons, and the shelling is very
-heavy. Saw a horrid sight: a barge full of wounded was being towed
-out to the hospital ship. Two great Jack Johnsons came, one just in
-front of them; then when they turned with a wriggle, one just behind
-them, sending up towers of water, and leaving two great white roses in
-the sea that turned muddy as the stuff from the bottom rose. They had
-shells round them again, and a miraculous escape. It’s cruel hard on
-the nerves of wounded men, but of course that was bad luck, not wicked
-intentions, because the enemy couldn’t see them.
-
-If the Turks had attacked us fiercely on the top and shelled us as
-badly down here earlier, they might have had us out. Now we ought to
-be all right, and they can hardly go on using ammunition like this.
-Their losses are said to be very great. New Turkish reinforcements
-said to be at Helles. They have done what we ought to have done. Now
-they are throwing 11-inch at us. It’s too bad.... I saw Colonel Skeen.
-He said to me: “You had better be ready to go out this afternoon. We
-have just shot a Turk with a white flag. That will give us an excuse
-for apologizing”; quite so: it will also give the Turk an excuse for
-retaliating. A Turkish officer just brought in says that the real
-attack is to be this afternoon, now at 1.30. I spent an hour in the
-hospital, interpreting for the Turkish wounded. The Australians are
-very good to them. On returning I found the General’s dugout hit hard.
-Nothing to be done but to dig deeper in.
-
-From the third week in May to the third week in June was the kernel of
-our time at Anzac. We had grown accustomed to think of the place as
-home, and of the conditions of our life as natural and permanent. The
-monotony of the details of shelling and the worry of the flies are of
-interest only to those who endured them, and have been eliminated, here
-and there, from this diary.
-
-During this month we were not greatly troubled. The men continued to
-make the trenches impregnable, and were contented. It was in some ways
-a curiously happy time.
-
-The New Zealanders and the Australians were generally clothed by the
-sunlight, which fitted them, better than any tailor, with a red-brown
-skin, and only on ceremonial occasions did they wear their belts and
-accoutrements.
-
-Our sport was bathing, and the Brotherhood of the Bath was rudely
-democratic. There was at Anzac a singularly benevolent officer, but
-for all his geniality a strong disciplinarian, devoted to military
-observances. He was kind to all the world, not forgetting himself, and
-he had developed a kindly figure. No insect could resist his contours.
-Fleas and bugs made passionate love to him, inlaying his white skin
-with a wonderful red mosaic. One day he undressed and, leaving nothing
-of his dignity with his uniform, he mingled superbly with the crowd of
-bathers. Instantly he received a hearty blow upon his tender, red and
-white shoulder and a cordial greeting from some democrat of Sydney or
-of Wellington: “Old man, you’ve been amongst the biscuits!” He drew
-himself up to rebuke this presumption, then dived for the sea, for, as
-he said, “What’s the good of telling one naked man to salute another
-naked man, especially when neither have got their caps?”
-
-This month was marked by a feature that is rare in modern warfare. We
-had an armistice for the burial of the dead, which is described in the
-diary.
-
-On the Peninsula we were extremely anxious for an armistice for many
-reasons. We wished, on all occasions, to be able to get our wounded in
-after a fight, and we believed, or at least the writer was confident,
-that an arrangement could be come to. We were also very anxious to
-bury the dead. Rightly or wrongly, we thought that G.H.Q., living on
-its perfumed island, did not consider how great was the abomination of
-life upon the cramped and stinking battlefield that was our encampment,
-though this was not a charge that any man would have dreamed of
-bringing against Sir Ian Hamilton.
-
-_Diary._ _Wednesday, May 19, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ General Birdwood told
-me to go to Imbros to talk to Sir Ian Hamilton about an armistice, if
-General Godley would give me leave.
-
-_Thursday, May 20, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ Have been waiting for four
-hours in Colonel Knox’s boat, which was supposed to go to Imbros.
-Turkish guns very quiet.... Hear that Ock Asquith and Wedgwood are
-wounded. A liaison officer down south says: “When the Senegalese fly,
-and the French troops stream forward twenty yards and then stream back
-twenty-five yards, we know that we are making excellent progress.”
-There is a Coalition Government at home. We think that we are the
-reason of that; we think the Government cannot face the blunder of the
-Dardanelles without asking for support from the Conservatives.
-
-_6 p.m._ “_Arcadian._” Found George Lloyd. Have been talking to Sir Ian
-Hamilton with regard to the armistice.... Clive Bigham[10] was there.
-He lent me some Shakespeares.
-
-_Friday, May 21, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ Saw Sir Ian Hamilton again this
-morning. The Turks are said to have put up a white flag and to have
-massed behind it in their trenches, intending to rush us. Left with
-four “Arcadians.”
-
-There was a parley yesterday while I was away. The Turks had put up
-some white flags, but it was not a case of bad faith as the “Arcadians”
-believed. We are said to have shot one Red Crescent man by mistake.
-General Walker went out to talk to the Turks, just like that. Both
-sides had, apparently, been frightened. I walked back to Reserve Gully
-with the General, to see the new brigade. The evening sun was shining
-on the myrtles in all the gullies, and the new brigade was singing and
-whistling up and down the hills, while fires crackled everywhere.
-
-_Saturday, May 22, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ S. B. was sent out yesterday
-to talk to the Turks, but he did not take a white flag with him,
-and was sniped and bruised.... This morning, suddenly, I was sent
-for. S. B. and I hurried along the beach and crossed the barbed wire
-entanglements. We went along by the sea, through heavy showers of rain,
-and at last met a fierce Arab officer and a wandery-looking Turkish
-lieutenant. We sat and smoked in fields splendid with poppies, the sea
-glittering by us.
-
-Then Kemal Bey arrived, and went into Anzac with S. B., while I went
-off as hostage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-S. B. and Kemal Bey, as they went, provided the Australian escort with
-much innocent laughter. Our barbed wire down to the sea consisted
-only of a few light strands, over which the Turk was helped by having
-his legs raised high for him. S. B., however, wished him, as he was
-blindfolded, to believe that this defence went on for at least twenty
-yards. So the Turk was made to do an enormously high, stiff goose-step
-over the empty air for that space, as absurd a spectacle to our men as
-I was to be, later, to the Turks. The Australians were almost sick from
-internal laughter.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ Kemal Bey asked for a hostage, and I went out. They bandaged
-my eyes, and I mounted a horse and rode off with Sahib Bey. We went
-along by the sea for some time, for I could hear the waves. Then we
-went round and round--to puzzle me, I suppose--and ended up in a tent
-in a grove of olives, where they took the handkerchief off, and Sahib
-Bey said: “This is the beginning of a life-long friendship.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-At one moment, as I was riding along, the soldier who was supposed to
-be leading my horse had apparently let go and had fallen behind to
-light a cigarette or pick flowers. I heard Sahib Bey call out: “You old
-fool! Can’t you see he’s riding straight over the cliff?” I protested
-loudly as I rode on, blind as fate.
-
-We had cheese and tea and coffee, Sahib Bey offering to eat first to
-show me that it was all right, which I said was nonsense. He said:
-“It may not be political economy, but there are some great advantages
-in war. It’s very comfortable when there are no exports, because it
-means that all the things stay at home and are very cheap.” He tried to
-impress me with their well-being. He said he hated all politicians and
-had sworn never to read the papers. The Turks had come sadly into the
-war against us, otherwise gladly. They wanted to regain the prestige
-that they had lost in the Balkans.... He said, after I had talked to
-him: “There are many of us who think like you, but we must obey. We
-know that you are just and that Moslems thrive under you, but you have
-made cruel mistakes by us, the taking of those two ships and the way in
-which they were taken.” He asked me a few questions, which I put aside.
-He had had a conversation with Dash the day before, when we parleyed.
-Dash is a most innocent creature. He had apparently told him that
-G.H.Q. was an awful bore, and also the number of Turkish prisoners we
-had taken....
-
-_Sunday, May 23, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ We landed a month ago to-day. We
-now hold a smaller front than then. Also the _Albion_ has gone ashore.
-The rest of the fleet has left; she remains a fixture. All the boats
-are rushing up to tow her off. The Turks are sending in a hail of
-shrapnel.... It will be a bad business if they don’t get her off....
-They have got her off, thank the Lord, and every one is breathing more
-freely.
-
-We wonder if all the places with queer, accidental names will one day
-be historical: Johnson’s Jolly, Dead Man’s Ridge, Quinn’s Post, The
-Valley of Death, The Sphinx, Anzac--by the way, that’s not a name of
-good omen, as “anjak” in Turkish means barely, only just--Plugge’s
-Plateau. Plugge is a grand man, wounded for the second time. The New
-Zealanders are all most gallant fellows....
-
-The big fight ought to come off, after the armistice. Two more
-divisions have come up against us. All quiet last night, but a shell
-came into the New Zealand hospital on the beach and killed four wounded
-men and a dresser and some more outside. It’s these new guns whose
-position we still do not know.
-
-_Tuesday, May 25, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ We had the truce yesterday. I was
-afraid something might go wrong, but it all went off all right. Skeen,
-Blamey,[11] Howse, V.C.,[12] Hough and I started early. Skeen offered
-me breakfast but, like a fool, I refused. He put some creosote on my
-handkerchief. We were at the rendezvous on the beach at 6.30. Heavy
-rain soaked us to the skin. At 7.30 we met the Turks, Miralai Izzedin,
-a pleasant, rather sharp, little man; Arif, the son of Achmet Pasha,
-who gave me a card, “Sculpteur et Peintre,” and “Etudiant de Poésie.”
-I saw Sahib and had a few words with him, but he did not come with us.
-Fahreddin Bey came later. We walked from the sea and passed immediately
-up the hill, through a field of tall corn filled with poppies, then
-another cornfield; then the fearful smell of death began as we came
-upon scattered bodies. We mounted over a plateau and down through
-gullies filled with thyme, where there lay about 4,000 Turkish dead.
-It was indescribable. One was grateful for the rain and the grey sky.
-A Turkish Red Crescent man came and gave me some antiseptic wool with
-scent on it, and this they renewed frequently. There were two wounded
-crying in that multitude of silence. The Turks were distressed, and
-Skeen strained a point to let them send water to the first wounded man,
-who must have been a sniper crawling home. I walked over to the second,
-who lay with a high circle of dead that made a mound round him, and
-gave him a drink from my water-bottle, but Skeen called me to come on
-and I had to leave the bottle. Later a Turk gave it back to me. The
-Turkish Captain with me said: “At this spectacle even the most gentle
-must feel savage, and the most savage must weep.” The dead fill acres
-of ground, mostly killed in the one big attack, but some recently. They
-fill the myrtle-grown gullies. One saw the result of machine-gun fire
-very clearly; entire companies annihilated--not wounded, but killed,
-their heads doubled under them with the impetus of their rush and both
-hands clasping their bayonets. It was as if God had breathed in their
-faces, as “the Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold.”
-
-The line was not easy to settle. Neither side wanted to give its
-position or its trenches away. At the end Skeen agreed that the Turks
-had been fair. We had not been going very long when we had a message
-to say that the Turks were entrenching at Johnson’s Jolly. Skeen had,
-however, just been there and seen that they were doing nothing at all.
-He left me at Quinn’s Post, looking at the communication trench through
-which I had spoken to the Turks. Corpses and dead men blown to bits
-everywhere. Richards was with me part of the time: easy to get on with;
-also a gentleman called indifferently by the men Mr. or Major Tibbs. A
-good deal of friction at first. The trenches were 10 to 15 yards apart.
-Each side was on the _qui vive_ for treachery. In one gully the dead
-had got to be left unburied. It was impossible to bury them without one
-side seeing the position of the other. In the Turkish parapet there
-were many bodies buried. Fahreddin told Skeen he wanted to bury them,
-“but,” he said, “we cannot take them out without putting something in
-their place.” Skeen agreed, but said that this concession was not to be
-taken advantage of to repair the trench. This was a difficult business.
-
-When our people complained that the Turks were making loopholes, they
-invited me into their trench to look. Then the Turks said that we were
-stealing their rifles; this came from the dead land where we could not
-let them go. I went down, and when I got back, very hot, they took my
-word for it that we were not. There was some trouble because we were
-always crossing each other’s lines. I talked to the Turks, one of whom
-pointed to the graves. “That’s politics,” he said. Then he pointed to
-the dead bodies and said: “That’s diplomacy. God pity all of us poor
-soldiers.”
-
-Much of this business was ghastly to the point of nightmare. I found
-a hardened old Albanian chaoush and got him to do anything I wanted.
-Then a lot of other Albanians came up, and I said: “Tunya tyeta.”[13] I
-had met some of them in Janina. They began clapping me on the back and
-cheering while half a dozen funeral services were going on all round,
-conducted by the chaplains. I had to stop them. I asked them if they
-did not want an Imam for a service over their own dead, but the old
-Albanian pagan roared with laughter and said that their souls were all
-right. They could look after themselves. Not many signs of fanaticism.
-One huge, savage-looking Anatolian looked curses at me. Greeks came up
-and tried to surrender to me, but were ordered back by the Turks pretty
-roughly.
-
-Considering the number of their men we had killed, they remained
-extraordinarily unmoved and polite. They wouldn’t have, if we had been
-Russians. Blamey came to say that Skeen had lost H. and wanted me, so
-he, Arif and I walked to the sea. The burying had not been well done.
-It was sometimes impossible to do it.... As we went, we took our rifles
-from the Turkish side, minus their bolts, and gave the Turks their
-rifles in the same way....
-
-Our men gave cigarettes to the Turks, and beyond the storm-centre at
-Quinn’s Post the feeling was all right. We sat down and sent men to
-look for Skeen. Arif was nervous and almost rude. Then Skeen came.
-He told me to get back as quickly as possible to Quinn’s Post, as I
-said I was nervous at being away, and to retire the troops at 4 and
-the white-flag men at 4.15. I said to Arif: “Everybody’s behaved very
-well. Now we must take care that nobody loses his head. Your men won’t
-shoot you and my men won’t shoot me, so we must walk about, otherwise
-a gun will go off and everybody will get shot.” But Arif faded away. I
-got back as quickly as possible. Blamey went away on the left. I then
-found that the Turks’ time was eight minutes ahead of ours, and put on
-our watches. The Turks asked me to witness their taking the money from
-their dead, as they had no officer there. They were very worried by
-having no officer, and asked me if any one were coming. I, of course,
-had no idea, but I told them I would see that they were all right.
-They were very patient....
-
-The burying was finished some time before the end. There were certain
-tricks on both sides.
-
-Our men and the Turks began fraternizing, exchanging badges, etc. I
-had to keep them apart. At 4 o’clock the Turks came to me for orders.
-I do not believe this could have happened anywhere else. I retired
-their troops and ours, walking along the line. At 4.7 I retired the
-white-flag men, making them shake hands with our men. Then I came to
-the upper end. About a dozen Turks came out. I chaffed them, and said
-that they would shoot me next day. They said, in a horrified chorus:
-“God forbid!” The Albanians laughed and cheered, and said: “We will
-never shoot you.” Then the Australians began coming up, and said:
-“Good-bye, old chap; good luck!” And the Turks said: “Oghur Ola gule
-gule gedejekseniz, gule gule gelejekseniz” (Smiling may you go and
-smiling come again). Then I told them all to get into their trenches,
-and unthinkingly went up to the Turkish trench and got a deep salaam
-from it. I told them that neither side would fire for twenty-five
-minutes after they had got into the trenches. One Turk was seen out
-away on our left, but there was nothing to be done, and I think he
-was all right. A couple of rifles had gone off about twenty minutes
-before the end, but Potts and I went hurriedly to and fro seeing it was
-all right. At last we dropped into our trenches, glad that the strain
-was over. I walked back with Temperley. I got some raw whisky for the
-infection in my throat, and iodine for where the barbed wire had torn
-my feet. There was a hush over the Peninsula....
-
-_Wednesday, May 26, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ This morning I was talking
-to Dix, asking him if he believed there were submarines. “Yes,” he
-said, and then swore and added: “There’s the _Triumph_ sinking.” Every
-picket-boat dashed off to pick up the survivors. The Turks behaved well
-in not shelling. There was fury, panic and rage on the beach and on the
-hill. I heard Uncle Bill, half off his head, saying: “You should kill
-all enemies. Like a wounded bird, she is. Give them cigarettes. Swine!
-Like a wounded bird. The swine!” He was shaking his fist. Men were
-crying and cursing. Very different from yesterday’s temper.
-
-This afternoon I went round past Monash Gully, towards Kaba Tepé, and
-bathed. I got shelled, and came back over the ridges having a beastly
-time from the shrapnel which hunted me.
-
-We have now got a sap under Quinn’s Post. The flies and ants are past
-endurance.
-
-_Thursday, May 27, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ A very wet night. I wish the
-Turks would forget how to shoot. Here we are for an indefinite period
-without the power of replying effectively and with the knowledge that
-we are firmly locked outside the back door of a side-show....
-
-Went with the General to General Russell’s trenches. They are very much
-improved. The men call an ideal trench a Godley-Braithwaite trench;
-that is, tall enough for General Godley and broad enough for Colonel
-Braithwaite. Bathed. Charlie Bentinck arrived. His destroyer lay just
-off the beach and was shelled. Some sailors and five soldiers killed.
-Forty-five wounded. Very unfortunate. If they had come yesterday,
-it would have been all right--a quiet day, though we had thirty men
-sniped. The _Majestic_ reported sunk off Helles. Off to Mudros to get
-stores.
-
-_Friday, May 28, 1915._ _Mudros._ Left after many delays, and slept on
-deck. Very cold. It’s a pretty tall order for the French to put black
-Senegalese cannibals into Red Cross uniform....
-
-_Saturday, May 29, 1915._ _Lemnos._ Drove across the island to Castro.
-There was a delightful spring half a mile from Castro and a café kept
-by a Greek. His wife had been killed by the Turks. Great fig-trees
-and gardens. I met two naval officers, who told me Wedgwood had died
-of wounds. I am very sorry; he was a very fine man. I admired him a
-lot. Castro is beautiful, with balconies over the narrow streets, half
-Turk and half Greek, and shady gardens. I bathed in a transparent sea,
-facing Athos, which was gleaming like a diamond. I watched its shadow
-come across the eighty miles of sea at sunset, as Homer said it did. I
-found a Greek, who had been Cromer’s cook. He said he would come back
-and cook for me, if there was no danger. He said he knew that G.H.Q.
-cooks were safe, but his wife would not let him go on to the Peninsula.
-He said her idea of warfare was wrong. She always thought of men and
-bullets skipping about together on a hillside.
-
-_Sunday, May 30, 1915._ _Mudros._ I bathed before dawn and went back to
-Mudros with masses of mosquito-netting, etc. Turkish prisoners of the
-French were being guarded by Greeks. It was rather like monkeys looking
-after bears. They wore uniforms that were a cross between Ali Pasha of
-Janina and Little Lord Fauntleroy. I saw H., who had been on the River
-Clyde. He looked as if he were still watching the sea turn red with
-blood, as he described the landing on Gallipoli. Jack was sick, and I
-had to leave him with my coat. Went and saw my friend the Papas of the
-little Greek church on the hill.
-
-_Monday, May 31, 1915._ _Anzac._ I saw Hutton this morning, slightly
-wounded. Bathed at the farthest point towards Kaba Tepé, but had to fly
-with my clothes in my hand, leaving my cigarettes....
-
-_Wednesday, June 2, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ Had a picturesque examination
-of a Greek peasant this morning. It was a fine picture, with the
-setting of the blue sea and the mountains. The man himself was
-patriarchal and biblical, surrounded by tall English officers and
-half-naked soldiers. Last night we sent up bombs from Japanese mortars
-by Quinn’s. It sounded beastly. This morning I went to Reserve Gully
-with the General. Monash’s Brigade is resting there for the first
-time for five weeks. The General, looking like a Trojan hero, made
-them a fine speech from a sort of natural throne in the middle of
-the sunlit amphitheatre, in which they all sat, tier after tier of
-magnificent-looking fellows, brown as Indians. Bullets swept over all
-the time, sometimes drowning the General’s voice.... Have just heard
-that Quinn is killed. I am very sorry. He was a fine, jolly, gallant
-fellow.
-
-_Friday, June 4, 1915._ _Anzac._ Nothing doing. George Lloyd came over.
-Very glad to see him. This morning I went with Shaw to the extreme
-left, through fields of poppies, thyme and lavender. We saw a vulture
-high overhead, and the air was full of the song of larks. At Helles
-there was a savage attack going on. There was very bad sniping. In
-some places the trenches are only knee-high; in other places there
-are no trenches and the Turks are anything from four to eight hundred
-yards off. Yesterday seventeen men were hit at one place, they said,
-by one sniper. At one place on the way, we ran like deer, dodging.
-The General, when he had had a number of bullets at him, also ran.
-Sniping is better fun than shrapnel; it’s more human. You pit your wits
-against the enemy in a rather friendly sort of way. A lot of vultures
-collecting.
-
-_Saturday, June 5, 1915._ _Anzac._ Examined sixteen prisoners. Food
-good, munitions plentiful, morale all right. The individuals fed up
-with the war, but the mass obedient and pretty willing. No idea of
-surrendering. They think they are going to win. There was one Greek, a
-Karamanly, who only talked Turkish. He did not say until to-night that
-he was wounded. The flies are bad.
-
-_Sunday, June 6, 1915._ _Anzac._ Went to the service this morning
-with the General, in the amphitheatre. The sermon was mainly against
-America for not coming into the war, and also against bad language.
-The chaplain said he could not understand the meaning of it. The men
-laughed. So did I.
-
-_Monday, June 7, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ This morning the land was sweet
-as Eden and there was the calm of the first creation. H. has been
-made a new Uriah the Hittite, but not because of Mrs. H. Last night I
-was invaded by mice. There is tremendous shelling going on now. This
-afternoon S. B., Onslow and I climbed a hill and had a beautiful view.
-Every one is rather ill and feverish. I have no news about Jack. The
-Intelligence office has been moved to a higher and safer place. Pirie
-Gordon, poor chap, has gone sick a long time ago. I rather liked the
-stuffy old place, which was called “The Mountain Path to the Jackal’s
-Cave.”
-
-The attack last night failed, but the drone of the rifles went on
-unceasingly, like the drone of a dry waterfall. We shall not get to
-Constantinople unless the flat-faced Bulgars come in.
-
-Yesterday I lunched with Temperley at the H.Q. of Monash Valley. Times
-have changed: it’s fairly safe going there through a long sap they
-have dug, and the noise is less bad.
-
-Colonel ---- had seen a lot of the Crown Prince in India, and said he
-was a very good fellow. Dined with Woods, Dix, S. B. and Edwards. Lots
-of champagne for once; a very good dinner.
-
-I went to No. 2 Outpost with the General. There is a sap all the
-way now. Only one sniper the whole way. The Turkish birds were
-singing beautifully as we went. There was also a Turkish snake,
-which I believed was quite harmless, but Tahu killed it. The men are
-getting pretty tired. They are not as resigned as their ten thousand
-brother-monks over the way at Mount Athos.
-
-_Friday, June 11, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ The Australians and New
-Zealanders have given up wearing clothes. They lie about and bathe and
-become darker than Indians. The General objects to this. “I suppose,”
-he says, “we shall have our servants waiting on us like that.” The
-flies are very bad, so are the mice, and so is the shelling....
-
-_Sunday, June 13, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ A lot of mules and several men
-hit yesterday. Last night, S. B. and I were on the beach, when a man
-on a stretcher went by, groaning rhythmically. I thought he had been
-shot through the brain. Later on I went into the hospital to find a
-wounded Turk, and found that this man had never been hit at all. He had
-been doing very good work till a shell exploded near him and gave him a
-shock. Then he went on imitating a machine-gun. Some men in a sap up at
-Quinn’s have been going off their heads.
-
-Awful accounts of Mudros: flies, heat, sand, no water, typhoid. To-day
-are the Greek elections.
-
-Am dining with H. Woods. “The beach” now says that Ot has been poisoned
-by the Greek guides, whom he illtreats and uses as cooks. I shouldn’t
-wonder. The shelling is bad. I am going to make a new dugout to get
-away from the flies and mice. The Turkish prisoners will do this. I pay
-them a small sum.
-
-_Tuesday, June 15, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ Colonel Chauvel[14] has
-pleurisy, Colonel Johnston[15] enteric. The sea’s high and the Navy
-depressed.... One man and two mules killed in our gully this morning;
-the body of one mule blown about 50 yards both ways.
-
-_Wednesday, June 16, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ Rain. I was to have gone to
-Helles with Woods to see Dedez, but no boats went; it was too rough.
-I was going to talk about spies to S. B., when General Cunliffe Owen
-said to me: “Wait a bit. The shelling is too bad. We will go along
-together.” But I was in too much of a hurry. A shell fell in the gully
-as I crossed, and Woods came out to see where it had hit. It went into
-Machonochie’s dugout, where H. was, and blew him out of his dugout,
-black and shaken. It destroyed his furniture. I felt sorry for him. Ot
-tried to turn him out of the Intelligence dugout, but we protested.
-
-The General has come back with the latest casualty lists from France....
-
-_Thursday, June 17, 1915._ _Helles._ Thirty men killed and wounded
-on the beach to-day. This morning I came to Helles with Woods. As
-we got there a submarine had two shots at one of our transports by
-us. I was to have seen Dedez, but he had gone off to see Gouraud.
-George Peel walked in and took me round the beach, two miles on. We
-climbed on to the headland, in what he called “the quiet track of the
-Black Marias.” He talked of every mortal thing--the future Liberal
-and Socialist, the possibility of touching the heart of the people,
-the collapse of Christianity, our past and our policy. I left him and
-walked back across thyme and asphodel, Asia glowing like a jewel across
-the Dardanelles in the sunset. At night I talked late and long with
-Dash. Every Department is jealous, every one is at cross-purposes, no
-co-operation between the War Office and the Foreign Office.
-
-Walked in the morning to the H.Q. of the R.N.D. with Whittall. We were
-shelled most of the way in the open landscape. There was no cover
-anywhere. It felt unfamiliar. I was unfavourably impressed with the
-insecurity of life in this part of the world, and wished for Anzac. In
-the evening we drank mavrodaphne and tried to get rid of----
-
-_Friday, June 18, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ I left Helles in the middle of
-very heavy shelling, a star performance. A lot of horses killed this
-morning. A submarine popped up last night. As we came back to Anzac
-the Turks shelled our trawler and hit her twice, but without doing any
-damage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Shelling grew worse at Anzac, and sickness began to make itself felt.
-Men were sent across to Imbros when it was possible to rest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ On June 25th I went across to Imbros with H. Woods and the
-Greek miller, Nikolas. Hawker was there, and E. of Macedonia. E.
-is very unpopular. If he takes a dislike to a man he digs around
-his dugout, until it falls in on him. The chief R.A.M.C. officer,
-an Irishman, was mourning over the ruins of his home. We slept
-uncomfortably on the ground, with flies to keep us warm.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As I was writing this a shell burst outside my dugout, a lot of
-shrapnel coming through, and one bullet glancing off the typewriter,
-which has just come. At the same time Jack was hit across the gully
-going from my dugout to his. Conolly, the escort, and I carried him
-down, after binding his leg up, under heavy fire. Then I nipped back to
-get some of his stuff to take off, but on going back to the beach found
-that he had gone. Many men hit on the beach. Thousands of flies on the
-wounded. The General’s blankets riddled with bullets. They have our
-range, pat. Two days ago Colonel Parker had his chair and table smashed
-while he was in his dugout. He left it to have tea with Wagstaffe.
-There he was reading when another bullet tore his paper in two. I have
-been covered with dirt several times in the last days. L. S. Amery came
-with K. I only saw him for a minute, worse luck, but he is coming back
-to-morrow, I hope, when we can have a talk. G.H.Q. turned up in force,
-and walked about like wooden images.
-
-We have a clerk here, Venables. He has got tired of writing, and,
-wanting to change the pen for the sword, borrowed a rifle and walked
-up to the front line at Quinn’s Post. There he popped his head in and
-said: “Excuse me, is this a private trench, or may any one fire out of
-it?”
-
-The sound of battle has ended. Men are bathing. The clouds that the
-cannonade had called up are gone, and the sea is still and crimson in
-the sunset to Imbros and Samothrace.
-
-_Tuesday, June 29, 1915._ _Anzac._ We have advanced 1,000 yards down
-at Helles, but no details yet. Many men shot here yesterday by the
-Anafarta gun. I should think this gun had as good a tale of killed and
-wounded as any gun in the war. Every day it gets its twenty odd on the
-beach. The Australians attacked on the right yesterday. Fifty killed
-and wounded; they think the Turks suffered more heavily. I went with
-the General to the extreme left. Terrific heat. We came to a valley
-filled with thyme and lavender, which the Maoris are to inhabit. The
-men were bathing beyond Shrapnel Point. They say the Turks let them.
-I had two letters--one two months old, a curious one to receive here,
-from an Englishwoman, wife of the ex-Grand Vizier of Afghanistan. He
-was a progressive man, and is therefore in an Afghan prison. She wants
-work for her son. Wants him to be a saddler, a job a lot of men here
-would like. All my stuff looted coming from Egypt.
-
-Men are practising bomb-throwing, all over the place. They are mostly
-half-naked, and darker than Red Indians. It’s a day of blessed peace,
-but there’s a lot of feeling about the Anafarta gun, and bathing is
-stopped on the beach till night.
-
-_Wednesday, June 30, 1915._ _Anzac._ Last night I went down to the
-hospital and was inoculated for cholera by C., a witty man. A trench
-had been blown in, and men were lying groaning on the floor, most of
-them suffering from shell-shock, not wounds, but some of the wounds
-horrible.... I asked C. why the wounded were not sent to Cyprus instead
-of Mudros. He said: “Because it’s a splendid climate and there is heaps
-of water.” The chief doctor at Mudros is useless, the second ---- (With
-regard to the second doctor I regret that the diary is libellous.)
-Anyway, what is certain is that the condition of the sick and wounded
-is awful. This morning it’s very rough, and I can’t get out to Jack at
-the hospital ship, as prisoners are coming in....
-
-_July 1, 1915._ _Anzac._ I examined the prisoners, amongst them a
-tall Armenian lawyer, who talked some English. I asked him how he had
-surrendered. He said: “I saw two gentlemen with their looking-glasses,
-and came over to them.” By this he meant two officers with periscopes.
-He said that the psychology of the Turks is a curious thing. They do
-not fear death, yet are not brave....
-
-No water came in yesterday. The storm wrecked the barges and the beach
-is covered with lighters. We got brackish water from the hill. I could
-not get to Jack for work.
-
-At lunch I heard there were wounded crying on Walker’s Ridge, and went
-up there with Zachariades. We found a first-rate Australian, Major
-Reynell. We went through the trenches, dripping with sweat; it was
-a boiling day, and my head reeled from inoculation. We had to crawl
-through a secret sap over a number of dead Turks, some of whom were in
-a ghastly condition, headless and covered with flies. Then out from the
-darkness into another sap, with a dead Turk to walk over. The Turkish
-trenches were 30 yards off, and the dead lay between the two lines.
-
-When I called I was answered at once by a Turk. He said he could
-not move.... I gave him a drink, and Reynell and I carried him
-in, stumbling over the dead among whom he lay. I went back for my
-water-bottle, but the Turks began shooting as a warning, and I had to
-go back into the trench.
-
-An awful time getting the Turk through the very narrow trench. I got
-one other, unwounded, shamming dead. We threw him a rope, and in he
-came.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The taking of the second Turk was a curious episode that perhaps
-deserves a little more description than is given by the diary. The
-process of catching Turks fascinated the Australians, and amongst them
-an R.A.M.C. doctor who came round on that occasion. This officer prided
-himself upon neatness and a smart appearance, when the dust and heat
-of the Dardanelles had turned every one else into scallywags. After he
-had attended to the first wounded man, he pointed out the second Turk
-lying between our trenches and the Turks’ and only a few yards from
-either. “You go out again, sir,” said the Australians; “it’s as good
-as a show.” I, however, took another view. I called out to the Turk:
-“Do you want any water?” “By God,” he whispered back, “I do, but I am
-afraid of my people.” We then threw him a rope and pulled him in. He
-told us that the night before he had lost direction in the attack. Fire
-seemed to be coming every way, and it had seemed to him the best plan
-to fall and lie still amongst his dead comrades. The doctor gave him
-some water, with which he rinsed his mouth, and I left him under the
-charge of the R.A.M.C. doctor. This is what happened subsequently. They
-had to crawl back through the secret sap, from which the bodies of the
-dead Turks had by that time been removed and left at the entrance. The
-Turk was blindfolded, but he was able to see under the handkerchief,
-and when he saw his dead comrades, over whose bodies he had to step, he
-leapt to the conclusion that it was our habit to bring our prisoners to
-one place and there to kill them. He gave one panic-stricken yell; he
-threw his arms round the neck of the well-dressed officer; they fell
-and rolled upon the corpses together, the Turk in convulsions of fear
-clinging to the neck of the doctor, pressing his face to the faces
-of the dead till he was covered with blood and dust and the ghastly
-remains of death, while the soldiers stood round saying to the Turk:
-“Now, don’t you carry on so.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Friday, July 2._ _Anzac._ This morning I had a magnificent
-bathe with General Birdwood. At night a great storm blew up. The
-lightning played in splendid glares over Imbros and Samothrace. The sea
-roared, the thunder crashed and rain spouted down. After a time that
-stopped and a cloud, black as ink, came down upon us like a pall.
-
-Yesterday mourning met the two Whittalls going to Helles with General
-de Lotbiniere and his periscopes.
-
-I went off to the _Sicilia_ to see Jack, and had a lot of trouble about
-a pass. I saw Jack. He said they had re-bound his leg on the beach, but
-that it had not been looked at for eighteen hours on the boat. It had
-swelled to double its size. Then a doctor came and said the bandage had
-been done too tight, and there was a chance of his losing his leg. I
-felt absolutely savage.... Saw General House,[16] V.C., on shore and
-got him to promise to do what he could. We had a bad time going home.
-We were slung off the ship in wooden cases. It was very rough indeed,
-and when the wooden case hit the flat barge it bounced like anything.
-Then we were towed out on this flat barge, open to the great waves and
-shrapnel, to a lighter, and left off Anzac for a couple of hours. The
-Turks sent a few shells, absent-mindedly. Finally, a trawler brought us
-off, very angry.
-
-S. dined, a scholarly fanatic, interesting about the next war, which
-he thinks will be with Russia, in fifteen years. A lot of people going
-sick.
-
-I saw Cox to-night, who said that this is the worst storm we have had.
-We have only one day’s water supply. We could have had as much as we
-had wanted, but many of the cans stored on the beach are useless, as
-they have had holes knocked in them by the shrapnel. We are not as
-abstemious as the Turks, who had been lying for so many hours under the
-sun, and shall suffer from thirst badly.
-
-_Saturday, July 3, 1915._ _Anzac._ Macaulay has come as our artillery
-officer. I dined with him and H. Woods last night. Yesterday it rained.
-Jack’s boat has gone. We are being badly shelled here. I shall have to
-change my dugout, if this goes on. The guide Katzangaris has been hit
-in the mouth.
-
-_Sunday, July 4._ Saw the Maoris, who had just landed. General
-Godley made them a first-class speech. They danced a very fine Haka
-with tremendous enthusiasm in his honour when he had finished. They
-liked digging their dugouts, and seemed to like it when they came
-to human remains.... More people going sick. Doctor F. told me that
-he and another doctor had asked to be allowed to help on board the
-hospital ships where they have more wounded than they can deal with,
-short-handed as they are, but have been refused permission by the
-R.A.M.C.
-
-There has been a great explosion at Achi Baba. Macaulay saw a transport
-of ours sunk this afternoon.... G. L. came ashore with depressing
-accounts of Russia. He is probably going to come on this beach. Hope
-he does. Went off and bathed with Macaulay. Saw Colonel Bauchop, who
-promised me a present of some fresh drinking-water to-morrow.
-
-_Monday, July 5, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ A breathless, panting morning,
-still and blue and fiery hot, with not a ripple on the sea. Colonel
-Bauchop, commanding the Otago Mounted Rifles, was shot in the shoulder
-last night. This morning we have had an exhibition of “frightfulness”
-in the shape of vast shells. They burst with a tremendous roar that
-echoes to the sky and across the sea for more than a minute. Their case
-or bullets fall over the sea in a great area. They started by striking
-the sea and raising great columns of water. Now they burst and fall on
-land and sea.
-
-It has had the great result of getting rid of Mr. Lock, the Socialist
-Czech, from the doorway of my dugout. He was an undergraduate at ----
-and afterwards a Labour candidate. Now he is Colonel P.’s cook.
-
-The transport that Macaulay saw go down was French. Six lives lost. The
-explosion down south was a French ammunition store. This shelling makes
-one’s head ache.
-
-_Tuesday, July 6th._ _Kaba Tepé._ Yesterday I went to Quinn’s Post with
-General Godley in the morning. There was a fair amount of shelling.
-They had just hit thirteen men in Courtney’s before we got there. We
-went into a mine that was being dug towards and under the Turkish
-trenches. At the end of the sap the Turks were only six to eight feet
-away. We could hear them picking. The time for blowing in had very
-nearly come. These underground people take it all as a matter of
-course. I should hate fighting on my stomach in a passage two feet
-high, yards under the ground. The Turks were throwing bombs from the
-trenches, and these hit the ground over us, three of them, making it
-shudder. Down below they talk in whispers. We went round the trenches.
-Saw none so fine as last time, when we came to the Millionaires’ Sap,
-so called because it was made by six Australians, each the son of a
-millionaire.
-
-In the afternoon I tried to sleep, but there was too much shelling.
-Kyumjiyan was hit, and has gone; S. B. was grazed. It was 11.2 shells
-filled with all kinds of stuff. We answered with a monitor whose
-terrific percussions shook my dugout, bringing down dust and stones.
-A submarine appeared, and all the destroyers were after her. Then
-two aeroplanes started a fight as the sun set down towards Helles,
-appearing and vanishing behind crimson clouds. Captain Buck, the Maori
-doctor and M.P., dined with us, to wind up an exciting day.
-
-This morning is like yesterday. No breath of air, but the day is more
-clear, and Samothrace and Imbros look very peaceful. Early again the
-shelling began. As I was shaving outside three shells hit the beach
-just in front. I wasn’t watching the third, but suddenly heard a great
-burst of laughter. At the first shell a bather had rushed back to his
-dugout; the shell had come and knocked it in on the top of him, and he
-was dug out, naked and black, but smiling and none the worse. “Another
-blasted sniper,” he said, which made the men laugh.
-
-Active preparations are being made to fight the gas, as the
-Intelligence says it is going to be used. Am going out with the General
-at 9.30. Was sent to get Colonel Parker, but found him sick, and under
-pretty heavy fire, having a new dugout built. Came back and stood with
-the General, Thoms and others outside Headquarters. A shell burst just
-by us, bruised the General in the ribs, and filled his eyes with dirt.
-Went out with Colonel Anthill and Poles. Talked of arranging a truce
-to bury the Turkish dead on our parapet. They said that otherwise our
-men must get cholera; the heat and sand and flies and smell is awful.
-We met Colonel Bauchop with his arm in a sling, but the bullet out
-of his shoulder, and Colonel White with his head still bandaged. The
-Australians very cheerful.
-
-_Wednesday, July 7, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ A fierce, expectant dawn. We
-shelled furiously at 4.30 a.m. Now absolute peace on a glassy sea.
-Last night Bentinck, Jack Anderson and I bathed. I was at the end of
-the pier; as I was beginning to dress a shell burst very close, the
-smoke and powder in my face. I fled half dressed; Colonel P. rose like
-Venus from the sea and followed with nothing. A calm marine gave me my
-cigarette-holder.
-
-One of the prisoners reported that on the occasion of the armistice
-Turkish Staff officers had put on Red Crescent clothes in order to have
-a look at our trenches.... No news of Jack.
-
-The Turks put up five crosses yesterday, all of which we shot down.
-I first thought it was probably Greeks or Armenians who wanted to
-show they were Christians, wishing to surrender, and telephoned to
-Courtney’s to see if I could get into touch with them, but now I think
-it’s probably Turks who were anxious to make us shoot at the sign of
-our own religion. In this they succeeded.
-
-Colonel Johnson, Commanding the New Zealand Infantry Brigade, gone
-sick. I persuaded the mess to get inoculated for cholera. Last night I
-dined with Woods and Macaulay. They told Eastern stories, and we had a
-very contented time, drinking mavrodaphne and looking at the sea.
-
-The Turks shelled a little after eight, in answer to our tiresome
-provocative monitor fire. This morning Tahu arrived from Egypt with
-letters. The Turks are bombing something cruel from Kaba Tepé.... It’s
-a beautiful sight--a sea like lapis-lazuli and a burning sun, with
-columns of water like geysers where the shells hit. A good many men hit
-here to-day.
-
-_Saturday, July 10, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ I went with General Godley
-to the _Triad_, and dined with Admiral de Robeck. Took the General’s
-things to put them on board the picket-boat, but as I got there a
-shell struck her and knocked a hole in her. There was another one,
-and we sat and waited uncomfortably in this till he came.... Found
-Alec Ramsay on board. Slept in Commodore Roger Keyes’ cabin. Very
-comfortable. He was very kind. Went to G.H.Q. and had lunch with L. and
-Bob Graves.
-
-_Sunday, July 11th._ Felt much better. Went ashore and saw Colonel
-Hawker and the Turkish prisoners.... Came back late at night, after
-some very jolly days. Best week-end I ever spent. The Turks have asked
-for another armistice in the south. This has been refused. If they
-attack, they will have to do it across their dead, piled high, and this
-is not good for morale.
-
- * * * * *
-
-By this time the persecutions of the interpreters had greatly
-diminished. They were still badly treated by a man called Ot, but to a
-large extent they had won the respect of the troops by their behaviour.
-The chief interpreter was an old Greek of some sixty-two or sixty-three
-years, Mr. Kyriakidis, who was given a medal for conspicuous gallantry
-at the bombardment of Alexandria and had served with General Stuart’s
-unfortunate expedition. He was a gentleman, and one of the straightest
-men I have met. His simplicity, courtesy and unfailing courage had
-gained him many friends. He was also endowed with considerable humour.
-
-A relation had sent me a gas mask, at that time a rarity at Anzac. I
-did not believe that I should need it, and made a present of it to
-the first man I met, who happened to be Mr. Kyriakidis. He went down
-and played poker with the other interpreters on the beach. He put
-on my respirator as a poker mask, with much swagger. This put the
-fear of death into the interpreters, who sent a deputation to G.H.Q.
-Intelligence, insisting that they should also be provided with masks.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Monday, July 12, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ By the way, an unhappy shadow was
-shot yesterday, an interpreter of whom we none of us knew anything,
-and who was on no list. Things are not very comfortable. The fire is
-increasingly heavy. All the air is full of thudding and broken echoes.
-No one minds anything much, but high explosive.... The hospitals are
-being moved. They had too many casualties where they were before.
-
-_Tuesday, July 13th._ _Kaba Tepé._ Tremendous fire round Achi Baba
-yesterday. French advanced 150 and we 200 yards. Don’t know what the
-losses were. I went with Macaulay and Woods to No. 3 Post, to Bauchop’s
-Fountain. They can snipe there very close, and killed a man a couple
-of days ago, two yards off under the olives, and wounded his mate,
-who crawled back into the sandy way. On both sides there is tall wild
-lavender and what M. calls pig’s parsley.
-
-We crawled down a sandy path to the sea, M. rather sick. Met the
-General going back, who told us not to bathe. In the evening Tahu got
-out his gramophone and we had some good songs when the shooting was not
-too much.
-
-Ramadan began to-day. George Lloyd arrived this afternoon and said they
-wanted to send me to Tenedos for a special job.
-
-Yesterday evening General Godley went to Courtney’s Post. As he got
-there the Turks shelled with heavy stuff, killing and wounding about
-twenty men. Reynell came to see me. I like him very much indeed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary. Sunday, July 18, 1915. Kaba Tepé._ They are now shelling the
-pier, and killed a doctor, cutting off both his legs, and several other
-people, when I was bathing from the pier. Everybody is again going
-sick. The situation is changing. Every night we are landing guns. The
-moon is young now and growing. It seems, therefore, reasonable to
-expect that we cannot land forces of men that take time before the
-nights are moonless; that is, in about a month’s time the preparations
-ought to be ready.
-
-A few days ago we had an attack on Achi Baba, won about 400 yards and
-lost about 5,000 men. Two battalions got out of touch and were lost for
-a considerable time. The “Imbros Journal,” “Dardanelles Driveller,” or
-whatever it’s called, said “their return was as surprising as that of
-Jonah from the belly of the whale.” Good, happy author!
-
-A German Taube over us throwing bombs and also heavy stuff, but not
-much damage lately. George Lloyd[17] was here this afternoon, and while
-we talked a shell burst and hit four men.
-
-_Monday, July 19, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ My dugout has now become a centre
-for Australian and New Zealand officers, all good fellows. I had it
-made small on purpose, so that no one would offer to share it with me,
-and that makes it less convenient for the crowd that now sit in it. Two
-old friends come when the day’s work is over, and grow sentimental by
-moonlight; both ill and, I am afraid, getting worse. All the talk is
-now about gassing. It is thought that they will do it to us here. As
-usual, new troops are reported to be coming against us.
-
-_Tuesday, July 20, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ There is always something fresh
-here. Now a lot of sharks are supposed to have come in. During the last
-two days there has been absolute silence, no shelling at all, nothing
-but the sound of crickets and at night a singsong chorus as the men
-drag up the great tanks prepared for water. S. B. yesterday worked out
-a theory to prove that the Turks were to attack us last night. (1)
-No gunfire yesterday; the reason being they (the Turks) were moving
-troops. They didn’t want us to fire at their troops, therefore didn’t
-draw fire by shooting at us. (2) Ulemas have come down. There must be a
-special reason for this. (3) 10,000 coming up. Gas being prepared. All
-this means an attack on Anzac. To wipe us out would be a great feather
-in their cap. I am inclined to doubt another great attack.... Tempers
-all a bit ruffled. General Birdwood is sick. The heat is fierce and the
-stillness absolute. This afternoon I heard from Dedez, who asked me to
-go to Tenedos for a time....
-
-_Wednesday, July 21, 1915._ _Kaba Tepé._ There is something uncanny
-about this calm. No shots at all. News that the Italian Ambassador at
-Constantinople has gone nap. We have had very little news of Italy....
-I wonder if the Turks are likely to attack on the eve of Constitution
-Day.
-
-_Saturday, July 24, 1915._ _Imbros._ On Wednesday I went over to G.H.Q.
-and met old friends among the war correspondents. Met some of the New
-Zealanders who had come over for a rest, but were coming back for the
-expected attack. Meanwhile, they had been kept on fatigue most of the
-time, and were unutterably weary. At Imbros I was ordered to go to
-Tenedos and Mytilene.
-
-_Thursday, July 22nd._ Came back to Anzac in the same boat with Ashmead
-Bartlett and Nevinson,[18] and got leave to take them round in the
-afternoon.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Later on, during one of the worst days of the Suvla fighting, I met my
-friend Nevinson picking his way amongst the wounded on their stretchers
-under fire. “After this,” he said, decisively, “I shall confine myself
-strictly to revolutions.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _July 23rd._ Started for Imbros and went in the _Bacchante_
-pinnace, which was leaking badly from a shell hole. There were six of
-us on deck, and one man was hit when we were about a hundred yards out.
-We put back and left him on shore.
-
-_Saturday, July 24th._ _Imbros._ Went for a ride on a mule, and had a
-bathe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At this point in the campaign, though the morale was excellent,
-depression began to grow. There was a great deal of sickness, from
-which practically no one escaped, though it was less virulent in its
-form than later in the summer. I had been ill for some time, and was
-very anxious to avoid being invalided to Egypt, and was grateful for
-the chance of going to the islands for a change of climate and light
-work, for the few days that were sufficient to give another lease of
-health.
-
-The feeling that invades almost every side-show, sooner or later,
-that the home authorities cared nothing and knew nothing about the
-Dardanelles, was abroad. The policy and the strategy of the expedition
-were bitterly criticized. I remember a friend of mine saying to me:
-“All this expedition is like one of Walter Scott’s novels, upside
-down.” Walter Scott generally put his hero at the top of a winding
-stair, where he comfortably disposed, one by one, of a hundred of his
-enemies. “Now,” he said, “what we have done was, first of all to warn
-the Turks that we were going to attack by having a naval bombardment.
-That made them fortify the Dardanelles, but still they were not
-completely ready. We then send a small force to attack, to tell them
-that we really are in earnest, and to ask them if they are quite ready.
-In fact, we have put the man who ought to be, not the hero, but the
-villain of the piece, at the top of the corkscrew stair, and we have
-given him so much notice that when the hero attacks the villain has
-more men at the top of the circular stair than the hero has at the
-bottom. It’s like throwing pebbles at a stone wall,” he said, mixing
-his metaphors.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Sunday, July 25, 1915._ _On the Sea._ I left for Tenedos; a
-most beautiful day. We have just been to Anzac, very burnt and wounded
-amongst the surrounding greenery. Pretty peaceful there, only a few
-bullets coming over.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Perhaps the record of a sojourn in the Greek Islands on what was really
-sick-leave, as the work was of the lightest, should not be included in
-a war diary, but the writer looks back with amusement and pleasure to
-days that were not uneventful. They were passed with friends who were
-playing a difficult and most arduous part, and whose services, in many
-cases, have not received the recognition that was their due.
-
-It was pleasant once again to be lord of the horizon, to have space
-through which to roam, and lovely hills and valleys to ride across in
-the careless, scented air of the Mediterranean summer, with the sea
-shining a peacock-blue through the pines. It is this space and liberty
-that men cramped in a siege desire, more than the freedom from the
-shelling of the enemy’s guns. There was much, too, that was _opéra
-bouffe_ in the Islands, that made a not unpleasant contrast to the
-general life at Anzac.
-
-If there was spy mania on the Peninsula, it was multiplied tenfold,
-and quite reasonably, on the Islands, where part of the population
-were strongly pro-Ally, another part pro-German, while others were
-anti-British by an accidental kind of ricochet. These were the royalist
-followers of King Constantine, who hated Venizelos, and consequently
-the friends of Venizelos, Great Britain and France.
-
-The situation on the Islands was one with which it was extremely hard
-to cope. We were very anxious to safeguard the lives of our men, and
-to prevent information going to the enemy, and, at the same time, not
-to pursue German methods. It was unceasing work, with a great strain
-of responsibility. There was an inevitable _va et vient_ between the
-Peninsula and Imbros. From Imbros boats could slip across to Tenedos,
-Mytilene or the mainland. The native caïques would drop in at evening,
-report, be ordered to stay till further notice, and would drift away
-like ghosts in the night. Men, and women, performed remarkable feats,
-in appearing and disappearing. They were like pictures on a film in
-their coming and their going. Watchers and watched, they thrust and
-parried, discovered and concealed, glowed on the picture and darkened.
-
-Anatasio, a Serbian by birth, was one of our workers, conspicuous for
-his quickness and intelligence. At the outbreak of the war he had
-already been five months in an Austrian prison at Cattaro, but the
-prospect of battle stimulated his faculties, and he escaped. One day at
-luncheon I asked him where it was that he had learned Italian, which
-he did not talk very well. “While I was in prison at Smyrna,” said he.
-“What for?” said I. “For stabbing a Cretan,” said he, and added that
-he would rather be five years in prison in Turkey than one in Austria.
-Then there was Avani, one of the most vivid personalities that I have
-ever met. He was a poet and a clairvoyant, a mesmerist and a masseur,
-a specialist in rheumatism and the science of detection, once a member
-of General Chermside’s gendarmerie in Crete, and ex-chief of the Smyrna
-fire brigade. The stories of him are too many, and too flamboyant, to
-tell.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ Avani mesmerized the wife of the Armenian dragoman.
-Unfortunately it went wrong. Her obedience to his volition was delayed
-and she only obeyed his commands in the wrong company some hours after.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He had given proof of rare courage, and also considerable indiscretion.
-On one occasion, armed to the teeth, he burst into a perfectly innocent
-house at night, and, revolver in hand, hunted a terrified inhabitant.
-His only evidence against this man was, that when he had been caught
-and hurled to the ground and sat upon, his heart had beaten very fast,
-which would not happen, insisted Avani, if he had not been guilty of
-some crime.
-
-Amongst our opponents were the romantic but sinister Vassilaki family,
-two brothers and three lovely sisters. Talk about them in the Islands
-was almost as incessant as was talk about shelling on the Peninsula.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Monday, July 26, 1915._ _Tenedos._ Yesterday I was very ill,
-and again to-day, but was injected with something or other and feel
-better, but weak. Tried to sleep yesterday, but one of our monitors at
-Rabbit Island bombarded hugely, shaking the bugs down on me. This place
-is clean, but there are bugs and some lice. Last night I dined with the
-Governor, Colonel Mullins, and a jolly French doctor, and Thompson, who
-has fallen ill. Am carrying on for him at the moment.
-
-_Tuesday, July 27, 1915._ _Tenedos._ Went to the trenches at Tenedos.
-They face the enemy. That is the most military thing about them.
-Thompson went out to see the inhabitants. I was going with him, but
-felt worse and went to rest. The Turks here are in a very bad way. We
-do not allow them to work. It’s inevitable. They mayn’t fish or work at
-the aerodrome.
-
-_Wednesday, July 28, 1915._ _Tenedos._ Interpreted for the Governor
-of Tenedos, who, like Jupiter, rules with might, in the afternoon. In
-the evening I saw the Mufti, who had a list of starving, widows and
-indigent.... Last night the Cretan soldiers started ragging the Turks
-and singing, till I stopped them. They were quite good.
-
-Still ill, but better. Had a beautiful walk in the evening, and a long
-talk with the Greek refugees working in the vines by the edge of the
-sea. The old patriarch addressed me all the time as “chorbaji”--that
-is, Possessor of the Soup, the Headman of the village.
-
-_Thursday, July 29, 1915._ _Tenedos._ Yesterday I rode over to the
-French aerodrome, coming late for luncheon, but had coffee with about
-twenty French officers, all very jolly. Promised to let me fly over the
-Dardanelles. I went on to the Cretans in a pinewood. Their officer, a
-Frenchman, very keen on a show in Asia Minor.... The elder Vassilaki
-has been arrested. His brother saw him go by in a trawler. Am going
-to Mytilene, then return after three days, and leave here on Tuesday
-for Anzac. No news of anything happening. Tenedos is a beautiful
-town in its way, surrounded by windmills, with Mount Elias in the
-background. Its streets are narrow, picturesque and hung with vines
-that make them cool and shady. At the end of the town there is a very
-fine old Venetian fortress, but its magnificence is outside; inside it
-is furnished with round stone cannon-balls, ammunition for catapults.
-In the last war the Greeks took the island, but one day a Turkish
-destroyer popped her nose in. All the Greeks fled, and the Mufti and
-the Moslems went and pulled the Greek flag down. Then in came a Greek
-destroyer, and the Turkish one departed. The Mufti and the Turks were
-taken off to Mudros, where he and they were beaten. He narrowly missed
-being killed....
-
-_Friday, July 30, 1915._ _Tenedos._ Slept very badly again. Had a
-letter from the O.C. Poor Onslow killed, lying on his bed by his
-dugout. A good fellow and a fine soldier. Aden nearly captured. I
-prophesied its capture in Egypt. I shall be recalled before anything
-happens.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The radiant air of Tenedos gave health as it did in Homeric times,
-and I left with the desire that others should have the same chance
-as myself of using that beautiful island as a hospital; but all the
-pictures there were not bright. Under the windmills above the shining
-sea there were the motionless, dark-clad, desolate Moslem women,
-sitting without food or shelter. Their case, it is true, was no harder
-than that of the thousands of Greek refugees who had been driven from
-their homes, but these at any rate were living amongst kindred, while
-the unfortunate Moslems were without help or sympathy, except that
-which came from their enemies, the British.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Friday, July 30, 1915._ _Mytilene._ I left by the Greek
-boat yesterday. On the boat I met a man who might be useful as an
-interpreter, Anibal Miscu, Entrepreneur de Travaux Publiques, black as
-my hat, but talks English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Turkish,
-Greek, Arabic, Bulgar, Russian and something else. The boat was stopped
-by our trawler, No. ----, and searched for contraband of war. The
-Greeks were furious. I landed at Mytilene, not having slept much and
-feeling bad. Avani said they had tried to bribe him to allow some
-raisins through, and kicked up the devil of a row. He seemed to think
-that the raisins were dynamite. He was left guarding the raisins, all
-night, I believe, with his revolver.
-
-I was given a warm welcome by Compton Mackenzie in Mytilene. He,
-fortunately for me, had been sent there by G.H.Q. I found several
-old friends--Heathcote-Smith, the Consul, whose work it would be
-impertinent for me to praise, and Hadkinson, whom I had last seen
-at my own house in England, where he was staying with me when the
-Archduke Franz Ferdinand had been murdered. Hadkinson had passed most
-of his life on his property in Macedonia. Of the Eastern and Southern
-languages he talked Greek, Italian, Turkish, Bulgarian, Serbian and
-Albanian. His voice was as delightful as his knowledge of Balkan
-ballads was wide, and his friends made him sing the endless songs of
-the mountaineers. His personality had carried him through experiences
-that would have been disastrous to most men; battles decisive in
-European history had raged in front of his doors, while his house had
-remained untouched; brigands of most of the Balkan races had crossed
-his farm, rarely driving off his stock, and most of the local peasantry
-in their misfortunes had come to him for help, for advice, doctoring
-or intercession. Until the European war had crashed upon the world,
-Hadkinson had been a good example of the fact that minorities, even
-when they are a minority of one, do not always suffer.
-
-The people of Mytilene, at that time, were very pro-English, though
-the officials were of the faction of King Constantine. The desire I
-frequently heard expressed was that Great Britain should take over
-Mytilene, as she did the Ionian Islands, and that when Mytilene had
-been put in order it should be restored to Greece.
-
-_Diary._ _Friday, July 30, 1915._ _Mytilene._ ---- and Hadkinson have
-gone out with a motor-boat and a machine-gun. The Vassilakis, or some
-of them, have been deported, Vassilaki to Imbros and the beautiful
-sisters to Mudros.... It’s a blazing, burning day.
-
-_Saturday, July 31, 1915._ _Mytilene._ A gaming-house. Moved from
-my first hotel to a larger and more disreputable one. Lunched with
-Hadkinson and Compton Mackenzie[19].... At Thasos the Greeks have
-arrested our agents under the orders of Gunaris. Have worked, and am
-feeling better.
-
-_Later._ The three Miss Vassilakis have not gone to Mudros. They turned
-up this morning, and I was left to deal with them. Not as beautiful,
-except one, as I had been led to believe. They got Avani out of
-the room and wept and wept. I told them their brother would be all
-right.... They wanted to know who prevented them leaving. I said it was
-the Admiral. That good man is far away.
-
-_Sunday, August 1, 1915._ _Mytilene._ Avani went off with the three
-Miss Vassilakis, in hysterics, last night. They were very angry with
-us. It seems probable that we shall have a landing on the mainland here
-to divert attention from the Peninsula. Sir Ian Hamilton is coming down
-to have a look. A good deal of friction over the blockade. The present
-system causes much inconvenience to all concerned.
-
- * * * * *
-
-They were enchanting days of golden light or starlit darkness, while
-one drank health almost in the concrete from the hot pine-scented
-air and the famous wine of Mytilene. The conditions of others was
-unfortunately less happy. There were some 80,000 Greek refugees from
-the mainland, for whom the Greek Government had done practically
-nothing, while the patriotic Greek communities of England and America
-had not had the opportunity of relieving their necessities. We all did
-what we could to help these people.
-
-There was another question allied to this to be considered: whether a
-Greek Expeditionary Force, largely composed of these refugees, should
-be sent into Asia Minor. The danger of such a campaign to the native
-Greeks was obvious; mainly for this reason it was not undertaken. But
-while no expedition occurred, there was much talk about one. The fact
-that Sir Ian Hamilton had come was widely known. It was said that great
-preparations were being made, and these rumours probably troubled the
-Turks and kept troops of theirs in a non-combatant area.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Sunday, August 1, 1915._ _Mytilene._ Lunched with Mavromati
-Bey. He was very heroic, saying he preferred to die rather than to
-live under the German yoke, but there were no signs of a funeral at
-luncheon, which was delicious.
-
-Dined with Hadkinson, and was taken ill, but got all right and went
-off with him on the motor-boat _Omala_ after dinner. H. said that for
-a long time he had felt that I was coming, and had ordered a lamb for
-me to be executed the following day; told the cook, too, to get some
-special herbs.
-
-The object of our journey was to find a wonderful woman, lithe as a
-leopard and strong as a horse, and put her somewhere near Aivali to
-gain information.
-
-_Monday, August 2, 1915._ “_Omala._” _Off Moskonisi._ At dawn this
-morning we came to Moskonisi, luminous in the sea. A decrepit shepherd
-led a flock of sheep along the beach. His name is Panayotis and he has
-a Homeric past; he killed two Turkish guards who courted a beautiful
-sister-in-law before marriage. Then he killed two others for a
-pusillanimous brother-in-law after marriage, and he has also sent two
-other Turks to their rest, though H. does not know the reason for their
-death.
-
-Hadkinson had collected a large band of Palikaris, but the motor-boat
-only held a few, the cream of them. He had English names for most of
-them--Little John, Robin Hood, etc. They were tall men, with very
-quick, clever eyes and lithe movements, picturesquely dressed. One of
-them had a cross glittering in his kalpak, and A. M. (for Asia Minor)
-on both sides of the cross. He said to me, pointing to Aivali: “There
-is my country; we are an orphan people. For 150 years we have shed our
-blood and given our best to Greece. Now in her hour of triumph and in
-our day of wretchedness she denies us help. May she ever be less!”
-Another Greek had been to Mecca as a soldier and stayed there and in
-the Yemen for some years. The Captain was a quiet man, but apparently
-very excitable. They were delighted with their army rifles. The
-woman, Angeliko Andriotis, did not turn up at Gymno, so we went on to
-Moskonisi, the men often playing on a plaintive flute, and sometimes
-singing low together. At breakfast, soon after dawn, we had a sort of
-orchestra.
-
-We arrived opposite to Aivali. The Turks have sunk three mauna....
-Hadkinson saw one of their submarines.
-
-The situation at Aivali is curious. It lies at the head of a bay. Above
-it there are hills, not high hills, but high enough, the men said
-who were with us, to prevent its being bombarded by the Turks. They
-looked at it with longing eyes. Their families were there. They kept
-on cursing the “black dogs” and saying they would eat them. There were
-35,000 people in Aivali, now only 25,000; 10,000 have left lately. The
-sword of Damocles hangs over the rest of them, for they might be sent
-off into the interior at any moment. We went on to the channel between
-Moskonisi and Pyrgos. There we found the child of the woman, who was
-sent with a note to her. Men were moving in the olives and the scrub
-some distance off, whom the Greeks said were their own compatriots.
-
-The boy, who was thirteen, took the letter and put it under his saddle.
-He went off calmly to get past the Turks, without any air of adventure
-about him. The others realized the stage on which they were acting,
-and swaggered finely. I got off on Pyrgos with Hadkinson, and went to
-a small, rough chapel, where they were bringing the eikons back in
-triumph.
-
-The beauty of it all was beyond words. I bathed on a silver sand in
-transparent water between the two islands. Moskonisi, by the way,
-doesn’t mean the Island of Perfume, but takes its name from a great
-brigand who practically held the island against the Turks about thirty
-years ago.
-
-After a time the boy returned with a letter from his mother, and a
-peasant with binoculars. He and the peasant both said that they had
-seen a great oil-pool in Aivali Bay. We thought that this must be from
-a submarine, and dashed round there at full speed, but found nothing.
-Then we decided to come home. We picked up some of the men we had
-dropped en route; and they brought us presents of gran Turco, basilica
-and sweet-scented pinks. Then they played their flutes as the sun set,
-and Hadkinson sang Greek, Bulgarian and Turkish songs, singing the
-“Imam’s Call” beautifully and, to the horror of his Greek followers,
-reverently.
-
-We might have bagged the twenty-five Turks, or whatever number there
-were, quite easily, but H. thought this would have produced reprisals.
-He was probably right.
-
-_Tuesday, August 3, 1915._ _Mytilene._ We got back last night after
-dinner and heard that Sir Ian Hamilton, George Lloyd and George
-Brodrick had been here.... One of the poor Whittall boys very badly
-wounded. They were a fine pair.
-
-_August 4, 1915._ _Mytilene._ Yesterday we heard that the Turks had
-sent the town-crier to the equivalent of the capital of Moskonisi to
-say that any Greek going beyond a certain line would be put to death.
-Miss Vassilaki turned up, and said that she and her sister would come
-with me to Tenedos. I said they couldn’t.
-
-We dined with General Hill and his Staff and slept on the _Canopus_....
-Mackenzie no better.... A good deal of friction in Tenedos. Athanasius
-Vassilaki has escaped, and every one is annoyed. Some men have been
-arrested for signalling.
-
-_Thursday, August 5, 1915._ _Tenedos._ Most of the officers sick. I was
-asked to stay on at Tenedos, but felt I must get back at once. Christo
-says that it’s dull here, and Kaba Tepé is better than this house.
-Turkish guns have been firing at our trawlers. A couple of men wounded.
-Examined a man just escaped from Constantinople. Constantinople is
-quite cheery: theatres, carriages, boats, etc. The Germans say we can’t
-hold out on the Peninsula when the bad weather comes.
-
-Then I examined a Lebanon French soldier who had arrested a child and
-an old man for signalling....
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here there are some pages of my diary missing, but the events that
-occurred are still vividly in my mind.
-
-In company with other officers I went first to Imbros, hearing the
-thunder of the guns from Helles. In passionate haste we tried every
-means to get on to the Peninsula for the great battle. I left Christo
-to follow with my kit, if he could, with the future doubtful before
-him, and no certainty, except that of being arrested many times.
-
-In the harbour at Imbros on that night there was a heavy sea, and in
-a small, dancing boat we quested through the darkness for any ship
-sailing to Anzac. One was found at last that was on the point of
-sailing, and off we went.
-
-The instructions of my friend Ian Smith were to get to Suvla, and luck
-favoured him, for at dawn we lay off Suvla, and a trawler took him
-ashore.
-
-Along the heights and down to the sea-shore the battle growled and
-raged, and it was difficult to know what was the mist of the morning or
-battle smoke. I got off at Anzac, which was calm, realizing that I had
-missed the first attack.
-
-_Diary._ _Saturday, August 7, 1915._ _Kaba Tebé._ I went out to
-Headquarters, which are now beyond Colonel Bauchop’s old Headquarters.
-He, poor fellow, had just been hit and was said to be dying. Dix[20]
-again wounded in the leg and Cator killed when he had just been
-promoted. I saw the General; on the way out I met 300 Turkish prisoners
-and was ordered to return and embark them. We came to the pier on
-the beach, then three shells fell on and beside it; both S. B. and I
-thought we were going to have a very bad time, packed like sardines,
-with panicky prisoners. Embarking them took time; we were all very
-snappy, but we got them off. I was glad to find S. B. and Woods. All
-the dugouts here are desolate. I saw General Birdwood, who was very sad
-about Onslow.[21] He talked of the water difficulties. He was cheerful,
-as usual, and said he thought we should know which way things were
-going by 5 o’clock. S. was less cheerful.
-
-I went back to Headquarters, a weary trudge of two hot, steaming miles,
-past masses of wounded. The saps were constantly blocked. Then back to
-Anzac for a few hours’ sleep, till I can get my kit.
-
-_Sunday, August 8, 1915._ _Near Anafarta._ Slept badly last night
-at Anzac. The place was very desolate with every one away. I got up
-before a clear dawn and went out to the observation post, where I found
-General Godley and General Shaw. Our assault began. We saw our men in
-the growing light attack the Turks. It was a cruel and beautiful sight,
-for it was like a fight in fairyland; they went forward in parties
-through the beautiful light, with the clouds crimsoning over them.
-Sometimes a tiny, gallant figure would be in front, then a puff would
-come and they would be lying still. We got to within about forty yards
-of the Turks; later we lost ground. Meanwhile, men were streaming up,
-through awful heat. There were Irish troops cursing the Kaiser. At the
-observation post we were being badly shelled. The beauty of the place
-was extraordinary, and made it better than the baldness of Anzac, but
-we were on an unpropitious hillside, and beyond there were mules and
-men, clustered thickly.
-
-Then I was sent back to Kaba Tepé, where I found a lot of wounded
-prisoners, who had not been attended to. I woke a doctor who had not
-slept for ages. He talked almost deliriously, but came along and
-worked like a real good man. I saw General House, V.C., and suggested
-attaching one doctor to the prisoners, so that we should not get
-contagious diseases.
-
-Returned to Bauchop’s Post and examined a couple of Germans from the
-_Goeben_. Got a good deal of information. Then I was telephoned for to
-interrogate a wounded Greek, who had, however, got lost. I went back
-outside the hospital, where there were many wounded lying. I stumbled
-upon poor A. C. (a schoolfellow), who had been wounded about 3 a.m. the
-day before, and had lain in the sun on the sand all the previous day.
-He recognized me, and asked me to help him, but was light-headed. There
-were fifty-six others with him; M. and I counted. It was awful having
-to pass them. A lot of the men called out: “We are being murdered.” The
-smells were fearful.... I went down a sap to the north to find the
-Greek. Fierce shelling began. The sap was knocked down in front and
-behind.
-
-I came to a field hospital, situated where the troops were going
-through. There no one knew where Taylor’s Hollow, the place where the
-Greek was supposed to be, was. While I was there shelling was bad.
-Several of the wounded hit again. One man was knocked in on the top of
-me, bleeding all over. I returned to meet Thoms, who said he knew the
-way. We ran the gauntlet....
-
-I had a curious, beautiful walk, looking for the wounded Greek, going
-to nineteen hospitals. Many wounded everywhere. First I saw one of
-our fellows who had met ten Turks and had ten bayonet wounds. He was
-extremely cheerful. Then a couple of Turks in the shadow of some pines,
-one dying and groaning, really unconscious. I offered the other water
-from my bottle, but he refused because of his companion, using Philip
-Sidney’s words in Turkish.
-
-Men were being hit everywhere. After going by fields and groves and
-lanes I came back to where the wounded were lying in hundreds, in the
-sap going to the sea, near Bauchop’s Fountain. There a man called to me
-in French. He was the Greek I was looking for, badly wounded. He talked
-a great deal. Said 200,000 reinforcements were expected from Gallipoli.
-No gas would be used here....
-
-_Monday, August 9, 1915._ _No. 3 Outpost._ Slept uncomfortably on the
-ground. Went before the dawn to observation post; returned to examine
-prisoners. Had an unsuccessful expedition with Hastings to find some
-guns which he said had been lost between the lines.
-
-Bullets came streaming down our valley, and we put up a small wall, of
-sacks, 3 feet high, behind which we slept. I was sitting at breakfast
-this morning listening to Colonel Manders[22] talking, when suddenly I
-saw Charlie B. put his hand to his own head and say: “By G----, he’s
-killed!” Manders fell back dead, with a bullet through his temple. He
-was a very good fellow.
-
-Sir Ian Hamilton came ashore. I saw him for a moment. Then to Kaba
-Tepé; going and coming one passes a line of bodies, some dreadful,
-being carried for burial. Many still lying out. The last wounded have
-been more pitiful than anything I have seen. Cazalet is badly wounded;
-I hope he will recover; he is a good boy. Colonel Malone was killed
-last night and Jacky Hughes wounded. Lots of shelling.
-
-Coming back I had to go outside the crowded sap, and got sniped. Thoms
-and I had a very lively time of it.
-
-Came back for Manders’ funeral. I was very fond of him. General Godley
-read a few sentences with the help of my electric torch, which failed.
-Four others were buried with him. Later I saw a great shell strike the
-grave. A cemetery, or rather lots, growing up round us. There are dead
-buried or half buried in every gully.
-
-_Tuesday, August 10, 1915._ _No. 3 Outpost._ Christo arrived with my
-kit and some grapes last night. While we were eating these, two men,
-one of whom was our cook, were hit, and he being the second cook, it
-was decided to change our quarters, as a lot of bullets streamed down
-the gully and we had been losing heavily. I was called up in the night
-to see about some wounded. The General had said they had better go by
-boat, because of the difficulty of the saps, but there were no boats,
-and Manders’ death had caused confusion at the hospital. The doctor on
-the beach said he could not keep the wounded there any longer, because
-of the rifle fire. I woke Charlie B. We got 200 men from the Canterbury
-reinforcements. They had been fighting without sleep since Sunday
-morning, but evacuated about 300 wounded to below Walker’s Ridge. There
-were no complaints. The Turks still had to be left. They called to me
-at night and at dawn. I gave them drinks, and later, after sunrise,
-shifted them into the shade, which made them cheerful. The General had
-not slept for three nights. The day went badly for us. We lost Chunuk
-Bair, and without it we cannot win the battle. The Turks have fought
-very finely, and all praise their courage. It was wonderful to see them
-charging down the hill, through the storm of shrapnel, under the white
-ghost wreaths of smoke. Our own men were splendid. The N.Z. Infantry
-Brigade must have ceased to exist. Meanwhile the condition of the
-wounded is indescribable. They lie in the sand in rows upon rows, their
-faces caked with sand and blood; one murmur for water; no shelter from
-the sun; many of them in saps, with men passing all the time scattering
-more dust on them. There is hardly any possibility of transporting
-them. The fire zones are desperate, and the saps are blocked with
-ammunition transport and mules, also whinnying for water, carrying
-food, etc. Some unwounded men almost mad from thirst, cursing.
-
-We all did what we could, but amongst so many it was almost
-impossible.... The wounded Turks still here. I kept them alive with
-water. More prisoners in, report another 15,000 men at Bulair and a new
-Division, the 7th, coming against us here. I saw General Cooper,[23]
-wounded, in the afternoon, and got him water. His Staff had all been
-killed or wounded....
-
-If the Turks continue to hold Chunuk Bair and get up their big guns
-there, we are, as a force, far worse off than at Anzac. What has
-happened is roughly this: we have emerged from a position which was
-unsatisfactory but certain, into one that is uncertain but partly
-satisfactory. If the Turks have the time to dig themselves in, then
-we are worse off than before, because we shall again be held up, with
-the winter to face, and time running hard against us, with an extended
-front. The Turks will still have land communications, while we shall
-only have sea communications, and though we ourselves shall be possibly
-better off, because we shall now have a harbour, the Turks some time
-will almost certainly be able to break through, though possibly not
-able to keep what they take. But the men at Helles will not be freed as
-our move proposed to free them.
-
-I thought one of the wounded Turks had cholera to-day. There is very
-little water, and we have to give them water out of our own bottles.
-We have a terrible view here: lines of wounded creeping up from the
-hospital to the cemetery like a tide, and the cemetery is going like
-a live thing to meet the wounded. Between us and the sea is about 150
-yards; this space is now empty of men because of the sniping. There
-are a number of dead mules on it, which smell horribly but cannot be
-moved. A curious exhibition of sniping took place just below us this
-evening, about 50 yards away. Two men were on the open space when a
-sniper started to shoot at them. They popped into a dry well that
-practically hid them, but he got his bullets all round them--in front
-and behind and on the sides. They weren’t hit. The camp watched,
-laughing.
-
-_Thursday, August 12, 1915._ _No. 3 Outpost._ At 4.30 in the morning I
-got up and walked with the General. We went up to Rhododendron Ridge to
-have a look at the Turks. It is a steep, beautiful walk, and a glorious
-view--trees everywhere and cliffs. We are fastening the cliffs up, and
-camouflaging the trenches.
-
-I took Nikolas the miller round the observation post in the morning. A
-new Division is supposed to be against us, the 8th. In the afternoon
-walked into Anzac to get a drink of water as have had fever and a cruel
-thirst. The dugouts smell, and washing’s difficult. Anglesey gave me
-excellent water.
-
-_Friday, August 13, 1915._ _No. 3 Outpost._ Nothing doing. Bullets
-singing about, but nobody getting hit. The heat’s ferocious, and
-everybody’s feeling ill. Macaulay’s wounded.
-
-Worked yesterday morning, also started on new dugout. In the afternoon
-went with Turkish papers to Anzac. I saw C. He said that this beach for
-cruelty had beaten the Crimea.... Savage feeling with the R.A.M.C....
-
-Streams of mules took water out in the evening as the sun set. I met
-several men with sunstroke coming in. I saw George Hutton, Royal Welsh
-Fusiliers, who has become a Colonel. He had a hand-to-hand bayonet
-tussle with a Turk, in the last fight. Another man came up, and killed
-the Turk with his bayonet. Then, he said, the man, instead of pulling
-his bayonet out, dashed to another man and asked him for his bayonet,
-saying: “I have left mine in the Turk.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The battle-cries, by the way, were for the Turks the sonorous,
-deep-voiced “Allah, Allah,” and “Voor” (“God, God,” “Strike”); while
-the New Zealanders used often to shout: “Eggs is cooked.” This
-apparently irrelevant, unwarlike slogan had its origin in Egypt. There,
-on field days in the desert, when the men halted to rest, Egyptians
-would appear magically with primitive kitchens and the cry of “Eggs is
-cooked!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Monday, August 16, 1915._ _No. 3 Outpost._ Christo will spit
-on my razor-strop; otherwise he is a good servant.... Bathed with
-Charlie B. yesterday afternoon.... I don’t think we want Roumania in.
-If she has no ammunition and takes a very bad knock from Germany, it
-would give Germany a very strong strategic position. The Turks who have
-come in do not really seem very disheartened.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At about this time the Expeditionary Force entered upon a new phase.
-The agony of the struggle had passed its crisis. Both sides sat
-down grimly, to wait for the winter. In many ways our position had
-distinctly improved. There was more room, and space banished the
-sense of imprisonment that had afflicted us. The country was not as
-battle-scarred as Anzac, and walking over the heights at sunset was a
-feast of loveliness.
-
-We moved our Headquarters again, and I went up to a large dugout in
-what had been a Turkish fort. The troops quartered in this fort were an
-Indian Field Battery and sixty-three New Zealanders, all that was left
-of their battalion. These men had been in the first landing. They had,
-every one of them, had dysentery or fever, and the great majority were
-still sick and over-ripe for hospital.
-
-As time went on, and illness increased, one often heard men and
-officers say: “If we can’t hold the trenches with sound men, we have
-got to hold them with sick men.” When all was quiet, the sick-list
-grew daily. But when the men knew that there was to be an attack,
-they fought their sickness, to fight the Turk, and the stream to the
-hospitals shrank.
-
-I admired nothing in the war more than the spirit of these sixty-three
-New Zealanders, who were soon to go to their last fight. When the day’s
-work was over, and the sunset swept the sea, we used to lean upon the
-parapet and look up to where Chunuk Bair flamed, and talk. The great
-distance from their own country created an atmosphere of loneliness.
-This loneliness was emphasized by the fact that the New Zealanders
-rarely received the same recognition as the Australians in the Press,
-and many of their gallant deeds went unrecorded or were attributed to
-their greater neighbours. But they had a silent pride that put these
-things into proper perspective. The spirit of these men was unconquered
-and unconquerable. At night, when the great moon of the Dardanelles
-soared and all was quiet except the occasional whine of a bullet
-overhead, the voices of the tired men continually argued the merits
-of the Expedition, and there was always one end to these discussions:
-“Well, it may all be a ---- mistake, but in a war of this size you will
-have mistakes of this size, and it doesn’t matter a ---- to us whether
-we are for it here or in France, for we came out to do one job, and
-it’s nothing to us whether we finish in one place or another.” The
-Turks were not the only fatalists in those days.
-
-We were now well supplied with water, but food of the right kind was a
-difficulty. It was very hard to obtain supplies for sick men, and here,
-as always, we met with the greatest kindness from the Navy.
-
-Horlick’s Malted Milk and fruit from the Islands did us more good than
-anything else. Relations of mine in Egypt sent me an enormous quantity
-of the first, which I was able to distribute to the garrison of the
-fort. Later, when I was invalided, I bequeathed the massive remnants to
-a friend who had just landed. Greedily he opened my stores, hoping for
-the good things of the world--tongues, potted ham and whisky--only to
-find a wilderness of Horlick’s Malted Milk.
-
-Our position had at last been appreciated at home, and we were
-no longer irritated, as in the early days, by the frivolity and
-fatuousness of London. Upon one occasion, shortly after the first
-landing, one of the illustrated papers had a magnificent picture
-entitled, if I remember right, “The Charge that Won Constantinople.”
-The picture was of a cavalry charge, led quite obviously by General
-Godley--and those were the days when we were living on the edge of a
-cliff, where only centipedes could, and did, charge, and when we were
-provided with some mules and my six donkeys for all our transport.
-
-There was a remarkable contrast between our war against the Germans
-and the Turks. In France the British soldier started fighting
-good-naturedly, and it took considerable time to work him up to a pitch
-of hatred; at Anzac the troops from the Dominions began their campaign
-with feelings of contempt and hatred, which gradually turned to respect
-for the Moslems. At the beginning the great majority of our men had
-naturally no knowledge of the enemy they were fighting. Once, looking
-down from a gun emplacement, I saw a number of Turks walking about, and
-asked why they had not been shot at. “Well,” said one man, “it seems
-hard on them, poor chaps. They aren’t doing any harm.” Then up came
-another: “Those Turks,” he said, “they walk about as if this place
-belongs to them.” I suggested that it was their native land. “Well,” he
-said, “I never thought of that.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Monday, August 16, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ It’s curious the
-way the men speak of the Turks here. They still can’t be made to wear
-gas helmets, because they say the Turks are clean fighters and won’t
-use gas....
-
-It’s good to be high up in this observation post, above the smells,
-with a magnificent view of hill and valley. We shoot from here pretty
-often at the Turkish guns. Last night the Dardanelles droned on for
-hours. This morning the machine-guns on both sides were going like
-dentists’ drills. To-day it’s absolutely still, with only the whirr of
-aeroplanes overhead.
-
-Bartlett turned up to-night. He had not much hope.... Poor Bauchop is
-dead. News came to-night.... A gallant man.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On Wednesday, August 18th, I was sent to G.H.Q. at Imbros, and heard a
-full account of the tragic battle down at Helles, and the condition of
-the wounded at Mudros.
-
-When men have gone to the limits of human endurance, when blood has
-been spilled like water, and the result is still unachieved, bitter and
-indiscriminate recrimination and criticism inevitably follow. But Anzac
-had one great advantage. Our leaders had the confidence of their men.
-The troops were able to see General Birdwood and General Godley every
-day in the front trenches with themselves, walking about under fire as
-if they had been on a lawn in England, and the men knew that their own
-lives were never uselessly sacrificed.
-
-The work of many of the doctors on the Peninsula was beyond all praise,
-but there was black rage against the chiefs of the R.A.M.C. at Imbros
-and in Egypt. The anger would have been still greater if their attitude
-of complacent self-sufficiency had been known.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Thursday, August 19, 1915._ _No. 3 Outpost._ Returned to
-the Peninsula with Bettinson and Commander Patch and Phillips, the
-navigator. When we had come up to the fort I told them not to show
-their heads at the observation post, as the fort did not belong to me,
-and I did not want to become unpopular. I got Perry, Captain of the
-fort, and he sat them down on the parapet, showing them the lines of
-our trenches. While we talked, a sniper shot at Patch, just missing
-him, and hitting the parapet beside him. They were very pleased, though
-the others said I had paid a man to shoot in order to give them fun.
-Perry said in a friendly way: “That’s a good sniper; he’s thirteen
-hundred yards off, so it was a pretty decent shot.” Then he talked to
-them, and they felt what any one must feel talking to these men. They
-gave us a lot of things, and are sending all sorts of things to-morrow
-for the men here.
-
-_Friday, August 20, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ Last night was the first
-cold night. This morning I went out with the General, who was like a
-bull-dog and a cyclone. We met Birdwood, who was there to see the last
-Australians arrive, 17th and 18th Brigades, in Reserve Gully. They
-looked a splendid lot, and it did one’s heart good to see them. Some
-more officers from the _Bacchante_ turned up with stores, and special
-cocoa for me. I was just going off to find Perry when I met him. He is
-off out; there is a fight to-morrow. I gave him the cocoa. He was glad
-to have it.... The men are all tired out with heat and dysentery and
-digging and fighting. The General and I went up to Sazli Beit Deri. I
-didn’t think it over-safe for him.
-
-_Saturday, August 21, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ Work in the morning. Was
-to have gone with the General in the afternoon, but prisoners came in
-to be examined. They said: “Curse the Germans! We can’t go on. There
-are no more men left.” One of them was killed by their own fire after
-I left. G. L. came to luncheon. Charlie B., he and I started off
-together, I feeling pretty bad. It was very hot. We went at a great
-pace over two or three ridges and across valleys, our guns thundering
-about us. Finally, I felt so bad I let them go on, and came back....
-The battle developed and the shooting was fierce and general. While
-I hunted for General Monash’s Headquarters I met Colonel A. J., who
-was rather worried. We had a close shave.... I left him, and had an
-odd adventure.... Went home alone through deafening noise, all the
-valleys under fire.... Got at last into a shallow nullah that led into
-a regular gully, and so home.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That day I saw an unforgettable sight. The dismounted Yeomanry
-attacked the Turks across the salt lakes of Suvla. Shrapnel burst
-over them continuously; above their heads there was a sea of smoke.
-Away to the north by Chocolate Hill fires broke out on the plain. The
-Yeomanry never faltered. On they came through the haze of smoke in two
-formations, columns and extended. Sometimes they broke into a run, but
-they always came on. It is difficult to describe the feelings of pride
-and sorrow with which we watched this advance, in which so many of our
-friends and relations were playing their part.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _August 21st._ Charlie B. and G. L. came back all right....
-The Turks had come over in three waves down Chunuk Bair. The first two
-were destroyed by naval fire; the third got home into our trenches.
-Charlie B. was full of admiration for one old fellow whom he had seen
-holding up his finger and lecturing to the men when they hung back.
-
-Hutton is wounded again.
-
-_Sunday, August 22, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ Last night, or this
-morning at 1 o’clock, I was called up. They said there were 150 Turks
-in one place and others elsewhere, anxious to surrender. I took the
-miller, Zachariades and Kyriakidis out to Headquarters. Sent back
-Kyriakidis and the miller, as there was nothing doing and I wanted to
-keep Kyriakidis. Went on with Zachariades and guides sent by Poles
-to Colonel Agnew to his H.Q. There we lay on the ground, very cold.
-They said the Turks had wished to surrender, but there had been no
-interpreter, and they had been fired on. The Turks were then attacking
-heavily. Eastwood telephoned that they had fourteen prisoners. I went
-back to see if they could give any news about our immediate front.
-
-Every one worried. The ---- Battalion of Australians had gone wrong.
-Nobody knew where they were. I sent my escort to try and find them. The
-Hampshires, who ought to have arrived, had not come.... They came along
-gradually.
-
-We attacked at about four in the morning. The Turkish fire tarried
-a little, then got furious. We went towards Monash, and met the
-Hampshires, very tired and wayworn. Bullets sang very viciously, and
-burst into flame on the rocks. There was a thunder of rifle fire and
-echoes in the gullies, men dropping now and then. Lower down the gully
-I found the Hampshires running like mad upwards to the firing line;
-beyond this a mixed crowd of men without an officer.... My guide, wild
-as a hawk, took us up a ridge. I fell over a dead man in the darkness
-and hurt my ankle. We had to wait. There seemed a sort of froth of
-dust on the other side of the ridge, from the rifle fire, and I told
-the escort to take us down and round the ridge across the valley. He
-admitted afterwards we had no chance of crossing the other way. In the
-valley the bullets sang. We came to the half-nullah where I had taken
-such unsatisfactory cover in the afternoon. There we waited a bit, and
-then ran across the hundred yards to the next gully. Zachariades and
-the escort grazed. Found the prisoners; the other Zachariades examined
-them.... Spent bullets falling about, but the Greeks never winked. A
-surrendered Armenian could only tell us that the Turks were very weak
-before us. The rifle fire died away in the end, and we walked back at
-dawn, getting here by sunrise. Then examined more prisoners till about
-11, and slept till 1.
-
-The position is still indefinite. It’s on the same old lines, on the
-hills we are the eyebrows and the Turks are the forehead.
-
-_Monday, August 23, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ Perry is wounded, but
-not badly, I hope, in the arm. There is hardly any one in the fort.
-The interpreter question becoming very difficult. They are all going
-sick. Had a quiet evening last night, and read on the parapet. It will
-be very difficult to keep these old troops here during the winter.
-The Australians and New Zealanders who have been here a long time
-are weak, and will all get pneumonia. There was a great wind blowing
-and the sound of heavy firing. I went to Anzac to-day, and found men
-bombing fish. They got about twenty from one bomb, beautiful fish,
-half-pounders.
-
-_Tuesday, August 24th._ _No. 2 Outpost._ General Shaw has gone sick to
-England; General Maude has taken his place. He commands the 13th. He
-and Harter dined here last night. Longford was killed, Milbanke said to
-be killed or wounded, and the Hertfordshires have suffered.
-
-This morning we talked about the winter seriously and of preparations
-to be made. I am for a hillside. The plain is a marsh and the valley a
-water-course. We ought to have fuel, caves for drying clothes, cooking,
-etc., and mostly this hill is made of dust and sand. A great mail came
-in last night, but the machine-guns got on to the men as they passed by
-the beach in the moonlight, killed some and wounded five men. So there
-are the mails lying now, with the machine-guns playing round them....
-
-I advised Lawless yesterday at Anzac to move out from the beach, lest
-the sea should rise and take him like a winkle from his shell.
-
-Saw D. to-day. He has a curious story to tell of the other night, when
-I was telephoned for. He said I was called three hours too late. A lot
-of Turks had come out of their trenches, some unarmed and some armed
-and some with bombs. He had gone out and pointed his revolver at one
-of them, who shouldered arms and stood to attention. Some of the Turks
-came right up, and the New Zealanders said: “Come in here, Turkey,” and
-began pulling them into the front trench. D. had feared that the Turks,
-who were about 200, might rush the trench, and had waved them back and
-finally fired his revolver and ordered our fellows to fire. It was a
-pity there was no one there who could talk. Later I saw Temperley, who
-said when we took Rhododendron Ridge there were 250 Turks on the top.
-They piled their arms, cheered us and clapped their hands.
-
-To-night I went to Chaylak Dere with the General and saw General Maude,
-and his Staff, who looked pretty ill, also Claude Willoughby, who was
-anxious to take the Knoll by the Apex.
-
-There was a tremendous wind, and dust-storms everywhere. In the gullies
-men were burying the dead, not covering them sufficiently. My eyes are
-still full of the dust and the glow of the camp-fires on the hillside,
-and the moonlight. It is an extraordinary country to look across--range
-after range of high hills, precipice and gully, the despair of
-Generals, the grave and oblivion of soldiers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here the diary stops abruptly, and begins again on Saturday, September
-23rd.
-
-_No. 2 Outpost._ After writing the above I had a bad go of fever, and
-was put on to hospital ship. Went aboard with General Birdwood, General
-Godley and Tahu Rhodes. The Generals had come to inspect the New
-Zealand hospital ship, which was excellent. That night there was a very
-heavy fire. I felt some friend of mine would be hit on shore, and the
-next morning I found Charlie B. on board, not badly wounded, hit in the
-side.
-
-My friend Charlie B. had a temper, and was often angry when others
-were calm, but in moments of excitement he was calm to the point of
-phlegm. When we were off Mudros there was a great crash, and a jarring
-of the ship from end to end. I went into Charlie B.’s cabin and said:
-“Come along. They say we’re torpedoed. I’ll help you.” “Where are my
-slippers?” he asked. I said: “Curse your slippers.” “I will not be
-hurried by these Germans,” answered Charlie B., and he had the right of
-it, for we had only had a minor collision with another boat.
-
-At Mudros the majority of the sick and wounded on our hospital ship
-were sent to England, but my friend and I were luckily carried on to
-Egypt.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _September 23rd._ There was a remarkable man on board the
-_Manitou_, Major K. He had led 240 men into a Turkish trench; three had
-returned unwounded, but he got most of his wounded back with eighteen
-men. The Adjutant was killed on his back. He himself had already been
-wounded twice. Finally, he left the trench alone, and turned round and
-faced the Turks at 200 yards. They never fired at him, because, he
-said, “they admired me.” This officer found a D.S.O. waiting for him
-in Egypt, and has since earned the V.C. in France, for which he had
-been previously recommended in South Africa. He and I returned to the
-Dardanelles together while he still had a long, unhealed bayonet wound
-in his leg.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At Alexandria, fortunately for myself, I had relations who were working
-there. I went to the hospital of a friend. It was a great marble
-palace, surrounded by lawns and fountains, and made, at any rate,
-gorgeous within by the loves of the Gods, painted in the colours of the
-Egyptian sunset on the ceilings.
-
-The Englishwomen in Alexandria were working like slaves for the wounded
-and the sick. They did all that was humanly possible to make up for
-the improvidence and the callousness of the home medical authorities.
-Thanks to their untiring and unceasing work, day and night, these
-ladies saved great numbers of British lives.
-
-One day the Sultan came to inspect the hospital where I was a patient.
-For reasons of toilette, I should have preferred not to have been seen
-on that occasion by His Highness, but the royal eye fixed itself upon
-my kimono, and I was taken aside for a few minutes’ conversation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ (_Subsequently written on the Peninsula._) The Sultan said
-that he was very grieved about the Conservative party, because of the
-Coalition, I suppose, and also about Gallipoli. There I cordially
-agreed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I went up to Cairo for a few days, and found the city and life there
-very changed. Shepheard’s was filled with the ghosts of those who had
-left on and since April 12th.
-
-In Egypt the danger of the Canal had passed, but anxiety had not gone
-with it. There was much doubt as to what the Senoussi would be likely
-to do and what consequences their action would have. They had little
-to gain by attacking, but all knew that this would not necessarily
-deter them. I was in Cairo when Fathy Pasha was stabbed, and those in
-authority feared for the life of the Sultan.
-
-My friend Charlie B. and Major K. and I left Alexandria in brilliant
-moonlight. Our boat could do a bare twelve knots an hour. On the
-journey rockets went up at night, S.O.S. signals were sent us, all in
-vain: we were not to be seduced from our steady spinster’s course to
-Mudros. When we again reached that place we found that our sister-ship,
-the _Ramadan_, had been torpedoed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ (_Written September 23rd._) General Godley was on the _Lord
-Nelson_. He had been sick for some time, and had been taking three
-days off. Roger Keyes desperately anxious to go up the Dardanelles,
-come what may. He is the proper man to do it, but I think it’s only
-singeing the King of Spain’s beard.
-
-At Imbros the General, Charlie B. and I had a stormy row ashore and
-a long walk to G.H.Q., where I found Willy Percy, who had been badly
-wounded, now recovering. I saw Tyrrell, G. L. and Dedez. The news had
-just come through of Bulgaria’s mobilization, but they did not know
-against whom. I wonder if the Bulgars will attack both the Serbs and
-the Turks. That would be a topsy-turvy, Balkan thing to do, and might
-suit their book. We ought to have had them in on our side six months
-ago. From G.H.Q. we came back to Anzac. The General has had my dugout
-kept for me in the fort, where Christo and I now live in solitude, for
-all the rest are gone. I found a lot of new uniforms and a magnificent
-cap. When I put this on Christo cried violently: “No, no, no, not until
-we ride into Constantinople as conquerors.”
-
-H.Q. are on the other side of the Turkish fort, in a tiny valley across
-which you can throw a stone. They have all the appearance of a more
-comfortable Pompeii, and are scarcely more alive; it is the quietest
-town I have ever seen; there lies in front a ridge of valley, a dip
-of blue sea and a good deal of the Anafarta plain. The first night on
-arriving the cold was bitter, also next morning. Pleurisy has already
-started. This morning the General went up to the Apex and behind it.
-He was not at all pleased with the fire trenches. He nearly drove C.,
-the officer at that moment instructing the Australians, mad, first by
-criticizing everything--I thought pretty justly--and then by standing
-about in view of the Turks and not worrying about shells or bombs. I
-did my best to get him in. The Australians were all laughing at C. for
-his caution and fussiness. Incidentally, one of the big mortar-bombs
-fell in the trench as we arrived. Hastings is Intelligence officer.
-It’s luck to have got him.
-
-_Sunday, September 24, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ A lovely morning. There
-was a bracing chill of autumn and yet warm air and a smiling, southern
-look across Anafarta plain, with great hills on the other side, stately
-and formidable. Swallows everywhere. Up till now it’s been very silent.
-I thought that the noise of war was past, but bullets and shells have
-been whining and moaning over us. At Anzac yesterday morning they had
-about twenty men hit by one shell, and I saw a lot of mules being
-dragged down to the sea as I went in. We walked through the “Camel’s
-Hump” with Colonel Chauvel and Glasgow, on to No. 1 Outpost, now
-deserted, with the beautiful trench made by the six millionaires. I
-wonder what has happened to them all.
-
-Cazalet, of whom I had grown very fond, is dead, Hornby’s missing. I
-was very sad to hear that Reynell was killed on the night of the 27th,
-when we left. A fine man in every way. His men worshipped him....
-
-A lot of French transports were leaving Egypt as we left, maybe for
-Asia. We shall do nothing more here unless we have an overwhelming
-force. We have never done anything except with a rush. Directly we have
-touched a spade we have ceased to advance, and have gone on adding
-bricks to the wall which we first built and then beat our heads against.
-
-This morning we had a service in the valley, which is extraordinarily
-beautiful. The flies are awful, horrible, lethargic; they stick to one
-like gum. The men in the trenches are wearing the head-dresses that
-Egypt has sent. I went with the General in the afternoon to Anzac. We
-walked back as shelling began. We had one whizz round us, and a man
-fell beside me on the beach. I heard a tremendous smack, and thought
-he was dead, and began to drag him in to cover, but he was all right,
-though a bullet had thumped him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The flies and their habits deserve to live in a diary of their own.
-They were horrible in themselves, and made more horrible by our
-circumstances and their habits. They lived upon the dead, between the
-trenches, and came bloated from their meal to fasten on the living. One
-day I killed a fly on my leg that made a splash of blood that half a
-crown would not have covered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Monday, September 27, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ Last night F.
-dined. He said that the Indians could get back from Mudros if they
-gave the hospital orderly ten rupees. The hospital orderly would then
-certify them as having dysentery. Most of them did not want to go back,
-some did. When they were reluctant about fighting, he thought it was
-due to the fact that it was Moslems they were against.
-
-This morning the General and I went round Colonel Anthill’s trenches.
-Billy H. was there, as independent and casual as ever. He came out here
-as a sergeant and is now Acting Brigade Major. I am giving him a shirt.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Billy H. was not the only member of his family who was independent.
-His father, a well-known Australian doctor, on one occasion gave one
-of the chiefs of the British R.A.M.C. his sincere opinion about the
-treatment of the sick and wounded. After a while the chief of the
-R.A.M.C. said: “You don’t seem to understand that it is I who am
-responsible for these things.” “Oh yes, I do,” said the Australian
-doctor, “but it’s not you I’m getting at; it’s the fool who put you
-there.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Thursday, September 28, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ Last night
-I dined with S. B. and H. Woods. Walked back through a still, moonlit
-night, with the sea and the air just breathing. Very bright stars. We
-sent up flares. The General was ill this morning, so did not go out.
-The Greek interpreters have been called up for mobilization. This
-Greek mobilization ought to do some good about the German submarines.
-Last night at Anzac they had iron needles dropped from aeroplanes.
-I always objected to this. This morning over our heads there was a
-Taube firing hard at something with a machine-gun. It produces an
-unpleasant impression, I suppose because it is unfamiliar, to hear
-the noise straight above one. Two bombs were dropped--at least, I
-suppose they were. They fell with a progressive whistle, but not close
-to us; another big one, however, an 8-inch one, I believe, from the
-Dardanelles, fell with a tired and sensuous thud just over the ridge.
-
-_Wednesday, September 29, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ The General went out
-at nine this morning, P. and I with him. He went to the Apex and round.
-In the evening Kettle and I talked in the fort.
-
-_Friday, October 1, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ Yesterday morning General
-Godley, General Birdwood, de Crespigny and I went round the trenches,
-Apex, Anthill’s, etc., from 9.30 until 3. A very hot day; I wish that
-Generals were a hungrier, thirstier race. We had some light shelling,
-into which the Generals walked without winking or reason, though they
-made us take intervals.
-
-G. L. has gone home. Ross turned up last night; glad to see him again.
-He said that a statement was to be made almost at once, and that we
-weren’t going to be here for the winter. He had a notion that the
-Italians were going to take our place....
-
-This morning there was a very heavy mist; the hills and the sea were
-curtained in it. My clothes were wringing wet. The Greek interpreters
-have been called up by the Greek mobilization and have gone to Imbros,
-some of them to try to avoid going. They have, says Christo, “kria
-kardia” (cold feet.) Xenophon, in a moment of enthusiasm, changed
-Turkish for Greek nationality. He now speaks of the days of his Ottoman
-nationality with a solemn and mournful affection, as of a golden age.
-He envies his cousin, Pericles, who was not so carried away. Kyriakidis
-is too old to go, thank goodness.
-
-Going into Anzac with the General, and glad to be quit of the trenches.
-It’s a weary business walking through these narrow mountain trenches,
-hearing the perpetual iteration of the same commands. The trenches are
-curiously personal. Some are so tidy as to be almost red-tape--the
-names of the streets, notices, etc., everywhere--and others slums.
-(_Later._) I went into Anzac with the General to see General Birdwood,
-but he had gone out to see the bombardment from the sea. The General
-went off to the New Zealand hospital ship, _Mahino_. I went to get P.
-off, who was ill. The General and I had a very philosophical talk
-coming back. There was a radiance over Anzac; the sunken timbership
-shone against the sunset, with the crew half of them naked. Shells
-screamed over us, and in the Headquarters hollow parts of them came
-whimpering down.
-
-_Saturday, October 2, 1915._ _No. 2 Outpost._ This morning General
-Godley, Colonel Artillery Johnson and I went round to see the guns,
-all across the Anafarta plain. Yesterday they had been shelling a good
-deal and had killed some Gurkhas.... We trudged about in the open,
-the Turkish hills in a semicircle round us. We kept about fifty yards
-apart.... I thought it very risky for the General; however, nothing
-happened. Have been meeting various school acquaintances these days....
-
-_Sunday, October 3, 1915._ The General and Charlie B. went to Suvla.
-I lunched with S. B. and H. Woods. We played chess. A good deal of
-shelling. A fair number hit....
-
-_Monday, October 4, 1915._ Changed my dugout this morning with
-an infinity of trouble, I didn’t like doing it; it involved men
-standing on the roof, and if one of them had been hit I should
-have felt responsible. However, we did it all right. I stole some
-corrugated iron, and am well off. This morning the Turks had a fierce
-demonstration. The bullets kicked up the dust at the mouth of the
-gully. Colonel Artillery Johnson just missed being hit, but only
-one man struck. They shelled us with big stuff that came over tired
-and groaning, bursting with a beastly noise and torrents of smoke.
-General C. lunched. He said people sent curiously inappropriate stores
-sometimes. In the middle of the summer they had sent us here mufflers
-and cardigan jackets, and two thousand swagger canes. These were now
-at Mudros. Chauvel has taken over command while the General is sick. He
-borrowed all my novels.
-
-_Tuesday, October 5, 1915._ General C.O. turned up. He said we are
-going to attack through Macedonia. Heaven help us! Bulgaria has been
-given twenty-four hours’ ultimatum by Russia.
-
-Went into Anzac, to go by boat to Suvla. Met C., who was at W---- (my
-private school). He said there was no boat. I went on and played chess,
-coming back through one of the most beautiful evenings we have had, the
-sea a lake of gold and the sky a lake of fire; but C. and I agreed we
-would not go back to Anzac or to W----, if we could help it.
-
-_Wednesday, October 6, 1915._ I was going into Suvla with Hastings, but
-in the morning a Turkish deserter, Ahmed Ali, came in. He promised to
-show us two machine-guns, which he did (one German, immovable, and the
-other Turkish, movable), and seven guns which he had collected; this
-he failed to do, and also to produce three more comrades by firing a
-Turkish rifle as a signal.
-
-In the afternoon I had a signal from S. B. to say he was leaving, sick,
-for Egypt. I walked in to see, and found he had gastritis....
-
-_Thursday, October 7, 1915._ _N.Z. and A. H.Q._ This morning we went up
-with Ahmed Ali, and lay waiting for the Turkish deserters until after
-six. One Turkish rifle shot, a thicker sound than ours, was fired at
-Kidd’s Post, but no Turks came. Ahmed Ali was distressed. The dawn was
-fine; clouds of fire all over the sky.
-
-The Turkish deserters and prisoners were put through a number of
-inquisitions. There was first of all the local officer, who had
-captured the Turk and was creditably anxious to anticipate the
-discoveries of the Intelligence. Then there was G.H.Q., intensely
-jealous of its privileges, and then Divisional H.Q., waiting rather
-sourly for the final examination of the exhausted Turks.
-
-The Turkish private soldiers, being Moslems, were inspired rather with
-the theocratic ideals of comradeship than by the _esprit de corps_
-of nationality, and spoke freely. They were always well treated, and
-this probably loosened their tongues, but Ahmed Ali was more voluble
-than the majority of his comrades, and I append information which he
-supplied as an illustration of our examinations and their results. The
-two sides of Turkish character were very difficult to reconcile. On the
-one hand, we were faced in the trenches by the stubborn and courageous
-Anatolian peasant, who fought to the last gasp; on the other hand, in
-our dugouts we had a friendly prisoner, who would overwhelm us with
-information. “The fact is you are just a bit above our trenches. If
-only you can get your fire rather lower, you will be right into them,
-and here exactly is the dugout of our Captain, Riza Kiazim Bey, a poor,
-good man. You miss him all the time. If you will take the line of that
-pine-tree, you will get him.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Saturday, October 9, 1915._ _A. and N.Z. H.Q._ Ahmed Ali
-proposed coming to England with me when I went there.... Last night we
-had bad weather; a sort of whirlwind came down. It whizzed away the
-iron sheeting over my dugout and poured in a cascade of water, soaking
-everything. Iron sheeting was flying about like razors; it was not
-possible to light candles. Finally, Ryrie came and lent me a torch, and
-I slept, wet but comfortable, under my cloak. Our people and the Turks
-both got excited, and heavy rifle fire broke out, as loud as the storm.
-An angry dawn, very windy and rifles crackling.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At this point the diary ends, for the writer was evacuated on the
-hospital ship, and did not return to Active Service for several months.
-Of all those who had sailed from Egypt with General Godley on April
-12th, the General himself remained the only man who saw the campaign
-through from the first to the last day, with the rare exception of a
-few days of sickness.
-
-
-
-
-KUT
-
-1916
-
-[Illustration: _SIFTON, PRAED & CO LTD. ST JAMES’ ST. LONDON S.W._]
-
-
-
-
-KUT, 1916
-
-
-After some months of convalescence, I was passed fit for Active
-Service. Admiral Wemyss, Commander-in-Chief of the East Indian Fleet,
-had done me the honour to ask me to serve under him, when I was well
-again, as his liaison and Intelligence officer. I accepted very gladly,
-for I knew how devoted to him were all those who served Admiral Wemyss.
-The unappreciative War Office showed no reluctance in dispensing with
-my services, but my orders got lost, and it was only late in February
-when I left. When my weak qualifications in the way of languages were
-put before the Department concerned, the brief comment was: “This must
-be an immoral man to know so many languages.”
-
-About this time the question was perpetually debated as to whether war
-should be made mainly on the one great front or _en petits paquets_;
-that is, practically all over the globe. “Hit your enemy where he is
-weakest,” said some, while others were violently in favour of striking
-where he was strongest.
-
-When I left England, she was in a curious state of official indecision.
-It would then have been, obviously, greatly to our advantage had we
-been able to get the Turks out of the war, for the collapse of Bulgaria
-would almost certainly have followed. On the other hand, Russia had
-been promised Constantinople and the Church of Santa Sophia, and while
-these promises held it was idle to think that the Grand Turk would
-compromise or resign his position as head of Islam. So the dread in
-the minds of Englishmen of friction with Russia was unconsciously
-adding square leagues to the British Empire, by forcing us reluctantly
-to attack an unwilling foe. In the end, we chose both Scylla and
-Charybdis, for the Turks remained in the war, Russia went out. Yet we
-survived, victoriously. Allah is greatest.
-
-The story of this campaign is the most difficult to tell. The writer
-was in a humble position, but in a position of trust, and can only
-record what he saw and the things with which all men’s ears were too
-familiar in Mesopotamia.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _Monday, February 28, 1916._ _S.S. “Mooltan.”_ _Off
-Marseilles._ The Germans are by way of not torpedoing our boats
-until Wednesday, but to-day is St. Leander’s Day, not a good day, on
-the sea, at this time of year. They have torpedoed four boats these
-last days near Marseilles. We are off the coast of Corsica, dull and
-unattractive.... John Baird is here....
-
-_Wednesday, March 1, 1916._ _SS. “Mooltan.”_ Yesterday J. B., Captain
-Cummings and I went ashore at Malta. We heard of the torpedoing of
-the _Maloja_ off Dover. I saw Admiral Limpus, an old friend; then
-dined with Admiral de Robeck. I saw R. K. He still wants to go up the
-Dardanelles. This seems to me to be a war of ants and attrition, and
-no one ought to think of the glory of the Army or the Navy before
-winning the war. I do not think he cares if he is at the bottom of the
-sea, as long as the country and the Navy is covered with imperishable
-splendour. He talked about the blizzard as if it had been a zephyr.
-You can’t beat that sort. A lot of old Admirals rolled up. They had
-rejoined long past the age as Commanders of Sweepers, or in any and
-every kind of capacity. The spirit of their Elizabethan ancestors was
-not more tough or fine than theirs.... Left J. B. and Jack Marriott.
-
-_Monday, March 6, 1916._ _Ismailia._ We landed without incident from
-the _Mooltan_. The last day, at luncheon, there were two tremendously
-loud bangs, the lids of hatches falling; they sounded exactly like
-cannon shot. Nobody moved at lunch, which I thought was good. Am
-staying with O’Sullivan. He has been eighteen years in Central Africa.
-To-night I went to the Club and found Kettle, alive, whom I thought
-dead--very glad to find it wasn’t true--and lots of Anzacs. Then went
-for a walk with the Admiral; I understand why men like serving him.
-Afterwards tea with General Birdwood and a yarn about the Peninsula.
-All the men from Anzac talk of it with something like reverence. I
-dined with General Godley. I have been doing work between the Navy and
-the Army; found them very stiff. Yesterday they said: “What can you
-want to know?” Also, in my humble opinion, what they are doing is wrong.
-
-_Friday, March 10, 1916._ _Cairo._ Back again at Zamalek. They have
-sown a proper, green, English lawn instead of the clover which we
-put in for economy. Saw C. in the evening. Agreed that for the time
-being our Arab policy was finished.... If the Russians go ahead and
-threaten Constantinople, the French agreement may stand. If, on
-the other hand, they cannot get beyond Trebizond, then Arabia will
-probably be a Confederation, perhaps nominally under the Turks. The
-Powers would probably look favourably at this, as it would be a return
-to the bad old principle. It would constitute one more extension of
-the life of the Turk, outside Turkey, made miserable to him and his
-subjects, during which all his legatees would intrigue to improve
-their own position. They would go on fermenting discontent amongst the
-subjects of the Turk, and when it did not exist they would create it.
-It is the old cynicism that this war has done nothing to get rid of.
-On the other hand, if annexation follows there will be two results:
-(1) The population in the annexed French and Russian spheres will be
-rigorously conscripted. I think we ought to do our best to prevent the
-Arabs being the subjects and victims of High Explosive Powers. They
-themselves don’t realize what it means, and simply look forward to the
-boredom of having to beat their swords into ploughshares and take up
-the dullness of civilization. The second result is that we shall have
-vast, conterminous frontiers with France and Russia, and that we shall
-be compelled to become a huge military power and adopt the Prussianism
-that we are fighting. There ought to be a self-denying ordinance about
-annexation. We should none of us annex.
-
-_Wednesday, March 8, 1916._ _Cairo._ I arranged for Storrs to come
-down the Red Sea with the Commander-in-Chief. In the evening I saw
-the Sultan at the Palace. He prophesied that the Russians would be in
-Trebizond in eight days, and that we should be in Solloum in the same
-time; he put our arrival at Bagdad at the end of May. The snows were
-melting, he said, and the waters of the Tigris and Euphrates rising;
-the Turks might be cut off, and might have to surrender.... He said we
-did not understand the Moslems or what was their fraternity. In his
-hall he had two signs, “God and His Prophet,” and the other, “I live
-by God’s will!” Any Moslem who entered saw these, and knew him for
-his brother. He would rather have been a farmer, dressed as a farmer,
-and, he added, rather quaintly, sitting in his automobile, amongst his
-fields, than in his Palace with interviews before him all day long.
-
-He had accepted the Throne when it had been offered to him after
-consideration, because the good of Egypt was bound up in our success,
-and as Sultan he could help us. He regretted he had not been allowed
-to help more. He was loyal, but neither we, nor any man, could buy
-his honour. We could throw him over at any moment. So be it; he knew
-what his honour and individual dignity demanded. General Maxwell, he
-said, understood the Moslems. Even the Duke of Connaught could hardly
-have done better in Egypt. He, the Sultan, had deplored Gallipoli,
-both before and after. We English were _bons enfants_, but did not
-understand the East. He gave many messages to his friends, especially
-General Birdwood.
-
-_Thursday, March 9, 1916._ _Cairo._ Saw Jaafar Pasha, a prisoner.
-He was wounded by a sword-thrust in the arm. They had had a good
-old-fashioned mêlée. He was just off shopping, taking his captivity
-with great philosophy. It was beautiful weather. The Bougainvillea was
-purple and scarlet all over the house. It looked as fairylike as a
-Japanese dwelling.
-
-_Friday, March 10, 1916._ _Cairo._ The Admiral came up on Thursday
-night. I lunched with General Maxwell. Bron came. He said his leg
-troubled him flying, but he loved it. I saw his Colonel, who told me
-that he was worried, as if he fell in the desert he was done, as he
-could not walk great distances like the others, with his wooden leg.
-
-I have got a “Who’s Who,” for Arabia, but I want a “Where’s Where.”
-
-_Saturday, March 11, 1916._ _Ismailia._ The Australians have
-been having high old times in Cairo. We have to pay for their
-extraordinarily fine fighting qualities, but it’s a pity that they
-can’t be more quiet.... They admire General Birdwood, who’s got a
-difficult job. We owed a lot to their initiative at Anzac, when all
-their officers were killed. Salutes, after all, matter less than
-fighting. In peace they resent General Godley’s discipline, and that’s
-natural, but it’s inevitable, and they know it, when it comes to
-fighting. Charlie Bentinck came down with us, going home; I hope he
-gets there all right.
-
-_Tuesday, March 14, 1916._ _Ismailia._ Maxwell is now definitely
-recalled.... It’s a pity to take away the man whose name is everything
-in Egypt. On Saturday I dined with the Admiral and Potts of the
-Khedive’s yacht. Like Jimmy Watson, he was very fond of his ex-Chief.
-Sunday I lunched with the Admiral and General Murray, and saw my old
-friend Tyrrell. Yesterday the Admiral left with Philip Neville for
-Solloum. I should have liked to have been in that show.
-
-Here are criticisms and indescretions, which are better left lying at
-the bottom of a drawer....
-
- * * * * *
-
-All are very sad about Desmond Fitzgerald’s death. There was no
-one quite like him. He would have played a great part. He was
-extraordinarily fine, too fine to be a type, though he was a type, but
-not of these times. I shall never forget him during the Retreat, always
-calm and always cheerful. Bron came, and we had a long talk.
-
-_Wednesday, March 15, 1916._ _Cairo._ This morning I saw Jaafar Pasha
-for a minute. He is becoming less and less a prisoner. Was off to shop,
-and said that he heard that Cairo was a nice town. He was unmoved by
-the war. I said to M. that the war ought to prevent one’s pulses ever
-fluttering again. M. said to me: “Yes, unless it makes them flutter for
-ever.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here there followed naval, strategical, political and commercial
-considerations which are irrelevant to this published diary.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ _March 15, 1916._ Went to the citadel to see the old Sheikh.
-It was a lovely day of heat, fresh winds, clear air and flowers
-everywhere.
-
-_Wednesday, March 22, 1916._ _Ismailia._ I have neglected my diary.
-Yesterday I went and said good-bye to General Birdwood. General Godley,
-he and everybody went to see Maxwell off. It was a very remarkable
-demonstration; all were there--red hats and tarbouches, blue gowns and
-the khaki of the private soldier. We were all downhearted at his going.
-
-To-day I rode with Temperley through the groves of Ismailia, out by
-the lagoon. The desert was in splendid form. The Australians were
-bathing everywhere and French sailors were paddling. I lunched with
-General Russell.... I dined with General Godley. All the talk was of
-Mesopotamia. Some one said at dinner that no securely beleaguered force
-had ever cut its way out. I could only think of Xenophon, who, General
-Gwynne said, quite truly, was not beleaguered, and also of Plevna, that
-didn’t get out.
-
-_Sunday, March 26, 1916._ _Cairo._ This morning we leave for
-Mesopotamia, by the Viceroy’s train. He arrived yesterday, having
-been shot at by a torpedo on the way. The soldiers are becoming
-discontented. Their pay is four months due, and when they get it they
-are paid in threepenny bits for which they only receive twopence in
-exchange. Hence their irritation. Tommy Howard’s brigade has nearly all
-got commissions. There are now forty-seven officers and only enough
-soldiers left for their servants. Saw Uncle Bob G., who reminded me of
-Sayid Talib, the Lion of Mesopotamia and the terror of the Turks, with
-whom on one occasion I travelled from Constantinople. Sayid Talib once
-wanted to get rid of a very good Vali of Basrah. He went round to all
-the keepers of hashish dens and infamous houses and got them to draw up
-a petition: “We, the undersigned, hear with anguish that our beloved
-Vali is to be removed by the Merciful Government. He is a good man, has
-been just to all, and most just to us, who now implore the mercy of the
-Sublime Porte.” Constantinople was in a virtuous mood. The experts of
-Basrah were summoned. They expressed their horror at the support which
-the Vali was receiving from all the worst elements in the town. The
-Vali was removed. Sayid Talib scored. He was on our side, and remained
-in Basrah, but we made him a prisoner and sent him to India, I believe.
-
-_Monday, March 27, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Euryalus._” _Gulf of Suez._
-Yesterday, Sunday, the Prince of Wales, the Viceroy, General Birdwood
-and the High Commissioner travelled down to Ismailia. Storrs and I were
-also of the company. General Godley was at the station to meet the
-Prince, and a lot of others.
-
-_Tuesday, March 28, 1916._ _H.M.S._ “_Euryalus.”_ I wonder what
-situation we shall find in Mesopotamia. Willcocks in Cairo said that
-the Arabs were feeding Townshend’s people. “In the old days,” he said,
-“Elijah was fed by the ravens--that is, ’orab,’ which means Arabs as
-well as ravens.” That was how he explained that miracle.
-
-It’s getting very hot. I am working at Hindustani. The Staff here are
-all first class. It’s luck to find Colonel de Sausmarez, who was on the
-_Bacchante_, now promoted.
-
-_Thursday, March 30, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Euryalus.”_ Took a bad fall
-down the ladder. Storrs sleeps in a casemate. The only ventilation
-is through a gun whose breech has now been closed. Have been writing
-précis and political notes. We are bound to make mistakes in dealing
-with the Arabs, but they need not matter if they are passive mistakes;
-they can be corrected. If they are active, they are much harder to
-remedy.... Our people divide the world into two categories. The
-Ulstermen, the Serbs and the Portuguese are good, loyal people, because
-they are supposed to put our interests first, whereas the Bulgars,
-the Arabs, etc., are beastly traitors because sometimes a thought of
-self-interest crosses their minds.
-
-It’s raining hard this morning and it’s cooler. Hope to get into the
-trenches at Aden, but doubt there being time. Am learning Hindustani. A
-number of the same words mean different things. _Kal_ means yesterday
-or to-morrow, i.e. one day distant; but on the other hand _parson_
-means the day after to-morrow or the day before yesterday. This must
-occasionally make muddles about appointments.
-
-_Friday, March 31, 1916._ _Aden._ Got up early this morning and went
-over to the Northbrook. The Turks at Lahej are being bombarded. The
-Admiral’s going part of the way to see it. Six seaplanes off. A heavy,
-hot, grey day. The Turks are fighting well. There is no ill-will here.
-They say the Turk is a member of the club, but has not been in it
-lately. We are feeding the Turks and they feed us. Caravans come and
-go as usual. There are great difficulties in the way of blockade. We
-can’t hit our enemies without also hitting our friends, and yet if we
-do nothing our prestige suffers.
-
-A conference this morning. Fifty years ago Colonel Pelly said that the
-Turks were like the Thirty-nine Articles; every one accepts them, but
-nobody remembers them or what they are. India seems extremely apathetic
-about Aden. We left early this morning. Last night I saw Colonel Jacob,
-who has been twelve years at Aden and in the hinterland. In the evening
-I went with the Brigadier to the Turkish prisoners. They said they had
-surrendered because life was impossible in the Yemen. They had been six
-to seven years without pay, had had bad food and perpetual fighting.
-Then they had been put on a ship to go back to their families, then
-taken off again and sent to fight us. Human nature could not stand it,
-they said. They liked their Commander, Said Pasha, who was good to the
-soldiers, but they complained of their non-commissioned officers....
-
-We seem to be perpetually changing our officers here. This C.O. is
-the fifth in a short time. Jacob is the only man who talks Arabic,
-and there is not a soul who talks Turkish. Wrote to Egypt to get an
-interpreter.
-
-_Sunday, April 2, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Euryalus.”_ We are steaming through
-a grey-black gloom, like an English autumn afternoon, only the
-thermometer is 92 and there are no rooks cawing. There are lowering
-skies everywhere. Talked about Arabia yesterday with the Admiral.
-
-Have been re-reading Whigan’s _Persia_ and other Gulf books. Wish that
-I had George Lloyd’s memoranda. The present position is unsatisfactory.
-We have policed and lighted and pacified this Gulf for a hundred years,
-and we are entitled to a more definite status. We ought to have Bunder
-Abbas. Otherwise, if the Russians come down the Gulf to Bunder Abbas,
-they hold the neck of the bottle of the Persian Gulf and we shall be
-corked in our own bottle; they would be on the flank of India; they
-would be fed by a railway, while our large naval station would be
-cooking away in Elphinstone’s Inlet (which is only another name for
-a slow process of frying), where we should have battle casualties in
-peace-time from the heat. Elphinstone’s Inlet to Bushire is a poor
-Wei-hai-wei to a first-rate Port Arthur. Then, if the Russians come
-down, any defensive measures which we may be forced into taking
-will appear aggressive when the Russians are on the spot. They would
-not appear aggressive now. We have a prescriptive right to Bunder
-Abbas, which we ought to strengthen. It doesn’t involve territorial
-annexations.
-
-_Monday, April 3, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Euryalus.”_ Last night I had a long
-and rather acrimonious argument with ---- and ---- on the question of
-Arab policy. They said: “You must punish the Arabs if they don’t come
-in on our side.” I said: “You have no means of punishing them. All you
-can do is to antagonize them.”
-
-There is news of a Zeppelin raid on London. Everybody is anxious.
-
-_Tuesday, April 4, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Euryalus.”_ _Muskat._ Last night
-I had my fourth Hindustani lesson, a very easy one. Jack Marriott is
-extraordinarily quick at languages. My teacher said that his affianced
-wife is fourteen and that he kept her in a cage at Bushire. Talked with
-the Admiral and Captain Burmester....
-
-To-day is a wild day, Arabia crouching, yellow like a lion, in a
-sand-storm, and spray and sand flying in layers on the ship. All the
-land is lurid and the sea foaming and the sky black. If only there
-had been some sharks at sea and lions on shore, it would have been a
-perfect picture. This afternoon it cleared and became beautiful. We
-passed a desolate coast with no sign of life, where it looked as if a
-man would fry in half an hour in summer. A few dhows on the sea were
-all we saw. My last journey here came back vividly and the time at
-Bahrein after we were wrecked in the _Africa_.
-
-Wireless came into Basrah to say the spring offensive was beginning.
-We put into Muskat. I found that the Resident, Colonel Ducat, was a
-neighbour. There has been a row at Chahbar, and the _Philomel_, which
-we expected to find here, has left, telegraphed for this morning.
-The news here is that the tribes intend to attack Muskat, but it’s
-not believed. We went ashore this evening, and a Beluchi boy took
-the Admiral and all of us round. The people who had not been to the
-East before were enchanted by the quiet, the scent of musk, and the
-evening behind the Sultan’s Palace. Last time I was here was on
-Christmas Day, with Leland Buxton. I was very sick, carrying a huge
-bag of Maria Teresa dollars. The Portuguese forts and the names of the
-ships that come here, painted in huge white letters on the cliffs, are
-the remarkable things about the place. There is a sort of a silent
-roll-call of the ships. The men like writing their names up in white
-letters. Matrah is round the corner, and looks bigger than Muskat. You
-have got to get to it by boat. Muskat itself is completely cut off. I
-saw a straight-looking Arab from Asir who had been with the Turks and
-had information, and asked the Agent to send him on to Aden.
-
-_Wednesday, April 5, 1916._ _Muskat._ Came ashore early this morning.
-Then came the Admiral and his Staff, and we went to the Sultan’s house.
-He had about thirty followers. We drank sherbet like scented lip-salve,
-and the sailors didn’t like it. The Admiral and the Sultan talked.
-Later the Sultan came here with seven A.D.C.’s and a nephew who talked
-very good English which he had learned at Harrow. The Sultan has got a
-lot of rather nice-looking little horses and a monstrous goat with ears
-that are about 3 feet long. The Sultan gets 5 per cent. of the customs
-of this place. Jack Marriott went to see a prisoner in the Portuguese
-fort. He was Sheikh of a village in which a murder had been committed.
-They had failed to catch the murderer, and so the Sheikh had to suffer
-imprisonment himself. Not a bad plan, really. It’s the old Anglo-Saxon
-idea. That sort of thing discourages men from pushing for power and
-makes them very energetic, for their own sakes, when they have power.
-Everything seems quiet in the hinterland. The people here are Bunyas,
-who cheat the Sultan, slim aristocratic Arabs, and gorilla-like
-negroes. They are mostly armed to the teeth. Sheets of rain fell this
-afternoon.
-
-_Thursday, April 6, 1916._ _Persian Gulf._ We left early this morning.
-Some very fine king-fish were brought aboard, about 4 feet long. Great
-heat. We had an excellent telegram about Gorringe’s offensive in
-Mesopotamia; the Turks driven back. The Admiral in great spirits. I
-am tremendously glad, because I have always felt that we were coming
-to a tragedy. I remember the telegram read out to us at Anzac and the
-cheers--“The Turks are beaten! The way lies open to Bagdad!”--and our
-enthusiasm and the disappointment after it, and I did not think this
-would succeed. Hanna, on the left bank of the Tigris, is reported
-taken. That ought to open Sinn on the right bank.
-
-_Friday, April 7, 1916._ _Persian Gulf._... To-day we were told by
-wireless telegram that we had a slave of the Sultan’s on board. Quite
-true; so we have.... He said he had been with the Sultan eight years
-and that if he were sent back he feared for his throat. He drew his
-finger across it very tenderly, and everybody roared with laughter. I
-do not see that the Sultan has a leg to stand on. If the man went to
-him eight years ago, he went either of his own free will, in which case
-he can leave, or he was sold, and we do not recognize anything except
-bondage, no traffic in slavery.
-
-The _Philomel’s_ prisoners have been transferred to us. One of them
-looks like an old nobleman. His name is Shah Dulla. He held up Chahbar
-for 4,000 rupees, like other old noblemen, and was captured with seven
-bearded patriarchs by the _Philomel_ four days ago. They are dignified
-people.
-
-_Friday, April 8, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Euryalus.”_ _Bushire._ A very cold
-morning with a clear sky. It’s a nuisance having lost all my coats.
-Here I leave Edward. I hope he will be all right. He is to follow by
-the first opportunity with the other servants and my kit. McKay, who
-is a jolly fellow, will look after him. The news this morning is that
-we have again improved our position and have taken the second Turkish
-line. The Russians are advancing. There was a fight here a couple of
-nights ago. Our Agent, his brother and four sepoys were killed last
-night at Lingah.
-
-_Sunday, April 9, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Imogene.”_ _Shat-el-Arab._ Yesterday
-Commodore Wake came aboard.... He said that an officer had put land
-mines down, and that some time after this officer had been recalled.
-People in Bushire naturally wanted him either to remove or to mark
-his land mines, but he said that they were all right, as they were
-only exploded by electricity. The following night, however, there were
-loud explosions when dogs gambolled over these mines, so people still
-walk like Agag, and walking is not a popular form of exercise round
-Bushire. To-day we are in a brown waste of waters that I remember well,
-a dismal hinterland to a future Egypt. We passed a hospital ship early
-this morning, in these yellow shallow waters. It reminded me of the
-Dardanelles, but there it was much better, for there the sea and sky
-were beautiful and the climate, by comparison, excellent.
-
-Ages ago, in Egypt, Machel used to talk of ghosts. This ship conjures
-them up all right--trips with Sir Nicholas and the children to the
-island and many other people, some of them still in Constantinople.
-Sir Nicholas would have been surprised if he could have seen the name
-of his yacht written on the rocks at Muskat, and, as the Admiral said,
-he would not have liked any one else in command of his yacht, here or
-in any other waters. Townshend has telegraphed some time ago to say he
-could only hold out until April 1st. Here we are at the 9th.
-
-_Sunday, April 10, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Imogene.”_ _Kurna._ Yesterday we
-arrived at Basra. It looked very beautiful and green, but we only had
-a short time. Everything seemed in a state of great confusion. Two
-Generals came aboard. They said we had taken two out of three lines of
-the trenches that we had got to take in the first attack. Then our men
-had been checked. We ought to have taken the third line last night.
-The Sinn position still remains to be taken. If we had been successful
-last night (and we ought to have heard this morning), we have got a
-chance of relieving Townshend. If not, I am afraid there is not much
-chance.... The doctors are being pretty hotly criticized, also the
-Royal Indian Marine, though how they can be expected to know this river
-I can’t see. Apparently they asked for iron barges from India and were
-given wooden barges that the banks and the current continually break.
-They asked here for one type of river-craft from home, and were told
-they must have another. Lynch out here says that Lynch in London has
-never been consulted, though they deny this at home. The troops have
-only two days’ supplies. The soldiers in Basra were cheerful; the
-wounded also, for the first time, were cheerful, because they thought
-it had been worth it and that we are going to succeed....
-
-There is a great storm getting up. The river’s a vast rolling flood
-of yellow water, palm-trees beyond and again beyond that, marshes and
-glimpses of a skeleton land, with marsh Arabs always in the background,
-like ghouls, swarming on every battlefield, killing and robbing the
-wounded on both sides. The Turks, they say in Basra, had said: “Let
-us both have a truce and go for the Arabs and then we can turn to and
-fight again.” Nureddin, the Turkish Commander-in-Chief, is supposed to
-have been at Harrow with Townshend. I should think that it was really
-a _pension_ at Lausanne. I saw P. Z. Cox yesterday. He and Lady Cox
-were very good to me years ago in the Gulf.... The Russians have not
-yet met any considerable Turkish force. If we do not relieve Townshend,
-and have to fall back, we shall be attacked by all the Arabs, who are
-well armed. They say a Royal Commission is being sent to India because
-at home they anticipate a failure here and want a scapegoat, which they
-have already provided in Nixon.
-
-I dined with Gertrude Bell, Millborrow, whom I had last seen at
-Bahrein, and Wilson, whom I had known before. We transferred here at
-Kurna from the _Imogene_ on to a tiny Admiralty gunboat, as usual
-leaving all our kit. Dick Bevan says that he has a vision of perpetual
-landings and expeditions until we arrive in China, with always the
-same troubles, too few mules, too many A.P.M.’s, etc. This is a war
-threshold to conjure up dreams and visions. It would be hard to find
-one more tragic. It’s a curious fate that sends us a second time,
-unprepared, to one of the richest countries in the world that, like
-Egypt, has combined fertility and desert, with a stream controlling its
-future.
-
-_Tuesday, April 11, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Snakefly.”_ Monday night we got
-off the _Imogene_ on to the _Snakefly_, one of the twelve Admiralty
-gunboats built for this expedition. The Admiralty don’t seem able to
-stop building them, now they’ve started. They were sent out here in
-pieces, then put together. One has been taken by the Turks.[24] The
-_Snakefly_ draws 2 feet 9 inches only. Webster is her captain. We
-slept on deck all right. We saw practically no traffic at first on the
-river, and could not understand why we did not pass boats coming back
-empty for supplies. We passed many Indian troops, mainly on the left
-bank of the river; also isolated stations with telegraph-masters as
-chiefs. These men go out two or four miles into the desert with only
-a couple of rifles. These small posts contain the maximum of boredom
-and anxiety, because there is nothing to do, and if any force of Arabs
-came along they would be done in. An enterprising Indian sentry fired
-at us in the night. We passed dour, scowling Arabs in villages and
-groups on the bank with flocks and herds, buffaloes and goats, men more
-savage than the Philistines, but armed with rifles. An almost endless
-column of our cavalry wound its way through marsh and desert, over the
-green grass, and here and there fires sent up their smoke where meals
-were cooked. It struck me as more curious than the Australians round
-the Pyramids. At 6 p.m. we reached Ali Gharbi. I talked to an officer
-of the --th Punjabis. They were all very depressed at the failure of
-Aylmer’s attack on the 8th March.... Townshend was the man they swore
-by. The 4th Devons, where John Kennaway is, are said to be at the
-front. There are flies that bite like bulldogs everywhere. Each night
-we have had lightning over towards Kut like a sort of malignant and
-fantastic Star of Bethlehem to light us on.
-
-_Wednesday, April 12, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Snakefly.”_ Last night the
-weather broke. The Admiral’s got a cabin about 6 feet long by 2-1/2
-across. He put his head out of the window and said: “Would any of you
-fellows like to come in?” It was a beastly night. Our clothes are the
-thinnest tropical khaki, and they tear like a woman’s veil. There was
-no shelter. I got into a conning-tower, like a telescope, but finally
-walked about. There seemed to be people’s faces everywhere on deck,
-though there was a lot of water. I kept my dictionary dry. Now it’s
-fine and bright. At seven this morning, when I had gone below, a Boy
-Scout of eighteen, one of the crew, went overboard. He was rescued
-almost at once, and swam lightly and gallantly. He was lucky. To-day is
-the 12th, my lucky day, but I have only got one extra shirt and one
-blanket, and a Turkish dictionary for a pillow....
-
-Everything seems greater and greater chaos.... We started this campaign
-against one of the great military Powers of the world with two brigades
-of Indians, who ought not to have been used at all, if it could have
-been avoided, on this ground, which to them is holy. We started with
-the wrong type of boat, and also Indian Generals who looked on the
-expedition as a frontier campaign.... If we fail to relieve Townshend,
-I suppose the best thing to do would be to cut our losses and retire
-to Kurna and hold that line, but if we do that the Turks can fortify
-the river and make it impregnable. We ran on to the bank last night,
-and stayed there. We spent an uncomfortable wet night, but got off all
-right this morning. There was an encampment close by. We couldn’t make
-out if they were friends or enemies; the Admiral didn’t bother. We all
-want a clean pair of socks and fewer mosquitoes.
-
-_Thursday, April 13, 1916._ _Near Sanayat._ It was at noon yesterday
-that we arrived at Ali Gharbi. The Admiral saw General Lake. We are
-cruelly handicapped by lacking transport and not being able to get
-it. In the afternoon I crossed the river and saw General Gilman at
-Felahiya. I was very glad to see him again. He had been on our left
-with the 13th Division at Anafarta. One of the best men I have met. We
-had a long talk.... Then I came back with Dick Bevan. What’s happened
-is this: we got in such a state about Townshend being able to hold out
-till the end of January that we rushed up troops and attacked without
-the possibility of making preparation for the wounded, ambulances,
-etc., and we failed.... Townshend has got 5,000 Arabs with him, and
-the _bouches inutiles_ have told enormously, but T. has apparently
-promised these people his protection and nothing will make him send
-them away, and he’s right. The strain on the men with him has been
-very great indeed; some of the older men are very sick. No one thinks
-that he’s got a dog’s chance of getting out. The --th were badly cut
-up at Anafarta, but they kept their keenness, and at the beginning
-of this show their officers could not keep them back, _on the 8th of
-March_. The fight on the 9th of April was very bad luck. All the men
-were very cold and tired. A hot cup of coffee might have made the
-whole difference.... We shall have to face a lot of trouble with the
-Arabs and look out for Nasryah, which could be cut off by marsh Arabs
-from Basra way and turned into another Kut. Most people think that the
-line that we ought to defend is Nasryah--Amara--Ahwaz. The Admiral’s
-going to Nasryah. I suggested his taking General Gillman, and he is
-off too. Every one is raging against the economy of India, especially
-a man called Meyer, the Treasury member for the Council of India. He
-is said to have refused to give any help. In this flat land they need
-observation balloons; none forthcoming. They asked for transport from
-May to Christmas, and then got one launch....
-
-I saw the Admiral in the evening. He was cheered after talking to
-General Gorringe. We walked by the river. We met some of the Black
-Watch--clean, smart men. There was a great bridge of boats, without
-rails, swaying and tossing in the hurricane and covered with driven
-foam from the raging yellow water. Across this there lurched Madrassis,
-Sudanese, terrified cavalry horses, mules that seemed to think that
-there was only water on one side, and that they would be on dry land
-if they jumped off on the other. We are out of range, but shelling
-is going on and one can fix points in the landscape by bursts. The
-eternal flatness is depressing. This morning I saw Leachman, the
-political officer. He has had a lot of adventures in Arabia--a very
-good fellow, whom everybody likes, which is rare.... He was against
-our going farther back than Sheikh Saad, both from the point of view
-of strategy and also because it would be playing a low game on our own
-friendlies. The Arabs on the bank between Sheikh Saad and Ali Gharbi
-are, apparently, past praying for.
-
-This afternoon I went out with the Admiral.... Townshend has been
-telegraphing to-day. His men are dying of starvation. The whole
-situation is pitiful. Here the troops have been on half rations for
-some time. Our boats are many, but insufficient. They are of every
-kind, from an Irawaddy steamer to the steamers of the Gordon Relief
-Expedition and L.C.C. boats. We met some of the 6th Devons, and I asked
-them if the way the Admiral was going was safe. They said: “We be
-strangers here zur,” as if they were Exeter men in Taunton.... The rain
-is making the relief practically impossible. Last night there was heavy
-firing and we advanced 2,000 yards, but the main positions are still
-untaken. To-night I met Percy Herbert, very useful, as my tropical
-khaki is coming to pieces.
-
-_Friday, April 14, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Stonefly.”_ ... A furious wind got
-up and drove mountains of yellow water before it, against the stream.
-The skies were black. Captain Nunn, the Senior Naval Officer, wanted
-to go to Sheikh Saad. I wanted to go to H.Q. to see Colonel Beach,
-Chief of the Intelligence, who has written to me to come. We got off
-with difficulty into the stream. It was like a monstrous snake, heaving
-and coiling. We only drew 3 feet and we were very top-heavy with iron,
-and I thought we were bound to turn over. I said so to Singleton, the
-captain, who said: “I quite agree. It serves them d----d well right
-if we do, for sending us out in this weather.” This thought pleased
-him, though it did not satisfy me. Nunn said it was the worst weather
-he had seen in the year. I got off at Wadi thankfully, and went to
-see Beach, but it was not all over yet. He wanted to go and see how
-the bridge of boats was standing the strain. The end of the bridge
-of boats had been removed to let the steamers through, though there
-were none passing. It was twisting like an eel trying to get free,
-and going up and down like a moving staircase in agony. There was
-foam and gloom and strain and fury and the screaming of the timber,
-but the bridge held. The engineers were calmly smoking their pipes
-at the end, wondering in a detached way if it would hold. I prefer
-fighting any day to this sort of thing. Then I went walking with
-Beach. He asked me to be ready in case Townshend wanted me. I dined
-with General Lake, General Money, Williams and Dent; capital fellows.
-Had an interesting time after dinner. The future is doubtful. If we
-have to retire, we shall have a double loss of prestige, Kut gone and
-our own retreat. When we want to advance later, we shall find all our
-present positions fortified against us. A retreat will also involve
-the abandonment of our friendlies. This campaign has taught me why we
-have been called _perfide Albion_. It’s very simple. We embark upon a
-campaign without any forethought at all. Then, naturally we get into
-extreme difficulties. After that, we talk to the natives, telling them
-quite truthfully that we have got magnificent principles of truth,
-justice, tolerance, etc., that where the British Raj is all creeds are
-free. They like these principles so much that they forget to count
-our guns. Then, principles or no principles, we have got to retreat
-before a vastly superior force, and the people who have come in with us
-get strafed. Then they all say “_perfide Albion_,” though it’s really
-nobody’s fault--sometimes not even the fault of the Government.
-
-I slept on the _Malamir_, on deck. It was very wet in the night, but I
-kept fairly dry.
-
-_Saturday, April 15, 1916._ “_Malamir._” I went and saw the Turkish
-prisoners in one of the most desolate camps on earth; some Albanians
-amongst them. They said there were munition factories in Bagdad,
-that 4,000 Turks had gone to Persia--they did not know if it was to
-the oil-field at Basra or against the Russians. It’s Basra and the
-oil-field that are important to us.
-
-Lunched aboard the _Malamir_. General Lake was very kind. I went off
-on an Irawaddy steamer, a “P” boat. The Captain told appalling stories
-of the wounded on board after Ctesiphon. It took them seventeen days
-to Amara, which sounds incredible. They had to turn back three times
-at Wadi and return to Kut, because they were heavily attacked at Wadi
-by Kurds. General Nixon had to turn back too. The transport was so
-overcrowded that men were pushed overboard. I met an Indian political
-officer on board ... (and again).... He said one thing to me that was
-not indiscreet. Once at Abazai he had seen a Pathan wrestling. Before
-he wrestled he held up his hands, and cried an invocation: “Dynamis”
-(Might). He thought it must have come from the days of Alexander.
-He had been in the Dujaila fight on March 8th, and talked about it,
-unhappily. He also said that the corruption of the Babus at Basra was
-awful.
-
-On board our ship there were piles of bread without any covering, but a
-swarming deposit of flies; good for everybody’s stomach.
-
-_Sunday, April 16, 1916._ Half a day’s food is being dropped daily
-by aeroplanes in Kut.... I met a very jolly Irish officer, a V.C. He
-said that when the war broke out he, and many like himself, saw the
-Mohammedan difficulty. They had themselves been ready to refuse to
-fight against Ulster; why should Indians fight the Turks? We were
-fighting for our own lives, but the quarrel did not really concern
-Indians. They might have been expected to be spectators. Then the
-orders came for them to go to France. They called up the Indian
-officers and said to them: “Germany has declared war, and on second
-thoughts, a Jehad. She quarrelled with England first and then pretended
-she was fighting for Islam.” The Indian officers agreed, and came along
-readily. They were then ordered to Mesopotamia. They again called upon
-the Indian officers, who said: “We would sooner go anywhere else in
-the world, but we will go, and we will not let the regiment down.” They
-were told to go to Bagdad, and were willing to go, though their frame
-of mind was the same.... Then I went off to interrogate prisoners. It
-was tremendously hot. The prisoners were under a guard of Indians,
-and I found it hard to make the Indians understand my few words of
-Hindustani. The prisoners’ morale seemed good. They said they were not
-tired of the war and that they did not think of disobeying orders, for
-that, they said, would be awful and would make chaos. They thought that
-what pleased God was going to happen, and they were inclined to believe
-that that would be victory for the Turks. They said twenty-seven guns
-had come up in the last eight days, 17 cm. and 20 cm. If that’s the
-case, they can shell us out of here. I told the Admiral, and in the
-evening we walked. We met General Gorringe ... I am tremendously sorry
-for these men here. Last year the God of battles was on our side. We
-ought not to have won, by any law of odds or strategy, at Shaiba, at
-Ctesiphon, or Nasryah, but we did. They won against everything, and now
-the luck has turned. They have brought Indian troops to fight on holy
-soil for things that mean nothing to them. They have been hopelessly
-outnumbered by the Turks. They have been starved of everything, from
-food to letters, not to speak of high explosives. They have been
-through the most ghastly heat and the most cruel cold, and they are
-still cheerful. I have never seen a more friendly lot than these men
-here. They have always got something cheerful to say when you meet
-them. The weather has changed and it’s very fine, with a beautiful
-wind and clear skies, but there are no scents, like in Gallipoli, of
-thyme and myrtle. It’s a limitless bare plain, green and sometimes
-brown mud, covered by an amazing mixture of men and creatures: horses
-and mules and buffaloes, Highlanders, Soudanese and Devons, Arabs and
-Babus. Camp fires spring up, somehow, at night by magic. We generally
-have a bombardment most days, but no shells round us.
-
-_Monday, April 17, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Waterfly.”_ Harris is Captain. While
-we were having breakfast this morning a German aeroplane flew over and
-bombed us ineffectually. Bombs fell a couple of hundred yards away in
-camp, not doing any damage, but they’ll get us sometime, as we are a
-fine target, three boats together.
-
-_Tuesday, April 18, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Waterfly.”_ Last night the Admiral
-went to Amara. He left Jack Marriott, Philip Neville, Dick Bevan and me
-here. There was no work down there and a lot here. Last night we did
-well, took about 250 prisoners and the Bunds that are essential to us.
-If the Turks have these and want to, they can flood the country to the
-extent of making manœuvring impossible. There was peace yesterday at
-the crimson sunset. Then after that came the tremendous fight. Guns and
-flares blazed all along the line. Now comes the news that we have lost
-the Bunds and the eight guns we had taken. The position is not clear.
-We are said to have retaken most of the positions this morning.
-
-The prisoners’ morale here is much better than in Gallipoli. I asked
-an Arab if he was glad to be a prisoner. He said that he was sorry,
-because his own people might think that he hadn’t fought well, but
-that he was glad not to have to go on fighting for the Germans. Jack
-Marriott wrote for me while I translated. The prisoners could not or
-would not tell us anything much about the condition of the river. This
-morning I had an experience. I walked out through tremendous heat to
-where the last batch of officer prisoners were guarded in a tent. As I
-came up, I heard loud wrangling, and saw the prisoners being harangued
-by a fierce black-bearded officer. I said: “Who here talks Turkish?”
-and a grizzled old Kurd said: “Some of us talk Kurdish and some Arabic,
-but we all talk Turkish.” I picked out Black-beard and took him apart
-from the others, whom I saw he had been bullying. He was a schoolmaster
-and a machine-gunner, and fierce beyond words. He began by saying
-sarcastically that he would give me all the information I wanted. “You
-have failed at Gallipoli,” he said. “We hold you up at Salonica, and
-you are only visitors at Basra. I do not mind how much I tell you,
-because I know we are going to win.” I answered rather tartly that it
-was our national habit to be defeated at the beginning of every war and
-to win at the end, and that we should go on, if it took us ten years.
-“Ah, then,” he said, “you will be fighting Russia.” I did not like the
-way this conversation was going, and said to him: “Do you know the
-thing that your friends the Germans have done? They have offered Persia
-to Russia. How do you like that?” “The question is,” he said, “how
-do you like it?” He then said that he was sick of the word “German,”
-that Turkey was not fighting for the Germans, but to get rid of the
-capitulations. He said they had four Austrian motor-guns of 24 cm.
-coming in a few days. I congratulated him. In the end he became more
-friendly, but I got nothing out of him. One prisoner had a series of
-fits: I think it was fright. He got all right when he was given water
-and food. The river has given another great sigh and risen a foot and
-a half. We have crossed over from the right to the left bank. It’s a
-black, thundery day. Much depends on to-day and to-night.
-
-_Good Friday, April 21, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Waterfly.”_ I have had no time
-to write these last days. This morning is a beautiful morning, with a
-fresh north wind. When we first came here Townshend was supposed to
-be able to hold out until the 12th. Now the 27th April is the last
-date. All the reports that we have been getting from the Turks are
-bad. Masses more men and guns coming up, heavy calibre guns. Still,
-Townshend is getting some food.... The _Julnar_ is to go up in a few
-days, when the moon is waning. It is very difficult to get information
-from the prisoners, without running the risk of giving things away.
-Costello is chief of the Intelligence here, a capital fellow.
-
-The Royal Indian Marine, freed from the obstruction of India, seem to
-have done pretty well. A lot of the boats and barges sent here have
-been sunk on the way. The Admiralty goes on building these river Fly
-boats like anything. The _Mantis_, with Bernard Buxton captain, draws 5
-feet and was intended for the Danube in the days when we were going to
-have taken Constantinople. On Wednesday, the 18th, we fired a good deal
-from the _Waterfly_. We are not well situated for firing....
-
-The Dorsets and Norfolks, the Oxfords and the Devons, have done the
-most splendid fighting. Twenty-two Dorsets saved the whole situation
-at Ahwaz. Harris, who is only twenty-five, has been through all this.
-He was the first up here, with Leachman. It’s awfully bad luck on
-Townshend, being shut up again, the second time counting Chitral. On
-Wednesday there was a tremendous fire. It sounded like a nearer Helles.
-The Turks are three miles from us. They lollop down mines that go on
-the bank, but this morning one was found close by the ship.
-
-I examined a Turk this morning, who said that three Army Corps were
-coming up under Mehemed Ali Pasha. I asked him if they could outflank
-us on the Hai, to try and turn this place into a second Kut. “That,” he
-said, “has always been my opinion.”
-
-Yesterday, the 20th, I went to H.Q. in the morning, then talked to Dick
-and got maps revised and borrowed a horse for the afternoon from Percy
-Herbert, and got another from Costello for B.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here I should explain that I had promised my friend B., the sailor, to
-take him up into the front-line trenches. He had never been in a front
-trench before, and was determined to see what it was like.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary._ General Gillman gave B. and me luncheon. Then B. and I rode
-out to the camp of the 18th Division, where I found Brownrigg, now
-become a Colonel, with malaria. I congratulated and condoled. I asked
-if we could get into the front trench, and Colonel Hillard said it
-was unhealthy. B. said that didn’t matter, and I asked exactly how
-unhealthy. Hillard said there were no communication trenches and we
-should be under machine-gun fire at 80 yards. No rations were being
-sent up till nightfall, but still, of course, if we wanted to go, we
-could. B. was passionately anxious to go; I was not. We walked down a
-shallow communication trench, which we soon had to leave, because of
-the water, and then across the open to a beastly place called Crofton’s
-Post, an observation post in the flat land, with a few sandbags and mud
-walls. They had dug a kind of shelter about 6 feet deep below it. It
-stood about 20 feet high. The Turks were eight to nine hundred yards
-away. We passed other observation posts, these simply a ladder rising
-from the flat land, and men like flies on it. It’s incredible that the
-Turks leave these places standing or that they allow people to walk
-about in the open in the way in which they do. Coming out, we passed a
-lot of quail and partridge and some jolly wild flowers, but also the
-smells of the battlefield.
-
-After we had been at Crofton’s Post a little while, a furious
-bombardment of the Turks by us began. I cursed myself for not having
-asked what the plans of the afternoon were going to be. B. was
-delighted. Shells rushed over our heads from all sides. I heard the
-scream of two premature bursts just by us. They raised filthy, great
-columns of heaving smoke. It was a wonderful picture; the radiant and
-brilliant light of the afternoon, the desert out by the river, the
-gleam of the gun flashes and the smouldering smoke columns.
-
-The Gurkhas fought very well two nights ago, they said here. They used
-up all their ammunition and what Turkish rifles they could get and then
-they fought with kukris. At one place an unfortunate mistake happened.
-We mistook the Indians for Turks, and we bombarded each other.
-
-We went back almost deafened by our own guns, B. reluctant to leave.
-I expected a heavy Turkish return bombardment every minute, which
-would have been unpleasant without any cover, but beyond the ticking
-of a machine-gun nothing happened. Found General Maude having tea. His
-casualties have been heavy--nineteen officers killed and wounded in the
-last ten days, simply trench work, no attacks. He said it was putting a
-very heavy strain on the new army.
-
-The more I see of this foul country, the more convinced I am that we
-are a seafaring people, lured to disaster by this river. The River
-Tigris has been a disaster and a delusion to us. These lines are
-untenable without two railways, one across to Nasriyah and the other
-up to Bagdad. At the present moment, we can be cut off if the river
-falls or if they manage to put in guns anywhere down the river and sink
-a couple of our boats, or even one, in the narrows, and so block the
-channel. We have got no policy. We came here and we saw the Tigris and
-we said: “This is as good as the sea, and up we will go,” and now it
-will dry up and we shall get left.
-
-Lawrence arrived at Wadi on Wednesday. Had some talk with him; I am
-very glad to see him. Got a letter from John Kennaway yesterday--he is
-down at Sheikh Saad--asking me to go there. I can get no news about
-Bobby Palmer. Am afraid there is no doubt; he must be killed; am very
-sad for his people.
-
-_Easter Sunday, April 23, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Greenfly.”_ A curious
-morning, with the whole of Pusht i Kuh standing blue and clear. The
-last two foreigners who visited that place were given the choice of
-embracing Islam or of being pushed over the precipice. They chose the
-precipice.
-
-Yesterday morning we attacked. The 19th Brigade, the Black Watch,
-the 20th and the 28th. We took two trenches, but were driven back to
-our own. I was sent post-haste to H.Q. for news. There was a great
-sand-storm and men and artillery going through it like phantoms.
-Overhead it was lurid. One could hardly breathe for the sand. High
-columns of it rushed across the desert. The repulse looks as if the
-end’s very close. I came back to the Admiral and was sent back again.
-This time they said there was a truce, and if the Admiral would give
-permission, I was to go to the front at once. I came back and found
-the Admiral and went on shore. I got a horse and rode up to the front
-as fast as I could, passing many dead and wounded. I went to General
-Younghusband and asked if I could be of any use to him. He said the
-truce was ending. The Turks had pushed out white flags, which was
-decent of them. We had done the same. A Staff officer came in to say
-that the Turks were taking our kit, and he wanted to fire on them. I
-was anxious we should not do so without giving warning.
-
-We discussed the possibility of the Turks’ letting Townshend and his
-men come out with the honours of war, to be on parole till peace. I
-said that I could see no _quid pro quo_, and even if one existed,
-we, here, could not use it, because of our ignorance of the Russian
-situation.... The General said that the water had narrowed our front to
-300 yards across which to attack. The Turkish trenches were half-full
-of water and many of our men fell and got their rifles filled with
-mud. The Turks attacked again at once. He said there were not many
-troops who would do that when a brigade like the 19th had been through
-them. There’s very little left of the 19th; beautiful men they were. I
-have talked to a lot of them these last days. I rode back on a horse
-that was always falling down. In the evening I crossed the river with
-the Admiral and rode up to the front with Beach. There was shelling
-going on, but nothing came near. The river was gorgeous in the sunset.
-Overhead the sand-grouse flew. We talked about the future.... It seems
-to me that if we have got to retreat 130 miles it’s less bad for
-prestige to do it in one go. The Politicals’ point of view is that you
-should not retreat at all, but that, of course, has got to depend on
-military considerations. The Soldiers’ point of view is that you should
-not do your retreat in one go, because you do not kill so many of the
-enemy as if you fall back from one position to another; but then, I
-suppose, that cuts both ways. None of these soldiers have had any
-decorations since the beginning of the war. One of them said to me it
-made them unhappy, because they felt that they hadn’t done their duty.
-It’s an infernal shame. I asked the man who had said this if he had any
-leave. He said: “Not much! I should have lost my job.” That would have
-been quite a pleasure to a lot of men....
-
-Lawrence has gone and got fever; Nunn also has it. The atmosphere makes
-shooting difficult. Yesterday the Turks shot quite a lot at a mirage,
-splashing their bullets about in the Suwekki marsh. We often do the
-same. Curiously enough, I believe that we won the battle of Shaiba by
-virtue of a mirage. We saw a lot of Turks marching up against our
-position, and fired at them; these Turks were phantoms of men miles
-away; but it happened to be the only road by which they could bring up
-their ammunition, and our firing prevented that. To-night the _Julnar_
-goes up the river on her journey. She has less speed than they thought.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For various reasons I have barely mentioned the _Julnar_ until now,
-though she had been very much in our thoughts. The _Julnar_ was a river
-boat, and for some days past she had been preparing to set out upon her
-splendid, tragic mission. In her lay the last hope of General Townshend
-and his gallant force. Her freight was food, intended to prolong the
-resistance of the garrison until the relieving force was sufficiently
-strong to drive back the Turks and enter Kut. The writer of this diary
-has many heroic pictures in his mind, but no more heroic picture and
-no more glowing memory than the little _Julnar_ steaming slowly up the
-flaming Tigris to meet the Turkish Army and her fate. Her Captains were
-Lieut. Firman, R.N. and Lieut.-Comdr. Cowley, R.N.V.R., of Lynch’s
-Company, who had spent a long life in navigating the River Tigris.
-
-When Admiral Wemyss called for volunteers, every man volunteered, for
-what was practically certain death. Lieut. Firman and Lieut.-Comdr.
-Cowley were both killed, and both received posthumous V.C.’s.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Diary. April 23rd._ _H.M.S. “Greenfly.”_ We are alongside the
-_Mantis_. I am sleeping in Firman’s cabin. He is down-stream, but
-he comes up to-night. Many men badly wounded yesterday, but all as
-cheerful as could be; one man with three bullets in his stomach, full
-of talk and oaths. Fifteen of the Dorsets have died in the nearest
-hospital and have been buried close by.
-
-This afternoon an Easter Service was held on board. The Padre made a
-good sermon three minutes long. It was a wonderful sight--the desert
-covered with our graves, mirages in the distance and the river glowing
-in the sun. At the end of the service the _Julnar_ arrived. Firman
-is an attractive good-looking fellow. King, whom I met last year in
-Alexandretta, whither he had marched from Bagdad, is also here. When
-Buxton told the men of the hundred to one chance of the _Julnar’s_
-getting through, they volunteered to a man. Gieve waistcoats are being
-served out; the cannon’s sounding while they are loading the _Julnar_
-and the Black Watch are playing on the bagpipes close by. Overhead go
-the sand-grouse, calling and the river and the desert wind are sighing.
-It’s all like a dream.... Even if she does get through, I don’t believe
-we can relieve Kut. The Turks will have time to consolidate their
-position and we shan’t be sent enough men from home to take them. If
-this attempt fails, I suppose we shall fall back to Sheikh Saad. I see
-three points: (1) Political. Don’t retreat. (2) Military. You’ve got to
-retreat, occupying as many positions as possible, in order to attrition
-the enemy. (3) If you do this last, you give the Turks the chance of
-saying they have beaten you in a number of battles. Probably retreat
-as little as possible is the best. A retreat may be more disastrous to
-us than the loss of Kut. While we hold Sheikh Saad, it’s difficult for
-them to outflank us on the right bank, and while we have the Vali of
-Pusht i Kuh with us, they ought not to be able to get to Ahwaz. One
-wonders if they realize the supreme importance of Basra at home and
-that if we no longer hold it we do not hold the Indian Ocean.
-
-_Monday, April 24, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Dragonfly.”_ Firman came last night,
-and I sat next to him at dinner. The _Julnar_ could not start; she
-starts to-night.
-
-I went ashore this morning and saw Leachman, then Colonel Beach. The
-flies are awful; one black web of them this morning; in one’s hair and
-eyes and mouth, in one’s bath and shaving-water, in one’s tea and in
-one’s towel. It’s a great nuisance being without Edward and having to
-do everything oneself, besides one’s work. It destroys all joy in war.
-
-_Tuesday, April 25, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Greenfly.”_ A year ago to-day we
-landed at Anzac. To-day is the day of the fall of Kut, though the
-surrender may not be made for some time. Last night the _Julnar_ left.
-I saw old Cowley, an old friend. He is to pilot her. He has been
-thirty-three years on this river. He is a proper Englishman. He laughed
-and chaffed with Philip Neville and me on the _Julnar_ before starting.
-Firman was very glad to have got the job, and felt the responsibility.
-Everybody wanted to go. The sailors were moved. No cheers were allowed.
-They pushed off, almost stationary, into the river, that was a glory
-of light with the graceful mehailahs in an avenue on both sides of
-it, with masts and rigging a filigree against the gorgeous sunset.
-The faint bagpipes and the desert wind were the only music at their
-going.... The Admiral told me to be ready to go out at any moment.
-This morning Colonel Beach came aboard and told me to hold myself in
-readiness. He proposed going out to see the Turks with Lawrence and
-myself. He talked about terms. It’s a very difficult thing to get terms
-when one side holds all the cards. If Townshend destroys his guns, as
-he must, I don’t see what terms we have got. My own opinion is that
-Townshend would make better terms for himself with the Turks than we
-can get for him here. It will be difficult to stop the Arabs being shot
-and hung. We have got to do our best....
-
-The _Julnar_ has grounded above the Sinn position. Nothing is known of
-what happened to the crew.
-
-Wilfred Peek turned up here this afternoon, having seen John Kennaway
-down the stream. We have no terms to offer the Turks except money,
-general or local peace, or the evacuation of territory. I do not think
-the first is any good. We cannot offer the second because of ourselves
-and of Russia. The third might be all right, if it was not beyond
-Amarah. I hope in these negotiations we do not meet a Prussian Turk in
-Khalil.
-
-After lunch I met Captain Potter. In the last attack this had happened:
-A corporal had gone mad and, after rolling in filth, had come down the
-trench with a bomb in each hand, shouting out that he was looking for
-the ---- Arabs. The parapet was low, about shoulder-high, and there was
-a good deal of shrapnel and bullets coming in. The corporal threw the
-bomb into the middle of the officers’ mess, killing one and wounding
-the Colonel, knocking Potter and the others out. They collared the
-corporal, who had got a madman’s strength. Then the attack followed.
-Potter went as soon as he recovered. They charged across 600 yards
-under machine-gun fire, up to their knees in mud. The Turks were in
-their third trench. The first and the second were filled with mud.
-Then the Turks ran out a white flag, which suited us very well, as it
-allowed our men in the Turkish trenches to get away, which otherwise
-they couldn’t have done. He thought the Turks did it because they
-wanted to bring up reinforcements. He now commands a battalion of 84,
-all that are left of 650 men. He said they had reached the limits
-of human endurance. He had three officers, including himself, left.
-The Black Watch had been wiped out twice, and other regiments simply
-annihilated. I told him that I thought there would be no more attacks.
-He said a Turkish prisoner, a friend of his, had said to him: “Let’s
-have a truce and both kill the Arabs.”
-
-Beach says there is no question of going out to-day. I went out
-shooting sand-grouse.
-
-_Wednesday, April 26, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ I am writing in great
-haste, till the sun goes down, as the mehailahs stream past on a river
-of fire, in the retreat that is beginning.
-
-The news from home is good and bad. As usual, they are desperately
-optimistic, but more men are coming. We must, if we can, save the Arabs
-with Townshend. The last telegrams in were pitiful. Townshend quotes
-military precedents and other campaigns, and it’s all mixed up with
-famine and the stinks of Kut. Wilfred Peek’s his A.D.C. I am to try
-and get him a safe conduct to take Townshend’s stuff up to him, also
-one for us. If Townshend does not make it clear that it’s a return
-ticket, we shall all be kept. I saw General Lake this morning. Captain
-Bermester, the Chief of the Staff, Neville, Dick Bevan and Miller all
-went off this morning. The Admiral is coming back. I have received
-instructions about negotiations.
-
-_Friday, April 28, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ For the last two days I
-have been standing by to go to Kut, constantly dressing up for it and
-then undressing for the heat. A wave of great heat has come and the air
-is black with flies. Practically no firing, though they tried to shell
-us yesterday and an aeroplane dropped bombs near here. We have got very
-little to bargain with, as far as the Turks are concerned, practically
-only the exchange of prisoners. The operations of this force are not to
-be reckoned with as a bargaining asset. We are not to retire to save
-Townshend. Yesterday Townshend saw Khalil at ten a.m., whom he liked.
-Khalil said that Townshend would have as great a reception in Turkey
-as Osman Pasha in Russia, but he demanded unconditional surrender, or
-that Townshend should march out of Kut. This last is equivalent to an
-unconditional surrender, and Townshend’s men are too weak. We are all
-sorry for them.
-
-Yesterday morning General Lake sent for me, and talked about the Turks.
-I said it was quite clear to me that the Turks would procrastinate,
-if it was only from force of habit, and the end of that must mean
-unconditional surrender. General Lake was calm. He has been made
-responsible for things for which other people are answerable. Townshend
-has telegraphed to say that he has only food for two more days and
-that Khalil has referred to Enver for better terms.... I still think
-Townshend would get better terms for himself than we shall get for him.
-He has made a desperately gallant fight of it, and his position has
-not been taken. Lack of food makes him surrender, not force of arms.
-We, the relieving force, have been checked by the Turks, but I suppose
-all these men, Lake, Townshend and Nixon, will be made scapegoats. In
-the last telegrams Townshend warns us that the Turks may attack. He
-says he cannot move out, and that even if he were able to get his weak
-men out the Turks would not have enough tents for them or transport to
-Bagdad, and that there will be a terrible tragedy and that a lot of
-sick and wounded will die.... We are not in a position to insist on
-anything. One is more sorry for Townshend and his men than words can
-say.
-
-_Sunday, April 30, 1916._ _H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ _The Events of Saturday_:
-Yesterday morning Colonel Beach came to the _Mantis_ at seven and
-took me off. We rode across the bridge to General Younghusband’s H.Q.
-Nothing that I have ever seen or dreamed of came up to the flies. They
-hatched out until they were almost the air. They were in myriads. The
-horses were half mad. The flies were mostly tiny. They rolled up in
-little balls when one passed one’s hand across one’s sweating face.
-They were on your eyelids and lashes and in your lips and nostrils. We
-could not speak for them, and could hardly see.
-
-We went into General Younghusband’s tent. The flies, for some reason,
-stayed outside. He put a loose net across the door of the tent. They
-were like a visible fever, shimmering in the burning light all round.
-Inside his tent you did not breathe them; outside you could not help
-taking them in through the nose and the mouth. We left General
-Younghusband and went on to the front trenches, where we met Colonel
-Aylsmee. There Lawrence joined us. We three then went out of the
-trenches with a white flag, and walked a couple of hundred yards or so
-ahead, where we waited, with all the battlefield smells round us. It
-was all a plain, with the river to the north and the place crawling
-with huge black beetles and singing flies, that have been feeding on
-the dead. After a time a couple of Turks came out. I said: “We have got
-a letter to Khalil.” This they wanted to take from us, but we refused
-to give it up, and they sent an orderly back to ask if we might come in
-to the Turkish lines. Meanwhile we talked amiably. One of the Turkish
-officers, a Cretan, had left school five years ago and had been in five
-wars. He reckoned that he had been in 200 attacks, not counting scraps
-with brigands and comitadjis. The Turks showed us their medals, and we
-were rather chagrined at not being able to match them, but they and we
-agreed that we should find the remedy for that in a future opportunity.
-
-Several hours passed. It was very hot. I was hungry, having had no
-breakfast. Again they asked us to give up our letter. I said that
-our orders were to deliver it in person and, as soldiers, they knew
-what orders were, but that Colonel Beach would give the letter up if
-their C.O. would guarantee that we should see Khalil Pasha. This took
-a long time. The Turks sent for a tent. A few rifle shots went off
-from our lines, but Beach went back and stopped it. The Turks sent
-for oranges and water, and we ate and drank. We had to refill these
-bottles from the Tigris, and up and down the banks were a lot of dead
-bodies from shot-wounds and cholera. After some time they agreed to
-Beach’s proposal. We were blindfolded and we went in a string of hot
-hands to the trenches of the Turks. When it was plain going the Turk,
-who talked French, called: “Franchement, en avant,” and when it was
-bad going, over trenches, “Yavash Dikatet.” We marched a long way
-through these trenches, banging against men and corners, and sweating
-something cruel. Beyond the trenches we went for half an hour, while
-my handkerchief became a wet string across my eyes. Then we met Bekir
-Sami Bey. He was a very fine man and very jolly, something between an
-athlete and old King Cole. He lavished hospitality upon us, coffee
-and yoghurt, and begged us to say if there was anything more he could
-get us, while we sat and streamed with perspiration. He told us how
-he had loved England and still did. He was fierceness and friendship
-incarnate. He said it was all Grey’s fault, and glorified the Crimea.
-Why couldn’t we have stuck to that policy? Then, as we were going off,
-I said that he would not insist on our eyes being bandaged, showing him
-my taut, wet rag of a pocket-handkerchief. He shouted with laughter
-and said: “No, no; you have chosen soldiering, a very hard profession.
-You have got to wear that for miles, and you will have to ride across
-ditches.” Then he shook hands and patted us on the shoulder.
-
-My eyes were bound, and I got on a horse that started bucking because
-of the torture of the flies. The Turk was angry and amused. I heard
-him laughing and swearing: “This is perfectly monstrous. Ha, ha! He’ll
-be off. Ha, ha! This is a reproach to us.” I was then given another
-horse that was not much of an improvement, and off we three went
-with a Turkish officer, Ali Shefket, and a guard. Lawrence had hurt
-his knee and could not ride. He got off and walked, a Turkish officer
-being left with him. Colonel Beach and I went on. Then our eyes were
-unbound, though as a matter of fact this was against the orders I had
-heard given. The Turk Ali Shefket and I talked. He knew no French. He
-said to me: “Formerly the Arabs would not take our bank-notes; now they
-take them. Once upon a time they would not take medjids; two days ago
-they took them. To what do you put that down?” I knew he meant the fall
-of Kut, but it was not said maliciously. I said that I put it down to
-the beautiful character of the marsh Arabs, “yerli bourda beule” (here
-the native are thus). He laughed and agreed. We passed formidable herds
-of horses and mules, our road a sand-track. The escort rode ahead of
-us. The heat was very great, but we galloped. The Turks we met thought
-that we were prisoners. They saluted sometimes at strict attention,
-sometimes with a grin, and later our Indians were told in return to
-salute the Turkish officers, who looked at them as black as thunder.
-
-At last we came to Khalil’s camp, a single round tent, a few men on
-motor cycles coming and going, horses picketed here and there and the
-camp in process of shifting. Later on, Khalil said that the flies bored
-him and that he meant to camp beside the river. Colonel Beach told me
-to start talking. I said to Khalil, whose face I remembered: “Where
-was it that I met your Excellency last?” And he said: “At a dance at
-the British Embassy.” Khalil, throughout the interview, was polite. He
-was quite a young man for his position, I suppose about thirty-five,
-and a fine man to look at--lion-taming eyes, a square chin and a mouth
-like a trap. Kiazim Bey, who was also courteous, but silent, was his
-C.G.S. We began on minor points. The Turks had taken the English ladies
-in Bagdad. Their husbands were sent across to Alexandretta, where I
-met them last year; some of them, worse luck, are now prisoners again.
-We had Turkish ladies at Amara and also twenty-five Turkish civilian
-officials. This exchange was arranged. They were to meet each other at
-Beyrout.
-
-I went on to speak of the _Julnar_. He said that there had been two
-killed on the _Julnar_. He was afraid it was the two Captains. He was
-sorry. It made Beech and me very sad. I did hope they would have got
-through. Firman was a gallant man--he had had forty-eight hours’ leave
-in four years--and old Cowley was a splendid old fellow. Well, if you
-are going to be killed, trying to relieve Townshend is not a bad way to
-end.
-
-After that, I began talking of the treatment of the Arab population
-in Kut. I asked Khalil to put himself in the position of Townshend. I
-said that I knew that he could not help feeling for Townshend, whose
-lifelong study of soldiering was brought to nought through siege and
-famine, by no fault of his own. I said that the Arabs with Townshend
-had done what weak people always do: they had trimmed their sails,
-and because they had feared him, they had given him their service. If
-they suffered, Townshend would feel that he was responsible. Khalil
-said: “There is no need to worry about Townshend. He’s all right.”
-He added that the Arabs are Turkish subjects, not British, and that
-therefore their fate was irrelevant, but that their fate would depend
-upon what they did in the future, not upon what they had done in the
-past. We asked him for some assurance that there would be no hanging or
-persecution. He would not give this assurance, for the reasons already
-stated, but said that it was not his intention to do anything to the
-Arabs. Then Lawrence turned up.
-
-We discussed the question of our sick and wounded. He said that he
-would send 500 of them down the river, but that he required Turkish
-soldiers for them in exchange. I said that he gained by having sound
-men instead of wounded. He wanted us to send boats to fetch these men.
-He said that he was sending them drugs, doctors and food, and doing
-what could be done. Beach asked for the exchange of all our prisoners
-in Kut against the Ottomans that we had taken. He at first said that he
-would exchange English against Turk and Arab against Indian, because
-he had a poor opinion of the fighting qualities of the last two. I
-said that some of the Arabs had fought very well, and he would gain by
-getting them back. He then pulled out a list of prisoners of ours, and
-went through the list of Arab surrenders, swearing. He said: “Perhaps
-one of our men in ten is weak or cowardly, but it’s only one in a
-hundred of the Arabs who is brave. Look, these brutes have surrendered
-to you because they were a lot of cowards. What are you to do with men
-like that? You can send them back to me if you like, but I have already
-condemned them to death. I should like to have them to hang.” That
-ended that. We must see that Arabs are not sent back by mistake.
-
-He then said that he would like us to send ships up to transport
-Townshend and his men to Bagdad; otherwise they would have to march,
-which would be hard on them. He promised to let us have these ships
-back again. Colonel Beach said to me, not for translation, that this
-was impossible. We have already insufficient transport. He told me to
-say that he would refer this to General Lake. We then talked about
-terms and the exchange of the sick and wounded. On this, Khalil said he
-would refer to Enver or Constantinople as to whether sound men at Kut
-would be exchanged against the Turkish prisoners in Cairo and India.
-He did not think it likely. He was going to give us the wounded in any
-case, at once. He would trust us to give their equivalent.
-
-_Guns_: Townshend had destroyed the guns. Khalil was angry and
-showed it. He said he had a great admiration for Townshend, but he
-was obviously disappointed at not getting the guns, on which he had
-counted. He said: “I could have prevented it by bombarding, but I did
-not want to.” Later, one of his officers said to me: “The Pasha’s a
-most honourable man; all love him. He was first very pleased and said
-that Townshend should go free. After that something happened, I don’t
-know what, and now Townshend will be an honoured prisoner at Stamboul.”
-
-Beach told me to say that we would willingly pay for the maintenance
-of the civilians and the Arabs of Kut. Khalil brushed this aside and
-returned to his proposal that we should send up boats to transport
-Townshend’s sick and wounded to Bagdad. Beach whispered to me that we
-had not enough ships for ourselves at the present moment and no reserve
-supplies....
-
-Then we talked of the general situation and its difficulties. I asked
-him if all this business would be possible without an armistice. Khalil
-said very strongly indeed that he was entirely against an armistice
-and that he wanted his assurance given to General Lake that even if
-there was a general offensive the ships carrying the sick and wounded
-could still come and go. Beach told me to say that we had no idea of
-an armistice. Khalil, at this point, grew very sleepy. He apologized
-and said he had had a lot of work to do. He also said that he had seen
-Townshend that morning and that he was all right, but he had slight
-fever.
-
-Our final understanding with Khalil was that we were to notify him when
-we were sending up boats, so that he might clear the river. He laughed
-and said that he had forgotten all about the mines, which we had not.
-
-We ended with mutual compliments, and we said good-bye to him and
-Kiazim Bey. As we were leaving he called to me and said that he hoped
-we should be comfortable that night and that we were to ask for all we
-wanted. After more compliments, we shook hands and rode away, all the
-Turks saluting. I talked to Ali Shefket, who now seemed a fast friend
-and said: “How angry the Germans would be if they could see the Turks
-and the English.”
-
-We rode on, and before sunset, came to the Turkish camp. There the
-three of us sat down and, as far as we could for the flies, wrote
-reports.
-
-The Turks gave us their tent, though I should have preferred to sleep
-out. They gave us their beds and an excellent dinner. We all sat and
-smoked after dinner for a few minutes under the stars, with camp
-fires burning round us. Muezzin called from different places and the
-sound of flutes and singing came through the dusk. Then Colonel Beach
-decided that I had better stay and go to Kut, where I was to meet him
-and Lawrence, who would come up with the boats to take our prisoners
-away. I didn’t believe that Khalil would accept this sort of liaison
-business. Beach wanted to go straight back, but would not let Lawrence
-or me. We pointed out that, if he got shot in the dark by our people,
-it would upset everything.
-
-I dictated a French letter to Lawrence, asking for permission for me to
-stay and go across to Kut. I cannot think how he wrote the letter. The
-whole place was one smother of small flies, attracted by the candle.
-They put it out three times. B. and I kept them off Lawrence while he
-wrote. We got an answer at about two in the morning. Khalil said that
-it was not necessary. All this happened on April 29th.
-
-_To-day. April 30th._ We left at 4.30 this morning, and this time rode
-all the way with unbandaged eyes. We ended up on the river bank amongst
-dead bodies. We walked across to our front line and Colonel Beach
-telephoned to H.Q. While he was doing this a Turkish white flag went up
-and we went out again. After several palavers, Ali Shefket came out and
-said that the river was clear of mines. Beach and Lawrence went back to
-H.Q.
-
-Our boat could go up if it arrived by 2 o’clock in the afternoon. I,
-with the Cretan, the man of a hundred fights, Ali Shefket and others,
-went across. A fierce bearded Colonel came out, arrogant and insolent,
-talking German. He boasted that he knew Greek, but when I talked to him
-in Greek, he could not answer. He then harangued me in bad German,
-talking rot. I said, in Turkish: “Neither you nor I can talk good
-German, therefore let us talk Turkish.” “Yes,” said the other Turks;
-“it’s a much better language.”
-
-The ship tarried. At 5 o’clock in the evening she was in sight, but she
-could not have arrived for another hour. It was decided that we could
-do nothing that night and that she would have to be put off until next
-day. A monstrous beetle, the size of half a crown, crawled up my back.
-The Turks were as horrified as I.
-
-_Monday, May 1, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ I came back last night. I saw
-General Lake this morning to report. I think Khalil is going to play
-the game, but he has got something up his sleeve. A letter has come
-in from him. The ships, he said, could go. He wanted boats to send
-the prisoners to Bagdad. He was answered by General Money that His
-Excellency would understand that we ourselves needed all our boats.
-Beach went up this morning with two boats, but they stopped him at No
-Man’s Land.
-
-_Tuesday, May 2, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ Last night I went on the
-_P----_ to go to Kut, with a rather tiresome Padre. It rained and blew
-in the night, and was very uncomfortable on deck. I got up at four, and
-we started soon after. They opened the bridge of boats for us. A launch
-followed for me, for I was to get off before entering neutral territory.
-
-At the neutral territory I found white flags and an Indian Major,
-who was tired and nervous. All the way up the river there had been a
-curious feeling of expectancy and uncanniness; the Indians looked at
-us, shading their eyes from the rising sun, and our own troops stared.
-There was an uncomfortable, eerie feeling in the air. The Major said
-the Turks refused to allow the boats to go on. I telephoned to Colonel
-Beach, who was leaving H.Q. He told me to do the best I could.... I
-took a white flag and went out into No Man’s Land and found the man
-I had talked to before, the Cretan’s brother. I asked what all this
-meant. This was neither war nor peace. He said that it was our fellows,
-who had been shooting on the right bank, and there was quite enough
-shooting while we talked to make one feel uncomfortable. I said that
-Khalil had given his word that the boats could go up, even if there was
-an offensive. This was telephoned to Khalil. Our fellows began loosing
-off with a machine-gun. The beastly Colonel and the Cretan then came
-out to say that they had telephoned, and later the Cretan came again,
-alone, to say that our boats could not go through until the others had
-returned from Kut. He said it might not be necessary to send them up
-to Kut. We sat and talked in the great heat. I have given Ali Shefket
-Bobby Palmer’s photograph and have asked him to make enquiries. He
-sent it back to me by the Cretan, who read me out what Ali Shefket had
-written me. It was to say that Bobby Palmer was killed. He spoke very
-kindly and very sadly. I am so sorry for his family.
-
-I went back very tired and found a lot of men making up burying parties
-which, reluctantly, I sent back again. A lot of the bodies on the river
-bank look as if they died of cholera. By the way, we have had a hundred
-and fifty cases in the last three days. Then I shaved on the deck of
-the launch, while the Turks looked on in the distance. Then I went and
-telephoned from the front line to Beach. He told me to bring all the
-four boats back, which I did. The only news is that the Turks have dug
-in below us near Sheikh Saad.
-
-_Wednesday, May 3, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ You foul land of
-Mesopotamia! This morning bodies raced by us on the stream and I spent
-most of the day walking in the ruin of battle. I was sent for by
-General Gorringe and General Brown. They wanted to know why our boats
-had not come down from Kut. They said that the Turks had been shooting
-on the right and sent out white-flag parties, 200 men strong, to bury
-the dead. I said I thought it would be all right about the ships but
-I would go and see Khalil. The fact that they did not want us to send
-more ships showed that it was all right, but I thought they would
-probably like to nag us into doing something indiscreet, and asked the
-General if he would give orders that there should be no firing except
-under instructions, as long as they had our hostages. He sent me off to
-see the Turks.
-
-I rode fast through suffocating heat, with an Indian orderly. At the
-bridge I found our two ships, the _Sikhim_ and the _Shaba_, which had
-come through from Kut. They were banking above the bridge, which was
-being mended. This altered the whole situation, since the General had
-sent me out to complain that they had not been let through, and I
-galloped back. After a talk at H.Q., it was decided that I was only to
-thank Khalil.
-
-I jumped the trenches and finally arrived at the main trench, where
-my horse stared down at a horrified circle, lunching. The circle said
-that no horses were allowed there and that none had ever been there,
-and that my horse, or rather Costello’s, would be shot immediately
-by the Turks. So I went to General Peebles, who was lunching farther
-along in the same trenches, and he had her sent back. I then got a
-white flag and walked out.... I met a couple of Turks. They wanted us
-to send up two ships to-morrow, and were quite agreeable. I asked them,
-as a favour, not to send out again the Colonel who talked German, as I
-couldn’t stand him, and they said they wouldn’t.
-
-It was blazing hot; a Turkish officer and I sat out between the lines.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is one incident not recorded in the diary that is, perhaps,
-worth mentioning, as it had a curious result that will find its place
-in the sequel to this journal, if it is ever published. On one of the
-occasions when I was talking to the Turks between the lines, a general
-fire started from the British and the Turkish trenches. The Turks, for
-the honour of their country, and I, for the honour of mine, pretended
-to ignore this fire, and we continued to discuss our business, but
-in the end the fire refused to be ignored, and, with loud curses, we
-fell upon the ground and there attempted to continue the discussion. I
-suggested to the Turks that the whole proceeding was lacking in dignity
-and that it would be better for each to retire to their own trenches
-and resume negotiations when circumstances were more favourable.
-
-Next time I returned I was informed that one of the Turks had been hit
-whilst returning. I naturally said how sorry I was, and that I hoped
-they would not think it was a case of _mala fides_, as it might have
-happened to one of us, and wrote a note explaining my regret.
-
-_Diary._ It was curious and bitter sitting in that peaceful field
-talking amicably with the Turks between the lines, with maize round us.
-The river murmured and the larks were singing, while the stiff clay
-held the knee-deep prints, like plaster of Paris, of the Black Watch
-and the others, who had charged across that foul field, when it had
-been a trap and a bog.
-
-_Thursday, May 4, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ Very tired to-day. I rode
-back last night from the Turks, very fast. The flies made it impossible
-to go slow, horses couldn’t breathe. At the bridge, I found that the
-traffic was going the other way and had to hold up an unfortunate
-brigade to get across, hating to do it.
-
-I met Green Armitage, who had just come from Kut. He had got
-Townshend’s terriers, who barked like mad. He said that there were
-three Turkish officers on board the _Sikhim_, who were asking for me.
-I didn’t know what to do, as I wanted to go to H.Q., but dashed on
-board and found they were Ali Shefket and Mehmed Jemal and Salahedin
-Bey, inspector to the Agricultural Bank of Smyrna. Our people on board
-wanted me to stay. I told them I would come back. I saw the sick and
-wounded Indians being carried away, terribly emaciated. I reported at
-H.Q., where, apparently, half a dozen entirely contradictory orders
-were being prepared for me. I then went back in a launch to the Turks,
-who were reported to be taking notes of our position from the bridge.
-On the _Sikhim_ I found crowds of our officers with the Turks and a
-general jollification going on. I did not understand how or why they
-had been allowed to come down. All the Intelligence came along to see
-what the Turks could tell them. I was fed-up with the whole business,
-and disliked the Turks being on deck. I said to them: “Of course, it’s
-a pleasure to have you here, as guests, but we would much rather give
-you hospitality in London, for there we can show you everything, and,
-unfortunately, that’s not the case here. So in future, if you please,
-Turkish officers will not accompany the boats down.” They agreed to
-that.
-
-The same tiresome Padre came bumbling up again. I think he wanted to
-go to Kut for the adventure, and I had no sympathy, as he would have
-meant another mouth to feed. The Turks made no particular objection
-to his going, but they said there was already a clergyman there, so I
-told the Padre he could go if he liked, but that if he went he ought
-to stay and let the other chaplain come back, as the other had had all
-the hardships of the siege. He thought I was brutal, but cleared out
-and gave no more trouble. It seems to me, however, that he runs a fair
-risk, like the rest of us, of being made a prisoner.
-
-I wish the Admiral was here. The Turks on board said that they had hung
-seven Arabs at Kut, which made me furious. I said that Khalil had said
-that he had no intention of doing that. The Turks said that these men
-were not natives, but vagabonds....
-
-Then they talked about the future. I said it would not be easy for
-Turkey to dissociate herself from Germany, even if they wanted to. They
-replied: “How long did it take the Bulgars and Serbs to quarrel?” They
-said Khalil had sent messages, and I arranged that if there was any
-hitch I should be able to get straight through.
-
-I did not sleep much. This morning I went up with them to Sanayat,
-where Husni Bey took their place. Then I came back by launch to the
-bridge and found a motor, which I took to H.Q.
-
-At dinner to-night Reuter’s came in, and the doctor, in a perfectly
-calm voice, read out to us that there now seemed some chance of
-checking the rebellion in Ireland. Somebody said: “Don’t be a fool.
-Things are bad enough here. Kut’s fallen and we shall probably be
-prisoners. Don’t invent worse things.” The doctor said: “It’s an
-absolute fact,” and read it out again. Then somebody said: “Those
-cursed Irish.” Then an Ulsterman leapt to his feet and said: “You would
-insult my country, would you?” Then there was a general row. After
-that, everything seemed so utterly desperate that there was nothing
-to be done but to make the best of things, and we had an extremely
-cheerful dinner. We must have missed a lot of news. Let’s hope this
-Irish business is the bursting of a boil. I am more afraid of the
-treatment than the disease.
-
-_Friday, May 5, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ Vane Tempest came back from
-Kut with unpleasant stories. He said that our officers had been looted
-at the point of the bayonet by the Arabs. He had seen four men hanging
-and one man hanged. This was a curious incident. This man, as he was
-going to execution, threw Vane Tempest his _tesbih_ (his rosary), the
-ninety-nine Beautiful Names of God. Vane Tempest had still got it. It
-means “I commend my cause to you. Take up my quarrel.” I told Vane
-Tempest if he was superstitious he ought never to part with it.
-
-Now there is a new position created. They can float down all their
-guns and stores. There is a fight coming, but I wonder where. Eight
-hundred Turks and Arabs below Sheikh Saad, with three guns. The country
-is up behind us and we have only half a day’s provisions in reserve.
-The guns are booming away behind us. It’s going to be very hard to hold
-this position. I wish Edward was here, and hope he is all right, with
-my kit. I want it badly, but I got some stuff from Percy Herbert this
-morning. We agreed that we had a most excellent chance of being cut
-off.... One is sorry for these men here. They are starved in every way,
-ammunition excepted. They are not even given cigarettes and have to pay
-six times their price to the Arabs. Last night the Arabs were looting
-all over the place. A man told me this morning that a sick officer in
-the 21st Brigade found five Arabs in his tent and lost everything.
-Lucky for him that was all he lost.
-
-_Saturday, May 6, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.” Sheikh Saad._ Yesterday my
-typewriter broke. A jolly mechanic more or less repaired it and refused
-money. “It’s all for one purpose,” he said. H.Q. suddenly determined to
-come down to Sheikh Saad in the afternoon. General Gorringe and General
-Ratcliffe went off, strafing like mad. Then the _Mantis_ sailed. I
-found Edward on board the _Blosse Lynch_, with 200 “sea-gulls,” as he
-called the sepoys. He was very upset about the Irish news, but glad to
-have found me.
-
-I walked at night with Bernard Buxton into the Arab village to find
-H.Q. A curious sight: Devons and Somersets, Gurkhas, Arabs and frogs
-all mixed up together. The Somersets were very glad to meet a friend.
-
-This morning, after going through the evidence with the other officers
-about Bobby Palmer, I sent a telegram to Lord Selborne. They did not
-doubt the evidence of the Turks that he was killed.
-
-This morning I walked along the banks of the Tigris, while bodies
-floated down it. After a time I found the 4th Devons and John Kennaway,
-Acland Troyte and the rest, also a lot of people from home. Promised
-them cigarettes and that I would get messages home for them. The latest
-out were a bit depressed and complained of the shortage of food. Their
-camp isn’t too bad. Three miles away, one can see Lot’s Tomb, with
-generally, they say, a Turkish patrol on it. Sheikh Saad is supposed,
-J. K. says, to be Sodom. If you took our troops away, another dose of
-brimstone would do it and its inhabitants a lot of good.
-
-Then I saw Captain ---- of the Indian Transport. He was miserable at
-the way that his men were treated. He said: (1) The drivers did not
-receive pay equal to sepoys, nor did they receive allowances, which
-mountain battery drivers and ammunition column drivers did receive. The
-work the transport drivers did was equally dangerous and more onerous.
-(2) There were no spare men. A transport driver went sick and the next
-man had to look after his animals. (3) They got no fresh clothes.
-Their clothes were in rags. (4) They had 21-lb. tents for four men. In
-a hot or a cold climate this is unhealthy; very bad here. Also they
-have only one flap, so later on they’ll be bound to get sunstroke. (5)
-They do not get milk, cigarettes or tobacco. (6) They get no presents,
-such as the other Indian regiments have received. (7) The treatment of
-transport officers is not equal to that of a sepoy officer. _Vide_
-Subadar Rangbaz Khan, about thirty years’ service. Recommended with
-many others. No notice taken. Only two recommendations given, those
-for actual valour. This man, if he had been with his relations in the
-cavalry, would probably have done less good work, but would have been
-covered with medals.
-
-I walked back through rain, with frogs everywhere, a plague. It’s
-a pity we can’t get our men to eat them. One can’t even teach the
-officers to eat them. John said the Arabs sniped them most nights, but
-they were well and not too uncomfortable. Jack Amory was there, but I
-didn’t see him. He was out shooting sand-grouse.
-
-_Sunday, May 7, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ Harris came up last night.
-He said all was quiet down the river. Subhi Bey, with a good many
-troops, had tried to cut us off at Kumait, but the floods were out. He
-said that last year Cowley prophesied that when the hot weather came
-the river would fall and that five-eighths of our transport would be
-useless. Cowley was generally right. If he was wrong then, he will
-probably be right now. Harris had been fishing the other day, when two
-of the Devons suddenly appeared, naked, beside him. They had swum the
-river, being carried a mile and a half down, and intend to swim it
-again. It’s very dangerous. They are wonderful fellows. I am on the
-_Waterfly_ now.
-
-Early this morning a telegram arrived to say the Corps Commander wanted
-me at once. I spoke on the telephone to H. C. Cassel said: “Our men
-have fired on the Turks and they have collared the _Sikhim_. You must
-come and get her out”.... I transferred to the _Waterfly_ and came up
-with Harris. I knew this would happen. What, apparently, happened was
-that the Turks fired four shots at the _Sikhim_. The Turkish officer
-was angry, and rigid orders had been issued to the Turks not to fire
-again. Then our men had opened fire.... But they don’t all tell the
-same story.... I have now got five contradictory orders from H.Q.
-
-_Tuesday, May 9, 1916. Felahiah._ The last boatload of wounded is
-coming down and the truce will, I suppose, end. The _Sikhim_ has made
-her last journey. A telegram arrived from the Admiral ordering me to go
-at once to Bushire. I am to get on board the _Lawrence_, sailing the
-12th from Basra, and join him at Bushire.... (Here indescribable things
-follow.) I went round and said good-bye to everybody.
-
-There is a lot of cholera. General Rice died last night. There are many
-bodies floating down the river. It’s tremendously hot. I have just seen
-Williams, the doctor of the _Sikhim_. He says the Turks have been good
-throughout. The Arabs have looted at the beginning, but this has been
-put an end to. It’s not going well with the Arabs.... We must largely
-depend on them for supplies.
-
-_Wednesday, May 10, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”_ I was to have left on S.1,
-but when it was apparent that it would not start that night, I went
-off to the _Mantis_. Buxton telephoned from Sheikh Saad that he would
-take me to Amara, if I could get there by 4.30 a.m. I came down with
-Colonel James. Many bodies in the river and much cholera at Wadi. Our
-men lack every mortal thing. I should like to send a telegram like this
-home, but don’t expect I should be allowed to: “From my experience of
-this country, I see that, unless certain action is taken immediately,
-consequences that are disastrous to the health of the troops must
-follow. All realize here that the past economy of the Government of
-India is responsible for our failure (_vide_ Sir W. Meyer’s Budget
-speech). Unless this is realized in England and supplies taken out
-of the hands of the Government of India, altogether, or liberally
-supplemented from home and Egypt, the troops will suffer even more
-during this summer than last year. Condensed milk and oatmeal are
-essential to the troops. India cannot provide these under three months,
-by which time we shall have sustained great and unnecessary losses.
-Supplies of potatoes and onions will cease at the end of this month.
-If cold storage is found to be impossible, a substitute, e.g. dried
-figs, must be found. India cannot provide these substitutes in time.
-Sufficient ice-machines and soda-water machines are as essential to
-prevent heat-stroke in the trenches as to cure heat-stroke in the
-hospitals. India, unless ordered to commandeer these from clubs,
-private houses, etc., cannot provide them. Many Indian troops are in
-21-lb. tents, single flap, one tent to four men. Numbers of these will
-get sunstroke. If you mean to hold this country, you can’t do it on
-the lines of Sir W. Meyer. A railway is essential. A fall in the river
-would render half our present transport useless, above Kurna. Many
-of the troops here are young and not strong. If a disaster to their
-health, which, in its way, is as grave as the fall of Kut, and due to
-the same reason, lack of transport, is to be prevented, supplies must
-be taken in hand from England and Egypt.”
-
-_Thursday, May 11, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.” Amara._ Yesterday was one of
-the most beautiful days imaginable. We came very fast down the river,
-with a delicious wind against us. On both banks there were great herds
-of sheep, cattle and nice-looking horses. Every horse here is blanketed
-by the Arabs, only our horses not blanketed. The Arabs vary a lot in
-looks. One man, towing a bellam, glancing back over his shoulder, was
-the picture of a snarling hyena. A great many of them were handsome.
-
-We came to Amara in the evening and found a lot of cholera. I went
-to the bazaar and bought what I could for J. K. and his mess, and
-cigarettes for the men, but couldn’t get fishing tackle. Amara looked
-beautiful in the evening--fine, picturesque Arab buildings, and palm
-groves and forests up and down both sides of the lighted river. At
-night we anchored to a palm and slept well, in spite of great gusts of
-wind occasionally, which roared through the palm forests, and bursts of
-rifle fire on the banks by us, at Arabs, who were stealing or sniping
-us. Jackals cried in a chorus.
-
-To-day the river has been enchanted. Long processions of delicately
-built mehailahs, perfectly reflected in the water, drifted down, often
-commanded by our own officers. The river turned into a glowing, limpid
-lake, almost without a land horizon. We passed the _Marmariss_, which
-the Turks fought until she caught fire. The Arab villages were half
-afloat. There was a look of peace everywhere, and the flood is too high
-to allow an attack on us. There was a glorious, dangerous sunset. The
-sky was a bank of clouds that caught fire and glowed east and west over
-the glowing water. The palms looked like a forest raised by magic from
-the river. It was like the most magnificent Mecca stone on the most
-gigantic scale.
-
-Pursefield, whose last night it is in Mesopotamia, asked me how much
-I wanted to get on. I said I couldn’t see the people I wanted to that
-night, so it was the same to me if we got in after dawn next morning.
-We tied up in mid-stream, to avoid being sniped. No flies at all.
-Sherbrooke and I talked after dinner.
-
-_Friday, May 12, 1916. H.M.S. “Lawrence.”_ The Army Commander and
-General Money were both away, and I only spent twenty minutes at Basra.
-I saw Bill Beach and Captain Nunn and wrote a line to Gertrude Bell
-and George Lloyd. I wish I could have seen them both. The _Sikhim_
-is there, in quarantine, her Red Cross looking like a huge tropical
-flower. I got on to the _Lawrence_. Cleanliness and comfort and good
-food. I wish the others could have it too.
-
- _Printed in Great Britain by_
- UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED
- WOKING AND LONDON
-
-
- Telegrams: “Scholarly, London.” 41 and 43 Maddox Street,
- Telephone: 1883 Mayfair. Bond Street, London, W. 1.
- _October, 1919._
-
-
-
-
-Mr. Edward Arnold’s
-
-AUTUMN ANNOUNCEMENTS, 1919.
-
-
-JOHN REDMOND’S LAST YEARS.
-
-By STEPHEN GWYNN.
-
- _With Portrait._ _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ =16s. net.=
-
-
-The “History of John Redmond’s Last Years,” by Stephen Gwynn, is in
-the first place an historical document of unusual importance. It is
-an account of Irish political events at their most exciting period,
-written by an active member of Mr. Redmond’s party who was in the
-confidence of his chief. The preliminary story of the struggle with the
-House of Lords and the prolonged fight over Home Rule is described by a
-keen student of parliamentary action. For the period which began with
-the war Mr. Gwynn has had access to all Redmond’s papers. He writes of
-Redmond’s effort to lead Ireland into the war from the standpoint of a
-soldier as well as a member of parliament. The last chapter gives to
-the world, for the first time, a full account of the Irish Convention
-which sat for eight months behind closed doors, and in which Redmond’s
-career reached its dramatic catastrophe.
-
-The interlocking of varying chains of circumstance, the parliamentary
-struggle, the rise of the rival volunteer forces, the raising of Irish
-divisions, the rebellion and its sequel, and, finally, the effect
-of bringing Irishmen together into conference--all this is vividly
-pictured, with increasing detail as the book proceeds. In the opening,
-two short chapters recall the earlier history of the Irish party and
-Redmond’s part in it.
-
-But the main interest centres in the character of Redmond himself. Mr.
-Gwynn does not work to display his leader as a hero without faults and
-incapable of mistakes. He shows the man as he knew him and worked under
-him, traces his career through its triumphs to reverses, and through
-gallant recovery to final defeat. A great man is made familiar to the
-reader, in his wisdom, his magnanimity, and his love of country. The
-tragic waste of great opportunities is portrayed in a story which has
-the quality of drama in it. Beside the picture of John Redmond himself
-there is sketched the gallant and sympathetic figure of his brother,
-who, after thirty-five years of parliamentary service, died with the
-foremost wave of his battalion at the battle of Messines.
-
-
-
-
-A MEDLEY OF MEMORIES.
-
-By the RT. REV. SIR DAVID HUNTER BLAIR, BART.
-
- _With Illustrations._ _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ =16s. net.=
-
-
-Sir David Hunter Blair, late Abbot of Fort Augustus, in the first part
-of these fifty years’ recollections, deals with his childhood and youth
-in Scotland, and gives a picture full of varied interest of Scottish
-country house life a generation or more ago. Very vivid, too, is the
-account of early days at what was then the most famous private school
-in England; and the chapter on Eton under Balston and Hornby gives
-thumbnail sketches of a great many Etonians, school-contemporaries of
-the writer’s, and bearing names afterwards very well known for one
-reason or another. Eton was followed by Magdalen; and undergraduate
-life in the Oxford of 1872 is depicted with a light hand and many
-amusing touches. There was foreign travel after the Oxford days; and
-two of the most pleasantly descriptive chapters of the book deal with
-Rome in the reign of Pius IX. and Leo XIII., both of which Pontiffs the
-author served as Private Chamberlain. There is much also that is fresh
-and interesting in the section treating of the lives and personalities
-of some of the great English Catholic families of by-gone days.
-
-Sir David entered the Benedictine Order at the age of twenty-five; and
-the latter half of the book is concerned with his life as co-founder,
-and member of the community of, the great Highland Abbey of Fort
-Augustus, of which he rose later to be the second abbot. The intimate
-account given in these pages of the life of a modern monk will be
-new to most readers, who will find it very interesting reading. The
-writer’s monastic experiences embrace not only his own beautiful home
-in the Central Highlands, but Benedictine life and work in England, in
-Belgium, Germany and Portugal, and in South America. One of the most
-novel and attractive chapters in the book is that dealing with the work
-of the Order in the vast territory of Brazil.
-
-The volume is illustrated with an excellent portrait, and with some
-clever black-and-white drawings, the work of Mr. Richard Anson, one
-of the author’s religious brethren, and a member of the Benedictine
-community at Caldey Abbey, in South Wales.
-
-
-
-
-WITH THE PERSIAN EXPEDITION.
-
-By MAJOR M. H. DONOHOE,
-
-ARMY INTELLIGENCE CORPS.
-
-SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT OF THE “DAILY CHRONICLE.”
-
- _With numerous Illustrations and Map._ _Demy 8vo._ =16s. net.=
-
-
-Among the many “side-shows” of the Great War, few are so difficult for
-the average reader to understand as the operations in Northern Persia,
-an offshoot of the Bagdhad venture, which had for their object the
-policing of the warlike tribes in an area almost unknown to Europeans,
-and included the various attempts to reach and hold Baku, and so get
-command of the Caspian and Caucasia.
-
-The story of these operations--carried out by little, half-forgotten
-bodies of troops, mainly local levies who broke at the critical moment
-and left their British officers and N.C.O.’s to carry on alone--is one
-of the most amazing of the whole War, and comprises many episodes that
-recall the most stirring events of the Empire’s pioneering days.
-
-By happy chance, Major M. H. Donohoe, the famous War Correspondent,
-whose work for the _Daily Chronicle_ in all the wars of the past
-twenty years is well known, was in this part of the world as a Major
-on the Intelligence Staff, work for which his knowledge of men and
-languages off the beaten tract peculiarly fitted him. He has written
-the story of these operations as he saw them, chiefly as a member of
-the Staff of the Military Mission under General Byron, known officially
-as the “Baghdad Party,” and unofficially as the “Hush-Hush Brigade,”
-which set forth early in 1918 to join the Column under General
-Dunsterville. Though there is little of fighting in the story, the
-book gives an admirable picture of the Empire’s work done faithfully
-under difficulties, and glimpses of places and peoples that are almost
-unknown even to the most venturesome traveller. Indeed, it is largely
-as a book about an unknown land that this volume will attract, together
-with its little pen-portraits of men and little pen-pictures of
-adventures, that Kipling would love.
-
-
-
-
-A PHYSICIAN IN FRANCE.
-
-By MAJOR-GENERAL SIR WILMOT HERRINGHAM, K.C.M.G., C.B.,
-
-PHYSICIAN TO ST. BARTHOLOMEW’S HOSPITAL; CONSULTING PHYSICIAN TO THE
-FORCES OVERSEAS.
-
- _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ =15s. net.=
-
-
-How the war, as seen at close quarters, struck a man eminent in
-another profession than that of arms is the distinguishing feature
-of this volume of personal impressions. It is not, however, merely
-the outcome of a few weeks’ sojourn or “trip to the trenches,” with
-one eye on an expectant public, for the author has four times seen
-autumn fade into winter on the flat country-side of Flanders, and,
-when the war ended, was still at his post rendering invaluable
-services amidst unforgettable scenes. The author’s comments on the
-day-to-day happenings are distinguished by a tone that is at once
-manly, reflective, and good-humoured. Medical questions are naturally
-prominent, but are dealt with largely in a manner that should interest
-the layman at the present time. Sir Wilmot was with Lord Roberts
-when he died. A very pleasing feature of the book is the constant
-revelation of the author’s love of nature and sport, and his happy way
-of introducing such topics, together with descriptions of the country
-around him, makes a welcome contrast to the stern events which form the
-staple material of the book. There are some very amusing stories.
-
-
-
-
-LONDON MEN IN PALESTINE.
-
-By ROWLANDS COLDICOTT.
-
- _With maps._ _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ =12s. 6d. net.=
-
-
-This book embraces so much more than the ordinary war story that we
-have a peculiar difficulty in describing it in a few chosen words.
-
-The curtain lifts the day after the battle of Sheria, one of the
-minor fights in General Allenby’s first campaign--those movements of
-troops which came only to a pause with the capture of Jerusalem. Gaza
-has just been taken. You are introduced to one of the companies of a
-London battalion serving in the East, of which company the author is
-commander. The reading of a few lines, the passing of a few moments,
-causes you (such is the power of right words) to be _attached_ to that
-company and to move in imagination with it across the dazzling plain.
-When you have tramped a few miles you begin to realise, perhaps for
-the first time, the heat and torment of a day’s march in Philistia. It
-is not long before you feel that you, too, are adventuring with the
-toiling soldiers; with them you wonder where the halting place will
-be, what sort of bivouac you are likely to hit upon. By this time you
-will have met the officers--Temple, Trobus, Jackson--and are coming
-to have a nodding acquaintance with the men. Desire to compass the
-unknown, and sympathetic interest in the experiences of a company of
-your own country-men, Londoners footing it in a foreign land, now
-takes you irresistibly into the very heart of the tale, and you become
-one with the narrator. With him you wander among the ruins of Gaza,
-pass into southern Palestine, and come to the foot-hills of Judea.
-With him you slowly become conscious that the long series of marches
-is planned to culminate in an assault upon Jerusalem. Now you are
-part of a dusty column winding up into Judea by the Jerusalem road,
-looking hour by hour upon those natural phenomena that suggested the
-parables. “London Men in Palestine” brings all this home to you as if
-you were a passer-by. Next, the massing of troops about the Holy City
-is described, and you are given a distant view of the city itself. A
-chapter follows that describes the coming of the rains. Then you spend
-a night in an old rock-engendered fortress-village while troops pass
-through to the attack, the storm still at its height. A chapter follows
-that tells of a crowded day--too complex and full of incident here to
-be described. The book closes with an exciting description of a fight
-on the Mount of Olives.
-
-
-
-
-MONS, ANZAC, AND KUT.
-
-By an M.P.
-
- _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ =14s. net.=
-
-
-The writer of these remarkable memoirs, whose anonymity will not
-veil his identity from his friends, is a man well known, not only in
-England, but also abroad, and the pages are full of the writer’s charm,
-and gaiety of spirit, and “courage of a day that knows not death.” Day
-by day, in the thick of the most stirring events in history, he jotted
-down his impressions at first hand, and although parts of the diary
-cannot yet be published, enough is given to the world to form a graphic
-and very human history.
-
-Our author was present at the most critical part of the Retreat from
-Mons. He took part in the dramatic defence of Landrecies, and the stand
-at Compiegne. Wounded, and a prisoner, he describes his experiences in
-a German hospital and his subsequent recapture by the British during
-the Marne advance.
-
-The scene then shifts to Gallipoli, where he was present at the
-immortal first landing, surely one of the noblest pages of our history.
-He took part in the fierce fighting at Suvla Bay, and, owing to his
-knowledge of Turkish, he had amazing experiences during the Armistice
-arranged for the burial of the dead.
-
-Later, the author was in Mesopotamia, where he accompanied the
-relieving force in their heroic attempt to save Kut. On several
-occasions he was sent out between the lines to conduct negociations
-between the Turks and ourselves.
-
-“Mons, Anzac, and Kut”.... A day and a day will pass, before the man
-and the moment meet to give us another book like this. We congratulate
-ourselves that the author survived to write it.
-
-
-
-
-THE STRUGGLE IN THE AIR.
-
-1914-1918.
-
-By MAJOR CHARLES C. TURNER (late R.A.F.).
-
- ASSOC. FELLOW R.AER.SOC., CANTOR LECTURES ON AERONAUTICS, 1909. AUTHOR OF
- “AIRCRAFT OF TO-DAY,” “THE ROMANCE OF AERONAUTICS,” AND (WITH
- GUSTAV HAMEL) OF “FLYING: SOME PRACTICAL EXPERIENCES,”
- EDITOR OF “AERONAUTICS,” ETC., ETC., ETC.
-
- _With Illustrations._ _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ =15s. net.=
-
-
-Major Turner served in the flying arm throughout the great conflict,
-chiefly as an instructor of officers of the Royal Naval Air Service,
-and then of the Royal Air Force in the principles of flight, aerial
-navigation, and other subjects. He did much experimental work, made
-one visit to the Front, and was mentioned in dispatches. The Armistice
-found him in the position of Chief Instructor at No. 2 School of
-Aeronautics, Oxford.
-
-The classification of this book explains its scope and arrangement. The
-chapters are as follows:
-
-Capabilities of Aircraft; Theory in 1914; The flight to France and
-Baptism of Fire; Early Surprises; Fighting in the Air, 1914-1915; 1916;
-1917; 1918; Zeppelins and the Defence; Night Flying; The Zeppelin
-Beaten; Aeroplane Raids on England; Bombing the Germans; Artillery
-Observation; Reconnaissance and Photography; Observation Balloons;
-Aircraft and Infantry; Sea Aircraft; Heroic Experimenters; Casualties
-in the Third Arm; The Robinson Quality.
-
-
-
-
-CAUGHT BY THE TURKS.
-
-By FRANCIS YEATS-BROWN.
-
- _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
-
-This book contains a full measure of adventure and excitement. The
-author, who is a Captain in the Indian Cavalry, was serving in the Air
-Force in Mesopotamia in 1915, and was captured through an accident
-to the aeroplane while engaged in a hazardous and successful attempt
-to cut the Turkish telegraph lines north and west of Baghdad, just
-before the Battle of Ctesiphon. Then came the horrors of the journey
-to Constantinople, during which the “terrible Turk” showed himself in
-his worst colours; but it was in Constantinople that the most thrilling
-episodes of his captivity had their origin. The story of the Author’s
-first attempt to escape (which did not succeed) and of his subsequent
-lucky dash for freedom, is one of intense interest, and is told in a
-most vivid and dramatic way.
-
-
-
-
-JOHN HUGH ALLEN
-
-OF THE GALLANT COMPANY
-
-A Memoir by his Sister INA MONTGOMERY.
-
- _With Portrait._ _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
-
-This book is the life-story of a young New Zealander who was killed
-in action at the Dardanelles in June, 1915. It is told mainly in his
-own letters and diaries--which have been supplemented, so far as was
-needful, with the utmost tact and discretion by his sister--and falls
-naturally into three principal stages. Allen spent four very strenuous
-years, 1907-1911, at Cambridge, where he occupied a prominent position
-among his contemporaries as an active member, and eventually President
-of the Union. Though undergraduate politics are not usually taken very
-seriously by the outside world, yet this side of Allen’s Cambridge
-career has an interest far transcending the merely personal one.
-Possessed, as he was, of remarkable gifts, which he had cultivated by
-assiduous practice as a speaker and writer, and passionately interested
-in all that concerns the British Empire, and the present and future
-relations between the United Kingdom and the Overseas Dominions, his
-record may well stand as representative of the attitude of the _élite_
-of the New Zealand youth towards these vital matters in the period just
-preceding the war.
-
-After Cambridge, he returned for a time to New Zealand, where he
-resolved to make his permanent home, but came back to England in
-December, 1913, to complete his legal studies and get called to the
-bar, and was still in England when the war broke out. Consequently the
-second stage is the story of seven months’ experience as a lieutenant
-in the 13th Battalion of the Worcesters, and his letters of this period
-give an attractive, and intensely graphic account of the making of
-the new army. Finally, he was despatched, with a few other selected
-officers, to the Dardanelles, arrived on May 25th at Cape Helles, and
-was attached to the Essex regiment. The last stage, brief, glorious,
-and terrible, lasted only twelve days but, brief as it was, he had
-time to draw an enthralling picture of the unexampled horrors of this
-particular phase of trench-warfare. The book is steeped, from beginning
-to end, in a sober but fervent enthusiasm; and the cult of the Empire,
-in its noblest form, has seldom been as finely exemplified as by the
-life and death of John Allen.
-
-
-
-
-NOËL ROSS AND HIS WORK.
-
-Edited by HIS PARENTS.
-
- _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
-
-A series of charming sketches by a young New Zealander, who died in
-December, 1917, on the threshold of a brilliant literary career. Noël
-Ross was one of those daring Anzacs who made the landing on Gallipoli.
-Wounded in the early days of the terrible fighting there, he was
-discharged from the Army, came to London, rejoined there, and obtained
-a commission in the Royal Field Artillery. Afterwards he became a
-valued member of the Editorial Staff of _The Times_, on which his
-genius was at once recognized and highly appreciated. Much of his work
-appeared in _The Times_, and he was also a contributor to Punch. In
-collaboration with his father, Captain Malcolm Ross, the New Zealand
-War Correspondent, he was the author of “Light and Shade in War,” of
-which the _Daily Mail_ said: “It is full of Anzac virility, full of
-Anzac buoyancy, and surcharged with that devil-may-care humour that has
-so astounded us jaded peoples of an older world.”
-
-His writings attracted the attention of such capable writers as Rudyard
-Kipling, and Sir Ian Hamilton, who said he reminded him in many ways of
-that gallant and brilliant young Englishman, Rupert Brooke.
-
-
-
-
-WITH THE BRITISH INTERNED IN SWITZERLAND.
-
-By LIEUT.-COLONEL H. P. PICOT, C.B.E.,
-
-LATE MILITARY ATTACHÉ, 1914-16, AND BRITISH OFFICER IN CHARGE OF THE
-INTERNED, 1916-18.
-
- _1 vol._ _Demy 8vo._ _Cloth._ =10s. 6d. net.=
-
-
-In this volume Colonel Picot tells us, in simple and lucid fashion,
-how some thousands of our much tried and suffering countrymen were
-transferred--to the eternal credit of Switzerland--from the harsh
-conditions of captivity to a neutral soil, there to live in comparative
-freedom amid friendly surroundings. He describes in some detail the
-initiative taken by the Swiss Government on behalf of the Prisoners
-of War in general, and the negociations which preceded the acceptance
-by the Belligerent States of the principle of Internment, and then
-recounts the measures taken by that Government for the hospitalization
-of some 30,000 Prisoners of War, and the organization of a Medical
-Service for the treatment of the sick and wounded.
-
-Turning, then, more particularly to the group of British prisoners,
-he deals with their discipline, their camp life, the steps taken for
-spiritual welfare, and the organization of sports and recreations,
-and an interesting chapter records the efforts made to afford them
-technical training in view of their return to civil life.
-
-The book also comprises a resumé of the formation and development of
-the Bread Bureau at Berne, which ultimately, in providing bread for
-100,000 British prisoners of war in Germany, doubtless saved countless
-lives; and a description of the activities of the British Legation Red
-Cross Organization, both of which institutions were founded by Lady
-Grant Duff, wife of H.M.’s Minister at Berne.
-
-Colonel Picot throws many interesting sidelights on life in Switzerland
-in war-time--diplomatic, social, and artistic--and his modest and
-self-effacing narrative dwells generously on the devotion of all those
-who, whether by appointment or chance, were associated with him in his
-beneficent labours.
-
-It is hoped that this account of a special phase in the history of our
-countrymen will prove of interest to that large public who have shown
-in countless ways their sympathy with all that concerns the welfare of
-Prisoners of War.
-
-
-
-
-A CHILDHOOD IN BRITTANY EIGHTY YEARS AGO.
-
-By ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK,
-
-AUTHOR OF “TANTE,” “THE ENCOUNTER,” ETC.
-
- _Demy 8vo._ _Cloth._ =10s. 6d. net.=
-
-
-With exquisite literary art which the reading public has recognised
-in “Tante” and others of her novels, the author of this book tells of
-a great lady’s childhood in picturesque Brittany in the middle of the
-last century. It covers that period of life around which the tenderest
-and most vivid memories cluster; a childhood set in a district of
-France rich in romance, and rich in old loyalties to manners and
-customs of a gracious era that is irrevocably in the past.
-
-Charming vignettes of character, marvellous descriptions of houses,
-costumes and scenery, short stories in silhouette of pathetic or
-humorous characters--these are also in the book.
-
-And through it all the author is seen re-creating a background, which
-has profoundly influenced one of the finest literary artists of the
-last century.
-
-
-
-
-GARDENS: THEIR FORM AND DESIGN.
-
-By the VISCOUNTESS WOLSELEY.
-
-_With numerous Illustrations by_ MISS M. G. CAMPION.
-
- _1 vol._ _Medium 8vo._ =21s. net.=
-
-
-The present volume, which is beautifully got up and illustrated, deals
-with form and line in the garden, a subject comparatively new in
-England.
-
-Lady Wolseley’s book suggests simple, inexpensive means--the outcome
-of practical knowledge and experience--for achieving charming results
-in gardens of all sizes. Her College of Gardening at Glynde has
-shown Lady Wolseley how best to make clear to those who have never
-before thought about garden design, some of the complex subjects
-embraced by it, such as Water Gardens, Rock Gardens, Treillage, Paved
-Gardens, Surprise Gardens, etc. The book contains many decorative and
-imaginative drawings by Miss Mary G. Campion, as well as a large number
-of practical diagrams and plans, which further illustrate the author’s
-ideas and add to the value of the book.
-
-
-
-
-MEMORIES OF THE MONTHS.
-
-SIXTH SERIES.
-
-By the RT. HON. SIR HERBERT MAXWELL, BT., F.R.S., D.C.L., LL.D.
-
- _With photogravure frontispiece._ Large Crown 8vo._ =10s. 6d. net.=
-
-
-It is some years since the fifth series of “Memories of the Months”
-was issued, but the demand for Sir Herbert Maxwell’s charming volumes
-continues unabated. Every year rings new changes on the old order
-of Nature, and the observant eye can always find fresh features on
-the face of the Seasons. Sir Herbert Maxwell goes out to meet Nature
-on the moor and loch, in garden and forest, and writes of what he
-sees and feels. It is a volume of excellent gossip, the note-book
-of a well-informed and high-spirited student of Nature, where the
-sportsman’s ardour is tempered always with the sympathy of the lover of
-wild things, and the naturalist’s interest is leavened with the humour
-of a cultivated man of the world. This is what gives the work its
-abiding charm, and makes these memories fill the place of old friends
-on the library bookshelf.
-
-
-
-
-SINGLE-HANDED CRUISING.
-
-By FRANCIS B. COOKE,
-
-AUTHOR OF “THE CORINTHIAN YACHTSMAN’S HANDBOOK,” “CRUISING HINTS,” ETC.
-
- _Illustrated._ =10s. 6d. net.=
-
-
-The contents of this volume being based upon the author’s many
-years’ practical experience of single-handed sailing, are sure to
-be acceptable to those who, either from choice or necessity, make a
-practice of cruising alone. Of the four thousand or more yachts whose
-names appear in Lloyd’s Register, quite a considerable proportion
-are small craft used for the most part for week-end cruising, and
-single-handed sailing is a proposition that the owner of a week-ender
-cannot afford altogether to ignore. To be dependent upon the assistance
-of friends, who may leave one in the lurch at the eleventh hour, is a
-miserable business that can only be avoided by having a yacht which
-one is capable of handling alone. The ideal arrangement is to have a
-vessel of sufficient size to accommodate one or two guests and yet
-not too large to be sailed single-handed at a pinch. In this book Mr.
-Cooke gives some valuable hints on the equipment and handling of such a
-craft, which, it may be remarked, can, in the absence of paid hands, be
-maintained at comparatively small cost.
-
-
-
-
-MODERN ROADS.
-
-By H. PERCY BOULNOIS, M.Inst.C.E., F.R.San.Inst., etc.
-
- _Demy 8vo._ =16s. net.=
-
-
-The author is well known as one of the leading authorities on
-road-making, and he deals at length with Traffic, Water-bound Macadam
-Roads, Surface Tarring, Bituminous Roads, Waves and Corrugations,
-Slippery Roads, Paved Streets (Stone and Wood, etc.), Concrete Road
-Construction, etc.
-
-
-
-
-A THIN GHOST AND OTHERS.
-
-By DR. M. R. JAMES,
-
-PROVOST OF ETON COLLEGE.
-
- _Crown 8vo._ _Cloth._ =4s. 6d. net.=
-
-
-The Provost of Eton needs no introduction as a past master of the art
-of making our flesh creep, and those who have enjoyed his earlier books
-may rest assured that his hand has lost none of its blood-curdling
-cunning. Neither is it necessary to remind them that Dr. James’s
-inexhaustible stories of archæological erudition furnish him with a
-unique power of giving his gruesome tales a picturesque setting, and
-heightening by their literary and antiquarian charm the exquisite
-pleasure derived from thrills of imaginary terror. This latter quality
-has never been more happily displayed than in the stories contained
-in the present volume, which we submit with great confidence to the
-judgment of all who appreciate--and who does not?--a good old-fashioned
-hair-raising ghost story.
-
-
-
-
-New Editions.
-
-
-
-
-GHOST STORIES OF AN ANTIQUARY.
-
-By DR. M. R. JAMES,
-
-PROVOST OF ETON COLLEGE.
-
- _New Edition._ _Crown 8vo._ =5s. net.=
-
-
-
-
-MORE GHOST STORIES.
-
-By DR. M. R. JAMES.
-
- _New Edition._ _Crown 8vo._ =5s. net.=
-
-
-
-
-THE PERFECT GENTLEMAN.
-
-By CAPTAIN HARRY GRAHAM,
-
-AUTHOR OF “RUTHLESS RHYMES,” ETC.
-
- _New Edition._ _Crown 8vo._ _Cloth._ =3s. 6d. net.=
-
-
-
-
-THE COMPLETE SPORTSMAN.
-
-By CAPTAIN HARRY GRAHAM.
-
- _New Edition._ _Crown 8vo._ _Cloth._ =3s. 6d. net.=
-
-
-
-
-_The Modern Educator’s Library._
-
-General Editor: Professor A. A. COCK.
-
-
-The present age is seeing an unprecedented advance in educational
-theory and practice; its whole outlook on the ideals and methods of
-teaching is being widened. The aim of this new series is to present the
-considered views of teachers of wide experience, and eminent ability,
-upon the changes in method involved in this development, and upon the
-problems which still remain to be solved, in the several branches of
-teaching with which they are most intimately connected. It is hoped,
-therefore, that these volumes will be instructive not only to teachers,
-but to all who are interested in the progress of education.
-
-Each volume contains an index and a comprehensive bibliography of the
-subject with which it deals.
-
-
-
-
-EDUCATION: ITS DATA AND FIRST PRINCIPLES.
-
-By T. PERCY NUNN, M.A., D.Sc.,
-
-PROFESSOR OF EDUCATION IN THE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON; AUTHOR OF “THE AIMS
-AND ACHIEVEMENTS OF SCIENTIFIC METHOD,” “THE TEACHING OF ALGEBRA,” ETC.
-
- _Crown 8vo._ _Cloth._ =6s. net.=
-
-
-Dr. Nunn’s volume really forms an introduction to the whole series,
-and deals with the fundamental questions which lie at the root of
-educational inquiry. The first is that of the aims of education. These,
-he says, are always correlative to ideals of life, and, as ideals of
-life are eternally at variance, their conflict will be reflected in
-educational theories. The individualism of post-reformation Europe
-gradually gave way to a reaction culminating in Hegel, which pictured
-the state as the superentity of which the single life is but a fugitive
-element. The logical result of this Hegelian ideal the world has
-just seen, and educators of to-day have to decide whether to foster
-this sinister tradition or to help humanity to escape from it to
-something better. What we need is a doctrine which, while admitting the
-importance of the social element in man, reasserts the importance of
-the individual.
-
-This notion of individuality as the ideal of life is worked out
-at length, and on the results of this investigation are based the
-conclusions which are reached upon the practical problem of embodying
-this ideal in teaching. Among other subjects, the author deals with
-Routine and Ritual, Play, Nature and Nurture, Imitation, Instinct;
-and there is a very illuminating last chapter on “The School and the
-Individual.”
-
-
-
-
-MORAL AND RELIGIOUS EDUCATION.
-
-By SOPHIE BRYANT, D.Sc., Litt.D.
-
-LATE HEAD MISTRESS OF THE NORTH LONDON COLLEGIATE SCHOOL FOR GIRLS
-AUTHOR OF “EDUCATIONAL ENDS,” ETC.
-
- _Crown 8vo._ _Cloth._ =6s. net.=
-
-
-In this book, Mrs. Bryant, whose writings on educational subjects are
-widely known, takes the view that in order to produce the best result
-over the widest area, the teaching of morality through the development
-of religious faith, and its teaching by direct appeal to self-respect,
-reason, sympathy and common sense, are both necessary. In religion,
-more than in anything else, different individuals must follow different
-paths to the goal.
-
-Upon this basis the book falls into four parts. The first deals with
-the processes of spiritual self-realisation by means of interest in
-knowledge and art, and of personal affections and social interest,
-which all emerge in the development of conscience. The second part
-treats of the moral ideal and how it is set forth by means of heroic
-romance and history, and in the teaching of Aristotle, to build up the
-future citizen. The third presents the religious ideal, its beginnings
-and the background of ideas implied by it, together with suggestions
-for study of the Bible and the lives of the Saints. In the fourth part
-the problem of the reasoned presentment of religious truths is dealt
-with in detail.
-
-There is no doubt that this book makes a very considerable addition to
-what has already been written on the subject of religious education.
-
-
-
-
-THE TEACHING OF MODERN FOREIGN LANGUAGES IN SCHOOL AND UNIVERSITY.
-
-By H. G. ATKINS, M.A.,
-
-PROFESSOR OF GERMAN IN KING’S COLLEGE, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON, AND
-UNIVERSITY READER IN GERMAN,
-
-AND
-
-H. L. HUTTON, M.A.,
-
-SENIOR MODERN LANGUAGE MASTER AT MERCHANT TAYLORS’ SCHOOL.
-
- _Crown 8vo._ _Cloth._ =6s. net.=
-
-
-The first part of this book deals with the School, the second with the
-University. While each part is mainly written by one of the authors,
-they have acted in collaboration and have treated the two subjects as
-interdependent. They have referred only briefly to the main features of
-the past history, and have chiefly tried to give a broad survey of the
-present position of modern language teaching, and the desirable policy
-for the future.
-
-As regards the School, conclusions are first reached as to the relative
-amount of time to be devoted to modern languages in the curriculum, and
-the various branches of the subject--its organisation and methods, the
-place of grammar and the history of the language--are then discussed.
-A chapter is devoted to the questions relating to the second foreign
-language, and the study is linked up with the University course.
-
-In the second part Professor Atkins graces the different ends to which
-the School course continued at the University may lead, with special
-reference to the higher Civil Service Examinations and to the training
-of Secondary School Teachers.
-
-The general plan of the book was worked out before the publication of
-the report of the Government Committee appointed by the Prime Minister
-to enquire into the position of Modern Languages in the educational
-system of Great Britain. With the report, however, the authors’
-conclusions were in the main found to agree, and the text of the book
-has been brought up-to-date by references to the report which have
-been made in footnotes as well as in places in the text. No further
-modifications were thought to be necessary.
-
-The book will be found to give a comprehensive review of the whole
-field of modern language teaching and some valuable help towards the
-solution of its problems.
-
-
-
-
-THE CHILD UNDER EIGHT.
-
-By E. R. MURRAY,
-
-VICE-PRINCIPAL OF MARIA GREY TRAINING COLLEGE; AUTHOR OF “FROEBEL AS A
-PIONEER IN MODERN PSYCHOLOGY,” ETC.,
-
-AND
-
-HENRIETTA BROWN SMITH, LL.A.,
-
-LECTURER IN EDUCATION, GOLDSMITH’S COLLEGE, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON;
-EDITOR OF “EDUCATION BY LIFE.”
-
- _Crown 8vo._ _Cloth._ =6s. net.=
-
-
-The authors of this book deal with the young child at the outset of its
-education, a stage the importance of which cannot be exaggerated. The
-volume is written in two parts, the first dealing with the child in the
-Nursery and Kindergarten, and the second with the child in the State
-School. Much that is said is naturally applicable to either form of
-School, and, where this is so, repetition has been avoided by means of
-cross references.
-
-The authors find that the great weakness of English education in the
-past has been want of a definite aim to put before the children, and
-the want of a philosophy for the teacher. Without some understanding
-of the meaning and purpose of life the teacher is at the mercy of
-every fad, and is apt to exalt method above principle. This book is an
-attempt to gather together certain recognised principles, and to show
-in the light of actual experience how these may be applied to existing
-circumstances. They put forward a strong plea for the recognition of
-the true value of Play, the “spontaneous activity in all directions,”
-and for courage and faith on the part of the teacher to put this
-recognition into practice; and they look forward to the time when the
-conditions of public Elementary Schools, from the Nursery School up,
-will be such--in point of numbers, space, situation and beauty of
-surroundings--that parents of any class will gladly let their children
-attend them.
-
-_Further volumes in this series are in preparation and will be
-published shortly._
-
-
-
-
-FIRST PRINCIPLES OF MUSIC.
-
-By F. J. READ, MUS. DOC. (OXON.)
-
-FORMERLY PROFESSOR AT THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF MUSIC.
-
- _Crown 8vo._ =1s. 6d.=
-
-
-This book is the result of the author’s long experience as Professor
-of Theory at the Royal College of Music, and is the clearest and most
-concise treatise of the kind that has yet been written.
-
- “It is a useful little book, covering a wider field than any
- other of the kind that we know.”--_The Times._
-
- “It is calculated to quicken interest in various subjects
- outside the normal scope of an elementary musical grammar. The
- illustrated chapter on orchestral instruments, for instance, is
- a welcome and stimulating innovation.”--_Daily Telegraph._
-
-LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 & 43 MADDOX STREET, W. 1.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Now Admiral Boyle, C.B., C.M.G., M.V.O.
-
-[2] Colonel Doughty Wylie, V.C.
-
-[3] Colonel Esson was Q.M.G. of the New Zealand Division.
-
-[4] Now Lieut.-General Sir John Monash, commanding the Australian
-Forces.
-
-[5] Because he had been through the siege of Plevna and was covered
-with Turkish decorations.
-
-[6] Supply officer of the New Zealand Division.
-
-[7] Now Lieut.-General Sir A. H. Russell, K.C.M.G., K.C.B.
-
-[8] Now Chief of Staff in India.
-
-[9] Commanding Australian Div.
-
-[10] Now Lieut.-Colonel Bigham, C.M.G., Grenadier Guards.
-
-[11] Now Brigadier-General, Australian Forces.
-
-[12] Now Surgeon-General and Director-General, Medical Services of
-Australia.
-
-[13] The usual Albanian greeting.
-
-[14] Commanding 1st Australian Light Horse Brigade. Now Lieut.-General
-Sir H. Chauvel, G.C.M.G., K.C.B.
-
-[15] Commanding New Zealand Infantry Brigade. Afterwards killed at
-battle of Messines in 1917.
-
-[16] Now Lieut.-General Sir Neville, Director of the Australian Medical
-Service.
-
-[17] Now Sir George Lloyd, Governor of Bombay.
-
-[18] War correspondents.
-
-[19] The novelist.
-
-[20] Naval beachmaster.
-
-[21] His A.D.C., a Captain in the Indian Lancers, who had been killed.
-
-[22] A.D.M.S., New Zealand Division.
-
-[23] Irish Guards. Commanding 29th Irish Brigade.
-
-[24] Taken back after.
-
-
-[Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.
-
-Page 151, “_Monday, July 2, 1915.” changed to read “_Monday, August 2,
-1915.” to match the month in previous and subsequent diary entries.]
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mons, Anzac and Kut, by Aubrey Herbert
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-Title: Mons, Anzac and Kut
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-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_i">i</span></p>
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<h3>Transcriber’s Note:</h3>
-
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-</div>
-
-<h1>
-MONS, ANZAC AND KUT<br />
-<br />
-<span class="large smcap">By an M.P.</span><br />
-
-<span style="padding-top: 5em" class="medium table">LONDON<br />
-
-EDWARD ARNOLD<br />
-
-1919<br />
-
-<span class="copy">[<i>All rights reserved</i>]</span></span></h1>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ii">ii</span></p>
-
-<p class="break center">
-<span class="small">
-THIS BOOK<br />
-
-IS DEDICATED TO<br />
-
-<span class="large">LORD ROBERT CECIL</span><br />
-
-AND<br />
-
-<span class="large">THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS</span></span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">iii</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="PREFACE">PREFACE</h2>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">Journals</span>, in the eyes of their author, usually
-require an introduction of some kind, which,
-often, may be conveniently forgotten. The reader
-is invited to turn to this one if, after persevering
-through the pages of the diary, he wishes to learn
-the reason of the abrupt changes and chances of
-war that befell the writer. They are explained
-by the fact that his eyesight did not allow him to
-pass the necessary medical tests. He was able,
-through some slight skill, to evade these obstacles
-in the first stage of the war; later, when England
-had settled down to routine, they defeated him,
-as far as the Western Front was concerned. He
-was fortunately compensated for this disadvantage
-by a certain knowledge of the East, that sent him
-in various capacities to different fronts, often at
-critical times. It was as an Interpreter that the
-writer went to France. After a brief imprisonment,
-it was as an Intelligence Officer that he went to
-Egypt, the Dardanelles and Mesopotamia.</p>
-
-<p>The first diary was dictated in hospital from
-memory and rough notes made on the Retreat
-from Mons. For the writing of the second diary,
-idle hours were provided in the Dardanelles between
-times of furious action. The third diary, which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">iv</span>
-deals with the fall of Kut, was written on the Fly
-boats of the River Tigris.</p>
-
-<p>In a diary egotism is inevitable. Julius C&aelig;sar
-cloaked it by using the third person and Lord
-French by preferring to blame others, rather than
-to praise himself, but these devices are no precedents
-for one who is not a generalissimo. There remains
-anonymity. True, it is a very thin covering for
-modesty, but, like a modern bathing-dress, it may
-serve its purpose.</p>
-
-<p>When dots occur in the journal, they have their
-usual significance. The author was thinking his
-private thoughts, or, perhaps, criticizing some high
-authority, or concealing what, for the moment,
-at any rate, is better not revealed.</p>
-
-<p>In the Retreat from Mons, only Christian or
-nicknames have generally been used. In the case
-of the other two Expeditions, names have been
-used freely, though where it was considered advisable,
-they have occasionally been disguised or initials
-substituted for them.</p>
-
-<p>This diary claims to be no more than a record
-of great and small events, a chronicle of events
-within limited horizons&mdash;a retreat, a siege and an
-attack. Writing was often hurried and difficult,
-and the diary was sometimes neglected for a
-period. If inaccuracies occur, the writer offers
-sincere apologies.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td class="small tdr">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#MONS">MONS, 1914</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#ANZAC_1915">ANZAC, 1915</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">61</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#KUT_1916">KUT, 1916</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">189</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="break xx-large"><span class="xx-large">MONS</span><br />
-<span class="x-large">1914</span><br />
-</h2>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">SIFTON, PRAED &amp; CO. LTD. ST JAMES’ ST LONDON S. W.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="MONS" class="break">MONS<br />
-
-<span class="large smcap">August 12-September 13, 1914</span></h2>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">On</span> Wednesday, August 12, 1914, my regiment left
-Wellington Barracks at seven in the morning.
-I fell into step in the ranks as they went out of
-the gateway, where I said good-bye to my brother,
-who left that day. It was very quiet in the streets,
-as the papers had said nothing about the movement
-of troops. On the march the wives and relations
-of men said good-bye to them at intervals, and some
-of our people came to see us off at the station,
-but we missed them.</p>
-
-<p>We entrained for Southampton&mdash;Tom, Robin,
-Valentine and I got into the same carriage. We
-left Southampton without much delay. I was
-afraid of a hitch, but got on to the ship without
-any trouble. On board everybody was very cheerful.
-Most people thought that the first big engagement
-would have begun and very likely have ended
-before we arrived. Some were disappointed and
-some cheered by this thought. The men sang
-without ceasing and nobody thought of a sea attack.</p>
-
-<p>The next day (the 13th) we arrived very early at
-Le Havre in a blazing sun. As we came in, the
-French soldiers tumbled out of their barracks and
-came to cheer us. Our men had never seen foreign
-uniforms before, and roared with laughter at their
-colours. Stephen Burton of the Coldstream Guards
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-rebuked his men. He said: “These French troops
-are our Allies; they are going to fight with us
-against the Germans.” Whereupon one man said:
-“Poor chaps, they deserve to be encouraged,”
-and took off his cap and waved it and shouted
-“Vive l’Empereur!” He was a bit behind the
-times. I believe if the Germans beat us and
-invaded England they would still be laughed at
-in the villages as ridiculous foreigners.</p>
-
-<p>We were met by a Colonel of the French Reserves,
-a weak and ineffective man, two Boy Scouts, and
-a semi-idiotic interpreter. We shed this man as
-soon as we were given our own two excellent interpreters.
-We had no wood to cook the men’s
-dinners, and I was sent off with Jumbo and a
-hundred men to see what I could find. A French
-corporal came reluctantly with us. We marched
-a mile, when we found an English quartermaster
-at a depot, who let us requisition a heap of great
-faggots, which we carried back.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast I was sent with Hickie to arrange
-for billeting the men. Hickie rode a bicycle and
-lent me his horse, which was the most awful brute
-I have ever mounted in any country. It walked
-ordinarily like a crab; when it was frightened it
-walked backwards, and it was generally frightened.
-It would go with the troop, but not alone, and
-neither whip nor reins played any part in guiding
-the beast. Hickie couldn’t ride it. Some French
-soldiers threw some stones at it and hit me. Finally
-we got a crawling cab, then a motor, and went
-off about 11 kilometres to the Caf&eacute; des Fleurs,
-where the camp was to be. It was a piping hot
-day. We got a house for the Colonel and Desmond
-belonging to Monsieur Saville, who said he was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
-a friend of Mr. Yoxall, M.P. He had a very jolly
-arbour, where we dined. In the afternoon the
-troops came marching up the steep hill in great
-heat. Hickie and I found a man rather drunk,
-with a very hospitable Frenchman. The Frenchman
-said: “We have clean sheets and a well-aired bed,
-coffee, wine or beer for him, if he desires them.”
-There was no question about the man’s desiring
-them. Hickie almost wept, and said: “How can
-you keep an army together if they are going to
-be treated like this?” The sun had been delightful
-in the morning at Le Havre, but was cruel on the
-troops, especially on the Reservists, coming up
-the long hill.</p>
-
-<p>The French had been very hospitable. They
-had given the men, where they had been able to
-do so free of observation, wine, coffee and beer.
-The result was distressing. About twenty of the
-men collapsed at the top of the hill in a ditch,
-some of them unconscious, seeming almost dying,
-like fish out of water. The French behaved very
-well, especially the women, and stopped giving
-them spirits. I got hold of cars and carried the
-men off to their various camps. Jack, Tom and I
-slept all right in a tent on the ground. The next day
-I was sent down by the Colonel with the drum-major,
-to buy beer for the regiment at 1s. 1d. a
-gallon, which seemed cheap. I met Stephen while
-I was buying things. He told me we were off
-that night, that we were to start at ten, but that
-we should not be entrained till 4.30. I lunched
-with Churchill, who very kindly tried to help me
-to get a horse. Long sent me back in his motor.
-At the camp, the Colonel complained that the beer
-had not come, and that the drum-major and the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-men had been lost. I commandeered a private
-motor and went back at a tremendous rate into
-the town, all but killing the drum-major at a corner.
-We had a capital dinner. M. Saville gave us
-excellent wine, and the Colonel told me to make him
-a speech. We then lay down before the march.</p>
-
-<p>The next camp captured a spy, but nobody paid
-any attention. About 10.30 we moved off. It
-was a warm night with faint moonlight. Coming
-into the town the effect was operatic. As we
-marched or were halted all the windows opened
-and the people put their heads out to try and
-talk to us. At about half-past eleven it began
-to rain, but the men whistled the Marseillaise and
-“It’s a long way to Tipperary.” The people came
-out of the houses, trying to catch the hands of the
-men and walking along beside them. We were
-halted in front of the station, and waited endlessly
-in the rain. We then had an almost unspeakable
-march over cobbles, past interminable canals, over
-innumerable bridges, through what seemed to be
-the conglomeration of all the slums of all the world,
-to light that always promised us rest but never came.
-It poured without ceasing. At last we arrived
-at the station, and when we saw the train pandemonium
-followed. Everybody jumped into
-carriages and tried to keep other people out, so
-as to have more room. We were all soaked to the
-skin, and nobody bothered about any one else.
-After that we got out and packed the men in. Tom,
-Charles, Jack, Hickie and I got into one carriage.
-Lieutenants who tried to follow were hurled out.
-It was very cold. Tom had a little brandy, which
-did us some good. At about 5 a.m. we moved off.
-The next day we arrived at Amiens.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span></p>
-
-<p>Saturday, the 15th, we arrived at Amiens to see a
-great stir and bustle. We had not had much to eat.
-We found several officers of the Coldstream Guards
-in their shirt-sleeves, who had got left trying to
-get food. I got masses later on at a wayside station,
-and a stream of people to carry it, and returned
-with rousing cheers from the men. At every station
-we were met by enormous crowds that cheered and
-would have kissed our hands if we had let them.
-They made speeches and piled wreaths of flowers
-upon the Colonel, who was at first very shy, but
-driven to make a speech, liked it, and became
-almost garrulous. At Arras we had the greatest
-ovation of all. An old man in the crowd gave
-me a post-card, which I directed to a relation at
-home and asked him to post. This he did, adding
-a long letter of his own, to say that I was well
-and in good spirits. This letter and my post-card
-got past the censor.</p>
-
-<p>Late that night we came to a place called Wassigny,
-where, after a lot of standing about, we went up
-to a farmhouse. Hickie and I lay down on the floor
-in a sort of an office at about half-past two, with
-orders to be off at five. The Colonel slept outside,
-half on and half off a bench. He never seemed
-to need sleep.</p>
-
-<p>We left the next morning, Sunday, the 16th,
-at five, for Vadencourt. I was wearing Cretan
-boots, and my feet already began to trouble me.</p>
-
-<p>At Vadencourt we met the Maire and his colleague,
-Monsieur Lesur. He took us first of all to
-the most beautiful place for a camp, a splendid
-field by a river for bathing, wooded with poplars,
-but no sooner had we got there than we were told
-the Coldstreamers had the right to it.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span></p>
-
-<p>In Vadencourt everybody helped us. The people
-threw open their houses, their barns and their
-orchards. They could not do enough; but it was
-a long business and we had not finished until
-1 o’clock, by which time we were pretty tired.
-Then the troops turned up, and we had to get
-them into billets. After that we lunched with the
-Colonel. The French cottages were extraordinarily
-clean, never an insect, but plenty of mice rioting
-about at night. There were many signs of religion
-in all these cottages. Most of the rooms were
-filled with crucifixes and pictures of the Saints.
-The priests seemed to have a great deal of influence.
-Vadencourt was very religious, and the morning
-we went off they had a special service for the men,
-which was impressive. All the people seemed
-saintly, except the Maire, who was very much
-of this world.</p>
-
-<p>The men had fraternized with the people and,
-to the irritation of the Colonel, wore flowers in
-their hair and caps. There was no drunkenness&mdash;in
-fact the men complained that there was nothing
-strong enough to make a man drunk. Generally
-there was not much to do, though one day the men
-helped with the harvest. The people could not
-have been kinder. It was, as one of the men said,
-a great “overtation.” Every day there was a
-paper published in amazing English. In one paper
-we found a picture of Alex Thynne, with contemptuous
-and angry references to a speech he
-had made against English tourists going to France;
-he wanted them to go instead to Bath, in his constituency,
-and so to please both him and his
-constituents.</p>
-
-<p>It was a quiet life. There was very little soldiering,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-and that, as some one said, was more like manœuvres
-in the millennium than anything else. Everywhere
-corn was offered for our horses and wine for ourselves,
-but there was a great fear underlying the
-quiet. We were constantly asked whether the
-Germans would ever get to Vadencourt, and always
-said we were quite sure they would not. We used
-to mess at the inn close to my house. Of French
-troops we saw practically nothing, except our
-two interpreters, Charlot, who talked very good
-English, and Bernard, a butcher from Havre,
-a most excellent fellow, who was more English
-than the English, though he could only talk a few
-words of the language. There was also another
-interpreter, head master of a girls’ school in Paris.
-He said to me: “Vous trouverez toutes esp&egrave;ces
-d’infames parmi les interprets, m&ecirc;me des M.P.s.”</p>
-
-<p>One day Hugo said that it would be interesting,
-before going into battle, to have our fortunes
-told. I told him he could not get a fortune-teller
-at Vadencourt. “Not at all, there is one in the
-village; I saw it written over her shop, ‘Sage
-Femme’.” ... I was very comfortable in my house,
-which was just out of bounds, but not enough to
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>Monsieur Louis Prevot came in one day, with
-a beautiful mare, brown to bay, Moonshine II,
-by Troubadour out of Middlemas. He said that
-she could jump two metres. Her disadvantages
-were that she jumped these two metres at the
-wrong time and in the wrong place, that she hated
-being saddled and kicked when she was groomed:
-while Monsieur Prevot was showing me how to
-prevent her kicking she kicked right through the
-barn door. I bought her for &pound;40. I think Prevot
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-thought that the French authorities were going
-to take his stables and that I was his only chance.
-When she settled down to troops she became a
-beautiful mount.</p>
-
-<p>That day I went with Hickie through Etreux
-to Bou&eacute;, foraging. I drove with a boy called
-Vanston behind a regular man-killer. It was far
-worse than anything that happened at Mons.
-Vanston talked all the time of the virtue of Irishwomen,
-of the great advantage of having medals
-and the delight old men found in looking at them,
-of the higher courage of the unmarried man and
-his keen anxiety to get into battle, and of the goodness
-of God. Hickie was upset because he thought
-that the man-killing horse was going to destroy
-the Maltese cart, which was, apparently, harder
-to replace than Vanston or me.</p>
-
-<p>The night before we left the Colonel gave us
-a lecture. As an additional preparation for the
-march we were also inoculated against typhoid,
-which made some people light-headed.</p>
-
-<p>We left Vadencourt on August 19th, Hickie
-and Hubert both ill, travelling on a transport
-cart. I rode ahead, through pretty and uneventful
-country. At Oisy, Hickie was very ill, and I got
-him some brandy. We were to camp beyond
-Oisy. When we got to the appointed place the
-Maire was ill and half dotty. S. and I laboured
-like mad to find houses, but at last, when our work
-was finished we found that they had already been
-given to the Coldstreamers. Some of the people
-were excellent. One old fellow of seventy wept
-and wished that his house was as big as a barn,
-that he might put up the soldiers in it. A rough
-peasant boy took me round and stayed with us
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-all the afternoon and refused to take a penny.
-But some of them were not so kind. In the end,
-billets were not found for a number of officers
-and men, who slept quite comfortably in the new-mown
-hay. We passed a big monastery where
-two Germans, disguised as priests, had been taken
-and shot the week before. I slept in a house
-belonging to three widows, all like stage creatures.
-They had one of the finest cupboards I have ever
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning (August 20th) we marched
-off to Maroilles&mdash;a big dull town, and again some
-of the people were not overpleased to see us. Here
-we had an excellent dinner. I slept at a chemist’s.
-Hickie was sent back from Maroilles to Amiens
-with rheumatic fever. We got up at 4 o’clock
-the next morning (August 21st), and had a pretty
-long march to Longueville by Malplaquet.</p>
-
-<p>As we crossed the frontier the men wanted
-a cheer, but they were ordered to be quiet, “so as
-not to let the Germans hear them.” This order
-gave an unpleasant impression of the proximity
-of the Germans.</p>
-
-<p>The men began to fall out a great deal on the
-road. The heat was very great. Many of the
-reservists were soft, and their feet found them
-out. Their rough clothes rubbed them. Tom
-carried rifles all day, and I carried rifles and kit
-on my horse, while the men held on to the stirrups.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the Maires of France seemed to
-be growing faint under the strain of billeting.
-We never saw the Maire of Longueville. The
-country made a wonderful picture that I shall
-never forget. We marched past fields of rich,
-tall grass, most splendid pasture, and by acres and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-acres of ripe corn which was either uncut or, if
-cut, uncarried.</p>
-
-<p>There was any amount of food for our horses,
-but one felt reluctant at first at feeding them in
-the standing corn. I went ahead when I could
-to forage for the mess, and because Moonshine
-danced continuously and produced confusion.</p>
-
-<p>We lived chiefly on hard-boiled eggs, chocolate
-and beer, but we did better than most other
-companies, because generally, as Valentine said,
-the officers’ vocabulary was limited to “omelette”
-and “bi&egrave;re.”</p>
-
-<p>Longueville is a very long town, with fine houses,
-and we did capitally there, but the men were tired.
-No. 3 dined luxuriously at a farm. Hugo and I
-billeted at two houses close to each other. At
-6 o’clock I went to get some rest, when my servant
-told me that the order had come to stand to arms
-at once, as the Germans were close upon us.</p>
-
-<p>I went outside and heard one cannon boom very
-faintly in the distance. Women were wringing
-their hands and crying in the streets, and the
-battalion was ordered to stand to arms. Then,
-after a time, we were ordered to march at ten, and
-went back to quarters. At this time we began
-to curse the Germans for disturbing the peace of
-Europe.</p>
-
-<p>The women of the village brought us milk, bread,
-everything they could for the march. While we
-were dining the order came to make ready for a
-German attack. We went out at once. Bernard
-took me up and down various roads, and we put
-iron and wire and everything we could lay hold
-of, across them, making a flimsy defence. When
-we returned we heard that we were to march at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-2 a.m., and at 11 those who could lay down
-to sleep. The woman in my house was very kind
-in getting bread and milk. At 2 o’clock we began
-marching. The horses were all over the place.
-Moonshine nearly kicked a man behind her heels,
-and Tom just missed being killed by the ammunition
-horse in front. It was very dark.</p>
-
-<p>We marched to a place called Senlis. Dawn
-came, and then an enemy aeroplane appeared over
-us, which everybody at once shot at. Moonshine
-broke up two companies in the most casual way.
-The aeroplane went on. In Belgium the people
-were very good to us, during the week-end that
-we spent there. They were honest and pathetic.
-There were no signs of panic, but there was a ghastly
-silence in the towns.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond Senlis we were halted on a plain near
-a big town which we did not then know was Mons.
-We were drawn up and told that the Germans
-were close to us and that we had to drive them
-back. Valentine and I lay down under the shelter
-of a haystack, as it was raining. It was a mournful
-day in its early hours. At about 10 a.m. I was
-sent for by the Colonel, who had been looking
-for me, he said, for some time. He told me to
-ride after S. to Quevy-le-Grand. I rode fast, and
-caught up S. We stabled our horses and went
-round the town. Soames, a Staff officer, told
-us we could have both sides of the road&mdash;as we
-understood, the pompous main road. Unfortunately
-he meant both sides of an insignificant road we
-had not even noticed. We took one of the biggest
-and most beautiful farms I have ever seen for Headquarters,
-and proposed to put seven or eight officers
-in it. We then, as usual, found that this house
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-and all the rest had been given to the Coldstreamers,
-and we went to hunt for other billets. I thought
-I heard cannon, faint and dim. As we went on
-with our work the noise grew louder and louder.
-There was a big battle going on within four or five
-miles. Then in came the battalion from Senlis
-(which was burnt twenty-four hours later) at
-about twelve, and got into billets, while, at last,
-we had luncheon. Valentine and I were eating
-an omelette and talking Shakespeare, when suddenly
-we saw the battalion go past. We both got cursed
-because we had not been able to prophesy that the
-battalion would start within twenty minutes. We
-marched on till about half-past three, through
-rising and falling land, under a very hot sun. We
-were getting nearer to the battle. The sky was
-filled with smoke-wreaths from shells. “We are
-going slap-bang at them,” said Hubert. At 3.30
-we found ourselves on a hill, by a big building
-which looked like a monastery. The road
-was crowded with troops and frightened peasants.
-Below the road lay the green valley with the river
-winding through it, and on the crest of the wooded
-hills beyond were the Germans.</p>
-
-<p>We left our horses and marched down to the
-valley. As we passed the village of Harveng
-I inconsiderately tried to get a drink of water from
-a house. The men naturally followed, but we
-were all ordered on, and I had nothing to drink
-until 7 o’clock the next morning. The men, or
-some of them, got a little water that night.</p>
-
-<p>From behind us by the monastery the shells
-rose in jerks, three at a time. The Germans
-answered from the belt of trees above the cliffs.
-Our feelings were more violently moved against
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-Germany as the disturber of Europe. I went
-into the first fight prepared only for peace, as I
-had left my revolver and sword on my horse. Tom
-said: “For goodness’ sake don’t get away from
-our company; those woods will be full of Germans
-with bayonets to-night.” We never doubted that
-we should drive them back. The Colonel called
-the officers together and told us that the trees
-above the chalk cliffs were our objective. We
-then lay down in some lucerne and waited and
-talked. The order to move came about 5.30,
-I suppose. We went down through the fields
-rather footsore and came to a number of wire
-fences which kept in cattle. These fences we
-were ordered to cut. My agricultural instinct revolted
-at this destruction. We marched on through
-a dark wood to the foot of the cliffs and, skirting
-them, came to the open fields, on the flank of the
-wood, sloping steeply upwards. Here we found
-our first wounded man, though I believe as we
-moved through the wood an officer had been
-reported missing.</p>
-
-<p>The first stretch was easy. Some rifle bullets
-hummed and buzzed round and over us, but nothing
-to matter. We almost began to vote war a dull
-thing. We took up our position under a natural
-earthwork. We had been there a couple of minutes
-when a really terrific fire opened. We were told
-afterwards that we were not the target&mdash;that it
-was an accident that they happened to have stumbled
-on the exact range. But even if we had known
-this at the time, it would not have made much
-difference. It was as if a scythe of bullets passed
-directly over our heads about a foot above the
-earthworks. It came in gusts, whistling and sighing.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-The men behaved very well. A good many of
-them were praying and crossing themselves. A
-man next to me said: “It’s hell fire we’re going
-into.” It seemed inevitable that any man who
-went over the bank must be cut neatly in two.
-Valentine was sent to find out if Bernard was ready
-on the far left. Then, in a lull, Tom gave the
-word and we scrambled over and dashed on to
-the next bank. Bullets were singing round us
-like a swarm of bees, but we had only a short way
-to go, and got, all of us, I think, safely to the next
-shelter, where we lay and gasped and thought
-hard.</p>
-
-<p>Our next rush was worse, for we had a long way
-to go through turnips. The prospect was extremely
-unattractive; we thought that the fire came from
-the line of trees which we were ordered to take,
-and that we should have to stand the almost impossible
-fire from which the first bank had sheltered
-us. This was not the case, as the German trenches,
-we heard afterwards, were about 300 yards behind
-the trees, but their rifle fire and their shells cut
-across. We had not gone more than about 100
-yards, at a rush and uphill, when a shell burst
-over my head. I jumped to the conclusion that
-I was killed, and fell flat. I was ashamed of myself
-before I reached the ground, but, looking round,
-found that everybody else had done the same.</p>
-
-<p>The turnips seemed to offer a sort of cover, and
-I thought of the feelings of the partridges, a covey
-of which rose as we sank. Tom gave us a minute
-in which to get our wind&mdash;we lay gasping in the
-heat, while the shrapnel splashed about&mdash;and then
-told us to charge, but ordered the men not to fire
-until they got the word. As we rose, with a number
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-of partridges, the shooting began again, violently,
-but without much effect. I think we had six
-or seven men hit. We raced to the trees. Valentine
-was so passionately anxious to get there that he
-discarded his haversack, scabbard and mackintosh,
-and for days afterwards walked about with his
-naked sword as a walking-stick.</p>
-
-<p>When we reached the trees in a condition of
-tremendous sweat we found an avenue and a road
-with a ditch on either side. We were told that our
-trenches were a few yards over the farther hedge,
-faced by the German trenches, about 250 yards
-off. There was fierce rifle and machine-gun fire.
-Night fell; the wounded were carried back on
-stretchers; we sat very uncomfortably in a ditch.
-I was angry with Tom for the only time on the
-march, as he was meticulous about making us
-take cover in this beastly ditch when outside it
-there was a bank of grass like a sofa, which to all
-intents and purposes was safe from fire. We were
-extremely thirsty, but there was nothing to drink
-and no prospect of getting water. After some
-time we moved down the road upon which we
-lay, getting what sleep we could. In the earlier
-part of the night there were fierce duels of rifle
-fire and machine-guns between the two trenches.
-It sounded as if the Germans were charging. Our
-men in the road never got a chance of letting off
-their guns. Most of us dozed coldly and uncomfortably
-on the hard road. I woke up about 2 a.m.,
-dreaming that a mule was kicking the splash-board
-of a Maltese wagon to pieces, and then
-realized that it was the German rifle fire beyond
-the hedge, hitting the road. I walked up the road
-for a few yards and heard two men talking, one
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-of whom was, I suppose, Hubert, and the other
-must have been C. Hubert said: “Have I your
-leave, sir, to retire?” “Yes, you have; everybody
-else has gone; it is clear that we are outflanked
-on the left, and it is suicide to stay.” The battalion
-was then ordered to retire; No. 3 Company, doing
-rearguard, was ordered back to the fields which
-we had already crossed. I said to Tom: “I
-hear upon the best authority that this is suicide.”
-Tom said: “Of course it is; we shall get an
-awful slating.” We moved back. There was a
-faint light and a spasmodic rifle fire from the
-Germans as we went back to the fields we had
-crossed. We could not make out why they did
-not open on us with shrapnel, as they had the
-range. We lay down on the new-cut hay, which
-smelt delicious. It seemed almost certain that we
-should be wiped out when dawn came, but most
-of us went fast asleep. I did. At 4 o’clock we
-were hurried off. We went down into the blinding
-darkness of the wood by the road we had gone the
-evening before. We went through the wood, past
-the monastery, up into the village. There we
-waited. The road was blocked, the villagers were
-huddled, moaning, in the streets.</p>
-
-<p>The men were very pleased to have been under
-fire, and compared notes as to how they felt. Every
-one was pleased. But they felt that more of this
-sort of thing would be uncivilized, and it ought
-to be stopped by somebody now. In the dawn
-we crossed a high down, where we expected to be
-shelled, but nothing happened. We were very
-tired and footsore.</p>
-
-<p>At 7 o’clock we got to Quevy-le-Petit and had
-a long drink, the first for seventeen hours. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-smell of powder and the heat had made us very
-thirsty. Two companies were set to dig trenches.
-We were held in reserve, and all the hot morning
-we shelled the Germans from Quevy-le-Petit, while
-their guns answered our fire without much effect.
-One shell was a trouble. The remainder of the
-&mdash;&mdash; Regiment (men without officers), who had had
-a bad time at Mons, had a shell burst over them
-and rushed through our ranks, taking some of our
-men with them. This was put right at once.</p>
-
-<p>We were told that a tremendous German attack
-was to take place in the evening; we disliked
-the idea, as, even to an amateur like myself, it was
-obvious that there was hardly any means of defence.
-To stay was to be destroyed, as the Colonel said
-casually, causing “une impression bien p&eacute;nible.”</p>
-
-<p>We wrote farewell letters which were never
-sent. I kept mine in my pocket, as I thought it
-would do for a future occasion. They began to
-shell us heavily while we helped ourselves from
-neighbouring gardens. We did this with as much
-consideration as possible, and Valentine and I
-went off to cook some potatoes in an outhouse
-by a lane.</p>
-
-<p>The peasants were flying, and offered us all their
-superfluous goods. They were very kind. Then
-an order to retire came, and in hot haste we left our
-potatoes. We retired at about 1 o’clock in the
-afternoon and marched to Longueville, or rather
-to a camp near it called Bavai. We reached this
-camp at about 10.30 at night. Moonshine behaved
-like the war-horse in the Bible. She had hysterics
-which were intolerable; smelling the battle a long
-way off. She must have done this the night before,
-when it was much nearer and I had left her with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-Ryan, for when I found her again she had only
-one stirrup. A sergeant-major captured her and
-picketed her for the night.</p>
-
-<p>The orchard in which we camped blazed with
-torch-light and camp-fires and was extremely
-cheerful. Every now and then a rifle went off by
-accident, and this was always greeted with
-tremendous cheers.</p>
-
-<p>I was very tired, and threw myself down to sleep
-under a tree, when up came the Colonel and said:
-“Come along, have some rum before you go to
-bed.” I went and drank it, and with all the others
-lay down thoroughly warm and contented in the
-long wet grass, and slept soundly for three hours.
-Next morning we were woken about 3 o’clock,
-but did not march off till 6 o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>From Bavai we marched to Landrecies. Hubert
-rode ahead with me to do the billeting. We
-pastured our horses in the luxuriant grass and got
-milk at the farms. We did not see much sign of
-panic amongst the people, but coming to a big
-railway station we saw that all the engines of the
-heavy ammunition wagons had been turned round.
-Hubert saw and swore. In the morning we occupied
-a farm, where I tried to buy a strap to replace my
-lost stirrup. We lay about under haystacks and
-talked to the farmer and his son. After about
-an hour it was reported that two hundred Germans
-were coming down the road, and Eric went off
-after them, with machine-guns.</p>
-
-<p>The retreat had begun in real earnest. This
-whole retreat was curiously normal. Everybody
-got very sick of it, and all day long one was hearing
-officers and men saying how they wanted to turn
-and fight. I used to feel that myself, though
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-when one was told to do so and realized that we
-were unchaperoned by the French and faced by
-about two million Germans, it did something to
-cool one’s pugnacity, and one received the subsequent
-order to retire in a temperate spirit. Men occasionally
-fell out from bad feet, but the regiment marched
-quite splendidly. There was never any sign of
-flurry or panic anywhere. I think that most
-people, when they realized what had happened,
-accepted things rather impersonally. They thought
-that as far as our Army in France was concerned,
-disaster, in the face of the enormous numbers that
-we had to fight, was inevitable, but that this disaster
-was not vital as long as the Navy was safe.</p>
-
-<p>My dates are not quite accurate here, as I cannot
-account for one day. It was Sunday, August 23rd,
-that we had the fight at Mons; I remember several
-men said: “Our people are now going to Evening
-Service at home,” as we marched out; and it was
-Tuesday, September 1st, that we had the fight in
-which I and the others were taken prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>Hubert and I arrived at Landrecies about 1 o’clock.
-Going in, we met S., a Staff officer, who told us
-where we could quarter the men. We went to
-a big house belonging to a man called Berlaimont,
-which Hubert wanted to have as Headquarters.
-Berlaimont was offensive and did not wish to give
-his house. We went on to the Maire, who gave us
-permission to take it. After lunch we went on
-billeting, finding some very fine houses. We had
-a mixed reception. Berlaimont gave in ungraciously,
-and wrote up rather offensive orders as to what
-was not to be done: “Ne pas cracher dans les
-corridors.” In other houses, too, they made
-difficulties. I said: “After all, we are better
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-than the Germans.” They soon had the chance
-of judging. The troops came in to be billeted.
-At 6 o’clock fire suddenly broke out in the town,
-and the cry was raised that the Germans were upon
-us. I ran back and got my sword and revolver
-at Headquarters, and going out, found a body of
-unattached troops training a Maxim on the estaminet
-that was my lodgings. I prevented them firing.
-Troops took up positions all over the town. The
-inhabitants poured out pell-mell. It was like a
-flight in the Balkans. They carried their all away
-in wheelbarrows, carts, perambulators and even
-umbrellas. I met and ran into M. Berlaimont,
-very pale and fat, trotting away from the town;
-he said to me with quivering cheeks: “What is
-it?” I said: “It is the Prussians, M. Berlaimont.
-And they will probably spit in your corridors.”</p>
-
-<p>We had some dinner in a very hospitable house.
-At 8 o’clock there was some very fierce fighting;
-the Coldstreamers had been ordered outside the
-town. The Germans came up, talking French, and
-called out to Monk, a Coldstream officer: “Ne
-tirez pas; nous sommes des amis,” and “Vive
-les Anglais.” A German knocked Monk under a
-transport wagon. Then our men grasped what
-was happening; they charged the Germans and
-the Germans charged them, three times, I believe.
-They brought up machine-guns. Afterwards one
-of our medical officers said that we had lost 150
-men, killing 800 to 1,000 Germans. It was there
-that Archer Clive was killed.</p>
-
-<p>Just before dinner I met an officer of the regiment.
-I asked him if he had a billet. He told me he could
-not get one, and I said he could have mine and that
-I would find another. However, I found that my
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-kit had already been put into the estaminet, and
-took him up to the market-place to find a lodging.
-We first went to an empty caf&eacute;, where all the liquor
-was left out, with no master or servants. We
-left money for what beer we drank. I then found
-a room in a tradesman’s house. After dinner I
-went down to the main barricade with Jack.
-Wagons, including one of our own that carried our
-kit, had been dragged across the road and defences
-were put up like lightning. We loopholed the
-houses and some houses were pulled down. It was
-an extraordinarily picturesque scene. The town was
-pitch-black except where the torches glowed on the
-faces and on the bayonets of the men, or where
-shells flashed and burst. I thought of the taking
-of Italian towns in the seventeenth century. The
-Germans shelled us very heavily. It did not
-seem as if there was much chance of getting away,
-but no one was despondent. At about 1 a.m.
-there was a lull in the firing, and I went back
-to lie down in my room. There I fell asleep,
-and the shelling of the town did not wake me,
-though the house next to me was hit. About
-2.30, in my sleep I heard my name, and found
-Desmond calling me loudly in the street outside.
-He said: “We have lost two young officers,
-L. and W. Come out and find them at once. The
-Germans are coming into the town, and we shall
-have to clear out instantly.” I said to him: “I
-don’t know either L. or W. by sight, and if I did
-it is far too dark to see them.” “Well,” he said,
-“you must do your best.” I went out and walked
-about the town, which was still being shelled, but
-I was far more afraid of being run over in the
-darkness than of being hit. Troops were pouring
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-out in great confusion&mdash;foot, artillery, transport
-mixed&mdash;and there were great holes in the road
-made by the German shells. I met Eric, who
-said: “Come along with me to Guise”; also
-the driver of a great transport wagon, who said
-he had no orders, and begged me to come with
-him: he felt lonely without an officer.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite clear to me that it was impossible
-to find these two officers. I met Desmond by
-Headquarters and told him so; he said: “Very
-well, fall in and come along.” The regiment
-passed at that moment. Hubert and Tom told
-me to fall in, but I would not leave Moonshine,
-though there did not seem to be much more chance
-of finding her than W. and L. My groom and
-servant had both disappeared. The houses were
-all locked or deserted. I battered on a door with
-my revolver. Two old ladies timidly came out
-with a light. They pointed to a house where I
-could find a man, but at that moment a Frenchman
-came up, whom I commandeered. I went
-off to Headquarters to see if a sergeant was left.</p>
-
-<p>There was nobody there. The dinner left looked
-like Belshazzar’s feast. I had a good swig of
-beer from a jug. My saddle and sword had gone.
-I went out with the Frenchman and saw that
-the troops were nearly all out of the town. I determined
-to stay, if necessary, and hide until I could
-find my horse, but the Frenchman turned up
-trumps and we found her. We were terrified of
-her heels in the dark. I thanked the old ladies and
-apologized for having threatened them with my
-revolver. There was no question of riding Moonshine
-bare-back. I went back to get a saddle, below
-Headquarters, but the Germans were there, so the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-Frenchman swore. It was too dark to see, but they
-weren’t our men. I took her back to where the
-medical officer was billeted. He had been waiting
-with a dying man and was about to leave the town.
-I asked him to let one of his men lead her, and went
-forward to see if I could get a saddle. In this I
-failed. As I got out of the town dawn was breaking.
-For some obscure reason one of our gunners fired
-a shell. Everybody said: “I suppose that is
-to tell them where we are.” We all thought that
-the German artillery fire must catch us going
-out of the town. For the second time they let
-us off. By that time we had grasped the fact
-that they could outmarch us, but we did not know
-that they had come on motor-cars, and ascribed
-their greater pace to what we believed to be the
-fact&mdash;that we were entirely unsupported by the
-French. My regiment were a good long way
-ahead. I joined an officer who was leading a
-detachment, and he was anxious that I should stay
-with him. As I walked along, pretty footsore,
-an unshaven man came up and asked me if I liked
-this sort of thing better than politics. I didn’t
-say much, as I had heard the soldiers discussing
-politicians in the dark at Landrecies, cursing all
-politicians every time a shell fell, and saying:
-“Ah, that’s another one we owe to them. Why
-aren’t they here?” He offered me a horse. He
-was the Colonel of the Irish Horse, Burns-Lindow.
-I took the horse gratefully, which had a slight
-wound on its shoulder and was as slow as an ox,
-poor beast. This drove me almost mad after
-Moonshine, and, meeting another officer, I fell
-into conversation with him. I asked if he saw
-anything wrong in my taking the saddle off this
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-horse and putting it on to Moonshine, when I found
-her. He said it was certainly irregular, and I
-then recognized who he was. I got away from
-him as soon as possible and, finding another officer
-of the Irish Horse, persuaded him to help me to take
-off the saddle and put it on to Moonshine, whom
-I had regained fairly chastened. I found the
-Colonel, and we rode on to Etreux. Here we brought
-down an aeroplane after it had dropped a bomb
-on us. The officers tried to prevent the men
-shooting, but the noise made their commands
-useless. The C.O. was very angry. He said:
-“I will teach you to behave like a lot of ... s.
-Off you go and dig trenches.” One of the men
-said as we marched off: “If that was a friendly
-aeroplane, what did it want to drop that bomb
-on us for?” He was quite right. It had done
-this, and the shell had fallen about thirty yards
-away. Our fire prevented us hearing it. Stephen
-came down in a Balaclava helmet and said that
-officers were the best shots at aeroplanes because
-pheasants had taught them to swing in firing.</p>
-
-<p>At Etreux we were ordered to dig trenches,
-which we did. After this I slept under a hedge,
-where Bernard, the Frenchman, gave me some
-rum, which was very welcome, as it was raining.
-At about 9 o’clock I felt Hubert, very angry,
-thumping me, as he thought I was a private who
-had taken his haversack to lie on.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning everybody was in tremendous
-spirits. They had slept very well in the trenches
-and those outside had been housed in nests of
-straw. The officers were called up and spoken
-to by the Colonel. He read out a message from
-Joffre to say that the British Army had saved
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-France. He told us that the retreat had been
-inevitable and had given the French time to take
-up adequate defensive positions. The impression
-I think most of us had was that we had been used
-as a bait. Then we were once more ordered to
-retire.</p>
-
-<p>As I rode along in the morning going to La F&egrave;re
-an aeroplane passed fairly close over us; everybody
-fired at it at once; thousands of rounds must have
-been fired, and I found it useful in teaching Moonshine
-to stand fire. She took her first lesson well,
-though she broke up the formation of half a company.
-We often saw aeroplanes, and they were nearly
-always shot at, whether they belonged to friend
-or foe.</p>
-
-<p>That day we marched to Origny, where we camped
-below a hill with a steep cliff to it. I went into
-the town and bought eggs, brandy, etc. There
-was every kind of rumour about: that we were
-completely surrounded by the Germans; that
-there were millions of them in front and behind;
-also that there had been a great French defeat
-at Charleroi.</p>
-
-<p>We were all very jolly. At night the artillery
-poured past with the sound of a great cataract.
-We lay down on the hillside, and every man going
-to get straw to cover him walked over Tom’s face,
-who swore himself almost faint with rage. All
-our kit had been lost at Landrecies, and many of
-us had not great-coats.</p>
-
-<p>We started at dawn; but had to wait to let other
-troops pass us. I was sent back to look for communicating
-files of the regiment that had been
-lost. I found them with difficulty and brought
-them on. The Germans were too near to us. That
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-day we marched through great avenues of tall
-poplars and through a pleasant smiling country
-to La F&egrave;re. Moonshine began to grow lame. I
-stayed behind to get food for my company and
-lost the regiment, only finding them again after
-long wanderings and with the greatest difficulty.
-We camped near La F&egrave;re. The regiment forgot
-its tiredness in a hunt after a strange horse which
-strayed into our camp and which Eric finally captured
-for the transport. Both Desmond and he tried
-hard to take my saddle from me; for the saddle
-which I had first put upon Moonshine was Hickie’s
-harness. Then Hickie was invalided, and I lost
-his saddle at Landrecies and then got the saddle
-from B. L., Colonel of the Irish Horse. I beat
-them in argument, but thought they were quite
-capable of taking the saddle in spite of that.</p>
-
-<p>We stopped some time to smoke and rest. The
-men were drawn up on a torrid cornfield. Valentine
-was overdone. He volunteered, like the man in
-the Bible, to get water. Finding that he would
-have to wait in a long queue, he returned without
-the water. Tom’s anger beat all records. A deputation
-from another regiment came and asked him
-to repeat what he had said. They were surprised
-to find that it was his brother-in-law who had
-provoked these comments.</p>
-
-<p>I saw John Manners and George Cecil, and
-gave them cigarettes. Near a great factory of
-some kind we marched past Sir Douglas Haig.
-I hurried past him.</p>
-
-<p>La F&egrave;re was an old fortified city. We were
-told we were to have a rest and the next day’s
-march was to be a very short one. We camped
-near Berteaucourt. It was very hot. I hobbled
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-up to the village to get provisions, and found a
-French girl, the daughter of a farmer, who talked
-fair English. Near the village I spoke to a number
-of people. I told one peasant I thought it was
-a mistake that everybody should fly from their
-houses if they did not mean to clear out altogether,
-and that it was an invitation to the Germans to
-loot and burn. He said: “Monsieur, I quite
-agree with you. Moi, je vais agir en patriote
-quand ils viendront. Je vais tout bonnement
-descendre dans ma cave.” The next day (the
-29th) we camped above the village of Pasly. On
-the road I got boracic cream for my horse’s cracked
-heel. We passed through a big town, Coucy,
-crowded with curious, frightened, silent people.
-It had a very fine castle. I bought some cigarette-holders,
-with cinema pictures inside, for the Colonel.
-People pressed chocolate and all they could get
-into my hands, taking payment unwillingly. Moonshine
-lost a shoe, but I managed to get her shod
-there. Reluctantly at Pasly I lent her to Robin,
-who went off to post his men in the village. The
-moment he had gone the O.C. sent for me and told
-me we had got outside the area of our maps, and
-asked if I could get him a map. I started off at
-once to walk to Soissons. When he discovered
-where I was going he said it was out of the question;
-so I walked down to Pasly either to get a map there
-or to take the Maire’s carriage and drive to Soissons.
-In Pasly there was a tenth-rate Maire and a schoolmaster.
-They provided me with an ancient map,
-the date of which was 1870. It did not even mark
-the monument of the schoolmasters whom the
-Germans had lightheartedly shot on their last
-visit to the village.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span></p>
-
-<p>I found a half-wit, and paid him to carry up some
-wine, bread and eggs.</p>
-
-<p>We camped above a quarry and talked of what
-was going to happen. There seemed only two
-alternatives. One was that we should get into
-Paris and take first-class tickets home to England,
-and the other that we should stay and get wiped
-out. For we still saw no French troops; we still
-believed ourselves to be 100,000 against a force
-of anything from one to two millions.</p>
-
-<p>Eric had met a Lancer who had been full of the
-German atrocities. I met him and talked to
-him afterwards. His stories sounded improbable.
-Eric had also seen an extraordinary thing happen
-that morning. He had seen an aeroplane which
-we were bombarding. It was flying in the blue
-sky when it was struck. It was there, and then it
-was not. It just disappeared.</p>
-
-<p><i>August 31st.</i> We got up fairly early, and I
-rode with Eric past caves in which there were
-houses and quarries down the steep hillside to the
-plain of Soissons. It was a beautiful morning,
-very peaceful, and the air was scented. There
-was bright sunlight over the marching soldiers
-and the fields of green, tall grass. The C.O. told
-me that our camping ground was at Cœuvre.
-I asked leave to ride into Soissons and see if I
-could not get clean shirts and handkerchiefs to
-replace what we had lost at Landrecies.</p>
-
-<p>Soissons was like a sunlit town of the dead. Four
-out of five houses were shut. Most of the well-to-do
-people had gone. It was silent streets and blind
-houses. The clattering which Moonshine made
-on the cobbles was almost creepy. I stopped first
-of all at a saddler’s shop and tried to get a proper
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-bridle. The saddler was a rough democratic
-Frenchman, not a bad fellow, the sort of man who
-made the Republic. He took me to a boot shop
-which was my first need, where the people were
-very kind, and I bought a capital pair of boots
-for twelve francs. I went into the “Lion d’Or.”
-They refused me a stall for Moonshine on the ground
-that the landlord and all his family were going.
-I insisted, and bought her some fodder, also some
-food for myself. They drove hard bargains.</p>
-
-<p>Out of doors I met some English officers having
-breakfast. They had only just arrived. I left
-a man called Gustave to look after Moonshine
-and went out to spend a most laborious morning
-of shopping. After going to many different shops
-I found a bazaar like a mortuary, with two old
-women and a boy. They said to me: “Take
-whatever you want and pay as much or as little
-as pleases you. If the Germans come we shall
-set fire to this place.” They pressed every kind
-of souvenir on me, but it was extraordinary, with
-plenty lying round, how difficult it was to get
-what one needed. I was buying mostly for
-other people. It was like being turned loose in
-Selfridge’s&mdash;boots, scissors, pocket-knives, electric
-torches, watches, bags, vests, etc. I also bought
-an alpenstock, as I had lost my sword and thought
-it might be useful as a light bayonet.</p>
-
-<p>I then went and had a bath, the first proper one
-since England. The heat was very great. I felt
-dirty and wanted to shave my beard, as the men said
-every day that I became more like King Edward.
-I then intended to go to the Cathedral, but found
-the few English soldiers in the town moving out
-hurriedly. They said the Germans were coming
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-in an hour. So I gave up the Cathedral and went
-and had lunch in a jolly little inn. There were
-some very excitable Frenchmen, one of whom
-asked me if I would sell him a lucky sixpence for
-a franc which he could wear round his neck. I
-suppose he was really pathetic; at the moment
-he only irritated me. He said: “J’ai confiance&mdash;m&ecirc;me
-s’ils vont &agrave; Paris j’aurais confiance.” “But,”
-he said, “where is the French Army?” They
-were all saying that by this time.</p>
-
-<p>I went back to my boot shop. All the women
-there were crying. They insisted upon giving
-me some wine. At the hotel I found the hotel-keeper
-and his family going off, squeaking with
-anger at the ostler, Gustave, who was helping me
-to carry all I had bought in two great bags. The
-weight was very oppressive in the heat, and I
-was afraid of making Moonshine’s tender foot
-worse on the hard road. Before I had got outside
-the town I had to get off and readjust everything,
-with the help of some very kind French people.
-While I was doing this, Westminster, with Hugh
-Dawnay, drove up in his beautiful car. I suggested
-his taking my things on to Cœuvre. He said,
-unfortunately he had other orders, and wanted to
-know where to lunch. I told him where I had
-lunched, but said that he would probably have
-to share his lunch with the Germans if he went
-into the town, as they must now be close
-behind us.</p>
-
-<p>Riding on, I met some French troops evacuating
-the town and with them a man of my regiment,
-who had hurt his knee. He could not walk, so
-I put him under the charge of a French sergeant.
-While I was talking to him two other men of my
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-regiment came up. They had fallen out on the
-previous day and had had nothing to eat since
-yesterday’s breakfast. I took them into a French
-house, where the people were very hospitable;
-gave them food at once and insisted on giving
-them champagne, which they said was “d&eacute;champagnis&eacute;.”
-The men ate like wolves. One of them was
-a splendidly built fellow, called Sheridan.</p>
-
-<p>Then we marched slowly on in the heat, for
-about two hours, when Sheridan said: “What
-is it is happening yonder, sir?” pointing to the
-horizon about a mile away. Soon rifle fire broke
-out, and Sheridan said: “There are Uhlans coming
-down the road.” There was a wood on our left,
-and we made preparations to get into this; the
-other man had fallen behind. They were both
-very done, but Sheridan was like a different man
-at the prospect of a fight. Our people, however,
-or rather the French, drove the German cavalry
-back at this moment, and we went on quietly. I
-was glad to be able to turn to the left, as the fighting
-on our right was pretty hot and I was weighed
-down with all the extra things I carried.</p>
-
-<p>I fell into conversation with a medical officer,
-and asked him if he knew where Cœuvre was.
-Then an R.A.M.C. Colonel came up and looked
-at my kit very suspiciously. He asked me who
-the General in command of the Division was. I
-said I had forgotten his name; I could not keep
-my head filled with these details. He said to me:
-“You don’t seem to know who you are.” I said
-to him: “I know who I am; I don’t know who
-you are, I don’t want to. I hope to God I shall
-never see you again. Go to hell and stay there.”
-This made him angry, and he said: “Your
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-regiment is ahead on the left, but the Germans
-are in front of you, if you wish to rejoin
-them,” pointing in the direction from which I had
-come.</p>
-
-<p>All this time I had been waiting for Sheridan
-and other now numerous stragglers behind me,
-and at this point I turned round and rode off to
-see what had happened, thoroughly irritated with
-the R.A.M.C. Colonel. This apparently convinced
-him that I really was a German, as the engagement
-in the rear was going on fairly close, and he came
-after me with a Major of the K.R.R., who was
-unhappy. He said: “Will you come with me
-to my Colonel?” I said: “I will go with you
-anywhere to get away from this fussy little man,
-but if you think that a German spy would come
-on a racehorse, dressed like the White Knight,
-with an alpenstock, you are greatly mistaken.”
-He promised to have my stragglers looked after,
-and then I rode up to his regiment with him, when
-Blank came up and shook hands. We had not
-met since Eton. He cleared my character. After
-that I went on as fast as I could. I picked up
-some more of my regiment, including a sergeant
-who had sprained his ankle. I told him to ride,
-but found a motor and put him in that.</p>
-
-<p>Soon we were stopped by a sentry in a wood,
-as it was growing dark. He said that his officer
-had told him to stop all on the road and to send
-for him. Then came General Monro, who was
-also stopped. He was with a sad man. He forced
-his way through, and I asked permission to take
-on the men of my regiment. He told me that
-I should find my regiment at Soucy, and gave
-me the permission I wanted. In a few moments
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-I met the officer who had had us stopped. He
-said the Germans were very close to us. We
-could hear firing near by.</p>
-
-<p>I reached my regiment as night was falling.
-They were delighted with my arrest. We spent
-our last night very comfortably, though there was
-heavy dew. Tom, who had been frightfully overdone,
-always carrying rifles, was recovering, and
-every one was cheerful and very keen to have a
-fight. Until now only Hickie had been invalided.
-The rum at night after a long march made a wonderful
-difference. The men got in very tired, footsore,
-cold and hungry, and had to sleep on the wet ground.
-A tot of rum sent them to sleep, and sent them
-to sleep feeling warm. Teetotalism on the march
-is an excellent thing, better still to drink nothing,
-but that nip at night made the difference between
-health and sickness, comfort and misery.</p>
-
-<p><i>September 1st.</i> The next morning we got up at
-2 o’clock. The Army was passing all round us
-already. It was like the sound of deep, slow
-rivers. For the first and last time we took a
-wrong turning, only for a couple of hundred yards.
-This was the only mistake I saw at all in the
-long march. After two hours we halted, and S.
-and I sat under a dripping tree and talked about
-the West Country. At the beginning S. had said
-to me: “I shall be very disappointed if I go
-home without seeing a fight, but the worst of it
-is you can’t make an omelette without breaking
-eggs, and I don’t want to see my friends killed.”
-I said to him: “You are going to get your
-omelette all right now.” Some constituents passed
-me. They said: “This be terrible dangerous.
-Do’ee come along with we.”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span></p>
-
-<p>Moonshine would eat nothing, and this worried
-me. I had become very fond of her.</p>
-
-<p>At about 6 o’clock we halted on what I knew to
-be a tragic plain. In my mind I associate this
-plain with turnips, though I am not sure that any
-grew there. There was stubble, high and wet
-lucerne, and a mournful field where corn had been
-cut but not carried. We sat about on the wet,
-muddy ground for breakfast, while a thin, dismal
-rain fell.</p>
-
-<p>The C.O. called us round and gave us our orders.
-He said: “We are required to hold this wood
-until 2 o’clock in the afternoon. We may have
-to fight a rearguard action until a later hour if
-there is a block in the road. We are to retire upon
-Rond de la Reine.” After this we breakfasted on
-hot cocoa; it tasted of vaseline or paraffin, but
-it was warm.</p>
-
-<p>It was apparent that if the First Division took
-long over their luncheon we should be wiped out.
-By this time every one had got their second wind,
-their feet were hard and they were cheerful. Jumbo
-said he could go on walking for ever. I talked
-to Alex and agreed that we had seen a great deal
-of fun together. He had said, while we were crossing
-the Channel, that it was long odds, not, of course,
-against some of us going back, but against any
-particular one of us seeing it through. This was
-now visibly true; we believed that we were three
-divisions against twenty-one or even twenty-eight
-German divisions. I wrote two letters, one of
-them a eulogy of Moonshine. I went to Desmond,
-asking him to post them. He said crossly: “You
-seem to think that Adjutants can work miracles.
-Charles asks for letters under fire, you want to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-post them on the battlefield. It is quite useless
-to write letters now.”</p>
-
-<p>He then borrowed some of my paper and wrote
-a letter. I have the picture in my mind of Desmond
-constantly sitting, in very tidy breeches, writing
-and calling for sergeants. We had little sleep.
-He never seemed to sleep at all. He was woken
-all the time and was always cheerful. We had
-nothing to do for a bit, and I read scraps about
-cemeteries from Shakespeare, to irritate the others.
-They remained cheerful. Then we moved off to
-the wood. Nobody had any illusions about the
-immediate future. One man said to me: “I
-may live to see many battles; I think I shall,
-for I am very keen on my profession, but I shall
-never forget this plain or this morning.” It must
-have been about 7.30 when we went into the wood.
-No. 4 held the extreme right; they were protected
-by a wall, which they loopholed, and a wire fence
-outside. No. 3 was next on a road that ran
-through the heart of the wood to Rond de la Reine.
-I did not see Tom; I thought I was sure to see
-him some time in the morning. Stubbs was behind
-No. 3, down in the village (I forget the name).
-The C.O. said to me: “I want you to gallop
-for me to-day, so stick to me.” I lost him at once
-in the wood behind No. 4, but rode right down to
-a deserted farm and, swinging to my right, found
-him at the cross-roads.</p>
-
-<p>I had seen a good deal of him the last days.
-He had a very attractive personality, and it was a
-delight to hear him talk about anything. I asked
-him what chance he thought we had of getting
-more than half of us away. He said he thought
-a fairly good chance. Then he said to me: “How
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-is your rest-cure getting on now? There is very
-little that looks like manœuvres in the millennium
-about this, is there?” I had told him some time
-before that I looked upon this expedition as a
-rest-cure, as in some ways it was. We talked
-about Ireland and Home Rule, riding outside the
-wood. The grey, damp mist had gone and the
-day was beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>He sent me first to Hubert, Second-in-Command,
-with the order that in the retreat every officer was
-to retire down the main road, with the exception of
-Stubbs, who was to retire as he liked. I imagine
-that he was afraid that men would be lost in the
-wood. By this time the firing had begun, some
-way off, but our men could see the Germans coming
-over the rising land. The C.O. ordered me to find
-Colonel Pereira of the Coldstream Guards and tell
-him that, as soon our own troops, now fighting
-the Germans in front of him, would fall back
-through his lines, after this he was to fall back
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>I went off at a hand gallop, and had got half-way
-there, with the wood on my left and open
-land on my right, when the Germans began shooting
-at about three-quarters of a mile. Our men were
-firing at them from the wood, and I felt annoyed
-at being between two fires and the only thing
-visible to amuse our men and the Germans. I
-turned into the wood, and, galloping down a sandy
-way, found the road filled with refugees with
-haunted faces. We had seen crowds of refugees
-for days, but I felt sorrier for these. I suppose
-it was that the Germans were so very near them.
-I gave my message to Pereira, who advised me to
-go back through the wood, but I knew the other
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-way and thought I should soon be past the German
-fire. I had not, however, counted on their advancing
-so quickly. When I came to the edge of the wood
-they were firing furiously&mdash;shrapnel, machine-gun
-and rifle fire. Our men had excellent cover, and
-were answering. I then tried to make my way
-through the wood, but it was abominably rough.
-There were ferns and brambles waist-high, and
-great ditches; the wood was very beautiful with
-its tall trees, but that, at the moment, was irrelevant.
-Moonshine stood like a goat on the stump of a tree
-that made an island among the ditches, and I
-turned back to take the way by the open fields.
-When I got outside the fire had grown very bad. I
-raced for an orchard that jutted out of the wood.
-Bullets hummed and buzzed. Coming to it, I found
-that there was wire round it. I then popped at
-full speed, like a rabbit, into the wood again, through
-a thicket, down an enormous ditch, up the other
-side, bang into some barbed wire, which cut my
-horse. It was like diving on horseback. I turned
-round and galloped delicately out again, riding
-full tilt round the orchard.</p>
-
-<p>I found the Colonel, who was standing under
-shelter at the cross-roads to the left of the road,
-facing the enemy, that led through the heart of the
-wood. He mounted the bank and watched the
-Germans advancing. I sat under the bank with M.
-and Alex. The German shells began to fall close to
-us, knocking the trees about in the wood. There
-were some sergeants very excited and pleased at
-the idea of a fight. They said: “Now has come
-the time for deeds, not words.” They felt that they
-were the men of the moment.</p>
-
-<p>We considered whether the Germans were likely
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-to charge down the road along which I had come,
-but thought we could hold them effectively in
-check from our corner and that the fire from the
-wood would reach them.</p>
-
-<p>It was, I suppose, now about 10.30. Desmond,
-the Colonel and I rode back into the big, green
-wood. It was very peaceful. The sun was shining
-through the beech-trees, and for a bit the whole
-thing seemed unreal. The C.O. talked to the men,
-telling them to reserve their fire till the Germans
-were close on them. “Then you will kill them
-and they won’t get up again.” That made them
-laugh. The German advance began very rapidly.
-The Coldstreamers must have begun falling back
-about this time. The Germans came up in front
-and on our left flank. There was a tremendous
-fire. The leaves, branches, etc., rained upon one.
-One’s face was constantly fanned by the wind
-from their bullets. This showed how bad their
-fire was. My regiment took cover very well, and
-after the first minute or two fired pretty carefully.
-Moonshine was startled to begin with by the fire,
-but afterwards remained very still and confidential.
-Desmond did not get off his horse; he told me
-to lead my horse back into the wood and then
-come back to the firing line. The Colonel then
-told me to gallop up to the Brigadier to say that
-the retreat was being effectively carried out;
-that there were two squadrons advancing and
-he did not know what force of infantry. In this
-estimate he was very much out, as subsequent
-events proved. Eric, now at home wounded, said
-to me: “The Germans seemed hardly to have
-an advance guard; it was an army rolling over
-us.” When I found the Brigadier he wanted
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-to know if the C.O. seemed happy about things.
-I said I thought on the whole he did. There were
-bullets everywhere and men falling, but the fire
-was still too high. One bullet in about half a
-million must have hit a man. I returned to the
-Colonel. Our men had then begun to retire down
-the main road to Rond de la Reine. A galloper
-came up and, as far as I heard, said that we were
-to hang on and not retreat yet. This officer was,
-I think, killed immediately after giving his message.
-The Colonel said that the Coldstreamers had already
-begun to retreat, that we couldn’t hold on there,
-but must go back to the position we had left. We
-were ordered to resume the position which Hubert
-had been told to leave. The Germans were by
-this time about 250 yards away, firing on us with
-machine-guns and rifles. The noise was perfectly
-awful. In a lull the C.O. said to the men: “Do
-you hear that? Do you know what they are
-doing that for? They are doing that to frighten
-you.” I said to him: “If that’s all, they might
-as well stop. As far as I am concerned, they
-have succeeded, two hours ago.”</p>
-
-<p>The men were ordered to charge, but the order
-was not heard in the noise, and after we had held
-this position for some minutes a command was
-given to retreat. Another galloper brought it,
-who also, I think, was shot. Guernsey, whom
-I met with his company, asked me to gallop back
-and tell Valentine he must retire his platoon;
-he had not received the order. I found Valentine
-and got off my horse and walked him some yards
-down the road, the Germans following. He, like
-everybody else, was very pleased at the calm way
-the men were behaving.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span></p>
-
-<p>I mounted and galloped after the Colonel, who
-said: “If only we could get at them with the
-bayonet I believe one of our men is as good as
-three of theirs.” He started in the direction of
-the Brigadier. Men were now falling fast. I
-happened to see one man drop with a bayonet
-in his hand a few yards off, and reined in my horse
-to see if I could help him, but the C.O. called me
-and I followed him. The man whom I had seen
-was Hubert, though I did not know it at the time.
-The C.O. said: “It is impossible now to rescue
-wounded men; we have all we can do.” He
-had a charmed life. He raced from one place to
-another through the wood; cheering the men
-and chaffing them, and talking to me; smoking
-cigarette after cigarette. Under ordinary conditions
-one would have thought it mad to ride
-at the ridiculous pace we did over the very broken
-ground, but the bullets made everything else
-irrelevant. At about 1 o’clock we went up to
-the Brigadier at the corner of the road. The
-fighting there was pretty hot. One of the men
-told the Colonel that Hubert was killed. The
-Colonel said: “Are you sure?” The man said:
-“Well, I can’t swear.” I was sent back to see.
-The man said he was about 400 yards away, and as
-I galloped as hard as I could, G. called to me:
-“To the right and then to the left.” As I raced
-through the wood there was a cessation of the
-firing, though a number of shots came from both
-sides. They snapped very close. I found Hubert
-in the road we had been holding. I jumped off
-my horse and put my hand on his shoulder and
-spoke to him. He must have been killed at once,
-and looked absolutely peaceful. He cannot have
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-suffered at all. I leant over to see if he had letters
-in his pocket, when I heard a whistle 25 or 30 yards
-behind me in the wood. I stood up and called:
-“If that is an Englishman, get outside the wood
-and up to the corner like hell; you will be shot if
-you try and join the rest through the wood. The
-Germans are between us.” I bent over to pick
-up Hubert’s bayonet, when again a whistle came
-and the sound of low voices, talking German.
-I then thought the sooner I was away the better.
-As I swung into the saddle a shot came from just
-behind me, missing me. I rode back as fast as
-Moonshine could go. The lull in the firing had
-ceased, and the Germans were all round us. One
-could see them in the wood, and they were shooting
-quite close. The man who finally got me was
-about 15 to 20 yards away; his bullet must have
-passed through a tree or through Bron’s great-coat,
-because it came into my side broken up.
-It was like a tremendous punch. I galloped straight
-on to my regiment and told the Colonel that Hubert
-was dead. He said: “I am sorry, and I am sorry
-that you are hit. I am going to charge.” He had
-told me earlier that he meant to if he got the chance.</p>
-
-<p>I got off and asked them to take on my horse.
-Then I lay down on the ground and an R.A.M.C.
-man dressed me. The Red Cross men gave a
-loud whistle when they saw my wound, and said the
-bullet had gone through me. The fire was frightfully
-hot. The men who were helping me were crouching
-down, lying on the ground. While he was dressing
-me a horse&mdash;his, I suppose&mdash;was shot just behind
-us. I asked them to go, as they could do me no
-good and would only get killed or taken themselves.
-The doctor gave me some morphia, and I gave
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-them my revolver. They put me on a stretcher,
-leaving another empty stretcher beside me. This
-was hit several times. Shots came from all directions,
-and the fire seemed to be lower than earlier in the
-day. The bullets were just above me and my
-stretcher. I lost consciousness for a bit; then I
-heard my regiment charging. There were loud cries
-and little spurts of spasmodic shooting; then
-everything was quiet and a deep peace fell upon
-the wood. It was very dreamlike.</p>
-
-<p>It is really very difficult to reconstruct this fight.
-I think every man’s attention was fixed like iron
-on doing his own job, otherwise they would all
-have noticed more. I carry in my mind a number
-of very vivid pictures&mdash;Desmond on his horse,
-Valentine and I discussing fatalism, the C.O.
-smoking cigarettes in the cinema holders that
-I had bought for him a few days before.</p>
-
-<p>As I lay on the stretcher a jarring thought came
-to me. I had in my pocket the flat-nosed bullets
-which the War Office had served out to us as revolver
-ammunition. They are not dum-dum bullets, but
-they would naturally not make as pleasant a wound
-as the sharp-nosed ones, and it occurred to me
-that those having them would be shot. I searched
-my pockets and flung mine away. I did not discover
-one which remained and was buried later
-on,&mdash;but neither did the Germans. It was first
-hearing German voices close by that jogged my
-memory about these bullets, and the Germans
-were then so close that I felt some difficulty in
-throwing the bullets away. The same idea must
-have occurred to others, for later I heard the
-Germans speaking very angrily about the flat
-bullets they had picked up in the wood, and saying
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-how they would deal with any one in whose
-possession they were found.</p>
-
-<p>The glades became resonant with loud, raucous
-German commands and occasional cries from
-wounded men. After about an hour and a half,
-I suppose, a German with a red beard, with the
-sun shining on his helmet and bayonet, came up
-looking like an angel of death. He walked round
-from behind, and put his serrated bayonet on
-the empty stretcher by me, so close that it all but
-touched me. The stretcher broke and his bayonet
-poked me. I enquired in broken but polite German
-what he proposed to do next; after reading the
-English papers and seeing the way he was handling
-his bayonet, it seemed to me that there was going
-to be another atrocity. He was extraordinarily
-kind and polite. He put something under my
-head; offered me wine, water and cigarettes.
-He said: “Wir sind kamaraden.” Another soldier
-came up and said: “Why didn’t you stay in
-England&mdash;you who made war upon the Boers?”
-I said: “We obeyed orders, just as you do;
-as for the Boers, they were our enemies and are
-now our friends, and it is not your business to
-insult wounded men.” My first friend then cursed
-him heartily, and he moved on.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans passed in crowds. They seemed
-like steel locusts. Every now and then I would
-hear: “Here is an officer who talks German,”
-and the crowd would swerve in like a steel eddy.
-Then: “Schnell Kinder!” and they would be
-off. They gave a tremendous impression of lightness
-and iron. After some hours, when my wound
-was beginning to hurt, some carriers came up to
-take me to a collecting place for the wounded.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-These men were rather rough. They dropped
-me and my stretcher once, but were cursed by an
-officer. They then carried me some distance, and
-took me off the stretcher, leaving me on the ground.
-The Germans continued to pass in an uninterrupted
-stream. One motor cyclist, but with a bayonet
-in his hand, was very unpleasant. He said: “I
-would like to put this in your throat and turn it
-round and round,” waving it down to my nose. That
-sort of thing happened more than once or twice,
-but there were always more friends than enemies,
-though as night fell the chance of being left without
-friends increased. As it grew dark, I got rather
-cold. One of the Germans saw this, covered me
-with his coat and said: “Wait a moment, I
-will bring you something else.” He went off,
-and, I suppose, stripped a dead Englishman and
-a dead German. The German jersey which he
-gave me had no holes in it; the Englishman’s
-coat had two bayonet cuts.</p>
-
-<p>The wounded began to cry dreadfully in the
-darkness. I found myself beside Robin, who was
-very badly wounded in the leg. The Germans
-gave me water when I asked for it, but every time
-I drank it made me sick. At, I suppose, 9.30
-or 10 p.m. they took us off into an ambulance
-and carried us to a house that had been turned
-into a hospital. I was left outside, talking to a
-Dane who was very anti-German, though he was
-serving with them as a Red Cross man. He cursed
-them loudly in German. He said it was monstrous
-that I hadn’t been attended to, that the Germans
-had had a defeat and would be beaten. I said:
-“Yes, it’s all true, but please stop talking, because
-they’ll hear you and punish me.”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span></p>
-
-<p>Just before 12 o’clock they carried me into the
-hospital on to the operating table, and dressed my
-wound quickly.</p>
-
-<p>Then I was helped out to an outhouse and lay
-beside Robin. It was full of English and German
-wounded. They gave us one drink of water and
-then shut and locked the door and left us for the
-night. One man cried and cried for water until
-he died. It was a horrible night. The straw was
-covered with blood, and there was never a moment
-when men were not groaning and calling for help.
-In the morning the man next to Robin went off
-his head and became animal with pain. I got
-the Germans to do what was possible for him.
-I asked the Germans to let me out, and they helped
-me outside into a chair, and I talked to an officer
-called Brandt. He sent a telegram to the German
-authorities to say that Robin and I were lightly
-wounded, and asking them to let our families
-know. He would not let me pay. I would have
-liked to have done it for every one, but that wasn’t
-possible. They took us away in an ambulance
-at about 11 o’clock. It was a beautiful September
-day, very hot indeed. The heat in the covered
-ambulance was suffocating, and Robin must have
-suffered horribly. He asked me the German for
-“quick,” and when I told him, urged the Germans
-on. There were great jolts and....</p>
-
-<p>At Viviers I found Shields, who said to me:
-“Hullo, you wounded, and you a volunteer, too?”&mdash;as
-if a volunteer ought to be immune from wounds.
-We were carried upstairs and told that Valentine
-and Buddy, whom I had last met under the cedars,
-were in the same hospital. Valentine had the
-point of his elbow shot away just after I had left
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-him. He raised his hand to brush a wasp off
-his neck, and only remembered pitching forward
-when a bullet struck his elbow. He woke up in
-a pool of blood. A German came up and took the
-flask of brandy that I had given him after my
-visit to Soissons. He gave Valentine a drink,
-and then, when Valentine had said he did not
-want any more, swigged the whole of the rest off.
-It was enough to make two men drunk, solidly,
-for hours. Later, five Germans came up to Valentine
-and ragged him. One of them kicked him, but
-an officer arrived, took all their names, promised
-Valentine they should be punished, and attached
-an orderly to him for the night. Buddy was badly
-wounded in the back and arm. He found his
-servant in the church at Viviers. Then we all
-met at the house in Viviers. The doctors gave
-Robin and me a strong dose of morphia. That
-afternoon a German doctor, whose name was Hillsparck,
-came in and woke me. He gave me a
-gold watch with a crest on it, and a silver watch
-and a purse of gold (&pound;8 in it). He said that a
-Colonel to whom the watch belonged had been
-buried close by in the village of Haraman, and asked
-me if I could say who he was. We heard that
-the Colonel had been killed, and I imagined it must
-have been him, but we could not tell, as apparently
-every single man of the seventy odd who had
-charged with him had been killed. The doctor
-left this watch with me. In the hospital we believed
-that the General of the Division, Monro, and
-also our own Brigadier, General Scott Kerr, were
-wounded, and that the Colonel and T. were killed;
-Hubert we knew was killed.</p>
-
-<p>Our experiences on the field were all the same.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-We were all well treated, though occasionally we
-were insulted. In hospital an old <i>ober-stadt</i> was
-in command of the doctors. He was very good
-to us. The English doctors were W., in command,
-S. next, Rankin and Shields. They were all good
-doctors. W., Rankin and Shields were excellent
-fellows. Rankin, who has been killed since, himself
-wounded, was dressing the wounded on the field
-and was recommended for the V.C. Shields has
-been killed in the same way, and I believe would
-have been recommended but that his C.O. was
-also killed. They were both the best sort of man
-you can find.</p>
-
-<p>After a couple of days I moved into Buddy and
-Valentine’s room. A little way down the street
-there was the ch&acirc;teau, full of wounded Germans.
-Our men were carried there to be operated upon.</p>
-
-<p>W. and the other doctors who went to help
-discovered that there were 311 wounded Germans
-as against 92 of our own, so we didn’t do
-badly.</p>
-
-<p>Every morning the German sentries used to
-come in and talk to us. My German and Buddy’s
-was very weak, but we managed to get along all
-right. Downstairs those who were lightly wounded
-sat outside in the chairs they took from the house,
-in the sunny garden. It was a fairly luxurious
-house, with paper marked “F. H.” I thought
-it was a girls’ school, for the only books we could
-find were the <i>Berger de Valence</i> and Jules Verne.
-My side was painful the first few days. Then
-they cut me open and took out the bullet, which
-was all in bits. It was rather hard lines on the
-others to perform an operation in the room, but
-I felt much better after it. The food difficulty
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
-was rather acute. There was very little food,
-and what there was was badly cooked. We lived
-principally on things that S. called “chupatti”&mdash;thick,
-unleavened biscuits. The men began to give
-trouble. There was nobody in command of them.
-There was an ex-comedian who was particularly
-tiresome. We had to ask the Germans to punish
-one man for us. About the fourth day one of
-the orderlies escaped&mdash;Drummer McCoy. He
-passed for four days through the German lines,
-and on one occasion watched a whole Army Corps
-go by from the boughs of a tree. Then he found
-the French, who passed him on to the English,
-where he went to the Staff and told them of us.
-That is how we were picked up so quickly on
-the 11th.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here is a copy of my diary for September 9th:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The people are beginning to return, but not the
-priest, who is with the Army. We want him for
-the regiment. Up till this time only six of the
-wounded have died. The Germans tell us every
-kind of story&mdash;the United States are declaring war
-on Japan, Italy on France, Denmark on England,
-etc., etc. Also that Paris has been given twelve
-hours to accept or reject the German terms, and
-if the French Government is obdurate the town
-will be bombarded. We are told that we are
-to be taken as prisoners to Magdeburg. It is a
-week since I have had a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, September 10th.</i> We are all very
-anxious to get news home, but there is no chance.
-Last night S. Herbert died. I had a Testament,
-and Valentine and I found verses which W. read
-over his grave. Valentine has bad pain. Three
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-bones broken in his arm and the point of his elbow
-gone. Buddy is better, but hit cruel hard. Robin
-has a bad wound, and is very restless. They don’t
-like giving us morphia. Luckily I have got my
-own medicine chest, which is a good thing for all
-of us, as I can give the others sleeping draughts.
-Last night a French cavalry patrol came within
-two miles of us. Early this morning there was
-rifle fire close by. It sounded in the wood that
-we suppose is Haraman. We think the Germans
-may evacuate this place any time. The bandages
-have given out. Stores are not coming in. There
-is a big aeroplane depot quite close by, and the
-whole air is full of aeroplanes. It looks and feels
-as if there might be a big battle round here soon.
-They have shot an old man wandering about the
-aerodrome. But he was asking for it.</p>
-
-<p><i>9 a.m.</i> The aeroplanes are being shifted from
-the depot. Last night we heard that arms were
-issued to all the wounded Germans in hospital
-who could carry them. This morning the Germans
-are digging trenches hard. There are Red Crosses
-everywhere. The doctors want us to go down to
-the cellars if we are shelled. The French women
-in the village say that the French are coming.
-The firing is increasing.</p>
-
-<p><i>9.15 a.m.</i> The German hospital across the way
-is ordered to be ready to move at once.</p>
-
-<p><i>10.25 a.m.</i> An order has come for all prisoners
-to parade at the church at 12 o’clock. The German
-lightly wounded are being sent on. We are very
-anxious as to whether they mean to take us too.
-More of our wounded who have died are being
-buried.</p>
-
-<p><i>11.10 a.m.</i> A German doctor has come. He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-said: “They are going and taking all (of our)
-prisoners, 18 (of our) lightly wounded, and leaving
-25 (of their) badly wounded.” French wounded
-are now coming in. We have no more bandages
-at all. A German sentry with whom I had talked
-has just come in. I asked him some days ago
-to buy some handkerchiefs. He said: “I have
-not been able to buy you any handkerchiefs, or
-to get the cigarettes you wanted, but here is one
-of my own handkerchiefs, which I have washed.
-We have got to go.”</p>
-
-<p><i>8 p.m.</i> The last order is that the previous orders
-are countermanded and the Germans are to stay
-on ten days.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, September 11th.</i> Our English prisoners
-were marched off this morning. We are full of
-speculation as to what has really happened. Valentine,
-Buddy and I are well.</p>
-
-<p><i>10.10 a.m.</i> There are machine-guns about four
-miles away.</p>
-
-<p><i>10.30 a.m.</i> There is a heavy rifle fire within
-a mile. It is very trying lying here in bed. We
-have nothing to read except <i>The Rajah’s Heir</i>
-which V. sent to me and which has become known
-as the treasure-house of fun. It is a sort of mixture
-of Hymns Ancient and Modern and the <i>Fairchild
-Family</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>2 p.m.</i> There is a Maxim within a few hundred
-yards of the house. Rifle volleys outside in the
-garden. A rising wind and rain threatening.</p>
-
-<p><i>3 p.m.</i> Heavy rain. The French are visible,
-advancing.</p>
-
-<p><i>3.10 p.m.</i> The French are here. They came
-in in fine style, like conquerors; one man first,
-riding, his hand on his hip. The German sentries
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-who had been posted to protect us wounded walked
-down and surrendered their bayonets. The German
-doctors came to us for help. I offered to go, but
-W. went. The French infantry and cavalry came
-streaming through. Our wounded went out into
-the pouring rain to cheer them. They got water
-from our men, whose hands they kissed. The
-German guns are on the skyline. The Germans
-are in full retreat, and said to be cut off by the
-English.</p>
-
-<p><i>5 p.m.</i> A heavy bombardment of the German
-guns began from here. I have come upstairs
-to a long low garret with skylights, in order to
-leave Valentine and Buddy more room. Through
-the skylight one can see every flash of the French
-and German guns. The doctors all come up here
-to watch with their field-glasses through my skylights.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, September 12th.</i> Yesterday, when W.
-went down, he found the German doctors receiving
-cavalier treatment from the French. He explained
-to the French that they had treated us with the
-greatest kindness; after that the French treated
-with courtesy the old <i>ober-stadt</i>. Shields carved
-a great wooden tombstone for the thirteen men
-who had died up to date. It is a month to-day
-since I left England.</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon Colonel Thompson, English Staff
-Officer attached to General Manoury, who had been
-attached to the Serbian Army through the last
-war, came in. McCoy, who had escaped, had
-found him and told him about us at Viviers. He
-said he would take me into Villers Cotterets after
-he had done some other business. We talked
-a lot about the Balkans, but I finally went back
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-and lay down in my garret and shall not get up
-again to-day.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, September 13th.</i> I went off with Thompson
-this morning. We passed through the wood
-where we had had the fight, and a long grave of
-120 men was shown to me by McCoy.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="break xx-large">ANZAC<br />
-<span class="x-large">1915</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_060.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>SIFTON, PRAED &amp; CO LTD ST JAMES’ ST LONDON S W</i></p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="ANZAC_1915" class="break">ANZAC, 1915</h2>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">When</span> I was passed fit for Active Service,
-after some time in hospital, I left England
-for Egypt with five other officers. Four of these
-had strange histories. One is, perhaps, the most
-romantic figure of the war, another now governs
-a great Province, while two, after many adventures,
-were prisoners of war in Turkey, for different but
-dreary periods.</p>
-
-<p>I was sent to the East because it had been my
-fortune to have travelled widely, and I had a fairly
-fluent smattering of several Eastern languages. On
-arriving at Gibraltar about December 14, 1914,
-we heard the first news of submarines. One of
-these was reported to have passed through into
-the Mediterranean a few days previously.</p>
-
-<p>When I reached Egypt just before Christmas,
-superficially everything was calm. This calm did
-not last very long. I was given Intelligence work
-to do, under Colonel Clayton, who has played
-a very great part in achieving our success in the
-East. Reports constantly came in from Minia,
-Zagazig and Tanta of Turkish and German intrigues.
-General Sir J. Maxwell commanded the Forces
-in Egypt. Prince Hussein had just been proclaimed
-Sultan, and Egypt had been declared to be under
-British protection. Rushdy Pasha was Prime
-Minister and a triumvirate of Sir Milne Cheetham
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-at the Residency, Sir R. Graham as Adviser to
-the Ministry of the Interior, and Lord Edward
-Cecil as Adviser to the Ministry of Finance, directed
-the Government.</p>
-
-<p>It was difficult to believe that the Egyptian,
-who then had all the advantages of neutrals without
-any of the disadvantages, really meant mischief.
-Most people, I think, agreed with Lord Cromer,
-and believed that his policy of making taxes light
-and life easy for the Egyptian had succeeded, but
-the East is never logical, as we all know, and the
-natural consequence constantly does not follow
-the parental cause. Mecca rose to join us after
-Kut had fallen; the rebellion in Egypt only took
-place when the English had achieved a complete
-victory over Turkey, and held Palestine and Syria.
-I quote the following incident as an illustration
-of the difficulty of sometimes following this
-mentality:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>A Syrian reported to me that a great Egyptian
-family, whom I will call the Ashakas, had conspired
-to bring 15,000 rifles into the country
-and to engineer a rising. The rifles were to be
-imported from the Greek islands and from Greece,
-by means of Greek sponge-fishers. One of these,
-who had the pleasant and appropriate name of
-Son-of-the-Dagger, met me in a caf&eacute; in an obscure
-side street in Cairo. There he revealed the conspiracy,
-explaining that only the landing-place
-for the arms had still to be decided upon. He
-and his companions were to receive a commission
-on every rifle landed, and he wanted to know what
-the British Government would be ready to pay
-for his betrayal of his patrons.</p>
-
-<p>On reporting this to the proper authorities,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-I was told that they were aware of the existence
-of this plot. The next day frantic messages from
-the Greek came, and I met him, disturbed in his
-mind. He said that the Ashakas had become
-suspicious of him and the other Greeks, and that
-he feared for his life. He asked to be arrested
-immediately after the seizure of the arms and thrown
-into prison with the Egyptians, and then to be
-flogged before them, in order to convince them
-that he was acting honourably by them. He
-was very anxious to be paid for both pieces of
-treachery, by the Egyptians and by us. On making
-my report to the authorities I learned that the
-Ashakas had betrayed the Greeks by denouncing
-them as traitors.</p>
-
-<p>The whole affair had been a result of Levantine
-nerves. The Ashakas in the past had been
-strong Nationalists. When the war between the
-Turks and ourselves broke out, in spite of the
-fact that it seemed possible, and indeed likely,
-that Egypt might again become a Turkish province,
-their politics changed, and they hastily became
-Anglophile, but their past record haunted them.
-They feared the British Government almost as
-much as the Turks, and yearned to prove themselves
-loyal.</p>
-
-<p>After much thought it appeared to them that the
-simplest way of achieving this would be to supply
-valuable military information to the British. That,
-however, was an article which they did not possess,
-and they therefore hit upon the idea of getting up
-a bogus conspiracy in order to be able to denounce
-it. This seemed the simplest way to safeguard
-themselves, and they hurriedly adopted the plan.
-The instruments that they chose were subtle
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-Greeks, who were more proficient in the art of
-intrigue than the Ashakas, and had an even more
-degraded morality. It took only a few days for
-the Ashakas to realize the infidelity of the Greeks,
-and to inform against them still more hurriedly,
-but meanwhile the Greeks had spoken first. In
-the end, when the hair of the Ashakas had turned
-grey, they made a clean breast of the whole affair
-to the British authorities, and were, I believe,
-forgiven.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“Happy is the country that has no history”
-is a proverb which is often untrue, but Egypt was
-certainly happy, compared with the rest of the
-world, early in 1915. Then history moved rapidly
-towards us. The thunder of the guns in France
-was no longer something remote and irrelevant. The
-Turks massed across the desert, and prepared to
-attack the Canal. Many of the English thought
-that we were living on a sleeping volcano, but
-there was general confidence, and no one doubted
-our power to cope with the situation. The Turks
-attacked skilfully and bravely, but the odds against
-them were too heavy. They were, however, able
-to shell H.M.S. <i>Harding</i> in the Canal, and a few
-of their men swam across to Egypt. Complete
-serenity reigned in Cairo. I remember going to
-the Opera that night. General Sir John Maxwell
-was listening, quite unruffled, to the performance.
-I heard a civilian say in a scandalized voice to
-him: “They have gone and broken the <i>Harding</i>.
-What next?” To which Sir John answered:
-“Well, they’ll have to mend it, I suppose.” Two
-ladies landed at Port Said and had their train
-shelled as it steamed slowly along the banks of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-the Canal to Cairo. They wondered placidly if
-this was the normal state of things in Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>These attacks added to the labours and quickened
-the energies of the Intelligence in Egypt,
-but still there were only vague rumours to
-be heard. One of these foretold that there was to
-be a general rising of Islam on April 27th.</p>
-
-<p>I remember long conversations with a specialist
-with regard to this possibility; he disbelieved in
-it, then or at any time, for, as he said very rightly,
-Islam had to contend with great difficulties from
-the point of view of communications&mdash;waterless
-deserts, impassable seas, mountain ranges, unbridged
-by our telegraph. My friend, who was remarkable,
-would not have an office like any other man in his
-position; he disconcerted friend and foe alike by
-changing his address every few days, and when
-one wished to see him, and after the unusual event
-of catching him, he would make an appointment
-such as: “The third lamp-post in the Street
-of Mohammed Ali at dusk.” When he had gone
-beyond recall, one remembered that the Mohammed
-Ali Street was several miles long, and that he had
-not said at which end was the appointed lamp-post;
-so he was well qualified to speak of the
-disadvantages accruing from lack of communications.</p>
-
-<p>Prisoners began coming in, but not much news
-was to be obtained from them. They were mostly
-shattered and rather pathetic men. The first to
-arrive were some escaped Syrian schoolmasters,
-who had been conscripted by the Turks, and gave
-a very graphic account of a hot and harassing
-journey ahead of their comrades to Egypt, where
-their friends and relations lived. Then came a
-blind old gentleman of eighty, who fell into our
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-front-line trench. It had been his habit, every
-two years, to visit his son in Egypt, and he had
-not realized that there was a war going on.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst the Turkish prisoners of the first attack
-there was one old quartermaster seriously ill, whose
-manners and courage made him the friend of all
-his captors, but, like the rest, he told us nothing.
-There was probably more information amongst
-the prisoners who had been interned, if they had
-been willing to speak, but they were not. I met
-one of these to whom fate had been unusually
-cruel. He was an Albanian whose home had been
-in Montenegro. When the amiable Montenegrins
-seized the land of the Albanians, he had been beaten
-and cast out; thence he had gone to Turkey, but
-the Albanians had been the first to attack the
-Turks, and were, indeed, the main cause of the
-ruin of the Ottoman Empire, so in Turkey he was
-bastinadoed and thrown into prison. Somehow
-he managed to escape and arrived in Egypt. In
-Egypt he was arrested as a Turk, and again thrown
-into prison. In prison he was continually beaten
-by his fellow-prisoners, who were Turks, as an
-Albanian and an enemy of Islam.</p>
-
-<p>There were no tangible proofs of a conspiracy;
-one used sometimes to get black looks in the bazaar,
-and scowls from the class of the Effendis. On the
-other hand, we were very strongly supported by
-men of the type of the late Sultan Hussein and
-Adly Yeghen Pasha.</p>
-
-<p>It would be difficult to meet a more attractive
-or courteous gentleman than the late Sultan. He
-was of the advanced school of enlightened Islam;
-neither his literary tastes, his philosophy, nor his
-pleasure in European society allowed him to forget
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-his own people for a moment. Adly Yeghen Pasha,
-then Minister of Education, is an exceptional and
-outstanding figure in Egypt, with a marked personality.
-The other Ministers mixed freely with
-European society, and there was no sign of anything
-but friendliness.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of February I was sent on the battleship
-<i>Bacchante</i>, commanded by Captain Boyle,<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a>
-which lay for about a fortnight off Alexandretta,
-occasionally bombarding telegraphs, or wagons
-that were said to be loaded with artillery wheels.
-One morning we saw two carts crawling along,
-drawn by bullocks, carrying the alleged wheels
-of artillery northward from Alexandretta. In
-order to warn the two drivers shells were fired
-from the great battleship a hundred yards ahead
-of them. The men left their oxen, taking refuge
-in a neighbouring ditch, while the oxen went slowly
-forward alone, like automata. Our guns then
-fired upon the carts, which were about half a mile
-distant, and one of the oxen was immediately
-hit. On this one of the two Turks left the ditch,
-cut the wounded animal free, and continued to
-lead the two carts. Again our guns fired ahead
-of him to give him warning, but he went on steadfastly
-at about a mile an hour to what was certain
-death. In the end he was left lying by his dead
-oxen and his broken cart. We had given him
-every chance that we could, and if the admiration
-of a British ship for his courage could reward a
-dead Anatolian muleteer, that reward was his.</p>
-
-<p>Life outside Alexandretta was uneventful. Occasionally
-a Turkish official came out to discuss various
-questions that arose. He used to sway and bow
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-from the tiller of his boat while I swayed and bowed
-from the platform below the gangway of the
-cruiser. It is perhaps worth saying that when I
-expressed to him Captain Boyle’s regret for the
-death of the Turkish muleteer it was an event that
-he would not condescend to notice.</p>
-
-<p>We discovered one curious fact of natural history,
-that with a searchlight you can see the eyes of
-dogs or jackals at night more than half a mile
-away. A previous ship had reported that men
-came down to the shore with electric torches, and
-it was only after some days that we discovered that
-these will-o’-the-wisp appearances were in reality the
-eyes of dogs.</p>
-
-<p>But though life was uneventful, it was very pleasant
-on the ship, and all were sorry when the cruise
-came to an end.</p>
-
-<p>I remember the last night at dinner in the wardroom
-the name of a distinguished Admiral occurred
-in the conversation. He was a man who had a
-great reputation for capacity and also eccentricity,
-that came mainly from his habit of concentrated
-thinking. When he was deep in thought and his
-eyes caught any bright object, he would go up
-to it like a magpie and play with it. He would
-sometimes go up and fiddle with the button of a
-junior officer on the quarter-deck, looking at it
-very attentively, to the great discomfort of the
-junior officer, or even with that of a stranger to
-whom he had been introduced. The legend grew
-from this idiosyncrasy, that those may believe
-who wish to. It was said that one night at a dance
-he sat out for a long time with a girl in a black
-dress. His eye caught a white thread on her
-shoulder, and unconsciously while he talked he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-began pulling at it. The story goes on to say
-that when the girl went home she said to her mother:
-“I know I went out with a vest to-night, and now
-I wonder what has happened to it.”</p>
-
-<p>I remember at the same dinner Dr. Levick, who
-had been with Captain Scott in the Antarctic voyage,
-told a curious story of prophecy. He had been
-to a fortune-teller after the idea of going with
-Captain Scott had occurred to him, but before
-he had taken any steps. The fortune-teller gave
-a description of the melancholy place where he was
-to live for two years, of the unknown men who were
-to be his companions, and particularly one who
-had strangely flecked hair.</p>
-
-<p>I returned to Cairo and office work with some
-reluctance. Friends of mine and I took a house,
-which somehow managed to run itself, in Gezireh.
-It was covered with Bougainvillea and flowers of
-every colour, and was a delight to see. Sometimes
-it lacked servants completely, and at other times
-there was a black horde. Gardeners sprang up
-as if by enchantment, and made things grow almost
-before one’s eyes.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I quote from my diary of March 8, 1915:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>News to-day that King Constantine won’t have
-Greece come in, and that Venizelos has resigned.
-At a guess, this means that either Greece or King
-Constantine is lost. If Constantine goes, Venizelos
-might shepherd his son through his minority.</p>
-
-<p><i>March 14, 1915.</i> I left Luxor Tuesday night,
-after a wonderful time. My guide was a Senoussi&mdash;something-or-other
-Galleel. He had a tip of white
-turban hanging, which he said was a sign of his
-people. He was rather like one of the Arabs out
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-of a Hichens book, and I expect about as genuine.
-A snake-charmer came with us. He gave me the
-freedom of the snakes as a man is given the freedom
-of a city, but as one scorpion and two snakes&mdash;one
-of them a so-to-speak soi-disant cobra&mdash;stung
-and bit him during the day, it’s not likely
-to be of much help to me. He did some very
-mysterious things, and called snakes from every
-kind of place&mdash;one from a window in the wall,
-a 5-foot long cobra, and a Coptic cook found its
-old skin in the next window.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In justice to the snake-charmer it ought to be
-said that he was only stung and bitten as a consequence
-of a quarrel with an arch&aelig;ologist.</p>
-
-<p>In Egypt every arch&aelig;ologist looks upon the
-local magician or snake-charmer as his competitor,
-and hates him. When the arch&aelig;ologist is telling
-the tourist the history of Rameses II the attention
-of the tourist is distracted by a half-naked man
-doing the mango trick. My arch&aelig;ologist friend,
-irritated by the presence of the snake-charmer,
-declared that his snakes were all doped and his
-scorpions were tame town scorpions, green, and not
-yellow like the country scorpions. He found a
-bucolic scorpion under a stone, of the proper colour,
-which instantly stung the snake-charmer; he then
-insisted upon stirring up his snakes with a stick,
-with the unfortunate results that have already
-been mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>The Egyptian has always seemed to me harder
-to understand than his neighbours. It may be
-because there is less in him to understand. The
-Greeks, Turks, and Arabs have all got very salient
-characteristic qualities, but though the characteristics
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-of the Egyptians are probably as strongly
-marked, they are less conspicuous to the foreigner’s
-eye; in other words, the Egyptian has less in common
-with the outer world than any of the Asiatic, or
-even African, peoples who surround him. Lane,
-in his <i>Modern Egyptians</i>, says that they refused
-to believe that the ordinary traveller was not an
-agent for the Government, because they could
-not understand the desire for travel, and their
-character has not changed since his day. Here is
-a story of Egyptian guile and credulity:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>An Egyptian was anxious to get some job profitable
-to himself done, and he went to one of the
-kavasses (guards) at the Agency for advice. The
-kavass professed himself able to help. He said:
-“The man for you to go to is Mr. Jones, that high
-English official. He will get what you want done,
-but I warn you that Mr. Jones is an expensive
-man. Give me three hundred pounds, and I will
-see what can be done.” The three hundred pounds
-was duly paid, and for a long time nothing happened.
-The petitioner grew impatient and importunate,
-and was eventually satisfied for the moment by
-an invitation to lunch with a Levantine who passed
-himself off as Mr. Jones. At luncheon the Levantine,
-who was of German extraction, wore his hat, banged
-his fist on the table, smoked a pipe, interrupted,
-and generally acted as an Englishman abroad is
-supposed by some to behave. Then occurred an
-interval of inaction; the petitioner again grew
-restive, and this time he complained to the
-authorities. Finally the transaction was discovered,
-and the kavass was sent to gaol.</p>
-
-<p>Events moved in Egypt. The Australian and
-New Zealand troops poured in, and splendid
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-men they were. But there was little love lost
-between the Australians and the Egyptians, though
-the British troops and the natives fraternized
-occasionally. The native Egyptian was, it must
-be admitted, constantly very roughly treated, for
-the average Australian, while he was at first apt
-to resent superiority in others, felt little doubt
-about his own claim to it. The Australian and
-New Zealand Corps was commanded by General
-Birdwood, and the New Zealand and Australian
-Division by General Godley.</p>
-
-<p>I joined the New Zealand Division as Interpreter
-and Intelligence officer, and we all made preparations
-to start early in April. I was anxious to buy a
-beautiful snow-white Arab, that had won most of
-the races at Cairo, from a friend of mine, but General
-Godley spoke simply but firmly. “You aren’t
-the Duke of Marlborough,” he said. “You can’t
-have that white pony unless he’s dyed, and even
-then it would wash off in any rain-storm. You
-may get yourself shot, but not me.” I agreed
-with the less reluctance because I had found that
-the pony pulled furiously and would certainly
-lead any advance or retreat by many miles.</p>
-
-<p>The day for our departure approached. The
-golden sunlight and tranquillity of Egypt was
-tragic in its contrast to what was coming.</p>
-
-<p>Every Intelligence officer was a Cassandra with
-an attentive audience. In every discussion there
-was, as far as I saw, unanimity between military,
-naval, and political officers, who all wished the
-landing to take place at Alexandretta, and deplored
-(not to use a stronger word) the project of the
-Dardanelles, which the Turks had been given
-ample time to fortify.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span></p>
-
-<p>The heat increased, and the English officers’
-wives, who had come to Egypt to be with their
-husbands, were given a taste of a ferocious khamsin
-that affected their complexions. In the spring
-of 1915 this wind came in waves and gusts of lurid
-heat. It was like a Nessus shirt, scorching the
-skin and making slow fire of one’s blood. After
-the khamsin, which has the one advantage of
-killing insects with its heat, locusts came. They
-made a carpet on the ground and a shadow against
-the sun. Life was intolerable out of doors, and
-they followed one into the recesses of the house.
-A friend of mine said to me: “What on earth
-had they got to grumble about in Egypt in the
-time of the Pharaohs? They had one plague
-at a time then; we are having all the lot at once.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I quote from my diary:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday I saw Todd, who had been on the
-<i>Annie Rickmers</i> when she was torpedoed off Smyrna.
-The crew was Greek. There were five Englishmen
-on board, and a good many wounded. The Greeks
-were all off at once, taking all the boats. They
-had no interpreter with them. He said the English
-in Smyrna were angry at being bombarded, and
-came aboard with Rahmy Bey, the Vali, to complain.
-Rahmy was always Anglophile.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Early in April Sir Ian Hamilton came and went.
-He had a great review of the troops in the desert
-on a glorious day. It was a very splendid sight,
-and one I should have enjoyed better if I had not
-been riding a mountainous roan horse that bolted
-through the glittering Staff.</p>
-
-<p>Many old friends, Ock Asquith, Patrick Shaw-Stewart,
-Charles Lister, and Rupert Brooke, had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-come out to Egypt in the Naval Division, and we
-lunched, dined, and went to the Pyramids by moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>The first week in April we made our preparations
-for leaving, and I went to say good-bye to native
-friends. One of them was an old Albanian Abbot
-of the Bektashi sect, whose monastery was in the
-living rock in a huge cave behind the Mokattan
-Hills. He had a fine face and a venerable beard,
-and I spent much time talking to him, drinking
-his coffee, by a fountain in the cool garden outside
-his home. I was sorry to say goodbye to the
-delightful Zoo in Cairo, with the hawks calling
-unceasingly in the sunlight, and a hundred different
-birds. Another pleasure there was Said, an attractive
-and intellectual hippopotamus, who performed a
-number of tricks.</p>
-
-<p>On April 10th I went to Alexandria to report
-aboard the German prize ship <i>Lutzow</i>, and on the
-12th we sailed. We discovered that night at dinner
-that the puritanical New Zealand Government
-had ordained that this boat should be a dry one,
-but it made no difference to our mess, which was
-very pleasant. On April 13th we made a new
-discovery, that the boat was even drier than we
-expected, as there was not enough water, and the
-men had to shave in salt water. On April 15th
-we came into Lemnos Harbour, with a keen wind
-and a rustling deep blue sea, and white-crested
-waves, with cheer on cheer from French and English
-warships, from German prizes with British crews,
-from submarines, and even from anchored balloons.</p>
-
-<p>The next day I went ashore with a couple of
-other officers to buy donkeys, who were to carry
-our kits. Mudros was not too bad a town, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-was a very curious spectacle in those days. There
-were great black Senegalese troops with filed teeth
-who chased the children in play, though if the
-children had known what their home habits were
-the games would probably have ceased abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>There were Greeks dressed in fantastic costume
-and British troops of all sorts. Many old friends
-from the East were there, among them Colonel
-Doughty Wylie, who in a few days was to win his
-V.C. and lose a life of great value to his country.</p>
-
-<p>I met a friend, Bettelheim, nicknamed “Beetle,”
-whose life had been one long adventure. When
-last I had seen him he had been an official in Turkey,
-and in a rising had been dragged from his carriage
-on Galata Bridge in Constantinople by the mob,
-with his companion, the Emir Arslan. Emir Arslan
-was torn to pieces, but “Beetle,” with his marvellous
-luck, escaped.</p>
-
-<p>Many of us lunched together under a vine, drinking
-excellent wine at a penny a glass. Everybody
-was extremely cheerful, and there was great elation
-in the island air. The talk was, of course, about
-the landing. A friend of mine said: “This is
-a terrible business; entire Staffs will be wiped out.”
-He seemed to think that the Staffs were the most
-important thing.</p>
-
-<p>After lunch I went to see the Mayor, to help
-me buy all that I wanted. He was rather shaky
-with regard to his own position, as Lemnos had not
-yet been recognized by us as Greek, and our recognition
-was contingent on the behaviour of the Greek
-Government. He was a very good linguist, talking
-French, a little English, Italian, Greek, Turkish
-and Arabic. I think it was he who quoted to me
-the story of the Khoja Nasr-ed-Din. Nasr-ed-Din
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-was lent a saucepan by a friend; he returned
-it with another small saucepan, saying it had
-produced a child. Next year the friend offered a
-huge saucepan at the same date, which the friend
-considered the breeding time of saucepans. Later
-on, when his friend applied for the return of the
-saucepan, Nasr-ed-Din said: “It is dead.” His
-friend expostulated: “How can a saucepan die?”
-“Well,” said Nasr-ed-Din, “if it can have a child,
-why can’t it die?”</p>
-
-<p>Lemnos itself, though then it was a pageant,
-is on the whole a dreary island. The land was green,
-as all lands are in the spring, but there was not the
-carpet of anemones that one finds in Crete, Cyprus,
-and other islands, nor was there even asphodel.</p>
-
-<p>On Friday, April 16th, we heard that the <i>Manitou</i>
-had been torpedoed, and that a number of men
-had been drowned. This was not the case, though
-she had had three torpedoes fired at her.</p>
-
-<p>At this time we believed that we were to make
-three simultaneous attacks, the New Zealanders
-taking the centre of the Peninsula. A rather
-melancholy call to arms was issued by General
-Birdwood, the pith of which was that for the first
-few days there would be no transport of any kind.
-This made it all the more necessary to obtain the
-donkeys, and with the help of the Mayor of Mudros
-I bought six, and one little one for &pound;1 as a mascot. It
-was a great deal of trouble getting them on board.
-The Greek whose boat I had commandeered was
-very unfriendly, and I had to requisition the services
-of some Senegalese troops.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>April 21, 1915.</i> <i>Mudros.</i> Inner Bay.
-Monday, the 19th, I tried to dine on H.M.S. <i>Bacchante</i>,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-but failed to find her. Dined on the <i>Arcadia</i>.
-Came back with Commodore Keyes.... Met &mdash;&mdash;
-(a journalist turned censor). He said that the
-Turks had thirty 15-inch howitzers on Gallipoli,
-also wire entanglements everywhere. The general
-impression is that we shall get a very bad knock,
-and that it may set the war back a year, besides
-producing an indefinite amount of trouble in the
-East.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, April 20th.</i> I went ashore to get
-porters, but the Mayor was in a nervous state,
-and I failed. I tried to get back in a dinghy with
-a couple of Greeks, and we nearly swamped. A
-gale got up. Finally I made the <i>Imogen</i>, tied up
-by the <i>Hussar</i>, and at last reached my destination.
-Great gale in the night. I hope we don’t suffer
-the fate of the Armada. It is said that our orders
-are to steam for the outer harbour at once.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was curious to see the <i>Imogen</i>, once the Ambassador’s
-yacht at Constantinople. In those days she
-was treated with reverent care. The Mediterranean
-had to be calmed by the finest of weather before
-she travelled. Now she had to sink or swim with
-the rest. Her adventures did not end at Lemnos.
-Travellers may see her name written proudly on
-the harsh cliffs of Muscat in the Persian Gulf, and
-to-day she is probably at Kurna, the site of the
-Garden of Eden.</p>
-
-<p>On Thursday, April 22nd, I was able to get
-two Greek porters, Kristo Keresteji (which being
-interpreted means Kristo the Timber-merchant) and
-Yanni, of the little island of Ayo Strati. Kristo
-was with me until I was invalided in the middle
-of October. He showed the greatest fidelity and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-courage after the first few days. The other man
-was a natural coward, and had to be sent away
-when an opportunity offered, after the landing.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Friday, April 23rd.</i> I have just seen
-the most wonderful procession of ships I shall ever
-see. In the afternoon we left for the outer harbour.
-The wind was blowing; there was foam upon the
-sea and the air of the island was sparkling. With
-the band playing and flags flying, we steamed past
-the rest of the fleet. Cheers went from one end of
-the harbour to the other. Spring and summer
-met. Everybody felt it more than anything that
-had gone before.</p>
-
-<p>After we had passed the fleet, the pageant of
-the fleet passed us. First the <i>Queen Elizabeth</i>,
-immense, beautiful lines, long, like a snake, straight
-as an arrow. This time there was silence. It
-was grim and very beautiful. We would rather
-have had the music and the cheers.... This
-morning instructions were given to the officers
-and landing arrangements made. We leave at
-1.30 to-night. The Australians are to land first.
-This they should do to-night. Then we land....
-Naval guns will have to cover our advance, and the
-men are to be warned that the naval fire is very
-accurate. They will need some reassuring if the
-fire is just over our heads. The 29th land at Helles,
-the French in Asia near Troy. This is curious,
-as they can’t support us or we them. The Naval
-Division goes north and makes a demonstration....
-The general opinion is that very many boats must
-be sunk from the shore. Having got ashore, we
-go on to a rendezvous. We have no native guides....
-The politicians are very unpopular.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span></p>
-
-<p>The sea was very quiet between Lemnos and
-Anzac on April 24th. There were one or two alterations
-in plans, but nothing very material. We
-expected to have to land in the afternoon, but this
-was changed, and we were ordered to land after
-the Australians, who were to attack at 4.30 a.m.
-Some proposed to get up to see the first attack at
-dawn. I thought that we should see plenty of
-the attack before we had done with it, and preferred
-to sleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Sunday, April 25th.</i> I got up at 6.30.
-Thoms, who shared my cabin, had been up earlier.
-There was a continuous roll of thunder from the
-south. Opposite to us the land rose steeply in
-cliffs and hills covered with the usual Mediterranean
-vegetation. The crackle of rifles sounded and
-ceased in turns.... Orders were given to us to
-start at 8.30 a.m.... The tows were punctual....
-We were ordered to take practically nothing but
-rations. I gave my sleeping-bag to Kyriakidis,
-the old Greek interpreter whom I had snatched
-from the <i>Arcadia</i>, and took my British warm and
-my Burberry.... The tow was unpleasantly open
-to look at; there was naturally no shelter of any
-kind. We all packed in, and were towed across
-the shining sea towards the land fight.... We
-could see some still figures lying on the beach to
-our left, one or two in front. Some bullets splashed
-round.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As we were all jumping into the sea to flounder
-ashore, I heard cries from the sergeant at the back
-of the tow. He said to me: “These two men
-refuse to go ashore.” I turned and saw Kristo
-Keresteji and Yanni of Ayo Strati with mesmerized
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-eyes looking at the plops that the bullets made
-in the water, and with their minds evidently fixed
-on the Greek equivalent of “Home, Sweet Home.”
-They were, however, pushed in, and we all scrambled
-on to that unholy land. The word was then, I
-thought rather unnecessarily, passed that we were
-under fire.</p>
-
-<p>It was difficult to understand why the Turkish
-fire developed so late. If they had started shelling
-us during our landing as they shelled us later,
-our losses would have been very heavy. We
-frequently owed our salvation in the Peninsula
-to a Turkish weakness and a Turkish mistake.
-They were constantly slow to appreciate a position
-and take full advantage of it, and their shrapnel
-was generally fused too high. Hardly any man
-who landed escaped being thumped and bumped
-on different occasions by shrapnel, which would,
-of course, have killed or seriously wounded him
-if the burst had not been so high. I remember
-on the afternoon of the first landing a sailor was
-knocked down beside me, and I and another man
-carried him to what shelter there was. We found
-that, while the bullet had pierced his clothes, it
-had not even broken his skin. Said the sailor:
-“This is the third time that that’s ’appened to
-me to-day. I’m beginning to think of my little
-grey ’ome in the West.” So were others.</p>
-
-<p>We had landed on a spit of land which in those
-days we called Shrapnel Point, to the left of what
-afterwards became Corps Headquarters, though
-later the other spit on the right usurped that name.
-I took cover under a bush with a New Zealand
-officer, Major Browne. This officer had risen from
-the ranks. He fought through the whole of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-Gallipoli campaign, and in the end, to the sorrow
-of all who knew him, was killed as a Brigadier
-in France.</p>
-
-<p>The shrapnel fire became too warm to be pleasant,
-and I said: “Major, a soldier’s first duty is to
-save his life for his country.” He said: “I
-quite agree, but I don’t see how it’s to be done.”
-We were driven from Shrapnel Point to the north,
-round the cliff, but were almost immediately driven
-back again by the furious fire that met us.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> We were being shot at from three sides.
-All that morning we kept moving. There were
-lines of men clinging like cockroaches under the cliffs
-or moving silently as the guns on the right and
-left enfiladed us. The only thing to be done was
-to dig in as soon as possible, but a good many
-men were shot while they were doing this. General
-Godley landed about twelve, and went up Monash
-Gully with General Birdwood. We remained on
-the beach.... We had no artillery to keep the
-enemy’s fire down.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We spent a chilly night, sometimes lying down,
-sometimes walking, as the rain began to fall after
-dark, and we had not too much food. My servant,
-Jack, who was a very old friend, and I made ourselves
-as comfortable as we could.</p>
-
-<p>There was a great deal of inevitable confusion.
-We were very hard pressed; as every draft landed
-it was hurried off to that spot in the line where
-reinforcements were most needed. This naturally
-produced chaos amongst the units, and order was
-not re-established for some time. It was a terrible
-night for those in authority. I believe that, had
-it been possible, we should have re-embarked that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-night, but the sacrifices involved would have been
-too great. Preparations for the expedition had
-been totally inadequate. The chief R.A.M.C.
-officer had told me the ridiculously small number of
-casualties he had been ordered to make preparations
-for, and asked my opinion, which I gave him with
-some freedom. As it was, we had to put 600
-men on the ship from which we had disembarked in
-the morning, to go back to hospital in Egypt, a
-four days’ journey, under the charge of one officer,
-who was a veterinary surgeon.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Monday, April 26th.</i> At 5 o’clock
-yesterday our artillery began to land. It’s a very
-rough country; the Mediterranean macchia everywhere,
-and steep, winding valleys. We slept on
-a ledge a few feet above the beach.... Firing
-went on all night. In the morning it was very
-cold, and we were all soaked. The Navy, it appeared,
-had landed us in the wrong place. This made the
-Army extremely angry, though as things turned out
-it was the one bright spot. Had we landed anywhere
-else, we should have been wiped out.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I believe the actual place decided on for our
-landing was a mile farther south, which was an open
-plain, and an ideal place for a hostile landing
-from the Turkish point of view.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning I walked with General Godley
-and Tahu Rhodes, his A.D.C., up the height to
-the plateau which was afterwards called Plugges
-Plateau. The gullies and ravines were very steep,
-and covered with undergrowth. We found General
-Walker, General Birdwood’s Chief of the Staff,
-on the ridge that bears his name. Bullets were
-whining about, through the undergrowth, but were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-not doing much harm, though the shelling on the
-beach was serious.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> We believed that the Turks were using
-16-inch shells from the Dardanelles, and we were
-now able to reply. The noise was deafening,
-and our firing knocked down our own dugouts.
-The Generals all behaved as if the whole thing
-was a tea-party. Their different Staffs looked
-worried for their chiefs and themselves. Generals
-Godley and Walker were the most reckless, but
-General Birdwood also went out of his way to
-take risks. The sun was very hot, and our clothes
-dried while the shrapnel whistled over us into
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>At noon we heard the rumour that the 29th
-were fighting their way up from Helles, and everybody
-grew happy. We also heard that two
-Brigadiers had been wounded and one killed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Australians had brought with them two
-ideas, which were only eliminated by time, fighting,
-and their own good sense. The “eight hours’
-day” was almost a holy principle, and when they
-had violated it by holding on for two or three days
-heroically, they thought that they deserved a
-“spell.” Their second principle was not to leave
-their pals. When a man was wounded his friends
-would insist upon bringing him down, instead of
-leaving him to the stretcher-bearers. When they
-had learned the practical side of war, both these
-dogmas were jettisoned. In Egypt the Australians
-had human weaknesses, and had shown them;
-in Gallipoli they were the best of companions.
-Naturally, with the New Zealand Division, I saw
-more of the New Zealanders, who had the virtues
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-of the Australians and the British troops. They
-had all the dash and <i>&eacute;lan</i> of the Australians, and the
-discipline of the Englishmen.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Tuesday, April 27th.</i> Last night, or
-rather this morning at about 1 o’clock, I was
-called up by C. He said: “We are sending up
-40,000 rounds of ammunition to Colonel Pope.”
-Greek donkey-boys, with an Indian escort, were to
-go up with this ammunition. I asked if any officer
-was going, and was answered “No”; that there
-was no officer to go. I said that I would go if I
-could get a guide, but that I did not talk Hindustani,
-and that the whole thing was risky, as we were
-just as likely without a guide to wander into the
-Turks as to find our own people; also that if we
-were attacked we should be without means of communicating,
-and that the Greeks would certainly
-bolt. At the Corps Headquarters I found an
-absolutely gaga officer. He had an A.D.C. who
-was on the spot, however, and produced a note
-from Colonel Pope which stated that he had all
-the ammunition he wanted. The officer, in spite
-of this, told me to carry on. I said it was nonsense
-without a guide, when Pope had his ammunition.
-He then told me to take the mules to one place
-and the ammunition to another. I said that I
-had better take them both back to my own Headquarters,
-from which I had come. He then tried
-to come with me, after saying that he would put
-me under arrest, but fell over two tent-ropes and
-was nearly kicked by a mule, and gave up in
-mute despair.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I may add that this officer was sent away shortly
-afterwards. The next night he was found with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-a revolver stalking one of the Staff officers, who
-was sleeping with a night-cap that looked like a
-turban, to shelter his head from the dew. My
-persecutor said that he thought he was a Turk.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> Three of us slept crowded in one dugout
-on Monday night. The cliff is becoming like a
-rookery, with ill-made nests. George Lloyd and
-Ian Smith have a charming view, only no room to
-lie down in. Everybody’s dugout is falling on his
-neighbour’s head. I went round the corner of the
-cliff to find a clean place to wash in the sea, but
-was sniped, and had to come back quick. The
-Gallipoli Division of Turks, 18,000 strong, is
-supposed to be approaching, while we listened to
-a great artillery duel not far off. An Armenian
-who was captured yesterday reported the Gallipoli
-Division advancing on us. On Tuesday night things
-were better. I think most men were then of the
-opinion that we ought to be able to hold on, but
-we were clinging by our eyelids on to the ridge.
-The confusion of units and the great losses in officers
-increased the difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>This was the third day of battle. My dugout
-was twice struck. A tug was sunk just in front
-of us.... The interpreters have all got three days’
-beards which are turning white from worry. The
-shells to-day did not do so much damage; they
-whirled over us in coveys, sometimes hitting the
-beach and flying off singing, sometimes splashing
-in the sea, but a lot of dead and wounded were
-carried by.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>About this time the spy mania started, which
-is one of the inevitable concomitants of war. Spies
-were supposed to be everywhere. In the popular
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-belief, that is “on the beach,” there were enough
-spies to have made an opera. The first convincing
-proof of treachery which we had was the story
-of a Turkish girl who had painted her face green
-in order to look like a tree, and had shot several
-people at Helles from the boughs of an oak. Next
-came the story of the daily pigeon post from Anzac
-to the Turkish line; but as a matter of fact, the
-pigeons were about their own business of nesting.</p>
-
-<p>We had with us, too, a remarkable body of men
-who were more than suspect, and whose presence
-fed the wildest rumours. These were called Zionists,
-Zionites, and many other names. They were the
-Jewish exiles from Syria, who looked after the
-mules, and constituted the Mule Corps, under
-Colonel Patterson, of lion-hunting fame. They
-performed very fine service, and gave proof of the
-greatest courage. On several occasions I saw the
-mules blown to bits, and the men of the Mule Corps
-perfectly calm, among their charges. One night
-it did seem to me that at last we had got the genuine
-article. A panting Australian came to say that
-they had captured a German disguised as a member
-of the Mule Corps, but that he had unfortunately
-killed one man before being taken. When I examined
-this individual he gave his name as Fritz
-Sehmann, and the language in which we conversed
-most easily was German. He was able to justify
-himself in his explanation, which turned out to be
-true. He had been walking along the cliff at night
-with his mule, when the mule had been shot and
-had fallen over the cliff with Fritz Sehmann.
-Together they had fallen upon an unfortunate
-soldier, who had been killed by the same burst.</p>
-
-<p>It was a work of some difficulty to explain to the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-Colonial troops that many of the prisoners that we
-took&mdash;as, for instance, Greeks and Armenians&mdash;were
-conscripts who hated their masters. On one occasion,
-speaking of a prisoner, I said to a soldier:
-“This man says he is a Greek, and that he hates the
-Turks.” “That’s a likely story, that is,” said the
-soldier; “better put a bayonet in the brute.”</p>
-
-<p>The trouble that we had with the native interpreters
-is even now a painful memory. If they were
-arrested once a day, they were arrested ten times.
-Those who had anything to do with them, if they
-were not suspected of being themselves infected
-by treachery, were believed to be in some way
-unpatriotic. It was almost as difficult to persuade
-the officers as the men that the fact that a man
-knew Turkish did not make him a Turk. There
-was one moment when the interpreters were flying
-over the hills like hares.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Wednesday, April 28th.</i> I got up at
-4 a.m. this morning, after a fine, quiet night, and
-examined a Greek deserter from the Turkish Army.
-He said many would desert if they did not fear
-for their lives. The New Zealanders spare their
-prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>Last night, while he was talking to me, Colonel C.
-was hit by a bit of shell on his hat. He stood quite
-still while a man might count three, wondering
-if he was hurt. He then stooped down and picked
-it up. At 8 p.m last night there was furious shelling
-in the gully. Many men and mules hit. General
-Godley was in the Signalling Office, on the telephone,
-fairly under cover. I was outside with Pinwell,
-and got grazed, just avoiding the last burst. Their
-range is better. Before this they have been bursting
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-the shrapnel too high. It was after 4 p.m. their
-range improved so much. My dugout was shot
-through five minutes before I went there. So was
-Shaw’s....</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Chaytor was knocked down by shrapnel,
-but not hurt. The same happened to Colonel
-Manders. We heard that the Indian troops were
-to come to-night. Twenty-three out of twenty-seven
-Auckland officers killed and wounded.</p>
-
-<p><i>11 a.m.</i> All firing except from Helles has ceased.
-Things look better. The most the men can do
-is to hang on. General Godley has been very
-fine. The men know it.</p>
-
-<p><i>4.30 p.m.</i> Turks suddenly reported to have
-mounted huge howitzer on our left flank, two or
-three miles away. We rushed all the ammunition off
-the beach, men working like ants, complete silence
-and furious work. We were absolutely enfiladed,
-and they could have pounded us, mules and
-machinery, to pulp, or driven us into the gully
-and up the hill, cutting us off from our water and
-at the same time attacking us with shrapnel. The
-ships came up and fired on the new gun, and proved
-either that it was a dummy or had moved, or had
-been knocked out. It was a cold, wet night.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The material which General Birdwood and General
-Godley had to work upon was very fine. The
-Australians and the New Zealanders were born
-fighters and natural soldiers, and learnt quickly on
-Active Service what it would have taken months
-of training to have taught them. But like many
-another side-show, Anzac was casual in many ways,
-as the following excerpt from this diary will
-show:&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Thursday, April 29th.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> I
-was woken at 2.30 a.m., when the New Zealanders
-stood to arms. It was wet and cold, and a wind
-blew which felt as if it came through snowy gorges.
-The alarm had been given, and the Turks were
-supposed to be about to rush the beach from
-the left flank in force. Colonel Chaytor was sent
-to hold the point. He told me to collect stragglers
-and form them up. It was very dark, and the
-stragglers were very straggly. I found an Australian,
-Quinn, and told him to fetch his men along to the
-gun emplacement, beyond the graves, on the point
-where Chaytor was. Every one lost every one.</p>
-
-<p>I found Colonel Chaytor with an Australian
-officer. He said to him: “Go out along the flank
-and find out where the Canterbury Battalion is,
-and how strong. On the extreme left there is a
-field ambulance. They must be told to lie down,
-so that the Turks will not shoot them.” I said
-I would look after them. We started. I heard
-the Australian, after we had gone some hundreds
-of yards, ordering the Canterburys in support to
-retire. I said: “But are your orders to that
-effect? A support is there to support. The Canterburys
-will be routed or destroyed if you take this
-support away.” He said: “Well, that’s a bright
-idea.” He went back, and I heard him say, in the
-darkness: “This officer thinks you had better
-stay where you are.” I don’t know if he was a
-Colonel, or what he was, and he did not know
-what I was.</p>
-
-<p>I found the field ambulance, a long way off,
-and went on to the outposts. The field ambulance
-were touchingly grateful for nothing, and I had
-some tea and yarned with them till morning, walking
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-back after dawn along the beach by the graves.
-No one fired at me.</p>
-
-<p>When I got back I heard the news of Doughty’s<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a>
-death, which grieved me a great deal.... He
-seems to have saved the situation. The description
-of Helles is ghastly, of the men looking down into
-the red sea, and the dying drowned in a foot of
-water. That is what might have, and really ought
-to have happened to us.</p>
-
-<p>One hears the praise of politicians in all men’s
-mouths....</p>
-
-<p>A beautiful night, last night, and a fair amount
-of shrapnel. Every evening now they send over
-a limited number of howitzers from the great guns
-in the Dardanelles, aimed at our ships. That
-happens also in the early morning, as this morning.
-To-night an aeroplane is to locate these guns, and
-when they let fly to-morrow we are to give them
-an immense broadside from all our ships.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At this time the weather had improved, but we
-were living in a good deal of discomfort. We
-were not yet properly supplied with stores, the
-water was brackish, occasionally one had to shave
-in salt water, and all one’s ablutions had to be done
-on the beach, with the permission of the Turkish
-artillery.</p>
-
-<p>The beach produced a profound impression on
-almost all of us, and has in some cases made the
-seaside distasteful for the rest of our lives. It
-was, when we first landed, I suppose, about
-30 yards broad, and covered with shingle. Upon
-this narrow strip depended all our communications:
-landing and putting off, food and water, all came
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-and went upon the beach&mdash;and the Turkish guns
-had got the exact range. Later, shelters were
-put up, but life was still precarious, and the openness
-of the beach gave men a greater feeling of insecurity
-than they had in the trenches.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> Our hair and eyes and mouths are full
-of dust and sand, and our nostrils of the smell of
-dead mules.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There were also colonies of ants that kept in
-close touch with us, and our cigarettes gave out.
-Besides these trials, we had no news of the war
-or of the outer world.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> Tahu and I repacked the provisions
-this morning. While we did so one man was shot
-on the right and another on the left. We have been
-expecting howitzers all the time, and speculating
-as to whether there would be any panic if they
-really get on to us. The Turks have got their
-indirect, or rather enfilading, fire on us, and hit
-our mules. One just hit a few yards away....
-Imbros and Samothrace are clear and delicate
-between the blue sea and the hot sky. The riband
-of beach is crowded with transport, and Jews,
-Greeks, Armenians, New Zealanders, Australians,
-scallywag officers, and officers that still manage to
-keep a shadow of dandyism between their disreputable
-selves and immaculate past. And there’s
-the perpetual ripple of the waves that is sometimes
-loud enough to be mistaken for the swish of shrapnel,
-which is also perpetual, splashing in the sea or
-rattling on the beach. There is very little noise
-on the beach in the way of talk and laughter. The
-men never expected to be up against this. When
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-we left Lemnos we saw one boat with an arrow
-and in front of it “<span class="smcap">To Constantinople and the
-Harem</span>.” Precious few of those poor fellows will
-ever see Constantinople, let alone the Harem.</p>
-
-<p><i>May 1st.</i> A beautiful dawn, but defiled by a
-real hymn of hate from the Turks. Last night
-the <i>Torgut Reiss</i> sent us some shells. This morning
-it was supposed to be the <i>Goeben</i> that was
-firing. I woke to hear the howitzers that everybody
-had been talking of here droning over us, and watched
-them lifting great columns of water where they hit
-the sea. Then there came the sigh and the snarl
-of shrapnel, but that to the other is like the rustle
-of a lady’s fan to the rumble of a brewer’s dray.
-This hymn of hate went on for an unusually long
-time this morning from the big stuff. A lot of
-men were hit all round, and it has been difficult
-to wash in the sea. All the loading, unloading,
-etc., is done at night. The picket-boats are fairly
-well protected. The middies are the most splendid
-boys. We are all very cramped and the mules add
-to the congestion. We shall have a plague of
-flies before we are done, if we don’t have a worse
-plague than that. The New Zealanders are all
-right....</p>
-
-<p>Colonel White, Rickes and Murphy, all hit at
-breakfast this morning, but not hurt. One of the
-Greek donkey-boys says he is a barber. This
-would be a great advantage if he wasn’t so nervous
-and did not start so much whenever there is a burst.</p>
-
-<p>There is a fleet of boats in front of us, and even
-more at Helles; the Turks must feel uncomfortable,
-but another landing, between us, would be pretty
-risky. They are fighting splendidly. Opinions are
-divided as to what would happen if we fought our
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
-way to Maidos. Many think we could be shelled
-out again by the <i>Goeben</i>. This expedition needed
-at least three times the number of men. The
-Indians have not come, and the Territorials cannot
-come for a long time.</p>
-
-<p>General Godley wants to change Headquarters
-for us. Colonel Artillery Johnston’s battery is on
-our right, facing the Turks, and only a few yards
-away. The Turks spend a lot of time shooting
-at it, missing it, and hitting us. Another man
-killed just now. Shrapnel, heaps of it, is coming
-both ways on us. Nobody speaks on the beach.
-We have two tables on the top of the dugout.
-One is safe, and the other can be hit. The punctual
-people get the safe table.</p>
-
-<p>B. has lunched. He says that Rupert Brooke died
-at Lemnos. I am very sorry; he was a good fellow,
-and a poet with a great future. B. was blown
-up by a shell yesterday. He has to go back to-night.
-While we lunched a man had his head blown off
-20 yards away....</p>
-
-<p>Orders have come that we are to entrench impregnably.
-We are practically besieged, for we
-can’t re-embark without sacrificing our rear-guard,
-and if the howitzers come up we shall be cut off
-from the beach and our water. A lot more men
-have been killed on the beach....</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, May 2nd. 6 a.m.</i> Shrapnel all round
-as I washed. Beach opinion is if this siege lasts
-they must be able to get up their heavy guns. The
-Indians have gone to Helles, and the Naval Division
-is being taken away from us. New Turkish Divisions
-are coming against us. There are no chaplains
-here for burial or for anything else.</p>
-
-<p>Waite took a dozen prisoners this morning&mdash;gendarmes,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-nice fellows. They hadn’t much to
-tell us. One of them complained that he had been
-shot through a mistake after he had surrendered.
-There ought to be an interpreter on these occasions....</p>
-
-<p>It is a fiery hot day, without a ripple on the clear
-sea, and all still but for the thunder coming from
-Helles. I bathed and got clean. The beach looks
-like a mule fair of mutes, for it is very silent. We
-are to attack to-night at seven. We have now been
-here a week, and advanced a hundred yards farther
-than the first rush carried us. There is a great
-bombardment going on, a roaring ring of fire,
-and the Turks are being shelled and shelled.</p>
-
-<p>At night the battleships throw out two lines of
-searchlights, and behind them there gleam the
-fires of Samothrace and Imbros. Up and down
-the cliffs here, outside the dugouts, small fires
-burn. The rifle fire comes over the hill, echoing
-in the valleys and back from the ships. Sometimes
-it is difficult to tell whether it is the sound of ripples
-on the beach or firing.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, May 3rd.</i> I was called up at 3 a.m.
-to examine three prisoners. Our attack has failed,
-and we have many casualties, probably not less
-than 1,000. The wounded have been crying on
-the beach horribly. A wounded Arab reported
-that our naval gun fire did much damage.</p>
-
-<p>The complaint is old and bitter now. We insist
-that the Turks are Hottentots. We give them
-notice before we attack them. We tell them what
-we are going to do with their Capital. We attack
-them with an inadequate force of irregular troops,
-without adequate ammunition (we had one gun
-in our landing) in the most impregnable part of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-their Empire. We ask for trouble all over the East
-by risking disaster here.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Goeben</i> is shelling the fleet, and (11.30) has
-just struck a transport. The sea is gay, and a
-fresh wind is blowing, and the beach is crowded,
-but there is not a voice upon it, except for an
-occasional order....</p>
-
-<p>The Turks are now expected to attack us. We
-suppose people realize what is happening here
-in London, though it isn’t easy to see how troops
-and reinforcements can be sent us in time&mdash;that is,
-before the Turks have turned all this into a fortification.
-A good many men hit on the beach to-day.
-The mules cry like lost souls.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, May 4th.</i> The sea like a looking-glass,
-not a cloud in the sky, and Samothrace looking
-very clear and close. The moon is like a faint
-shadow of light in the clear sky over the smoke
-of the guns. Heavy fighting between us and
-Helles. A landing is being attempted. Pessimists
-say it is our men being taken off because their
-position is impossible. The boats coming back
-seem full of wounded. It may have been an attempt
-at a landing and entrenching, or simply a repetition
-of what we did the other day at Falcon Hill or
-Nebronesi, or whatever the place is.</p>
-
-<p>The attack has failed this morning. Perfect
-peace here, except for rifles crackling on the hill.
-Ian Smith and I wandered off up a valley through
-smilax, thyme, heath and myrtle, to a high ridge.
-We went through the Indians and found a couple of
-very jolly officers, one of them since killed. There
-are a good many bodies unburied. Not many
-men hit. We helped to carry one wounded man
-back. The stretcher-bearers are splendid fellows,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-good to friend and enemy. At one place we saw a
-beastly muddy little pond with a man standing
-in it in trousers, shovelling out mud. But the water
-in a tin was clear and cool and very good....</p>
-
-<p>General Godley and Tahu Rhodes got up to the
-Turkish trenches, quite close to them. The Turks
-attacked, threw hand-grenades, and our supports
-broke. The General rallied the men, but a good
-many were killed, amongst them the General’s
-orderly, a gentleman ranker and a first-rate fellow.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, May 5th.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> The other
-day, when our attack below failed, the Turks allowed
-us to bring off our wounded. This was after that
-unfortunate landing.</p>
-
-<p>Went on board the <i>Lutzow</i> to-day, and got some
-of my things off. Coming back the tow rope parted,
-and we thought that we should drift into captivity.
-It was rough and unpleasant.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, May 6th.</i> Very cold night. The dead
-are unburied and the wounded crying for water
-between the trenches. Talked to General Birdwood
-about the possibility of an armistice for burying
-the dead and bringing in the wounded. He thinks
-that the Germans would not allow the Turks to
-accept.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Esson<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">3</a> landed this morning. He brought
-the rumour that 8,000 Turks had been killed lower
-down on the Peninsula. We attacked Achi Baba
-at 10 a.m. There was an intermittent fire all
-night.</p>
-
-<p>This morning I went up to the trenches with
-General Godley by Walker’s Ridge. The view was
-magnificent. The plain was covered with friendly
-olives.... General Birdwood and General Mercer,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-commanding the Naval Brigade were also there.
-The trenches have become a perfect maze. As
-we went along the snipers followed us, seeing Onslow’s
-helmet above the parapet, and stinging us with
-dirt. Many dead. I saw no wounded between
-the lines. On the beach the shrapnel has opened
-from a new direction. The Turks were supposed
-to be making light railways to bring up their howitzers
-and then rub us off this part of the Peninsula. This
-last shell that has just struck the beach has
-killed and wounded several men and a good many
-mules....</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, May 7th.</i> A bitter night and morning....
-This morning a shell burst overhead, when I heard
-maniac peals of laughter and found the cook flying
-up, hit in the boot and his kitchen upset; he was
-laughing like a madman. It’s a nuisance one has
-to sit in the shade in our dining place and not in
-the sun. They have got our exact range, and are
-pounding in one shell after another. A shell has
-just burst over our heads, and hit a lighter and
-set her on fire.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The mules, most admirable animals, had now
-begun to give a good deal of trouble, alive and dead.
-There were hundreds of them on the beach and
-in the gullies. Alive, they bit precisely and kicked
-accurately; dead, they were towed out to sea, but
-returned to us faithfully on the beach, making bathing
-unpleasant and cleanliness difficult. The dead mule
-was not only offensive to the Army; he became
-a source of supreme irritation to the Navy, as he
-floated on his back, with his legs sticking stiffly
-up in the air. These legs were constantly mistaken
-for periscopes of submarines, causing excitement,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-exhaustive naval manœuvres and sometimes
-recriminations.</p>
-
-<p>My special duties now began to take an unusual
-form. Every one was naturally anxious for Turkish
-troops to surrender, in order to get information,
-and also that we might have fewer men to fight.
-Those Turks who had been captured had said
-that the general belief was that we took no prisoners,
-but killed all who fell into our hands, ruthlessly.
-I said that I believed that this impression, which
-did us much harm, could be corrected. The
-problem was how to disabuse the Turks of this
-belief. I was ordered to make speeches to them
-from those of our trenches which were closest to
-theirs, to explain to them that they would be well
-treated and that our quarrel lay with the Germans,
-and not with them.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Friday, May 7th.</i> At 1.30 I went up
-Monash Valley, which the men now call the “Valley
-of Death,” passing a stream of haggard men, wounded
-and unwounded, coming down in the brilliant
-sunlight. I saw Colonel Monash<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">4</a> at his headquarters,
-and General Godley with him, and received
-instructions. The shelling overhead was terrific,
-but did no damage, as the shells threw forward,
-but the smoke made a shadow between us and
-the sun. It was like the continuous crashing of
-a train going over the sleepers of a railway bridge.</p>
-
-<p>Monash, whom I had last seen at the review in
-the desert, said: “We laugh at this shrapnel.”
-He tried to speak on the telephone to say I was
-coming, but it was difficult, and the noise made
-it impossible. Finally I went up the slope to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
-Quinn’s Post, with an escort, running and taking
-cover, and panting up the very steep hill. It felt
-as if bullets rained, but the fact is that they came
-from three sides and have each got about five
-echoes. There’s a <i>d&eacute;collet&eacute;</i> place in the hill that
-they pass over. I got into the trench, and found
-Quinn, tall and openfaced, swearing like a trooper,
-much respected by his men. The trenches in
-Quinn’s Post were narrow and low, full of exhausted
-men sleeping. I crawled over them and through
-tiny holes. There was the smell of death everywhere.
-I spoke in three places.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In conversations with the Turks across the trenches
-I generally said the same thing: that we took
-prisoners and treated them well; that the essential
-quarrel was between us and the Germans and not
-between England and the Turks; that the Turks
-had been our friends in the Crimea; and I ended
-by quoting the Turkish proverb “Eski dost dushman
-olmaz” (An old friend cannot be an enemy).
-These speeches probably caused more excitement
-amongst our men than in the ranks of the Turks,
-though the Constantinople Press declared that a
-low attempt to copy the muezzin’s call to prayer
-had been made from our lines. There were many
-pictures drawn of the speech-maker and the shower
-of hand-grenades that answered his kindly words.
-It must be admitted that there was some reason for
-these caricatures. Upon this first occasion nothing
-very much happened&mdash;to me, at any rate. Our lines
-were very close to the Turkish lines, and I was
-able to speak clearly with and without a megaphone,
-and the Turks were good enough to show some
-interest, and in that neighbourhood to keep quiet
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-for a time. I got through my business quickly,
-and went back to the beach. It was then that the
-consequences of these blandishments developed,
-for the places from which I had spoken were made
-the object of a very heavy strafe, of which I had
-been the innocent cause, and for which others
-suffered. When I returned two days later to make
-another effort at exhortation, I heard a groan
-go up from the trench. “Oh, Lord, here he comes
-again. Now for the bally bombs.” On the first
-occasion when not much had happened it had been:
-“Law, I’d like to be able to do that meself.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Friday, May 7th.</i> On getting back here
-we had a very heavy fire, which broke up our dinner
-party, wounded Jack Anderson, stung Jack (my
-servant), hit me. Jack is sick.... Here are three
-unpleasant possibilities:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. Any strong attack on the height. The Navy
-could not help then. We should be too mixed
-in the fighting.</p>
-
-<p>2. The expected blessed big guns to lollop over
-howitzers.</p>
-
-<p>3. Disease. The Turks have dysentery already.</p>
-
-<p>There is an uncanny whistling overhead. It
-must come from the bullets and machine-guns
-or Maxims a long way off. It sounds eldritch.
-T. very sick after seeing some wounded on the beach,
-and yet his nerves are very good. Eastwood told
-me that he was sure to get through. I told him not
-to say such things. He had three bullets through
-his tunic the other day. I went on the <i>Lutzow</i>
-to get the rest of my stuff off, and found Colonel
-Ryan (“Turkish Charlie”)<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">5</a> full of awful descriptions
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-of operations. Many wounded on the boat, all very
-quiet.... Had a drink with a sailor, the gloomiest
-man that ever I met. He comes from Southampton,
-and thinks we cannot possibly win the war. It’s
-become very cold.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Most of the diary of May 9th is too indiscreet
-for publication, but here are some incidents of the
-day:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Worsley<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">6</a> says it’s very hard to get work done
-on the beach; in fact its almost impossible. It
-was said that the gun which had been enfilading
-us was knocked out, but it is enfilading us now,
-and it looks as if we shall have a pretty heavy bill
-to pay to-day. The beach is holding its breath,
-and between the sound of the shrapnel and the
-hiss there is only the noise of the waves and a few
-low voices.... Harrison, who was slightly wounded
-a few days ago, was yesterday resting in his dugout
-when he was blown out of it by a shell. To-day
-he was sent to the <i>Lutzow</i>, and we watched him
-being shelled the whole way, his boat wriggling.
-It seems as if the shells know and love him. I
-am glad he won’t be dining with us any more;
-a magnet like that is a bore, though he is a very
-good fellow. The land between us and the 29th
-is reported to be full of barbed wire entanglements.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, May 10th.</i> Raining and cold. Jack
-better.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Braithwaite woke me last night with
-the news of the sinking of the <i>Lusitania</i>. Last
-night we took three trenches, but lost them again
-this morning. S. B. came last night; I was glad
-to see him.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span></p>
-
-<p>S. B. had been a great friend of mine in Egypt
-and brought me and others letters, of which we
-were badly in need, and stores, which were very
-welcome. We met upon the beach, and decided
-to celebrate the occasion in the Intelligence dugout,
-for my friend had actually got some soda and a
-bottle of whisky, two very rare luxuries on the
-beach.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> We went into the Intelligence dugout
-and sat there. Then a shell hit the top of the
-dugout. The next one buzzed a lot of bullets
-in through the door. The third ricochetted all
-over the place and one bullet grazed my head.
-I then said: “We’d better put up a blanket
-to save us from the ricochets.” At the same
-time J. was shot next door and Onslow’s war
-diary was destroyed. A pot of jam was shot
-in General Cunliffe Owen’s hand, which made him
-very angry. V., the beachmaster, dashed into our
-Intelligence dugout gasping while we held blankets
-in front of him. Two days ago a man was killed
-in his dugout next door, and another man again
-yesterday. Now two fuses had come straight
-through his roof and spun like a whipping-top on
-the floor, dancing a sort of sarabande before the
-hypnotized eyes of the sailors....</p>
-
-<p>Also S. B.’s whisky was destroyed in the luncheon
-basket. He broke into furious swearing in Arabic.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, May 12th.</i> Rain, mud, grease, temper
-all night, but we shall long for this coolness when
-it really gets hot. No bombardment this morning,
-but the Greek cook, Christopher of the Black Lamp,
-came and gave two hours’ notice, with the rain and
-tears running down his face. I am not surprised
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-at his giving notice, but why he should be meticulous
-about the time I can’t think. Conversation about
-the shelling is getting very boring.</p>
-
-<p>Had a picturesque walk through the dark last
-night, past Greeks, Indians, Australians, across a
-rain-swept, wind-swept, bullet-swept hillside. Many
-of the Colonels here are business men, who never
-in their wildest dreams contemplated being in
-such a position, and they have risen to the occasion
-finely. The Generals have at last been prevailed
-upon not to walk about the beach in the daytime....
-Two German and one Austrian submarine
-expected here. The transports have been ordered to
-Mudros.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, May 13th.</i> Very calm morning, the
-echoes of rifle fire on the sea. I went with C. to
-take General Russell<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">7</a> up from Reserve Gully to
-Walker’s Ridge. It was a beautiful morning, with
-the sky flaming softly, not a cloud anywhere, and
-the sea perfectly still. The scrub was full of wild
-flowers; not even the dead mules could spoil it.
-Guns thundered far off.... After breakfast
-examined an intelligent Greek prisoner, Nikolas,
-the miller from Ali Ken&igrave;. Then I was telephoned
-for by Colonel Monash in great haste, and went off
-up his valley with a megaphone as quickly as possible.
-In the valley the men were in a state of nerves
-along the road because of the snipers. The Turks
-had put up a white flag above their trenches opposite
-Quinn’s Post. I think this was an artillery flag
-and that they hoped to avoid the fire of the fleet
-by this means.... The people at Helles aren’t
-making headway, and it seems unlikely, except
-at tremendous cost, and probably not then, that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-they will. We are pretty well hung up except
-on our left; why not try there? The Turks are
-not yet entrenched or dug in there as in other
-places.... I had to bully Yanni of Ayo Strati
-till he sobbed on the cliff. I then threatened to
-dismiss him, after which he grew cheerful, for it
-was what he wanted....</p>
-
-<p>The Turks have again got white flags out. Have
-been ordered to go up at dawn.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, May 14th. 4 a.m.</i> Walked up the
-valley. The crickets were singing in the bushes
-at the opening of the valley and the place was cool
-with the faint light of coming dawn. Then a line
-of stretcher-bearers with the wounded, some quiet,
-some groaning. Then came the dawn and the
-smell of death that infects one’s hands and clothes
-and haunts one.</p>
-
-<p>They weren’t over-pleased to see me at first,
-as after my speech the other day they had had an
-awful time from hand-grenades, and their faces
-fell when I appeared. I spoke from the same
-place. Then I went to another, and lastly to a
-trench that communicated with the Turkish trench.
-The Greek who had surrendered last night came down
-this trench and the Turks were said to be five to
-ten yards off. It was partly roofed, and there were
-some sandbags, between two and three feet high,
-that separated us from them. Leading into this
-was a big circular dugout, open to heaven. I
-got the men cleared out of this before speaking.
-In the small trench there were two men facing the
-Turks and lying on the ground with revolvers
-pointed at the Turks. I moved one man back
-out of the way and lay on the other&mdash;there wasn’t
-anything else to be done&mdash;and spoke for five minutes
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
-with some intervals. Once a couple of hand-grenades
-fell outside and the ground quivered, but
-that was all. I then got the guard changed....</p>
-
-<p>The loss of the <i>Goliath</i> is confirmed and the
-fleet has gone, leaving a considerable blank on
-the horizon and a depression on the sunlit beach.
-Four interpreters were arrested to-day and handed
-over to me.</p>
-
-<p>I put them on to dig me a new dugout, round
-which a colony of interpreters is growing: Kyriakidis,
-who is a fine man and a gentleman; Ashjian, a young
-Armenian boy, aristocratic-looking, but very soft,
-whom I want to send away as soon as possible;
-and others. My dugout is in the middle of wild
-flowers, with the sea splashing round. Since the
-ships have all gone we are, as a consequence, short
-of water.... The Turks have been shelling our
-barges hard for an hour. We are to make an
-attack to-night and destroy their trenches.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, May 15th.</i> The attack has failed.
-There are many of our wounded outside our lines.
-Have been told to go out with a white flag. Was
-sent for by Skeen<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">8</a> to see General Birdwood in half
-an hour. While Colonel Skeen and I were talking
-a shell hit one man in the lungs and knocked Colonel
-Knox on the back without hurting him. General
-Birdwood was hit yesterday in the head, but won’t
-lie up, General Trottman the day before. While
-we talked water arrived. A message came from
-Colonel Chauvel to say there were only two wounded
-lying out.... In a few minutes a telephone message
-arrived from the doctor in the trenches that the
-two wounded had died.... I came back to Headquarters,
-and heard General Bridges<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">9</a> asking the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-General if he might go up Monash Valley. In
-a few minutes we heard that he was shot in the
-thigh. The snipers are getting many of our men.
-If the Germans were running this show they would
-have had 200,000 men for it.</p>
-
-<p>Last night Kyriakidis heard a nightingale. I
-notice that the cuckoo has changed his note, worried
-by the shrapnel. I don’t blame the bird. My
-new dugout is built. It has a corridor and a patio,
-and is sort of Louis Quinze. The food is good,
-but we are always hungry.</p>
-
-<p>Went out with Colonel N. He is a very great
-man for his luxuries, and looks on cover as the
-first of these. He is very funny about shelling,
-and is huffy, like a man who has received an insult,
-if he gets hit by a spent bullet or covered with earth.
-They have got the range of our new Headquarters
-beautifully&mdash;two shells before lunch, one on either
-side of the kitchen range. The men and the mess
-table covered with dust and stones. The fact
-is our ships have gone; they can now do pretty
-much as they like.</p>
-
-<p>Most people here agree that the position is hopeless,
-unless we drive the Turks back on our left
-and get reinforcements from Helles, where they
-could quite well spare them.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, May 16th.</i> A day fit for Trojan heroes
-to fight on. As a matter of fact, there is a good
-deal of Trojan friction. Went into the Intelligence
-dugout, as five men were hit below it. They have
-just hit another interpreter, and are pounding
-away at us again. I was warned to go out with
-a flag of truce and a bugler this afternoon.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, May 17th.</i> I walked out to the left
-with S. B., and bathed in a warm, quiet sea. Many
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-men bathing too, and occasionally shrapnel also.
-There was a scent of thyme, and also the other
-smell from the graves on the beach, which are
-very shallow. I got a touch of the sun, and had
-to lie down. When I got back I heard that Villiers
-Stuart had been killed this morning, instantaneously.
-He was a very good fellow, and very good to me.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, May 18th.</i> Last night Villiers Stuart
-was buried. The funeral was to have been at
-sunset, but at that time we were savagely shelled
-and had to wait. We formed up in as decent a
-kit as we could muster, and after the sun had set in
-a storm of red, while the young moon was rising,
-the procession started. We stumbled over boulders,
-and met stretcher-bearers with dead and wounded,
-we passed Indians driving mules, and shadowy
-Australians standing at attention, till we came to
-the graves by the sea. The prayers were very short
-and good, interrupted by the boom of our guns
-and the whining of Turkish bullets overhead. His
-salute was fired above his head from both the
-trenches....</p>
-
-<p>We shelled the village of Anafarta yesterday,
-which I don’t much care about. A good many
-here want to destroy the minaret of the mosque.
-I can see no difference in principle between this
-and the destruction of Rheims Cathedral. Kyriakidis
-told me a Greek cure for sunstroke. You
-fill the ears of the afflicted one with salt water;
-it makes a noise like thunder in his head, but the
-sunstroke passes. Christo thereupon got me salt
-water in a jug without telling me, and several
-thirsty people tried to drink it....</p>
-
-<p>A German submarine seen here.... A day
-of almost perfect peace; rifle fire ceased sometimes
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-for several minutes together, but 8-inch shells
-were fired into the trenches.... Men are singing
-on the beach for the first time, and there is something
-cheerful in the air. The enfilading gun has been,
-as usual, reported to be knocked out, but gunners
-are great optimists. No news from Helles....
-Turkish reinforcements just coming up. Attack
-expected at 3 a.m. We stand to arms here.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, May 19th.</i> Work under heavy shell
-fire. This grew worse about 6.30. Several heavy
-shells hit within a few yards of this dugout and the
-neighbouring ones, but did not burst. A little
-farther off they did explode, or striking the sea,
-raised tall columns and high fountains of white
-water. Colonel Chaytor badly wounded in the
-shoulder. A great loss to us. He talked very
-cheerfully. I have got leave to send away Ashjian....
-This, after all, is a quarrel for those directly
-concerned. The Germans have brought up about
-twelve more field-guns and four or five Jack Johnsons,
-and the shelling is very heavy. Saw a horrid
-sight: a barge full of wounded was being towed
-out to the hospital ship. Two great Jack Johnsons
-came, one just in front of them; then when they
-turned with a wriggle, one just behind them, sending
-up towers of water, and leaving two great white
-roses in the sea that turned muddy as the stuff
-from the bottom rose. They had shells round
-them again, and a miraculous escape. It’s cruel
-hard on the nerves of wounded men, but of course
-that was bad luck, not wicked intentions, because
-the enemy couldn’t see them.</p>
-
-<p>If the Turks had attacked us fiercely on the top
-and shelled us as badly down here earlier, they
-might have had us out. Now we ought to be all
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-right, and they can hardly go on using ammunition
-like this. Their losses are said to be very great.
-New Turkish reinforcements said to be at Helles.
-They have done what we ought to have done.
-Now they are throwing 11-inch at us. It’s too bad....
-I saw Colonel Skeen. He said to me: “You
-had better be ready to go out this afternoon. We
-have just shot a Turk with a white flag. That will
-give us an excuse for apologizing”; quite so: it will
-also give the Turk an excuse for retaliating. A
-Turkish officer just brought in says that the real
-attack is to be this afternoon, now at 1.30. I
-spent an hour in the hospital, interpreting for
-the Turkish wounded. The Australians are very
-good to them. On returning I found the General’s
-dugout hit hard. Nothing to be done but to dig
-deeper in.</p>
-
-<p>From the third week in May to the third week
-in June was the kernel of our time at Anzac. We
-had grown accustomed to think of the place as
-home, and of the conditions of our life as natural
-and permanent. The monotony of the details of
-shelling and the worry of the flies are of interest
-only to those who endured them, and have been
-eliminated, here and there, from this diary.</p>
-
-<p>During this month we were not greatly troubled.
-The men continued to make the trenches impregnable,
-and were contented. It was in some ways
-a curiously happy time.</p>
-
-<p>The New Zealanders and the Australians were
-generally clothed by the sunlight, which fitted
-them, better than any tailor, with a red-brown
-skin, and only on ceremonial occasions did they
-wear their belts and accoutrements.</p>
-
-<p>Our sport was bathing, and the Brotherhood of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-the Bath was rudely democratic. There was at
-Anzac a singularly benevolent officer, but for all
-his geniality a strong disciplinarian, devoted to
-military observances. He was kind to all the
-world, not forgetting himself, and he had developed
-a kindly figure. No insect could resist his contours.
-Fleas and bugs made passionate love to him, inlaying
-his white skin with a wonderful red mosaic.
-One day he undressed and, leaving nothing of his
-dignity with his uniform, he mingled superbly with
-the crowd of bathers. Instantly he received a
-hearty blow upon his tender, red and white shoulder
-and a cordial greeting from some democrat of
-Sydney or of Wellington: “Old man, you’ve been
-amongst the biscuits!” He drew himself up to
-rebuke this presumption, then dived for the sea,
-for, as he said, “What’s the good of telling one
-naked man to salute another naked man, especially
-when neither have got their caps?”</p>
-
-<p>This month was marked by a feature that is
-rare in modern warfare. We had an armistice
-for the burial of the dead, which is described in
-the diary.</p>
-
-<p>On the Peninsula we were extremely anxious
-for an armistice for many reasons. We wished,
-on all occasions, to be able to get our wounded in
-after a fight, and we believed, or at least the
-writer was confident, that an arrangement could be
-come to. We were also very anxious to bury the
-dead. Rightly or wrongly, we thought that G.H.Q.,
-living on its perfumed island, did not consider how
-great was the abomination of life upon the cramped
-and stinking battlefield that was our encampment,
-though this was not a charge that any man would
-have dreamed of bringing against Sir Ian Hamilton.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Wednesday, May 19, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i>
-General Birdwood told me to go to Imbros to talk
-to Sir Ian Hamilton about an armistice, if General
-Godley would give me leave.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, May 20, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> Have
-been waiting for four hours in Colonel Knox’s
-boat, which was supposed to go to Imbros. Turkish
-guns very quiet.... Hear that Ock Asquith and
-Wedgwood are wounded. A liaison officer down
-south says: “When the Senegalese fly, and the
-French troops stream forward twenty yards and
-then stream back twenty-five yards, we know
-that we are making excellent progress.” There is
-a Coalition Government at home. We think that
-we are the reason of that; we think the Government
-cannot face the blunder of the Dardanelles
-without asking for support from the Conservatives.</p>
-
-<p><i>6 p.m.</i> “<i>Arcadian.</i>” Found George Lloyd. Have
-been talking to Sir Ian Hamilton with regard
-to the armistice.... Clive Bigham<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">10</a> was there.
-He lent me some Shakespeares.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, May 21, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> Saw Sir
-Ian Hamilton again this morning. The Turks
-are said to have put up a white flag and to have
-massed behind it in their trenches, intending to
-rush us. Left with four “Arcadians.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a parley yesterday while I was away.
-The Turks had put up some white flags, but it was
-not a case of bad faith as the “Arcadians” believed.
-We are said to have shot one Red Crescent man by
-mistake. General Walker went out to talk to the
-Turks, just like that. Both sides had, apparently,
-been frightened. I walked back to Reserve Gully
-with the General, to see the new brigade. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-evening sun was shining on the myrtles in all the
-gullies, and the new brigade was singing and
-whistling up and down the hills, while fires crackled
-everywhere.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, May 22, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> S. B. was
-sent out yesterday to talk to the Turks, but he
-did not take a white flag with him, and was sniped
-and bruised.... This morning, suddenly, I was
-sent for. S. B. and I hurried along the beach
-and crossed the barbed wire entanglements. We
-went along by the sea, through heavy showers of
-rain, and at last met a fierce Arab officer and a
-wandery-looking Turkish lieutenant. We sat and
-smoked in fields splendid with poppies, the sea
-glittering by us.</p>
-
-<p>Then Kemal Bey arrived, and went into Anzac
-with S. B., while I went off as hostage.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>S. B. and Kemal Bey, as they went, provided
-the Australian escort with much innocent laughter.
-Our barbed wire down to the sea consisted only
-of a few light strands, over which the Turk was
-helped by having his legs raised high for him.
-S. B., however, wished him, as he was blindfolded,
-to believe that this defence went on for at least
-twenty yards. So the Turk was made to do an
-enormously high, stiff goose-step over the empty
-air for that space, as absurd a spectacle to our
-men as I was to be, later, to the Turks. The
-Australians were almost sick from internal laughter.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> Kemal Bey asked for a hostage, and I
-went out. They bandaged my eyes, and I mounted
-a horse and rode off with Sahib Bey. We went
-along by the sea for some time, for I could hear
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-the waves. Then we went round and round&mdash;to
-puzzle me, I suppose&mdash;and ended up in a tent in
-a grove of olives, where they took the handkerchief
-off, and Sahib Bey said: “This is the beginning
-of a life-long friendship.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At one moment, as I was riding along, the soldier
-who was supposed to be leading my horse had
-apparently let go and had fallen behind to light
-a cigarette or pick flowers. I heard Sahib Bey
-call out: “You old fool! Can’t you see he’s
-riding straight over the cliff?” I protested loudly
-as I rode on, blind as fate.</p>
-
-<p>We had cheese and tea and coffee, Sahib Bey
-offering to eat first to show me that it was all right,
-which I said was nonsense. He said: “It may
-not be political economy, but there are some great
-advantages in war. It’s very comfortable when
-there are no exports, because it means that all
-the things stay at home and are very cheap.” He
-tried to impress me with their well-being. He
-said he hated all politicians and had sworn never
-to read the papers. The Turks had come sadly
-into the war against us, otherwise gladly. They
-wanted to regain the prestige that they had lost
-in the Balkans.... He said, after I had talked
-to him: “There are many of us who think like
-you, but we must obey. We know that you are
-just and that Moslems thrive under you, but you
-have made cruel mistakes by us, the taking of those
-two ships and the way in which they were taken.”
-He asked me a few questions, which I put aside.
-He had had a conversation with Dash the day
-before, when we parleyed. Dash is a most innocent
-creature. He had apparently told him that G.H.Q.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-was an awful bore, and also the number of Turkish
-prisoners we had taken....</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, May 23, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> We landed
-a month ago to-day. We now hold a smaller
-front than then. Also the <i>Albion</i> has gone
-ashore. The rest of the fleet has left; she remains
-a fixture. All the boats are rushing up to tow
-her off. The Turks are sending in a hail of
-shrapnel.... It will be a bad business if they
-don’t get her off.... They have got her off,
-thank the Lord, and every one is breathing more
-freely.</p>
-
-<p>We wonder if all the places with queer, accidental
-names will one day be historical: Johnson’s Jolly,
-Dead Man’s Ridge, Quinn’s Post, The Valley of
-Death, The Sphinx, Anzac&mdash;by the way, that’s
-not a name of good omen, as “anjak” in Turkish
-means barely, only just&mdash;Plugge’s Plateau. Plugge
-is a grand man, wounded for the second time.
-The New Zealanders are all most gallant
-fellows....</p>
-
-<p>The big fight ought to come off, after the armistice.
-Two more divisions have come up against us. All
-quiet last night, but a shell came into the New
-Zealand hospital on the beach and killed four
-wounded men and a dresser and some more outside.
-It’s these new guns whose position we still do not
-know.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, May 25, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> We had
-the truce yesterday. I was afraid something might
-go wrong, but it all went off all right. Skeen,
-Blamey,<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">11</a> Howse, V.C.,<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">12</a> Hough and I started early.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-Skeen offered me breakfast but, like a fool, I refused.
-He put some creosote on my handkerchief.
-We were at the rendezvous on the beach at 6.30.
-Heavy rain soaked us to the skin. At 7.30 we met
-the Turks, Miralai Izzedin, a pleasant, rather sharp,
-little man; Arif, the son of Achmet Pasha, who
-gave me a card, “Sculpteur et Peintre,” and “Etudiant
-de Po&eacute;sie.” I saw Sahib and had a few words
-with him, but he did not come with us. Fahreddin
-Bey came later. We walked from the sea and
-passed immediately up the hill, through a field of
-tall corn filled with poppies, then another cornfield;
-then the fearful smell of death began as we
-came upon scattered bodies. We mounted over
-a plateau and down through gullies filled with
-thyme, where there lay about 4,000 Turkish dead.
-It was indescribable. One was grateful for the
-rain and the grey sky. A Turkish Red Crescent
-man came and gave me some antiseptic wool with
-scent on it, and this they renewed frequently.
-There were two wounded crying in that multitude
-of silence. The Turks were distressed, and Skeen
-strained a point to let them send water to the first
-wounded man, who must have been a sniper crawling
-home. I walked over to the second, who lay with
-a high circle of dead that made a mound round
-him, and gave him a drink from my water-bottle,
-but Skeen called me to come on and I had to leave
-the bottle. Later a Turk gave it back to me. The
-Turkish Captain with me said: “At this spectacle
-even the most gentle must feel savage, and the
-most savage must weep.” The dead fill acres of
-ground, mostly killed in the one big attack, but
-some recently. They fill the myrtle-grown gullies.
-One saw the result of machine-gun fire very clearly;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-entire companies annihilated&mdash;not wounded, but
-killed, their heads doubled under them with the
-impetus of their rush and both hands clasping
-their bayonets. It was as if God had breathed
-in their faces, as “the Assyrian came down like
-the wolf on the fold.”</p>
-
-<p>The line was not easy to settle. Neither side
-wanted to give its position or its trenches away.
-At the end Skeen agreed that the Turks had been
-fair. We had not been going very long when we
-had a message to say that the Turks were
-entrenching at Johnson’s Jolly. Skeen had, however,
-just been there and seen that they were doing
-nothing at all. He left me at Quinn’s Post, looking
-at the communication trench through which I
-had spoken to the Turks. Corpses and dead men
-blown to bits everywhere. Richards was with me
-part of the time: easy to get on with; also a gentleman
-called indifferently by the men Mr. or Major Tibbs.
-A good deal of friction at first. The trenches
-were 10 to 15 yards apart. Each side was on the
-<i>qui vive</i> for treachery. In one gully the dead had
-got to be left unburied. It was impossible to bury
-them without one side seeing the position of the
-other. In the Turkish parapet there were many
-bodies buried. Fahreddin told Skeen he wanted
-to bury them, “but,” he said, “we cannot take
-them out without putting something in their place.”
-Skeen agreed, but said that this concession was
-not to be taken advantage of to repair the trench.
-This was a difficult business.</p>
-
-<p>When our people complained that the Turks
-were making loopholes, they invited me into their
-trench to look. Then the Turks said that we
-were stealing their rifles; this came from the dead
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
-land where we could not let them go. I went
-down, and when I got back, very hot, they took
-my word for it that we were not. There was some
-trouble because we were always crossing each
-other’s lines. I talked to the Turks, one of whom
-pointed to the graves. “That’s politics,” he said.
-Then he pointed to the dead bodies and said:
-“That’s diplomacy. God pity all of us poor
-soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p>Much of this business was ghastly to the point
-of nightmare. I found a hardened old Albanian
-chaoush and got him to do anything I wanted.
-Then a lot of other Albanians came up, and I said:
-“Tunya tyeta.”<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">13</a> I had met some of them in Janina.
-They began clapping me on the back and cheering
-while half a dozen funeral services were going on
-all round, conducted by the chaplains. I had to
-stop them. I asked them if they did not want
-an Imam for a service over their own dead, but
-the old Albanian pagan roared with laughter and
-said that their souls were all right. They could
-look after themselves. Not many signs of fanaticism.
-One huge, savage-looking Anatolian looked
-curses at me. Greeks came up and tried to surrender
-to me, but were ordered back by the Turks
-pretty roughly.</p>
-
-<p>Considering the number of their men we had
-killed, they remained extraordinarily unmoved and
-polite. They wouldn’t have, if we had been
-Russians. Blamey came to say that Skeen had
-lost H. and wanted me, so he, Arif and I walked
-to the sea. The burying had not been well done.
-It was sometimes impossible to do it.... As we
-went, we took our rifles from the Turkish side,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-minus their bolts, and gave the Turks their rifles
-in the same way....</p>
-
-<p>Our men gave cigarettes to the Turks, and
-beyond the storm-centre at Quinn’s Post the feeling
-was all right. We sat down and sent men to look
-for Skeen. Arif was nervous and almost rude.
-Then Skeen came. He told me to get back as
-quickly as possible to Quinn’s Post, as I said I was
-nervous at being away, and to retire the troops
-at 4 and the white-flag men at 4.15. I said to
-Arif: “Everybody’s behaved very well. Now
-we must take care that nobody loses his head.
-Your men won’t shoot you and my men won’t
-shoot me, so we must walk about, otherwise a
-gun will go off and everybody will get shot.” But
-Arif faded away. I got back as quickly as possible.
-Blamey went away on the left. I then found that
-the Turks’ time was eight minutes ahead of ours,
-and put on our watches. The Turks asked me to
-witness their taking the money from their dead,
-as they had no officer there. They were very worried
-by having no officer, and asked me if any one were
-coming. I, of course, had no idea, but I told
-them I would see that they were all right. They
-were very patient....</p>
-
-<p>The burying was finished some time before the
-end. There were certain tricks on both sides.</p>
-
-<p>Our men and the Turks began fraternizing,
-exchanging badges, etc. I had to keep them apart.
-At 4 o’clock the Turks came to me for orders. I
-do not believe this could have happened anywhere
-else. I retired their troops and ours, walking
-along the line. At 4.7 I retired the white-flag
-men, making them shake hands with our men.
-Then I came to the upper end. About a dozen
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-Turks came out. I chaffed them, and said that
-they would shoot me next day. They said, in
-a horrified chorus: “God forbid!” The Albanians
-laughed and cheered, and said: “We will never
-shoot you.” Then the Australians began coming up,
-and said: “Good-bye, old chap; good luck!” And
-the Turks said: “Oghur Ola gule gule gedejekseniz,
-gule gule gelejekseniz” (Smiling may you go and
-smiling come again). Then I told them all to get
-into their trenches, and unthinkingly went up to
-the Turkish trench and got a deep salaam from
-it. I told them that neither side would fire for
-twenty-five minutes after they had got into the
-trenches. One Turk was seen out away on our
-left, but there was nothing to be done, and I think
-he was all right. A couple of rifles had gone off
-about twenty minutes before the end, but Potts
-and I went hurriedly to and fro seeing it was all
-right. At last we dropped into our trenches,
-glad that the strain was over. I walked back
-with Temperley. I got some raw whisky for the
-infection in my throat, and iodine for where the
-barbed wire had torn my feet. There was a hush
-over the Peninsula....</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, May 26, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> This
-morning I was talking to Dix, asking him if he
-believed there were submarines. “Yes,” he said,
-and then swore and added: “There’s the <i>Triumph</i>
-sinking.” Every picket-boat dashed off to pick
-up the survivors. The Turks behaved well in not
-shelling. There was fury, panic and rage on the
-beach and on the hill. I heard Uncle Bill, half
-off his head, saying: “You should kill all enemies.
-Like a wounded bird, she is. Give them cigarettes.
-Swine! Like a wounded bird. The swine!” He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-was shaking his fist. Men were crying and cursing.
-Very different from yesterday’s temper.</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon I went round past Monash Gully,
-towards Kaba Tep&eacute;, and bathed. I got shelled,
-and came back over the ridges having a beastly
-time from the shrapnel which hunted me.</p>
-
-<p>We have now got a sap under Quinn’s Post.
-The flies and ants are past endurance.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, May 27, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> A very
-wet night. I wish the Turks would forget how to
-shoot. Here we are for an indefinite period without
-the power of replying effectively and with the
-knowledge that we are firmly locked outside the
-back door of a side-show....</p>
-
-<p>Went with the General to General Russell’s
-trenches. They are very much improved. The
-men call an ideal trench a Godley-Braithwaite
-trench; that is, tall enough for General Godley
-and broad enough for Colonel Braithwaite. Bathed.
-Charlie Bentinck arrived. His destroyer lay just
-off the beach and was shelled. Some sailors and
-five soldiers killed. Forty-five wounded. Very
-unfortunate. If they had come yesterday, it would
-have been all right&mdash;a quiet day, though we had
-thirty men sniped. The <i>Majestic</i> reported sunk
-off Helles. Off to Mudros to get stores.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, May 28, 1915.</i> <i>Mudros.</i> Left after
-many delays, and slept on deck. Very cold. It’s
-a pretty tall order for the French to put black
-Senegalese cannibals into Red Cross uniform....</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, May 29, 1915.</i> <i>Lemnos.</i> Drove across
-the island to Castro. There was a delightful spring
-half a mile from Castro and a caf&eacute; kept by a Greek.
-His wife had been killed by the Turks. Great
-fig-trees and gardens. I met two naval officers,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-who told me Wedgwood had died of wounds. I
-am very sorry; he was a very fine man. I admired
-him a lot. Castro is beautiful, with balconies
-over the narrow streets, half Turk and half Greek,
-and shady gardens. I bathed in a transparent
-sea, facing Athos, which was gleaming like a diamond.
-I watched its shadow come across the eighty miles
-of sea at sunset, as Homer said it did. I found a
-Greek, who had been Cromer’s cook. He said he
-would come back and cook for me, if there was no
-danger. He said he knew that G.H.Q. cooks were
-safe, but his wife would not let him go on to the
-Peninsula. He said her idea of warfare was wrong.
-She always thought of men and bullets skipping
-about together on a hillside.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, May 30, 1915.</i> <i>Mudros.</i> I bathed
-before dawn and went back to Mudros with masses
-of mosquito-netting, etc. Turkish prisoners of the
-French were being guarded by Greeks. It was
-rather like monkeys looking after bears. They
-wore uniforms that were a cross between Ali Pasha
-of Janina and Little Lord Fauntleroy. I saw
-H., who had been on the River Clyde. He looked
-as if he were still watching the sea turn red with
-blood, as he described the landing on Gallipoli.
-Jack was sick, and I had to leave him with my
-coat. Went and saw my friend the Papas of the
-little Greek church on the hill.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, May 31, 1915.</i> <i>Anzac.</i> I saw Hutton
-this morning, slightly wounded. Bathed at the
-farthest point towards Kaba Tep&eacute;, but had to
-fly with my clothes in my hand, leaving my
-cigarettes....</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, June 2, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> Had a
-picturesque examination of a Greek peasant this
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-morning. It was a fine picture, with the setting
-of the blue sea and the mountains. The man
-himself was patriarchal and biblical, surrounded
-by tall English officers and half-naked soldiers.
-Last night we sent up bombs from Japanese mortars
-by Quinn’s. It sounded beastly. This morning
-I went to Reserve Gully with the General. Monash’s
-Brigade is resting there for the first time for five
-weeks. The General, looking like a Trojan hero,
-made them a fine speech from a sort of natural
-throne in the middle of the sunlit amphitheatre,
-in which they all sat, tier after tier of magnificent-looking
-fellows, brown as Indians. Bullets swept
-over all the time, sometimes drowning the General’s
-voice.... Have just heard that Quinn is killed.
-I am very sorry. He was a fine, jolly, gallant
-fellow.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, June 4, 1915.</i> <i>Anzac.</i> Nothing doing.
-George Lloyd came over. Very glad to see him.
-This morning I went with Shaw to the extreme
-left, through fields of poppies, thyme and lavender.
-We saw a vulture high overhead, and the air was
-full of the song of larks. At Helles there was a
-savage attack going on. There was very bad
-sniping. In some places the trenches are only
-knee-high; in other places there are no trenches
-and the Turks are anything from four to eight
-hundred yards off. Yesterday seventeen men were
-hit at one place, they said, by one sniper. At
-one place on the way, we ran like deer, dodging.
-The General, when he had had a number of bullets
-at him, also ran. Sniping is better fun than shrapnel;
-it’s more human. You pit your wits against
-the enemy in a rather friendly sort of way. A lot
-of vultures collecting.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, June 5, 1915.</i> <i>Anzac.</i> Examined sixteen
-prisoners. Food good, munitions plentiful,
-morale all right. The individuals fed up with the
-war, but the mass obedient and pretty willing.
-No idea of surrendering. They think they are
-going to win. There was one Greek, a Karamanly,
-who only talked Turkish. He did not say until
-to-night that he was wounded. The flies are bad.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, June 6, 1915.</i> <i>Anzac.</i> Went to the
-service this morning with the General, in the
-amphitheatre. The sermon was mainly against
-America for not coming into the war, and also
-against bad language. The chaplain said he could
-not understand the meaning of it. The men laughed.
-So did I.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, June 7, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> This morning
-the land was sweet as Eden and there was
-the calm of the first creation. H. has been made
-a new Uriah the Hittite, but not because of
-Mrs. H. Last night I was invaded by mice. There
-is tremendous shelling going on now. This afternoon
-S. B., Onslow and I climbed a hill and had a
-beautiful view. Every one is rather ill and feverish.
-I have no news about Jack. The Intelligence
-office has been moved to a higher and safer place.
-Pirie Gordon, poor chap, has gone sick a long time
-ago. I rather liked the stuffy old place, which
-was called “The Mountain Path to the Jackal’s
-Cave.”</p>
-
-<p>The attack last night failed, but the drone of
-the rifles went on unceasingly, like the drone of
-a dry waterfall. We shall not get to Constantinople
-unless the flat-faced Bulgars come in.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday I lunched with Temperley at the H.Q.
-of Monash Valley. Times have changed: it’s fairly
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-safe going there through a long sap they have dug,
-and the noise is less bad.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel &mdash;&mdash; had seen a lot of the Crown Prince
-in India, and said he was a very good fellow. Dined
-with Woods, Dix, S. B. and Edwards. Lots of
-champagne for once; a very good dinner.</p>
-
-<p>I went to No. 2 Outpost with the General. There
-is a sap all the way now. Only one sniper the whole
-way. The Turkish birds were singing beautifully
-as we went. There was also a Turkish snake,
-which I believed was quite harmless, but Tahu
-killed it. The men are getting pretty tired. They
-are not as resigned as their ten thousand brother-monks
-over the way at Mount Athos.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, June 11, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> The Australians
-and New Zealanders have given up wearing
-clothes. They lie about and bathe and become
-darker than Indians. The General objects to this.
-“I suppose,” he says, “we shall have our servants
-waiting on us like that.” The flies are very bad,
-so are the mice, and so is the shelling....</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, June 13, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> A lot of
-mules and several men hit yesterday. Last night,
-S. B. and I were on the beach, when a man on a
-stretcher went by, groaning rhythmically. I thought
-he had been shot through the brain. Later on I
-went into the hospital to find a wounded Turk,
-and found that this man had never been hit at all.
-He had been doing very good work till a shell
-exploded near him and gave him a shock. Then
-he went on imitating a machine-gun. Some men
-in a sap up at Quinn’s have been going off their
-heads.</p>
-
-<p>Awful accounts of Mudros: flies, heat, sand,
-no water, typhoid. To-day are the Greek elections.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span></p>
-
-<p>Am dining with H. Woods. “The beach” now
-says that Ot has been poisoned by the Greek
-guides, whom he illtreats and uses as cooks. I
-shouldn’t wonder. The shelling is bad. I am
-going to make a new dugout to get away from
-the flies and mice. The Turkish prisoners will
-do this. I pay them a small sum.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, June 15, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> Colonel
-Chauvel<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">14</a> has pleurisy, Colonel Johnston<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">15</a> enteric.
-The sea’s high and the Navy depressed.... One
-man and two mules killed in our gully this morning;
-the body of one mule blown about 50 yards both
-ways.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, June 16, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> Rain. I
-was to have gone to Helles with Woods to see Dedez,
-but no boats went; it was too rough. I was going
-to talk about spies to S. B., when General Cunliffe
-Owen said to me: “Wait a bit. The shelling is
-too bad. We will go along together.” But I was
-in too much of a hurry. A shell fell in the gully
-as I crossed, and Woods came out to see where
-it had hit. It went into Machonochie’s dugout,
-where H. was, and blew him out of his dugout,
-black and shaken. It destroyed his furniture. I
-felt sorry for him. Ot tried to turn him out of
-the Intelligence dugout, but we protested.</p>
-
-<p>The General has come back with the latest
-casualty lists from France....</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, June 17, 1915.</i> <i>Helles.</i> Thirty men
-killed and wounded on the beach to-day. This
-morning I came to Helles with Woods. As we
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-got there a submarine had two shots at one of our
-transports by us. I was to have seen Dedez, but
-he had gone off to see Gouraud. George Peel
-walked in and took me round the beach, two miles
-on. We climbed on to the headland, in what he
-called “the quiet track of the Black Marias.”
-He talked of every mortal thing&mdash;the future Liberal
-and Socialist, the possibility of touching the heart
-of the people, the collapse of Christianity, our past
-and our policy. I left him and walked back across
-thyme and asphodel, Asia glowing like a jewel
-across the Dardanelles in the sunset. At night I
-talked late and long with Dash. Every Department
-is jealous, every one is at cross-purposes, no co-operation
-between the War Office and the Foreign
-Office.</p>
-
-<p>Walked in the morning to the H.Q. of the R.N.D.
-with Whittall. We were shelled most of the way
-in the open landscape. There was no cover anywhere.
-It felt unfamiliar. I was unfavourably
-impressed with the insecurity of life in this part
-of the world, and wished for Anzac. In the evening
-we drank mavrodaphne and tried to get rid of&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, June 18, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> I left
-Helles in the middle of very heavy shelling, a star
-performance. A lot of horses killed this morning.
-A submarine popped up last night. As we came
-back to Anzac the Turks shelled our trawler and
-hit her twice, but without doing any damage.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Shelling grew worse at Anzac, and sickness began
-to make itself felt. Men were sent across to Imbros
-when it was possible to rest.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> On June 25th I went across to Imbros
-with H. Woods and the Greek miller, Nikolas.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-Hawker was there, and E. of Macedonia. E. is
-very unpopular. If he takes a dislike to a man
-he digs around his dugout, until it falls in on him.
-The chief R.A.M.C. officer, an Irishman, was mourning
-over the ruins of his home. We slept uncomfortably
-on the ground, with flies to keep us warm.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As I was writing this a shell burst outside my
-dugout, a lot of shrapnel coming through, and one
-bullet glancing off the typewriter, which has just
-come. At the same time Jack was hit across the
-gully going from my dugout to his. Conolly,
-the escort, and I carried him down, after binding
-his leg up, under heavy fire. Then I nipped back
-to get some of his stuff to take off, but on going
-back to the beach found that he had gone. Many
-men hit on the beach. Thousands of flies on
-the wounded. The General’s blankets riddled with
-bullets. They have our range, pat. Two days
-ago Colonel Parker had his chair and table smashed
-while he was in his dugout. He left it to have
-tea with Wagstaffe. There he was reading when
-another bullet tore his paper in two. I have been
-covered with dirt several times in the last days.
-L. S. Amery came with K. I only saw him for a
-minute, worse luck, but he is coming back to-morrow,
-I hope, when we can have a talk. G.H.Q.
-turned up in force, and walked about like wooden
-images.</p>
-
-<p>We have a clerk here, Venables. He has got
-tired of writing, and, wanting to change the pen
-for the sword, borrowed a rifle and walked up to
-the front line at Quinn’s Post. There he popped
-his head in and said: “Excuse me, is this a private
-trench, or may any one fire out of it?”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span></p>
-
-<p>The sound of battle has ended. Men are bathing.
-The clouds that the cannonade had called up are
-gone, and the sea is still and crimson in the sunset
-to Imbros and Samothrace.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, June 29, 1915.</i> <i>Anzac.</i> We have
-advanced 1,000 yards down at Helles, but no
-details yet. Many men shot here yesterday by
-the Anafarta gun. I should think this gun had
-as good a tale of killed and wounded as any gun
-in the war. Every day it gets its twenty odd
-on the beach. The Australians attacked on the
-right yesterday. Fifty killed and wounded; they
-think the Turks suffered more heavily. I went
-with the General to the extreme left. Terrific
-heat. We came to a valley filled with thyme and
-lavender, which the Maoris are to inhabit. The
-men were bathing beyond Shrapnel Point. They
-say the Turks let them. I had two letters&mdash;one
-two months old, a curious one to receive here, from
-an Englishwoman, wife of the ex-Grand Vizier of
-Afghanistan. He was a progressive man, and is
-therefore in an Afghan prison. She wants work
-for her son. Wants him to be a saddler, a job
-a lot of men here would like. All my stuff looted
-coming from Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>Men are practising bomb-throwing, all over the
-place. They are mostly half-naked, and darker
-than Red Indians. It’s a day of blessed peace,
-but there’s a lot of feeling about the Anafarta
-gun, and bathing is stopped on the beach till
-night.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, June 30, 1915.</i> <i>Anzac.</i> Last night
-I went down to the hospital and was inoculated
-for cholera by C., a witty man. A trench had
-been blown in, and men were lying groaning on
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
-the floor, most of them suffering from shell-shock,
-not wounds, but some of the wounds horrible....
-I asked C. why the wounded were not sent to
-Cyprus instead of Mudros. He said: “Because it’s a
-splendid climate and there is heaps of water.” The
-chief doctor at Mudros is useless, the second &mdash;&mdash;
-(With regard to the second doctor I regret that
-the diary is libellous.) Anyway, what is certain
-is that the condition of the sick and wounded is
-awful. This morning it’s very rough, and I can’t
-get out to Jack at the hospital ship, as prisoners
-are coming in....</p>
-
-<p><i>July 1, 1915.</i> <i>Anzac.</i> I examined the prisoners,
-amongst them a tall Armenian lawyer, who talked
-some English. I asked him how he had surrendered.
-He said: “I saw two gentlemen with
-their looking-glasses, and came over to them.”
-By this he meant two officers with periscopes. He
-said that the psychology of the Turks is a curious
-thing. They do not fear death, yet are not
-brave....</p>
-
-<p>No water came in yesterday. The storm wrecked
-the barges and the beach is covered with lighters.
-We got brackish water from the hill. I could not
-get to Jack for work.</p>
-
-<p>At lunch I heard there were wounded crying
-on Walker’s Ridge, and went up there with Zachariades.
-We found a first-rate Australian, Major
-Reynell. We went through the trenches, dripping
-with sweat; it was a boiling day, and my head
-reeled from inoculation. We had to crawl through
-a secret sap over a number of dead Turks, some of
-whom were in a ghastly condition, headless and
-covered with flies. Then out from the darkness
-into another sap, with a dead Turk to walk
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
-over. The Turkish trenches were 30 yards off, and
-the dead lay between the two lines.</p>
-
-<p>When I called I was answered at once by a Turk.
-He said he could not move.... I gave him a drink,
-and Reynell and I carried him in, stumbling over
-the dead among whom he lay. I went back for
-my water-bottle, but the Turks began shooting
-as a warning, and I had to go back into the trench.</p>
-
-<p>An awful time getting the Turk through the
-very narrow trench. I got one other, unwounded,
-shamming dead. We threw him a rope, and in
-he came.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The taking of the second Turk was a curious
-episode that perhaps deserves a little more description
-than is given by the diary. The process
-of catching Turks fascinated the Australians, and
-amongst them an R.A.M.C. doctor who came round
-on that occasion. This officer prided himself upon
-neatness and a smart appearance, when the dust
-and heat of the Dardanelles had turned every one
-else into scallywags. After he had attended to
-the first wounded man, he pointed out the second
-Turk lying between our trenches and the Turks’
-and only a few yards from either. “You go out
-again, sir,” said the Australians; “it’s as good
-as a show.” I, however, took another view. I
-called out to the Turk: “Do you want any water?”
-“By God,” he whispered back, “I do, but I am
-afraid of my people.” We then threw him a rope
-and pulled him in. He told us that the night
-before he had lost direction in the attack. Fire
-seemed to be coming every way, and it had seemed
-to him the best plan to fall and lie still amongst
-his dead comrades. The doctor gave him some water,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-with which he rinsed his mouth, and I left him
-under the charge of the R.A.M.C. doctor. This
-is what happened subsequently. They had to
-crawl back through the secret sap, from which
-the bodies of the dead Turks had by that time been
-removed and left at the entrance. The Turk
-was blindfolded, but he was able to see under the
-handkerchief, and when he saw his dead comrades,
-over whose bodies he had to step, he leapt to the
-conclusion that it was our habit to bring our prisoners
-to one place and there to kill them. He gave
-one panic-stricken yell; he threw his arms round
-the neck of the well-dressed officer; they fell and
-rolled upon the corpses together, the Turk in convulsions
-of fear clinging to the neck of the doctor,
-pressing his face to the faces of the dead till he
-was covered with blood and dust and the ghastly
-remains of death, while the soldiers stood round
-saying to the Turk: “Now, don’t you carry on so.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Friday, July 2.</i> <i>Anzac.</i> This morning
-I had a magnificent bathe with General
-Birdwood. At night a great storm blew up. The
-lightning played in splendid glares over Imbros
-and Samothrace. The sea roared, the thunder
-crashed and rain spouted down. After a time
-that stopped and a cloud, black as ink, came down
-upon us like a pall.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday mourning met the two Whittalls going
-to Helles with General de Lotbiniere and his
-periscopes.</p>
-
-<p>I went off to the <i>Sicilia</i> to see Jack, and had a lot
-of trouble about a pass. I saw Jack. He said
-they had re-bound his leg on the beach, but that
-it had not been looked at for eighteen hours on
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-the boat. It had swelled to double its size. Then
-a doctor came and said the bandage had been done
-too tight, and there was a chance of his losing
-his leg. I felt absolutely savage.... Saw General
-House,<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">16</a> V.C., on shore and got him to promise
-to do what he could. We had a bad time going
-home. We were slung off the ship in wooden cases.
-It was very rough indeed, and when the wooden
-case hit the flat barge it bounced like anything.
-Then we were towed out on this flat barge, open
-to the great waves and shrapnel, to a lighter, and
-left off Anzac for a couple of hours. The Turks
-sent a few shells, absent-mindedly. Finally, a
-trawler brought us off, very angry.</p>
-
-<p>S. dined, a scholarly fanatic, interesting about
-the next war, which he thinks will be with
-Russia, in fifteen years. A lot of people going
-sick.</p>
-
-<p>I saw Cox to-night, who said that this is the worst
-storm we have had. We have only one day’s
-water supply. We could have had as much as
-we had wanted, but many of the cans stored on
-the beach are useless, as they have had holes
-knocked in them by the shrapnel. We are not as
-abstemious as the Turks, who had been lying for
-so many hours under the sun, and shall suffer
-from thirst badly.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, July 3, 1915.</i> <i>Anzac.</i> Macaulay has
-come as our artillery officer. I dined with him and
-H. Woods last night. Yesterday it rained. Jack’s
-boat has gone. We are being badly shelled here.
-I shall have to change my dugout, if this goes on.
-The guide Katzangaris has been hit in the mouth.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, July 4.</i> Saw the Maoris, who had just
-landed. General Godley made them a first-class
-speech. They danced a very fine Haka with
-tremendous enthusiasm in his honour when he
-had finished. They liked digging their dugouts,
-and seemed to like it when they came to human
-remains.... More people going sick. Doctor F.
-told me that he and another doctor had asked to
-be allowed to help on board the hospital ships
-where they have more wounded than they can
-deal with, short-handed as they are, but have
-been refused permission by the R.A.M.C.</p>
-
-<p>There has been a great explosion at Achi Baba.
-Macaulay saw a transport of ours sunk this afternoon....
-G. L. came ashore with depressing
-accounts of Russia. He is probably going to come
-on this beach. Hope he does. Went off and
-bathed with Macaulay. Saw Colonel Bauchop, who
-promised me a present of some fresh drinking-water
-to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, July 5, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> A breathless,
-panting morning, still and blue and fiery hot,
-with not a ripple on the sea. Colonel Bauchop,
-commanding the Otago Mounted Rifles, was shot
-in the shoulder last night. This morning we have
-had an exhibition of “frightfulness” in the shape
-of vast shells. They burst with a tremendous
-roar that echoes to the sky and across the sea for
-more than a minute. Their case or bullets fall
-over the sea in a great area. They started by
-striking the sea and raising great columns of water.
-Now they burst and fall on land and sea.</p>
-
-<p>It has had the great result of getting rid of Mr.
-Lock, the Socialist Czech, from the doorway of
-my dugout. He was an undergraduate at &mdash;&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span>
-and afterwards a Labour candidate. Now he is
-Colonel P.’s cook.</p>
-
-<p>The transport that Macaulay saw go down was
-French. Six lives lost. The explosion down south
-was a French ammunition store. This shelling
-makes one’s head ache.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, July 6th.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> Yesterday I
-went to Quinn’s Post with General Godley in
-the morning. There was a fair amount of shelling.
-They had just hit thirteen men in Courtney’s before
-we got there. We went into a mine that was being
-dug towards and under the Turkish trenches. At
-the end of the sap the Turks were only six to eight
-feet away. We could hear them picking. The
-time for blowing in had very nearly come. These
-underground people take it all as a matter of course.
-I should hate fighting on my stomach in a passage
-two feet high, yards under the ground. The Turks
-were throwing bombs from the trenches, and these
-hit the ground over us, three of them, making it
-shudder. Down below they talk in whispers. We
-went round the trenches. Saw none so fine as last
-time, when we came to the Millionaires’ Sap, so
-called because it was made by six Australians,
-each the son of a millionaire.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon I tried to sleep, but there was
-too much shelling. Kyumjiyan was hit, and has
-gone; S. B. was grazed. It was 11.2 shells filled
-with all kinds of stuff. We answered with a monitor
-whose terrific percussions shook my dugout, bringing
-down dust and stones. A submarine appeared,
-and all the destroyers were after her. Then two
-aeroplanes started a fight as the sun set down
-towards Helles, appearing and vanishing behind
-crimson clouds. Captain Buck, the Maori doctor
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-and M.P., dined with us, to wind up an exciting
-day.</p>
-
-<p>This morning is like yesterday. No breath of
-air, but the day is more clear, and Samothrace
-and Imbros look very peaceful. Early again the
-shelling began. As I was shaving outside three
-shells hit the beach just in front. I wasn’t watching
-the third, but suddenly heard a great burst of
-laughter. At the first shell a bather had rushed
-back to his dugout; the shell had come and
-knocked it in on the top of him, and he was dug
-out, naked and black, but smiling and none the
-worse. “Another blasted sniper,” he said, which
-made the men laugh.</p>
-
-<p>Active preparations are being made to fight
-the gas, as the Intelligence says it is going to be
-used. Am going out with the General at 9.30.
-Was sent to get Colonel Parker, but found him sick,
-and under pretty heavy fire, having a new dugout
-built. Came back and stood with the General,
-Thoms and others outside Headquarters. A shell
-burst just by us, bruised the General in the ribs,
-and filled his eyes with dirt. Went out with Colonel
-Anthill and Poles. Talked of arranging a truce
-to bury the Turkish dead on our parapet. They
-said that otherwise our men must get cholera;
-the heat and sand and flies and smell is awful.
-We met Colonel Bauchop with his arm in a sling,
-but the bullet out of his shoulder, and Colonel
-White with his head still bandaged. The Australians
-very cheerful.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, July 7, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> A fierce,
-expectant dawn. We shelled furiously at 4.30 a.m.
-Now absolute peace on a glassy sea. Last night
-Bentinck, Jack Anderson and I bathed. I was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-at the end of the pier; as I was beginning to dress
-a shell burst very close, the smoke and powder in
-my face. I fled half dressed; Colonel P. rose like
-Venus from the sea and followed with nothing.
-A calm marine gave me my cigarette-holder.</p>
-
-<p>One of the prisoners reported that on the occasion
-of the armistice Turkish Staff officers had put on
-Red Crescent clothes in order to have a look at
-our trenches.... No news of Jack.</p>
-
-<p>The Turks put up five crosses yesterday, all of
-which we shot down. I first thought it was probably
-Greeks or Armenians who wanted to show they
-were Christians, wishing to surrender, and telephoned
-to Courtney’s to see if I could get into
-touch with them, but now I think it’s probably
-Turks who were anxious to make us shoot at the
-sign of our own religion. In this they succeeded.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Johnson, Commanding the New Zealand
-Infantry Brigade, gone sick. I persuaded the mess
-to get inoculated for cholera. Last night I dined
-with Woods and Macaulay. They told Eastern
-stories, and we had a very contented time, drinking
-mavrodaphne and looking at the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The Turks shelled a little after eight, in answer to
-our tiresome provocative monitor fire. This morning
-Tahu arrived from Egypt with letters. The Turks
-are bombing something cruel from Kaba Tep&eacute;....
-It’s a beautiful sight&mdash;a sea like lapis-lazuli and a
-burning sun, with columns of water like geysers
-where the shells hit. A good many men hit here
-to-day.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, July 10, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> I went
-with General Godley to the <i>Triad</i>, and dined with
-Admiral de Robeck. Took the General’s things
-to put them on board the picket-boat, but as I
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-got there a shell struck her and knocked a hole
-in her. There was another one, and we sat and
-waited uncomfortably in this till he came....
-Found Alec Ramsay on board. Slept in Commodore
-Roger Keyes’ cabin. Very comfortable. He was
-very kind. Went to G.H.Q. and had lunch with
-L. and Bob Graves.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, July 11th.</i> Felt much better. Went
-ashore and saw Colonel Hawker and the Turkish
-prisoners.... Came back late at night, after some
-very jolly days. Best week-end I ever spent. The
-Turks have asked for another armistice in the
-south. This has been refused. If they attack,
-they will have to do it across their dead, piled high,
-and this is not good for morale.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>By this time the persecutions of the interpreters
-had greatly diminished. They were still badly
-treated by a man called Ot, but to a large extent
-they had won the respect of the troops by their
-behaviour. The chief interpreter was an old Greek
-of some sixty-two or sixty-three years, Mr. Kyriakidis,
-who was given a medal for conspicuous
-gallantry at the bombardment of Alexandria and
-had served with General Stuart’s unfortunate
-expedition. He was a gentleman, and one of
-the straightest men I have met. His simplicity,
-courtesy and unfailing courage had gained him
-many friends. He was also endowed with considerable
-humour.</p>
-
-<p>A relation had sent me a gas mask, at that time
-a rarity at Anzac. I did not believe that I should
-need it, and made a present of it to the first man
-I met, who happened to be Mr. Kyriakidis. He
-went down and played poker with the other interpreters
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
-on the beach. He put on my respirator
-as a poker mask, with much swagger. This put
-the fear of death into the interpreters, who sent a
-deputation to G.H.Q. Intelligence, insisting that
-they should also be provided with masks.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Monday, July 12, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> By the
-way, an unhappy shadow was shot yesterday,
-an interpreter of whom we none of us knew anything,
-and who was on no list. Things are not
-very comfortable. The fire is increasingly heavy.
-All the air is full of thudding and broken echoes.
-No one minds anything much, but high explosive....
-The hospitals are being moved. They had too
-many casualties where they were before.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, July 13th.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> Tremendous fire
-round Achi Baba yesterday. French advanced 150
-and we 200 yards. Don’t know what the losses
-were. I went with Macaulay and Woods to No. 3
-Post, to Bauchop’s Fountain. They can snipe there
-very close, and killed a man a couple of days ago,
-two yards off under the olives, and wounded his
-mate, who crawled back into the sandy way. On
-both sides there is tall wild lavender and what
-M. calls pig’s parsley.</p>
-
-<p>We crawled down a sandy path to the sea, M.
-rather sick. Met the General going back, who told
-us not to bathe. In the evening Tahu got out his
-gramophone and we had some good songs when
-the shooting was not too much.</p>
-
-<p>Ramadan began to-day. George Lloyd arrived
-this afternoon and said they wanted to send me
-to Tenedos for a special job.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday evening General Godley went to
-Courtney’s Post. As he got there the Turks shelled
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
-with heavy stuff, killing and wounding about twenty
-men. Reynell came to see me. I like him very
-much indeed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary. Sunday, July 18, 1915. Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i>
-They are now shelling the pier, and killed a doctor,
-cutting off both his legs, and several other people,
-when I was bathing from the pier. Everybody is
-again going sick. The situation is changing. Every
-night we are landing guns. The moon is young
-now and growing. It seems, therefore, reasonable
-to expect that we cannot land forces of men that
-take time before the nights are moonless; that is,
-in about a month’s time the preparations ought to
-be ready.</p>
-
-<p>A few days ago we had an attack on Achi Baba,
-won about 400 yards and lost about 5,000 men.
-Two battalions got out of touch and were lost
-for a considerable time. The “Imbros Journal,”
-“Dardanelles Driveller,” or whatever it’s called,
-said “their return was as surprising as that of
-Jonah from the belly of the whale.” Good, happy
-author!</p>
-
-<p>A German Taube over us throwing bombs and
-also heavy stuff, but not much damage lately.
-George Lloyd<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">17</a> was here this afternoon, and while
-we talked a shell burst and hit four men.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, July 19, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> My dugout
-has now become a centre for Australian and New
-Zealand officers, all good fellows. I had it made
-small on purpose, so that no one would offer to share
-it with me, and that makes it less convenient for
-the crowd that now sit in it. Two old friends
-come when the day’s work is over, and grow sentimental
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-by moonlight; both ill and, I am afraid,
-getting worse. All the talk is now about gassing.
-It is thought that they will do it to us here.
-As usual, new troops are reported to be coming
-against us.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, July 20, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> There is
-always something fresh here. Now a lot of sharks
-are supposed to have come in. During the last
-two days there has been absolute silence, no shelling
-at all, nothing but the sound of crickets and at
-night a singsong chorus as the men drag up the
-great tanks prepared for water. S. B. yesterday
-worked out a theory to prove that the Turks were
-to attack us last night. (1) No gunfire yesterday;
-the reason being they (the Turks) were moving
-troops. They didn’t want us to fire at their
-troops, therefore didn’t draw fire by shooting at
-us. (2) Ulemas have come down. There must
-be a special reason for this. (3) 10,000 coming
-up. Gas being prepared. All this means an attack
-on Anzac. To wipe us out would be a great feather
-in their cap. I am inclined to doubt another
-great attack.... Tempers all a bit ruffled. General
-Birdwood is sick. The heat is fierce and the
-stillness absolute. This afternoon I heard from
-Dedez, who asked me to go to Tenedos for a
-time....</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, July 21, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Tep&eacute;.</i> There
-is something uncanny about this calm. No shots
-at all. News that the Italian Ambassador at
-Constantinople has gone nap. We have had very
-little news of Italy.... I wonder if the Turks
-are likely to attack on the eve of Constitution Day.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, July 24, 1915.</i> <i>Imbros.</i> On Wednesday
-I went over to G.H.Q. and met old friends among
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-the war correspondents. Met some of the New
-Zealanders who had come over for a rest, but were
-coming back for the expected attack. Meanwhile,
-they had been kept on fatigue most of the time,
-and were unutterably weary. At Imbros I was
-ordered to go to Tenedos and Mytilene.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, July 22nd.</i> Came back to Anzac in
-the same boat with Ashmead Bartlett and Nevinson,<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">18</a>
-and got leave to take them round in the
-afternoon.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Later on, during one of the worst days of the
-Suvla fighting, I met my friend Nevinson picking
-his way amongst the wounded on their stretchers
-under fire. “After this,” he said, decisively, “I
-shall confine myself strictly to revolutions.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>July 23rd.</i> Started for Imbros and went
-in the <i>Bacchante</i> pinnace, which was leaking badly
-from a shell hole. There were six of us on deck,
-and one man was hit when we were about a hundred
-yards out. We put back and left him on shore.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, July 24th.</i> <i>Imbros.</i> Went for a ride
-on a mule, and had a bathe.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At this point in the campaign, though the morale
-was excellent, depression began to grow. There
-was a great deal of sickness, from which practically
-no one escaped, though it was less virulent in its
-form than later in the summer. I had been ill
-for some time, and was very anxious to avoid being
-invalided to Egypt, and was grateful for the chance
-of going to the islands for a change of climate and
-light work, for the few days that were sufficient
-to give another lease of health.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span></p>
-
-<p>The feeling that invades almost every side-show,
-sooner or later, that the home authorities cared
-nothing and knew nothing about the Dardanelles,
-was abroad. The policy and the strategy of the expedition
-were bitterly criticized. I remember a friend
-of mine saying to me: “All this expedition is like
-one of Walter Scott’s novels, upside down.” Walter
-Scott generally put his hero at the top of a winding
-stair, where he comfortably disposed, one by one, of
-a hundred of his enemies. “Now,” he said, “what
-we have done was, first of all to warn the Turks
-that we were going to attack by having a naval
-bombardment. That made them fortify the Dardanelles,
-but still they were not completely ready.
-We then send a small force to attack, to tell them
-that we really are in earnest, and to ask them if
-they are quite ready. In fact, we have put the man
-who ought to be, not the hero, but the villain of
-the piece, at the top of the corkscrew stair, and we
-have given him so much notice that when the hero
-attacks the villain has more men at the top of the
-circular stair than the hero has at the bottom.
-It’s like throwing pebbles at a stone wall,” he said,
-mixing his metaphors.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Sunday, July 25, 1915.</i> <i>On the Sea.</i> I
-left for Tenedos; a most beautiful day. We have
-just been to Anzac, very burnt and wounded
-amongst the surrounding greenery. Pretty peaceful
-there, only a few bullets coming over.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Perhaps the record of a sojourn in the Greek
-Islands on what was really sick-leave, as the work
-was of the lightest, should not be included in a war
-diary, but the writer looks back with amusement
-and pleasure to days that were not uneventful.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-They were passed with friends who were playing
-a difficult and most arduous part, and whose services,
-in many cases, have not received the recognition
-that was their due.</p>
-
-<p>It was pleasant once again to be lord of the
-horizon, to have space through which to roam,
-and lovely hills and valleys to ride across in the
-careless, scented air of the Mediterranean summer,
-with the sea shining a peacock-blue through the
-pines. It is this space and liberty that men cramped
-in a siege desire, more than the freedom from the
-shelling of the enemy’s guns. There was much,
-too, that was <i>op&eacute;ra bouffe</i> in the Islands, that made
-a not unpleasant contrast to the general life at
-Anzac.</p>
-
-<p>If there was spy mania on the Peninsula, it was
-multiplied tenfold, and quite reasonably, on the
-Islands, where part of the population were strongly
-pro-Ally, another part pro-German, while others
-were anti-British by an accidental kind of ricochet.
-These were the royalist followers of King Constantine,
-who hated Venizelos, and consequently the
-friends of Venizelos, Great Britain and France.</p>
-
-<p>The situation on the Islands was one with which
-it was extremely hard to cope. We were very
-anxious to safeguard the lives of our men, and to
-prevent information going to the enemy, and, at
-the same time, not to pursue German methods. It
-was unceasing work, with a great strain of responsibility.
-There was an inevitable <i>va et vient</i> between
-the Peninsula and Imbros. From Imbros boats
-could slip across to Tenedos, Mytilene or the mainland.
-The native ca&iuml;ques would drop in at evening,
-report, be ordered to stay till further notice, and
-would drift away like ghosts in the night. Men,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
-and women, performed remarkable feats, in appearing
-and disappearing. They were like pictures on
-a film in their coming and their going. Watchers
-and watched, they thrust and parried, discovered
-and concealed, glowed on the picture and darkened.</p>
-
-<p>Anatasio, a Serbian by birth, was one of our
-workers, conspicuous for his quickness and intelligence.
-At the outbreak of the war he had
-already been five months in an Austrian prison
-at Cattaro, but the prospect of battle stimulated
-his faculties, and he escaped. One day at luncheon
-I asked him where it was that he had learned
-Italian, which he did not talk very well. “While
-I was in prison at Smyrna,” said he. “What
-for?” said I. “For stabbing a Cretan,” said
-he, and added that he would rather be five years
-in prison in Turkey than one in Austria. Then
-there was Avani, one of the most vivid personalities
-that I have ever met. He was a poet and a clairvoyant,
-a mesmerist and a masseur, a specialist
-in rheumatism and the science of detection, once
-a member of General Chermside’s gendarmerie
-in Crete, and ex-chief of the Smyrna fire brigade.
-The stories of him are too many, and too
-flamboyant, to tell.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> Avani mesmerized the wife of the Armenian
-dragoman. Unfortunately it went wrong.
-Her obedience to his volition was delayed and she
-only obeyed his commands in the wrong company
-some hours after.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>He had given proof of rare courage, and also
-considerable indiscretion. On one occasion, armed
-to the teeth, he burst into a perfectly innocent
-house at night, and, revolver in hand, hunted a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-terrified inhabitant. His only evidence against this
-man was, that when he had been caught and hurled
-to the ground and sat upon, his heart had beaten
-very fast, which would not happen, insisted Avani,
-if he had not been guilty of some crime.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst our opponents were the romantic but
-sinister Vassilaki family, two brothers and three
-lovely sisters. Talk about them in the Islands
-was almost as incessant as was talk about shelling
-on the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Monday, July 26, 1915.</i> <i>Tenedos.</i> Yesterday
-I was very ill, and again to-day, but was
-injected with something or other and feel better,
-but weak. Tried to sleep yesterday, but one of
-our monitors at Rabbit Island bombarded hugely,
-shaking the bugs down on me. This place is clean,
-but there are bugs and some lice. Last night I
-dined with the Governor, Colonel Mullins, and a
-jolly French doctor, and Thompson, who has
-fallen ill. Am carrying on for him at the
-moment.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, July 27, 1915.</i> <i>Tenedos.</i> Went to
-the trenches at Tenedos. They face the enemy.
-That is the most military thing about them. Thompson
-went out to see the inhabitants. I was going
-with him, but felt worse and went to rest. The
-Turks here are in a very bad way. We do not
-allow them to work. It’s inevitable. They mayn’t
-fish or work at the aerodrome.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, July 28, 1915.</i> <i>Tenedos.</i> Interpreted
-for the Governor of Tenedos, who, like Jupiter,
-rules with might, in the afternoon. In the evening
-I saw the Mufti, who had a list of starving, widows
-and indigent.... Last night the Cretan soldiers
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
-started ragging the Turks and singing, till I stopped
-them. They were quite good.</p>
-
-<p>Still ill, but better. Had a beautiful walk in
-the evening, and a long talk with the Greek refugees
-working in the vines by the edge of the sea.
-The old patriarch addressed me all the time as
-“chorbaji”&mdash;that is, Possessor of the Soup, the
-Headman of the village.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, July 29, 1915.</i> <i>Tenedos.</i> Yesterday
-I rode over to the French aerodrome, coming late
-for luncheon, but had coffee with about twenty
-French officers, all very jolly. Promised to let me
-fly over the Dardanelles. I went on to the Cretans
-in a pinewood. Their officer, a Frenchman, very
-keen on a show in Asia Minor.... The elder
-Vassilaki has been arrested. His brother saw him
-go by in a trawler. Am going to Mytilene, then
-return after three days, and leave here on Tuesday
-for Anzac. No news of anything happening. Tenedos
-is a beautiful town in its way, surrounded by
-windmills, with Mount Elias in the background.
-Its streets are narrow, picturesque and hung with
-vines that make them cool and shady. At the end
-of the town there is a very fine old Venetian fortress,
-but its magnificence is outside; inside it is furnished
-with round stone cannon-balls, ammunition for
-catapults. In the last war the Greeks took the
-island, but one day a Turkish destroyer popped
-her nose in. All the Greeks fled, and the Mufti
-and the Moslems went and pulled the Greek flag
-down. Then in came a Greek destroyer, and the
-Turkish one departed. The Mufti and the Turks
-were taken off to Mudros, where he and they were
-beaten. He narrowly missed being killed....</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, July 30, 1915.</i> <i>Tenedos.</i> Slept very
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-badly again. Had a letter from the O.C. Poor
-Onslow killed, lying on his bed by his dugout.
-A good fellow and a fine soldier. Aden nearly
-captured. I prophesied its capture in Egypt. I
-shall be recalled before anything happens.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The radiant air of Tenedos gave health as it did
-in Homeric times, and I left with the desire that
-others should have the same chance as myself of
-using that beautiful island as a hospital; but all
-the pictures there were not bright. Under the
-windmills above the shining sea there were the
-motionless, dark-clad, desolate Moslem women,
-sitting without food or shelter. Their case, it is
-true, was no harder than that of the thousands of
-Greek refugees who had been driven from their
-homes, but these at any rate were living amongst
-kindred, while the unfortunate Moslems were without
-help or sympathy, except that which came
-from their enemies, the British.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Friday, July 30, 1915.</i> <i>Mytilene.</i> I left
-by the Greek boat yesterday. On the boat I met
-a man who might be useful as an interpreter,
-Anibal Miscu, Entrepreneur de Travaux Publiques,
-black as my hat, but talks English, French, German,
-Italian, Spanish, Turkish, Greek, Arabic, Bulgar,
-Russian and something else. The boat was stopped
-by our trawler, No. &mdash;&mdash;, and searched for contraband
-of war. The Greeks were furious. I landed
-at Mytilene, not having slept much and feeling bad.
-Avani said they had tried to bribe him to allow
-some raisins through, and kicked up the devil of
-a row. He seemed to think that the raisins were
-dynamite. He was left guarding the raisins, all
-night, I believe, with his revolver.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span></p>
-
-<p>I was given a warm welcome by Compton
-Mackenzie in Mytilene. He, fortunately for me,
-had been sent there by G.H.Q. I found several
-old friends&mdash;Heathcote-Smith, the Consul, whose
-work it would be impertinent for me to praise,
-and Hadkinson, whom I had last seen at my own
-house in England, where he was staying with me
-when the Archduke Franz Ferdinand had been
-murdered. Hadkinson had passed most of his life
-on his property in Macedonia. Of the Eastern
-and Southern languages he talked Greek, Italian,
-Turkish, Bulgarian, Serbian and Albanian. His
-voice was as delightful as his knowledge of Balkan
-ballads was wide, and his friends made him sing
-the endless songs of the mountaineers. His personality
-had carried him through experiences that
-would have been disastrous to most men; battles
-decisive in European history had raged in front
-of his doors, while his house had remained untouched;
-brigands of most of the Balkan races
-had crossed his farm, rarely driving off his stock,
-and most of the local peasantry in their misfortunes
-had come to him for help, for advice, doctoring
-or intercession. Until the European war had
-crashed upon the world, Hadkinson had been a
-good example of the fact that minorities, even
-when they are a minority of one, do not always
-suffer.</p>
-
-<p>The people of Mytilene, at that time, were very
-pro-English, though the officials were of the faction
-of King Constantine. The desire I frequently
-heard expressed was that Great Britain should
-take over Mytilene, as she did the Ionian Islands,
-and that when Mytilene had been put in order
-it should be restored to Greece.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Friday, July 30, 1915.</i> <i>Mytilene.</i> &mdash;&mdash;
-and Hadkinson have gone out with a motor-boat
-and a machine-gun. The Vassilakis, or some of
-them, have been deported, Vassilaki to Imbros
-and the beautiful sisters to Mudros.... It’s a
-blazing, burning day.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, July 31, 1915.</i> <i>Mytilene.</i> A gaming-house.
-Moved from my first hotel to a larger and
-more disreputable one. Lunched with Hadkinson
-and Compton Mackenzie<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">19</a>.... At Thasos the
-Greeks have arrested our agents under the orders
-of Gunaris. Have worked, and am feeling better.</p>
-
-<p><i>Later.</i> The three Miss Vassilakis have not gone
-to Mudros. They turned up this morning, and I
-was left to deal with them. Not as beautiful,
-except one, as I had been led to believe. They
-got Avani out of the room and wept and wept.
-I told them their brother would be all right....
-They wanted to know who prevented them leaving.
-I said it was the Admiral. That good man is far
-away.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, August 1, 1915.</i> <i>Mytilene.</i> Avani went
-off with the three Miss Vassilakis, in hysterics,
-last night. They were very angry with us. It
-seems probable that we shall have a landing on the
-mainland here to divert attention from the Peninsula.
-Sir Ian Hamilton is coming down to have a look.
-A good deal of friction over the blockade. The
-present system causes much inconvenience to all
-concerned.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>They were enchanting days of golden light or
-starlit darkness, while one drank health almost
-in the concrete from the hot pine-scented air and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-the famous wine of Mytilene. The conditions of
-others was unfortunately less happy. There were
-some 80,000 Greek refugees from the mainland, for
-whom the Greek Government had done practically
-nothing, while the patriotic Greek communities of
-England and America had not had the opportunity
-of relieving their necessities. We all did what we
-could to help these people.</p>
-
-<p>There was another question allied to this to be
-considered: whether a Greek Expeditionary Force,
-largely composed of these refugees, should be sent
-into Asia Minor. The danger of such a campaign
-to the native Greeks was obvious; mainly for this
-reason it was not undertaken. But while no
-expedition occurred, there was much talk about
-one. The fact that Sir Ian Hamilton had come
-was widely known. It was said that great preparations
-were being made, and these rumours
-probably troubled the Turks and kept troops of
-theirs in a non-combatant area.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Sunday, August 1, 1915.</i> <i>Mytilene.</i>
-Lunched with Mavromati Bey. He was very heroic,
-saying he preferred to die rather than to live under
-the German yoke, but there were no signs of a
-funeral at luncheon, which was delicious.</p>
-
-<p>Dined with Hadkinson, and was taken ill, but
-got all right and went off with him on the motor-boat
-<i>Omala</i> after dinner. H. said that for a long
-time he had felt that I was coming, and had
-ordered a lamb for me to be executed the following
-day; told the cook, too, to get some special
-herbs.</p>
-
-<p>The object of our journey was to find a wonderful
-woman, lithe as a leopard and strong as a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-horse, and put her somewhere near Aivali to gain
-information.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, August 2, 1915.</i> “<i>Omala.</i>” <i>Off Moskonisi.</i>
-At dawn this morning we came to Moskonisi,
-luminous in the sea. A decrepit shepherd led a
-flock of sheep along the beach. His name is Panayotis
-and he has a Homeric past; he killed two
-Turkish guards who courted a beautiful sister-in-law
-before marriage. Then he killed two others
-for a pusillanimous brother-in-law after marriage,
-and he has also sent two other Turks to their rest,
-though H. does not know the reason for their death.</p>
-
-<p>Hadkinson had collected a large band of Palikaris,
-but the motor-boat only held a few, the cream of
-them. He had English names for most of them&mdash;Little
-John, Robin Hood, etc. They were tall
-men, with very quick, clever eyes and lithe movements,
-picturesquely dressed. One of them had a
-cross glittering in his kalpak, and A. M. (for Asia
-Minor) on both sides of the cross. He said to me,
-pointing to Aivali: “There is my country; we are
-an orphan people. For 150 years we have shed our
-blood and given our best to Greece. Now in her
-hour of triumph and in our day of wretchedness
-she denies us help. May she ever be less!” Another
-Greek had been to Mecca as a soldier and
-stayed there and in the Yemen for some years.
-The Captain was a quiet man, but apparently
-very excitable. They were delighted with their
-army rifles. The woman, Angeliko Andriotis, did
-not turn up at Gymno, so we went on to Moskonisi,
-the men often playing on a plaintive flute, and
-sometimes singing low together. At breakfast, soon
-after dawn, we had a sort of orchestra.</p>
-
-<p>We arrived opposite to Aivali. The Turks have
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-sunk three mauna.... Hadkinson saw one of
-their submarines.</p>
-
-<p>The situation at Aivali is curious. It lies at
-the head of a bay. Above it there are hills, not
-high hills, but high enough, the men said who were
-with us, to prevent its being bombarded by the
-Turks. They looked at it with longing eyes. Their
-families were there. They kept on cursing the
-“black dogs” and saying they would eat them.
-There were 35,000 people in Aivali, now only
-25,000; 10,000 have left lately. The sword of
-Damocles hangs over the rest of them, for they
-might be sent off into the interior at any moment.
-We went on to the channel between Moskonisi
-and Pyrgos. There we found the child of the
-woman, who was sent with a note to her. Men
-were moving in the olives and the scrub some
-distance off, whom the Greeks said were their own
-compatriots.</p>
-
-<p>The boy, who was thirteen, took the letter and
-put it under his saddle. He went off calmly to
-get past the Turks, without any air of adventure
-about him. The others realized the stage on which
-they were acting, and swaggered finely. I got
-off on Pyrgos with Hadkinson, and went to a small,
-rough chapel, where they were bringing the eikons
-back in triumph.</p>
-
-<p>The beauty of it all was beyond words. I bathed
-on a silver sand in transparent water between the
-two islands. Moskonisi, by the way, doesn’t mean
-the Island of Perfume, but takes its name from a
-great brigand who practically held the island against
-the Turks about thirty years ago.</p>
-
-<p>After a time the boy returned with a letter from
-his mother, and a peasant with binoculars. He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-and the peasant both said that they had seen a
-great oil-pool in Aivali Bay. We thought that
-this must be from a submarine, and dashed round
-there at full speed, but found nothing. Then we
-decided to come home. We picked up some of the
-men we had dropped en route; and they brought
-us presents of gran Turco, basilica and sweet-scented
-pinks. Then they played their flutes as
-the sun set, and Hadkinson sang Greek, Bulgarian
-and Turkish songs, singing the “Imam’s Call”
-beautifully and, to the horror of his Greek
-followers, reverently.</p>
-
-<p>We might have bagged the twenty-five Turks,
-or whatever number there were, quite easily, but
-H. thought this would have produced reprisals. He
-was probably right.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, August 3, 1915.</i> <i>Mytilene.</i> We got
-back last night after dinner and heard that Sir
-Ian Hamilton, George Lloyd and George Brodrick
-had been here.... One of the poor Whittall boys
-very badly wounded. They were a fine pair.</p>
-
-<p><i>August 4, 1915.</i> <i>Mytilene.</i> Yesterday we heard
-that the Turks had sent the town-crier to the
-equivalent of the capital of Moskonisi to say that
-any Greek going beyond a certain line would be
-put to death. Miss Vassilaki turned up, and said
-that she and her sister would come with me to
-Tenedos. I said they couldn’t.</p>
-
-<p>We dined with General Hill and his Staff and
-slept on the <i>Canopus</i>.... Mackenzie no better....
-A good deal of friction in Tenedos. Athanasius
-Vassilaki has escaped, and every one is annoyed.
-Some men have been arrested for signalling.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, August 5, 1915.</i> <i>Tenedos.</i> Most of the
-officers sick. I was asked to stay on at Tenedos,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-but felt I must get back at once. Christo says
-that it’s dull here, and Kaba Tep&eacute; is better than
-this house. Turkish guns have been firing at our
-trawlers. A couple of men wounded. Examined
-a man just escaped from Constantinople. Constantinople
-is quite cheery: theatres, carriages,
-boats, etc. The Germans say we can’t hold out
-on the Peninsula when the bad weather comes.</p>
-
-<p>Then I examined a Lebanon French soldier who
-had arrested a child and an old man for signalling....</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here there are some pages of my diary missing,
-but the events that occurred are still vividly in
-my mind.</p>
-
-<p>In company with other officers I went first to
-Imbros, hearing the thunder of the guns from
-Helles. In passionate haste we tried every means
-to get on to the Peninsula for the great battle. I
-left Christo to follow with my kit, if he could, with
-the future doubtful before him, and no certainty,
-except that of being arrested many times.</p>
-
-<p>In the harbour at Imbros on that night there was
-a heavy sea, and in a small, dancing boat we quested
-through the darkness for any ship sailing to Anzac.
-One was found at last that was on the point of
-sailing, and off we went.</p>
-
-<p>The instructions of my friend Ian Smith were
-to get to Suvla, and luck favoured him, for at dawn
-we lay off Suvla, and a trawler took him ashore.</p>
-
-<p>Along the heights and down to the sea-shore
-the battle growled and raged, and it was difficult
-to know what was the mist of the morning or battle
-smoke. I got off at Anzac, which was calm, realizing
-that I had missed the first attack.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Saturday, August 7, 1915.</i> <i>Kaba Teb&eacute;.</i>
-I went out to Headquarters, which are now beyond
-Colonel Bauchop’s old Headquarters. He, poor
-fellow, had just been hit and was said to be dying.
-Dix<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">20</a> again wounded in the leg and Cator killed
-when he had just been promoted. I saw the General;
-on the way out I met 300 Turkish prisoners and
-was ordered to return and embark them. We
-came to the pier on the beach, then three shells
-fell on and beside it; both S. B. and I thought we
-were going to have a very bad time, packed like
-sardines, with panicky prisoners. Embarking them
-took time; we were all very snappy, but we got
-them off. I was glad to find S. B. and Woods.
-All the dugouts here are desolate. I saw General
-Birdwood, who was very sad about Onslow.<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">21</a> He
-talked of the water difficulties. He was cheerful,
-as usual, and said he thought we should know which
-way things were going by 5 o’clock. S. was less
-cheerful.</p>
-
-<p>I went back to Headquarters, a weary trudge
-of two hot, steaming miles, past masses of wounded.
-The saps were constantly blocked. Then back to
-Anzac for a few hours’ sleep, till I can get my kit.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, August 8, 1915.</i> <i>Near Anafarta.</i> Slept
-badly last night at Anzac. The place was very
-desolate with every one away. I got up before a
-clear dawn and went out to the observation post,
-where I found General Godley and General Shaw.
-Our assault began. We saw our men in the growing
-light attack the Turks. It was a cruel and beautiful
-sight, for it was like a fight in fairyland; they went
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-forward in parties through the beautiful light, with
-the clouds crimsoning over them. Sometimes a tiny,
-gallant figure would be in front, then a puff would
-come and they would be lying still. We got to
-within about forty yards of the Turks; later we
-lost ground. Meanwhile, men were streaming up,
-through awful heat. There were Irish troops
-cursing the Kaiser. At the observation post we
-were being badly shelled. The beauty of the place
-was extraordinary, and made it better than the
-baldness of Anzac, but we were on an unpropitious
-hillside, and beyond there were mules and men,
-clustered thickly.</p>
-
-<p>Then I was sent back to Kaba Tep&eacute;, where I
-found a lot of wounded prisoners, who had not been
-attended to. I woke a doctor who had not slept
-for ages. He talked almost deliriously, but came
-along and worked like a real good man. I saw
-General House, V.C., and suggested attaching one
-doctor to the prisoners, so that we should not get
-contagious diseases.</p>
-
-<p>Returned to Bauchop’s Post and examined a
-couple of Germans from the <i>Goeben</i>. Got a good
-deal of information. Then I was telephoned for
-to interrogate a wounded Greek, who had, however,
-got lost. I went back outside the hospital, where
-there were many wounded lying. I stumbled upon
-poor A. C. (a schoolfellow), who had been wounded
-about 3 a.m. the day before, and had lain in the
-sun on the sand all the previous day. He recognized
-me, and asked me to help him, but was light-headed.
-There were fifty-six others with him; M. and I
-counted. It was awful having to pass them. A lot
-of the men called out: “We are being murdered.”
-The smells were fearful.... I went down a sap
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-to the north to find the Greek. Fierce shelling
-began. The sap was knocked down in front and
-behind.</p>
-
-<p>I came to a field hospital, situated where the
-troops were going through. There no one knew
-where Taylor’s Hollow, the place where the Greek
-was supposed to be, was. While I was there shelling
-was bad. Several of the wounded hit again. One
-man was knocked in on the top of me, bleeding
-all over. I returned to meet Thoms, who said he
-knew the way. We ran the gauntlet....</p>
-
-<p>I had a curious, beautiful walk, looking for the
-wounded Greek, going to nineteen hospitals. Many
-wounded everywhere. First I saw one of our
-fellows who had met ten Turks and had ten bayonet
-wounds. He was extremely cheerful. Then a
-couple of Turks in the shadow of some pines, one
-dying and groaning, really unconscious. I offered
-the other water from my bottle, but he refused
-because of his companion, using Philip Sidney’s
-words in Turkish.</p>
-
-<p>Men were being hit everywhere. After going
-by fields and groves and lanes I came back to where
-the wounded were lying in hundreds, in the sap
-going to the sea, near Bauchop’s Fountain. There
-a man called to me in French. He was the Greek I
-was looking for, badly wounded. He talked a great
-deal. Said 200,000 reinforcements were expected
-from Gallipoli. No gas would be used here....</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, August 9, 1915.</i> <i>No. 3 Outpost.</i> Slept
-uncomfortably on the ground. Went before the
-dawn to observation post; returned to examine
-prisoners. Had an unsuccessful expedition with
-Hastings to find some guns which he said had
-been lost between the lines.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span></p>
-
-<p>Bullets came streaming down our valley, and we
-put up a small wall, of sacks, 3 feet high, behind
-which we slept. I was sitting at breakfast this
-morning listening to Colonel Manders<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">22</a> talking,
-when suddenly I saw Charlie B. put his hand to
-his own head and say: “By G&mdash;&mdash;, he’s killed!”
-Manders fell back dead, with a bullet through his
-temple. He was a very good fellow.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Ian Hamilton came ashore. I saw him for
-a moment. Then to Kaba Tep&eacute;; going and coming
-one passes a line of bodies, some dreadful, being
-carried for burial. Many still lying out. The
-last wounded have been more pitiful than anything
-I have seen. Cazalet is badly wounded; I hope
-he will recover; he is a good boy. Colonel Malone
-was killed last night and Jacky Hughes wounded.
-Lots of shelling.</p>
-
-<p>Coming back I had to go outside the crowded sap,
-and got sniped. Thoms and I had a very lively
-time of it.</p>
-
-<p>Came back for Manders’ funeral. I was very
-fond of him. General Godley read a few sentences
-with the help of my electric torch, which failed.
-Four others were buried with him. Later I saw
-a great shell strike the grave. A cemetery, or rather
-lots, growing up round us. There are dead buried
-or half buried in every gully.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, August 10, 1915.</i> <i>No. 3 Outpost.</i>
-Christo arrived with my kit and some grapes last
-night. While we were eating these, two men, one
-of whom was our cook, were hit, and he being the
-second cook, it was decided to change our quarters,
-as a lot of bullets streamed down the gully and we
-had been losing heavily. I was called up in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-night to see about some wounded. The General
-had said they had better go by boat, because of
-the difficulty of the saps, but there were no boats,
-and Manders’ death had caused confusion at the
-hospital. The doctor on the beach said he could
-not keep the wounded there any longer, because
-of the rifle fire. I woke Charlie B. We got
-200 men from the Canterbury reinforcements.
-They had been fighting without sleep since Sunday
-morning, but evacuated about 300 wounded to
-below Walker’s Ridge. There were no complaints.
-The Turks still had to be left. They called to me
-at night and at dawn. I gave them drinks, and later,
-after sunrise, shifted them into the shade, which
-made them cheerful. The General had not slept
-for three nights. The day went badly for us.
-We lost Chunuk Bair, and without it we cannot
-win the battle. The Turks have fought very
-finely, and all praise their courage. It was wonderful
-to see them charging down the hill, through the
-storm of shrapnel, under the white ghost wreaths
-of smoke. Our own men were splendid. The N.Z.
-Infantry Brigade must have ceased to exist.
-Meanwhile the condition of the wounded is indescribable.
-They lie in the sand in rows upon rows,
-their faces caked with sand and blood; one murmur
-for water; no shelter from the sun; many of them
-in saps, with men passing all the time scattering
-more dust on them. There is hardly any possibility
-of transporting them. The fire zones are desperate,
-and the saps are blocked with ammunition transport
-and mules, also whinnying for water, carrying
-food, etc. Some unwounded men almost mad
-from thirst, cursing.</p>
-
-<p>We all did what we could, but amongst so many
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-it was almost impossible.... The wounded Turks
-still here. I kept them alive with water. More
-prisoners in, report another 15,000 men at Bulair
-and a new Division, the 7th, coming against us here.
-I saw General Cooper,<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">23</a> wounded, in the afternoon,
-and got him water. His Staff had all been killed
-or wounded....</p>
-
-<p>If the Turks continue to hold Chunuk Bair and
-get up their big guns there, we are, as a force, far
-worse off than at Anzac. What has happened is
-roughly this: we have emerged from a position
-which was unsatisfactory but certain, into one
-that is uncertain but partly satisfactory. If the
-Turks have the time to dig themselves in, then we
-are worse off than before, because we shall again
-be held up, with the winter to face, and time running
-hard against us, with an extended front. The Turks
-will still have land communications, while we shall
-only have sea communications, and though we
-ourselves shall be possibly better off, because we
-shall now have a harbour, the Turks some time
-will almost certainly be able to break through,
-though possibly not able to keep what they take.
-But the men at Helles will not be freed as our
-move proposed to free them.</p>
-
-<p>I thought one of the wounded Turks had cholera
-to-day. There is very little water, and we have
-to give them water out of our own bottles. We
-have a terrible view here: lines of wounded
-creeping up from the hospital to the cemetery
-like a tide, and the cemetery is going like a
-live thing to meet the wounded. Between us
-and the sea is about 150 yards; this space is
-now empty of men because of the sniping.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-There are a number of dead mules on it, which
-smell horribly but cannot be moved. A curious
-exhibition of sniping took place just below us this
-evening, about 50 yards away. Two men were
-on the open space when a sniper started to shoot
-at them. They popped into a dry well that practically
-hid them, but he got his bullets all round
-them&mdash;in front and behind and on the sides. They
-weren’t hit. The camp watched, laughing.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, August 12, 1915.</i> <i>No. 3 Outpost.</i> At
-4.30 in the morning I got up and walked with the
-General. We went up to Rhododendron Ridge to
-have a look at the Turks. It is a steep, beautiful
-walk, and a glorious view&mdash;trees everywhere
-and cliffs. We are fastening the cliffs up, and
-camouflaging the trenches.</p>
-
-<p>I took Nikolas the miller round the observation
-post in the morning. A new Division is supposed
-to be against us, the 8th. In the afternoon walked
-into Anzac to get a drink of water as have had
-fever and a cruel thirst. The dugouts smell, and
-washing’s difficult. Anglesey gave me excellent
-water.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, August 13, 1915.</i> <i>No. 3 Outpost.</i> Nothing
-doing. Bullets singing about, but nobody
-getting hit. The heat’s ferocious, and everybody’s
-feeling ill. Macaulay’s wounded.</p>
-
-<p>Worked yesterday morning, also started on new
-dugout. In the afternoon went with Turkish papers
-to Anzac. I saw C. He said that this beach for
-cruelty had beaten the Crimea.... Savage feeling
-with the R.A.M.C....</p>
-
-<p>Streams of mules took water out in the evening
-as the sun set. I met several men with sunstroke
-coming in. I saw George Hutton, Royal Welsh
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-Fusiliers, who has become a Colonel. He had a
-hand-to-hand bayonet tussle with a Turk, in the
-last fight. Another man came up, and killed the
-Turk with his bayonet. Then, he said, the man,
-instead of pulling his bayonet out, dashed to
-another man and asked him for his bayonet,
-saying: “I have left mine in the Turk.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The battle-cries, by the way, were for the Turks
-the sonorous, deep-voiced “Allah, Allah,” and
-“Voor” (“God, God,” “Strike”); while the New
-Zealanders used often to shout: “Eggs is cooked.”
-This apparently irrelevant, unwarlike slogan had
-its origin in Egypt. There, on field days in the
-desert, when the men halted to rest, Egyptians
-would appear magically with primitive kitchens
-and the cry of “Eggs is cooked!”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Monday, August 16, 1915.</i> <i>No. 3
-Outpost.</i> Christo will spit on my razor-strop;
-otherwise he is a good servant.... Bathed with
-Charlie B. yesterday afternoon.... I don’t think
-we want Roumania in. If she has no ammunition
-and takes a very bad knock from Germany, it would
-give Germany a very strong strategic position.
-The Turks who have come in do not really seem
-very disheartened.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At about this time the Expeditionary Force
-entered upon a new phase. The agony of the struggle
-had passed its crisis. Both sides sat down grimly,
-to wait for the winter. In many ways our position
-had distinctly improved. There was more room,
-and space banished the sense of imprisonment that
-had afflicted us. The country was not as battle-scarred
-as Anzac, and walking over the heights at
-sunset was a feast of loveliness.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span></p>
-
-<p>We moved our Headquarters again, and I went
-up to a large dugout in what had been a Turkish
-fort. The troops quartered in this fort were an
-Indian Field Battery and sixty-three New Zealanders,
-all that was left of their battalion. These men
-had been in the first landing. They had, every
-one of them, had dysentery or fever, and the
-great majority were still sick and over-ripe for
-hospital.</p>
-
-<p>As time went on, and illness increased, one often
-heard men and officers say: “If we can’t hold
-the trenches with sound men, we have got to hold
-them with sick men.” When all was quiet, the sick-list
-grew daily. But when the men knew that there
-was to be an attack, they fought their sickness,
-to fight the Turk, and the stream to the hospitals
-shrank.</p>
-
-<p>I admired nothing in the war more than the
-spirit of these sixty-three New Zealanders, who
-were soon to go to their last fight. When the day’s
-work was over, and the sunset swept the sea, we
-used to lean upon the parapet and look up to where
-Chunuk Bair flamed, and talk. The great distance
-from their own country created an atmosphere
-of loneliness. This loneliness was emphasized by
-the fact that the New Zealanders rarely received
-the same recognition as the Australians in the Press,
-and many of their gallant deeds went unrecorded
-or were attributed to their greater neighbours.
-But they had a silent pride that put these things
-into proper perspective. The spirit of these men
-was unconquered and unconquerable. At night,
-when the great moon of the Dardanelles soared and
-all was quiet except the occasional whine of a
-bullet overhead, the voices of the tired men continually
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-argued the merits of the Expedition, and
-there was always one end to these discussions:
-“Well, it may all be a &mdash;&mdash; mistake, but in a war
-of this size you will have mistakes of this size, and
-it doesn’t matter a &mdash;&mdash; to us whether we are for it
-here or in France, for we came out to do one job,
-and it’s nothing to us whether we finish in one
-place or another.” The Turks were not the only
-fatalists in those days.</p>
-
-<p>We were now well supplied with water, but food
-of the right kind was a difficulty. It was very
-hard to obtain supplies for sick men, and here,
-as always, we met with the greatest kindness from
-the Navy.</p>
-
-<p>Horlick’s Malted Milk and fruit from the Islands
-did us more good than anything else. Relations
-of mine in Egypt sent me an enormous quantity
-of the first, which I was able to distribute to the
-garrison of the fort. Later, when I was invalided,
-I bequeathed the massive remnants to a friend
-who had just landed. Greedily he opened my
-stores, hoping for the good things of the world&mdash;tongues,
-potted ham and whisky&mdash;only to find a
-wilderness of Horlick’s Malted Milk.</p>
-
-<p>Our position had at last been appreciated at
-home, and we were no longer irritated, as in the
-early days, by the frivolity and fatuousness of
-London. Upon one occasion, shortly after the
-first landing, one of the illustrated papers had a
-magnificent picture entitled, if I remember right,
-“The Charge that Won Constantinople.” The picture
-was of a cavalry charge, led quite obviously
-by General Godley&mdash;and those were the days when
-we were living on the edge of a cliff, where only
-centipedes could, and did, charge, and when we
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
-were provided with some mules and my six donkeys
-for all our transport.</p>
-
-<p>There was a remarkable contrast between our
-war against the Germans and the Turks. In France
-the British soldier started fighting good-naturedly,
-and it took considerable time to work him up to
-a pitch of hatred; at Anzac the troops from the
-Dominions began their campaign with feelings of
-contempt and hatred, which gradually turned to
-respect for the Moslems. At the beginning the
-great majority of our men had naturally no knowledge
-of the enemy they were fighting. Once,
-looking down from a gun emplacement, I saw a
-number of Turks walking about, and asked why
-they had not been shot at. “Well,” said one
-man, “it seems hard on them, poor chaps. They
-aren’t doing any harm.” Then up came another:
-“Those Turks,” he said, “they walk about as if
-this place belongs to them.” I suggested that it
-was their native land. “Well,” he said, “I never
-thought of that.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Monday, August 16, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i>
-It’s curious the way the men speak of the Turks
-here. They still can’t be made to wear gas helmets,
-because they say the Turks are clean fighters and
-won’t use gas....</p>
-
-<p>It’s good to be high up in this observation post,
-above the smells, with a magnificent view of hill
-and valley. We shoot from here pretty often
-at the Turkish guns. Last night the Dardanelles
-droned on for hours. This morning the machine-guns
-on both sides were going like dentists’ drills.
-To-day it’s absolutely still, with only the whirr
-of aeroplanes overhead.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span></p>
-
-<p>Bartlett turned up to-night. He had not much
-hope.... Poor Bauchop is dead. News came to-night....
-A gallant man.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On Wednesday, August 18th, I was sent to
-G.H.Q. at Imbros, and heard a full account of
-the tragic battle down at Helles, and the condition
-of the wounded at Mudros.</p>
-
-<p>When men have gone to the limits of human
-endurance, when blood has been spilled like water,
-and the result is still unachieved, bitter and
-indiscriminate recrimination and criticism inevitably
-follow. But Anzac had one great advantage.
-Our leaders had the confidence of their men. The
-troops were able to see General Birdwood and General
-Godley every day in the front trenches with themselves,
-walking about under fire as if they had been
-on a lawn in England, and the men knew that
-their own lives were never uselessly sacrificed.</p>
-
-<p>The work of many of the doctors on the Peninsula
-was beyond all praise, but there was black rage
-against the chiefs of the R.A.M.C. at Imbros and
-in Egypt. The anger would have been still greater
-if their attitude of complacent self-sufficiency had
-been known.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Thursday, August 19, 1915.</i> <i>No. 3 Outpost.</i>
-Returned to the Peninsula with Bettinson
-and Commander Patch and Phillips, the navigator.
-When we had come up to the fort I told them
-not to show their heads at the observation post,
-as the fort did not belong to me, and I did not
-want to become unpopular. I got Perry, Captain
-of the fort, and he sat them down on the parapet,
-showing them the lines of our trenches. While
-we talked, a sniper shot at Patch, just missing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-him, and hitting the parapet beside him. They
-were very pleased, though the others said I had
-paid a man to shoot in order to give them fun.
-Perry said in a friendly way: “That’s a good
-sniper; he’s thirteen hundred yards off, so it was
-a pretty decent shot.” Then he talked to them,
-and they felt what any one must feel talking to these
-men. They gave us a lot of things, and are sending
-all sorts of things to-morrow for the men here.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, August 20, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i> Last
-night was the first cold night. This morning I
-went out with the General, who was like a bull-dog
-and a cyclone. We met Birdwood, who was there
-to see the last Australians arrive, 17th and 18th
-Brigades, in Reserve Gully. They looked a splendid
-lot, and it did one’s heart good to see them. Some
-more officers from the <i>Bacchante</i> turned up with
-stores, and special cocoa for me. I was just going off
-to find Perry when I met him. He is off out;
-there is a fight to-morrow. I gave him the cocoa.
-He was glad to have it.... The men are all tired
-out with heat and dysentery and digging and fighting.
-The General and I went up to Sazli Beit Deri.
-I didn’t think it over-safe for him.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, August 21, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i> Work
-in the morning. Was to have gone with the General
-in the afternoon, but prisoners came in to be examined.
-They said: “Curse the Germans! We
-can’t go on. There are no more men left.” One
-of them was killed by their own fire after I left.
-G. L. came to luncheon. Charlie B., he and I
-started off together, I feeling pretty bad. It was
-very hot. We went at a great pace over two
-or three ridges and across valleys, our guns
-thundering about us. Finally, I felt so bad I let
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-them go on, and came back.... The battle
-developed and the shooting was fierce and general.
-While I hunted for General Monash’s Headquarters
-I met Colonel A. J., who was rather worried. We
-had a close shave.... I left him, and had an odd
-adventure.... Went home alone through deafening
-noise, all the valleys under fire.... Got at last
-into a shallow nullah that led into a regular gully,
-and so home.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That day I saw an unforgettable sight. The
-dismounted Yeomanry attacked the Turks across
-the salt lakes of Suvla. Shrapnel burst over
-them continuously; above their heads there was
-a sea of smoke. Away to the north by Chocolate
-Hill fires broke out on the plain. The Yeomanry
-never faltered. On they came through the haze
-of smoke in two formations, columns and extended.
-Sometimes they broke into a run, but they always
-came on. It is difficult to describe the feelings
-of pride and sorrow with which we watched this
-advance, in which so many of our friends and
-relations were playing their part.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>August 21st.</i> Charlie B. and G. L. came
-back all right.... The Turks had come over
-in three waves down Chunuk Bair. The first two
-were destroyed by naval fire; the third got home
-into our trenches. Charlie B. was full of admiration
-for one old fellow whom he had seen holding up
-his finger and lecturing to the men when they
-hung back.</p>
-
-<p>Hutton is wounded again.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, August 22, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i> Last
-night, or this morning at 1 o’clock, I was called
-up. They said there were 150 Turks in one place
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-and others elsewhere, anxious to surrender. I
-took the miller, Zachariades and Kyriakidis out
-to Headquarters. Sent back Kyriakidis and the
-miller, as there was nothing doing and I wanted
-to keep Kyriakidis. Went on with Zachariades
-and guides sent by Poles to Colonel Agnew to his
-H.Q. There we lay on the ground, very cold.
-They said the Turks had wished to surrender,
-but there had been no interpreter, and they had
-been fired on. The Turks were then attacking
-heavily. Eastwood telephoned that they had fourteen
-prisoners. I went back to see if they could
-give any news about our immediate front.</p>
-
-<p>Every one worried. The &mdash;&mdash; Battalion of Australians
-had gone wrong. Nobody knew where they
-were. I sent my escort to try and find them.
-The Hampshires, who ought to have arrived, had
-not come.... They came along gradually.</p>
-
-<p>We attacked at about four in the morning. The
-Turkish fire tarried a little, then got furious. We
-went towards Monash, and met the Hampshires, very
-tired and wayworn. Bullets sang very viciously,
-and burst into flame on the rocks. There was
-a thunder of rifle fire and echoes in the gullies,
-men dropping now and then. Lower down the
-gully I found the Hampshires running like mad
-upwards to the firing line; beyond this a mixed
-crowd of men without an officer.... My guide,
-wild as a hawk, took us up a ridge. I fell over a
-dead man in the darkness and hurt my ankle.
-We had to wait. There seemed a sort of froth
-of dust on the other side of the ridge, from the
-rifle fire, and I told the escort to take us down and
-round the ridge across the valley. He admitted
-afterwards we had no chance of crossing the other
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-way. In the valley the bullets sang. We came
-to the half-nullah where I had taken such unsatisfactory
-cover in the afternoon. There we waited
-a bit, and then ran across the hundred yards to
-the next gully. Zachariades and the escort grazed.
-Found the prisoners; the other Zachariades examined
-them.... Spent bullets falling about, but the
-Greeks never winked. A surrendered Armenian
-could only tell us that the Turks were very weak
-before us. The rifle fire died away in the end,
-and we walked back at dawn, getting here by
-sunrise. Then examined more prisoners till about
-11, and slept till 1.</p>
-
-<p>The position is still indefinite. It’s on the same
-old lines, on the hills we are the eyebrows and the
-Turks are the forehead.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, August 23, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i> Perry
-is wounded, but not badly, I hope, in the arm.
-There is hardly any one in the fort. The interpreter
-question becoming very difficult. They are all
-going sick. Had a quiet evening last night, and
-read on the parapet. It will be very difficult to
-keep these old troops here during the winter. The
-Australians and New Zealanders who have been
-here a long time are weak, and will all get pneumonia.
-There was a great wind blowing and the sound
-of heavy firing. I went to Anzac to-day, and found
-men bombing fish. They got about twenty from
-one bomb, beautiful fish, half-pounders.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, August 24th.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i> General
-Shaw has gone sick to England; General Maude
-has taken his place. He commands the 13th.
-He and Harter dined here last night. Longford
-was killed, Milbanke said to be killed or wounded,
-and the Hertfordshires have suffered.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span></p>
-
-<p>This morning we talked about the winter seriously
-and of preparations to be made. I am for a hillside.
-The plain is a marsh and the valley a water-course.
-We ought to have fuel, caves for drying
-clothes, cooking, etc., and mostly this hill is made
-of dust and sand. A great mail came in last night,
-but the machine-guns got on to the men as they
-passed by the beach in the moonlight, killed some
-and wounded five men. So there are the mails lying
-now, with the machine-guns playing round them....</p>
-
-<p>I advised Lawless yesterday at Anzac to move
-out from the beach, lest the sea should rise and
-take him like a winkle from his shell.</p>
-
-<p>Saw D. to-day. He has a curious story to tell
-of the other night, when I was telephoned for. He
-said I was called three hours too late. A lot of
-Turks had come out of their trenches, some unarmed
-and some armed and some with bombs. He had
-gone out and pointed his revolver at one of them,
-who shouldered arms and stood to attention. Some
-of the Turks came right up, and the New Zealanders
-said: “Come in here, Turkey,” and began pulling
-them into the front trench. D. had feared that the
-Turks, who were about 200, might rush the trench,
-and had waved them back and finally fired his
-revolver and ordered our fellows to fire. It was
-a pity there was no one there who could talk. Later
-I saw Temperley, who said when we took Rhododendron
-Ridge there were 250 Turks on the top.
-They piled their arms, cheered us and clapped
-their hands.</p>
-
-<p>To-night I went to Chaylak Dere with the General
-and saw General Maude, and his Staff, who looked
-pretty ill, also Claude Willoughby, who was anxious
-to take the Knoll by the Apex.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span></p>
-
-<p>There was a tremendous wind, and dust-storms
-everywhere. In the gullies men were burying the
-dead, not covering them sufficiently. My eyes
-are still full of the dust and the glow of the camp-fires
-on the hillside, and the moonlight. It is
-an extraordinary country to look across&mdash;range
-after range of high hills, precipice and gully, the
-despair of Generals, the grave and oblivion of
-soldiers.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here the diary stops abruptly, and begins again
-on Saturday, September 23rd.</p>
-
-<p><i>No. 2 Outpost.</i> After writing the above I had
-a bad go of fever, and was put on to hospital ship.
-Went aboard with General Birdwood, General
-Godley and Tahu Rhodes. The Generals had come
-to inspect the New Zealand hospital ship, which
-was excellent. That night there was a very heavy
-fire. I felt some friend of mine would be hit on
-shore, and the next morning I found Charlie B.
-on board, not badly wounded, hit in the side.</p>
-
-<p>My friend Charlie B. had a temper, and was
-often angry when others were calm, but in moments
-of excitement he was calm to the point of phlegm.
-When we were off Mudros there was a great crash,
-and a jarring of the ship from end to end. I went
-into Charlie B.’s cabin and said: “Come along.
-They say we’re torpedoed. I’ll help you.” “Where
-are my slippers?” he asked. I said: “Curse
-your slippers.” “I will not be hurried by these
-Germans,” answered Charlie B., and he had the
-right of it, for we had only had a minor collision
-with another boat.</p>
-
-<p>At Mudros the majority of the sick and wounded
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
-on our hospital ship were sent to England, but my
-friend and I were luckily carried on to Egypt.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>September 23rd.</i> There was a remarkable
-man on board the <i>Manitou</i>, Major K. He had
-led 240 men into a Turkish trench; three had returned
-unwounded, but he got most of his wounded
-back with eighteen men. The Adjutant was killed
-on his back. He himself had already been wounded
-twice. Finally, he left the trench alone, and turned
-round and faced the Turks at 200 yards. They
-never fired at him, because, he said, “they admired
-me.” This officer found a D.S.O. waiting for him
-in Egypt, and has since earned the V.C. in France,
-for which he had been previously recommended
-in South Africa. He and I returned to the Dardanelles
-together while he still had a long, unhealed
-bayonet wound in his leg.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At Alexandria, fortunately for myself, I had
-relations who were working there. I went to the
-hospital of a friend. It was a great marble palace,
-surrounded by lawns and fountains, and made,
-at any rate, gorgeous within by the loves of the
-Gods, painted in the colours of the Egyptian sunset
-on the ceilings.</p>
-
-<p>The Englishwomen in Alexandria were working
-like slaves for the wounded and the sick. They
-did all that was humanly possible to make up for
-the improvidence and the callousness of the home
-medical authorities. Thanks to their untiring and
-unceasing work, day and night, these ladies saved
-great numbers of British lives.</p>
-
-<p>One day the Sultan came to inspect the hospital
-where I was a patient. For reasons of toilette,
-I should have preferred not to have been seen on
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-that occasion by His Highness, but the royal eye
-fixed itself upon my kimono, and I was taken
-aside for a few minutes’ conversation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> (<i>Subsequently written on the Peninsula.</i>)
-The Sultan said that he was very grieved about
-the Conservative party, because of the Coalition,
-I suppose, and also about Gallipoli. There I
-cordially agreed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I went up to Cairo for a few days, and found
-the city and life there very changed. Shepheard’s
-was filled with the ghosts of those who had left
-on and since April 12th.</p>
-
-<p>In Egypt the danger of the Canal had passed,
-but anxiety had not gone with it. There was
-much doubt as to what the Senoussi would be
-likely to do and what consequences their action
-would have. They had little to gain by attacking,
-but all knew that this would not necessarily deter
-them. I was in Cairo when Fathy Pasha was
-stabbed, and those in authority feared for the life
-of the Sultan.</p>
-
-<p>My friend Charlie B. and Major K. and I left
-Alexandria in brilliant moonlight. Our boat could
-do a bare twelve knots an hour. On the journey
-rockets went up at night, S.O.S. signals were sent
-us, all in vain: we were not to be seduced from our
-steady spinster’s course to Mudros. When we again
-reached that place we found that our sister-ship,
-the <i>Ramadan</i>, had been torpedoed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> (<i>Written September 23rd.</i>) General Godley
-was on the <i>Lord Nelson</i>. He had been sick for
-some time, and had been taking three days off.
-Roger Keyes desperately anxious to go up the
-Dardanelles, come what may. He is the proper
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-man to do it, but I think it’s only singeing the
-King of Spain’s beard.</p>
-
-<p>At Imbros the General, Charlie B. and I had a
-stormy row ashore and a long walk to G.H.Q.,
-where I found Willy Percy, who had been badly
-wounded, now recovering. I saw Tyrrell, G. L.
-and Dedez. The news had just come through of
-Bulgaria’s mobilization, but they did not know
-against whom. I wonder if the Bulgars will attack
-both the Serbs and the Turks. That would be
-a topsy-turvy, Balkan thing to do, and might suit
-their book. We ought to have had them in on
-our side six months ago. From G.H.Q. we came
-back to Anzac. The General has had my dugout
-kept for me in the fort, where Christo and I now
-live in solitude, for all the rest are gone. I found
-a lot of new uniforms and a magnificent cap. When
-I put this on Christo cried violently: “No, no, no,
-not until we ride into Constantinople as conquerors.”</p>
-
-<p>H.Q. are on the other side of the Turkish fort,
-in a tiny valley across which you can throw a stone.
-They have all the appearance of a more comfortable
-Pompeii, and are scarcely more alive; it is the
-quietest town I have ever seen; there lies in front
-a ridge of valley, a dip of blue sea and a good deal
-of the Anafarta plain. The first night on arriving
-the cold was bitter, also next morning. Pleurisy
-has already started. This morning the General
-went up to the Apex and behind it. He was not
-at all pleased with the fire trenches. He nearly
-drove C., the officer at that moment instructing
-the Australians, mad, first by criticizing everything&mdash;I
-thought pretty justly&mdash;and then by standing about
-in view of the Turks and not worrying about shells
-or bombs. I did my best to get him in. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-Australians were all laughing at C. for his caution
-and fussiness. Incidentally, one of the big mortar-bombs
-fell in the trench as we arrived. Hastings
-is Intelligence officer. It’s luck to have got him.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, September 24, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i>
-A lovely morning. There was a bracing chill of
-autumn and yet warm air and a smiling, southern
-look across Anafarta plain, with great hills on
-the other side, stately and formidable. Swallows
-everywhere. Up till now it’s been very silent.
-I thought that the noise of war was past, but bullets
-and shells have been whining and moaning over
-us. At Anzac yesterday morning they had about
-twenty men hit by one shell, and I saw a lot of
-mules being dragged down to the sea as I went in.
-We walked through the “Camel’s Hump” with
-Colonel Chauvel and Glasgow, on to No. 1 Outpost,
-now deserted, with the beautiful trench made by
-the six millionaires. I wonder what has happened
-to them all.</p>
-
-<p>Cazalet, of whom I had grown very fond, is dead,
-Hornby’s missing. I was very sad to hear that
-Reynell was killed on the night of the 27th, when
-we left. A fine man in every way. His men
-worshipped him....</p>
-
-<p>A lot of French transports were leaving Egypt as
-we left, maybe for Asia. We shall do nothing more
-here unless we have an overwhelming force. We
-have never done anything except with a rush.
-Directly we have touched a spade we have ceased
-to advance, and have gone on adding bricks to
-the wall which we first built and then beat our
-heads against.</p>
-
-<p>This morning we had a service in the valley,
-which is extraordinarily beautiful. The flies are
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-awful, horrible, lethargic; they stick to one like
-gum. The men in the trenches are wearing the
-head-dresses that Egypt has sent. I went with
-the General in the afternoon to Anzac. We walked
-back as shelling began. We had one whizz round
-us, and a man fell beside me on the beach. I
-heard a tremendous smack, and thought he was
-dead, and began to drag him in to cover, but he
-was all right, though a bullet had thumped him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The flies and their habits deserve to live in a
-diary of their own. They were horrible in themselves,
-and made more horrible by our circumstances
-and their habits. They lived upon the dead,
-between the trenches, and came bloated from their
-meal to fasten on the living. One day I killed
-a fly on my leg that made a splash of blood that
-half a crown would not have covered.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Monday, September 27, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2
-Outpost.</i> Last night F. dined. He said that the
-Indians could get back from Mudros if they gave
-the hospital orderly ten rupees. The hospital orderly
-would then certify them as having dysentery. Most
-of them did not want to go back, some did. When
-they were reluctant about fighting, he thought
-it was due to the fact that it was Moslems they
-were against.</p>
-
-<p>This morning the General and I went round
-Colonel Anthill’s trenches. Billy H. was there,
-as independent and casual as ever. He came
-out here as a sergeant and is now Acting Brigade
-Major. I am giving him a shirt.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Billy H. was not the only member of his family
-who was independent. His father, a well-known
-Australian doctor, on one occasion gave one of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-the chiefs of the British R.A.M.C. his sincere
-opinion about the treatment of the sick and
-wounded. After a while the chief of the R.A.M.C.
-said: “You don’t seem to understand that it is I
-who am responsible for these things.” “Oh yes, I
-do,” said the Australian doctor, “but it’s not you
-I’m getting at; it’s the fool who put you there.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Thursday, September 28, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2
-Outpost.</i> Last night I dined with S. B. and H.
-Woods. Walked back through a still, moonlit night,
-with the sea and the air just breathing. Very
-bright stars. We sent up flares. The General
-was ill this morning, so did not go out. The Greek
-interpreters have been called up for mobilization.
-This Greek mobilization ought to do some good
-about the German submarines. Last night at Anzac
-they had iron needles dropped from aeroplanes.
-I always objected to this. This morning over
-our heads there was a Taube firing hard at something
-with a machine-gun. It produces an unpleasant
-impression, I suppose because it is unfamiliar,
-to hear the noise straight above one. Two bombs
-were dropped&mdash;at least, I suppose they were. They
-fell with a progressive whistle, but not close to
-us; another big one, however, an 8-inch one,
-I believe, from the Dardanelles, fell with a tired
-and sensuous thud just over the ridge.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, September 29, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i>
-The General went out at nine this morning, P.
-and I with him. He went to the Apex and round.
-In the evening Kettle and I talked in the fort.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, October 1, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i> Yesterday
-morning General Godley, General Birdwood,
-de Crespigny and I went round the trenches, Apex,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
-Anthill’s, etc., from 9.30 until 3. A very hot day;
-I wish that Generals were a hungrier, thirstier race.
-We had some light shelling, into which the Generals
-walked without winking or reason, though they
-made us take intervals.</p>
-
-<p>G. L. has gone home. Ross turned up last night;
-glad to see him again. He said that a statement
-was to be made almost at once, and that we weren’t
-going to be here for the winter. He had a notion
-that the Italians were going to take our place....</p>
-
-<p>This morning there was a very heavy mist; the
-hills and the sea were curtained in it. My clothes
-were wringing wet. The Greek interpreters have
-been called up by the Greek mobilization and have
-gone to Imbros, some of them to try to avoid going.
-They have, says Christo, “kria kardia” (cold feet.)
-Xenophon, in a moment of enthusiasm, changed
-Turkish for Greek nationality. He now speaks
-of the days of his Ottoman nationality with a
-solemn and mournful affection, as of a golden
-age. He envies his cousin, Pericles, who was not
-so carried away. Kyriakidis is too old to go,
-thank goodness.</p>
-
-<p>Going into Anzac with the General, and glad to
-be quit of the trenches. It’s a weary business
-walking through these narrow mountain trenches,
-hearing the perpetual iteration of the same commands.
-The trenches are curiously personal. Some
-are so tidy as to be almost red-tape&mdash;the names
-of the streets, notices, etc., everywhere&mdash;and others
-slums. (<i>Later.</i>) I went into Anzac with the
-General to see General Birdwood, but he had
-gone out to see the bombardment from the sea.
-The General went off to the New Zealand hospital
-ship, <i>Mahino</i>. I went to get P. off, who was ill.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-The General and I had a very philosophical talk
-coming back. There was a radiance over Anzac;
-the sunken timbership shone against the sunset,
-with the crew half of them naked. Shells screamed
-over us, and in the Headquarters hollow parts of
-them came whimpering down.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, October 2, 1915.</i> <i>No. 2 Outpost.</i> This
-morning General Godley, Colonel Artillery Johnson
-and I went round to see the guns, all across the
-Anafarta plain. Yesterday they had been shelling
-a good deal and had killed some Gurkhas....
-We trudged about in the open, the Turkish hills
-in a semicircle round us. We kept about fifty
-yards apart.... I thought it very risky for the
-General; however, nothing happened. Have been
-meeting various school acquaintances these days....</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, October 3, 1915.</i> The General and
-Charlie B. went to Suvla. I lunched with S. B.
-and H. Woods. We played chess. A good deal
-of shelling. A fair number hit....</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, October 4, 1915.</i> Changed my dugout
-this morning with an infinity of trouble, I didn’t
-like doing it; it involved men standing on the
-roof, and if one of them had been hit I should have
-felt responsible. However, we did it all right.
-I stole some corrugated iron, and am well off. This
-morning the Turks had a fierce demonstration.
-The bullets kicked up the dust at the mouth of the
-gully. Colonel Artillery Johnson just missed being
-hit, but only one man struck. They shelled us with
-big stuff that came over tired and groaning, bursting
-with a beastly noise and torrents of smoke. General
-C. lunched. He said people sent curiously inappropriate
-stores sometimes. In the middle of the
-summer they had sent us here mufflers and cardigan
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
-jackets, and two thousand swagger canes. These
-were now at Mudros. Chauvel has taken over
-command while the General is sick. He borrowed
-all my novels.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, October 5, 1915.</i> General C.O. turned
-up. He said we are going to attack through
-Macedonia. Heaven help us! Bulgaria has been
-given twenty-four hours’ ultimatum by Russia.</p>
-
-<p>Went into Anzac, to go by boat to Suvla. Met
-C., who was at W&mdash;&mdash; (my private school). He
-said there was no boat. I went on and played
-chess, coming back through one of the most beautiful
-evenings we have had, the sea a lake of gold
-and the sky a lake of fire; but C. and I agreed we
-would not go back to Anzac or to W&mdash;&mdash;, if we
-could help it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, October 6, 1915.</i> I was going into
-Suvla with Hastings, but in the morning a Turkish
-deserter, Ahmed Ali, came in. He promised to
-show us two machine-guns, which he did (one
-German, immovable, and the other Turkish,
-movable), and seven guns which he had collected;
-this he failed to do, and also to produce three
-more comrades by firing a Turkish rifle as a
-signal.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon I had a signal from S. B. to say
-he was leaving, sick, for Egypt. I walked in to
-see, and found he had gastritis....</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, October 7, 1915.</i> <i>N.Z. and A. H.Q.</i>
-This morning we went up with Ahmed Ali, and lay
-waiting for the Turkish deserters until after six.
-One Turkish rifle shot, a thicker sound than ours,
-was fired at Kidd’s Post, but no Turks came. Ahmed
-Ali was distressed. The dawn was fine; clouds of
-fire all over the sky.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span></p>
-
-<p>The Turkish deserters and prisoners were put
-through a number of inquisitions. There was first
-of all the local officer, who had captured the Turk
-and was creditably anxious to anticipate the discoveries
-of the Intelligence. Then there was G.H.Q.,
-intensely jealous of its privileges, and then Divisional
-H.Q., waiting rather sourly for the final
-examination of the exhausted Turks.</p>
-
-<p>The Turkish private soldiers, being Moslems,
-were inspired rather with the theocratic ideals of
-comradeship than by the <i>esprit de corps</i> of nationality,
-and spoke freely. They were always well
-treated, and this probably loosened their tongues,
-but Ahmed Ali was more voluble than the majority
-of his comrades, and I append information which
-he supplied as an illustration of our examinations
-and their results. The two sides of Turkish character
-were very difficult to reconcile. On the one hand,
-we were faced in the trenches by the stubborn and
-courageous Anatolian peasant, who fought to the
-last gasp; on the other hand, in our dugouts we had
-a friendly prisoner, who would overwhelm us with
-information. “The fact is you are just a bit above
-our trenches. If only you can get your fire rather
-lower, you will be right into them, and here exactly
-is the dugout of our Captain, Riza Kiazim Bey,
-a poor, good man. You miss him all the time.
-If you will take the line of that pine-tree, you will
-get him.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Saturday, October 9, 1915.</i> <i>A. and N.Z.
-H.Q.</i> Ahmed Ali proposed coming to England
-with me when I went there.... Last night we
-had bad weather; a sort of whirlwind came down.
-It whizzed away the iron sheeting over my dugout
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-and poured in a cascade of water, soaking everything.
-Iron sheeting was flying about like razors;
-it was not possible to light candles. Finally, Ryrie
-came and lent me a torch, and I slept, wet but
-comfortable, under my cloak. Our people and
-the Turks both got excited, and heavy rifle fire
-broke out, as loud as the storm. An angry dawn,
-very windy and rifles crackling.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At this point the diary ends, for the writer was
-evacuated on the hospital ship, and did not return
-to Active Service for several months. Of all those
-who had sailed from Egypt with General Godley
-on April 12th, the General himself remained the
-only man who saw the campaign through from
-the first to the last day, with the rare exception
-of a few days of sickness.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="break xx-large">KUT<br />
-
-<span class="x-large">1916</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_188.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><i>SIFTON, PRAED &amp; CO LTD. ST JAMES’ ST. LONDON S.W.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="KUT_1916" class="break">KUT, 1916</h2>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">After</span> some months of convalescence, I was
-passed fit for Active Service. Admiral Wemyss,
-Commander-in-Chief of the East Indian Fleet, had
-done me the honour to ask me to serve under him,
-when I was well again, as his liaison and Intelligence
-officer. I accepted very gladly, for I knew how
-devoted to him were all those who served Admiral
-Wemyss. The unappreciative War Office showed
-no reluctance in dispensing with my services, but
-my orders got lost, and it was only late in February
-when I left. When my weak qualifications in the
-way of languages were put before the Department
-concerned, the brief comment was: “This
-must be an immoral man to know so many
-languages.”</p>
-
-<p>About this time the question was perpetually
-debated as to whether war should be made mainly
-on the one great front or <i>en petits paquets</i>; that is,
-practically all over the globe. “Hit your enemy
-where he is weakest,” said some, while others
-were violently in favour of striking where he was
-strongest.</p>
-
-<p>When I left England, she was in a curious state
-of official indecision. It would then have been,
-obviously, greatly to our advantage had we been
-able to get the Turks out of the war, for the collapse
-of Bulgaria would almost certainly have followed.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
-On the other hand, Russia had been promised
-Constantinople and the Church of Santa Sophia,
-and while these promises held it was idle to think
-that the Grand Turk would compromise or resign
-his position as head of Islam. So the dread in the
-minds of Englishmen of friction with Russia was
-unconsciously adding square leagues to the British
-Empire, by forcing us reluctantly to attack an
-unwilling foe. In the end, we chose both Scylla
-and Charybdis, for the Turks remained in the war,
-Russia went out. Yet we survived, victoriously.
-Allah is greatest.</p>
-
-<p>The story of this campaign is the most difficult
-to tell. The writer was in a humble position,
-but in a position of trust, and can only record what
-he saw and the things with which all men’s ears
-were too familiar in Mesopotamia.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>Monday, February 28, 1916.</i> <i>S.S.
-“Mooltan.”</i> <i>Off Marseilles.</i> The Germans are by
-way of not torpedoing our boats until Wednesday,
-but to-day is St. Leander’s Day, not a good day,
-on the sea, at this time of year. They have torpedoed
-four boats these last days near Marseilles.
-We are off the coast of Corsica, dull and unattractive....
-John Baird is here....</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, March 1, 1916.</i> <i>SS. “Mooltan.”</i> Yesterday
-J. B., Captain Cummings and I went ashore
-at Malta. We heard of the torpedoing of the
-<i>Maloja</i> off Dover. I saw Admiral Limpus, an old
-friend; then dined with Admiral de Robeck. I
-saw R. K. He still wants to go up the Dardanelles.
-This seems to me to be a war of ants and attrition,
-and no one ought to think of the glory of the Army
-or the Navy before winning the war. I do not
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
-think he cares if he is at the bottom of the sea, as
-long as the country and the Navy is covered with
-imperishable splendour. He talked about the blizzard
-as if it had been a zephyr. You can’t beat
-that sort. A lot of old Admirals rolled up. They
-had rejoined long past the age as Commanders of
-Sweepers, or in any and every kind of capacity.
-The spirit of their Elizabethan ancestors was not
-more tough or fine than theirs.... Left J. B. and
-Jack Marriott.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, March 6, 1916.</i> <i>Ismailia.</i> We landed
-without incident from the <i>Mooltan</i>. The last day,
-at luncheon, there were two tremendously loud bangs,
-the lids of hatches falling; they sounded exactly
-like cannon shot. Nobody moved at lunch, which
-I thought was good. Am staying with O’Sullivan.
-He has been eighteen years in Central Africa.
-To-night I went to the Club and found Kettle,
-alive, whom I thought dead&mdash;very glad to find it
-wasn’t true&mdash;and lots of Anzacs. Then went for a
-walk with the Admiral; I understand why men like
-serving him. Afterwards tea with General Birdwood
-and a yarn about the Peninsula. All the men from
-Anzac talk of it with something like reverence.
-I dined with General Godley. I have been doing
-work between the Navy and the Army; found them
-very stiff. Yesterday they said: “What can
-you want to know?” Also, in my humble opinion,
-what they are doing is wrong.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, March 10, 1916.</i> <i>Cairo.</i> Back again at
-Zamalek. They have sown a proper, green, English
-lawn instead of the clover which we put in for
-economy. Saw C. in the evening. Agreed that
-for the time being our Arab policy was finished....
-If the Russians go ahead and threaten Constantinople,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-the French agreement may stand. If,
-on the other hand, they cannot get beyond Trebizond,
-then Arabia will probably be a Confederation,
-perhaps nominally under the Turks. The
-Powers would probably look favourably at this,
-as it would be a return to the bad old principle.
-It would constitute one more extension of the
-life of the Turk, outside Turkey, made miserable
-to him and his subjects, during which all his legatees
-would intrigue to improve their own position.
-They would go on fermenting discontent amongst
-the subjects of the Turk, and when it did not exist
-they would create it. It is the old cynicism that this
-war has done nothing to get rid of. On the other
-hand, if annexation follows there will be two results:
-(1) The population in the annexed French and
-Russian spheres will be rigorously conscripted. I
-think we ought to do our best to prevent the Arabs
-being the subjects and victims of High Explosive
-Powers. They themselves don’t realize what it means,
-and simply look forward to the boredom of having
-to beat their swords into ploughshares and take
-up the dullness of civilization. The second result
-is that we shall have vast, conterminous frontiers
-with France and Russia, and that we shall be compelled
-to become a huge military power and adopt
-the Prussianism that we are fighting. There ought
-to be a self-denying ordinance about annexation.
-We should none of us annex.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, March 8, 1916.</i> <i>Cairo.</i> I arranged for
-Storrs to come down the Red Sea with the Commander-in-Chief.
-In the evening I saw the Sultan
-at the Palace. He prophesied that the Russians
-would be in Trebizond in eight days, and that we
-should be in Solloum in the same time; he put
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
-our arrival at Bagdad at the end of May. The
-snows were melting, he said, and the waters of the
-Tigris and Euphrates rising; the Turks might be
-cut off, and might have to surrender.... He said
-we did not understand the Moslems or what was
-their fraternity. In his hall he had two signs,
-“God and His Prophet,” and the other, “I live
-by God’s will!” Any Moslem who entered saw
-these, and knew him for his brother. He would
-rather have been a farmer, dressed as a farmer,
-and, he added, rather quaintly, sitting in his
-automobile, amongst his fields, than in his Palace
-with interviews before him all day long.</p>
-
-<p>He had accepted the Throne when it had been
-offered to him after consideration, because the good
-of Egypt was bound up in our success, and as
-Sultan he could help us. He regretted he had
-not been allowed to help more. He was loyal,
-but neither we, nor any man, could buy his honour.
-We could throw him over at any moment. So
-be it; he knew what his honour and individual
-dignity demanded. General Maxwell, he said,
-understood the Moslems. Even the Duke of Connaught
-could hardly have done better in Egypt.
-He, the Sultan, had deplored Gallipoli, both before
-and after. We English were <i>bons enfants</i>, but
-did not understand the East. He gave many
-messages to his friends, especially General Birdwood.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, March 9, 1916.</i> <i>Cairo.</i> Saw Jaafar
-Pasha, a prisoner. He was wounded by a sword-thrust
-in the arm. They had had a good old-fashioned
-m&ecirc;l&eacute;e. He was just off shopping, taking
-his captivity with great philosophy. It was beautiful
-weather. The Bougainvillea was purple and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-scarlet all over the house. It looked as fairylike
-as a Japanese dwelling.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, March 10, 1916.</i> <i>Cairo.</i> The Admiral
-came up on Thursday night. I lunched with
-General Maxwell. Bron came. He said his leg
-troubled him flying, but he loved it. I saw his
-Colonel, who told me that he was worried, as if
-he fell in the desert he was done, as he could
-not walk great distances like the others, with his
-wooden leg.</p>
-
-<p>I have got a “Who’s Who,” for Arabia, but I
-want a “Where’s Where.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, March 11, 1916.</i> <i>Ismailia.</i> The Australians
-have been having high old times in
-Cairo. We have to pay for their extraordinarily
-fine fighting qualities, but it’s a pity that they
-can’t be more quiet.... They admire General
-Birdwood, who’s got a difficult job. We owed a
-lot to their initiative at Anzac, when all their
-officers were killed. Salutes, after all, matter less
-than fighting. In peace they resent General
-Godley’s discipline, and that’s natural, but it’s
-inevitable, and they know it, when it comes to
-fighting. Charlie Bentinck came down with us,
-going home; I hope he gets there all right.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, March 14, 1916.</i> <i>Ismailia.</i> Maxwell
-is now definitely recalled.... It’s a pity to take
-away the man whose name is everything in Egypt.
-On Saturday I dined with the Admiral and Potts
-of the Khedive’s yacht. Like Jimmy Watson, he
-was very fond of his ex-Chief. Sunday I lunched
-with the Admiral and General Murray, and saw my
-old friend Tyrrell. Yesterday the Admiral left with
-Philip Neville for Solloum. I should have liked
-to have been in that show.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span></p>
-
-<p>Here are criticisms and indescretions, which are
-better left lying at the bottom of a drawer....</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>All are very sad about Desmond Fitzgerald’s
-death. There was no one quite like him. He
-would have played a great part. He was extraordinarily
-fine, too fine to be a type, though he
-was a type, but not of these times. I shall never
-forget him during the Retreat, always calm and
-always cheerful. Bron came, and we had a long
-talk.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, March 15, 1916.</i> <i>Cairo.</i> This morning
-I saw Jaafar Pasha for a minute. He is
-becoming less and less a prisoner. Was off to shop,
-and said that he heard that Cairo was a nice town.
-He was unmoved by the war. I said to M. that the
-war ought to prevent one’s pulses ever fluttering
-again. M. said to me: “Yes, unless it makes
-them flutter for ever.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here there followed naval, strategical, political
-and commercial considerations which are irrelevant
-to this published diary.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> <i>March 15, 1916.</i> Went to the citadel
-to see the old Sheikh. It was a lovely day of heat,
-fresh winds, clear air and flowers everywhere.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, March 22, 1916.</i> <i>Ismailia.</i> I have
-neglected my diary. Yesterday I went and said
-good-bye to General Birdwood. General Godley,
-he and everybody went to see Maxwell off. It
-was a very remarkable demonstration; all were
-there&mdash;red hats and tarbouches, blue gowns and
-the khaki of the private soldier. We were all
-downhearted at his going.</p>
-
-<p>To-day I rode with Temperley through the groves
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
-of Ismailia, out by the lagoon. The desert was
-in splendid form. The Australians were bathing
-everywhere and French sailors were paddling. I
-lunched with General Russell.... I dined with
-General Godley. All the talk was of Mesopotamia.
-Some one said at dinner that no securely beleaguered
-force had ever cut its way out. I could only think
-of Xenophon, who, General Gwynne said, quite
-truly, was not beleaguered, and also of Plevna,
-that didn’t get out.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, March 26, 1916.</i> <i>Cairo.</i> This morning
-we leave for Mesopotamia, by the Viceroy’s train.
-He arrived yesterday, having been shot at by a
-torpedo on the way. The soldiers are becoming
-discontented. Their pay is four months due, and
-when they get it they are paid in threepenny bits
-for which they only receive twopence in exchange.
-Hence their irritation. Tommy Howard’s brigade has
-nearly all got commissions. There are now forty-seven
-officers and only enough soldiers left for their
-servants. Saw Uncle Bob G., who reminded me
-of Sayid Talib, the Lion of Mesopotamia and the
-terror of the Turks, with whom on one occasion I
-travelled from Constantinople. Sayid Talib once
-wanted to get rid of a very good Vali of Basrah.
-He went round to all the keepers of hashish dens
-and infamous houses and got them to draw up
-a petition: “We, the undersigned, hear with
-anguish that our beloved Vali is to be removed by
-the Merciful Government. He is a good man, has
-been just to all, and most just to us, who now implore
-the mercy of the Sublime Porte.” Constantinople
-was in a virtuous mood. The experts of Basrah
-were summoned. They expressed their horror at
-the support which the Vali was receiving from all
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
-the worst elements in the town. The Vali was
-removed. Sayid Talib scored. He was on our
-side, and remained in Basrah, but we made him a
-prisoner and sent him to India, I believe.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, March 27, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Euryalus.</i>”
-<i>Gulf of Suez.</i> Yesterday, Sunday, the Prince of
-Wales, the Viceroy, General Birdwood and the
-High Commissioner travelled down to Ismailia.
-Storrs and I were also of the company. General
-Godley was at the station to meet the Prince, and
-a lot of others.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, March 28, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S.</i> “<i>Euryalus.”</i> I
-wonder what situation we shall find in Mesopotamia.
-Willcocks in Cairo said that the Arabs were feeding
-Townshend’s people. “In the old days,” he said,
-“Elijah was fed by the ravens&mdash;that is, ’orab,’
-which means Arabs as well as ravens.” That was
-how he explained that miracle.</p>
-
-<p>It’s getting very hot. I am working at Hindustani.
-The Staff here are all first class. It’s luck
-to find Colonel de Sausmarez, who was on the
-<i>Bacchante</i>, now promoted.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, March 30, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Euryalus.”</i>
-Took a bad fall down the ladder. Storrs sleeps
-in a casemate. The only ventilation is through a
-gun whose breech has now been closed. Have
-been writing pr&eacute;cis and political notes. We are
-bound to make mistakes in dealing with the Arabs,
-but they need not matter if they are passive mistakes;
-they can be corrected. If they are active,
-they are much harder to remedy.... Our people
-divide the world into two categories. The Ulstermen,
-the Serbs and the Portuguese are good, loyal
-people, because they are supposed to put our interests
-first, whereas the Bulgars, the Arabs, etc.,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
-are beastly traitors because sometimes a thought of
-self-interest crosses their minds.</p>
-
-<p>It’s raining hard this morning and it’s cooler.
-Hope to get into the trenches at Aden, but doubt
-there being time. Am learning Hindustani. A
-number of the same words mean different things.
-<i>Kal</i> means yesterday or to-morrow, i.e. one day
-distant; but on the other hand <i>parson</i> means the
-day after to-morrow or the day before yesterday.
-This must occasionally make muddles about
-appointments.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, March 31, 1916.</i> <i>Aden.</i> Got up early
-this morning and went over to the Northbrook.
-The Turks at Lahej are being bombarded. The
-Admiral’s going part of the way to see it. Six
-seaplanes off. A heavy, hot, grey day. The Turks
-are fighting well. There is no ill-will here. They
-say the Turk is a member of the club, but has not
-been in it lately. We are feeding the Turks and
-they feed us. Caravans come and go as usual.
-There are great difficulties in the way of blockade.
-We can’t hit our enemies without also hitting our
-friends, and yet if we do nothing our prestige suffers.</p>
-
-<p>A conference this morning. Fifty years ago
-Colonel Pelly said that the Turks were like the
-Thirty-nine Articles; every one accepts them, but
-nobody remembers them or what they are. India
-seems extremely apathetic about Aden. We left
-early this morning. Last night I saw Colonel
-Jacob, who has been twelve years at Aden and in
-the hinterland. In the evening I went with the
-Brigadier to the Turkish prisoners. They said they
-had surrendered because life was impossible in the
-Yemen. They had been six to seven years without
-pay, had had bad food and perpetual fighting.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
-Then they had been put on a ship to go back to
-their families, then taken off again and sent to
-fight us. Human nature could not stand it, they
-said. They liked their Commander, Said Pasha,
-who was good to the soldiers, but they complained
-of their non-commissioned officers....</p>
-
-<p>We seem to be perpetually changing our officers
-here. This C.O. is the fifth in a short time. Jacob
-is the only man who talks Arabic, and there is not
-a soul who talks Turkish. Wrote to Egypt to get
-an interpreter.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, April 2, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Euryalus.”</i> We
-are steaming through a grey-black gloom, like an
-English autumn afternoon, only the thermometer
-is 92 and there are no rooks cawing. There are
-lowering skies everywhere. Talked about Arabia
-yesterday with the Admiral.</p>
-
-<p>Have been re-reading Whigan’s <i>Persia</i> and other
-Gulf books. Wish that I had George Lloyd’s
-memoranda. The present position is unsatisfactory.
-We have policed and lighted and pacified this
-Gulf for a hundred years, and we are entitled to a
-more definite status. We ought to have Bunder
-Abbas. Otherwise, if the Russians come down
-the Gulf to Bunder Abbas, they hold the neck of
-the bottle of the Persian Gulf and we shall be
-corked in our own bottle; they would be on the
-flank of India; they would be fed by a railway,
-while our large naval station would be cooking
-away in Elphinstone’s Inlet (which is only another
-name for a slow process of frying), where we should
-have battle casualties in peace-time from the heat.
-Elphinstone’s Inlet to Bushire is a poor Wei-hai-wei
-to a first-rate Port Arthur. Then, if the Russians
-come down, any defensive measures which we may
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-be forced into taking will appear aggressive when
-the Russians are on the spot. They would not
-appear aggressive now. We have a prescriptive
-right to Bunder Abbas, which we ought to strengthen.
-It doesn’t involve territorial annexations.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, April 3, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Euryalus.”</i> Last
-night I had a long and rather acrimonious argument
-with &mdash;&mdash; and &mdash;&mdash; on the question of Arab policy.
-They said: “You must punish the Arabs if they
-don’t come in on our side.” I said: “You have
-no means of punishing them. All you can do is
-to antagonize them.”</p>
-
-<p>There is news of a Zeppelin raid on London.
-Everybody is anxious.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, April 4, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Euryalus.”</i>
-<i>Muskat.</i> Last night I had my fourth Hindustani
-lesson, a very easy one. Jack Marriott is extraordinarily
-quick at languages. My teacher said
-that his affianced wife is fourteen and that he kept
-her in a cage at Bushire. Talked with the Admiral
-and Captain Burmester....</p>
-
-<p>To-day is a wild day, Arabia crouching, yellow
-like a lion, in a sand-storm, and spray and sand
-flying in layers on the ship. All the land is lurid
-and the sea foaming and the sky black. If only
-there had been some sharks at sea and lions on
-shore, it would have been a perfect picture. This
-afternoon it cleared and became beautiful. We
-passed a desolate coast with no sign of life, where
-it looked as if a man would fry in half an hour
-in summer. A few dhows on the sea were all we
-saw. My last journey here came back vividly
-and the time at Bahrein after we were wrecked
-in the <i>Africa</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Wireless came into Basrah to say the spring
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-offensive was beginning. We put into Muskat. I
-found that the Resident, Colonel Ducat, was a
-neighbour. There has been a row at Chahbar,
-and the <i>Philomel</i>, which we expected to find here,
-has left, telegraphed for this morning. The news
-here is that the tribes intend to attack Muskat,
-but it’s not believed. We went ashore this evening,
-and a Beluchi boy took the Admiral and all of us
-round. The people who had not been to the East
-before were enchanted by the quiet, the scent of
-musk, and the evening behind the Sultan’s Palace.
-Last time I was here was on Christmas Day, with
-Leland Buxton. I was very sick, carrying a huge
-bag of Maria Teresa dollars. The Portuguese forts
-and the names of the ships that come here, painted
-in huge white letters on the cliffs, are the remarkable
-things about the place. There is a sort of a silent
-roll-call of the ships. The men like writing their
-names up in white letters. Matrah is round the
-corner, and looks bigger than Muskat. You have got
-to get to it by boat. Muskat itself is completely cut
-off. I saw a straight-looking Arab from Asir who
-had been with the Turks and had information,
-and asked the Agent to send him on to Aden.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, April 5, 1916.</i> <i>Muskat.</i> Came
-ashore early this morning. Then came the Admiral
-and his Staff, and we went to the Sultan’s house.
-He had about thirty followers. We drank sherbet
-like scented lip-salve, and the sailors didn’t like it.
-The Admiral and the Sultan talked. Later the
-Sultan came here with seven A.D.C.’s and a nephew
-who talked very good English which he had learned
-at Harrow. The Sultan has got a lot of rather
-nice-looking little horses and a monstrous goat
-with ears that are about 3 feet long. The Sultan
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-gets 5 per cent. of the customs of this place. Jack
-Marriott went to see a prisoner in the Portuguese
-fort. He was Sheikh of a village in which a murder
-had been committed. They had failed to catch
-the murderer, and so the Sheikh had to suffer imprisonment
-himself. Not a bad plan, really. It’s
-the old Anglo-Saxon idea. That sort of thing
-discourages men from pushing for power and makes
-them very energetic, for their own sakes, when
-they have power. Everything seems quiet in the
-hinterland. The people here are Bunyas, who cheat
-the Sultan, slim aristocratic Arabs, and gorilla-like
-negroes. They are mostly armed to the teeth.
-Sheets of rain fell this afternoon.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, April 6, 1916.</i> <i>Persian Gulf.</i> We left
-early this morning. Some very fine king-fish were
-brought aboard, about 4 feet long. Great heat.
-We had an excellent telegram about Gorringe’s
-offensive in Mesopotamia; the Turks driven back.
-The Admiral in great spirits. I am tremendously
-glad, because I have always felt that we were
-coming to a tragedy. I remember the telegram read
-out to us at Anzac and the cheers&mdash;“The Turks
-are beaten! The way lies open to Bagdad!”&mdash;and
-our enthusiasm and the disappointment after it,
-and I did not think this would succeed. Hanna,
-on the left bank of the Tigris, is reported taken.
-That ought to open Sinn on the right bank.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, April 7, 1916.</i> <i>Persian Gulf.</i>... To-day
-we were told by wireless telegram that we had
-a slave of the Sultan’s on board. Quite true; so
-we have.... He said he had been with the
-Sultan eight years and that if he were sent back
-he feared for his throat. He drew his finger across
-it very tenderly, and everybody roared with laughter.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
-I do not see that the Sultan has a leg to stand
-on. If the man went to him eight years ago,
-he went either of his own free will, in which case
-he can leave, or he was sold, and we do not
-recognize anything except bondage, no traffic in
-slavery.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Philomel’s</i> prisoners have been transferred
-to us. One of them looks like an old nobleman.
-His name is Shah Dulla. He held up Chahbar
-for 4,000 rupees, like other old noblemen, and
-was captured with seven bearded patriarchs by
-the <i>Philomel</i> four days ago. They are dignified
-people.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, April 8, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Euryalus.”</i>
-<i>Bushire.</i> A very cold morning with a clear sky.
-It’s a nuisance having lost all my coats. Here I
-leave Edward. I hope he will be all right. He is
-to follow by the first opportunity with the other
-servants and my kit. McKay, who is a jolly
-fellow, will look after him. The news this morning
-is that we have again improved our position and have
-taken the second Turkish line. The Russians are
-advancing. There was a fight here a couple of
-nights ago. Our Agent, his brother and four sepoys
-were killed last night at Lingah.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, April 9, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Imogene.”</i>
-<i>Shat-el-Arab.</i> Yesterday Commodore Wake came
-aboard.... He said that an officer had put land
-mines down, and that some time after this officer
-had been recalled. People in Bushire naturally
-wanted him either to remove or to mark his land
-mines, but he said that they were all right, as they
-were only exploded by electricity. The following
-night, however, there were loud explosions when
-dogs gambolled over these mines, so people still
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-walk like Agag, and walking is not a popular form
-of exercise round Bushire. To-day we are in a
-brown waste of waters that I remember well, a
-dismal hinterland to a future Egypt. We passed
-a hospital ship early this morning, in these
-yellow shallow waters. It reminded me of the
-Dardanelles, but there it was much better, for
-there the sea and sky were beautiful and the
-climate, by comparison, excellent.</p>
-
-<p>Ages ago, in Egypt, Machel used to talk of ghosts.
-This ship conjures them up all right&mdash;trips with
-Sir Nicholas and the children to the island and
-many other people, some of them still in Constantinople.
-Sir Nicholas would have been surprised
-if he could have seen the name of his yacht written
-on the rocks at Muskat, and, as the Admiral said,
-he would not have liked any one else in command
-of his yacht, here or in any other waters. Townshend
-has telegraphed some time ago to say he
-could only hold out until April 1st. Here we are
-at the 9th.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, April 10, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Imogene.”</i>
-<i>Kurna.</i> Yesterday we arrived at Basra. It looked
-very beautiful and green, but we only had a short
-time. Everything seemed in a state of great confusion.
-Two Generals came aboard. They said
-we had taken two out of three lines of the trenches
-that we had got to take in the first attack. Then
-our men had been checked. We ought to have
-taken the third line last night. The Sinn position
-still remains to be taken. If we had been successful
-last night (and we ought to have heard this morning),
-we have got a chance of relieving Townshend. If
-not, I am afraid there is not much chance....
-The doctors are being pretty hotly criticized, also
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-the Royal Indian Marine, though how they can
-be expected to know this river I can’t see. Apparently
-they asked for iron barges from India and
-were given wooden barges that the banks and the
-current continually break. They asked here for
-one type of river-craft from home, and were told
-they must have another. Lynch out here says
-that Lynch in London has never been consulted,
-though they deny this at home. The troops have
-only two days’ supplies. The soldiers in Basra
-were cheerful; the wounded also, for the first time,
-were cheerful, because they thought it had been
-worth it and that we are going to succeed....</p>
-
-<p>There is a great storm getting up. The river’s
-a vast rolling flood of yellow water, palm-trees
-beyond and again beyond that, marshes and glimpses
-of a skeleton land, with marsh Arabs always in
-the background, like ghouls, swarming on every
-battlefield, killing and robbing the wounded on
-both sides. The Turks, they say in Basra, had
-said: “Let us both have a truce and go for the
-Arabs and then we can turn to and fight again.”
-Nureddin, the Turkish Commander-in-Chief, is supposed
-to have been at Harrow with Townshend.
-I should think that it was really a <i>pension</i> at
-Lausanne. I saw P. Z. Cox yesterday. He and
-Lady Cox were very good to me years ago in the
-Gulf.... The Russians have not yet met any
-considerable Turkish force. If we do not relieve
-Townshend, and have to fall back, we shall be
-attacked by all the Arabs, who are well armed.
-They say a Royal Commission is being sent to
-India because at home they anticipate a failure
-here and want a scapegoat, which they have already
-provided in Nixon.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span></p>
-
-<p>I dined with Gertrude Bell, Millborrow, whom
-I had last seen at Bahrein, and Wilson, whom I
-had known before. We transferred here at Kurna
-from the <i>Imogene</i> on to a tiny Admiralty gunboat,
-as usual leaving all our kit. Dick Bevan
-says that he has a vision of perpetual landings
-and expeditions until we arrive in China, with
-always the same troubles, too few mules, too many
-A.P.M.’s, etc. This is a war threshold to conjure
-up dreams and visions. It would be hard to find
-one more tragic. It’s a curious fate that sends
-us a second time, unprepared, to one of the richest
-countries in the world that, like Egypt, has combined
-fertility and desert, with a stream controlling its
-future.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, April 11, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Snakefly.”</i>
-Monday night we got off the <i>Imogene</i> on to the
-<i>Snakefly</i>, one of the twelve Admiralty gunboats
-built for this expedition. The Admiralty don’t
-seem able to stop building them, now they’ve
-started. They were sent out here in pieces, then
-put together. One has been taken by the Turks.<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">24</a>
-The <i>Snakefly</i> draws 2 feet 9 inches only. Webster
-is her captain. We slept on deck all right. We
-saw practically no traffic at first on the river, and
-could not understand why we did not pass boats
-coming back empty for supplies. We passed many
-Indian troops, mainly on the left bank of the river;
-also isolated stations with telegraph-masters as chiefs.
-These men go out two or four miles into the desert
-with only a couple of rifles. These small posts
-contain the maximum of boredom and anxiety,
-because there is nothing to do, and if any force of
-Arabs came along they would be done in. An
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-enterprising Indian sentry fired at us in the night.
-We passed dour, scowling Arabs in villages and
-groups on the bank with flocks and herds, buffaloes
-and goats, men more savage than the Philistines,
-but armed with rifles. An almost endless column
-of our cavalry wound its way through marsh and
-desert, over the green grass, and here and there
-fires sent up their smoke where meals were cooked.
-It struck me as more curious than the Australians
-round the Pyramids. At 6 p.m. we reached Ali
-Gharbi. I talked to an officer of the &mdash;th Punjabis.
-They were all very depressed at the failure of Aylmer’s
-attack on the 8th March.... Townshend was the
-man they swore by. The 4th Devons, where John
-Kennaway is, are said to be at the front. There
-are flies that bite like bulldogs everywhere. Each
-night we have had lightning over towards Kut like
-a sort of malignant and fantastic Star of Bethlehem
-to light us on.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, April 12, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Snakefly.”</i>
-Last night the weather broke. The Admiral’s
-got a cabin about 6 feet long by 2-1/2 across. He
-put his head out of the window and said: “Would
-any of you fellows like to come in?” It was a
-beastly night. Our clothes are the thinnest tropical
-khaki, and they tear like a woman’s veil. There
-was no shelter. I got into a conning-tower, like
-a telescope, but finally walked about. There
-seemed to be people’s faces everywhere on deck,
-though there was a lot of water. I kept my
-dictionary dry. Now it’s fine and bright. At
-seven this morning, when I had gone below, a Boy
-Scout of eighteen, one of the crew, went overboard.
-He was rescued almost at once, and swam lightly
-and gallantly. He was lucky. To-day is the 12th,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
-my lucky day, but I have only got one extra shirt
-and one blanket, and a Turkish dictionary for a
-pillow....</p>
-
-<p>Everything seems greater and greater chaos....
-We started this campaign against one of the great
-military Powers of the world with two brigades of
-Indians, who ought not to have been used at all,
-if it could have been avoided, on this ground,
-which to them is holy. We started with the wrong
-type of boat, and also Indian Generals who looked
-on the expedition as a frontier campaign.... If
-we fail to relieve Townshend, I suppose the best
-thing to do would be to cut our losses and retire
-to Kurna and hold that line, but if we do that the
-Turks can fortify the river and make it impregnable.
-We ran on to the bank last night, and stayed there.
-We spent an uncomfortable wet night, but got off
-all right this morning. There was an encampment
-close by. We couldn’t make out if they were
-friends or enemies; the Admiral didn’t bother.
-We all want a clean pair of socks and fewer
-mosquitoes.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, April 13, 1916.</i> <i>Near Sanayat.</i> It
-was at noon yesterday that we arrived at Ali
-Gharbi. The Admiral saw General Lake. We are
-cruelly handicapped by lacking transport and not
-being able to get it. In the afternoon I crossed
-the river and saw General Gilman at Felahiya. I
-was very glad to see him again. He had been on
-our left with the 13th Division at Anafarta. One
-of the best men I have met. We had a long talk....
-Then I came back with Dick Bevan. What’s
-happened is this: we got in such a state about
-Townshend being able to hold out till the end of
-January that we rushed up troops and attacked
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-without the possibility of making preparation for
-the wounded, ambulances, etc., and we failed....
-Townshend has got 5,000 Arabs with him,
-and the <i>bouches inutiles</i> have told enormously,
-but T. has apparently promised these people his
-protection and nothing will make him send them
-away, and he’s right. The strain on the men with
-him has been very great indeed; some of the older
-men are very sick. No one thinks that he’s got
-a dog’s chance of getting out. The &mdash;th were badly
-cut up at Anafarta, but they kept their keenness,
-and at the beginning of this show their officers
-could not keep them back, <i>on the 8th of March</i>. The
-fight on the 9th of April was very bad luck. All
-the men were very cold and tired. A hot cup of
-coffee might have made the whole difference....
-We shall have to face a lot of trouble with the Arabs
-and look out for Nasryah, which could be cut off
-by marsh Arabs from Basra way and turned into
-another Kut. Most people think that the line that
-we ought to defend is Nasryah&mdash;Amara&mdash;Ahwaz.
-The Admiral’s going to Nasryah. I suggested his
-taking General Gillman, and he is off too. Every one
-is raging against the economy of India, especially
-a man called Meyer, the Treasury member for the
-Council of India. He is said to have refused to
-give any help. In this flat land they need observation
-balloons; none forthcoming. They asked for
-transport from May to Christmas, and then got one
-launch....</p>
-
-<p>I saw the Admiral in the evening. He was
-cheered after talking to General Gorringe. We
-walked by the river. We met some of the Black
-Watch&mdash;clean, smart men. There was a great
-bridge of boats, without rails, swaying and tossing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-in the hurricane and covered with driven foam
-from the raging yellow water. Across this there
-lurched Madrassis, Sudanese, terrified cavalry horses,
-mules that seemed to think that there was only
-water on one side, and that they would be on dry
-land if they jumped off on the other. We are
-out of range, but shelling is going on and one can
-fix points in the landscape by bursts. The eternal
-flatness is depressing. This morning I saw Leachman,
-the political officer. He has had a lot of
-adventures in Arabia&mdash;a very good fellow, whom
-everybody likes, which is rare.... He was
-against our going farther back than Sheikh Saad,
-both from the point of view of strategy and also
-because it would be playing a low game on our
-own friendlies. The Arabs on the bank between
-Sheikh Saad and Ali Gharbi are, apparently, past
-praying for.</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon I went out with the Admiral....
-Townshend has been telegraphing to-day. His men
-are dying of starvation. The whole situation is
-pitiful. Here the troops have been on half rations
-for some time. Our boats are many, but insufficient.
-They are of every kind, from an Irawaddy steamer
-to the steamers of the Gordon Relief Expedition
-and L.C.C. boats. We met some of the 6th Devons,
-and I asked them if the way the Admiral was going
-was safe. They said: “We be strangers here zur,”
-as if they were Exeter men in Taunton....
-The rain is making the relief practically impossible.
-Last night there was heavy firing and we advanced
-2,000 yards, but the main positions are
-still untaken. To-night I met Percy Herbert,
-very useful, as my tropical khaki is coming to
-pieces.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, April 14, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Stonefly.”</i> ...
-A furious wind got up and drove mountains of yellow
-water before it, against the stream. The skies
-were black. Captain Nunn, the Senior Naval
-Officer, wanted to go to Sheikh Saad. I wanted
-to go to H.Q. to see Colonel Beach, Chief of the
-Intelligence, who has written to me to come. We
-got off with difficulty into the stream. It was like
-a monstrous snake, heaving and coiling. We only
-drew 3 feet and we were very top-heavy with
-iron, and I thought we were bound to turn over.
-I said so to Singleton, the captain, who said: “I
-quite agree. It serves them d&mdash;&mdash;d well right if we
-do, for sending us out in this weather.” This
-thought pleased him, though it did not satisfy
-me. Nunn said it was the worst weather he had
-seen in the year. I got off at Wadi thankfully,
-and went to see Beach, but it was not all over yet.
-He wanted to go and see how the bridge of boats
-was standing the strain. The end of the bridge
-of boats had been removed to let the steamers
-through, though there were none passing. It was
-twisting like an eel trying to get free, and going up
-and down like a moving staircase in agony. There
-was foam and gloom and strain and fury and the
-screaming of the timber, but the bridge held. The
-engineers were calmly smoking their pipes at the
-end, wondering in a detached way if it would hold.
-I prefer fighting any day to this sort of thing. Then
-I went walking with Beach. He asked me to be
-ready in case Townshend wanted me. I dined with
-General Lake, General Money, Williams and Dent;
-capital fellows. Had an interesting time after
-dinner. The future is doubtful. If we have to
-retire, we shall have a double loss of prestige, Kut
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
-gone and our own retreat. When we want to
-advance later, we shall find all our present positions
-fortified against us. A retreat will also involve
-the abandonment of our friendlies. This campaign
-has taught me why we have been called <i>perfide
-Albion</i>. It’s very simple. We embark upon a
-campaign without any forethought at all. Then,
-naturally we get into extreme difficulties. After
-that, we talk to the natives, telling them quite
-truthfully that we have got magnificent principles
-of truth, justice, tolerance, etc., that where the
-British Raj is all creeds are free. They like these
-principles so much that they forget to count our
-guns. Then, principles or no principles, we have
-got to retreat before a vastly superior force, and the
-people who have come in with us get strafed.
-Then they all say “<i>perfide Albion</i>,” though it’s
-really nobody’s fault&mdash;sometimes not even the
-fault of the Government.</p>
-
-<p>I slept on the <i>Malamir</i>, on deck. It was very
-wet in the night, but I kept fairly dry.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, April 15, 1916.</i> “<i>Malamir.</i>” I went
-and saw the Turkish prisoners in one of the most
-desolate camps on earth; some Albanians amongst
-them. They said there were munition factories
-in Bagdad, that 4,000 Turks had gone to
-Persia&mdash;they did not know if it was to the oil-field
-at Basra or against the Russians. It’s Basra and
-the oil-field that are important to us.</p>
-
-<p>Lunched aboard the <i>Malamir</i>. General Lake
-was very kind. I went off on an Irawaddy steamer,
-a “P” boat. The Captain told appalling stories
-of the wounded on board after Ctesiphon. It
-took them seventeen days to Amara, which sounds
-incredible. They had to turn back three times at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-Wadi and return to Kut, because they were heavily
-attacked at Wadi by Kurds. General Nixon had
-to turn back too. The transport was so overcrowded
-that men were pushed overboard. I met
-an Indian political officer on board ... (and again)....
-He said one thing to me that was not indiscreet.
-Once at Abazai he had seen a Pathan
-wrestling. Before he wrestled he held up his
-hands, and cried an invocation: “Dynamis”
-(Might). He thought it must have come from the
-days of Alexander. He had been in the Dujaila
-fight on March 8th, and talked about it, unhappily.
-He also said that the corruption of the Babus at
-Basra was awful.</p>
-
-<p>On board our ship there were piles of bread without
-any covering, but a swarming deposit of flies;
-good for everybody’s stomach.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, April 16, 1916.</i> Half a day’s food is
-being dropped daily by aeroplanes in Kut....
-I met a very jolly Irish officer, a V.C. He said
-that when the war broke out he, and many like
-himself, saw the Mohammedan difficulty. They had
-themselves been ready to refuse to fight against
-Ulster; why should Indians fight the Turks?
-We were fighting for our own lives, but the quarrel
-did not really concern Indians. They might have
-been expected to be spectators. Then the orders
-came for them to go to France. They called up
-the Indian officers and said to them: “Germany
-has declared war, and on second thoughts, a Jehad.
-She quarrelled with England first and then pretended
-she was fighting for Islam.” The Indian officers
-agreed, and came along readily. They were then
-ordered to Mesopotamia. They again called upon
-the Indian officers, who said: “We would sooner
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-go anywhere else in the world, but we will go, and
-we will not let the regiment down.” They were
-told to go to Bagdad, and were willing to go, though
-their frame of mind was the same.... Then I
-went off to interrogate prisoners. It was tremendously
-hot. The prisoners were under a guard of
-Indians, and I found it hard to make the Indians
-understand my few words of Hindustani. The
-prisoners’ morale seemed good. They said they
-were not tired of the war and that they did not
-think of disobeying orders, for that, they said,
-would be awful and would make chaos. They
-thought that what pleased God was going to happen,
-and they were inclined to believe that that would
-be victory for the Turks. They said twenty-seven
-guns had come up in the last eight days, 17 cm.
-and 20 cm. If that’s the case, they can shell
-us out of here. I told the Admiral, and in the
-evening we walked. We met General Gorringe ...
-I am tremendously sorry for these men here.
-Last year the God of battles was on our side. We
-ought not to have won, by any law of odds or
-strategy, at Shaiba, at Ctesiphon, or Nasryah, but
-we did. They won against everything, and now
-the luck has turned. They have brought Indian
-troops to fight on holy soil for things that mean
-nothing to them. They have been hopelessly outnumbered
-by the Turks. They have been starved
-of everything, from food to letters, not to speak
-of high explosives. They have been through the
-most ghastly heat and the most cruel cold, and they
-are still cheerful. I have never seen a more friendly
-lot than these men here. They have always got
-something cheerful to say when you meet them.
-The weather has changed and it’s very fine, with a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
-beautiful wind and clear skies, but there are no
-scents, like in Gallipoli, of thyme and myrtle.
-It’s a limitless bare plain, green and sometimes
-brown mud, covered by an amazing mixture of
-men and creatures: horses and mules and buffaloes,
-Highlanders, Soudanese and Devons, Arabs and
-Babus. Camp fires spring up, somehow, at night
-by magic. We generally have a bombardment
-most days, but no shells round us.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, April 17, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Waterfly.”</i>
-Harris is Captain. While we were having breakfast
-this morning a German aeroplane flew over and
-bombed us ineffectually. Bombs fell a couple of
-hundred yards away in camp, not doing any
-damage, but they’ll get us sometime, as we are a
-fine target, three boats together.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, April 18, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Waterfly.”</i>
-Last night the Admiral went to Amara. He left
-Jack Marriott, Philip Neville, Dick Bevan and me
-here. There was no work down there and a lot
-here. Last night we did well, took about 250
-prisoners and the Bunds that are essential to
-us. If the Turks have these and want to, they
-can flood the country to the extent of making
-manœuvring impossible. There was peace yesterday
-at the crimson sunset. Then after that came
-the tremendous fight. Guns and flares blazed all
-along the line. Now comes the news that we have
-lost the Bunds and the eight guns we had taken.
-The position is not clear. We are said to have
-retaken most of the positions this morning.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoners’ morale here is much better than
-in Gallipoli. I asked an Arab if he was glad to
-be a prisoner. He said that he was sorry, because
-his own people might think that he hadn’t fought
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-well, but that he was glad not to have to go on
-fighting for the Germans. Jack Marriott wrote
-for me while I translated. The prisoners could
-not or would not tell us anything much about
-the condition of the river. This morning I had
-an experience. I walked out through tremendous
-heat to where the last batch of officer
-prisoners were guarded in a tent. As I came
-up, I heard loud wrangling, and saw the prisoners
-being harangued by a fierce black-bearded officer.
-I said: “Who here talks Turkish?” and a
-grizzled old Kurd said: “Some of us talk Kurdish
-and some Arabic, but we all talk Turkish.” I
-picked out Black-beard and took him apart from
-the others, whom I saw he had been bullying.
-He was a schoolmaster and a machine-gunner, and
-fierce beyond words. He began by saying sarcastically
-that he would give me all the information
-I wanted. “You have failed at Gallipoli,” he said.
-“We hold you up at Salonica, and you are only
-visitors at Basra. I do not mind how much I tell
-you, because I know we are going to win.” I
-answered rather tartly that it was our national
-habit to be defeated at the beginning of every war
-and to win at the end, and that we should go on,
-if it took us ten years. “Ah, then,” he said, “you
-will be fighting Russia.” I did not like the way
-this conversation was going, and said to him: “Do
-you know the thing that your friends the Germans
-have done? They have offered Persia to Russia.
-How do you like that?” “The question is,”
-he said, “how do you like it?” He then said that
-he was sick of the word “German,” that Turkey was
-not fighting for the Germans, but to get rid of the
-capitulations. He said they had four Austrian
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-motor-guns of 24 cm. coming in a few days. I
-congratulated him. In the end he became more
-friendly, but I got nothing out of him. One prisoner
-had a series of fits: I think it was fright. He got
-all right when he was given water and food. The
-river has given another great sigh and risen a foot
-and a half. We have crossed over from the right
-to the left bank. It’s a black, thundery day.
-Much depends on to-day and to-night.</p>
-
-<p><i>Good Friday, April 21, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Waterfly.”</i>
-I have had no time to write these last days. This
-morning is a beautiful morning, with a fresh north
-wind. When we first came here Townshend was
-supposed to be able to hold out until the 12th.
-Now the 27th April is the last date. All the reports
-that we have been getting from the Turks are bad.
-Masses more men and guns coming up, heavy
-calibre guns. Still, Townshend is getting some
-food.... The <i>Julnar</i> is to go up in a few days,
-when the moon is waning. It is very difficult
-to get information from the prisoners, without
-running the risk of giving things away. Costello
-is chief of the Intelligence here, a capital fellow.</p>
-
-<p>The Royal Indian Marine, freed from the obstruction
-of India, seem to have done pretty well.
-A lot of the boats and barges sent here have been
-sunk on the way. The Admiralty goes on building
-these river Fly boats like anything. The <i>Mantis</i>,
-with Bernard Buxton captain, draws 5 feet and
-was intended for the Danube in the days when we
-were going to have taken Constantinople. On
-Wednesday, the 18th, we fired a good deal from
-the <i>Waterfly</i>. We are not well situated for firing....</p>
-
-<p>The Dorsets and Norfolks, the Oxfords and the
-Devons, have done the most splendid fighting.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-Twenty-two Dorsets saved the whole situation at
-Ahwaz. Harris, who is only twenty-five, has been
-through all this. He was the first up here, with
-Leachman. It’s awfully bad luck on Townshend,
-being shut up again, the second time counting
-Chitral. On Wednesday there was a tremendous
-fire. It sounded like a nearer Helles. The Turks
-are three miles from us. They lollop down mines
-that go on the bank, but this morning one was
-found close by the ship.</p>
-
-<p>I examined a Turk this morning, who said that
-three Army Corps were coming up under Mehemed
-Ali Pasha. I asked him if they could outflank us
-on the Hai, to try and turn this place into a second
-Kut. “That,” he said, “has always been my
-opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday, the 20th, I went to H.Q. in the morning,
-then talked to Dick and got maps revised and
-borrowed a horse for the afternoon from Percy
-Herbert, and got another from Costello for B.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here I should explain that I had promised my
-friend B., the sailor, to take him up into the front-line
-trenches. He had never been in a front trench
-before, and was determined to see what it was like.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> General Gillman gave B. and me
-luncheon. Then B. and I rode out to the camp of
-the 18th Division, where I found Brownrigg, now
-become a Colonel, with malaria. I congratulated
-and condoled. I asked if we could get into the
-front trench, and Colonel Hillard said it was unhealthy.
-B. said that didn’t matter, and I asked
-exactly how unhealthy. Hillard said there were
-no communication trenches and we should be under
-machine-gun fire at 80 yards. No rations were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-being sent up till nightfall, but still, of course, if
-we wanted to go, we could. B. was passionately
-anxious to go; I was not. We walked down a
-shallow communication trench, which we soon had
-to leave, because of the water, and then across the
-open to a beastly place called Crofton’s Post, an
-observation post in the flat land, with a few sandbags
-and mud walls. They had dug a kind of shelter
-about 6 feet deep below it. It stood about 20
-feet high. The Turks were eight to nine hundred
-yards away. We passed other observation posts,
-these simply a ladder rising from the flat land,
-and men like flies on it. It’s incredible that the
-Turks leave these places standing or that they allow
-people to walk about in the open in the way in
-which they do. Coming out, we passed a lot of
-quail and partridge and some jolly wild flowers,
-but also the smells of the battlefield.</p>
-
-<p>After we had been at Crofton’s Post a little
-while, a furious bombardment of the Turks by us
-began. I cursed myself for not having asked what
-the plans of the afternoon were going to be. B.
-was delighted. Shells rushed over our heads from
-all sides. I heard the scream of two premature bursts
-just by us. They raised filthy, great columns of
-heaving smoke. It was a wonderful picture; the
-radiant and brilliant light of the afternoon, the
-desert out by the river, the gleam of the gun flashes
-and the smouldering smoke columns.</p>
-
-<p>The Gurkhas fought very well two nights ago,
-they said here. They used up all their ammunition
-and what Turkish rifles they could get and then
-they fought with kukris. At one place an unfortunate
-mistake happened. We mistook the Indians
-for Turks, and we bombarded each other.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span></p>
-
-<p>We went back almost deafened by our own guns,
-B. reluctant to leave. I expected a heavy Turkish
-return bombardment every minute, which would
-have been unpleasant without any cover, but
-beyond the ticking of a machine-gun nothing
-happened. Found General Maude having tea. His
-casualties have been heavy&mdash;nineteen officers killed
-and wounded in the last ten days, simply trench
-work, no attacks. He said it was putting a very
-heavy strain on the new army.</p>
-
-<p>The more I see of this foul country, the more
-convinced I am that we are a seafaring people,
-lured to disaster by this river. The River Tigris
-has been a disaster and a delusion to us. These
-lines are untenable without two railways, one
-across to Nasriyah and the other up to Bagdad.
-At the present moment, we can be cut off if the
-river falls or if they manage to put in guns anywhere
-down the river and sink a couple of our boats, or
-even one, in the narrows, and so block the channel.
-We have got no policy. We came here and we
-saw the Tigris and we said: “This is as good as
-the sea, and up we will go,” and now it will dry up
-and we shall get left.</p>
-
-<p>Lawrence arrived at Wadi on Wednesday. Had
-some talk with him; I am very glad to see him.
-Got a letter from John Kennaway yesterday&mdash;he
-is down at Sheikh Saad&mdash;asking me to go there.
-I can get no news about Bobby Palmer. Am
-afraid there is no doubt; he must be killed; am
-very sad for his people.</p>
-
-<p><i>Easter Sunday, April 23, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Greenfly.”</i>
-A curious morning, with the whole of Pusht
-i Kuh standing blue and clear. The last two
-foreigners who visited that place were given the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-choice of embracing Islam or of being pushed over
-the precipice. They chose the precipice.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday morning we attacked. The 19th
-Brigade, the Black Watch, the 20th and the 28th.
-We took two trenches, but were driven back to
-our own. I was sent post-haste to H.Q. for news.
-There was a great sand-storm and men and artillery
-going through it like phantoms. Overhead it was
-lurid. One could hardly breathe for the sand.
-High columns of it rushed across the desert. The
-repulse looks as if the end’s very close. I came
-back to the Admiral and was sent back again.
-This time they said there was a truce, and if the
-Admiral would give permission, I was to go to the
-front at once. I came back and found the Admiral
-and went on shore. I got a horse and rode up to
-the front as fast as I could, passing many dead
-and wounded. I went to General Younghusband
-and asked if I could be of any use to him. He
-said the truce was ending. The Turks had pushed
-out white flags, which was decent of them. We
-had done the same. A Staff officer came in to
-say that the Turks were taking our kit, and he
-wanted to fire on them. I was anxious we should
-not do so without giving warning.</p>
-
-<p>We discussed the possibility of the Turks’ letting
-Townshend and his men come out with the honours
-of war, to be on parole till peace. I said that I
-could see no <i>quid pro quo</i>, and even if one existed,
-we, here, could not use it, because of our ignorance
-of the Russian situation.... The General said
-that the water had narrowed our front to 300
-yards across which to attack. The Turkish trenches
-were half-full of water and many of our men fell
-and got their rifles filled with mud. The Turks
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-attacked again at once. He said there were not
-many troops who would do that when a brigade
-like the 19th had been through them. There’s
-very little left of the 19th; beautiful men they
-were. I have talked to a lot of them these last
-days. I rode back on a horse that was always
-falling down. In the evening I crossed the river
-with the Admiral and rode up to the front with
-Beach. There was shelling going on, but nothing
-came near. The river was gorgeous in the sunset.
-Overhead the sand-grouse flew. We talked about
-the future.... It seems to me that if we have
-got to retreat 130 miles it’s less bad for prestige
-to do it in one go. The Politicals’ point of view
-is that you should not retreat at all, but that, of
-course, has got to depend on military considerations.
-The Soldiers’ point of view is that you should not
-do your retreat in one go, because you do not kill
-so many of the enemy as if you fall back from one
-position to another; but then, I suppose, that
-cuts both ways. None of these soldiers have had
-any decorations since the beginning of the war.
-One of them said to me it made them unhappy,
-because they felt that they hadn’t done their duty.
-It’s an infernal shame. I asked the man who had
-said this if he had any leave. He said: “Not
-much! I should have lost my job.” That would
-have been quite a pleasure to a lot of men....</p>
-
-<p>Lawrence has gone and got fever; Nunn also
-has it. The atmosphere makes shooting difficult.
-Yesterday the Turks shot quite a lot at a mirage,
-splashing their bullets about in the Suwekki marsh.
-We often do the same. Curiously enough, I believe
-that we won the battle of Shaiba by virtue of a
-mirage. We saw a lot of Turks marching up against
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-our position, and fired at them; these Turks were
-phantoms of men miles away; but it happened
-to be the only road by which they could bring
-up their ammunition, and our firing prevented that.
-To-night the <i>Julnar</i> goes up the river on her journey.
-She has less speed than they thought.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>For various reasons I have barely mentioned
-the <i>Julnar</i> until now, though she had been very
-much in our thoughts. The <i>Julnar</i> was a river
-boat, and for some days past she had been preparing
-to set out upon her splendid, tragic mission. In
-her lay the last hope of General Townshend and
-his gallant force. Her freight was food, intended
-to prolong the resistance of the garrison until the
-relieving force was sufficiently strong to drive
-back the Turks and enter Kut. The writer of this
-diary has many heroic pictures in his mind, but no
-more heroic picture and no more glowing memory
-than the little <i>Julnar</i> steaming slowly up the flaming
-Tigris to meet the Turkish Army and her fate.
-Her Captains were Lieut. Firman, R.N. and Lieut.-Comdr.
-Cowley, R.N.V.R., of Lynch’s Company,
-who had spent a long life in navigating the River
-Tigris.</p>
-
-<p>When Admiral Wemyss called for volunteers,
-every man volunteered, for what was practically
-certain death. Lieut. Firman and Lieut.-Comdr.
-Cowley were both killed, and both received posthumous
-V.C.’s.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><i>Diary. April 23rd.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Greenfly.”</i> We
-are alongside the <i>Mantis</i>. I am sleeping in Firman’s
-cabin. He is down-stream, but he comes up
-to-night. Many men badly wounded yesterday,
-but all as cheerful as could be; one man with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-three bullets in his stomach, full of talk and oaths.
-Fifteen of the Dorsets have died in the nearest
-hospital and have been buried close by.</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon an Easter Service was held on
-board. The Padre made a good sermon three
-minutes long. It was a wonderful sight&mdash;the
-desert covered with our graves, mirages in the
-distance and the river glowing in the sun. At
-the end of the service the <i>Julnar</i> arrived. Firman
-is an attractive good-looking fellow. King, whom
-I met last year in Alexandretta, whither he had
-marched from Bagdad, is also here. When Buxton
-told the men of the hundred to one chance of the
-<i>Julnar’s</i> getting through, they volunteered to a
-man. Gieve waistcoats are being served out; the
-cannon’s sounding while they are loading the <i>Julnar</i>
-and the Black Watch are playing on the bagpipes
-close by. Overhead go the sand-grouse, calling
-and the river and the desert wind are sighing.
-It’s all like a dream.... Even if she does get
-through, I don’t believe we can relieve Kut. The
-Turks will have time to consolidate their position
-and we shan’t be sent enough men from home to
-take them. If this attempt fails, I suppose we shall
-fall back to Sheikh Saad. I see three points:
-(1) Political. Don’t retreat. (2) Military. You’ve got
-to retreat, occupying as many positions as possible,
-in order to attrition the enemy. (3) If you do this
-last, you give the Turks the chance of saying they
-have beaten you in a number of battles. Probably
-retreat as little as possible is the best. A retreat
-may be more disastrous to us than the loss of Kut.
-While we hold Sheikh Saad, it’s difficult for them
-to outflank us on the right bank, and while we have
-the Vali of Pusht i Kuh with us, they ought not
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
-to be able to get to Ahwaz. One wonders if they
-realize the supreme importance of Basra at home
-and that if we no longer hold it we do not hold
-the Indian Ocean.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, April 24, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Dragonfly.”</i>
-Firman came last night, and I sat next to him at
-dinner. The <i>Julnar</i> could not start; she starts
-to-night.</p>
-
-<p>I went ashore this morning and saw Leachman,
-then Colonel Beach. The flies are awful; one black
-web of them this morning; in one’s hair and eyes
-and mouth, in one’s bath and shaving-water, in
-one’s tea and in one’s towel. It’s a great nuisance
-being without Edward and having to do everything
-oneself, besides one’s work. It destroys all
-joy in war.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, April 25, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Greenfly.”</i>
-A year ago to-day we landed at Anzac. To-day
-is the day of the fall of Kut, though the surrender
-may not be made for some time. Last night the
-<i>Julnar</i> left. I saw old Cowley, an old friend. He
-is to pilot her. He has been thirty-three years
-on this river. He is a proper Englishman. He
-laughed and chaffed with Philip Neville and me
-on the <i>Julnar</i> before starting. Firman was very
-glad to have got the job, and felt the responsibility.
-Everybody wanted to go. The sailors were moved.
-No cheers were allowed. They pushed off, almost
-stationary, into the river, that was a glory of light
-with the graceful mehailahs in an avenue on both
-sides of it, with masts and rigging a filigree against
-the gorgeous sunset. The faint bagpipes and the
-desert wind were the only music at their going....
-The Admiral told me to be ready to go out at any
-moment. This morning Colonel Beach came aboard
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-and told me to hold myself in readiness. He proposed
-going out to see the Turks with Lawrence
-and myself. He talked about terms. It’s a very
-difficult thing to get terms when one side holds
-all the cards. If Townshend destroys his guns,
-as he must, I don’t see what terms we have got.
-My own opinion is that Townshend would make
-better terms for himself with the Turks than we
-can get for him here. It will be difficult to stop
-the Arabs being shot and hung. We have got to
-do our best....</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Julnar</i> has grounded above the Sinn position.
-Nothing is known of what happened to the crew.</p>
-
-<p>Wilfred Peek turned up here this afternoon,
-having seen John Kennaway down the stream.
-We have no terms to offer the Turks except money,
-general or local peace, or the evacuation of territory.
-I do not think the first is any good. We cannot
-offer the second because of ourselves and of Russia.
-The third might be all right, if it was not beyond
-Amarah. I hope in these negotiations we do not
-meet a Prussian Turk in Khalil.</p>
-
-<p>After lunch I met Captain Potter. In the last
-attack this had happened: A corporal had gone
-mad and, after rolling in filth, had come down the
-trench with a bomb in each hand, shouting out that
-he was looking for the &mdash;&mdash; Arabs. The parapet
-was low, about shoulder-high, and there was a good
-deal of shrapnel and bullets coming in. The corporal
-threw the bomb into the middle of the officers’
-mess, killing one and wounding the Colonel, knocking
-Potter and the others out. They collared the
-corporal, who had got a madman’s strength. Then
-the attack followed. Potter went as soon as
-he recovered. They charged across 600 yards
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
-under machine-gun fire, up to their knees in mud.
-The Turks were in their third trench. The first
-and the second were filled with mud. Then the
-Turks ran out a white flag, which suited us very
-well, as it allowed our men in the Turkish trenches
-to get away, which otherwise they couldn’t have
-done. He thought the Turks did it because they
-wanted to bring up reinforcements. He now commands
-a battalion of 84, all that are left of 650
-men. He said they had reached the limits of
-human endurance. He had three officers, including
-himself, left. The Black Watch had been wiped
-out twice, and other regiments simply annihilated.
-I told him that I thought there would be no more
-attacks. He said a Turkish prisoner, a friend of
-his, had said to him: “Let’s have a truce and both
-kill the Arabs.”</p>
-
-<p>Beach says there is no question of going out
-to-day. I went out shooting sand-grouse.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, April 26, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i>
-I am writing in great haste, till the sun goes down,
-as the mehailahs stream past on a river of fire,
-in the retreat that is beginning.</p>
-
-<p>The news from home is good and bad. As usual,
-they are desperately optimistic, but more men are
-coming. We must, if we can, save the Arabs with
-Townshend. The last telegrams in were pitiful.
-Townshend quotes military precedents and other
-campaigns, and it’s all mixed up with famine and
-the stinks of Kut. Wilfred Peek’s his A.D.C. I
-am to try and get him a safe conduct to take
-Townshend’s stuff up to him, also one for us.
-If Townshend does not make it clear that it’s a
-return ticket, we shall all be kept. I saw General
-Lake this morning. Captain Bermester, the Chief of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-the Staff, Neville, Dick Bevan and Miller all went
-off this morning. The Admiral is coming back. I
-have received instructions about negotiations.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, April 28, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i> For
-the last two days I have been standing by to go
-to Kut, constantly dressing up for it and then
-undressing for the heat. A wave of great heat has
-come and the air is black with flies. Practically
-no firing, though they tried to shell us yesterday
-and an aeroplane dropped bombs near here. We
-have got very little to bargain with, as far as the
-Turks are concerned, practically only the exchange
-of prisoners. The operations of this force are not
-to be reckoned with as a bargaining asset. We
-are not to retire to save Townshend. Yesterday
-Townshend saw Khalil at ten a.m., whom he liked.
-Khalil said that Townshend would have as great
-a reception in Turkey as Osman Pasha in Russia,
-but he demanded unconditional surrender, or that
-Townshend should march out of Kut. This last
-is equivalent to an unconditional surrender, and
-Townshend’s men are too weak. We are all sorry
-for them.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday morning General Lake sent for me,
-and talked about the Turks. I said it was quite
-clear to me that the Turks would procrastinate,
-if it was only from force of habit, and the end of
-that must mean unconditional surrender. General
-Lake was calm. He has been made responsible
-for things for which other people are answerable.
-Townshend has telegraphed to say that he has
-only food for two more days and that Khalil has
-referred to Enver for better terms.... I still
-think Townshend would get better terms for himself
-than we shall get for him. He has made a desperately
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-gallant fight of it, and his position has not
-been taken. Lack of food makes him surrender,
-not force of arms. We, the relieving force, have
-been checked by the Turks, but I suppose all these
-men, Lake, Townshend and Nixon, will be made
-scapegoats. In the last telegrams Townshend
-warns us that the Turks may attack. He says he
-cannot move out, and that even if he were able to
-get his weak men out the Turks would not have
-enough tents for them or transport to Bagdad,
-and that there will be a terrible tragedy and that
-a lot of sick and wounded will die.... We are
-not in a position to insist on anything. One is
-more sorry for Townshend and his men than words
-can say.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, April 30, 1916.</i> <i>H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i> <i>The
-Events of Saturday</i>: Yesterday morning Colonel
-Beach came to the <i>Mantis</i> at seven and took me
-off. We rode across the bridge to General Younghusband’s
-H.Q. Nothing that I have ever seen
-or dreamed of came up to the flies. They hatched
-out until they were almost the air. They were
-in myriads. The horses were half mad. The
-flies were mostly tiny. They rolled up in little
-balls when one passed one’s hand across one’s
-sweating face. They were on your eyelids and
-lashes and in your lips and nostrils. We could
-not speak for them, and could hardly see.</p>
-
-<p>We went into General Younghusband’s tent.
-The flies, for some reason, stayed outside. He
-put a loose net across the door of the tent. They
-were like a visible fever, shimmering in the burning
-light all round. Inside his tent you did not breathe
-them; outside you could not help taking them in
-through the nose and the mouth. We left General
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-Younghusband and went on to the front trenches,
-where we met Colonel Aylsmee. There Lawrence
-joined us. We three then went out of the trenches
-with a white flag, and walked a couple of hundred
-yards or so ahead, where we waited, with all the
-battlefield smells round us. It was all a plain,
-with the river to the north and the place crawling
-with huge black beetles and singing flies, that have
-been feeding on the dead. After a time a couple
-of Turks came out. I said: “We have got a letter
-to Khalil.” This they wanted to take from us, but
-we refused to give it up, and they sent an orderly
-back to ask if we might come in to the Turkish lines.
-Meanwhile we talked amiably. One of the Turkish
-officers, a Cretan, had left school five years ago
-and had been in five wars. He reckoned that he
-had been in 200 attacks, not counting scraps
-with brigands and comitadjis. The Turks showed
-us their medals, and we were rather chagrined at
-not being able to match them, but they and we
-agreed that we should find the remedy for that in
-a future opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>Several hours passed. It was very hot. I was
-hungry, having had no breakfast. Again they asked
-us to give up our letter. I said that our orders
-were to deliver it in person and, as soldiers, they
-knew what orders were, but that Colonel Beach
-would give the letter up if their C.O. would guarantee
-that we should see Khalil Pasha. This took a long
-time. The Turks sent for a tent. A few rifle
-shots went off from our lines, but Beach went back
-and stopped it. The Turks sent for oranges and
-water, and we ate and drank. We had to refill
-these bottles from the Tigris, and up and down the
-banks were a lot of dead bodies from shot-wounds
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-and cholera. After some time they agreed to Beach’s
-proposal. We were blindfolded and we went in
-a string of hot hands to the trenches of the Turks.
-When it was plain going the Turk, who talked French,
-called: “Franchement, en avant,” and when it
-was bad going, over trenches, “Yavash Dikatet.”
-We marched a long way through these trenches,
-banging against men and corners, and sweating
-something cruel. Beyond the trenches we went
-for half an hour, while my handkerchief became a
-wet string across my eyes. Then we met Bekir
-Sami Bey. He was a very fine man and very jolly,
-something between an athlete and old King Cole.
-He lavished hospitality upon us, coffee and yoghurt,
-and begged us to say if there was anything more
-he could get us, while we sat and streamed with
-perspiration. He told us how he had loved England
-and still did. He was fierceness and friendship
-incarnate. He said it was all Grey’s fault, and
-glorified the Crimea. Why couldn’t we have stuck
-to that policy? Then, as we were going off, I
-said that he would not insist on our eyes being
-bandaged, showing him my taut, wet rag of a pocket-handkerchief.
-He shouted with laughter and said:
-“No, no; you have chosen soldiering, a very hard
-profession. You have got to wear that for miles,
-and you will have to ride across ditches.” Then
-he shook hands and patted us on the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>My eyes were bound, and I got on a horse that
-started bucking because of the torture of the flies.
-The Turk was angry and amused. I heard him
-laughing and swearing: “This is perfectly monstrous.
-Ha, ha! He’ll be off. Ha, ha! This is
-a reproach to us.” I was then given another horse
-that was not much of an improvement, and off we
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-three went with a Turkish officer, Ali Shefket, and
-a guard. Lawrence had hurt his knee and could
-not ride. He got off and walked, a Turkish officer
-being left with him. Colonel Beach and I went on.
-Then our eyes were unbound, though as a matter
-of fact this was against the orders I had heard
-given. The Turk Ali Shefket and I talked. He
-knew no French. He said to me: “Formerly the
-Arabs would not take our bank-notes; now they
-take them. Once upon a time they would not take
-medjids; two days ago they took them. To what
-do you put that down?” I knew he meant the
-fall of Kut, but it was not said maliciously. I
-said that I put it down to the beautiful character
-of the marsh Arabs, “yerli bourda beule” (here the
-native are thus). He laughed and agreed. We
-passed formidable herds of horses and mules, our
-road a sand-track. The escort rode ahead of us.
-The heat was very great, but we galloped. The
-Turks we met thought that we were prisoners.
-They saluted sometimes at strict attention, sometimes
-with a grin, and later our Indians were told
-in return to salute the Turkish officers, who looked
-at them as black as thunder.</p>
-
-<p>At last we came to Khalil’s camp, a single round
-tent, a few men on motor cycles coming and going,
-horses picketed here and there and the camp in
-process of shifting. Later on, Khalil said that the
-flies bored him and that he meant to camp beside
-the river. Colonel Beach told me to start talking.
-I said to Khalil, whose face I remembered:
-“Where was it that I met your Excellency last?”
-And he said: “At a dance at the British Embassy.”
-Khalil, throughout the interview, was polite. He
-was quite a young man for his position, I suppose
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-about thirty-five, and a fine man to look at&mdash;lion-taming
-eyes, a square chin and a mouth like a trap.
-Kiazim Bey, who was also courteous, but silent,
-was his C.G.S. We began on minor points. The
-Turks had taken the English ladies in Bagdad.
-Their husbands were sent across to Alexandretta,
-where I met them last year; some of them, worse
-luck, are now prisoners again. We had Turkish
-ladies at Amara and also twenty-five Turkish
-civilian officials. This exchange was arranged.
-They were to meet each other at Beyrout.</p>
-
-<p>I went on to speak of the <i>Julnar</i>. He said that
-there had been two killed on the <i>Julnar</i>. He
-was afraid it was the two Captains. He was sorry.
-It made Beech and me very sad. I did hope they
-would have got through. Firman was a gallant
-man&mdash;he had had forty-eight hours’ leave in four
-years&mdash;and old Cowley was a splendid old fellow.
-Well, if you are going to be killed, trying to relieve
-Townshend is not a bad way to end.</p>
-
-<p>After that, I began talking of the treatment
-of the Arab population in Kut. I asked Khalil
-to put himself in the position of Townshend. I
-said that I knew that he could not help feeling
-for Townshend, whose lifelong study of soldiering
-was brought to nought through siege and famine,
-by no fault of his own. I said that the Arabs
-with Townshend had done what weak people
-always do: they had trimmed their sails, and
-because they had feared him, they had given him
-their service. If they suffered, Townshend would
-feel that he was responsible. Khalil said: “There
-is no need to worry about Townshend. He’s
-all right.” He added that the Arabs are Turkish
-subjects, not British, and that therefore their fate
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-was irrelevant, but that their fate would depend
-upon what they did in the future, not upon what
-they had done in the past. We asked him for some
-assurance that there would be no hanging or persecution.
-He would not give this assurance, for
-the reasons already stated, but said that it was
-not his intention to do anything to the Arabs.
-Then Lawrence turned up.</p>
-
-<p>We discussed the question of our sick and wounded.
-He said that he would send 500 of them down
-the river, but that he required Turkish soldiers
-for them in exchange. I said that he gained by
-having sound men instead of wounded. He wanted
-us to send boats to fetch these men. He said that
-he was sending them drugs, doctors and food, and
-doing what could be done. Beach asked for the
-exchange of all our prisoners in Kut against the
-Ottomans that we had taken. He at first said
-that he would exchange English against Turk
-and Arab against Indian, because he had a poor
-opinion of the fighting qualities of the last two.
-I said that some of the Arabs had fought very well,
-and he would gain by getting them back. He then
-pulled out a list of prisoners of ours, and went
-through the list of Arab surrenders, swearing. He
-said: “Perhaps one of our men in ten is weak or
-cowardly, but it’s only one in a hundred of the Arabs
-who is brave. Look, these brutes have surrendered
-to you because they were a lot of cowards. What
-are you to do with men like that? You can send
-them back to me if you like, but I have already
-condemned them to death. I should like to have
-them to hang.” That ended that. We must see
-that Arabs are not sent back by mistake.</p>
-
-<p>He then said that he would like us to send ships
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-up to transport Townshend and his men to Bagdad;
-otherwise they would have to march, which would
-be hard on them. He promised to let us have these
-ships back again. Colonel Beach said to me, not
-for translation, that this was impossible. We have
-already insufficient transport. He told me to say
-that he would refer this to General Lake. We then
-talked about terms and the exchange of the sick
-and wounded. On this, Khalil said he would refer to
-Enver or Constantinople as to whether sound men at
-Kut would be exchanged against the Turkish prisoners
-in Cairo and India. He did not think it likely. He
-was going to give us the wounded in any case, at
-once. He would trust us to give their equivalent.</p>
-
-<p><i>Guns</i>: Townshend had destroyed the guns.
-Khalil was angry and showed it. He said he had
-a great admiration for Townshend, but he was
-obviously disappointed at not getting the guns, on
-which he had counted. He said: “I could have
-prevented it by bombarding, but I did not want
-to.” Later, one of his officers said to me: “The
-Pasha’s a most honourable man; all love him. He
-was first very pleased and said that Townshend
-should go free. After that something happened, I
-don’t know what, and now Townshend will be an
-honoured prisoner at Stamboul.”</p>
-
-<p>Beach told me to say that we would willingly
-pay for the maintenance of the civilians and
-the Arabs of Kut. Khalil brushed this aside and
-returned to his proposal that we should send up
-boats to transport Townshend’s sick and wounded
-to Bagdad. Beach whispered to me that we had
-not enough ships for ourselves at the present moment
-and no reserve supplies....</p>
-
-<p>Then we talked of the general situation and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-its difficulties. I asked him if all this business
-would be possible without an armistice. Khalil
-said very strongly indeed that he was entirely against
-an armistice and that he wanted his assurance
-given to General Lake that even if there was a
-general offensive the ships carrying the sick and
-wounded could still come and go. Beach told me
-to say that we had no idea of an armistice. Khalil,
-at this point, grew very sleepy. He apologized and
-said he had had a lot of work to do. He also said
-that he had seen Townshend that morning and that
-he was all right, but he had slight fever.</p>
-
-<p>Our final understanding with Khalil was that we
-were to notify him when we were sending up boats,
-so that he might clear the river. He laughed and
-said that he had forgotten all about the mines,
-which we had not.</p>
-
-<p>We ended with mutual compliments, and we said
-good-bye to him and Kiazim Bey. As we were
-leaving he called to me and said that he hoped
-we should be comfortable that night and that we
-were to ask for all we wanted. After more compliments,
-we shook hands and rode away, all the Turks
-saluting. I talked to Ali Shefket, who now seemed
-a fast friend and said: “How angry the Germans
-would be if they could see the Turks and the
-English.”</p>
-
-<p>We rode on, and before sunset, came to the
-Turkish camp. There the three of us sat down
-and, as far as we could for the flies, wrote reports.</p>
-
-<p>The Turks gave us their tent, though I should
-have preferred to sleep out. They gave us their
-beds and an excellent dinner. We all sat and
-smoked after dinner for a few minutes under the
-stars, with camp fires burning round us. Muezzin
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-called from different places and the sound of flutes
-and singing came through the dusk. Then Colonel
-Beach decided that I had better stay and go to Kut,
-where I was to meet him and Lawrence, who would
-come up with the boats to take our prisoners away.
-I didn’t believe that Khalil would accept this sort
-of liaison business. Beach wanted to go straight
-back, but would not let Lawrence or me. We
-pointed out that, if he got shot in the dark by our
-people, it would upset everything.</p>
-
-<p>I dictated a French letter to Lawrence, asking
-for permission for me to stay and go across to Kut.
-I cannot think how he wrote the letter. The whole
-place was one smother of small flies, attracted by
-the candle. They put it out three times. B. and I
-kept them off Lawrence while he wrote. We got
-an answer at about two in the morning. Khalil
-said that it was not necessary. All this happened
-on April 29th.</p>
-
-<p><i>To-day. April 30th.</i> We left at 4.30 this morning,
-and this time rode all the way with unbandaged
-eyes. We ended up on the river bank amongst
-dead bodies. We walked across to our front line
-and Colonel Beach telephoned to H.Q. While he
-was doing this a Turkish white flag went up and
-we went out again. After several palavers, Ali
-Shefket came out and said that the river was clear
-of mines. Beach and Lawrence went back to H.Q.</p>
-
-<p>Our boat could go up if it arrived by 2 o’clock
-in the afternoon. I, with the Cretan, the man of
-a hundred fights, Ali Shefket and others, went across.
-A fierce bearded Colonel came out, arrogant and
-insolent, talking German. He boasted that he
-knew Greek, but when I talked to him in Greek, he
-could not answer. He then harangued me in bad
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-German, talking rot. I said, in Turkish: “Neither
-you nor I can talk good German, therefore let us
-talk Turkish.” “Yes,” said the other Turks; “it’s
-a much better language.”</p>
-
-<p>The ship tarried. At 5 o’clock in the evening
-she was in sight, but she could not have arrived
-for another hour. It was decided that we could do
-nothing that night and that she would have to be
-put off until next day. A monstrous beetle, the
-size of half a crown, crawled up my back. The
-Turks were as horrified as I.</p>
-
-<p><i>Monday, May 1, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i> I came
-back last night. I saw General Lake this morning
-to report. I think Khalil is going to play the game,
-but he has got something up his sleeve. A letter
-has come in from him. The ships, he said, could
-go. He wanted boats to send the prisoners to
-Bagdad. He was answered by General Money
-that His Excellency would understand that we
-ourselves needed all our boats. Beach went up
-this morning with two boats, but they stopped him
-at No Man’s Land.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, May 2, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i> Last
-night I went on the <i>P&mdash;&mdash;</i> to go to Kut, with a rather
-tiresome Padre. It rained and blew in the night,
-and was very uncomfortable on deck. I got up
-at four, and we started soon after. They opened the
-bridge of boats for us. A launch followed for me,
-for I was to get off before entering neutral territory.</p>
-
-<p>At the neutral territory I found white flags and
-an Indian Major, who was tired and nervous. All
-the way up the river there had been a curious
-feeling of expectancy and uncanniness; the Indians
-looked at us, shading their eyes from the rising sun,
-and our own troops stared. There was an uncomfortable,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-eerie feeling in the air. The Major said
-the Turks refused to allow the boats to go on. I
-telephoned to Colonel Beach, who was leaving H.Q.
-He told me to do the best I could.... I took a
-white flag and went out into No Man’s Land and
-found the man I had talked to before, the Cretan’s
-brother. I asked what all this meant. This was
-neither war nor peace. He said that it was our
-fellows, who had been shooting on the right bank,
-and there was quite enough shooting while we talked
-to make one feel uncomfortable. I said that Khalil
-had given his word that the boats could go up,
-even if there was an offensive. This was telephoned
-to Khalil. Our fellows began loosing off with a
-machine-gun. The beastly Colonel and the Cretan
-then came out to say that they had telephoned,
-and later the Cretan came again, alone, to say
-that our boats could not go through until the
-others had returned from Kut. He said it might
-not be necessary to send them up to Kut. We
-sat and talked in the great heat. I have given
-Ali Shefket Bobby Palmer’s photograph and have
-asked him to make enquiries. He sent it back to
-me by the Cretan, who read me out what Ali Shefket
-had written me. It was to say that Bobby Palmer
-was killed. He spoke very kindly and very sadly.
-I am so sorry for his family.</p>
-
-<p>I went back very tired and found a lot of men
-making up burying parties which, reluctantly, I
-sent back again. A lot of the bodies on the river
-bank look as if they died of cholera. By the way,
-we have had a hundred and fifty cases in the last
-three days. Then I shaved on the deck of the launch,
-while the Turks looked on in the distance. Then I
-went and telephoned from the front line to Beach.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-He told me to bring all the four boats back, which I
-did. The only news is that the Turks have dug
-in below us near Sheikh Saad.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, May 3, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i> You
-foul land of Mesopotamia! This morning bodies
-raced by us on the stream and I spent most of the
-day walking in the ruin of battle. I was sent
-for by General Gorringe and General Brown. They
-wanted to know why our boats had not come down
-from Kut. They said that the Turks had been
-shooting on the right and sent out white-flag parties,
-200 men strong, to bury the dead. I said I
-thought it would be all right about the ships but I
-would go and see Khalil. The fact that they did not
-want us to send more ships showed that it was all
-right, but I thought they would probably like to
-nag us into doing something indiscreet, and asked
-the General if he would give orders that there should
-be no firing except under instructions, as long as
-they had our hostages. He sent me off to see the
-Turks.</p>
-
-<p>I rode fast through suffocating heat, with an
-Indian orderly. At the bridge I found our two
-ships, the <i>Sikhim</i> and the <i>Shaba</i>, which had come
-through from Kut. They were banking above
-the bridge, which was being mended. This altered
-the whole situation, since the General had sent me
-out to complain that they had not been let through,
-and I galloped back. After a talk at H.Q., it was
-decided that I was only to thank Khalil.</p>
-
-<p>I jumped the trenches and finally arrived at the
-main trench, where my horse stared down at a
-horrified circle, lunching. The circle said that no
-horses were allowed there and that none had ever
-been there, and that my horse, or rather Costello’s,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-would be shot immediately by the Turks. So I
-went to General Peebles, who was lunching farther
-along in the same trenches, and he had her sent
-back. I then got a white flag and walked out....
-I met a couple of Turks. They wanted us to send
-up two ships to-morrow, and were quite agreeable.
-I asked them, as a favour, not to send out again
-the Colonel who talked German, as I couldn’t stand
-him, and they said they wouldn’t.</p>
-
-<p>It was blazing hot; a Turkish officer and I sat
-out between the lines.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is one incident not recorded in the diary
-that is, perhaps, worth mentioning, as it had a
-curious result that will find its place in the sequel
-to this journal, if it is ever published. On one of
-the occasions when I was talking to the Turks
-between the lines, a general fire started from the
-British and the Turkish trenches. The Turks, for
-the honour of their country, and I, for the honour
-of mine, pretended to ignore this fire, and we continued
-to discuss our business, but in the end the
-fire refused to be ignored, and, with loud curses, we
-fell upon the ground and there attempted to continue
-the discussion. I suggested to the Turks
-that the whole proceeding was lacking in dignity
-and that it would be better for each to retire to
-their own trenches and resume negotiations when
-circumstances were more favourable.</p>
-
-<p>Next time I returned I was informed that one
-of the Turks had been hit whilst returning. I
-naturally said how sorry I was, and that I hoped
-they would not think it was a case of <i>mala fides</i>,
-as it might have happened to one of us, and wrote
-a note explaining my regret.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Diary.</i> It was curious and bitter sitting in that
-peaceful field talking amicably with the Turks
-between the lines, with maize round us. The river
-murmured and the larks were singing, while the
-stiff clay held the knee-deep prints, like plaster
-of Paris, of the Black Watch and the others, who
-had charged across that foul field, when it had been
-a trap and a bog.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, May 4, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i> Very
-tired to-day. I rode back last night from the Turks,
-very fast. The flies made it impossible to go slow,
-horses couldn’t breathe. At the bridge, I found
-that the traffic was going the other way and had
-to hold up an unfortunate brigade to get across,
-hating to do it.</p>
-
-<p>I met Green Armitage, who had just come from
-Kut. He had got Townshend’s terriers, who barked
-like mad. He said that there were three Turkish
-officers on board the <i>Sikhim</i>, who were asking for
-me. I didn’t know what to do, as I wanted to
-go to H.Q., but dashed on board and found they
-were Ali Shefket and Mehmed Jemal and Salahedin
-Bey, inspector to the Agricultural Bank of Smyrna.
-Our people on board wanted me to stay. I told
-them I would come back. I saw the sick and
-wounded Indians being carried away, terribly
-emaciated. I reported at H.Q., where, apparently,
-half a dozen entirely contradictory orders
-were being prepared for me. I then went back
-in a launch to the Turks, who were reported
-to be taking notes of our position from the bridge.
-On the <i>Sikhim</i> I found crowds of our officers with
-the Turks and a general jollification going on. I did
-not understand how or why they had been allowed
-to come down. All the Intelligence came along to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-see what the Turks could tell them. I was fed-up
-with the whole business, and disliked the Turks
-being on deck. I said to them: “Of course, it’s
-a pleasure to have you here, as guests, but we would
-much rather give you hospitality in London, for
-there we can show you everything, and, unfortunately,
-that’s not the case here. So in future, if
-you please, Turkish officers will not accompany the
-boats down.” They agreed to that.</p>
-
-<p>The same tiresome Padre came bumbling up
-again. I think he wanted to go to Kut for the adventure,
-and I had no sympathy, as he would have
-meant another mouth to feed. The Turks made
-no particular objection to his going, but they said
-there was already a clergyman there, so I told the
-Padre he could go if he liked, but that if he went
-he ought to stay and let the other chaplain come
-back, as the other had had all the hardships of the
-siege. He thought I was brutal, but cleared out
-and gave no more trouble. It seems to me, however,
-that he runs a fair risk, like the rest of us, of being
-made a prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>I wish the Admiral was here. The Turks on
-board said that they had hung seven Arabs at Kut,
-which made me furious. I said that Khalil had
-said that he had no intention of doing that. The
-Turks said that these men were not natives, but
-vagabonds....</p>
-
-<p>Then they talked about the future. I said it
-would not be easy for Turkey to dissociate herself
-from Germany, even if they wanted to. They
-replied: “How long did it take the Bulgars and
-Serbs to quarrel?” They said Khalil had sent
-messages, and I arranged that if there was any
-hitch I should be able to get straight through.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span></p>
-
-<p>I did not sleep much. This morning I went up
-with them to Sanayat, where Husni Bey took
-their place. Then I came back by launch to the
-bridge and found a motor, which I took to H.Q.</p>
-
-<p>At dinner to-night Reuter’s came in, and the
-doctor, in a perfectly calm voice, read out to us
-that there now seemed some chance of checking
-the rebellion in Ireland. Somebody said: “Don’t
-be a fool. Things are bad enough here. Kut’s
-fallen and we shall probably be prisoners. Don’t
-invent worse things.” The doctor said: “It’s an
-absolute fact,” and read it out again. Then somebody
-said: “Those cursed Irish.” Then an Ulsterman
-leapt to his feet and said: “You would insult
-my country, would you?” Then there was a
-general row. After that, everything seemed so
-utterly desperate that there was nothing to be done
-but to make the best of things, and we had an
-extremely cheerful dinner. We must have missed
-a lot of news. Let’s hope this Irish business is the
-bursting of a boil. I am more afraid of the treatment
-than the disease.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, May 5, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i> Vane
-Tempest came back from Kut with unpleasant
-stories. He said that our officers had been looted
-at the point of the bayonet by the Arabs. He had
-seen four men hanging and one man hanged. This
-was a curious incident. This man, as he was going
-to execution, threw Vane Tempest his <i>tesbih</i> (his
-rosary), the ninety-nine Beautiful Names of God.
-Vane Tempest had still got it. It means “I commend
-my cause to you. Take up my quarrel.”
-I told Vane Tempest if he was superstitious he
-ought never to part with it.</p>
-
-<p>Now there is a new position created. They can
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-float down all their guns and stores. There is a
-fight coming, but I wonder where. Eight hundred
-Turks and Arabs below Sheikh Saad, with three
-guns. The country is up behind us and we have
-only half a day’s provisions in reserve. The guns
-are booming away behind us. It’s going to be
-very hard to hold this position. I wish Edward
-was here, and hope he is all right, with my kit. I
-want it badly, but I got some stuff from Percy
-Herbert this morning. We agreed that we had a
-most excellent chance of being cut off.... One
-is sorry for these men here. They are starved in
-every way, ammunition excepted. They are not
-even given cigarettes and have to pay six times
-their price to the Arabs. Last night the Arabs were
-looting all over the place. A man told me this
-morning that a sick officer in the 21st Brigade
-found five Arabs in his tent and lost everything.
-Lucky for him that was all he lost.</p>
-
-<p><i>Saturday, May 6, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.” Sheikh
-Saad.</i> Yesterday my typewriter broke. A jolly
-mechanic more or less repaired it and refused money.
-“It’s all for one purpose,” he said. H.Q. suddenly
-determined to come down to Sheikh Saad in the
-afternoon. General Gorringe and General Ratcliffe
-went off, strafing like mad. Then the <i>Mantis</i>
-sailed. I found Edward on board the <i>Blosse Lynch</i>,
-with 200 “sea-gulls,” as he called the sepoys.
-He was very upset about the Irish news, but glad
-to have found me.</p>
-
-<p>I walked at night with Bernard Buxton into
-the Arab village to find H.Q. A curious sight:
-Devons and Somersets, Gurkhas, Arabs and frogs
-all mixed up together. The Somersets were very
-glad to meet a friend.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span></p>
-
-<p>This morning, after going through the evidence
-with the other officers about Bobby Palmer, I
-sent a telegram to Lord Selborne. They did not
-doubt the evidence of the Turks that he was killed.</p>
-
-<p>This morning I walked along the banks of the
-Tigris, while bodies floated down it. After a time
-I found the 4th Devons and John Kennaway,
-Acland Troyte and the rest, also a lot of people
-from home. Promised them cigarettes and that
-I would get messages home for them. The latest
-out were a bit depressed and complained of the
-shortage of food. Their camp isn’t too bad. Three
-miles away, one can see Lot’s Tomb, with generally,
-they say, a Turkish patrol on it. Sheikh Saad is
-supposed, J. K. says, to be Sodom. If you took
-our troops away, another dose of brimstone would
-do it and its inhabitants a lot of good.</p>
-
-<p>Then I saw Captain &mdash;&mdash; of the Indian Transport.
-He was miserable at the way that his men were
-treated. He said: (1) The drivers did not receive
-pay equal to sepoys, nor did they receive allowances,
-which mountain battery drivers and ammunition
-column drivers did receive. The work the transport
-drivers did was equally dangerous and more
-onerous. (2) There were no spare men. A transport
-driver went sick and the next man had to look
-after his animals. (3) They got no fresh clothes.
-Their clothes were in rags. (4) They had 21-lb.
-tents for four men. In a hot or a cold climate this
-is unhealthy; very bad here. Also they have only
-one flap, so later on they’ll be bound to get sunstroke.
-(5) They do not get milk, cigarettes or tobacco.
-(6) They get no presents, such as the other Indian
-regiments have received. (7) The treatment of
-transport officers is not equal to that of a sepoy
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
-officer. <i>Vide</i> Subadar Rangbaz Khan, about thirty
-years’ service. Recommended with many others.
-No notice taken. Only two recommendations
-given, those for actual valour. This man, if he
-had been with his relations in the cavalry, would
-probably have done less good work, but would have
-been covered with medals.</p>
-
-<p>I walked back through rain, with frogs everywhere,
-a plague. It’s a pity we can’t get our men
-to eat them. One can’t even teach the officers to
-eat them. John said the Arabs sniped them most
-nights, but they were well and not too uncomfortable.
-Jack Amory was there, but I didn’t see him. He
-was out shooting sand-grouse.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, May 7, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i> Harris
-came up last night. He said all was quiet down the
-river. Subhi Bey, with a good many troops, had
-tried to cut us off at Kumait, but the floods were
-out. He said that last year Cowley prophesied
-that when the hot weather came the river would
-fall and that five-eighths of our transport would
-be useless. Cowley was generally right. If he
-was wrong then, he will probably be right now.
-Harris had been fishing the other day, when two
-of the Devons suddenly appeared, naked, beside
-him. They had swum the river, being carried a
-mile and a half down, and intend to swim it again.
-It’s very dangerous. They are wonderful fellows.
-I am on the <i>Waterfly</i> now.</p>
-
-<p>Early this morning a telegram arrived to say
-the Corps Commander wanted me at once. I
-spoke on the telephone to H. C. Cassel said: “Our
-men have fired on the Turks and they have collared
-the <i>Sikhim</i>. You must come and get her out”....
-I transferred to the <i>Waterfly</i> and came up with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-Harris. I knew this would happen. What, apparently,
-happened was that the Turks fired four shots
-at the <i>Sikhim</i>. The Turkish officer was angry,
-and rigid orders had been issued to the Turks not
-to fire again. Then our men had opened fire....
-But they don’t all tell the same story.... I have
-now got five contradictory orders from H.Q.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tuesday, May 9, 1916. Felahiah.</i> The last
-boatload of wounded is coming down and the
-truce will, I suppose, end. The <i>Sikhim</i> has made
-her last journey. A telegram arrived from the
-Admiral ordering me to go at once to Bushire. I
-am to get on board the <i>Lawrence</i>, sailing the 12th
-from Basra, and join him at Bushire.... (Here
-indescribable things follow.) I went round and said
-good-bye to everybody.</p>
-
-<p>There is a lot of cholera. General Rice died last
-night. There are many bodies floating down the
-river. It’s tremendously hot. I have just seen
-Williams, the doctor of the <i>Sikhim</i>. He says the
-Turks have been good throughout. The Arabs
-have looted at the beginning, but this has been
-put an end to. It’s not going well with the Arabs....
-We must largely depend on them for supplies.</p>
-
-<p><i>Wednesday, May 10, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”</i> I
-was to have left on S.1, but when it was apparent
-that it would not start that night, I went off to
-the <i>Mantis</i>. Buxton telephoned from Sheikh Saad
-that he would take me to Amara, if I could get
-there by 4.30 a.m. I came down with Colonel
-James. Many bodies in the river and much cholera
-at Wadi. Our men lack every mortal thing. I
-should like to send a telegram like this home, but
-don’t expect I should be allowed to: “From my
-experience of this country, I see that, unless certain
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-action is taken immediately, consequences that
-are disastrous to the health of the troops must
-follow. All realize here that the past economy of
-the Government of India is responsible for our
-failure (<i>vide</i> Sir W. Meyer’s Budget speech). Unless
-this is realized in England and supplies taken out
-of the hands of the Government of India, altogether,
-or liberally supplemented from home and Egypt,
-the troops will suffer even more during this summer
-than last year. Condensed milk and oatmeal are
-essential to the troops. India cannot provide these
-under three months, by which time we shall have
-sustained great and unnecessary losses. Supplies
-of potatoes and onions will cease at the end of
-this month. If cold storage is found to be impossible,
-a substitute, e.g. dried figs, must be found. India
-cannot provide these substitutes in time. Sufficient
-ice-machines and soda-water machines are
-as essential to prevent heat-stroke in the trenches
-as to cure heat-stroke in the hospitals. India,
-unless ordered to commandeer these from clubs,
-private houses, etc., cannot provide them. Many
-Indian troops are in 21-lb. tents, single flap, one
-tent to four men. Numbers of these will get sunstroke.
-If you mean to hold this country, you
-can’t do it on the lines of Sir W. Meyer. A railway
-is essential. A fall in the river would render half
-our present transport useless, above Kurna. Many
-of the troops here are young and not strong. If a
-disaster to their health, which, in its way, is as
-grave as the fall of Kut, and due to the same reason,
-lack of transport, is to be prevented, supplies must
-be taken in hand from England and Egypt.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Thursday, May 11, 1916. H.M.S. “Mantis.”
-Amara.</i> Yesterday was one of the most beautiful
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
-days imaginable. We came very fast down the
-river, with a delicious wind against us. On both
-banks there were great herds of sheep, cattle and
-nice-looking horses. Every horse here is blanketed
-by the Arabs, only our horses not blanketed.
-The Arabs vary a lot in looks. One man, towing
-a bellam, glancing back over his shoulder, was
-the picture of a snarling hyena. A great many
-of them were handsome.</p>
-
-<p>We came to Amara in the evening and found a
-lot of cholera. I went to the bazaar and bought
-what I could for J. K. and his mess, and cigarettes
-for the men, but couldn’t get fishing tackle.
-Amara looked beautiful in the evening&mdash;fine,
-picturesque Arab buildings, and palm groves and
-forests up and down both sides of the lighted river.
-At night we anchored to a palm and slept well,
-in spite of great gusts of wind occasionally, which
-roared through the palm forests, and bursts of
-rifle fire on the banks by us, at Arabs, who
-were stealing or sniping us. Jackals cried in a
-chorus.</p>
-
-<p>To-day the river has been enchanted. Long
-processions of delicately built mehailahs, perfectly
-reflected in the water, drifted down, often commanded
-by our own officers. The river turned into
-a glowing, limpid lake, almost without a land horizon.
-We passed the <i>Marmariss</i>, which the Turks fought
-until she caught fire. The Arab villages were half
-afloat. There was a look of peace everywhere, and
-the flood is too high to allow an attack on us. There
-was a glorious, dangerous sunset. The sky was
-a bank of clouds that caught fire and glowed east
-and west over the glowing water. The palms
-looked like a forest raised by magic from the river.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-It was like the most magnificent Mecca stone on
-the most gigantic scale.</p>
-
-<p>Pursefield, whose last night it is in Mesopotamia,
-asked me how much I wanted to get on. I said I
-couldn’t see the people I wanted to that night, so
-it was the same to me if we got in after dawn next
-morning. We tied up in mid-stream, to avoid
-being sniped. No flies at all. Sherbrooke and I
-talked after dinner.</p>
-
-<p><i>Friday, May 12, 1916. H.M.S. “Lawrence.”</i> The
-Army Commander and General Money were both
-away, and I only spent twenty minutes at Basra.
-I saw Bill Beach and Captain Nunn and wrote a
-line to Gertrude Bell and George Lloyd. I wish
-I could have seen them both. The <i>Sikhim</i> is there,
-in quarantine, her Red Cross looking like a huge
-tropical flower. I got on to the <i>Lawrence</i>. Cleanliness
-and comfort and good food. I wish the others
-could have it too.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span></p>
-
-<p class="copy">
-<i>Printed in Great Britain by</i><br />
-UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED<br />
-WOKING AND LONDON<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1001">1</span></p>
-
-<table>
- <tr>
- <td>Telegrams: “Scholarly, London.”</td>
- <td class="tdr">41 and 43 Maddox Street,</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Telephone: 1883 Mayfair.</td>
- <td class="tdr">Bond Street, London, W. 1.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td class="tdr"><i>October, 1919.</i></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h2><span class="large">Mr. Edward Arnold’s</span><br />
-
-AUTUMN<br />
-ANNOUNCEMENTS, 1919.<br />
-
-<span class="large">JOHN REDMOND’S LAST YEARS.</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium">By STEPHEN GWYNN.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>With Portrait.</i> <i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>16s. net.</b>
-</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>The “History of John Redmond’s Last Years,” by Stephen
-Gwynn, is in the first place an historical document of unusual
-importance. It is an account of Irish political events at their
-most exciting period, written by an active member of Mr.
-Redmond’s party who was in the confidence of his chief. The
-preliminary story of the struggle with the House of Lords and
-the prolonged fight over Home Rule is described by a keen
-student of parliamentary action. For the period which began
-with the war Mr. Gwynn has had access to all Redmond’s papers.
-He writes of Redmond’s effort to lead Ireland into the war from
-the standpoint of a soldier as well as a member of parliament.
-The last chapter gives to the world, for the first time, a full
-account of the Irish Convention which sat for eight months
-behind closed doors, and in which Redmond’s career reached its
-dramatic catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p>The interlocking of varying chains of circumstance, the parliamentary
-struggle, the rise of the rival volunteer forces, the raising
-of Irish divisions, the rebellion and its sequel, and, finally, the
-effect of bringing Irishmen together into conference&mdash;all this is
-vividly pictured, with increasing detail as the book proceeds. In
-the opening, two short chapters recall the earlier history of the
-Irish party and Redmond’s part in it.</p>
-
-<p>But the main interest centres in the character of Redmond
-himself. Mr. Gwynn does not work to display his leader as a
-hero without faults and incapable of mistakes. He shows the
-man as he knew him and worked under him, traces his career
-through its triumphs to reverses, and through gallant recovery to
-final defeat. A great man is made familiar to the reader, in his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1002">2</span>
-wisdom, his magnanimity, and his love of country. The tragic
-waste of great opportunities is portrayed in a story which has the
-quality of drama in it. Beside the picture of John Redmond
-himself there is sketched the gallant and sympathetic figure of his
-brother, who, after thirty-five years of parliamentary service, died
-with the foremost wave of his battalion at the battle of Messines.</p>
-
-<h2>A MEDLEY OF MEMORIES.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By the <span class="smcap">Rt. Rev. Sir DAVID HUNTER BLAIR, Bart.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>With Illustrations.</i> <i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>16s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Sir David Hunter Blair, late Abbot of Fort Augustus, in the first
-part of these fifty years’ recollections, deals with his childhood and
-youth in Scotland, and gives a picture full of varied interest of
-Scottish country house life a generation or more ago. Very vivid,
-too, is the account of early days at what was then the most
-famous private school in England; and the chapter on Eton under
-Balston and Hornby gives thumbnail sketches of a great many
-Etonians, school-contemporaries of the writer’s, and bearing names
-afterwards very well known for one reason or another. Eton was
-followed by Magdalen; and undergraduate life in the Oxford of 1872
-is depicted with a light hand and many amusing touches. There
-was foreign travel after the Oxford days; and two of the most
-pleasantly descriptive chapters of the book deal with Rome in
-the reign of Pius IX. and Leo XIII., both of which Pontiffs the
-author served as Private Chamberlain. There is much also that
-is fresh and interesting in the section treating of the lives and
-personalities of some of the great English Catholic families of
-by-gone days.</p>
-
-<p>Sir David entered the Benedictine Order at the age of twenty-five;
-and the latter half of the book is concerned with his life as
-co-founder, and member of the community of, the great Highland
-Abbey of Fort Augustus, of which he rose later to be the second
-abbot. The intimate account given in these pages of the life of a
-modern monk will be new to most readers, who will find it very
-interesting reading. The writer’s monastic experiences embrace
-not only his own beautiful home in the Central Highlands, but
-Benedictine life and work in England, in Belgium, Germany and
-Portugal, and in South America. One of the most novel and
-attractive chapters in the book is that dealing with the work of
-the Order in the vast territory of Brazil.</p>
-
-<p>The volume is illustrated with an excellent portrait, and with
-some clever black-and-white drawings, the work of Mr. Richard
-Anson, one of the author’s religious brethren, and a member of
-the Benedictine community at Caldey Abbey, in South Wales.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1003">3</span></p>
-
-<h2>WITH THE PERSIAN EXPEDITION.<br />
-
-<span class="medium">By <span class="smcap">Major</span> M. H. DONOHOE,</span><br />
-
-<span class="small smcap">Army Intelligence Corps.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small smcap">Special Correspondent of the “Daily Chronicle.”</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium">
-<i>With numerous Illustrations and Map.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>16s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Among the many “side-shows” of the Great War, few are so
-difficult for the average reader to understand as the operations in
-Northern Persia, an offshoot of the Bagdhad venture, which had
-for their object the policing of the warlike tribes in an area
-almost unknown to Europeans, and included the various attempts
-to reach and hold Baku, and so get command of the Caspian and
-Caucasia.</p>
-
-<p>The story of these operations&mdash;carried out by little, half-forgotten
-bodies of troops, mainly local levies who broke at the
-critical moment and left their British officers and N.C.O.’s to
-carry on alone&mdash;is one of the most amazing of the whole War,
-and comprises many episodes that recall the most stirring events
-of the Empire’s pioneering days.</p>
-
-<p>By happy chance, Major M. H. Donohoe, the famous War
-Correspondent, whose work for the <i>Daily Chronicle</i> in all the
-wars of the past twenty years is well known, was in this part
-of the world as a Major on the Intelligence Staff, work for
-which his knowledge of men and languages off the beaten tract
-peculiarly fitted him. He has written the story of these operations
-as he saw them, chiefly as a member of the Staff of the
-Military Mission under General Byron, known officially as the
-“Baghdad Party,” and unofficially as the “Hush-Hush Brigade,”
-which set forth early in 1918 to join the Column under General
-Dunsterville. Though there is little of fighting in the story, the
-book gives an admirable picture of the Empire’s work done faithfully
-under difficulties, and glimpses of places and peoples that
-are almost unknown even to the most venturesome traveller.
-Indeed, it is largely as a book about an unknown land that this
-volume will attract, together with its little pen-portraits of men
-and little pen-pictures of adventures, that Kipling would love.</p>
-
-<h2>A PHYSICIAN IN FRANCE.<br />
-
-<span class="table">
-<span class="large">By <span class="smcap">Major-General Sir</span> WILMOT HERRINGHAM,<br />
-K.C.M.G., C.B.,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small"><span class="smcap">Physician to St. Bartholomew’s Hospital; Consulting Physician
-to the Forces Overseas.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>15s. net.</b></span></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>How the war, as seen at close quarters, struck a man eminent
-in another profession than that of arms is the distinguishing
-feature of this volume of personal impressions. It is not, however,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1004">4</span>
-merely the outcome of a few weeks’ sojourn or “trip to the
-trenches,” with one eye on an expectant public, for the author
-has four times seen autumn fade into winter on the flat country-side
-of Flanders, and, when the war ended, was still at his post
-rendering invaluable services amidst unforgettable scenes. The
-author’s comments on the day-to-day happenings are distinguished
-by a tone that is at once manly, reflective, and good-humoured.
-Medical questions are naturally prominent, but are dealt with
-largely in a manner that should interest the layman at the present
-time. Sir Wilmot was with Lord Roberts when he died. A very
-pleasing feature of the book is the constant revelation of the
-author’s love of nature and sport, and his happy way of introducing
-such topics, together with descriptions of the country around him,
-makes a welcome contrast to the stern events which form the
-staple material of the book. There are some very amusing stories.</p>
-
-<h2>LONDON MEN IN PALESTINE.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By ROWLANDS COLDICOTT.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>With maps.</i> <i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>12s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>This book embraces so much more than the ordinary war story
-that we have a peculiar difficulty in describing it in a few chosen
-words.</p>
-
-<p>The curtain lifts the day after the battle of Sheria, one of the
-minor fights in General Allenby’s first campaign&mdash;those movements
-of troops which came only to a pause with the capture
-of Jerusalem. Gaza has just been taken. You are introduced to
-one of the companies of a London battalion serving in the East,
-of which company the author is commander. The reading of a few
-lines, the passing of a few moments, causes you (such is the power of
-right words) to be <i>attached</i> to that company and to move in imagination
-with it across the dazzling plain. When you have tramped a few
-miles you begin to realise, perhaps for the first time, the heat and
-torment of a day’s march in Philistia. It is not long before you
-feel that you, too, are adventuring with the toiling soldiers; with
-them you wonder where the halting place will be, what sort of
-bivouac you are likely to hit upon. By this time you will have
-met the officers&mdash;Temple, Trobus, Jackson&mdash;and are coming to
-have a nodding acquaintance with the men. Desire to compass
-the unknown, and sympathetic interest in the experiences of a
-company of your own country-men, Londoners footing it in a
-foreign land, now takes you irresistibly into the very heart of the
-tale, and you become one with the narrator. With him you
-wander among the ruins of Gaza, pass into southern Palestine, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1005">5</span>
-come to the foot-hills of Judea. With him you slowly become
-conscious that the long series of marches is planned to culminate
-in an assault upon Jerusalem. Now you are part of a dusty
-column winding up into Judea by the Jerusalem road, looking
-hour by hour upon those natural phenomena that suggested the
-parables. “London Men in Palestine” brings all this home to
-you as if you were a passer-by. Next, the massing of troops
-about the Holy City is described, and you are given a distant view
-of the city itself. A chapter follows that describes the coming of
-the rains. Then you spend a night in an old rock-engendered
-fortress-village while troops pass through to the attack, the storm
-still at its height. A chapter follows that tells of a crowded day&mdash;too
-complex and full of incident here to be described. The book
-closes with an exciting description of a fight on the Mount of Olives.</p>
-
-<h2>MONS, ANZAC, AND KUT.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By an M.P.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>14s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>The writer of these remarkable memoirs, whose anonymity will
-not veil his identity from his friends, is a man well known, not
-only in England, but also abroad, and the pages are full of the
-writer’s charm, and gaiety of spirit, and “courage of a day that
-knows not death.” Day by day, in the thick of the most stirring
-events in history, he jotted down his impressions at first hand,
-and although parts of the diary cannot yet be published, enough
-is given to the world to form a graphic and very human history.</p>
-
-<p>Our author was present at the most critical part of the Retreat
-from Mons. He took part in the dramatic defence of Landrecies,
-and the stand at Compiegne. Wounded, and a prisoner, he
-describes his experiences in a German hospital and his subsequent
-recapture by the British during the Marne advance.</p>
-
-<p>The scene then shifts to Gallipoli, where he was present at the
-immortal first landing, surely one of the noblest pages of our
-history. He took part in the fierce fighting at Suvla Bay, and,
-owing to his knowledge of Turkish, he had amazing experiences
-during the Armistice arranged for the burial of the dead.</p>
-
-<p>Later, the author was in Mesopotamia, where he accompanied
-the relieving force in their heroic attempt to save Kut. On
-several occasions he was sent out between the lines to conduct
-negociations between the Turks and ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>“Mons, Anzac, and Kut”.... A day and a day will pass,
-before the man and the moment meet to give us another book
-like this. We congratulate ourselves that the author survived to
-write it.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1006">6</span></p>
-
-<h2>THE STRUGGLE IN THE AIR.<br />
-
-<span class="large">1914-1918.</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">By <span class="smcap">Major</span> CHARLES C. TURNER (late R.A.F.).</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small table"><span class="smcap">Assoc. Fellow R.Aer.Soc., Cantor Lectures on Aeronautics, 1909. Author of<br />
-“Aircraft of To-day,” “The Romance of Aeronautics,” and (with<br />
-Gustav Hamel) of “Flying: Some Practical Experiences,”<br />
-Editor of “Aeronautics,” etc., etc., etc.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="medium">
-<i>With Illustrations.</i> <i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>15s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Major Turner served in the flying arm throughout the
-great conflict, chiefly as an instructor of officers of the Royal
-Naval Air Service, and then of the Royal Air Force in the
-principles of flight, aerial navigation, and other subjects. He did
-much experimental work, made one visit to the Front, and was
-mentioned in dispatches. The Armistice found him in the position
-of Chief Instructor at No. 2 School of Aeronautics, Oxford.</p>
-
-<p>The classification of this book explains its scope and arrangement.
-The chapters are as follows:</p>
-
-<p>Capabilities of Aircraft; Theory in 1914; The flight to France
-and Baptism of Fire; Early Surprises; Fighting in the Air,
-1914-1915; 1916; 1917; 1918; Zeppelins and the Defence;
-Night Flying; The Zeppelin Beaten; Aeroplane Raids on
-England; Bombing the Germans; Artillery Observation; Reconnaissance
-and Photography; Observation Balloons; Aircraft and
-Infantry; Sea Aircraft; Heroic Experimenters; Casualties in
-the Third Arm; The Robinson Quality.</p>
-
-<h2>CAUGHT BY THE TURKS.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By FRANCIS YEATS-BROWN.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>10s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>This book contains a full measure of adventure and excitement.
-The author, who is a Captain in the Indian Cavalry, was serving
-in the Air Force in Mesopotamia in 1915, and was captured
-through an accident to the aeroplane while engaged in a
-hazardous and successful attempt to cut the Turkish telegraph
-lines north and west of Baghdad, just before the Battle of
-Ctesiphon. Then came the horrors of the journey to Constantinople,
-during which the “terrible Turk” showed himself in his
-worst colours; but it was in Constantinople that the most thrilling
-episodes of his captivity had their origin. The story of the
-Author’s first attempt to escape (which did not succeed) and of
-his subsequent lucky dash for freedom, is one of intense interest,
-and is told in a most vivid and dramatic way.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1007">7</span></p>
-
-<h2>JOHN HUGH ALLEN<br />
-
-<span class="large">OF THE GALLANT COMPANY</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium">A Memoir by his Sister INA MONTGOMERY.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>With Portrait.</i> <i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>10s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>This book is the life-story of a young New Zealander who was
-killed in action at the Dardanelles in June, 1915. It is told mainly
-in his own letters and diaries&mdash;which have been supplemented, so
-far as was needful, with the utmost tact and discretion by his
-sister&mdash;and falls naturally into three principal stages. Allen spent
-four very strenuous years, 1907-1911, at Cambridge, where he
-occupied a prominent position among his contemporaries as an
-active member, and eventually President of the Union. Though
-undergraduate politics are not usually taken very seriously by the
-outside world, yet this side of Allen’s Cambridge career has an
-interest far transcending the merely personal one. Possessed, as
-he was, of remarkable gifts, which he had cultivated by assiduous
-practice as a speaker and writer, and passionately interested in
-all that concerns the British Empire, and the present and future
-relations between the United Kingdom and the Overseas
-Dominions, his record may well stand as representative of the
-attitude of the <i>&eacute;lite</i> of the New Zealand youth towards these vital
-matters in the period just preceding the war.</p>
-
-<p>After Cambridge, he returned for a time to New Zealand, where
-he resolved to make his permanent home, but came back to
-England in December, 1913, to complete his legal studies and get
-called to the bar, and was still in England when the war broke
-out. Consequently the second stage is the story of seven months’
-experience as a lieutenant in the 13th Battalion of the Worcesters,
-and his letters of this period give an attractive, and intensely
-graphic account of the making of the new army. Finally, he was
-despatched, with a few other selected officers, to the Dardanelles,
-arrived on May 25th at Cape Helles, and was attached to the
-Essex regiment. The last stage, brief, glorious, and terrible,
-lasted only twelve days but, brief as it was, he had time to draw
-an enthralling picture of the unexampled horrors of this particular
-phase of trench-warfare. The book is steeped, from beginning
-to end, in a sober but fervent enthusiasm; and the cult of the
-Empire, in its noblest form, has seldom been as finely exemplified
-as by the life and death of John Allen.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1008">8</span></p>
-
-<h2>NO&Euml;L ROSS AND HIS WORK.<br />
-
-<span class="large">Edited by HIS PARENTS.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>10s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>A series of charming sketches by a young New Zealander, who
-died in December, 1917, on the threshold of a brilliant literary
-career. No&euml;l Ross was one of those daring Anzacs who made
-the landing on Gallipoli. Wounded in the early days of the
-terrible fighting there, he was discharged from the Army, came
-to London, rejoined there, and obtained a commission in the
-Royal Field Artillery. Afterwards he became a valued member
-of the Editorial Staff of <i>The Times</i>, on which his genius was at
-once recognized and highly appreciated. Much of his work
-appeared in <i>The Times</i>, and he was also a contributor to Punch.
-In collaboration with his father, Captain Malcolm Ross, the New
-Zealand War Correspondent, he was the author of “Light and
-Shade in War,” of which the <i>Daily Mail</i> said: “It is full of
-Anzac virility, full of Anzac buoyancy, and surcharged with that
-devil-may-care humour that has so astounded us jaded peoples
-of an older world.”</p>
-
-<p>His writings attracted the attention of such capable writers
-as Rudyard Kipling, and Sir Ian Hamilton, who said he reminded
-him in many ways of that gallant and brilliant young Englishman,
-Rupert Brooke.</p>
-
-<h2>WITH THE BRITISH INTERNED
-IN SWITZERLAND.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By <span class="smcap">Lieut.-Colonel</span> H. P. PICOT, C.B.E.,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small table"><span class="smcap">Late Military Attach&eacute;, 1914-16, and British Officer in Charge of the
-Interned, 1916-18.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>1 vol.</i> <i>Demy 8vo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <b>10s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>In this volume Colonel Picot tells us, in simple and lucid
-fashion, how some thousands of our much tried and suffering
-countrymen were transferred&mdash;to the eternal credit of Switzerland&mdash;from
-the harsh conditions of captivity to a neutral soil,
-there to live in comparative freedom amid friendly surroundings.
-He describes in some detail the initiative taken by the Swiss
-Government on behalf of the Prisoners of War in general, and
-the negociations which preceded the acceptance by the Belligerent
-States of the principle of Internment, and then recounts the
-measures taken by that Government for the hospitalization of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1009">9</span>
-some 30,000 Prisoners of War, and the organization of a Medical
-Service for the treatment of the sick and wounded.</p>
-
-<p>Turning, then, more particularly to the group of British
-prisoners, he deals with their discipline, their camp life, the steps
-taken for spiritual welfare, and the organization of sports and
-recreations, and an interesting chapter records the efforts made
-to afford them technical training in view of their return to civil
-life.</p>
-
-<p>The book also comprises a resum&eacute; of the formation and
-development of the Bread Bureau at Berne, which ultimately,
-in providing bread for 100,000 British prisoners of war in
-Germany, doubtless saved countless lives; and a description of
-the activities of the British Legation Red Cross Organization,
-both of which institutions were founded by Lady Grant Duff,
-wife of H.M.’s Minister at Berne.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Picot throws many interesting sidelights on life in
-Switzerland in war-time&mdash;diplomatic, social, and artistic&mdash;and his
-modest and self-effacing narrative dwells generously on the
-devotion of all those who, whether by appointment or chance,
-were associated with him in his beneficent labours.</p>
-
-<p>It is hoped that this account of a special phase in the history
-of our countrymen will prove of interest to that large public
-who have shown in countless ways their sympathy with all that
-concerns the welfare of Prisoners of War.</p>
-
-<h2>A CHILDHOOD IN BRITTANY
-EIGHTY YEARS AGO.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small"><span class="smcap">Author of “Tante,” “The Encounter,” etc.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>Demy 8vo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <b>10s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>With exquisite literary art which the reading public has recognised
-in “Tante” and others of her novels, the author of this
-book tells of a great lady’s childhood in picturesque Brittany in
-the middle of the last century. It covers that period of life
-around which the tenderest and most vivid memories cluster;
-a childhood set in a district of France rich in romance, and rich
-in old loyalties to manners and customs of a gracious era that is
-irrevocably in the past.</p>
-
-<p>Charming vignettes of character, marvellous descriptions of
-houses, costumes and scenery, short stories in silhouette of
-pathetic or humorous characters&mdash;these are also in the book.</p>
-
-<p>And through it all the author is seen re-creating a background,
-which has profoundly influenced one of the finest literary artists
-of the last century.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1010">10</span></p>
-
-<h2>GARDENS: THEIR FORM
-AND DESIGN.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By the <span class="smcap">Viscountess</span> WOLSELEY.</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium"><i>With numerous Illustrations by</i> <span class="smcap">Miss</span> M. G. CAMPION.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>1 vol.</i> <i>Medium 8vo.</i> <b>21s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>The present volume, which is beautifully got up and illustrated,
-deals with form and line in the garden, a subject comparatively
-new in England.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wolseley’s book suggests simple, inexpensive means&mdash;the
-outcome of practical knowledge and experience&mdash;for achieving
-charming results in gardens of all sizes. Her College of Gardening
-at Glynde has shown Lady Wolseley how best to make
-clear to those who have never before thought about garden design,
-some of the complex subjects embraced by it, such as Water
-Gardens, Rock Gardens, Treillage, Paved Gardens, Surprise
-Gardens, etc. The book contains many decorative and imaginative
-drawings by Miss Mary G. Campion, as well as a large
-number of practical diagrams and plans, which further illustrate
-the author’s ideas and add to the value of the book.</p>
-
-<h2>MEMORIES OF THE MONTHS.<br />
-
-<span class="large">SIXTH SERIES.</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">By the <span class="smcap">Rt. Hon. Sir HERBERT MAXWELL, Bt.</span>,
-F.R.S., D.C.L., LL.D.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>With photogravure frontispiece.</i> <i>Large Crown 8vo.</i> <b>10s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>It is some years since the fifth series of “Memories of the
-Months” was issued, but the demand for Sir Herbert Maxwell’s
-charming volumes continues unabated. Every year rings new
-changes on the old order of Nature, and the observant eye can
-always find fresh features on the face of the Seasons. Sir
-Herbert Maxwell goes out to meet Nature on the moor and loch,
-in garden and forest, and writes of what he sees and feels. It is
-a volume of excellent gossip, the note-book of a well-informed
-and high-spirited student of Nature, where the sportsman’s
-ardour is tempered always with the sympathy of the lover of
-wild things, and the naturalist’s interest is leavened with the
-humour of a cultivated man of the world. This is what gives
-the work its abiding charm, and makes these memories fill the
-place of old friends on the library bookshelf.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1011">11</span></p>
-
-<h2>SINGLE-HANDED CRUISING.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By FRANCIS B. COOKE,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small"><span class="smcap">Author of “The Corinthian Yachtsman’s Handbook,” “Cruising Hints,” Etc.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>Illustrated.</i> <b>10s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>The contents of this volume being based upon the author’s
-many years’ practical experience of single-handed sailing, are
-sure to be acceptable to those who, either from choice or
-necessity, make a practice of cruising alone. Of the four
-thousand or more yachts whose names appear in Lloyd’s
-Register, quite a considerable proportion are small craft used for the
-most part for week-end cruising, and single-handed sailing is a
-proposition that the owner of a week-ender cannot afford altogether
-to ignore. To be dependent upon the assistance of friends, who
-may leave one in the lurch at the eleventh hour, is a miserable
-business that can only be avoided by having a yacht which one is
-capable of handling alone. The ideal arrangement is to have a
-vessel of sufficient size to accommodate one or two guests and yet
-not too large to be sailed single-handed at a pinch. In this book
-Mr. Cooke gives some valuable hints on the equipment and handling
-of such a craft, which, it may be remarked, can, in the absence of
-paid hands, be maintained at comparatively small cost.</p>
-
-<h2>MODERN ROADS.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By H. PERCY BOULNOIS, M.Inst.C.E., F.R.San.Inst., etc.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>Demy 8vo.</i> <b>16s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>The author is well known as one of the leading authorities on
-road-making, and he deals at length with Traffic, Water-bound
-Macadam Roads, Surface Tarring, Bituminous Roads, Waves
-and Corrugations, Slippery Roads, Paved Streets (Stone and
-Wood, etc.), Concrete Road Construction, etc.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1012">12</span></p>
-
-<h2>A THIN GHOST AND OTHERS.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By <span class="smcap">Dr.</span> M. R. JAMES,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small"><span class="smcap">Provost of Eton College.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>Crown 8vo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <b>4s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>The Provost of Eton needs no introduction as a past master of
-the art of making our flesh creep, and those who have enjoyed
-his earlier books may rest assured that his hand has lost none of
-its blood-curdling cunning. Neither is it necessary to remind
-them that Dr. James’s inexhaustible stories of arch&aelig;ological
-erudition furnish him with a unique power of giving his gruesome
-tales a picturesque setting, and heightening by their literary and
-antiquarian charm the exquisite pleasure derived from thrills of
-imaginary terror. This latter quality has never been more happily
-displayed than in the stories contained in the present volume,
-which we submit with great confidence to the judgment of all
-who appreciate&mdash;and who does not?&mdash;a good old-fashioned hair-raising
-ghost story.</p>
-
-<h2>New Editions.</h2>
-
-<h2>GHOST STORIES OF AN
-ANTIQUARY.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By <span class="smcap">Dr.</span> M. R. JAMES,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small"><span class="smcap">Provost of Eton College.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>New Edition.</i> <i>Crown 8vo.</i> <b>5s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<h2>MORE GHOST STORIES.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By <span class="smcap">Dr.</span> M. R. JAMES.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>New Edition.</i> <i>Crown 8vo.</i> <b>5s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<h2>THE PERFECT GENTLEMAN.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By <span class="smcap">Captain</span> HARRY GRAHAM,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small"><span class="smcap">Author of “Ruthless Rhymes,” etc.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>New Edition.</i> <i>Crown 8vo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <b>3s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<h2>THE COMPLETE SPORTSMAN.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By <span class="smcap">Captain</span> HARRY GRAHAM.</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>New Edition.</i> <i>Crown 8vo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <b>3s. 6d. net.</b></span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1013">13</span></h2>
-
-<h2><i>The Modern Educator’s Library.</i><br />
-
-<span class="medium">General Editor: Professor A. A. COCK.</span></h2>
-
-<p>The present age is seeing an unprecedented advance in educational
-theory and practice; its whole outlook on the ideals and
-methods of teaching is being widened. The aim of this new series
-is to present the considered views of teachers of wide experience,
-and eminent ability, upon the changes in method involved in this
-development, and upon the problems which still remain to be
-solved, in the several branches of teaching with which they are
-most intimately connected. It is hoped, therefore, that these
-volumes will be instructive not only to teachers, but to all who are
-interested in the progress of education.</p>
-
-<p>Each volume contains an index and a comprehensive bibliography
-of the subject with which it deals.</p>
-
-<h2>EDUCATION: ITS DATA AND
-FIRST PRINCIPLES.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By T. PERCY NUNN, M.A., D.Sc.,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small table"><span class="smcap">Professor of Education in the University of London; Author of “The Aims
-and Achievements of Scientific Method,” “The Teaching of Algebra,” etc.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>Crown 8vo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <b>6s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Dr. Nunn’s volume really forms an introduction to the whole
-series, and deals with the fundamental questions which lie at the
-root of educational inquiry. The first is that of the aims of education.
-These, he says, are always correlative to ideals of life, and,
-as ideals of life are eternally at variance, their conflict will be
-reflected in educational theories. The individualism of post-reformation
-Europe gradually gave way to a reaction culminating
-in Hegel, which pictured the state as the superentity of which the
-single life is but a fugitive element. The logical result of this
-Hegelian ideal the world has just seen, and educators of to-day
-have to decide whether to foster this sinister tradition or to help
-humanity to escape from it to something better. What we need
-is a doctrine which, while admitting the importance of the social
-element in man, reasserts the importance of the individual.</p>
-
-<p>This notion of individuality as the ideal of life is worked out at
-length, and on the results of this investigation are based the conclusions
-which are reached upon the practical problem of
-embodying this ideal in teaching. Among other subjects, the
-author deals with Routine and Ritual, Play, Nature and Nurture,
-Imitation, Instinct; and there is a very illuminating last chapter
-on “The School and the Individual.”
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1014">14</span></p>
-
-<h2>MORAL AND RELIGIOUS
-EDUCATION.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By SOPHIE BRYANT, D.Sc., Litt.D.</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small"><span class="smcap">Late Head Mistress of the North London Collegiate School for Girls
-Author of “Educational Ends,” etc.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>Crown 8vo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <b>6s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>In this book, Mrs. Bryant, whose writings on educational subjects
-are widely known, takes the view that in order to produce
-the best result over the widest area, the teaching of morality
-through the development of religious faith, and its teaching by
-direct appeal to self-respect, reason, sympathy and common
-sense, are both necessary. In religion, more than in anything
-else, different individuals must follow different paths to the goal.</p>
-
-<p>Upon this basis the book falls into four parts. The first deals
-with the processes of spiritual self-realisation by means of interest
-in knowledge and art, and of personal affections and social interest,
-which all emerge in the development of conscience. The second
-part treats of the moral ideal and how it is set forth by means of
-heroic romance and history, and in the teaching of Aristotle, to
-build up the future citizen. The third presents the religious ideal,
-its beginnings and the background of ideas implied by it, together
-with suggestions for study of the Bible and the lives of the Saints.
-In the fourth part the problem of the reasoned presentment of
-religious truths is dealt with in detail.</p>
-
-<p>There is no doubt that this book makes a very considerable
-addition to what has already been written on the subject of
-religious education.</p>
-
-<h2>THE TEACHING OF MODERN
-FOREIGN LANGUAGES IN SCHOOL
-AND UNIVERSITY.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By H. G. ATKINS, M.A.,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small table"><span class="smcap">Professor of German in King’s College, University of London,
-and University Reader in German</span>,</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">AND</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">H. L. HUTTON, M.A.,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small"><span class="smcap">Senior Modern Language Master at Merchant Taylors’ School.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>Crown 8vo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <b>6s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>The first part of this book deals with the School, the second
-with the University. While each part is mainly written by one
-of the authors, they have acted in collaboration and have treated
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1015">15</span>
-the two subjects as interdependent. They have referred only briefly
-to the main features of the past history, and have chiefly tried to
-give a broad survey of the present position of modern language
-teaching, and the desirable policy for the future.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the School, conclusions are first reached as to the
-relative amount of time to be devoted to modern languages in the
-curriculum, and the various branches of the subject&mdash;its organisation
-and methods, the place of grammar and the history of the
-language&mdash;are then discussed. A chapter is devoted to the
-questions relating to the second foreign language, and the study
-is linked up with the University course.</p>
-
-<p>In the second part Professor Atkins graces the different ends to
-which the School course continued at the University may lead,
-with special reference to the higher Civil Service Examinations
-and to the training of Secondary School Teachers.</p>
-
-<p>The general plan of the book was worked out before the publication
-of the report of the Government Committee appointed by
-the Prime Minister to enquire into the position of Modern
-Languages in the educational system of Great Britain. With
-the report, however, the authors’ conclusions were in the main
-found to agree, and the text of the book has been brought up-to-date
-by references to the report which have been made in footnotes
-as well as in places in the text. No further modifications were
-thought to be necessary.</p>
-
-<p>The book will be found to give a comprehensive review of the
-whole field of modern language teaching and some valuable help
-towards the solution of its problems.</p>
-
-<h2>THE CHILD UNDER EIGHT.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By E. R. MURRAY,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small table"><span class="smcap">Vice-Principal of Maria Grey Training College; Author of “Froebel as a
-Pioneer in Modern Psychology,” etc.</span>,</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">AND</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">HENRIETTA BROWN SMITH, LL.A.,</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small table"><span class="smcap">Lecturer in Education, Goldsmith’s College, University of London; Editor of
-“Education by Life.”</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="small">
-<i>Crown 8vo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <b>6s. net.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>The authors of this book deal with the young child at the outset
-of its education, a stage the importance of which cannot be
-exaggerated. The volume is written in two parts, the first
-dealing with the child in the Nursery and Kindergarten, and the
-second with the child in the State School. Much that is said is
-naturally applicable to either form of School, and, where this is so,
-repetition has been avoided by means of cross references.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1016">16</span></p>
-
-<p>The authors find that the great weakness of English education
-in the past has been want of a definite aim to put before the
-children, and the want of a philosophy for the teacher. Without
-some understanding of the meaning and purpose of life the teacher
-is at the mercy of every fad, and is apt to exalt method above
-principle. This book is an attempt to gather together certain
-recognised principles, and to show in the light of actual experience
-how these may be applied to existing circumstances. They put
-forward a strong plea for the recognition of the true value of Play,
-the “spontaneous activity in all directions,” and for courage
-and faith on the part of the teacher to put this recognition into
-practice; and they look forward to the time when the conditions
-of public Elementary Schools, from the Nursery School up, will be
-such&mdash;in point of numbers, space, situation and beauty of
-surroundings&mdash;that parents of any class will gladly let their
-children attend them.</p>
-
-<p class="copy"><i>Further volumes in this series are in preparation and will be
-published shortly.</i></p>
-
-<h2>FIRST PRINCIPLES OF MUSIC.<br />
-
-<span class="large">By F. J. READ, <span class="smcap">Mus. Doc. (Oxon.)</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="x-small"><span class="smcap">Formerly Professor at the Royal College of Music.</span></span><br />
-
-<span class="medium">
-<i>Crown 8vo.</i> <b>1s. 6d.</b></span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>This book is the result of the author’s long experience as
-Professor of Theory at the Royal College of Music, and is the
-clearest and most concise treatise of the kind that has yet been
-written.</p>
-
-<p class="small">“It is a useful little book, covering a wider field than any other of the kind
-that we know.”&mdash;<i>The Times.</i></p>
-
-<p class="small">“It is calculated to quicken interest in various subjects outside the normal
-scope of an elementary musical grammar. The illustrated chapter on
-orchestral instruments, for instance, is a welcome and stimulating innovation.”&mdash;<i>Daily
-Telegraph.</i></p>
-
-<p class="copy">LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 &amp; 43 MADDOX STREET, W. 1.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h2 id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a>
-Now Admiral Boyle, C.B., C.M.G., M.V.O.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a>
-Colonel Doughty Wylie, V.C.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">3</a>
-Colonel Esson was Q.M.G. of the New Zealand Division.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">4</a>
-Now Lieut.-General Sir John Monash, commanding the
-Australian Forces.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">5</a>
-Because he had been through the siege of Plevna and was
-covered with Turkish decorations.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">6</a>
-Supply officer of the New Zealand Division.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">7</a>
-Now Lieut.-General Sir A. H. Russell, K.C.M.G., K.C.B.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">8</a>
-Now Chief of Staff in India.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">9</a>
-Commanding Australian Div.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">10</a>
-Now Lieut.-Colonel Bigham, C.M.G., Grenadier Guards.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">11</a>
-Now Brigadier-General, Australian Forces.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">12</a>
-Now Surgeon-General and Director-General, Medical Services
-of Australia.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">13</a>
-The usual Albanian greeting.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">14</a>
-Commanding 1st Australian Light Horse Brigade. Now
-Lieut.-General Sir H. Chauvel, G.C.M.G., K.C.B.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">15</a>
-Commanding New Zealand Infantry Brigade. Afterwards
-killed at battle of Messines in 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">16</a>
-Now Lieut.-General Sir Neville, Director of the Australian
-Medical Service.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">17</a>
-Now Sir George Lloyd, Governor of Bombay.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">18</a>
-War correspondents.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">19</a>
-The novelist.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">20</a>
-Naval beachmaster.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">21</a>
-is A.D.C., a Captain in the Indian Lancers, who had been
-killed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">22</a>
-A.D.M.S., New Zealand Division.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">23</a>
-Irish Guards. Commanding 29th Irish Brigade.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">24</a>
-Taken back after.</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h3>Transcriber’s Note:</h3>
-
-<p>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.</p>
-
-<p>Page 151, “<i>Monday, July 2, 1915.”</i> changed to read “<i>Monday, August 2, 1915.”</i> to match the month in previous and subsequent diary entries.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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