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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.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55048 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55048)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Retreat from Mons, by A. Corbett-Smith
-
-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: The Retreat from Mons
- By one who shared in it
-
-Author: A. Corbett-Smith
-
-Release Date: July 5, 2017 [EBook #55048]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RETREAT FROM MONS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Frontispiece: GENERAL SIR H. SMITH-DORRIEN. _From the Painting by
-Arnold Mountford._]
-
-
-
- The
- Retreat from Mons
-
- BY ONE WHO SHARED IN IT
-
-
-
- BY
- A. CORBETT-SMITH
- (_Major, R.F.A._)
-
-
-
- _With Three Plates and Map_
-
-
-
- For who is he, whose chin is but enrich'd
- With one appearing hair, that will not follow
- These cull'd and choice-drawn cavaliers to France?
-
-
-
- CASSELL AND COMPANY, LTD
- London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne
- 1916
-
-
-
-
- To
-
- GENERAL SIR H. L. SMITH-DORRIEN,
- G.C.M.G., G.C.B., D.S.O., ETC.
-
-DEAR GENERAL SMITH-DORRIEN,
-
-When, some few months ago, you honoured me by your acceptance of this
-dedication I had in mind to make a single volume which should trace the
-course of the War during the period of your command of the Second Army,
-the unforgettable days from Mons to Ypres.
-
-Since then I have found that there is one phase of the operations which
-has gripped the imagination of the public more than any other event of
-the past two years: the "Retreat from Mons." It is, indeed, almost
-incredible how little the people know of this, and how splendidly they
-respond to the telling of the story.
-
-But it seems to me that the story can never be told as it should be.
-Only those who actually experienced the horror and the splendour of
-those ten days could hope to tell it, and for them the facts are
-blurred and distorted by the nightmare through which they passed.
-
-Still, I am rashly making the attempt, and in doing so I try to write
-of the big, human side of things. For it is the trivial, homely
-incidents in the daily life of the British soldier, and the stories of
-noble devotion and chivalry of gallant gentlemen like Francis Grenfell
-and Bradbury, which fire the imagination. I know that you will
-understand and appreciate my motives.
-
-For the rest, should the public be kind to this trivial volume I shall
-hope later to continue the narrative as I had originally intended.
-
-Will you, then, accept my book, not in tribute of a Command which must
-remain indelibly scored in letters of gold on the page of our country's
-history so long as Britain endures, but as a memory of the two or three
-years of peace when I was privileged to work with you and of the year
-of war when I had the honour of serving, one of that "band of
-brothers," in your Command?
-
-I am,
- Very faithfully yours,
- A. CORBETT-SMITH.
-
-THE MIDDLE TEMPLE,
- LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-AUTHOR'S ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-
-I tender my very grateful thanks to GENERAL SIR HORACE SMITH-DORRIEN
-for his kindness in reading the proof-sheets of the book and for
-several most valuable items of information.
-
-My thanks are also due to CAPTAIN C. T. ATKINSON, of the Historical
-Section, Committee of Imperial Defence, for his courteous help in the
-task of compiling the Roll of Honour. Also to the SECRETARY, K.A.
-Institution, for the loan of material for the same purpose.
-
-I have availed myself to some extent of the researches of MR. HILAIRE
-BELLOC in my estimates in Chapter V.; while my details of the German
-Army are taken from German sources, "Deutsche Land- und Seemacht," by
-Rabenau, and other volumes.
-
-To my comrades-in-arms (few, alas! remain), whose deeds and experiences
-have contributed to the writing of the story, I hold out a hand of
-greeting. I salute in reverence the immortal souls of the gallant dead.
-
-A. C.-S.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-Roll of Honour
-
-CHAPTER
-
- 1. Mobilisation
- 2. The Sailing of the Force
- 3. The Landing of the Force
- 4. Up Country
- 5. The Marshalling of the Armies
- 6. Mons
- 7. Mons (_continued_)
- 8. The Retreat Begins
- 9. The Second Day
- 10. An Interlude
- 11. Wednesday, the 26th of August
- 12. Wednesday, the 26th of August (_continued_)
- 13. The Retreat Continues
- 14. Past Compiègne
- 15. The Final Stages
-
-Appendix I.
-
-Appendix II.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF PLATES
-
-General Sir H. Smith-Dorrien . . . _Frontispiece_
-
-Field-Marshal Viscount French
-
-General Sir Douglas Haig
-
-Map of Country from Mons to Paris
-
-
-
-
- The Roll of Honour
-
- OF THE
-
- FIRST EXPEDITIONARY FORGE
-
- _General Officer Commanding-in-Chief the British Forces:_
- FIELD-MARSHAL SIR J. D. P. FRENCH.
-
- _Chief of the General Staff:_
- LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR A. J. MURRAY.
-
- _Adjutant-General:_
- MAJOR-GENERAL SIR C. F. N. MACREADY.
-
- _Quartermaster-General:_
- MAJOR-GENERAL SIR W. R. ROBERTSON.
-
-
-
- _FIRST ARMY CORPS_
-
- _General Officer Commanding-in-Chief_--
- LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR DOUGLAS HAIG.
-
-
- 1st DIVISION
-
- _General Officer Commanding_--MAJOR-GENERAL S. H. LOMAX.
-
-
- 1st Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL F. I. MAXSE.
- 1st Batt. Coldstream Guards.
- 1st Batt. R. Highlanders.
- 1st Batt. Scots Guards.
- 2nd Batt. R. Munster Fusiliers.
-
-
- 2nd Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL E. S. BULFIN.
- 2nd Batt. R. Sussex Regt.
- 1st Batt. Northampton Regt.
- 1st Batt. N. Lancs. Regt.
- 2nd Batt. K. R. Rifle Corps
-
-
- 3rd Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL H. J. S. LANDON.
- 1st Batt. R. W. Surrey Regt.
- 1st Batt. Gloucester Regt.
- 1st Batt. S. Wales Borderers.
- 2nd Batt. Welsh Regt.
-
- CAVALRY (attached)
- C Squadron 15th Hussars.
-
- ROYAL ENGINEERS
- 23rd and 26th Field Companies.
-
- ROYAL ARTILLERY
- R.F.A. Batteries--113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 46, 51, 54;
- (Howitzer) 30, 40, 57.
- _Heavy Battery R.G.A._--26.
- An Ammunition Column and an Ammunition Park.
-
-
-
- 2nd DIVISION
-
- _General Officer Commanding_--MAJOR-GENERAL C. C. MONRO.
-
-
- 4th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade-Commander_--GENERAL R. SCOTT-KERR.
- 2nd Batt. Grenadier Guards
- 3rd Batt. Coldstream Guards
- 2nd Batt. Coldstream Guards
- lst Batt. Irish Guards.
-
-
- 5th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL R. C. B. HAKING.
-
- 2nd Batt. Worcester Regt.
- 2nd Batt. Highland L.I.
- 2nd Batt. Oxford and Bucks L.I.
- 2nd Batt. Connaught Rangers
-
-
- 6th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL R. H. DAVIES.
- 1st Batt. Liverpool Regt.
- 1st Batt. R. Berks Regt.
- 2nd Batt. S. Staffs. Regt.
- lst Batt. K. R. Rifle
-
- CAVALRY (attached)
- B Squadron 15th Hussars.
-
- ROYAL ENGINEERS
- 5th and 11th Field Companies.
-
- ROYAL ARTILLERY
-
- _R.F.A. Batteries_--22, 50, 70, 15, 48, 71, 9, 16, 17;
- (Howitzer) 47, 56, 60.
- _Heavy Battery R.G.A._--35.
- An Ammunition Column and an Ammunition Park.
-
-
-
- CAVALRY
-
- _A Division_ (_Four Brigades_)
-
- General Officer Commanding--MAJOR-GENERAL E. H. H. ALLENBY.
-
-
- 1st Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL C. J. BRIGGS.
-
- 2nd Dragoon Guards.
- 5th Dragoon Guards.
- 11th Hussars.
-
-
- 2nd Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL H. DE B. DE LISLE.
-
- 4th Dragoon Guards.
- 9th Lancers.
- 18th Hussars.
-
-
- 3rd Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL H. DE LA POER GOUGH.
-
- 4th Hussars.
- 5th Lancers.
- 16th Lancers.
-
-
- 4th Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL HON. C. E. BINGHAM.
-
- Household Cavalry (composite Regiment).
- 6th Dragoon Guards.
- 3rd Hussars.
-
- And--
-
- the 5th Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL SIR P. W. CHETWODE.
- 12th Lancers.
- 20th Hussars.
- 2nd Dragoons.
-
-
- ROYAL HORSE ARTILLERY
- _Batteries_ "D," "E," "I," "J," "L."
-
-
-
- SECOND ARMY CORPS
-
- _General Officer Commanding-in-Chief_--
- GENERAL SIR H. L. SMITH-DORRIEN.
-
-
- 3rd DIVISION
-
- _General Officer Commanding_--MAJOR-GENERAL H. I. W. HAMILTON.
-
-
- 7th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL F. W. N. McCRACHEN.
-
- 3rd Batt. Worcester Regt.
- 1st Batt. Wilts Regt.
- 2nd Batt. S. Lancs. Regt.
- 2nd Batt. R. Irish Rifles.
-
-
- 8th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL B. J. C. DORAN.
-
- 2nd Batt. R. Scots.
- 4th Batt. Middlesex Regt.
- 2nd Batt. R. Irish Regt.
- 1st Batt. Gordon Highlanders.
-
-
- 9th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL F. C. SHAW.
- 1st Batt. Northumberland Fusiliers.
- 1st Batt. Lincolnshire Regt.
- 1st Batt. R. Scots Fusiliers.
- 4th Batt. R. Fusiliers.
-
-
- CAVALRY (attached)
- A Squadron 15th Hussars.
-
- ROYAL ENGINEERS
- 56th and 57th Field Companies.
-
- ROYAL ARTILLERY
-
- _R.F.A. Batteries_--107, 108, 109, 6, 23, 49, 29, 41, 45;
- (Howitzer) 128, 129, 130.
- _Heavy Battery R. G. A._--48.
- An Ammunition Column and an Ammunition Park.
-
-
-
- 5th DIVISION
-
- _General Officer Commanding_--MAJOR-GENERAL SIR C. FERGUSSON.
-
-
- 13th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL G. J. CUTHBERT.
- 2nd Batt. K. O. Scottish Borderers.
- 1st Batt. R.W. Kent Regt.
- 2nd Batt. Yorks L.I.
- 2nd Batt. W. Riding Regt.
-
-
- 14th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL S. P. ROLT.
- 2nd Batt. Suffolk Regt.
- 1st Batt. Duke of Cornwall's L.I.
- 1st Batt. East Surrey Regt.
- 2nd Batt. Manchester Regt.
-
-
- 15th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL COUNT A. E. W. GLEICHEN.
-
- 1st Batt. Norfolk Regt.
- 1st Batt. Cheshire Regt.
- 1st Batt. Bedford Regt.
- 1st Batt. Dorset Regt.
-
- CAVALRY (attached)
- A Squadron 19th Hussars.
-
- ROYAL ENGINEERS
- 17th and 59th Field Companies.
-
- ROYAL ARTILLERY
- _R.F.A. Batteries_--11, 52, 80, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124;
- (Howitzer) 37, 61, 65.
- _Heavy Battery R.G.A._--108.
- An Ammunition Column and an Ammunition Park.
-
-
- 19th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--MAJOR-GENERAL L. G. DRUMMOND.
- 2nd Batt. R. Welsh Fusiliers.
- 1st Batt. Middlesex Regt.
- 1st Batt. Scottish Rifles.
- 2nd Batt. Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders.
-
-
- ROYAL FLYING CORPS
-
- Aeroplane Squadrons Nos. 2, 3, 4 and 5.
-
-
-
- ARMY SERVICE CORPS
-
- Horsed and Mechanical Transport.
-
-
- ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS
-
-
- There came into line at Le Cateau on August 25th the--
-
- 4th DIVISION
-
- _General Officer Commanding_--MAJOR-GENERAL T. D. O. SNOW.
-
-
- 10th Infantry Brigade
-
- Brigade Commander--BRIGADIER-GENERAL J. A. L. HALDANE.
- 1st Batt. R. Warwickshire Regt.
- 1st Batt. R. Irish Fusiliers.
- 2nd Batt. Seaforth Highlanders.
- 2nd Batt. R. Dublin Fusiliers.
-
-
- 11th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL A. G. HUNTER-WESTON.
- 1st Batt. Somersetshire L.I.
- 1st Batt. Hampshire Regt.
- 1st Batt. E. Lancs. Regt.
- 1st Batt. Rifle Brigade.
-
-
- 12th Infantry Brigade
-
- _Brigade Commander_--BRIGADIER-GENERAL H. F. M. WILSON.
- 1st Batt. R. Lancs. Regt.
- 2nd Batt. R. Inniskilling Fusiliers.
- 2nd Batt. Lancashire Fusiliers.
- 2nd Batt. Essex Regt.
-
- CAVALRY (attached)
- B Squadron 19th Hussars.
-
- ROYAL ENGINEERS
- 7th and 9th Field Companies.
-
- ROYAL ARTILLERY
-
- _R.F.A. Batteries_--39, 68, 88 (xiv. Brigade); 125, 126, 127 (xxix
- Brigade); 27, 134, 135 (xxxii. Brigade); 31, 35, 55 (xxxvii. Brigade).
-
- _Heavy Battery R.G.A._--31.
-
- LINES OF COMMUNICATION AND ARMY TROOPS
-
- 1st Batt. Devonshire Regt.
- 1st Batt. Cameron Highlanders
-
-
-
-
-The Retreat from Mons
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-MOBILISATION
-
- _Now all the youth of England are on fire,
- And silken dalliance in the wardrobe lies;
- Now thrive the armourers, and honour's thought
- Reigns solely in the breast of every man._
-
-
-August 5th, 1914! "Who would have dreamed of such a thing!" exclaimed
-the big majority. "So it has come at last," said the small minority.
-
-Broadly speaking, there you have the country's opinion during those now
-dimly remembered days which followed immediately upon Germany's
-throwing down of the gauntlet.
-
-Officers and men of our once-upon-a-time professional Army did not
-bother very much about it either way. War was their job. Active
-service was to be welcomed as a picnic change from the monotony of
-soldiering in England. Also, to the man keen on his profession (and
-since the Boer War such men have been steadily increasing in numbers)
-it meant the chance of promotion and of showing what he was made of.
-
-A war, even long foreseen, must inevitably come as a surprise when it
-does actually break out, and this one was no exception. During the
-last week of that July there were very, very few in Aldershot who felt
-certain that the hour was at last striking.
-
-But Aldershot was ready for it. For many a long year past Aldershot
-had existed for the Army. Latterly it had been the forge where
-Britain's little striking force, the spear-head of her armies, had been
-welded, sharpened and tested, made ready for instant launching. So,
-with the Fleet, were we prepared to fulfil our pact with France; or, if
-the summons came, to stand by Belgium.
-
-Aldershot existed for war, and the comings and goings of troops passed
-almost unnoticed. True, it now became increasingly difficult to find
-rooms in the town, and the local outfitters promptly set to work to
-reap a golden harvest from the fantastic prices which they put upon war
-gear of all kinds, but that was all--at least to the eye of a casual
-observer.
-
-There was Fritz, the doyen of Aldershot hairdressers. I wonder how
-much he learned in those days of the movements of units. Fritz had
-been an institution in the camps when present-day G.O.C.'s, grizzled
-and weather-beaten, had, as junior subalterns, sought his advice upon
-the training of incipient moustaches. Fritz remembered them all, could
-instantly reel off details of their careers, their regiments or
-stations, from the time they had left Aldershot until they had returned
-in senior commands. All duly pigeonholed in Berlin together with
-seemingly trivial incidents in their private lives.
-
-Later on, sometime at the Aisne, rumour came round that Herr Fritz had
-been up to mischief of a more serious nature and that he had been duly
-lodged in prison, or shot, or something equally suitable.
-
-Those were happy if very strenuous days at Aldershot that week or so
-before the embarkation. Men talked very little about the future,
-everyone was really too busy. Thoughts naturally flew back to the
-South African War when they did talk.
-
-"Nobody was particularly keen on that," was the generally expressed
-opinion; "nobody wanted to kill the Boers; too one-sided. This--oh!
-this is the real thing. We've got our work cut out."
-
-The very day after the mobilisation the Officers' Mess showed signs of
-packing up. It reminded one so much of the third act in _The Second in
-Command_. Two notices in the hall brought things home:--
-
-"Officers may wear Service dress or blue undress jackets in Mess."
-
-"Officers are particularly requested to pay their mess bills before
-leaving."
-
-Packing-cases and parcels began to drift in and lie about: dozens of
-telegrams passed in and out: a smaller variety of dishes appeared at
-luncheon and dinner: the regimental band came and played to us every
-night (the cheerier spirits all took a hand at conducting, especially
-rag-time).
-
-Everybody had his job, and nobody knew what anyone else was doing.
-Right at the beginning we experienced a curious feeling of secrecy.
-You would see an officer at lunch and miss him at dinner.
-
-"Oh yes! I believe he has gone this afternoon," someone remarks.
-
-"When are you off?" Colonel X. would say to an officer in a moment of
-forgetfulness, hastily adding, "No, I don't want to know--but, mind you
-pay your mess bill before you go."
-
-This secrecy of movement was certainly the most striking feature of
-those early days: that, and the splendid organisation. We have got
-accustomed to it since, but at the time, and to men used to the
-happy-go-lucky methods of this dear, lovable, muddle-headed old country
-of ours, that organisation struck one as amazing.
-
-On August 5th every C.O. was handed a file of documents. In these were
-given the most precise directions as to times, places and dates when
-his unit was to leave Aldershot. For instance:
-
-"Train No. 463Y will arrive at siding B at 12.35 A.M., August 10th.
-
-"You will complete loading by 3.40 A.M.
-
-"This train will leave siding C at 9.45 A.M., August 10th.
-
-"You will march on to the platform at 9.30 A.M. and complete your
-entraining by 9.40."
-
-And I believe it is a fact that every train left five minutes ahead of
-its scheduled time. The London and South Western Railway was given
-sixty hours in which to send to Southampton 350 troop-trains. They did
-it in forty-five hours. "Some" hustle! The astonishing efficiency of
-it all, and the admirable co-operation between military and civil
-authorities. I very much doubt if there were more than two officers of
-the Staff at Aldershot H.Q. who knew details of the intended movements.
-Fritz must have been annoyed. C.O.'s, and other individual officers,
-who knew when their own unit was timed for departure, entered
-splendidly into the spirit of the game and loyally kept the information
-to themselves; would not even tell their people, nor their best girls.
-
-One day the King came down. The visit was as secret as everything
-else. Each unit received about a quarter of an hour's warning of His
-Majesty's approach, and the men turned out of their tents or broke off
-their work to line up by the road. A few words of "good-bye, and good
-luck" to the men, a warm hand-clasp to the officers, three cheers, and
-the Royal car slipped forward to the next unit. One could hear the
-ripple of cheering flow round the camps as His Majesty passed.
-
-By the way, it is a little curious how, from the very beginning, there
-have been just three words used by everyone in bidding "good-bye."
-"Good-bye, and good luck." A kind of spontaneous, universal formula.
-Officers used it, the men, mothers, wives and sweethearts.
-
- "Good-bye, and good luck" to our sailors
- (It's a big debt we owe you to-day),
- "Good-bye, and good luck" to our soldiers
- (Some day we shall hope to repay).
- Though anxious the hearts left behind you,
- And a tear from the eye seems to fall,
- Yet--"good-bye"--God be with you, "good luck attend you,
- "Good-bye, and good luck to you all"--
-
-as the refrain of a popular song had it later.
-
-Impressions of those few hurried days are blurred. In a sense one had
-been through it all many times before. It differed but little from
-moving station or preparing for manoeuvres. And yet there was
-something of the glamour of an unknown future before one: an
-instinctive feeling that this was the end of soldiering as we had known
-it. Not that anyone dreamed of the war lasting beyond Christmas; there
-are no pessimists in the Army. We were all at school breaking up for
-the holidays, and I think that just about sums up the situation as we
-saw it at Aldershot. The unknown future was more on the lines of
-"Shall we get any skating?" "Will there be some good shows at the
-theatres?" "What sort of fun will the Pytchley give us?" "Shall I be
-able to get in the Hunt Ball?"
-
-And so one has little enough to say about the days of mobilisation and
-packing up. Besides, quite enough has already been written to satisfy
-an interested public. One little adventure, however, seems worth
-recording. It befell a certain Gunner captain who was detailed to
-conduct a draft of men from one unit to another. The yarn has the
-merit of being true in every particular. It may form a small chapter
-to itself.
-
-
-A TOURING COMPANY
-
-"Putting two and two together," said the A.S.C. major, "I imagine that
-you're to take this draft on to Portsmouth and hand over to the O.C. of
-the company down there."
-
-Why a Gunner captain should have to conduct a draft of Field Gunners to
-a place like Portsmouth and hand them over to the tender mercies of an
-A.S.C. Company Commander, I couldn't imagine. Nor indeed why a Gunner
-should take his instructions from an A.S.C. major at all. But the
-Divisional C.R.A. had sent me up to him with the remark, "It looks as
-though you ought to report there," and that was all about it.
-
-Mobilisation is responsible for a good many queer happenings, and here
-at Aldershot on the third day of it most men were rather at sea.
-
-Even in those few hours one had learned not to ask questions. There
-was no objection to the asking, but the answer was usually a vacant,
-far-away look over the shoulder and "Eenteenth Brigade Office? Oh,
-it's over there"; and a wave of the arm would comprehensively include
-Farnborough, Deepcut and the Town Station.
-
-And that was how the trouble began. If only the A.S.C. major had
-exercised a little imagination and made five out of his addition sum:
-if only he had read his own instructions a little more carefully
-(although we didn't know that till afterwards), a draft of tired
-Gunners would not have spent the next week trailing about the South of
-England looking for an A.S.C. company which didn't want them, and their
-officer would not have received a black mark which nearly damned his
-future chances at the very outset. But that by the way.
-
-"The men had their breakfast at three this morning," and the cheery
-little subaltern, who had brought the draft down from Newcastle,
-saluted and discreetly made himself still smaller by vanishing hastily
-round the nearest corner.
-
-I took my railway warrant and went out to have a look at the draft.
-
-A fresh-looking lot they were; young, most of them, averaging about
-twenty-three years old; special reservists the senior sergeant told me.
-The few old hands, who sadly needed a shave and a wash, showed how
-young the rest of them were. I didn't take much stock of them, then.
-One doesn't when it's just a conducting job of a few hours, handing
-over, and back to Headquarters right away.
-
-The men stood to attention, picked up their kits, and, with a "Fours
-left," we were off to the station down the shimmering, dancing, sandy
-roads of the Aldershot camps. The A.S.C. major returned to his ledgers
-and more arithmetic, and the cheery subaltern reclined at lordly ease
-in a Gunner Mess arm-chair, with a tinkling glass of gin and ginger
-beer at his elbow, and discussed the striking results of the previous
-day's battle in the North Sea--which had not taken place.
-
-The station-master, who didn't look as worried as he felt, touched his
-cap.
-
-"A local to ----, then change and go on to Reigate" (was it Reigate? I
-forget now, one visited so many out-of-the-way places), "and from there
-you'll probably get a through train to Portsmouth. If there isn't room
-in the train you can always turn people out."
-
-Visions of burly, homespun-clad farmers and comfortable market-women
-being turned out, protesting, by a mere Gunner captain danced through
-my brain. Actions for assault and battery, damages, bail, prison.
-
-"How an if they will not turn out?" said I.
-
-And then I realised. This was War, red War; and Great Britain was
-mobilising. The needs of the State were paramount.
-
-"You shall bid them turn out in the Prince's name," and, unlike
-Dogberry, shall see that you are obeyed.
-
-And I made myself two inches taller because after all a Gunner captain
-was somebody in the world now. And people looked with a new interest
-at the lads in khaki and began to realise, perhaps for the first time,
-that they would have to count on the British Army even though it were
-"such a little one."
-
-To do the good folk justice there was never a word of protest at the
-idea of having to turn out. And we had to invite them to do so a good
-many times before the company finished its tour of the Southern ports.
-Really it might have been a railway in Germany from the way the
-civilians gave road to the uniform. This change of attitude was
-certainly a vivid contrast to the days--last week was it?--when a man
-in His Majesty's uniform was looked at askance in crowded street and
-bar.
-
-At Reigate, where we had to wait an hour, a bombardier, one of the old
-hands, begged leave to visit a certain hotel outside the station to buy
-some bread and cheese.
-
-He was a man who hardly gave the appearance of being bread-and-cheese
-hungry, if you quite take my meaning, and the glassy stare with which
-this ancient tried to fix me augured ill for discipline if there were
-many others in the draft like him. Permission was refused. It was a
-trivial point gained but it had its consequences.
-
-Portsmouth was reached in some five hours; and twenty minutes' march
-brought us to the A.S.C. barracks where a hot dinner would cheer us
-all; for I had remembered to send a telegram _en route_ to tell them to
-expect us.
-
-We were received with cordiality by a decrepit old store-keeper, and
-the stables' cat. Otherwise the barracks looked as though an army had
-lately sacked the place from floor to basement.
-
-The men looked glum, and there was more than a hint of a move to a
-near-by hotel for "bread and cheese." Well, they were only young
-reservists and discipline was an almost unknown quantity.
-
-But dinner had to materialise somehow. So, demanding the keys of the
-castle from the unwilling seneschal, the senior sergeant, the
-bombardier, the stables' cat and myself started on a tour of inspection.
-
-Good! The kitchen contained a sack of flour and most of a sheep.
-Apparently the sheep was intended to last the decrepit servitor and his
-struggling family for the rest of the week. But we paid no heed to
-tearful entreaties and ruthlessly tore the meat away from their very
-mouths.
-
-"This is War," said I.
-
-Soon dinner was well on the way, blankets were found for the men, and
-off I went to report to Headquarters.
-
-H.Q. "received me most politely," as Harry Fragson used to sing, and
-didn't think they wanted me nor my company for any performance in
-Portsmouth.
-
-"Come back to-morrow morning," said H.Q., "and we'll tell you."
-
-The next day. "Oh, yes!" said H.Q., "you're Field Gunners, you're
-evidently sent here for Hilsea (two miles out): you'd better move on at
-once."
-
-"Parade with kits in half an hour," I ordered.
-
-Merrily we marched forth from the castle gates. Were we not wanted at
-Hilsea?
-
-A cyclist orderly threw himself, panting, from his machine.
-
-"H.Q.'s compliments and will you please report there at once."
-
-"Halt! Fours about! Quick march!"
-
-H.Q. again received me most politely.
-
-"No, you're not to go to Hilsea. You've evidently got to join the
-Eenty-eenth A.S.C. Company which has gone on to Bristol. You'll just
-catch the 5.0 train if you're sharp."
-
-"We're to go to Bristol," said I to the senior sergeant, "and you've
-got to get a move on or we'll miss the train."
-
-"I've heard tell of Bristol," he ruminated; "nice place, so my wife's
-cousin's husband used to say. He did tell as how----"
-
-But I cut the soliloquy short and got the draft out of the castle again.
-
-A few minutes later peaceable citizens fled into doorways and up
-courts, electric cars pulled up short with a grinding of brakes,
-policemen held up traffic. The R.F.A. draft approached at a steady
-double.
-
-"Where's the fire?" yelled some.
-
-"The Germans have captured the 'Hampshire Arms,'" said others.
-
-"It's for a cinema show," screamed a ragged urchin. Everyone gave us
-kindly encouragement, and girls waved merrily as we flew past. The
-bombardier, who was on the pavement side, threw an arm gallantly round
-the waist of a stout matron of some forty summers and dragged her, not
-unwillingly, half a dozen yards before he could get home with a kiss on
-the cheek.
-
-But we caught that train with five minutes to spare. The men were now
-beginning to see the joke. As yet it had escaped me. Of course it was
-not the first time I had seen "Tommy" at his cheeriest under
-misadventures; but this cheeriness now struck me vividly for the first
-time. To-day it is world-famous.
-
-They certainly made that journey a lively one. Six hours in a slow
-train across country--it is apt to become somewhat tedious. I tried to
-look like the man who owns a dog which persists in nibbling the
-trousers of total strangers--to pretend they (the men, not the
-trousers) didn't belong to me. It was no good. They might have been
-Lancashire lads off to Blackpool for the "wakes."
-
-So with imitations of Harry Tate, George Robey and other well-known
-favourites of the music-halls, the railway officials at the various
-stations being made the butt of the jokes; with a weird medley of
-harmony and melody, from "Hallo, hallo, who's your lady friend?" to
-"Sun of my Soul," the journey passed happily enough until the first of
-the Bristol stations was reached about 11.45 P.M.
-
-As no one knew where the A.S.C. barracks were I got through on the
-telephone to H.Q.
-
-"This is Captain Estcourt, R.F.A., speaking. I've got----"
-
-The orderly evidently went to fetch someone else. It turned out to be
-an adjutant, who listened to me most politely.
-
-"No, we've got no A.S.C. here. I don't think there are any in Bristol.
-But you might ring up ---- Barracks and see." Prrr.
-
-"Hallo! Is that ---- Barracks? I'm Captain----"
-
-The orderly went to fetch someone. This time, after a long wait, it
-was evidently an irascible senior officer.
-
-"No. No A.S.C. here. Try Avonmouth." Prrr.
-
-This looked like bedding down in the station waiting-rooms. Still we
-would try Avonmouth.
-
-Avonmouth Headquarters received me over the telephone most politely,
-considering the time of night.
-
-"No, we've got no A.S.C. here; but you might ring up the Embarkation
-Office." Prrr.
-
-"Hallo! Embarkation Office? I'm ----, etc."
-
-The Embarkation Office was not quite so polite in its reception. It
-sounded very worried.
-
-"No. We've got no A.S.C. here. You can come along down if you like in
-case the company should turn up."
-
-Luckily the last train had not gone. When it drew up in the station
-the men greeted it as a long-lost friend. To the strains of "All
-aboard for Dixie" they clambered in, more cheery than ever.
-
-At Avonmouth we came out into a wilderness of mighty sheds. The night
-breeze from the Bristol Channel carried with it the pungent, cleanly
-smell of tarred rope.
-
-"This is Avonmouth," said I to the senior sergeant, "and we can't go
-any farther unless a ship is waiting for us. I'm going to see where we
-can bed down."
-
-The Embarkation Office had had time to recover from its worries and
-received me very politely.
-
-Eventually we got the men into one of the sheds where hundreds of sacks
-of oats lay about. In ten minutes they had made themselves amazingly
-comfortable and peace reigned.
-
-But I'm glad we went to Avonmouth. It gave me my first real glimpse of
-the astonishing organisation under which the Expeditionary Force was to
-take the field; and also of the methods of supply.
-
-Outside the dock gates, by all the approach roads into the little town,
-there were streaming in hundreds upon hundreds of great motor lorries,
-the majority of them built to carry three tons.
-
-From all parts of England and Scotland dozens were arriving every hour.
-The organisation of it! Here was the third or fourth day from
-mobilisation and there were a couple of thousand ready for
-transportation.
-
-You picture a vividly green lorry of a big whisky distillery up North
-axle to axle with the scarlet of a Brixton firm with its blatant
-advertisement of somebody's corsets. The cockney driver from a London
-furnishing house exchanged honeyed words with a colleague from "'twixt
-Trent and Tweed" in a polite inquiry as to why the hell he couldn't let
-his tail-board down without using his (the Londoner's) radiator to
-scrape his boots on.
-
-"Can't you imagine Tommy's comments when he finds a 'Johnny Walker' van
-bringing up his ammunition in the wilds of Belgium," was the general
-remark, "but I suppose they'll give them a coat of paint first."
-
-They didn't, as a matter of fact; at least not for several months, so
-that Tommy was able to indulge his gift of language to the full.
-
-And so nearly two days passed. The men amused themselves by wandering
-about the docks, wondering at the shipping, and making sarcastic
-remarks about the lorry drivers who were being taught how to handle a
-rifle.
-
-Then came a telegram from H.Q., Aldershot.
-
-"Return and report here immediately."
-
-"Good," said the senior sergeant to me, "I always did like Aldershot.
-But we've had quite a pleasant holiday seeing the country."
-
-The draft duly paraded again, and when they learned their next
-destination their remarks were a joy to listen to.
-
-We caught a 9.0 train in the evening into Bristol. Then we marched
-across the city, a matter of, say, three miles. It was a Sunday night,
-the good citizens were abed. But my lads were determined to show that
-they were by no means downhearted.
-
-The march across was one long pageant of melody. "I'm going home to
-Dixie" was prime favourite, and splendidly they sang it in harmony.
-Then some evening hymns, then more rag-time--they were really excellent
-exponents of that difficult art--then "Onward, Christian Soldiers"; but
-never a note of "Tipperary." That immortal chorus had not yet
-"arrived."
-
-The midnight train from Bristol to Reading. A wait of three hours.
-Finally, Aldershot (the wrong station) at 6.30 A.M. A march of four
-miles into camp somewhat took the spirit out of the men, breakfastless
-and carrying heavy kits. But we rallied them at the last post and came
-in singing "Somewhere the sun is shining," like a choir of Welsh
-colliers. We certainly looked the part.
-
-"We've been looking for you for a week; where on earth have you been?"
-was hurled at us as we marched in.
-
-The bombardier started upon a story which would have made that intrepid
-explorer Captain de Rougemont green with envy. I left him to his
-astonished audience and went off for a bath and shave before attending
-my own funeral at H.Q.
-
-It will have been observed that there were varying degrees in the
-politeness with which successive H.Q.s greeted my touring company. The
-politeness with which Aldershot Headquarters now greeted me was well
-below freezing-point.
-
-"I received your telegrams from Portsmouth and various other places,"
-was the Chief's opening. "You appear to have been taking your men upon
-an extended holiday round the southern coast health resorts. May I
-inquire, without appearing too inquisitive, your authority for this
-expenditure of public money?"
-
-"Will you allow me to explain, sir?"
-
-"I am waiting for your explanation."
-
-I began. When I had recounted the story of the A.S.C. major's
-arithmetical problem I saw that I had the Great Man's attention. As
-soon as I had caught the 5 P.M. train from Portsmouth----
-
-"Sit down, won't you," said the Great Man; "cigarette?"
-
-I took one from his proffered case and lit it carefully.
-
-"If only I can hold him," thought I, "I shall pull through."
-
-I did hold him, and I did pull through.
-
-"I don't know that I can compliment you on your perspicacity," said the
-Great Man, "but I can see now where the blame lies. I had intended to
-withdraw your name from the Expeditionary Force, but----"
-
-I got up, mouth open.
-
-"Expeditionary Force?" It can only have been a feeble gasp which the
-Great Man heard. "Am I going out with the Force?"
-
-The Great Man smiled and put his hand on my shoulder.
-
-"We'll overlook it this time. Let's see how well you can do your job.
-And if you send in your claim for travelling expenses, send it to me
-and I'll countersign it."
-
-I suppose I must have said something by way of thanks. I suppose I
-must have saluted, and closed the door behind me. I know that I
-cleared half a dozen or so of the stairs down at a bound and fell over
-an astonished sentry at the bottom. It must have looked most
-undignified in a Gunner captain, but--I had actually been selected to
-join the British Expeditionary Force with a command of my own and----
-
-I leaped into the waiting taxicab in a state of delirium.
-
-The driver touched his cap.
-
-"Where to, sir?" said he.
-
-"Where to? Where to? Oh! Brussels; anywhere."
-
-The driver grinned in sympathetic understanding and got on to third
-speed in as many seconds.
-
-
-And that is how I very nearly missed the most gorgeous adventure of my
-life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE SAILING OF THE FORCE
-
- _Follow, follow!
- Grapple your minds to sternage of this navy;
- And leave your England as dead midnight still.
- * * * * *
- For who is he, whose chin is but enrich'd
- With one appearing hair, that will not follow
- These cull'd and choice-drawn cavaliers to France?_
-
-"_I consider that I have command of the sea when I am able to tell my
-Government that they can move an expedition to any point without fear
-of interference from an enemy's fleet._"--SIR GEOFFREY HORNBY.
-
-
-Train No. B46 had slipped unostentatiously into its appointed siding
-precisely on its scheduled time. For a couple of hours the men had
-been working like galley-slaves to get the ammunition on board in time.
-The C.O. and two other officers with their coats off were working as
-hard as the rest. And it is no joke heaving up and packing neatly
-cases of 18-pr. and howitzer shell, especially when you are not used to
-it.
-
-Finished at last, and with half an hour to the good. Another four
-hours and they will be on the road themselves, the first step into the
-unknown.
-
-A couple of hours' sleep, a shave and a bath, a final look round the
-battery office, a last hurried breakfast in the Mess, and a last
-handshake with the colonel.
-
-"You off? Well, good-bye, and good luck to you. We shall meet over
-the other side, I expect."
-
-The battery parades. "Battery all present, sir," reports the
-sergeant-major. The report runs through until it reaches the C.O. A
-few minutes to ride round the teams and then:
-
-"Column o' route from the right. Walk--march!" and the battery is off
-through the early morning quiet of the Aldershot streets, bound for the
-port of embarkation.
-
-Thus the mounted units, or most of them. Others by train. A few lines
-will serve as description for all these.
-
-A Railway Transport Officer meets the C.O. on the platform as the men
-march in.
-
-"Get your men in as quickly as you can, please; we always get off five
-minutes ahead of time."
-
-"What's our port?" asks the C.O.
-
-"No idea. Push on, please."
-
-The C.O. "pushes on."
-
-"All in," he reports to the R.T.O., and turns for a final shake of the
-hand.
-
-"Well, good-bye, and good luck" (always that phrase); "wish I was
-coming with you."
-
-The R.T.O. gives the signal and looks wistfully for a moment after the
-train before he clambers across the metals to dispatch another dozen or
-so units from other sidings.
-
-"Where are we embarking?" asks everyone. Not a soul knows. I don't
-believe the engine-driver himself knew. He just went gaily forward
-following the points or stopping for signals.
-
-"Through Winchester! Why, it must be Southampton. Wonder what our
-port will be the other side?"
-
-
-Detraining and embarkation at Southampton were carried out under the
-same admirable conditions of efficiency and speed, and with never a
-single hitch. It seems little enough to read the sentence in cold
-print, but the more one thinks about it the more wonderful appears the
-organisation. Had it been the German War Staff directing movements the
-affair would have seemed no more than an ordinary episode. But with
-memories of the South African War, and a hundred everyday incidents
-constantly revealing muddling, red-tape methods, one can find no words
-in which to express adequately one's admiration for this astonishing
-volte-face. One single incident, one of fifty like it, will show to
-what excellent purpose the Authorities had profited by experience, even
-in those early days.
-
-An A.S.C. motor transport unit was detailed to embark upon a certain
-ship. Nearly a day's warning had been given to the O.C. The lorries
-were driven to the dock-side and were just being got on board. The
-Embarkation Officer, who was standing quietly by, suddenly informed the
-C.O. that his ship was not that one but another due to sail from
-another dock some distance away.
-
-The C.O. had barely time in which to get his lorries across, and the
-ship sailed the moment all was reported clear.
-
-An incident trivial enough, and how un-English it seemed at the time.
-But after the secret landing of the 9th Army Corps at Suvla, and the
-subsequent evacuation of Gallipoli, it would appear that we have
-nothing to learn in the art of ruse.
-
-The weather in those early days of August was perfect: the sea so calm
-that there was no discomfort even, with the men and horses packed on
-board like sardines in a tin. If it was a night crossing, the men
-bedded down in rows out on the decks just as they had filed on board.
-The transports were of all kinds, from an Atlantic liner to a coasting
-tramp.
-
-The ship's officers did more than their best for everybody's comfort,
-giving up their cabins to the officers, sharing their meals and
-refusing to accept any payment for food and drinks. If the skipper of
-a certain ship of the Royal Mail Company, which sailed on the early
-morning of August 16th from Southampton, chances to see these lines I
-would tell him how gratefully his kindness is remembered, and how the
-little mascot, in the shape of a tiny teapot from the steward's pantry,
-brought the best of luck through ten months' hard service, always made
-excellent tea whenever called upon, and now occupies a place of honour
-in my china cabinet. Here's wishing everything of the best to those
-who carry on the fine traditions of the blue or red ensign!
-
-"Well, where are we bound for?" This to the First Officer.
-
-"Don't know a bit," he replies. "The skipper may know, but I'm not
-sure. Anyway he's as close as a barnacle about it."
-
-We steamed across Channel with all lights on. It was another of those
-astonishing facts which didn't strike one until later. We were off the
-mouth of the Seine exactly twelve hours after sailing. And all that
-time we only once sighted anything in the shape of a convoy, and that
-was a T.B.D. for about twenty minutes a couple of miles to starboard.
-
-At this stage it seems almost invidious to say anything more about the
-work of the Grand Fleet during that first fortnight. And yet, even
-now, the public is amazingly ignorant of what the Navy has
-accomplished, or, indeed is still accomplishing. Ignorant, not through
-indifference, but because the Authorities still steadily refuse to take
-seriously in hand the work of education in war facts and ideas.
-
-How the Navy succeeded in sweeping the enemy flag from the North Sea
-and the Channel in a couple of days, apparently without firing a shot,
-we cannot pretend to guess. Some day the story will be told. But the
-result was the most astonishing manifestation of the real meaning of
-naval supremacy that the world has ever seen, or is ever likely to see.
-And Germany, by her naval inaction, lost for ever her great chance of
-the War, and so, in failing to intercept or damage the British
-Expeditionary Force, failed also to enter Paris and to end the war upon
-her own terms within the period she had intended. The British Army may
-have saved Paris, but the British Navy enabled it to do so.
-
-Entering the Seine the skipper revealed the name of our destination,
-Rouen. Another instance of organisation and forethought on the part of
-the Authorities in using small ships so as to get right up the river
-and disembark troops and stores well inland.
-
-Again, this has become a matter of everyday routine, but in those days
-each such new manoeuvre was sufficiently remarkable for admiring
-comment.
-
-Here the pilot came on board. A typical old son of Normandy he was,
-grizzled and weatherbeaten, clambering aboard with stiff heavy gait.
-
-On to the bridge he climbed: saw our lads clustered thick as bees in
-the fo'c'sle and lower deck. Up went his cap into the air, tears
-sprang to his eyes.
-
-"Vivent les Anglais!" he shouted, "vive l'Angleterre! A--ah" (with an
-instinct of triumph), "ça va bien. Ils arrivent."
-
-How the lads yelled in answer.
-
-"Cheer-o, moossoo. Veeve France! 'Who's your lady friend?' 'For he's
-a jolly good fellow,'"--and other pertinent observations.
-
-Then, to my astonishment, they burst into the "Marseillaise." How and
-where they had learned it I have no idea. But sing it they did, and
-very well too. They took that little curly bit in the middle, where a
-B flat comes when you least expect it, just like an old hunter clearing
-a stiff post-and-rails. And that old chap stood on the bridge and
-mopped his eyes, and didn't care who saw him do it. The English had
-really come to stand by his beloved France. _Comme ça va bien!_
-
-That was the first hint we had of the reception which awaited us.
-
-You picture the transport steaming slowly up river between the high,
-wooded banks. Little houses, such as Peter Pan might have built for
-Wendy, seem to sway dizzily in the tree-tops. Out on to the verandas,
-down to the river path run the women and children, and the few old men
-who remain. Everyone carries a little flag; not the French tricolour,
-but the British Jack--or rather an excellent substitute.
-
-Dimly one can see the waving hands, faintly across the water echo the
-treble voices. But know now what it means, and gallantly our lads
-respond to this welcome of our future hosts, who, with true French
-courtesy, have met their guests at the very entrance gates.
-
-Far up the hill-side, close under the ridge, there nestles a tiny
-cottage. A blot of deep crimson staining the deeper green of the trees
-makes me take out my binoculars. The good house-wife, with no British
-flag available, yet determined to do honour to her country's allies,
-has taken the red tablecloth, has stitched long bands of white across
-it to form a St. Andrew's Cross, and flung it proudly across the
-balustrade. What monarch ever had truer-hearted welcome from his own
-people? Well, the sight brought a lump to the throat of at least one
-Englishman.
-
-And so slowly we steamed up the historic river. France had indeed
-flung wide her gates in welcome. Here we found ourselves moving in a
-small procession of transports. Greetings swung across from one ship
-to the next, to combine and roar out a British answer to our French
-friends on shore.
-
-Ah! but it was good to feel that Britain had not failed France, though
-the obligation were no more than a moral one. It was good to be an
-Englishman that day; good to feel that Englishmen then in France could
-now look Frenchmen squarely in the face and say:
-
-"You thought we were going to stand aside, didn't you? Well, you see
-we are coming in with you and you can bet that means that we intend to
-see it through."
-
-Yes, one felt proud as never before.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE LANDING OF THE FORCE
-
-"_Shall not thou and I, between Saint Dennis and Saint George, compound
-a boy, half French, half English, that shall go to Constantinople, and
-take the Turk by the beard?_"
-
-
-The dominant note in the reception which the French gave to the Force
-on landing was undoubtedly that of _relief_. Happy in showering little
-courtesies, surprised and delighted with everything British--all these,
-but it was relief which came uppermost in their minds. The feeling
-which the old pilot had expressed in his "comme ça va bien, maintenant."
-
-And as transport after transport slid quietly to her berth alongside
-the broad Rouen quays, discharged her freight of men, horses, guns,
-stores, lorries, and the countless trappings of a modern army, and then
-as quickly and noiselessly vacated the berth for her successor, so
-increased the wonder and delight of the good Normandy folk.
-
-That _les anglais_ should really have arrived was splendid enough, but
-that they should also bring with them their own food and cooking
-arrangements--"mais c'est tonnant! et quelle organisation!"
-
-Everyone spoke in admiring comment about it. And how Rouen crowded
-down to the quays or out to the rest camps to watch _les anglais_
-cooking their dinners! Army stores those few days were sadly depleted
-of tins of jam, biscuits and "grocery ration." How could one refuse
-the hungry look in the eye of a motherly matron as she espied a packet
-of the famous English tea?
-
-And the children! We learned for the first time how hungry children
-could be when they saw biscuits and jam.
-
-Make a fuss of the kiddies and you have won the mothers! And if you
-have won the mothers and women of France you have conquered "la belle
-France" herself. And _les anglais_ conquered France in those few days
-at the French ports. The happiest of victories, and one which augured
-well for the future.
-
-Nothing pleased the French more than British courtesy and gentleness to
-women and children; and their kindness to and care of their horses.
-British love of personal cleanliness, and the unfailing cheeriness of
-the men, these have, of course, long since become proverbial. But then
-it was all new to France, almost to the world, and so one records these
-things as first impressions.
-
-And the Scotties. Everyone knows how the lads from north of the Tweed
-made sad havoc among French hearts. Have they not always done so since
-Frenchmen and Scotsmen first clasped hands in alliance?
-
-If a Scotsman was asked once a day whether he wore anything under his
-kilt he was asked a hundred times. And truth compels me to add that it
-was generally the ladies who put the question. What the answer was I
-never found out. I imagine that our lads were not sorry to hide their
-blushes in the troop trains which carried them forward to the frontier.
-
-But all these little details have been so admirably recorded by Philip
-Gibbs in his masterly book, "The Soul of the War," that there is really
-not much more to tell. I shall have still a little to add in the next
-chapter, when it comes to trekking up country.
-
-I had some little cause on the first day of landing to regret the
-exuberance of French hospitality. Half my men, they were mostly
-Special Reservists, suddenly disappeared into the unknown directly they
-set foot on shore. And they hadn't a week's pay in their pockets
-either.
-
-Eventually I got them rounded up and next morning there were
-twenty-five prisoners, "caps off," for "office." To say they were
-surprised is to give a very poor indication of their feelings when they
-found varying degrees of punishment awarded to them.
-
-But this was nothing to the ludicrous expressions of the men when all
-the remainder were paraded and informed what they had to expect on
-active service. It ran somewhat as follows:
-
- "When a sentry, sleeping upon his post."
- Punishment--DEATH.
- "Leaving his C.O. to go in search of
- plunder." Punishment--DEATH.
- "Forcing a safeguard."--DEATH.
- "Quitting his guard without leave."--DEATH.
- "Disobeying the lawful command of his
- superior officer."--DEATH.
-
-And so on, the lightest punishment being about fourteen years' Rigorous
-Imprisonment.
-
-Their faces got longer and longer as the list proceeded, and it was a
-very meek detachment who turned to their dinners on the quay-side. And
-that was the beginning and end of any trouble with those good lads
-until the day when they, or the poor remnant who pulled through,
-crowded round to sing "Auld lang syne" and give me a farewell cheer.
-Fine work they did, and always as cheery and lovable as any unit in the
-Force.
-
-Disembarkation was carried on with the same admirable efficiency which
-had characterised embarkation. A large number of British Staff
-officers had, I believe, crossed to France immediately upon
-mobilisation. There, in collaboration with French colleagues, every
-possible arrangement was made for the reception of the Force.
-
-Rest camps were pitched or billets were allotted, branches of the Army
-Post Office were established, a field cashier was installed at the
-Banque de France and imprests in French notes for the men's pay could
-be obtained on demand.
-
-Of course everybody had seized the few hours' holiday on board ship to
-write more or less lengthy letters home, hoping, in their innocence,
-that the ship's officers would post them on returning to England.
-
-Alas! before ever the ship was berthed, an all-powerful bogy swarmed up
-the companion way and greedily snatched away the ship's correspondence.
-Calling for a brush and a barrel of black fluid, he gleefully set to
-work upon the letters and postcards. When he had finished with them
-(and it took him a good couple of hours on our ship) they looked like
-the slips of paper you use in the parlour round-game where the first
-player writes a line and leaves the next to continue the sentence.
-
-We had all given the most vivid description of our adventures, filling
-page after page. When the precious documents ultimately reached their
-destination, our fond parents, or best girls, must have been gratified
-to find that their four-page letter had dwindled down to:
-
-
-"MY DEAR FATHER,--
-
-(Four pages of brush and fluid work.)
-
-"Well, I think I have told you all the news now. My love to the Mater
-and, cheer-oh, we shall soon be home again.
-
-"Your affect. son,
- "----"
-
-
-It was very interesting to compare the way in which French and British
-temperaments expressed themselves; intensely interesting to note how
-each so quickly became the complement of the other.
-
-One knew so well the attitude of disdain of anything foreign which
-invariably characterises the Briton abroad; an unfortunate attitude
-which has been encouraged, or so it would almost seem, by the
-invariable courtesy, under the most irritating conditions, of men and
-women of the Latin races.
-
-Here were some seventy or eighty thousand men thrust headlong into a
-strange country. Probably at least two-thirds of that number had never
-been out of England before. Everyone knows the impression which your
-average Englishman of the middle and lower classes has of French men
-and French women. Certainly it has not been very complimentary. How
-would our men now bear themselves?
-
-And if our attitude to the French has for the most part been one of
-cold disdain and amusement, the French would seem to have regarded us,
-as a race, with incredulity, tempered by such a degree of irritation as
-their native courtesy would permit. This, together with an under
-current of admiration.
-
-"_Que j'aime la hardiesse anglaise!_" says Voltaire, "_que j'aime les
-gens qui disent ce qu'ils pensent._"
-
-During those early August days before the Retreat there was little real
-opportunity to modify racial opinions. But if British disdain was not
-yet effaced, the overwhelming reception by the French went far to break
-it down. Soon it was to be washed clean away in the blood sacrament
-which united French and English in a closer tie than that of
-brothers-in-arms.
-
-French methods and customs still amused our men, but the amusement
-became that light-hearted gaiety, in tackling and surmounting trifling
-difficulties in a foreign country, which is quite irresistible. Here
-the British soldier or sailor is always at his very best, and the
-anecdotes of his adventures in French villages and towns would fill a
-volume.
-
-Wiseacres who try to invent some universal language should certainly
-base it upon that of Thomas A. in a strange country. He is equally at
-home in China, Peru, the wilds of Africa or Spain.
-
-The fact which astonished him more than anything else about the French
-language was that all the children spoke it. He could understand
-grown-ups learning it in time; but how the kiddies were able to talk it
-with such amazing fluency, that was quite beyond him.
-
-As for the French attitude of mind, I am inclined to think that their
-incredulity, admiration and irritation were all intensified; the last
-named, however, being even less in evidence than before.
-
-The attitude of the French women is easier to define. It is literally
-true to remark that, from highest to lowest in the land, there were no
-half measures in their welcome. One can say this now because the fact
-has long since been recognised and openly discussed in France. This,
-however, is not the place in which to make more than passing reference
-to a subject which, apart from the purely human aspect, is more a
-matter for the student of physiology or psychology.
-
-"Combien de coeurs vous avez ravagé dans un si petit délai que vous
-avez stationné ici," a French girl once remarked, "et cependant on ne
-devrait pas refuser aux anglais les baisers qu'ils nous demandent
-puisqu'ils se donnent pour nous."
-
-And the last half of the sentence admirably sums up the French woman's
-point of view.
-
-This landing of the portion of the Force at Rouen was typical of what
-happened at Boulogne or Havre. John Buchan, in his first volume of the
-"History of the War," has given a most interesting glimpse of incidents
-at the former port.
-
-In no case did the troops remain at these bases for more than a couple
-of days. Nobody appeared to have the least idea of what was going on
-up at the frontiers, but time was obviously of importance.
-
-No one knew where they were bound for; no one appeared to have the
-slightest presentiment of the tragedy, and the magnificence of the days
-which were so soon to crowd upon them. Still the cheery,
-light-hearted, end-of-term spirit. A summer holiday on the Continong!
-Cheer-oh!
-
-And so they were merry parties of men which boarded the funny French
-trains; where you had to clamber up the sides of the carriages from
-platforms which didn't really exist, and where you were packed in like
-a Cup Tie crowd returning from the Crystal Palace.
-
-How the horses hated those French trucks. Never before had they
-suffered such indignity. I would not have been a stableman on duty in
-one of those trucks for many a month's pay.
-
-"Mais, quelles bêtes!" said the railway officials. And the porters
-would run and fetch the stationmaster and gesticulate at the
-Compagnie's trucks, which had begun to look like bundles of firewood
-long before the frontier was reached.
-
-"Third return Clapham Junction, please," said the company wag.
-
-"Wotto! Berlin! Not 'arf," shouted the rest....
-
-And off the trains would steam, every compartment labelled "Berlin."
-It's rather pathetic how history repeats itself. This time the French
-were silent. They _knew_.
-
-So, forward into the unknown!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-UP COUNTRY
-
- _So be there 'twixt your kingdoms such a spousal,
- That never may ill office, or fell jealousy,
- * * * * *
- Thrust in between the paction of these kingdoms,
- To make divorce of their incorporate league:
- That English may as French, French Englishmen,
- Receive each other!_
-
-
-Patience, still a little patience! The stage is not yet set. The
-actors have not yet reached the theatre. Very soon now shall you see
-unfolded the opening scenes of the Great Drama, and hear the first
-clash of the armies. Soon shall you have your fill of the horror and
-splendour of modern warfare.
-
-We have seen the Force into the French troop trains, horse, guns and
-foot. But not all journeyed thus to the frontier. Some of the units,
-the most mobile, went by road. Units which were intended to take their
-places in the reserve lines, and especially the A.S.C. motor transport,
-ammunition or supplies. Let us move forward with one of these and see
-a little of the France through which so soon the armies will come
-rolling back.
-
-Out from Rouen and across the lovely Normandy country. You picture the
-excitement and amusement of the country folk as a great procession of
-those motor lorries, which we have seen coming into Avonmouth, pants
-heavily through the towns and villages.
-
-Here is a part of a letter, from an officer in one of those units,
-which appeared in the _Times_ towards the end of August. It seems to
-give a very happy picture of the French reception of our men.
-
-
-ROSES, ROSES, ALL THE WAY
-
-I can, of course, tell you nothing of our movements, nor where we are.
-I can, however, say something of the reception we have met with moving
-across country. It has been simply wonderful and most affecting. We
-travel entirely by motor transport (if the censor will allow that), and
-it has been flowers all the way. One long procession of acclamation.
-By the wayside and through the villages men, women, and children cheer
-us on with the greatest enthusiasm, and everyone wants to give us
-something. Even the babies in arms have been taught to wave their
-little hands.
-
-They strip their flower gardens, and the cars look like carnival
-carriages. They pelt us with fruit, cigarettes, chocolate, bread,
-anything, and everything. It is simply impossible to convey an
-impression of it all. One village had stretched across the road a big
-banner, "Honour to the British Army." Always cries of "Vivent les
-anglais, vive l'Angleterre," etc., and often they would make the sign
-of hanging, and cutting the throat (the Kaiser), pointing forward along
-the road. This always struck me as so curious.
-
-Yesterday, my own car had to stop in a town for petrol. In a moment
-there must have been a couple of hundred people round, clamouring.
-Autograph albums were thrust in front of me; a perfect delirium. A
-tray of wine and biscuits appeared, and before we started again the car
-had come to look like a grocery delivery van with a florist's window
-display in front.
-
-In another town I had to stop for an hour and took the opportunity to
-do some shopping. I wanted some motor goggles, an eye bath, some
-boracic, provisions, etc. They would not let me pay for a single
-thing, and there was lunch and drinks as well.
-
-The farther we go the more enthusiastic is the greeting. What it will
-be like at the end of the war one cannot attempt to guess.
-
-This all sounds like a picnic, but the work is hard and continuous.
-One eats and sleeps just when one can. There is no division between
-night and day. But we are all very fit and well, and the men, who have
-an easy time compared to the officers, look upon it as a huge joke--at
-present.
-
-My French is, of course, simply invaluable, and each day I can
-understand and talk better and better. It is extraordinary that I am
-absolutely the only officer I have come across (except one or two Staff
-men) who can speak it with any fluency. Well, this will surely be the
-last of war amongst civilised peoples, and the dreams of the idealists
-will be fulfilled. The French seem to think that it will all be over
-certainly by Christmas. I wonder?
-
-
-Thus the men came to see something of French life away from the beaten
-track of the tourist, and, needless to say, they made friends at every
-stopping-place.
-
-"Mais, si polis, ces messieurs anglais," everyone remarks. And how
-could "ces messieurs" refuse some little trifles in return for such
-hospitality? The word "souvenir" soon became a nightmare in their
-dreams. There was a peculiar bleat in the intonation of the word which
-was, after a time, positively hateful. But during the first few days
-the men gave readily enough all sorts of little articles for which they
-had no immediate use, and others for which they had.
-
-Before a week had elapsed very few had any buttons left. It was a
-mystery how they kept their trousers up. Regimental badges on caps and
-shoulder-straps were much appreciated, especially the Gunners' letters.
-It did not take long for the quick-witted French girl to discover that
-R.F.A. was obviously intended to represent the Triple Entente--Russie,
-France, Angleterre.
-
-When these units eventually rolled up at their destination it was found
-that about half the men had lost not only all their buttons and badges
-but their caps as well, getting in exchange some horrible provincial
-product in the shape of a rakish tweed cap. Bits of tape and string
-held coats and trousers together.
-
-But long ere this Thomas Atkins was fed up with souvenir-hunters, and
-one recalls a _Punch_ picture which showed a weary and wounded soldier
-sitting by the roadside with what remained of his kit and arms.
-
-"'Souvenir' is it you want?" he remarks in reply to a little urchin who
-is bleating the hateful word at him. "Here, you can take the ----
-lot." And he pitches his rifle and kit at the youngster's head.
-
-The officers and men who came up by road must have had a very cheery
-time in the various towns where they were billeted. The route lay, I
-believe, by way of Amiens, and so up through St. Quentin and Bohain to
-Le Cateau.
-
-Hardly was there a hint of war in all that lovely country-side. What
-war could ever touch those glowing cornfields, those orchards heavy
-with plum and apple, the stately châteaux or dim cloisters of mediæval
-church or convent? As little can we conceive our fragrant villages of
-Kent or Surrey blasted and devastated by poisonous shells.
-
-Very, very few men were to be seen anywhere; only Government officials
-and others over military age. Such guards or sentries as were posted
-were somewhat decrepit-looking Territorials, with arms and
-accoutrements which looked as if they had done good service in 1870.
-But they made up for their deficiencies in other respects by an excess
-of zeal in carrying out imaginary orders.
-
-Their method of challenging, in particular, had the merit of simplicity
-and, at the same time, involved no undue straining of the vocal powers.
-It was merely the thrusting of a rifle-barrel into the face or chest of
-the passer-by. And when there is a very shaky hand on the trigger you
-don't lose much time in getting out your credentials.
-
-One of these men caused much excitement one evening by holding up and
-clapping into the guardroom every single individual who attempted to
-pass him. He was performing sentry duty across a certain main road.
-
-This went on for a couple of hours, and the guardroom was becoming
-uncomfortably crowded with a very miscellaneous assortment of
-travellers. In fact, when a particularly plump matron, carrying a
-basket of particularly evil-smelling cheeses, was incontinently thrust
-in, to fall heavily across the toes of an already irate railway porter,
-there was very nearly a riot.
-
-At length a gilded Staff officer came along. He too was held up. But
-this time the sentry met his match. The officer demanded to see the
-N.C.O. of the guard. Whereupon the sentry, who was really somewhat the
-worse for drink, fell down upon his knees in the road, and with salty
-tears coursing down his cheeks piteously besought the officer to allow
-him to go home and get his supper.
-
-But French Territorials did their "bit" gallantly enough a few days
-later, away on the British left. Old reservists as they were, they
-hung on splendidly at Tournai, and, led by de Villaret, fought
-gallantly against overwhelming numbers until they were surrounded,
-killed, or captured.
-
-So, on through the golden August sunshine or beneath the heavy harvest
-moon. Interminable processions of columns, horsed and petrol-driven,
-threading their way along the endless, poplar-lined roads of France;
-the white dust churned up and drifting over men and vehicles until they
-look like Arctic adventurers.
-
-No one knows what is happening in the great "beyond." No one very much
-cares. "Let's get on and have it over," is the philosophy of the hour.
-"Expect those Germans are being held up a bit in Belgium; wonder where
-we shall come in?"
-
-The enemy had marched in triumph through Brussels on August 20th. The
-British Force was not actually in position until two days later: and
-Brussels is only 30 odd miles from Mons.
-
-After it was all over; after the tide of war had crashed forward almost
-to the gates of Paris and then rolled sullenly back, one saw a little
-of the devastation it had left behind. Here are two pictures.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_August_ 20_th_. Can you, too, see that little vicarage hard by the
-tiny church? (Think, it might have been plucked from a Surrey hamlet.)
-The cool, veranda-shaded rooms filled with a hundred homely treasures;
-the tiled kitchen with its winking copper pots and pans. Out through
-the flagged yard, where pigeons coo in gentle defiance of predatory
-sparrows, and down to a miniature farmstead. The pretty alleyed garden
-of roses, hollyhocks and the flowers and sweet herbs of English
-garden-lovers.
-
-Can you see the old curé as he browses over a volume of Renan? He has
-tended his flock in that village for a quarter of a century. A pretty
-niece keeps house for him; and her dainty herb-potions and unwearied
-nursing have saved many a life in the little community. They think of
-her as of an angel from heaven.
-
-
-_September_ 7_th_. A fortnight later! The village street has
-disappeared beneath the debris of what was once the village. One
-cow-shed is still miraculously intact, and from it creeps a gaunt,
-haggard old crone. They have not touched her. She was too old and
-infirm to make good fun, even for the rank and file.
-
-She points with shaking finger to the wayside crucifix from which the
-Christ looks down with infinite patience. He also has been
-miraculously preserved. He gazes still over His tiny sanctuary, now
-but two blackened, battered walls. The vicarage has disappeared as
-though in an earthquake. The incendiary tablets have done their work
-well. The little garden with its pretty rose trees has been ploughed
-up, it would seem, by giant shares.
-
-Stay, in one corner, down by the brook, there is planted a rough wooden
-cross.
-
-The old curé had refused to leave his post when the stream of refugees
-had passed through. They told him of the horror behind them. He stood
-firm. Jeannette, too, would stay with her uncle.
-
-_They_ came. The curé, they said, must be a spy left behind by the
-French troops. Besides, he had carrier-pigeons. "What need have we of
-further witnesses?"
-
-And so they tied him against the stem of his pigeon-cote. He met his
-death as a gallant gentleman of France.
-
-The girl. Ah, young and tender! Good sport for the plucking! First
-let her bury the old man. "Rather hard work using a spade when you're
-not used to it, isn't it?--Done? Good, now get us dinner."
-
-After dinner, a dance--Eastern slave fashion. First, good sport for
-the officers. "When we have finished throw her to the men."
-
-What need to tell the horrors of it? The village marked the ebb of the
-tide. The French and British had turned at last. Hurried orders came
-to retire at dawn. The girl had not been such good sport after
-all--fainted too easily.
-
-A leering, drunken satyr slashes at her naked breasts with his bayonet
-and Jeannette falls dead over the threshold. The house is fired, the
-body is pitched on to the pyre.
-
-One village in France? No, one of a hundred where such things were
-done. And this is almost as nothing beside such as this England of
-ours has, by God's gracious mercy, been spared. What does England know
-of this war?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now the various units begin to converge and concentrate on the French
-frontier. "Each unit," says the G.O.C.-in-Chief in his first dispatch,
-"arrived at its destination in this country well within the scheduled
-time."
-
-For some days past the French troop trains have been disgorging their
-living freight at a number of stations and sidings, most of them
-hastily improvised, within a few miles' radius on a line
-Valenciennes-Maubeuge.
-
-The columns which came by road halted in various little villages about
-the town of Le Cateau. You will get the general lie of the land and
-the principal points of interest from the picture-map.
-
-Now to set the stage.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE MARSHALLING OF THE ARMIES
-
- _Now entertain conjecture of a time,
- When creeping murmur, and the poring dark,
- Fills the wide vessel of the universe.
- From camp to camp, through the foul womb of night,
- The hum of either army stilly sounds,_
- * * * * *
- _..... and from the tents,
- The armourers, accomplishing the knights,
- With busy hammers closing rivets up,
- Give dreadful note of preparation._
-
-
-A well-known American, it was probably Roosevelt, remarked à propos of
-the outbreak of the War that Germany's readiness would redound to her
-eternal dishonour, while Britain's unreadiness would be to her eternal
-honour.
-
-The term "unready" applies to the nation as a whole. Fortunately for
-civilisation the British Navy and the little striking Force were, as we
-have seen, kept trained to an hour. And so it was that, upon a single
-word, the whole machine moved precisely as the admirable organisation
-had planned for it.
-
-It must also be remembered that for some years past everybody who had
-studied international affairs with any intelligence knew precisely how
-and where Germany would attack; that even in 1908 it was possible to
-give the approximate date of such attack; and that when the attack came
-the position of the British Expeditionary Force would be in the post of
-honour upon the left of the French line in, approximately, the district
-in which it actually deployed.
-
-Thus, up to a certain point, events fell out as anticipated. But one
-or two big factors were not foreseen, or, at least, not sufficiently
-appreciated. These were the amazing speed and mobility with which the
-German initial attack was destined to develop; the overwhelming numbers
-of the enemy; and, lastly, the astonishing effect of big gun fire, as
-instanced at Liége and other fortresses. This lack of foresight came
-within an ace of losing the war for the Entente Powers.
-
-It was not until Saturday, August 15th, that the gates into Belgium by
-way of Liége were fully opened for the German armies, although Liége
-itself had been entered on the 7th.
-
-The immediate effect, apart from the great moral value, of Belgium's
-heroic and successful resistance of those two or three days was to give
-to the British Force at least a sporting chance. The Force was late;
-those three days allowed it to get into position. It needs no great
-effort to imagine what would otherwise inevitably have happened.
-
-Now let me at this point disclaim any intention of giving details of
-strategy and tactics, even were I sufficiently competent to do so. So
-far as I can I shall try to tell the story as simply as possible,
-omitting everything which may tend to confusion or which may render
-necessary continuous reference to maps. In a word, I am making this
-record of facts and impressions for the public, not for the experts.
-It is the human side and not the military which I would emphasise.
-
-It is, however, necessary at the outset to get a good general idea of
-numbers, and the disposition of the armies on August 22nd in the
-particular area, if we wish fully to appreciate the events, and their
-significance, of the succeeding ten days. For the sake of convenience
-I will make sub-headings:
-
-
-_The German Forces_
-
-The total strength, all ranks, of a German _Army Corps_ is, roughly,
-45,000; of a _Division_, roughly, 17,500. We may take this as a
-minimum.
-
-Each Corps and each Division has, respectively, about 160 and 72
-field-guns, and 48 and 24 machine-guns. The numbers of the latter arm
-were materially increased during 1913-14.
-
-The German forces which concentrated on this far Western front, from
-Namur to about Tournai, consisted of no fewer than 13 Army Corps, _each
-Corps being augmented by an extra Division_. These Reserve Divisions
-were, I believe, combined into separate "Reserve Corps."
-
-The Corps were divided up:--
-
- 5 under von Kluck (First German Army),
- attacking British.
- 4 under von Buelow (Second German
- Army), attacking 5th French Army.
- 4 under von Hausen (Third German
- Army), attacking 4th French Army.
-
-
-The general lines of advance will be seen in plan A (page 71) and plan
-B (page 98).
-
-Thus, the total German force concentrated on or about this immediate
-front must have numbered at least 812,500, with, say, 3,010 field-guns
-and 936 machine-guns.
-
-It is not unreasonable to add to this total the not inconsiderable
-number of cavalry which operated, more or less independently, on the
-extreme flanks, and particularly from Tournai down through Amiens
-towards Le Havre.
-
-
-_The French Forces_
-
-The total strength, all ranks, of a French Army Corps is, roughly,
-40,000, with, say, 160 field- and 48 machine-guns.
-
-In this area there were present 3 corps under Lanrezac (5th French
-Army) holding the line Charleroi-Namur, and 3 corps under de Langle de
-Gary (4th French Army) holding a line west of the River Meuse
-south-west from Namur.
-
-Away on the left flank of the British was another Corps, of
-Territorials, under d'Amade; and near Maubeuge, in reserve, were two or
-three Cavalry Divisions. These last did not, I believe, operate; and
-the Territorials were also fully occupied in their own area.
-
-Reckoning up, then, we get an approximate total of, say, 240,000 men,
-960 field- and 288 machine-guns.
-
-
-_The British Forces_
-
-A British Army Corps, of two Divisions, contains about 36,145, all
-ranks, with 152 field- and 48 machine-guns.
-
-A Cavalry Division contains about 9,270, all ranks, with 24 field- and
-24 machine-guns; a Cavalry Brigade about 2,285, all ranks, 6 field- and
-6 machine-guns.
-
-This is not revealing State secrets, because the numbers may be
-obtained from any military reference books.
-
-Now it was, I believe, originally intended that the Expeditionary Force
-should be about 120,000 strong, or half the strength of the army with
-the colours.
-
-The force actually present at Mons on August 22nd consisted, nominally,
-of two Army Corps, a Cavalry Division and a Cavalry Brigade. But
-several authorities, including Mr. Hilaire Belloc, assert that one of
-these corps was considerably below strength, and that, in round
-numbers, the strength of the Force was no more than 75,000, with 250
-guns.
-
-If we calculate up the _official_ strength the numbers should work out
-at 83,845 all ranks, 334 field- and 126 machine-guns.
-
-Another Infantry Brigade came up on the 23rd and joined the Second
-Corps, and another Division (the 4th) also arrived.[1]
-
-Taking everything into account it is, I think, reasonable to put the
-British strength at about 80,000 men, 300 field- and 100 machine-guns
-when battle was first joined.
-
-Let me put these figures in tabular form so that we can get a
-comparison at a glance.
-
- _Machine-_
- _All ranks. Field-guns. guns._
-
- _Actual Approximate Numbers on August_ 22_nd_
-
- _British_ . . . 80,000 300 100
- _French_ . . . 240,000 960 288
- _German_ . . . 812,500 3,016 936
-
- _Excess German
- strength over
- Franco-British_ 492,500 1,756 548
-
-
-It is always rather difficult to grasp the _meaning_ of big numbers
-like these, so let me put it another way.
-
-Place one German against each man in the Franco-British Force, and one
-German field-gun against each field-gun on our side. Now take all the
-German soldiers and guns still remaining over and imagine that you are
-watching them march past you down Whitehall, the men in fours all doing
-their "goose" parade step and the guns going by at a trot.
-
-The army, marching night and day, without a moment's halt, would take
-just about three days to pass you.
-
-Such then was the enemy superiority; about four or five times as great
-as the most pessimistic prophets had anticipated. We shall see shortly
-what this superiority developed into against the British Force.
-
-
-_The Position of the Forces_
-
-British.--The general position of the opposing forces before battle was
-joined, at least for the British, will be realised from plan A (page
-71), and there is little need to add anything by way of explanation.
-
-It will be noted that the British line extended along a front of about
-25 miles, with Mons near the centre of the line. On Saturday, August
-22nd, Sir John French disposed the Force into its positions. The
-Second Corps, under Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien, held the canal line from
-Condé, on the west, to Mons, on the east. The First Corps, under Sir
-Douglas Haig, extended from Mons, on the west, to Binche, on the east.
-
-As there were no British reserves, the Cavalry Division, under General
-Allenby, was detailed to act as such and to be ready to move forward
-where and as required.
-
-The 5th Cavalry Brigade, under Sir Philip Chetwode, was posted in and
-around Binche.
-
-French.--I have indicated the composition of the French force, and plan
-A (page 71) will show how it was disposed on the morning of the 22nd;
-i.e. 5th French Army from Charleroi to just south of Namur, and 4th
-Army down the River Meuse to south of Dinant.
-
-Similarly, there is nothing further to add about the German
-dispositions if the general lines of the enemy advance be noted: an
-attempted out-flanking movement on the extreme west, and the driving in
-of a wedge in the neighbourhood of Namur. These, together with heavy
-frontal attacks.
-
-
-In all that follows it is necessary to add in, by way of reinforcements
-on the German side, the very great moral encouragement which the enemy
-had received by their triumphal passage through Belgium. They were in
-overwhelming strength; their heavy guns had crushed the fortresses in a
-few hours like so many egg-shells; they had, for many a long year,
-believed themselves invincible as against the world; and now they were
-marching directly upon Paris with the confident hope that within three
-months France would have ceased to exist as a nation, and that by the
-end of the year the war would be finished, with terms of peace dictated
-by their all-highest and supremely-powerful deity, the Kaiser.
-
-It was, too, not merely an army disciplined and trained in the minutest
-details of war which was thus bludgeoning forward into France; it was,
-in effect, a nation in arms. A nation which, for many a long year
-past, had been educated to regard war as the greatest of all earthly
-things---a supreme issue to which all the sciences and arts of the
-preliminary years of peace were to be directed.
-
-It was a nation which regarded as fully legitimate any means whatever
-to the supreme end desired.
-
-I recall a remark made to me during the South African War by a Prussian
-naval officer.
-
-"You English," he said, "do not know the rudiments of war. When the
-day comes for us to go to war you shall see how we deal with the men,
-women and children. With us terror is our greatest weapon."
-
-To-day the world knows how that weapon has been mercilessly wielded;
-and how impotent it has been.
-
-On her side Britain was equally united, but in a different sense. She
-had taken up the gauntlet because her people were assured that the
-cause was a just one. In those early days the Expeditionary Force was
-not concerned one way or the other with the reasons for its presence in
-France. The men were, for the most part, quite ignorant of the facts;
-they were there as a professional army to do their "bit," as they had
-often had to do it before, and I cannot recall a single instance during
-the first month where the men spoke of the meaning of the war.
-
-In numbers they were hopelessly insignificant beside the enormous
-masses ranged against them, but, for its size, the army with the
-colours has always been recognised the world over as without a peer.
-
-There was, however, one factor which in no small degree tended to level
-the balance. Discipline in the Germany Army meant discipline in the
-mass, by regiments or companies, under constant supervision of officers
-and N.C.O.'s. In the British Army it meant discipline of the
-individual. In a word, if a British soldier finds himself alone in a
-tight corner he generally knows how to get out, if it is humanly
-possible. The German, accustomed from his childhood to be dry-nursed
-in every trivial detail of his every-day life, would be hopelessly at
-sea when forced to act on his own initiative. When properly led the
-German is splendidly courageous, and in this respect, quite apart from
-numbers and moral, it was an exceedingly tough proposition which French
-and British were up against at Mons.
-
-As regards the French it is rather more difficult to estimate their
-outlook in the early days. From their experience in 1870 they knew
-what war with Germany meant, both in the actual fighting and in the
-nameless atrocities which the enemy committed on the civil population.
-Thus they wanted their revenge.
-
-But France had not yet suffered in this war. She had not yet seen her
-borough officials taken as hostages and murdered in cold blood; her
-older men sold into slavery; her women raped and mutilated; her infant
-children impaled upon the bayonet and thrown into the fire; her
-Cathedral of Rheims tortured and desecrated. All this was yet to come.
-
-At the beginning they fought valiantly but blindly. The shock was too
-sudden and overwhelming. Mistakes were made in the higher commands.
-
-But within the month France awoke. The Soul of her still lived; and it
-was the Soul of a nation which was mighty many a generation before ever
-Germanic tribes had banded together in primitive community.
-
-The Soul of France awoke in every one of her children. Not one, man,
-woman or child, but saw the way clear before him, but felt the grip of
-steel-cold determination to follow that path straight to the end.
-
-Such was the France which turned at bay before the very gates of her
-capital, to show the world that the doom of civilisation's enemy was
-irrevocably sealed.
-
-
-
-[1] Until Wednesday the 26th, the 19th Brigade was acting directly
-under orders from G.H.Q. On that date, being isolated it was
-appropriated by the Second Corps. The 4th Division detrained at Le
-Cateau and took up position in and about Solesmes to cover the
-retirement.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-MONS
-
-"_If the English had any apprehension they would run away._"
-
- * * * * *
-
-"_That island of England breeds very valiant creatures: their mastiffs
-are of unmatchable courage._"
-
-
-The dawn of Sunday, the 23rd, broke dim and misty, giving promise of
-heat. From the late afternoon of the previous day squadrons and
-reconnaissance patrols from Chetwode's Cavalry Brigade had been pushing
-well forward on the flanks and front of the British line. They were
-regiments with names "familiar in our mouths as household words": 12th
-Lancers, 20th Hussars and Scots Greys.
-
-It was pretty though delicate work this feeling forward to get into
-touch with enemy outposts and patrols. Nor was there a troop which did
-not have some story to tell that evening of a tussle with enemy
-cavalry, with its ending, happy or otherwise, determined by the more
-wide-awake patrol.
-
-In one place an officer's patrol, moving quietly out from a grassy
-forest track, stumbled straight upon a dozen Uhlans having a meal. The
-British had no time to draw swords, and certainly the Uhlans hadn't, it
-was just a question of riding them down, and swords and pistols out
-when you could.
-
-In another place a German and a British patrol entered a village
-simultaneously from either end, unbeknown to each other. The turn of a
-corner and they were face to face. Our men were the more wide-awake,
-and they got spurs to their horses and swords out before the enemy
-grasped the situation. The little affair was over in five minutes.
-
-But as our cavalry pushed farther and farther northwards they found
-themselves confronting ever-increasing numbers, and retirement became
-necessary.
-
-Thus were the first shots fired.
-
-At six in the morning of this Sunday, Sir John French held a "pow-wow"
-with the three G.O.C.'s, Generals Haig, Smith-Dorrien and Allenby, and
-discussed the situation, somewhat in these terms:[1]
-
-"So far as I can see from the messages I've had from French H.Q. I
-don't think we've got more than a couple of Corps in front of us,
-perhaps a Cavalry Division as well.[2] And it doesn't look as though
-they are trying to outflank, because the cavalry have been right out
-there and didn't meet with much opposition; nor do the aircraft appear
-to have noticed anything unusual going on. It'll be a big enemy
-superiority, but I don't think too big if we've got dug in properly and
-the lines are all right. We ought to hold them when they come on. The
-French, as you know, are holding our right, Namur, and down the Meuse."
-
-Here is a plan to show the situation as it was known at G.H.Q.:
-
-[Illustration: PLAN A]
-
-The morning wears on. You picture the country-side as not unlike one
-of our own mining districts, the little villages and low-roofed houses
-giving that curious smoky, grimy effect of mean suburbs bordering on a
-large industrial town. Here and there great heaps of slag or disused
-pits and quarries; gaunt iron stems carrying great wheels and heavy
-machinery.
-
-The soldiers are billeted all through the houses or make a shake-down
-in odd barns and yards. Look over the garden gate of one little house
-and you will see the company cooks of one regiment getting the Sunday
-dinner ready, peeling the potatoes, swinging the pots on to the camp
-fires.
-
-From a barn hard by you'll hear the sound of singing. A padre has
-looked in as the rollicking chorus of "Who's your lady friend?" swung
-out into the roadway, and with gentle interruption has improvised a
-short service, suggesting "Rock of Ages" as a substitute for the
-music-hall ditty.
-
-Down the road a couple of sergeants of the West Ridings lean idly over
-a gate smoking and watching the folk going off to Mass.
-
-Out over the canal line the men are hard at work trench-digging,
-pausing now and again to look skywards as the drowsy hum of an
-aeroplane propeller sounds over them. Whether the machine is friend or
-foe they have no idea.
-
-Three girls saunter down the road, arms round waists, and stop to look
-with interest and amusement at some of the West Kents washing out their
-shirts. One of the men is stripped for a wash and Marie exchanges a
-little repartee with him, to run off laughing as a burly lance-corporal
-plants a sounding kiss on her cheek, by way of finishing the argument.
-
-So peaceful it all is, with just that under-current of excitement which
-the presence of strange troops would give. Imagine a Lancashire or
-Yorkshire village on a summer Sunday morning and you have the picture.
-
-It is now eleven o'clock and the people are streaming home from church.
-The service seems to have been cut rather shorter than usual and there
-is just a hint of anxiety to be seen on their faces. What was it the
-curé had said, something about keeping quietly in their homes and
-trusting _le bon Dieu_? But there is no danger, the English are here
-to protect us. Still, those aeroplanes have an ugly sound, something
-of _un air menaçant_.
-
-Another aeroplane--and look, it has a great black cross under the
-wings! Un Boche? No, it cannot be. Ah, see, see, a French one, ours!
-It goes to meet it. Mon Dieu! they fight! And dimly from the sunny
-heaven there falls the crackle of revolvers.
-
-A motor dispatch-rider hurls himself from his machine straight upon the
-astonished group of West Kents.
-
-"Where's the officer? Get moving; you're wanted up there!" and he
-jerks a thumb over his shoulder.
-
-The men rush for their kit and rifles. Away to the west there is the
-crack of an 18-pounder.
-
-Down the street the cyclist pants. A subaltern bursts in on the Sunday
-dinner of the Bedfords.
-
-"Fall in outside at once!"
-
-Another aeroplane sails over. It hovers for a moment over the Scottish
-Borderers in their trenches. A trail of black smoke drops down, and
-instinctively the men cower below the parapet. Slowly it falls.
-Nothing more. The men raise their heads.
-
-"Eh, man, but a thocht yon werre one o' thae----"
-
-A sudden, odd hum in the air, and then--crash!
-
-The Scots corporal slowly and painfully drags himself out from the pile
-of earth and debris and looks round. There is a curious numb feeling
-in his right arm. He sits up with a dazed gasp. There is a hand by
-him on the ground. His? He looks at his arm, and realises. Near by
-five of his pals are laid out. He seems to have escaped.
-
-"The Lord ha' maircy--but the regiment's fair blooded this day," and he
-falls back in a faint.
-
-More aeroplanes, more trails of smoke; and, wherever they fall, within
-twenty odd seconds a German shell bursts fair and true.
-
-All down the line there springs the crack of rifles. Beyond the canal
-the outposts of the Lincolns, Royal Scots and others are coming in at
-the double. A curtain of shell-fire is lowered behind them as the
-British batteries come into action. A curtain of fire rolls down
-before them as the German guns take the range.
-
-It is now close upon one o'clock, and enemy shells have begun to creep
-nearer and nearer in from the suburbs upon Mons itself. The good curé
-and his words are forgotten, for what living things can remain? And so
-there begins that pitiable exodus of old men, women and children which
-streamed steadily southwards, ever increasing as it crowded through the
-villages and towns.
-
-But there is no time to-day to think of them. They must go, or stay
-and perish--anything so long as they do not interfere with the great
-game of War.
-
-North of the town, where our lines necessarily bulged out, making a
-salient, the fighting was becoming desperate. Here three regiments
-especially (the Middlesex, Royal Irish and Royal Fusiliers) lost very
-heavily as they sturdily contested every yard of ground. This
-particular point had, from the first, been recognised as the weakest in
-the British lines.
-
-Barely an hour since the first shots were fired, and now by one o'clock
-practically every gun and every rifle of the British Force is blazing
-away as though the powers of hell were set loose.
-
-As yet it would seem that the ammunition is being merely wasted for the
-sake of making a noise. There is no enemy in sight save in the air the
-circling aeroplanes, and away on the flanks dimly-seen clouds of
-horsemen. A modern battlefield with its curious emptiness has so often
-been described that here one need only record the fact in passing.
-There is nothing to be seen. The men are firing, in the first flush of
-excitement, at corners of possible concealment--the line of a hedge,
-the edge of a wood, the very occasional flash of a field-gun. On the
-left, in the Second Corps, the British fire slackens somewhat as the
-men pull themselves together. No one has the foggiest notion of what
-is really happening. It is the officers' business of the moment to
-steady the ranks and keep them under cover.
-
-But away on the right, out by Binche, where the Guards are, the storm
-has burst in fullest fury. No slackening there. The extreme right was
-held by battalions of historic regiments, names to conjure with:
-Munster Fusiliers, Black Watch, Scots and Coldstream Guards. Ah, those
-Guards! The glorious discipline of them! But how distinguish between
-any of the regiments that day, and after?
-
-Almost from the first the senior officers began to realise that
-something was wrong, especially on the right. The Divisional
-Commanders and their immediate staffs, to whom the general idea of
-strengths and dispositions was known, began to wonder whether a big
-mistake had not been made. "Well, never mind, we're in for it now, we
-must do the best we can. But, those guns! There certainly should not
-be so many out there."
-
-And it was positively uncanny how the German guns got their range.
-That fact struck everybody almost more than anything else. There
-appeared to be no preliminary ranging, as was always usual, but guns
-got direct on to the target at once.
-
-It is difficult at times to avoid launching out into details which are
-of more interest to soldiers than to the general public, but as
-everything at this time was so new an occasional lapse may perhaps be
-excused.
-
-Again, one's brain is so confused with such a mass of detail that it
-becomes most difficult to disentangle impressions and note them down in
-dispassionate language. If, however, the reader will take the little
-pen-pictures of incidents which are given and imagine them, not as
-isolated facts but as being reproduced fifty times all through the
-fighting lines, he may get a fair idea of the course of events.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As the day wore on that uncanny effect of the German fire increased.
-There is no doubt that it was mainly due to the amazingly efficient
-secret service of the enemy. The H.Q. of a division or a brigade, for
-instance, does not blatantly advertise its position, and yet time and
-time again shells were dropped clean on to the particular building
-where the Staff happened to be. And when they got into another
-building, plump would come more shells.
-
-Looking back it is a little curious to remember that even in that first
-week a very considerable percentage of our total casualties were caused
-by high explosive shell, and the shooting of them was astonishingly
-accurate.
-
-Yes, the German guns did their work well, but they did not fully
-succeed in their object. Their local successes were great, especially
-against British guns and batteries.
-
-Here is a British battery which has made two mistakes--it is not
-sufficiently concealed, the battery commander is perched up on an
-observation limber, and the guns are not far enough back behind the
-crest. (The Germans always "search" for some 300 yards behind crests
-of hills.) The B.C. is quickly spotted by an aeroplane observer and a
-perfect hell of fire is switched on by the enemy. In a moment
-telephone wires are cut, communications are broken, and within five
-minutes the gun detachments are wiped out.
-
-The effect of a shell from the enemy heavier guns is overwhelming. The
-flank gun of the battery is hit, practically "direct." Some R.A.M.C.
-men double up a few minutes later to help out the wounded. There is
-nothing, save a great hole, fragments of twisted steel, and--a few
-limbs of brave men. Nothing can be done except, later, dig in the
-sides of the pit to cover the remains.
-
-The rest of the guns remain, but there is no one to work them. The
-horses, a little way to the rear, have also suffered badly. A
-subaltern officer staggers painfully through the tornado of fire from
-one gun to the next, slowly, deliberately putting them out of action,
-rendering them useless should the enemy come up to capture them.
-
-Early in the afternoon Brigade Commanders have got orders round to the
-British lines to hold up the infantry fire as far as possible. It is
-now all well under control, for everyone realises that the artillery
-bombardment was a preliminary only, that the real attack is yet to
-come. The men have had their baptism of fire and magnificently have
-they stood it. This is discipline, and now they are ready for anything
-which may come along.
-
-[Illustration: FIELD-MARSHAL VISCOUNT FRENCH.]
-
-But already the casualties have been very heavy. Early in the day you
-have seen that company of the West Kents double up to the support of
-their battalion entrenched about half-way along the Second Corps line.
-I find a note in my diary: "W. Kents, Middlesex and Northumberlands"
-(they were all in the Second Corps) "decimated by shell fire." One or
-two companies of the W. Kents were, I believe, on outpost duty, which
-would mean that they were literally wiped out.
-
-And, remember, the British trenches were not those of later days round
-Ypres. They had all been hastily dug in extremely hard and difficult
-ground, so that there were none of the niceties of snug dug-outs and
-bomb-proof shelters. In many places it was just a matter of scratching
-up the soil behind a hump of shale and cramming oneself in as far as
-one could go. To imagine, as one is led to do by some writers, that
-our men sat snugly in deep trenches through all that shell fire waiting
-calmly for the infantry attack is to get a hopelessly wrong idea. And
-if this was so on the first day when the men started in fresh, the
-conditions during the days which followed may be vaguely guessed.
-
-Think for a moment of the splendid work the R.A.M.C. were doing all
-this time. I wonder how many V.C.'s were earned by that
-self-sacrificing corps during the week. It is easy enough to do what
-people call a gallant deed with arms in your hands when the blood is
-up, to pick up a live bomb and hurl it away--little trifles of the
-moment which no one thinks twice about,--but the courage demanded in
-walking quietly into a hail of lead to bandage and carry out a wounded
-man, a feat which the R.A.M.C. men in the firing lines do a dozen times
-a day, _that_ is worth talking about.
-
-On our right the fight does not go well for us, and the suspicion that
-some mistake has been made becomes a certainty. If it is only a matter
-of two German corps and a Cavalry division in front of our position
-where on earth have all those guns come from?
-
-Still the British guns out towards Binche go pounding gallantly on,
-hopelessly outmatched though they are. It's pretty shooting, for our
-18-prs. can get in six or seven shots a minute more than the German
-field-guns, but we cannot compete against their heavier metal. And,
-just as in a naval fight, it is the heavier metal which tells.
-
-The fighting on the right where General Lomax has the 1st Division has
-not slackened for a moment, but steadily becomes more intense. Now,
-for the first time, the enemy is really seen. And as his infantry
-begin an advance the German shell-fire redoubles in intensity. Every
-house where British can be concealed, every possible observation post,
-every foot of trench, every hill-crest and 400 yards behind it is swept
-and devastated by the tornado.
-
-What communication between units is possible in such a storm? Now
-battalions and batteries find themselves cut off from their neighbours,
-each fighting and carrying on by itself.
-
-Chetwode's Cavalry Brigade is caught in the thick of it. The Guards
-are out there and they hold on almost by their teeth. The 1st Irish
-are in action for the first time since their formation. They'll see
-the Germans in hell before they're going to quit. The Munsters are in
-the hottest corner, if indeed you can see any degrees of difference.
-
-The cavalry have to go; and the Munsters and Black Watch lose horribly
-as they cover the retirement. No finer fighting regiments in the world
-than these on the right, but nothing human can stay there and live.
-The little town of Binche is abandoned; the first enemy success that
-day. The First Corps has had to swing back its outer flank.
-
-But if you think that the Black Watch, or the Guards, or any of them,
-have been sitting there quietly to be shot at when there's an enemy in
-sight, you know little of those regiments. And you don't imagine that
-the Scots Greys, or Lancers, or Hussars, with such a reputation behind
-them, are going to sneak out of Binche by a back way without first
-getting a little of their own back.
-
-No, if the Germans have got to have Binche they must bring up a great
-many more men than that to take it. There has been much talk of a
-repetition of that famous charge of the Greys, with the Black Watch
-hanging on to the stirrup-leathers. If indeed it was repeated that
-August then this must have been the moment. I am sorry to say that I
-have never been able to obtain any real confirmation of the story, so I
-shall not set it down.
-
-But it might well have happened, and one likes to think that it did.
-Anyway, during that hour or so, there was many a gallant, desperate
-charge in that corner. A charge against overwhelming odds, when the
-utmost to be expected was the breaking and rout of the first two or
-three lines of the advance.
-
-It needs no vivid flight of imagination to picture it. On the far
-outskirts of the town a railway line runs. Under the lee of a
-sheltering embankment and bridge the officers collect and re-form some
-of the squadrons, now grown pitiably less in numbers. Words of command
-are almost inaudible, but the men understand. Hard by, on their left,
-you have the flanking companies of the line regiments. One or two
-brief messages pass to and fro between cavalry and infantry.
-
-"The Greys and Lancers are going to charge the left of infantry
-advancing beyond the wood. Give them all the support you can!"
-
-The British fire slackens from loophole and broken window. The
-Scottish regiment and the Coldstream Guards insist on taking a share.
-They cut out through the leaden hail and make some yards' advance,
-dropping again under what cover they can.
-
-A last look round, a final pull at girth-straps, and the word is
-passed. The enemy infantry is 300 yards away.
-
-"Tr-rot!" They are clear of the embankment. All well in hand. The
-enemy guns have not yet got them.
-
-The Scots and Coldstream Guards make another rush and again drop.
-
-"Can-ter!" And men and horses settle down into the steady swing. The
-infantry who have got the orders to support start blazing away again as
-fast as they can get the magazine clips home.
-
-Now the German gunners see what is happening and one gun after another
-drops its range and fuse. The German infantry is 250 yards away.
-
-"Cha-arge!" No need to sound it. The officers are in front, and where
-the officers go their men will follow. Anywhere!
-
-The Scots and Coldstreamers are after them as hard as they can leg it.
-
-The enemy on the flank try to swing round to meet the charge, but there
-is no time. The German guns mercilessly drop the range still
-more--what matter if they sweep away their own men as well.
-
-One hundred yards! Fifty yards! A long, sickening crash--and the
-Greys and Lancers are in them. Hacking, slashing, hewing! The Scots
-are hard on their heels just to their left. A mighty heave as the
-bayonets get home. The first rank is through. There are no more
-ranks, only a vast confusion.
-
-Five little minutes (it seems an eternity) and the enemy flank is
-crushed in, smashed to pulp as a block of stone smashes in the head of
-a man.
-
-"Who goes home?" Who can? Ten men, a dozen, perhaps twenty have
-struggled through. A few will cover again the ground over which they
-charged. A few, such a tiny few, will get back under cover again.
-"The rest is silence."
-
-But they have done it. The enemy have learned what a British charge is
-like. They know now what bayonet work is, and the lesson sinks deep.
-They will not face the steel again. Ask the men who fought at the
-Aisne, at Ypres.
-
-
-
-[1] I have simply turned paragraphs of Sir John French's dispatch into
-imaginary spoken words.
-
-[2] A German Cavalry Division numbered, approximately, 5,200, all
-ranks, including 2 batteries Horse Artillery and 1 machine-gun battery.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-MONS (_continued_)
-
- _But pardon, gentles all,
- The flat unraised spirits that have dar'd,
- On this unworthy scaffold to bring forth
- So great an object: can this cockpit hold
- The vasty fields of France?_
-
-
-It may be of interest at this point if the narrative be broken off for
-a few minutes to give some details of the methods the Germans employ in
-their infantry attack, especially as they differ so greatly from our
-own.
-
-The two main features are (_a_) they consider rifle work as of
-comparatively little value and rely mainly on machine-gun fire, and
-(_b_) they attack in dense masses, shoulder to shoulder.
-
-British methods are, or were, precisely the opposite. Our men have
-brought musketry to such perfection that an infantryman will get off in
-one minute almost double the number of rounds that a German will; and,
-what is more to the point, they will all hit the mark. Let it be noted
-that the British Army owes this perfection to the wise foresight of
-Lord Roberts. (Ah, if only the nation, too, had listened to him!)
-
-British troops, adopting the lessons of the Boer War, attack with an
-interval between the files, i.e. in extended order.
-
-Now at Mons, and after, a German battalion generally attacked in three
-double ranks. The rear double rank had with it four or six
-machine-guns. They count upon the first three or four ranks stopping
-the enemy's bullets, but, by the time these are swept away, the last
-ranks (with the machine-guns) should be sufficiently near to carry the
-position attacked: say about 300 yards.
-
-This reckless sacrifice of life is typical of the German "machine," as
-opposed to the British "individual."
-
-As a matter of fact their method never succeeded over open ground
-before the British fire, for the front ranks were always swept away at
-the very beginning of the attack, and so they did not get near enough
-with the rear ranks.
-
-The German officer who gave me these details remarked that the rapidity
-and accuracy of the British fire were simply incredible, that they
-never had a chance.
-
-"Our men," he said, "have come to believe that every one of you carries
-a portable Maxim with him."
-
- * * * * *
-
-It must have been about 2.30 in the afternoon that Binche had to be
-abandoned. But it was before this that the German infantry attacks
-began all along the line.
-
-For nearly two hours our men had somehow or other been weathering the
-storm of shrapnel, and we have seen that they had by now settled down
-under it. Let us get back to the Second Corps and see what is
-happening. You have got some idea of the look of the country in front
-of our positions, all broken up, uneven ground, little woods here and
-there. Out on the left flank there are county regiments, men of
-Dorset, Norfolk, Suffolk, Cheshire, Surrey. They know something about
-"ground" work, and they have learned a deal more with their regiments.
-
-One end of the Yorks L.I. trench ends in a little stone-walled pigsty.
-At least it was a pigsty about church time that morning, but a German
-gunner thought it would look better without any roof or walls.
-
-There is still a fragment three feet high on the weather side, and the
-Yorks C.O. finds it a convenient shelter for the time being. He is not
-attending church-parade that day, so it doesn't matter about lying full
-length in the filth on the ground. The last remaining company
-colour-sergeant is with him--also embedded in the manure. They are
-both nibbling chocolate. Tobacco would be particularly useful just
-now, but they have both run out of it.
-
-For some minutes the C.O. has been intently watching through his
-glasses the corner of a wood about 500 yards in front. He hands the
-binoculars to the sergeant.
-
-"What do you make of it? That corner over the little shed."
-
-The sergeant has a look. He returns the glasses and slowly nods.
-
-"It might be a brigade, sir, from the number of them."
-
-"Yes," says the C.O., "I thought it was about time. Get word along
-that there is to be no firing till the order's given."
-
-"Very good, sir!" And the sergeant scrambles to his feet, salutes,
-ducks hastily as a shell seems to whistle past unnecessarily close, and
-dives into the rabbit-burrow in which his men are squatting. The C.O.
-returns to his glasses.
-
-The C.O. of a British battery, in position some distance to the rear,
-has evidently also spotted that particular target, for puffs of
-bursting shrapnel have begun to appear over the wood and round the
-edges.
-
-Now there is a distinct movement of troops emerging from behind the
-wood. It is a movement only which can be seen, for the men themselves
-can scarcely be distinguished against the grey-green country-side.
-
-At the very same moment it seems as though all the guns in the world
-have been turned on to those few miles of British front, and to the
-batteries behind.
-
-The British gun-fire wavers for a minute or so; but soon it picks up
-again though, alas! not so strongly as before.
-
-The Yorks C.O. has lost his enemy infantry for a minute; they are
-working forward under the edge of a rise in the ground.
-
-Now the front ranks appear, and the C.O. gives a sharp whistle of
-astonishment. Four hundred yards off, and it looks like a great
-glacier rolling down a mountain-side.
-
-Nearer still it creeps, and the German guns have raised their range to
-give their infantry a chance. "Besides, there will probably be nothing
-but empty trenches to take anyway," they say.
-
-Fifty yards nearer, and the temptation is too great.
-
-"Let it go, Yorkshires!" he yells down the trench. (The command is not
-in the drill-book, but it serves very well.)
-
-And the Yorkshires "let it go" accordingly.
-
-"Eh, lads," sings out a lad from Halifax, "'tis t' crowd coom oop for
-t' Coop Day! And t' lads yonder can't shoot for nuts," he blithely
-adds as myriads of rifle bullets whistle high overhead.
-
-And he and the lads from Trent-side proceed very methodically to give
-"t' lads" from Spreeside a lesson in how shooting should be done.
-
-Very methodically; but that means something like 16 shots a minute each
-man, and you may be sure that very, very few bullets go off the target.
-No one dreams of keeping cover. Indeed, the men prop their rifles on
-the parapet and pump out lead as hard as their fingers can work bolt
-and trigger.
-
-Miss? It's impossible to miss. You can't help hitting the side of a
-house--and that's what the target looks like. It is just slaughter.
-The oncoming ranks simply melt away.
-
-And now through the unholy din you can hear a cracking noise which is
-quite distinct in the uproar. Something like the continuous back-fire
-of a mammoth motor-cycle. Machine-guns.
-
-The Dorsets have got a man who is a past-master in the use of these
-infernal engines. How he escaped that day no one can tell. But for
-many an hour he sat at the gun spraying the enemy attack with his steel
-hose. His "bag" must have run into thousands.
-
-The attack still comes on. Though hundreds, thousands of the grey
-coats are mown down, as many more crowd forward to refill the ranks.
-
-Nearer still, and with a hoarse yell the Yorkshires, Dorsets, Cornwalls
-and others are out of the trenches, officers ahead of them, with
-bayonets fixed and heading straight at the enemy. A murderous Maxim
-fire meets them but it does not stop them, and in a minute they are
-thrusting and bashing with rifles, fists, stones, in amongst the enemy
-ranks.
-
-Again the German gunners drop their range and pour their shells
-indiscriminately into friend and foe. It is too much for the attacking
-regiments and they break up hopelessly, turn and begin to struggle
-back. It is impossible to attempt any rally of our men. They must go
-on until they are overwhelmed by sheer numbers, or they must straggle
-to the lines as best they can in knots of twos and threes, or wander
-aimlessly off to the flanks and get lost.
-
-Such was one single attack. But no sooner was it broken than fresh
-regiments would march out to begin it all over again. And here is no
-Pass of Thermopylae where a handful of men can withstand for indefinite
-time an army. What can the British hope to do against such
-overwhelming numbers? The end, you will say, must be annihilation.
-
-The cavalry, the only reserves, are working, surely, as no cavalry has
-ever worked before. Squadrons are everywhere at once. Wherever a gap
-is threatened they are there in support. And wherever they go there
-also go the Horse Gunners working hand and glove with them. Charge and
-counter-charge upon the flanks of the attacking infantry, dismounting
-to cover with their fire a British infantry rally, fierce hand-to-hand
-encounters with enemy squadrons. Wherever they are wanted, each man
-and horse is doing the work of ten.
-
-But this cannot last for long. Now it is becoming only too evident
-that far from there being a reasonable superiority against us the
-British are everywhere along the line hopelessly outnumbered in every
-arm. And at 5 P.M. there happened one of the most dramatic incidents
-of the war, that day or afterwards. You will find the bare recital of
-the event set forth in cold official language in the G.O.C.-in-Chief's
-dispatch, beginning: "In the meantime, about 5 P.M., I received a most
-unexpected message from General Joffre."
-
-It will be remembered that from information received from French G.H.Q.
-the previous night, and from his own reconnaissance reports, the
-Commander-in-Chief had concluded that his right flank was reasonably
-secured by the French armies, that the fortress of Namur was still
-being held, and that the enemy strength in front of him was about
-134,000 men and 490 field-guns, at an outside estimate.
-
-All the afternoon the enemy had been attacking, and the British right
-had had to give ground before it, with the consequence that Mons itself
-had to be abandoned.
-
-Now, like a bolt from the blue, came the message from the French.
-"Unexpected," one would think, is a very mild term:--
-
-"Namur has fallen. The Germans _yesterday_ won the passages over the
-River Sambre between Charleroi and Namur. The French armies are
-retiring. You have _at least_ 187,500 men and 690 guns attacking you
-in front; another 62,500 men and 230 guns trying to turn your left
-flank; and probably another 300,000 men" (the victorious army in
-pursuit of the French) "driving in a wedge on your right."
-
-This is what the message would look like:--
-
-[Illustration: Attacking and defending forces]
-
-
-But we have seen that there were really thirteen German corps attacking
-the positions Tournai--Namur--Dinant.
-
-Thus the _real_ figures would probably look like this:--
-
-[Illustration: Attacking and defending forces]
-
-
-We may, of course, take it that by the end of the day the figures were
-somewhat reduced all round, British and German; the German losses being
-"out of all proportion to those which we have suffered."
-
-[Illustration: PLAN B. Position as it appeared at 5 pm Aug 23.]
-
-Such then was the situation at 5.0 P.M. on that eventful Sunday. An
-average of nearly four times our number of guns against us all along
-the position. No wonder that senior officers had guessed from the
-first that "something was wrong."
-
-And G.H.Q.? You imagine, perhaps, that the municipal offices where the
-General Staff had its abode would now be seething with excitement. You
-will picture Staff officers rushing from room to room; orders and
-counter-orders being reeled off; the Intelligence and Army Signals
-Departments looking like Peter Robinson's in sales week; an army of
-motor-cyclist dispatch riders being hurled from the courtyard towards
-every point of the compass.
-
-Wrong! G.H.Q. that day, and the next, was less concerned than a little
-French provincial mairie would be on France's national fête day. The
-casual visitor would have seen less bustle of activity than at the
-Liverpool offices of a shipping firm on mail day.
-
-The Postal Department: "Business as usual." Army Censor: Not much
-doing. Intelligence: Half a dozen red-tabbed officers looking at big
-maps with blue and red chalk-marks on them. Director of Ordnance
-Supplies: "Better see about moving rail-head a few miles farther
-south." A.G.'s (Adjutant-General) Office: "We shall want orders out
-about stragglers, what they are to do." And so on, all through the
-list. If this was an instance of that British phlegm which so amuses
-the French, then commend me to it! If anybody wanted a tonic against
-pessimism these days of the Retreat he only had to drop in at G.H.Q.
-He would certainly come out with the conviction that we should indeed
-be home by Christmas, with the German Army wiped off the map.
-
-
-Yes, that week which followed, indeed, welded into one "band of
-brothers" all the officers and men in the little Force. In those days
-everybody seemed to know everybody else. Regimental jealousy (if it
-ever existed) was obliterated completely, and every officer and man,
-from the General Officers Commanding Corps down to the bus drivers who
-drove the A.S.C. lorries, worked shoulder to shoulder. And so we
-pulled through.
-
-
-Now there were other units in the Force besides those in the
-firing-line. There were all those columns which trekked up by road.
-Normally, most of these should be something like 15 miles to the rear.
-They know very little of what is going on ahead of them, though the
-ammunition columns can gauge fairly well by the demands made on them.
-
-So it was that about midnight on that Sunday they began to realise back
-there that things were moving by a sudden and insistent demand for
-every scrap of rifle and 18-pr. ammunition they carried.
-
-No sooner was that sent than there came more demands, and there was
-nothing to send. Wagons and lorries had trundled off at once to
-rail-head, but it would be hours before they could get back. Thus, on
-the very first day, the overwhelming nature of the situation pulled at
-and snapped the slender threads of communication. The threads were
-soon mended, but, as will be seen later, they never got properly into
-working order until the Marne.
-
-Nor did those columns altogether escape disaster even at the very
-outset of the fighting. One, out towards the flank, was attacked and
-practically destroyed by raiding cavalry, for they do not work with
-escorts.
-
-In one column, about 10.0 P.M., the alarm was given by an imaginative
-A.S.C. subaltern. What the men were to fight with is not clear, for
-only about 25 per cent. of the detachment had ever handled a rifle, and
-no ammunition was issued.
-
-"It's Germans crawling through that field," said the subaltern. "I saw
-their electric-torch flashes."
-
-The men stood to, peering into the darkness, and feeling certain that
-their last hour had come.
-
-A farmer came slowly out of the field-gate and begged two of the men to
-come and help him round up his cows.
-
-So the detachment turned in again, cursing heartily.
-
-But soon the A.S.C. bus drivers were "doing their bit" under fire as
-gallantly as everybody else. How and when you shall hear in another
-chapter.
-
-
-6.0 P.M.--The enemy have concentrated their fire upon the town of Mons
-and it has become untenable.
-
-Only six hours, six little hours since the Belgian townsfolk had come
-peacefully home from Mass to their Sunday _déjeuner_, proud and hopeful
-in the presence of their British allies. And now their houses, their
-town, a heap of smoking ruins.
-
-In those short hours how many women have seen their children crushed by
-falling walls or blown to atoms by bursting shells? How many children
-are left helpless and alone in the world, with no mother or father to
-take them by the hand and guide them from the hell of destruction?
-
-Is there no thought for them, you who have been following the fortunes
-of the day for the British? Many have escaped, with such few household
-treasures as they can carry in perambulators and little handcarts.
-They, at least, have some hope of life. These may struggle on for a
-little while--to faint or die of hunger and exhaustion by the roadside.
-The strongest may get through.
-
-For the rest, their lives are sacrificed to make a German holiday.
-They die, but in their death the battalions of these innocents have
-joined the mighty, mysterious army of souls who shall haunt the German
-people until Germany ceases to be.
-
- _C'est l'armée de ceux qui sont morts_
- _En maudissant les Allemands,_
- _Et dont les invincibles renforts_
- _Vengeront le sang innocent._[1]
-
-
-With such an overwhelming attack working forward in front and on both
-flanks the only problem left was how to get the British force away with
-the smallest loss. To remain obviously meant certain annihilation
-sooner or later. As a matter of course, possible positions in rear had
-long since been reconnoitred. They were not particularly good ones,
-but the best that were available.
-
-From earlier in the afternoon the Sappers had been at work on all the
-bridges crossing the canal, laying mines ready to blow them up in front
-of a possible successful enemy advance. By no means a pleasant task
-this, for the men were working under heavy fire practically all the
-time. But the Sappers are another of those corps of the Service which
-are well used to the kicks without the ha'pence, and nothing comes
-amiss to them. There is no regiment in the Army whose work merits
-recognition more than the R.E.; there is no regiment more surprised and
-pleased at receiving it.
-
-As the dusk draws on the enemy fire has slackened a little, and the men
-in their trenches are here and there able to snatch mouthfuls of any
-food they happen to have handy. Most of them have not tasted anything
-since early morning, and they have been fighting hard all day. But
-there is no thought of rest.
-
-The darkening night becomes red day as the glare of burning houses and
-buildings everywhere mounts to heaven in great shafts of light. It is
-such a picture as only a Rembrandt could give us on canvas.
-
-The men sit or crouch wearily in their burrows, rifles always ready,
-heads sunk forward over the butts. Now and again there is a momentary
-stir as a doctor or stretcher-bearers scramble through the debris to
-get at the wounded. The fantastic, twisted shapes of the dead are
-reverently composed and laid down on the ground. The belongings of
-them are carefully collected, with the little metal identity disc. So
-far as possible these will reach the wife, mother, or sweetheart at
-home.
-
-Perhaps those evening hours of the first day's fighting were the most
-terrible the men were ever to know. The tension had very slightly
-relaxed, and the brain began once again something of its functions.
-They began to _feel_ things. No one ever gets accustomed to being
-under the fire of modern warfare, and this was the first day of it.
-The horror of everything began to crush the senses. Soon physical and
-mental action became purely mechanical; men ceased to feel, but moved,
-fired a rifle, fed themselves, with the grotesque jerks of children's
-toys. But this was not yet. Now they were conscious, if but a little.
-
-One man, a bugler in a county regiment, little more than a child in
-years, went raving mad as he staggered across a trench and fell,
-dragging with him a headless Thing which still kept watch with rifle
-against shoulder. His shrieks, as they pulled the two apart, ring even
-now in the ears. He died that night, simply from shock after the awful
-tension of the day.
-
-Consciousness came to the men, yet with it came also amazing
-cheerfulness even in the midst of the horror. But it was the
-cheerfulness not of high spirits but of determination, and of pity.
-They had fought through the day against an enemy which, even to men who
-did not understand, was in overwhelming strength; and yet they had been
-able to hold their ground. It was the cheerfulness which, at a word
-from their officers, would have taken them straight at the enemy's
-throat.
-
-And pity, if it is to be helpful and sincere, must have behind it a
-gaiety of heart. No man in the world is more tender to helpless or
-dumb creatures than the British soldier or sailor; no man more
-cheerful. And no man in the Force but felt his heart wrung by the
-infinite pathos of the folk of Mons and round it. History will never
-record how many soldiers lost their lives that day in succouring the
-people who had put such trust in their presence.
-
-And how many won such a distinction as no king can bestow--the love and
-gratitude of little children? One man, at least, I knew (I never
-learned his name) who, at the tears of two tiny mites, clambered into
-the ruins of a burning outhouse, then being shelled, to fetch something
-they wanted, he could not understand what. He found a terror-stricken
-cat and brought it out safely. No, not pussy, something else as well.
-Back he went again, and after a little search discovered on the floor
-in a corner a wicker cage, in it a blackbird. Yes, that was it. And,
-oh, the joy of the girl mite at finding it still alive!
-
-"Well, you see, sir," he said afterwards, "I've got two kiddies the
-image of them. And it was no trouble, anyway."
-
-
-About 2 A.M. (the 24th) orders to begin retiring were issued from
-G.H.Q. Some four hours before a few of the units--those north of the
-canal--had begun to fall back; and so the beginning of the move was
-made. As the last of these crossed the bridges the detonator fuses
-were fired and the bridges blown up.
-
-For the rest, the men crouched ever in their places, bayonets fixed,
-rifles always ready--waiting, waiting.
-
-
-
-[1] 'Tis the army of those who in dying
- Have cursed the German flood--
- And whose growing invincible forces
- Will avenge all innocent blood.--EMILE CAMMAERTS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE RETREAT BEGINS
-
- _The poor condemned English,
- Like sacrifices, by their watchful fires
- Sit patiently, and inly ruminate
- The morning's danger._
-
-
-To follow now the fortunes of the British Force you must imagine it, if
-you will, divided, like Caesar's Gaul, into three parts. There is the
-First Corps, which still holds its position, save that extreme right by
-Binche; there is the Second Corps, which has begun at 3 A.M. to retire
-to a new position; and there is the Cavalry, Allenby's Division and the
-remainder of Chetwode's Brigade, which turns up whereever it is most
-needed to lend a helping hand.
-
-If you glance through Sir John French's dispatch (at the end of the
-book) you will see that he had in mind to retire in what is called
-"echelon" formation. That is, one-half retires and takes up a new
-position, while the other half stays behind to act as a rear-guard and
-hold up enemy attacks. Then, in turn, that other half retires behind
-the first half, and so on.
-
-That was the idea, and on the first day it worked very well. But after
-that it was found simply impossible to keep to it, partly through the
-enemy's thunderbolt movements, and partly because our men became more
-and more exhausted.
-
-Now, it is also a cardinal principle in rearguard fights that you must
-not only check your enemy, but must also, whenever possible, make a
-counter-attack. In fact, the counter-attacks are part and parcel of
-the checking movements. This is where cavalry comes in very useful.
-
-Let us, then, take the three divisions of the Force separately.
-
-
-_The First Corps_
-
-Night attacks, especially in the early morning (it sounds rather
-Irish), are horribly uncomfortable things. The nerves are continuously
-on edge and you are apt to loose off guns or rifles at the merest
-suspicion of a movement.
-
-"If ye should see a wee brrown beastie in frront o' ye," a canny Scot
-sergeant told his men, "ye mauna fire, because likely it'll be a bit
-rrabbit, and rrabbits are guid for the pot. But if the beastie should
-walk upon twa legs, then ye may ken it's no a rrabbit, but a Gerrman,
-an' ye will tak a verry quick but carefu' sicht o' him."
-
-All through that Sunday night the men had snatched odd minutes of sleep
-just where they had fought through the day. And very little rest did
-the enemy allow them. For one can well imagine how exasperated by this
-time the enemy were at being held up by a handful of a "contemptible
-little army." It was most difficult, too, to get any food up to the
-lines, for the German guns had "registered" all the approaches and
-persistently dropped their shells across them.
-
-But the men hung on cheerily enough, and if they couldn't get any sleep
-they made up their minds that the Germans should not either, especially
-where they were dug in only a few hundred yards in front.
-
-So the short summer night was passed. And with the first hint of dawn
-the news ran quickly round that, far from dreaming of retiring, the
-First Corps was going to attack. The news was as good as a big
-breakfast. Somehow or other the A.S.C. got up rations to most of the
-units, and so it was the cheeriest of 2nd Divisions which swung out of
-their trenches and loop holed houses and headed for the enemy's left
-flank in Binche. The 1st Division acted as supports.
-
-In the attack there was something more of a hint of that method and
-timing which, eight months later, were brought to such perfection in
-Flanders. The British batteries had by now recovered somewhat from
-their severe handling during the day, and at the given moment every gun
-got well to work in support of the infantry, and very fine practice
-they made.
-
-Of course the attack was really no more than a ruse, daringly conceived
-and successfully executed. Binche could not have been held even if it
-had been recaptured. But it is not difficult to imagine the enemy's
-astonishment at finding an Army Corps, which they had fondly imagined
-as good as wiped out, coming to life again and actually having the
-cheek to attack them. Kipling's remark about the Fuzzy-wuzzy who is
-"generally shamming when 'e's dead" was an excellent motto for that
-morning's work.
-
-When the attack was well launched General Lomax began to withdraw very
-carefully some of his regiments from the supporting 1st Division. The
-task of the British guns of the two divisions (working together) was to
-lower such a curtain of fire in front of the 2nd Division as to make it
-as difficult as possible for the enemy to counter-attack or, indeed, to
-advance at all. As soon as the 1st Division have retired a little, it
-will be the turn of the division which has made that excellent sortie.
-
-It is easy enough to say "the guns will check an enemy advance," but
-think for a moment what that means. There is already a big enemy
-superiority in guns, and, what is more, these have already got the
-ranges to a nicety.
-
-Our batteries, or most of them, were in quite good positions, but at
-this early date we had not yet learned the art of concealing them
-sufficiently. The enemy aircraft were very active, and against them
-our own aircraft were hopelessly outnumbered. And so it was not long
-before our guns were "spotted," with the inevitable result.
-
-Imagine, then, how gloriously those gun detachments must have worked to
-have accomplished what they did that day, "enabling Sir Douglas Haig,
-with the First Corps, to reach the new line without much further loss
-about 7 P.M." For it was undoubtedly the devotion of the guns which
-made possible this and succeeding retirements. Unless facts like this
-are realised, the astonishing work of the Force in its retreat can
-never be appreciated.
-
-
-_The Second Corps_
-
-If that Monday was an anxious day for Sir Douglas Haig, what must it
-have been for General Smith-Dorrien and his men? One looks hopelessly
-at the blank writing-pad in despair of giving even the most primitive
-description of the anxiety, the work, and the accomplishment of it.
-
-Here is a Corps which has gone through, for the first time, the awful
-ordeal of a day's modern shell-fire and massed infantry attack. The
-men have supped full of horrors, and, at 3 A.M., hungry, weary and with
-nerves stretched to their utmost tension, they have received orders to
-move. There is not a regiment which has not lost heavily, especially
-in officers, and there is not a man but receives the command with his
-senses tangled in bewilderment.
-
-Now it should be remembered that up to this time all our dispositions
-had been made for an advance. The impedimenta to the rear of the
-firing-line were so arranged that they might the more easily follow up
-a British attack. There was no real thought of retiring. The British
-were in the place of honour on the left of the line, and intended, with
-our French comrades, to drive the enemy back again through Belgium. I
-will not say that all this was a foregone conclusion, but at least it
-was "confidently anticipated." Remembering this, you will perhaps
-realise more vividly how staggering were the contents of that telegram
-from French G.H.Q. The work, therefore, of clearing the roads of the
-transport was exceedingly difficult. This devolves upon the Q.M.G.'s
-department, and General Smith-Dorrien has placed on record the wholly
-admirable way in which it was accomplished by General Ryecroft and his
-Staff. But proper Staff work for all the retiring troops during the
-hours of darkness was even more complicated.
-
-Thus some few of the companies, with no one to guide them, start off in
-the wrong direction and march straight into the German lines; they are
-shot or captured. Others wander off to the east, struggle painfully
-through the shell-fire on Mons, and drift into their comrade ranks of
-the First Corps. Others, again, march off to the west, and are
-hopelessly lost; they are either captured by the flanking German corps
-or they get through and meet with friendly peasants, to turn up
-eventually at base ports or other towns.
-
-Night marching across unknown country is not always easy in peace time,
-with guides at the heads of columns. Now there was the added confusion
-of the crowds of emigrants, a perfect network of roads to choose from,
-and, above all, continual alarms of enemy attacks which the British had
-to turn to meet. The whole of the night and all the Monday was one
-long period of marching, fighting, marching and fighting.
-
-Early in the morning another infantry brigade, the 19th, arrived by
-railway, detraining at Valenciennes, and it is no exaggeration to say
-that the men went straight off the trains into the thick of the fight.
-It was a very welcome reinforcement of about 4,000 men.
-
-By 8 A.M. the enemy had burst through Mons, across the canal line, and
-were in hot pursuit in overwhelming numbers. Away on the left flank
-they had attacked Tournai, which was occupied by French Territorials
-and also, I believe, by a British battery, though how it got there, or
-why, I do not know. That bit of fighting was over by midday with the
-capture of the town and the destruction or capture of its defenders.
-The Germans were then free to resume their victorious advance.
-
-About the middle of the morning, then, the line of the Second Corps
-extended from a little Belgian village called Frameries, five miles
-S.W. of Mons, through the village of Dour. The right flank was the
-more forward, partly because the regiments there had to encounter the
-more furious attacks and could not break away.
-
-It was at this point that there was made one more of those splendid but
-hopeless cavalry charges of which we so often read in military history.
-It is, curiously enough, almost the only definite incident mentioned by
-Sir John French in his dispatch. But the incident, or rather the
-sequel to it, caught the public imagination, mainly because of the fine
-work of that most gallant gentleman, Francis Grenfell.
-
-Of all the noble, lion-hearted men who have "gone west" in this bloody
-war, no man more worthily deserves the description applied to the
-Chevalier Bayard, "_sans peur et sans reproche_," than Francis
-Grenfell--he and one other whom I shall name hereafter. Gallant
-soldier, brilliant sportsman, graceful poet, and true lover of Nature,
-a genuine statesman in his dealings with men, and the most loyal of
-friends, he died later on the field of honour, and Britain--nay, the
-world is the poorer for his loss.
-
-The charge was made by the 9th Lancers, which regiment, with others of
-the 2nd Brigade, had been moved forward to ease the pressure on the
-right flank.
-
-About 400 yards from the German infantry and guns the Lancers galloped
-full tilt into barbed wire. There was nothing for it but to swerve
-across the German front. How a single man or horse escaped the hail of
-shell and bullets which was turned on them one can never understand.
-But a poor remnant, under Captain Francis Grenfell, did indeed get
-across, mercilessly pursued by that storm of lead, and eventually found
-some little shelter under a railway embankment.
-
-A R.F.A. battery was in action here. At least, the guns were still
-there, but officers and detachments had been gradually wiped out until
-there were just one officer and two detachments left to work the
-battery. It was only a matter of minutes before the remainder must be
-killed and the guns fall into the hands of the enemy, for the German
-guns had the range and the German infantry were crowding up.
-
-The 9th Lancers and the Gunners are old friends, and the Lancers do not
-leave old friends (or new ones) to finish a losing fight alone.
-
-"The Germans don't get those guns while any of us are left," said
-Grenfell. "I'm off to see how we can get them away."
-
-Now Grenfell was already badly wounded, but he stuck on his horse
-somehow and _walked_ that gallant beast out into the storm to see where
-he was to run the guns to. (Why does not His Majesty create a
-decoration for horses? But I'll wager Grenfell hung his V.C. round his
-charger's neck a month later.)
-
-Well, he walked him out and he walked him back, just to show his men
-what poor shots the Germans were.
-
-"Now then," said Grenfell, "who's for the guns?"
-
-And, since (as I have said) the Lancers always stand by old pals, every
-man of them was.
-
-They tied their horses up, and Lancers and Gunners set to work. One by
-one of those guns they got at the wheels and trails and worked and
-worked. Down went more gallant Lancers and more gallant Gunners, but
-there were still a few left, and, by Heaven, those few stuck to it.
-
-"Come on, lads, just one more!" sang out Grenfell, with his coat off.
-
-And they worked and heaved, and did it. Every one of those guns they
-saved.
-
-But then, be it repeated, the Lancers and Gunners always were good pals.
-
-
-By midday General Smith-Dorrien's task had become one of the gravest
-difficulty. And this was but the opening phase of a movement which, I
-venture to think, will be accounted by the historian as one of the most
-astonishing pieces of work in military history. I refer not to the
-Retreat as a whole, but to the work of the Second Corps and its leader
-from 3 A.M. of the 24th to about midnight of the 26th--27th. An
-eternity of years was encircled by those few hours.
-
-The difficulties of the movement can probably be appreciated at their
-full value only by the military student with a vivid imagination, so I
-will just suggest what had to be done. First of all, General
-Smith-Dorrien had to get his men away from the Mons line in the early
-dawn in the face of overwhelming numbers, numbers which he could only
-guess at, for at any moment a big attack might be made by another army
-upon his left flank. This was very much complicated by his men having
-been severely handled all through the Sunday, and getting no food nor
-rest. In fact, it was the human element which really made all the
-movement so difficult. The feeling that at any moment the tremendous
-strain upon the men's endurance would stretch to breaking-point and
-snap.
-
-Then the G.O.C. had not merely to get his men gradually back, but they
-had to show a bold front the whole time. It was a matter of fighting
-backwards without a moment's rest. A couple of regiments, say, with
-some cavalry, would halt for half an hour on a certain line, and hold
-up with the heaviest fire they could the attack on their particular
-section. Then, when the enemy got nearer, up they would jump and go
-straight at the Germans with the bayonet, the cavalry backing them up
-all they knew. The same with the guns.
-
-A battery would manoeuvre into a position, come into action, and pound
-away for a quarter of an hour. Then, at the right moment (and it
-called for the nicest judgment to select that moment) four guns would
-be run back, limbered up, and got away, while the remaining couple
-would continue an intermittent fire to cover the retirement. These in
-turn would slip away--if they could.
-
-The casualties under conditions like these must, of course, be very
-heavy indeed. That they were not infinitely heavier was due to the
-splendid use the men made of the ground, taking cover and so on, and to
-the noble spirit of self-sacrifice for comrades which animated every
-unit.
-
-Thirdly, the G.O.C. had to remember that he was not playing a lone
-hand, but that he had to consider the retirement of the First Corps on
-his right. He had to play the match for his side. Just at the moment
-Jessop, in the person of Sir Douglas Haig, was in with him, and Jessop
-had to hit out against time to make the runs while Leveson-Gower
-(Smith-Dorrien) kept up his wicket at the other end.
-
-And, fourthly, to carry on the metaphor, when Jessop was forced to
-"retire hurt" Leveson-Gower had to begin to hit at just that moment
-when he felt that he had "collared the bowling." In other words, the
-G.O.C., having held a certain line of defence for a couple of hours or
-so, had to judge to a nicety the exact moment when he had, for the
-time, broken the enemy's attack sufficiently to permit of retirement
-another two miles to the next position.
-
-Those four points, then, constitute in very broad outline the task
-which General Smith-Dorrien had to perform. Our people have not been
-slow to recognise how magnificently he and his men accomplished it.
-
-The enemy were now, by accident or design, beginning to drive in a
-wedge at Frameries between the two corps. Always a serious situation,
-especially when, as now, units had become very scattered in the gradual
-retirement. The gap was filled to some extent by the 5th Brigade,
-which General Smith-Dorrien borrowed from the First Corps.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Impressions gleaned from the other side are always of interest.
-Another German officer, whom we got a few days later, gave me his
-opinion of the British work somewhat like this.
-
-"All our text-books," he said, "about rear-guard actions will have to
-be rewritten, and you have certainly taught us a lesson. It has been
-just like advancing into a wall of fog. The fog is elastic enough when
-one enters it, but soon it clings all round and chokes you. We pushed
-in all right, but never came out at the other side."
-
-Personally, I felt inclined to apply the metaphor the reverse way, and
-that is how the men felt it. The dense, overpowering cloud rolling
-down, the battling against it with impotent arms, and the fog
-penetrating into every gap in the lines.
-
-The men were dazed, stunned by the continuous onslaughts. There seemed
-no end to them. As fast as one German company was mown down another
-would spring up. It was as though their aircraft flew over with
-watchful eye to sow in every field another bushel of the mythical
-dragon's teeth. And everywhere more and more German guns would come
-into action to support their infantry, and everywhere more and more
-machine-guns would be rushed up by their very mobile transport to rake
-and enfilade the British companies or gun detachments.
-
-At the time all these things were not realised, for there was no
-sitting down for five minutes to ruminate. But now, after eighteen
-months, when one pieces together this fact and that, and learns
-something of what the actual numbers were, one hesitates to set it down
-on paper for fear of being flatly disbelieved.
-
-
-Any record of feelings during those hours is blurred. But there was
-one thought which, I know, was uppermost in every man's mind: "Where on
-earth are the French?"
-
-When a thought like that has been born it is easy to guess how it will
-grow and run through the ranks. If only now and again they had seen a
-French squadron swoop down upon the enemy's flank in front of them
-everything would have been well. They would have cheered their French
-comrades on, and gone in for all they were worth to avenge their death,
-if called upon. But never a French soldier did one of our lads see.
-
-So far as I know, our Allies have published no official account of
-their retreat from Namur, although they have very frankly admitted, in
-an official Government report, the mistakes which were then made and
-have shown how they were since rectified. It is by no means clear what
-happened to the 5th French Army on our right after Namur had fallen; we
-only knew that we never saw them.
-
-But at the time it must be remembered that no one in the British Force,
-save G.H.Q., knew what was happening even to themselves, so it was
-hardly likely that they could learn anything definite about the French.
-So there the subject may rest.
-
-
-In the early afternoon General Smith-Dorrien learned that the First
-Corps had "made good" during the morning, and were fighting their way
-back with sufficient success to admit of his own retirement when he was
-able to break away.
-
-Although, perhaps, too little space has been given in this chapter to
-the work of the First Corps, they had nearly as hard a fight as the
-rest of the Force. The task before Sir Douglas Haig was probably not
-quite so delicate as General Smith-Dorrien's, but it was obviously one
-of as grave a responsibility. However, in the late afternoon he got
-safely back, as we have seen, to the position determined by the
-Commander-in-Chief.
-
-The Second Corps then succeeded in breaking away, and by the evening a
-new line of the entire Force was formed, reaching from the fortress of
-Maubeuge on the right to two little villages, Bry and Jenlain, on the
-left. The 19th Brigade, which had come into the fight in the morning,
-was posted on and across the extreme left.
-
-It should be noted that, with the fall of Tournai and the destruction
-of the French troops in that neighbourhood, the whole country on the
-west was open to the invaders. Their victorious army corps operating
-there was now able to swing round to attack the British left, and their
-cavalry was already sweeping in flying squadrons and patrols over the
-country-side. In fact, the French Channel ports, from Boulogne to
-Havre, were there for the taking, and the French coast line, for which
-the enemy fought so valiantly a few months later, would have been
-theirs without a struggle.
-
-But these facts were only vaguely realised in the Force, and the men,
-of course, knew nothing of doings save only upon their immediate front.
-At every moment they fully expected to make a definite stand, with an
-advance to follow, and thus they remained in good heart, secure in the
-conviction that though badly mauled they were not even at the beginning
-of a defeat. But some of us knew and realised, and it was a hard task
-to keep the knowledge from the men and from the friendly country-folk.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE SECOND DAY
-
- _Gloucester, 'tis true that we are in great danger;
- The greater, therefore, should our courage be.--
- . . . . God Almighty!
- There is some soul of goodness in things evil,
- Would men observingly distil it out.
- For our bad neighbour makes us early stirrers,
- Which is both healthful and good husbandry._
-
-
-During the night of Monday the whole Force was on or about the line
-already indicated, with the fortress of Maubeuge on their right flank.
-But let it not be imagined that the men settled down quietly at 9 P.M.
-to a cosy supper with a night's sleep to follow. There was no such
-thing as a halt for any time. Incidentally, most of the horses went
-through the whole business without being off-saddled once. The first
-regiments in were the first to move off again. The men just dropped
-down in the road where they halted and, if lucky, snatched ten minutes'
-sleep. Many of the men seemed to sleep while they marched; although,
-as one has often done it on night manoeuvres at home, there was nothing
-curious about that.
-
-By midnight I do not think that anybody very much cared what happened.
-There was a certain amount of trench digging going on, and there was,
-in consequence, some idea that a stand would be made. But the men were
-really too exhausted to care one way or the other.
-
-It is all very well to remark upon their invariable cheeriness, as most
-writers seem to delight in doing, but it gives a hopelessly wrong
-impression of the hardships. A certain form of "cheery spirit" is
-inseparable from the British soldier when he is up against a tough job,
-but you can't very well be lively and make funny remarks (as reported
-in the Press) when you have become an automaton in all your movements.
-
-Had the French held firm, in all probability a stand would have been
-made on this line. But there is no object in speculating about it now.
-The view adopted by the Commander-in-Chief, which determined a further
-retreat, may best be given in his own words:
-
-"The French were still retiring, and I had no support except such as
-was afforded by the fortress of Maubeuge; and the determined attempts
-of the enemy to get round my left flank assured me that it was his
-intention to hem me against that place and surround me. I felt that
-not a moment must be lost in retiring to another position."
-
-"I hoped," he adds, "that the enemy's pursuit would not be too vigorous
-to prevent me effecting my object."
-
-This hope was, fortunately, fulfilled, and the second day's retirement
-was, on the whole, less eventful. Later I will hazard a suggestion why
-it was so.
-
-The necessary orders had been given overnight to be clear of the
-Valenciennes--Bavai--Maubeuge road by 5.30 A.M. The Second Corps got
-clear by the time specified, but the First Corps could only begin their
-move at that hour, and so got behind. This fact tended to make
-inevitable the fight which took place that evening at Landrecies.
-
-It was, as I remember, a baking hot day, with a blazing sun in a
-cloudless sky. Along English country roads and through our own little
-dappled-grey villages it would have been trying enough; but French
-roads, built Roman fashion, do not try to be picturesque and charming,
-and they certainly have no sense of humour like ours. Thus, the day's
-march was simply purgatory to a tired force. The fruit trees with
-their harvest really saved the situation. But, oh, those green apples
-and pears!
-
-Once again, do not imagine the regiments trekking along straight for
-their next destination. The day was less eventful only in comparison
-with Monday and Wednesday. It was a rear-guard action most of the way,
-and there was quite enough fighting to break the monotony, with some
-big cavalry actions and the 5th Brigade heavily engaged.
-
-Take, for instance, a field battery in the 2nd Division. The
-time-table would be something like this: 5.30 A.M., open fire; 6, cease
-fire and limber up; 6.10, en route to new position; 6.30, halt, open
-fire; 6.40, cease fire, limber up, and start off for new position;
-7.15, halt, open fire; and so on all through the day. In fact, that
-was the ordinary day's programme. The particular battery I have in
-mind had a little adventure all to itself on Tuesday. It is of
-interest as revealing another side of German thoroughness.
-
-The battery was in action, but had temporarily ceased firing, and the
-detachments were lying by the guns.
-
-A big grey "Sunbeam" drew up on a road to the flank of the battery, and
-a couple of red-tabbed Staff officers jumped out, walked up to the
-nearest gun, and started to chat with one of the gunners.
-
-After a few remarks about how well the battery had been doing, they
-asked some questions about casualties, positions of neighbouring
-batteries, the infantry near them, and the usual facts which the Staff
-come to inquire about.
-
-The major had been watching from the far flank, and, as the Staff
-officers turned to get into their car, he remarked to the
-sergeant-major:
-
-"I don't quite like the look of those two officers; there's something
-wrong about them." And he had a look through his glasses.
-
-Some distance along the road there was marching down a company of
-R.E.'s.
-
-"Call up those sappers (by flag) and tell them to hold up that car."
-
-The sergeant-major repeated the message to the flag-wagger.
-
-"Stop grey car--suspicious."
-
-The R.E. sergeant ran up to the subaltern in charge:
-
-"Battery signals 'stop grey car.'"
-
-"Well, stop it, then," replied the subaltern irritably.
-
-So the grey car was stopped, very much to the annoyance of two Staff
-officers who were in a great hurry to get back to G.H.Q.
-
-"Very sorry, sir," said the subaltern, "but it's a telegraph message
-from that battery. The O.C. has probably got something special to send
-to G.H.Q." And the car was escorted back again.
-
-The O.C. had "something special to send" in the shape of a couple of
-German officers, very carefully disguised as British. A drum-head
-court-martial was held at Corps H.Q., and as the Germans in question
-were hopelessly compromised by the very full notes which they had
-managed to collect from various units about the Force, the case was
-clear.
-
-"Guilty. To be shot at dawn."
-
-They were plucky fellows, but--well, a spy is a spy, and that's all
-about it.
-
-
-Less than a week before the country folk had watched with delight and
-relief the passing of mighty transport columns of British, had welcomed
-and cheered the men forward, proud and confident in the anticipation of
-early victory.
-
-Now imagine their feelings, their alarm, at the sight of British
-regiments, war-worn, weary and battered, trailing back as fast as they
-could move.
-
-Of what use was it to tell them that this was only a strategical
-retirement? Panic spreads quickly, and once the hint of calamity is
-given it is impossible to check the alarm.
-
-But even then it was some little time before the stolid peasants of
-Northern France could grasp the meaning of what they saw, and I
-remember well how the inhabitants of a certain little village crowded
-out to watch the extraordinary (to them) behaviour of a regiment which
-was in the extreme rear of the retiring First Corps.
-
-The village overlooked a valley, and there was a splendid view of the
-British lines retiring in open order up the hill towards the little
-hamlet. They came up panting heavily and, just under the brow of the
-hill, set to work to dig up some rough shelter. The folk stood
-watching, laughing and talking, until an exasperated lance-corporal
-threw his tool in front of an oldish man.
-
-"'Ere, it's about b---- well time _you_ did a bit"; and the corporal
-sat down to wipe off some of the dirt from his face.
-
-In a few minutes all the men and women had started digging as though
-for buried treasure, and the British sat still for a spell and
-encouraged them with happy comments.
-
-Very soon down the opposite slope thousands of little grey-blue ants
-came swiftly, and from the ridge behind them dim flashes shot out.
-
-"Now, then, you'd better 'op it!" said the lance-corporal.
-
-And even then they didn't understand what those ants really were.
-
-"Allmonds!" was the lance-corporal's laconic remark.
-
-The arrival of a shell settled it, and the villagers ran helter-skelter
-for their houses and little treasures. In a quarter of an hour another
-pitiable reinforcement had joined the ranks of the refugee army flying
-southwards, and only the old curé remained, ever true to his charge.
-They were gallant gentlemen those French curés, and bravely they faced
-the death which nearly always overtook them at the hands of those
-murderers.
-
-It was not until the British had turned to advance from the Marne that
-they began fully to realise the nature of the Germans. As yet they
-encountered no evidence of the atrocious, bestial work of the enemy.
-But already rumour was busy, and even on this day I had recorded
-authentic details that the Germans were placing women and children
-before their advancing infantry, and that they were stabbing the
-wounded with the bayonet.
-
-
-On the Sunday another British Division, the 4th, had arrived at Le
-Cateau, the little town to which the Force was now moving. This meant
-a reinforcement of some 14,500 men, together with three field
-batteries. They were there waiting to come into action on the
-Wednesday, and in the meantime had begun to entrench.
-
-The general line of retirement on the Tuesday was:
-
-(_a_) First Corps, Bavai--Maubeuge, to Landrecies--Maroilles.
-
-(_b_) Second Corps, Bry--Bavai, to west of Le Cateau.
-
-A glance at the picture-map will show the position of these places. It
-will be noted that the various divisions kept together pretty well.
-Also that between Landrecies and Le Cateau there was a gap in the line
-which the 6th Brigade could not properly fill. The Commander-in-Chief
-remarks in his dispatch that the men in the First Corps were too
-exhausted to march farther so as to cover this gap.
-
-
-You picture, then, the regiments arriving one by one at the end of that
-most exhausting day. The men dog-tired, hardly able to drag their feet
-over the burning ground, no proper meal since a hasty breakfast at
-dawn, fighting on and off all day, and now simply done to the world.
-
-Now, it is a golden rule in the Service that, however tired the men may
-be, they must set to work at the end of their march to entrench
-themselves or otherwise prepare against possible attack. I leave it to
-your imagination to realise the meaning of "discipline" when you learn
-that the men did entrench themselves that evening. And never was that
-rule more finely vindicated.
-
-I conceive Marshal von Kluck at German G.H.Q. soliloquising that
-Tuesday morning something in this wise:
-
-"My friends von Buelow and Hausen have between them settled with the
-French on this side, and _they_ won't give any more trouble. Von
-Buelow and I have pretty well pounded and demoralised the English, and
-one more effort should finish _them_. Now, I will just give them
-enough to keep them busy through to-day, keep them on the run and
-exhaust them thoroughly, and then to-night we'll have a really hot
-attack and crumple up the First Corps. They'll never stand that; and
-we shall then have the rest of their army surrounded."?
-
-And that is the suggestion about the day's work which I venture to
-make. We have seen how the daylight hours went for the British, and
-how the Force drifted in to their destinations. Now we will see how
-von Kluck crumpled up the First Corps with his night attack.
-
-The 1st Division was halted in and about Maroilles, and the 2nd
-Division at Landrecies. They were therefore on the extreme right of
-the line, with their flank more or less "in the air," for no French
-seemed to be near. Landrecies was held by the 4th Brigade, battalions
-of the Foot Guards, Grenadiers, Coldstreams and Irish, under General
-Scott-Kerr.
-
-The torrid heat of the day had been the prelude to a cool, rainy
-evening. Room was found for about two-thirds of the Brigade in the
-houses and halls of the little town--a typical French country-town,
-with its straight streets and market-place. The remainder of the men
-got what little comfort they could on a rainy night outside.
-
-By 9 P.M. they had hardly begun to settle down, after "clearing decks
-for action"--in case. Outposts had been placed, and the men were
-congratulating themselves on a comfortable shelter after so many nights
-of foot slogging. At 9.30 lights were out, and town and country-side
-were in pitch darkness.
-
-A battalion of the Coldstream Guards had not yet arrived, but was about
-a quarter of a mile from the town, marching in. The colonel was at the
-head of the column with the guide. This man persisted in flashing an
-electric torch to and fro towards the left, and the C.O. peremptorily
-ordered him to put it out.
-
-The man obeyed for a few yards, and then flashed the light again.
-
-The C.O. at once grasped the situation, drew his revolver, and shot the
-spy dead.
-
-It was as though that bullet had been fired straight into a mountain of
-gunpowder.
-
-With a terrific crash German guns opened fire. Simultaneously, on
-front and flank, rifles and machine-guns blazed out.
-
-A German night attack is no question of feeling a way in open order
-until the enemy's outposts are driven in; it comes down like a smith's
-hammer on the anvil.
-
-The Coldstreamers, with miraculous discipline, swung round and got into
-a kind of line with the outposts already there, then continued
-retirement to the town at the double.
-
-The outpost line was crushed through almost in a moment like tissue
-paper, and before anyone could grasp what was happening the Germans
-were pouring their massed columns into the town.
-
-Thus began perhaps the most critical and certainly the most remarkable
-fight in which British regiments have ever been engaged.
-
-Tired out, the men tumbled out of the houses; three privates and a
-corporal here, a dozen men and a sergeant there, a subaltern, a private
-and a machine-gun at another corner, half a dozen men at two
-first-floor windows somewhere else. And the only light came from the
-flash of the rifles.
-
-There was no idea of forming ranks, even had it been possible. Slowly,
-steadily up the streets the great German mammoth crept, and, like
-tigers at their prey, the men of the Guards sprang at head and flanks,
-worrying with grim-set teeth to the heart of the beast.
-
-Now the British machine-guns opened fire straight upon the head of the
-column, swept it away, swept the succeeding ranks, until the mass was
-brought to a standstill.
-
-More Guardsmen threw themselves straight at the ranks, firing as they
-could, crashing in with bayonet and clubbed rifle.
-
-Now the column shivers; but the Germans are brave men. They rally, for
-their comrades are pouring into the town to help them. Up side streets
-and lanes, by all the approaches they come, and everywhere the men of
-the Guards spring at them.
-
-But surely numbers must tell. What can four battered regiments,
-fighting by handfuls, do in face of such thousands of a fresh army
-corps!
-
-From Maroilles right down the line the British are fighting for their
-lives, for von Kluck has staked heavily on this throw, and it would
-seem that the dice are loaded. He pushes his guns up still closer
-until some are firing into the town almost at point-blank range.
-Again, what does it matter if his own men are swept away? There are
-thousands more to fill their places.
-
-The houses have begun to blaze fiercely in the torrents of rain, and
-there is plenty of light at last. And now the Guards rally for a
-supreme effort. The last, the forlorn hope--but it is the Guards, and
-at least they will go down fighting to the last man.
-
-One mighty heave--in at them--again--they are breaking--heave!
-
-They have done it. Broken them. Driven them out. And behind them the
-enemy leave close upon 1,000 dead.
-
-Away up by Maroilles Sir Douglas Haig has fought his men like one
-possessed, and there, too, he has broken the German attack, just as two
-French Reserve Divisions came up to his aid.
-
-Slowly, sullenly, von Kluck withdraws his legions. Slowly and fitfully
-the firing dies away, and by 2 A.M. all is still once more.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-AN INTERLUDE
-
- _... As many ways meet in one town;
- As many fresh streams meet in one salt sea;
- As many lines close in the dial's centre;
- So may a thousand actions, once afoot,
- End in one purpose, and be all well borne
- Without defeat._
-
-
-There is something more than magic in the poetry of Shakespeare's
-_Henry V._ when it is read to illustrate the stirring events of these
-opening phases of the War. To set it side by side with the recital of
-the story is to listen to the voice of a singer supported by the
-gravely-sounding, deep-toned brass instruments of an orchestra.
-
-There is more than beauty of accompaniment, there is the magic of
-prophecy. I can hardly find an incident of those August days which was
-not mirrored three centuries ago in the verse of this play. Thus, I
-have sought in no other for the musical preludes of my chapters; and I
-confess often to have rubbed my eyes in astonishment at the aptness of
-the poetry to the incidents of the moment.
-
-Now those few bars of introduction suggest another _motif_; let me try
-to expand the theme a little.
-
-In reading the cold, semi-official language which states that the
-British Force halted at such and such an hour along a line extending
-from So-and-So to Somewhere, one is apt to gain an impression which is
-far removed from reality.
-
-You picture, perhaps, the various units retiring along routes carefully
-assigned by gilded Staff officers, and duly arriving at the scheduled
-times in various villages and hamlets. That there they are met by
-courteous billeting parties, who proceed to allot the men to more or
-less unwilling householders. That at the hour specified in the report
-you find the Dorsets in one place, the Irish Guards next to them, the
-batteries with their guns neatly parked, and so on all down the line.
-The various H.Q.'s of Brigades, Divisions or Corps all in readily
-accessible spots, and everybody connected up with everybody else by
-telegraph or telephone, so that any unit can be set in motion at any
-minute.
-
-That is the ideal. Well, that delightful ideal first assumed definite
-shape after the Battle of the Marne and not before. Here is a little
-sketch of a tiny village on the line of retreat on the evening of
-Tuesday, August 25th:
-
-
-M. le maire, old Pierre Godolphin, sat slowly pulling at a new clay
-pipe as he looked with unseeing eyes up the long dusty road which led
-out of the village away over the northern uplands. A trimly kept hedge
-of privet bordered his rose-garden and the road, and his favourite seat
-was set in a little niche of the greenery whence he could command all
-that went on in his tiny kingdom and, without moving, could see exactly
-what Madame la Femme du Maire was about in the stone-flagged kitchen.
-
-That afternoon an avalanche of three-ton motor lorries had descended
-upon the village, weird vehicles which announced in blatant language
-the superiority over all others of Mayflower's margarine or the
-outstanding merits of Pulltite's corsets. The men in authority were
-obviously, from their uniforms, English officers, and not travellers
-for the firms in question. But, frankly, old Pierre was puzzled. They
-had come from the south, and why did they not continue their journey?
-Two of the officers were actually proposing to stay with him, for an
-indefinite period.
-
-M. le boulanger walked slowly across the road to confer with him about
-the baking of more bread. "But these English are like a locust swarm,
-and I have no more flour," he explained.
-
-"A glass of cider for monsieur, Henriette."
-
-"I do not understand," Pierre went on, "what it is ces braves garçons
-do here. It is the third week of war, and by now surely ces bêtes de
-Boches should have been driven back into their own pigsties---- Mais,
-nom de Dieu, qu'est ce que c'est?"
-
-Down the village street a four-seater car came lurching from side to
-side like a drunken man. Crash! It has caught a stone post and turned
-over. In an instant the road is full of people running.
-
-Two men lay dazed as they had been thrown out. Both in the
-yellow-green uniform of the British, one, certainly, an officer.
-Willing hands lift them tenderly, and someone dashes a jug of water
-over their heads. Then one sees what has happened.
-
-Between the shoulders on the officer's tunic there is spreading a great
-dark stain. Very carefully they take off the coat and shirt and try to
-stanch the blood. But it is too late; there is a bullet through the
-lungs, and, with a little gasp, the officer lies still.
-
-In a few minutes the other man recovers sufficiently to tell how they
-were taking a dispatch through to the rear. The officer was driving
-the car when they ran straight into a patrol of enemy cavalry. They
-had got through, but the enemy opened fire, and now his officer lies
-dead. Things are going badly up there--and the man vaguely indicates
-the country up north: our men are retiring as hard as they can; whole
-regiments are getting wiped out; and "Gawd knows where the French are."
-Can he get a motor-bike to take on the message?
-
-An A.S.C. officer runs for his car, the man is put in, and off they
-start again.
-
-Only the A.S.C. lorry drivers understood the story, but the villagers
-were quick to realise that something serious was happening. Old Pierre
-remembered 1870, and he knew what war meant; but to the rest it was a
-new, hideous thing, dimly realised, but now, at last, with this mute
-witness before them, very real.
-
-Then things began to happen. No one ever knows how a crowd will spring
-up in a city street, apparently by magic, and here suddenly the village
-began to fill with men.
-
-Four soldiers--two Scots, a Dorset and a Bedford man--black with grime,
-three days' growth of beard, hollow-eyed and limping painfully,
-appeared in front of Pierre and asked where they were to go. A captain
-of the Guards, riding a tired farm-horse, with a colonel walking by his
-side, one hand on the horse's flank, came behind, and, tackling the
-A.S.C. captain, asked for something to eat.
-
-"We've been on the trudge for twelve hours," said the colonel, "and
-could get nothing. No one knows where anyone is. The regiment? Badly
-cut up last night and all scattered, heaven knows where."
-
-"Is the mayor about anywhere?" And a young Staff officer, with a
-French interpreter, pushes his way through the crowd.
-
-"A cavalry brigade (or what's left of it"--he adds in an undertone)
-"will be here to-night. What barns and houses have you available? How
-much hay can you get?"
-
-Old Pierre is beginning to lose his wits in the amazing turn of events.
-
-"If monsieur will come into the house I will try to arrange."
-
-The officer follows, with a shrug of the shoulders which might have
-meant many things.
-
-The long summer's day is closing, but there is no hint of the evening's
-cool in the heavy air. All over the little village green, where the
-church tower has thrown a grateful shadow, lie groups of men worn with
-exhaustion and sleeping with gulping breaths. In one corner Henriette
-is busy with water and clean linen, bathing and bandaging horrible,
-staring wounds. And the men lie patiently, with now and then a moan of
-pain, gazing up at her with the great round eyes of a hurt collie dog.
-
-And now the vanguard of the retiring army begins to stream in and
-through--all arms, all regiments. Overhead a flight of aeroplanes
-circle, like homing pigeons, seeking where they may alight. It is
-incredible that these are the regiments which a little ten days ago
-swung gaily down the Aldershot roads.
-
-At the head of the column there marches a field battery. Two days ago
-the major took it into action six guns and wagons strong, with perhaps
-a couple of hundred men; so proud in his command, his men, his horses.
-
-Now, stand by the path and watch the battery pass! And, as it passes,
-uncover your head, for it has returned from the very gates of Death.
-
-Two guns--with three horses each to draw them. There are still four
-drivers left, and there are still half a dozen gunners. On the first
-limber ride a subaltern and the sergeant-major, and by the gun walk
-another sergeant and the quartermaster-sergeant. That is the battery.
-
-On the second limber three men sit, swaying dizzily. A captain of a
-cavalry regiment and two privates of a Scottish regiment.
-
-Here marches a battalion of the Guards. Two days ago it went into
-action perhaps 1,100 strong. Uncover your head once again as it
-passes, for these men too have looked Death in the face.
-
-At the head there paces slowly an ammunition mule. On it, wearing a
-peasant's slouch hat, with breeches cut off above the knees, and with
-left arm held close by a rough bandage, there rides the colonel. Count
-the men as they march past in fours: 80, 120, 160, 180, 220. No, that
-is the next regiment you are counting in. Just 200! That is the tale
-of them.
-
-Blackened by dust and powder, bearded, breeches cut short like those of
-their commanding officer, the few puttees that are left to them wrapped
-round their feet for boots--otherwise bits of sacking or cloth, bloody
-bandages round heads or arms, some with hats like the colonel's, most
-with none at all slowly they limp by. And, as they pass, the A.S.C.
-drivers silently offer such biscuits or bread as they have. God, how
-they wolf the food!
-
-The colonel turns round on his "charger," and in a hoarse shout:
-
-"Battalion! 'Tention! Pull yourselves together, lads; a French
-village!"
-
-Ah, the pride of them! The glory of race and blood! This is not the
-Mons country, with its blood-soaked memories; 'tis the Horse Guards
-Parade, and we're Trooping the Colour!
-
-The click of rifles coming to the slope runs down the ranks. The fours
-line by magic as the men straighten themselves; it is a new regiment,
-marching into action, which the French villagers see pass before them.
-
-"Defeat? Why, this is part of the joke! Just to draw the Germans on
-into the trap." And at a word they would have turned to charge an army
-corps.
-
-And so the regiments pass. And as the last of the Division goes
-through, lights twinkle from the tiny windows of the cottages and the
-great yellow moon climbs slowly over the poplar trees. An A.S.C.
-sergeant mounts a lorry with a copy of the Paris _Daily Mail_ in his
-hand, and entertains an ever-growing audience with the news that the
-Russians have invaded Germany and are marching on Berlin.
-
-"It will be all over by Christmas--but I'd 'ave liked just one slap at
-them Germans, so as I could tell the missis," says a late bus-driver.
-
-But on the outskirts of the crowd the Staff officer is talking to the
-A.S.C. captain:
-
-"I've no orders for you, but you've evidently been forgotten. You
-ought to have had your park fifteen miles farther south by now. Things
-are bad, and there will be the hell of a scrap round here to-morrow
-morning. I should clear out if I were you."
-
-Away up to the north there is a blinding electric glare coming fast
-down the road. Nearer, and it is the headlight on the first of a long
-train of R.F.C. light motor-lorries, slipping silently down on rubber
-tires. The dust rises in clouds above and about them. Half-way
-through the village a motor-cyclist rides, meeting them. The dust
-takes his shadow, and as he approaches the headlight the silhouette
-rises higher and higher until it mounts to the sky and disappears.
-Just as when children play a shadow pantomime and vanish by jumping
-over the lamp.
-
-The lorries pass, and the dust slowly settles once more. The little
-lights twinkle clearly again, and the moon now floods the countryside
-in a sheen of silver.
-
-But the A.S.C. captain talks earnestly with his sergeant-major and M.
-le maire.
-
-"We must move, but how can we possibly carry all those wounded and
-stragglers?"
-
-M. le maire is of opinion that as _les Boches_ are being driven back
-into Germany, the wounded might well remain until ambulances can be got.
-
-The O.C. looks at his sergeant-major. They have both guessed the
-meaning of that retirement, and they guess also something that they
-dare not tell the mayor.
-
-A few minutes suffice to rouse all the men and to get the wounded made
-as comfortable as possible in the lorries. Lights are switched on the
-cars, and within half an hour the column is clear of the village on its
-way south.
-
-An hour later the advance patrols of a German cavalry division ride in
-from the north; and old Pierre finds that the hay he had collected for
-_les anglais_ does not go very far with his new visitors.
-
-Poor old Pierre, and Madame the mayoress, and the pretty little
-rose-garden!
-
-Such is a little pen-picture, not one whit exaggerated, of an evening
-of the Retreat. And perhaps those few lines will serve to convey some
-trifling idea of the wonder of the achievement.
-
-Everywhere regiments and units forgotten, or lost, or acting on their
-own initiative. And yet, somehow or other, making a composite whole to
-turn and repel the attacking hordes. Staff work practically ceased to
-exist, and yet the threads of communication held fast, though only by a
-little.
-
-Now you have had a glimpse of the men who, the very next day, fought
-_and won_ perhaps the most glorious fight a British Army has ever
-shared in.
-
- So may a thousand actions, once afoot,
- End in one purpose, and be all well borne
- Without defeat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-WEDNESDAY, THE 26TH OF AUGUST
-
- _We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;
- For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
- Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,
- This day shall gentle his condition._
-
-WESTMORELAND. _Of fighting men they have full three-score thousand._
-
-EXETER. _There's five to one; besides, they all are fresh._
-
-SALISBURY. _God's arm strike with us! 'tis a fearful odds._
-
-
-The night attack which the First Corps had so magnificently repulsed
-was but the prelude to the greater attack of August 26th. So imminent
-did the danger appear to the Commander-in-chief, so tense was the
-anxiety, that immediately after the firing had died away at midnight
-orders were issued to the First Corps to march again at daybreak. I
-cannot attempt to dwell upon the condition of the men after the battle
-of Sunday, the fighting and marching of Monday and Tuesday, and,
-finally, the great fight of Tuesday night. One can but quote the words
-of Sir John French: "They were too exhausted to be placed in the
-fighting line," and "were at the moment incapable of movement," and so
-leave the rest to the imagination.
-
-To that extent, then, had von Kluck succeeded in his scheme. The First
-Corps were temporarily out of action; the French, as the
-Commander-in-Chief remarks, "were unable to afford any support on the
-most critical day of all"; and to the Second Corps was left the task of
-withstanding the whole German attack, designed to outflank them on the
-left and roll them up. And the odds against them were, as at
-Agincourt, "five to one"; in guns, more than six to one.
-
-Apart from his 3rd and 5th Divisions, General Smith-Dorrien had taken
-under his command the detached 19th Infantry Brigade (composed of the
-2nd Royal Welsh Fusiliers, 1st Scottish Rifles, 1st Middlesex, 2nd
-Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders), the infantry and some of the R.F.A.
-of the 4th Division, and two brigades of cavalry, out by Cambrai.
-
-The line of the Second Corps on the Tuesday night extended, roughly,
-from Le Cateau on the east to a little south of Cambrai on the west, or
-a front of about fifteen miles. Trenches had been hastily dug since
-the previous afternoon. East of Le Cateau was a big gap between the
-two Corps. This could not be bridged owing to the exhausted condition
-of the regiments in the 2nd Division.
-
-Some hours before battle was joined General Smith-Dorrien realised that
-it was absolutely impossible for him to carry out the
-Commander-in-Chief's instructions and continue his retirement in
-conjunction with the First Corps. A retirement in face of such
-overwhelming numbers would have meant annihilation. At 2 A.M. he
-decided to fight, and reported so to his Chief. Sir John French
-replied that the retirement must continue.
-
-"My only chance," rejoined the General, "is to do my utmost in
-weakening the enemy's attack, and then seize such a moment as I can to
-retire."
-
-General Smith-Dorrien was on the field of action; Sir John French was
-at G.H.Q., some twenty miles to the south. The man on the spot,
-realising that the only hope of stopping the enemy lay in a successful
-action, proceeded with his plans of battle. The fight began at
-daylight.
-
-About 7 A.M. General Smith-Dorrien informed G.H.Q. by telephone that
-the battle was in progress, and that he was confident that he could
-deal the enemy a smashing blow sufficiently heavy to gain time to
-withdraw his weary troops.
-
-"General," said the senior Staff officer over the telephone, "yours is
-the cheeriest voice I've heard for three days. I'll go and tell the
-Chief."
-
-The Commander-in-Chief, who did not approve of the decision to fight,
-in reply instructed him "to use his utmost endeavours to break off the
-action and retire at the earliest possible moment."
-
-
-Le Cateau, after which this battle has come to be named, is a pleasant
-enough little town set in a country-side not unlike the Sussex uplands
-between Tonbridge and Hastings--broad, open pasture- and meadow-land,
-cut by tiny valleys, rolling away south to the dip of St. Quentin.
-Through the town runs one broad street, and here, in the town hall
-offices, G.H.Q. had its habitation for a short spell earlier in the
-week. Opposite there was a little bun-shop and cafè combined, which
-proudly announced: "English five o'clock tea." The two buxom ladies
-who dispensed the refreshing beverage must have overheard many a little
-confidence exchanged between their unsuspecting officer clients, and we
-heard later that one of the two had been shot as a German spy.
-
-With the earliest dawn the firing began along the front with such a
-curious spitefulness (if one could so call it) that many of our men
-afterwards remarked about it. There were evidently to be no half
-measures about this attack, for the German infantry came on almost with
-the first rounds from their guns, advancing in their usual masses and
-making big play with their machine-guns. It was good country for this
-kind of work, while the cover our men got was generally only such as
-they could make for themselves by digging.
-
-The morning came on radiantly sunny, with the sky a lovely pale limpid
-blue, washed clear by the downpour of the previous night.
-
-"'An' 'tis a foine morning they'll be having in Lismore for the fair
-this day," remarked a lad from County Cork; "but I would not be missin'
-the fair _we'll_ be having for all the porter in Daddy Breean's ould
-tent. Ah, will ye look at that now! Shure, 'tis the bhoys are coming
-early for the knocks they'll be getting. Will I be seeing how the
-little gun is shooting this morning, yer honour?"
-
-The platoon commander nodded, for Jerry was a privileged favourite. He
-was also a remarkably fine shot.
-
-So Jerry nestled his cheek cosily down to his little gun and took a
-deep breath, while the two or three near him looked on with interest.
-Jerry lifted his head again, for he was an artist and knew the value of
-arousing expectation.
-
-"And will it be a golden sovereign if I take the coat-tails of the
-little ould gentleman with the spy-glasses?" This was Jerry's way of
-making a bet.
-
-"Yes; I'll bet you a sovereign you won't down that officer on the
-right, and he looks like the colonel," said the platoon commander. It
-was a 500 yards' shot, and hazy, too.
-
-Jerry carefully judged the distance by a half-way haystack, adjusted
-his sight, and settled down once again. "For the ould counthry!" he
-breathed, and slowly squeezed the trigger.
-
-The "little ould gentleman" was seen to clap his hand smartly to his
-leg, while two men ran up to him.
-
-"Will ye double the stakes, yer honour, for me to take the three o'
-them?" said Jerry over his shoulder, clicking his bolt back and forward
-again.
-
-"A fiver, Jerry, if you do it."
-
-Jerry wedged his rifle between two stones, took a slightly fuller
-sight, and almost before you could have counted them three shots
-cracked out.
-
-"Have you that fiver on you, yer honour, or will I be taking an IOU?"
-And Jerry leaned back with a sigh of satisfaction as a mighty cheer ran
-down the trench, and the platoon officer shook him hard by the hand.
-What the enemy thought about it one could only surmise, but a few of
-the men shook their fists threateningly in the direction of the British
-lines.
-
-
-Now let us follow for a little the fortunes of a Brigade in a
-particularly warm corner of the line close to a small town where a very
-strong German attack soon developed. The guns of the Brigade opened
-fire at daybreak. They had managed to dig some serviceable pits, and
-were as snugly ensconced as time had allowed.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL SIR DOUGLAS HAIG.]
-
-For an hour, perhaps, the German guns pounded steadily away without
-making very much impression; and our R.F.A. as steadily replied. Many
-of the outlying farms and houses were badly knocked about and began to
-burn fiercely. About 7.30 the enemy made a determined attempt to get
-hold of a flank position for their machine-guns to enfilade our
-infantry; and it was then that one regiment lost horribly before our
-cavalry could get round in a counter-attack. So heavy were their
-casualties that, as a regiment, they were simply out of action, and an
-urgent message was dispatched to the next Brigade for anything they
-could possibly send in the way of reinforcements. Badly off though
-they were, two battalions were promptly transferred. Just one more
-instance of working shoulder to shoulder.
-
-It was curious how certain regiments suffered very heavily while other
-units next to them got off comparatively lightly. One R.F.A. brigade,
-for instance, was right in the thick of the fighting from Mons to the
-Aisne, and yet had very few losses until the middle of September, while
-the battery next on their left on this Wednesday suffered very badly.
-Of two other batteries I came across, one was in action right through
-to the Aisne, and did not have a single casualty, while a second (most
-curious of all), in the First Corps, never fired a shot until the big
-advance of the Corps at the Aisne on September 14th.
-
-About 9 A.M. things began to look serious. Several enemy infantry
-attacks had been met by desperate counter-charges; but numbers were
-bound to tell. A German cavalry regiment had succeeded in working
-round to the flank, and now they made a gallant effort to capture the
-British guns.
-
-This was, I believe, one of the very few occasions when the enemy
-cavalry had a real chance of getting any of our batteries by a charge.
-There was a clear field, and they had got to within 500 yards of the
-battery, when the guns opened on them. Our men had heard about the
-fatal charge of the 9th Lancers, and now it was their turn. The
-battery commander dropped to "fuse o, open sights," and the detachments
-worked as though the devil were behind them. In the next 250 yards the
-cavalry lost a good two-thirds of the regiment, and they got no nearer
-than 200 yards from the guns. A British squadron luckily came out at
-the moment, and charged clean through the remnant, wheeled, and cut up
-what still remained. And that was the end of that very game attack.
-
-If only the Germans would always play fair, there would be nothing to
-grumble about. Their infantry cannot, of course, be compared with the
-British, and our cavalry have always come out better than theirs in a
-clean fight; but the Germans have always fought courageously when it
-was a case of genuine fighting. Indeed, it is a very poor compliment
-to our men to suggest otherwise.
-
-But the main attack, instead of being checked, seemed to gather
-strength, until it became manifestly impossible to protect and hold the
-little town any longer. The infantry accordingly gradually withdrew
-under cover of the guns, and at last the guns were limbered up and
-marched back to another position farther south, the Brigade having held
-the corner for something like four hours.
-
-Most of the townsfolk had begun their flight late on the previous
-evening, but a good many still remained. Had they only known the fate
-in store for them, the invaders would have found an empty town. But,
-at least in this case, vengeance was swift, as you shall hear.
-
-The Brigade, then, took up its new position, and the men were able to
-make themselves fairly snug before the enemy had finished with the
-town. Fortunately, too, many of our wounded were got away from the
-hospital, for the Germans had begun to shell that some time before.
-But it was a very trying business, as there were not enough ambulances
-for the very large number of casualties, and many had to be carried on
-the already overloaded regimental transport.
-
-
-Now, it must be remembered that General Smith-Dorrien had absolutely no
-reserves on which to draw if any part of his line began to bend back.
-The usual plan is, of course, to keep certain fresh regiments
-concentrated at given spots to move up in support as and when required.
-But now, if the Inniskillings were getting badly cut up and a gap was
-being made, the G.O.C. could only call upon the Cheshires, say, a mile
-off, who were not being so strongly attacked, to send a company or so
-to the help of their comrades.
-
-Another thing. I have hinted in a previous chapter that the threads of
-communication with the ammunition supply were badly stretched to
-breaking-point, owing to the astonishing speed at which the British had
-to retire. Normally, the ammunition parks (motor transport) draw the
-ammunition supplies from railhead, and carry it up to the divisional
-ammunition columns. These, in turn, distribute to brigade columns, and
-the actual units draw upon the last named. Thus there are several
-links between railhead and the firing-line, and the motor-lorries
-should not come within about eight miles of the line.
-
-But on this Wednesday and the two or three following days all this
-arrangement literally went to pieces. How could it be otherwise? And
-that is how the A.S.C. drivers came to do their bit with all the rest.
-Speed was vital, and the lorries could cover the distance in a third of
-the time taken by the horse transport. In fact, the horse transport
-was ignored or forgotten, although there were exceptions. One saw the
-divisional columns aimlessly trekking about the country, at one moment
-under orders to go to a certain village, only to find on arrival that
-the enemy were just a mile off; back they would come again as hard as
-the tired horses could do it.
-
-Time and again an urgent message would go back from a battery for more
-18-pr. or howitzer, and the dispatch-rider would have instructions to
-get the stuff wherever he could lay hands on it. He generally managed
-to find a few lorries of a "park," and so off the bus drivers would
-start with their three-ton vehicles, little dreaming that they were
-going under fire.
-
-"Gor blimey, sir," said one of them next day to his officer, "I tell
-yer it wos a fair beano! We'd gone abaht a couple o' miles, when the
-sergeant wot wos along o' me on the box 'e sez: 'Stevens,' sez 'e, 'can
-yer knock anything more aht of 'er? 'Cos they're firing acrost the
-road.' Lor lumme, I nearly put 'er in the ditch at the turn 'e giv me!
-Yer see, sir, I didn't enlist to get knocked aht by no b---- German.
-I'm a peaceable man, I am, wot likes my grub and pint o' bitter reg'lar
-like, and the missus the same. But, as I wos a-sayin', I turned to the
-sergeant an' I sez: 'Yer don't fink there's no danger, do yer?' An'
-the sergeant, 'e sez, sarkastic-like: 'Ho no, they're only bustin' the
-shells on the road, an' we've got a few tons of fireworks be'ind wot's
-bahnd to bust too if we gits 'it!' S'welp me pink, sir, I turned that
-cold you could 'ave 'eard my teeth going louder nor the enjin.
-
-"'E 'adn't 'ardly spoke when there was the 'ell of a bang somewheres
-just be'ind, and--well, you can bet your life, sir, we did a guy for
-all we wos worth. Lord, 'ow we 'opped it dahn that road! I tell yer,
-sir, we knocked forty-five miles an hour aht o' that ole bus, and she
-come up to it like as we wos knockin' spots orf of a pirit bus dahn
-Piccadilly.
-
-"The sergeant, 'e jammed 'is 'eel dahn on the accelerator, an' I just
-'eld on to the wheel wiv bofe 'ands. It wos a fair old Brock's benifit
-we wos in. But we got frew orl right, and wen we got to the place
-where we wos to drop the stuff, there weren't no guns wot wanted it.
-An', as old G. R. Sims sez, 'hit wos the unkindest cut of orl.' Well,
-I wasn't coming back agin frew that pyrriteknikle show not for the ole
-bus full o' suvrins, an' so we come 'ome rahnd by a place I forgit the
-name of, and that's 'ow we're late; but it was worf the hextra thirty
-miles rahnd, an' I 'ope, sir, yer won't mind this time."
-
-There was another occasion on this day when three of these lorries went
-forward under the charge of an officer. He was quite unaware that the
-village whence the call for howitzer shell had come had been captured
-by the Germans half an hour after the message had been sent. On the
-way he picked up another officer who was lost.
-
-Rounding a corner by a wood, about a mile from the village, they came
-straight upon a small German cavalry outpost. The Germans sprang to
-their feet at the rumble of the approaching lorries, and a sergeant
-stood in the road to bar the way.
-
-There was not a moment for thought, and the second officer whipped his
-pistol out and took a snap shot. Luckily, he killed the sergeant
-outright. The officer in charge jumped down into the road as the lorry
-pulled up, with his own revolver in hand, and levelled it at the group
-by the roadside. One of them got his carbine off from the hip, and the
-shot just missed the first lorry driver on his seat. The officer
-promptly sent a bullet through the man's chest. Over his shoulder he
-shouted to the drivers to reverse the lorries, while he and the other
-officer held up the Germans.
-
-Now, reversing three big lorries in not too wide a road needs some
-doing; but they all backed and advanced and sidled and backed until it
-was done. Then one officer jumped up behind the last one, the second
-officer followed, and off the lorries went.
-
-There was nothing remarkable about the little experience, and it is
-only recorded to show the difficulties in ammunition supply at this
-time and also how the A.S.C. drivers were doing their job.
-
-
-You must imagine that while we have been at the rear with the A.S.C.,
-the fighting all along the British line has been growing in intensity.
-A big flank attack, with the idea of rolling up the whole line like a
-ball of string, is always a favourite move of the Germans, and this
-time they were trying to crush the British left.
-
-But although the left was the main objective, the enemy still had a big
-superiority in numbers for frontal attacks, and these they kept up
-without ceasing. It was just like the crashing of many mighty hammers
-from one end to the other.
-
-Following up the policy of making counterattacks whenever possible, a
-bold offensive was made against the little town from which we had just
-been driven. The enemy had now been in possession for two or three
-hours. So word was passed to the batteries, some of the indefatigable
-cavalry was concentrated, and the infantry, with the two reinforcing
-battalions, received the cheering news that they were to advance.
-
-How they all went at it! Under the heaviest fire our guns could pour
-in, the infantry rushed the outlying houses, the main street, and the
-town itself, the cavalry sweeping up on the flank. The gunners, after
-raising the range to put a curtain before the infantry, limbered up,
-and had the satisfaction of marching back through the town which they
-had just been forced to evacuate.
-
-Then it was that our men first saw a little of the hideous work of the
-invaders upon the civilian population. And if anything more were
-needed to brace them up to fight to the last man, they had it in that
-brief hour in the recaptured town.
-
-The hospital was burning fiercely, just as that at Mons had done. Such
-a building, with its Red Cross flag, was always a convenient ranging
-point for the enemy. In it there had been some 400 wounded and other
-casualties. A large number of these had been got away, but a number
-had, perforce, to be left. Their end must have been too cruel to dwell
-upon.
-
-Up the main street everywhere was horrible evidence that _they_ had
-been at work. Mingled with dead or wounded combatants were bodies of
-women and children, many terribly mutilated, while other women knelt
-beside them, with stone-set faces or gasping through hysterical
-weeping. From behind shutters or half-closed doors others looked out,
-blinded with terror.
-
-But there was one thing which, for the men who saw it, dwarfed all
-else. Hanging up in the open window of a shop, strung from a hook in
-the cross-beam, like a joint in a butcher's shop, was the body of a
-little girl, five years old, perhaps. Its poor little hands had been
-hacked off, and through the slender body were vicious bayonet stabs.
-
-Yes, close your eyes in horror, but it is right that our people should
-hear and know these things. There must be no false, vapid sentiment in
-refusing to think about them. There should not be a home in the
-British Empire where the facts of German atrocities are not known, and
-where, in realising them, hearts are not nerved to yield their last
-drop of blood in stamping out from the world of men the hideous Thing
-which has done them.
-
-After that the Brigade "saw red." There was no more talk of taking
-prisoners, and if there was another ounce they could put into their
-work they did it. The sight of those poor distracted women kneeling
-down in the road before our men, or hanging round their knees praying
-to be taken away, would have melted the stoniest hearts. The situation
-was serious enough, for another German attack in force was bound to
-follow, and the Brigade had little hope of getting away safely
-themselves. But they could not possibly leave the women behind
-again--nor did they. Somehow or other they escorted, on guns, limbers
-and vehicles, all they could find safely on to the southward road,
-sullenly retiring once more before the new counter-attack.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
- WEDNESDAY, THE 26TH OF AUGUST
- (_continued_)
-
- _A many of our bodies shall, no doubt
- Find native graves; upon the which, I trust,
- Shall witness live in brass of this day's work;
- And those that leave their valiant bones in France,
- Dying like men, ...
- They shall be fam'd._
-
-
-By midday the tide of battle had begun to roll southwards, though only
-by a very little. The British lines were forced back, a mile here,
-half a mile there, but they still held on with superhuman energy and
-determination. And not only did they hold on, but, wherever there was
-the least chance, a regiment or cavalry squadron would launch a
-counter-attack. But it all seemed so hopeless, just as one might throw
-pebbles into the waves of the sea as they break upon a beach.
-
-Some day it is to be hoped that an adequate record will be published of
-the remarkable work which the cavalry performed during the Retreat.
-Sir John French, perhaps because he was himself a cavalry leader,
-hardly mentions them in his first dispatch. Wherever they were most
-wanted, there they were in the thick of the fighting. How the horses
-"carried on" and where and how fresh animals were obtained remains a
-mystery, in view of the muddle in which everything was.
-
-But where every unit and every man worked as they did, it seems almost
-invidious to single out for mention any particular regiment or episode.
-Take a single half-hour of the fighting on the left, and you have an
-example of what was repeated fifty times that day across the whole
-British front.
-
-A blue-grey mass of enemy infantry appears advancing with steady,
-swinging pace. At 500 yards or a trifle more one of our regiments
-opens rapid fire upon them. You can actually see the lanes in the
-German ranks ploughed through by the British rifle-fire. Still they
-advance, for the gaps are filled almost immediately. Nearer and
-nearer, until that regiment which began the advance has almost ceased
-to exist. The remnant breaks and scatters in confusion, and as they
-break away another new regiment is disclosed behind them. Such is the
-method of the German massed attack, overwhelming by sheer numbers.
-
-But rarely did they get near enough to the British lines for a
-hand-to-hand fight. Regiment after regiment would be held at bay by
-the murderous rifle-fire of the little handful of British; regiment
-after regiment would appear to fill the gap. Now and again the weight
-of the attack would tell, and the Germans would get close enough for a
-final rush on the British trench. Then, at the critical moment, a
-British company, slightly forward on the flank, pours in a withering
-enfilade fire, and while the German infantry stagger under this
-unexpected attack the British cavalry charge through our own lines
-straight on the front and flank of the enemy. There are a few minutes
-of mad cut and thrust, and the Germans, who always dread the cold steel
-as a Chinese dreads rain, break and run as though all the fiends of
-hell were after them.
-
-
-Just about this time General Smith-Dorrien and a couple of his Staff
-officers were following the fortunes of the battle from some rising
-ground not far from the centre of the line. A sudden outburst of heavy
-and incessant firing was heard from the direction of Cambrai, where, it
-will be remembered, the enemy were trying to outflank us.
-
-"Good heavens," cried the General, "the Germans have got round our
-left!" And, jumping on to his horse, he galloped off towards the
-firing.
-
-To his astonishment and delight he found, as he drew near the flank,
-that the firing came not from victorious Germans, but from some of our
-French comrades.
-
-Never was help more opportune; seldom can it have come in more dramatic
-fashion. By all accounts General Sordêt with his cavalry should have
-been sitting by the roadside, forty miles away on the British right,
-tending his worn-out horses. Yet, at the call for help, by sheer grit
-and determination he and his Corps had carried through that long forced
-march (Heaven knows how the horses did it!), and swept up on our left
-with his squadrons and horse artillery. Everyone knows what splendid
-work the French gunners can do, and--well, this was one of their best
-days.
-
-It was a thrilling episode, and why, in common justice to our gallant
-Allies, the details have not been published I do not know. You will
-find General Smith-Dorrien's record and appreciation of the invaluable
-help thus given by General Sordêt in the second Appendix at the end of
-the book.
-
-While such were the conditions about midday up with the front line, the
-situation immediately in the rear was fast becoming indescribable in
-its confusion and complexity. Looking back at it now, after the lapse
-of so many months, it seemed very much like a theatrical performance
-where a "front cloth" has been lowered to conceal from the audience a
-strike of stage hands and the despair of the actors at setting the
-stage and getting on with the play. Before the front cloth a special
-"turn" is performing to gain time and appease the growing impatience of
-the audience.
-
-There was, for instance, a particular centre of cross-roads, nearly a
-mile beyond where German shells were bursting. It was just outside a
-large village, and the inhabitants were streaming out with their
-belongings, yet uncertain whether there was actual danger or no.
-
-At the cross-roads were gradually arriving ammunition columns, remnants
-of battered regiments, motor-lorries, and odd cavalry patrols; and no
-one had the vaguest idea as to why they were there nor where they were
-to go next. A Staff officer standing there was as much at sea as the
-rest. Every moment more and more transport would roll up, and more and
-more stragglers, while hanging on to the outskirts of the crowd were
-increasing numbers of frightened women and children. An old curé alone
-seemed calm and collected. Over another village a little way back down
-the road the German shells come bursting ever nearer. It must be
-remembered that even the Staff had but a hazy idea of the trend of
-events, and that outside the Staff not a soul had any notion of what
-was really happening to the Force. It was just a matter of doing your
-own special bit.
-
-Right into this confused mass came running some R..A.M.C. orderlies.
-"The Germans are just behind!" they shouted. There might have been a
-bad panic with all those civilians about, but there was only rather
-more confusion. The Staff officer gave a general order to retire on
-St. Quentin (a large town about seven miles to the south); and then
-there was one mad rush.
-
-Motor-lorries blocked the whole road, trying to reverse, while wounded
-and stragglers made a dash for the nearest vehicles. Ammunition
-columns struck off the road on to the open down-land. The refugees
-streamed straight across country. Down the road the heavy lorries went
-pounding, and soon outdistanced everyone else. At one corner there
-were two R.F.A. drivers in charge of five heavy draught horses.
-"Germans be'ind us," yelled a lorry driver; "better move!" And they
-did move. The sight of those old "hairies" clopping down the road at a
-hand gallop after the disappearing lorries was too ludicrous for words.
-
-
-By 3 P.M. the weight of the enemy's attack had begun to tell, and, to
-quote the Commander-in-Chief's dispatch, "it became apparent that, if
-complete annihilation was to be avoided, a retirement must be
-attempted; and the order was given to commence it about 3.30 P.M."
-
-Now came the most critical time of all. At the beginning of the day
-the enemy must have imagined that a retirement would be made at the
-earliest opportunity. But as the hours passed, and the British line
-still held, the impression may have spread that they intended to fight
-the day to a finish where they stood. Certainly it is impossible to
-think that had they realised a definite retirement to be in progress,
-they would not have thrown every man they had upon the rear of the
-Corps.
-
-Slowly and cautiously, then, regiment after regiment fell back. I have
-tried to show in an earlier chapter what that means and how much
-depends upon the guns at such a juncture. Again I can only quote the
-Commander-in-Chief's words: "The movement was covered with the most
-devoted intrepidity and determination by the artillery, which had
-itself suffered severely."
-
-I will just give one instance of what that devotion meant, a devotion
-which, as has everywhere been agreed, saved the situation.
-
-Close under a ridge a battery had been in action without a moment's
-rest for the last six hours. One gun after another had been knocked
-out, the battery commander and every officer save one killed, all the
-men of the detachments killed or wounded, until there was left just one
-gun, one subaltern, and one driver. And still they kept the battery in
-action; still they loaded and fired, as they had been doing all through
-that ghastly day.
-
-"Got a drink?" said the subaltern; "a cigarette? Good! Thank God for
-a white man's cigarette again!" And he went on with his job. That was
-what "covering the movement" meant.
-
-But the battle had been won. General Smith-Dorrien, his officers and
-men, had accomplished the almost superhuman task thrust upon them.
-They had not merely held the German attack through all the long hours
-of that blazing August day; they had _broken_ it. For the remainder of
-the Retreat it never recovered its sting and energy, and so the Force
-and Paris were saved.
-
-Events have had time to shape themselves during the months that have
-lapsed since August, 1914, and it is possible to view them in a certain
-perspective. It has been urged that we British have exaggerated the
-importance of the work of the Force in the Retreat; that while we were
-holding a line of no more than 20 odd miles, the French were extended
-over a front of 400 miles against an equally strong attack; that, by
-the prominence given to the work of the Force to the neglect of that of
-the French, a distorted picture has been given of the operations during
-August from Alsace to the sea.
-
-To these arguments I would reply that Germany was staking everything
-upon that rush to Paris. For years past we had known that her
-intentions were to bring France to her knees within the first month or
-so, to admit of turning to meet Russia before that country had fully
-mobilised. And so, with this definite task in view, Germany
-concentrated her main attack through Belgium and south by Mons. She
-had not only her greatest strength in the armies of von Kluck and von
-Buelow, but she included in these masses of troops the flower of the
-German Army, picked regiments like the Prussian Guard, the "Iron" 3rd
-Corps of Brandenburg,[1] and others. Add to these facts the sustained
-violence of the invasion, and the concentrated hate which was levelled
-against Belgians and British by the invaders when the attack was
-continually and successfully checked, and I think that there is
-sufficient evidence to indicate the vital importance of the work of the
-British Force.
-
-Moreover, the French people themselves had, with fine generosity,
-recognised that it was the British Force, under God's hand, which had
-saved Paris: for on Sunday, August 30th, prayers of thanksgiving were
-offered up in the churches on behalf of our troops.
-
-
-And now, hopelessly inadequate as this record has so far been, words
-utterly fail me in attempting to describe the events of the next twelve
-hours, and how the Retreat was continued. It was one long, ghastly
-nightmare.
-
-As regiment after regiment received its orders to retire, the survivors
-staggered to their feet, blinded by the ordeal of the day, and crept
-back until they reached a point where ranks could be formed. Then they
-got moving. Their destination no one knew, no one cared.... Keep
-moving! Men licked their blackened lips with parched tongues. "Any
-chance of a drink?" "Not here; perhaps we shall pass a village." Keep
-moving! "Got a fag on you?" "Smoked the last this morning; perhaps
-get some in the village." "Where the b---- 'ell is your village?"
-"Gawd knows." ... Keep moving!
-
-Ten minutes later. "Where the 'ell are we going? and why the ---- are
-we retreating? Give 'em socks, didn't we? And where the ---- are them
----- Frenchies?" "Oh, shut yer 'ed, carn't yer?" ... Keep moving!
-
-There was a tiny village called Estrées in a hollow of the downs about
-three miles out from St. Quentin. Here at 4 P.M. the confusion was
-indescribable. Lorries, stragglers, refugees, transport columns,
-guns--all inextricably mixed up. It was, I believe, supposed to be a
-bivouac point for the night, but no one knew definitely. In any case,
-they were all tightly wedged in that hollow, and the Germans were but a
-very few miles behind. Had an enemy battery come within range, as it
-might well have done, it would have meant certain death for every soul
-there. Later in the evening news got to G.H.Q. of the position, and
-rations were sent up to the starving troops, with definite orders about
-further retirement.
-
-Staff work simply went to pieces. It was not that men lost their heads
-or anything like that, but the various H.Q.'s found it impossible to
-keep pace with events. A regiment would be in a certain position, then
-it would be completely forgotten (or so it seemed), and no orders would
-arrive to move. Many C.O.'s retired entirely on their own initiative,
-and so got clear. Others decided to await instructions, and so got
-wiped out or captured.
-
-As dusk gathered into darkness the confusion grew worse, while
-discomfort increased (if possible) with the steady downpour of ram
-which followed. But there was no moment's rest for the exhausted
-troops, save when a regiment came up against an obstacle across the
-road--a broken-down motor-van or gun-wagon. Then, if there were any
-sappers handy, the vehicle would be blown up and the road cleared....
-Anyhow, keep moving!
-
-And the dreadful agonies of the wounded. At St. Quentin there was a
-big hospital which had been gradually filling during the past
-twenty-four hours. Now, on this afternoon, G.H.Q. found it advisable
-to pack up in a hurry and leave for farther south. And the
-hospital--would it share the same fate as those of Mons and Le Cateau?
-Once again the movable cases were hastily got into ambulances and other
-conveyances, and carried off in the wake of G.H.Q. But for hundreds of
-men there was no chance of getting even so far as St. Quentin for
-attention. Through the day the R.A.M.C. had worked as hard as the
-fighters, but it was very little more than first aid which could be
-given. No chance for deft operation, anti-tetanus serum or the like.
-
-So, mingled with the retreating army were the ghosts of men swathed in
-bloody bandages, some clinging to vehicles on which they had found a
-seat, others marching with vague, uncertain pace by the infantry,
-others, again, just dropping out, to huddle exhausted by the roadside
-waiting for dawn and a fate which now had no meaning for them.
-
-Keep moving! ... Horse after horse in the slowly trekking columns of
-batteries or supply transport dropped down and fouled the wheels.
-Unhook or cut the traces; push the poor beast out of the road. An old
-pal, was he? Aye, he was a fine "wheeler," that dark bay! Remember
-the first time we had him in at practice camp? Nothing matters now but
-keeping on the move. Yes, better shoot him. He deserves a clean end.
-
-
-Dozens, perhaps hundreds of men got cut adrift from their regiments
-that day, adrift and hopelessly lost in a strange country. No house,
-no village was safe as sanctuary, for the tide of invasion lapped at
-the threshold and would presently overwhelm it. One trivial incident I
-heard of seems worthy of record as an instance of "individuality" in
-the training of the British soldier.
-
-A man---we will call him Headlam--got adrift by himself from the 3rd
-Division out on the left flank. After many hours' wandering, he came
-to a little farmhouse on the road. Here the good woman took him in,
-fed him, and gave him a shakedown. There were also there a couple of
-French stragglers.
-
-A few hours later the little son of the farm came running in with the
-news that a patrol of the dreaded Uhlans was coming down the road.
-That meant murder for everyone. There was no time to hide, and the
-French were at their wits' end.
-
-Headlam's first thought was for cover. Out in the yard there was a big
-rain-tub. Calling the two French soldiers to help, they rolled it out
-longways on into the road, and one of them, with Headlam, got behind
-with their rifles. The moment the patrol appeared, Headlam gave the
-Uhlans an excellent example of rapid fire, and three saddles were empty
-before they realised where the attack came from. Then they charged.
-French and British, side by side, ground away with their rifles, and
-when the Uhlans reached the little fortress there were only three left
-out of the patrol of nine. The second Frenchman, by the side of the
-road, accounted for another, and, with three to two, the Uhlans
-surrendered.
-
-So our three musketeers found themselves with five excellent horses and
-a couple of prisoners; and I leave you to picture the triumphal
-procession which passed through the villages on the southward journey.
-The order of march was: Jacques and a led horse, Pierre and a led
-horse, two disconsolate Uhlans on foot (and hating it), and Headlam
-(with female escort), as G.O.C., bringing up the rear....
-
-
-Keep moving! ... But oh, the inexpressible weariness of it! No torture
-is more refined than that of preventing a worn-out human being from
-sleeping; and here it was experienced to the full. The picture of the
-Force that night might well have created for Dante the vision of one
-more circle of Hell.
-
-Hunger was long since forgotten, but a red-hot thirst remained. One
-could appreciate as never before how Dives thirsted when he asked for
-Lazarus to touch his lips with a moistened finger. On, ever on, for
-hour after eternal hour, riding or trudging through the inky darkness,
-never a halt.... Keep moving!
-
-How the troops did it I cannot tell. It was not the triumph of will
-over the exhausted body, for the sense of volition had fled, and men
-were mere automata in their movements. The legs jerked forwards as
-those of a clockwork toy. Had the men halted they could never have got
-moving again; the clockwork would have run down.
-
-In the saddle it was little better. Every muscle of the body ached
-with an intolerable dull throbbing; a deadly coma crept through the
-brain and dragged at the eyelids. Nerveless fingers clutched at the
-pommel of the saddle, and were pulled away by the drag of the heavy
-arms.
-
-One knows how a single night of sleeplessness will tell its tale in the
-face of a man or woman. Here was the fourth night of ceaseless
-fighting and marching, with only an odd hour of rest now and again.
-
-All through the night and on into the daylight hours sounded the
-plod-plod of marching men, the grumble--creak--grumble of transport or
-guns. And in the far rear of the moving columns were more regiments
-lined out, showing a bold front to the still advancing enemy, ever
-guarding the backs of their comrades so far as was humanly possible.
-
-
-One particularly sad disaster befell a regiment in the course of the
-retirement; it is remarkable that there were not many others of a like
-nature. The 1st Gordons lost their way after dark, and began to march
-in a direction across the front of the German advance. About midnight
-the regiment found itself moving into masses of troops. The first
-thought was that they were amongst the French, for it was supposed that
-they had been marching towards French support.
-
-Suddenly fire was opened upon the regiment from all sides, and though
-the Gordons put up the gallant fight which they have ever done in a
-tight corner, the odds were too impossible, and ten minutes saw the end.
-
-I think that disaster affected the Force more than anything else in
-that opening month. Men spoke of it in hushed tones. A magnificent
-regiment with glorious traditions, and to be crushed out as they were
-in those few minutes. And yet not crushed out! Though the older
-generation of the family may die, there is the younger generation which
-follows, and their sons after them. And well do I remember that
-younger generation at the Aisne, when the Regiment rose again
-reincarnate from the ashes of the dead. I see now the stern-set faces
-of the officers, proud in their determination to avenge their honour;
-faces shaded and hallowed by the knowledge of what the Regiment had
-done and suffered, what it must now do and suffer that their dead may
-rest in peace. As it was, so shall it be,
-
- Rising, roaring, rushing like the tide,
- (Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)
- They're up through the fire-zone, not to be denied;
- (Bayonets! and charge! by the right!)
- Thirty bullets straight where the rest went wide,
- And thirty lads are lying on the bare hillside;
- But they passed in the hour of the Gordons' pride,
- To the skirl of the pipers' playing.
-
-
-
-[1] This Corps is always regarded in Germany as the finest in the
-German Army.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE RETREAT CONTINUES
-
- _We are but warriors for the working-day;
- Our gayness and our gilt are all besmirch'd
- With rainy marching in the painful field;
- There's not a piece of feather in our host,
- * * * * *
- And time hath worn us into slovenry;
- But, by the mass, our hearts are in the trim._
-
-
-The following days saw no rest for the exhausted troops, and they were
-compelled to plod on ever farther and farther south. If the rapidity
-of the German advance was so astonishing, even more so was the speed at
-which the British retired before them. For it is a hundred times more
-easy to do the advancing than the retiring. In the former case there
-is the confidence of success, with the feeling that at any moment the
-coveted prize may be snapped up. In the latter there is the inevitable
-feeling that things are going wrong, that the army is suffering defeat,
-and the constant dread that the troops may not stand the tremendous
-strain upon their powers of endurance.
-
-So it was that every encouragement was given to the rumour which ran
-through the Force that this was but a strategical retirement, part of
-the plan decided on years before between the French and British
-Headquarters Staffs. And the idea of the Retreat was that the British
-were to draw the Germans ever southward, while the Belgian forces were
-gradually closing in behind the invaders on the west, and the French
-doing the same on the east. Then at the psychological moment the
-signal would be flashed round, the British would suddenly turn and
-present a dead wall, the strings of the net would be pulled tight,
-and--hey presto! we should all be home by Christmas.
-
-There was only one part of the scheme which everyone regretted, and
-that was that we should be out of the entry into Berlin. It is all
-very well to keep up your wicket while the other fellow makes the runs,
-but then the other fellow gets all the credit. You see, everybody knew
-for a fact that the Russians were only a couple of days from the German
-capital, and that heartened the Force almost more than anything else.
-However, one consoled the men by telling them that regiments were sure
-to be picked by ballot to represent the British in the march through;
-and as for the newspaper prizes to the first man or regiment in--well,
-that regiment would surely be sporting and share the prize.
-
-How many times one must have explained this wonderful piece of strategy
-to the good French folk I should not like to guess. On passing through
-a little village, generally at dusk, one of the things one always had
-to do, after dispelling the fears of the ancient policeman who tried to
-hold up the battery with an antiquated fowling-piece, was to draw maps
-on the sanded floor of the café for the edification of the local
-magnates.
-
-"Why do we thus retire, madame? But it is so simple. It is a piece of
-strategy of the most clever. The Allemands"--here the audience spit
-profusely--"come thus, the Belgians are here, etc. etc. At any moment
-we turn to attack, etc. How many English, madame? Ah, madame, it is
-not permitted to tell; but for your ear, madame (and I would tell no
-one else), they say that the second quarter of a million disembarked
-yesterday."
-
-Perhaps our kindly hosts will by now have forgiven us, but at least
-much of it we believed ourselves at the time. It all helped to keep
-the men going and prevent sudden panic with the countryfolk. It is
-difficult to say whether we did wrong.
-
-By 8 A.M. on the Thursday the retiring columns were well on their way
-beyond St. Quentin. The First Corps, during the eventful Wednesday,
-had also been steadily retiring, and had had comparatively little
-fighting to do. The condition of the troops will be remembered.
-
-About half an hour later the rear-guard reached St. Quentin. The
-batteries marched in, watered their horses in the square, and marched
-out again immediately, the infantry covering them outside the town.
-
-It was a little curious in St. Quentin--the attitude of the
-inhabitants. No one seemed to take any interest in the British
-movements, and certainly no one appeared to bother himself one atom
-about the German approach. St. Quentin is a big garrison town, with
-fine open places and streets, excellent shops and stately buildings,
-and the wealth of the place must be great. Yet there was never a hint
-of an exodus, and the people accepted the whole situation with
-astonishing sang-froid. I believe that when the Germans did arrive, a
-little later in the day, they surrounded the town and marched in from
-all sides at once, to find their triumphant entry opposed by--one
-British soldier. This man had got lost or left behind in a house, and
-now turned out with his rifle to defend the town. The German division
-had to open fire with a machine-gun upon the gallant lad before he
-fell, face to the enemy, riddled with bullets. The war can have
-witnessed few more remarkable episodes.
-
-The fact that the R.F.A. with the rearguard were able to continue their
-retirement throughout the day without having to fire a round will show
-how well the Second Corps had smashed the German attack.
-
-It should also be recorded that on this Thursday and Friday the Force
-had further help from the French. General Sordêt's cavalry continued
-its excellent work in relieving the pressure on the left of the Second
-Corps.
-
-G.H.Q. had moved from St. Quentin on the Wednesday afternoon, and taken
-up their abode at Noyon, a cathedral town about 30 miles farther south.
-Here, again, no one seemed to have the slightest inkling of impending
-danger, and the business of the town was being carried on as usual.
-The mayor certainly posted a proclamation imploring the "citoyens" to
-remain calm and to pay no heed to rumours, and the citoyens obeyed by
-wondering why M. le maire should have so put himself about as to issue
-such a notice.
-
-That was on the Thursday. But on the Friday the citoyens received
-something of a shock. A number of British regiments marched through in
-broad daylight, and it was now plainly to be seen that something very
-serious was happening. After the first gasp of astonishment and utter
-incredulity, the people stood by the road in dead silence with tears of
-pity running down their cheeks. So long as I live I can never forget
-that scene, the intense drama of it, the tragedy, and the glory of
-achievement which shone radiantly forth.
-
-The remnants of three gallant regiments we watched go by, and we could
-look no longer. There is no need to say which they were, for they were
-but typical of all the other regiments in the Force that day. Again
-there were but a poor 200 men left of each 1,000. Officers and men
-alike in their pitiable destitution. Barefooted, or shifts of bandages
-round their swollen feet; torn breeches, cut short like football
-knickers. Great bearded men they were, with the grime and dust of five
-terrible days' incessant fighting and marching upon them; but in their
-eyes the unquenchable light of their native pluck and steadfastness.
-There was no trace of defeat there, only the hungry, dazed look of men
-who long for a little sleep before they turn once more to crash their
-way into an enemy's ranks.
-
-It is not such things as these that our people at home are told, and so
-I set them down. Tales of gallant deeds in the fighting-line they have
-now in plenty, but the great human side of this bloody war is passed
-over in discreet silence. England knows nothing of the meaning of
-modern war; she has not suffered invasion, save from the predatory
-attacks of aircraft. Her sons are fighting for her, and the knowledge
-thrills our womenfolk; but of the conditions under which they have
-fought, and of the appalling sufferings of tortured Belgium and France
-and Poland and Serbia, they are hopelessly ignorant. If but a tenth
-part were thoroughly realised there would be one mighty irresistible
-cry from the heart of the civilised world:
-
-"Stand at nothing to finish this war at once, and it shall be the last!"
-
-There are no such things as neutral nations. If a nation refuses to be
-enrolled for Civilisation, then it is fighting by the side of the
-obscene Horror which has plunged Europe into this carnival of blood and
-misery.
-
-On the Friday afternoon some of us learned from a wounded French lancer
-that the German centre had been badly smashed and was actually retiring
-from St. Quentin, owing to a French counter-offensive; also some of our
-cavalry had been doing specially good work south of that town. The 3rd
-Cavalry Brigade broke and beat back the Prussian Guard and another
-cavalry regiment, and the 5th Cavalry Brigade had a similar success
-with other German cavalry.
-
-In the meantime G.H.Q. had removed still farther south to Compiègne,
-and occupied Napoleon's magnificent palace, or a wing of it.
-
-
-It had been intended to give the Force a really good rest when they
-reached the River Oise on the Friday night. By that time the British
-line (both Corps) ran along the river from La Fère to Noyon. But it
-was, after all, little more than five or six hours which could be
-spared; many of the regiments and batteries did not even get that brief
-respite. "Keep moving" was still the order of the day.
-
-But for the fortunate it was a glimpse of Paradise. It meant, above
-all else, a proper all-over wash and a clean shirt, even though you had
-to wash it yourself. It meant the luxury of a shave, if you could
-manage to get hold of anything in the shape of a razor. There was a
-square meal served out, and there were two or three hours of blessed
-sleep, when you lay with next to nothing on (for your shirt was drying)
-under a shady tree. It was all little enough, and, truth to tell, most
-of the men could only turn out of the ranks to fall straight into the
-sleep of utter exhaustion, a sleep of the clock round had it been
-allowed.
-
-Tobacco in those days was a luxury, and it was needed most. Now there
-is a regular weekly ration, and in addition kind friends at home see
-that the supply of cigarettes does not fail. But in the Retreat the
-usual substitute was dried tea-leaves rolled in the parchment paper of
-the emergency ration. Tea-leaves are very nasty to smoke, but I am not
-sure that they are so nasty as brown paper or the seat of a
-cane-bottomed chair; and I have tried them all.
-
-The men's equipment, too, was a constant source of trouble. They would
-throw away their greatcoats and packs, anything to march as lightly as
-possible. The Germans must have had a fine haul, and there were
-several occasions when they dressed up their infantry companies in
-British greatcoats and caps, and got well up to our lines before their
-identity was discovered.
-
-And that reminds me that in Noyon we caught a German spy wearing no
-fewer than three different uniforms. First, a French; over it a
-Belgian; and on top of these a khaki greatcoat with cap. It was a very
-hot day, and the man's obvious discomfort was the first thing to give
-him away. It did not take ten minutes to settle that little affair.
-
-By the time the two corps joined up again the refugee problem had
-become really serious. All the way back the army of unfortunates had
-been steadily growing larger, and it was but natural that they should
-hang on to the skirts of the Force for protection. How many of the
-poor women and little children died of exposure and exhaustion, it is
-impossible to tell. Our men were themselves badly off for food, but,
-needless to say, they were always eager to share their emergency
-rations with those who had nothing at all save what could be garnered
-in wayside village or cottage.
-
-Rules about commandeering are most rigid; nothing must be taken without
-payment, or at least a voucher. I remember one C.O. buying a couple of
-fruit trees for his unit. But it went to the men's hearts to leave
-behind them tender chickens and toothsome bunnies, even though there
-was no chance of cooking them, to be snapped up by Germans with no such
-qualms of conscience.
-
-Yet, to give the Germans credit, they did, in many cases, give written
-receipts for provisions when it was a question of an odd duck or bale
-of hay; but when a house was properly ransacked the receipt given more
-usually bore the signature of that redoubtable warrior, Herr von
-Koepenick. It was one of the very few occasions when they showed a
-sense of humour, if one can call it so.
-
-Amongst those fortunate regiments which had been able to snatch the few
-hours' rest there was a very general, and a very natural, impression
-that a definite stand was now going to be made. The position was a
-good one, and it was also confidently expected that more divisions were
-being hurried out from England as fast as ship and train could bring
-them.
-
-Perhaps, under other circumstances, the stand might indeed have been
-made. But what we did not know was that the main French Armies away to
-the east were being dealt a series of such smashing blows by the
-Germans that they were retiring almost more quickly than we were.
-
-
-Although we are concerned here solely with the fortunes of the British
-Force, yet it must be remembered that the fighting on the west was only
-a small part of the general engagement, and that the Force had
-necessarily to conform with the main strategical idea. The capture of
-Paris would have been of incalculable moral value to the Germans. They
-recognised this, and therefore made that special bid for it. But the
-triumphant entry into Paris would have possessed no _real_ value so
-long as the French and British Armies were still "in being." Just as,
-later, the capture of Warsaw was of little real value (save as a
-strategic centre), because the Russian Armies had escaped.
-
-The position, then, on Saturday morning, the 29th, was:
-
-(_a_) The Force was retiring, not too severely pressed by the enemy,
-but with continuous rear-guard actions.
-
-(_b_) Two new French Armies (the 6th and 7th) were coming into position
-on our left, by Amiens and Roye.
-
-(_c_) On our immediate right was the 5th French Army, the one which had
-suffered so badly after the fall of Namur.
-
-(_d_) Generally, the French forces on the east were being steadily
-pushed back by the very strong enemy advance.
-
-On that morning the Commander-in-Chief received a visit from General
-Joffre, and this is what took place. I quote from Sir John French's
-second dispatch:
-
-"I strongly represented my position to the French Commander-in-Chief,
-who was most kind, cordial and sympathetic, as he has always been. He
-told me that he had directed the 5th French Army on the Oise to move
-forward and attack the Germans on the Somme with a view to checking
-pursuit.
-
-"I finally arranged with General Joffre to effect a further short
-retirement towards the line Compiègne--Soissons, promising him,
-however, to do my utmost to keep always within a day's march of him."
-
-It may be noted here (although, of course, we did not know it till much
-later) that, owing to the German advance on the west, Le Havre was
-evacuated as the British base, and the organisation, stores, hospitals
-and everything, were rushed at half a day's notice right down to St.
-Nazaire, at the mouth of the River Loire. It was an amusing episode in
-the war, and quite a happy little yarn it would make; "but that is
-another story," as Kipling says.
-
-On the Saturday evening the Force was got on the move again, heartened
-and not a little refreshed. The country-side now was as lovely as any
-district in France. Gentle, undulating downs, crowned by the beautiful
-forest of Ligues, and besprinkled with dainty little villages and
-stately châteaux. If these lines should chance to be read by the mayor
-and mayoress of a certain little village hard by Compiègne, I would beg
-them to believe that the officer whom they so graciously entertained
-for those brief hours remembers their kindness with the deepest
-gratitude, and records the day as one of the most perfect he has ever
-spent. Officers and men made so many good friends even during those
-crowded hours of life, only to realise with heartfelt sorrow that
-perhaps half a day later their kindly hosts must have been engulfed by
-the tide of invasion.
-
-I vividly recall how curious seemed that order to go on retiring when,
-from all accounts, the German centre had the previous day been so badly
-beaten. Madame's instincts, when the order came, were only too
-correct. She guessed the truth; we continued our trek hopelessly blind
-to the real facts.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-PAST COMPIÈGNE
-
-KING HENRY. _The sum of all our answer is but this:
- We would not seek a battle, as we are;
- Nor, as we are, we say we will not shun it.
- * * * * *
- We are in God's hand, brother, not in theirs.
- March to the bridge;
- Beyond the river we'll encamp ourselves,
- And on to-morrow bid them march away._
-
-
-The destruction of a bridge, especially if it spans a river, always
-seems to me so pathetic. Bridges are such companionable things; they
-fall so readily into one's mood, and there are, I imagine, few persons
-who do not possess pleasant memories of one or another. Whether in
-town or country, there is always fascination in staying one's journey
-for a few minutes to lean over the parapet and watch the stream--the
-basking of a trout amongst the pebbles, the sway of the water-weeds,
-the trailing of heavy barges, or the twinkling shore-lights.
-
-In Compiègne there is a particularly handsome structure which spans the
-River Oise. The French people love a noble bridge to ferry their broad
-highways over the rivers, and I cannot help thinking that it was not
-alone special reliance upon the workmanship of our sappers which
-induced the French authorities to resign to them the destruction. For,
-whenever possible, British sappers were called in for the work. They
-made such a clean job of it, the French would say. No; it was, I feel
-sure, their affection and pride for beautiful works of art with tender
-associations that made them reluctant to lay sacrilegious hands upon
-them.
-
-It must have been on Sunday, the 30th, that the last of the Force
-marched through or past Compiègne, and the bridge, besides many
-another, was blown up. The R.F.A. of the rear-guard passed through the
-town and halted, guns unlimbered, about 500 yards out the other side,
-ready to open fire, if necessary, for they were being hard pressed.
-The fuses were laid and lighted literally in face of the advancing
-enemy, and two R.E. officers who were doing the work were killed by
-enemy bullets. With a terrific crash the bridge fell, cut in two, and
-the retirement was continued while the Germans hurled impotent curses
-and (at that time) ineffectual shells after the column.
-
-The Second Corps had now reached country which was very difficult; not
-only for manoeuvre, but especially so for transport. Immediately after
-you leave Compiègne its glorious forest is entered, and directly that
-is passed it is a country of very steep ravines, thickly wooded, with
-little villages clinging limpet-like to the ridges. The heat of the
-day, too, was most trying.
-
-The First Corps, which had joined up at Noyon, crossed the Aisne, and
-continued its retirement via Soissons.
-
-The German pursuit, which during the last two or three days had seemed
-to slacken off, began to get serious again on the afternoon of Monday,
-the 31st.
-
-About 3 P.M. three field batteries and the Brigade of Guards (First
-Corps) were out by Villers-Cotterets, and the Germans were pushing on
-almost as fast as they did during the first days. Their guns came into
-action at about 1,700 yards, and as our brigade there was far
-outnumbered, orders were given to go on retiring.
-
-Well, the major of one of the batteries was "fed up" with retiring
-without getting some of his own back, so he put his telescope (a
-battery carries a telescope) to his blind eye and said he'd be hanged
-before he retired (or words to that effect), and "let's give them a
-dressing down first."
-
-So it was "Halt; action right!" and, after a couple of ranging shots,
-"Two rounds gun-fire!" And that was all that battery got in. The
-Germans put a couple of guns out of action, and then turned their
-attention to the wagon line, where they made a considerable mess-up
-with the teams.
-
-That settled it. "Signal the teams up and let's get out of it!" said
-the major; and it was so. The quartermaster-sergeant put the fear of
-God, not the Germans, into the drivers; up came the teams, "rear limber
-up," and away they went, damaged guns and all. The Guards meanwhile
-had gone on.
-
-There was nothing particularly heroic about it all, but it was very
-excusable, and it certainly helped to buck the men up a little.
-
-The Guards, however, gave further excellent evidence of their fighting
-qualities in a series of stiff hand-to-hand encounters in the forest
-glades. While they suffered badly, they succeeded again and again in
-beating back the enemy's attacks, and so further relieving the pressure
-on the rear.
-
-
-Now, despite the continuous fighting and marching, there was no doubt
-whatever that the men were daily becoming more war-hardened and fit.
-The worst was over, and with that firm conviction their spirits grew
-lighter. During the first few days the troops were marching perhaps 25
-to 30 miles a day, apart from the fighting. Take, for instance,
-Wednesday, the 26th. The men had begun that great fight practically
-tired out. They fought all day, and then at the end of it did a
-retirement of some 25 miles. Staff officers were simply worn out by
-the nerve-racking ordeal, and General Smith-Dorrien himself says that
-he did not average more than two hours' sleep during the first six days.
-
-But the week's campaigning had done more for the troops than ten years'
-peace work. Their self-reliance, their confidence in and affection for
-their officers were evidenced in a hundred ways; while officers, for
-their part, had perfect confidence in their men and knew that, however
-impossible an order might seem, it would be carried out. The Force
-was, in short, one big happy family. Everybody seemed to know
-everybody else, and that meant that everybody helped everybody else.
-After the Marne it was never quite the same, because the Force began to
-increase in size. New-comers were immediately recognised, and the old
-hands could never resist a momentary exhibition of very pardonable
-pride at having "been out since the beginning."
-
-The heavy losses in officers and N.C.O.'s had an inevitable effect on
-discipline, though it might well have been worse had not the sense of
-discipline amongst the rank and file been so strong. It must be
-remembered that so soon as the vanguard of the retiring Force passed
-through a village, practically the whole of the inhabitants would pack
-up such few of their belongings as they could carry on light carts,
-perambulators and any available vehicle, and then join the ever-growing
-stream of refugees. So the next units to pass through would find
-nothing but empty houses, and the temptation to carry away a few
-"souvenirs" was very hard to check, especially in the case of food.
-
-One man of an infantry regiment "found" a horse wandering loose in a
-field. He was very tired, so why, thought he, should he not take what
-the gods sent him? He did, and rode the horse for a couple of days.
-Knowing nothing about horses, the poor beast got little enough to eat,
-and the man thought that the heaven-sent gift was becoming a nuisance.
-So he talked the matter over with a pal, and swopped his charger for--a
-packet of Woodbines! And I don't think the pal was a canny Scot either.
-
-I remember particularly the date September 1st, and going through the
-little town of Crépy-en-Valois, because we then realised for the first
-time that something was wrong about that "strategical retirement"
-business. Our maps included Belgium and all N.E. France, but Compiègne
-was the farthest point south; and when we had retired below that town
-we knew that retreat so far south was not a part of the original scheme.
-
-Then most of us saw some French troops for the first time, and, ominous
-sign, they were always engaged in barricading and mining the roads,
-opening the barricades to let us pass through.
-
-But Tuesday, September 1st, must ever be a red-letter day in the annals
-of the Royal Regiment, on account of the famous fight of L Battery,
-R.H.A., at Nery, hard by Compiègne. I always regard that episode as
-one of the most wonderful incidents in this war. Nor do I think so
-because it was my own regiment, though naturally one can appreciate it
-the more from being a Gunner. The story is, of course, well known, but
-no repetition can mar the effect, however bald the telling of it may be.
-
-L Battery was working with the 1st Cavalry Brigade, which was made up
-of the 2nd Dragoons (Queen's Bays), the 11th Hussars, and the 5th
-Dragoons. For the benefit of the uninitiated it may be explained that
-a horse artillery battery of six guns forms an integral part of a
-cavalry brigade; wherever the cavalry go, there can go the "Horse
-Gunners," for the gun is of lighter calibre than that of the field
-batteries.
-
-About 2 o'clock in the morning word reached Second Corps H.Q. that a
-strong force of Germans, 90 guns and cavalry, was moving towards the
-1st Cavalry Brigade in bivouac at Nery. The Third Army Corps, which
-was still included in General Smith-Dorrien's command, was also not far
-away. Our cavalry were actually bivouacked within about 600 yards of
-the Germans, and I believe that our outposts were, for some reason or
-other, not sufficiently advanced.
-
-In an earlier chapter, writing of Captain Francis Grenfell, I have
-remarked that there was one other to whose life might well be applied
-the phrase: "_Sans peur et sans reproche_." That other was Captain E.
-K. Bradbury, of L Battery. All that I have ventured to say of Grenfell
-I would say also of Bradbury. I doubt whether there ever lived a
-Gunner officer who was more beloved by his men, or one more worthy to
-be so beloved. And when that is said, what else remains?
-
-Half-past four in the morning, and the mists have scarcely begun to
-rise above the beech trees. You picture the guns of L Battery parked
-in line just on the downward slope of a slight hill and in a little
-clearing of the woods. The horses of the gun-teams are tethered to the
-gun and limber-wheels; others are down at a little stream hard by,
-where some of the men are washing and scrubbing out their shirts. The
-Queen's Bays are in bivouac in a neighbouring field.
-
-"Some of our scouts out there, aren't they?" remarked a shoeing-smith,
-pointing to some rising ground about 500 yards to the north; "or is it
-French cursers?" (cuirassiers).
-
-"Looks more like Germans to me," said one of the gunners. "Let's have
-a squint through the telescope."
-
-"What's up?" said the sergeant-major, passing at the moment.
-
-"Half a mo!" mumbled the gunner, eye glued to the battery telescope.
-"Yes, it is--Germans--I can see the spiky helmets."
-
-"Rot," returned the sergeant-major; "can't be!"
-
-"Anyway, I'm off to report to the captain," said the gunner.
-
-Bradbury was talking to the horses by one of the guns when a breathless
-gunner of the battery staff appeared with the telescope.
-
-"Beg pardon, sir, but there are----"
-
-CRASH! A percussion shell burst clean in the middle of the battery,
-followed the next instant by a couple more. And in the few moments'
-breathless pause it was realised that practically every horse and every
-driver was either killed outright or wounded.
-
-"Action rear!" yelled Bradbury, who found himself in command.
-
-Their leader's voice above the unholy din pulled them together, and the
-gun detachments, such as were left, leaped to the trails to get the
-limbers clear. But no more than three guns could they get into action.
-
-Now a tornado of shell and machine-gun bullets from close range burst
-over and through the devoted remnant--Bradbury, three subalterns
-(Giffard, Campbell and Mundy), the sergeant-major, a sergeant, a couple
-of gunners, and a driver. And in action against them were ten German
-field-guns, and two machine-guns enfilading from the wood.
-
-Of their three guns, they had now to abandon two.
-
-"All hands number 2 gun!" called Bradbury, who, with the sergeant, had
-already opened fire.
-
-The others rushed the few yards to Bradbury's gun; but even in that
-short space Giffard was hit five times. Bradbury acted as No. 1
-(layer), the sergeant No. 2, while Mundy acted as observing officer.
-One of the gunners and the driver carried across all the ammunition by
-hand, through the hail of lead, from the firing battery wagons.
-
-The range was, say, 600 yards, but in such a nerve-racking storm it was
-difficult for the little detachment to work clearly with no one to
-observe the burst of the shells. There was only a little chance, but
-Mundy took it, and stepped calmly out from the shelter of the
-gun-shield to observe.
-
-Then No. 2 gun began its work in earnest.
-
-"Five minutes more left," said Mundy; "add twenty-five."
-
-Crack went the report. "One out!" said Mundy.
-
-"Ten minutes more right; drop twenty-five."
-
-Crack again! "Short," murmured Mundy; then, "add twenty-five."
-
-"Two out!" he counted.
-
-When three German guns had been counted out, Bradbury called over his
-shoulder to the sergeant-major:
-
-"Take my place; I'll load for a bit."
-
-He had barely changed places when a bursting shell carried away a leg
-at the thigh. Yet, by some superhuman will-power, he stuck to his post
-and went on loading.
-
-Now Mundy was mortally wounded. Then Campbell fell. But still the gun
-was served, laid, and fired. And as surely were the German guns being
-counted out, one by one.
-
-Then there burst true another shell. The gallant Bradbury received his
-death-wound, and his other leg was carried away. The rest of the
-detachment were all wounded. Still that tiny remnant stuck to it
-through the storm.
-
-Now only are left the sergeant-major, Sergeant Nelson, the gunner, and
-the driver. Still they work. Still they watch one enemy gun after
-another ceasing to fire, until all are counted out but one.
-
-All the ammunition is finished. Nothing left now but to crawl back out
-of that hell. I Battery coming up? Well, they can finish it. Lend us
-some "wheelers" to get our guns back.
-
-So were the six guns of L Battery brought out of action. Torn and
-battered, but safe. Glorious relics of perhaps the most wonderful
-action a battery of the Regiment has ever fought--and won.
-
-I Battery opened on the massed columns of the German cavalry now
-appearing, and rent mighty lanes through their ranks, turned and
-scattered them. The Queen's Bays, who had been working as infantry,
-for their horses stampeded when the firing began, collected up, and
-with I Battery and the Lincolns went over the hill after the retiring
-enemy.
-
-There they found the German battery out of action and abandoned.
-
-And Bradbury? His last conscious words were an appeal for morphia and
-to be carried away as quickly as possible that his men might not
-witness his agony and be unnerved.
-
-So passed that heroic soul away. A life nobly spent, a death nobly
-encountered.
-
- Nothing is here for tears,
- ... nothing but well and fair
- And what may quiet us in a death so noble.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-THE FINAL STAGES
-
-FRENCH KING. _'Tis certain he hath passed the river Somme._
-
-CONSTABLE OF FRANCE. _And if he be not fought withal, my lord,
- Let us not live in France: let us quit all,
- And give our vineyards to a barbarous people._
-
-
-The fighting in the neighbourhood of Compiègne developed into something
-of a general action, an action in which the British more than held
-their own. There was some doubt whether the 4th Division would be able
-to shake off the heavy attack which was being made upon them, so
-another brigade was ordered to their help. The retirement was then
-easily effected.
-
-The 3rd Brigade was a little north of Crépy-en-Valois, and, without
-waiting for the enemy, themselves made a spirited advance for a short
-distance, and did excellent work with their R.F.A. against the German
-infantry.
-
-Soon after midnight on Wednesday, September 2nd, the Force continued
-its retirement. There may have been some little grumbling, and it
-became increasingly difficult to keep up the old fiction--now indeed a
-fact--about a "strategical retirement"; but, somehow or other, a
-genuine conviction was stealing through the ranks that at any moment
-the real end would come. If our men were very, very weary, so also
-were the enemy, and every day brought fresh evidence of the fact.
-
-Then, too, news came to us that the French (the 7th Army) were really
-tackling von Buelow's armies, and were doing well against them. That
-had a very inspiriting effect.
-
-Now the Force, or rather our left, was actually in sight of the
-outlying forts of Paris, about a dozen miles off. Great was the
-excitement, for, of course, everyone jumped to the conclusion that we
-were making for the capital. G.H.Q. was at Lagny-sur-Marne, just 15
-miles due east of Paris. They actually got as far south as Melun, on
-the outskirts of the Forest of Fontainebleau, before the tide turned.
-
-If you look at these places on the picture-map you will see that, after
-Senlis was passed, the Force, instead of retiring straight on towards
-Paris, as it had been doing, now swung round, with the right flank of
-the First Corps as pivot, and marched in a south-easterly direction.
-Possibly the enemy imagined from this that their chance had come, and
-that they would now be able to slip in between our left and Paris. But
-the new French army was coming up from behind Paris, upon our left, to
-fill the gap and cover the approaches to the city.
-
-That swinging round movement to cross the River Marne was rather a
-risky business, for it meant marching for a certain distance across the
-enemy's front. However, it was successfully accomplished, and by the
-evening of September 3rd the Force was south of the river. That same
-afternoon our aircraft reported that the Germans had also swung
-eastwards, and were now apparently making for the large town of
-Château-Thierry, the point of division between our extreme right and
-the 5th French Army.
-
-The position in which the Force found themselves that evening was
-wellnigh hopeless from a defensive point of view. To make matters
-worse, we were very badly off for entrenching tools, the men having
-lost the greater part in the hurried retirement after the hard battle
-at the Wednesday. This question of entrenching tools was further
-complicated by the removal of our base to St. Nazaire, for that meant a
-much more serious difficulty in getting up supplies.
-
-I forgot to mention that when orders reached the Second Corps and 4th
-Division on the Thursday night to keep on the move, instructions were
-given by G.H.Q. to abandon everything, even the ammunition, which might
-retard the transport, and so to leave the vehicles free for wounded or
-the more exhausted of the men. Only one Division carried out the
-order, and that only partially, before the G.O.C. Second Corps on the
-spot realised it was unnecessary and countermanded it.
-
-
-During and after the battle of Le Cateau, as I have said the fight of
-the Wednesday has come to be spoken of, a rather curious adventure
-befell one of the motor transport ammunition parks About ten of the
-lorries, under an A.S.C. subaltern, had been doing some detached work
-away from the main body. These had got out of rather a tight corner,
-but the rest of the park (some sixty odd lorries) had become involved
-in that mix-up at Estrées.
-
-About 3 P M. the A.S.C. captain in charge received an order to go back
-in the direction of Le Cateau. This was, apparently, straight into the
-advancing enemy, who were only some three or four miles off. The C.O.
-obeyed his orders and took his lorries back. From that moment those
-sixty great lorries vanished into thin air, and not a soul knew what
-had happened to them. At G.H.Q. the unit was officially reported as
-"missing," and it so appeared, I believe, in the London Press.
-
-The subaltern invented and spread abroad a delicious yarn. I omit his
-version of his own adventures, for he got a "mention in dispatches" for
-it, though this was subsequently quashed.
-
-When the order to go back was received, he said, and annihilation of
-the park seemed certain, the O.C. called his subalterns together and
-told them the position. They unanimously decided to obey and charge
-the advancing enemy with the lorries. The drivers (our old friends the
-busmen) were instructed to go full speed ahead into the enemy column.
-But the drivers were not having any. So the officers produced their
-revolvers and threatened to shoot any man who refused to obey. That
-decided them. "We will die by German bullets rather than British." So
-away they went, the lorries bumping along the road straight into the
-ranks of the astonished Germans. Nothing could stop them, and the
-column got through (the narrator forgot to mention where to) with the
-loss of about half the park.
-
-The subaltern carried his arm in a sling for a fortnight afterwards. A
-shrapnel splinter, he said, when they were rushing the enemy. It had
-really been caused by the back-fire of a motor-bike. Possibly this is
-the origin of that glorified picture which appeared in certain of the
-London illustrated papers.
-
-The park was, however, actually lost for nearly a week. They had
-vanished as completely as though the earth had opened and swallowed
-them. They were eventually heard of by the merest accident, when a
-sergeant came in to one of the towns on the line of retreat to get
-provisions. But even then they could not be found, for the sergeant
-had gone again without leaving his address. So for days Staff officers
-scoured the country in swift cars, and thus the park was eventually run
-to earth. No one was more surprised than the C.O. to hear that he had
-been lost. They had not seen a single German, and they had had such a
-jolly time, thank you, seeing the pretty country.
-
-But to tell of half the curious or amusing incidents I should need a
-volume many times the size of this one. Things happened every day any
-one of which would provide a newspaper with a column of excellent
-"copy." At the time one thought little about them, for everybody was
-too busy looking after his job and himself. There was, for instance,
-the Adventure of the Flat-Nosed Bullet, the Adventure of the Man with
-the Crooked Ear, the Adventure of the Field Cashier and the Pay Chest,
-the Adventure of the Blood-stained Putty Knife, the Adventure of the
-Perishing Cat, and many another.
-
-
-The great question on the morning of Friday, September 4th, was: "Are
-we going right back to the Seine, with our left on Paris?" You picture
-the Force, tired enough but in most excellent fettle, growing hourly
-more impatient, longing with all their hearts to turn and have a go at
-the enemy who had caused them all that trouble and discomfort.
-
-"Give a guess," I asked two of my sergeants that day, "how long we have
-been out here?"
-
-They thought for a few minutes. "Six weeks," they said; "perhaps
-seven."
-
-And, you see, it was only a fortnight after all. But they would not
-believe it until a calendar was produced. Unconsciously everyone
-reckoned each night as another day, for nights and days were alike so
-far as work was concerned. I think that remark was more telling than
-pages of descriptive writing.
-
-The days during those final stages were almost tropical in their heat,
-which told very severely on men and horses. The nights were chill and
-wet. So altogether one had one's work cut out in mothering the men.
-Cases of bowel complaints were very common, and one has to be so
-careful to prevent serious developments. The lads really need looking
-after like children, bless them! Aromatic chalk-powder with opium
-(5-grain tablets) I found an excellent remedy, and cured dozens of
-cases. So there is a little tip for other officers. Calomel is
-useful, too, and I saved much agony from bad wounds by doses of opium
-(1-grain tablets), but this must not be given in cases of stomach
-wounds--most to be dreaded of any. Aspirin, also, is, of course,
-invaluable. Certainly no officer should be without a small
-medicine-case, and it is the one thing they never seem to think of when
-getting kit together. A trivial lapse, this, into egotism, I am
-afraid. I hope it will be excused for the sake of the hints offered.
-
-
-In the evening of September 4th orders came to continue the retirement
-still farther. The Second Corps marched through most of the night
-towards the River Seine, the First Corps conforming to the movement on
-the east. The 6th French Army was coming up well on our left, and thus
-the western end of the Franco-British line was gradually swinging round
-and up between Paris and the right flank of the Germans, who were now
-definitely moving east-south-east. You must remember, though, that
-these facts were only apparent at the time to a handful of officers of
-the Headquarters Staff; everyone else was still in the dark. But how
-thrilling those hours must have been to an airman observing from above,
-and who knew the facts.
-
-On the 5th (Saturday), at noon, one battery found itself halted in a
-field by the 12-kilometre stone from Paris, and the men were confident
-that "la ville lumière" was their next stop. There was an undercurrent
-of excitement, for another couple of thousand men had joined up to the
-corps as reinforcements. It was a definite halt and a rest, the first
-they had had since Mons, and they were making the most of it.
-
-Just about 6 P.M. the major came into the lines with a paper in his
-hand. There was something in his walk, something about him--the men
-jumped up as he approached. "Paris?"--the major shook his head.
-"Not--not--is it advance, sir?" The major nodded. "We are going to
-advance," he said.
-
-ADVANCE!
-
-There was a cheer which must have startled the French Government in
-Bordeaux, or whereever they had gone to.
-
-The drivers rushed at their horses, the gunners rushed to the limbers
-to help hook in. "Stand to your horses!" sang out the sergeant-major.
-Then, in a very few minutes: "Battery all ready, sir!"
-
-The major stood up in his stirrups with a splendid laugh in his eyes.
-
-"Sub-sections right-about-wheel! Walk, march!"
-
-Another rousing shout, which soon merged into the cheery strains of
-"All aboard for Dixie," and the battery began a march, this time in the
-right direction, which only stopped at 2 A.M. for the sake of the
-horses. The men were ready to go on for a week.
-
-The great Retreat had ended. The Advance had begun.
-
-How and why the tide turned against the invaders at that, for them,
-most critical moment we cannot exactly tell. It was, as I see it, a
-combination of circumstances. There was the imminence of the Russian
-invasion into Prussia, and it was said that the Germans withdrew two
-army corps from the Western front to meet it. There was the sudden
-production by the French Commander-in-Chief of an entirely new French
-army from behind Paris to attack the German right.
-
-But one thing, at least, is certain. Von Kluck made, perhaps, the
-biggest mistake in his life in imagining that "the contemptible little
-army" which he and his legions had been hunting for a fortnight was now
-too dispirited and broken for further fighting; and, with that
-conviction in his mind, he started to do the very thing which the most
-elementary military textbooks tell you is absolutely wrong. He moved
-his army across the unbroken front of a hostile force.
-
-General Smith-Dorrien had been compelled to do the same thing with the
-Second Corps only three days before. But he did it with the full
-knowledge of the dangers, and he took every possible precaution to
-obviate them. He succeeded.
-
-Von Kluck, in his delusion, saw no danger. He failed.
-
-"I should conceive it," says Sir John French, "to have been about noon
-on September 6th ... that the enemy realised the powerful threat that
-was being made against the flank of his columns moving south-east, and
-began the great retreat which opened the battle of the Marne."
-
- * * * * *
-
-And there I draw the tableau curtains on the first act of the drama.
-
-How inadequately the story has been told, or rather outlined, no one is
-more conscious than the writer. For every omission the critics may
-find, I will find two. But if I have so written that the great-hearted
-public may realise a little more of what the Retreat from Mons meant to
-the lads of ours who worked and fought so marvellously, to themselves
-at home, to our brothers and sisters overseas, then indeed I am
-satisfied.
-
-Of necessity I have had to omit a great deal which may not be told
-until the war has ended. To an officer on the active list freedom of
-speech is rightly denied. But some day I shall hope to write in fuller
-detail and to do more justice to the work of individuals. It is only
-right that the public should learn the actual facts.
-
-The glory of the achievement lay not merely in the hourly repulse, over
-a period of fourteen days, of an overwhelming attack, and of a
-continued retirement, which somehow never broke, before such an
-inveterate pursuit. But there was also the big question of
-temperament. The Germans knew exactly what they wanted, and they went
-straight for it, backed by all the resources of their wonderful
-organisation working to that particular end for a decade of years or
-longer. The British, on the other hand, were thrust into the breach
-literally at the last moment, a week late, and then had to fight for a
-fortnight in total ignorance of the course of events.
-
-I recall a remark once made by General Joffre:
-
-"The better he understands the importance of the movements of the
-attack wherein he participates, the braver the French soldier fights,
-and the more trust he puts in the measures taken by his leaders."
-
-While the converse may not always be true, it will, I think, suggest
-how very difficult is the execution of a delicate piece of strategy
-when the officers and men are ignorant of the motives which prompt it.
-
-The Retreat was carried to a successful conclusion because, by the
-inherent qualities of race, it was a piece of work of a character in
-which the British Army has always excelled; and also, in face of the
-terrible engines of modern slaughter, because of the splendid
-discipline of the men and their training as individual human beings.
-
-Of the invariable cheerfulness of the men I have given several
-examples; but I would again attempt to correct the popular impression
-that such cheerfulness is no more than the cracking of jokes on all
-occasions. No, it is something far deeper and finer than that. The
-casual observer will watch a party of sappers mending a road, under
-fire, with loads of flint stones. He will hear them grumbling about
-the shocking waste of the ratepayers' money, and will then write home a
-letter for publication narrating the incident as a funny remark under
-fire. He omits to point out that it is only the cheery spirits of the
-men (and, of course, discipline, etc.) which make possible the clean
-finish of the work.
-
-So it was in the Retreat. The men were far too exhausted to crack
-jokes, but the unconquerable soul of them rose high above every
-obstacle, and so the work was done.
-
-
-Looking back over what I have written, I find that, quite
-unconsciously, I have said little or nothing of the work of the
-officers. Yet there is nothing else that I can say. It is not for me
-to remark upon the work of our leaders and of my brother-officers. I
-can only repeat the words of the Commander-in-Chief, and I venture to
-do so because the general public bothers but little with official
-dispatches.
-
-"It is impossible," Sir John French remarked, "for me to speak too
-highly of the skill evinced by the two General Officers Commanding Army
-Corps; the self-sacrificing and devoted exertions of their Staffs; the
-direction of the troops by Divisional, Brigade and Regimental leaders;
-the command of the smaller units by their officers; and the magnificent
-fighting spirit displayed by non-commissioned officers and men."
-
-But in the Commander-in-Chief's dispatches there is one officer whose
-name shines out like a beacon. You who have followed in spirit the
-work of the Second Corps on August 26th will have realised the
-imperishable debt which the nation owes to the General Officer
-Commanding that corps. The verdict of posterity will but confirm that
-of the present generation.
-
-Again I can but quote the Commander-in-Chief:
-
-"I cannot close the brief account of this glorious stand of the British
-troops without putting on record my deep appreciation of the valuable
-services rendered by General Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien.
-
-"I say without hesitation that the saving of the left wing of the Army
-under my command on the morning of August 26th could never have been
-accomplished unless a commander of rare and unusual coolness,
-intrepidity and determination had been present to personally conduct
-the operation."
-
-At the head of my sketch of that day's work I have set Shakespeare's
-immortal lines on St. Crispin's Day. May one who was privileged to
-serve as a member of that "band of brothers" on that day venture to
-offer his poor tribute to the leader of that band?
-
-From Mons to the Marne, wherever the fight was hottest, wherever his
-men were working against heaviest odds, there was the General at hand
-to help and stiffen them. The outposts before Mons were heavily
-engaged; the General was up with them, under shell-fire, to see how
-things were going. Through the days that followed, wherever
-opportunity served, their commander stepped from his car to say a few
-words of cheery encouragement to the passing troops. Was there a field
-hospital, a passing ambulance?--again, those few words of kindly
-inquiry which made the poor sufferers forget everything save only the
-desire to be well again to give their-chief, and Britain, all that was
-in them. If the Commander-in-Chief owed so much to General
-Smith-Dorrien, I can only say that the Second Corps would have stormed
-the gates of Hell for their leader, and would have trusted implicitly
-in him to bring them through.
-
-
-I seem to have said practically nothing about the Flying Corps, and
-very little about the Sappers. I am afraid that I saw very little of
-our aeroplane work until the Aisne, and so I cannot speak from personal
-observation. In fact, there are far too many omissions in this brief
-chronicle.
-
- But pardon, gentles all,
- * * * * *
- Oh, pardon! since a crooked figure may
- Attest in little place a million;
- And let us, ciphers to this great accompt,
- On your imaginary forces work,
- * * * * *
- Piece out our imperfections with your thoughts.
-
-
-Indeed, I find it quite impossible to speak of one branch of the Force
-more than another. It was just one perfect whole. Thus I have, so far
-as possible, refrained from designating particular regiments. If I
-have written of the 9th Lancers or L Battery it is because the gallant
-work of those units is already a household word throughout the Empire.
-But, so far as that first fortnight was concerned, there was not a
-single unit, officer or man, who did not achieve something equally as
-gallant did the opportunity come his way. Indeed, had it not been so,
-the Retreat could never have been accomplished as it was. Every man
-played the game for his side, and, in consequence, that side won.
-
-And if that were so, then there can be no question of "mentions in
-dispatches," D.S.O.'s and D.C.M.'s. Every regiment in the firing-line
-should be "mentioned." If, by great good fortune, a regiment achieves
-some specially noble piece of work which comes to the notice of the
-authorities, then, say I, let the Colour of that regiment be decorated.
-To single out individuals, to give a Victoria Cross to the colonel, a
-D.S.O. to the senior major, a Military Cross to the senior captain, and
-so on, is to create jealousy, and is, also, unfair to others.
-
-
-Humanity, the other noble trait in the character of our men, I have
-barely mentioned, for it seems quite unnecessary to do so. It is a
-characteristic of British sailors and soldiers which is always taken
-for granted. One need only recall some of the many occasions in our
-naval actions when British sailors have rescued Germans at the peril of
-their lives, and have been fired at while doing so. And set in
-contrast the murderous attack by German destroyers upon the crew of a
-British submarine stranded on the Swedish coast.
-
-And so it has been with our soldiers. Our men invariably enter a fight
-with the innate feeling that it is a sporting contest, where you shake
-hands with your adversary before and after the fight. If he knocks out
-his adversary, then the winner is the man to help him to his feet.
-
-We have seen from the very beginning that "chivalry" and "fair play"
-are words unknown to the Germans. To them nothing matters but to win,
-preferably by foul means. So, on the very first day, British soldiers
-were terribly undeceived. They saw German infantry advancing to the
-attack behind a screen of Belgian women and children, driven on at the
-bayonet point. From then onwards we lost hundreds of gallant men
-simply through their feelings of humanity towards wounded enemies,
-being shot at by other Germans, or being treacherously shot or stabbed
-by the very man to whose lips they were holding a flask of water.
-
-And yet, with such examples before them of their comrades' fate, the
-sense of humanity and chivalry was never dulled. Despite the stringent
-orders on the subject, the men, even now, hesitate to fire when the
-enemy raises a white flag, and will always, whenever possible, succour
-a wounded German lying before the trench. These are the men who have
-only, as yet, learned of German treachery by hearsay evidence. But
-there are others. There are companies and battalions who know from
-ghastly experience. These men adopt other methods.
-
-But nothing I can write will make people at home understand what this
-war really is. Nothing, short of actual experience, can do that.
-Stay, perhaps there is one thing: the genius of Louis Raemaekers. He,
-at least, by his cartoons, is bringing home to millions the hideous
-meaning of this war. And not only of this war, but of all modern war.
-I would have a volume of his cartoons distributed gratis by the
-Government to every household in the kingdom. I would have half a
-dozen of the cartoons thrown upon the screen in every cinema-house at
-every entertainment. The people would shudder with horror, but they
-would see them and learn what Germany is and what war means.
-
-Apart from this, I hold it to be the sacred duty of every man and woman
-who can use a pen to advantage, or who can command the attention of an
-audience, to make known this meaning. To cry from the housetops what
-is this foul thing which Germany has thrust upon the world, and to show
-the people why and how Civilisation must crush it out for ever.
-
-
-There is no greater honour to-day that a man may wear--alas, there are
-but few left to wear it!--than the honour of having served his King and
-Country in France throughout August and September, 1914. Just that.
-He needs no decoration, no "mention." He served through the "Retreat
-from Mons." In days to come our children, our children's children,
-will point with pride to that one little word on the regimental colour,
-"Mons." For in that single word will be summed up the Liberation of
-the World. It was the victory of the Marne which won for Civilisation
-that freedom, but it was, under God's hand, the British Navy, the stand
-of Belgium, and the "Retreat from Mons" which made that victory
-possible.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX I
-
- MILITARY DESPATCHES FROM THE FIELD-MARSHAL
- COMMANDING-IN-CHIEF, BRITISH FORCES IN THE FIELD,
- DATED SEPTEMBER 7TH AND 17TH
-
-7th September, 1914.
-
-MY LORD,
-
-I have the honour to report the proceedings of the Field Force under my
-command up to the time of rendering this despatch.
-
-1. The transport of the troops from England both by sea and by rail was
-effected in the best order and without a check. Each unit arrived at
-its destination in this country well within the scheduled time.
-
-The concentration was practically complete on the evening of Friday,
-the 21st ultimo, and I was able to make dispositions to move the Force
-during Saturday, the 22nd, to positions I considered most favourable
-from which to commence operations which the French Commander-in-Chief,
-General Joffre, requested me to undertake in pursuance of his plans in
-prosecution of the campaign.
-
-
-Position at Mons
-
-The line taken up extended along the line of the canal from Condé on
-the west, through Mons and Binche on the east. This line was taken up
-as follows:--
-
-From Condé to Mons inclusive was assigned to the Second Corps, and to
-the right of the Second Corps from Mons the First Corps was posted.
-The 5th Cavalry Brigade was placed at Binche.
-
-In the absence of my Third Army Corps I desired to keep the Cavalry
-Division as much as possible as a reserve to act on my outer flank, or
-move in support of any threatened part of the line. The forward
-reconnaissance was entrusted to Brigadier-General Sir Philip Chetwode
-with the 5th Cavalry Brigade, but I directed General Allenby to send
-forward a few squadrons to assist in this work.
-
-During the 22nd and 23rd these advanced squadrons did some excellent
-work, some of them penetrating as far as Soignies, and several
-encounters took place in which our troops showed to great advantage.
-
-
-Sunday, August 23
-
-2. At 6 a.m., on August 23rd, I assembled the Commanders of the First
-and Second Corps and Cavalry Division at a point close to the position,
-and explained the general situation of the Allies, and what I
-understood to be General Joffre's plan. I discussed with them, at some
-length the immediate situation in front of us.
-
-From information I received from French Headquarters I understood that
-little more than one, or at most two, of the enemy's Army Corps, with
-perhaps one Cavalry Division, were in front of my position; and I was
-aware of no attempted outflanking movement by the enemy. I was
-confirmed in this opinion by the fact that my patrols encountered no
-undue opposition in their reconnoitring operations. The observation of
-my aeroplanes seemed also to bear out this estimate.
-
-About 3 p.m. on Sunday, the 23rd, reports began coming in to the effect
-that the enemy was commencing an attack on the Mons line, apparently in
-some strength, but that the right of the position from Mons and Bray
-was being particularly threatened.
-
-The Commander of the First Corps had pushed his flank back to some high
-ground south of Bray, and the 5th Cavalry Brigade evacuated Binche,
-moving slightly south: the enemy thereupon occupied Binche.
-
-The right of the 3rd Division, under General Hamilton, was at Mons,
-which formed a somewhat dangerous salient; and I directed the Commander
-of the Second Corps to be careful not to keep the troops on this
-salient too long, but, if threatened seriously, to draw back the centre
-behind Mons. This was done before dark. In the meantime, about 5
-p.m., I received a most unexpected message from General Joffre by
-telegraph, telling me that at least three German Corps, viz., a reserve
-corps, the 4th Corps and the 9th Corps, were moving on my position in
-front, and that the Second Corps was engaged in a turning movement from
-the direction of Tournay. He also informed me that the two reserve
-French Divisions and the 5th French Army on my right were retiring, the
-Germans having on the previous day gained possession of the passages of
-the Sambre between Charleroi and Namur.
-
-
-Monday, August 24
-
-3. In view of the possibility of my being driven from the Mons
-position, I had previously ordered a position in rear to be
-reconnoitred. This position rested on the fortress of Maubeuge on the
-right and extended west to Jenlain, south-east of Valenciennes, on the
-left. The position was reported difficult to hold, because standing
-crops and buildings made the siting of trenches very difficult and
-limited the field of fire in many important localities. It
-nevertheless afforded a few good artillery positions.
-
-When the news of the retirement of the French and the heavy German
-threatening on my front reached me, I endeavoured to confirm it by
-aeroplane reconnaissance; and as a result of this I determined to
-effect a retirement to the Maubeuge position at daybreak on the 24th.
-
-A certain amount of fighting continued along the whole line throughout
-the night, and at daybreak on the 24th the 2nd Division from the
-neighbourhood of Harmignies made a powerful demonstration as if to
-retake Binche. This was supported by the artillery of both the 1st and
-2nd Divisions, whilst the 1st Division took up a supporting position in
-the neighbourhood of Peissant. Under cover of this demonstration the
-Second Corps retired on the line Dour--Quarouble--Frameries. The 3rd
-Division on the right of the Corps suffered considerable loss in this
-operation from the enemy, who had retaken Mons.
-
-The Second Corps halted on this line, where they partially entrenched
-themselves, enabling Sir Douglas Haig with the First Corps gradually to
-withdraw to the new position; and he effected this without much further
-loss, reaching the line Bavai--Maubeuge about 7 p.m. Towards midday
-the enemy appeared to be directing his principal effort against our
-left.
-
-
-Work of the Cavalry
-
-I had previously ordered General Allenby with the Cavalry to act
-vigorously in advance of my left front and endeavour to take the
-pressure off.
-
-About 7.30 a.m. General Allenby received a message from Sir Charles
-Fergusson, commanding 5th Division, saying that he was very hard
-pressed and in urgent need of support. On receipt of this message
-General Allenby drew in the Cavalry and endeavoured to bring direct
-support to the 5th Division.
-
-During the course of this operation General De Lisle, of the 2nd
-Cavalry Brigade, thought he saw a good opportunity to paralyse the
-further advance of the enemy's infantry by making a mounted attack on
-his flank. He formed up and advanced for this purpose, but was held up
-by wire about 500 yards from his objective, and the 9th Lancers and
-18th Hussars suffered severely in the retirement of the Brigade.
-
-The 19th Infantry Brigade, which had been guarding the Line of
-Communications, was brought up by rail to Valenciennes on the 22nd and
-23rd. On the morning of the 24th they were moved out to a position
-south of Quarouble to support the left flank of the Second Corps.
-
-With the assistance of the Cavalry Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien was enabled
-to effect his retreat to a new position; although, having two corps of
-the enemy on his front and one threatening his flank, he suffered great
-losses in doing so.
-
-At nightfall the position was occupied by the Second Corps to the west
-of Bavai, the First Corps to the right. The right was protected by the
-Fortress of Maubeuge, the left by the 19th Brigade in position between
-Jenlain and Bry, and the Cavalry on the outer flank.
-
-
-Tuesday, August 25
-
-4. The French were still retiring, and I had no support except such as
-was afforded by the Fortress of Maubeuge; and the determined attempts
-of the enemy to get round my left flank assured me that it was his
-intention to hem me against that place and surround me. I felt that
-not a moment must be lost in retiring to another position.
-
-I had every reason to believe that the enemy's forces were somewhat
-exhausted, and I knew that they had suffered heavy losses. I hoped,
-therefore, that his pursuit would not be too vigorous to prevent me
-effecting my object.
-
-The operation, however, was full of danger and difficulty, not only
-owing to the very superior force in my front, but also to the
-exhaustion of the troops.
-
-The retirement was recommenced in the early morning of the 25th to a
-position in the neighbourhood of Le Cateau, and rearguards were ordered
-to be clear of the Maubeuge--Bavai--Eth road by 5.30 a.m.
-
-Two Cavalry Brigades, with the Divisional Cavalry of the Second Corps,
-covered the movement of the Second Corps. The remainder of the Cavalry
-Division with the 19th Brigade, the whole under the command of General
-Allenby, covered the west flank.
-
-The 4th Division commenced its detrainment at Le Cateau on Sunday, the
-23rd, and by the morning of the 25th eleven battalions and a Brigade of
-Artillery with Divisional Staff were available for service.
-
-I ordered General Snow to move out to take up a position with his right
-south of Solesmes, his left resting on the Cambrai--Le Cateau road
-south of La Chaprie. In this position the Division rendered great help
-to the effective retirement of the Second and First Corps to the new
-position.
-
-Although the troops had been ordered to occupy the Cambrai--Le
-Cateau--Landrecies position, and the ground had, during the 25th, been
-partially prepared and entrenched, I had grave doubts--owing to the
-information I received as to the accumulating strength of the enemy
-against me--as to the wisdom of standing there to fight.
-
-Having regard to the continued retirement of the French on my right, my
-exposed left flank, the tendency of the enemy's western corps (II.) to
-envelop me, and, more than all, the exhausted condition of the troops,
-I determined to make a great effort to continue the retreat till I
-could put some substantial obstacle, such as the Somme or the Oise,
-between my troops and the enemy, and afford the former some opportunity
-of rest and reorganisation. Orders were, therefore, sent to the Corps
-Commanders to continue their retreat as soon as they possibly could
-towards the general line Vermand--St. Quentin--Ribemont.
-
-The Cavalry, under General Allenby, were ordered to cover the
-retirement.
-
-
-The Guards at Landrecies
-
-Throughout the 25th and far into the evening, the First Corps continued
-its march on Landrecies, following the road along the eastern border of
-the Forêt de Mormal, and arrived at Landrecies about 10 o'clock. I had
-intended that the Corps should come farther west so as to fill up the
-gap between Le Cateau and Landrecies, but the men were exhausted and
-could not get farther in without rest.
-
-The enemy, however, would not allow them this rest, and about 9.30 p.m.
-a report was received that the 4th Guards Brigade in Landrecies was
-heavily attacked by troops of the 9th German Army Corps who were coming
-through the forest on the north of the town. This brigade fought most
-gallantly and caused the enemy to suffer tremendous loss in issuing
-from the forest into the narrow street of the town. The loss has been
-estimated from reliable sources at from 700 to 1,000. At the same time
-information reached me from Sir Douglas Haig that his 1st Division was
-also heavily engaged south and east of Maroilles. I sent urgent
-messages to the Commander of the two French Reserve Divisions on my
-right to come up to the assistance of the First Corps, which they
-eventually did. Partly owing to this assistance but mainly to the
-skilful manner in which Sir Douglas Haig extricated his Corps from an
-exceptionally difficult position in the darkness of the night, they
-were able at dawn to resume their march south towards Wessigny on Guise.
-
-By about 6 p.m. the Second Corps had got into position with their right
-on Le Cateau, their left in the neighbourhood of Caudry, and the line
-of defence was continued thence by the 4th Division towards
-Seranvillers, the left being thrown back.
-
-During the fighting on the 24th and 25th the Cavalry became a good deal
-scattered, but by the early morning of the 26th General Allenby had
-succeeded in concentrating two brigades to the south of Cambrai.
-
-The 4th Division was placed under the orders of the General Officer
-Commanding the Second Army Corps.
-
-
-Wednesday, August 26
-
-On the 24th the French Cavalry Corps, consisting of three divisions,
-under General Sordêt, had been in billets north of Avesnes. On my way
-back from Bavai, which was my "Poste de Commandement" during the
-fighting of the 23rd and 24th, I visited General Sordêt, and earnestly
-requested his co-operation and support. He promised to obtain sanction
-from his Army Commander to act on my left flank, but said that his
-horses were too tired to move before the next day. Although he
-rendered me valuable assistance later on in the course of the
-retirement, he was unable for the reasons given to afford me any
-support on the most critical day of all, viz., the 26th.
-
-At daybreak it became apparent that the enemy was throwing the bulk of
-his strength against the left of the position occupied by the Second
-Corps and the 4th Division.
-
-At this time the guns of four German Army Corps were in position
-against them, and Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien reported to me that he
-judged it impossible to continue his retirement at daybreak (as
-ordered) in face of such an attack.
-
-I sent him orders to use his utmost endeavours to break off the action
-and retire at the earliest possible moment, as it was impossible for me
-to send him any support, the First Corps being at the moment incapable
-of movement.
-
-The French Cavalry Corps, under General Sordêt, was coming up on our
-left rear early in the morning, and I sent an urgent message to him to
-do his utmost to come up and support the retirement of my left flank;
-but, owing to the fatigue of his horses he found himself unable to
-intervene in any way.
-
-There had been no time to entrench the position properly, but the
-troops showed a magnificent front to the terrible fire which confronted
-them.
-
-The Artillery, although outmatched by at least four to one, made a
-splendid fight, and inflicted heavy losses on their opponents.
-
-At length it became apparent that, if complete annihilation was to be
-avoided, a retirement must be attempted; and the order was given to
-commence it about 3.30 p.m. The movement was covered with the most
-devoted intrepidity and determination by the Artillery, which had
-itself suffered heavily, and the fine work done by the Cavalry in the
-further retreat from the position assisted materially in the final
-completion of this most difficult and dangerous operation.
-
-Fortunately the enemy had himself suffered too heavily to engage in an
-energetic pursuit.
-
-
-I cannot close the brief account of this glorious stand of the British
-troops without putting on record my deep appreciation of the valuable
-services rendered by General Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien.
-
-I say without hesitation that the saving of the left wing of the Army
-under my command on the morning of the 26th August could never have
-been accomplished unless a commander of rare and unusual coolness,
-intrepidity, and determination had been present to personally conduct
-the operations.
-
-The retreat was continued far into the night of the 26th and through
-the 27th and 28th, on which date the troops halted on the line
-Noyon--Chauny--La Fère, having then thrown off the weight of the
-enemy's pursuit.
-
-On the 27th and 28th I was much indebted to General Sordêt and the
-French Cavalry Division which he commands for materially assisting my
-retirement and successfully driving back some of the enemy on Cambrai.
-
-General D'Amade also, with the 61st and 62nd French Reserve Divisions,
-moved down from the neighbourhood of Arras on the enemy's right flank
-and took much pressure off the rear of the British Forces.
-
-This closes the period covering the heavy fighting which commenced at
-Mons on Sunday afternoon, 23rd August, and which really constituted a
-four days' battle.
-
-At this point, therefore, I propose to close the present despatch.
-
-I deeply deplore the very serious losses which the British Forces have
-suffered in this great battle; but they were inevitable in view of the
-fact that the British Army--only two days after a concentration by
-rail--was called upon to withstand a vigorous attack of five German
-Army Corps.
-
-It is impossible for me to speak too highly of the skill evinced by the
-two General Officers commanding Army Corps; the self-sacrificing and
-devoted exertions of their Staffs; the direction of the troops by
-Divisional, Brigade, and Regimental Leaders; the command of the smaller
-units by their officers; and the magnificent fighting spirit displayed
-by non-commissioned officers and men.
-
-I wish particularly to bring to your Lordship's notice the admirable
-work done by the Royal Flying Corps under Sir David Henderson. Their
-skill, energy, and perseverance have been beyond all praise. They have
-furnished me with the most complete and accurate information which has
-been of incalculable value in the conduct of the operations. Fired at
-constantly both by friend and foe, and not hesitating to fly in every
-kind of weather, they have remained undaunted throughout.
-
-Further, by actually fighting in the air, they have succeeded in
-destroying five of the enemy's machines.
-
-I wish to acknowledge with deep gratitude the incalculable assistance I
-received from the General and Personal Staffs at Headquarters during
-this trying period.
-
-Lieutenant-General Sir Archibald Murray, Chief of the General Staff;
-Major-General Wilson, Sub-Chief of the General Staff; and all under
-them have worked day and night unceasingly with the utmost skill,
-self-sacrifice, and devotion; and the same acknowledgment is due by me
-to Brigadier-General Hon. W. Lambton, my Military Secretary, and the
-Personal Staff.
-
-In such operations as I have described, the work of the
-Quartermaster-General is of an extremely onerous nature. Major-General
-Sir William Robertson has met what appeared to be almost insuperable
-difficulties with his characteristic energy, skill, and determination;
-and it is largely owing to his exertions that the hardships and
-sufferings of the troops--inseparable from such operations--were not
-much greater.
-
-Major-General Sir Nevil Macready, the Adjutant-General, has also been
-confronted with most onerous and difficult tasks in connection with
-disciplinary arrangements and the preparation of casualty lists. He
-has been indefatigable in his exertions to meet the difficult
-situations which arose.
-
-I have not yet been able to complete the list of officers whose names I
-desire to bring to your Lordship's notice for services rendered during
-the period under review; and, as I understand it is of importance that
-this despatch should no longer be delayed, I propose to forward this
-list, separately, as soon as I can.
-
-I have the honour to be,
- Your Lordship's most obedient Servant,
- (Signed) J. D. P. FRENCH, Field-Marshal,
- Commander-in-Chief, British Forces in the Field.
-
-
-17th September, 1914.
-
-MY LORD,
-
-In continuation of my despatch of September 7th, I have the honour to
-report the further progress of the operations of the Forces under my
-command from August 28th.
-
-On that evening the retirement of the Force was followed closely by two
-of the enemy's cavalry columns, moving south-east from St. Quentin.
-
-
-Saturday, August 29
-
-The retreat in this part of the field was being covered by the 3rd and
-5th Cavalry Brigades. South of the Somme General Gough, with the 3rd
-Cavalry Brigade, threw back the Uhlans of the Guard with considerable
-loss.
-
-General Chetwode, with the 5th Cavalry Brigade, encountered the eastern
-column near Cerizy, moving south. The Brigade attacked and routed the
-column, the leading German regiment suffering very severe casualties
-and being almost broken up.
-
-The 7th French Army Corps was now in course of being railed up from the
-south to the east of Amiens. On the 29th it nearly completed its
-detrainment, and the French 6th Army got into position on my left, its
-right resting on Roye.
-
-The 5th French Army was behind the line of the Oise between La Fère and
-Guise.
-
-The pursuit of the enemy was very vigorous; some five or six German
-corps were on the Somme facing the 5th Army on the Oise. At least two
-corps were advancing towards my front, and were crossing the Somme east
-and west of Ham. Three or four more German corps were opposing the 6th
-French Army on my left.
-
-This was the situation at 1 o'clock on the 29th, when I received a
-visit from General Joffre at my headquarters.
-
-I strongly represented my position to the French Commander-in-Chief,
-who was most kind, cordial, and sympathetic, as he has always been. He
-told me that he had directed the 5th French Army on the Oise to move
-forward and attack the Germans on the Somme, with a view to checking
-pursuit. He also told me of the formation of the Sixth French Army on
-my left flank, composed of the 7th Army Corps, four Reserve Divisions,
-and Sordêt's Corps of Cavalry.
-
-I finally arranged with General Joffre to effect a further short
-retirement towards the line Compiègne--Soissons, promising him,
-however, to do my utmost to keep always within a day's march of him.
-
-In pursuance of this arrangement the British Forces retired to a
-position a few miles north of the line Compiègne--Soissons on the 29th.
-
-
-Change of Base
-
-The right flank of the German Army was now reaching a point which
-appeared seriously to endanger my line of communications with Havre. I
-had already evacuated Amiens, into which place a German reserve
-division was reported to have moved.
-
-Orders were given to change the base to St. Nazaire, and establish an
-advance base at Le Mans. This operation was well carried out by the
-Inspector-General of Communications.
-
-In spite of a severe defeat inflicted upon the Guard 10th and Guard
-Reserve Corps of the German Army by the 1st and 3rd French Corps on the
-right of the 5th Army, it was not part of General Joffre's plan to
-pursue this advantage, and a general retirement on to the line of the
-Marne was ordered, to which the French forces in the more eastern
-theatre were directed to conform.
-
-A new Army (the 9th) had been formed from three corps in the south by
-General Joffre, and moved into the space between the right of the 5th
-and left of the 4th Armies.
-
-Whilst closely adhering to his strategic conception to draw the enemy
-on at all points until a favourable situation was created from which to
-assume the offensive, General Joffre found it necessary to modify from
-day to day the methods by which he sought to attain this object, owing
-to the development of the enemy's plans and changes in the general
-situation.
-
-In conformity with the movements of the French Forces, my retirement
-continued practically from day to day. Although we were not severely
-pressed by the enemy, rearguard actions took place continually.
-
-
-South of Compiègne
-
-On the 1st September, when retiring from the thickly wooded country to
-the south of Compiègne, the 1st Cavalry Brigade was overtaken by some
-German cavalry. They momentarily lost a Horse Artillery battery, and
-several officers and men were killed and wounded. With the help,
-however, of some detachments from the 3rd Corps operating on their
-left, they not only recovered their own guns, but succeeded in
-capturing twelve of the enemy's.
-
-Similarly, to the eastward, the 1st Corps, retiring south, also got
-into some very difficult forest country, and a somewhat severe
-rearguard action ensued at Villers-Cotterets, in which the 4th Guards
-Brigade suffered considerably.
-
-On September 3rd the British Forces were in position south of the Marne
-between Lagny and Signy-Signets. Up to this time I had been requested
-by General Joffre to defend the passages of the river as long as
-possible, and to blow up the bridges in my front. After I had made the
-necessary dispositions, and the destruction of the bridges had been
-effected, I was asked by the French Commander-in-Chief to continue my
-retirement to a point some 12 miles in rear of the position I then
-occupied, with a view to taking up a second position behind the Seine.
-This retirement was duly carried out. In the meantime the enemy had
-thrown bridges and crossed the Marne in considerable force, and was
-threatening the Allies all along the line of the British Forces and the
-5th and 9th French Armies. Consequently several small outpost actions
-took place.
-
-
-Saturday, September 5
-
-On Saturday, September 5th, I met the French Commander-in-Chief at his
-request, and he informed me of his intention to take the offensive
-forthwith, as he considered conditions were very favourable to success.
-
-General Joffre announced to me his intention of wheeling up the left
-flank of the 6th Army, pivoting on the Marne and directing it to move
-on the Ourcq; cross and attack the flank of the 1st German Army, which
-was then moving in a south-easterly direction east of that river.
-
-
-The Advance
-
-He requested me to effect a change of front to my right--my left
-resting on the Marne, and my right on the 5th Army--to fill the gap
-between that army and the 6th. I was then to advance against the enemy
-in my front and join in the general offensive movement.
-
-These combined movements practically commenced on Sunday, September
-6th, at sunrise; and on that day it may be said that a great battle
-opened on a front extending from Ermenonville, which was just in front
-of the left flank of the 6th French Army, through Lizy on the Marne,
-Mauperthuis, which was about the British centre Courtecon, which was
-the left of the 5th French Army; to Esternay and Charleville, the left
-of the 9th Army under General Foch, and so along the front of the 9th,
-4th and 3rd French Armies to a point north of the fortress of Verdun.
-
-This battle, in so far as the 6th French Army, the British Army, the
-5th French Army, and the 9th French Army were concerned, may be said to
-have concluded on the evening of September 10th, by which time the
-Germans had been driven back to the line Soissons--Reims, with a loss
-of thousands of prisoners, many guns, and enormous masses of transport.
-
-About the 3rd September the enemy appears to have changed his plans and
-to have determined to stop his advance South direct upon Paris; for on
-the 4th September air reconnaissances showed that his main columns were
-moving in a south-easterly direction generally east of a line drawn
-through Nanteuil and Lizy on the Ourcq. On the 5th September several
-of these columns were observed to have crossed the Marne; whilst German
-troops, which were observed moving south-east up the left bank of the
-Ourcq on the 4th, were now reported to be halted and facing that river.
-Heads of the enemy's columns were seen crossing at Changis, La Ferté,
-Nogent, Château Thierry, and Mezy.
-
-Considerable German columns of all arms were seen to be converging on
-Montmirail, whilst before sunset large bivouacs of the enemy were
-located in the neighbourhood of Coulommiers, south of Rebais, La
-Ferté-Gauchér, and Dagny.
-
-I should conceive it to have been about noon on the 6th September,
-after the British Forces had changed their front to the right and
-occupied the line Jouy-Le Chatel--Faremoutiers--Villeneuve La Comte,
-and the advance of the 6th French Army north of the Marne towards the
-Ourcq became apparent, that the enemy realised the powerful threat that
-was being made against the flank of his columns moving south-east, and
-began the great retreat which opened the battle above referred to.
-
-
-
-_Here follows the account of the Battle of the Marne._
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX II
-
-
-ORDER OF THE DAY
-
-AUGUST 29TH, 1914.
-
- _Issued to the Troops under his command by the General
- Officer Commanding the Second Corps._
-
-
-As it is improbable the troops of the 2nd Army Corps understand the
-operations of the last few days, commencing on the 21st instant with
-the advance to the line of the Mons Canal and ending with a retirement
-to our present position on the River Oise about Noyon, the Commander of
-the Corps desires to let troops know that the object was to delay the
-advance of a far superior force of the enemy to enable our Allies to
-conduct operations elsewhere. This object, owing to the skilful
-handling of the Commanders of units and the magnificent fighting spirit
-shown by all ranks against overwhelming odds, and in spite of very
-heavy casualties, was achieved, and the French Army is now reported to
-be advancing.
-
-That the losses were not greater in the retirement from the
-Hancourt--Caudry--Beaumont--Le Cateau position on the 26th instant is
-due largely to the support given by French troops, chiefly General
-Sordêt's Cavalry Corps, operating on the West flank of the British
-troops, and we may well be thankful to our gallant comrades in arms.
-
-General Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien, whilst regretting the terribly heavy
-casualties and the weary forced marches, in which it has been
-impossible to distribute the necessary amount of food, begs to thank
-all ranks and to express his admiration of the grand fighting and
-determined spirit shown by all ranks, and his pride in being allowed to
-command such a splendid force.
-
-He is sure that whenever it is thought necessary to again assume the
-offensive the troops will be as pleased as he will himself.
-
-The following messages have been received from the Commander-in-Chief,
-Field-Marshal Sir John French, to publish to the troops of the 2nd Army
-Corps--the first dated 25th August.
-
-
-(1)
-
-"_Special Army Order._
-
-"I have received the following telegram from the Secretary of State for
-War:
-
-"'LONDON, 25-8-14.
-
-"'Congratulate troops on their splendid work. We are all proud as
-usual of them.'
-
-"In making this message known to the troops under my command, I wish to
-express to them my heartfelt thanks for, and my profound admiration of,
-their magnificent bearing and conduct during the fighting of the last
-two days.
-
-"The most difficult operation which an army can be called upon to carry
-out was rendered necessary by the general strategic situation of the
-allied forces extending over an enormous front.
-
-"I can only tell you that it was most brilliantly and successfully
-performed. This happy result was entirely due to the splendid spirit,
-efficient training, and magnificent discipline of regimental officers
-and men, and the fine skill displayed by the higher commanders in the
-direction of the troops."
-
-
-(2)
-
-"28TH AUGUST, 1914.
-
-"A a 67. Following message from Lord Kitchener to C.-in-C. will be
-communicated to all troops. Begins: 'The First Lord asks me to
-transmit to you the following message from the Home Fleet:--"The
-officers and men of the Grand Fleet wish to express to their comrades
-of the Army admiration of the magnificent stand made against great
-odds, and wish them the brilliant success which the Fleet feels sure
-awaits their further efforts." Ends.
-
-
-(3)
-
-"No. 28 G. Following from Lord Kitchener to C.-in-C. Begins: 'Your F
-37. Your troops have done marvellously well under their Commanders
-during severe attacks which they have had to withstand practically
-alone. Express to them all the thanks of the King and Government.'
-Ends."
-
-
-
- PRINTED BY CASSELL & COMPANY, LIMITED, LA BELLE SAUVAGE, LONDON, E.C.
- F.40.816
-
-
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF COUNTRY FROM MONS TO PARIS]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Retreat from Mons, by A. Corbett-Smith
-
-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: The Retreat from Mons
- By one who shared in it
-
-Author: A. Corbett-Smith
-
-Release Date: July 5, 2017 [EBook #55048]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RETREAT FROM MONS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-front"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-front.jpg" alt="GENERAL SIR H. SMITH-DORRIEN. From the Painting by Arnold Mountford." />
-<br />
-GENERAL SIR H. SMITH-DORRIEN. <br />
-<i>From the Painting by Arnold Mountford.</i>
-</p>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
-The<br />
-Retreat from Mons
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t3">
-BY ONE WHO SHARED IN IT
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-BY
-A. CORBETT-SMITH
-(<i>Major, R.F.A.</i>)
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>With Three Plates and Map</i>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- For who is he, whose chin is but enrich'd<br />
- With one appearing hair, that will not follow<br />
- These cull'd and choice-drawn cavaliers to France?<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-CASSELL AND COMPANY, LTD<br />
-London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne<br />
-1916
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-To
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-GENERAL SIR H. L. SMITH-DORRIEN,<br />
-G.C.M.G., G.C.B., D.S.O., ETC.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-DEAR GENERAL SMITH-DORRIEN,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When, some few months ago, you honoured
-me by your acceptance of this dedication I had
-in mind to make a single volume which should
-trace the course of the War during the period of
-your command of the Second Army, the
-unforgettable days from Mons to Ypres.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Since then I have found that there is one
-phase of the operations which has gripped the
-imagination of the public more than any other
-event of the past two years: the "Retreat from
-Mons." It is, indeed, almost incredible how little
-the people know of this, and how splendidly they
-respond to the telling of the story.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it seems to me that the story can never
-be told as it should be. Only those who actually
-experienced the horror and the splendour of those
-ten days could hope to tell it, and for them the
-facts are blurred and distorted by the nightmare
-through which they passed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still, I am rashly making the attempt, and in
-doing so I try to write of the big, human side of
-things. For it is the trivial, homely incidents
-in the daily life of the British soldier, and the
-stories of noble devotion and chivalry of gallant
-gentlemen like Francis Grenfell and Bradbury,
-which fire the imagination. I know that you will
-understand and appreciate my motives.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the rest, should the public be kind to this
-trivial volume I shall hope later to continue the
-narrative as I had originally intended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Will you, then, accept my book, not in tribute
-of a Command which must remain indelibly scored
-in letters of gold on the page of our country's
-history so long as Britain endures, but as a memory
-of the two or three years of peace when I was
-privileged to work with you and of the year of
-war when I had the honour of serving, one of that
-"band of brothers," in your Command?
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-I am,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Very faithfully yours,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A. CORBETT-SMITH.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-THE MIDDLE TEMPLE,<br />
- LONDON.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-AUTHOR'S ACKNOWLEDGMENT
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I tender my very grateful thanks to GENERAL SIR
-HORACE SMITH-DORRIEN for his kindness in reading
-the proof-sheets of the book and for several most
-valuable items of information.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My thanks are also due to CAPTAIN C. T. ATKINSON,
-of the Historical Section, Committee of
-Imperial Defence, for his courteous help in the
-task of compiling the Roll of Honour. Also to
-the SECRETARY, K.A. Institution, for the loan of
-material for the same purpose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have availed myself to some extent of the
-researches of MR. HILAIRE BELLOC in my estimates
-in Chapter V.; while my details of the German
-Army are taken from German sources, "Deutsche
-Land- und Seemacht," by Rabenau, and other
-volumes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To my comrades-in-arms (few, alas! remain),
-whose deeds and experiences have contributed to
-the writing of the story, I hold out a hand of
-greeting. I salute in reverence the immortal souls
-of the gallant dead.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-A. C.-S.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-CONTENTS
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap00b">Roll of Honour</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-CHAPTER
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- &nbsp;1. <a href="#chap01">Mobilisation</a><br />
- &nbsp;2. <a href="#chap02">The Sailing of the Force</a><br />
- &nbsp;3. <a href="#chap03">The Landing of the Force</a><br />
- &nbsp;4. <a href="#chap04">Up Country</a><br />
- &nbsp;5. <a href="#chap05">The Marshalling of the Armies</a><br />
- &nbsp;6. <a href="#chap06">Mons</a><br />
- &nbsp;7. <a href="#chap07">Mons (<i>continued</i>)</a><br />
- &nbsp;8. <a href="#chap08">The Retreat Begins</a><br />
- &nbsp;9. <a href="#chap09">The Second Day</a><br />
- 10. <a href="#chap10">An Interlude</a><br />
- 11. <a href="#chap11">Wednesday, the 26th of August</a><br />
- 12. <a href="#chap12">Wednesday, the 26th of August (<i>continued</i>)</a><br />
- 13. <a href="#chap13">The Retreat Continues</a><br />
- 14. <a href="#chap14">Past Compiègne</a><br />
- 15. <a href="#chap15">The Final Stages</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap16">Appendix I.</a><br />
-<br />
-<a href="#chap17">Appendix II.</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-LIST OF PLATES
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-front">General Sir H. Smith-Dorrien</a> . . . <i>Frontispiece</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-080">Field-Marshal Viscount French</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-160">General Sir Douglas Haig</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-256t">Map of Country from Mons to Paris</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap00b"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
- The Roll of Honour
-<br />
- OF THE
-<br />
- FIRST EXPEDITIONARY FORGE<br />
-</h3>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>General Officer Commanding-in-Chief the British Forces:</i><br />
- FIELD-MARSHAL SIR J. D. P. FRENCH.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Chief of the General Staff:</i><br />
- LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR A. J. MURRAY.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Adjutant-General:</i><br />
- MAJOR-GENERAL SIR C. F. N. MACREADY.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Quartermaster-General:</i><br />
- MAJOR-GENERAL SIR W. R. ROBERTSON.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- <i>FIRST ARMY CORPS</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>General Officer Commanding-in-Chief</i>&mdash;<br />
- LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR DOUGLAS HAIG.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 1st DIVISION<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>General Officer Commanding</i>&mdash;MAJOR-GENERAL S. H. LOMAX.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 1st Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL F. I. MAXSE.<br />
- 1st Batt. Coldstream Guards.<br />
- 1st Batt. R. Highlanders.<br />
- 1st Batt. Scots Guards.<br />
- 2nd Batt. R. Munster Fusiliers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 2nd Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL E. S. BULFIN.<br />
- 2nd Batt. R. Sussex Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Northampton Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. N. Lancs. Regt.<br />
- 2nd Batt. K. R. Rifle Corps<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 3rd Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL H. J. S. LANDON.<br />
- 1st Batt. R. W. Surrey Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Gloucester Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. S. Wales Borderers.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Welsh Regt.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- CAVALRY (attached)<br />
- C Squadron 15th Hussars.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ENGINEERS<br />
- 23rd and 26th Field Companies.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ARTILLERY<br />
- R.F.A. Batteries&mdash;113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 46, 51, 54;<br />
- (Howitzer) 30, 40, 57.<br />
- <i>Heavy Battery R.G.A.</i>&mdash;26.<br />
- An Ammunition Column and an Ammunition Park.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 2nd DIVISION<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>General Officer Commanding</i>&mdash;MAJOR-GENERAL C. C. MONRO.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 4th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade-Commander</i>&mdash;GENERAL R. SCOTT-KERR.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Grenadier Guards<br />
- 3rd Batt. Coldstream Guards<br />
- 2nd Batt. Coldstream Guards<br />
- lst Batt. Irish Guards.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 5th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL R. C. B. HAKING.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 2nd Batt. Worcester Regt.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Highland L.I.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Oxford and Bucks L.I.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Connaught Rangers<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 6th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL R. H. DAVIES.<br />
- 1st Batt. Liverpool Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. R. Berks Regt.<br />
- 2nd Batt. S. Staffs. Regt.<br />
- lst Batt. K. R. Rifle<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- CAVALRY (attached)<br />
- B Squadron 15th Hussars.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ENGINEERS<br />
- 5th and 11th Field Companies.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ARTILLERY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>R.F.A. Batteries</i>&mdash;22, 50, 70, 15, 48, 71, 9, 16, 17;<br />
- (Howitzer) 47, 56, 60.<br />
- <i>Heavy Battery R.G.A.</i>&mdash;35.<br />
- An Ammunition Column and an Ammunition Park.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- CAVALRY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- <i>A Division</i> (<i>Four Brigades</i>)<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- General Officer Commanding&mdash;MAJOR-GENERAL E. H. H. ALLENBY.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 1st Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL C. J. BRIGGS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 2nd Dragoon Guards.<br />
- 5th Dragoon Guards.<br />
- 11th Hussars.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 2nd Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL H. DE B. DE LISLE.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 4th Dragoon Guards.<br />
- 9th Lancers.<br />
- 18th Hussars.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 3rd Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL H. DE LA POER GOUGH.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 4th Hussars.<br />
- 5th Lancers.<br />
- 16th Lancers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 4th Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL HON. C. E. BINGHAM.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- Household Cavalry (composite Regiment).<br />
- 6th Dragoon Guards.<br />
- 3rd Hussars.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- And&mdash;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- the 5th Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL SIR P. W. CHETWODE.<br />
- 12th Lancers.<br />
- 20th Hussars.<br />
- 2nd Dragoons.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL HORSE ARTILLERY<br />
- <i>Batteries</i> "D," "E," "I," "J," "L."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- SECOND ARMY CORPS<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>General Officer Commanding-in-Chief</i>&mdash;<br />
- GENERAL SIR H. L. SMITH-DORRIEN.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 3rd DIVISION<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>General Officer Commanding</i>&mdash;MAJOR-GENERAL H. I. W. HAMILTON.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 7th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL F. W. N. McCRACHEN.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 3rd Batt. Worcester Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Wilts Regt.<br />
- 2nd Batt. S. Lancs. Regt.<br />
- 2nd Batt. R. Irish Rifles.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 8th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL B. J. C. DORAN.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 2nd Batt. R. Scots.<br />
- 4th Batt. Middlesex Regt.<br />
- 2nd Batt. R. Irish Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Gordon Highlanders.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 9th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL F. C. SHAW.<br />
- 1st Batt. Northumberland Fusiliers.<br />
- 1st Batt. Lincolnshire Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. R. Scots Fusiliers.<br />
- 4th Batt. R. Fusiliers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- CAVALRY (attached)<br />
- A Squadron 15th Hussars.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ENGINEERS<br />
- 56th and 57th Field Companies.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ARTILLERY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>R.F.A. Batteries</i>&mdash;107, 108, 109, 6, 23, 49, 29, 41, 45;<br />
- (Howitzer) 128, 129, 130.<br />
- <i>Heavy Battery R. G. A.</i>&mdash;48.<br />
- An Ammunition Column and an Ammunition Park.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 5th DIVISION<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>General Officer Commanding</i>&mdash;MAJOR-GENERAL SIR C. FERGUSSON.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 13th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL G. J. CUTHBERT.<br />
- 2nd Batt. K. O. Scottish Borderers.<br />
- 1st Batt. R.W. Kent Regt.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Yorks L.I.<br />
- 2nd Batt. W. Riding Regt.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 14th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL S. P. ROLT.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Suffolk Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Duke of Cornwall's L.I.<br />
- 1st Batt. East Surrey Regt.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Manchester Regt.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 15th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL COUNT A. E. W. GLEICHEN.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 1st Batt. Norfolk Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Cheshire Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Bedford Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Dorset Regt.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- CAVALRY (attached)<br />
- A Squadron 19th Hussars.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ENGINEERS<br />
- 17th and 59th Field Companies.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ARTILLERY<br />
- <i>R.F.A. Batteries</i>&mdash;11, 52, 80, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124;<br />
- (Howitzer) 37, 61, 65.<br />
- <i>Heavy Battery R.G.A.</i>&mdash;108.<br />
- An Ammunition Column and an Ammunition Park.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 19th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;MAJOR-GENERAL L. G. DRUMMOND.<br />
- 2nd Batt. R. Welsh Fusiliers.<br />
- 1st Batt. Middlesex Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Scottish Rifles.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- ROYAL FLYING CORPS<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- Aeroplane Squadrons Nos. 2, 3, 4 and 5.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- ARMY SERVICE CORPS<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- Horsed and Mechanical Transport.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- There came into line at Le Cateau on August 25th the&mdash;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 4th DIVISION<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>General Officer Commanding</i>&mdash;MAJOR-GENERAL T. D. O. SNOW.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 10th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- Brigade Commander&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL J. A. L. HALDANE.<br />
- 1st Batt. R. Warwickshire Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. R. Irish Fusiliers.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Seaforth Highlanders.<br />
- 2nd Batt. R. Dublin Fusiliers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 11th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL A. G. HUNTER-WESTON.<br />
- 1st Batt. Somersetshire L.I.<br />
- 1st Batt. Hampshire Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. E. Lancs. Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Rifle Brigade.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- 12th Infantry Brigade<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Brigade Commander</i>&mdash;BRIGADIER-GENERAL H. F. M. WILSON.<br />
- 1st Batt. R. Lancs. Regt.<br />
- 2nd Batt. R. Inniskilling Fusiliers.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Lancashire Fusiliers.<br />
- 2nd Batt. Essex Regt.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- CAVALRY (attached)<br />
- B Squadron 19th Hussars.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ENGINEERS<br />
- 7th and 9th Field Companies.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- ROYAL ARTILLERY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>R.F.A. Batteries</i>&mdash;39, 68, 88 (xiv. Brigade); 125, 126, 127 (xxix<br />
- Brigade); 27, 134, 135 (xxxii. Brigade); 31, 35, 55 (xxxvii. Brigade).<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Heavy Battery R.G.A.</i>&mdash;31.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LINES OF COMMUNICATION AND ARMY TROOPS<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- 1st Batt. Devonshire Regt.<br />
- 1st Batt. Cameron Highlanders<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-The Retreat from Mons
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I
-<br />
-MOBILISATION
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>Now all the youth of England are on fire,<br />
- And silken dalliance in the wardrobe lies;<br />
- Now thrive the armourers, and honour's thought<br />
- Reigns solely in the breast of every man.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-August 5th, 1914! "Who would have
-dreamed of such a thing!" exclaimed the big
-majority. "So it has come at last," said the
-small minority.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Broadly speaking, there you have the
-country's opinion during those now dimly
-remembered days which followed immediately
-upon Germany's throwing down of the gauntlet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Officers and men of our once-upon-a-time
-professional Army did not bother very much
-about it either way. War was their job.
-Active service was to be welcomed as a picnic
-change from the monotony of soldiering in
-England. Also, to the man keen on his
-profession (and since the Boer War such men have
-been steadily increasing in numbers) it meant
-the chance of promotion and of showing what
-he was made of.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A war, even long foreseen, must inevitably
-come as a surprise when it does actually break
-out, and this one was no exception. During
-the last week of that July there were very, very
-few in Aldershot who felt certain that the hour
-was at last striking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Aldershot was ready for it. For many
-a long year past Aldershot had existed for the
-Army. Latterly it had been the forge where
-Britain's little striking force, the spear-head of
-her armies, had been welded, sharpened and
-tested, made ready for instant launching. So,
-with the Fleet, were we prepared to fulfil our
-pact with France; or, if the summons came,
-to stand by Belgium.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Aldershot existed for war, and the comings
-and goings of troops passed almost unnoticed.
-True, it now became increasingly difficult to
-find rooms in the town, and the local outfitters
-promptly set to work to reap a golden harvest
-from the fantastic prices which they put upon
-war gear of all kinds, but that was all&mdash;at least
-to the eye of a casual observer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was Fritz, the doyen of Aldershot
-hairdressers. I wonder how much he learned
-in those days of the movements of units. Fritz
-had been an institution in the camps when
-present-day G.O.C.'s, grizzled and weather-beaten,
-had, as junior subalterns, sought his
-advice upon the training of incipient
-moustaches. Fritz remembered them all, could
-instantly reel off details of their careers, their
-regiments or stations, from the time they had
-left Aldershot until they had returned in senior
-commands. All duly pigeonholed in Berlin
-together with seemingly trivial incidents in
-their private lives.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Later on, sometime at the Aisne, rumour
-came round that Herr Fritz had been up to
-mischief of a more serious nature and that he
-had been duly lodged in prison, or shot, or
-something equally suitable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those were happy if very strenuous days at
-Aldershot that week or so before the embarkation.
-Men talked very little about the future,
-everyone was really too busy. Thoughts
-naturally flew back to the South African War when
-they did talk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nobody was particularly keen on that,"
-was the generally expressed opinion; "nobody
-wanted to kill the Boers; too one-sided.
-This&mdash;oh! this is the real thing. We've got our
-work cut out."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The very day after the mobilisation the
-Officers' Mess showed signs of packing up. It
-reminded one so much of the third act in <i>The
-Second in Command</i>. Two notices in the hall
-brought things home:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Officers may wear Service dress or blue
-undress jackets in Mess."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Officers are particularly requested to pay
-their mess bills before leaving."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Packing-cases and parcels began to drift in
-and lie about: dozens of telegrams passed in
-and out: a smaller variety of dishes appeared
-at luncheon and dinner: the regimental band
-came and played to us every night (the cheerier
-spirits all took a hand at conducting, especially
-rag-time).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Everybody had his job, and nobody knew
-what anyone else was doing. Right at the
-beginning we experienced a curious feeling of
-secrecy. You would see an officer at lunch
-and miss him at dinner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh yes! I believe he has gone this afternoon,"
-someone remarks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"When are you off?" Colonel X. would
-say to an officer in a moment of forgetfulness,
-hastily adding, "No, I don't want to know&mdash;but,
-mind you pay your mess bill before you go."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This secrecy of movement was certainly the
-most striking feature of those early days: that,
-and the splendid organisation. We have got
-accustomed to it since, but at the time, and
-to men used to the happy-go-lucky methods
-of this dear, lovable, muddle-headed old
-country of ours, that organisation struck one
-as amazing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On August 5th every C.O. was handed a
-file of documents. In these were given the
-most precise directions as to times, places and
-dates when his unit was to leave Aldershot.
-For instance:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Train No. 463Y will arrive at siding B at
-12.35 A.M., August 10th.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will complete loading by 3.40 A.M.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This train will leave siding C at 9.45 A.M.,
-August 10th.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You will march on to the platform at
-9.30 A.M. and complete your entraining by 9.40."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And I believe it is a fact that every train
-left five minutes ahead of its scheduled time.
-The London and South Western Railway was
-given sixty hours in which to send to Southampton
-350 troop-trains. They did it in
-forty-five hours. "Some" hustle! The astonishing
-efficiency of it all, and the admirable
-co-operation between military and civil authorities.
-I very much doubt if there were more than
-two officers of the Staff at Aldershot H.Q. who
-knew details of the intended movements. Fritz
-must have been annoyed. C.O.'s, and other
-individual officers, who knew when their own
-unit was timed for departure, entered splendidly
-into the spirit of the game and loyally kept the
-information to themselves; would not even tell
-their people, nor their best girls.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One day the King came down. The visit was
-as secret as everything else. Each unit received
-about a quarter of an hour's warning of His
-Majesty's approach, and the men turned out
-of their tents or broke off their work to line
-up by the road. A few words of "good-bye,
-and good luck" to the men, a warm hand-clasp
-to the officers, three cheers, and the Royal car
-slipped forward to the next unit. One could
-hear the ripple of cheering flow round the camps
-as His Majesty passed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the way, it is a little curious how, from
-the very beginning, there have been just three
-words used by everyone in bidding
-"good-bye." "Good-bye, and good luck." A kind
-of spontaneous, universal formula. Officers
-used it, the men, mothers, wives and sweethearts.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Good-bye, and good luck" to our sailors<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(It's a big debt we owe you to-day),<br />
- "Good-bye, and good luck" to our soldiers<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Some day we shall hope to repay).<br />
- Though anxious the hearts left behind you,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And a tear from the eye seems to fall,<br />
- Yet&mdash;"good-bye"&mdash;God be with you, "good luck attend you,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"Good-bye, and good luck to you all"&mdash;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-as the refrain of a popular song had it later.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Impressions of those few hurried days are
-blurred. In a sense one had been through
-it all many times before. It differed but
-little from moving station or preparing for
-manoeuvres. And yet there was something of
-the glamour of an unknown future before one:
-an instinctive feeling that this was the end of
-soldiering as we had known it. Not that
-anyone dreamed of the war lasting beyond Christmas;
-there are no pessimists in the Army. We
-were all at school breaking up for the holidays,
-and I think that just about sums up the
-situation as we saw it at Aldershot. The unknown
-future was more on the lines of "Shall we get
-any skating?" "Will there be some good
-shows at the theatres?" "What sort of fun
-will the Pytchley give us?" "Shall I be able
-to get in the Hunt Ball?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so one has little enough to say about
-the days of mobilisation and packing up.
-Besides, quite enough has already been written
-to satisfy an interested public. One little
-adventure, however, seems worth recording.
-It befell a certain Gunner captain who was
-detailed to conduct a draft of men from one
-unit to another. The yarn has the merit of
-being true in every particular. It may form
-a small chapter to itself.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-A TOURING COMPANY
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Putting two and two together," said the
-A.S.C. major, "I imagine that you're to take
-this draft on to Portsmouth and hand over to
-the O.C. of the company down there."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Why a Gunner captain should have to
-conduct a draft of Field Gunners to a place like
-Portsmouth and hand them over to the tender
-mercies of an A.S.C. Company Commander, I
-couldn't imagine. Nor indeed why a Gunner
-should take his instructions from an A.S.C. major
-at all. But the Divisional C.R.A. had
-sent me up to him with the remark, "It looks
-as though you ought to report there," and
-that was all about it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mobilisation is responsible for a good many
-queer happenings, and here at Aldershot on
-the third day of it most men were rather at
-sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even in those few hours one had learned
-not to ask questions. There was no objection
-to the asking, but the answer was usually a
-vacant, far-away look over the shoulder and
-"Eenteenth Brigade Office? Oh, it's over
-there"; and a wave of the arm would
-comprehensively include Farnborough, Deepcut
-and the Town Station.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And that was how the trouble began. If
-only the A.S.C. major had exercised a little
-imagination and made five out of his addition
-sum: if only he had read his own instructions
-a little more carefully (although we didn't know
-that till afterwards), a draft of tired Gunners
-would not have spent the next week trailing
-about the South of England looking for an
-A.S.C. company which didn't want them, and
-their officer would not have received a black
-mark which nearly damned his future chances
-at the very outset. But that by the way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The men had their breakfast at three
-this morning," and the cheery little subaltern,
-who had brought the draft down from Newcastle,
-saluted and discreetly made himself still
-smaller by vanishing hastily round the nearest
-corner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I took my railway warrant and went out to
-have a look at the draft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A fresh-looking lot they were; young, most
-of them, averaging about twenty-three years
-old; special reservists the senior sergeant told
-me. The few old hands, who sadly needed a
-shave and a wash, showed how young the rest
-of them were. I didn't take much stock of
-them, then. One doesn't when it's just a
-conducting job of a few hours, handing over, and
-back to Headquarters right away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men stood to attention, picked up their
-kits, and, with a "Fours left," we were off to
-the station down the shimmering, dancing,
-sandy roads of the Aldershot camps. The
-A.S.C. major returned to his ledgers and more
-arithmetic, and the cheery subaltern reclined
-at lordly ease in a Gunner Mess arm-chair,
-with a tinkling glass of gin and ginger beer
-at his elbow, and discussed the striking results
-of the previous day's battle in the North
-Sea&mdash;which had not taken place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The station-master, who didn't look as
-worried as he felt, touched his cap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A local to &mdash;&mdash;, then change and go on
-to Reigate" (was it Reigate? I forget now,
-one visited so many out-of-the-way places),
-"and from there you'll probably get a through
-train to Portsmouth. If there isn't room in
-the train you can always turn people out."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Visions of burly, homespun-clad farmers
-and comfortable market-women being turned
-out, protesting, by a mere Gunner captain
-danced through my brain. Actions for assault
-and battery, damages, bail, prison.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How an if they will not turn out?" said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And then I realised. This was War, red
-War; and Great Britain was mobilising. The
-needs of the State were paramount.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You shall bid them turn out in the
-Prince's name," and, unlike Dogberry, shall
-see that you are obeyed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And I made myself two inches taller
-because after all a Gunner captain was
-somebody in the world now. And people looked
-with a new interest at the lads in khaki and
-began to realise, perhaps for the first time,
-that they would have to count on the British
-Army even though it were "such a little one."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To do the good folk justice there was never
-a word of protest at the idea of having to turn
-out. And we had to invite them to do so a
-good many times before the company finished
-its tour of the Southern ports. Really it might
-have been a railway in Germany from the way
-the civilians gave road to the uniform. This
-change of attitude was certainly a vivid contrast
-to the days&mdash;last week was it?&mdash;when a man
-in His Majesty's uniform was looked at askance
-in crowded street and bar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At Reigate, where we had to wait an hour,
-a bombardier, one of the old hands, begged
-leave to visit a certain hotel outside the station
-to buy some bread and cheese.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was a man who hardly gave the appearance
-of being bread-and-cheese hungry, if you
-quite take my meaning, and the glassy stare
-with which this ancient tried to fix me augured
-ill for discipline if there were many others in the
-draft like him. Permission was refused. It
-was a trivial point gained but it had its consequences.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Portsmouth was reached in some five
-hours; and twenty minutes' march brought
-us to the A.S.C. barracks where a hot dinner
-would cheer us all; for I had remembered
-to send a telegram <i>en route</i> to tell them to
-expect us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were received with cordiality by a
-decrepit old store-keeper, and the stables' cat.
-Otherwise the barracks looked as though an
-army had lately sacked the place from floor to
-basement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men looked glum, and there was more
-than a hint of a move to a near-by hotel for
-"bread and cheese." Well, they were only
-young reservists and discipline was an almost
-unknown quantity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But dinner had to materialise somehow.
-So, demanding the keys of the castle from the
-unwilling seneschal, the senior sergeant, the
-bombardier, the stables' cat and myself started
-on a tour of inspection.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Good! The kitchen contained a sack of
-flour and most of a sheep. Apparently the
-sheep was intended to last the decrepit servitor
-and his struggling family for the rest of the
-week. But we paid no heed to tearful
-entreaties and ruthlessly tore the meat away from
-their very mouths.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is War," said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Soon dinner was well on the way, blankets
-were found for the men, and off I went to
-report to Headquarters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-H.Q. "received me most politely," as
-Harry Fragson used to sing, and didn't think
-they wanted me nor my company for any
-performance in Portsmouth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come back to-morrow morning," said
-H.Q., "and we'll tell you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The next day. "Oh, yes!" said H.Q.,
-"you're Field Gunners, you're evidently sent
-here for Hilsea (two miles out): you'd better
-move on at once."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Parade with kits in half an hour," I
-ordered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Merrily we marched forth from the castle
-gates. Were we not wanted at Hilsea?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A cyclist orderly threw himself, panting,
-from his machine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"H.Q.'s compliments and will you please
-report there at once."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Halt! Fours about! Quick march!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-H.Q. again received me most politely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, you're not to go to Hilsea. You've
-evidently got to join the Eenty-eenth
-A.S.C. Company which has gone on to Bristol. You'll
-just catch the 5.0 train if you're sharp."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We're to go to Bristol," said I to the
-senior sergeant, "and you've got to get a
-move on or we'll miss the train."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I've heard tell of Bristol," he ruminated;
-"nice place, so my wife's cousin's husband
-used to say. He did tell as how&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But I cut the soliloquy short and got the
-draft out of the castle again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few minutes later peaceable citizens fled
-into doorways and up courts, electric cars pulled
-up short with a grinding of brakes, policemen
-held up traffic. The R.F.A. draft approached
-at a steady double.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where's the fire?" yelled some.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Germans have captured the 'Hampshire
-Arms,'" said others.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It's for a cinema show," screamed a
-ragged urchin. Everyone gave us kindly
-encouragement, and girls waved merrily as we
-flew past. The bombardier, who was on the
-pavement side, threw an arm gallantly round
-the waist of a stout matron of some forty
-summers and dragged her, not unwillingly, half
-a dozen yards before he could get home with
-a kiss on the cheek.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But we caught that train with five minutes
-to spare. The men were now beginning to see
-the joke. As yet it had escaped me. Of
-course it was not the first time I had seen
-"Tommy" at his cheeriest under misadventures;
-but this cheeriness now struck me vividly
-for the first time. To-day it is world-famous.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They certainly made that journey a lively
-one. Six hours in a slow train across
-country&mdash;it is apt to become somewhat tedious. I
-tried to look like the man who owns a dog
-which persists in nibbling the trousers of total
-strangers&mdash;to pretend they (the men, not the
-trousers) didn't belong to me. It was no
-good. They might have been Lancashire lads
-off to Blackpool for the "wakes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So with imitations of Harry Tate, George
-Robey and other well-known favourites of the
-music-halls, the railway officials at the various
-stations being made the butt of the jokes; with
-a weird medley of harmony and melody, from
-"Hallo, hallo, who's your lady friend?" to
-"Sun of my Soul," the journey passed happily
-enough until the first of the Bristol stations
-was reached about 11.45 P.M.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As no one knew where the A.S.C. barracks
-were I got through on the telephone to H.Q.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is Captain Estcourt, R.F.A., speaking.
-I've got&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The orderly evidently went to fetch someone
-else. It turned out to be an adjutant, who
-listened to me most politely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, we've got no A.S.C. here. I don't
-think there are any in Bristol. But you might
-ring up &mdash;&mdash; Barracks and see." Prrr.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hallo! Is that &mdash;&mdash; Barracks? I'm Captain&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The orderly went to fetch someone. This
-time, after a long wait, it was evidently an
-irascible senior officer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No. No A.S.C. here. Try Avonmouth." Prrr.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This looked like bedding down in the station
-waiting-rooms. Still we would try Avonmouth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Avonmouth Headquarters received me over
-the telephone most politely, considering the
-time of night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No, we've got no A.S.C. here; but you
-might ring up the Embarkation Office." Prrr.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hallo! Embarkation Office? I'm &mdash;&mdash;, etc."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Embarkation Office was not quite so
-polite in its reception. It sounded very worried.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No. We've got no A.S.C. here. You
-can come along down if you like in case the
-company should turn up."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Luckily the last train had not gone. When
-it drew up in the station the men greeted it as
-a long-lost friend. To the strains of "All
-aboard for Dixie" they clambered in, more
-cheery than ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At Avonmouth we came out into a wilderness
-of mighty sheds. The night breeze from
-the Bristol Channel carried with it the pungent,
-cleanly smell of tarred rope.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is Avonmouth," said I to the senior
-sergeant, "and we can't go any farther unless a
-ship is waiting for us. I'm going to see where
-we can bed down."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Embarkation Office had had time to
-recover from its worries and received me very
-politely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eventually we got the men into one of
-the sheds where hundreds of sacks of oats
-lay about. In ten minutes they had made
-themselves amazingly comfortable and peace
-reigned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But I'm glad we went to Avonmouth. It
-gave me my first real glimpse of the astonishing
-organisation under which the Expeditionary
-Force was to take the field; and also of the
-methods of supply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Outside the dock gates, by all the approach
-roads into the little town, there were streaming
-in hundreds upon hundreds of great motor
-lorries, the majority of them built to carry three
-tons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From all parts of England and Scotland
-dozens were arriving every hour. The organisation
-of it! Here was the third or fourth day
-from mobilisation and there were a couple of
-thousand ready for transportation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-You picture a vividly green lorry of a big
-whisky distillery up North axle to axle with
-the scarlet of a Brixton firm with its blatant
-advertisement of somebody's corsets. The
-cockney driver from a London furnishing house
-exchanged honeyed words with a colleague from
-"'twixt Trent and Tweed" in a polite inquiry
-as to why the hell he couldn't let his tail-board
-down without using his (the Londoner's)
-radiator to scrape his boots on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can't you imagine Tommy's comments
-when he finds a 'Johnny Walker' van bringing
-up his ammunition in the wilds of Belgium,"
-was the general remark, "but I suppose they'll
-give them a coat of paint first."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They didn't, as a matter of fact; at least
-not for several months, so that Tommy was
-able to indulge his gift of language to the
-full.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so nearly two days passed. The men
-amused themselves by wandering about the
-docks, wondering at the shipping, and making
-sarcastic remarks about the lorry drivers who
-were being taught how to handle a rifle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then came a telegram from H.Q., Aldershot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Return and report here immediately."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good," said the senior sergeant to me,
-"I always did like Aldershot. But we've had
-quite a pleasant holiday seeing the country."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The draft duly paraded again, and when
-they learned their next destination their remarks
-were a joy to listen to.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We caught a 9.0 train in the evening into
-Bristol. Then we marched across the city, a
-matter of, say, three miles. It was a Sunday
-night, the good citizens were abed. But my
-lads were determined to show that they were
-by no means downhearted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The march across was one long pageant of
-melody. "I'm going home to Dixie" was
-prime favourite, and splendidly they sang it in
-harmony. Then some evening hymns, then
-more rag-time&mdash;they were really excellent
-exponents of that difficult art&mdash;then "Onward,
-Christian Soldiers"; but never a note of
-"Tipperary." That immortal chorus had not
-yet "arrived."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The midnight train from Bristol to Reading.
-A wait of three hours. Finally, Aldershot (the
-wrong station) at 6.30 A.M. A march of four
-miles into camp somewhat took the spirit out
-of the men, breakfastless and carrying heavy
-kits. But we rallied them at the last post and
-came in singing "Somewhere the sun is
-shining," like a choir of Welsh colliers. We
-certainly looked the part.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We've been looking for you for a week;
-where on earth have you been?" was hurled at
-us as we marched in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The bombardier started upon a story which
-would have made that intrepid explorer
-Captain de Rougemont green with envy. I left
-him to his astonished audience and went off for
-a bath and shave before attending my own
-funeral at H.Q.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It will have been observed that there were
-varying degrees in the politeness with which
-successive H.Q.s greeted my touring company.
-The politeness with which Aldershot
-Headquarters now greeted me was well below
-freezing-point.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I received your telegrams from
-Portsmouth and various other places," was the
-Chief's opening. "You appear to have been
-taking your men upon an extended holiday
-round the southern coast health resorts. May I
-inquire, without appearing too inquisitive, your
-authority for this expenditure of public money?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Will you allow me to explain, sir?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I am waiting for your explanation."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I began. When I had recounted the story
-of the A.S.C. major's arithmetical problem I
-saw that I had the Great Man's attention. As
-soon as I had caught the 5 P.M. train from
-Portsmouth&mdash;&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sit down, won't you," said the Great
-Man; "cigarette?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I took one from his proffered case and lit it
-carefully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If only I can hold him," thought I, "I
-shall pull through."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I did hold him, and I did pull through.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't know that I can compliment you
-on your perspicacity," said the Great Man,
-"but I can see now where the blame lies. I
-had intended to withdraw your name from the
-Expeditionary Force, but&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I got up, mouth open.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Expeditionary Force?" It can only have
-been a feeble gasp which the Great Man heard.
-"Am I going out with the Force?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Great Man smiled and put his hand on
-my shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We'll overlook it this time. Let's see how
-well you can do your job. And if you send in
-your claim for travelling expenses, send it to
-me and I'll countersign it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I suppose I must have said something by
-way of thanks. I suppose I must have saluted,
-and closed the door behind me. I know that
-I cleared half a dozen or so of the stairs down
-at a bound and fell over an astonished sentry at
-the bottom. It must have looked most
-undignified in a Gunner captain, but&mdash;I had
-actually been selected to join the British
-Expeditionary Force with a command of my
-own and&mdash;&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I leaped into the waiting taxicab in a state
-of delirium.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The driver touched his cap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where to, sir?" said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where to? Where to? Oh! Brussels;
-anywhere."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The driver grinned in sympathetic understanding
-and got on to third speed in as many
-seconds.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-And that is how I very nearly missed the
-most gorgeous adventure of my life.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II
-<br />
-THE SAILING OF THE FORCE
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Follow, follow!<br />
- Grapple your minds to sternage of this navy;<br />
- And leave your England as dead midnight still.<br />
-<span style="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</span><br />
- For who is he, whose chin is but enrich'd<br />
- With one appearing hair, that will not follow<br />
- These cull'd and choice-drawn cavaliers to France?</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>I consider that I have command of the sea when I am
-able to tell my Government that they can move an expedition
-to any point without fear of interference from an enemy's
-fleet.</i>"&mdash;SIR GEOFFREY HORNBY.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Train No. B46 had slipped unostentatiously
-into its appointed siding precisely on its
-scheduled time. For a couple of hours the
-men had been working like galley-slaves to get
-the ammunition on board in time. The C.O. and
-two other officers with their coats off were
-working as hard as the rest. And it is no joke
-heaving up and packing neatly cases of 18-pr. and
-howitzer shell, especially when you are not
-used to it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Finished at last, and with half an hour to
-the good. Another four hours and they will
-be on the road themselves, the first step into
-the unknown.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A couple of hours' sleep, a shave and a bath,
-a final look round the battery office, a last
-hurried breakfast in the Mess, and a last
-handshake with the colonel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You off? Well, good-bye, and good luck
-to you. We shall meet over the other side, I
-expect."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The battery parades. "Battery all present,
-sir," reports the sergeant-major. The report
-runs through until it reaches the C.O. A few
-minutes to ride round the teams and then:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Column o' route from the right. Walk&mdash;march!"
-and the battery is off through the early
-morning quiet of the Aldershot streets, bound
-for the port of embarkation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus the mounted units, or most of them.
-Others by train. A few lines will serve as
-description for all these.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A Railway Transport Officer meets the C.O. on
-the platform as the men march in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Get your men in as quickly as you can,
-please; we always get off five minutes ahead of
-time."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What's our port?" asks the C.O.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No idea. Push on, please."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The C.O. "pushes on."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All in," he reports to the R.T.O., and
-turns for a final shake of the hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, good-bye, and good luck" (always
-that phrase); "wish I was coming with you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The R.T.O. gives the signal and looks
-wistfully for a moment after the train before he
-clambers across the metals to dispatch another
-dozen or so units from other sidings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where are we embarking?" asks everyone.
-Not a soul knows. I don't believe the
-engine-driver himself knew. He just went gaily
-forward following the points or stopping for
-signals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Through Winchester! Why, it must be
-Southampton. Wonder what our port will be
-the other side?"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Detraining and embarkation at Southampton
-were carried out under the same admirable
-conditions of efficiency and speed, and with
-never a single hitch. It seems little enough to
-read the sentence in cold print, but the more
-one thinks about it the more wonderful appears
-the organisation. Had it been the German
-War Staff directing movements the affair would
-have seemed no more than an ordinary episode.
-But with memories of the South African War,
-and a hundred everyday incidents constantly
-revealing muddling, red-tape methods, one can
-find no words in which to express adequately
-one's admiration for this astonishing volte-face.
-One single incident, one of fifty like it, will
-show to what excellent purpose the Authorities
-had profited by experience, even in those early
-days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An A.S.C. motor transport unit was detailed
-to embark upon a certain ship. Nearly a day's
-warning had been given to the O.C. The
-lorries were driven to the dock-side and were
-just being got on board. The Embarkation
-Officer, who was standing quietly by, suddenly
-informed the C.O. that his ship was not that
-one but another due to sail from another dock
-some distance away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The C.O. had barely time in which to get
-his lorries across, and the ship sailed the moment
-all was reported clear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An incident trivial enough, and how un-English
-it seemed at the time. But after the
-secret landing of the 9th Army Corps at Suvla,
-and the subsequent evacuation of Gallipoli, it
-would appear that we have nothing to learn in
-the art of ruse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The weather in those early days of August
-was perfect: the sea so calm that there was no
-discomfort even, with the men and horses packed
-on board like sardines in a tin. If it was a night
-crossing, the men bedded down in rows out on
-the decks just as they had filed on board. The
-transports were of all kinds, from an Atlantic
-liner to a coasting tramp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The ship's officers did more than their best
-for everybody's comfort, giving up their cabins
-to the officers, sharing their meals and refusing
-to accept any payment for food and drinks. If
-the skipper of a certain ship of the Royal Mail
-Company, which sailed on the early morning of
-August 16th from Southampton, chances to see
-these lines I would tell him how gratefully his
-kindness is remembered, and how the little
-mascot, in the shape of a tiny teapot from the
-steward's pantry, brought the best of luck
-through ten months' hard service, always made
-excellent tea whenever called upon, and now
-occupies a place of honour in my china cabinet.
-Here's wishing everything of the best to those
-who carry on the fine traditions of the blue or
-red ensign!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, where are we bound for?" This to
-the First Officer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't know a bit," he replies. "The
-skipper may know, but I'm not sure. Anyway
-he's as close as a barnacle about it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We steamed across Channel with all lights
-on. It was another of those astonishing facts
-which didn't strike one until later. We were
-off the mouth of the Seine exactly twelve hours
-after sailing. And all that time we only once
-sighted anything in the shape of a convoy, and
-that was a T.B.D. for about twenty minutes
-a couple of miles to starboard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this stage it seems almost invidious to
-say anything more about the work of the Grand
-Fleet during that first fortnight. And yet,
-even now, the public is amazingly ignorant of
-what the Navy has accomplished, or, indeed is
-still accomplishing. Ignorant, not through
-indifference, but because the Authorities still
-steadily refuse to take seriously in hand the
-work of education in war facts and ideas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How the Navy succeeded in sweeping the
-enemy flag from the North Sea and the Channel
-in a couple of days, apparently without firing
-a shot, we cannot pretend to guess. Some day
-the story will be told. But the result was the
-most astonishing manifestation of the real
-meaning of naval supremacy that the world has ever
-seen, or is ever likely to see. And Germany,
-by her naval inaction, lost for ever her great
-chance of the War, and so, in failing to
-intercept or damage the British Expeditionary
-Force, failed also to enter Paris and to end the
-war upon her own terms within the period she
-had intended. The British Army may have
-saved Paris, but the British Navy enabled it to
-do so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Entering the Seine the skipper revealed the
-name of our destination, Rouen. Another
-instance of organisation and forethought on
-the part of the Authorities in using small ships
-so as to get right up the river and disembark
-troops and stores well inland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again, this has become a matter of everyday
-routine, but in those days each such new
-manoeuvre was sufficiently remarkable for
-admiring comment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here the pilot came on board. A typical
-old son of Normandy he was, grizzled and
-weatherbeaten, clambering aboard with stiff
-heavy gait.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On to the bridge he climbed: saw our lads
-clustered thick as bees in the fo'c'sle and lower
-deck. Up went his cap into the air, tears
-sprang to his eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Vivent les Anglais!" he shouted, "vive
-l'Angleterre! A&mdash;ah" (with an instinct of
-triumph), "ça va bien. Ils arrivent."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How the lads yelled in answer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cheer-o, moossoo. Veeve France! 'Who's
-your lady friend?' 'For he's a jolly good
-fellow,'"&mdash;and other pertinent observations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, to my astonishment, they burst into
-the "Marseillaise." How and where they had
-learned it I have no idea. But sing it they
-did, and very well too. They took that little
-curly bit in the middle, where a B flat comes
-when you least expect it, just like an old hunter
-clearing a stiff post-and-rails. And that old
-chap stood on the bridge and mopped his eyes,
-and didn't care who saw him do it. The English
-had really come to stand by his beloved France.
-<i>Comme ça va bien!</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That was the first hint we had of the reception
-which awaited us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-You picture the transport steaming slowly
-up river between the high, wooded banks.
-Little houses, such as Peter Pan might have
-built for Wendy, seem to sway dizzily in the
-tree-tops. Out on to the verandas, down to
-the river path run the women and children,
-and the few old men who remain. Everyone
-carries a little flag; not the French tricolour,
-but the British Jack&mdash;or rather an excellent
-substitute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dimly one can see the waving hands, faintly
-across the water echo the treble voices. But
-know now what it means, and gallantly
-our lads respond to this welcome of out
-future hosts, who, with true French courtesy,
-have met their guests at the very entrance
-gates.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Far up the hill-side, close under the ridge,
-there nestles a tiny cottage. A blot of deep
-crimson staining the deeper green of the trees
-makes me take out my binoculars. The good
-house-wife, with no British flag available, yet
-determined to do honour to her country's allies,
-has taken the red tablecloth, has stitched long
-bands of white across it to form a St. Andrew's
-Cross, and flung it proudly across the balustrade.
-What monarch ever had truer-hearted
-welcome from his own people? Well, the sight
-brought a lump to the throat of at least one
-Englishman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so slowly we steamed up the historic
-river. France had indeed flung wide her gates
-in welcome. Here we found ourselves moving
-in a small procession of transports. Greetings
-swung across from one ship to the next, to
-combine and roar out a British answer to our
-French friends on shore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ah! but it was good to feel that Britain had
-not failed France, though the obligation were
-no more than a moral one. It was good to be
-an Englishman that day; good to feel that
-Englishmen then in France could now look
-Frenchmen squarely in the face and say:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You thought we were going to stand aside,
-didn't you? Well, you see we are coming in
-with you and you can bet that means that we
-intend to see it through."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yes, one felt proud as never before.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III
-<br />
-THE LANDING OF THE FORCE
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Shall not thou and I, between Saint Dennis and Saint
-George, compound a boy, half French, half English, that
-shall go to Constantinople, and take the Turk by the beard?</i>"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The dominant note in the reception which the
-French gave to the Force on landing was
-undoubtedly that of <i>relief</i>. Happy in showering
-little courtesies, surprised and delighted
-with everything British&mdash;all these, but it was
-relief which came uppermost in their minds.
-The feeling which the old pilot had expressed
-in his "comme ça va bien, maintenant."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And as transport after transport slid quietly
-to her berth alongside the broad Rouen quays,
-discharged her freight of men, horses, guns,
-stores, lorries, and the countless trappings of a
-modern army, and then as quickly and noiselessly
-vacated the berth for her successor, so
-increased the wonder and delight of the good
-Normandy folk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That <i>les anglais</i> should really have arrived
-was splendid enough, but that they should also
-bring with them their own food and cooking
-arrangements&mdash;"mais c'est tonnant! et quelle
-organisation!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Everyone spoke in admiring comment about
-it. And how Rouen crowded down to the
-quays or out to the rest camps to watch <i>les
-anglais</i> cooking their dinners! Army stores
-those few days were sadly depleted of tins of
-jam, biscuits and "grocery ration." How
-could one refuse the hungry look in the eye of
-a motherly matron as she espied a packet of
-the famous English tea?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the children! We learned for the first
-time how hungry children could be when they
-saw biscuits and jam.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Make a fuss of the kiddies and you have
-won the mothers! And if you have won the
-mothers and women of France you have
-conquered "la belle France" herself. And <i>les
-anglais</i> conquered France in those few days at
-the French ports. The happiest of victories,
-and one which augured well for the future.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nothing pleased the French more than
-British courtesy and gentleness to women and
-children; and their kindness to and care of
-their horses. British love of personal cleanliness,
-and the unfailing cheeriness of the men,
-these have, of course, long since become
-proverbial. But then it was all new to France,
-almost to the world, and so one records these
-things as first impressions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the Scotties. Everyone knows how
-the lads from north of the Tweed made sad
-havoc among French hearts. Have they not
-always done so since Frenchmen and Scotsmen
-first clasped hands in alliance?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If a Scotsman was asked once a day whether
-he wore anything under his kilt he was asked a
-hundred times. And truth compels me to add
-that it was generally the ladies who put the
-question. What the answer was I never found
-out. I imagine that our lads were not sorry to
-hide their blushes in the troop trains which
-carried them forward to the frontier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But all these little details have been so
-admirably recorded by Philip Gibbs in his
-masterly book, "The Soul of the War," that
-there is really not much more to tell. I shall
-have still a little to add in the next chapter,
-when it comes to trekking up country.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had some little cause on the first day of
-landing to regret the exuberance of French
-hospitality. Half my men, they were mostly
-Special Reservists, suddenly disappeared into
-the unknown directly they set foot on shore.
-And they hadn't a week's pay in their pockets
-either.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eventually I got them rounded up and
-next morning there were twenty-five prisoners,
-"caps off," for "office." To say they were
-surprised is to give a very poor indication of
-their feelings when they found varying degrees
-of punishment awarded to them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But this was nothing to the ludicrous
-expressions of the men when all the remainder were
-paraded and informed what they had to expect
-on active service. It ran somewhat as follows:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "When a sentry, sleeping upon his post."<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Punishment&mdash;DEATH.<br />
- "Leaving his C.O. to go in search of<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;plunder." Punishment&mdash;DEATH.<br />
- "Forcing a safeguard."&mdash;DEATH.<br />
- "Quitting his guard without leave."&mdash;DEATH.<br />
- "Disobeying the lawful command of his<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;superior officer."&mdash;DEATH.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-And so on, the lightest punishment being about
-fourteen years' Rigorous Imprisonment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their faces got longer and longer as the list
-proceeded, and it was a very meek detachment
-who turned to their dinners on the quay-side.
-And that was the beginning and end of any
-trouble with those good lads until the day when
-they, or the poor remnant who pulled through,
-crowded round to sing "Auld lang syne" and
-give me a farewell cheer. Fine work they did,
-and always as cheery and lovable as any unit
-in the Force.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Disembarkation was carried on with the
-same admirable efficiency which had characterised
-embarkation. A large number of British
-Staff officers had, I believe, crossed to France
-immediately upon mobilisation. There, in
-collaboration with French colleagues, every possible
-arrangement was made for the reception of the
-Force.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rest camps were pitched or billets were
-allotted, branches of the Army Post Office were
-established, a field cashier was installed at the
-Banque de France and imprests in French notes
-for the men's pay could be obtained on demand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of course everybody had seized the few
-hours' holiday on board ship to write more or
-less lengthy letters home, hoping, in their
-innocence, that the ship's officers would post
-them on returning to England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Alas! before ever the ship was berthed, an
-all-powerful bogy swarmed up the companion
-way and greedily snatched away the ship's
-correspondence. Calling for a brush and a
-barrel of black fluid, he gleefully set to work
-upon the letters and postcards. When he had
-finished with them (and it took him a good
-couple of hours on our ship) they looked like
-the slips of paper you use in the parlour round-game
-where the first player writes a line and
-leaves the next to continue the sentence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We had all given the most vivid description
-of our adventures, filling page after page.
-When the precious documents ultimately
-reached their destination, our fond parents, or
-best girls, must have been gratified to find that
-their four-page letter had dwindled down to:
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"MY DEAR FATHER,&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-(Four pages of brush and fluid work.)
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Well, I think I have told you all the news
-now. My love to the Mater and, cheer-oh, we
-shall soon be home again.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Your affect. son,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&mdash;&mdash;"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-It was very interesting to compare the way
-in which French and British temperaments
-expressed themselves; intensely interesting to
-note how each so quickly became the
-complement of the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One knew so well the attitude of disdain of
-anything foreign which invariably characterises
-the Briton abroad; an unfortunate attitude
-which has been encouraged, or so it would
-almost seem, by the invariable courtesy, under
-the most irritating conditions, of men and
-women of the Latin races.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here were some seventy or eighty thousand
-men thrust headlong into a strange country.
-Probably at least two-thirds of that number
-had never been out of England before. Everyone
-knows the impression which your average
-Englishman of the middle and lower classes has
-of French men and French women. Certainly
-it has not been very complimentary. How
-would our men now bear themselves?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And if our attitude to the French has for
-the most part been one of cold disdain and
-amusement, the French would seem to have
-regarded us, as a race, with incredulity,
-tempered by such a degree of irritation as their
-native courtesy would permit. This, together
-with an under current of admiration.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>Que j'aime la hardiesse anglaise!</i>" says
-Voltaire, "<i>que j'aime les gens qui disent ce
-qu'ils pensent.</i>"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During those early August days before the
-Retreat there was little real opportunity to
-modify racial opinions. But if British disdain
-was not yet effaced, the overwhelming reception
-by the French went far to break it down.
-Soon it was to be washed clean away in the
-blood sacrament which united French and
-English in a closer tie than that of brothers-in-arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-French methods and customs still amused
-our men, but the amusement became that
-light-hearted gaiety, in tackling and surmounting
-trifling difficulties in a foreign country, which
-is quite irresistible. Here the British soldier
-or sailor is always at his very best, and the
-anecdotes of his adventures in French villages
-and towns would fill a volume.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wiseacres who try to invent some universal
-language should certainly base it upon that of
-Thomas A. in a strange country. He is equally
-at home in China, Peru, the wilds of Africa or
-Spain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fact which astonished him more than
-anything else about the French language was
-that all the children spoke it. He could
-understand grown-ups learning it in time; but how
-the kiddies were able to talk it with such
-amazing fluency, that was quite beyond him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for the French attitude of mind, I am
-inclined to think that their incredulity,
-admiration and irritation were all intensified; the
-last named, however, being even less in evidence
-than before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The attitude of the French women is easier
-to define. It is literally true to remark that,
-from highest to lowest in the land, there were
-no half measures in their welcome. One can
-say this now because the fact has long since
-been recognised and openly discussed in France.
-This, however, is not the place in which to make
-more than passing reference to a subject which,
-apart from the purely human aspect, is more
-a matter for the student of physiology or
-psychology.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Combien de coeurs vous avez ravagé dans
-un si petit délai que vous avez stationné ici,"
-a French girl once remarked, "et cependant on
-ne devrait pas refuser aux anglais les baisers
-qu'ils nous demandent puisqu'ils se donnent
-pour nous."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the last half of the sentence admirably
-sums up the French woman's point of view.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This landing of the portion of the Force
-at Rouen was typical of what happened at
-Boulogne or Havre. John Buchan, in his first
-volume of the "History of the War," has given
-a most interesting glimpse of incidents at the
-former port.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In no case did the troops remain at these
-bases for more than a couple of days. Nobody
-appeared to have the least idea of what was
-going on up at the frontiers, but time was
-obviously of importance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No one knew where they were bound for;
-no one appeared to have the slightest presentiment
-of the tragedy, and the magnificence of
-the days which were so soon to crowd upon
-them. Still the cheery, light-hearted,
-end-of-term spirit. A summer holiday on the
-Continong! Cheer-oh!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so they were merry parties of men
-which boarded the funny French trains; where
-you had to clamber up the sides of the carriages
-from platforms which didn't really exist, and
-where you were packed in like a Cup Tie crowd
-returning from the Crystal Palace.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How the horses hated those French trucks.
-Never before had they suffered such indignity.
-I would not have been a stableman on duty in
-one of those trucks for many a month's pay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mais, quelles bêtes!" said the railway
-officials. And the porters would run and fetch
-the stationmaster and gesticulate at the
-Compagnie's trucks, which had begun to look like
-bundles of firewood long before the frontier
-was reached.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Third return Clapham Junction, please,"
-said the company wag.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Wotto! Berlin! Not 'arf," shouted the
-rest....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And off the trains would steam, every
-compartment labelled "Berlin." It's rather
-pathetic how history repeats itself. This time
-the French were silent. They <i>knew</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, forward into the unknown!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV
-<br />
-UP COUNTRY
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>So be there 'twixt your kingdoms such a spousal,<br />
- That never may ill office, or fell jealousy,<br />
-<span style="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</span><br />
- Thrust in between the paction of these kingdoms,<br />
- To make divorce of their incorporate league:<br />
- That English may as French, French Englishmen,<br />
- Receive each other!</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Patience, still a little patience! The stage is
-not yet set. The actors have not yet reached
-the theatre. Very soon now shall you see
-unfolded the opening scenes of the Great
-Drama, and hear the first clash of the armies.
-Soon shall you have your fill of the horror and
-splendour of modern warfare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have seen the Force into the French
-troop trains, horse, guns and foot. But not all
-journeyed thus to the frontier. Some of the
-units, the most mobile, went by road. Units
-which were intended to take their places in the
-reserve lines, and especially the A.S.C. motor
-transport, ammunition or supplies. Let us
-move forward with one of these and see a little
-of the France through which so soon the armies
-will come rolling back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Out from Rouen and across the lovely
-Normandy country. You picture the excitement
-and amusement of the country folk as a
-great procession of those motor lorries, which
-we have seen coming into Avonmouth, pants
-heavily through the towns and villages.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here is a part of a letter, from an officer in
-one of those units, which appeared in the <i>Times</i>
-towards the end of August. It seems to give a
-very happy picture of the French reception of
-our men.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-ROSES, ROSES, ALL THE WAY
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I can, of course, tell you nothing of our
-movements, nor where we are. I can, however, say
-something of the reception we have met with
-moving across country. It has been simply wonderful
-and most affecting. We travel entirely by motor
-transport (if the censor will allow that), and it
-has been flowers all the way. One long procession
-of acclamation. By the wayside and through the
-villages men, women, and children cheer us on
-with the greatest enthusiasm, and everyone wants
-to give us something. Even the babies in arms have
-been taught to wave their little hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They strip their flower gardens, and the cars
-look like carnival carriages. They pelt us with
-fruit, cigarettes, chocolate, bread, anything, and
-everything. It is simply impossible to convey an
-impression of it all. One village had stretched
-across the road a big banner, "Honour to the British
-Army." Always cries of "Vivent les anglais, vive
-l'Angleterre," etc., and often they would make the
-sign of hanging, and cutting the throat (the Kaiser),
-pointing forward along the road. This always struck
-me as so curious.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yesterday, my own car had to stop in a town
-for petrol. In a moment there must have been a
-couple of hundred people round, clamouring.
-Autograph albums were thrust in front of me; a perfect
-delirium. A tray of wine and biscuits appeared,
-and before we started again the car had come to
-look like a grocery delivery van with a florist's
-window display in front.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In another town I had to stop for an hour and
-took the opportunity to do some shopping. I wanted
-some motor goggles, an eye bath, some boracic,
-provisions, etc. They would not let me pay for a
-single thing, and there was lunch and drinks as well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The farther we go the more enthusiastic is the
-greeting. What it will be like at the end of the
-war one cannot attempt to guess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This all sounds like a picnic, but the work is
-hard and continuous. One eats and sleeps just when
-one can. There is no division between night and
-day. But we are all very fit and well, and the men,
-who have an easy time compared to the officers,
-look upon it as a huge joke&mdash;at present.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My French is, of course, simply invaluable, and
-each day I can understand and talk better and
-better. It is extraordinary that I am absolutely
-the only officer I have come across (except one or
-two Staff men) who can speak it with any fluency.
-Well, this will surely be the last of war amongst
-civilised peoples, and the dreams of the idealists
-will be fulfilled. The French seem to think that it
-will all be over certainly by Christmas. I wonder?
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Thus the men came to see something of
-French life away from the beaten track of the
-tourist, and, needless to say, they made friends
-at every stopping-place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mais, si polis, ces messieurs anglais,"
-everyone remarks. And how could "ces
-messieurs" refuse some little trifles in return
-for such hospitality? The word "souvenir"
-soon became a nightmare in their dreams.
-There was a peculiar bleat in the intonation of
-the word which was, after a time, positively
-hateful. But during the first few days the men
-gave readily enough all sorts of little articles for
-which they had no immediate use, and others
-for which they had.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Before a week had elapsed very few had any
-buttons left. It was a mystery how they kept
-their trousers up. Regimental badges on caps
-and shoulder-straps were much appreciated,
-especially the Gunners' letters. It did not take
-long for the quick-witted French girl to discover
-that R.F.A. was obviously intended to represent
-the Triple Entente&mdash;Russie, France,
-Angleterre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When these units eventually rolled up at
-their destination it was found that about half
-the men had lost not only all their buttons and
-badges but their caps as well, getting in
-exchange some horrible provincial product in the
-shape of a rakish tweed cap. Bits of tape and
-string held coats and trousers together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But long ere this Thomas Atkins was fed
-up with souvenir-hunters, and one recalls a
-<i>Punch</i> picture which showed a weary and
-wounded soldier sitting by the roadside with
-what remained of his kit and arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Souvenir' is it you want?" he remarks
-in reply to a little urchin who is bleating the
-hateful word at him. "Here, you can take
-the &mdash;&mdash; lot." And he pitches his rifle and kit
-at the youngster's head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The officers and men who came up by road
-must have had a very cheery time in the various
-towns where they were billeted. The route lay,
-I believe, by way of Amiens, and so up through
-St. Quentin and Bohain to Le Cateau.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hardly was there a hint of war in all that
-lovely country-side. What war could ever touch
-those glowing cornfields, those orchards heavy
-with plum and apple, the stately châteaux or
-dim cloisters of mediæval church or convent?
-As little can we conceive our fragrant villages
-of Kent or Surrey blasted and devastated by
-poisonous shells.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Very, very few men were to be seen anywhere;
-only Government officials and others
-over military age. Such guards or sentries as
-were posted were somewhat decrepit-looking
-Territorials, with arms and accoutrements which
-looked as if they had done good service in 1870.
-But they made up for their deficiencies in other
-respects by an excess of zeal in carrying out
-imaginary orders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their method of challenging, in particular,
-had the merit of simplicity and, at the same
-time, involved no undue straining of the vocal
-powers. It was merely the thrusting of a
-rifle-barrel into the face or chest of the passer-by.
-And when there is a very shaky hand on the
-trigger you don't lose much time in getting out
-your credentials.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One of these men caused much excitement
-one evening by holding up and clapping into
-the guardroom every single individual who
-attempted to pass him. He was performing
-sentry duty across a certain main road.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This went on for a couple of hours, and
-the guardroom was becoming uncomfortably
-crowded with a very miscellaneous assortment
-of travellers. In fact, when a particularly
-plump matron, carrying a basket of particularly
-evil-smelling cheeses, was incontinently thrust
-in, to fall heavily across the toes of an already
-irate railway porter, there was very nearly a riot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At length a gilded Staff officer came along.
-He too was held up. But this time the sentry
-met his match. The officer demanded to see
-the N.C.O. of the guard. Whereupon the
-sentry, who was really somewhat the worse for
-drink, fell down upon his knees in the road,
-and with salty tears coursing down his cheeks
-piteously besought the officer to allow him to
-go home and get his supper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But French Territorials did their "bit"
-gallantly enough a few days later, away on the
-British left. Old reservists as they were, they
-hung on splendidly at Tournai, and, led by
-de Villaret, fought gallantly against overwhelming
-numbers until they were surrounded, killed,
-or captured.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, on through the golden August sunshine
-or beneath the heavy harvest moon. Interminable
-processions of columns, horsed and petrol-driven,
-threading their way along the endless,
-poplar-lined roads of France; the white dust
-churned up and drifting over men and vehicles
-until they look like Arctic adventurers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No one knows what is happening in the
-great "beyond." No one very much cares.
-"Let's get on and have it over," is the
-philosophy of the hour. "Expect those
-Germans are being held up a bit in Belgium;
-wonder where we shall come in?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The enemy had marched in triumph through
-Brussels on August 20th. The British Force
-was not actually in position until two days
-later: and Brussels is only 30 odd miles from
-Mons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After it was all over; after the tide of war
-had crashed forward almost to the gates of Paris
-and then rolled sullenly back, one saw a little
-of the devastation it had left behind. Here are
-two pictures.
-</p>
-
-<p class="thought">
-*****
-<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>August</i> 20<i>th</i>. Can you, too, see that little
-vicarage hard by the tiny church? (Think, it
-might have been plucked from a Surrey
-hamlet.) The cool, veranda-shaded rooms filled with
-a hundred homely treasures; the tiled kitchen
-with its winking copper pots and pans. Out
-through the flagged yard, where pigeons coo in
-gentle defiance of predatory sparrows, and down
-to a miniature farmstead. The pretty alleyed
-garden of roses, hollyhocks and the flowers and
-sweet herbs of English garden-lovers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Can you see the old curé as he browses over
-a volume of Renan? He has tended his flock
-in that village for a quarter of a century. A
-pretty niece keeps house for him; and her dainty
-herb-potions and unwearied nursing have saved
-many a life in the little community. They think
-of her as of an angel from heaven.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<i>September</i> 7<i>th</i>. A fortnight later! The
-village street has disappeared beneath the debris
-of what was once the village. One cow-shed is
-still miraculously intact, and from it creeps a
-gaunt, haggard old crone. They have not
-touched her. She was too old and infirm to
-make good fun, even for the rank and file.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She points with shaking finger to the wayside
-crucifix from which the Christ looks down
-with infinite patience. He also has been
-miraculously preserved. He gazes still over His
-tiny sanctuary, now but two blackened, battered
-walls. The vicarage has disappeared as though
-in an earthquake. The incendiary tablets have
-done their work well. The little garden with
-its pretty rose trees has been ploughed up, it
-would seem, by giant shares.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Stay, in one corner, down by the brook,
-there is planted a rough wooden cross.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old curé had refused to leave his post
-when the stream of refugees had passed through.
-They told him of the horror behind them. He
-stood firm. Jeannette, too, would stay with her
-uncle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>They</i> came. The curé, they said, must be
-a spy left behind by the French troops. Besides,
-he had carrier-pigeons. "What need have we
-of further witnesses?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so they tied him against the stem of
-his pigeon-cote. He met his death as a gallant
-gentleman of France.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The girl. Ah, young and tender! Good
-sport for the plucking! First let her bury the
-old man. "Rather hard work using a spade
-when you're not used to it, isn't it?&mdash;Done?
-Good, now get us dinner."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After dinner, a dance&mdash;Eastern slave
-fashion. First, good sport for the officers.
-"When we have finished throw her to the men."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What need to tell the horrors of it? The
-village marked the ebb of the tide. The French
-and British had turned at last. Hurried orders
-came to retire at dawn. The girl had not been
-such good sport after all&mdash;fainted too easily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A leering, drunken satyr slashes at her naked
-breasts with his bayonet and Jeannette falls
-dead over the threshold. The house is fired, the
-body is pitched on to the pyre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One village in France? No, one of a
-hundred where such things were done. And this
-is almost as nothing beside such as this England
-of ours has, by God's gracious mercy, been
-spared. What does England know of this war?
-</p>
-
-<p class="thought">
-*****
-<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the various units begin to converge and
-concentrate on the French frontier. "Each
-unit," says the G.O.C.-in-Chief in his first
-dispatch, "arrived at its destination in this
-country well within the scheduled time."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For some days past the French troop trains
-have been disgorging their living freight at a
-number of stations and sidings, most of them
-hastily improvised, within a few miles' radius on
-a line Valenciennes-Maubeuge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The columns which came by road halted in
-various little villages about the town of Le
-Cateau. You will get the general lie of the
-land and the principal points of interest from
-the picture-map.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now to set the stage.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V
-</h3>
-
-<h3>
-THE MARSHALLING OF THE ARMIES
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>Now entertain conjecture of a time,<br />
- When creeping murmur, and the poring dark,<br />
- Fills the wide vessel of the universe.<br />
- From camp to camp, through the foul womb of night,<br />
- The hum of either army stilly sounds,</i><br />
-<span style="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</span><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>..... and from the tents,<br />
- The armourers, accomplishing the knights,<br />
- With busy hammers closing rivets up,<br />
- Give dreadful note of preparation.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-A well-known American, it was probably
-Roosevelt, remarked à propos of the outbreak
-of the War that Germany's readiness would
-redound to her eternal dishonour, while Britain's
-unreadiness would be to her eternal honour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The term "unready" applies to the nation
-as a whole. Fortunately for civilisation the
-British Navy and the little striking Force were,
-as we have seen, kept trained to an hour. And
-so it was that, upon a single word, the whole
-machine moved precisely as the admirable
-organisation had planned for it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It must also be remembered that for some
-years past everybody who had studied
-international affairs with any intelligence knew
-precisely how and where Germany would attack;
-that even in 1908 it was possible to give the
-approximate date of such attack; and that when
-the attack came the position of the British
-Expeditionary Force would be in the post of
-honour upon the left of the French line in,
-approximately, the district in which it actually
-deployed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, up to a certain point, events fell out
-as anticipated. But one or two big factors were
-not foreseen, or, at least, not sufficiently
-appreciated. These were the amazing speed and
-mobility with which the German initial attack
-was destined to develop; the overwhelming
-numbers of the enemy; and, lastly, the astonishing
-effect of big gun fire, as instanced at Liége
-and other fortresses. This lack of foresight
-came within an ace of losing the war for the
-Entente Powers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not until Saturday, August 15th,
-that the gates into Belgium by way of Liége
-were fully opened for the German armies,
-although Liége itself had been entered on the 7th.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The immediate effect, apart from the great
-moral value, of Belgium's heroic and successful
-resistance of those two or three days was to give
-to the British Force at least a sporting chance.
-The Force was late; those three days allowed
-it to get into position. It needs no great effort
-to imagine what would otherwise inevitably
-have happened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now let me at this point disclaim any intention
-of giving details of strategy and tactics,
-even were I sufficiently competent to do so.
-So far as I can I shall try to tell the story as
-simply as possible, omitting everything which
-may tend to confusion or which may render
-necessary continuous reference to maps. In a
-word, I am making this record of facts and
-impressions for the public, not for the experts.
-It is the human side and not the military which
-I would emphasise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is, however, necessary at the outset to
-get a good general idea of numbers, and the
-disposition of the armies on August 22nd in the
-particular area, if we wish fully to appreciate
-the events, and their significance, of the
-succeeding ten days. For the sake of convenience I
-will make sub-headings:
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>The German Forces</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The total strength, all ranks, of a German
-<i>Army Corps</i> is, roughly, 45,000; of a <i>Division</i>,
-roughly, 17,500. We may take this as a
-minimum.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Each Corps and each Division has, respectively,
-about 160 and 72 field-guns, and 48 and
-24 machine-guns. The numbers of the latter
-arm were materially increased during 1913-14.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The German forces which concentrated on
-this far Western front, from Namur to about
-Tournai, consisted of no fewer than 13 Army
-Corps, <i>each Corps being augmented by an extra
-Division</i>. These Reserve Divisions were, I
-believe, combined into separate "Reserve
-Corps."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Corps were divided up:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 5 under von Kluck (First German Army),<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;attacking British.<br />
- 4 under von Buelow (Second German<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Army), attacking 5th French Army.<br />
- 4 under von Hausen (Third German<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Army), attacking 4th French Army.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The general lines of advance will be seen in
-plan A (page 71) and plan B (page 98).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, the total German force concentrated
-on or about this immediate front must have
-numbered at least 812,500, with, say, 3,010
-field-guns and 936 machine-guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not unreasonable to add to this total
-the not inconsiderable number of cavalry which
-operated, more or less independently, on the
-extreme flanks, and particularly from Tournai
-down through Amiens towards Le Havre.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>The French Forces</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The total strength, all ranks, of a French
-Army Corps is, roughly, 40,000, with, say,
-160 field- and 48 machine-guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this area there were present 3 corps under
-Lanrezac (5th French Army) holding the line
-Charleroi-Namur, and 3 corps under de Langle
-de Gary (4th French Army) holding a line west
-of the River Meuse south-west from Namur.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Away on the left flank of the British was
-another Corps, of Territorials, under d'Amade;
-and near Maubeuge, in reserve, were two or
-three Cavalry Divisions. These last did not, I
-believe, operate; and the Territorials were also
-fully occupied in their own area.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Reckoning up, then, we get an approximate
-total of, say, 240,000 men, 960 field- and 288
-machine-guns.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>The British Forces</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A British Army Corps, of two Divisions,
-contains about 36,145, all ranks, with 152
-field- and 48 machine-guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A Cavalry Division contains about 9,270,
-all ranks, with 24 field- and 24 machine-guns; a
-Cavalry Brigade about 2,285, all ranks, 6
-field- and 6 machine-guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This is not revealing State secrets, because
-the numbers may be obtained from any military
-reference books.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now it was, I believe, originally intended
-that the Expeditionary Force should be about
-120,000 strong, or half the strength of the army
-with the colours.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The force actually present at Mons on
-August 22nd consisted, nominally, of two
-Army Corps, a Cavalry Division and a Cavalry
-Brigade. But several authorities, including
-Mr. Hilaire Belloc, assert that one of these
-corps was considerably below strength, and
-that, in round numbers, the strength of the
-Force was no more than 75,000, with 250 guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If we calculate up the <i>official</i> strength the
-numbers should work out at 83,845 all ranks,
-334 field- and 126 machine-guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another Infantry Brigade came up on the
-23rd and joined the Second Corps, and another
-Division (the 4th) also arrived.[<a id="chap05fn1text"></a><a href="#chap05fn1">1</a>]
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Taking everything into account it is, I think,
-reasonable to put the British strength at about
-80,000 men, 300 field- and 100 machine-guns
-when battle was first joined.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Let me put these figures in tabular form
-so that we can get a comparison at a glance.
-</p>
-
-<pre>
- <i>Machine-</i>
- <i>All ranks. Field-guns. guns.</i>
-
- <i>Actual Approximate Numbers on August</i> 22<i>nd</i>
-
- <i>British</i> . . . 80,000 300 100
- <i>French</i> . . . 240,000 960 288
- <i>German</i> . . . 812,500 3,016 936
-
- <i>Excess German
- strength over
- Franco-British</i> 492,500 1,756 548
-</pre>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-It is always rather difficult to grasp the
-<i>meaning</i> of big numbers like these, so let me
-put it another way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Place one German against each man in the
-Franco-British Force, and one German field-gun
-against each field-gun on our side. Now take
-all the German soldiers and guns still
-remaining over and imagine that you are watching
-them march past you down Whitehall, the
-men in fours all doing their "goose" parade
-step and the guns going by at a trot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The army, marching night and day, without
-a moment's halt, would take just about three
-days to pass you.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such then was the enemy superiority; about
-four or five times as great as the most pessimistic
-prophets had anticipated. We shall see
-shortly what this superiority developed into
-against the British Force.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>The Position of the Forces</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-British.&mdash;The general position of the opposing
-forces before battle was joined, at least for
-the British, will be realised from plan A
-(page 71), and there is little need to add
-anything by way of explanation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It will be noted that the British line extended
-along a front of about 25 miles, with Mons near
-the centre of the line. On Saturday, August
-22nd, Sir John French disposed the Force into
-its positions. The Second Corps, under Sir
-Horace Smith-Dorrien, held the canal line from
-Condé, on the west, to Mons, on the east. The
-First Corps, under Sir Douglas Haig, extended
-from Mons, on the west, to Binche, on the east.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As there were no British reserves, the
-Cavalry Division, under General Allenby, was
-detailed to act as such and to be ready to move
-forward where and as required.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 5th Cavalry Brigade, under Sir Philip
-Chetwode, was posted in and around Binche.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-French.&mdash;I have indicated the composition
-of the French force, and plan A (page 71) will
-show how it was disposed on the morning of
-the 22nd; i.e. 5th French Army from Charleroi
-to just south of Namur, and 4th Army down
-the River Meuse to south of Dinant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Similarly, there is nothing further to add
-about the German dispositions if the general
-lines of the enemy advance be noted: an
-attempted out-flanking movement on the
-extreme west, and the driving in of a wedge in
-the neighbourhood of Namur. These, together
-with heavy frontal attacks.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-In all that follows it is necessary to add in,
-by way of reinforcements on the German side,
-the very great moral encouragement which the
-enemy had received by their triumphal passage
-through Belgium. They were in overwhelming
-strength; their heavy guns had crushed the
-fortresses in a few hours like so many egg-shells;
-they had, for many a long year, believed
-themselves invincible as against the world; and now
-they were marching directly upon Paris with
-the confident hope that within three months
-France would have ceased to exist as a nation,
-and that by the end of the year the war would
-be finished, with terms of peace dictated by
-their all-highest and supremely-powerful deity,
-the Kaiser.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was, too, not merely an army disciplined
-and trained in the minutest details of war which
-was thus bludgeoning forward into France; it
-was, in effect, a nation in arms. A nation
-which, for many a long year past, had been
-educated to regard war as the greatest of all
-earthly things&mdash;-a supreme issue to which all the
-sciences and arts of the preliminary years of
-peace were to be directed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a nation which regarded as fully
-legitimate any means whatever to the supreme
-end desired.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I recall a remark made to me during the
-South African War by a Prussian naval officer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You English," he said, "do not know the
-rudiments of war. When the day comes for us
-to go to war you shall see how we deal with
-the men, women and children. With us terror
-is our greatest weapon."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To-day the world knows how that weapon
-has been mercilessly wielded; and how impotent
-it has been.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On her side Britain was equally united, but
-in a different sense. She had taken up the
-gauntlet because her people were assured that
-the cause was a just one. In those early days
-the Expeditionary Force was not concerned
-one way or the other with the reasons for its
-presence in France. The men were, for the
-most part, quite ignorant of the facts; they
-were there as a professional army to do their
-"bit," as they had often had to do it before,
-and I cannot recall a single instance during the
-first month where the men spoke of the meaning
-of the war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In numbers they were hopelessly insignificant
-beside the enormous masses ranged
-against them, but, for its size, the army with
-the colours has always been recognised the world
-over as without a peer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was, however, one factor which in no
-small degree tended to level the balance.
-Discipline in the Germany Army meant discipline
-in the mass, by regiments or companies, under
-constant supervision of officers and N.C.O.'s.
-In the British Army it meant discipline of the
-individual. In a word, if a British soldier finds
-himself alone in a tight corner he generally
-knows how to get out, if it is humanly possible.
-The German, accustomed from his childhood to
-be dry-nursed in every trivial detail of his
-every-day life, would be hopelessly at sea when forced
-to act on his own initiative. When properly
-led the German is splendidly courageous, and
-in this respect, quite apart from numbers and
-moral, it was an exceedingly tough proposition
-which French and British were up against at Mons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As regards the French it is rather more
-difficult to estimate their outlook in the early
-days. From their experience in 1870 they knew
-what war with Germany meant, both in the
-actual fighting and in the nameless atrocities
-which the enemy committed on the civil
-population. Thus they wanted their revenge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But France had not yet suffered in this
-war. She had not yet seen her borough officials
-taken as hostages and murdered in cold blood;
-her older men sold into slavery; her women
-raped and mutilated; her infant children
-impaled upon the bayonet and thrown into the
-fire; her Cathedral of Rheims tortured and
-desecrated. All this was yet to come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the beginning they fought valiantly but
-blindly. The shock was too sudden and
-overwhelming. Mistakes were made in the higher
-commands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But within the month France awoke. The
-Soul of her still lived; and it was the Soul of
-a nation which was mighty many a generation
-before ever Germanic tribes had banded together
-in primitive community.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Soul of France awoke in every one of
-her children. Not one, man, woman or child,
-but saw the way clear before him, but felt the
-grip of steel-cold determination to follow that
-path straight to the end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the France which turned at bay
-before the very gates of her capital, to show
-the world that the doom of civilisation's enemy
-was irrevocably sealed.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap05fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap05fn1text">1</a>] Until Wednesday the 26th, the 19th Brigade was acting
-directly under orders from G.H.Q. On that date, being isolated
-it was appropriated by the Second Corps. The 4th Division
-detrained at Le Gateau and took up position in and about
-Solesmes to cover the retirement.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI
-</h3>
-
-<h3>
-MONS
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-"<i>If the English had any apprehension they would run
-away.</i>"
-</p>
-
-<p class="thought">
-*****
-<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"<i>That island of England breeds very valiant creatures:
-their mastiffs are of unmatchable courage.</i>"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The dawn of Sunday, the 23rd, broke dim and
-misty, giving promise of heat. From the late
-afternoon of the previous day squadrons and
-reconnaissance patrols from Chetwode's Cavalry
-Brigade had been pushing well forward on the
-flanks and front of the British line. They were
-regiments with names "familiar in our mouths
-as household words": 12th Lancers, 20th
-Hussars and Scots Greys.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was pretty though delicate work this
-feeling forward to get into touch with enemy
-outposts and patrols. Nor was there a troop which
-did not have some story to tell that evening of
-a tussle with enemy cavalry, with its ending,
-happy or otherwise, determined by the more
-wide-awake patrol.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In one place an officer's patrol, moving
-quietly out from a grassy forest track, stumbled
-straight upon a dozen Uhlans having a meal.
-The British had no time to draw swords, and
-certainly the Uhlans hadn't, it was just a
-question of riding them down, and swords and pistols
-out when you could.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In another place a German and a British
-patrol entered a village simultaneously from
-either end, unbeknown to each other. The
-turn of a corner and they were face to face.
-Our men were the more wide-awake, and they
-got spurs to their horses and swords out before
-the enemy grasped the situation. The little
-affair was over in five minutes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But as our cavalry pushed farther and
-farther northwards they found themselves
-confronting ever-increasing numbers, and
-retirement became necessary.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus were the first shots fired.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At six in the morning of this Sunday, Sir
-John French held a "pow-wow" with the
-three G.O.C.'s, Generals Haig, Smith-Dorrien
-and Allenby, and discussed the situation,
-somewhat in these terms:[<a id="chap06fn1text"></a><a href="#chap06fn1">1</a>]
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So far as I can see from the messages I've
-had from French H.Q. I don't think we've got
-more than a couple of Corps in front of us,
-perhaps a Cavalry Division as well.[<a id="chap06fn2text"></a><a href="#chap06fn2">2</a>] And it
-doesn't look as though they are trying to
-outflank, because the cavalry have been right out
-there and didn't meet with much opposition;
-nor do the aircraft appear to have noticed
-anything unusual going on. It'll be a big enemy
-superiority, but I don't think too big if we've
-got dug in properly and the lines are all right.
-We ought to hold them when they come on.
-The French, as you know, are holding our
-right, Namur, and down the Meuse."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here is a plan to show the situation as it
-was known at G.H.Q.:
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-071"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-071.jpg" alt="PLAN A" />
-<br />
-PLAN A
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The morning wears on. You picture the
-country-side as not unlike one of our own
-mining districts, the little villages and
-low-roofed houses giving that curious smoky, grimy
-effect of mean suburbs bordering on a large
-industrial town. Here and there great heaps
-of slag or disused pits and quarries; gaunt
-iron stems carrying great wheels and heavy
-machinery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The soldiers are billeted all through the
-houses or make a shake-down in odd barns and
-yards. Look over the garden gate of one little
-house and you will see the company cooks of
-one regiment getting the Sunday dinner ready,
-peeling the potatoes, swinging the pots on to
-the camp fires.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From a barn hard by you'll hear the sound
-of singing. A padre has looked in as the rollicking
-chorus of "Who's your lady friend?" swung
-out into the roadway, and with gentle interruption
-has improvised a short service, suggesting
-"Rock of Ages" as a substitute for the music-hall ditty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Down the road a couple of sergeants of the
-West Ridings lean idly over a gate smoking and
-watching the folk going off to Mass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Out over the canal line the men are hard at
-work trench-digging, pausing now and again to
-look skywards as the drowsy hum of an
-aeroplane propeller sounds over them. Whether
-the machine is friend or foe they have
-no idea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Three girls saunter down the road, arms
-round waists, and stop to look with interest and
-amusement at some of the West Kents washing
-out their shirts. One of the men is stripped
-for a wash and Marie exchanges a little repartee
-with him, to run off laughing as a burly
-lance-corporal plants a sounding kiss on her cheek, by
-way of finishing the argument.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So peaceful it all is, with just that
-under-current of excitement which the presence of
-strange troops would give. Imagine a
-Lancashire or Yorkshire village on a summer
-Sunday morning and you have the picture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is now eleven o'clock and the people are
-streaming home from church. The service
-seems to have been cut rather shorter than
-usual and there is just a hint of anxiety to be
-seen on their faces. What was it the curé had
-said, something about keeping quietly in their
-homes and trusting <i>le bon Dieu</i>? But there is
-no danger, the English are here to protect us.
-Still, those aeroplanes have an ugly sound,
-something of <i>un air menaçant</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another aeroplane&mdash;and look, it has a great
-black cross under the wings! Un Boche? No,
-it cannot be. Ah, see, see, a French one,
-ours! It goes to meet it. Mon Dieu! they
-fight! And dimly from the sunny heaven there
-falls the crackle of revolvers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A motor dispatch-rider hurls himself from
-his machine straight upon the astonished group
-of West Kents.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where's the officer? Get moving; you're
-wanted up there!" and he jerks a thumb over
-his shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men rush for their kit and rifles.
-Away to the west there is the crack of an
-18-pounder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Down the street the cyclist pants. A subaltern
-bursts in on the Sunday dinner of the
-Bedfords.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fall in outside at once!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another aeroplane sails over. It hovers for
-a moment over the Scottish Borderers in their
-trenches. A trail of black smoke drops down,
-and instinctively the men cower below the
-parapet. Slowly it falls. Nothing more. The
-men raise their heads.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Eh, man, but a thocht yon werre one o' thae&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sudden, odd hum in the air, and then&mdash;crash!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Scots corporal slowly and painfully drags
-himself out from the pile of earth and debris
-and looks round. There is a curious numb
-feeling in his right arm. He sits up with a dazed
-gasp. There is a hand by him on the ground.
-His? He looks at his arm, and realises. Near
-by five of his pals are laid out. He seems to
-have escaped.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Lord ha' maircy&mdash;but the regiment's
-fair blooded this day," and he falls back in a
-faint.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-More aeroplanes, more trails of smoke; and,
-wherever they fall, within twenty odd seconds a
-German shell bursts fair and true.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All down the line there springs the crack of
-rifles. Beyond the canal the outposts of the
-Lincolns, Royal Scots and others are coming in
-at the double. A curtain of shell-fire is lowered
-behind them as the British batteries come into
-action. A curtain of fire rolls down before
-them as the German guns take the range.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is now close upon one o'clock, and enemy
-shells have begun to creep nearer and nearer
-in from the suburbs upon Mons itself. The
-good curé and his words are forgotten, for what
-living things can remain? And so there begins
-that pitiable exodus of old men, women and
-children which streamed steadily southwards,
-ever increasing as it crowded through the
-villages and towns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But there is no time to-day to think of them.
-They must go, or stay and perish&mdash;anything so
-long as they do not interfere with the great game
-of War.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-North of the town, where our lines necessarily
-bulged out, making a salient, the fighting
-was becoming desperate. Here three regiments
-especially (the Middlesex, Royal Irish and
-Royal Fusiliers) lost very heavily as they sturdily
-contested every yard of ground. This particular
-point had, from the first, been recognised as
-the weakest in the British lines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barely an hour since the first shots were
-fired, and now by one o'clock practically every
-gun and every rifle of the British Force is
-blazing away as though the powers of hell were
-set loose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As yet it would seem that the ammunition
-is being merely wasted for the sake of making
-a noise. There is no enemy in sight save in the
-air the circling aeroplanes, and away on the
-flanks dimly-seen clouds of horsemen. A
-modern battlefield with its curious emptiness
-has so often been described that here one need
-only record the fact in passing. There is
-nothing to be seen. The men are firing, in the
-first flush of excitement, at corners of possible
-concealment&mdash;the line of a hedge, the edge of
-a wood, the very occasional flash of a field-gun.
-On the left, in the Second Corps, the British
-fire slackens somewhat as the men pull themselves
-together. No one has the foggiest notion
-of what is really happening. It is the officers'
-business of the moment to steady the ranks and
-keep them under cover.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But away on the right, out by Binche, where
-the Guards are, the storm has burst in fullest
-fury. No slackening there. The extreme right
-was held by battalions of historic regiments,
-names to conjure with: Munster Fusiliers,
-Black Watch, Scots and Coldstream Guards.
-Ah, those Guards! The glorious discipline of
-them! But how distinguish between any of the
-regiments that day, and after?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Almost from the first the senior officers
-began to realise that something was wrong,
-especially on the right. The Divisional
-Commanders and their immediate staffs, to whom
-the general idea of strengths and dispositions
-was known, began to wonder whether a big
-mistake had not been made. "Well, never
-mind, we're in for it now, we must do the best
-we can. But, those guns! There certainly
-should not be so many out there."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And it was positively uncanny how the
-German guns got their range. That fact struck
-everybody almost more than anything else.
-There appeared to be no preliminary ranging,
-as was always usual, but guns got direct on to
-the target at once.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is difficult at times to avoid launching
-out into details which are of more interest to
-soldiers than to the general public, but as
-everything at this time was so new an occasional
-lapse may perhaps be excused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again, one's brain is so confused with such
-a mass of detail that it becomes most difficult
-to disentangle impressions and note them down
-in dispassionate language. If, however, the
-reader will take the little pen-pictures of
-incidents which are given and imagine them, not
-as isolated facts but as being reproduced fifty
-times all through the fighting lines, he may get
-a fair idea of the course of events.
-</p>
-
-<p class="thought">
-*****
-<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the day wore on that uncanny effect of
-the German fire increased. There is no doubt
-that it was mainly due to the amazingly efficient
-secret service of the enemy. The H.Q. of a
-division or a brigade, for instance, does not
-blatantly advertise its position, and yet time
-and time again shells were dropped clean on to
-the particular building where the Staff happened
-to be. And when they got into another building,
-plump would come more shells.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Looking back it is a little curious to remember
-that even in that first week a very considerable
-percentage of our total casualties were
-caused by high explosive shell, and the shooting
-of them was astonishingly accurate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yes, the German guns did their work well,
-but they did not fully succeed in their object.
-Their local successes were great, especially
-against British guns and batteries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here is a British battery which has made
-two mistakes&mdash;it is not sufficiently concealed,
-the battery commander is perched up on an
-observation limber, and the guns are not far
-enough back behind the crest. (The Germans
-always "search" for some 300 yards behind
-crests of hills.) The B.C. is quickly spotted by
-an aeroplane observer and a perfect hell of fire
-is switched on by the enemy. In a moment
-telephone wires are cut, communications are
-broken, and within five minutes the gun
-detachments are wiped out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The effect of a shell from the enemy heavier
-guns is overwhelming. The flank gun of the
-battery is hit, practically "direct." Some
-R.A.M.C. men double up a few minutes later
-to help out the wounded. There is nothing,
-save a great hole, fragments of twisted steel,
-and&mdash;a few limbs of brave men. Nothing can
-be done except, later, dig in the sides of the pit
-to cover the remains.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rest of the guns remain, but there is no
-one to work them. The horses, a little way to
-the rear, have also suffered badly. A subaltern
-officer staggers painfully through the tornado
-of fire from one gun to the next, slowly,
-deliberately putting them out of action, rendering
-them useless should the enemy come up to
-capture them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Early in the afternoon Brigade Commanders
-have got orders round to the British lines to
-hold up the infantry fire as far as possible. It
-is now all well under control, for everyone
-realises that the artillery bombardment was a
-preliminary only, that the real attack is yet to
-come. The men have had their baptism of fire
-and magnificently have they stood it. This is
-discipline, and now they are ready for anything
-which may come along.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-080"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-080.jpg" alt="FIELD-MARSHAL VISCOUNT FRENCH." />
-<br />
-FIELD-MARSHAL VISCOUNT FRENCH.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But already the casualties have been very
-heavy. Early in the day you have seen that
-company of the West Kents double up to the
-support of their battalion entrenched about
-half-way along the Second Corps line. I find a note
-in my diary: "W. Kents, Middlesex and
-Northumberlands" (they were all in the
-Second Corps) "decimated by shell fire." One
-or two companies of the W. Kents were, I
-believe, on outpost duty, which would mean
-that they were literally wiped out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, remember, the British trenches were
-not those of later days round Ypres. They
-had all been hastily dug in extremely hard and
-difficult ground, so that there were none of
-the niceties of snug dug-outs and bomb-proof
-shelters. In many places it was just a matter
-of scratching up the soil behind a hump of
-shale and cramming oneself in as far as one
-could go. To imagine, as one is led to do by
-some writers, that our men sat snugly in deep
-trenches through all that shell fire waiting
-calmly for the infantry attack is to get a
-hopelessly wrong idea. And if this was so on the
-first day when the men started in fresh, the
-conditions during the days which followed may
-be vaguely guessed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Think for a moment of the splendid work
-the R.A.M.C. were doing all this time. I
-wonder how many V.C.'s were earned by that
-self-sacrificing corps during the week. It is
-easy enough to do what people call a gallant
-deed with arms in your hands when the blood
-is up, to pick up a live bomb and hurl it
-away&mdash;little trifles of the moment which no one
-thinks twice about,&mdash;but the courage demanded
-in walking quietly into a hail of lead to bandage
-and carry out a wounded man, a feat which the
-R.A.M.C. men in the firing lines do a dozen
-times a day, <i>that</i> is worth talking about.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On our right the fight does not go well for
-us, and the suspicion that some mistake has
-been made becomes a certainty. If it is only
-a matter of two German corps and a Cavalry
-division in front of our position where on earth
-have all those guns come from?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still the British guns out towards Binche
-go pounding gallantly on, hopelessly outmatched
-though they are. It's pretty shooting,
-for our 18-prs. can get in six or seven shots a
-minute more than the German field-guns, but
-we cannot compete against their heavier metal.
-And, just as in a naval fight, it is the heavier
-metal which tells.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fighting on the right where General
-Lomax has the 1st Division has not slackened
-for a moment, but steadily becomes more
-intense. Now, for the first time, the enemy is
-really seen. And as his infantry begin an
-advance the German shell-fire redoubles in
-intensity. Every house where British can be
-concealed, every possible observation post, every
-foot of trench, every hill-crest and 400 yards
-behind it is swept and devastated by the
-tornado.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What communication between units is
-possible in such a storm? Now battalions and
-batteries find themselves cut off from their
-neighbours, each fighting and carrying on by
-itself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chetwode's Cavalry Brigade is caught in
-the thick of it. The Guards are out there
-and they hold on almost by their teeth. The
-1st Irish are in action for the first time since
-their formation. They'll see the Germans in
-hell before they're going to quit. The Munsters
-are in the hottest corner, if indeed you
-can see any degrees of difference.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cavalry have to go; and the Munsters
-and Black Watch lose horribly as they cover
-the retirement. No finer fighting regiments in
-the world than these on the right, but nothing
-human can stay there and live. The little town
-of Binche is abandoned; the first enemy success
-that day. The First Corps has had to swing
-back its outer flank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But if you think that the Black Watch, or
-the Guards, or any of them, have been sitting
-there quietly to be shot at when there's an
-enemy in sight, you know little of those
-regiments. And you don't imagine that the Scots
-Greys, or Lancers, or Hussars, with such a
-reputation behind them, are going to sneak out
-of Binche by a back way without first getting
-a little of their own back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No, if the Germans have got to have Binche
-they must bring up a great many more men
-than that to take it. There has been much talk
-of a repetition of that famous charge of the
-Greys, with the Black Watch hanging on to
-the stirrup-leathers. If indeed it was repeated
-that August then this must have been the
-moment. I am sorry to say that I have never
-been able to obtain any real confirmation of
-the story, so I shall not set it down.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it might well have happened, and one
-likes to think that it did. Anyway, during that
-hour or so, there was many a gallant, desperate
-charge in that corner. A charge against
-overwhelming odds, when the utmost to be expected
-was the breaking and rout of the first two or
-three lines of the advance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It needs no vivid flight of imagination to
-picture it. On the far outskirts of the town a
-railway line runs. Under the lee of a sheltering
-embankment and bridge the officers collect
-and re-form some of the squadrons, now grown
-pitiably less in numbers. Words of command
-are almost inaudible, but the men understand.
-Hard by, on their left, you have the flanking
-companies of the line regiments. One or two
-brief messages pass to and fro between cavalry
-and infantry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Greys and Lancers are going to
-charge the left of infantry advancing beyond
-the wood. Give them all the support you can!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The British fire slackens from loophole and
-broken window. The Scottish regiment and
-the Coldstream Guards insist on taking a share.
-They cut out through the leaden hail and make
-some yards' advance, dropping again under what
-cover they can.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A last look round, a final pull at girth-straps,
-and the word is passed. The enemy
-infantry is 300 yards away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Tr-rot!" They are clear of the embankment.
-All well in hand. The enemy guns
-have not yet got them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Scots and Coldstream Guards make
-another rush and again drop.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can-ter!" And men and horses settle
-down into the steady swing. The infantry who
-have got the orders to support start blazing
-away again as fast as they can get the magazine
-clips home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the German gunners see what is happening
-and one gun after another drops its
-range and fuse. The German infantry is 250
-yards away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cha-arge!" No need to sound it. The
-officers are in front, and where the officers go
-their men will follow. Anywhere!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Scots and Coldstreamers are after them
-as hard as they can leg it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The enemy on the flank try to swing round
-to meet the charge, but there is no time. The
-German guns mercilessly drop the range still
-more&mdash;what matter if they sweep away their
-own men as well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One hundred yards! Fifty yards! A long,
-sickening crash&mdash;and the Greys and Lancers are
-in them. Hacking, slashing, hewing! The
-Scots are hard on their heels just to their left.
-A mighty heave as the bayonets get home.
-The first rank is through. There are no more
-ranks, only a vast confusion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Five little minutes (it seems an eternity)
-and the enemy flank is crushed in, smashed to
-pulp as a block of stone smashes in the head
-of a man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who goes home?" Who can? Ten
-men, a dozen, perhaps twenty have struggled
-through. A few will cover again the ground
-over which they charged. A few, such a tiny
-few, will get back under cover again. "The
-rest is silence."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But they have done it. The enemy have
-learned what a British charge is like. They
-know now what bayonet work is, and the lesson
-sinks deep. They will not face the steel again.
-Ask the men who fought at the Aisne, at
-Ypres.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap06fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap06fn1text">1</a>] I have simply turned paragraphs of Sir John French's
-dispatch into imaginary spoken words.
-</p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap06fn2"></a>
-[<a href="#chap06fn2text">2</a>] A German Cavalry Division numbered, approximately, 5,200,
-all ranks, including 2 batteries Horse Artillery and 1
-machine-gun battery.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII
-<br />
-MONS (<i>continued</i>)
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>But pardon, gentles all,<br />
- The flat unraised spirits that have dar'd,<br />
- On this unworthy scaffold to bring forth<br />
- So great an object: can this cockpit hold<br />
- The vasty fields of France?</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-It may be of interest at this point if the
-narrative be broken off for a few minutes to
-give some details of the methods the Germans
-employ in their infantry attack, especially as
-they differ so greatly from our own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two main features are (<i>a</i>) they consider
-rifle work as of comparatively little value and
-rely mainly on machine-gun fire, and (<i>b</i>) they
-attack in dense masses, shoulder to shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-British methods are, or were, precisely the
-opposite. Our men have brought musketry to
-such perfection that an infantryman will get off
-in one minute almost double the number of
-rounds that a German will; and, what is more
-to the point, they will all hit the mark. Let
-it be noted that the British Army owes this
-perfection to the wise foresight of Lord
-Roberts. (Ah, if only the nation, too, had
-listened to him!)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-British troops, adopting the lessons of the
-Boer War, attack with an interval between the
-files, i.e. in extended order.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now at Mons, and after, a German battalion
-generally attacked in three double ranks. The
-rear double rank had with it four or six
-machine-guns. They count upon the first three or four
-ranks stopping the enemy's bullets, but, by the
-time these are swept away, the last ranks (with
-the machine-guns) should be sufficiently near
-to carry the position attacked: say about 300
-yards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This reckless sacrifice of life is typical of the
-German "machine," as opposed to the British
-"individual."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a matter of fact their method never
-succeeded over open ground before the British
-fire, for the front ranks were always swept away
-at the very beginning of the attack, and so
-they did not get near enough with the rear ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The German officer who gave me these
-details remarked that the rapidity and accuracy
-of the British fire were simply incredible, that
-they never had a chance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Our men," he said, "have come to believe
-that every one of you carries a portable Maxim
-with him."
-</p>
-
-<p class="thought">
-*****
-<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It must have been about 2.30 in the afternoon
-that Binche had to be abandoned. But it
-was before this that the German infantry attacks
-began all along the line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For nearly two hours our men had somehow
-or other been weathering the storm of shrapnel,
-and we have seen that they had by now settled
-down under it. Let us get back to the Second
-Corps and see what is happening. You have
-got some idea of the look of the country in
-front of our positions, all broken up, uneven
-ground, little woods here and there. Out on
-the left flank there are county regiments, men
-of Dorset, Norfolk, Suffolk, Cheshire, Surrey.
-They know something about "ground" work,
-and they have learned a deal more with their
-regiments.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One end of the Yorks L.I. trench ends in
-a little stone-walled pigsty. At least it was a
-pigsty about church time that morning, but
-a German gunner thought it would look better
-without any roof or walls.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is still a fragment three feet high on
-the weather side, and the Yorks C.O. finds it
-a convenient shelter for the time being. He
-is not attending church-parade that day, so it
-doesn't matter about lying full length in the
-filth on the ground. The last remaining
-company colour-sergeant is with him&mdash;also
-embedded in the manure. They are both
-nibbling chocolate. Tobacco would be particularly
-useful just now, but they have both run
-out of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For some minutes the C.O. has been intently
-watching through his glasses the corner
-of a wood about 500 yards in front. He
-hands the binoculars to the sergeant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What do you make of it? That corner
-over the little shed."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sergeant has a look. He returns the
-glasses and slowly nods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It might be a brigade, sir, from the
-number of them."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," says the C.O., "I thought it was
-about time. Get word along that there is to
-be no firing till the order's given."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very good, sir!" And the sergeant
-scrambles to his feet, salutes, ducks hastily as
-a shell seems to whistle past unnecessarily close,
-and dives into the rabbit-burrow in which his men
-are squatting. The C.O. returns to his glasses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The C.O. of a British battery, in position
-some distance to the rear, has evidently also
-spotted that particular target, for puffs of
-bursting shrapnel have begun to appear over
-the wood and round the edges.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now there is a distinct movement of troops
-emerging from behind the wood. It is a
-movement only which can be seen, for the men
-themselves can scarcely be distinguished against
-the grey-green country-side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the very same moment it seems as though
-all the guns in the world have been turned on
-to those few miles of British front, and to the
-batteries behind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The British gun-fire wavers for a minute or
-so; but soon it picks up again though, alas! not
-so strongly as before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Yorks C.O. has lost his enemy infantry
-for a minute; they are working forward under
-the edge of a rise in the ground.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the front ranks appear, and the C.O. gives
-a sharp whistle of astonishment. Four
-hundred yards off, and it looks like a great
-glacier rolling down a mountain-side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nearer still it creeps, and the German guns
-have raised their range to give their infantry
-a chance. "Besides, there will probably be
-nothing but empty trenches to take anyway,"
-they say.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fifty yards nearer, and the temptation is
-too great.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Let it go, Yorkshires!" he yells down the
-trench. (The command is not in the drill-book,
-but it serves very well.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the Yorkshires "let it go" accordingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Eh, lads," sings out a lad from Halifax,
-"'tis t' crowd coom oop for t' Coop Day! And
-t' lads yonder can't shoot for nuts," he blithely
-adds as myriads of rifle bullets whistle high
-overhead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And he and the lads from Trent-side proceed
-very methodically to give "t' lads" from
-Spreeside a lesson in how shooting should be done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Very methodically; but that means something
-like 16 shots a minute each man, and you
-may be sure that very, very few bullets go off
-the target. No one dreams of keeping cover.
-Indeed, the men prop their rifles on the parapet
-and pump out lead as hard as their fingers can
-work bolt and trigger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Miss? It's impossible to miss. You can't
-help hitting the side of a house&mdash;and that's
-what the target looks like. It is just slaughter.
-The oncoming ranks simply melt away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now through the unholy din you can
-hear a cracking noise which is quite distinct in
-the uproar. Something like the continuous
-back-fire of a mammoth motor-cycle. Machine-guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Dorsets have got a man who is a past-master
-in the use of these infernal engines.
-How he escaped that day no one can tell. But
-for many an hour he sat at the gun spraying
-the enemy attack with his steel hose. His
-"bag" must have run into thousands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The attack still comes on. Though hundreds,
-thousands of the grey coats are mown
-down, as many more crowd forward to refill
-the ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nearer still, and with a hoarse yell the
-Yorkshires, Dorsets, Cornwalls and others are
-out of the trenches, officers ahead of them,
-with bayonets fixed and heading straight at the
-enemy. A murderous Maxim fire meets them
-but it does not stop them, and in a minute they
-are thrusting and bashing with rifles, fists, stones,
-in amongst the enemy ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again the German gunners drop their range
-and pour their shells indiscriminately into friend
-and foe. It is too much for the attacking
-regiments and they break up hopelessly, turn
-and begin to struggle back. It is impossible to
-attempt any rally of our men. They must go on
-until they are overwhelmed by sheer numbers,
-or they must straggle to the lines as best they
-can in knots of twos and threes, or wander
-aimlessly off to the flanks and get lost.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was one single attack. But no sooner
-was it broken than fresh regiments would march
-out to begin it all over again. And here is no
-Pass of Thermopylae where a handful of men
-can withstand for indefinite time an army.
-What can the British hope to do against such
-overwhelming numbers? The end, you will say,
-must be annihilation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cavalry, the only reserves, are working,
-surely, as no cavalry has ever worked before.
-Squadrons are everywhere at once. Wherever
-a gap is threatened they are there in support.
-And wherever they go there also go the Horse
-Gunners working hand and glove with them.
-Charge and counter-charge upon the flanks of
-the attacking infantry, dismounting to cover
-with their fire a British infantry rally, fierce
-hand-to-hand encounters with enemy squadrons.
-Wherever they are wanted, each man and horse
-is doing the work of ten.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But this cannot last for long. Now it is
-becoming only too evident that far from there
-being a reasonable superiority against us the
-British are everywhere along the line
-hopelessly outnumbered in every arm. And at
-5 P.M. there happened one of the most
-dramatic incidents of the war, that day or
-afterwards. You will find the bare recital of
-the event set forth in cold official language
-in the G.O.C.-in-Chief's dispatch, beginning:
-"In the meantime, about 5 P.M., I received a
-most unexpected message from General Joffre."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It will be remembered that from information
-received from French G.H.Q. the previous
-night, and from his own reconnaissance reports,
-the Commander-in-Chief had concluded that
-his right flank was reasonably secured by the
-French armies, that the fortress of Namur was
-still being held, and that the enemy strength
-in front of him was about 134,000 men and
-490 field-guns, at an outside estimate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All the afternoon the enemy had been
-attacking, and the British right had had to
-give ground before it, with the consequence
-that Mons itself had to be abandoned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, like a bolt from the blue, came the
-message from the French. "Unexpected,"
-one would think, is a very mild term:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Namur has fallen. The Germans <i>yesterday</i>
-won the passages over the River Sambre
-between Charleroi and Namur. The French
-armies are retiring. You have <i>at least</i> 187,500
-men and 690 guns attacking you in front;
-another 62,500 men and 230 guns trying to
-turn your left flank; and probably another
-300,000 men" (the victorious army in pursuit
-of the French) "driving in a wedge on your
-right."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This is what the message would look like:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-097a"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-097a.jpg" alt="Attacking and defending forces" />
-<br />
-Attacking and defending forces
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But we have seen that there were really
-thirteen German corps attacking the positions
-Tournai&mdash;Namur&mdash;Dinant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus the <i>real</i> figures would probably look
-like this:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-097b"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-097b.jpg" alt="Attacking and defending forces" />
-<br />
-Attacking and defending forces
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We may, of course, take it that by the end
-of the day the figures were somewhat reduced
-all round, British and German; the German
-losses being "out of all proportion to those
-which we have suffered."
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-098"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-098.jpg" alt="PLAN B. Position as it appeared at 5 pm Aug 23." />
-<br />
-PLAN B. Position as it appeared at 5 pm Aug 23.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such then was the situation at 5.0 P.M. on
-that eventful Sunday. An average of nearly
-four times our number of guns against us all
-along the position. No wonder that senior
-officers had guessed from the first that
-"something was wrong."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And G.H.Q.? You imagine, perhaps, that
-the municipal offices where the General Staff
-had its abode would now be seething with
-excitement. You will picture Staff officers
-rushing from room to room; orders and
-counter-orders being reeled off; the Intelligence
-and Army Signals Departments looking
-like Peter Robinson's in sales week; an army
-of motor-cyclist dispatch riders being hurled
-from the courtyard towards every point of the
-compass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wrong! G.H.Q. that day, and the next,
-was less concerned than a little French
-provincial mairie would be on France's national
-fête day. The casual visitor would have seen
-less bustle of activity than at the Liverpool
-offices of a shipping firm on mail day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Postal Department: "Business as
-usual." Army Censor: Not much doing.
-Intelligence: Half a dozen red-tabbed officers
-looking at big maps with blue and red
-chalk-marks on them. Director of Ordnance
-Supplies: "Better see about moving rail-head a
-few miles farther south." A.G.'s (Adjutant-General)
-Office: "We shall want orders out
-about stragglers, what they are to do." And
-so on, all through the list. If this was an
-instance of that British phlegm which so
-amuses the French, then commend me to it!
-If anybody wanted a tonic against pessimism
-these days of the Retreat he only had to drop
-in at G.H.Q. He would certainly come out
-with the conviction that we should indeed be
-home by Christmas, with the German Army
-wiped off the map.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Yes, that week which followed, indeed,
-welded into one "band of brothers" all the
-officers and men in the little Force. In those
-days everybody seemed to know everybody else.
-Regimental jealousy (if it ever existed) was
-obliterated completely, and every officer and
-man, from the General Officers Commanding
-Corps down to the bus drivers who drove the
-A.S.C. lorries, worked shoulder to shoulder.
-And so we pulled through.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Now there were other units in the Force
-besides those in the firing-line. There were all
-those columns which trekked up by road.
-Normally, most of these should be something
-like 15 miles to the rear. They know very
-little of what is going on ahead of them, though
-the ammunition columns can gauge fairly well
-by the demands made on them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So it was that about midnight on that
-Sunday they began to realise back there that
-things were moving by a sudden and insistent
-demand for every scrap of rifle and
-18-pr. ammunition they carried.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No sooner was that sent than there came
-more demands, and there was nothing to send.
-Wagons and lorries had trundled off at once to
-rail-head, but it would be hours before they
-could get back. Thus, on the very first day,
-the overwhelming nature of the situation pulled
-at and snapped the slender threads of communication.
-The threads were soon mended, but, as
-will be seen later, they never got properly into
-working order until the Marne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nor did those columns altogether escape
-disaster even at the very outset of the fighting.
-One, out towards the flank, was attacked and
-practically destroyed by raiding cavalry, for
-they do not work with escorts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In one column, about 10.0 P.M., the alarm
-was given by an imaginative A.S.C. subaltern.
-What the men were to fight with is not clear,
-for only about 25 per cent. of the detachment
-had ever handled a rifle, and no ammunition
-was issued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It's Germans crawling through that field,"
-said the subaltern. "I saw their electric-torch
-flashes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men stood to, peering into the darkness,
-and feeling certain that their last hour
-had come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A farmer came slowly out of the field-gate
-and begged two of the men to come and help
-him round up his cows.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the detachment turned in again, cursing
-heartily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But soon the A.S.C. bus drivers were
-"doing their bit" under fire as gallantly as
-everybody else. How and when you shall hear
-in another chapter.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-6.0 P.M.&mdash;The enemy have concentrated
-their fire upon the town of Mons and it has
-become untenable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Only six hours, six little hours since the
-Belgian townsfolk had come peacefully home
-from Mass to their Sunday <i>déjeuner</i>, proud and
-hopeful in the presence of their British allies.
-And now their houses, their town, a heap of
-smoking ruins.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In those short hours how many women have
-seen their children crushed by falling walls or
-blown to atoms by bursting shells? How many
-children are left helpless and alone in the world,
-with no mother or father to take them by the
-hand and guide them from the hell of destruction?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Is there no thought for them, you who have
-been following the fortunes of the day for the
-British? Many have escaped, with such few
-household treasures as they can carry in
-perambulators and little handcarts. They, at least,
-have some hope of life. These may struggle on
-for a little while&mdash;to faint or die of hunger
-and exhaustion by the roadside. The strongest
-may get through.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the rest, their lives are sacrificed to
-make a German holiday. They die, but in their
-death the battalions of these innocents have
-joined the mighty, mysterious army of souls
-who shall haunt the German people until
-Germany ceases to be.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>C'est l'armée de ceux qui sont morts</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>En maudissant les Allemands,</i><br />
- <i>Et dont les invincibles renforts</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>Vengeront le sang innocent.</i>[<a id="chap07fn1text"></a><a href="#chap07fn1">1</a>]<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-With such an overwhelming attack working
-forward in front and on both flanks the only
-problem left was how to get the British force
-away with the smallest loss. To remain
-obviously meant certain annihilation sooner or
-later. As a matter of course, possible positions
-in rear had long since been reconnoitred. They
-were not particularly good ones, but the best
-that were available.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From earlier in the afternoon the Sappers
-had been at work on all the bridges crossing the
-canal, laying mines ready to blow them up in
-front of a possible successful enemy advance.
-By no means a pleasant task this, for the men
-were working under heavy fire practically all
-the time. But the Sappers are another of those
-corps of the Service which are well used to the
-kicks without the ha'pence, and nothing comes
-amiss to them. There is no regiment in the
-Army whose work merits recognition more than
-the R.E.; there is no regiment more surprised
-and pleased at receiving it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the dusk draws on the enemy fire has
-slackened a little, and the men in their trenches
-are here and there able to snatch mouthfuls of
-any food they happen to have handy. Most
-of them have not tasted anything since early
-morning, and they have been fighting hard all
-day. But there is no thought of rest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The darkening night becomes red day as the
-glare of burning houses and buildings everywhere
-mounts to heaven in great shafts of light.
-It is such a picture as only a Rembrandt could
-give us on canvas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men sit or crouch wearily in their
-burrows, rifles always ready, heads sunk
-forward over the butts. Now and again there is
-a momentary stir as a doctor or stretcher-bearers
-scramble through the debris to get at
-the wounded. The fantastic, twisted shapes of
-the dead are reverently composed and laid down
-on the ground. The belongings of them are
-carefully collected, with the little metal identity
-disc. So far as possible these will reach the
-wife, mother, or sweetheart at home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps those evening hours of the first
-day's fighting were the most terrible the men
-were ever to know. The tension had very
-slightly relaxed, and the brain began once again
-something of its functions. They began to
-<i>feel</i> things. No one ever gets accustomed to
-being under the fire of modern warfare, and
-this was the first day of it. The horror of
-everything began to crush the senses. Soon
-physical and mental action became purely
-mechanical; men ceased to feel, but moved,
-fired a rifle, fed themselves, with the grotesque
-jerks of children's toys. But this was not yet.
-Now they were conscious, if but a little.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One man, a bugler in a county regiment,
-little more than a child in years, went raving
-mad as he staggered across a trench and fell,
-dragging with him a headless Thing which still
-kept watch with rifle against shoulder. His
-shrieks, as they pulled the two apart, ring even
-now in the ears. He died that night, simply
-from shock after the awful tension of the day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Consciousness came to the men, yet with it
-came also amazing cheerfulness even in the
-midst of the horror. But it was the cheerfulness
-not of high spirits but of determination,
-and of pity. They had fought through the day
-against an enemy which, even to men who did
-not understand, was in overwhelming strength;
-and yet they had been able to hold their ground.
-It was the cheerfulness which, at a word from
-their officers, would have taken them straight
-at the enemy's throat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And pity, if it is to be helpful and sincere,
-must have behind it a gaiety of heart. No
-man in the world is more tender to helpless or
-dumb creatures than the British soldier or
-sailor; no man more cheerful. And no man in
-the Force but felt his heart wrung by the
-infinite pathos of the folk of Mons and round
-it. History will never record how many soldiers
-lost their lives that day in succouring the people
-who had put such trust in their presence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And how many won such a distinction as no
-king can bestow&mdash;the love and gratitude of little
-children? One man, at least, I knew (I never
-learned his name) who, at the tears of two tiny
-mites, clambered into the ruins of a burning
-outhouse, then being shelled, to fetch something
-they wanted, he could not understand what.
-He found a terror-stricken cat and brought it
-out safely. No, not pussy, something else as
-well. Back he went again, and after a little
-search discovered on the floor in a corner a
-wicker cage, in it a blackbird. Yes, that was
-it. And, oh, the joy of the girl mite at finding
-it still alive!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, you see, sir," he said afterwards,
-"I've got two kiddies the image of them.
-And it was no trouble, anyway."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-About 2 A.M. (the 24th) orders to begin
-retiring were issued from G.H.Q. Some four
-hours before a few of the units&mdash;those north of
-the canal&mdash;had begun to fall back; and so the
-beginning of the move was made. As the last
-of these crossed the bridges the detonator fuses
-were fired and the bridges blown up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the rest, the men crouched ever in
-their places, bayonets fixed, rifles always
-ready&mdash;waiting, waiting.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap07fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap07fn1text">1</a>] 'Tis the army of those who in dying<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Have cursed the German flood&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And whose growing invincible forces<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Will avenge all innocent blood.&mdash;EMILE CAMMAERTS.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII
-<br />
-THE RETREAT BEGINS
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>The poor condemned English,<br />
- Like sacrifices, by their watchful fires<br />
- Sit patiently, and inly ruminate<br />
- The morning's danger.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-To follow now the fortunes of the British Force
-you must imagine it, if you will, divided, like
-Caesar's Gaul, into three parts. There is the
-First Corps, which still holds its position, save
-that extreme right by Binche; there is the
-Second Corps, which has begun at 3 A.M. to
-retire to a new position; and there is the
-Cavalry, Allenby's Division and the remainder
-of Chetwode's Brigade, which turns up whereever
-it is most needed to lend a helping hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If you glance through Sir John French's
-dispatch (at the end of the book) you will see
-that he had in mind to retire in what is called
-"echelon" formation. That is, one-half
-retires and takes up a new position, while the
-other half stays behind to act as a rear-guard
-and hold up enemy attacks. Then, in turn,
-that other half retires behind the first half, and
-so on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That was the idea, and on the first day it
-worked very well. But after that it was found
-simply impossible to keep to it, partly through
-the enemy's thunderbolt movements, and
-partly because our men became more and more
-exhausted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, it is also a cardinal principle in
-rearguard fights that you must not only check your
-enemy, but must also, whenever possible, make
-a counter-attack. In fact, the counter-attacks
-are part and parcel of the checking movements.
-This is where cavalry comes in very useful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Let us, then, take the three divisions of the
-Force separately.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>The First Corps</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Night attacks, especially in the early morning
-(it sounds rather Irish), are horribly
-uncomfortable things. The nerves are continuously
-on edge and you are apt to loose off guns or
-rifles at the merest suspicion of a movement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If ye should see a wee brrown beastie in
-frront o' ye," a canny Scot sergeant told his
-men, "ye mauna fire, because likely it'll be a
-bit rrabbit, and rrabbits are guid for the pot.
-But if the beastie should walk upon twa legs,
-then ye may ken it's no a rrabbit, but a
-Gerrman, an' ye will tak a verry quick but
-carefu' sicht o' him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All through that Sunday night the men had
-snatched odd minutes of sleep just where they
-had fought through the day. And very little
-rest did the enemy allow them. For one can
-well imagine how exasperated by this time the
-enemy were at being held up by a handful of
-a "contemptible little army." It was most
-difficult, too, to get any food up to the lines,
-for the German guns had "registered" all the
-approaches and persistently dropped their shells
-across them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the men hung on cheerily enough, and
-if they couldn't get any sleep they made up
-their minds that the Germans should not either,
-especially where they were dug in only a few
-hundred yards in front.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the short summer night was passed.
-And with the first hint of dawn the news ran
-quickly round that, far from dreaming of
-retiring, the First Corps was going to attack. The
-news was as good as a big breakfast. Somehow
-or other the A.S.C. got up rations to most of
-the units, and so it was the cheeriest of 2nd
-Divisions which swung out of their trenches and
-loop holed houses and headed for the enemy's
-left flank in Binche. The 1st Division acted
-as supports.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the attack there was something more of
-a hint of that method and timing which, eight
-months later, were brought to such perfection in
-Flanders. The British batteries had by now
-recovered somewhat from their severe handling
-during the day, and at the given moment every
-gun got well to work in support of the infantry,
-and very fine practice they made.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of course the attack was really no more
-than a ruse, daringly conceived and successfully
-executed. Binche could not have been held
-even if it had been recaptured. But it is not
-difficult to imagine the enemy's astonishment
-at finding an Army Corps, which they had fondly
-imagined as good as wiped out, coming to life
-again and actually having the cheek to attack
-them. Kipling's remark about the Fuzzy-wuzzy
-who is "generally shamming when 'e's dead"
-was an excellent motto for that morning's work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the attack was well launched General
-Lomax began to withdraw very carefully some
-of his regiments from the supporting 1st
-Division. The task of the British guns of the
-two divisions (working together) was to lower
-such a curtain of fire in front of the 2nd
-Division as to make it as difficult as possible
-for the enemy to counter-attack or, indeed, to
-advance at all. As soon as the 1st Division have
-retired a little, it will be the turn of the division
-which has made that excellent sortie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is easy enough to say "the guns will
-check an enemy advance," but think for a
-moment what that means. There is already a
-big enemy superiority in guns, and, what is
-more, these have already got the ranges to a
-nicety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our batteries, or most of them, were in quite
-good positions, but at this early date we had
-not yet learned the art of concealing them
-sufficiently. The enemy aircraft were very
-active, and against them our own aircraft were
-hopelessly outnumbered. And so it was not
-long before our guns were "spotted," with the
-inevitable result.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Imagine, then, how gloriously those gun
-detachments must have worked to have
-accomplished what they did that day, "enabling Sir
-Douglas Haig, with the First Corps, to reach
-the new line without much further loss about
-7 P.M." For it was undoubtedly the devotion
-of the guns which made possible this and
-succeeding retirements. Unless facts like this
-are realised, the astonishing work of the Force
-in its retreat can never be appreciated.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>The Second Corps</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If that Monday was an anxious day for Sir
-Douglas Haig, what must it have been for
-General Smith-Dorrien and his men? One
-looks hopelessly at the blank writing-pad in
-despair of giving even the most primitive
-description of the anxiety, the work, and the
-accomplishment of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here is a Corps which has gone through,
-for the first time, the awful ordeal of a day's
-modern shell-fire and massed infantry attack.
-The men have supped full of horrors, and, at
-3 A.M., hungry, weary and with nerves stretched
-to their utmost tension, they have received
-orders to move. There is not a regiment which
-has not lost heavily, especially in officers, and
-there is not a man but receives the command
-with his senses tangled in bewilderment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now it should be remembered that up to
-this time all our dispositions had been made for
-an advance. The impedimenta to the rear of the
-firing-line were so arranged that they might the
-more easily follow up a British attack. There
-was no real thought of retiring. The British
-were in the place of honour on the left of the
-line, and intended, with our French comrades,
-to drive the enemy back again through Belgium.
-I will not say that all this was a foregone
-conclusion, but at least it was "confidently
-anticipated." Remembering this, you will perhaps
-realise more vividly how staggering were the
-contents of that telegram from French G.H.Q.
-The work, therefore, of clearing the roads
-of the transport was exceedingly difficult. This
-devolves upon the Q.M.G.'s department, and
-General Smith-Dorrien has placed on record
-the wholly admirable way in which it was
-accomplished by General Ryecroft and his Staff.
-But proper Staff work for all the retiring troops
-during the hours of darkness was even more
-complicated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus some few of the companies, with no one
-to guide them, start off in the wrong direction
-and march straight into the German lines; they
-are shot or captured. Others wander off to the
-east, struggle painfully through the shell-fire
-on Mons, and drift into their comrade ranks of
-the First Corps. Others, again, march off to
-the west, and are hopelessly lost; they are
-either captured by the flanking German corps
-or they get through and meet with friendly
-peasants, to turn up eventually at base ports
-or other towns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Night marching across unknown country is
-not always easy in peace time, with guides at
-the heads of columns. Now there was the added
-confusion of the crowds of emigrants, a perfect
-network of roads to choose from, and, above
-all, continual alarms of enemy attacks which
-the British had to turn to meet. The whole
-of the night and all the Monday was one long
-period of marching, fighting, marching and
-fighting.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Early in the morning another infantry
-brigade, the 19th, arrived by railway, detraining
-at Valenciennes, and it is no exaggeration
-to say that the men went straight off the
-trains into the thick of the fight. It was
-a very welcome reinforcement of about 4,000 men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By 8 A.M. the enemy had burst through
-Mons, across the canal line, and were in hot
-pursuit in overwhelming numbers. Away on
-the left flank they had attacked Tournai, which
-was occupied by French Territorials and also, I
-believe, by a British battery, though how it got
-there, or why, I do not know. That bit of
-fighting was over by midday with the capture
-of the town and the destruction or capture of
-its defenders. The Germans were then free to
-resume their victorious advance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About the middle of the morning, then, the
-line of the Second Corps extended from a little
-Belgian village called Frameries, five miles
-S.W. of Mons, through the village of Dour.
-The right flank was the more forward, partly
-because the regiments there had to encounter
-the more furious attacks and could not break
-away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was at this point that there was made
-one more of those splendid but hopeless cavalry
-charges of which we so often read in military
-history. It is, curiously enough, almost the
-only definite incident mentioned by Sir John
-French in his dispatch. But the incident, or
-rather the sequel to it, caught the public
-imagination, mainly because of the fine work
-of that most gallant gentleman, Francis
-Grenfell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of all the noble, lion-hearted men who
-have "gone west" in this bloody war, no
-man more worthily deserves the description
-applied to the Chevalier Bayard, "<i>sans peur
-et sans reproche</i>," than Francis Grenfell&mdash;he
-and one other whom I shall name hereafter.
-Gallant soldier, brilliant sportsman, graceful
-poet, and true lover of Nature, a genuine
-statesman in his dealings with men, and the most
-loyal of friends, he died later on the field of
-honour, and Britain&mdash;nay, the world is the
-poorer for his loss.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The charge was made by the 9th Lancers,
-which regiment, with others of the 2nd Brigade,
-had been moved forward to ease the pressure on
-the right flank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About 400 yards from the German infantry
-and guns the Lancers galloped full tilt into
-barbed wire. There was nothing for it but to
-swerve across the German front. How a single
-man or horse escaped the hail of shell and
-bullets which was turned on them one can
-never understand. But a poor remnant, under
-Captain Francis Grenfell, did indeed get across,
-mercilessly pursued by that storm of lead, and
-eventually found some little shelter under a
-railway embankment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A R.F.A. battery was in action here. At
-least, the guns were still there, but officers and
-detachments had been gradually wiped out until
-there were just one officer and two detachments
-left to work the battery. It was only a matter
-of minutes before the remainder must be killed
-and the guns fall into the hands of the enemy,
-for the German guns had the range and the
-German infantry were crowding up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 9th Lancers and the Gunners are old
-friends, and the Lancers do not leave old
-friends (or new ones) to finish a losing fight
-alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Germans don't get those guns while
-any of us are left," said Grenfell. "I'm off to
-see how we can get them away."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Grenfell was already badly wounded,
-but he stuck on his horse somehow and <i>walked</i>
-that gallant beast out into the storm to see
-where he was to run the guns to. (Why does
-not His Majesty create a decoration for horses?
-But I'll wager Grenfell hung his V.C. round
-his charger's neck a month later.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Well, he walked him out and he walked him
-back, just to show his men what poor shots the
-Germans were.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now then," said Grenfell, "who's for
-the guns?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, since (as I have said) the Lancers
-always stand by old pals, every man of them was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They tied their horses up, and Lancers and
-Gunners set to work. One by one of those
-guns they got at the wheels and trails and
-worked and worked. Down went more gallant
-Lancers and more gallant Gunners, but there
-were still a few left, and, by Heaven, those few
-stuck to it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come on, lads, just one more!" sang out
-Grenfell, with his coat off.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And they worked and heaved, and did it.
-Every one of those guns they saved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But then, be it repeated, the Lancers and
-Gunners always were good pals.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-By midday General Smith-Dorrien's task
-had become one of the gravest difficulty. And
-this was but the opening phase of a movement
-which, I venture to think, will be accounted by
-the historian as one of the most astonishing
-pieces of work in military history. I refer not
-to the Retreat as a whole, but to the work of
-the Second Corps and its leader from 3 A.M. of
-the 24th to about midnight of the 26th&mdash;27th.
-An eternity of years was encircled by those few
-hours.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The difficulties of the movement can probably
-be appreciated at their full value only by
-the military student with a vivid imagination,
-so I will just suggest what had to be done.
-First of all, General Smith-Dorrien had to get
-his men away from the Mons line in the early
-dawn in the face of overwhelming numbers,
-numbers which he could only guess at, for at
-any moment a big attack might be made by
-another army upon his left flank. This was
-very much complicated by his men having been
-severely handled all through the Sunday, and
-getting no food nor rest. In fact, it was the
-human element which really made all the
-movement so difficult. The feeling that at any
-moment the tremendous strain upon the men's
-endurance would stretch to breaking-point and
-snap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the G.O.C. had not merely to get his
-men gradually back, but they had to show a bold
-front the whole time. It was a matter of
-fighting backwards without a moment's rest. A
-couple of regiments, say, with some cavalry,
-would halt for half an hour on a certain line,
-and hold up with the heaviest fire they could
-the attack on their particular section. Then,
-when the enemy got nearer, up they would
-jump and go straight at the Germans with the
-bayonet, the cavalry backing them up all they
-knew. The same with the guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A battery would manoeuvre into a position,
-come into action, and pound away for a quarter
-of an hour. Then, at the right moment (and it
-called for the nicest judgment to select that
-moment) four guns would be run back, limbered
-up, and got away, while the remaining couple
-would continue an intermittent fire to cover the
-retirement. These in turn would slip away&mdash;if
-they could.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The casualties under conditions like these
-must, of course, be very heavy indeed. That
-they were not infinitely heavier was due to the
-splendid use the men made of the ground,
-taking cover and so on, and to the noble spirit
-of self-sacrifice for comrades which animated
-every unit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thirdly, the G.O.C. had to remember that
-he was not playing a lone hand, but that he
-had to consider the retirement of the First
-Corps on his right. He had to play the match
-for his side. Just at the moment Jessop,
-in the person of Sir Douglas Haig, was in
-with him, and Jessop had to hit out against
-time to make the runs while Leveson-Gower
-(Smith-Dorrien) kept up his wicket at the
-other end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, fourthly, to carry on the metaphor,
-when Jessop was forced to "retire hurt"
-Leveson-Gower had to begin to hit at just
-that moment when he felt that he had "collared
-the bowling." In other words, the G.O.C.,
-having held a certain line of defence for a
-couple of hours or so, had to judge to a nicety
-the exact moment when he had, for the time,
-broken the enemy's attack sufficiently to permit
-of retirement another two miles to the next
-position.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those four points, then, constitute in very
-broad outline the task which General
-Smith-Dorrien had to perform. Our people have not
-been slow to recognise how magnificently he
-and his men accomplished it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The enemy were now, by accident or design,
-beginning to drive in a wedge at Frameries
-between the two corps. Always a serious situation,
-especially when, as now, units had become
-very scattered in the gradual retirement. The
-gap was filled to some extent by the 5th Brigade,
-which General Smith-Dorrien borrowed from
-the First Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p class="thought">
-*****
-<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Impressions gleaned from the other side are
-always of interest. Another German officer,
-whom we got a few days later, gave me his
-opinion of the British work somewhat like
-this.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All our text-books," he said, "about
-rear-guard actions will have to be rewritten,
-and you have certainly taught us a lesson. It
-has been just like advancing into a wall of fog.
-The fog is elastic enough when one enters it,
-but soon it clings all round and chokes you.
-We pushed in all right, but never came out
-at the other side."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Personally, I felt inclined to apply the
-metaphor the reverse way, and that is how the
-men felt it. The dense, overpowering cloud
-rolling down, the battling against it with
-impotent arms, and the fog penetrating into
-every gap in the lines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men were dazed, stunned by the
-continuous onslaughts. There seemed no end to
-them. As fast as one German company was
-mown down another would spring up. It was
-as though their aircraft flew over with watchful
-eye to sow in every field another bushel of the
-mythical dragon's teeth. And everywhere more
-and more German guns would come into action
-to support their infantry, and everywhere more
-and more machine-guns would be rushed up by
-their very mobile transport to rake and enfilade
-the British companies or gun detachments.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the time all these things were not
-realised, for there was no sitting down for five
-minutes to ruminate. But now, after eighteen
-months, when one pieces together this fact and
-that, and learns something of what the actual
-numbers were, one hesitates to set it down on
-paper for fear of being flatly disbelieved.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Any record of feelings during those hours
-is blurred. But there was one thought which,
-I know, was uppermost in every man's mind:
-"Where on earth are the French?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When a thought like that has been born it
-is easy to guess how it will grow and run
-through the ranks. If only now and again they
-had seen a French squadron swoop down upon
-the enemy's flank in front of them everything
-would have been well. They would have cheered
-their French comrades on, and gone in for all
-they were worth to avenge their death, if called
-upon. But never a French soldier did one of
-our lads see.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So far as I know, our Allies have published
-no official account of their retreat from Namur,
-although they have very frankly admitted, in
-an official Government report, the mistakes
-which were then made and have shown how they
-were since rectified. It is by no means clear
-what happened to the 5th French Army on
-our right after Namur had fallen; we only knew
-that we never saw them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But at the time it must be remembered that
-no one in the British Force, save G.H.Q., knew
-what was happening even to themselves, so it
-was hardly likely that they could learn anything
-definite about the French. So there the subject
-may rest.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-In the early afternoon General Smith-Dorrien
-learned that the First Corps had
-"made good" during the morning, and were
-fighting their way back with sufficient success
-to admit of his own retirement when he was
-able to break away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although, perhaps, too little space has been
-given in this chapter to the work of the First
-Corps, they had nearly as hard a fight as the
-rest of the Force. The task before Sir Douglas
-Haig was probably not quite so delicate as
-General Smith-Dorrien's, but it was obviously
-one of as grave a responsibility. However, in
-the late afternoon he got safely back, as we have
-seen, to the position determined by the
-Commander-in-Chief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Second Corps then succeeded in breaking
-away, and by the evening a new line of the
-entire Force was formed, reaching from the
-fortress of Maubeuge on the right to two little
-villages, Bry and Jenlain, on the left. The
-19th Brigade, which had come into the fight in
-the morning, was posted on and across the
-extreme left.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It should be noted that, with the fall of
-Tournai and the destruction of the French
-troops in that neighbourhood, the whole
-country on the west was open to the invaders.
-Their victorious army corps operating there
-was now able to swing round to attack the
-British left, and their cavalry was already
-sweeping in flying squadrons and patrols over
-the country-side. In fact, the French Channel
-ports, from Boulogne to Havre, were there for
-the taking, and the French coast line, for which
-the enemy fought so valiantly a few months
-later, would have been theirs without a
-struggle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But these facts were only vaguely realised
-in the Force, and the men, of course, knew
-nothing of doings save only upon their
-immediate front. At every moment they fully
-expected to make a definite stand, with an
-advance to follow, and thus they remained in
-good heart, secure in the conviction that though
-badly mauled they were not even at the
-beginning of a defeat. But some of us knew and
-realised, and it was a hard task to keep the
-knowledge from the men and from the friendly
-country-folk.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX
-<br />
-THE SECOND DAY
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>Gloucester, 'tis true that we are in great danger;<br />
- The greater, therefore, should our courage be.&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;. . . . God Almighty!<br />
- There is some soul of goodness in things evil,<br />
- Would men observingly distil it out.<br />
- For our bad neighbour makes us early stirrers,<br />
- Which is both healthful and good husbandry.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-During the night of Monday the whole Force
-was on or about the line already indicated,
-with the fortress of Maubeuge on their right
-flank. But let it not be imagined that the men
-settled down quietly at 9 P.M. to a cosy supper
-with a night's sleep to follow. There was no
-such thing as a halt for any time. Incidentally,
-most of the horses went through the whole
-business without being off-saddled once. The
-first regiments in were the first to move off
-again. The men just dropped down in the road
-where they halted and, if lucky, snatched ten
-minutes' sleep. Many of the men seemed to
-sleep while they marched; although, as one has
-often done it on night manoeuvres at home,
-there was nothing curious about that.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By midnight I do not think that anybody
-very much cared what happened. There was a
-certain amount of trench digging going on, and
-there was, in consequence, some idea that a
-stand would be made. But the men were really
-too exhausted to care one way or the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is all very well to remark upon their
-invariable cheeriness, as most writers seem to
-delight in doing, but it gives a hopelessly wrong
-impression of the hardships. A certain form of
-"cheery spirit" is inseparable from the British
-soldier when he is up against a tough job, but
-you can't very well be lively and make funny
-remarks (as reported in the Press) when you
-have become an automaton in all your movements.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had the French held firm, in all probability
-a stand would have been made on this line.
-But there is no object in speculating about it
-now. The view adopted by the Commander-in-Chief,
-which determined a further retreat,
-may best be given in his own words:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The French were still retiring, and I had
-no support except such as was afforded by the
-fortress of Maubeuge; and the determined
-attempts of the enemy to get round my left
-flank assured me that it was his intention to
-hem me against that place and surround me.
-I felt that not a moment must be lost in retiring
-to another position."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I hoped," he adds, "that the enemy's
-pursuit would not be too vigorous to prevent
-me effecting my object."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This hope was, fortunately, fulfilled, and
-the second day's retirement was, on the
-whole, less eventful. Later I will hazard a
-suggestion why it was so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The necessary orders had been given overnight
-to be clear of the Valenciennes&mdash;Bavai&mdash;Maubeuge
-road by 5.30 A.M. The Second
-Corps got clear by the time specified, but the
-First Corps could only begin their move at that
-hour, and so got behind. This fact tended to
-make inevitable the fight which took place that
-evening at Landrecies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was, as I remember, a baking hot day,
-with a blazing sun in a cloudless sky. Along
-English country roads and through our own
-little dappled-grey villages it would have been
-trying enough; but French roads, built Roman
-fashion, do not try to be picturesque and
-charming, and they certainly have no sense of
-humour like ours. Thus, the day's march was
-simply purgatory to a tired force. The fruit
-trees with their harvest really saved the
-situation. But, oh, those green apples and pears!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Once again, do not imagine the regiments
-trekking along straight for their next destination.
-The day was less eventful only in comparison
-with Monday and Wednesday. It was
-a rear-guard action most of the way, and
-there was quite enough fighting to break the
-monotony, with some big cavalry actions and
-the 5th Brigade heavily engaged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Take, for instance, a field battery in the
-2nd Division. The time-table would be
-something like this: 5.30 A.M., open fire; 6, cease
-fire and limber up; 6.10, en route to new
-position; 6.30, halt, open fire; 6.40, cease fire,
-limber up, and start off for new position; 7.15,
-halt, open fire; and so on all through the day.
-In fact, that was the ordinary day's programme.
-The particular battery I have in mind had
-a little adventure all to itself on Tuesday. It
-is of interest as revealing another side of German
-thoroughness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The battery was in action, but had
-temporarily ceased firing, and the detachments
-were lying by the guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A big grey "Sunbeam" drew up on a road
-to the flank of the battery, and a couple of
-red-tabbed Staff officers jumped out, walked up to
-the nearest gun, and started to chat with one
-of the gunners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a few remarks about how well the
-battery had been doing, they asked some
-questions about casualties, positions of
-neighbouring batteries, the infantry near them, and
-the usual facts which the Staff come to inquire
-about.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The major had been watching from the far
-flank, and, as the Staff officers turned to get
-into their car, he remarked to the sergeant-major:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't quite like the look of those two
-officers; there's something wrong about
-them." And he had a look through his glasses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some distance along the road there was
-marching down a company of R.E.'s.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Call up those sappers (by flag) and tell
-them to hold up that car."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sergeant-major repeated the message to
-the flag-wagger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Stop grey car&mdash;suspicious."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The R.E. sergeant ran up to the subaltern
-in charge:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Battery signals 'stop grey car.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, stop it, then," replied the subaltern
-irritably.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the grey car was stopped, very much to
-the annoyance of two Staff officers who were in
-a great hurry to get back to G.H.Q.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very sorry, sir," said the subaltern, "but
-it's a telegraph message from that battery. The
-O.C. has probably got something special to
-send to G.H.Q." And the car was escorted
-back again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The O.C. had "something special to send"
-in the shape of a couple of German officers,
-very carefully disguised as British. A drum-head
-court-martial was held at Corps H.Q., and
-as the Germans in question were hopelessly
-compromised by the very full notes which they
-had managed to collect from various units about
-the Force, the case was clear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Guilty. To be shot at dawn."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were plucky fellows, but&mdash;well, a spy
-is a spy, and that's all about it.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Less than a week before the country folk
-had watched with delight and relief the passing
-of mighty transport columns of British, had
-welcomed and cheered the men forward, proud and
-confident in the anticipation of early victory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now imagine their feelings, their alarm, at
-the sight of British regiments, war-worn, weary
-and battered, trailing back as fast as they could
-move.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of what use was it to tell them that this
-was only a strategical retirement? Panic
-spreads quickly, and once the hint of calamity
-is given it is impossible to check the alarm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But even then it was some little time before
-the stolid peasants of Northern France could
-grasp the meaning of what they saw, and I
-remember well how the inhabitants of a certain
-little village crowded out to watch the
-extraordinary (to them) behaviour of a regiment
-which was in the extreme rear of the retiring
-First Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The village overlooked a valley, and there
-was a splendid view of the British lines retiring
-in open order up the hill towards the little
-hamlet. They came up panting heavily and,
-just under the brow of the hill, set to work to
-dig up some rough shelter. The folk stood
-watching, laughing and talking, until an
-exasperated lance-corporal threw his tool in front of
-an oldish man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Ere, it's about b&mdash;&mdash; well time <i>you</i> did
-a bit"; and the corporal sat down to wipe off
-some of the dirt from his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes all the men and women
-had started digging as though for buried
-treasure, and the British sat still for a spell and
-encouraged them with happy comments.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Very soon down the opposite slope
-thousands of little grey-blue ants came swiftly,
-and from the ridge behind them dim flashes
-shot out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, then, you'd better 'op it!" said the
-lance-corporal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And even then they didn't understand what
-those ants really were.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Allmonds!" was the lance-corporal's
-laconic remark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The arrival of a shell settled it, and the
-villagers ran helter-skelter for their houses
-and little treasures. In a quarter of an hour
-another pitiable reinforcement had joined the
-ranks of the refugee army flying southwards,
-and only the old curé remained, ever true to
-his charge. They were gallant gentlemen those
-French curés, and bravely they faced the death
-which nearly always overtook them at the hands
-of those murderers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not until the British had turned to
-advance from the Marne that they began fully
-to realise the nature of the Germans. As yet
-they encountered no evidence of the atrocious,
-bestial work of the enemy. But already rumour
-was busy, and even on this day I had recorded
-authentic details that the Germans were placing
-women and children before their advancing
-infantry, and that they were stabbing the wounded
-with the bayonet.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-On the Sunday another British Division,
-the 4th, had arrived at Le Cateau, the little
-town to which the Force was now moving.
-This meant a reinforcement of some 14,500
-men, together with three field batteries. They
-were there waiting to come into action on the
-Wednesday, and in the meantime had begun to
-entrench.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The general line of retirement on the Tuesday was:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(<i>a</i>) First Corps, Bavai&mdash;Maubeuge, to Landrecies&mdash;Maroilles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-(<i>b</i>) Second Corps, Bry&mdash;Bavai, to west of Le
-Cateau.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A glance at the picture-map will show
-the position of these places. It will be noted
-that the various divisions kept together pretty
-well. Also that between Landrecies and Le
-Cateau there was a gap in the line which the
-6th Brigade could not properly fill. The
-Commander-in-Chief remarks in his dispatch that
-the men in the First Corps were too exhausted
-to march farther so as to cover this gap.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-You picture, then, the regiments arriving
-one by one at the end of that most exhausting
-day. The men dog-tired, hardly able to drag
-their feet over the burning ground, no proper
-meal since a hasty breakfast at dawn, fighting
-on and off all day, and now simply done to the
-world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, it is a golden rule in the Service that,
-however tired the men may be, they must set
-to work at the end of their march to entrench
-themselves or otherwise prepare against possible
-attack. I leave it to your imagination to realise
-the meaning of "discipline" when you learn
-that the men did entrench themselves that
-evening. And never was that rule more finely
-vindicated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I conceive Marshal von Kluck at German
-G.H.Q. soliloquising that Tuesday morning
-something in this wise:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My friends von Buelow and Hausen have
-between them settled with the French on this
-side, and <i>they</i> won't give any more trouble.
-Von Buelow and I have pretty well pounded
-and demoralised the English, and one more
-effort should finish <i>them</i>. Now, I will just give
-them enough to keep them busy through
-to-day, keep them on the run and exhaust
-them thoroughly, and then to-night we'll
-have a really hot attack and crumple up the
-First Corps. They'll never stand that; and
-we shall then have the rest of their army
-surrounded."?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And that is the suggestion about the day's
-work which I venture to make. We have seen
-how the daylight hours went for the British,
-and how the Force drifted in to their
-destinations. Now we will see how von Kluck
-crumpled up the First Corps with his night
-attack.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 1st Division was halted in and about
-Maroilles, and the 2nd Division at Landrecies.
-They were therefore on the extreme right of
-the line, with their flank more or less "in the
-air," for no French seemed to be near.
-Landrecies was held by the 4th Brigade, battalions
-of the Foot Guards, Grenadiers, Coldstreams
-and Irish, under General Scott-Kerr.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The torrid heat of the day had been the
-prelude to a cool, rainy evening. Room was
-found for about two-thirds of the Brigade in
-the houses and halls of the little town&mdash;a typical
-French country-town, with its straight streets
-and market-place. The remainder of the men
-got what little comfort they could on a rainy
-night outside.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By 9 P.M. they had hardly begun to settle
-down, after "clearing decks for action"&mdash;in
-case. Outposts had been placed, and the men
-were congratulating themselves on a
-comfortable shelter after so many nights of foot
-slogging. At 9.30 lights were out, and town
-and country-side were in pitch darkness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A battalion of the Coldstream Guards had
-not yet arrived, but was about a quarter of a
-mile from the town, marching in. The colonel
-was at the head of the column with the guide.
-This man persisted in flashing an electric torch
-to and fro towards the left, and the
-C.O. peremptorily ordered him to put it out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The man obeyed for a few yards, and then
-flashed the light again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The C.O. at once grasped the situation,
-drew his revolver, and shot the spy dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was as though that bullet had been fired
-straight into a mountain of gunpowder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a terrific crash German guns opened
-fire. Simultaneously, on front and flank, rifles
-and machine-guns blazed out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A German night attack is no question of
-feeling a way in open order until the enemy's
-outposts are driven in; it comes down like a
-smith's hammer on the anvil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Coldstreamers, with miraculous discipline,
-swung round and got into a kind of line
-with the outposts already there, then continued
-retirement to the town at the double.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The outpost line was crushed through almost
-in a moment like tissue paper, and before
-anyone could grasp what was happening the
-Germans were pouring their massed columns into
-the town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus began perhaps the most critical and
-certainly the most remarkable fight in which
-British regiments have ever been engaged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tired out, the men tumbled out of the
-houses; three privates and a corporal here, a
-dozen men and a sergeant there, a subaltern, a
-private and a machine-gun at another corner,
-half a dozen men at two first-floor windows
-somewhere else. And the only light came from
-the flash of the rifles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no idea of forming ranks, even
-had it been possible. Slowly, steadily up the
-streets the great German mammoth crept, and,
-like tigers at their prey, the men of the Guards
-sprang at head and flanks, worrying with
-grim-set teeth to the heart of the beast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the British machine-guns opened fire
-straight upon the head of the column, swept it
-away, swept the succeeding ranks, until the
-mass was brought to a standstill.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-More Guardsmen threw themselves straight
-at the ranks, firing as they could, crashing in
-with bayonet and clubbed rifle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the column shivers; but the Germans
-are brave men. They rally, for their comrades
-are pouring into the town to help them. Up
-side streets and lanes, by all the approaches they
-come, and everywhere the men of the Guards
-spring at them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But surely numbers must tell. What can
-four battered regiments, fighting by handfuls,
-do in face of such thousands of a fresh army
-corps!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From Maroilles right down the line the
-British are fighting for their lives, for von Kluck
-has staked heavily on this throw, and it would
-seem that the dice are loaded. He pushes his
-guns up still closer until some are firing into
-the town almost at point-blank range. Again,
-what does it matter if his own men are swept
-away? There are thousands more to fill their
-places.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The houses have begun to blaze fiercely in
-the torrents of rain, and there is plenty of light
-at last. And now the Guards rally for a
-supreme effort. The last, the forlorn hope&mdash;but
-it is the Guards, and at least they will go
-down fighting to the last man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One mighty heave&mdash;in at them&mdash;again&mdash;they
-are breaking&mdash;heave!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They have done it. Broken them. Driven
-them out. And behind them the enemy leave
-close upon 1,000 dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Away up by Maroilles Sir Douglas Haig has
-fought his men like one possessed, and there,
-too, he has broken the German attack, just as
-two French Reserve Divisions came up to his aid.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Slowly, sullenly, von Kluck withdraws his
-legions. Slowly and fitfully the firing dies
-away, and by 2 A.M. all is still once more.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X
-<br />
-AN INTERLUDE
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>... As many ways meet in one town;<br />
- As many fresh streams meet in one salt sea;<br />
- As many lines close in the dial's centre;<br />
- So may a thousand actions, once afoot,<br />
- End in one purpose, and be all well borne<br />
- Without defeat.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-There is something more than magic in the
-poetry of Shakespeare's <i>Henry V.</i> when it is
-read to illustrate the stirring events of these
-opening phases of the War. To set it side by
-side with the recital of the story is to listen to
-the voice of a singer supported by the
-gravely-sounding, deep-toned brass instruments of an
-orchestra.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is more than beauty of accompaniment,
-there is the magic of prophecy. I can
-hardly find an incident of those August days
-which was not mirrored three centuries ago in
-the verse of this play. Thus, I have sought
-in no other for the musical preludes of my
-chapters; and I confess often to have rubbed
-my eyes in astonishment at the aptness of the
-poetry to the incidents of the moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now those few bars of introduction suggest
-another <i>motif</i>; let me try to expand the theme
-a little.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In reading the cold, semi-official language
-which states that the British Force halted at
-such and such an hour along a line extending
-from So-and-So to Somewhere, one is apt to
-gain an impression which is far removed from
-reality.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-You picture, perhaps, the various units
-retiring along routes carefully assigned by
-gilded Staff officers, and duly arriving at the
-scheduled times in various villages and hamlets.
-That there they are met by courteous billeting
-parties, who proceed to allot the men to more
-or less unwilling householders. That at the
-hour specified in the report you find the Dorsets
-in one place, the Irish Guards next to them, the
-batteries with their guns neatly parked, and so
-on all down the line. The various H.Q.'s of
-Brigades, Divisions or Corps all in readily
-accessible spots, and everybody connected up
-with everybody else by telegraph or telephone,
-so that any unit can be set in motion at any
-minute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That is the ideal. Well, that delightful
-ideal first assumed definite shape after the Battle
-of the Marne and not before. Here is a little
-sketch of a tiny village on the line of retreat
-on the evening of Tuesday, August 25th:
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-M. le maire, old Pierre Godolphin, sat
-slowly pulling at a new clay pipe as he looked
-with unseeing eyes up the long dusty road which
-led out of the village away over the northern
-uplands. A trimly kept hedge of privet
-bordered his rose-garden and the road, and his
-favourite seat was set in a little niche of the
-greenery whence he could command all that
-went on in his tiny kingdom and, without
-moving, could see exactly what Madame la
-Femme du Maire was about in the stone-flagged
-kitchen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That afternoon an avalanche of three-ton
-motor lorries had descended upon the village,
-weird vehicles which announced in blatant
-language the superiority over all others of
-Mayflower's margarine or the outstanding merits of
-Pulltite's corsets. The men in authority were
-obviously, from their uniforms, English officers,
-and not travellers for the firms in question.
-But, frankly, old Pierre was puzzled. They
-had come from the south, and why did they
-not continue their journey? Two of the officers
-were actually proposing to stay with him, for
-an indefinite period.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-M. le boulanger walked slowly across the
-road to confer with him about the baking of
-more bread. "But these English are like a
-locust swarm, and I have no more flour," he
-explained.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A glass of cider for monsieur, Henriette."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do not understand," Pierre went on,
-"what it is ces braves garçons do here. It is
-the third week of war, and by now surely ces
-bêtes de Boches should have been driven back
-into their own pigsties&mdash;&mdash; Mais, nom de Dieu,
-qu'est ce que c'est?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Down the village street a four-seater car
-came lurching from side to side like a drunken
-man. Crash! It has caught a stone post and
-turned over. In an instant the road is full of
-people running.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two men lay dazed as they had been thrown
-out. Both in the yellow-green uniform of the
-British, one, certainly, an officer. Willing
-hands lift them tenderly, and someone dashes
-a jug of water over their heads. Then one sees
-what has happened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Between the shoulders on the officer's tunic
-there is spreading a great dark stain. Very
-carefully they take off the coat and shirt and
-try to stanch the blood. But it is too late;
-there is a bullet through the lungs, and, with
-a little gasp, the officer lies still.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes the other man recovers
-sufficiently to tell how they were taking a
-dispatch through to the rear. The officer was
-driving the car when they ran straight into a
-patrol of enemy cavalry. They had got through,
-but the enemy opened fire, and now his officer
-lies dead. Things are going badly up there&mdash;and
-the man vaguely indicates the country up
-north: our men are retiring as hard as they
-can; whole regiments are getting wiped out;
-and "Gawd knows where the French are." Can
-he get a motor-bike to take on the message?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An A.S.C. officer runs for his car, the man
-is put in, and off they start again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Only the A.S.C. lorry drivers understood
-the story, but the villagers were quick to realise
-that something serious was happening. Old
-Pierre remembered 1870, and he knew what
-war meant; but to the rest it was a new, hideous
-thing, dimly realised, but now, at last, with
-this mute witness before them, very real.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then things began to happen. No one ever
-knows how a crowd will spring up in a city
-street, apparently by magic, and here suddenly
-the village began to fill with men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Four soldiers&mdash;two Scots, a Dorset and a
-Bedford man&mdash;black with grime, three days'
-growth of beard, hollow-eyed and limping
-painfully, appeared in front of Pierre and asked
-where they were to go. A captain of the
-Guards, riding a tired farm-horse, with a
-colonel walking by his side, one hand on the
-horse's flank, came behind, and, tackling the
-A.S.C. captain, asked for something to eat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We've been on the trudge for twelve
-hours," said the colonel, "and could get
-nothing. No one knows where anyone is. The
-regiment? Badly cut up last night and all
-scattered, heaven knows where."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is the mayor about anywhere?" And a
-young Staff officer, with a French interpreter,
-pushes his way through the crowd.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A cavalry brigade (or what's left of it"&mdash;he
-adds in an undertone) "will be here to-night.
-What barns and houses have you available?
-How much hay can you get?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Old Pierre is beginning to lose his wits in
-the amazing turn of events.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If monsieur will come into the house I
-will try to arrange."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The officer follows, with a shrug of the
-shoulders which might have meant many things.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The long summer's day is closing, but there
-is no hint of the evening's cool in the heavy air.
-All over the little village green, where the
-church tower has thrown a grateful shadow, lie
-groups of men worn with exhaustion and
-sleeping with gulping breaths. In one corner
-Henriette is busy with water and clean linen,
-bathing and bandaging horrible, staring wounds.
-And the men lie patiently, with now and then
-a moan of pain, gazing up at her with the great
-round eyes of a hurt collie dog.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now the vanguard of the retiring army
-begins to stream in and through&mdash;all arms, all
-regiments. Overhead a flight of aeroplanes
-circle, like homing pigeons, seeking where they
-may alight. It is incredible that these are the
-regiments which a little ten days ago swung
-gaily down the Aldershot roads.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the head of the column there marches a
-field battery. Two days ago the major took it
-into action six guns and wagons strong, with
-perhaps a couple of hundred men; so proud in
-his command, his men, his horses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, stand by the path and watch the
-battery pass! And, as it passes, uncover your
-head, for it has returned from the very gates of
-Death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two guns&mdash;with three horses each to draw
-them. There are still four drivers left, and
-there are still half a dozen gunners. On the
-first limber ride a subaltern and the sergeant-major,
-and by the gun walk another sergeant
-and the quartermaster-sergeant. That is the
-battery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the second limber three men sit, swaying
-dizzily. A captain of a cavalry regiment and
-two privates of a Scottish regiment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here marches a battalion of the Guards.
-Two days ago it went into action perhaps 1,100
-strong. Uncover your head once again as it
-passes, for these men too have looked Death in
-the face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the head there paces slowly an ammunition
-mule. On it, wearing a peasant's slouch
-hat, with breeches cut off above the knees, and
-with left arm held close by a rough bandage,
-there rides the colonel. Count the men as they
-march past in fours: 80, 120, 160, 180, 220.
-No, that is the next regiment you are counting
-in. Just 200! That is the tale of them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Blackened by dust and powder, bearded,
-breeches cut short like those of their commanding
-officer, the few puttees that are left to
-them wrapped round their feet for boots&mdash;otherwise
-bits of sacking or cloth, bloody bandages
-round heads or arms, some with hats like the
-colonel's, most with none at all slowly they
-limp by. And, as they pass, the A.S.C. drivers
-silently offer such biscuits or bread as they have.
-God, how they wolf the food!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The colonel turns round on his "charger,"
-and in a hoarse shout:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Battalion! 'Tention! Pull yourselves
-together, lads; a French village!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ah, the pride of them! The glory of race
-and blood! This is not the Mons country,
-with its blood-soaked memories; 'tis the
-Horse Guards Parade, and we're Trooping the
-Colour!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The click of rifles coming to the slope runs
-down the ranks. The fours line by magic as
-the men straighten themselves; it is a new
-regiment, marching into action, which the
-French villagers see pass before them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Defeat? Why, this is part of the joke!
-Just to draw the Germans on into the trap." And
-at a word they would have turned to charge
-an army corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so the regiments pass. And as the last
-of the Division goes through, lights twinkle
-from the tiny windows of the cottages and the
-great yellow moon climbs slowly over the poplar
-trees. An A.S.C. sergeant mounts a lorry with
-a copy of the Paris <i>Daily Mail</i> in his hand, and
-entertains an ever-growing audience with the
-news that the Russians have invaded Germany
-and are marching on Berlin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It will be all over by Christmas&mdash;but I'd
-'ave liked just one slap at them Germans, so
-as I could tell the missis," says a late bus-driver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But on the outskirts of the crowd the Staff
-officer is talking to the A.S.C. captain:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I've no orders for you, but you've
-evidently been forgotten. You ought to have
-had your park fifteen miles farther south by
-now. Things are bad, and there will be the hell
-of a scrap round here to-morrow morning. I
-should clear out if I were you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Away up to the north there is a blinding
-electric glare coming fast down the road.
-Nearer, and it is the headlight on the first of a
-long train of R.F.C. light motor-lorries,
-slipping silently down on rubber tires. The dust
-rises in clouds above and about them. Half-way
-through the village a motor-cyclist rides,
-meeting them. The dust takes his shadow, and
-as he approaches the headlight the silhouette
-rises higher and higher until it mounts to the
-sky and disappears. Just as when children play
-a shadow pantomime and vanish by jumping
-over the lamp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The lorries pass, and the dust slowly settles
-once more. The little lights twinkle clearly
-again, and the moon now floods the countryside
-in a sheen of silver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the A.S.C. captain talks earnestly with
-his sergeant-major and M. le maire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We must move, but how can we possibly
-carry all those wounded and stragglers?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-M. le maire is of opinion that as <i>les Boches</i>
-are being driven back into Germany, the
-wounded might well remain until ambulances
-can be got.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The O.C. looks at his sergeant-major. They
-have both guessed the meaning of that retirement,
-and they guess also something that they
-dare not tell the mayor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few minutes suffice to rouse all the
-men and to get the wounded made as comfortable
-as possible in the lorries. Lights are
-switched on the cars, and within half an hour
-the column is clear of the village on its way
-south.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An hour later the advance patrols of a
-German cavalry division ride in from the
-north; and old Pierre finds that the hay he
-had collected for <i>les anglais</i> does not go very
-far with his new visitors.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor old Pierre, and Madame the mayoress,
-and the pretty little rose-garden!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such is a little pen-picture, not one whit
-exaggerated, of an evening of the Retreat.
-And perhaps those few lines will serve to
-convey some trifling idea of the wonder of the
-achievement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Everywhere regiments and units forgotten,
-or lost, or acting on their own initiative. And
-yet, somehow or other, making a composite
-whole to turn and repel the attacking hordes.
-Staff work practically ceased to exist, and yet
-the threads of communication held fast, though
-only by a little.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now you have had a glimpse of the men
-who, the very next day, fought <i>and won</i> perhaps
-the most glorious fight a British Army has
-ever shared in.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- So may a thousand actions, once afoot,<br />
- End in one purpose, and be all well borne<br />
- Without defeat.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI
-<br />
-WEDNESDAY, THE 26TH OF AUGUST
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;<br />
- For he to-day that sheds his blood with me<br />
- Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,<br />
- This day shall gentle his condition.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-WESTMORELAND. <i>Of fighting men they have full three-score
-thousand.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-EXETER. <i>There's five to one; besides, they all are fresh.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-SALISBURY. <i>God's arm strike with us! 'tis a fearful odds.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The night attack which the First Corps had
-so magnificently repulsed was but the prelude
-to the greater attack of August 26th. So
-imminent did the danger appear to the
-Commander-in-chief, so tense was the anxiety,
-that immediately after the firing had died away
-at midnight orders were issued to the First
-Corps to march again at daybreak. I cannot
-attempt to dwell upon the condition of the men
-after the battle of Sunday, the fighting and
-marching of Monday and Tuesday, and, finally,
-the great fight of Tuesday night. One can but
-quote the words of Sir John French: "They
-were too exhausted to be placed in the fighting
-line," and "were at the moment incapable
-of movement," and so leave the rest to the
-imagination.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To that extent, then, had von Kluck
-succeeded in his scheme. The First Corps
-were temporarily out of action; the French, as
-the Commander-in-Chief remarks, "were unable
-to afford any support on the most critical
-day of all"; and to the Second Corps was left
-the task of withstanding the whole German
-attack, designed to outflank them on the left
-and roll them up. And the odds against them
-were, as at Agincourt, "five to one"; in guns,
-more than six to one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Apart from his 3rd and 5th Divisions,
-General Smith-Dorrien had taken under his
-command the detached 19th Infantry Brigade
-(composed of the 2nd Royal Welsh Fusiliers,
-1st Scottish Rifles, 1st Middlesex, 2nd Argyll
-and Sutherland Highlanders), the infantry and
-some of the R.F.A. of the 4th Division, and
-two brigades of cavalry, out by Cambrai.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The line of the Second Corps on the
-Tuesday night extended, roughly, from Le Cateau
-on the east to a little south of Cambrai on the
-west, or a front of about fifteen miles. Trenches
-had been hastily dug since the previous afternoon.
-East of Le Cateau was a big gap between
-the two Corps. This could not be bridged
-owing to the exhausted condition of the
-regiments in the 2nd Division.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some hours before battle was joined General
-Smith-Dorrien realised that it was absolutely
-impossible for him to carry out the
-Commander-in-Chief's instructions and continue his
-retirement in conjunction with the First Corps.
-A retirement in face of such overwhelming
-numbers would have meant annihilation. At
-2 A.M. he decided to fight, and reported so to
-his Chief. Sir John French replied that the
-retirement must continue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My only chance," rejoined the General,
-"is to do my utmost in weakening the
-enemy's attack, and then seize such a moment
-as I can to retire."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Smith-Dorrien was on the field of
-action; Sir John French was at G.H.Q., some
-twenty miles to the south. The man on the
-spot, realising that the only hope of stopping the
-enemy lay in a successful action, proceeded with
-his plans of battle. The fight began at daylight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About 7 A.M. General Smith-Dorrien
-informed G.H.Q. by telephone that the battle
-was in progress, and that he was confident
-that he could deal the enemy a smashing blow
-sufficiently heavy to gain time to withdraw his
-weary troops.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"General," said the senior Staff officer
-over the telephone, "yours is the cheeriest
-voice I've heard for three days. I'll go and
-tell the Chief."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Commander-in-Chief, who did not approve
-of the decision to fight, in reply instructed
-him "to use his utmost endeavours to break off
-the action and retire at the earliest possible
-moment."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Le Cateau, after which this battle has come
-to be named, is a pleasant enough little town
-set in a country-side not unlike the Sussex
-uplands between Tonbridge and Hastings&mdash;broad,
-open pasture- and meadow-land, cut by
-tiny valleys, rolling away south to the dip of
-St. Quentin. Through the town runs one
-broad street, and here, in the town hall offices,
-G.H.Q. had its habitation for a short spell
-earlier in the week. Opposite there was a little
-bun-shop and cafè combined, which proudly
-announced: "English five o'clock tea." The
-two buxom ladies who dispensed the refreshing
-beverage must have overheard many a little
-confidence exchanged between their unsuspecting
-officer clients, and we heard later that one
-of the two had been shot as a German spy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With the earliest dawn the firing began
-along the front with such a curious spitefulness
-(if one could so call it) that many of our men
-afterwards remarked about it. There were
-evidently to be no half measures about this
-attack, for the German infantry came on almost
-with the first rounds from their guns, advancing
-in their usual masses and making big play with
-their machine-guns. It was good country for
-this kind of work, while the cover our men got
-was generally only such as they could make for
-themselves by digging.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The morning came on radiantly sunny, with
-the sky a lovely pale limpid blue, washed clear
-by the downpour of the previous night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'An' 'tis a foine morning they'll be having
-in Lismore for the fair this day," remarked a
-lad from County Cork; "but I would not be
-missin' the fair <i>we'll</i> be having for all the porter
-in Daddy Breean's ould tent. Ah, will ye look
-at that now! Shure, 'tis the bhoys are coming
-early for the knocks they'll be getting. Will I
-be seeing how the little gun is shooting this
-morning, yer honour?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The platoon commander nodded, for Jerry
-was a privileged favourite. He was also a
-remarkably fine shot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Jerry nestled his cheek cosily down to
-his little gun and took a deep breath, while the
-two or three near him looked on with interest.
-Jerry lifted his head again, for he was an artist
-and knew the value of arousing expectation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And will it be a golden sovereign if I take
-the coat-tails of the little ould gentleman with
-the spy-glasses?" This was Jerry's way of
-making a bet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; I'll bet you a sovereign you won't
-down that officer on the right, and he looks like
-the colonel," said the platoon commander. It
-was a 500 yards' shot, and hazy, too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry carefully judged the distance by a
-half-way haystack, adjusted his sight, and settled
-down once again. "For the ould counthry!"
-he breathed, and slowly squeezed the trigger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The "little ould gentleman" was seen to
-clap his hand smartly to his leg, while two men
-ran up to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Will ye double the stakes, yer honour, for
-me to take the three o' them?" said Jerry over
-his shoulder, clicking his bolt back and forward
-again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A fiver, Jerry, if you do it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jerry wedged his rifle between two stones,
-took a slightly fuller sight, and almost before
-you could have counted them three shots
-cracked out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have you that fiver on you, yer honour,
-or will I be taking an IOU?" And Jerry
-leaned back with a sigh of satisfaction as a
-mighty cheer ran down the trench, and the
-platoon officer shook him hard by the hand.
-What the enemy thought about it one could
-only surmise, but a few of the men shook their
-fists threateningly in the direction of the British
-lines.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Now let us follow for a little the fortunes
-of a Brigade in a particularly warm corner of
-the line close to a small town where a very
-strong German attack soon developed. The
-guns of the Brigade opened fire at daybreak.
-They had managed to dig some serviceable
-pits, and were as snugly ensconced as time
-had allowed.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-160"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-160.jpg" alt="GENERAL SIR DOUGLAS HAIG." />
-<br />
-GENERAL SIR DOUGLAS HAIG.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For an hour, perhaps, the German guns
-pounded steadily away without making very
-much impression; and our R.F.A. as steadily
-replied. Many of the outlying farms and
-houses were badly knocked about and began to
-burn fiercely. About 7.30 the enemy made a
-determined attempt to get hold of a flank
-position for their machine-guns to enfilade our
-infantry; and it was then that one regiment
-lost horribly before our cavalry could get
-round in a counter-attack. So heavy were
-their casualties that, as a regiment, they were
-simply out of action, and an urgent message
-was dispatched to the next Brigade for anything
-they could possibly send in the way of
-reinforcements. Badly off though they were, two
-battalions were promptly transferred. Just one
-more instance of working shoulder to shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was curious how certain regiments
-suffered very heavily while other units next to
-them got off comparatively lightly. One
-R.F.A. brigade, for instance, was right in
-the thick of the fighting from Mons to the
-Aisne, and yet had very few losses until the
-middle of September, while the battery next
-on their left on this Wednesday suffered
-very badly. Of two other batteries I came
-across, one was in action right through to the
-Aisne, and did not have a single casualty, while
-a second (most curious of all), in the First
-Corps, never fired a shot until the big advance
-of the Corps at the Aisne on September 14th.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About 9 A.M. things began to look serious.
-Several enemy infantry attacks had been met
-by desperate counter-charges; but numbers
-were bound to tell. A German cavalry
-regiment had succeeded in working round to the
-flank, and now they made a gallant effort to
-capture the British guns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was, I believe, one of the very few
-occasions when the enemy cavalry had a real
-chance of getting any of our batteries by a
-charge. There was a clear field, and they had
-got to within 500 yards of the battery, when
-the guns opened on them. Our men had heard
-about the fatal charge of the 9th Lancers, and
-now it was their turn. The battery commander
-dropped to "fuse o, open sights," and the
-detachments worked as though the devil were
-behind them. In the next 250 yards the cavalry
-lost a good two-thirds of the regiment, and
-they got no nearer than 200 yards from the
-guns. A British squadron luckily came out at
-the moment, and charged clean through the
-remnant, wheeled, and cut up what still
-remained. And that was the end of that very
-game attack.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If only the Germans would always play fair,
-there would be nothing to grumble about.
-Their infantry cannot, of course, be compared
-with the British, and our cavalry have always
-come out better than theirs in a clean fight; but
-the Germans have always fought courageously
-when it was a case of genuine fighting. Indeed,
-it is a very poor compliment to our men to
-suggest otherwise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the main attack, instead of being
-checked, seemed to gather strength, until it
-became manifestly impossible to protect and
-hold the little town any longer. The infantry
-accordingly gradually withdrew under cover of
-the guns, and at last the guns were limbered
-up and marched back to another position
-farther south, the Brigade having held the
-corner for something like four hours.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Most of the townsfolk had begun their flight
-late on the previous evening, but a good many
-still remained. Had they only known the fate
-in store for them, the invaders would have
-found an empty town. But, at least in this
-case, vengeance was swift, as you shall hear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Brigade, then, took up its new position,
-and the men were able to make themselves
-fairly snug before the enemy had finished with
-the town. Fortunately, too, many of our
-wounded were got away from the hospital, for
-the Germans had begun to shell that some time
-before. But it was a very trying business, as
-there were not enough ambulances for the very
-large number of casualties, and many had to be
-carried on the already overloaded regimental
-transport.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Now, it must be remembered that General
-Smith-Dorrien had absolutely no reserves on
-which to draw if any part of his line began to
-bend back. The usual plan is, of course, to
-keep certain fresh regiments concentrated at
-given spots to move up in support as and when
-required. But now, if the Inniskillings were
-getting badly cut up and a gap was being made,
-the G.O.C. could only call upon the Cheshires,
-say, a mile off, who were not being so strongly
-attacked, to send a company or so to the help
-of their comrades.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another thing. I have hinted in a previous
-chapter that the threads of communication with
-the ammunition supply were badly stretched to
-breaking-point, owing to the astonishing speed
-at which the British had to retire. Normally,
-the ammunition parks (motor transport) draw
-the ammunition supplies from railhead, and
-carry it up to the divisional ammunition
-columns. These, in turn, distribute to brigade
-columns, and the actual units draw upon the
-last named. Thus there are several links
-between railhead and the firing-line, and the
-motor-lorries should not come within about
-eight miles of the line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But on this Wednesday and the two or
-three following days all this arrangement literally
-went to pieces. How could it be otherwise?
-And that is how the A.S.C. drivers came to
-do their bit with all the rest. Speed was vital,
-and the lorries could cover the distance in a
-third of the time taken by the horse transport.
-In fact, the horse transport was ignored or
-forgotten, although there were exceptions. One
-saw the divisional columns aimlessly trekking
-about the country, at one moment under orders
-to go to a certain village, only to find on arrival
-that the enemy were just a mile off; back they
-would come again as hard as the tired horses
-could do it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Time and again an urgent message would
-go back from a battery for more 18-pr. or
-howitzer, and the dispatch-rider would have
-instructions to get the stuff wherever he could
-lay hands on it. He generally managed to find
-a few lorries of a "park," and so off the bus
-drivers would start with their three-ton vehicles,
-little dreaming that they were going under fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Gor blimey, sir," said one of them next
-day to his officer, "I tell yer it wos a fair
-beano! We'd gone abaht a couple o' miles,
-when the sergeant wot wos along o' me on the
-box 'e sez: 'Stevens,' sez 'e, 'can yer knock
-anything more aht of 'er? 'Cos they're firing
-acrost the road.' Lor lumme, I nearly put 'er
-in the ditch at the turn 'e giv me! Yer see,
-sir, I didn't enlist to get knocked aht by no
-b&mdash;&mdash; German. I'm a peaceable man, I am,
-wot likes my grub and pint o' bitter reg'lar
-like, and the missus the same. But, as I wos
-a-sayin', I turned to the sergeant an' I sez:
-'Yer don't fink there's no danger, do yer?' An'
-the sergeant, 'e sez, sarkastic-like: 'Ho
-no, they're only bustin' the shells on the road,
-an' we've got a few tons of fireworks be'ind
-wot's bahnd to bust too if we gits 'it!' S'welp
-me pink, sir, I turned that cold you could 'ave
-'eard my teeth going louder nor the enjin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'E 'adn't 'ardly spoke when there was the
-'ell of a bang somewheres just be'ind, and&mdash;well,
-you can bet your life, sir, we did a guy
-for all we wos worth. Lord, 'ow we 'opped it
-dahn that road! I tell yer, sir, we knocked
-forty-five miles an hour aht o' that ole bus, and
-she come up to it like as we wos knockin' spots
-orf of a pirit bus dahn Piccadilly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The sergeant, 'e jammed 'is 'eel dahn on
-the accelerator, an' I just 'eld on to the wheel
-wiv bofe 'ands. It wos a fair old Brock's
-benifit we wos in. But we got frew orl right,
-and wen we got to the place where we wos to
-drop the stuff, there weren't no guns wot
-wanted it. An', as old G. R. Sims sez, 'hit
-wos the unkindest cut of orl.' Well, I wasn't
-coming back agin frew that pyrriteknikle show
-not for the ole bus full o' suvrins, an' so we
-come 'ome rahnd by a place I forgit the name
-of, and that's 'ow we're late; but it was worf
-the hextra thirty miles rahnd, an' I 'ope, sir,
-yer won't mind this time."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was another occasion on this day
-when three of these lorries went forward under
-the charge of an officer. He was quite unaware
-that the village whence the call for howitzer
-shell had come had been captured by the
-Germans half an hour after the message had been
-sent. On the way he picked up another officer
-who was lost.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rounding a corner by a wood, about a mile
-from the village, they came straight upon a
-small German cavalry outpost. The Germans
-sprang to their feet at the rumble of the
-approaching lorries, and a sergeant stood in
-the road to bar the way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was not a moment for thought, and
-the second officer whipped his pistol out and
-took a snap shot. Luckily, he killed the
-sergeant outright. The officer in charge jumped
-down into the road as the lorry pulled up, with
-his own revolver in hand, and levelled it at the
-group by the roadside. One of them got his
-carbine off from the hip, and the shot just
-missed the first lorry driver on his seat. The
-officer promptly sent a bullet through the man's
-chest. Over his shoulder he shouted to the
-drivers to reverse the lorries, while he and the
-other officer held up the Germans.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, reversing three big lorries in not too
-wide a road needs some doing; but they all
-backed and advanced and sidled and backed
-until it was done. Then one officer jumped up
-behind the last one, the second officer followed,
-and off the lorries went.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was nothing remarkable about the
-little experience, and it is only recorded to show
-the difficulties in ammunition supply at this
-time and also how the A.S.C. drivers were
-doing their job.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-You must imagine that while we have been
-at the rear with the A.S.C., the fighting all
-along the British line has been growing in
-intensity. A big flank attack, with the idea of
-rolling up the whole line like a ball of string,
-is always a favourite move of the Germans, and
-this time they were trying to crush the British
-left.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But although the left was the main objective,
-the enemy still had a big superiority in
-numbers for frontal attacks, and these they kept
-up without ceasing. It was just like the crashing
-of many mighty hammers from one end to
-the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Following up the policy of making counterattacks
-whenever possible, a bold offensive was
-made against the little town from which we
-had just been driven. The enemy had now
-been in possession for two or three hours. So
-word was passed to the batteries, some of the
-indefatigable cavalry was concentrated, and the
-infantry, with the two reinforcing battalions,
-received the cheering news that they were to
-advance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How they all went at it! Under the
-heaviest fire our guns could pour in, the
-infantry rushed the outlying houses, the main
-street, and the town itself, the cavalry sweeping
-up on the flank. The gunners, after raising the
-range to put a curtain before the infantry,
-limbered up, and had the satisfaction of
-marching back through the town which they had just
-been forced to evacuate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then it was that our men first saw a little
-of the hideous work of the invaders upon the
-civilian population. And if anything more
-were needed to brace them up to fight to the
-last man, they had it in that brief hour in the
-recaptured town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The hospital was burning fiercely, just as
-that at Mons had done. Such a building, with
-its Red Cross flag, was always a convenient
-ranging point for the enemy. In it there had
-been some 400 wounded and other casualties. A
-large number of these had been got away, but
-a number had, perforce, to be left. Their end
-must have been too cruel to dwell upon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Up the main street everywhere was horrible
-evidence that <i>they</i> had been at work. Mingled
-with dead or wounded combatants were bodies
-of women and children, many terribly mutilated,
-while other women knelt beside them, with
-stone-set faces or gasping through hysterical
-weeping. From behind shutters or half-closed
-doors others looked out, blinded with terror.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But there was one thing which, for the men
-who saw it, dwarfed all else. Hanging up in
-the open window of a shop, strung from a hook
-in the cross-beam, like a joint in a butcher's
-shop, was the body of a little girl, five years
-old, perhaps. Its poor little hands had been
-hacked off, and through the slender body were
-vicious bayonet stabs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yes, close your eyes in horror, but it is right
-that our people should hear and know these
-things. There must be no false, vapid sentiment
-in refusing to think about them. There
-should not be a home in the British Empire
-where the facts of German atrocities are not
-known, and where, in realising them, hearts are
-not nerved to yield their last drop of blood in
-stamping out from the world of men the hideous
-Thing which has done them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After that the Brigade "saw red." There
-was no more talk of taking prisoners, and if
-there was another ounce they could put into
-their work they did it. The sight of those
-poor distracted women kneeling down in the
-road before our men, or hanging round their
-knees praying to be taken away, would have
-melted the stoniest hearts. The situation was
-serious enough, for another German attack in
-force was bound to follow, and the Brigade
-had little hope of getting away safely
-themselves. But they could not possibly leave the
-women behind again&mdash;nor did they. Somehow
-or other they escorted, on guns, limbers and
-vehicles, all they could find safely on to the
-southward road, sullenly retiring once more
-before the new counter-attack.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII
-<br />
-WEDNESDAY, THE 26TH OF AUGUST
-<br />
-(<i>continued</i>)
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>A many of our bodies shall, no doubt<br />
- Find native graves; upon the which, I trust,<br />
- Shall witness live in brass of this day's work;<br />
- And those that leave their valiant bones in France,<br />
- Dying like men, ...<br />
- They shall be fam'd.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-By midday the tide of battle had begun to roll
-southwards, though only by a very little. The
-British lines were forced back, a mile here, half
-a mile there, but they still held on with
-superhuman energy and determination. And not
-only did they hold on, but, wherever there was
-the least chance, a regiment or cavalry squadron
-would launch a counter-attack. But it all
-seemed so hopeless, just as one might throw
-pebbles into the waves of the sea as they break
-upon a beach.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some day it is to be hoped that an adequate
-record will be published of the remarkable work
-which the cavalry performed during the Retreat.
-Sir John French, perhaps because he was
-himself a cavalry leader, hardly mentions them in
-his first dispatch. Wherever they were most
-wanted, there they were in the thick of the
-fighting. How the horses "carried on" and
-where and how fresh animals were obtained
-remains a mystery, in view of the muddle in
-which everything was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But where every unit and every man worked
-as they did, it seems almost invidious to single
-out for mention any particular regiment or
-episode. Take a single half-hour of the fighting
-on the left, and you have an example of what
-was repeated fifty times that day across the
-whole British front.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A blue-grey mass of enemy infantry appears
-advancing with steady, swinging pace. At 500
-yards or a trifle more one of our regiments opens
-rapid fire upon them. You can actually see the
-lanes in the German ranks ploughed through by
-the British rifle-fire. Still they advance, for the
-gaps are filled almost immediately. Nearer and
-nearer, until that regiment which began the
-advance has almost ceased to exist. The
-remnant breaks and scatters in confusion, and as
-they break away another new regiment is
-disclosed behind them. Such is the method of the
-German massed attack, overwhelming by sheer
-numbers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But rarely did they get near enough to the
-British lines for a hand-to-hand fight.
-Regiment after regiment would be held at bay by
-the murderous rifle-fire of the little handful of
-British; regiment after regiment would appear
-to fill the gap. Now and again the weight of
-the attack would tell, and the Germans would
-get close enough for a final rush on the British
-trench. Then, at the critical moment, a British
-company, slightly forward on the flank, pours
-in a withering enfilade fire, and while the
-German infantry stagger under this unexpected
-attack the British cavalry charge through our
-own lines straight on the front and flank of
-the enemy. There are a few minutes of mad
-cut and thrust, and the Germans, who always
-dread the cold steel as a Chinese dreads rain,
-break and run as though all the fiends of hell
-were after them.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Just about this time General Smith-Dorrien
-and a couple of his Staff officers were following
-the fortunes of the battle from some rising
-ground not far from the centre of the line. A
-sudden outburst of heavy and incessant firing
-was heard from the direction of Cambrai, where,
-it will be remembered, the enemy were trying
-to outflank us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good heavens," cried the General, "the
-Germans have got round our left!" And,
-jumping on to his horse, he galloped off towards
-the firing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To his astonishment and delight he found,
-as he drew near the flank, that the firing came
-not from victorious Germans, but from some
-of our French comrades.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Never was help more opportune; seldom
-can it have come in more dramatic fashion. By
-all accounts General Sordêt with his cavalry
-should have been sitting by the roadside, forty
-miles away on the British right, tending his
-worn-out horses. Yet, at the call for help, by
-sheer grit and determination he and his Corps
-had carried through that long forced march
-(Heaven knows how the horses did it!), and
-swept up on our left with his squadrons and
-horse artillery. Everyone knows what splendid
-work the French gunners can do, and&mdash;well,
-this was one of their best days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a thrilling episode, and why, in
-common justice to our gallant Allies, the details
-have not been published I do not know. You
-will find General Smith-Dorrien's record and
-appreciation of the invaluable help thus given
-by General Sordêt in the second Appendix at
-the end of the book.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While such were the conditions about
-midday up with the front line, the situation
-immediately in the rear was fast becoming
-indescribable in its confusion and complexity.
-Looking back at it now, after the lapse of
-so many months, it seemed very much like a
-theatrical performance where a "front cloth"
-has been lowered to conceal from the audience
-a strike of stage hands and the despair of the
-actors at setting the stage and getting on with
-the play. Before the front cloth a special
-"turn" is performing to gain time and appease
-the growing impatience of the audience.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was, for instance, a particular centre
-of cross-roads, nearly a mile beyond where
-German shells were bursting. It was just outside
-a large village, and the inhabitants were
-streaming out with their belongings, yet uncertain
-whether there was actual danger or no.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the cross-roads were gradually arriving
-ammunition columns, remnants of battered
-regiments, motor-lorries, and odd cavalry
-patrols; and no one had the vaguest idea as
-to why they were there nor where they were to
-go next. A Staff officer standing there was as
-much at sea as the rest. Every moment more
-and more transport would roll up, and more and
-more stragglers, while hanging on to the
-outskirts of the crowd were increasing numbers of
-frightened women and children. An old curé
-alone seemed calm and collected. Over another
-village a little way back down the road the
-German shells come bursting ever nearer. It
-must be remembered that even the Staff had
-but a hazy idea of the trend of events, and that
-outside the Staff not a soul had any notion of
-what was really happening to the Force. It
-was just a matter of doing your own special
-bit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Right into this confused mass came running
-some R..A.M.C. orderlies. "The Germans are
-just behind!" they shouted. There might have
-been a bad panic with all those civilians about,
-but there was only rather more confusion. The
-Staff officer gave a general order to retire on
-St. Quentin (a large town about seven miles to
-the south); and then there was one mad rush.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Motor-lorries blocked the whole road, trying
-to reverse, while wounded and stragglers
-made a dash for the nearest vehicles.
-Ammunition columns struck off the road on to the
-open down-land. The refugees streamed
-straight across country. Down the road the
-heavy lorries went pounding, and soon
-outdistanced everyone else. At one corner there
-were two R.F.A. drivers in charge of five heavy
-draught horses. "Germans be'ind us," yelled
-a lorry driver; "better move!" And they did
-move. The sight of those old "hairies" clopping
-down the road at a hand gallop after the
-disappearing lorries was too ludicrous for words.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-By 3 P.M. the weight of the enemy's attack
-had begun to tell, and, to quote the
-Commander-in-Chief's dispatch, "it became
-apparent that, if complete annihilation was to be
-avoided, a retirement must be attempted; and
-the order was given to commence it about
-3.30 P.M."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now came the most critical time of all.
-At the beginning of the day the enemy must
-have imagined that a retirement would be made
-at the earliest opportunity. But as the hours
-passed, and the British line still held, the
-impression may have spread that they intended
-to fight the day to a finish where they stood.
-Certainly it is impossible to think that had they
-realised a definite retirement to be in progress,
-they would not have thrown every man they had
-upon the rear of the Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Slowly and cautiously, then, regiment after
-regiment fell back. I have tried to show in an
-earlier chapter what that means and how much
-depends upon the guns at such a juncture.
-Again I can only quote the Commander-in-Chief's
-words: "The movement was covered
-with the most devoted intrepidity and
-determination by the artillery, which had itself
-suffered severely."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I will just give one instance of what that
-devotion meant, a devotion which, as has
-everywhere been agreed, saved the situation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Close under a ridge a battery had been in
-action without a moment's rest for the last six
-hours. One gun after another had been knocked
-out, the battery commander and every officer
-save one killed, all the men of the detachments
-killed or wounded, until there was left just one
-gun, one subaltern, and one driver. And still
-they kept the battery in action; still they loaded
-and fired, as they had been doing all through
-that ghastly day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Got a drink?" said the subaltern; "a
-cigarette? Good! Thank God for a white
-man's cigarette again!" And he went on with
-his job. That was what "covering the
-movement" meant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the battle had been won. General
-Smith-Dorrien, his officers and men, had
-accomplished the almost superhuman task thrust upon
-them. They had not merely held the German
-attack through all the long hours of that blazing
-August day; they had <i>broken</i> it. For the
-remainder of the Retreat it never recovered its
-sting and energy, and so the Force and Paris
-were saved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Events have had time to shape themselves
-during the months that have lapsed since
-August, 1914, and it is possible to view them
-in a certain perspective. It has been urged that
-we British have exaggerated the importance of
-the work of the Force in the Retreat; that while
-we were holding a line of no more than 20 odd
-miles, the French were extended over a front
-of 400 miles against an equally strong attack;
-that, by the prominence given to the work of
-the Force to the neglect of that of the French,
-a distorted picture has been given of the
-operations during August from Alsace to the
-sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To these arguments I would reply that
-Germany was staking everything upon that
-rush to Paris. For years past we had known
-that her intentions were to bring France to her
-knees within the first month or so, to admit of
-turning to meet Russia before that country had
-fully mobilised. And so, with this definite task
-in view, Germany concentrated her main attack
-through Belgium and south by Mons. She had
-not only her greatest strength in the armies of
-von Kluck and von Buelow, but she included in
-these masses of troops the flower of the German
-Army, picked regiments like the Prussian
-Guard, the "Iron" 3rd Corps of Brandenburg,[<a id="chap12fn1text"></a><a href="#chap12fn1">1</a>]
-and others. Add to these facts the
-sustained violence of the invasion, and the
-concentrated hate which was levelled against
-Belgians and British by the invaders when the
-attack was continually and successfully checked,
-and I think that there is sufficient evidence to
-indicate the vital importance of the work of the
-British Force.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Moreover, the French people themselves
-had, with fine generosity, recognised that it
-was the British Force, under God's hand, which
-had saved Paris: for on Sunday, August 30th,
-prayers of thanksgiving were offered up in the
-churches on behalf of our troops.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-And now, hopelessly inadequate as this
-record has so far been, words utterly fail me in
-attempting to describe the events of the next
-twelve hours, and how the Retreat was
-continued. It was one long, ghastly nightmare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As regiment after regiment received its
-orders to retire, the survivors staggered to their
-feet, blinded by the ordeal of the day, and
-crept back until they reached a point where
-ranks could be formed. Then they got moving.
-Their destination no one knew, no one cared....
-Keep moving! Men licked their blackened
-lips with parched tongues. "Any chance of a
-drink?" "Not here; perhaps we shall pass a
-village." Keep moving! "Got a fag on
-you?" "Smoked the last this morning; perhaps get
-some in the village." "Where the b&mdash;&mdash; 'ell
-is your village?" "Gawd knows." ... Keep
-moving!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ten minutes later. "Where the 'ell are we
-going? and why the &mdash;&mdash; are we retreating?
-Give 'em socks, didn't we? And where the &mdash;&mdash;
-are them &mdash;&mdash; Frenchies?" "Oh, shut yer 'ed,
-carn't yer?" ... Keep moving!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a tiny village called Estrées in a
-hollow of the downs about three miles out from
-St. Quentin. Here at 4 P.M. the confusion was
-indescribable. Lorries, stragglers, refugees,
-transport columns, guns&mdash;all inextricably mixed
-up. It was, I believe, supposed to be a bivouac
-point for the night, but no one knew definitely.
-In any case, they were all tightly wedged in
-that hollow, and the Germans were but a very
-few miles behind. Had an enemy battery come
-within range, as it might well have done, it
-would have meant certain death for every soul
-there. Later in the evening news got to
-G.H.Q. of the position, and rations were sent
-up to the starving troops, with definite orders
-about further retirement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Staff work simply went to pieces. It was
-not that men lost their heads or anything like
-that, but the various H.Q.'s found it impossible
-to keep pace with events. A regiment would
-be in a certain position, then it would be
-completely forgotten (or so it seemed), and no
-orders would arrive to move. Many C.O.'s
-retired entirely on their own initiative, and so
-got clear. Others decided to await instructions,
-and so got wiped out or captured.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As dusk gathered into darkness the confusion
-grew worse, while discomfort increased
-(if possible) with the steady downpour of ram
-which followed. But there was no moment's
-rest for the exhausted troops, save when a
-regiment came up against an obstacle across the
-road&mdash;a broken-down motor-van or gun-wagon.
-Then, if there were any sappers handy, the
-vehicle would be blown up and the road cleared....
-Anyhow, keep moving!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the dreadful agonies of the wounded.
-At St. Quentin there was a big hospital which
-had been gradually filling during the past
-twenty-four hours. Now, on this afternoon,
-G.H.Q. found it advisable to pack up in a
-hurry and leave for farther south. And the
-hospital&mdash;would it share the same fate as those
-of Mons and Le Cateau? Once again the
-movable cases were hastily got into ambulances
-and other conveyances, and carried off in the
-wake of G.H.Q. But for hundreds of men
-there was no chance of getting even so far as
-St. Quentin for attention. Through the day
-the R.A.M.C. had worked as hard as the
-fighters, but it was very little more than first
-aid which could be given. No chance for deft
-operation, anti-tetanus serum or the like.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, mingled with the retreating army were
-the ghosts of men swathed in bloody bandages,
-some clinging to vehicles on which they had
-found a seat, others marching with vague,
-uncertain pace by the infantry, others, again,
-just dropping out, to huddle exhausted by the
-roadside waiting for dawn and a fate which now
-had no meaning for them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Keep moving! ... Horse after horse in
-the slowly trekking columns of batteries or
-supply transport dropped down and fouled the
-wheels. Unhook or cut the traces; push the
-poor beast out of the road. An old pal, was
-he? Aye, he was a fine "wheeler," that dark
-bay! Remember the first time we had him in
-at practice camp? Nothing matters now but
-keeping on the move. Yes, better shoot him.
-He deserves a clean end.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Dozens, perhaps hundreds of men got cut
-adrift from their regiments that day, adrift and
-hopelessly lost in a strange country. No house,
-no village was safe as sanctuary, for the tide
-of invasion lapped at the threshold and would
-presently overwhelm it. One trivial incident I
-heard of seems worthy of record as an instance
-of "individuality" in the training of the British
-soldier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A man&mdash;-we will call him Headlam&mdash;got
-adrift by himself from the 3rd Division out on
-the left flank. After many hours' wandering,
-he came to a little farmhouse on the road.
-Here the good woman took him in, fed him,
-and gave him a shakedown. There were also
-there a couple of French stragglers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few hours later the little son of the farm
-came running in with the news that a patrol of
-the dreaded Uhlans was coming down the road.
-That meant murder for everyone. There was
-no time to hide, and the French were at
-their wits' end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Headlam's first thought was for cover. Out
-in the yard there was a big rain-tub. Calling
-the two French soldiers to help, they rolled it
-out longways on into the road, and one of them,
-with Headlam, got behind with their rifles.
-The moment the patrol appeared, Headlam
-gave the Uhlans an excellent example of rapid
-fire, and three saddles were empty before they
-realised where the attack came from. Then
-they charged. French and British, side by side,
-ground away with their rifles, and when the
-Uhlans reached the little fortress there were
-only three left out of the patrol of nine. The
-second Frenchman, by the side of the road,
-accounted for another, and, with three to two,
-the Uhlans surrendered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So our three musketeers found themselves
-with five excellent horses and a couple of
-prisoners; and I leave you to picture the
-triumphal procession which passed through the
-villages on the southward journey. The order
-of march was: Jacques and a led horse, Pierre
-and a led horse, two disconsolate Uhlans on
-foot (and hating it), and Headlam (with female
-escort), as G.O.C., bringing up the rear....
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Keep moving! ... But oh, the inexpressible
-weariness of it! No torture is more refined
-than that of preventing a worn-out human being
-from sleeping; and here it was experienced to
-the full. The picture of the Force that night
-might well have created for Dante the vision of
-one more circle of Hell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hunger was long since forgotten, but a
-red-hot thirst remained. One could appreciate
-as never before how Dives thirsted when he
-asked for Lazarus to touch his lips with a
-moistened finger. On, ever on, for hour after
-eternal hour, riding or trudging through the
-inky darkness, never a halt.... Keep moving!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How the troops did it I cannot tell. It
-was not the triumph of will over the exhausted
-body, for the sense of volition had fled, and men
-were mere automata in their movements. The
-legs jerked forwards as those of a clockwork toy.
-Had the men halted they could never have got
-moving again; the clockwork would have run down.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the saddle it was little better. Every
-muscle of the body ached with an intolerable
-dull throbbing; a deadly coma crept through
-the brain and dragged at the eyelids. Nerveless
-fingers clutched at the pommel of the saddle,
-and were pulled away by the drag of the heavy
-arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One knows how a single night of sleeplessness
-will tell its tale in the face of a man or
-woman. Here was the fourth night of ceaseless
-fighting and marching, with only an odd hour
-of rest now and again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All through the night and on into the daylight
-hours sounded the plod-plod of marching
-men, the grumble&mdash;creak&mdash;grumble of transport
-or guns. And in the far rear of the moving
-columns were more regiments lined out, showing
-a bold front to the still advancing enemy,
-ever guarding the backs of their comrades so
-far as was humanly possible.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-One particularly sad disaster befell a
-regiment in the course of the retirement; it is
-remarkable that there were not many others of
-a like nature. The 1st Gordons lost their way
-after dark, and began to march in a direction
-across the front of the German advance. About
-midnight the regiment found itself moving into
-masses of troops. The first thought was that
-they were amongst the French, for it was
-supposed that they had been marching towards
-French support.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly fire was opened upon the regiment
-from all sides, and though the Gordons put up
-the gallant fight which they have ever done in
-a tight corner, the odds were too impossible,
-and ten minutes saw the end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think that disaster affected the Force more
-than anything else in that opening month.
-Men spoke of it in hushed tones. A magnificent
-regiment with glorious traditions, and to
-be crushed out as they were in those few
-minutes. And yet not crushed out! Though
-the older generation of the family may die,
-there is the younger generation which follows,
-and their sons after them. And well do I
-remember that younger generation at the Aisne,
-when the Regiment rose again reincarnate from
-the ashes of the dead. I see now the stern-set
-faces of the officers, proud in their determination
-to avenge their honour; faces shaded and
-hallowed by the knowledge of what the Regiment
-had done and suffered, what it must now
-do and suffer that their dead may rest in peace.
-As it was, so shall it be,
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- Rising, roaring, rushing like the tide,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Gay goes the Gordon to a fight)<br />
- They're up through the fire-zone, not to be denied;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Bayonets! and charge! by the right!)<br />
- Thirty bullets straight where the rest went wide,<br />
- And thirty lads are lying on the bare hillside;<br />
- But they passed in the hour of the Gordons' pride,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To the skirl of the pipers' playing.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap12fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap12fn1text">1</a>] This Corps is always regarded in Germany as the finest in the
-German Army.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII
-<br />
-THE RETREAT CONTINUES
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>We are but warriors for the working-day;<br />
- Our gayness and our gilt are all besmirch'd<br />
- With rainy marching in the painful field;<br />
- There's not a piece of feather in our host,<br />
-<span style="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</span><br />
- And time hath worn us into slovenry;<br />
- But, by the mass, our hearts are in the trim.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The following days saw no rest for the exhausted
-troops, and they were compelled to plod on ever
-farther and farther south. If the rapidity of the
-German advance was so astonishing, even more
-so was the speed at which the British retired
-before them. For it is a hundred times more
-easy to do the advancing than the retiring. In
-the former case there is the confidence of
-success, with the feeling that at any moment
-the coveted prize may be snapped up. In the
-latter there is the inevitable feeling that things
-are going wrong, that the army is suffering
-defeat, and the constant dread that the troops
-may not stand the tremendous strain upon their
-powers of endurance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So it was that every encouragement was
-given to the rumour which ran through the
-Force that this was but a strategical retirement,
-part of the plan decided on years before between
-the French and British Headquarters Staffs.
-And the idea of the Retreat was that the British
-were to draw the Germans ever southward,
-while the Belgian forces were gradually closing
-in behind the invaders on the west, and the
-French doing the same on the east. Then at
-the psychological moment the signal would be
-flashed round, the British would suddenly turn
-and present a dead wall, the strings of the net
-would be pulled tight, and&mdash;hey presto! we
-should all be home by Christmas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was only one part of the scheme which
-everyone regretted, and that was that we should
-be out of the entry into Berlin. It is all very
-well to keep up your wicket while the other
-fellow makes the runs, but then the other fellow
-gets all the credit. You see, everybody knew
-for a fact that the Russians were only a couple
-of days from the German capital, and that
-heartened the Force almost more than anything
-else. However, one consoled the men by telling
-them that regiments were sure to be picked by
-ballot to represent the British in the march
-through; and as for the newspaper prizes to the
-first man or regiment in&mdash;well, that regiment
-would surely be sporting and share the prize.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How many times one must have explained
-this wonderful piece of strategy to the good
-French folk I should not like to guess. On
-passing through a little village, generally at
-dusk, one of the things one always had to do,
-after dispelling the fears of the ancient
-policeman who tried to hold up the battery with an
-antiquated fowling-piece, was to draw maps on
-the sanded floor of the café for the edification
-of the local magnates.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why do we thus retire, madame? But
-it is so simple. It is a piece of strategy of
-the most clever. The Allemands"&mdash;here the
-audience spit profusely&mdash;"come thus, the
-Belgians are here, etc. etc. At any moment
-we turn to attack, etc. How many English,
-madame? Ah, madame, it is not permitted to
-tell; but for your ear, madame (and I would
-tell no one else), they say that the second
-quarter of a million disembarked yesterday."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps our kindly hosts will by now have
-forgiven us, but at least much of it we believed
-ourselves at the time. It all helped to keep the
-men going and prevent sudden panic with the
-countryfolk. It is difficult to say whether we
-did wrong.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By 8 A.M. on the Thursday the retiring
-columns were well on their way beyond
-St. Quentin. The First Corps, during the eventful
-Wednesday, had also been steadily retiring,
-and had had comparatively little fighting
-to do. The condition of the troops will be
-remembered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About half an hour later the rear-guard
-reached St. Quentin. The batteries marched in,
-watered their horses in the square, and marched
-out again immediately, the infantry covering
-them outside the town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a little curious in St. Quentin&mdash;the
-attitude of the inhabitants. No one seemed
-to take any interest in the British movements,
-and certainly no one appeared to bother
-himself one atom about the German approach.
-St. Quentin is a big garrison town, with fine
-open places and streets, excellent shops and
-stately buildings, and the wealth of the place
-must be great. Yet there was never a hint of
-an exodus, and the people accepted the whole
-situation with astonishing sang-froid. I believe
-that when the Germans did arrive, a little later
-in the day, they surrounded the town and
-marched in from all sides at once, to find
-their triumphant entry opposed by&mdash;one British
-soldier. This man had got lost or left behind
-in a house, and now turned out with his rifle
-to defend the town. The German division had
-to open fire with a machine-gun upon the gallant
-lad before he fell, face to the enemy, riddled
-with bullets. The war can have witnessed few
-more remarkable episodes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fact that the R.F.A. with the rearguard
-were able to continue their retirement
-throughout the day without having to fire a
-round will show how well the Second Corps
-had smashed the German attack.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It should also be recorded that on this
-Thursday and Friday the Force had further
-help from the French. General Sordêt's cavalry
-continued its excellent work in relieving the
-pressure on the left of the Second Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-G.H.Q. had moved from St. Quentin on
-the Wednesday afternoon, and taken up their
-abode at Noyon, a cathedral town about 30 miles
-farther south. Here, again, no one seemed to
-have the slightest inkling of impending danger,
-and the business of the town was being carried
-on as usual. The mayor certainly posted a
-proclamation imploring the "citoyens" to
-remain calm and to pay no heed to rumours,
-and the citoyens obeyed by wondering why
-M. le maire should have so put himself about
-as to issue such a notice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That was on the Thursday. But on the
-Friday the citoyens received something of a
-shock. A number of British regiments marched
-through in broad daylight, and it was now
-plainly to be seen that something very serious
-was happening. After the first gasp of
-astonishment and utter incredulity, the people
-stood by the road in dead silence with tears of
-pity running down their cheeks. So long as I
-live I can never forget that scene, the intense
-drama of it, the tragedy, and the glory of
-achievement which shone radiantly forth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The remnants of three gallant regiments we
-watched go by, and we could look no longer.
-There is no need to say which they were, for
-they were but typical of all the other regiments
-in the Force that day. Again there were but
-a poor 200 men left of each 1,000. Officers
-and men alike in their pitiable destitution.
-Barefooted, or shifts of bandages round their
-swollen feet; torn breeches, cut short like
-football knickers. Great bearded men they were,
-with the grime and dust of five terrible days'
-incessant fighting and marching upon them;
-but in their eyes the unquenchable light of
-their native pluck and steadfastness. There was
-no trace of defeat there, only the hungry, dazed
-look of men who long for a little sleep before
-they turn once more to crash their way into an
-enemy's ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not such things as these that our people
-at home are told, and so I set them down.
-Tales of gallant deeds in the fighting-line they
-have now in plenty, but the great human side
-of this bloody war is passed over in discreet
-silence. England knows nothing of the
-meaning of modern war; she has not suffered
-invasion, save from the predatory attacks of
-aircraft. Her sons are fighting for her, and
-the knowledge thrills our womenfolk; but of
-the conditions under which they have fought,
-and of the appalling sufferings of tortured
-Belgium and France and Poland and Serbia,
-they are hopelessly ignorant. If but a tenth
-part were thoroughly realised there would be
-one mighty irresistible cry from the heart of
-the civilised world:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Stand at nothing to finish this war at once,
-and it shall be the last!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There are no such things as neutral nations.
-If a nation refuses to be enrolled for Civilisation,
-then it is fighting by the side of the
-obscene Horror which has plunged Europe into
-this carnival of blood and misery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the Friday afternoon some of us learned
-from a wounded French lancer that the German
-centre had been badly smashed and was actually
-retiring from St. Quentin, owing to a French
-counter-offensive; also some of our cavalry had
-been doing specially good work south of that
-town. The 3rd Cavalry Brigade broke and beat
-back the Prussian Guard and another cavalry
-regiment, and the 5th Cavalry Brigade had a
-similar success with other German cavalry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the meantime G.H.Q. had removed
-still farther south to Compiègne, and occupied
-Napoleon's magnificent palace, or a wing of it.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-It had been intended to give the Force a
-really good rest when they reached the River
-Oise on the Friday night. By that time the
-British line (both Corps) ran along the river
-from La Fère to Noyon. But it was, after all,
-little more than five or six hours which could
-be spared; many of the regiments and batteries
-did not even get that brief respite. "Keep
-moving" was still the order of the day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But for the fortunate it was a glimpse of
-Paradise. It meant, above all else, a proper
-all-over wash and a clean shirt, even though you
-had to wash it yourself. It meant the luxury
-of a shave, if you could manage to get hold of
-anything in the shape of a razor. There was a
-square meal served out, and there were two or
-three hours of blessed sleep, when you lay with
-next to nothing on (for your shirt was drying)
-under a shady tree. It was all little enough,
-and, truth to tell, most of the men could only
-turn out of the ranks to fall straight into the
-sleep of utter exhaustion, a sleep of the clock
-round had it been allowed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tobacco in those days was a luxury, and it
-was needed most. Now there is a regular
-weekly ration, and in addition kind friends at
-home see that the supply of cigarettes does not
-fail. But in the Retreat the usual substitute
-was dried tea-leaves rolled in the parchment
-paper of the emergency ration. Tea-leaves are
-very nasty to smoke, but I am not sure that they
-are so nasty as brown paper or the seat of a
-cane-bottomed chair; and I have tried them all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men's equipment, too, was a constant
-source of trouble. They would throw away
-their greatcoats and packs, anything to march
-as lightly as possible. The Germans must have
-had a fine haul, and there were several occasions
-when they dressed up their infantry companies
-in British greatcoats and caps, and got well up
-to our lines before their identity was discovered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And that reminds me that in Noyon we
-caught a German spy wearing no fewer than
-three different uniforms. First, a French; over
-it a Belgian; and on top of these a khaki
-greatcoat with cap. It was a very hot day, and the
-man's obvious discomfort was the first thing to
-give him away. It did not take ten minutes
-to settle that little affair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the time the two corps joined up again
-the refugee problem had become really serious.
-All the way back the army of unfortunates had
-been steadily growing larger, and it was but
-natural that they should hang on to the skirts
-of the Force for protection. How many of the
-poor women and little children died of exposure
-and exhaustion, it is impossible to tell. Our
-men were themselves badly off for food, but,
-needless to say, they were always eager to share
-their emergency rations with those who had
-nothing at all save what could be garnered in
-wayside village or cottage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rules about commandeering are most rigid;
-nothing must be taken without payment, or at
-least a voucher. I remember one C.O. buying
-a couple of fruit trees for his unit. But it went
-to the men's hearts to leave behind them tender
-chickens and toothsome bunnies, even though
-there was no chance of cooking them, to be
-snapped up by Germans with no such qualms
-of conscience.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet, to give the Germans credit, they did,
-in many cases, give written receipts for
-provisions when it was a question of an odd duck
-or bale of hay; but when a house was properly
-ransacked the receipt given more usually bore
-the signature of that redoubtable warrior, Herr
-von Koepenick. It was one of the very few
-occasions when they showed a sense of humour,
-if one can call it so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Amongst those fortunate regiments which
-had been able to snatch the few hours' rest
-there was a very general, and a very natural,
-impression that a definite stand was now going
-to be made. The position was a good one, and
-it was also confidently expected that more
-divisions were being hurried out from England
-as fast as ship and train could bring them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps, under other circumstances, the
-stand might indeed have been made. But what
-we did not know was that the main French
-Armies away to the east were being dealt a
-series of such smashing blows by the Germans
-that they were retiring almost more quickly
-than we were.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Although we are concerned here solely with
-the fortunes of the British Force, yet it must
-be remembered that the fighting on the west
-was only a small part of the general engagement,
-and that the Force had necessarily to
-conform with the main strategical idea. The
-capture of Paris would have been of incalculable
-moral value to the Germans. They recognised
-this, and therefore made that special bid for it.
-But the triumphant entry into Paris would
-have possessed no <i>real</i> value so long as the
-French and British Armies were still "in
-being." Just as, later, the capture of Warsaw
-was of little real value (save as a strategic
-centre), because the Russian Armies had
-escaped.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The position, then, on Saturday morning,
-the 29th, was:
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-(<i>a</i>) The Force was retiring, not too severely
-pressed by the enemy, but with continuous
-rear-guard actions.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-(<i>b</i>) Two new French Armies (the 6th and
-7th) were coming into position on our
-left, by Amiens and Roye.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-(<i>c</i>) On our immediate right was the 5th
-French Army, the one which had
-suffered so badly after the fall of Namur.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-(<i>d</i>) Generally, the French forces on the east
-were being steadily pushed back by the
-very strong enemy advance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On that morning the Commander-in-Chief
-received a visit from General Joffre, and this
-is what took place. I quote from Sir John
-French's second dispatch:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I strongly represented my position to the
-French Commander-in-Chief, who was most
-kind, cordial and sympathetic, as he has always
-been. He told me that he had directed the
-5th French Army on the Oise to move forward
-and attack the Germans on the Somme with a
-view to checking pursuit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I finally arranged with General Joffre to
-effect a further short retirement towards the
-line Compiègne&mdash;Soissons, promising him,
-however, to do my utmost to keep always within
-a day's march of him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It may be noted here (although, of course,
-we did not know it till much later) that, owing
-to the German advance on the west, Le Havre
-was evacuated as the British base, and the
-organisation, stores, hospitals and everything,
-were rushed at half a day's notice right down
-to St. Nazaire, at the mouth of the River
-Loire. It was an amusing episode in the war,
-and quite a happy little yarn it would make;
-"but that is another story," as Kipling says.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the Saturday evening the Force was got
-on the move again, heartened and not a little
-refreshed. The country-side now was as lovely
-as any district in France. Gentle, undulating
-downs, crowned by the beautiful forest of
-Ligues, and besprinkled with dainty little
-villages and stately châteaux. If these lines
-should chance to be read by the mayor and
-mayoress of a certain little village hard by
-Compiègne, I would beg them to believe that
-the officer whom they so graciously entertained
-for those brief hours remembers their kindness
-with the deepest gratitude, and records the day
-as one of the most perfect he has ever spent.
-Officers and men made so many good friends
-even during those crowded hours of life, only
-to realise with heartfelt sorrow that perhaps
-half a day later their kindly hosts must have
-been engulfed by the tide of invasion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I vividly recall how curious seemed that
-order to go on retiring when, from all accounts,
-the German centre had the previous day been
-so badly beaten. Madame's instincts, when the
-order came, were only too correct. She guessed
-the truth; we continued our trek hopelessly
-blind to the real facts.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV
-<br />
-PAST COMPIÈGNE
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
-KING HENRY. <i>The sum of all our answer is but this:<br />
- We would not seek a battle, as we are;<br />
- Nor, as we are, we say we will not shun it.<br />
-<span style="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</span><br />
- We are in God's hand, brother, not in theirs.<br />
- March to the bridge;<br />
- Beyond the river we'll encamp ourselves,<br />
- And on to-morrow bid them march away.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The destruction of a bridge, especially if it
-spans a river, always seems to me so pathetic.
-Bridges are such companionable things; they
-fall so readily into one's mood, and there are,
-I imagine, few persons who do not possess
-pleasant memories of one or another. Whether
-in town or country, there is always fascination
-in staying one's journey for a few minutes to
-lean over the parapet and watch the stream&mdash;the
-basking of a trout amongst the pebbles, the
-sway of the water-weeds, the trailing of heavy
-barges, or the twinkling shore-lights.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In Compiègne there is a particularly
-handsome structure which spans the River Oise.
-The French people love a noble bridge to ferry
-their broad highways over the rivers, and I
-cannot help thinking that it was not alone
-special reliance upon the workmanship of our
-sappers which induced the French authorities to
-resign to them the destruction. For, whenever
-possible, British sappers were called in for the
-work. They made such a clean job of it, the
-French would say. No; it was, I feel sure,
-their affection and pride for beautiful works of
-art with tender associations that made them
-reluctant to lay sacrilegious hands upon them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It must have been on Sunday, the 30th,
-that the last of the Force marched through or
-past Compiègne, and the bridge, besides many
-another, was blown up. The R.F.A. of the
-rear-guard passed through the town and halted,
-guns unlimbered, about 500 yards out the other
-side, ready to open fire, if necessary, for they
-were being hard pressed. The fuses were laid
-and lighted literally in face of the advancing
-enemy, and two R.E. officers who were doing
-the work were killed by enemy bullets. With
-a terrific crash the bridge fell, cut in two, and
-the retirement was continued while the
-Germans hurled impotent curses and (at that time)
-ineffectual shells after the column.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Second Corps had now reached country
-which was very difficult; not only for manoeuvre,
-but especially so for transport. Immediately
-after you leave Compiègne its glorious forest is
-entered, and directly that is passed it is a country
-of very steep ravines, thickly wooded, with little
-villages clinging limpet-like to the ridges. The
-heat of the day, too, was most trying.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The First Corps, which had joined up at
-Noyon, crossed the Aisne, and continued its
-retirement via Soissons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The German pursuit, which during the last
-two or three days had seemed to slacken off,
-began to get serious again on the afternoon of
-Monday, the 31st.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About 3 P.M. three field batteries and
-the Brigade of Guards (First Corps) were out
-by Villers-Cotterets, and the Germans were
-pushing on almost as fast as they did during
-the first days. Their guns came into action at
-about 1,700 yards, and as our brigade there was
-far outnumbered, orders were given to go on
-retiring.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Well, the major of one of the batteries was
-"fed up" with retiring without getting some
-of his own back, so he put his telescope (a
-battery carries a telescope) to his blind eye and
-said he'd be hanged before he retired (or words
-to that effect), and "let's give them a dressing
-down first."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So it was "Halt; action right!" and, after
-a couple of ranging shots, "Two rounds
-gun-fire!" And that was all that battery got in.
-The Germans put a couple of guns out of action,
-and then turned their attention to the wagon
-line, where they made a considerable mess-up
-with the teams.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That settled it. "Signal the teams up and
-let's get out of it!" said the major; and it was
-so. The quartermaster-sergeant put the fear of
-God, not the Germans, into the drivers; up
-came the teams, "rear limber up," and away
-they went, damaged guns and all. The Guards
-meanwhile had gone on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was nothing particularly heroic about
-it all, but it was very excusable, and it certainly
-helped to buck the men up a little.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Guards, however, gave further excellent
-evidence of their fighting qualities in a series
-of stiff hand-to-hand encounters in the forest
-glades. While they suffered badly, they
-succeeded again and again in beating back the
-enemy's attacks, and so further relieving the
-pressure on the rear.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Now, despite the continuous fighting and
-marching, there was no doubt whatever that the
-men were daily becoming more war-hardened
-and fit. The worst was over, and with that firm
-conviction their spirits grew lighter. During
-the first few days the troops were marching
-perhaps 25 to 30 miles a day, apart from the
-fighting. Take, for instance, Wednesday, the
-26th. The men had begun that great fight
-practically tired out. They fought all day, and
-then at the end of it did a retirement of some
-25 miles. Staff officers were simply worn out
-by the nerve-racking ordeal, and General
-Smith-Dorrien himself says that he did not average
-more than two hours' sleep during the first six
-days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the week's campaigning had done more
-for the troops than ten years' peace work.
-Their self-reliance, their confidence in and
-affection for their officers were evidenced in a
-hundred ways; while officers, for their part,
-had perfect confidence in their men and knew
-that, however impossible an order might seem,
-it would be carried out. The Force was, in
-short, one big happy family. Everybody seemed
-to know everybody else, and that meant that
-everybody helped everybody else. After the
-Marne it was never quite the same, because the
-Force began to increase in size. New-comers
-were immediately recognised, and the old hands
-could never resist a momentary exhibition of
-very pardonable pride at having "been out since
-the beginning."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The heavy losses in officers and N.C.O.'s
-had an inevitable effect on discipline, though it
-might well have been worse had not the sense
-of discipline amongst the rank and file been so
-strong. It must be remembered that so soon
-as the vanguard of the retiring Force passed
-through a village, practically the whole of the
-inhabitants would pack up such few of their
-belongings as they could carry on light carts,
-perambulators and any available vehicle, and
-then join the ever-growing stream of refugees.
-So the next units to pass through would find
-nothing but empty houses, and the temptation
-to carry away a few "souvenirs" was
-very hard to check, especially in the case of
-food.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One man of an infantry regiment "found"
-a horse wandering loose in a field. He was very
-tired, so why, thought he, should he not take
-what the gods sent him? He did, and rode the
-horse for a couple of days. Knowing nothing
-about horses, the poor beast got little enough
-to eat, and the man thought that the heaven-sent
-gift was becoming a nuisance. So he
-talked the matter over with a pal, and
-swopped his charger for&mdash;a packet of
-Woodbines! And I don't think the pal was a canny
-Scot either.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I remember particularly the date September
-1st, and going through the little town of
-Crépy-en-Valois, because we then realised for
-the first time that something was wrong about
-that "strategical retirement" business. Our
-maps included Belgium and all N.E. France,
-but Compiègne was the farthest point south;
-and when we had retired below that town we
-knew that retreat so far south was not a part
-of the original scheme.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then most of us saw some French troops
-for the first time, and, ominous sign, they
-were always engaged in barricading and mining
-the roads, opening the barricades to let us pass
-through.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Tuesday, September 1st, must ever be
-a red-letter day in the annals of the Royal
-Regiment, on account of the famous fight of
-L Battery, R.H.A., at Nery, hard by Compiègne.
-I always regard that episode as one of
-the most wonderful incidents in this war. Nor
-do I think so because it was my own regiment,
-though naturally one can appreciate it the more
-from being a Gunner. The story is, of course,
-well known, but no repetition can mar the
-effect, however bald the telling of it may be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-L Battery was working with the 1st Cavalry
-Brigade, which was made up of the 2nd
-Dragoons (Queen's Bays), the 11th Hussars,
-and the 5th Dragoons. For the benefit of the
-uninitiated it may be explained that a horse
-artillery battery of six guns forms an integral
-part of a cavalry brigade; wherever the cavalry
-go, there can go the "Horse Gunners," for
-the gun is of lighter calibre than that of the
-field batteries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About 2 o'clock in the morning word
-reached Second Corps H.Q. that a strong force
-of Germans, 90 guns and cavalry, was moving
-towards the 1st Cavalry Brigade in bivouac
-at Nery. The Third Army Corps, which was
-still included in General Smith-Dorrien's
-command, was also not far away. Our cavalry were
-actually bivouacked within about 600 yards of
-the Germans, and I believe that our outposts
-were, for some reason or other, not sufficiently
-advanced.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In an earlier chapter, writing of Captain
-Francis Grenfell, I have remarked that there
-was one other to whose life might well be
-applied the phrase: "<i>Sans peur et sans
-reproche</i>." That other was Captain E. K. Bradbury,
-of L Battery. All that I have ventured
-to say of Grenfell I would say also of
-Bradbury. I doubt whether there ever lived a
-Gunner officer who was more beloved by his
-men, or one more worthy to be so beloved.
-And when that is said, what else remains?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Half-past four in the morning, and the mists
-have scarcely begun to rise above the beech
-trees. You picture the guns of L Battery
-parked in line just on the downward slope of a
-slight hill and in a little clearing of the woods.
-The horses of the gun-teams are tethered to the
-gun and limber-wheels; others are down at a
-little stream hard by, where some of the men
-are washing and scrubbing out their shirts.
-The Queen's Bays are in bivouac in a neighbouring field.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Some of our scouts out there, aren't
-they?" remarked a shoeing-smith, pointing
-to some rising ground about 500 yards to
-the north; "or is it French cursers?"
-(cuirassiers).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Looks more like Germans to me," said
-one of the gunners. "Let's have a squint
-through the telescope."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What's up?" said the sergeant-major,
-passing at the moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Half a mo!" mumbled the gunner, eye
-glued to the battery telescope. "Yes, it
-is&mdash;Germans&mdash;I can see the spiky helmets."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Rot," returned the sergeant-major;
-"can't be!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Anyway, I'm off to report to the
-captain," said the gunner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bradbury was talking to the horses by
-one of the guns when a breathless gunner
-of the battery staff appeared with the
-telescope.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Beg pardon, sir, but there are&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-CRASH! A percussion shell burst clean
-in the middle of the battery, followed the next
-instant by a couple more. And in the few
-moments' breathless pause it was realised that
-practically every horse and every driver was
-either killed outright or wounded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Action rear!" yelled Bradbury, who found
-himself in command.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their leader's voice above the unholy din
-pulled them together, and the gun detachments,
-such as were left, leaped to the trails to
-get the limbers clear. But no more than three
-guns could they get into action.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now a tornado of shell and machine-gun
-bullets from close range burst over and through
-the devoted remnant&mdash;Bradbury, three
-subalterns (Giffard, Campbell and Mundy), the
-sergeant-major, a sergeant, a couple of gunners,
-and a driver. And in action against them were
-ten German field-guns, and two machine-guns
-enfilading from the wood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of their three guns, they had now to abandon two.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All hands number 2 gun!" called Bradbury,
-who, with the sergeant, had already
-opened fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The others rushed the few yards to
-Bradbury's gun; but even in that short space
-Giffard was hit five times. Bradbury acted as
-No. 1 (layer), the sergeant No. 2, while Mundy
-acted as observing officer. One of the gunners
-and the driver carried across all the ammunition
-by hand, through the hail of lead, from the
-firing battery wagons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The range was, say, 600 yards, but in such
-a nerve-racking storm it was difficult for the
-little detachment to work clearly with no one
-to observe the burst of the shells. There was
-only a little chance, but Mundy took it, and
-stepped calmly out from the shelter of the
-gun-shield to observe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then No. 2 gun began its work in earnest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Five minutes more left," said Mundy;
-"add twenty-five."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Crack went the report. "One out!" said
-Mundy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ten minutes more right; drop twenty-five."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Crack again! "Short," murmured Mundy;
-then, "add twenty-five."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Two out!" he counted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When three German guns had been counted
-out, Bradbury called over his shoulder to the
-sergeant-major:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Take my place; I'll load for a bit."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had barely changed places when a bursting
-shell carried away a leg at the thigh. Yet,
-by some superhuman will-power, he stuck to
-his post and went on loading.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Mundy was mortally wounded. Then
-Campbell fell. But still the gun was served,
-laid, and fired. And as surely were the German
-guns being counted out, one by one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then there burst true another shell. The
-gallant Bradbury received his death-wound, and
-his other leg was carried away. The rest of the
-detachment were all wounded. Still that tiny
-remnant stuck to it through the storm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now only are left the sergeant-major,
-Sergeant Nelson, the gunner, and the driver.
-Still they work. Still they watch one enemy
-gun after another ceasing to fire, until all are
-counted out but one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All the ammunition is finished. Nothing
-left now but to crawl back out of that hell.
-I Battery coming up? Well, they can finish
-it. Lend us some "wheelers" to get our guns
-back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So were the six guns of L Battery brought
-out of action. Torn and battered, but safe.
-Glorious relics of perhaps the most wonderful
-action a battery of the Regiment has ever
-fought&mdash;and won.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I Battery opened on the massed columns of
-the German cavalry now appearing, and rent
-mighty lanes through their ranks, turned and
-scattered them. The Queen's Bays, who had
-been working as infantry, for their horses
-stampeded when the firing began, collected up,
-and with I Battery and the Lincolns went over
-the hill after the retiring enemy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There they found the German battery out
-of action and abandoned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Bradbury? His last conscious words
-were an appeal for morphia and to be carried
-away as quickly as possible that his men might
-not witness his agony and be unnerved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So passed that heroic soul away. A life
-nobly spent, a death nobly encountered.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- Nothing is here for tears,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;... nothing but well and fair<br />
- And what may quiet us in a death so noble.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV
-<br />
-THE FINAL STAGES
-</h3>
-
-<p class="poem">
-FRENCH KING. <i>'Tis certain he hath passed the river Somme.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
-CONSTABLE OF FRANCE. <i>And if he be not fought withal, my lord,<br />
- Let us not live in France: let us quit all,<br />
- And give our vineyards to a barbarous people.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The fighting in the neighbourhood of Compiègne
-developed into something of a general
-action, an action in which the British more than
-held their own. There was some doubt whether
-the 4th Division would be able to shake off the
-heavy attack which was being made upon them,
-so another brigade was ordered to their help.
-The retirement was then easily effected.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 3rd Brigade was a little north of
-Crépy-en-Valois, and, without waiting for the
-enemy, themselves made a spirited advance for
-a short distance, and did excellent work with
-their R.F.A. against the German infantry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Soon after midnight on Wednesday, September
-2nd, the Force continued its retirement.
-There may have been some little grumbling,
-and it became increasingly difficult to keep up
-the old fiction&mdash;now indeed a fact&mdash;about a
-"strategical retirement"; but, somehow or
-other, a genuine conviction was stealing through
-the ranks that at any moment the real end would
-come. If our men were very, very weary, so
-also were the enemy, and every day brought
-fresh evidence of the fact.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, too, news came to us that the French
-(the 7th Army) were really tackling von
-Buelow's armies, and were doing well against
-them. That had a very inspiriting effect.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the Force, or rather our left, was
-actually in sight of the outlying forts of Paris,
-about a dozen miles off. Great was the
-excitement, for, of course, everyone jumped to the
-conclusion that we were making for the capital.
-G.H.Q. was at Lagny-sur-Marne, just 15 miles
-due east of Paris. They actually got as far
-south as Melun, on the outskirts of the Forest
-of Fontainebleau, before the tide turned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If you look at these places on the picture-map
-you will see that, after Senlis was passed,
-the Force, instead of retiring straight on
-towards Paris, as it had been doing, now swung
-round, with the right flank of the First Corps
-as pivot, and marched in a south-easterly
-direction. Possibly the enemy imagined from
-this that their chance had come, and that they
-would now be able to slip in between our left
-and Paris. But the new French army was
-coming up from behind Paris, upon our left,
-to fill the gap and cover the approaches to the
-city.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That swinging round movement to cross the
-River Marne was rather a risky business, for it
-meant marching for a certain distance across
-the enemy's front. However, it was
-successfully accomplished, and by the evening of
-September 3rd the Force was south of the river.
-That same afternoon our aircraft reported that
-the Germans had also swung eastwards, and
-were now apparently making for the large
-town of Château-Thierry, the point of division
-between our extreme right and the 5th French
-Army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The position in which the Force found themselves
-that evening was wellnigh hopeless from
-a defensive point of view. To make matters
-worse, we were very badly off for entrenching
-tools, the men having lost the greater part in
-the hurried retirement after the hard battle at
-the Wednesday. This question of entrenching
-tools was further complicated by the removal of
-our base to St. Nazaire, for that meant a much
-more serious difficulty in getting up supplies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I forgot to mention that when orders reached
-the Second Corps and 4th Division on the
-Thursday night to keep on the move, instructions
-were given by G.H.Q. to abandon everything,
-even the ammunition, which might retard
-the transport, and so to leave the vehicles free
-for wounded or the more exhausted of the men.
-Only one Division carried out the order, and
-that only partially, before the G.O.C. Second
-Corps on the spot realised it was unnecessary
-and countermanded it.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-During and after the battle of Le Cateau,
-as I have said the fight of the Wednesday has
-come to be spoken of, a rather curious adventure
-befell one of the motor transport ammunition
-parks About ten of the lorries, under an
-A.S.C. subaltern, had been doing some detached
-work away from the main body. These had
-got out of rather a tight corner, but the rest
-of the park (some sixty odd lorries) had become
-involved in that mix-up at Estrées.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About 3 P M. the A.S.C. captain in charge
-received an order to go back in the direction of
-Le Cateau. This was, apparently, straight into
-the advancing enemy, who were only some three
-or four miles off. The C.O. obeyed his orders
-and took his lorries back. From that moment
-those sixty great lorries vanished into thin air,
-and not a soul knew what had happened to
-them. At G.H.Q. the unit was officially
-reported as "missing," and it so appeared, I
-believe, in the London Press.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The subaltern invented and spread abroad a
-delicious yarn. I omit his version of his own
-adventures, for he got a "mention in
-dispatches" for it, though this was subsequently
-quashed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the order to go back was received,
-he said, and annihilation of the park seemed
-certain, the O.C. called his subalterns together
-and told them the position. They unanimously
-decided to obey and charge the advancing enemy
-with the lorries. The drivers (our old friends
-the busmen) were instructed to go full speed
-ahead into the enemy column. But the drivers
-were not having any. So the officers produced
-their revolvers and threatened to shoot any
-man who refused to obey. That decided them.
-"We will die by German bullets rather than
-British." So away they went, the lorries
-bumping along the road straight into the ranks of
-the astonished Germans. Nothing could stop
-them, and the column got through (the narrator
-forgot to mention where to) with the loss of
-about half the park.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The subaltern carried his arm in a sling for
-a fortnight afterwards. A shrapnel splinter, he
-said, when they were rushing the enemy. It
-had really been caused by the back-fire of a
-motor-bike. Possibly this is the origin of that
-glorified picture which appeared in certain of
-the London illustrated papers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The park was, however, actually lost for
-nearly a week. They had vanished as
-completely as though the earth had opened and
-swallowed them. They were eventually heard
-of by the merest accident, when a sergeant came
-in to one of the towns on the line of retreat to
-get provisions. But even then they could not
-be found, for the sergeant had gone again
-without leaving his address. So for days Staff
-officers scoured the country in swift cars, and
-thus the park was eventually run to earth. No
-one was more surprised than the C.O. to hear
-that he had been lost. They had not seen a
-single German, and they had had such a jolly
-time, thank you, seeing the pretty country.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But to tell of half the curious or amusing
-incidents I should need a volume many times
-the size of this one. Things happened every
-day any one of which would provide a newspaper
-with a column of excellent "copy." At
-the time one thought little about them, for
-everybody was too busy looking after his job
-and himself. There was, for instance, the
-Adventure of the Flat-Nosed Bullet, the
-Adventure of the Man with the Crooked Ear, the
-Adventure of the Field Cashier and the Pay
-Chest, the Adventure of the Blood-stained
-Putty Knife, the Adventure of the Perishing
-Cat, and many another.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The great question on the morning of
-Friday, September 4th, was: "Are we going
-right back to the Seine, with our left on
-Paris?" You picture the Force, tired enough but in
-most excellent fettle, growing hourly more
-impatient, longing with all their hearts to turn
-and have a go at the enemy who had caused
-them all that trouble and discomfort.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Give a guess," I asked two of my
-sergeants that day, "how long we have been
-out here?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They thought for a few minutes. "Six
-weeks," they said; "perhaps seven."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, you see, it was only a fortnight after
-all. But they would not believe it until a
-calendar was produced. Unconsciously
-everyone reckoned each night as another day, for
-nights and days were alike so far as work was
-concerned. I think that remark was more
-telling than pages of descriptive writing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The days during those final stages were
-almost tropical in their heat, which told very
-severely on men and horses. The nights were
-chill and wet. So altogether one had one's work
-cut out in mothering the men. Cases of bowel
-complaints were very common, and one has to
-be so careful to prevent serious developments.
-The lads really need looking after like children,
-bless them! Aromatic chalk-powder with opium
-(5-grain tablets) I found an excellent remedy,
-and cured dozens of cases. So there is a little
-tip for other officers. Calomel is useful, too,
-and I saved much agony from bad wounds by
-doses of opium (1-grain tablets), but this must
-not be given in cases of stomach wounds&mdash;most
-to be dreaded of any. Aspirin, also, is, of
-course, invaluable. Certainly no officer should
-be without a small medicine-case, and it is the
-one thing they never seem to think of when
-getting kit together. A trivial lapse, this, into
-egotism, I am afraid. I hope it will be excused
-for the sake of the hints offered.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-In the evening of September 4th orders
-came to continue the retirement still farther.
-The Second Corps marched through most of the
-night towards the River Seine, the First Corps
-conforming to the movement on the east. The
-6th French Army was coming up well on our
-left, and thus the western end of the Franco-British
-line was gradually swinging round and
-up between Paris and the right flank of the
-Germans, who were now definitely moving
-east-south-east. You must remember, though, that
-these facts were only apparent at the time to a
-handful of officers of the Headquarters Staff;
-everyone else was still in the dark. But how
-thrilling those hours must have been to an
-airman observing from above, and who knew the
-facts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 5th (Saturday), at noon, one battery
-found itself halted in a field by the 12-kilometre
-stone from Paris, and the men were confident
-that "la ville lumière" was their next stop.
-There was an undercurrent of excitement, for
-another couple of thousand men had joined
-up to the corps as reinforcements. It was a
-definite halt and a rest, the first they had
-had since Mons, and they were making the most
-of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Just about 6 P.M. the major came into the
-lines with a paper in his hand. There was
-something in his walk, something about
-him&mdash;the men jumped up as he approached.
-"Paris?"&mdash;the major shook his head.
-"Not&mdash;not&mdash;is it advance, sir?" The major
-nodded. "We are going to advance," he said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-ADVANCE!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a cheer which must have startled
-the French Government in Bordeaux, or
-whereever they had gone to.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The drivers rushed at their horses, the
-gunners rushed to the limbers to help hook in.
-"Stand to your horses!" sang out the sergeant-major.
-Then, in a very few minutes: "Battery
-all ready, sir!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The major stood up in his stirrups with a
-splendid laugh in his eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sub-sections right-about-wheel! Walk, march!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another rousing shout, which soon merged
-into the cheery strains of "All aboard for
-Dixie," and the battery began a march, this
-time in the right direction, which only stopped
-at 2 A.M. for the sake of the horses. The men
-were ready to go on for a week.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The great Retreat had ended. The Advance
-had begun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How and why the tide turned against the
-invaders at that, for them, most critical moment
-we cannot exactly tell. It was, as I see it, a
-combination of circumstances. There was the
-imminence of the Russian invasion into Prussia,
-and it was said that the Germans withdrew two
-army corps from the Western front to meet it.
-There was the sudden production by the French
-Commander-in-Chief of an entirely new French
-army from behind Paris to attack the German
-right.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But one thing, at least, is certain. Von
-Kluck made, perhaps, the biggest mistake in
-his life in imagining that "the contemptible
-little army" which he and his legions had been
-hunting for a fortnight was now too dispirited
-and broken for further fighting; and, with that
-conviction in his mind, he started to do the very
-thing which the most elementary military
-textbooks tell you is absolutely wrong. He moved
-his army across the unbroken front of a hostile
-force.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Smith-Dorrien had been compelled
-to do the same thing with the Second Corps only
-three days before. But he did it with the full
-knowledge of the dangers, and he took every
-possible precaution to obviate them. He
-succeeded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Von Kluck, in his delusion, saw no danger.
-He failed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I should conceive it," says Sir John
-French, "to have been about noon on September
-6th ... that the enemy realised the powerful
-threat that was being made against the flank of
-his columns moving south-east, and began the
-great retreat which opened the battle of the
-Marne."
-</p>
-
-<p class="thought">
-*****
-<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And there I draw the tableau curtains on
-the first act of the drama.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How inadequately the story has been told, or
-rather outlined, no one is more conscious than
-the writer. For every omission the critics may
-find, I will find two. But if I have so written
-that the great-hearted public may realise a little
-more of what the Retreat from Mons meant to
-the lads of ours who worked and fought so
-marvellously, to themselves at home, to our
-brothers and sisters overseas, then indeed I am
-satisfied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of necessity I have had to omit a great deal
-which may not be told until the war has ended.
-To an officer on the active list freedom of speech
-is rightly denied. But some day I shall hope
-to write in fuller detail and to do more justice
-to the work of individuals. It is only right that
-the public should learn the actual facts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The glory of the achievement lay not merely
-in the hourly repulse, over a period of fourteen
-days, of an overwhelming attack, and of a
-continued retirement, which somehow never broke,
-before such an inveterate pursuit. But there
-was also the big question of temperament. The
-Germans knew exactly what they wanted, and
-they went straight for it, backed by all the
-resources of their wonderful organisation working
-to that particular end for a decade of years
-or longer. The British, on the other hand, were
-thrust into the breach literally at the last
-moment, a week late, and then had to fight for
-a fortnight in total ignorance of the course of
-events.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I recall a remark once made by General Joffre:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The better he understands the importance
-of the movements of the attack wherein he
-participates, the braver the French soldier
-fights, and the more trust he puts in the
-measures taken by his leaders."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While the converse may not always be true,
-it will, I think, suggest how very difficult is the
-execution of a delicate piece of strategy when
-the officers and men are ignorant of the motives
-which prompt it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Retreat was carried to a successful
-conclusion because, by the inherent qualities of
-race, it was a piece of work of a character in
-which the British Army has always excelled;
-and also, in face of the terrible engines of
-modern slaughter, because of the splendid
-discipline of the men and their training as
-individual human beings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of the invariable cheerfulness of the men I
-have given several examples; but I would again
-attempt to correct the popular impression that
-such cheerfulness is no more than the cracking
-of jokes on all occasions. No, it is something
-far deeper and finer than that. The casual
-observer will watch a party of sappers mending
-a road, under fire, with loads of flint stones.
-He will hear them grumbling about the shocking
-waste of the ratepayers' money, and will
-then write home a letter for publication narrating
-the incident as a funny remark under fire.
-He omits to point out that it is only the cheery
-spirits of the men (and, of course, discipline,
-etc.) which make possible the clean finish of
-the work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So it was in the Retreat. The men were
-far too exhausted to crack jokes, but the
-unconquerable soul of them rose high above every
-obstacle, and so the work was done.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Looking back over what I have written, I
-find that, quite unconsciously, I have said little
-or nothing of the work of the officers. Yet
-there is nothing else that I can say. It is not
-for me to remark upon the work of our leaders
-and of my brother-officers. I can only repeat
-the words of the Commander-in-Chief, and I
-venture to do so because the general public
-bothers but little with official dispatches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is impossible," Sir John French
-remarked, "for me to speak too highly of the
-skill evinced by the two General Officers
-Commanding Army Corps; the self-sacrificing and
-devoted exertions of their Staffs; the direction
-of the troops by Divisional, Brigade and
-Regimental leaders; the command of the smaller
-units by their officers; and the magnificent
-fighting spirit displayed by non-commissioned
-officers and men."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But in the Commander-in-Chief's dispatches
-there is one officer whose name shines out like
-a beacon. You who have followed in spirit the
-work of the Second Corps on August 26th will
-have realised the imperishable debt which the
-nation owes to the General Officer Commanding
-that corps. The verdict of posterity will but
-confirm that of the present generation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again I can but quote the Commander-in-Chief:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I cannot close the brief account of this
-glorious stand of the British troops without
-putting on record my deep appreciation of the
-valuable services rendered by General Sir Horace
-Smith-Dorrien.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I say without hesitation that the saving of
-the left wing of the Army under my command
-on the morning of August 26th could never
-have been accomplished unless a commander of
-rare and unusual coolness, intrepidity and
-determination had been present to personally conduct
-the operation."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the head of my sketch of that day's work
-I have set Shakespeare's immortal lines on
-St. Crispin's Day. May one who was privileged to
-serve as a member of that "band of brothers"
-on that day venture to offer his poor tribute to
-the leader of that band?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From Mons to the Marne, wherever the fight
-was hottest, wherever his men were working
-against heaviest odds, there was the General at
-hand to help and stiffen them. The outposts
-before Mons were heavily engaged; the General
-was up with them, under shell-fire, to see how
-things were going. Through the days that
-followed, wherever opportunity served, their
-commander stepped from his car to say a few
-words of cheery encouragement to the passing
-troops. Was there a field hospital, a passing
-ambulance?&mdash;again, those few words of kindly
-inquiry which made the poor sufferers forget
-everything save only the desire to be well again
-to give their-chief, and Britain, all that was in
-them. If the Commander-in-Chief owed so
-much to General Smith-Dorrien, I can only say
-that the Second Corps would have stormed the
-gates of Hell for their leader, and would have
-trusted implicitly in him to bring them through.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-I seem to have said practically nothing
-about the Flying Corps, and very little about
-the Sappers. I am afraid that I saw very little
-of our aeroplane work until the Aisne, and so
-I cannot speak from personal observation. In
-fact, there are far too many omissions in this
-brief chronicle.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But pardon, gentles all,<br />
-<span style="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</span><br />
- Oh, pardon! since a crooked figure may<br />
- Attest in little place a million;<br />
- And let us, ciphers to this great accompt,<br />
- On your imaginary forces work,<br />
-/tb
- Piece out our imperfections with your thoughts.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, I find it quite impossible to speak
-of one branch of the Force more than another.
-It was just one perfect whole. Thus I have,
-so far as possible, refrained from designating
-particular regiments. If I have written of the
-9th Lancers or L Battery it is because the
-gallant work of those units is already a
-household word throughout the Empire. But, so far
-as that first fortnight was concerned, there was
-not a single unit, officer or man, who did not
-achieve something equally as gallant did the
-opportunity come his way. Indeed, had it
-not been so, the Retreat could never have been
-accomplished as it was. Every man played the
-game for his side, and, in consequence, that
-side won.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And if that were so, then there can be no
-question of "mentions in dispatches," D.S.O.'s
-and D.C.M.'s. Every regiment in the firing-line
-should be "mentioned." If, by great good
-fortune, a regiment achieves some specially
-noble piece of work which comes to the notice
-of the authorities, then, say I, let the Colour
-of that regiment be decorated. To single out
-individuals, to give a Victoria Cross to the
-colonel, a D.S.O. to the senior major, a Military
-Cross to the senior captain, and so on, is to
-create jealousy, and is, also, unfair to others.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Humanity, the other noble trait in the
-character of our men, I have barely mentioned,
-for it seems quite unnecessary to do so. It is
-a characteristic of British sailors and soldiers
-which is always taken for granted. One need
-only recall some of the many occasions in our
-naval actions when British sailors have rescued
-Germans at the peril of their lives, and have
-been fired at while doing so. And set in
-contrast the murderous attack by German destroyers
-upon the crew of a British submarine stranded
-on the Swedish coast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so it has been with our soldiers. Our
-men invariably enter a fight with the innate
-feeling that it is a sporting contest, where you
-shake hands with your adversary before and
-after the fight. If he knocks out his adversary,
-then the winner is the man to help him to his
-feet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have seen from the very beginning that
-"chivalry" and "fair play" are words
-unknown to the Germans. To them nothing
-matters but to win, preferably by foul means.
-So, on the very first day, British soldiers were
-terribly undeceived. They saw German infantry
-advancing to the attack behind a screen of
-Belgian women and children, driven on at the
-bayonet point. From then onwards we lost
-hundreds of gallant men simply through their
-feelings of humanity towards wounded enemies,
-being shot at by other Germans, or being
-treacherously shot or stabbed by the very man
-to whose lips they were holding a flask of
-water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And yet, with such examples before them
-of their comrades' fate, the sense of humanity
-and chivalry was never dulled. Despite the
-stringent orders on the subject, the men, even
-now, hesitate to fire when the enemy raises a
-white flag, and will always, whenever possible,
-succour a wounded German lying before the
-trench. These are the men who have only, as
-yet, learned of German treachery by hearsay
-evidence. But there are others. There are
-companies and battalions who know from ghastly
-experience. These men adopt other methods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But nothing I can write will make people
-at home understand what this war really is.
-Nothing, short of actual experience, can do
-that. Stay, perhaps there is one thing: the
-genius of Louis Raemaekers. He, at least, by
-his cartoons, is bringing home to millions the
-hideous meaning of this war. And not only
-of this war, but of all modern war. I would
-have a volume of his cartoons distributed gratis
-by the Government to every household in the
-kingdom. I would have half a dozen of the
-cartoons thrown upon the screen in every
-cinema-house at every entertainment. The
-people would shudder with horror, but they
-would see them and learn what Germany is and
-what war means.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Apart from this, I hold it to be the sacred
-duty of every man and woman who can use a
-pen to advantage, or who can command the
-attention of an audience, to make known this
-meaning. To cry from the housetops what is
-this foul thing which Germany has thrust upon
-the world, and to show the people why and
-how Civilisation must crush it out for ever.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-There is no greater honour to-day that a
-man may wear&mdash;alas, there are but few left to
-wear it!&mdash;than the honour of having served his
-King and Country in France throughout August
-and September, 1914. Just that. He needs no
-decoration, no "mention." He served through
-the "Retreat from Mons." In days to come
-our children, our children's children, will point
-with pride to that one little word on the
-regimental colour, "Mons." For in that single
-word will be summed up the Liberation of the
-World. It was the victory of the Marne which
-won for Civilisation that freedom, but it was,
-under God's hand, the British Navy, the stand
-of Belgium, and the "Retreat from Mons"
-which made that victory possible.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-APPENDIX I
-</h3>
-
-<p class="t3">
-MILITARY DESPATCHES FROM THE FIELD-MARSHAL<br />
-COMMANDING-IN-CHIEF, BRITISH FORCES IN THE FIELD,<br />
-DATED SEPTEMBER 7TH AND 17TH
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-7th September, 1914.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-MY LORD,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have the honour to report the proceedings of the
-Field Force under my command up to the time of
-rendering this despatch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-1. The transport of the troops from England both by
-sea and by rail was effected in the best order and without
-a check. Each unit arrived at its destination in this
-country well within the scheduled time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The concentration was practically complete on the
-evening of Friday, the 21st ultimo, and I was able to
-make dispositions to move the Force during Saturday,
-the 22nd, to positions I considered most favourable
-from which to commence operations which the French
-Commander-in-Chief, General Joffre, requested me to
-undertake in pursuance of his plans in prosecution of the
-campaign.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Position at Mons
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The line taken up extended along the line of the canal
-from Condé on the west, through Mons and Binche on
-the east. This line was taken up as follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From Condé to Mons inclusive was assigned to the
-Second Corps, and to the right of the Second Corps from
-Mons the First Corps was posted. The 5th Cavalry
-Brigade was placed at Binche.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the absence of my Third Army Corps I desired to
-keep the Cavalry Division as much as possible as a reserve
-to act on my outer flank, or move in support of any
-threatened part of the line. The forward reconnaissance
-was entrusted to Brigadier-General Sir Philip Chetwode
-with the 5th Cavalry Brigade, but I directed General
-Allenby to send forward a few squadrons to assist in
-this work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the 22nd and 23rd these advanced squadrons
-did some excellent work, some of them penetrating as
-far as Soignies, and several encounters took place in
-which our troops showed to great advantage.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Sunday, August 23
-</p>
-
-<p>
-2. At 6 a.m., on August 23rd, I assembled the
-Commanders of the First and Second Corps and Cavalry
-Division at a point close to the position, and explained
-the general situation of the Allies, and what I
-understood to be General Joffre's plan. I discussed with
-them, at some length the immediate situation in front
-of us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From information I received from French Headquarters
-I understood that little more than one, or at
-most two, of the enemy's Army Corps, with perhaps one
-Cavalry Division, were in front of my position; and I
-was aware of no attempted outflanking movement by
-the enemy. I was confirmed in this opinion by the fact
-that my patrols encountered no undue opposition in their
-reconnoitring operations. The observation of my
-aeroplanes seemed also to bear out this estimate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About 3 p.m. on Sunday, the 23rd, reports began
-coming in to the effect that the enemy was commencing
-an attack on the Mons line, apparently in some strength,
-but that the right of the position from Mons and Bray
-was being particularly threatened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Commander of the First Corps had pushed his
-flank back to some high ground south of Bray, and the
-5th Cavalry Brigade evacuated Binche, moving slightly
-south: the enemy thereupon occupied Binche.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The right of the 3rd Division, under General Hamilton,
-was at Mons, which formed a somewhat dangerous
-salient; and I directed the Commander of the Second
-Corps to be careful not to keep the troops on this salient
-too long, but, if threatened seriously, to draw back the
-centre behind Mons. This was done before dark. In
-the meantime, about 5 p.m., I received a most unexpected
-message from General Joffre by telegraph, telling me
-that at least three German Corps, viz., a reserve corps,
-the 4th Corps and the 9th Corps, were moving on my
-position in front, and that the Second Corps was engaged
-in a turning movement from the direction of Tournay.
-He also informed me that the two reserve French Divisions
-and the 5th French Army on my right were retiring,
-the Germans having on the previous day gained possession
-of the passages of the Sambre between Charleroi
-and Namur.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Monday, August 24
-</p>
-
-<p>
-3. In view of the possibility of my being driven from
-the Mons position, I had previously ordered a position
-in rear to be reconnoitred. This position rested on the
-fortress of Maubeuge on the right and extended west to
-Jenlain, south-east of Valenciennes, on the left. The
-position was reported difficult to hold, because standing
-crops and buildings made the siting of trenches very
-difficult and limited the field of fire in many important
-localities. It nevertheless afforded a few good artillery
-positions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the news of the retirement of the French and
-the heavy German threatening on my front reached me,
-I endeavoured to confirm it by aeroplane reconnaissance;
-and as a result of this I determined to effect a retirement
-to the Maubeuge position at daybreak on the 24th.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A certain amount of fighting continued along the
-whole line throughout the night, and at daybreak on the
-24th the 2nd Division from the neighbourhood of
-Harmignies made a powerful demonstration as if to retake
-Binche. This was supported by the artillery of both the
-1st and 2nd Divisions, whilst the 1st Division took up
-a supporting position in the neighbourhood of Peissant.
-Under cover of this demonstration the Second Corps
-retired on the line Dour&mdash;Quarouble&mdash;Frameries. The 3rd
-Division on the right of the Corps suffered considerable
-loss in this operation from the enemy, who had retaken
-Mons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Second Corps halted on this line, where they
-partially entrenched themselves, enabling Sir Douglas
-Haig with the First Corps gradually to withdraw to the
-new position; and he effected this without much further
-loss, reaching the line Bavai&mdash;Maubeuge about 7 p.m.
-Towards midday the enemy appeared to be directing his
-principal effort against our left.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Work of the Cavalry
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had previously ordered General Allenby with the
-Cavalry to act vigorously in advance of my left front
-and endeavour to take the pressure off.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About 7.30 a.m. General Allenby received a message
-from Sir Charles Fergusson, commanding 5th Division,
-saying that he was very hard pressed and in urgent need
-of support. On receipt of this message General Allenby
-drew in the Cavalry and endeavoured to bring direct
-support to the 5th Division.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the course of this operation General De Lisle,
-of the 2nd Cavalry Brigade, thought he saw a good
-opportunity to paralyse the further advance of the enemy's
-infantry by making a mounted attack on his flank. He
-formed up and advanced for this purpose, but was held
-up by wire about 500 yards from his objective, and the
-9th Lancers and 18th Hussars suffered severely in the
-retirement of the Brigade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 19th Infantry Brigade, which had been guarding
-the Line of Communications, was brought up by rail to
-Valenciennes on the 22nd and 23rd. On the morning of
-the 24th they were moved out to a position south of
-Quarouble to support the left flank of the Second Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With the assistance of the Cavalry Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien
-was enabled to effect his retreat to a new position;
-although, having two corps of the enemy on his
-front and one threatening his flank, he suffered great
-losses in doing so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At nightfall the position was occupied by the Second
-Corps to the west of Bavai, the First Corps to the right.
-The right was protected by the Fortress of Maubeuge,
-the left by the 19th Brigade in position between Jenlain
-and Bry, and the Cavalry on the outer flank.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Tuesday, August 25
-</p>
-
-<p>
-4. The French were still retiring, and I had no
-support except such as was afforded by the Fortress of
-Maubeuge; and the determined attempts of the enemy
-to get round my left flank assured me that it was his
-intention to hem me against that place and surround
-me. I felt that not a moment must be lost in retiring
-to another position.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had every reason to believe that the enemy's forces
-were somewhat exhausted, and I knew that they had
-suffered heavy losses. I hoped, therefore, that his pursuit
-would not be too vigorous to prevent me effecting my
-object.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The operation, however, was full of danger and
-difficulty, not only owing to the very superior force in my
-front, but also to the exhaustion of the troops.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The retirement was recommenced in the early morning
-of the 25th to a position in the neighbourhood of
-Le Cateau, and rearguards were ordered to be clear of
-the Maubeuge&mdash;Bavai&mdash;Eth road by 5.30 a.m.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two Cavalry Brigades, with the Divisional Cavalry
-of the Second Corps, covered the movement of the Second
-Corps. The remainder of the Cavalry Division with the
-19th Brigade, the whole under the command of General
-Allenby, covered the west flank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 4th Division commenced its detrainment at Le
-Cateau on Sunday, the 23rd, and by the morning of the
-25th eleven battalions and a Brigade of Artillery with
-Divisional Staff were available for service.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I ordered General Snow to move out to take up a
-position with his right south of Solesmes, his left resting
-on the Cambrai&mdash;Le Cateau road south of La Chaprie.
-In this position the Division rendered great help to the
-effective retirement of the Second and First Corps to the
-new position.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although the troops had been ordered to occupy the
-Cambrai&mdash;Le Cateau&mdash;Landrecies position, and the ground
-had, during the 25th, been partially prepared and
-entrenched, I had grave doubts&mdash;owing to the information
-I received as to the accumulating strength of the enemy
-against me&mdash;as to the wisdom of standing there to fight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having regard to the continued retirement of the
-French on my right, my exposed left flank, the tendency
-of the enemy's western corps (II.) to envelop me, and,
-more than all, the exhausted condition of the troops, I
-determined to make a great effort to continue the retreat
-till I could put some substantial obstacle, such as the
-Somme or the Oise, between my troops and the enemy,
-and afford the former some opportunity of rest and
-reorganisation. Orders were, therefore, sent to the Corps
-Commanders to continue their retreat as soon as they
-possibly could towards the general line
-Vermand&mdash;St. Quentin&mdash;Ribemont.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Cavalry, under General Allenby, were ordered to
-cover the retirement.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-The Guards at Landrecies
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Throughout the 25th and far into the evening, the
-First Corps continued its march on Landrecies, following
-the road along the eastern border of the Forêt de Mormal,
-and arrived at Landrecies about 10 o'clock. I had
-intended that the Corps should come farther west so as
-to fill up the gap between Le Cateau and Landrecies,
-but the men were exhausted and could not get farther
-in without rest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The enemy, however, would not allow them this rest,
-and about 9.30 p.m. a report was received that the 4th
-Guards Brigade in Landrecies was heavily attacked by
-troops of the 9th German Army Corps who were coming
-through the forest on the north of the town. This
-brigade fought most gallantly and caused the enemy to
-suffer tremendous loss in issuing from the forest into
-the narrow street of the town. The loss has been
-estimated from reliable sources at from 700 to 1,000. At
-the same time information reached me from Sir Douglas
-Haig that his 1st Division was also heavily engaged
-south and east of Maroilles. I sent urgent messages to
-the Commander of the two French Reserve Divisions on
-my right to come up to the assistance of the First Corps,
-which they eventually did. Partly owing to this assistance
-but mainly to the skilful manner in which Sir
-Douglas Haig extricated his Corps from an exceptionally
-difficult position in the darkness of the night, they were
-able at dawn to resume their march south towards
-Wessigny on Guise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By about 6 p.m. the Second Corps had got into
-position with their right on Le Cateau, their left in the
-neighbourhood of Caudry, and the line of defence was
-continued thence by the 4th Division towards Seranvillers,
-the left being thrown back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the fighting on the 24th and 25th the
-Cavalry became a good deal scattered, but by the
-early morning of the 26th General Allenby had
-succeeded in concentrating two brigades to the south of
-Cambrai.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 4th Division was placed under the orders of the
-General Officer Commanding the Second Army Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Wednesday, August 26
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 24th the French Cavalry Corps, consisting of
-three divisions, under General Sordêt, had been in billets
-north of Avesnes. On my way back from Bavai, which
-was my "Poste de Commandement" during the fighting
-of the 23rd and 24th, I visited General Sordêt, and
-earnestly requested his co-operation and support. He
-promised to obtain sanction from his Army Commander
-to act on my left flank, but said that his horses were too
-tired to move before the next day. Although he rendered
-me valuable assistance later on in the course of the
-retirement, he was unable for the reasons given to afford
-me any support on the most critical day of all, viz.,
-the 26th.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At daybreak it became apparent that the enemy was
-throwing the bulk of his strength against the left of the
-position occupied by the Second Corps and the 4th
-Division.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this time the guns of four German Army Corps
-were in position against them, and Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien
-reported to me that he judged it impossible to
-continue his retirement at daybreak (as ordered) in face
-of such an attack.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I sent him orders to use his utmost endeavours to
-break off the action and retire at the earliest possible
-moment, as it was impossible for me to send him any
-support, the First Corps being at the moment incapable
-of movement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The French Cavalry Corps, under General Sordêt, was
-coming up on our left rear early in the morning, and I
-sent an urgent message to him to do his utmost to come
-up and support the retirement of my left flank; but,
-owing to the fatigue of his horses he found himself unable
-to intervene in any way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There had been no time to entrench the position
-properly, but the troops showed a magnificent front to
-the terrible fire which confronted them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Artillery, although outmatched by at least four
-to one, made a splendid fight, and inflicted heavy losses
-on their opponents.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At length it became apparent that, if complete annihilation
-was to be avoided, a retirement must be attempted;
-and the order was given to commence it about 3.30 p.m.
-The movement was covered with the most devoted
-intrepidity and determination by the Artillery, which had
-itself suffered heavily, and the fine work done by the
-Cavalry in the further retreat from the position assisted
-materially in the final completion of this most difficult
-and dangerous operation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fortunately the enemy had himself suffered too
-heavily to engage in an energetic pursuit.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-I cannot close the brief account of this glorious stand
-of the British troops without putting on record my deep
-appreciation of the valuable services rendered by General
-Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I say without hesitation that the saving of the left
-wing of the Army under my command on the morning
-of the 26th August could never have been accomplished
-unless a commander of rare and unusual coolness, intrepidity,
-and determination had been present to personally
-conduct the operations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The retreat was continued far into the night of the
-26th and through the 27th and 28th, on which date the
-troops halted on the line Noyon&mdash;Chauny&mdash;La Fère,
-having then thrown off the weight of the enemy's pursuit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 27th and 28th I was much indebted to
-General Sordêt and the French Cavalry Division which
-he commands for materially assisting my retirement
-and successfully driving back some of the enemy on
-Cambrai.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General D'Amade also, with the 61st and 62nd French
-Reserve Divisions, moved down from the neighbourhood
-of Arras on the enemy's right flank and took much
-pressure off the rear of the British Forces.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This closes the period covering the heavy fighting
-which commenced at Mons on Sunday afternoon, 23rd
-August, and which really constituted a four days' battle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this point, therefore, I propose to close the present
-despatch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I deeply deplore the very serious losses which the
-British Forces have suffered in this great battle; but
-they were inevitable in view of the fact that the British
-Army&mdash;only two days after a concentration by rail&mdash;was
-called upon to withstand a vigorous attack of five
-German Army Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is impossible for me to speak too highly of the skill
-evinced by the two General Officers commanding Army
-Corps; the self-sacrificing and devoted exertions of their
-Staffs; the direction of the troops by Divisional, Brigade,
-and Regimental Leaders; the command of the smaller
-units by their officers; and the magnificent fighting spirit
-displayed by non-commissioned officers and men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I wish particularly to bring to your Lordship's notice
-the admirable work done by the Royal Flying Corps
-under Sir David Henderson. Their skill, energy, and
-perseverance have been beyond all praise. They have
-furnished me with the most complete and accurate
-information which has been of incalculable value in the
-conduct of the operations. Fired at constantly both by
-friend and foe, and not hesitating to fly in every kind of
-weather, they have remained undaunted throughout.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Further, by actually fighting in the air, they have
-succeeded in destroying five of the enemy's machines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I wish to acknowledge with deep gratitude the
-incalculable assistance I received from the General and Personal
-Staffs at Headquarters during this trying period.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lieutenant-General Sir Archibald Murray, Chief of
-the General Staff; Major-General Wilson, Sub-Chief of
-the General Staff; and all under them have worked day
-and night unceasingly with the utmost skill, self-sacrifice,
-and devotion; and the same acknowledgment is due by
-me to Brigadier-General Hon. W. Lambton, my Military
-Secretary, and the Personal Staff.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In such operations as I have described, the work of
-the Quartermaster-General is of an extremely onerous
-nature. Major-General Sir William Robertson has met
-what appeared to be almost insuperable difficulties with
-his characteristic energy, skill, and determination; and
-it is largely owing to his exertions that the hardships and
-sufferings of the troops&mdash;inseparable from such
-operations&mdash;were not much greater.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Major-General Sir Nevil Macready, the Adjutant-General,
-has also been confronted with most onerous and
-difficult tasks in connection with disciplinary arrangements
-and the preparation of casualty lists. He has been
-indefatigable in his exertions to meet the difficult
-situations which arose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have not yet been able to complete the list of officers
-whose names I desire to bring to your Lordship's notice
-for services rendered during the period under review;
-and, as I understand it is of importance that this despatch
-should no longer be delayed, I propose to forward this
-list, separately, as soon as I can.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-I have the honour to be,<br />
- Your Lordship's most obedient Servant,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Signed) J. D. P. FRENCH, Field-Marshal,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Commander-in-Chief, British Forces in the Field.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-17th September, 1914.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-MY LORD,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In continuation of my despatch of September 7th, I
-have the honour to report the further progress of the
-operations of the Forces under my command from
-August 28th.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On that evening the retirement of the Force was
-followed closely by two of the enemy's cavalry columns,
-moving south-east from St. Quentin.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Saturday, August 29
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The retreat in this part of the field was being covered
-by the 3rd and 5th Cavalry Brigades. South of the Somme
-General Gough, with the 3rd Cavalry Brigade, threw
-back the Uhlans of the Guard with considerable loss.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Chetwode, with the 5th Cavalry Brigade,
-encountered the eastern column near Cerizy, moving
-south. The Brigade attacked and routed the column, the
-leading German regiment suffering very severe
-casualties and being almost broken up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 7th French Army Corps was now in course of
-being railed up from the south to the east of Amiens.
-On the 29th it nearly completed its detrainment, and the
-French 6th Army got into position on my left, its right
-resting on Roye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 5th French Army was behind the line of the
-Oise between La Fère and Guise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The pursuit of the enemy was very vigorous; some
-five or six German corps were on the Somme facing the
-5th Army on the Oise. At least two corps were advancing
-towards my front, and were crossing the Somme east
-and west of Ham. Three or four more German corps
-were opposing the 6th French Army on my left.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was the situation at 1 o'clock on the 29th, when
-I received a visit from General Joffre at my headquarters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I strongly represented my position to the French
-Commander-in-Chief, who was most kind, cordial, and
-sympathetic, as he has always been. He told me that
-he had directed the 5th French Army on the Oise to
-move forward and attack the Germans on the Somme,
-with a view to checking pursuit. He also told me of the
-formation of the Sixth French Army on my left flank,
-composed of the 7th Army Corps, four Reserve Divisions,
-and Sordêt's Corps of Cavalry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I finally arranged with General Joffre to effect a further
-short retirement towards the line Compiègne&mdash;Soissons,
-promising him, however, to do my utmost to keep always
-within a day's march of him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In pursuance of this arrangement the British Forces
-retired to a position a few miles north of the line
-Compiègne&mdash;Soissons on the 29th.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Change of Base
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The right flank of the German Army was now reaching
-a point which appeared seriously to endanger my line
-of communications with Havre. I had already evacuated
-Amiens, into which place a German reserve division was
-reported to have moved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Orders were given to change the base to St. Nazaire,
-and establish an advance base at Le Mans. This operation
-was well carried out by the Inspector-General of
-Communications.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In spite of a severe defeat inflicted upon the Guard
-10th and Guard Reserve Corps of the German Army
-by the 1st and 3rd French Corps on the right of the
-5th Army, it was not part of General Joffre's plan to
-pursue this advantage, and a general retirement on
-to the line of the Marne was ordered, to which the French
-forces in the more eastern theatre were directed to
-conform.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A new Army (the 9th) had been formed from three
-corps in the south by General Joffre, and moved into
-the space between the right of the 5th and left of the
-4th Armies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whilst closely adhering to his strategic conception to
-draw the enemy on at all points until a favourable
-situation was created from which to assume the offensive,
-General Joffre found it necessary to modify from day
-to day the methods by which he sought to attain this
-object, owing to the development of the enemy's plans
-and changes in the general situation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In conformity with the movements of the French
-Forces, my retirement continued practically from day to
-day. Although we were not severely pressed by the
-enemy, rearguard actions took place continually.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-South of Compiègne
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 1st September, when retiring from the thickly
-wooded country to the south of Compiègne, the 1st Cavalry
-Brigade was overtaken by some German cavalry. They
-momentarily lost a Horse Artillery battery, and several
-officers and men were killed and wounded. With the
-help, however, of some detachments from the 3rd Corps
-operating on their left, they not only recovered their
-own guns, but succeeded in capturing twelve of the
-enemy's.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Similarly, to the eastward, the 1st Corps, retiring
-south, also got into some very difficult forest country,
-and a somewhat severe rearguard action ensued at
-Villers-Cotterets, in which the 4th Guards Brigade suffered
-considerably.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On September 3rd the British Forces were in position
-south of the Marne between Lagny and Signy-Signets.
-Up to this time I had been requested by General Joffre
-to defend the passages of the river as long as possible, and
-to blow up the bridges in my front. After I had made
-the necessary dispositions, and the destruction of the
-bridges had been effected, I was asked by the French
-Commander-in-Chief to continue my retirement to a
-point some 12 miles in rear of the position I then occupied,
-with a view to taking up a second position behind
-the Seine. This retirement was duly carried out. In
-the meantime the enemy had thrown bridges and crossed
-the Marne in considerable force, and was threatening the
-Allies all along the line of the British Forces and the 5th
-and 9th French Armies. Consequently several small
-outpost actions took place.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Saturday, September 5
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On Saturday, September 5th, I met the French
-Commander-in-Chief at his request, and he informed me of
-his intention to take the offensive forthwith, as he
-considered conditions were very favourable to success.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Joffre announced to me his intention of
-wheeling up the left flank of the 6th Army, pivoting on
-the Marne and directing it to move on the Ourcq; cross
-and attack the flank of the 1st German Army, which was
-then moving in a south-easterly direction east of that
-river.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-The Advance
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He requested me to effect a change of front to my
-right&mdash;my left resting on the Marne, and my right on
-the 5th Army&mdash;to fill the gap between that army and
-the 6th. I was then to advance against the enemy in
-my front and join in the general offensive movement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These combined movements practically commenced on
-Sunday, September 6th, at sunrise; and on that day it
-may be said that a great battle opened on a front
-extending from Ermenonville, which was just in front of the
-left flank of the 6th French Army, through Lizy on the
-Marne, Mauperthuis, which was about the British centre
-Courtecon, which was the left of the 5th French Army;
-to Esternay and Charleville, the left of the 9th Army
-under General Foch, and so along the front of the 9th,
-4th and 3rd French Armies to a point north of the fortress
-of Verdun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This battle, in so far as the 6th French Army, the
-British Army, the 5th French Army, and the 9th French
-Army were concerned, may be said to have concluded on
-the evening of September 10th, by which time the
-Germans had been driven back to the line Soissons&mdash;Reims,
-with a loss of thousands of prisoners, many guns, and
-enormous masses of transport.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About the 3rd September the enemy appears to have
-changed his plans and to have determined to stop his
-advance South direct upon Paris; for on the 4th
-September air reconnaissances showed that his main columns
-were moving in a south-easterly direction generally east
-of a line drawn through Nanteuil and Lizy on the Ourcq.
-On the 5th September several of these columns were
-observed to have crossed the Marne; whilst German
-troops, which were observed moving south-east up the
-left bank of the Ourcq on the 4th, were now reported to
-be halted and facing that river. Heads of the enemy's
-columns were seen crossing at Changis, La Ferté, Nogent,
-Château Thierry, and Mezy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Considerable German columns of all arms were seen
-to be converging on Montmirail, whilst before sunset
-large bivouacs of the enemy were located in the
-neighbourhood of Coulommiers, south of Rebais, La
-Ferté-Gauchér, and Dagny.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I should conceive it to have been about noon on the
-6th September, after the British Forces had changed
-their front to the right and occupied the line Jouy-Le
-Chatel&mdash;Faremoutiers&mdash;Villeneuve La Comte, and the
-advance of the 6th French Army north of the Marne
-towards the Ourcq became apparent, that the enemy
-realised the powerful threat that was being made against
-the flank of his columns moving south-east, and began the
-great retreat which opened the battle above referred to.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>Here follows the account of the Battle of the Marne.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-APPENDIX II
-</h3>
-
-<p class="t3">
-ORDER OF THE DAY
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-AUGUST 29TH, 1914.
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>Issued to the Troops under his command by the General<br />
-Officer Commanding the Second Corps.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-As it is improbable the troops of the 2nd Army Corps
-understand the operations of the last few days,
-commencing on the 21st instant with the advance to the line
-of the Mons Canal and ending with a retirement to our
-present position on the River Oise about Noyon, the
-Commander of the Corps desires to let troops know that
-the object was to delay the advance of a far superior force
-of the enemy to enable our Allies to conduct operations
-elsewhere. This object, owing to the skilful handling of
-the Commanders of units and the magnificent fighting
-spirit shown by all ranks against overwhelming odds, and
-in spite of very heavy casualties, was achieved, and the
-French Army is now reported to be advancing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That the losses were not greater in the retirement
-from the Hancourt&mdash;Caudry&mdash;Beaumont&mdash;Le Cateau
-position on the 26th instant is due largely to the support
-given by French troops, chiefly General Sordêt's Cavalry
-Corps, operating on the West flank of the British troops,
-and we may well be thankful to our gallant comrades in
-arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien, whilst regretting
-the terribly heavy casualties and the weary forced marches,
-in which it has been impossible to distribute the necessary
-amount of food, begs to thank all ranks and to express his
-admiration of the grand fighting and determined spirit
-shown by all ranks, and his pride in being allowed to
-command such a splendid force.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He is sure that whenever it is thought necessary to
-again assume the offensive the troops will be as pleased
-as he will himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The following messages have been received from the
-Commander-in-Chief, Field-Marshal Sir John French, to
-publish to the troops of the 2nd Army Corps&mdash;the first
-dated 25th August.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-(1)
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"<i>Special Army Order.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have received the following telegram from the
-Secretary of State for War:
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"'LONDON, 25-8-14.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"'Congratulate troops on their splendid work. We
-are all proud as usual of them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In making this message known to the troops under
-my command, I wish to express to them my heartfelt
-thanks for, and my profound admiration of, their
-magnificent bearing and conduct during the fighting of the
-last two days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The most difficult operation which an army can be
-called upon to carry out was rendered necessary by the
-general strategic situation of the allied forces extending
-over an enormous front.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I can only tell you that it was most brilliantly and
-successfully performed. This happy result was entirely
-due to the splendid spirit, efficient training, and magnificent
-discipline of regimental officers and men, and the
-fine skill displayed by the higher commanders in the
-direction of the troops."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-(2)
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"28TH AUGUST, 1914.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"A a 67. Following message from Lord Kitchener to
-C.-in-C. will be communicated to all troops. Begins:
-'The First Lord asks me to transmit to you the following
-message from the Home Fleet:&mdash;"The officers and
-men of the Grand Fleet wish to express to their comrades
-of the Army admiration of the magnificent stand made
-against great odds, and wish them the brilliant success
-which the Fleet feels sure awaits their further
-efforts." Ends.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-(3)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No. 28 G. Following from Lord Kitchener to
-C.-in-C. Begins: 'Your F 37. Your troops have done
-marvellously well under their Commanders during severe
-attacks which they have had to withstand practically
-alone. Express to them all the thanks of the King and
-Government.' Ends."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-PRINTED BY CASSELL &amp; COMPANY, LIMITED, LA BELLE SAUVAGE, LONDON, E.C.
-<br />
-F.40.816
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-256t"></a>
-<a href="images/img-256.jpg">
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-256t.jpg" alt="MAP OF COUNTRY FROM MONS TO PARIS" />
-</a>
-<br />
-MAP OF COUNTRY FROM MONS TO PARIS
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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