me to be turning into men under the prevailing
influence. I saw a batch of them, neurotic and largely be-spectacled, but
working with a will by the roadside. They will volunteer for the
trenches yet.
* * * * *
If there are pessimists among us they are not to be found among the
men who are doing the work. There is no foolish bravado, no
under-rating of a dour opponent, but there is a quick, alert, confident
attention to the job in hand which is an inspiration to the observer.
These brave lads are guarding Britain in the present. See to it that
Britain guards them in the future! We have a bad record in this matter.
It must be changed. They are the wards of the nation, both officers and
men. Socialism has never had an attraction for me, but I should be a
Socialist to-morrow if I thought that to ease a tax on wealth these men
should ever suffer for the time or health that they gave to the public
cause.
'Get out of the car. Don't let it stay here. It may be hit.' These words
from a staff officer give you the first idea that things are going to
happen. Up to then you might have been driving through the black
country in the Walsall district with the population of Aldershot let
loose upon its dingy roads. 'Put on this shrapnel helmet. That hat of
yours would infuriate the Boche'--this was an unkind allusion to the
only uniform which I have a right to wear. 'Take this gas helmet. You
won't need it, but it is a standing order. Now come on!'
We cross a meadow and enter a trench. Here and there it comes to the
surface again where there is dead ground. At one such point an old
church stands, with an unexploded shell sticking out of the wall. A
century hence folk will journey to see that shell. Then on again through
an endless cutting. It is slippery clay below. I have no nails in my boots,
an iron pot on my head, and the sun above me. I will remember that
walk. Ten telephone wires run down the side. Here and there large
thistles and other plants grow from the clay walls, so immobile have
been our lines. Occasionally there are patches of untidiness. 'Shells,'
says the officer laconically. There is a racket of guns before us and
behind, especially behind, but danger seems remote with all these
Bairnfather groups of cheerful Tommies at work around us. I pass one
group of grimy, tattered boys. A glance at their shoulders shows me
that they are of a public school battalion. 'I thought you fellows were all
officers now,' I remarked. 'No, sir, we like it better so.' 'Well, it will be
a great memory for you. We are all in your debt.'
They salute, and we squeeze past them. They had the fresh, brown
faces of boy cricketers. But their comrades were men of a different type,
with hard, strong, rugged features, and the eyes of men who have seen
strange sights. These are veterans, men of Mons, and their young pals
of the public schools have something to live up to.
* * * * *
Up to this we have only had two clay walls to look at. But now our
interminable and tropical walk is lightened by the sight of a British
aeroplane sailing overhead. Numerous shrapnel bursts are all round it,
but she floats on serenely, a thing of delicate beauty against the blue
background. Now another passes--and yet another. All morning we saw
them circling and swooping, and never a sign of a Boche. They tell me
it is nearly always so--that we hold the air, and that the Boche intruder,
save at early morning, is a rare bird. A visit to the line would reassure
Mr. Pemberton-Billing. 'We have never met a British aeroplane which
was not ready to fight,' said a captured German aviator the other day.
There is a fine stern courtesy between the airmen on either side, each
dropping notes into the other's aerodromes to tell the fate of missing
officers. Had the whole war been fought by the Germans as their
airmen have conducted it (I do not speak of course of the Zeppelin
murderers), a peace would eventually have been more easily arranged.
As it is, if every frontier could be settled, it would be a hard thing to
stop until all that is associated with the words Cavell, Zeppelin,
Wittenberg, Lusitania, and Louvain has been brought to the bar of the
world's Justice.
And now we are there--in what is surely the most wonderful spot in the
world, the front firing trench, the outer breakwater which holds back
the German
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.