<h2 class="vspace"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII<br/> <span class="subhead">IN CAMP</span></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> going to camp, transferring from the solid
shelter of barracks to the more doubtful
comfort of crowding under a canvas roof, the
soldier feels that he is getting somewhere near the
conditions under which he will be placed on active
service. The pitching of camp, especially by an
infantry battalion, is a parade movement, and as
such is an interesting business. It begins with
the laying out of the tents in their bags, and the
tent poles beside them, near the positions which
the erected tents will occupy. The bags are
emptied of their contents; men are told off to
poles, guy ropes, mallets and pegs; the tents are
fully unfolded, and, at a given word of command,
every tent goes up to be pegged into place in the
shortest possible space of time. At the beginning
of a given ten minutes there will be lying on
otherwise unoccupied ground rows of bags and
poles; at the end of that same ten minutes a
canvas town is in being, and the men who are to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107">107</SPAN></span>
occupy that town are thinking of fetching in their
kits.</p>
<p>Under ordinary circumstances, from four to
eight men are told off to occupy each tent, but on
manœuvres and on active service these numbers
are exceeded more often than not. During the
South African war the present writer once had
the doubtful pleasure of being the twenty-fourth
man in an ordinary military bell-tent. The next
night and thereafter, wet or fine, half the men
allotted to that tent made a point of sleeping in
the open air. It was preferable.</p>
<p>Life in camp is an enjoyable business so long as
the weather continues fine and not too boisterous;
discipline is relaxed to a certain extent while
under canvas, open-air life renders the appetite
keener, and one’s enjoyment of life is more
thorough than is the case in barracks. Wet
weather, however, changes all this. The luxury
of floor-boards is a rare one even in a standing
camp, and, no matter what one may do in the way
of digging trenches round the tent and draining
off surplus water by all possible means, a moist
unpleasantness renders life a burden and causes
equipment and arms to need about twice as much
cleaning as under normal circumstances.</p>
<p>Camp life breeds yarns unending, and in wet<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108">108</SPAN></span>
weather, or in the hours after dark, men sit and
tell hirsute chestnuts to each other for lack of
better occupation. If the weather is fine there
are plenty of varieties of sport, including the ubiquitous
football to occupy spare minutes, but yarns
and tobacco form the principal solace of hours
which cannot be filled in more active ways. There
is one yarn which, like all yarns, has the merit of
being perfectly true, but, unlike most, is not nearly
so well known as it ought to be. It concerns a
cavalry regiment which settled down for a brief
space at Potchefstroom after the signing of peace
in South Africa.</p>
<p>Some months previous to the signing of peace, a
certain lieutenant of this regiment, known to his
men and his fellow officers as “Bulgy,” became
possessed of a young baboon, which grew and
throve exceedingly at the end of a stout chain
that secured the captive to one of the transport
wagons of the regiment. Bulgy’s servant was
entrusted with the care of the monkey, which,
after the manner of baboons, was a competent
thief from infancy, and inclined to be savage if
thwarted. On one occasion, in particular, Bulgy’s
monkey got loose, and got at the officers’ mess
wagon; it had a good feed of biscuits and other
delicacies, and retired at length, followed by the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109">109</SPAN></span>
mess caterer, who expostulated violently both
with Bulgy’s servant and with Bulgy’s monkey,
until a tin of ox-tongues skilfully aimed by the
monkey caught him below the belt and winded
him. After that, as Bret Harte says, the subsequent
proceedings interested him no more.</p>
<p>Well, the regiment arrived at Potchefstroom and
settled down under canvas, with an average of
eight men to a tent and the horse lines of each
troop placed at right-angles to the lines of tents.
Bulgy’s monkey was given a place away on the
outside of the lines, with the other end of his chain
attached to a tree-stump, and there, for a time,
he rested, fed sparingly and abused plentifully by
Bulgy’s servant. In the regiment itself money
was plentiful at the time, and it was the custom in
the tents which housed drinking men for the eight
tent-mates to get in a can of beer before the canteen
closed. Over the beer they would sit and yarn
and play cards until “lights out” sounded.</p>
<p>One night, eight men sat round their can of beer
in a tent of “A” Squadron, to which, by the way,
Bulgy belonged. These eight had nearly reached
the bottom of the can. They had blown out all
the candles in the tent save one, which would
remain for illumination until “lights out” sounded.
The last man to unroll his blankets and get to bed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110">110</SPAN></span>
had just finished, and was sitting up in order to
blow out the last remaining candle, when the flap
of the tent was raised from the back, and a hairy,
grinning, evil face, which might have been that of
the devil himself, looked in on the sleepy warriors.
They, for their part, were too startled to investigate
the occurrence, and the sight of that face prevented
them from stopping to unfasten the tent flap in
order to get out. They simply went out, under the
flies, anyhow; one man tried to climb the tent pole,
possibly with a vague idea of getting out through
the ventilating holes at the top, but he finally
went out under the fly of the tent like the rest,
taking with him the sting of a vicious whack which
the hairy devil aimed at him with a chain that it
carried. While these eight men were fleeing
through the night, the devil with the chain came
out from the tent, and, seeing a line of startled
horses before it, leaped upon the back of the
nearest horse, gave the animal a thundering blow
with its chain, and hopped lightly on to the back
of the next horse in the row, repeating the performance
there. In almost as little time as it
takes to tell, a squadron of stampeding horses
followed the eight men of the tent on their journey
toward the skyline, and in the black and windy
dark the remaining men of “A” Squadron turned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111">111</SPAN></span>
out to fetch their terrified horses back to camp,
and, when they knew the cause of the disturbance,
to curse Bulgy’s monkey even more fervently
than Bulgy’s servant had cursed it. The end of it
all was that eight men of “A” Squadron signed
the pledge, and Bulgy left off keeping the monkey;
it was too expensive a form of amusement.</p>
<p>This is a typical camp yarn, and a military camp
is full of yarns, some better than this, and some
worse.</p>
<p>In camp, more than anywhere else, the soldier
learns to be handy. The South African war taught
men to kill and cut up their own meat, to make a
cooking fire out of nothing, to cook for themselves,
to wash up—though most of them had learned
this in barracks—to wash their own underclothing,
darn their own socks, and do all necessary mending
to their clothes. It taught cavalrymen the value
of a horse, in addition to giving them an insight
to the foregoing list of accomplishments. It was,
for the first year or so, a strenuous business of
fighting, but the last twelve months of the war
consisted for many men far more of marching and
camp experience than actual war service. It was
an ideal training school and gave an insight into
camp life under the best possible circumstances;
its lessons were invaluable, and much of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112">112</SPAN></span>
practice of the Army of to-day is derived from
experience obtained during that campaign.</p>
<p>One failing to which men—and especially young
soldiers—are liable in camp life consists in that
when they return to camp, thoroughly tired after
a long day’s manœuvring or marching, they will
not take the trouble to cook and get ready for
themselves the food without which they ought not
to be allowed to retire to rest. In the French Army,
officers make a point of urging their men to
prepare food for themselves immediately on their
return to camp, but in the English Army this
matter is left to the discretion of the men themselves,
with the result that some of them frequently
go to bed for the night without being properly fed.
This course, if persisted in, almost invariably leads
to illness, and it is important that men under
canvas should be properly fed at the end of the
day as well as at the beginning and during the
course of their work.</p>
<p>When under canvas in time of peace, the authorities
of most units reduce their demands on
their men in comparison with barrack life. It is
generally understood that a man cannot turn out
in review order, or in “burnish and fake,” with
the restrictions of a canvas town about him. In
some units, however, this point is not sufficiently<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113">113</SPAN></span>
considered, and as much is asked of men as when
they have the conveniences of barracks all about
them. The result of this is sullenness and bad
working on the part of the men; the short-sightedness
of officers leads them to press their demands
while men are in the bad temper caused by too
much being put upon them, and the final result
is what is known technically in the Army as an
excess of “crime.” A string of men far in excess
of the usual number is wheeled up in front of the
company or commanding officer to be “weighed
off,” and the number of men on defaulters’ parade,
or undergoing punishment fatigues, steadily increases.
Although in theory the soldier has the
right of complaint, if he feels himself aggrieved, to
successive officers, even up to the general officer
commanding the brigade or division in which he
is serving, in practice he finds these complaints
of so little real use to him that he expresses his
discontent by means of incurring “crime,” or, in
other words, by getting into trouble in some way.
There is no accounting for this habit; it is the
way of the soldier, and no further explanation can
be given. Squadrons of cavalry have been known
to cut all their saddlery to pieces, and companies
of infantry to render their belts and equipment
useless, by way of expressing their discontent or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114">114</SPAN></span>
disgust at undue harshness. The relaxation of
discipline and the absence of barrack-room
soldiering when under canvas is a privilege which
the soldier values highly, and it ought not to be
curtailed in any way.</p>
<p>A pleasant form of camping which many units
on home service enjoy is the annual musketry
camp. It happens often that there is no musketry
range within convenient marching distance of the
place in which a unit is stationed, and, in that case,
the unit sends its men, one or two companies or
squadrons at a time, to camp in the vicinity of
the musketry range allotted to their use. The
firing of the actual musketry course is in itself an
interesting business, and it brings out a pleasant
spirit of emulation among the men concerned.
Keenness is always displayed in the attempt to
attain the coveted score which entitles a man to
wear crossed guns on his sleeve for the ensuing
twelve months, and proclaims him a “marksman.”
In addition to this there is the pleasant sense of
freedom engendered by life under canvas, and the
access of health induced thereby. The soldier, in
common with most healthy men, enjoys roughing
it up to a point, and life in a musketry camp
seldom takes him beyond the point at which
enjoyment ceases.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115">115</SPAN></span>
Infantry units serving in foreign and colonial
stations are frequently split up into detachments
consisting of one or more companies, and serving
each at a different place. This detachment duty,
as it is called, as often as not involves life under
canvas, and it may be understood that life under
the tropical or sub-tropical conditions of foreign
and colonial stations can be a very pleasant
thing. Here, as in home stations, sufficient work
is provided to keep the soldier from overmuch
meditation. Time is allowed, however, for sport
and recreation, and, even when thrown entirely
on their own resources for amusement, troops are
capable of making the time pass quickly and
easily.</p>
<p>While on the subject of camping there is one
more yarn of South Africa and the war which
merits telling, although it only concerns a bad
case of “nerves.” It happened during the last
year of the war that a column crossed the Modder
River from south to north, going in the direction
of Brandfort, and camp was pitched for the night
just to the north of the Glen Drift. At this point
in its course the Modder runs between steep, cliff-like
banks, from which a belt of mimosa scrub
stretches out for nearly a quarter of a mile on each
side of the river. After camp had been pitched<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116">116</SPAN></span>
for the night, the sentries round about the camp
were finally posted with a special view to guarding
the drift, the northward front of the column, and
its flanks. Only two or three sentries, however,
were considered necessary to protect the rear,
which rested on the impenetrable belt of mimosa
scrub along the river bank.</p>
<p>One of these sentries along the scrub came on
duty at midnight, just after the moon had gone
down. He “took over” from the sentry who
preceded him on the post, and started to keep
watch according to orders, though in his particular
position there was little enough to watch. Quite
suddenly he grew terribly afraid, not with a
natural kind of fear, but with the nightmarish kind
of terror that children are known to experience in
the dark. His reason told him that in the position
that he occupied there was nothing which could
possibly harm him, for behind him was the bush,
through which a man could not even crawl,
while before him and to either side was the
chain of sentries, of which he formed a part,
surrounding his sleeping comrades. His imagination,
however, or possibly his instinct, insisted
that something uncanny and evil was
watching him from the darkness of the tangled
mimosa bushes, and was waiting a chance to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117">117</SPAN></span>
strike at him in some horrible fashion. He tried
to shake off this childish fear, to assure himself
that it could not possibly be other than a trick of
“nerves” brought on by darkness and the need
for keeping watch, when—crash!—something
struck him with tremendous force in the back and
sent him forward on his face.</p>
<p>Half stunned, he picked himself up from the
ground, and the pain in his back was sufficient to
assure him that he had not merely fallen asleep
and imagined the whole business. With his
loaded rifle at the ready he searched the edge of
the mimosa bush as closely as he was able, but
could discover nothing; he had an idea of communicating
with the sentry next in the line to
himself, but, since there was no further disturbance,
and nothing to show, he decided to say nothing,
but simply to stick to his post until the next relief
came round.</p>
<p>Suddenly the uncanny sense of terror returned
to him, intensified. He felt certain this time that
the evil thing which had struck him before would
strike again, and he felt certain that he was being
watched by unseen eyes. He was new to the
country; as an irregular he was new to military
ways, and he promised himself that if ever he got
safely home he would not volunteer for active<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118">118</SPAN></span>
service again. The sense of something unseen and
watching him grew, and with it grew also the
nightmarish terror, until he was actually afraid to
move. Then, by means of the same mysterious
agency, he was struck again to the ground, and
this time he lay only partially conscious and quite
helpless until the reliefs came round. The sergeant
in charge of the reliefs had an idea at first of
making the man a close prisoner for lying down
and sleeping at his post, but after a little investigation
he changed his mind and sent one of his men
for the doctor instead.</p>
<p>The doctor announced, after examination, that
if the blow which felled the man had struck him
a few inches higher up in the back he would not
have been alive to remember it, and the man
himself was taken into hospital for a few days to
recover from the injuries so mysteriously inflicted.
In the morning the column moved off on its way,
and no satisfactory reason could be adduced for
the midnight occurrence.</p>
<p>But residents in that district will tell you, unto
this day, that one who has the patience to keep
quiet and watch in the moonlight can see
baboons come up from the mimosa scrub and
amuse themselves by throwing clods of earth and
rocks at each other.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119">119</SPAN></span>
It is a good camp story, and I tell it as it was
told to me, without vouching for its truth. Any
man who cares to go into a military camp—by
permission of the officer commanding, of course—and
has the tact and patience to win the confidence
of the soldiers in the camp, can hear stories equally
good, and plenty of them. For, as previously
remarked, camp life breeds yarns.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120">120</SPAN></span></p>
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