<h2 class="vspace"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI<br/> <span class="subhead">ACTIVE SERVICE</span></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> popular conception of active service is of
a succession of encounters with the enemy.
Desperate deeds of valour, brilliant charges by
bodies of troops, men saving other men under fire,
the storming of positions, and the flush of victory
after strenuous action enter largely into the
civilian conception of war.</p>
<p>The reality is a sombre business of marching
and watching, nights without sleep and days
without food; retracing one’s steps in order to
execute the plan of the brain to which a man is
but one effective rifle out of many thousands,
marching for days and days, seeing nothing more
exciting than a burnt-out house and the marching
men on either side and to front and rear—and then
the contact with the enemy. A vicious crack from
somewhere, or the solid boom of a piece of artillery;
somewhere away to the front or flank is the enemy,
and his pieces do damage in the ranks; there is a
searching for cover, some orders are given, perhaps<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170">170</SPAN></span>
a comrade lies utterly still, and one knows that
that man will not move any more; there is a
desperate sense of ineffectiveness, of anger at this
cowardly (as it seems) trick of hitting when one
cannot hit back. There is the satisfaction of
getting the range and firing, with results that may
be guessed but cannot be known accurately by
the man who fires; there is the curious thrill that
comes when an angrily singing bullet passes near,
and one realises that one is under fire from the
enemy. In a normal action, there is the sense of
disaster, even of defeat when one’s side may in
reality be winning, for one sees men dying,
wounded, lying dead—one knows the damage the
enemy has inflicted, but has no idea of the damage
ones own force has inflicted in return. Often,
when it begins to be apparent that the enemy is
nearly beaten, there comes the order to retire;
one does not understand the order, but, with a
sullen sense of resentment at it, retires, ducking
at the whizzing of a shell, though not all the
ducking in the world would avail if the shell were
truly aimed at the one who ducks, or starting
back to avoid a bullet that whizzed by—as if by
starting back one could get out of the way of a
bullet!</p>
<p>After a day of action, or after the chance has<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171">171</SPAN></span>
come to rest for a while after days of action, one
gets a sense of the horror of the whole business—the
tragedy of lives laid down, in a good cause
certainly, but the men are dead, and one questions
almost with despair if it is worth while. So many
good men with whom one has joked and worked and
played in time of peace have gone under—and there
are probably more battles yet to fight. It is not until
a war has concluded, and men who have served
are able to get some idea of the operations as a
whole, that they are able to understand what has
been done and why it has been done. Men who
came back wounded from Mons and Charleroi,
away from the magnificent three weeks’ retreat
that was then in progress for the British and
French armies, were, in many cases, fully convinced
that they had been defeated—that their
armies were beaten, and had to retreat to save
themselves from destruction. The man in the
ranks cannot understand the plan of the staff who
control him, for he sees so very little of the whole;
at the most, he knows what is happening to a
division of men, while engaged in the retreat to
the position of the Marne were, at the least, twenty
divisions on the side of the Allies. Had one of these
been utterly shattered in a set battle, the other
nineteen might still have won a decisive victory,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172">172</SPAN></span>
and, if news of that victory had not come through
for a day or two, the survivors from the shattered
division would have spread tidings of a defeat—which
it would have been, to them. The man in
the ranks sees so little of the whole.</p>
<p>Here the war correspondent makes the most
egregious mistakes, for, untrained in military
service himself, he takes the word of the man in the
ranks—the man on the staff of army headquarters
is far too busy and far too discreet to talk to war
correspondents—and out of what the man in the
ranks has to say the war correspondent makes up
his story. Though the man in the ranks may
believe his own story to be true, though he may
tell of the operations as he conceives them, he may
be giving an utterly false impression of what is
actually happening. The man in the ranks is one
cog in a machine, and he cannot tell what all the
machine is doing at any time, least of all when a
battle is in progress.</p>
<p>Every battle fought differs from all other battles,
for no opposing forces ever meet under precisely
identical conditions twice. Thus it is useless to
speak of a typical battle except in the broadest
general sense, and useless to attempt to describe
a typical battle, or action of any kind. Usually,
the artillery get into action after cavalry have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173">173</SPAN></span>
reconnoitred the enemy’s position; the guns shell
the enemy until he is considered sufficiently
weakened to permit of infantry attack, and then
the infantry go forward, even up to the rarely
occurring bayonet charge. If their advance
dislodges the enemy, the cavalry are set on to turn
retreat into rout; if, on the other hand, the
attacking force is compelled to retire, the cavalry
cover the retreat, and, in order to make good in a
retreat, a part of a force is taken back while the
remainder hold the enemy in check. In modern
actions, artillery fire their shells over the heads
of their own infantry at the enemy, distance and
trajectory permitting of this. By trajectory is
meant the curve that a projectile describes in its
flight; both rifles and big guns are so constructed
and sighted that they throw their projectiles
upward to counteract the pull of gravity, and the
missile eventually drops down toward its object—it
does not travel in a perfectly straight line. But
it is bad for infantry to be in front of their own
guns, with their own artillery shells passing over
them, for too long—<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">morale</i> suffers from this after
a time, since a man cannot distinguish in such a
case between his own artillery’s shells and those
of the enemy. Whenever possible, the artillery in
rear of an infantry force are posted slightly to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174">174</SPAN></span>
either flank; circumstances, however, do not
always admit of this.</p>
<p>On mobilisation for active service, the first
thing that happens in the British Army is the
calling up of the reserves. All men enlist, in the
first case, for a certain number of years with the
colours and a further period “on the reserve.” In
this latter force, they are free to follow any civilian
avocation, but on mobilisation must immediately
report themselves at headquarters—wherever their
headquarters may be—and take the place appointed
to them in the mobilised army. Then comes the
business of drawing war kit and equipment from
stores. As a battleship clears for action, so the
Army rids itself for the time of all things not
absolutely necessary on active service, exchanges
blank ammunition for ball, sharpens swords and
bayonets, and in every way prepares for stern
business. Each man is issued with a little
aluminium plate which he is compelled to wear,
and on which are inscribed such particulars as his
name, regimental number, unit, etc., so that in
case of his being killed on the field he can be
identified and the news of his death transmitted
to his next of kin. Each man, too, is issued with
an “emergency ration,” which is a compressed
supply of food amply sufficient for one day’s meals,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175">175</SPAN></span>
so that in any tight corner, where provisions are
not obtainable, he may be able to hold out for at
least one day without being reduced to starvation.
The opening and use of this ration, except by
permission of an officer, counts as a crime in the
Army, unless a man is placed in such a position
that no officer is at hand to sanction the opening
of the package, when the matter is perforce left
to the man’s discretion.</p>
<p>Marching on service is a different matter from
marching in time of peace. Not only is there the
strain of ever-possible attack, but there is also,
for cavalry and infantry, the weight of service
armament and equipment to be considered. Every
man carries in his bandoliers 150 rounds of ammunition
for his rifle—not a bit too much, when
the rate of fire possible with the modern rifle is
taken into account. But 150 rounds of ball
cartridge is a serious matter when one has to carry
it throughout the day, and, when active service
opens, it is easy to understand why only really fit
men are passed by doctors into the Army. So far
as the rank and file are concerned, it is power to
endure that makes the soldier on active service;
bravery is needed, initiative is needed, but staying
power is needed most of all.</p>
<p>There may be days of solid marching without<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176">176</SPAN></span>
a sight of the enemy. One may form part of a
flanking force whose business is to march from
point to point, fighting but seldom, but always
presenting a threat to the enemy or his lines of
communication, and thus ever on the move, with
very little time for sleep or eating; again, one may
be placed with a force which has to march half
a day to come in contact with the enemy, and to
fight the other half of the day; or yet again, it may
be necessary to march all night in order to take a
position—or be shot in the attempt—at dawn. In
time of peace and on manœuvres, officers take care
that compensating time is allowed to men, so as
to give them the normal amount of rest; on
active service, the officer commanding a force
spares his men as much as he can, and gives them
all the rest possible, but he has to be guided by
circumstances, or to rise superior to circumstances
and cause himself and his men to undergo far
more than normal exertions. War, as carried out
to-day, requires all that every man has to give in
the way of staying power, and now, as in the days
of the battle-axe and long-bow, physical endurance
is the greatest asset a man can have on active
service. The hard drinker in time of peace and
the man who has been looking for “soft jobs” all
the time of his peace service soon “go sick” and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177">177</SPAN></span>
become ineffective; they may be just as brave
as the rest, but they lack the staying power
requisite to the carrying on of war.</p>
<p>Men’s impressions of being under fire vary so
much that every account is of interest. “My
principal impression was that I’d like to run away,
but there was nowhere to run to, so I stuck on,
and got used to it after a bit.” “I felt cold, and
horribly thirsty—I never thought to be afraid till
afterwards.” “It was interesting, till I saw the
man next to me rolled over with a bullet in his
head, and then I wanted to get up and go for the
devils who had done that.” Thus spoke three men
when asked how they felt about it. My own impression
was chiefly a fear that I was going to be
afraid—I did not want to disgrace myself, but to
be as good as the rest.</p>
<p>One man, who came back wounded after the
day of Mons, described how he felt at first shooting
a man and knowing that his bullet had taken effect—for
in the majority of cases, with a whole body
of men firing, it is difficult to tell which of the
bullets take effect. This, however, was a clear
case, and the man could not but know that he was
responsible for the shot.</p>
<p>“I had four men with me on rear-guard,” he
said, “and we were holding the end of a village<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178">178</SPAN></span>
street to let our chaps get away as far as possible
before we mounted and caught up with them. We
could see German infantry coming on, masses of
them, but they couldn’t tell whether the village
street held five men or a couple of squadrons, so
they held back a bit. At last I could see we were
in danger of being outflanked, so I got my men
to get mounted, and just as they were doing so a
German officer put his head round the corner of
the house at the end of the street—not ten yards
away from me. I raised my rifle, shut both eyes,
and pulled the trigger—it was point-blank range,
and when I opened my eyes and looked it seemed
as if I’d blown half his face away. I felt scared at
what I had done—it seemed wrong to have shot
a man like that, though he and his kind drive
women and children in front of their firing lines.
It seemed to make such a horrible mess, somehow.
I got mounted, and just as I swung my leg over the
horse, a fool of a German infantryman aimed a
blow at me with the butt end of his rifle—I don’t
know where he sprung from—and damaged my
arm like this. If he’d had the sense he could have
run me through with a bayonet or shot me, but I
suppose he was too flurried. But that officer’s
face after I’d shot him stuck to me, and I still
dream of it, and shall for some time, probably.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179">179</SPAN></span>
He who told this story is a boy of twenty-two or
three, and he has gone back to the front to rejoin
his regiment, now—with three stripes on his arm,
instead of the two that were his at the beginning
of the campaign.</p>
<p>On forced marches, and often on normal marches
as well, all the things that one considers necessities—with
the exception of sufficient food to keep one
in condition—go by the board. One sleeps under
the stars, with no other covering than a coat and
blanket; one lies out to sleep in pouring rain,
with no more covering; tents are out of the
question, for there is no time to pitch and strike
them. One goes for days without a wash, and for
days, too, without undressing. There were two
scamps in the South African campaign who
promised each other, for some mysterious reason,
that they would not take their boots off for a
month, and they ran into such a series of marches
and actions that, even if they had not made the
compact, they would only have been able to remove
their boots three times in the course of that month.
The smart soldier of peace service goes unshaven,
unwashed, careless of all except getting enough of
food and sleep at times; and when a lull comes in
the operations, so that he gets a day or even an
hour or two to himself, a bath is a luxury undreamed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180">180</SPAN></span>
of by the man who can have one every
morning and consider it a mere usual thing.</p>
<p>If in time of peace the soldier considers a rifle
carelessly, and even resents having to carry it
about with him, he looks on it differently on
service, knowing as he does that his life may
depend on the quality of the weapon and his
ability to use it at almost any minute of the day
or night. The confirmed “grouser” of peace time,
who will make a fuss over having to put twenty
rounds of blank ammunition in his bandolier to go
out on a field-day, will swing his three bandoliers
of ball cartridges on to his person without a word
of complaint, for he knows that he may need every
round. Values alter amazingly on service; the
man with a box of matches, when one has been
away from the base for a few days, is a person of
importance, and a mere cigarette is worth far
more than its weight in gold. In General Rundle’s
column during the South African war, half a
biscuit was something to fight for, and the men
who thought it such had many a time thrown
away the same sort of unpalatable biscuits and
bought bread to eat instead. An ant-heap acquired
a new significance, for it might be the means of
saving a man’s life at any time, and among mounted
men a “fresh” horse, which might give its rider<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181">181</SPAN></span>
some trouble at the time of mounting, was no
longer to be avoided, for by its freshness it showed
that it had plenty of spirit and go about it, spirit
that might take a man out of rifle range at a
critical moment, when the slower class of mount
might come out of action without its rider.</p>
<p>This reversal of the circumstances of ordinary
life produces lasting effect on men; no man who
has undergone the realities of active service comes
back to the average of life unchanged. The
difference in him may not be apparent at a casual
glance, but it is there, for the rest of his life. He
has looked on death at close quarters, and, whatever
his intelligence may be—whether he be gutter-snipe
or ’Varsity man, sage or fool—he has a
clearer realisation of the ultimate values of things.
One may count the Army in peace time as a great
training school out of which men come moulded
to a definite pattern, and yet retaining their
individuality. But active service is a fire through
which men pass, emerging on the far side purified of
little aims to a greater or less extent, according
to the material on which the fire has to work. For
many—all honour to them and to those who mourn
their loss—it is a destroying fire.</p>
<p>So far as the limits of space will permit, there
is set down in these pages a record of what military<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182">182</SPAN></span>
service amounts to for the rank and file, in peace
and war. It is necessarily incomplete, for the
story of the British Army of to-day, apart from its
history of great yesterdays, is not to be told in
any one book—there is too much of it for that.
There are those who belittle the Army and its ways
and influence on the men who serve, but one who
has served, with the perspective of time to give
him clearness of vision, can always look back on
the Army and be glad that he has learned its
lessons, accomplished its tasks; the men who
would belittle it are themselves very little men,
too little to be worthy of serious notice. The
British Army is a gathering of brave men, fighting
in this year of grace 1914 in a noble cause, and
fighting, as the British Army has always fought,
bravely and well.</p>
<p class="p2 center wspace small">
WILLIAM BRENDON AND SON, LTD.<br/>
PRINTERS, PLYMOUTH</p>
<div class="transnote">
<h2 class="nobreak p1"><SPAN name="Transcribers_Notes"></SPAN>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
<p>Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
quotation marks retained.</p>
<p>Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained.
Inconsistent hyphenation was not changed.</p>
<p>Page <SPAN href="#Page_173">173</SPAN>: <em>morale</em> was printed as <em>moral</em>; changed here.</p>
</div>
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