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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14086 ***
+
+Carry On
+
+By Lieutenant
+Coningsby
+Dawson
+
+CARRY ON
+
+[Illustration: Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson
+Canadian Field Artillery]
+
+
+
+
+CARRY ON
+
+LETTERS IN WAR TIME
+
+BY
+
+CONINGSBY DAWSON
+
+NOVELIST AND SOLDIER
+
+WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND NOTES
+
+BY HIS FATHER, W.J. DAWSON
+
+FRONTISPIECE
+
+1917
+
+
+
+ WHEN THE WAR'S AT AN END
+
+
+ At length when the war's at an end
+ And we're just ourselves,--you and I,
+ And we gather our lives up to mend,
+ We, who've learned how to live and to die:
+
+ Shall we think of the old ambition
+ For riches, or how to grow wise,
+ When, like Lazarus freshly arisen,
+ We've the presence of Death in our eyes?
+
+ Shall we dream of our old life's passion,--
+ To toil for our heart's desire,
+ Whose souls War has taken to fashion
+ With molten death and with fire?
+
+ I think we shall crave the laughter
+ Of the wind through trees gold with the sun,
+ When our strife is all finished,--after
+ The carnage of War is done.
+
+ Just these things will then seem worth while:--
+ How to make Life more wondrously sweet;
+ How to live with a song and a smile,
+ How to lay our lives at Love's feet.
+
+ ERIC P. DAWSON,
+ _Sub. Lieut_. R.N.V.R.
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The letters in this volume were not written for publication. They are
+intimate and personal in a high degree. They would not now be published
+by those to whom they are addressed, had they not come to feel that the
+spirit and temper of the writer might do something to strengthen and
+invigorate those who, like himself, are called on to make great
+sacrifices for high causes and solemn duties.
+
+They do not profess to give any new information about the military
+operations of the Allies; this is the task of the publicist, and at all
+times is forbidden to the soldier in the field. Here and there some
+striking or significant fact has been allowed to pass the censor; but
+the value of the letters does not lie in these things. It is found
+rather in the record of how the dreadful yet heroic realities of war
+affect an unusually sensitive mind, long trained in moral and romantic
+idealism; the process by which this mind adapts itself to unanticipated
+and incredible conditions, to acts and duties which lie close to horror,
+and are only saved from being horrible by the efficacy of the spiritual
+effort which they evoke. Hating the brutalities of War, clearly
+perceiving the wide range of its cruelties, yet the heart of the writer
+is never hardened by its daily commerce with death; it is purified by
+pity and terror, by heroism and sacrifice, until the whole nature seems
+fresh annealed into a finer strength.
+
+The intimate nature of these letters makes it necessary to say something
+about the writer.
+
+Coningsby Dawson graduated with honours in history from Oxford in 1905,
+and in the same year came to the United States with the intention of
+taking a theological course at Union Seminary. After a year at the
+Seminary he reached the conclusion that his true lifework lay in
+literature, and he at once began to fit himself for his vocation. In the
+meantime his family left England, and we had made our home in Taunton,
+Massachusetts. Here, in a quiet house, amid lawns and leafy elms, he
+gave himself with indefatigable ardour to the art of writing. He wrote
+from seven to ten hours a day, producing many poems, short stories, and
+three novels. Few writers have ever worked harder to attain literary
+excellence, or have practised a more austere devotion to their art. I
+often marvelled how a young man, fresh from a brilliant career at the
+greatest of English Universities, could be content with a life that was
+so widely separated from association with men and affairs. I wondered
+still more at the patience with which he endured the rebuffs that always
+await the beginner in literature, and the humility with which he was
+willing to learn the hard lessons of his apprenticeship in literary
+form. The secret lay, no doubt, in his secure sense of a vocation, and
+his belief that good work could not fail in the end to justify itself.
+But, not the less, these four years of obscure drudgery wore upon his
+spirit, and hence some of the references in these letters to his days of
+self-despising. The period of waiting came to an end at last with the
+publication in 1913 of his _Garden Without Walls_, which attained
+immediate success. When he speaks in these letters of his brief burst of
+fame, he refers to those crowded months in the Fall of 1913, when his
+novel was being discussed on every hand, and, for the first time, he met
+many writers of established reputation as an equal.
+
+Another novel, _The Raft_, followed _The Garden Without Walls_. The
+nature of his life now seemed fixed. To the task of novel-writing he had
+brought a temperament highly idealistic and romantic, a fresh and vivid
+imagination, and a thorough literary equipment. His life, as he planned
+it, held but one purpose for him, outside the warmth and tenacity of
+its affections--the triumph of the efficient purpose in the adequate
+expression of his mind in literature. The austerity of his long years of
+preparation had left him relatively indifferent to the common prizes of
+life, though they had done nothing to lessen his intense joy in life.
+His whole mind was concentrated on his art. His adventures would be the
+adventures of the mind in search of ampler modes of expression. His
+crusades would be the crusades of the spirit in search of the realities
+of truth. He had received the public recognition which gave him faith in
+himself and faith in his ability to achieve the reputation of the true
+artist, whose work is not cheapened but dignified and broadened by
+success. So he read the future, and so his critics read it for him. And
+then, sudden and unheralded, there broke on this quiet life of
+intellectual devotion the great storm of 1914. The guns that roared
+along the Marne shattered all his purposes, and left him face to face
+with a solemn spiritual exigency which admitted no equivocation.
+
+At first, in common with multitudes more experienced than himself, he
+did not fully comprehend the true measure of the cataclysm which had
+overwhelmed the world. There had been wars before, and they had been
+fought out by standing armies. It was incredible that any war should
+last more than a few months. Again and again the world had been assured
+that war would break down with its own weight, that no war could be
+financed beyond a certain brief period, that the very nature of modern
+warfare, with its terrible engines of destruction, made swift decisions
+a necessity. The conception of a British War which involved the entire
+manhood of the nation was new, and unparalleled in past history. And the
+further conception of a war so vast in its issues that it really
+threatened the very existence of the nation was new too. Alarmists had
+sometimes predicted these things, but they had been disbelieved.
+Historians had used such phrases of long past struggles, but often as a
+mode of rhetoric rather than as the expression of exact truth. Yet, in a
+very few weeks, it became evident that not alone England, but the entire
+fabric of liberal civilisation was threatened by a power that knew no
+honour, no restraints of either caution or magnanimity, no ethic but the
+armed might that trampled under blood-stained feet all the things which
+the common sanction of centuries held dearest and fairest.
+
+Perhaps, if Coningsby had been resident in England, these realities of
+the situation would have been immediately apparent. Residing in
+America, the real outlines of the struggle were a little dimmed by
+distance. Nevertheless, from the very first he saw clearly where his
+duty lay. He could not enlist immediately. He was bound in honour to
+fulfil various literary obligations. His latest book, _Slaves of
+Freedom_, was in process of being adapted for serial use, and its
+publication would follow. He set the completion of this work as the
+period when he must enlist; working on with difficult self-restraint
+toward the appointed hour. If he had regrets for a career broken at the
+very point where it had reached success and was assured of more than
+competence, he never expressed them. His one regret was the effect of
+his enlistment on those most closely bound to him by affections which
+had been deepened and made more tender by the sense of common exile. At
+last the hour came when he was free to follow the imperative call of
+patriotic duty. He went to Ottawa, saw Sir Sam Hughes, and was offered a
+commission in the Canadian Field Artillery on the completion of his
+training at the Royal Military College, at Kingston, Ontario. The last
+weeks of his training were passed at the military camp of Petewawa on
+the Ottawa River. There his family was able to meet him in the July of
+1916. While we were with him he was selected, with twenty-four other
+officers, for immediate service in France; and at the same time his two
+younger brothers enlisted in the Naval Patrol, then being recruited in
+Canada by Commander Armstrong.
+
+The letters in this volume commence with his departure from Ottawa. Week
+by week they have come, with occasional interruptions; mud stained
+epistles, written in pencil, in dug-outs by the light of a single
+candle, in the brief moments snatched from hard and perilous duties.
+They give no hint of where he was on the far-flung battle-line. We know
+now that he was at Albert, at Thiepval, at Courcelette, and at the
+taking of the Regina trench, where, unknown to him, one of his cousins
+fell in the heroic charge of the Canadian infantry. His constant
+thoughtfulness for those who were left at home is manifest in all he
+writes. It has been expressed also in other ways, dear and precious to
+remember: in flowers delivered by his order from the battlefield each
+Sabbath morning at our house in Newark, in cables of birthday
+congratulations, which arrived on the exact date. Nothing has been
+forgotten that could alleviate the loneliness of our separation, or
+stimulate our courage, or make us conscious of the unbroken bond of
+love.
+
+The general point of view in these letters is, I think, adequately
+expressed in the phrase "_Carry On_," which I have used as the title of
+this book. It was our happy lot to meet Coningsby in London in the
+January of the present year, when he was granted ten days' leave. In the
+course of conversation one night he laid emphasis on the fact that he,
+and those who served with him, were, after all, not professional
+soldiers, but civilians at war. They did not love war, and when the war
+was ended not five per cent of them would remain in the army. They were
+men who had left professions and vocations which still engaged the best
+parts of their minds, and would return to them when the hour came. War
+was for them an occupation, not a vocation. Yet they had proved
+themselves, one and all, splendid soldiers, bearing the greatest
+hardships without complaint, and facing wounds and death with a gay
+courage which had made the Canadian forces famous even among a host of
+men, equally brave and heroic. The secret of their fortitude lay in the
+one brief phrase, "Carry On." Their fortitude was of the spirit rather
+than the nerves. They were aware of the solemn ideals of justice,
+liberty, and righteousness for which they fought, and would never give
+up till they were won. In the completeness of their surrender to a great
+cause they had been lifted out of themselves to a new plane of living
+by the transformation of their spirit. It was the dogged indomitable
+drive of spiritual forces controlling bodily forces. Living or dying
+those forces would prevail. They would carry on to the end, however long
+the war, and would count no sacrifice too great to assure its triumph.
+
+This is the spirit which breathes through these letters. The splendour
+of war, as my son puts it, is in nothing external; it is all in the
+souls of the men. "There's a marvellous grandeur about all this carnage
+and desolation--men's souls rise above the distress--they have to, in
+order to survive." "Every man I have met out here has the amazing guts
+to wear his crown of thorns as though it were a cap-and-bells." They
+have shredded off their weaknesses, and attained that "corporate
+stout-heartedness" which is "the acme of what Aristotle meant by
+virtue." For himself, he discovers that the plague of his former modes
+of life lay in self-distrust. It was the disease of the age. The doubt
+of many things which it were wisdom to believe had ended in the doubt of
+one's own capacity for heroism. All those doubts and self-despisings had
+vanished in the supreme surrender to sacrificial duty. The doors of the
+Kingdom of Heroism were flung so wide that the meanest might enter in,
+and in that act the humblest became comrades of Drake's men, who could
+jest as they died. No one knows his real strength till it is put to the
+test; the highest joy of life is to discover that the soul can meet the
+test, and survive it.
+
+The Somme battlefield, from which all these letters were despatched, is
+an Inferno much more terrible than any Dante pictured. It is a vast sea
+of mud, full of the unburied dead, pitted and pock-marked by
+shell-holes, treeless and horseless, "the abomination of desolation."
+And the men who toil across it look more like outcasts of the London
+Embankment than soldiers. "They're loaded down like pack-animals, their
+shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they go on and go
+on.... There's no flash of sword or splendour of uniforms. They're only
+very tired men determined to carry on. The war will be won by tired men
+who can never again pass an insurance test." Yet they carry on--the
+"broken counter-jumper, the ragged ex-plumber," the clerk from the
+office, the man from the farm; Londoner, Canadian, Australian, New
+Zealander, men drawn from every quarter of the Empire, who daily justify
+their manhood by devotion to an ideal and by contempt of death. And in
+the heart of each there is a settled conviction that the cause for which
+they have sacrificed so much must triumph. They have no illusions about
+an early peace. They see their comrades fall, and say quietly, "He's
+gone West." They do heroic things daily, which in a lesser war would
+have won the Victoria Cross, but in this war are commonplaces. They know
+themselves re-born in soul, and are dimly aware that the world is
+travailing toward new birth with them. They are still very human, men
+who end their letters with a row of crosses which stand for kisses. They
+are not dehumanised by war; the kindliness and tenderness of their
+natures are unspoiled by all their daily traffic in horror. But they
+have won their souls; and when the days of peace return these men will
+take with them to the civilian life a tonic strength and nobleness which
+will arrest and extirpate the decadence of society with the saving salt
+of valour and of faith.
+
+It may be said also that they do not hate their foe, although they hate
+the things for which he fights. They are fighting a clean fight, with
+men whose courage they respect. A German prisoner who comes into the
+British camp is sure of good treatment. He is neither starved nor
+insulted. His captors share with him cheerfully their rations and their
+little luxuries. Sometimes a sullen brute will spit in the face of his
+captor when he offers him a cigarette; he is always an officer, never a
+private. And occasionally between these fighting hosts there are acts of
+magnanimity which stand out illumined against the dark background of
+death and suffering. One of the stories told me by my son illustrates
+this. During one fierce engagement a British officer saw a German
+officer impaled on the barbed wire, writhing in anguish. The fire was
+dreadful, yet he still hung there unscathed. At length the British
+officer could stand it no longer. He said quietly, "I can't bear to look
+at that poor chap any longer." So he went out under the hail of shell,
+released him, took him on his shoulders and carried him to the German
+trench. The firing ceased. Both sides watched the act with wonder. Then
+the Commander in the German trench came forward, took from his own bosom
+the Iron Cross, and pinned it on the breast of the British officer. Such
+an episode is true to the holiest ideals of chivalry; and it is all the
+more welcome because the German record is stained by so many acts of
+barbarism, which the world cannot forgive.
+
+This magnanimous attitude toward the enemy is very apparent in these
+letters. The man whose mind is filled with great ideals of sacrifice and
+duty has no room for the narrowness of hate. He can pity a foe whose
+sufferings exceed his own, and the more so because he knows that his
+foe is doomed. The British troops do know this to-day by many infallible
+signs. In the early days of the war untrained men, poorly equipped with
+guns, were pitted against the best trained troops in Europe. The first
+Canadian armies were sacrificed, as was that immortal army of Imperial
+troops who saved the day at Mons. The Canadians often perished in that
+early fighting by the excess of their own reckless bravery. They are
+still the most daring fighters in the British army, but they have
+profited by the hard discipline of the past. They know now that they
+have not only the will to conquer, but the means of conquest. Their,
+artillery has become conspicuous for its efficiency. It is the ceaseless
+artillery fire which has turned the issue of the war for the British
+forces. The work of the infantry is beyond praise. They "go over the
+top" with superb courage, and all who have seen them are ready to say
+with my son, "I'm hats off to the infantry." And in this final
+efficiency, surpassing all that could have been thought possible in the
+earlier stages of the war, the British forces read the clear augury of
+victory. The war will be won by the Allied armies; not only because they
+fight for the better cause, which counts for much, in spite of
+Napoleon's cynical saying that "God is on the side of the strongest
+battalions"; but because at last they have superiority in equipment,
+discipline and efficiency. Upon that shell-torn Western front, amid the
+mud and carnage of the Somme, there has been slowly forged the weapon
+which will drive the Teuton enemy across the Rhine, and give back to
+Europe and the world unhindered liberty and enduring peace.
+
+W.J. DAWSON.
+
+March, 1917.
+
+
+
+
+THE LETTERS
+
+
+In order to make some of the allusions in these letters clear I will set
+down briefly the circumstances which explain them, and supply a
+narrative link where it may be required.
+
+I have already mentioned the Military Camp at Petewawa, on the Ottawa
+river. The Camp is situated about seven miles from Pembroke. The Ottawa
+river is at this point a beautiful lake. Immediately opposite the Camp
+is a little summer hotel of the simplest description. It was at this
+hotel that my wife, my daughter, and myself stayed in the early days of
+July, 1916.
+
+The hotel was full of the wives of the officers stationed in the Camp.
+During the daytime I was the only man among the guests. About five
+o'clock in the afternoon the officers from the Camp began to arrive on a
+primitive motor ferryboat. My son came over each day, and we often
+visited him at the Camp. His long training at Kingston had been very
+severe. It included besides the various classes which he attended a
+great deal of hard exercise, long rides or foot marches over frozen
+roads before breakfast, and so forth. After this strenuous winter the
+Camp at Petewawa was a delightful change. His tent stood on a bluff,
+commanding an exquisite view of the broad stretch of water, diversified
+by many small islands. We had a great deal of swimming in the lake, and
+several motor-boat excursions to its beautiful upper reaches. One
+afternoon when we went over in our launch to meet him at the Camp wharf,
+he told us that that day a General had come from Ottawa to ask for
+twenty-five picked officers to supply the casualties among the Canadian
+Field Artillery at the front. He had immediately volunteered and been
+accepted.
+
+At this time my two younger sons, who had joined us at Petewawa in order
+to see their brother, enrolled themselves in the Royal Naval Motor
+Patrol Service, and had to return to Nelson, British Columbia, to settle
+their affairs. Near Nelson, on the Kootenay Lake, we have a large fruit
+ranch, managed by my second son, Reginald. My youngest son, Eric, was
+with a law-firm in Nelson, and had just passed his final examinations as
+solicitor and barrister.
+
+This ranch had played a great part in our lives. The scenery is among
+the finest in British Columbia. We usually spent our summers there,
+finding not only continual interest in the development of our orchards,
+but a great deal of pleasure in riding, swimming, and boating. We had
+often talked of building a modern house there, but had never done so.
+The original "little shack" was the work of Reginald's own hands, in the
+days when most of the ranch was primeval forest. It had been added to,
+but was still of the simplest description. One reason why we had not
+built a modern house was that this "little shack" had become much
+endeared to us by association and memory. We were all together there
+more than once, and Coningsby had written a great deal there. We built
+later on a sort of summer library--a big room on the edge of a beautiful
+ravine--to which reference is made in later letters. Some of the
+happiest days of our lives were spent in these lovely surroundings, and
+the memory of those blue summer days, amid the fragrance of miles of
+pine-forest, often recurs to Coningsby as he writes from the mud-wastes
+of the Somme.
+
+We left Petewawa to go to the ranch before Coningsby sailed for England,
+that we might get our other two sons ready for their journey to England.
+They left us on August 21st, and the ranch was sub-let to Chinamen in
+the end of September, when we returned to Newark, New Jersey.
+
+
+
+
+CARRY ON
+
+I
+
+OTTAWA, July 16th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST ALL:
+
+So much has happened since last I saw you that it's difficult to know
+where to start. On Thursday, after lunch, I got the news that we were to
+entrain from Petewawa next Friday morning. I at once put in for leave to
+go to Ottawa the next day until the following Thursday at reveille. We
+came here with a lot of the other officers who are going over and have
+been having a very full time.
+
+I am sailing from a port unknown on board the _Olympic_ with 6,000
+troops--there is to be a big convoy. I feel more than ever I did--and
+I'm sure it's a feeling that you share since visiting the camp--that I
+am setting out on a Crusade from which it would have been impossible to
+withhold myself with honour. I go quite gladly and contentedly, and pray
+that in God's good time we may all sit again in the little shack at
+Kootenay and listen to the rustling of the orchard outside. It will be
+of those summer days that I shall be thinking all the time.
+
+ Yours, with very much love,
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+HALIFAX, July 23rd.
+
+MY DEAR ONES:
+
+We've spent all morning on the dock, seeing to our baggage, and have
+just got leave ashore for two hours. We have had letters handed to us
+saying that on no account are we to mention anything concerning our
+passage overseas, neither are we allowed to cable our arrival from the
+other side until four clear days have elapsed.
+
+You are thinking of me this quiet Sunday morning at the ranch, and I of
+you. And I am wishing--As I wish, I stop and ask myself, "Would I be
+there if I could have my choice?" And I remember those lines of
+Emerson's which you quoted:
+
+ "Though love repine and reason chafe,
+ There comes a voice without reply,
+ 'Twere man's perdition to be safe,
+ When for the Truth he ought to die."
+
+I wouldn't turn back if I could, but my heart cries out against "the
+voice which speaks without reply."
+
+Things are growing deeper with me in all sorts of ways. Family
+affections stand out so desirably and vivid, like meadows green after
+rain. And religion means more. The love of a few dear human people and
+the love of the divine people out of sight, are all that one has to lean
+on in the graver hours of life. I hope I come back again--I very much
+hope I come back again; there are so many finer things that I could do
+with the rest of my days--bigger things. But if by any chance I should
+cross the seas to stay, you'll know that that also will be right and as
+big as anything that I could do with life, and something that you'll be
+able to be just as proud about as if I had lived to fulfil all your
+other dear hopes for me. I don't suppose I shall talk of this again. But
+I wanted you to know that underneath all the lightness and ambition
+there's something that I learnt years ago in Highbury[1]. I've become a
+little child again in God's hands, with full confidence in His love and
+wisdom, and a growing trust that whatever He decides for me will be best
+and kindest.
+
+[Footnote 1: We resided over thirteen years at Highbury, London, N.,
+during my pastorate of the Highbury Quadrant Congregational Church.]
+
+This is the last letter I shall be able to send to you before the other
+boys follow me. Keep brave, dear ones, for all our sakes; don't let any
+of us turn cowards whatever ultimately happens. We've a tradition to
+live up to now that we have become a family of soldiers and sailors.
+
+I shall long for the time when you come over to England. Where will our
+meeting be and when? Perhaps the war may be ended and then won't you be
+glad that we dared all this sorrow of good-byes?
+
+ God bless and keep you,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+ON BOARD, July 27th, 1916.
+
+My VERY DEAR PEOPLE:
+
+Here we are scooting along across the same old Atlantic we've crossed so
+many times on journeys of pleasure. I'm at a loss to make my letters
+interesting, as we are allowed to say little concerning the voyage and
+everything is censored.
+
+There are men on board who are going back to the trenches for the second
+time. One of them is a captain in the Princess Pat's, who is badly
+scarred in his neck and cheek and thighs, and has been in Canada
+recuperating. There is also a young flying chap who has also seen
+service. They are all such boys and so plucky in the face of certain
+knowledge.
+
+This morning I woke up thinking of our motor-tour of two years ago in
+England, and especially of our first evening at The Three Cups in
+Dorset. I feel like running down there to see it all again if I get any
+leave on landing. How strange it will be to go back to Highbury again
+like this! The little boy who ran back and forth to school down Paradise
+Row little thought of the person who to-day masquerades as his elder
+self.
+
+Heigho! I wish I could tell you a lot of things that I'm not allowed to.
+This letter would be much more interesting then.
+
+In seventeen days the boys will also have left you--so this will arrive
+when you're horribly lonely. I'm so sorry for you dear people--but I'd
+be sorrier for you if we were all with you. If I were a father or
+mother, I'd rather have my sons dead than see them failing when the
+supreme sacrifice was called for. I marvel all the time at the prosaic
+and even coarse types of men who have risen to the greatness of the
+occasion. And there's not a man aboard who would have chosen the job
+ahead of him. One man here used to pay other people to kill his pigs
+because he couldn't endure the cruelty of doing it himself. And now
+he's going to kill men. And he's a sample. I wonder if there is a Lord
+God of Battles--or is he only an invention of man and an excuse for
+man's own actions.
+
+Monday.
+
+We are just in--safely arrived in spite of everything. I hope you had no
+scare reports of our having been sunk--such reports often get about when
+a big troop ship is on the way.
+
+I'm baggage master for my draft, and have to get on deck now. You'll
+have a long letter from me soon.
+
+ Good-bye,
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.
+
+MY DEARESTS:
+
+We haven't had any hint of what is going to happen to us--whether Field
+Artillery, the Heavies or trench mortars. There seems little doubt that
+we are to be in England for a little while taking special courses.
+
+I read father's letter yesterday. You are very brave--you never thought
+that you would be the father of a soldier and sailors; and, as you say,
+there's a kind of tradition about the way in which the fathers of
+soldiers and sailors should act. Confess--aren't you more honestly happy
+to be our father as we are now than as we were? I know quite well you
+are, in spite of the loneliness and heartache. We've all been forced
+into a heroism of which we did not think ourselves capable. We've been
+carried up to the Calvary of the world where it is expedient that a few
+men should suffer that all the generations to come may be better.
+
+I understand in a dim way all that you suffer--the sudden divorce of all
+that we had hoped for from the present--the ceaseless questionings as to
+what lies ahead. Your end of the business is the worse. For me, I can go
+forward steadily because of the greatness of the glory. I never thought
+to have the chance to suffer in my body for other men. The insufficiency
+of merely setting nobilities down on paper is finished. How unreal I
+seem to myself! Can it be true that I am here and you are in the still
+aloofness of the Rockies? I think the multitude of my changes has
+blunted my perceptions. I trudge along like a traveller between high
+hedgerows; my heart is blinkered so that I am scarcely aware of
+landscapes. My thoughts are always with you--I make calculations for the
+differences of time that I may follow more accurately your doings. I'd
+love to come down to the study summer-house and watch the blueness of
+the lake with you--I love those scenes and memories more than any in the
+world.
+
+ Good-bye for the present. Be brave.
+
+ Yours,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.
+
+MY DEARS:
+
+It's not quite three weeks to-day since I came to England, and it seems
+ages. The first week was spent on leave, the second I passed my exams in
+gun drill and gun-laying, and this week I have finished my riding. Next
+Monday I start on my gunnery.
+
+Do you remember Captain S. at the Camp? I had his young brother to
+dinner with me last night-he's just back from France minus an eye. He
+lasted three and a half weeks, and was buried four feet deep by a shell.
+He's a jolly boy, as cheerful as you could want and is very good
+company. He gave me a vivid description. He had a great boy-friend. At
+the start of the war they both joined, S. in the Artillery, his friend
+in the Mounted Rifles. At parting they exchanged identification tokens.
+S.'s bore his initials and the one word "Violets"--which meant that they
+were his favourite flower and he would like to have some scattered over
+him when he was buried. His friend wore his initials and the words "No
+flowers by request." It was S.'s first week out--they were advancing,
+having driven back the enemy, and were taking up a covered position in a
+wood from which to renew their offensive. It was night, black as pitch,
+but they knew that the wood must have been the scene of fighting by the
+scuttling of the rats. Suddenly the moon came out, and from beneath a
+bush S. saw a face--or rather half a face--which he thought he
+recognised, gazing up at him. He corrects himself when he tells the
+story, and says that it wasn't so much the disfigured features as the
+profile that struck him as familiar. He bent down and searched beneath
+the shirt, and drew out a little metal disc with "No flowers by request"
+written on it.
+
+I don't know whether I ought to repeat things like that to you, but the
+description was so graphic. I have met many who have returned from the
+Front, and what puzzles me in all of them is their unawed acceptance of
+death. I don't think I could ever accept it as natural; it's too
+discourteous in its interruption of many dreams and plans and loves.
+
+ Yours with very much love,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+SHORNCLIFF, August 30th, 1916.
+
+MY DEARESTS:
+
+I have just returned from sending you a cable to let you know that I'm
+off to France. The word came out in orders yesterday, and I shall leave
+before the end of the week with a draft of officers--I have been in
+England just a day over four weeks. My only regret is that I shall miss
+the boys who should be travelling up to London about the same time as I
+am setting out for the Front. After I have been there for three months I
+am supposed to get a leave--this should be due to me about the beginning
+of December, and you can judge how I shall count on it. Think of the
+meeting with R. and E., and the immensity of the joy.
+
+Selfishly I wish that you were here at this moment--actually I'm glad
+that you are away. Everybody goes out quite unemotionally and with very
+few good-byes--we made far more fuss in the old days about a week-end
+visit.
+
+Now that at last it has come--this privileged moment for which I have
+worked and waited--my heart is very quiet. It's the test of a character
+which I have often doubted. I shall be glad not to have to doubt it
+again. Whatever happens, I know you will be glad to remember that at a
+great crisis I tried to play the man, however small my qualifications.
+We have always lived so near to one another's affections that this going
+out alone is more lonely to me than to most men. I have always had some
+one near at hand with love-blinded eyes to see my faults as springing
+from higher motives. Now I reach out my hands across six thousand miles
+and only touch yours with my imagination to say good-bye. What queer
+sights these eyes, which have been almost your eyes, will witness! If my
+hands do anything respectable, remember that it is your hands that are
+doing it. It is your influence as a family that has made me ready for
+the part I have to play, and where I go, you follow me.
+
+Poor little circle of three loving persons, please be tremendously
+brave. Don't let anything turn you into cowards--we've all got to be
+worthy of each other's sacrifice; the greater the sacrifice may prove to
+be for the one the greater the nobility demanded of the remainder. How
+idle the words sound, and yet they will take deep meanings when time has
+given them graver sanctions. I think gallant is the word I've been
+trying to find--we must be gallant English women and gentlemen.
+
+It's been raining all day and I got very wet this morning. Don't you
+wish I had caught some quite harmless sickness? When I didn't want to go
+back to school, I used to wet my socks purposely in order to catch cold,
+but the cold always avoided me when I wanted it badly. How far away the
+childish past seems--almost as though it never happened. And was I
+really the budding novelist in New York? Life has become so stern and
+scarlet--and so brave. From my window I look out on the English Channel,
+a cold, grey-green sea, with rain driving across it and a fleet of small
+craft taking shelter. Over there beyond the curtain of mist lies
+France--and everything that awaits me.
+
+News has just come that I have to start. Will continue from France.
+
+ Yours ever lovingly,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+Friday, September 1st, 1916, 11 am.
+
+DEAREST FATHER AND MOTHER:
+
+I embark at 12.30--so this is the last line before I reach France. I
+expect the boys are now within sight of English shores--I wish I could
+have had an hour with them.
+
+I'm going to do my best to bring you honour--remember that--I shall do
+things for your sake out there, living up to the standards you have
+taught me.
+
+ Yours with a heart full of love,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+FRANCE, September 1st, 1916.
+
+DEAREST M.:
+
+Here I am in France with the same strange smells and street cries, and
+almost the same little boys bowling hoops over the very cobbly cobble
+stones. I had afternoon tea at a patisserie and ate a great many gâteaux
+for the sake of old times. We had a very choppy crossing, and you would
+most certainly have been sick had you been on board. It seemed to me
+that I must be coming on one of those romantic holidays to see churches
+and dead history--only the khaki-clad figures reminded me that I was
+coming to see history in the making. It's a funny world that batters us
+about so. It's three years since I was in France--the last time was with
+Arthur in Provence. It's five years since you and I did our famous trip
+together.
+
+I wish you were here--there are heaps of English nurses in the streets.
+I expect to sleep in this place and proceed to my destination to-morrow.
+How I wish I could send you a really descriptive letter! If I did, I
+fear you would not get it--so I have to write in generalities. None of
+this seems real--it's a kind of wild pretence from which I shall
+awake-and when I tell you my dream you'll laugh and say, "How absurd of
+you, dreaming that you were a soldier. I must say you look like it."
+
+ Good-bye, my dearest girl,
+ God bless you,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+September 8th, 1916.
+
+MY DEAREST ONES:
+
+I'm sending this to meet you on your return from Kootenay. I left
+England on September 1st and had a night at my point of disembarkation,
+and then set off on a wandering adventure in search of my division. I'm
+sure you'll understand that I cannot enter into any details--I can only
+give you general and purely personal impressions. There were two other
+officers with me, both from Montreal. We had to picnic on chocolate and
+wine for twenty-four hours through our lack of forethought in not
+supplying ourselves with food for the trip. I shaved the first morning
+with water from the exhaust of a railroad engine, having first balanced
+my mirror on the step. The engineer was fascinated with my safety razor.
+There were Tommies from the trenches in another train, muddied to the
+eyes--who showed themselves much more resourceful. They cooked
+themselves quite admirable meals as they squatted on the rails, over
+little fires on which they perched tomato cans. Sunday evening we saw
+our first German prisoners--a young and degenerate-looking lot. Sunday
+evening we got off at a station in the rain, and shouldered our own
+luggage. Our luggage, by the way, consists of a sleeping bag, in which
+much of our stuff is packed, and a kit sack--for an immediate change and
+toilet articles one carries a haversack hung across the shoulder. Well,
+as I say, we alighted and coaxed a military wagon to come to our rescue.
+As we set off through a drizzling rain, trudging behind the cart, a
+double rainbow shone, which I took for an omen. Presently we came to a
+rest camp, where we told our sad story of empty tummies, and were put up
+for the night. A Jock--all Highlanders are called Jock--looked after us.
+Next morning we started out afresh in a motor lorry and finished at a
+Y.M.C.A. tent, where we stayed two nights. On Wednesday we met the
+General in Command of our Division, who posted me to the battery, which
+is said to be the best in the best brigade in the best division--so you
+may see I'm in luck. I found the battery just having come out of
+action--we expect to go back again in a day or two. Major B. is the
+O.C.--a fine man. The lieutenant who shares my tent won the Military
+Cross at Ypres last Spring. I'm very happy--which will make you
+happy--and longing for my first taste of real war.
+
+How strangely far away I am from you--all the experiences so unshared
+and different. Long before this reaches you I shall have been in action
+several times. This time three years ago my streak of luck came to me
+and I was prancing round New York. To-day I am much more genuinely happy
+in mind, for I feel, as I never felt when I was only writing, that I am
+doing something difficult which has no element of self in it. If I come
+back, life will be a much less restless affair.
+
+This letter! I can imagine it being delivered and the shout from whoever
+takes it and the comments. I make the contrast in my mind--this little
+lean-to spread of canvas about four feet high, the horse-lines, guns,
+sentries going up and down--and then the dear home and the well-loved
+faces.
+
+ Good-bye. Don't be at all nervous.
+ Yours lovingly,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+September 12th, Tuesday.
+
+DEAREST M.:
+
+You will already have received my first letters giving you my address
+over here. The wagon has just come up to our position, but it has
+brought me only one letter since I've been across. I'm sitting in my
+dug-out with shells passing over my head with the sound of ripping
+linen. I've already had the novel experience of firing a battery, and
+to-morrow I go up to the first line trenches.
+
+It's extraordinary how commonplace war becomes to a man who is thrust
+among others who consider it commonplace. Not fifty yards away from me a
+dead German lies rotting and uncovered--I daresay he was buried once and
+then blown out by a shell.
+
+Wednesday, 7 p.m.
+
+Your letters came two hours ago--the first to reach me here--and I have
+done little else but read and re-read them. How they bring the old ways
+of life back with their love and longing! Dear mother's tie will be worn
+to-morrow, and it will be ripping to feel that it was made by her hands.
+Your cross has not arrived yet, dear. Your mittens will be jolly for the
+winter. I've heard nothing from the boys yet.
+
+To-day I took a trip into No-Man's Land--when the war is ended I'll be
+able to tell you all about it. I think the picture is photographed upon
+my memory forever. There's so much you would like to hear and so little
+I'm allowed to tell. Ask G.M.'C. if he was at Princeton with a man named
+Price--an instructor there.
+
+You ought to see the excitement when the water-cart brings us our mail
+and the letters are handed out. Some of the gunners have evidently told
+their Canadian girls that they are officers, and so they are addressed
+on their letters as lieutenants. I have to censor some of their replies,
+and I can tell you they are as often funny as pathetic. The ones to
+their mothers are childish, too, and have rows of kisses. I think men
+are always kiddies if you look beneath the surface. The snapshots did
+fill me with a wanting to be with you in Kootenay. But that's not where
+you'll receive this. There'll probably be a fire in the sitting-room at
+home, and a strong aroma of coffee and tobacco. You'll be sitting in a
+low chair before the fire and your fingers rubbing the hair above your
+left ear as you read this aloud. I'd like to walk in on you and say, "No
+more need for letters now." Some day soon, I pray and expect.
+
+Tell dear Papa and Mother that their answers come next. What a lot of
+love you each one manage to put into your written pages! I'm afraid if I
+let myself go that way I might make you unhappy.
+
+Since writing this far I have had supper. I'm now sleeping in a new
+dug-out and get a shower of mould on my sleeping-kit each time the guns
+are fired. One doesn't mind that particularly, especially when you know
+that the earth walls make you safe. I have a candle in an old petrol tin
+and dodge the shadows as I write. You know, this artillery game is good
+sport and one takes everything as it comes with a joke. The men are
+splendid--their cheeriness comes up bubbling whenever the occasion calls
+for the dumps. Certainly there are fine qualities which war, despite its
+unnaturalness, develops. I'm hats off to every infantry private I meet
+nowadays.
+
+God bless you and all of you.
+ Yours lovingly, Con.
+
+The reference in the previous letter to a cross is to a little bronze
+cross of Francis of Assisi.
+
+Many years ago I visited Assisi, and, on leaving, the monks gave me four
+of these small bronze crosses, assuring me that those who wore them were
+securely defended in all peril by the efficacious prayers of St.
+Francis. Just before Coningsby left Shorncliff to go to France he wrote
+to us and asked if we couldn't send him something to hang round his neck
+for luck. We fortunately had one of these crosses of St. Francis at the
+ranch, and his sister--the M. of these letters-sent it to him. It
+arrived safely, and he has worn it ever since.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+September 15th, 1916.
+
+DEAR FATHER:
+
+Your last letter to me was written on a quiet morning in August--in the
+summer house at Kootenay. It came up yesterday evening on a water-cart
+from the wagon-lines to a scene a little in contrast.
+
+It's a fortnight to-day since I left England, and already I've seen
+action. Things move quickly in this game, and it is a game--one which
+brings out both the best and the worst qualities in a man. If
+unconscious heroism is the virtue most to be desired, and heroism spiced
+with a strong sense of humour at that, then pretty well every man I have
+met out here has the amazing guts to wear his crown of thorns as though
+it were a cap-and-bells. To do that for the sake of corporate
+stout-heartedness is, I think, the acme of what Aristotle meant by
+virtue. A strong man, or a good man or a brainless man, can walk to meet
+pain with a smile on his mouth because he knows that he is strong enough
+to bear it, or worthy enough to defy it, or because he is such a fool
+that he has no imagination. But these chaps are neither particularly
+strong, good, nor brainless; they're more like children, utterly casual
+with regard to trouble, and quite aware that it is useless to struggle
+against their elders. So they have the merriest of times while they can,
+and when the governess, Death, summons them to bed, they obey her with
+unsurprised quietness. It sends the mercury of one's optimism rising to
+see the way they do it. I search my mind to find the bigness of motive
+which supports them, but it forever evades me. These lads are not the
+kind who philosophise about life; they're the sort, many of them, who
+would ordinarily wear corduroys and smoke a cutty pipe. I suppose the
+Christian martyrs would have done the same had corduroys been the
+fashion in that day, and if a Roman Raleigh had discovered tobacco.
+
+I wrote this about midnight and didn't get any further, as I was up till
+six carrying on and firing the battery. After adding another page or two
+I want to get some sleep, as I shall probably have to go up to the
+observation station to watch the effect of fire to-night. But before I
+turn in I want to tell you that I had the most gorgeous mail from
+everybody. Now that I'm in touch with you all again, it's almost like
+saying "How-do?" every night and morning.
+
+I daresay you'll wonder how it feels to be under shell-fire. This is how
+it feels--you don't realise your danger until you come to think about it
+afterwards--at the time it's like playing coconut shies at a coon's
+head--only you're the coon's head. You take too much interest in the
+sport of dodging to be afraid. You'll hear the Tommies saying if one
+bursts nearly on them, "Line, you blighter, line. Five minutes more
+left," just as though they were reprimanding the unseen Hun battery for
+rotten shooting.
+
+The great word of the Tommies here is "No bloody bon"--a strange mixture
+of French and English, which means that a thing is no good. If it
+pleases them it's _Jake_--though where Jake comes from nobody knows.
+
+Now I must get a wink or two, as I don't know when I may have to start
+off.
+
+ Ever yours, with love,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+September 19th, 1916.
+
+Dearest Mother:
+
+I've been in France 19 days, and it hasn't taken me long to go into
+action. Soon I shall be quite an old hand. I'm just back from 24 hours
+in the Observation Post, from which one watches the effect of fire. I
+understand now and forgive the one phrase which the French children have
+picked up from our Tommies on account of its frequent
+occurrence--"bl---- mud." I never knew that mud could be so thick and
+treacly. All my fear that I might be afraid under shell-fire is
+over--you get to believe that if you're going to be hit you're going to
+be. But David's phrase keeps repeating itself in my mind, "Ten thousand
+shall fall at thy side, etc., but it shall not come nigh unto thee."
+It's a curious thing that the men who are most afraid are those who get
+most easily struck. A friend of G.M.C.'s was hit the other day within
+thirty yards of me--he was a Princeton chap. I mentioned him in one of
+my previous letters. Our right section commander got a blighty two days
+ago and is probably now in England. He went off on a firing battery
+wagon, grinning all over his face, saying he wouldn't sell that bit of
+blood and shrapnel for a thousand pounds. I'm wearing your tie--it's the
+envy of the battery. All the officers wanted me to give them the name of
+my girl. It never occurs to men that mothers will do things like that.
+
+Thank the powers it has stopped raining and we'll be able to get dry. I
+came in plastered from head to foot with lying in the rain on my tummy
+and peering over the top of a trench. Isn't it a funny change from
+comfortable breakfasts, press notices and a blazing fire?
+
+Do you want any German souvenirs? Just at present I can get plenty. I
+have a splendid bayonet and a belt with Kaiser Bill's arms on it--but
+you can't forward these things from France. The Germans swear that
+they're not using bayonets with saw-edges, but you can buy them for five
+francs from the Tommies--ones they've taken from the prisoners or else
+picked up.
+
+You needn't be nervous about me. I'm a great little dodger of
+whizz-bangs. Besides I have a superstition that there's something in
+the power of M.'s cross to bless. It came with the mittens, and is at
+present round my neck.
+
+You know what it sounds like when they're shooting coals down an iron
+run-way into a cellar-well, imagine a thousand of them. That's what I'm
+hearing while I write.
+
+God bless you; I'm very happy.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+September 19th, 1916.
+
+Dearest Father:
+
+I'm writing you your birthday letter early, as I don't know how busy I
+may be in the next week, nor how long this may take to reach you. You
+know how much love I send you and how I would like to be with you. D'you
+remember the birthday three years ago when we set the victrola going
+outside your room door? Those were my high-jinks days when very many
+things seemed possible. I'd rather be the person I am now than the
+person I was then. Life was selfish though glorious.
+
+Well, I've seen my first modern battlefield and am quite disillusioned
+about the splendour of war. The splendour is all in the souls of the
+men who creep through the squalor like vermin--it's in nothing
+external. There was a chap here the other day who deserved the V.C. four
+times over by running back through the Hun shell fire to bring news that
+the infantry wanted more artillery support. I was observing for my
+brigade in the forward station at the time. How he managed to live
+through the ordeal nobody knows. But men laugh while they do these
+things. It's fine.
+
+A modern battlefield is the abomination of abominations. Imagine a vast
+stretch of dead country, pitted with shell-holes as though it had been
+mutilated with small-pox. There's not a leaf or a blade of grass in
+sight. Every house has either been leveled or is in ruins. No bird
+sings. Nothing stirs. The only live sound is at night--the scurry of
+rats. You enter a kind of ditch, called a trench; it leads on to another
+and another in an unjoyful maze. From the sides feet stick out, and arms
+and faces--the dead of previous encounters. "One of our chaps," you say
+casually, recognising him by his boots or khaki, or "Poor blighter--a
+Hun!" One can afford to forget enmity in the presence of the dead. It is
+horribly difficult sometimes to distinguish between the living and the
+slaughtered--they both lie so silently in their little kennels in the
+earthen bank. You push on--especially if you are doing observation work,
+till you are past your own front line and out in No Man's Land. You have
+to crouch and move warily now. Zing! A bullet from a German sniper. You
+laugh and whisper, "A near one, that." My first trip to the trenches was
+up to No Man's Land. I went in the early dawn and came to a Madame
+Tussaud's show of the dead, frozen into immobility in the most
+extraordinary attitudes. Some of them were part way out of the ground,
+one hand pressed to the wound, the other pointing, the head sunken and
+the hair plastered over the forehead by repeated rains. I kept on
+wondering what my companions would look like had they been three weeks
+dead. My imagination became ingeniously and vividly morbid. When I had
+to step over them to pass, it seemed as though they must clutch at my
+trench coat and ask me to help. Poor lonely people, so brave and so
+anonymous in their death! Somewhere there is a woman who loved each one
+of them and would give her life for my opportunity to touch the poor
+clay that had been kind to her. It's like walking through the day of
+resurrection to visit No Man's Land. Then the Huns see you and the
+shrapnel begins to fall--you crouch like a dog and run for it.
+
+One gets used to shell-fire up to a point, but there's not a man who
+doesn't want to duck when he hears one coming. The worst of all is the
+whizz-bang, because it doesn't give you a chance--it pounces and is on
+you the same moment that it bangs. There's so much I wish that I could
+tell you. I can only say this, at the moment we're making history.
+
+What a curious birthday letter! I think of all your other birthdays--the
+ones before I met these silent men with the green and yellow faces, and
+the blackened lips which will never speak again. What happy times we
+have had as a family--what happy jaunts when you took me in those early
+days, dressed in a sailor suit, when you went hunting pictures. Yet, for
+all the damnability of what I now witness, I was never quieter in my
+heart. To have surrendered to an imperative self-denial brings a peace
+which self-seeking never brought.
+
+So don't let this birthday be less gay for my absence. It ought to be
+the proudest in your life--proud because your example has taught each of
+your sons to do the difficult things which seem right. It would have
+been a condemnation of you if any one of us had been a shirker.
+
+ "I want to buy fine things for you
+ And be a soldier if I can."
+
+The lines come back to me now. You read them to me first in the dark
+little study from a green oblong book. You little thought that I would
+be a soldier--even now I can hardly realise the fact. It seems a dream
+from which I shall wake up. Am I really killing men day by day? Am I
+really in jeopardy myself?
+
+Whatever happens I'm not afraid, and I'll give you reason to be glad of
+me.
+ Very much love,
+ CON.
+
+The poem referred to in this letter was actually written for Coningsby
+when he was between five and six years old. The dark little study which
+he describes was in the old house at Wesley's Chapel, in the City Road,
+London--and it was very dark, with only one window, looking out upon a
+dingy yard. The green oblong book in which I used to write my poems I
+still have; and it is an illustration of the tenacity of a child's
+memory that he should recall it. The poem was called _A Little Boy's
+Programme_, and ran thus:
+
+ I am so very young and small,
+ That, when big people pass me by,
+ I sometimes think they are so high
+ I'll never be a man at all.
+
+ And yet I want to be a man
+ Because so much I want to do;
+ I want to buy fine things for you,
+ And be a soldier, if I can.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When I'm a man I will not let
+ Poor little children starve, or be
+ Ill-used, or stand and beg of me
+ With naked feet out in the wet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Now, don't you laugh!--The father kissed
+ The little serious mouth and said
+ "You've almost made me cry instead,
+ You blessed little optimist."
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+September 21st, 1916.
+
+My Very Dear M.:
+
+I am wearing your talisman while I write and have a strong superstition
+in its efficacy. The efficacy of your socks is also very noticeable--I
+wore them the first time on a trip to the Forward Observation Station. I
+had to lie on my tummy in the mud, my nose just showing above the
+parapet, for the best part of twenty-four hours. Your socks little
+thought I would take them into such horrid places when you made them.
+
+Last night both the King and Sir Sam sent us congratulations--I popped
+in just at the right time. I daresay you know far more about our doings
+than I do. Only this morning I picked up the _London Times_ and read a
+full account of everything I have witnessed. The account is likely to be
+still fuller in the New York papers.
+
+"Home for Christmas"--that's what the Tommies are promising their
+mothers and sweethearts in all their letters that I censor. Yesterday I
+was offered an Imperial commission in the army of occupation. But home
+for Christmas, will be Christmas, 1917--I can't think that it will be
+earlier.
+ Very much love,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+Sunday, September 24th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST MOTHER:
+
+Your locket has just reached me, and I have strung it round my neck with
+M.'s cross. Was it M.'s cross the other night that accounted for my
+luck? I was in a gun-pit when a shell landed, killing a man only a foot
+away from me and wounding three others--I and the sergeant were the only
+two to get out all right. Men who have been out here some time have a
+dozen stories of similar near squeaks. And talking of squeaks, it was a
+mouse that saved one man. It kept him awake to such an extent that he
+determined to move to another place. Just as he got outside the dug-out
+a shell fell on the roof.
+
+You'll be pleased to know that we have a ripping chaplain or Padre, as
+they call chaplains, with us. He plays the game, and I've struck up a
+great friendship with him. We discuss literature and religion when we're
+feeling a bit fed up. We talk at home of our faith being tested--one
+begins to ask strange questions here when he sees what men are allowed
+by the Almighty to do to one another, and so it's a fine thing to be in
+constant touch with a great-hearted chap who can risk his life daily to
+speak of the life hereafter to dying Tommies.
+
+I wish I could tell you of my doings, but it's strictly against orders.
+You may read in the papers of actions in which I've taken part and never
+know that I was there.
+
+We live for the most part on tinned stuff, but our appetites make
+anything taste palatable. Living and sleeping in the open air keeps one
+ravenous. And one learns to sleep the sleep of the just despite the
+roaring of the guns.
+
+God bless you each one and give us peaceful hearts.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+September 28th, 1916.
+
+My Dears:
+
+We're in the midst of a fine old show, so I don't get much opportunity
+for writing. Suffice it to say that I've seen the big side of war by now
+and the extraordinary uncalculating courage of it. Men run out of a
+trench to an attack with as much eagerness as they would display in
+overtaking a late bus. If you want to get an idea of what meals are like
+when a row is on, order the McAlpin to spread you a table where 34th
+crosses Broadway--and wait for the uptown traffic on the Elevated. It's
+wonderful to see the waiters dodging with dishes through the
+shell-holes.
+
+It's a wonderful autumn day, golden and mellow; I picture to myself what
+this country must have looked like before the desolation of war struck
+it.
+
+I was Brigade observation officer on September 26th, and wouldn't have
+missed what I saw for a thousand dollars. It was a touch and go
+business, with shells falling everywhere and machine-gun fire--but
+something glorious to remember. I had the great joy of being useful in
+setting a Hun position on fire. I think the war will be over in a
+twelvemonth.
+
+Our great joy is composing menus of the meals we'll eat when we get
+home. Good-bye for the present.
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+October 1st, 1916.
+
+MY DEAREST M.:
+
+Sunday morning, your first back in Newark. You're not up yet owing to
+the difference in time--I can imagine the quiet house with the first of
+the morning stealing greyly in. You'll be presently going to church to
+sit in your old-fashioned mahogany pew. There's not much of Sunday in
+our atmosphere--only the little one can manage to keep in his heart. I
+shall share the echo of yours by remembering.
+
+I'm waiting orders at the present moment to go forward with the Colonel
+and pick out a new gun position. You know I'm very happy-satisfied for
+the first time I'm doing something big enough to make me forget all
+failures and self-contempts. I know at last that I can measure up to the
+standard I have always coveted for myself. So don't worry yourselves
+about any note of hardship that you may interpret into my letters, for
+the deprivation is fully compensated for by the winged sense of
+exaltation one has.
+
+Things have been a little warm round us lately. A gun to our right,
+another to our rear and another to our front were knocked out with
+direct hits. We've got some of the chaps taking their meals with us now
+because their mess was all shot to blazes. There was an officer who was
+with me at the 53rd blown thirty feet into the air while I was watching.
+He picked himself up and insisted on carrying on, although his face was
+a mass of bruises. I walked in on the biggest engagement of the entire
+war the moment I came out here. There was no gradual breaking-in for me.
+My first trip to the front line was into a trench full of dead.
+
+Have you seen Lloyd George's great speech? I'm all with him. No matter
+what the cost and how many of us have to give our lives, this War must
+be so finished that war may be forever at an end. If the devils who plan
+wars could only see the abysmal result of their handiwork! Give them one
+day in the trenches under shell-fire when their lives aren't worth a
+five minutes' purchase--or one day carrying back the wounded through
+this tortured country, or one day in a Red Cross train. No one can
+imagine the damnable waste and Christlessness of this battering of
+human flesh. The only way that this War can be made holy is by making it
+so thorough that war will be finished for all time.
+
+Papa at least will be awake by now. How familiar the old house seems to
+me--I can think of the place of every picture. Do you set the victrola
+going now-a-days? I bet you play Boys in Khaki, Boys in Blue.
+
+Please send me anything in the way of eatables that the goodness of your
+hearts can imagine--also smokes.
+
+Later.
+
+I came back from the front-line all right and have since been hard at it
+firing. Your letters reached me in the midst of a bombardment--I read
+them in a kind of London fog of gun-powder smoke, with my steel helmet
+tilted back, in the interval of commanding my section through a
+megaphone.
+
+Don't suppose that I'm in any way unhappy--I'm as cheerful as a cricket
+and do twice as much hopping--I have to. There's something
+extraordinarily bracing about taking risks and getting away with
+it--especially when you know that you're contributing your share to a
+far-reaching result. My mother is the mother of a soldier now, and
+soldiers' mothers don't lie awake at night imagining--they just say a
+prayer for their sons and leave everything in God's hands. I'm sure
+you'd far rather I died than not play the man to the fullest of my
+strength. It isn't when you die that matters--it's how. Not but what I
+intend to return to Newark and make the house reek of tobacco smoke
+before I've done.
+
+We're continually in action now, and the casualty to B. has left us
+short-handed--moreover we're helping out another battery which has lost
+two officers. As you've seen by the papers, we've at last got the Hun on
+the run. Three hundred passed me the other day unescorted, coming in to
+give themselves up as prisoners. They're the dirtiest lot you ever set
+eyes on, and looked as though they hadn't eaten for months. I wish I
+could send you some souvenirs. But we can't send them out of France.
+
+I'm scribbling by candlelight and everything's jumping with the stamping
+of the guns. I wear the locket and cross all the time.
+
+ Yours with much love,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+October 13th, 1916.
+
+DEAR ONES:
+
+I have only time to write and assure you that I am safe. We're living in
+trenches at present--I have my sleeping bag placed on a stretcher to
+keep it fairly dry. By the time you get this we expect to be having a
+rest, as we've been hard at it now for an unusually long time. How I
+wish that I could tell you so many things that are big and vivid in my
+mind-but the censor--!
+
+Yesterday I had an exciting day. I was up forward when word came through
+that an officer still further forward was wounded and he'd been caught
+in a heavy enemy fire. I had only a kid telephonist with me, but we
+found a stretcher, went forward and got him out. The earth was hopping
+up and down like pop-corn in a frying pan. The unfortunate thing was
+that the poor chap died on the way out. It was only the evening before
+that we had dined together and he had told me what he was going to do
+with his next leave.
+
+ God bless you all,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+October 14th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST MOTHER:
+
+I'm still all right and well. To-day I had the funniest experience of my
+life--got caught in a Hun curtain of fire and had to lie on my tummy
+for two hours in a trench with the shells bursting five yards from
+me--and never a scratch. You know how I used to wonder what I'd do under
+such circumstances. Well, I laughed. All I could think of was the sleek
+people walking down Fifth Avenue, and the equally sleek crowds taking
+tea at the Waldorf. It struck me as ludicrous that I, who had been one
+of them, should be lying there lunchless. For a little while I was
+slightly deaf with the concussions.
+
+That poem keeps on going through my head,
+
+ Oh, to come home once more, when the dusk is falling,
+ To see the nursery lighted and the children's table spread;
+ "Mother, mother, mother!" the eager voices calling,
+ "The baby was so sleepy that he had to go to bed!"
+
+Wouldn't it be good, instead of sitting in a Hun dug-out?
+
+ Yours lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+October 15th, 1916.
+
+Dear Ones:
+
+We're still in action, but are in hopes that soon we may be moved to
+winter quarters. We've had our taste of mud, and are anxious to move
+into better quarters before we get our next. I think I told you that
+our O.C. had got wounded in the feet, and our right section commander
+got it in the shoulder a little earlier--so we're a bit short-handed and
+find ourselves with plenty of work.
+
+I have curiously lucid moments when recent happenings focus themselves
+in what seems to be their true perspective. The other night I was
+Forward Observation officer on one of our recent battlefields. I had to
+watch the front all night for signals, etc. There was a full white moon
+sailing serenely overhead, and when I looked at it I could almost fancy
+myself back in the old melancholy pomp of autumn woodlands where the
+leaves were red, not with the colour of men's blood. My mind went back
+to so many by-gone days-especially to three years ago. I seemed so
+vastly young then, upon reflection. For a little while I was full of
+regrets for many things wasted, and then I looked at the battlefield
+with its scattered kits and broken rifles. Nothing seemed to matter very
+much. A rat came out-then other rats. I stood there feeling
+extraordinarily aloof from all things that can hurt, and--you'll
+smile--I planned a novel. O, if I get back, how differently I shall
+write! When you've faced the worst in so many forms, you lose your fear
+and arrive at peace. There's a marvellous grandeur about all this
+carnage and desolation--men's souls rise above the distress--they have
+to in order to survive. When you see how cheap men's bodies are you
+cannot help but know that the body is the least part of personality.
+
+You can let up on your nervousness when you get this, for I shall almost
+certainly be in a safer zone. We've done more than our share and must be
+withdrawn soon. There's hardly a battery which does not deserve a dozen
+D.S.O.'s with a V.C. or two thrown in.
+
+It's 4.30 now--you'll be in church and, I hope, wearing my flowers. Wait
+till I come back and you shall go to church with the biggest bunch of
+roses that ever were pinned to a feminine chest. I wonder when that will
+be.
+
+We have heaps of humour out here. You should have seen me this morning,
+sitting on the gun-seat while my batman cut my hair. A sand-bag was
+spread over my shoulders in place of a towel and the gun-detachment
+stood round and gave advice. I don't know what I look like, for I
+haven't dared to gaze into my shaving mirror.
+
+ Good luck to us all,
+ CON
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+October 18th, 1910
+
+Dearest M.:
+
+I've come down to the lines to-day; to-morrow I go back again. I'm
+sitting alone in a deep chalk dug-out--it is 10 p.m. and I have lit a
+fire by splitting wood with a bayonet. Your letters from Montreal
+reached me yesterday. They came up in the water-cart when we'd all begun
+to despair of mail. It was wonderful the silence that followed while
+every one went back home for a little while, and most of them met their
+best girls. We've fallen into the habit of singing in parts. Jerusalem
+the Golden is a great favourite as we wait for our breakfast--we go
+through all our favourite songs, including Poor Old Adam Was My Father.
+Our greatest favourite is one which is symbolising the hopes that are in
+so many hearts on this greatest battlefield in history. We sing it under
+shell-fire as a kind of prayer, we sing it as we struggle knee-deep in
+the appalling mud, we sing it as we sit by a candle in our deep captured
+German dug-outs. It runs like this:
+
+ "There's a long, long trail a-winding
+ Into the land of my dreams,
+ Where the nightingales are singing
+ And a white moon beams:
+
+ There's a long, long night of waiting
+ Until my dreams all come true;
+ Till the day when I'll be going down
+ That long, long trail with you."
+
+You ought to be able to get it, and then you will be singing it when I'm
+doing it.
+
+No, I don't know what to ask from you for Christmas--unless a plum
+pudding and a general surprise box of sweets and food stuffs. If you
+don't mind my suggesting it, I wouldn't a bit mind a Christmas box at
+once--a schoolboy's tuck box. I wear the locket, cross, and tie all the
+time as kind of charms against danger--they give me the feeling of
+loving hands going with me everywhere.
+
+ God bless you.
+ Yours ever,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+October 23, 1916
+
+Dearest All:
+
+As you know I have been in action ever since I left England and am
+still. I've lived in various extemporised dwellings and am at present
+writing from an eight foot deep hole dug in the ground and covered over
+with galvanised iron and sand-bags. We have made ourselves very
+comfortable, and a fire is burning--I correct that--comfortable until it
+rains, I should say, when the water finds its own level. We have just
+finished with two days of penetrating rain and mist--in the trenches the
+mud was up to my knees, so you can imagine the joy of wading down these
+shell-torn tunnels. Good thick socks have been priceless.
+
+You'll be pleased to hear that two days ago I was made Right Section
+Commander--which is fairly rapid promotion. It means a good deal more
+work and responsibility, but it gives me a contact with the men which I
+like.
+
+I don't know when I'll get leave--not for another two months anyway. It
+would be ripping if I had word in time for you to run over to England
+for the brief nine days.
+
+I plan novels galore and wonder whether I shall ever write them the way
+I see them now. My imagination is to an extent crushed by the
+stupendousness of reality. I think I am changed in some stern spiritual
+way--stripped of flabbiness. I am perhaps harder--I can't say. That I
+should be a novelist seems unreasonable--it's so long since I had my own
+way in the world and met any one on artistic terms. But I have enough
+ego left to be very interested in my book. And by the way, when we're
+out at the front and the battery wants us to come in they simply phone
+up the password, "Slaves of Freedom," the meaning of which we all
+understand.
+
+You are ever in my thoughts, and I pray the day may not be far distant
+when we meet again.
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+October 27th, 1916.
+
+Dearest Family:
+
+All to-day I've been busy registering our guns. There is little chance
+of rest--one would suppose that we intended to end the war by spring.
+
+Two new officers joined our battery from England, which makes the work
+lighter. One of them brings the news that D., one of the two officers
+who crossed over from England with me and wandered through France with
+me in search of our Division, is already dead. He was a corking fellow,
+and I'm very sorry. He was caught by a shell in the head and legs.
+
+I am still living in a sand-bagged shell-hole eight feet beneath the
+level of the ground. I have a sleeping bag with an eider-down inside it,
+for my bed; it is laid on a stretcher, which is placed in a roofed-in
+trench. For meals, when there isn't a block on the roads, we do very
+well; we subscribe pretty heavily to the mess, and have an officer back
+at the wagon-lines to do our purchasing. When we move forward into a new
+position, however, we go pretty short, as roads have to be built for the
+throng of traffic. Most of what we eat is tinned--and I never want to
+see tinned salmon again when this war is ended. I have a personal
+servant, a groom and two horses--but haven't been on a horse for seven
+weeks on account of being in action. We're all pretty fed up with
+continuous firing and living so many hours in the trenches. The way
+artillery is run to-day an artillery lieutenant is more in the trenches
+than an infantryman--the only thing he doesn't do is to go over the
+parapet in an attack. And one of our chaps did that the other day,
+charging the Huns with a bar of chocolate in one hand and a revolver in
+the other. I believe he set a fashion which will be imitated. Three
+times in my experience I have seen the infantry jump out of their
+trenches and go across. It's a sight never to be forgotten. One time
+there were machine guns behind me and they sent a message to me, asking
+me to lie down and take cover. That was impossible, as I was observing
+for my brigade, so I lay on the parapet till the bullets began to fall
+too close for comfort, then I dodged out into a shell-hole with the
+German barrage bursting all around me, and had a most gorgeous view of
+a modern attack. That was some time ago, so you needn't be nervous.
+
+Have I mentioned rum to you? I never tasted it to my knowledge until I
+came out here. We get it served us whenever we're wet. It's the one
+thing which keeps a man alive in the winter--you can sleep when you're
+drenched through and never get a cold if you take it.
+
+At night, by a fire, eight feet underground, we sing all the dear old
+songs. We manage a kind of glee--Clementina, The Long, Long Trail, Three
+Blind Mice, Long, Long Ago, Rock of Ages. Hymns are quite favourites.
+
+Don't worry about me; your prayers weave round me a mantle of defence.
+
+Yours with more love than I can write,
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+October 31st, 1916.
+Hallowe'en.
+
+Dearest People:
+
+Once more I'm taking the night-firing and so have a chance to write to
+you. I got letters from you all, and they each deserve answers, but I
+have so little time to write. We've been having beastly weather--drowned
+out of our little houses below ground, with rivers running through our
+beds. The mud is once more up to our knees and gets into whatever we
+eat. The wonder is that we keep healthy--I suppose it's the open air. My
+throat never troubles me and I'm free from colds in spite of wet feet.
+The main disadvantage is that we rarely get a chance to wash or change
+our clothes. Your ideas of an army with its buttons all shining is quite
+erroneous; we look like drunk and disorderlies who have spent the night
+in the gutter--and we have the same instinct for fighting.
+
+In the trenches the other day I heard mother's Suffolk tongue and had a
+jolly talk with a chap who shared many of my memories. It was his first
+trip in and the Huns were shelling badly, but he didn't seem at all
+upset.
+
+We're still hard at it and have given up all idea of a rest--the only
+way we'll get one is with a blighty. You say how often you tell
+yourselves that the same moon looks down on me; it does, but on a scene
+how different! We advance over old battlefields--everything is blasted.
+If you start digging, you turn up what's left of something human. If
+there were any grounds for superstition, surely the places in which I
+have been should be ghost-haunted. One never thinks about it. For myself
+I have increasingly the feeling that I am protected by your prayers; I
+tell myself so when I am in danger.
+
+Here I sit in an old sweater and muddy breeches, the very reverse of
+your picture of a soldier, and I imagine to myself your receipt of this.
+Our chief interest is to enquire whether milk, jam and mail have come up
+from the wagon-lines; it seems a faery-tale that there are places where
+milk and jam can be had for the buying. See how simple we become.
+
+Poor little house at Kootenay! I hate to think of it empty. We had such
+good times there twelve months ago. They have a song here to a nursery
+rhyme lilt, Après le Guerre Finis; it goes on to tell of all the good
+times we'll have when the war is ended. Every night I invent a new story
+of my own celebration of the event, usually, as when I was a kiddie,
+just before I fall asleep--only it doesn't seem possible that the war
+will ever end.
+
+I hear from the boys very regularly. There's just the chance that I may
+get leave to London in the New Year and meet them before they set out. I
+always picture you with your heads high in the air. I'm glad to think of
+you as proud because of the pain we've made you suffer.
+
+Once again I shall think of you on Papa's birthday. I don't think this
+will be the saddest he will have to remember. It might have been if we
+three boys had still all been with him. If I were a father, I would
+prefer at all costs that my sons should be men. What good comrades we've
+always been, and what long years of happy times we have in memory--all
+the way down from a little boy in a sailor-suit to Kootenay!
+
+I fell asleep in the midst of this. I've now got to go out and start the
+other gun firing. With very much love.
+
+ Yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+November 1st, 1916.
+
+My Dearest M.:
+
+Peace after a storm! Your letter was not brought up by the water-wagon
+this evening, but by an orderly--the mud prevented wheel-traffic. I was
+just sitting down to read it when Fritz began to pay us too much
+attention. I put down your letter, grabbed my steel helmet, rushed out
+to see where the shells were falling, and then cleared my men to a safer
+area. (By the way, did I tell you that I had been made Right Section
+Commander?) After about half an hour I came back and settled down by a
+fire made of smashed ammunition boxes in a stove borrowed from a ruined
+cottage. I'm always ashamed that my letters contain so little news and
+are so uninteresting. This thing is so big and dreadful that it does not
+bear putting down on paper. I read the papers with the accounts of
+singing soldiers and other rubbish; they depict us as though we were a
+lot of hair-brained idiots instead of men fully realising our danger,
+who plod on because it's our duty. I've seen a good many men killed by
+now--we all have--consequently the singing soldier story makes us smile.
+We've got a big job; we know that we've got to "Carry On" whatever
+happens--so we wear a stern grin and go to it. There's far more heroism
+in the attitude of men out here than in the footlight attitude that
+journalists paint for the public. It isn't a singing matter to go on
+firing a gun when gun-pits are going up in smoke within sight of you.
+
+What a terrible desecration war is! You go out one week and look through
+your glasses at a green, smiling country-little churches, villages
+nestling among woods, white roads running across a green carpet; next
+week you see nothing but ruins and a country-side pitted with
+shell-holes. All night the machine guns tap like rivet-ting machines
+when a New York sky-scraper is in the building. Then suddenly in the
+night a bombing attack will start, and the sky grows white with signal
+rockets. Orders come in for artillery retaliation, and your guns begin
+to stamp the ground like stallions; in the darkness on every side you
+can see them snorting fire. Then stillness again, while Death counts his
+harvest; the white rockets grow fainter and less hysterical. For an hour
+there is blackness.
+
+My batman consoles himself with singing,
+
+ "Pack up your troubles in your old kit-bag,
+ And smile, smile, smile."
+
+There's a lot in his philosophy--it's best to go on smiling even when
+some one who was once your pal lies forever silent in his blanket on a
+stretcher.
+
+The great uplifting thought is that we have proved ourselves men. In our
+death we set a standard which in ordinary life we could never have
+followed. Inevitably we should have sunk below our highest self. Here we
+know that the world will remember us and that our loved ones, in spite
+of tears, will be proud of us. What God will say to us we cannot
+guess--but He can't be too hard on men who did their duty. I think we
+all feel that trivial former failures are washed out by this final
+sacrifice. When little M. used to recite "Breathes there a man with soul
+so dead, who never to himself had said, 'This is my own, my native
+land,'" I never thought that I should have the chance that has now been
+given to me. I feel a great and solemn gratitude that I have been
+thought worthy. Life has suddenly become effective and worthy by reason
+of its carelessness of death.
+
+By the way, that Princeton man I mentioned so long ago was killed forty
+yards away from me on my first trip into the trenches. Probably G. M'C.
+and his other friends know by now. He was the first man I ever saw
+snuffed out.
+
+I'm wearing your mittens and find them a great comfort. I'll look
+forward to some more of your socks--I can do with plenty of them. If any
+of your friends are making things for soldiers, I wish you'd get them to
+send them to this battery, as they would be gratefully accepted by the
+men.
+
+I wish I could come to _The Music Master_ with you. I wonder how long
+till we do all those intimately family things together again.
+
+Good-bye, my dearest M. I live for home letters and am rarely
+disappointed.
+
+God bless you, and love to you all.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+November 4th, 1916.
+
+
+My Dearest Mother:
+
+This morning I was wakened up in the gunpit where I was sleeping by the
+arrival of the most wonderful parcel of mail. It was really a kind of
+Christmas morning for me. My servant had lit a fire in a punctured
+petrol can and the place looked very cheery. First of all entered an
+enormous affair, which turned out to be a stove which C. had sent. Then
+there was a sand-bag containing all your gifts. You may bet I made for
+that first, and as each knot was undone remembered the loving hands that
+had done it up. I am now going up to a twenty-four-hour shift of
+observing, and shall take up the malted milk and some blocks of
+chocolate for a hot drink. It somehow makes you seem very near to me to
+receive things packed with your hands. When I go forward I shall also
+take candles and a copy of _Anne Veronica_ with me, so that if I get a
+chance I can forget time.
+
+Always when I write to you odds and ends come to mind, smacking of local
+colour. After an attack some months ago I met a solitary private
+wandering across a shell-torn field, I watched him and thought something
+was wrong by the aimlessness of his progress. When I spoke to him, he
+looked at me mistily and said, "Dead men. Moonlit road." He kept on
+repeating the phrase, and it was all that one could get out of him.
+Probably the dead men and the moonlit road were the last sights he had
+seen before he went insane.
+
+Another touching thing happened two days ago. A Major turned up who had
+travelled fifty miles by motor lorries and any conveyance he could pick
+up on the road. He had left his unit to come to have a glimpse of our
+front-line trench where his son was buried. The boy had died there some
+days ago in going over the parapet. I persuaded him that he ought not to
+go alone, and that in any case it wasn't a healthy spot. At last he
+consented to let me take him to a point from which he could see the
+ground over which his son had attacked and led his men. The sun was
+sinking behind us. He stood there very straightly, peering through my
+glasses--and then forgot all about me and began speaking to his son in
+childish love-words. "Gone West," they call dying out here--we rarely
+say that a man is dead. I found out afterwards that it was the boy's
+mother the Major was thinking of when he pledged himself to visit the
+grave in the front-line.
+
+But there are happier things than that. For instance, you should hear
+us singing at night in our dug-out--every tune we ever learnt, I
+believe. Silver Threads Among the Gold, In the Gloaming, The Star of
+Bethlehem, I Hear You Calling Me, interspersed with Everybody Works but
+Father, and Poor Old Adam, etc.
+
+I wish I could know in time when I get my leave for you to come over and
+meet me. I'm going to spend my nine days in the most glorious ways
+imaginable. To start with I won't eat anything that's canned and, to go
+on, I won't get out of bed till I feel inclined. And if you're there--!
+
+Dreams and nonsense! God bless you all and keep us near and safe though
+absent. Alive or "Gone West" I shall never be far from you; you may
+depend on that--and I shall always hope to feel you brave and happy.
+This is a great game--cheese-mites pitting themselves against all the
+splendours of Death. Please, please write well ahead, so that I may not
+miss your Christmas letters.
+
+ Yours lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+November 6th, 1916.
+
+
+My Dear Ones:
+
+Such a wonderful day it has been--I scarcely know where to start. I came
+down last night from twenty-four hours in the mud, where I had been
+observing. I'd spent the night in a hole dug in the side of the trench
+and a dead Hun forming part of the roof. I'd sat there re-living so many
+things--the ecstatic moments of my life when I first touched fame--and
+my feet were so cold that I could not feel them, so I thought all the
+harder of the pleasant things of the past. Then, as I say, I came back
+to the gun position to learn that I was to have one day off at the back
+of the lines. You can't imagine what that meant to me--one day in a
+country that is green, one day where there is no shell-fire, one day
+where you don't turn up corpses with your tread! For two months I have
+never left the guns except to go forward and I have never been from
+under shell-fire. All night long as I have slept the ground had been
+shaken by the stamping of the guns--and now after two months, to come
+back to comparative normality! The reason for this privilege being
+granted was that the powers that he had come to the conclusion that it
+was time I had a bath. Since I sleep in my clothes and water is too
+valuable for washing anything but the face and hands, they were probably
+right in their guess at my condition.
+
+So with the greatest holiday of my life in prospect I went to the empty
+gunpit in which I sleep, and turned in. This morning I set out early
+with my servant, tramping back across the long, long battlefields which
+our boys have won. The mud was knee-deep in places, but we floundered on
+till we came to our old and deserted gun-position where my horses waited
+for me. From there I rode to the wagon-lines--the first time I've sat a
+horse since I came into action. Far behind me the thunder of winged
+murder grew more faint. The country became greener; trees even had
+leaves upon them which fluttered against the grey-blue sky. It was
+wonderful--like awaking from an appalling nightmare. My little beast was
+fresh and seemed to share my joy, for she stepped out bravely.
+
+When I arrived at the wagon-lines I would not wait--I longed to see
+something even greener and quieter. My groom packed up some oats and
+away we went again. My first objective was the military baths; I lay in
+hot water for half-an-hour and read the advertisements of my book. As I
+lay there, for the first time since I've been out, I began to get a
+half-way true perspective of myself. What's left of the egotism of the
+author came to life, and--now laugh--I planned my next novel--planned it
+to the sound of men singing, because they were clean for the first time
+in months. I left my towels and soap with a military policeman, by the
+roadside, and went prancing off along country roads in search of the
+almost forgotten places where people don't kill one another. Was it
+imagination? There seemed to me to be a different look in the faces of
+the men I met--for the time being they were neither hunters nor hunted.
+There were actually cows in the fields. At one point, where pollarded
+trees stand like a Hobbema sketch against the sky, a group of officers
+were coursing a hare, following a big black hound on horseback. We lost
+our way. A drenching rainstorm fell over us--we didn't care; and we saw
+as we looked back a most beautiful thing--a rainbow over green fields.
+It was as romantic as the first rainbow in childhood.
+
+All day I have been seeing lovely and familiar things as though for the
+first time. I've been a sort of Lazarus, rising out of his tomb and
+praising God at the sound of a divine voice. You don't know how
+exquisite a ploughed field can look, especially after rain, unless you
+have feared that you might never see one again.
+
+I came to a grey little village, where civilians were still living, and
+then to a gate and a garden. In the cottage was a French peasant woman
+who smiled, patted my hair because it was curly, and chattered
+interminably. The result was a huge omelette and a bottle of champagne.
+Then came a touch of naughtiness--a lady visitor with a copy of _La Vie
+Parisienne_, which she promptly bestowed on the English soldier. I read
+it, and dreamt of the time when I should walk the Champs Elysées again.
+It was growing dusk when I turned back to the noise of battle. There was
+a white moon in a milky sky. Motor-bikes fled by me, great lorries
+driven by Jehus from London buses, and automobiles which too poignantly
+had been Strand taxis and had taken lovers home from the Gaiety. I
+jogged along thinking very little, but supremely happy. Now I'm back at
+the wagon-line; to-morrow I go back to the guns. Meanwhile I write to
+you by a guttering candle.
+
+Life, how I love you! What a wonderful kindly thing I could make of you
+to-night. Strangely the vision has come to me of all that you mean. Now
+I could write. So soon you may go from me or be changed into a form of
+existence which all my training has taught me to dread. After death is
+there only nothingness? I think that for those who have missed love in
+this life there must be compensations--the little children whom they
+ought to have had, perhaps. To-day, after so many weeks, I have seen
+little children again.
+
+And yet, so strange a havoc does this war work that, if I have to "Go
+West," I shall go _proudly_ and quietly. I have seen too many men die
+bravely to make a fuss if my turn comes. A mixed passenger list old
+Father Charon must have each night--Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Huns.
+To-morrow I shall have another sight of the greenness and then--the
+guns.
+
+I don't know whether I have been able to make any of my emotions clear
+to you in my letters. Terror has a terrible fascination. Up to now I
+have always been afraid--afraid of small fears. At last I meet fear
+itself and it stings my pride into an unpremeditated courage.
+
+I've just had a pile of letters from you all. How ripping it is to be
+remembered! Letters keep one civilised.
+
+It's late and I'm very tired. God bless you each and all.
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+November 15th, 1916.
+
+
+Dear Father:
+
+I've owed you a letter for some time, but I've been getting very little
+leisure. You can't send steel messages to the Kaiser and love-notes to
+your family in the same breath.
+
+I am amazed at the spirit you three are showing and almighty proud that
+you can muster such courage. I suppose none of us quite realised our
+strength till it came to the test. There was a time when we all doubted
+our own heroism. I think we were typical of our age. Every novel of the
+past ten years has been more or less a study in sentiment and
+self-distrust. We used to wonder what kind of stuff Drake's men were
+made of that they could jest while they died. We used to contrast
+ourselves with them to our own disfavour. Well, we know now that when
+there's a New World to be discovered we can still rise up reincarnated
+into spiritual pirates. It wasn't the men of our age who were at fault,
+but the New World that was lacking. Our New World is the Kingdom of
+Heroism, the doors of which are flung so wide that the meanest of us may
+enter. I know men out here who are the dependable daredevils of their
+brigades, who in peace times were nuisances and as soon as peace is
+declared will become nuisances again. At the moment they're fine,
+laughing at Death and smiling at the chance of agony. There's a man I
+know of who had a record sheet of crimes. When he was out of action he
+was always drunk and up for office. To get rid of him, they put him into
+the trench mortars and within a month he had won his D.C.M. He came out
+and went on the spree--this particular spree consisted in stripping a
+Highland officer of his kilts on a moonlight night. For this he was
+sentenced to several months in a military prison, but asked to be
+allowed to serve his sentence in the trenches. He came out from his
+punishment a King's sergeant--which means that whatever he did nobody
+could degrade him. He got this for lifting his trench mortar over the
+parapet when all the detachment were killed. Carrying it out into a
+shell-hole, he held back the Hun attack and saved the situation. He got
+drunk again, and again chose to be returned to the trenches. This time
+his head was blown off while he was engaged in a special feat of
+gallantry. What are you to say to such men? Ordinarily they'd be
+blackguards, but war lifts them into splendour. In the same way you see
+mild men, timid men, almost girlish men, carrying out duties which in
+other wars would have won V.C.'s. I don't think the soul of courage
+ever dies out of the race any more than the capacity for love. All it
+means is that the occasion is not present. For myself I try to analyse
+my emotions; am I simply numb, or do I imitate other people's coolness
+and shall I fear life again when the war is ended? There is no
+explanation save the great army phrase "Carry on." We "carry on"
+because, if we don't, we shall let other men down and put their lives in
+danger. And there's more than that--we all want to live up to the
+standard that prompted us to come.
+
+One talks about splendour--but war isn't splendid except in the
+individual sense. A man by his own self-conquest can make it splendid
+for himself, but in the massed sense it's squalid. There's nothing
+splendid about a battlefield when the fight is ended--shreds of what
+once were men, tortured, levelled landscapes--the barbaric loneliness of
+Hell. I shall never forget my first dead man. He was a signalling
+officer, lying in the dawn on a muddy hill. I thought he was asleep at
+first, but when I looked more closely, I saw that his shoulder blade was
+showing white through his tunic. He was wearing black boots. It's odd,
+but the sight of black boots have the same effect on me now that black
+and white stripes had in childhood. I have the superstitious feeling
+that to wear them would bring me bad luck.
+
+Tonight we've been singing in parts, Back in the Dear Dead Days Beyond
+Recall--a mournful kind of ditty to sing under the circumstances--so
+mournful that we had to have a game of five hundred to cheer us up.
+
+It's now nearly 2 a.m., and I have to go out to the guns again before I
+go to bed. I carry your letters about in my pockets and read them at odd
+intervals in all kinds of places that you can't imagine.
+
+Cheer up and remember that I'm quite happy. I wish you could be with me
+for just one day to understand.
+
+ Yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+December 3rd, 1916.
+
+Dear Boys:
+
+By this time you will be all through your exams and I hope have both
+passed. It'll be splendid if you can go together to the same station.
+You envy me, you say; well, I rather envy you. I'd like to be with you.
+You, at least, don't have Napoleon's fourth antagonist with which to
+contend--mud. But at present I'm clean and billeted in an estaminet, in
+a not too bad little village. There's an old mill and still older
+church, and the usual farmhouses with the indispensable pile of manure
+under the front windows. We shall have plenty of hard work here, licking
+our men into shape and re-fitting.
+
+You know how I've longed to sleep between sheets; I can now, but find
+them so cold that I still use my sleeping bag--such is human
+inconsistency. But yesterday I had a boiling bath--as good a bath as
+could be found in a New York hotel--and I am CLEAN.
+
+I woke up this morning to hear some one singing Casey
+Jones--consequently I thought of former Christmases. My mind has been
+travelling back very much of late. Suddenly I see something here which
+reminds me of the time when E. and I were at Lisieux, or even of our
+Saturday excursions to Nelson when we were all together at the ranch.
+
+Did I tell you that B., our officer who was wounded two months ago, has
+just returned to us. This morning he got news that his young brother has
+been killed in the place which we have left. I wonder when we shall grow
+tired of stabbing and shooting and killing. It seems to me that the war
+cannot end in less than two years.
+
+I have made myself nice to the Brigade interpreter and he has found me
+a delightful room with electric light and a fire. It's in an old
+farmhouse with a brick terrace in front. My room is on the ground floor
+and tile-paved. The chairs are rush-bottomed and there are old quaint
+china plates on the shelves. There is also a quite charming
+mademoiselle. So you see, you don't need to pity me any more.
+
+Just at present I'm busy getting up the Brigade Christmas Entertainment.
+The Colonel asked me to do it, otherwise I should have said _no_, as I
+want all the time I can get to myself. You can't think how jolly it is
+to sit again in a room which is temporarily yours after living in
+dug-outs, herded side by side with other men. I can be _me_ now, and not
+a soldier of thousands when I write. You shall hear from me again soon.
+Hope you're having a ripping time in London.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+December 5th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST M.:
+
+I've just come in from my last tour of inspection as orderly officer,
+and it's close on midnight. I'm getting this line off to you to let you
+know that I expect to get my nine days' leave about the beginning of
+January. How I wish it were possible to have you in London when I
+arrive, or, failing that, to spend my leave in New York!
+
+To-morrow I make an early start on horseback for a market of the
+old-fashioned sort which is held at a town near by. Can you dimly
+picture me with my groom, followed by a mess-cart, going from stall to
+stall and bartering with the peasants? It'll be rather good fun and
+something quite out of my experience.
+
+Christmas will be over by the time you get this, and I do hope that you
+had a good one. I paused to talk to the other officers; they say that
+they are sure that you are very beautiful and have a warm heart, and
+would like to send them a five-storey layer cake, half a dozen bottles
+of port and one Paris chef. At present I am the Dives of the mess and
+dole out luxuries to these Lazaruses.
+
+Good-bye for the present.
+
+ Yours ever lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+December 6th, 1916.
+
+
+Dearest M.:
+
+I've just undone your Christmas parcels, and already I am wearing the
+waistcoat and socks, and my mouth is hot with the ginger.
+
+I expect to get leave for England on January 10th. I do wish it might be
+possible for some of you to cross the ocean and be in London with
+me--and I don't see what there is to prevent you. Unless the war ends
+sooner than any of us expect, it is not likely that I shall get another
+leave in less than nine months. So, if you want to come and if there's
+time when you receive this letter, just hop on a boat and let's see what
+London looks like together.
+
+I wonder what kind of a Christmas you'll have. I shall picture it all.
+You may hear me tiptoeing up the stairs if you listen very hard. Where
+does the soul go in sleep? Surely mine flies back to where all of you
+dear people are.
+
+I came back to my farm yesterday to find a bouquet of paper flowers at
+the head of my bed with a note pinned on it. Over my fire-place was hung
+a pathetic pair of farm-girls' heavy Sunday boots, all brightly
+polished, with two other notes pinned on them. The Feast of St. Nicholas
+on December 7th is an opportunity for unmarried men to be reminded that
+there are unmarried girls in the world--wherefore the flowers. I enclose
+the notes. Keep them,--they may be useful for a book some day.
+
+I'm having a pretty good rest, and am still in my old farmhouse.
+
+ Love to all.
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+December 15th, 1916.
+
+Dearest All:
+
+At the present I'm just where mother hoped I'd be--in a deep dug-out
+about twenty feet down--we're trying to get a fire lighted, and
+consequently the place is smoked out. Where I'll be for Christmas I
+don't know, but I hope by then to be in billets. I've just come back
+from the trenches, where I've been observing. The mud is not nearly so
+bad where I am now, and with a few days' more work, we should be quite
+comfortable. You'll have received my cable about my getting leave
+soon--I'm wondering whether the Atlantic is sufficiently quiet for any
+of you to risk a crossing.
+
+Poor Basil! Your letter was the first news I got of his death. I must
+have watched the attack in which he lost his life. One wonders now how
+it was that some instinct did not warn me that one of those khaki dots
+jumping out of the trenches was the cousin who stayed with us in London.
+
+I'm wondering what this mystery of the German Chancellor is all
+about--some peace proposals, I suppose--which are sure to prove
+bombastic and unacceptable. It seems to us out here as though the war
+must go on forever. Like a boy's dream of the far-off freedom of
+manhood, the day appears when we shall step out into the old liberty of
+owning our own lives. What a celebration we'll have when I come home! I
+can't quite grasp the joy of it.
+
+I've got to get this letter off quite soon if it's to go to-day. It
+ought to reach, you by January 12th or thereabouts. You may be sure my
+thoughts will have been with you on Christmas day. I shall look back and
+remember all the by-gone good times and then plan for Christmas, 1917.
+God keep us all.
+
+ Ever yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+December 18th, 1916.
+
+My Dearest M.:
+
+I always feel when I write a joint letter to the family that I'm
+cheating each one of you, but it's so very difficult to get time to
+write as often as I'd like. It's a week to Christmas and I picture the
+beginnings of the preparations. I can look back and remember so many
+such preparations, especially when we were kiddies in London. What good
+times one has in a life! I've been sitting with my groom by the fire
+to-night while he dried my clothes. I've mentioned him to you before as
+having lived in Nelson, and worked at the Silver King mine. We both grew
+ecstatic over British Columbia.
+
+I am hoping all the time that the boys may be in England at the time I
+get my leave--I hardly dare hope that any of you will be there. But it
+would he grand if you could manage it--I long very much to see you all
+again. I can just imagine my first month home again. I shan't let any of
+you work. I shall be the incurable boy. I've spent the best part of
+to-day out in No Man's Land, within seventy yards of the Huns. Quite an
+experience, I assure you, and one that I wouldn't have missed for
+worlds. I'll have heaps to write into novels one day--the vividest kind
+of local colour. Just at present I have nothing to read but the
+Christmas number of the _Strand_. It makes me remember the time when we
+children raced for the latest development of _The Hound of the
+Baskervilles_, and so many occasions when I had one of "those sniffy
+colds" and sat by the Highbury fire with a book. Good days, those!
+
+I'm just off to bed now, and will finish this to-morrow. Bed is my
+greatest luxury nowadays.
+
+December 19th.
+
+The book and chocolate just came, and a bunch of New York papers. All
+were most welcome. I was longing for something to read. To-morrow I have
+to go forward to observe. Two of our officers are on leave, so it makes
+the rest of us work pretty hard. What do you think of the Kaiser's
+absurd peace proposals? The man must be mad.
+
+ The best of love,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+December 20th, 1916.
+
+Dear Mr. T.:
+
+Just back from a successful argument with Fritz, to find your kind good
+wishes. It's rather a lark out here, though a lark which may turn
+against you any time. I laugh a good deal more than I mope. Anything
+really horrible has a ludicrous side--it's like Mark Twain's humour--a
+gross exaggeration. The maddest thing of all to me is that a person so
+willing to be amiable as I am should be out here killing people for
+principle's sake. There's no rhyme or reason--it can't be argued. Dimly
+one thinks he sees what is right and leaves father and mother and home,
+as though it were for the Kingdom of Heaven's sake. Perhaps it is. If
+one didn't pin his faith to that "perhaps"--. One can't explain.
+
+A merry Christmas to you.
+ Yours very sincerely,
+ CONINGSBY DAWSON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+December 20th, 1916.
+
+Dear Mr. A.D.:
+
+I've just come in from an argument with Fritz when your chocolate formed
+my meal. You were very kind to think of me and to send it, and you were
+extraordinarily understanding in the letter that you sent me. One's life
+out here is like a pollarded tree--all the lower branches are gone--one
+gazes on great nobilities, on the fascinating horror of Eternity
+sometimes--I said horror, but it's often fine in its spaciousness--one
+gazes on many inverted splendours of Titans, but it's giddy work being
+so high and rarefied, and all the gentle past seems gone. That's why it
+is pleasant in this grimy anonymity of death and courage to get
+reminders, such as your letter, that one was once localised and had a
+familiar history. If I come back, I shall be like Rip Van Winkle, or a
+Robinson Crusoe--like any and all of the creatures of legend and history
+to whom abnormality has grown to seem normal. If you can imagine
+yourself living in a world in which every day is a demonstration of a
+Puritan's conception of what happens when the last trump sounds, then
+you have some idea of my queer situation. One has come to a point when
+death seems very inconsiderable and only failure to do one's duty is an
+utter loss. Love and the future, and all the sweet and tender dreams of
+by-gone days are like a house in which the blinds are lowered and from
+which the sight has gone. Landscapes have lost their beauty, everything
+God-made and man-made is destroyed except man's power to endure with a
+smile the things he once most dreaded, because he believes that only so
+may he be righteous in his own eyes. How one has longed for that sure
+confidence in the petty failings of little living--the confidence to
+believe that he can stand up and suffer for principle! God has given all
+men who are out here that opportunity--the supremest that can be hoped
+for--so, in spite of exile, Christmas for most of us will be a happy
+day. Does one see more truly life's worth on a battlefield? I often ask
+myself that question. Is the contempt that is hourly shown for life the
+real standard of life's worth? I shrug my shoulders at my own
+unanswerable questions--all I know is that I move daily with men who
+have everything to live for who, nevertheless, are urged by an
+unconscious magnanimity to die. I don't think any of our dead pity
+themselves--but they would have done so if they had faltered in their
+choice. One lives only from sunrise to sunrise, but there's a more real
+happiness in this brief living than I ever knew before, because it is so
+exactingly worth while.
+
+Thank you again for your kindness.
+ Very sincerely yours,
+ C.D.
+
+The suggestion that we might all meet in London in January, 1917, was a
+hope rather than an expectation. We received a cable from France on
+Sunday, December 17th, 1916, and left New York on December 30th. We were
+met in London by the two sailor-sons, who were expecting appointments at
+any moment, and Coningsby arrived late in the evening of January 13th.
+He was unwell when he arrived, having had a near touch of pneumonia. The
+day before he left the front he had been in action, with a temperature
+of 104. There were difficulties about getting his leave at the exact
+time appointed, but these he overcame by exchanging leave with a
+brother-officer. He travelled from the Front all night in a windowless
+train, and at Calais was delayed by a draft of infantry which he had to
+take over to England. The consequence of this delay was that the meeting
+at the railway station, of which he had so long dreamed, did not come
+off. We spent a long day, going from station to station, misled by
+imperfect information as to the arrival of troop trains. At Victoria
+Station we saw two thousand troops arrive on leave, men caked with
+trench-mud, but he was not among them. We reluctantly returned to our
+hotel in the late afternoon and gave up expecting him. There was all the
+time a telegram at the hotel from him, giving the exact place and time
+of his arrival, but it was not delivered until it was too late to meet
+him. He arrived at ten o'clock, and at the same time his two brothers,
+who had been summoned in the morning to Southampton, entered the hotel,
+having been granted special leave to return to London. A night's rest
+did wonders for Coningsby, and the next day his spirits were as high as
+in the old days of joyous holiday. During the next eight days we lived
+at a tense pitch of excitement. We went to theatres, dined in
+restaurants, met friends, and heard from his lips a hundred details of
+his life which could not be communicated in letters. We were all
+thrilled by the darkened heroic London through which we moved, the
+London which bore its sorrows so proudly, and went about its daily life
+with such silent courage. We visited old friends to whom the war had
+brought irreparable bereavements, but never once heard the voice of
+self-pity, of murmur or complaint. To me it was an incredible England;
+an England purged of all weakness, stripped of flabbiness, regenerated
+by sacrifice. I had dreamed of no such transformation by anything I had
+read in American newspapers and magazines. I think no one can imagine
+the completeness of this rebirth of the soul of England who has not
+dwelt, if only for a few days, among its people.
+
+Coningsby's brief leave expired all too soon. We saw him off from
+Folkestone, and while we were saying good-bye to him, his two brothers
+were on their way to their distant appointments with the Royal Naval
+Motor Patrol in the North of Scotland. We left Liverpool for New York on
+January 27th, and while at sea heard of the diplomatic break between
+America and Germany. The news was received on board the _S.S. St. Paul_
+with rejoicing. It was Sunday, and the religious service on board
+concluded with the Star-Spangled Banner.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+December 28th, 1916.
+
+Dearest All:
+
+I'm writing you this letter because I expect to-night is a busy-packing
+one with you. The picture is in my mind of you all. How splendid it is
+of you to come! I never thought you would really, not even in my wildest
+dream of optimism. There have been so many times when I scarcely thought
+that I would ever see you again--now the unexpected and hoped-for
+happens. It's ripping!
+
+I've put in an application for special leave in case the ordinary leave
+should be cut off. I think I'm almost certain to arrive by the 11th.
+Won't we have a time? I wonder what we'll want to do most--sit quiet or
+go to theatres? The nine days of freedom--the wonderful nine days--will
+pass with most tragic quickness. But they'll be days to remember as long
+as life lasts.
+
+Shall I see you standing on the station when I puff into London--or will
+it be Folkestone where we meet--or shall I arrive before you? I somehow
+think it will be you who will meet me at the barrier at Charing Cross,
+and we'll taxi through the darkened streets down the Strand, and back to
+our privacy. How impossible it sounds--like a vision of heart's desire
+in the night.
+
+Far, far away I see the fine home-coming, like a lamp burning in a dark
+night. I expect we shall all go off our heads with joy and be madder
+than ever. Who in the old London days would have imagined such a nine
+days of happiness in the old places as we are to have together.
+
+ God bless you, till we meet,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+January 4th, 1917.
+
+10.30 p.m.
+
+MY DEAREST ONES:
+
+This letter is written to welcome you to England, but I may be with you
+when it is opened. It was glorious news to hear that you were coming--I
+was only playing a forlorn bluff when I sent those cables. You're on the
+sea at present and should be half way over. Our last trip over together
+you marvelled at the apparent indifference of the soldiers on board, and
+now you're coming to meet one of your own fresh from the Front. A
+change!
+
+O what a nine days we're going to have together--the most wonderful that
+were ever spent. I dream of them, tell myself tales about them, live
+them over many times in imagination before they are realised. Sometimes
+I'm going to have no end of sleep, sometimes I'm going to keep awake
+every second, sometimes I'm going to sit quietly by a fire, and
+sometimes I'm going to taxi all the time. I can't fit your faces into
+the picture--it seems too unbelievable that we are to be together once
+again. To-day I've been staging our meeting--if you arrive first, and
+then if I arrive before you, and lastly if we both hit London on the
+same day. You mustn't expect me to be a sane person. You're three
+rippers to do this--and I hope you'll have an easy journey. The only
+ghost is the last day, when the leave train pulls out of Charing Cross.
+But we'll do that smiling, too; C'est la guerre.
+
+ Yours always and ever, CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+January 6th, 1917.
+
+MY DEAR ONES:
+
+I have just seen a brother officer aboard the ex-London bus en route for
+Blighty. How I wished I could have stepped on board that ex-London
+perambulator to-night! "Pickerdilly Cirkuss, 'Ighbury, 'Ighgate, Welsh
+'Arp--all the wye." O my, what a time I'll have when I meet you! I shall
+feel as though if anything happens to me after my return you'll be able
+to understand so much more bravely. These blinkered letters, with only
+writing and no touch of live hands, convey so little. When we've had a
+good time together and sat round the fire and talked interminably you'll
+be able to read so much more between the lines of my future letters.
+To-morrow you ought to land in England, and to-morrow night you should
+sleep in London. I am trying to swop my leave with another man,
+otherwise it won't come till the 15th. I am looking forward every hour
+to those miraculous nine days which we are to have together. You can't
+imagine with your vividest imagination the contrast between nine days
+with you in London and my days where I am now. A battalion went by
+yesterday, marching into action, and its band was playing I've a
+Sneakin' Feelin' in My Heart That I Want to Settle Down. We all have
+that sneaking feeling from time to time. I tell myself wonderful stories
+in the early dark mornings and become the architect of the most
+wonderful futures.
+
+I'm coming to join you just as soon as I know how--at the worst I'll be
+in London on the 16th of this month.
+
+ Ever yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+_The following letters were written after Coningsby had met his family
+in London._
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX
+
+January 24th, 1917.
+
+MY DEAR ONES:
+
+I have had a chance to write you sooner than I expected, as I stopped
+the night where I disembarked, and am catching my train to-day.
+
+It's strange to be back and under orders after nine days' freedom.
+Directly I landed I was detailed to march a party--it was that that made
+me lose my train--not that I objected, for I got one more sleep between
+sheets. I picked up on the boat in the casual way one does, with three
+other officers, so on landing we made a party to dine together, and had
+a very decent evening. I wasn't wanting to remember too much then, so
+that was why I didn't write letters.
+
+What good times we have to look back on and how much to be thankful for,
+that we met altogether. Now we must look forward to the summer and,
+perhaps, the end of the war. What a mad joy will sweep across the world
+on the day that peace is declared!
+
+This visit will have made you feel that you have a share in all that's
+happening over here and are as real a part of it as any of us. I'm
+awfully proud of you for your courage.
+
+ Yours lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XL
+
+January 26th, 1917.
+
+MY VERY DEAR ONES:
+
+Here I am back--my nine days' leave a dream. I got into our wagon-lines
+last night after midnight, having had a cold ride along frozen roads
+through white wintry country. I was only half-expected, so my
+sleeping-bag hadn't been unpacked. I had to wake my batman and tramp
+about a mile to the billet; by the time I got there every one was
+asleep, so I spread out my sleeping-sack and crept in very quietly. For
+the few minutes before my eyes closed I pictured London, the taxis, the
+gay parties, the mystery of lights. I was roused this morning with the
+news that I had to go up to the gun-position at once. I stole just
+sufficient time to pick up a part of my accumulated mail, then got on my
+horse and set out. At the guns, I found that I was due to report as
+liaison officer, so here I am in the trenches again writing to you by
+candle-light. How wonderfully we have bridged the distance in spending
+those nine whole days together. And now it is over, and I am back in the
+trenches, and to-morrow you're sailing for New York.
+
+I can't tell you what the respite has meant to me. There have been times
+when my whole past life has seemed a myth and the future an endless
+prospect of carrying on. Now I can distantly hope that the old days will
+return.
+
+When I was in London half my mind was at the Front; now that I'm back in
+the trenches half my mind is in London. I re-live our gay times
+together; I go to cosy little dinners; I sit with you in the stalls,
+listening to the music; then I tumble off to sleep, and dream, and wake
+up to find the dream a delusion. It's a fine and manly contrast,
+however, between the game one plays out here and the fretful
+trivialities of civilian life.
+
+
+
+
+XLI
+
+January 27th.
+
+
+I got as far as this and then "something" happened. Twenty-four hours
+have gone by and once more it's nearly midnight and I write to you by
+candle-light. Since last night I've been with these infantry
+boy-officers who are doing such great work in such a careless spirit of
+jolliness. Any softness which had crept into me during my nine days of
+happiness has gone. I'm glad to be out here and wouldn't wish to be
+anywhere else till the war is ended.
+
+It's a week to-day since we were at _Charlie's Aunt_--such a cheerful
+little party! I expect the boys are doing their share of remembering too
+somewhere on the sea at present. I know you are, as you round the coast
+of Ireland and set out for the Atlantic.
+
+I've not been out of my clothes for three days and I've another day to
+go yet. I brought my haversack into the trenches with me; on opening it
+I found that some kind hands had slipped into it some clean socks and a
+bottle of Horlick's Malted Milk tablets.
+
+The signallers in a near-by dug-out are singing Keep the Home-Fires
+Burning Till the Boys Come Home. That's what we're all doing, isn't
+it--you at your end and we at ours? The brief few days of possessing
+myself are over and once more stern duty lies ahead. But I thank God for
+the chance I've had to see again those whom I love, and to be able to
+tell them with my own lips some of the bigness of our life at the Front.
+No personal aims count beside the great privilege which is ours to carry
+on until the war is over.
+
+All my thoughts are with you--so many memories of kindness. I keep on
+picturing things I ought to have done--things I ought to have told you.
+Always I can see, Oh, so vividly, the two sailor brothers waving
+good-bye as the train moved off through the London dusk, and then that
+other and forlorner group of three, standing outside the dock gates with
+the sentry like the angel in Eden, turning them back from happiness.
+With an extraordinary aloofness I watched myself moving like a puppet
+away from you whom I love most dearly in all the world--going away as if
+going were a thing so usual.
+
+I'm asking myself again if there isn't some new fineness of spirit which
+will develop from this war and survive it. In London, at a distance
+from all this tragedy of courage, I felt that I had slipped back to a
+lower plane; a kind of flabbiness was creeping into my blood--the old
+selfish fear of life and love of comfort. It's odd that out here, where
+the fear of death should supplant the fear of life, one somehow rises
+into a contempt for everything which is not bravest. There's no doubt
+that the call for sacrifice, and perhaps the supreme sacrifice, can
+transform men into a nobility of which they themselves are unconscious.
+That's the most splendid thing of all, that they themselves are unaware
+of their fineness.
+
+I'm now waiting to be relieved and am hurrying to finish this so that I
+may mail it as soon as I get back to the battery. There's a whole sack
+of letters and parcels waiting for me there, and I'm as eager to get to
+them as a kiddy to inspect his Christmas stocking. I always undo the
+string and wrappings with a kind of reverence, trying to picture the
+dear kneeling figures who did them up. In London I didn't dare to let
+myself go with you--I couldn't say all that was in my heart--it wouldn't
+have been wise. Don't ever doubt that the tenderness was there. Even
+though one is only a civilian in khaki, some of the soldier's sternness
+becomes second nature.
+
+All the country is covered with snow--it's brilliant clear weather,
+more like America than Europe. I'm feeling strong as a horse, ever so
+much better than I felt when on leave. Life is really tremendously worth
+living, in spite of the war.
+
+
+
+
+XLII
+
+January 28th.
+
+I'm back at the battery, sitting by a cosy fire. I might be up at
+Kootenay by the look of my surroundings. I'm in a shack with a really
+truly floor, and a window looking out on moonlit whiteness. If it wasn't
+for the tapping of the distant machine guns--tapping that always sounds
+to me like the nailing up of coffins--I might be here for pleasure. In
+imagination I can see your great ship, with all its portholes aglare,
+ploughing across the darkness to America. The dear sailor brothers I
+can't quite visualise; I can only see them looking so upright and pale
+when we said good-bye. It's getting late and the fire's dying. I'm half
+asleep; I've not been out of my clothes for three nights. I shall tell
+myself a story of the end of the war and our next meeting--it'll last
+from the time that I creep into my sack until I close my eyes. It's a
+glorious life.
+
+ Yours very lovingly,
+ CON
+
+
+
+
+XLIII
+
+January 31st, 1917.
+
+DEAR MR. AND MRS. M.:
+
+It was extremely good of you to remember me. I got back from leave in
+London on the 26th and found the cigarettes waiting for me. One hasn't
+got an awful lot of pleasures left, but smoking is one of them. I feel
+particularly doggy when I open my case and find my initials on them.
+
+I expect you'll have heard all the news of my leave long before this
+reaches you. We had a splendid time and the greatest of luck. My sailor
+brothers were with me all but two days, and my people were in England
+only a few days before I arrived.
+
+This is a queer adventure for a peaceable person like myself--it blots
+out all the past and reduces the future to a speck. One hardly hopes
+that things will ever be different, but looks forward to interminable
+years of carrying on. My leave rather corrected that frame of mind; it
+came as a surprise to be forced to realise that not all the world was
+living under orders on woman less, childless battlefields. But we don't
+need any pity--we manage our good times, and are sorry for the men who
+aren't here, for it's a wonderful thing to have been chosen to
+sacrifice and perhaps to die that the world of the future may be happier
+and kinder.
+
+This letter is rather disjointed; I'm in charge of the battery for the
+time, and messages keep on coming in, and one has to rush out to give
+the order to fire.
+
+It's an American night--snow-white and piercing, with a frigid moon
+sailing quietly. I think the quiet beauty of the sky is about the only
+thing in Nature that we do not scar and destroy with our fighting.
+
+Good-bye, and thank you ever so much.
+
+ Yours very sincerely,
+ CONINGSBY DAWSON.
+
+
+
+
+XLIV
+
+February 1st, 1917.
+
+11 p.m.
+
+DEAR FATHER:
+
+Your picture of the black days when no letter comes from me sets me off
+scribbling to you at this late hour. All to-day I've been having a cold
+but amusing time at the O.P. (Forward Observation Post). It seems brutal
+to say it, but taking potshots at the enemy when they present themselves
+is rather fun. When you watch them scattering like ants before the
+shell whose direction you have ordered, you somehow forget to think of
+them as individuals, any more than the bear-hunter thinks of the cubs
+that will be left motherless. You watch your victims through your
+glasses as God might watch his mad universe. Your skill in directing
+fire makes you what in peace times would be called a murderer. Curious!
+You're glad, and yet at close quarters only in hot blood would you hurt
+a man.
+
+I'd been back for a little over an hour when I had to go forward again
+to guide in some guns. The country was dazzlingly white in the
+moonlight. As far as eye could see every yard was an old battlefield;
+beneath the soft white fleece of snow lay countless unburied bodies.
+Like frantic fingers tearing at the sky, all along the horizon, Hun
+lights were shooting up and drifting across our front. Tap-tap-tappity
+went the machine-guns; whoo-oo went the heavies, and they always stamp
+like angry bulls. I had to come back by myself across the heroic
+corruption which the snow had covered. All the way I asked myself why
+was I not frightened. What has happened to me? Ghosts should walk here
+if anywhere. Moreover, I know that I shall be frightened again when the
+war is ended. Do you remember how you once offered me money to walk
+through the Forest of Dean after dark, and I wouldn't? I wouldn't if
+you offered it to me now. You remember Meredith's lines in "The Woods of
+Westermain":
+
+ "All the eyeballs under hoods
+ Shroud you in their glare;
+ Enter these enchanted woods
+ You who dare."
+
+Maybe what re-creates one for the moment is the British officer's
+uniform, and even more the fact that you are not asked, but expected, to
+do your duty. So I came back quite unruffled across battered trenches
+and silent mounds to write this letter to you.
+
+My dear father, I'm over thirty, and yet just as much a little boy as
+ever. I still feel overwhelmingly dependent on your good opinion and
+love. I'm glad that they are black days when you have no letters from
+me. I love to think of the rush to the door when the postman rings and
+the excited shouting up the stairs, "Quick, one from Con."
+
+
+February 2nd.
+
+You see by the writing how tired I was when I reached this point. It's
+nearly twenty-four hours later and again night. The gramophone is
+playing an air from _La Tosca_ to which the guns beat out a bass
+accompaniment. I close my eyes and picture the many times I have heard
+the (probably) German orchestras of Broadway Joy Palaces play that same
+music. How incongruous that I should be listening to it here and under
+these circumstances! It must have been listened to so often by gay
+crowds in the beauty places of the world. A romantic picture grows up in
+my mind of a blue night, the laughter of youth in evening dress, lamps
+twinkling through trees, far off the velvety shadow of water and
+mountains, and as a voice to it all, that air from _La Tosca_. I can
+believe that the silent people near by raise themselves up in their
+snow-beds to listen, each one recalling some ecstatic moment before the
+dream of life was shattered.
+
+There's a picture in the Pantheon at Paris, I remember; I believe it's
+called _To Glory_. One sees all the armies of the ages charging out of
+the middle distance with Death riding at their head. The only glory that
+I have discovered in this war is in men's hearts--it's not external.
+Were one to paint the spirit of this war he would depict a mud
+landscape, blasted trees, an iron sky; wading through the slush and
+shell-holes would come a file of bowed figures, more like outcasts from
+the Embankment than soldiers. They're loaded down like pack animals,
+their shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they go on
+and go on. There's no "To Glory" about what we're doing out here;
+there's no flash of swords or splendour of uniforms. There are only very
+tired men determined to carry on. The war will be won by tired men who
+could never again pass an insurance test, a mob of broken
+counter-jumpers, ragged ex-plumbers and quite unheroic persons. We're
+civilians in khaki, but because of the ideals for which we fight we've
+managed to acquire soldiers' hearts.
+
+My flow of thought was interrupted by a burst of song in which I was
+compelled to join. We're all writing letters around one candle; suddenly
+the O.C. looked up and began, God Be With You Till We Meet Again. We
+sang it in parts. It was in Southport, when I was about nine years old,
+that I first heard that sung. You had gone for your first trip to
+America, leaving a very lonely family behind you. We children were
+scared to death that you'd be drowned. One evening, coming back from a
+walk on the sand-hills, we heard voices singing in a garden, God Be With
+You Till We Meet Again. The words and the soft dusk, and the vague
+figures in the English summer garden, seemed to typify the terror of all
+partings. We've said good-bye so often since, and God has been with us.
+I don't think any parting was more hard than our last at the prosaic
+dock-gates with the cold wind of duty blowing, and the sentry barring
+your entrance, and your path leading back to America while mine led on
+to France. But you three were regular soldiers--just as much soldiers as
+we chaps who were embarking. One talks of our armies in the field, but
+there are the other armies, millions strong, of mothers and fathers and
+sisters, who keep their eyes dry, treasure muddy letters beneath their
+pillows, offer up prayers and wait, wait, wait so eternally for God to
+open another door.
+
+To-morrow I again go forward, which means rising early and taking a long
+plod through the snows; that's one reason for not writing any more, and
+another is that our one poor candle is literally on its last legs.
+
+Your poem, written years ago when the poor were marching in London, is
+often in my mind:
+
+ "Yesterday and to-day
+ Have been heavy with labour and sorrow;
+ I should faint if I did not see
+ The day that is after to-morrow."
+
+And there's that last verse which prophesied utterly the spirit in which
+we men at the Front are fighting to-day:
+
+ "And for me, with spirit elate
+ The mire and the fog I press thorough,
+ For Heaven shines under the cloud
+ Of the day that is after to-morrow."
+
+We civilians who have been taught so long to love our enemies and do
+good to them who hate us--much too long ever to make professional
+soldiers--are watching with our hearts in our eyes for that day which
+conies after to-morrow. Meanwhile we plod on determinedly, hoping for
+the hidden glory.
+
+ Yours very lovingly,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+XLV
+
+
+February 3rd, 1917.
+
+Dear Misses W.:
+
+You were very kind to remember me at Christmas. _Seventeen_ was read
+with all kinds of gusto by all my brother officers. It's still being
+borrowed.
+
+I've been back from leave a few days now and am settling back to
+business again. It was a trifle hard after over-eating and undersleeping
+myself for nine days, and riding everywhere with my feet up in taxis. I
+was the wildest little boy. Here it's snowy and bitter. We wear scarves
+round our ears to keep the frost away and dream of fires a mile high.
+All I ask, when the war is ended, is to be allowed to sit asleep in a
+big armchair and to be left there absolutely quiet. Sleep, which we
+crave so much at times, is only death done up in sample bottles. Perhaps
+some of these very weary men who strew our battlefields are glad to lie
+at last at endless leisure.
+
+Good-bye, and thank you.
+
+ Yours very sincerely,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XLVI
+
+February 4th, 1917.
+
+My Dearest Mother:
+
+Somewhere in the distance I can hear a piano going and men's voices
+singing A Perfect Day. It's queer how music creates a world for you in
+which you are not, and makes you dreamy. I've been sitting by a fire and
+thinking of all the happy times when the total of desire seemed almost
+within one's grasp. It never is--one always, always misses it and has to
+rub the dust from the eyes, recover one's breath and set out on the
+search afresh. I suppose when you grow very old you learn the lesson of
+sitting quiet, and the heart stops beating and the total of desire comes
+to you. And yet I can remember so many happy days, when I was a child in
+the summer and later at Kootenay. One almost thought he had caught the
+secret of carrying heaven in his heart.
+
+By the time this reaches you I'll be in the line again, but for the
+present I'm undergoing a special course of training. You can't hear the
+most distant sound of guns, and if it wasn't for the pressure of study,
+similar to that at _Kingston_, one would be very rested.
+
+Sunday of all days is the one when I remember you most. You're just
+sitting down to mid-day dinner,--I've made the calculation for
+difference of time. You're probably saying how less than a month ago we
+were in London. That doesn't sound true even when I write it. I wonder
+how your old familiar surroundings strike you. It's terrible to come
+down from the mountain heights of a great elation like our ten days in
+London. I often think of that with regard to myself when the war is
+ended. There'll be a sense of dissatisfaction when the old lost comforts
+are regained. There'll be a sense of lowered manhood. The stupendous
+terrors of Armageddon demand less courage than the uneventful terror of
+the daily commonplace. There's something splendid and exhilarating in
+going forward among bursting shells--we, who have done all that, know
+that when the guns have ceased to roar our blood will grow more
+sluggish and we'll never be such men again. Instead of getting up in the
+morning and hearing your O.C. say, "You'll run a line into trench
+so-and-so to-day and shoot up such-and-such Hun wire," you'll hear
+necessity saying, "You'll work from breakfast to dinner and earn your
+daily bread. And you'll do it to-morrow and to-morrow and to-morrow
+world without end. Amen." They never put that forever and forever part
+into their commands out here, because the Amen for any one of us may be
+only a few hours away. But the big immediate thing is so much easier to
+do than the prosaic carrying on without anxiety--which is your game. I
+begin to understand what you have had to suffer now that R. and E. are
+really at war too. I get awfully anxious about them. I never knew before
+that either of them owned so much of my heart. I get furious when I
+remember that they might get hurt. I've heard of a Canadian who joined
+when he learnt that his best friend had been murdered by Hun bayonets.
+He came to get his own back and was the most reckless man in his
+battalion. I can understand his temper now. We're all of us in danger of
+slipping back into the worship of Thor.
+
+I'll write as often as I can while here, but I don't get much time--so
+you'll understand. It's the long nights when one sits up to take the
+firing in action that give one the chance to be a decent correspondent.
+
+My birthday comes round soon, doesn't it? Good heavens, how ancient I'm
+getting and without any "grow old along with me" consolation. Well, to
+grow old is all in the job of living.
+
+Good-bye, and God bless you all.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XLVII
+
+
+February 4th, 1917.
+
+Dear Mr. B.:
+
+I have been intending to write to you for a very long time, but as most
+of one's writing is done when one ought to be asleep, and sleep next to
+eating is one of our few remaining pleasures, my intended letter has
+remained in my head up to now. On returning from a nine days' leave to
+London the other day, however, I found two letters from you awaiting me
+and was reproached into effort.
+
+War's a queer game--not at all what one's civilian mind imagined; it's
+far more horrible and less exciting. The horrors which the civilian mind
+dreads most are mutilation and death. Out here we rarely think about
+them; the thing which wears on one most and calls out his gravest
+courage is the endless sequence of physical discomfort. Not to be able
+to wash, not to be able to sleep, to have to be wet and cold for long
+periods at a stretch, to find mud on your person, in your food, to have
+to stand in mud, see mud, sleep in mud and to continue to smile--that's
+what tests courage. Our chaps are splendid. They're not the hair-brained
+idiots that some war-correspondents depict from day to day. They're
+perfectly sane people who know to a fraction what they're up against,
+but who carry on with a grim good-nature and a determination to win with
+a smile. I never before appreciated as I do to-day the latent capacity
+for big-hearted endurance that is in the heart of every man. Here are
+apparently quite ordinary chaps--chaps who washed, liked theatres, loved
+kiddies and sweethearts, had a zest for life--they're bankrupt of all
+pleasures except the supreme pleasure of knowing that they're doing the
+ordinary and finest thing of which they are capable. There are millions
+to whom the mere consciousness of doing their duty has brought an
+heretofore unexperienced peace of mind. For myself I was never happier
+than I am at present; there's a novel zip added to life by the daily
+risks and the knowledge that at last you're doing something into which
+no trace of selfishness enters. One can only die once; the chief concern
+that matters is _how_ and not _when_ you die. I don't pity the weary men
+who have attained eternal leisure in the corruption of our
+shell-furrowed battles; they "went West" in their supreme moment. The
+men I pity are those who could not hear the call of duty and whose
+consciences will grow more flabby every day. With the brutal roar of the
+first Prussian gun the cry came to the civilised world, "Follow thou
+me," just as truly as it did in Palestine. Men went to their Calvary
+singing Tipperary, rubbish, rhymed doggerel, but their spirit was equal
+to that of any Christian martyr in a Roman amphitheatre. "Greater love
+hath no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friend." Our
+chaps are doing that consciously, willingly, almost without bitterness
+towards their enemies; for the rest it doesn't matter whether they sing
+hymns or ragtime. They've followed their ideal--freedom--and died for
+it. A former age expressed itself in Gregorian chants; ours, no less
+sincerely, disguises its feelings in ragtime.
+
+Since September I have been less than a month out of action. The game
+doesn't pall as time goes on--it fascinates. We've got to win so that
+men may never again be tortured by the ingenious inquisition of modern
+warfare. The winning of the war becomes a personal affair to the chaps
+who are fighting. The world which sits behind the lines, buys extra
+specials of the daily papers and eats three square meals a day, will
+never know what this other world has endured for its safety, for no man
+of this other world will have the vocabulary in which to tell. But don't
+for a moment mistake me--we're grimly happy.
+
+What a serial I'll write for you if I emerge from this turmoil! Thank
+God, my outlook is all altered. I don't want to live any longer--only to
+live well.
+
+Good-bye and good luck.
+
+ Yours,
+ Coningsby Dawson.
+
+
+
+
+XLVIII
+
+
+February 5th, 1917.
+
+My Dearest Mother:
+
+Aren't the papers good reading now-a-days with nothing to record but
+success? It gives us hope that at last, anyway before the year is out,
+the war must end. As you know, I am at the artillery school back of the
+lines for a month, taking an extra course. I have been meeting a great
+many young officers from all over the world and have listened to them
+discussing their program for when peace is declared. Very few of them
+have any plans or prospects. Most of them had just started on some
+course of professional training to which they won't have the energy to
+go back after a two years' interruption. The question one asks is how
+will all these men be reabsorbed into civilian life. I'm afraid the
+result will be a vast host of men with promising pasts and highly
+uncertain futures. We shall be a holiday world without an income. I'm
+afraid the hero-worship attitude will soon change to impatience when the
+soldiers beat their swords into ploughshares and then confess that they
+have never been taught to plough. That's where I shall score--by beating
+my sword into a pen. But what to write about--! Everything will seem so
+little and inconsequential after seeing armies marching to mud and
+death, and people will soon get tired of hearing about that. It seems as
+though war does to the individual what it does to the landscapes it
+attacks--obliterates everything personal and characteristic. A valley,
+when a battle has done with it, is nothing but earth--exactly what it
+was when God said, "Let there be Light;" a man just something with a
+mind purged of the past and ready to observe afresh. I question whether
+a return to old environments will ever restore to us the whole of our
+old tastes and affections. War is, I think, utterly destructive. It
+doesn't even create courage--it only finds it in the soul of a man. And
+yet there is one quality which will survive the war and help us to face
+the temptations of peace--that same courage which most of us have
+unconsciously discovered out here.
+
+Well, my dear, I have little news--at least, none that I can tell. I'm
+just about recovered from an attack of "flu." I want to get thoroughly
+rid of it before I go back to my battery. I hope you all keep well. God
+bless you all.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XLIX
+
+February 6th, 1917.
+
+My Very Dear M.:
+
+I read in to-day's paper that U.S.A. threatens to come over and help us.
+I wish she would. The very thought of the possibility fills me with joy.
+I've been light-headed all day. It would be so ripping to live among
+people, when the war is ended, of whom you need not be ashamed.
+Somewhere deep down in my heart I've felt a sadness ever since I've been
+out here, at America's lack of gallantry--it's so easy to find excuses
+for not climbing to Calvary; sacrifice was always too noble to be
+sensible. I would like to see the country of our adoption become
+splendidly irrational even at this eleventh hour in the game; it would
+redeem her in the world's eyes. She doesn't know what she's losing. From
+these carcase-strewn fields of khaki there's a cleansing wind blowing
+for the nations that have died. Though there was only one Englishman
+left to carry on the race when this war is victoriously ended, I would
+give more for the future of England than for the future of America with
+her ninety millions whose sluggish blood was not stirred by the call of
+duty. It's bigness of soul that makes nations great and not population.
+Money, comfort, limousines and ragtime are not the requisites of men
+when heroes are dying. I hate the thought of Fifth Avenue, with its
+pretty faces, its fashions, its smiling frivolity. America as a great
+nation will die, as all coward civilisations have died, unless she
+accepts the stigmata of sacrifice, which a divine opportunity again
+offers her.
+
+If it were but possible to show those ninety millions one battlefield
+with its sprawling dead, its pity, its marvellous forgetfulness of self,
+I think then--no, they wouldn't be afraid. Fear isn't the emotion one
+feels--they would experience the shame of living when so many have shed
+their youth freely. This war is a prolonged moment of exultation for
+most of us--we are redeeming ourselves in our own eyes. To lay down
+one's life for one's friend once seemed impossible. All that is altered.
+We lay down our lives that the future generations may be good and kind,
+and so we can contemplate oblivion with quiet eyes. Nothing that is
+noblest that the Greeks taught is unpractised by the simplest men out
+here to-day. They may die childless, but their example will father the
+imagination of all the coming ages. These men, in the noble indignation
+of a great ideal, face a worse hell than the most ingenious of fanatics
+ever planned or plotted. Men die scorched like moths in a furnace, blown
+to atoms, gassed, tortured. And again other men step forward to take
+their places well knowing what will be their fate. Bodies may die, but
+the spirit of England grows greater as each new soul speeds upon its
+way. The battened souls of America will die and be buried. I believe the
+decision of the next few days will prove to be the crisis in America's
+nationhood. If she refuses the pain which will save her, the cancer of
+self-despising will rob her of her life.
+
+This feeling is strong with us. It's past midnight, but I could write
+of nothing else to-night.
+
+God bless you.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Carry On, by Coningsby Dawson
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14086 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14086 ***</div>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a href="images/001.jpg">
+<img src="images/001.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a>
+</p>
+
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+ <a href="#CARRY_ON"><b>CARRY ON</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#INTRODUCTION"><b>INTRODUCTION</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#THE_LETTERS"><b>THE LETTERS</b></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <a href="#I"><b>I</b></a>
+ <a href="#II"><b>II</b></a>
+ <a href="#III"><b>III</b></a>
+ <a href="#IV"><b>IV</b></a>
+ <a href="#V"><b>V</b></a>
+ <a href="#VI"><b>VI</b></a>
+ <a href="#VII"><b>VII</b></a>
+ <a href="#VIII"><b>VIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#IX"><b>IX</b></a>
+ <a href="#X"><b>X</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#XI"><b>XI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XII"><b>XII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XIII"><b>XIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XIV"><b>XIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XV"><b>XV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XVI"><b>XVI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XVII"><b>XVII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XVIII"><b>XVIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XIX"><b>XIX</b></a>
+ <a href="#XX"><b>XX</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#XXI"><b>XXI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXII"><b>XXII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXIII"><b>XXIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXIV"><b>XXIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXV"><b>XXV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXVI"><b>XXVI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXVII"><b>XXVII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXVIII"><b>XXVIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXIX"><b>XXIX</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXX"><b>XXX</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#XXXI"><b>XXXI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXII"><b>XXXII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXIII"><b>XXXIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXIV"><b>XXXIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXV"><b>XXXV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXVI"><b>XXXVI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXVII"><b>XXXVII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXVIII"><b>XXXVIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXIX"><b>XXXIX</b></a>
+ <a href="#XL"><b>XL</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#XLI"><b>XLI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLII"><b>XLII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLIII"><b>XLIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLIV"><b>XLIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLIV"><b>XLIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLV"><b>XLV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLVI"><b>XLVI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLVII"><b>XLVII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLVIII"><b>XLVIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLIX"><b>XLIX</b></a><br />
+<br /><br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a href="images/003.jpg">
+<img src="images/003.jpg" width="50%" alt="Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson Canadian Field Artillery" title="" /></a>
+<br /><b>Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson Canadian Field Artillery</b>
+</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h1>CARRY ON</h1>
+
+<h2>LETTERS IN WAR TIME</h2>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+
+<h3>CONINGSBY DAWSON</h3>
+
+<h4>NOVELIST AND SOLDIER</h4>
+
+<h5>WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND NOTES</h5>
+
+<h4>BY HIS FATHER, W.J. DAWSON</h4>
+
+<h5>1917</h5>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">WHEN THE WAR'S AT AN END</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">At length when the war's at an end</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">And we're just ourselves,&mdash;you and I,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And we gather our lives up to mend,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">We, who've learned how to live and to die:</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Shall we think of the old ambition</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">For riches, or how to grow wise,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When, like Lazarus freshly arisen,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">We've the presence of Death in our eyes?</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Shall we dream of our old life's passion,&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">To toil for our heart's desire,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Whose souls War has taken to fashion</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">With molten death and with fire?</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I think we shall crave the laughter</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Of the wind through trees gold with the sun,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When our strife is all finished,&mdash;after</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">The carnage of War is done.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Just these things will then seem worth while:&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">How to make Life more wondrously sweet;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">How to live with a song and a smile,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">How to lay our lives at Love's feet.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 19em;">ERIC P. DAWSON,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21.5em;"><i>Sub. Lieut</i>. R.N.V.R.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="INTRODUCTION" id="INTRODUCTION" />INTRODUCTION</h2>
+
+
+<p>The letters in this volume were not written
+for publication. They are intimate and
+personal in a high degree. They would not now
+be published by those to whom they are addressed,
+had they not come to feel that the spirit
+and temper of the writer might do something to
+strengthen and invigorate those who, like himself,
+are called on to make great sacrifices for
+high causes and solemn duties.</p>
+
+<p>They do not profess to give any new information
+about the military operations of the Allies;
+this is the task of the publicist, and at all times
+is forbidden to the soldier in the field. Here and
+there some striking or significant fact has been
+allowed to pass the censor; but the value of the
+letters does not lie in these things. It is found
+rather in the record of how the dreadful yet
+heroic realities of war affect an unusually sensitive
+mind, long trained in moral and romantic
+idealism; the process by which this mind adapts
+itself to unanticipated and incredible conditions,
+to acts and duties which lie close to horror, and
+are only saved from being horrible by the efficacy
+of the spiritual effort which they evoke. Hating
+the brutalities of War, clearly perceiving the
+wide range of its cruelties, yet the heart of the
+writer is never hardened by its daily commerce
+with death; it is purified by pity and terror, by
+heroism and sacrifice, until the whole nature
+seems fresh annealed into a finer strength.</p>
+
+<p>The intimate nature of these letters makes it
+necessary to say something about the writer.</p>
+
+<p>Coningsby Dawson graduated with honours in
+history from Oxford in 1905, and in the same
+year came to the United States with the intention
+of taking a theological course at Union Seminary.
+After a year at the Seminary he reached
+the conclusion that his true lifework lay in literature,
+and he at once began to fit himself for his
+vocation. In the meantime his family left England,
+and we had made our home in Taunton,
+Massachusetts. Here, in a quiet house, amid
+lawns and leafy elms, he gave himself with indefatigable
+ardour to the art of writing. He wrote
+from seven to ten hours a day, producing many
+poems, short stories, and three novels. Few
+writers have ever worked harder to attain literary
+excellence, or have practised a more austere
+devotion to their art. I often marvelled how a
+young man, fresh from a brilliant career at the
+greatest of English Universities, could be content
+with a life that was so widely separated from
+association with men and affairs. I wondered
+still more at the patience with which he endured
+the rebuffs that always await the beginner in
+literature, and the humility with which he was
+willing to learn the hard lessons of his apprenticeship
+in literary form. The secret lay, no
+doubt, in his secure sense of a vocation, and his
+belief that good work could not fail in the end
+to justify itself. But, not the less, these four
+years of obscure drudgery wore upon his spirit,
+and hence some of the references in these letters
+to his days of self-despising. The period of
+waiting came to an end at last with the publication
+in 1913 of his <i>Garden Without Walls</i>,
+which attained immediate success. When he
+speaks in these letters of his brief burst of fame,
+he refers to those crowded months in the Fall of
+1913, when his novel was being discussed on
+every hand, and, for the first time, he met many
+writers of established reputation as an equal.</p>
+
+<p>Another novel, <i>The Raft</i>, followed <i>The
+Garden Without Walls</i>. The nature of his life
+now seemed fixed. To the task of novel-writing
+he had brought a temperament highly idealistic
+and romantic, a fresh and vivid imagination, and
+a thorough literary equipment. His life, as he
+planned it, held but one purpose for him, outside
+the warmth and tenacity of its affections&mdash;the
+triumph of the efficient purpose in the adequate
+expression of his mind in literature. The austerity
+of his long years of preparation had left
+him relatively indifferent to the common prizes
+of life, though they had done nothing to lessen
+his intense joy in life. His whole mind was concentrated
+on his art. His adventures would be
+the adventures of the mind in search of ampler
+modes of expression. His crusades would be the
+crusades of the spirit in search of the realities
+of truth. He had received the public recognition
+which gave him faith in himself and faith in his
+ability to achieve the reputation of the true artist,
+whose work is not cheapened but dignified and
+broadened by success. So he read the future,
+and so his critics read it for him. And then,
+sudden and unheralded, there broke on this quiet
+life of intellectual devotion the great storm of
+1914. The guns that roared along the Marne
+shattered all his purposes, and left him face to
+face with a solemn spiritual exigency which admitted
+no equivocation.</p>
+
+<p>At first, in common with multitudes more experienced
+than himself, he did not fully comprehend
+the true measure of the cataclysm which
+had overwhelmed the world. There had been
+wars before, and they had been fought out by
+standing armies. It was incredible that any war
+should last more than a few months. Again and
+again the world had been assured that war would
+break down with its own weight, that no war
+could be financed beyond a certain brief period,
+that the very nature of modern warfare, with its
+terrible engines of destruction, made swift decisions
+a necessity. The conception of a British
+War which involved the entire manhood of the
+nation was new, and unparalleled in past history.
+And the further conception of a war so vast in
+its issues that it really threatened the very existence
+of the nation was new too. Alarmists had
+sometimes predicted these things, but they had
+been disbelieved. Historians had used such
+phrases of long past struggles, but often as a
+mode of rhetoric rather than as the expression
+of exact truth. Yet, in a very few weeks, it
+became evident that not alone England, but the
+entire fabric of liberal civilisation was threatened
+by a power that knew no honour, no restraints
+of either caution or magnanimity, no
+ethic but the armed might that trampled under
+blood-stained feet all the things which the common
+sanction of centuries held dearest and fairest.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps, if Coningsby had been resident in
+England, these realities of the situation would
+have been immediately apparent. Residing in
+America, the real outlines of the struggle were
+a little dimmed by distance. Nevertheless, from
+the very first he saw clearly where his duty lay.
+He could not enlist immediately. He was bound
+in honour to fulfil various literary obligations.
+His latest book, <i>Slaves of Freedom</i>, was in
+process of being adapted for serial use, and its
+publication would follow. He set the completion
+of this work as the period when he must enlist;
+working on with difficult self-restraint toward
+the appointed hour. If he had regrets for a
+career broken at the very point where it had
+reached success and was assured of more than
+competence, he never expressed them. His one
+regret was the effect of his enlistment on those
+most closely bound to him by affections which
+had been deepened and made more tender by the
+sense of common exile. At last the hour came
+when he was free to follow the imperative call
+of patriotic duty. He went to Ottawa, saw Sir
+Sam Hughes, and was offered a commission in
+the Canadian Field Artillery on the completion
+of his training at the Royal Military College, at
+Kingston, Ontario. The last weeks of his training
+were passed at the military camp of Petewawa
+on the Ottawa River. There his family
+was able to meet him in the July of 1916. While
+we were with him he was selected, with twenty-four
+other officers, for immediate service in
+France; and at the same time his two younger
+brothers enlisted in the Naval Patrol, then being
+recruited in Canada by Commander Armstrong.</p>
+
+<p>The letters in this volume commence with his
+departure from Ottawa. Week by week they
+have come, with occasional interruptions; mud
+stained epistles, written in pencil, in dug-outs by
+the light of a single candle, in the brief moments
+snatched from hard and perilous duties. They
+give no hint of where he was on the far-flung
+battle-line. We know now that he was at Albert,
+at Thiepval, at Courcelette, and at the taking of
+the Regina trench, where, unknown to him, one
+of his cousins fell in the heroic charge of the
+Canadian infantry. His constant thoughtfulness
+for those who were left at home is manifest in
+all he writes. It has been expressed also in other
+ways, dear and precious to remember: in flowers
+delivered by his order from the battlefield each
+Sabbath morning at our house in Newark, in
+cables of birthday congratulations, which arrived
+on the exact date. Nothing has been forgotten
+that could alleviate the loneliness of our separation,
+or stimulate our courage, or make us conscious
+of the unbroken bond of love.</p>
+
+<p>The general point of view in these letters is, I
+think, adequately expressed in the phrase &quot;<i>Carry
+On</i>,&quot; which I have used as the title of this book.
+It was our happy lot to meet Coningsby in London
+in the January of the present year, when he
+was granted ten days' leave. In the course of
+conversation one night he laid emphasis on the
+fact that he, and those who served with him,
+were, after all, not professional soldiers, but
+civilians at war. They did not love war, and
+when the war was ended not five per cent of them
+would remain in the army. They were men
+who had left professions and vocations which
+still engaged the best parts of their minds, and
+would return to them when the hour came. War
+was for them an occupation, not a vocation. Yet
+they had proved themselves, one and all, splendid
+soldiers, bearing the greatest hardships without
+complaint, and facing wounds and death with
+a gay courage which had made the Canadian
+forces famous even among a host of men, equally
+brave and heroic. The secret of their fortitude
+lay in the one brief phrase, &quot;Carry On.&quot; Their
+fortitude was of the spirit rather than the nerves.
+They were aware of the solemn ideals of justice,
+liberty, and righteousness for which they fought,
+and would never give up till they were won. In
+the completeness of their surrender to a great
+cause they had been lifted out of themselves to
+a new plane of living by the transformation of
+their spirit. It was the dogged indomitable drive
+of spiritual forces controlling bodily forces. Living
+or dying those forces would prevail. They
+would carry on to the end, however long the war,
+and would count no sacrifice too great to assure
+its triumph.</p>
+
+<p>This is the spirit which breathes through these
+letters. The splendour of war, as my son puts
+it, is in nothing external; it is all in the souls of
+the men. &quot;There's a marvellous grandeur about
+all this carnage and desolation&mdash;men's souls rise
+above the distress&mdash;they have to, in order to survive.&quot;
+&quot;Every man I have met out here has the
+amazing guts to wear his crown of thorns as
+though it were a cap-and-bells.&quot; They have
+shredded off their weaknesses, and attained that
+&quot;corporate stout-heartedness&quot; which is &quot;the acme
+of what Aristotle meant by virtue.&quot; For himself,
+he discovers that the plague of his former modes
+of life lay in self-distrust. It was the disease of
+the age. The doubt of many things which it were
+wisdom to believe had ended in the doubt of one's
+own capacity for heroism. All those doubts and
+self-despisings had vanished in the supreme surrender
+to sacrificial duty. The doors of the
+Kingdom of Heroism were flung so wide that the
+meanest might enter in, and in that act the
+humblest became comrades of Drake's men, who
+could jest as they died. No one knows his real
+strength till it is put to the test; the highest joy
+of life is to discover that the soul can meet the
+test, and survive it.</p>
+
+<p>The Somme battlefield, from which all these
+letters were despatched, is an Inferno much more
+terrible than any Dante pictured. It is a vast
+sea of mud, full of the unburied dead, pitted and
+pock-marked by shell-holes, treeless and horseless,
+&quot;the abomination of desolation.&quot; And the
+men who toil across it look more like outcasts
+of the London Embankment than soldiers.
+&quot;They're loaded down like pack-animals, their
+shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death,
+but they go on and go on.... There's no flash
+of sword or splendour of uniforms. They're only
+very tired men determined to carry on. The war
+will be won by tired men who can never again
+pass an insurance test.&quot; Yet they carry on&mdash;the
+&quot;broken counter-jumper, the ragged ex-plumber,&quot;
+the clerk from the office, the man from the farm;
+Londoner, Canadian, Australian, New Zealander,
+men drawn from every quarter of the Empire,
+who daily justify their manhood by devotion to
+an ideal and by contempt of death. And in the
+heart of each there is a settled conviction
+that the cause for which they have sacrificed so
+much must triumph. They have no illusions
+about an early peace. They see their comrades
+fall, and say quietly, &quot;He's gone West.&quot; They do
+heroic things daily, which in a lesser war would
+have won the Victoria Cross, but in this war are
+commonplaces. They know themselves re-born
+in soul, and are dimly aware that the world is
+travailing toward new birth with them. They
+are still very human, men who end their letters
+with a row of crosses which stand for kisses.
+They are not dehumanised by war; the kindliness
+and tenderness of their natures are unspoiled by
+all their daily traffic in horror. But they have
+won their souls; and when the days of peace return
+these men will take with them to the
+civilian life a tonic strength and nobleness which
+will arrest and extirpate the decadence of society
+with the saving salt of valour and of faith.</p>
+
+<p>It may be said also that they do not hate their
+foe, although they hate the things for which he
+fights. They are fighting a clean fight, with men
+whose courage they respect. A German prisoner
+who comes into the British camp is sure of good
+treatment. He is neither starved nor insulted.
+His captors share with him cheerfully their rations
+and their little luxuries. Sometimes a sullen
+brute will spit in the face of his captor when
+he offers him a cigarette; he is always an officer,
+never a private. And occasionally between these
+fighting hosts there are acts of magnanimity
+which stand out illumined against the dark background
+of death and suffering. One of the
+stories told me by my son illustrates this. During
+one fierce engagement a British officer saw a
+German officer impaled on the barbed wire,
+writhing in anguish. The fire was dreadful, yet
+he still hung there unscathed. At length the
+British officer could stand it no longer. He said
+quietly, &quot;I can't bear to look at that poor chap
+any longer.&quot; So he went out under the hail of
+shell, released him, took him on his shoulders and
+carried him to the German trench. The firing
+ceased. Both sides watched the act with wonder.
+Then the Commander in the German trench came
+forward, took from his own bosom the Iron
+Cross, and pinned it on the breast of the British
+officer. Such an episode is true to the holiest
+ideals of chivalry; and it is all the more welcome
+because the German record is stained by so many
+acts of barbarism, which the world cannot forgive.</p>
+
+<p>This magnanimous attitude toward the enemy
+is very apparent in these letters. The man
+whose mind is filled with great ideals of sacrifice
+and duty has no room for the narrowness of
+hate. He can pity a foe whose sufferings exceed
+his own, and the more so because he knows
+that his foe is doomed. The British troops do
+know this to-day by many infallible signs. In
+the early days of the war untrained men, poorly
+equipped with guns, were pitted against the best
+trained troops in Europe. The first Canadian
+armies were sacrificed, as was that immortal
+army of Imperial troops who saved the day at
+Mons. The Canadians often perished in that
+early fighting by the excess of their own reckless
+bravery. They are still the most daring
+fighters in the British army, but they have
+profited by the hard discipline of the past. They
+know now that they have not only the will to
+conquer, but the means of conquest. Their, artillery
+has become conspicuous for its efficiency.
+It is the ceaseless artillery fire which has turned
+the issue of the war for the British forces. The
+work of the infantry is beyond praise. They &quot;go
+over the top&quot; with superb courage, and all who
+have seen them are ready to say with my son,
+&quot;I'm hats off to the infantry.&quot; And in this final
+efficiency, surpassing all that could have been
+thought possible in the earlier stages of the war,
+the British forces read the clear augury of victory.
+The war will be won by the Allied armies;
+not only because they fight for the better cause,
+which counts for much, in spite of Napoleon's
+cynical saying that &quot;God is on the side of the
+strongest battalions&quot;; but because at last they
+have superiority in equipment, discipline and efficiency.
+Upon that shell-torn Western front,
+amid the mud and carnage of the Somme, there
+has been slowly forged the weapon which will
+drive the Teuton enemy across the Rhine, and
+give back to Europe and the world unhindered
+liberty and enduring peace.</p>
+
+<p>W.J. DAWSON.</p>
+
+<p>March, 1917.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_LETTERS" id="THE_LETTERS" />THE LETTERS</h2>
+
+
+<p>In order to make some of the allusions in these
+letters clear I will set down briefly the circumstances
+which explain them, and supply a narrative
+link where it may be required.</p>
+
+<p>I have already mentioned the Military Camp
+at Petewawa, on the Ottawa river. The Camp
+is situated about seven miles from Pembroke.
+The Ottawa river is at this point a beautiful
+lake. Immediately opposite the Camp is a little
+summer hotel of the simplest description. It
+was at this hotel that my wife, my daughter, and
+myself stayed in the early days of July, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>The hotel was full of the wives of the officers
+stationed in the Camp. During the daytime I
+was the only man among the guests. About five
+o'clock in the afternoon the officers from the
+Camp began to arrive on a primitive motor ferryboat.
+My son came over each day, and we often
+visited him at the Camp. His long training at
+Kingston had been very severe. It included besides
+the various classes which he attended a great
+deal of hard exercise, long rides or foot marches
+over frozen roads before breakfast, and so forth.
+After this strenuous winter the Camp at Petewawa
+was a delightful change. His tent stood
+on a bluff, commanding an exquisite view of the
+broad stretch of water, diversified by many small
+islands. We had a great deal of swimming in
+the lake, and several motor-boat excursions to
+its beautiful upper reaches. One afternoon
+when we went over in our launch to meet him
+at the Camp wharf, he told us that that day a
+General had come from Ottawa to ask for
+twenty-five picked officers to supply the casualties
+among the Canadian Field Artillery at the
+front. He had immediately volunteered and
+been accepted.</p>
+
+<p>At this time my two younger sons, who had
+joined us at Petewawa in order to see their
+brother, enrolled themselves in the Royal Naval
+Motor Patrol Service, and had to return to Nelson,
+British Columbia, to settle their affairs.
+Near Nelson, on the Kootenay Lake, we have a
+large fruit ranch, managed by my second son,
+Reginald. My youngest son, Eric, was with a
+law-firm in Nelson, and had just passed his final
+examinations as solicitor and barrister.</p>
+
+<p>This ranch had played a great part in our
+lives. The scenery is among the finest in British
+Columbia. We usually spent our summers
+there, finding not only continual interest in the
+development of our orchards, but a great deal of
+pleasure in riding, swimming, and boating. We
+had often talked of building a modern house
+there, but had never done so. The original &quot;little
+shack&quot; was the work of Reginald's own
+hands, in the days when most of the ranch was
+primeval forest. It had been added to, but was
+still of the simplest description. One reason
+why we had not built a modern house was that
+this &quot;little shack&quot; had become much endeared to
+us by association and memory. We were all together
+there more than once, and Coningsby
+had written a great deal there. We built later
+on a sort of summer library&mdash;a big room on the
+edge of a beautiful ravine&mdash;to which reference
+is made in later letters. Some of the happiest
+days of our lives were spent in these lovely surroundings,
+and the memory of those blue summer
+days, amid the fragrance of miles of pine-forest,
+often recurs to Coningsby as he writes
+from the mud-wastes of the Somme.</p>
+
+<p>We left Petewawa to go to the ranch before
+Coningsby sailed for England, that we might
+get our other two sons ready for their journey
+to England. They left us on August 21st, and
+the ranch was sub-let to Chinamen in the end
+of September, when we returned to Newark,
+New Jersey.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h1><a name="CARRY_ON" id="CARRY_ON" />CARRY ON</h1>
+
+<h2><a name="I" id="I" />I</h2>
+
+<p>OTTAWA, July 16th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST ALL:</p>
+
+
+<p>So much has happened since last I saw you
+that it's difficult to know where to start. On
+Thursday, after lunch, I got the news that we
+were to entrain from Petewawa next Friday
+morning. I at once put in for leave to go to
+Ottawa the next day until the following Thursday
+at reveille. We came here with a lot of the
+other officers who are going over and have been
+having a very full time.</p>
+
+<p>I am sailing from a port unknown on board
+the <i>Olympic</i> with 6,000 troops&mdash;there is to be a
+big convoy. I feel more than ever I did&mdash;and
+I'm sure it's a feeling that you share since visiting
+the camp&mdash;that I am setting out on a Crusade
+from which it would have been impossible
+to withhold myself with honour. I go quite
+gladly and contentedly, and pray that in God's
+good time we may all sit again in the little shack
+at Kootenay and listen to the rustling of the orchard
+outside. It will be of those summer days
+that I shall be thinking all the time.</p>
+
+<p>Yours, with very much love,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="II" id="II" />II</h2>
+
+<p>HALIFAX, July 23rd.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>We've spent all morning on the dock, seeing
+to our baggage, and have just got leave
+ashore for two hours. We have had letters
+handed to us saying that on no account are we
+to mention anything concerning our passage overseas,
+neither are we allowed to cable our arrival
+from the other side until four clear days have
+elapsed.</p>
+
+<p>You are thinking of me this quiet Sunday
+morning at the ranch, and I of you. And I am
+wishing&mdash;As I wish, I stop and ask myself,
+&quot;Would I be there if I could have my
+choice?&quot; And I remember those lines of Emerson's
+which you quoted:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&quot;Though love repine and reason chafe,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">There comes a voice without reply,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Twere man's perdition to be safe,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When for the Truth he ought to die.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I wouldn't turn back if I could, but my heart
+cries out against &quot;the voice which speaks without
+reply.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Things are growing deeper with me in all sorts
+of ways. Family affections stand out so desirably
+and vivid, like meadows green after rain.
+And religion means more. The love of a few
+dear human people and the love of the divine
+people out of sight, are all that one has to lean
+on in the graver hours of life. I hope I come
+back again&mdash;I very much hope I come back
+again; there are so many finer things that I could
+do with the rest of my days&mdash;bigger things. But
+if by any chance I should cross the seas to stay,
+you'll know that that also will be right and as big
+as anything that I could do with life, and something
+that you'll be able to be just as proud
+about as if I had lived to fulfil all your other
+dear hopes for me. I don't suppose I shall talk
+of this again. But I wanted you to know that
+underneath all the lightness and ambition there's
+something that I learnt years ago in Highbury<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1" /><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>.
+I've become a little child again in God's hands,
+with full confidence in His love and wisdom, and
+a growing trust that whatever He decides for me
+will be best and kindest.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1" /><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> We resided over thirteen years at Highbury, London,
+N., during my pastorate of the Highbury Quadrant Congregational
+Church.</p></div>
+
+<p>This is the last letter I shall be able to send
+to you before the other boys follow me. Keep
+brave, dear ones, for all our sakes; don't let any
+of us turn cowards whatever ultimately happens.
+We've a tradition to live up to now that
+we have become a family of soldiers and sailors.</p>
+
+<p>I shall long for the time when you come over
+to England. Where will our meeting be and
+when? Perhaps the war may be ended and then
+won't you be glad that we dared all this sorrow
+of good-byes?</p>
+
+<p>God bless and keep you,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="III" id="III" />III</h2>
+
+
+<p>ON BOARD,
+July 27th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My VERY DEAR PEOPLE:</p>
+
+<p>Here we are scooting along across the
+same old Atlantic we've crossed so many times
+on journeys of pleasure. I'm at a loss to make
+my letters interesting, as we are allowed to say
+little concerning the voyage and everything is
+censored.</p>
+
+<p>There are men on board who are going back
+to the trenches for the second time. One of
+them is a captain in the Princess Pat's, who is
+badly scarred in his neck and cheek and thighs,
+and has been in Canada recuperating. There is
+also a young flying chap who has also seen service.
+They are all such boys and so plucky in
+the face of certain knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>This morning I woke up thinking of our motor-tour
+of two years ago in England, and especially
+of our first evening at The Three Cups
+in Dorset. I feel like running down there to
+see it all again if I get any leave on landing.
+How strange it will be to go back to Highbury
+again like this! The little boy who ran back
+and forth to school down Paradise Row little
+thought of the person who to-day masquerades
+as his elder self.</p>
+
+<p>Heigho! I wish I could tell you a lot of
+things that I'm not allowed to. This letter
+would be much more interesting then.</p>
+
+<p>In seventeen days the boys will also have left
+you&mdash;so this will arrive when you're horribly
+lonely. I'm so sorry for you dear people&mdash;but
+I'd be sorrier for you if we were all with you.
+If I were a father or mother, I'd rather have
+my sons dead than see them failing when the
+supreme sacrifice was called for. I marvel all
+the time at the prosaic and even coarse types of
+men who have risen to the greatness of the occasion.
+And there's not a man aboard who
+would have chosen the job ahead of him. One
+man here used to pay other people to kill his
+pigs because he couldn't endure the cruelty of
+doing it himself. And now he's going to kill
+men. And he's a sample. I wonder if there is
+a Lord God of Battles&mdash;or is he only an invention
+of man and an excuse for man's own actions.</p>
+
+<p>Monday.</p>
+
+<p>We are just in&mdash;safely arrived in spite of
+everything. I hope you had no scare reports of
+our having been sunk&mdash;such reports often get
+about when a big troop ship is on the way.</p>
+
+<p>I'm baggage master for my draft, and have to
+get on deck now. You'll have a long letter from
+me soon.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye,
+Yours ever,
+Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="IV" id="IV" />IV</h2>
+
+
+<p>SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEARESTS:</p>
+
+<p>We haven't had any hint of what is going
+to happen to us&mdash;whether Field Artillery, the
+Heavies or trench mortars. There seems little
+doubt that we are to be in England for a little
+while taking special courses.</p>
+
+<p>I read father's letter yesterday. You are very
+brave&mdash;you never thought that you would be the
+father of a soldier and sailors; and, as you say,
+there's a kind of tradition about the way in
+which the fathers of soldiers and sailors should
+act. Confess&mdash;aren't you more honestly happy
+to be our father as we are now than as we were?
+I know quite well you are, in spite of the loneliness
+and heartache. We've all been forced into
+a heroism of which we did not think ourselves
+capable. We've been carried up to the Calvary
+of the world where it is expedient that a few
+men should suffer that all the generations to
+come may be better.</p>
+
+<p>I understand in a dim way all that you suffer&mdash;the
+sudden divorce of all that we had hoped
+for from the present&mdash;the ceaseless questionings
+as to what lies ahead. Your end of the business
+is the worse. For me, I can go forward steadily
+because of the greatness of the glory. I never
+thought to have the chance to suffer in my body
+for other men. The insufficiency of merely setting
+nobilities down on paper is finished. How
+unreal I seem to myself! Can it be true that I
+am here and you are in the still aloofness of the
+Rockies? I think the multitude of my changes
+has blunted my perceptions. I trudge along like
+a traveller between high hedgerows; my heart is
+blinkered so that I am scarcely aware of landscapes.
+My thoughts are always with you&mdash;I
+make calculations for the differences of time that
+I may follow more accurately your doings. I'd
+love to come down to the study summer-house
+and watch the blueness of the lake with you&mdash;I
+love those scenes and memories more than any
+in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye for the present. Be brave.</p>
+
+<p>Yours,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="V" id="V" />V</h2>
+
+
+<p>SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEARS:</p>
+
+<p>It's not quite three weeks to-day since I
+came to England, and it seems ages. The first
+week was spent on leave, the second I passed my
+exams in gun drill and gun-laying, and this week
+I have finished my riding. Next Monday I start
+on my gunnery.</p>
+
+<p>Do you remember Captain S. at the Camp?
+I had his young brother to dinner with me last
+night-he's just back from France minus an
+eye. He lasted three and a half weeks, and was
+buried four feet deep by a shell. He's a jolly
+boy, as cheerful as you could want and is very
+good company. He gave me a vivid description.
+He had a great boy-friend. At the start of the
+war they both joined, S. in the Artillery, his
+friend in the Mounted Rifles. At parting they
+exchanged identification tokens. S.'s bore his
+initials and the one word &quot;Violets&quot;&mdash;which
+meant that they were his favourite flower and he
+would like to have some scattered over him when
+he was buried. His friend wore his initials and
+the words &quot;No flowers by request.&quot; It was S.'s
+first week out&mdash;they were advancing, having
+driven back the enemy, and were taking up a
+covered position in a wood from which to renew
+their offensive. It was night, black as pitch, but
+they knew that the wood must have been the
+scene of fighting by the scuttling of the rats.
+Suddenly the moon came out, and from beneath
+a bush S. saw a face&mdash;or rather half a face&mdash;which
+he thought he recognised, gazing up at
+him. He corrects himself when he tells the
+story, and says that it wasn't so much the disfigured
+features as the profile that struck him as
+familiar. He bent down and searched beneath
+the shirt, and drew out a little metal disc with
+&quot;No flowers by request&quot; written on it.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know whether I ought to repeat things
+like that to you, but the description was so
+graphic. I have met many who have returned
+from the Front, and what puzzles me in all of
+them is their unawed acceptance of death. I
+don't think I could ever accept it as natural; it's
+too discourteous in its interruption of many
+dreams and plans and loves.</p>
+
+<p>Yours with very much love,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VI" id="VI" />VI</h2>
+
+<p>SHORNCLIFF, August 30th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEARESTS:</p>
+
+<p>I have just returned from sending you a
+cable to let you know that I'm off to France.
+The word came out in orders yesterday, and I
+shall leave before the end of the week with a
+draft of officers&mdash;I have been in England just a
+day over four weeks. My only regret is that I
+shall miss the boys who should be travelling up
+to London about the same time as I am setting
+out for the Front. After I have been there for
+three months I am supposed to get a leave&mdash;this
+should be due to me about the beginning of December,
+and you can judge how I shall count on
+it. Think of the meeting with R. and E., and
+the immensity of the joy.</p>
+
+<p>Selfishly I wish that you were here at this
+moment&mdash;actually I'm glad that you are away.
+Everybody goes out quite unemotionally and
+with very few good-byes&mdash;we made far more
+fuss in the old days about a week-end visit.</p>
+
+<p>Now that at last it has come&mdash;this privileged
+moment for which I have worked and waited&mdash;my
+heart is very quiet. It's the test of a character
+which I have often doubted. I shall be
+glad not to have to doubt it again. Whatever
+happens, I know you will be glad to remember
+that at a great crisis I tried to play the man, however
+small my qualifications. We have always
+lived so near to one another's affections that this
+going out alone is more lonely to me than to
+most men. I have always had some one near at
+hand with love-blinded eyes to see my faults as
+springing from higher motives. Now I reach
+out my hands across six thousand miles and only
+touch yours with my imagination to say good-bye.
+What queer sights these eyes, which have
+been almost your eyes, will witness! If my hands
+do anything respectable, remember that it is your
+hands that are doing it. It is your influence as
+a family that has made me ready for the part I
+have to play, and where I go, you follow me.</p>
+
+<p>Poor little circle of three loving persons,
+please be tremendously brave. Don't let anything
+turn you into cowards&mdash;we've all got to
+be worthy of each other's sacrifice; the greater
+the sacrifice may prove to be for the one the
+greater the nobility demanded of the remainder.
+How idle the words sound, and yet they will take
+deep meanings when time has given them graver
+sanctions. I think gallant is the word I've been
+trying to find&mdash;we must be gallant English
+women and gentlemen.</p>
+
+<p>It's been raining all day and I got very wet
+this morning. Don't you wish I had caught some
+quite harmless sickness? When I didn't want to
+go back to school, I used to wet my socks purposely
+in order to catch cold, but the cold always
+avoided me when I wanted it badly. How far
+away the childish past seems&mdash;almost as though
+it never happened. And was I really the budding
+novelist in New York? Life has become
+so stern and scarlet&mdash;and so brave. From my
+window I look out on the English Channel, a
+cold, grey-green sea, with rain driving across it
+and a fleet of small craft taking shelter. Over
+there beyond the curtain of mist lies France&mdash;and
+everything that awaits me.</p>
+
+<p>News has just come that I have to start. Will
+continue from France.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever lovingly,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VII" id="VII" />VII</h2>
+
+
+<p>Friday, September 1st, 1916, 11 am.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST FATHER AND MOTHER:</p>
+
+<p>I embark at 12.30&mdash;so this is the last line
+before I reach France. I expect the boys are
+now within sight of English shores&mdash;I wish I
+could have had an hour with them.</p>
+
+<p>I'm going to do my best to bring you honour&mdash;remember
+that&mdash;I shall do things for your
+sake out there, living up to the standards you
+have taught me.</p>
+
+<p>Yours with a heart full of love,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VIII" id="VIII" />VIII</h2>
+
+<p>FRANCE, September 1st, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST M.:</p>
+
+<p>Here I am in France with the same
+strange smells and street cries, and almost the
+same little boys bowling hoops over the very
+cobbly cobble stones. I had afternoon tea at a
+patisserie and ate a great many g&acirc;teaux for the
+sake of old times. We had a very choppy crossing,
+and you would most certainly have been
+sick had you been on board. It seemed to me
+that I must be coming on one of those romantic
+holidays to see churches and dead history&mdash;only
+the khaki-clad figures reminded me that I was
+coming to see history in the making. It's a
+funny world that batters us about so. It's three
+years since I was in France&mdash;the last time was
+with Arthur in Provence. It's five years since
+you and I did our famous trip together.</p>
+
+<p>I wish you were here&mdash;there are heaps of English
+nurses in the streets. I expect to sleep in
+this place and proceed to my destination to-morrow.
+How I wish I could send you a really descriptive
+letter! If I did, I fear you would not
+get it&mdash;so I have to write in generalities. None
+of this seems real&mdash;it's a kind of wild pretence
+from which I shall awake-and when I tell you
+my dream you'll laugh and say, &quot;How absurd
+of you, dreaming that you were a soldier. I
+must say you look like it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, my dearest girl,</p>
+
+<p>God bless you,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="IX" id="IX" />IX</h2>
+
+
+<p>September 8th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAREST ONES:</p>
+
+<p>I'm sending this to meet you on your return
+from Kootenay. I left England on September
+1st and had a night at my point of disembarkation,
+and then set off on a wandering adventure
+in search of my division. I'm sure
+you'll understand that I cannot enter into any
+details&mdash;I can only give you general and purely
+personal impressions. There were two other
+officers with me, both from Montreal. We had
+to picnic on chocolate and wine for twenty-four
+hours through our lack of forethought in not supplying
+ourselves with food for the trip. I shaved
+the first morning with water from the exhaust
+of a railroad engine, having first balanced my
+mirror on the step. The engineer was fascinated
+with my safety razor. There were Tommies
+from the trenches in another train, muddied to
+the eyes&mdash;who showed themselves much more resourceful.
+They cooked themselves quite admirable
+meals as they squatted on the rails, over
+little fires on which they perched tomato cans.
+Sunday evening we saw our first German prisoners&mdash;a
+young and degenerate-looking lot. Sunday
+evening we got off at a station in the rain,
+and shouldered our own luggage. Our luggage,
+by the way, consists of a sleeping bag, in which
+much of our stuff is packed, and a kit sack&mdash;for
+an immediate change and toilet articles one
+carries a haversack hung across the shoulder.
+Well, as I say, we alighted and coaxed a military
+wagon to come to our rescue. As we set off
+through a drizzling rain, trudging behind the
+cart, a double rainbow shone, which I took for
+an omen. Presently we came to a rest camp,
+where we told our sad story of empty tummies,
+and were put up for the night. A Jock&mdash;all
+Highlanders are called Jock&mdash;looked after us.
+Next morning we started out afresh in a motor
+lorry and finished at a Y.M.C.A. tent, where
+we stayed two nights. On Wednesday we met
+the General in Command of our Division, who
+posted me to the battery, which is said to be the
+best in the best brigade in the best division&mdash;so
+you may see I'm in luck. I found the battery
+just having come out of action&mdash;we expect to go
+back again in a day or two. Major B. is the
+O.C.&mdash;a fine man. The lieutenant who shares
+my tent won the Military Cross at Ypres last
+Spring. I'm very happy&mdash;which will make you
+happy&mdash;and longing for my first taste of real
+war.</p>
+
+<p>How strangely far away I am from you&mdash;all
+the experiences so unshared and different. Long
+before this reaches you I shall have been in action
+several times. This time three years ago
+my streak of luck came to me and I was prancing
+round New York. To-day I am much more
+genuinely happy in mind, for I feel, as I never
+felt when I was only writing, that I am doing
+something difficult which has no element of self
+in it. If I come back, life will be a much less
+restless affair.</p>
+
+<p>This letter! I can imagine it being delivered
+and the shout from whoever takes it and the
+comments. I make the contrast in my mind&mdash;this
+little lean-to spread of canvas about four
+feet high, the horse-lines, guns, sentries going up
+and down&mdash;and then the dear home and the well-loved
+faces.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye. Don't be at all nervous.</p>
+
+<p>Yours lovingly,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="X" id="X" />X</h2>
+
+
+<p>September 12th, Tuesday.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST M.:</p>
+
+<p>You will already have received my first
+letters giving you my address over here. The
+wagon has just come up to our position, but it has
+brought me only one letter since I've been across.
+I'm sitting in my dug-out with shells passing over
+my head with the sound of ripping linen. I've
+already had the novel experience of firing a battery,
+and to-morrow I go up to the first line
+trenches.</p>
+
+<p>It's extraordinary how commonplace war becomes
+to a man who is thrust among others who
+consider it commonplace. Not fifty yards away
+from me a dead German lies rotting and uncovered&mdash;I
+daresay he was buried once and then
+blown out by a shell.</p>
+
+<p>Wednesday, 7 p.m.</p>
+
+<p>Your letters came two hours ago&mdash;the first to
+reach me here&mdash;and I have done little else but
+read and re-read them. How they bring the old
+ways of life back with their love and longing!
+Dear mother's tie will be worn to-morrow, and
+it will be ripping to feel that it was made by her
+hands. Your cross has not arrived yet, dear.
+Your mittens will be jolly for the winter. I've
+heard nothing from the boys yet.</p>
+
+<p>To-day I took a trip into No-Man's Land&mdash;when
+the war is ended I'll be able to tell you all
+about it. I think the picture is photographed
+upon my memory forever. There's so much
+you would like to hear and so little I'm allowed
+to tell. Ask G.M.'C. if he was at Princeton with
+a man named Price&mdash;an instructor there.</p>
+
+<p>You ought to see the excitement when the
+water-cart brings us our mail and the letters are
+handed out. Some of the gunners have evidently
+told their Canadian girls that they are officers,
+and so they are addressed on their letters as
+lieutenants. I have to censor some of their replies,
+and I can tell you they are as often funny
+as pathetic. The ones to their mothers are childish,
+too, and have rows of kisses. I think men
+are always kiddies if you look beneath the surface.
+The snapshots did fill me with a wanting
+to be with you in Kootenay. But that's not
+where you'll receive this. There'll probably be
+a fire in the sitting-room at home, and a strong
+aroma of coffee and tobacco. You'll be sitting
+in a low chair before the fire and your fingers
+rubbing the hair above your left ear as you read
+this aloud. I'd like to walk in on you and say,
+&quot;No more need for letters now.&quot; Some day
+soon, I pray and expect.</p>
+
+<p>Tell dear Papa and Mother that their answers
+come next. What a lot of love you each one
+manage to put into your written pages! I'm
+afraid if I let myself go that way I might make
+you unhappy.</p>
+
+<p>Since writing this far I have had supper. I'm
+now sleeping in a new dug-out and get a shower
+of mould on my sleeping-kit each time the guns
+are fired. One doesn't mind that particularly,
+especially when you know that the earth walls
+make you safe. I have a candle in an old petrol
+tin and dodge the shadows as I write. You
+know, this artillery game is good sport and
+one takes everything as it comes with a joke.
+The men are splendid&mdash;their cheeriness comes
+up bubbling whenever the occasion calls for the
+dumps. Certainly there are fine qualities which
+war, despite its unnaturalness, develops. I'm
+hats off to every infantry private I meet nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you and all of you.</p>
+
+<p>Yours lovingly, Con.</p>
+
+<p>The reference in the previous letter to a
+cross is to a little bronze cross of Francis of
+Assisi.</p>
+
+<p>Many years ago I visited Assisi, and, on leaving,
+the monks gave me four of these small
+bronze crosses, assuring me that those who wore
+them were securely defended in all peril by the
+efficacious prayers of St. Francis.
+Just before Coningsby left Shorncliff to go to
+France he wrote to us and asked if we couldn't
+send him something to hang round his neck for
+luck. We fortunately had one of these crosses
+of St. Francis at the ranch, and his sister&mdash;the
+M. of these letters-sent it to him. It arrived
+safely, and he has worn it ever since.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XI" id="XI" />XI</h2>
+
+<p>September 15th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR FATHER:</p>
+
+<p>Your last letter to me was written on a
+quiet morning in August&mdash;in the summer house
+at Kootenay. It came up yesterday evening on a
+water-cart from the wagon-lines to a scene a
+little in contrast.</p>
+
+<p>It's a fortnight to-day since I left England,
+and already I've seen action. Things move
+quickly in this game, and it is a game&mdash;one
+which brings out both the best and the worst
+qualities in a man. If unconscious heroism is
+the virtue most to be desired, and heroism spiced
+with a strong sense of humour at that, then
+pretty well every man I have met out here has
+the amazing guts to wear his crown of thorns as
+though it were a cap-and-bells. To do that for
+the sake of corporate stout-heartedness is, I think,
+the acme of what Aristotle meant by virtue. A
+strong man, or a good man or a brainless man,
+can walk to meet pain with a smile on his mouth
+because he knows that he is strong enough to
+bear it, or worthy enough to defy it, or because
+he is such a fool that he has no imagination.
+But these chaps are neither particularly strong,
+good, nor brainless; they're more like children,
+utterly casual with regard to trouble, and quite
+aware that it is useless to struggle against their
+elders. So they have the merriest of times while
+they can, and when the governess, Death, summons
+them to bed, they obey her with unsurprised
+quietness. It sends the mercury of one's
+optimism rising to see the way they do it. I
+search my mind to find the bigness of motive
+which supports them, but it forever evades me.
+These lads are not the kind who philosophise
+about life; they're the sort, many of them, who
+would ordinarily wear corduroys and smoke a
+cutty pipe. I suppose the Christian martyrs
+would have done the same had corduroys been
+the fashion in that day, and if a Roman Raleigh
+had discovered tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>I wrote this about midnight and didn't get any
+further, as I was up till six carrying on and firing
+the battery. After adding another page or
+two I want to get some sleep, as I shall probably
+have to go up to the observation station to watch
+the effect of fire to-night. But before I turn in
+I want to tell you that I had the most gorgeous
+mail from everybody. Now that I'm in touch
+with you all again, it's almost like saying &quot;How-do?&quot;
+every night and morning.</p>
+
+<p>I daresay you'll wonder how it feels to be under
+shell-fire. This is how it feels&mdash;you don't
+realise your danger until you come to think about
+it afterwards&mdash;at the time it's like playing coconut
+shies at a coon's head&mdash;only you're the coon's
+head. You take too much interest in the sport
+of dodging to be afraid. You'll hear the Tommies
+saying if one bursts nearly on them, &quot;Line,
+you blighter, line. Five minutes more left,&quot; just
+as though they were reprimanding the unseen
+Hun battery for rotten shooting.</p>
+
+<p>The great word of the Tommies here is &quot;No
+bloody bon&quot;&mdash;a strange mixture of French and
+English, which means that a thing is no good.
+If it pleases them it's <i>Jake</i>&mdash;though where Jake
+comes from nobody knows.</p>
+
+<p>Now I must get a wink or two, as I don't
+know when I may have to start off.</p>
+
+<p>Ever yours, with love,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XII" id="XII" />XII</h2>
+
+<p>September 19th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dearest Mother:</p>
+
+<p>I've been in France 19 days, and it hasn't
+taken me long to go into action. Soon I shall
+be quite an old hand. I'm just back from 24
+hours in the Observation Post, from which one
+watches the effect of fire. I understand now and
+forgive the one phrase which the French children
+have picked up from our Tommies on account
+of its frequent occurrence&mdash;&quot;bl&mdash;&mdash; mud.&quot;
+I never knew that mud could be so thick and
+treacly. All my fear that I might be afraid under
+shell-fire is over&mdash;you get to believe that if
+you're going to be hit you're going to be. But
+David's phrase keeps repeating itself in my mind,
+&quot;Ten thousand shall fall at thy side, etc., but it
+shall not come nigh unto thee.&quot; It's a curious
+thing that the men who are most afraid are those
+who get most easily struck. A friend of G.M.C.'s
+was hit the other day within thirty yards of me&mdash;he
+was a Princeton chap. I mentioned him in
+one of my previous letters. Our right section
+commander got a blighty two days ago and is
+probably now in England. He went off on a
+firing battery wagon, grinning all over his face,
+saying he wouldn't sell that bit of blood and
+shrapnel for a thousand pounds. I'm wearing
+your tie&mdash;it's the envy of the battery. All the
+officers wanted me to give them the name of my
+girl. It never occurs to men that mothers will
+do things like that.</p>
+
+<p>Thank the powers it has stopped raining and
+we'll be able to get dry. I came in plastered
+from head to foot with lying in the rain on my
+tummy and peering over the top of a trench.
+Isn't it a funny change from comfortable breakfasts,
+press notices and a blazing fire?</p>
+
+<p>Do you want any German souvenirs? Just at
+present I can get plenty. I have a splendid
+bayonet and a belt with Kaiser Bill's arms on
+it&mdash;but you can't forward these things from
+France. The Germans swear that they're not
+using bayonets with saw-edges, but you can buy
+them for five francs from the Tommies&mdash;ones
+they've taken from the prisoners or else picked
+up.</p>
+
+<p>You needn't be nervous about me. I'm a
+great little dodger of whizz-bangs. Besides I
+have a superstition that there's something in the
+power of M.'s cross to bless. It came with the
+mittens, and is at present round my neck.</p>
+
+<p>You know what it sounds like when they're
+shooting coals down an iron run-way into a
+cellar-well, imagine a thousand of them.
+That's what I'm hearing while I write.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you; I'm very happy.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XIII" id="XIII" />XIII</h2>
+
+<p>September 19th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dearest Father:</p>
+
+<p>I'm writing you your birthday letter early,
+as I don't know how busy I may be in the next
+week, nor how long this may take to reach you.
+You know how much love I send you and how
+I would like to be with you. D'you remember
+the birthday three years ago when we set the
+victrola going outside your room door? Those
+were my high-jinks days when very many things
+seemed possible. I'd rather be the person I am
+now than the person I was then. Life was
+selfish though glorious.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I've seen my first modern battlefield and
+am quite disillusioned about the splendour of
+war. The splendour is all in the souls of the
+men who creep through the squalor like vermin&mdash;it's
+in nothing external. There was a chap
+here the other day who deserved the V.C. four
+times over by running back through the Hun
+shell fire to bring news that the infantry wanted
+more artillery support. I was observing for my
+brigade in the forward station at the time. How
+he managed to live through the ordeal nobody
+knows. But men laugh while they do these
+things. It's fine.</p>
+
+<p>A modern battlefield is the abomination of
+abominations. Imagine a vast stretch of dead
+country, pitted with shell-holes as though it had
+been mutilated with small-pox. There's not a
+leaf or a blade of grass in sight. Every house
+has either been leveled or is in ruins. No bird
+sings. Nothing stirs. The only live sound is
+at night&mdash;the scurry of rats. You enter a kind
+of ditch, called a trench; it leads on to another
+and another in an unjoyful maze. From the
+sides feet stick out, and arms and faces&mdash;the
+dead of previous encounters. &quot;One of our
+chaps,&quot; you say casually, recognising him by his
+boots or khaki, or &quot;Poor blighter&mdash;a Hun!&quot;
+One can afford to forget enmity in the presence
+of the dead. It is horribly difficult sometimes
+to distinguish between the living and the slaughtered&mdash;they
+both lie so silently in their little kennels
+in the earthen bank. You push on&mdash;especially
+if you are doing observation work, till you
+are past your own front line and out in No
+Man's Land. You have to crouch and move
+warily now. Zing! A bullet from a German
+sniper. You laugh and whisper, &quot;A near one,
+that.&quot; My first trip to the trenches was up to
+No Man's Land. I went in the early dawn and
+came to a Madame Tussaud's show of the dead,
+frozen into immobility in the most extraordinary
+attitudes. Some of them were part way
+out of the ground, one hand pressed to the
+wound, the other pointing, the head sunken and
+the hair plastered over the forehead by repeated
+rains. I kept on wondering what my companions
+would look like had they been three weeks
+dead. My imagination became ingeniously and
+vividly morbid. When I had to step over them
+to pass, it seemed as though they must clutch at
+my trench coat and ask me to help. Poor lonely
+people, so brave and so anonymous in their
+death! Somewhere there is a woman who loved
+each one of them and would give her life for my
+opportunity to touch the poor clay that had been
+kind to her. It's like walking through the day
+of resurrection to visit No Man's Land. Then
+the Huns see you and the shrapnel begins to
+fall&mdash;you crouch like a dog and run for it.</p>
+
+<p>One gets used to shell-fire up to a point, but
+there's not a man who doesn't want to duck when
+he hears one coming. The worst of all is the
+whizz-bang, because it doesn't give you a
+chance&mdash;it pounces and is on you the same moment
+that it bangs. There's so much I wish that
+I could tell you. I can only say this, at the moment
+we're making history.</p>
+
+<p>What a curious birthday letter! I think of all
+your other birthdays&mdash;the ones before I met
+these silent men with the green and yellow faces,
+and the blackened lips which will never speak
+again. What happy times we have had as a
+family&mdash;what happy jaunts when you took me
+in those early days, dressed in a sailor suit, when
+you went hunting pictures. Yet, for all the
+damnability of what I now witness, I was never
+quieter in my heart. To have surrendered to an
+imperative self-denial brings a peace which self-seeking
+never brought.</p>
+
+<p>So don't let this birthday be less gay for my
+absence. It ought to be the proudest in your
+life&mdash;proud because your example has taught
+each of your sons to do the difficult things which
+seem right. It would have been a condemnation
+of you if any one of us had been a shirker.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;I want to buy fine things for you</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And be a soldier if I can.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The lines come back to me now. You read
+them to me first in the dark little study from a
+green oblong book. You little thought that I
+would be a soldier&mdash;even now I can hardly realise
+the fact. It seems a dream from which I
+shall wake up. Am I really killing men day by
+day? Am I really in jeopardy myself?</p>
+
+<p>Whatever happens I'm not afraid, and I'll give
+you reason to be glad of me.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">Very much love,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The poem referred to in this letter was actually
+written for Coningsby when he was between
+five and six years old. The dark little study
+which he describes was in the old house at Wesley's
+Chapel, in the City Road, London&mdash;and it
+was very dark, with only one window, looking
+out upon a dingy yard. The green oblong book
+in which I used to write my poems I still have;
+and it is an illustration of the tenacity of a child's
+memory that he should recall it. The poem was
+called <i>A Little Boy's Programme</i>, and ran thus:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I am so very young and small,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">That, when big people pass me by,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I sometimes think they are so high</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I'll never be a man at all.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And yet I want to be a man</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Because so much I want to do;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I want to buy fine things for you,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And be a soldier, if I can.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When I'm a man I will not let</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Poor little children starve, or be</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Ill-used, or stand and beg of me</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">With naked feet out in the wet.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Now, don't you laugh!&mdash;The father kissed</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">The little serious mouth and said</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;You've almost made me cry instead,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">You blessed little optimist.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XIV" id="XIV" />XIV</h2>
+
+
+<p>September 21st, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My Very Dear M.:</p>
+
+<p>I am wearing your talisman while I write
+and have a strong superstition in its efficacy.
+The efficacy of your socks is also very noticeable&mdash;I
+wore them the first time on a trip to the
+Forward Observation Station. I had to lie on
+my tummy in the mud, my nose just showing
+above the parapet, for the best part of twenty-four
+hours. Your socks little thought I would
+take them into such horrid places when you made
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Last night both the King and Sir Sam sent us
+congratulations&mdash;I popped in just at the right
+time. I daresay you know far more about our
+doings than I do. Only this morning I picked
+up the <i>London Times</i> and read a full account of
+everything I have witnessed. The account is
+likely to be still fuller in the New York papers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Home for Christmas&quot;&mdash;that's what the Tommies
+are promising their mothers and sweethearts
+in all their letters that I censor. Yesterday
+I was offered an Imperial commission in
+the army of occupation. But home for Christmas,
+will be Christmas, 1917&mdash;I can't think that
+it will be earlier.</p>
+
+<p>Very much love,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XV" id="XV" />XV</h2>
+
+<p>Sunday, September 24th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST MOTHER:</p>
+
+<p>Your locket has just reached me, and I
+have strung it round my neck with M.'s cross.
+Was it M.'s cross the other night that accounted
+for my luck? I was in a gun-pit when a shell
+landed, killing a man only a foot away from me
+and wounding three others&mdash;I and the sergeant
+were the only two to get out all right. Men
+who have been out here some time have a dozen
+stories of similar near squeaks. And talking of
+squeaks, it was a mouse that saved one man. It
+kept him awake to such an extent that he determined
+to move to another place. Just as he got
+outside the dug-out a shell fell on the roof.</p>
+
+<p>You'll be pleased to know that we have a ripping
+chaplain or Padre, as they call chaplains,
+with us. He plays the game, and I've struck up
+a great friendship with him. We discuss literature
+and religion when we're feeling a bit fed
+up. We talk at home of our faith being tested&mdash;one
+begins to ask strange questions here when
+he sees what men are allowed by the Almighty
+to do to one another, and so it's a fine thing to
+be in constant touch with a great-hearted chap
+who can risk his life daily to speak of the life
+hereafter to dying Tommies.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could tell you of my doings, but it's
+strictly against orders. You may read in the
+papers of actions in which I've taken part and
+never know that I was there.</p>
+
+<p>We live for the most part on tinned stuff, but
+our appetites make anything taste palatable.
+Living and sleeping in the open air keeps one
+ravenous. And one learns to sleep the sleep of
+the just despite the roaring of the guns.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you each one and give us peaceful*
+hearts.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XVI" id="XVI" />XVI</h2>
+
+<p>September 28th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My Dears:</p>
+
+<p>We're in the midst of a fine old show, so
+I don't get much opportunity for writing. Suffice
+it to say that I've seen the big side of war by
+now and the extraordinary uncalculating courage
+of it. Men run out of a trench to an attack
+with as much eagerness as they would display
+in overtaking a late bus. If you want to
+get an idea of what meals are like when a row
+is on, order the McAlpin to spread you a table
+where 34th crosses Broadway&mdash;and wait for the
+uptown traffic on the Elevated. It's wonderful
+to see the waiters dodging with dishes through
+the shell-holes.</p>
+
+<p>It's a wonderful autumn day, golden and mellow;
+I picture to myself what this country must
+have looked like before the desolation of war
+struck it.</p>
+
+<p>I was Brigade observation officer on September
+26th, and wouldn't have missed what I saw
+for a thousand dollars. It was a touch and go
+business, with shells falling everywhere and machine-gun
+fire&mdash;but something glorious to remember.
+I had the great joy of being useful in
+setting a Hun position on fire. I think the war
+will be over in a twelvemonth.</p>
+
+<p>Our great joy is composing menus of the
+meals we'll eat when we get home. Good-bye
+for the present.</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XVII" id="XVII" />XVII</h2>
+
+<p>October 1st, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAREST M.:</p>
+
+<p>Sunday morning, your first back in Newark.
+You're not up yet owing to the difference
+in time&mdash;I can imagine the quiet house with
+the first of the morning stealing greyly in.
+You'll be presently going to church to sit in your
+old-fashioned mahogany pew. There's not
+much of Sunday in our atmosphere&mdash;only the
+little one can manage to keep in his heart. I
+shall share the echo of yours by remembering.</p>
+
+<p>I'm waiting orders at the present moment to
+go forward with the Colonel and pick out a new
+gun position. You know I'm very happy-satisfied
+for the first time I'm doing something big
+enough to make me forget all failures and self-contempts.
+I know at last that I can measure
+up to the standard I have always coveted for myself.
+So don't worry yourselves about any note
+of hardship that you may interpret into my letters,
+for the deprivation is fully compensated for
+by the winged sense of exaltation one has.</p>
+
+<p>Things have been a little warm round us
+lately. A gun to our right, another to our rear
+and another to our front were knocked out with
+direct hits. We've got some of the chaps taking
+their meals with us now because their mess
+was all shot to blazes. There was an officer who
+was with me at the 53rd blown thirty feet into
+the air while I was watching. He picked himself
+up and insisted on carrying on, although his
+face was a mass of bruises. I walked in on the
+biggest engagement of the entire war the moment
+I came out here. There was no gradual
+breaking-in for me. My first trip to the front
+line was into a trench full of dead.</p>
+
+<p>Have you seen Lloyd George's great speech?
+I'm all with him. No matter what the cost and
+how many of us have to give our lives, this War
+must be so finished that war may be forever at
+an end. If the devils who plan wars could only
+see the abysmal result of their handiwork!
+Give them one day in the trenches under shell-fire
+when their lives aren't worth a five minutes'
+purchase&mdash;or one day carrying back the wounded
+through this tortured country, or one day in a
+Red Cross train. No one can imagine the damnable
+waste and Christlessness of this battering
+of human flesh. The only way that this War can
+be made holy is by making it so thorough that
+war will be finished for all time.</p>
+
+<p>Papa at least will be awake by now. How
+familiar the old house seems to me&mdash;I can think
+of the place of every picture. Do you set the
+victrola going now-a-days? I bet you play
+Boys in Khaki, Boys in Blue.</p>
+
+<p>Please send me anything in the way of eatables
+that the goodness of your hearts can imagine&mdash;also
+smokes.</p>
+
+<p>Later.</p>
+
+<p>I came back from the front-line all right and
+have since been hard at it firing. Your letters
+reached me in the midst of a bombardment&mdash;I
+read them in a kind of London fog of gun-powder
+smoke, with my steel helmet tilted back,
+in the interval of commanding my section
+through a megaphone.</p>
+
+<p>Don't suppose that I'm in any way unhappy&mdash;I'm
+as cheerful as a cricket and do twice as
+much hopping&mdash;I have to. There's something
+extraordinarily bracing about taking risks and
+getting away with it&mdash;especially when you know
+that you're contributing your share to a far-reaching
+result. My mother is the mother of a
+soldier now, and soldiers' mothers don't lie
+awake at night imagining&mdash;they just say a prayer
+for their sons and leave everything in God's
+hands. I'm sure you'd far rather I died than
+not play the man to the fullest of my strength.
+It isn't when you die that matters&mdash;it's how.
+Not but what I intend to return to Newark and
+make the house reek of tobacco smoke before
+I've done.</p>
+
+<p>We're continually in action now, and the casualty
+to B. has left us short-handed&mdash;moreover
+we're helping out another battery which has lost
+two officers. As you've seen by the papers,
+we've at last got the Hun on the run. Three
+hundred passed me the other day unescorted,
+coming in to give themselves up as prisoners.
+They're the dirtiest lot you ever set eyes on, and
+looked as though they hadn't eaten for months.
+I wish I could send you some souvenirs. But
+we can't send them out of France.</p>
+
+<p>I'm scribbling by candlelight and everything's
+jumping with the stamping of the guns. I wear
+the locket and cross all the time.</p>
+
+<p>Yours with much love,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XVIII" id="XVIII" />XVIII</h2>
+
+<p>October 13th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>I have only time to write and assure you
+that I am safe. We're living in trenches at
+present&mdash;I have my sleeping bag placed on a
+stretcher to keep it fairly dry. By the time you
+get this we expect to be having a rest, as we've
+been hard at it now for an unusually long time.
+How I wish that I could tell you so many things
+that are big and vivid in my mind-but the censor&mdash;!</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday I had an exciting day. I was up
+forward when word came through that an officer
+still further forward was wounded and he'd
+been caught in a heavy enemy fire. I had only
+a kid telephonist with me, but we found a
+stretcher, went forward and got him out. The
+earth was hopping up and down like pop-corn
+in a frying pan. The unfortunate thing was
+that the poor chap died on the way out. It was
+only the evening before that we had dined together
+and he had told me what he was going to
+do with his next leave.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you all,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="XIX" id="XIX" />XIX</h2>
+
+<p>October 14th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST MOTHER:</p>
+
+<p>I'm still all right and well. To-day I had
+the funniest experience of my life&mdash;got caught
+in a Hun curtain of fire and had to lie on my
+tummy for two hours in a trench with the shells
+bursting five yards from me&mdash;and never a
+scratch. You know how I used to wonder what
+I'd do under such circumstances. Well, I
+laughed. All I could think of was the sleek people
+walking down Fifth Avenue, and the equally
+sleek crowds taking tea at the Waldorf. It
+struck me as ludicrous that I, who had been one
+of them, should be lying there lunchless. For
+a little while I was slightly deaf with the concussions.</p>
+
+<p>That poem keeps on going through my head,</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Oh, to come home once more, when the dusk is falling,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">To see the nursery lighted and the children's table spread;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;Mother, mother, mother!&quot; the eager voices calling,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">&quot;The baby was so sleepy that he had to go to bed!&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Wouldn't it be good, instead of sitting in a
+Hun dug-out?</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours lovingly,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 16.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XX" id="XX" />XX</h2>
+
+<p>October 15th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Ones:</p>
+
+<p>We're still in action, but are in hopes that
+soon we may be moved to winter quarters.
+We've had our taste of mud, and are anxious to
+move into better quarters before we get our next.
+I think I told you that our O.C. had got
+wounded in the feet, and our right section commander
+got it in the shoulder a little earlier&mdash;so
+we're a bit short-handed and find ourselves with
+plenty of work.</p>
+
+<p>I have curiously lucid moments when recent
+happenings focus themselves in what seems to be
+their true perspective. The other night I was
+Forward Observation officer on one of our recent
+battlefields. I had to watch the front all
+night for signals, etc. There was a full white
+moon sailing serenely overhead, and when I
+looked at it I could almost fancy myself back in
+the old melancholy pomp of autumn woodlands
+where the leaves were red, not with the colour
+of men's blood. My mind went back to so many
+by-gone days-especially to three years ago. I
+seemed so vastly young then, upon reflection.
+For a little while I was full of regrets for many
+things wasted, and then I looked at the battlefield
+with its scattered kits and broken rifles.
+Nothing seemed to matter very much. A rat
+came out-then other rats. I stood there feeling
+extraordinarily aloof from all things that
+can hurt, and&mdash;you'll smile&mdash;I planned a novel.
+O, if I get back, how differently I shall write!
+When you've faced the worst in so many forms,
+you lose your fear and arrive at peace. There's
+a marvellous grandeur about all this carnage and
+desolation&mdash;men's souls rise above the distress&mdash;they
+have to in order to survive. When you see
+how cheap men's bodies are you cannot help but
+know that the body is the least part of personality.</p>
+
+<p>You can let up on your nervousness when
+you get this, for I shall almost certainly be in a
+safer zone. We've done more than our share
+and must be withdrawn soon. There's hardly
+a battery which does not deserve a dozen
+D.S.O.'s with a V.C. or two thrown in.</p>
+
+<p>It's 4.30 now&mdash;you'll be in church and, I hope,
+wearing my flowers. Wait till I come back and
+you shall go to church with the biggest bunch
+of roses that ever were pinned to a feminine
+chest. I wonder when that will be.</p>
+
+<p>We have heaps of humour out here. You
+should have seen me this morning, sitting on the
+gun-seat while my batman cut my hair. A sand-bag
+was spread over my shoulders in place of a
+towel and the gun-detachment stood round and
+gave advice. I don't know what I look like, for
+I haven't dared to gaze into my shaving mirror.</p>
+
+<p>Good luck to us all,</p>
+
+<p>CON</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXI" id="XXI" />XXI</h2>
+
+<p>October 18th, 1910</p>
+
+<p>Dearest M.:</p>
+
+<p>I've come down to the lines to-day; to-morrow
+I go back again. I'm sitting alone in
+a deep chalk dug-out&mdash;it is 10 p.m. and I have
+lit a fire by splitting wood with a bayonet.
+Your letters from Montreal reached me yesterday.
+They came up in the water-cart when we'd
+all begun to despair of mail. It was wonderful
+the silence that followed while every one went
+back home for a little while, and most of them
+met their best girls. We've fallen into the habit
+of singing in parts. Jerusalem the Golden
+is a great favourite as we wait for our breakfast&mdash;we
+go through all our favourite songs, including
+Poor Old Adam Was My Father. Our
+greatest favourite is one which is symbolising
+the hopes that are in so many hearts on this
+greatest battlefield in history. We sing it under
+shell-fire as a kind of prayer, we sing it as
+we struggle knee-deep in the appalling mud, we
+sing it as we sit by a candle in our deep captured
+German dug-outs. It runs like this:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;There's a long, long trail a-winding</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Into the land of my dreams,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Where the nightingales are singing</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And a white moon beams:</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">There's a long, long night of waiting</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Until my dreams all come true;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Till the day when I'll be going down</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">That long, long trail with you.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>You ought to be able to get it, and then you will
+be singing it when I'm doing it.</p>
+
+<p>No, I don't know what to ask from you for
+Christmas&mdash;unless a plum pudding and a general
+surprise box of sweets and food stuffs. If
+you don't mind my suggesting it, I wouldn't a
+bit mind a Christmas box at once&mdash;a schoolboy's
+tuck box. I wear the locket, cross, and tie all
+the time as kind of charms against danger&mdash;they
+give me the feeling of loving hands going with
+me everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">God bless you.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours ever,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXII" id="XXII" />XXII</h2>
+
+<p>October 23, 1916</p>
+
+<p>Dearest All:</p>
+
+<p>As you know I have been in action ever
+since I left England and am still. I've lived in
+various extemporised dwellings and am at present
+writing from an eight foot deep hole dug in
+the ground and covered over with galvanised
+iron and sand-bags. We have made ourselves
+very comfortable, and a fire is burning&mdash;I correct
+that&mdash;comfortable until it rains, I should
+say, when the water finds its own level. We
+have just finished with two days of penetrating
+rain and mist&mdash;in the trenches the mud was up
+to my knees, so you can imagine the joy of wading
+down these shell-torn tunnels. Good thick
+socks have been priceless.</p>
+
+<p>You'll be pleased to hear that two days ago
+I was made Right Section Commander&mdash;which
+is fairly rapid promotion. It means a good deal
+more work and responsibility, but it gives me a
+contact with the men which I like.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know when I'll get leave&mdash;not for another
+two months anyway. It would be ripping
+if I had word in time for you to run over to
+England for the brief nine days.</p>
+
+<p>I plan novels galore and wonder whether I
+shall ever write them the way I see them now.
+My imagination is to an extent crushed by the
+stupendousness of reality. I think I am changed
+in some stern spiritual way&mdash;stripped of flabbiness.
+I am perhaps harder&mdash;I can't say. That
+I should be a novelist seems unreasonable&mdash;it's
+so long since I had my own way in the world
+and met any one on artistic terms. But I have
+enough ego left to be very interested in my book.
+And by the way, when we're out at the front and
+the battery wants us to come in they simply
+phone up the password, &quot;Slaves of Freedom,&quot;
+the meaning of which we all understand.</p>
+
+<p>You are ever in my thoughts, and I pray the
+day may not be far distant when we meet again.</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXIII" id="XXIII" />XXIII</h2>
+
+<p>October 27th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dearest Family:</p>
+
+<p>All to-day I've been busy registering our
+guns. There is little chance of rest&mdash;one would
+suppose that we intended to end the war by spring.</p>
+
+<p>Two new officers joined our battery from
+England, which makes the work lighter. One
+of them brings the news that D., one of the two
+officers who crossed over from England with me
+and wandered through France with me in search
+of our Division, is already dead. He was a
+corking fellow, and I'm very sorry. He was
+caught by a shell in the head and legs.</p>
+
+<p>I am still living in a sand-bagged shell-hole
+eight feet beneath the level of the ground. I
+have a sleeping bag with an eider-down inside
+it, for my bed; it is laid on a stretcher, which
+is placed in a roofed-in trench. For meals,
+when there isn't a block on the roads, we do very
+well; we subscribe pretty heavily to the mess, and
+have an officer back at the wagon-lines to do our
+purchasing. When we move forward into a new
+position, however, we go pretty short, as roads
+have to be built for the throng of traffic. Most
+of what we eat is tinned&mdash;and I never want to
+see tinned salmon again when this war is ended.
+I have a personal servant, a groom and two
+horses&mdash;but haven't been on a horse for seven
+weeks on account of being in action. We're all
+pretty fed up with continuous firing and living
+so many hours in the trenches. The way artillery
+is run to-day an artillery lieutenant is
+more in the trenches than an infantryman&mdash;the
+only thing he doesn't do is to go over the parapet
+in an attack. And one of our chaps did that
+the other day, charging the Huns with a bar of
+chocolate in one hand and a revolver in the
+other. I believe he set a fashion which will be
+imitated. Three times in my experience I have
+seen the infantry jump out of their trenches
+and go across. It's a sight never to be forgotten.
+One time there were machine guns behind
+me and they sent a message to me, asking me to
+lie down and take cover. That was impossible,
+as I was observing for my brigade, so I lay on
+the parapet till the bullets began to fall too close
+for comfort, then I dodged out into a shell-hole
+with the German barrage bursting all around
+me, and had a most gorgeous view of a modern
+attack. That was some time ago, so you needn't
+be nervous.</p>
+
+<p>Have I mentioned rum to you? I never
+tasted it to my knowledge until I came out here.
+We get it served us whenever we're wet. It's
+the one thing which keeps a man alive in the
+winter&mdash;you can sleep when you're drenched
+through and never get a cold if you take it.</p>
+
+<p>At night, by a fire, eight feet underground,
+we sing all the dear old songs. We manage a
+kind of glee&mdash;Clementina, The Long, Long Trail,
+Three Blind Mice, Long, Long Ago, Rock of
+Ages. Hymns are quite favourites.</p>
+
+<p>Don't worry about me; your prayers weave
+round me a mantle of defence.</p>
+
+<p>Yours with more love than I can write,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXIV" id="XXIV" />XXIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+October 31st, 1916.<br />
+Hallowe'en.<br />
+<br />
+Dearest People:<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Once more I'm taking the night-firing and
+so have a chance to write to you. I got letters
+from you all, and they each deserve answers, but
+I have so little time to write. We've been having
+beastly weather&mdash;drowned out of our little
+houses below ground, with rivers running through
+our beds. The mud is once more up to our knees
+and gets into whatever we eat. The wonder is
+that we keep healthy&mdash;I suppose it's the open air.
+My throat never troubles me and I'm free from
+colds in spite of wet feet. The main disadvantage
+is that we rarely get a chance to wash or
+change our clothes. Your ideas of an army with
+its buttons all shining is quite erroneous; we look
+like drunk and disorderlies who have spent the
+night in the gutter&mdash;and we have the same instinct
+for fighting.</p>
+
+<p>In the trenches the other day I heard mother's
+Suffolk tongue and had a jolly talk with a chap
+who shared many of my memories. It was his
+first trip in and the Huns were shelling badly, but
+he didn't seem at all upset.</p>
+
+<p>We're still hard at it and have given up all
+idea of a rest&mdash;the only way we'll get one is with
+a blighty. You say how often you tell yourselves
+that the same moon looks down on me; it does,
+but on a scene how different! We advance over
+old battlefields&mdash;everything is blasted. If you
+start digging, you turn up what's left of something
+human. If there were any grounds for superstition,
+surely the places in which I have been
+should be ghost-haunted. One never thinks
+about it. For myself I have increasingly the feeling
+that I am protected by your prayers; I tell
+myself so when I am in danger.</p>
+
+<p>Here I sit in an old sweater and muddy
+breeches, the very reverse of your picture of a
+soldier, and I imagine to myself your receipt of
+this. Our chief interest is to enquire whether
+milk, jam and mail have come up from the wagon-lines;
+it seems a faery-tale that there are places
+where milk and jam can be had for the buying.
+See how simple we become.</p>
+
+<p>Poor little house at Kootenay! I hate to think
+of it empty. We had such good times there
+twelve months ago. They have a song here to a
+nursery rhyme lilt, Apr&egrave;s le Guerre Finis; it
+goes on to tell of all the good times we'll have
+when the war is ended. Every night I invent a
+new story of my own celebration of the event,
+usually, as when I was a kiddie, just before I fall
+asleep&mdash;only it doesn't seem possible that the war
+will ever end.</p>
+
+<p>I hear from the boys very regularly. There's
+just the chance that I may get leave to London
+in the New Year and meet them before they set
+out. I always picture you with your heads high
+in the air. I'm glad to think of you as proud
+because of the pain we've made you suffer.</p>
+
+<p>Once again I shall think of you on Papa's
+birthday. I don't think this will be the saddest
+he will have to remember. It might have been
+if we three boys had still all been with him. If
+I were a father, I would prefer at all costs that
+my sons should be men. What good comrades
+we've always been, and what long years of happy
+times we have in memory&mdash;all the way down
+from a little boy in a sailor-suit to Kootenay!</p>
+
+<p>I fell asleep in the midst of this. I've now got
+to go out and start the other gun firing. With
+very much love.</p>
+
+<p>Yours,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXV" id="XXV" />XXV</h2>
+
+<p>November 1st, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My Dearest M.:</p>
+
+<p>Peace after a storm! Your letter was not
+brought up by the water-wagon this evening, but
+by an orderly&mdash;the mud prevented wheel-traffic.
+I was just sitting down to read it when Fritz began
+to pay us too much attention. I put down
+your letter, grabbed my steel helmet, rushed out
+to see where the shells were falling, and then
+cleared my men to a safer area. (By the way,
+did I tell you that I had been made Right Section
+Commander?) After about half an hour I
+came back and settled down by a fire made of
+smashed ammunition boxes in a stove borrowed
+from a ruined cottage. I'm always ashamed that
+my letters contain so little news and are so uninteresting.
+This thing is so big and dreadful
+that it does not bear putting down on paper. I
+read the papers with the accounts of singing soldiers
+and other rubbish; they depict us as though
+we were a lot of hair-brained idiots instead of
+men fully realising our danger, who plod on because
+it's our duty. I've seen a good many men
+killed by now&mdash;we all have&mdash;consequently the
+singing soldier story makes us smile. We've got
+a big job; we know that we've got to &quot;Carry
+On&quot; whatever happens&mdash;so we wear a stern grin
+and go to it. There's far more heroism in the
+attitude of men out here than in the footlight attitude
+that journalists paint for the public. It
+isn't a singing matter to go on firing a gun when
+gun-pits are going up in smoke within sight of
+you.</p>
+
+<p>What a terrible desecration war is! You go
+out one week and look through your glasses at a
+green, smiling country-little churches, villages
+nestling among woods, white roads running
+across a green carpet; next week you see nothing
+but ruins and a country-side pitted with shell-holes.
+All night the machine guns tap like rivet-ting
+machines when a New York sky-scraper is
+in the building. Then suddenly in the night a
+bombing attack will start, and the sky grows
+white with signal rockets. Orders come in for
+artillery retaliation, and your guns begin to stamp
+the ground like stallions; in the darkness on every
+side you can see them snorting fire. Then stillness
+again, while Death counts his harvest; the
+white rockets grow fainter and less hysterical.
+For an hour there is blackness.</p>
+
+<p>My batman consoles himself with singing,</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;Pack up your troubles in your old kit-bag,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And smile, smile, smile.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>There's a lot in his philosophy&mdash;it's best to go on
+smiling even when some one who was once your
+pal lies forever silent in his blanket on a
+stretcher.</p>
+
+<p>The great uplifting thought is that we have
+proved ourselves men. In our death we set a
+standard which in ordinary life we could never
+have followed. Inevitably we should have sunk
+below our highest self. Here we know that the
+world will remember us and that our loved ones,
+in spite of tears, will be proud of us. What God
+will say to us we cannot guess&mdash;but He can't be
+too hard on men who did their duty. I think we
+all feel that trivial former failures are washed out
+by this final sacrifice. When little M. used to
+recite &quot;Breathes there a man with soul so dead,
+who never to himself had said, 'This is my own,
+my native land,'&quot; I never thought that I should
+have the chance that has now been given to me.
+I feel a great and solemn gratitude that I have
+been thought worthy. Life has suddenly become
+effective and worthy by reason of its carelessness
+of death.</p>
+
+<p>By the way, that Princeton man I mentioned so
+long ago was killed forty yards away from me
+on my first trip into the trenches. Probably G.
+M'C. and his other friends know by now. He
+was the first man I ever saw snuffed out.</p>
+
+<p>I'm wearing your mittens and find them a great
+comfort. I'll look forward to some more of your
+socks&mdash;I can do with plenty of them. If any of
+your friends are making things for soldiers, I
+wish you'd get them to send them to this battery,
+as they would be gratefully accepted by the men.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could come to <i>The Music Master</i> with
+you. I wonder how long till we do all those intimately
+family things together again.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, my dearest M. I live for home letters
+and am rarely disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you, and love to you all.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXVI" id="XXVI" />XXVI</h2>
+
+<p>November 4th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>My Dearest Mother:</p>
+
+<p>This morning I was wakened up in the
+gunpit where I was sleeping by the arrival of the
+most wonderful parcel of mail. It was really a
+kind of Christmas morning for me. My servant
+had lit a fire in a punctured petrol can and the
+place looked very cheery. First of all entered an
+enormous affair, which turned out to be a stove
+which C. had sent. Then there was a sand-bag
+containing all your gifts. You may bet I made
+for that first, and as each knot was undone remembered
+the loving hands that had done it up.
+I am now going up to a twenty-four-hour shift
+of observing, and shall take up the malted milk
+and some blocks of chocolate for a hot drink.
+It somehow makes you seem very near to me to
+receive things packed with your hands. When
+I go forward I shall also take candles and a copy
+of <i>Anne Veronica</i> with me, so that if I get a
+chance I can forget time.</p>
+
+<p>Always when I write to you odds and ends
+come to mind, smacking of local colour. After
+an attack some months ago I met a solitary private
+wandering across a shell-torn field, I
+watched him and thought something was wrong
+by the aimlessness of his progress. When I
+spoke to him, he looked at me mistily and said,
+&quot;Dead men. Moonlit road.&quot; He kept on repeating
+the phrase, and it was all that one could
+get out of him. Probably the dead men and the
+moonlit road were the last sights he had seen before
+he went insane.</p>
+
+<p>Another touching thing happened two days ago.
+A Major turned up who had travelled fifty miles
+by motor lorries and any conveyance he could
+pick up on the road. He had left his unit to
+come to have a glimpse of our front-line trench
+where his son was buried. The boy had died
+there some days ago in going over the parapet. I
+persuaded him that he ought not to go alone, and
+that in any case it wasn't a healthy spot. At last
+he consented to let me take him to a point from
+which he could see the ground over which his
+son had attacked and led his men. The sun
+was sinking behind us. He stood there very
+straightly, peering through my glasses&mdash;and then
+forgot all about me and began speaking to his son
+in childish love-words. &quot;Gone West,&quot; they call
+dying out here&mdash;we rarely say that a man is dead.
+I found out afterwards that it was the boy's
+mother the Major was thinking of when he
+pledged himself to visit the grave in the front-line.</p>
+
+<p>But there are happier things than that. For
+instance, you should hear us singing at night in
+our dug-out&mdash;every tune we ever learnt, I believe.
+Silver Threads Among the Gold, In the
+Gloaming, The Star of Bethlehem, I Hear You
+Calling Me, interspersed with Everybody Works
+but Father, and Poor Old Adam, etc.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could know in time when I get my
+leave for you to come over and meet me. I'm
+going to spend my nine days in the most glorious
+ways imaginable. To start with I won't eat anything
+that's canned and, to go on, I won't get out
+of bed till I feel inclined. And if you're
+there&mdash;!</p>
+
+<p>Dreams and nonsense! God bless you all and
+keep us near and safe though absent. Alive or
+&quot;Gone West&quot; I shall never be far from you; you
+may depend on that&mdash;and I shall always hope to
+feel you brave and happy. This is a great
+game&mdash;cheese-mites pitting themselves against all
+the splendours of Death. Please, please write
+well ahead, so that I may not miss your Christmas
+letters.</p>
+
+<p>Yours lovingly,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXVII" id="XXVII" />XXVII</h2>
+
+<p>November 6th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>My Dear Ones:</p>
+
+<p>Such a wonderful day it has been&mdash;I
+scarcely know where to start. I came down last
+night from twenty-four hours in the mud, where
+I had been observing. I'd spent the night in a
+hole dug in the side of the trench and a dead
+Hun forming part of the roof. I'd sat there re-living
+so many things&mdash;the ecstatic moments of
+my life when I first touched fame&mdash;and my feet
+were so cold that I could not feel them, so I
+thought all the harder of the pleasant things of
+the past. Then, as I say, I came back to the gun
+position to learn that I was to have one day off
+at the back of the lines. You can't imagine what
+that meant to me&mdash;one day in a country that is
+green, one day where there is no shell-fire, one
+day where you don't turn up corpses with your
+tread! For two months I have never left the
+guns except to go forward and I have never been
+from under shell-fire. All night long as I have
+slept the ground had been shaken by the stamping
+of the guns&mdash;and now after two months, to
+come back to comparative normality! The reason
+for this privilege being granted was that the
+powers that he had come to the conclusion that
+it was time I had a bath. Since I sleep in my
+clothes and water is too valuable for washing
+anything but the face and hands, they were probably
+right in their guess at my condition.</p>
+
+<p>So with the greatest holiday of my life in prospect
+I went to the empty gunpit in which I sleep,
+and turned in. This morning I set out early with
+my servant, tramping back across the long, long
+battlefields which our boys have won. The mud
+was knee-deep in places, but we floundered on
+till we came to our old and deserted gun-position
+where my horses waited for me. From there I
+rode to the wagon-lines&mdash;the first time I've sat
+a horse since I came into action. Far behind
+me the thunder of winged murder grew
+more faint. The country became greener; trees
+even had leaves upon them which fluttered against
+the grey-blue sky. It was wonderful&mdash;like
+awaking from an appalling nightmare. My little
+beast was fresh and seemed to share my joy,
+for she stepped out bravely.</p>
+
+<p>When I arrived at the wagon-lines I would not
+wait&mdash;I longed to see something even greener and
+quieter. My groom packed up some oats and
+away we went again. My first objective was the
+military baths; I lay in hot water for half-an-hour
+and read the advertisements of my book.
+As I lay there, for the first time since I've been
+out, I began to get a half-way true perspective of
+myself. What's left of the egotism of the author
+came to life, and&mdash;now laugh&mdash;I planned my next
+novel&mdash;planned it to the sound of men singing,
+because they were clean for the first time in
+months. I left my towels and soap with a military
+policeman, by the roadside, and went prancing
+off along country roads in search of the almost
+forgotten places where people don't kill one
+another. Was it imagination? There seemed
+to me to be a different look in the faces of the
+men I met&mdash;for the time being they were neither
+hunters nor hunted. There were actually cows
+in the fields. At one point, where pollarded trees
+stand like a Hobbema sketch against the sky, a
+group of officers were coursing a hare, following
+a big black hound on horseback. We lost our
+way. A drenching rainstorm fell over us&mdash;we
+didn't care; and we saw as we looked back a
+most beautiful thing&mdash;a rainbow over green fields.
+It was as romantic as the first rainbow in childhood.</p>
+
+<p>All day I have been seeing lovely and familiar
+things as though for the first time. I've been a
+sort of Lazarus, rising out of his tomb and praising
+God at the sound of a divine voice. You
+don't know how exquisite a ploughed field can
+look, especially after rain, unless you have feared
+that you might never see one again.</p>
+
+<p>I came to a grey little village, where civilians
+were still living, and then to a gate and a garden.
+In the cottage was a French peasant woman who
+smiled, patted my hair because it was curly, and
+chattered interminably. The result was a huge
+omelette and a bottle of champagne. Then came
+a touch of naughtiness&mdash;a lady visitor with a
+copy of <i>La Vie Parisienne</i>, which she promptly
+bestowed on the English soldier. I read it, and
+dreamt of the time when I should walk the
+Champs Elys&eacute;es again. It was growing dusk
+when I turned back to the noise of battle. There
+was a white moon in a milky sky. Motor-bikes
+fled by me, great lorries driven by Jehus from
+London buses, and automobiles which too poignantly
+had been Strand taxis and had taken lovers
+home from the Gaiety. I jogged along thinking
+very little, but supremely happy. Now I'm back
+at the wagon-line; to-morrow I go back to the
+guns. Meanwhile I write to you by a guttering
+candle.</p>
+
+<p>Life, how I love you! What a wonderful
+kindly thing I could make of you to-night.
+Strangely the vision has come to me of all that
+you mean. Now I could write. So soon you
+may go from me or be changed into a form of
+existence which all my training has taught me
+to dread. After death is there only nothingness?
+I think that for those who have missed love in
+this life there must be compensations&mdash;the little
+children whom they ought to have had, perhaps.
+To-day, after so many weeks, I have seen little
+children again.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, so strange a havoc does this war work
+that, if I have to &quot;Go West,&quot; I shall go <i>proudly</i>
+and quietly. I have seen too many men die
+bravely to make a fuss if my turn comes. A
+mixed passenger list old Father Charon must
+have each night&mdash;Englishmen, Frenchmen, and
+Huns. To-morrow I shall have another sight
+of the greenness and then&mdash;the guns.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know whether I have been able to make
+any of my emotions clear to you in my letters.
+Terror has a terrible fascination. Up to now I
+have always been afraid&mdash;afraid of small fears.
+At last I meet fear itself and it stings my pride
+into an unpremeditated courage.</p>
+
+<p>I've just had a pile of letters from you all.
+How ripping it is to be remembered! Letters
+keep one civilised.</p>
+
+<p>It's late and I'm very tired. God bless you
+each and all.</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXVIII" id="XXVIII" />XXVIII</h2>
+
+<p>November 15th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dear Father:</p>
+
+<p>I've owed you a letter for some time, but
+I've been getting very little leisure. You can't
+send steel messages to the Kaiser and love-notes
+to your family in the same breath.</p>
+
+<p>I am amazed at the spirit you three are showing
+and almighty proud that you can muster
+such courage. I suppose none of us quite realised
+our strength till it came to the test. There
+was a time when we all doubted our own heroism.
+I think we were typical of our age. Every novel
+of the past ten years has been more or less a
+study in sentiment and self-distrust. We used
+to wonder what kind of stuff Drake's men were
+made of that they could jest while they died.
+We used to contrast ourselves with them to our
+own disfavour. Well, we know now that when
+there's a New World to be discovered we can
+still rise up reincarnated into spiritual pirates.
+It wasn't the men of our age who were at fault,
+but the New World that was lacking. Our New
+World is the Kingdom of Heroism, the doors of
+which are flung so wide that the meanest of us
+may enter. I know men out here who are the
+dependable daredevils of their brigades, who in
+peace times were nuisances and as soon as peace
+is declared will become nuisances again. At the
+moment they're fine, laughing at Death and smiling
+at the chance of agony. There's a man I
+know of who had a record sheet of crimes.
+When he was out of action he was always drunk
+and up for office. To get rid of him, they put
+him into the trench mortars and within a month
+he had won his D.C.M. He came out and went
+on the spree&mdash;this particular spree consisted in
+stripping a Highland officer of his kilts on a
+moonlight night. For this he was sentenced to
+several months in a military prison, but asked to
+be allowed to serve his sentence in the trenches.
+He came out from his punishment a King's sergeant&mdash;which
+means that whatever he did nobody
+could degrade him. He got this for lifting
+his trench mortar over the parapet when all the
+detachment were killed. Carrying it out into a
+shell-hole, he held back the Hun attack and saved
+the situation. He got drunk again, and again
+chose to be returned to the trenches. This time
+his head was blown off while he was engaged in
+a special feat of gallantry. What are you to say
+to such men? Ordinarily they'd be blackguards,
+but war lifts them into splendour. In the same
+way you see mild men, timid men, almost girlish
+men, carrying out duties which in other wars
+would have won V.C.'s. I don't think the soul
+of courage ever dies out of the race any more
+than the capacity for love. All it means is that
+the occasion is not present. For myself I try
+to analyse my emotions; am I simply numb, or
+do I imitate other people's coolness and shall I
+fear life again when the war is ended? There
+is no explanation save the great army phrase
+&quot;Carry on.&quot; We &quot;carry on&quot; because, if we
+don't, we shall let other men down and put their
+lives in danger. And there's more than that&mdash;we
+all want to live up to the standard that
+prompted us to come.</p>
+
+<p>One talks about splendour&mdash;but war isn't
+splendid except in the individual sense. A man
+by his own self-conquest can make it splendid
+for himself, but in the massed sense it's squalid.
+There's nothing splendid about a battlefield when
+the fight is ended&mdash;shreds of what once were men,
+tortured, levelled landscapes&mdash;the barbaric loneliness
+of Hell. I shall never forget my first dead
+man. He was a signalling officer, lying in the
+dawn on a muddy hill. I thought he was asleep
+at first, but when I looked more closely, I saw
+that his shoulder blade was showing white
+through his tunic. He was wearing black boots.
+It's odd, but the sight of black boots have the
+same effect on me now that black and white
+stripes had in childhood. I have the superstitious
+feeling that to wear them would bring me
+bad luck.</p>
+
+<p>Tonight we've been singing in parts, Back
+in the Dear Dead Days Beyond Recall&mdash;a mournful
+kind of ditty to sing under the circumstances&mdash;so
+mournful that we had to have a game
+of five hundred to cheer us up.</p>
+
+<p>It's now nearly 2 a.m., and I have to go out to
+the guns again before I go to bed. I carry your
+letters about in my pockets and read them at odd
+intervals in all kinds of places that you can't
+imagine.</p>
+
+<p>Cheer up and remember that I'm quite happy.
+I wish you could be with me for just one day
+to understand.</p>
+
+<p>Yours,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXIX" id="XXIX" />XXIX</h2>
+
+<p>December 3rd, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dear Boys:</p>
+
+<p>By this time you will be all through your
+exams and I hope have both passed. It'll be
+splendid if you can go together to the same station.
+You envy me, you say; well, I rather envy
+you. I'd like to be with you. You, at least,
+don't have Napoleon's fourth antagonist with
+which to contend&mdash;mud. But at present I'm
+clean and billeted in an estaminet, in a not too
+bad little village. There's an old mill and still
+older church, and the usual farmhouses with the
+indispensable pile of manure under the front
+windows. We shall have plenty of hard work
+here, licking our men into shape and re-fitting.</p>
+
+<p>You know how I've longed to sleep between
+sheets; I can now, but find them so cold that I
+still use my sleeping bag&mdash;such is human inconsistency.
+But yesterday I had a boiling bath&mdash;as
+good a bath as could be found in a New York
+hotel&mdash;and I am CLEAN.</p>
+
+<p>I woke up this morning to hear some one singing
+Casey Jones&mdash;consequently I thought of
+former Christmases. My mind has been travelling
+back very much of late. Suddenly I see
+something here which reminds me of the time
+when E. and I were at Lisieux, or even of our
+Saturday excursions to Nelson when we were all
+together at the ranch.</p>
+
+<p>Did I tell you that B., our officer who was
+wounded two months ago, has just returned to
+us. This morning he got news that his young
+brother has been killed in the place which we have
+left. I wonder when we shall grow tired of
+stabbing and shooting and killing. It seems to me
+that the war cannot end in less than two years.</p>
+
+<p>I have made myself nice to the Brigade interpreter
+and he has found me a delightful room
+with electric light and a fire. It's in an old
+farmhouse with a brick terrace in front. My
+room is on the ground floor and tile-paved. The
+chairs are rush-bottomed and there are old quaint
+china plates on the shelves. There is also a
+quite charming mademoiselle. So you see, you
+don't need to pity me any more.</p>
+
+<p>Just at present I'm busy getting up the Brigade
+Christmas Entertainment. The Colonel asked
+me to do it, otherwise I should have said <i>no</i>, as
+I want all the time I can get to myself. You
+can't think how jolly it is to sit again in a room
+which is temporarily yours after living in dug-outs,
+herded side by side with other men. I can
+be <i>me</i> now, and not a soldier of thousands when
+I write. You shall hear from me again soon.
+Hope you're having a ripping time in London.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours ever,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 14.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXX" id="XXX" />XXX</h2>
+
+<p>December 5th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST M.:</p>
+
+<p>I've just come in from my last tour of
+inspection as orderly officer, and it's close on
+midnight. I'm getting this line off to you to let
+you know that I expect to get my nine days'
+leave about the beginning of January. How I
+wish it were possible to have you in London when
+I arrive, or, failing that, to spend my leave in
+New York!</p>
+
+<p>To-morrow I make an early start on horseback
+for a market of the old-fashioned sort which
+is held at a town near by. Can you dimly picture
+me with my groom, followed by a mess-cart,
+going from stall to stall and bartering with
+the peasants? It'll be rather good fun and something
+quite out of my experience.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas will be over by the time you get this,
+and I do hope that you had a good one. I paused
+to talk to the other officers; they say that they
+are sure that you are very beautiful and have a
+warm heart, and would like to send them a five-storey
+layer cake, half a dozen bottles of port
+and one Paris chef. At present I am the Dives
+of the mess and dole out luxuries to these Lazaruses.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye for the present.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever lovingly,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXI" id="XXXI" />XXXI</h2>
+
+<p>December 6th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dearest M.:</p>
+
+<p>I've just undone your Christmas parcels,
+and already I am wearing the waistcoat and
+socks, and my mouth is hot with the ginger.</p>
+
+<p>I expect to get leave for England on January
+10th. I do wish it might be possible for some
+of you to cross the ocean and be in London with
+me&mdash;and I don't see what there is to prevent you.
+Unless the war ends sooner than any of us expect,
+it is not likely that I shall get another leave
+in less than nine months. So, if you want to
+come and if there's time when you receive this
+letter, just hop on a boat and let's see what London
+looks like together.</p>
+
+<p>I wonder what kind of a Christmas you'll have.
+I shall picture it all. You may hear me tiptoeing
+up the stairs if you listen very hard. Where
+does the soul go in sleep? Surely mine flies back
+to where all of you dear people are.</p>
+
+<p>I came back to my farm yesterday to find a
+bouquet of paper flowers at the head of my bed
+with a note pinned on it. Over my fire-place was
+hung a pathetic pair of farm-girls' heavy Sunday
+boots, all brightly polished, with two other
+notes pinned on them. The Feast of St. Nicholas
+on December 7th is an opportunity for unmarried
+men to be reminded that there are unmarried
+girls in the world&mdash;wherefore the flowers.
+I enclose the notes. Keep them,&mdash;they may be
+useful for a book some day.</p>
+
+<p>I'm having a pretty good rest, and am still in
+my old farmhouse.</p>
+
+<p>Love to all.</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXII" id="XXXII" />XXXII</h2>
+
+<p>December 15th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dearest All:</p>
+
+<p>At the present I'm just where mother
+hoped I'd be&mdash;in a deep dug-out about twenty
+feet down&mdash;we're trying to get a fire lighted, and
+consequently the place is smoked out. Where
+I'll be for Christmas I don't know, but I hope
+by then to be in billets. I've just come back from
+the trenches, where I've been observing. The
+mud is not nearly so bad where I am now, and
+with a few days' more work, we should be quite
+comfortable. You'll have received my cable
+about my getting leave soon&mdash;I'm wondering
+whether the Atlantic is sufficiently quiet for any
+of you to risk a crossing.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Basil! Your letter was the first news I
+got of his death. I must have watched the attack
+in which he lost his life. One wonders now
+how it was that some instinct did not warn me
+that one of those khaki dots jumping out of the
+trenches was the cousin who stayed with us in
+London.</p>
+
+<p>I'm wondering what this mystery of the German
+Chancellor is all about&mdash;some peace proposals,
+I suppose&mdash;which are sure to prove bombastic
+and unacceptable. It seems to us out here
+as though the war must go on forever. Like
+a boy's dream of the far-off freedom of manhood,
+the day appears when we shall step out into
+the old liberty of owning our own lives. What
+a celebration we'll have when I come home! I
+can't quite grasp the joy of it.</p>
+
+<p>I've got to get this letter off quite soon if it's
+to go to-day. It ought to reach, you by January
+12th or thereabouts. You may be sure my
+thoughts will have been with you on Christmas
+day. I shall look back and remember all the by-gone
+good times and then plan for Christmas,
+1917. God keep us all.</p>
+
+<p>Ever yours,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXIII" id="XXXIII" />XXXIII</h2>
+
+<p>December 18th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My Dearest M.:</p>
+
+<p>I always feel when I write a joint letter
+to the family that I'm cheating each one of you,
+but it's so very difficult to get time to write as
+often as I'd like. It's a week to Christmas and
+I picture the beginnings of the preparations. I
+can look back and remember so many such
+preparations, especially when we were kiddies in
+London. What good times one has in a life!
+I've been sitting with my groom by the fire to-night
+while he dried my clothes. I've mentioned
+him to you before as having lived in Nelson, and
+worked at the Silver King mine. We both grew
+ecstatic over British Columbia.</p>
+
+<p>I am hoping all the time that the boys may be
+in England at the time I get my leave&mdash;I hardly
+dare hope that any of you will be there. But
+it would he grand if you could manage it&mdash;I long
+very much to see you all again. I can just
+imagine my first month home again. I shan't
+let any of you work. I shall be the incurable
+boy. I've spent the best part of to-day out in
+No Man's Land, within seventy yards of the
+Huns. Quite an experience, I assure you, and
+one that I wouldn't have missed for worlds. I'll
+have heaps to write into novels one day&mdash;the
+vividest kind of local colour. Just at present I
+have nothing to read but the Christmas number
+of the <i>Strand</i>. It makes me remember the time
+when we children raced for the latest development
+of <i>The Hound of the Baskervilles</i>, and so
+many occasions when I had one of &quot;those sniffy
+colds&quot; and sat by the Highbury fire with a book.
+Good days, those!</p>
+
+<p>I'm just off to bed now, and will finish this to-morrow.
+Bed is my greatest luxury nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>December 19th.</p>
+
+<p>The book and chocolate just came, and a bunch
+of New York papers. All were most welcome.
+I was longing for something to read. To-morrow
+I have to go forward to observe. Two of
+our officers are on leave, so it makes the rest of
+us work pretty hard. What do you think of
+the Kaiser's absurd peace proposals? The man
+must be mad.</p>
+
+<p>The best of love,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXIV" id="XXXIV" />XXXIV</h2>
+
+<p>December 20th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Mr. T.:</p>
+
+<p>Just back from a successful argument with
+Fritz, to find your kind good wishes. It's rather
+a lark out here, though a lark which may turn
+against you any time. I laugh a good deal more
+than I mope. Anything really horrible has a
+ludicrous side&mdash;it's like Mark Twain's humour&mdash;a
+gross exaggeration. The maddest thing of all
+to me is that a person so willing to be amiable
+as I am should be out here killing people for
+principle's sake. There's no rhyme or reason&mdash;it
+can't be argued. Dimly one thinks he sees
+what is right and leaves father and mother and
+home, as though it were for the Kingdom of
+Heaven's sake. Perhaps it is. If one didn't pin
+his faith to that &quot;perhaps&quot;&mdash;. One can't explain.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">A merry Christmas to you.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours very sincerely,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">CONINGSBY DAWSON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<hr style='width: 65%;' />
+<h2><a name="XXXV" id="XXXV" />XXXV</h2>
+
+<p>December 20th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Mr. A.D.:</p>
+
+<p>I've just come in from an argument with
+Fritz when your chocolate formed my meal.
+You were very kind to think of me and to send
+it, and you were extraordinarily understanding in
+the letter that you sent me. One's life out here
+is like a pollarded tree&mdash;all the lower branches
+are gone&mdash;one gazes on great nobilities, on the
+fascinating horror of Eternity sometimes&mdash;I said
+horror, but it's often fine in its spaciousness&mdash;one
+gazes on many inverted splendours of Titans,
+but it's giddy work being so high and rarefied,
+and all the gentle past seems gone. That's why
+it is pleasant in this grimy anonymity of death
+and courage to get reminders, such as your letter,
+that one was once localised and had a familiar
+history. If I come back, I shall be like Rip Van
+Winkle, or a Robinson Crusoe&mdash;like any and all
+of the creatures of legend and history to whom
+abnormality has grown to seem normal. If you
+can imagine yourself living in a world in which
+every day is a demonstration of a Puritan's conception
+of what happens when the last trump
+sounds, then you have some idea of my queer
+situation. One has come to a point when death
+seems very inconsiderable and only failure to
+do one's duty is an utter loss. Love and the future,
+and all the sweet and tender dreams of by-gone
+days are like a house in which the blinds
+are lowered and from which the sight has gone.
+Landscapes have lost their beauty, everything
+God-made and man-made is destroyed except
+man's power to endure with a smile the things
+he once most dreaded, because he believes that
+only so may he be righteous in his own eyes.
+How one has longed for that sure confidence in
+the petty failings of little living&mdash;the confidence
+to believe that he can stand up and suffer for
+principle! God has given all men who are out
+here that opportunity&mdash;the supremest that can be
+hoped for&mdash;so, in spite of exile, Christmas for
+most of us will be a happy day. Does one see
+more truly life's worth on a battlefield? I often
+ask myself that question. Is the contempt that is
+hourly shown for life the real standard of life's
+worth? I shrug my shoulders at my own unanswerable
+questions&mdash;all I know is that I move
+daily with men who have everything to live for
+who, nevertheless, are urged by an unconscious
+magnanimity to die. I don't think any of our
+dead pity themselves&mdash;but they would have done
+so if they had faltered in their choice. One lives
+only from sunrise to sunrise, but there's a more
+real happiness in this brief living than I ever
+knew before, because it is so exactingly worth
+while.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Thank you again for your kindness.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Very sincerely yours,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 19.5em;">C.D.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The suggestion that we might all meet in
+London in January, 1917, was a hope rather
+than an expectation. We received a cable from
+France on Sunday, December 17th, 1916, and
+left New York on December 30th. We were met
+in London by the two sailor-sons, who were expecting
+appointments at any moment, and Coningsby
+arrived late in the evening of January
+13th. He was unwell when he arrived, having
+had a near touch of pneumonia. The day before
+he left the front he had been in action, with
+a temperature of 104. There were difficulties
+about getting his leave at the exact time appointed,
+but these he overcame by exchanging
+leave with a brother-officer. He travelled from
+the Front all night in a windowless train, and
+at Calais was delayed by a draft of infantry
+which he had to take over to England. The consequence
+of this delay was that the meeting at
+the railway station, of which he had so long
+dreamed, did not come off. We spent a long
+day, going from station to station, misled by imperfect
+information as to the arrival of troop
+trains. At Victoria Station we saw two thousand
+troops arrive on leave, men caked with
+trench-mud, but he was not among them. We
+reluctantly returned to our hotel in the late afternoon
+and gave up expecting him. There was all
+the time a telegram at the hotel from him, giving
+the exact place and time of his arrival, but it
+was not delivered until it was too late to meet
+him. He arrived at ten o'clock, and at the same
+time his two brothers, who had been summoned
+in the morning to Southampton, entered the hotel,
+having been granted special leave to return to
+London. A night's rest did wonders for Coningsby,
+and the next day his spirits were as high
+as in the old days of joyous holiday. During
+the next eight days we lived at a tense pitch of
+excitement. We went to theatres, dined in restaurants,
+met friends, and heard from his lips a
+hundred details of his life which could not be
+communicated in letters. We were all thrilled
+by the darkened heroic London through which
+we moved, the London which bore its sorrows
+so proudly, and went about its daily life with
+such silent courage. We visited old friends to
+whom the war had brought irreparable bereavements,
+but never once heard the voice of self-pity,
+of murmur or complaint. To me it was
+an incredible England; an England purged of all
+weakness, stripped of flabbiness, regenerated by
+sacrifice. I had dreamed of no such transformation
+by anything I had read in American newspapers
+and magazines. I think no one can
+imagine the completeness of this rebirth of the
+soul of England who has not dwelt, if only for
+a few days, among its people.</p>
+
+<p>Coningsby's brief leave expired all too soon.
+We saw him off from Folkestone, and while
+we were saying good-bye to him, his two brothers
+were on their way to their distant appointments
+with the Royal Naval Motor Patrol in the North
+of Scotland. We left Liverpool for New York
+on January 27th, and while at sea heard of the
+diplomatic break between America and Germany.
+The news was received on board the <i>S.S. St.
+Paul</i> with rejoicing. It was Sunday, and the religious
+service on board concluded with the Star-Spangled
+Banner.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXVI" id="XXXVI" />XXXVI</h2>
+
+<p>December 28th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dearest All:</p>
+
+<p>I'm writing you this letter because I expect
+to-night is a busy-packing one with you.
+The picture is in my mind of you all. How
+splendid it is of you to come! I never thought
+you would really, not even in my wildest dream
+of optimism. There have been so many times
+when I scarcely thought that I would ever see
+you again&mdash;now the unexpected and hoped-for
+happens. It's ripping!</p>
+
+<p>I've put in an application for special leave in
+case the ordinary leave should be cut off. I think
+I'm almost certain to arrive by the 11th. Won't
+we have a time? I wonder what we'll want to
+do most&mdash;sit quiet or go to theatres? The nine
+days of freedom&mdash;the wonderful nine days&mdash;will
+pass with most tragic quickness. But they'll be
+days to remember as long as life lasts.</p>
+
+<p>Shall I see you standing on the station when
+I puff into London&mdash;or will it be Folkestone
+where we meet&mdash;or shall I arrive before you?
+I somehow think it will be you who will meet me
+at the barrier at Charing Cross, and we'll taxi
+through the darkened streets down the Strand,
+and back to our privacy. How impossible it
+sounds&mdash;like a vision of heart's desire in the
+night.</p>
+
+<p>Far, far away I see the fine home-coming, like
+a lamp burning in a dark night. I expect we
+shall all go off our heads with joy and be madder
+than ever. Who in the old London days would
+have imagined such a nine days of happiness in
+the old places as we are to have together.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">God bless you, till we meet,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 18.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXVII" id="XXXVII" />XXXVII</h2>
+
+<p>January 4th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>10.30 p.m.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAREST ONES:</p>
+
+<p>This letter is written to welcome you to
+England, but I may be with you when it is opened.
+It was glorious news to hear that you were coming&mdash;I
+was only playing a forlorn bluff when I
+sent those cables. You're on the sea at present
+and should be half way over. Our last trip
+over together you marvelled at the apparent indifference
+of the soldiers on board, and now
+you're coming to meet one of your own fresh
+from the Front. A change!</p>
+
+<p>O what a nine days we're going to have together&mdash;the
+most wonderful that were ever spent.
+I dream of them, tell myself tales about them,
+live them over many times in imagination before
+they are realised. Sometimes I'm going to
+have no end of sleep, sometimes I'm going to
+keep awake every second, sometimes I'm going
+to sit quietly by a fire, and sometimes I'm going
+to taxi all the time. I can't fit your faces into
+the picture&mdash;it seems too unbelievable that we
+are to be together once again. To-day I've been
+staging our meeting&mdash;if you arrive first, and then
+if I arrive before you, and lastly if we both hit
+London on the same day. You mustn't expect
+me to be a sane person. You're three rippers to
+do this&mdash;and I hope you'll have an easy journey.
+The only ghost is the last day, when the leave
+train pulls out of Charing Cross. But we'll do
+that smiling, too; C'est la guerre.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">Yours always and ever, CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXVIII" id="XXXVIII" />XXXVIII</h2>
+
+<p>January 6th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>I have just seen a brother officer aboard
+the ex-London bus en route for Blighty. How
+I wished I could have stepped on board that ex-London
+perambulator to-night! &quot;Pickerdilly
+Cirkuss, 'Ighbury, 'Ighgate, Welsh 'Arp&mdash;all the
+wye.&quot; O my, what a time I'll have when I
+meet you! I shall feel as though if anything
+happens to me after my return you'll be able to
+understand so much more bravely. These blinkered
+letters, with only writing and no touch of
+live hands, convey so little. When we've had a
+good time together and sat round the fire and
+talked interminably you'll be able to read so
+much more between the lines of my future letters.
+To-morrow you ought to land in England,
+and to-morrow night you should sleep in London.
+I am trying to swop my leave with another man,
+otherwise it won't come till the 15th. I am looking
+forward every hour to those miraculous nine
+days which we are to have together. You can't
+imagine with your vividest imagination the contrast
+between nine days with you in London and
+my days where I am now. A battalion went by
+yesterday, marching into action, and its band was
+playing I've a Sneakin' Feelin' in My Heart
+That I Want to Settle Down. We all have that
+sneaking feeling from time to time. I tell myself
+wonderful stories in the early dark mornings and
+become the architect of the most wonderful futures.</p>
+
+<p>I'm coming to join you just as soon as I
+know how&mdash;at the worst I'll be in London on the
+16th of this month.</p>
+
+<p>Ever yours,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>The following letters were written after Coningsby
+had met his family in London.</i></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXIX" id="XXXIX" />XXXIX</h2>
+
+
+<p>January 24th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>I have had a chance to write you sooner
+than I expected, as I stopped the night where I
+disembarked, and am catching my train to-day.</p>
+
+<p>It's strange to be back and under orders after
+nine days' freedom. Directly I landed I was detailed
+to march a party&mdash;it was that that made me
+lose my train&mdash;not that I objected, for I got one
+more sleep between sheets. I picked up on the
+boat in the casual way one does, with three other
+officers, so on landing we made a party to dine
+together, and had a very decent evening. I
+wasn't wanting to remember too much then, so
+that was why I didn't write letters.</p>
+
+<p>What good times we have to look back on
+and how much to be thankful for, that we met
+altogether. Now we must look forward to the
+summer and, perhaps, the end of the war. What
+a mad joy will sweep across the world on the
+day that peace is declared!</p>
+
+<p>This visit will have made you feel that you
+have a share in all that's happening over here
+and are as real a part of it as any of us. I'm
+awfully proud of you for your courage.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Yours lovingly,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 17em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XL" id="XL" />XL</h2>
+
+<p>January 26th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>MY VERY DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>Here I am back&mdash;my nine days' leave a
+dream. I got into our wagon-lines last night
+after midnight, having had a cold ride along
+frozen roads through white wintry country. I
+was only half-expected, so my sleeping-bag hadn't
+been unpacked. I had to wake my batman and
+tramp about a mile to the billet; by the time I
+got there every one was asleep, so I spread out
+my sleeping-sack and crept in very quietly. For
+the few minutes before my eyes closed I pictured
+London, the taxis, the gay parties, the mystery
+of lights. I was roused this morning with
+the news that I had to go up to the gun-position
+at once. I stole just sufficient time to pick up a
+part of my accumulated mail, then got on my
+horse and set out. At the guns, I found that I
+was due to report as liaison officer, so here I am
+in the trenches again writing to you by candle-light.
+How wonderfully we have bridged the
+distance in spending those nine whole days together.
+And now it is over, and I am back in the
+trenches, and to-morrow you're sailing for New
+York.</p>
+
+<p>I can't tell you what the respite has meant to
+me. There have been times when my whole past
+life has seemed a myth and the future an endless
+prospect of carrying on. Now I can distantly
+hope that the old days will return.</p>
+
+<p>When I was in London half my mind was at
+the Front; now that I'm back in the trenches half
+my mind is in London. I re-live our gay times
+together; I go to cosy little dinners; I sit with
+you in the stalls, listening to the music; then I
+tumble off to sleep, and dream, and wake up to
+find the dream a delusion. It's a fine and
+manly contrast, however, between the game one
+plays out here and the fretful trivialities of
+civilian life.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLI" id="XLI" />XLI</h2>
+
+<p>January 27th.</p>
+
+
+<p>I got as far as this and then &quot;something&quot; happened.
+Twenty-four hours have gone by and
+once more it's nearly midnight and I write to you
+by candle-light. Since last night I've been with
+these infantry boy-officers who are doing such
+great work in such a careless spirit of jolliness.
+Any softness which had crept into me during my
+nine days of happiness has gone. I'm glad to be
+out here and wouldn't wish to be anywhere else
+till the war is ended.</p>
+
+<p>It's a week to-day since we were at <i>Charlie's
+Aunt</i>&mdash;such a cheerful little party! I expect the
+boys are doing their share of remembering too
+somewhere on the sea at present. I know you
+are, as you round the coast of Ireland and set
+out for the Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>I've not been out of my clothes for three days
+and I've another day to go yet. I brought my
+haversack into the trenches with me; on opening
+it I found that some kind hands had slipped
+into it some clean socks and a bottle of Horlick's
+Malted Milk tablets.</p>
+
+<p>The signallers in a near-by dug-out are singing
+Keep the Home-Fires Burning Till the Boys
+Come Home. That's what we're all doing,
+isn't it&mdash;you at your end and we at ours? The
+brief few days of possessing myself are over and
+once more stern duty lies ahead. But I thank God
+for the chance I've had to see again those whom
+I love, and to be able to tell them with my own
+lips some of the bigness of our life at the Front.
+No personal aims count beside the great privilege
+which is ours to carry on until the war is over.</p>
+
+<p>All my thoughts are with you&mdash;so many memories
+of kindness. I keep on picturing things I
+ought to have done&mdash;things I ought to have
+told you. Always I can see, Oh, so vividly,
+the two sailor brothers waving good-bye as
+the train moved off through the London dusk,
+and then that other and forlorner group of
+three, standing outside the dock gates with
+the sentry like the angel in Eden, turning them
+back from happiness. With an extraordinary
+aloofness I watched myself moving like a puppet
+away from you whom I love most dearly
+in all the world&mdash;going away as if going were a
+thing so usual.</p>
+
+<p>I'm asking myself again if there isn't some
+new fineness of spirit which will develop from
+this war and survive it. In London, at a distance
+from all this tragedy of courage, I felt that
+I had slipped back to a lower plane; a kind of
+flabbiness was creeping into my blood&mdash;the old
+selfish fear of life and love of comfort. It's odd
+that out here, where the fear of death should
+supplant the fear of life, one somehow rises into
+a contempt for everything which is not bravest.
+There's no doubt that the call for sacrifice, and
+perhaps the supreme sacrifice, can transform men
+into a nobility of which they themselves are unconscious.
+That's the most splendid thing of
+all, that they themselves are unaware of their
+fineness.</p>
+
+<p>I'm now waiting to be relieved and am hurrying
+to finish this so that I may mail it as soon
+as I get back to the battery. There's a whole
+sack of letters and parcels waiting for me there,
+and I'm as eager to get to them as a kiddy to
+inspect his Christmas stocking. I always undo
+the string and wrappings with a kind of reverence,
+trying to picture the dear kneeling figures
+who did them up. In London I didn't dare to
+let myself go with you&mdash;I couldn't say all that
+was in my heart&mdash;it wouldn't have been wise.
+Don't ever doubt that the tenderness was there.
+Even though one is only a civilian in khaki, some
+of the soldier's sternness becomes second nature.</p>
+
+<p>All the country is covered with snow&mdash;it's brilliant
+clear weather, more like America than
+Europe. I'm feeling strong as a horse, ever so
+much better than I felt when on leave. Life is
+really tremendously worth living, in spite of the
+war.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLII" id="XLII" />XLII</h2>
+
+<p>January 28th.</p>
+
+<p>I'm back at the battery, sitting by a cosy fire.
+I might be up at Kootenay by the look of my
+surroundings. I'm in a shack with a really truly
+floor, and a window looking out on moonlit whiteness.
+If it wasn't for the tapping of the distant
+machine guns&mdash;tapping that always sounds to me
+like the nailing up of coffins&mdash;I might be here
+for pleasure. In imagination I can see your
+great ship, with all its portholes aglare, ploughing
+across the darkness to America. The dear
+sailor brothers I can't quite visualise; I can only
+see them looking so upright and pale when we
+said good-bye. It's getting late and the fire's
+dying. I'm half asleep; I've not been out of my
+clothes for three nights. I shall tell myself a
+story of the end of the war and our next meeting&mdash;it'll
+last from the time that I creep into my
+sack until I close my eyes. It's a glorious life.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours very lovingly,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 18.5em;">CON</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLIII" id="XLIII" />XLIII</h2>
+
+<p>January 31st, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR MR. AND MRS. M.:</p>
+
+<p>It was extremely good of you to remember
+me. I got back from leave in London on
+the 26th and found the cigarettes waiting for
+me. One hasn't got an awful lot of pleasures
+left, but smoking is one of them. I feel particularly
+doggy when I open my case and find
+my initials on them.</p>
+
+<p>I expect you'll have heard all the news of my
+leave long before this reaches you. We had a
+splendid time and the greatest of luck. My
+sailor brothers were with me all but two days,
+and my people were in England only a few days
+before I arrived.</p>
+
+<p>This is a queer adventure for a peaceable person
+like myself&mdash;it blots out all the past and reduces
+the future to a speck. One hardly hopes
+that things will ever be different, but looks forward
+to interminable years of carrying on. My
+leave rather corrected that frame of mind; it came
+as a surprise to be forced to realise that not all
+the world was living under orders on woman less,
+childless battlefields. But we don't need
+any pity&mdash;we manage our good times, and are
+sorry for the men who aren't here, for it's a
+wonderful thing to have been chosen to sacrifice
+and perhaps to die that the world of the future
+may be happier and kinder.</p>
+
+<p>This letter is rather disjointed; I'm in charge
+of the battery for the time, and messages keep
+on coming in, and one has to rush out to give
+the order to fire.</p>
+
+<p>It's an American night&mdash;snow-white and piercing,
+with a frigid moon sailing quietly. I think
+the quiet beauty of the sky is about the only
+thing in Nature that we do not scar and destroy
+with our fighting.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, and thank you ever so much.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Yours very sincerely,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">CONINGSBY DAWSON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLIV" id="XLIV" />XLIV</h2>
+
+<p>February 1st, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>11 p.m.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR FATHER:</p>
+
+<p>Your picture of the black days when no
+letter comes from me sets me off scribbling to
+you at this late hour. All to-day I've been having
+a cold but amusing time at the O.P. (Forward
+Observation Post). It seems brutal to say
+it, but taking potshots at the enemy when they
+present themselves is rather fun. When you
+watch them scattering like ants before the shell
+whose direction you have ordered, you somehow
+forget to think of them as individuals, any more
+than the bear-hunter thinks of the cubs that will
+be left motherless. You watch your victims
+through your glasses as God might watch his
+mad universe. Your skill in directing fire makes
+you what in peace times would be called a murderer.
+Curious! You're glad, and yet at close
+quarters only in hot blood would you hurt a man.</p>
+
+<p>I'd been back for a little over an hour when
+I had to go forward again to guide in some guns.
+The country was dazzlingly white in the moonlight.
+As far as eye could see every yard was
+an old battlefield; beneath the soft white fleece
+of snow lay countless unburied bodies. Like
+frantic fingers tearing at the sky, all along the
+horizon, Hun lights were shooting up and drifting
+across our front. Tap-tap-tappity went the machine-guns;
+whoo-oo went the heavies, and they
+always stamp like angry bulls. I had to come
+back by myself across the heroic corruption which
+the snow had covered. All the way I asked myself
+why was I not frightened. What has happened
+to me? Ghosts should walk here if anywhere.
+Moreover, I know that I shall be frightened
+again when the war is ended. Do you remember
+how you once offered me money to walk
+through the Forest of Dean after dark, and I
+wouldn't? I wouldn't if you offered it to me
+now. You remember Meredith's lines in &quot;The
+Woods of Westermain&quot;:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;All the eyeballs under hoods</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Shroud you in their glare;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Enter these enchanted woods</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">You who dare.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Maybe what re-creates one for the moment is the
+British officer's uniform, and even more the fact
+that you are not asked, but expected, to do your
+duty. So I came back quite unruffled across battered
+trenches and silent mounds to write this
+letter to you.</p>
+
+<p>My dear father, I'm over thirty, and yet just
+as much a little boy as ever. I still feel overwhelmingly
+dependent on your good opinion and
+love. I'm glad that they are black days when
+you have no letters from me. I love to think
+of the rush to the door when the postman rings
+and the excited shouting up the stairs, &quot;Quick,
+one from Con.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>February 2nd.</p>
+
+<p>You see by the writing how tired I was when
+I reached this point. It's nearly twenty-four
+hours later and again night. The gramophone is
+playing an air from <i>La Tosca</i> to which the guns
+beat out a bass accompaniment. I close my eyes
+and picture the many times I have heard the
+(probably) German orchestras of Broadway Joy
+Palaces play that same music. How incongruous
+that I should be listening to it here and under
+these circumstances! It must have been
+listened to so often by gay crowds in the beauty
+places of the world. A romantic picture grows
+up in my mind of a blue night, the laughter of
+youth in evening dress, lamps twinkling through
+trees, far off the velvety shadow of water and
+mountains, and as a voice to it all, that air from
+<i>La Tosca</i>. I can believe that the silent people
+near by raise themselves up in their snow-beds
+to listen, each one recalling some ecstatic moment
+before the dream of life was shattered.</p>
+
+<p>There's a picture in the Pantheon at Paris, I
+remember; I believe it's called <i>To Glory</i>. One
+sees all the armies of the ages charging out of
+the middle distance with Death riding at their
+head. The only glory that I have discovered in
+this war is in men's hearts&mdash;it's not external.
+Were one to paint the spirit of this war he would
+depict a mud landscape, blasted trees, an iron sky;
+wading through the slush and shell-holes would
+come a file of bowed figures, more like outcasts
+from the Embankment than soldiers. They're
+loaded down like pack animals, their shoulders
+are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they
+go on and go on. There's no &quot;To Glory&quot; about
+what we're doing out here; there's no flash of
+swords or splendour of uniforms. There are
+only very tired men determined to carry on. The
+war will be won by tired men who could never
+again pass an insurance test, a mob of broken
+counter-jumpers, ragged ex-plumbers and quite
+unheroic persons. We're civilians in khaki, but
+because of the ideals for which we fight we've
+managed to acquire soldiers' hearts.</p>
+
+<p>My flow of thought was interrupted by a burst
+of song in which I was compelled to join. We're
+all writing letters around one candle; suddenly
+the O.C. looked up and began, God Be With
+You Till We Meet Again. We sang it in parts.
+It was in Southport, when I was about nine years
+old, that I first heard that sung. You had gone
+for your first trip to America, leaving a very
+lonely family behind you. We children were
+scared to death that you'd be drowned. One evening,
+coming back from a walk on the sand-hills,
+we heard voices singing in a garden, God Be
+With You Till We Meet Again. The words and
+the soft dusk, and the vague figures in the English
+summer garden, seemed to typify the terror of
+all partings. We've said good-bye so often since,
+and God has been with us. I don't think any
+parting was more hard than our last at the prosaic
+dock-gates with the cold wind of duty blowing,
+and the sentry barring your entrance, and
+your path leading back to America while mine
+led on to France. But you three were regular
+soldiers&mdash;just as much soldiers as we chaps who
+were embarking. One talks of our armies in
+the field, but there are the other armies, millions
+strong, of mothers and fathers and sisters,
+who keep their eyes dry, treasure muddy letters
+beneath their pillows, offer up prayers and wait,
+wait, wait so eternally for God to open another
+door.</p>
+
+<p>To-morrow I again go forward, which means
+rising early and taking a long plod through the
+snows; that's one reason for not writing any
+more, and another is that our one poor candle
+is literally on its last legs.</p>
+
+<p>Your poem, written years ago when the poor
+were marching in London, is often in my mind:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;Yesterday and to-day</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Have been heavy with labour and sorrow;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I should faint if I did not see</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">The day that is after to-morrow.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>And there's that last verse which prophesied utterly
+the spirit in which we men at the Front are
+fighting to-day:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;And for me, with spirit elate</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">The mire and the fog I press thorough,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">For Heaven shines under the cloud</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Of the day that is after to-morrow.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>We civilians who have been taught so long to
+love our enemies and do good to them who hate
+us&mdash;much too long ever to make professional
+soldiers&mdash;are watching with our hearts in our
+eyes for that day which conies after to-morrow.
+Meanwhile we plod on determinedly, hoping for
+the hidden glory.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Yours very lovingly,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 19.5em;">Con.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLV" id="XLV" />XLV</h2>
+
+
+<p>February 3rd, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Misses W.:</p>
+
+<p>You were very kind to remember me at
+Christmas. <i>Seventeen</i> was read with all kinds
+of gusto by all my brother officers. It's still being
+borrowed.</p>
+
+<p>I've been back from leave a few days now and
+am settling back to business again. It was a
+trifle hard after over-eating and undersleeping
+myself for nine days, and riding everywhere with
+my feet up in taxis. I was the wildest little boy.
+Here it's snowy and bitter. We wear scarves
+round our ears to keep the frost away and dream
+of fires a mile high. All I ask, when the war is
+ended, is to be allowed to sit asleep in a big armchair
+and to be left there absolutely quiet. Sleep,
+which we crave so much at times, is only death
+done up in sample bottles. Perhaps some of
+these very weary men who strew our battlefields
+are glad to lie at last at endless leisure.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, and thank you.</p>
+
+<p>Yours very sincerely,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLVI" id="XLVI" />XLVI</h2>
+
+<p>February 4th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>My Dearest Mother:</p>
+
+<p>Somewhere in the distance I can hear a
+piano going and men's voices singing A Perfect
+Day. It's queer how music creates a world
+for you in which you are not, and makes you
+dreamy. I've been sitting by a fire and thinking
+of all the happy times when the total of desire
+seemed almost within one's grasp. It never
+is&mdash;one always, always misses it and has to rub
+the dust from the eyes, recover one's breath and
+set out on the search afresh. I suppose when
+you grow very old you learn the lesson of sitting
+quiet, and the heart stops beating and the total
+of desire comes to you. And yet I can remember
+so many happy days, when I was a child in
+the summer and later at Kootenay. One almost
+thought he had caught the secret of carrying
+heaven in his heart.</p>
+
+<p>By the time this reaches you I'll be in the line
+again, but for the present I'm undergoing a special
+course of training. You can't hear the most
+distant sound of guns, and if it wasn't for the
+pressure of study, similar to that at <i>Kingston</i>,
+one would be very rested.</p>
+
+<p>Sunday of all days is the one when I remember
+you most. You're just sitting down to mid-day
+dinner,&mdash;I've made the calculation for difference
+of time. You're probably saying how
+less than a month ago we were in London. That
+doesn't sound true even when I write it. I wonder
+how your old familiar surroundings strike
+you. It's terrible to come down from the mountain
+heights of a great elation like our ten days
+in London. I often think of that with regard to
+myself when the war is ended. There'll be a
+sense of dissatisfaction when the old lost comforts
+are regained. There'll be a sense of lowered
+manhood. The stupendous terrors of Armageddon
+demand less courage than the uneventful
+terror of the daily commonplace. There's
+something splendid and exhilarating in going forward
+among bursting shells&mdash;we, who have done
+all that, know that when the guns have ceased to
+roar our blood will grow more sluggish and we'll
+never be such men again. Instead of getting up
+in the morning and hearing your O.C. say,
+&quot;You'll run a line into trench so-and-so to-day
+and shoot up such-and-such Hun wire,&quot; you'll
+hear necessity saying, &quot;You'll work from breakfast
+to dinner and earn your daily bread. And
+you'll do it to-morrow and to-morrow and to-morrow
+world without end. Amen.&quot; They
+never put that forever and forever part into their
+commands out here, because the Amen for any
+one of us may be only a few hours away. But
+the big immediate thing is so much easier to do
+than the prosaic carrying on without anxiety&mdash;which
+is your game. I begin to understand what
+you have had to suffer now that R. and E.
+are really at war too. I get awfully anxious
+about them. I never knew before that either of
+them owned so much of my heart. I get furious
+when I remember that they might get hurt.
+I've heard of a Canadian who joined when he
+learnt that his best friend had been murdered
+by Hun bayonets. He came to get his own back
+and was the most reckless man in his battalion.
+I can understand his temper now. We're all of
+us in danger of slipping back into the worship
+of Thor.</p>
+
+<p>I'll write as often as I can while here, but I
+don't get much time&mdash;so you'll understand. It's
+the long nights when one sits up to take the firing
+in action that give one the chance to be a decent
+correspondent.</p>
+
+<p>My birthday comes round soon, doesn't it?
+Good heavens, how ancient I'm getting and without
+any &quot;grow old along with me&quot; consolation.
+Well, to grow old is all in the job of living.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, and God bless you all.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLVII" id="XLVII" />XLVII</h2>
+
+
+<p>February 4th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Mr. B.:</p>
+
+<p>I have been intending to write to you for
+a very long time, but as most of one's writing
+is done when one ought to be asleep, and sleep
+next to eating is one of our few remaining pleasures,
+my intended letter has remained in my head
+up to now. On returning from a nine days'
+leave to London the other day, however, I found
+two letters from you awaiting me and was reproached
+into effort.</p>
+
+<p>War's a queer game&mdash;not at all what one's
+civilian mind imagined; it's far more horrible and
+less exciting. The horrors which the civilian
+mind dreads most are mutilation and death. Out
+here we rarely think about them; the thing which
+wears on one most and calls out his gravest courage
+is the endless sequence of physical discomfort.
+Not to be able to wash, not to be able to
+sleep, to have to be wet and cold for long periods
+at a stretch, to find mud on your person, in your
+food, to have to stand in mud, see mud, sleep in
+mud and to continue to smile&mdash;that's what tests
+courage. Our chaps are splendid. They're not
+the hair-brained idiots that some war-correspondents
+depict from day to day. They're perfectly
+sane people who know to a fraction what they're
+up against, but who carry on with a grim good-nature
+and a determination to win with a smile.
+I never before appreciated as I do to-day the
+latent capacity for big-hearted endurance that is
+in the heart of every man. Here are apparently
+quite ordinary chaps&mdash;chaps who washed, liked
+theatres, loved kiddies and sweethearts, had a
+zest for life&mdash;they're bankrupt of all pleasures
+except the supreme pleasure of knowing that
+they're doing the ordinary and finest thing of
+which they are capable. There are millions to
+whom the mere consciousness of doing their duty
+has brought an heretofore unexperienced peace
+of mind. For myself I was never happier than
+I am at present; there's a novel zip added to life
+by the daily risks and the knowledge that at last
+you're doing something into which no trace of
+selfishness enters. One can only die once; the
+chief concern that matters is <i>how</i> and not <i>when</i>
+you die. I don't pity the weary men who have
+attained eternal leisure in the corruption of our
+shell-furrowed battles; they &quot;went West&quot; in their
+supreme moment. The men I pity are those who
+could not hear the call of duty and whose consciences
+will grow more flabby every day. With
+the brutal roar of the first Prussian gun the
+cry came to the civilised world, &quot;Follow thou
+me,&quot; just as truly as it did in Palestine. Men went
+to their Calvary singing Tipperary, rubbish,
+rhymed doggerel, but their spirit was equal to
+that of any Christian martyr in a Roman amphitheatre.
+&quot;Greater love hath no man than this,
+that he lay down his life for his friend.&quot; Our
+chaps are doing that consciously, willingly, almost
+without bitterness towards their enemies;
+for the rest it doesn't matter whether they sing
+hymns or ragtime. They've followed their
+ideal&mdash;freedom&mdash;and died for it. A former age
+expressed itself in Gregorian chants; ours, no less
+sincerely, disguises its feelings in ragtime.</p>
+
+<p>Since September I have been less than a month
+out of action. The game doesn't pall as time
+goes on&mdash;it fascinates. We've got to win so that
+men may never again be tortured by the ingenious
+inquisition of modern warfare. The winning of
+the war becomes a personal affair to the chaps
+who are fighting. The world which sits behind
+the lines, buys extra specials of the daily papers
+and eats three square meals a day, will never
+know what this other world has endured for its
+safety, for no man of this other world will have
+the vocabulary in which to tell. But don't for
+a moment mistake me&mdash;we're grimly happy.</p>
+
+<p>What a serial I'll write for you if I emerge
+from this turmoil! Thank God, my outlook is
+all altered. I don't want to live any longer&mdash;only
+to live well.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye and good luck.</p>
+
+<p>Yours,</p>
+
+<p>Coningsby Dawson.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLVIII" id="XLVIII" />XLVIII</h2>
+
+
+<p>February 5th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>My Dearest Mother:</p>
+
+<p>Aren't the papers good reading now-a-days
+with nothing to record but success? It
+gives us hope that at last, anyway before the year
+is out, the war must end. As you know, I am at
+the artillery school back of the lines for a month,
+taking an extra course. I have been meeting a
+great many young officers from all over the world
+and have listened to them discussing their program
+for when peace is declared. Very few of
+them have any plans or prospects. Most of them
+had just started on some course of professional
+training to which they won't have the energy to
+go back after a two years' interruption. The
+question one asks is how will all these men be reabsorbed
+into civilian life. I'm afraid the result
+will be a vast host of men with promising pasts
+and highly uncertain futures. We shall be a holiday
+world without an income. I'm afraid the
+hero-worship attitude will soon change to impatience
+when the soldiers beat their swords into
+ploughshares and then confess that they have
+never been taught to plough. That's where I
+shall score&mdash;by beating my sword into a pen.
+But what to write about&mdash;! Everything will
+seem so little and inconsequential after seeing
+armies marching to mud and death, and people
+will soon get tired of hearing about that. It
+seems as though war does to the individual what
+it does to the landscapes it attacks&mdash;obliterates
+everything personal and characteristic. A valley,
+when a battle has done with it, is nothing but
+earth&mdash;exactly what it was when God said, &quot;Let
+there be Light;&quot; a man just something with a
+mind purged of the past and ready to observe
+afresh. I question whether a return to old
+environments will ever restore to us the whole of
+our old tastes and affections. War is, I think,
+utterly destructive. It doesn't even create courage&mdash;it
+only finds it in the soul of a man. And
+yet there is one quality which will survive the
+war and help us to face the temptations of peace&mdash;that
+same courage which most of us have unconsciously
+discovered out here.</p>
+
+<p>Well, my dear, I have little news&mdash;at least,
+none that I can tell. I'm just about recovered
+from an attack of &quot;flu.&quot; I want to get thoroughly
+rid of it before I go back to my battery. I hope
+you all keep well. God bless you all.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLIX" id="XLIX" />XLIX</h2>
+
+<p>February 6th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>My Very Dear M.:</p>
+
+<p>I read in to-day's paper that U.S.A.
+threatens to come over and help us. I wish
+she would. The very thought of the possibility
+fills me with joy. I've been light-headed all day.
+It would be so ripping to live among people,
+when the war is ended, of whom you need not
+be ashamed. Somewhere deep down in my heart
+I've felt a sadness ever since I've been out here,
+at America's lack of gallantry&mdash;it's so easy to
+find excuses for not climbing to Calvary; sacrifice
+was always too noble to be sensible. I
+would like to see the country of our adoption become
+splendidly irrational even at this eleventh
+hour in the game; it would redeem her in the
+world's eyes. She doesn't know what she's
+losing. From these carcase-strewn fields of
+khaki there's a cleansing wind blowing for the
+nations that have died. Though there was only
+one Englishman left to carry on the race when
+this war is victoriously ended, I would give more
+for the future of England than for the future of
+America with her ninety millions whose sluggish
+blood was not stirred by the call of duty. It's
+bigness of soul that makes nations great and not
+population. Money, comfort, limousines and
+ragtime are not the requisites of men when
+heroes are dying. I hate the thought of Fifth
+Avenue, with its pretty faces, its fashions, its
+smiling frivolity. America as a great nation will
+die, as all coward civilisations have died, unless
+she accepts the stigmata of sacrifice, which a
+divine opportunity again offers her.</p>
+
+<p>If it were but possible to show those ninety
+millions one battlefield with its sprawling dead,
+its pity, its marvellous forgetfulness of self, I
+think then&mdash;no, they wouldn't be afraid. Fear
+isn't the emotion one feels&mdash;they would
+experience the shame of living when so many have
+shed their youth freely. This war is a prolonged
+moment of exultation for most of us&mdash;we
+are redeeming ourselves in our own eyes.
+To lay down one's life for one's friend once
+seemed impossible. All that is altered. We lay
+down our lives that the future generations may
+be good and kind, and so we can contemplate
+oblivion with quiet eyes. Nothing that is noblest
+that the Greeks taught is unpractised by the
+simplest men out here to-day. They may die
+childless, but their example will father the imagination
+of all the coming ages. These men, in
+the noble indignation of a great ideal, face a
+worse hell than the most ingenious of fanatics
+ever planned or plotted. Men die scorched like
+moths in a furnace, blown to atoms, gassed, tortured.
+And again other men step forward to
+take their places well knowing what will be their
+fate. Bodies may die, but the spirit of England
+grows greater as each new soul speeds upon its
+way. The battened souls of America will die and
+be buried. I believe the decision of the next
+few days will prove to be the crisis in America's
+nationhood. If she refuses the pain which will
+save her, the cancer of self-despising will rob her
+of her life.</p>
+
+<p>This feeling is strong with us. It's past midnight,
+but I could write of nothing else to-night.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14086 ***</div>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14086 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14086)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Carry On, by Coningsby Dawson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: Carry On
+
+Author: Coningsby Dawson
+
+Release Date: November 18, 2004 [EBook #14086]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CARRY ON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+Carry On
+
+By Lieutenant
+Coningsby
+Dawson
+
+CARRY ON
+
+[Illustration: Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson
+Canadian Field Artillery]
+
+
+
+
+CARRY ON
+
+LETTERS IN WAR TIME
+
+BY
+
+CONINGSBY DAWSON
+
+NOVELIST AND SOLDIER
+
+WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND NOTES
+
+BY HIS FATHER, W.J. DAWSON
+
+FRONTISPIECE
+
+1917
+
+
+
+ WHEN THE WAR'S AT AN END
+
+
+ At length when the war's at an end
+ And we're just ourselves,--you and I,
+ And we gather our lives up to mend,
+ We, who've learned how to live and to die:
+
+ Shall we think of the old ambition
+ For riches, or how to grow wise,
+ When, like Lazarus freshly arisen,
+ We've the presence of Death in our eyes?
+
+ Shall we dream of our old life's passion,--
+ To toil for our heart's desire,
+ Whose souls War has taken to fashion
+ With molten death and with fire?
+
+ I think we shall crave the laughter
+ Of the wind through trees gold with the sun,
+ When our strife is all finished,--after
+ The carnage of War is done.
+
+ Just these things will then seem worth while:--
+ How to make Life more wondrously sweet;
+ How to live with a song and a smile,
+ How to lay our lives at Love's feet.
+
+ ERIC P. DAWSON,
+ _Sub. Lieut_. R.N.V.R.
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The letters in this volume were not written for publication. They are
+intimate and personal in a high degree. They would not now be published
+by those to whom they are addressed, had they not come to feel that the
+spirit and temper of the writer might do something to strengthen and
+invigorate those who, like himself, are called on to make great
+sacrifices for high causes and solemn duties.
+
+They do not profess to give any new information about the military
+operations of the Allies; this is the task of the publicist, and at all
+times is forbidden to the soldier in the field. Here and there some
+striking or significant fact has been allowed to pass the censor; but
+the value of the letters does not lie in these things. It is found
+rather in the record of how the dreadful yet heroic realities of war
+affect an unusually sensitive mind, long trained in moral and romantic
+idealism; the process by which this mind adapts itself to unanticipated
+and incredible conditions, to acts and duties which lie close to horror,
+and are only saved from being horrible by the efficacy of the spiritual
+effort which they evoke. Hating the brutalities of War, clearly
+perceiving the wide range of its cruelties, yet the heart of the writer
+is never hardened by its daily commerce with death; it is purified by
+pity and terror, by heroism and sacrifice, until the whole nature seems
+fresh annealed into a finer strength.
+
+The intimate nature of these letters makes it necessary to say something
+about the writer.
+
+Coningsby Dawson graduated with honours in history from Oxford in 1905,
+and in the same year came to the United States with the intention of
+taking a theological course at Union Seminary. After a year at the
+Seminary he reached the conclusion that his true lifework lay in
+literature, and he at once began to fit himself for his vocation. In the
+meantime his family left England, and we had made our home in Taunton,
+Massachusetts. Here, in a quiet house, amid lawns and leafy elms, he
+gave himself with indefatigable ardour to the art of writing. He wrote
+from seven to ten hours a day, producing many poems, short stories, and
+three novels. Few writers have ever worked harder to attain literary
+excellence, or have practised a more austere devotion to their art. I
+often marvelled how a young man, fresh from a brilliant career at the
+greatest of English Universities, could be content with a life that was
+so widely separated from association with men and affairs. I wondered
+still more at the patience with which he endured the rebuffs that always
+await the beginner in literature, and the humility with which he was
+willing to learn the hard lessons of his apprenticeship in literary
+form. The secret lay, no doubt, in his secure sense of a vocation, and
+his belief that good work could not fail in the end to justify itself.
+But, not the less, these four years of obscure drudgery wore upon his
+spirit, and hence some of the references in these letters to his days of
+self-despising. The period of waiting came to an end at last with the
+publication in 1913 of his _Garden Without Walls_, which attained
+immediate success. When he speaks in these letters of his brief burst of
+fame, he refers to those crowded months in the Fall of 1913, when his
+novel was being discussed on every hand, and, for the first time, he met
+many writers of established reputation as an equal.
+
+Another novel, _The Raft_, followed _The Garden Without Walls_. The
+nature of his life now seemed fixed. To the task of novel-writing he had
+brought a temperament highly idealistic and romantic, a fresh and vivid
+imagination, and a thorough literary equipment. His life, as he planned
+it, held but one purpose for him, outside the warmth and tenacity of
+its affections--the triumph of the efficient purpose in the adequate
+expression of his mind in literature. The austerity of his long years of
+preparation had left him relatively indifferent to the common prizes of
+life, though they had done nothing to lessen his intense joy in life.
+His whole mind was concentrated on his art. His adventures would be the
+adventures of the mind in search of ampler modes of expression. His
+crusades would be the crusades of the spirit in search of the realities
+of truth. He had received the public recognition which gave him faith in
+himself and faith in his ability to achieve the reputation of the true
+artist, whose work is not cheapened but dignified and broadened by
+success. So he read the future, and so his critics read it for him. And
+then, sudden and unheralded, there broke on this quiet life of
+intellectual devotion the great storm of 1914. The guns that roared
+along the Marne shattered all his purposes, and left him face to face
+with a solemn spiritual exigency which admitted no equivocation.
+
+At first, in common with multitudes more experienced than himself, he
+did not fully comprehend the true measure of the cataclysm which had
+overwhelmed the world. There had been wars before, and they had been
+fought out by standing armies. It was incredible that any war should
+last more than a few months. Again and again the world had been assured
+that war would break down with its own weight, that no war could be
+financed beyond a certain brief period, that the very nature of modern
+warfare, with its terrible engines of destruction, made swift decisions
+a necessity. The conception of a British War which involved the entire
+manhood of the nation was new, and unparalleled in past history. And the
+further conception of a war so vast in its issues that it really
+threatened the very existence of the nation was new too. Alarmists had
+sometimes predicted these things, but they had been disbelieved.
+Historians had used such phrases of long past struggles, but often as a
+mode of rhetoric rather than as the expression of exact truth. Yet, in a
+very few weeks, it became evident that not alone England, but the entire
+fabric of liberal civilisation was threatened by a power that knew no
+honour, no restraints of either caution or magnanimity, no ethic but the
+armed might that trampled under blood-stained feet all the things which
+the common sanction of centuries held dearest and fairest.
+
+Perhaps, if Coningsby had been resident in England, these realities of
+the situation would have been immediately apparent. Residing in
+America, the real outlines of the struggle were a little dimmed by
+distance. Nevertheless, from the very first he saw clearly where his
+duty lay. He could not enlist immediately. He was bound in honour to
+fulfil various literary obligations. His latest book, _Slaves of
+Freedom_, was in process of being adapted for serial use, and its
+publication would follow. He set the completion of this work as the
+period when he must enlist; working on with difficult self-restraint
+toward the appointed hour. If he had regrets for a career broken at the
+very point where it had reached success and was assured of more than
+competence, he never expressed them. His one regret was the effect of
+his enlistment on those most closely bound to him by affections which
+had been deepened and made more tender by the sense of common exile. At
+last the hour came when he was free to follow the imperative call of
+patriotic duty. He went to Ottawa, saw Sir Sam Hughes, and was offered a
+commission in the Canadian Field Artillery on the completion of his
+training at the Royal Military College, at Kingston, Ontario. The last
+weeks of his training were passed at the military camp of Petewawa on
+the Ottawa River. There his family was able to meet him in the July of
+1916. While we were with him he was selected, with twenty-four other
+officers, for immediate service in France; and at the same time his two
+younger brothers enlisted in the Naval Patrol, then being recruited in
+Canada by Commander Armstrong.
+
+The letters in this volume commence with his departure from Ottawa. Week
+by week they have come, with occasional interruptions; mud stained
+epistles, written in pencil, in dug-outs by the light of a single
+candle, in the brief moments snatched from hard and perilous duties.
+They give no hint of where he was on the far-flung battle-line. We know
+now that he was at Albert, at Thiepval, at Courcelette, and at the
+taking of the Regina trench, where, unknown to him, one of his cousins
+fell in the heroic charge of the Canadian infantry. His constant
+thoughtfulness for those who were left at home is manifest in all he
+writes. It has been expressed also in other ways, dear and precious to
+remember: in flowers delivered by his order from the battlefield each
+Sabbath morning at our house in Newark, in cables of birthday
+congratulations, which arrived on the exact date. Nothing has been
+forgotten that could alleviate the loneliness of our separation, or
+stimulate our courage, or make us conscious of the unbroken bond of
+love.
+
+The general point of view in these letters is, I think, adequately
+expressed in the phrase "_Carry On_," which I have used as the title of
+this book. It was our happy lot to meet Coningsby in London in the
+January of the present year, when he was granted ten days' leave. In the
+course of conversation one night he laid emphasis on the fact that he,
+and those who served with him, were, after all, not professional
+soldiers, but civilians at war. They did not love war, and when the war
+was ended not five per cent of them would remain in the army. They were
+men who had left professions and vocations which still engaged the best
+parts of their minds, and would return to them when the hour came. War
+was for them an occupation, not a vocation. Yet they had proved
+themselves, one and all, splendid soldiers, bearing the greatest
+hardships without complaint, and facing wounds and death with a gay
+courage which had made the Canadian forces famous even among a host of
+men, equally brave and heroic. The secret of their fortitude lay in the
+one brief phrase, "Carry On." Their fortitude was of the spirit rather
+than the nerves. They were aware of the solemn ideals of justice,
+liberty, and righteousness for which they fought, and would never give
+up till they were won. In the completeness of their surrender to a great
+cause they had been lifted out of themselves to a new plane of living
+by the transformation of their spirit. It was the dogged indomitable
+drive of spiritual forces controlling bodily forces. Living or dying
+those forces would prevail. They would carry on to the end, however long
+the war, and would count no sacrifice too great to assure its triumph.
+
+This is the spirit which breathes through these letters. The splendour
+of war, as my son puts it, is in nothing external; it is all in the
+souls of the men. "There's a marvellous grandeur about all this carnage
+and desolation--men's souls rise above the distress--they have to, in
+order to survive." "Every man I have met out here has the amazing guts
+to wear his crown of thorns as though it were a cap-and-bells." They
+have shredded off their weaknesses, and attained that "corporate
+stout-heartedness" which is "the acme of what Aristotle meant by
+virtue." For himself, he discovers that the plague of his former modes
+of life lay in self-distrust. It was the disease of the age. The doubt
+of many things which it were wisdom to believe had ended in the doubt of
+one's own capacity for heroism. All those doubts and self-despisings had
+vanished in the supreme surrender to sacrificial duty. The doors of the
+Kingdom of Heroism were flung so wide that the meanest might enter in,
+and in that act the humblest became comrades of Drake's men, who could
+jest as they died. No one knows his real strength till it is put to the
+test; the highest joy of life is to discover that the soul can meet the
+test, and survive it.
+
+The Somme battlefield, from which all these letters were despatched, is
+an Inferno much more terrible than any Dante pictured. It is a vast sea
+of mud, full of the unburied dead, pitted and pock-marked by
+shell-holes, treeless and horseless, "the abomination of desolation."
+And the men who toil across it look more like outcasts of the London
+Embankment than soldiers. "They're loaded down like pack-animals, their
+shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they go on and go
+on.... There's no flash of sword or splendour of uniforms. They're only
+very tired men determined to carry on. The war will be won by tired men
+who can never again pass an insurance test." Yet they carry on--the
+"broken counter-jumper, the ragged ex-plumber," the clerk from the
+office, the man from the farm; Londoner, Canadian, Australian, New
+Zealander, men drawn from every quarter of the Empire, who daily justify
+their manhood by devotion to an ideal and by contempt of death. And in
+the heart of each there is a settled conviction that the cause for which
+they have sacrificed so much must triumph. They have no illusions about
+an early peace. They see their comrades fall, and say quietly, "He's
+gone West." They do heroic things daily, which in a lesser war would
+have won the Victoria Cross, but in this war are commonplaces. They know
+themselves re-born in soul, and are dimly aware that the world is
+travailing toward new birth with them. They are still very human, men
+who end their letters with a row of crosses which stand for kisses. They
+are not dehumanised by war; the kindliness and tenderness of their
+natures are unspoiled by all their daily traffic in horror. But they
+have won their souls; and when the days of peace return these men will
+take with them to the civilian life a tonic strength and nobleness which
+will arrest and extirpate the decadence of society with the saving salt
+of valour and of faith.
+
+It may be said also that they do not hate their foe, although they hate
+the things for which he fights. They are fighting a clean fight, with
+men whose courage they respect. A German prisoner who comes into the
+British camp is sure of good treatment. He is neither starved nor
+insulted. His captors share with him cheerfully their rations and their
+little luxuries. Sometimes a sullen brute will spit in the face of his
+captor when he offers him a cigarette; he is always an officer, never a
+private. And occasionally between these fighting hosts there are acts of
+magnanimity which stand out illumined against the dark background of
+death and suffering. One of the stories told me by my son illustrates
+this. During one fierce engagement a British officer saw a German
+officer impaled on the barbed wire, writhing in anguish. The fire was
+dreadful, yet he still hung there unscathed. At length the British
+officer could stand it no longer. He said quietly, "I can't bear to look
+at that poor chap any longer." So he went out under the hail of shell,
+released him, took him on his shoulders and carried him to the German
+trench. The firing ceased. Both sides watched the act with wonder. Then
+the Commander in the German trench came forward, took from his own bosom
+the Iron Cross, and pinned it on the breast of the British officer. Such
+an episode is true to the holiest ideals of chivalry; and it is all the
+more welcome because the German record is stained by so many acts of
+barbarism, which the world cannot forgive.
+
+This magnanimous attitude toward the enemy is very apparent in these
+letters. The man whose mind is filled with great ideals of sacrifice and
+duty has no room for the narrowness of hate. He can pity a foe whose
+sufferings exceed his own, and the more so because he knows that his
+foe is doomed. The British troops do know this to-day by many infallible
+signs. In the early days of the war untrained men, poorly equipped with
+guns, were pitted against the best trained troops in Europe. The first
+Canadian armies were sacrificed, as was that immortal army of Imperial
+troops who saved the day at Mons. The Canadians often perished in that
+early fighting by the excess of their own reckless bravery. They are
+still the most daring fighters in the British army, but they have
+profited by the hard discipline of the past. They know now that they
+have not only the will to conquer, but the means of conquest. Their,
+artillery has become conspicuous for its efficiency. It is the ceaseless
+artillery fire which has turned the issue of the war for the British
+forces. The work of the infantry is beyond praise. They "go over the
+top" with superb courage, and all who have seen them are ready to say
+with my son, "I'm hats off to the infantry." And in this final
+efficiency, surpassing all that could have been thought possible in the
+earlier stages of the war, the British forces read the clear augury of
+victory. The war will be won by the Allied armies; not only because they
+fight for the better cause, which counts for much, in spite of
+Napoleon's cynical saying that "God is on the side of the strongest
+battalions"; but because at last they have superiority in equipment,
+discipline and efficiency. Upon that shell-torn Western front, amid the
+mud and carnage of the Somme, there has been slowly forged the weapon
+which will drive the Teuton enemy across the Rhine, and give back to
+Europe and the world unhindered liberty and enduring peace.
+
+W.J. DAWSON.
+
+March, 1917.
+
+
+
+
+THE LETTERS
+
+
+In order to make some of the allusions in these letters clear I will set
+down briefly the circumstances which explain them, and supply a
+narrative link where it may be required.
+
+I have already mentioned the Military Camp at Petewawa, on the Ottawa
+river. The Camp is situated about seven miles from Pembroke. The Ottawa
+river is at this point a beautiful lake. Immediately opposite the Camp
+is a little summer hotel of the simplest description. It was at this
+hotel that my wife, my daughter, and myself stayed in the early days of
+July, 1916.
+
+The hotel was full of the wives of the officers stationed in the Camp.
+During the daytime I was the only man among the guests. About five
+o'clock in the afternoon the officers from the Camp began to arrive on a
+primitive motor ferryboat. My son came over each day, and we often
+visited him at the Camp. His long training at Kingston had been very
+severe. It included besides the various classes which he attended a
+great deal of hard exercise, long rides or foot marches over frozen
+roads before breakfast, and so forth. After this strenuous winter the
+Camp at Petewawa was a delightful change. His tent stood on a bluff,
+commanding an exquisite view of the broad stretch of water, diversified
+by many small islands. We had a great deal of swimming in the lake, and
+several motor-boat excursions to its beautiful upper reaches. One
+afternoon when we went over in our launch to meet him at the Camp wharf,
+he told us that that day a General had come from Ottawa to ask for
+twenty-five picked officers to supply the casualties among the Canadian
+Field Artillery at the front. He had immediately volunteered and been
+accepted.
+
+At this time my two younger sons, who had joined us at Petewawa in order
+to see their brother, enrolled themselves in the Royal Naval Motor
+Patrol Service, and had to return to Nelson, British Columbia, to settle
+their affairs. Near Nelson, on the Kootenay Lake, we have a large fruit
+ranch, managed by my second son, Reginald. My youngest son, Eric, was
+with a law-firm in Nelson, and had just passed his final examinations as
+solicitor and barrister.
+
+This ranch had played a great part in our lives. The scenery is among
+the finest in British Columbia. We usually spent our summers there,
+finding not only continual interest in the development of our orchards,
+but a great deal of pleasure in riding, swimming, and boating. We had
+often talked of building a modern house there, but had never done so.
+The original "little shack" was the work of Reginald's own hands, in the
+days when most of the ranch was primeval forest. It had been added to,
+but was still of the simplest description. One reason why we had not
+built a modern house was that this "little shack" had become much
+endeared to us by association and memory. We were all together there
+more than once, and Coningsby had written a great deal there. We built
+later on a sort of summer library--a big room on the edge of a beautiful
+ravine--to which reference is made in later letters. Some of the
+happiest days of our lives were spent in these lovely surroundings, and
+the memory of those blue summer days, amid the fragrance of miles of
+pine-forest, often recurs to Coningsby as he writes from the mud-wastes
+of the Somme.
+
+We left Petewawa to go to the ranch before Coningsby sailed for England,
+that we might get our other two sons ready for their journey to England.
+They left us on August 21st, and the ranch was sub-let to Chinamen in
+the end of September, when we returned to Newark, New Jersey.
+
+
+
+
+CARRY ON
+
+I
+
+OTTAWA, July 16th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST ALL:
+
+So much has happened since last I saw you that it's difficult to know
+where to start. On Thursday, after lunch, I got the news that we were to
+entrain from Petewawa next Friday morning. I at once put in for leave to
+go to Ottawa the next day until the following Thursday at reveille. We
+came here with a lot of the other officers who are going over and have
+been having a very full time.
+
+I am sailing from a port unknown on board the _Olympic_ with 6,000
+troops--there is to be a big convoy. I feel more than ever I did--and
+I'm sure it's a feeling that you share since visiting the camp--that I
+am setting out on a Crusade from which it would have been impossible to
+withhold myself with honour. I go quite gladly and contentedly, and pray
+that in God's good time we may all sit again in the little shack at
+Kootenay and listen to the rustling of the orchard outside. It will be
+of those summer days that I shall be thinking all the time.
+
+ Yours, with very much love,
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+HALIFAX, July 23rd.
+
+MY DEAR ONES:
+
+We've spent all morning on the dock, seeing to our baggage, and have
+just got leave ashore for two hours. We have had letters handed to us
+saying that on no account are we to mention anything concerning our
+passage overseas, neither are we allowed to cable our arrival from the
+other side until four clear days have elapsed.
+
+You are thinking of me this quiet Sunday morning at the ranch, and I of
+you. And I am wishing--As I wish, I stop and ask myself, "Would I be
+there if I could have my choice?" And I remember those lines of
+Emerson's which you quoted:
+
+ "Though love repine and reason chafe,
+ There comes a voice without reply,
+ 'Twere man's perdition to be safe,
+ When for the Truth he ought to die."
+
+I wouldn't turn back if I could, but my heart cries out against "the
+voice which speaks without reply."
+
+Things are growing deeper with me in all sorts of ways. Family
+affections stand out so desirably and vivid, like meadows green after
+rain. And religion means more. The love of a few dear human people and
+the love of the divine people out of sight, are all that one has to lean
+on in the graver hours of life. I hope I come back again--I very much
+hope I come back again; there are so many finer things that I could do
+with the rest of my days--bigger things. But if by any chance I should
+cross the seas to stay, you'll know that that also will be right and as
+big as anything that I could do with life, and something that you'll be
+able to be just as proud about as if I had lived to fulfil all your
+other dear hopes for me. I don't suppose I shall talk of this again. But
+I wanted you to know that underneath all the lightness and ambition
+there's something that I learnt years ago in Highbury[1]. I've become a
+little child again in God's hands, with full confidence in His love and
+wisdom, and a growing trust that whatever He decides for me will be best
+and kindest.
+
+[Footnote 1: We resided over thirteen years at Highbury, London, N.,
+during my pastorate of the Highbury Quadrant Congregational Church.]
+
+This is the last letter I shall be able to send to you before the other
+boys follow me. Keep brave, dear ones, for all our sakes; don't let any
+of us turn cowards whatever ultimately happens. We've a tradition to
+live up to now that we have become a family of soldiers and sailors.
+
+I shall long for the time when you come over to England. Where will our
+meeting be and when? Perhaps the war may be ended and then won't you be
+glad that we dared all this sorrow of good-byes?
+
+ God bless and keep you,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+ON BOARD, July 27th, 1916.
+
+My VERY DEAR PEOPLE:
+
+Here we are scooting along across the same old Atlantic we've crossed so
+many times on journeys of pleasure. I'm at a loss to make my letters
+interesting, as we are allowed to say little concerning the voyage and
+everything is censored.
+
+There are men on board who are going back to the trenches for the second
+time. One of them is a captain in the Princess Pat's, who is badly
+scarred in his neck and cheek and thighs, and has been in Canada
+recuperating. There is also a young flying chap who has also seen
+service. They are all such boys and so plucky in the face of certain
+knowledge.
+
+This morning I woke up thinking of our motor-tour of two years ago in
+England, and especially of our first evening at The Three Cups in
+Dorset. I feel like running down there to see it all again if I get any
+leave on landing. How strange it will be to go back to Highbury again
+like this! The little boy who ran back and forth to school down Paradise
+Row little thought of the person who to-day masquerades as his elder
+self.
+
+Heigho! I wish I could tell you a lot of things that I'm not allowed to.
+This letter would be much more interesting then.
+
+In seventeen days the boys will also have left you--so this will arrive
+when you're horribly lonely. I'm so sorry for you dear people--but I'd
+be sorrier for you if we were all with you. If I were a father or
+mother, I'd rather have my sons dead than see them failing when the
+supreme sacrifice was called for. I marvel all the time at the prosaic
+and even coarse types of men who have risen to the greatness of the
+occasion. And there's not a man aboard who would have chosen the job
+ahead of him. One man here used to pay other people to kill his pigs
+because he couldn't endure the cruelty of doing it himself. And now
+he's going to kill men. And he's a sample. I wonder if there is a Lord
+God of Battles--or is he only an invention of man and an excuse for
+man's own actions.
+
+Monday.
+
+We are just in--safely arrived in spite of everything. I hope you had no
+scare reports of our having been sunk--such reports often get about when
+a big troop ship is on the way.
+
+I'm baggage master for my draft, and have to get on deck now. You'll
+have a long letter from me soon.
+
+ Good-bye,
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.
+
+MY DEARESTS:
+
+We haven't had any hint of what is going to happen to us--whether Field
+Artillery, the Heavies or trench mortars. There seems little doubt that
+we are to be in England for a little while taking special courses.
+
+I read father's letter yesterday. You are very brave--you never thought
+that you would be the father of a soldier and sailors; and, as you say,
+there's a kind of tradition about the way in which the fathers of
+soldiers and sailors should act. Confess--aren't you more honestly happy
+to be our father as we are now than as we were? I know quite well you
+are, in spite of the loneliness and heartache. We've all been forced
+into a heroism of which we did not think ourselves capable. We've been
+carried up to the Calvary of the world where it is expedient that a few
+men should suffer that all the generations to come may be better.
+
+I understand in a dim way all that you suffer--the sudden divorce of all
+that we had hoped for from the present--the ceaseless questionings as to
+what lies ahead. Your end of the business is the worse. For me, I can go
+forward steadily because of the greatness of the glory. I never thought
+to have the chance to suffer in my body for other men. The insufficiency
+of merely setting nobilities down on paper is finished. How unreal I
+seem to myself! Can it be true that I am here and you are in the still
+aloofness of the Rockies? I think the multitude of my changes has
+blunted my perceptions. I trudge along like a traveller between high
+hedgerows; my heart is blinkered so that I am scarcely aware of
+landscapes. My thoughts are always with you--I make calculations for the
+differences of time that I may follow more accurately your doings. I'd
+love to come down to the study summer-house and watch the blueness of
+the lake with you--I love those scenes and memories more than any in the
+world.
+
+ Good-bye for the present. Be brave.
+
+ Yours,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.
+
+MY DEARS:
+
+It's not quite three weeks to-day since I came to England, and it seems
+ages. The first week was spent on leave, the second I passed my exams in
+gun drill and gun-laying, and this week I have finished my riding. Next
+Monday I start on my gunnery.
+
+Do you remember Captain S. at the Camp? I had his young brother to
+dinner with me last night-he's just back from France minus an eye. He
+lasted three and a half weeks, and was buried four feet deep by a shell.
+He's a jolly boy, as cheerful as you could want and is very good
+company. He gave me a vivid description. He had a great boy-friend. At
+the start of the war they both joined, S. in the Artillery, his friend
+in the Mounted Rifles. At parting they exchanged identification tokens.
+S.'s bore his initials and the one word "Violets"--which meant that they
+were his favourite flower and he would like to have some scattered over
+him when he was buried. His friend wore his initials and the words "No
+flowers by request." It was S.'s first week out--they were advancing,
+having driven back the enemy, and were taking up a covered position in a
+wood from which to renew their offensive. It was night, black as pitch,
+but they knew that the wood must have been the scene of fighting by the
+scuttling of the rats. Suddenly the moon came out, and from beneath a
+bush S. saw a face--or rather half a face--which he thought he
+recognised, gazing up at him. He corrects himself when he tells the
+story, and says that it wasn't so much the disfigured features as the
+profile that struck him as familiar. He bent down and searched beneath
+the shirt, and drew out a little metal disc with "No flowers by request"
+written on it.
+
+I don't know whether I ought to repeat things like that to you, but the
+description was so graphic. I have met many who have returned from the
+Front, and what puzzles me in all of them is their unawed acceptance of
+death. I don't think I could ever accept it as natural; it's too
+discourteous in its interruption of many dreams and plans and loves.
+
+ Yours with very much love,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+SHORNCLIFF, August 30th, 1916.
+
+MY DEARESTS:
+
+I have just returned from sending you a cable to let you know that I'm
+off to France. The word came out in orders yesterday, and I shall leave
+before the end of the week with a draft of officers--I have been in
+England just a day over four weeks. My only regret is that I shall miss
+the boys who should be travelling up to London about the same time as I
+am setting out for the Front. After I have been there for three months I
+am supposed to get a leave--this should be due to me about the beginning
+of December, and you can judge how I shall count on it. Think of the
+meeting with R. and E., and the immensity of the joy.
+
+Selfishly I wish that you were here at this moment--actually I'm glad
+that you are away. Everybody goes out quite unemotionally and with very
+few good-byes--we made far more fuss in the old days about a week-end
+visit.
+
+Now that at last it has come--this privileged moment for which I have
+worked and waited--my heart is very quiet. It's the test of a character
+which I have often doubted. I shall be glad not to have to doubt it
+again. Whatever happens, I know you will be glad to remember that at a
+great crisis I tried to play the man, however small my qualifications.
+We have always lived so near to one another's affections that this going
+out alone is more lonely to me than to most men. I have always had some
+one near at hand with love-blinded eyes to see my faults as springing
+from higher motives. Now I reach out my hands across six thousand miles
+and only touch yours with my imagination to say good-bye. What queer
+sights these eyes, which have been almost your eyes, will witness! If my
+hands do anything respectable, remember that it is your hands that are
+doing it. It is your influence as a family that has made me ready for
+the part I have to play, and where I go, you follow me.
+
+Poor little circle of three loving persons, please be tremendously
+brave. Don't let anything turn you into cowards--we've all got to be
+worthy of each other's sacrifice; the greater the sacrifice may prove to
+be for the one the greater the nobility demanded of the remainder. How
+idle the words sound, and yet they will take deep meanings when time has
+given them graver sanctions. I think gallant is the word I've been
+trying to find--we must be gallant English women and gentlemen.
+
+It's been raining all day and I got very wet this morning. Don't you
+wish I had caught some quite harmless sickness? When I didn't want to go
+back to school, I used to wet my socks purposely in order to catch cold,
+but the cold always avoided me when I wanted it badly. How far away the
+childish past seems--almost as though it never happened. And was I
+really the budding novelist in New York? Life has become so stern and
+scarlet--and so brave. From my window I look out on the English Channel,
+a cold, grey-green sea, with rain driving across it and a fleet of small
+craft taking shelter. Over there beyond the curtain of mist lies
+France--and everything that awaits me.
+
+News has just come that I have to start. Will continue from France.
+
+ Yours ever lovingly,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+Friday, September 1st, 1916, 11 am.
+
+DEAREST FATHER AND MOTHER:
+
+I embark at 12.30--so this is the last line before I reach France. I
+expect the boys are now within sight of English shores--I wish I could
+have had an hour with them.
+
+I'm going to do my best to bring you honour--remember that--I shall do
+things for your sake out there, living up to the standards you have
+taught me.
+
+ Yours with a heart full of love,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+FRANCE, September 1st, 1916.
+
+DEAREST M.:
+
+Here I am in France with the same strange smells and street cries, and
+almost the same little boys bowling hoops over the very cobbly cobble
+stones. I had afternoon tea at a patisserie and ate a great many gâteaux
+for the sake of old times. We had a very choppy crossing, and you would
+most certainly have been sick had you been on board. It seemed to me
+that I must be coming on one of those romantic holidays to see churches
+and dead history--only the khaki-clad figures reminded me that I was
+coming to see history in the making. It's a funny world that batters us
+about so. It's three years since I was in France--the last time was with
+Arthur in Provence. It's five years since you and I did our famous trip
+together.
+
+I wish you were here--there are heaps of English nurses in the streets.
+I expect to sleep in this place and proceed to my destination to-morrow.
+How I wish I could send you a really descriptive letter! If I did, I
+fear you would not get it--so I have to write in generalities. None of
+this seems real--it's a kind of wild pretence from which I shall
+awake-and when I tell you my dream you'll laugh and say, "How absurd of
+you, dreaming that you were a soldier. I must say you look like it."
+
+ Good-bye, my dearest girl,
+ God bless you,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+September 8th, 1916.
+
+MY DEAREST ONES:
+
+I'm sending this to meet you on your return from Kootenay. I left
+England on September 1st and had a night at my point of disembarkation,
+and then set off on a wandering adventure in search of my division. I'm
+sure you'll understand that I cannot enter into any details--I can only
+give you general and purely personal impressions. There were two other
+officers with me, both from Montreal. We had to picnic on chocolate and
+wine for twenty-four hours through our lack of forethought in not
+supplying ourselves with food for the trip. I shaved the first morning
+with water from the exhaust of a railroad engine, having first balanced
+my mirror on the step. The engineer was fascinated with my safety razor.
+There were Tommies from the trenches in another train, muddied to the
+eyes--who showed themselves much more resourceful. They cooked
+themselves quite admirable meals as they squatted on the rails, over
+little fires on which they perched tomato cans. Sunday evening we saw
+our first German prisoners--a young and degenerate-looking lot. Sunday
+evening we got off at a station in the rain, and shouldered our own
+luggage. Our luggage, by the way, consists of a sleeping bag, in which
+much of our stuff is packed, and a kit sack--for an immediate change and
+toilet articles one carries a haversack hung across the shoulder. Well,
+as I say, we alighted and coaxed a military wagon to come to our rescue.
+As we set off through a drizzling rain, trudging behind the cart, a
+double rainbow shone, which I took for an omen. Presently we came to a
+rest camp, where we told our sad story of empty tummies, and were put up
+for the night. A Jock--all Highlanders are called Jock--looked after us.
+Next morning we started out afresh in a motor lorry and finished at a
+Y.M.C.A. tent, where we stayed two nights. On Wednesday we met the
+General in Command of our Division, who posted me to the battery, which
+is said to be the best in the best brigade in the best division--so you
+may see I'm in luck. I found the battery just having come out of
+action--we expect to go back again in a day or two. Major B. is the
+O.C.--a fine man. The lieutenant who shares my tent won the Military
+Cross at Ypres last Spring. I'm very happy--which will make you
+happy--and longing for my first taste of real war.
+
+How strangely far away I am from you--all the experiences so unshared
+and different. Long before this reaches you I shall have been in action
+several times. This time three years ago my streak of luck came to me
+and I was prancing round New York. To-day I am much more genuinely happy
+in mind, for I feel, as I never felt when I was only writing, that I am
+doing something difficult which has no element of self in it. If I come
+back, life will be a much less restless affair.
+
+This letter! I can imagine it being delivered and the shout from whoever
+takes it and the comments. I make the contrast in my mind--this little
+lean-to spread of canvas about four feet high, the horse-lines, guns,
+sentries going up and down--and then the dear home and the well-loved
+faces.
+
+ Good-bye. Don't be at all nervous.
+ Yours lovingly,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+September 12th, Tuesday.
+
+DEAREST M.:
+
+You will already have received my first letters giving you my address
+over here. The wagon has just come up to our position, but it has
+brought me only one letter since I've been across. I'm sitting in my
+dug-out with shells passing over my head with the sound of ripping
+linen. I've already had the novel experience of firing a battery, and
+to-morrow I go up to the first line trenches.
+
+It's extraordinary how commonplace war becomes to a man who is thrust
+among others who consider it commonplace. Not fifty yards away from me a
+dead German lies rotting and uncovered--I daresay he was buried once and
+then blown out by a shell.
+
+Wednesday, 7 p.m.
+
+Your letters came two hours ago--the first to reach me here--and I have
+done little else but read and re-read them. How they bring the old ways
+of life back with their love and longing! Dear mother's tie will be worn
+to-morrow, and it will be ripping to feel that it was made by her hands.
+Your cross has not arrived yet, dear. Your mittens will be jolly for the
+winter. I've heard nothing from the boys yet.
+
+To-day I took a trip into No-Man's Land--when the war is ended I'll be
+able to tell you all about it. I think the picture is photographed upon
+my memory forever. There's so much you would like to hear and so little
+I'm allowed to tell. Ask G.M.'C. if he was at Princeton with a man named
+Price--an instructor there.
+
+You ought to see the excitement when the water-cart brings us our mail
+and the letters are handed out. Some of the gunners have evidently told
+their Canadian girls that they are officers, and so they are addressed
+on their letters as lieutenants. I have to censor some of their replies,
+and I can tell you they are as often funny as pathetic. The ones to
+their mothers are childish, too, and have rows of kisses. I think men
+are always kiddies if you look beneath the surface. The snapshots did
+fill me with a wanting to be with you in Kootenay. But that's not where
+you'll receive this. There'll probably be a fire in the sitting-room at
+home, and a strong aroma of coffee and tobacco. You'll be sitting in a
+low chair before the fire and your fingers rubbing the hair above your
+left ear as you read this aloud. I'd like to walk in on you and say, "No
+more need for letters now." Some day soon, I pray and expect.
+
+Tell dear Papa and Mother that their answers come next. What a lot of
+love you each one manage to put into your written pages! I'm afraid if I
+let myself go that way I might make you unhappy.
+
+Since writing this far I have had supper. I'm now sleeping in a new
+dug-out and get a shower of mould on my sleeping-kit each time the guns
+are fired. One doesn't mind that particularly, especially when you know
+that the earth walls make you safe. I have a candle in an old petrol tin
+and dodge the shadows as I write. You know, this artillery game is good
+sport and one takes everything as it comes with a joke. The men are
+splendid--their cheeriness comes up bubbling whenever the occasion calls
+for the dumps. Certainly there are fine qualities which war, despite its
+unnaturalness, develops. I'm hats off to every infantry private I meet
+nowadays.
+
+God bless you and all of you.
+ Yours lovingly, Con.
+
+The reference in the previous letter to a cross is to a little bronze
+cross of Francis of Assisi.
+
+Many years ago I visited Assisi, and, on leaving, the monks gave me four
+of these small bronze crosses, assuring me that those who wore them were
+securely defended in all peril by the efficacious prayers of St.
+Francis. Just before Coningsby left Shorncliff to go to France he wrote
+to us and asked if we couldn't send him something to hang round his neck
+for luck. We fortunately had one of these crosses of St. Francis at the
+ranch, and his sister--the M. of these letters-sent it to him. It
+arrived safely, and he has worn it ever since.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+September 15th, 1916.
+
+DEAR FATHER:
+
+Your last letter to me was written on a quiet morning in August--in the
+summer house at Kootenay. It came up yesterday evening on a water-cart
+from the wagon-lines to a scene a little in contrast.
+
+It's a fortnight to-day since I left England, and already I've seen
+action. Things move quickly in this game, and it is a game--one which
+brings out both the best and the worst qualities in a man. If
+unconscious heroism is the virtue most to be desired, and heroism spiced
+with a strong sense of humour at that, then pretty well every man I have
+met out here has the amazing guts to wear his crown of thorns as though
+it were a cap-and-bells. To do that for the sake of corporate
+stout-heartedness is, I think, the acme of what Aristotle meant by
+virtue. A strong man, or a good man or a brainless man, can walk to meet
+pain with a smile on his mouth because he knows that he is strong enough
+to bear it, or worthy enough to defy it, or because he is such a fool
+that he has no imagination. But these chaps are neither particularly
+strong, good, nor brainless; they're more like children, utterly casual
+with regard to trouble, and quite aware that it is useless to struggle
+against their elders. So they have the merriest of times while they can,
+and when the governess, Death, summons them to bed, they obey her with
+unsurprised quietness. It sends the mercury of one's optimism rising to
+see the way they do it. I search my mind to find the bigness of motive
+which supports them, but it forever evades me. These lads are not the
+kind who philosophise about life; they're the sort, many of them, who
+would ordinarily wear corduroys and smoke a cutty pipe. I suppose the
+Christian martyrs would have done the same had corduroys been the
+fashion in that day, and if a Roman Raleigh had discovered tobacco.
+
+I wrote this about midnight and didn't get any further, as I was up till
+six carrying on and firing the battery. After adding another page or two
+I want to get some sleep, as I shall probably have to go up to the
+observation station to watch the effect of fire to-night. But before I
+turn in I want to tell you that I had the most gorgeous mail from
+everybody. Now that I'm in touch with you all again, it's almost like
+saying "How-do?" every night and morning.
+
+I daresay you'll wonder how it feels to be under shell-fire. This is how
+it feels--you don't realise your danger until you come to think about it
+afterwards--at the time it's like playing coconut shies at a coon's
+head--only you're the coon's head. You take too much interest in the
+sport of dodging to be afraid. You'll hear the Tommies saying if one
+bursts nearly on them, "Line, you blighter, line. Five minutes more
+left," just as though they were reprimanding the unseen Hun battery for
+rotten shooting.
+
+The great word of the Tommies here is "No bloody bon"--a strange mixture
+of French and English, which means that a thing is no good. If it
+pleases them it's _Jake_--though where Jake comes from nobody knows.
+
+Now I must get a wink or two, as I don't know when I may have to start
+off.
+
+ Ever yours, with love,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+September 19th, 1916.
+
+Dearest Mother:
+
+I've been in France 19 days, and it hasn't taken me long to go into
+action. Soon I shall be quite an old hand. I'm just back from 24 hours
+in the Observation Post, from which one watches the effect of fire. I
+understand now and forgive the one phrase which the French children have
+picked up from our Tommies on account of its frequent
+occurrence--"bl---- mud." I never knew that mud could be so thick and
+treacly. All my fear that I might be afraid under shell-fire is
+over--you get to believe that if you're going to be hit you're going to
+be. But David's phrase keeps repeating itself in my mind, "Ten thousand
+shall fall at thy side, etc., but it shall not come nigh unto thee."
+It's a curious thing that the men who are most afraid are those who get
+most easily struck. A friend of G.M.C.'s was hit the other day within
+thirty yards of me--he was a Princeton chap. I mentioned him in one of
+my previous letters. Our right section commander got a blighty two days
+ago and is probably now in England. He went off on a firing battery
+wagon, grinning all over his face, saying he wouldn't sell that bit of
+blood and shrapnel for a thousand pounds. I'm wearing your tie--it's the
+envy of the battery. All the officers wanted me to give them the name of
+my girl. It never occurs to men that mothers will do things like that.
+
+Thank the powers it has stopped raining and we'll be able to get dry. I
+came in plastered from head to foot with lying in the rain on my tummy
+and peering over the top of a trench. Isn't it a funny change from
+comfortable breakfasts, press notices and a blazing fire?
+
+Do you want any German souvenirs? Just at present I can get plenty. I
+have a splendid bayonet and a belt with Kaiser Bill's arms on it--but
+you can't forward these things from France. The Germans swear that
+they're not using bayonets with saw-edges, but you can buy them for five
+francs from the Tommies--ones they've taken from the prisoners or else
+picked up.
+
+You needn't be nervous about me. I'm a great little dodger of
+whizz-bangs. Besides I have a superstition that there's something in
+the power of M.'s cross to bless. It came with the mittens, and is at
+present round my neck.
+
+You know what it sounds like when they're shooting coals down an iron
+run-way into a cellar-well, imagine a thousand of them. That's what I'm
+hearing while I write.
+
+God bless you; I'm very happy.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+September 19th, 1916.
+
+Dearest Father:
+
+I'm writing you your birthday letter early, as I don't know how busy I
+may be in the next week, nor how long this may take to reach you. You
+know how much love I send you and how I would like to be with you. D'you
+remember the birthday three years ago when we set the victrola going
+outside your room door? Those were my high-jinks days when very many
+things seemed possible. I'd rather be the person I am now than the
+person I was then. Life was selfish though glorious.
+
+Well, I've seen my first modern battlefield and am quite disillusioned
+about the splendour of war. The splendour is all in the souls of the
+men who creep through the squalor like vermin--it's in nothing
+external. There was a chap here the other day who deserved the V.C. four
+times over by running back through the Hun shell fire to bring news that
+the infantry wanted more artillery support. I was observing for my
+brigade in the forward station at the time. How he managed to live
+through the ordeal nobody knows. But men laugh while they do these
+things. It's fine.
+
+A modern battlefield is the abomination of abominations. Imagine a vast
+stretch of dead country, pitted with shell-holes as though it had been
+mutilated with small-pox. There's not a leaf or a blade of grass in
+sight. Every house has either been leveled or is in ruins. No bird
+sings. Nothing stirs. The only live sound is at night--the scurry of
+rats. You enter a kind of ditch, called a trench; it leads on to another
+and another in an unjoyful maze. From the sides feet stick out, and arms
+and faces--the dead of previous encounters. "One of our chaps," you say
+casually, recognising him by his boots or khaki, or "Poor blighter--a
+Hun!" One can afford to forget enmity in the presence of the dead. It is
+horribly difficult sometimes to distinguish between the living and the
+slaughtered--they both lie so silently in their little kennels in the
+earthen bank. You push on--especially if you are doing observation work,
+till you are past your own front line and out in No Man's Land. You have
+to crouch and move warily now. Zing! A bullet from a German sniper. You
+laugh and whisper, "A near one, that." My first trip to the trenches was
+up to No Man's Land. I went in the early dawn and came to a Madame
+Tussaud's show of the dead, frozen into immobility in the most
+extraordinary attitudes. Some of them were part way out of the ground,
+one hand pressed to the wound, the other pointing, the head sunken and
+the hair plastered over the forehead by repeated rains. I kept on
+wondering what my companions would look like had they been three weeks
+dead. My imagination became ingeniously and vividly morbid. When I had
+to step over them to pass, it seemed as though they must clutch at my
+trench coat and ask me to help. Poor lonely people, so brave and so
+anonymous in their death! Somewhere there is a woman who loved each one
+of them and would give her life for my opportunity to touch the poor
+clay that had been kind to her. It's like walking through the day of
+resurrection to visit No Man's Land. Then the Huns see you and the
+shrapnel begins to fall--you crouch like a dog and run for it.
+
+One gets used to shell-fire up to a point, but there's not a man who
+doesn't want to duck when he hears one coming. The worst of all is the
+whizz-bang, because it doesn't give you a chance--it pounces and is on
+you the same moment that it bangs. There's so much I wish that I could
+tell you. I can only say this, at the moment we're making history.
+
+What a curious birthday letter! I think of all your other birthdays--the
+ones before I met these silent men with the green and yellow faces, and
+the blackened lips which will never speak again. What happy times we
+have had as a family--what happy jaunts when you took me in those early
+days, dressed in a sailor suit, when you went hunting pictures. Yet, for
+all the damnability of what I now witness, I was never quieter in my
+heart. To have surrendered to an imperative self-denial brings a peace
+which self-seeking never brought.
+
+So don't let this birthday be less gay for my absence. It ought to be
+the proudest in your life--proud because your example has taught each of
+your sons to do the difficult things which seem right. It would have
+been a condemnation of you if any one of us had been a shirker.
+
+ "I want to buy fine things for you
+ And be a soldier if I can."
+
+The lines come back to me now. You read them to me first in the dark
+little study from a green oblong book. You little thought that I would
+be a soldier--even now I can hardly realise the fact. It seems a dream
+from which I shall wake up. Am I really killing men day by day? Am I
+really in jeopardy myself?
+
+Whatever happens I'm not afraid, and I'll give you reason to be glad of
+me.
+ Very much love,
+ CON.
+
+The poem referred to in this letter was actually written for Coningsby
+when he was between five and six years old. The dark little study which
+he describes was in the old house at Wesley's Chapel, in the City Road,
+London--and it was very dark, with only one window, looking out upon a
+dingy yard. The green oblong book in which I used to write my poems I
+still have; and it is an illustration of the tenacity of a child's
+memory that he should recall it. The poem was called _A Little Boy's
+Programme_, and ran thus:
+
+ I am so very young and small,
+ That, when big people pass me by,
+ I sometimes think they are so high
+ I'll never be a man at all.
+
+ And yet I want to be a man
+ Because so much I want to do;
+ I want to buy fine things for you,
+ And be a soldier, if I can.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When I'm a man I will not let
+ Poor little children starve, or be
+ Ill-used, or stand and beg of me
+ With naked feet out in the wet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Now, don't you laugh!--The father kissed
+ The little serious mouth and said
+ "You've almost made me cry instead,
+ You blessed little optimist."
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+September 21st, 1916.
+
+My Very Dear M.:
+
+I am wearing your talisman while I write and have a strong superstition
+in its efficacy. The efficacy of your socks is also very noticeable--I
+wore them the first time on a trip to the Forward Observation Station. I
+had to lie on my tummy in the mud, my nose just showing above the
+parapet, for the best part of twenty-four hours. Your socks little
+thought I would take them into such horrid places when you made them.
+
+Last night both the King and Sir Sam sent us congratulations--I popped
+in just at the right time. I daresay you know far more about our doings
+than I do. Only this morning I picked up the _London Times_ and read a
+full account of everything I have witnessed. The account is likely to be
+still fuller in the New York papers.
+
+"Home for Christmas"--that's what the Tommies are promising their
+mothers and sweethearts in all their letters that I censor. Yesterday I
+was offered an Imperial commission in the army of occupation. But home
+for Christmas, will be Christmas, 1917--I can't think that it will be
+earlier.
+ Very much love,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+Sunday, September 24th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST MOTHER:
+
+Your locket has just reached me, and I have strung it round my neck with
+M.'s cross. Was it M.'s cross the other night that accounted for my
+luck? I was in a gun-pit when a shell landed, killing a man only a foot
+away from me and wounding three others--I and the sergeant were the only
+two to get out all right. Men who have been out here some time have a
+dozen stories of similar near squeaks. And talking of squeaks, it was a
+mouse that saved one man. It kept him awake to such an extent that he
+determined to move to another place. Just as he got outside the dug-out
+a shell fell on the roof.
+
+You'll be pleased to know that we have a ripping chaplain or Padre, as
+they call chaplains, with us. He plays the game, and I've struck up a
+great friendship with him. We discuss literature and religion when we're
+feeling a bit fed up. We talk at home of our faith being tested--one
+begins to ask strange questions here when he sees what men are allowed
+by the Almighty to do to one another, and so it's a fine thing to be in
+constant touch with a great-hearted chap who can risk his life daily to
+speak of the life hereafter to dying Tommies.
+
+I wish I could tell you of my doings, but it's strictly against orders.
+You may read in the papers of actions in which I've taken part and never
+know that I was there.
+
+We live for the most part on tinned stuff, but our appetites make
+anything taste palatable. Living and sleeping in the open air keeps one
+ravenous. And one learns to sleep the sleep of the just despite the
+roaring of the guns.
+
+God bless you each one and give us peaceful hearts.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+September 28th, 1916.
+
+My Dears:
+
+We're in the midst of a fine old show, so I don't get much opportunity
+for writing. Suffice it to say that I've seen the big side of war by now
+and the extraordinary uncalculating courage of it. Men run out of a
+trench to an attack with as much eagerness as they would display in
+overtaking a late bus. If you want to get an idea of what meals are like
+when a row is on, order the McAlpin to spread you a table where 34th
+crosses Broadway--and wait for the uptown traffic on the Elevated. It's
+wonderful to see the waiters dodging with dishes through the
+shell-holes.
+
+It's a wonderful autumn day, golden and mellow; I picture to myself what
+this country must have looked like before the desolation of war struck
+it.
+
+I was Brigade observation officer on September 26th, and wouldn't have
+missed what I saw for a thousand dollars. It was a touch and go
+business, with shells falling everywhere and machine-gun fire--but
+something glorious to remember. I had the great joy of being useful in
+setting a Hun position on fire. I think the war will be over in a
+twelvemonth.
+
+Our great joy is composing menus of the meals we'll eat when we get
+home. Good-bye for the present.
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+October 1st, 1916.
+
+MY DEAREST M.:
+
+Sunday morning, your first back in Newark. You're not up yet owing to
+the difference in time--I can imagine the quiet house with the first of
+the morning stealing greyly in. You'll be presently going to church to
+sit in your old-fashioned mahogany pew. There's not much of Sunday in
+our atmosphere--only the little one can manage to keep in his heart. I
+shall share the echo of yours by remembering.
+
+I'm waiting orders at the present moment to go forward with the Colonel
+and pick out a new gun position. You know I'm very happy-satisfied for
+the first time I'm doing something big enough to make me forget all
+failures and self-contempts. I know at last that I can measure up to the
+standard I have always coveted for myself. So don't worry yourselves
+about any note of hardship that you may interpret into my letters, for
+the deprivation is fully compensated for by the winged sense of
+exaltation one has.
+
+Things have been a little warm round us lately. A gun to our right,
+another to our rear and another to our front were knocked out with
+direct hits. We've got some of the chaps taking their meals with us now
+because their mess was all shot to blazes. There was an officer who was
+with me at the 53rd blown thirty feet into the air while I was watching.
+He picked himself up and insisted on carrying on, although his face was
+a mass of bruises. I walked in on the biggest engagement of the entire
+war the moment I came out here. There was no gradual breaking-in for me.
+My first trip to the front line was into a trench full of dead.
+
+Have you seen Lloyd George's great speech? I'm all with him. No matter
+what the cost and how many of us have to give our lives, this War must
+be so finished that war may be forever at an end. If the devils who plan
+wars could only see the abysmal result of their handiwork! Give them one
+day in the trenches under shell-fire when their lives aren't worth a
+five minutes' purchase--or one day carrying back the wounded through
+this tortured country, or one day in a Red Cross train. No one can
+imagine the damnable waste and Christlessness of this battering of
+human flesh. The only way that this War can be made holy is by making it
+so thorough that war will be finished for all time.
+
+Papa at least will be awake by now. How familiar the old house seems to
+me--I can think of the place of every picture. Do you set the victrola
+going now-a-days? I bet you play Boys in Khaki, Boys in Blue.
+
+Please send me anything in the way of eatables that the goodness of your
+hearts can imagine--also smokes.
+
+Later.
+
+I came back from the front-line all right and have since been hard at it
+firing. Your letters reached me in the midst of a bombardment--I read
+them in a kind of London fog of gun-powder smoke, with my steel helmet
+tilted back, in the interval of commanding my section through a
+megaphone.
+
+Don't suppose that I'm in any way unhappy--I'm as cheerful as a cricket
+and do twice as much hopping--I have to. There's something
+extraordinarily bracing about taking risks and getting away with
+it--especially when you know that you're contributing your share to a
+far-reaching result. My mother is the mother of a soldier now, and
+soldiers' mothers don't lie awake at night imagining--they just say a
+prayer for their sons and leave everything in God's hands. I'm sure
+you'd far rather I died than not play the man to the fullest of my
+strength. It isn't when you die that matters--it's how. Not but what I
+intend to return to Newark and make the house reek of tobacco smoke
+before I've done.
+
+We're continually in action now, and the casualty to B. has left us
+short-handed--moreover we're helping out another battery which has lost
+two officers. As you've seen by the papers, we've at last got the Hun on
+the run. Three hundred passed me the other day unescorted, coming in to
+give themselves up as prisoners. They're the dirtiest lot you ever set
+eyes on, and looked as though they hadn't eaten for months. I wish I
+could send you some souvenirs. But we can't send them out of France.
+
+I'm scribbling by candlelight and everything's jumping with the stamping
+of the guns. I wear the locket and cross all the time.
+
+ Yours with much love,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+October 13th, 1916.
+
+DEAR ONES:
+
+I have only time to write and assure you that I am safe. We're living in
+trenches at present--I have my sleeping bag placed on a stretcher to
+keep it fairly dry. By the time you get this we expect to be having a
+rest, as we've been hard at it now for an unusually long time. How I
+wish that I could tell you so many things that are big and vivid in my
+mind-but the censor--!
+
+Yesterday I had an exciting day. I was up forward when word came through
+that an officer still further forward was wounded and he'd been caught
+in a heavy enemy fire. I had only a kid telephonist with me, but we
+found a stretcher, went forward and got him out. The earth was hopping
+up and down like pop-corn in a frying pan. The unfortunate thing was
+that the poor chap died on the way out. It was only the evening before
+that we had dined together and he had told me what he was going to do
+with his next leave.
+
+ God bless you all,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+October 14th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST MOTHER:
+
+I'm still all right and well. To-day I had the funniest experience of my
+life--got caught in a Hun curtain of fire and had to lie on my tummy
+for two hours in a trench with the shells bursting five yards from
+me--and never a scratch. You know how I used to wonder what I'd do under
+such circumstances. Well, I laughed. All I could think of was the sleek
+people walking down Fifth Avenue, and the equally sleek crowds taking
+tea at the Waldorf. It struck me as ludicrous that I, who had been one
+of them, should be lying there lunchless. For a little while I was
+slightly deaf with the concussions.
+
+That poem keeps on going through my head,
+
+ Oh, to come home once more, when the dusk is falling,
+ To see the nursery lighted and the children's table spread;
+ "Mother, mother, mother!" the eager voices calling,
+ "The baby was so sleepy that he had to go to bed!"
+
+Wouldn't it be good, instead of sitting in a Hun dug-out?
+
+ Yours lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+October 15th, 1916.
+
+Dear Ones:
+
+We're still in action, but are in hopes that soon we may be moved to
+winter quarters. We've had our taste of mud, and are anxious to move
+into better quarters before we get our next. I think I told you that
+our O.C. had got wounded in the feet, and our right section commander
+got it in the shoulder a little earlier--so we're a bit short-handed and
+find ourselves with plenty of work.
+
+I have curiously lucid moments when recent happenings focus themselves
+in what seems to be their true perspective. The other night I was
+Forward Observation officer on one of our recent battlefields. I had to
+watch the front all night for signals, etc. There was a full white moon
+sailing serenely overhead, and when I looked at it I could almost fancy
+myself back in the old melancholy pomp of autumn woodlands where the
+leaves were red, not with the colour of men's blood. My mind went back
+to so many by-gone days-especially to three years ago. I seemed so
+vastly young then, upon reflection. For a little while I was full of
+regrets for many things wasted, and then I looked at the battlefield
+with its scattered kits and broken rifles. Nothing seemed to matter very
+much. A rat came out-then other rats. I stood there feeling
+extraordinarily aloof from all things that can hurt, and--you'll
+smile--I planned a novel. O, if I get back, how differently I shall
+write! When you've faced the worst in so many forms, you lose your fear
+and arrive at peace. There's a marvellous grandeur about all this
+carnage and desolation--men's souls rise above the distress--they have
+to in order to survive. When you see how cheap men's bodies are you
+cannot help but know that the body is the least part of personality.
+
+You can let up on your nervousness when you get this, for I shall almost
+certainly be in a safer zone. We've done more than our share and must be
+withdrawn soon. There's hardly a battery which does not deserve a dozen
+D.S.O.'s with a V.C. or two thrown in.
+
+It's 4.30 now--you'll be in church and, I hope, wearing my flowers. Wait
+till I come back and you shall go to church with the biggest bunch of
+roses that ever were pinned to a feminine chest. I wonder when that will
+be.
+
+We have heaps of humour out here. You should have seen me this morning,
+sitting on the gun-seat while my batman cut my hair. A sand-bag was
+spread over my shoulders in place of a towel and the gun-detachment
+stood round and gave advice. I don't know what I look like, for I
+haven't dared to gaze into my shaving mirror.
+
+ Good luck to us all,
+ CON
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+October 18th, 1910
+
+Dearest M.:
+
+I've come down to the lines to-day; to-morrow I go back again. I'm
+sitting alone in a deep chalk dug-out--it is 10 p.m. and I have lit a
+fire by splitting wood with a bayonet. Your letters from Montreal
+reached me yesterday. They came up in the water-cart when we'd all begun
+to despair of mail. It was wonderful the silence that followed while
+every one went back home for a little while, and most of them met their
+best girls. We've fallen into the habit of singing in parts. Jerusalem
+the Golden is a great favourite as we wait for our breakfast--we go
+through all our favourite songs, including Poor Old Adam Was My Father.
+Our greatest favourite is one which is symbolising the hopes that are in
+so many hearts on this greatest battlefield in history. We sing it under
+shell-fire as a kind of prayer, we sing it as we struggle knee-deep in
+the appalling mud, we sing it as we sit by a candle in our deep captured
+German dug-outs. It runs like this:
+
+ "There's a long, long trail a-winding
+ Into the land of my dreams,
+ Where the nightingales are singing
+ And a white moon beams:
+
+ There's a long, long night of waiting
+ Until my dreams all come true;
+ Till the day when I'll be going down
+ That long, long trail with you."
+
+You ought to be able to get it, and then you will be singing it when I'm
+doing it.
+
+No, I don't know what to ask from you for Christmas--unless a plum
+pudding and a general surprise box of sweets and food stuffs. If you
+don't mind my suggesting it, I wouldn't a bit mind a Christmas box at
+once--a schoolboy's tuck box. I wear the locket, cross, and tie all the
+time as kind of charms against danger--they give me the feeling of
+loving hands going with me everywhere.
+
+ God bless you.
+ Yours ever,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+October 23, 1916
+
+Dearest All:
+
+As you know I have been in action ever since I left England and am
+still. I've lived in various extemporised dwellings and am at present
+writing from an eight foot deep hole dug in the ground and covered over
+with galvanised iron and sand-bags. We have made ourselves very
+comfortable, and a fire is burning--I correct that--comfortable until it
+rains, I should say, when the water finds its own level. We have just
+finished with two days of penetrating rain and mist--in the trenches the
+mud was up to my knees, so you can imagine the joy of wading down these
+shell-torn tunnels. Good thick socks have been priceless.
+
+You'll be pleased to hear that two days ago I was made Right Section
+Commander--which is fairly rapid promotion. It means a good deal more
+work and responsibility, but it gives me a contact with the men which I
+like.
+
+I don't know when I'll get leave--not for another two months anyway. It
+would be ripping if I had word in time for you to run over to England
+for the brief nine days.
+
+I plan novels galore and wonder whether I shall ever write them the way
+I see them now. My imagination is to an extent crushed by the
+stupendousness of reality. I think I am changed in some stern spiritual
+way--stripped of flabbiness. I am perhaps harder--I can't say. That I
+should be a novelist seems unreasonable--it's so long since I had my own
+way in the world and met any one on artistic terms. But I have enough
+ego left to be very interested in my book. And by the way, when we're
+out at the front and the battery wants us to come in they simply phone
+up the password, "Slaves of Freedom," the meaning of which we all
+understand.
+
+You are ever in my thoughts, and I pray the day may not be far distant
+when we meet again.
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+October 27th, 1916.
+
+Dearest Family:
+
+All to-day I've been busy registering our guns. There is little chance
+of rest--one would suppose that we intended to end the war by spring.
+
+Two new officers joined our battery from England, which makes the work
+lighter. One of them brings the news that D., one of the two officers
+who crossed over from England with me and wandered through France with
+me in search of our Division, is already dead. He was a corking fellow,
+and I'm very sorry. He was caught by a shell in the head and legs.
+
+I am still living in a sand-bagged shell-hole eight feet beneath the
+level of the ground. I have a sleeping bag with an eider-down inside it,
+for my bed; it is laid on a stretcher, which is placed in a roofed-in
+trench. For meals, when there isn't a block on the roads, we do very
+well; we subscribe pretty heavily to the mess, and have an officer back
+at the wagon-lines to do our purchasing. When we move forward into a new
+position, however, we go pretty short, as roads have to be built for the
+throng of traffic. Most of what we eat is tinned--and I never want to
+see tinned salmon again when this war is ended. I have a personal
+servant, a groom and two horses--but haven't been on a horse for seven
+weeks on account of being in action. We're all pretty fed up with
+continuous firing and living so many hours in the trenches. The way
+artillery is run to-day an artillery lieutenant is more in the trenches
+than an infantryman--the only thing he doesn't do is to go over the
+parapet in an attack. And one of our chaps did that the other day,
+charging the Huns with a bar of chocolate in one hand and a revolver in
+the other. I believe he set a fashion which will be imitated. Three
+times in my experience I have seen the infantry jump out of their
+trenches and go across. It's a sight never to be forgotten. One time
+there were machine guns behind me and they sent a message to me, asking
+me to lie down and take cover. That was impossible, as I was observing
+for my brigade, so I lay on the parapet till the bullets began to fall
+too close for comfort, then I dodged out into a shell-hole with the
+German barrage bursting all around me, and had a most gorgeous view of
+a modern attack. That was some time ago, so you needn't be nervous.
+
+Have I mentioned rum to you? I never tasted it to my knowledge until I
+came out here. We get it served us whenever we're wet. It's the one
+thing which keeps a man alive in the winter--you can sleep when you're
+drenched through and never get a cold if you take it.
+
+At night, by a fire, eight feet underground, we sing all the dear old
+songs. We manage a kind of glee--Clementina, The Long, Long Trail, Three
+Blind Mice, Long, Long Ago, Rock of Ages. Hymns are quite favourites.
+
+Don't worry about me; your prayers weave round me a mantle of defence.
+
+Yours with more love than I can write,
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+October 31st, 1916.
+Hallowe'en.
+
+Dearest People:
+
+Once more I'm taking the night-firing and so have a chance to write to
+you. I got letters from you all, and they each deserve answers, but I
+have so little time to write. We've been having beastly weather--drowned
+out of our little houses below ground, with rivers running through our
+beds. The mud is once more up to our knees and gets into whatever we
+eat. The wonder is that we keep healthy--I suppose it's the open air. My
+throat never troubles me and I'm free from colds in spite of wet feet.
+The main disadvantage is that we rarely get a chance to wash or change
+our clothes. Your ideas of an army with its buttons all shining is quite
+erroneous; we look like drunk and disorderlies who have spent the night
+in the gutter--and we have the same instinct for fighting.
+
+In the trenches the other day I heard mother's Suffolk tongue and had a
+jolly talk with a chap who shared many of my memories. It was his first
+trip in and the Huns were shelling badly, but he didn't seem at all
+upset.
+
+We're still hard at it and have given up all idea of a rest--the only
+way we'll get one is with a blighty. You say how often you tell
+yourselves that the same moon looks down on me; it does, but on a scene
+how different! We advance over old battlefields--everything is blasted.
+If you start digging, you turn up what's left of something human. If
+there were any grounds for superstition, surely the places in which I
+have been should be ghost-haunted. One never thinks about it. For myself
+I have increasingly the feeling that I am protected by your prayers; I
+tell myself so when I am in danger.
+
+Here I sit in an old sweater and muddy breeches, the very reverse of
+your picture of a soldier, and I imagine to myself your receipt of this.
+Our chief interest is to enquire whether milk, jam and mail have come up
+from the wagon-lines; it seems a faery-tale that there are places where
+milk and jam can be had for the buying. See how simple we become.
+
+Poor little house at Kootenay! I hate to think of it empty. We had such
+good times there twelve months ago. They have a song here to a nursery
+rhyme lilt, Aprčs le Guerre Finis; it goes on to tell of all the good
+times we'll have when the war is ended. Every night I invent a new story
+of my own celebration of the event, usually, as when I was a kiddie,
+just before I fall asleep--only it doesn't seem possible that the war
+will ever end.
+
+I hear from the boys very regularly. There's just the chance that I may
+get leave to London in the New Year and meet them before they set out. I
+always picture you with your heads high in the air. I'm glad to think of
+you as proud because of the pain we've made you suffer.
+
+Once again I shall think of you on Papa's birthday. I don't think this
+will be the saddest he will have to remember. It might have been if we
+three boys had still all been with him. If I were a father, I would
+prefer at all costs that my sons should be men. What good comrades we've
+always been, and what long years of happy times we have in memory--all
+the way down from a little boy in a sailor-suit to Kootenay!
+
+I fell asleep in the midst of this. I've now got to go out and start the
+other gun firing. With very much love.
+
+ Yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+November 1st, 1916.
+
+My Dearest M.:
+
+Peace after a storm! Your letter was not brought up by the water-wagon
+this evening, but by an orderly--the mud prevented wheel-traffic. I was
+just sitting down to read it when Fritz began to pay us too much
+attention. I put down your letter, grabbed my steel helmet, rushed out
+to see where the shells were falling, and then cleared my men to a safer
+area. (By the way, did I tell you that I had been made Right Section
+Commander?) After about half an hour I came back and settled down by a
+fire made of smashed ammunition boxes in a stove borrowed from a ruined
+cottage. I'm always ashamed that my letters contain so little news and
+are so uninteresting. This thing is so big and dreadful that it does not
+bear putting down on paper. I read the papers with the accounts of
+singing soldiers and other rubbish; they depict us as though we were a
+lot of hair-brained idiots instead of men fully realising our danger,
+who plod on because it's our duty. I've seen a good many men killed by
+now--we all have--consequently the singing soldier story makes us smile.
+We've got a big job; we know that we've got to "Carry On" whatever
+happens--so we wear a stern grin and go to it. There's far more heroism
+in the attitude of men out here than in the footlight attitude that
+journalists paint for the public. It isn't a singing matter to go on
+firing a gun when gun-pits are going up in smoke within sight of you.
+
+What a terrible desecration war is! You go out one week and look through
+your glasses at a green, smiling country-little churches, villages
+nestling among woods, white roads running across a green carpet; next
+week you see nothing but ruins and a country-side pitted with
+shell-holes. All night the machine guns tap like rivet-ting machines
+when a New York sky-scraper is in the building. Then suddenly in the
+night a bombing attack will start, and the sky grows white with signal
+rockets. Orders come in for artillery retaliation, and your guns begin
+to stamp the ground like stallions; in the darkness on every side you
+can see them snorting fire. Then stillness again, while Death counts his
+harvest; the white rockets grow fainter and less hysterical. For an hour
+there is blackness.
+
+My batman consoles himself with singing,
+
+ "Pack up your troubles in your old kit-bag,
+ And smile, smile, smile."
+
+There's a lot in his philosophy--it's best to go on smiling even when
+some one who was once your pal lies forever silent in his blanket on a
+stretcher.
+
+The great uplifting thought is that we have proved ourselves men. In our
+death we set a standard which in ordinary life we could never have
+followed. Inevitably we should have sunk below our highest self. Here we
+know that the world will remember us and that our loved ones, in spite
+of tears, will be proud of us. What God will say to us we cannot
+guess--but He can't be too hard on men who did their duty. I think we
+all feel that trivial former failures are washed out by this final
+sacrifice. When little M. used to recite "Breathes there a man with soul
+so dead, who never to himself had said, 'This is my own, my native
+land,'" I never thought that I should have the chance that has now been
+given to me. I feel a great and solemn gratitude that I have been
+thought worthy. Life has suddenly become effective and worthy by reason
+of its carelessness of death.
+
+By the way, that Princeton man I mentioned so long ago was killed forty
+yards away from me on my first trip into the trenches. Probably G. M'C.
+and his other friends know by now. He was the first man I ever saw
+snuffed out.
+
+I'm wearing your mittens and find them a great comfort. I'll look
+forward to some more of your socks--I can do with plenty of them. If any
+of your friends are making things for soldiers, I wish you'd get them to
+send them to this battery, as they would be gratefully accepted by the
+men.
+
+I wish I could come to _The Music Master_ with you. I wonder how long
+till we do all those intimately family things together again.
+
+Good-bye, my dearest M. I live for home letters and am rarely
+disappointed.
+
+God bless you, and love to you all.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+November 4th, 1916.
+
+
+My Dearest Mother:
+
+This morning I was wakened up in the gunpit where I was sleeping by the
+arrival of the most wonderful parcel of mail. It was really a kind of
+Christmas morning for me. My servant had lit a fire in a punctured
+petrol can and the place looked very cheery. First of all entered an
+enormous affair, which turned out to be a stove which C. had sent. Then
+there was a sand-bag containing all your gifts. You may bet I made for
+that first, and as each knot was undone remembered the loving hands that
+had done it up. I am now going up to a twenty-four-hour shift of
+observing, and shall take up the malted milk and some blocks of
+chocolate for a hot drink. It somehow makes you seem very near to me to
+receive things packed with your hands. When I go forward I shall also
+take candles and a copy of _Anne Veronica_ with me, so that if I get a
+chance I can forget time.
+
+Always when I write to you odds and ends come to mind, smacking of local
+colour. After an attack some months ago I met a solitary private
+wandering across a shell-torn field, I watched him and thought something
+was wrong by the aimlessness of his progress. When I spoke to him, he
+looked at me mistily and said, "Dead men. Moonlit road." He kept on
+repeating the phrase, and it was all that one could get out of him.
+Probably the dead men and the moonlit road were the last sights he had
+seen before he went insane.
+
+Another touching thing happened two days ago. A Major turned up who had
+travelled fifty miles by motor lorries and any conveyance he could pick
+up on the road. He had left his unit to come to have a glimpse of our
+front-line trench where his son was buried. The boy had died there some
+days ago in going over the parapet. I persuaded him that he ought not to
+go alone, and that in any case it wasn't a healthy spot. At last he
+consented to let me take him to a point from which he could see the
+ground over which his son had attacked and led his men. The sun was
+sinking behind us. He stood there very straightly, peering through my
+glasses--and then forgot all about me and began speaking to his son in
+childish love-words. "Gone West," they call dying out here--we rarely
+say that a man is dead. I found out afterwards that it was the boy's
+mother the Major was thinking of when he pledged himself to visit the
+grave in the front-line.
+
+But there are happier things than that. For instance, you should hear
+us singing at night in our dug-out--every tune we ever learnt, I
+believe. Silver Threads Among the Gold, In the Gloaming, The Star of
+Bethlehem, I Hear You Calling Me, interspersed with Everybody Works but
+Father, and Poor Old Adam, etc.
+
+I wish I could know in time when I get my leave for you to come over and
+meet me. I'm going to spend my nine days in the most glorious ways
+imaginable. To start with I won't eat anything that's canned and, to go
+on, I won't get out of bed till I feel inclined. And if you're there--!
+
+Dreams and nonsense! God bless you all and keep us near and safe though
+absent. Alive or "Gone West" I shall never be far from you; you may
+depend on that--and I shall always hope to feel you brave and happy.
+This is a great game--cheese-mites pitting themselves against all the
+splendours of Death. Please, please write well ahead, so that I may not
+miss your Christmas letters.
+
+ Yours lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+November 6th, 1916.
+
+
+My Dear Ones:
+
+Such a wonderful day it has been--I scarcely know where to start. I came
+down last night from twenty-four hours in the mud, where I had been
+observing. I'd spent the night in a hole dug in the side of the trench
+and a dead Hun forming part of the roof. I'd sat there re-living so many
+things--the ecstatic moments of my life when I first touched fame--and
+my feet were so cold that I could not feel them, so I thought all the
+harder of the pleasant things of the past. Then, as I say, I came back
+to the gun position to learn that I was to have one day off at the back
+of the lines. You can't imagine what that meant to me--one day in a
+country that is green, one day where there is no shell-fire, one day
+where you don't turn up corpses with your tread! For two months I have
+never left the guns except to go forward and I have never been from
+under shell-fire. All night long as I have slept the ground had been
+shaken by the stamping of the guns--and now after two months, to come
+back to comparative normality! The reason for this privilege being
+granted was that the powers that he had come to the conclusion that it
+was time I had a bath. Since I sleep in my clothes and water is too
+valuable for washing anything but the face and hands, they were probably
+right in their guess at my condition.
+
+So with the greatest holiday of my life in prospect I went to the empty
+gunpit in which I sleep, and turned in. This morning I set out early
+with my servant, tramping back across the long, long battlefields which
+our boys have won. The mud was knee-deep in places, but we floundered on
+till we came to our old and deserted gun-position where my horses waited
+for me. From there I rode to the wagon-lines--the first time I've sat a
+horse since I came into action. Far behind me the thunder of winged
+murder grew more faint. The country became greener; trees even had
+leaves upon them which fluttered against the grey-blue sky. It was
+wonderful--like awaking from an appalling nightmare. My little beast was
+fresh and seemed to share my joy, for she stepped out bravely.
+
+When I arrived at the wagon-lines I would not wait--I longed to see
+something even greener and quieter. My groom packed up some oats and
+away we went again. My first objective was the military baths; I lay in
+hot water for half-an-hour and read the advertisements of my book. As I
+lay there, for the first time since I've been out, I began to get a
+half-way true perspective of myself. What's left of the egotism of the
+author came to life, and--now laugh--I planned my next novel--planned it
+to the sound of men singing, because they were clean for the first time
+in months. I left my towels and soap with a military policeman, by the
+roadside, and went prancing off along country roads in search of the
+almost forgotten places where people don't kill one another. Was it
+imagination? There seemed to me to be a different look in the faces of
+the men I met--for the time being they were neither hunters nor hunted.
+There were actually cows in the fields. At one point, where pollarded
+trees stand like a Hobbema sketch against the sky, a group of officers
+were coursing a hare, following a big black hound on horseback. We lost
+our way. A drenching rainstorm fell over us--we didn't care; and we saw
+as we looked back a most beautiful thing--a rainbow over green fields.
+It was as romantic as the first rainbow in childhood.
+
+All day I have been seeing lovely and familiar things as though for the
+first time. I've been a sort of Lazarus, rising out of his tomb and
+praising God at the sound of a divine voice. You don't know how
+exquisite a ploughed field can look, especially after rain, unless you
+have feared that you might never see one again.
+
+I came to a grey little village, where civilians were still living, and
+then to a gate and a garden. In the cottage was a French peasant woman
+who smiled, patted my hair because it was curly, and chattered
+interminably. The result was a huge omelette and a bottle of champagne.
+Then came a touch of naughtiness--a lady visitor with a copy of _La Vie
+Parisienne_, which she promptly bestowed on the English soldier. I read
+it, and dreamt of the time when I should walk the Champs Elysées again.
+It was growing dusk when I turned back to the noise of battle. There was
+a white moon in a milky sky. Motor-bikes fled by me, great lorries
+driven by Jehus from London buses, and automobiles which too poignantly
+had been Strand taxis and had taken lovers home from the Gaiety. I
+jogged along thinking very little, but supremely happy. Now I'm back at
+the wagon-line; to-morrow I go back to the guns. Meanwhile I write to
+you by a guttering candle.
+
+Life, how I love you! What a wonderful kindly thing I could make of you
+to-night. Strangely the vision has come to me of all that you mean. Now
+I could write. So soon you may go from me or be changed into a form of
+existence which all my training has taught me to dread. After death is
+there only nothingness? I think that for those who have missed love in
+this life there must be compensations--the little children whom they
+ought to have had, perhaps. To-day, after so many weeks, I have seen
+little children again.
+
+And yet, so strange a havoc does this war work that, if I have to "Go
+West," I shall go _proudly_ and quietly. I have seen too many men die
+bravely to make a fuss if my turn comes. A mixed passenger list old
+Father Charon must have each night--Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Huns.
+To-morrow I shall have another sight of the greenness and then--the
+guns.
+
+I don't know whether I have been able to make any of my emotions clear
+to you in my letters. Terror has a terrible fascination. Up to now I
+have always been afraid--afraid of small fears. At last I meet fear
+itself and it stings my pride into an unpremeditated courage.
+
+I've just had a pile of letters from you all. How ripping it is to be
+remembered! Letters keep one civilised.
+
+It's late and I'm very tired. God bless you each and all.
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+November 15th, 1916.
+
+
+Dear Father:
+
+I've owed you a letter for some time, but I've been getting very little
+leisure. You can't send steel messages to the Kaiser and love-notes to
+your family in the same breath.
+
+I am amazed at the spirit you three are showing and almighty proud that
+you can muster such courage. I suppose none of us quite realised our
+strength till it came to the test. There was a time when we all doubted
+our own heroism. I think we were typical of our age. Every novel of the
+past ten years has been more or less a study in sentiment and
+self-distrust. We used to wonder what kind of stuff Drake's men were
+made of that they could jest while they died. We used to contrast
+ourselves with them to our own disfavour. Well, we know now that when
+there's a New World to be discovered we can still rise up reincarnated
+into spiritual pirates. It wasn't the men of our age who were at fault,
+but the New World that was lacking. Our New World is the Kingdom of
+Heroism, the doors of which are flung so wide that the meanest of us may
+enter. I know men out here who are the dependable daredevils of their
+brigades, who in peace times were nuisances and as soon as peace is
+declared will become nuisances again. At the moment they're fine,
+laughing at Death and smiling at the chance of agony. There's a man I
+know of who had a record sheet of crimes. When he was out of action he
+was always drunk and up for office. To get rid of him, they put him into
+the trench mortars and within a month he had won his D.C.M. He came out
+and went on the spree--this particular spree consisted in stripping a
+Highland officer of his kilts on a moonlight night. For this he was
+sentenced to several months in a military prison, but asked to be
+allowed to serve his sentence in the trenches. He came out from his
+punishment a King's sergeant--which means that whatever he did nobody
+could degrade him. He got this for lifting his trench mortar over the
+parapet when all the detachment were killed. Carrying it out into a
+shell-hole, he held back the Hun attack and saved the situation. He got
+drunk again, and again chose to be returned to the trenches. This time
+his head was blown off while he was engaged in a special feat of
+gallantry. What are you to say to such men? Ordinarily they'd be
+blackguards, but war lifts them into splendour. In the same way you see
+mild men, timid men, almost girlish men, carrying out duties which in
+other wars would have won V.C.'s. I don't think the soul of courage
+ever dies out of the race any more than the capacity for love. All it
+means is that the occasion is not present. For myself I try to analyse
+my emotions; am I simply numb, or do I imitate other people's coolness
+and shall I fear life again when the war is ended? There is no
+explanation save the great army phrase "Carry on." We "carry on"
+because, if we don't, we shall let other men down and put their lives in
+danger. And there's more than that--we all want to live up to the
+standard that prompted us to come.
+
+One talks about splendour--but war isn't splendid except in the
+individual sense. A man by his own self-conquest can make it splendid
+for himself, but in the massed sense it's squalid. There's nothing
+splendid about a battlefield when the fight is ended--shreds of what
+once were men, tortured, levelled landscapes--the barbaric loneliness of
+Hell. I shall never forget my first dead man. He was a signalling
+officer, lying in the dawn on a muddy hill. I thought he was asleep at
+first, but when I looked more closely, I saw that his shoulder blade was
+showing white through his tunic. He was wearing black boots. It's odd,
+but the sight of black boots have the same effect on me now that black
+and white stripes had in childhood. I have the superstitious feeling
+that to wear them would bring me bad luck.
+
+Tonight we've been singing in parts, Back in the Dear Dead Days Beyond
+Recall--a mournful kind of ditty to sing under the circumstances--so
+mournful that we had to have a game of five hundred to cheer us up.
+
+It's now nearly 2 a.m., and I have to go out to the guns again before I
+go to bed. I carry your letters about in my pockets and read them at odd
+intervals in all kinds of places that you can't imagine.
+
+Cheer up and remember that I'm quite happy. I wish you could be with me
+for just one day to understand.
+
+ Yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+December 3rd, 1916.
+
+Dear Boys:
+
+By this time you will be all through your exams and I hope have both
+passed. It'll be splendid if you can go together to the same station.
+You envy me, you say; well, I rather envy you. I'd like to be with you.
+You, at least, don't have Napoleon's fourth antagonist with which to
+contend--mud. But at present I'm clean and billeted in an estaminet, in
+a not too bad little village. There's an old mill and still older
+church, and the usual farmhouses with the indispensable pile of manure
+under the front windows. We shall have plenty of hard work here, licking
+our men into shape and re-fitting.
+
+You know how I've longed to sleep between sheets; I can now, but find
+them so cold that I still use my sleeping bag--such is human
+inconsistency. But yesterday I had a boiling bath--as good a bath as
+could be found in a New York hotel--and I am CLEAN.
+
+I woke up this morning to hear some one singing Casey
+Jones--consequently I thought of former Christmases. My mind has been
+travelling back very much of late. Suddenly I see something here which
+reminds me of the time when E. and I were at Lisieux, or even of our
+Saturday excursions to Nelson when we were all together at the ranch.
+
+Did I tell you that B., our officer who was wounded two months ago, has
+just returned to us. This morning he got news that his young brother has
+been killed in the place which we have left. I wonder when we shall grow
+tired of stabbing and shooting and killing. It seems to me that the war
+cannot end in less than two years.
+
+I have made myself nice to the Brigade interpreter and he has found me
+a delightful room with electric light and a fire. It's in an old
+farmhouse with a brick terrace in front. My room is on the ground floor
+and tile-paved. The chairs are rush-bottomed and there are old quaint
+china plates on the shelves. There is also a quite charming
+mademoiselle. So you see, you don't need to pity me any more.
+
+Just at present I'm busy getting up the Brigade Christmas Entertainment.
+The Colonel asked me to do it, otherwise I should have said _no_, as I
+want all the time I can get to myself. You can't think how jolly it is
+to sit again in a room which is temporarily yours after living in
+dug-outs, herded side by side with other men. I can be _me_ now, and not
+a soldier of thousands when I write. You shall hear from me again soon.
+Hope you're having a ripping time in London.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+December 5th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST M.:
+
+I've just come in from my last tour of inspection as orderly officer,
+and it's close on midnight. I'm getting this line off to you to let you
+know that I expect to get my nine days' leave about the beginning of
+January. How I wish it were possible to have you in London when I
+arrive, or, failing that, to spend my leave in New York!
+
+To-morrow I make an early start on horseback for a market of the
+old-fashioned sort which is held at a town near by. Can you dimly
+picture me with my groom, followed by a mess-cart, going from stall to
+stall and bartering with the peasants? It'll be rather good fun and
+something quite out of my experience.
+
+Christmas will be over by the time you get this, and I do hope that you
+had a good one. I paused to talk to the other officers; they say that
+they are sure that you are very beautiful and have a warm heart, and
+would like to send them a five-storey layer cake, half a dozen bottles
+of port and one Paris chef. At present I am the Dives of the mess and
+dole out luxuries to these Lazaruses.
+
+Good-bye for the present.
+
+ Yours ever lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+December 6th, 1916.
+
+
+Dearest M.:
+
+I've just undone your Christmas parcels, and already I am wearing the
+waistcoat and socks, and my mouth is hot with the ginger.
+
+I expect to get leave for England on January 10th. I do wish it might be
+possible for some of you to cross the ocean and be in London with
+me--and I don't see what there is to prevent you. Unless the war ends
+sooner than any of us expect, it is not likely that I shall get another
+leave in less than nine months. So, if you want to come and if there's
+time when you receive this letter, just hop on a boat and let's see what
+London looks like together.
+
+I wonder what kind of a Christmas you'll have. I shall picture it all.
+You may hear me tiptoeing up the stairs if you listen very hard. Where
+does the soul go in sleep? Surely mine flies back to where all of you
+dear people are.
+
+I came back to my farm yesterday to find a bouquet of paper flowers at
+the head of my bed with a note pinned on it. Over my fire-place was hung
+a pathetic pair of farm-girls' heavy Sunday boots, all brightly
+polished, with two other notes pinned on them. The Feast of St. Nicholas
+on December 7th is an opportunity for unmarried men to be reminded that
+there are unmarried girls in the world--wherefore the flowers. I enclose
+the notes. Keep them,--they may be useful for a book some day.
+
+I'm having a pretty good rest, and am still in my old farmhouse.
+
+ Love to all.
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+December 15th, 1916.
+
+Dearest All:
+
+At the present I'm just where mother hoped I'd be--in a deep dug-out
+about twenty feet down--we're trying to get a fire lighted, and
+consequently the place is smoked out. Where I'll be for Christmas I
+don't know, but I hope by then to be in billets. I've just come back
+from the trenches, where I've been observing. The mud is not nearly so
+bad where I am now, and with a few days' more work, we should be quite
+comfortable. You'll have received my cable about my getting leave
+soon--I'm wondering whether the Atlantic is sufficiently quiet for any
+of you to risk a crossing.
+
+Poor Basil! Your letter was the first news I got of his death. I must
+have watched the attack in which he lost his life. One wonders now how
+it was that some instinct did not warn me that one of those khaki dots
+jumping out of the trenches was the cousin who stayed with us in London.
+
+I'm wondering what this mystery of the German Chancellor is all
+about--some peace proposals, I suppose--which are sure to prove
+bombastic and unacceptable. It seems to us out here as though the war
+must go on forever. Like a boy's dream of the far-off freedom of
+manhood, the day appears when we shall step out into the old liberty of
+owning our own lives. What a celebration we'll have when I come home! I
+can't quite grasp the joy of it.
+
+I've got to get this letter off quite soon if it's to go to-day. It
+ought to reach, you by January 12th or thereabouts. You may be sure my
+thoughts will have been with you on Christmas day. I shall look back and
+remember all the by-gone good times and then plan for Christmas, 1917.
+God keep us all.
+
+ Ever yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+December 18th, 1916.
+
+My Dearest M.:
+
+I always feel when I write a joint letter to the family that I'm
+cheating each one of you, but it's so very difficult to get time to
+write as often as I'd like. It's a week to Christmas and I picture the
+beginnings of the preparations. I can look back and remember so many
+such preparations, especially when we were kiddies in London. What good
+times one has in a life! I've been sitting with my groom by the fire
+to-night while he dried my clothes. I've mentioned him to you before as
+having lived in Nelson, and worked at the Silver King mine. We both grew
+ecstatic over British Columbia.
+
+I am hoping all the time that the boys may be in England at the time I
+get my leave--I hardly dare hope that any of you will be there. But it
+would he grand if you could manage it--I long very much to see you all
+again. I can just imagine my first month home again. I shan't let any of
+you work. I shall be the incurable boy. I've spent the best part of
+to-day out in No Man's Land, within seventy yards of the Huns. Quite an
+experience, I assure you, and one that I wouldn't have missed for
+worlds. I'll have heaps to write into novels one day--the vividest kind
+of local colour. Just at present I have nothing to read but the
+Christmas number of the _Strand_. It makes me remember the time when we
+children raced for the latest development of _The Hound of the
+Baskervilles_, and so many occasions when I had one of "those sniffy
+colds" and sat by the Highbury fire with a book. Good days, those!
+
+I'm just off to bed now, and will finish this to-morrow. Bed is my
+greatest luxury nowadays.
+
+December 19th.
+
+The book and chocolate just came, and a bunch of New York papers. All
+were most welcome. I was longing for something to read. To-morrow I have
+to go forward to observe. Two of our officers are on leave, so it makes
+the rest of us work pretty hard. What do you think of the Kaiser's
+absurd peace proposals? The man must be mad.
+
+ The best of love,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+December 20th, 1916.
+
+Dear Mr. T.:
+
+Just back from a successful argument with Fritz, to find your kind good
+wishes. It's rather a lark out here, though a lark which may turn
+against you any time. I laugh a good deal more than I mope. Anything
+really horrible has a ludicrous side--it's like Mark Twain's humour--a
+gross exaggeration. The maddest thing of all to me is that a person so
+willing to be amiable as I am should be out here killing people for
+principle's sake. There's no rhyme or reason--it can't be argued. Dimly
+one thinks he sees what is right and leaves father and mother and home,
+as though it were for the Kingdom of Heaven's sake. Perhaps it is. If
+one didn't pin his faith to that "perhaps"--. One can't explain.
+
+A merry Christmas to you.
+ Yours very sincerely,
+ CONINGSBY DAWSON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+December 20th, 1916.
+
+Dear Mr. A.D.:
+
+I've just come in from an argument with Fritz when your chocolate formed
+my meal. You were very kind to think of me and to send it, and you were
+extraordinarily understanding in the letter that you sent me. One's life
+out here is like a pollarded tree--all the lower branches are gone--one
+gazes on great nobilities, on the fascinating horror of Eternity
+sometimes--I said horror, but it's often fine in its spaciousness--one
+gazes on many inverted splendours of Titans, but it's giddy work being
+so high and rarefied, and all the gentle past seems gone. That's why it
+is pleasant in this grimy anonymity of death and courage to get
+reminders, such as your letter, that one was once localised and had a
+familiar history. If I come back, I shall be like Rip Van Winkle, or a
+Robinson Crusoe--like any and all of the creatures of legend and history
+to whom abnormality has grown to seem normal. If you can imagine
+yourself living in a world in which every day is a demonstration of a
+Puritan's conception of what happens when the last trump sounds, then
+you have some idea of my queer situation. One has come to a point when
+death seems very inconsiderable and only failure to do one's duty is an
+utter loss. Love and the future, and all the sweet and tender dreams of
+by-gone days are like a house in which the blinds are lowered and from
+which the sight has gone. Landscapes have lost their beauty, everything
+God-made and man-made is destroyed except man's power to endure with a
+smile the things he once most dreaded, because he believes that only so
+may he be righteous in his own eyes. How one has longed for that sure
+confidence in the petty failings of little living--the confidence to
+believe that he can stand up and suffer for principle! God has given all
+men who are out here that opportunity--the supremest that can be hoped
+for--so, in spite of exile, Christmas for most of us will be a happy
+day. Does one see more truly life's worth on a battlefield? I often ask
+myself that question. Is the contempt that is hourly shown for life the
+real standard of life's worth? I shrug my shoulders at my own
+unanswerable questions--all I know is that I move daily with men who
+have everything to live for who, nevertheless, are urged by an
+unconscious magnanimity to die. I don't think any of our dead pity
+themselves--but they would have done so if they had faltered in their
+choice. One lives only from sunrise to sunrise, but there's a more real
+happiness in this brief living than I ever knew before, because it is so
+exactingly worth while.
+
+Thank you again for your kindness.
+ Very sincerely yours,
+ C.D.
+
+The suggestion that we might all meet in London in January, 1917, was a
+hope rather than an expectation. We received a cable from France on
+Sunday, December 17th, 1916, and left New York on December 30th. We were
+met in London by the two sailor-sons, who were expecting appointments at
+any moment, and Coningsby arrived late in the evening of January 13th.
+He was unwell when he arrived, having had a near touch of pneumonia. The
+day before he left the front he had been in action, with a temperature
+of 104. There were difficulties about getting his leave at the exact
+time appointed, but these he overcame by exchanging leave with a
+brother-officer. He travelled from the Front all night in a windowless
+train, and at Calais was delayed by a draft of infantry which he had to
+take over to England. The consequence of this delay was that the meeting
+at the railway station, of which he had so long dreamed, did not come
+off. We spent a long day, going from station to station, misled by
+imperfect information as to the arrival of troop trains. At Victoria
+Station we saw two thousand troops arrive on leave, men caked with
+trench-mud, but he was not among them. We reluctantly returned to our
+hotel in the late afternoon and gave up expecting him. There was all the
+time a telegram at the hotel from him, giving the exact place and time
+of his arrival, but it was not delivered until it was too late to meet
+him. He arrived at ten o'clock, and at the same time his two brothers,
+who had been summoned in the morning to Southampton, entered the hotel,
+having been granted special leave to return to London. A night's rest
+did wonders for Coningsby, and the next day his spirits were as high as
+in the old days of joyous holiday. During the next eight days we lived
+at a tense pitch of excitement. We went to theatres, dined in
+restaurants, met friends, and heard from his lips a hundred details of
+his life which could not be communicated in letters. We were all
+thrilled by the darkened heroic London through which we moved, the
+London which bore its sorrows so proudly, and went about its daily life
+with such silent courage. We visited old friends to whom the war had
+brought irreparable bereavements, but never once heard the voice of
+self-pity, of murmur or complaint. To me it was an incredible England;
+an England purged of all weakness, stripped of flabbiness, regenerated
+by sacrifice. I had dreamed of no such transformation by anything I had
+read in American newspapers and magazines. I think no one can imagine
+the completeness of this rebirth of the soul of England who has not
+dwelt, if only for a few days, among its people.
+
+Coningsby's brief leave expired all too soon. We saw him off from
+Folkestone, and while we were saying good-bye to him, his two brothers
+were on their way to their distant appointments with the Royal Naval
+Motor Patrol in the North of Scotland. We left Liverpool for New York on
+January 27th, and while at sea heard of the diplomatic break between
+America and Germany. The news was received on board the _S.S. St. Paul_
+with rejoicing. It was Sunday, and the religious service on board
+concluded with the Star-Spangled Banner.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+December 28th, 1916.
+
+Dearest All:
+
+I'm writing you this letter because I expect to-night is a busy-packing
+one with you. The picture is in my mind of you all. How splendid it is
+of you to come! I never thought you would really, not even in my wildest
+dream of optimism. There have been so many times when I scarcely thought
+that I would ever see you again--now the unexpected and hoped-for
+happens. It's ripping!
+
+I've put in an application for special leave in case the ordinary leave
+should be cut off. I think I'm almost certain to arrive by the 11th.
+Won't we have a time? I wonder what we'll want to do most--sit quiet or
+go to theatres? The nine days of freedom--the wonderful nine days--will
+pass with most tragic quickness. But they'll be days to remember as long
+as life lasts.
+
+Shall I see you standing on the station when I puff into London--or will
+it be Folkestone where we meet--or shall I arrive before you? I somehow
+think it will be you who will meet me at the barrier at Charing Cross,
+and we'll taxi through the darkened streets down the Strand, and back to
+our privacy. How impossible it sounds--like a vision of heart's desire
+in the night.
+
+Far, far away I see the fine home-coming, like a lamp burning in a dark
+night. I expect we shall all go off our heads with joy and be madder
+than ever. Who in the old London days would have imagined such a nine
+days of happiness in the old places as we are to have together.
+
+ God bless you, till we meet,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+January 4th, 1917.
+
+10.30 p.m.
+
+MY DEAREST ONES:
+
+This letter is written to welcome you to England, but I may be with you
+when it is opened. It was glorious news to hear that you were coming--I
+was only playing a forlorn bluff when I sent those cables. You're on the
+sea at present and should be half way over. Our last trip over together
+you marvelled at the apparent indifference of the soldiers on board, and
+now you're coming to meet one of your own fresh from the Front. A
+change!
+
+O what a nine days we're going to have together--the most wonderful that
+were ever spent. I dream of them, tell myself tales about them, live
+them over many times in imagination before they are realised. Sometimes
+I'm going to have no end of sleep, sometimes I'm going to keep awake
+every second, sometimes I'm going to sit quietly by a fire, and
+sometimes I'm going to taxi all the time. I can't fit your faces into
+the picture--it seems too unbelievable that we are to be together once
+again. To-day I've been staging our meeting--if you arrive first, and
+then if I arrive before you, and lastly if we both hit London on the
+same day. You mustn't expect me to be a sane person. You're three
+rippers to do this--and I hope you'll have an easy journey. The only
+ghost is the last day, when the leave train pulls out of Charing Cross.
+But we'll do that smiling, too; C'est la guerre.
+
+ Yours always and ever, CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+January 6th, 1917.
+
+MY DEAR ONES:
+
+I have just seen a brother officer aboard the ex-London bus en route for
+Blighty. How I wished I could have stepped on board that ex-London
+perambulator to-night! "Pickerdilly Cirkuss, 'Ighbury, 'Ighgate, Welsh
+'Arp--all the wye." O my, what a time I'll have when I meet you! I shall
+feel as though if anything happens to me after my return you'll be able
+to understand so much more bravely. These blinkered letters, with only
+writing and no touch of live hands, convey so little. When we've had a
+good time together and sat round the fire and talked interminably you'll
+be able to read so much more between the lines of my future letters.
+To-morrow you ought to land in England, and to-morrow night you should
+sleep in London. I am trying to swop my leave with another man,
+otherwise it won't come till the 15th. I am looking forward every hour
+to those miraculous nine days which we are to have together. You can't
+imagine with your vividest imagination the contrast between nine days
+with you in London and my days where I am now. A battalion went by
+yesterday, marching into action, and its band was playing I've a
+Sneakin' Feelin' in My Heart That I Want to Settle Down. We all have
+that sneaking feeling from time to time. I tell myself wonderful stories
+in the early dark mornings and become the architect of the most
+wonderful futures.
+
+I'm coming to join you just as soon as I know how--at the worst I'll be
+in London on the 16th of this month.
+
+ Ever yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+_The following letters were written after Coningsby had met his family
+in London._
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX
+
+January 24th, 1917.
+
+MY DEAR ONES:
+
+I have had a chance to write you sooner than I expected, as I stopped
+the night where I disembarked, and am catching my train to-day.
+
+It's strange to be back and under orders after nine days' freedom.
+Directly I landed I was detailed to march a party--it was that that made
+me lose my train--not that I objected, for I got one more sleep between
+sheets. I picked up on the boat in the casual way one does, with three
+other officers, so on landing we made a party to dine together, and had
+a very decent evening. I wasn't wanting to remember too much then, so
+that was why I didn't write letters.
+
+What good times we have to look back on and how much to be thankful for,
+that we met altogether. Now we must look forward to the summer and,
+perhaps, the end of the war. What a mad joy will sweep across the world
+on the day that peace is declared!
+
+This visit will have made you feel that you have a share in all that's
+happening over here and are as real a part of it as any of us. I'm
+awfully proud of you for your courage.
+
+ Yours lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XL
+
+January 26th, 1917.
+
+MY VERY DEAR ONES:
+
+Here I am back--my nine days' leave a dream. I got into our wagon-lines
+last night after midnight, having had a cold ride along frozen roads
+through white wintry country. I was only half-expected, so my
+sleeping-bag hadn't been unpacked. I had to wake my batman and tramp
+about a mile to the billet; by the time I got there every one was
+asleep, so I spread out my sleeping-sack and crept in very quietly. For
+the few minutes before my eyes closed I pictured London, the taxis, the
+gay parties, the mystery of lights. I was roused this morning with the
+news that I had to go up to the gun-position at once. I stole just
+sufficient time to pick up a part of my accumulated mail, then got on my
+horse and set out. At the guns, I found that I was due to report as
+liaison officer, so here I am in the trenches again writing to you by
+candle-light. How wonderfully we have bridged the distance in spending
+those nine whole days together. And now it is over, and I am back in the
+trenches, and to-morrow you're sailing for New York.
+
+I can't tell you what the respite has meant to me. There have been times
+when my whole past life has seemed a myth and the future an endless
+prospect of carrying on. Now I can distantly hope that the old days will
+return.
+
+When I was in London half my mind was at the Front; now that I'm back in
+the trenches half my mind is in London. I re-live our gay times
+together; I go to cosy little dinners; I sit with you in the stalls,
+listening to the music; then I tumble off to sleep, and dream, and wake
+up to find the dream a delusion. It's a fine and manly contrast,
+however, between the game one plays out here and the fretful
+trivialities of civilian life.
+
+
+
+
+XLI
+
+January 27th.
+
+
+I got as far as this and then "something" happened. Twenty-four hours
+have gone by and once more it's nearly midnight and I write to you by
+candle-light. Since last night I've been with these infantry
+boy-officers who are doing such great work in such a careless spirit of
+jolliness. Any softness which had crept into me during my nine days of
+happiness has gone. I'm glad to be out here and wouldn't wish to be
+anywhere else till the war is ended.
+
+It's a week to-day since we were at _Charlie's Aunt_--such a cheerful
+little party! I expect the boys are doing their share of remembering too
+somewhere on the sea at present. I know you are, as you round the coast
+of Ireland and set out for the Atlantic.
+
+I've not been out of my clothes for three days and I've another day to
+go yet. I brought my haversack into the trenches with me; on opening it
+I found that some kind hands had slipped into it some clean socks and a
+bottle of Horlick's Malted Milk tablets.
+
+The signallers in a near-by dug-out are singing Keep the Home-Fires
+Burning Till the Boys Come Home. That's what we're all doing, isn't
+it--you at your end and we at ours? The brief few days of possessing
+myself are over and once more stern duty lies ahead. But I thank God for
+the chance I've had to see again those whom I love, and to be able to
+tell them with my own lips some of the bigness of our life at the Front.
+No personal aims count beside the great privilege which is ours to carry
+on until the war is over.
+
+All my thoughts are with you--so many memories of kindness. I keep on
+picturing things I ought to have done--things I ought to have told you.
+Always I can see, Oh, so vividly, the two sailor brothers waving
+good-bye as the train moved off through the London dusk, and then that
+other and forlorner group of three, standing outside the dock gates with
+the sentry like the angel in Eden, turning them back from happiness.
+With an extraordinary aloofness I watched myself moving like a puppet
+away from you whom I love most dearly in all the world--going away as if
+going were a thing so usual.
+
+I'm asking myself again if there isn't some new fineness of spirit which
+will develop from this war and survive it. In London, at a distance
+from all this tragedy of courage, I felt that I had slipped back to a
+lower plane; a kind of flabbiness was creeping into my blood--the old
+selfish fear of life and love of comfort. It's odd that out here, where
+the fear of death should supplant the fear of life, one somehow rises
+into a contempt for everything which is not bravest. There's no doubt
+that the call for sacrifice, and perhaps the supreme sacrifice, can
+transform men into a nobility of which they themselves are unconscious.
+That's the most splendid thing of all, that they themselves are unaware
+of their fineness.
+
+I'm now waiting to be relieved and am hurrying to finish this so that I
+may mail it as soon as I get back to the battery. There's a whole sack
+of letters and parcels waiting for me there, and I'm as eager to get to
+them as a kiddy to inspect his Christmas stocking. I always undo the
+string and wrappings with a kind of reverence, trying to picture the
+dear kneeling figures who did them up. In London I didn't dare to let
+myself go with you--I couldn't say all that was in my heart--it wouldn't
+have been wise. Don't ever doubt that the tenderness was there. Even
+though one is only a civilian in khaki, some of the soldier's sternness
+becomes second nature.
+
+All the country is covered with snow--it's brilliant clear weather,
+more like America than Europe. I'm feeling strong as a horse, ever so
+much better than I felt when on leave. Life is really tremendously worth
+living, in spite of the war.
+
+
+
+
+XLII
+
+January 28th.
+
+I'm back at the battery, sitting by a cosy fire. I might be up at
+Kootenay by the look of my surroundings. I'm in a shack with a really
+truly floor, and a window looking out on moonlit whiteness. If it wasn't
+for the tapping of the distant machine guns--tapping that always sounds
+to me like the nailing up of coffins--I might be here for pleasure. In
+imagination I can see your great ship, with all its portholes aglare,
+ploughing across the darkness to America. The dear sailor brothers I
+can't quite visualise; I can only see them looking so upright and pale
+when we said good-bye. It's getting late and the fire's dying. I'm half
+asleep; I've not been out of my clothes for three nights. I shall tell
+myself a story of the end of the war and our next meeting--it'll last
+from the time that I creep into my sack until I close my eyes. It's a
+glorious life.
+
+ Yours very lovingly,
+ CON
+
+
+
+
+XLIII
+
+January 31st, 1917.
+
+DEAR MR. AND MRS. M.:
+
+It was extremely good of you to remember me. I got back from leave in
+London on the 26th and found the cigarettes waiting for me. One hasn't
+got an awful lot of pleasures left, but smoking is one of them. I feel
+particularly doggy when I open my case and find my initials on them.
+
+I expect you'll have heard all the news of my leave long before this
+reaches you. We had a splendid time and the greatest of luck. My sailor
+brothers were with me all but two days, and my people were in England
+only a few days before I arrived.
+
+This is a queer adventure for a peaceable person like myself--it blots
+out all the past and reduces the future to a speck. One hardly hopes
+that things will ever be different, but looks forward to interminable
+years of carrying on. My leave rather corrected that frame of mind; it
+came as a surprise to be forced to realise that not all the world was
+living under orders on woman less, childless battlefields. But we don't
+need any pity--we manage our good times, and are sorry for the men who
+aren't here, for it's a wonderful thing to have been chosen to
+sacrifice and perhaps to die that the world of the future may be happier
+and kinder.
+
+This letter is rather disjointed; I'm in charge of the battery for the
+time, and messages keep on coming in, and one has to rush out to give
+the order to fire.
+
+It's an American night--snow-white and piercing, with a frigid moon
+sailing quietly. I think the quiet beauty of the sky is about the only
+thing in Nature that we do not scar and destroy with our fighting.
+
+Good-bye, and thank you ever so much.
+
+ Yours very sincerely,
+ CONINGSBY DAWSON.
+
+
+
+
+XLIV
+
+February 1st, 1917.
+
+11 p.m.
+
+DEAR FATHER:
+
+Your picture of the black days when no letter comes from me sets me off
+scribbling to you at this late hour. All to-day I've been having a cold
+but amusing time at the O.P. (Forward Observation Post). It seems brutal
+to say it, but taking potshots at the enemy when they present themselves
+is rather fun. When you watch them scattering like ants before the
+shell whose direction you have ordered, you somehow forget to think of
+them as individuals, any more than the bear-hunter thinks of the cubs
+that will be left motherless. You watch your victims through your
+glasses as God might watch his mad universe. Your skill in directing
+fire makes you what in peace times would be called a murderer. Curious!
+You're glad, and yet at close quarters only in hot blood would you hurt
+a man.
+
+I'd been back for a little over an hour when I had to go forward again
+to guide in some guns. The country was dazzlingly white in the
+moonlight. As far as eye could see every yard was an old battlefield;
+beneath the soft white fleece of snow lay countless unburied bodies.
+Like frantic fingers tearing at the sky, all along the horizon, Hun
+lights were shooting up and drifting across our front. Tap-tap-tappity
+went the machine-guns; whoo-oo went the heavies, and they always stamp
+like angry bulls. I had to come back by myself across the heroic
+corruption which the snow had covered. All the way I asked myself why
+was I not frightened. What has happened to me? Ghosts should walk here
+if anywhere. Moreover, I know that I shall be frightened again when the
+war is ended. Do you remember how you once offered me money to walk
+through the Forest of Dean after dark, and I wouldn't? I wouldn't if
+you offered it to me now. You remember Meredith's lines in "The Woods of
+Westermain":
+
+ "All the eyeballs under hoods
+ Shroud you in their glare;
+ Enter these enchanted woods
+ You who dare."
+
+Maybe what re-creates one for the moment is the British officer's
+uniform, and even more the fact that you are not asked, but expected, to
+do your duty. So I came back quite unruffled across battered trenches
+and silent mounds to write this letter to you.
+
+My dear father, I'm over thirty, and yet just as much a little boy as
+ever. I still feel overwhelmingly dependent on your good opinion and
+love. I'm glad that they are black days when you have no letters from
+me. I love to think of the rush to the door when the postman rings and
+the excited shouting up the stairs, "Quick, one from Con."
+
+
+February 2nd.
+
+You see by the writing how tired I was when I reached this point. It's
+nearly twenty-four hours later and again night. The gramophone is
+playing an air from _La Tosca_ to which the guns beat out a bass
+accompaniment. I close my eyes and picture the many times I have heard
+the (probably) German orchestras of Broadway Joy Palaces play that same
+music. How incongruous that I should be listening to it here and under
+these circumstances! It must have been listened to so often by gay
+crowds in the beauty places of the world. A romantic picture grows up in
+my mind of a blue night, the laughter of youth in evening dress, lamps
+twinkling through trees, far off the velvety shadow of water and
+mountains, and as a voice to it all, that air from _La Tosca_. I can
+believe that the silent people near by raise themselves up in their
+snow-beds to listen, each one recalling some ecstatic moment before the
+dream of life was shattered.
+
+There's a picture in the Pantheon at Paris, I remember; I believe it's
+called _To Glory_. One sees all the armies of the ages charging out of
+the middle distance with Death riding at their head. The only glory that
+I have discovered in this war is in men's hearts--it's not external.
+Were one to paint the spirit of this war he would depict a mud
+landscape, blasted trees, an iron sky; wading through the slush and
+shell-holes would come a file of bowed figures, more like outcasts from
+the Embankment than soldiers. They're loaded down like pack animals,
+their shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they go on
+and go on. There's no "To Glory" about what we're doing out here;
+there's no flash of swords or splendour of uniforms. There are only very
+tired men determined to carry on. The war will be won by tired men who
+could never again pass an insurance test, a mob of broken
+counter-jumpers, ragged ex-plumbers and quite unheroic persons. We're
+civilians in khaki, but because of the ideals for which we fight we've
+managed to acquire soldiers' hearts.
+
+My flow of thought was interrupted by a burst of song in which I was
+compelled to join. We're all writing letters around one candle; suddenly
+the O.C. looked up and began, God Be With You Till We Meet Again. We
+sang it in parts. It was in Southport, when I was about nine years old,
+that I first heard that sung. You had gone for your first trip to
+America, leaving a very lonely family behind you. We children were
+scared to death that you'd be drowned. One evening, coming back from a
+walk on the sand-hills, we heard voices singing in a garden, God Be With
+You Till We Meet Again. The words and the soft dusk, and the vague
+figures in the English summer garden, seemed to typify the terror of all
+partings. We've said good-bye so often since, and God has been with us.
+I don't think any parting was more hard than our last at the prosaic
+dock-gates with the cold wind of duty blowing, and the sentry barring
+your entrance, and your path leading back to America while mine led on
+to France. But you three were regular soldiers--just as much soldiers as
+we chaps who were embarking. One talks of our armies in the field, but
+there are the other armies, millions strong, of mothers and fathers and
+sisters, who keep their eyes dry, treasure muddy letters beneath their
+pillows, offer up prayers and wait, wait, wait so eternally for God to
+open another door.
+
+To-morrow I again go forward, which means rising early and taking a long
+plod through the snows; that's one reason for not writing any more, and
+another is that our one poor candle is literally on its last legs.
+
+Your poem, written years ago when the poor were marching in London, is
+often in my mind:
+
+ "Yesterday and to-day
+ Have been heavy with labour and sorrow;
+ I should faint if I did not see
+ The day that is after to-morrow."
+
+And there's that last verse which prophesied utterly the spirit in which
+we men at the Front are fighting to-day:
+
+ "And for me, with spirit elate
+ The mire and the fog I press thorough,
+ For Heaven shines under the cloud
+ Of the day that is after to-morrow."
+
+We civilians who have been taught so long to love our enemies and do
+good to them who hate us--much too long ever to make professional
+soldiers--are watching with our hearts in our eyes for that day which
+conies after to-morrow. Meanwhile we plod on determinedly, hoping for
+the hidden glory.
+
+ Yours very lovingly,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+XLV
+
+
+February 3rd, 1917.
+
+Dear Misses W.:
+
+You were very kind to remember me at Christmas. _Seventeen_ was read
+with all kinds of gusto by all my brother officers. It's still being
+borrowed.
+
+I've been back from leave a few days now and am settling back to
+business again. It was a trifle hard after over-eating and undersleeping
+myself for nine days, and riding everywhere with my feet up in taxis. I
+was the wildest little boy. Here it's snowy and bitter. We wear scarves
+round our ears to keep the frost away and dream of fires a mile high.
+All I ask, when the war is ended, is to be allowed to sit asleep in a
+big armchair and to be left there absolutely quiet. Sleep, which we
+crave so much at times, is only death done up in sample bottles. Perhaps
+some of these very weary men who strew our battlefields are glad to lie
+at last at endless leisure.
+
+Good-bye, and thank you.
+
+ Yours very sincerely,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XLVI
+
+February 4th, 1917.
+
+My Dearest Mother:
+
+Somewhere in the distance I can hear a piano going and men's voices
+singing A Perfect Day. It's queer how music creates a world for you in
+which you are not, and makes you dreamy. I've been sitting by a fire and
+thinking of all the happy times when the total of desire seemed almost
+within one's grasp. It never is--one always, always misses it and has to
+rub the dust from the eyes, recover one's breath and set out on the
+search afresh. I suppose when you grow very old you learn the lesson of
+sitting quiet, and the heart stops beating and the total of desire comes
+to you. And yet I can remember so many happy days, when I was a child in
+the summer and later at Kootenay. One almost thought he had caught the
+secret of carrying heaven in his heart.
+
+By the time this reaches you I'll be in the line again, but for the
+present I'm undergoing a special course of training. You can't hear the
+most distant sound of guns, and if it wasn't for the pressure of study,
+similar to that at _Kingston_, one would be very rested.
+
+Sunday of all days is the one when I remember you most. You're just
+sitting down to mid-day dinner,--I've made the calculation for
+difference of time. You're probably saying how less than a month ago we
+were in London. That doesn't sound true even when I write it. I wonder
+how your old familiar surroundings strike you. It's terrible to come
+down from the mountain heights of a great elation like our ten days in
+London. I often think of that with regard to myself when the war is
+ended. There'll be a sense of dissatisfaction when the old lost comforts
+are regained. There'll be a sense of lowered manhood. The stupendous
+terrors of Armageddon demand less courage than the uneventful terror of
+the daily commonplace. There's something splendid and exhilarating in
+going forward among bursting shells--we, who have done all that, know
+that when the guns have ceased to roar our blood will grow more
+sluggish and we'll never be such men again. Instead of getting up in the
+morning and hearing your O.C. say, "You'll run a line into trench
+so-and-so to-day and shoot up such-and-such Hun wire," you'll hear
+necessity saying, "You'll work from breakfast to dinner and earn your
+daily bread. And you'll do it to-morrow and to-morrow and to-morrow
+world without end. Amen." They never put that forever and forever part
+into their commands out here, because the Amen for any one of us may be
+only a few hours away. But the big immediate thing is so much easier to
+do than the prosaic carrying on without anxiety--which is your game. I
+begin to understand what you have had to suffer now that R. and E. are
+really at war too. I get awfully anxious about them. I never knew before
+that either of them owned so much of my heart. I get furious when I
+remember that they might get hurt. I've heard of a Canadian who joined
+when he learnt that his best friend had been murdered by Hun bayonets.
+He came to get his own back and was the most reckless man in his
+battalion. I can understand his temper now. We're all of us in danger of
+slipping back into the worship of Thor.
+
+I'll write as often as I can while here, but I don't get much time--so
+you'll understand. It's the long nights when one sits up to take the
+firing in action that give one the chance to be a decent correspondent.
+
+My birthday comes round soon, doesn't it? Good heavens, how ancient I'm
+getting and without any "grow old along with me" consolation. Well, to
+grow old is all in the job of living.
+
+Good-bye, and God bless you all.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XLVII
+
+
+February 4th, 1917.
+
+Dear Mr. B.:
+
+I have been intending to write to you for a very long time, but as most
+of one's writing is done when one ought to be asleep, and sleep next to
+eating is one of our few remaining pleasures, my intended letter has
+remained in my head up to now. On returning from a nine days' leave to
+London the other day, however, I found two letters from you awaiting me
+and was reproached into effort.
+
+War's a queer game--not at all what one's civilian mind imagined; it's
+far more horrible and less exciting. The horrors which the civilian mind
+dreads most are mutilation and death. Out here we rarely think about
+them; the thing which wears on one most and calls out his gravest
+courage is the endless sequence of physical discomfort. Not to be able
+to wash, not to be able to sleep, to have to be wet and cold for long
+periods at a stretch, to find mud on your person, in your food, to have
+to stand in mud, see mud, sleep in mud and to continue to smile--that's
+what tests courage. Our chaps are splendid. They're not the hair-brained
+idiots that some war-correspondents depict from day to day. They're
+perfectly sane people who know to a fraction what they're up against,
+but who carry on with a grim good-nature and a determination to win with
+a smile. I never before appreciated as I do to-day the latent capacity
+for big-hearted endurance that is in the heart of every man. Here are
+apparently quite ordinary chaps--chaps who washed, liked theatres, loved
+kiddies and sweethearts, had a zest for life--they're bankrupt of all
+pleasures except the supreme pleasure of knowing that they're doing the
+ordinary and finest thing of which they are capable. There are millions
+to whom the mere consciousness of doing their duty has brought an
+heretofore unexperienced peace of mind. For myself I was never happier
+than I am at present; there's a novel zip added to life by the daily
+risks and the knowledge that at last you're doing something into which
+no trace of selfishness enters. One can only die once; the chief concern
+that matters is _how_ and not _when_ you die. I don't pity the weary men
+who have attained eternal leisure in the corruption of our
+shell-furrowed battles; they "went West" in their supreme moment. The
+men I pity are those who could not hear the call of duty and whose
+consciences will grow more flabby every day. With the brutal roar of the
+first Prussian gun the cry came to the civilised world, "Follow thou
+me," just as truly as it did in Palestine. Men went to their Calvary
+singing Tipperary, rubbish, rhymed doggerel, but their spirit was equal
+to that of any Christian martyr in a Roman amphitheatre. "Greater love
+hath no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friend." Our
+chaps are doing that consciously, willingly, almost without bitterness
+towards their enemies; for the rest it doesn't matter whether they sing
+hymns or ragtime. They've followed their ideal--freedom--and died for
+it. A former age expressed itself in Gregorian chants; ours, no less
+sincerely, disguises its feelings in ragtime.
+
+Since September I have been less than a month out of action. The game
+doesn't pall as time goes on--it fascinates. We've got to win so that
+men may never again be tortured by the ingenious inquisition of modern
+warfare. The winning of the war becomes a personal affair to the chaps
+who are fighting. The world which sits behind the lines, buys extra
+specials of the daily papers and eats three square meals a day, will
+never know what this other world has endured for its safety, for no man
+of this other world will have the vocabulary in which to tell. But don't
+for a moment mistake me--we're grimly happy.
+
+What a serial I'll write for you if I emerge from this turmoil! Thank
+God, my outlook is all altered. I don't want to live any longer--only to
+live well.
+
+Good-bye and good luck.
+
+ Yours,
+ Coningsby Dawson.
+
+
+
+
+XLVIII
+
+
+February 5th, 1917.
+
+My Dearest Mother:
+
+Aren't the papers good reading now-a-days with nothing to record but
+success? It gives us hope that at last, anyway before the year is out,
+the war must end. As you know, I am at the artillery school back of the
+lines for a month, taking an extra course. I have been meeting a great
+many young officers from all over the world and have listened to them
+discussing their program for when peace is declared. Very few of them
+have any plans or prospects. Most of them had just started on some
+course of professional training to which they won't have the energy to
+go back after a two years' interruption. The question one asks is how
+will all these men be reabsorbed into civilian life. I'm afraid the
+result will be a vast host of men with promising pasts and highly
+uncertain futures. We shall be a holiday world without an income. I'm
+afraid the hero-worship attitude will soon change to impatience when the
+soldiers beat their swords into ploughshares and then confess that they
+have never been taught to plough. That's where I shall score--by beating
+my sword into a pen. But what to write about--! Everything will seem so
+little and inconsequential after seeing armies marching to mud and
+death, and people will soon get tired of hearing about that. It seems as
+though war does to the individual what it does to the landscapes it
+attacks--obliterates everything personal and characteristic. A valley,
+when a battle has done with it, is nothing but earth--exactly what it
+was when God said, "Let there be Light;" a man just something with a
+mind purged of the past and ready to observe afresh. I question whether
+a return to old environments will ever restore to us the whole of our
+old tastes and affections. War is, I think, utterly destructive. It
+doesn't even create courage--it only finds it in the soul of a man. And
+yet there is one quality which will survive the war and help us to face
+the temptations of peace--that same courage which most of us have
+unconsciously discovered out here.
+
+Well, my dear, I have little news--at least, none that I can tell. I'm
+just about recovered from an attack of "flu." I want to get thoroughly
+rid of it before I go back to my battery. I hope you all keep well. God
+bless you all.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XLIX
+
+February 6th, 1917.
+
+My Very Dear M.:
+
+I read in to-day's paper that U.S.A. threatens to come over and help us.
+I wish she would. The very thought of the possibility fills me with joy.
+I've been light-headed all day. It would be so ripping to live among
+people, when the war is ended, of whom you need not be ashamed.
+Somewhere deep down in my heart I've felt a sadness ever since I've been
+out here, at America's lack of gallantry--it's so easy to find excuses
+for not climbing to Calvary; sacrifice was always too noble to be
+sensible. I would like to see the country of our adoption become
+splendidly irrational even at this eleventh hour in the game; it would
+redeem her in the world's eyes. She doesn't know what she's losing. From
+these carcase-strewn fields of khaki there's a cleansing wind blowing
+for the nations that have died. Though there was only one Englishman
+left to carry on the race when this war is victoriously ended, I would
+give more for the future of England than for the future of America with
+her ninety millions whose sluggish blood was not stirred by the call of
+duty. It's bigness of soul that makes nations great and not population.
+Money, comfort, limousines and ragtime are not the requisites of men
+when heroes are dying. I hate the thought of Fifth Avenue, with its
+pretty faces, its fashions, its smiling frivolity. America as a great
+nation will die, as all coward civilisations have died, unless she
+accepts the stigmata of sacrifice, which a divine opportunity again
+offers her.
+
+If it were but possible to show those ninety millions one battlefield
+with its sprawling dead, its pity, its marvellous forgetfulness of self,
+I think then--no, they wouldn't be afraid. Fear isn't the emotion one
+feels--they would experience the shame of living when so many have shed
+their youth freely. This war is a prolonged moment of exultation for
+most of us--we are redeeming ourselves in our own eyes. To lay down
+one's life for one's friend once seemed impossible. All that is altered.
+We lay down our lives that the future generations may be good and kind,
+and so we can contemplate oblivion with quiet eyes. Nothing that is
+noblest that the Greeks taught is unpractised by the simplest men out
+here to-day. They may die childless, but their example will father the
+imagination of all the coming ages. These men, in the noble indignation
+of a great ideal, face a worse hell than the most ingenious of fanatics
+ever planned or plotted. Men die scorched like moths in a furnace, blown
+to atoms, gassed, tortured. And again other men step forward to take
+their places well knowing what will be their fate. Bodies may die, but
+the spirit of England grows greater as each new soul speeds upon its
+way. The battened souls of America will die and be buried. I believe the
+decision of the next few days will prove to be the crisis in America's
+nationhood. If she refuses the pain which will save her, the cancer of
+self-despising will rob her of her life.
+
+This feeling is strong with us. It's past midnight, but I could write
+of nothing else to-night.
+
+God bless you.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Carry On, by Coningsby Dawson
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Carry On, by Coningsby Dawson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: Carry On
+
+Author: Coningsby Dawson
+
+Release Date: November 18, 2004 [EBook #14086]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CARRY ON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a href="images/001.jpg">
+<img src="images/001.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a>
+</p>
+
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+ <a href="#CARRY_ON"><b>CARRY ON</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#INTRODUCTION"><b>INTRODUCTION</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#THE_LETTERS"><b>THE LETTERS</b></a><br />
+ <br />
+ <a href="#I"><b>I</b></a>
+ <a href="#II"><b>II</b></a>
+ <a href="#III"><b>III</b></a>
+ <a href="#IV"><b>IV</b></a>
+ <a href="#V"><b>V</b></a>
+ <a href="#VI"><b>VI</b></a>
+ <a href="#VII"><b>VII</b></a>
+ <a href="#VIII"><b>VIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#IX"><b>IX</b></a>
+ <a href="#X"><b>X</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#XI"><b>XI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XII"><b>XII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XIII"><b>XIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XIV"><b>XIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XV"><b>XV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XVI"><b>XVI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XVII"><b>XVII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XVIII"><b>XVIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XIX"><b>XIX</b></a>
+ <a href="#XX"><b>XX</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#XXI"><b>XXI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXII"><b>XXII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXIII"><b>XXIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXIV"><b>XXIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXV"><b>XXV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXVI"><b>XXVI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXVII"><b>XXVII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXVIII"><b>XXVIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXIX"><b>XXIX</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXX"><b>XXX</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#XXXI"><b>XXXI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXII"><b>XXXII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXIII"><b>XXXIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXIV"><b>XXXIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXV"><b>XXXV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXVI"><b>XXXVI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXVII"><b>XXXVII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXVIII"><b>XXXVIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XXXIX"><b>XXXIX</b></a>
+ <a href="#XL"><b>XL</b></a><br />
+ <a href="#XLI"><b>XLI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLII"><b>XLII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLIII"><b>XLIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLIV"><b>XLIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLIV"><b>XLIV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLV"><b>XLV</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLVI"><b>XLVI</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLVII"><b>XLVII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLVIII"><b>XLVIII</b></a>
+ <a href="#XLIX"><b>XLIX</b></a><br />
+<br /><br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter"><a href="images/003.jpg">
+<img src="images/003.jpg" width="50%" alt="Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson Canadian Field Artillery" title="" /></a>
+<br /><b>Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson Canadian Field Artillery</b>
+</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h1>CARRY ON</h1>
+
+<h2>LETTERS IN WAR TIME</h2>
+
+<h4>BY</h4>
+
+<h3>CONINGSBY DAWSON</h3>
+
+<h4>NOVELIST AND SOLDIER</h4>
+
+<h5>WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND NOTES</h5>
+
+<h4>BY HIS FATHER, W.J. DAWSON</h4>
+
+<h5>1917</h5>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">WHEN THE WAR'S AT AN END</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">At length when the war's at an end</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">And we're just ourselves,&mdash;you and I,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And we gather our lives up to mend,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">We, who've learned how to live and to die:</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Shall we think of the old ambition</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">For riches, or how to grow wise,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When, like Lazarus freshly arisen,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">We've the presence of Death in our eyes?</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Shall we dream of our old life's passion,&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">To toil for our heart's desire,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Whose souls War has taken to fashion</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">With molten death and with fire?</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I think we shall crave the laughter</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Of the wind through trees gold with the sun,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When our strife is all finished,&mdash;after</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">The carnage of War is done.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Just these things will then seem worth while:&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">How to make Life more wondrously sweet;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">How to live with a song and a smile,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">How to lay our lives at Love's feet.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 19em;">ERIC P. DAWSON,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21.5em;"><i>Sub. Lieut</i>. R.N.V.R.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="INTRODUCTION" id="INTRODUCTION" />INTRODUCTION</h2>
+
+
+<p>The letters in this volume were not written
+for publication. They are intimate and
+personal in a high degree. They would not now
+be published by those to whom they are addressed,
+had they not come to feel that the spirit
+and temper of the writer might do something to
+strengthen and invigorate those who, like himself,
+are called on to make great sacrifices for
+high causes and solemn duties.</p>
+
+<p>They do not profess to give any new information
+about the military operations of the Allies;
+this is the task of the publicist, and at all times
+is forbidden to the soldier in the field. Here and
+there some striking or significant fact has been
+allowed to pass the censor; but the value of the
+letters does not lie in these things. It is found
+rather in the record of how the dreadful yet
+heroic realities of war affect an unusually sensitive
+mind, long trained in moral and romantic
+idealism; the process by which this mind adapts
+itself to unanticipated and incredible conditions,
+to acts and duties which lie close to horror, and
+are only saved from being horrible by the efficacy
+of the spiritual effort which they evoke. Hating
+the brutalities of War, clearly perceiving the
+wide range of its cruelties, yet the heart of the
+writer is never hardened by its daily commerce
+with death; it is purified by pity and terror, by
+heroism and sacrifice, until the whole nature
+seems fresh annealed into a finer strength.</p>
+
+<p>The intimate nature of these letters makes it
+necessary to say something about the writer.</p>
+
+<p>Coningsby Dawson graduated with honours in
+history from Oxford in 1905, and in the same
+year came to the United States with the intention
+of taking a theological course at Union Seminary.
+After a year at the Seminary he reached
+the conclusion that his true lifework lay in literature,
+and he at once began to fit himself for his
+vocation. In the meantime his family left England,
+and we had made our home in Taunton,
+Massachusetts. Here, in a quiet house, amid
+lawns and leafy elms, he gave himself with indefatigable
+ardour to the art of writing. He wrote
+from seven to ten hours a day, producing many
+poems, short stories, and three novels. Few
+writers have ever worked harder to attain literary
+excellence, or have practised a more austere
+devotion to their art. I often marvelled how a
+young man, fresh from a brilliant career at the
+greatest of English Universities, could be content
+with a life that was so widely separated from
+association with men and affairs. I wondered
+still more at the patience with which he endured
+the rebuffs that always await the beginner in
+literature, and the humility with which he was
+willing to learn the hard lessons of his apprenticeship
+in literary form. The secret lay, no
+doubt, in his secure sense of a vocation, and his
+belief that good work could not fail in the end
+to justify itself. But, not the less, these four
+years of obscure drudgery wore upon his spirit,
+and hence some of the references in these letters
+to his days of self-despising. The period of
+waiting came to an end at last with the publication
+in 1913 of his <i>Garden Without Walls</i>,
+which attained immediate success. When he
+speaks in these letters of his brief burst of fame,
+he refers to those crowded months in the Fall of
+1913, when his novel was being discussed on
+every hand, and, for the first time, he met many
+writers of established reputation as an equal.</p>
+
+<p>Another novel, <i>The Raft</i>, followed <i>The
+Garden Without Walls</i>. The nature of his life
+now seemed fixed. To the task of novel-writing
+he had brought a temperament highly idealistic
+and romantic, a fresh and vivid imagination, and
+a thorough literary equipment. His life, as he
+planned it, held but one purpose for him, outside
+the warmth and tenacity of its affections&mdash;the
+triumph of the efficient purpose in the adequate
+expression of his mind in literature. The austerity
+of his long years of preparation had left
+him relatively indifferent to the common prizes
+of life, though they had done nothing to lessen
+his intense joy in life. His whole mind was concentrated
+on his art. His adventures would be
+the adventures of the mind in search of ampler
+modes of expression. His crusades would be the
+crusades of the spirit in search of the realities
+of truth. He had received the public recognition
+which gave him faith in himself and faith in his
+ability to achieve the reputation of the true artist,
+whose work is not cheapened but dignified and
+broadened by success. So he read the future,
+and so his critics read it for him. And then,
+sudden and unheralded, there broke on this quiet
+life of intellectual devotion the great storm of
+1914. The guns that roared along the Marne
+shattered all his purposes, and left him face to
+face with a solemn spiritual exigency which admitted
+no equivocation.</p>
+
+<p>At first, in common with multitudes more experienced
+than himself, he did not fully comprehend
+the true measure of the cataclysm which
+had overwhelmed the world. There had been
+wars before, and they had been fought out by
+standing armies. It was incredible that any war
+should last more than a few months. Again and
+again the world had been assured that war would
+break down with its own weight, that no war
+could be financed beyond a certain brief period,
+that the very nature of modern warfare, with its
+terrible engines of destruction, made swift decisions
+a necessity. The conception of a British
+War which involved the entire manhood of the
+nation was new, and unparalleled in past history.
+And the further conception of a war so vast in
+its issues that it really threatened the very existence
+of the nation was new too. Alarmists had
+sometimes predicted these things, but they had
+been disbelieved. Historians had used such
+phrases of long past struggles, but often as a
+mode of rhetoric rather than as the expression
+of exact truth. Yet, in a very few weeks, it
+became evident that not alone England, but the
+entire fabric of liberal civilisation was threatened
+by a power that knew no honour, no restraints
+of either caution or magnanimity, no
+ethic but the armed might that trampled under
+blood-stained feet all the things which the common
+sanction of centuries held dearest and fairest.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps, if Coningsby had been resident in
+England, these realities of the situation would
+have been immediately apparent. Residing in
+America, the real outlines of the struggle were
+a little dimmed by distance. Nevertheless, from
+the very first he saw clearly where his duty lay.
+He could not enlist immediately. He was bound
+in honour to fulfil various literary obligations.
+His latest book, <i>Slaves of Freedom</i>, was in
+process of being adapted for serial use, and its
+publication would follow. He set the completion
+of this work as the period when he must enlist;
+working on with difficult self-restraint toward
+the appointed hour. If he had regrets for a
+career broken at the very point where it had
+reached success and was assured of more than
+competence, he never expressed them. His one
+regret was the effect of his enlistment on those
+most closely bound to him by affections which
+had been deepened and made more tender by the
+sense of common exile. At last the hour came
+when he was free to follow the imperative call
+of patriotic duty. He went to Ottawa, saw Sir
+Sam Hughes, and was offered a commission in
+the Canadian Field Artillery on the completion
+of his training at the Royal Military College, at
+Kingston, Ontario. The last weeks of his training
+were passed at the military camp of Petewawa
+on the Ottawa River. There his family
+was able to meet him in the July of 1916. While
+we were with him he was selected, with twenty-four
+other officers, for immediate service in
+France; and at the same time his two younger
+brothers enlisted in the Naval Patrol, then being
+recruited in Canada by Commander Armstrong.</p>
+
+<p>The letters in this volume commence with his
+departure from Ottawa. Week by week they
+have come, with occasional interruptions; mud
+stained epistles, written in pencil, in dug-outs by
+the light of a single candle, in the brief moments
+snatched from hard and perilous duties. They
+give no hint of where he was on the far-flung
+battle-line. We know now that he was at Albert,
+at Thiepval, at Courcelette, and at the taking of
+the Regina trench, where, unknown to him, one
+of his cousins fell in the heroic charge of the
+Canadian infantry. His constant thoughtfulness
+for those who were left at home is manifest in
+all he writes. It has been expressed also in other
+ways, dear and precious to remember: in flowers
+delivered by his order from the battlefield each
+Sabbath morning at our house in Newark, in
+cables of birthday congratulations, which arrived
+on the exact date. Nothing has been forgotten
+that could alleviate the loneliness of our separation,
+or stimulate our courage, or make us conscious
+of the unbroken bond of love.</p>
+
+<p>The general point of view in these letters is, I
+think, adequately expressed in the phrase &quot;<i>Carry
+On</i>,&quot; which I have used as the title of this book.
+It was our happy lot to meet Coningsby in London
+in the January of the present year, when he
+was granted ten days' leave. In the course of
+conversation one night he laid emphasis on the
+fact that he, and those who served with him,
+were, after all, not professional soldiers, but
+civilians at war. They did not love war, and
+when the war was ended not five per cent of them
+would remain in the army. They were men
+who had left professions and vocations which
+still engaged the best parts of their minds, and
+would return to them when the hour came. War
+was for them an occupation, not a vocation. Yet
+they had proved themselves, one and all, splendid
+soldiers, bearing the greatest hardships without
+complaint, and facing wounds and death with
+a gay courage which had made the Canadian
+forces famous even among a host of men, equally
+brave and heroic. The secret of their fortitude
+lay in the one brief phrase, &quot;Carry On.&quot; Their
+fortitude was of the spirit rather than the nerves.
+They were aware of the solemn ideals of justice,
+liberty, and righteousness for which they fought,
+and would never give up till they were won. In
+the completeness of their surrender to a great
+cause they had been lifted out of themselves to
+a new plane of living by the transformation of
+their spirit. It was the dogged indomitable drive
+of spiritual forces controlling bodily forces. Living
+or dying those forces would prevail. They
+would carry on to the end, however long the war,
+and would count no sacrifice too great to assure
+its triumph.</p>
+
+<p>This is the spirit which breathes through these
+letters. The splendour of war, as my son puts
+it, is in nothing external; it is all in the souls of
+the men. &quot;There's a marvellous grandeur about
+all this carnage and desolation&mdash;men's souls rise
+above the distress&mdash;they have to, in order to survive.&quot;
+&quot;Every man I have met out here has the
+amazing guts to wear his crown of thorns as
+though it were a cap-and-bells.&quot; They have
+shredded off their weaknesses, and attained that
+&quot;corporate stout-heartedness&quot; which is &quot;the acme
+of what Aristotle meant by virtue.&quot; For himself,
+he discovers that the plague of his former modes
+of life lay in self-distrust. It was the disease of
+the age. The doubt of many things which it were
+wisdom to believe had ended in the doubt of one's
+own capacity for heroism. All those doubts and
+self-despisings had vanished in the supreme surrender
+to sacrificial duty. The doors of the
+Kingdom of Heroism were flung so wide that the
+meanest might enter in, and in that act the
+humblest became comrades of Drake's men, who
+could jest as they died. No one knows his real
+strength till it is put to the test; the highest joy
+of life is to discover that the soul can meet the
+test, and survive it.</p>
+
+<p>The Somme battlefield, from which all these
+letters were despatched, is an Inferno much more
+terrible than any Dante pictured. It is a vast
+sea of mud, full of the unburied dead, pitted and
+pock-marked by shell-holes, treeless and horseless,
+&quot;the abomination of desolation.&quot; And the
+men who toil across it look more like outcasts
+of the London Embankment than soldiers.
+&quot;They're loaded down like pack-animals, their
+shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death,
+but they go on and go on.... There's no flash
+of sword or splendour of uniforms. They're only
+very tired men determined to carry on. The war
+will be won by tired men who can never again
+pass an insurance test.&quot; Yet they carry on&mdash;the
+&quot;broken counter-jumper, the ragged ex-plumber,&quot;
+the clerk from the office, the man from the farm;
+Londoner, Canadian, Australian, New Zealander,
+men drawn from every quarter of the Empire,
+who daily justify their manhood by devotion to
+an ideal and by contempt of death. And in the
+heart of each there is a settled conviction
+that the cause for which they have sacrificed so
+much must triumph. They have no illusions
+about an early peace. They see their comrades
+fall, and say quietly, &quot;He's gone West.&quot; They do
+heroic things daily, which in a lesser war would
+have won the Victoria Cross, but in this war are
+commonplaces. They know themselves re-born
+in soul, and are dimly aware that the world is
+travailing toward new birth with them. They
+are still very human, men who end their letters
+with a row of crosses which stand for kisses.
+They are not dehumanised by war; the kindliness
+and tenderness of their natures are unspoiled by
+all their daily traffic in horror. But they have
+won their souls; and when the days of peace return
+these men will take with them to the
+civilian life a tonic strength and nobleness which
+will arrest and extirpate the decadence of society
+with the saving salt of valour and of faith.</p>
+
+<p>It may be said also that they do not hate their
+foe, although they hate the things for which he
+fights. They are fighting a clean fight, with men
+whose courage they respect. A German prisoner
+who comes into the British camp is sure of good
+treatment. He is neither starved nor insulted.
+His captors share with him cheerfully their rations
+and their little luxuries. Sometimes a sullen
+brute will spit in the face of his captor when
+he offers him a cigarette; he is always an officer,
+never a private. And occasionally between these
+fighting hosts there are acts of magnanimity
+which stand out illumined against the dark background
+of death and suffering. One of the
+stories told me by my son illustrates this. During
+one fierce engagement a British officer saw a
+German officer impaled on the barbed wire,
+writhing in anguish. The fire was dreadful, yet
+he still hung there unscathed. At length the
+British officer could stand it no longer. He said
+quietly, &quot;I can't bear to look at that poor chap
+any longer.&quot; So he went out under the hail of
+shell, released him, took him on his shoulders and
+carried him to the German trench. The firing
+ceased. Both sides watched the act with wonder.
+Then the Commander in the German trench came
+forward, took from his own bosom the Iron
+Cross, and pinned it on the breast of the British
+officer. Such an episode is true to the holiest
+ideals of chivalry; and it is all the more welcome
+because the German record is stained by so many
+acts of barbarism, which the world cannot forgive.</p>
+
+<p>This magnanimous attitude toward the enemy
+is very apparent in these letters. The man
+whose mind is filled with great ideals of sacrifice
+and duty has no room for the narrowness of
+hate. He can pity a foe whose sufferings exceed
+his own, and the more so because he knows
+that his foe is doomed. The British troops do
+know this to-day by many infallible signs. In
+the early days of the war untrained men, poorly
+equipped with guns, were pitted against the best
+trained troops in Europe. The first Canadian
+armies were sacrificed, as was that immortal
+army of Imperial troops who saved the day at
+Mons. The Canadians often perished in that
+early fighting by the excess of their own reckless
+bravery. They are still the most daring
+fighters in the British army, but they have
+profited by the hard discipline of the past. They
+know now that they have not only the will to
+conquer, but the means of conquest. Their, artillery
+has become conspicuous for its efficiency.
+It is the ceaseless artillery fire which has turned
+the issue of the war for the British forces. The
+work of the infantry is beyond praise. They &quot;go
+over the top&quot; with superb courage, and all who
+have seen them are ready to say with my son,
+&quot;I'm hats off to the infantry.&quot; And in this final
+efficiency, surpassing all that could have been
+thought possible in the earlier stages of the war,
+the British forces read the clear augury of victory.
+The war will be won by the Allied armies;
+not only because they fight for the better cause,
+which counts for much, in spite of Napoleon's
+cynical saying that &quot;God is on the side of the
+strongest battalions&quot;; but because at last they
+have superiority in equipment, discipline and efficiency.
+Upon that shell-torn Western front,
+amid the mud and carnage of the Somme, there
+has been slowly forged the weapon which will
+drive the Teuton enemy across the Rhine, and
+give back to Europe and the world unhindered
+liberty and enduring peace.</p>
+
+<p>W.J. DAWSON.</p>
+
+<p>March, 1917.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_LETTERS" id="THE_LETTERS" />THE LETTERS</h2>
+
+
+<p>In order to make some of the allusions in these
+letters clear I will set down briefly the circumstances
+which explain them, and supply a narrative
+link where it may be required.</p>
+
+<p>I have already mentioned the Military Camp
+at Petewawa, on the Ottawa river. The Camp
+is situated about seven miles from Pembroke.
+The Ottawa river is at this point a beautiful
+lake. Immediately opposite the Camp is a little
+summer hotel of the simplest description. It
+was at this hotel that my wife, my daughter, and
+myself stayed in the early days of July, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>The hotel was full of the wives of the officers
+stationed in the Camp. During the daytime I
+was the only man among the guests. About five
+o'clock in the afternoon the officers from the
+Camp began to arrive on a primitive motor ferryboat.
+My son came over each day, and we often
+visited him at the Camp. His long training at
+Kingston had been very severe. It included besides
+the various classes which he attended a great
+deal of hard exercise, long rides or foot marches
+over frozen roads before breakfast, and so forth.
+After this strenuous winter the Camp at Petewawa
+was a delightful change. His tent stood
+on a bluff, commanding an exquisite view of the
+broad stretch of water, diversified by many small
+islands. We had a great deal of swimming in
+the lake, and several motor-boat excursions to
+its beautiful upper reaches. One afternoon
+when we went over in our launch to meet him
+at the Camp wharf, he told us that that day a
+General had come from Ottawa to ask for
+twenty-five picked officers to supply the casualties
+among the Canadian Field Artillery at the
+front. He had immediately volunteered and
+been accepted.</p>
+
+<p>At this time my two younger sons, who had
+joined us at Petewawa in order to see their
+brother, enrolled themselves in the Royal Naval
+Motor Patrol Service, and had to return to Nelson,
+British Columbia, to settle their affairs.
+Near Nelson, on the Kootenay Lake, we have a
+large fruit ranch, managed by my second son,
+Reginald. My youngest son, Eric, was with a
+law-firm in Nelson, and had just passed his final
+examinations as solicitor and barrister.</p>
+
+<p>This ranch had played a great part in our
+lives. The scenery is among the finest in British
+Columbia. We usually spent our summers
+there, finding not only continual interest in the
+development of our orchards, but a great deal of
+pleasure in riding, swimming, and boating. We
+had often talked of building a modern house
+there, but had never done so. The original &quot;little
+shack&quot; was the work of Reginald's own
+hands, in the days when most of the ranch was
+primeval forest. It had been added to, but was
+still of the simplest description. One reason
+why we had not built a modern house was that
+this &quot;little shack&quot; had become much endeared to
+us by association and memory. We were all together
+there more than once, and Coningsby
+had written a great deal there. We built later
+on a sort of summer library&mdash;a big room on the
+edge of a beautiful ravine&mdash;to which reference
+is made in later letters. Some of the happiest
+days of our lives were spent in these lovely surroundings,
+and the memory of those blue summer
+days, amid the fragrance of miles of pine-forest,
+often recurs to Coningsby as he writes
+from the mud-wastes of the Somme.</p>
+
+<p>We left Petewawa to go to the ranch before
+Coningsby sailed for England, that we might
+get our other two sons ready for their journey
+to England. They left us on August 21st, and
+the ranch was sub-let to Chinamen in the end
+of September, when we returned to Newark,
+New Jersey.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h1><a name="CARRY_ON" id="CARRY_ON" />CARRY ON</h1>
+
+<h2><a name="I" id="I" />I</h2>
+
+<p>OTTAWA, July 16th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST ALL:</p>
+
+
+<p>So much has happened since last I saw you
+that it's difficult to know where to start. On
+Thursday, after lunch, I got the news that we
+were to entrain from Petewawa next Friday
+morning. I at once put in for leave to go to
+Ottawa the next day until the following Thursday
+at reveille. We came here with a lot of the
+other officers who are going over and have been
+having a very full time.</p>
+
+<p>I am sailing from a port unknown on board
+the <i>Olympic</i> with 6,000 troops&mdash;there is to be a
+big convoy. I feel more than ever I did&mdash;and
+I'm sure it's a feeling that you share since visiting
+the camp&mdash;that I am setting out on a Crusade
+from which it would have been impossible
+to withhold myself with honour. I go quite
+gladly and contentedly, and pray that in God's
+good time we may all sit again in the little shack
+at Kootenay and listen to the rustling of the orchard
+outside. It will be of those summer days
+that I shall be thinking all the time.</p>
+
+<p>Yours, with very much love,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="II" id="II" />II</h2>
+
+<p>HALIFAX, July 23rd.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>We've spent all morning on the dock, seeing
+to our baggage, and have just got leave
+ashore for two hours. We have had letters
+handed to us saying that on no account are we
+to mention anything concerning our passage overseas,
+neither are we allowed to cable our arrival
+from the other side until four clear days have
+elapsed.</p>
+
+<p>You are thinking of me this quiet Sunday
+morning at the ranch, and I of you. And I am
+wishing&mdash;As I wish, I stop and ask myself,
+&quot;Would I be there if I could have my
+choice?&quot; And I remember those lines of Emerson's
+which you quoted:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&quot;Though love repine and reason chafe,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">There comes a voice without reply,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Twere man's perdition to be safe,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When for the Truth he ought to die.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I wouldn't turn back if I could, but my heart
+cries out against &quot;the voice which speaks without
+reply.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Things are growing deeper with me in all sorts
+of ways. Family affections stand out so desirably
+and vivid, like meadows green after rain.
+And religion means more. The love of a few
+dear human people and the love of the divine
+people out of sight, are all that one has to lean
+on in the graver hours of life. I hope I come
+back again&mdash;I very much hope I come back
+again; there are so many finer things that I could
+do with the rest of my days&mdash;bigger things. But
+if by any chance I should cross the seas to stay,
+you'll know that that also will be right and as big
+as anything that I could do with life, and something
+that you'll be able to be just as proud
+about as if I had lived to fulfil all your other
+dear hopes for me. I don't suppose I shall talk
+of this again. But I wanted you to know that
+underneath all the lightness and ambition there's
+something that I learnt years ago in Highbury<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1" /><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>.
+I've become a little child again in God's hands,
+with full confidence in His love and wisdom, and
+a growing trust that whatever He decides for me
+will be best and kindest.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1" /><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> We resided over thirteen years at Highbury, London,
+N., during my pastorate of the Highbury Quadrant Congregational
+Church.</p></div>
+
+<p>This is the last letter I shall be able to send
+to you before the other boys follow me. Keep
+brave, dear ones, for all our sakes; don't let any
+of us turn cowards whatever ultimately happens.
+We've a tradition to live up to now that
+we have become a family of soldiers and sailors.</p>
+
+<p>I shall long for the time when you come over
+to England. Where will our meeting be and
+when? Perhaps the war may be ended and then
+won't you be glad that we dared all this sorrow
+of good-byes?</p>
+
+<p>God bless and keep you,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="III" id="III" />III</h2>
+
+
+<p>ON BOARD,
+July 27th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My VERY DEAR PEOPLE:</p>
+
+<p>Here we are scooting along across the
+same old Atlantic we've crossed so many times
+on journeys of pleasure. I'm at a loss to make
+my letters interesting, as we are allowed to say
+little concerning the voyage and everything is
+censored.</p>
+
+<p>There are men on board who are going back
+to the trenches for the second time. One of
+them is a captain in the Princess Pat's, who is
+badly scarred in his neck and cheek and thighs,
+and has been in Canada recuperating. There is
+also a young flying chap who has also seen service.
+They are all such boys and so plucky in
+the face of certain knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>This morning I woke up thinking of our motor-tour
+of two years ago in England, and especially
+of our first evening at The Three Cups
+in Dorset. I feel like running down there to
+see it all again if I get any leave on landing.
+How strange it will be to go back to Highbury
+again like this! The little boy who ran back
+and forth to school down Paradise Row little
+thought of the person who to-day masquerades
+as his elder self.</p>
+
+<p>Heigho! I wish I could tell you a lot of
+things that I'm not allowed to. This letter
+would be much more interesting then.</p>
+
+<p>In seventeen days the boys will also have left
+you&mdash;so this will arrive when you're horribly
+lonely. I'm so sorry for you dear people&mdash;but
+I'd be sorrier for you if we were all with you.
+If I were a father or mother, I'd rather have
+my sons dead than see them failing when the
+supreme sacrifice was called for. I marvel all
+the time at the prosaic and even coarse types of
+men who have risen to the greatness of the occasion.
+And there's not a man aboard who
+would have chosen the job ahead of him. One
+man here used to pay other people to kill his
+pigs because he couldn't endure the cruelty of
+doing it himself. And now he's going to kill
+men. And he's a sample. I wonder if there is
+a Lord God of Battles&mdash;or is he only an invention
+of man and an excuse for man's own actions.</p>
+
+<p>Monday.</p>
+
+<p>We are just in&mdash;safely arrived in spite of
+everything. I hope you had no scare reports of
+our having been sunk&mdash;such reports often get
+about when a big troop ship is on the way.</p>
+
+<p>I'm baggage master for my draft, and have to
+get on deck now. You'll have a long letter from
+me soon.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye,
+Yours ever,
+Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="IV" id="IV" />IV</h2>
+
+
+<p>SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEARESTS:</p>
+
+<p>We haven't had any hint of what is going
+to happen to us&mdash;whether Field Artillery, the
+Heavies or trench mortars. There seems little
+doubt that we are to be in England for a little
+while taking special courses.</p>
+
+<p>I read father's letter yesterday. You are very
+brave&mdash;you never thought that you would be the
+father of a soldier and sailors; and, as you say,
+there's a kind of tradition about the way in
+which the fathers of soldiers and sailors should
+act. Confess&mdash;aren't you more honestly happy
+to be our father as we are now than as we were?
+I know quite well you are, in spite of the loneliness
+and heartache. We've all been forced into
+a heroism of which we did not think ourselves
+capable. We've been carried up to the Calvary
+of the world where it is expedient that a few
+men should suffer that all the generations to
+come may be better.</p>
+
+<p>I understand in a dim way all that you suffer&mdash;the
+sudden divorce of all that we had hoped
+for from the present&mdash;the ceaseless questionings
+as to what lies ahead. Your end of the business
+is the worse. For me, I can go forward steadily
+because of the greatness of the glory. I never
+thought to have the chance to suffer in my body
+for other men. The insufficiency of merely setting
+nobilities down on paper is finished. How
+unreal I seem to myself! Can it be true that I
+am here and you are in the still aloofness of the
+Rockies? I think the multitude of my changes
+has blunted my perceptions. I trudge along like
+a traveller between high hedgerows; my heart is
+blinkered so that I am scarcely aware of landscapes.
+My thoughts are always with you&mdash;I
+make calculations for the differences of time that
+I may follow more accurately your doings. I'd
+love to come down to the study summer-house
+and watch the blueness of the lake with you&mdash;I
+love those scenes and memories more than any
+in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye for the present. Be brave.</p>
+
+<p>Yours,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="V" id="V" />V</h2>
+
+
+<p>SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEARS:</p>
+
+<p>It's not quite three weeks to-day since I
+came to England, and it seems ages. The first
+week was spent on leave, the second I passed my
+exams in gun drill and gun-laying, and this week
+I have finished my riding. Next Monday I start
+on my gunnery.</p>
+
+<p>Do you remember Captain S. at the Camp?
+I had his young brother to dinner with me last
+night-he's just back from France minus an
+eye. He lasted three and a half weeks, and was
+buried four feet deep by a shell. He's a jolly
+boy, as cheerful as you could want and is very
+good company. He gave me a vivid description.
+He had a great boy-friend. At the start of the
+war they both joined, S. in the Artillery, his
+friend in the Mounted Rifles. At parting they
+exchanged identification tokens. S.'s bore his
+initials and the one word &quot;Violets&quot;&mdash;which
+meant that they were his favourite flower and he
+would like to have some scattered over him when
+he was buried. His friend wore his initials and
+the words &quot;No flowers by request.&quot; It was S.'s
+first week out&mdash;they were advancing, having
+driven back the enemy, and were taking up a
+covered position in a wood from which to renew
+their offensive. It was night, black as pitch, but
+they knew that the wood must have been the
+scene of fighting by the scuttling of the rats.
+Suddenly the moon came out, and from beneath
+a bush S. saw a face&mdash;or rather half a face&mdash;which
+he thought he recognised, gazing up at
+him. He corrects himself when he tells the
+story, and says that it wasn't so much the disfigured
+features as the profile that struck him as
+familiar. He bent down and searched beneath
+the shirt, and drew out a little metal disc with
+&quot;No flowers by request&quot; written on it.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know whether I ought to repeat things
+like that to you, but the description was so
+graphic. I have met many who have returned
+from the Front, and what puzzles me in all of
+them is their unawed acceptance of death. I
+don't think I could ever accept it as natural; it's
+too discourteous in its interruption of many
+dreams and plans and loves.</p>
+
+<p>Yours with very much love,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VI" id="VI" />VI</h2>
+
+<p>SHORNCLIFF, August 30th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEARESTS:</p>
+
+<p>I have just returned from sending you a
+cable to let you know that I'm off to France.
+The word came out in orders yesterday, and I
+shall leave before the end of the week with a
+draft of officers&mdash;I have been in England just a
+day over four weeks. My only regret is that I
+shall miss the boys who should be travelling up
+to London about the same time as I am setting
+out for the Front. After I have been there for
+three months I am supposed to get a leave&mdash;this
+should be due to me about the beginning of December,
+and you can judge how I shall count on
+it. Think of the meeting with R. and E., and
+the immensity of the joy.</p>
+
+<p>Selfishly I wish that you were here at this
+moment&mdash;actually I'm glad that you are away.
+Everybody goes out quite unemotionally and
+with very few good-byes&mdash;we made far more
+fuss in the old days about a week-end visit.</p>
+
+<p>Now that at last it has come&mdash;this privileged
+moment for which I have worked and waited&mdash;my
+heart is very quiet. It's the test of a character
+which I have often doubted. I shall be
+glad not to have to doubt it again. Whatever
+happens, I know you will be glad to remember
+that at a great crisis I tried to play the man, however
+small my qualifications. We have always
+lived so near to one another's affections that this
+going out alone is more lonely to me than to
+most men. I have always had some one near at
+hand with love-blinded eyes to see my faults as
+springing from higher motives. Now I reach
+out my hands across six thousand miles and only
+touch yours with my imagination to say good-bye.
+What queer sights these eyes, which have
+been almost your eyes, will witness! If my hands
+do anything respectable, remember that it is your
+hands that are doing it. It is your influence as
+a family that has made me ready for the part I
+have to play, and where I go, you follow me.</p>
+
+<p>Poor little circle of three loving persons,
+please be tremendously brave. Don't let anything
+turn you into cowards&mdash;we've all got to
+be worthy of each other's sacrifice; the greater
+the sacrifice may prove to be for the one the
+greater the nobility demanded of the remainder.
+How idle the words sound, and yet they will take
+deep meanings when time has given them graver
+sanctions. I think gallant is the word I've been
+trying to find&mdash;we must be gallant English
+women and gentlemen.</p>
+
+<p>It's been raining all day and I got very wet
+this morning. Don't you wish I had caught some
+quite harmless sickness? When I didn't want to
+go back to school, I used to wet my socks purposely
+in order to catch cold, but the cold always
+avoided me when I wanted it badly. How far
+away the childish past seems&mdash;almost as though
+it never happened. And was I really the budding
+novelist in New York? Life has become
+so stern and scarlet&mdash;and so brave. From my
+window I look out on the English Channel, a
+cold, grey-green sea, with rain driving across it
+and a fleet of small craft taking shelter. Over
+there beyond the curtain of mist lies France&mdash;and
+everything that awaits me.</p>
+
+<p>News has just come that I have to start. Will
+continue from France.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever lovingly,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VII" id="VII" />VII</h2>
+
+
+<p>Friday, September 1st, 1916, 11 am.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST FATHER AND MOTHER:</p>
+
+<p>I embark at 12.30&mdash;so this is the last line
+before I reach France. I expect the boys are
+now within sight of English shores&mdash;I wish I
+could have had an hour with them.</p>
+
+<p>I'm going to do my best to bring you honour&mdash;remember
+that&mdash;I shall do things for your
+sake out there, living up to the standards you
+have taught me.</p>
+
+<p>Yours with a heart full of love,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="VIII" id="VIII" />VIII</h2>
+
+<p>FRANCE, September 1st, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST M.:</p>
+
+<p>Here I am in France with the same
+strange smells and street cries, and almost the
+same little boys bowling hoops over the very
+cobbly cobble stones. I had afternoon tea at a
+patisserie and ate a great many g&acirc;teaux for the
+sake of old times. We had a very choppy crossing,
+and you would most certainly have been
+sick had you been on board. It seemed to me
+that I must be coming on one of those romantic
+holidays to see churches and dead history&mdash;only
+the khaki-clad figures reminded me that I was
+coming to see history in the making. It's a
+funny world that batters us about so. It's three
+years since I was in France&mdash;the last time was
+with Arthur in Provence. It's five years since
+you and I did our famous trip together.</p>
+
+<p>I wish you were here&mdash;there are heaps of English
+nurses in the streets. I expect to sleep in
+this place and proceed to my destination to-morrow.
+How I wish I could send you a really descriptive
+letter! If I did, I fear you would not
+get it&mdash;so I have to write in generalities. None
+of this seems real&mdash;it's a kind of wild pretence
+from which I shall awake-and when I tell you
+my dream you'll laugh and say, &quot;How absurd
+of you, dreaming that you were a soldier. I
+must say you look like it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, my dearest girl,</p>
+
+<p>God bless you,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="IX" id="IX" />IX</h2>
+
+
+<p>September 8th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAREST ONES:</p>
+
+<p>I'm sending this to meet you on your return
+from Kootenay. I left England on September
+1st and had a night at my point of disembarkation,
+and then set off on a wandering adventure
+in search of my division. I'm sure
+you'll understand that I cannot enter into any
+details&mdash;I can only give you general and purely
+personal impressions. There were two other
+officers with me, both from Montreal. We had
+to picnic on chocolate and wine for twenty-four
+hours through our lack of forethought in not supplying
+ourselves with food for the trip. I shaved
+the first morning with water from the exhaust
+of a railroad engine, having first balanced my
+mirror on the step. The engineer was fascinated
+with my safety razor. There were Tommies
+from the trenches in another train, muddied to
+the eyes&mdash;who showed themselves much more resourceful.
+They cooked themselves quite admirable
+meals as they squatted on the rails, over
+little fires on which they perched tomato cans.
+Sunday evening we saw our first German prisoners&mdash;a
+young and degenerate-looking lot. Sunday
+evening we got off at a station in the rain,
+and shouldered our own luggage. Our luggage,
+by the way, consists of a sleeping bag, in which
+much of our stuff is packed, and a kit sack&mdash;for
+an immediate change and toilet articles one
+carries a haversack hung across the shoulder.
+Well, as I say, we alighted and coaxed a military
+wagon to come to our rescue. As we set off
+through a drizzling rain, trudging behind the
+cart, a double rainbow shone, which I took for
+an omen. Presently we came to a rest camp,
+where we told our sad story of empty tummies,
+and were put up for the night. A Jock&mdash;all
+Highlanders are called Jock&mdash;looked after us.
+Next morning we started out afresh in a motor
+lorry and finished at a Y.M.C.A. tent, where
+we stayed two nights. On Wednesday we met
+the General in Command of our Division, who
+posted me to the battery, which is said to be the
+best in the best brigade in the best division&mdash;so
+you may see I'm in luck. I found the battery
+just having come out of action&mdash;we expect to go
+back again in a day or two. Major B. is the
+O.C.&mdash;a fine man. The lieutenant who shares
+my tent won the Military Cross at Ypres last
+Spring. I'm very happy&mdash;which will make you
+happy&mdash;and longing for my first taste of real
+war.</p>
+
+<p>How strangely far away I am from you&mdash;all
+the experiences so unshared and different. Long
+before this reaches you I shall have been in action
+several times. This time three years ago
+my streak of luck came to me and I was prancing
+round New York. To-day I am much more
+genuinely happy in mind, for I feel, as I never
+felt when I was only writing, that I am doing
+something difficult which has no element of self
+in it. If I come back, life will be a much less
+restless affair.</p>
+
+<p>This letter! I can imagine it being delivered
+and the shout from whoever takes it and the
+comments. I make the contrast in my mind&mdash;this
+little lean-to spread of canvas about four
+feet high, the horse-lines, guns, sentries going up
+and down&mdash;and then the dear home and the well-loved
+faces.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye. Don't be at all nervous.</p>
+
+<p>Yours lovingly,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="X" id="X" />X</h2>
+
+
+<p>September 12th, Tuesday.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST M.:</p>
+
+<p>You will already have received my first
+letters giving you my address over here. The
+wagon has just come up to our position, but it has
+brought me only one letter since I've been across.
+I'm sitting in my dug-out with shells passing over
+my head with the sound of ripping linen. I've
+already had the novel experience of firing a battery,
+and to-morrow I go up to the first line
+trenches.</p>
+
+<p>It's extraordinary how commonplace war becomes
+to a man who is thrust among others who
+consider it commonplace. Not fifty yards away
+from me a dead German lies rotting and uncovered&mdash;I
+daresay he was buried once and then
+blown out by a shell.</p>
+
+<p>Wednesday, 7 p.m.</p>
+
+<p>Your letters came two hours ago&mdash;the first to
+reach me here&mdash;and I have done little else but
+read and re-read them. How they bring the old
+ways of life back with their love and longing!
+Dear mother's tie will be worn to-morrow, and
+it will be ripping to feel that it was made by her
+hands. Your cross has not arrived yet, dear.
+Your mittens will be jolly for the winter. I've
+heard nothing from the boys yet.</p>
+
+<p>To-day I took a trip into No-Man's Land&mdash;when
+the war is ended I'll be able to tell you all
+about it. I think the picture is photographed
+upon my memory forever. There's so much
+you would like to hear and so little I'm allowed
+to tell. Ask G.M.'C. if he was at Princeton with
+a man named Price&mdash;an instructor there.</p>
+
+<p>You ought to see the excitement when the
+water-cart brings us our mail and the letters are
+handed out. Some of the gunners have evidently
+told their Canadian girls that they are officers,
+and so they are addressed on their letters as
+lieutenants. I have to censor some of their replies,
+and I can tell you they are as often funny
+as pathetic. The ones to their mothers are childish,
+too, and have rows of kisses. I think men
+are always kiddies if you look beneath the surface.
+The snapshots did fill me with a wanting
+to be with you in Kootenay. But that's not
+where you'll receive this. There'll probably be
+a fire in the sitting-room at home, and a strong
+aroma of coffee and tobacco. You'll be sitting
+in a low chair before the fire and your fingers
+rubbing the hair above your left ear as you read
+this aloud. I'd like to walk in on you and say,
+&quot;No more need for letters now.&quot; Some day
+soon, I pray and expect.</p>
+
+<p>Tell dear Papa and Mother that their answers
+come next. What a lot of love you each one
+manage to put into your written pages! I'm
+afraid if I let myself go that way I might make
+you unhappy.</p>
+
+<p>Since writing this far I have had supper. I'm
+now sleeping in a new dug-out and get a shower
+of mould on my sleeping-kit each time the guns
+are fired. One doesn't mind that particularly,
+especially when you know that the earth walls
+make you safe. I have a candle in an old petrol
+tin and dodge the shadows as I write. You
+know, this artillery game is good sport and
+one takes everything as it comes with a joke.
+The men are splendid&mdash;their cheeriness comes
+up bubbling whenever the occasion calls for the
+dumps. Certainly there are fine qualities which
+war, despite its unnaturalness, develops. I'm
+hats off to every infantry private I meet nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you and all of you.</p>
+
+<p>Yours lovingly, Con.</p>
+
+<p>The reference in the previous letter to a
+cross is to a little bronze cross of Francis of
+Assisi.</p>
+
+<p>Many years ago I visited Assisi, and, on leaving,
+the monks gave me four of these small
+bronze crosses, assuring me that those who wore
+them were securely defended in all peril by the
+efficacious prayers of St. Francis.
+Just before Coningsby left Shorncliff to go to
+France he wrote to us and asked if we couldn't
+send him something to hang round his neck for
+luck. We fortunately had one of these crosses
+of St. Francis at the ranch, and his sister&mdash;the
+M. of these letters-sent it to him. It arrived
+safely, and he has worn it ever since.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XI" id="XI" />XI</h2>
+
+<p>September 15th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR FATHER:</p>
+
+<p>Your last letter to me was written on a
+quiet morning in August&mdash;in the summer house
+at Kootenay. It came up yesterday evening on a
+water-cart from the wagon-lines to a scene a
+little in contrast.</p>
+
+<p>It's a fortnight to-day since I left England,
+and already I've seen action. Things move
+quickly in this game, and it is a game&mdash;one
+which brings out both the best and the worst
+qualities in a man. If unconscious heroism is
+the virtue most to be desired, and heroism spiced
+with a strong sense of humour at that, then
+pretty well every man I have met out here has
+the amazing guts to wear his crown of thorns as
+though it were a cap-and-bells. To do that for
+the sake of corporate stout-heartedness is, I think,
+the acme of what Aristotle meant by virtue. A
+strong man, or a good man or a brainless man,
+can walk to meet pain with a smile on his mouth
+because he knows that he is strong enough to
+bear it, or worthy enough to defy it, or because
+he is such a fool that he has no imagination.
+But these chaps are neither particularly strong,
+good, nor brainless; they're more like children,
+utterly casual with regard to trouble, and quite
+aware that it is useless to struggle against their
+elders. So they have the merriest of times while
+they can, and when the governess, Death, summons
+them to bed, they obey her with unsurprised
+quietness. It sends the mercury of one's
+optimism rising to see the way they do it. I
+search my mind to find the bigness of motive
+which supports them, but it forever evades me.
+These lads are not the kind who philosophise
+about life; they're the sort, many of them, who
+would ordinarily wear corduroys and smoke a
+cutty pipe. I suppose the Christian martyrs
+would have done the same had corduroys been
+the fashion in that day, and if a Roman Raleigh
+had discovered tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>I wrote this about midnight and didn't get any
+further, as I was up till six carrying on and firing
+the battery. After adding another page or
+two I want to get some sleep, as I shall probably
+have to go up to the observation station to watch
+the effect of fire to-night. But before I turn in
+I want to tell you that I had the most gorgeous
+mail from everybody. Now that I'm in touch
+with you all again, it's almost like saying &quot;How-do?&quot;
+every night and morning.</p>
+
+<p>I daresay you'll wonder how it feels to be under
+shell-fire. This is how it feels&mdash;you don't
+realise your danger until you come to think about
+it afterwards&mdash;at the time it's like playing coconut
+shies at a coon's head&mdash;only you're the coon's
+head. You take too much interest in the sport
+of dodging to be afraid. You'll hear the Tommies
+saying if one bursts nearly on them, &quot;Line,
+you blighter, line. Five minutes more left,&quot; just
+as though they were reprimanding the unseen
+Hun battery for rotten shooting.</p>
+
+<p>The great word of the Tommies here is &quot;No
+bloody bon&quot;&mdash;a strange mixture of French and
+English, which means that a thing is no good.
+If it pleases them it's <i>Jake</i>&mdash;though where Jake
+comes from nobody knows.</p>
+
+<p>Now I must get a wink or two, as I don't
+know when I may have to start off.</p>
+
+<p>Ever yours, with love,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XII" id="XII" />XII</h2>
+
+<p>September 19th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dearest Mother:</p>
+
+<p>I've been in France 19 days, and it hasn't
+taken me long to go into action. Soon I shall
+be quite an old hand. I'm just back from 24
+hours in the Observation Post, from which one
+watches the effect of fire. I understand now and
+forgive the one phrase which the French children
+have picked up from our Tommies on account
+of its frequent occurrence&mdash;&quot;bl&mdash;&mdash; mud.&quot;
+I never knew that mud could be so thick and
+treacly. All my fear that I might be afraid under
+shell-fire is over&mdash;you get to believe that if
+you're going to be hit you're going to be. But
+David's phrase keeps repeating itself in my mind,
+&quot;Ten thousand shall fall at thy side, etc., but it
+shall not come nigh unto thee.&quot; It's a curious
+thing that the men who are most afraid are those
+who get most easily struck. A friend of G.M.C.'s
+was hit the other day within thirty yards of me&mdash;he
+was a Princeton chap. I mentioned him in
+one of my previous letters. Our right section
+commander got a blighty two days ago and is
+probably now in England. He went off on a
+firing battery wagon, grinning all over his face,
+saying he wouldn't sell that bit of blood and
+shrapnel for a thousand pounds. I'm wearing
+your tie&mdash;it's the envy of the battery. All the
+officers wanted me to give them the name of my
+girl. It never occurs to men that mothers will
+do things like that.</p>
+
+<p>Thank the powers it has stopped raining and
+we'll be able to get dry. I came in plastered
+from head to foot with lying in the rain on my
+tummy and peering over the top of a trench.
+Isn't it a funny change from comfortable breakfasts,
+press notices and a blazing fire?</p>
+
+<p>Do you want any German souvenirs? Just at
+present I can get plenty. I have a splendid
+bayonet and a belt with Kaiser Bill's arms on
+it&mdash;but you can't forward these things from
+France. The Germans swear that they're not
+using bayonets with saw-edges, but you can buy
+them for five francs from the Tommies&mdash;ones
+they've taken from the prisoners or else picked
+up.</p>
+
+<p>You needn't be nervous about me. I'm a
+great little dodger of whizz-bangs. Besides I
+have a superstition that there's something in the
+power of M.'s cross to bless. It came with the
+mittens, and is at present round my neck.</p>
+
+<p>You know what it sounds like when they're
+shooting coals down an iron run-way into a
+cellar-well, imagine a thousand of them.
+That's what I'm hearing while I write.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you; I'm very happy.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XIII" id="XIII" />XIII</h2>
+
+<p>September 19th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dearest Father:</p>
+
+<p>I'm writing you your birthday letter early,
+as I don't know how busy I may be in the next
+week, nor how long this may take to reach you.
+You know how much love I send you and how
+I would like to be with you. D'you remember
+the birthday three years ago when we set the
+victrola going outside your room door? Those
+were my high-jinks days when very many things
+seemed possible. I'd rather be the person I am
+now than the person I was then. Life was
+selfish though glorious.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I've seen my first modern battlefield and
+am quite disillusioned about the splendour of
+war. The splendour is all in the souls of the
+men who creep through the squalor like vermin&mdash;it's
+in nothing external. There was a chap
+here the other day who deserved the V.C. four
+times over by running back through the Hun
+shell fire to bring news that the infantry wanted
+more artillery support. I was observing for my
+brigade in the forward station at the time. How
+he managed to live through the ordeal nobody
+knows. But men laugh while they do these
+things. It's fine.</p>
+
+<p>A modern battlefield is the abomination of
+abominations. Imagine a vast stretch of dead
+country, pitted with shell-holes as though it had
+been mutilated with small-pox. There's not a
+leaf or a blade of grass in sight. Every house
+has either been leveled or is in ruins. No bird
+sings. Nothing stirs. The only live sound is
+at night&mdash;the scurry of rats. You enter a kind
+of ditch, called a trench; it leads on to another
+and another in an unjoyful maze. From the
+sides feet stick out, and arms and faces&mdash;the
+dead of previous encounters. &quot;One of our
+chaps,&quot; you say casually, recognising him by his
+boots or khaki, or &quot;Poor blighter&mdash;a Hun!&quot;
+One can afford to forget enmity in the presence
+of the dead. It is horribly difficult sometimes
+to distinguish between the living and the slaughtered&mdash;they
+both lie so silently in their little kennels
+in the earthen bank. You push on&mdash;especially
+if you are doing observation work, till you
+are past your own front line and out in No
+Man's Land. You have to crouch and move
+warily now. Zing! A bullet from a German
+sniper. You laugh and whisper, &quot;A near one,
+that.&quot; My first trip to the trenches was up to
+No Man's Land. I went in the early dawn and
+came to a Madame Tussaud's show of the dead,
+frozen into immobility in the most extraordinary
+attitudes. Some of them were part way
+out of the ground, one hand pressed to the
+wound, the other pointing, the head sunken and
+the hair plastered over the forehead by repeated
+rains. I kept on wondering what my companions
+would look like had they been three weeks
+dead. My imagination became ingeniously and
+vividly morbid. When I had to step over them
+to pass, it seemed as though they must clutch at
+my trench coat and ask me to help. Poor lonely
+people, so brave and so anonymous in their
+death! Somewhere there is a woman who loved
+each one of them and would give her life for my
+opportunity to touch the poor clay that had been
+kind to her. It's like walking through the day
+of resurrection to visit No Man's Land. Then
+the Huns see you and the shrapnel begins to
+fall&mdash;you crouch like a dog and run for it.</p>
+
+<p>One gets used to shell-fire up to a point, but
+there's not a man who doesn't want to duck when
+he hears one coming. The worst of all is the
+whizz-bang, because it doesn't give you a
+chance&mdash;it pounces and is on you the same moment
+that it bangs. There's so much I wish that
+I could tell you. I can only say this, at the moment
+we're making history.</p>
+
+<p>What a curious birthday letter! I think of all
+your other birthdays&mdash;the ones before I met
+these silent men with the green and yellow faces,
+and the blackened lips which will never speak
+again. What happy times we have had as a
+family&mdash;what happy jaunts when you took me
+in those early days, dressed in a sailor suit, when
+you went hunting pictures. Yet, for all the
+damnability of what I now witness, I was never
+quieter in my heart. To have surrendered to an
+imperative self-denial brings a peace which self-seeking
+never brought.</p>
+
+<p>So don't let this birthday be less gay for my
+absence. It ought to be the proudest in your
+life&mdash;proud because your example has taught
+each of your sons to do the difficult things which
+seem right. It would have been a condemnation
+of you if any one of us had been a shirker.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;I want to buy fine things for you</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And be a soldier if I can.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The lines come back to me now. You read
+them to me first in the dark little study from a
+green oblong book. You little thought that I
+would be a soldier&mdash;even now I can hardly realise
+the fact. It seems a dream from which I
+shall wake up. Am I really killing men day by
+day? Am I really in jeopardy myself?</p>
+
+<p>Whatever happens I'm not afraid, and I'll give
+you reason to be glad of me.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 5em;">Very much love,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The poem referred to in this letter was actually
+written for Coningsby when he was between
+five and six years old. The dark little study
+which he describes was in the old house at Wesley's
+Chapel, in the City Road, London&mdash;and it
+was very dark, with only one window, looking
+out upon a dingy yard. The green oblong book
+in which I used to write my poems I still have;
+and it is an illustration of the tenacity of a child's
+memory that he should recall it. The poem was
+called <i>A Little Boy's Programme</i>, and ran thus:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I am so very young and small,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">That, when big people pass me by,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I sometimes think they are so high</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I'll never be a man at all.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And yet I want to be a man</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Because so much I want to do;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I want to buy fine things for you,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And be a soldier, if I can.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When I'm a man I will not let</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Poor little children starve, or be</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Ill-used, or stand and beg of me</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">With naked feet out in the wet.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Now, don't you laugh!&mdash;The father kissed</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">The little serious mouth and said</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;You've almost made me cry instead,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">You blessed little optimist.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XIV" id="XIV" />XIV</h2>
+
+
+<p>September 21st, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My Very Dear M.:</p>
+
+<p>I am wearing your talisman while I write
+and have a strong superstition in its efficacy.
+The efficacy of your socks is also very noticeable&mdash;I
+wore them the first time on a trip to the
+Forward Observation Station. I had to lie on
+my tummy in the mud, my nose just showing
+above the parapet, for the best part of twenty-four
+hours. Your socks little thought I would
+take them into such horrid places when you made
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Last night both the King and Sir Sam sent us
+congratulations&mdash;I popped in just at the right
+time. I daresay you know far more about our
+doings than I do. Only this morning I picked
+up the <i>London Times</i> and read a full account of
+everything I have witnessed. The account is
+likely to be still fuller in the New York papers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Home for Christmas&quot;&mdash;that's what the Tommies
+are promising their mothers and sweethearts
+in all their letters that I censor. Yesterday
+I was offered an Imperial commission in
+the army of occupation. But home for Christmas,
+will be Christmas, 1917&mdash;I can't think that
+it will be earlier.</p>
+
+<p>Very much love,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XV" id="XV" />XV</h2>
+
+<p>Sunday, September 24th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST MOTHER:</p>
+
+<p>Your locket has just reached me, and I
+have strung it round my neck with M.'s cross.
+Was it M.'s cross the other night that accounted
+for my luck? I was in a gun-pit when a shell
+landed, killing a man only a foot away from me
+and wounding three others&mdash;I and the sergeant
+were the only two to get out all right. Men
+who have been out here some time have a dozen
+stories of similar near squeaks. And talking of
+squeaks, it was a mouse that saved one man. It
+kept him awake to such an extent that he determined
+to move to another place. Just as he got
+outside the dug-out a shell fell on the roof.</p>
+
+<p>You'll be pleased to know that we have a ripping
+chaplain or Padre, as they call chaplains,
+with us. He plays the game, and I've struck up
+a great friendship with him. We discuss literature
+and religion when we're feeling a bit fed
+up. We talk at home of our faith being tested&mdash;one
+begins to ask strange questions here when
+he sees what men are allowed by the Almighty
+to do to one another, and so it's a fine thing to
+be in constant touch with a great-hearted chap
+who can risk his life daily to speak of the life
+hereafter to dying Tommies.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could tell you of my doings, but it's
+strictly against orders. You may read in the
+papers of actions in which I've taken part and
+never know that I was there.</p>
+
+<p>We live for the most part on tinned stuff, but
+our appetites make anything taste palatable.
+Living and sleeping in the open air keeps one
+ravenous. And one learns to sleep the sleep of
+the just despite the roaring of the guns.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you each one and give us peaceful*
+hearts.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XVI" id="XVI" />XVI</h2>
+
+<p>September 28th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My Dears:</p>
+
+<p>We're in the midst of a fine old show, so
+I don't get much opportunity for writing. Suffice
+it to say that I've seen the big side of war by
+now and the extraordinary uncalculating courage
+of it. Men run out of a trench to an attack
+with as much eagerness as they would display
+in overtaking a late bus. If you want to
+get an idea of what meals are like when a row
+is on, order the McAlpin to spread you a table
+where 34th crosses Broadway&mdash;and wait for the
+uptown traffic on the Elevated. It's wonderful
+to see the waiters dodging with dishes through
+the shell-holes.</p>
+
+<p>It's a wonderful autumn day, golden and mellow;
+I picture to myself what this country must
+have looked like before the desolation of war
+struck it.</p>
+
+<p>I was Brigade observation officer on September
+26th, and wouldn't have missed what I saw
+for a thousand dollars. It was a touch and go
+business, with shells falling everywhere and machine-gun
+fire&mdash;but something glorious to remember.
+I had the great joy of being useful in
+setting a Hun position on fire. I think the war
+will be over in a twelvemonth.</p>
+
+<p>Our great joy is composing menus of the
+meals we'll eat when we get home. Good-bye
+for the present.</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XVII" id="XVII" />XVII</h2>
+
+<p>October 1st, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAREST M.:</p>
+
+<p>Sunday morning, your first back in Newark.
+You're not up yet owing to the difference
+in time&mdash;I can imagine the quiet house with
+the first of the morning stealing greyly in.
+You'll be presently going to church to sit in your
+old-fashioned mahogany pew. There's not
+much of Sunday in our atmosphere&mdash;only the
+little one can manage to keep in his heart. I
+shall share the echo of yours by remembering.</p>
+
+<p>I'm waiting orders at the present moment to
+go forward with the Colonel and pick out a new
+gun position. You know I'm very happy-satisfied
+for the first time I'm doing something big
+enough to make me forget all failures and self-contempts.
+I know at last that I can measure
+up to the standard I have always coveted for myself.
+So don't worry yourselves about any note
+of hardship that you may interpret into my letters,
+for the deprivation is fully compensated for
+by the winged sense of exaltation one has.</p>
+
+<p>Things have been a little warm round us
+lately. A gun to our right, another to our rear
+and another to our front were knocked out with
+direct hits. We've got some of the chaps taking
+their meals with us now because their mess
+was all shot to blazes. There was an officer who
+was with me at the 53rd blown thirty feet into
+the air while I was watching. He picked himself
+up and insisted on carrying on, although his
+face was a mass of bruises. I walked in on the
+biggest engagement of the entire war the moment
+I came out here. There was no gradual
+breaking-in for me. My first trip to the front
+line was into a trench full of dead.</p>
+
+<p>Have you seen Lloyd George's great speech?
+I'm all with him. No matter what the cost and
+how many of us have to give our lives, this War
+must be so finished that war may be forever at
+an end. If the devils who plan wars could only
+see the abysmal result of their handiwork!
+Give them one day in the trenches under shell-fire
+when their lives aren't worth a five minutes'
+purchase&mdash;or one day carrying back the wounded
+through this tortured country, or one day in a
+Red Cross train. No one can imagine the damnable
+waste and Christlessness of this battering
+of human flesh. The only way that this War can
+be made holy is by making it so thorough that
+war will be finished for all time.</p>
+
+<p>Papa at least will be awake by now. How
+familiar the old house seems to me&mdash;I can think
+of the place of every picture. Do you set the
+victrola going now-a-days? I bet you play
+Boys in Khaki, Boys in Blue.</p>
+
+<p>Please send me anything in the way of eatables
+that the goodness of your hearts can imagine&mdash;also
+smokes.</p>
+
+<p>Later.</p>
+
+<p>I came back from the front-line all right and
+have since been hard at it firing. Your letters
+reached me in the midst of a bombardment&mdash;I
+read them in a kind of London fog of gun-powder
+smoke, with my steel helmet tilted back,
+in the interval of commanding my section
+through a megaphone.</p>
+
+<p>Don't suppose that I'm in any way unhappy&mdash;I'm
+as cheerful as a cricket and do twice as
+much hopping&mdash;I have to. There's something
+extraordinarily bracing about taking risks and
+getting away with it&mdash;especially when you know
+that you're contributing your share to a far-reaching
+result. My mother is the mother of a
+soldier now, and soldiers' mothers don't lie
+awake at night imagining&mdash;they just say a prayer
+for their sons and leave everything in God's
+hands. I'm sure you'd far rather I died than
+not play the man to the fullest of my strength.
+It isn't when you die that matters&mdash;it's how.
+Not but what I intend to return to Newark and
+make the house reek of tobacco smoke before
+I've done.</p>
+
+<p>We're continually in action now, and the casualty
+to B. has left us short-handed&mdash;moreover
+we're helping out another battery which has lost
+two officers. As you've seen by the papers,
+we've at last got the Hun on the run. Three
+hundred passed me the other day unescorted,
+coming in to give themselves up as prisoners.
+They're the dirtiest lot you ever set eyes on, and
+looked as though they hadn't eaten for months.
+I wish I could send you some souvenirs. But
+we can't send them out of France.</p>
+
+<p>I'm scribbling by candlelight and everything's
+jumping with the stamping of the guns. I wear
+the locket and cross all the time.</p>
+
+<p>Yours with much love,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XVIII" id="XVIII" />XVIII</h2>
+
+<p>October 13th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>I have only time to write and assure you
+that I am safe. We're living in trenches at
+present&mdash;I have my sleeping bag placed on a
+stretcher to keep it fairly dry. By the time you
+get this we expect to be having a rest, as we've
+been hard at it now for an unusually long time.
+How I wish that I could tell you so many things
+that are big and vivid in my mind-but the censor&mdash;!</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday I had an exciting day. I was up
+forward when word came through that an officer
+still further forward was wounded and he'd
+been caught in a heavy enemy fire. I had only
+a kid telephonist with me, but we found a
+stretcher, went forward and got him out. The
+earth was hopping up and down like pop-corn
+in a frying pan. The unfortunate thing was
+that the poor chap died on the way out. It was
+only the evening before that we had dined together
+and he had told me what he was going to
+do with his next leave.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you all,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="XIX" id="XIX" />XIX</h2>
+
+<p>October 14th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST MOTHER:</p>
+
+<p>I'm still all right and well. To-day I had
+the funniest experience of my life&mdash;got caught
+in a Hun curtain of fire and had to lie on my
+tummy for two hours in a trench with the shells
+bursting five yards from me&mdash;and never a
+scratch. You know how I used to wonder what
+I'd do under such circumstances. Well, I
+laughed. All I could think of was the sleek people
+walking down Fifth Avenue, and the equally
+sleek crowds taking tea at the Waldorf. It
+struck me as ludicrous that I, who had been one
+of them, should be lying there lunchless. For
+a little while I was slightly deaf with the concussions.</p>
+
+<p>That poem keeps on going through my head,</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Oh, to come home once more, when the dusk is falling,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">To see the nursery lighted and the children's table spread;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;Mother, mother, mother!&quot; the eager voices calling,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">&quot;The baby was so sleepy that he had to go to bed!&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Wouldn't it be good, instead of sitting in a
+Hun dug-out?</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours lovingly,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 16.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XX" id="XX" />XX</h2>
+
+<p>October 15th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Ones:</p>
+
+<p>We're still in action, but are in hopes that
+soon we may be moved to winter quarters.
+We've had our taste of mud, and are anxious to
+move into better quarters before we get our next.
+I think I told you that our O.C. had got
+wounded in the feet, and our right section commander
+got it in the shoulder a little earlier&mdash;so
+we're a bit short-handed and find ourselves with
+plenty of work.</p>
+
+<p>I have curiously lucid moments when recent
+happenings focus themselves in what seems to be
+their true perspective. The other night I was
+Forward Observation officer on one of our recent
+battlefields. I had to watch the front all
+night for signals, etc. There was a full white
+moon sailing serenely overhead, and when I
+looked at it I could almost fancy myself back in
+the old melancholy pomp of autumn woodlands
+where the leaves were red, not with the colour
+of men's blood. My mind went back to so many
+by-gone days-especially to three years ago. I
+seemed so vastly young then, upon reflection.
+For a little while I was full of regrets for many
+things wasted, and then I looked at the battlefield
+with its scattered kits and broken rifles.
+Nothing seemed to matter very much. A rat
+came out-then other rats. I stood there feeling
+extraordinarily aloof from all things that
+can hurt, and&mdash;you'll smile&mdash;I planned a novel.
+O, if I get back, how differently I shall write!
+When you've faced the worst in so many forms,
+you lose your fear and arrive at peace. There's
+a marvellous grandeur about all this carnage and
+desolation&mdash;men's souls rise above the distress&mdash;they
+have to in order to survive. When you see
+how cheap men's bodies are you cannot help but
+know that the body is the least part of personality.</p>
+
+<p>You can let up on your nervousness when
+you get this, for I shall almost certainly be in a
+safer zone. We've done more than our share
+and must be withdrawn soon. There's hardly
+a battery which does not deserve a dozen
+D.S.O.'s with a V.C. or two thrown in.</p>
+
+<p>It's 4.30 now&mdash;you'll be in church and, I hope,
+wearing my flowers. Wait till I come back and
+you shall go to church with the biggest bunch
+of roses that ever were pinned to a feminine
+chest. I wonder when that will be.</p>
+
+<p>We have heaps of humour out here. You
+should have seen me this morning, sitting on the
+gun-seat while my batman cut my hair. A sand-bag
+was spread over my shoulders in place of a
+towel and the gun-detachment stood round and
+gave advice. I don't know what I look like, for
+I haven't dared to gaze into my shaving mirror.</p>
+
+<p>Good luck to us all,</p>
+
+<p>CON</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXI" id="XXI" />XXI</h2>
+
+<p>October 18th, 1910</p>
+
+<p>Dearest M.:</p>
+
+<p>I've come down to the lines to-day; to-morrow
+I go back again. I'm sitting alone in
+a deep chalk dug-out&mdash;it is 10 p.m. and I have
+lit a fire by splitting wood with a bayonet.
+Your letters from Montreal reached me yesterday.
+They came up in the water-cart when we'd
+all begun to despair of mail. It was wonderful
+the silence that followed while every one went
+back home for a little while, and most of them
+met their best girls. We've fallen into the habit
+of singing in parts. Jerusalem the Golden
+is a great favourite as we wait for our breakfast&mdash;we
+go through all our favourite songs, including
+Poor Old Adam Was My Father. Our
+greatest favourite is one which is symbolising
+the hopes that are in so many hearts on this
+greatest battlefield in history. We sing it under
+shell-fire as a kind of prayer, we sing it as
+we struggle knee-deep in the appalling mud, we
+sing it as we sit by a candle in our deep captured
+German dug-outs. It runs like this:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;There's a long, long trail a-winding</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Into the land of my dreams,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Where the nightingales are singing</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And a white moon beams:</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">There's a long, long night of waiting</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Until my dreams all come true;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Till the day when I'll be going down</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">That long, long trail with you.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>You ought to be able to get it, and then you will
+be singing it when I'm doing it.</p>
+
+<p>No, I don't know what to ask from you for
+Christmas&mdash;unless a plum pudding and a general
+surprise box of sweets and food stuffs. If
+you don't mind my suggesting it, I wouldn't a
+bit mind a Christmas box at once&mdash;a schoolboy's
+tuck box. I wear the locket, cross, and tie all
+the time as kind of charms against danger&mdash;they
+give me the feeling of loving hands going with
+me everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">God bless you.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours ever,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 13.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXII" id="XXII" />XXII</h2>
+
+<p>October 23, 1916</p>
+
+<p>Dearest All:</p>
+
+<p>As you know I have been in action ever
+since I left England and am still. I've lived in
+various extemporised dwellings and am at present
+writing from an eight foot deep hole dug in
+the ground and covered over with galvanised
+iron and sand-bags. We have made ourselves
+very comfortable, and a fire is burning&mdash;I correct
+that&mdash;comfortable until it rains, I should
+say, when the water finds its own level. We
+have just finished with two days of penetrating
+rain and mist&mdash;in the trenches the mud was up
+to my knees, so you can imagine the joy of wading
+down these shell-torn tunnels. Good thick
+socks have been priceless.</p>
+
+<p>You'll be pleased to hear that two days ago
+I was made Right Section Commander&mdash;which
+is fairly rapid promotion. It means a good deal
+more work and responsibility, but it gives me a
+contact with the men which I like.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know when I'll get leave&mdash;not for another
+two months anyway. It would be ripping
+if I had word in time for you to run over to
+England for the brief nine days.</p>
+
+<p>I plan novels galore and wonder whether I
+shall ever write them the way I see them now.
+My imagination is to an extent crushed by the
+stupendousness of reality. I think I am changed
+in some stern spiritual way&mdash;stripped of flabbiness.
+I am perhaps harder&mdash;I can't say. That
+I should be a novelist seems unreasonable&mdash;it's
+so long since I had my own way in the world
+and met any one on artistic terms. But I have
+enough ego left to be very interested in my book.
+And by the way, when we're out at the front and
+the battery wants us to come in they simply
+phone up the password, &quot;Slaves of Freedom,&quot;
+the meaning of which we all understand.</p>
+
+<p>You are ever in my thoughts, and I pray the
+day may not be far distant when we meet again.</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXIII" id="XXIII" />XXIII</h2>
+
+<p>October 27th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dearest Family:</p>
+
+<p>All to-day I've been busy registering our
+guns. There is little chance of rest&mdash;one would
+suppose that we intended to end the war by spring.</p>
+
+<p>Two new officers joined our battery from
+England, which makes the work lighter. One
+of them brings the news that D., one of the two
+officers who crossed over from England with me
+and wandered through France with me in search
+of our Division, is already dead. He was a
+corking fellow, and I'm very sorry. He was
+caught by a shell in the head and legs.</p>
+
+<p>I am still living in a sand-bagged shell-hole
+eight feet beneath the level of the ground. I
+have a sleeping bag with an eider-down inside
+it, for my bed; it is laid on a stretcher, which
+is placed in a roofed-in trench. For meals,
+when there isn't a block on the roads, we do very
+well; we subscribe pretty heavily to the mess, and
+have an officer back at the wagon-lines to do our
+purchasing. When we move forward into a new
+position, however, we go pretty short, as roads
+have to be built for the throng of traffic. Most
+of what we eat is tinned&mdash;and I never want to
+see tinned salmon again when this war is ended.
+I have a personal servant, a groom and two
+horses&mdash;but haven't been on a horse for seven
+weeks on account of being in action. We're all
+pretty fed up with continuous firing and living
+so many hours in the trenches. The way artillery
+is run to-day an artillery lieutenant is
+more in the trenches than an infantryman&mdash;the
+only thing he doesn't do is to go over the parapet
+in an attack. And one of our chaps did that
+the other day, charging the Huns with a bar of
+chocolate in one hand and a revolver in the
+other. I believe he set a fashion which will be
+imitated. Three times in my experience I have
+seen the infantry jump out of their trenches
+and go across. It's a sight never to be forgotten.
+One time there were machine guns behind
+me and they sent a message to me, asking me to
+lie down and take cover. That was impossible,
+as I was observing for my brigade, so I lay on
+the parapet till the bullets began to fall too close
+for comfort, then I dodged out into a shell-hole
+with the German barrage bursting all around
+me, and had a most gorgeous view of a modern
+attack. That was some time ago, so you needn't
+be nervous.</p>
+
+<p>Have I mentioned rum to you? I never
+tasted it to my knowledge until I came out here.
+We get it served us whenever we're wet. It's
+the one thing which keeps a man alive in the
+winter&mdash;you can sleep when you're drenched
+through and never get a cold if you take it.</p>
+
+<p>At night, by a fire, eight feet underground,
+we sing all the dear old songs. We manage a
+kind of glee&mdash;Clementina, The Long, Long Trail,
+Three Blind Mice, Long, Long Ago, Rock of
+Ages. Hymns are quite favourites.</p>
+
+<p>Don't worry about me; your prayers weave
+round me a mantle of defence.</p>
+
+<p>Yours with more love than I can write,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXIV" id="XXIV" />XXIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+October 31st, 1916.<br />
+Hallowe'en.<br />
+<br />
+Dearest People:<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Once more I'm taking the night-firing and
+so have a chance to write to you. I got letters
+from you all, and they each deserve answers, but
+I have so little time to write. We've been having
+beastly weather&mdash;drowned out of our little
+houses below ground, with rivers running through
+our beds. The mud is once more up to our knees
+and gets into whatever we eat. The wonder is
+that we keep healthy&mdash;I suppose it's the open air.
+My throat never troubles me and I'm free from
+colds in spite of wet feet. The main disadvantage
+is that we rarely get a chance to wash or
+change our clothes. Your ideas of an army with
+its buttons all shining is quite erroneous; we look
+like drunk and disorderlies who have spent the
+night in the gutter&mdash;and we have the same instinct
+for fighting.</p>
+
+<p>In the trenches the other day I heard mother's
+Suffolk tongue and had a jolly talk with a chap
+who shared many of my memories. It was his
+first trip in and the Huns were shelling badly, but
+he didn't seem at all upset.</p>
+
+<p>We're still hard at it and have given up all
+idea of a rest&mdash;the only way we'll get one is with
+a blighty. You say how often you tell yourselves
+that the same moon looks down on me; it does,
+but on a scene how different! We advance over
+old battlefields&mdash;everything is blasted. If you
+start digging, you turn up what's left of something
+human. If there were any grounds for superstition,
+surely the places in which I have been
+should be ghost-haunted. One never thinks
+about it. For myself I have increasingly the feeling
+that I am protected by your prayers; I tell
+myself so when I am in danger.</p>
+
+<p>Here I sit in an old sweater and muddy
+breeches, the very reverse of your picture of a
+soldier, and I imagine to myself your receipt of
+this. Our chief interest is to enquire whether
+milk, jam and mail have come up from the wagon-lines;
+it seems a faery-tale that there are places
+where milk and jam can be had for the buying.
+See how simple we become.</p>
+
+<p>Poor little house at Kootenay! I hate to think
+of it empty. We had such good times there
+twelve months ago. They have a song here to a
+nursery rhyme lilt, Apr&egrave;s le Guerre Finis; it
+goes on to tell of all the good times we'll have
+when the war is ended. Every night I invent a
+new story of my own celebration of the event,
+usually, as when I was a kiddie, just before I fall
+asleep&mdash;only it doesn't seem possible that the war
+will ever end.</p>
+
+<p>I hear from the boys very regularly. There's
+just the chance that I may get leave to London
+in the New Year and meet them before they set
+out. I always picture you with your heads high
+in the air. I'm glad to think of you as proud
+because of the pain we've made you suffer.</p>
+
+<p>Once again I shall think of you on Papa's
+birthday. I don't think this will be the saddest
+he will have to remember. It might have been
+if we three boys had still all been with him. If
+I were a father, I would prefer at all costs that
+my sons should be men. What good comrades
+we've always been, and what long years of happy
+times we have in memory&mdash;all the way down
+from a little boy in a sailor-suit to Kootenay!</p>
+
+<p>I fell asleep in the midst of this. I've now got
+to go out and start the other gun firing. With
+very much love.</p>
+
+<p>Yours,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXV" id="XXV" />XXV</h2>
+
+<p>November 1st, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My Dearest M.:</p>
+
+<p>Peace after a storm! Your letter was not
+brought up by the water-wagon this evening, but
+by an orderly&mdash;the mud prevented wheel-traffic.
+I was just sitting down to read it when Fritz began
+to pay us too much attention. I put down
+your letter, grabbed my steel helmet, rushed out
+to see where the shells were falling, and then
+cleared my men to a safer area. (By the way,
+did I tell you that I had been made Right Section
+Commander?) After about half an hour I
+came back and settled down by a fire made of
+smashed ammunition boxes in a stove borrowed
+from a ruined cottage. I'm always ashamed that
+my letters contain so little news and are so uninteresting.
+This thing is so big and dreadful
+that it does not bear putting down on paper. I
+read the papers with the accounts of singing soldiers
+and other rubbish; they depict us as though
+we were a lot of hair-brained idiots instead of
+men fully realising our danger, who plod on because
+it's our duty. I've seen a good many men
+killed by now&mdash;we all have&mdash;consequently the
+singing soldier story makes us smile. We've got
+a big job; we know that we've got to &quot;Carry
+On&quot; whatever happens&mdash;so we wear a stern grin
+and go to it. There's far more heroism in the
+attitude of men out here than in the footlight attitude
+that journalists paint for the public. It
+isn't a singing matter to go on firing a gun when
+gun-pits are going up in smoke within sight of
+you.</p>
+
+<p>What a terrible desecration war is! You go
+out one week and look through your glasses at a
+green, smiling country-little churches, villages
+nestling among woods, white roads running
+across a green carpet; next week you see nothing
+but ruins and a country-side pitted with shell-holes.
+All night the machine guns tap like rivet-ting
+machines when a New York sky-scraper is
+in the building. Then suddenly in the night a
+bombing attack will start, and the sky grows
+white with signal rockets. Orders come in for
+artillery retaliation, and your guns begin to stamp
+the ground like stallions; in the darkness on every
+side you can see them snorting fire. Then stillness
+again, while Death counts his harvest; the
+white rockets grow fainter and less hysterical.
+For an hour there is blackness.</p>
+
+<p>My batman consoles himself with singing,</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;Pack up your troubles in your old kit-bag,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And smile, smile, smile.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>There's a lot in his philosophy&mdash;it's best to go on
+smiling even when some one who was once your
+pal lies forever silent in his blanket on a
+stretcher.</p>
+
+<p>The great uplifting thought is that we have
+proved ourselves men. In our death we set a
+standard which in ordinary life we could never
+have followed. Inevitably we should have sunk
+below our highest self. Here we know that the
+world will remember us and that our loved ones,
+in spite of tears, will be proud of us. What God
+will say to us we cannot guess&mdash;but He can't be
+too hard on men who did their duty. I think we
+all feel that trivial former failures are washed out
+by this final sacrifice. When little M. used to
+recite &quot;Breathes there a man with soul so dead,
+who never to himself had said, 'This is my own,
+my native land,'&quot; I never thought that I should
+have the chance that has now been given to me.
+I feel a great and solemn gratitude that I have
+been thought worthy. Life has suddenly become
+effective and worthy by reason of its carelessness
+of death.</p>
+
+<p>By the way, that Princeton man I mentioned so
+long ago was killed forty yards away from me
+on my first trip into the trenches. Probably G.
+M'C. and his other friends know by now. He
+was the first man I ever saw snuffed out.</p>
+
+<p>I'm wearing your mittens and find them a great
+comfort. I'll look forward to some more of your
+socks&mdash;I can do with plenty of them. If any of
+your friends are making things for soldiers, I
+wish you'd get them to send them to this battery,
+as they would be gratefully accepted by the men.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could come to <i>The Music Master</i> with
+you. I wonder how long till we do all those intimately
+family things together again.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, my dearest M. I live for home letters
+and am rarely disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you, and love to you all.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXVI" id="XXVI" />XXVI</h2>
+
+<p>November 4th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>My Dearest Mother:</p>
+
+<p>This morning I was wakened up in the
+gunpit where I was sleeping by the arrival of the
+most wonderful parcel of mail. It was really a
+kind of Christmas morning for me. My servant
+had lit a fire in a punctured petrol can and the
+place looked very cheery. First of all entered an
+enormous affair, which turned out to be a stove
+which C. had sent. Then there was a sand-bag
+containing all your gifts. You may bet I made
+for that first, and as each knot was undone remembered
+the loving hands that had done it up.
+I am now going up to a twenty-four-hour shift
+of observing, and shall take up the malted milk
+and some blocks of chocolate for a hot drink.
+It somehow makes you seem very near to me to
+receive things packed with your hands. When
+I go forward I shall also take candles and a copy
+of <i>Anne Veronica</i> with me, so that if I get a
+chance I can forget time.</p>
+
+<p>Always when I write to you odds and ends
+come to mind, smacking of local colour. After
+an attack some months ago I met a solitary private
+wandering across a shell-torn field, I
+watched him and thought something was wrong
+by the aimlessness of his progress. When I
+spoke to him, he looked at me mistily and said,
+&quot;Dead men. Moonlit road.&quot; He kept on repeating
+the phrase, and it was all that one could
+get out of him. Probably the dead men and the
+moonlit road were the last sights he had seen before
+he went insane.</p>
+
+<p>Another touching thing happened two days ago.
+A Major turned up who had travelled fifty miles
+by motor lorries and any conveyance he could
+pick up on the road. He had left his unit to
+come to have a glimpse of our front-line trench
+where his son was buried. The boy had died
+there some days ago in going over the parapet. I
+persuaded him that he ought not to go alone, and
+that in any case it wasn't a healthy spot. At last
+he consented to let me take him to a point from
+which he could see the ground over which his
+son had attacked and led his men. The sun
+was sinking behind us. He stood there very
+straightly, peering through my glasses&mdash;and then
+forgot all about me and began speaking to his son
+in childish love-words. &quot;Gone West,&quot; they call
+dying out here&mdash;we rarely say that a man is dead.
+I found out afterwards that it was the boy's
+mother the Major was thinking of when he
+pledged himself to visit the grave in the front-line.</p>
+
+<p>But there are happier things than that. For
+instance, you should hear us singing at night in
+our dug-out&mdash;every tune we ever learnt, I believe.
+Silver Threads Among the Gold, In the
+Gloaming, The Star of Bethlehem, I Hear You
+Calling Me, interspersed with Everybody Works
+but Father, and Poor Old Adam, etc.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could know in time when I get my
+leave for you to come over and meet me. I'm
+going to spend my nine days in the most glorious
+ways imaginable. To start with I won't eat anything
+that's canned and, to go on, I won't get out
+of bed till I feel inclined. And if you're
+there&mdash;!</p>
+
+<p>Dreams and nonsense! God bless you all and
+keep us near and safe though absent. Alive or
+&quot;Gone West&quot; I shall never be far from you; you
+may depend on that&mdash;and I shall always hope to
+feel you brave and happy. This is a great
+game&mdash;cheese-mites pitting themselves against all
+the splendours of Death. Please, please write
+well ahead, so that I may not miss your Christmas
+letters.</p>
+
+<p>Yours lovingly,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXVII" id="XXVII" />XXVII</h2>
+
+<p>November 6th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>My Dear Ones:</p>
+
+<p>Such a wonderful day it has been&mdash;I
+scarcely know where to start. I came down last
+night from twenty-four hours in the mud, where
+I had been observing. I'd spent the night in a
+hole dug in the side of the trench and a dead
+Hun forming part of the roof. I'd sat there re-living
+so many things&mdash;the ecstatic moments of
+my life when I first touched fame&mdash;and my feet
+were so cold that I could not feel them, so I
+thought all the harder of the pleasant things of
+the past. Then, as I say, I came back to the gun
+position to learn that I was to have one day off
+at the back of the lines. You can't imagine what
+that meant to me&mdash;one day in a country that is
+green, one day where there is no shell-fire, one
+day where you don't turn up corpses with your
+tread! For two months I have never left the
+guns except to go forward and I have never been
+from under shell-fire. All night long as I have
+slept the ground had been shaken by the stamping
+of the guns&mdash;and now after two months, to
+come back to comparative normality! The reason
+for this privilege being granted was that the
+powers that he had come to the conclusion that
+it was time I had a bath. Since I sleep in my
+clothes and water is too valuable for washing
+anything but the face and hands, they were probably
+right in their guess at my condition.</p>
+
+<p>So with the greatest holiday of my life in prospect
+I went to the empty gunpit in which I sleep,
+and turned in. This morning I set out early with
+my servant, tramping back across the long, long
+battlefields which our boys have won. The mud
+was knee-deep in places, but we floundered on
+till we came to our old and deserted gun-position
+where my horses waited for me. From there I
+rode to the wagon-lines&mdash;the first time I've sat
+a horse since I came into action. Far behind
+me the thunder of winged murder grew
+more faint. The country became greener; trees
+even had leaves upon them which fluttered against
+the grey-blue sky. It was wonderful&mdash;like
+awaking from an appalling nightmare. My little
+beast was fresh and seemed to share my joy,
+for she stepped out bravely.</p>
+
+<p>When I arrived at the wagon-lines I would not
+wait&mdash;I longed to see something even greener and
+quieter. My groom packed up some oats and
+away we went again. My first objective was the
+military baths; I lay in hot water for half-an-hour
+and read the advertisements of my book.
+As I lay there, for the first time since I've been
+out, I began to get a half-way true perspective of
+myself. What's left of the egotism of the author
+came to life, and&mdash;now laugh&mdash;I planned my next
+novel&mdash;planned it to the sound of men singing,
+because they were clean for the first time in
+months. I left my towels and soap with a military
+policeman, by the roadside, and went prancing
+off along country roads in search of the almost
+forgotten places where people don't kill one
+another. Was it imagination? There seemed
+to me to be a different look in the faces of the
+men I met&mdash;for the time being they were neither
+hunters nor hunted. There were actually cows
+in the fields. At one point, where pollarded trees
+stand like a Hobbema sketch against the sky, a
+group of officers were coursing a hare, following
+a big black hound on horseback. We lost our
+way. A drenching rainstorm fell over us&mdash;we
+didn't care; and we saw as we looked back a
+most beautiful thing&mdash;a rainbow over green fields.
+It was as romantic as the first rainbow in childhood.</p>
+
+<p>All day I have been seeing lovely and familiar
+things as though for the first time. I've been a
+sort of Lazarus, rising out of his tomb and praising
+God at the sound of a divine voice. You
+don't know how exquisite a ploughed field can
+look, especially after rain, unless you have feared
+that you might never see one again.</p>
+
+<p>I came to a grey little village, where civilians
+were still living, and then to a gate and a garden.
+In the cottage was a French peasant woman who
+smiled, patted my hair because it was curly, and
+chattered interminably. The result was a huge
+omelette and a bottle of champagne. Then came
+a touch of naughtiness&mdash;a lady visitor with a
+copy of <i>La Vie Parisienne</i>, which she promptly
+bestowed on the English soldier. I read it, and
+dreamt of the time when I should walk the
+Champs Elys&eacute;es again. It was growing dusk
+when I turned back to the noise of battle. There
+was a white moon in a milky sky. Motor-bikes
+fled by me, great lorries driven by Jehus from
+London buses, and automobiles which too poignantly
+had been Strand taxis and had taken lovers
+home from the Gaiety. I jogged along thinking
+very little, but supremely happy. Now I'm back
+at the wagon-line; to-morrow I go back to the
+guns. Meanwhile I write to you by a guttering
+candle.</p>
+
+<p>Life, how I love you! What a wonderful
+kindly thing I could make of you to-night.
+Strangely the vision has come to me of all that
+you mean. Now I could write. So soon you
+may go from me or be changed into a form of
+existence which all my training has taught me
+to dread. After death is there only nothingness?
+I think that for those who have missed love in
+this life there must be compensations&mdash;the little
+children whom they ought to have had, perhaps.
+To-day, after so many weeks, I have seen little
+children again.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, so strange a havoc does this war work
+that, if I have to &quot;Go West,&quot; I shall go <i>proudly</i>
+and quietly. I have seen too many men die
+bravely to make a fuss if my turn comes. A
+mixed passenger list old Father Charon must
+have each night&mdash;Englishmen, Frenchmen, and
+Huns. To-morrow I shall have another sight
+of the greenness and then&mdash;the guns.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know whether I have been able to make
+any of my emotions clear to you in my letters.
+Terror has a terrible fascination. Up to now I
+have always been afraid&mdash;afraid of small fears.
+At last I meet fear itself and it stings my pride
+into an unpremeditated courage.</p>
+
+<p>I've just had a pile of letters from you all.
+How ripping it is to be remembered! Letters
+keep one civilised.</p>
+
+<p>It's late and I'm very tired. God bless you
+each and all.</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXVIII" id="XXVIII" />XXVIII</h2>
+
+<p>November 15th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dear Father:</p>
+
+<p>I've owed you a letter for some time, but
+I've been getting very little leisure. You can't
+send steel messages to the Kaiser and love-notes
+to your family in the same breath.</p>
+
+<p>I am amazed at the spirit you three are showing
+and almighty proud that you can muster
+such courage. I suppose none of us quite realised
+our strength till it came to the test. There
+was a time when we all doubted our own heroism.
+I think we were typical of our age. Every novel
+of the past ten years has been more or less a
+study in sentiment and self-distrust. We used
+to wonder what kind of stuff Drake's men were
+made of that they could jest while they died.
+We used to contrast ourselves with them to our
+own disfavour. Well, we know now that when
+there's a New World to be discovered we can
+still rise up reincarnated into spiritual pirates.
+It wasn't the men of our age who were at fault,
+but the New World that was lacking. Our New
+World is the Kingdom of Heroism, the doors of
+which are flung so wide that the meanest of us
+may enter. I know men out here who are the
+dependable daredevils of their brigades, who in
+peace times were nuisances and as soon as peace
+is declared will become nuisances again. At the
+moment they're fine, laughing at Death and smiling
+at the chance of agony. There's a man I
+know of who had a record sheet of crimes.
+When he was out of action he was always drunk
+and up for office. To get rid of him, they put
+him into the trench mortars and within a month
+he had won his D.C.M. He came out and went
+on the spree&mdash;this particular spree consisted in
+stripping a Highland officer of his kilts on a
+moonlight night. For this he was sentenced to
+several months in a military prison, but asked to
+be allowed to serve his sentence in the trenches.
+He came out from his punishment a King's sergeant&mdash;which
+means that whatever he did nobody
+could degrade him. He got this for lifting
+his trench mortar over the parapet when all the
+detachment were killed. Carrying it out into a
+shell-hole, he held back the Hun attack and saved
+the situation. He got drunk again, and again
+chose to be returned to the trenches. This time
+his head was blown off while he was engaged in
+a special feat of gallantry. What are you to say
+to such men? Ordinarily they'd be blackguards,
+but war lifts them into splendour. In the same
+way you see mild men, timid men, almost girlish
+men, carrying out duties which in other wars
+would have won V.C.'s. I don't think the soul
+of courage ever dies out of the race any more
+than the capacity for love. All it means is that
+the occasion is not present. For myself I try
+to analyse my emotions; am I simply numb, or
+do I imitate other people's coolness and shall I
+fear life again when the war is ended? There
+is no explanation save the great army phrase
+&quot;Carry on.&quot; We &quot;carry on&quot; because, if we
+don't, we shall let other men down and put their
+lives in danger. And there's more than that&mdash;we
+all want to live up to the standard that
+prompted us to come.</p>
+
+<p>One talks about splendour&mdash;but war isn't
+splendid except in the individual sense. A man
+by his own self-conquest can make it splendid
+for himself, but in the massed sense it's squalid.
+There's nothing splendid about a battlefield when
+the fight is ended&mdash;shreds of what once were men,
+tortured, levelled landscapes&mdash;the barbaric loneliness
+of Hell. I shall never forget my first dead
+man. He was a signalling officer, lying in the
+dawn on a muddy hill. I thought he was asleep
+at first, but when I looked more closely, I saw
+that his shoulder blade was showing white
+through his tunic. He was wearing black boots.
+It's odd, but the sight of black boots have the
+same effect on me now that black and white
+stripes had in childhood. I have the superstitious
+feeling that to wear them would bring me
+bad luck.</p>
+
+<p>Tonight we've been singing in parts, Back
+in the Dear Dead Days Beyond Recall&mdash;a mournful
+kind of ditty to sing under the circumstances&mdash;so
+mournful that we had to have a game
+of five hundred to cheer us up.</p>
+
+<p>It's now nearly 2 a.m., and I have to go out to
+the guns again before I go to bed. I carry your
+letters about in my pockets and read them at odd
+intervals in all kinds of places that you can't
+imagine.</p>
+
+<p>Cheer up and remember that I'm quite happy.
+I wish you could be with me for just one day
+to understand.</p>
+
+<p>Yours,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXIX" id="XXIX" />XXIX</h2>
+
+<p>December 3rd, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dear Boys:</p>
+
+<p>By this time you will be all through your
+exams and I hope have both passed. It'll be
+splendid if you can go together to the same station.
+You envy me, you say; well, I rather envy
+you. I'd like to be with you. You, at least,
+don't have Napoleon's fourth antagonist with
+which to contend&mdash;mud. But at present I'm
+clean and billeted in an estaminet, in a not too
+bad little village. There's an old mill and still
+older church, and the usual farmhouses with the
+indispensable pile of manure under the front
+windows. We shall have plenty of hard work
+here, licking our men into shape and re-fitting.</p>
+
+<p>You know how I've longed to sleep between
+sheets; I can now, but find them so cold that I
+still use my sleeping bag&mdash;such is human inconsistency.
+But yesterday I had a boiling bath&mdash;as
+good a bath as could be found in a New York
+hotel&mdash;and I am CLEAN.</p>
+
+<p>I woke up this morning to hear some one singing
+Casey Jones&mdash;consequently I thought of
+former Christmases. My mind has been travelling
+back very much of late. Suddenly I see
+something here which reminds me of the time
+when E. and I were at Lisieux, or even of our
+Saturday excursions to Nelson when we were all
+together at the ranch.</p>
+
+<p>Did I tell you that B., our officer who was
+wounded two months ago, has just returned to
+us. This morning he got news that his young
+brother has been killed in the place which we have
+left. I wonder when we shall grow tired of
+stabbing and shooting and killing. It seems to me
+that the war cannot end in less than two years.</p>
+
+<p>I have made myself nice to the Brigade interpreter
+and he has found me a delightful room
+with electric light and a fire. It's in an old
+farmhouse with a brick terrace in front. My
+room is on the ground floor and tile-paved. The
+chairs are rush-bottomed and there are old quaint
+china plates on the shelves. There is also a
+quite charming mademoiselle. So you see, you
+don't need to pity me any more.</p>
+
+<p>Just at present I'm busy getting up the Brigade
+Christmas Entertainment. The Colonel asked
+me to do it, otherwise I should have said <i>no</i>, as
+I want all the time I can get to myself. You
+can't think how jolly it is to sit again in a room
+which is temporarily yours after living in dug-outs,
+herded side by side with other men. I can
+be <i>me</i> now, and not a soldier of thousands when
+I write. You shall hear from me again soon.
+Hope you're having a ripping time in London.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours ever,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 14.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXX" id="XXX" />XXX</h2>
+
+<p>December 5th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>DEAREST M.:</p>
+
+<p>I've just come in from my last tour of
+inspection as orderly officer, and it's close on
+midnight. I'm getting this line off to you to let
+you know that I expect to get my nine days'
+leave about the beginning of January. How I
+wish it were possible to have you in London when
+I arrive, or, failing that, to spend my leave in
+New York!</p>
+
+<p>To-morrow I make an early start on horseback
+for a market of the old-fashioned sort which
+is held at a town near by. Can you dimly picture
+me with my groom, followed by a mess-cart,
+going from stall to stall and bartering with
+the peasants? It'll be rather good fun and something
+quite out of my experience.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas will be over by the time you get this,
+and I do hope that you had a good one. I paused
+to talk to the other officers; they say that they
+are sure that you are very beautiful and have a
+warm heart, and would like to send them a five-storey
+layer cake, half a dozen bottles of port
+and one Paris chef. At present I am the Dives
+of the mess and dole out luxuries to these Lazaruses.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye for the present.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever lovingly,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXI" id="XXXI" />XXXI</h2>
+
+<p>December 6th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dearest M.:</p>
+
+<p>I've just undone your Christmas parcels,
+and already I am wearing the waistcoat and
+socks, and my mouth is hot with the ginger.</p>
+
+<p>I expect to get leave for England on January
+10th. I do wish it might be possible for some
+of you to cross the ocean and be in London with
+me&mdash;and I don't see what there is to prevent you.
+Unless the war ends sooner than any of us expect,
+it is not likely that I shall get another leave
+in less than nine months. So, if you want to
+come and if there's time when you receive this
+letter, just hop on a boat and let's see what London
+looks like together.</p>
+
+<p>I wonder what kind of a Christmas you'll have.
+I shall picture it all. You may hear me tiptoeing
+up the stairs if you listen very hard. Where
+does the soul go in sleep? Surely mine flies back
+to where all of you dear people are.</p>
+
+<p>I came back to my farm yesterday to find a
+bouquet of paper flowers at the head of my bed
+with a note pinned on it. Over my fire-place was
+hung a pathetic pair of farm-girls' heavy Sunday
+boots, all brightly polished, with two other
+notes pinned on them. The Feast of St. Nicholas
+on December 7th is an opportunity for unmarried
+men to be reminded that there are unmarried
+girls in the world&mdash;wherefore the flowers.
+I enclose the notes. Keep them,&mdash;they may be
+useful for a book some day.</p>
+
+<p>I'm having a pretty good rest, and am still in
+my old farmhouse.</p>
+
+<p>Love to all.</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXII" id="XXXII" />XXXII</h2>
+
+<p>December 15th, 1916.</p>
+
+
+<p>Dearest All:</p>
+
+<p>At the present I'm just where mother
+hoped I'd be&mdash;in a deep dug-out about twenty
+feet down&mdash;we're trying to get a fire lighted, and
+consequently the place is smoked out. Where
+I'll be for Christmas I don't know, but I hope
+by then to be in billets. I've just come back from
+the trenches, where I've been observing. The
+mud is not nearly so bad where I am now, and
+with a few days' more work, we should be quite
+comfortable. You'll have received my cable
+about my getting leave soon&mdash;I'm wondering
+whether the Atlantic is sufficiently quiet for any
+of you to risk a crossing.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Basil! Your letter was the first news I
+got of his death. I must have watched the attack
+in which he lost his life. One wonders now
+how it was that some instinct did not warn me
+that one of those khaki dots jumping out of the
+trenches was the cousin who stayed with us in
+London.</p>
+
+<p>I'm wondering what this mystery of the German
+Chancellor is all about&mdash;some peace proposals,
+I suppose&mdash;which are sure to prove bombastic
+and unacceptable. It seems to us out here
+as though the war must go on forever. Like
+a boy's dream of the far-off freedom of manhood,
+the day appears when we shall step out into
+the old liberty of owning our own lives. What
+a celebration we'll have when I come home! I
+can't quite grasp the joy of it.</p>
+
+<p>I've got to get this letter off quite soon if it's
+to go to-day. It ought to reach, you by January
+12th or thereabouts. You may be sure my
+thoughts will have been with you on Christmas
+day. I shall look back and remember all the by-gone
+good times and then plan for Christmas,
+1917. God keep us all.</p>
+
+<p>Ever yours,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXIII" id="XXXIII" />XXXIII</h2>
+
+<p>December 18th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>My Dearest M.:</p>
+
+<p>I always feel when I write a joint letter
+to the family that I'm cheating each one of you,
+but it's so very difficult to get time to write as
+often as I'd like. It's a week to Christmas and
+I picture the beginnings of the preparations. I
+can look back and remember so many such
+preparations, especially when we were kiddies in
+London. What good times one has in a life!
+I've been sitting with my groom by the fire to-night
+while he dried my clothes. I've mentioned
+him to you before as having lived in Nelson, and
+worked at the Silver King mine. We both grew
+ecstatic over British Columbia.</p>
+
+<p>I am hoping all the time that the boys may be
+in England at the time I get my leave&mdash;I hardly
+dare hope that any of you will be there. But
+it would he grand if you could manage it&mdash;I long
+very much to see you all again. I can just
+imagine my first month home again. I shan't
+let any of you work. I shall be the incurable
+boy. I've spent the best part of to-day out in
+No Man's Land, within seventy yards of the
+Huns. Quite an experience, I assure you, and
+one that I wouldn't have missed for worlds. I'll
+have heaps to write into novels one day&mdash;the
+vividest kind of local colour. Just at present I
+have nothing to read but the Christmas number
+of the <i>Strand</i>. It makes me remember the time
+when we children raced for the latest development
+of <i>The Hound of the Baskervilles</i>, and so
+many occasions when I had one of &quot;those sniffy
+colds&quot; and sat by the Highbury fire with a book.
+Good days, those!</p>
+
+<p>I'm just off to bed now, and will finish this to-morrow.
+Bed is my greatest luxury nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>December 19th.</p>
+
+<p>The book and chocolate just came, and a bunch
+of New York papers. All were most welcome.
+I was longing for something to read. To-morrow
+I have to go forward to observe. Two of
+our officers are on leave, so it makes the rest of
+us work pretty hard. What do you think of
+the Kaiser's absurd peace proposals? The man
+must be mad.</p>
+
+<p>The best of love,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXIV" id="XXXIV" />XXXIV</h2>
+
+<p>December 20th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Mr. T.:</p>
+
+<p>Just back from a successful argument with
+Fritz, to find your kind good wishes. It's rather
+a lark out here, though a lark which may turn
+against you any time. I laugh a good deal more
+than I mope. Anything really horrible has a
+ludicrous side&mdash;it's like Mark Twain's humour&mdash;a
+gross exaggeration. The maddest thing of all
+to me is that a person so willing to be amiable
+as I am should be out here killing people for
+principle's sake. There's no rhyme or reason&mdash;it
+can't be argued. Dimly one thinks he sees
+what is right and leaves father and mother and
+home, as though it were for the Kingdom of
+Heaven's sake. Perhaps it is. If one didn't pin
+his faith to that &quot;perhaps&quot;&mdash;. One can't explain.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">A merry Christmas to you.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours very sincerely,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12.5em;">CONINGSBY DAWSON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<hr style='width: 65%;' />
+<h2><a name="XXXV" id="XXXV" />XXXV</h2>
+
+<p>December 20th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Mr. A.D.:</p>
+
+<p>I've just come in from an argument with
+Fritz when your chocolate formed my meal.
+You were very kind to think of me and to send
+it, and you were extraordinarily understanding in
+the letter that you sent me. One's life out here
+is like a pollarded tree&mdash;all the lower branches
+are gone&mdash;one gazes on great nobilities, on the
+fascinating horror of Eternity sometimes&mdash;I said
+horror, but it's often fine in its spaciousness&mdash;one
+gazes on many inverted splendours of Titans,
+but it's giddy work being so high and rarefied,
+and all the gentle past seems gone. That's why
+it is pleasant in this grimy anonymity of death
+and courage to get reminders, such as your letter,
+that one was once localised and had a familiar
+history. If I come back, I shall be like Rip Van
+Winkle, or a Robinson Crusoe&mdash;like any and all
+of the creatures of legend and history to whom
+abnormality has grown to seem normal. If you
+can imagine yourself living in a world in which
+every day is a demonstration of a Puritan's conception
+of what happens when the last trump
+sounds, then you have some idea of my queer
+situation. One has come to a point when death
+seems very inconsiderable and only failure to
+do one's duty is an utter loss. Love and the future,
+and all the sweet and tender dreams of by-gone
+days are like a house in which the blinds
+are lowered and from which the sight has gone.
+Landscapes have lost their beauty, everything
+God-made and man-made is destroyed except
+man's power to endure with a smile the things
+he once most dreaded, because he believes that
+only so may he be righteous in his own eyes.
+How one has longed for that sure confidence in
+the petty failings of little living&mdash;the confidence
+to believe that he can stand up and suffer for
+principle! God has given all men who are out
+here that opportunity&mdash;the supremest that can be
+hoped for&mdash;so, in spite of exile, Christmas for
+most of us will be a happy day. Does one see
+more truly life's worth on a battlefield? I often
+ask myself that question. Is the contempt that is
+hourly shown for life the real standard of life's
+worth? I shrug my shoulders at my own unanswerable
+questions&mdash;all I know is that I move
+daily with men who have everything to live for
+who, nevertheless, are urged by an unconscious
+magnanimity to die. I don't think any of our
+dead pity themselves&mdash;but they would have done
+so if they had faltered in their choice. One lives
+only from sunrise to sunrise, but there's a more
+real happiness in this brief living than I ever
+knew before, because it is so exactingly worth
+while.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Thank you again for your kindness.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Very sincerely yours,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 19.5em;">C.D.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The suggestion that we might all meet in
+London in January, 1917, was a hope rather
+than an expectation. We received a cable from
+France on Sunday, December 17th, 1916, and
+left New York on December 30th. We were met
+in London by the two sailor-sons, who were expecting
+appointments at any moment, and Coningsby
+arrived late in the evening of January
+13th. He was unwell when he arrived, having
+had a near touch of pneumonia. The day before
+he left the front he had been in action, with
+a temperature of 104. There were difficulties
+about getting his leave at the exact time appointed,
+but these he overcame by exchanging
+leave with a brother-officer. He travelled from
+the Front all night in a windowless train, and
+at Calais was delayed by a draft of infantry
+which he had to take over to England. The consequence
+of this delay was that the meeting at
+the railway station, of which he had so long
+dreamed, did not come off. We spent a long
+day, going from station to station, misled by imperfect
+information as to the arrival of troop
+trains. At Victoria Station we saw two thousand
+troops arrive on leave, men caked with
+trench-mud, but he was not among them. We
+reluctantly returned to our hotel in the late afternoon
+and gave up expecting him. There was all
+the time a telegram at the hotel from him, giving
+the exact place and time of his arrival, but it
+was not delivered until it was too late to meet
+him. He arrived at ten o'clock, and at the same
+time his two brothers, who had been summoned
+in the morning to Southampton, entered the hotel,
+having been granted special leave to return to
+London. A night's rest did wonders for Coningsby,
+and the next day his spirits were as high
+as in the old days of joyous holiday. During
+the next eight days we lived at a tense pitch of
+excitement. We went to theatres, dined in restaurants,
+met friends, and heard from his lips a
+hundred details of his life which could not be
+communicated in letters. We were all thrilled
+by the darkened heroic London through which
+we moved, the London which bore its sorrows
+so proudly, and went about its daily life with
+such silent courage. We visited old friends to
+whom the war had brought irreparable bereavements,
+but never once heard the voice of self-pity,
+of murmur or complaint. To me it was
+an incredible England; an England purged of all
+weakness, stripped of flabbiness, regenerated by
+sacrifice. I had dreamed of no such transformation
+by anything I had read in American newspapers
+and magazines. I think no one can
+imagine the completeness of this rebirth of the
+soul of England who has not dwelt, if only for
+a few days, among its people.</p>
+
+<p>Coningsby's brief leave expired all too soon.
+We saw him off from Folkestone, and while
+we were saying good-bye to him, his two brothers
+were on their way to their distant appointments
+with the Royal Naval Motor Patrol in the North
+of Scotland. We left Liverpool for New York
+on January 27th, and while at sea heard of the
+diplomatic break between America and Germany.
+The news was received on board the <i>S.S. St.
+Paul</i> with rejoicing. It was Sunday, and the religious
+service on board concluded with the Star-Spangled
+Banner.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXVI" id="XXXVI" />XXXVI</h2>
+
+<p>December 28th, 1916.</p>
+
+<p>Dearest All:</p>
+
+<p>I'm writing you this letter because I expect
+to-night is a busy-packing one with you.
+The picture is in my mind of you all. How
+splendid it is of you to come! I never thought
+you would really, not even in my wildest dream
+of optimism. There have been so many times
+when I scarcely thought that I would ever see
+you again&mdash;now the unexpected and hoped-for
+happens. It's ripping!</p>
+
+<p>I've put in an application for special leave in
+case the ordinary leave should be cut off. I think
+I'm almost certain to arrive by the 11th. Won't
+we have a time? I wonder what we'll want to
+do most&mdash;sit quiet or go to theatres? The nine
+days of freedom&mdash;the wonderful nine days&mdash;will
+pass with most tragic quickness. But they'll be
+days to remember as long as life lasts.</p>
+
+<p>Shall I see you standing on the station when
+I puff into London&mdash;or will it be Folkestone
+where we meet&mdash;or shall I arrive before you?
+I somehow think it will be you who will meet me
+at the barrier at Charing Cross, and we'll taxi
+through the darkened streets down the Strand,
+and back to our privacy. How impossible it
+sounds&mdash;like a vision of heart's desire in the
+night.</p>
+
+<p>Far, far away I see the fine home-coming, like
+a lamp burning in a dark night. I expect we
+shall all go off our heads with joy and be madder
+than ever. Who in the old London days would
+have imagined such a nine days of happiness in
+the old places as we are to have together.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">God bless you, till we meet,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 18.5em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXVII" id="XXXVII" />XXXVII</h2>
+
+<p>January 4th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>10.30 p.m.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAREST ONES:</p>
+
+<p>This letter is written to welcome you to
+England, but I may be with you when it is opened.
+It was glorious news to hear that you were coming&mdash;I
+was only playing a forlorn bluff when I
+sent those cables. You're on the sea at present
+and should be half way over. Our last trip
+over together you marvelled at the apparent indifference
+of the soldiers on board, and now
+you're coming to meet one of your own fresh
+from the Front. A change!</p>
+
+<p>O what a nine days we're going to have together&mdash;the
+most wonderful that were ever spent.
+I dream of them, tell myself tales about them,
+live them over many times in imagination before
+they are realised. Sometimes I'm going to
+have no end of sleep, sometimes I'm going to
+keep awake every second, sometimes I'm going
+to sit quietly by a fire, and sometimes I'm going
+to taxi all the time. I can't fit your faces into
+the picture&mdash;it seems too unbelievable that we
+are to be together once again. To-day I've been
+staging our meeting&mdash;if you arrive first, and then
+if I arrive before you, and lastly if we both hit
+London on the same day. You mustn't expect
+me to be a sane person. You're three rippers to
+do this&mdash;and I hope you'll have an easy journey.
+The only ghost is the last day, when the leave
+train pulls out of Charing Cross. But we'll do
+that smiling, too; C'est la guerre.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 7em;">Yours always and ever, CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXVIII" id="XXXVIII" />XXXVIII</h2>
+
+<p>January 6th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>I have just seen a brother officer aboard
+the ex-London bus en route for Blighty. How
+I wished I could have stepped on board that ex-London
+perambulator to-night! &quot;Pickerdilly
+Cirkuss, 'Ighbury, 'Ighgate, Welsh 'Arp&mdash;all the
+wye.&quot; O my, what a time I'll have when I
+meet you! I shall feel as though if anything
+happens to me after my return you'll be able to
+understand so much more bravely. These blinkered
+letters, with only writing and no touch of
+live hands, convey so little. When we've had a
+good time together and sat round the fire and
+talked interminably you'll be able to read so
+much more between the lines of my future letters.
+To-morrow you ought to land in England,
+and to-morrow night you should sleep in London.
+I am trying to swop my leave with another man,
+otherwise it won't come till the 15th. I am looking
+forward every hour to those miraculous nine
+days which we are to have together. You can't
+imagine with your vividest imagination the contrast
+between nine days with you in London and
+my days where I am now. A battalion went by
+yesterday, marching into action, and its band was
+playing I've a Sneakin' Feelin' in My Heart
+That I Want to Settle Down. We all have that
+sneaking feeling from time to time. I tell myself
+wonderful stories in the early dark mornings and
+become the architect of the most wonderful futures.</p>
+
+<p>I'm coming to join you just as soon as I
+know how&mdash;at the worst I'll be in London on the
+16th of this month.</p>
+
+<p>Ever yours,</p>
+
+<p>CON.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>The following letters were written after Coningsby
+had met his family in London.</i></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XXXIX" id="XXXIX" />XXXIX</h2>
+
+
+<p>January 24th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>MY DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>I have had a chance to write you sooner
+than I expected, as I stopped the night where I
+disembarked, and am catching my train to-day.</p>
+
+<p>It's strange to be back and under orders after
+nine days' freedom. Directly I landed I was detailed
+to march a party&mdash;it was that that made me
+lose my train&mdash;not that I objected, for I got one
+more sleep between sheets. I picked up on the
+boat in the casual way one does, with three other
+officers, so on landing we made a party to dine
+together, and had a very decent evening. I
+wasn't wanting to remember too much then, so
+that was why I didn't write letters.</p>
+
+<p>What good times we have to look back on
+and how much to be thankful for, that we met
+altogether. Now we must look forward to the
+summer and, perhaps, the end of the war. What
+a mad joy will sweep across the world on the
+day that peace is declared!</p>
+
+<p>This visit will have made you feel that you
+have a share in all that's happening over here
+and are as real a part of it as any of us. I'm
+awfully proud of you for your courage.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Yours lovingly,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 17em;">CON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XL" id="XL" />XL</h2>
+
+<p>January 26th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>MY VERY DEAR ONES:</p>
+
+<p>Here I am back&mdash;my nine days' leave a
+dream. I got into our wagon-lines last night
+after midnight, having had a cold ride along
+frozen roads through white wintry country. I
+was only half-expected, so my sleeping-bag hadn't
+been unpacked. I had to wake my batman and
+tramp about a mile to the billet; by the time I
+got there every one was asleep, so I spread out
+my sleeping-sack and crept in very quietly. For
+the few minutes before my eyes closed I pictured
+London, the taxis, the gay parties, the mystery
+of lights. I was roused this morning with
+the news that I had to go up to the gun-position
+at once. I stole just sufficient time to pick up a
+part of my accumulated mail, then got on my
+horse and set out. At the guns, I found that I
+was due to report as liaison officer, so here I am
+in the trenches again writing to you by candle-light.
+How wonderfully we have bridged the
+distance in spending those nine whole days together.
+And now it is over, and I am back in the
+trenches, and to-morrow you're sailing for New
+York.</p>
+
+<p>I can't tell you what the respite has meant to
+me. There have been times when my whole past
+life has seemed a myth and the future an endless
+prospect of carrying on. Now I can distantly
+hope that the old days will return.</p>
+
+<p>When I was in London half my mind was at
+the Front; now that I'm back in the trenches half
+my mind is in London. I re-live our gay times
+together; I go to cosy little dinners; I sit with
+you in the stalls, listening to the music; then I
+tumble off to sleep, and dream, and wake up to
+find the dream a delusion. It's a fine and
+manly contrast, however, between the game one
+plays out here and the fretful trivialities of
+civilian life.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLI" id="XLI" />XLI</h2>
+
+<p>January 27th.</p>
+
+
+<p>I got as far as this and then &quot;something&quot; happened.
+Twenty-four hours have gone by and
+once more it's nearly midnight and I write to you
+by candle-light. Since last night I've been with
+these infantry boy-officers who are doing such
+great work in such a careless spirit of jolliness.
+Any softness which had crept into me during my
+nine days of happiness has gone. I'm glad to be
+out here and wouldn't wish to be anywhere else
+till the war is ended.</p>
+
+<p>It's a week to-day since we were at <i>Charlie's
+Aunt</i>&mdash;such a cheerful little party! I expect the
+boys are doing their share of remembering too
+somewhere on the sea at present. I know you
+are, as you round the coast of Ireland and set
+out for the Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>I've not been out of my clothes for three days
+and I've another day to go yet. I brought my
+haversack into the trenches with me; on opening
+it I found that some kind hands had slipped
+into it some clean socks and a bottle of Horlick's
+Malted Milk tablets.</p>
+
+<p>The signallers in a near-by dug-out are singing
+Keep the Home-Fires Burning Till the Boys
+Come Home. That's what we're all doing,
+isn't it&mdash;you at your end and we at ours? The
+brief few days of possessing myself are over and
+once more stern duty lies ahead. But I thank God
+for the chance I've had to see again those whom
+I love, and to be able to tell them with my own
+lips some of the bigness of our life at the Front.
+No personal aims count beside the great privilege
+which is ours to carry on until the war is over.</p>
+
+<p>All my thoughts are with you&mdash;so many memories
+of kindness. I keep on picturing things I
+ought to have done&mdash;things I ought to have
+told you. Always I can see, Oh, so vividly,
+the two sailor brothers waving good-bye as
+the train moved off through the London dusk,
+and then that other and forlorner group of
+three, standing outside the dock gates with
+the sentry like the angel in Eden, turning them
+back from happiness. With an extraordinary
+aloofness I watched myself moving like a puppet
+away from you whom I love most dearly
+in all the world&mdash;going away as if going were a
+thing so usual.</p>
+
+<p>I'm asking myself again if there isn't some
+new fineness of spirit which will develop from
+this war and survive it. In London, at a distance
+from all this tragedy of courage, I felt that
+I had slipped back to a lower plane; a kind of
+flabbiness was creeping into my blood&mdash;the old
+selfish fear of life and love of comfort. It's odd
+that out here, where the fear of death should
+supplant the fear of life, one somehow rises into
+a contempt for everything which is not bravest.
+There's no doubt that the call for sacrifice, and
+perhaps the supreme sacrifice, can transform men
+into a nobility of which they themselves are unconscious.
+That's the most splendid thing of
+all, that they themselves are unaware of their
+fineness.</p>
+
+<p>I'm now waiting to be relieved and am hurrying
+to finish this so that I may mail it as soon
+as I get back to the battery. There's a whole
+sack of letters and parcels waiting for me there,
+and I'm as eager to get to them as a kiddy to
+inspect his Christmas stocking. I always undo
+the string and wrappings with a kind of reverence,
+trying to picture the dear kneeling figures
+who did them up. In London I didn't dare to
+let myself go with you&mdash;I couldn't say all that
+was in my heart&mdash;it wouldn't have been wise.
+Don't ever doubt that the tenderness was there.
+Even though one is only a civilian in khaki, some
+of the soldier's sternness becomes second nature.</p>
+
+<p>All the country is covered with snow&mdash;it's brilliant
+clear weather, more like America than
+Europe. I'm feeling strong as a horse, ever so
+much better than I felt when on leave. Life is
+really tremendously worth living, in spite of the
+war.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLII" id="XLII" />XLII</h2>
+
+<p>January 28th.</p>
+
+<p>I'm back at the battery, sitting by a cosy fire.
+I might be up at Kootenay by the look of my
+surroundings. I'm in a shack with a really truly
+floor, and a window looking out on moonlit whiteness.
+If it wasn't for the tapping of the distant
+machine guns&mdash;tapping that always sounds to me
+like the nailing up of coffins&mdash;I might be here
+for pleasure. In imagination I can see your
+great ship, with all its portholes aglare, ploughing
+across the darkness to America. The dear
+sailor brothers I can't quite visualise; I can only
+see them looking so upright and pale when we
+said good-bye. It's getting late and the fire's
+dying. I'm half asleep; I've not been out of my
+clothes for three nights. I shall tell myself a
+story of the end of the war and our next meeting&mdash;it'll
+last from the time that I creep into my
+sack until I close my eyes. It's a glorious life.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 7.5em;">Yours very lovingly,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 18.5em;">CON</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLIII" id="XLIII" />XLIII</h2>
+
+<p>January 31st, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR MR. AND MRS. M.:</p>
+
+<p>It was extremely good of you to remember
+me. I got back from leave in London on
+the 26th and found the cigarettes waiting for
+me. One hasn't got an awful lot of pleasures
+left, but smoking is one of them. I feel particularly
+doggy when I open my case and find
+my initials on them.</p>
+
+<p>I expect you'll have heard all the news of my
+leave long before this reaches you. We had a
+splendid time and the greatest of luck. My
+sailor brothers were with me all but two days,
+and my people were in England only a few days
+before I arrived.</p>
+
+<p>This is a queer adventure for a peaceable person
+like myself&mdash;it blots out all the past and reduces
+the future to a speck. One hardly hopes
+that things will ever be different, but looks forward
+to interminable years of carrying on. My
+leave rather corrected that frame of mind; it came
+as a surprise to be forced to realise that not all
+the world was living under orders on woman less,
+childless battlefields. But we don't need
+any pity&mdash;we manage our good times, and are
+sorry for the men who aren't here, for it's a
+wonderful thing to have been chosen to sacrifice
+and perhaps to die that the world of the future
+may be happier and kinder.</p>
+
+<p>This letter is rather disjointed; I'm in charge
+of the battery for the time, and messages keep
+on coming in, and one has to rush out to give
+the order to fire.</p>
+
+<p>It's an American night&mdash;snow-white and piercing,
+with a frigid moon sailing quietly. I think
+the quiet beauty of the sky is about the only
+thing in Nature that we do not scar and destroy
+with our fighting.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, and thank you ever so much.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">Yours very sincerely,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">CONINGSBY DAWSON.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLIV" id="XLIV" />XLIV</h2>
+
+<p>February 1st, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>11 p.m.</p>
+
+<p>DEAR FATHER:</p>
+
+<p>Your picture of the black days when no
+letter comes from me sets me off scribbling to
+you at this late hour. All to-day I've been having
+a cold but amusing time at the O.P. (Forward
+Observation Post). It seems brutal to say
+it, but taking potshots at the enemy when they
+present themselves is rather fun. When you
+watch them scattering like ants before the shell
+whose direction you have ordered, you somehow
+forget to think of them as individuals, any more
+than the bear-hunter thinks of the cubs that will
+be left motherless. You watch your victims
+through your glasses as God might watch his
+mad universe. Your skill in directing fire makes
+you what in peace times would be called a murderer.
+Curious! You're glad, and yet at close
+quarters only in hot blood would you hurt a man.</p>
+
+<p>I'd been back for a little over an hour when
+I had to go forward again to guide in some guns.
+The country was dazzlingly white in the moonlight.
+As far as eye could see every yard was
+an old battlefield; beneath the soft white fleece
+of snow lay countless unburied bodies. Like
+frantic fingers tearing at the sky, all along the
+horizon, Hun lights were shooting up and drifting
+across our front. Tap-tap-tappity went the machine-guns;
+whoo-oo went the heavies, and they
+always stamp like angry bulls. I had to come
+back by myself across the heroic corruption which
+the snow had covered. All the way I asked myself
+why was I not frightened. What has happened
+to me? Ghosts should walk here if anywhere.
+Moreover, I know that I shall be frightened
+again when the war is ended. Do you remember
+how you once offered me money to walk
+through the Forest of Dean after dark, and I
+wouldn't? I wouldn't if you offered it to me
+now. You remember Meredith's lines in &quot;The
+Woods of Westermain&quot;:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;All the eyeballs under hoods</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Shroud you in their glare;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Enter these enchanted woods</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">You who dare.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Maybe what re-creates one for the moment is the
+British officer's uniform, and even more the fact
+that you are not asked, but expected, to do your
+duty. So I came back quite unruffled across battered
+trenches and silent mounds to write this
+letter to you.</p>
+
+<p>My dear father, I'm over thirty, and yet just
+as much a little boy as ever. I still feel overwhelmingly
+dependent on your good opinion and
+love. I'm glad that they are black days when
+you have no letters from me. I love to think
+of the rush to the door when the postman rings
+and the excited shouting up the stairs, &quot;Quick,
+one from Con.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>February 2nd.</p>
+
+<p>You see by the writing how tired I was when
+I reached this point. It's nearly twenty-four
+hours later and again night. The gramophone is
+playing an air from <i>La Tosca</i> to which the guns
+beat out a bass accompaniment. I close my eyes
+and picture the many times I have heard the
+(probably) German orchestras of Broadway Joy
+Palaces play that same music. How incongruous
+that I should be listening to it here and under
+these circumstances! It must have been
+listened to so often by gay crowds in the beauty
+places of the world. A romantic picture grows
+up in my mind of a blue night, the laughter of
+youth in evening dress, lamps twinkling through
+trees, far off the velvety shadow of water and
+mountains, and as a voice to it all, that air from
+<i>La Tosca</i>. I can believe that the silent people
+near by raise themselves up in their snow-beds
+to listen, each one recalling some ecstatic moment
+before the dream of life was shattered.</p>
+
+<p>There's a picture in the Pantheon at Paris, I
+remember; I believe it's called <i>To Glory</i>. One
+sees all the armies of the ages charging out of
+the middle distance with Death riding at their
+head. The only glory that I have discovered in
+this war is in men's hearts&mdash;it's not external.
+Were one to paint the spirit of this war he would
+depict a mud landscape, blasted trees, an iron sky;
+wading through the slush and shell-holes would
+come a file of bowed figures, more like outcasts
+from the Embankment than soldiers. They're
+loaded down like pack animals, their shoulders
+are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they
+go on and go on. There's no &quot;To Glory&quot; about
+what we're doing out here; there's no flash of
+swords or splendour of uniforms. There are
+only very tired men determined to carry on. The
+war will be won by tired men who could never
+again pass an insurance test, a mob of broken
+counter-jumpers, ragged ex-plumbers and quite
+unheroic persons. We're civilians in khaki, but
+because of the ideals for which we fight we've
+managed to acquire soldiers' hearts.</p>
+
+<p>My flow of thought was interrupted by a burst
+of song in which I was compelled to join. We're
+all writing letters around one candle; suddenly
+the O.C. looked up and began, God Be With
+You Till We Meet Again. We sang it in parts.
+It was in Southport, when I was about nine years
+old, that I first heard that sung. You had gone
+for your first trip to America, leaving a very
+lonely family behind you. We children were
+scared to death that you'd be drowned. One evening,
+coming back from a walk on the sand-hills,
+we heard voices singing in a garden, God Be
+With You Till We Meet Again. The words and
+the soft dusk, and the vague figures in the English
+summer garden, seemed to typify the terror of
+all partings. We've said good-bye so often since,
+and God has been with us. I don't think any
+parting was more hard than our last at the prosaic
+dock-gates with the cold wind of duty blowing,
+and the sentry barring your entrance, and
+your path leading back to America while mine
+led on to France. But you three were regular
+soldiers&mdash;just as much soldiers as we chaps who
+were embarking. One talks of our armies in
+the field, but there are the other armies, millions
+strong, of mothers and fathers and sisters,
+who keep their eyes dry, treasure muddy letters
+beneath their pillows, offer up prayers and wait,
+wait, wait so eternally for God to open another
+door.</p>
+
+<p>To-morrow I again go forward, which means
+rising early and taking a long plod through the
+snows; that's one reason for not writing any
+more, and another is that our one poor candle
+is literally on its last legs.</p>
+
+<p>Your poem, written years ago when the poor
+were marching in London, is often in my mind:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;Yesterday and to-day</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Have been heavy with labour and sorrow;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I should faint if I did not see</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">The day that is after to-morrow.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>And there's that last verse which prophesied utterly
+the spirit in which we men at the Front are
+fighting to-day:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">&quot;And for me, with spirit elate</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">The mire and the fog I press thorough,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">For Heaven shines under the cloud</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">Of the day that is after to-morrow.&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>We civilians who have been taught so long to
+love our enemies and do good to them who hate
+us&mdash;much too long ever to make professional
+soldiers&mdash;are watching with our hearts in our
+eyes for that day which conies after to-morrow.
+Meanwhile we plod on determinedly, hoping for
+the hidden glory.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Yours very lovingly,</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 19.5em;">Con.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLV" id="XLV" />XLV</h2>
+
+
+<p>February 3rd, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Misses W.:</p>
+
+<p>You were very kind to remember me at
+Christmas. <i>Seventeen</i> was read with all kinds
+of gusto by all my brother officers. It's still being
+borrowed.</p>
+
+<p>I've been back from leave a few days now and
+am settling back to business again. It was a
+trifle hard after over-eating and undersleeping
+myself for nine days, and riding everywhere with
+my feet up in taxis. I was the wildest little boy.
+Here it's snowy and bitter. We wear scarves
+round our ears to keep the frost away and dream
+of fires a mile high. All I ask, when the war is
+ended, is to be allowed to sit asleep in a big armchair
+and to be left there absolutely quiet. Sleep,
+which we crave so much at times, is only death
+done up in sample bottles. Perhaps some of
+these very weary men who strew our battlefields
+are glad to lie at last at endless leisure.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, and thank you.</p>
+
+<p>Yours very sincerely,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLVI" id="XLVI" />XLVI</h2>
+
+<p>February 4th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>My Dearest Mother:</p>
+
+<p>Somewhere in the distance I can hear a
+piano going and men's voices singing A Perfect
+Day. It's queer how music creates a world
+for you in which you are not, and makes you
+dreamy. I've been sitting by a fire and thinking
+of all the happy times when the total of desire
+seemed almost within one's grasp. It never
+is&mdash;one always, always misses it and has to rub
+the dust from the eyes, recover one's breath and
+set out on the search afresh. I suppose when
+you grow very old you learn the lesson of sitting
+quiet, and the heart stops beating and the total
+of desire comes to you. And yet I can remember
+so many happy days, when I was a child in
+the summer and later at Kootenay. One almost
+thought he had caught the secret of carrying
+heaven in his heart.</p>
+
+<p>By the time this reaches you I'll be in the line
+again, but for the present I'm undergoing a special
+course of training. You can't hear the most
+distant sound of guns, and if it wasn't for the
+pressure of study, similar to that at <i>Kingston</i>,
+one would be very rested.</p>
+
+<p>Sunday of all days is the one when I remember
+you most. You're just sitting down to mid-day
+dinner,&mdash;I've made the calculation for difference
+of time. You're probably saying how
+less than a month ago we were in London. That
+doesn't sound true even when I write it. I wonder
+how your old familiar surroundings strike
+you. It's terrible to come down from the mountain
+heights of a great elation like our ten days
+in London. I often think of that with regard to
+myself when the war is ended. There'll be a
+sense of dissatisfaction when the old lost comforts
+are regained. There'll be a sense of lowered
+manhood. The stupendous terrors of Armageddon
+demand less courage than the uneventful
+terror of the daily commonplace. There's
+something splendid and exhilarating in going forward
+among bursting shells&mdash;we, who have done
+all that, know that when the guns have ceased to
+roar our blood will grow more sluggish and we'll
+never be such men again. Instead of getting up
+in the morning and hearing your O.C. say,
+&quot;You'll run a line into trench so-and-so to-day
+and shoot up such-and-such Hun wire,&quot; you'll
+hear necessity saying, &quot;You'll work from breakfast
+to dinner and earn your daily bread. And
+you'll do it to-morrow and to-morrow and to-morrow
+world without end. Amen.&quot; They
+never put that forever and forever part into their
+commands out here, because the Amen for any
+one of us may be only a few hours away. But
+the big immediate thing is so much easier to do
+than the prosaic carrying on without anxiety&mdash;which
+is your game. I begin to understand what
+you have had to suffer now that R. and E.
+are really at war too. I get awfully anxious
+about them. I never knew before that either of
+them owned so much of my heart. I get furious
+when I remember that they might get hurt.
+I've heard of a Canadian who joined when he
+learnt that his best friend had been murdered
+by Hun bayonets. He came to get his own back
+and was the most reckless man in his battalion.
+I can understand his temper now. We're all of
+us in danger of slipping back into the worship
+of Thor.</p>
+
+<p>I'll write as often as I can while here, but I
+don't get much time&mdash;so you'll understand. It's
+the long nights when one sits up to take the firing
+in action that give one the chance to be a decent
+correspondent.</p>
+
+<p>My birthday comes round soon, doesn't it?
+Good heavens, how ancient I'm getting and without
+any &quot;grow old along with me&quot; consolation.
+Well, to grow old is all in the job of living.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye, and God bless you all.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLVII" id="XLVII" />XLVII</h2>
+
+
+<p>February 4th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>Dear Mr. B.:</p>
+
+<p>I have been intending to write to you for
+a very long time, but as most of one's writing
+is done when one ought to be asleep, and sleep
+next to eating is one of our few remaining pleasures,
+my intended letter has remained in my head
+up to now. On returning from a nine days'
+leave to London the other day, however, I found
+two letters from you awaiting me and was reproached
+into effort.</p>
+
+<p>War's a queer game&mdash;not at all what one's
+civilian mind imagined; it's far more horrible and
+less exciting. The horrors which the civilian
+mind dreads most are mutilation and death. Out
+here we rarely think about them; the thing which
+wears on one most and calls out his gravest courage
+is the endless sequence of physical discomfort.
+Not to be able to wash, not to be able to
+sleep, to have to be wet and cold for long periods
+at a stretch, to find mud on your person, in your
+food, to have to stand in mud, see mud, sleep in
+mud and to continue to smile&mdash;that's what tests
+courage. Our chaps are splendid. They're not
+the hair-brained idiots that some war-correspondents
+depict from day to day. They're perfectly
+sane people who know to a fraction what they're
+up against, but who carry on with a grim good-nature
+and a determination to win with a smile.
+I never before appreciated as I do to-day the
+latent capacity for big-hearted endurance that is
+in the heart of every man. Here are apparently
+quite ordinary chaps&mdash;chaps who washed, liked
+theatres, loved kiddies and sweethearts, had a
+zest for life&mdash;they're bankrupt of all pleasures
+except the supreme pleasure of knowing that
+they're doing the ordinary and finest thing of
+which they are capable. There are millions to
+whom the mere consciousness of doing their duty
+has brought an heretofore unexperienced peace
+of mind. For myself I was never happier than
+I am at present; there's a novel zip added to life
+by the daily risks and the knowledge that at last
+you're doing something into which no trace of
+selfishness enters. One can only die once; the
+chief concern that matters is <i>how</i> and not <i>when</i>
+you die. I don't pity the weary men who have
+attained eternal leisure in the corruption of our
+shell-furrowed battles; they &quot;went West&quot; in their
+supreme moment. The men I pity are those who
+could not hear the call of duty and whose consciences
+will grow more flabby every day. With
+the brutal roar of the first Prussian gun the
+cry came to the civilised world, &quot;Follow thou
+me,&quot; just as truly as it did in Palestine. Men went
+to their Calvary singing Tipperary, rubbish,
+rhymed doggerel, but their spirit was equal to
+that of any Christian martyr in a Roman amphitheatre.
+&quot;Greater love hath no man than this,
+that he lay down his life for his friend.&quot; Our
+chaps are doing that consciously, willingly, almost
+without bitterness towards their enemies;
+for the rest it doesn't matter whether they sing
+hymns or ragtime. They've followed their
+ideal&mdash;freedom&mdash;and died for it. A former age
+expressed itself in Gregorian chants; ours, no less
+sincerely, disguises its feelings in ragtime.</p>
+
+<p>Since September I have been less than a month
+out of action. The game doesn't pall as time
+goes on&mdash;it fascinates. We've got to win so that
+men may never again be tortured by the ingenious
+inquisition of modern warfare. The winning of
+the war becomes a personal affair to the chaps
+who are fighting. The world which sits behind
+the lines, buys extra specials of the daily papers
+and eats three square meals a day, will never
+know what this other world has endured for its
+safety, for no man of this other world will have
+the vocabulary in which to tell. But don't for
+a moment mistake me&mdash;we're grimly happy.</p>
+
+<p>What a serial I'll write for you if I emerge
+from this turmoil! Thank God, my outlook is
+all altered. I don't want to live any longer&mdash;only
+to live well.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye and good luck.</p>
+
+<p>Yours,</p>
+
+<p>Coningsby Dawson.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLVIII" id="XLVIII" />XLVIII</h2>
+
+
+<p>February 5th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>My Dearest Mother:</p>
+
+<p>Aren't the papers good reading now-a-days
+with nothing to record but success? It
+gives us hope that at last, anyway before the year
+is out, the war must end. As you know, I am at
+the artillery school back of the lines for a month,
+taking an extra course. I have been meeting a
+great many young officers from all over the world
+and have listened to them discussing their program
+for when peace is declared. Very few of
+them have any plans or prospects. Most of them
+had just started on some course of professional
+training to which they won't have the energy to
+go back after a two years' interruption. The
+question one asks is how will all these men be reabsorbed
+into civilian life. I'm afraid the result
+will be a vast host of men with promising pasts
+and highly uncertain futures. We shall be a holiday
+world without an income. I'm afraid the
+hero-worship attitude will soon change to impatience
+when the soldiers beat their swords into
+ploughshares and then confess that they have
+never been taught to plough. That's where I
+shall score&mdash;by beating my sword into a pen.
+But what to write about&mdash;! Everything will
+seem so little and inconsequential after seeing
+armies marching to mud and death, and people
+will soon get tired of hearing about that. It
+seems as though war does to the individual what
+it does to the landscapes it attacks&mdash;obliterates
+everything personal and characteristic. A valley,
+when a battle has done with it, is nothing but
+earth&mdash;exactly what it was when God said, &quot;Let
+there be Light;&quot; a man just something with a
+mind purged of the past and ready to observe
+afresh. I question whether a return to old
+environments will ever restore to us the whole of
+our old tastes and affections. War is, I think,
+utterly destructive. It doesn't even create courage&mdash;it
+only finds it in the soul of a man. And
+yet there is one quality which will survive the
+war and help us to face the temptations of peace&mdash;that
+same courage which most of us have unconsciously
+discovered out here.</p>
+
+<p>Well, my dear, I have little news&mdash;at least,
+none that I can tell. I'm just about recovered
+from an attack of &quot;flu.&quot; I want to get thoroughly
+rid of it before I go back to my battery. I hope
+you all keep well. God bless you all.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="XLIX" id="XLIX" />XLIX</h2>
+
+<p>February 6th, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>My Very Dear M.:</p>
+
+<p>I read in to-day's paper that U.S.A.
+threatens to come over and help us. I wish
+she would. The very thought of the possibility
+fills me with joy. I've been light-headed all day.
+It would be so ripping to live among people,
+when the war is ended, of whom you need not
+be ashamed. Somewhere deep down in my heart
+I've felt a sadness ever since I've been out here,
+at America's lack of gallantry&mdash;it's so easy to
+find excuses for not climbing to Calvary; sacrifice
+was always too noble to be sensible. I
+would like to see the country of our adoption become
+splendidly irrational even at this eleventh
+hour in the game; it would redeem her in the
+world's eyes. She doesn't know what she's
+losing. From these carcase-strewn fields of
+khaki there's a cleansing wind blowing for the
+nations that have died. Though there was only
+one Englishman left to carry on the race when
+this war is victoriously ended, I would give more
+for the future of England than for the future of
+America with her ninety millions whose sluggish
+blood was not stirred by the call of duty. It's
+bigness of soul that makes nations great and not
+population. Money, comfort, limousines and
+ragtime are not the requisites of men when
+heroes are dying. I hate the thought of Fifth
+Avenue, with its pretty faces, its fashions, its
+smiling frivolity. America as a great nation will
+die, as all coward civilisations have died, unless
+she accepts the stigmata of sacrifice, which a
+divine opportunity again offers her.</p>
+
+<p>If it were but possible to show those ninety
+millions one battlefield with its sprawling dead,
+its pity, its marvellous forgetfulness of self, I
+think then&mdash;no, they wouldn't be afraid. Fear
+isn't the emotion one feels&mdash;they would
+experience the shame of living when so many have
+shed their youth freely. This war is a prolonged
+moment of exultation for most of us&mdash;we
+are redeeming ourselves in our own eyes.
+To lay down one's life for one's friend once
+seemed impossible. All that is altered. We lay
+down our lives that the future generations may
+be good and kind, and so we can contemplate
+oblivion with quiet eyes. Nothing that is noblest
+that the Greeks taught is unpractised by the
+simplest men out here to-day. They may die
+childless, but their example will father the imagination
+of all the coming ages. These men, in
+the noble indignation of a great ideal, face a
+worse hell than the most ingenious of fanatics
+ever planned or plotted. Men die scorched like
+moths in a furnace, blown to atoms, gassed, tortured.
+And again other men step forward to
+take their places well knowing what will be their
+fate. Bodies may die, but the spirit of England
+grows greater as each new soul speeds upon its
+way. The battened souls of America will die and
+be buried. I believe the decision of the next
+few days will prove to be the crisis in America's
+nationhood. If she refuses the pain which will
+save her, the cancer of self-despising will rob her
+of her life.</p>
+
+<p>This feeling is strong with us. It's past midnight,
+but I could write of nothing else to-night.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you.</p>
+
+<p>Yours ever,</p>
+
+<p>Con.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Carry On, by Coningsby Dawson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: Carry On
+
+Author: Coningsby Dawson
+
+Release Date: November 18, 2004 [EBook #14086]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CARRY ON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+Carry On
+
+By Lieutenant
+Coningsby
+Dawson
+
+CARRY ON
+
+[Illustration: Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson
+Canadian Field Artillery]
+
+
+
+
+CARRY ON
+
+LETTERS IN WAR TIME
+
+BY
+
+CONINGSBY DAWSON
+
+NOVELIST AND SOLDIER
+
+WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND NOTES
+
+BY HIS FATHER, W.J. DAWSON
+
+FRONTISPIECE
+
+1917
+
+
+
+ WHEN THE WAR'S AT AN END
+
+
+ At length when the war's at an end
+ And we're just ourselves,--you and I,
+ And we gather our lives up to mend,
+ We, who've learned how to live and to die:
+
+ Shall we think of the old ambition
+ For riches, or how to grow wise,
+ When, like Lazarus freshly arisen,
+ We've the presence of Death in our eyes?
+
+ Shall we dream of our old life's passion,--
+ To toil for our heart's desire,
+ Whose souls War has taken to fashion
+ With molten death and with fire?
+
+ I think we shall crave the laughter
+ Of the wind through trees gold with the sun,
+ When our strife is all finished,--after
+ The carnage of War is done.
+
+ Just these things will then seem worth while:--
+ How to make Life more wondrously sweet;
+ How to live with a song and a smile,
+ How to lay our lives at Love's feet.
+
+ ERIC P. DAWSON,
+ _Sub. Lieut_. R.N.V.R.
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+The letters in this volume were not written for publication. They are
+intimate and personal in a high degree. They would not now be published
+by those to whom they are addressed, had they not come to feel that the
+spirit and temper of the writer might do something to strengthen and
+invigorate those who, like himself, are called on to make great
+sacrifices for high causes and solemn duties.
+
+They do not profess to give any new information about the military
+operations of the Allies; this is the task of the publicist, and at all
+times is forbidden to the soldier in the field. Here and there some
+striking or significant fact has been allowed to pass the censor; but
+the value of the letters does not lie in these things. It is found
+rather in the record of how the dreadful yet heroic realities of war
+affect an unusually sensitive mind, long trained in moral and romantic
+idealism; the process by which this mind adapts itself to unanticipated
+and incredible conditions, to acts and duties which lie close to horror,
+and are only saved from being horrible by the efficacy of the spiritual
+effort which they evoke. Hating the brutalities of War, clearly
+perceiving the wide range of its cruelties, yet the heart of the writer
+is never hardened by its daily commerce with death; it is purified by
+pity and terror, by heroism and sacrifice, until the whole nature seems
+fresh annealed into a finer strength.
+
+The intimate nature of these letters makes it necessary to say something
+about the writer.
+
+Coningsby Dawson graduated with honours in history from Oxford in 1905,
+and in the same year came to the United States with the intention of
+taking a theological course at Union Seminary. After a year at the
+Seminary he reached the conclusion that his true lifework lay in
+literature, and he at once began to fit himself for his vocation. In the
+meantime his family left England, and we had made our home in Taunton,
+Massachusetts. Here, in a quiet house, amid lawns and leafy elms, he
+gave himself with indefatigable ardour to the art of writing. He wrote
+from seven to ten hours a day, producing many poems, short stories, and
+three novels. Few writers have ever worked harder to attain literary
+excellence, or have practised a more austere devotion to their art. I
+often marvelled how a young man, fresh from a brilliant career at the
+greatest of English Universities, could be content with a life that was
+so widely separated from association with men and affairs. I wondered
+still more at the patience with which he endured the rebuffs that always
+await the beginner in literature, and the humility with which he was
+willing to learn the hard lessons of his apprenticeship in literary
+form. The secret lay, no doubt, in his secure sense of a vocation, and
+his belief that good work could not fail in the end to justify itself.
+But, not the less, these four years of obscure drudgery wore upon his
+spirit, and hence some of the references in these letters to his days of
+self-despising. The period of waiting came to an end at last with the
+publication in 1913 of his _Garden Without Walls_, which attained
+immediate success. When he speaks in these letters of his brief burst of
+fame, he refers to those crowded months in the Fall of 1913, when his
+novel was being discussed on every hand, and, for the first time, he met
+many writers of established reputation as an equal.
+
+Another novel, _The Raft_, followed _The Garden Without Walls_. The
+nature of his life now seemed fixed. To the task of novel-writing he had
+brought a temperament highly idealistic and romantic, a fresh and vivid
+imagination, and a thorough literary equipment. His life, as he planned
+it, held but one purpose for him, outside the warmth and tenacity of
+its affections--the triumph of the efficient purpose in the adequate
+expression of his mind in literature. The austerity of his long years of
+preparation had left him relatively indifferent to the common prizes of
+life, though they had done nothing to lessen his intense joy in life.
+His whole mind was concentrated on his art. His adventures would be the
+adventures of the mind in search of ampler modes of expression. His
+crusades would be the crusades of the spirit in search of the realities
+of truth. He had received the public recognition which gave him faith in
+himself and faith in his ability to achieve the reputation of the true
+artist, whose work is not cheapened but dignified and broadened by
+success. So he read the future, and so his critics read it for him. And
+then, sudden and unheralded, there broke on this quiet life of
+intellectual devotion the great storm of 1914. The guns that roared
+along the Marne shattered all his purposes, and left him face to face
+with a solemn spiritual exigency which admitted no equivocation.
+
+At first, in common with multitudes more experienced than himself, he
+did not fully comprehend the true measure of the cataclysm which had
+overwhelmed the world. There had been wars before, and they had been
+fought out by standing armies. It was incredible that any war should
+last more than a few months. Again and again the world had been assured
+that war would break down with its own weight, that no war could be
+financed beyond a certain brief period, that the very nature of modern
+warfare, with its terrible engines of destruction, made swift decisions
+a necessity. The conception of a British War which involved the entire
+manhood of the nation was new, and unparalleled in past history. And the
+further conception of a war so vast in its issues that it really
+threatened the very existence of the nation was new too. Alarmists had
+sometimes predicted these things, but they had been disbelieved.
+Historians had used such phrases of long past struggles, but often as a
+mode of rhetoric rather than as the expression of exact truth. Yet, in a
+very few weeks, it became evident that not alone England, but the entire
+fabric of liberal civilisation was threatened by a power that knew no
+honour, no restraints of either caution or magnanimity, no ethic but the
+armed might that trampled under blood-stained feet all the things which
+the common sanction of centuries held dearest and fairest.
+
+Perhaps, if Coningsby had been resident in England, these realities of
+the situation would have been immediately apparent. Residing in
+America, the real outlines of the struggle were a little dimmed by
+distance. Nevertheless, from the very first he saw clearly where his
+duty lay. He could not enlist immediately. He was bound in honour to
+fulfil various literary obligations. His latest book, _Slaves of
+Freedom_, was in process of being adapted for serial use, and its
+publication would follow. He set the completion of this work as the
+period when he must enlist; working on with difficult self-restraint
+toward the appointed hour. If he had regrets for a career broken at the
+very point where it had reached success and was assured of more than
+competence, he never expressed them. His one regret was the effect of
+his enlistment on those most closely bound to him by affections which
+had been deepened and made more tender by the sense of common exile. At
+last the hour came when he was free to follow the imperative call of
+patriotic duty. He went to Ottawa, saw Sir Sam Hughes, and was offered a
+commission in the Canadian Field Artillery on the completion of his
+training at the Royal Military College, at Kingston, Ontario. The last
+weeks of his training were passed at the military camp of Petewawa on
+the Ottawa River. There his family was able to meet him in the July of
+1916. While we were with him he was selected, with twenty-four other
+officers, for immediate service in France; and at the same time his two
+younger brothers enlisted in the Naval Patrol, then being recruited in
+Canada by Commander Armstrong.
+
+The letters in this volume commence with his departure from Ottawa. Week
+by week they have come, with occasional interruptions; mud stained
+epistles, written in pencil, in dug-outs by the light of a single
+candle, in the brief moments snatched from hard and perilous duties.
+They give no hint of where he was on the far-flung battle-line. We know
+now that he was at Albert, at Thiepval, at Courcelette, and at the
+taking of the Regina trench, where, unknown to him, one of his cousins
+fell in the heroic charge of the Canadian infantry. His constant
+thoughtfulness for those who were left at home is manifest in all he
+writes. It has been expressed also in other ways, dear and precious to
+remember: in flowers delivered by his order from the battlefield each
+Sabbath morning at our house in Newark, in cables of birthday
+congratulations, which arrived on the exact date. Nothing has been
+forgotten that could alleviate the loneliness of our separation, or
+stimulate our courage, or make us conscious of the unbroken bond of
+love.
+
+The general point of view in these letters is, I think, adequately
+expressed in the phrase "_Carry On_," which I have used as the title of
+this book. It was our happy lot to meet Coningsby in London in the
+January of the present year, when he was granted ten days' leave. In the
+course of conversation one night he laid emphasis on the fact that he,
+and those who served with him, were, after all, not professional
+soldiers, but civilians at war. They did not love war, and when the war
+was ended not five per cent of them would remain in the army. They were
+men who had left professions and vocations which still engaged the best
+parts of their minds, and would return to them when the hour came. War
+was for them an occupation, not a vocation. Yet they had proved
+themselves, one and all, splendid soldiers, bearing the greatest
+hardships without complaint, and facing wounds and death with a gay
+courage which had made the Canadian forces famous even among a host of
+men, equally brave and heroic. The secret of their fortitude lay in the
+one brief phrase, "Carry On." Their fortitude was of the spirit rather
+than the nerves. They were aware of the solemn ideals of justice,
+liberty, and righteousness for which they fought, and would never give
+up till they were won. In the completeness of their surrender to a great
+cause they had been lifted out of themselves to a new plane of living
+by the transformation of their spirit. It was the dogged indomitable
+drive of spiritual forces controlling bodily forces. Living or dying
+those forces would prevail. They would carry on to the end, however long
+the war, and would count no sacrifice too great to assure its triumph.
+
+This is the spirit which breathes through these letters. The splendour
+of war, as my son puts it, is in nothing external; it is all in the
+souls of the men. "There's a marvellous grandeur about all this carnage
+and desolation--men's souls rise above the distress--they have to, in
+order to survive." "Every man I have met out here has the amazing guts
+to wear his crown of thorns as though it were a cap-and-bells." They
+have shredded off their weaknesses, and attained that "corporate
+stout-heartedness" which is "the acme of what Aristotle meant by
+virtue." For himself, he discovers that the plague of his former modes
+of life lay in self-distrust. It was the disease of the age. The doubt
+of many things which it were wisdom to believe had ended in the doubt of
+one's own capacity for heroism. All those doubts and self-despisings had
+vanished in the supreme surrender to sacrificial duty. The doors of the
+Kingdom of Heroism were flung so wide that the meanest might enter in,
+and in that act the humblest became comrades of Drake's men, who could
+jest as they died. No one knows his real strength till it is put to the
+test; the highest joy of life is to discover that the soul can meet the
+test, and survive it.
+
+The Somme battlefield, from which all these letters were despatched, is
+an Inferno much more terrible than any Dante pictured. It is a vast sea
+of mud, full of the unburied dead, pitted and pock-marked by
+shell-holes, treeless and horseless, "the abomination of desolation."
+And the men who toil across it look more like outcasts of the London
+Embankment than soldiers. "They're loaded down like pack-animals, their
+shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they go on and go
+on.... There's no flash of sword or splendour of uniforms. They're only
+very tired men determined to carry on. The war will be won by tired men
+who can never again pass an insurance test." Yet they carry on--the
+"broken counter-jumper, the ragged ex-plumber," the clerk from the
+office, the man from the farm; Londoner, Canadian, Australian, New
+Zealander, men drawn from every quarter of the Empire, who daily justify
+their manhood by devotion to an ideal and by contempt of death. And in
+the heart of each there is a settled conviction that the cause for which
+they have sacrificed so much must triumph. They have no illusions about
+an early peace. They see their comrades fall, and say quietly, "He's
+gone West." They do heroic things daily, which in a lesser war would
+have won the Victoria Cross, but in this war are commonplaces. They know
+themselves re-born in soul, and are dimly aware that the world is
+travailing toward new birth with them. They are still very human, men
+who end their letters with a row of crosses which stand for kisses. They
+are not dehumanised by war; the kindliness and tenderness of their
+natures are unspoiled by all their daily traffic in horror. But they
+have won their souls; and when the days of peace return these men will
+take with them to the civilian life a tonic strength and nobleness which
+will arrest and extirpate the decadence of society with the saving salt
+of valour and of faith.
+
+It may be said also that they do not hate their foe, although they hate
+the things for which he fights. They are fighting a clean fight, with
+men whose courage they respect. A German prisoner who comes into the
+British camp is sure of good treatment. He is neither starved nor
+insulted. His captors share with him cheerfully their rations and their
+little luxuries. Sometimes a sullen brute will spit in the face of his
+captor when he offers him a cigarette; he is always an officer, never a
+private. And occasionally between these fighting hosts there are acts of
+magnanimity which stand out illumined against the dark background of
+death and suffering. One of the stories told me by my son illustrates
+this. During one fierce engagement a British officer saw a German
+officer impaled on the barbed wire, writhing in anguish. The fire was
+dreadful, yet he still hung there unscathed. At length the British
+officer could stand it no longer. He said quietly, "I can't bear to look
+at that poor chap any longer." So he went out under the hail of shell,
+released him, took him on his shoulders and carried him to the German
+trench. The firing ceased. Both sides watched the act with wonder. Then
+the Commander in the German trench came forward, took from his own bosom
+the Iron Cross, and pinned it on the breast of the British officer. Such
+an episode is true to the holiest ideals of chivalry; and it is all the
+more welcome because the German record is stained by so many acts of
+barbarism, which the world cannot forgive.
+
+This magnanimous attitude toward the enemy is very apparent in these
+letters. The man whose mind is filled with great ideals of sacrifice and
+duty has no room for the narrowness of hate. He can pity a foe whose
+sufferings exceed his own, and the more so because he knows that his
+foe is doomed. The British troops do know this to-day by many infallible
+signs. In the early days of the war untrained men, poorly equipped with
+guns, were pitted against the best trained troops in Europe. The first
+Canadian armies were sacrificed, as was that immortal army of Imperial
+troops who saved the day at Mons. The Canadians often perished in that
+early fighting by the excess of their own reckless bravery. They are
+still the most daring fighters in the British army, but they have
+profited by the hard discipline of the past. They know now that they
+have not only the will to conquer, but the means of conquest. Their,
+artillery has become conspicuous for its efficiency. It is the ceaseless
+artillery fire which has turned the issue of the war for the British
+forces. The work of the infantry is beyond praise. They "go over the
+top" with superb courage, and all who have seen them are ready to say
+with my son, "I'm hats off to the infantry." And in this final
+efficiency, surpassing all that could have been thought possible in the
+earlier stages of the war, the British forces read the clear augury of
+victory. The war will be won by the Allied armies; not only because they
+fight for the better cause, which counts for much, in spite of
+Napoleon's cynical saying that "God is on the side of the strongest
+battalions"; but because at last they have superiority in equipment,
+discipline and efficiency. Upon that shell-torn Western front, amid the
+mud and carnage of the Somme, there has been slowly forged the weapon
+which will drive the Teuton enemy across the Rhine, and give back to
+Europe and the world unhindered liberty and enduring peace.
+
+W.J. DAWSON.
+
+March, 1917.
+
+
+
+
+THE LETTERS
+
+
+In order to make some of the allusions in these letters clear I will set
+down briefly the circumstances which explain them, and supply a
+narrative link where it may be required.
+
+I have already mentioned the Military Camp at Petewawa, on the Ottawa
+river. The Camp is situated about seven miles from Pembroke. The Ottawa
+river is at this point a beautiful lake. Immediately opposite the Camp
+is a little summer hotel of the simplest description. It was at this
+hotel that my wife, my daughter, and myself stayed in the early days of
+July, 1916.
+
+The hotel was full of the wives of the officers stationed in the Camp.
+During the daytime I was the only man among the guests. About five
+o'clock in the afternoon the officers from the Camp began to arrive on a
+primitive motor ferryboat. My son came over each day, and we often
+visited him at the Camp. His long training at Kingston had been very
+severe. It included besides the various classes which he attended a
+great deal of hard exercise, long rides or foot marches over frozen
+roads before breakfast, and so forth. After this strenuous winter the
+Camp at Petewawa was a delightful change. His tent stood on a bluff,
+commanding an exquisite view of the broad stretch of water, diversified
+by many small islands. We had a great deal of swimming in the lake, and
+several motor-boat excursions to its beautiful upper reaches. One
+afternoon when we went over in our launch to meet him at the Camp wharf,
+he told us that that day a General had come from Ottawa to ask for
+twenty-five picked officers to supply the casualties among the Canadian
+Field Artillery at the front. He had immediately volunteered and been
+accepted.
+
+At this time my two younger sons, who had joined us at Petewawa in order
+to see their brother, enrolled themselves in the Royal Naval Motor
+Patrol Service, and had to return to Nelson, British Columbia, to settle
+their affairs. Near Nelson, on the Kootenay Lake, we have a large fruit
+ranch, managed by my second son, Reginald. My youngest son, Eric, was
+with a law-firm in Nelson, and had just passed his final examinations as
+solicitor and barrister.
+
+This ranch had played a great part in our lives. The scenery is among
+the finest in British Columbia. We usually spent our summers there,
+finding not only continual interest in the development of our orchards,
+but a great deal of pleasure in riding, swimming, and boating. We had
+often talked of building a modern house there, but had never done so.
+The original "little shack" was the work of Reginald's own hands, in the
+days when most of the ranch was primeval forest. It had been added to,
+but was still of the simplest description. One reason why we had not
+built a modern house was that this "little shack" had become much
+endeared to us by association and memory. We were all together there
+more than once, and Coningsby had written a great deal there. We built
+later on a sort of summer library--a big room on the edge of a beautiful
+ravine--to which reference is made in later letters. Some of the
+happiest days of our lives were spent in these lovely surroundings, and
+the memory of those blue summer days, amid the fragrance of miles of
+pine-forest, often recurs to Coningsby as he writes from the mud-wastes
+of the Somme.
+
+We left Petewawa to go to the ranch before Coningsby sailed for England,
+that we might get our other two sons ready for their journey to England.
+They left us on August 21st, and the ranch was sub-let to Chinamen in
+the end of September, when we returned to Newark, New Jersey.
+
+
+
+
+CARRY ON
+
+I
+
+OTTAWA, July 16th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST ALL:
+
+So much has happened since last I saw you that it's difficult to know
+where to start. On Thursday, after lunch, I got the news that we were to
+entrain from Petewawa next Friday morning. I at once put in for leave to
+go to Ottawa the next day until the following Thursday at reveille. We
+came here with a lot of the other officers who are going over and have
+been having a very full time.
+
+I am sailing from a port unknown on board the _Olympic_ with 6,000
+troops--there is to be a big convoy. I feel more than ever I did--and
+I'm sure it's a feeling that you share since visiting the camp--that I
+am setting out on a Crusade from which it would have been impossible to
+withhold myself with honour. I go quite gladly and contentedly, and pray
+that in God's good time we may all sit again in the little shack at
+Kootenay and listen to the rustling of the orchard outside. It will be
+of those summer days that I shall be thinking all the time.
+
+ Yours, with very much love,
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+HALIFAX, July 23rd.
+
+MY DEAR ONES:
+
+We've spent all morning on the dock, seeing to our baggage, and have
+just got leave ashore for two hours. We have had letters handed to us
+saying that on no account are we to mention anything concerning our
+passage overseas, neither are we allowed to cable our arrival from the
+other side until four clear days have elapsed.
+
+You are thinking of me this quiet Sunday morning at the ranch, and I of
+you. And I am wishing--As I wish, I stop and ask myself, "Would I be
+there if I could have my choice?" And I remember those lines of
+Emerson's which you quoted:
+
+ "Though love repine and reason chafe,
+ There comes a voice without reply,
+ 'Twere man's perdition to be safe,
+ When for the Truth he ought to die."
+
+I wouldn't turn back if I could, but my heart cries out against "the
+voice which speaks without reply."
+
+Things are growing deeper with me in all sorts of ways. Family
+affections stand out so desirably and vivid, like meadows green after
+rain. And religion means more. The love of a few dear human people and
+the love of the divine people out of sight, are all that one has to lean
+on in the graver hours of life. I hope I come back again--I very much
+hope I come back again; there are so many finer things that I could do
+with the rest of my days--bigger things. But if by any chance I should
+cross the seas to stay, you'll know that that also will be right and as
+big as anything that I could do with life, and something that you'll be
+able to be just as proud about as if I had lived to fulfil all your
+other dear hopes for me. I don't suppose I shall talk of this again. But
+I wanted you to know that underneath all the lightness and ambition
+there's something that I learnt years ago in Highbury[1]. I've become a
+little child again in God's hands, with full confidence in His love and
+wisdom, and a growing trust that whatever He decides for me will be best
+and kindest.
+
+[Footnote 1: We resided over thirteen years at Highbury, London, N.,
+during my pastorate of the Highbury Quadrant Congregational Church.]
+
+This is the last letter I shall be able to send to you before the other
+boys follow me. Keep brave, dear ones, for all our sakes; don't let any
+of us turn cowards whatever ultimately happens. We've a tradition to
+live up to now that we have become a family of soldiers and sailors.
+
+I shall long for the time when you come over to England. Where will our
+meeting be and when? Perhaps the war may be ended and then won't you be
+glad that we dared all this sorrow of good-byes?
+
+ God bless and keep you,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+ON BOARD, July 27th, 1916.
+
+My VERY DEAR PEOPLE:
+
+Here we are scooting along across the same old Atlantic we've crossed so
+many times on journeys of pleasure. I'm at a loss to make my letters
+interesting, as we are allowed to say little concerning the voyage and
+everything is censored.
+
+There are men on board who are going back to the trenches for the second
+time. One of them is a captain in the Princess Pat's, who is badly
+scarred in his neck and cheek and thighs, and has been in Canada
+recuperating. There is also a young flying chap who has also seen
+service. They are all such boys and so plucky in the face of certain
+knowledge.
+
+This morning I woke up thinking of our motor-tour of two years ago in
+England, and especially of our first evening at The Three Cups in
+Dorset. I feel like running down there to see it all again if I get any
+leave on landing. How strange it will be to go back to Highbury again
+like this! The little boy who ran back and forth to school down Paradise
+Row little thought of the person who to-day masquerades as his elder
+self.
+
+Heigho! I wish I could tell you a lot of things that I'm not allowed to.
+This letter would be much more interesting then.
+
+In seventeen days the boys will also have left you--so this will arrive
+when you're horribly lonely. I'm so sorry for you dear people--but I'd
+be sorrier for you if we were all with you. If I were a father or
+mother, I'd rather have my sons dead than see them failing when the
+supreme sacrifice was called for. I marvel all the time at the prosaic
+and even coarse types of men who have risen to the greatness of the
+occasion. And there's not a man aboard who would have chosen the job
+ahead of him. One man here used to pay other people to kill his pigs
+because he couldn't endure the cruelty of doing it himself. And now
+he's going to kill men. And he's a sample. I wonder if there is a Lord
+God of Battles--or is he only an invention of man and an excuse for
+man's own actions.
+
+Monday.
+
+We are just in--safely arrived in spite of everything. I hope you had no
+scare reports of our having been sunk--such reports often get about when
+a big troop ship is on the way.
+
+I'm baggage master for my draft, and have to get on deck now. You'll
+have a long letter from me soon.
+
+ Good-bye,
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.
+
+MY DEARESTS:
+
+We haven't had any hint of what is going to happen to us--whether Field
+Artillery, the Heavies or trench mortars. There seems little doubt that
+we are to be in England for a little while taking special courses.
+
+I read father's letter yesterday. You are very brave--you never thought
+that you would be the father of a soldier and sailors; and, as you say,
+there's a kind of tradition about the way in which the fathers of
+soldiers and sailors should act. Confess--aren't you more honestly happy
+to be our father as we are now than as we were? I know quite well you
+are, in spite of the loneliness and heartache. We've all been forced
+into a heroism of which we did not think ourselves capable. We've been
+carried up to the Calvary of the world where it is expedient that a few
+men should suffer that all the generations to come may be better.
+
+I understand in a dim way all that you suffer--the sudden divorce of all
+that we had hoped for from the present--the ceaseless questionings as to
+what lies ahead. Your end of the business is the worse. For me, I can go
+forward steadily because of the greatness of the glory. I never thought
+to have the chance to suffer in my body for other men. The insufficiency
+of merely setting nobilities down on paper is finished. How unreal I
+seem to myself! Can it be true that I am here and you are in the still
+aloofness of the Rockies? I think the multitude of my changes has
+blunted my perceptions. I trudge along like a traveller between high
+hedgerows; my heart is blinkered so that I am scarcely aware of
+landscapes. My thoughts are always with you--I make calculations for the
+differences of time that I may follow more accurately your doings. I'd
+love to come down to the study summer-house and watch the blueness of
+the lake with you--I love those scenes and memories more than any in the
+world.
+
+ Good-bye for the present. Be brave.
+
+ Yours,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+SHORNCLIFF, August 19th, 1916.
+
+MY DEARS:
+
+It's not quite three weeks to-day since I came to England, and it seems
+ages. The first week was spent on leave, the second I passed my exams in
+gun drill and gun-laying, and this week I have finished my riding. Next
+Monday I start on my gunnery.
+
+Do you remember Captain S. at the Camp? I had his young brother to
+dinner with me last night-he's just back from France minus an eye. He
+lasted three and a half weeks, and was buried four feet deep by a shell.
+He's a jolly boy, as cheerful as you could want and is very good
+company. He gave me a vivid description. He had a great boy-friend. At
+the start of the war they both joined, S. in the Artillery, his friend
+in the Mounted Rifles. At parting they exchanged identification tokens.
+S.'s bore his initials and the one word "Violets"--which meant that they
+were his favourite flower and he would like to have some scattered over
+him when he was buried. His friend wore his initials and the words "No
+flowers by request." It was S.'s first week out--they were advancing,
+having driven back the enemy, and were taking up a covered position in a
+wood from which to renew their offensive. It was night, black as pitch,
+but they knew that the wood must have been the scene of fighting by the
+scuttling of the rats. Suddenly the moon came out, and from beneath a
+bush S. saw a face--or rather half a face--which he thought he
+recognised, gazing up at him. He corrects himself when he tells the
+story, and says that it wasn't so much the disfigured features as the
+profile that struck him as familiar. He bent down and searched beneath
+the shirt, and drew out a little metal disc with "No flowers by request"
+written on it.
+
+I don't know whether I ought to repeat things like that to you, but the
+description was so graphic. I have met many who have returned from the
+Front, and what puzzles me in all of them is their unawed acceptance of
+death. I don't think I could ever accept it as natural; it's too
+discourteous in its interruption of many dreams and plans and loves.
+
+ Yours with very much love,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+SHORNCLIFF, August 30th, 1916.
+
+MY DEARESTS:
+
+I have just returned from sending you a cable to let you know that I'm
+off to France. The word came out in orders yesterday, and I shall leave
+before the end of the week with a draft of officers--I have been in
+England just a day over four weeks. My only regret is that I shall miss
+the boys who should be travelling up to London about the same time as I
+am setting out for the Front. After I have been there for three months I
+am supposed to get a leave--this should be due to me about the beginning
+of December, and you can judge how I shall count on it. Think of the
+meeting with R. and E., and the immensity of the joy.
+
+Selfishly I wish that you were here at this moment--actually I'm glad
+that you are away. Everybody goes out quite unemotionally and with very
+few good-byes--we made far more fuss in the old days about a week-end
+visit.
+
+Now that at last it has come--this privileged moment for which I have
+worked and waited--my heart is very quiet. It's the test of a character
+which I have often doubted. I shall be glad not to have to doubt it
+again. Whatever happens, I know you will be glad to remember that at a
+great crisis I tried to play the man, however small my qualifications.
+We have always lived so near to one another's affections that this going
+out alone is more lonely to me than to most men. I have always had some
+one near at hand with love-blinded eyes to see my faults as springing
+from higher motives. Now I reach out my hands across six thousand miles
+and only touch yours with my imagination to say good-bye. What queer
+sights these eyes, which have been almost your eyes, will witness! If my
+hands do anything respectable, remember that it is your hands that are
+doing it. It is your influence as a family that has made me ready for
+the part I have to play, and where I go, you follow me.
+
+Poor little circle of three loving persons, please be tremendously
+brave. Don't let anything turn you into cowards--we've all got to be
+worthy of each other's sacrifice; the greater the sacrifice may prove to
+be for the one the greater the nobility demanded of the remainder. How
+idle the words sound, and yet they will take deep meanings when time has
+given them graver sanctions. I think gallant is the word I've been
+trying to find--we must be gallant English women and gentlemen.
+
+It's been raining all day and I got very wet this morning. Don't you
+wish I had caught some quite harmless sickness? When I didn't want to go
+back to school, I used to wet my socks purposely in order to catch cold,
+but the cold always avoided me when I wanted it badly. How far away the
+childish past seems--almost as though it never happened. And was I
+really the budding novelist in New York? Life has become so stern and
+scarlet--and so brave. From my window I look out on the English Channel,
+a cold, grey-green sea, with rain driving across it and a fleet of small
+craft taking shelter. Over there beyond the curtain of mist lies
+France--and everything that awaits me.
+
+News has just come that I have to start. Will continue from France.
+
+ Yours ever lovingly,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+Friday, September 1st, 1916, 11 am.
+
+DEAREST FATHER AND MOTHER:
+
+I embark at 12.30--so this is the last line before I reach France. I
+expect the boys are now within sight of English shores--I wish I could
+have had an hour with them.
+
+I'm going to do my best to bring you honour--remember that--I shall do
+things for your sake out there, living up to the standards you have
+taught me.
+
+ Yours with a heart full of love,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+FRANCE, September 1st, 1916.
+
+DEAREST M.:
+
+Here I am in France with the same strange smells and street cries, and
+almost the same little boys bowling hoops over the very cobbly cobble
+stones. I had afternoon tea at a patisserie and ate a great many gateaux
+for the sake of old times. We had a very choppy crossing, and you would
+most certainly have been sick had you been on board. It seemed to me
+that I must be coming on one of those romantic holidays to see churches
+and dead history--only the khaki-clad figures reminded me that I was
+coming to see history in the making. It's a funny world that batters us
+about so. It's three years since I was in France--the last time was with
+Arthur in Provence. It's five years since you and I did our famous trip
+together.
+
+I wish you were here--there are heaps of English nurses in the streets.
+I expect to sleep in this place and proceed to my destination to-morrow.
+How I wish I could send you a really descriptive letter! If I did, I
+fear you would not get it--so I have to write in generalities. None of
+this seems real--it's a kind of wild pretence from which I shall
+awake-and when I tell you my dream you'll laugh and say, "How absurd of
+you, dreaming that you were a soldier. I must say you look like it."
+
+ Good-bye, my dearest girl,
+ God bless you,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+September 8th, 1916.
+
+MY DEAREST ONES:
+
+I'm sending this to meet you on your return from Kootenay. I left
+England on September 1st and had a night at my point of disembarkation,
+and then set off on a wandering adventure in search of my division. I'm
+sure you'll understand that I cannot enter into any details--I can only
+give you general and purely personal impressions. There were two other
+officers with me, both from Montreal. We had to picnic on chocolate and
+wine for twenty-four hours through our lack of forethought in not
+supplying ourselves with food for the trip. I shaved the first morning
+with water from the exhaust of a railroad engine, having first balanced
+my mirror on the step. The engineer was fascinated with my safety razor.
+There were Tommies from the trenches in another train, muddied to the
+eyes--who showed themselves much more resourceful. They cooked
+themselves quite admirable meals as they squatted on the rails, over
+little fires on which they perched tomato cans. Sunday evening we saw
+our first German prisoners--a young and degenerate-looking lot. Sunday
+evening we got off at a station in the rain, and shouldered our own
+luggage. Our luggage, by the way, consists of a sleeping bag, in which
+much of our stuff is packed, and a kit sack--for an immediate change and
+toilet articles one carries a haversack hung across the shoulder. Well,
+as I say, we alighted and coaxed a military wagon to come to our rescue.
+As we set off through a drizzling rain, trudging behind the cart, a
+double rainbow shone, which I took for an omen. Presently we came to a
+rest camp, where we told our sad story of empty tummies, and were put up
+for the night. A Jock--all Highlanders are called Jock--looked after us.
+Next morning we started out afresh in a motor lorry and finished at a
+Y.M.C.A. tent, where we stayed two nights. On Wednesday we met the
+General in Command of our Division, who posted me to the battery, which
+is said to be the best in the best brigade in the best division--so you
+may see I'm in luck. I found the battery just having come out of
+action--we expect to go back again in a day or two. Major B. is the
+O.C.--a fine man. The lieutenant who shares my tent won the Military
+Cross at Ypres last Spring. I'm very happy--which will make you
+happy--and longing for my first taste of real war.
+
+How strangely far away I am from you--all the experiences so unshared
+and different. Long before this reaches you I shall have been in action
+several times. This time three years ago my streak of luck came to me
+and I was prancing round New York. To-day I am much more genuinely happy
+in mind, for I feel, as I never felt when I was only writing, that I am
+doing something difficult which has no element of self in it. If I come
+back, life will be a much less restless affair.
+
+This letter! I can imagine it being delivered and the shout from whoever
+takes it and the comments. I make the contrast in my mind--this little
+lean-to spread of canvas about four feet high, the horse-lines, guns,
+sentries going up and down--and then the dear home and the well-loved
+faces.
+
+ Good-bye. Don't be at all nervous.
+ Yours lovingly,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+September 12th, Tuesday.
+
+DEAREST M.:
+
+You will already have received my first letters giving you my address
+over here. The wagon has just come up to our position, but it has
+brought me only one letter since I've been across. I'm sitting in my
+dug-out with shells passing over my head with the sound of ripping
+linen. I've already had the novel experience of firing a battery, and
+to-morrow I go up to the first line trenches.
+
+It's extraordinary how commonplace war becomes to a man who is thrust
+among others who consider it commonplace. Not fifty yards away from me a
+dead German lies rotting and uncovered--I daresay he was buried once and
+then blown out by a shell.
+
+Wednesday, 7 p.m.
+
+Your letters came two hours ago--the first to reach me here--and I have
+done little else but read and re-read them. How they bring the old ways
+of life back with their love and longing! Dear mother's tie will be worn
+to-morrow, and it will be ripping to feel that it was made by her hands.
+Your cross has not arrived yet, dear. Your mittens will be jolly for the
+winter. I've heard nothing from the boys yet.
+
+To-day I took a trip into No-Man's Land--when the war is ended I'll be
+able to tell you all about it. I think the picture is photographed upon
+my memory forever. There's so much you would like to hear and so little
+I'm allowed to tell. Ask G.M.'C. if he was at Princeton with a man named
+Price--an instructor there.
+
+You ought to see the excitement when the water-cart brings us our mail
+and the letters are handed out. Some of the gunners have evidently told
+their Canadian girls that they are officers, and so they are addressed
+on their letters as lieutenants. I have to censor some of their replies,
+and I can tell you they are as often funny as pathetic. The ones to
+their mothers are childish, too, and have rows of kisses. I think men
+are always kiddies if you look beneath the surface. The snapshots did
+fill me with a wanting to be with you in Kootenay. But that's not where
+you'll receive this. There'll probably be a fire in the sitting-room at
+home, and a strong aroma of coffee and tobacco. You'll be sitting in a
+low chair before the fire and your fingers rubbing the hair above your
+left ear as you read this aloud. I'd like to walk in on you and say, "No
+more need for letters now." Some day soon, I pray and expect.
+
+Tell dear Papa and Mother that their answers come next. What a lot of
+love you each one manage to put into your written pages! I'm afraid if I
+let myself go that way I might make you unhappy.
+
+Since writing this far I have had supper. I'm now sleeping in a new
+dug-out and get a shower of mould on my sleeping-kit each time the guns
+are fired. One doesn't mind that particularly, especially when you know
+that the earth walls make you safe. I have a candle in an old petrol tin
+and dodge the shadows as I write. You know, this artillery game is good
+sport and one takes everything as it comes with a joke. The men are
+splendid--their cheeriness comes up bubbling whenever the occasion calls
+for the dumps. Certainly there are fine qualities which war, despite its
+unnaturalness, develops. I'm hats off to every infantry private I meet
+nowadays.
+
+God bless you and all of you.
+ Yours lovingly, Con.
+
+The reference in the previous letter to a cross is to a little bronze
+cross of Francis of Assisi.
+
+Many years ago I visited Assisi, and, on leaving, the monks gave me four
+of these small bronze crosses, assuring me that those who wore them were
+securely defended in all peril by the efficacious prayers of St.
+Francis. Just before Coningsby left Shorncliff to go to France he wrote
+to us and asked if we couldn't send him something to hang round his neck
+for luck. We fortunately had one of these crosses of St. Francis at the
+ranch, and his sister--the M. of these letters-sent it to him. It
+arrived safely, and he has worn it ever since.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+September 15th, 1916.
+
+DEAR FATHER:
+
+Your last letter to me was written on a quiet morning in August--in the
+summer house at Kootenay. It came up yesterday evening on a water-cart
+from the wagon-lines to a scene a little in contrast.
+
+It's a fortnight to-day since I left England, and already I've seen
+action. Things move quickly in this game, and it is a game--one which
+brings out both the best and the worst qualities in a man. If
+unconscious heroism is the virtue most to be desired, and heroism spiced
+with a strong sense of humour at that, then pretty well every man I have
+met out here has the amazing guts to wear his crown of thorns as though
+it were a cap-and-bells. To do that for the sake of corporate
+stout-heartedness is, I think, the acme of what Aristotle meant by
+virtue. A strong man, or a good man or a brainless man, can walk to meet
+pain with a smile on his mouth because he knows that he is strong enough
+to bear it, or worthy enough to defy it, or because he is such a fool
+that he has no imagination. But these chaps are neither particularly
+strong, good, nor brainless; they're more like children, utterly casual
+with regard to trouble, and quite aware that it is useless to struggle
+against their elders. So they have the merriest of times while they can,
+and when the governess, Death, summons them to bed, they obey her with
+unsurprised quietness. It sends the mercury of one's optimism rising to
+see the way they do it. I search my mind to find the bigness of motive
+which supports them, but it forever evades me. These lads are not the
+kind who philosophise about life; they're the sort, many of them, who
+would ordinarily wear corduroys and smoke a cutty pipe. I suppose the
+Christian martyrs would have done the same had corduroys been the
+fashion in that day, and if a Roman Raleigh had discovered tobacco.
+
+I wrote this about midnight and didn't get any further, as I was up till
+six carrying on and firing the battery. After adding another page or two
+I want to get some sleep, as I shall probably have to go up to the
+observation station to watch the effect of fire to-night. But before I
+turn in I want to tell you that I had the most gorgeous mail from
+everybody. Now that I'm in touch with you all again, it's almost like
+saying "How-do?" every night and morning.
+
+I daresay you'll wonder how it feels to be under shell-fire. This is how
+it feels--you don't realise your danger until you come to think about it
+afterwards--at the time it's like playing coconut shies at a coon's
+head--only you're the coon's head. You take too much interest in the
+sport of dodging to be afraid. You'll hear the Tommies saying if one
+bursts nearly on them, "Line, you blighter, line. Five minutes more
+left," just as though they were reprimanding the unseen Hun battery for
+rotten shooting.
+
+The great word of the Tommies here is "No bloody bon"--a strange mixture
+of French and English, which means that a thing is no good. If it
+pleases them it's _Jake_--though where Jake comes from nobody knows.
+
+Now I must get a wink or two, as I don't know when I may have to start
+off.
+
+ Ever yours, with love,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+September 19th, 1916.
+
+Dearest Mother:
+
+I've been in France 19 days, and it hasn't taken me long to go into
+action. Soon I shall be quite an old hand. I'm just back from 24 hours
+in the Observation Post, from which one watches the effect of fire. I
+understand now and forgive the one phrase which the French children have
+picked up from our Tommies on account of its frequent
+occurrence--"bl---- mud." I never knew that mud could be so thick and
+treacly. All my fear that I might be afraid under shell-fire is
+over--you get to believe that if you're going to be hit you're going to
+be. But David's phrase keeps repeating itself in my mind, "Ten thousand
+shall fall at thy side, etc., but it shall not come nigh unto thee."
+It's a curious thing that the men who are most afraid are those who get
+most easily struck. A friend of G.M.C.'s was hit the other day within
+thirty yards of me--he was a Princeton chap. I mentioned him in one of
+my previous letters. Our right section commander got a blighty two days
+ago and is probably now in England. He went off on a firing battery
+wagon, grinning all over his face, saying he wouldn't sell that bit of
+blood and shrapnel for a thousand pounds. I'm wearing your tie--it's the
+envy of the battery. All the officers wanted me to give them the name of
+my girl. It never occurs to men that mothers will do things like that.
+
+Thank the powers it has stopped raining and we'll be able to get dry. I
+came in plastered from head to foot with lying in the rain on my tummy
+and peering over the top of a trench. Isn't it a funny change from
+comfortable breakfasts, press notices and a blazing fire?
+
+Do you want any German souvenirs? Just at present I can get plenty. I
+have a splendid bayonet and a belt with Kaiser Bill's arms on it--but
+you can't forward these things from France. The Germans swear that
+they're not using bayonets with saw-edges, but you can buy them for five
+francs from the Tommies--ones they've taken from the prisoners or else
+picked up.
+
+You needn't be nervous about me. I'm a great little dodger of
+whizz-bangs. Besides I have a superstition that there's something in
+the power of M.'s cross to bless. It came with the mittens, and is at
+present round my neck.
+
+You know what it sounds like when they're shooting coals down an iron
+run-way into a cellar-well, imagine a thousand of them. That's what I'm
+hearing while I write.
+
+God bless you; I'm very happy.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+September 19th, 1916.
+
+Dearest Father:
+
+I'm writing you your birthday letter early, as I don't know how busy I
+may be in the next week, nor how long this may take to reach you. You
+know how much love I send you and how I would like to be with you. D'you
+remember the birthday three years ago when we set the victrola going
+outside your room door? Those were my high-jinks days when very many
+things seemed possible. I'd rather be the person I am now than the
+person I was then. Life was selfish though glorious.
+
+Well, I've seen my first modern battlefield and am quite disillusioned
+about the splendour of war. The splendour is all in the souls of the
+men who creep through the squalor like vermin--it's in nothing
+external. There was a chap here the other day who deserved the V.C. four
+times over by running back through the Hun shell fire to bring news that
+the infantry wanted more artillery support. I was observing for my
+brigade in the forward station at the time. How he managed to live
+through the ordeal nobody knows. But men laugh while they do these
+things. It's fine.
+
+A modern battlefield is the abomination of abominations. Imagine a vast
+stretch of dead country, pitted with shell-holes as though it had been
+mutilated with small-pox. There's not a leaf or a blade of grass in
+sight. Every house has either been leveled or is in ruins. No bird
+sings. Nothing stirs. The only live sound is at night--the scurry of
+rats. You enter a kind of ditch, called a trench; it leads on to another
+and another in an unjoyful maze. From the sides feet stick out, and arms
+and faces--the dead of previous encounters. "One of our chaps," you say
+casually, recognising him by his boots or khaki, or "Poor blighter--a
+Hun!" One can afford to forget enmity in the presence of the dead. It is
+horribly difficult sometimes to distinguish between the living and the
+slaughtered--they both lie so silently in their little kennels in the
+earthen bank. You push on--especially if you are doing observation work,
+till you are past your own front line and out in No Man's Land. You have
+to crouch and move warily now. Zing! A bullet from a German sniper. You
+laugh and whisper, "A near one, that." My first trip to the trenches was
+up to No Man's Land. I went in the early dawn and came to a Madame
+Tussaud's show of the dead, frozen into immobility in the most
+extraordinary attitudes. Some of them were part way out of the ground,
+one hand pressed to the wound, the other pointing, the head sunken and
+the hair plastered over the forehead by repeated rains. I kept on
+wondering what my companions would look like had they been three weeks
+dead. My imagination became ingeniously and vividly morbid. When I had
+to step over them to pass, it seemed as though they must clutch at my
+trench coat and ask me to help. Poor lonely people, so brave and so
+anonymous in their death! Somewhere there is a woman who loved each one
+of them and would give her life for my opportunity to touch the poor
+clay that had been kind to her. It's like walking through the day of
+resurrection to visit No Man's Land. Then the Huns see you and the
+shrapnel begins to fall--you crouch like a dog and run for it.
+
+One gets used to shell-fire up to a point, but there's not a man who
+doesn't want to duck when he hears one coming. The worst of all is the
+whizz-bang, because it doesn't give you a chance--it pounces and is on
+you the same moment that it bangs. There's so much I wish that I could
+tell you. I can only say this, at the moment we're making history.
+
+What a curious birthday letter! I think of all your other birthdays--the
+ones before I met these silent men with the green and yellow faces, and
+the blackened lips which will never speak again. What happy times we
+have had as a family--what happy jaunts when you took me in those early
+days, dressed in a sailor suit, when you went hunting pictures. Yet, for
+all the damnability of what I now witness, I was never quieter in my
+heart. To have surrendered to an imperative self-denial brings a peace
+which self-seeking never brought.
+
+So don't let this birthday be less gay for my absence. It ought to be
+the proudest in your life--proud because your example has taught each of
+your sons to do the difficult things which seem right. It would have
+been a condemnation of you if any one of us had been a shirker.
+
+ "I want to buy fine things for you
+ And be a soldier if I can."
+
+The lines come back to me now. You read them to me first in the dark
+little study from a green oblong book. You little thought that I would
+be a soldier--even now I can hardly realise the fact. It seems a dream
+from which I shall wake up. Am I really killing men day by day? Am I
+really in jeopardy myself?
+
+Whatever happens I'm not afraid, and I'll give you reason to be glad of
+me.
+ Very much love,
+ CON.
+
+The poem referred to in this letter was actually written for Coningsby
+when he was between five and six years old. The dark little study which
+he describes was in the old house at Wesley's Chapel, in the City Road,
+London--and it was very dark, with only one window, looking out upon a
+dingy yard. The green oblong book in which I used to write my poems I
+still have; and it is an illustration of the tenacity of a child's
+memory that he should recall it. The poem was called _A Little Boy's
+Programme_, and ran thus:
+
+ I am so very young and small,
+ That, when big people pass me by,
+ I sometimes think they are so high
+ I'll never be a man at all.
+
+ And yet I want to be a man
+ Because so much I want to do;
+ I want to buy fine things for you,
+ And be a soldier, if I can.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When I'm a man I will not let
+ Poor little children starve, or be
+ Ill-used, or stand and beg of me
+ With naked feet out in the wet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Now, don't you laugh!--The father kissed
+ The little serious mouth and said
+ "You've almost made me cry instead,
+ You blessed little optimist."
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+September 21st, 1916.
+
+My Very Dear M.:
+
+I am wearing your talisman while I write and have a strong superstition
+in its efficacy. The efficacy of your socks is also very noticeable--I
+wore them the first time on a trip to the Forward Observation Station. I
+had to lie on my tummy in the mud, my nose just showing above the
+parapet, for the best part of twenty-four hours. Your socks little
+thought I would take them into such horrid places when you made them.
+
+Last night both the King and Sir Sam sent us congratulations--I popped
+in just at the right time. I daresay you know far more about our doings
+than I do. Only this morning I picked up the _London Times_ and read a
+full account of everything I have witnessed. The account is likely to be
+still fuller in the New York papers.
+
+"Home for Christmas"--that's what the Tommies are promising their
+mothers and sweethearts in all their letters that I censor. Yesterday I
+was offered an Imperial commission in the army of occupation. But home
+for Christmas, will be Christmas, 1917--I can't think that it will be
+earlier.
+ Very much love,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+Sunday, September 24th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST MOTHER:
+
+Your locket has just reached me, and I have strung it round my neck with
+M.'s cross. Was it M.'s cross the other night that accounted for my
+luck? I was in a gun-pit when a shell landed, killing a man only a foot
+away from me and wounding three others--I and the sergeant were the only
+two to get out all right. Men who have been out here some time have a
+dozen stories of similar near squeaks. And talking of squeaks, it was a
+mouse that saved one man. It kept him awake to such an extent that he
+determined to move to another place. Just as he got outside the dug-out
+a shell fell on the roof.
+
+You'll be pleased to know that we have a ripping chaplain or Padre, as
+they call chaplains, with us. He plays the game, and I've struck up a
+great friendship with him. We discuss literature and religion when we're
+feeling a bit fed up. We talk at home of our faith being tested--one
+begins to ask strange questions here when he sees what men are allowed
+by the Almighty to do to one another, and so it's a fine thing to be in
+constant touch with a great-hearted chap who can risk his life daily to
+speak of the life hereafter to dying Tommies.
+
+I wish I could tell you of my doings, but it's strictly against orders.
+You may read in the papers of actions in which I've taken part and never
+know that I was there.
+
+We live for the most part on tinned stuff, but our appetites make
+anything taste palatable. Living and sleeping in the open air keeps one
+ravenous. And one learns to sleep the sleep of the just despite the
+roaring of the guns.
+
+God bless you each one and give us peaceful hearts.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+September 28th, 1916.
+
+My Dears:
+
+We're in the midst of a fine old show, so I don't get much opportunity
+for writing. Suffice it to say that I've seen the big side of war by now
+and the extraordinary uncalculating courage of it. Men run out of a
+trench to an attack with as much eagerness as they would display in
+overtaking a late bus. If you want to get an idea of what meals are like
+when a row is on, order the McAlpin to spread you a table where 34th
+crosses Broadway--and wait for the uptown traffic on the Elevated. It's
+wonderful to see the waiters dodging with dishes through the
+shell-holes.
+
+It's a wonderful autumn day, golden and mellow; I picture to myself what
+this country must have looked like before the desolation of war struck
+it.
+
+I was Brigade observation officer on September 26th, and wouldn't have
+missed what I saw for a thousand dollars. It was a touch and go
+business, with shells falling everywhere and machine-gun fire--but
+something glorious to remember. I had the great joy of being useful in
+setting a Hun position on fire. I think the war will be over in a
+twelvemonth.
+
+Our great joy is composing menus of the meals we'll eat when we get
+home. Good-bye for the present.
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+October 1st, 1916.
+
+MY DEAREST M.:
+
+Sunday morning, your first back in Newark. You're not up yet owing to
+the difference in time--I can imagine the quiet house with the first of
+the morning stealing greyly in. You'll be presently going to church to
+sit in your old-fashioned mahogany pew. There's not much of Sunday in
+our atmosphere--only the little one can manage to keep in his heart. I
+shall share the echo of yours by remembering.
+
+I'm waiting orders at the present moment to go forward with the Colonel
+and pick out a new gun position. You know I'm very happy-satisfied for
+the first time I'm doing something big enough to make me forget all
+failures and self-contempts. I know at last that I can measure up to the
+standard I have always coveted for myself. So don't worry yourselves
+about any note of hardship that you may interpret into my letters, for
+the deprivation is fully compensated for by the winged sense of
+exaltation one has.
+
+Things have been a little warm round us lately. A gun to our right,
+another to our rear and another to our front were knocked out with
+direct hits. We've got some of the chaps taking their meals with us now
+because their mess was all shot to blazes. There was an officer who was
+with me at the 53rd blown thirty feet into the air while I was watching.
+He picked himself up and insisted on carrying on, although his face was
+a mass of bruises. I walked in on the biggest engagement of the entire
+war the moment I came out here. There was no gradual breaking-in for me.
+My first trip to the front line was into a trench full of dead.
+
+Have you seen Lloyd George's great speech? I'm all with him. No matter
+what the cost and how many of us have to give our lives, this War must
+be so finished that war may be forever at an end. If the devils who plan
+wars could only see the abysmal result of their handiwork! Give them one
+day in the trenches under shell-fire when their lives aren't worth a
+five minutes' purchase--or one day carrying back the wounded through
+this tortured country, or one day in a Red Cross train. No one can
+imagine the damnable waste and Christlessness of this battering of
+human flesh. The only way that this War can be made holy is by making it
+so thorough that war will be finished for all time.
+
+Papa at least will be awake by now. How familiar the old house seems to
+me--I can think of the place of every picture. Do you set the victrola
+going now-a-days? I bet you play Boys in Khaki, Boys in Blue.
+
+Please send me anything in the way of eatables that the goodness of your
+hearts can imagine--also smokes.
+
+Later.
+
+I came back from the front-line all right and have since been hard at it
+firing. Your letters reached me in the midst of a bombardment--I read
+them in a kind of London fog of gun-powder smoke, with my steel helmet
+tilted back, in the interval of commanding my section through a
+megaphone.
+
+Don't suppose that I'm in any way unhappy--I'm as cheerful as a cricket
+and do twice as much hopping--I have to. There's something
+extraordinarily bracing about taking risks and getting away with
+it--especially when you know that you're contributing your share to a
+far-reaching result. My mother is the mother of a soldier now, and
+soldiers' mothers don't lie awake at night imagining--they just say a
+prayer for their sons and leave everything in God's hands. I'm sure
+you'd far rather I died than not play the man to the fullest of my
+strength. It isn't when you die that matters--it's how. Not but what I
+intend to return to Newark and make the house reek of tobacco smoke
+before I've done.
+
+We're continually in action now, and the casualty to B. has left us
+short-handed--moreover we're helping out another battery which has lost
+two officers. As you've seen by the papers, we've at last got the Hun on
+the run. Three hundred passed me the other day unescorted, coming in to
+give themselves up as prisoners. They're the dirtiest lot you ever set
+eyes on, and looked as though they hadn't eaten for months. I wish I
+could send you some souvenirs. But we can't send them out of France.
+
+I'm scribbling by candlelight and everything's jumping with the stamping
+of the guns. I wear the locket and cross all the time.
+
+ Yours with much love,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+October 13th, 1916.
+
+DEAR ONES:
+
+I have only time to write and assure you that I am safe. We're living in
+trenches at present--I have my sleeping bag placed on a stretcher to
+keep it fairly dry. By the time you get this we expect to be having a
+rest, as we've been hard at it now for an unusually long time. How I
+wish that I could tell you so many things that are big and vivid in my
+mind-but the censor--!
+
+Yesterday I had an exciting day. I was up forward when word came through
+that an officer still further forward was wounded and he'd been caught
+in a heavy enemy fire. I had only a kid telephonist with me, but we
+found a stretcher, went forward and got him out. The earth was hopping
+up and down like pop-corn in a frying pan. The unfortunate thing was
+that the poor chap died on the way out. It was only the evening before
+that we had dined together and he had told me what he was going to do
+with his next leave.
+
+ God bless you all,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+October 14th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST MOTHER:
+
+I'm still all right and well. To-day I had the funniest experience of my
+life--got caught in a Hun curtain of fire and had to lie on my tummy
+for two hours in a trench with the shells bursting five yards from
+me--and never a scratch. You know how I used to wonder what I'd do under
+such circumstances. Well, I laughed. All I could think of was the sleek
+people walking down Fifth Avenue, and the equally sleek crowds taking
+tea at the Waldorf. It struck me as ludicrous that I, who had been one
+of them, should be lying there lunchless. For a little while I was
+slightly deaf with the concussions.
+
+That poem keeps on going through my head,
+
+ Oh, to come home once more, when the dusk is falling,
+ To see the nursery lighted and the children's table spread;
+ "Mother, mother, mother!" the eager voices calling,
+ "The baby was so sleepy that he had to go to bed!"
+
+Wouldn't it be good, instead of sitting in a Hun dug-out?
+
+ Yours lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+October 15th, 1916.
+
+Dear Ones:
+
+We're still in action, but are in hopes that soon we may be moved to
+winter quarters. We've had our taste of mud, and are anxious to move
+into better quarters before we get our next. I think I told you that
+our O.C. had got wounded in the feet, and our right section commander
+got it in the shoulder a little earlier--so we're a bit short-handed and
+find ourselves with plenty of work.
+
+I have curiously lucid moments when recent happenings focus themselves
+in what seems to be their true perspective. The other night I was
+Forward Observation officer on one of our recent battlefields. I had to
+watch the front all night for signals, etc. There was a full white moon
+sailing serenely overhead, and when I looked at it I could almost fancy
+myself back in the old melancholy pomp of autumn woodlands where the
+leaves were red, not with the colour of men's blood. My mind went back
+to so many by-gone days-especially to three years ago. I seemed so
+vastly young then, upon reflection. For a little while I was full of
+regrets for many things wasted, and then I looked at the battlefield
+with its scattered kits and broken rifles. Nothing seemed to matter very
+much. A rat came out-then other rats. I stood there feeling
+extraordinarily aloof from all things that can hurt, and--you'll
+smile--I planned a novel. O, if I get back, how differently I shall
+write! When you've faced the worst in so many forms, you lose your fear
+and arrive at peace. There's a marvellous grandeur about all this
+carnage and desolation--men's souls rise above the distress--they have
+to in order to survive. When you see how cheap men's bodies are you
+cannot help but know that the body is the least part of personality.
+
+You can let up on your nervousness when you get this, for I shall almost
+certainly be in a safer zone. We've done more than our share and must be
+withdrawn soon. There's hardly a battery which does not deserve a dozen
+D.S.O.'s with a V.C. or two thrown in.
+
+It's 4.30 now--you'll be in church and, I hope, wearing my flowers. Wait
+till I come back and you shall go to church with the biggest bunch of
+roses that ever were pinned to a feminine chest. I wonder when that will
+be.
+
+We have heaps of humour out here. You should have seen me this morning,
+sitting on the gun-seat while my batman cut my hair. A sand-bag was
+spread over my shoulders in place of a towel and the gun-detachment
+stood round and gave advice. I don't know what I look like, for I
+haven't dared to gaze into my shaving mirror.
+
+ Good luck to us all,
+ CON
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+October 18th, 1910
+
+Dearest M.:
+
+I've come down to the lines to-day; to-morrow I go back again. I'm
+sitting alone in a deep chalk dug-out--it is 10 p.m. and I have lit a
+fire by splitting wood with a bayonet. Your letters from Montreal
+reached me yesterday. They came up in the water-cart when we'd all begun
+to despair of mail. It was wonderful the silence that followed while
+every one went back home for a little while, and most of them met their
+best girls. We've fallen into the habit of singing in parts. Jerusalem
+the Golden is a great favourite as we wait for our breakfast--we go
+through all our favourite songs, including Poor Old Adam Was My Father.
+Our greatest favourite is one which is symbolising the hopes that are in
+so many hearts on this greatest battlefield in history. We sing it under
+shell-fire as a kind of prayer, we sing it as we struggle knee-deep in
+the appalling mud, we sing it as we sit by a candle in our deep captured
+German dug-outs. It runs like this:
+
+ "There's a long, long trail a-winding
+ Into the land of my dreams,
+ Where the nightingales are singing
+ And a white moon beams:
+
+ There's a long, long night of waiting
+ Until my dreams all come true;
+ Till the day when I'll be going down
+ That long, long trail with you."
+
+You ought to be able to get it, and then you will be singing it when I'm
+doing it.
+
+No, I don't know what to ask from you for Christmas--unless a plum
+pudding and a general surprise box of sweets and food stuffs. If you
+don't mind my suggesting it, I wouldn't a bit mind a Christmas box at
+once--a schoolboy's tuck box. I wear the locket, cross, and tie all the
+time as kind of charms against danger--they give me the feeling of
+loving hands going with me everywhere.
+
+ God bless you.
+ Yours ever,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+October 23, 1916
+
+Dearest All:
+
+As you know I have been in action ever since I left England and am
+still. I've lived in various extemporised dwellings and am at present
+writing from an eight foot deep hole dug in the ground and covered over
+with galvanised iron and sand-bags. We have made ourselves very
+comfortable, and a fire is burning--I correct that--comfortable until it
+rains, I should say, when the water finds its own level. We have just
+finished with two days of penetrating rain and mist--in the trenches the
+mud was up to my knees, so you can imagine the joy of wading down these
+shell-torn tunnels. Good thick socks have been priceless.
+
+You'll be pleased to hear that two days ago I was made Right Section
+Commander--which is fairly rapid promotion. It means a good deal more
+work and responsibility, but it gives me a contact with the men which I
+like.
+
+I don't know when I'll get leave--not for another two months anyway. It
+would be ripping if I had word in time for you to run over to England
+for the brief nine days.
+
+I plan novels galore and wonder whether I shall ever write them the way
+I see them now. My imagination is to an extent crushed by the
+stupendousness of reality. I think I am changed in some stern spiritual
+way--stripped of flabbiness. I am perhaps harder--I can't say. That I
+should be a novelist seems unreasonable--it's so long since I had my own
+way in the world and met any one on artistic terms. But I have enough
+ego left to be very interested in my book. And by the way, when we're
+out at the front and the battery wants us to come in they simply phone
+up the password, "Slaves of Freedom," the meaning of which we all
+understand.
+
+You are ever in my thoughts, and I pray the day may not be far distant
+when we meet again.
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+October 27th, 1916.
+
+Dearest Family:
+
+All to-day I've been busy registering our guns. There is little chance
+of rest--one would suppose that we intended to end the war by spring.
+
+Two new officers joined our battery from England, which makes the work
+lighter. One of them brings the news that D., one of the two officers
+who crossed over from England with me and wandered through France with
+me in search of our Division, is already dead. He was a corking fellow,
+and I'm very sorry. He was caught by a shell in the head and legs.
+
+I am still living in a sand-bagged shell-hole eight feet beneath the
+level of the ground. I have a sleeping bag with an eider-down inside it,
+for my bed; it is laid on a stretcher, which is placed in a roofed-in
+trench. For meals, when there isn't a block on the roads, we do very
+well; we subscribe pretty heavily to the mess, and have an officer back
+at the wagon-lines to do our purchasing. When we move forward into a new
+position, however, we go pretty short, as roads have to be built for the
+throng of traffic. Most of what we eat is tinned--and I never want to
+see tinned salmon again when this war is ended. I have a personal
+servant, a groom and two horses--but haven't been on a horse for seven
+weeks on account of being in action. We're all pretty fed up with
+continuous firing and living so many hours in the trenches. The way
+artillery is run to-day an artillery lieutenant is more in the trenches
+than an infantryman--the only thing he doesn't do is to go over the
+parapet in an attack. And one of our chaps did that the other day,
+charging the Huns with a bar of chocolate in one hand and a revolver in
+the other. I believe he set a fashion which will be imitated. Three
+times in my experience I have seen the infantry jump out of their
+trenches and go across. It's a sight never to be forgotten. One time
+there were machine guns behind me and they sent a message to me, asking
+me to lie down and take cover. That was impossible, as I was observing
+for my brigade, so I lay on the parapet till the bullets began to fall
+too close for comfort, then I dodged out into a shell-hole with the
+German barrage bursting all around me, and had a most gorgeous view of
+a modern attack. That was some time ago, so you needn't be nervous.
+
+Have I mentioned rum to you? I never tasted it to my knowledge until I
+came out here. We get it served us whenever we're wet. It's the one
+thing which keeps a man alive in the winter--you can sleep when you're
+drenched through and never get a cold if you take it.
+
+At night, by a fire, eight feet underground, we sing all the dear old
+songs. We manage a kind of glee--Clementina, The Long, Long Trail, Three
+Blind Mice, Long, Long Ago, Rock of Ages. Hymns are quite favourites.
+
+Don't worry about me; your prayers weave round me a mantle of defence.
+
+Yours with more love than I can write,
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+October 31st, 1916.
+Hallowe'en.
+
+Dearest People:
+
+Once more I'm taking the night-firing and so have a chance to write to
+you. I got letters from you all, and they each deserve answers, but I
+have so little time to write. We've been having beastly weather--drowned
+out of our little houses below ground, with rivers running through our
+beds. The mud is once more up to our knees and gets into whatever we
+eat. The wonder is that we keep healthy--I suppose it's the open air. My
+throat never troubles me and I'm free from colds in spite of wet feet.
+The main disadvantage is that we rarely get a chance to wash or change
+our clothes. Your ideas of an army with its buttons all shining is quite
+erroneous; we look like drunk and disorderlies who have spent the night
+in the gutter--and we have the same instinct for fighting.
+
+In the trenches the other day I heard mother's Suffolk tongue and had a
+jolly talk with a chap who shared many of my memories. It was his first
+trip in and the Huns were shelling badly, but he didn't seem at all
+upset.
+
+We're still hard at it and have given up all idea of a rest--the only
+way we'll get one is with a blighty. You say how often you tell
+yourselves that the same moon looks down on me; it does, but on a scene
+how different! We advance over old battlefields--everything is blasted.
+If you start digging, you turn up what's left of something human. If
+there were any grounds for superstition, surely the places in which I
+have been should be ghost-haunted. One never thinks about it. For myself
+I have increasingly the feeling that I am protected by your prayers; I
+tell myself so when I am in danger.
+
+Here I sit in an old sweater and muddy breeches, the very reverse of
+your picture of a soldier, and I imagine to myself your receipt of this.
+Our chief interest is to enquire whether milk, jam and mail have come up
+from the wagon-lines; it seems a faery-tale that there are places where
+milk and jam can be had for the buying. See how simple we become.
+
+Poor little house at Kootenay! I hate to think of it empty. We had such
+good times there twelve months ago. They have a song here to a nursery
+rhyme lilt, Apres le Guerre Finis; it goes on to tell of all the good
+times we'll have when the war is ended. Every night I invent a new story
+of my own celebration of the event, usually, as when I was a kiddie,
+just before I fall asleep--only it doesn't seem possible that the war
+will ever end.
+
+I hear from the boys very regularly. There's just the chance that I may
+get leave to London in the New Year and meet them before they set out. I
+always picture you with your heads high in the air. I'm glad to think of
+you as proud because of the pain we've made you suffer.
+
+Once again I shall think of you on Papa's birthday. I don't think this
+will be the saddest he will have to remember. It might have been if we
+three boys had still all been with him. If I were a father, I would
+prefer at all costs that my sons should be men. What good comrades we've
+always been, and what long years of happy times we have in memory--all
+the way down from a little boy in a sailor-suit to Kootenay!
+
+I fell asleep in the midst of this. I've now got to go out and start the
+other gun firing. With very much love.
+
+ Yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+November 1st, 1916.
+
+My Dearest M.:
+
+Peace after a storm! Your letter was not brought up by the water-wagon
+this evening, but by an orderly--the mud prevented wheel-traffic. I was
+just sitting down to read it when Fritz began to pay us too much
+attention. I put down your letter, grabbed my steel helmet, rushed out
+to see where the shells were falling, and then cleared my men to a safer
+area. (By the way, did I tell you that I had been made Right Section
+Commander?) After about half an hour I came back and settled down by a
+fire made of smashed ammunition boxes in a stove borrowed from a ruined
+cottage. I'm always ashamed that my letters contain so little news and
+are so uninteresting. This thing is so big and dreadful that it does not
+bear putting down on paper. I read the papers with the accounts of
+singing soldiers and other rubbish; they depict us as though we were a
+lot of hair-brained idiots instead of men fully realising our danger,
+who plod on because it's our duty. I've seen a good many men killed by
+now--we all have--consequently the singing soldier story makes us smile.
+We've got a big job; we know that we've got to "Carry On" whatever
+happens--so we wear a stern grin and go to it. There's far more heroism
+in the attitude of men out here than in the footlight attitude that
+journalists paint for the public. It isn't a singing matter to go on
+firing a gun when gun-pits are going up in smoke within sight of you.
+
+What a terrible desecration war is! You go out one week and look through
+your glasses at a green, smiling country-little churches, villages
+nestling among woods, white roads running across a green carpet; next
+week you see nothing but ruins and a country-side pitted with
+shell-holes. All night the machine guns tap like rivet-ting machines
+when a New York sky-scraper is in the building. Then suddenly in the
+night a bombing attack will start, and the sky grows white with signal
+rockets. Orders come in for artillery retaliation, and your guns begin
+to stamp the ground like stallions; in the darkness on every side you
+can see them snorting fire. Then stillness again, while Death counts his
+harvest; the white rockets grow fainter and less hysterical. For an hour
+there is blackness.
+
+My batman consoles himself with singing,
+
+ "Pack up your troubles in your old kit-bag,
+ And smile, smile, smile."
+
+There's a lot in his philosophy--it's best to go on smiling even when
+some one who was once your pal lies forever silent in his blanket on a
+stretcher.
+
+The great uplifting thought is that we have proved ourselves men. In our
+death we set a standard which in ordinary life we could never have
+followed. Inevitably we should have sunk below our highest self. Here we
+know that the world will remember us and that our loved ones, in spite
+of tears, will be proud of us. What God will say to us we cannot
+guess--but He can't be too hard on men who did their duty. I think we
+all feel that trivial former failures are washed out by this final
+sacrifice. When little M. used to recite "Breathes there a man with soul
+so dead, who never to himself had said, 'This is my own, my native
+land,'" I never thought that I should have the chance that has now been
+given to me. I feel a great and solemn gratitude that I have been
+thought worthy. Life has suddenly become effective and worthy by reason
+of its carelessness of death.
+
+By the way, that Princeton man I mentioned so long ago was killed forty
+yards away from me on my first trip into the trenches. Probably G. M'C.
+and his other friends know by now. He was the first man I ever saw
+snuffed out.
+
+I'm wearing your mittens and find them a great comfort. I'll look
+forward to some more of your socks--I can do with plenty of them. If any
+of your friends are making things for soldiers, I wish you'd get them to
+send them to this battery, as they would be gratefully accepted by the
+men.
+
+I wish I could come to _The Music Master_ with you. I wonder how long
+till we do all those intimately family things together again.
+
+Good-bye, my dearest M. I live for home letters and am rarely
+disappointed.
+
+God bless you, and love to you all.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+November 4th, 1916.
+
+
+My Dearest Mother:
+
+This morning I was wakened up in the gunpit where I was sleeping by the
+arrival of the most wonderful parcel of mail. It was really a kind of
+Christmas morning for me. My servant had lit a fire in a punctured
+petrol can and the place looked very cheery. First of all entered an
+enormous affair, which turned out to be a stove which C. had sent. Then
+there was a sand-bag containing all your gifts. You may bet I made for
+that first, and as each knot was undone remembered the loving hands that
+had done it up. I am now going up to a twenty-four-hour shift of
+observing, and shall take up the malted milk and some blocks of
+chocolate for a hot drink. It somehow makes you seem very near to me to
+receive things packed with your hands. When I go forward I shall also
+take candles and a copy of _Anne Veronica_ with me, so that if I get a
+chance I can forget time.
+
+Always when I write to you odds and ends come to mind, smacking of local
+colour. After an attack some months ago I met a solitary private
+wandering across a shell-torn field, I watched him and thought something
+was wrong by the aimlessness of his progress. When I spoke to him, he
+looked at me mistily and said, "Dead men. Moonlit road." He kept on
+repeating the phrase, and it was all that one could get out of him.
+Probably the dead men and the moonlit road were the last sights he had
+seen before he went insane.
+
+Another touching thing happened two days ago. A Major turned up who had
+travelled fifty miles by motor lorries and any conveyance he could pick
+up on the road. He had left his unit to come to have a glimpse of our
+front-line trench where his son was buried. The boy had died there some
+days ago in going over the parapet. I persuaded him that he ought not to
+go alone, and that in any case it wasn't a healthy spot. At last he
+consented to let me take him to a point from which he could see the
+ground over which his son had attacked and led his men. The sun was
+sinking behind us. He stood there very straightly, peering through my
+glasses--and then forgot all about me and began speaking to his son in
+childish love-words. "Gone West," they call dying out here--we rarely
+say that a man is dead. I found out afterwards that it was the boy's
+mother the Major was thinking of when he pledged himself to visit the
+grave in the front-line.
+
+But there are happier things than that. For instance, you should hear
+us singing at night in our dug-out--every tune we ever learnt, I
+believe. Silver Threads Among the Gold, In the Gloaming, The Star of
+Bethlehem, I Hear You Calling Me, interspersed with Everybody Works but
+Father, and Poor Old Adam, etc.
+
+I wish I could know in time when I get my leave for you to come over and
+meet me. I'm going to spend my nine days in the most glorious ways
+imaginable. To start with I won't eat anything that's canned and, to go
+on, I won't get out of bed till I feel inclined. And if you're there--!
+
+Dreams and nonsense! God bless you all and keep us near and safe though
+absent. Alive or "Gone West" I shall never be far from you; you may
+depend on that--and I shall always hope to feel you brave and happy.
+This is a great game--cheese-mites pitting themselves against all the
+splendours of Death. Please, please write well ahead, so that I may not
+miss your Christmas letters.
+
+ Yours lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+November 6th, 1916.
+
+
+My Dear Ones:
+
+Such a wonderful day it has been--I scarcely know where to start. I came
+down last night from twenty-four hours in the mud, where I had been
+observing. I'd spent the night in a hole dug in the side of the trench
+and a dead Hun forming part of the roof. I'd sat there re-living so many
+things--the ecstatic moments of my life when I first touched fame--and
+my feet were so cold that I could not feel them, so I thought all the
+harder of the pleasant things of the past. Then, as I say, I came back
+to the gun position to learn that I was to have one day off at the back
+of the lines. You can't imagine what that meant to me--one day in a
+country that is green, one day where there is no shell-fire, one day
+where you don't turn up corpses with your tread! For two months I have
+never left the guns except to go forward and I have never been from
+under shell-fire. All night long as I have slept the ground had been
+shaken by the stamping of the guns--and now after two months, to come
+back to comparative normality! The reason for this privilege being
+granted was that the powers that he had come to the conclusion that it
+was time I had a bath. Since I sleep in my clothes and water is too
+valuable for washing anything but the face and hands, they were probably
+right in their guess at my condition.
+
+So with the greatest holiday of my life in prospect I went to the empty
+gunpit in which I sleep, and turned in. This morning I set out early
+with my servant, tramping back across the long, long battlefields which
+our boys have won. The mud was knee-deep in places, but we floundered on
+till we came to our old and deserted gun-position where my horses waited
+for me. From there I rode to the wagon-lines--the first time I've sat a
+horse since I came into action. Far behind me the thunder of winged
+murder grew more faint. The country became greener; trees even had
+leaves upon them which fluttered against the grey-blue sky. It was
+wonderful--like awaking from an appalling nightmare. My little beast was
+fresh and seemed to share my joy, for she stepped out bravely.
+
+When I arrived at the wagon-lines I would not wait--I longed to see
+something even greener and quieter. My groom packed up some oats and
+away we went again. My first objective was the military baths; I lay in
+hot water for half-an-hour and read the advertisements of my book. As I
+lay there, for the first time since I've been out, I began to get a
+half-way true perspective of myself. What's left of the egotism of the
+author came to life, and--now laugh--I planned my next novel--planned it
+to the sound of men singing, because they were clean for the first time
+in months. I left my towels and soap with a military policeman, by the
+roadside, and went prancing off along country roads in search of the
+almost forgotten places where people don't kill one another. Was it
+imagination? There seemed to me to be a different look in the faces of
+the men I met--for the time being they were neither hunters nor hunted.
+There were actually cows in the fields. At one point, where pollarded
+trees stand like a Hobbema sketch against the sky, a group of officers
+were coursing a hare, following a big black hound on horseback. We lost
+our way. A drenching rainstorm fell over us--we didn't care; and we saw
+as we looked back a most beautiful thing--a rainbow over green fields.
+It was as romantic as the first rainbow in childhood.
+
+All day I have been seeing lovely and familiar things as though for the
+first time. I've been a sort of Lazarus, rising out of his tomb and
+praising God at the sound of a divine voice. You don't know how
+exquisite a ploughed field can look, especially after rain, unless you
+have feared that you might never see one again.
+
+I came to a grey little village, where civilians were still living, and
+then to a gate and a garden. In the cottage was a French peasant woman
+who smiled, patted my hair because it was curly, and chattered
+interminably. The result was a huge omelette and a bottle of champagne.
+Then came a touch of naughtiness--a lady visitor with a copy of _La Vie
+Parisienne_, which she promptly bestowed on the English soldier. I read
+it, and dreamt of the time when I should walk the Champs Elysees again.
+It was growing dusk when I turned back to the noise of battle. There was
+a white moon in a milky sky. Motor-bikes fled by me, great lorries
+driven by Jehus from London buses, and automobiles which too poignantly
+had been Strand taxis and had taken lovers home from the Gaiety. I
+jogged along thinking very little, but supremely happy. Now I'm back at
+the wagon-line; to-morrow I go back to the guns. Meanwhile I write to
+you by a guttering candle.
+
+Life, how I love you! What a wonderful kindly thing I could make of you
+to-night. Strangely the vision has come to me of all that you mean. Now
+I could write. So soon you may go from me or be changed into a form of
+existence which all my training has taught me to dread. After death is
+there only nothingness? I think that for those who have missed love in
+this life there must be compensations--the little children whom they
+ought to have had, perhaps. To-day, after so many weeks, I have seen
+little children again.
+
+And yet, so strange a havoc does this war work that, if I have to "Go
+West," I shall go _proudly_ and quietly. I have seen too many men die
+bravely to make a fuss if my turn comes. A mixed passenger list old
+Father Charon must have each night--Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Huns.
+To-morrow I shall have another sight of the greenness and then--the
+guns.
+
+I don't know whether I have been able to make any of my emotions clear
+to you in my letters. Terror has a terrible fascination. Up to now I
+have always been afraid--afraid of small fears. At last I meet fear
+itself and it stings my pride into an unpremeditated courage.
+
+I've just had a pile of letters from you all. How ripping it is to be
+remembered! Letters keep one civilised.
+
+It's late and I'm very tired. God bless you each and all.
+
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+November 15th, 1916.
+
+
+Dear Father:
+
+I've owed you a letter for some time, but I've been getting very little
+leisure. You can't send steel messages to the Kaiser and love-notes to
+your family in the same breath.
+
+I am amazed at the spirit you three are showing and almighty proud that
+you can muster such courage. I suppose none of us quite realised our
+strength till it came to the test. There was a time when we all doubted
+our own heroism. I think we were typical of our age. Every novel of the
+past ten years has been more or less a study in sentiment and
+self-distrust. We used to wonder what kind of stuff Drake's men were
+made of that they could jest while they died. We used to contrast
+ourselves with them to our own disfavour. Well, we know now that when
+there's a New World to be discovered we can still rise up reincarnated
+into spiritual pirates. It wasn't the men of our age who were at fault,
+but the New World that was lacking. Our New World is the Kingdom of
+Heroism, the doors of which are flung so wide that the meanest of us may
+enter. I know men out here who are the dependable daredevils of their
+brigades, who in peace times were nuisances and as soon as peace is
+declared will become nuisances again. At the moment they're fine,
+laughing at Death and smiling at the chance of agony. There's a man I
+know of who had a record sheet of crimes. When he was out of action he
+was always drunk and up for office. To get rid of him, they put him into
+the trench mortars and within a month he had won his D.C.M. He came out
+and went on the spree--this particular spree consisted in stripping a
+Highland officer of his kilts on a moonlight night. For this he was
+sentenced to several months in a military prison, but asked to be
+allowed to serve his sentence in the trenches. He came out from his
+punishment a King's sergeant--which means that whatever he did nobody
+could degrade him. He got this for lifting his trench mortar over the
+parapet when all the detachment were killed. Carrying it out into a
+shell-hole, he held back the Hun attack and saved the situation. He got
+drunk again, and again chose to be returned to the trenches. This time
+his head was blown off while he was engaged in a special feat of
+gallantry. What are you to say to such men? Ordinarily they'd be
+blackguards, but war lifts them into splendour. In the same way you see
+mild men, timid men, almost girlish men, carrying out duties which in
+other wars would have won V.C.'s. I don't think the soul of courage
+ever dies out of the race any more than the capacity for love. All it
+means is that the occasion is not present. For myself I try to analyse
+my emotions; am I simply numb, or do I imitate other people's coolness
+and shall I fear life again when the war is ended? There is no
+explanation save the great army phrase "Carry on." We "carry on"
+because, if we don't, we shall let other men down and put their lives in
+danger. And there's more than that--we all want to live up to the
+standard that prompted us to come.
+
+One talks about splendour--but war isn't splendid except in the
+individual sense. A man by his own self-conquest can make it splendid
+for himself, but in the massed sense it's squalid. There's nothing
+splendid about a battlefield when the fight is ended--shreds of what
+once were men, tortured, levelled landscapes--the barbaric loneliness of
+Hell. I shall never forget my first dead man. He was a signalling
+officer, lying in the dawn on a muddy hill. I thought he was asleep at
+first, but when I looked more closely, I saw that his shoulder blade was
+showing white through his tunic. He was wearing black boots. It's odd,
+but the sight of black boots have the same effect on me now that black
+and white stripes had in childhood. I have the superstitious feeling
+that to wear them would bring me bad luck.
+
+Tonight we've been singing in parts, Back in the Dear Dead Days Beyond
+Recall--a mournful kind of ditty to sing under the circumstances--so
+mournful that we had to have a game of five hundred to cheer us up.
+
+It's now nearly 2 a.m., and I have to go out to the guns again before I
+go to bed. I carry your letters about in my pockets and read them at odd
+intervals in all kinds of places that you can't imagine.
+
+Cheer up and remember that I'm quite happy. I wish you could be with me
+for just one day to understand.
+
+ Yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+December 3rd, 1916.
+
+Dear Boys:
+
+By this time you will be all through your exams and I hope have both
+passed. It'll be splendid if you can go together to the same station.
+You envy me, you say; well, I rather envy you. I'd like to be with you.
+You, at least, don't have Napoleon's fourth antagonist with which to
+contend--mud. But at present I'm clean and billeted in an estaminet, in
+a not too bad little village. There's an old mill and still older
+church, and the usual farmhouses with the indispensable pile of manure
+under the front windows. We shall have plenty of hard work here, licking
+our men into shape and re-fitting.
+
+You know how I've longed to sleep between sheets; I can now, but find
+them so cold that I still use my sleeping bag--such is human
+inconsistency. But yesterday I had a boiling bath--as good a bath as
+could be found in a New York hotel--and I am CLEAN.
+
+I woke up this morning to hear some one singing Casey
+Jones--consequently I thought of former Christmases. My mind has been
+travelling back very much of late. Suddenly I see something here which
+reminds me of the time when E. and I were at Lisieux, or even of our
+Saturday excursions to Nelson when we were all together at the ranch.
+
+Did I tell you that B., our officer who was wounded two months ago, has
+just returned to us. This morning he got news that his young brother has
+been killed in the place which we have left. I wonder when we shall grow
+tired of stabbing and shooting and killing. It seems to me that the war
+cannot end in less than two years.
+
+I have made myself nice to the Brigade interpreter and he has found me
+a delightful room with electric light and a fire. It's in an old
+farmhouse with a brick terrace in front. My room is on the ground floor
+and tile-paved. The chairs are rush-bottomed and there are old quaint
+china plates on the shelves. There is also a quite charming
+mademoiselle. So you see, you don't need to pity me any more.
+
+Just at present I'm busy getting up the Brigade Christmas Entertainment.
+The Colonel asked me to do it, otherwise I should have said _no_, as I
+want all the time I can get to myself. You can't think how jolly it is
+to sit again in a room which is temporarily yours after living in
+dug-outs, herded side by side with other men. I can be _me_ now, and not
+a soldier of thousands when I write. You shall hear from me again soon.
+Hope you're having a ripping time in London.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+December 5th, 1916.
+
+DEAREST M.:
+
+I've just come in from my last tour of inspection as orderly officer,
+and it's close on midnight. I'm getting this line off to you to let you
+know that I expect to get my nine days' leave about the beginning of
+January. How I wish it were possible to have you in London when I
+arrive, or, failing that, to spend my leave in New York!
+
+To-morrow I make an early start on horseback for a market of the
+old-fashioned sort which is held at a town near by. Can you dimly
+picture me with my groom, followed by a mess-cart, going from stall to
+stall and bartering with the peasants? It'll be rather good fun and
+something quite out of my experience.
+
+Christmas will be over by the time you get this, and I do hope that you
+had a good one. I paused to talk to the other officers; they say that
+they are sure that you are very beautiful and have a warm heart, and
+would like to send them a five-storey layer cake, half a dozen bottles
+of port and one Paris chef. At present I am the Dives of the mess and
+dole out luxuries to these Lazaruses.
+
+Good-bye for the present.
+
+ Yours ever lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+December 6th, 1916.
+
+
+Dearest M.:
+
+I've just undone your Christmas parcels, and already I am wearing the
+waistcoat and socks, and my mouth is hot with the ginger.
+
+I expect to get leave for England on January 10th. I do wish it might be
+possible for some of you to cross the ocean and be in London with
+me--and I don't see what there is to prevent you. Unless the war ends
+sooner than any of us expect, it is not likely that I shall get another
+leave in less than nine months. So, if you want to come and if there's
+time when you receive this letter, just hop on a boat and let's see what
+London looks like together.
+
+I wonder what kind of a Christmas you'll have. I shall picture it all.
+You may hear me tiptoeing up the stairs if you listen very hard. Where
+does the soul go in sleep? Surely mine flies back to where all of you
+dear people are.
+
+I came back to my farm yesterday to find a bouquet of paper flowers at
+the head of my bed with a note pinned on it. Over my fire-place was hung
+a pathetic pair of farm-girls' heavy Sunday boots, all brightly
+polished, with two other notes pinned on them. The Feast of St. Nicholas
+on December 7th is an opportunity for unmarried men to be reminded that
+there are unmarried girls in the world--wherefore the flowers. I enclose
+the notes. Keep them,--they may be useful for a book some day.
+
+I'm having a pretty good rest, and am still in my old farmhouse.
+
+ Love to all.
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII
+
+December 15th, 1916.
+
+Dearest All:
+
+At the present I'm just where mother hoped I'd be--in a deep dug-out
+about twenty feet down--we're trying to get a fire lighted, and
+consequently the place is smoked out. Where I'll be for Christmas I
+don't know, but I hope by then to be in billets. I've just come back
+from the trenches, where I've been observing. The mud is not nearly so
+bad where I am now, and with a few days' more work, we should be quite
+comfortable. You'll have received my cable about my getting leave
+soon--I'm wondering whether the Atlantic is sufficiently quiet for any
+of you to risk a crossing.
+
+Poor Basil! Your letter was the first news I got of his death. I must
+have watched the attack in which he lost his life. One wonders now how
+it was that some instinct did not warn me that one of those khaki dots
+jumping out of the trenches was the cousin who stayed with us in London.
+
+I'm wondering what this mystery of the German Chancellor is all
+about--some peace proposals, I suppose--which are sure to prove
+bombastic and unacceptable. It seems to us out here as though the war
+must go on forever. Like a boy's dream of the far-off freedom of
+manhood, the day appears when we shall step out into the old liberty of
+owning our own lives. What a celebration we'll have when I come home! I
+can't quite grasp the joy of it.
+
+I've got to get this letter off quite soon if it's to go to-day. It
+ought to reach, you by January 12th or thereabouts. You may be sure my
+thoughts will have been with you on Christmas day. I shall look back and
+remember all the by-gone good times and then plan for Christmas, 1917.
+God keep us all.
+
+ Ever yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII
+
+December 18th, 1916.
+
+My Dearest M.:
+
+I always feel when I write a joint letter to the family that I'm
+cheating each one of you, but it's so very difficult to get time to
+write as often as I'd like. It's a week to Christmas and I picture the
+beginnings of the preparations. I can look back and remember so many
+such preparations, especially when we were kiddies in London. What good
+times one has in a life! I've been sitting with my groom by the fire
+to-night while he dried my clothes. I've mentioned him to you before as
+having lived in Nelson, and worked at the Silver King mine. We both grew
+ecstatic over British Columbia.
+
+I am hoping all the time that the boys may be in England at the time I
+get my leave--I hardly dare hope that any of you will be there. But it
+would he grand if you could manage it--I long very much to see you all
+again. I can just imagine my first month home again. I shan't let any of
+you work. I shall be the incurable boy. I've spent the best part of
+to-day out in No Man's Land, within seventy yards of the Huns. Quite an
+experience, I assure you, and one that I wouldn't have missed for
+worlds. I'll have heaps to write into novels one day--the vividest kind
+of local colour. Just at present I have nothing to read but the
+Christmas number of the _Strand_. It makes me remember the time when we
+children raced for the latest development of _The Hound of the
+Baskervilles_, and so many occasions when I had one of "those sniffy
+colds" and sat by the Highbury fire with a book. Good days, those!
+
+I'm just off to bed now, and will finish this to-morrow. Bed is my
+greatest luxury nowadays.
+
+December 19th.
+
+The book and chocolate just came, and a bunch of New York papers. All
+were most welcome. I was longing for something to read. To-morrow I have
+to go forward to observe. Two of our officers are on leave, so it makes
+the rest of us work pretty hard. What do you think of the Kaiser's
+absurd peace proposals? The man must be mad.
+
+ The best of love,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+December 20th, 1916.
+
+Dear Mr. T.:
+
+Just back from a successful argument with Fritz, to find your kind good
+wishes. It's rather a lark out here, though a lark which may turn
+against you any time. I laugh a good deal more than I mope. Anything
+really horrible has a ludicrous side--it's like Mark Twain's humour--a
+gross exaggeration. The maddest thing of all to me is that a person so
+willing to be amiable as I am should be out here killing people for
+principle's sake. There's no rhyme or reason--it can't be argued. Dimly
+one thinks he sees what is right and leaves father and mother and home,
+as though it were for the Kingdom of Heaven's sake. Perhaps it is. If
+one didn't pin his faith to that "perhaps"--. One can't explain.
+
+A merry Christmas to you.
+ Yours very sincerely,
+ CONINGSBY DAWSON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+December 20th, 1916.
+
+Dear Mr. A.D.:
+
+I've just come in from an argument with Fritz when your chocolate formed
+my meal. You were very kind to think of me and to send it, and you were
+extraordinarily understanding in the letter that you sent me. One's life
+out here is like a pollarded tree--all the lower branches are gone--one
+gazes on great nobilities, on the fascinating horror of Eternity
+sometimes--I said horror, but it's often fine in its spaciousness--one
+gazes on many inverted splendours of Titans, but it's giddy work being
+so high and rarefied, and all the gentle past seems gone. That's why it
+is pleasant in this grimy anonymity of death and courage to get
+reminders, such as your letter, that one was once localised and had a
+familiar history. If I come back, I shall be like Rip Van Winkle, or a
+Robinson Crusoe--like any and all of the creatures of legend and history
+to whom abnormality has grown to seem normal. If you can imagine
+yourself living in a world in which every day is a demonstration of a
+Puritan's conception of what happens when the last trump sounds, then
+you have some idea of my queer situation. One has come to a point when
+death seems very inconsiderable and only failure to do one's duty is an
+utter loss. Love and the future, and all the sweet and tender dreams of
+by-gone days are like a house in which the blinds are lowered and from
+which the sight has gone. Landscapes have lost their beauty, everything
+God-made and man-made is destroyed except man's power to endure with a
+smile the things he once most dreaded, because he believes that only so
+may he be righteous in his own eyes. How one has longed for that sure
+confidence in the petty failings of little living--the confidence to
+believe that he can stand up and suffer for principle! God has given all
+men who are out here that opportunity--the supremest that can be hoped
+for--so, in spite of exile, Christmas for most of us will be a happy
+day. Does one see more truly life's worth on a battlefield? I often ask
+myself that question. Is the contempt that is hourly shown for life the
+real standard of life's worth? I shrug my shoulders at my own
+unanswerable questions--all I know is that I move daily with men who
+have everything to live for who, nevertheless, are urged by an
+unconscious magnanimity to die. I don't think any of our dead pity
+themselves--but they would have done so if they had faltered in their
+choice. One lives only from sunrise to sunrise, but there's a more real
+happiness in this brief living than I ever knew before, because it is so
+exactingly worth while.
+
+Thank you again for your kindness.
+ Very sincerely yours,
+ C.D.
+
+The suggestion that we might all meet in London in January, 1917, was a
+hope rather than an expectation. We received a cable from France on
+Sunday, December 17th, 1916, and left New York on December 30th. We were
+met in London by the two sailor-sons, who were expecting appointments at
+any moment, and Coningsby arrived late in the evening of January 13th.
+He was unwell when he arrived, having had a near touch of pneumonia. The
+day before he left the front he had been in action, with a temperature
+of 104. There were difficulties about getting his leave at the exact
+time appointed, but these he overcame by exchanging leave with a
+brother-officer. He travelled from the Front all night in a windowless
+train, and at Calais was delayed by a draft of infantry which he had to
+take over to England. The consequence of this delay was that the meeting
+at the railway station, of which he had so long dreamed, did not come
+off. We spent a long day, going from station to station, misled by
+imperfect information as to the arrival of troop trains. At Victoria
+Station we saw two thousand troops arrive on leave, men caked with
+trench-mud, but he was not among them. We reluctantly returned to our
+hotel in the late afternoon and gave up expecting him. There was all the
+time a telegram at the hotel from him, giving the exact place and time
+of his arrival, but it was not delivered until it was too late to meet
+him. He arrived at ten o'clock, and at the same time his two brothers,
+who had been summoned in the morning to Southampton, entered the hotel,
+having been granted special leave to return to London. A night's rest
+did wonders for Coningsby, and the next day his spirits were as high as
+in the old days of joyous holiday. During the next eight days we lived
+at a tense pitch of excitement. We went to theatres, dined in
+restaurants, met friends, and heard from his lips a hundred details of
+his life which could not be communicated in letters. We were all
+thrilled by the darkened heroic London through which we moved, the
+London which bore its sorrows so proudly, and went about its daily life
+with such silent courage. We visited old friends to whom the war had
+brought irreparable bereavements, but never once heard the voice of
+self-pity, of murmur or complaint. To me it was an incredible England;
+an England purged of all weakness, stripped of flabbiness, regenerated
+by sacrifice. I had dreamed of no such transformation by anything I had
+read in American newspapers and magazines. I think no one can imagine
+the completeness of this rebirth of the soul of England who has not
+dwelt, if only for a few days, among its people.
+
+Coningsby's brief leave expired all too soon. We saw him off from
+Folkestone, and while we were saying good-bye to him, his two brothers
+were on their way to their distant appointments with the Royal Naval
+Motor Patrol in the North of Scotland. We left Liverpool for New York on
+January 27th, and while at sea heard of the diplomatic break between
+America and Germany. The news was received on board the _S.S. St. Paul_
+with rejoicing. It was Sunday, and the religious service on board
+concluded with the Star-Spangled Banner.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+December 28th, 1916.
+
+Dearest All:
+
+I'm writing you this letter because I expect to-night is a busy-packing
+one with you. The picture is in my mind of you all. How splendid it is
+of you to come! I never thought you would really, not even in my wildest
+dream of optimism. There have been so many times when I scarcely thought
+that I would ever see you again--now the unexpected and hoped-for
+happens. It's ripping!
+
+I've put in an application for special leave in case the ordinary leave
+should be cut off. I think I'm almost certain to arrive by the 11th.
+Won't we have a time? I wonder what we'll want to do most--sit quiet or
+go to theatres? The nine days of freedom--the wonderful nine days--will
+pass with most tragic quickness. But they'll be days to remember as long
+as life lasts.
+
+Shall I see you standing on the station when I puff into London--or will
+it be Folkestone where we meet--or shall I arrive before you? I somehow
+think it will be you who will meet me at the barrier at Charing Cross,
+and we'll taxi through the darkened streets down the Strand, and back to
+our privacy. How impossible it sounds--like a vision of heart's desire
+in the night.
+
+Far, far away I see the fine home-coming, like a lamp burning in a dark
+night. I expect we shall all go off our heads with joy and be madder
+than ever. Who in the old London days would have imagined such a nine
+days of happiness in the old places as we are to have together.
+
+ God bless you, till we meet,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII
+
+January 4th, 1917.
+
+10.30 p.m.
+
+MY DEAREST ONES:
+
+This letter is written to welcome you to England, but I may be with you
+when it is opened. It was glorious news to hear that you were coming--I
+was only playing a forlorn bluff when I sent those cables. You're on the
+sea at present and should be half way over. Our last trip over together
+you marvelled at the apparent indifference of the soldiers on board, and
+now you're coming to meet one of your own fresh from the Front. A
+change!
+
+O what a nine days we're going to have together--the most wonderful that
+were ever spent. I dream of them, tell myself tales about them, live
+them over many times in imagination before they are realised. Sometimes
+I'm going to have no end of sleep, sometimes I'm going to keep awake
+every second, sometimes I'm going to sit quietly by a fire, and
+sometimes I'm going to taxi all the time. I can't fit your faces into
+the picture--it seems too unbelievable that we are to be together once
+again. To-day I've been staging our meeting--if you arrive first, and
+then if I arrive before you, and lastly if we both hit London on the
+same day. You mustn't expect me to be a sane person. You're three
+rippers to do this--and I hope you'll have an easy journey. The only
+ghost is the last day, when the leave train pulls out of Charing Cross.
+But we'll do that smiling, too; C'est la guerre.
+
+ Yours always and ever, CON.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII
+
+January 6th, 1917.
+
+MY DEAR ONES:
+
+I have just seen a brother officer aboard the ex-London bus en route for
+Blighty. How I wished I could have stepped on board that ex-London
+perambulator to-night! "Pickerdilly Cirkuss, 'Ighbury, 'Ighgate, Welsh
+'Arp--all the wye." O my, what a time I'll have when I meet you! I shall
+feel as though if anything happens to me after my return you'll be able
+to understand so much more bravely. These blinkered letters, with only
+writing and no touch of live hands, convey so little. When we've had a
+good time together and sat round the fire and talked interminably you'll
+be able to read so much more between the lines of my future letters.
+To-morrow you ought to land in England, and to-morrow night you should
+sleep in London. I am trying to swop my leave with another man,
+otherwise it won't come till the 15th. I am looking forward every hour
+to those miraculous nine days which we are to have together. You can't
+imagine with your vividest imagination the contrast between nine days
+with you in London and my days where I am now. A battalion went by
+yesterday, marching into action, and its band was playing I've a
+Sneakin' Feelin' in My Heart That I Want to Settle Down. We all have
+that sneaking feeling from time to time. I tell myself wonderful stories
+in the early dark mornings and become the architect of the most
+wonderful futures.
+
+I'm coming to join you just as soon as I know how--at the worst I'll be
+in London on the 16th of this month.
+
+ Ever yours,
+ CON.
+
+
+_The following letters were written after Coningsby had met his family
+in London._
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX
+
+January 24th, 1917.
+
+MY DEAR ONES:
+
+I have had a chance to write you sooner than I expected, as I stopped
+the night where I disembarked, and am catching my train to-day.
+
+It's strange to be back and under orders after nine days' freedom.
+Directly I landed I was detailed to march a party--it was that that made
+me lose my train--not that I objected, for I got one more sleep between
+sheets. I picked up on the boat in the casual way one does, with three
+other officers, so on landing we made a party to dine together, and had
+a very decent evening. I wasn't wanting to remember too much then, so
+that was why I didn't write letters.
+
+What good times we have to look back on and how much to be thankful for,
+that we met altogether. Now we must look forward to the summer and,
+perhaps, the end of the war. What a mad joy will sweep across the world
+on the day that peace is declared!
+
+This visit will have made you feel that you have a share in all that's
+happening over here and are as real a part of it as any of us. I'm
+awfully proud of you for your courage.
+
+ Yours lovingly,
+ CON.
+
+
+
+
+XL
+
+January 26th, 1917.
+
+MY VERY DEAR ONES:
+
+Here I am back--my nine days' leave a dream. I got into our wagon-lines
+last night after midnight, having had a cold ride along frozen roads
+through white wintry country. I was only half-expected, so my
+sleeping-bag hadn't been unpacked. I had to wake my batman and tramp
+about a mile to the billet; by the time I got there every one was
+asleep, so I spread out my sleeping-sack and crept in very quietly. For
+the few minutes before my eyes closed I pictured London, the taxis, the
+gay parties, the mystery of lights. I was roused this morning with the
+news that I had to go up to the gun-position at once. I stole just
+sufficient time to pick up a part of my accumulated mail, then got on my
+horse and set out. At the guns, I found that I was due to report as
+liaison officer, so here I am in the trenches again writing to you by
+candle-light. How wonderfully we have bridged the distance in spending
+those nine whole days together. And now it is over, and I am back in the
+trenches, and to-morrow you're sailing for New York.
+
+I can't tell you what the respite has meant to me. There have been times
+when my whole past life has seemed a myth and the future an endless
+prospect of carrying on. Now I can distantly hope that the old days will
+return.
+
+When I was in London half my mind was at the Front; now that I'm back in
+the trenches half my mind is in London. I re-live our gay times
+together; I go to cosy little dinners; I sit with you in the stalls,
+listening to the music; then I tumble off to sleep, and dream, and wake
+up to find the dream a delusion. It's a fine and manly contrast,
+however, between the game one plays out here and the fretful
+trivialities of civilian life.
+
+
+
+
+XLI
+
+January 27th.
+
+
+I got as far as this and then "something" happened. Twenty-four hours
+have gone by and once more it's nearly midnight and I write to you by
+candle-light. Since last night I've been with these infantry
+boy-officers who are doing such great work in such a careless spirit of
+jolliness. Any softness which had crept into me during my nine days of
+happiness has gone. I'm glad to be out here and wouldn't wish to be
+anywhere else till the war is ended.
+
+It's a week to-day since we were at _Charlie's Aunt_--such a cheerful
+little party! I expect the boys are doing their share of remembering too
+somewhere on the sea at present. I know you are, as you round the coast
+of Ireland and set out for the Atlantic.
+
+I've not been out of my clothes for three days and I've another day to
+go yet. I brought my haversack into the trenches with me; on opening it
+I found that some kind hands had slipped into it some clean socks and a
+bottle of Horlick's Malted Milk tablets.
+
+The signallers in a near-by dug-out are singing Keep the Home-Fires
+Burning Till the Boys Come Home. That's what we're all doing, isn't
+it--you at your end and we at ours? The brief few days of possessing
+myself are over and once more stern duty lies ahead. But I thank God for
+the chance I've had to see again those whom I love, and to be able to
+tell them with my own lips some of the bigness of our life at the Front.
+No personal aims count beside the great privilege which is ours to carry
+on until the war is over.
+
+All my thoughts are with you--so many memories of kindness. I keep on
+picturing things I ought to have done--things I ought to have told you.
+Always I can see, Oh, so vividly, the two sailor brothers waving
+good-bye as the train moved off through the London dusk, and then that
+other and forlorner group of three, standing outside the dock gates with
+the sentry like the angel in Eden, turning them back from happiness.
+With an extraordinary aloofness I watched myself moving like a puppet
+away from you whom I love most dearly in all the world--going away as if
+going were a thing so usual.
+
+I'm asking myself again if there isn't some new fineness of spirit which
+will develop from this war and survive it. In London, at a distance
+from all this tragedy of courage, I felt that I had slipped back to a
+lower plane; a kind of flabbiness was creeping into my blood--the old
+selfish fear of life and love of comfort. It's odd that out here, where
+the fear of death should supplant the fear of life, one somehow rises
+into a contempt for everything which is not bravest. There's no doubt
+that the call for sacrifice, and perhaps the supreme sacrifice, can
+transform men into a nobility of which they themselves are unconscious.
+That's the most splendid thing of all, that they themselves are unaware
+of their fineness.
+
+I'm now waiting to be relieved and am hurrying to finish this so that I
+may mail it as soon as I get back to the battery. There's a whole sack
+of letters and parcels waiting for me there, and I'm as eager to get to
+them as a kiddy to inspect his Christmas stocking. I always undo the
+string and wrappings with a kind of reverence, trying to picture the
+dear kneeling figures who did them up. In London I didn't dare to let
+myself go with you--I couldn't say all that was in my heart--it wouldn't
+have been wise. Don't ever doubt that the tenderness was there. Even
+though one is only a civilian in khaki, some of the soldier's sternness
+becomes second nature.
+
+All the country is covered with snow--it's brilliant clear weather,
+more like America than Europe. I'm feeling strong as a horse, ever so
+much better than I felt when on leave. Life is really tremendously worth
+living, in spite of the war.
+
+
+
+
+XLII
+
+January 28th.
+
+I'm back at the battery, sitting by a cosy fire. I might be up at
+Kootenay by the look of my surroundings. I'm in a shack with a really
+truly floor, and a window looking out on moonlit whiteness. If it wasn't
+for the tapping of the distant machine guns--tapping that always sounds
+to me like the nailing up of coffins--I might be here for pleasure. In
+imagination I can see your great ship, with all its portholes aglare,
+ploughing across the darkness to America. The dear sailor brothers I
+can't quite visualise; I can only see them looking so upright and pale
+when we said good-bye. It's getting late and the fire's dying. I'm half
+asleep; I've not been out of my clothes for three nights. I shall tell
+myself a story of the end of the war and our next meeting--it'll last
+from the time that I creep into my sack until I close my eyes. It's a
+glorious life.
+
+ Yours very lovingly,
+ CON
+
+
+
+
+XLIII
+
+January 31st, 1917.
+
+DEAR MR. AND MRS. M.:
+
+It was extremely good of you to remember me. I got back from leave in
+London on the 26th and found the cigarettes waiting for me. One hasn't
+got an awful lot of pleasures left, but smoking is one of them. I feel
+particularly doggy when I open my case and find my initials on them.
+
+I expect you'll have heard all the news of my leave long before this
+reaches you. We had a splendid time and the greatest of luck. My sailor
+brothers were with me all but two days, and my people were in England
+only a few days before I arrived.
+
+This is a queer adventure for a peaceable person like myself--it blots
+out all the past and reduces the future to a speck. One hardly hopes
+that things will ever be different, but looks forward to interminable
+years of carrying on. My leave rather corrected that frame of mind; it
+came as a surprise to be forced to realise that not all the world was
+living under orders on woman less, childless battlefields. But we don't
+need any pity--we manage our good times, and are sorry for the men who
+aren't here, for it's a wonderful thing to have been chosen to
+sacrifice and perhaps to die that the world of the future may be happier
+and kinder.
+
+This letter is rather disjointed; I'm in charge of the battery for the
+time, and messages keep on coming in, and one has to rush out to give
+the order to fire.
+
+It's an American night--snow-white and piercing, with a frigid moon
+sailing quietly. I think the quiet beauty of the sky is about the only
+thing in Nature that we do not scar and destroy with our fighting.
+
+Good-bye, and thank you ever so much.
+
+ Yours very sincerely,
+ CONINGSBY DAWSON.
+
+
+
+
+XLIV
+
+February 1st, 1917.
+
+11 p.m.
+
+DEAR FATHER:
+
+Your picture of the black days when no letter comes from me sets me off
+scribbling to you at this late hour. All to-day I've been having a cold
+but amusing time at the O.P. (Forward Observation Post). It seems brutal
+to say it, but taking potshots at the enemy when they present themselves
+is rather fun. When you watch them scattering like ants before the
+shell whose direction you have ordered, you somehow forget to think of
+them as individuals, any more than the bear-hunter thinks of the cubs
+that will be left motherless. You watch your victims through your
+glasses as God might watch his mad universe. Your skill in directing
+fire makes you what in peace times would be called a murderer. Curious!
+You're glad, and yet at close quarters only in hot blood would you hurt
+a man.
+
+I'd been back for a little over an hour when I had to go forward again
+to guide in some guns. The country was dazzlingly white in the
+moonlight. As far as eye could see every yard was an old battlefield;
+beneath the soft white fleece of snow lay countless unburied bodies.
+Like frantic fingers tearing at the sky, all along the horizon, Hun
+lights were shooting up and drifting across our front. Tap-tap-tappity
+went the machine-guns; whoo-oo went the heavies, and they always stamp
+like angry bulls. I had to come back by myself across the heroic
+corruption which the snow had covered. All the way I asked myself why
+was I not frightened. What has happened to me? Ghosts should walk here
+if anywhere. Moreover, I know that I shall be frightened again when the
+war is ended. Do you remember how you once offered me money to walk
+through the Forest of Dean after dark, and I wouldn't? I wouldn't if
+you offered it to me now. You remember Meredith's lines in "The Woods of
+Westermain":
+
+ "All the eyeballs under hoods
+ Shroud you in their glare;
+ Enter these enchanted woods
+ You who dare."
+
+Maybe what re-creates one for the moment is the British officer's
+uniform, and even more the fact that you are not asked, but expected, to
+do your duty. So I came back quite unruffled across battered trenches
+and silent mounds to write this letter to you.
+
+My dear father, I'm over thirty, and yet just as much a little boy as
+ever. I still feel overwhelmingly dependent on your good opinion and
+love. I'm glad that they are black days when you have no letters from
+me. I love to think of the rush to the door when the postman rings and
+the excited shouting up the stairs, "Quick, one from Con."
+
+
+February 2nd.
+
+You see by the writing how tired I was when I reached this point. It's
+nearly twenty-four hours later and again night. The gramophone is
+playing an air from _La Tosca_ to which the guns beat out a bass
+accompaniment. I close my eyes and picture the many times I have heard
+the (probably) German orchestras of Broadway Joy Palaces play that same
+music. How incongruous that I should be listening to it here and under
+these circumstances! It must have been listened to so often by gay
+crowds in the beauty places of the world. A romantic picture grows up in
+my mind of a blue night, the laughter of youth in evening dress, lamps
+twinkling through trees, far off the velvety shadow of water and
+mountains, and as a voice to it all, that air from _La Tosca_. I can
+believe that the silent people near by raise themselves up in their
+snow-beds to listen, each one recalling some ecstatic moment before the
+dream of life was shattered.
+
+There's a picture in the Pantheon at Paris, I remember; I believe it's
+called _To Glory_. One sees all the armies of the ages charging out of
+the middle distance with Death riding at their head. The only glory that
+I have discovered in this war is in men's hearts--it's not external.
+Were one to paint the spirit of this war he would depict a mud
+landscape, blasted trees, an iron sky; wading through the slush and
+shell-holes would come a file of bowed figures, more like outcasts from
+the Embankment than soldiers. They're loaded down like pack animals,
+their shoulders are rounded, they're wearied to death, but they go on
+and go on. There's no "To Glory" about what we're doing out here;
+there's no flash of swords or splendour of uniforms. There are only very
+tired men determined to carry on. The war will be won by tired men who
+could never again pass an insurance test, a mob of broken
+counter-jumpers, ragged ex-plumbers and quite unheroic persons. We're
+civilians in khaki, but because of the ideals for which we fight we've
+managed to acquire soldiers' hearts.
+
+My flow of thought was interrupted by a burst of song in which I was
+compelled to join. We're all writing letters around one candle; suddenly
+the O.C. looked up and began, God Be With You Till We Meet Again. We
+sang it in parts. It was in Southport, when I was about nine years old,
+that I first heard that sung. You had gone for your first trip to
+America, leaving a very lonely family behind you. We children were
+scared to death that you'd be drowned. One evening, coming back from a
+walk on the sand-hills, we heard voices singing in a garden, God Be With
+You Till We Meet Again. The words and the soft dusk, and the vague
+figures in the English summer garden, seemed to typify the terror of all
+partings. We've said good-bye so often since, and God has been with us.
+I don't think any parting was more hard than our last at the prosaic
+dock-gates with the cold wind of duty blowing, and the sentry barring
+your entrance, and your path leading back to America while mine led on
+to France. But you three were regular soldiers--just as much soldiers as
+we chaps who were embarking. One talks of our armies in the field, but
+there are the other armies, millions strong, of mothers and fathers and
+sisters, who keep their eyes dry, treasure muddy letters beneath their
+pillows, offer up prayers and wait, wait, wait so eternally for God to
+open another door.
+
+To-morrow I again go forward, which means rising early and taking a long
+plod through the snows; that's one reason for not writing any more, and
+another is that our one poor candle is literally on its last legs.
+
+Your poem, written years ago when the poor were marching in London, is
+often in my mind:
+
+ "Yesterday and to-day
+ Have been heavy with labour and sorrow;
+ I should faint if I did not see
+ The day that is after to-morrow."
+
+And there's that last verse which prophesied utterly the spirit in which
+we men at the Front are fighting to-day:
+
+ "And for me, with spirit elate
+ The mire and the fog I press thorough,
+ For Heaven shines under the cloud
+ Of the day that is after to-morrow."
+
+We civilians who have been taught so long to love our enemies and do
+good to them who hate us--much too long ever to make professional
+soldiers--are watching with our hearts in our eyes for that day which
+conies after to-morrow. Meanwhile we plod on determinedly, hoping for
+the hidden glory.
+
+ Yours very lovingly,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+XLV
+
+
+February 3rd, 1917.
+
+Dear Misses W.:
+
+You were very kind to remember me at Christmas. _Seventeen_ was read
+with all kinds of gusto by all my brother officers. It's still being
+borrowed.
+
+I've been back from leave a few days now and am settling back to
+business again. It was a trifle hard after over-eating and undersleeping
+myself for nine days, and riding everywhere with my feet up in taxis. I
+was the wildest little boy. Here it's snowy and bitter. We wear scarves
+round our ears to keep the frost away and dream of fires a mile high.
+All I ask, when the war is ended, is to be allowed to sit asleep in a
+big armchair and to be left there absolutely quiet. Sleep, which we
+crave so much at times, is only death done up in sample bottles. Perhaps
+some of these very weary men who strew our battlefields are glad to lie
+at last at endless leisure.
+
+Good-bye, and thank you.
+
+ Yours very sincerely,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XLVI
+
+February 4th, 1917.
+
+My Dearest Mother:
+
+Somewhere in the distance I can hear a piano going and men's voices
+singing A Perfect Day. It's queer how music creates a world for you in
+which you are not, and makes you dreamy. I've been sitting by a fire and
+thinking of all the happy times when the total of desire seemed almost
+within one's grasp. It never is--one always, always misses it and has to
+rub the dust from the eyes, recover one's breath and set out on the
+search afresh. I suppose when you grow very old you learn the lesson of
+sitting quiet, and the heart stops beating and the total of desire comes
+to you. And yet I can remember so many happy days, when I was a child in
+the summer and later at Kootenay. One almost thought he had caught the
+secret of carrying heaven in his heart.
+
+By the time this reaches you I'll be in the line again, but for the
+present I'm undergoing a special course of training. You can't hear the
+most distant sound of guns, and if it wasn't for the pressure of study,
+similar to that at _Kingston_, one would be very rested.
+
+Sunday of all days is the one when I remember you most. You're just
+sitting down to mid-day dinner,--I've made the calculation for
+difference of time. You're probably saying how less than a month ago we
+were in London. That doesn't sound true even when I write it. I wonder
+how your old familiar surroundings strike you. It's terrible to come
+down from the mountain heights of a great elation like our ten days in
+London. I often think of that with regard to myself when the war is
+ended. There'll be a sense of dissatisfaction when the old lost comforts
+are regained. There'll be a sense of lowered manhood. The stupendous
+terrors of Armageddon demand less courage than the uneventful terror of
+the daily commonplace. There's something splendid and exhilarating in
+going forward among bursting shells--we, who have done all that, know
+that when the guns have ceased to roar our blood will grow more
+sluggish and we'll never be such men again. Instead of getting up in the
+morning and hearing your O.C. say, "You'll run a line into trench
+so-and-so to-day and shoot up such-and-such Hun wire," you'll hear
+necessity saying, "You'll work from breakfast to dinner and earn your
+daily bread. And you'll do it to-morrow and to-morrow and to-morrow
+world without end. Amen." They never put that forever and forever part
+into their commands out here, because the Amen for any one of us may be
+only a few hours away. But the big immediate thing is so much easier to
+do than the prosaic carrying on without anxiety--which is your game. I
+begin to understand what you have had to suffer now that R. and E. are
+really at war too. I get awfully anxious about them. I never knew before
+that either of them owned so much of my heart. I get furious when I
+remember that they might get hurt. I've heard of a Canadian who joined
+when he learnt that his best friend had been murdered by Hun bayonets.
+He came to get his own back and was the most reckless man in his
+battalion. I can understand his temper now. We're all of us in danger of
+slipping back into the worship of Thor.
+
+I'll write as often as I can while here, but I don't get much time--so
+you'll understand. It's the long nights when one sits up to take the
+firing in action that give one the chance to be a decent correspondent.
+
+My birthday comes round soon, doesn't it? Good heavens, how ancient I'm
+getting and without any "grow old along with me" consolation. Well, to
+grow old is all in the job of living.
+
+Good-bye, and God bless you all.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XLVII
+
+
+February 4th, 1917.
+
+Dear Mr. B.:
+
+I have been intending to write to you for a very long time, but as most
+of one's writing is done when one ought to be asleep, and sleep next to
+eating is one of our few remaining pleasures, my intended letter has
+remained in my head up to now. On returning from a nine days' leave to
+London the other day, however, I found two letters from you awaiting me
+and was reproached into effort.
+
+War's a queer game--not at all what one's civilian mind imagined; it's
+far more horrible and less exciting. The horrors which the civilian mind
+dreads most are mutilation and death. Out here we rarely think about
+them; the thing which wears on one most and calls out his gravest
+courage is the endless sequence of physical discomfort. Not to be able
+to wash, not to be able to sleep, to have to be wet and cold for long
+periods at a stretch, to find mud on your person, in your food, to have
+to stand in mud, see mud, sleep in mud and to continue to smile--that's
+what tests courage. Our chaps are splendid. They're not the hair-brained
+idiots that some war-correspondents depict from day to day. They're
+perfectly sane people who know to a fraction what they're up against,
+but who carry on with a grim good-nature and a determination to win with
+a smile. I never before appreciated as I do to-day the latent capacity
+for big-hearted endurance that is in the heart of every man. Here are
+apparently quite ordinary chaps--chaps who washed, liked theatres, loved
+kiddies and sweethearts, had a zest for life--they're bankrupt of all
+pleasures except the supreme pleasure of knowing that they're doing the
+ordinary and finest thing of which they are capable. There are millions
+to whom the mere consciousness of doing their duty has brought an
+heretofore unexperienced peace of mind. For myself I was never happier
+than I am at present; there's a novel zip added to life by the daily
+risks and the knowledge that at last you're doing something into which
+no trace of selfishness enters. One can only die once; the chief concern
+that matters is _how_ and not _when_ you die. I don't pity the weary men
+who have attained eternal leisure in the corruption of our
+shell-furrowed battles; they "went West" in their supreme moment. The
+men I pity are those who could not hear the call of duty and whose
+consciences will grow more flabby every day. With the brutal roar of the
+first Prussian gun the cry came to the civilised world, "Follow thou
+me," just as truly as it did in Palestine. Men went to their Calvary
+singing Tipperary, rubbish, rhymed doggerel, but their spirit was equal
+to that of any Christian martyr in a Roman amphitheatre. "Greater love
+hath no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friend." Our
+chaps are doing that consciously, willingly, almost without bitterness
+towards their enemies; for the rest it doesn't matter whether they sing
+hymns or ragtime. They've followed their ideal--freedom--and died for
+it. A former age expressed itself in Gregorian chants; ours, no less
+sincerely, disguises its feelings in ragtime.
+
+Since September I have been less than a month out of action. The game
+doesn't pall as time goes on--it fascinates. We've got to win so that
+men may never again be tortured by the ingenious inquisition of modern
+warfare. The winning of the war becomes a personal affair to the chaps
+who are fighting. The world which sits behind the lines, buys extra
+specials of the daily papers and eats three square meals a day, will
+never know what this other world has endured for its safety, for no man
+of this other world will have the vocabulary in which to tell. But don't
+for a moment mistake me--we're grimly happy.
+
+What a serial I'll write for you if I emerge from this turmoil! Thank
+God, my outlook is all altered. I don't want to live any longer--only to
+live well.
+
+Good-bye and good luck.
+
+ Yours,
+ Coningsby Dawson.
+
+
+
+
+XLVIII
+
+
+February 5th, 1917.
+
+My Dearest Mother:
+
+Aren't the papers good reading now-a-days with nothing to record but
+success? It gives us hope that at last, anyway before the year is out,
+the war must end. As you know, I am at the artillery school back of the
+lines for a month, taking an extra course. I have been meeting a great
+many young officers from all over the world and have listened to them
+discussing their program for when peace is declared. Very few of them
+have any plans or prospects. Most of them had just started on some
+course of professional training to which they won't have the energy to
+go back after a two years' interruption. The question one asks is how
+will all these men be reabsorbed into civilian life. I'm afraid the
+result will be a vast host of men with promising pasts and highly
+uncertain futures. We shall be a holiday world without an income. I'm
+afraid the hero-worship attitude will soon change to impatience when the
+soldiers beat their swords into ploughshares and then confess that they
+have never been taught to plough. That's where I shall score--by beating
+my sword into a pen. But what to write about--! Everything will seem so
+little and inconsequential after seeing armies marching to mud and
+death, and people will soon get tired of hearing about that. It seems as
+though war does to the individual what it does to the landscapes it
+attacks--obliterates everything personal and characteristic. A valley,
+when a battle has done with it, is nothing but earth--exactly what it
+was when God said, "Let there be Light;" a man just something with a
+mind purged of the past and ready to observe afresh. I question whether
+a return to old environments will ever restore to us the whole of our
+old tastes and affections. War is, I think, utterly destructive. It
+doesn't even create courage--it only finds it in the soul of a man. And
+yet there is one quality which will survive the war and help us to face
+the temptations of peace--that same courage which most of us have
+unconsciously discovered out here.
+
+Well, my dear, I have little news--at least, none that I can tell. I'm
+just about recovered from an attack of "flu." I want to get thoroughly
+rid of it before I go back to my battery. I hope you all keep well. God
+bless you all.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+XLIX
+
+February 6th, 1917.
+
+My Very Dear M.:
+
+I read in to-day's paper that U.S.A. threatens to come over and help us.
+I wish she would. The very thought of the possibility fills me with joy.
+I've been light-headed all day. It would be so ripping to live among
+people, when the war is ended, of whom you need not be ashamed.
+Somewhere deep down in my heart I've felt a sadness ever since I've been
+out here, at America's lack of gallantry--it's so easy to find excuses
+for not climbing to Calvary; sacrifice was always too noble to be
+sensible. I would like to see the country of our adoption become
+splendidly irrational even at this eleventh hour in the game; it would
+redeem her in the world's eyes. She doesn't know what she's losing. From
+these carcase-strewn fields of khaki there's a cleansing wind blowing
+for the nations that have died. Though there was only one Englishman
+left to carry on the race when this war is victoriously ended, I would
+give more for the future of England than for the future of America with
+her ninety millions whose sluggish blood was not stirred by the call of
+duty. It's bigness of soul that makes nations great and not population.
+Money, comfort, limousines and ragtime are not the requisites of men
+when heroes are dying. I hate the thought of Fifth Avenue, with its
+pretty faces, its fashions, its smiling frivolity. America as a great
+nation will die, as all coward civilisations have died, unless she
+accepts the stigmata of sacrifice, which a divine opportunity again
+offers her.
+
+If it were but possible to show those ninety millions one battlefield
+with its sprawling dead, its pity, its marvellous forgetfulness of self,
+I think then--no, they wouldn't be afraid. Fear isn't the emotion one
+feels--they would experience the shame of living when so many have shed
+their youth freely. This war is a prolonged moment of exultation for
+most of us--we are redeeming ourselves in our own eyes. To lay down
+one's life for one's friend once seemed impossible. All that is altered.
+We lay down our lives that the future generations may be good and kind,
+and so we can contemplate oblivion with quiet eyes. Nothing that is
+noblest that the Greeks taught is unpractised by the simplest men out
+here to-day. They may die childless, but their example will father the
+imagination of all the coming ages. These men, in the noble indignation
+of a great ideal, face a worse hell than the most ingenious of fanatics
+ever planned or plotted. Men die scorched like moths in a furnace, blown
+to atoms, gassed, tortured. And again other men step forward to take
+their places well knowing what will be their fate. Bodies may die, but
+the spirit of England grows greater as each new soul speeds upon its
+way. The battened souls of America will die and be buried. I believe the
+decision of the next few days will prove to be the crisis in America's
+nationhood. If she refuses the pain which will save her, the cancer of
+self-despising will rob her of her life.
+
+This feeling is strong with us. It's past midnight, but I could write
+of nothing else to-night.
+
+God bless you.
+
+ Yours ever,
+ Con.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Carry On, by Coningsby Dawson
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