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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62629 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62629)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Impressions and Experiences of a French
-Trooper, 1914-1915, by Christian Mallet
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Impressions and Experiences of a French Trooper, 1914-1915
-
-Author: Christian Mallet
-
-Release Date: July 12, 2020 [EBook #62629]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IMPRESSIONS, EXPERIENCES OF FRENCH TROOPER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-IMPRESSIONS AND EXPERIENCES OF A FRENCH TROOPER, 1914-15
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: NIGHT CHARGE OF THE 22ND DRAGOONS, SEPT. 10-11, 1914.]
-
-[Illustration: MAP ILLUSTRATING THE ROUTE FOLLOWED BY THE 22ND REGIMENT
-OF DRAGOONS.]
-
-
-
-
- IMPRESSIONS AND
- EXPERIENCES OF A
- FRENCH TROOPER
- 1914-1915
-
- BY
- CHRISTIAN MALLET
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK
- E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY
- 1916
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1916
- BY
- E. P. DUTTON & CO.
-
- The Knickerbocker Press, New York
-
-
-
-
- In Memoriam
-
- TO MY CAPTAIN
- COUNT J. DE TARRAGON
-
- AND
-
- TO MY TWO COMRADES
- 2ND LIEUT. MAGRIN AND 2ND LIEUT. CLÈRE
-
- WITH WHOM
-
- MANY PAGES OF THIS BOOK ARE CONCERNED
-
- WHO FELL
-
- ALL THREE ON THE FIELD OF HONOUR
-
- IN DEFENCE
-
- OF THEIR COUNTRY
-
- “_Dragons que Rome eut pris pour des Légionnaires._”
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- PAGE
-
- Frontispiece 9
-
- The 22nd Regiment of Dragoons 11
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I.—Mobilisation—Farewells—We leave Rheims 13
-
- II.—Across the Border into Belgium—Life on Active
- Service from Day to Day—After the Germans
- had Passed through—The Retreat 26
-
- III.—How we Crossed the German Lines—The Charge
- of Gilocourt—The Escape in the Forest of
- Compiègne 43
-
- IV.—Verberie the Centre of the Rally—The Epic of
- a Young Girl—Mass in the Open Air—From Day
- to Day 74
-
- V.—The Two Glorious Days of Staden 97
-
- VI.—The Funeral of Lord Roberts—Nieuport-Ville—In
- the Trenches—Ypres and the Neighbouring
- Sectors—I Transfer to the Line 110
-
- VII.—The Attack at Loos 144
-
- Index 165
-
-
-
-
-FRONTISPIECE
-
-
-This picture by Carrey represents the night charge of a squadron of 22nd
-Dragoons against German trenches near Compiègne. During the night of
-September 9th, the squadron leader, who had received orders to endeavour
-to intercept and capture a large enemy convoy, suddenly came under a
-hot fire from German trenches. In the darkness it was impossible to
-choose his country, but the position before him must be attacked, and,
-signalling the charge, he led his squadron at the trenches. As the first
-line rose to the jump the Germans scuttled out in panic, only to be
-ridden down and destroyed. With the 22nd are shown two troopers of the
-4th Dragoon Guards, belonging to the 2nd British Cavalry Brigade. Both
-had fought at Mons, but during the retirement had lost their regiment,
-and after wandering about for some days fallen in with the 22nd Dragoons
-and fought for some weeks in their ranks. Whilst still under heavy
-fire, one of these Englishmen, throwing the reins of his horse to his
-companion, dismounted and ran to and rescued a French trooper whose
-horse had fallen dead and pinned him to the ground; on rejoining their
-own regiment their French commanding officer gave them the following
-certificate of service:
-
- “I, the undersigned, certify that T..... and B....., troopers,
- belonging to the 4th Dragoon Guards, lost themselves in the
- neighbourhood of Péronne on the 20th August, and joined up with
- my squadron, and have since then formed part of it and engaged
- in all its operations. On the night September 10-11 my squadron
- received orders to capture a German convoy, and found itself
- surrounded by the retreating enemy.
-
- “T..... and B..... took part in a charge by night against
- entrenched infantry, and helped in the fighting on the
- outskirts of the forest of Compiègne.
-
- “They are both men of fine courage and high training, and have
- given me every satisfaction.
-
- “(_Signed_) A. DE S.,
-
- “_Captain_, 22nd Dragoons.”
-
- (_Le Temps._)
-
-
-
-
-THE 22ND REGIMENT OF DRAGOONS
-
-
- AUSTERLITZ 1805
- JENA 1806
- EYLAU 1807
- OPORTO 1809
-
-The 22nd Regiment of Dragoons was raised in 1635 under the name of “The
-Orleans Regiment,” and took part from 1639 to 1756 in all the great wars
-in which the French were engaged before the Revolution. From 1793 to 1814
-the regiment was continually at work, first under the Republic and then
-in Napoleon’s armies.
-
-It saw service in the Army of the Sambre and Meuse, 1794-1796; the
-Army of the Rhine, 1800; the Grande-Armée, 1805; in the war in Spain,
-1808-1813; the Campaign in Saxony, 1813; the Campaign in France, 1814.
-
-The regiment was disbanded in May, 1815, and was not raised again until
-September, 1873.
-
-
-
-
-Impressions and Experiences of a French Trooper, 1914-15
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-MOBILISATION—FAREWELLS—WE LEAVE RHEIMS
-
-
-Of all my experiences, of all the unforgettable memories which the war
-has woven with threads of fire unquenchable in my mind, of all the hours
-of feverish expectancy, joy, pain, anguish and glorious action, none
-stands out—nor ever will—more clearly in my recollection than the day
-when we marched out of Rheims. Nothing remains, except a confusion of
-disconnected memories of the days of waiting and of expectation, days
-nevertheless when one’s heart beat fast and loud. A bugle-call sounding
-the “fall-in” lifts the curtain on a new act in which, the empty years
-behind us, we are spurring our horses on into the eternal battle between
-life and death.
-
-On the thirtieth of July, 1914, I did not believe in the possibility
-either of war or of mobilisation—nor even of partial mobilisation—and I
-refused to let my thoughts dwell on it.
-
-The good folk of Rheims, excited and anxious, gathered from time to
-time in dense crowds outside the building of the Société Générale, on
-the walls of which the latest telegrams were posted up, then broke up
-into knots of people who discussed the situation with anxiety and even
-consternation. At the Lion d’Or, where I turned in for dinner on the
-terrace under the very shadow of the cathedral, I called for a bottle of
-Pommery, saying jocularly that I must just once more drink champagne; a
-message telephoned from a big Paris newspaper reassured me, and in the
-peaceful quiet of a fine summer’s night I returned to my quarters with a
-light heart.
-
-As I was turning into bed I caught a glimpse through the barrack window
-of the two Gothic towers of the cathedral, standing high above the city
-as if in the act of blessing and guarding it.
-
-All was quiet: the silence was only broken from time to time by the cry
-of the swallows as they skimmed through the clear air.
-
-War, I repeated to myself, it is foolish even to think of, and this talk
-of war is but the outcome of some disordered pessimistic minds; and with
-that I went to sleep on my hard little webbed bed ... for the last time.
-
-Towards midnight I woke with a start, as though someone had shaken me
-roughly. Yet all was still: the barracks were rapt in sleep. Near by
-me only the loud and heavy breathing of the twelve men who made up the
-number occupying the room could be heard, as I lay on my back, wide
-awake, waiting, for I now felt that the signal would surely come which
-should turn the barracks into a very hive of bees.
-
-Five minutes passed—perhaps ten—then a deafening bugle call which made
-the very walls vibrate, calling first the first squadron, growing in
-volume as it called the second, louder still the third, like the roar
-of some beast of prey as it summoned ours; then it died away as it got
-farther off across the barrack square where the fifth squadron was
-quartered.
-
-It was the call to arms.
-
-The sleepy troopers, half awake, sat up in their beds with a
-start—“Hulloa!—what? What is the matter?... Are we really mobilising?”
-
-Then followed the sound of heavy boots in the corridors, heavy knocks on
-the doors, the silence of the night was a thing of the past and had given
-place to deafening clatter.
-
-In a few seconds every man was on his feet without any clear idea as
-to what was forward. The sergeant-major called to me: “Mallet—run and
-warn the officers of the squadron to strap on their mess tins with their
-equipment and assemble in barracks as quickly as possible.”
-
-So it’s serious, is it? and in a flash the truth, the very reverse of
-what I had been trying to believe, forced itself upon me and paralysed
-all other power of thought. Whether it breaks out to-morrow or in a
-month’s time, it is war—relentless war—that I seem to see like a living
-picture revealed.
-
-The impression masters my mind as I turn each corner of the dark streets
-and open spaces, and the cathedral with its twin towers, so peacefully
-standing there, is transformed into a giant fortress watching over the
-safety of the country-side.
-
-A man comes out of a house on the _place_ and runs after me, I hear his
-heavy shoes striking the pavement behind me; breathless he blurts out the
-question, “Is war declared?”
-
-“War ... yes ... that is to say, I don’t know.”
-
-I continue on my way to carry out my orders with enough time left to run
-up to my own rooms and get some money and clean linen.
-
-I got back to barracks as dawn was spreading over the sky, and found our
-commandeered horses being brought in by civilians and soldiers in fatigue
-overalls. An elderly non-commissioned officer shrugged his shoulders and
-said in a low voice, “Commandeered horses being brought in already!—that
-does not look very healthy.”
-
-At the time of the Agadir affair things did not get as far as that, and
-the incident forced itself on my mind as proof that war was inevitable.
-
-Packing and preparation were over and the men, waiting for orders, were
-wandering about the square, and in the canteen, which they filled—still
-half dark as it was—one heard shouts of joy and high-pitched voices
-telling the oldest and most threadbare stories.
-
-But the canteen-keeper—friend of us all—with red eyes and shaking voice,
-was talking of Bazeille, her own village, burned by the Germans in 1870,
-where her old father and mother still lived. She is horrified at the
-thought of another invasion of the soil of France.
-
-“The Bosches here? No, indeed, Flora, you are talking wildly; never you
-doubt, we will send them to the right-about and back to Berlin at the
-point of our toes—give us another glass of white wine—the best—that’s
-better worth doing.”
-
-“Well, well!”
-
-At the table where I sat with my own particular friends, all were in high
-spirits, all talking the greatest nonsense, becoming intoxicated with
-their own words as they romanced of heroic charges, of wonderful forced
-marches and highly fantastic battles; I alone remained somewhat serious
-and heavy of heart, and abused myself for being less free of care than
-they in the face of this triumph of manliness and youthful high spirits;
-yet in spite of myself, I watched them, these comrades of mine, day in,
-day out, to whom I should become more closely allied still by war, and
-tried to pierce the mists of the future, grey and threatening, and to
-discern what was to be the fate of each.
-
-There they sat: Polignac, who was to be taken prisoner a short four weeks
-later, and who still languishes in a Westphalian fortress; Laperrade, who
-was to fall dead with a lance head through his chest as he defended his
-officer; Magrin, fated to die, when spring came, with a bullet through
-his heart; Clère, whom death was to claim three days after having
-heroically won his commission, and all the rest of them, too many to name
-here, but of all of whom I cherish in my heart a recollection not only
-tender but full of pride that they were my friends.
-
-Yet the day passed in a fever of expectation and excitement. The smallest
-piece of news, or the greatest absurdity told by the latest man from the
-guard-room of the 5th, or the stables of the 2nd, or by “the adjutant’s
-orderly,” flew like the wind round the barracks, increased in volume,
-became distorted, took shape no one knew how and in the end was believed
-by all—until some still more ridiculous tale took its place.
-
-There were waggish fellows, too, who wandered from group to group with a
-serious look on their faces, saying, “Well, it’s come now; I have just
-heard the Colonel give the order to stand to horses,” and until evening,
-when we were again crowded inside the canteen, it was the same hunger for
-news, the same excitement, the same desperate longing to know what was
-happening.
-
-Only at seven o’clock did we get the official news, and although it came
-as no surprise, the whole barrack was stunned by it. Squadron orders
-issued at seven o’clock gave us three hours to prepare to march, as
-prescribed by the rules governing the movements of covering troops, to
-which we belonged. In three hours we should be on the way to an unknown
-destination; to ourselves fell the honour of being the advance guard;
-to us the task of guarding and watching the frontiers whilst the rest
-of the army was mobilising; and with keen pride in the fact, we held up
-our heads and thrust out our chests, whilst our faces took on a look of
-confidence in our power to conquer. Even the humblest trooper seemed
-transfigured, and in that moment I realised, perhaps for the first time,
-the high soul of France.
-
-But the news soon spread beyond the barracks. Rheims, although some
-twenty minutes’ walk away, somehow learned it, and almost immediately all
-the town flocked to the barrack gates. I say all the town because all
-classes together hurried there pell-mell—not only those with a brother or
-son or a friend amongst the troops about to set off, but those who were
-drawn by ties of friendship with the regiment, and those who came from
-mere curiosity. The crowd, which got larger and larger, beat upon the
-iron gates like waves breaking vast and black on a rocky shore. Old women
-came to give a last kiss to their sons; old men, too, pensioners who
-had fought in ’70, whose hands trembled as they pressed those of their
-boys, distracted little shop girls who held their lovers passionately
-in their arms—silk frocks and broadcloth mingled together in one vast
-crowd swayed by deep emotion, brave and placid, though its heart was near
-breaking—every sob was stifled, every mouth drawn with sorrow yet tried
-to laugh, and it was cheerily that the last partings took place, the last
-touching and heartfelt “God speed” was said.
-
-How great a country to possess such children! Soon the gates could no
-longer bar the passage of the crowd which swept like a torrent through
-the outer square, overwhelmed the sentries, and threatened to engulf
-everything.
-
-As the hour of departure grew nearer, the farewells became more animated.
-Then the bugles sounded through the barracks the order for “majors to
-join the Colonel,” next captains and others of commissioned rank; there
-was a scurrying of officers to and fro before the orderly room, and
-Colonel Robillot himself could be seen standing on the doorstep watching
-the scene with a look of pride and indulgence in his eyes.
-
-At nine o’clock, as I was standing some distance apart in a corner
-of the square with friends who had come to bid me a last farewell, a
-non-commissioned officer, touching me on the shoulder, warned me that my
-troop was about to fall in, and I had to break off my adieux.
-
-From that moment I was to think no more of myself. All was over with
-affairs that bound heart or fancy. The supreme moment had come when words
-no longer count, and when the eyes try to fill themselves with one last
-gaze upon those whom one is leaving—goodbye to family, to love, to self,
-to the joy of the living—all one’s soul goes out in this last gaze.
-
-This look would say, “Farewell, I will be brave, never doubt it, don’t
-cry, don’t suffer regrets.” This look embraces all that life has meant up
-to now, whether of joy or sorrow. It is final—a farewell, a promise—it
-signifies the end—all one’s very soul is in one’s eyes.
-
-And, in effect, no sooner was my back turned and I stood at my horse’s
-side than all other thoughts left me. I forgot that I had perhaps said
-a last farewell, in face of the essential importance of assuring myself
-that nothing of my equipment should be forgotten, that my horse is
-soundly shod, of tightening up the girths and seeing that my blanket was
-properly folded, and, automatically, I went on repeating to myself, “Let
-me see ... I have my lance, my sword, my carbine[1] ... have I thought
-of everything?” and seemed to look disaster in the face on finding that
-I had no water-bottle—what was I to do? The very bottle that Flora, the
-canteen-keeper, had filled with boiling soup in her motherly way—“Oh, my
-water-bottle”—a real calamity it seemed—empires might crumble; I should
-have no soup to-morrow morning—all my outlook on war is shrouded in gloom.
-
-Still it was no time to behave like a child. One by one each trooper
-led his horse into the huge barrack square, where spots of light from
-electric torches carried by the officers indicated where each troop was
-to take up its position.
-
-On the chalky ground of the square, showing grey in the darkness, what
-looked like parallel black lines were growing longer. They were lines of
-troops, growing into squadrons and increasing until they became the whole
-regiment. Behind them were the baggage waggons, the travelling forges,
-machine-guns, commandeered carts, the cyclists’ detachment and all the
-rest.
-
-The riding school lay between us and the outer square, which was filled
-with light and alive with the impatient crowd crushing forward to see us
-ride out of the narrow way kept open for us, and the time dragged as we
-waited for every man to be in his place and for the signal to move out.
-
-The horses, impatient at standing still, would paw the ground, and now
-and again a long-drawn neigh would break the silence. At last a figure
-appeared in silhouette—it was the Colonel.
-
-“Mount!” The two majors repeated the command, and in each half-regiment
-its two captains, first, then the subalterns and non-commissioned
-officers repeated it.
-
-A wave seemed to flow from troop to troop like an eddy in a pool, and,
-sitting rigid in our saddles, our lances held upright, we waited the
-final order, which was to decide our future and direct us towards the
-unknown.
-
-“March!” Quitting the dim light of the inner, we came suddenly into the
-brightly lit outer square, where thousands of hands were held up to bid
-us a frenzied farewell.
-
-A cry from the crowd followed as we dragoons, sitting like statues, our
-helmets drawn well down over our faces lest we should betray any sign of
-emotion, passed out of the barracks which many were never to see again,
-amid the cheers of a multitude, and the noise of thousands of feet which
-grew less and less distinct as we rode on.
-
-“I say, old pals, don’t forget your sweethearts,” cried a little street
-girl standing on the edge of the foot-path, and that was the last word I
-heard as Rheims became more and more indistinct in the darkness, whilst
-we pushed on towards the east.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-ACROSS THE BORDER INTO BELGIUM—LIFE ON ACTIVE SERVICE FROM DAY TO
-DAY—AFTER THE GERMANS HAD PASSED THROUGH—THE RETREAT
-
-6th August to 5th September, 1914
-
-
-It was on the 6th of August that we crossed the frontier into the Walloon
-district of Belgium at Muno, to bring succour to the Belgians whose
-territory had just been violated by the German Army.
-
-In turning over my diary, I select this incident from among many
-others and stop to describe it, for it seems but right to recall the
-enthusiastic and touching welcome with which the whole people greeted
-us—a people now, alas, crushed under the German heel. We were welcomed
-with open arms—they gave without counting the cost, they threw open their
-doors to us and could not do enough for the French who had come to join
-forces with them and bring them succour.
-
-There is not a trooper in my regiment, not a soldier in our whole army,
-who does not recall that day with feelings of profound emotion.
-
-From the time we left Sedan, our ears still ringing with the cheers that
-had sent us on our way from Rheims, we received the heartiest of welcomes
-and good wishes at every village we passed through, but once across the
-frontier we were acclaimed—prematurely, as it turned out—as veritable
-conquerors.
-
-Cavalry on the march, squadron after squadron, has a marked effect on
-people, and takes the semblance of an invincible rampart against which
-any enemy must go down.
-
-After seventeen hours in the saddle, with helmet, lance, carbine, sword
-and full kit, now by a night-time more than disagreeable by reason of an
-icy cold fog, now under a tropical sun which scorched us, all the while
-in a cloud of dust, tormented by swarms of midges and horse-flies which
-hung about us, and tortured by the sight of cherry trees heavy with
-fruit, which hung over the road, but the branches of which were out of
-our reach, we approached the frontier.
-
-On the road we passed all the vehicles in the district which had been
-requisitioned by the military, interminable convoys of them, amongst
-which, irrespective of class, were humble peasant carts, old-fashioned
-shaky barouches, motor-cars, with the crests of their owners blazoned on
-the doors, all filled with oats and forage.
-
-Aëroplanes followed us and passed ahead of us flying all-out towards the
-east. Every now and again we had to draw to the side of the road to allow
-streams of motor omnibuses drawn from the streets of Paris, filled with
-chasseurs[2] and infantry, to pass by; and our teeth crunched the fine
-dust that we incessantly breathed.
-
-At length we passed by a fir wood, and a post, painted yellow and black,
-showed us that we were in Belgium; then we came in sight of a village,
-almost a hamlet, from which, as we drew near, there rose a noise, the
-sound of singing, growing louder as we drew near—the _Marseillaise_,
-sung in welcome by all the folk from the country-side, gathered at their
-country’s gateway to greet us.
-
-All joined in, women, children with shrill voices, even the old men. They
-ran along after us till we reached the _place_, when the song ceased and
-a thousand voices cried: “Vive la France! Vive les Français!” with such
-vigour that the horses were startled and cocked their ears in alarm.
-
-One and all brought us gifts, each according to his or her means, fruit,
-bread, jam, cakes, cigars and cigarettes, pipes and tobacco. I should
-fill a page with a list of what was thrust upon us. To our parched lips
-women held flagons of wine or beer, which refreshed us more perhaps when
-it ran down our cheeks, caked with dust, even than when it found its
-way down our throats, as the jolting of our horses caused us to spill
-the precious liquid. It taxed us to stuff away all the dainties in our
-already overfull pockets, and we stuck cigars into our tunics between the
-buttons, and flowers in the buttonholes.
-
-A number of French nuns with white head-dresses, like huge white birds,
-presented us with sacred medallions. I shall always retain graven on
-my memory the agony depicted in the beautiful, sad eyes of an elderly
-nun with white hair, who held out to me the last of her collection, a
-scapular of the Virgin in a brown wrap, and as she did so, said to me,
-“God guard you, my child.”
-
-And in each village we passed through, that day and the days which
-followed, we met with the same welcome and the same generosity. It was
-the same at Basteigne, at Bertrix, at Rochefort, Beauraing, and Ave;
-indeed everywhere, in the towns as in the villages, the crowd hailed us
-and fed us. Belgians have handed me boxes of as many as fifty cigarettes.
-
-After exhausting days of twelve or fourteen hours in the saddle I noticed
-that the troopers, worn out with fatigue, suffering from the heat, from
-hunger and thirst and intolerable stiffness, sat up in their saddles
-instinctively as we approached a village, prompted by an unconscious
-sense of pride in holding up their heads, and I can say, for my part,
-that such a welcome as we received always banished any feelings of
-fatigue.
-
-One of our bitterest regrets was having to pass again through Belgium in
-the reverse direction and to read the dumb surprise on the faces of the
-people who had thought us unconquerable, but whose great hearts were full
-only of commiseration for us, worn out as we were, and who, forgetful of
-their own anxieties, did all in their power to help us.
-
-A peasant woman, I remember, gave us the whole of her provisions,
-everything that remained in her humble dwelling. The enemy were then
-advancing on our heels in a threatening wave, and, on my expressing
-astonishment that she should strip her shelves bare in this fashion, she
-shook her fist towards the horizon in a fury of rage and exclaimed: “Ah,
-sir, I prefer that you should eat my provisions rather than leave them a
-crumb of bread.”
-
-Up till the 19th August we had advanced in Belgium; the retreat of the
-division commenced that same day from Gembloux. We kept on seeking,
-without success, to get in touch with the German cavalry. Nothing but
-petty combats took place with insignificant details, a troop at most, but
-more often with patrols, reconnaissance parties and little groups who
-surrendered on our approach in a contemptible fashion.
-
-I saw a German major, Prince R——, accompanied by two or three troopers,
-surrender themselves while still some two hundred mètres from one of our
-weak patrols. They threw down their arms and put up their hands. It was a
-sickening sight.
-
-Everywhere the enemy’s cavalry gave ground, vanished in smoke, became a
-myth for our regiment, in spite of our forced marches. Each day we spent
-ten, fifteen, twenty hours in the saddle. One day we actually covered
-a hundred and thirty kilomètres in twenty-two hours, and reached our
-culminating point to the east, almost under the walls of Liége.
-
-Although we hardly saw any Germans during this first month, we could,
-_per contra_, follow them by the traces of their crimes.
-
-By day, from village to village, lamentations spread from one horizon to
-the other, and I regret not having noted the names of the places which
-were the scenes of the atrocities of which I saw the sequels. I regret
-not having taken the names of the unhappy women whose children, brothers
-and husbands had been tortured and shot without motive, not to speak of
-the outrages which they themselves had undergone, not to speak of the
-assaults of lechery and Sadism of which they had been the victims. They
-alluded to these in a fury of rage or made an involuntary confession in
-an agony of humiliation and grief.
-
-By night a furrow of fire traced the enemy’s path. The Germans burnt
-everything that was susceptible of being burnt—ricks, barns, farms,
-entire villages, which blazed like torches, lighting the country-side
-with a weird light.
-
-We entered villages of which nothing remained except smoking and calcined
-stones, before which families, who had lost their all, grieved and wrung
-their powerless hands at the sight of some black débris which had once
-been all their joy, their hearth and home.
-
-I wish particularly to insist that these deeds were not the result of
-_accident_, for we were daily witnesses of them for a whole month. I
-still shiver when I think of the confidences which I have received. The
-pen may not write down all the facts, all the abominations, all the
-hateful things, all the lowest and most degrading filthiness inspired by
-the imagination of crazy erotomaniacs. It was always Sadism which seemed
-to guide their acts and predominate amongst their misdeeds.
-
-Here a mother mourned a child, shot for some childish prank; there a
-young girl grieved for her fiancé, hung because he was of military age;
-farther on a helpless old man had had his house pillaged and had been
-brutally treated because he had nothing else to offer. At every step
-we heard the story of crime, and those guilty deserve to be hung. Such
-are the things of which such an enemy was capable—an enemy who refused
-combat, who advanced hastily under cover of night to rob and burn a
-defenceless village, and who seemed to vanish like smoke at the approach
-of our troops, leaving in our hands hardly more than some drunken
-stragglers unable to regain their army, or some robbers who had waited
-behind to rob a house or to violate a woman, and had been taken in the
-act.
-
-We passed through all that in our endless quest, always in the saddle,
-sleeping two or three hours at night, in an exasperating search for the
-German cavalry, which was constantly reported to be within gun-shot, but
-which disappeared by enchantment each time we approached. To give an idea
-of what we endured, I have transcribed word for word the notes from my
-field pocket-book describing some of these August days. These notes were
-written in most cases on horseback by the roadside during a halt.
-
- _7th August._—Torrential rain; twelve hours in the saddle; we
- are worn out with fatigue; put up at Basteigne; arrived at
- night. My troop is on guard. I mount duty at the bridge; we are
- fed by the populace, nothing to eat from rations.
-
- _8th August._—Réveillé 3 o’clock, mounted a last turn of duty
- at the bridge till 5 o’clock. Departure; rested at midday in an
- open field for dinner. While we are eating, enemy is reported
- near; we follow immediately towards Liége. Don’t come up with
- them. March at night till one in the morning; have done one
- hundred and thirty kilomètres and twenty hours on horseback,
- sleep in an open field from two to four.
-
- _9th August._—Torrid heat, men and horses done up; billeted at
- Ave after twelve hours in the saddle. First squadron ambushed.
- Lieutenant Chauvenet killed. The Germans flee, burning the
- villages, killing women and children.
-
- _11th August._—Leave Ave at 5 o’clock. The heat appears to
- increase, not a breath of air. For two hours we trot in clouds
- of blinding dust. A regiment of Uhlans is reported. The Colonel
- masses us behind a hill and we think we are going to deliver
- battle; but the enemy steals away once more. Thirst is a
- torture, my water-bottle lasts no time. Arrive at Beauraing at
- six o’clock. Thirteen hours in the saddle.
-
- _12th August._—We onsaddled at 5 o’clock. False alarm; wait at
- Beauraing.
-
- _14th August._—Alarm, the regiment moves off; I am left behind
- to accompany a convoy of reservists. The village is barricaded,
- the enemy is quite near. Only a handful of men are with the
- convoy. Wait at the side of the road with Fuéminville and
- Lubeké. Five dismounted men arrive, without helmets, done up,
- limping, prostrated, grim as those who have seen a sight which
- will for ever prevent them from smiling; the fact is that the
- remains of the 3rd squadron of the 16th have been caught in
- an ambush by the German infantry concealed in a wood. They
- have been shot down at point-blank range without being able to
- put up a fight. Never have I seen human waifs more lamentable
- and more tragic. They had seen all their comrades fall at
- their side and owed their lives only to the fact that they had
- themselves fallen under their dead horses and to a flight of 40
- kilomètres through the woods. Montcalm is amongst the killed.
- The convoy marched out at half-past nine at night, at the walk,
- an exasperating pace of 4 kilomètres an hour. We took all night
- to do 23 kilomètres. I ask myself when we are likely to rejoin
- the 22nd, even whether the 22nd still exists.
-
- _15th August._—We bivouac near the village of Authée, with the
- convoys of the 61st and 5th Chasseurs. It is dark and cold,
- and this night has tired me more than my longest marches. The
- waiting about unnerves us, and my blood boils when I think that
- the 22nd must be on the eve of having a fight. The Germans lay
- siege to Dinant eight kilomètres off. One hears the guns as
- if they were alongside. Our turn is near, I think. No one is
- affected thereby, and we prepare our soup to the whistling of
- shells. The cannonade seems to redouble, they are giving and
- taking hard knocks, and some there will be who won’t answer
- their names to-night.
-
- _Ten o’clock._—The different convoys move off. 16th, 22nd,
- 9th, 28th, 32nd Dragoons, etc. All at once we are stupefied
- by seeing a battalion of the 33rd of the line, or rather what
- remains of the battalion, some thirty terrifying beings,
- livid, stumbling along, with horrible wounds. One has his lips
- carried away, an officer has a crushed hand, another has his
- arm fractured by a shell splinter. Their uniforms are torn,
- white with dust and drip with blood. Amongst the last comers
- the wounds are more villainous; in the waggons one sees bare
- legs that hang limp, bloodless faces. They come from Dinant,
- where the French have fought like lions. Our artillery arrived
- too late, but they had the fine courage to charge the German
- guns with the bayonet. The guns spit shell without cease and
- the crackle of musketry does not stop. We go across country
- to billet at Florennes. These last days of tropical heat
- give place to damp cold. It is raining. We meet long convoys
- of inhabitants who, panic-stricken, quit their houses to go
- and camp anywhere at all. It is lamentable. Two kilomètres
- from Florennes we “incline.” The cold is biting, in spite of
- the cloak I wear. We arrive in black darkness at a village
- where we bivouac in spite of the torrential rain. I rejoin
- the regiment with infinite trouble; clothes, kit, horses are
- dripping wet. They must stay so all night. I do a stable guard
- at three in the morning without a lantern. The horses are tied
- up by groups to a horseshoe. They kick and rear, upsetting the
- kit and the lances in the mud; I dabble about and lose myself
- in the night. The village is called Biesmérée.
-
- _Sunday, 16th August._—The weather has cleared up. I
- leave again with the regiment. We are going to put up at
- Maisons-Saint-Gérard. Just before arriving there a storm bursts
- and wets us through; the water runs down into our breeches.
- I am as wet as if I had been dipped in a river; and one must
- sleep like that ... and yet one does not die!
-
- _17th August._—Off at 5 o’clock. We bivouac at Saint-Martin in
- the meadow between two small streams. I have hurt my left foot
- badly, and at times I feel an overpowering fatigue, but one
- must carry on all the same. The bivouac is admirable. Big fires
- warm up the soup for the troops. The little stream shimmers,
- all red, and encircles the bivouac. The day ends; splendid.
- Some Cuirassiers bivouac a little higher up on the village
- green. We hear them singing the _Marseillaise_. We sleep in a
- barn in heaps one on the top of the other.
-
- _19th August._—The 4th squadron is on reconnaissance. We start
- alone, at a venture. We are in the saddle all day. At night we
- make a triumphal entry into Gembloux and we are baited with
- drinks and food. The Germans are at the gates of the town and
- the crowd is wildly excited. The sun goes down without a cloud,
- round as a wafer. I forget the day’s fatigues and we venture
- across the plain and the woods. It is an agonising moment; we
- hide ourselves behind a long rick of flax; the enemy is some
- hundreds of mètres off and all night we have sentries out. I
- slept two hours yesterday, to-day I am passing the whole night
- on foot. The cold is cruel. Now and then my legs give way and I
- nearly fall on my knees. We have had nothing to eat but bread,
- the chill damp gets into our bones. Some Taubes pass, sowing
- agony.
-
- _20th August._—I am one of the point party under Lieutenant
- Chatelin. We fire on some horsemen at 600 mètres. The squadron
- is still on reconnaissance. One could sit down and cry from
- fatigue. We advance towards Charleroi, whose approaches are
- several kilomètres long. A population of miners. Everywhere
- are foundries, mines, factories, and for two hours unceasing
- acclamation. We arrive at a suburb of Charleroi, done up,
- falling out of our saddles. Interminable wait on the _place_;
- night falls. The camp kit comes up at last, but the march is
- not yet over, we are camping five kilomètres farther on. It
- is enough to kill one. We get to Landelies. Rest at last, we
- bivouac. I share a bed, with Delettrez, for the first time for
- three weeks. In a bed at one side a fat old woman is sleeping.
- No matter, it is an unforgettable night.
-
- _21st August._—Landelies; rest; we satisfy our hunger; we
- expect to pass a quiet day and night. At four o’clock we are
- off to an alarm; we are in the saddle all night and arrive in
- a little village, whose name I forget, half dead with hunger
- and cold. The peasants give us bread. We have been all day on
- horseback.
-
- _22nd August._—Are we going to have a little rest? No, we
- were out of bed all night and we are at it again. We do
- not understand the movements we are carrying out. _Are we
- retreating?_ The fatigue is becoming insupportable. We get
- to Bousignies at three in the morning. On the road I lost my
- horse during a halt and I found myself alone in the night and
- on foot. I had all the trouble in the world to catch up the
- squadron on foot. We slept two hours in the rain in a field of
- beetroot. Off again at 9 o’clock. Loud firing twenty kilomètres
- off. All the peasants are clearing out. They say that Charleroi
- is on fire.
-
-And so it goes on each day till the end of the month. The 26th we marched
-in the direction of Cambrai; we put up at Epehy, which the enemy burnt
-the following day. The peasants replied by themselves setting fire to the
-crops to prevent their falling into the enemies’ hands.
-
-At Roisel, a whole train of goods blazed in the midday heat. We went on
-to Péronne. The 28th we were at Villers-Carbonel, where I was present
-at an unforgettable artillery combat. I saw shells throw some French
-skirmishers in the air by groups of three and four at a time. We left
-Villers-Carbonel in flames, and, from that moment, we beat a rapid
-retreat towards Paris, passing by Sourdon, Maisoncelle, Beauvais,
-Villers-sur-Thère, Breançon, Meulan, Les Alluets-le-Roi, and, after a
-last and painful stage, we put up at Loges-en-Josas, four kilomètres from
-Versailles, where the fortune of war brought me to one of our own estates.
-
-Thus it came about that my mother, who believed me to be at the other
-end of Belgium, caught sight of me one fine morning coming up the central
-drive to the château on foot, leading my horse, my lance on my shoulder,
-followed by a long file of troopers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-HOW WE CROSSED THE GERMAN LINES—THE CHARGE OF GILOCOURT—THE ESCAPE IN THE
-FOREST OF COMPIÈGNE
-
-6th to 10th September, 1914
-
-
-Having left Versailles we arrived at Saint-Mard on the 6th of September
-to find ourselves in the thick of the battle of the Marne. The struggle
-extended all around us, from one horizon to the other, and if it was
-incomprehensible to our officers it was still more so to us private
-soldiers. In the evening, from Loges-en-Josas, where we had been
-billeted, we heard the guns. Everyone was sure that Paris would be
-invested within the next two days, and then we were suddenly sent off to
-be stranded some forty kilomètres to the north-east of Paris. We were
-ignorant of the movements going on, and we were amazed and quite out of
-our reckoning, hardly daring to believe that the enemy, who the evening
-before was thought to be at the gates of Paris, was now in retreat.
-
-For my own part I preserve only a confused and burning recollection of
-the days of the 6th and 7th of September, days memorable amongst all
-others, since they saw the beginning of the victorious offensive of the
-armies of Maunoury, of Foch, of French and of Langle de Cary. The heat
-was suffocating. The exhausted men, covered with a layer of black dust
-adherent from sweat, looked like devils. The tired horses, no longer
-off-saddled, had large open sores on their backs. The air was burning;
-thirst was intolerable, and there was no possibility of procuring a drop
-of water. All around us the guns thundered. The horizon was, as it were,
-encircled with a moving line of bursting shells, and we knew nothing,
-absolutely nothing.
-
-In the torrid midday heat we kept advancing, without knowing where or
-why. We passed a disturbed night rolled in our cloaks in an open field,
-without rations and already suffering from hunger. The next day was
-a repetition of the last and was passed in the same hateful state of
-physical exhaustion and of moral inquietude. From time to time, behind
-some hill, beyond some wood, quite near, a sudden and violent musketry
-fire broke out; the gun fire redoubled in intensity and we heard the
-whistle of the shrapnel passing high over us, and the noise of the
-bursting shell. There, we said to ourselves, is the fighting; there,
-no, there, and then there on the left, on the right; it was everywhere.
-Repeatedly our column had to make sudden detours to avoid artillery fire.
-Still we knew nothing, and we continued our march as in a dream, under
-the scorching sun, gnawed by hunger, parched with thirst and so exhausted
-by fatigue that I could see my comrades stiffen themselves in the saddle
-to prevent themselves from falling. The sun went down with a splendour
-that no one thought of admiring. Little by little, insensibly, our
-figures bent forward till they touched the wallets on our saddles, and
-we gave way to a sort of torpor. Then a long tremor ran along the ranks.
-Above the village of Troène we fell into the thick of the fight. This
-happened so quickly that I preserve only a visual image of it. We had
-slowly climbed a hill, whose shadow concealed the setting sun from us.
-As we came out on the crest of the hill, we caught a sudden glimpse of a
-regiment of chasseurs-à-cheval, silhouetted in black against the immense
-red screen of the sky, charging like a whirlwind, with drawn sabres.
-
-A “75” gun on our flank fired without interruption. I can see now a
-wounded chasseur who rose from the grass where he lay almost under the
-muzzle of the gun, and who fell back, as if struck by lightning, from
-the displacement of air caused by the shell. A second later nothing was
-to be seen except a confused _mêlée_ behind a small wood. The noise was
-terrible, and was made up of a thousand different sounds. An officer of
-chasseurs, with a bullet through his chest, bareheaded, all splashed with
-blood, came down the hill leaning on his sword, and leaving behind him a
-long trail which reddened the grass. Then the sun seemed to perish as the
-immense uproar died down; all the noises died away, and we continued our
-road in the rapidly falling darkness, having had a sudden and fugitive
-vision of one scene amongst the thousands which compose the drama of a
-great battle.
-
-All night we had marched without repose, without food. In our exhaustion
-we had become the spectres of our former selves, and our hearts were
-breaking from discouragement. We did not know that right alongside of us
-the most victorious offensive in the history of the world was commencing.
-We did not suspect that, under pressure from General Maunoury, the
-German 4th Reserve Corps was giving way, and that this must assure the
-rout and the final defeat of Von Kluck’s army.
-
-From the 8th we began to play an active part in the great battle. The 5th
-Cavalry Division was ordered to surprise a German convoy and to seize
-it. The officers told us of this mission. At last we were going to do
-something; our time of waiting was at an end, and there was to be no more
-wandering about the burnt-up country, devoured by thirst and discouraged
-at feeling ourselves lost and forgotten in the great struggle we had
-set our hand to. The convoy would be four kilomètres long, and we could
-already imagine the attack, the taking of the booty. It was going to be a
-romantic and amusing episode, and the dragoons sat up in their saddles,
-forgetting their fatigue and their hunger, and full of joy at the thought
-of the promised combat.
-
-In my inner self I could not share the general enthusiasm; I felt that
-we had been exactly marked down by the enemy’s aircraft which flew over
-us each moment, insolently bidding defiance to our rifle and machine-gun
-fire.
-
-The expedition, however, started off well. A young dragoon, sent forward
-as scout, penetrated into a farm and there found fifteen Prussian Staff
-Officers engaged in stuffing themselves with food. He calmly pointed his
-revolver at them and advised them to surrender. “My regiment will be here
-directly; any resistance is useless.” In reality he had to keep them
-under the muzzle of his revolver for a long quarter of an hour, for the
-regiment was still far off. A major having shown signs of moving, the
-dragoon blew out his brains at point-blank range, and he succeeded in
-keeping them all terrorised until our arrival. This capture stimulated
-still further the general good humour. I can still see six of the
-fourteen prisoners file past the flank of the column, each between two
-dragoons, a forage cord tied to the reins of their horses, and I can see
-again the cunning and furious look of a “hauptmann” still bloated with
-the feast which we had prevented him from completing. I remember the gay,
-frank laugh of the whole regiment, its light-heartedness at having laid
-hands on these fat eaters of _choucroute_, who were too astonished even
-to be insolent.
-
-A few moments afterwards three German motor-cars were sighted three
-hundred mètres off, going at a prudent pace. At once the ranks were
-broken and we galloped furiously at them, each straining hard to be the
-first to get there; but, by quickly reversing their engines, the three
-chauffeurs succeeded in turning and made off at top speed, riddled by
-machine-gun fire, but out of range for us. The last of them, however, was
-destined to fall into our hands next morning, having been damaged by a
-shot in its petrol tank. We had to set it on fire so as not to abandon
-it to the enemy, who were pressing us on all sides. Half my regiment was
-now detached from the division and charged with the task of capturing,
-unaided, the tail of a convoy which was reputed to have broken down on
-the road.
-
-At nightfall we entered the forest of Villers-Cotterets, under the
-command of Major Jouillié, and I was assailed by an acute presentiment
-of misfortune. I parted from the other half of the regiment and from the
-other regiments of the division with the clear and irresistible intuition
-that I would not see them again for a long time, and shortly afterwards
-we melted like shadows under the trees of the great dark forest.
-
-Then commenced, for me, one of the most painful episodes of the whole
-war. The silence of the forest was lugubrious. A Taube persisted in
-flying over us, quite near to the ground, like a great blackbird. Its
-shadow grazed us, one might have said, and nothing was more harassing
-and more demoralising than this enemy that followed us and kept
-persistently on our track. At a cross-roads, as we came out into a large
-clearing, it let fall three long coloured smoke balls to signal our
-presence to its artillery, which was doubtless quite near but of whose
-position we were ignorant. Then it disappeared with a rapid flight, and
-the night fell black as ink around us.
-
-The voices of the officers seemed grave. The continual thrusts which the
-column made, its returns on its tracks, gave me to understand that we
-were groping our way, not knowing which to take. We descended in double
-file a terribly steep narrow path, preceded by the machine-guns, which
-had only just room enough to pass. The soft soil sunk in like a marsh.
-Then there was a sudden halt and, quite near me, I saw the Major’s face,
-full of anxiety. Addressing Captain de Tarragon in a choking voice he
-said, “The machine-guns are done for.” The rest of the phrase was lost,
-but I heard the words “bogged, engulfed, impossible to get them out....”
-
-We were ordered to incline, and we climbed up again to the forest. All
-the men were alarmed at the loss of the machine-guns, abandoned in the
-marsh, and the face of Desoil, the non-commissioned officer with the
-machine-guns, was heart-breaking. His mouth worked but no words came.
-
-With this discouragement all of us felt a renewal of hunger which was
-painfully acute. Thirst too burnt our throats, and fatigue weighed down
-our exhausted limbs. Ah, how I envied the horses which nibbled the leaves
-and the grass. For two days our water-bottles had been empty, we had
-already finished our reserve rations and this contributed to the gloom on
-our faces.
-
-Towards midnight, the village of Bonneuil-en-Valois was vaguely outlined
-in the night at the edge of the forest. The hungry and tired horses
-stumbled at each step; almost all the men were dozing on their wallets,
-and we committed the irreparable fault of dismounting and of sleeping
-heavily on the open ground, instead of utilising the cover of night to
-join one of the neighbouring divisions by a forced march. A small post
-composed of a corporal and four men was the only guard for our bivouac.
-Each of us had passed his horse’s reins under his arm, and all of us
-slept, officers and men alike, like tired brutes. We did not suspect that
-our sentinels were posted hardly three hundred mètres from the German
-sentries, who were concealed from us by a fold in the ground which held a
-regiment of Prussian infantry, who had chanced to get there, within rifle
-range, just at the same time as we.
-
-At dawn a neighing horse, some clash of arms, probably gave away our
-position, and the alarm was given in the enemy’s camp, which was
-separated from us only by a field of standing lucerne. The troopers slept
-on, and the German scouts crept up, absolutely invisible.
-
-A sudden musketry fire woke us up, and the German infantry was on us.
-I cannot think of these moments without giving credit to the admirable
-presence of mind which saved the situation by the avoidance of all panic.
-The horses were not girthed up, many of the kits had slipped round, reins
-were unbuckled; no matter, we had to mount. I have a crazy recollection
-of my loose girth, of my saddle slipping round, of the blanket which had
-worked forward on to my horse’s neck; no matter, “Forward! Forward!” a
-second’s delay might be our ruin. A hail of bullets fell amongst us.
-Alongside of me, Alaire, a quite young non-commissioned officer, was hit
-in the belly. He was the first in the regiment whom I had seen fall.
-God! what a horrible toss he took, dragged by his horse, maddened by
-fear, crying out, “Rolland, Rolland, don’t abandon me.” Then, in a last
-contortion, his foot came out of the stirrup and he died convulsed by a
-final spasm. Near me, the Captain’s orderly gave a loud shout; horses,
-mortally wounded, galloped wildly for some mètres and then suddenly fell
-as if pole-axed.
-
-I saw a man who, as if seized with madness, sent his wounded horse
-headlong to the bottom of a ravine and then threw himself after.
-
-“Forward! Forward!” I followed the others, who made off towards the
-village. My horse trod on a German whose throat, gashed by a lance
-thrust, poured out such a stream of blood that the earth under me was red
-and streaming with it. “Forward! Forward!”
-
-We were not going to view them then, these enemies who killed us without
-our seeing them, so hidden were they amongst the grass that they blended
-with the soil? Yes we were though, and suddenly surprise stopped short
-the rush of the squadrons. Before us, some mètres off, and so near that
-we could almost touch it with our lances, an aëroplane got up, like a
-partridge surprised in a stubble. A cry of rage burst from every throat.
-We tried to charge it with our lances in the air, but it mocked our
-efforts, and our rearing horses were on the spot ten seconds too late.
-The enemy seemed also to have flown. All that remained were two or three
-grey corpses that strewed the soil. We trotted into the village with our
-heads down, humiliated at having been fooled like children.
-
-After having passed the first few isolated farms along our road, an
-enemy’s section came for us, exposing themselves entirely this time,
-while a line of recumbent skirmishers fired a volley into us from our
-right, almost at point-blank range. There was nothing for it but to
-retire, unless we wanted to remain there as dead men, and at the gallop,
-the more so because a machine-gun was riddling the walls of a farm with
-little black points. We passed before it like a whirlwind; and, happily,
-its murderous fire was too high to hit us. I can still recall the sight
-of an isolated German, caught between the fire of his regiment and the
-charge of our horses. I turned my head and laughed with joy at seeing a
-comrade pierce him with his lance in passing.
-
-The Germans were all round us, and our only line of retreat was by the
-forest, into which we all plunged in a common rush without waiting for
-orders. The forest, at least, represented safety for the moment. It was
-a sanctuary calculated to protect us from an entire army, until we died
-of hunger. For a long time we marched in silence, cutting across the
-wood, avoiding the beaten path, for our intention was to attain the very
-heart of the forest, or some impenetrable spot where we could not be
-discovered, where we could regain our breath and where our officers could
-deliberate and take a decision. The whole half-regiment took shelter at
-last in an immense ravine, where we were sheltered from aircraft. We were
-covered by a thick vault of leaves in a sort of prehistoric gorge, which
-seemed far from all civilisation and lost in an ocean of verdure, and
-there we dismounted. The Major sent patrols to explore the issues from
-the forest, and we waited some mortal hours without daring to raise our
-voices.
-
-Our situation was almost desperate. For three days we had touched not a
-morsel of bread, not a biscuit, our horses not a handful of corn. The
-reserve rations were exhausted; and the patrols, which came in one after
-the other, brought sad news. The Germans were masters of all the issues
-from the forest, and we were taken in a vice, prisoners in this gulf
-of trees and reduced to dying of hunger and thirst. A little way off,
-the officers—Major Jouillié, Captain de Salverte, Captain de Tarragon,
-Monsieurs Chatelin, Cambacérès, Roy and de Thézy—deliberated with glum
-faces. Each stood near his horse so as to be able to jump on in case of
-surprise. In spite of everything the men’s spirits remained admirable.
-All had a jest on their lips, and the more serious amongst them wrote a
-line to their wives or mothers. Leaning against the trunk of a tree, I
-scribbled on two letter-cards, found in my wallets, two short notes of
-adieu. The day passed with depressing slowness.
-
-Towards four o’clock two officers of Uhlans appeared on a little road
-which, so to speak, hung above us. At once all eyes were fixed on these
-two thin silhouettes. They advanced, talking quietly, with their reins
-loose on their horses’ necks. How great was the temptation to shoulder
-one’s carbine, take steady aim, feel one’s man at the end of the muzzle
-and kill him dead with a ball through the heart! Everyone understood,
-however, that it was necessary to keep quiet and let off the prey so good
-a mark was it, for doing so would have given the alarm and signalised our
-presence. Now they were right on us, so near that we could have touched
-them, and yet they did not know that there were two hundred carbines
-which could have knocked them over at point-blank range. Even now I
-can distinctly see the face of the first, as if it were photographed
-on my brain. He was quite young, with an eye-glass well screwed into
-the eye, his face was red and insolent, just as the Prussian officer
-is always represented. He had a whip under his arm, and he even had a
-cigar. Suddenly his face and that of his companion contracted, as if
-confronted by some apparition. This French regiment must have seemed to
-them a phantom of the forest, some impossible and illusory vision seen in
-the shadow of the leaves. Their horses stopped short and, for the space
-of a second, their riders looked like two figures in stone. Then in a
-flash they understood and fled at full speed. For an instant we heard
-the stones fly under their horses’ shoes, but the sound grew fainter and
-fainter, and a deep silence reigned again.
-
-The alarm had been given, the danger had still further increased, and,
-now that our place of concealment had been discovered, we had to start
-off again across the thicket and rock on our poor done-up horses. On
-reflecting over it, my mind refuses to believe that such a cross-country
-ride was possible. To throw the enemy off the scent it was necessary to
-pass where no one would have imagined that a horse could go, and that
-involved a ride into the abyss in the deepening night, plunges into black
-gulfs, intersected by trunks of trees, to the foot of which some horsemen
-and their horses rolled like broken toys.
-
-I felt my old horse, Teint, curl up and tremble between my legs. His hair
-stood on end and his nostrils opened and shut. On, on, ever on ... to the
-very heart of the old forest, whose most secret solitudes we troubled,
-frightening the herds of deer, which fled terrified before our cavalcade.
-For a moment it seemed as if we were at some monstrous hunt on horseback
-with men for quarry, and in spite of myself, a mortal fatigue seized on
-me. I shut my eyes and waited for the “Gone away.” Better it were to be
-finished quickly, since the game was lost.
-
-The troops had got mixed and I found myself again for a moment amongst
-the 3rd squadron by the side of Lieutenant Cambacérès, and we exchanged a
-few brief words. Almost timidly, so absurd did the idea appear that one
-of us could escape, I asked him to write a line home if it were my luck
-to be done for and if he came out safe. I promised him the same service,
-if the rôles were reversed. To such an extent does gaiety enter into
-the composition of our French nature, we even joked for a few moments
-and we shared a last tablet of chocolate, which he had preserved in his
-wallet, a service for which I shall always be grateful to him, for hunger
-was causing me insupportable pain. We were now going at a slow pace over
-a carpet of dead leaves, amongst trees which were singularly thinned
-out. Our object being to gain the heart of the forest, we had ended up
-by reaching its border, and we remained glued to the spot, holding our
-breath at the sudden vision seen through the branches.
-
-The famous convoys that the division was out to take were there, in
-front of us, on a stretch of some eight kilomètres of road. Waggons of
-munitions, provision carts, water-carts, lorries of all sorts, were
-moving gaily along at an easy walk, and the rumbling noise was continuous.
-
-In the calm of the evening each spoken word, each order given by the
-guides came to us clear and distinct. Then came the last vehicles, the
-last country carts, some stragglers tailing out into a confusion of
-cyclists and horsemen; and so the interminable convoy went on its way.
-The vehicles at its head had the appearance of toys on the horizon, of
-toys designed with the pen on the gold of the sky; and the personnel
-looked like insects finely traced in the clear atmosphere. The whole
-thing went quietly on its way like a slow caravan. One would have said
-that here was a people coming to settle in conquered country and arriving
-at the end of its journey in the peace of a lovely evening.
-
-The same day, at the same moment, General Foch, pushing the thin end of
-his wedge between the armies of Bülow and those of Hausen, enlarged that
-fissure which was to prove fatal to the German army which had almost
-arrived at the Marne. The pursuit was about to begin. These same convoys,
-whose peaceful aspect wounded our hearts from the insolence of their air
-of possession on French soil (we were ignorant of course that the dawn
-of a great victory was about to break)—these same convoys, lashed by
-terror and by the breath of panic, were going to follow beaten armies in
-a headlong and wild retreat, leaving on the road their waggons and stores.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From this moment a vague hope sprang up in our hearts and, as is often
-the case, we gathered courage when the worst of catastrophes seemed to be
-heaping on our heads.
-
-Night fell little by little. It was impossible to remain where we were.
-We were well within the German lines, of this there was no doubt, since
-we had the enemy’s troops behind us, while their convoys were on in front
-of us; but, under cover of night we might attempt a desperate stroke,
-and anything was better than dying of hunger. Towards ten at night our
-column came bravely out of the forest—a silent column whose members
-looked like phantoms. Cutting across country, we avoided Haramont,
-Eméville, Bonneuil-en-Valois, Morienval. As night fell a sombre gloom
-seized on us. All those silent villages, which we dared not approach, had
-a threatening appearance; lights appeared suddenly, more or less distant;
-a succession of luminous points was moving slowly, like a moving train
-going slowly. I was ill at ease, and this was causing me physical pain;
-my saddle girth was too loose and had allowed my horse’s blanket to slip
-till it threatened to fall off. No matter, for nothing in the world would
-I dismount. It seemed as if hands came out of the shadows and stretched
-forth to seize me. A breath of superstitious terror blew over us, and, in
-the deep surrounding silence, a single persistent and regular noise made
-us start with the fear of the unknown. It was the screech of the owl,
-an unnatural cry which seemed like a signal replied to in the distance;
-and it made us shudder. My eyes eagerly searched the shadow to discover
-a hidden enemy. Twice I could have sworn that I saw a group of German
-uniforms, two mounted Uhlans, another on foot; but I mistrusted my eyes,
-hallucinations being of common occurrence at night, and I tried to pluck
-up courage.
-
-While crossing a road a sudden noise and a cry of “Help!” rang out, a cry
-choked with agony and terror. It came from one of our men, whose horse
-had struck into mine and had rolled into the ditch. I turned and saw
-in a flash a brief struggle which the night at once blotted out. This
-time I had made no mistake. There really were two Germans struggling
-with our comrade; but I was carried on by the forward movement, and
-profound silence reigned again. If we were surrounded by enemies, why
-this conspiracy of silence? The horrid screech of the owl never ceased,
-imparting panic to our disordered imaginations, making us think that even
-a catastrophe was preferable to this maddening incertitude, to this agony
-of doubt. During this time I lived the worst hours of my life.
-
-We advanced, however, marching from west to east, and soon we entered
-the great black mass of the forest of Compiègne, from whence arose four
-or five bird-calls as we approached. No matter; for the second time the
-forest represented safety for us, and under the impenetrable shade of its
-tall trees we followed its edge in the direction of Champlieu, sometimes
-followed, sometimes preceded by the hooting which announced, as we learnt
-later, our approach and our passage.
-
-At the moment when our agony was at an end, when hope revived, when,
-even, certain men giving way to fatigue had bent down on to their
-wallets drunk with sleep,—at that moment we fell definitely into the
-mouse-trap into which the Germans had methodically decoyed us, and a
-desperate attack was made on us from all sides. The drama took place
-so rapidly that I can remember only detached shreds of it. The clouds
-parted, letting fall a flood of moonlight; somewhere a cry resounded in
-the night, and the black forest seemed to spit fire. Thousands of brief
-flashes lit up each thicket, a hail of bullets thinned the column, and
-mingled with this were cries and a terrible neighing from the horses,
-some of which reared, while others lay kicking on the ground, dragging
-their riders and their kits in a spasm of terrible agony. Instinctively
-each trooper made a “left turn” and galloped furiously to get out of
-range of this murderous fire which decimated our ranks. In a few seconds
-we had put two hundred mètres between the forest and us, and the two
-squadrons rallied under cover of a slight mist.
-
-As we rode a squadron sergeant-major, Dangel, gave a groan, as his horse
-carried him off after the others. Then I saw him collapse, pitch forward
-on his nose on to his horse’s fore shoulder and fall to the ground, to be
-dragged. I leapt from my horse and managed to disengage his foot. Holding
-him in my arms, I begged him to show a little pluck. “We must clear out
-of this or we will be taken prisoners. For God’s sake get on your horse.”
-His only response was a long sigh, then his heavy body collapsed in my
-arms, and he dragged me to the ground. For a second I was perplexed. The
-others were far off, and I alone remained behind with a dying man in my
-arms, who clasped me in desperate embrace. At last his arms let go, and a
-spasm stretched him dead at my feet. I laid him piously on the grass with
-his face to the sky, and when I had finished this last duty to a comrade,
-I raised my head and saw a whole line of skirmishers fifty mètres off.
-For a moment a feeling possessed me that I could not get away; but,
-damme, they were not going to take me alive. An extraordinary calm came
-over me.
-
-I remounted slowly, made sure that I had picked up all four reins and
-lowered my lance. Now, by the grace of God ... now for it. A volley
-greeted my departure, but it was written that I was to escape. Several
-bullets grazed me, not one hit me. Soon I was out of range and concealed
-by a curtain of fog. I rejoined the two squadrons, many of whose troopers
-were without horses. Two hundred mètres farther on a fresh fusillade came
-from the invisible trenches and decimated our already thinned ranks.
-Captain de Tarragon, whose horse had been wounded, pitched forward
-and remained pinned under his horse. I passed by him at the gallop
-hardly seeing him, and I heard a shout that seemed to illumine the very
-darkness: “Charge, my lads.” This shout, repeated by all, swelled,
-increased and became a savage clamour, which must have paralysed the
-enemy, for the fusillade ceased and cries of “Wer da” were heard at
-different points.
-
-Afterwards I shut my eyes and tried to remember, but for some moments
-everything was mixed up. I recall a furious gallop at the dark holes
-where the Germans had gone to earth. A high trench embankment faced us
-and my horse got to the other side after a monstrous scramble. Before
-me and on my right and left I saw horses taking complete somersaults; I
-could not say whether it lasted a minute or an hour. The pains and the
-privations of the last three days culminated in a moment of madness. We
-had to get through, cost what it might; we had to bowl over everything,
-break through everything, but get through all the same, and our hot and
-furious gallop grew faster under the heedless moon, which bathed the
-country with its pale and gentle light. Three times we charged, three
-times we charged down on the obstacle without knowing its nature, until
-the remains of the two squadrons found themselves, breathless, in a
-little depression at the edge of a wood, before an impassable wall of
-barbed wire.
-
-Impatient voices shouted for wire-cutters, and during the delay before
-these were forthcoming, a few panic-mongers blurted out false news,
-which soon circulated and which all believed: “The enemy is advancing in
-skirmishing order.” “We are going to be shot down at point-blank range,”
-etc.... Had the news been true, I would not have given much for our
-skins. Huddled together like a flock of sheep before the gap which some
-of our men were exerting themselves to open up for our passage, a handful
-of resolute infantry could have killed every one of us.
-
-At last the gap was made and I descended a steep slope between the thin
-stems of the birches, having been sent forward as scout by my Major, whom
-I was never to see again. Below, a figure in silhouette and bareheaded
-was resting on his sword in the middle of a clearing bathed in moonlight.
-He watched me coming, and I was astonished to recognise in him the
-officer of my troop. For a brief moment each had taken the other for an
-enemy, and at twenty mètres off we were each ready to fall on the other.
-Our mutual recognition was none the less cordial. M. Chatelin refused
-my horse, which I offered to him, deciding to try to regain our lines
-on foot under cover of night (which he did after having knocked over
-two German sentries). He warned me expressly against some skirmishers
-concealed in a thicket behind me, and after a hearty handshake and a
-“good luck,” which sounded supremely ironical between two such isolated
-individuals, lost in the heart of German “territory,” I watched his thin
-silhouette melt into the darkness.
-
-I made my way back to give an account of my mission and to tell the
-Major that this route was impracticable for the two squadrons. Above,
-the plain extended to infinity, white in the moonlight, with no vestige
-of a human being! All that was to be seen were two horses which galloped
-wildly to an accompaniment of clashing stirrups, and the uneasy neighs of
-lost animals—that whinny of the horse which has something so human in it
-gave me a shudder. How was it that two squadrons had had the time, during
-my brief absence, to melt and disappear?
-
-What road have they found? Why have they abandoned me? The terror of
-desolation took the place of my former calm. To die with the others in
-the midst of a charge would have been fine; but to feel oneself lost
-and alone in all this mystery, in this endless night, in the midst of
-thousands of invisible enemies, was a bit too much. It was a childish
-nightmare and, seized with the same panic as the lost horses, I too
-spurred mine till his flanks bled, and I set off straight before me
-galloping like a madman. Luck, or perhaps my horse who scented his
-stable companions, brought me all at once to a small contingent of
-dragoons,—Captain de Salverte and eleven men, with whom I joined up. I
-questioned the Captain, who could tell me nothing. He had found himself
-detached and lost like me, and he had put himself at our head to try to
-get us out of this inextricable position. We walked on gloomily through
-a country cut up by hedges and streams. Shortly, we found ourselves
-within a few mètres of an enemy’s bivouac, the fires of which made the
-shadows dance on our drawn faces. A stupid sentry was warming himself,
-and had his back turned to us. What was the good of struggling? Why cheat
-oneself with chimerical illusions? The day would dawn and we would be
-ingloriously surprised and sent to some prisoner’s camp in the centre of
-Germany, unless, choosing to die rather than yield, we kept for ourselves
-the last shot in our magazines.
-
-However, we reached the forest. In the maze of dark paths we lost the
-Captain and Sergeant Pathé. With Farrier Sergeant-Major Delfour, and
-Sergeant-Major Desoil of the machine-gun section, nine of us were left,
-and we were determined to try a last effort, spurred by an awakening of
-that instinct of self-preservation which stiffens the desire to live in
-the very face of death.
-
-Deep in the forest we passed the night concealed in a thicket, taking
-pity on our horses, which would have died had we demanded a further
-effort of them. Soon we were overpowered by sleep, sleep so profound that
-the entire German army might have surprised us, without our raising a
-little finger to get away.
-
-At daybreak we continued our way, with stiff and benumbed limbs and
-soaking clothing. It was a beautiful autumn day. Wisps of pink mist
-wrapped to the tree tops. A large stag watched our coming with uneasy
-surprise, standing in the middle of a paved road on his slim legs. He
-disappeared with a bound into a clump of bushes, whose swaying branches
-let fall a shower of silver drops. A divine peace possessed all space. In
-a clearing some thirty loose horses had got together. The larger number
-were saddled and carried the complete equipment of regiments of dragoons
-and of chasseurs. The lances lay on the ground, together with complete
-sets of kit and mess tins. Surely the enemy had not passed this way or he
-would have laid hands on all this material so hurriedly abandoned; and
-yet no human being was about who could tell us anything, not even a lost
-soldier. There was no one but ourselves and the immense tranquil forest,
-gilded by early autumn, splashed with the dark green of the oaks and with
-every shade of colour from ardent purple to the white leaf of the aspen.
-
-That glorious dawn shone on the greatest victory the world had ever seen.
-The battle was over for the armies of Maunoury, of French, of Franchet,
-of d’Estrey, of Foch, and of Langle de Cary. The pursuit was beginning,
-and the whole extent of country, where we were now wandering, pursued and
-tracked like wild beasts, was going to be cleared within a few hours of
-the last German who had sullied its soil.
-
-More than thrice during the morning we came unexpectedly on German
-detachments, isolated parties, lost patrols or stragglers, and each time
-we cut across the wood to escape them at the risk of breaking our necks.
-Then we got to a long straight path at the lower end of which a fine
-limousine motor-car had been abandoned, and at the end of the path we
-reached a village which appeared to be empty. We consulted together for
-a moment, being in doubt what to do; but all of us were loth to return
-to the forest. This was the fifth day of our fast; so much the worse for
-us; it was time to put an end to it, so we made our way to an abandoned
-farm. We sheltered there for two hours, scanning the surrounding country
-for signs of life. Everything seemed dead. We could see no peasant, no
-civilian, not even an animal, and this waiting was one torment the
-more, but it was to be the last. Not till ten o’clock, over there, very
-far off, did I catch sight of the thin black caterpillar of a column
-of soldiers coming our way during my turn of sentry-go. My heart beat
-violently, but I refrained from giving the news to my comrades from
-the fear of raising false hopes. My eyes burnt like flame and my teeth
-chattered. If these were Germans the game was up. If they were French,
-oh! then!
-
-I looked, I looked with my eyes pressing out of my head. At times, as I
-strained my eyes, everything grew misty and I could see nothing; then,
-a second later, I again found this growing caterpillar and I began to
-distinguish details. There were squadrons of cavalry, but I could not yet
-make out the colour; and my body, from being icy cold, turned to burning
-hot. At times I forced myself not to look. I looked again, counted
-twenty, and then devoured space with my eyes.
-
-A patrol had been detached, and approached rapidly at the trot; this
-time I recognised French Hussars. Then all strength of will, and all my
-effort to remain calm disappeared. I turned my reeling head towards my
-comrades and I fell on the grass crying, crying like a madman, in words
-without sequence. The fatigue of these five days without food or drink,
-almost without sleep, and the living in a perpetual nightmare, brought on
-a nervous crisis, and my whole body was racked with spasms. My comrades,
-not having as yet understood, looked at me with astonishment. With a
-gesture I pointed out the approaching column, the pale blue of which
-contrasted brightly with the gold of the leaves. All of them, as soon as
-they had seen it, were overcome as I had been, each in his own way. Some
-burst into brusque convulsive sobs, others danced, waving their arms like
-madmen or rather like poor wretches who have passed days of suffering and
-agony on a raft in mid-ocean, and who suddenly see a ship approaching to
-their rescue.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-VERBERIE THE CENTRE OF THE RALLY—THE EPIC OF A YOUNG GIRL—MASS IN THE
-OPEN AIR—FROM DAY TO DAY
-
-10th September to 20th October, 1914
-
-
-The battle finished on the tenth, and then the pursuit of the conquered
-army commenced and kept the whole world in suspense, with eyes fixed on
-this headlong flight towards the north, which lasted till the end of the
-month, and which was to be the prelude of the great battles of the Yser.
-
-The region round Verberie was definitely cleared of Germans and was
-become once more French. The little town for some days presented an
-extraordinary spectacle.
-
-We entered the town after having received the formal assurance of the 5th
-Chasseurs, who went farther on, that all the country was in our hands.
-Some divisional cyclists were seated at the roadside. We asked them for
-news of the 22nd, and their reply wrung our hearts. They knew nothing
-definite, but they had met a country cart full of our wounded comrades,
-who had told them that the regiment had been cut up.
-
-No one could tell us where the divisional area was to be found. The
-division itself appeared to have been dismembered, lost and in part
-destroyed. We thought that we were the only survivors of a disaster,
-and, once the horses were in shelter in an empty abandoned farm stuffing
-themselves with hay, we wandered sadly through the streets destroyed
-by bombardment and by fire in search of such civilians as might have
-remained behind during the invasion.
-
-A little outside the town we at last found a farm where two of the
-inhabitants had stayed on. The contrast between them was touching. One
-was a paralysed old man unable to leave his fields, the other was a young
-girl of fifteen, a frail little peasant, and rather ugly. Her strange
-green eyes contrasted with an admirable head of auburn hair, and she
-had heroically insisted on looking after her infirm grandfather, though
-all the rest of the family had emigrated towards the west. She had
-remained faithful to her duty in spite of the bombardment, the battle
-at their very door and the ill-treatment of the Bavarian soldiers who
-were billeted in the farm. Distressed, yet joyous, she prepared a hasty
-meal and busied herself in quest of food, for it was anything but easy
-to satiate eleven men dying of hunger when the Germans, who lay hands on
-everything, had only just left.
-
-She wrung the neck of an emaciated fowl which had escaped massacre,
-and, by adding thereto some potatoes from the garden, she served us a
-breakfast, washed down with white wine, which made us stammer with joy,
-like children. One needs to have fasted for five days to have felt the
-cutting pains of hunger and of thirst in all their horror, to appreciate
-the happiness that one can experience in eating the wing of a scraggy
-fowl and in drinking a glass of execrable wine tasting like vinegar. She
-bustled about, and her pitying and motherly gestures touched our hearts.
-While we ate she told us the most astonishing story that ever was, a
-story acted, illustrated by gestures, which made the scenes live with
-remarkable vividness.
-
-She told us how, faithful to her oath, she was alone when the Bavarians
-came knocking at her door, how she lived three days with them, a butt
-for their innumerable coarsenesses, sometimes brutally treated when the
-soldiers were sober, sometimes pursued by their gross assiduities when
-they were drunk; how one night she had to fly half naked through the
-rain, slipping out through the vent-hole of the cellar, to escape being
-violated by a group of madmen, not daring to go to bed again, sleeping
-fully dressed behind a small copse; how at last French chasseurs had put
-the Bavarians to flight and had in their turn installed themselves in the
-farm, and how among them she felt herself protected and respected.
-
-She attached herself to her new companions, whom she looked after like a
-mother for three days. Then they went away, promising to return, and she
-was left alone.
-
-But the next day at dawn, uneasy at the row that came from the town, she
-decided to go in search of news. She put on a shawl and slipped through
-the brushwood and thickets as far as the first houses. She was afraid of
-being seen, and made herself as small as possible, keeping close to the
-walls, crossing gardens and ruined houses. The terrible noise increased,
-and she went towards it. She wanted to see what was going on, and a fine
-virile courage sustained her. The shells fell near her; no matter, she
-had only a few more steps to go to turn the corner of a street. She
-arrived on the _place_ as the battle was finishing.
-
-Her fifteen chasseurs were there, fifteen corpses at the foot of the
-barricade. One of them, who still lived, raised himself on seeing her,
-and held out his arms towards her. Then, forgetting all danger, in a
-magnificent outburst of feminine pity, she braved the rain of fire and
-dashed to the centre of the _place_. She knelt by the young fellow,
-enveloped him in her shawl to warm him and rocked him in her arms till he
-closed his young eyes for ever, thankful for this feminine presence which
-had made his last sufferings less bitter.
-
-While she remained kneeling on the pavement wet with blood, a last big
-calibre shell knocked over, almost at her feet, a big corner house, which
-in its fall buried the German and French corpses in one horrible heap.
-She fell in a faint on the stones, knocked over by the windage of the
-shell, which had so nearly done for her.
-
-During the latter part of her discourse she straightened her thin figure
-to the full, her strange eyes sparkled, and she appeared to be possessed
-by some strong and mysterious spirit which made us tremble. She became
-big in her rustic simplicity—big, as the incarnation of grief and of
-pity, and the peasant in her gave place to a living image of the war—an
-image singularly moving and singularly beautiful.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From the next day Verberie became in some degree the rallying point
-for all soldiers who had lost touch with their units. Elements of all
-sorts of regiments, of all arms, of all races even, arrived on foot,
-on horseback, on bicycles, in country carts. There were dragoons,
-cuirassiers, chasseurs, artillerymen, Algerian Light Infantry and
-English. Bernous, khaki uniform, blue capes, rubbed shoulders with
-dolmans, black tunics and red trousers.
-
-In this extraordinary crowd there were men from Morocco mounted on Arab
-horses and wearing turbans; there were “Joyeux” who wore the tarboosh,
-and ruddy English faces surmounted by flat caps. All the uniforms were
-covered with dirt and slashed and torn. Many of the men had bare feet,
-and some carried arms and some were without. It was the hazard of the
-colossal battle of the Marne, where several millions of men had been at
-grips, which had thrown them on this point. All were animated by the same
-desire for information, and particularly of the whereabouts of their
-respective regiments. From every direction flowed in convoys, waggons,
-artillery ammunition waggons, stragglers from every division and from
-every army corps. The mix-up and the confusion were indescribable. One
-heard shouting, swearing, neighing of horses, the horns of motor-cars,
-and the rumble of heavy waggons, which shook the houses.
-
-Faces drawn with fatigue were black with dust and mud and framed in
-stubbly beards. Everyone was gesticulating, everyone was shouting and
-a bright autumn sun, following upon the storm, threw into prominence
-amongst the medley of clothing the luminous splashes of gaudy colours and
-imparted an Oriental effect to the crowd.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having eaten, washed and rested, I walked the streets, drinking the
-morning air and taking deep breaths of the _joie de vivre_, of the
-strength and vitality mingled with the air. I looked on every side to
-see whether I could not find some acquaintance in the crowd, some stray
-trooper from my regiment.
-
-So it was that the hazard of my walk brought me to a scene which moved
-me to tears and which rests graven so deeply on my memory that I can see
-its smallest detail with my eyes shut. The Gothic porch of the church,
-with its fine sculptures of the best period, was open, making in the
-brightness of the morning a pit of shade, at the foot of which some
-candles shone like stars. On the threshold of the porch, gaily lighted
-by the morning sun, a priest, whose fine virile face I can still recall,
-held in his hand the enamel pyx, and his surplice of lace of a dazzling
-whiteness contrasted with the muddy boots and spurs. One could guess
-that after having traversed some field of battle, consoling the wounded
-and the dying, he had dismounted to officiate in the open air under the
-morning sun.
-
-Before him, on a humble country cart and lying on a bed of straw, were
-stretched the rigid bodies, fixed in death, of two chasseurs who had
-fallen nobly while defending the bridge over the river. All around,
-kneeling in the mud of the porch, a semicircle of bareheaded soldiers,
-overcome by gratitude and humility, were assembled to accomplish a last
-duty and pay their last respects to the two comrades who were lying
-before them and who were sleeping their last sleep in their blood-stained
-uniforms, and assisted at the supreme office. The priest finished the _De
-profundis_, and in a clear voice pronounced the sacred words “_Revertitur
-in terram suam unde erat et spiritus redit ad Deum qui dedit illum._”
-The officiant gave the holy-water sprinkler to the priest, who sprinkled
-the bodies and murmured “_Requiescat in pace._” “Amen,” responded the
-kneeling crowd, and a great wave of religious feeling passed over the
-kneeling men, the greater part of whom gave way to overmastering emotion.
-
-I can still see a big devil of an artilleryman, with his head between
-his hands, shaken by convulsive sobs. Having given the absolution, the
-priest raised the host sparkling in the sunlight for the last time and
-pronounced the sacramental words. I moved off, deeply affected by the
-grandeur of the scene.
-
- * * * * *
-
-By the 12th a good number of 22nd Dragoons and some officers of the
-regiment had rejoined at Verberie. We formed from this débris an almost
-complete squadron under the command of Captain de Salverte, who had
-succeeded in getting through the lines by skirting the forest.
-
-I again found my officer, M. Chatelin, whom I had last seen in the little
-clearing near Gilocourt, surrounded by lurking enemies, and whom I had
-hardly dared hope to see again alive; also M. de Thézy, my comrade Clère
-and others.
-
-We were all sorry to hear that Lieutenant Roy had fallen on the field
-of battle with several others, and that Major Jouillié had been taken
-prisoner. As for Captain de Tarragon, it was stated that he might have
-escaped on foot with his orderly and that he might be somewhere in
-the neighbourhood with a contingent of escaped men, but any precise
-information was wanting.
-
-The night before I had slept in the drawing-room of the château belonging
-to M. de Maindreville, the mayor. Its appearance merits some brief
-description, so that those who are still in doubt as to the savagery of
-the Germans may learn to what degree of bestiality and ignominy they are
-capable of attaining.
-
-This fine drawing-room was a veritable dung heap. The curtains were torn,
-the small billiard-table lay upside down in the middle of the room, a
-litter of rotting food covered the floor, the furniture was in matchwood,
-the chairs were broken, the easy-chairs had had their stuffing torn out
-of them and the glass of the cabinets was smashed. One could see that all
-small objects had been carried off and all others methodically broken.
-On the first floor the sight was heart-breaking. Fine linen, trimmed
-with lace, was soiled with excrement; excrement was everywhere, in the
-bath, on the sheets, on the floor. They had vomited on the beds and
-urinated against the walls; broken bottles had shed seas of red wine on
-the costly carpets. An unnamable liquid was running down the staircase,
-obscene designs were traced in charcoal on the wall-papers and filthy
-inscriptions ornamented the walls.
-
-I have told enough to give an idea of the degrading traces left by a
-contemptible enemy. I have exaggerated nothing; if anything, I have
-understated the truth.
-
-And this is the people that wants to be the arbiter of culture and of
-civilisation! May it stand for ever shamed and reduced to its true level,
-which is below that of the brute beast.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the morning of the 12th, under the command of Captain de Salverte
-we crossed the Oise by a bridge of boats, the stone bridge having
-been destroyed by dynamite some days before. We went north to billet
-at Estrée-Saint-Denis, which was to be the definite rallying point of
-the 22nd Dragoons. We were followed by several country carts, full
-of dismounted troopers, saddles, lances, cloaks and odds and ends of
-equipment.
-
-Acting on very vague information, I set out on the 13th to look for
-Captain de Tarragon. I was mounted on a prehistoric motor bicycle,
-requisitioned from the village barber. I scoured the country seeking
-information from everyone I met. I received the most contradictory
-reports, made a thousand useless detours and was exasperated when
-overtaken by night without having found any trace of him.
-
-I followed the road leading to Baron and to Nanteuil-le-Haudoin, along
-which but a few days before the corps of Landwehr, asked for by von
-Kluck, had marched with the object of enveloping our army, and along
-which it had just been precipitately hustled back. The sky was overcast
-and the day threatening. At each step dead horses with swelled bellies
-threatened heaven with their stiff legs. A score of soldiers were lying
-in convulsed attitudes, their eyes wide open, with grimacing mouths
-twisted into a terrifying smile, and with hands clasping their rifles.
-Involuntarily I trembled at finding myself alone at nightfall in this
-deserted country, where no living being was to be seen, where not a sound
-was to be heard except the cawing of thousands of crows and the purr of
-my motor, which panted on the hills like an asthmatic old man, causing
-me the liveliest anxiety.
-
-Fifteen hundred mètres from Baron, after a last gasp, my machine stopped
-for ever, and, as I was ignorant of its mechanics, I was compelled
-to leave it where it was and continue my journey on foot through the
-darkness.
-
-The proprietor of the château of Baron put me up for the night. As at
-Verberie, everything had been burnt, soiled and destroyed. Nothing
-remained of the elegant furniture beyond a heap of shapeless objects.
-Next morning with the aid of a captain on the staff who requisitioned a
-trap for me, I got back to Verberie and found Captain de Tarragon there.
-He had slept at the farm of La Bonne Aventure, quite near to where I lay.
-
-When he saw me, after the mortal anxieties through which he had lived,
-believing his squadron lost and cut up, he was overcome by such a feeling
-of gratitude and joy that I saw tears rise to his eyes while he shook me
-vigorously by the hand. He had already sent forward my name for mention
-in the order for the day with reference to the affair at Gilocourt and
-the death of poor Dangel. I was recommended for the military medal,
-and my heart swelled with pride and joy, while I was carried back to
-Estrée-Saint-Denis, stretched out in a country cart with a score of
-dismounted comrades.
-
-A few days afterwards I was promoted corporal and proudly sported the red
-flannel chevrons bought at a country grocer’s shop.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Once the half-regiment was reconstituted after a fashion, though many
-were missing (a detachment of fifty men without horses having returned to
-the depot), we were attached to the 3rd Cavalry Division, which happened
-to be in our neighbourhood, ours having left the area for some unknown
-destination. Until the 1st of October our lot was bound up with that of
-the 4th Cuirassiers, who marched with us.
-
-On the 23rd of September, as supports for the artillery, we were present
-at violent infantry actions between Nesle and Billancourt. The 4th Corps
-attacked, and the furious struggle extended over the whole country. My
-troop was detached as flank guard and, in the thick morning fog, we
-knocked up against a handful of German cavalry, whom, in the distance, we
-had taken for our own men.
-
-We charged them at a gallop, and we noticed that they were tiring and
-that we were gaining on them. One of them drew his sabre and cut his
-horse’s flanks with it, whilst a non-commissioned officer turned and
-fired his revolver without hitting us; but, thanks to the fog, they got
-away. We did not tempt providence by following them too far for fear of
-bringing up in their lines.
-
-At night we were sent to reconnoitre some fires which were reddening the
-horizon and which, from a distance, seemed vast conflagrations. We came
-upon a bivouac of Algerian troops, who were squatting on their heels,
-warming themselves, singing strange African melodies and giving to this
-corner of French soil an appearance of Algeria.
-
-On hearing the sound of our horses they sprang to arms with guttural
-cries, but when they had recognised that we were French they insisted on
-embracing our officer and danced round us like children.
-
-We billeted at Parvillers in a half-destroyed farm, and there at daybreak
-a sight that suggested an hallucination met our eyes. Some ten German
-soldiers were there in the courtyard dead, mowed down by the “75,” but
-in such natural attitudes that but for their waxen colour one could have
-believed them alive. One was standing holding on to a bush, his hand
-grasping the branches. His face bespoke his terror, his mute mouth
-seemed as if in the act of yelling and his eyes were dilated with fear.
-A fragment of shell had pierced his chest. Another was on his knees,
-propped against a wall, under cover of which he had sought shelter from
-the murderous fire. I approached to see where his wound was and it took
-me a moment to discover it, so intact was the corpse. I saw at last
-that he had had the whole of the inside of his cranium carried away and
-hollowed out, as if by some surgical instrument. His tongue and his eyes
-were kept in place by a filament of flesh, and his spiked helmet had
-rolled off by his side. An officer was seated on some hay, with his legs
-apart and his head thrown back, looking at the farm.
-
-All these eyes fixed us with a terrifying immobility, with a look of
-such acute terror that our men turned away, as if afraid of sharing it;
-and not one of them dared to touch the magnificent new equipment of the
-Germans, which would have tempted them in any other circumstances. There
-were aluminium water-bottles and mess tins, helmet plates of shining
-copper and sculptured regimental badges dear to the hearts of soldiers,
-and which they have the habit of collecting as trophies.
-
-The dawn of the 25th broke without a cloud over the village of Folies. A
-heat haze hid the early morning sun. The enemy were quite near, and the
-sentries on the barricades gave the alarm. The cuirassiers and dragoons,
-leaving their horses under cover, had been on watch in the surrounding
-country since the morning to protect the village and the batteries of
-“75’s,” which were firing from a little way back.
-
-A non-commissioned officer and I had remained mounted. M. de Thézy
-sent us to investigate some horsemen whose shadows had loomed through
-the mist and whom we had seen dismount in an apple orchard near the
-village of Chocques. We set off at a quiet trot, convinced that we had
-to deal with some French hussars whom I had seen go that way an hour
-before. We crossed a field of beetroot and made straight towards them.
-They seemed anchored to the spot, and when we were within one hundred
-mètres, and they showed no signs of moving, our confidence increased.
-The fog seemed to grow thicker and our horses, now at the walk, scented
-no danger. We were within fifty mètres of them when a voice spoke out
-and the word “carbine” reached us distinctly, carried by a light breeze.
-The non-commissioned officer turned to me, his suspicions completely
-stilled, and said, “We can go on, they are French, I heard the word
-carbine.” At the same instant I saw the group come to the shoulder and
-a dozen jets of fire tore the mist with short red flashes. A hail of
-bullets fell all around us, and we had only just time enough to put
-between them and ourselves as much fog as would conceal us, for before
-turning tail we had seen the confused grey mass of a column coming out of
-the village. We had only to warn the artillery and then there would be
-some fun.
-
-The lieutenant of artillery was two kilomètres back perched on a ladder.
-Having listened to what we had to say, he turned towards his gun and
-cried through a megaphone, “2600, corrector 18.” We were already far off,
-returning at the gallop to try to see the effect, and it was a fine sight.
-
-Leaving the horses in a farm, we slipped from tree to tree. There was
-the column, still advancing. A first shell, ten mètres in front of
-it, stopped it short; immediately a second fell on the left, wounding
-some men, and a horse reared and upset its rider. A third shell struck
-mercilessly into the centre of the column and caused an explosion
-which sent flying, right and left, dark shapes which we guessed to
-be fragments of bodies. It rained shell, which struck the road with
-mathematical precision, sowing death and panic. In the twinkling of an
-eye the road was swept clean. The survivors bolted in every direction
-like madmen, and the agonising groans of a dying horse echoed through the
-whole country-side.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the 1st of October we rejoined our division and the first
-half-regiment at Tilloy-les-Mofflaines. Up to the 20th we passed through
-a period of great privation and fatigue owing to the early frosts. We
-were unable to sleep for as many as five days on end, and when at night
-we had a few hours in which to rest, we passed them lying on the pavement
-of the street, propped up against some heap of coal or of stones, holding
-our horses’ reins, each huddled up against his neighbour to try and keep
-warm.
-
-Here are extracts from my diary, starting from 8th October:
-
- _8th October._—All night we guarded the bridge at Estaires,
- after having constructed a formidable barricade. Damp and
- chilly night, which I got through lying on the pavement before
- the bridge; drank a half-litre of spirits in little sips to
- sustain me. This is the most trying night we have passed, but
- the spirits of all are wonderful.
-
- _9th October: Twenty minutes to four, two kilomètres from
- Estaires, scouting amongst beetroot fields._—Has the supreme
- moment come? A little while ago I firmly believed that it
- had; now I am out of my reckoning, so incomprehensible and
- widespread is the struggle which surrounds us.
-
- We have evacuated Estaires and the bridge over the Lys, which
- we were guarding, to rejoin our horses on foot. After some
- minutes on the road the first shells burst. My troop received
- orders to fight dismounted, and here we are, lying down as
- skirmishers amongst the beetroot, in the midst of a heavy
- artillery and musketry fire. I am on the extreme right, and a
- moment ago two shrapnel shells came over and burst six or eight
- mètres above my head, peppering the ground with bullets. Never,
- I imagine, have I come so near to being hit.
-
- For the moment it is impossible to understand what is going on;
- the whole of the cavalry which was on in front of us—chasseurs,
- dragoons and all the cyclists—have fallen back, passing along
- the road on our flank. We, however, have had no order to
- retire. The peasants with their wives and children are running
- about the country like mad people. It is a sorry sight. A
- moment ago I saw an old man and a little girl fall in their
- hurry to escape from their farm, which a shell had just knocked
- to pieces. They are like herds of animals maddened by a storm.
-
- At dusk the Germans are 500 mètres off. We have orders to take
- up our post in the cemetery of Estaires. I have hurt my foot
- and each step in the ploughed land is a torture. I have noted a
- way which will lead me to the bridge on the other side of the
- town.
-
- I brought up my patrol at the double. When I got back I saw the
- troop retiring.
-
- We passed through the town, which had a sinister look by night,
- reddened by the flames from many fires. The whole population is
- in flight, leaving houses open to the streets, and crowding up
- the roads. All the window-panes are broken by the bombardment;
- somewhere, in the middle of the town, a building is burning
- and the flames mount to the sky. There are barricades in every
- street. We have reached the horses, which are two kilomètres
- from the town, and we grope for them in the dark. Mine is
- slightly wounded in the foreleg. Long retreat during the night
- (the second during which we have not slept—a storm wets us to
- the skin).
-
- Arrived at Chocques at five in the morning. We get to bed at
- 6.30 and we are off again at 8 o’clock. I ask myself for how
- many days men and horses can hold out.
-
- _10th October._—In the afternoon we again covered the twenty
- kilomètres which separated us from Estaires. Hardly had we
- settled down to guard the same bridge as yesterday when we were
- sent to La Gorgue. On the way stopped in the village, as shells
- commenced to fall. The 1st troop took refuge in a grocer’s,
- where we were parked like sheep. A large calibre shell burst
- just opposite with a terrible row. I thought that the house
- was going to fall in. Lieutenant Niel, who had stayed outside,
- was knocked over into the ditch and wounded. We are falling
- back with the horses to La Gorgue, and we are passing a third
- night, without sleep, on the road, Magrin and I on a heap of
- coal. Horses and men have had nothing to eat, the latter are
- benumbed, exhausted, but gay as ever.
-
- _11th October._—We get to a neighbouring farm at Estrem to
- feed the horses. They have scarcely touched their hay and
- oats before an order comes telling us to rejoin at the very
- place from which we have come. The Germans are trying to take
- the village from the east, thanks to the bridge which they
- captured the day before yesterday, but we have been reinforced
- by cyclists, and the 4th Division is coming up. We are holding
- on; the position is good. The belfry of the town hall has just
- fallen. We are going back to Estrem.
-
- Three hours passed in a trench without great-coats. Magrin
- and I are so cold that we huddle up one against the other and
- share a woollen handkerchief to cover our faces. We put up at
- Calonne-sur-la-Lys. And so it goes on up to the 17th, the date
- on which we re-enter Belgium, passing by Bailleul, Outersteene
- and Locre. It is not again a triumphal entry on a fine August
- morning, it is a march past ruins and over rubbish heaps.
-
- At Outersteene, however, we were received with touching
- manifestations of confidence and enthusiasm; an old tottering
- and broken-down teacher had drawn up before the school a score
- of young lads of seven to ten years old, who watched us passing
- and sang the _Marseillaise_ with all their lungs, while the old
- man beat the time.
-
- The village had been evacuated only three days ago, and it
- was from the thresholds of its houses, partly fallen in and
- still smoking, that this song rose, a sincere and spontaneous
- outburst.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE TWO GLORIOUS DAYS OF STADEN
-
-
-On October 19th, at midday, we rode into Hougled. The Captain got us
-together and warned us that we were being sent on in front to delay
-the march of the enemy till our infantry had had time to come up. The
-enemy’s march had to be delayed _at all costs_. He did not conceal from
-us that two, or perhaps three, divisions had been marked down in front
-of us, that the task would be a stiff one and that it was a question of
-“sticking it out” to the last drop of our blood.
-
-We then received orders to prepare for a dismounted action, and, leaving
-our horses in a street, we set off across the ploughed fields, laden with
-ammunition. I carried a big cartridge case, which I usually left in my
-wallets on account of its weight.
-
-Some round clouds, of a snowy whiteness, which made them stand out
-against the crude and washy blue of the background, scudded across the
-sky, carried by a stiff breeze. All Nature was _en fête_, and the fresh
-strong wind was intoxicating.
-
-Towards four o’clock the enemy showed himself in sections and in
-companies, well aligned on the plain beneath us. There was no attempt at
-concealment, as, doubtless, the village was thought to be unoccupied.
-
-Under cover of some thin brushwood we opened fire on these regular
-formations, to show that we were there and not in the least impressed
-by these demonstrations of company and field training. It was just like
-being on manœuvres, and these awkward soldiers seemed rather ridiculous,
-gravely doing the goose-step, when so soon it would be a question of
-killing or being killed.
-
-We must have got their range, for we noted through field-glasses a slight
-confusion in the enemy’s ranks, and, instantaneously, the advancing
-infantry disappeared. They were still there, however, for their bullets,
-slipping over the ridge where we offered a good target, pitted the turf
-all round us, happily without wounding any one. The Germans have a
-remarkable faculty of making themselves scarce in the twinkling of an eye
-as soon as they have been seen by an enemy, like those insects which, at
-the least noise, blend with the grass on which they are perched.
-
-Our naval guns, ranged by the side of the road, fired over the plain. An
-observing officer, standing on his horse’s back, judged the effects of
-the fire. We saw the shells burst in beautiful plumes of dark or light
-smoke. The enemy’s fusillade ceased, much to our satisfaction.
-
-But the German artillery began to reply, and we were soon subjected to
-such a fire that we had to retreat towards the village, being uneasy
-about our horses, which happened to be in the line of fire. In going
-along the main street we kept close to the walls to avoid the shell
-splinters. Shells of all calibres fell without ceasing, making holes
-in the thin slate roofs and breaking the windows. I saw one pierce a
-wall some paces in front of me and burst inside a house, whose stories
-collapsed, one on the top of the other. It was just like an earthquake,
-the whole street was shaken by it.
-
-We made for our horses at the double and found them plunging under this
-storm of fire, and we galloped off behind the village to get them into
-safety. Without losing a second we distributed extra cartridges in large
-numbers and returned to take our place between the farms in the grass
-fields shut in by hedges and barriers. We worked at fortifying our
-positions till evening. Everyone made “his trench.” (That word had then
-another signification; at that time the word trench represented for us
-the least scooped-out hole, the least obstacle placed between the enemy
-and us.)
-
-We protected ourselves with sand-bags, faggots, agricultural implements,
-etc. We were hardly installed before we received an order to leave this
-place and to occupy a road on the right, running between two meadows. We
-made a barricade at the end of it, somehow or other, with whatever came
-to hand.
-
-The infantry, expected at four o’clock, were late, and it became
-questionable whether it would be materially possible to hold out
-much longer, if the Germans attacked, taking into consideration the
-disproportion between our forces and those of the enemy.
-
-Night had hardly come when an infernal fusillade broke out, and it
-lasted till daylight without the least slackening. It was exactly like
-an uninterrupted salvo fire, with the addition of the sharp, regular dry
-crackle of machine-guns. Thousands of projectiles struck our fragile
-barricade or passed, whistling, over our heads. We fired straight in
-front of us into the dark night, without knowing what we aimed at, except
-that our fire was directed towards the place whence this murderous storm
-of shot and shell came.
-
-Constantly the same question ran from man to man: “Have the infantry come
-up?” for we knew that our lives depended on their arrival. Our orders
-were: “You will prevent the Germans passing till you have been relieved.”
-
-We had only a handful of troopers, two hundred perhaps, to check the
-onslaught of a formidable mass of infantry. Unless our infantry came to
-our aid we would be cut up to a man; but the enemy should have to pass
-over our bodies.
-
-Overcome with fatigue, and in spite of the thunder all round us, I fell
-asleep, suddenly, heavily, dreamlessly, in a little ditch which ran by
-the roadside. I don’t know when I awoke. The noise of the combat was
-dominated by a clamour still louder and more penetrating: a part of the
-village of Staden was on fire. A horde of Germans dashed into it, yelling
-“Hourraa!” A diabolical clamour rose to heaven, and yells and cries of
-bestial joy mounted with the thick smoke of the fires.
-
-We learnt afterwards that they had charged empty barricades, a party of
-our men having evacuated the town an hour previously. A corporal of the
-1st squadron, posted a little more to the left, told me he had seen them
-200 yards off defiling in quick step “silhouetted like devils” against
-the glare of the fire.
-
-Still no infantry.
-
-A torpor seized me and I fell back into the ditch, overcome by sleep,
-and slept again till almost daylight. From that moment events moved with
-great rapidity. It must have been seven o’clock when the infantry at last
-arrived, fifteen hours late. We heard hurried footsteps. I turned and saw
-troops falling back in hot haste, being irresistibly outflanked by the
-enemy. They seemed to be pursued by assailants who were on their heels.
-I heard voices exclaiming, “It is pitiable to see fellows so up against
-it.” I said nothing, but, in my inner consciousness, I clearly understood
-that the supreme moment was come for many of us.
-
-For a moment I feared that we had been forgotten in the general movement.
-Soon afterwards Captain de Tarragon appeared at the cross-roads. I
-can see him still; he looked immensely big in his blue cloak. Without
-speaking, he signalled to us that we could retire. It was time indeed,
-for the enemy outflanked us on all sides. The troop doubled towards him
-and ran on. Magrin and I remained alongside him. Never so much as then
-have I felt the irresistible force of Destiny. It was written that I was
-to remain with him until the end.
-
-We three reached a farm on the crest of the ridge; 400 mètres off a
-German company was advancing. The Captain seized a carbine from the hands
-of a late-comer who fled past us and turned round to open fire. Faithful
-to my oath, and knowing that our lives hung on a thread, I fired off the
-contents of my magazine alongside of him. I aimed as best I could, though
-my greatcoat interfered, and I shot into the brown. A second later the
-German reply crumbled the wall of the farm, passing between the Captain
-and me, two fingers’ breadth over our heads.
-
-I implored de Tarragon not to expose himself any longer. What was the use
-of this heroic folly of standing up alone against an advancing battalion
-of the enemy? Doubtless our regiment was already a long way off, but we
-might, perhaps, be able to rejoin it by crawling along the deep ditch
-which ran by the roadside.
-
-Hate of the enemy seemed, however, to rage in his heart, and he replied,
-“It is too bad to have to abandon such a target!” At last, his cartridges
-being exhausted, he decided to retire, without running, and seeming to
-defy the entire world with his tall well set-up figure of a handsome
-French soldier. Instead of taking to the ditch which ran by the roadside,
-he crossed the field of fire. I followed him, without understanding, and
-Magrin did likewise.
-
-A moment afterwards our number was increased to four by the arrival of
-an officer of hussars or of chasseurs, who came running up. All my life
-I shall remember this last. He was young, elegant and good-looking, and
-so trim and neat with his sky-blue cap jauntily set at an angle. When two
-mètres off he opened his mouth as if to speak, but before having emitted
-a sound he fell dead, hit by a bullet under the ear.
-
-The Captain, who was at my side, stepped forward to put himself, at
-last, under shelter. Hardly had he taken a step before a bullet hit him,
-and I uttered a cry of rage on seeing him fall in a heap. Feigning to
-be wounded or dead, to deceive the enemy and cause the cessation of his
-fire, I fell also, and both of us rolled into the deep ditch.
-
-There was not a minute to lose. “Magrin, quick, quick, no good troubling
-about the Lieutenant of chasseurs, he’s dead; but perhaps the Captain is
-still alive, we must get him away.” Magrin, who had tumbled down after
-me, believing me hit, raised the Captain’s head and I took his feet. A
-hail of bullets passed like a squall above our heads. We stayed so a good
-five minutes, exhausting ourselves in useless efforts to carry off this
-inert body. On account of its weight it was impossible even to move it in
-the squatting and unhandy position in which we found ourselves.
-
-He did not regain consciousness for an instant; once his eyes opened,
-then the eyelids quivered and his head fell back heavily. He was dead,
-and we could not think of getting him away. The fire was furious. Magrin
-and I, who had remained behind till the last, now tried to gain the farm
-behind which our regiment was massed. We made three mètres under cover of
-the ditch, and then we covered a hundred mètres at the run, under such a
-rain of bullets, aimed at us, that I attribute our escape to a miracle.
-My greatcoat and cape were riddled. As I turned the corner of the house,
-that corner even was torn off and the broken bricks fell on me. I passed
-by some bicycles abandoned against a wall, and, after I had gone by, I
-heard the sharp crack of broken spokes, which the bullets had cut.
-
-Once I had passed the corner I found shelter for an instant. I came
-across Captain Besnier who was wounded, and helped to carry him. The
-road was strewn with the bodies of dragoons, chasseurs and cyclists.
-Behind the house were a brick-field and a clay-pit, whose slippery crest
-had to be crossed. I saw some unlucky fellows get half over, within
-two paces of safety, and then roll to the bottom, hit by the pitiless
-machine-guns.
-
-The firing redoubled. Major Chapin, who had arrived at the front only
-three days before, fell hit through the head, and many others fell whom I
-did not know.
-
-The command of our party devolved on Lieutenant Mielle, and, following
-an order from the dying Major Chapin, we took the direction of the
-railway bridge on the right. Lieutenant Desonney was wounded and lay
-out a hundred mètres off. I heard the Colonel cry in a loud voice with
-an accent of despair which is untranslatable, “Won’t someone bring in
-Desonney?” and one after the other five dragoons unhesitatingly left
-their shelter and threw themselves into the furnace of fire, each of
-them as he fell, within a few yards, and to be immediately replaced by
-another. The whole regiment would have gone if the Colonel had not put a
-stop to such heroic obedience.
-
-But what was going on? Amidst the noise of battle the clear notes of a
-bugle mounted to heaven; both sides hesitated. They were the well-known
-notes sounding the charge. We turned, and a sight of unspeakable grandeur
-met our eyes.
-
-The dismounted 1st squadron, lance in hand, charged into the whirlwind of
-fire, to allow of the rest of the regiment falling back. The obsessing
-refrain made one’s temples throb. We were hypnotised, and the Colonel,
-standing up, unconscious of the bullets which grazed him, folded his
-arms and watched his admirable soldiers who, moved by almost superhuman
-brotherly devotion, braved the fire and retarded for a moment the enemy’s
-march so as to permit their comrades to escape. The Colonel watched, and
-great tears of pride and of anxiety ran down his tanned cheeks. When,
-once in one’s life, one has had the privilege of seeing such a deed, it
-lives with one for ever.
-
-We now crawled across the railway. The machine-guns mowed the fields of
-beetroot as if they had been shaved off with a razor. Seven of us took
-this way and we all got through, I don’t know how, without being touched.
-Then we slipped between the infantry sections which were advancing in
-skirmishing order on all sides. Some minutes later we were behind a ridge
-under cover and in safety. We reached a little shanty where we sheltered
-for a long time, and from the loft of which we could still fire on the
-enemy.
-
-Towards 9 o’clock the musketry fire gradually diminished. We left the
-farm only when the artillery duel began. The shells came a bit too close,
-and there was the risk of the house falling in on us.
-
-We went in search of the horses two kilomètres off, and retirement was
-decided on because of the need for food and rest. When I caught up the
-column at the trot I counted 47 led horses, which means that 47 men had
-fallen. Desonney’s troop had an officer and 14 men missing out of 28. We
-had lost a major, two captains, two lieutenants and many comrades, but we
-had made it possible for two army corps to come up.
-
-A mere handful of men had put up a fight against three divisions. A fine
-page in the history of the regiment!
-
-My greatcoat was handed round the squadron. A bullet had pierced the
-cloth four times under the heart, another twice through the arm, three
-others over the ribs.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Eight days afterwards, at Clarques, near Saint-Omer, where we were
-resting, promotions were made to replace the non-commissioned officers
-who had fallen gloriously that day. I was made sergeant-major.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE FUNERAL OF LORD ROBERTS—NIEUPORT-VILLE—IN THE TRENCHES—YPRES AND THE
-NEIGHBOURING SECTORS—I TRANSFER TO THE LINE
-
-
-A memorable ceremony in which with others of the regiment I took
-part, was on the occasion of the ceremony at Saint-Omer in honour of
-Field-Marshal Lord Roberts, who had died on the 15th November while on a
-visit to the allied armies.
-
-At half-past six the regiment was formed up on the road and the twelve
-best specimens of manhood were picked out from each troop. We were soaked
-by rain on the way, but the sun came out when the ceremony began.
-
-We were formed up in battle array before the town hall. All round the
-square, on the edge of the pavement, a single rank of Highlanders,
-carefully sized, stood like statues. We waited the coffin, which appeared
-at last from a side street, preceded by a troop of English cavalry who
-marched slowly—their black horses were admirable creatures. Then came
-a section of infantry, fine, big, taking fellows, who marched with
-their heads down and their eyes fixed on the ground; next came superb
-Indian troops, who wore turbans, amongst whom were great native princes;
-then a contingent of Canadians, just disembarked; lastly some Highland
-pipers playing a lament whose refrain was eternally alike. We had heard
-this shrill lament for a long time, now it became stronger and more
-penetrating the nearer the cortège approached, and gave a strange exotic
-note to this old-fashioned setting of a little French town.
-
-When the coffin appeared the Highlanders who formed the guard of honour
-executed a strange movement. They slowly described an arc of a circle
-with their rifles, their outstretched right arms forming an uninterrupted
-line all round the square, then each man finished the movement by
-crossing his arms on the butt-plate of his rifle, the muzzle of which was
-now resting on the ground.
-
-With their heads bowed, these mourners resembled some old bas-relief. The
-coffin, enveloped in the Union Jack, was borne on a gun-carriage. It was
-all very simple and very moving.
-
-To the wild notes of the Scottish bagpipes, now silent, the clear
-trumpets of our dragoons replied, and their sound was in itself like
-sparkling metal. They continued to sound until the remains of the
-Field-Marshal had been placed in the town hall.
-
-After the ceremony, which we did not see, twenty-one guns thundered
-out, fired by batteries posted behind the square. An immense rainbow,
-as sharply defined as if drawn with a stroke of the brush, cut the sky
-with a perfect and uninterrupted semicircle. Symbol of peace, it came to
-earth directly behind the batteries, and the flash of the guns showed up
-against its iridescent screen.
-
-An English officer came to tell the Colonel that the ceremony was over,
-and we returned to Clarques under a beating rain, which had begun to fall
-again.
-
-Our next active work was at Nieuport. Motor buses brought us to Coxyde,
-where, amongst the slightly built villas of this watering-place, Belgian
-and French uniforms swarmed. Sand-dunes, on which the sand encroached on
-the scanty covering of grass, bordered the horizon on all sides.
-
-Captain Vigoureux had sent me to lay out the camp with a corporal and
-one man. Clère, Hénon and I went on ahead at a sharp pace. From Coxyde
-to Ostdinkerque there was no trace of bombardment. On the road we met
-several lots of horses at exercise, some waggons, many soldiers and a few
-civilians. At Ostdinkerque a mill, two houses and a part of the church
-had been gutted yesterday. Some vehicles contained civilians, who were
-prudently clearing out.
-
-From this place onwards (Nieuport-Ville was six kilomètres off) the road
-became more and more deserted and the noise of the guns became louder. At
-first we only heard the noise of our own batteries and the shell burst
-a long way off. Two kilomètres from Nieuport I heard the whistle of the
-first German shell, a shrapnel which burst some hundreds of mètres off.
-Several people on the road were peppered with the fragments of shell; the
-telegraph wires were broken and the rails of a tramway were torn up. The
-country was a desert, and the eye saw nothing but sand-dunes without end,
-and here our underground life began.
-
-At the entrance to the town a prudent man on duty showed his profile
-at the door of a cellar. I asked him, “Where is Captain Mahot?” and he
-answered in an irritated voice: “Don’t stand there in the middle of the
-road, don’t you see that the shells are falling just where you are?” I
-had not noticed it, but I did not take long to find out. The man on
-duty led me five mètres underground to Lieutenant Deporte. “Sir, where
-is Captain Mahot? The town commandant of the 16th Dragoons? I see no one
-about.” “Everyone has gone to earth,” he replied, placidly filling his
-pipe, “and I advise you to hurry up and do likewise, for it comes down
-like hail just about now.” It did indeed. I heard the most disquieting
-sounds, the bursting of big shells, the splash of bullets, which
-flattened themselves against the houses. Some streets were enfiladed, and
-thousands of shrapnel bullets flew back and forward between the German
-trenches and ours.
-
-The Lieutenant gave me a man to take me to the Captain’s cellar, which
-was at the other end of the town. He and I (I had left the others in
-a cellar) skirted the walls, and at every step what a sight! All that
-remained of the church resembled a sort of historic ruin—some pillars,
-some arches, very fine ones, and some sculptures lying on the ground.
-Everywhere the craters of the big shells had the dimensions of dried-up
-ponds. In the principal _place_ there were two such, in which one could
-have put two houses.
-
-Speaking of houses, some had been destroyed with an art and a refinement
-which made them look like builder’s models. One was standing, of which
-the only thing wanting was the outside wall facing the street, and one
-could see the section of the gaping interior. The pictures were hanging
-on the walls, and on the piano were photographs and nick-nacks. The
-drawing-room, the dining-room and the bedroom were intact; but the
-flooring of the attics had given way and everything had fallen through
-to the floor below. Another house was almost comical in appearance, for,
-against a wall on the lowest story, stood a fine bamboo rack, on which
-two statuettes of sham Saxe ware smiled an eternal and idiotic smile and
-seemed to jeer at the bombardment. Other houses, and these were the most
-numerous, were lamentable rubbish heaps, fallen in, blackened, broken up
-in every sense, blocking the streets and forming a hideous lamentable
-chaos. Even when no shell fell—and there were long moments of calm—the
-houses dropped to pieces of themselves. This one might lose the remainder
-of its tiles, which fell into the street with a din; the next one might
-drop, let us say, a stove, or a small billiard-table, from one floor to
-another.
-
-I arrived at last at the end of my journey, having asked myself a
-thousand times whether I should not be pulverised on the way there. The
-worst bit was when I reached the last cross-roads. For the second time I
-asked an orderly whether this was the house—pardon, the cellar—of Captain
-Mahot, and for the second time I heard an irritated voice reply, “Don’t
-stay there in the middle of the street”; but this time I lost the end
-of the phrase, being blinded and deafened. The heavens seemed to fall
-on me. I heard, “Get under cover,” and I felt my tympanum shattered. A
-house twenty mètres from me, a large two-storied house, seemed to be
-transformed into a volcano. A shell had entered its middle, through the
-roof, and _the whole house collapsed into the street_, accompanied by a
-formidable fall of rafters, bricks and furniture. “You see that,” said
-the orderly in a severe tone; “get into the cellar.” I felt just like a
-little boy.
-
-Five marines had been buried under the ruins. A little later I saw their
-bodies on stretchers. What a lamentable death for a sailor or soldier!
-
-Captain Mahot said to me, “The billeting area of the 22nd Dragoons? Very
-good, there it is,” and he showed me the butt-end of “the shepstraat.”
-I looked at it in astonishment, saying to myself, “That?” Messina after
-the earthquake would have offered more comfort. Nevertheless I inspected
-the cellars and apportioned them amongst the troops, and, by myself this
-time, I returned through the town to my point of departure, to meet and
-conduct Captain Vigoureux, whom I found three hundred mètres beyond the
-gates.
-
-This made the fourth time that I had made this disquieting journey. I
-began to feel that I had had enough of it, the more so as I had walked
-twelve kilomètres, and, not being accustomed to carrying a pack, my back
-hurt me. Clère was quite knocked up, and had looked at once so sad and so
-comic that I did not know whether to laugh at him or to pity him.
-
-The regiment settled in more or less (rather less) in the sector reserved
-for it. The cellars were crowded. My orderly, who was a treasure of
-devotion and very inventive, arranged my kit, found me a candle and
-spread a mattress. I was kept on the run, everyone called me at once: “A
-man wanted for the guard-room, a liaison officer to see the Captain, a
-man wanted for water fatigue, the quartermaster-sergeant wants to know
-how things are here, the 3rd troop have no billets and so on.” ... I
-tried to reply to everyone, and my head was like a whirlpool. It was
-impossible to keep the men in, though there were strict orders that they
-were not to leave the cellars. They broke out in every direction, and,
-in spite of the shells, they amused themselves like children, entering
-the houses at the peril of their lives. One of them brought me a stuffed
-stork; another a cornet and a draught screen; my orderly came last with a
-woman’s mantlet, trimmed with lace!
-
-Towards six o’clock the rain of shells ceased.
-
-After dinner not a sound was heard. The cold was cruel. I wrapped
-myself in my greatcoat and turned up the collar above my ears. I stuck
-my head well into my fatigue-cap and, to amuse myself, I started off
-on “reconnaissance,” armed with an electric lamp. I visited twenty
-gutted houses, and this diversion was becoming monotonous when, from a
-particularly damaged court, I heard a somewhat uncertain hand playing
-the piano. The air was one of those old waltzes which dragoons dote on
-and which suggest Viennese softness combined with the popular taste of
-the Boulevards. There was no light in the yawning house. One might have
-called it the house of Usher, at least I thought of that spontaneously,
-for there was something weird about those black holes from whence came
-this sad and popular jingle, though the eye was conscious of nothing but
-darkness.
-
-My ideas wandered for a moment, but, noticing a ray of light at my feet,
-I found the key of the enigma: some lascars had brought the piano down
-to the cellar to be more at their ease. At the foot of some ten steps,
-or rather of a steep slope—I learnt afterwards that, in coming down
-stairs, the piano had done the work of a “105”—I had only to pull a
-canvas curtain aside slightly to see what was going on inside. It was an
-affecting scene.
-
-Some ten men lay on mattresses listening to the musician, who was seated
-on a small cask, playing the same waltz over and over again, probably the
-only thing he knew, with his great clumsy fingers. There was something
-in the look of each of these men analogous to that of intoxication from
-opium, or to the fascination on his subject of a mesmerist. Above, the
-shells began to fall again; below, they had forgotten the war, because
-they listened to a tune they loved, and, music is all-powerful over
-simple hearts.
-
-I remember this episode as one of the most picturesque souvenirs of the
-war. I stayed in that cellar playing to them for more than an hour. They
-were drunk with pleasure and with dreams of home. That night I could have
-led them to the assault, even to the cannon’s mouth.
-
-Next day, the 24th of January, réveillé was sounded at three o’clock.
-
-At four o’clock we fell in. We were going into the second line trenches.
-
- Our “dug-out” was a little rectangular room five mètres long by
- two mètres wide, cut in the stiff soil, stayed up with planks,
- covered with beams and roofed with earth.[3] It was dark as an
- oven. It was entered by an opening so narrow that my pack could
- not pass, and to get to this door, if one could call it a door,
- one had to perform prodigies from the roadside onwards to avoid
- being bogged up to the knees. There was a little straw on the
- floor, and the furniture consisted of a chair.
-
- There we were going to take up our residence, my seven men and
- I—Dhuic, Laroche, Ponnery, Bobet, Thiérard, Emmanuel and that
- terrible-looking fellow Hurel, with his vulture’s face and
- insane alcoholic eye. I can see him now at the bottom of the
- trench, his face emerging from a sheep-skin coat which made
- him look more than ever like a wild beast. “If the Bosches
- catch sight of you,” an unindulgent comrade said to him, “they
- will certainly clear out in double-quick time.”
-
- We got here from Nieuport at four o’clock in the morning. The
- regiment was closed up and the men stumbled at each step over
- the débris of houses, which littered the road. Dead silence
- reigned, and the cold north wind of early morning made our eyes
- water. No shells or bullets were flying, but we heard from time
- to time the noise of tiles falling from some roof or the din
- of a falling skirt of wall. Star shell were being used, and
- each time they lit up the country they made us jumpy, for we
- presumed that they would be followed by a shell only too well
- placed.
-
- Day dawned, and I came cautiously out of my hole to have a
- look at the country. The human imagination never, I imagine,
- has conceived, nor ever can picture, anything sadder or more
- desolate than what I saw. I found myself on the road leading
- from Nieuport to Saint-Georges at a point almost equally
- distant from both of these remains of towns. The banked-up road
- meandered over an immense muddy plain, necked with pools of
- grey water, now frozen. Nieuport was on my right. From here
- I could not see a single house which was, I won’t say intact,
- but only damaged by the bombardment. It was a heap of gutted
- buildings, crumbling walls and twisted and broken trees. On my
- left was Saint-Georges, in if anything worse state. Nothing
- remained but a pile of stones, and one would never have
- supposed that a village had once existed there.
-
- By the side of my trench there was a freshly made grave,
- that is to say a square of mud surmounted by a white cross.
- The cap of a marine lay by its side. I picked it up; it was
- full of brains. The poor fellow must have been killed on this
- very spot, and yesterday probably, mown down perhaps by that
- same shell which had pierced two neighbouring trees with its
- murderous fragments.
-
- As I re-entered my trench the sharp clatter of our batteries
- disturbed the air. They were placed quite near us, and well
- hidden, for I could see nothing of them. I supposed that this
- was the opening of the ball and that the enemy’s reply would
- not be long in coming. Some of my men had come out. I made
- them get back again quickly, and treated Hurel to a kick from
- behind. The men become as quiet as sheep when there is danger
- about. One of them warmed me some coffee on a solid fuel
- spirit-lamp, and another let me make a pillow of his abdomen.
-
- _25th January, 1915._—We were relieved at 5 o’clock and
- returned safe and sound to Nieuport. I found the cellar
- transformed, thanks to Clère and Hénon; there was a light, a
- table covered with a cloth and some crockery. They had looted
- these things from the town, and I did not find fault with them
- for doing so, for these articles were safer where they were
- than in the ruins exposed at any moment to squalls of shell.
-
- The bombardment had kept on increasing until past midday. It
- was dangerous to go outside. Every half-hour I made a round to
- make the men get back into their cellars. We made some tea,
- but the water came from the Yser, which was carrying down dead
- bodies, and the tea smelt of death. We could not drink it.
-
- The ration cart arrived to an accompaniment of shells. We did
- not take long to unload it.
-
- _26th January, 1915._—At midday a French aëroplane flew over
- the dunes. It was bombarded at times, and it let fall some
- silver trails which sparkled in the sky like the scales of
- fish.[4]
-
- * * * * *
-
- To-night we buried a dragoon belonging to the 16th, who had
- been killed some days before in the course of a reconnaissance.
- The body was already at the cemetery, covered with earth, and
- we brought the coffin, carried by two soldier grave-diggers.
- It preceded, by some paces, the silent cortège formed by the
- Captain, M. Chatelin, the priest, two non-commissioned officers
- and myself. We crossed the canal bridge a little before
- midnight.
-
- A sentry, petrified by cold, asked us for the countersign,
- which was given, and we went on our way, avoiding the white
- patches of moonlight which might have betrayed our presence.
-
- The rusted gate of the cemetery creaked lamentably as we
- entered onto the holy ground that the shells had failed to
- respect. They had hollowed monstrous and gaping graves that
- yawned under our feet, laying bare, completely or partially,
- the skeletons and corpses. A stiff north wind was blowing,
- bending the slim shrubs and agitating the grass and the rotten
- crosses as in a danse macabre. It was the devil of a night, and
- I admit that we all shivered, preferring the risks of a charge
- in full daylight to this sinister and furtive work. Every two
- or three minutes a star shell traced a lovely curve of diamonds
- in the sky, and, instinctively, we put our heads down in
- silence. Four men dug the grave. We uncovered the poor body,
- which had been covered with a thin layer of earth. It had been
- wrapped up in sacking, like the big quarters of beef that are
- unloaded from the supply carts when rations are given out.
-
- It was the most lamentable thing I have ever seen.
-
- Everything was hurried through in a few minutes. The coffin was
- too big. The Captain put into it an envelope containing the
- name of the soldier who was going to rest there between the
- lines, and who would be crooned to sleep by the noise of shells.
-
- The wind shook the surplice of the priest who recited the
- prayers, and I heard only a confused murmur of odd phrases, for
- the wind carried off the rest. We had to hurry, for the quiet
- moments were rare, and we returned through the dark deserted
- streets in impressive silence.
-
- _Nieuport, 29th January, 1915._—To form an exact idea of
- what this very peculiar war is like one must have lived the
- twenty-four hours that I have just passed through—a bitterly
- cold winter’s day and night.
-
- We set out to occupy the first line trenches at 4 o’clock.
- The night was clear and frosty, and the stars glittered like
- splinters of ice. A clear and cold moon lit up the immensity
- of the ravaged and desolated plain, making the ice glitter,
- silhouetting the traitorous and dangerous ruins, betraying our
- position by the glint from our bayonets, while the frost-bound
- ground conducted sound to a great distance.
-
- As far as the post from which the second-line trenches were
- commanded the road was good and the distance easy; but from
- there onwards the carrying out of reliefs became hazardous. We
- marched in single file, holding our bayonets in our left hands
- to prevent them from knocking against our rifles, raising our
- feet and going on tiptoe, as in a sick-room. The road became
- atrociously bad, it being impossible to repair it owing to
- the nearness of the enemy. Nothing was wanting, ruts, holes,
- fencing wire, overturned fencing posts, etc. The squadron
- occupied some trenches on the right. These were arrow-shaped,
- and were the nearest trenches to the enemy.
-
- Seventeen of us held the main trench, and in an adjacent
- one were two marines with a small pom-pom trench gun. These
- were called trenches; in reality they consisted of sloping
- beams laid against an embankment of stones and sand-bags. We
- had to crawl into them, and, once in, we were condemned to
- immobility. We could not even sit down without bending our
- heads. Little by little the cold took hold of us, beginning
- with our feet, and we felt as if we were transformed into
- blocks of ice.
-
- The wind brought us a suggestive odour, which mingled with
- the smell of rotting litter on which we were lying. We felt
- inclined to vomit. Day came and brought the need for absolute
- immobility. It was impossible to risk oneself outside the
- trench, even flat on one’s belly, until night-time. M. Chatelin
- and I shivered side by side, and inspected the horizon
- through field-glasses. On the left we saw some suspicious
- smoke, and the same distance off, on the right, we found
- the explanation of the stink we had smelt on our arrival.
- A score of German corpses were there, caught between their
- barbed-wire entanglement and ours, and destined to rot there
- for an undetermined period. They were in all sorts of poses
- and horribly mutilated. Some bodies were without heads, some
- heads and arms were lying separated and all the bodies were in
- convulsive postures. A number of crows were disputing their
- bodies, as were some half-wild cats, which refused the meat
- we offered them—a pretty sight indeed; happily there were no
- French bodies amongst them.
-
- The artillery opened the ball about eight o’clock. We were
- almost in the middle, and well below the trajectory of the
- shells. We saw some shells strike their target—some farms,
- that fell to pieces—but many missed. That, however, was of no
- account.
-
- From the direction of Lombaertzyde a sudden thunder resounded,
- and for the whole of the afternoon the earth was shaken by a
- bombardment which nothing could describe. To represent it one
- must think of a furious sea, an express at full speed, lowing
- of cattle, cat-calls, creakings; one must think of a mixture of
- all these sounds forming a sort of savage harmony. In the rays
- of the rising sun Lombaertzyde was crowned with plumes of black
- and white smoke, made by the bursting shells.
-
- Nothing else happened till evening. The night was less
- monotonous, for, in spite of the pitiless moonlight, one could
- go out. We looked on with much interest at a raid by two
- aëroplanes, which marked down an enemy’s trench and a supply
- convoy with luminous bombs. An instant afterwards the “75’s”
- hit hard. Towards midnight seven shots were let off from the
- listening post. I said to myself, “At last, here comes the
- attack.” I shook up my men, benumbed with cold and sleep; but
- dead silence again fell.
-
- It was freezing hard enough to split stones. Over a surface
- of several kilomètres the newly formed ice cracked and made
- one think that an advance was taking place. Little Duval, in a
- moment of hallucination, fired on the dead bodies, mistaking
- them for skirmishers.
-
- From time to time an imperceptible breeze distinctly brought us
- the sound of the enemy at work. We heard the blows of mallets,
- used doubtless to consolidate his wire entanglements. I made
- our freezing men do the same.
-
- M. Chatelin and I walked up and down or made reconnaissances
- simply for the sake of keeping on the move. On the plain I
- stumbled on the body of a dragoon between two frozen pools.
- His head was wrapped up in hay, but he was frozen so hard that
- we could not move him. I tried to lift him by his belt, but it
- broke in my hands. Two cats, a white one and an Angora, seemed
- annoyed at being deranged. Oh, the horror of it!
-
- Décatoire had his feet frost-bitten and was unable to walk.
- M. Chatelin and I returned to the trench, and, huddled up one
- against the other, we passed the remaining hours of that trying
- night in shivering.
-
- At five o’clock the 5th Chasseurs relieved us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Long weeks followed, during which the cavalry, become useless on account
-of the time of year and the novel trench warfare, remained inactive far
-from the front in muddy rest-camps.
-
-Officers and men were sent by turns into the trenches for eight or ten
-days at a time, being taken there in motor omnibuses.
-
-When we returned to regimental headquarters we led an ordinary barrack
-life there. The admirable unity which made us all brothers in the firing
-line had a tendency to relax in face of the pettiness of ordinary
-military duty. Peace-time jealousies showed themselves during our forced
-inactivity, when our tour of service did not call us far from our horses
-to dismounted fighting. For this reason, and as I was desirous of living
-again and renewing acquaintance with those intoxicating hours to which
-one becomes accustomed as a necessary factor in life, preferring, in
-short, to perform the duties of a foot-soldier with real infantry men,
-knowing their duties and suitably equipped, rather than to degenerate
-into a dismounted dragoon, I asked to be appointed 2nd Lieutenant in an
-infantry regiment as soon as the ministerial circular concerning cavalry
-non-commissioned appeared. Fifteen days later my request was granted.
-
-I was gazetted 2nd Lieutenant on February 3rd. The 22nd were at
-Volckerinkove. M. de Vesian told me of my appointment, and a few
-hours later I was sent with the others who had been recently
-promoted—Fuéminville, Marin and Paris—to the headquarters of the 5th
-Division, and from there to Poperinghe to the headquarters of the 9th
-Army Corps.
-
-In spite of my decision, taken freely of my own accord, I was very sorry
-to leave the 22nd. It was for me a page turned over, something finished.
-I passed down the ranks and shook hands with all those comrades by whose
-side I had marched, slept and fought for six months, and then, without
-looking behind me, I set off on horseback on a fine sunny day.
-
-Having been posted to the 90th Regiment of the Line, I followed a course
-of instruction at Vlamertinghe, with the newly gazetted officers from
-Saint-Cyr. After fifteen days of a monotonous and tranquil life the class
-broke up on the 21st. On the morning of the 22nd I rejoined the 90th, and
-the same evening we left to go into action.
-
-In February I was again in the trenches, those which I occupied affording
-me great amusement. We left at half-past eight in the morning, and we
-had eighteen kilomètres to march. At Ypres we made a few minutes’ halt
-on the edge of the pavement before the celebrated Cloth Hall. I looked
-eagerly around me, wishing to fix the sights which met my eyes. They were
-intensely picturesque and of peculiar interest. When the war is over
-shall we ever again see such a picture? It is not likely.
-
-Night had come. It was a time propitious for reliefs, hence everywhere
-feverish activity reigned. All lights in the town were masked. Under a
-moon, luminous as shining chalk, the cathedral and the Cloth Hall were of
-a dazzling white, which made the gaping wounds which the shells have made
-in the stonework all the blacker and more apparent.
-
-The scudding clouds masked the moon for a moment, and everything faded
-from view, or rather, as in a kaleidoscope, the ever-changing shadows
-changed the forms of the ruins. Sudden beams of light rested for a moment
-like furtive phantoms on the stonework, to disappear a second later.
-On the edge of the horizon star shell were being thrown up, pitting
-the night with a white or green fixed star, or appearing as a diamond
-spray held by some invisible hand, to sparkle a moment and then vanish.
-The silence was cut by the regular cadence of the march of the various
-companies towards the neighbouring sectors.
-
-They debouched from every cross-road. There were French, Belgians and
-English, the latter whistling in chorus, “It’s a long long way to
-Tipperary,” and keeping step to it. As soon as they saw us by common
-accord they started the _Marseillaise_—a charming courtesy—and strange
-and rapid dialogues were exchanged between the “poilus” and the “Tommies”
-in a language so untranslatable, so indescribable, that most of the men
-burst out laughing at hearing themselves speak. Then some guns crossed
-the _place_ at the trot making a deafening noise.
-
-Every unit had its destination, its appointed place and perfect order
-prevailed. Those back from the trenches are glad at the prospect of rest;
-those going there are light-hearted also, and so the active ant-heap
-swarms with busy people.
-
-From time to time shell would fall in the town, crumbling still further
-the marvellous Cloth Hall or causing irreparable damage to the humble
-house of some inoffensive civilian. It was stupid and useless.
-
-From Zonnebeck onwards the ground was swept by rifle fire, and we had
-to cross a horseshoe sector exposed to fire from all sides. It was
-impossible to find cover, and the relief was extremely difficult and
-dangerous. Then it was that I made acquaintance with the new and the
-unknown.
-
-New trenches, new customs. We groped our way through a little pine
-wood. Every now and then a bullet struck the trunk of a tree with such
-a loud and sharp sound that the drum of one’s ear was all but torn.
-Insensibly the company advanced along the cutting which got deeper and
-deeper under ground. Soon one was in up to the shoulders, and the deeper
-the communication trench got the deeper we got into mud and water. I
-pretended to myself that we were figures in some “attraction” at Luna
-Park or the Magic City. We were in a labyrinth which turned to the right
-and left, doubled back on itself and got deeper and more difficult at
-each step, while “the bees” passed whistling over our heads.
-
-There was a sudden stop, just as I had given up hope of ever seeing the
-end. The section in front of me emerged into a trench, and a ray of light
-fell on the wet clay at my feet. A form leaned out of a hole, and a voice
-said to me, “This way, sir; this is your command post.” Hardly had I
-entered when the curtain which masked the door fell again, to shut in the
-light. I found myself in a tiny square room constructed entirely of rough
-logs, that is to say of the trunks of pine trees. It was buried under a
-mountain of earth, very solidly beaten down, and it had a brick fireplace
-in which a good coke fire blazed (within 100 mètres of the enemy). There
-was a bed, or rather a straw mattress, which exactly filled up the middle
-of this “casba.” The other half was taken up by a stand on which were
-ranged miscellaneous objects—gum boots, tin boxes, grenades, petards,
-flares, etc. One could not stand up, but lying down one felt like a king.
-
-The network of trenches which unites the sections was so complicated
-that I lost myself in it every time. In the early morning I made a
-reconnaissance of the neighbouring sections. At places the parapet became
-so low that, even by stooping, one was not completely under cover. My
-presence was hailed by a salvo which passed whistling over my head.
-
- _24th February, 1915._—It snowed last night. The trenches
- are white and my “poilus” are cold. And so am I! A man of my
- section has just been wounded in the head by a bullet which
- ricochetted off a bayonet. But, generally speaking, the Germans
- leave us in peace.
-
- _Six o’clock._—My trench has been demolished in part by a
- “105.” We shall have to work all night to repair it.
-
- _26th February, 1915._—Under cover of fog I left my shelter
- and had some wire entanglements made. The men were able to
- work without drawing fire. _Per contra_ a German patrol came
- exploring, counting on the fog for concealment. Having arrived
- opposite Règues’s section, they must have lost their way and
- pitched straight on to us. We hit three of them. All the
- morning, fifty mètres off, we saw them wriggling and raising
- their legs, and we heard them crying out. It was impossible to
- go to bring them in, the Germans would have fired on us. One
- of them signalled that he was ready to surrender. He put up
- his hands and cried, “Kamarad, Kamarad,” so he can’t be badly
- wounded. We could see him rise, unbuckle his belt and throw off
- his pack. My men, very pleased, were ready to receive him with
- open arms, but he regained his own lines at a bound. We let off
- a salvo, but the “Kamarad” had already disappeared. The two
- others kept on wriggling like worms.
-
- _2nd March, 1915._—I am occupying a new sector, not nearly
- so good as the first; trench fallen in, full of water,
- communications difficult, no comfortable command post; I sleep
- on the hard ground in the cold. My predecessor, when giving me
- my instructions, warned me that for two days past we had been
- badly shelled.
-
- _3rd March._—At 8.30 the first shell, a “105,” came over and
- pitched some mètres from my post. I was almost thrown out of
- the dug-out; earth and mud flew in all directions, and shell
- fragments fell with a sharp noise. Some moments after a second
- one came over, then a third and then, for three-quarters of an
- hour, they fell without ceasing.
-
- All the shells fell on my left. The men were a little pale in
- face of this form of danger, against which there is nothing
- to be done. After a quarter of an hour the trench became
- untenable, the shelters, the parapets, the dug-out, were all
- tumbling down. Sometimes the shock and the displacement of air
- threw us in bunches one against the other.
-
- I remained at the command post until the next dug-out was
- knocked to pieces, burying a man under the ruins. I then caused
- the whole section to be evacuated, except by a watcher, and I
- asked hospitality from a 2nd lieutenant of machine-guns.
-
- At last the storm calmed down and I sent everyone back to his
- place. The trench was a veritable timber yard, and rifles and
- mess tins littered the ground. The parapet by the side of my
- shelter was knocked down level with the ground, leaving a
- gaping opening that we must repair to-night.
-
- _Six o’clock._—After the tension of such a morning I heard with
- pleasure the cry of “Stand to your arms.” Each man flew to his
- rifle; they too, I think, were pleased. I had gone back to see
- my comrade the machine-gunner, but it did not take me long to
- cover the thirty or forty mètres of trench which separated me
- from my men.
-
- How good a thing it was to hear this crackle of rifle fire
- after the disquieting row of the “105’s”! “Stand to the
- machine-gun.” I saw with pleasure the four men at their gun,
- and I admired the graceful movement of the man who crouched to
- fire and who, unconsciously, assumed the posture of an animal
- ready to spring. Unfortunately the enemy were not “for it.” At
- our first shots the Germans got back into their trenches.
-
- _27th March._—We arrived yesterday in the second line, or
- rather in reserve. The huts are in a pine wood, surrounded with
- ridges. We arrived by moonlight. The bullets passed high and
- struck the tops of the trees. These huts are in the form of a
- redskin’s wigwam, made of earth and sacking. To-day we went
- hunting with revolvers and we killed a rabbit! We cooked it
- ourselves and enjoyed it for dinner.
-
- _28th March._—The enemy leaves us in peace. Not a shell, not
- the least little “77.” We went hunting again and brought back
- a pheasant. After supper Maugenot and I intend to go and play
- cards with Captain Lametz, a little in front of our trenches.
- We must cross a glacis in front of the ridge; the bullets come
- over there head high. We slipped along the edge of the wood to
- take advantage of the lie of the land; and then all at once
- we said, “So much the worse,” and we crossed the field at
- its widest part. We jumped the parapet of an old trench and
- we arrived at the 1st company. Captain Lametz has his post
- buried in a wood. We played, seated cross-legs on the ground,
- by candlelight. The rest of the post were asleep, rolled up
- in blankets. The moonlight peered into the dug-out each time
- that the wind blew aside the canvas of the tent. In coming
- back Maugenot and I were almost stopped by bullets, chance
- bullets, be it understood, which fell with regularity and in
- disconcerting abundance, often, as they struck the ground,
- hitting some shell fragments which would ring like glasses
- knocked together.
-
- To save time Maugenot suggested taking a short cut, and he
- succeeded in entangling us in an inextricable network of
- barbed wire. It was too late to draw back, we had to jump and
- crawl. We arrived, however, at the hut safe and sound, but our
- great-coats were badly torn.
-
- _29th March._—A man had been killed some little time ago. While
- I write I am looking at the cortège which has brought him back.
- The body, a little bent, is carried on an improvised stretcher
- by four men and is wrapped up in the canvas of a tent, tinted
- red where it has touched his wound. The little procession
- advances with difficulty in the narrow communication trench,
- and every two or three steps a drop of blood falls and stains
- the ground like a star, brown-red, and the cortège may be
- traced by these as far as the grave.
-
-Such was the daily life of almost the whole army during the winter
-months. Though monotonous, I have thought it well to transcribe these few
-passages from my daily journal, for they are human documents. In spring
-the benumbed army stirred itself, stretched its legs and awoke to the
-fact that a new era was about to begin. The change took place with the
-greatest mystery. News, come no one knew whence, began to circulate.
-
-When we left Belgium on the 30th March some extravagant hypotheses took
-shape. Haute-Alsace, the Argonne, the Dardanelles and Turkey were spoken
-of. The least bellicose would have it that we were to rest near Lyons;
-but no one knew anything, and each day we went farther south-west, being
-ignorant even of the billets we would occupy that evening.
-
-So we passed Saint-Omer, Arneke, Pilens, Blingel, Frévent,
-Avesne-le-Comte, etc.... and we approached Arras, whose town hall and
-belfry we saw one morning profiled in a blue haze against a spectral sky.
-
-On passing through Arneke on the 8th of April we marched past General
-Foch headed by our band. When the regiment had passed by he sent for the
-officers. We were all presented to him, and he had us formed up in a
-circle to say a few words to us.
-
-Listening to the General was like experiencing a species of shock. He
-hammered out his words and scanned his phrases in a manner which made us
-feel ill at ease. His speech was a flagellation, and we felt a sort of
-moral abaissement as a result of it. His look seized upon and held us. He
-brought us to bay and then crushed us.
-
-First he spoke to us of our mission, of the utility of training the men
-in view of the coming fatigues. “Train their arms, train their legs,
-train their muscles, train their backs. You possess fine qualities,
-draw on them from the soles of your feet, if necessary, but get them
-into your heads. I have no use for people who are said to be animated by
-good intentions. Good intentions are not enough; I want people who are
-determined to get there and who do.”
-
-There are shreds of his phrases that remain graven on my memory, curt
-short phrases, punctuated by a sharp gesture, or by an indescribable look
-of the eye: “If you want to overturn that wall, don’t blunt your bayonet
-point on it; what is necessary is to break it, shatter it, overturn it,
-stamp on it and walk over the ruins, _for we are going to walk over
-ruins_. If we have not already done so”—and here he suddenly lowered his
-voice and gave it an intonation almost mysterious—“_it is because we were
-not ready_. We lacked explosives, bombs, grenades, minerwerfers, which
-now we have. And we are going to be able to strike, _for we have a stock_
-such as you cannot even have an idea of. We are going to swamp the enemy,
-strike him everywhere at once: in his defences, in his morale, harass
-him, madden him, crush him; we will march over nothing but ruins.”
-
-Then he went off quite naturally, without any theatrical effect. He said
-just what he had to say, and he did not add a word too many. He saluted
-us: “I hope, gentlemen, to have the honour of seeing you again.” A moment
-later his motor-car was carrying him off towards Cassel, leaving us
-deeply stirred and impressed by his spoken words and no less influenced
-by his personality.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE ATTACK AT LOOS
-
-9th May, 1915
-
-
-On April the 29th, ten days before the attack, we were taking our last
-great rest at Noyelette in a setting which resembled a scene from a comic
-opera. The apple trees were in full bloom and the blossom fell like
-snow. In the radiant peace of early spring we lay on the scented grass,
-listening to the ripples on the little stream. For many of us it was
-destined to be a last pleasure and a last caress which Nature was pleased
-to lavish on those of her children who were about to die.
-
- _6th May: In the first line._—We relieved the 256th in the
- first-line trenches near Mazingarbe, on the road to Lens.
- That relief by a reserve regiment confirmed the rumour of an
- offensive. As we passed through Nœux-les-Mines and Mazingarbe
- even the civilians said to us, “Sure enough you are going to
- attack, aren’t you? See to it that you push them back once and
- for all!”
-
- _7th May._—The great moment, so long expected, has come.
- To-morrow the 10th Army is going to attack on the Lille-Arras
- front. My battalion is to advance straight forward with Hill
- 70 for objective on this side of Loos. I made a reconnaissance
- of the sector. To-night I am going to inspect the German
- barbed-wire entanglements with Stivalet. I am quite calm and
- very well prepared; my only fear is that I may do badly and
- commit some fault. That the men will go forward, I am sure. My
- battalion forms the first line, the 2nd and the 3rd come next,
- then the 125th and the 68th line regiments, while the 256th and
- the 281st are on the right and left and are to converge to a
- point.
-
- _Two o’clock p.m._—The French guns are beginning to shell the
- enemy. The batteries are landing shell just in front of our
- trench and so near that I am beginning to think that there must
- be an error in the range. The mere fact of having to wait is
- a torture, to know nothing and to say, “Is it to be in five
- minutes, this evening or to-morrow?” My heart beats hard and my
- throat is dry. I would give anything for the order to attack,
- for I know that then I should at once recover my calm.
-
- The four sections have orders to advance to their front towards
- the Lens road, to take the German trenches and then make
- for Hill 70 by way of Loos. I distributed some asphyxiating
- bombs, hand grenades to my section, and little bags containing
- cotton previously soaked in a bisulphite and which must be
- dipped again into lime water at the last moment and introduced
- into the mouth and nostrils to neutralise the effects of
- asphyxiating gas.
-
- _Four o’clock._—The shelling is still going on, but it has lost
- the unheard-of violence with which it started. The remainder
- of the guns are to arrive to-night and consequently the attack
- cannot take place before to-morrow.
-
- Everyone is at work; the Engineers are making steps and
- finishing saps; Artillerymen walk about in the communication
- trenches with range-finders with which they accomplish
- mysterious rites, asking me politely to move as I am in the
- way. Officers of all battalions are reconnoitring the sector,
- and the men are sewing bits of white canvas on their packs so
- that they may be recognized at a distance by our artillery. One
- would say that a costume play was in course of being mounted
- and that the last preparations were being made for the opening
- performance.
-
- At ten minutes to nine I returned to my command post. I
- examined my revolver carefully, took off my tunic and put my
- money and my papers in my trousers pocket. I slipped my cloak
- on over my shirt, put my revolver in the inside pocket and I
- got out of the trench. I gave a last warning to my men not to
- fire, even if they heard firing.
-
- Stivalet was there; we got over the parapet at nine o’clock
- exactly, and we had chosen a bit of known ground between two
- _chevaux de frise_. It was very dark; scarcely had we started
- than a star shell lit up the sky. We threw ourselves flat on
- the ground on our faces. I felt the wet grass and moist soil
- on my cheeks and on the palms of my hands. I listened to my
- breathing and I could not feel the beatings of my heart. I was
- perfectly calm.
-
- For two or three minutes we groped our way across the wire of
- the _chevaux de frise_. When we had passed it we came on an
- old network of rusted barbed wire all broken up by shell fire,
- and our feet and cloaks got entangled in it. We crawled on our
- hands and knees and each time that a star shell burst we threw
- ourselves flat, as before.
-
- The critical moment had arrived. Stivalet hailed me in a low
- voice, “This is a rotten trip we are making.” He whispered in
- my ear, “It is too dark, we shall see nothing.” I said to him,
- “All right, you stay here, I am going farther on.”
-
- I crawled on alone. I felt perturbed at being alone in the
- black night with all these rifle muzzles pointed at me. I was
- at the mercy of a flare. I went on as well as I could, without
- a sound, trying to blend with the ground. I went on for I don’t
- know how long or how far. Then I looked up and I saw the German
- entanglements close beside me. I distinctly heard talking going
- on; unfortunately I did not understand a word of it. There was
- no object in delaying further, my mission was over. I had seen
- their defences; they were only _chevaux de frise_, united by
- barbed wire. As I turned, two rockets went off and crossed. I
- thought that I was lost and I stayed still with my head on my
- arms and my face to the ground, biting the grass; but nothing
- happened; not a shot was fired.
-
- I started off then to crawl with a speed which astonished
- myself, using my feet, shoulders and elbows to help me along.
- I arrived at the spot where I had left Stivalet, and in no
- time we had jumped back into our trench. My clothes were so
- caked with mud that they stuck to me like a jersey. I made a
- report to Maugenot, whom I found asleep. On the table of the
- dug-out was a note from the Major. The attack was to take
- place to-morrow. The day would be given over to a minute
- reconnaissance of the sector, and everything would be ready
- for the attack, to take place probably during the night of the
- 8th-9th.
-
- _8th May, 1915._—Unless counter-ordered the attack is to take
- place to-morrow at six in the morning, after four consecutive
- hours of shell fire. There are a thousand guns behind us, one
- for every fifty mètres of terrain to be battered.
-
- Nothing happened during the morning. New bombs were given
- out, and each man was to have at least one. From two in the
- afternoon the artillery corrected its shooting, which is
- equivalent in ordinary times to a very violent bombardment.
-
- From my parapet I followed the phases of this correction. The
- redan on the Lens road blew up at two o’clock; the defences
- before my trench were knocked to bits. At this moment, 6.40,
- the artillery fired a little short. The men in the trench
- could not get on with their dinners; they were covered with
- earth and little bits of steel, and the water fatigue had some
- splinters sent among them—two men of the 5th were wounded.
-
- I have got for my section 7 asphyxiating bombs, 9 Beszzi bombs,
- 48 hand grenades and 5 terrible chedite bombs, which I have
- primed myself, and of which I intend to carry two.
-
- What a carnage is being prepared for to-morrow! I remembered
- the prophecy of Father Johannes, “Only the great princes and
- the great captains will be buried; there will be so many dead
- and wounded that the bodies will be burnt on pyres whose flames
- will mount to the skies.”
-
- _9th May, 1915, 4.30 a.m._—I am ordered to line up my men.
- A company of Engineers has joined us in order to excavate a
- communicating trench as soon as we have cleared out. Far away
- on the left—probably from the English lines—the guns are firing
- without interruption. It sounds like a hoarse roar.
-
- 5.15 and no order to attack has been received; it seems long in
- coming.
-
- The guns were still thundering on the left, but ours were
- silent. I would give a lot to know!
-
- _Seven o’clock._—Orders have come; we are to attack at 10
- o’clock precisely. There is to be no signal; all our watches
- have been synchronised. We are all to start together from our
- trenches at the same time. We shelled the enemy violently for
- an hour, but, as that was too little, we are going to shell
- them again from 9 to 10. The big winged bombs made a thunderous
- din; we could see them rise in the air like shuttlecocks and
- fall lightly to earth again. They looked as though they were
- going to rebound, but they burst at once, each like a miniature
- volcano in eruption.
-
- For the second time I was astonished to find myself so calm. I
- could not realise that in so short a time (what are two hours?)
- there was going to be a wild rush, a hand-to-hand fight,
- hideous and disfigured corpses everywhere, and perhaps death
- for me. I had only the fixed idea that everything was going
- well. I was acutely conscious that I was responsible for the
- lives of fifty men.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Though wounded at the beginning of the attack, and sole survivor of all
-the officers of the company and of a neighbouring company of the 114th
-regiment of the line, I was, nevertheless, still able to carry on till 8
-o’clock at night.
-
-At 9 o’clock A.M. I precipitated the ammoniacal solution and all the men
-soaked their pads in it. Everyone had his bomb. While I was finishing
-these last preparations shells and bombs seemed to crush the enemy’s
-lines. The noise was deafening and the smoke suffocating and blinding. I
-should like to shut my eyes and pass in review each scene which followed,
-forgetting none. In a few moments I consider that I lived the sum total
-of a lifetime.
-
-At a quarter to ten all were lined up, pack on back. The section of
-Engineers stuck to the communicating trench so as not to hinder our
-movements. I placed myself in the centre and took out my watch; still ten
-minutes to go! I called in a loud voice, “Five minutes,” “Two minutes.”
-I had a stealthy look at the men and I saw on their faces so tense an
-expression, something so fixed, that they seemed to be in a trance.
-
-As I cried, “Only half a minute more!” I saw the left of the company
-starting off; they had some mètres start of me. At all costs we must keep
-touch, so I shouted, “Forward,” and ran straight at the German line,
-without seeing or hearing anything. I had a vague consciousness that the
-“75” guns had not yet increased their range, but we were no longer our
-own masters. Thousands of men, their minds fixed on the same purpose,
-rushed forward blindly.
-
-As I arrived at the first German entanglement I turned round. Everyone
-had followed; the men were at my heels. A second later we were leaping
-over the parapet of the enemy’s first line. I yelled, “Don’t get into the
-communicating trench; the trench is empty, except for a few stragglers;
-get on and seize the second line.”
-
-The blue cloaks bounded forward together and the bayonets shone under a
-burning sun, for there was not a cloud in the sky.
-
-Now, with our heads down, we entered the zone of Hell.
-
-There is no word, sound or colour that can give an idea of it. To prevent
-our advance the Germans had made a barrier of fire, and we had to go
-through a sort of suffocating vapour. We went through sheaves of fire,
-from which burst forth percussion and time shells at such short intervals
-that the soil opened every moment under our feet. I saw, as in a dream,
-tiny silhouettes, drunk with battle, charging through the smoke.
-
-The terrified Germans, caught between their own artillery fire and our
-bayonets, sprang up from everywhere; some cried for mercy; others turned
-round like madmen, whilst others again threw themselves upon us to drive
-us back.
-
-Shells had made ravages in the ranks. I saw groups of five or six
-crushed and mown down. I caught a momentary glimpse of Petit, the
-corporal, at the head of a group of men, and I forgot everything else and
-shouted to him, “Go it: bravo, Petit!” His Herculean figure, moulded in
-a woollen jersey, was standing on a hillock, wielding his rifle like a
-windmill. Careless of shot and shell, his terrible bayonet running with
-blood, he seemed the very incarnation of the war. All my life I shall see
-him, bareheaded, covered with blood and sweat, leading the others on to
-carnage; and the blue sky behind.
-
-My section and I kept pressing on, and we were now within a few mètres of
-the last of the German lines. At every step grey uniforms now surged. I
-discharged my revolver to right and left. Cries and moans rose and fell
-in the infernal din of that struggle.
-
-In a second we should be occupying the enemy’s last positions. What
-remained of my section followed me blindly. I put my foot on the parapet
-and cried, “Forward, lads, here we are!” then I felt as though someone
-had suddenly given me a brutal blow in the back with the butt-end of a
-rifle. I let go my revolver and the chedite bomb, which I had in my left
-hand, and I rolled to the bottom of a shell hole.
-
-I was hit!
-
-In a flash I remembered a phrase of my orderly’s, overheard by chance
-yesterday, “If anything happens to the little lieutenant he won’t be
-left behind,” and a moment later this brave fellow, himself wounded in
-the arm, was at my side, and with two or three others, carried me to
-the trench. In front of us nothing was left, not a defence, not a wire
-entanglement. We had carried the German lines to their uttermost limits.
-
-We at once set to work to dig ourselves in, whilst the men who were not
-digging kept a look-out. We asked ourselves from what direction the
-Germans would try to outflank us, for we knew nothing about the trenches
-that had been carried. All at once I saw two of them coming out of a
-little communicating trench with their bayonets at the charge. I blew out
-the brains of the first; the second, a veritable lad of about sixteen,
-had a terrified expression which I shall never forget. He yelled, and his
-strident cries made me shudder; but my pistol went off, and he fell on
-the ground on his face.
-
-During the whole of the attack I had not for an instant seen my company
-commander, and I wondered where he was. My colour-sergeant told me
-that the Major and he had been killed, that Lieutenant Desessart was
-badly wounded and that Lieutenant Règues and I were the only officers
-left in the company. Règues took command, and, seated on the parapet,
-superintended the preparations for defence. The guns were silent....
-Alone the whistle of bullets was heard, and warning cries were raised:
-“Look out on the left; look out on the right; they are coming from such
-and such a trench.”
-
-Then a bullet struck Règues fair on the head. He rolled over at my feet,
-and the sole command devolved on me. I myself was wounded; the blood was
-running from my back, and my movements were paralysed. My men wanted me
-to go back, but I stiffened myself up with the energy of despair. Someone
-passed me a flask of ether and I propped myself against the parapet. I
-was alone in command; I had all my faculties about me, and I determined
-to stay there whatever happened.
-
-Up till two o’clock nothing did happen. We feverishly dug shelters to
-fire from, and made traverses to protect the trench which was in part
-open to enfilade. As far as the road everything had gone well, but, from
-that point on, connection was broken. The rest of the 90th were behind
-and parallel with me, some mètres off; the Germans there had retained
-their positions. Though we could not see them, they were there quite
-near, concealed, gone to earth but ready to spring on us.
-
-Lying almost helpless at the foot of the trench I gave my orders, which
-the men, one and all, carried out with remarkable presence of mind.
-Enervating hours slowly slipped by. The sun scorched the trench; some of
-the bodies took on a deep yellow colour, and their wounds were horrible.
-
-To stop our reinforcements the Germans pitched shells behind the first
-lines. In the communicating trenches, where the Engineers, the 125th and
-the 68th, were massed, they must, I felt, be having a hot time. Even in
-the trench shells fell both before and behind. I had three men killed.
-Grossain had his head carried away.
-
-With midday came some relaxation. Work eased off a little; the men
-rummaged in their haversacks; Pillard brought me some cigars, Henry
-Clays, and some Egyptian cigarettes. Mayet dressed my wound in a summary
-fashion, passing his hand through the rent in my cloak. The opening was
-as big as my fist. I suffered horrible pain.
-
-The sergeant and I, nevertheless, explored the captured sector. The
-trenches have been knocked in by shell. In certain places it was open
-ground for 25 mètres; in other parts corpses obstructed the way. As we
-went by, some Germans, lying on their backs right in the sun, opened
-their eyes and said, “Ich durste.” We had no time to stop, the guns might
-open fire again at any moment, and it was essential to find some means of
-communicating with the Colonel.
-
-When I got back to my men I found nothing changed. Mayet, fine fellow
-that he is, was keeping a good look-out. The trench which barred the road
-was consolidated, and we placed a machine-gun in it. I took under my
-command a company on my left, as it had no officer left.
-
-At half-past one a kind of agitation, a tremor, ran from man to man, as
-if the whole company had received an electric shock; yet there was no
-cry, no shot fired. Yet everyone realised that the counter-attack was
-about to be launched.
-
-I was amazed at the gaiety and good humour which prevailed. I wanted
-to say a few words regarding their conduct, but there was little need
-to sustain their morale. They shut me up by shouting, “Long live the
-Lieutenant.” I was too overcome with emotion to reply.
-
-All of a sudden there came a burst of musketry. It was sharp and brutal,
-and there was no hesitation about it. One felt that it was not the sort
-of musketry fire that one might expect from dispirited men, firing
-without taking the trouble to aim; on the contrary, each shot had its
-target. I looked through my field-glasses in its direction; it was on my
-left, about three hundred mètres off.
-
-The Germans, who were masters of a communication trench in front of us,
-debouched from it and tried to rush us in column of fours. They did not
-gain an inch of ground. Each section of fours was shot down.
-
-One cannot but render homage to such soldiers. A whole company was wiped
-out, not a man rose again after he fell, not a man retreated. The second
-counter-attack took shape on the right under the same conditions. The
-Germans were massed in a communication trench parallel to the road. A
-little later, again on the left, the enemy profited by a small wood to
-concentrate his men and to attempt a sortie, and this again was stopped
-short.
-
-They seemed to have resigned themselves to doing what we were doing. By
-the aid of a periscope we could see them as far as their waist-belts.
-They were smoking and waiting. To put one’s head up was to court death.
-Maugenot was lying just beyond the parapet on the grass with his face to
-the ground. Already he was the colour of wax. I determined to have him
-picked up at night.
-
-The Colonel, at three o’clock, sent me the 7th company, under Captain
-Dupont, as a reinforcement. I told him that I wanted to stay where I was.
-That it was I and my men who had taken this ground, and therefore that it
-was ours by right; so the Captain settled down on the right, and at least
-I was no longer alone.
-
-I could gain no clue as to the real state of affairs from the complete
-silence of the German artillery. There was a noise of waggons coming and
-going on the higher ground, and this seemed to me to mean a fresh supply
-of munitions. It was unfortunately impossible to communicate with our own
-artillery.
-
-Seated at the bottom of the trench, I began to feel my senses deserting
-me. When I was asked for orders I racked my brains in vain. I could not
-find the right thing to say. I tried to joke with the men, but profound
-melancholy possessed me, for I began to realise that I was no longer good
-for anything.
-
-At 7 o’clock at night came the order for the attack which was preparing.
-“The 3rd battalion will carry out the attack on the village of Loos,
-taking the steeple as directing point, and joining up on the left with
-the 114th. The first line units—the 3rd, 7th, 4th and 8th companies—will
-be pushed forward by the attacking battalion. Preparations for this
-movement must be made as soon as possible, but no move forward is to be
-made till further orders.—_Signed_ Alquier.”
-
-Night fell rapidly. I was anxious to speak to the Colonel before the new
-attack if I could get to him, and so I handed over command to Mayet. My
-wound hurt me horribly. It felt as if my left shoulder were being torn
-from my body, as though indeed I were being quartered. I had doubts as to
-whether I could get to where I should find him, but I knew what could be
-done if the will to do were strong. Alas! I was not to see the company
-again, nor was I to succeed in finding the Colonel.
-
-On the way I walked like a drunken man, staggering from one wall of the
-trench to the other. Sometimes I had to climb over pyramids of bodies,
-sometimes I had to go right outside the trench, amidst the whistling of
-bullets and the noise of shells, which burst on all sides. I reflected
-sadly on how stupid it would be to be killed there, all alone, after
-having so miraculously escaped during the fight. I met some men of the
-Engineers, some prisoners and some messengers. Everyone was in a hurry,
-and I automatically repeated the same phrase to each, “Look out, I am a
-wounded officer, don’t hustle me.” I asked myself if it was possible to
-suffer more than I did. A sort of continuous groaning sound escaped me,
-my sight became blurred and I walked as if in delirium.
-
-I went round the same sector several times, asking everyone where the
-Colonel was.
-
-And they would ask me, “What Colonel?”
-
-I had forgotten, and then everything became vague. I met two men with
-fixed bayonets in charge of three prisoners. They gave me some red wine
-and took me along with them. We passed a factory whose broken machinery
-I saw profiled against the night sky. Then some stretcher-bearers picked
-me up and carried me to the neighbouring aid post. From there I was sent
-by ambulance to the divisional dressing station at Mazingarbe, where I
-passed the night.
-
-The building was plunged into complete darkness for fear of being marked
-down. Our big guns—the 120 long—were firing quite near, and at every
-round the walls trembled and the window-panes rattled. One could well
-picture oneself still in the thick of the fight. The noise of musketry
-seemed to come from the garden, and I still remember clearly the sinister
-sights that I saw there. Dimly made out in the shadow, the wounded were
-lying on straw in rows on the ground. One only saw their silhouettes.
-There were infantrymen, artillerymen and Algerian Light Infantry on
-whom the white dressings stood out sharply. Amidst the roar of the guns
-one would hear a long-drawn moan and some groans, cut short at times by
-incoherent phrases. All of them raved. Officers and men lived through the
-morning’s battle once again, and brief commands were uttered, infinitely
-painful to listen to, “March in open order, by the right; stand by the
-machine-gun,” and so on. As I stretched myself on some straw in the least
-encumbered corner, I shivered with fever. The next morning we were all
-sent on to Nœux-les-Mines, and from there we left by train for we knew
-not where.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] French cavalry were equipped with the carbine, and not with the
-infantry rifle as in the case of English.
-
-[2] Light infantry.
-
-[3] On reading the remarkable and charming book which my colleague,
-Lieutenant Dupont, has published under the title _En Compagne_, I noticed
-in one chapter such a similarity of phrase that I thought of changing
-the beginning of this description, so as to avoid the appearance of a
-plagiarism. I decided, however, not to alter its first form, but to leave
-intact this page, which was written in the trenches on that very day 24th
-January, 1915, long before Lieutenant Dupont’s book appeared.
-
-[4] These were darts and position-indicating rockets.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- A
-
- Agadir, 17
-
- Alaire, Captain, killed, 52
-
- Allies, rally of, at Verberie, 79
-
- —— meeting of, 133
-
- Alquier, orders received from, 161
-
- Arneke, 141
-
- Arras, 141
-
- Authée, bivouac near, 36
-
- —— departure from, 36
-
- Ave, French dragoons billeted at, 34
-
- —— French squadron ambushed at, 35
-
- —— French departure from, 35
-
-
- B
-
- Baron, 85, 86
-
- —— Château of, pillaged by Germans, 86
-
- Basteigne, 29, 34
-
- Bavarians, atrocities of, 76, 77
-
- Bazeille, burning of, by Germans, 1870, 17
-
- Beauraing, arrival of French at, 35
-
- —— departure of French from, 35
-
- —— ambush at, 35
-
- Belgium, welcome and hospitality of villages, 27, 28, 29
-
- —— re-entered by French, 96
-
- —— departure from, 140
-
- Biesmérée, bivouac at, 38
-
- Billancourt, infantry action near, 87
-
- Bonneuil-en-Valois, surprise attack by Germans at, 51, 52
-
- Bülow, Count von, 60
-
-
- C
-
- Calonne-sur-la-Lys, 96
-
- Cary, General Langle de, 44, 71
-
- Cavalry, French, equipment of, 23
-
- Chapin, Major, 106
-
- Charleroi, 39
-
- Chasseurs-à-cheval, charge of, 45
-
- Chatelin, Lieut., 39, 67, 82, 127, 129
-
- Chauvenet, Lieut., killed, 35
-
- Chocques, enemy sighted at, 90
-
- —— artillery action at, 91
-
- Clarques, return of French troops to, 112
-
- Clère, Lieut., 18, 123
-
- Compiègne, forest of, 63
-
- —— ambushed in, 63-5
-
- —— adventures in, 65-9
-
- Coxyde, 112
-
-
- D
-
- Dangel, Sergeant-Major, death of, 64
-
- Desonney, Lieut., 106
-
- Dinant, siege of, by Germans, 36
-
- —— arrival of French wounded from, 37
-
- Dragoon, funeral of a, 124-5
-
-
- E
-
- Epehy, arrival at, 41
-
- —— burning of, by Germans, 41
-
- Estaires, evacuation of, 93
-
- —— attack at, 95
-
- —— cemetery of, 94
-
- Estrée-Saint-Denis, 84, 87
-
- d’Estrey, General, 71
-
-
- F
-
- Florennes, arrival at, 37
-
- Foch, General, 60, 71
-
- —— address by, 141-3
-
- —— army of, 44
-
- Folies, 90
-
- Franchet, General, 71
-
- French, General Lord John, 71
-
- Fuéminville, 35
-
-
- G
-
- Gembloux, retreat from, 31
-
- —— triumphal entry into, 39
-
- Germans, atrocities of, 32-4, 76-7, 83-4
-
- —— cavalry of, 31, 34, 87
-
- —— flight of, 34
-
- —— retreat of, 43
-
- Gilocourt, 82, 86
-
- Gorgue, La, 95
-
- Grossain killed, 157
-
-
- H
-
- Hausen, 60
-
- Hill 70, 145
-
- Hougled, entry of, by French, 97
-
- —— infantry and artillery attacks at, 98-101
-
-
- J
-
- Johannes Father, quotation from, 150
-
- Jouillié, Major, 49, 56, 83
-
-
- L
-
- Lametz, Captain, 139
-
- Landelies, arrival at, 40
-
- Laperrade, 18
-
- Lens road, French advance towards, 146
-
- —— German lines carried near, 154
-
- —— redan blown up, 149
-
- Liége, arrival of French dragoons at, 31
-
- Lille-Arras, front of, 145
-
- Lombaertzyde, bombardment of, 128
-
- Loos, French attack at, 150-5
-
- —— German counter-attack at, 159
-
- —— preparations for attack at, 144-7
-
- Lubeké, 35
-
- Lys, bridge of, evacuated, 93
-
-
- M
-
- Magrin, Lieut., 18, 102, 104, 105
-
- Mahot, Captain, 113, 116
-
- Maindreville, M. de, German atrocities at château of, 83
-
- Marne, battle of, 43
-
- Maugenot, 139, 160
-
- —— report to, 149
-
- Maunoury, General, army of, 44, 47, 71
-
- Mazingarbe, relieved trenches at, 144
-
- —— divisional dressing station at, 162
-
- Montcalm killed, 36
-
- Muno, arrival of French cavalry at, 26
-
-
- N
-
- Nesle, infantry action near, 87
-
- Nieuport-Ville, road to, 113
-
- —— bombardment of, 114-17, 119
-
- —— billeted at, 116-18
-
- —— scenes at, 114-19
-
- Nœux-les-Mines, wounded sent to, 144, 163
-
- Noyelette, resting at, 144
-
-
- O
-
- Oise River, crossing of, 84
-
- Ostdinkerque, 113
-
- Outersteene, Belgian manifestations to French, 96
-
-
- P
-
- Paris, retreat of French cavalry towards, 41
-
- Parvillers, 88
-
- Petit, Corporal, 154
-
- Polignac, 18
-
- Poperinghe, 131
-
- Prussians, capture of Staff Officers, 48
-
-
- R
-
- Règues, Lieut., 156
-
- Rheims Cathedral, 14, 16
-
- —— departure from, 13
-
- —— scenes at, 20, 21, 23, 25
-
- Roberts, Lord, funeral of, 110-12
-
- Robillot, Colonel, 21, 24
-
-
- S
-
- Saint-Martin, bivouac at, 38
-
- Saint-Omer, 110
-
- Salverte, Captain de, 56, 68, 82, 84
-
- Staden, village of, fighting at, 97, 108
-
- Stivalet, 147-8
-
-
- T
-
- Tarragon, Captain de, 56, 65, 83, 85, 86, 102, 103, 104
-
- —— death of, 105
-
- Taube drops bombs, 50
-
- Taubes at Gembloux, 39
-
- Teint, 58
-
- Troène, fighting at, 45
-
-
- U
-
- Uhlans, 35, 56, 57, 62
-
-
- V
-
- Verberie, rally of French troops, at, 79, 80, 82
-
- —— scenes at, 74-84
-
- Vigoureux, Captain, 112, 117
-
- Villers-Carbonel, artillery combat at, 41
-
- —— in flames, 41
-
- Villers-Cotterets, forest of, 49-51
-
- —— loss of French machine-guns at, 50
-
- —— fighting at, 51-4
-
- —— in hiding in, 54-7
-
- —— retreat from, 57-9
-
- Von Kluck, General, army of, 47
-
-
- W
-
- Walloon district, the, 26
-
-
- Y
-
- Ypres, 131
-
- —— Cloth Hall at, 132
-
- —— Cathedral, at, 132
-
- —— scenes at, 132-3
-
- —— in the trenches near, 134-40
-
- Yser, 74, 123
-
-
- Z
-
- Zonnebeck, 133
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Impressions and Experiences of a
-French Trooper, 1914-1915, by Christian Mallet
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Impressions and Experiences of a French
-Trooper, 1914-1915, by Christian Mallet
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Impressions and Experiences of a French Trooper, 1914-1915
-
-Author: Christian Mallet
-
-Release Date: July 12, 2020 [EBook #62629]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IMPRESSIONS, EXPERIENCES OF FRENCH TROOPER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">IMPRESSIONS AND EXPERIENCES OF<br />
-A FRENCH TROOPER, 1914-15</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;" id="frontis">
-<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="550" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Night Charge of the 22nd Dragoons, Sept. 10-11, 1914.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
-<img src="images/map.jpg" width="800" height="675" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Map illustrating the Route followed by the 22nd
-Regiment of Dragoons.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">IMPRESSIONS AND<br />
-EXPERIENCES OF A<br />
-FRENCH TROOPER<br />
-1914-1915</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-CHRISTIAN MALLET</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter titlepage" style="width: 35px;">
-<img src="images/deco.jpg" width="35" height="25" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="titlepage">NEW YORK<br />
-E. P. DUTTON &amp; COMPANY<br />
-1916</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1916<br />
-by<br />
-E. P. DUTTON &amp; CO.</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">The Knickerbocker Press, New York</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage gothic">In Memoriam</p>
-
-<p class="dedication">TO MY CAPTAIN<br />
-COUNT J. DE TARRAGON<br />
-<span class="smaller">AND</span><br />
-TO MY TWO COMRADES<br />
-<span class="smcap">2nd LIEUT. MAGRIN and 2nd LIEUT. CLÈRE</span><br />
-<span class="smaller">WITH WHOM<br />
-MANY PAGES OF THIS BOOK ARE CONCERNED<br />
-WHO FELL<br />
-ALL THREE ON THE FIELD OF HONOUR<br />
-IN DEFENCE<br />
-OF THEIR COUNTRY</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">“<i>Dragons que Rome eut pris pour des Légionnaires.</i>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td>Frontispiece</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#FRONTISPIECE">9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td>The 22nd Regiment of Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#THE_22nd_REGIMENT_OF_DRAGOONS">11</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr smaller">CHAPTER</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">I.</td>
- <td>—Mobilisation—Farewells—We leave Rheims</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">13</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">II.</td>
- <td>—Across the Border into Belgium—Life on Active Service
- from Day to Day—After the Germans had Passed through—The
- Retreat</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">26</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">III.</td>
- <td>—How we Crossed the German Lines—The Charge of
- Gilocourt—The Escape in the Forest of Compiègne</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">43</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">IV.</td>
- <td>—Verberie the Centre of the Rally—The Epic of a
- Young Girl—Mass in the Open Air—From Day to Day</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">V.</td>
- <td>—The Two Glorious Days of Staden</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">97</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VI.</td>
- <td>—The Funeral of Lord Roberts—Nieuport-Ville—In the
- Trenches—Ypres and the Neighbouring Sectors—I Transfer
- to the Line</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">110</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VII.</td>
- <td>—The Attack at Loos</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">144</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td>Index</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#INDEX">165</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="FRONTISPIECE">FRONTISPIECE</h2>
-
-<p><a href="#frontis">This picture</a> by Carrey represents the night charge
-of a squadron of 22nd Dragoons against German
-trenches near Compiègne. During the night of
-September 9th, the squadron leader, who had received
-orders to endeavour to intercept and capture a large
-enemy convoy, suddenly came under a hot fire from
-German trenches. In the darkness it was impossible
-to choose his country, but the position before him
-must be attacked, and, signalling the charge, he
-led his squadron at the trenches. As the first line rose
-to the jump the Germans scuttled out in panic, only
-to be ridden down and destroyed. With the 22nd are
-shown two troopers of the 4th Dragoon Guards,
-belonging to the 2nd British Cavalry Brigade. Both
-had fought at Mons, but during the retirement had
-lost their regiment, and after wandering about for
-some days fallen in with the 22nd Dragoons and
-fought for some weeks in their ranks. Whilst still
-under heavy fire, one of these Englishmen, throwing
-the reins of his horse to his companion, dismounted
-and ran to and rescued a French trooper whose
-horse had fallen dead and pinned him to the ground;
-on rejoining their own regiment their French commanding
-officer gave them the following certificate of
-service:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I, the undersigned, certify that T..... and
-B....., troopers, belonging to the 4th Dragoon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-Guards, lost themselves in the neighbourhood of
-Péronne on the 20th August, and joined up with my
-squadron, and have since then formed part of it and
-engaged in all its operations. On the night September
-10-11 my squadron received orders to capture a
-German convoy, and found itself surrounded by
-the retreating enemy.</p>
-
-<p>“T..... and B..... took part in a charge by
-night against entrenched infantry, and helped in the
-fighting on the outskirts of the forest of Compiègne.</p>
-
-<p>“They are both men of fine courage and high
-training, and have given me every satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“(<i>Signed</i>) <span class="smcap">A. De S.</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<i>Captain</i>, 22nd Dragoons.”</p>
-
-<p>(<i>Le Temps.</i>)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="THE_22nd_REGIMENT_OF_DRAGOONS"><span class="smcap">THE 22nd REGIMENT OF DRAGOONS</span></h2>
-
-<table summary="Battles in which the 22nd Regiment of Dragoons fought, presumably">
- <tr>
- <td>AUSTERLITZ</td>
- <td>1805</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>JENA</td>
- <td>1806</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>EYLAU</td>
- <td>1807</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>OPORTO</td>
- <td>1809</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The 22nd Regiment of Dragoons was raised in 1635
-under the name of “The Orleans Regiment,” and
-took part from 1639 to 1756 in all the great wars in
-which the French were engaged before the Revolution.
-From 1793 to 1814 the regiment was continually at
-work, first under the Republic and then in Napoleon’s
-armies.</p>
-
-<p>It saw service in the Army of the Sambre and
-Meuse, 1794-1796; the Army of the Rhine, 1800;
-the Grande-Armée, 1805; in the war in Spain,
-1808-1813; the Campaign in Saxony, 1813; the
-Campaign in France, 1814.</p>
-
-<p>The regiment was disbanded in May, 1815, and was
-not raised again until September, 1873.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>Impressions and Experiences of a
-French Trooper, 1914-15</h1>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</h2>
-
-<p class="subhead">MOBILISATION—FAREWELLS—WE LEAVE
-RHEIMS</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">Of all my experiences, of all the unforgettable
-memories which the war has woven
-with threads of fire unquenchable in my mind,
-of all the hours of feverish expectancy, joy,
-pain, anguish and glorious action, none stands
-out—nor ever will—more clearly in my
-recollection than the day when we marched
-out of Rheims. Nothing remains, except a
-confusion of disconnected memories of the
-days of waiting and of expectation, days nevertheless
-when one’s heart beat fast and loud.
-A bugle-call sounding the “fall-in” lifts the
-curtain on a new act in which, the empty
-years behind us, we are spurring our horses
-on into the eternal battle between life and
-death.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the thirtieth of July, 1914, I did not
-believe in the possibility either of war or of
-mobilisation—nor even of partial mobilisation—and
-I refused to let my thoughts dwell on
-it.</p>
-
-<p>The good folk of Rheims, excited and
-anxious, gathered from time to time in dense
-crowds outside the building of the Société
-Générale, on the walls of which the latest
-telegrams were posted up, then broke up into
-knots of people who discussed the situation
-with anxiety and even consternation. At
-the Lion d’Or, where I turned in for dinner on
-the terrace under the very shadow of the
-cathedral, I called for a bottle of Pommery,
-saying jocularly that I must just once more
-drink champagne; a message telephoned from
-a big Paris newspaper reassured me, and in
-the peaceful quiet of a fine summer’s night
-I returned to my quarters with a light heart.</p>
-
-<p>As I was turning into bed I caught a
-glimpse through the barrack window of the
-two Gothic towers of the cathedral, standing
-high above the city as if in the act of blessing
-and guarding it.</p>
-
-<p>All was quiet: the silence was only broken
-from time to time by the cry of the swallows as
-they skimmed through the clear air.</p>
-
-<p>War, I repeated to myself, it is foolish even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-to think of, and this talk of war is but the
-outcome of some disordered pessimistic minds;
-and with that I went to sleep on my hard little
-webbed bed ... for the last time.</p>
-
-<p>Towards midnight I woke with a start, as
-though someone had shaken me roughly.
-Yet all was still: the barracks were rapt in
-sleep. Near by me only the loud and heavy
-breathing of the twelve men who made up the
-number occupying the room could be heard,
-as I lay on my back, wide awake, waiting,
-for I now felt that the signal would surely
-come which should turn the barracks into a
-very hive of bees.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes passed—perhaps ten—then a
-deafening bugle call which made the very
-walls vibrate, calling first the first squadron,
-growing in volume as it called the second,
-louder still the third, like the roar of some
-beast of prey as it summoned ours; then it
-died away as it got farther off across the
-barrack square where the fifth squadron was
-quartered.</p>
-
-<p>It was the call to arms.</p>
-
-<p>The sleepy troopers, half awake, sat up in
-their beds with a start—“Hulloa!—what?
-What is the matter?... Are we really
-mobilising?”</p>
-
-<p>Then followed the sound of heavy boots in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-the corridors, heavy knocks on the doors, the
-silence of the night was a thing of the past and
-had given place to deafening clatter.</p>
-
-<p>In a few seconds every man was on his feet
-without any clear idea as to what was forward.
-The sergeant-major called to me: “Mallet—run
-and warn the officers of the squadron to
-strap on their mess tins with their equipment
-and assemble in barracks as quickly as
-possible.”</p>
-
-<p>So it’s serious, is it? and in a flash the truth,
-the very reverse of what I had been trying to
-believe, forced itself upon me and paralysed
-all other power of thought. Whether it
-breaks out to-morrow or in a month’s
-time, it is war—relentless war—that I seem
-to see like a living picture revealed.</p>
-
-<p>The impression masters my mind as I turn
-each corner of the dark streets and open
-spaces, and the cathedral with its twin towers,
-so peacefully standing there, is transformed
-into a giant fortress watching over the safety
-of the country-side.</p>
-
-<p>A man comes out of a house on the <i>place</i> and
-runs after me, I hear his heavy shoes striking
-the pavement behind me; breathless he blurts
-out the question, “Is war declared?”</p>
-
-<p>“War ... yes ... that is to say, I don’t
-know.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I continue on my way to carry out my orders
-with enough time left to run up to my own
-rooms and get some money and clean linen.</p>
-
-<p>I got back to barracks as dawn was spreading
-over the sky, and found our commandeered
-horses being brought in by civilians and
-soldiers in fatigue overalls. An elderly non-commissioned
-officer shrugged his shoulders
-and said in a low voice, “Commandeered
-horses being brought in already!—that does
-not look very healthy.”</p>
-
-<p>At the time of the Agadir affair things did
-not get as far as that, and the incident forced
-itself on my mind as proof that war was
-inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>Packing and preparation were over and the
-men, waiting for orders, were wandering about
-the square, and in the canteen, which they
-filled—still half dark as it was—one heard
-shouts of joy and high-pitched voices telling
-the oldest and most threadbare stories.</p>
-
-<p>But the canteen-keeper—friend of us all—with
-red eyes and shaking voice, was talking
-of Bazeille, her own village, burned by the
-Germans in 1870, where her old father and
-mother still lived. She is horrified at the
-thought of another invasion of the soil of
-France.</p>
-
-<p>“The Bosches here? No, indeed, Flora, you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-are talking wildly; never you doubt, we will
-send them to the right-about and back to
-Berlin at the point of our toes—give us another
-glass of white wine—the best—that’s better
-worth doing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!”</p>
-
-<p>At the table where I sat with my own
-particular friends, all were in high spirits, all
-talking the greatest nonsense, becoming intoxicated
-with their own words as they romanced
-of heroic charges, of wonderful forced marches
-and highly fantastic battles; I alone remained
-somewhat serious and heavy of heart, and
-abused myself for being less free of care than
-they in the face of this triumph of manliness
-and youthful high spirits; yet in spite of
-myself, I watched them, these comrades of
-mine, day in, day out, to whom I should
-become more closely allied still by war, and
-tried to pierce the mists of the future, grey
-and threatening, and to discern what was to
-be the fate of each.</p>
-
-<p>There they sat: Polignac, who was to be
-taken prisoner a short four weeks later, and
-who still languishes in a Westphalian fortress;
-Laperrade, who was to fall dead with a lance
-head through his chest as he defended his
-officer; Magrin, fated to die, when spring
-came, with a bullet through his heart; Clère,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-whom death was to claim three days after
-having heroically won his commission, and all
-the rest of them, too many to name here, but
-of all of whom I cherish in my heart a recollection
-not only tender but full of pride that they
-were my friends.</p>
-
-<p>Yet the day passed in a fever of expectation
-and excitement. The smallest piece of news,
-or the greatest absurdity told by the latest
-man from the guard-room of the 5th, or the
-stables of the 2nd, or by “the adjutant’s
-orderly,” flew like the wind round the barracks,
-increased in volume, became distorted,
-took shape no one knew how and in the end
-was believed by all—until some still more
-ridiculous tale took its place.</p>
-
-<p>There were waggish fellows, too, who
-wandered from group to group with a serious
-look on their faces, saying, “Well, it’s come
-now; I have just heard the Colonel give the
-order to stand to horses,” and until evening,
-when we were again crowded inside the canteen,
-it was the same hunger for news, the
-same excitement, the same desperate longing
-to know what was happening.</p>
-
-<p>Only at seven o’clock did we get the official
-news, and although it came as no surprise, the
-whole barrack was stunned by it. Squadron
-orders issued at seven o’clock gave us three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-hours to prepare to march, as prescribed by
-the rules governing the movements of covering
-troops, to which we belonged. In three hours
-we should be on the way to an unknown
-destination; to ourselves fell the honour of
-being the advance guard; to us the task
-of guarding and watching the frontiers whilst
-the rest of the army was mobilising; and with
-keen pride in the fact, we held up our heads
-and thrust out our chests, whilst our faces
-took on a look of confidence in our power to
-conquer. Even the humblest trooper seemed
-transfigured, and in that moment I realised,
-perhaps for the first time, the high soul of
-France.</p>
-
-<p>But the news soon spread beyond the
-barracks. Rheims, although some twenty
-minutes’ walk away, somehow learned it, and
-almost immediately all the town flocked to
-the barrack gates. I say all the town because
-all classes together hurried there pell-mell—not
-only those with a brother or son or a
-friend amongst the troops about to set off,
-but those who were drawn by ties of friendship
-with the regiment, and those who came from
-mere curiosity. The crowd, which got larger
-and larger, beat upon the iron gates like waves
-breaking vast and black on a rocky shore.
-Old women came to give a last kiss to their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-sons; old men, too, pensioners who had
-fought in ’70, whose hands trembled as they
-pressed those of their boys, distracted little
-shop girls who held their lovers passionately
-in their arms—silk frocks and broadcloth
-mingled together in one vast crowd swayed by
-deep emotion, brave and placid, though its
-heart was near breaking—every sob was stifled,
-every mouth drawn with sorrow yet tried to
-laugh, and it was cheerily that the last partings
-took place, the last touching and heartfelt
-“God speed” was said.</p>
-
-<p>How great a country to possess such
-children! Soon the gates could no longer bar
-the passage of the crowd which swept like a
-torrent through the outer square, overwhelmed
-the sentries, and threatened to engulf everything.</p>
-
-<p>As the hour of departure grew nearer, the
-farewells became more animated. Then
-the bugles sounded through the barracks the
-order for “majors to join the Colonel,” next
-captains and others of commissioned rank;
-there was a scurrying of officers to and fro
-before the orderly room, and Colonel Robillot
-himself could be seen standing on the doorstep
-watching the scene with a look of pride
-and indulgence in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>At nine o’clock, as I was standing some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-distance apart in a corner of the square with
-friends who had come to bid me a last farewell,
-a non-commissioned officer, touching me on
-the shoulder, warned me that my troop was
-about to fall in, and I had to break off my
-adieux.</p>
-
-<p>From that moment I was to think no more of
-myself. All was over with affairs that bound
-heart or fancy. The supreme moment had
-come when words no longer count, and when
-the eyes try to fill themselves with one last
-gaze upon those whom one is leaving—goodbye
-to family, to love, to self, to the joy of the
-living—all one’s soul goes out in this last
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p>This look would say, “Farewell, I will be
-brave, never doubt it, don’t cry, don’t suffer
-regrets.” This look embraces all that life
-has meant up to now, whether of joy or
-sorrow. It is final—a farewell, a promise—it
-signifies the end—all one’s very soul is in
-one’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>And, in effect, no sooner was my back
-turned and I stood at my horse’s side than all
-other thoughts left me. I forgot that I had
-perhaps said a last farewell, in face of the
-essential importance of assuring myself that
-nothing of my equipment should be forgotten,
-that my horse is soundly shod, of tightening<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-up the girths and seeing that my blanket was
-properly folded, and, automatically, I went on
-repeating to myself, “Let me see ... I have
-my lance, my sword, my carbine<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> ... have I
-thought of everything?” and seemed to look
-disaster in the face on finding that I had no
-water-bottle—what was I to do? The very
-bottle that Flora, the canteen-keeper, had
-filled with boiling soup in her motherly way—“Oh,
-my water-bottle”—a real calamity
-it seemed—empires might crumble; I should
-have no soup to-morrow morning—all my
-outlook on war is shrouded in gloom.</p>
-
-<p>Still it was no time to behave like a child.
-One by one each trooper led his horse into the
-huge barrack square, where spots of light from
-electric torches carried by the officers indicated
-where each troop was to take up its position.</p>
-
-<p>On the chalky ground of the square, showing
-grey in the darkness, what looked like parallel
-black lines were growing longer. They were
-lines of troops, growing into squadrons and
-increasing until they became the whole
-regiment. Behind them were the baggage
-waggons, the travelling forges, machine-guns,
-commandeered carts, the cyclists’ detachment
-and all the rest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The riding school lay between us and the
-outer square, which was filled with light and
-alive with the impatient crowd crushing forward
-to see us ride out of the narrow way
-kept open for us, and the time dragged as we
-waited for every man to be in his place and
-for the signal to move out.</p>
-
-<p>The horses, impatient at standing still,
-would paw the ground, and now and again
-a long-drawn neigh would break the silence.
-At last a figure appeared in silhouette—it was
-the Colonel.</p>
-
-<p>“Mount!” The two majors repeated the
-command, and in each half-regiment its two
-captains, first, then the subalterns and non-commissioned
-officers repeated it.</p>
-
-<p>A wave seemed to flow from troop to troop
-like an eddy in a pool, and, sitting rigid in our
-saddles, our lances held upright, we waited
-the final order, which was to decide our future
-and direct us towards the unknown.</p>
-
-<p>“March!” Quitting the dim light of the
-inner, we came suddenly into the brightly lit
-outer square, where thousands of hands were
-held up to bid us a frenzied farewell.</p>
-
-<p>A cry from the crowd followed as we dragoons,
-sitting like statues, our helmets drawn
-well down over our faces lest we should betray
-any sign of emotion, passed out of the barracks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-which many were never to see again,
-amid the cheers of a multitude, and the
-noise of thousands of feet which grew less and
-less distinct as we rode on.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, old pals, don’t forget your sweethearts,”
-cried a little street girl standing on
-the edge of the foot-path, and that was the
-last word I heard as Rheims became more
-and more indistinct in the darkness, whilst
-we pushed on towards the east.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</h2>
-
-<p class="subhead">ACROSS THE BORDER INTO BELGIUM—LIFE ON
-ACTIVE SERVICE FROM DAY TO DAY—AFTER
-THE GERMANS HAD PASSED THROUGH—THE
-RETREAT</p>
-
-<p class="center">6th August to 5th September, 1914</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">It was on the 6th of August that we crossed
-the frontier into the Walloon district of
-Belgium at Muno, to bring succour to the
-Belgians whose territory had just been violated
-by the German Army.</p>
-
-<p>In turning over my diary, I select this
-incident from among many others and stop
-to describe it, for it seems but right to recall
-the enthusiastic and touching welcome with
-which the whole people greeted us—a people
-now, alas, crushed under the German heel.
-We were welcomed with open arms—they
-gave without counting the cost, they threw
-open their doors to us and could not do enough
-for the French who had come to join forces
-with them and bring them succour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There is not a trooper in my regiment, not a
-soldier in our whole army, who does not recall
-that day with feelings of profound emotion.</p>
-
-<p>From the time we left Sedan, our ears still
-ringing with the cheers that had sent us on our
-way from Rheims, we received the heartiest
-of welcomes and good wishes at every village
-we passed through, but once across the frontier
-we were acclaimed—prematurely, as it turned
-out—as veritable conquerors.</p>
-
-<p>Cavalry on the march, squadron after
-squadron, has a marked effect on people, and
-takes the semblance of an invincible rampart
-against which any enemy must go down.</p>
-
-<p>After seventeen hours in the saddle, with
-helmet, lance, carbine, sword and full kit,
-now by a night-time more than disagreeable
-by reason of an icy cold fog, now under a
-tropical sun which scorched us, all the while
-in a cloud of dust, tormented by swarms of
-midges and horse-flies which hung about us,
-and tortured by the sight of cherry trees heavy
-with fruit, which hung over the road, but the
-branches of which were out of our reach,
-we approached the frontier.</p>
-
-<p>On the road we passed all the vehicles in
-the district which had been requisitioned by
-the military, interminable convoys of them,
-amongst which, irrespective of class, were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-humble peasant carts, old-fashioned shaky
-barouches, motor-cars, with the crests of
-their owners blazoned on the doors, all filled
-with oats and forage.</p>
-
-<p>Aëroplanes followed us and passed ahead of
-us flying all-out towards the east. Every
-now and again we had to draw to the side of
-the road to allow streams of motor omnibuses
-drawn from the streets of Paris, filled with
-chasseurs<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> and infantry, to pass by; and our
-teeth crunched the fine dust that we incessantly
-breathed.</p>
-
-<p>At length we passed by a fir wood, and a
-post, painted yellow and black, showed us
-that we were in Belgium; then we came in
-sight of a village, almost a hamlet, from which,
-as we drew near, there rose a noise, the sound
-of singing, growing louder as we drew near—the
-<i>Marseillaise</i>, sung in welcome by all the
-folk from the country-side, gathered at their
-country’s gateway to greet us.</p>
-
-<p>All joined in, women, children with shrill
-voices, even the old men. They ran along
-after us till we reached the <i>place</i>, when the
-song ceased and a thousand voices cried:
-“Vive la France! Vive les Français!” with
-such vigour that the horses were startled and
-cocked their ears in alarm.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One and all brought us gifts, each according
-to his or her means, fruit, bread, jam, cakes,
-cigars and cigarettes, pipes and tobacco. I
-should fill a page with a list of what was
-thrust upon us. To our parched lips women
-held flagons of wine or beer, which refreshed
-us more perhaps when it ran down our cheeks,
-caked with dust, even than when it found
-its way down our throats, as the jolting of
-our horses caused us to spill the precious
-liquid. It taxed us to stuff away all the
-dainties in our already overfull pockets, and
-we stuck cigars into our tunics between the
-buttons, and flowers in the buttonholes.</p>
-
-<p>A number of French nuns with white
-head-dresses, like huge white birds, presented
-us with sacred medallions. I shall always
-retain graven on my memory the agony
-depicted in the beautiful, sad eyes of an
-elderly nun with white hair, who held out
-to me the last of her collection, a scapular of
-the Virgin in a brown wrap, and as she did
-so, said to me, “God guard you, my child.”</p>
-
-<p>And in each village we passed through, that
-day and the days which followed, we met
-with the same welcome and the same generosity.
-It was the same at Basteigne, at Bertrix,
-at Rochefort, Beauraing, and Ave; indeed
-everywhere, in the towns as in the villages,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-the crowd hailed us and fed us. Belgians
-have handed me boxes of as many as fifty
-cigarettes.</p>
-
-<p>After exhausting days of twelve or fourteen
-hours in the saddle I noticed that the troopers,
-worn out with fatigue, suffering from the heat,
-from hunger and thirst and intolerable stiffness,
-sat up in their saddles instinctively as
-we approached a village, prompted by an
-unconscious sense of pride in holding up
-their heads, and I can say, for my part, that
-such a welcome as we received always banished
-any feelings of fatigue.</p>
-
-<p>One of our bitterest regrets was having to
-pass again through Belgium in the reverse
-direction and to read the dumb surprise on
-the faces of the people who had thought us
-unconquerable, but whose great hearts were
-full only of commiseration for us, worn out
-as we were, and who, forgetful of their own
-anxieties, did all in their power to help us.</p>
-
-<p>A peasant woman, I remember, gave us the
-whole of her provisions, everything that remained
-in her humble dwelling. The enemy
-were then advancing on our heels in a threatening
-wave, and, on my expressing astonishment
-that she should strip her shelves bare in this
-fashion, she shook her fist towards the horizon
-in a fury of rage and exclaimed: “Ah, sir,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-I prefer that you should eat my provisions
-rather than leave them a crumb of bread.”</p>
-
-<p>Up till the 19th August we had advanced in
-Belgium; the retreat of the division commenced
-that same day from Gembloux. We kept on
-seeking, without success, to get in touch with
-the German cavalry. Nothing but petty
-combats took place with insignificant details,
-a troop at most, but more often with patrols,
-reconnaissance parties and little groups who
-surrendered on our approach in a contemptible
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>I saw a German major, Prince R——, accompanied
-by two or three troopers, surrender
-themselves while still some two hundred
-mètres from one of our weak patrols. They
-threw down their arms and put up their hands.
-It was a sickening sight.</p>
-
-<p>Everywhere the enemy’s cavalry gave
-ground, vanished in smoke, became a myth
-for our regiment, in spite of our forced marches.
-Each day we spent ten, fifteen, twenty hours
-in the saddle. One day we actually covered
-a hundred and thirty kilomètres in twenty-two
-hours, and reached our culminating point
-to the east, almost under the walls of Liége.</p>
-
-<p>Although we hardly saw any Germans
-during this first month, we could, <i>per contra</i>,
-follow them by the traces of their crimes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>By day, from village to village, lamentations
-spread from one horizon to the other,
-and I regret not having noted the names of
-the places which were the scenes of the
-atrocities of which I saw the sequels. I regret
-not having taken the names of the unhappy
-women whose children, brothers and husbands
-had been tortured and shot without motive,
-not to speak of the outrages which they
-themselves had undergone, not to speak of the
-assaults of lechery and Sadism of which they
-had been the victims. They alluded to these
-in a fury of rage or made an involuntary
-confession in an agony of humiliation and
-grief.</p>
-
-<p>By night a furrow of fire traced the enemy’s
-path. The Germans burnt everything that
-was susceptible of being burnt—ricks, barns,
-farms, entire villages, which blazed like torches,
-lighting the country-side with a weird light.</p>
-
-<p>We entered villages of which nothing remained
-except smoking and calcined stones,
-before which families, who had lost their all,
-grieved and wrung their powerless hands at
-the sight of some black débris which had once
-been all their joy, their hearth and home.</p>
-
-<p>I wish particularly to insist that these
-deeds were not the result of <i>accident</i>, for we
-were daily witnesses of them for a whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-month. I still shiver when I think of the
-confidences which I have received. The pen
-may not write down all the facts, all the
-abominations, all the hateful things, all the
-lowest and most degrading filthiness inspired
-by the imagination of crazy erotomaniacs.
-It was always Sadism which seemed to guide
-their acts and predominate amongst their
-misdeeds.</p>
-
-<p>Here a mother mourned a child, shot for some
-childish prank; there a young girl grieved for
-her fiancé, hung because he was of military
-age; farther on a helpless old man had had his
-house pillaged and had been brutally treated
-because he had nothing else to offer. At
-every step we heard the story of crime, and
-those guilty deserve to be hung. Such are
-the things of which such an enemy was
-capable—an enemy who refused combat, who
-advanced hastily under cover of night to
-rob and burn a defenceless village, and who
-seemed to vanish like smoke at the approach
-of our troops, leaving in our hands hardly
-more than some drunken stragglers unable to
-regain their army, or some robbers who had
-waited behind to rob a house or to violate a
-woman, and had been taken in the act.</p>
-
-<p>We passed through all that in our endless
-quest, always in the saddle, sleeping two or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-three hours at night, in an exasperating
-search for the German cavalry, which was
-constantly reported to be within gun-shot,
-but which disappeared by enchantment each
-time we approached. To give an idea of
-what we endured, I have transcribed word for
-word the notes from my field pocket-book
-describing some of these August days. These
-notes were written in most cases on horseback
-by the roadside during a halt.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><i>7th August.</i>—Torrential rain; twelve hours
-in the saddle; we are worn out with fatigue;
-put up at Basteigne; arrived at night. My
-troop is on guard. I mount duty at the bridge;
-we are fed by the populace, nothing to eat
-from rations.</p>
-
-<p><i>8th August.</i>—Réveillé 3 o’clock, mounted a
-last turn of duty at the bridge till 5 o’clock.
-Departure; rested at midday in an open field
-for dinner. While we are eating, enemy is
-reported near; we follow immediately towards
-Liége. Don’t come up with them. March
-at night till one in the morning; have done one
-hundred and thirty kilomètres and twenty
-hours on horseback, sleep in an open field
-from two to four.</p>
-
-<p><i>9th August.</i>—Torrid heat, men and horses
-done up; billeted at Ave after twelve hours<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-in the saddle. First squadron ambushed.
-Lieutenant Chauvenet killed. The Germans
-flee, burning the villages, killing women and
-children.</p>
-
-<p><i>11th August.</i>—Leave Ave at 5 o’clock.
-The heat appears to increase, not a breath of
-air. For two hours we trot in clouds of
-blinding dust. A regiment of Uhlans is
-reported. The Colonel masses us behind
-a hill and we think we are going to deliver
-battle; but the enemy steals away once more.
-Thirst is a torture, my water-bottle lasts no
-time. Arrive at Beauraing at six o’clock.
-Thirteen hours in the saddle.</p>
-
-<p><i>12th August.</i>—We onsaddled at 5 o’clock.
-False alarm; wait at Beauraing.</p>
-
-<p><i>14th August.</i>—Alarm, the regiment moves
-off; I am left behind to accompany a convoy
-of reservists. The village is barricaded, the
-enemy is quite near. Only a handful of
-men are with the convoy. Wait at the side
-of the road with Fuéminville and Lubeké.
-Five dismounted men arrive, without helmets,
-done up, limping, prostrated, grim as
-those who have seen a sight which will for
-ever prevent them from smiling; the fact is
-that the remains of the 3rd squadron of the
-16th have been caught in an ambush by the
-German infantry concealed in a wood. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-have been shot down at point-blank range
-without being able to put up a fight. Never
-have I seen human waifs more lamentable
-and more tragic. They had seen all their
-comrades fall at their side and owed their
-lives only to the fact that they had themselves
-fallen under their dead horses and to a flight of
-40 kilomètres through the woods. Montcalm
-is amongst the killed. The convoy
-marched out at half-past nine at night, at the
-walk, an exasperating pace of 4 kilomètres
-an hour. We took all night to do 23 kilomètres.
-I ask myself when we are likely to
-rejoin the 22nd, even whether the 22nd still
-exists.</p>
-
-<p><i>15th August.</i>—We bivouac near the village
-of Authée, with the convoys of the 61st and
-5th Chasseurs. It is dark and cold, and
-this night has tired me more than my longest
-marches. The waiting about unnerves us,
-and my blood boils when I think that the
-22nd must be on the eve of having a fight.
-The Germans lay siege to Dinant eight
-kilomètres off. One hears the guns as if
-they were alongside. Our turn is near, I
-think. No one is affected thereby, and we
-prepare our soup to the whistling of shells.
-The cannonade seems to redouble, they are
-giving and taking hard knocks, and some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-there will be who won’t answer their names
-to-night.</p>
-
-<p><i>Ten o’clock.</i>—The different convoys move
-off. 16th, 22nd, 9th, 28th, 32nd Dragoons, etc.
-All at once we are stupefied by seeing a battalion
-of the 33rd of the line, or rather what
-remains of the battalion, some thirty terrifying
-beings, livid, stumbling along, with horrible
-wounds. One has his lips carried away, an
-officer has a crushed hand, another has his
-arm fractured by a shell splinter. Their
-uniforms are torn, white with dust and drip
-with blood. Amongst the last comers the
-wounds are more villainous; in the waggons
-one sees bare legs that hang limp, bloodless
-faces. They come from Dinant, where the
-French have fought like lions. Our artillery
-arrived too late, but they had the fine courage
-to charge the German guns with the bayonet.
-The guns spit shell without cease and the
-crackle of musketry does not stop. We go
-across country to billet at Florennes. These
-last days of tropical heat give place to damp
-cold. It is raining. We meet long convoys
-of inhabitants who, panic-stricken, quit their
-houses to go and camp anywhere at all. It
-is lamentable. Two kilomètres from Florennes
-we “incline.” The cold is biting, in spite of
-the cloak I wear. We arrive in black darkness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-at a village where we bivouac in spite
-of the torrential rain. I rejoin the regiment
-with infinite trouble; clothes, kit, horses are
-dripping wet. They must stay so all night.
-I do a stable guard at three in the morning
-without a lantern. The horses are tied up by
-groups to a horseshoe. They kick and rear,
-upsetting the kit and the lances in the mud;
-I dabble about and lose myself in the night.
-The village is called Biesmérée.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sunday, 16th August.</i>—The weather has
-cleared up. I leave again with the regiment.
-We are going to put up at Maisons-Saint-Gérard.
-Just before arriving there a storm
-bursts and wets us through; the water runs
-down into our breeches. I am as wet as if
-I had been dipped in a river; and one must
-sleep like that ... and yet one does not die!</p>
-
-<p><i>17th August.</i>—Off at 5 o’clock. We bivouac
-at Saint-Martin in the meadow between two
-small streams. I have hurt my left foot
-badly, and at times I feel an overpowering
-fatigue, but one must carry on all the same.
-The bivouac is admirable. Big fires warm
-up the soup for the troops. The little stream
-shimmers, all red, and encircles the bivouac.
-The day ends; splendid. Some Cuirassiers
-bivouac a little higher up on the village green.
-We hear them singing the <i>Marseillaise</i>. We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-sleep in a barn in heaps one on the top of the
-other.</p>
-
-<p><i>19th August.</i>—The 4th squadron is on reconnaissance.
-We start alone, at a venture.
-We are in the saddle all day. At night we
-make a triumphal entry into Gembloux and
-we are baited with drinks and food. The
-Germans are at the gates of the town and the
-crowd is wildly excited. The sun goes down
-without a cloud, round as a wafer. I forget
-the day’s fatigues and we venture across the
-plain and the woods. It is an agonising
-moment; we hide ourselves behind a long rick
-of flax; the enemy is some hundreds of mètres
-off and all night we have sentries out. I slept
-two hours yesterday, to-day I am passing the
-whole night on foot. The cold is cruel.
-Now and then my legs give way and I nearly
-fall on my knees. We have had nothing to
-eat but bread, the chill damp gets into our
-bones. Some Taubes pass, sowing agony.</p>
-
-<p><i>20th August.</i>—I am one of the point party
-under Lieutenant Chatelin. We fire on some
-horsemen at 600 mètres. The squadron is
-still on reconnaissance. One could sit down
-and cry from fatigue. We advance towards
-Charleroi, whose approaches are several kilomètres
-long. A population of miners. Everywhere
-are foundries, mines, factories, and for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-two hours unceasing acclamation. We arrive
-at a suburb of Charleroi, done up, falling out
-of our saddles. Interminable wait on the
-<i>place</i>; night falls. The camp kit comes up at
-last, but the march is not yet over, we are
-camping five kilomètres farther on. It is
-enough to kill one. We get to Landelies.
-Rest at last, we bivouac. I share a bed, with
-Delettrez, for the first time for three weeks.
-In a bed at one side a fat old woman is sleeping.
-No matter, it is an unforgettable night.</p>
-
-<p><i>21st August.</i>—Landelies; rest; we satisfy
-our hunger; we expect to pass a quiet day and
-night. At four o’clock we are off to an alarm;
-we are in the saddle all night and arrive in
-a little village, whose name I forget, half
-dead with hunger and cold. The peasants
-give us bread. We have been all day on
-horseback.</p>
-
-<p><i>22nd August.</i>—Are we going to have a little
-rest? No, we were out of bed all night and
-we are at it again. We do not understand
-the movements we are carrying out. <i>Are
-we retreating?</i> The fatigue is becoming insupportable.
-We get to Bousignies at three
-in the morning. On the road I lost my
-horse during a halt and I found myself alone
-in the night and on foot. I had all the trouble
-in the world to catch up the squadron on foot.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-We slept two hours in the rain in a field of
-beetroot. Off again at 9 o’clock. Loud
-firing twenty kilomètres off. All the peasants
-are clearing out. They say that Charleroi
-is on fire.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And so it goes on each day till the end of the
-month. The 26th we marched in the direction
-of Cambrai; we put up at Epehy, which the
-enemy burnt the following day. The peasants
-replied by themselves setting fire to the crops
-to prevent their falling into the enemies’
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>At Roisel, a whole train of goods blazed in
-the midday heat. We went on to Péronne.
-The 28th we were at Villers-Carbonel, where I
-was present at an unforgettable artillery combat.
-I saw shells throw some French skirmishers
-in the air by groups of three and four at a
-time. We left Villers-Carbonel in flames, and,
-from that moment, we beat a rapid retreat
-towards Paris, passing by Sourdon, Maisoncelle,
-Beauvais, Villers-sur-Thère, Breançon,
-Meulan, Les Alluets-le-Roi, and, after a last
-and painful stage, we put up at Loges-en-Josas,
-four kilomètres from Versailles, where
-the fortune of war brought me to one of our
-own estates.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it came about that my mother, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-believed me to be at the other end of Belgium,
-caught sight of me one fine morning coming
-up the central drive to the château on foot,
-leading my horse, my lance on my shoulder,
-followed by a long file of troopers.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</h2>
-
-<p class="subhead">HOW WE CROSSED THE GERMAN LINES—THE
-CHARGE OF GILOCOURT—THE ESCAPE IN
-THE FOREST OF COMPIÈGNE</p>
-
-<p class="center">6th to 10th September, 1914</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">Having left Versailles we arrived at
-Saint-Mard on the 6th of September to
-find ourselves in the thick of the battle of the
-Marne. The struggle extended all around
-us, from one horizon to the other, and if it
-was incomprehensible to our officers it was still
-more so to us private soldiers. In the evening,
-from Loges-en-Josas, where we had been
-billeted, we heard the guns. Everyone was
-sure that Paris would be invested within the
-next two days, and then we were suddenly
-sent off to be stranded some forty kilomètres
-to the north-east of Paris. We were ignorant
-of the movements going on, and we were
-amazed and quite out of our reckoning,
-hardly daring to believe that the enemy, who
-the evening before was thought to be at the
-gates of Paris, was now in retreat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>For my own part I preserve only a confused
-and burning recollection of the days of the
-6th and 7th of September, days memorable
-amongst all others, since they saw the beginning
-of the victorious offensive of the armies
-of Maunoury, of Foch, of French and of
-Langle de Cary. The heat was suffocating.
-The exhausted men, covered with a layer of
-black dust adherent from sweat, looked like
-devils. The tired horses, no longer off-saddled,
-had large open sores on their backs.
-The air was burning; thirst was intolerable,
-and there was no possibility of procuring a
-drop of water. All around us the guns
-thundered. The horizon was, as it were,
-encircled with a moving line of bursting
-shells, and we knew nothing, absolutely
-nothing.</p>
-
-<p>In the torrid midday heat we kept advancing,
-without knowing where or why. We
-passed a disturbed night rolled in our cloaks
-in an open field, without rations and already
-suffering from hunger. The next day was a
-repetition of the last and was passed in the
-same hateful state of physical exhaustion
-and of moral inquietude. From time to
-time, behind some hill, beyond some wood,
-quite near, a sudden and violent musketry
-fire broke out; the gun fire redoubled in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-intensity and we heard the whistle of the
-shrapnel passing high over us, and the noise
-of the bursting shell. There, we said to
-ourselves, is the fighting; there, no, there, and
-then there on the left, on the right; it was
-everywhere. Repeatedly our column had to
-make sudden detours to avoid artillery fire.
-Still we knew nothing, and we continued our
-march as in a dream, under the scorching
-sun, gnawed by hunger, parched with thirst
-and so exhausted by fatigue that I could
-see my comrades stiffen themselves in the
-saddle to prevent themselves from falling.
-The sun went down with a splendour that
-no one thought of admiring. Little by little,
-insensibly, our figures bent forward till they
-touched the wallets on our saddles, and we
-gave way to a sort of torpor. Then a long
-tremor ran along the ranks. Above the
-village of Troène we fell into the thick of the
-fight. This happened so quickly that I preserve
-only a visual image of it. We had
-slowly climbed a hill, whose shadow concealed
-the setting sun from us. As we came out on
-the crest of the hill, we caught a sudden glimpse
-of a regiment of chasseurs-à-cheval, silhouetted
-in black against the immense red screen of the
-sky, charging like a whirlwind, with drawn
-sabres.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A “75” gun on our flank fired without
-interruption. I can see now a wounded
-chasseur who rose from the grass where he
-lay almost under the muzzle of the gun, and
-who fell back, as if struck by lightning, from
-the displacement of air caused by the shell.
-A second later nothing was to be seen except
-a confused <i>mêlée</i> behind a small wood. The
-noise was terrible, and was made up of a
-thousand different sounds. An officer of
-chasseurs, with a bullet through his chest,
-bareheaded, all splashed with blood, came
-down the hill leaning on his sword, and
-leaving behind him a long trail which reddened
-the grass. Then the sun seemed to perish
-as the immense uproar died down; all the
-noises died away, and we continued our road
-in the rapidly falling darkness, having had
-a sudden and fugitive vision of one scene
-amongst the thousands which compose the
-drama of a great battle.</p>
-
-<p>All night we had marched without repose,
-without food. In our exhaustion we had
-become the spectres of our former selves, and
-our hearts were breaking from discouragement.
-We did not know that right alongside of us
-the most victorious offensive in the history
-of the world was commencing. We did not
-suspect that, under pressure from General<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-Maunoury, the German 4th Reserve Corps
-was giving way, and that this must assure
-the rout and the final defeat of Von Kluck’s
-army.</p>
-
-<p>From the 8th we began to play an active
-part in the great battle. The 5th Cavalry
-Division was ordered to surprise a German
-convoy and to seize it. The officers told us of
-this mission. At last we were going to do
-something; our time of waiting was at an
-end, and there was to be no more wandering
-about the burnt-up country, devoured by
-thirst and discouraged at feeling ourselves
-lost and forgotten in the great struggle we
-had set our hand to. The convoy would be
-four kilomètres long, and we could already
-imagine the attack, the taking of the booty.
-It was going to be a romantic and amusing
-episode, and the dragoons sat up in their
-saddles, forgetting their fatigue and their
-hunger, and full of joy at the thought of the
-promised combat.</p>
-
-<p>In my inner self I could not share the general
-enthusiasm; I felt that we had been exactly
-marked down by the enemy’s aircraft which
-flew over us each moment, insolently bidding
-defiance to our rifle and machine-gun fire.</p>
-
-<p>The expedition, however, started off well.
-A young dragoon, sent forward as scout,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-penetrated into a farm and there found fifteen
-Prussian Staff Officers engaged in stuffing
-themselves with food. He calmly pointed his
-revolver at them and advised them to surrender.
-“My regiment will be here directly;
-any resistance is useless.” In reality he
-had to keep them under the muzzle of his
-revolver for a long quarter of an hour, for the
-regiment was still far off. A major having
-shown signs of moving, the dragoon blew out
-his brains at point-blank range, and he succeeded
-in keeping them all terrorised until
-our arrival. This capture stimulated still
-further the general good humour. I can still
-see six of the fourteen prisoners file past the
-flank of the column, each between two dragoons,
-a forage cord tied to the reins of their
-horses, and I can see again the cunning and
-furious look of a “hauptmann” still bloated
-with the feast which we had prevented him
-from completing. I remember the gay, frank
-laugh of the whole regiment, its light-heartedness
-at having laid hands on these fat eaters
-of <i>choucroute</i>, who were too astonished even
-to be insolent.</p>
-
-<p>A few moments afterwards three German
-motor-cars were sighted three hundred mètres
-off, going at a prudent pace. At once the
-ranks were broken and we galloped furiously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-at them, each straining hard to be the first
-to get there; but, by quickly reversing their
-engines, the three chauffeurs succeeded in
-turning and made off at top speed, riddled by
-machine-gun fire, but out of range for us.
-The last of them, however, was destined to
-fall into our hands next morning, having been
-damaged by a shot in its petrol tank. We
-had to set it on fire so as not to abandon it to
-the enemy, who were pressing us on all sides.
-Half my regiment was now detached from the
-division and charged with the task of capturing,
-unaided, the tail of a convoy which
-was reputed to have broken down on the road.</p>
-
-<p>At nightfall we entered the forest of Villers-Cotterets,
-under the command of Major
-Jouillié, and I was assailed by an acute presentiment
-of misfortune. I parted from the
-other half of the regiment and from the other
-regiments of the division with the clear and
-irresistible intuition that I would not see them
-again for a long time, and shortly afterwards
-we melted like shadows under the trees of
-the great dark forest.</p>
-
-<p>Then commenced, for me, one of the most
-painful episodes of the whole war. The
-silence of the forest was lugubrious. A Taube
-persisted in flying over us, quite near to the
-ground, like a great blackbird. Its shadow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-grazed us, one might have said, and nothing
-was more harassing and more demoralising
-than this enemy that followed us and kept
-persistently on our track. At a cross-roads,
-as we came out into a large clearing, it let fall
-three long coloured smoke balls to signal our
-presence to its artillery, which was doubtless
-quite near but of whose position we were ignorant.
-Then it disappeared with a rapid
-flight, and the night fell black as ink around
-us.</p>
-
-<p>The voices of the officers seemed grave.
-The continual thrusts which the column made,
-its returns on its tracks, gave me to understand
-that we were groping our way, not knowing
-which to take. We descended in double file
-a terribly steep narrow path, preceded by the
-machine-guns, which had only just room
-enough to pass. The soft soil sunk in like a
-marsh. Then there was a sudden halt and,
-quite near me, I saw the Major’s face, full of
-anxiety. Addressing Captain de Tarragon
-in a choking voice he said, “The machine-guns
-are done for.” The rest of the phrase was
-lost, but I heard the words “bogged, engulfed,
-impossible to get them out....”</p>
-
-<p>We were ordered to incline, and we climbed
-up again to the forest. All the men were
-alarmed at the loss of the machine-guns, abandoned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-in the marsh, and the face of Desoil,
-the non-commissioned officer with the machine-guns,
-was heart-breaking. His mouth worked
-but no words came.</p>
-
-<p>With this discouragement all of us felt a
-renewal of hunger which was painfully acute.
-Thirst too burnt our throats, and fatigue
-weighed down our exhausted limbs. Ah,
-how I envied the horses which nibbled the
-leaves and the grass. For two days our
-water-bottles had been empty, we had already
-finished our reserve rations and this contributed
-to the gloom on our faces.</p>
-
-<p>Towards midnight, the village of Bonneuil-en-Valois
-was vaguely outlined in the night
-at the edge of the forest. The hungry and
-tired horses stumbled at each step; almost
-all the men were dozing on their wallets, and
-we committed the irreparable fault of dismounting
-and of sleeping heavily on the
-open ground, instead of utilising the cover of
-night to join one of the neighbouring divisions
-by a forced march. A small post composed
-of a corporal and four men was the only guard
-for our bivouac. Each of us had passed his
-horse’s reins under his arm, and all of us slept,
-officers and men alike, like tired brutes.
-We did not suspect that our sentinels were
-posted hardly three hundred mètres from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-German sentries, who were concealed from us
-by a fold in the ground which held a regiment
-of Prussian infantry, who had chanced to
-get there, within rifle range, just at the same
-time as we.</p>
-
-<p>At dawn a neighing horse, some clash of
-arms, probably gave away our position, and
-the alarm was given in the enemy’s camp,
-which was separated from us only by a field
-of standing lucerne. The troopers slept on,
-and the German scouts crept up, absolutely
-invisible.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden musketry fire woke us up, and
-the German infantry was on us. I cannot
-think of these moments without giving credit
-to the admirable presence of mind which
-saved the situation by the avoidance of all
-panic. The horses were not girthed up,
-many of the kits had slipped round, reins
-were unbuckled; no matter, we had to mount.
-I have a crazy recollection of my loose girth,
-of my saddle slipping round, of the blanket
-which had worked forward on to my horse’s
-neck; no matter, “Forward! Forward!” a
-second’s delay might be our ruin. A hail of
-bullets fell amongst us. Alongside of me,
-Alaire, a quite young non-commissioned
-officer, was hit in the belly. He was the first
-in the regiment whom I had seen fall. God!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-what a horrible toss he took, dragged by his
-horse, maddened by fear, crying out, “Rolland,
-Rolland, don’t abandon me.” Then, in
-a last contortion, his foot came out of the
-stirrup and he died convulsed by a final
-spasm. Near me, the Captain’s orderly gave
-a loud shout; horses, mortally wounded,
-galloped wildly for some mètres and then
-suddenly fell as if pole-axed.</p>
-
-<p>I saw a man who, as if seized with madness,
-sent his wounded horse headlong to the
-bottom of a ravine and then threw himself
-after.</p>
-
-<p>“Forward! Forward!” I followed the
-others, who made off towards the village. My
-horse trod on a German whose throat, gashed
-by a lance thrust, poured out such a stream of
-blood that the earth under me was red and
-streaming with it. “Forward! Forward!”</p>
-
-<p>We were not going to view them then, these
-enemies who killed us without our seeing
-them, so hidden were they amongst the grass
-that they blended with the soil? Yes we
-were though, and suddenly surprise stopped
-short the rush of the squadrons. Before
-us, some mètres off, and so near that we could
-almost touch it with our lances, an aëroplane
-got up, like a partridge surprised in a stubble.
-A cry of rage burst from every throat. We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-tried to charge it with our lances in the air,
-but it mocked our efforts, and our rearing
-horses were on the spot ten seconds too late.
-The enemy seemed also to have flown. All
-that remained were two or three grey corpses
-that strewed the soil. We trotted into the
-village with our heads down, humiliated at
-having been fooled like children.</p>
-
-<p>After having passed the first few isolated
-farms along our road, an enemy’s section
-came for us, exposing themselves entirely this
-time, while a line of recumbent skirmishers
-fired a volley into us from our right, almost at
-point-blank range. There was nothing for
-it but to retire, unless we wanted to remain
-there as dead men, and at the gallop, the
-more so because a machine-gun was riddling
-the walls of a farm with little black points.
-We passed before it like a whirlwind; and,
-happily, its murderous fire was too high to
-hit us. I can still recall the sight of an
-isolated German, caught between the fire of
-his regiment and the charge of our horses.
-I turned my head and laughed with joy at
-seeing a comrade pierce him with his lance in
-passing.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans were all round us, and our
-only line of retreat was by the forest, into
-which we all plunged in a common rush<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-without waiting for orders. The forest, at
-least, represented safety for the moment.
-It was a sanctuary calculated to protect us
-from an entire army, until we died of hunger.
-For a long time we marched in silence, cutting
-across the wood, avoiding the beaten path, for
-our intention was to attain the very heart of
-the forest, or some impenetrable spot where
-we could not be discovered, where we could
-regain our breath and where our officers could
-deliberate and take a decision. The whole
-half-regiment took shelter at last in an immense
-ravine, where we were sheltered from
-aircraft. We were covered by a thick vault
-of leaves in a sort of prehistoric gorge, which
-seemed far from all civilisation and lost in an
-ocean of verdure, and there we dismounted.
-The Major sent patrols to explore the issues
-from the forest, and we waited some mortal
-hours without daring to raise our voices.</p>
-
-<p>Our situation was almost desperate. For
-three days we had touched not a morsel of
-bread, not a biscuit, our horses not a handful
-of corn. The reserve rations were exhausted;
-and the patrols, which came in one after the
-other, brought sad news. The Germans were
-masters of all the issues from the forest, and
-we were taken in a vice, prisoners in this
-gulf of trees and reduced to dying of hunger<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-and thirst. A little way off, the officers—Major
-Jouillié, Captain de Salverte, Captain
-de Tarragon, Monsieurs Chatelin, Cambacérès,
-Roy and de Thézy—deliberated with
-glum faces. Each stood near his horse so as
-to be able to jump on in case of surprise. In
-spite of everything the men’s spirits remained
-admirable. All had a jest on their lips,
-and the more serious amongst them wrote
-a line to their wives or mothers. Leaning
-against the trunk of a tree, I scribbled on two
-letter-cards, found in my wallets, two short
-notes of adieu. The day passed with depressing
-slowness.</p>
-
-<p>Towards four o’clock two officers of Uhlans
-appeared on a little road which, so to speak,
-hung above us. At once all eyes were fixed
-on these two thin silhouettes. They advanced,
-talking quietly, with their reins loose
-on their horses’ necks. How great was the
-temptation to shoulder one’s carbine, take
-steady aim, feel one’s man at the end of the
-muzzle and kill him dead with a ball through
-the heart! Everyone understood, however,
-that it was necessary to keep quiet and let off
-the prey so good a mark was it, for doing so
-would have given the alarm and signalised
-our presence. Now they were right on us,
-so near that we could have touched them,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-and yet they did not know that there were
-two hundred carbines which could have
-knocked them over at point-blank range.
-Even now I can distinctly see the face of the
-first, as if it were photographed on my brain.
-He was quite young, with an eye-glass well
-screwed into the eye, his face was red and
-insolent, just as the Prussian officer is always
-represented. He had a whip under his arm,
-and he even had a cigar. Suddenly his face
-and that of his companion contracted, as if
-confronted by some apparition. This French
-regiment must have seemed to them a phantom
-of the forest, some impossible and illusory
-vision seen in the shadow of the leaves. Their
-horses stopped short and, for the space of a
-second, their riders looked like two figures in
-stone. Then in a flash they understood
-and fled at full speed. For an instant we
-heard the stones fly under their horses’ shoes,
-but the sound grew fainter and fainter, and a
-deep silence reigned again.</p>
-
-<p>The alarm had been given, the danger had
-still further increased, and, now that our place
-of concealment had been discovered, we had
-to start off again across the thicket and rock
-on our poor done-up horses. On reflecting
-over it, my mind refuses to believe that such
-a cross-country ride was possible. To throw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-the enemy off the scent it was necessary to
-pass where no one would have imagined that
-a horse could go, and that involved a ride into
-the abyss in the deepening night, plunges
-into black gulfs, intersected by trunks of
-trees, to the foot of which some horsemen and
-their horses rolled like broken toys.</p>
-
-<p>I felt my old horse, Teint, curl up and
-tremble between my legs. His hair stood on
-end and his nostrils opened and shut. On,
-on, ever on ... to the very heart of the old
-forest, whose most secret solitudes we troubled,
-frightening the herds of deer, which fled terrified
-before our cavalcade. For a moment
-it seemed as if we were at some monstrous
-hunt on horseback with men for quarry, and
-in spite of myself, a mortal fatigue seized
-on me. I shut my eyes and waited for the
-“Gone away.” Better it were to be finished
-quickly, since the game was lost.</p>
-
-<p>The troops had got mixed and I found myself
-again for a moment amongst the 3rd
-squadron by the side of Lieutenant Cambacérès,
-and we exchanged a few brief words.
-Almost timidly, so absurd did the idea appear
-that one of us could escape, I asked him to
-write a line home if it were my luck to be
-done for and if he came out safe. I promised
-him the same service, if the rôles were reversed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-To such an extent does gaiety enter
-into the composition of our French nature,
-we even joked for a few moments and we
-shared a last tablet of chocolate, which he had
-preserved in his wallet, a service for which
-I shall always be grateful to him, for hunger
-was causing me insupportable pain. We
-were now going at a slow pace over a carpet
-of dead leaves, amongst trees which were
-singularly thinned out. Our object being to
-gain the heart of the forest, we had ended
-up by reaching its border, and we remained
-glued to the spot, holding our breath at the
-sudden vision seen through the branches.</p>
-
-<p>The famous convoys that the division was
-out to take were there, in front of us, on a
-stretch of some eight kilomètres of road.
-Waggons of munitions, provision carts, water-carts,
-lorries of all sorts, were moving gaily
-along at an easy walk, and the rumbling
-noise was continuous.</p>
-
-<p>In the calm of the evening each spoken
-word, each order given by the guides came to
-us clear and distinct. Then came the last
-vehicles, the last country carts, some stragglers
-tailing out into a confusion of cyclists and
-horsemen; and so the interminable convoy
-went on its way. The vehicles at its head
-had the appearance of toys on the horizon,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-of toys designed with the pen on the gold
-of the sky; and the personnel looked like
-insects finely traced in the clear atmosphere.
-The whole thing went quietly on its way
-like a slow caravan. One would have said
-that here was a people coming to settle in
-conquered country and arriving at the end
-of its journey in the peace of a lovely evening.</p>
-
-<p>The same day, at the same moment, General
-Foch, pushing the thin end of his wedge between
-the armies of Bülow and those of Hausen,
-enlarged that fissure which was to prove
-fatal to the German army which had almost
-arrived at the Marne. The pursuit was
-about to begin. These same convoys, whose
-peaceful aspect wounded our hearts from the
-insolence of their air of possession on French
-soil (we were ignorant of course that the
-dawn of a great victory was about to break)—these
-same convoys, lashed by terror and
-by the breath of panic, were going to follow
-beaten armies in a headlong and wild retreat,
-leaving on the road their waggons and stores.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From this moment a vague hope sprang up
-in our hearts and, as is often the case, we
-gathered courage when the worst of catastrophes
-seemed to be heaping on our heads.</p>
-
-<p>Night fell little by little. It was impossible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-to remain where we were. We were well
-within the German lines, of this there was
-no doubt, since we had the enemy’s troops
-behind us, while their convoys were on in
-front of us; but, under cover of night we
-might attempt a desperate stroke, and anything
-was better than dying of hunger.
-Towards ten at night our column came bravely
-out of the forest—a silent column whose
-members looked like phantoms. Cutting
-across country, we avoided Haramont, Eméville,
-Bonneuil-en-Valois, Morienval. As
-night fell a sombre gloom seized on us. All
-those silent villages, which we dared not
-approach, had a threatening appearance;
-lights appeared suddenly, more or less distant;
-a succession of luminous points was moving
-slowly, like a moving train going slowly. I
-was ill at ease, and this was causing me
-physical pain; my saddle girth was too loose
-and had allowed my horse’s blanket to slip
-till it threatened to fall off. No matter, for
-nothing in the world would I dismount. It
-seemed as if hands came out of the shadows
-and stretched forth to seize me. A breath of
-superstitious terror blew over us, and, in the
-deep surrounding silence, a single persistent
-and regular noise made us start with the fear of
-the unknown. It was the screech of the owl,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-an unnatural cry which seemed like a signal
-replied to in the distance; and it made us
-shudder. My eyes eagerly searched the
-shadow to discover a hidden enemy. Twice
-I could have sworn that I saw a group of
-German uniforms, two mounted Uhlans, another
-on foot; but I mistrusted my eyes,
-hallucinations being of common occurrence
-at night, and I tried to pluck up courage.</p>
-
-<p>While crossing a road a sudden noise and a
-cry of “Help!” rang out, a cry choked with
-agony and terror. It came from one of our
-men, whose horse had struck into mine and had
-rolled into the ditch. I turned and saw in a
-flash a brief struggle which the night at once
-blotted out. This time I had made no mistake.
-There really were two Germans
-struggling with our comrade; but I was carried
-on by the forward movement, and profound
-silence reigned again. If we were surrounded
-by enemies, why this conspiracy of silence?
-The horrid screech of the owl never ceased,
-imparting panic to our disordered imaginations,
-making us think that even a catastrophe
-was preferable to this maddening
-incertitude, to this agony of doubt. During
-this time I lived the worst hours of my life.</p>
-
-<p>We advanced, however, marching from west
-to east, and soon we entered the great black<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-mass of the forest of Compiègne, from whence
-arose four or five bird-calls as we approached.
-No matter; for the second time the forest
-represented safety for us, and under the impenetrable
-shade of its tall trees we followed
-its edge in the direction of Champlieu, sometimes
-followed, sometimes preceded by the
-hooting which announced, as we learnt later,
-our approach and our passage.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment when our agony was at an
-end, when hope revived, when, even, certain
-men giving way to fatigue had bent down on
-to their wallets drunk with sleep,—at that
-moment we fell definitely into the mouse-trap
-into which the Germans had methodically
-decoyed us, and a desperate attack was made
-on us from all sides. The drama took place
-so rapidly that I can remember only detached
-shreds of it. The clouds parted, letting fall a
-flood of moonlight; somewhere a cry resounded
-in the night, and the black forest seemed to
-spit fire. Thousands of brief flashes lit up
-each thicket, a hail of bullets thinned the
-column, and mingled with this were cries and
-a terrible neighing from the horses, some of
-which reared, while others lay kicking on the
-ground, dragging their riders and their kits
-in a spasm of terrible agony. Instinctively
-each trooper made a “left turn” and galloped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-furiously to get out of range of this murderous
-fire which decimated our ranks. In a few
-seconds we had put two hundred mètres
-between the forest and us, and the two
-squadrons rallied under cover of a slight
-mist.</p>
-
-<p>As we rode a squadron sergeant-major,
-Dangel, gave a groan, as his horse carried
-him off after the others. Then I saw him
-collapse, pitch forward on his nose on to his
-horse’s fore shoulder and fall to the ground,
-to be dragged. I leapt from my horse and
-managed to disengage his foot. Holding
-him in my arms, I begged him to show a little
-pluck. “We must clear out of this or we
-will be taken prisoners. For God’s sake get
-on your horse.” His only response was a
-long sigh, then his heavy body collapsed in
-my arms, and he dragged me to the ground.
-For a second I was perplexed. The others
-were far off, and I alone remained behind
-with a dying man in my arms, who clasped
-me in desperate embrace. At last his arms
-let go, and a spasm stretched him dead at
-my feet. I laid him piously on the grass
-with his face to the sky, and when I had
-finished this last duty to a comrade, I raised
-my head and saw a whole line of skirmishers
-fifty mètres off. For a moment a feeling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-possessed me that I could not get away; but,
-damme, they were not going to take me alive.
-An extraordinary calm came over me.</p>
-
-<p>I remounted slowly, made sure that I had
-picked up all four reins and lowered my
-lance. Now, by the grace of God ... now
-for it. A volley greeted my departure, but
-it was written that I was to escape. Several
-bullets grazed me, not one hit me. Soon
-I was out of range and concealed by a curtain
-of fog. I rejoined the two squadrons, many
-of whose troopers were without horses. Two
-hundred mètres farther on a fresh fusillade
-came from the invisible trenches and decimated
-our already thinned ranks. Captain
-de Tarragon, whose horse had been wounded,
-pitched forward and remained pinned under
-his horse. I passed by him at the gallop
-hardly seeing him, and I heard a shout that
-seemed to illumine the very darkness: “Charge,
-my lads.” This shout, repeated by all, swelled,
-increased and became a savage clamour,
-which must have paralysed the enemy, for
-the fusillade ceased and cries of “Wer da”
-were heard at different points.</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards I shut my eyes and tried to
-remember, but for some moments everything
-was mixed up. I recall a furious gallop at the
-dark holes where the Germans had gone to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-earth. A high trench embankment faced us
-and my horse got to the other side after a
-monstrous scramble. Before me and on my
-right and left I saw horses taking complete
-somersaults; I could not say whether it lasted
-a minute or an hour. The pains and the
-privations of the last three days culminated
-in a moment of madness. We had to
-get through, cost what it might; we had to
-bowl over everything, break through everything,
-but get through all the same, and our
-hot and furious gallop grew faster under the
-heedless moon, which bathed the country
-with its pale and gentle light. Three times we
-charged, three times we charged down on the
-obstacle without knowing its nature, until the
-remains of the two squadrons found themselves,
-breathless, in a little depression at the
-edge of a wood, before an impassable wall of
-barbed wire.</p>
-
-<p>Impatient voices shouted for wire-cutters,
-and during the delay before these were forthcoming,
-a few panic-mongers blurted out false
-news, which soon circulated and which all
-believed: “The enemy is advancing in skirmishing
-order.” “We are going to be shot
-down at point-blank range,” etc.... Had
-the news been true, I would not have given
-much for our skins. Huddled together like a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-flock of sheep before the gap which some of
-our men were exerting themselves to open
-up for our passage, a handful of resolute
-infantry could have killed every one of us.</p>
-
-<p>At last the gap was made and I descended
-a steep slope between the thin stems of the
-birches, having been sent forward as scout by
-my Major, whom I was never to see again.
-Below, a figure in silhouette and bareheaded
-was resting on his sword in the middle of a
-clearing bathed in moonlight. He watched
-me coming, and I was astonished to recognise
-in him the officer of my troop. For a brief
-moment each had taken the other for an
-enemy, and at twenty mètres off we were
-each ready to fall on the other. Our mutual
-recognition was none the less cordial. M.
-Chatelin refused my horse, which I offered
-to him, deciding to try to regain our lines on
-foot under cover of night (which he did after
-having knocked over two German sentries).
-He warned me expressly against some skirmishers
-concealed in a thicket behind me, and
-after a hearty handshake and a “good luck,”
-which sounded supremely ironical between
-two such isolated individuals, lost in the heart
-of German “territory,” I watched his thin
-silhouette melt into the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>I made my way back to give an account of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-my mission and to tell the Major that this
-route was impracticable for the two squadrons.
-Above, the plain extended to infinity,
-white in the moonlight, with no vestige of a
-human being! All that was to be seen were
-two horses which galloped wildly to an accompaniment
-of clashing stirrups, and the uneasy
-neighs of lost animals—that whinny of
-the horse which has something so human in
-it gave me a shudder. How was it that two
-squadrons had had the time, during my brief
-absence, to melt and disappear?</p>
-
-<p>What road have they found? Why have
-they abandoned me? The terror of desolation
-took the place of my former calm. To
-die with the others in the midst of a charge
-would have been fine; but to feel oneself
-lost and alone in all this mystery, in this endless
-night, in the midst of thousands of invisible
-enemies, was a bit too much. It was
-a childish nightmare and, seized with the same
-panic as the lost horses, I too spurred mine till
-his flanks bled, and I set off straight before me
-galloping like a madman. Luck, or perhaps
-my horse who scented his stable companions,
-brought me all at once to a small contingent
-of dragoons,—Captain de Salverte and eleven
-men, with whom I joined up. I questioned
-the Captain, who could tell me nothing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-He had found himself detached and lost like
-me, and he had put himself at our head to try
-to get us out of this inextricable position.
-We walked on gloomily through a country
-cut up by hedges and streams. Shortly, we
-found ourselves within a few mètres of an
-enemy’s bivouac, the fires of which made the
-shadows dance on our drawn faces. A stupid
-sentry was warming himself, and had his
-back turned to us. What was the good of
-struggling? Why cheat oneself with chimerical
-illusions? The day would dawn and we
-would be ingloriously surprised and sent to
-some prisoner’s camp in the centre of Germany,
-unless, choosing to die rather than
-yield, we kept for ourselves the last shot in
-our magazines.</p>
-
-<p>However, we reached the forest. In the
-maze of dark paths we lost the Captain and
-Sergeant Pathé. With Farrier Sergeant-Major
-Delfour, and Sergeant-Major Desoil of the
-machine-gun section, nine of us were left,
-and we were determined to try a last effort,
-spurred by an awakening of that instinct of
-self-preservation which stiffens the desire
-to live in the very face of death.</p>
-
-<p>Deep in the forest we passed the night concealed
-in a thicket, taking pity on our horses,
-which would have died had we demanded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-a further effort of them. Soon we were overpowered
-by sleep, sleep so profound that the
-entire German army might have surprised us,
-without our raising a little finger to get away.</p>
-
-<p>At daybreak we continued our way, with
-stiff and benumbed limbs and soaking clothing.
-It was a beautiful autumn day. Wisps of
-pink mist wrapped to the tree tops. A large
-stag watched our coming with uneasy surprise,
-standing in the middle of a paved road
-on his slim legs. He disappeared with a
-bound into a clump of bushes, whose swaying
-branches let fall a shower of silver drops. A
-divine peace possessed all space. In a clearing
-some thirty loose horses had got together.
-The larger number were saddled and carried
-the complete equipment of regiments of
-dragoons and of chasseurs. The lances lay
-on the ground, together with complete sets
-of kit and mess tins. Surely the enemy had
-not passed this way or he would have laid
-hands on all this material so hurriedly abandoned;
-and yet no human being was about
-who could tell us anything, not even a lost
-soldier. There was no one but ourselves and
-the immense tranquil forest, gilded by early
-autumn, splashed with the dark green of the
-oaks and with every shade of colour from
-ardent purple to the white leaf of the aspen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>That glorious dawn shone on the greatest
-victory the world had ever seen. The battle
-was over for the armies of Maunoury, of
-French, of Franchet, of d’Estrey, of Foch, and
-of Langle de Cary. The pursuit was beginning,
-and the whole extent of country, where
-we were now wandering, pursued and tracked
-like wild beasts, was going to be cleared
-within a few hours of the last German who
-had sullied its soil.</p>
-
-<p>More than thrice during the morning we
-came unexpectedly on German detachments,
-isolated parties, lost patrols or stragglers, and
-each time we cut across the wood to escape
-them at the risk of breaking our necks. Then
-we got to a long straight path at the lower end
-of which a fine limousine motor-car had been
-abandoned, and at the end of the path we
-reached a village which appeared to be empty.
-We consulted together for a moment, being in
-doubt what to do; but all of us were loth to
-return to the forest. This was the fifth day
-of our fast; so much the worse for us; it was
-time to put an end to it, so we made our way
-to an abandoned farm. We sheltered there for
-two hours, scanning the surrounding country
-for signs of life. Everything seemed dead.
-We could see no peasant, no civilian, not even
-an animal, and this waiting was one torment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-the more, but it was to be the last. Not till
-ten o’clock, over there, very far off, did I
-catch sight of the thin black caterpillar of
-a column of soldiers coming our way during
-my turn of sentry-go. My heart beat violently,
-but I refrained from giving the news
-to my comrades from the fear of raising false
-hopes. My eyes burnt like flame and my
-teeth chattered. If these were Germans the
-game was up. If they were French, oh!
-then!</p>
-
-<p>I looked, I looked with my eyes pressing
-out of my head. At times, as I strained my
-eyes, everything grew misty and I could see
-nothing; then, a second later, I again found
-this growing caterpillar and I began to distinguish
-details. There were squadrons of
-cavalry, but I could not yet make out the
-colour; and my body, from being icy cold,
-turned to burning hot. At times I forced
-myself not to look. I looked again, counted
-twenty, and then devoured space with my
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>A patrol had been detached, and approached
-rapidly at the trot; this time I recognised
-French Hussars. Then all strength of will,
-and all my effort to remain calm disappeared.
-I turned my reeling head towards my comrades
-and I fell on the grass crying, crying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-like a madman, in words without sequence.
-The fatigue of these five days without food
-or drink, almost without sleep, and the living
-in a perpetual nightmare, brought on a
-nervous crisis, and my whole body was racked
-with spasms. My comrades, not having as
-yet understood, looked at me with astonishment.
-With a gesture I pointed out the
-approaching column, the pale blue of which
-contrasted brightly with the gold of the leaves.
-All of them, as soon as they had seen it, were
-overcome as I had been, each in his own way.
-Some burst into brusque convulsive sobs,
-others danced, waving their arms like madmen
-or rather like poor wretches who have passed
-days of suffering and agony on a raft in mid-ocean,
-and who suddenly see a ship approaching
-to their rescue.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</h2>
-
-<p class="subhead">VERBERIE THE CENTRE OF THE RALLY—THE
-EPIC OF A YOUNG GIRL—MASS IN THE
-OPEN AIR—FROM DAY TO DAY</p>
-
-<p class="center">10th September to 20th October, 1914</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">The battle finished on the tenth, and then
-the pursuit of the conquered army
-commenced and kept the whole world in
-suspense, with eyes fixed on this headlong
-flight towards the north, which lasted till the
-end of the month, and which was to be the
-prelude of the great battles of the Yser.</p>
-
-<p>The region round Verberie was definitely
-cleared of Germans and was become once
-more French. The little town for some days
-presented an extraordinary spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>We entered the town after having received
-the formal assurance of the 5th Chasseurs,
-who went farther on, that all the country was
-in our hands. Some divisional cyclists were
-seated at the roadside. We asked them for
-news of the 22nd, and their reply wrung our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-hearts. They knew nothing definite, but they
-had met a country cart full of our wounded
-comrades, who had told them that the regiment
-had been cut up.</p>
-
-<p>No one could tell us where the divisional
-area was to be found. The division itself
-appeared to have been dismembered, lost
-and in part destroyed. We thought that we
-were the only survivors of a disaster, and,
-once the horses were in shelter in an empty
-abandoned farm stuffing themselves with
-hay, we wandered sadly through the streets
-destroyed by bombardment and by fire in
-search of such civilians as might have remained
-behind during the invasion.</p>
-
-<p>A little outside the town we at last found a
-farm where two of the inhabitants had stayed
-on. The contrast between them was touching.
-One was a paralysed old man unable to
-leave his fields, the other was a young girl
-of fifteen, a frail little peasant, and rather
-ugly. Her strange green eyes contrasted
-with an admirable head of auburn hair, and
-she had heroically insisted on looking after
-her infirm grandfather, though all the rest
-of the family had emigrated towards the
-west. She had remained faithful to her
-duty in spite of the bombardment, the battle
-at their very door and the ill-treatment of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-the Bavarian soldiers who were billeted in the
-farm. Distressed, yet joyous, she prepared
-a hasty meal and busied herself in quest of
-food, for it was anything but easy to satiate
-eleven men dying of hunger when the Germans,
-who lay hands on everything, had only
-just left.</p>
-
-<p>She wrung the neck of an emaciated fowl
-which had escaped massacre, and, by adding
-thereto some potatoes from the garden, she
-served us a breakfast, washed down with
-white wine, which made us stammer with
-joy, like children. One needs to have fasted
-for five days to have felt the cutting pains of
-hunger and of thirst in all their horror, to
-appreciate the happiness that one can experience
-in eating the wing of a scraggy fowl and
-in drinking a glass of execrable wine tasting
-like vinegar. She bustled about, and her
-pitying and motherly gestures touched our
-hearts. While we ate she told us the most
-astonishing story that ever was, a story acted,
-illustrated by gestures, which made the
-scenes live with remarkable vividness.</p>
-
-<p>She told us how, faithful to her oath, she
-was alone when the Bavarians came knocking
-at her door, how she lived three days with
-them, a butt for their innumerable coarsenesses,
-sometimes brutally treated when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-soldiers were sober, sometimes pursued by
-their gross assiduities when they were drunk;
-how one night she had to fly half naked
-through the rain, slipping out through the
-vent-hole of the cellar, to escape being violated
-by a group of madmen, not daring to
-go to bed again, sleeping fully dressed behind
-a small copse; how at last French chasseurs
-had put the Bavarians to flight and had
-in their turn installed themselves in the farm,
-and how among them she felt herself protected
-and respected.</p>
-
-<p>She attached herself to her new companions,
-whom she looked after like a mother for three
-days. Then they went away, promising to
-return, and she was left alone.</p>
-
-<p>But the next day at dawn, uneasy at the
-row that came from the town, she decided
-to go in search of news. She put on a shawl
-and slipped through the brushwood and
-thickets as far as the first houses. She was
-afraid of being seen, and made herself as
-small as possible, keeping close to the walls,
-crossing gardens and ruined houses. The
-terrible noise increased, and she went towards
-it. She wanted to see what was going on,
-and a fine virile courage sustained her. The
-shells fell near her; no matter, she had only a
-few more steps to go to turn the corner of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-street. She arrived on the <i>place</i> as the battle
-was finishing.</p>
-
-<p>Her fifteen chasseurs were there, fifteen
-corpses at the foot of the barricade. One of
-them, who still lived, raised himself on seeing
-her, and held out his arms towards her.
-Then, forgetting all danger, in a magnificent
-outburst of feminine pity, she braved the
-rain of fire and dashed to the centre of the
-<i>place</i>. She knelt by the young fellow, enveloped
-him in her shawl to warm him and
-rocked him in her arms till he closed his young
-eyes for ever, thankful for this feminine
-presence which had made his last sufferings
-less bitter.</p>
-
-<p>While she remained kneeling on the pavement
-wet with blood, a last big calibre shell
-knocked over, almost at her feet, a big corner
-house, which in its fall buried the German
-and French corpses in one horrible heap.
-She fell in a faint on the stones, knocked
-over by the windage of the shell, which had
-so nearly done for her.</p>
-
-<p>During the latter part of her discourse she
-straightened her thin figure to the full, her
-strange eyes sparkled, and she appeared to be
-possessed by some strong and mysterious
-spirit which made us tremble. She became
-big in her rustic simplicity—big, as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-incarnation of grief and of pity, and the
-peasant in her gave place to a living image
-of the war—an image singularly moving and
-singularly beautiful.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From the next day Verberie became in
-some degree the rallying point for all soldiers
-who had lost touch with their units. Elements
-of all sorts of regiments, of all arms, of
-all races even, arrived on foot, on horseback,
-on bicycles, in country carts. There were
-dragoons, cuirassiers, chasseurs, artillerymen,
-Algerian Light Infantry and English. Bernous,
-khaki uniform, blue capes, rubbed
-shoulders with dolmans, black tunics and red
-trousers.</p>
-
-<p>In this extraordinary crowd there were men
-from Morocco mounted on Arab horses and
-wearing turbans; there were “Joyeux” who
-wore the tarboosh, and ruddy English faces
-surmounted by flat caps. All the uniforms
-were covered with dirt and slashed and torn.
-Many of the men had bare feet, and some
-carried arms and some were without. It
-was the hazard of the colossal battle of the
-Marne, where several millions of men had been
-at grips, which had thrown them on this
-point. All were animated by the same
-desire for information, and particularly of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-whereabouts of their respective regiments.
-From every direction flowed in convoys,
-waggons, artillery ammunition waggons, stragglers
-from every division and from every
-army corps. The mix-up and the confusion
-were indescribable. One heard shouting,
-swearing, neighing of horses, the horns of
-motor-cars, and the rumble of heavy waggons,
-which shook the houses.</p>
-
-<p>Faces drawn with fatigue were black with
-dust and mud and framed in stubbly beards.
-Everyone was gesticulating, everyone was
-shouting and a bright autumn sun, following
-upon the storm, threw into prominence
-amongst the medley of clothing the luminous
-splashes of gaudy colours and imparted an
-Oriental effect to the crowd.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Having eaten, washed and rested, I walked
-the streets, drinking the morning air and taking
-deep breaths of the <i>joie de vivre</i>, of the strength
-and vitality mingled with the air. I looked
-on every side to see whether I could not find
-some acquaintance in the crowd, some stray
-trooper from my regiment.</p>
-
-<p>So it was that the hazard of my walk
-brought me to a scene which moved me to
-tears and which rests graven so deeply on
-my memory that I can see its smallest detail<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-with my eyes shut. The Gothic porch of the
-church, with its fine sculptures of the best
-period, was open, making in the brightness of
-the morning a pit of shade, at the foot of which
-some candles shone like stars. On the threshold
-of the porch, gaily lighted by the morning
-sun, a priest, whose fine virile face I can still
-recall, held in his hand the enamel pyx, and
-his surplice of lace of a dazzling whiteness
-contrasted with the muddy boots and spurs.
-One could guess that after having traversed
-some field of battle, consoling the wounded
-and the dying, he had dismounted to officiate
-in the open air under the morning sun.</p>
-
-<p>Before him, on a humble country cart and
-lying on a bed of straw, were stretched the
-rigid bodies, fixed in death, of two chasseurs
-who had fallen nobly while defending the
-bridge over the river. All around, kneeling
-in the mud of the porch, a semicircle of bareheaded
-soldiers, overcome by gratitude and
-humility, were assembled to accomplish a last
-duty and pay their last respects to the two
-comrades who were lying before them and who
-were sleeping their last sleep in their blood-stained
-uniforms, and assisted at the supreme
-office. The priest finished the <i>De profundis</i>,
-and in a clear voice pronounced the sacred
-words “<i>Revertitur in terram suam unde erat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-et spiritus redit ad Deum qui dedit illum.</i>”
-The officiant gave the holy-water sprinkler
-to the priest, who sprinkled the bodies and
-murmured “<i>Requiescat in pace.</i>” “Amen,”
-responded the kneeling crowd, and a great
-wave of religious feeling passed over the
-kneeling men, the greater part of whom gave
-way to overmastering emotion.</p>
-
-<p>I can still see a big devil of an artilleryman,
-with his head between his hands, shaken by
-convulsive sobs. Having given the absolution,
-the priest raised the host sparkling
-in the sunlight for the last time and pronounced
-the sacramental words. I moved off,
-deeply affected by the grandeur of the scene.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>By the 12th a good number of 22nd Dragoons
-and some officers of the regiment had
-rejoined at Verberie. We formed from this
-débris an almost complete squadron under the
-command of Captain de Salverte, who had
-succeeded in getting through the lines by
-skirting the forest.</p>
-
-<p>I again found my officer, M. Chatelin,
-whom I had last seen in the little clearing
-near Gilocourt, surrounded by lurking enemies,
-and whom I had hardly dared hope to see
-again alive; also M. de Thézy, my comrade
-Clère and others.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We were all sorry to hear that Lieutenant
-Roy had fallen on the field of battle with
-several others, and that Major Jouillié had
-been taken prisoner. As for Captain de
-Tarragon, it was stated that he might have
-escaped on foot with his orderly and that
-he might be somewhere in the neighbourhood
-with a contingent of escaped men, but any
-precise information was wanting.</p>
-
-<p>The night before I had slept in the drawing-room
-of the château belonging to M. de
-Maindreville, the mayor. Its appearance
-merits some brief description, so that those
-who are still in doubt as to the savagery of
-the Germans may learn to what degree of
-bestiality and ignominy they are capable
-of attaining.</p>
-
-<p>This fine drawing-room was a veritable
-dung heap. The curtains were torn, the small
-billiard-table lay upside down in the middle
-of the room, a litter of rotting food covered the
-floor, the furniture was in matchwood, the
-chairs were broken, the easy-chairs had had
-their stuffing torn out of them and the glass
-of the cabinets was smashed. One could
-see that all small objects had been carried off
-and all others methodically broken. On the
-first floor the sight was heart-breaking. Fine
-linen, trimmed with lace, was soiled with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-excrement; excrement was everywhere, in the
-bath, on the sheets, on the floor. They had
-vomited on the beds and urinated against
-the walls; broken bottles had shed seas of
-red wine on the costly carpets. An unnamable
-liquid was running down the staircase,
-obscene designs were traced in charcoal on
-the wall-papers and filthy inscriptions ornamented
-the walls.</p>
-
-<p>I have told enough to give an idea of the
-degrading traces left by a contemptible enemy.
-I have exaggerated nothing; if anything, I
-have understated the truth.</p>
-
-<p>And this is the people that wants to be the
-arbiter of culture and of civilisation! May
-it stand for ever shamed and reduced to its
-true level, which is below that of the brute
-beast.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the morning of the 12th, under the
-command of Captain de Salverte we crossed
-the Oise by a bridge of boats, the stone bridge
-having been destroyed by dynamite some
-days before. We went north to billet at
-Estrée-Saint-Denis, which was to be the
-definite rallying point of the 22nd Dragoons.
-We were followed by several country carts,
-full of dismounted troopers, saddles, lances,
-cloaks and odds and ends of equipment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Acting on very vague information, I set out
-on the 13th to look for Captain de Tarragon.
-I was mounted on a prehistoric motor bicycle,
-requisitioned from the village barber. I
-scoured the country seeking information from
-everyone I met. I received the most contradictory
-reports, made a thousand useless
-detours and was exasperated when overtaken
-by night without having found any trace of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>I followed the road leading to Baron and to
-Nanteuil-le-Haudoin, along which but a few
-days before the corps of Landwehr, asked
-for by von Kluck, had marched with the
-object of enveloping our army, and along
-which it had just been precipitately hustled
-back. The sky was overcast and the day
-threatening. At each step dead horses with
-swelled bellies threatened heaven with their
-stiff legs. A score of soldiers were lying in
-convulsed attitudes, their eyes wide open,
-with grimacing mouths twisted into a terrifying
-smile, and with hands clasping their
-rifles. Involuntarily I trembled at finding
-myself alone at nightfall in this deserted
-country, where no living being was to be seen,
-where not a sound was to be heard except
-the cawing of thousands of crows and the
-purr of my motor, which panted on the hills<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-like an asthmatic old man, causing me the
-liveliest anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen hundred mètres from Baron, after
-a last gasp, my machine stopped for ever,
-and, as I was ignorant of its mechanics, I was
-compelled to leave it where it was and continue
-my journey on foot through the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>The proprietor of the château of Baron
-put me up for the night. As at Verberie,
-everything had been burnt, soiled and destroyed.
-Nothing remained of the elegant
-furniture beyond a heap of shapeless objects.
-Next morning with the aid of a captain on
-the staff who requisitioned a trap for me, I
-got back to Verberie and found Captain de
-Tarragon there. He had slept at the farm
-of La Bonne Aventure, quite near to where
-I lay.</p>
-
-<p>When he saw me, after the mortal anxieties
-through which he had lived, believing his
-squadron lost and cut up, he was overcome
-by such a feeling of gratitude and joy that I
-saw tears rise to his eyes while he shook me
-vigorously by the hand. He had already
-sent forward my name for mention in the
-order for the day with reference to the affair
-at Gilocourt and the death of poor Dangel.
-I was recommended for the military medal,
-and my heart swelled with pride and joy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-while I was carried back to Estrée-Saint-Denis,
-stretched out in a country cart with
-a score of dismounted comrades.</p>
-
-<p>A few days afterwards I was promoted
-corporal and proudly sported the red flannel
-chevrons bought at a country grocer’s shop.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Once the half-regiment was reconstituted
-after a fashion, though many were missing
-(a detachment of fifty men without horses
-having returned to the depot), we were attached
-to the 3rd Cavalry Division, which
-happened to be in our neighbourhood, ours
-having left the area for some unknown
-destination. Until the 1st of October our
-lot was bound up with that of the 4th Cuirassiers,
-who marched with us.</p>
-
-<p>On the 23rd of September, as supports for
-the artillery, we were present at violent
-infantry actions between Nesle and Billancourt.
-The 4th Corps attacked, and the
-furious struggle extended over the whole
-country. My troop was detached as flank
-guard and, in the thick morning fog, we
-knocked up against a handful of German
-cavalry, whom, in the distance, we had
-taken for our own men.</p>
-
-<p>We charged them at a gallop, and we
-noticed that they were tiring and that we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-were gaining on them. One of them drew
-his sabre and cut his horse’s flanks with it,
-whilst a non-commissioned officer turned and
-fired his revolver without hitting us; but,
-thanks to the fog, they got away. We did
-not tempt providence by following them too
-far for fear of bringing up in their lines.</p>
-
-<p>At night we were sent to reconnoitre some
-fires which were reddening the horizon and
-which, from a distance, seemed vast conflagrations.
-We came upon a bivouac of
-Algerian troops, who were squatting on their
-heels, warming themselves, singing strange
-African melodies and giving to this corner
-of French soil an appearance of Algeria.</p>
-
-<p>On hearing the sound of our horses they
-sprang to arms with guttural cries, but when
-they had recognised that we were French they
-insisted on embracing our officer and danced
-round us like children.</p>
-
-<p>We billeted at Parvillers in a half-destroyed
-farm, and there at daybreak a sight that
-suggested an hallucination met our eyes.
-Some ten German soldiers were there in the
-courtyard dead, mowed down by the “75,”
-but in such natural attitudes that but for
-their waxen colour one could have believed
-them alive. One was standing holding on to
-a bush, his hand grasping the branches. His<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-face bespoke his terror, his mute mouth
-seemed as if in the act of yelling and his
-eyes were dilated with fear. A fragment of
-shell had pierced his chest. Another was
-on his knees, propped against a wall, under
-cover of which he had sought shelter from
-the murderous fire. I approached to see where
-his wound was and it took me a moment to
-discover it, so intact was the corpse. I saw
-at last that he had had the whole of the inside
-of his cranium carried away and hollowed out,
-as if by some surgical instrument. His tongue
-and his eyes were kept in place by a filament
-of flesh, and his spiked helmet had rolled off
-by his side. An officer was seated on some
-hay, with his legs apart and his head thrown
-back, looking at the farm.</p>
-
-<p>All these eyes fixed us with a terrifying
-immobility, with a look of such acute terror
-that our men turned away, as if afraid of
-sharing it; and not one of them dared to
-touch the magnificent new equipment of the
-Germans, which would have tempted them
-in any other circumstances. There were
-aluminium water-bottles and mess tins, helmet
-plates of shining copper and sculptured
-regimental badges dear to the hearts of
-soldiers, and which they have the habit of
-collecting as trophies.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The dawn of the 25th broke without a
-cloud over the village of Folies. A heat haze
-hid the early morning sun. The enemy were
-quite near, and the sentries on the barricades
-gave the alarm. The cuirassiers and dragoons,
-leaving their horses under cover, had
-been on watch in the surrounding country
-since the morning to protect the village and
-the batteries of “75’s,” which were firing
-from a little way back.</p>
-
-<p>A non-commissioned officer and I had
-remained mounted. M. de Thézy sent us
-to investigate some horsemen whose shadows
-had loomed through the mist and whom we
-had seen dismount in an apple orchard near
-the village of Chocques. We set off at a
-quiet trot, convinced that we had to deal
-with some French hussars whom I had seen
-go that way an hour before. We crossed a
-field of beetroot and made straight towards
-them. They seemed anchored to the spot,
-and when we were within one hundred mètres,
-and they showed no signs of moving, our
-confidence increased. The fog seemed to
-grow thicker and our horses, now at the walk,
-scented no danger. We were within fifty
-mètres of them when a voice spoke out and
-the word “carbine” reached us distinctly,
-carried by a light breeze. The non-commissioned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-officer turned to me, his suspicions
-completely stilled, and said, “We can go on,
-they are French, I heard the word carbine.”
-At the same instant I saw the group come to
-the shoulder and a dozen jets of fire tore the
-mist with short red flashes. A hail of bullets
-fell all around us, and we had only just time
-enough to put between them and ourselves
-as much fog as would conceal us, for before
-turning tail we had seen the confused grey
-mass of a column coming out of the village.
-We had only to warn the artillery and then
-there would be some fun.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant of artillery was two kilomètres
-back perched on a ladder. Having
-listened to what we had to say, he turned
-towards his gun and cried through a megaphone,
-“2600, corrector 18.” We were already
-far off, returning at the gallop to try
-to see the effect, and it was a fine sight.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the horses in a farm, we slipped
-from tree to tree. There was the column,
-still advancing. A first shell, ten mètres in
-front of it, stopped it short; immediately a
-second fell on the left, wounding some men,
-and a horse reared and upset its rider. A
-third shell struck mercilessly into the centre of
-the column and caused an explosion which sent
-flying, right and left, dark shapes which we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-guessed to be fragments of bodies. It rained
-shell, which struck the road with mathematical
-precision, sowing death and panic. In the
-twinkling of an eye the road was swept clean.
-The survivors bolted in every direction like
-madmen, and the agonising groans of a dying
-horse echoed through the whole country-side.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the 1st of October we rejoined our division
-and the first half-regiment at Tilloy-les-Mofflaines.
-Up to the 20th we passed through
-a period of great privation and fatigue owing
-to the early frosts. We were unable to sleep
-for as many as five days on end, and when at
-night we had a few hours in which to rest, we
-passed them lying on the pavement of the
-street, propped up against some heap of coal
-or of stones, holding our horses’ reins, each
-huddled up against his neighbour to try and
-keep warm.</p>
-
-<p>Here are extracts from my diary, starting
-from 8th October:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><i>8th October.</i>—All night we guarded the
-bridge at Estaires, after having constructed a
-formidable barricade. Damp and chilly night,
-which I got through lying on the pavement
-before the bridge; drank a half-litre of spirits
-in little sips to sustain me. This is the most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-trying night we have passed, but the spirits of
-all are wonderful.</p>
-
-<p><i>9th October: Twenty minutes to four, two
-kilomètres from Estaires, scouting amongst beetroot
-fields.</i>—Has the supreme moment come?
-A little while ago I firmly believed that it had;
-now I am out of my reckoning, so incomprehensible
-and widespread is the struggle which
-surrounds us.</p>
-
-<p>We have evacuated Estaires and the bridge
-over the Lys, which we were guarding, to
-rejoin our horses on foot. After some minutes
-on the road the first shells burst. My troop
-received orders to fight dismounted, and here
-we are, lying down as skirmishers amongst
-the beetroot, in the midst of a heavy artillery
-and musketry fire. I am on the extreme right,
-and a moment ago two shrapnel shells came
-over and burst six or eight mètres above my
-head, peppering the ground with bullets.
-Never, I imagine, have I come so near to
-being hit.</p>
-
-<p>For the moment it is impossible to understand
-what is going on; the whole of the
-cavalry which was on in front of us—chasseurs,
-dragoons and all the cyclists—have fallen
-back, passing along the road on our flank. We,
-however, have had no order to retire. The
-peasants with their wives and children are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-running about the country like mad people.
-It is a sorry sight. A moment ago I saw an
-old man and a little girl fall in their hurry to
-escape from their farm, which a shell had just
-knocked to pieces. They are like herds of
-animals maddened by a storm.</p>
-
-<p>At dusk the Germans are 500 mètres off.
-We have orders to take up our post in the
-cemetery of Estaires. I have hurt my foot
-and each step in the ploughed land is a torture.
-I have noted a way which will lead me
-to the bridge on the other side of the town.</p>
-
-<p>I brought up my patrol at the double.
-When I got back I saw the troop retiring.</p>
-
-<p>We passed through the town, which had a
-sinister look by night, reddened by the flames
-from many fires. The whole population is in
-flight, leaving houses open to the streets, and
-crowding up the roads. All the window-panes
-are broken by the bombardment; somewhere,
-in the middle of the town, a building is burning
-and the flames mount to the sky. There are
-barricades in every street. We have reached
-the horses, which are two kilomètres from the
-town, and we grope for them in the dark.
-Mine is slightly wounded in the foreleg. Long
-retreat during the night (the second during
-which we have not slept—a storm wets us to
-the skin).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Arrived at Chocques at five in the morning.
-We get to bed at 6.30 and we are off again at
-8 o’clock. I ask myself for how many days
-men and horses can hold out.</p>
-
-<p><i>10th October.</i>—In the afternoon we again
-covered the twenty kilomètres which separated
-us from Estaires. Hardly had we settled
-down to guard the same bridge as yesterday
-when we were sent to La Gorgue. On the way
-stopped in the village, as shells commenced
-to fall. The 1st troop took refuge in a grocer’s,
-where we were parked like sheep. A large
-calibre shell burst just opposite with a terrible
-row. I thought that the house was going to
-fall in. Lieutenant Niel, who had stayed
-outside, was knocked over into the ditch and
-wounded. We are falling back with the
-horses to La Gorgue, and we are passing a third
-night, without sleep, on the road, Magrin and
-I on a heap of coal. Horses and men have
-had nothing to eat, the latter are benumbed,
-exhausted, but gay as ever.</p>
-
-<p><i>11th October.</i>—We get to a neighbouring
-farm at Estrem to feed the horses. They have
-scarcely touched their hay and oats before an
-order comes telling us to rejoin at the very
-place from which we have come. The Germans
-are trying to take the village from the
-east, thanks to the bridge which they captured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-the day before yesterday, but we have been
-reinforced by cyclists, and the 4th Division is
-coming up. We are holding on; the position
-is good. The belfry of the town hall has just
-fallen. We are going back to Estrem.</p>
-
-<p>Three hours passed in a trench without
-great-coats. Magrin and I are so cold that we
-huddle up one against the other and share a
-woollen handkerchief to cover our faces. We
-put up at Calonne-sur-la-Lys. And so it
-goes on up to the 17th, the date on which we
-re-enter Belgium, passing by Bailleul, Outersteene
-and Locre. It is not again a triumphal
-entry on a fine August morning, it is a march
-past ruins and over rubbish heaps.</p>
-
-<p>At Outersteene, however, we were received
-with touching manifestations of confidence
-and enthusiasm; an old tottering and broken-down
-teacher had drawn up before the school
-a score of young lads of seven to ten years old,
-who watched us passing and sang the <i>Marseillaise</i>
-with all their lungs, while the old man
-beat the time.</p>
-
-<p>The village had been evacuated only three
-days ago, and it was from the thresholds of
-its houses, partly fallen in and still smoking,
-that this song rose, a sincere and spontaneous
-outburst.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</h2>
-
-<p class="subhead">THE TWO GLORIOUS DAYS OF STADEN</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">On October 19th, at midday, we rode into
-Hougled. The Captain got us together
-and warned us that we were being sent on in
-front to delay the march of the enemy till our
-infantry had had time to come up. The
-enemy’s march had to be delayed <i>at all costs</i>.
-He did not conceal from us that two, or
-perhaps three, divisions had been marked
-down in front of us, that the task would be a
-stiff one and that it was a question of “sticking
-it out” to the last drop of our blood.</p>
-
-<p>We then received orders to prepare for a
-dismounted action, and, leaving our horses in
-a street, we set off across the ploughed fields,
-laden with ammunition. I carried a big
-cartridge case, which I usually left in my
-wallets on account of its weight.</p>
-
-<p>Some round clouds, of a snowy whiteness,
-which made them stand out against the crude
-and washy blue of the background, scudded
-across the sky, carried by a stiff breeze. All<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-Nature was <i>en fête</i>, and the fresh strong wind
-was intoxicating.</p>
-
-<p>Towards four o’clock the enemy showed
-himself in sections and in companies, well
-aligned on the plain beneath us. There was
-no attempt at concealment, as, doubtless, the
-village was thought to be unoccupied.</p>
-
-<p>Under cover of some thin brushwood we
-opened fire on these regular formations, to
-show that we were there and not in the least
-impressed by these demonstrations of company
-and field training. It was just like being
-on manœuvres, and these awkward soldiers
-seemed rather ridiculous, gravely doing the
-goose-step, when so soon it would be a question
-of killing or being killed.</p>
-
-<p>We must have got their range, for we noted
-through field-glasses a slight confusion in the
-enemy’s ranks, and, instantaneously, the
-advancing infantry disappeared. They were
-still there, however, for their bullets, slipping
-over the ridge where we offered a good target,
-pitted the turf all round us, happily without
-wounding any one. The Germans have a
-remarkable faculty of making themselves
-scarce in the twinkling of an eye as soon as they
-have been seen by an enemy, like those insects
-which, at the least noise, blend with the grass
-on which they are perched.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Our naval guns, ranged by the side of the
-road, fired over the plain. An observing
-officer, standing on his horse’s back, judged the
-effects of the fire. We saw the shells burst in
-beautiful plumes of dark or light smoke. The
-enemy’s fusillade ceased, much to our satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>But the German artillery began to reply, and
-we were soon subjected to such a fire that we
-had to retreat towards the village, being
-uneasy about our horses, which happened to be
-in the line of fire. In going along the main
-street we kept close to the walls to avoid the
-shell splinters. Shells of all calibres fell without
-ceasing, making holes in the thin slate
-roofs and breaking the windows. I saw one
-pierce a wall some paces in front of me and
-burst inside a house, whose stories collapsed,
-one on the top of the other. It was just like
-an earthquake, the whole street was shaken
-by it.</p>
-
-<p>We made for our horses at the double and
-found them plunging under this storm of fire,
-and we galloped off behind the village to get
-them into safety. Without losing a second
-we distributed extra cartridges in large numbers
-and returned to take our place between
-the farms in the grass fields shut in by hedges
-and barriers. We worked at fortifying our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-positions till evening. Everyone made “his
-trench.” (That word had then another signification;
-at that time the word trench represented
-for us the least scooped-out hole,
-the least obstacle placed between the enemy
-and us.)</p>
-
-<p>We protected ourselves with sand-bags,
-faggots, agricultural implements, etc. We
-were hardly installed before we received an
-order to leave this place and to occupy a road
-on the right, running between two meadows.
-We made a barricade at the end of it, somehow
-or other, with whatever came to hand.</p>
-
-<p>The infantry, expected at four o’clock, were
-late, and it became questionable whether it
-would be materially possible to hold out much
-longer, if the Germans attacked, taking into
-consideration the disproportion between our
-forces and those of the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Night had hardly come when an infernal
-fusillade broke out, and it lasted till daylight
-without the least slackening. It was exactly
-like an uninterrupted salvo fire, with the addition
-of the sharp, regular dry crackle of
-machine-guns. Thousands of projectiles struck
-our fragile barricade or passed, whistling,
-over our heads. We fired straight in front
-of us into the dark night, without knowing
-what we aimed at, except that our fire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-was directed towards the place whence this
-murderous storm of shot and shell came.</p>
-
-<p>Constantly the same question ran from man
-to man: “Have the infantry come up?” for
-we knew that our lives depended on their
-arrival. Our orders were: “You will prevent
-the Germans passing till you have been
-relieved.”</p>
-
-<p>We had only a handful of troopers, two
-hundred perhaps, to check the onslaught of
-a formidable mass of infantry. Unless our
-infantry came to our aid we would be cut up
-to a man; but the enemy should have to pass
-over our bodies.</p>
-
-<p>Overcome with fatigue, and in spite of the
-thunder all round us, I fell asleep, suddenly,
-heavily, dreamlessly, in a little ditch which ran
-by the roadside. I don’t know when I awoke.
-The noise of the combat was dominated by a
-clamour still louder and more penetrating: a
-part of the village of Staden was on fire. A
-horde of Germans dashed into it, yelling
-“Hourraa!” A diabolical clamour rose to
-heaven, and yells and cries of bestial joy
-mounted with the thick smoke of the fires.</p>
-
-<p>We learnt afterwards that they had charged
-empty barricades, a party of our men having
-evacuated the town an hour previously. A
-corporal of the 1st squadron, posted a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-more to the left, told me he had seen them
-200 yards off defiling in quick step “silhouetted
-like devils” against the glare of the fire.</p>
-
-<p>Still no infantry.</p>
-
-<p>A torpor seized me and I fell back into the
-ditch, overcome by sleep, and slept again till
-almost daylight. From that moment events
-moved with great rapidity. It must have
-been seven o’clock when the infantry at last
-arrived, fifteen hours late. We heard hurried
-footsteps. I turned and saw troops falling
-back in hot haste, being irresistibly outflanked
-by the enemy. They seemed to be
-pursued by assailants who were on their
-heels. I heard voices exclaiming, “It is
-pitiable to see fellows so up against it.” I
-said nothing, but, in my inner consciousness,
-I clearly understood that the supreme moment
-was come for many of us.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment I feared that we had been
-forgotten in the general movement. Soon
-afterwards Captain de Tarragon appeared at
-the cross-roads. I can see him still; he
-looked immensely big in his blue cloak.
-Without speaking, he signalled to us that we
-could retire. It was time indeed, for the
-enemy outflanked us on all sides. The troop
-doubled towards him and ran on. Magrin
-and I remained alongside him. Never so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-much as then have I felt the irresistible force
-of Destiny. It was written that I was to
-remain with him until the end.</p>
-
-<p>We three reached a farm on the crest of the
-ridge; 400 mètres off a German company was
-advancing. The Captain seized a carbine
-from the hands of a late-comer who fled past
-us and turned round to open fire. Faithful to
-my oath, and knowing that our lives hung on a
-thread, I fired off the contents of my magazine
-alongside of him. I aimed as best I could,
-though my greatcoat interfered, and I shot
-into the brown. A second later the German
-reply crumbled the wall of the farm, passing
-between the Captain and me, two fingers’
-breadth over our heads.</p>
-
-<p>I implored de Tarragon not to expose himself
-any longer. What was the use of this
-heroic folly of standing up alone against an
-advancing battalion of the enemy? Doubtless
-our regiment was already a long way off, but
-we might, perhaps, be able to rejoin it by
-crawling along the deep ditch which ran by the
-roadside.</p>
-
-<p>Hate of the enemy seemed, however, to rage
-in his heart, and he replied, “It is too bad to
-have to abandon such a target!” At last,
-his cartridges being exhausted, he decided to
-retire, without running, and seeming to defy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-the entire world with his tall well set-up figure
-of a handsome French soldier. Instead of
-taking to the ditch which ran by the roadside,
-he crossed the field of fire. I followed him,
-without understanding, and Magrin did likewise.</p>
-
-<p>A moment afterwards our number was
-increased to four by the arrival of an officer
-of hussars or of chasseurs, who came running
-up. All my life I shall remember this last.
-He was young, elegant and good-looking, and
-so trim and neat with his sky-blue cap jauntily
-set at an angle. When two mètres off he
-opened his mouth as if to speak, but before
-having emitted a sound he fell dead, hit by
-a bullet under the ear.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain, who was at my side, stepped
-forward to put himself, at last, under shelter.
-Hardly had he taken a step before a bullet hit
-him, and I uttered a cry of rage on seeing him
-fall in a heap. Feigning to be wounded or
-dead, to deceive the enemy and cause the
-cessation of his fire, I fell also, and both of us
-rolled into the deep ditch.</p>
-
-<p>There was not a minute to lose. “Magrin,
-quick, quick, no good troubling about the
-Lieutenant of chasseurs, he’s dead; but perhaps
-the Captain is still alive, we must get
-him away.” Magrin, who had tumbled down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-after me, believing me hit, raised the Captain’s
-head and I took his feet. A hail of bullets
-passed like a squall above our heads. We
-stayed so a good five minutes, exhausting ourselves
-in useless efforts to carry off this inert
-body. On account of its weight it was impossible
-even to move it in the squatting and
-unhandy position in which we found ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>He did not regain consciousness for an
-instant; once his eyes opened, then the eyelids
-quivered and his head fell back heavily.
-He was dead, and we could not think of getting
-him away. The fire was furious. Magrin
-and I, who had remained behind till the last,
-now tried to gain the farm behind which our
-regiment was massed. We made three mètres
-under cover of the ditch, and then we covered
-a hundred mètres at the run, under such a
-rain of bullets, aimed at us, that I attribute our
-escape to a miracle. My greatcoat and cape
-were riddled. As I turned the corner of the
-house, that corner even was torn off and the
-broken bricks fell on me. I passed by some
-bicycles abandoned against a wall, and, after
-I had gone by, I heard the sharp crack of
-broken spokes, which the bullets had cut.</p>
-
-<p>Once I had passed the corner I found shelter
-for an instant. I came across Captain Besnier
-who was wounded, and helped to carry him.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-The road was strewn with the bodies of dragoons,
-chasseurs and cyclists. Behind the
-house were a brick-field and a clay-pit, whose
-slippery crest had to be crossed. I saw some
-unlucky fellows get half over, within two paces
-of safety, and then roll to the bottom, hit by
-the pitiless machine-guns.</p>
-
-<p>The firing redoubled. Major Chapin, who
-had arrived at the front only three days before,
-fell hit through the head, and many others
-fell whom I did not know.</p>
-
-<p>The command of our party devolved on
-Lieutenant Mielle, and, following an order
-from the dying Major Chapin, we took the
-direction of the railway bridge on the right.
-Lieutenant Desonney was wounded and lay
-out a hundred mètres off. I heard the Colonel
-cry in a loud voice with an accent of despair
-which is untranslatable, “Won’t someone
-bring in Desonney?” and one after the other
-five dragoons unhesitatingly left their shelter
-and threw themselves into the furnace of fire,
-each of them as he fell, within a few yards,
-and to be immediately replaced by another.
-The whole regiment would have gone if the
-Colonel had not put a stop to such heroic
-obedience.</p>
-
-<p>But what was going on? Amidst the noise
-of battle the clear notes of a bugle mounted to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-heaven; both sides hesitated. They were the
-well-known notes sounding the charge. We
-turned, and a sight of unspeakable grandeur
-met our eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The dismounted 1st squadron, lance in
-hand, charged into the whirlwind of fire, to
-allow of the rest of the regiment falling back.
-The obsessing refrain made one’s temples
-throb. We were hypnotised, and the Colonel,
-standing up, unconscious of the bullets which
-grazed him, folded his arms and watched his
-admirable soldiers who, moved by almost
-superhuman brotherly devotion, braved the
-fire and retarded for a moment the enemy’s
-march so as to permit their comrades to escape.
-The Colonel watched, and great tears of pride
-and of anxiety ran down his tanned cheeks.
-When, once in one’s life, one has had the
-privilege of seeing such a deed, it lives with
-one for ever.</p>
-
-<p>We now crawled across the railway. The
-machine-guns mowed the fields of beetroot as
-if they had been shaved off with a razor.
-Seven of us took this way and we all got
-through, I don’t know how, without being
-touched. Then we slipped between the infantry
-sections which were advancing in
-skirmishing order on all sides. Some minutes
-later we were behind a ridge under cover and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-in safety. We reached a little shanty where
-we sheltered for a long time, and from the
-loft of which we could still fire on the
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Towards 9 o’clock the musketry fire gradually
-diminished. We left the farm only when
-the artillery duel began. The shells came a
-bit too close, and there was the risk of the
-house falling in on us.</p>
-
-<p>We went in search of the horses two kilomètres
-off, and retirement was decided on
-because of the need for food and rest. When
-I caught up the column at the trot I counted
-47 led horses, which means that 47 men had
-fallen. Desonney’s troop had an officer and
-14 men missing out of 28. We had lost a
-major, two captains, two lieutenants and
-many comrades, but we had made it possible
-for two army corps to come up.</p>
-
-<p>A mere handful of men had put up a fight
-against three divisions. A fine page in the
-history of the regiment!</p>
-
-<p>My greatcoat was handed round the squadron.
-A bullet had pierced the cloth four
-times under the heart, another twice through
-the arm, three others over the ribs.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Eight days afterwards, at Clarques, near<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-Saint-Omer, where we were resting, promotions
-were made to replace the non-commissioned
-officers who had fallen gloriously that
-day. I was made sergeant-major.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</h2>
-
-<p class="subhead">THE FUNERAL OF LORD ROBERTS—NIEUPORT-VILLE—IN
-THE TRENCHES—YPRES AND
-THE NEIGHBOURING SECTORS—I TRANSFER
-TO THE LINE</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">A memorable ceremony in which with
-others of the regiment I took part, was on
-the occasion of the ceremony at Saint-Omer
-in honour of Field-Marshal Lord Roberts, who
-had died on the 15th November while on a
-visit to the allied armies.</p>
-
-<p>At half-past six the regiment was formed up
-on the road and the twelve best specimens of
-manhood were picked out from each troop.
-We were soaked by rain on the way, but the
-sun came out when the ceremony began.</p>
-
-<p>We were formed up in battle array before
-the town hall. All round the square, on the
-edge of the pavement, a single rank of Highlanders,
-carefully sized, stood like statues.
-We waited the coffin, which appeared at last
-from a side street, preceded by a troop of
-English cavalry who marched slowly—their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-black horses were admirable creatures. Then
-came a section of infantry, fine, big, taking
-fellows, who marched with their heads down
-and their eyes fixed on the ground; next came
-superb Indian troops, who wore turbans,
-amongst whom were great native princes; then
-a contingent of Canadians, just disembarked;
-lastly some Highland pipers playing a lament
-whose refrain was eternally alike. We had
-heard this shrill lament for a long time, now
-it became stronger and more penetrating the
-nearer the cortège approached, and gave a
-strange exotic note to this old-fashioned setting
-of a little French town.</p>
-
-<p>When the coffin appeared the Highlanders
-who formed the guard of honour executed a
-strange movement. They slowly described
-an arc of a circle with their rifles, their outstretched
-right arms forming an uninterrupted
-line all round the square, then each man
-finished the movement by crossing his arms on
-the butt-plate of his rifle, the muzzle of which
-was now resting on the ground.</p>
-
-<p>With their heads bowed, these mourners
-resembled some old bas-relief. The coffin,
-enveloped in the Union Jack, was borne on a
-gun-carriage. It was all very simple and very
-moving.</p>
-
-<p>To the wild notes of the Scottish bagpipes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-now silent, the clear trumpets of our dragoons
-replied, and their sound was in itself like
-sparkling metal. They continued to sound
-until the remains of the Field-Marshal had
-been placed in the town hall.</p>
-
-<p>After the ceremony, which we did not see,
-twenty-one guns thundered out, fired by
-batteries posted behind the square. An immense
-rainbow, as sharply defined as if drawn
-with a stroke of the brush, cut the sky with a
-perfect and uninterrupted semicircle. Symbol
-of peace, it came to earth directly behind
-the batteries, and the flash of the guns showed
-up against its iridescent screen.</p>
-
-<p>An English officer came to tell the Colonel
-that the ceremony was over, and we returned
-to Clarques under a beating rain, which had
-begun to fall again.</p>
-
-<p>Our next active work was at Nieuport.
-Motor buses brought us to Coxyde, where,
-amongst the slightly built villas of this
-watering-place, Belgian and French uniforms
-swarmed. Sand-dunes, on which the sand
-encroached on the scanty covering of grass,
-bordered the horizon on all sides.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Vigoureux had sent me to lay out
-the camp with a corporal and one man. Clère,
-Hénon and I went on ahead at a sharp pace.
-From Coxyde to Ostdinkerque there was no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-trace of bombardment. On the road we met
-several lots of horses at exercise, some waggons,
-many soldiers and a few civilians. At Ostdinkerque
-a mill, two houses and a part of the
-church had been gutted yesterday. Some
-vehicles contained civilians, who were
-prudently clearing out.</p>
-
-<p>From this place onwards (Nieuport-Ville
-was six kilomètres off) the road became more
-and more deserted and the noise of the guns
-became louder. At first we only heard the
-noise of our own batteries and the shell burst
-a long way off. Two kilomètres from Nieuport
-I heard the whistle of the first German
-shell, a shrapnel which burst some hundreds
-of mètres off. Several people on the road
-were peppered with the fragments of shell; the
-telegraph wires were broken and the rails of a
-tramway were torn up. The country was a
-desert, and the eye saw nothing but sand-dunes
-without end, and here our underground life
-began.</p>
-
-<p>At the entrance to the town a prudent man
-on duty showed his profile at the door of a
-cellar. I asked him, “Where is Captain Mahot?”
-and he answered in an irritated voice:
-“Don’t stand there in the middle of the road,
-don’t you see that the shells are falling just
-where you are?” I had not noticed it, but I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-did not take long to find out. The man on
-duty led me five mètres underground to Lieutenant
-Deporte. “Sir, where is Captain
-Mahot? The town commandant of the 16th
-Dragoons? I see no one about.” “Everyone
-has gone to earth,” he replied, placidly
-filling his pipe, “and I advise you to hurry up
-and do likewise, for it comes down like hail
-just about now.” It did indeed. I heard the
-most disquieting sounds, the bursting of big
-shells, the splash of bullets, which flattened
-themselves against the houses. Some streets
-were enfiladed, and thousands of shrapnel
-bullets flew back and forward between the
-German trenches and ours.</p>
-
-<p>The Lieutenant gave me a man to take me to
-the Captain’s cellar, which was at the other end
-of the town. He and I (I had left the others in
-a cellar) skirted the walls, and at every step
-what a sight! All that remained of the church
-resembled a sort of historic ruin—some pillars,
-some arches, very fine ones, and some sculptures
-lying on the ground. Everywhere the
-craters of the big shells had the dimensions of
-dried-up ponds. In the principal <i>place</i> there
-were two such, in which one could have put
-two houses.</p>
-
-<p>Speaking of houses, some had been destroyed
-with an art and a refinement which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-made them look like builder’s models. One
-was standing, of which the only thing wanting
-was the outside wall facing the street, and one
-could see the section of the gaping interior.
-The pictures were hanging on the walls, and
-on the piano were photographs and nick-nacks.
-The drawing-room, the dining-room and the
-bedroom were intact; but the flooring of the
-attics had given way and everything had fallen
-through to the floor below. Another house
-was almost comical in appearance, for, against
-a wall on the lowest story, stood a fine bamboo
-rack, on which two statuettes of sham Saxe
-ware smiled an eternal and idiotic smile and
-seemed to jeer at the bombardment. Other
-houses, and these were the most numerous,
-were lamentable rubbish heaps, fallen in,
-blackened, broken up in every sense, blocking
-the streets and forming a hideous lamentable
-chaos. Even when no shell fell—and there
-were long moments of calm—the houses
-dropped to pieces of themselves. This one
-might lose the remainder of its tiles, which fell
-into the street with a din; the next one might
-drop, let us say, a stove, or a small billiard-table,
-from one floor to another.</p>
-
-<p>I arrived at last at the end of my journey,
-having asked myself a thousand times whether
-I should not be pulverised on the way there.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-The worst bit was when I reached the last
-cross-roads. For the second time I asked an
-orderly whether this was the house—pardon,
-the cellar—of Captain Mahot, and for the
-second time I heard an irritated voice reply,
-“Don’t stay there in the middle of the street”;
-but this time I lost the end of the phrase, being
-blinded and deafened. The heavens seemed
-to fall on me. I heard, “Get under cover,”
-and I felt my tympanum shattered. A house
-twenty mètres from me, a large two-storied
-house, seemed to be transformed into a volcano.
-A shell had entered its middle, through
-the roof, and <i>the whole house collapsed into the
-street</i>, accompanied by a formidable fall of
-rafters, bricks and furniture. “You see that,”
-said the orderly in a severe tone; “get into the
-cellar.” I felt just like a little boy.</p>
-
-<p>Five marines had been buried under the
-ruins. A little later I saw their bodies on
-stretchers. What a lamentable death for a
-sailor or soldier!</p>
-
-<p>Captain Mahot said to me, “The billeting
-area of the 22nd Dragoons? Very good, there
-it is,” and he showed me the butt-end of
-“the shepstraat.” I looked at it in
-astonishment, saying to myself, “That?”
-Messina after the earthquake would have
-offered more comfort. Nevertheless I inspected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-the cellars and apportioned them
-amongst the troops, and, by myself this time,
-I returned through the town to my point of
-departure, to meet and conduct Captain
-Vigoureux, whom I found three hundred
-mètres beyond the gates.</p>
-
-<p>This made the fourth time that I had made
-this disquieting journey. I began to feel that
-I had had enough of it, the more so as I had
-walked twelve kilomètres, and, not being
-accustomed to carrying a pack, my back hurt
-me. Clère was quite knocked up, and had
-looked at once so sad and so comic that I did
-not know whether to laugh at him or to pity
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The regiment settled in more or less (rather
-less) in the sector reserved for it. The cellars
-were crowded. My orderly, who was a treasure
-of devotion and very inventive, arranged
-my kit, found me a candle and spread a
-mattress. I was kept on the run, everyone
-called me at once: “A man wanted for the
-guard-room, a liaison officer to see the Captain,
-a man wanted for water fatigue, the quartermaster-sergeant
-wants to know how things
-are here, the 3rd troop have no billets and
-so on.” ... I tried to reply to everyone,
-and my head was like a whirlpool. It was
-impossible to keep the men in, though there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-were strict orders that they were not to leave
-the cellars. They broke out in every direction,
-and, in spite of the shells, they amused
-themselves like children, entering the houses
-at the peril of their lives. One of them
-brought me a stuffed stork; another a cornet
-and a draught screen; my orderly came last
-with a woman’s mantlet, trimmed with lace!</p>
-
-<p>Towards six o’clock the rain of shells ceased.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner not a sound was heard. The
-cold was cruel. I wrapped myself in my greatcoat
-and turned up the collar above my ears.
-I stuck my head well into my fatigue-cap and,
-to amuse myself, I started off on “reconnaissance,”
-armed with an electric lamp. I
-visited twenty gutted houses, and this diversion
-was becoming monotonous when, from a
-particularly damaged court, I heard a somewhat
-uncertain hand playing the piano. The
-air was one of those old waltzes which dragoons
-dote on and which suggest Viennese softness
-combined with the popular taste of the
-Boulevards. There was no light in the yawning
-house. One might have called it the house
-of Usher, at least I thought of that spontaneously,
-for there was something weird about
-those black holes from whence came this sad
-and popular jingle, though the eye was conscious
-of nothing but darkness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>My ideas wandered for a moment, but,
-noticing a ray of light at my feet, I found the
-key of the enigma: some lascars had brought
-the piano down to the cellar to be more at their
-ease. At the foot of some ten steps, or rather
-of a steep slope—I learnt afterwards that, in
-coming down stairs, the piano had done the
-work of a “105”—I had only to pull a canvas
-curtain aside slightly to see what was going
-on inside. It was an affecting scene.</p>
-
-<p>Some ten men lay on mattresses listening
-to the musician, who was seated on a small
-cask, playing the same waltz over and over
-again, probably the only thing he knew, with
-his great clumsy fingers. There was something
-in the look of each of these men analogous
-to that of intoxication from opium, or to
-the fascination on his subject of a mesmerist.
-Above, the shells began to fall again; below,
-they had forgotten the war, because they
-listened to a tune they loved, and, music is
-all-powerful over simple hearts.</p>
-
-<p>I remember this episode as one of the most
-picturesque souvenirs of the war. I stayed
-in that cellar playing to them for more than
-an hour. They were drunk with pleasure and
-with dreams of home. That night I could
-have led them to the assault, even to the
-cannon’s mouth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Next day, the 24th of January, réveillé was
-sounded at three o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>At four o’clock we fell in. We were going
-into the second line trenches.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Our “dug-out” was a little rectangular
-room five mètres long by two mètres wide, cut
-in the stiff soil, stayed up with planks, covered
-with beams and roofed with earth.<a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> It was
-dark as an oven. It was entered by an opening
-so narrow that my pack could not pass,
-and to get to this door, if one could call it a
-door, one had to perform prodigies from the
-roadside onwards to avoid being bogged up to
-the knees. There was a little straw on the
-floor, and the furniture consisted of a chair.</p>
-
-<p>There we were going to take up our residence,
-my seven men and I—Dhuic, Laroche, Ponnery,
-Bobet, Thiérard, Emmanuel and that
-terrible-looking fellow Hurel, with his vulture’s
-face and insane alcoholic eye. I can
-see him now at the bottom of the trench, his
-face emerging from a sheep-skin coat which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-made him look more than ever like a wild
-beast. “If the Bosches catch sight of you,”
-an unindulgent comrade said to him, “they
-will certainly clear out in double-quick
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>We got here from Nieuport at four o’clock
-in the morning. The regiment was closed
-up and the men stumbled at each step over
-the débris of houses, which littered the road.
-Dead silence reigned, and the cold north wind
-of early morning made our eyes water. No
-shells or bullets were flying, but we heard from
-time to time the noise of tiles falling from some
-roof or the din of a falling skirt of wall. Star
-shell were being used, and each time they lit
-up the country they made us jumpy, for we
-presumed that they would be followed by a
-shell only too well placed.</p>
-
-<p>Day dawned, and I came cautiously out of
-my hole to have a look at the country. The
-human imagination never, I imagine, has
-conceived, nor ever can picture, anything
-sadder or more desolate than what I saw. I
-found myself on the road leading from Nieuport
-to Saint-Georges at a point almost
-equally distant from both of these remains of
-towns. The banked-up road meandered over
-an immense muddy plain, necked with pools
-of grey water, now frozen. Nieuport was on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-my right. From here I could not see a single
-house which was, I won’t say intact, but only
-damaged by the bombardment. It was a
-heap of gutted buildings, crumbling walls and
-twisted and broken trees. On my left was
-Saint-Georges, in if anything worse state.
-Nothing remained but a pile of stones, and
-one would never have supposed that a village
-had once existed there.</p>
-
-<p>By the side of my trench there was a freshly
-made grave, that is to say a square of mud
-surmounted by a white cross. The cap of a
-marine lay by its side. I picked it up; it was
-full of brains. The poor fellow must have
-been killed on this very spot, and yesterday
-probably, mown down perhaps by that same
-shell which had pierced two neighbouring
-trees with its murderous fragments.</p>
-
-<p>As I re-entered my trench the sharp clatter
-of our batteries disturbed the air. They were
-placed quite near us, and well hidden, for I
-could see nothing of them. I supposed that
-this was the opening of the ball and that the
-enemy’s reply would not be long in coming.
-Some of my men had come out. I made them
-get back again quickly, and treated Hurel to
-a kick from behind. The men become as
-quiet as sheep when there is danger about.
-One of them warmed me some coffee on a solid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-fuel spirit-lamp, and another let me make a
-pillow of his abdomen.</p>
-
-<p><i>25th January, 1915.</i>—We were relieved at
-5 o’clock and returned safe and sound to
-Nieuport. I found the cellar transformed,
-thanks to Clère and Hénon; there was a light,
-a table covered with a cloth and some crockery.
-They had looted these things from the town,
-and I did not find fault with them for doing so,
-for these articles were safer where they were
-than in the ruins exposed at any moment to
-squalls of shell.</p>
-
-<p>The bombardment had kept on increasing
-until past midday. It was dangerous to go outside.
-Every half-hour I made a round to make
-the men get back into their cellars. We made
-some tea, but the water came from the Yser,
-which was carrying down dead bodies, and
-the tea smelt of death. We could not drink it.</p>
-
-<p>The ration cart arrived to an accompaniment
-of shells. We did not take long to
-unload it.</p>
-
-<p><i>26th January, 1915.</i>—At midday a French
-aëroplane flew over the dunes. It was bombarded
-at times, and it let fall some silver
-trails which sparkled in the sky like the scales
-of fish.<a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>To-night we buried a dragoon belonging to
-the 16th, who had been killed some days before
-in the course of a reconnaissance. The body
-was already at the cemetery, covered with
-earth, and we brought the coffin, carried by
-two soldier grave-diggers. It preceded, by
-some paces, the silent cortège formed by the
-Captain, M. Chatelin, the priest, two non-commissioned
-officers and myself. We crossed
-the canal bridge a little before midnight.</p>
-
-<p>A sentry, petrified by cold, asked us for the
-countersign, which was given, and we went on
-our way, avoiding the white patches of moonlight
-which might have betrayed our presence.</p>
-
-<p>The rusted gate of the cemetery creaked
-lamentably as we entered onto the holy ground
-that the shells had failed to respect. They
-had hollowed monstrous and gaping graves
-that yawned under our feet, laying bare, completely
-or partially, the skeletons and corpses.
-A stiff north wind was blowing, bending the
-slim shrubs and agitating the grass and the
-rotten crosses as in a danse macabre. It was
-the devil of a night, and I admit that we all
-shivered, preferring the risks of a charge in
-full daylight to this sinister and furtive work.
-Every two or three minutes a star shell traced
-a lovely curve of diamonds in the sky, and,
-instinctively, we put our heads down in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-silence. Four men dug the grave. We uncovered
-the poor body, which had been covered
-with a thin layer of earth. It had been
-wrapped up in sacking, like the big quarters
-of beef that are unloaded from the supply
-carts when rations are given out.</p>
-
-<p>It was the most lamentable thing I have
-ever seen.</p>
-
-<p>Everything was hurried through in a few
-minutes. The coffin was too big. The Captain
-put into it an envelope containing the
-name of the soldier who was going to rest there
-between the lines, and who would be crooned
-to sleep by the noise of shells.</p>
-
-<p>The wind shook the surplice of the priest
-who recited the prayers, and I heard only a
-confused murmur of odd phrases, for the wind
-carried off the rest. We had to hurry, for
-the quiet moments were rare, and we returned
-through the dark deserted streets in impressive
-silence.</p>
-
-<p><i>Nieuport, 29th January, 1915.</i>—To form an
-exact idea of what this very peculiar war is like
-one must have lived the twenty-four hours that
-I have just passed through—a bitterly cold
-winter’s day and night.</p>
-
-<p>We set out to occupy the first line trenches
-at 4 o’clock. The night was clear and frosty,
-and the stars glittered like splinters of ice.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-A clear and cold moon lit up the immensity of
-the ravaged and desolated plain, making the
-ice glitter, silhouetting the traitorous and
-dangerous ruins, betraying our position by
-the glint from our bayonets, while the frost-bound
-ground conducted sound to a great
-distance.</p>
-
-<p>As far as the post from which the second-line
-trenches were commanded the road was good
-and the distance easy; but from there onwards
-the carrying out of reliefs became hazardous.
-We marched in single file, holding our bayonets
-in our left hands to prevent them from
-knocking against our rifles, raising our feet
-and going on tiptoe, as in a sick-room. The
-road became atrociously bad, it being impossible
-to repair it owing to the nearness of
-the enemy. Nothing was wanting, ruts, holes,
-fencing wire, overturned fencing posts, etc.
-The squadron occupied some trenches on the
-right. These were arrow-shaped, and were the
-nearest trenches to the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Seventeen of us held the main trench, and
-in an adjacent one were two marines with
-a small pom-pom trench gun. These were
-called trenches; in reality they consisted of
-sloping beams laid against an embankment of
-stones and sand-bags. We had to crawl into
-them, and, once in, we were condemned to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-immobility. We could not even sit down
-without bending our heads. Little by little
-the cold took hold of us, beginning with our
-feet, and we felt as if we were transformed into
-blocks of ice.</p>
-
-<p>The wind brought us a suggestive odour,
-which mingled with the smell of rotting litter
-on which we were lying. We felt inclined to
-vomit. Day came and brought the need for
-absolute immobility. It was impossible to
-risk oneself outside the trench, even flat on
-one’s belly, until night-time. M. Chatelin
-and I shivered side by side, and inspected the
-horizon through field-glasses. On the left
-we saw some suspicious smoke, and the same
-distance off, on the right, we found the explanation
-of the stink we had smelt on our
-arrival. A score of German corpses were there,
-caught between their barbed-wire entanglement
-and ours, and destined to rot there for an
-undetermined period. They were in all sorts
-of poses and horribly mutilated. Some bodies
-were without heads, some heads and arms were
-lying separated and all the bodies were in
-convulsive postures. A number of crows were
-disputing their bodies, as were some half-wild
-cats, which refused the meat we offered them—a
-pretty sight indeed; happily there were no
-French bodies amongst them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The artillery opened the ball about eight
-o’clock. We were almost in the middle, and
-well below the trajectory of the shells. We
-saw some shells strike their target—some
-farms, that fell to pieces—but many missed.
-That, however, was of no account.</p>
-
-<p>From the direction of Lombaertzyde a
-sudden thunder resounded, and for the whole
-of the afternoon the earth was shaken by a
-bombardment which nothing could describe.
-To represent it one must think of a furious sea,
-an express at full speed, lowing of cattle, cat-calls,
-creakings; one must think of a mixture
-of all these sounds forming a sort of savage
-harmony. In the rays of the rising sun Lombaertzyde
-was crowned with plumes of black
-and white smoke, made by the bursting shells.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing else happened till evening. The
-night was less monotonous, for, in spite of
-the pitiless moonlight, one could go out. We
-looked on with much interest at a raid by two
-aëroplanes, which marked down an enemy’s
-trench and a supply convoy with luminous
-bombs. An instant afterwards the “75’s”
-hit hard. Towards midnight seven shots were
-let off from the listening post. I said to myself,
-“At last, here comes the attack.” I
-shook up my men, benumbed with cold and
-sleep; but dead silence again fell.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was freezing hard enough to split stones.
-Over a surface of several kilomètres the newly
-formed ice cracked and made one think that
-an advance was taking place. Little Duval,
-in a moment of hallucination, fired on the
-dead bodies, mistaking them for skirmishers.</p>
-
-<p>From time to time an imperceptible breeze
-distinctly brought us the sound of the enemy
-at work. We heard the blows of mallets,
-used doubtless to consolidate his wire entanglements.
-I made our freezing men do
-the same.</p>
-
-<p>M. Chatelin and I walked up and down or
-made reconnaissances simply for the sake of
-keeping on the move. On the plain I stumbled
-on the body of a dragoon between two frozen
-pools. His head was wrapped up in hay, but
-he was frozen so hard that we could not move
-him. I tried to lift him by his belt, but it
-broke in my hands. Two cats, a white one
-and an Angora, seemed annoyed at being
-deranged. Oh, the horror of it!</p>
-
-<p>Décatoire had his feet frost-bitten and was
-unable to walk. M. Chatelin and I returned
-to the trench, and, huddled up one against the
-other, we passed the remaining hours of that
-trying night in shivering.</p>
-
-<p>At five o’clock the 5th Chasseurs relieved us.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" /></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Long weeks followed, during which the
-cavalry, become useless on account of the
-time of year and the novel trench warfare,
-remained inactive far from the front in muddy
-rest-camps.</p>
-
-<p>Officers and men were sent by turns into the
-trenches for eight or ten days at a time, being
-taken there in motor omnibuses.</p>
-
-<p>When we returned to regimental headquarters
-we led an ordinary barrack life there.
-The admirable unity which made us all
-brothers in the firing line had a tendency to
-relax in face of the pettiness of ordinary
-military duty. Peace-time jealousies showed
-themselves during our forced inactivity, when
-our tour of service did not call us far from our
-horses to dismounted fighting. For this
-reason, and as I was desirous of living again
-and renewing acquaintance with those intoxicating
-hours to which one becomes accustomed
-as a necessary factor in life, preferring,
-in short, to perform the duties of a foot-soldier
-with real infantry men, knowing their duties
-and suitably equipped, rather than to degenerate
-into a dismounted dragoon, I asked
-to be appointed 2nd Lieutenant in an infantry
-regiment as soon as the ministerial circular concerning
-cavalry non-commissioned appeared.
-Fifteen days later my request was granted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I was gazetted 2nd Lieutenant on February
-3rd. The 22nd were at Volckerinkove. M.
-de Vesian told me of my appointment, and a
-few hours later I was sent with the others who
-had been recently promoted—Fuéminville,
-Marin and Paris—to the headquarters of the
-5th Division, and from there to Poperinghe
-to the headquarters of the 9th Army Corps.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of my decision, taken freely of my
-own accord, I was very sorry to leave the 22nd.
-It was for me a page turned over, something
-finished. I passed down the ranks and shook
-hands with all those comrades by whose side I
-had marched, slept and fought for six months,
-and then, without looking behind me, I set off
-on horseback on a fine sunny day.</p>
-
-<p>Having been posted to the 90th Regiment of
-the Line, I followed a course of instruction at
-Vlamertinghe, with the newly gazetted officers
-from Saint-Cyr. After fifteen days of a monotonous
-and tranquil life the class broke up on
-the 21st. On the morning of the 22nd I rejoined
-the 90th, and the same evening we left
-to go into action.</p>
-
-<p>In February I was again in the trenches,
-those which I occupied affording me great
-amusement. We left at half-past eight in the
-morning, and we had eighteen kilomètres to
-march. At Ypres we made a few minutes’<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-halt on the edge of the pavement before the
-celebrated Cloth Hall. I looked eagerly
-around me, wishing to fix the sights which met
-my eyes. They were intensely picturesque
-and of peculiar interest. When the war is over
-shall we ever again see such a picture? It is
-not likely.</p>
-
-<p>Night had come. It was a time propitious
-for reliefs, hence everywhere feverish activity
-reigned. All lights in the town were masked.
-Under a moon, luminous as shining chalk, the
-cathedral and the Cloth Hall were of a
-dazzling white, which made the gaping wounds
-which the shells have made in the stonework
-all the blacker and more apparent.</p>
-
-<p>The scudding clouds masked the moon for a
-moment, and everything faded from view, or
-rather, as in a kaleidoscope, the ever-changing
-shadows changed the forms of the ruins.
-Sudden beams of light rested for a moment
-like furtive phantoms on the stonework, to
-disappear a second later. On the edge of the
-horizon star shell were being thrown up,
-pitting the night with a white or green fixed
-star, or appearing as a diamond spray held by
-some invisible hand, to sparkle a moment and
-then vanish. The silence was cut by the
-regular cadence of the march of the various
-companies towards the neighbouring sectors.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They debouched from every cross-road.
-There were French, Belgians and English,
-the latter whistling in chorus, “It’s a long
-long way to Tipperary,” and keeping step to
-it. As soon as they saw us by common accord
-they started the <i>Marseillaise</i>—a charming
-courtesy—and strange and rapid dialogues
-were exchanged between the “poilus” and the
-“Tommies” in a language so untranslatable,
-so indescribable, that most of the men burst
-out laughing at hearing themselves speak.
-Then some guns crossed the <i>place</i> at the trot
-making a deafening noise.</p>
-
-<p>Every unit had its destination, its appointed
-place and perfect order prevailed. Those
-back from the trenches are glad at the prospect
-of rest; those going there are light-hearted
-also, and so the active ant-heap swarms with
-busy people.</p>
-
-<p>From time to time shell would fall in the
-town, crumbling still further the marvellous
-Cloth Hall or causing irreparable damage to
-the humble house of some inoffensive civilian.
-It was stupid and useless.</p>
-
-<p>From Zonnebeck onwards the ground was
-swept by rifle fire, and we had to cross a horseshoe
-sector exposed to fire from all sides. It
-was impossible to find cover, and the relief was
-extremely difficult and dangerous. Then it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-was that I made acquaintance with the new
-and the unknown.</p>
-
-<p>New trenches, new customs. We groped
-our way through a little pine wood. Every
-now and then a bullet struck the trunk of a
-tree with such a loud and sharp sound that the
-drum of one’s ear was all but torn. Insensibly
-the company advanced along the cutting
-which got deeper and deeper under ground.
-Soon one was in up to the shoulders, and the
-deeper the communication trench got the
-deeper we got into mud and water. I pretended
-to myself that we were figures in some
-“attraction” at Luna Park or the Magic City.
-We were in a labyrinth which turned to the
-right and left, doubled back on itself and got
-deeper and more difficult at each step, while
-“the bees” passed whistling over our heads.</p>
-
-<p>There was a sudden stop, just as I had given
-up hope of ever seeing the end. The section in
-front of me emerged into a trench, and a ray
-of light fell on the wet clay at my feet. A
-form leaned out of a hole, and a voice said to
-me, “This way, sir; this is your command
-post.” Hardly had I entered when the curtain
-which masked the door fell again, to shut
-in the light. I found myself in a tiny square
-room constructed entirely of rough logs, that
-is to say of the trunks of pine trees. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-buried under a mountain of earth, very solidly
-beaten down, and it had a brick fireplace in
-which a good coke fire blazed (within 100
-mètres of the enemy). There was a bed, or
-rather a straw mattress, which exactly filled
-up the middle of this “casba.” The other
-half was taken up by a stand on which were
-ranged miscellaneous objects—gum boots, tin
-boxes, grenades, petards, flares, etc. One
-could not stand up, but lying down one felt
-like a king.</p>
-
-<p>The network of trenches which unites the
-sections was so complicated that I lost myself
-in it every time. In the early morning I made
-a reconnaissance of the neighbouring sections.
-At places the parapet became so low that,
-even by stooping, one was not completely
-under cover. My presence was hailed by a
-salvo which passed whistling over my head.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><i>24th February, 1915.</i>—It snowed last night.
-The trenches are white and my “poilus” are
-cold. And so am I! A man of my section
-has just been wounded in the head by a bullet
-which ricochetted off a bayonet. But, generally
-speaking, the Germans leave us in peace.</p>
-
-<p><i>Six o’clock.</i>—My trench has been demolished
-in part by a “105.” We shall have to work all
-night to repair it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>26th February, 1915.</i>—Under cover of fog I
-left my shelter and had some wire entanglements
-made. The men were able to work
-without drawing fire. <i>Per contra</i> a German
-patrol came exploring, counting on the fog for
-concealment. Having arrived opposite Règues’s
-section, they must have lost their way
-and pitched straight on to us. We hit three
-of them. All the morning, fifty mètres off, we
-saw them wriggling and raising their legs, and
-we heard them crying out. It was impossible
-to go to bring them in, the Germans would
-have fired on us. One of them signalled that
-he was ready to surrender. He put up his
-hands and cried, “Kamarad, Kamarad,” so
-he can’t be badly wounded. We could see
-him rise, unbuckle his belt and throw off his
-pack. My men, very pleased, were ready to
-receive him with open arms, but he regained
-his own lines at a bound. We let off a
-salvo, but the “Kamarad” had already disappeared.
-The two others kept on wriggling
-like worms.</p>
-
-<p><i>2nd March, 1915.</i>—I am occupying a new
-sector, not nearly so good as the first; trench
-fallen in, full of water, communications difficult,
-no comfortable command post; I sleep
-on the hard ground in the cold. My predecessor,
-when giving me my instructions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-warned me that for two days past we had
-been badly shelled.</p>
-
-<p><i>3rd March.</i>—At 8.30 the first shell, a “105,”
-came over and pitched some mètres from my
-post. I was almost thrown out of the dug-out;
-earth and mud flew in all directions, and shell
-fragments fell with a sharp noise. Some
-moments after a second one came over, then a
-third and then, for three-quarters of an hour,
-they fell without ceasing.</p>
-
-<p>All the shells fell on my left. The men
-were a little pale in face of this form of danger,
-against which there is nothing to be done.
-After a quarter of an hour the trench became
-untenable, the shelters, the parapets, the dug-out,
-were all tumbling down. Sometimes the
-shock and the displacement of air threw us
-in bunches one against the other.</p>
-
-<p>I remained at the command post until the
-next dug-out was knocked to pieces, burying a
-man under the ruins. I then caused the whole
-section to be evacuated, except by a watcher,
-and I asked hospitality from a 2nd lieutenant
-of machine-guns.</p>
-
-<p>At last the storm calmed down and I sent
-everyone back to his place. The trench was a
-veritable timber yard, and rifles and mess
-tins littered the ground. The parapet by the
-side of my shelter was knocked down level<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-with the ground, leaving a gaping opening
-that we must repair to-night.</p>
-
-<p><i>Six o’clock.</i>—After the tension of such a
-morning I heard with pleasure the cry of
-“Stand to your arms.” Each man flew to his
-rifle; they too, I think, were pleased. I had
-gone back to see my comrade the machine-gunner,
-but it did not take me long to cover
-the thirty or forty mètres of trench which
-separated me from my men.</p>
-
-<p>How good a thing it was to hear this crackle
-of rifle fire after the disquieting row of the
-“105’s”! “Stand to the machine-gun.” I
-saw with pleasure the four men at their gun,
-and I admired the graceful movement of the
-man who crouched to fire and who, unconsciously,
-assumed the posture of an animal
-ready to spring. Unfortunately the enemy
-were not “for it.” At our first shots the
-Germans got back into their trenches.</p>
-
-<p><i>27th March.</i>—We arrived yesterday in the
-second line, or rather in reserve. The huts are
-in a pine wood, surrounded with ridges. We
-arrived by moonlight. The bullets passed high
-and struck the tops of the trees. These huts
-are in the form of a redskin’s wigwam, made
-of earth and sacking. To-day we went hunting
-with revolvers and we killed a rabbit! We
-cooked it ourselves and enjoyed it for dinner.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>28th March.</i>—The enemy leaves us in peace.
-Not a shell, not the least little “77.” We
-went hunting again and brought back a
-pheasant. After supper Maugenot and I
-intend to go and play cards with Captain
-Lametz, a little in front of our trenches. We
-must cross a glacis in front of the ridge; the
-bullets come over there head high. We slipped
-along the edge of the wood to take advantage
-of the lie of the land; and then all at once we
-said, “So much the worse,” and we crossed
-the field at its widest part. We jumped the
-parapet of an old trench and we arrived at the
-1st company. Captain Lametz has his post
-buried in a wood. We played, seated cross-legs
-on the ground, by candlelight. The rest
-of the post were asleep, rolled up in blankets.
-The moonlight peered into the dug-out each
-time that the wind blew aside the canvas of
-the tent. In coming back Maugenot and I
-were almost stopped by bullets, chance bullets,
-be it understood, which fell with regularity
-and in disconcerting abundance, often, as they
-struck the ground, hitting some shell fragments
-which would ring like glasses knocked
-together.</p>
-
-<p>To save time Maugenot suggested taking a
-short cut, and he succeeded in entangling us
-in an inextricable network of barbed wire. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-was too late to draw back, we had to jump and
-crawl. We arrived, however, at the hut safe
-and sound, but our great-coats were badly
-torn.</p>
-
-<p><i>29th March.</i>—A man had been killed some
-little time ago. While I write I am looking at
-the cortège which has brought him back. The
-body, a little bent, is carried on an improvised
-stretcher by four men and is wrapped up in the
-canvas of a tent, tinted red where it has
-touched his wound. The little procession
-advances with difficulty in the narrow communication
-trench, and every two or three
-steps a drop of blood falls and stains the
-ground like a star, brown-red, and the cortège
-may be traced by these as far as the grave.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Such was the daily life of almost the whole
-army during the winter months. Though
-monotonous, I have thought it well to transcribe
-these few passages from my daily
-journal, for they are human documents. In
-spring the benumbed army stirred itself,
-stretched its legs and awoke to the fact that a
-new era was about to begin. The change took
-place with the greatest mystery. News, come
-no one knew whence, began to circulate.</p>
-
-<p>When we left Belgium on the 30th March
-some extravagant hypotheses took shape.
-Haute-Alsace, the Argonne, the Dardanelles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-and Turkey were spoken of. The least
-bellicose would have it that we were to rest
-near Lyons; but no one knew anything, and
-each day we went farther south-west, being
-ignorant even of the billets we would occupy
-that evening.</p>
-
-<p>So we passed Saint-Omer, Arneke, Pilens,
-Blingel, Frévent, Avesne-le-Comte, etc....
-and we approached Arras, whose town hall
-and belfry we saw one morning profiled in a
-blue haze against a spectral sky.</p>
-
-<p>On passing through Arneke on the 8th of
-April we marched past General Foch headed
-by our band. When the regiment had passed
-by he sent for the officers. We were all
-presented to him, and he had us formed up
-in a circle to say a few words to us.</p>
-
-<p>Listening to the General was like experiencing
-a species of shock. He hammered out his
-words and scanned his phrases in a manner
-which made us feel ill at ease. His speech was
-a flagellation, and we felt a sort of moral
-abaissement as a result of it. His look seized
-upon and held us. He brought us to bay and
-then crushed us.</p>
-
-<p>First he spoke to us of our mission, of the
-utility of training the men in view of the
-coming fatigues. “Train their arms, train
-their legs, train their muscles, train their backs.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-You possess fine qualities, draw on them from
-the soles of your feet, if necessary, but get
-them into your heads. I have no use for
-people who are said to be animated by good
-intentions. Good intentions are not enough;
-I want people who are determined to get there
-and who do.”</p>
-
-<p>There are shreds of his phrases that remain
-graven on my memory, curt short phrases,
-punctuated by a sharp gesture, or by an indescribable
-look of the eye: “If you want to
-overturn that wall, don’t blunt your bayonet
-point on it; what is necessary is to break it,
-shatter it, overturn it, stamp on it and walk
-over the ruins, <i>for we are going to walk over
-ruins</i>. If we have not already done so”—and
-here he suddenly lowered his voice and gave
-it an intonation almost mysterious—“<i>it is
-because we were not ready</i>. We lacked explosives,
-bombs, grenades, minerwerfers,
-which now we have. And we are going to be
-able to strike, <i>for we have a stock</i> such as you
-cannot even have an idea of. We are going to
-swamp the enemy, strike him everywhere at
-once: in his defences, in his morale, harass
-him, madden him, crush him; we will march
-over nothing but ruins.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he went off quite naturally, without
-any theatrical effect. He said just what he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-had to say, and he did not add a word too
-many. He saluted us: “I hope, gentlemen,
-to have the honour of seeing you again.” A
-moment later his motor-car was carrying him
-off towards Cassel, leaving us deeply stirred
-and impressed by his spoken words and no less
-influenced by his personality.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</h2>
-
-<p class="subhead">THE ATTACK AT LOOS</p>
-
-<p class="center">9th May, 1915</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">On April the 29th, ten days before the
-attack, we were taking our last great
-rest at Noyelette in a setting which resembled
-a scene from a comic opera. The apple trees
-were in full bloom and the blossom fell like
-snow. In the radiant peace of early spring we
-lay on the scented grass, listening to the
-ripples on the little stream. For many of us
-it was destined to be a last pleasure and a last
-caress which Nature was pleased to lavish on
-those of her children who were about to die.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><i>6th May: In the first line.</i>—We relieved the
-256th in the first-line trenches near Mazingarbe,
-on the road to Lens. That relief by a
-reserve regiment confirmed the rumour of an
-offensive. As we passed through Nœux-les-Mines
-and Mazingarbe even the civilians said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-to us, “Sure enough you are going to attack,
-aren’t you? See to it that you push them
-back once and for all!”</p>
-
-<p><i>7th May.</i>—The great moment, so long
-expected, has come. To-morrow the 10th
-Army is going to attack on the Lille-Arras
-front. My battalion is to advance straight
-forward with Hill 70 for objective on this
-side of Loos. I made a reconnaissance of the
-sector. To-night I am going to inspect the
-German barbed-wire entanglements with
-Stivalet. I am quite calm and very well
-prepared; my only fear is that I may do
-badly and commit some fault. That the men
-will go forward, I am sure. My battalion
-forms the first line, the 2nd and the 3rd come
-next, then the 125th and the 68th line regiments,
-while the 256th and the 281st are on
-the right and left and are to converge to a
-point.</p>
-
-<p><i>Two o’clock p.m.</i>—The French guns are
-beginning to shell the enemy. The batteries
-are landing shell just in front of our trench
-and so near that I am beginning to think that
-there must be an error in the range. The
-mere fact of having to wait is a torture, to
-know nothing and to say, “Is it to be in five
-minutes, this evening or to-morrow?” My
-heart beats hard and my throat is dry. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-would give anything for the order to attack,
-for I know that then I should at once recover
-my calm.</p>
-
-<p>The four sections have orders to advance to
-their front towards the Lens road, to take the
-German trenches and then make for Hill 70
-by way of Loos. I distributed some asphyxiating
-bombs, hand grenades to my section, and
-little bags containing cotton previously soaked
-in a bisulphite and which must be dipped
-again into lime water at the last moment and
-introduced into the mouth and nostrils to
-neutralise the effects of asphyxiating gas.</p>
-
-<p><i>Four o’clock.</i>—The shelling is still going on,
-but it has lost the unheard-of violence with
-which it started. The remainder of the guns
-are to arrive to-night and consequently the
-attack cannot take place before to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>Everyone is at work; the Engineers are
-making steps and finishing saps; Artillerymen
-walk about in the communication trenches
-with range-finders with which they accomplish
-mysterious rites, asking me politely to
-move as I am in the way. Officers of all
-battalions are reconnoitring the sector, and the
-men are sewing bits of white canvas on their
-packs so that they may be recognized at a
-distance by our artillery. One would say
-that a costume play was in course of being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-mounted and that the last preparations were
-being made for the opening performance.</p>
-
-<p>At ten minutes to nine I returned to my
-command post. I examined my revolver
-carefully, took off my tunic and put my money
-and my papers in my trousers pocket. I
-slipped my cloak on over my shirt, put my
-revolver in the inside pocket and I got out
-of the trench. I gave a last warning to my
-men not to fire, even if they heard firing.</p>
-
-<p>Stivalet was there; we got over the parapet
-at nine o’clock exactly, and we had chosen a
-bit of known ground between two <i>chevaux de
-frise</i>. It was very dark; scarcely had we
-started than a star shell lit up the sky. We
-threw ourselves flat on the ground on our
-faces. I felt the wet grass and moist soil on
-my cheeks and on the palms of my hands. I
-listened to my breathing and I could not feel
-the beatings of my heart. I was perfectly
-calm.</p>
-
-<p>For two or three minutes we groped our way
-across the wire of the <i>chevaux de frise</i>. When
-we had passed it we came on an old network of
-rusted barbed wire all broken up by shell fire,
-and our feet and cloaks got entangled in it.
-We crawled on our hands and knees and each
-time that a star shell burst we threw ourselves
-flat, as before.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The critical moment had arrived. Stivalet
-hailed me in a low voice, “This is a rotten trip
-we are making.” He whispered in my ear,
-“It is too dark, we shall see nothing.” I said
-to him, “All right, you stay here, I am going
-farther on.”</p>
-
-<p>I crawled on alone. I felt perturbed at being
-alone in the black night with all these rifle
-muzzles pointed at me. I was at the mercy of
-a flare. I went on as well as I could, without a
-sound, trying to blend with the ground. I
-went on for I don’t know how long or how far.
-Then I looked up and I saw the German entanglements
-close beside me. I distinctly
-heard talking going on; unfortunately I did
-not understand a word of it. There was no
-object in delaying further, my mission was
-over. I had seen their defences; they were
-only <i>chevaux de frise</i>, united by barbed wire.
-As I turned, two rockets went off and crossed.
-I thought that I was lost and I stayed still
-with my head on my arms and my face to the
-ground, biting the grass; but nothing happened;
-not a shot was fired.</p>
-
-<p>I started off then to crawl with a speed
-which astonished myself, using my feet,
-shoulders and elbows to help me along. I
-arrived at the spot where I had left Stivalet,
-and in no time we had jumped back into our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-trench. My clothes were so caked with mud
-that they stuck to me like a jersey. I made a
-report to Maugenot, whom I found asleep.
-On the table of the dug-out was a note from
-the Major. The attack was to take place to-morrow.
-The day would be given over to a
-minute reconnaissance of the sector, and
-everything would be ready for the attack, to
-take place probably during the night of the
-8th-9th.</p>
-
-<p><i>8th May, 1915.</i>—Unless counter-ordered
-the attack is to take place to-morrow at six
-in the morning, after four consecutive hours
-of shell fire. There are a thousand guns
-behind us, one for every fifty mètres of terrain
-to be battered.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing happened during the morning.
-New bombs were given out, and each man was
-to have at least one. From two in the afternoon
-the artillery corrected its shooting,
-which is equivalent in ordinary times to a
-very violent bombardment.</p>
-
-<p>From my parapet I followed the phases of
-this correction. The redan on the Lens road
-blew up at two o’clock; the defences before
-my trench were knocked to bits. At this
-moment, 6.40, the artillery fired a little short.
-The men in the trench could not get on with
-their dinners; they were covered with earth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-and little bits of steel, and the water fatigue
-had some splinters sent among them—two
-men of the 5th were wounded.</p>
-
-<p>I have got for my section 7 asphyxiating
-bombs, 9 Beszzi bombs, 48 hand grenades and
-5 terrible chedite bombs, which I have primed
-myself, and of which I intend to carry two.</p>
-
-<p>What a carnage is being prepared for to-morrow!
-I remembered the prophecy of
-Father Johannes, “Only the great princes and
-the great captains will be buried; there will
-be so many dead and wounded that the bodies
-will be burnt on pyres whose flames will mount
-to the skies.”</p>
-
-<p><i>9th May, 1915, 4.30 a.m.</i>—I am ordered to
-line up my men. A company of Engineers has
-joined us in order to excavate a communicating
-trench as soon as we have cleared out. Far
-away on the left—probably from the English
-lines—the guns are firing without interruption.
-It sounds like a hoarse roar.</p>
-
-<p>5.15 and no order to attack has been
-received; it seems long in coming.</p>
-
-<p>The guns were still thundering on the left,
-but ours were silent. I would give a lot to
-know!</p>
-
-<p><i>Seven o’clock.</i>—Orders have come; we are to
-attack at 10 o’clock precisely. There is to be
-no signal; all our watches have been synchronised.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-We are all to start together from
-our trenches at the same time. We shelled the
-enemy violently for an hour, but, as that was
-too little, we are going to shell them again
-from 9 to 10. The big winged bombs made a
-thunderous din; we could see them rise in the
-air like shuttlecocks and fall lightly to earth
-again. They looked as though they were going
-to rebound, but they burst at once, each like
-a miniature volcano in eruption.</p>
-
-<p>For the second time I was astonished to
-find myself so calm. I could not realise that
-in so short a time (what are two hours?) there
-was going to be a wild rush, a hand-to-hand
-fight, hideous and disfigured corpses everywhere,
-and perhaps death for me. I had only
-the fixed idea that everything was going well.
-I was acutely conscious that I was responsible
-for the lives of fifty men.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" /></div>
-
-<p>Though wounded at the beginning of the
-attack, and sole survivor of all the officers of
-the company and of a neighbouring company
-of the 114th regiment of the line, I was, nevertheless,
-still able to carry on till 8 o’clock at
-night.</p>
-
-<p>At 9 o’clock <span class="smcapuc">A.M.</span> I precipitated the ammoniacal
-solution and all the men soaked their pads
-in it. Everyone had his bomb. While I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-finishing these last preparations shells and
-bombs seemed to crush the enemy’s lines.
-The noise was deafening and the smoke
-suffocating and blinding. I should like to
-shut my eyes and pass in review each scene
-which followed, forgetting none. In a few
-moments I consider that I lived the sum total
-of a lifetime.</p>
-
-<p>At a quarter to ten all were lined up, pack
-on back. The section of Engineers stuck to
-the communicating trench so as not to hinder
-our movements. I placed myself in the centre
-and took out my watch; still ten minutes to
-go! I called in a loud voice, “Five minutes,”
-“Two minutes.” I had a stealthy look at the
-men and I saw on their faces so tense an
-expression, something so fixed, that they
-seemed to be in a trance.</p>
-
-<p>As I cried, “Only half a minute more!” I
-saw the left of the company starting off; they
-had some mètres start of me. At all costs we
-must keep touch, so I shouted, “Forward,”
-and ran straight at the German line, without
-seeing or hearing anything. I had a vague
-consciousness that the “75” guns had not
-yet increased their range, but we were no
-longer our own masters. Thousands of men,
-their minds fixed on the same purpose, rushed
-forward blindly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As I arrived at the first German entanglement
-I turned round. Everyone had followed;
-the men were at my heels. A second later we
-were leaping over the parapet of the enemy’s
-first line. I yelled, “Don’t get into the communicating
-trench; the trench is empty, except
-for a few stragglers; get on and seize the
-second line.”</p>
-
-<p>The blue cloaks bounded forward together
-and the bayonets shone under a burning sun,
-for there was not a cloud in the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Now, with our heads down, we entered the
-zone of Hell.</p>
-
-<p>There is no word, sound or colour that can
-give an idea of it. To prevent our advance the
-Germans had made a barrier of fire, and we
-had to go through a sort of suffocating vapour.
-We went through sheaves of fire, from which
-burst forth percussion and time shells at such
-short intervals that the soil opened every
-moment under our feet. I saw, as in a dream,
-tiny silhouettes, drunk with battle, charging
-through the smoke.</p>
-
-<p>The terrified Germans, caught between their
-own artillery fire and our bayonets, sprang up
-from everywhere; some cried for mercy; others
-turned round like madmen, whilst others again
-threw themselves upon us to drive us back.</p>
-
-<p>Shells had made ravages in the ranks. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-saw groups of five or six crushed and mown
-down. I caught a momentary glimpse of Petit,
-the corporal, at the head of a group of men,
-and I forgot everything else and shouted to
-him, “Go it: bravo, Petit!” His Herculean
-figure, moulded in a woollen jersey, was
-standing on a hillock, wielding his rifle like a
-windmill. Careless of shot and shell, his
-terrible bayonet running with blood, he seemed
-the very incarnation of the war. All my life
-I shall see him, bareheaded, covered with
-blood and sweat, leading the others on to
-carnage; and the blue sky behind.</p>
-
-<p>My section and I kept pressing on, and we
-were now within a few mètres of the last of the
-German lines. At every step grey uniforms
-now surged. I discharged my revolver to
-right and left. Cries and moans rose and fell
-in the infernal din of that struggle.</p>
-
-<p>In a second we should be occupying the
-enemy’s last positions. What remained of my
-section followed me blindly. I put my foot
-on the parapet and cried, “Forward, lads,
-here we are!” then I felt as though someone
-had suddenly given me a brutal blow in the
-back with the butt-end of a rifle. I let go my
-revolver and the chedite bomb, which I had
-in my left hand, and I rolled to the bottom of
-a shell hole.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I was hit!</p>
-
-<p>In a flash I remembered a phrase of my
-orderly’s, overheard by chance yesterday, “If
-anything happens to the little lieutenant he
-won’t be left behind,” and a moment later
-this brave fellow, himself wounded in the arm,
-was at my side, and with two or three others,
-carried me to the trench. In front of us nothing
-was left, not a defence, not a wire entanglement.
-We had carried the German lines
-to their uttermost limits.</p>
-
-<p>We at once set to work to dig ourselves in,
-whilst the men who were not digging kept a
-look-out. We asked ourselves from what
-direction the Germans would try to outflank
-us, for we knew nothing about the trenches
-that had been carried. All at once I saw two
-of them coming out of a little communicating
-trench with their bayonets at the charge. I
-blew out the brains of the first; the second, a
-veritable lad of about sixteen, had a terrified
-expression which I shall never forget. He
-yelled, and his strident cries made me shudder;
-but my pistol went off, and he fell on the
-ground on his face.</p>
-
-<p>During the whole of the attack I had not for
-an instant seen my company commander, and
-I wondered where he was. My colour-sergeant
-told me that the Major and he had been killed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-that Lieutenant Desessart was badly wounded
-and that Lieutenant Règues and I were the
-only officers left in the company. Règues
-took command, and, seated on the parapet,
-superintended the preparations for defence.
-The guns were silent.... Alone the whistle
-of bullets was heard, and warning cries were
-raised: “Look out on the left; look out on the
-right; they are coming from such and such a
-trench.”</p>
-
-<p>Then a bullet struck Règues fair on the
-head. He rolled over at my feet, and the sole
-command devolved on me. I myself was
-wounded; the blood was running from my
-back, and my movements were paralysed.
-My men wanted me to go back, but I stiffened
-myself up with the energy of despair. Someone
-passed me a flask of ether and I propped
-myself against the parapet. I was alone in
-command; I had all my faculties about me,
-and I determined to stay there whatever
-happened.</p>
-
-<p>Up till two o’clock nothing did happen. We
-feverishly dug shelters to fire from, and made
-traverses to protect the trench which was in
-part open to enfilade. As far as the road
-everything had gone well, but, from that
-point on, connection was broken. The rest of
-the 90th were behind and parallel with me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-some mètres off; the Germans there had
-retained their positions. Though we could
-not see them, they were there quite near,
-concealed, gone to earth but ready to spring
-on us.</p>
-
-<p>Lying almost helpless at the foot of the
-trench I gave my orders, which the men, one
-and all, carried out with remarkable presence
-of mind. Enervating hours slowly slipped by.
-The sun scorched the trench; some of the
-bodies took on a deep yellow colour, and their
-wounds were horrible.</p>
-
-<p>To stop our reinforcements the Germans
-pitched shells behind the first lines. In the
-communicating trenches, where the Engineers,
-the 125th and the 68th, were massed, they
-must, I felt, be having a hot time. Even in the
-trench shells fell both before and behind. I
-had three men killed. Grossain had his head
-carried away.</p>
-
-<p>With midday came some relaxation. Work
-eased off a little; the men rummaged in their
-haversacks; Pillard brought me some cigars,
-Henry Clays, and some Egyptian cigarettes.
-Mayet dressed my wound in a summary
-fashion, passing his hand through the rent in
-my cloak. The opening was as big as my fist.
-I suffered horrible pain.</p>
-
-<p>The sergeant and I, nevertheless, explored<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-the captured sector. The trenches have been
-knocked in by shell. In certain places it was
-open ground for 25 mètres; in other parts
-corpses obstructed the way. As we went by,
-some Germans, lying on their backs right in
-the sun, opened their eyes and said, “Ich
-durste.” We had no time to stop, the guns
-might open fire again at any moment, and it
-was essential to find some means of communicating
-with the Colonel.</p>
-
-<p>When I got back to my men I found nothing
-changed. Mayet, fine fellow that he is, was
-keeping a good look-out. The trench which
-barred the road was consolidated, and we
-placed a machine-gun in it. I took under my
-command a company on my left, as it had no
-officer left.</p>
-
-<p>At half-past one a kind of agitation, a
-tremor, ran from man to man, as if the whole
-company had received an electric shock; yet
-there was no cry, no shot fired. Yet everyone
-realised that the counter-attack was about to
-be launched.</p>
-
-<p>I was amazed at the gaiety and good humour
-which prevailed. I wanted to say a few words
-regarding their conduct, but there was little
-need to sustain their morale. They shut me
-up by shouting, “Long live the Lieutenant.”
-I was too overcome with emotion to reply.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>All of a sudden there came a burst of musketry.
-It was sharp and brutal, and there was
-no hesitation about it. One felt that it was
-not the sort of musketry fire that one might
-expect from dispirited men, firing without
-taking the trouble to aim; on the contrary,
-each shot had its target. I looked through
-my field-glasses in its direction; it was on my
-left, about three hundred mètres off.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans, who were masters of a communication
-trench in front of us, debouched
-from it and tried to rush us in column of fours.
-They did not gain an inch of ground. Each
-section of fours was shot down.</p>
-
-<p>One cannot but render homage to such
-soldiers. A whole company was wiped out, not
-a man rose again after he fell, not a man retreated.
-The second counter-attack took
-shape on the right under the same conditions.
-The Germans were massed in a communication
-trench parallel to the road. A little later,
-again on the left, the enemy profited by a
-small wood to concentrate his men and to
-attempt a sortie, and this again was stopped
-short.</p>
-
-<p>They seemed to have resigned themselves to
-doing what we were doing. By the aid of a
-periscope we could see them as far as their
-waist-belts. They were smoking and waiting.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-To put one’s head up was to court death.
-Maugenot was lying just beyond the parapet
-on the grass with his face to the ground.
-Already he was the colour of wax. I determined
-to have him picked up at night.</p>
-
-<p>The Colonel, at three o’clock, sent me the
-7th company, under Captain Dupont, as a
-reinforcement. I told him that I wanted to
-stay where I was. That it was I and my
-men who had taken this ground, and therefore
-that it was ours by right; so the Captain
-settled down on the right, and at least I was
-no longer alone.</p>
-
-<p>I could gain no clue as to the real state of
-affairs from the complete silence of the German
-artillery. There was a noise of waggons coming
-and going on the higher ground, and this
-seemed to me to mean a fresh supply of munitions.
-It was unfortunately impossible to
-communicate with our own artillery.</p>
-
-<p>Seated at the bottom of the trench, I began
-to feel my senses deserting me. When I was
-asked for orders I racked my brains in vain. I
-could not find the right thing to say. I tried
-to joke with the men, but profound melancholy
-possessed me, for I began to realise that
-I was no longer good for anything.</p>
-
-<p>At 7 o’clock at night came the order for
-the attack which was preparing. “The 3rd<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-battalion will carry out the attack on the
-village of Loos, taking the steeple as directing
-point, and joining up on the left with the 114th.
-The first line units—the 3rd, 7th, 4th and 8th
-companies—will be pushed forward by the
-attacking battalion. Preparations for this
-movement must be made as soon as possible,
-but no move forward is to be made till further
-orders.—<i>Signed</i> Alquier.”</p>
-
-<p>Night fell rapidly. I was anxious to speak
-to the Colonel before the new attack if I could
-get to him, and so I handed over command to
-Mayet. My wound hurt me horribly. It felt
-as if my left shoulder were being torn from my
-body, as though indeed I were being quartered.
-I had doubts as to whether I could get to
-where I should find him, but I knew what
-could be done if the will to do were strong.
-Alas! I was not to see the company again,
-nor was I to succeed in finding the Colonel.</p>
-
-<p>On the way I walked like a drunken man,
-staggering from one wall of the trench to the
-other. Sometimes I had to climb over pyramids
-of bodies, sometimes I had to go right
-outside the trench, amidst the whistling of
-bullets and the noise of shells, which burst on
-all sides. I reflected sadly on how stupid it
-would be to be killed there, all alone, after
-having so miraculously escaped during the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-fight. I met some men of the Engineers, some
-prisoners and some messengers. Everyone
-was in a hurry, and I automatically repeated
-the same phrase to each, “Look out, I am a
-wounded officer, don’t hustle me.” I asked
-myself if it was possible to suffer more than I
-did. A sort of continuous groaning sound
-escaped me, my sight became blurred and I
-walked as if in delirium.</p>
-
-<p>I went round the same sector several times,
-asking everyone where the Colonel was.</p>
-
-<p>And they would ask me, “What Colonel?”</p>
-
-<p>I had forgotten, and then everything became
-vague. I met two men with fixed bayonets in
-charge of three prisoners. They gave me some
-red wine and took me along with them. We
-passed a factory whose broken machinery I
-saw profiled against the night sky. Then
-some stretcher-bearers picked me up and
-carried me to the neighbouring aid post.
-From there I was sent by ambulance to the
-divisional dressing station at Mazingarbe,
-where I passed the night.</p>
-
-<p>The building was plunged into complete
-darkness for fear of being marked down. Our
-big guns—the 120 long—were firing quite
-near, and at every round the walls trembled
-and the window-panes rattled. One could
-well picture oneself still in the thick of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-fight. The noise of musketry seemed to come
-from the garden, and I still remember clearly
-the sinister sights that I saw there. Dimly
-made out in the shadow, the wounded were
-lying on straw in rows on the ground. One
-only saw their silhouettes. There were infantrymen,
-artillerymen and Algerian Light
-Infantry on whom the white dressings stood
-out sharply. Amidst the roar of the guns one
-would hear a long-drawn moan and some
-groans, cut short at times by incoherent
-phrases. All of them raved. Officers and men
-lived through the morning’s battle once again,
-and brief commands were uttered, infinitely
-painful to listen to, “March in open order, by
-the right; stand by the machine-gun,” and so
-on. As I stretched myself on some straw in the
-least encumbered corner, I shivered with
-fever. The next morning we were all sent on
-to Nœux-les-Mines, and from there we left
-by train for we knew not where.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> French cavalry were equipped with the carbine, and not with
-the infantry rifle as in the case of English.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Light infantry.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> On reading the remarkable and charming book which my
-colleague, Lieutenant Dupont, has published under the title
-<i>En Compagne</i>, I noticed in one chapter such a similarity of
-phrase that I thought of changing the beginning of this description,
-so as to avoid the appearance of a plagiarism. I decided,
-however, not to alter its first form, but to leave intact this
-page, which was written in the trenches on that very day 24th
-January, 1915, long before Lieutenant Dupont’s book appeared.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> These were darts and position-indicating rockets.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="ifrst">A</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Agadir, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alaire, Captain, killed, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Allies, rally of, at Verberie, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— meeting of, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alquier, orders received from, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arneke, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arras, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Authée, bivouac near, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— departure from, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ave, French dragoons billeted at, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— French squadron ambushed at, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— French departure from, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">B</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baron, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Château of, pillaged by Germans, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Basteigne, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bavarians, atrocities of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bazeille, burning of, by Germans, 1870, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beauraing, arrival of French at, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— departure of French from, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— ambush at, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belgium, welcome and hospitality of villages, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— re-entered by French, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— departure from, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Biesmérée, bivouac at, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Billancourt, infantry action near, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bonneuil-en-Valois, surprise attack by Germans at, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bülow, Count von, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">C</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calonne-sur-la-Lys, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cary, General Langle de, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cavalry, French, equipment of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chapin, Major, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charleroi, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chasseurs-à-cheval, charge of, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chatelin, Lieut., <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chauvenet, Lieut., killed, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chocques, enemy sighted at, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— artillery action at, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clarques, return of French troops to, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clère, Lieut., <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Compiègne, forest of, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— ambushed in, <a href="#Page_63">63-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— adventures in, <a href="#Page_65">65-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coxyde, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">D</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dangel, Sergeant-Major, death of, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Desonney, Lieut., <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dinant, siege of, by Germans, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— arrival of French wounded from, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>Dragoon, funeral of a, <a href="#Page_124">124-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">E</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Epehy, arrival at, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— burning of, by Germans, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Estaires, evacuation of, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— attack at, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— cemetery of, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Estrée-Saint-Denis, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">d’Estrey, General, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">F</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Florennes, arrival at, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foch, General, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— address by, <a href="#Page_141">141-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— army of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folies, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Franchet, General, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">French, General Lord John, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fuéminville, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">G</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gembloux, retreat from, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— triumphal entry into, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Germans, atrocities of, <a href="#Page_32">32-4</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76-7</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— cavalry of, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— flight of, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— retreat of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilocourt, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gorgue, La, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grossain killed, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">H</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hausen, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hill 70, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hougled, entry of, by French, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— infantry and artillery attacks at, <a href="#Page_98">98-101</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">J</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johannes Father, quotation from, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jouillié, Major, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">L</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lametz, Captain, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Landelies, arrival at, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laperrade, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lens road, French advance towards, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— German lines carried near, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— redan blown up, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liége, arrival of French dragoons at, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lille-Arras, front of, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lombaertzyde, bombardment of, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loos, French attack at, <a href="#Page_150">150-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— German counter-attack at, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— preparations for attack at, <a href="#Page_144">144-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lubeké, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lys, bridge of, evacuated, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">M</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Magrin, Lieut., <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mahot, Captain, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maindreville, M. de, German atrocities at château of, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marne, battle of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maugenot, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— report to, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maunoury, General, army of, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mazingarbe, relieved trenches at, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— divisional dressing station at, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montcalm killed, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Muno, arrival of French cavalry at, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">N</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nesle, infantry action near, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nieuport-Ville, road to, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— bombardment of, <a href="#Page_114">114-17</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>—— billeted at, <a href="#Page_116">116-18</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— scenes at, <a href="#Page_114">114-19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nœux-les-Mines, wounded sent to, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Noyelette, resting at, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">O</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oise River, crossing of, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ostdinkerque, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Outersteene, Belgian manifestations to French, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">P</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paris, retreat of French cavalry towards, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parvillers, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Petit, Corporal, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Polignac, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poperinghe, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prussians, capture of Staff Officers, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">R</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Règues, Lieut., <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rheims Cathedral, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— departure from, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— scenes at, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roberts, Lord, funeral of, <a href="#Page_110">110-12</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robillot, Colonel, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">S</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saint-Martin, bivouac at, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saint-Omer, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salverte, Captain de, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Staden, village of, fighting at, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stivalet, <a href="#Page_147">147-8</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">T</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tarragon, Captain de, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— death of, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taube drops bombs, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taubes at Gembloux, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Teint, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Troène, fighting at, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">U</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Uhlans, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">V</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Verberie, rally of French troops, at, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— scenes at, <a href="#Page_74">74-84</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vigoureux, Captain, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Villers-Carbonel, artillery combat at, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— in flames, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Villers-Cotterets, forest of, <a href="#Page_49">49-51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— loss of French machine-guns at, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— fighting at, <a href="#Page_51">51-4</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— in hiding in, <a href="#Page_54">54-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— retreat from, <a href="#Page_57">57-9</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Von Kluck, General, army of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">W</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walloon district, the, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Y</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ypres, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Cloth Hall at, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— Cathedral, at, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— scenes at, <a href="#Page_132">132-3</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">—— in the trenches near, <a href="#Page_134">134-40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yser, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Z</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Zonnebeck, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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