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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 #65042 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65042)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The British Campaign in France and Flanders
-1914, by Arthur Conan Doyle
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The British Campaign in France and Flanders 1914
-
-Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
-
-Release Date: April 09, 2021 [eBook #65042]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN IN FRANCE AND
-FLANDERS 1914 ***
-
-
-
-
- THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN
-
- IN FRANCE AND FLANDERS
-
- 1914
-
-
-
- BY
-
- ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE
-
- AUTHOR OF
- "THE GREAT BOER WAR," ETC.
-
-
-
- SECOND EDITION
-
-
-
- HODDER AND STOUGHTON
- LONDON NEW YORK TORONTO
- MCMXVI
-
-
-
-
- TO
- GENERAL SIR WILLIAM ROBERTSON
- THIS CHRONICLE OF THE GREAT WAR
- IN WHICH HE RENDERED
- SUCH INVALUABLE SERVICE TO HIS COUNTRY
- IS
- DEDICATED
-
-
-
-
-{vii}
-
-PREFACE
-
-It is continually stated that it is impossible to bring out at the
-present time any accurate history of the war. No doubt this is true
-so far as some points of the larger strategy are concerned, for the
-motives at the back of them have not yet been cleared up. It is true
-also as regards many incidents which have exercised the minds of
-statesmen and of many possibilities which have worried the soldiers.
-But so far as the actual early events of our own campaign upon the
-Continent are concerned there is no reason why the approximate truth
-should not now be collected and set forth. I believe that the
-narrative in this volume will in the main stand the test of time, and
-that the changes of the future will consist of additions rather than
-of alterations or subtractions.
-
-The present volume deals only with the events of 1914 in the British
-fighting-line in France and Belgium. A second volume dealing with
-1915 will be published within a few months. It is intended that a
-third volume, covering the current year, shall carry on this
-contemporary narrative of a tremendous episode.
-
-From the first days of the war I have devoted much of my time to the
-accumulation of evidence {viii} from first-hand sources as to the
-various happenings of these great days. I have built up my narrative
-from letters, diaries, and interviews from the hand or lips of men
-who have been soldiers in our armies, the deeds of which it was my
-ambition to understand and to chronicle. In many cases I have been
-privileged to submit my descriptions of the principal incidents to
-prominent actors in them, and to receive their corrections or
-endorsement. I can say with certainty, therefore, that a great deal
-of this work is not only accurate, but that it is very precisely
-correct in its detail. The necessary restrictions which forbade the
-mention of numbered units have now been removed, a change made
-possible by the very general rearrangements which have recently taken
-place. I am able, therefore, to deal freely with my material. As
-that material is not always equally full, it may have occasionally
-led to a want of proportion, where the brigade occupies a line and
-the battalion a paragraph. In extenuation of such faults, and of the
-omissions which are unavoidable, I can only plead the difficulty of
-the task and throw myself upon the reader's good nature. Some
-compensation for such shortcoming may be found in the fact that a
-narrative written at the time reflects the warm emotions which these
-events aroused amongst us more clearly than the more measured story
-of the future historian can do.
-
-It may seem that the political chapters are somewhat long for a
-military work, but the reader will {ix} find that in subsequent
-volumes there are no further politics, so that this survey of the
-European conditions of 1914 is a lead up to the whole long narrative
-of the actual contest.
-
-I would thank my innumerable correspondents (whom I may not name) for
-their very great help. I would also admit the profit which I have
-derived from reading Coleman's _Mons to Ypres_, and especially Lord
-Ernest Hamilton's _The First Seven Divisions_. These books added
-some new facts, and enabled me to check many old ones. Finally, I
-desire to thank my friend Mr. P. L. Forbes for his kind and
-intelligent assistance in arranging my material.
-
-ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE.
-
- WINDLESHAM, CROWBOROUGH,
- _October_ 1916.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE BREAKING OF THE PEACE
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE OPENING OF THE WAR
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE BATTLE OF MONS
-
-The landing of the British in France--The British leaders--The
-advance to Mons--The defence of the bridges of Nimy--The holding of
-the canal--The fateful telegram--The rearguard actions of Frameries,
-Wasmes, and Dour--The charge of the Lancers--The fate of the
-Cheshires--The 7th Brigade at Solesmes--The Guards in action--The
-Germans' rude awakening--The Connaughts at Pont-sur-Sambre
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE BATTLE OF LE CATEAU
-
-The order of battle at Le Cateau--The stand of the 2nd
-Suffolks--Major Yate's V.C.--The fight for the quarries--The splendid
-work of the British guns--Difficult retirement of the Fourth
-Division--The fate of the 1st Gordons--Results of the
-battle--Exhaustion of the Army--The destruction of the 2nd
-Munsters--A cavalry fight--The news in Great Britain--The views of
-General Joffre--Battery L--The action of Villars-Cotteret--Reunion of
-the Army
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE MARNE
-
-The general situation--"Die grosse Zeit"--The turn of the tide--The
-Battle of the Ourcq--The British advance--Cavalry fighting--The 1st
-Lincolns and the guns--6th Brigade's action at Hautvesnes--9th
-Brigade's capture of Germans at Vinly--The problem of the Aisne--Why
-the Marne is one of the great battles of all time
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE AISNE
-
-The hazardous crossing of the Aisne--Wonderful work of the
-sappers--The fight for the sugar factory--General advance of the
-Army--The 4th (Guards) Brigade's difficult task--Cavalry as a mobile
-reserve--The Sixth Division--Hardships of the Army--German breach of
-faith--_Tâtez toujours_--The general position--Attack upon the West
-Yorks--Counter-attack by Congreve's 18th Brigade--Rheims
-Cathedral--Spies--The siege and fall of Antwerp
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE LA BASSÉE--ARMENTIÈRES OPERATIONS
-
-The great battle line--Advance of Second Corps--Death of General
-Hamilton--The farthest point--Fate of the 2nd Royal Irish--The Third
-Corps--Exhausted troops--First fight of Neuve Chapelle--The Indians
-take over--The Lancers at Warneton--Pulteney's operations--Action of
-Le Gheir
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE FIRST BATTLE OF YPRES
-
-The Seventh Division--Its peculiar excellence--Its difficult
-position--A deadly ordeal--Desperate attacks on Seventh
-Division--Destruction of 2nd Wilts--Hard fight of 20th
-Brigade--Arrival of First Corps--Advance of Haig's Corps--Fight of
-Pilken Inn--Bravery of enemy--Advance of Second Division--Fight of
-Kruiseik cross-roads--Fight of Zandvoorde--Fight of
-Gheluvelt--Advance of Worcesters--German recoil--General result--A
-great crisis
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE FIRST BATTLE OF YPRES (_continued_)
-
-Attack upon the cavalry--The struggle at Messines--The London Scots
-in action--Rally to the north--Terrible losses--Action of
-Zillebeke--Record of the Seventh Division--Situation at Ypres--Attack
-of the Prussian Guard--Confused fighting--End of the first Battle of
-Ypres--Death of Lord Roberts--The Eighth Division
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-A RETROSPECT AND GENERAL SUMMARY
-
-Position of Italy--Fall of German colonies--Sea affairs--Our Allies
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE WINTER LULL OF 1914
-
-Increase of the Army--Formation of the Fifth Corps--The visit of the
-King--Third Division at Petit Bois--The fight at Givenchy--Heavy
-losses of the Indians--Fine advance of Manchesters--Advance of the
-First Division--Singular scenes at Christmas
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-
-
-MAPS AND PLANS
-
-Map to illustrate the British Campaign in France and Flanders, 1914
-
-Position of Second Army Corps at Mons, August 23
-
-First Morning of Retreat of Second Army Corps, August 24
-
-Sketch of Battle of Le Cateau, August 26
-
-Line of Retreat from Mons
-
-L Battery Action, September 1, 1914
-
-British Advance during the Battle of the Marne
-
-British Advance at the Aisne
-
-Diagram to illustrate Operations of Smith-Dorrien's Second Corps and
-Pulteney's Third Corps from October 11 to October 19, 1914
-
-Southern End of British Line
-
-General View of Seat of Operations
-
-Line of Seventh Division (Capper) and Third Cavalry Division (Byng)
-from October 16 onwards
-
-General Scene of Operations
-
-Sketch of Battle of Gheluvelt, October 31
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Map of north-east France and Belgium]
-
-
-
-
-{1}
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE BREAKING OF THE PEACE
-
-In the frank, cynical, and powerful book of General Bernhardi which
-has been so often quoted in connection with the war there is one
-statement which is both true and important. It is, that no one in
-Great Britain thought seriously of a war with Germany before the year
-1902. As a German observer he has fixed this date, and a British
-commentator who cast back through the history of the past would
-surely endorse it. Here, then, is a point of common agreement from
-which one can construct a scheme of thought.
-
-Why then should the British people in the year 1902 begin to
-seriously contemplate the possibility of a war with Germany? It
-might be argued by a German apologist that this date marks an
-appreciation by Great Britain that Germany was a great trade rival
-who might with advantage be crushed. But the facts would not sustain
-such a conclusion. The growth of German trade and of German wealth
-was a phenomenon with which the British were familiar. It had been
-constant since the days when Bismarck changed the policy of his
-country from free trade to protection, and it had competed for twenty
-years without the idea of war having entered British {2} minds. On
-the contrary, the prevailing economic philosophy in Great Britain
-was, that trade reacts upon trade, and that the successful rival
-becomes always the best customer. It is true that manufacturers
-expressed occasional irritation at the methods of German commerce,
-such as the imitation of British trade-marks and shoddy reproductions
-of British products. The Fatherland can produce both the best and
-the worst, and the latter either undersold us or forced down our own
-standards. But apart from this natural annoyance, the growing trade
-of Germany produced no hostility in Great Britain which could
-conceivably have led to an armed conflict. Up to the year 1896 there
-was a great deal of sympathy and of respect in Great Britain for the
-German Empire. It was felt that of all Continental Powers she was
-the one which was most nearly allied to Britain in blood, religion,
-and character. The fact that in 1890 Lord Salisbury deliberately
-handed over to Germany Heligoland--an island which blockaded her
-chief commercial port and the harbour of her warships--must show once
-for all how entirely Germany lay outside of any possible
-world-struggle which could at that time be foreseen. France has
-always had its warm partisans in this country, but none the less it
-can most truthfully be said that during all the years that Britain
-remained in political isolation she would, had she been forced to
-take sides, have assuredly chosen to stand by the Triple Alliance.
-It is hard now to recall those days of French pinpricks and of the
-evil effects which they produced. Germany's foreign policy is her
-own affair, and the German people are the judges of those who control
-it, but to us it must appear absolutely {3} demented in taking a line
-which has driven this great world-power away from her side--or,
-putting it at its lowest, away from an absolute neutrality, and into
-the ranks of her enemies.
-
-In 1896 there came the first serious chill in the relations between
-the two countries. It arose from the famous telegram to Kruger at
-the time of the Jameson Raid--a telegram which bore the name of the
-Kaiser, but which is understood to have been drafted by Baron
-Marschall von Bieberstein. Whoever was responsible for it did his
-country a poor service, for British feelings were deeply hurt at such
-an intrusion into a matter which bore no direct relation to Germany.
-Britons had put themselves thoroughly in the wrong. Britain admitted
-and deplored it. Public opinion was the more sensitive to outside
-interference, and the telegram of congratulation from the Emperor to
-Kruger was felt to be an uncalled-for impertinence. The matter
-passed, however, and would have been forgiven and forgotten but for
-the virulent agitation conducted against us in Germany during the
-Boer War--an agitation which, it is only fair to say, appeared to
-receive no support from the Kaiser himself, who twice visited England
-during the course of the struggle. It could not be forgotten,
-however, that Von Bülow, the Chancellor, assumed an offensive
-attitude in some of his speeches, that the very idea of an
-Anglo-German Alliance put forward by Chamberlain in 1900 was scouted
-by the German Press, and that in the whole country there was hardly a
-paper which did not join in a chorus of unreasoned hatred and calumny
-against ourselves, our policy, and our arms. The incident was a
-perfectly astounding revelation to the British, {4} who looked back
-at the alliance between the two countries, and had imagined that the
-traditions of such battles as Minden or Dettingen, where British
-blood had been freely shed in Prussia's quarrel, really stood for
-something in their present relations. Britons were absolutely
-unconscious of anything which had occurred to alter the bonds which
-history had formed. It was clear, once for all, that this was mere
-self-deception, and as the British are a practical race, who are more
-concerned with what is than why it is, they resigned themselves to
-the situation and adjusted their thoughts to this new phase of their
-relations.
-
-But soon a new phenomenon engaged their attention. They had already
-realised that the Germans, for some motive which appeared to them to
-be entirely inadequate, were filled with hatred, and would do the
-British Empire an injury if they had the power. Hitherto, they had
-never had the power. But now it was evident that they were forging a
-weapon which might enable them to gratify their malevolence. In 1900
-was passed the famous German law regulating the increase of their
-navy. The British, preoccupied by their South African War, took no
-great notice of it at the time, but from 1902 onwards it engaged
-their attention to an ever-increasing degree. The original law was
-ambitious and far-reaching, but it was subjected to several
-modifications, each of which made it more formidable. By a system as
-inexorable as Fate, year after year added to the force which was
-being prepared at Wilhelmshaven and at Kiel--a force entirely out of
-proportion to the amount of German commerce to be defended or of
-German coast-line to be protected. The greatest army in the world
-was rapidly being supplemented by a fleet {5} which would be
-dangerously near, both in numbers and quality, to our own. The
-British Admiralty, more influenced by party politics than the German,
-showed at times commendable activity, and at other periods
-inexcusable indifference. On the whole, it was well ahead in its
-building programmes, for a wide circle of the public had become
-thoroughly awakened to the danger, and kept up a continual and most
-justifiable agitation for a broader margin of safety. Fortunately,
-the two final rulers of the Navy--McKenna and Churchill--rose to
-their responsibilities, and, in spite of a clamour from a section of
-their own party, insisted upon an adequate preponderance of naval
-construction. A deep debt of gratitude is owed also to the action of
-Lord Fisher, who saw the danger afar off and used all his remarkable
-powers of organisation and initiative to ensure that his country
-should be ready for the approaching struggle.
-
-Great Britain, being much exercised in mind by the menacing tone of
-Germany, expressed not only in her great and rapid naval
-preparations, but in an astonishing outburst of minatory speeches and
-literature from professors, journalists, and other leaders of the
-people, began from 1902 onwards to look round her for allies. Had
-she continued to remain isolated, some turn of the political wheel
-might have exposed her to a Continental coalition under the
-leadership and inspiration of this bitter enemy. But for the threats
-of Germany, Britain would in all probability have been able to keep
-aloof from entanglements, but as it was, the enemies of her enemy
-became of necessity her friends. In an attempt to preserve her
-independence of action so far as was still possible, she refused to
-form an alliance, and only committed {6} herself in a vague fashion
-to an ill-defined _entente_. By settling several outstanding causes
-of friction with France, an agreement was come to in the year 1903
-which was extended to Russia in 1907. The general purport of such an
-arrangement was, that the sympathies of Great Britain were with the
-Dual Alliance, and that these sympathies would be translated into
-action if events seemed to warrant it. An aggressive policy on the
-part of France or Russia would be absolutely discountenanced by
-Britain, but if France were attacked Britain would pledge herself to
-do her utmost to prevent her from being overwhelmed. It was
-recognised that a victorious Germany would constitute a serious
-menace to the British Empire--a fact which neither the Pan-German
-fanatics nor the German national Press would ever permit us to
-forget. In this policy of insuring against a German attack King
-Edward VII. took a deep interest, and the policy is itself attributed
-to him in Germany, but as a matter of fact it represented the only
-sane course of action which was open to the nation. Germans are fond
-of representing King Edward's action as the cause of subsequent
-events, whereas a wider knowledge would show them that it was really
-the effect of five years of German irritation and menace. This,
-then, was the political situation up to the time of the actual
-outbreak of war. Upon the one side were the German and Austrian
-Empires in a solid alliance, while Italy was nominally allied, but
-obviously moved upon an orbit of her own. On the other hand, Russia
-and France were solidly allied, with Britain moving upon an
-independent orbit which had more relation with that of her friends
-than Italy's with that of Central Europe. It might clearly {7} have
-been foreseen that Britain's fate would be that of France, while
-Italy would break away under any severe test, for a number of open
-questions divided her vitally from her secular enemy to the
-north-east, The whole story of the campaign of Tripoli in 1911 showed
-very clearly how independent, and even antagonistic, were the
-interests and actions of Italy.
-
-Germany, in the meanwhile, viewed with considerable annoyance the
-formation of the elastic but very real ties which united France and
-Britain, while she did not cease to continue the course of action
-which had encouraged them. It had been one of the axioms of
-Wilhelmstrasse that whilst the British occupied Egypt, no friendship
-was possible between them and the French. Even now they were
-incredulous that such a thing could be, and they subjected it to a
-succession of tests. They desired to see whether the friendship was
-a reality, or whether it was only for fair-weather use and would fly
-to pieces before the stress of storm. Twice they tried it, once in
-1905 when they drove France into a conference at Algeciras, and again
-in 1911, when in a time of profound peace they stirred up trouble by
-sending a gunboat to Agadir in south-western Morocco, an event which
-brought Europe to the very edge of war. In each case the _entente_
-remained so close and firm that it is difficult to imagine that they
-were really surprised by our actions in 1914, when the enormous
-provocation of the breach of the Belgian treaty was added to our
-promise to stand by France in any trouble not of her own making.
-
-Allusion has been made to the campaign of threats and abuse which had
-been going on for many years in Germany, but the matter is of such
-importance in its {8} bearing upon the outbreak of war that it
-requires some fuller discussion. For a long period before matters
-became acute between the two countries, a number of writers, of whom
-Nietzsche and Treitschke are the best known, had inoculated the
-German spirit with a most mischievous philosophy, which grew the more
-rapidly as it was dropped into the favourable soil of Prussian
-militarism. Nietzsche's doctrines were a mere general defence of
-might as against right, and of violent brutality against everything
-which we associate with Christianity and Civilisation. The whooping
-savage bulked larger in this perverted philosophy than the saint or
-the martyr. His views, however, though congenial to a certain class
-of the German people, had no special international significance. The
-typical brute whom he exalted was blonde, but a brute of any other
-tint would presumably suffice. It was different in the case of
-Treitschke. He was a historian, not a philosopher, with nothing
-indefinite or abstract about his teaching. He used his high position
-as Professor in the Berlin University to preach the most ardent
-Chauvinism, and above all to teach the rising generation of Germans
-that their special task was to have a reckoning with England and to
-destroy the British Empire, which for some reason he imagined to be
-degenerate and corrupt. He has passed away before he could see the
-ruin which he helped to bring about, for there is no doubt that his
-deeds lived after him, and that he is one of half a dozen men who
-were prominent in guiding their country along the path which has
-ended in the abyss. Scores of other lesser writers repeated and
-exaggerated his message. Prominent among these was General von
-Bernhardi, a man of high standing and a very {9} great authority upon
-theoretical warfare. In the volume on _Germany and the Next War_,
-which has been already quoted, he declared in the year 1911 that
-Germany should and would do exactly what it has done in 1914. Her
-antagonists, her allies, and her general strategy are all set forth
-with a precision which shows that German thinkers had entirely made
-up their minds as to the course of events, and that the particular
-pretext upon which war would be waged was a matter of secondary
-importance. These and similar sentiments naturally increased the
-uneasiness and resentment in Great Britain, where the taxation had
-risen constantly in the endeavour to keep pace with German
-preparations, until it was generally felt that such a state of things
-could not continue without some crisis being reached. The cloud was
-so heavy that it must either pass or burst.
-
-The situation had been aggravated by the fact that in order to win
-popular assent to the various increases of the naval estimates in
-Germany, constantly recurring anti-British agitations were
-deliberately raised with alarms of an impending attack. As Britain
-had never thought of attacking Germany during the long years when she
-had been almost defenceless at sea, it was difficult to perceive why
-she should do so now; but none the less the public and the
-politicians were gulled again and again by this device, which, while
-it achieved its purpose of obtaining the money, produced a
-corresponding resentment in Great Britain. Sometimes these
-manoeuvres to excite public opinion in favour of an increased navy
-went to extreme lengths which might well have justified an official
-remonstrance from England. A flagrant example was the arrest, trial,
-and condemnation of Captain Stewart {10} for espionage upon the
-evidence of a suborned and perjured criminal. It is a story which is
-little to the credit of the Imperial Government, of the High Court at
-Leipzig, or of the British authorities who failed to protect their
-fellow-countryman from most outrageous treatment.
-
-So much for the causes which helped to produce an evil atmosphere
-between the two countries. Looking at the matter from the German
-point of view, there were some root-causes out of which this
-monstrous growth had come, and it is only fair that these should be
-acknowledged and recorded. These causes can all be traced to the
-fact that Britain stood between Germany and that world-empire of
-which she dreamed. This depended upon circumstances over which this
-country had no control, and which she could not modify if she had
-wished to do so. Britain, through her maritime power and through the
-energy of her merchants, had become a great world-power when Germany
-was still a collection of petty States. When Germany became a
-powerful Empire with a rising population and an immense commerce, she
-found that the choice places of the world, and those most fitted for
-the spread of a transplanted European race, were already filled up.
-It was not a matter which Britain could help, nor could she alter it,
-since Canada, Australasia, and South Africa would not, even if she
-had desired it, be transferred to German rule. And yet it formed a
-national grievance, and if we can put ourselves in the place of the
-Germans we may admit that it was galling that the surplus of their
-manhood should go to build up the strength of an alien and possibly a
-hostile State. To this point we could fully see that grievance--or
-rather that misfortune, since {11} no one was in truth to blame in
-the matter. It was forgotten by their people that the Colonial
-Empire of the British and of the French had been built up by much
-outlay of blood and treasure, extending over three centuries.
-Germany had existed as a united State for less than half a century,
-and already during that time had built up a very considerable oversea
-dominion. It was unreasonable to suppose that she could at once
-attain the same position as her fully grown rivals.
-
-Thus this German discontent was based upon fixed factors which could
-no more be changed by Britain than the geographical position which
-has laid her right across the German exit to the oceans of the world.
-That this deeply rooted national sentiment, which for ever regarded
-Britain as the Carthage to which they were destined to play the part
-of Rome, would sooner or later have brought about war, is beyond all
-doubt. There are a score of considerations which show that a
-European war had long been planned, and that finally the very date,
-determined by the completion of the broadened Kiel Canal, had been
-approximately fixed. The importations of corn, the secret
-preparations of giant guns, the formations of concrete gun-platforms,
-the early distribution of mobilisation papers, the sending out of
-guns for auxiliary cruisers, the arming of the German colonies, all
-point to a predetermined rupture. If it could not be effected on one
-pretext, it certainly would on another. As a matter of fact, an
-occasion was furnished by means which have not yet been fully cleared
-up. It was one which admirably suited the German book, since it
-enabled her to make her ally the apparent protagonist and so secure
-her fidelity to the {12} bond. At the same time, by making the cause
-of quarrel one which affected only the Slavonic races, she hoped to
-discourage and detach the more liberal Western Powers and so divide
-the ranks of the Allies from the outset. It is possible, though not
-certain, that she might have effected this in the case of Great
-Britain, but for her own stupendous blunder in the infraction of
-Belgian neutrality, which left us a united nation in our agreement as
-to the necessity of war.
-
-The political balance of the Great Powers of Europe is so delicately
-adjusted that any weakening of one means a general oscillation of
-all. The losses of Russia in a sterile campaign in East Asia in 1904
-disturbed the whole peace of the world. Germany took advantage of it
-at once to bully France over Morocco; and in 1908, judging correctly
-that Russia was still unfit for war, Austria, with the connivance and
-help of Germany, tore up the Treaty of Berlin without reference to
-its other signatories, and annexed the provinces of Bosnia and
-Herzegovina. Russia immediately issued a futile protest, as did
-Great Britain, but the latter had no material interest at stake. It
-was otherwise with Russia. She was the hereditary guardian of Slav
-interests which were directly attacked by this incorporation of an
-unwilling Slav population into the Austrian Empire. Unable for the
-moment to prevent it, she waited in silent wrath for the chance of
-the future, humiliated and exasperated by the knowledge that she had
-been bullied at the moment of her temporary weakness. So great had
-been the indignity that it was evident that were she to tolerate a
-second one it would mean the complete abandonment of her leadership
-of the race.
-
-On June 28, 1914, the Archduke Francis Ferdinand, {13} heir to the
-throne of the Austrian Empire, made a state visit to Sarajevo in the
-newly annexed provinces. Here he was assassinated, together with his
-wife. The immediate criminals were two youths named Princip and
-Cabrinovic, but what exact forces were at the back of them, or
-whether they merely represented local discontent, have never yet been
-clearly shown. Austria was, however, naturally incensed against
-Serbia, which was looked upon as the centre of all aggressive
-Slavonic action. Politics take fantastic shapes in this
-south-eastern corner of Europe, and murder, abduction, forgery, and
-perjury are weapons which in the past have been freely used by all
-parties. The provocation in this instance was so immense and the
-crime so monstrous that had it been established after trustworthy
-examination that Serbia had indeed been directly connected with it,
-there is no doubt that the whole of Europe, including Russia, would
-have acquiesced in any reasonable punishment which could be
-inflicted. Certainly the public opinion of Great Britain would have
-been unanimous in keeping clear of any quarrel which seemed to uphold
-the criminals.
-
-Austria seems to have instantly made up her mind to push the matter
-to an extreme conclusion, as is shown by the fact that mobilisation
-papers were received by Austrians abroad, bearing the date June 30,
-so that they were issued within two days of the crime. An inquiry
-was held in connection with the trial of the assassins, which was
-reported to have implicated individual Serbians in the murder plot,
-but no charge was made against the Serbian Government. Had Austria
-now demanded the immediate trial and punishment of these accomplices,
-she would {14} once again have had the sympathy of the civilised
-world. Her actual action was far more drastic, and gave impartial
-observers the conviction that she was endeavouring not to obtain
-reparation but to ensure war. It is inconceivable that so important
-a document as her ultimatum was launched without the approval of
-Berlin, and we have already seen that Germany was in a mood for war.
-The German newspapers, even before the Austrian demands were made,
-had begun to insist that in view of the distracted domestic politics
-of Great Britain, and of the declaration by M. Humbert in the French
-Senate that the army was unprepared, the hour for definite
-settlements had arrived.
-
-The Austrian ultimatum was such a demand as one nation has never yet
-addressed to another. Indeed, it could hardly be said that Serbia
-would remain a nation if she submitted to it. Some clauses, though
-severe, were within the bounds of reason. That papers should not be
-allowed to incite hatred, and that secret societies which were
-supposed to be connected with the crime should be forcibly
-suppressed, were not unfair demands. So, too, that all accessories
-to the plot, some of whom are mentioned by name, should be tried, and
-that certain measures to prevent a possible recurrence of such plots
-should be adopted. All these demands might be justified, and each of
-them was, as a matter of fact, accepted by Serbia. The impossible
-conditions were that Austrian judges should sit in Serbia upon
-political cases and that delegates of Austria should have partial
-administrative control in the neighbouring kingdom. Even these
-outrageous demands were not rejected absolutely by the Serbian
-Government, though it {15} proclaimed itself to be unable to accept
-them in the crude form in which they were presented. A humble and
-conciliatory reply concluded with an expression of the desire to
-submit any point still open to impartial arbitration. The Austrian
-Government--or the forces behind it--appeared, however, to have no
-desire at all to find a peaceful solution. So precipitate were they
-in their action, that on the receipt of the Serbian reply, in less
-than an hour the Austrian Minister had left Belgrade, and a
-diplomatic rupture, the immediate prelude to war, had taken place
-between the two countries. So far only two figures were on the
-stage, but already vast shadows were looming in the wings, and all
-the world was hushed at the presentiment of coming tragedy.
-
-It has been shown that Russia, the elder brother of the Slav races,
-had once already been humiliated over Austrian policy and could not
-be indifferent to this new attempt to coerce a Slavonic people. The
-King of Serbia in his sore need appealed to the Czar and received a
-sympathetic reply. A moderate castigation of Serbia might have been
-condoned by Russia, but she could not contemplate unmoved a course of
-action which would practically destroy a kindred State. The Austrian
-army was already mobilising, so Russia also began to mobilise in the
-south. Events crowded rapidly upon each other. On July 28 came the
-declaration of war from Austria to Serbia. Three days later--days
-which were employed by Great Britain in making every possible effort
-to prevent the extension of the mischief--Germany as Austria's ally
-declared war upon Russia. Two days later Germany declared war upon
-France. The current ran swiftly as it drew nearer to Niagara.
-
-{16}
-
-The scope of this chronicle is more immediately concerned with the
-doings of Great Britain in this sudden and frightful misfortune which
-had fallen upon Europe. Her peaceful efforts were thrust aside, for
-she was dealing with those who had predetermined that there should be
-no peace. Even Austria, the prime mover in discord, had shown
-herself inclined to treat at the last moment, but Germany had
-hastened her onwards by a sudden ultimatum to Russia. From that
-instant the die was cast. The attitude of France was never in doubt.
-She was taken at a disadvantage, for her President was abroad when
-the crisis broke out, but the most chivalrous of nations could be
-relied upon to fulfil her obligations. She took her stand at once by
-the side of her ally. The one all-important question upon which the
-history of the world would depend, as so often before, was the action
-of Great Britain.
-
-Sir Edward Grey had proposed a conference of ambassadors to deal with
-the situation, a suggestion which was set aside by Germany. So long
-as the matter was purely Balkan it was outside the sphere of special
-British interests, but day by day it was becoming more clear that
-France would be involved, and a large party in Great Britain held
-that it would be impossible for us to stand by and witness any
-further dismembering of our neighbour. Thus the shadow which had
-settled so heavily upon the south-east of Europe was creeping across
-from east to west until it was already darkening the future of
-Britain. It was obviously the German game, whatever her ultimate
-designs might be upon the British Empire, to endeavour to keep it
-peaceful until she had disposed of her Continental opponents. For
-this reason a {17} strong bid was made for British neutrality upon
-July 29, through the Ambassador at Berlin, Sir Edward Goschen. In an
-official conversation the German Chancellor, Bethmann-Hollweg,
-declared that Germany was ready to pledge herself to take no
-territory from France in case of victory. He would make no promise
-as regards the French colonies, nor was anything said as to the
-French Fleet, nor as to the gigantic indemnity which was already
-discussed in some of the German papers. In a word, the proposition
-was that Great Britain was to abandon her friend at the hour of her
-need on condition that she should be robbed but not mutilated.
-Subsequent experience of German promises may lead us to doubt,
-however, whether they would really have insured France against the
-worst that the victor could inflict.
-
-Sir Edward Grey answered with as much warmth as the iced language of
-diplomacy will permit. His dispatch of July 30 begins as follows:
-
-"His Majesty's Government cannot for a moment entertain the
-Chancellor's proposal that they should bind themselves to neutrality
-on such terms.
-
-"What he asks us in effect is, to engage to stand by while French
-colonies are taken and France is beaten so long as Germany does not
-take French territory as distinct from the colonies.
-
-"From the material point of view such a proposal is unacceptable, for
-France, without further territory in Europe being taken from her,
-could be so crushed as to lose her position as a great Power, and
-become subordinate to German policy.
-
-"Altogether apart from that, it would be a disgrace for us to make
-this bargain with Germany {18} at the expense of France, a disgrace
-from which the good name of this country would never recover."
-
-At a subsequent period the Premier, Mr. Asquith, voiced the sentiment
-of the whole nation when he declared that the proposal was infamous.
-
-The immediate concern of the British Government was to ascertain the
-views of the rival Powers upon the question of Belgian neutrality,
-which had been solemnly guaranteed by France, Prussia, and ourselves.
-How faithfully this guarantee had been observed by France in the past
-is shown by the fact that even when an infraction of the frontier at
-Sedan in 1870 would have saved the French Army from total
-destruction, it had not been attempted. There were signs in advance,
-however, that Germany proposed to turn the French defences by
-marching through Belgium. The arrangement of the new German
-strategic railways upon the frontier all pointed to such a plan. It
-was evident that such an action must at once bring Britain into the
-struggle, since it is difficult to see how she could ever hold up her
-head again if, after promising protection to a smaller nation, she
-broke her bond at the moment of danger. The French, too, who had
-left their northern frontier comparatively unfortified in reliance
-upon the integrity of Belgium, would have rightly felt that they had
-been betrayed by Britain if they suffered now through their
-confidence in the British guarantee. The Balkans were nothing to
-Great Britain, but she had more than her interests, she had her
-national honour at stake upon the Belgian frontier.
-
-On July 31 the British Government asked France and Germany whether
-they were still prepared to stand by their pledge. France answered
-promptly {19} that she was, and added that she had withdrawn her
-armies ten kilometres from the frontier, so as to prove to the world
-that her position was defensive only. From Germany there came an
-ominous silence. Meanwhile, in Brussels the German representative,
-Herr von Below-Saleske, was assuring the Belgian Government that
-nothing was further from the intention of Germany than an infraction
-of the frontier. These assurances were continued almost to the
-moment of the arrival of German troops in Belgium, and give one more
-instance of the absolute want of truth and honour which from the days
-of Frederick the Great has been the outstanding characteristic of
-German diplomacy. Just as the Seven Years' War was begun by an
-attack upon an ally in times of peace, so her last two campaigns have
-been opened, the one by the doctored telegram of Ems, and the other
-by the perfidy to Belgium, which is none the less shameful because it
-has been publicly admitted by the Chancellor.
-
-Another incident of these crowded days deserves some record, as it
-has been quoted in Germany as an instance of Great Britain having
-stood in the way of a localisation of the war. This impression is
-produced by suppressing a telegram in which it is shown that the
-whole episode arose from a mistake upon the part of Prince
-Lichnowsky, the German Ambassador. On August 1 Sir Edward Grey,
-still feeling round for some way in which the evil might be
-minimised, suggested through the telephone to Prince Lichnowsky that
-if both Germany and France could see their way to stand out, the
-conflict would then be limited to Austria and Russia. This practical
-and possible suggestion was transmitted to Berlin in {20} the absurd
-form that Britain would hold France out of the war, while Russia
-would be abandoned to Germany and Austria. The Kaiser lost no time
-in assenting to so delightful a proposal. It was at once pointed out
-to Prince Lichnowsky that he had made a mistake, and the Prince
-telegraphed to Berlin a correction of his previous message. This
-second telegram was suppressed by the German Government, while, some
-weeks afterwards, they published the inaccurate dispatch in order to
-give the world the impression that Britain had actually made a move
-towards peace which had been withdrawn when it was found that it was
-eagerly welcomed by Germany. The very idea that Britain could in any
-way pledge the actions of France is grotesque upon the face of it.
-Whilst making this false suggestion as to the action of Britain, the
-German Government carefully concealed the fact that Sir Edward Grey
-had actually gone the extreme length in the interests of peace, of
-promising that we should detach ourselves from our Allies if a
-conference were held and their unreasonable attitude was an obstacle
-to an agreement.
-
-Whether, if Belgian neutrality had been honoured, Great Britain would
-or would not have come into the war is an academic question which can
-never be decided. Certainly she would never have come in as a united
-nation, for public opinion was deeply divided upon the point, and the
-Cabinet is understood to have been at variance. Only one thing could
-have closed the ranks and sent the British Empire with absolute
-unanimity into the fight. This was the one thing which Germany did.
-However great her military power may be, it seems certain that her
-diplomatic affairs were grievously mismanaged, and {21} that, in
-spite of that cloud of spies who have been the precursors of her
-Uhlans in each of her campaigns, she was singularly ill-informed as
-to the sentiments of foreign nations. The columns of a single honest
-British paper would have told her more of the true views and spirit
-of the nation than all the eavesdroppers of her famous secret service.
-
-We now come to the critical instant as regards Britain, leading to a
-succession of incidents in Berlin so admirably described in Sir
-Edward Goschen's classical report that it seems a profanation to
-condense it. Having received no reply to their request for a
-definite assurance about Belgium, the British Government instructed
-their Ambassador to ask for an immediate answer upon August 4. The
-startling reply from Von Jagow, Secretary of Foreign Affairs, was
-that the German troops had actually crossed the frontier. With a
-cynical frankness the German statesman explained that it was a matter
-of life or death to the Imperial Army to get their blow in quickly by
-the undefended route. In answer to the shocked remonstrance of the
-British Ambassador, he could only assert that it was now too late to
-reconsider the matter. About seven in the evening Sir Edward Goschen
-conveyed an ultimatum upon the subject to the German Government,
-declaring war unless by midnight a more satisfactory answer could be
-given.
-
-From Herr von Jagow the Ambassador passed to the Chancellor, whom he
-found much agitated. He broke into a harangue in which he used the
-phrase, now become historic, that he could not understand the British
-Government making such a fuss about a mere scrap of paper, and
-declared that a breach of {22} territorial neutrality was a matter of
-no great consequence. A recollection of the history of his own
-country would none the less have reminded him that it was precisely
-on account of an infringement of their frontier by the troops of
-Napoleon that Prussia had entered upon the ill-fated war of 1806. He
-continued by saying that he held Great Britain responsible for all
-the terrible events which might happen. Sir Edward pointed out that
-it was a matter of necessity that Great Britain should keep her
-engagements, and added with dignity that fear of the consequences
-could hardly be accepted as a valid reason for breaking them.
-
-Such in brief was the momentous interview which determined the
-question of peace or war between these two great Empires. Sir Edward
-immediately forwarded a telegraphic summary of what had occurred to
-London, but this telegram was never forwarded by the Berlin
-authorities--one more of those actions for which the word "caddish"
-is the most appropriate British adjective. Throughout all our German
-experiences both before the war and during it, we have always found
-our rivals to be formidable; they have usually proved themselves to
-be both brave and energetic; but hardly ever have we recognised them
-as gentlemen. Three centuries ago the leading nations of Europe had
-attained something subtle and gracious which is still denied to the
-Germans.
-
-The populace of Berlin hastened to show these same unamiable
-characteristics. Whereas the retiring Ambassadors in London, Paris,
-and also in Vienna, met with courteous treatment, the German mob
-surrounded the British Embassy and hurled {23} vituperations, and
-finally stones, at its occupants. Defenceless people were hustled,
-assaulted, and arrested in the streets. A day or two previously the
-Russian Embassy had been brutally insulted by the populace upon its
-departure--a fact which produced some regrettable, but very natural,
-reprisals in Petrograd, to use the new name for the Russian capital.
-The French Ambassador and his suite had also been very badly treated
-in their journey to the Dutch frontier. Thus it was shocking, but
-not surprising, to find that the Berlin mob indulged in excesses
-towards the British representatives, and that shameful scenes marked
-the final hours of Sir Edward Goschen's official duties. Truly, as
-Herr von Jagow admitted, such incidents leave an indelible stain upon
-the reputation of Berlin. It is pleasant to be able to add that Von
-Jagow himself behaved with propriety, and did what he could to
-mitigate the violence of the populace.
-
-It is difficult for us to imagine how any German could possibly for
-an instant have imagined that Great Britain would stand by in silent
-acquiescence while the little country which she had sworn to protect
-was overrun by German troops; but that such a delusion existed is
-shown not only by the consternation of the Chancellor at Sir Edward's
-message, but also by the extreme irritation of the Emperor. What
-part Emperor William had played in the events which led up to the war
-may possibly remain for ever the subject of debate. There are those
-who argue that the Crown Prince and the military party had taken
-advantage of his absence on one of his Norwegian tours, and had
-hurried matters into such an impasse that he was unable to get them
-back to more peaceful {24} lines. One would wish to think that this
-were true, and there is evidence that on previous occasions his
-influence has been exerted upon the side of peace to an extent which
-was unwelcome to many of his own subjects. On the other hand, it is
-very difficult to believe that such a situation, led up to by many
-preparatory steps which included the _fons et origo mali_, the
-provocative and impossible Austrian ultimatum, could have been
-arranged without the assent of a man who has notoriously continually
-interfered directly in all large, and many small, transactions of
-state. However this may be, it is beyond dispute that the action of
-Great Britain deprived him for the instant of his usual dignity and
-courtesy, and he dispatched a verbal message by one of his
-aides-de-camp in the following terms:
-
-"The Emperor has charged me to express to your Excellency his regret
-for the occurrences of last night, but to tell you at the same time
-that you will gather from those occurrences an idea of the feelings
-of his people respecting the action of Great Britain in joining with
-other nations against her old allies of Waterloo. His Majesty also
-begs that you will tell the King that he has been proud of the titles
-of British Field-Marshal and British Admiral, but that in consequence
-of what has occurred he must now at once divest himself of those
-titles."
-
-The Ambassador adds feelingly that this message lost nothing of its
-acerbity by the manner of its delivery. Some artist of the future
-will do justice to the scene where the benign and dignified old
-diplomatist sat listening to the rasping utterances of the insolent
-young Prussian soldier. The actual departure of the Embassy was
-effected without {25} molestation, thanks once more to the good
-offices of Herr von Jagow. On the same day, in the presence of a
-large but silent crowd, the German Ambassador left London and
-embarked for home in a vessel placed at his disposal by the British
-Government. His voyage back, _via_ Flushing, was safely
-accomplished, but it is worth recording that it was only the warning
-from a British warship which prevented him and his staff from being
-blown up by the mines which had already, within a few hours of the
-outbreak of hostilities, been strewn thickly by his countrymen in the
-path of neutral shipping across the highway of commerce in the North
-Sea. Should our kinsmen of America ever find themselves in our
-place, let them remember that it is "all in" from the beginning with
-the Germans.
-
-Let America also remember our experience that no pupil can go to a
-German school, no scholar to a German university, and no invalid to a
-German health-resort, without the chance of some sudden turn of
-politics leaving them as prisoners in the country. Even the elderly
-heart patients at Nauheim were detained by the German authorities.
-An old admiral among them, Admiral Neeld, made a direct appeal as
-sailor to sailor to Prince Henry of Prussia, and was answered by the
-proverb that "War is war." Our contention is that such actions are
-_not_ war, and that their perpetration will never be forgotten or
-forgiven by the nations of the world, who can have no security that
-when their subjects pass the German frontier they will ever get clear
-again. Such practices are, of course, entirely distinct from that of
-interning reservists or males of fighting age, which was freely done
-by the Allies. It is only fair to say that after {26} a long delay
-there was a release of schoolgirls, and afterwards one of doctors, by
-the Germans, but many harmless travellers, students, and others were
-held for a long period of the war at a time when tens of thousands of
-Germans were free in Great Britain.
-
-By a gross perversion of facts German publicists have endeavoured to
-show that Great Britain was to blame for the final rupture. The
-pretence is too absurd to deceive any one, and one can hardly think
-that they believe it themselves. One has only to ask what had Great
-Britain to do with the death of the Heir Apparent of Austria, with
-the sending of the fatal ultimatum, with the declaration of war
-against Russia and France, or, finally, with the infraction of the
-Belgian frontier? She had nothing to do with any one of these
-things, which all, save the first, emanated from Vienna or Berlin,
-and were the obvious causes of the war. Britain was only involved
-because she remained true to her solemn contract, a breach of which
-would have left her dishonoured. It is mere effrontery to pretend
-that she desired war, or that she left anything undone which could
-have prevented it. We lay our record with confidence before foreign
-nations and posterity. We have nothing to conceal and nothing to
-regret.
-
-On the other hand, supposing that one were to grant the whole of the
-German contention, suppose one were to admit that Germany did not
-know of the terms of the Austrian ultimatum or foresee its effect
-upon the other nations of Europe, that she took her stand by the side
-of Austria purely out of motives of chivalrous loyalty to an ally,
-and that she was forced, by so doing, to find herself at variance
-with Russia and France--suppose so inconceivable a hypothesis {27} as
-this, even then it cannot in any way condone the admitted wrong which
-Germany did in invading Belgium, nor does it show any possible cause
-why, because Germany was false to her word in this matter, Britain
-should be so also. This point is so unanswerable that the only
-defence, if it can be called a defence, which Germany has ever put
-forward is, that if she had not infringed Belgian neutrality,
-somebody else would have done so. Not one shadow of evidence has
-ever been put forward to justify so monstrous an assertion, which is
-certainly not endorsed by the Belgians themselves.
-
-In this connection one may allude to the so-called secret military
-engagements which were found and published by the Germans at Brussels
-and which were supposed to show that Great Britain herself
-contemplated the infraction of Belgian neutrality. One can only
-realise how bankrupt is Germany of all reason and argument when one
-considers such a contention as this. For years the German threats
-had been obvious to all the world. They had brought their strategic
-railways to the frontier of Belgium, and erected their standing camps
-there. Naturally Belgium was alarmed at such preparations and took
-counsel with Great Britain how her pledge should be redeemed and how
-her soil could be defended in case Germany proved perfidious. It was
-a simple military precaution which involved not the breach of a
-treaty but the fulfilment of one--not the invasion of Belgium but its
-protection after it was invaded. Each successive so-called
-"revelation" about the actions of Great Britain has only proved once
-more that--
-
- "Whatever record leaps to light
- She never shall be shamed."
-
-
-{28}
-
-These attempts to confuse the issue irresistibly recall the message
-of Frederic to Podowils when he was about to seize Silesia even as
-William seized Belgium. "The question of right," he said, "is the
-affair of ministers. It is your affair. It is time to work at it in
-secret, for the orders to the troops are given." March first and
-find some justification later.
-
-Germany would have stood higher in the world's esteem and in the
-estimate of history if, instead of playing in most grotesque fashion
-the wolf to the lamb, and accusing her unprepared and distracted
-neighbours of making a surprise attack upon her at the moment when
-she was at the height of her preparations, she had boldly stated her
-true position. Her dignity and frankness would have been undeniable
-if she had said, "I am a great power. I believe I am the greatest.
-I am willing to put it to the test of war. I am not satisfied with
-my geographical position. I desire a greater seaboard. You must
-give it to me or I shall take it. I justify my action by the fact
-that the position of every state rests ultimately upon its strength
-in war, and that I am willing to undergo that test."
-
-Such a contention would have commanded respect, however much we might
-resent it. But these repeated declarations from the Emperor himself,
-the Chancellor, and so many others that they were deliberately
-attacked, coupled with appeals to the Almighty, make up the most
-nauseous mixture of falsehood and blasphemy which the world has ever
-known. The whole conception of religion became grotesque, and the
-Almighty, instead of a universal Father of the human race, was
-suddenly transformed into "our good {29} old God," a bloodthirsty
-tribal deity worthy of those Prussian pagans who as late as the
-fourteenth century offered human sacrifices to their idols in the
-Eastern Mark. The phenomenon was part of that general national
-madness to which, it is to be hoped, the German of the future will
-look back with bewilderment and shame.
-
-One contention put forward by certain German apologists in connection
-with the war would hardly be worth referring to, were it not for the
-singular light which it casts upon the mental and moral position of a
-large number of the German public. It was that some special culture
-had been evolved by Germany which was of such value that it should be
-imposed by force upon the rest of the world. Since culture must in
-its nature be an international thing, the joint product of human
-development, such a claim can only be regarded as a conspicuous sign
-of its absence. In spiritual and intellectual matters it could not
-be asserted that Germany since 1870 had shown any superiority over
-France or England. In many matters she was conspicuously behind. It
-might fairly be claimed that in chemistry, in music, and in some
-forms of criticism, notably biblical exegesis, she was supreme. But
-in how many fields was she inferior to Great Britain? What name had
-she in poetry to put against Tennyson and Browning, in zoology to
-compare with Darwin, in scientific surgery to excel that of Lister,
-in travel to balance Stanley, or in the higher human qualities to
-equal such a man as Gordon? The fruits of German culture do not bear
-out the claim that it should forcibly supplant that of either of the
-great Western nations.
-
-We have now seen how the great cloud which had {30} hung so long over
-Europe burst at last, and the blast of war swept the land from end to
-end. We have passed through the years of hopes and alarms, of the
-_ententes_ of optimists and the _détentes_ of politicians, of
-skirmishes between journals and wrestles of finance, until we reach
-the end of it all--open primitive warfare between the two great
-branches of the Germanic family. In a purple passage Professor Cramb
-spoke of the days when the high gods of virility would smile as they
-looked down upon the chosen children of Odin, the English and the
-Germans, locked in the joy of battle. The hour had struck, and it is
-a partial record of those crowded and heroic days which is here set
-forth with such accuracy of detail as diligence may command and
-circumstances allow.
-
-
-
-
-{31}
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE OPENING OF THE WAR
-
-There can be no doubt that if Germany had confined her operations to
-an attack upon France without any infraction of Belgian neutrality,
-the situation in Great Britain would have been extraordinarily
-difficult. The Government was the most democratic that has ever been
-known in our political history, and it owed its power to an
-electorate, many of whom were passionate advocates for peace at
-almost any conceivable price. The preparations for naval war,
-necessitated by the ever-growing German power, had been accompanied
-and occasionally retarded by a constant murmur of remonstrance which
-swelled periodically into a menacing expostulation. McKenna and
-Churchill found their only opponents in the members of their own
-party, who persistently refused to look obvious facts in the face,
-and impatiently swept aside the figures of the German armaments while
-they indulged in vague and amiable aspirations towards international
-friendship. This large and energetic party would certainly have most
-strenuously resisted British interference in a Continental war. The
-statesmen who foresaw that the conquest of France would surely lead
-to the conquest of Britain {32} might have carried the country with
-them, but none the less they would have gone to war with such an
-incubus upon them as the traitorous Charles James Fox and his party
-had been in the days of Napoleon. A disunited British against a
-united German Empire would have been a grievous disadvantage, be our
-allies who they might, for, as Shakespeare sang, "If England to
-herself be true," it is then only that she is formidable.
-
-This great misfortune, however, was obviated by the policy of
-Germany. The most peace-loving Briton could not face the national
-dishonour which would have been eternally branded upon him had his
-country without an effort allowed its guarantee to be treated as
-waste paper by a great military nation. The whole people were welded
-into one, and save for a few freakish individuals who obeyed their
-own perversity of mind or passion for notoriety, the country was
-united as it has never been in history. A just war seemed to touch
-the land with some magic wand, which healed all dissensions and
-merged into one national whole those vivid controversies which are,
-in fact, a sign rather of intense vitality than of degeneration. In
-a moment the faddist forgot his fad, the capitalist his grievance
-against taxation, the Labour man his feud against Capital, the Tory
-his hatred of the Government, even the woman her craving for the
-vote. A political millennium seemed to have dawned. Best and most
-important of all was the evident sign that the work done of late
-years to win the friendship of Ireland had not been in vain. If the
-mere promise of domestic institutions has ranged all responsible
-Irishmen upon one side on the day of battle, what may we not hope for
-ourselves {33} and for the Empire when they have been fully
-established and Time has alleviated the last lingering memories of an
-evil past? It is true that at a later period of the war this fair
-prospect was somewhat overcast by an insane rebellion, in which the
-wrongs of Ireland, once formidable and now trivial, were allowed by a
-colossal selfishness to outweigh the martyrdom of Belgium and the
-mutilation of France. Still the fact remains (and it must sustain us
-in our future efforts for conciliation) that never before have we had
-the representative nationalists of Ireland as our allies in a great
-struggle.
-
-The leaders of the Unionist party, Lord Lansdowne and Mr. Bonar Law,
-had already, on August 2, signified to the Government that they
-considered Britain to be honour-bound to France, and would support
-without hesitation every practical step to give effect to the
-alliance. Fortified by this assurance, the Government could go
-strongly forward. But after the Belgian infraction, its position was
-that of the executive of a united nation. Sir Edward Grey's analysis
-in Parliament of the causes which had brought us to war convinced the
-reason and claimed the sympathy of every political party, and even
-the most fervent advocates of peace found themselves silenced in the
-presence of the huge German aggression which could never admit of a
-peace founded upon mutual respect and equality, but only of that
-which comes from ascendancy on the one side and helplessness upon the
-other.
-
-Should Britain ever be led into an unjust war, she will soon learn it
-from the fearless voices of her children. The independent young
-nations which are rising under the red-crossed flag will not be
-dragged, {34} in the train of the Mother-Country, into any enterprise
-of which their conscience does not approve. But
- now their assent was whole-hearted. They were
-vehement in their approval of the firm stand made for the pledged
-word of the nation. From every quarter of the world deep answered
-deep in its assurance that the sword should not be sheathed until the
-wrong was righted and avenged.
-
-Strong, earnest Canada sent her 30,000 men, with her promise of more.
-Fiery Australia and New Zealand prepared as many, Maori vying with
-white man in his loyalty to the flag. South Africa, under the
-splendid leadership of Botha, began to arm, to speak with the foe in
-her own gates. India poured forth money and men with a lavish
-generosity which can never be forgotten in this country. The throb
-of loyalty to the old land passed through every smallest Dependency,
-and then beyond the frontier to those further lands which had known
-us as a just and kindly neighbour. Newfoundland voted a contingent.
-Ceylon sent of her best. Little Fiji mustered her company of
-fighting men, and even the mountains of Nepaul and the inaccessible
-plateaux of Thibet were desirous of swelling that great host,
-gathered from many races, but all under the one banner which meant to
-each a just and liberal rule.
-
-On the very eve of the outbreak of hostilities one man was added to
-the home establishment whose presence was worth many army corps.
-This was Lord Kitchener, whose boat was actually lying with steam up
-to bear him away upon a foreign mission, when, at the last instant,
-either the universal public demand or the good sense of the
-Government recalled him to take supreme charge of the war. It was a
-{35} strange and a novel situation that a soldier who was no party
-politician should assume the role of War Minister in a political
-Cabinet, but the times called for decided measures, and this was
-among them. From that day onwards until the dark hour which called
-him from his uncompleted task the passer-by who looked up at the
-massive front of the War Office was gladdened by the thought that
-somewhere in the heart of it those stern, immutable eyes were looking
-out at Britain's enemies, and that clear, calculating brain was
-working for their downfall. Slow, safe, methodical, remorseless,
-carefully preparing the means at every stage that led him to the
-distant but preordained end, he had shown, both in the Soudan and
-South Africa, that the race of great British generals was not yet
-extinct. He knew and trusted his instrument even as it knew and
-trusted him.
-
-That instrument was an army which was remarkably well prepared for
-its work. It cannot be said that the Boer War had increased the
-prestige of the British forces, though only those who have studied
-the subject can realise how difficult was the task with which they
-were then faced, or how considerable an achievement it was to bring
-it to a success. But the campaign had left behind it a valuable
-legacy, all the richer because so great a proportion of the land
-forces had been drawn into the struggle. In 1914 a large proportion
-of senior officers and a considerable number of non-commissioned
-officers and reservists had passed through that ordeal, and learned
-by experience what can be done, and, even more important, what cannot
-be done, in face of modern rifles in skilful hands.
-
-The lesson had been well pressed home after the {36} war, and every
-general, from Lord Roberts downwards, had laid emphasis upon the
-importance of cover and of accuracy of fire. Apart from the sound
-technical training of the soldiers, the administration of the Army
-had, after an experimental period, fallen into the hands of Lord
-Haldane, who has left his mark more deeply than any one since
-Cardwell upon the formation of the land forces. A debt of gratitude
-is owing to him for his clear thought and his masterful dispositions.
-Had he been a prophet as well as organiser, he would no doubt have
-held his hand before he made the smallest decrease of our regular
-forces; but, on the other hand, by turning our haphazard, amateurish
-volunteers into the workman-like Territorials, in forming the
-invaluable Officers' Training Corps which tapped our public schools
-for something better than athletic talent, and in rigidly defining
-our expeditionary corps and providing the special reserves for its
-reinforcements, he did work for which he can never adequately be
-thanked. The weapon which he had fashioned was now thrust into the
-strong right hand of the new Minister of War.
-
-It is well to survey this weapon before we show how it was used. The
-total personnel of the Army with its reserves called up was about
-370,000 men. Of this 160,000 were set aside as an expeditionary
-force, but only a portion of this number could be counted as
-immediately available on the outbreak of war, though the system of
-mobilisation had been brought to a fine point. It was hoped that
-three army corps numbering about 110,000 men, with two divisions of
-cavalry, about 10,000 horsemen, would be immediately available, petty
-numbers as compared with the millions of the Continent, but highly
-trained {37} professional soldiers, capable, perhaps, of turning the
-balance in the clash of equal hosts. The rest of the Regular Army
-had to provide garrisons for India, Egypt, Gibraltar, and other
-dependencies, but it was hoped that in time nearly all of it would be
-available for service.
-
-Behind these first-line troops was the special reserve, something
-under 100,000 in number, who were the immediate reinforcements to
-fill the gaps of battle. Next in order came the Territorials, whose
-full complement was 340,000 men. Unhappily at this time they were
-nearly 100,000 under strength, and there are many who think that if
-the National Service League in their earnest campaign, which was
-inspired by a clear vision of the coming danger, had insisted upon a
-great enlargement of this constitutional force, instead of agitating
-for a complete change which presented practical and political
-difficulties, their efforts would have been more fruitful. These
-troops were raw, inexperienced, and only enlisted for home service,
-but with a fine spirit they set to work at once to make themselves
-efficient, and the great majority signified their readiness to go
-anywhere at the country's call. Many brigades were sent abroad at
-once to relieve the regulars in Egypt and India, while others were
-ready to join the fighting line on the Continent after a few months,
-where, as will be shown, they acquitted themselves remarkably well.
-The enthusiasm for the war rapidly sent the numbers of the
-Territorials up to nearly half a million. In addition to these
-troops there was the promise of 70,000 highly trained men (one
-quarter of whom were British regulars) from India. Canada,
-Australia, and New Zealand came forward to offer some 60,000 {38} men
-between them, with the promise of as many more as should be called
-for. Brave and hardy, these were splendid raw material, though their
-actual technical training was not, save in some special corps, more
-advanced than that of the British Territorials. Altogether, the
-British War Lord could see, at the very beginning of hostilities,
-nearly 1,000,000 of men ready to his hand, though in very different
-stages of efficiency.
-
-But already he had conceived the idea of a campaign of attrition,
-and, looking forward into the years, he was convinced that these
-forces were insufficient. Some entirely new cadres must be
-organised, which should have no limitations, but be as reliable an
-instrument as the regular forces of the Crown. With a prescience
-which found no counterpart either among our friends or our foes he
-fixed three years as a probable term for the war, and he made
-preparation accordingly. Early in August he called for half a
-million fresh volunteers for the war, and early in October he had got
-them. Still unsatisfied, he called for yet another half-million, and
-before Christmas his numbers were again complete. It was a wonderful
-autumn and winter in Britain. Every common and green was loud with
-the cries of the instructors, and bare with the tramp of the men.
-Nothing has ever been seen in the world's history which can compare
-in patriotic effort with that rally to the flag, for no bounty was
-offered, and no compulsion used. The spirit of the men was
-extraordinarily high. Regiments were filled with gentlemen who gave
-up every amenity of life in order to face an arduous and dangerous
-campaign, while even greater patriotism was shown by the countless
-thousands of {39} miners, artisans, and other well-paid workmen who
-sacrificed high wages and a home life in order to serve for an
-indefinite time upon the humble pay of the soldier, leaving, very
-often, a wife and children in straitened circumstances behind them.
-It is at such times that a democratic country reaps the rich fruits
-of its democracy, for if you make the land such that it is good to
-live in, so also does it become good to die for. These forces could
-not be ready, even with the best of wills, and the most intensive
-culture, before the summer of 1915, but at that date, including her
-sea forces, Great Britain had not less than 2,000,000 volunteers
-under arms and ready for immediate use, a number which had risen to
-4,000,000 by the end of that year, and 5,000,000 by the spring of
-1916.
-
-So much for the wise provisions of Lord Kitchener, which would have
-been useless had they not been supported by a stern and
-self-sacrificing national spirit. The crisis was met with a cold
-determination which gave some superficial observers the impression
-that the nation was listless, when it was, in truth, far too earnest
-for mere shoutings or flag-waving. "Wakened at last!" cried some
-foreign cartoon when a German outrage aroused the country for an
-instant to some visible gleam of wrath. A deeper observer might have
-known that a country which finds 5,000,000 volunteer fighters, and
-which, instead of putting the expenses of the war upon future
-generations, as was done by Germany, elects to meet a considerable
-proportion of them by present taxation, is in grim earnest from the
-start. The income tax was doubled without a remonstrance by a
-unanimous vote of the Commons, thus finding an extra £40,000,000 a
-year for the prosecution of the war. Other taxes {40} were levied by
-which the working classes bore their fair share of the burden, and
-they also elicited no complaints. Before Christmas no less than
-£450,000,000 had been raised by a loan, a gigantic financial effort
-which was easily borne at a charge of 4 per cent.
-
-But if Britain was able to face the future with confidence, both in
-finance and in her military preparation, it was entirely to her
-silent, invisible, but most efficient Navy that she owed it. By wise
-foresight the Grand Fleet, numbering some 400 vessels, had been
-assembled for Royal inspection before the storm broke and when it was
-but a rising cloud-bank upon the horizon. This all-important move
-has been attributed to Prince Louis of Battenberg, First Sea Lord of
-the Admiralty, but it could not have been done without the hearty
-concurrence and cooperation of Mr. Winston Churchill, who should
-share the honour, even as he would have shared the blame had we been
-caught unawares. The so-called inspection had hardly been completed
-at Spithead before war was upon us, and the Fleet, ready manned,
-provisioned, and armed, moved straight away to take up its war
-stations. The main fighting squadrons vanished into a strategic mist
-from which they did not emerge for very many months, but it was
-understood that they were assembled at centres like Scapa Flow and
-Cromarty Firth which were outside the radius of the German
-torpedo-boats and smaller submarines, while they were near enough to
-the enemy's ports to be able to bring him to action should he emerge.
-
-Numerous patrols of small vessels were let loose in the North Sea to
-keep in touch with our opponents, {41} who were well known to be both
-daring and active. It is said that no less than 3000 ships, large
-and small, were flying the white ensign of St. George. A portion of
-these were told off for the protection of the great commercial
-sea-routes, and for the hunting down of some score of German cruisers
-which were known to be at sea. Some of these gave a very good
-account of themselves and others were innocuous; but the net result
-in loss, which had been discounted in advance as 5 per cent of the
-merchant fleet at sea, worked out at less than half that figure, and,
-by the new year, the marauders had been practically exterminated.
-
-Now as always--but now more than ever in the past--it was absolutely
-vital to hold the seas. Who wins the sea wins Britain. Of every
-five loaves in the country four come to us from abroad, and our
-position in meat is no better. It is victory or starvation when we
-fight upon the sea. It is ill to play for such stakes, however safe
-the game--worse still when it is a game where the value of some of
-the cards is unknown. We have little to fear from a raid, nothing
-from invasion, everything from interference with our commerce. It is
-one of the points in which our party politics, which blind so many
-people to reason, might well have brought absolute ruin upon the
-country. The cultivation of British food supplies should never have
-been a question of free trade or protection, but rather of vital
-national insurance.
-
-Had the war come ten years later we might have been in deadly danger,
-owing to the rapidly growing power of the submarine. These engines
-turned upon our food-carriers might well have starved us out,
-especially if we had continued our national folly in {42} being
-scared by bogeys from building a Channel tunnel. But by a merciful
-Providence the struggle came at a moment when the submarine was half
-developed, and had not yet reached either the speed or the range of
-action which would make it the determining factor in a war. As it
-was, the fruits of submarine warfare, in spite of a wise and timely
-warning on the eve of hostilities by Admiral Sir Percy Scott,
-astonished the public, but the mischief done was a very small thing
-compared to the possibilities which have to be most carefully guarded
-against in the future.
-
-In their present stage of development, the submarine could only
-annoy. With the great fleet in existence and with the shipbuilding
-facilities of Great Britain, nothing could vitally harm her save the
-loss of a pitched battle. The British superiority was rather in her
-small craft than in her large ones, but in capital ships she was able
-to place in line at the beginning of the war enough to give a
-sufficient margin of insurance. There was never any tendency to
-under-rate the excellence of the hostile ships, nor the courage and
-efficiency of the men. It was well understood that when they came
-out they would give a good account of themselves, and also that they
-would not come out until the circumstances seemed propitious. They
-were under a disadvantage in that the Russian fleet, though small,
-was not negligible, and therefore some portion of the German force on
-sea as well as on land had always to face eastwards. Also the
-British had the French for their allies, and, though the great ships
-of the latter were nearly all in the Mediterranean, a swarm of small
-craft was ready to buzz out of her western ports should the war come
-down-channel.
-
-{43}
-
-Yet another advantage lay with the British in that their geographical
-position put a six-hundred-mile-long breakwater right across the
-entrance to Germany, leaving only two sally-ports north and south by
-which commerce could enter or raiders escape. The result was the
-immediate utter annihilation of Germany's sea-borne commerce.
-Altogether it must be admitted that Germany was grievously
-handicapped at sea, and that she deserves the more credit for
-whatever she accomplished, save when, as on land, she transgressed
-and degraded the recognised laws of civilised warfare. It is time
-now to turn to those military events upon the Continent which were
-the precursors of that British campaign which is the subject of this
-volume.
-
-Want of space and accurate material make it impossible to do justice
-here to the deeds of our Allies, but an attempt must be made to
-indicate briefly the main phases of the struggle abroad, since its
-course reacted continually upon the British operations. It may be
-shortly stated, then, that so far as the western theatre of war was
-concerned, hostilities commenced by two movements, one an attack by
-the French upon the occupants of those lost provinces for which they
-had mourned during forty-four years, and the other the advance of the
-Germans over the Belgian frontier.
-
-The former was a matter of no great importance. It took two distinct
-lines, the one from the Belfort region into Alsace, and the other
-from Nancy as a centre into Lorraine. The Alsatian venture gained
-some ground which was never wholly lost, and was adorned by one small
-victory near Mulhausen before it was checked by the German defence.
-The Lorraine {44} advance had also some initial success, but was
-finally thrown back on August 20 in a severe action in which the
-French were defeated. Luneville, across the French frontier, was
-occupied by the Germans, but they made no headway, and their
-subsequent attempts upon Nancy were repulsed by the army of General
-Castelnau. General Pau, a fiery, one-armed septuagenarian, was the
-French leader in the Alsatian invasion, but it was soon realised by
-General Joffre that he and the bulk of his men would be more useful
-at the vital point upon the northern frontier, to which early in
-September they were transferred.
-
-The main drama, however, quickly unfolded upon the Belgian frontier.
-Speed and secrecy were vital to the German plans. On July 31, before
-any declaration of war, and while the German representative at
-Brussels was perjuring his soul in his country's service by
-representing that no infringement was possible, three German army
-corps, the seventh, ninth, and tenth, fully mobilised and highly
-equipped, were moving up from their quarters so as to be ready for a
-treacherous pounce upon their little neighbour whom they were pledged
-to defend. Von Emmich was in command. On the night of Saturday,
-August 1, the vanguard of the German armies, using motor traffic
-followed by trains, burst through the neutral Duchy of Luxemburg, and
-on August 3 they were over the Belgian line at Verviers. The
-long-meditated crime had been done, and, with loud appeals to God,
-Germany began her fatal campaign by deliberate perjury and arrogant
-disdain for treaties. God accepted the appeal, and swiftly showed
-how the weakest State with absolute right upon its side may bring to
-naught all the crafty plottings of the strong.
-
-{45}
-
-For time was the essence of the situation. For this the innumerable
-motors, for this the light equipment and the lack of transport. It
-was on, on, at top speed, that there be no hindrance in the path of
-the great hosts that soon would be closing up behind. But time was
-life and death for the French also, with their slower mobilisation,
-their backward preparation, and their expectations from Great
-Britain. Time was the precious gift which little Belgium gave to the
-Allies. She gave them days and days, and every day worth an army
-corps. The Germans had crossed the Meuse, had taken Vise, and then
-had rushed at Liége, even as the Japanese had rushed at Port Arthur.
-With all their military lore, they had not learned the lesson which
-was taught so clearly in 1904--that a fortress is taken by skill and
-not by violence alone.
-
-Leman, a great soldier, defended the forts built by Brialmont. Both
-defender and designer were justified of their work. On August 5 the
-seventh German Corps attempted to rush the gaps between the forts.
-These gaps were three miles wide, but were filled with entrenched
-infantry. The attack was boldly pressed home, but it completely
-failed. The German loss was considerable. Two other corps were
-called up, and again on August 7 the attack was renewed, but with no
-better result. The defenders fought as befitted the descendants of
-those Belgae whom Caesar pronounced to be the bravest of the Gauls,
-or of that Walloon Guard which had so great a mediaeval reputation.
-There were 25,000 in the town and 120,000 outside, but they were
-still outside at the end of the assault.
-
-Liége, however, had one fatal weakness. Its {46} garrison was far
-too small to cover the ground. With twelve forts three miles apart
-it is clear that there were intervals of, roughly, thirty-six miles
-to be covered, and that a garrison of 25,000 men, when you had
-deducted the gunners for the forts, hardly left the thinnest skirmish
-line to cover the ground. So long as the Germans attacked upon a
-narrow front they could be held. The instant that they spread out
-there were bound to be places where they could march almost unopposed
-into the town. This was what occurred. The town was penetrated, but
-the forts were intact. General Leman, meanwhile, seeing that the
-town itself was indefensible, had sent the garrison out before the
-place was surrounded. Many a Belgian soldier fought upon the Yser
-and helped to turn the tide of that crowning conflict who would have
-been a prisoner in Germany had it not been for the foresight and the
-decision of General Leman.
-
-The Germans were in the town upon the 8th, but the forts still held
-out and the general advance was grievously impeded. Day followed
-day, and each beyond price to the Allies. Germany had secretly
-prepared certain monstrous engines of war--one more proof, if proof
-were needed, that the conflict had been prearranged and deliberately
-provoked. These were huge cannon of a dimension never before
-cast--42 centimetres in bore. More mobile and hardly less effective
-were some smaller howitzers of 28-centimetre calibre said to have
-come from the Austrian foundries at Skoda. Brialmont, when he
-erected his concrete and iron cupolas, had not foreseen the Thor's
-hammer which would be brought to crush them. One after another they
-were smashed like {47} eggs. The heroic Leman was dug out from under
-the debris of the last fort and lived to tell of his miraculous
-escape. Liége was at last in the hands of the invaders. But already
-the second week of August was at an end--the British were crowding
-into France, the French line was thickening along the frontier--all
-was well with the Allies. Little David had left a grievous mark upon
-Goliath.
-
-The German mobilisation was now complete, and the whole vast host,
-over a million strong, poured over the frontier. Never was seen such
-an army, so accurate and scientific in its general conception, so
-perfect in its detail. Nothing had been omitted from its equipment
-which the most thorough of nations, after years of careful
-preparation, could devise. In motor transport, artillery, machine
-guns, and all the technique of war they were unrivalled. The men
-themselves were of high heart and grand physique. By some twisted
-process of reasoning founded upon false information they had been
-persuaded that this most aggressive and unnecessary of wars was in
-some way a war of self-defence, for it was put to them that unless
-they attacked their neighbours now, their neighbours would certainly
-some day or other attack them. Hence, they were filled with
-patriotic ardour and a real conviction that they were protecting
-their beloved Fatherland. One could not but admire their
-self-sacrificing devotion, though in the dry light of truth and
-reason they stood forth as the tools of tyranny, the champions of
-barbarous political reaction and the bullies of Europe. It was an
-ominous fact that the troops were provided in advance with incendiary
-discs for the firing of dwellings, which shows that the orgy of
-destruction {48} and cruelty which disgraced the name of the German
-Army in Belgium and in the north of France was prearranged by some
-central force, whose responsibility in this matter can only be
-described as terrific. They brought the world of Christ back to the
-days of Odin, and changed a civilised campaign to an inroad of pagan
-Danes. This wicked central force could only be the Chief Staff of
-the Army, and in the last instance the Emperor himself. Had Napoleon
-conducted his campaigns with as little scruple as William II., it can
-safely be said that Europe as we know it would hardly exist to-day,
-and the monuments of antiquity and learning would have been wiped
-from the face of the globe. It is an evil precedent to be expunged
-from the records for ever--all the more evil because it was practised
-by a strong nation on a weak one and on a defenceless people by one
-which had pledged themselves to defend them. That it was in no wise
-caused by any actions upon the part of the Belgians is clearly proved
-by the fact that similar atrocities were committed by the German Army
-the moment they crossed the frontiers both of France and of Poland.
-
-The Allies had more than they expected from Liége. They had less
-from Namur. The grey-green tide of German invasion had swept the
-Belgian resistance before it, had flooded into Brussels, and had been
-dammed for only a very few days by the great frontier fortress,
-though it was counted as stronger than Liége. The fact was that the
-Germans had now learned their lesson. Never again would they imagine
-that the _Furor Teutonicus_ alone could carry a walled city. The
-fatal guns were brought up again and the forts were crushed with
-mechanical precision, while the defenders between the forts, after
-{49} enduring for ten hours a severe shelling, withdrew from their
-trenches. On August 22 the fortress surrendered, some of General
-Michel's garrison being taken, but a considerable proportion
-effecting its retreat with the French Army which had come up to
-support the town. By the third week of August the remains of the
-Belgian forces had taken refuge in Antwerp, and the Germans, having
-made a wide sweep with their right wing through Brussels, were
-descending in a two-hundred-mile line upon Northern France.
-
-The French plans had in truth been somewhat disarranged by the
-Belgian resistance, for the chivalrous spirit of the nation would not
-permit that their gallant friends be unsupported. Fresh dispositions
-had been made, but the sudden fall of Namur brought them to naught.
-Before that untoward event the French had won a small but indubitable
-victory at Dinant, and had advanced their line from Namur on the
-right to Charleroi on the left. With the fall of Namur their long
-wall had lost its corner bastion, and they were at once vigorously
-attacked by all the German armies, who forced the Sambre on August
-22, carried Charleroi, and pushed the French back with considerable
-loss of guns and prisoners along the whole line. There was defeat,
-but there was nothing in the nature of a rout or of an envelopment.
-The line fell back fighting tooth and nail, but none the less
-Northern France was thrown open to the invaders. In this general
-movement the British forces were involved, and we now turn to a more
-particular and detailed account of what befell them during these most
-momentous days.
-
-
-
-
-{50}
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE BATTLE OF MONS
-
-The landing of the British in France--The British leaders--The
-advance to Mons--The defence of the bridges of Nimy--The holding of
-the canal--The fateful telegram--The rearguard actions of Frameries,
-Wasmes, and Dour--The charge of the Lancers--The fate of the
-Cheshires--The 7th Brigade at Solesmes--The Guards in action--The
-Germans' rude awakening--The Connaughts at Pont-sur-Sambre.
-
-
-[Sidenote: The landing of the British in France]
-
-The bulk of the British Expeditionary Force passed over to France
-under cover of darkness on the nights of August 12 and 13, 1914. The
-movement, which included four infantry divisions and a cavalry
-division, necessitated the transportation of approximately 90,000
-men, 15,000 horses, and 400 guns. It is doubtful if so large a host
-has ever been moved by water in so short a time in all the annals of
-military history. There was drama in the secrecy and celerity of the
-affair. Two canvas walls converging into a funnel screened the
-approaches to Southampton Dock. All beyond was darkness and mystery.
-Down this fatal funnel passed the flower of the youth of Britain, and
-their folk saw them no more. They had embarked upon the great
-adventure of the German War. The crowds in the streets saw the last
-serried files vanish into the darkness of the docks, heard the
-measured tramp upon the stone quays dying farther {51} away in the
-silence of the night, until at last all was still and the great
-steamers were pushing out into the darkness.
-
-No finer force for technical efficiency, and no body of men more
-hot-hearted in their keen desire to serve their country, have ever
-left the shores of Britain. It is a conservative estimate to say
-that within four months a half of their number were either dead or in
-the hospitals. They were destined for great glory, and for that
-great loss which is the measure of their glory.
-
-Belated pedestrians upon the beach of the southern towns have
-recorded their impression of that amazing spectacle. In the clear
-summer night the wall of transports seemed to stretch from horizon to
-horizon. Guardian warships flanked the mighty column, while swift
-shadows shooting across the surface of the sea showed where the
-torpedo-boats and scouts were nosing and ferreting for any possible
-enemy. But far away, hundreds of miles to the north, lay the real
-protection of the flotilla, where the smooth waters of the Heligoland
-Bight were broken by the sudden rise and dip of the blockading
-periscopes.
-
-It is well to state, once for all, the composition of this force, so
-that in the succeeding pages, when a brigade or division is under
-discussion, the diligent reader may ascertain its composition. This,
-then, is the First Army which set forth to France. Others will be
-chronicled as they appeared upon the scene of action. It may be
-remarked that the formation of units was greatly altered with the
-progress of the campaign, so that it has been possible without
-indiscretion to raise the veil of secrecy which was once so essential.
-
-{52}
-
- THE FIRST ARMY CORPS--GENERAL HAIG
-
- DIVISION I.
-
- General LOMAX.
-
- 1_st Infantry Brigade--General Maxse_.
- 1st Coldstream Guards.
- 1st Scots Guards.
- 1st Black Watch.
- 2nd Munster Fusiliers.
-
- 2_nd Infantry Brigade--General Bulfin_.
- 2nd Sussex.
- 1st N. Lancs.
- 1st Northampton.
- 2nd K.R. Rifles.
-
- 3_rd Infantry Brigade--General Landon_.
- 1st West Surrey (Queen's).
- 1st S. Wales Borderers.
- 1st Gloucester.
- 2nd Welsh.
-
- _Artillery--Colonel Findlay_.
- 25th Brig. R.F.A. 113, 114, 115.
- 26th Brig. R.F.A. 116, 117, 118.
- 39th Brig. R.F.A. 46, 51, 54.
- 43rd (How.) Brig. R.F.A. 30, 40, 57.
-
- _Engineers--Colonel Schreiber_.
- 23 F. Co.
- 26 F. Co.
- 1 Signal Co.
-
-
- DIVISION II.
-
- General Munro.
-
- 4_th Infantry Brigade--General Scott-Kerr_.
- 2nd Grenadier Guards.
- 2nd Coldstream Guards.
- 3rd Coldstream Guards.
- 1st Irish.
-
- 5_th Infantry Brigade--General Haking_.
- 2nd Worcester.
- 2nd Ox. and Bucks L.I.
- 2nd Highland L.I.
- 2nd Connaught Rangers.
-
- 6_th Infantry Brigade--General Davies_.
- 1st Liverpool (King's).
- 2nd S. Stafford.
- 1st Berks.
- 1st K.R. Rifles.
-
- _Artillery--General Perceval_.
- 34th Brig. R.F.A. 22, 50, 70.
- 36th Brig. R.F.A. 15, 48, 71.
- 41st Brig. R.F.A. 9, 16, 17.
- How. Brig. R.F.A. 47, 56, 60.
- 35th Batt. R.G.A.
- R.E. 5, 11, Field Cos.
-
-
-
- THE SECOND ARMY CORPS--GENERAL SMITH-DORRIEN
-
- DIVISION III.
-
- General HAMILTON.
-
- 7_th Infantry Brigade--General McCracken_.
- 3rd Worcester.
- 2nd S. Lancs.
- 1st Wilts.
- 2nd Irish Rifles.
-
- 8_th Infantry Brigade--General B. Doran_.
- 2nd Royal Scots.
- 2nd Royal Irish.
- 4th Middlesex.
- 1st Gordon Highlanders.
-
- 9_th Infantry Brigade--General Shaw_.
- 1st North. Fusiliers.
- 4th Royal Fusiliers.
- 1st Lincoln.
- 1st Scots Fusiliers.
-
- _Artillery--General Wing_.
- 23rd Brigade 107, 108, 109.
- 30th Brigade (How.) 128, 129, 130.
- 40th Brigade 6, 23, 49.
- 42nd Brigade 29, 41, 45.
- 48th Batt. R.G.A.
-
- _R.E.--Colonel Wilson_.
- 56, 57 F. Corps.
- 3 Signal Co.
-
-
- DIVISION V.
-
- General FERGUSON.
-
- 13_th Infantry Brigade--General Cuthbert_.
- 2nd K.O. Scot. Bord.
- 2nd West Riding.
- 1st West Kent.
- 2nd Yorks. Light Infantry.
-
- 14_th Infantry Brigade--General Holt_.
- 2nd Suffolk.
- 1st East Surrey.
- 1st D. of Cornwall's L.T.
- 2nd Manchester.
-
- 15_th Infantry Brigade--General Gleichen_.
- 1st Norfolk.
- 1st Bedford.
- 1st Cheshire.
- 1st Dorset.
-
- _Artillery--General Headlam_.
- 15th Brig. R.F.A. 11, 52, 80
- 27th Brig. R.F.A. 119, 120, 121
- 28th Brig. R.F.A. 122, 123, 124
- 8 How. Brig. 37, 61, 65.
- Heavy G.A. 108 Battery,
-
- _R.E.--Colonel Tulloch_.
- 17th and 59th Field Cos.
- 5 Signal Co.
-
-
-The Cavalry consisted of four Brigades forming the first cavalry
-division, and one extra Brigade. They were made up thus:
-
-1st Cavalry Brigade (Briggs).--2nd and 5th Dragoon Guards; 11th
-Hussars.
-
-2nd Cavalry Brigade (De Lisle).--4th Dragoon Guards; 9th Lancers;
-18th Hussars
-
-3rd Cavalry Brigade (Gough).--4th Hussars; 5th Lancers; 16th Lancers.
-
-4th Cavalry Brigade (Bingham).--3rd Hussars; 6th Dragoon Guards;
-Comp. Guards Re.
-
-5th Cavalry Brigade (Chetwode).--Scots Greys; 12th Lancers; 20th
-Hussars.
-
-D, E, I, J, and L batteries of Horse Artillery were attached to these
-Brigades.
-
-
-{53}
-
-Such was the Army which first set forth to measure itself against the
-soldiers of Germany. Prussian bravery, capacity, and organising
-power had a high reputation among us, and yet we awaited the result
-with every confidence, if the odds of numbers were not overwhelming.
-It was generally known that during the period since the last war the
-training of the troops had greatly progressed, and many of the men,
-with nearly all the senior officers, had had experience in the
-arduous campaign of South Africa. They could also claim those
-advantages which volunteer troops may hope to have over conscripts.
-At the same time there was no tendency to underrate the earnest
-patriotism of our opponents, and we were well aware that even the
-numerous Socialists who filled their ranks were persuaded, incredible
-as it may seem, that the Fatherland was really attacked, and were
-whole-hearted in its defence.
-
-The crossing was safely effected. It has always been the traditional
-privilege of the British public to grumble at their public servants
-and to speak of "muddling through" to victory. No doubt the
-criticism has often been deserved. But on this occasion the
-supervising General in command, the British War Office, and the Naval
-Transport Department all rose to a supreme degree of excellence in
-their arrangements. So too did the Railway Companies concerned. The
-details were meticulously correct. Without the loss of man, horse,
-or gun, the soldiers who had seen the sun set in Hampshire saw it
-rise in Picardy or in Normandy. Boulogne and Havre were the chief
-ports of disembarkation, but many, including the cavalry, went up the
-Seine and came ashore at Rouen. The soldiers everywhere received a
-rapturous {54} welcome from the populace, which they returned by a
-cheerful sobriety of behaviour. The admirable precepts as to wine
-and women set forth in Lord Kitchener's parting orders to the Army
-seem to have been most scrupulously observed. It is no slight upon
-the gallantry of France--the very home of gallantry--if it be said
-that she profited greatly at this strained, over-anxious time by the
-arrival of these boisterous over-sea Allies. The tradition of
-British solemnity has been for ever killed by these jovial invaders.
-It is probable that the beautiful tune, and even the paltry words of
-"Tipperary," will pass into history as the marching song, and often
-the death-dirge, of that gallant host. The dusty, poplar-lined roads
-resounded with their choruses, and the quiet Picardy villages
-re-echoed their thunderous and superfluous assurances as to the state
-of their hearts. All France broke into a smile at the sight of them,
-and it was at a moment when a smile meant much to France.
-
-[Sidenote: The British leaders.]
-
-Whilst the various brigades were with some deliberation preparing for
-an advance up-country, there arrived at the Gare du Nord in Paris a
-single traveller who may be said to have been the most welcome
-British visitor who ever set foot in the city. He was a short, thick
-man, tanned by an outdoor life, a solid, impassive personality with a
-strong, good-humoured face, the forehead of a thinker above it, and
-the jaw of an obstinate fighter below. Overhung brows shaded a pair
-of keen grey eyes, while the strong, set mouth was partly concealed
-by a grizzled moustache. Such was John French, leader of cavalry in
-Africa and now Field-Marshal commanding the Expeditionary Forces of
-Britain. His defence of Colesberg at {55} a critical period when he
-bluffed the superior Boer forces, his dashing relief of Kimberley,
-and especially the gallant way in which he had thrown his exhausted
-cavalry across the path of Cronje's army in order to hold it while
-Roberts pinned it down at Paardeberg, were all exploits which were
-fresh in the public mind, and gave the soldiers confidence in their
-leader.
-
-French might well appreciate the qualities of his immediate
-subordinates. Both of his army corps and his cavalry division were
-in good hands. Haig, like his leader, was a cavalry man by
-education, though now entrusted with the command of the First Army
-Corps, and destined for an ever-increasing European reputation.
-Fifty-four years of age, he still preserved all his natural energies,
-whilst he had behind him long years of varied military experience,
-including both the Soudanese and the South African campaigns, in both
-of which he had gained high distinction. He had the advantage of
-thoroughly understanding the mind of his commander, as he had worked
-under him as Chief of the Staff in his remarkable operations round
-Colesberg in those gloomy days which opened the Boer War.
-
-The Second Army Corps sustained a severe loss before ever it reached
-the field of action, for its commander, General Grierson, died
-suddenly of heart failure in the train between Havre and Rouen upon
-August 18. Grierson had been for many years Military Attaché in
-Berlin, and one can well imagine how often he had longed to measure
-British soldiers against the self-sufficient critics around him. At
-the very last moment the ambition of his lifetime was denied him.
-His place, however, was worthily filled by General Smith-Dorrien,
-another South African {56} veteran whose brigade in that difficult
-campaign had been recognised as one of the very best. Smith-Dorrien
-was a typical Imperial soldier in the world-wide character of his
-service, for he had followed the flag, and occasionally preceded it,
-in Zululand, Egypt, the Soudan, Chitral, and the Tirah before the
-campaign against the Boers. A sportsman as well as a soldier, he had
-very particularly won the affections of the Aldershot division by his
-system of trusting to their honour rather than to compulsion in
-matters of discipline. It was seldom indeed that his confidence was
-abused.
-
-Haig and Smith-Dorrien were the two generals upon whom the immediate
-operations were to devolve, for the Third Army Corps was late,
-through no fault of its own, in coming into line. There remained the
-Cavalry Division commanded by General Allenby, who was a column
-leader in that great class for mounted tactics held in South Africa a
-dozen years before. It is remarkable that of the four leaders in the
-initial operations of the German War--French, Smith-Dorrien, Haig,
-and Allenby--three belonged to the cavalry, an arm which has usually
-been regarded as active and ornamental rather than intellectual.
-Pulteney, the commander of the Third Army Corps, was a product of the
-Guards, a veteran of much service and a well-known heavy-game shot.
-Thus, neither of the more learned corps were represented among the
-higher commanders upon the actual field of battle, but brooding over
-the whole operations was the steadfast, untiring brain of Joffre,
-whilst across the water the silent Kitchener, remorseless as Destiny,
-moved the forces of the Empire to the front. The last word in each
-case lay with the sappers.
-
-{57}
-
-The general plan of campaign was naturally in the hands of General
-Joffre, since he was in command of far the greater portion of the
-Allied Force. It has been admitted in France that the original
-dispositions might be open to criticism, since a number of the French
-troops had engaged themselves in Alsace and Lorraine, to the
-weakening of the line of battle in the north, where the fate of Paris
-was to be decided. It is small profit to a nation to injure its
-rival ever so grievously in the toe when it is itself in imminent
-danger of being stabbed to the heart. A further change in plan had
-been caused by the intense sympathy felt both by the French and the
-British for the gallant Belgians, who had done so much and gained so
-many valuable days for the Allies. It was felt that it would be
-unchivalrous not to advance and do what was possible to relieve the
-intolerable pressure which was crushing them. It was resolved,
-therefore, to abandon the plan which had been formed, by which the
-Germans should be led as far as possible from their base, and to
-attack them at once. For this purpose the French Army changed its
-whole dispositions, which had been formed on the idea of an attack
-from the east, and advanced over the Belgian frontier, getting into
-touch with the enemy at Namur and Charleroi, so as to secure the
-passages of the Sambre. It was in fulfilling its part as the left of
-the Allied line that on August 18 and 19 the British troops began to
-move northwards into Belgium. The First Army Corps advanced through
-Le Nouvion, St. Remy, and Maubeuge to Rouveroy, which is a village
-upon the Mons-Chimay road. There it linked on to the right of the
-Second Corps, which had moved up to the line of {58} the Condé-Mons
-Canal. On the morning of Sunday, August 23, all these troops were in
-position. The 5th Brigade of Cavalry (Chetwode's) lay out upon the
-right front at Binche, but the remainder of the cavalry was brought
-to a point about five miles behind the centre of the line, so as to
-be able to reinforce either flank. The first blood of the land
-campaign had been drawn upon August 22 outside Soignies, when a
-reconnoitring squadron of the 4th Dragoon Guards under Captain Hornby
-charged and overthrew a body of the 4th German Cuirassiers, bringing
-back some prisoners. The 20th Hussars had enjoyed a similar
-experience. It was a small but happy omen.
-
-[Sidenote: The advance to Mons.]
-
-The forces which now awaited the German attack numbered about 86,000
-men, who may be roughly divided into 76,000 infantry, 10,000 cavalry,
-and 312 guns. The general alignment was as follows: The First Army
-Corps held the space between Mons and Binche, which was soon
-contracted to Bray as the eastward limit. Close to Mons, where the
-attack was expected to break, since the town is a point of
-considerable strategic importance, there was a thickening of the line
-of defence. From that point the Third Division and the Fifth, in the
-order named, carried on the British formation down the length of the
-Mons-Condé Canal. The front of the Army covered nearly twenty miles,
-an excessive strain upon so small a force in the presence of a
-compact enemy.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{59}
-
-[Illustration: POSITION OF 2nd ARMY CORPS AT MONS. AUG. 23rd]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-If one looks at the general dispositions, it becomes clear that Sir
-John French was preparing for an attack upon his right flank. From
-all his information the enemy was to the north and to the east of
-him, so that if they set about turning his position it must be from
-the Charleroi direction. Hence, his right {60} wing was laid back at
-an angle to the rest of his line, and the only cavalry which he kept
-in advance was thrown out to Binche in front of this flank. The rest
-of the cavalry was on the day of battle drawn in behind the centre of
-the Army, but as danger began to develop upon the left flank it was
-sent across in that direction, so that on the morning of the 24th it
-was at Thulin, at the westward end of the line.
-
-The line of the canal was a most tempting position to defend from
-Condé to Mons, for it ran as straight as a Roman road across the path
-of an invader. But it was very different at Mons itself. Here it
-formed a most awkward loop. A glance at the diagram will show this
-formation. It was impossible to leave it undefended, and yet troops
-who held it were evidently subjected to a flanking artillery fire
-from each side. The canal here was also crossed by at least three
-substantial road bridges and one railway bridge. This section of the
-defence was under the immediate direction of General Smith-Dorrien,
-who at once took steps to prepare a second line of defence, thrown
-back to the right rear of the town, so that if the canal were forced
-the British array would remain unbroken. The immediate care of this
-weak point in the position was committed to General Beauchamp Doran's
-8th Brigade, consisting of the 2nd Royal Scots, 2nd Royal Irish, 4th
-Middlesex, and 1st Gordon Highlanders. On their left, occupying the
-village of Nimy and the western side of the peninsula, as well as the
-immediate front of Mons itself, was the 9th Brigade (Shaw's),
-containing the 4th Royal Fusiliers, the 1st Northumberland Fusiliers,
-and the 1st Royal Scots Fusiliers, together with the 1st Lincolns.
-To the left of this brigade, occupying the eastern end of {61} the
-Mons-Condé line of canal, was Cuthbert's 13th Brigade, containing the
-2nd Scottish Borderers, 2nd West Ridings, 1st West Kents, and 2nd
-Yorkshire Light Infantry. It was on these three brigades, and
-especially on the 8th and 9th, that the impact of the German army was
-destined to fall. Beyond them, scattered somewhat thinly along the
-line of the Mons-Condé Canal from the railway bridge west of St.
-Ghislain, were the two remaining brigades of the Fifth Division, the
-14th (Rolt's) and the 15th (Gleichen's), the latter being in
-divisional reserve. Still farther to the west the head of the newly
-arrived 19th Brigade just touched the canal, and was itself in touch
-with French cavalry at Condé. Sundry units of artillery and field
-hospitals had not yet come up, but otherwise the two corps were
-complete.
-
-Having reached their ground, the troops, with no realisation of
-immediate danger, proceeded to make shallow trenches. Their bands
-had not been brought to the front, but the universal singing from one
-end of the line to the other showed that the men were in excellent
-spirits. Cheering news had come in from the cavalry, detachments of
-which, as already stated, had ridden out as far as Soignies, meeting
-advance patrols of the enemy and coming back with prisoners and
-trophies. The guns were drawn up in concealed positions within half
-a mile of the line of battle. All was now ready, and officers could
-be seen on every elevation peering northwards through their glasses
-for the first sign of the enemy. It was a broken country, with large
-patches of woodland and green spaces between. There were numerous
-slag-heaps from old mines, with here and there a factory and here and
-there a private dwelling, but the sappers {62} had endeavoured in the
-short time to clear a field of fire for the infantry. In order to
-get this field of fire in so closely built a neighbourhood, several
-of the regiments, such as the West Kents of the 13th and the
-Cornwalls of the 14th Brigades, had to take their positions across
-the canal with bridges in their rear. Thrilling with anticipation,
-the men waited for their own first entrance upon the stupendous
-drama. They were already weary and footsore, for they had all done
-at least two days of forced marching, and the burden of the pack, the
-rifle, and the hundred and fifty rounds per man was no light one.
-They lay snugly in their trenches under the warm August sun and
-waited. It was a Sunday, and more than one have recorded in their
-letters how in that hour of tension their thoughts turned to the old
-home church and the mellow call of the village bells.
-
-A hovering aeroplane had just slid down with the news that the roads
-from the north were alive with the advancing Germans, but the
-estimate of the aviator placed them at two corps and a division of
-cavalry. This coincided roughly with the accounts brought in by the
-scouts and, what was more important, with the forecast of General
-Joffre. Secure in the belief that he was flanked upon one side by
-the 5th French Army, and on the other by a screen of French cavalry,
-whilst his front was approached by a force not appreciably larger
-than his own, General French had no cause for uneasiness. Had his
-airmen taken a wider sweep to the north and west,[1] or had the
-French commander among his many pressing {63} preoccupations been
-able to give an earlier warning to his British colleague, the
-trenches would, no doubt, have been abandoned before a grey coat had
-appeared, and the whole Army brought swiftly to a position of
-strategical safety. Even now, as they waited expectantly for the
-enemy, a vast steel trap was closing up for their destruction.
-
-
-[1] An American correspondent, Mr. Harding Davis, actually saw a
-shattered British aeroplane upon the ground in this region. Its
-destruction may have been of great strategic importance. This
-aviator was probably the first British soldier to fall in the
-Continental War.
-
-
-Let us take a glance at what was going on over that northern horizon.
-The American Powell had seen something of the mighty right swing
-which was to end the combat. Invited to a conference with a German
-general who was pursuing the national policy of soothing the United
-States until her own turn should come round, Mr. Powell left Brussels
-and chanced to meet Von Kluck's legions upon their western and
-southerly trek. He describes with great force the effect upon his
-mind of those endless grey columns, all flowing in the same
-direction, double files of infantry on either side of the road, and
-endless guns, motor-cars, cavalry, and transport between. The men,
-as he describes them, were all in the prime of life, and equipped
-with everything which years of forethought could devise. He was
-dazed and awed by the tremendous procession, its majesty and its
-self-evident efficiency. It is no wonder, for he was looking at the
-chosen legions of the most wonderful army that the world had ever
-seen--an army which represented the last possible word on the
-material and mechanical side of war. High in the van a Taube
-aeroplane, like an embodiment of that black eagle which is the
-fitting emblem of a warlike and rapacious race, pointed the path for
-the German hordes.
-
-A day or two before, two American correspondents, {64} Mr. Irvin Cobb
-and Mr. Harding Davis, had seen the same great army as it streamed
-westwards through Louvain and Brussels. They graphically describe
-how for three consecutive days and the greater part of three nights
-they poured past, giving the impression of unconquerable energy and
-efficiency, young, enthusiastic, wonderfully equipped. "Either we
-shall go forward or we die. We do not expect to fall back ever. If
-the generals would let them, the men would run to Paris instead of
-walking there." So spoke one of the leaders of that huge invading
-host, the main part of which was now heading straight for the British
-line. A second part, unseen and unsuspected, were working round by
-Tournai to the west, hurrying hard to strike in upon the British
-flank and rear. The German is a great marcher as well as a great
-fighter, and the average rate of progress was little less than thirty
-miles a day.
-
-It was after ten o'clock when scouting cavalry were observed falling
-back. Then the distant sound of a gun was heard, and a few seconds
-later a shell burst some hundreds of yards behind the British lines.
-The British guns one by one roared into action. A cloud of smoke
-rose along the line of the woods in front from the bursting shrapnel,
-but nothing could be seen of the German gunners. The defending guns
-were also well concealed. Here and there, from observation points
-upon buildings and slag-heaps, the controllers of the batteries were
-able to indicate targets and register hits unseen by the gunners
-themselves. The fire grew warmer and warmer as fresh batteries
-dashed up and unlimbered on either side. The noise was horrible, but
-no enemy had been seen by the infantry, and little damage done.
-
-{65}
-
-But now an ill-omened bird flew over the British lines. Far aloft
-across the deep blue sky skimmed the dark Taube, curved, turned, and
-sailed northwards again. It had marked the shells bursting beyond
-the trenches. In an instant, by some devilish cantrip of signal or
-wireless, it had set the range right. A rain of shells roared and
-crashed along the lines of the shallow trenches. The injuries were
-not yet numerous, but they were inexpressibly ghastly. Men who had
-hardly seen worse than a cut finger in their lives gazed with horror
-at the gross mutilations around them. "One dared not look sideways,"
-said one of them. Stretcher-bearers bent and heaved while wet, limp
-forms were hoisted upwards by their comrades. Officers gave short,
-sharp words of encouragement or advice. The minutes seemed very
-long, and still the shells came raining down. The men shoved the
-five-fold clips down into their magazines and waited with weary
-patience. A senior officer peering over the end of a trench leaned
-tensely forward and rested his glasses upon the grassy edge.
-"They're coming!" he whispered to his neighbour. It ran from lip to
-lip along the line of crouching men. Heads were poked up here and
-there above the line of broken earth. Soon, in spite of the crashing
-shells overhead, there was a fringe of peering faces. And there at
-last in front of them was the German enemy. After all the centuries,
-Briton and Teuton faced each other at last for the test of battle.
-
-A stylist among letter-writers has described that oncoming swarm as
-grey clouds drifting over green fields. They had deployed under
-cover whilst the batteries were preparing their path, and now over an
-extended front to the north-west of Mons they {66} were breaking out
-from the woods and coming rapidly onwards. The men fidgeted with
-their triggers, but no order came to fire. The officers were gazing
-with professional interest and surprise at the German formations.
-Were these the tactics of the army which had claimed to be the most
-scientific in Europe? British observers had seen it in peace-time
-and had conjectured that it was a screen for some elaborate tactics
-held up for the day of battle. Yet here they were, advancing in what
-in old Soudan days used to be described as the twenty-acre formation,
-against the best riflemen in Europe. It was not even a shoulder to
-shoulder column, but a mere crowd, shredding out in the front and
-dense to the rear. There was nothing of the swiftly weaving lines,
-the rushes of alternate companies, the twinkle and flicker of a
-modern attack. It was mediaeval, and yet it was impressive also in
-its immediate display of numbers and the ponderous insistence of its
-onward flow. It was not many weeks before the stern lesson of war
-taught very different formations to those of the grand Kaiser
-manoeuvres.
-
-The men, still fingering their triggers, gazed expectantly at their
-officers, who measured intently the distance of the approaching
-swarms. The Germans had already begun to fire in a desultory
-fashion. Shrapnel was bursting thickly along the head of their
-columns but they were coming steadily onwards. Suddenly a rolling
-wave of independent firing broke out from the British position. At
-some portions of the line the enemy were at eight hundred, at others
-at one thousand yards. The men, happy in having something definite
-to do, snuggled down earnestly to their work and fired swiftly but
-deliberately into {67} the approaching mass. Rifles, machine-guns,
-and field-pieces were all roaring together, while the incessant crash
-of the shells overhead added to the infernal uproar. Men lost all
-sense of time as they thrust clip after clip into their rifles. The
-German swarms staggered on bravely under that leaden sleet. Then
-they halted, vacillated, and finally thinned, shredded out, and
-drifted backwards like a grey fog torn by a gale. The woods absorbed
-them once again, whilst the rain of shells upon the British trenches
-became thicker and more deadly.
-
-There was a lull in the infantry attack, and the British, peering
-from their shelters, surveyed with a grim satisfaction the patches
-and smudges of grey which showed the effect of their fire. But the
-rest was not a long one. With fine courage the German battalions
-re-formed under the shelter of the trees, while fresh troops from the
-rear pushed forward to stiffen the shaken lines. "Hold your fire!"
-was the order that ran down the ranks. With the confidence bred of
-experience, the men waited and still waited, till the very features
-of the Germans could be distinguished. Then once more the deadly
-fire rippled down the line, the masses shredded and dissolved, and
-the fugitives hurried to the woods. Then came the pause under shell
-fire, and then once again the emergence of the infantry, the attack,
-the check, and the recoil. Such were the general characteristics of
-the action at Mons over a large portion of the British line--that
-portion which extended along the actual course of the canal.
-
-It is not to be supposed, however, that there was a monotony of
-attack and defence over the whole of the British position. A large
-part of the force, {68} including the whole of the First Army Corps,
-was threatened rather than seriously engaged, while the opposite end
-of the line was also out of the main track of the storm. It beat
-most dangerously, as had been foreseen, upon the troops to the
-immediate west and north of Mons, and especially upon those which
-defended the impossible peninsula formed by the loop of the canal.
-
-[Sidenote: The defence of the bridges of Nimy.]
-
-There is a road which runs from Mons due north through the village of
-Nimy to Jurbise. The defences to the west of this road were in the
-hands of the 9th Brigade. The 4th Royal Fusiliers, with the Scots
-Fusiliers, were the particular battalions which held the trenches
-skirting this part of the peninsula, while half the Northumberland
-Fusiliers were on the straight canal to the westward. To the east of
-Nimy are three road bridges--those of Nimy itself, Lock No. 5, and
-Aubourg Station. All these three bridges were defended by the 4th
-Middlesex, who had made shallow trenches which commanded them. The
-Gordons were on their immediate right. The field of fire was much
-interfered with by the mines and buildings which faced them, so that
-at this point the Germans could get up unobserved to the very front.
-It has also been already explained that the German artillery could
-enfilade the peninsula from each side, making the defence most
-difficult. A rush of German troops came between eleven and twelve
-o'clock across the Aubourg Station Bridge. It was so screened up to
-the moment of the advance that neither the rifles nor the
-machine-guns of the Middlesex could stop it. It is an undoubted fact
-that this rush was preceded by a great crowd of women and children,
-through which the leading files of the {69} Germans could hardly be
-seen. At the same time, or very shortly afterwards, the other two
-bridges were forced in a similar manner, but the Germans in all three
-cases as they reached the farther side were unable to make any rapid
-headway against the British fire, though they made the position
-untenable for the troops in trenches between the bridges. The whole
-of the 8th Brigade, supported by the 2nd Irish Rifles from
-McCracken's 7th Brigade, which had been held in reserve at Ciply,
-were now fully engaged, covering the retirement of the Middlesex and
-Gordons. At some points the firing between the two lines of infantry
-was across the breadth of a road. Two batteries of the 40th
-Artillery Brigade, which were facing the German attack at this point,
-were badly mauled, one of them, the 23rd R.F.A., losing its gun
-teams. Major Ingham succeeded in reconstituting his equipment and
-getting his guns away.
-
-It is well to accentuate the fact that though this was the point of
-the most severe pressure there was never any disorderly retirement,
-and strong reserves were available had they been needed. The 8th
-Brigade, at the time of the general strategical withdrawal of the
-Army, made its arrangements in a methodical fashion, and General
-Doran kept his hold until after nightfall upon Bois la Haut, which
-was an elevation to the east of Mons from which the German artillery
-might have harassed the British retreat, since it commanded all the
-country to the south. The losses of the brigade had, however, been
-considerable, amounting to not less than three hundred and fifty in
-the case of the 4th Middlesex, many being killed or wounded in the
-defence, and some cut off in the trenches between the various
-bridge-heads. Majors {70} Davey and Abell of the Middlesex were
-respectively wounded and killed, with thirteen other officers.
-
-It has already been said that the line of the 4th Royal Fusiliers
-extended along the western perimeter up to Nimy Road Bridge, where
-Colonel MacMahon's section ended and that of Colonel Hull, of the
-Middlesex Regiment, began. To the west of this point was the Nimy
-Railway Bridge, defended also by Captain Ashburner's company of the
-4th Royal Fusiliers. This was assaulted early, and was held for
-nearly five hours against an attack of several German battalions.
-The British artillery was unable to help much in the defence, as the
-town of Mons behind offered no positions for guns, but the 107th
-Battery in the immediate rear did good work. The defence was
-continued until the Germans who had already crossed to the east were
-advancing on the flank. Lieutenant Maurice Dease, five times wounded
-before he was killed, worked his machine-gun to the end, and every
-man of his detachment was hit. Lieutenant Dease and Private Godley
-both received the Victoria Cross. The occupants of one trench,
-including Lieutenant Smith, who was wounded, were cut off by the
-rush. Captain Carey commanded the covering company and the
-retirement was conducted in good order, though Captain Bowden Smith,
-Lieutenant Mead, and a number of men fell in the movement.
-Altogether, the Royal Fusiliers lost five officers and about two
-hundred men in the defence of the bridge, Lieutenant Tower having
-seven survivors in his platoon of sixty. Captain Byng's company at
-the Glin Bridge farther east had severe losses and was driven in in
-the same way. As the infantry retired a small party of engineers
-under Captain Theodore {71} Wright endeavoured to destroy this and
-other bridges. Lieutenant Day was twice wounded in his attempt upon
-the main Nimy Bridge. Corporal Jarvis received the V.C. for his
-exertions in preparing the Jemappes bridge for destruction to the
-west of Nimy. Captain Wright, with Sergeant Smith, made an heroic
-endeavour under terrific fire to detonate the charge, but was wounded
-and fell into the canal. Lieutenant Holt, a brave young officer of
-reserve engineers, also lost his life in these operations.
-
-[Sidenote: The holding of the canal.]
-
-Having held on as long as was possible, the front line of the 9th
-Brigade fell back upon the prepared position on high ground between
-Mons and Frameries, where the 107th R.F.A. was entrenched. The 4th
-Royal Fusiliers passed through Mons and reached the new line in good
-order and without further loss. The 1st Royal Scots Fusiliers,
-however, falling back to the same point on a different route through
-Flenu, came under heavy machine-gun fire from a high soil heap,
-losing Captain Rose and a hundred men.
-
-The falling back of the 8th and 9th Brigades from the Nimy Peninsula
-had an immediate effect upon Cuthbert's 13th Brigade, which was on
-their left holding the line up to the railway bridge just east of St.
-Ghislain. Of this brigade two battalions, the 1st West Kent on the
-right and the 2nd Scottish Borderers on the left, were in the
-trenches while the 2nd West Riding and the 2nd Yorkshire Light
-Infantry were in support, having their centre at Boussu. The day
-began by some losses to the West Kent Regiment, who were probably,
-apart from cavalry patrols, the first troops to suffer in the great
-war. A company of the regiment under Captain Lister was sent across
-the canal early as a support to some advancing {72} cavalry, and was
-driven in about eleven o'clock with a loss of two officers and about
-a hundred men.
-
-From this time onwards the German attacks were easily held, though
-the German guns were within twelve hundred yards. The situation was
-changed when it was learned later in the day that the Germans were
-across to the right and had got as far as Flenu on the flank of the
-brigade. In view of this advance, General Smith-Dorrien, having no
-immediate supports, dashed off on a motor to Sir Douglas Haig's
-headquarters some four miles distant, and got his permission to use
-Haking's 5th Brigade, which pushed up in time to re-establish the
-line.
-
-It has been shown that the order of the regiments closely engaged in
-the front line was, counting from the east, the 1st Gordons, the 4th
-Middlesex, the 4th Royal Fusiliers, the 1st Scots Fusiliers, half the
-1st Northumberland Fusiliers, the 1st West Kents, and the 2nd
-Scottish Borderers, the other regiments of these brigades being in
-reserve. The last-named battalion, being opposite a bridge, was
-heavily engaged all day, losing many men, but holding its position
-intact against repeated advances. On the left hand or western side
-of the Scottish Borderers, continuing the line along the canal, one
-would come upon the front of the 14th Brigade (Rolfs), which was
-formed by the 1st Surrey on the right and the 1st Duke of Cornwall's
-on the left. The German attack upon this portion of the line began
-about 1 P.M., and by 3 P.M. had become so warm that the reserve
-companies were drawn into the firing line. Thanks to their good
-work, both with rifles and with machine-guns, the regiments held
-their own until about six o'clock in the evening, when the retirement
-of the troops on {73} their right enabled the Germans to enfilade the
-right section of the East Surreys at close range. They were ordered
-to retire, but lost touch with the left section, which remained to
-the north of the canal where their trench was situated. Captain
-Benson of this section had been killed and Captain Campbell severely
-wounded, but the party of one hundred and ten men under Lieutenant
-Morritt held on most gallantly and made a very fine defence. Being
-finally surrounded, they endeavoured to cut their way out with cold
-steel, Lieutenant Ward being killed and Morritt four times wounded in
-the attempt. Many of the men were killed and wounded, and the
-survivors were taken. Altogether the loss of the regiment was five
-officers and one hundred and thirty-four men.
-
-On the left of the East Surreys, as already stated, lay the 1st Duke
-of Cornwall's of the same brigade. About four o'clock in the
-afternoon the presence of the German outflanking corps first made
-itself felt. At that hour the Cornwalls were aware of an advance
-upon their left as well as their front. The Cornwalls drew in across
-the canal in consequence, and the Germans did not follow them over
-that evening.
-
-The chief point defended by the 14th Brigade upon this day had been
-the bridge and main road which crosses the canal between Pommeroeul
-and Thulin, some eight or nine miles west of Mons. In the evening,
-when the final order for retreat was given, this bridge was blown up,
-and the brigade fell back after nightfall as far as Dour, where it
-slept.
-
-[Sidenote: The fateful telegram.]
-
-By the late afternoon the general position was grave, but not
-critical. The enemy had lost very heavily, while the men in the
-trenches were, in comparison, unscathed. Here and there, as we have
-{74} seen, the Germans had obtained a lodgment in the British
-position, especially at the salient which had always appeared to be
-impossible to hold, but, on the other hand, the greater part of the
-Army, including the whole First Corps, had not yet been seriously
-engaged, and there were reserve troops in the immediate rear of the
-fighting line who could be trusted to make good any gap in the ranks
-before them. The German artillery fire was heavy and well-directed,
-but the British batteries had held their own. Such was the position
-when, about 5 P.M., a telegram from General Joffre was put into Sir
-John French's hand, which must have brought a pang to his heart.
-From it he learned that all his work had been in vain, and that far
-from contending for victory, he would be fortunate if he saved
-himself from utter defeat.
-
-There were two pieces of information in this fatal message, and each
-was disastrous. The first announced that instead of the two German
-corps whom he had reason to think were in front of him, there were
-four--the Third, Fourth, Seventh, and Fourth Reserve Corps--forming,
-with the second and fourth cavalry divisions, a force of nearly
-200,000 men, while the Second Corps were bringing another 40,000
-round his left flank from the direction of Tournai. The second item
-was even more serious. Instead of being buttressed up with French
-troops on either side of him, he learned that the Germans had burst
-the line of the Sambre, and that the French armies on his right were
-already in full retreat, while nothing substantial lay upon his left.
-It was a most perilous position. The British force lay exposed and
-unsupported amid converging foes who far outnumbered it in men and
-guns. What was the profit of one {75} day of successful defence if
-the morrow would dawn upon a British Sedan? There was only one
-course of action, and Sir John decided upon it in the instant, bitter
-as the decision must have been. The Army must be extricated from the
-battle and fall back until it resumed touch with its Allies.
-
-But it is no easy matter to disengage so large an army which is
-actually in action and hard-pressed by a numerous and enterprising
-enemy. The front was extensive and the lines of retreat were
-limited. That the operation was carried out in an orderly fashion is
-a testimony to the skill of the General, the talents of the
-commanders, and the discipline of the units. If it had been done at
-once and simultaneously it would certainly have been the signal for a
-vigorous German advance and a possible disaster. The positions were
-therefore held, though no efforts were made to retake those points
-where the enemy had effected a lodgment. There was no possible use
-in wasting troops in regaining positions which would in no case be
-held. As dusk fell, a dusk which was lightened by the glare of
-burning villages, some of the regiments began slowly to draw off to
-the rear. In the early morning of the 24th the definite order to
-retire was conveyed to the corps commanders, whilst immediate
-measures were taken to withdraw the impedimenta and to clear the
-roads.
-
-Such, in its bare outlines, was the action of Mons upon August 23,
-interesting for its own sake, but more so as being the first clash
-between the British and German armies. One or two questions call for
-discussion before the narrative passes on. The most obvious of these
-is the question of the bridges. Why were they not blown up in the
-dangerous peninsula? {76} Without having any special information
-upon the point, one might put forward the speculation that the reason
-why they were not at once blown up was that the whole of Joffre's
-advance was an aggressive movement for the relief of Namur, and that
-the bridges were not destroyed because they would be used in a
-subsequent advance. It will always be a subject for speculation as
-to what would have occurred had the battle been fought to a finish.
-Considering the comparative merits of British and German infantry as
-shown in many a subsequent encounter, and allowing for the advantage
-that the defence has over the attack, it is probable that the odds
-might not have been too great and that Sir John French might have
-remained master of the field. That, however, is a matter of opinion.
-What is not a matter of opinion is that the other German armies to
-the east would have advanced on the heels of the retiring French,
-that they would have cut the British off from their Allies, and that
-they would have been hard put to it to reach the coast. Therefore,
-win or lose, the Army had no possible course open but to retire. The
-actual losses of the British were not more than three or four
-thousand, the greater part from the 8th, 9th, and 13th Brigades.
-There are no means as yet by which the German losses can be taken out
-from the general returns, but when one considers the repeated
-advances over the open and the constant breaking of the dense
-attacking formations, it is impossible that they should have been
-fewer than from seven to ten thousand men. Each army had for the
-first time an opportunity of forming a critical estimate of the
-other. German officers have admitted with soldierly frankness that
-the efficiency of the British came to them as a revelation, which is
-{77} not surprising after the assurances that had been made to them.
-On the other hand, the British bore away a very clear conviction of
-the excellence of the German artillery and of the plodding bravery of
-the German infantry, together with a great reassurance as to their
-own capacity to hold their own at any reasonable odds.
-
-[Sidenote: The rearguard actions of Frameries, Wasmes, and Dour.]
-
-After a night of flames and of uproar the day dawned, a day of great
-anxiety to the British commanders and of considerable pressure upon a
-portion of the troops. Sir John French had given instructions that
-the First Corps, which had been only slightly engaged the day before,
-should pretend to assume the offensive upon the extreme right wing in
-the direction of Binche, whilst the Second Corps began its
-retirement. The enemy was following up rapidly, however, along the
-whole length of the British line, both flanks of which were exposed.
-Shortly after dawn the evacuated positions had been occupied, and
-Mons itself was in the hands of the advancing Germans. The Second
-Corps began its retreat, helped by the feint which was carried out by
-General Haig upon the right, and by the bulk of the batteries of both
-corps, but the pursuit was vigorous and the shell-fire incessant. A
-shell from the rear is more intimidating than twenty in the front.
-Hamilton's Third Division, including the 8th and 9th Brigades, who
-had done such hard work the day before, sustained the most severe
-losses, especially at Frameries, four miles south of Mons. The 2nd
-Royal Scots of the 8th Brigade about midnight had been attacked by a
-heavy German column which got so near that the swish of their feet
-through the long grass put the regiment on the alert. The attack was
-{78} blown back by a volley at close quarters. The 9th Brigade
-(Shaw's), which covered the retreat, was closely pressed from dawn by
-the pursuing Germans, and was subjected to a very heavy shell-fire.
-A barricade, erected in the village and manned by Captain Sandilands,
-of the Northumberlands, with his company, held up the German advance,
-and they were never permitted to reach the line nor to hustle the
-retirement. Butler's 23rd Artillery Brigade helped with its fire.
-The chief losses in this skilful covering action fell upon the 1st
-Lincolns and upon the 1st Northumberland Fusiliers, each of which
-lost about 150 men, including Captain Rose, Lieutenants Bulbe,
-Welchman, and others. There was a stational ambulance in the village
-of Frameries, and a foreign nurse in its employ has left a vivid
-picture of the wounded British rushing in grimy and breathless to
-have their slighter wounds dressed and then running out, rifle in
-hand, to find their place in the firing line.
-
-The remaining brigade of the Third Division, McCracken's 7th Brigade,
-had detached one regiment, the 2nd Irish Rifles, upon the day before
-to reinforce the 8th Brigade, and this regiment had, as already
-mentioned, some severe fighting, holding back the German advance
-after the retirement from the Nimy Peninsula of the Middlesex and the
-Gordons. It did not find its way back to its brigade until the
-evening of the 24th. The brigade itself, during the first day of the
-retreat, held a position near Ciply, to the south of Mons, where it
-was heavily attacked in the early morning, and in some danger as its
-flank was exposed. At ten o'clock it was ordered to retire _via_
-Genly towards Bavai, and it carried out this difficult movement in
-the face of a pushful enemy in {79} perfect order, covered by the
-divisional artillery. The principal losses fell upon the 2nd South
-Lancashire Regiment, which came under heavy fire from German
-machine-guns posted upon slag-heaps. This regiment was very hard
-hit, losing several hundred men. The brigade faced round near Bavai
-and held off the pursuit.
-
-Cuthbert's 13th Brigade, keeping in line with their comrades on the
-right, halted at Wasmes, some four miles from the canal, where they
-prepared some hasty entrenchments. Here, at the dawn of day, they
-were furiously attacked by the German vanguard at the same time that
-the 9th Brigade was hustled in Frameries, but for two hours the
-assailants were beaten back with heavy losses. The brunt of the
-fighting fell upon the 2nd West Riding Regiment, who lost heavily,
-were at one time nearly surrounded, and finally, with dour Yorkshire
-pertinacity, shook themselves clear. Their losses included their
-commander, Colonel Gibbs, their adjutant, 300 men, and all their
-officers save five. The 1st West Kents also lost about 100 men and
-several officers, including Major Pack-Beresford. For the remainder
-of the day and for the whole of the 25th the brigade, with the rest
-of the Fifth Division, fell back with little fighting _via_ Bavai to
-the Le Cateau line.
-
-On the evening of the 23rd the 14th Brigade, still farther to the
-west, had fallen back to Dour, blowing up the bridge and road over
-the canal. After dark the Germans followed them, and Gleichen's 15th
-Brigade, which had not yet been engaged, found itself in the position
-of rearguard and immediately exposed to the pressure of the German
-flanking movement. This was now threatening to envelop the {80}
-whole of Ferguson's Fifth Division. The situation was particularly
-difficult, since this General had to make a flank movement in the
-face of the enemy in order to close up with his comrades of the Third
-Division. He was soon compelled to call for assistance, and Allenby,
-with his cavalry division, was advanced to help him. It was
-evidently the intention of the enemy to strike in upon the western
-side of the division and pin it to its ground until it could be
-surrounded.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{81}
-
-[Illustration: 1st MORNING OF RETREAT OF 2nd ARMY CORPS AUG 24th.]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Sidenote: The charge of the Lancers.]
-
-The first menacing advance in the morning of the 24th was directed
-against the flank of the British infantry who were streaming down the
-Elouges-Dour high road. The situation was critical, and a portion of
-De Lisle's 2nd Cavalry Brigade was ordered to charge near Andregnies,
-the hostile infantry being at that time about a thousand yards
-distant, with several batteries in support. The attack of the
-cavalry was vigorously supported by L Battery of Horse Artillery.
-The charge was carried out by three squadrons of the 9th Lancers,
-Colonel Campbell at their head. The 4th Dragoon Guards under Colonel
-Mullens was in support. The cavalry rode forward amidst a heavy but
-not particularly deadly fire until they were within a few hundred
-yards of the enemy, when, being faced by a wire fence, they swung to
-the right and rallied under the cover of some slag-heaps and of a
-railway embankment. Their menace and rifle fire, or the fine work of
-Major Sclater-Booth's battery, had the effect of holding up the
-German advance for some time, and though the cavalry were much
-scattered and disorganised they were able to reunite without any
-excessive loss, the total casualties being a little over two hundred.
-Some {82} hours later the enemy's pressure again became heavy upon
-Ferguson's flank, and the 1st Cheshires and 1st Norfolks, of
-Gleichen's 15th Brigade, which formed the infantry flank-guard,
-incurred heavy losses. It was in this defensive action that the
-119th R.F.A., under Major Alexander, fought itself to a standstill
-with only three unwounded gunners by the guns. The battery had
-silenced one German unit and was engaged with three others. Only
-Major Alexander and Lieutenant Pollard with a few men were left. As
-the horses had been destroyed the pieces had to be man-handled out of
-action. Captain the Hon. F. Grenfell, of the 9th Lancers, bleeding
-from two wounds, with several officers, Sergeants Davids and Turner,
-and some fifty men of the regiment, saved these guns under a terrible
-fire, the German infantry being within close range. During the whole
-long, weary day the batteries and horsemen were working hard to cover
-the retreat, while the surgeons exposed themselves with great
-fearlessness, lingering behind the retiring lines in order to give
-first aid to the men who had been hit by the incessant shell-fire.
-It was in this noble task--the noblest surely within the whole range
-of warfare--that Captain Malcolm Leckie, and other brave medical
-officers, met with a glorious end, upholding to the full the
-traditions of their famous corps.
-
-[Sidenote: The fate of the Cheshires.]
-
-It has been stated that the 1st Cheshires, in endeavouring to screen
-the west flank of the Second Corps from the German pursuit, were very
-badly punished. This regiment, together with the Norfolks, occupied
-a low ridge to the north-east side of the village of Elouges, which
-they endeavoured to hold against the onflowing tide of Germans.
-About three in the afternoon it was seen {83} that there was danger
-of this small flank-guard being entirely cut off. As a matter of
-fact an order had actually been sent for a retreat, but had not
-reached them. Colonel Boger of the Cheshires sent several
-messengers, representing the growing danger, but no answer came back.
-Finally, in desperation, Colonel Boger went himself and found that
-the enemy held the position previously occupied by the rest of
-Gleichen's Brigade, which had retired. The Cheshires had by this
-time endured dreadful losses, and were practically surrounded. A
-bayonet charge eased the pressure for a short time, but the enemy
-again closed in and the bulk of the survivors, isolated amidst a
-hostile army corps, were compelled to surrender. Some escaped in
-small groups and made their way through to their retreating comrades.
-When roll was next called, there remained 5 officers and 193 men out
-of 27 officers and 1007 of all ranks who had gone into action. It
-speaks volumes for the discipline of the regiment that this remnant,
-under Captain Shore, continued to act as a useful unit. These
-various episodes, including the severe losses of Gleichen's 15th
-Brigade, the attack of the 2nd Cavalry Brigade, and the artillery
-action in which the 119th Battery was so severely handled, group
-themselves into a separate little action occurring the day after Mons
-and associated either with the villages of Elouges or of Dour. The
-Second German Corps continued to act upon the western side of the
-Second British Corps, whilst the rest of General von Kluck's army
-followed it behind. With three corps close behind him, and one
-snapping at his flank, General Smith-Dorrien made his way southwards,
-his gunners and cavalry labouring hard to relieve the ever-increasing
-{84} pressure, while his rear brigades were continually sprayed by
-the German shrapnel.
-
-It is to be noted that Sir John French includes the Ninth German
-Corps in Von Kluck's army in his first dispatch, and puts it in Von
-Bülow's second army in his second dispatch. The French authorities
-are of opinion that Von Kluck's army consisted of the Second, Third,
-Fourth, Seventh, and Fourth Reserve Corps, with two divisions of
-cavalry. If this be correct, then part of Von Bulow's army was
-pursuing Haig, while the whole of Von Kluck's was concentrated upon
-Smith-Dorrien. This would make the British performance even more
-remarkable than it has hitherto appeared, since it would mean that
-during the pursuit, and at the subsequent battle, ten German
-divisions were pressing upon three British ones.
-
-It is not to be supposed that so huge a force was all moving abreast,
-or available simultaneously at any one point. None the less a
-General can use his advance corps very much more freely when he knows
-that every gap can be speedily filled.
-
-A tiny reinforcement had joined the Army on the morning after the
-battle of Mons. This was the 19th Brigade under General Drummond,
-which consisted of the 1st Middlesex, 1st Scots Rifles, 2nd Welsh
-Fusiliers, and 2nd Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. This detached
-brigade acted, and continued to act during a large part of the war,
-as an independent unit. It detrained at Valenciennes on August 23,
-and two regiments, the Middlesex and the Cameronians, may be said to
-have taken part in the battle of Mons, since they formed up at the
-east of Condé, on the extreme left of the British position, {85} and
-received, together with the Queen's Bays, who were scouting in front
-of them, the first impact of the German flanking corps. They fell
-back with the Army upon the 24th and 25th, keeping the line
-Jenlain--Solesmes, finally reaching Le Cateau, where they eventually
-took up their position on the right rear of the British Army.
-
-As the Army fell back, the border fortress of Maubeuge with its heavy
-guns offered a tempting haven of rest for the weary and overmatched
-troops, but not in vain had France lost her army in Metz. Sir John
-French would have no such protection, however violently the Germans
-might push him towards it. "The British Army invested in Maubeuge"
-was not destined to furnish the head-line of a Berlin special
-edition. The fortress was left to the eastward, and the tired troops
-snatched a few hours of rest near Bavai, still pursued by the guns
-and the searchlights of their persistent foemen. At an early hour of
-the 25th the columns were again on the march for the south, and for
-safety.
-
-It may be remarked that in all this movement what made the operation
-most difficult and complicated was, that in the retirement the Army
-was not moving direct to the rear, but diagonally away to the west,
-thus making the west flank more difficult to cover as well as
-complicating the movements of transport. It was this oblique
-movement which caused the Third Division to change places with the
-Fifth, so that from now onwards it was to the west of the Army.
-
-The greater part of the Fourth Division of the Third Army Corps,
-coming up from the lines of communication, brought upon this day a
-welcome {86} reinforcement to the Army and did yeoman work in
-covering the retirement. The total composition of this division was
-as follows:--
-
- THIRD ARMY CORPS
-
- GENERAL PULTENEY.
-
- DIVISION IV.--General SNOW.
-
- 10_th Infantry Brigade--General Haldane_.
- 1st Warwicks.
- 2nd Seaforths.
- 1st Irish Fusiliers.
- 2nd Dublin Fusiliers.
-
- 11_th Infantry Brigade--General Hunter-Weston_.
- 1st Somerset L. Infantry.
- 1st East Lancashires.
- 1st Hants.
- 1st Rifle Brigade.
-
- 12_th Infantry Brigade--General Wilson_.
- 1st Royal Lancaster Regiment.
- 2nd Lancs. Fusiliers.
- 2nd Innis. Fusiliers.
- 2nd Essex.
-
- _Artillery--General Milne_.
- XIV. Brig. R.F.A. 39, 68, 88.
- XXIX. Brig. R.F.A. 125, 126, 127.
- XXXII. Brig. R.F.A. 27, 134, 135.
- XXXVII. Brig. (How.) 31, 35, 55.
- Heavy R.G.A. 31 Battery.
- R.E. 7, 9 Field Cos.
-
-
-These troops, which had been quartered in the Ligny and Montigny
-area, received urgent orders at one in the morning of the 25th that
-they should advance northwards. They marched that night to Briastre,
-where they covered the retreat of the Army, the Third Division
-passing through their lines. The Fourth Division then retired south
-again, having great difficulty in getting along, as the roads were
-choked with transport and artillery, and fringed with exhausted men.
-The 12th Brigade (Wilson's) was acting as rearguard, and began to
-experience pressure from the pursuers, the Essex men being {87}
-shelled out of the village of Bethencourt, which they held until it
-was nearly surrounded by the German cavalry. The line followed by
-the division was Briastre-Viesly-Bethencourt-Caudry-Ligny and
-Haucourt, the latter village marking the general position which they
-were to take up on the left of the Army at the line of Le Cateau.
-Such reinforcements were mere handfuls when compared with the
-pursuing hosts, but their advent heartened up the British troops and
-relieved them of some of the pressure. It has been remarked by
-officers of the Fourth Division that they and their men were
-considerably taken aback by the worn appearance of the weary
-regiments from Mons which passed through their ranks. Their
-confidence was revived, however, by the undisturbed demeanour of the
-General Headquarters Staff, who came through them in the late
-afternoon of the 25th. "General French himself struck me as being
-extremely composed, and the staff officers looked very cheerful."
-These are the imponderabilia which count for much in a campaign.
-
-Tuesday, August 25, was a day of scattered rearguard actions. The
-weary Army had rested upon the evening of the 24th upon the general
-line Maubeuge-Bavai-Wargnies. Orders were issued for the retirement
-to continue next day to a position already partly prepared, in front
-of the centre of which stood the town of Le Cateau. All rearguards
-were to be clear of the above-mentioned line by 5.30 A.M. The
-general conception was that the inner flanks of the two corps should
-be directed upon Le Cateau.
-
-The intention of the Commander-in-Chief was that the Army should
-fight in that position next day, {88} the First Corps occupying the
-right and the Second Corps the left of the position. The night of
-the 25th found the Second Corps in the position named, whilst their
-comrades were still at Landrecies, eight miles to the north-east,
-with a cavalry brigade endeavouring to bridge the gap between. It is
-very certain, in the case of so ardent a leader as Haig, that it was
-no fault upon his part which kept him from Smith-Dorrien's side upon
-the day of battle. It can only be said that the inevitable delays
-upon the road experienced by the First Corps, including the rearguard
-actions which it fought, prevented the ensuing battle from being one
-in which the British Army as a whole might have stemmed the rush of
-Von Kluck's invading host.
-
-[Sidenote: The 7th Brigade at Solesmes.]
-
-Whilst the whole Army had been falling back upon the position which
-had been selected for a stand, it was hoped that substantial French
-reinforcements were coming up from the south. The roads were much
-blocked during the 25th, for two divisions of French territorials
-were retiring along them, as well as the British Army. As a
-consequence progress was slow, and the German pressure from the rear
-became ever more severe. Allenby's cavalry and horse-guns covered
-the retreat, continually turning round and holding off the pursuers.
-Finally, near Solesmes, on the evening of the 25th, the cavalry were
-at last driven in, and the Germans came up against McCracken's 7th
-Brigade, who held them most skilfully until nightfall with the
-assistance of the 42nd Brigade R.F.A. and the 30th Howitzer Brigade.
-Most of the fighting fell upon the 1st Wiltshires and 2nd South
-Lancashires, both of which had substantial losses. The Germans could
-make no further progress, {89} and time was given for the roads to
-clear and for the artillery to get away. The 7th Brigade then
-followed, marching, so far as possible, across country and taking up
-its position, which it did not reach until after midnight, in the
-village of Caudry, on the line of the Le Cateau-Courtrai road. As it
-faced north once more it found Snow's Fourth Division upon its left,
-while on its immediate right were the 8th and the 9th Brigades, with
-the Fifth Division on the farther side of them. One unit of the 7th
-Brigade, the 2nd Irish Rifles, together with the 41st R.F.A., swerved
-off in the darkness and confusion and went away with the cavalry.
-The rest were in the battle line. Here we may leave them in position
-while we return to trace the fortunes of the First Army Corps.
-
-Sir Douglas Haig's corps, after the feint of August 24, in which the
-Second Division appeared to be attacking with the First in support,
-was cleverly disengaged from the enemy and fell back by alternate
-divisions. It was not an easy operation, and it was conducted under
-a very heavy shell-fire, which fell especially upon the covering guns
-of Colonel Sandilands' 34th Artillery Brigade. These guns were
-exposed to a concentration of fire from the enemy, which was so
-intense that a thick haze of smoke and dust blotted out the view for
-long periods at a time. It was only with difficulty and great
-gallantry that they were got away. An officer of the 6th Brigade,
-immediately behind them, writes: "Both going in and coming back the
-limbers passed my trench at a tearing gallop, the drivers lying low
-on the horses' necks and screaming at them to go faster, while on the
-return the guns bounded about on the stubble {90} field like so many
-tin cans behind a runaway dog." The guns having been drawn in, the
-corps retired by roads parallel to the Second Corps, and were able to
-reach the line Bavai-Maubeuge by about 7 P.M. upon that evening,
-being on the immediate eastern flank of Smith-Dorrien's men. It is a
-striking example of the historical continuity of the British Army
-that as they marched that day many of the regiments, such as the
-Guards and the 1st King's Liverpool, passed over the graves of their
-predecessors who had died under the same colours at Malplaquet in
-1709, two hundred and six years before.
-
-[Sidenote: The Guards in action.]
-
-On August 25 General Haig continued his retreat. During the day he
-fell back to the west of Maubeuge by Feignies to Vavesnes and
-Landrecies. The considerable forest of Mormal intervened between the
-two sections of the British Army. On the forenoon of this day the
-vanguard of the German infantry, using motor transport, overtook
-Davies' 6th Brigade, which was acting as rearguard to the corps.
-They pushed in to within five hundred yards, but were driven back by
-rifle-fire. Other German forces were coming rapidly up and
-enveloping the wings of the British rearguard, but the brigade,
-through swift and skilful handling, disengaged itself from what was
-rapidly becoming a dangerous situation. The weather was exceedingly
-hot during the day, and with their heavy packs the men were much
-exhausted, many of them being barely able to stagger. In the
-evening, footsore and weary, they reached the line of Landrecies,
-Maroilles, and Pont-sur-Sambre. The 4th Brigade of Guards,
-consisting of Grenadiers, Coldstream, and Irish, under General
-Scott-Kerr, occupied the town of Landrecies. During {91} the day
-they had seen little of the enemy, and they had no reason to believe
-that the forest, which extended up to the outskirts of the town, was
-full of German infantry pressing eagerly to cut them off. The
-possession of vast numbers of motor lorries for infantry transport
-introduces a new element into strategy, especially the strategy of a
-pursuit, which was one of those disagreeable first experiences of
-up-to-date warfare which the British Army had to undergo. It ensures
-that the weary retreating rearguard shall ever have a perfectly fresh
-pursuing vanguard at its heels.
-
-The Guards at Landrecies were put into the empty cavalry barracks for
-a much-needed rest, but they had hardly settled down before there was
-an alarm that the Germans were coming into the town. It was just
-after dusk that a column of infantry debouched from the shadow of the
-trees and advanced briskly towards the town. A company of the 3rd
-Coldstream under Captain Monck gave the alarm, and the whole regiment
-stood to arms, while the rest of the brigade, who could not operate
-in so confined a space, defended the other entrances of the town.
-The van of the approaching Germans shouted out that they were French,
-and seemed to have actually got near enough to attack the officer of
-the picket and seize a machine-gun before the Guardsmen began to
-fire. There is a single approach to the village, and no means of
-turning it, so that the attack was forced to come directly down the
-road.
-
-[Sidenote: The Germans' rude awakening.]
-
-Possibly the Germans had the impression that they were dealing with
-demoralised fugitives, but if so they got a rude awakening. The
-advance party, who were endeavouring to drag away the {92}
-machine-gun, were all shot down, and their comrades who stormed up to
-the houses were met with a steady and murderous fire which drove them
-back into the shadows of the wood. A gun was brought up by them, and
-fired at a range of five hundred yards with shrapnel, but the
-Coldstream, reinforced by a second company, lay low or flattened
-themselves into the doorways for protection, while the 9th British
-Battery replied from a position behind the town. Presently,
-believing that the way had been cleared for them, there was a fresh
-surge of dark masses out of the wood, and they poured into the throat
-of the street. The Guards had brought out two machine-guns, and
-their fire, together with a succession of volleys from the rifles,
-decimated the stormers. Some of them got near enough to throw hand
-bombs among the British, but none effected a lodgment among the
-buildings.
-
-From time to time there were fresh advances during the night,
-designed apparently rather to tire out the troops than to gain the
-village. Once fire was set to the house at the end of the street,
-but the flames were extinguished by a party led by Corporal Wyatt, of
-the 3rd Coldstream. The Irish Guards after midnight relieved the
-Coldstream of their vigil, and in the early morning the tired but
-victorious brigade went forward unmolested upon their way. They had
-lost 170 of their number, nearly all from the two Coldstream
-companies. Lord Hawarden and the Hon. Windsor Clive of the
-Coldstream and Lieut. Vereker of the Grenadiers were killed, four
-other officers were wounded. The Germans in their close attacking
-formation had suffered very much more heavily. Their enterprise {93}
-was a daring one, for they had pushed far forward to get command of
-the Landrecies Bridge, but their audacity became foolhardy when faced
-by steady, unshaken infantry. History has shown many times before
-that a retreating British Army still retains a sting in its tail.
-
-At the same time as the Guards' Brigade was attacked at Landrecies
-there was an advance from the forest against Maroilles, which is four
-miles to the eastward. A troop of the 15th Hussars guarding a bridge
-over the Sambre near that point was driven in by the enemy, and two
-attempts on the part of the 1st Berkshires, of Davies' 6th Brigade,
-to retake it were repulsed, owing to the fact that the only approach
-was by a narrow causeway with marshland on either side, where it was
-not possible for infantry to deploy. The 1st Rifles were ordered to
-support the Berkshires, but darkness had fallen and nothing could be
-done. The casualties in this skirmish amounted to 124 killed,
-wounded, or missing. The Landrecies and Maroilles wounded were left
-behind with some of the medical staff. At this period of the war the
-British had not yet understood the qualities of the enemy, and
-several times made the mistake of trusting surgeons and orderlies to
-their mercy, with the result that they were inhumanly treated, both
-by the authorities at the front and by the populace in Germany,
-whither they were conveyed as starving prisoners of war. Five of
-them, Captains Edmunds and Hamilton, Lieut. Danks (all of the Army
-Medical Corps), with Dr. Austin and Dr. Elliott, who were exchanged
-in January 1915, deposed that they were left absolutely without food
-for long periods. It is only fair to state that at a later date,
-with a few {94} scandalous exceptions, such as that of Wittenberg,
-the German treatment of prisoners, though often harsh, was no longer
-barbarous. For the first six months, however, it was brutal in the
-extreme, and frequently accompanied by torture as well as neglect. A
-Spanish prisoner, incarcerated by mistake, has given very clear
-neutral evidence of the abominable punishments of the prison camps.
-His account reads more like the doings of Iroquois than of a
-Christian nation.
-
-[Sidenote: The Connnaughts at Pont-sur-Sambre.]
-
-A small mishap--small on the scale of such a war, though serious
-enough in itself--befell a unit of the First Army Corps on the
-morning after the Landrecies engagement. The portion of the German
-army who pursued General Haig had up to now been able to effect
-little, and that little at considerable cost to themselves. Early on
-August 26, however, a brisk action was fought near Pont-sur-Sambre,
-in which the 2nd Connaughts, of Haking's Fifth Brigade, lost six
-officers, including Colonel Abercrombie, who was taken prisoner, and
-280 men. The regiment was cut off by a rapidly advancing enemy in a
-country which was so thickly enclosed that there was great difficulty
-in keeping touch between the various companies or in conveying their
-danger to the rest of the brigade. By steadiness and judgment the
-battalion was extricated from a most difficult position, but it was
-at the heavy cost already quoted. In this case again the use by the
-enemy of great numbers of motor lorries in their pursuit accounts for
-the suddenness and severity of the attacks which now and afterwards
-fell upon the British rearguards.
-
-Dawn broke upon August 26, a day upon which the exhausted troops were
-destined to be tried to the {95} limit of human endurance. It was
-the date of Von Kluck's exultant telegram in which he declared that
-he held them surrounded, a telegram which set Berlin fluttering with
-flags. On this day the First Army Corps was unmolested in its march,
-reaching the Venerolles line that night. There was woody country
-upon the west of it, and from beyond this curtain of trees they heard
-the distant roar of a terrific cannonade, and knew that a great
-battle was in progress to the westward. It was on Smith-Dorrien's
-Second Corps and upon the single division of the Third Corps that the
-full storm of the German attack had broken. In a word, a corps and a
-half of British troops, with 225 guns, were assailed by certainly
-four and probably five German corps, with 600 guns. It is no wonder
-that the premature tidings of a great German triumph were forwarded
-that morning to make one more item in that flood of good news which
-from August 21 to the end of the month was pouring in upon the German
-people. A glittering mirage lay before them. The French lines had
-been hurled back from the frontier, the British were in full retreat,
-and now were faced with absolute disaster. Behind these breaking
-lines lay the precious capital, the brain and heart of France. But
-God is not always with the big battalions, and the end was not yet.
-
-
-
-
-{96}
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE BATTLE OF LE CATEAU
-
-The order of battle at Le Cateau--The stand of the 2nd
-Suffolks--Major Yate's V.C.--The fight for the quarries--The splendid
-work of the British guns--Difficult retirement of the Fourth
-Division--The fate of the 1st Gordons--Results of the
-battle--Exhaustion of the Army--The destruction of the 2nd
-Munsters--A cavalry fight--The news in Great Britain--The views of
-General Joffre--Battery L--The action of Villars-Cotteret--Reunion of
-the Army.
-
-
-Reference has already been made to the retirement of Smith-Dorrien's
-Second Corps, covered by Allenby's cavalry, throughout the 25th. The
-heads of the columns arrived at the Le Cateau position at about 3
-P.M., but the rearguards were fighting into the night, and came in
-eventually in an exhausted condition. The Fourth Division, which was
-still quite fresh, did good and indeed vital service by allowing the
-tired units to pass through its ranks and acting as a pivot upon
-which the cavalry could fall back.
-
-Sir John French had reconsidered the idea of making a stand at Le
-Cateau, feeling, no doubt, that if his whole Army could not be
-consolidated there the affair would be too desperate. He had moved
-with his staff during the evening of the 25th to St. Quentin, leaving
-word that the retirement should be continued early next morning.
-Smith-Dorrien spent the afternoon and evening going round the
-position, but it was {97} not until 2 A.M. upon the morning of the
-26th that he was able to ascertain the whereabouts of all his
-scattered and weary units. About that time General Allenby reported
-that his cavalry had been widely separated, two and a half brigades
-being at Chatillon, six miles east of Le Cateau, the other one and a
-half brigades being near Ligny, four miles west of the same town.
-General Smith-Dorrien was in the position that his troops were
-scattered, weary, and in danger of losing their morale through
-continued retreat in the presence of an ever-pressing enemy. Even
-with the best soldiers such an experience too long continued may turn
-an army into a rabble. He therefore made urgent representations by
-telephone to the Commander-in-Chief, pointing out that the only hope
-of checking the dangerous German pursuit was to stagger them by a
-severe counter. "The only thing for the men to do when they can't
-stand is to lie down and fight," said he. Sir John assented to the
-view, with the proviso that the retirement should be continued as
-soon as possible. Smith-Dorrien, taking under his orders the
-cavalry, the Fourth Division, and the 19th Brigade, as well as his
-own corps, issued instructions for the battle which he knew must
-begin within a few hours.
-
-Owing to the gap of eight miles between the nearest points of the two
-corps, both flanks of the position were in the air. Smith-Dorrien
-therefore requested the cavalry brigades from Chatillon to move in
-and guard the east flank, while the rest of the cavalry watched the
-west. He was less anxious about the latter, as he knew that Sordet's
-French cavalry was in that direction.
-
-[Sidenote: The order of battle at Le Coteau.]
-
-The exhausted infantry, who had now been {98} marching for about a
-week, and fighting for three days and the greater part of three
-nights, flung themselves down where best they could, some to the
-north-east of Le Cateau, some in the town, and some along the line of
-very inadequate trenches hastily prepared by civilian labour. In the
-early dawn they took up their position, the Fifth Division being to
-the right near the town. Of this division, the 14th Brigade (Rolt's)
-was on the extreme right, the 13th (Cuthbert's) to the left of it,
-and the 15th (Gleichen's) to the left again. To the west of the
-Fifth Division lay the Third, their trenches covering the villages of
-Troisville (9th Brigade), Audencourt (8th Brigade), and Caudry (7th
-Brigade). Behind Caudry one and a half brigades of cavalry were in
-reserve to strengthen the left wing. From Caudry the line was thrown
-back to meet a flanking movement and extended to Haucourt. This
-portion was held by Snow's Fourth Division. Sordet's cavalry had
-passed across the rear of the British position the day before, and
-lay now to the left flank and rear of the Army. There were rumours
-of approaching French forces from the south, which put heart into the
-weary men, but, as a matter of fact, they had only their own brave
-spirits upon which to depend. Their numbers, putting every unit at
-its full complement, were about 70,000 men. Their opponents were
-four army corps at the least, with two divisions of cavalry--say,
-170,000 men with an overpowering artillery. Subsequent reports
-showed that the guns of all five army corps had been concentrated for
-the battle.
-
-It has been said that Rolt's 14th Brigade was at the extreme right of
-the line. This statement needs some expansion. The 14th Brigade
-consisted of the {99} 1st East Surrey, 2nd Suffolk, 2nd Manchester,
-and 1st Cornwalls. Of these four regiments, half of the East Surrey
-had been detached on escort duty and the other half, under Colonel
-Longley, with the whole of the Cornwalls, bivouacked in the northern
-suburbs of Le Cateau on the night of the 25th. In the early morning
-of the 26th the enemy's advanced guard got into the town, and this
-detachment of British troops were cut off from their comrades and
-fired upon as they assembled in the streets of the town. They made
-their way out, however, in orderly fashion and took up a position to
-the south-east of the town, where they fought an action on their own
-account for some hours, quite apart from the rest of the Army, which
-they could hear but not see. Eventually the division of cavalry fell
-back from Chatillon to join the Army and picked up these troops _en
-route_, so that the united body was able to make its way safely back
-to their comrades. These troops were out of the main battle, but did
-good work in covering the retreat. The whole signal section of the
-14th Brigade was with them, which greatly hampered the brigade during
-the battle. Two companies of the 1st East Surreys under Major Tew
-had become separated from their comrades after Mons, but they
-rejoined the British line at Troisville, and on the morning of August
-26 were able to fall in on the rear of the 14th Brigade, where, as
-will be seen later, they did good service.
-
-The 19th Brigade had also bivouacked in Le Cateau and was nearly cut
-off, as the two regiments of the 14th Brigade had been, by the sudden
-intrusion of the enemy. It had been able to make its way out of the
-town, however, without being separated from the rest of the Army, and
-it took up its position on {100} the right rear of the infantry line,
-whence it sent help where needed and played the part of a reserve
-until towards the close of the action its presence became very vital
-to the Fifth Division. At the outset the 2nd Argyll and Sutherlands
-were in the front line of this brigade and the 1st Middlesex
-supporting them, while the other two battalions, the 2nd Welsh
-Fusiliers and 1st Scots Rifles, with a battery of artillery had been
-taken as a reserve by the force commander. No trenches had been
-prepared at this point, and the losses of the two front battalions
-from shell-fire were, from the beginning, very heavy. The other two
-battalions spent a day of marching rather than fighting, being sent
-right across to reinforce the Fourth Division and then being brought
-back to the right flank once more.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{101}
-
-[Illustration: Sketch of the Battle of Le Cateau, Aug. 26th]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Sidenote: The stand of the 2nd Suffolks.]
-
-It was the Fifth Division, on the right of the line, who first
-experienced the full effect of the heavy shelling which about seven
-o'clock became general along the whole position, but was always most
-severe upon the right. There was a dangerous salient in the trenches
-at the cross-roads one mile west of Le Cateau which was a source of
-very great weakness. Every effort was made to strengthen the
-trenches, the 15th Brigade and 59th Company R.E. working especially
-hard in the Troisville section. The Germans were moving round upon
-this right wing, and the murderous hail of missiles came from the
-flank as well as from the front, being supplemented by rifle and
-machine-gun fire. The 2nd Suffolks and 2nd Manchesters, the
-remaining half of Rolfs 14th Brigade, being on the extreme right of
-the line, suffered the most. The guns immediately supporting them,
-of the 28th Artillery Brigade, were quite overmatched and were {102}
-overwhelmed by the devastating rain of shells, many of them being put
-out of action. A heavy battery, the 108th, some little distance
-behind the line, kept up a steady and effective fire which long held
-back the German advance. The pressure, however, was extreme, and
-growing steadily from hour to hour until it became well-nigh
-intolerable. Especially it fell upon the 2nd Suffolks, who held
-their shallow trenches with splendid tenacity. Their colonel, Brett,
-was killed, Major Doughty was wounded in three places, Captains
-Orford and Cutbill, with eight lieutenants, were on the ground.
-Finally, when the position of the brigade became untenable and it was
-ordered to retreat, the gallant Suffolks held on to their line with
-the desire of saving the disabled guns, and were eventually all
-killed, wounded, or taken, save for about 250 men, while their
-neighbours, the 2nd Manchesters, lost 14 officers and 350 of their
-men. In this way the extreme right of the British line was
-practically destroyed.
-
-The 19th Brigade, in the rear of the 14th, were able to observe the
-fate of their comrades, and about mid-day the 2nd Argyll and
-Sutherland Highlanders, who had already lost a good many men from
-shell-fire, advanced in the chivalrous hope of relieving the
-pressure. The battalion went forward as if on parade, though the
-casualties were numerous. They eventually gained the shelter of some
-trenches near the remains of the 14th Brigade, but their gallant
-effort, instead of averting the threatened destruction, ended by
-partially involving them in the same fate. They could do nothing
-against the concentrated and well-directed artillery fire of the
-enemy. When eventually they fell back, part of two companies were
-cut {103} off in their trench and taken. The rest of the regiment,
-together with the 1st Middlesex and two companies of the Royal Scots
-Fusiliers from the 9th Brigade, formed a covering line on a ridge in
-the rear and held back the German advance for a long time. This line
-did not retire until 5 P.M., when it was nearly enveloped. General
-Drummond, commanding the 19th Brigade, had met with an injury in the
-course of the action, and it was commanded during the latter part by
-Colonel Ward, of the Middlesex.
-
-[Sidenote: Major Yate's V.C.]
-
-The retirement or destruction of the 14th Brigade exposed the flank
-of the 13th (Cuthbert's) to a murderous enfilade fire, which fell
-chiefly upon the 2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry. This brigade had
-defended itself successfully for six hours against various frontal
-attacks, but now the flank-fire raked it from end to end and
-practically destroyed the Yorkshiremen, who were the most exposed to
-it. On them and on the 2nd Scottish Borderers fell the great bulk of
-the losses, for the West Rents and the survivors of the West Ridings
-were in reserve. Of the two companies of the Yorkshire Light
-Infantry who held the foremost trenches, that on the right had only
-fifteen men left, with whom Major Yate attempted a final charge,
-finding his Victoria Cross in the effort, while the next company,
-under Major Trevor, had only forty-one survivors, the whole losses of
-the battalion being 600 men, with 20 officers. Both the Yorkshire
-and the Scottish Border battalions lost their colonels in the action.
-Their losses were shared by the two companies of the 1st East Surreys
-under Major Tew, who had been placed between the 14th and 13th
-Brigades, and {104} who fought very steadily in shallow trenches,
-holding on to the last possible moment.
-
-Whilst the battle was going badly on the right, the Third Division in
-the centre and the Fourth Division on the left had held their own
-against a succession of attacks. The 8th and 9th Brigades drove off
-the German infantry with their crushing rifle-fire, and endured as
-best they might the shelling, which was formidable and yet very much
-less severe than that to which the Fifth Division had been exposed.
-In the case of the 7th Brigade (McCracken's) the village of Caudry,
-which it defended, formed a salient, since the Fourth Division on the
-left was thrown back. The attack upon this brigade from daylight
-onwards was very severe, but the assailants could neither drive in
-the line nor capture the village of Caudry. They attacked on both
-flanks at short rifle range, inflicting and also enduring heavy
-losses. In this part of the field the British guns held their own
-easily against the German, the proportion of numbers being more equal
-than on the right of the line.
-
-Whilst the right flank was crumbling before the terrific
-concentration of German guns, and while the centre was stoutly
-holding its own, farther to the west, in the Haucourt-Ligny
-direction, the Second German Army Corps was beating hard against
-Snow's Fourth Division, which was thrown back to protect the left
-flank of the Army, and to cover the Cambrai-Esnes road.
-Hunter-Weston's 11th Brigade was on the right, south of Fontaine,
-with Wilson's 12th upon its left, and Haldane's 10th in reserve at
-Haucourt. As the German attack came from the left, or western flank,
-the 12th Brigade received the {105} first impact. The artillery of
-the division had not yet come up, and the 1st Royal Lancasters,
-stretched in a turnip patch, endured for some time a severe fire
-which cost them many casualties, including their Colonel Dykes, and
-to which little reply could be made. There were no cavalry scouts in
-front of the infantry, so that working parties and advanced posts
-were cut up by sudden machine-gun fire. Some of the covering parties
-both of the Lancasters and of the 2nd Lancashire Fusiliers were never
-seen again. At about seven the British guns came up, the 14th
-Brigade R.F.A. on the left, the 29th in the centre, and the 32nd on
-the right, with the howitzers of the 37th behind the right centre on
-the high ground near Selvigny. From this time onward they supported
-the infantry in the most self-sacrificing way. The German infantry
-advance began shortly afterwards, and was carried out by wave after
-wave of men. A company of the 2nd Essex Regiment, under Captain
-Vandeleur, upon the British left, having good cover and a clear field
-of fire, inflicted very heavy losses on the Germans, though they were
-finally overwhelmed, their leader having been killed. The 2nd
-Lancashire Fusiliers in the front line were also heavily attacked,
-and held their own for several hours. About ten o'clock the pressure
-was so great that the defence was driven in, and two battalions lost
-their machine-guns, but a new line was formed in the Haucourt-Esnes
-road, the retirement being skilfully covered by Colonel Anley, of the
-Essex, and Colonel Griffin, of the Lancashire Fusiliers. There the
-2nd Inniskilling Fusiliers, the 1st Royal Lancasters, the 2nd
-Lancashire Fusiliers, and the 2nd Essex held firmly on until the
-afternoon under very heavy and {106} incessant fire, while the 11th
-Brigade upon their right were equally involved in the fight. Two
-battalions of the 10th Brigade (Haldane's), the 1st Irish Fusiliers
-and 2nd Seaforths, had dug themselves in on the high ground just
-north of Selvigny and repulsed every attack, but two others, the 2nd
-Dublins and 1st Warwicks, had got involved with the 12th Brigade and
-could not be retrieved. The Signal Corps had not yet arrived, and
-the result was that General Snow had the greatest difficulty in
-ensuring his connections with his brigadiers, the orders being
-carried by his staff officers. At two o'clock, as there was a lull
-in the German advance, Wilson of the 12th Brigade made a spirited
-counter-attack, recovering many of the wounded, but being finally
-driven back to the old position by intense artillery and machine-gun
-fire.
-
-It is worth recording that during this advance the Essex men found
-among the German dead many Jaeger with the same Gibraltar badge upon
-their caps which they bore themselves. It was a Hanoverian battalion
-who had been comrades with the old 56th in the defence of the
-fortress one hundred and fifty years before.
-
-[Sidenote: The fight for the quarries.]
-
-The 11th Brigade (Hunter-Weston), on the right of the 12th, had
-meanwhile played a very vital part in the fight. This brigade was
-defending a position called Les Carrières, or the quarry pits, which
-was east of Fontaine and to the north of the village of Ligny. It
-was a desperate business, for the British were four times driven out
-of it and four times came back to their bitter work amid a sleet of
-shells and bullets. Parties of the 1st Somersets and of the 1st East
-Lancashires held the quarries with the 1st {107} Hants and 1st Rifle
-Brigade in immediate support, all being eventually drawn into the
-fight. Major Bickman, of the latter regiment, distinguished himself
-greatly in the defence, but was seriously wounded and left behind in
-the final retirement. Besides incessant gun-fire, the defenders were
-under infantry fire of a very murderous description from both flanks.
-In spite of this, the place was held for six hours until the
-retirement of the line in the afternoon caused it to be untenable, as
-the enemy was able to get behind it. The brigade then fell back upon
-Ligny under heavy shrapnel-fire, moving steadily and in good order.
-The Germans at once attacked the village from the east and
-north-east. Could they have taken it, they would have been upon the
-flank of the British line of retirement. They were twice driven
-back, however, by the fire of the infantry, losing very heavily upon
-both occasions. About four o'clock, the Army being in full retreat,
-the brigade received orders to abandon Ligny and march upon
-Malincourt. The effect of a heavy shrapnel-fire was minimised by
-this movement being carried out in small columns of fours. A loss of
-30 officers and 1115 men in a single day's fighting showed how severe
-had been the work of Hunter-Weston's brigade. The 12th Brigade had
-also lost about a thousand men. Many of the guns had run short of
-shells. A spectator has described how he saw the British gunners
-under a heavy fire, sitting in gloomy groups round the guns which
-they had neither the shells to work, nor the heart to abandon.
-
-Such was the general fortune of the British left. At the extreme
-edge of it, in the gap between the left of the Fourth Division and
-the town of Cambrai, {108} Sordet's French cavalry had been fighting
-to prevent the British wing from being turned. There was some
-misconception upon this point at the time, but in justice to our Ally
-it should be known that General Smith-Dorrien himself galloped to
-this flank in the course of the afternoon and was a witness of the
-efforts of the French troopers, who had actually marched 40 miles in
-order to be present at the battle. The narrative has now taken the
-movements of the left wing up to the point of its retirement, in
-order to preserve the continuity of events in that portion of the
-field, but the actual abandonment of their position by Snow's Fourth
-Division was due to circumstances over which they had no control, and
-which had occurred at a considerable distance. Both the centre and
-the left of the Army could have held its own, though it must be
-admitted that the attack to which they were exposed was a very
-violent one gallantly pushed home.
-
-All might have gone well had the Germans not been able to mass such
-an overpowering artillery attack upon the right of the line. It was
-shortly after mid-day that this part of the position began to weaken,
-and observers from the centre saw stragglers retiring over the low
-hill in the Le Cateau direction. At that hour the artillery upon the
-right of the British line was mostly silenced, and large masses of
-the German infantry were observed moving round the right flank. The
-salient of the Suffolks was in the possession of the enemy, and from
-it they could enfilade the line. It was no longer possible to bring
-up ammunition or horses to the few remaining guns. The greater part
-of the troops held on none the less most doggedly to their positions.
-A steady downpour {109} of rain was a help rather than a discomfort,
-as it enabled the men to moisten their parched lips. But the
-situation of the Fifth Division was growing desperate. It was plain
-that to remain where they were could only mean destruction. And yet
-to ask the exhausted men to retire under such a rain of shells would
-be a dangerous operation. Even the best troops may reach their
-snapping point. Most of them had by the afternoon been under
-constant shrapnel-fire for eight hours on end. Some were visibly
-weakening. Anxious officers looked eagerly over their shoulders for
-any sign of reinforcement, but an impassable gap separated them from
-their comrades of the First Army Corps, who were listening with
-sinking hearts to the rumble of the distant cannonade. There was
-nothing for it but to chance the retirement. About three o'clock
-commanders called to officers and officers to men for a last great
-effort. It was the moment when a leader reaps in war the love and
-confidence which he has sown in peace. Smith-Dorrien had sent his
-meagre reserve, which consisted of one battery and two battalions, to
-take up a rearguard position astride the Le Cateau-St. Quentin road.
-Every available detail, that could pull a trigger, down to
-Hildebrand's signallers of the Headquarters Staff, who had already
-done wonderful work in their own particular line, were thrust into
-the covering line. One by one the dishevelled brigades were drawn
-off towards the south. One section of the heavy guns of the 108th
-Heavy Battery was ordered back to act with two battalions of the 19th
-Brigade in covering the Reumont-Maritz road, while the 1st Norfolks
-were put in echelon behind the right flank for the same purpose.
-
-{110}
-
-[Sidenote: The splendid work of the British guns.]
-
-The Fifth Division, with the 15th Brigade as rearguard, considerably
-disorganised by its long hammering, retreated along the straight
-Roman road via Maritz and Estrees. The Third Division fell back
-through Berthy and Clary to Beaurevoir, the 9th Brigade forming a
-rearguard. The cavalry, greatly helped by Sordet's French cavalry
-upon the west, flung itself in front of the pursuit, while the guns
-sacrificed themselves to save the retiring infantry. Every British
-battery was an inferno of bursting shells, and yet every one fought
-on while breech-block would shut or gunner could stand. Many
-batteries were in the state of the 61st R.F.A., which fired away all
-its own shells and then borrowed from the limbers of other
-neighbouring batteries, the guns of which had been put out of action.
-Had the artillery gone the Army would have gone. Had the Army gone
-the Germans had a clear run into Paris. It has been said that on the
-covering batteries of Wing, Milne, and Headlam may, on that wet
-August afternoon, have hung the future history of Europe.
-
-Wing's command included the 23rd, 30th, 40th, and 42nd Brigades, with
-the 48th Heavy Battery; Headlam's were the 15th, 27th, 28th, and 8th,
-with the 108th Heavy; Milne's, the 14th, 29th, 32nd, and 37th, with
-the 31st Heavy. These numbers deserve to be recorded, for every gun
-of them did great service, though many were left in ruins on the
-field. Some, like those of the 37th R.F.A., were plucked from under
-the very noses of the Germans, who were within a hundred yards of
-them when they were withdrawn, a deed of valour for which Captain
-Reynolds of that battery received the Cross. One by one those
-batteries which could move were drawn off, the cavalry covering {111}
-the manoeuvre by their rifle-fire, and sometimes man-handling the gun
-from the field. Serving one day as charging cavaliers, another as
-mounted infantry in covering a retreat, again as sappers in making or
-holding a trench, or when occasion called for it as gun-teams to pull
-on the trace of a derelict gun, the cavalry have been the general
-utility men of the Army. The days of pure cavalry may have passed,
-but there will never be a time when a brave and handy fighting man
-who is mobile will not be invaluable to his comrades.
-
-[Sidenote: Difficult retirement of the Fourth Division.]
-
-It was about four o'clock that the Fourth Division, on the left
-flank, who had been maintaining the successful defensive already
-described, were ordered to begin their retirement. The 12th Brigade
-was able to withdraw with no great difficulty along the line
-Walincourt-Villiers-Vendhuile, reaching the latter village about
-nine-thirty. The doings of the 11th Brigade have been already
-described. There was considerable disintegration but no loss of
-spirit. One of the regiments of the 12th, the 2nd Royal Lancasters,
-together with about three hundred Warwicks, from the 10th Brigade,
-and some detachments of other regiments, were by some mischance,
-isolated in the village of Haucourt with no definite orders, and held
-on until ten o'clock at night, when the place was nearly surrounded.
-They fought their way out, however, in a most surprising fashion, and
-eventually made good their retreat. One party, under Major Poole of
-the Warwicks, rejoined the Army next day. Captain Clutterbuck, with
-a small party of Royal Lancasters, wandered into Haumont after it was
-occupied by the Germans. Summoned to surrender the gallant officer
-refused, and was shot {112} dead, but his men charged with the
-bayonet and fought their way clear to a post which was held by Major
-Parker of the same regiment, to the immediate south of the village.
-This officer, finding that he was the last rearguard, withdrew in the
-face of heavy German forces. Being joined by Major Christie of the
-Warwicks with 200 men, they followed the Army, and, finally, by a
-mixture of good luck and good leadership, picked their way through
-the German advance guards, and on the third day rejoined the colours
-at Noyon.
-
-Haldane's 10th Brigade had got split up during the confused fighting
-of the day, half of it, the 1st Warwicks and 2nd Dublins, getting
-involved with the 12th Brigade in the fighting on the Haucourt Ridge.
-The other two battalions, the 2nd Seaforths and 1st Royal Irish
-Fusiliers, kept guard as a reserve over the left flank of the
-division. Towards evening General Haldane, finding it hopeless to
-recover control of his lost regiments, collected the rest of his
-brigade, and endeavoured to follow the general line of retreat. He
-lost touch with the remainder of the Army, and might well have been
-cut off, but after a most exhausting experience he succeeded in
-safely rejoining the division at Roisel upon the 27th. It may be
-said generally that the reassembling of the Fourth Division after the
-disintegration they had experienced was a remarkable example of
-individualism and determination.
-
-It is impossible to doubt that the Germans, in spite of their
-preponderating numbers, were staggered by the resistance which they
-had encountered. In no other way can one explain the fact that their
-pursuit, which for three days had been incessant, {113} should now,
-at the most critical instant, have eased off. The cavalry and guns
-staved off the final blow, and the stricken infantry staggered from
-the field. The strain upon the infantry of the Fifth Division may be
-gathered from the fact that up to this point they had lost, roughly,
-143 officers, while the Third Division had lost 92 and the Fourth 70.
-For the time they were disorganised as bodies, even while they
-preserved their moral as individuals.
-
-When extended formations are drawn rapidly in under the conditions of
-a heavy action, it is often impossible to convey the orders to men in
-outlying positions. Staying in their trenches and unconscious of the
-departure of their comrades, they are sometimes gathered up by the
-advancing enemy, but more frequently fall into the ranks of some
-other corps, and remain for days or weeks away from their own
-battalion, turning up long after they have helped to swell some list
-of casualties. Regiments get intermingled and pour along the roads
-in a confusion which might suggest a rout, whilst each single soldier
-is actually doing his best to recover his corps. It is
-disorganisation--but not demoralisation.
-
-[Sidenote: The fate of the 1st Gordons.]
-
-It has been remarked above that in the widespread formations of
-modern battles it is difficult to be sure of the transmission of
-orders. An illustration of such a danger occurred upon this
-occasion, which gave rise to an aftermath of battle nearly as
-disastrous as the battle itself. This was the episode which
-culminated in the loss of a body of troops, including a large portion
-of the 1st Gordon Highlanders. This distinguished corps had been
-engaged with the rest of Beauchamp Doran's 8th Brigade at Mons and
-again upon the following day, after which they {114} retreated with
-the rest of their division. On the evening of the 25th they
-bivouacked in the village of Audencourt, just south of the Cambrai-Le
-Cateau highway, and on the morning of the 26th they found themselves
-defending a line of trenches in front of this village. From nine
-o'clock the Gordons held their ground against a persistent German
-attack. About 3.30 an order was given for the battalion to retire.
-This message only reached one company, which acted upon it, but the
-messenger was wounded _en route_, and failed to reach battalion
-headquarters. Consequently the remainder of the battalion did not
-retire with the Army, but continued to hold its trenches, greatly
-helped by the flank (D) Company of Royal Scots, until long after
-nightfall, when the enemy in great force had worked round both of its
-flanks. It should be understood that the withdrawal of the Royal
-Scots was under direct order emanating from brigade headquarters, but
-an officer of the Gordons, not knowing that such an order had been
-issued, and perceiving that their flank would be exposed if D Company
-left their trench, said a few words to them which had such an effect
-upon their fiery souls that they rushed back to stand by the
-Highlanders, their Captain being shot dead as he waved his men back
-into their trench. From that time onwards this company of Royal
-Scots, finely led by two young lieutenants, Graves and Graham Watson,
-shared all the dangers and the ultimate fate of the Gordons, as did a
-handful of Royal Irish upon the other flank. When it was dusk it
-became clear to Colonel Gordon, who was now in command of the mixed
-detachment, that he and his men were separated from the Army and
-surrounded {115} on every side by the advancing Germans. At that
-time the men, after supreme exertion for several days, had been in
-action for twelve hours on end. He therefore decided, as against
-annihilation in the morning, that retreat was the only course open.
-The wounded were left in the trenches. The transport, machine-guns,
-and horses had already been destroyed by the incessant shelling. The
-detachment made a move towards the south, the operation being a most
-difficult one in pitch darkness with the enemy within a few hundred
-yards. The success attained in this initial stage was largely due to
-the way in which the Master of Saltoun conveyed the orders which drew
-in the flanks to the centre. Having made good the Audencourt-Caudry
-road at 1 A.M. on August 27, the troops managed to traverse some
-miles of road, with blazing villages all about them, and had a fair
-chance of reaching safety when unfortunately at Montigny they took a
-wrong turn, which brought them into Bertry which was held by the
-Germans. Some confusion was caused by the latter challenging in
-French. A confused fight followed in the darkness, in the course of
-which many individual acts of great bravery and devotion were
-performed. The enemy were now all round the Highlanders, and though
-the struggle continued for fifty minutes, and there was no official
-surrender, the little body of men was embedded in Von Kluck's army,
-and no escape could be found. The utmost discipline and gallantry
-were shown by all ranks. It must be some consolation to the
-survivors to know that it is freely admitted that their resistance in
-the trenches for so long a period undoubtedly facilitated the safe
-withdrawal of the Third, and to some extent of the Fourth Divisions.
-{116} Major Leslie Butler, Brigade-Major of the 8th Brigade, who had
-made a gallant effort to ride to the Gordons and warn them of their
-danger, was entangled among the Germans, and only succeeded six days
-later in regaining the British lines.
-
-[Sidenote: Results of the battle.]
-
-So ended the perilous, costly, and almost disastrous action of Le
-Cateau. The loss to the British Army, so far as it can be extracted
-from complex figures and separated from the other losses of the
-retreat, amounted to between seven and eight thousand killed,
-wounded, and missing, while at the time of the action, or in the
-immediate retreat, a considerable quantity of transport and
-thirty-six field-pieces, mostly in splinters, were abandoned to the
-enemy. It was an action which could hardly have been avoided, and
-from which the troops were extricated on better terms than might have
-been expected. It will always remain an interesting academic
-question what would have occurred had it been possible for the First
-Corps to line up with the rest of the Army. The enemy's
-preponderance of artillery would probably have prevented a British
-victory, and the strategic position would in any case have made it a
-barren one, but at least the Germans would have been hard hit and the
-subsequent retreat more leisurely. As it stood, it was an engagement
-upon which the weaker side can look back without shame or dishonour.
-One result of it was to give both the Army and the country increased
-confidence in themselves and their leaders. Sir John French has
-testified to the splendid qualities shown by the troops, while his
-whole-hearted tribute to Smith-Dorrien, in which he said, "The saving
-of the left wing of the Army could never have been accomplished
-unless a commander of rare and unusual {117} coolness, intrepidity,
-and determination had been present to personally conduct the
-operation," will surely be endorsed by history.
-
-It is difficult to exaggerate the strain which had been thrown upon
-this commander. On him had fallen the immediate direction of the
-action at Mons; on him also had been the incessant responsibility of
-the retreat. He had, as has been shown in the narrative, been hard
-at work all night upon the eve of the battle; he superintended that
-trying engagement, he extricated his forces, and finally motored to
-St. Quentin in the evening, went on to Noyon, reached it after
-midnight, and was back with his Army in the morning, encouraging
-every one by the magnetism of his presence. It was a very remarkable
-feat of endurance.
-
-[Sidenote: Exhaustion of the Army]
-
-Exhausted as the troops were, there could be no halt or rest until
-they had extricated themselves from the immediate danger. At the
-last point of human endurance they still staggered on through the
-evening and the night time, amid roaring thunder and flashing
-lightning, down the St. Quentin road. Many fell from fatigue, and
-having fallen, continued to sleep in ditches by the roadside,
-oblivious of the racket around them. A number never woke until they
-found themselves in the hands of the Uhlan patrols. Others slumbered
-until their corps had disappeared, and then, regaining their senses,
-joined with other straggling units so as to form bands, which
-wandered over the country, and eventually reached the railway line
-about Amiens with wondrous Bill Adams tales of personal adventures
-which in time reached England, and gave the impression of complete
-disaster. But the main body were, as a matter of fact, holding well
-{118} together, though the units of infantry had become considerably
-mixed and so reduced that at least four brigades, after less than a
-week of war, had lost 50 per cent of their personnel. Many of the
-men threw away the heavier contents of their packs, and others
-abandoned the packs themselves, so that the pursuing Germans had
-every evidence of a rout before their eyes. It was deplorable that
-equipment should be discarded, but often it was the only possible
-thing to do, for either the man had to be sacrificed or the pack.
-Advantage was taken of a forked road to station an officer there who
-called out, "Third Division right, Fifth Division left," which
-greatly helped the reorganisation. The troops snatched a few hours
-of rest at St. Quentin, and then in the breaking dawn pushed upon
-their weary road once more, country carts being in many cases
-commandeered to carry the lame and often bootless infantry. The
-paved _chaussées_, with their uneven stones, knocked the feet to
-pieces, and caused much distress to the tired men, which was
-increased by the extreme heat of the weather.
-
-In the case of some of the men the collapse was so complete that it
-was almost impossible to get them on. Major Tom Bridges, of the 4th
-Royal Irish Dragoons, being sent to round up and hurry forward 250
-stragglers at St. Quentin, found them nearly comatose with fatigue.
-With quick wit he bought a toy drum, and, accompanied by a man with a
-penny whistle, he fell them in and marched them, laughing in all
-their misery, down the high road towards Ham. When he stopped he
-found that his strange following stopped also, so he was compelled to
-march and play the whole way to Roupy. Thus by one man's compelling
-{119} personality 250 men were saved for the Army. But such complete
-collapse was rare. The men kept their _moral_. "Beneath the dirt
-and grime and weariness I saw clear eyes and grim jaws even when the
-men could hardly walk." So spoke Coleman, the gallant American
-volunteer.
-
-Up to now nothing had been seen of the French infantry, and the
-exposed British force had been hustled and harried by Von Kluck's
-great army without receiving any substantial support. This was
-through no want of loyalty, but our gallant Allies were themselves
-hard pressed. Sir John French had sent urgent representations,
-especially to General Sordet, the leader of the cavalry operating
-upon the western side, and he had, as already shown, done what he
-could to screen Smith-Dorrien's flank. Now at last the retiring Army
-was coming in touch with those supports which were so badly needed.
-But before they were reached, on the morning of the 27th, the Germans
-had again driven in the rearguard of the First Corps.
-
-[Sidenote: The destruction of the 2nd Munsters.]
-
-Some delay in starting had been caused that morning by the fact that
-only one road was available for the whole of the transport, which had
-to be sent on in advance. Hence the rearguard was exposed to
-increased pressure. This rearguard consisted of the 1st Brigade.
-The 2nd Munsters were the right battalion. Then came the 1st
-Coldstream, the 1st Scots Guards, and the 1st Black Watch in reserve.
-The front of the Munsters, as it faced round to hold back the too
-pushful Germans, was from the north of Fesmy to Chapeau Rouge, but
-Major Charrier, who was in command, finding no French at Bergues, as
-he had been led to expect, sent B and D {120} Companies of Munsters
-with one troop of the 15th Hussars to hold the cross-roads near that
-place.
-
-At about 12.30 a message reached Major Charrier to the effect that
-when ordered to retire he should fall back on a certain line and act
-as flank-guard to the brigade. He was not to withdraw his two
-companies from Chapeau Rouge until ordered. The Germans were already
-in force right on the top of the Irishmen, the country being a broken
-one with high hedges which restricted the field of fire. A section
-of guns of the 118th R.F.A. were served from the road about fifty
-yards behind the line of the infantry. A desperate struggle ensued,
-in the course of which the Munsters, suffering heavily, overlapped on
-each flank, and utterly outnumbered, held on bravely in the hope of
-help from the rest of the brigade. They did not know that a message
-had already been dispatched to them to the effect that they should
-come on, and that the other regiments had already done so. Still
-waiting for the orders which never came, they fell back slowly
-through Fesmy before the attack, until held up at a small village
-called Etreux, where the Germans cut off their retreat. Meanwhile
-the Brigadier, hearing that the Munsters were in trouble, gave orders
-that the Coldstream should reinforce them. It was too late, however.
-At Oisy Bridge the Guards picked up sixty men, survivors of C
-Company. It was here at Oisy Bridge that the missing order was
-delivered at 3 P.M., the cycle orderly having been held up on his
-way. As there was no longer any sound of firing, the Coldstream and
-remnant of Munsters retired, being joined some miles back by an
-officer and some seventy men. Together with the transport guard this
-brought the {121} total survivors of that fine regiment to 5 officers
-and 206 men. All the rest had fought to the end and were killed,
-wounded, or captured, after a most desperate resistance, in which
-they were shot down at close quarters, making repeated efforts to
-pierce the strong German force at Etreux. To their fine work and
-that of the two lost guns and of a party of the 15th Hussars, under
-Lieutenant Nicholson, who covered the retreat it may have been due
-that the pursuit of the First Corps by the Germans from this moment
-sensibly relaxed. Nine gallant Irish officers were buried that night
-in a common grave. Major Charrier was twice wounded, but continued
-to lead his men until a third bullet struck him dead, and deprived
-the Army of a soldier whose career promised to be a brilliant one.
-Among others who fell was Lieutenant Chute, whose masterly handling
-of a machine-gun stemmed again and again the tide of the German
-attack. One of the most vivid recollections of the survivors was of
-this officer lying on his face in six inches of water--for the action
-was partly fought in tropical rain--and declaring that he was having
-"the time of his life." The moral both of this disaster and that of
-the Gordons must be the importance of sending a message in duplicate,
-or even in triplicate, where the withdrawal of a regiment is
-concerned. This, no doubt, is a counsel of perfection under
-practical conditions, but the ideal still remains.
-
-[Sidenote: A cavalry fight.]
-
-During the retreat of the First Corps its rear and right flank had
-been covered by the 5th Cavalry Brigade (Chetwode). On August 28 the
-corps was continuing its march towards La Fère and the cavalry found
-itself near Cerizy. At this point the pursuing German horsemen came
-into touch with it. At about {122} five in the afternoon three
-squadrons of the enemy advanced upon one squadron of the Scots Greys,
-which had the support of J Battery. Being fired at, the Germans
-dismounted and attempted to advance upon foot, but the fire was so
-heavy that they could make no progress and their led horses
-stampeded. They retired, still on foot, followed up by a squadron of
-the 12th Lancers on their flank. The remainder of the 12th Lancers,
-supported by the Greys, rode into the dismounted dragoons with sword
-and lance, killing or wounding nearly all of them. A section of guns
-had fired over the heads of the British cavalry during the advance
-into a supporting body of German cavalry, who retired, leaving many
-dead behind them. The whole hostile force retreated northwards,
-while the British cavalry continued to conform to the movements of
-the First Corps. In this spirited little action the German regiment
-engaged was, by the irony of fate, the 1st Guard Dragoons, Queen
-Victoria's Own. The British lost 43 killed and wounded. Among the
-dead were Major Swetenham and Captain Michell of the 12th Lancers.
-Colonel Wormald of the same regiment was wounded. The excited
-troopers rode back triumphantly between the guns of J Battery, the
-cavalrymen exchanging cheers with the horse-gunners as they passed,
-and brandishing their blood-stained weapons.
-
-On the evening before this brisk skirmish, the flank-guards of the
-British saw a considerable body of troops in dark clothing upon their
-left, and shortly afterwards perceived the shell-bursts of a rapid
-and effective fire over the pursuing German batteries. It was the
-first contact with the advancing French. These men consisted of the
-Sixty-first and Sixty-second {123} French Reserve Divisions, and were
-the van of a considerable army under General D'Amade. From that
-moment the British forces were at last enabled, after a week of
-constant marching, covering sometimes a good thirty miles a day, and
-four days of continual fighting against extreme odds, to feel that
-they had reached a zone of comparative quiet.
-
-[Sidenote: The news in Great Britain.]
-
-The German cavalry still followed the Army upon its southerly march,
-but there was no longer any fear of a disaster, for the main body of
-the Army was unbroken, and the soldiers were rather exasperated than
-depressed by their experience. On the Friday and Saturday, however,
-August 28 and 29, considerable crowds of stragglers and fugitives,
-weary and often weaponless, appeared upon the lines of communication,
-causing the utmost consternation by their stories and their
-appearance. Few who endured the mental anxiety caused in Great
-Britain by the messages of Sunday, August 30, are likely to forget
-it. The reports gave an enormous stimulus to recruiting, and it is
-worthy of record and remembrance that, in the dark week which
-followed before the true situation was clearly discerned, every
-successive day brought as many recruits to the standards as are
-usually gained in a year. Such was the rush of men that the
-authorities, with their many preoccupations, found it very difficult
-to deal with them. A considerable amount of hardship and discomfort
-was the result, which was endured with good humour until it could be
-remedied. It is to be noted in this connection that it was want of
-arms which held back the new armies. He who compares the empty
-arsenals of Britain with the huge extensions of Krupp's, undertaken
-during the years before the war, will {124} find the final proof as
-to which Power deliberately planned it.
-
-To return to the fortunes of the men retreating from Le Cateau, the
-colonels and brigadiers had managed to make order out of what was
-approaching to chaos on the day that the troops left St. Quentin.
-The feet of many were so cut and bleeding that they could no longer
-limp along, so some were packed into a few trains available and
-others were hoisted on to limbers, guns, wagons, or anything with
-wheels, some carts being lightened of ammunition or stores to make
-room for helpless men. In many cases the whole kits of the officers
-were deliberately sacrificed. Many men were delirious from
-exhaustion and incapable of understanding an order. By the evening
-of the 27th the main body of the troops were already fifteen miles
-south of the Somme river and canal, on the line Nesle-Ham-Flavy. All
-day there was distant shelling from the pursuers, who sent their
-artillery freely forward with their cavalry.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{125}
-
-[Illustration: Line of Retreat from Mons]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-On the 28th the Army continued its retreat to the line of the Oise
-near Noyon. Already the troops were re-forming, and had largely
-recovered their spirits, being much reassured by the declarations of
-the officers that the retreat was strategic to get them in line with
-the French, and that they would soon turn their faces northwards once
-more. As an instance of reorganisation it was observed that the
-survivors of a brigade of artillery which had left its horses and
-guns at Le Cateau still marched together as a single disciplined unit
-among the infantry. All day the enemy's horse artillery, cavalry,
-and motor-infantry hung on the skirts of the British, but were unable
-to make much impression. The work of the Staff was excellent, for
-{126} it is on record that many of them had not averaged two hours'
-sleep in the twenty-four for over a week, and still they remained the
-clear and efficient brain of the Army.
-
-On the next day, the 29th, the remainder of the Army got across the
-Oise, but the enemy's advance was so close that the British cavalry
-was continually engaged. Gough's 3rd Cavalry Brigade made several
-charges in the neighbourhood of Plessis, losing a number of men but
-stalling off the pursuit and dispersing the famous Uhlans of the
-Guard. On this day General Pulteney and his staff arrived to take
-command of the Third Army Corps, which still consisted only of the
-Fourth Division (Snow) with the semi-independent 19th Infantry
-Brigade, now commanded by Colonel Ward, of the 1st Middlesex. It was
-nearly three weeks later before the Third Corps was made complete.
-
-[Sidenote: The views of General Joffre.]
-
-There had been, as already mentioned, a French advance of four corps
-in the St. Quentin direction, which fought a brave covering action,
-and so helped to relieve the pressure upon the British. It cannot be
-denied that there was a feeling among the latter that they had been
-unduly exposed, being placed in so advanced a position and having
-their flank stripped suddenly bare in the presence of the main German
-army. General Joffre must have recognised that this feeling existed
-and that it was not unreasonable, for he came to a meeting on this
-day at the old Napoleonic Palace at Compiégne, at which Sir John
-French, with Generals Haig, Smith-Dorrien, and Allenby, was present.
-It was an assemblage of weary, overwrought men, and yet of men who
-had strength enough of mind and sufficient sense of justice to
-realise that whatever {127} weight had been thrown upon them, there
-was even more upon the great French engineer whose spirit hovered
-over the whole line from Verdun to Amiens. Each man left the room
-more confident of the immediate future. Shortly afterwards Joffre
-issued his kindly recognition of the work done by his Allies,
-admitting in the most handsome fashion that the flank of the long
-French line of armies had been saved by the hard fighting and
-self-sacrifice of the British Army.
-
-On August 30, the whole Army having crossed the Oise, the bridges
-over that river were destroyed, an operation which was performed
-under a heavy shell-fire, and cost the lives of several sapper
-officers and men. No words can exaggerate what the Army owed to
-Wilson's sappers of the 56th and 57th Field Companies and 3rd Signal
-Company, as also to Tulloch's, of the 17th and 59th Companies and 5th
-Signal Company, whose work was incessant, fearless, and splendid.
-
-The Army continued to fall back on the line of the Aisne, the general
-direction being almost east and west through Crépy-en-Valois. The
-aeroplanes, which had conducted a fine service during the whole of
-the operations, reported that the enemy was still coming rapidly on,
-and streaming southwards in the Compiégne direction. That they were
-in touch was shown in dramatic fashion upon the early morning of
-September 1. The epic in question deserves to be told somewhat
-fully, as being one of those incidents which are mere details in the
-history of a campaign, and yet may live as permanent inspirations in
-the life of an army.
-
-[Sidenote: Battery L.]
-
-The 1st Cavalry Brigade, greatly exhausted after screening the
-retreat so long, was encamped near Nery, {128} to the south of
-Compiégne, the bivouac being a somewhat extended one. Two units were
-close to each other and to the brigade headquarters of General
-Briggs. These were the hard-worked 2nd Dragoon Guards (the Bays) and
-L Battery of Horse Artillery. _Réveillé_ was at four o'clock, and
-shortly after that hour both troopers and gunners were busy in
-leading their horses to water. It was a misty morning, and, peering
-through the haze, an officer perceived that from the top of a low
-hill about seven hundred yards away three mounted men were looking
-down upon them. They were the observation officers of three four-gun
-German batteries. Before the British could realise the situation the
-guns dashed up and came into action with shrapnel at point-blank
-range. The whole twelve poured their fire into the disordered
-bivouac before them. The slaughter and confusion were horrible.
-Numbers of the horses and men were killed or wounded, and three of
-the guns were dismounted. It was a most complete surprise, and
-promised to be an absolute disaster. A body of German cavalry had
-escorted the guns, and their rifles added to the volume of fire.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{129}
-
-[Illustration: "L" Battery Action, Sept. 1st, 1914]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-It is at such moments that the grand power of disciplined valour
-comes to bring order out of chaos. Everything combined to make
-defence difficult--the chilling hour of the morning, the suddenness
-of the attack, its appalling severity, and the immediate loss of guns
-and men. A sunken road ran behind the British position, and from the
-edge of this the dismounted cavalrymen brought their rifles and their
-machine-gun into action. They suffered heavily from the pelting
-gusts of shrapnel. Young Captain de Crespigny, the gallant cadet of
-a gallant family, {130} and many other good men were beaten down by
-it. The sole hope lay in the guns. Three were utterly disabled.
-There was a rush of officers and men to bring the other three into
-action. Sclater-Booth, the major of the battery, and one lieutenant
-were already down. Captain Bradbury took command and cheered on the
-men. Two of the guns were at once put out of action, so all united
-to work the one that remained. What followed was Homeric.
-Lieutenant Giffard in rushing forward was hit in four places.
-Bradbury's leg was shattered, but he lay beside the trail encouraging
-the others and giving his directions. Lieutenant Mundy, standing
-wide as observation officer, was mortally wounded. The limber could
-not be got alongside and the shell had to be man-handled. In
-bringing it up Lieutenant Campbell was shot. Immediately afterwards
-another shell burst over the gun, killed the heroic Bradbury, and
-wounded Sergeant Dorell, Driver Osborne, and Gunners Nelson and
-Derbyshire, the only remaining men. But the fight went on. The
-bleeding men served the gun so long as they could move, Osborne and
-Derbyshire crawling over with the shells while Nelson loaded and
-Dorell laid. Osborne and Derbyshire fainted from loss of blood and
-lay between limber and gun. But the fight went on. Dorell and
-Nelson, wounded and exhausted, crouched behind the shield of the
-thirteen-pounder and kept up an incessant fire. Now it was that the
-amazing fact became visible that all this devotion had not been in
-vain. The cluster of Bays on the edge of the sunken road burst out
-into a cheer, which was taken up by the staff, who, with General
-Briggs himself, had come into the firing-line. Several of the German
-pieces had gone out of action. {131} The dying gun had wrought good
-work, as had the Maxim of the Bays in the hands of Lieutenant Lamb.
-Some at least of its opponents had been silenced before the two brave
-gunners could do no more, for their strength had gone with their
-blood. Not only had the situation been saved, but victory had been
-assured.
-
-About eight in the morning news of the perilous situation had reached
-the 19th Brigade. The 1st Middlesex, under Colonel Rowley, was
-hurried forward, followed by the 1st Scottish Rifles. Marching
-rapidly upon the firing, after the good old maxim, the Middlesex
-found themselves in a position to command the German batteries.
-After two minutes of rapid fire it was seen that the enemy had left
-their guns. Eight guns were captured, two of them still loaded.
-About a dozen German gunners lay dead or wounded round them.
-Twenty-five of the escort were captured, as was an ambulance with
-some further prisoners a mile in the rear. The cavalry, notably the
-11th Hussars, endeavoured to follow up the success, but soon found
-themselves in the presence of superior forces. New wheels and new
-wheelers were found for the injured guns, and Battery L came intact
-out of action--intact save for the brave acolytes who should serve
-her no more. Bradbury, Nelson, and Dorell had the Victoria Cross,
-and never was it better earned. The battery itself was recalled to
-England to refit and the guns were changed for new ones. It is safe
-to say that for many a long year these shrapnel-dinted
-thirteen-pounders will serve as a monument of one of those deeds
-which, by their self-sacrifice and nobility, do something to mitigate
-the squalors and horrors of war.
-
-The success was gained at the cost of many valuable {132} lives. Not
-only had the personnel of the battery been destroyed, but the Bays
-lost heavily, and there were some casualties among the rest of the
-brigade who had come up in support. The 5th Dragoon Guards had 50 or
-60 casualties, and lost its admirable commander, Colonel Ansell, who
-was shot down in a flanking movement which he had initiated. Major
-Cawley, of the staff, also fell. The total British loss was not far
-short of 500 killed and wounded, but the Germans lost heavily also,
-and were compelled to abandon their guns.[1]
-
-
-[1] The German cavalry were the Fourth Cavalry Division, including
-the 2nd Cuirassiers, 9th Uhlans, 17th and 18th Dragoons. They
-published in their losses for the "Combat of Néry" 643 casualties.
-This is not the complete loss, as the artillery does not seem to have
-been included.
-
-
-[Sidenote: The action of Villars-Cotteret.]
-
-The German advance guards were particularly active upon this day,
-September 1, the anniversary of Sedan. Although the Soissons Bridge
-had been destroyed they had possession of another at Vic, and over
-this they poured in pursuit of the First Corps, overtaking about 8
-A.M. near Villars-Cotteret the rearguard, consisting of the Irish
-Guards and the 2nd Coldstream. The whole of the 4th Guards Brigade
-was drawn into the fight, which resolved itself into a huge rifle
-duel amid thick woods, Scott-Kerr, their Brigadier, riding up and
-down the firing line. The Guards retired slowly upon the 6th
-Infantry Brigade (Davies), which was aided by Lushington's 41st
-Brigade of Artillery, just south of Pisseleux. The Germans had
-brought up many guns, but could make no further progress, and the
-British position was held until 6 P.M., when the rearguard closed up
-with the rest of the Army. Lushington's guns had fought with no
-infantry in front of them, and it was a matter of great difficulty in
-the end to get them off, but it was {133} accomplished by some very
-brilliant work under an infernal fire. After this sharp action, in
-which Colonel Morris of the Irish Guards lost his life, the retreat
-of the First Army Corps was not seriously interfered with. The
-losses at that date in this corps amounted to 81 officers and 2180 of
-all ranks.
-
-So much attention is naturally drawn to the Second Army Corps, which
-both at Mons and at Le Cateau had endured most of the actual
-fighting, that there is some danger of the remarkable retreat
-effected by the First Corps having less than its fair share of
-appreciation. The actual fighting was the least of the difficulties.
-The danger of one or both flanks being exposed, the great mobility of
-the enemy, the indifferent and limited roads, the want of rest, the
-difficulty of getting food cooked, the consequent absolute exhaustion
-of the men, and the mental depression combined to make it an
-operation of a most trying character, throwing an enormous strain
-upon the judgment and energy of General Haig, who so successfully
-brought his men intact and fit for service into a zone of safety.
-
-[Sidenote: Reunion of the Army.]
-
-On the night of September 1, the First and Second Army Corps were in
-touch once more at Betz, and were on the move again by 2 A.M. upon
-the 2nd. On this morning the German advance was curiously
-interlocked with the British rear, and four German guns were picked
-up by the cavalry near Ermenonville. They are supposed to have been
-the remaining guns of the force which attacked Battery L at Nery.
-The movements of the troops during the day were much impeded by the
-French refugees, who thronged every road in their flight before the
-German terror. In spite of these obstructions, the rearward services
-{134} of the Army--supply columns, ammunition columns, and medical
-transport--were well conducted, and the admiration of all independent
-observers. The work of all these departments had been greatly
-complicated by the fact that, as the Channel ports were now
-practically undefended and German troops, making towards the coast,
-had cut the main Calais-Boulogne line at Amiens, the base had been
-moved farther south from Havre to St. Nazaire, which meant shifting
-seventy thousand tons of stores and changing all arrangements. In
-spite of this the supplies were admirable. It may safely be said
-that if there is one officer more than another for whom the whole
-British Army felt a glow of gratitude, it was for Sir William
-Robertson, the Chief of the Commissariat, who saw that the fighting
-man was never without his rations. Greatly also did they appreciate
-the work of his subordinates, who, wet or fine, through rainfall or
-shell-fall, passed the food forward to the weary men at the front.
-
-A difficult movement lay in front of the Army which had to cross the
-Marne, involving a flank march in the face of the enemy. A
-retirement was still part of the general French scheme of defence,
-and the British Army had to conform to it, though it was exultantly
-whispered from officer to sergeant and from sergeant to private that
-the turn of the tide was nearly due. On this day it was first
-observed that the Germans, instead of pushing forward, were swinging
-across to the east in the direction of Chateau-Thierry. This made
-the task of the British a more easy one, and before evening they were
-south of the Marne and had blown up the bridges. The movement of the
-Germans brought them down to the river, {135} but at a point some ten
-miles east of the British position. They were reported to be
-crossing the river at La Ferté, and Sir John French continued to fall
-back towards the Seine, moving after sundown, as the heat had been
-for some days very exhausting. The troops halted in the
-neighbourhood of Presles, and were cheered by the arrival of some
-small drafts, numbering about 2000, a first instalment towards
-refilling the great gaps in the ranks, which at this date could not
-have been less than from 12,000 to 15,000 officers and men. Here for
-a moment this narrative may be broken, since it has taken the Army to
-the farthest point of its retreat and reached that moment of advance
-for which every officer and man, from Sir John French to the
-drummer-boys, was eagerly waiting. With their left flank resting
-upon the extreme outer forts of Paris, the British troops had finally
-ended a retreat which will surely live in military history as a
-remarkable example of an army retaining its cohesion and courage in
-the presence of an overpowering adversary, who could never either cut
-them off or break in their rearguard. The British Army was a small
-force when compared with the giants of the Continent, but when tried
-by this supreme test it is not mere national complacency for us to
-claim that it lived up to its own highest traditions. "It was not to
-forts of steel and concrete that the Allies owed their strength,"
-said a German historian, writing of this phase of the war, "but to
-the magnificent qualities of the British Army." We desire no
-compliments at the expense of our brothers-in-arms, nor would they be
-just, but at least so generous a sentence as this may be taken as an
-advance from that contemptuous view of the British Army with which
-the campaign had begun.
-
-{136}
-
-Before finally leaving the consideration of this historical retreat,
-where a small army successfully shook itself clear from the long and
-close pursuit of a remarkably gallant, mobile, and numerous enemy, it
-may be helpful to give a chronology of the events, that the reader
-may see their relation to each other.
-
-
- HAIG'S FIRST CORPS. SMITH-DORRIEN'S SECOND CORPS.
-
- _August_ 22.
-
- Get into position to the Get into position to the
- east of Mons, covering the west of Mons, covering the
- line Mons-Bray. line Mons-Condé.
-
- _August_ 23.
-
- Artillery engagement, but Strongly attacked by Von
- no severe attack. Ordered Kluck's army. Ordered to
- to retreat in conformity with abandon position and fall
- Second Corps. back.
-
- _August_ 24.
-
- Retreat with no serious Retreat followed up by the
- molestation upon Bavai. Germans. Severe rearguard
- Here the two Corps diverged actions at Dour, Wasmes,
- and did not meet again till Frameries. Corps shook
- they reached Betz upon itself clear and fell back on
- September 1. Bavai.
-
- _August_ 25.
-
- Marching all day. Overtaken Marching all day. Reinforced
- in evening at Landrecies by Fourth Division.
- and Maroilles by the German Continual rearguard action
- pursuit. Sharp fighting. becoming more serious towards
- evening, when Cambrai-Le Cateau
- line was reached.
-
- _August_ 26.
-
- Rearguard actions in morning. Battle of Le Cateau. German
- Marching south all day, pursuit stalled off at
- halting at the Venerolles heavy cost of men and guns.
- line. Retreat on St. Quentin.
-
-{137}
-
- _August_ 27.
-
- Rearguard action in which Marching south. Reach
- Munsters lost heavily. the line Nesle-Ham-Flavy.
- Marching south all day.
-
- _August_ 28.
-
- Cavalry actions to stop Marching south, making
- German pursuit. Marching for the line of the Oise near
- south on La Fere. Noyon. Light rearguard
- skirmishes.
-
- _August_ 29, 30, and 31.
-
- Marching on the line of the Crossed Oise. Cavalry
- Aisne, almost east and west. continually engaged. General
- direction through
- Crépy-en-Valois.
-
- _September_ 1.
-
- Sharp action at Nery with Retreat upon Paris continued.
- German vanguard. Later in Late this night the
- the day considerable infantry two Corps unite once more at
- action at Villars-Cotteret. Betz.
- Unite at Betz.
-
- _September_ 2.
-
- Crossed the Marne and began Crossed the Marne and began
- to fall back on the Seine. to fall back on the Seine.
- Halted near Presles.
-
-
-
-
-{138}
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE MARNE
-
-The general situation--"Die grosse Zeit"--The turn of the tide--The
-Battle of the Ourcq--The British advance--Cavalry fighting--The 1st
-Lincolns and the guns--6th Brigade's action at Hautvesnes--9th
-Brigade's capture of Germans at Vinly--The problem of the Aisne--Why
-the Marne is one of the great battles of all time.
-
-
-[Sidenote: The general situation.]
-
-There are several problems connected with the strategical opening of
-the great war which will furnish food for debate among military
-critics for many years to come. One of these, already alluded to, is
-the French offensive taken in Alsace and Lorraine. It ended in check
-in both cases, and yet its ultimate effects in confusing the German
-plans and deflecting German armies which might have been better used
-elsewhere may be held to justify the French in their strategy.
-
-Another remarkable and questionable move now obtrudes itself, this
-time upon the part of the Germans. Very shortly after the outbreak
-of war, the Russians had pushed their covering armies over the
-frontier of East Prussia, and had defeated a German force at
-Gumbinnen, with a loss of prisoners and guns. A few days later the
-left wing of the widespread, and as yet only partially mobilised,
-Russian army struck {139} heavily at the Austrians in the south near
-Lemberg, where after a week of fighting they gained a great victory,
-with prisoners, which amounted to over 70,000 men and a large booty
-of guns and supplies. Before this blow had befallen their cause, and
-influenced only by the fact that the Russian right wing was
-encroaching upon the sacred soil of the Fatherland, a considerable
-force was detached from the invading armies in France and dispatched
-to the Eastern front. These men were largely drawn from the Third
-(Saxon) Army of Von Haussen. Such a withdrawal at such a time could
-only mean that the German general staff considered that the situation
-in France was assured, and that they had still sufficient means to
-carry on a victorious invasion. Events were to show that they were
-utterly mistaken in their calculation. It is true that, aided by
-these reinforcements, Von Hindenburg succeeded on August 31 in
-inflicting a severe defeat upon the Russians at the battle of
-Tannenberg, but subsequent events proved that such a victory could
-have no decisive result, while the weakening of the armies in France
-may have had a permanent effect upon the whole course of the war. At
-the very moment that the Germans were withdrawing troops from their
-Western front the British and French were doing all they could to
-thicken their own line of resistance, especially by the transference
-of armies from Alsace and the south. Thus the net result was that,
-whereas the Germans had up to August 25 a very marked superiority in
-numbers, by the beginning of September the forces were more equal.
-From that moment the chance of their taking Paris became steadily
-more and more remote.
-
-The first month of the war represented a very {140} remarkable
-military achievement upon the part of Germany. In her high state of
-preparation as compared with the Allies, it was to be expected that
-the beginning of hostilities would be all in her favour, but the
-reality exceeded what could have been foreseen. Her great armies
-were ready to the last button. Up to the eve of war the soldiers did
-not themselves know what their field uniform was like. At the last
-moment two millions of men filed into the depots and emerged in half
-an hour clad in grey, with new boots, equipment, and every possible
-need for the campaign. On her artillery surprises she set special
-store, and they were upon a vast scale. The machine-gun had been
-developed to an extent unknown by other armies, and of these deadly
-little weapons it is certain that very many thousands were available.
-From the tiny quick-firer, carried easily by two men upon a
-stretcher, to the vast cannon with a diameter of sixteen and a half
-inches at the mouth, taking three railway trucks for its majestic
-portage, every possible variety of man-killing engine was ready in
-vast profusion. So, too, was the flying service, from the little
-Taube to the huge six-hundred-foot Zeppelin. From these latter
-devices great results were expected which were not destined to
-materialise, for, apart from reconnaissances, they proved themselves
-to be machines rather for the murder of non-combatants than for
-honest warfare.
-
-[Sidenote: "Die grosse Zeit."]
-
-Making every allowance for the huge advantage which the nation that
-knows war is coming must always enjoy over those which merely fear
-that it may come, it would be foolish to deny the vast military
-achievement of Germany in the month of August. It reflects great
-credit upon the bravery {141} and energy of her troops, as well as
-upon the foresight of her organisers and the capacity of her leaders.
-Though we are her enemies, our admiration would have been
-whole-hearted were it not for the brutalities which marked her
-advance both in Poland, in Belgium, and in France. Consider that
-wonderful panorama of victory which was known all over the Fatherland
-as "Die grosse Zeit." On August 10 fell the great fortress of Liége,
-on the 22nd the great fortress of Namur, early in September that of
-Maubeuge, while the smaller strongholds went down as if they were
-open cities. On August 10 was a considerable victory at Mülhausen,
-on the 20th the Belgians were defeated at Tirlemont, on the same day
-Brussels was occupied. On the 22nd the French central army of ten
-corps was defeated in a great battle near Charleroi, losing,
-according to the Germans, some 20,000 prisoners and 200 guns. On the
-left flank the Crown Prince's army won the battle of Longwy, taking
-10,000 prisoners and many more guns. On August 23 the Duke of
-Würtemberg won a battle in the Ardennes. Upon the same date the
-British were driven from their position at Mons. Upon the 26th they
-were defeated at Le Cateau. Most of Belgium and the North of France
-were overrun. Scattered parties of Uhlans made their way to the
-shores of the Atlantic spreading terror along the Channel coast. The
-British bases were in such danger that they had to be moved.
-
-Finally, upon the last day of the month, a great battle took place at
-Tannenberg in East Prussia, in which the Russian invading army was
-almost completely destroyed. I do not know where in history such a
-succession of victories is to be found, and our {142} horror of the
-atrocities of Louvain, Aerschot, Dinard, and so many other places
-must not blind us to the superb military achievement.
-
-It was not, it is true, an unbroken series of successes even in the
-West. The French in the early days won a victory at Dornach in
-Alsace, and another smaller one at Dinant in the Ardennes. They held
-the enemy in the neighbourhood of Nancy, fought a fairly equal battle
-at St. Quentin in taking the pressure off the British at the end of
-August, and had a success at Guise. These, however, were small
-matters as compared with the sweeping tide of German victory. But
-gradually the impetus of the rush was being stayed. Neither the
-French nor the British lines were broken. They grew stronger from
-compression, whilst the invaders grew weaker from diffusion. Even as
-they hoped to reach the climax of their success, and the huge
-winning-post of the Eiffel Tower loomed up before their racing
-armies, the dramatic moment arrived, and the dauntless, high-hearted
-Allies had the reward of their constant, much-enduring valour.
-
-[Sidenote: The turn of the tide.]
-
-September 6 was a day of great elation in the armies of the Allies,
-for it marked the end of the retreat and the beginning of their
-victorious return. It is clear that they could in no case have gone
-farther south without exposing Paris to the danger of an attack. The
-French Government had already been transferred to Bordeaux and the
-city put into a state which promised a long and stubborn defence, but
-after the surprising rapidity of the capture of Namur there was a
-general distrust of fortresses, and it was evident that if only one
-or two of the outer ring of forts should be overwhelmed by the German
-fire, {143} the enemy would be in a position to do terrible damage to
-the city, even if they failed to occupy it. The constant dropping of
-bombs from German aeroplanes, one of which had already injured the
-Cathedral of Notre Dame, gave a sinister forecast of the respect
-which the enemy was likely to show to the monuments of antiquity.
-
-Fortunately, the problem of investing Paris while the main French
-armies remained unbeaten in the field proved to be an insuperable
-one. The first German task, in accordance with the prophet
-Clausewitz, was to break the French resistance. Everything would
-follow after that, and nothing could precede it. Von Kluck, with his
-army, comprising originally something over 200,000 men, had lost
-considerably in their conflicts with the British, and were much
-exhausted by rapid marching, but they were still in good heart, as
-the roads over which they passed seemed to offer ample evidence that
-their enemy was in full flight before them. Knowing that they had
-hit the British hard, they hoped that, for a time at least, they
-might disregard them, and, accordingly, they ventured to close in, by
-a flank march, on to the other German armies to the east of them, in
-order to combine against the main line of French resistance and to
-make up the gaps of those corps which had been ordered to East
-Prussia. But the bulldog, though weary and somewhat wounded, was
-still watching with bloodshot eyes. He now sprang suddenly upon the
-exposed flank of his enemy and got a grip which held firm for many a
-day to come.
-
-Without going into complicated details of French strategy, which
-would be outside the scope of this work, it may be generally stated
-that the whole {144} French line, which had stretched on August 22
-from Namur along the line of the Sambre to Charleroi and had retired
-with considerable loss before the German advance, was now extended in
-seven separate armies from Verdun to the west of Paris.
-
-General Joffre had assembled Maunoury's Sixth Army, which consisted
-of the Seventh Regular Corps, one reserve corps, and three
-territorial divisions, with Sordet's cavalry, in the neighbourhood of
-Amiens, and at the end of the month they lay with their right upon
-Roye. Thus, when Von Kluck swerved to his left, this army was on the
-flank of the whole great German line which extended to Verdun. Next
-to this Sixth Army and more to the south-east were the British, now
-no longer unsupported, but with solid French comrades upon either
-side of them. Next to the British, counting from the left or
-westward end of the defensive line, was the Fifth French Army under
-General d'Esperey, of four corps, with Conneau's cavalry forming the
-link between. These three great bodies, the French Sixth, the
-British, and the French Fifth, were in touch during the subsequent
-operations, and moved forward in close co-operation upon September 6.
-Their operations were directed against the First (Von Kluck's) and
-Second (Von Bülow's) Armies. On the right of the Fifth French Army
-came another extra, produced suddenly by the prolific Joffre and
-thrust into the centre of the line. This was General Foch's Seventh,
-three corps strong, which joined to the eastward General Langlé de
-Cary's Fourth Army. Opposed to them were the remains of Von
-Haussen's Third Saxon Army and the Prince of Würtemberg's Fourth
-Army. Eastward of this, on the farther side of the great plain of
-{145} Chalons, a place of evil omen for the Huns, were the Third
-(Sarrail), Second (Castelnau), and First (Dubail) French Armies,
-which faced the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh German, commanded
-respectively by the Crown Prince of Prussia, the Crown Prince of
-Bavaria, and General von Heeringen. Such were the mighty lines which
-were destined to swing and sway for an eventful week in the strain of
-a close-locked fight.
-
-[Sidenote: The Battle of the Ourcq.]
-
-The eastern portion of this great battle is outside the scope of this
-account, but it may briefly be stated that after murderous fighting
-neither the French nor the German lines made any marked advance in
-the extreme east, but that the Crown Prince's army was driven back by
-Dubail, Sarrail, and Castelnau from all its advanced positions, and
-held off from Nancy and Verdun, which were his objectives. It was at
-the western end of the Allied line that the strategical position was
-most advantageous and the result most marked. In all other parts of
-that huge line the parallel battle prevailed. Only in the west were
-the Germans outflanked, and the shock of the impact of the Sixth
-French Army passed down from Meaux to Verdun as the blow of the
-engine's buffer sends the successive crashes along a line of trucks.
-This French army was, as already stated, upon the extreme outside
-right of Von Kluck's army, divided from it only by the River Ourcq.
-This was the deciding factor in the subsequent operations.
-
-By mid-day upon September 6, according to the dispatch of Sir John
-French, the Germans had realised their dangerous position. The
-British Army, consisting of five divisions and five cavalry brigades,
-with its depleted ranks filled up with reinforcements and some of its
-lost guns replaced, was advancing {146} from the south through the
-forest of Crécy, men who had limped south with bleeding feet at two
-miles an hour changing their gait to three or four now that they were
-bound northward. The general movement of the Army cannot, however,
-be said to have been rapid. Von Kluck had placed nothing more
-substantial than a cavalry screen of two divisions in front of them,
-while he had detached a strong force of infantry and artillery to
-fight a rearguard action against the Sixth French Army and prevent it
-from crossing the Ourcq.
-
-The desperate struggle of September 6, 7, 8, and 9 between Von Kluck
-and Maunoury may be looked upon as the first turning-point of the
-war. Von Kluck had originally faced Maunoury with his Fourth Reserve
-Corps on the defensive. Recognising how critical it was that
-Maunoury should be crushed, he passed back two more army corps--the
-Seventh and Second--across the Ourcq, and fell upon the French with
-such violence that for two days it was impossible to say which side
-would win. Maunoury and his men fought magnificently, and the
-Germans showed equal valour. At one time the situation seemed
-desperate, but 20,000 men, odds and ends of every kind--Republican
-Guards, gendarmes, and others--were rushed out from Paris in a
-five-mile line of automobiles, and the action was restored. Only on
-the morning of the 10th did the Germans withdraw in despair, held in
-their front by the brave Maunoury, and in danger of being cut off by
-the British to the east of them.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{147}
-
-[Illustration: British Advance during the Battle of the Marne]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Sidenote: The British advance.]
-
-The advance of the British upon September 6 was made in unison with
-that of the Fifth French Army (D'Esperey's) upon the right, and was
-much facilitated {148} by the fact that Von Kluck had to detach the
-strong force already mentioned to deal with Maunoury upon the left.
-The British advanced with the Fourth Division upon the left, the
-Second Corps in the centre and the First Corps upon the right. The
-high banks of the Grand Morin were occupied without serious fighting,
-and the whole line pushed forward for a considerable distance,
-halting on the Coulommiers-Maisoncelles front. The brunt of the
-fighting during the day was borne by the French on either wing, the
-Third and Fourth German Corps being thrown back by D'Esperey's men,
-among whom the Senegal regiments particularly distinguished
-themselves. The fighting in this section of the field continued far
-into the night.
-
-On September 7 the British and the Fifth French were still moving
-northwards, while the Sixth French were continuing their bitter
-struggle upon the Ourcq. The British infantry losses were not heavy,
-though a hidden battery cost the South Lancashires of the 7th Brigade
-forty-one casualties. Most of the fighting depended upon the
-constant touch between the British cavalry and the German. It was
-again the French armies upon each flank who did the hard work during
-this eventful day, the first of the German retreat. The Sixth Army
-were all day at close grips with Von Kluck, while the Fifth drove the
-enemy back to the line of the Petit Morin River, carrying
-Vieux-Maisons at the point of the bayonet. Foch's army, still
-farther to the east, was holding its own in a desperate defensive
-battle.
-
-[Sidenote: Cavalry fighting.]
-
-Of the cavalry skirmishes upon this day one deserves some special
-record. The 2nd Cavalry Brigade (De Lisle) was acting at the time as
-flank {149} guard with the 9th Lancers in front. Coming into contact
-with some German dragoons near the village of Moncel, there followed
-a face-to-face charge between two squadrons, each riding through the
-other. The American, Coleman, who saw the encounter, reckons the
-odds in numbers to have been two to one against the Lancers. The
-British Colonel Campbell was wounded, and the adjutant, Captain
-Reynolds, transfixed through the shoulder by a lance. While drawing
-the weapon out Captain Allfrey was killed. The other casualties were
-slight, and those of the German dragoons were considerably greater.
-This example of shock tactics was almost instantly followed by an
-exhibition of those mounted rifleman tactics which have been
-cultivated of late years. A squadron of the 18th Hussars, having
-dismounted, was immediately charged by a German squadron in close
-order. About 70 Germans charged, and 32 were picked up in front of
-the dismounted Hussars, while the few who passed through the firing
-line were destroyed by the horse-holders. It may fairly be argued
-that had the two squadrons met with shock tactics, no such crushing
-effect could possibly have been attained. It is interesting that in
-one morning two incidents should have occurred which bore so directly
-upon the perennial dispute between the partisans of the _arme
-blanche_ and those of the rifle.
-
-On the 8th the orders were to advance towards Chateau-Thierry and to
-endeavour to reach the Marne. The Germans were retreating fast, but
-rather on account of their generally faulty strategical position than
-from tactical compulsion, and they covered themselves with continual
-rearguard actions, especially along the line of the Petit Morin. It
-is one of {150} the noticeable results, however, of the use of
-aircraft that the bluff of a rearguard has disappeared and that it is
-no longer possible to make such a retreat as Massena from Torres
-Vedras, where the pursuer never knew if he were striking at a
-substance or a shadow. Gough's Second Cavalry Division, which
-consisted of the 3rd and 5th Brigades, swept along, and the infantry
-followed hard at the heels of the horses, Doran's 8th Brigade
-suffering the loss of about 100 men when held up at the crossing of
-the Petit Morin River near Orly, which they traversed eventually
-under an effective covering fire from J Battery, R.H.A.
-
-The First Army Corps upon this day forced the Petit Morin at two
-places, both near La Trétoire, north of Rebaix. The First Division
-secured the passage at Sablonnières, where the Black Watch seized the
-heights, causing the German rearguard some losses and taking 60
-prisoners. The Second Division met with considerable resistance, but
-the 2nd Worcesters got over at Le Gravier and the 2nd Grenadier
-Guards at La Forge. The enemy was then driven from the river bank
-into the woods, where they were practically surrounded and had
-eventually to surrender. Eight machine-guns and 350 prisoners, many
-of them from the Guards' Jaeger Battalion, were captured. Six of
-these machine-guns fell to the Irish Guards.
-
-The Second Army Corps passed the Petit Morin near St. Cyr and St.
-Ouen, the 13th Brigade attacking the former and the 14th the latter,
-both being villages on the farther side of the river. Such fighting
-as there was in this quarter came largely to the 1st East Surrey and
-1st Cornwalls, of the 14th Brigade, {151} but the resistance was not
-great, and was broken by the artillery fire. To the soldiers engaged
-the whole action was more like a route march with occasional
-deployments than a battle.
-
-On the 9th the Army was up to the Marne and was faced with the
-problem of crossing it. The operations extending over many miles
-were unimportant in detail, though of some consequence in the mass.
-The real hard fighting was falling upon the Sixth French Army north
-of Ligny, which was still in desperate conflict with the German
-right, and upon Foch's army, which was fighting magnificently at
-Fère-Champenoise. The advance of the British, and their own
-exertions, caused the Germans to retire and cleared the passage over
-the Ourcq for our Allies. The chief losses during the day upon the
-British side fell upon the Guards' Brigade, the 1st Lincolns, and the
-1st Cornwalls, most of which were inflicted by invisible quick-firing
-batteries shrouded by the woods which flank the river. The latter
-regiment lost Colonel Turner, Major Cornish-Bowden, and a number of
-other killed or wounded in a brilliant piece of woodland fighting,
-where they drove in a strong German rearguard. The 1st East Surrey,
-who were very forward in the movement, were also hard hit, having 6
-officers and about 120 men out of action.
-
-[Sidenote: The 1st Lincolns and the guns.]
-
-The British infantry was able on this day to show that woods may
-serve for other purposes besides hiding batteries. The 1st Lincolns,
-being held up a rapid and accurate fire from invisible guns,
-dispatched two companies, C and D, to make in single file a detour
-under the shelter of the trees. Coming behind the battery, which
-appears to have had no immediate support, they poured in a rapid fire
-at {152} two hundred and fifty yards, which laid every man of the
-German gunners upon the ground. The whole battery was captured. The
-casualties of the Lincolns in this dashing exploit, which included
-Captains Hoskyns and Ellison, with Lieutenant Thruston, were
-unavoidably caused by British shrapnel, our gunners knowing nothing
-of the movement.
-
-On this date (September 9) both the First and the Second Army Corps
-were across the Marne, and advanced some miles to the north of it,
-killing, wounding, or capturing many hundreds of the enemy. The
-Sixth French Army was, as stated, fighting hard upon the Ourcq, but
-the Fifth had won a brilliant success near Montmirail and driven the
-enemy completely over the river.
-
-Pulteney's Third Corps, still a division short, had been held up by
-the destruction of the bridges at La Ferté, but on September 10 they
-were across and the whole Army sweeping northwards. The cavalry
-overrode all resistance and rounded up a number of prisoners, over
-2000 in all. It was a strange reversal of fortune, for here within a
-fortnight were the same two armies playing the converse parts, the
-British eagerly pushing on with a flushed consciousness of victory,
-while the Germans, tired and dispirited, scattered in groups among
-the woods or were gathered up from the roadsides. It was a day of
-mist and rain, with muddy, sodden roads, but all weather is fine
-weather to the army that is gaining ground. An impression of
-complete German demoralisation became more widespread as transport,
-shells, and even guns were found littering the high-roads, and yet
-there was really even less cause for it than when the same delusion
-was held by the Germans. The {153} enemy were actually making a
-hurried but orderly retreat, and these signs of disaster were only
-the evidence of a broken rearguard resistance. German armies do not
-readily dissolve. There is no more cohesive force in the world. But
-they were undoubtedly hard pressed.
-
-[Sidenote: 6th Brigade's action at Hautvesnes.]
-
-About eight o'clock upon the morning of the 10th the 6th Brigade
-(Davies') observed a column of the enemy's infantry on a parallel
-road near the village of Hautvesnes. Artillery fire was at once
-opened upon them, and a vigorous infantry attack, the 1st Rifles
-advancing direct with the 1st Berkshires on their right, whilst the
-1st King's Liverpool worked round each flank in Boer fashion. The
-2nd Staffords were in support. The Germans had taken refuge in a
-sunken road, but they were mercilessly lashed by shrapnel, and 400 of
-them ran forward with their hands up. The sunken road was filled
-with their dead and wounded. Some hundreds streamed away across
-country, but these were mostly gathered up by the Third Division on
-the left.
-
-In this brisk little action the 50th R.F.A., and later the whole of
-the 34th Brigade R.F.A., put in some fine work, the shrapnel-fire
-being most deadly and accurate. The British had pushed their guns
-freely forward with their cavalry and did much execution with them,
-though they had the misfortune on this same date, the 10th, to lose,
-by the answering shell-fire of the enemy, General Findlay, artillery
-commander of the First Division. In this second action, in which the
-German rearguard, infantry as well as artillery, was engaged, the 2nd
-Sussex Regiment, which was leading the First Division, sustained
-considerable losses near Courchamps or {154} Priez, as did the 1st
-Northamptons and the 1st North Lancashires. Some 300 of Bulfin's 2nd
-Brigade were hit altogether, among whom was Colonel Knight, of the
-North Lancashires. The enemy came under heavy fire, both from the
-infantry and from the guns, so that their losses were considerable,
-and several hundred of them were captured. The country was very
-hilly, and the roads so bad that in the exhausted state of men and
-horses the pursuit could not be sufficiently pressed. Thirty large
-motor cars were seen at Priez in front of the 2nd Brigade, carrying
-the enemy's rearguard.
-
-[Sidenote: 9th Brigade's capture of Germans at Vinly.]
-
-On this same date the 9th Brigade captured 600 German infantry, the
-survivors of a battalion, at the village of Vinly. This seems to
-have been an incident of the same character as the loss of the
-Cheshires or of the Munsters in the British retreat, where a body of
-troops fighting a covering action was left too long, or failed to
-receive the orders for its withdrawal. The defence was by no means a
-desperate one, and few of the attacking infantry were killed or
-wounded. On this date the Fifth and Sixth French Armies were hardly
-engaged at all, and the whole Allied Force, including General Foch's
-Seventh French Army on the right of the Fifth, were all sweeping
-along together in a single rolling steel-crested wave, composed of at
-least twelve army corps, whilst nine German corps (five of Von Kluck
-and four of Bülow) retired swiftly before them, hurrying towards the
-chance of re-forming and refitting which the Aisne position would
-afford them.
-
-On September 11 the British were still advancing upon a somewhat
-narrowed front. There was no opposition and again the day bore a
-considerable {155} crop of prisoners and other trophies. The weather
-had become so foggy that the aircraft were useless, and it is only
-when these wonderful scouters are precluded from rising that a
-general realises how indispensable they have become to him. As a wit
-expressed it, they have turned war from a game of cards into a game
-of chess. It was still very wet, and the Army was exposed to
-considerable privation, most of the officers and men having neither
-change of clothing, overcoats, nor waterproof sheets, while the
-blowing up of bridges on the lines of communication had made it
-impossible to supply the wants. The undefeatable commissariat,
-however, was still working well, which means that the Army was doing
-the same. On the 12th the pursuit was continued as far as the River
-Aisne. Allenby's cavalry occupied Braine in the early morning, the
-Queen's Bays being particularly active, but there was so much
-resistance that the Third Division was needed to make the ground
-good. Gough's Cavalry Division also ran into the enemy near
-Chassemy, killing or capturing several hundred of the German
-infantry. In these operations Captain Stewart, whose experience as
-an alleged spy has been mentioned, met with a soldier's death. On
-this day the Sixth French Army was fighting a considerable action
-upon the British left in the vicinity of Soissons, the Germans making
-a stand in order to give time for their impedimenta to get over the
-river. In this they succeeded, so that when the Allied Forces
-reached the Aisne, which is an unfordable stream some sixty yards
-from bank to bank, the retiring army had got across it, had destroyed
-most of the bridges, and showed every sign of being prepared to
-dispute the crossing.
-
-{156}
-
-[Sidenote: The problem of the Aisne.]
-
-Missy Bridge, facing the Fifth Division, appeared at first to be
-intact, but a daring reconnaissance by Lieutenant Pennecuick, of the
-Engineers, showed that it was really badly damaged. Condé Bridge was
-intact, but was so covered by a high horse-shoe formation of hills
-upon the farther side that it could not be used, and remained
-throughout under control of the enemy. Bourg Bridge, however, in
-front of the First Army Corps, had for some unexplained reason been
-left undamaged, and this was seized in the early morning of September
-13 by De Lisle's cavalry, followed rapidly by Bulfin's 2nd Brigade.
-It was on the face of it a somewhat desperate enterprise which lay
-immediately in front of the British general. If the enemy were still
-retreating he could not afford to slacken his pursuit, while, on the
-other hand, if the enemy were merely making a feint of resistance,
-then, at all hazards, the stream must be forced and the rearguard
-driven in. The German infantry could be seen streaming up the roads
-on the farther bank of the river, but there were no signs of what
-their next disposition might be. Air reconnaissance was still
-precluded, and it was impossible to say for certain which alternative
-might prove to be correct, but Sir John French's cavalry training
-must incline him always to the braver course. The officer who rode
-through the Boers to Kimberley and threw himself with his weary men
-across the path of the formidable Kronje was not likely to stand
-hesitating upon the banks of the Aisne. His personal opinion was
-that the enemy meant to stand and fight, but none the less the order
-was given to cross.
-
-September 13 was spent in arranging this dashing {157} and dangerous
-movement. The British got across eventually in several places and by
-various devices. Bulfin's men, followed by the rest of the First
-Division of Haig's Army Corps, passed the canal bridge of Bourg with
-no loss or difficulty. The 11th Brigade of Pulteney's Third Corps
-got across by a partially demolished bridge and ferry at Venizel.
-They were followed by the 12th Brigade, who established themselves
-near Bucy. The 13th Brigade was held up at Missy, but the 14th got
-across and lined up with the men of the Third Corps in the
-neighbourhood of Ste. Marguerite, meeting with a considerable
-resistance from the Germans. Later, Count Gleichen's 15th Brigade
-also got across. On the right Hamilton got over with two brigades of
-the Third Division, the 8th Brigade crossing on a single plank at
-Vailly and the 9th using the railway bridge, while the whole of
-Haig's First Corps had before evening got a footing upon the farther
-bank. So eager was the advance and so inadequate the means that
-Haking's 5th Brigade, led by the Connaught Rangers, was obliged to
-get over the broad and dangerous river, walking in single file along
-the sloping girder of a ruined bridge, under a heavy, though distant,
-shell-fire. The night of September 13 saw the main body of the Army
-across the river, already conscious of a strong rearguard action, but
-not yet aware that the whole German Army had halted and was turning
-at bay. On the right De Lisle's cavalrymen had pushed up the slope
-from Bourg Bridge and reached as far as Vendresse, where they were
-pulled up by the German lines.
-
-It has been mentioned above that the 11th and 12th Brigades of the
-Fourth Division had passed the {158} river at Venizel. These troops
-were across in the early afternoon, and they at once advanced, and
-proved that in that portion of the field the enemy were undoubtedly
-standing fast. The 11th Brigade, which was more to the north, had
-only a constant shell-fall to endure, but the 12th, pushing forward
-through Bucy-le-long, found itself in front of a line of woods from
-which there swept a heavy machine-gun- and rifle-fire. The advance
-was headed by the 2nd Lancashire Fusiliers, supported by the 2nd
-Inniskilling Fusiliers. It was across open ground and under heavy
-fire, but it was admirably carried out. In places where the
-machine-guns had got the exact range the stricken Fusiliers lay dead
-or wounded with accurate intervals, like a firing-line on a
-field-day. The losses were heavy, especially in the Lancashire
-Fusiliers. Colonel Griffin was wounded, and 5 of his officers with
-250 men were among the casualties. It should be recorded that fresh
-supplies of ammunition were brought up at personal risk by Colonel
-Seely, late Minister of War, in his motor-car. The contest continued
-until dusk, when the troops waited for the battle of next day under
-such cover as they could find.
-
-The crossing of the stream may be said, upon the one side, to mark
-the end of the battle and pursuit of the Marne, while, on the other,
-it commenced that interminable Battle of the Aisne which was destined
-to fulfil Bloch's prophecies and to set the type of all great modern
-engagements. The prolonged struggles of the Manchurian War had
-prepared men's minds for such a development, but only here did it
-first assume its full proportions and warn us that the battle of the
-future was to be the siege of the past. {159} Men remembered with a
-smile Bernhardi's confident assertion that a German battle would be
-decided in one day, and that his countrymen would never be
-constrained to fight in defensive trenches.
-
-The moral effect of the Battle of the Marne was greater than its
-material gains. The latter, so far as the British were concerned,
-did not exceed 5000 prisoners, 20 guns, and a quantity of transport.
-The total losses, however, were very heavy. The Germans had
-perfected a method of burning their dead with the aid of petrol.
-These numerous holocausts over the country-side were found afterwards
-by the peasants to have left mounds of charred animal matter which
-were scattered by their industrious hands on the fields which they
-might help to fertilise. The heat of cremation had dissolved the
-bones, but the teeth in most cases remained intact, so that over an
-area of France it was no uncommon thing to see them gleaming in the
-clods on either side of the new-cut furrow. Had the ring of
-high-born German criminals who planned the war seen in some
-apocalyptic vision the detailed results of their own villainy, it is
-hard to doubt that even their hearts and consciences would have
-shrunk from the deed.
-
-Apart from the losses, the mere fact that a great German army had
-been hustled across thirty miles of country, had been driven from
-river to river, and had finally to take refuge in trenches in order
-to hold their ground, was a great encouragement to the Allies. From
-that time they felt assured that with anything like equal numbers
-they had an ascendancy over their opponents. Save in the matter of
-heavy guns and machine-guns, there was not a single arm {160} in
-which they did not feel that they were the equals or the superiors.
-Nor could they forget that this foe, whom they were driving in the
-open and holding in the trenches, was one who had rushed into the war
-with men and material all carefully prepared for this day of battle,
-while their own strength lay in the future. If the present was
-bright, it would surely be incomparably brighter when the reserves of
-France and the vast resources of the British Empire were finally
-brought into line. There had never from the beginning been a doubt
-of final victory, but from this time on it became less an opinion and
-more a demonstrable and mathematical certainty.
-
-[Sidenote: Why the Marne is one of the great battles of all time.]
-
-The battle must also be regarded as a fixed point in military
-history, since it was the first time since the days of the great
-Napoleon that a Prussian army had been turned and driven. In three
-successive wars--against the Danes, the Austrians, and the
-French--they had lived always in the warm sunshine of success. Now,
-at last, came the first chill of disaster. Partly from their
-excellent military qualities, but even more on account of their
-elaborate and methodical preparations, joined with a want of scruple
-which allowed them to force a war at the moment when they could take
-their adversary at a disadvantage, they had established a legend of
-invincibility. This they left behind them with their cannon and
-their prisoners between the Marne and the Aisne. It had been feared
-that free men, trained in liberal and humane methods, could never
-equal in military efficiency those who had passed through the savage
-discipline which is the heritage of the methods that first made
-Prussia great at the expense {161} of her neighbours. This shadow
-was henceforth for ever lifted from men's minds, and it was shown
-that the kindly comradeship which exists in the Western armies
-between officers and men was not incompatible with the finest
-fighting qualities of which any soldiers are capable.
-
-
-
-
-{162}
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE AISNE
-
-The hazardous crossing of the Aisne--Wonderful work of the
-sappers--The fight for the sugar factory--General advance of the
-Army--The 4th (Guards) Brigade's difficult task--Cavalry as a mobile
-reserve--The Sixth Division--Hardships of the Army--German breach of
-faith--_Tâtez toujours_--The general position--Attack upon the West
-Yorks--Counter-attack by Congreve's 18th Brigade--Rheims
-Cathedral--Spies--The siege and fall of Antwerp.
-
-
-[Sidenote: The hazardous crossing of the Aisne.]
-
-The stretch of river which confronted the British Army when they set
-about the hazardous crossing of the Aisne was about fifteen miles in
-length. It lay as nearly as possible east and west, so that the
-advance was from south to north. As the British faced the river the
-First Army Corps was on the right of their line, together with half
-the cavalry. In the centre was the Second Corps, on the left the
-Third Corps, which was still without one of its divisions (the
-Sixth), but retained, on the other hand, the 19th Brigade, which did
-not belong to it. Each of these British corps covered a front of,
-roughly, five miles. Across the broad and swift river a considerable
-German army with a powerful artillery was waiting to dispute the
-passage. On the right of the British were the French Fifth and
-Seventh Armies, and on their left, forming the extremity of the
-Allied line, was the French Sixth Army, acting in such close
-co-operation {163} with the British Third Corps in the Soissons
-region that their guns were often turned upon the same point. This
-Sixth French Army, with the British Army, may be looked upon as the
-left wing of the huge Allied line which stretched away with many a
-curve and bend to the Swiss frontier. During all this hurried
-retreat from the Marne, it is to be remembered that the Eastern
-German armies had hardly moved at all. It was their four armies of
-the right which had swung back like a closing door, the Crown
-Prince's Fifth Army being the hinge upon which it turned. Now the
-door had ceased to swing, and one solid barrier presented itself to
-the Allies. It is probable that the German preponderance of numbers
-was, for the moment, much lessened or even had ceased to exist, for
-the losses in battle, the detachments for Russia, and the operations
-in Belgium had all combined to deplete the German ranks.
-
-The Belgian Army had retired into Antwerp before the fall of
-Brussels, but they were by no means a force to be disregarded, being
-fired by that sense of intolerable wrong which is the most formidable
-stimulant to a virile nation. From the shelter of the Antwerp
-entrenchments they continually buzzed out against the German lines of
-communication, and although they were usually beaten back, and were
-finally pent in, they still added to the great debt of gratitude
-which the Allies already owed them by holding up a considerable body,
-two army corps at least, of good troops. On the other hand, the
-fortress of Maubeuge, on the northern French frontier, which had been
-invested within a few days of the battle of Mons, had now fallen
-before the heavy German guns, with the result that at least a corps
-of troops under {164} Von Zwehl and these same masterful guns were
-now released for service on the Aisne.
-
-[Sidenote: Wonderful work of the sappers.]
-
-The more one considers the operation of the crossing of the Aisne
-with the battle which followed it, the more one is impressed by the
-extraordinary difficulty of the task, the swift debonair way in which
-it was tackled, and the pushful audacity of the various commanders in
-gaining a foothold upon the farther side. Consider that upon the
-12th the Army was faced by a deep, broad, unfordable river with only
-one practicable bridge in the fifteen miles opposite them. They had
-a formidable enemy armed with powerful artillery standing on the
-defensive upon a line of uplands commanding every crossing and
-approach, whilst the valley was so broad that ordinary guns upon the
-corresponding uplands could have no effect, and good positions lower
-down were hard to find. There was the problem. And yet upon the
-14th the bulk of the Army was across and had established itself in
-positions from which it could never afterwards be driven. All arms
-must have worked well to bring about such a result, but what can be
-said of the Royal Engineers, who built under heavy fire in that brief
-space nine bridges, some of them capable of taking heavy traffic,
-while they restored five of the bridges which the enemy had
-destroyed! September 13, 1914, should be recorded in their annals as
-a marvellous example of personal self-sacrifice and technical
-proficiency.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{165}
-
-[Illustration: British Advance at the Aisne]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-Sir John French, acting with great swiftness and decision, did not
-lose an hour after he had established himself in force upon the
-northern bank of the river in pushing his men ahead and finding out
-what was in front of him. The weather was still very wet, {166} and
-heavy mists drew a veil over the German dispositions, but the advance
-went forward. The British right wing, consisting of the First
-Division of the First Corps, had established itself most securely, as
-was natural, since it was the one corps which had found an unbroken
-bridge in front of it. The First Division had pushed forward as far
-as Moulins and Vendresse, which lie about two miles north of the
-river. Now, in the early hours of the 14th, the whole of the Second
-Division got over. The immediate narrative, therefore, is concerned
-with the doings of the two divisions of the First Corps, upon which
-fell the first and chief strain of the very important and dangerous
-advance upon that date.
-
-On the top of the line of chalk hills which faced the British was an
-ancient and famous highway, the Chemin-des-dames, which, like all
-ancient highways, had been carried along the crest of the ridge.
-This was in the German possession, and it became the objective of the
-British attack. The 2nd Infantry Brigade (Bulfin's) led the way,
-working upwards in the early morning from Moulins and Vendresse
-through the hamlet of Troyon towards the great road. This brigade,
-consisting of the 2nd Sussex, 1st Northamptons, 1st North Lancashire,
-and 2nd Rifles, drawn mostly from solid shire regiments, was second
-to none in the Army. Just north of Troyon was a considerable
-deserted sugar factory, which formed a feature in the landscape. It
-lay within a few hundred yards of the Chemin-des-dames, while another
-winding road, cut in the side of the hill, lay an equal distance to
-the south of it, and was crossed by the British in their advance.
-This road, which was somewhat sunken in the chalk, and thus offered
-some cover {167} to a crouching man, played an important part in the
-operations.
-
-[Sidenote: The fight for the sugar factory.]
-
-Lieutenant Balfour and a picket of the 2nd Rifles, having crept up
-and reconnoitred the factory, returned with the information that it
-was held by the Germans, and that twelve guns were in position three
-hundred yards to the east of it. General Bulfin then--it was about
-3.30 in the morning of a wet, misty day--sent the 2nd Rifles, the 2nd
-Sussex Regiment, and the 1st Northamptons forward, with the factory
-and an adjoining whitewashed farmhouse as their objective. The 1st
-North Lancashires remained in reserve at Vendresse. The attacking
-force was under the immediate command of Colonel Serocold of the
-Rifles. The three advanced regiments drove in the pickets of the
-Germans, and after a severe fight turned the enemy out of his front
-trench, A Company of the Sussex capturing several hundred prisoners.
-A number of men, however, including Colonel Montresor and Major
-Cookson, were shot while rounding up these Germans and sending them
-to the rear. The advanced line had suffered severely, so the North
-Lancashires were called up and launched at the sugar factory, which
-they carried with a magnificent bayonet attack in spite of a fierce
-German resistance. Their losses were very heavy, including Major
-Lloyd, their commander, but their victory was a glorious one. The
-two batteries of the enemy were now commanded by machine-guns,
-brought up to the factory by Lieutenant Dashwood of the Sussex. The
-enemy made a brave attempt to get these guns away, but the teams and
-men were shot down, and it was a German Colenso. The British,
-however, unlike the Boers, were unable to get away the prizes of
-their victory. The factory {168} was abandoned as it was exposed to
-heavy fire, and the four regiments formed a firing-line, taking such
-cover as they could find, but a German shell fire developed which was
-so deadly that they were unable to get forward.
-
-A small party of Rifles, under Cathcart and Foljambe, clung hard to
-the captured guns, sending repeated messages: "For God's sake bring
-horses and fetch away these pieces!" No horses were, however,
-available, and eventually both the guns and the buildings were
-regained by the Germans, the former being disabled before they were
-abandoned by their captors, and the factory being smashed by the
-shells. Major Green and a company of the Sussex, with some of the
-Coldstream under Major Grant, had got as far forward as the
-Chemin-des-dames, but fell back steadily when their flank was finally
-exposed. Two companies of the 1st Coldstream, under Colonel
-Ponsonby, had also pushed on to the road, and now came back. Nothing
-could exceed the desperate gallantry of officers and men. Major
-Jelf, severely wounded, cheered on his riflemen until evening. Major
-Warre of the same regiment and Major Phillips rallied the
-hard-pressed line again and again. Lieutenant Spread, of the
-Lancashires, worked his machine-gun until it was smashed, and then,
-wounded as he was, brought up a second gun and continued the fight.
-Major Burrows rallied the Lancashires when their leader, Major Lloyd,
-was hit. Brigade-Major Watson, of the Queen's, was everywhere in the
-thick of the firing. No men could have been better led, nor could
-any leaders have better men. A large number of wounded, both British
-and Germans, lay under the {169} shelter of some haystacks between
-the lines, and crawled slowly round them for shelter, as the fire
-came from one side or the other--a fitting subject surely for a
-Verestschagin!
-
-[Sidenote: General advance of the Army.]
-
-Meanwhile, it is necessary to follow what had been going on at the
-immediate left of Bulfin's Brigade. Maxse's 1st Brigade had moved up
-in the face of a considerable fire until it came to be nearly as far
-north as the factory, but to the west of it. The 1st Coldstream had
-been sent across to help the dismounted cavalry to cover Bulfin's
-right, since the main German strength seemed to be in that quarter.
-The 1st Scots Guards was held in reserve, but the other regiments of
-the 1st Brigade, the 1st Black Watch and the 1st Camerons, a
-battalion which had taken the place of the brave but unfortunate
-Munsters, lined up on the left of the factory and found themselves
-swept by the same devastating fire which had checked the advance.
-This fire came from the fringe of the woods and from a line of
-trenches lying north-east of the factory on the edge of the
-Chemin-des-dames. Up to this time the British had no artillery
-support on account of the mist, but now Geddes' 25th Brigade R.F.A.,
-comprising the 113th, 114th, and 115th Batteries, was brought to its
-assistance. It could do little good in such a dim light, and one
-battery, the 115th, under Major Johnstone, which pushed up within
-eight hundred yards of the enemy's position, was itself nearly
-destroyed. The 116th R.F.A., under Captain Oliver, also did great
-work, working its way up till it was almost in the infantry line, and
-at one time in advance of it. The whole infantry line, including a
-mixture of units, men of the Rifles, Sussex, and {170} North
-Lancashires, with a sprinkling of Guardsmen and Black Watch from the
-1st Brigade, came slowly down the hill--"sweating blood to hold their
-own." as one of them described it--until they reached the sunken road
-which has been already mentioned. There General Bulfin had stationed
-himself with the reserve, and the line steadied itself, re-formed,
-and, with the support of the guns, made head once more against the
-advancing Germans, who were unable to make any progress against the
-fire which was poured into them. With such spades and picks as could
-be got, a line of shallow trenches was thrown up, and these were held
-against all attacks for the rest of the day.[1] It was the haphazard
-line of these hurriedly dug shelters which determined the position
-retained in the weeks to come. As this was the apex of the British
-advance and all the corps upon the left were in turn brought to a
-standstill and driven to make trenches, the whole line of the First
-Corps formed a long diagonal slash across the hillside, with its
-right close to the Chemin-des-dames and its left upon the river in
-the neighbourhood of Chavonne. The result was that now and always
-the trenches of the 2nd Brigade were in an extremely exposed
-position, for they were open not only to the direct fire of the
-Germans, which was not very severe, but to an enfilading fire from
-more distant guns upon each flank. Their immediate neighbours upon
-the right were the 1st Queen's Surrey, acting as {171} flank-guard,
-and a Moroccan corps from the Fifth French Army, which had not
-reached so advanced a position, but was in echelon upon their right
-rear.
-
-
-[1] Until an accurate German military history of the war shall
-appear, it is difficult to compute the exact rival forces in any
-engagement, but in this attack of the 2nd Brigade, where six British
-regiments may be said to have been involved, there are some data. A
-German officer, describing the same engagement, says that, apart from
-the original German force, the reinforcements amounted to fourteen
-battalions, from the Guards' Jaeger, the 4th Jaeger Battalion, 65th,
-13th Reserve, and 13th and 16th Landwehr Regiments.
-
-
-It has already been shown how the 1st Brigade was divided up, the 1st
-Coldstream being on the right of the 2nd Brigade. The rest of the
-1st Brigade had carried out an advance parallel to that described,
-and many of the Black Watch, who were the right-hand regiment, got
-mixed with Bulfin's men when they were driven back to what proved to
-be the permanent British line. This advance of the 1st Brigade
-intercepted a strong force of the enemy which was creeping round the
-left flank of the 2nd Brigade. The counter-stroke brought the flank
-attack to a standstill. The leading regiments of the 1st Brigade
-suffered very severely, however, especially the Cameron Highlanders,
-whose gallantry carried them far to the front. This regiment lost
-Lieutenant-Colonel MacLachlan, 2 majors, Maitland and Nicholson, 3
-captains, 11 lieutenants, and about 300 rank and file in the action.
-Some of these fell into the hands of the enemy, but the great
-majority were killed or wounded. The 1st Scots Guards upon the left
-of the brigade had also heavy casualties, while the Black Watch lost
-their Colonel, Grant Duff, their Adjutant, Rowan Hamilton, and many
-men. When the line on their right fell back, they conformed to the
-movement until they received support from two companies of the 1st
-Gloucesters from the 3rd Brigade upon their left rear.
-
-[Sidenote: The 4th (Guards) Brigade's difficult task.]
-
-The 4th (Guards) Brigade, forming the left of the Second Division,
-was across the river in battle array by ten o'clock in the morning
-and moving northwards towards the village of Ostel. {172} Its task
-was a supremely difficult one. Dense woods faced it, fringed with
-the hostile riflemen, while a heavy shell-fire tore through the
-extended ranks. It is safe to say that such an advance could not
-have been carried out in the heavy-handed German fashion without
-annihilating losses. As it was, the casualties were heavy, but not
-sufficient to prevent a continuance of the attack, which at one
-o'clock carried the farm and trenches which were its objective. The
-steep slopes and the thick woods made artillery support impossible,
-though one section of a battery did contrive to keep up with the
-infantry. The 3rd Coldstream being held up in their advance on the
-Soupir front, the 1st Irish were moved up on their right flank, but
-the line could do little more than hold its own. Captain Berners,
-Lord Guernsey, Lord Arthur Hay, and others were killed at this point.
-The German infantry advanced several times to counter-attack, but
-were swept back by the fire of the Guards.
-
-At one period it was found that the general German advance, which had
-followed the holding of the British attack, was threatening to flow
-in between the two divisions of the First Army Corps. The 3rd
-Brigade (Landon's) was therefore deployed rapidly from the point
-about a mile south of Vernesse where it had been stationed. Two
-regiments of the brigade, the 2nd Welsh and the 1st South Wales
-Borderers, were flung against the heavy German column advancing down
-the Beaulne ridge and threatening to cut Haig's corps in two. The
-Welshmen, worthy successors of their ancestors who left such a name
-on the battlefields of France, succeeded in heading it off and
-driving it back so that they were {173} able to extend and get in
-touch with the right of the Second Division. This consisted of the
-5th Brigade (Haking's) with the 6th (Davies') upon its left. Both of
-these brigades had to bear the brunt of continual German
-counter-attacks, involving considerable losses, both from shell and
-rifle fire. In spite of this they won their way for a mile or more
-up the slopes, where they were brought to a standstill and dug
-themselves into temporary shelter, continuing the irregular diagonal
-line of trenches which had been started by the brigades upon the
-right.
-
-[Sidenote: Cavalry as a mobile reserve.]
-
-It is impossible not to admire the way in which the German general in
-command observed and attempted to profit by any gap in the British
-line. It has already been shown how he tried to push his column
-between the two divisions of the First Corps and was only stopped by
-the deployment of the 3rd Brigade. Later, an even fairer chance
-presented itself, and he was quick to take advantage of it. The
-advance of the Guards Brigade to the Ostel ridge had caused a
-considerable gap between them and the nearest unit of the Second
-Corps, and also between the First Corps and the river. A German
-attack came swarming down upon the weak spot. From Troyon to Ostel,
-over five miles of ground, Haig's corps was engaged to the last man
-and pinned down in their positions. It was not possible to fill the
-gap. Not to fill it might have meant disaster--disaster under heavy
-shell-fire with an unfordable river in the rear. Here was a supreme
-example of the grand work that was done when our cavalry were made
-efficient as dismounted riflemen. Their mobility brought them
-quickly to the danger spot. Their training turned them in an instant
-from {174} horsemen to infantry. The 15th Hussars, the Irish Horse,
-the whole of Briggs' 1st Cavalry Brigade, and finally the whole of De
-Lisle's 2nd Cavalry Brigade, were thrown into the gap. The German
-advance was stayed and the danger passed. From now onwards the
-echelon formed by the units of the First Corps ended with these
-cavalry brigades near Chavonne to the immediate north of the river.
-
-The Third Division of the Second Corps, being on the immediate left
-of the operations which have been already described, moved forward
-upon Aizy, which is on about the same level as Ostel, the objective
-of the Guards. The 8th (Doran's) Brigade moved north by a tributary
-stream which runs down to the Aisne, while the 9th (Shaw's) tried to
-advance in line with it on the plateau to the right. Both brigades
-found it impossible to get any farther, and established themselves in
-entrenchments about a mile north of Vailly, so as to cover the
-important bridge at that place, where the 7th Brigade was in reserve.
-The three Fusilier regiments of the 9th Brigade all lost heavily, and
-the Lincolns had at one time to recross the river, but recovered
-their position.
-
-The attack made by the Fifth Division near Missy was held up by a
-very strong German position among the woods on the Chivres heights
-which was fronted by wire entanglements. The regiments chiefly
-engaged were the Norfolks and Bedfords of the 15th Brigade, with the
-Cornwalls and East Surreys of the 14th Brigade, the remains of the
-Cheshires being in close support. They crossed the wire and made
-good progress at first, but were eventually brought to a stand by
-heavy fire at close range from a trench upon their right front. It
-was already dusk, so the {175} troops ended by maintaining the
-position at Missy and Ste. Marguerite, where there were bridges to be
-guarded.
-
-The Fourth Division of Pulteney's Third Corps had no better success,
-and was only able to maintain its ground. It may be remarked, as an
-example of valiant individual effort, that this division was largely
-indebted for its ammunition supply to the efforts of Captain Johnston
-of the Sappers, who, upon a crazy raft of his own construction, aided
-by Lieutenant Flint, spent twelve hours under fire ferrying over the
-precious boxes. The familiar tale of stalemate was to be told of the
-Sixth French Army in the Soissons section of the river. Along the
-whole Allied line the position was the same, the greatest success and
-probably the hardest fighting having fallen to the lot of the
-Eighteenth French Corps, which had taken, lost, and finally retaken
-Craonne, thus establishing itself upon the lip of that formidable
-plateau which had been the objective of all the attacks.
-
-In the Vailly region the 5th Cavalry Brigade found itself in a
-difficult position, for it had crossed the stream as a mounted unit
-in expectation of a pursuit, and now found itself under heavy fire in
-the village of Vailly with no possibility of getting forward. The
-only alternative was to recross the river by the single narrow
-bridge, which was done at a later date under very heavy fire, the
-troopers leading their horses over in single file. This difficult
-operation was superintended by Captain Wright of the Engineers, the
-same brave officer who had endeavoured to blow up the bridge at Mons.
-Unhappily, he was mortally wounded on this occasion. On the
-afternoon of the 14th--it being found that the British artillery was
-{176} shelling our own advanced trenches--Staff-Captain Harter of the
-9th Brigade galloped across the bridge and informed the gunners as to
-the true position.
-
-Towards evening, in spite of the fact that there were no reserves and
-that all the troops had endured heavy losses and great fatigue, a
-general advance was ordered in the hope of gaining the high ground of
-the Chemin-des-dames before night. It was nearly sunset when the
-orders were given, and the troops responded gallantly to the call,
-though many of them had been in action since daybreak. The fire,
-however, was very heavy, and no great progress could be made. The
-First Division gained some ground, but was brought to a standstill.
-The only brigade which made good headway was Haking's 5th, which
-reached the crest of the hill in the neighbourhood of
-Tilleul-de-Courtecon. General Haking sent out scouts, and finding
-German outposts upon both his flanks, he withdrew under cover of
-darkness.
-
-Thus ended the sharp and indecisive action of September 14, the
-Germans holding their ground, but being in turn unable to drive back
-the Allies, who maintained their position and opposed an impassable
-obstacle to the renewed advance upon Paris. The battle was marked by
-the common features of advance, arrest, and entrenchment, which
-occurred not only in the British front, but in that of the French
-armies upon either flank. When the action ceased, the 1st
-Northamptons and the 1st Queen's, sent to guard the pressure point at
-the extreme right of the line, had actually reached the
-Chemin-des-dames, the British objective, and had dug themselves in
-upon the edge of it. From this very advanced spot the British line
-extended diagonally across the hillside for many {177} miles until it
-reached the river. Several hundred prisoners and some guns were
-taken in the course of the fighting. When one considers the
-predominant position of the Germans, and that their artillery was
-able to give them constant assistance, whereas that of the British
-and French was only brought up with the utmost difficulty, we can
-only marvel that the infantry were able to win and to hold the ground.
-
-The next day, September 15, was spent for the most part in making
-good the position gained and deepening the trenches to get some
-protection from the ever-growing artillery fire, which was the more
-intense as the great siege guns from Maubeuge were upon this day, for
-the first time, brought into action. At first the terrific
-explosions of these shells, the largest by far which had ever been
-brought into an actual line of battle, were exceedingly alarming, but
-after a time it became realised that, however omnipotent they might
-be against iron or concrete, they were comparatively harmless in soft
-soil, where their enormous excavations were soon used as convenient
-ready-made rifle-pits by the soldiers. This heavy fire led to a
-deepening of the trenches, which necessitated a general levy of picks
-and shovels from the country round, for a large portion of such
-equipment had been lost in the first week of the campaign.
-
-[Sidenote: The Sixth Division.]
-
-Only two active movements were made in the course of the day, one
-being that Hamilton's Third Division advanced once more towards Aizy
-and established itself a mile or more to the north in a better
-tactical position. The 7th Brigade suffered considerable casualties
-in this change, including Colonel Hasted, of the 1st Wilts. The
-other was that Ferguson's Fifth Division fell back from Chivres,
-{178} where it was exposed to a cross fire, and made its lines along
-the river bank, whence the Germans were never able to drive it,
-although they were only four hundred yards away in a position which
-was high above it. For the rest, it was a day of navvy's toil,
-though the men worked alternately with rifle and with pick, for there
-were continual German advances which withered away before the volleys
-which greeted them. By the 16th the position was fairly secure, and
-on the same day a welcome reinforcement arrived in the shape of the
-Sixth Division, forming the missing half of Pulteney's Third Corps.
-
-Its composition is here appended:
-
- DIVISION VI.--General KEIR.
-
- _16th Infantry Brigade--General Ing. Williams._
- 1st East Kent.
- 1st Leicester.
- 1st Shropshire Light Infantry.
- 2nd York and Lancaster.
-
- _17th Infantry Brigade--General Walter Doran._
- 1st Royal Fusiliers.
- 1st N. Stafford.
- 2nd Leinsters.
- 3rd Rifle Brigade.
-
- _18th Infantry Brigade--General Congreve, V.C._
- 1st W. York.
- 1st E. York.
- 2nd Notts and Derby (Sherwood Foresters).
- 2nd Durham Light Infantry.
-
- _Artillery._
- 2nd Brig. 21, 42, 53.
- 12th Brig. 43, 86, 87.
- 24th Brig. 110, 111, 112.
- 38th Brig. 24, 34, 72.
- R.G.A. 24.
-
-[Sidenote: Hardships of the Army.]
-
-This division was kept in reserve upon the south side of the river.
-The French Commander-in-Chief had intimated that he intended to throw
-in reinforcements upon the left of the Sixth French Army, and {179}
-so, as he hoped, to turn the German right. It was determined,
-therefore, that there should be no attempt at a British advance, but
-that the Allies should be content with holding the enemy to his
-positions. The two armies lay facing each other, therefore, at an
-average distance of about five hundred yards. The pressure was still
-most severe upon the 2nd Brigade on the extreme right. Bulfin's
-orders were to hold on at all costs, as he was the pivot of the whole
-line. He and his men responded nobly to the responsibility, although
-both they and their neighbours of Maxse's 1st Brigade had sustained a
-loss of over 1000 men each upon the 14th--25 per cent of their
-number. The shell-fire was incessant and from several converging
-directions. German infantry attacks were constant by night and by
-day, and the undrained trenches were deep in water. The men lay
-without overcoats and drenched to the skin, for the rain was
-incessant. Yet the sixth day found them on the exact ground upon
-which they had thrown their weary bodies after their attack. Nations
-desire from time to time to be reassured as to their own virility.
-Neither in endurance nor in courage have the British departed from
-the traditions of their ancestors. The unending strain of the
-trenches reached the limits of human resistance. But the line was
-always held.
-
-On September 16 occurred an incident which may be taken as typical of
-the difference in the spirit with which the British and the Germans
-make war. Close to the lines of the Guards a barn which contained
-fifty wounded Germans was ignited by the enemy's shells. Under a
-terrific fire a rescue party rushed forward and got the unfortunate
-men to a place of safety. {180} Several of the British lost their
-lives in this exploit, including Dr. Huggan, the Scottish
-International footballer. The Germans mock at our respect for sport,
-and yet this is the type of man that sport breeds, and it is the want
-of them in their own ranks which will stand for ever between us.
-
-September 17 was a day of incessant attacks upon the right of the
-line, continually repulsed and yet continually renewed. One can well
-sympathise with the feelings of the German commanders who, looking
-down from their heights, saw the British line in a most dangerous
-strategical position, overmatched by their artillery, with a deep
-river in their rear, and yet were unable to take advantage of it
-because of their failure to carry the one shallow line of
-extemporised trenches. Naturally, they came again and again, by
-night and by day, with admirable perseverance and daring to the
-attack, but were always forced to admit that nothing can be done
-against the magazine rifle in hands which know how to use it. They
-tried here and they tried there, these constant sudden outpourings of
-cheering, hurrying, grey-clad men. They were natural tactics, but
-expensive ones, for every new attack left a fresh fringe of stricken
-men in front of the British lines.
-
-[Sidenote: German breach of faith.]
-
-One incident upon the 17th stands out amid the somewhat monotonous
-record of trench attacks. On the extreme right of the British line a
-company of the 1st Northamptons occupied a most exposed position on
-the edge of the Chemin-des-dames. The men in a German trench which
-was some hundreds of yards in front hoisted a white flag and then
-advanced upon the British lines. It is well to be charitable in all
-these white flag incidents, since it is always possible {181} on
-either side that unauthorised men may hoist it and the officer in
-command very properly refuse to recognise it; but in this case the
-deception appears to have been a deliberate one. These are the
-facts. On seeing the flag, Captain Savage, of B Company
-Northamptons, got out of the trench and with Lieutenant Dimmer, of
-the Rifles, advanced to the Germans. He threw down his sword and
-revolver to show that he was unarmed. He found a difficulty in
-getting a direct answer from the Germans, so he saluted their
-officer, who returned his salute, and turned back to walk to his own
-trench. Dimmer, looking back, saw the Germans level their rifles, so
-he threw himself down, crying out, "For God's sake get down."
-Captain Savage stood erect and was riddled with bullets. Many of the
-Northamptons, including Lieutenant Gordon, were shot down by the same
-volley. The Germans then attempted an advance, which was stopped by
-the machine-guns of the 1st Queen's. Such deplorable actions must
-always destroy all the amenities of civilised warfare.
-
-On the afternoon of the same day, September 17, a more serious attack
-was made upon the right flank of the advanced British position, the
-enemy reoccupying a line of trenches from which they had previously
-been driven. It was a dismal day of wind, rain, and mist, but the
-latter was not wholly an evil, as it enabled that hard-worked
-regiment, the 1st Northamptons, under their Colonel, Osborne Smith,
-to move swiftly forward and, with the help of the 1st Queen's, carry
-the place at the bayonet point. Half the Germans in the trench were
-put out of action, thirty-eight taken, and the rest fled. Pushing on
-after their success, they found the ridge beyond held {182} by a
-considerable force of German infantry. The 2nd Rifles had come into
-the fight, and a dismounted squadron of the composite cavalry
-regiment put in some good work upon the flank. The action was
-continued briskly until dark, when both sides retained their ground
-with the exception of the captured line of trenches, which remained
-with the British. Seven officers and about 200 men were killed or
-wounded in this little affair.
-
-[Sidenote: _Tâtez toujours._]
-
-The 18th found the enemy still acting upon the Napoleonic advice of
-_Tâtez toujours_. All day they were feeling for that weak place
-which could never be found. The constant attempts were carried on
-into the night with the same monotonous record of advance leading to
-repulse. At one time it was the line of the 1st Queen's--and no line
-in the Army would be less likely to give results. Then it was the
-left flank of the First Division, and then the front of the Second.
-
-Now and again there were swift counters from the British, in one of
-which an enemy's trench was taken by the 1st Gloucesters with the two
-machine-guns therein. But there was no inducement for any general
-British advance. "We have nothing to lose by staying here," said a
-General, "whereas every day is of importance to the Germans, so the
-longer we can detain them here the better." So it seemed from the
-point of view of the Allies. There is a German point of view also,
-however, which is worthy of consideration. They were aware, and
-others were not, that great reserves of men were left in the
-Fatherland, even as there were in France and in Britain, but that,
-unlike France and Britain, they actually had the arms and equipment
-for them, so that a second host could rapidly be called into the
-field. If these legions were {183} in Belgium, they could ensure the
-fall of Antwerp, overrun the country, and seize the seaboard. All
-this could be effected while the Allies were held at the Aisne.
-Later, with these vast reinforcements, the German armies might burst
-the barrier which held them and make a second descent upon Paris,
-which was still only fifty miles away. So the Germans may have
-argued, and the history of the future was to show that there were
-some grounds for such a calculation. It was in truth a second war in
-which once again the Germans had the men and material ready, while
-the Allies had not.
-
-[Sidenote: The general position.]
-
-This date, September 18, may be taken as the conclusion of the actual
-Battle of the Aisne, since from that time the operations defined
-themselves definitely as a mutual siege and gigantic artillery duel.
-The casualties of the British at the Aisne amounted, up to that date,
-to 10,000 officers and men, the great majority of which were suffered
-by Haig's First Army Corps. The action had lasted from the 13th, and
-its outstanding features, so far as our forces were concerned, may be
-said to have been the remarkable feat of crossing the river and the
-fine leadership of General Haig in the dangerous position in which he
-found himself. It has been suggested that the single unbroken bridge
-by which he crossed may have been a trap purposely laid by the
-Germans, whose plans miscarried owing to the simultaneous forcing of
-the river at many other points. As it was, the position of the First
-Corps was a very difficult one, and a reverse might have become an
-absolute disaster. It was impossible for General French to avoid
-this risk, for since the weather precluded all air reconnaissance, it
-was only by pushing his Army {184} across that he could be sure of
-the enemy's dispositions. The net result was one more demonstration
-upon both sides that the defensive force has so great an advantage
-under modern conditions that if there be moderate equality of
-numbers, and if the flanks of each be guarded, a condition of
-stalemate will invariably ensue, until the campaign is decided by
-economic causes or by military movements in some other part of the
-field of operations.
-
-There is ample evidence that for the time the German Army, though
-able with no great effort to hold the extraordinarily strong position
-which had been prepared for it, was actually in very bad condition.
-Large new drafts had been brought out, which had not yet been
-assimilated by the army. The resistance of Maubeuge had blocked one
-of their supply railroads, and for some time the commissariat had
-partially broken down. Above all, they were mentally depressed by
-meeting such resistance where they had been led to expect an easy
-victory, by their forced retreat when almost within sight of Paris,
-and by their losses, which had been enormous. In spite of their own
-great superiority in heavy guns, the French light field-pieces had
-controlled the battlefields. There is ample evidence in the letters
-which have been intercepted, apart from the statements and appearance
-of the prisoners, to show the want and depression which prevailed.
-This period, however, may be said to mark the nadir of the German
-fortunes in this year. The fall of Maubeuge improved their supplies
-of every sort, their reserves and Landwehr got broken in by the war
-of the trenches, and the eventual fall of Antwerp and invasion of
-Western Belgium gave them that moral stimulus which they badly needed.
-
-{185}
-
-Some wit amongst the officers has described the war as "months of
-boredom broken by moments of agony." It is the duty of the
-chronicler to record, even if he attempts to alleviate, the former,
-for the most monotonous procession of events form integral parts of
-the great whole. The perusal of a great number of diaries and
-experiences leaves a vague and disconnected recollection behind it of
-personal escapes, of the terror of high explosives, of the excellence
-of the rear services of the Army, of futile shellings--with an
-occasional tragic mishap, where some group of men far from the front
-were suddenly, by some freak of fate, blown to destruction,--of the
-discomforts of wet trenches, and the joys of an occasional relief in
-the villages at the rear. Here and there, however, in the monotony
-of what had now become a mutual siege, there stand out some episodes
-or developments of a more vital character, which will be recorded in
-their sequence.
-
-It may be conjectured that, up to the period of the definite
-entrenchment of the two armies, the losses of the enemy were not
-greater than our own. It is in the attack that losses are incurred,
-and the attack had, for the most part, been with us. The heavier
-guns of the Germans had also been a factor in their favour. From the
-18th onwards, however, the weekly losses of the enemy must have been
-very much greater than ours, since continually, night and day, they
-made onslaughts, which attained some partial and temporary success
-upon the 20th, but which on every other occasion were blown back by
-the rifle-fire with which they were met. So mechanical and
-half-hearted did they at last become that they gave the impression
-that those who made them had no hope of {186} success, and that they
-were only done at the bidding of some imperious or imperial voice
-from the distance. In these attacks, though any one of them may have
-only furnished a few hundred casualties, the total effect spread over
-several weeks must have equalled that of a very great battle, and
-amounted, since no progress was ever made, to a considerable defeat.
-
-Thus on September 19 there was a succession of attacks, made with
-considerable vivacity and proportional loss. About 4 P.M. one
-developed in front of the 4th and 6th Brigades of the First Corps,
-but was speedily stopped. An hour later another one burst forth upon
-the 7th and 9th Brigades of the Second Corps, with the same result.
-The artillery fire was very severe all day and the broad valley was
-arched from dawn to dusk by the flying shell. The weather was still
-detestable, and a good many were reported ill from the effects of
-constant wet and cold.
-
-The 20th was the date of two separate attacks, one of which involved
-some hard fighting and considerable loss. The first, at eight in the
-morning, was upon Shaw's 9th Brigade and was driven off without great
-difficulty. The second was the more serious and demands some fuller
-detail.
-
-[Sidenote: Attack upon the West Yorks.]
-
-On the arrival of the Sixth Division upon the 18th, Sir John French
-had determined to hold them in reserve and to use them to relieve, in
-turn, each of the brigades which had been so hard-worked during the
-previous week. Of these, there was none which needed and deserved a
-rest more than Bulfin's 2nd Brigade, which, after their attack upon
-the Chemin-des-dames upon the 14th, had made and held the trenches
-which formed both the extreme right and the advanced point of the
-British line. For nearly a {187} week these men of iron had lain
-where the battle had left them. With the object of relieving them,
-the 18th Brigade (Congreve's) of the Sixth Division was ordered to
-take their places. The transfer was successfully effected at night,
-but the newcomers, who had only arrived two days before from England,
-found themselves engaged at once in a very serious action. It may
-have been coincidence, or it may have been that with their remarkable
-system of espionage the Germans learned that new troops had taken the
-place of those whose mettle they had tested so often; but however
-this may be, they made a vigorous advance upon the afternoon of
-September 20, coming on so rapidly and in such numbers that they
-drove out the occupants both of the front British trenches--which
-were manned by three companies of the 1st West Yorkshires--and the
-adjoining French trench upon the right, which was held by the Turcos.
-The West Yorkshires were overwhelmed and enfiladed with machine-guns,
-a number were shot down, and others were taken prisoners.
-
-[Sidenote: Counter-attack by Congreve's 18th Brigade.]
-
-Fortunately, the rest of the brigade were in immediate support, and
-orders were given by General Congreve to advance and to regain the
-ground that had been lost. The rush up the hill was carried out by
-the 2nd Notts and Derby Regiment (Sherwood Foresters) in the centre,
-with the remainder of the West Yorks upon their right, and the 2nd
-Durham Light Infantry upon their left. They were supported by the
-1st East Yorks and by the 2nd Sussex, who had just been called out of
-the line for a rest. The 4th Irish Dragoon Guards at a gallop at
-first, and then dismounting with rifle and bayonet, were in the
-forefront of the fray. The advance was {188} over half a mile of
-ground, most of which was clear of any sort of cover, but it was
-magnificently carried out and irresistible in its impetus. All the
-regiments lost heavily, but all reached their goal. Officers were
-hit again and again, but staggered on with their men. Captain
-Popham, of the Sherwood Foresters, is said to have carried six wounds
-with him up the slope. Fifteen officers and 250 men were shot down,
-but the lost trench was carried at the point of the bayonet and the
-whole position re-established. The total casualties were 1364, more
-than half of which fell upon the West Yorkshires, while the majority
-of the others were Sherwood Foresters, East Yorkshires, and Durhams.
-Major Robb, of the latter regiment, was among those who fell. The
-Germans did not hold the trenches for an hour, and yet the engagement
-may be counted as a success for them, since our losses were certainly
-heavier than theirs. There was no gain, however, in ground. The
-action was more than a mere local attack, and the British line was in
-danger of being broken had it not been for the determined
-counter-attack of the 18th Brigade and of the Irish dragoons. To the
-north of this main attack there was another subsidiary movement on
-the Beaulne ridge, in which the 5th and 6th Brigades were sharply
-engaged. The 1st King's, the 2nd H.L.I., and the 2nd Worcesters all
-sustained some losses.
-
-About this period both the British and the French armies began to
-strengthen themselves with those heavy guns in which they had been so
-completely overweighted by their enemy. On the 20th the French in
-the neighbourhood of our lines received twelve long-range cannon,
-firing a 35 lb. shell a distance of twelve kilometres. Three days
-later the {189} British opened fire with four new batteries of
-six-inch howitzers. From this time onwards there was no such great
-disparity in the heavy artillery, and the wounded from the monster
-shells of the enemy had at least the slight solace that their fate
-was not unavenged. The expenditure of shells, however, was still at
-the rate of ten German to one of the Allies. If the war was not won
-it was no fault of Krupp and the men of Essen. In two weeks the
-British lost nearly 3000 men from shell-fire.
-
-[Sidenote: Rheims Cathedral.]
-
-It was at this time, September 20, that the Germans put a climax upon
-the long series of outrages and vandalisms of which their troops had
-been guilty by the bombardment of Rheims Cathedral, the Westminster
-Abbey of France. The act seems to have sprung from deliberate
-malice, for though it was asserted afterwards that the tower had been
-used as an artillery observation point, this is in the highest degree
-improbable, since the summit of the ridge upon the French side is
-available for such a purpose. The cathedral was occupied at the time
-by a number of German wounded, who were the sufferers by the
-barbarity of their fellow-countrymen. The incident will always
-remain as a permanent record of the value of that Kultur over which
-we have heard such frantic boasts. The records of the French,
-Belgian, and British Commissions upon the German atrocities,
-reinforced by the recollection of the burned University of Louvain
-and the shattered Cathedral of Rheims, will leave a stain upon the
-German armies which can never be erased. Their conduct is the more
-remarkable, since the invasion of 1870 was conducted with a stern but
-rigid discipline, which won the acknowledgment of the world. In
-{190} spite of all the material progress and the superficial show of
-refinement, little more than a generation seems to have separated
-civilisation from primitive barbarity, which attained such a pitch
-that no arrangement could be made by which the wounded between the
-lines could be brought in. Such was the code of a nominally
-Christian nation in the year 1914.
-
-Up to now the heavier end of the fighting had been borne by Haig's
-First Corps, but from the 20th onwards the Second and Third sustained
-the impact. The action just described, in which the West Yorkshires
-suffered so severely, was fought mainly by the 18th Brigade of
-Pulteney's Third Corps. On the 21st it was the turn of the Second
-Corps. During the night the 1st Wiltshire battalion of McCracken's
-7th Brigade was attacked, and making a strong counter-attack in the
-morning they cleared a wood with the bayonet, and advanced the
-British line at that point. A subsequent attack upon the same
-brigade was repulsed. How heavy the losses had been in the wear and
-tear of six days' continual trench work is shown by the fact that
-when on this date the 9th Brigade (Shaw's) was taken back for a rest
-it had lost 30 officers and 860 men since crossing the Aisne.
-
-The German heavy guns upon the 21st set fire to the village of Missy,
-but failed to dislodge the 1st East Surreys who held it. This
-battalion, in common with the rest of Ferguson's Division, were
-dominated night and day by a plunging fire from above. It is worth
-recording that in spite of the strain, the hardship, and the wet
-trenches, the percentage of serious sickness among the troops was
-lower than the normal rate of a garrison town. A few cases of {191}
-enteric appeared about this time, of which six were in one company of
-the Coldstream Guards. It is instructive to note that in each case
-the man belonged to the uninoculated minority.
-
-[Sidenote: Spies.]
-
-A plague of spies infested the British and French lines at this
-period, and their elaborate telephone installations, leading from
-haystacks or from cellars, showed the foresight of the enemy. Some
-of these were German officers, who bravely took their lives in their
-hands from the patriotic motive of helping their country. Others,
-alas, were residents who had sold their souls for German gold. One
-such--a farmer--was found with a telephone within his house and no
-less a sum than a thousand pounds in specie. Many a battery
-concealed in a hollow, and many a convoy in a hidden road, were
-amazed by the accuracy of a fire which was really directed, not from
-the distant guns, but from some wayside hiding-place. Fifteen of
-these men were shot and the trouble abated.
-
-The attacks upon the British trenches, which had died down for
-several days, were renewed with considerable vigour upon September
-26. The first, directed against the 1st Queen's, was carried out by
-a force of about 1000 men, who advanced in close order, and, coming
-under machine-gun fire, were rapidly broken up. The second was made
-by a German battalion debouching from the woods in front of the 1st
-South Wales Borderers. This attack penetrated the line at one point,
-the left company of the regiment suffering severely, with all its
-officers down. The reserve company, with the help of the 2nd Welsh
-Regiment, retook the trenches after a hot fight, which ended by the
-wood being cleared. {192} The Germans lost heavily in this struggle,
-80 of them being picked up on the very edge of the trench. The
-Borderers also had numerous casualties, which totalled up to 7
-officers and 182 men, half of whom were actually killed.
-
-The Army was now in a very strong position, for the trenches were so
-well constructed that unless a shell by some miracle went right in,
-no harm would result. The weather had become fine once more, and the
-flying service relieved the anxieties of the commanders as to a
-massed attack. The heavy artillery of the Allies was also improving
-from day to day, especially the heavy British howitzers, aided by
-aeroplane observers with a wireless installation. On the other hand,
-the guns were frequently hit by the enemy's fire. The 22nd R.F.A.
-lost a gun, the 50th three guns, and other batteries had similar
-losses. Concealment had not yet been reduced to a science.
-
-At this period the enemy seems to have realised that his attacks,
-whether against the British line or against the French armies which
-flanked it, and had fought throughout with equal tenacity, were a
-mere waste of life. The assaults died away or became mere
-demonstrations. Early in October the total losses of the Army upon
-the Aisne had been 561 officers and 12,980 men, a proportion which
-speaks well for the coolness and accuracy of the enemy's
-sharp-shooters, while it exhibits our own forgetfulness of the
-lessons of the African War, where we learned that the officer should
-be clad and armed so like the men as to be indistinguishable even at
-short ranges. Of this large total the Second Corps lost 136 officers
-and 3095 men, and the First Corps 348 officers and {193} 6073 men,
-the remaining 77 officers and 3812 men being from the Third Corps and
-the cavalry.
-
-[Sidenote: The siege and fall of Antwerp.]
-
-It was at this period that a great change came over both the object
-and the locality of the operations. This change depended upon two
-events which had occurred far to the north, and reacted upon the
-great armies locked in the long grapple of the Aisne. The first of
-these controlling circumstances was that, by the movement of the old
-troops and the addition of new ones, each army had sought to turn the
-flank of the other in the north, until the whole centre of gravity of
-the war was transferred to that region. A new French army under
-General Castelnau, whose fine defence of Nancy had put him in the
-front of French leaders, had appeared on the extreme left wing of the
-Allies, only to be countered by fresh bodies of Germans, until the
-ever-extending line lengthened out to the manufacturing districts of
-Lens and Lille, where amid pit-shafts and slag-heaps the cavalry of
-the French and the Germans tried desperately to get round each
-other's flank. The other factor was the fall of Antwerp, which had
-released very large bodies of Germans, who were flooding over Western
-Belgium, and, with the help of great new levies from Germany,
-carrying the war to the sand-dunes of the coast. The operations
-which brought about this great change open up a new chapter in the
-history of the war. The actual events which culminated in the fall
-of Antwerp may be very briefly handled, since, important as they
-were, they were not primarily part of the British task, and hence
-hardly come within the scope of this narrative.
-
-The Belgians, after the evacuation of Brussels in August, had
-withdrawn their army into the widespread {194} fortress of Antwerp,
-from which they made frequent sallies upon the Germans who were
-garrisoning their country. Great activity was shown and several
-small successes were gained, which had the useful effect of detaining
-two corps which might have been employed upon the Aisne. Eventually,
-towards the end of September, the Germans turned their attention
-seriously to the reduction of the city, with a well-founded
-confidence that no modern forts could resist the impact of their
-enormous artillery. They drove the garrison within the lines, and
-early in October opened a bombardment upon the outer forts with such
-results that it was evidently only a matter of days before they would
-fall and the fine old city be faced with the alternative of surrender
-or destruction. The Spanish fury of Parma's pikemen would be a small
-thing compared to the _furor Teutonicus_ working its evil deliberate
-will upon town-hall or cathedral, with the aid of fire-disc,
-petrol-spray, or other products of culture. The main problem before
-the Allies, if the town could not be saved, was to ensure that the
-Belgian army should be extricated and that nothing of military value
-which could be destroyed should be left to the invaders. No troops
-were available for a rescue, for the French and British old
-formations were already engaged, while the new ones were not yet
-ready for action. In these circumstances, a resolution was come to
-by the British leaders which was bold to the verge of rashness and so
-chivalrous as to be almost quixotic. It was determined to send out
-at the shortest notice a naval division, one brigade of which
-consisted of marines, troops who are second to none in the country's
-service, while the other two brigades were young {195} amateur sailor
-volunteers, most of whom had only been under arms for a few weeks.
-It was an extraordinary experiment, as testing how far the average
-sport-loving, healthy-minded young Briton needs only his equipment to
-turn him into a soldier who, in spite of all rawness and
-inefficiency, can still affect the course of a campaign. This
-strange force, one-third veterans and two-thirds practically
-civilians, was hurried across to do what it could for the failing
-town, and to demonstrate to Belgium how real was the sympathy which
-prompted us to send all that we had. A reinforcement of a very
-different quality was dispatched a few days later in the shape of the
-Seventh Division of the Regular Army, with the Third Division of
-Cavalry. These fine troops were too late, however, to save the city,
-and soon found themselves in a position where it needed all their
-hardihood to save themselves.
-
-The Marine Brigade of the Naval Division under General Paris was
-dispatched from England in the early morning and reached Antwerp
-during the night of October 3. They were about 2000 in number.
-Early next morning they were out in the trenches, relieving some
-weary Belgians. The Germans were already within the outer enceinte
-and drawing close to the inner. For forty-eight hours they held the
-line in the face of heavy shelling. The cover was good and the
-losses were not heavy. At the end of that time the Belgian troops,
-who had been a good deal worn by their heroic exertions, were unable
-to sustain the German pressure, and evacuated the trenches on the
-flank of the British line. The brigade then fell back to a reserve
-position in front of the town.
-
-{196}
-
-On the night of the 5th the two other brigades of the division,
-numbering some 5000 amateur sailors, arrived in Antwerp, and the
-whole force assembled on the new line of defence. Mr. Winston
-Churchill showed his gallantry as a man, and his indiscretion as a
-high official, whose life was of great value to his country by
-accompanying the force from England. The bombardment was now very
-heavy, and the town was on fire in several places. The equipment of
-the British left much to be desired, and their trenches were as
-indifferent as their training. None the less they played the man and
-lived up to the traditions of that great service upon whose threshold
-they stood. For three days these men, who a few weeks before had
-been anything from schoolmasters to tram-conductors, held their
-perilous post. They were very raw, but they possessed a great asset
-in their officers, who were usually men of long service. But neither
-the lads of the naval brigades nor the war-worn and much-enduring
-Belgians could stop the mouths of those inexorable guns. On the 8th
-it was clear that the forts could no longer be held. The British
-task had been to maintain the trenches which connected the forts with
-each other, but if the forts went it was clear that the trenches must
-be outflanked and untenable. The situation, therefore, was hopeless,
-and all that remained was to save the garrison and leave as little as
-possible for the victors. Some thirty or forty German merchant ships
-in the harbour were sunk and the great petrol tanks were set on fire.
-By the light of the flames the Belgian and British forces made their
-way successfully out of the town, and the good service rendered later
-by our Allies upon the Yser and elsewhere is the best justification
-of the {197} policy which made us strain every nerve in order to do
-everything which could have a moral or material effect upon them in
-their darkest hour. Had the British been able to get away unscathed,
-the whole operation might have been reviewed with equanimity if not
-with satisfaction, but, unhappily, a grave misfortune, arising rather
-from bad luck than from the opposition of the enemy, came upon the
-retreating brigades, so that very many of our young sailors after
-their one week of crowded life came to the end of their active
-service for the war.
-
-On leaving Antwerp it had been necessary to strike to the north in
-order to avoid a large detachment of the enemy who were said to be
-upon the line of the retreat. The boundary between Holland and
-Belgium is at this point very intricate, with no clear line of
-demarcation, and a long column of British somnambulists, staggering
-along in the dark after so many days in which they had for the most
-part never enjoyed two consecutive hours of sleep, wandered over the
-fatal line and found themselves in firm but kindly Dutch custody for
-the rest of the war. Some fell into the hands of the enemy, but the
-great majority were interned. These men belonged chiefly to three
-battalions of the 1st Brigade. The 2nd Brigade, with one battalion
-of the 1st, and the greater part of the Marines, made their way to
-the trains at St. Gilles-Waes, and were able to reach Ostend in
-safety. The remaining battalion of Marines, with a number of
-stragglers of the other brigades, were cut off at Morbede by the
-Germans, and about half of them were taken, while the rest fought
-their way through in the darkness and joined their comrades. The
-total losses of the British in the whole {198} misadventure from
-first to last were about 2500 men--a high price, and yet not too high
-when weighed against the results of their presence at Antwerp. On
-October 10 the Germans under General Von Beseler occupied the city.
-Mr. Powell, who was present, testifies that 60,000 marched into the
-town, and that they were all troops of the active army.
-
-It has already been described how the northern ends of the two
-contending armies were endeavouring to outflank each other, and there
-seemed every possibility that this process would be carried out until
-each arrived at the coast. Early in October Sir John French
-represented to General Joffre that it would be well that the British
-Army should be withdrawn from the Aisne and take its position to the
-left of the French forces, a move which would shorten its line of
-communications very materially, and at the same time give it the task
-of defending the Channel coast. General Joffre agreed to the
-proposition, and the necessary steps were at once taken to put it
-into force. The Belgians had in the meanwhile made their way behind
-the line of the Yser, where a formidable position had been prepared.
-There, with hardly a day of rest, they were ready to renew the
-struggle with the ferocious ravagers of their country. The Belgian
-Government had been moved to France, and their splendid King, who
-will live in history as the most heroic and chivalrous figure of the
-war, continued by his brave words and noble example to animate the
-spirits of his countrymen.
-
-From this time Germany was in temporary occupation of all Belgium,
-save only the one little corner, the defence of which will be
-recorded for ever. Little did she profit by her crime or by the
-excuses and {199} forged documents by which she attempted to justify
-her action. She entered the land in dishonour and dishonoured will
-quit it. William, Germany, and Belgium are an association of words
-which will raise in the minds of posterity all that Parma, Spain, and
-the Lowlands have meant to us--an episode of oppression, cruelty, and
-rapacity, which fresh generations may atone for but can never efface.
-
-
-
-
-{200}
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE LA BASSÉE--ARMENTIÈRES OPERATIONS
-
-(From October 11 to October 31, 1914)
-
-The great battle line--Advance of Second Corps--Death of General
-Hamilton--The farthest point--Fate of the 2nd Royal Irish--The Third
-Corps--Exhausted troops--First fight of Neuve Chapelle--The Indians
-take over--The Lancers at Warneton--Pulteney's operations--Action of
-Le Gheir.
-
-
-In accordance with the new plans, the great transference began upon
-October 3. It was an exceedingly difficult problem, since an army of
-more than 100,000 men had to be gradually extricated by night from
-trenches which were often not more than a hundred yards from the
-enemy, while a second army of equal numbers had to be substituted in
-its place. The line of retreat was down an open slope, across
-exposed bridges, and up the slope upon the southern bank. Any alarm
-to the Germans might have been fatal, since a vigorous night attack
-in the middle of the operation would have been difficult to resist,
-and even an artillery bombardment must have caused great loss of
-life. The work of the Staff in this campaign has been worthy of the
-regimental officers and of the men. Everything went without a hitch.
-The Second Cavalry Division (Gough's) went first, followed {201}
-immediately by the First (De Lisle's). Then the infantry was
-withdrawn, the Second Corps being the vanguard; the Third Corps
-followed, and the First was the last to leave. The Second Corps
-began to clear from its trenches on October 3-4, and were ready for
-action on the Aire-Bethune line upon October 11. The Third Corps was
-very little behind it, and the First had reached the new
-battle-ground upon the 19th. Cavalry went by road; infantry marched
-part of the way, trained part of the way, and did the last lap very
-often in motor-buses. One way or another the men were got across,
-the Aisne trenches were left for ever, and a new phase of the war had
-begun. From the chalky uplands and the wooded slopes there was a
-sudden change to immense plains of clay, with slow, meandering,
-ditch-like streams, and all the hideous features of a great
-coal-field added to the drab monotony of Nature. No scenes could be
-more different, but the same great issue of history and the same old
-problem of trench and rifle were finding their slow solution upon
-each. The stalemate of the Aisne was for the moment set aside, and
-once again we had reverted to the old position where the ardent
-Germans declared, "This way we shall come," and the Allies, "Not a
-mile, save over our bodies."
-
-[Sidenote: The great battle line.]
-
-The narrator is here faced with a considerable difficulty in his
-attempt to adhere closely to truth and yet to make his narrative
-intelligible to the lay reader. We stand upon the edge of a great
-battle. If all the operations which centred at Ypres, but which
-extend to the Yser Canal upon the north and to La Bassée at the
-south, be grouped into one episode, it becomes the greatest clash of
-arms ever seen up {202} to that hour upon the globe, involving a
-casualty list--Belgian, French, British, and German--which could by
-no means be computed as under 250,000, and probably over 300,000 men.
-It was fought, however, over an irregular line, which is roughly
-forty miles from north to south, while it lasted, in its active form,
-from October 12 to November 20 before it settled down to the
-inevitable siege stage. Thus both in time and in space it presents
-difficulties which make a concentrated, connected, and intelligible
-narrative no easy task. In order to attempt this, it is necessary
-first to give a general idea of what the British Army, in conjunction
-with its Allies, was endeavouring to do, and, secondly, to show how
-the operations affected each corps in its turn.
-
-During the operations of the Aisne the French had extended the Allied
-line far to the north in the hope of outflanking the Germans. The
-new Tenth French Army, under General Foch, formed the extreme left of
-this vast manoeuvre, and it was supported on its left by the French
-cavalry. The German right had lengthened out, however, to meet every
-fresh extension of the French, and their cavalry had been
-sufficiently numerous and alert to prevent the French cavalry from
-getting round. Numerous skirmishes had ended in no definite result.
-It was at this period that it occurred, as already stated, to Sir
-John French that to bring the whole British Army round to the north
-of the line would both shorten very materially his communications and
-would prolong the line to an extent which might enable him to turn
-the German flank and make their whole position impossible. General
-Joffre having endorsed these views, Sir John took the steps which we
-have already seen. {203} The British movement was, therefore, at the
-outset an aggressive one. How it became defensive as new factors
-intruded themselves, and as a result of the fall of Antwerp, will be
-shown at a later stage of this account.
-
-As the Second Corps arrived first upon the scene it will be proper to
-begin with some account of its doings from October 12, when it went
-into action, until the end of the month, when it found itself brought
-to a standstill by superior forces and placed upon the defensive.
-The doings of the Third Corps during the same period will be
-interwoven with those of the Second, since they were in close
-co-operation; and, finally, the fortunes of the First Corps will be
-followed and the relation shown between its doings and those of the
-newly arrived Seventh Division, which had fallen back from the
-vicinity of Antwerp and turned at bay near Ypres upon the pursuing
-Germans. Coming from different directions, all these various bodies
-were destined to be formed into one line, cemented together by their
-own dismounted cavalry and by French reinforcements, so as to lay an
-unbroken breakwater before the great German flood.
-
-The task of the Second Corps was to get into touch with the left
-flank of the Tenth French Army in the vicinity of La Bassée, and then
-to wheel round its own left so as to turn the position of those
-Germans who were facing our Allies. The line of the Bethune-Lille
-road was to be the hinge, connecting the two armies and marking the
-turning-point for the British. On the 11th Gough's Second Cavalry
-Division was clearing the woods in front of the Aire-Bethune Canal,
-which marked the line of the Second Corps. By {204} evening Gough
-had connected up the Third Division of the Second Corps with the
-Sixth Division of the Third Corps, which was already at Hazebrouck.
-On the 12th the Third Division crossed the canal, followed by the
-Fifth Division, with the exception of the 13th Brigade, which
-remained to the south of it. Both divisions advanced more or less
-north before swinging round to almost due east in their outflanking
-movement. The rough diagram gives an idea of the point from which
-they started and the positions reached at various dates before they
-came to an equilibrium. There were many weary stages, however,
-between the outset and the fulfilment, and the final results were
-destined to be barren as compared with the exertions and the losses
-involved. None the less it was, as it proved, an essential part of
-that great operation by which the British--with the help of their
-good allies--checked the German advance upon Calais in October and
-November, even as they had helped to head them off from Paris in
-August and September. During these four months the little British
-Army, far from being negligible, as some critics had foretold would
-be the case in a Continental war, was absolutely vital in holding the
-Allied line and taking the edge off the hacking German sword.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{205}
-
-[Illustration: Diagram to illustrate operations of Smith-Dorrien's
-2nd. Corps & Pulteney's 3rd Corps from Oct. 11 to Oct 19, 1914.]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The Third Corps, which had detrained at St. Omer and moved to
-Hazebrouck, was intended to move in touch with the Second, prolonging
-its line to the north. The First and Second British Cavalry
-Divisions, now under the command of De Lisle and of Gough, with
-Allenby as chief, had a role of their own to play, and the space
-between the Second and Third Corps was now filled up by a French
-Cavalry Division under Conneau, a whole-hearted soldier always ready
-{206} to respond to any call. There was no strong opposition yet in
-front of the Third Corps, but General Pulteney moved rapidly
-forwards, brushed aside all resistance, and seized the town of
-Bailleul. A German position in front of the town, held by cavalry
-and infantry without guns, was rushed by a rapid advance of Haldane's
-10th Infantry Brigade, the 2nd Seaforths particularly distinguishing
-themselves, though the 1st Warwicks and 1st Irish Fusiliers had also
-a good many losses, the Irishmen clearing the trenches to the cry of
-"Faugh-a-Ballagh!" which has sounded so often upon battlefields of
-old. The 10th Brigade was on the left of the corps, and in touch
-with the Second Cavalry Division to the north. The whole action,
-with its swift advance and moderate losses, was a fine vindication of
-British infantry tactics. On the evening of October 15 the Third
-Corps had crossed the Lys, and on the 18th they extended from
-Warneton in the north to almost within touch of the position of the
-Second Corps at Aubers upon the same date.
-
-[Sidenote: Advance of Second Corps.]
-
-The country to the south in which the Second Corps was advancing upon
-October 12 was an extraordinarily difficult one, which offered many
-advantages to the defence over the attack. It was so flat that it
-was impossible to find places for artillery observation, and it was
-intersected with canals, high hedgerows, and dykes, which formed
-ready-made trenches. The Germans were at first not in strength, and
-consisted for the most part of dismounted cavalry drawn from four
-divisions, but from this time onwards there was a constant fresh
-accession of infantry and guns. They disputed with great skill and
-energy every position which could be defended, and the {207} British
-advance during the day, though steady, was necessarily slow. Every
-hamlet, hedgerow, and stream meant a separate skirmish. The troops
-continually closed ranks, advanced, extended, and attacked from
-morning to night, sleeping where they had last fought. There was
-nothing that could be called a serious engagement, and yet the
-losses--almost entirely from the Third Division--amounted to 300 for
-the day, the heaviest sufferers being the 2nd Royal Scots.
-
-On the next day, the 13th, the corps swung round its left so as to
-develop the turning movement already described. Its front of advance
-was about eight miles, and it met resistance which made all progress
-difficult. Again the 8th Brigade, especially the Royal Scots and 4th
-Middlesex, lost heavily. So desperate was the fighting that the
-Royal Scots had 400 casualties including 9 officers, and the
-Middlesex fared little better. The principal fighting, however, fell
-late in the evening upon the 15th Brigade (Gleichen's), who were on
-the right of the line and in touch with the Bethune Canal. The
-enemy, whose line of resistance had been considerably thickened by
-the addition of several battalions of Jaeger and part of the
-Fourteenth Corps, made a spirited counter-attack on this portion of
-the advance. The 1st Bedfords were roughly handled and driven back,
-with the result that the 1st Dorsets, who were stationed at a bridge
-over the canal near Givenchy, found their flanks exposed and
-sustained heavy losses, amounting to 400 men, including Major Roper.
-Colonel Bols, of the same regiment, enjoyed one crowded hour of
-glorious life, for he was wounded, captured, and escaped all on the
-same evening. It was in this {208} action also that Major Vandeleur
-was wounded and captured.[1] A section of guns which was involved in
-the same dilemma as the Dorsets had to be abandoned after every
-gunner had fallen. The 15th Brigade was compelled to fall back for
-half a mile and entrench itself for the night. On the left the 7th
-Brigade (McCracken's) had some eighty casualties in crossing the Lys,
-and a detachment of Northumberland Fusiliers, who covered their left
-flank, came under machine-gun fire, which struck down their adjutant,
-Captain Herbert, and a number of men. Altogether the losses on this
-day amounted to about twelve hundred men.
-
-
-[1] Major Vandeleur was the officer who afterwards escaped from
-Crefeld and brought back with him a shocking account of the German
-treatment of our prisoners. Though a wounded man, the Major was
-kicked by the direct command of one German officer, and his overcoat
-was taken from him in bitter weather by another.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Death of General Hamilton.]
-
-On the 14th the Second Corps continued its slow advance in the same
-direction. Upon this day the Third Division sustained a grievous
-loss in the shape of its commander, General Sir Hubert Hamilton, who
-was standing conversing with the quiet nonchalance which was
-characteristic of him, when a shell burst above him and a shrapnel
-bullet struck him on the temple, killing him at once. He was a grand
-commander, beloved by his men, and destined for the highest had he
-lived. He was buried that night after dark in a village churchyard.
-There was an artillery attack by the Germans during the service, and
-the group of silent officers, weary from the fighting line, who stood
-with bowed heads round the grave, could hardly hear the words of the
-chaplain for the whiz and crash of the shells. It was a proper
-ending for a soldier.
-
-{209}
-
-His division was temporarily taken over by General Colin Mackenzie.
-On this date the 13th Brigade, on the south of the canal, was
-relieved by French troops, so that henceforward all the British were
-to the north. For the three preceding days this brigade had done
-heavy work, the pressure of the enemy falling particularly upon the
-2nd Scottish Borderers, who lost Major Allen and a number of other
-officers and men.
-
-The 15th was a day of spirited advance, the Third Division offering
-sacrifice in the old warrior fashion to the shade of its dead leader.
-Guns were brought up into the infantry line and the enemy was smashed
-out of entrenched positions and loopholed villages in spite of a most
-manful resistance. The soldiers carried long planks with them and
-threw them over the dykes on their advance. Mile after mile the
-Germans were pushed back, until they were driven off the high road
-which connects Estaires with La Bassée. The 1st Northumberland and
-4th Royal Fusiliers of the 9th Brigade, and the 2nd Royal Scots and
-4th Middlesex of the 8th, particularly distinguished themselves in
-this day of hard fighting. By the night of the 15th the corps had
-lost 90 officers and 2500 men in the four days, the disproportionate
-number of officers being due to the broken nature of the fighting,
-which necessitated the constant leading of small detachments. The
-German resistance continued to be admirable.
-
-On the 16th the slow wheeling movement of the Second Corps went
-steadily though slowly forward, meeting always the same stubborn
-resistance. The British were losing heavily by the incessant
-fighting, but so were the Germans, and it was becoming a {210}
-question which could stand punishment longest. In the evening the
-Third Division was brought to a stand by the village of Aubers, which
-was found to be strongly held. The Fifth Division was instructed to
-mark time upon the right, so as to form the pivot upon which all the
-rest of the corps could swing round in their advance on La Bassée.
-At this date the Third Corps was no great distance to the north, and
-the First Corps was detraining from the Aisne. As the Seventh
-Division with Byng's Third Cavalry Division were reported to be in
-touch with the other forces in the north, the concentration of the
-British Army was approaching a successful issue. The weather up to
-now during all the operations which have been described was wet and
-misty, limiting the use of artillery and entirely preventing that of
-aircraft.
-
-[Sidenote: The farthest point.]
-
-On the 17th the advance was resumed and was destined to reach the
-extreme point which it attained for many a long laborious month.
-This was the village of Herlies, north-east of La Bassée, which was
-attacked in the evening by Shaw's 9th Brigade, and was carried in the
-dusk at the point of the bayonet by the 1st Lincolns and the 4th
-Royal Fusiliers. About the same time the Scots Fusiliers and
-Northumberlands had stormed Aubers. The 7th Brigade was less
-fortunate at the adjoining village of Illies, where they failed to
-make a lodgment, but the French cavalry on the extreme left, with the
-help of the 2nd Royal Irish, captured Fromelles. The Fifth Division
-also came forward a little, the right flank still on the canal, but
-the left bending round so as to get to the north of La Bassée. The
-1st Devons, who had taken the place of the Dorsets, {211} pushed
-forward with such fire that they were half a mile ahead of the Army
-and in great danger of being cut off, but by individual coolness and
-resource they managed to get back to safety.
-
-On the 18th, Sir Charles Ferguson, who had done good work with the
-Army from the first gunshot of the war, was promoted to a higher rank
-and the command of the Fifth Division passed over to General Morland.
-Thus both divisions of the Second Corps changed their commanders
-within a week. On this date the infantry of the 14th Brigade, with
-some of the 13th Brigade, were within eight hundred yards of La
-Bassée, but found it so strongly held that it could not be entered,
-the Scottish Borderers losing heavily in a very gallant advance. The
-village of Illies also remained impregnable, being strongly
-entrenched and loopholed. Shaw's 9th Brigade took some of the
-trenches, but found their left flank exposed, so had to withdraw
-nearly half a mile and to entrench. In this little action the 1st
-Royal Scots Fusiliers bore the brunt of the fighting and the losses.
-Eight officers and nearly 200 men of this regiment were killed or
-wounded. A fresh German division came into action this day and their
-artillery was stronger, so that the prospects of future advance were
-not particularly encouraging. The British artillery was worked very
-hard, being overmatched and yet undefeatable. The strain both upon
-the men and the officers was constant, and the observation officers
-showed great daring and tenacity.
-
-[Sidenote: Fate of the 2nd Royal Irish.]
-
-On the 19th neither the Third nor the Fifth Divisions made any
-appreciable progress, but one battalion was heavily engaged and added
-a fresh record to its ancient roll of valour. This was the {212} 2nd
-Royal Irish under Major Daniell, who attacked the village of Le Pilly
-rather forward from the British left in co-operation with the French
-cavalry. The Irish infantry charged over eight hundred yards of
-clear ground, carried the village by storm, and entrenched themselves
-within it. This advance and charge, which was carried out with the
-precision of an Aldershot field day, although 130 men fell during the
-movement, is said by experienced spectators to have been a great feat
-of arms. The 20th saw a strong counter-attack of the Germans, and by
-the evening their two flanks had lapped round Le Pilly, pushing off
-on the one side the French cavalry of Conneau, and on the other a too
-small detachment of the Royal Fusiliers who were flanking the
-Irishmen. All day the defenders of Le Pilly were subjected to a
-terrific shell-fire, and all attempts to get messages to them were
-unavailing. In the evening they were surrounded, and only two or
-three men of the battalion were ever seen again. The gallant Daniell
-fell, and it is on record that his last audible words were a command
-to fix bayonets and fight to the end, the cartridges of the battalion
-being at that time exhausted. A German officer engaged in this
-attack and subsequently taken prisoner has deposed that three German
-battalions attacked the Royal Irish, one in front and one on each
-flank, after they had been heavily bombarded in enfilade. Several
-hundred Irish dead and wounded were taken out of the main trench.
-
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-
-{213}
-
-[Illustration: Southern End of British Line]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-There was now ample evidence that the Germans had received large
-reinforcements, and that their line was too strong to be forced. The
-whole object and character of the operations assumed, therefore, a
-{214} new aspect. The Second and Third Corps had swung round,
-describing an angle of ninety degrees, with its pivot upon the right
-at the La Bassée Canal, and by this movement it had succeeded in
-placing itself upon the flank of the German force which faced the
-Tenth French Army. But there was now no longer any flank, for the
-German reinforcements had enabled them to prolong their line and so
-to turn the action into a frontal attack by the British. Such an
-attack in modern warfare can only hope for success when carried out
-by greatly superior numbers, whereas the Germans were now stronger
-than their assailants, having been joined by one division of the
-Seventh Corps, a brigade of the Third Corps, and the whole of the
-Fourteenth Corps, part of which had already been engaged.
-
-[Sidenote: The Third Corps.]
-
-The increased pressure was being felt by the Third Corps on the Lys,
-as well as by the Second to the south of them; indeed, as only a few
-miles intervened between the two, they may be regarded as one for
-these operations. We have seen that, having taken the town of
-Bailleul, Pulteney's Corps had established itself across the Lys, and
-occupied a line from Warneton to Radinghem upon October 18. The
-latter village had been taken on that day by the 16th Brigade in an
-action in which the 1st Buffs and 2nd York and Lancasters lost
-heavily, the latter being ambushed as it pursued the enemy and losing
-11 officers and 400 men. Colonel Cobbold fell back upon the village
-and held it successfully. Pulteney was now strongly attacked, and
-there was a movement of the Germans on October 20 as if to turn his
-right and slip in between the two British corps. The action was
-carried on into the 21st, the enemy still {215} showing considerable
-energy and strength. The chief German advance during the day was
-north of La Bassée. It came upon the village of Lorgies, which was
-the point where the South Lancashires, of McCracken's 7th Brigade,
-forming the extreme right of the Third Division, were in touch with
-the East Surreys and Duke of Cornwall's of the 14th Brigade, forming
-the extreme left of the Fifth Division. It is necessary to join
-one's flats carefully in the presence of the Germans, for they are
-sharp critics of such matters. In this instance a sudden attack near
-Illies drove in a portion of the 2nd South Lancashires. This attack
-also destroyed the greater part of a company of the 1st Cornwalls in
-support. An ugly gap was left in the line, but the remainder of the
-Cornwalls, with the help of a company of the 1st West Kents and the
-ever-constant artillery, filled it up during the rest of the day, and
-the 2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry took it over the same night, the
-Cornishmen retiring with heavy losses but a great deal of
-compensating glory. The temporary gap in the line exposed the right
-flank of the 3rd Worcesters, who were next to the South Lancashires.
-They lost heavily in killed and wounded, their colonel, Stuart, being
-among the latter, though his injury did not prevent him from
-remaining in the battle line. Apart from this action at Lorgies, the
-19th Brigade (Gordon's), upon the flank of Pulteney's Corps,
-sustained a very heavy attack, being driven back for some distance.
-It had been ordered to occupy Fromelles, and so close the gap which
-existed at that time between the left of the Second and the right of
-the Third Corps, situated respectively at Aubers and Radinghem. The
-chief fighting occurred {216} at the village of Le Maisnil, close to
-Fromelles. This village was occupied by the 2nd Argylls and half the
-1st Middlesex, but they were driven out by a severe shell-fire
-followed by an infantry advance. The brigade fell back in good
-order, the regiments engaged having lost about 300 men. They took up
-a position on the right of the 16th Infantry Brigade at La
-Boutillerie, and there they remained until November 17, one severe
-attack falling upon them on October 29, which is described under that
-date.
-
-On the morning of October 22 the Germans, still very numerous and
-full of fight, made a determined attack upon the Fifth Division,
-occupying the village of Violaines, close to La Bassée. The village
-was held by the 1st Cheshires, who, for the second time in this
-campaign, found themselves in a terribly difficult position. It is
-typical of the insolent high spirits of the men, in spite of all that
-they had endured, that upon the Germans charging forward with a
-war-cry which resembled, "Yip, Yip, Yip!" the British infantry joined
-in with "I-addy-ti-ay!" the whole forming the chorus of a once
-popular Gaiety song. The Cheshires inflicted heavy losses upon the
-stormers with rifle-fire, but were at last driven out, involving in
-their retirement the 1st Dorsets, who had left their own trenches in
-order to help them. Both regiments, but especially the Cheshires,
-had grievous losses, in casualties and prisoners. On advancing in
-pursuit the Germans were strongly counter-attacked by the 2nd
-Manchesters and the 1st Cornwalls, supported by the 3rd Worcesters,
-who, by their steady fire, brought them to a standstill, but were
-unable to recover the ground that had been lost, though the
-Cornwalls, who had {217} been fighting with hardly a pause for
-forty-eight hours, succeeded in capturing one of their machine-guns.
-In the night the British withdrew their line in accordance with the
-general rearrangement to be described. Some rearguard stragglers at
-break of day had the amusing experience of seeing the Germans making
-a valiant and very noisy attack upon the abandoned and empty trenches.
-
-On this date, October 22, not only had Smith-Dorrien experienced this
-hold-up upon his right flank, but his left flank had become more
-vulnerable, because the French had been heavily attacked at
-Fromelles, and had been driven out of that village. An equilibrium
-had been established between attack and defence, and the position of
-the Aisne was beginning to appear once again upon the edge of
-Flanders. General Smith-Dorrien, feeling that any substantial
-advance was no longer to be hoped for under the existing conditions,
-marked down and occupied a strong defensive position, from Givenchy
-on the south to Fauquissart on the north. This involved a retirement
-of the whole corps during the night for a distance of from one to two
-miles, but it gave a connected position with a clear field of fire.
-At the same time the general situation was greatly strengthened by
-the arrival at the front of the Lahore Division of the Indian Army
-under General Watkis. These fine troops were placed in reserve
-behind the Second Corps in the neighbourhood of Locon.
-
-[Sidenote: Exhausted troops.]
-
-It is well to remember at this point what Smith-Dorrien's troops had
-already endured during the two months that the campaign had lasted.
-Taking the strength of the corps at 37,000 men, they had lost,
-roughly, 10,000 men in August, 10,000 in {218} September, and 5000 up
-to date in these actions of October. It is certain that far less
-than 50 per cent of the original officers and men were still with the
-Colours, and drafts can never fully restore the unity and spirit of a
-homogeneous regiment, where every man knows his company leaders and
-his platoon. In addition to this they had now fought night and day
-for nearly a fortnight, with broken and insufficient sleep, laying
-down their rifles to pick up their spades, and then once again
-exchanging spade for rifle, while soaked to the skin with incessant
-fogs and rain, and exposed to that most harassing form of fighting,
-where every clump and hedgerow covers an enemy. They were so
-exhausted that they could hardly be woken up to fight. To say that
-they were now nearing the end of their strength and badly in need of
-a rest is but to say that they were mortal men and had reached the
-physical limits that mortality must impose.
-
-The French cavalry divisions acting as links between Pulteney and
-Smith-Dorrien were now relieved by the 8th (Jullundur) Indian
-Infantry Brigade, containing the 1st Manchesters, 59th (Scinde)
-Rifles, 15th and 47th Sikhs. It may be remarked that each Indian
-brigade is made up of three Indian and one British battalion. This
-change was effected upon October 24, a date which was marked by no
-particular military event save that the Third Division lost for a
-time the services of General Beauchamp Doran, who returned to
-England. General Doran had done great service in leading what was
-perhaps the most hard-worked brigade in a hard-worked division.
-General Bowes took over the command of the 8th Infantry Brigade.
-
-{219}
-
-On the night of October 24 determined attacks were made upon the
-trenches of the Second Corps at the Bois de Biez, near Neuve
-Chapelle, but were beaten off with heavy loss to the enemy, who had
-massed together twelve battalions in order to rush a particular part
-of the position. The main attack fell upon the 1st Wiltshires and
-the 2nd Royal Irish Rifles, belonging to McCracken's 7th Brigade, and
-also upon the 15th Sikhs, who seem to have been the first Indians to
-be seriously engaged, having nearly two hundred casualties. The 8th
-Brigade were also involved in the fight. The Germans had some
-temporary success in the centre of the trenches of the Third
-Division, where, in the darkness, they pushed back the 1st Gordon
-Highlanders, who lost very heavily. As the Highlanders fell back,
-the 2nd Royal Scots, upon their right, swung back its flank
-companies, covered the retirement, and then, straightening their
-ranks again, flung the Germans, at the point of their bayonets, out
-of the trenches. It was one of several remarkable feats which this
-fine battalion has performed in the war. Next morning the captured
-trenches were handed over to the care of the 4th Middlesex.
-
-[Sidenote: First fight of Neuve Chapelle.]
-
-The pressure upon the exhausted troops was extreme upon this day, for
-a very severe attack was made also upon the Fifth Division, holding
-the right of the line. The soldiers, as already shown, were in no
-condition for great exertions, and yet, after their wont, they rose
-grandly to the occasion. The important village of Givenchy, destined
-for many a long month to form the advanced post upon the right of the
-Army, was held by the 1st Norfolks and 1st Devons, who defied all
-efforts of the enemy to dislodge them. {220} Nevertheless, the
-situation was critical and difficult for both divisions, and the only
-available support, the 1st Manchesters from the Lahore Division, were
-pushed up into the fighting line and found themselves instantly
-engaged in the neighbourhood of Givenchy. It was dreadful weather,
-the trenches a quagmire, and the rifle-bolts often clogged with the
-mud. On the 26th Sir John French, realising how great was the task
-with which the weary corps was faced, sent up two batteries of 4.7
-guns, which soon lessened the volume of the German artillery attack.
-At the same time General Maistre, of the Twenty-first French Corps,
-sent two of his batteries and two of his battalions. Thus
-strengthened, there was no further immediate anxiety as to the line
-being broken, especially as upon the 26th Marshal French, carefully
-playing card after card from his not over-strong hand, placed the
-Second Cavalry Division and three more Indian battalions in reserve
-to Smith-Dorrien's corps. The German advance had by no means spent
-itself, as on this day they came to close grips with the 2nd Irish
-Rifles and established themselves firmly in the village of Neuve
-Chapelle, near the centre of the British line, inflicting heavy loss
-upon the Royal Fusiliers, who tried to restore the position. A
-number of attacks were made to regain this village next day, in which
-as strange a medley of troops were employed as could ever before have
-found themselves as comrades in so minor an operation. There were
-South Lancashires, Royal Fusiliers, 9th Bhopal Infantry, 47th Sikhs,
-Chasseurs Alpins, and other units. In spite of--or possibly on
-account of--this international competition the village remained with
-the Germans, who were strongly reinforced, and {221} managed by their
-shell-fire to clear some of the nearest trenches and gain some
-additional ground, hitting the 1st Wiltshires and 2nd Irish Rifles
-hard and making a number of prisoners, two or three hundred in all.
-Again the times had become critical, the more so as the 8th Indian
-Brigade to the north had also been attacked and roughly handled. The
-indomitable Smith-Dorrien was determined to have his village,
-however, and in the neighbouring French cavalry commander, General
-Conneau, he found a worthy colleague who was ready to throw his last
-man into the venture. The Second Cavalry, now under General Mullens,
-was also ready, as our cavalry has always been, to spring in as a
-makeweight when the balance trembled. The German losses were known
-to have been tremendous, and it was hoped that the force of their
-attack was spent. On the 28th the assault was renewed, prefaced by a
-strong artillery preparation, but again it was brought to a
-standstill. The 47th Sikhs fought magnificently from loopholed house
-to house, as did the Indian sappers and miners, while the cavalry
-showed themselves to be admirable infantry at a pinch, but the
-defence was still too strong and the losses too severe, though at one
-time Colonel McMahon, with his Fusiliers, had seized the whole north
-end of the village.
-
-Some 60 officers and 1500 men had fallen in the day's venture,
-including 70 of the cavalry. The night fell with Neuve Chapelle
-still in the hands of the enemy, and the British troops to the north,
-east, and west of it in a semicircle. The 14th Brigade, coming up
-after dark, found the 1st West Kent Regiment reduced to 2 officers
-and 150 men, and the 2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry at about the same
-strength, still holding on {222} to positions which had been
-committed to them three days before. The conduct of these two grand
-regiments upon that and the previous days excited the admiration of
-every one, for, isolated from their comrades, they had beaten off a
-long succession of infantry attacks and had been enfiladed by a most
-severe shell-fire. Second-Lieutenant White, with a still younger
-officer named Russell, formed the whole staff of officers of the West
-Kents. Major Buckle, Captain Legard, and many others having been
-killed or wounded, Penny and Crossley, the two sergeant-majors, did
-great work, and the men were splendid. These shire regiments, raised
-from the very soil of England, reflect most nearly her national
-qualities, and in their stolid invincibility form a fitting framework
-of a great national army. Speaking to the West Kents of this
-episode, General Smith-Dorrien said: "There is one part of the line
-which has never been retaken, because it was never lost. It was the
-particular trenches which your battalion held so grimly during those
-terrific ten days."
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{223}
-
-[Illustration: General View of Seat of Operations.]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-These determined efforts were not spent in vain, for the Germans
-would not bide the other brunt. Early on the 29th the British
-patrols found that Neuve Chapelle had been evacuated by the enemy,
-who must have lost several thousand men in its capture and fine
-subsequent defence. In this village fighting the British were much
-handicapped at this time by the want of high explosive shells to
-destroy the houses. The enemy's artillery made it impossible for the
-British to occupy it, and some time later it reverted to the Germans
-once more, being occupied by the Seventh Westphalian Corps. It was
-made an exceedingly strong advance position by the Germans, {224} but
-it was reoccupied by the British Fourth Corps (Rawlinson's) and the
-Indian Corps (Willcocks') upon March 10 in an assault which lasted
-three days, and involved a loss of 12,000 men to the attackers and at
-least as many to the defenders. This battle will be described among
-the operations of the spring of 1915, but it is mentioned now to show
-how immutable were the lines between these dates.
-
-The southern or La Bassée end of the line had also been attacked upon
-the 28th and 29th, and the 2nd Manchesters driven from their
-trenches, which they instantly regained, killing seventy of the enemy
-and taking a number of prisoners. It was in this action that
-Lieutenant Leach and Sergeant Hogan earned the V.C., capturing a
-trench at the head of ten volunteers and disposing of some fifty
-Germans. Morland's Fifth Division had several other skirmishes
-during these days, in which the Duke of Cornwall's, Manchesters, and
-1st Devons, who had taken the place of the Suffolks in the 14th
-Brigade, were chiefly engaged. The Devons had come late, but they
-had been constantly engaged and their losses were already as great as
-the others. For sixteen days they had held on with desperate
-resolution, their Colonel Gloster and a considerable proportion of
-the officers and men being hit. When they were at last relieved they
-received the applause of the Army. On the whole, the general line
-was held, though the price was often severe. At this period General
-Wing took command of the Third Division instead of General
-Mackenzie--invalided home--the third divisional change within a
-fortnight.
-
-[Sidenote: The Indians take over.]
-
-The arduous month of October was now drawing to a close, and so it
-was hoped were the labours of the {225} weary Second Corps. Already,
-on the top of all their previous casualties, they had lost 360
-officers and 8200 men since on October 12 they had crossed the La
-Bassée Canal. The spirit of the men was unimpaired for the most
-part--indeed, it seemed often to rise with the emergency--but the
-thinning of the ranks, the incessant labour, and the want of sleep
-had produced extreme physical exhaustion. Upon October 29 it was
-determined to take them out of the front line and give them the rest
-which they so badly needed. With this end in view, Sir James
-Willcocks' Indian Corps was moved to the front, and it was gradually
-substituted for the attenuated regiments of the Second Corps in the
-first row of trenches. The greater part of the corps was drawn out
-of the line, leaving two brigades and most of the artillery behind to
-support the Indians. That the latter would have some hard work was
-speedily apparent, as upon this very day the 8th Gurkhas were driven
-out of their trenches. With the support of a British battalion,
-however, and of Vaughan's Indian Rifles they were soon recovered,
-though Colonel Venner of the latter corps fell in the attack. This
-warfare of unseen enemies and enormous explosions was new to the
-gallant Indians, but they soon accommodated themselves to it, and
-moderated the imprudent gallantry which exposed them at first to
-unnecessary loss.
-
-Here, at the end of October, we may leave the Second Corps. It was
-speedily apparent that their services were too essential to be
-spared, and that their rest would be a very nominal one. The Third
-Corps will be treated presently. They did admirably all that came to
-them to do, but they were so placed that both flanks were covered by
-British troops, and they {226} were less exposed to pressure than the
-others. The month closed with this corps and the Indians holding a
-line which extended north and south for about twenty miles from
-Givenchy and Festubert in the south to Warneton in the north. We
-will return to the operations in this region, but must turn back a
-fortnight or so in order to follow the very critical and important
-events which had been proceeding in the north. Before doing so it
-would be well to see what had befallen the cavalry, which, when last
-mentioned, had, upon October 11, cleared the woods in front of the
-Second Corps and connected it up with the right wing of the Third
-Corps. This was carried out by Gough's Second Cavalry Division,
-which was joined next day by De Lisle's First Division, the whole
-under General Allenby. This considerable force moved north upon
-October 12 and 13, pushing back a light fringe of the enemy and
-having one brisk skirmish at Mont des Cats, a small hill, crowned by
-a monastery, where the body of a Prince of Hesse was picked up after
-the action. Still fighting its way, the cavalry moved north to
-Berthen and then turned eastwards towards the Lys to explore the
-strength of the enemy and the passages of the river in that
-direction. Late at night upon the 14th General de Lisle, scouting
-northwards upon a motor-car, met Prince Alexander of Teck coming
-southwards, the first contact with the isolated Seventh Division.
-
-[Sidenote: The Lancers at Warneton.]
-
-On the night of the 16th an attempt was made upon Warneton, where the
-Germans had a bridge over the river, but the village was too strongly
-held. The 3rd Cavalry Brigade was engaged in the enterprise, and the
-16th Lancers was the particular regiment upon whom it fell. The main
-street of the village was {227} traversed by a barricade and the
-houses loopholed. The Germans were driven by the dismounted
-troopers, led by Major Campbell, from the first barricade, but took
-refuge behind a second one, where they were strongly reinforced. The
-village had been set on fire, and the fighting went on by the glare
-of the flames. When the order for retirement was at last given it
-was found that several wounded Lancers had been left close to the
-German barricade. The fire having died down, three of the
-Lancers--Sergeant Glasgow, Corporal Boyton, and Corporal
-Chapman--stole down the dark side of the street in their stockinged
-feet and carried some of their comrades off under the very noses of
-the Germans. Many, however, had to be left behind. It is impossible
-for cavalry to be pushful and efficient without taking constant risks
-which must occasionally materialise. The general effect of the
-cavalry operations was to reconnoitre thoroughly all the west side of
-the river and to show that the enemy were in firm possession of the
-eastern bank.
-
-From this time onwards until the end of the month the cavalry were
-engaged in carrying on the north and south line of defensive
-trenches, which, beginning with the right of the Second Corps (now
-replaced by Indians) at Givenchy, was prolonged by the Third Corps as
-far as Frelingham. There the cavalry took it up and carried it
-through Comines to Wervicq, following the bend of the river. These
-lines were at once strongly attacked, but the dismounted troopers
-held their positions. On October 22 the 12th Lancers were heavily
-assaulted, but with the aid of an enfilading fire from the 5th
-Lancers drove off the enemy. That evening saw four more attacks, all
-of them {228} repulsed, but so serious that Indian troops were
-brought up to support the cavalry. Every day brought its attack
-until they culminated in the great and critical fight from October 30
-to November 2, which will be described later. The line was held,
-though with some loss of ground and occasional setbacks, until
-November 2, when considerable French reinforcements arrived upon the
-scene. It is a fact that for all these weeks the position which was
-held in the face of incessant attack by two weak cavalry divisions
-should have been, and eventually was, held by two army corps.
-
-[Sidenote: Pulteney's operations.]
-
-It is necessary now to briefly sketch the movements of the Third
-Corps (Pulteney's). Its presence upon the left flank of the Second
-Corps, and the fact that it held every attack that came against it,
-made it a vital factor in the operations. It is true that, having
-staunch British forces upon each flank, its position was always less
-precarious than either of the two corps which held the southern and
-northern extremities of the line, for without any disparagement to
-our Allies, who have shown themselves to be the bravest of the brave,
-it is evident that we can depend more upon troops who are under the
-same command, and whose movements can be certainly co-ordinated. At
-the same time, if the Third Corps had less to do, it can at least say
-that whatever did come to it was excellently well done, and that it
-preserved its line throughout. Its units were extended over some
-twelve miles of country, and it was partly astride of the River Lys,
-so that here as elsewhere there was constant demand upon the
-vigilance and staunchness of officers and men. On October 20 a very
-severe attack fell upon the 2nd Sherwood Foresters, who held {229}
-the most advanced trenches of Congreve's 18th Brigade. They were
-nearly overwhelmed by the violence of the German artillery fire, and
-were enfiladed on each side by infantry and machine-guns. The 2nd
-Durhams came up in reinforcement, but the Foresters had already
-sustained grievous losses in casualties and prisoners, the battalion
-being reduced from 900 to 250 in a single day. The Durhams also lost
-heavily. On this same day, the 20th, the 2nd Leinsters, of the 17th
-Brigade, were also driven from their trenches and suffered severely.
-
-[Sidenote: Action of La Gheir.]
-
-On October 21 the Germans crossed the River Lys in considerable
-force, and upon the morning of the 22nd they succeeded in occupying
-the village of Le Gheir upon the western side, thus threatening to
-outflank the positions of the Second Cavalry Division to the north.
-In their advance in the early morning of the 22nd they stormed the
-trenches held by the 2nd Inniskilling Fusiliers, this regiment
-enduring considerable losses. The trenches on the right were held by
-the 1st Royal Lancasters and 2nd Lancashire Fusiliers. These two
-regiments were at once ordered by General Anley, of the 12th Brigade,
-to initiate a counter-attack under the lead of Colonel Butler. Anley
-himself, who is a hard-bitten soldier of much Egyptian fighting,
-moved forward his men, while General Hunter-Weston, the indefatigable
-blower-up of railway lines in South Africa, supported the
-counter-attack with the Somerset Light Infantry and the 1st East
-Lancashires. The latter regiment, under Colonel Lawrence, passed
-through a wood and reached such a position that they were able to
-enfilade the Germans in the open, causing them very heavy losses.
-The action was a brilliant success. The positions lost {230} were
-reoccupied and the enemy severely punished, over a thousand Germans
-being killed or wounded, while 300 were taken prisoners. These
-belonged to the 104th and 179th Saxon regiments. It was a strange
-turn of fate which, after fifteen hundred years, brought tribesmen
-who had wandered up the course of the Elbe face to face in deadly
-strife with fellow-tribesmen who had passed over the sea to Britain.
-It is worth remarking and remembering that they are the one section
-of the German race who in this war have shown that bravery is not
-necessarily accompanied by coarseness and brutality.
-
-On October 25 the attacks became most severe upon the line of
-Williams' 16th Brigade, and on that night the trenches of the 1st
-Leicesters were raked by so heavy a gunfire that they were found to
-be untenable, the regiment losing 350 men. The line both of the 16th
-and of the 18th Brigades was drawn back for some little distance.
-There was a lull after this, broken upon the 29th, when Gordon's 19th
-Brigade was attacked with great violence by six fresh
-battalions--heavy odds against the four weak battalions which
-composed the British Brigade. The 1st Middlesex Regiment was driven
-from part of its trenches, but came back with a rush, helped by their
-comrades of the 2nd Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. The Germans
-were thrown out of the captured trenches, 40 were made prisoners, and
-200 were slain. This attack was made by the 223rd and 224th
-Regiments of the XXIV. German Reserve Corps. It was not repeated.
-
-On the 30th another sharp action occurred near St. Yves, when
-Hunter-Weston's 11th Brigade was momentarily pierced after dusk by a
-German rush, {231} which broke through a gap in the Hampshires. The
-Somerset Light Infantry, under Major Prowse, came back upon them and
-the trenches were regained. In all such actions it is to be
-remembered that where a mass of men can suddenly be directed against
-scattered trenches which will only hold a few, it is no difficult
-matter to carry them, but at once the conditions reverse themselves
-and the defenders mass their supports, who can usually turn the
-intruders out once more.
-
-This brings the general record of the doings of the Third Corps down
-to the end of October, the date on which we cease the account of the
-operations at the southern end of the British line. We turn from
-this diffuse and difficult story, with its ever-varying positions and
-units, to the great epic of the north, which will be inseparably
-united for ever with the name of Ypres.
-
-
-
-
-{232}
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE FIRST BATTLE OF YPRES
-
-(Up to the Action of Gheluvelt, October 31)
-
-The Seventh Division--Its peculiar excellence--Its difficult
-position--A deadly ordeal--Desperate attacks on Seventh
-Division--Destruction of 2nd Wilts--Hard fight of 20th
-Brigade--Arrival of First Corps--Advance of Haig's Corps--Fight of
-Pilken Inn--Bravery of enemy--Advance of Second Division--Fight of
-Kruiseik cross-roads--Fight of Zandvoorde--Fight of
-Gheluvelt--Advance of Worcesters--German recoil--General result--A
-great crisis.
-
-
-It has already been seen that the Seventh Division (Capper's), being
-the first half of Rawlinson's Fourth first Army Corps, had retired
-south and west after the unsuccessful attempt to relieve Antwerp. It
-was made up as follows:--
-
-[Sidenote: The Seventh Division]
-
- DIVISION VII.--General CAPPER.
-
- 20_th Infantry Brigade--General Ruggles-Brise_.
- 1st Grenadier Guards.
- 2nd Scots Guards.
- 2nd Border Regiment.
- 2nd Gordon Highlanders.
-
- 2l_st Infantry Brigade--General Walls_.
- 2nd Bedfords.
- 2nd Yorks.
- 2nd Wilts.
- 2nd Scots Fusiliers.
-
-{233}
-
- 22_nd Infantry Brigade--General Lawford_.
- 1st South Staffords.
- 2nd Warwicks.
- 2nd Queen's West Surrey.
- 1st Welsh Fusiliers.
-
- _Artillery._
- 22nd Brigade R.F.A.
- 35th Brigade R.F.A.
- 3rd R.G.A.
- 111th R.G.A.
- 112th R.G.A.
- 14th Brigade R.H.A. C.F.
-
- _Engineers._
- 54, 55, F. Co.
- 7 Signal Co.
- Divisional Cavalry.
- Northumberland Yeomanry.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Its peculiar excellence.]
-
-It is not too much to say that in an army where every division had
-done so well no single one was composed of such fine material as the
-Seventh. The reason was that the regiments composing it had all been
-drawn from foreign garrison duty, and consisted largely of soldiers
-of from three to seven years' standing, with a minimum of reservists.
-In less than a month from the day when this grand division of 18,000
-men went into action its infantry had been nearly annihilated, but
-the details of its glorious destruction furnish one more vivid page
-of British military achievement. We lost a noble division and gained
-a glorious record.
-
-The Third Cavalry Division under General Byng was attached to the
-Seventh Division, and joined up with it at Roulers upon October 13.
-It consisted of--
-
- 6_th Cavalry Brigade--General Makings_.
- 3rd Dragoon Guards.
- 10th Hussars.
- 1st Royals.
-
- 7_th Cavalry Brigade--General Kavanagh_.
- 1st Life Guards.
- 2nd Life Guards.
- 1st Horse Guards.
- 1st Horse Guards.
- K Battery, R.H.A.
-
-{234}
-
-The First Army Corps not having yet come up from the Aisne, these
-troops were used to cover the British position from the north, the
-infantry lying from Zandvoorde through Gheluvelt to Zonnebeke, and
-the cavalry on their left from Zonnebeke to Langemarck from October
-16 onwards. It was decided by Sir John French that it was necessary
-to get possession of the town of Menin, some distance to the east of
-the general British line, but very important because the chief
-bridge, by means of which the Germans were receiving their
-ever-growing reinforcements, was there. The Seventh Division was
-ordered accordingly to advance upon this town, its left flank being
-covered by the Third Cavalry Division.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{235}
-
-[Illustration: LINE OF 7th DIVISION (CAPPER) & 3rd CAVALRY DIVISION
-(BYNG) FROM OCT 17th. ONWARDS]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Sidenote: Its difficult position.]
-
-The position was a dangerous one. It has already been stated that
-the pause on the Aisne may not have been unwelcome to the Germans, as
-they were preparing reserve formations which might be suddenly thrown
-against some chosen spot in the Allied line. They had the equipment
-and arms for at least another 250,000 men, and that number of drilled
-men were immediately available, some being Landwehr who had passed
-through the ranks, and others young formations which had been
-preparing when war broke out. Together they formed no less than five
-new army corps, available for the extreme western front, more
-numerous than the whole British and Belgian armies combined. This
-considerable force, secretly assembled and moving rapidly across
-Belgium, was now striking the north of the Allied line, debouching
-not only over the river at Menin, but also through Courtrai, Iseghem,
-and Roulers. It consisted of the 22nd, 23rd, 24th, 26th, and 27th
-reserve corps. Of these the 22nd, and later the 24th, followed the
-{236} Belgians to the line of the Yser, but the other corps were all
-available for an attack upon the flank of that British line which was
-faced by formidable opponents--a line which extended over thirty
-miles and had already been forced into a defensive attitude. That
-was the situation when the Seventh Division faced round near Ypres.
-Sir John French was doing all that he could to support it, and Sir
-Douglas Haig was speeding up his army corps from the Aisne to take
-his place to the north of Ypres, but there were some days during
-which Rawlinson's men were in the face of a force six or seven times
-larger than themselves.
-
-Upon October 16th and 17th the division had advanced from Ypres and
-occupied the line already mentioned, the right centre of which rested
-about the ninth kilometre on the Ypres-Menin road, the order of the
-brigades from the north being 22nd, 21st, and 20th. On October 18
-the division wheeled its left forward. As the infantry advanced, the
-covering cavalry soon became aware of grave menace from Roulers and
-Courtrai in the north. A large German force was evidently striking
-down on to the left flank of the advance. The division was engaged
-all along the line, for the 20th Brigade upon the right had a brisk
-skirmish, while the 21st Brigade in the centre was also under fire,
-which came especially heavily upon the 2nd Bedfords, who had numerous
-casualties. About ten o'clock on the morning of the 19th the
-pressure from the north increased, and the 7th Cavalry Brigade was
-driven in, though it held its own with great resolution for some
-time, helped by the fine work of K Battery, R.H.A. The 6th Cavalry
-Brigade was held up in front, while the danger on the {237} flank
-grew more apparent as the hours passed. In these circumstances
-General Rawlinson, fortified in his opinion by the precise reports of
-his airmen as to the strength of the enemy upon his left, came to the
-conclusion that a further advance would place him in a difficult
-position. He therefore dropped back to his original line. There can
-be little doubt that, if he had persevered in the original plan, his
-force would have been in extreme danger. As it was, before he could
-get it back the 1st Welsh Fusiliers were hard hit, this famous
-regiment losing a major, 5 captains, 3 lieutenants, and about 200
-men. The order to retire had failed to reach it, and but for the
-able handling of Colonel Cadogan it might well have been destroyed.
-
-On October 20, the situation being still obscure, the 20th Brigade
-carried out a reconnaissance towards Menin. The 2nd Wilts and 2nd
-Scots Fusiliers, of the 21st Brigade, covered their left flank. The
-enemy, however, made a vigorous attack upon the 22nd Brigade to the
-north, especially upon the Welsh Fusiliers, so the reconnaissance had
-to fall back again, the 1st Grenadier Guards sustaining some losses.
-The two covering regiments were also hard pressed, especially the
-Wiltshires, who were again attacked during the night, but repulsed
-their assailants.
-
-[Sidenote: A deadly ordeal.]
-
-From this time onwards the Seventh Division was to feel ever more and
-more the increasing pressure as the German army corps from day to day
-brought their weight to bear upon a thin extended line of positions
-held by a single division. It will be shown that they were speedily
-reinforced by the First Corps, but even after its advent the Germans
-were still able {238} to greatly outnumber the British force. The
-story from this time onwards is one of incessant and desperate
-attacks by day and often by night. At first the division was holding
-the position alone, with the help of their attendant cavalry, and
-their instructions were to hold on to the last man until help could
-reach them. In the case of some units these instructions were
-literally fulfilled. One great advantage lay with the British. They
-were first-class trained soldiers, the flower of the Army, while
-their opponents, however numerous, were of the newly raised reserve
-corps, which showed no lack of bravery, but contained a large
-proportion of youths and elderly men in the ranks. Letters from the
-combatants have described the surprise and even pity which filled the
-minds of the British when they saw the stormers hesitate upon the
-edge of the trenches which they had so bravely approached, and stare
-down into them uncertain what they should do. But though the
-ascendancy of the British infantry was so great that they could
-afford to disregard the inequality of numbers, it was very different
-with the artillery. The German gunners were as good as ever, and
-their guns as powerful as they were numerous. The British had no
-howitzer batteries at all with this division, while the Germans had
-many. It was the batteries which caused the terrific losses. It may
-be that the Seventh Division, having had no previous experience in
-the campaign, had sited their trenches with less cunning than would
-have been shown by troops who had already faced the problem of how
-best to avoid high explosives. Either by sight or by aeroplane
-report the Germans got the absolute range of some portions of the
-British position, pitching their heavy shells exactly into the {239}
-trenches, and either blowing the inmates to pieces or else burying
-them alive, so that in a little time the straight line of the trench
-was entirely lost, and became a series of ragged pits and mounds.
-The head-cover for shrapnel was useless before such missiles, and
-there was nothing for it but either to evacuate the line or to hang
-on and suffer. The Seventh Division hung on and suffered, but no
-soldiers can ever have been exposed to a more deadly ordeal. When
-they were at last relieved by the arrival of reinforcements and the
-consequent contraction of the line, they were at the last pitch of
-exhaustion, indomitable in spirit, but so reduced by their losses and
-by the terrific nervous strain that they could hardly have held out
-much longer.
-
-A short account has been given of what occurred to the division up to
-October 20. It will now be carried on for a few days, after which
-the narrative must turn to the First Corps, and show why and how they
-came into action to the north of the hard-pressed division. It is
-impossible to tell the two stories simultaneously, and so it may now
-be merely mentioned that from October 21 Haig's Corps was on the
-left, and that those operations which will shortly be described
-covered the left wing of the division, and took over a portion of
-that huge German attack which would undoubtedly have overwhelmed the
-smaller unit had it not been for this addition of strength. It is
-necessary to get a true view of the operations, for it is safe to say
-that they are destined for immortality, and will be recounted so long
-as British history is handed down from one generation to another.
-
-On the 21st the enemy got a true conception of {240} the salient in
-front of the Seventh Division, and opened a vigorous attack, which
-lasted all day and assumed several different phases at different
-points. The feature of the morning of the 21st was the severe and,
-indeed, disastrous artillery fire upon Lawford's 22nd Brigade. The
-exact range of the British position seems to have been discovered
-with deadly results. Men, trenches, and machine-guns were all blown
-to pieces together. The 2nd Warwicks and the 1st Welsh Fusiliers
-were the two battalions upon which the storm beat hardest, and each
-of them had some hundreds of casualties. In three days the Welsh
-Fusiliers, who were on the exposed left flank, lost three-quarters of
-their effectives, including twenty-three of their officers, and yet
-preserved their military spirit. It became clearer as experience
-accumulated that the best trenches, if they are once fairly located,
-can be made untenable or turned into the graves of their occupants by
-the use of high explosives. The German fire was so severe that it
-was reckoned that one hundred and twenty shells an hour into or round
-a trench was a not uncommon rate of fall. The 2nd Queen's also lost
-seven officers and many men in this day's fighting. In spite of the
-heavy losses from gun-fire the German infantry could make no
-progress, being held up by a flanking fire of the South Staffords.
-
-[Sidenote: Desperate attacks on Seventh Division.]
-
-In the afternoon of October 21 a strong attack was made upon the 21st
-Brigade in the centre of the line. The brigade was holding a front
-of two and a half miles, and, although the attack was generally
-beaten back, a certain number of stormers got through between the
-trenches and into the woods beyond. Here they lurked for a couple of
-days, during which time the 2nd Yorkshire Regiment, behind whose
-{241} line they were lying, were often compelled to have each
-alternate man facing a different way to keep down the fire. The
-battalion sent itself reinforcements by hurrying its right company
-over to help to clear its left. This movement was successful, but
-was attended with heavy losses, including several officers. Some of
-the Royal Scots Fusiliers had been forced out of their trenches on
-the right, and made, under Major Ian Forbes, a gallant attempt to
-re-establish them, in which Captain Fairlie and many men were lost.
-The Wiltshires also endured a very severe attack, which they repulsed
-with great loss to the enemy. On this same eventful day, the 21st,
-the Second Cavalry Division had been pushed back at Holbeke, and the
-Germans got round the right flank of the hard-pressed infantry. It
-was then that General Rawlinson brought his Third Cavalry Division
-round and established it upon his right instead of his left flank.
-From this time until October 30 this cavalry division was holding
-Zandvoorde Ridge, sharing day by day in all the perils and the
-glories of their comrades of the Seventh Division. There was no more
-dangerous point than that which was held by the cavalry, and their
-losses, especially those of the 10th Hussars, were in proportion to
-the danger. In the course of a few days the Hussars lost Colonel
-Barnes, Majors Mitford and Crichton and many officers and men.
-
-On October 22 the Second Division of Haig's First Corps, which had
-been fully occupied to the north with operations which will presently
-be described, moved down to cover the ground vacated by the Third
-Cavalry Division and to relieve the pressure upon the infantry of the
-Seventh Division. The 4th Guards Brigade took its position upon
-their {242} immediate left. It was time. For four days they had
-covered the enormous front of eight miles against at least four times
-their own number, with more than six times their weight of artillery.
-It was touch and go. They were nearly submerged. It was indeed a
-vision of joy when the worn and desperate men, looking over their
-shoulders down the Ypres-Menin road, saw the head of a British column
-coming swiftly to the rescue. It was the 2nd Highland Light Infantry
-and the 2nd Worcesters, dispatched from the 5th Brigade, and never
-was reinforcement more needed. Shortly afterwards further help in
-the shape of a detachment of the Munster Fusiliers, two troops of the
-ever-helpful Irish Horse, and one section of artillery appeared upon
-the scene.
-
-[Sidenote: Destruction of 2nd Wilts.]
-
-Upon this date (October 22) the 22nd Infantry Brigade of the Seventh
-Division had fallen back to the railway crossings near Zonnebeke.
-Thus the salient which the Germans had been attacking was
-straightened out. Unhappily, the change caused another smaller
-salient farther south, at the point which was held by the 2nd
-Wiltshires. On the 22nd and 23rd there was a tremendous shelling of
-this sector, which was followed on the 24th by an infantry advance,
-in which the Wiltshires, who had been previously much reduced, were
-utterly overwhelmed and practically destroyed. The disastrous attack
-broke upon the British line just after daybreak. The enemy pushed
-through behind each flank of the Wiltshires, elbowing off the Scots
-Fusiliers on one side and the Scots Guards on the other. The Germans
-got in force into the Polygon Woods behind. There were no reserves
-available save the Northumberland Hussars, a corps which has the
-honour of being the {243} first British territorial corps to fight
-for its country. With the aid of some divisional cyclists, this
-handful of men held back the Germans until the 2nd Warwicks from the
-north were brought to stem the advance. The Warwicks charged through
-the wood, their gallant Colonel Loring riding his horse beside them
-without boot or legging, having been wounded some days before.
-"Where my men go I go as well," was his answer to medical
-remonstrance. He was killed by a bullet, but he died at a moment of
-victory, for his last earthly vision was that of his infantry driving
-the last Germans out of the wood. Besides their colonel, the
-regiment lost many officers and men in this fine advance, which was
-most vigorously supported by the 2nd Worcesters, the only
-reinforcement within reach. The Worcesters lost 6 officers and 160
-men, but did much execution and took a number of prisoners.
-
-[Sidenote: Hard fight of 20th Brigade.]
-
-At this time the 20th Brigade, being the extreme right of the Seventh
-Division, held an extended line from Kruiseik cross-roads, about a
-mile east of Gheluvelt village, to near Zandvoorde, with a salient at
-the village of Kruiseik. On the night of the 25th the Germans
-planned a furious attack upon the whole salient. The assailants, who
-were mostly Saxons, broke through the 2nd Scots Guards just north of
-Kruiseik and got behind the line, which was pushed back for some
-distance, though Captain Paynter, with the right-hand company, held
-his position. A counter-attack by the Guards retook the line,
-together with 200 prisoners, including 7 officers. On the morning of
-the 26th the Germans were back on them, however, and began by blowing
-in the trenches of the Border Regiment south of Kruiseik. The German
-{244} guns had found the exact range of the trenches, and the
-defenders had the same terrible and intolerable experience which had
-befallen some of their comrades two days before. It was simply
-impossible to stand up against the incessant shower of shattering
-shells. So great was the concussion and the nervous strain that many
-of the men exposed to it got completely dazed or even became
-delirious. Grenadiers, Scots Guards, and South Staffords, of the
-20th Brigade, held the line until the front trenches were carried by
-the Germans and many of the occupants made prisoners. It was pitch
-dark, and it was impossible to tell friend from foe. Major Fraser of
-the Scots Guards, going forward to reconnoitre, was shot dead and his
-party was destroyed. A house in a field taken by the Guards yielded
-no fewer than 200 prisoners, but in the confused fighting in the
-darkness our losses were greater than our gains. It was in this
-night-fighting that Lord Dalrymple, Colonel Bolton, and other
-officers, with some hundreds of men, fell into the hands of the enemy
-after a most heroic resistance to overpowering numbers and to a
-weight of artillery which was crushing in its effect. The King's
-Company of the 1st Grenadiers was isolated and in great danger, but
-managed to link up with the British line. The 1st South Staffords
-also lost some hundreds of men, and was only saved by fine handling
-on the part of Colonel Ovens. Kruiseik was abandoned, and a new line
-taken up half a mile farther back. It was a critical night, during
-which the energy and firmness of General Capper were splendidly
-employed in reforming and stiffening his sorely tried division. On
-the 26th the 20th Brigade, which had been so heavily {245} hit the
-day before, was drawn out of the line for a rest, and the two other
-brigades closed up to cover a shorter line. The work of the 20th at
-Kruiseik had been magnificent, but their losses were appalling,
-including their Brigadier, Ruggles-Brise, who was wounded. Here, for
-the instant, we shall leave the Seventh Division, though their ordeal
-was by no means done, and we shall turn to those other forces which
-had been forming in the northern or Ypres section of the long battle
-line.
-
-[Sidenote: Arrival of First Corps.]
-
-The reader will remember, if he casts his mind back, that the whole
-British line, as it extended from the south about October 18,
-consisted of the Second Corps and the advance guard of the Indians
-near La Bassée; then, in succession, the Third Corps in the
-Armentières district, the First Cavalry and Second Cavalry near
-Messines and Wytschaete, the Seventh Division near Gheluvelt, and
-finally the Third Cavalry on their left, joining up with the French,
-who carried the line to where the Belgians were reforming on the
-Yser. The First Corps had detrained from the Aisne, and was
-concentrated between St. Omer and Hazebrouck upon October 18 and 19.
-They represented a last British reserve of about thirty-five thousand
-men to set against the large new armies who were advancing from the
-north. The urgent question to be decided was where they should be
-placed, since there were so many points which needed reinforcement.
-
-Sir John French has explained in his dispatch the reasons which
-swayed him in deciding this question. "I knew," he said, "that the
-enemy were by this time in greatly superior strength upon the Lys and
-that the Second and Third Cavalry and Fourth Corps {246} (Seventh
-Division) were holding a much wider front than their strength and
-numbers warranted. Taking these facts alone into consideration, it
-would have appeared wise to throw the First Corps in to strengthen
-the line, but this would have left the country north and east of
-Ypres and the Ypres Canal open to a wide turning movement by the
-Third Reserve Corps and at least one Landwehr Division which I knew
-to be operating in that region. I was also aware that the enemy was
-bringing large reinforcements up from the east, which could only be
-opposed for several days by two or three French cavalry divisions,
-some French Territorials, and the Belgian Army."
-
-He proceeds to state his opinion that the Belgian Army was in no
-condition to withstand unsupported such an attack, and that if it
-were allowed to sweep past us it was very likely to wash away all
-opposition before it, and get into the Channel ports in our rear.
-With this consideration in his mind, Sir John French took the bold
-and dangerous, but absolutely necessary, step of leaving the long,
-thin, thirty-mile line to do the best it could, and prolonging it by
-another ten or twelve miles by forming up the First Corps on the same
-alignment, so as to present as long a British breakwater as possible
-to the oncoming flood. There was nothing else to be done, and the
-stronger the flood the more need there was to do it, but it is safe
-to say that seldom in history has so frail a barrier stood in the
-direct track of so terrible a storm.
-
-In accordance with this resolution, Haig's First Corps moved, on
-October 20, through Poperinghe and Ypres and took their place upon
-the north or left side of the Seventh Division. On their own left in
-this position was the French cavalry corps of {247} General de Mitry,
-while the Third Division of British cavalry was on their right. As
-the movement commenced Sir John French had a personal interview with
-General Haig, in which he held out hopes that the greater part of the
-new German levies had been deflected to hold our southern advance,
-and that he would only find the Third Reserve Corps and some Landwehr
-in front of him to the north of Ypres. His object was to advance
-upon the line of Bruges and drive the enemy towards Ghent. Meanwhile
-the gallant little Belgian army, which was proving itself a glutton
-at fighting, was entrenched along the line of the Ypres Canal and the
-Yser River, where they held their own manfully in spite of all that
-they had endured.
-
-[Sidenote: Advance of Haig's Corps.]
-
-The first large landmark in the direction of Bruges was Thorout, and
-towards this the First Corps, with the Third Cavalry Division upon
-its right, took its first steps, little thinking that it was butting
-forward against an approaching army of at least double its own
-strength. It was very quickly made to realise its position, however,
-and any dreams of a victorious entry into Bruges were speedily
-dispelled. Only too fortunate would it be if it could hold its own
-line without retreat and disaster. Upon the 21st Haig's men attacked
-Poel-Chapelle and Passchendaale, French cavalry and Territorials (the
-Eighty-seventh and Eighty-ninth Divisions) under General Bidon
-advancing on their left, while the Seventh Division, as already
-described, kept pace upon its right. There was strong opposition
-from the first, but the corps advanced in spite of it until the
-pressure from the north became too severe for the French, whose flank
-was exposed to the full force of it.
-
-{248}
-
-The British attack upon the morning in question was planned as
-follows. The Second Division was to advance upon Passchendaale. The
-First had orders to take Poel-Chapelle. The latter movement was
-headed by the 3rd Brigade, who were directed by General Landon to go
-forward about nine o'clock, the 1st Queen's having the station for
-their objective while the 1st South Wales Borderers attacked the
-village. The 1st Gloucesters were in reserve. The enemy met the
-attack with shell-fire, which it was difficult to locate, as the
-country was flat and enclosed. The progress of the movement,
-however, was steady though slow. About ten o'clock there were signs
-of a considerable hostile infantry advance from the north. The
-attack, however, made good progress up to midday, when there was a
-general retirement of the French Territorials, followed later by the
-French cavalry upon the British left. They moved back towards
-Bixschote. The Gloucester Regiment, who had been thrown out to
-reinforce that flank, were also driven back, and were in turn
-reinforced by the Coldstream Guards. This battalion executed a
-bayonet charge in clearing the small village of Koekuit, but later on
-had to retire, finding their flank exposed. It should be mentioned
-that one French corps, the Seventh Cavalry Division, kept its
-position upon the British left, and it is also only fair to point out
-that as the German advance was mainly from the north, it was upon the
-left flank, covered by the French, that it would fall. The 1st
-Camerons were now dispatched to the flank to stiffen the French
-resistance, taking up their position near the inn which is midway
-upon the road between Steenstraate and Langemarck, north of the
-village {249} of Pilken--an inn with which they were destined to have
-stirring associations. With the support of the 46th Battery, the
-Highlanders held up a German brigade which was thrusting through
-behind our main line; but farther west, in the Steenstraate
-direction, the defence against a northern advance was miserably thin,
-consisting only of one company of the Sussex Regiment and the 116th
-Battery. In the circumstances the more success Haig's troops
-attained in front, and the more they advanced, the more dangerous was
-their position upon the flank.
-
-About 2.30 the German advance from the north became more formidable,
-and the 1st South Welsh Borderers, between Langemarck and
-Poel-Chapelle, were heavily counter-attacked and suffered
-considerable loss, between two and three hundred in all. Two
-companies of the 2nd Welsh were pushed up to their help. It was
-clear, however, that the advance could not be continued. The 1st
-Brigade was therefore ordered to hold the line between Steenstraate
-and Langemarck, with their centre at the inn north of Pilken, so as
-to face the German advance from the north. Then from Langemarck the
-British line turned southwards, being carried on for two miles by the
-3rd Brigade to hold the enemy who were coming from the east. The 2nd
-Brigade was in reserve at Boesinghe. During this long and difficult
-day the Second Division, operating upon the right of the First, was
-not subjected to the same anxiety about its flank. It advanced upon
-its objective in the face of severe opposition, ending more than once
-in a brief bayonet encounter. Several counter-attacks were made by
-the Germans, but they were all beaten back with loss. About two
-o'clock, however, {250} the Second Division learned of the flank
-pressure which was holding up the First Division, and also of the
-extreme need for help experienced by the 22nd Brigade of the Seventh
-Division on their right. In these circumstances it was necessary to
-abandon the idea of further advance and to send south those
-reinforcements, the opportune arrival of which has been already
-described.
-
-As a net result of the two days' operations General Haig was not able
-to attain the line of Passchendaale-Poel-Chapelle, as originally
-planned, but he gained sufficient ground to establish himself from
-Langemarck to Zonnebeke, more than half-way to his objective. The
-whole character of the operations during these days was more of the
-familiar British type, being conducted upon the surface of the earth
-rather than under it, and cavalry making its last appearance for many
-a long day. Many fine deeds of valour were done. In one of these
-Captain Rising, of the Gloucester Regiment, with ninety men, defended
-some point with such heroic tenacity that when, some days afterwards,
-the Brigadier attempted to get the names of the survivors for
-commendation not one could be found. Quaintly valorous also is the
-picture of Major Powell, of the North Lancashires, leading his wing
-with a badly-sprained ankle, and using a cottage chair for a crutch,
-upon which he sat down between rushes. It is hopeless, however, and
-even invidious to pick instances where the same spirit animated all.
-The result was definite. It had been clearly shown that the enemy
-were in considerably greater strength than had been imagined, and
-instead of a rearguard action from weak forces the British found
-themselves in the presence of a strong German {251} advance. All day
-large forces of the enemy were advancing from Roulers and were
-impinging upon different points of the Franco-British line. These
-troops were composed of partially-trained men, volunteers and
-reservists, but they attacked with the utmost determination, and
-endured heavy losses with great bravery. It is a remarkable proof of
-the elaborate preparations for war made by Germany that, behind all
-their original gigantic array, they still had ready within the
-country sufficient arms and uniforms to fit out these five new army
-corps. He who plans finds it easy to prepare, and whoever will
-compare this profusion of munitions in Germany with the absolute lack
-of them in the Allied countries will have no further doubt as to
-which Government conspired against the peace of the world.
-
-On October 21, Sir John French began to feel that there were new
-factors in his front. In the evening, at a meeting with Haig and
-Rawlinson, he discussed the unexpected strength of the German
-reinforcements and admitted that the scheme of an advance upon Bruges
-would become impossible in the face of such numbers. Intelligence
-reports indicated that there was already a German army corps in front
-of each British division. General Joffre had promised considerable
-French reinforcements upon October 24, and all that could be done was
-for the British troops to hold their ground to the last man and to
-resist every pressure until the equality of the forces could be
-restored. Could they hold the line till then? That was the
-all-important question.
-
-October 22 was the first day of that long ordeal of incessant attacks
-which the First Corps was called {252} upon to endure, until by
-constant attrition it had become almost as worn as the Seventh
-Division to the south. On this day the German attack, which had not
-yet attained the full volume of later days, spent itself here and
-there along the extended lines. Only at one point did the enemy have
-some success, which, however, was the prelude to disaster.
-
-[Sidenote: Fight of Pilken Inn.]
-
-The line from Steenstraate to Langemarck, defending the British left
-flank, was held by the 1st Brigade, the Scots Guards upon the extreme
-left, then the Cameron Highlanders, and the Black Watch in reserve.
-In the middle of the line north of Pilken was a solitary inn, already
-mentioned, round which trenches had been cut in horse-shoe fashion,
-the concavity of the shoe pointing southwards. This point marked the
-junction between the Camerons and the Scots Guards. About 3 P.M.
-this position was driven in and captured by a sudden and determined
-advance of the enemy. The German charge was a fine feat of arms, for
-it was carried out largely by _Einjahrige_, who may be roughly
-compared to the Officers' Training Corps of our British system.
-These high-spirited lads advanced singing patriotic songs, and
-succeeded in carrying the trenches in the face of soldiers who are
-second to none in the British Army--soldiers, too, who had seen, much
-service, while the German cadets were new to the work. The
-performance was much appreciated by British officers and men.
-
-The Black Watch endeavoured without success to restore the line, and
-the 1st Northamptons were called upon from divisional reserve, while
-from all parts troops converged towards the gap. On the arrival of
-the Northamptons they pushed up towards {253} the interval which now
-existed between the Scots Guards and the remains of the Camerons, but
-found the gap broader than had been thought, and strongly occupied.
-It was then evening, and it was thought best to delay the
-counter-attack until morning and so have time to bring up
-reinforcements. The 1st North Lancashires and the 2nd South
-Staffords were accordingly ordered up, together with the 1st Queen's
-Surrey and the 2nd Rifles, the whole operation being under the
-immediate command of General Bulfin. The advance began at six in the
-morning, over very difficult ground which had been barb-wired during
-the night. The progress was slow but steady, and at eleven o'clock
-an assault upon the inn was ordered. The position was critical,
-since the enemy was now firmly lodged in the very centre of the flank
-of the British position, and was able to enfilade all the trenches of
-the First Division. The Queen's Surrey, the 2nd King's Royal Rifles,
-and the 1st North Lancashires charged home with splendid energy,
-capturing the trenches round the inn, besides releasing sixty
-Camerons and taking over five hundred prisoners. The trenches were
-carried by the North Lancashires, led by Major Carter. It was the
-second time within six weeks that this battalion had made a decisive
-bayonet charge. The price paid was six officers and 150 men. The
-inn itself was rushed by Captain Creek's company of the Queen's,
-while Major Watson, of the same regiment, organised the final
-advance. The fighting at this point was not finished for the day.
-In the late evening the enemy, with fine tenacity of purpose,
-attacked the inn once more and drove the Queen's out of a salient.
-The line was then straightened on each side {254} of the inn and
-remained firm. Both the attack on the inn and the defence of the
-line were splendidly supported by the field artillery.
-
-Whilst the 1st Brigade had in this fashion got into and out of a
-dangerous position, there had been a severe attack upon two regiments
-of Landon's 3rd Brigade stationed at Langemarck. The defending units
-were the 2nd Welsh Regiment and the 1st Gloucesters. Aided by a
-strong artillery backing, they beat off these attacks and inflicted a
-very heavy loss upon the enemy. The Allied line to the north was
-solid and unbroken.
-
-[Sidenote: Bravery of enemy.]
-
-The British losses during these operations of the First Corps
-amounted to 1500 men, while those of the Germans were exceedingly
-heavy. These inexperienced troops advanced with an indiscriminating
-enthusiasm which exposed them to severe retaliation. It is doubtful
-if at any time in the campaign the British fire found so easy a mark.
-One thousand five hundred dead were counted in the vicinity of
-Langemarck, and the total loss (including over six hundred prisoners)
-could not have been less than 10,000 men. Correspondence afterwards
-captured showed that the Twenty-third Reserve Corps sustained such
-losses that for a time at least it was out of action. The
-Twenty-seventh Reserve Corps was also hard hit. A letter from a
-soldier in the 246th Regiment mentions that only eighty men were left
-of his battalion after the action of the 24th.
-
-On October 24 and 25 the arrival of French reinforcements allowed the
-British to shorten up their defensive line, which had been unduly
-extended. The Seventeenth Division of the Ninth French Army Corps
-took over the line of the Second Division, which {255} was drawn back
-to St. Jean, and in turn took over part of the front of the Seventh
-Division. French territorial troops, under General de Mitry,
-relieved the First British Division on the line
-Hannebeke-Langemarck-Steenstraate. The First Division was drawn back
-to Zillebeke.
-
-[Sidenote: Advance of Second Division.]
-
-Meantime the Second Division, having the French Ninth Corps upon its
-left and the Seventh Division upon its right, made an attack towards
-Bacelaer, taking two guns and some prisoners. This advance was
-renewed upon the 26th, this being the day upon which, as already
-described, the Germans pushed back the 20th Brigade of the Seventh
-Division at the Kruiseik salient, creating a situation which brought
-the Second Division to a standstill.
-
-In this movement forward of the Second Division from October 24 to
-26, the Guards' 4th Brigade were on the right, the 6th Brigade on the
-left, with the French to the left of them. The 5th Brigade were in
-reserve. Two small villages were taken by storm, the Germans being
-driven out of loopholed houses, though at a considerable cost of
-officers and men. It was in this operation that Colonel Bannatyne,
-the gallant leader of the 1st King's Liverpool, was killed. Ten
-other officers and several hundred men of this corps were killed or
-wounded. The 1st Berkshires, fighting to the left of the King's,
-shared in its losses and in its success. The Irish Guards were held
-up before Reutel and separated from the rest of the force, but
-managed to extricate themselves after some anxious hours.
-
-On October 27, Sir John French came in person to Hooge, at the rear
-of the fighting line, and inquired into the state of the hard-pressed
-troops. He found {256} the Seventh to be now such a skeleton
-division that it was thought best to join it with Haig's First Corps,
-forming one single command.
-
-The attendant Third Cavalry Division was also attached to the First
-Corps. These readjustments took place upon October 27. They were,
-of course, of a temporary character until the eagerly awaited Eighth
-Division should arrive and so give General Rawlinson a complete
-Fourth Corps. At present there was a very immediate prospect that
-half of it might be annihilated before the second half appeared. The
-general arrangement of this section of the battlefield was now as
-depicted, the Seventh Division being entirely south of the
-Ypres-Menin roadway.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{257}
-
-[Illustration: General Scene of Operations]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-This date, the 27th, was memorable only for an advance of the 6th
-Brigade. These continual advances against odds were wonderful
-examples of the aggressive spirit of the British soldiers. In this
-instance ground was gained, but at the cost of some casualties,
-especially to the 1st Rifles, who lost Prince Maurice of Battenberg
-and a number of officers and men.
-
-[Sidenote: Fight of Kruiseik cross-roads.]
-
-And now the great epic of the first Battle of Ypres was rising to its
-climax, and the three days of supreme trial for the British Army were
-to begin. Early upon October 29, a very heavy attack developed upon
-the line of the Ypres-Menin road. There is a village named
-Gheluvelt, which is roughly half-way upon this tragic highway. It
-lay now immediately behind the centre of the British line. About
-half a mile in front of it the position ran through the important
-cross-roads which lead to the village of Kruiseik, still in the
-British possession. The line through the {258} Kruiseik cross-roads
-was that which was furiously assailed upon this morning, and the
-attack marked the beginning of a great movement to drive in the front
-continuing throughout the 30th and culminating in the terrible ordeal
-of the 31st, the crisis of the Ypres battle and possibly of the
-Western campaign.
-
-FitzClarence's 1st Brigade lay to the north of the road, and the
-battered, much-enduring 20th Brigade upon the south. They were
-destined together to give such an example of military tenacity during
-that day as has seldom been equalled and never exceeded, so that the
-fight for the Kruiseik crossroads may well live in history amongst
-those actions, like Albuera and Inkermann, which have put the powers
-of British infantry to an extreme test. The line was held by about
-five thousand men, but no finer units were to be found in the whole
-Army. The attack was conducted by an army corps with the eyes of
-their Emperor and an overpowering artillery encouraging them from the
-rear. Many of the defending regiments, especially those of the 20th
-Brigade, had already been terribly wasted. It was a line of weary
-and desperate men who faced the German onslaught.
-
-The attack began in the mists of the early morning. The opening was
-adverse to the British, for the enemy, pushing very boldly forward
-upon a narrow front and taking full advantage of the fog, broke a way
-down the Menin road and actually got past the defending line before
-the situation was understood. The result was that the two regiments
-which flanked the road, the 1st Black Watch and the 1st Grenadiers,
-were fired into from behind and endured terrible {259} losses. Among
-the Grenadiers Colonel Earle, Majors Forrester and Stucley, Lord
-Richard Wellesley, and a number of other officers fell, while out of
-650 privates only 150 were eventually left standing, the 2nd Gordons,
-upon the right of the Grenadiers, suffered nearly as heavily, while
-the 1st Coldstream, upon the left of the Black Watch, was perhaps the
-hardest hit of all, for at the end of that dreadful day it had not a
-single officer fit for duty. The right company of the 1st Scots
-Guards shared the fate of the Coldstream. The line was pushed back
-for a quarter of a mile and Kruiseik was evacuated, but the dead and
-wounded who remained in the trenches far exceeded in numbers those
-who were able to withdraw.
-
-Two small bodies who were cut off by the German advance did not fall
-back with their comrades, and each of them made a splendid and
-successful resistance. The one near Kruiseik was a mixed party under
-Major Bottomley of the 2nd Queen's West Surrey. The other was C
-Company of the 2nd Gordons under Captain B. G. R. Gordon and
-Lieutenant Laurence Carr. These small islands of khaki, in the midst
-of a broad stream of grey, lay so tight and fired so straight that
-they inflicted very great damage upon the enemy, and were able to
-hold their own, in ever-diminishing numbers, until under the
-protection of darkness the survivors regained the British line.
-
-In the meantime, a number of small dashing counter-attacks by the
-indomitable infantry was bringing the British line forward again.
-South of the road the Gordons, under Colonel Uniacke, dashed
-themselves again and again against the huge host which faced them,
-driving them back, and then in their turn recoiling before the
-ponderous advance of {260} the army corps. They were maddened by the
-sound of the rolling fire ahead of them, which showed that their own
-C Company was dying hard. In one of these counter-attacks Captain
-Brooke brought every straggler into the fray, and died while trying
-to cut his way through to his comrades. To the north of the road
-Captain Stephen, with the remains of the 1st Scots Guards, threw
-themselves upon the German flank and staggered it by their fire. The
-Germans, who had almost reached Gheluvelt, were now worried in this
-way on either flank, while the 2nd Border battalion and the Welsh
-Borderers with the rallied remains of the broken regiments were still
-facing them in front. The enemy was held, was stricken front and
-flank with a murderous fire, and recoiled back down the Menin road.
-Imperial eyes and overmastering guns were equally powerless to drive
-them through that iron defence. Five thousand British soldiers had
-driven back an army corps, but had left more than half their number
-upon the scene of victory.
-
-The Second Division, to the north of the road in the direction of
-Reutel, had been ordered to counter-attack, and the other brigades of
-the Seventh Division to the south did the same. While Haig had a man
-standing he was ready to hit back. Between these two flanking forces
-there was a movement in the centre to follow the Germans back and to
-recover some of the lost ground. Landon's Third Brigade, less the
-Gloucester Regiment, was pushed forward. These troops moved past
-Gheluvelt and advanced along the line of the road, the 1st Queen's,
-their right-hand unit, linking up by a happy chance with their own
-2nd Battalion, who were now on the left of the 22nd Brigade of the
-Seventh Division. Left {261} of the Queen's were the 2nd Welsh to
-the immediate south of the main road, while to their left again lay
-the 1st South Wales Borderers, in front of the village of Gheluvelt.
-By evening these troops had recovered some of the ground, but the
-village of Kruiseik, which had always constituted a salient, was now
-abandoned. The cross-roads also remained in the hands of the enemy.
-Landon's Brigade continued to bar the further German advance
-preparing in stern resignation for the renewed and heavier blow which
-all knew to be in readiness, and which was destined two days later to
-bring them a glorious annihilation.
-
-It was clear upon the evening of the 29th that serious mischief was
-afoot, for there were great signs of movement on the German side, and
-all night the continual rattle of wheels was heard to the eastward.
-These menacing sounds were actually caused by a very strong
-reinforcement, the Fifteenth German Corps (Strasburg) of the regular
-army, which, followed by the Thirteenth Corps and the Second Bavarian
-Corps, were coming into the battle line with the declared intention
-of smashing their way through to Ypres. Correspondence, afterwards
-captured, showed that the German Emperor had issued a special appeal
-to these troops, declaring that the movement was one which would be
-of decisive importance to the war. It was, of course, not the
-venerable town of Ypres which had assumed such a place in the mind
-both of the Emperor and his people, but it was Calais and the Channel
-coast to which it was the door. Once in the possession of these
-points, it seemed to their perfervid minds that they would be in a
-position to constrain Great Britain to an ignominious peace, a course
-which {262} would surely have ruined the cause of the Allies and
-placed the whole world under the German heel. No less was the issue
-at stake. The British Army from Langemarck in the north to La Bassée
-in the south were resolutely determined that the road was barred,
-while to left and to right they had stout-hearted comrades of Belgium
-and of France.
-
-[Sidenote: Fight of Zandvoorde.]
-
-At half-past six upon October 30 a very heavy attack developed, which
-involved the whole line of the First Corps and also the French Ninth
-Corps upon its left. This attack upon the left was carried out by
-the Reserve Corps 26 and 27, with whom we had had previous dealings,
-and it was repulsed with considerable loss by the French and the 6th
-British Brigade. To the south, however, the British were very
-violently engaged down the whole line of trenches from the position
-of the Seventh Division near the Ypres-Menin road, through
-Zandvoorde, where the Third Cavalry Division was holding on under
-great difficulties, and on southward still, past the position of the
-Second Cavalry down to Messines, where the First Cavalry Division was
-also heavily engaged. The front of battle was not less than twelve
-miles in length, with one continuous long-drawn rattle of small arms
-and roar of guns from end to end.
-
-The British may have anticipated that the chief blow would fall at
-the same spot as had been attacked the day before. As a matter of
-fact, it was directed farther south, at Zandvoorde, on the immediate
-right of the Seventh Division.
-
-The first sign of success for the strenuous German efforts upon
-October 30 was the driving in of Kavanagh's 7th Guards' Cavalry
-Brigade from their trenches at the Zandvoorde Ridge. On this ridge,
-{263} which is not more than a hundred and twenty feet high, the
-Germans concentrated so tremendous and accurate a fire that the
-trenches were in many places demolished and became entirely
-untenable. The survivors of the Life Guards and Blues who made up
-this brigade withdrew steadily through the reserve trenches, which
-were held by the 6th cavalry Brigade, and reformed at Klein Zillebeke
-in the rear. Two squadrons, however, and Lord Worsley's machine-gun
-section were killed or taken by the assailants. The unoccupied
-trenches were seized by the Sixth Bavarian Reserve Division, who
-advanced rapidly in order to improve their advantage, while their
-artillery began to pound the reserves. The cavalry had been
-strengthened, however, by the Greys and 3rd Hussars upon the left,
-while the 4th Hussars lined up on the right, and C, I, and K Horse
-Artillery batteries vigorously supported. In spite of great
-pressure, the position was held. Farther south the First Cavalry
-Division was also at very close grips with the Twenty-sixth Division
-of the Thirteenth German Army Corps, and was hard put to it to hold
-its own. Along the whole cavalry position there was extreme strain.
-A squadron of the 1st Royals were forced to evacuate the chateau of
-Holebeke, and the line in this quarter was pushed back as far as St.
-Eloi, thus flattening a considerable salient.
-
-The danger of a position which consists of so long a line with few
-reserves is that any retirement at any point immediately exposes the
-flanks of the neighbouring units to right and left. Thus the
-evacuation of Zandvoorde threw open the right flank of the Seventh
-Division, even as its left had been in the air upon the day before.
-On getting through, the Germans were {264} on the right rear of the
-1st Welsh Fusiliers and enfiladed them badly, destroying all the
-officers and a considerable proportion of the regiment, which had
-already been greatly reduced. Colonel Cadogan was among those who
-fell. The 22nd Brigade was forced to fall back, and the 2nd
-Yorkshires and 2nd Scots Fusiliers, of the 21st Brigade, being left
-in a salient, suffered heavily, especially the latter battalion, the
-conduct of which from first to last was remarkable even among such
-men as fought beside them. These two regiments held on with the
-greatest determination until orders to retire reached them, which
-were somewhat belated, as several orderlies were killed in bringing
-them. The 2nd Bedfords, who had themselves sustained very severe
-losses from the German artillery fire, covered the retirement of the
-remains of these two gallant units. The Seventh Division then
-covered the line from the canal through Klein Zillebeke and along the
-front of the woods to near Gheluvelt.
-
-The position was now most critical. The Germans were in possession
-of Zandvoorde Ridge on the British right flank, a most important
-position whence guns could command a considerable area. Ypres was
-only four miles distant. There was nothing but a line of weary and
-partially broken infantry to protect the flank from being entirely
-pierced. The whole of a German active army corps was attacking upon
-this line. The order was given to hold the new positions at all
-costs, but on the evening of the 30th the situation was full of
-menace for the morrow. The German flood was still thundering against
-the barrier, and the barrier seemed to be giving. At about 2 P.M. on
-October 30 the 1st Irish Guards and the 2nd Grenadiers, who were in
-reserve to two battalions of the Coldstream {265} in trenches in the
-Polygon Wood, near Reutel Village, were ordered to help the Seventh
-Division. General Capper subsequently directed them to take the
-place of the cavalry on the right of his division. The Irish Guards
-were accordingly on the right of the Seventh Division from now
-onwards, and the Grenadiers were on their right, extending down to
-the canal in front of Klein Zillebeke. The commander of the Ninth
-French Corps also, with that fine loyalty which his comrades have
-shown again and again during the war, easing many a difficult and
-perhaps saving some impossible situations, put three battalions and
-some cavalry at the disposal of the British. Two regiments of
-Bulfin's 2nd Brigade were also brought across and thrust into the
-gap. But the outlook that evening was not cheering. The troops had
-been fighting hard for two days without a break. The losses had been
-heavy. The line had been driven back and was greatly strained. It
-was known that the Germans were in great strength and that the attack
-would be renewed on the morrow. The troops and their leaders faced
-the immediate future in a spirit of sombre determination.
-
-[Sidenote: Fight of Gheluvelt.]
-
-During the 30th Landon's Brigade had strengthened their position near
-Gheluvelt, and General Haig, realising that this was the key of his
-line, moved up the 2nd King's Royal Rifles and the 1st North
-Lancashires to form a reserve under the orders of General Landon.
-These regiments took a position south-west of Gheluvelt and connected
-up more closely between the Seventh Division and the 3rd Brigade of
-the First Division. It was well that a closely-knitted line had been
-formed, for at the dawn of day upon the 31st a most terrific attack
-was made, {266} which was pushed with unexampled fierceness during
-the whole day, falling chiefly upon the centre and left of the
-Seventh Division and upon the 1st Queen's and 2nd Welsh of the Third
-Brigade.
-
-A weak point developed, unfortunately, in the front line, for the
-Seventh Division in its enfeebled condition was further weakened by
-forming somewhat of a salient in the Kruiseik direction. They
-behaved with all their usual magnificent gallantry, but they were not
-numerous enough to hold the ground. The line was broken and the
-remains of the 2nd Royal Scots Fusiliers, after being exposed to
-heavy fire from 5.30 A.M., were outflanked and surrounded in the
-early afternoon. The bulk of the survivors of this battalion had
-been sent to reinforce the line elsewhere, but the remainder, some
-sixty in number, were killed, wounded, or taken, including their
-gallant colonel, Baird Smith, who had been hit the day before. The
-Picton tradition which disregards wounds unless they are absolutely
-crippling was continually observed by these stern soldiers. On the
-left of the Scots Fusiliers the 2nd Bedfords were also involved in
-the catastrophe, but drew off with heavy losses.
-
-The left wing of the Seventh Division began to retire, and the 1st
-Queen's upon the right of the 3rd Brigade had both their flanks
-turned and were reduced to a handful under Major Watson and
-Lieutenant Boyd, who still held together as a unit. It was a great
-morning in the history of this regiment, as the two battalions had
-fought side by side, and their colonels, Pell and Coles, had both
-fallen in the action.
-
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-
-{267}
-
-[Illustration: SKETCH OF BATTLE OF GHELUVELT OCT 31st.]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The line of the 3rd Brigade had been drawn up across the Menin road
-some four hundred yards to the east of the village. The road itself
-was held by {268} the 2nd Welsh Regiment, supported by the 54th
-Battery (Major Peel), which was immediately behind the village. Both
-the battalion and the battery fought desperately in a most exposed
-situation. The Welsh Regiment were driven out of their trenches by a
-terrific shell-fire followed by an infantry attack. They lost during
-the day nearly six hundred men, with sixteen officers, killed,
-wounded, or missing. Colonel Morland was killed and Major Prichard
-badly wounded. Finally, after being pushed back, holding every
-possible point, they formed up under Captain Rees across the open in
-a thin skirmishing line to cover the battery, which was doing great
-work by holding back the German advance. One German gun was in
-action upon the Menin road. Lieutenant Blewitt took a British gun
-out on to the bare road to face it, and a duel ensued at five hundred
-yards, which ended by the German gun being knocked out at the third
-shot by a direct hit.
-
-When the First Division at the centre of the British line were driven
-in, as already described, and the Seventh Division were pushed back
-into the woods, the situation became most critical, for there was a
-general retirement, with a victorious enemy pressing swiftly on upon
-the British centre. The men behaved splendidly, and the officers
-kept their heads, taking every opportunity to form up a new line.
-The 2nd Rifles and 1st North Lancashires in immediate support of the
-centre did all that men could to hold it firm. The German artillery
-lengthened their range as the British fell back, and the infantry,
-with their murderous quick-firers scattered thickly in the front
-line, came rapidly on. Communications were difficult, and everything
-for a time was chaos {269} and confusion. It looked for an hour or
-two as if Von Deimling, the German leader, might really carry out his
-War Lord's command and break his road to the sea. It was one of the
-decisive moments of the world's history, for if the Germans at that
-period had seized the Channel ports, it is difficult to say how
-disastrous the result might have been both to France and to the
-British Empire. At that moment of darkness and doubt a fresh
-misfortune, which might well have proved overwhelming, came upon the
-hard-pressed forces. About 1.30 a shell exploded in the headquarters
-at the chateau of Hooge, and both General Lomax, of the First
-Division, and General Munro, of the Second, were put out of action,
-the first being wounded and the second rendered unconscious by the
-shock. It was a brain injury to the Army, and a desperately serious
-one, for besides the two divisional commanders the single shell had
-killed or wounded Colonels Kerr and Perceval, Major Paley, Captains
-Ommany and Trench, and Lieutenant Giffard. General Landon, of the
-3rd Brigade, took the command of the First Division at a moment's
-notice, and the battle went forward. A line was hurriedly formed,
-men digging as for their lives, whilst broken units threw themselves
-down to hold off the rolling grey wave that thundered behind. The
-new position was three-quarters of a mile back and about four hundred
-yards in advance of Veldhoek, which is the next village down the
-Ypres road. The Seventh Division had also been rolled back, but the
-fiery Capper, their divisional chief, who has been described as a
-British Samurai, was everywhere among his regiments, reforming and
-bracing them. The British soldiers, with their incomparable {270}
-regimental officers, rose to the crisis, whilst General Haig was
-behind the line at Hooge, directing and controlling, like a great
-engineer who seeks to hold a dam which carries an overpowering head
-of water. By three o'clock the new line was firmly held.
-
-[Sidenote: Advance of Worcesters.]
-
-Now General Haig, seeking round for some means of making a
-counter-attack, perceived that on his left flank he had some reserve
-troops who had been somewhat clear of the storm and might be
-employed. The 2nd Worcesters were ordered to advance upon Gheluvelt,
-the initiative in this vital movement coming from General
-Fitz-Clarence of the 1st Brigade. On that flank the troops had not
-joined in the retirement, and, including the South Wales Borderers of
-the 3rd Brigade, were still in their original trenches, being just
-north of the swathe that had been cut in the British line, and just
-south of where the Second Division, extended to cracking point, with
-one man often for every eight or nine feet, and no supports, were
-defending the left flank of the Army.
-
-When the village of Gheluvelt and the trenches to the north of it had
-been captured by the enemy, a gap had been left of about five hundred
-yards between the northern edge of the village and these South Wales
-Borderers. This gap the 2nd Worcesters were ordered to fill. They
-were in reserve at the time in the south-west corner of the Polygon
-Wood, but on being called upon they made a brilliant advance under
-Major Hankey. One company (A) was detached to guard the right flank
-of the advance. The other three companies came on for a thousand
-yards. At one point they had to cross two hundred and twenty yards
-of open under heavy shrapnel-fire. One hundred men fell, but the
-momentum of the charge {271} was never diminished. Their rapid and
-accurate fire drove back the German infantry, while their open order
-formation diminished their own losses. Finally they dashed into the
-trenches and connected up the village with the line of the Welsh
-Borderers. Their right platoons, under Captain Williams, held the
-village until nearly midnight. Altogether the advance cost the
-battalion 187 casualties, including 3 officers, out of 550 who were
-in the ranks that day. Up to dusk the Worcesters were exposed to
-heavy shrapnel-fire, and small detached parties of the enemy came
-round their right flank, but their position was strengthened and
-strongly held until the final readjustment of the line. It was a
-fine advance at a critical moment, and did much to save the
-situation. The whole movement was strongly supported by the guns of
-the 42nd Battery, and by some of the 1st Scots Guards upon the left
-of the Welsh Borderers.
-
-It has been stated that a line had been formed near Veldhoek, but
-this difficult operation was not performed in an instant, and was
-rather the final equilibrium established after a succession of
-oscillations. The British were worn to a shadow. The 2nd Queen's
-had 2 officers and 60 men left that night, the 2nd Welsh had 3
-officers and 93 men. Little groups, who might have been fitted into
-a large-sized drawing-room, were settling a contention upon which the
-fate of the world might depend. But the Germans also had spent all
-their force. The rattle of musketry behind their advance was enough
-to tell them that the British were still in their trenches, and the
-guns were for ever playing on them with deadly effect. Gradually
-they began to dissolve away among the thick woods which flank the
-road. They were {272} learning that to penetrate the line of a
-resolute adversary is not necessarily the prelude to victory. It may
-mean that the farther you advance the more your flanks are exposed.
-So it was now, when the infantry to the north on one side and the
-Third Cavalry Division on the other were closing in on them. That
-long tentacle which was pushing its way towards Ypres had to be
-swiftly withdrawn once more, and withdrawn under a heavy fire from
-the 29th, 41st, and 45th field batteries.
-
-[Sidenote: German recoil.]
-
-The scattered German infantry who had taken refuge in the woods of
-Hooge, which lie to the south of the road, were followed up by
-mounted and dismounted men of the Royals, 10th Hussars, and 3rd
-Dragoon Guards, aided by some French cavalry. These troops advanced
-through the woods, killing or taking a number of the enemy. By
-nightfall the Germans had fallen back along the whole debated line;
-the various British units, though much disorganised, were in close
-touch with each other, and the original trenches had in the main been
-occupied, the Berkshire Regiment helping to close the gap in the
-centre. The flood had slowly ebbed away, and the shaken barrier was
-steady once more, thanks to the master-hands which had so skilfully
-held it firm. The village of Gheluvelt remained in the hands of the
-Germans, but the British trenches were formed to the west of it, and
-the road to the sea was barred as effectually as ever. These are the
-main facts of the action of Gheluvelt, which may well be given a name
-of its own, though it was only one supremely important episode in
-that huge contention which will be known as the First Battle of Ypres.
-
-In the southern portion of the Ypres area at {273} Klein Zillebeke a
-very sharp engagement was going on, which swung and swayed with as
-much violence and change as the main battle on the Menin road. The
-German attack here was hardly inferior in intensity to that in the
-north. Having pushed back Lawford's weak brigade (22nd) it struck
-full upon part of Bulfin's 2nd Brigade, which had been detached from
-the First Division and sent to cover the right of the Seventh
-Division. Its own flank was now exposed, and its situation for a
-time was critical. The German advance was sudden and impetuous,
-coming through a wood which brought the dense mass of the enemy's
-leading formation almost unseen right up to the British line. The
-position of the 2nd Brigade was pierced, and the two regiments
-present, the 2nd Sussex and the 1st Northamptons, were driven back
-with loss. Their brigadier rallied them some hundreds of yards to
-the rear, where they formed up into a skirmish line in the open, and,
-though unable to advance, kept back the Germans with their
-rifle-fire. The losses still continued, however, and the enemy came
-on again and again with numbers which seemed inexhaustible. Suddenly
-there was a charging yell from behind a low slope covering the rear,
-and over the brow there appeared some three hundred survivors of the
-2nd Gordons, rushing at full speed with fixed bayonets. At the same
-moment the dismounted troopers of the 6th Cavalry Brigade and a
-company of sappers ran forward to join in the charge. The whole
-British force was not one to three of its opponents, but as the
-reinforcing line swept on, cheering with all its might, the survivors
-of the hard-pressed brigade sprang up with a shout and the united
-wave burst over the Germans. Next moment they had {274} broken and
-were flying for their lives through the Zwartelen Wood. The pursuit
-lasted for some distance, and a great number of the enemy were
-bayoneted, while several hundreds were taken prisoners.
-
-[Sidenote: General result.]
-
-There have been few more critical occasions in the British operations
-than this action upon October 31, when the Germans so nearly forced
-their way to Ypres. It is the peculiarity of modern warfare that,
-although vast armies are locked in a close struggle, the number of
-men who can come into actual contact at any one point is usually far
-more limited than in the old days, when each host could view the
-other from wing to wing. Thus the losses in such an action are small
-as compared with the terrific death-roll of a Napoleonic battle. On
-the other hand, when the operations are viewed broadly and one groups
-a series of actions into one prolonged battle, like the Aisne or
-Ypres, then the resulting losses become enormous. The old battle was
-a local conflagration, short and violent. The new one is a
-widespread smoulder, breaking here and there into flame. In this
-affair of Gheluvelt the casualties of the British did not exceed 2000
-or 3000, while those of the Germans, who were more numerous and who
-incurred the extra loss which falls upon the attack, could not have
-been less than twice that figure. One thousand five hundred dead
-were actually picked up and six hundred prisoners were taken. Some
-hundreds of prisoners were also taken by the enemy. The British
-artillery, which worked desperately hard all day, had many losses
-both upon the 30th and the 31st. The 12th Battery had all its guns
-silenced but one, and many others were equally hard hit.
-
-On the night of the 31st considerable French {275} reinforcements
-began to arrive, and it was high time that they did so, for the First
-Corps, including the Seventh Division, were likely to bleed to death
-upon the ground that they were holding. It had stood the successive
-attacks of four German corps, and it had held its line against each
-of them. But its own ranks had been grievously thinned and the men
-were weary to death. The strain, it should be added, was equally
-great upon the Ninth French Corps to the north, which had its own set
-of assailants to contend with. Now that the line of the Yser, so
-splendidly guarded by the Belgians, had proved to be impregnable, and
-that the French from Dixmude in the north had repulsed all attacks,
-the whole German advance upon Calais, for which Berlin was screaming,
-was centred upon the Ypres lines. It was time, then, that some
-relief should come to the hard-pressed troops. For several days the
-French on the right and the left took the weight of the attack upon
-themselves, and although the front was never free from fighting,
-there was a short period of comparative rest for Haig's tired men.
-In successive days they had lost Kruiseik, Zandvoorde, and Gheluvelt,
-but so long as they held the semicircle of higher ground which covers
-Ypres these small German gains availed them nothing.
-
-[Sidenote: A great crisis.]
-
-Looking back at the three actions of the 29th, 30th, and especially
-of the 31st of October, one can clearly perceive that it was the
-closest thing to a really serious defeat which the Army had had since
-Le Cateau. If the Germans had been able to push home their attack
-once again, it is probable that they would have taken Ypres, and that
-the results would have been most serious. Sir John French is
-reported {276} as having said that there was no time in the Mons
-retreat when he did not see his way, great as were his difficulties,
-but that there was a moment upon October 31 when he seemed to be at
-the end of his resources. To Sir John at Ypres converged all the
-cries for succour, and from him radiated the words of hope and
-encouragement which stiffened the breaking lines. To him and to his
-untiring lieutenant, Douglas Haig, the Empire owed more that day than
-has ever been generally realised. The latter was up to the firing
-line again and again rallying the troops. The sudden removal of the
-two divisional commanders of the First Corps was a dreadful blow at
-such a moment, and the manner in which General Landon, of the 3rd
-Brigade, took over the command of the First Division at a moment's
-notice was a most noteworthy performance. The fact that three
-divisions of infantry with brigades which resembled battalions, and
-battalions which were anything from companies to platoons, destitute
-of reserves save for a few dismounted cavalry, barred the path to a
-powerful German army, is one of the greatest feats of military
-history. It was a very near thing. There was a time, it is said,
-when the breech-blocks had actually been taken from the heavy guns in
-order to disable them, and some of the artillery had been passed back
-through Ypres. But the line held against all odds, as it has done so
-often in the past. The struggle was not over. For a fortnight still
-to come it was close and desperate. But never again would it be
-quite so perilous as on that immortal last day of October, when over
-the green Flemish meadows, beside the sluggish water-courses, on the
-fringes of the old-world villages, and in the heart of {277} the
-autumn-tinted woods, two great Empires fought for the mastery.
-
-Such was the British epic. There was another to the north which was
-no less wonderful, and which will be celebrated by the poets and
-historians of the lands to which the victors belong. It will tell of
-the glorious stand during this critical ten days of the Belgians, so
-weary, so battered, and yet so indomitable. It will tell how they
-made head against the hosts of the Duke of Würtemberg, and how in the
-end they flooded their own best land with the salt water which would
-sterilise it in order to cover their front. It will tell also of the
-splendid Frenchmen who fought at Dixmude, of Ronarch with his
-invincible marines, and of Grossetti, the fat and debonair, seated in
-an armchair in the village street and pointing the road to victory
-with his cane. Not least, perhaps, in that epic will be the tale of
-the British monitors who, with the deadly submarines upon one side of
-them and the heavy German batteries upon the other, ran into the
-Flemish coast and poured their fire upon the right flank of the
-attacking Germans. Ten days the great battle swung and swayed, and
-then here as at Ypres the wave of the invaders ebbed, or reached its
-definite flood. It would be an ungenerous foe who would not admit
-that they had fought bravely and well. Not all our hatred of their
-national ideals nor our contempt for their crafty misleaders can
-prevent us from saluting those German officers and soldiers who
-poured out their blood like water in the attempt to do that which was
-impossible.
-
-
-
-
-{278}
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE FIRST BATTLE OF YPRES (_continued_)
-
-(From the Action of Gheluvelt to the Winter Lull)
-
-Attack upon the cavalry--The struggle at Messines--The London Scots
-in action--Rally to the north--Terrible losses--Action of
-Zillebeke--Record of the Seventh Division--Situation at Ypres--Attack
-of the Prussian Guard--Confused fighting--End of the First Battle of
-Ypres--Death of Lord Roberts--The Eighth Division.
-
-
-[Sidenote: Attack upon the cavalry.]
-
-Whilst this severe fighting had been going on to the north of the
-British position, the centre, where the dismounted cavalry were
-holding the line of trenches, was so terribly pressed that it is an
-extraordinary thing that they were able to hold their own. The
-Second Corps, which at that time had just been withdrawn for a rest
-from the La Bassée lines, were the only available reinforcements.
-When news was flashed south as to the serious state of affairs, two
-regiments, the 2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry and the 2nd Scottish
-Borderers from the 13th Infantry Brigade, were sent up in motor-buses
-by road to the relief. Strange indeed was the sight of these
-vehicles flying along the Flemish roads, plastered outside with the
-homely names of London suburbs and crammed with the grimy,
-much-enduring infantry. The lines at Messines were in trouble, and
-so also were those at Wytschaete farther to the north. To this
-latter place {279} went two battalions of Shaw's 9th Brigade, the 1st
-Northumberland Fusiliers and the 1st Lincolns. Hard work awaited the
-infantry at Messines and at Wytschaete, for in both places Allenby's
-troopers were nearly rushed off their feet.
-
-It has already been shown that on October 30 a severe assault was
-made upon the Third Cavalry Division, when the 7th Brigade
-(Kavanagh's) was forced out of Zandvoorde by the Fifteenth German
-Army Corps. Upon this same date a most strenuous attack, made in
-great force and supported by a terrific shell-fire, was directed
-along the whole line of the cavalry from Wytschaete to Messines. No
-British troops have been exposed to a more severe ordeal than these
-brave troopers, for they were enormously outnumbered at every point,
-and their line was so thin that it was absolutely impossible for them
-to prevent it from being pierced by the masses of infantry, from the
-Twenty-fourth Corps and Second Bavarian Corps, which were hurled
-against them. From the extreme left of the Second Cavalry Division
-near Wytschaete to the right of the First Cavalry Division south of
-Messines the same reports came in to the anxious General, of trenches
-overwhelmed or enfiladed, and of little isolated groups of men
-struggling most desperately to keep a footing against an ever-surging
-grey tide which was beating up against them and flowing through every
-gap. In the north Gough's men were nearly overwhelmed, the 5th Irish
-Lancers were shelled out of a farmhouse position, and the 16th
-Lancers, shelled from in front and decimated by rifles and
-machine-guns from the flank, were driven back for half a mile until
-three French battalions helped the line to reform. The pressure,
-however, {280} was still extreme, the Germans fighting with admirable
-energy and coming forward in never-ending numbers. An Indian
-regiment of the 7th (Ferozepore) Brigade, the 129th Baluchis, had
-been helping the cavalry in this region since October 23, but their
-ranks were now much decimated, and they were fought almost to a
-standstill. Two more British regiments from the Second Corps, the
-1st Lincolns and the 1st Northumberland Fusiliers of the 9th Brigade,
-together with their Brigadier, Shaw, who was a reinforcement in
-himself, were, as already stated, hurried off from the south in
-motor-buses to strengthen Gough's line. Advancing into what was to
-them an entirely strange position these two veteran regiments
-sustained very heavy losses, which they bore with extreme fortitude.
-They were surprised by the Germans on the road between Kemmel and
-Wytschaete on the night of October 31, the same night upon which the
-London Scottish to the south of them were so heavily engaged.
-Colonel Smith succeeded in extricating the Lincolns from what was a
-most perilous position, but only after a loss of 16 officers and 400
-men. The Fusiliers were almost as hard hit. For forty-eight hours
-the battle swung backwards and forwards in front of Wytschaete, and
-in the end the village itself was lost, but the defensive lines to
-the west of it were firmly established. By November the second
-strong French reinforcements had appeared, and it was clear that this
-desperate attempt to break through the very centre of the British
-position had definitely failed.
-
-[Sidenote: The struggle at Messines.]
-
-The struggle at Messines, some five miles to the south, had been even
-more severe and sanguinary than at Wytschaete. In the early morning
-of the 31st the Bays and the 5th Dragoon Guards upon the left of the
-{281} Messines position, after a heavy shell-fire, were driven out of
-their trenches by a sudden furious advance of the German infantry.
-The front of the village of Messines was held by Wild's 57th Rifles,
-who were driven in by the same attack, every officer engaged being
-killed or wounded. A reserve company of Wild's Rifles and a squadron
-of the 5th Dragoon Guards endeavoured to restore the fight, but could
-not hold the torrent. The 9th Lancers, also in front of the village
-and to the right of the Indians, held on for a long time, repulsing
-the infantry attacks, until they were driven back by the deadly
-shell-fire. At one time they were enfiladed on both sides and heard
-the Germans roaring their war-songs in the dark all round them; but
-they were able, owing to the coolness of Colonel Campbell and the
-discipline of his veteran troopers, to fall back and to reform upon
-the western side of the village. Lance-Corporal Seaton distinguished
-himself by covering the retreat of his whole squadron, remaining
-single-handed in his trench until his maxim was destroyed, after he
-had poured a thousand shots into the close ranks of his assailants.
-
-The situation was so serious after dawn upon the 31st that General De
-Lisle had to call for help from Wilson's Fourth Infantry Division,
-holding the line upon his right. The Inniskilling Fusiliers were
-extended so as to relieve his right flank. The struggle within
-Messines was still going forward with fighting from house to house,
-but the Germans, who were coming on with overpowering numbers and
-great valour, were gradually winning their way forward. The
-Oxfordshire Hussars, fresh from the base, were thrown into the
-combat. A second line of defence {282} had been arranged a mile or
-so to the west, near Wulverghem, but if Messines must go the victors
-should at least pay the price down to the last drop of blood which
-could be wrung from them. Reinforcements were within sight, both
-French and British, but they were scanty in quantity though superb in
-quality. It was a most critical position, and one cannot but marvel
-at the load of responsibility which Sir John French had to bear upon
-this day, for from the left of Haig's First Corps in the north down
-to Neuve Chapelle in the south, a stretch of twenty-five miles, there
-was hardly a point which was not strained to the verge of cracking.
-Cool and alert, he controlled the situation from his central post and
-threw in such reinforcements as he could find, though, indeed, they
-could only be got by taking them from places where they were wanted
-and hurrying them to places where they were needed even more
-urgently. He was strengthened always by the knowledge that General
-Joffre behind him was doing all that a loyal colleague could to find
-fresh columns of his splendid infantrymen to buttress up the
-hard-pressed line.
-
-For the moment, however, none of these were available, and Messines
-was still partly in British, partly in German hands. Briggs's 1st
-Brigade--Bays, 5th Dragoon Guards, and 11th Hussars--with the
-Oxfords, held on to the western edge of the town. To their left,
-linking up with Gough's men in the Wytschaete sector, was the 4th
-Dragoon Guards. Late in the afternoon the 2nd Scots Borderers and
-the 2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry, the joint detachment under Major
-Coke, arrived from the south, and were at once advanced upon Messines
-to stiffen the defence. {283} Under heavy fire they established
-themselves in the village. Evening fell with desperate street
-fighting and the relative position unchanged. Twice the Bavarians
-stormed into the central square, and twice they fell back after
-littering it with their bodies. It seemed hopeless to hold the
-village against the ever-growing pressure of the Germans, and yet the
-loss of the village entailed the loss of the ridge, which would leave
-a commanding position in the hands of the enemy. Village and ridge
-were mutually dependent, for if either were lost the other could not
-be held.
-
-As it proved, it was the ridge and not the village which could no
-longer sustain the pressure. On the night of October 31 Mullen's 2nd
-Cavalry Brigade--9th Lancers, 4th Dragoon Guards, and 11th
-Hussars--took over the defence from Briggs. Of these, the 4th
-Dragoon Guards were to the left of the village upon the ridge. The
-London Scottish had been brought up, and they were placed upon the
-left of the 4th Dragoon Guards, forming a link of the defence which
-connected up the Second Cavalry Division with the First. The
-right-hand regiment of the latter, the 6th Carbineers, of Bingham's
-4th Brigade, were upon the left of the London Scottish. These two
-regiments held the centre of the ridge. The London Scottish had
-already suffered considerable losses. Hurried up from the lines of
-communication to St. Eloi, they were pushed forward at once into
-action, and were exposed for hours to all the nerve-racking horrors
-of a heavy shell-fire endured in most insufficient trenches. A more
-severe ordeal was in store for them, however, during the grim night
-which lay before them. The admirable behaviour of Colonel Malcolm's
-men excited the more attention as they {284} were the first
-Territorial infantry to come into action, and they set a standard
-which has been grandly sustained by the quarter-million of their
-comrades who have from first to last come into the line.
-
-[Sidenote: The London Scots in action.]
-
-On the early morning of November 1 there had been a strong attempt
-within the village to improve the British position, and some ground
-was actually gained by the cavalrymen, the Yorkshire Light Infantry,
-and the Scots Borderers. What occurred, however, on the ridge to the
-north made all further effort a useless waste of life. The Bavarian
-infantry had come with an irresistible rush against the thin British
-line. The order to hold their ground at all costs was given, and the
-London Scots answered it in a way which gained the highest praise
-from the many soldiers who saw it. It is not claimed that they did
-better than their Regular comrades. That would be impossible. The
-most that can be said is that they proved themselves worthy to fight
-in line with them. After being exposed for several hours to heavy
-shellfire, it was no light task for any troops to be called upon to
-resist a direct assault. From nine in the evening of October 31 to
-two in the morning, under the red glare of burning houses, Colonel
-Malcolm's Scottish and Colonel Annesley's Carbineers held back the
-Bavarian advance, an advance which would have meant the piercing of
-the British line. At two o'clock the Bavarians in greatly
-predominant force were all round the Scots, and even the reserve
-companies found work for their bayonets, preventing the enemy from
-encircling their companions. The losses were very heavy--400 men and
-9 officers, including their gallant doctor, M'Nab, who was
-villainously stabbed as he bandaged a patient. In spite of the great
-pressure, {285} the ground was held all night, and it was not till
-dawn, when the regiment found that it was outflanked on both sides
-and nearly surrounded, that, under cover of the fire of E Battery
-R.H.A., it fell back. The Carbineers and the Scots were close
-together, and the Germans, with their usual quick ingenuity,
-approached the former with a cry of "We are the London Scots." A
-disaster might have occurred in the darkness but for the quickness
-and bravery of a young officer, Lieutenant Hope Hawkins, who rushed
-forward, discovered the identity of the Germans, and fell, riddled
-with bullets, even while he gave warning to his comrades.
-
-The Germans had won the ridge, but the British line was still intact
-and growing stronger every hour. The village was held by the Scots
-Borderers and Yorkshiremen until nearly ten o'clock, when they were
-ordered to fall back and help to man the new line. The shock had
-been a rude one, but the danger-hour was past here as in the north.
-
-The fateful November 1 had come and gone. The villages of Messines
-and Wytschaete were, it is true, in German hands, but French
-reinforcements of the Sixteenth Corps were streaming up from the
-south, the line, though torn and broken, still held firm, and the
-road to Calais was for ever blocked. There was still pressure, and
-on November 2 the 11th Hussars were badly cut up by shell-fire, but
-the line was impregnable. Sir John French summed up in a few terse
-words the true meaning of the operations just described, when he said
-afterwards, in addressing the 9th Lancers, "Particularly I would
-refer to the period, October 31, when for forty-eight hours the
-Cavalry Corps held at bay two German army corps. {286} During this
-period you were supported by only three or four battalions, shattered
-and worn by previous fighting, and in so doing you rendered
-inestimable service." There have been few episodes in the war which
-have been at the same time so splendid and so absolutely vital. The
-First Cavalry Division lost 50 per cent of its numbers between
-October 30 and November 2, and the Second Division was hardly in
-better case, but never did men give their lives to better purpose.
-Their heroism saved the Army.
-
-[Sidenote: Rally to the north.]
-
-Meanwhile the current of operations was evidently running strongly
-towards the northern end of the British line, where help was badly
-needed, as Haig's men had been fought almost to exhaustion. There
-was no British reinforcement available save only the weary Second
-Corps, the remains of which from this date began to be drafted
-northwards. It was already known that the German Emperor had
-appeared in person in that region, and that a great concentration of
-his troops was taking place. At the same time the French were making
-splendid exertions in order to stiffen their own line and help us in
-those parts, like Messines, Wytschaete, and Ploegsteert, where the
-attack was most formidable. It was a great gathering towards the
-north, and clearly some hard blows were to be struck. Northwards
-then went General Morland, of the Fifth Division, taking with him
-four more weak battalions. The whole line had moved upwards towards
-the danger spot, and these troops now found themselves east of
-Bailleul, close to the village of Neuve Eglise. For the moment
-General Smith-Dorrien was without an army, for half his men were now
-supporting General Willcocks in the south {287} and half General
-Allenby or General Haig in the north. The British leaders all along
-the line were, as usual, desperately endeavouring to make one man do
-the work of three, but they were buoyed up by the knowledge that good
-Father Joffre, like some beneficent earthly Providence, was watching
-over them from the distance, and that fresh trainfuls of his brave
-little men were ever steaming into the danger zone. Day by day the
-line was thickening and the task of the Kaiser becoming more
-difficult. It was hoped that the crisis was past. If our troops
-were exhausted so also, it was thought, were those of the enemy. We
-could feel elated by the knowledge that we had held our ground, while
-they could hardly fail to be depressed by the reflection that they
-had made little progress in spite of so many heroic efforts, and that
-Calais was as far from them as ever.
-
-The narrative must now return to the defenders of the Ypres
-approaches, who were left in a state of extreme exhaustion by the
-critical action of October 31. On November 1 the First Corps was not
-in a condition to do more than to hold its line. This line was now
-near to Veldhoek, to the west of Gheluvelt village, and to that
-extent the Germans had profited by their desperate fighting, but this
-was a detail of small consequence so long as an unbroken British Army
-covered the town that was still the objective of the enemy. The
-Ninth French Corps to the north of the British had lost heavily, but
-to the south of the canal lay the Sixteenth French Corps, which was
-in comparatively good condition. This corps now made an advance to
-take some of the pressure off the British line, while Moussy's
-regiments to the north of the canal were to co-operate with Bulfin's
-men upon their {288} left. Upon the left of Bulfin's 2nd Brigade
-were two battalions of the 4th Brigade of Guards.
-
-One of these battalions had a terrible experience upon this morning.
-For some reason the trenches of the Irish Guards were exposed to an
-enfilading fire from the high explosives of the Germans, which
-wrought even more than their customary damage. For hours the
-Guardsmen lay under a terrific fire, to which they could make no
-reply, and from which they could obtain no protection. When at last,
-in the afternoon, they were compelled to fall back, their losses had
-been great, including their colonel, Lord Ardee, 7 other officers,
-and over 300 men. It is the hard fate of the side which is weaker in
-artillery to endure such buffetings with no possibility of return.
-
-The French attack of the Sixteenth Corps had been brought to a speedy
-standstill, and a severe counter-attack, preceded by a heavy
-shell-fire, had fallen upon General Moussy's men and upon the half of
-the 2nd Brigade. Help was urgently needed, so the remains of the 7th
-Brigade from the Third Cavalry Division were hurried forward. The
-Germans were now surging up against the whole right and right-centre
-of the line. It seems to have been their system to attack upon
-alternate days on the right and on the centre, for it will be
-remembered that it was on October 29 that they gained the Gheluvelt
-cross-roads, and on October 31 Gheluvelt village, both in the centre,
-while on October 30 they captured the Zandvoorde ridge upon the
-British right, and now, on November 1, were pressing hard upon the
-right once more.
-
-That morning the Army sustained a loss in the person of General
-Bulfin, who was wounded in the {289} head by shrapnel. Fortunately
-his recovery was not a lengthy one, and he was able to return in
-January as commander of the Twenty-eighth Division. Upon his fall,
-Lord Cavan, of the 4th Brigade, took over the command upon the
-hard-pressed right wing. At half-past one the hundred survivors of
-the 2nd Gordons, on the right of the Seventh Division, and the 2nd
-Oxford and Bucks, were desperately hard pressed by a strong German
-infantry advance, and so were the remains of the Sussex and
-Northamptons. The only available help lay in the 23rd Field Company
-of Royal Engineers. Our sappers proved, as they have so often done
-before, that their hearts are as sound as their heads. They pushed
-off the enemy, but incurred heavy losses. The situation was still
-critical when at the summons of Lord Cavan the 2nd Grenadiers
-advanced and cleared the Germans from the woods in the front and
-flank, while the 10th Hussars supported their advance. A gap had
-been left in the trenches from which the Irish Guards had been
-pushed, but this was now filled up by cavalry, who connected up with
-the French on their right and with the Guards upon their left. The
-general effect of the whole day's fighting was to drive the British
-line farther westward, but to contract it, so that it required a
-smaller force. Two battalions--the Gordons and the Sussex--could be
-taken out and brought into reserve. The centre of the line had a
-day's rest and dug itself into its new positions, but the units were
-greatly mixed and confused.
-
-November 2 brought no surcease from the constant fighting, though the
-disturbance of these days, severe as it was, may be looked upon as a
-mere ground swell after the terrific storm of the last days of
-October. {290} On the morning of the 2nd the Ninth French Corps upon
-the British left, under General Vidal, sent eight battalions forward
-to the south and east in the direction of Gheluvelt. Part of this
-village was actually occupied by them. The Germans meanwhile, with
-their usual courage and energy, were driving a fresh attack down that
-Menin road which had so often been reddened by their blood. It was
-the day for a centre attack on their stereotyped system of alternate
-pushes, and it came duly to hand. An initial success awaited them
-as, getting round a trench occupied by the Rifles, they succeeded in
-cutting off a number of them. The 3rd Brigade was hurried up by
-General Landon to the point of danger, and a French Zouave regiment
-helped to restore the situation. A spirited bayonet charge, in which
-the Gloucesters led, was beaten back by the enemy's fire. After a
-day of confused and desultory fighting the situation in the evening
-was very much as it had been in the morning. Both that night and the
-next day there was a series of local and sporadic attacks, first on
-the front of the Second Division and then of the Seventh, all of
-which were driven back. The Germans began to show their despair of
-ever gaining possession of Ypres by elevating their guns and dropping
-shells upon the old Cloth Hall of that historic city, a senseless act
-of spiteful vandalism which exactly corresponds with their action
-when the Allied Army held them in front of Rheims.
-
-November 4 was a day of menaces rather than of attacks. On this day,
-units which had become greatly mixed during the incessant and
-confused fighting of the last fortnight were rearranged and counted.
-The losses were terrible. The actual {291} strength of the infantry
-of the First Division upon that date was: 1st Brigade, 22 officers,
-1206 men; 2nd Brigade, 43 officers, 1315 men: 3rd Brigade, 27
-officers, 970 men; which make the losses of the whole division about
-75 per cent. Those of the Second Division were very little lighter.
-And now for the 25 per cent remainder of this gallant corps there was
-not a moment of breathing space or rest, but yet another fortnight of
-unremitting work, during which their thin ranks were destined to hold
-the German army, and even the Emperor's own Guard, from passing the
-few short miles which separated them from their objective. Great was
-the "will to conquer" of the Kaiser's troops, but greater still the
-iron resolve not to be conquered which hardened the war-worn lines of
-the soldiers of the King.
-
-[Sidenote: Terrible losses.]
-
-November 5 was a day of incessant shell-fire, from which the Seventh
-Division, the 4th and the 6th Brigades were the chief sufferers. On
-this day the Seventh Division, which had now been reduced from 12,000
-infantry to 2333, was withdrawn from the line. In their place were
-substituted those reinforcements from the south which have already
-been mentioned. These consisted of eleven battalions of the Second
-Corps under General McCracken; this corps, however, was greatly worn,
-and the eleven battalions only represented 3500 rifles. The Seventh
-Division was withdrawn to Bailleul in the south, but Lawford's 22nd
-Brigade was retained in corps reserve, and was destined to have one
-more trial before it could be spared for rest. The day was memorable
-also for a vigorous advance of the Gloucester Regiment, which was
-pushed with such hardihood that they {292} sustained losses of nearly
-half their numbers before admitting that they could not gain their
-objective. A description has been given here of the events of the
-north of the line and of the cavalry positions, but it is not to be
-supposed that peace reigned on the south of this point. On the
-contrary, during the whole period under discussion, while the great
-fight raged at Ypres, there had been constant shelling and occasional
-advances against the Third Corps in the Armentières section, and also
-against the Indians and the Second Corps down to the La Bassée Canal.
-
-The most serious of these occurred upon November 9. Upon this date
-the Germans, who had knocked so loudly at Messines and at Wytschaete
-without finding that any opening through our lines was open to them,
-thought that they might find better luck at Ploegsteert, which is a
-village on the same line as the other two. Wytschaete is to the
-north, Messines in the middle, and Ploegsteert in the south, each on
-the main road from Ypres to Armentières, with about four miles
-interval between each. The German attack was a very strong one, but
-the hundredfold drama was played once more. On the 3rd Worcesters
-fell the brunt, and no more solid fighters have been found in the
-Army than those Midland men from the very heart of England. A
-temporary set-back was retrieved and the line restored. Major
-Milward, of the Worcesters, a very gallant officer, was grievously
-wounded in this affair. The counter-attack which restored the
-situation was carried out mainly by the 1st East Lancashires, who
-lost Major Lambert and a number of men in the venture.
-
-[Sidenote: Action of Zillebeke.]
-
-Upon November 6, about 2 P.M., a strong German advance drove in those
-French troops who were on {293} the right of Lord Cavan's
-Brigade--4th--which occupied the extreme right of Haig's position.
-point was between Klein Zillebeke and the canal, where a German
-lodgment would have been most serious. The retirement of the French
-exposed the right flank of the 1st Irish Guards. This flank was
-strongly attacked, and for the second time in a week this brave
-regiment endured very heavy losses. No. 2 company was driven back to
-the support trenches, and No. 1 company, being isolated, was
-destroyed. Their neighbours on the left, the 2nd Grenadiers stood
-fast, but a great and dangerous alley-way was left for the Germans
-round the British right wing. The situation was splendidly saved by
-Kavanagh's 7th Cavalry Brigade, who galloped furiously down the road
-to the place where they were so badly needed. This hard-worked
-_corps d'élite_, consisting of the 1st and 2nd Life Guards supported
-by the Blues, now dismounted and flung themselves into the gap, a
-grimy line of weather-stained infantry with nothing left save their
-giant physique and their spurs to recall the men who are the pride of
-our London streets. The retiring French rallied at the sight of the
-sons of Anak. An instant later the Germans were into them, and there
-was a terrific _mêlée_ of British, French, and Prussians, which swung
-and swayed over the marshland and across the road. Men drove their
-bayonets through each other or fired point-blank into each other's
-bodies in a most desperate fight, the Germans slowly but surely
-recoiling, until at last they broke. It was this prompt and vigorous
-stroke by Kavanagh's Brigade which saved a delicate situation. Of
-the three cavalry regiments engaged, two lost their colonels--Wilson
-of the Blues and Dawnay {294} of the 2nd Life Guards. Sixteen
-officers fell in half an hour. The losses in rank and file were also
-heavy, but the results were great and indeed vital. The whole
-performance was an extraordinarily fine one.
-
-[Sidenote: Record of the Seventh Division.]
-
-Early on the morning of November 7 Lawford's 22nd Brigade, which was
-now reduced to 1100 men, with 7 officers, was called upon to retake a
-line of trenches which the enemy had wrested from a neighbouring
-unit. Unbroken in nerve or spirit by their own terrific losses, they
-rushed forward, led by Lawford himself, a cudgel in his hand, carried
-the trench, captured three machine-guns, held the trench till
-evening, and then retired for a time from the line. Captains
-Vallentin and Alleyne, who led the two regiments into which the
-skeleton brigade had been divided, both fell in this feat of arms.
-After this action there remained standing the brigadier, 3 officers,
-and 700 men. The losses of the brigade work out at 97 per cent of
-the officers and 80 per cent of the men, figures which can seldom
-have been matched in the warfare of any age, and yet were little in
-excess of the other brigades, as is shown by the fact that the whole
-division on November 7 numbered 44 officers and 2336 men. It is true
-that many British regiments found themselves in this campaign with
-not one single officer or man left who had started from England, but
-these were usually the effects of months of campaigning. In the case
-of the Seventh Division, all these deadly losses had been sustained
-in less than three weeks. Britain's soldiers have indeed been
-faithful to the death. Their record is the last word in endurance
-and military virtue.
-
-The division was now finally withdrawn from the fighting line. It
-has already been stated that there {295} were reasons which made its
-units exceptionally fine ones. In General Capper they possessed a
-leader of enormous energy and fire, whilst his three
-brigadiers--Watts, Lawford, and Ruggles-Brise--could not be surpassed
-by any in the Army. Yet with every advantage of officers and men
-there will always be wonder as well as admiration for what they
-accomplished. For three days, before the First Corps had come
-thoroughly into line, they held up the whole German advance, leaving
-the impression upon the enemy that they were faced by two army corps.
-Then for twelve more days they held the ground in the very
-storm-centre of the attack upon Ypres. When at last the survivors
-staggered from the line, they had made a name which will never die.
-
-[Sidenote: Situation at Ypres.]
-
-The bulk of Smith-Dorrien's Corps had now been brought north, so that
-from this date (November 7) onwards the story of the First and Second
-Corps is intimately connected. When we last saw this corps it will
-be remembered that it had been withdrawn from the front, having lost
-some twelve thousand men in three weeks of La Bassée operations, and
-that the Indian Corps had taken over their line of trenches. Such
-fighting men could not, however, be spared in the midst of such a
-fight. The hospital was the only rest that any British soldier could
-be afforded. Whilst they had still strength to stand they must line
-up to the German flood or be content to see it thunder past them to
-the coast. They were brought north, save only Bowes' 8th Brigade and
-Maude's 14th, which remained with the Indians in the south. Although
-the Seventh Division had been drawn out of the line, its attendant
-cavalry division still remained to give its very efficient help to
-General Haig. {296} The British position, though by no means secure,
-was getting stronger day by day, for General d'Urbal of the Eighth
-French Army to the north, and General Maud'huy to the south, had both
-been strongly reinforced, and with their usual good comradeship did
-all they could to strengthen the flanks and shorten the front of the
-British line.
-
-The men of the Second Corps who had come north from the La Bassée
-district were not left long unmolested in their new sphere of
-operations. On the afternoon of November 7 there was a hot German
-attack upon that portion of the line which had just been vacated by
-the Seventh Division. The trenches were now held by the Fifth
-Division (Morland's).
-
-The enemy may have hoped for some advantage from a change which they
-may well have observed, but they found that, though the units might
-be different, the same old breed still barred their path. On this
-occasion, after the early rush had spent itself upon the 1st
-Lincolns, it was the 2nd West Ridings who led the counter-charge.
-The line, however, was never fully re-established. A number of
-smaller attacks broke upon the front of the Second Division on the
-same day, leaving a few score of prisoners behind them as they ebbed.
-On the same day, November 7, the enemy got into the trenches of the
-2nd Highland Light Infantry and remained in them, for all of them
-were bayoneted or taken. Upon this day the London Scottish were
-brought up into the Ypres line--a sign, if one were needed, that
-after the action described they were accepted as the peers of their
-comrades of the Regular Army, for no empty compliments are passed
-when the breaking of a unit may mean the enfilading of a line.
-
-{297}
-
-November 8 was a quiet day, but it was well known from every report
-of spy, scout, and aeroplane to be the lull before the storm. One
-German brigade came down the Menin road, and went up it again leaving
-a hundred dead on or beside the causeway. This attack inflicted some
-loss upon the 1st North Lancashires and on the 1st Scots Guards. The
-1st Bedfords captured a trench that night. The 9th and the 10th were
-uneventful, and the tired troops rested on their arms, though never
-free for an hour from the endless pelting of shells. To the north
-and east the Eagles were known to be gathering. There were the
-Emperor, the Emperor's Guard, and a great fresh battle of the Germans
-ready for one grand final dash for Calais, with every rifle in the
-firing line and every cannon to support it. Grave messages came from
-headquarters, warning words were passed to anxious brigadiers, who
-took counsel with their colonels as to fire-fields and supports.
-Batteries were redistributed, depleted limbers refilled, and
-observation posts pushed to the front, while the untiring sappers
-gave the last touches to traverse and to trench. All was ready for
-the fray. So close were the lines that at many points the
-conversations of the enemy could be heard.
-
-[Sidenote: Attack of the Prussian Guard.]
-
-The Germans had already concentrated a large number of troops against
-this part of the British line, and they were now secretly reinforced
-by a division of the Prussian Guard. Documents found afterwards upon
-the dead show that the Guard had had special orders from the Emperor
-to break the line at all costs. The brigades which attacked were
-made up of the 1st and 2nd Foot Guards, the Kaiser Franz Grenadiers
-No. 2, the Königin Augusta Grenadiers No. 4, and {298} the battalion
-of Garde Jäger--13,000 men in all. It was to be victory or death
-with the _corps d'élite_ of the German army, but it was no less
-victory or death with the men who opposed them. After an artillery
-preparation of appalling intensity for three hours along the line of
-both the First and Second Divisions, the infantry advance began about
-9.30 on the morning of November 11 amid a storm of wind and rain.
-They are gregarious fighters, the Germans, finding comfort and
-strength in the rush of serried ranks. Even now the advance was made
-in a close formation, but it was carried out with magnificent dash,
-amazing valour, and a pedantic precision which caused, for example,
-the leading officers to hold their swords at the carry. The Prussian
-Guardsmen seemed to have lost nothing, and also to have learned
-nothing, since their famous predecessors lay dead in their ranks
-before St. Privat, forty-four years before. The attack was directed
-against the front of the two divisions of the First British Army
-Corps, but especially on the 1st Brigade, so that Guardsman faced
-Guardsman, as at Fontenoy. There were none of the chivalrous
-greetings of 1745, however, and a stern hatred hardened the hearts of
-either side. The German Guard charged on the north of the Menin
-road, while a second advance by troops of the line was made upon the
-south, which withered away before the British fire. Nothing could
-stop the Guards, however. With trenches blazing and crackling upon
-their flank, for the advance was somewhat diagonal, they poured over
-the British position and penetrated it at three different points
-where the heavy shells had overwhelmed the trenches and buried the
-occupants, who, in some cases, were {299} bayoneted as they struggled
-out from under the earth. It was a terrific moment. The yells of
-the stormers and the shrill whistles of their officers rose above the
-crash of the musketry-fire and roar of the guns. The British fought
-in their customary earnest silence, save for the short, sharp
-directions of their leaders. "They did not seem angry--only
-business-like," said a hostile observer. The troops to the immediate
-north of the Menin road, who had been shelled out of their trenches
-by the bombardment, were forced back and brushed aside into the woods
-to the north, while the Germans poured through the gap. The 4th
-Royal Fusiliers of the 9th Brigade, upon the right of the point where
-the enemy had penetrated, were enfiladed and lost their gallant
-colonel, MacMahon, a soldier who had done great service from the day
-of Mons, and had just been appointed to a brigade. The regiment,
-which has worked as hard and endured as great losses as any in the
-campaign, was reduced to 2 officers and 100 men.
-
-The German Guard poured on into the woods which lay in the immediate
-rear of the British position, but their formation was broken and the
-individualism of the Briton began to tell. Next to MacMahon's
-regiment lay the 1st Scots Fusiliers, sister battalion to that which
-had been destroyed upon October 31. With fierce joy they poured
-volleys into the flank of the Guard as the grey figures rushed past
-them into the woods. Four hundred dead Germans were afterwards
-picked out from the underwood at this point. The Scots Fusiliers
-were also hard hit by the German fire.
-
-At this period the Germans who had come through the line had skirted
-the south of a large wood of {300} half-grown trees, called the
-Polygon Wood, and had advanced into the farther one, named
-Nonnebusch. At this point they were close to the British artillery,
-which they threatened to overwhelm. The 41st Brigade R.F.A., and
-especially the 16th Field Battery, were in the immediate line of
-their advance, and the gunners looking up saw the grey uniforms
-advancing amid the trees. Colonel Lushington, who commanded the
-artillery brigade, hurriedly formed up a firing line under his
-adjutant, composed partly of his own spare gunners and partly of a
-number of Engineers, reinforced by cooks, officers' servants, and
-other odd hands who are to be found in the rear of the army, but
-seldom expect to find themselves in the van of the fight. It was a
-somewhat grotesque array, but it filled the gap and brought the
-advance to a halt, though the leading Germans were picked up
-afterwards within seventy yards of the guns. Whilst the position was
-critical at this point of the front, it was no less so upon the
-extreme right, where the French detachment, who still formed a link
-between the canal on the south and the British right flank, were
-shelled out of their trenches and driven back. Lord Cavan's 4th
-Brigade, their nearest neighbours, were too hard pressed to be able
-to help them. To the north of the Menin road a number of British
-units were intact, and these held up the German flood in that region.
-There are two considerable woods--the Polygon to the north and the
-Nonnebusch to the south-west of the Polygon--the edges of which have
-defined the British position, while their depths have harboured their
-artillery. Now the 1st King's Liverpool Regiment held firm to the
-south of the Polygon Wood, while north of them were {301} the 2nd
-Highland Light Infantry, with a field company of Engineers. Farther
-to the south-west were the 1st Connaught Rangers, while on the other
-side of the Nonnebusch road was the 7th Cavalry Brigade. In the
-afternoon of this day the enemy, skirting the south of the Polygon
-Wood, had actually entered the Nonnebusch Wood, in which it faced the
-artillery as already described. In the Polygon Wood, when they
-penetrated the trenches of the 1st Brigade, they had the King's
-Liverpool Regiment on their right, which refused to move, so that for
-a long time the Prussian Guard and the King's lay side by side with a
-traverse between them. "Our right is supported by the Prussian
-Guard," said the humorous adjutant of the famous Lancashire regiment.
-While the main body of the Guard passed on, some remained all day in
-this trench.
-
-The German Guardsmen had been prevented from submerging the 41st
-Brigade of Artillery, and also the 35th Heavy Battery, by the
-resistance of an improvised firing line. But a more substantial
-defence was at hand. The 2nd Oxford and Bucks Light Infantry, which
-had been in divisional reserve near Ypres, had been brought forward
-and found itself at Westhoek, near the threatened guns. This
-regiment is the old 52nd, of the Peninsular Light Division, a famous
-corps which threw itself upon the flank of Napoleon's Guard at
-Waterloo and broke it in the crisis of the battle. Once again within
-a century an Imperial Guard was to recoil before its disciplined
-rush. Under Colonel Davies the regiment swept through the wood from
-north-west to south-east, driving the Germans, who had already been
-badly shaken by the artillery fire, in a headlong rout. {302} Many
-threw down their arms. The loss to the Oxfords was surprisingly
-small, well under fifty in all. As they emerged from the wood they
-were joined by some of the 1st Northamptons from the 2nd Brigade upon
-the right, while on the left there was a rush of Connaughts and
-Highland Light Infantry from their own (Haking's) brigade and of
-Engineers of the 25th Field Company, who showed extraordinary
-initiative and gallantry, pushing on rapidly, and losing all their
-officers save one and a number of their men without flinching for an
-instant. A party of the Gloucesters, too, charged with the
-Northamptons upon the right, for by this time units were badly mixed
-up, as will always happen in woodland fighting. "It was all a
-confused nightmare," said one who tried to control it. The line of
-infantry dashed forward, a company of the Oxfords under Captain H. M.
-Dillon in the lead, and the khaki wave broke over a line of trenches
-which the Germans had taken, submerging all the occupants. There was
-another line in front, but as the victorious infantry pushed forward
-to this it was struck in the flank by a fire from French batteries,
-which had been unable to believe that so much progress could have
-been made in so short a time.
-
-It was now nearly dark, and the troops were in the last stage of
-exhaustion. Of the 1st Brigade something less than 400 with 4
-officers could be collected. It was impossible to do more than hold
-the line as it then existed. Two brave attempts were made in the
-darkness to win back the original front trenches, but it could not be
-done, for there were no men to do it. Save for one small corner of
-the Polygon Wood, the Germans had been completely {303} cleared out
-from the main position. At twelve and at four, during the night, the
-British made a forward movement to regain the advanced trenches, but
-in each case the advance could make no progress. At the very
-beginning of the second attempt General FitzClarence, commanding the
-1st Brigade, was killed, and the movement fizzled out. Besides
-General FitzClarence, the Army sustained a severe loss in General
-Shaw of the 9th Brigade, who was struck by a shell splinter, though
-happily the wound was not mortal. The German losses were exceedingly
-severe: 700 of their dead were picked up within a single section of
-the British line, but the main loss was probably sustained in the
-advance before they reached the trenches. Killed, wounded, and
-prisoners, their casualties cannot have been less than 10,000 men.[1]
-It was a fine attack, bravely delivered by fresh troops against weary
-men, but it showed the German leaders once for all that it was
-impossible to force a passage through the lines. The Emperor's
-Guard, driven on by the Emperor's own personal impetus, had recoiled
-broken, even as the Guard of a greater Emperor had done a century
-before from the indomitable resistance of the British infantry. The
-constant fighting had reduced British brigades to the strength of
-battalions, battalions to companies, and companies to weak platoons,
-but the position was still held. They had, it is true, lost about
-five hundred yards of ground in the battle, but a shorter line was at
-once dug, organised, and manned. The barrier to Ypres was as strong
-as ever.
-
-
-[1] The German returns for the Guard alone at this battle are
-reported at 1170 dead, 3991 wounded, 1719 missing.
-
-
-The strain upon the men, however, had been terrific. "Bearded,
-unwashed, sometimes plagued {304} with vermin, the few who remained
-in the front line were a terrible crew," says the American, Coleman.
-"They were like fierce, wild beasts," says another observer. They
-had given their all, almost to their humanity, to save Britain. May
-the day never come when Britain will refuse to save them.
-
-[Sidenote: Confused fighting.]
-
-Glancing for a moment down the line to the south, there had been
-continuous confused contention during this time, but no great attack
-such as distinguished the operations in the north. Upon November 7
-two brisk assaults were made by the Germans in the Armentières area,
-one upon the Fourth Division of the Third Corps and the other upon
-the Seaforth Highlanders, who were brigaded with the Indians. In
-each case the first German rush carried some trenches, and in each
-the swift return of the British regained them. There were moderate
-losses upon both sides. On the same date the 13th Infantry Brigade
-lost the services of Colonel Martyn of the 1st West Kents, who was
-seriously wounded the very day after he had been appointed to a
-brigade.
-
-This attack upon November 11 represents the absolute high-water mark
-of the German efforts in this battle, and the ebb was a rapid one.
-Upon November 12 and the remainder of the week, half-hearted attempts
-were made upon the British front, which were repulsed without
-difficulty. To the north of the line, where the French had held
-their positions with much the same fluctuations which had been
-experienced by their Allies, the German assault was more violent and
-met with occasional success, though it was finally repelled with very
-great loss. The 14th was to the French what the 11th had been to the
-British--the culmination of {305} violence and the prelude of rest.
-The weather throughout this period was cold and tempestuous, which
-much increased the strain upon the weary troops. Along the whole
-line from Ypres to Bethune there were desultory shellings with an
-occasional dash by one side or the other, which usually ended in the
-capture of a trench and its recapture by the supports in the rear.
-It was in one of these sporadic German attacks in the Klein Zillebeke
-section that the 2nd King's Royal Rifles held their trench against
-heavy odds, and their machine-gun officer, Lieutenant Dimmer, thrice
-wounded and still fighting, won the coveted Cross by his valour.
-Each gallant advance and capture of the Germans was countered by an
-equally gallant counter-attack and recapture by the British. The
-long line sagged and swayed, but never bent or broke. The era of
-battles had passed, but for thirty miles the skirmishes were
-incessant. So mixed and incessant had been the fighting that it was
-a very difficult task during these days to tidy up the line and get
-each scattered group of men back to its own platoon, company, and
-battalion.
-
-On Tuesday, November 17, the fighting suddenly assumed a more
-important character. The attack was again in the Ypres section and
-fell chiefly upon the battalions of the Second Corps, if so dignified
-a name as "battalion" can be given to bodies of men which consisted
-very often of less than a normal company, commanded, perhaps, by two
-junior officers. The 4th Brigade of Guards was also heavily engaged
-this day, and so were the cavalry of the Third Division. The general
-locale of the action was the same as that which had been so often
-fought over before, the Second Corps being to the south of the
-Ypres-Menin {306} road, with Lord Cavan's Guardsmen upon their right
-and the cavalry upon the right of the Guards. After a severe
-shelling there was a serious infantry advance, about one o'clock,
-which took some trenches, but was finally driven back and chased for
-a quarter of a mile. McCracken's 7th Brigade bore a chief part in
-this fighting, and the 1st Wiltshires particularly distinguished
-themselves by a fine charge led by Captain Cary-Barnard. The 2nd
-Grenadiers did great work during the day.
-
-An even heavier advance was made in the afternoon to the south of
-that which was broken in the morning. This involved an oblique
-advance across the British front, which was stopped and destroyed
-before it reached the trenches by the deadly fire of rifles and
-machine-guns. Over a thousand dead were left as a proof of the
-energy of the attack and the solidity of the resistance. Farther to
-the south a similar attack was beaten back by the cavalry after a
-preliminary shelling in which the 3rd Dragoon Guards suffered
-severely. This attack was repelled by the Third Cavalry Division, to
-which the Leicestershire and North Somerset Yeomanry were now
-attached. The latter did fine service in this action. Altogether,
-November 17 was a good day for the British arms and a most expensive
-one for the Germans.
-
-[Sidenote: End of the first Battle of Ypres.]
-
-We have now reached the end of the Battle of Ypres, which attained
-its maximum fury, so far as the British line was concerned, from
-October 29 to November 11. This great contest raged from the sand
-dunes of the north, where the Belgians fought so well, through the
-French Marine Brigade at Dixmude, and the Ninth French Corps, to
-General Haig's Corps, which was buttressed on the right towards {307}
-the latter part of the battle by the Sixteenth French Corps. Farther
-south yet another French corps supported and eventually took the
-place of the British cavalry opposite the lost villages of Wytschaete
-and Messines. From there ran the unbroken lines of the imperturbable
-Third Corps, which ended to the south in the trenches originally held
-by the Second British Corps, and later by the Indians. Across the La
-Bassée Canal the French once again took up the defence.
-
-It is not an action, therefore, which can be set down to the
-exclusive credit of any one nation. Our Allies fought gloriously,
-and if their deeds are not set down here, it is from want of space
-and of precise information, not from want of appreciation. But,
-turning to the merely British aspect of the fight--and beyond all
-doubt the heavier share fell upon the British, who bore the brunt
-from the start to the end,--it may be said that the battle lasted a
-clear month, from October 12, when Smith-Dorrien crossed the La
-Bassée Canal, to November 11, when the German Guard reeled out of the
-Nonnebusch Wood. We are so near these great events that it is hard
-to get their true proportion, but it is abundantly clear that the
-battle, in its duration, the space covered, the numbers engaged, and
-the losses endured, was far the greatest ever fought up to that time
-by a British Army. At Waterloo the losses were under 10,000. In
-this great fight they were little short of 50,000. The fact that the
-enemy did not recoil and that there was no sensational capture of
-prisoners and guns has obscured the completeness of the victory. In
-these days of nations in arms a beaten army is buttressed up or
-reabsorbed by the huge forces of {308} which it is part. One judges
-victory or defeat by the question whether an army has or has not
-reached its objective. In this particular case, taking a broad view
-of the whole action, a German force of at least 600,000 men set forth
-to reach the coast, and was opposed by a force of less than half its
-numbers who barred its way. The Germans did not advance five miles
-in a month of fighting, and they lost not less than 150,000 men
-without any military advantage whatever, for the possession of such
-villages as Gheluvelt, Wytschaete, or Messines availed them not at
-all. If this is not a great victory, I do not know what military
-achievement would deserve the term. Ypres was a Plevna--but a Plevna
-which remained for ever untaken.
-
-[Sidenote: Death of Lord Roberts.]
-
-On November 15 Lord Roberts died whilst visiting the Army, having
-such an end as he would have chosen, within earshot of the guns and
-within the lines of those Indian soldiers whom he loved and had so
-often led. The last words of his greatest speech to his
-fellow-countrymen before the outbreak of that war which he had
-foreseen, and for which he had incessantly tried to prepare, were
-that they should quit themselves like men. He lived to see them do
-so, and though he was not spared to see the final outcome, his spirit
-must at least have been at rest as to the general trend of the
-campaign. The tradition of his fascinating character, with its
-knightly qualities of gentleness, bravery, and devotion to duty, will
-remain as a national possession.
-
-[Sidenote: The Eighth Division.]
-
-About this time, though too late for the severe fighting, there
-arrived the Eighth Division, which would enable Sir Henry Rawlinson
-to complete his Fourth Corps.
-
-{309}
-
-The Eighth Division was composed as follows:--
-
- DIVISIONAL GENERAL--General DAVIES.
-
- 23_rd Infantry Brigade--General Penny._
- 2nd Scots Rifles.
- 2nd Middlesex.
- 2nd West Yorkshires.
- 2nd Devons.
-
- 24_th Infantry Brigade--General Carter._
- 1st Worcesters.
- 2nd East Lancashires.
- 1st Notts and Derby.
- 2nd Northamptons.
-
- 25_th Infantry Brigade--General Lowry Cole._
- 2nd Lincolns.
- 2nd Berkshires.
- 1st Irish Rifles.
- 2nd Rifle Brigade.
- 13th London (Kensingtons).
-
- _Artillery._
- 5th Brigade R.H.A., G.O.Z.
- 45th Brigade R.F.A.
- 33rd Brigade R.F.A.
- Heavy Batteries 118, 119.
- 2, 5, F. Cos. R.E.
- 8 Signal Co.
- Divisional Cavalry.
- Northampton Yeomanry.
- 8th Cyclists.
-
-
-We have now arrived at what may be called the great winter lull, when
-the continuation of active operations was made impossible by the
-weather conditions, which were of the most atrocious description. It
-was the season which in a more classic age of warfare was spent in
-comfortable winter quarters. There was no such surcease of hardship
-for the contending lines, who were left in their trenches face to
-face, often not more than fifty yards apart, and each always keenly
-alert for any devilry upon the part of the other. The ashes of war
-were always redly smouldering, and sometimes, as will be seen, burst
-up into sudden furious flame. It was a period of rain-storms and of
-frost-bites, of trench mortars and of {310} hand grenades, of weary,
-muddy, goat-skinned men shivering in narrow trenches, and of depleted
-brigades resting and recruiting in the rearward towns. Such was the
-position at the Front. But hundreds of miles to the westward the
-real future of the war was being fought out in the rifle factories of
-Birmingham, the great gun works of Woolwich, Coventry, Newcastle, and
-Sheffield, the cloth looms of Yorkshire, and the boot centres of
-Northampton. In these and many other places oversea the tools for
-victory were forged night and day through one of the blackest and
-most strenuous winters that Britain has ever known. And always on
-green and waste and common, from Cromarty to Brighton, wherever
-soldiers could find billets or a village of log huts could be put
-together, the soldier citizens who were to take up the burden of the
-war, the men of the Territorials and the men of the new armies,
-endured every hardship and discomfort without a murmur, whilst they
-prepared themselves for that great and glorious task which the future
-would bring. Even those who were too old or too young for service
-formed themselves into volunteer bands, who armed and clothed
-themselves at their own expense. This movement, which sprang first
-from the small Sussex village of Crowborough, was co-ordinated and
-controlled by a central body of which Lord Desborough was the head.
-In spite of discouragement, or at the best cold neutrality from
-Government, it increased and prospered until no fewer than a quarter
-of a million of men were mustered and ready entirely at their own
-expense and by private enterprise--one of the most remarkable
-phenomena of the war.
-
-
-
-
-{311}
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-A RETROSPECT AND GENERAL SUMMARY
-
-Position of Italy--Fall of German colonies--Sea affairs--Our Allies.
-
-
-There has been no opportunity during this somewhat breathless
-narrative of the great events which will ever be associated with the
-names of Mons, the Marne, the Aisne, and Ypres to indicate those
-factors which were influencing the course of the war in other
-regions. They do not come properly within the scope of this
-narrative, nor does the author profess to have any special
-information concerning them, but they cannot be absolutely omitted
-without interfering with a correct view of the general situation.
-They will therefore be briefly summarised in retrospect before the
-reader is carried on into a more particular account of the trench
-warfare of the early winter of 1914.
-
-[Sidenote: Position of Italy.]
-
-The most important European event at the outbreak of the war, outside
-the movement of the combatants, was the secession of Italy from the
-Central Powers on the grounds that her treaty applied only to wars of
-defence whilst this was manifestly one of aggression. Italian
-statesmen could speak with the more decision upon the point since the
-plot had been unfolded before their eyes. A year previously they had
-been asked to join in an unprovoked {312} attack upon Serbia, and in
-refusing had given clear warning to their allies how such an outrage
-would be viewed. The Central Powers, however, puffed up by their
-vainglory and by the knowledge of their own secret preparations, were
-persuaded that they had ample strength to carry out their intentions
-without aid from their southern ally. Italy, having denounced the
-treaty, remained a neutral, but it was always clear that she would
-sooner or later throw in her strength with those who were at war with
-Austria, her secular enemy. It was not, however, until May 1915 that
-she was in a position to take a definite step. It should be
-remembered to her eternal honour that the time at which she did
-eventually come in was one which was very overcast for the Allies,
-and that far from fulfilling the cynical German prophecy that she
-would "hasten to the assistance of the conqueror," she took grave
-risks in ranging herself upon the side of her Latin sister.
-
-[Sidenote: Fall of German colonies.]
-
-Upon August 24 Japan also declared war, and by November 7 had
-completed her share of the common task, for Tsingtau, the only German
-colony in Eastern Asia, was captured by a Japanese expeditionary
-force aided by a British contingent. Already the vast Colonial
-erection of Germany, those numerous places in the sun which she had
-annexed all over the globe, were beginning to crumble. The little
-Togoland colony fell upon August 26. New Zealand took over German
-Samoa upon August 31. The Australians occupied the Bismarck
-Archipelago upon September 7, and New Guinea upon the 25th. These
-smaller twigs were easily lopped, but the main boughs were made of
-tougher stuff. A premature attack upon German East Africa by an
-expeditionary force from India {313} met with a severe check
-immediately after landing. In South Africa the Germans succeeded in
-blowing into a small flame the smouldering ashes of the old Boer War.
-De Wet and others broke their oaths and took up arms, but the
-majority remained splendidly loyal, and by the beginning of December
-Botha had brought the insurrection to an end, and was able henceforth
-to devote his grand powers of leadership and organisation to the
-extinction of the enemy's south-western colony.
-
-[Sidenote: Sea affairs.]
-
-A word, too, about sea affairs before we turn to the further detailed
-account of the British winter upon the Continent. In good time the
-Fleet had been ordered to her war-stations at the north and east of
-Scotland, with the result that German ocean commerce was brought to
-an immediate and absolute stop. The German ships _Goeben_ and
-_Breslau_, which were cut off at the outbreak of the war in the
-Mediterranean, succeeded in a very clever fashion in reaching the
-Dardanelles and safety. Having taken refuge at Constantinople, these
-ships played a prominent part in determining Turkey to take action
-against the Allies on October 31, a most disastrous decision both for
-Turkey, which met her ruin, and for the Allies, who found their task
-greatly increased through the excellent fighting power of the Turkish
-forces.
-
-A brisk action was fought upon August 28 in the Heligoland Bight,
-when Admiral Beatty with his cruiser-squadron and a number of light
-craft visited the enemy in his own waters, sinking three German
-warships and sustaining no losses himself. Among the prisoners was
-the son of Chief Admiral Von Tirpitz. Numerous minor actions led to
-no {314} noteworthy result, but the power of the submarine, already
-prophesied before the war, speedily made itself manifest. Several
-small British cruisers were destroyed by these craft, and finally a
-considerable disaster occurred through the sinking of the three
-cruisers, _Hogue_, _Aboukir_, and _Cressy_, upon September 22. This
-dashing and cool-headed exploit was brought off by a young lieutenant
-named Weddigen. Much as we suffered from his action, it was
-recognised in Britain as having been a remarkable deed of arms upon a
-very different plane to those execrable murders of civilians with
-which the German submarine service was afterwards associated. Some
-months later Weddigen's submarine rose amongst the Grand Fleet whilst
-it was in motion, and was rammed and destroyed by the _Dreadnought_.
-
-The outbreak of war had seen a considerable number of German cruisers
-at large, and these would undoubtedly have been strongly reinforced
-had it not been for the speed with which the British Fleet took up
-its war-stations. As it was, the amount of damage to commerce was
-not serious, and by the New Year all the wanderers had been rounded
-up. The most successful raider was the _Emden_, under Captain
-Müller, which captured and destroyed numerous British merchant-ships,
-bombarded the Madras gas-works, and sank by a surprise attack a small
-Russian cruiser and a French destroyer before it was finally cornered
-and sunk by the Australian cruiser _Sydney_ off Cocos Island upon
-November 10. Captain Muller, though forced by circumstances to adopt
-certain measures not recognised in honourable naval warfare, behaved
-on the whole in the manner which one associates with the term naval
-officer. The {315} _Karlsruhe_ had also considerable success as a
-naval raider, but met her end through an unexplained explosion some
-little time after her consort the _Emden_. On the whole, the damage
-inflicted by German commerce destroyers was very much less summary.
-than had been anticipated.
-
-On November 1, Admiral Craddock's squadron, consisting of the
-_Monmouth_, the _Good Hope_, and two small vessels, was engaged by a
-superior squadron under Admiral von Spee at Coronel off the coast of
-Chili. The result was a British defeat, the two cruisers being sunk
-by gun-fire with all hands. This disaster was dramatically revenged,
-as within six weeks, upon December 8, a special cruiser-squadron
-dispatched from England under Admiral Sturdee entirely destroyed the
-fleet of Von Spee in the Battle of the Falkland Islands. The British
-Fleet was considerably stronger, and little credit can be claimed
-save for the admirable strategy which enabled Sturdee to find the
-enemy in that vast waste of waters as promptly and directly as if the
-meeting had been by appointment.
-
-There were no other outstanding naval events in 1914 save a raid upon
-Cuxhaven by aeroplanes, escorted by light cruisers, which probably
-did little harm as the weather was misty. This occurred upon
-Christmas Day 1914. It had been preceded by an attack by German
-cruisers on December 16 upon West Hartlepool, Scarborough, and
-Whitby. As the two latter towns were open watering-places, and as
-numerous civilians were the victims of the raid, it was recognised
-from this time onwards that the German Navy was as little trammelled
-by international law or by the feelings of humanity as the German
-{316} Army had shown itself to be in France, Belgium, and Russia.
-
-[Sidenote: Our Allies.]
-
-The general movement of the French armies has been touched upon in
-recording the experiences of the British, for after their glorious
-victory at the Marne and the hold-up at the Aisne, it was at Ypres
-that the real fighting was done, the rest of the long line down to
-the Swiss frontier playing a subsidiary part. The Russians, however,
-had experienced both extremities of fortune, for their victory at
-Lemberg over the Austrians upon September 2 was of a very glorious
-character, while their defeat by the Germans at Tannenberg in East
-Prussia was no less decisive. All the events of the outset of the
-war were inglorious for Austria, who received rapidly the punishment
-which she deserved for her wanton disturbance of the world's peace.
-Apart from the blows which she received from Russia, she was severely
-defeated by the Serbians on August 17, and her invading army was
-driven out of the country which she had wronged. At the end of the
-year she had lost the whole of Galicia to the Russians, who in turn
-had been pushed out of East Prussia by the German armies under Von
-Hindenburg. An invasion of Poland by the Germans was held up after
-very severe fighting, failing to reach Warsaw, which was its
-objective.
-
-These were the main incidents of the world's war during the months
-which have been under review. As those months passed the terrific
-nature of the task which they had undertaken became more and more
-clear to the British, but further reflection had confirmed them in
-their opinion that the alternative course of abandoning their friends
-and breaking their pledge to Belgium was an absolutely unthinkable
-{317} one, so that however great the trials and sacrifices in blood
-and treasure, they were not further embittered by the reflection that
-they could possibly have been avoided. Very greatly were they
-cheered in that dark hour by the splendid, whole-hearted help from
-India, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, help which was even more
-valuable from a moral than from a material standpoint. With this
-brief synopsis we will now return to those operations which are the
-proper subject of this volume.
-
-
-
-
-{318}
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE WINTER LULL OF 1914
-
-Increase of the Array--Formation of the Fifth Corps--The visit of the
-King--Third Division at Petit Bois--The fight at Givenchy--Heavy
-losses of the Indians--Fine advance of 1st Manchesters--Advance of
-the First Division--Singular scenes at Christmas.
-
-
-The winter lull may be said to have extended from the great combats
-at Ypres of the middle of November 1914 to the opening of the spring
-campaign in March 1915; but we will only follow it here up to the end
-of the year. It was a period of alternate rest and discomfort for
-the troops with an ever-present salt of danger. For days they found
-themselves billeted with some approach to comfort in the farmhouses
-and villages of Flanders, but such brief intervals of peace were
-broken by the routine of the trenches, when, in mud or water with a
-clay cutting before their faces and another at their backs, they
-waited through the long hours, listening to the crack of the sniper's
-rifle, or the crash of the bursting shell, with an indifference which
-bordered upon thankfulness for anything that would break the drab
-monotony of their task. It was a scene of warfare which was new to
-military experience. The vast plain of battle lay in front of the
-observer as a flat and lonely wilderness, dotted with ruined houses
-from which no homely wreath of smoke {319} rose into the wintry air.
-Here and there was an untidy litter of wire; here and there also a
-clump of bleak and tattered woodland; but nowhere was there any sign
-of man. And yet from the elevation of an aeroplane it might be seen
-that the population of a large city was lurking upon that motionless
-waste. Everywhere the airman would have distinguished the thin brown
-slits of the advance trenches, the broader ditches of the supports
-and the long zigzags of the communications, and he would have
-detected that they were stuffed with men--grey men and khaki, in
-every weird garment that ingenuity could suggest for dryness and for
-warmth--all cowering within their shelters with the ever-present
-double design of screening themselves and of attacking their enemy.
-As the German pressure became less, and as more regiments of the
-Territorials began to arrive, taking some of the work from their
-comrades of the Regulars, it was possible to mitigate something of
-the discomforts of warfare, to ensure that no regiments should be
-left for too long a period in the trenches, and even to arrange for
-week-end visits to England for a certain number of officers and men.
-The streets of London got a glimpse of rugged, war-hardened faces,
-and of uniforms caked with the brown mud of Flanders, or supplemented
-by strange Robinson Crusoe goatskins from the trenches, which brought
-home to the least imaginative the nature and the nearness of the
-struggle.
-
-[Sidenote: Increase of the Army.]
-
-Before noting those occasional spasms of activity--epileptic,
-sometimes, in their sudden intensity--which broke out from the German
-trenches, it may be well to take some note of the general development
-of those preparations which meant so much for the {320} future. The
-Army was growing steadily in strength. Not only were the old
-regiments reinforced by fresh drafts, but two new divisions of
-Regulars were brought over before the end of January. These formed
-the Twenty-seventh and Twenty-eighth Divisions under Generals Snow
-and Bulfin, two officers who had won a name in the first phase of the
-war.
-
-[Sidenote: Formation of the Fifth Corps.]
-
-The two Divisions together formed the Fifth Army Corps under General
-Plumer, the officer who had worked so hard for the relief of Mafeking
-in 1900. The Divisions, composed of splendid troops who needed some
-hardening after tropical service, were constituted as follows, the
-list including territorial battalions attached, but excluding the
-artillery as well as the four original regular units in each brigade:
-
- FIFTH ARMY CORPS
-
- GENERAL PLUMER.
-
- TWENTY-SEVENTH DIVISION.--General SNOW.
-
- 80_th Brigade--General Fortescue._
- Princess Pat. Canadians.
- 4th Rifle Brigade.
- 3rd King's Royal Rifles.
- 4th King's Royal Rifles.
- 2nd Shrop. Light Infantry.
-
- 81_st Brigade--General MacFarlane._
- 9th Royal Scots (T.F.).
- 2nd Cameron Highlanders.
- 1st Argyll and Sutherlands.
- 1st Royal Scots.
- 2nd Gloucesters.
- 9th Argyll and Sutherlands (T.F.).
-
- 82_nd Brigade--General Longley._
- 1st Leinsters.
- 2nd Royal Irish Fusiliers.
- 2nd Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry.
- 1st Royal Irish.
- 1st Cambridge (T.F.).
- Army Troops, 6th Cheshires.
-
-{321}
-
- TWENTY-EIGHTH DIVISION.--General BULFIN.
-
- 83_rd Brigade--General Boyle._
- 2nd E. Yorkshire.
- 1st King's Own York. Light Infantry.
- 1st Yorks. and Lancasters.
- 2nd Royal Lancasters.
- 3rd Monmouths (T.F.).
- 5th Royal Lancasters (T.F.).
-
- 84_th Brigade--General Winter._
- 2nd Northumberland Fusiliers.
- 1st Suffolks.
- 1st Welsh.
- 2nd Cheshires.
- 12th London Rangers (T.F.).
- 1st Monmouths (T.F.).
-
- 85_th Brigade--General Chapman._
- 2nd East Kent.
- 2nd East Surrey.
- 3rd Middlesex.
- 3rd Royal Fusiliers.
- 8th Middlesex (T.F.).
-
-Besides this new Fifth Army Corps, there had been a constant dribble
-of other territorial units to the front, where they were incorporated
-with various regular brigades. The London Scottish, which had done
-so well, was honoured by admission to the 1st Brigade of Guards. The
-Artists' Rifles, 28th London, had the unique distinction of being set
-aside as an officers' training corps, from which officers were
-actually drawn at the rate of a hundred a month. The Honourable
-Artillery Company, brigaded with the 7th Brigade, was among the first
-to arrive. Conspicuous among the newcomers were the London Rifle
-Brigade, the 4th Suffolk, the Liverpool Scottish, the 5th and 6th
-Cheshires, the 1st Herts, the 2nd Monmouthshires, Queen Victoria
-Rifles, and Queen's Westminsters. These were among the earlier
-arrivals, though it seems invidious to mention names where the spirit
-of all was equally good. Among the {322} yeomanry, many had already
-seen considerable service--notably the North and South Irish Horse,
-who had served from the beginning, the Northumberland Hussars, the
-North Somersets, the Oxford Hussars, and the Essex Yeomanry. Most of
-the troops named above shared the discomfort of the winter campaign
-before the great arrival of the new armies from England in the
-spring. There can be no better earned bar upon a medal than that
-which stands for this great effort of endurance against nature and
-man combined.
-
-To take events in their order: beyond numerous gallant affairs of
-outposts, there was no incident of importance until the evening of
-November 23, when the Germans, who had seemed stunned for a week or
-so, showed signs of returning animation. On this day, some eight
-hundred yards of trench held by Indian troops in the neighbourhood of
-Armentières were made untenable by the German artillery, especially
-by the _minen-werfer_--small mortars which threw enormous bombs by an
-ingenious arrangement whereby the actual shell never entered the bore
-but was on the end of a rod outside the muzzle. Some of these
-terrible missiles, which came through the air as slowly as a punted
-football, were 200 lbs. in weight and shattering in their effects.
-There was an advance of the 112th Regiment of the Fourteenth German
-Corps, and the empty trenches were strongly occupied by them--so
-strongly that the first attempt to retake them was unsuccessful in
-the face of the rifle and machine-gun fire of the defenders. A
-second more powerful counter-attack was organised by General Anderson
-of the Meerut Division, and this time the Germans were swept out of
-their position and the line {323} re-established. The fighting
-lasted all night, and the Ghurkas with their formidable knives proved
-to be invaluable for such close work, while a party of Engineers with
-hand-bombs did great execution--a strange combination of the Asiatic
-with the most primitive of weapons and the scientific European with
-the most recent. It was a substantial victory as such affairs go,
-for the British were left with a hundred prisoners, including three
-officers, three machine-guns, and two mortars.
-
-[Sidenote: The visit of the King.]
-
-The first week of December was rendered memorable by a visit of the
-King to the Army. King George reviewed a great number of his devoted
-soldiers, who showed by their fervent enthusiasm that one need not be
-an autocratic War-lord in order to command the fierce loyalty of the
-legions. After this pleasant interlude there followed a succession
-of those smaller exploits which seem so slight in any chronicle, and
-yet collectively do so much to sustain the spirit of the Army. Now
-this dashing officer, now that, attempted some deed upon the German
-line, and never failed to find men to follow him to death. On
-November 24 it was Lieutenant Impey, with a handful of 2nd Lincolns;
-on November 25, Lieutenants Ford and Morris with a few Welsh
-Fusiliers and sappers; on November 26, Sir Edward Hulse with some
-Scots Guards; on the same day, Lieutenant Durham with men of the 2nd
-Rifle Brigade--in each case trenches were temporarily won, the enemy
-was damaged, and a spirit of adventure encouraged in the trenches.
-Sometimes such a venture ended in the death of the leader, as in the
-case of Captain the Honourable H. L. Bruce of the Royal Scots. Such
-men died as the old knights did who rode out betwixt the {324} lines
-of marshalled armies, loved by their friends and admired by their
-foes.
-
-December 9 was the date of two small actions. In the first the 1st
-Lincolns of the 9th Brigade, which had been commanded by Douglas
-Smith since the wounding of General Shaw, made an attack upon the
-wood at Wytschaete which is called Le Petit Bois. The advance was
-not successful, the three officers who led it being all wounded, and
-forty-four men being hit. The attempt was renewed upon a larger
-scale five days later. The other action was an attack by the enemy
-upon some of the trenches of the Third Corps. This Corps, though it
-had not come in for the more dramatic scenes of the campaign, had
-done splendid and essential work in covering a line of fourteen miles
-or so against incessant attacks of the Germans, who never were able
-to gain any solid advantage. On this occasion the impact fell upon
-Gordon's 19th Brigade, especially upon the 2nd Argyll and Sutherland
-Highlanders and the 1st Middlesex. It was driven back with heavy
-loss.
-
-[Sidenote: Third Division at Petit Bois.]
-
-On December 14 the second and more sustained effort was made to get
-possession of the Petit Bois at Wytschaete, which had been attacked
-by the Lincolns upon the 9th. D'Urbal's Eighth French Army was
-co-operating upon the left. The British attack was conducted by
-Haldane's Third Division, and the actual advance was carried out,
-after a considerable artillery preparation from the batteries of two
-Corps, by Bowes' 8th Brigade, with the 2nd Royal Scots and the 1st
-Gordons in the lead. At 7.45 the guns were turned upon the big wood
-beyond Petit Bois, through which the supports might be advancing, and
-at the same hour the two regiments named swarmed forward, {325} the
-Lowlanders on the left and the Highlanders on the right. The Royal
-Scots, under Major Duncan, carried Petit Bois with a rush, taking
-fifty prisoners and two machine-guns, while the Germans fled out at
-the other end of the wood. The Scots at once entrenched themselves
-and got their own machine-guns into position. The Gordons, under
-Major Baird, advanced with splendid dash and gained some ground, but
-found the position such that they could not entrench upon it, so they
-were forced to fall back eventually to their original position. Both
-they and the 4th Middlesex, who supported them, lost considerably in
-the affair. The total casualties in the Petit Bois action came to
-over four hundred, with seventeen officers, figures which were
-considerably swollen by the losses of the Suffolks and Irish Rifles,
-who continued to hold the captured position in the face of continued
-bombing. The French in the north had no particular success and lost
-600 men. The importance of such operations is not to be measured,
-however, by the amount of ground won, but by the necessity of beating
-up the enemies' quarters, keeping them pinned to their positions, and
-preventing them from feeling that they could at their own sweet wills
-detach any reinforcements they chose to thicken their line upon the
-Eastern frontier, where our Russian Allies were so insistently
-pressing.
-
-On the morning of December 19 an attack was made upon the German
-lines in the Festubert region by Willcocks' Indian Corps, the Meerut
-Division, under General Anderson, attacking upon the left, and the
-Lahore, under General Watkis, upon the right. The object of the
-movement was to co-operate with the French in an advance which they
-had {326} planned. The Meerut attack was successful at first, but
-was driven back by a counter-attack, and some hundreds of Indian
-infantry were killed, wounded, or taken. In the case of the Lahore
-attack the storming party consisted of the 1st Highland Light
-Infantry and the 4th Ghurkas. Both of these units belong to the
-Sirhind Brigade, but they were joined in the enterprise by the 59th
-Scinde Rifles of the Jullundur Brigade. These latter troops had a
-long night march before reaching the scene of the operations, when
-they found themselves upon the right of the attack and within two
-hundred and fifty yards of the German trenches. Judging the
-operations from the standard reached at a later date, the whole
-arrangement seems to have been extraordinarily primitive. The
-artillery preparation for a frontal attack upon a strong German line
-of trenches lasted exactly four minutes, being rather a call to arms
-than a bombardment. The troops rushed most gallantly forward into
-the dark of a cold wet winter morning, with no guide save the
-rippling flashes of the rifles and machine-guns in front of them.
-Many were so sore-footed and weary that they could not break into the
-double. Some of the Indians were overtaken from behind by a line of
-British supports, which caused considerable confusion. An officer of
-Indians has left it on record that twice running he had a revolver
-clapped to his head by a British officer. All of the battalions
-advanced with a frontage of two companies in columns of platoons.
-Both the Ghurkas and Highlanders reached the trench in the face of a
-murderous fire. The left of the 59th, consisting of Punjabi
-Mahomedans, also reached the trench. The right, who were Sikhs, made
-an {327} equally gallant advance, but were knee-deep in a wet
-beetroot field and under terrific machine-gun fire. Their gallant
-leader, Captain Scale, was struck down, as was every Indian officer,
-but a handful of the survivors, under a Sikh Jemadar, got into a
-German sap, which they held for twenty-four hours, taking a number of
-prisoners.
-
-Day had dawned, and though the British and Indians were in the enemy
-trenches, it was absolutely impossible to send them up reinforcements
-across the bullet-swept plain. The 59th discovered a sap running
-from their left to the German line, and along this they pushed. They
-could not get through, however, to where their comrades were being
-terribly bombed on either flank by the counter-attack. It was an
-heroic resistance. Colonel Ronaldson, who led the party, held on all
-day, but was very lucky in being able to withdraw most of the
-survivors after nightfall. Of the hundred Punjabis who held one
-flank, only three returned, while thirteen wounded were reported
-later from Germany. The others all refused to surrender, declaring
-that those were the last orders of their British officers, and so
-they met their honoured end. It had been a long and weary day with a
-barren ending, for all that had been won was abandoned. The losses
-were over a thousand, and were especially heavy in the case of
-officers.
-
-[Sidenote: The fight at Givenchy.]
-
-The Germans, elated by the failure of the attack, were in the mood
-for a return visit. In the early dawn of the next day, December 20,
-they began a heavy bombardment of the Indian trenches, followed by an
-infantry attack extending over a line of six miles from south of the
-Bethune Canal to Festubert in the north. The attack began by the
-explosion of {328} a succession of mines which inflicted very heavy
-losses upon the survivors of the Ghurkas and Highland Light Infantry.
-The weight of the attack at the village of Givenchy fell upon the
-exhausted Sirhind Brigade, who were driven back, and the greater part
-of Givenchy was occupied by the enemy. General Brunker fell back
-with his Brigade, but his line was stiffened by the arrival of the
-47th Sikhs of the 8th Jullundur Brigade, who were in divisional
-reserve. These troops prevented any further advance of the Germans,
-while preparations were made for an effective counter-stroke.
-
-[Sidenote: Heavy losses of the Indians.]
-
-Little help could be given from the north, where the line was already
-engaged, but to the south there were considerable bodies of troops
-available. The situation was serious, and a great effort was called
-for, since it was impossible to abandon into the hands of the enemy a
-village which was an essential bastion upon the line of defence. The
-German attack had flooded down south of Givenchy to the Bethune
-Canal, and a subsidiary attack had come along the south of the Canal
-with the object of holding the troops in their places and preventing
-the reinforcement of the defenders of Givenchy. But these advances
-south of the village made no progress, being held up by the 9th
-Bhopals and Wilde's 57th Rifles of the 7th Ferozepore Brigade between
-Givenchy and the Canal, while the 1st Connaught Rangers of the same
-brigade stopped it on the southern side of the Canal. Matters were
-for a moment in equilibrium. To the south of the Canal energetic
-measures were taken to get together a force which could come across
-it by the Pont Fixe or road bridge, and re-establish matters in the
-north.
-
-{329}
-
-[Sidenote: Fine advance of Manchesters.]
-
-The struggle had broken out close to the point of junction between
-the British forces and those of General Foch of the Tenth French
-Army, so that our Allies were able to co-operate with us in the
-counter-attack. It was directed by General Carnegy, and the assault
-was made by the 1st Manchesters, the 4th Suffolk Territorials, and
-some French territorials. The Manchesters, under the leadership of
-Colonel Strickland, made a most notable attack, aided by two
-companies of the Suffolks, the other companies remaining in reserve
-on the north bank of the Canal. So critical was the position that
-the 3rd Indian Sappers and Miners were set the dangerous task, under
-very heavy shell-fire, of mining the bridge over the Canal. The
-situation was saved, however, by Colonel Strickland's fine advance.
-His infantry, with very inadequate artillery support, pushed its way
-into Givenchy and cleared the village from end to end. Three hundred
-of the Manchesters fell in this deed of arms. Not only did they win
-the village, but they also regained some of the lost trenches to the
-north-east of Givenchy. This was the real turning-point of the
-action. There was at the time only the one very wet, very weary, and
-rather cut-up Jullundur Brigade between the Germans and Bethune--with
-all that Bethune stood for strategically. To the east the 9th
-Bhopals and 57th Rifles still held on to their position. It was only
-to the north that the enemy retained his lodgment.
-
-But the fight to the north had been a bitter one all day, and had
-gone none too well for the British forces. The Indians were fighting
-at an enormous disadvantage. As well turn a tiger loose upon an
-ice-floe and expect that he will show all his wonted {330} fierceness
-and activity. There are inexorable axioms of Nature which no human
-valour nor constancy can change. The bravest of the brave, our
-Indian troops were none the less the children of the sun, dependent
-upon warmth for their vitality and numbed by the cold wet life of the
-trenches. That they still in the main maintained a brave,
-uncomplaining, soldierly demeanour, and that they made head against
-the fierce German assaults, is a wonderful proof of their
-adaptability.
-
-About ten o'clock on the morning of the 20th the German attack,
-driving back the Sirhind Brigade from Givenchy, who were the left
-advanced flank of the Lahore Division, came with a rush against the
-Dehra-Dun Brigade, who were the extreme right of the Meerut Division.
-This Brigade had the 1st Seaforth Highlanders upon its flank, with
-the 2nd Ghurkas upon its left. The Ghurkas were forced to retire,
-and the almost simultaneous retirement of the defenders of Givenchy
-left the Highlanders in a desperate position with both flanks in the
-air. Fortunately the next Brigade of the Meerut Division, the
-Garhwal Brigade, stood fast and kept in touch with the 6th Jats, who
-formed the left of the Dehra-Dun Brigade, and so prevented the
-pressure upon that side from becoming intolerable. The 9th Ghurkas
-came up to support the 2nd Ghurkas, who had not gone far from their
-abandoned trenches, and the 58th Indian Rifles also came to the
-front. These battalions upon the left rear of the Highlanders gave
-them some support. None the less the position of the battalion was
-dangerous and its losses heavy, but it faced the Germans with
-splendid firmness, and nothing could budge it. Machine-guns are
-stronger {331} than flesh and blood, but the human spirit can be
-stronger than either. You might kill the Highlanders, but you could
-not shift them. The 2nd Black Watch, who had been in reserve,
-established touch towards nightfall with the right of the Seaforths,
-and also with the left of the Sirhind Brigade, so that a continuous
-line was assured.
-
-In the meantime a small force had assembled under General MacBean
-with the intention of making a counter-attack and recovering the
-ground which had been lost on the north side of Givenchy. With the
-8th Ghurkas and the 47th Sikhs, together with the 7th British Dragoon
-Guards, an attack was made in the early hours of the 21st. Colonel
-Lempriere of the Dragoon Guards was killed, and the attack failed.
-It was renewed in the early hours of the morning, but it again failed
-to dislodge the Germans from the captured trenches.
-
-[Sidenote: Advance of the First Division.]
-
-December 21 dawned upon a situation which was not particularly rosy
-from a British point of view. It is true that Givenchy had been
-recovered, but a considerable stretch of trenches were still in the
-hands of the Germans, their artillery was exceedingly masterful, and
-the British line was weakened by heavy losses and indented in several
-places. The one bright spot was the advance of the First Division of
-Haig's Corps, who had come up in the night-time. The three brigades
-of this Division were at once thrown into the fight, the first being
-sent to Givenchy, the second given as a support to the Meerut
-Division, and the third directed upon the trenches which had been
-evacuated the day before by the Sirhind Brigade. All of these
-brigades won their way forward, and by the morning of the 22nd much
-of the ground which {332} had been taken by the Germans was
-reoccupied by the British. The 1st Brigade, led by the Cameron
-Highlanders, had made good all the ground between Givenchy and the
-Canal. Meanwhile the 3rd Brigade had re-established the Festubert
-position, where the 2nd Welsh and 1st South Wales Borderers had won
-their way into the lost trenches of the Ghurkas.
-
-This was not done without very stark fighting, in which of all the
-regiments engaged none suffered so heavily as the 2nd Munsters (now
-attached to the 3rd Brigade). This regiment, only just built up
-again after its practical extermination at Etreux in August, made a
-grand advance and fought without cessation for nearly forty-eight
-hours. Their losses were dreadful, including their gallant Colonel
-Bent, both Majors Day and Thomson, five other officers, and several
-hundreds of the rank and file. So far forward did they get that it
-was with great difficulty that the survivors, through the exertions
-of Major Ryan, were got back into a place of safety. It was the
-second of three occasions upon which this gallant Celtic battalion
-gave itself for King and Country. Let this soften the asperity of
-politics if unhappily we must come back to them after the war.
-
-Meanwhile the lines upon the flank of the Seaforths which had been
-lost by the Dehra-Dun Brigade were carried by the 2nd Brigade
-(Westmacott), the 1st North Lancashire and 1st Northamptons leading
-the attack with the 2nd Rifles in support. Though driven back by a
-violent counter-attack in which both leading regiments, and
-especially the Lancashire men, lost heavily, the Brigade came again,
-and ended by making good the gap in the line. Thus the situation on
-the morning of the 22nd looked very {333} much better than upon the
-day before. On this morning, as so many of the 1st Corps were in the
-advanced line, Sir Douglas Haig took over the command from Sir James
-Willcocks. The line had been to some extent re-established and the
-firing died away, but there were some trenches which were not retaken
-till a later date.
-
-Such was the scrambling and unsatisfactory fight of Givenchy, a
-violent interlude in the drab records of trench warfare. It began
-with a considerable inroad of Germans into our territory and heavy
-losses of our Indian Contingent. It ended by a general return of the
-Germans to their former lines, and the resumption by the veteran
-troops of the First Division of the main positions which we had lost.
-Neither side had gained any ground of material value, but the balance
-of profit in captures was upon the side of the Germans, who may
-fairly claim that the action was a minor success for their arms,
-since they assert that they captured some hundreds of prisoners and
-several machine-guns. The Anglo-Indian Corps had 2600 casualties,
-and the First Corps 1400, or 4000 in all. The Indian troops were now
-withdrawn for a rest, which they had well earned by their long and
-difficult service in the trenches. To stand day after day up to his
-knees in ice-cold water is no light ordeal for a European, but it is
-difficult to imagine all that it must have been to a Southern
-Asiatic. The First Corps took over the La Bassée lines.
-
-[Sidenote: Singular scenes at Christmas.]
-
-About the same date as the Battle of Givenchy there was some fighting
-farther north at Rouge Banc, where the Fourth Corps was engaged and
-some German trenches were taken. The chief losses in this affair
-{334} fell upon those war-worn units, the 2nd Scots Guards and 2nd
-Borderers of the 20th Brigade. Henceforward peace reigned along the
-lines for several weeks--indeed Christmas brought about something
-like fraternisation between British and Germans, who found a sudden
-and extraordinary link in that ancient tree worship, long anterior to
-Christianity, which Saxon tribes had practised in the depths of
-Germanic forests and still commemorated by their candle-lit firs.
-For a single day the opposing forces mingled in friendly conversation
-and even in games. It was an amazing spectacle, and must arouse
-bitter thoughts concerning those high-born conspirators against the
-peace of the world, who in their mad ambition had hounded such men on
-to take each other by the throat rather than by the hand. For a day
-there was comradeship. But the case had been referred to the God of
-Battles, and the doom had not yet been spoken. It must go to the
-end. On the morning of the 26th dark figures vanished reluctantly
-into the earth, and the rifles cracked once more. It remains one
-human episode amid all the atrocities which have stained the memory
-of the war.
-
-So ended 1914, the year of resistance. During it the Western Allies
-had been grievously oppressed by their well-prepared enemy. They had
-been over-weighted by numbers and even more so by munitions. For a
-space it had seemed as if the odds were too much for them. Then with
-a splendid rally they had pushed the enemy back. But his reserves
-had come up and had proved to be as superior as his first line had
-been. But even so he had reached his limit. He could get no
-further. The danger hour was past. There was now coming the long,
-anxious year of {335} equilibrium, the narrative of which will be
-given in the succeeding volume of 1915. Finally will come the year
-of restoration which will at least begin, though it will not finish,
-the victory of the champions of freedom.
-
-
-
-
-{337}
-
-INDEX
-
-
-Abell, Major, 70
-
-Abercrombie, Colonel, 94
-
-Agadir, 7
-
-Aisne, battle of the, 162-199
-
-Alexander, Major, 82
-
-Algeciras, 7
-
-Allen, Major, 209
-
-Allenby, General, 56, 80, 88, 96, 97, 126, 155, 204, 226, 279, 287
-
-Alleyne, Captain, 294
-
-Allfrey, Captain, 149
-
-Alsace, 43, 57
-
-Anderson, General, 322, 325
-
-Anley, Colonel, 105
-
-Anley, General, 229
-
-Annesley, Colonel, 284
-
-Ansell, Colonel, 132
-
-Antwerp, fall of, 193; Naval Division at siege of, 195
-
-Ardee, Lord, 288
-
-Army, the Russian, 138; at battle of Gumbinnen, 138; at battle of
-Lemberg, 139; at battle of Tannenberg, 139
-
-Ashburner, Captain, 70
-
-Asquith, Right Hon. H. H., 18
-
-Austin, Dr., 93
-
-Australia, offer of service, 34, 37; Bismarck Archipelago captured
-by, 312; German colony of New Guinea captured by, 312; 317
-
-Austria, Archduke Francis Ferdinand of, assassinated at Sarajevo, 12
-
-Austria-Hungary, annexes Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1908, 2; presents
-ultimatum to Serbia, 14; declares war against Serbia, 15
-
-
-
-Baird, Major, 325
-
-Balfour, Lieutenant, 167
-
-Bannatyne, Colonel, 255
-
-Barnes, Colonel, 241
-
-Battenberg, Prince Louis of, 40
-
-Battenberg, Prince Maurice of, 256
-
-Bavaria, Crown Prince of, 145
-
-Beatty, Admiral Sir David, 313
-
-Belgians, King of the, 198
-
-Belgium, infraction of neutrality, 12
-
-Below-Saleske, von, 19
-
-Benson, Captain, 73
-
-Bent, Colonel, 332
-
-Berners, Captain, 172
-
-Bernhardi, General von, 1, 8, 159
-
-Bethmann-Hollweg, von, 17, 21, 23, 28
-
-Bidon, General, 247
-
-Bingham, General, 283
-
-Bismarck Archipelago, German colony, captured by Australian forces,
-312
-
-Blewitt, Lieutenant, 268
-
-Boger, Colonel, 83
-
-Bols, Colonel, 207
-
-Bolton, Colonel, 244
-
-Botha, Right Hon. Louis, 34, 313
-
-Bottomley, Major, 259
-
-Bowes, General, 218, 295, 324
-
-Boyd, Lieutenant, 266
-
-Bradbury, Captain, V.C., 130, 131
-
-Brett, Colonel, 102
-
-Bridges, Major Tom, 118
-
-Briggs, General, 128, 130, 174, 282, 283
-
-British Expeditionary Force: departure from England, 50; its
-composition, 52, 86; its arrival in France, 53; its reception by the
-French people, 54; advance into Belgium, 57
-
-Brooke, Captain, 260
-
-Bruce, Captain the Hon. H. L., 323
-
-Brunker, General, 328
-
-Buckle, Major, 222
-
-Bulbe, Lieutenant, 78
-
-Bulfin, General, 154, 156, 166, 167, 169, 170, 171, 179, 186, 265,
-273, 287, 288, 320
-
-Bülow, General von, 84, 144, 154
-
-Bülow, Prince von, 3
-
-Burrows, Major, 168
-
-Butler, Colonel, 229
-
-Butler, Major Leslie, 116
-
-Byng, Captain, 70
-
-Byng, General, 210, 233
-
-
-
-Cadogan, Colonel, 237, 264
-
-Campbell, Captain, 73
-
-Campbell, Colonel (5th Dragoon Guards), 281
-
-Campbell, Colonel (9th Lancers), 80, 149
-
-Campbell, Lieutenant, 130
-
-Campbell, Major, 227
-
-Canada, offer of service, 34, 37; 317
-
-Canneau, General, 144, 204, 212, 221
-
-Capper, General, 232, 244, 265, 269, 295
-
-Carey, Captain, 70
-
-Carnegy, General, 329
-
-Carr, Lieutenant Laurence, 259
-
-Carter, Major, 253
-
-Cary, General Langlé de, 144
-
-Cary-Bernard, Captain, 306
-
-Castelnau, General, 44, 145, 193
-
-Cathcart, Captain, 168
-
-Cavan, Lord, 289, 293, 300, 306
-
-Cawley, Major, 132
-
-Ceylon, offer of service, 34
-
-Chapman, Corporal, 227
-
-Charleroi, battle of, 141
-
-Charrier, Major, 119, 120, 121
-
-Chetwode, General, 58, 121
-
-Christie, Major, 112
-
-Churchill, Right Hon. Winston S., 5, 31, 40, 196
-
-Chute, Lieutenant, 121
-
-Clive, Hon. Windsor, 92
-
-Clutterbuck, Captain, 111
-
-Cobb, Irvin, American correspondent with German Army, 64
-
-Cobbold, Colonel, 214
-
-Coke, Major, 282
-
-Coleman, American volunteer, quoted, 119, 149, 303
-
-Coles, Colonel, 266
-
-Congreve, General, V.C., 187, 229
-
-Cookson, Colonel, 167
-
-Cornish-Bowden, Major, 151
-
-Coronel, naval battle off, 315
-
-Craddock, Admiral, 315
-
-Cramb, Professor, 30
-
-Creek, Captain, 253
-
-Crichton, Major, 241
-
-Crossley, Sergeant-Major, 222
-
-Cutbill, Captain, 102
-
-Cuthbert, General, 71, 79, 98
-
-
-
-Dalrymple, Lord, 244
-
-D'Amade, General, 123
-
-Daniell, Major, 212
-
-Danks, Lieutenant, 93
-
-Dashwood, Lieutenant, 167
-
-Davey, Major, 70
-
-Davies, Colonel, 301
-
-Davies, General, 90, 93, 132, 153, 173
-
-Davis, Harding, American correspondent with German Army, 62, 64
-
-Dawnay, Colonel, 293
-
-Day, Major, 332
-
-Dease, Lieutenant Maurice, V.C., 70
-
-De Crespigny, Captain, 128
-
-Deimling, General von, 269
-
-De Lisle, General, 80, 148, 156, 157, 174, 204, 226, 281
-
-De Mitry, General, 247, 255
-
-Denham, Lieutenant, 323
-
-Derbyshhe, Gunner, 130
-
-D'Esperey, General, 144, 146
-
-Dillon, Captain H. M., 302
-
-Dimmer, Lieutenant, V.C., 181, 305
-
-Doran, General Beauchamp, 60, 69, 113, 150, 174, 218
-
-Dorell, Sergeant, V.C., 130, 131
-
-Doughty, Major, 102
-
-Dour, action at, 79
-
-Drummond, General. 84, 103
-
-Dubail, General, 145
-
-Duff, Colonel Grant, 171
-
-D'Urbal, General, 296, 324
-
-Dykes, Colonel, 105
-
-
-
-Earle, Colonel, 259
-
-East Africa, German colony of, attack on, fails, 312
-
-East Coast, raid on, by German cruisers, 315
-
-Edmunds, Captain, 93
-
-Edward VII., 6
-
-Elliott, Dr., 93
-
-Ellison, Captain, 152
-
-_Emden_, exploits of the, 314
-
-Emmich, General von, 44
-
-
-
-Fairlie, Captain, 241
-
-Falkland Islands, naval battle off, 315
-
-Ferguson, General, 80, 177, 190, 211
-
-Findlay, General, 153
-
-Fisher, Lord, 5
-
-FitzClarence, General, 258, 270, 303
-
-Flint, Lieutenant, 175
-
-Foch, General, 144, 148, 150, 154, 202, 329
-
-Foljambe, Captain, 168
-
-Forbes, Major Ian, 241
-
-Ford, Lieutenant, 323
-
-Forrester, Major, 259
-
-Frameries, action at, 77
-
-Fraser, Major, 244
-
-French, General Sir John, 54, 58, 62, 74, 75, 76, 77, 84, 87, 96, 97,
-116, 119, 126, 135, 145, 156, 164, 183, 186, 198, 202, 220, 234, 236,
-245, 246, 247, 251, 275, 276, 282, 285
-
-
-
-Geddes, Lieutenant-Colonel, 169
-
-George V. visits the Army in France, 323
-
-Germany, Heligoland ceded to, 2; agitation in, against Great Britain
-during Boer War, 3; navy bill of 1900, 4; anti-British agitations in,
-9; root causes of hatred of Great Britain in, 10; and world-power,
-10; preparations for war by, 11; declares war against Russia, 15;
-against France, 15; proposes that Great Britain should remain
-neutral, 17; and Belgian neutrality, 19; character of her diplomacy,
-19, 20; invades Belgium, 21; Great Britain declares war on, 21;
-treatment of the departing Embassies, 22; the claim for culture in, 29
-
-_Germany and the Next War_, 9
-
-Gheluvelt, battle of, 265
-
-Gibbs, Colonel, 79
-
-Giffard, Lieutenant, 269
-
-Gifford, Lieutenant, 130
-
-Givenchy, fight at, 327
-
-Glasgow, Sergeant, 227
-
-Gleichen, General Count, 61, 79, 82, 83, 98, 157, 207
-
-Gloster, Colonel, 224
-
-Godley, Private, V.C., 70
-
-Gordon, Captain B. G. R., 259
-
-Gordon, Colonel, 114
-
-Gordon, General, 215, 230, 324
-
-Gordon, Lieutenant, 181
-
-Goschen, Sir Edward, ambassador at Berlin, 17, 21, 22, 23, 24
-
-Gough, General, 126, 150, 155, 203, 204, 226, 279, 280, 282
-
-Grant, Major, 168
-
-Graves, Lieutenant, 114
-
-Great Britain, cedes Heligoland to Germany, 2; sympathy and respect
-for German Empire in, 2; agreement with France, 1903, 6; agreement
-with Russia, 1907, 6; maritime power of, 10; efforts for peace by,
-16; reply to German proposal of neutrality, 17; declares war against
-Germany, 21; preparations for possible naval war in, 31; effect of
-German war policy in, 32
-
-Green, Major, 168
-
-Grenfell, Captain the Hon. F., 82
-
-Grey, Sir Edward (now Viscount), proposes a conference of
-Ambassadors, 16; replies to German proposal of neutrality, 17;
-suggests limitation of the conflict, 19; 20, 33
-
-Grierson, General, 55
-
-Griffin, Colonel, 105, 158
-
-Guernsey, Lord, 172
-
-
-
-Haig, General Sir Douglas, 55, 56, 72, 77, 84, 88, 89, 90, 126, 133,
-157, 173, 183, 190, 236, 239, 241, 246, 247, 249, 250, 251, 256, 260,
-265, 270, 275, 276, 282, 286, 287, 295, 306, 331, 333
-
-Haking, General, 72, 94, 157, 173, 176, 302
-
-Haldane, General, 104, 106, 112, 206, 324
-
-Haldane, Lord, 36
-
-Hamilton, Adjutant Rowan, 171
-
-Hamilton, Captain, 93
-
-Hamilton, General Sir Hubert, 77, 157, 177, 208
-
-Hankey, Major, 270
-
-Harter, Staff-Captain, 176
-
-Hasted, Colonel, 177
-
-Haussen, General von, 139, 144
-
-Hautvesnes, action at, 153
-
-Hawarden, Lord, 92
-
-Hawkins, Lieutenant Hope, 285
-
-Hay, Lord Arthur, 172
-
-Headlam, General, 110
-
-Heeringen, General von, 145
-
-Heligoland Bight, battle in, 313
-
-Heligoland ceded to Germany, 1890, 2
-
-Herbert, Captain, 208
-
-Hindenburg, General von, 139, 316
-
-Hogan, Sergeant, V.C., 224
-
-Holt, Lieutenant, 71
-
-Hoskyns, Captain, 152
-
-Huggan, Dr., 180
-
-Hull, Colonel, 70
-
-Hulse, Sir Edward, 323
-
-Hunter-Weston, General, 104, 106, 107, 229, 230
-
-
-
-Impey, Lieutenant, 323
-
-India, offer of service, 34; 317
-
-Ingham, Major, 69
-
-Italy secedes from the Central Powers, 311
-
-
-
-Jagow, von, Secretary for Foreign Affairs at Berlin, 21, 23, 25
-
-Japan declares war, 312; captures the German colony of Tsingtau, 312
-
-Jarvis, Corporal, V.C., 71
-
-Jelf, Major, 168
-
-Joffre, General, 44, 57, 62, 74, 76, 126, 127, 144, 178, 198, 202,
-251, 255, 282, 287
-
-Johnston, Captain, 175
-
-Johnstone, Major, 169
-
-
-
-Kavanagh, General, 262, 279, 293
-
-Kerr, Colonel, 269
-
-Kitchener, Lord, becomes Secretary of State for War, 34; his estimate
-of duration of war, 38; appeals for volunteers, 38; 54, 56
-
-Kluck, General von, 83, 84, 88, 95, 143, 144, 145, 146, 148, 154
-
-Knight, Colonel, 154
-
-Kruseik cross-roads, fight for, 256
-
-
-
-Lamb, Lieutenant, 131
-
-Lambert, Major, 292
-
-Landon, General, 172, 248, 254, 260, 265, 269, 276, 290
-
-Landrecies, engagement at, 90
-
-Lansdowne, Lord, 33
-
-Law, Right Hon. A. Bonar, 33
-
-Lawford, General, 273, 291, 294, 295
-
-Lawrence, Colonel, 229
-
-Leach, Lieutenant, V.C., 224
-
-Le Cateau, battle of, 96-137, 141
-
-Leckie, Captain Malcolm, 82
-
-Legard, Captain, 222
-
-Le Gheir, action of 229
-
-Leman, General, 45, 46, 47
-
-Lemberg, battle of, 139, 316
-
-Lempriere, Colonel, 331
-
-Lichnowsky, Prince, German ambassador to Great Britain, 19, 20, 25
-
-Liége, 45, 46, 47, 141
-
-Lister, Captain, 71
-
-Lloyd, Major, 167, 168
-
-Lomax, General, 269
-
-Longley, Colonel, 99
-
-Longwy, battle of, 141
-
-Loring, Colonel, 243
-
-Lorraine, 43, 57
-
-Lushington, Lieutenant-Colonel, 132
-
-Luxemburg, duchy of, 44
-
-
-
-MacBean, General, 331
-
-McCracken, General, 69, 78, 88, 104, 190, 208, 215, 219, 291, 306
-
-McKenna, Right Hon. Reginald, 5, 31
-
-Mackenzie, General Colin, 209
-
-MacLachlan, Lieutenant-Colonel, 171
-
-MacMahon, Colonel, 70, 221, 299
-
-M'Nab, Captain, 284
-
-Maistre, General, 220
-
-Maitland, Major, 171
-
-Malcolm, Colonel, 283, 284
-
-Manoury, General, 144, 146, 148
-
-Marne, battle of the, 138-161
-
-Martyn, Colonel, 304
-
-Maubeuge, fortress of, 85, 141, 163, 184
-
-Maude, General, 295
-
-Maud'huy, General, 296
-
-Maxse, General, 169, 179
-
-Messines, fight at, 280
-
-Michel, General, 49
-
-Michell, Captain, 122
-
-Milne, General, 110
-
-Milward, Major, 292
-
-Mitford, Major, 241
-
-Monck, Captain, 91
-
-Mons, battle of, 50-95, 141
-
-Mons, retreat from, chronology of events, 136-137
-
-Montresor, Colonel, 167
-
-Morland, Colonel, 268
-
-Morland, General, 211, 224, 286, 296
-
-Morris, Colonel, 133
-
-Morris, Lieutenant, 323
-
-Morritt, Lieutenant, 73
-
-Moussy, General, 288
-
-Mülhausen, battle of, 141
-
-Mullens, General, 80, 221, 283
-
-Mundy, Lieutenant, 130
-
-Munro, General, 269
-
-
-
-Namur, 48, 49, 76, 141
-
-Navy, the, mobilisation of, 40
-
-Neeld, Admiral, 25
-
-Nelson, Gunner, V.C., 130, 131
-
-Nery, combat of, 127
-
-Neuve Chapelle, first fight of, 219
-
-Newfoundland, offer of service, 34
-
-New Guinea, German colony of, captured by Australian forces, 312
-
-New Zealand, offer of service, 34, 37; captures German colony of
-Samoa, 312; 317
-
-Nicholson, Lieutenant, 121
-
-Nicholson, Major, 171
-
-Nietzsche, 8
-
-Nimy, defence of the bridges of, 68
-
-
-
-Oliver, Captain, 169
-
-Ommany, Captain, 269
-
-Orford, Captain, 102
-
-Osborne, Driver, 130
-
-Ourcq, battle of the, 145
-
-Ovens, Colonel, 244
-
-
-
-Pack-Beresford, Major, 79
-
-Paley, Major, 269
-
-Paris, General, 195
-
-Parker, Major, 112
-
-Pau, General, 44
-
-Paynter, Captain, 243
-
-Peel, Major, 268
-
-Pell, Colonel, 266
-
-Pennecuick, Lieutenant, 156
-
-Penny, Sergeant-Major, 222
-
-Perceval, Colonel, 269
-
-Petit Bois, fight at, 324
-
-Phillips, Major, 168
-
-Pilken Inn, fight of, 252
-
-Plumer, General, 320
-
-Pollard, Lieutenant, 82
-
-Ponsonby, Colonel, 168
-
-Pont-sur-Sambre, action near, 94
-
-Poole, Major, 111
-
-Popham, Captain, 188
-
-Powell, American journalist, quoted, 63, 198
-
-Powell, Major, 250
-
-Prichard, Major, 268
-
-Prowse, Major, 231
-
-Prussia, Crown Prince of, 145, 163
-
-Prussia, Prince Henry of, 25
-
-Prussian Guards, attack of, at Ypres, 297; Kaiser's order to, 297
-
-Pulteney, General, 56, 126, 152, 157, 175, 178, 190, 206, 214, 215,
-218, 227
-
-
-
-Rawlinson, General Sir Henry, 224, 232, 236, 237, 241, 251, 256, 308
-
-Rees, Captain, 268
-
-Regiments:
-
-_Artillery--_
-
-Royal Field Artillery, 69, 70, 71, 78, 82, 88, 89, 92, 100, 105, 110,
-120, 153, 169, 192, 249, 268, 271, 272, 273, 300, 301
-
-Royal Horse Artillery, 263; E Battery, 285; J Battery, 122, 150; K
-Battery, 236; L Battery, 80, 128, 130, 131, 133
-
-Heavy, 109, 110, 301
-
-Howitzer, 88, 105
-
-Honourable Artillery Company, 321
-
-_Cavalry--_
-
-1st Life Guards, 263, 293
-
-2nd Life Guards, 263, 293
-
-Royal Horse Guards (Blues), 263, 293
-
-2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays), 85, 128, 131, 132, 155, 280, 282
-
-3rd Dragoon Guards, 272, 306
-
-4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards, 58, 80, 118, 187, 188, 282, 283
-
-5th Dragoon Guards, 280, 281, 282
-
-6th Dragoon Guards (Carabineers), 283, 284, 285
-
-7th Dragoon Guards, 331
-
-1st Dragoons (Royals), 263, 272
-
-2nd Dragoons (Scots Greys), 122, 263
-
-3rd Hussars, 263
-
-4th Hussars, 263
-
-10th Hussars, 241, 272
-
-11th Hussars, 131, 282, 283, 285
-
-15th Hussars, 93, 120, 121
-
-18th Hussars, 149
-
-20th Hussars, 58
-
-5th (Royal Irish) Lancers, 227, 279
-
-9th Lancers, 80, 82, 149, 281, 283, 285
-
-12th Lancers, 122, 227
-
-16th Lancers, 226, 279
-
-Essex Yeomanry, 322
-
-Irish Horse, 242, 322
-
-Leicestershire Yeomanry, 306
-
-North Somerset Yeomanry, 306, 322
-
-Northumberland Hussars, 242, 322
-
-Oxfordshire Hussars, 281, 282, 322
-
-_Guards--_
-
-Coldstream, 90, 91, 92, 119, 120, 132, 168, 169, 171, 172, 191, 248,
-259, 265
-
-Grenadier, 90, 92, 150, 237, 244, 258, 259, 265, 289, 293, 306
-
-Irish, 90, 92, 132, 150, 172, 255, 265, 288, 289, 293
-
-Scots, 119, 169, 171, 242, 243, 244, 252, 253, 259, 260, 271, 297,
-323, 334
-
-_Infantry--_
-
-Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, 84, 100, 102, 216, 230, 324
-
-Artists' Rifles (28th London), 321
-
-Bedford, 174, 207, 236, 264, 266, 297
-
-Berkshire, 93, 153, 255, 272
-
-Black Watch, 119, 150, 169, 170, 171, 252, 258, 259, 331
-
-Border, 243, 260
-
-Buffs (East Kent), 214
-
-Cameron Highlanders, 169, 171, 248, 252, 253, 332
-
-Cameronians (Scottish Rifles), 84, 100, 131
-
-Cheshire, 82, 83, 154, 174, 216, 321
-
-Connaught Rangers, 94, 157, 301, 302, 328
-
-Devon, 210, 219, 224
-
-Dorset, 207, 208, 210, 216
-
-Dublin Fusiliers, 106, 112
-
-Duke of Cornwall's, 62, 72, 73, 99, 150, 151, 174, 215, 216, 224
-
-Durham Light Infantry, 187, 188, 229
-
-East Lancashire, 106, 229, 292
-
-East Surrey, 72, 73, 99, 103, 150, 151, 174, 190, 215
-
-East Yorkshire, 187, 188
-
-Essex, 105, 106
-
-Gloucester, 171, 182, 248, 250, 254, 260, 290, 291, 302
-
-Gordon Highlanders, 60, 69, 72, 78, 113, 114, 219, 259, 273, 289,
-324, 325
-
-Hampshire, 106, 231
-
-Herts, 321
-
-Highland Light Infantry, 188, 242, 296, 301, 302, 326
-
-Inniskilling Fusiliers, 105, 158, 229, 281
-
-Irish Fusiliers, 106, 206
-
-King's Liverpool, 90, 153, 255, 300, 301
-
-King's Own Scottish Borderers, 61, 71, 72, 103, 209, 211, 278, 282,
-284, 285, 334
-
-King's Royal Rifles, 93, 153, 166, 167, 168, 169, 182, 188, 253, 256,
-265, 268, 290, 305, 332
-
-Lancashire Fusiliers, 105, 158, 229
-
-Leinster, 229, 230
-
-Lincoln, 60, 151, 174, 210, 279, 280, 296, 324
-
-Liverpool Scottish, 321
-
-London Rifle Brigade, 321
-
-London Scottish, 280, 283, 284, 285, 296, 321
-
-Manchester, 99, 100, 102, 216, 218, 220, 224, 329
-
-Middlesex, 60, 68, 69, 70, 72, 78, 84, 100, 103, 131, 207, 209, 216,
-219, 230, 324, 325
-
-Monmouthshire, 321
-
-Munster Fusiliers, 119, 120, 154, 169, 242, 331
-
-Norfolk, 82, 109, 174, 219, 323
-
-Northampton, 154, 166, 167, 176, 180, 181, 252, 273, 289, 302, 332
-
-North Lancashire, 154, 166, 167, 168, 170, 250, 253, 265, 268, 297,
-332
-
-Northumberland Fusiliers, 68, 72, 78, 208, 209, 210, 279, 280
-
-Oxford and Bucks, 289, 301, 302
-
-Queen Victoria Rifles, 321
-
-Queen's Westminsters, 321
-
-Queen's (West Surrey), 168, 170, 176, 181, 182, 191, 240, 248, 253,
-259, 260, 261, 266, 271
-
-Rifle Brigade, 106, 323
-
-Royal Fusiliers, 60, 68, 70, 71, 72, 209, 210, 212, 220, 221, 299
-
-Royal Irish, 60, 210, 212
-
-Royal Irish Fusiliers, 112
-
-Royal Irish Rifles, 69, 78, 89, 219, 220, 221, 235
-
-Royal Lancaster, 105, 111, 229
-
-Royal Scots, 60, 77, 114, 207, 209, 219, 323, 324, 325
-
-Royal Scots Fusiliers, 60, 68, 71, 72, 103, 210, 211, 237, 241, 242,
-264, 266, 299
-
-Seaforth Highlanders, 106, 112, 206, 304, 330, 332
-
-Sherwood Foresters, 187, 188, 227, 228, 229
-
-Somerset Light Infantry, 106, 229, 231
-
-South Lancashire, 79, 88, 148, 215, 220
-
-South Staffordshire, 153, 240, 244, 253
-
-South Wales Borderers, 172, 191, 192, 248, 249, 261, 270, 332
-
-Suffolk, 99, 100, 102, 108, 224, 321, 325, 329
-
-Sussex, 153, 166, 167, 169, 187, 249, 273, 289
-
-Warwick, 106, 111, 112, 206, 240, 243
-
-Welsh, 172, 191, 254, 261, 266, 268, 332
-
-Welsh Borderers, 260, 271
-
-Welsh Fusiliers, 84, 100, 237, 240, 264, 323
-
-West Kent, 61, 62, 71, 72, 79, 103, 215, 221, 222, 304
-
-West Riding, 61, 71, 79, 103, 296
-
-West Yorkshire, 187, 188, 190
-
-Wiltshire, 88, 177, 190, 219, 221, 237, 241, 242, 306
-
-Worcester, 150, 188, 215, 216, 242, 243, 270, 271, 292
-
-York and Lancaster, 214
-
-Yorkshire, 240, 264
-
-Yorkshire Light Infantry, 61, 71, 103, 215, 221, 278, 282, 284, 285
-
-
-Royal Engineers, 70, 100, 127, 164, 175, 289, 300, 301, 302, 323
-
-
-_Indian Army--_
-
-129th Baluchis, 279
-
-9th Bhopal Infantry, 220, 328, 329
-
-2nd Gurkhas, 330
-
-4th Gurkhas, 326, 328
-
-8th Gurkhas, 225, 331
-
-9th Gurkhas, 330
-
-58th Indian Rifles, 330
-
-3rd Indian Sappers and Miners, 329
-
-6th Jats, 330
-
-59th (Scinde) Rifles, 218, 326, 327
-
-15th Sikhs, 218, 219
-
-47th Sikhs, 218, 220, 221, 328, 331
-
-Vaughan's Indian Rifles, 225
-
-Wilde's 57th Rifles, 281, 328, 329
-
-Reynolds, Captain (R.F.A.), V.C., 110
-
-Reynolds, Captain (9th Lancers), 149
-
-Rheims Cathedral, bombarded by Germans, 189
-
-Rickman, Major, 106
-
-Rising, Captain, 250
-
-Robb, Major, 188
-
-Roberts, Lord, death of, while visiting the Army in France, 308
-
-Robertson, Sir William, 134
-
-Rolt, General, 61, 72, 98, 100
-
-Ronaldson, Colonel, 327
-
-Roper, Major, 207
-
-Rose, Captain (Northumberland Fusiliers), 78
-
-Rose, Captain (Royal Scots Fusiliers), 71
-
-Ruggles-Brise, General, 245, 295
-
-Russell, Second Lieutenant, 222
-
-Ryan, Major, 332
-
-
-
-Salisbury, late Lord, 2
-
-Saltoun, Master of, 115
-
-Samoa, German colony, captured by New Zealand, 312
-
-Sandilands, Captain, 78
-
-Sandilands, Colonel, 89
-
-Sarajevo, 13
-
-Sarrail, General, 145
-
-Savage, Captain, 181
-
-Scale, Captain, 327
-
-Sclater-Booth, Major, 80, 130
-
-Scott, Admiral Sir Percy, 42
-
-Scott-Kerr, General, 90, 132
-
-Seaton, Lance-Corporal, 281
-
-Seely, Colonel, 158
-
-Serbia, reply to Austrian ultimatum, 15; King of, appeals to the
-Czar, 15
-
-Serocold, Colonel, 167
-
-Shaw, General, 60, 78, 174, 186, 190, 210, 211, 279, 280, 303, 324
-
-Shore, Captain, 83
-
-Smith, Captain Bowden, 70
-
-Smith, Colonel (Lincoln), 280
-
-Smith, Colonel Baird (R.S.F.), 266
-
-Smith, Colonel Osborne (Northampton), 181
-
-Smith, General Douglas, 324
-
-Smith, Lieutenant, 70
-
-Smith-Dorrien, General Sir Horace, 55, 56, 60, 72, 83, 84, 88, 95,
-96, 97, 108, 109, 116, 119, 217, 218, 220, 221, 222, 286, 295, 307
-
-Snow, General, 89, 104, 106, 108, 126, 320
-
-Solesmes, action at, 88
-
-South Africa, offer of service, 34; insurrection in, 313
-
-Spee, Admiral von, 315
-
-Spread, Lieutenant, 168
-
-Stephen, Captain, 260
-
-Stewart, Captain, 9, 155
-
-Strickland, Colonel, 329
-
-Stucley, Major, 259
-
-Sturdee, Admiral, 315
-
-Swettenham, Major, 122
-
-
-
-Tannenberg, battle of, 139, 141, 316
-
-Teck, Prince Alexander of, 226
-
-Tew, Major, 99, 103
-
-Thomson, Major, 332
-
-Thruston, Lieutenant, 152
-
-Togoland, German colony, captured by British forces, 312
-
-Tower, Lieutenant, 70
-
-Treitschke, 8
-
-Trench, Captain, 269
-
-Trevor, Major, 103
-
-Triple Alliance and Triple Entente, 6
-
-Tsingtau, German colony, captured by Japanese, 312
-
-Tulloch, Colonel, 127
-
-Turner, Colonel, 151
-
-
-
-Uniacke, Colonel, 259
-
-
-
-Vallentin, Captain, 294
-
-Vandeleur, Captain, 102
-
-Vandeleur, Major, 208
-
-Venner, Colonel, 225
-
-Vereker, Lieutenant, 92
-
-Vidal, General, 290
-
-Villars-Cotteret, action of, 132
-
-
-
-Ward, Colonel, 103, 126
-
-Ward, Lieutenant, 73
-
-War Loan, success of the, 40
-
-Warre, Major, 168
-
-Wasme, action at, 79
-
-Watkis, General, 217, 325
-
-Watson, Lieutenant Graham, 114
-
-Watson, Major, 168, 253, 266
-
-Watts, General, 295
-
-Welchmann, Lieutenant, 78
-
-Wellesley, Lord Richard, 259
-
-Westmacott, General, 332
-
-White, Second Lieutenant, 222
-
-Willcocks, General Sir James, 224, 225, 286, 325, 333
-
-William II., Emperor of Germany, telegram to Kruger, 3; visits
-England, 3; 20; his message to Sir Edward Goschen, 24; 28, 48;
-special appeal to his troops at Ypres, 261
-
-Williams, Captain, 271
-
-Williams, General, 230
-
-Wilson, Colonel (Blues), 293
-
-Wilson, Colonel (R.E.), 127
-
-Wilson, General, 86, 104, 106, 281
-
-Wing, General, 110, 224
-
-Wormald, Colonel, 122
-
-Worsley, Lord, 263
-
-Wright, Captain Theodore, 70, 175
-
-Würtemberg, Duke of, 141, 144
-
-Wyatt, Corporal, 92
-
-
-
-Yate, Major, V.C., 103
-
-Ypres, first battle of, 232-310
-
-
-
-Zandvoorde, fight of, 262
-
-Zillebeke, action of, 292
-
-
-
-_Printed in Great Britain by_ R. & R. CLARK, LIMITED, _Edinburgh._
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN IN FRANCE AND
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The British Campaign in France and Flanders 1914, by Arthur Conan Doyle</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The British Campaign in France and Flanders 1914</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Arthur Conan Doyle</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 09, 2021 [eBook #65042]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Al Haines</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN IN FRANCE AND FLANDERS 1914 ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN<br />
-<br />
- IN FRANCE AND FLANDERS<br />
-<br />
- 1914<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- AUTHOR OF<br />
- "THE GREAT BOER WAR," ETC.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- SECOND EDITION<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- HODDER AND STOUGHTON<br />
- LONDON NEW YORK TORONTO<br />
- MCMXVI<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- TO<br />
- GENERAL SIR WILLIAM ROBERTSON<br />
- THIS CHRONICLE OF THE GREAT WAR<br />
- IN WHICH HE RENDERED<br />
- SUCH INVALUABLE SERVICE TO HIS COUNTRY<br />
- IS<br />
- DEDICATED<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Pvii"></a>vii}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-PREFACE
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is continually stated that it is impossible to bring
-out at the present time any accurate history of the
-war. No doubt this is true so far as some points of
-the larger strategy are concerned, for the motives at
-the back of them have not yet been cleared up. It
-is true also as regards many incidents which have
-exercised the minds of statesmen and of many
-possibilities which have worried the soldiers. But so far
-as the actual early events of our own campaign upon
-the Continent are concerned there is no reason why
-the approximate truth should not now be collected
-and set forth. I believe that the narrative in this
-volume will in the main stand the test of time, and
-that the changes of the future will consist of additions
-rather than of alterations or subtractions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The present volume deals only with the events of
-1914 in the British fighting-line in France and Belgium.
-A second volume dealing with 1915 will be published
-within a few months. It is intended that a third
-volume, covering the current year, shall carry on this
-contemporary narrative of a tremendous episode.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the first days of the war I have devoted
-much of my time to the accumulation of evidence
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Pviii"></a>viii}</span>
-from first-hand sources as to the various happenings
-of these great days. I have built up my narrative
-from letters, diaries, and interviews from the hand or
-lips of men who have been soldiers in our armies, the
-deeds of which it was my ambition to understand and
-to chronicle. In many cases I have been privileged
-to submit my descriptions of the principal incidents
-to prominent actors in them, and to receive their
-corrections or endorsement. I can say with certainty,
-therefore, that a great deal of this work is not only
-accurate, but that it is very precisely correct in its
-detail. The necessary restrictions which forbade the
-mention of numbered units have now been removed,
-a change made possible by the very general
-rearrangements which have recently taken place. I
-am able, therefore, to deal freely with my material.
-As that material is not always equally full, it may
-have occasionally led to a want of proportion, where
-the brigade occupies a line and the battalion a
-paragraph. In extenuation of such faults, and of the
-omissions which are unavoidable, I can only plead
-the difficulty of the task and throw myself upon the
-reader's good nature. Some compensation for such
-shortcoming may be found in the fact that a narrative
-written at the time reflects the warm emotions
-which these events aroused amongst us more clearly
-than the more measured story of the future historian
-can do.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It may seem that the political chapters are
-somewhat long for a military work, but the reader will
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="Pix"></a>ix}</span>
-find that in subsequent volumes there are no further
-politics, so that this survey of the European conditions
-of 1914 is a lead up to the whole long narrative
-of the actual contest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I would thank my innumerable correspondents
-(whom I may not name) for their very great help.
-I would also admit the profit which I have derived
-from reading Coleman's <i>Mons to Ypres</i>, and especially
-Lord Ernest Hamilton's <i>The First Seven Divisions</i>.
-These books added some new facts, and enabled me
-to check many old ones. Finally, I desire to thank
-my friend Mr. P. L. Forbes for his kind and
-intelligent assistance in arranging my material.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- WINDLESHAM, CROWBOROUGH,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>October</i> 1916.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-CONTENTS
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE BREAKING OF THE PEACE
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE OPENING OF THE WAR
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE BATTLE OF MONS
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-The landing of the British in France&mdash;The British leaders&mdash;The
-advance to Mons&mdash;The defence of the bridges of Nimy&mdash;The
-holding of the canal&mdash;The fateful telegram&mdash;The rearguard
-actions of Frameries, Wasmes, and Dour&mdash;The charge of the
-Lancers&mdash;The fate of the Cheshires&mdash;The 7th Brigade at
-Solesmes&mdash;The Guards in action&mdash;The Germans' rude
-awakening&mdash;The Connaughts at Pont-sur-Sambre
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE BATTLE OF LE CATEAU
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-The order of battle at Le Cateau&mdash;The stand of the 2nd
-Suffolks&mdash;Major Yate's V.C.&mdash;The fight
-for the quarries&mdash;The splendid work
-of the British guns&mdash;Difficult retirement of the Fourth
-Division&mdash;The fate of the 1st Gordons&mdash;Results
-of the battle&mdash;Exhaustion
-of the Army&mdash;The destruction of the 2nd Munsters&mdash;A cavalry
-fight&mdash;The news in Great Britain&mdash;The
-views of General Joffre&mdash;Battery L&mdash;The action of
-Villars-Cotteret&mdash;Reunion of the Army
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE BATTLE OF THE MARNE
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-The general situation&mdash;"Die grosse Zeit"&mdash;The turn of the
-tide&mdash;The Battle of the Ourcq&mdash;The British advance&mdash;Cavalry
-fighting&mdash;The 1st Lincolns and the guns&mdash;6th Brigade's action at
-Hautvesnes&mdash;9th Brigade's capture of Germans at Vinly&mdash;The
-problem of the Aisne&mdash;Why the Marne is one of the great
-battles of all time
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE BATTLE OF THE AISNE
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-The hazardous crossing of the Aisne&mdash;Wonderful work of the
-sappers&mdash;The fight for the sugar factory&mdash;General advance of the
-Army&mdash;The 4th (Guards) Brigade's difficult task&mdash;Cavalry as a mobile
-reserve&mdash;The Sixth Division&mdash;Hardships of the Army&mdash;German
-breach of faith&mdash;<i>Tâtez toujours</i>&mdash;The general position&mdash;Attack
-upon the West Yorks&mdash;Counter-attack by Congreve's 18th
-Brigade&mdash;Rheims Cathedral&mdash;Spies&mdash;The siege and fall of Antwerp
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE LA BASSÉE&mdash;ARMENTIÈRES OPERATIONS
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-The great battle line&mdash;Advance of Second Corps&mdash;Death of General
-Hamilton&mdash;The farthest point&mdash;Fate of the 2nd Royal Irish&mdash;The
-Third Corps&mdash;Exhausted troops&mdash;First fight of Neuve
-Chapelle&mdash;The Indians take over&mdash;The Lancers at Warneton&mdash;Pulteney's
-operations&mdash;Action of Le Gheir
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE FIRST BATTLE OF YPRES
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-The Seventh Division&mdash;Its peculiar excellence&mdash;Its difficult
-position&mdash;A deadly ordeal&mdash;Desperate attacks on Seventh
-Division&mdash;Destruction of 2nd Wilts&mdash;Hard
-fight of 20th Brigade&mdash;Arrival
-of First Corps&mdash;Advance of Haig's Corps&mdash;Fight of Pilken
-Inn&mdash;Bravery of enemy&mdash;Advance of Second Division&mdash;Fight of
-Kruiseik cross-roads&mdash;Fight of Zandvoorde&mdash;Fight of
-Gheluvelt&mdash;Advance of Worcesters&mdash;German recoil&mdash;General result&mdash;A
-great crisis
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE FIRST BATTLE OF YPRES (<i>continued</i>)
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-Attack upon the cavalry&mdash;The struggle at Messines&mdash;The London Scots
-in action&mdash;Rally to the north&mdash;Terrible losses&mdash;Action of
-Zillebeke&mdash;Record of the Seventh Division&mdash;Situation
-at Ypres&mdash;Attack of the Prussian Guard&mdash;Confused
-fighting&mdash;End of the first
-Battle of Ypres&mdash;Death of Lord Roberts&mdash;The Eighth Division
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-A RETROSPECT AND GENERAL SUMMARY
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-Position of Italy&mdash;Fall of German colonies&mdash;Sea affairs&mdash;Our Allies
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE WINTER LULL OF 1914
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-Increase of the Army&mdash;Formation of the Fifth Corps&mdash;The visit of
-the King&mdash;Third Division at Petit Bois&mdash;The fight at
-Givenchy&mdash;Heavy losses of the Indians&mdash;Fine
-advance of Manchesters&mdash;Advance
-of the First Division&mdash;Singular scenes at Christmas
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap12">INDEX</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-MAPS AND PLANS
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-001">
-Map to illustrate the British Campaign in France and Flanders,
-1914
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-059">
-Position of Second Army Corps at Mons, August 23
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-081">
-First Morning of Retreat of Second Army Corps, August 24
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-101">
-Sketch of Battle of Le Cateau, August 26
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-125">
-Line of Retreat from Mons
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-129">
-L Battery Action, September 1, 1914
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-147">
-British Advance during the Battle of the Marne
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-165">
-British Advance at the Aisne
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-205">
-Diagram to illustrate Operations of Smith-Dorrien's Second
-Corps and Pulteney's Third Corps from October 11 to
-October 19, 1914
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-213">
-Southern End of British Line
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-223">
-General View of Seat of Operations
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-235">
-Line of Seventh Division (Capper) and Third Cavalry Division
-(Byng) from October 16 onwards
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-257">
-General Scene of Operations
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="contents">
-<a href="#img-267">
-Sketch of Battle of Gheluvelt, October 31
-</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-001"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-001.jpg" alt="Map of north-east France and Belgium" />
-<br />
-Map of north-east France and Belgium
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P1"></a>1}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I
-<br /><br />
-THE BREAKING OF THE PEACE
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-In the frank, cynical, and powerful book of General
-Bernhardi which has been so often quoted in connection
-with the war there is one statement which is
-both true and important. It is, that no one in Great
-Britain thought seriously of a war with Germany
-before the year 1902. As a German observer he has
-fixed this date, and a British commentator who cast
-back through the history of the past would surely
-endorse it. Here, then, is a point of common agreement
-from which one can construct a scheme of thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Why then should the British people in the year
-1902 begin to seriously contemplate the possibility of
-a war with Germany? It might be argued by a
-German apologist that this date marks an appreciation
-by Great Britain that Germany was a great trade
-rival who might with advantage be crushed. But
-the facts would not sustain such a conclusion. The
-growth of German trade and of German wealth was
-a phenomenon with which the British were familiar.
-It had been constant since the days when Bismarck
-changed the policy of his country from free trade
-to protection, and it had competed for twenty years
-without the idea of war having entered British
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P2"></a>2}</span>
-minds. On the contrary, the prevailing economic
-philosophy in Great Britain was, that trade reacts
-upon trade, and that the successful rival becomes
-always the best customer. It is true that manufacturers
-expressed occasional irritation at the methods
-of German commerce, such as the imitation of British
-trade-marks and shoddy reproductions of British
-products. The Fatherland can produce both the
-best and the worst, and the latter either undersold us
-or forced down our own standards. But apart from
-this natural annoyance, the growing trade of Germany
-produced no hostility in Great Britain which could
-conceivably have led to an armed conflict. Up to
-the year 1896 there was a great deal of sympathy
-and of respect in Great Britain for the German
-Empire. It was felt that of all Continental Powers
-she was the one which was most nearly allied to
-Britain in blood, religion, and character. The fact
-that in 1890 Lord Salisbury deliberately handed over
-to Germany Heligoland&mdash;an island which blockaded
-her chief commercial port and the harbour of her
-warships&mdash;must show once for all how entirely
-Germany lay outside of any possible world-struggle
-which could at that time be foreseen. France has
-always had its warm partisans in this country, but
-none the less it can most truthfully be said that
-during all the years that Britain remained in political
-isolation she would, had she been forced to take
-sides, have assuredly chosen to stand by the Triple
-Alliance. It is hard now to recall those days of
-French pinpricks and of the evil effects which they
-produced. Germany's foreign policy is her own
-affair, and the German people are the judges of those
-who control it, but to us it must appear absolutely
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P3"></a>3}</span>
-demented in taking a line which has driven this great
-world-power away from her side&mdash;or, putting it at
-its lowest, away from an absolute neutrality, and
-into the ranks of her enemies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In 1896 there came the first serious chill in the
-relations between the two countries. It arose from
-the famous telegram to Kruger at the time of the
-Jameson Raid&mdash;a telegram which bore the name of
-the Kaiser, but which is understood to have been
-drafted by Baron Marschall von Bieberstein. Whoever
-was responsible for it did his country a poor
-service, for British feelings were deeply hurt at such
-an intrusion into a matter which bore no direct
-relation to Germany. Britons had put themselves
-thoroughly in the wrong. Britain admitted and
-deplored it. Public opinion was the more sensitive
-to outside interference, and the telegram of congratulation
-from the Emperor to Kruger was felt to be an
-uncalled-for impertinence. The matter passed,
-however, and would have been forgiven and forgotten
-but for the virulent agitation conducted against us
-in Germany during the Boer War&mdash;an agitation
-which, it is only fair to say, appeared to receive no
-support from the Kaiser himself, who twice visited
-England during the course of the struggle. It could
-not be forgotten, however, that Von Bülow, the
-Chancellor, assumed an offensive attitude in some of
-his speeches, that the very idea of an Anglo-German
-Alliance put forward by Chamberlain in 1900 was
-scouted by the German Press, and that in the whole
-country there was hardly a paper which did not join
-in a chorus of unreasoned hatred and calumny against
-ourselves, our policy, and our arms. The incident
-was a perfectly astounding revelation to the British,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P4"></a>4}</span>
-who looked back at the alliance between the two
-countries, and had imagined that the traditions of
-such battles as Minden or Dettingen, where British
-blood had been freely shed in Prussia's quarrel, really
-stood for something in their present relations. Britons
-were absolutely unconscious of anything which had
-occurred to alter the bonds which history had formed.
-It was clear, once for all, that this was mere
-self-deception, and as the British are a practical race, who
-are more concerned with what is than why it is, they
-resigned themselves to the situation and adjusted
-their thoughts to this new phase of their relations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But soon a new phenomenon engaged their attention.
-They had already realised that the Germans,
-for some motive which appeared to them to be entirely
-inadequate, were filled with hatred, and would do
-the British Empire an injury if they had the power.
-Hitherto, they had never had the power. But now
-it was evident that they were forging a weapon which
-might enable them to gratify their malevolence. In
-1900 was passed the famous German law regulating
-the increase of their navy. The British, preoccupied
-by their South African War, took no great notice of
-it at the time, but from 1902 onwards it engaged their
-attention to an ever-increasing degree. The original
-law was ambitious and far-reaching, but it was
-subjected to several modifications, each of which
-made it more formidable. By a system as inexorable
-as Fate, year after year added to the force which was
-being prepared at Wilhelmshaven and at Kiel&mdash;a
-force entirely out of proportion to the amount of
-German commerce to be defended or of German
-coast-line to be protected. The greatest army in the
-world was rapidly being supplemented by a fleet
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P5"></a>5}</span>
-which would be dangerously near, both in numbers
-and quality, to our own. The British Admiralty,
-more influenced by party politics than the German,
-showed at times commendable activity, and at other
-periods inexcusable indifference. On the whole, it
-was well ahead in its building programmes, for a
-wide circle of the public had become thoroughly
-awakened to the danger, and kept up a continual
-and most justifiable agitation for a broader margin
-of safety. Fortunately, the two final rulers of the
-Navy&mdash;McKenna and Churchill&mdash;rose to their responsibilities,
-and, in spite of a clamour from a section of
-their own party, insisted upon an adequate preponderance
-of naval construction. A deep debt of gratitude
-is owed also to the action of Lord Fisher, who saw the
-danger afar off and used all his remarkable powers
-of organisation and initiative to ensure that his
-country should be ready for the approaching struggle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Great Britain, being much exercised in mind by
-the menacing tone of Germany, expressed not only in
-her great and rapid naval preparations, but in an
-astonishing outburst of minatory speeches and literature
-from professors, journalists, and other leaders of
-the people, began from 1902 onwards to look round
-her for allies. Had she continued to remain isolated,
-some turn of the political wheel might have exposed
-her to a Continental coalition under the leadership
-and inspiration of this bitter enemy. But for the
-threats of Germany, Britain would in all probability
-have been able to keep aloof from entanglements,
-but as it was, the enemies of her enemy became of
-necessity her friends. In an attempt to preserve her
-independence of action so far as was still possible, she
-refused to form an alliance, and only committed
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P6"></a>6}</span>
-herself in a vague fashion to an ill-defined <i>entente</i>.
-By settling several outstanding causes of friction with
-France, an agreement was come to in the year 1903
-which was extended to Russia in 1907. The general
-purport of such an arrangement was, that the
-sympathies of Great Britain were with the Dual Alliance,
-and that these sympathies would be translated into
-action if events seemed to warrant it. An aggressive
-policy on the part of France or Russia would be
-absolutely discountenanced by Britain, but if France
-were attacked Britain would pledge herself to do her
-utmost to prevent her from being overwhelmed. It
-was recognised that a victorious Germany would
-constitute a serious menace to the British Empire&mdash;a
-fact which neither the Pan-German fanatics nor the
-German national Press would ever permit us to forget.
-In this policy of insuring against a German attack
-King Edward VII. took a deep interest, and the
-policy is itself attributed to him in Germany, but as
-a matter of fact it represented the only sane course
-of action which was open to the nation. Germans
-are fond of representing King Edward's action as
-the cause of subsequent events, whereas a wider
-knowledge would show them that it was really the
-effect of five years of German irritation and menace.
-This, then, was the political situation up to the
-time of the actual outbreak of war. Upon the one
-side were the German and Austrian Empires in a
-solid alliance, while Italy was nominally allied, but
-obviously moved upon an orbit of her own. On the
-other hand, Russia and France were solidly allied,
-with Britain moving upon an independent orbit
-which had more relation with that of her friends than
-Italy's with that of Central Europe. It might clearly
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P7"></a>7}</span>
-have been foreseen that Britain's fate would be that
-of France, while Italy would break away under any
-severe test, for a number of open questions divided
-her vitally from her secular enemy to the north-east,
-The whole story of the campaign of Tripoli in 1911
-showed very clearly how independent, and even
-antagonistic, were the interests and actions of Italy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Germany, in the meanwhile, viewed with considerable
-annoyance the formation of the elastic but
-very real ties which united France and Britain, while
-she did not cease to continue the course of action
-which had encouraged them. It had been one of the
-axioms of Wilhelmstrasse that whilst the British
-occupied Egypt, no friendship was possible between
-them and the French. Even now they were
-incredulous that such a thing could be, and they
-subjected it to a succession of tests. They desired to
-see whether the friendship was a reality, or whether
-it was only for fair-weather use and would fly to
-pieces before the stress of storm. Twice they tried
-it, once in 1905 when they drove France into a
-conference at Algeciras, and again in 1911, when in
-a time of profound peace they stirred up trouble by
-sending a gunboat to Agadir in south-western Morocco,
-an event which brought Europe to the very edge of
-war. In each case the <i>entente</i> remained so close and
-firm that it is difficult to imagine that they were
-really surprised by our actions in 1914, when the
-enormous provocation of the breach of the Belgian
-treaty was added to our promise to stand by France
-in any trouble not of her own making.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allusion has been made to the campaign of threats
-and abuse which had been going on for many years in
-Germany, but the matter is of such importance in its
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P8"></a>8}</span>
-bearing upon the outbreak of war that it requires
-some fuller discussion. For a long period before
-matters became acute between the two countries, a
-number of writers, of whom Nietzsche and Treitschke
-are the best known, had inoculated the German spirit
-with a most mischievous philosophy, which grew the
-more rapidly as it was dropped into the favourable
-soil of Prussian militarism. Nietzsche's doctrines
-were a mere general defence of might as against right,
-and of violent brutality against everything which
-we associate with Christianity and Civilisation. The
-whooping savage bulked larger in this perverted
-philosophy than the saint or the martyr. His views,
-however, though congenial to a certain class of the
-German people, had no special international
-significance. The typical brute whom he exalted was
-blonde, but a brute of any other tint would presumably
-suffice. It was different in the case of Treitschke.
-He was a historian, not a philosopher, with nothing
-indefinite or abstract about his teaching. He used
-his high position as Professor in the Berlin University
-to preach the most ardent Chauvinism, and above
-all to teach the rising generation of Germans that
-their special task was to have a reckoning with
-England and to destroy the British Empire, which for
-some reason he imagined to be degenerate and corrupt.
-He has passed away before he could see the ruin which
-he helped to bring about, for there is no doubt that
-his deeds lived after him, and that he is one of half
-a dozen men who were prominent in guiding their
-country along the path which has ended in the abyss.
-Scores of other lesser writers repeated and exaggerated
-his message. Prominent among these was General
-von Bernhardi, a man of high standing and a very
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P9"></a>9}</span>
-great authority upon theoretical warfare. In the
-volume on <i>Germany and the Next War</i>, which has
-been already quoted, he declared in the year 1911
-that Germany should and would do exactly what it
-has done in 1914. Her antagonists, her allies, and
-her general strategy are all set forth with a precision
-which shows that German thinkers had entirely made
-up their minds as to the course of events, and that
-the particular pretext upon which war would be
-waged was a matter of secondary importance. These
-and similar sentiments naturally increased the
-uneasiness and resentment in Great Britain, where the
-taxation had risen constantly in the endeavour to
-keep pace with German preparations, until it was
-generally felt that such a state of things could not
-continue without some crisis being reached. The
-cloud was so heavy that it must either pass or burst.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The situation had been aggravated by the fact that
-in order to win popular assent to the various increases
-of the naval estimates in Germany, constantly recurring
-anti-British agitations were deliberately raised
-with alarms of an impending attack. As Britain had
-never thought of attacking Germany during the long
-years when she had been almost defenceless at sea,
-it was difficult to perceive why she should do so now;
-but none the less the public and the politicians were
-gulled again and again by this device, which, while it
-achieved its purpose of obtaining the money, produced
-a corresponding resentment in Great Britain.
-Sometimes these manoeuvres to excite public opinion in
-favour of an increased navy went to extreme lengths
-which might well have justified an official
-remonstrance from England. A flagrant example was the
-arrest, trial, and condemnation of Captain Stewart
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P10"></a>10}</span>
-for espionage upon the evidence of a suborned and
-perjured criminal. It is a story which is little to the
-credit of the Imperial Government, of the High
-Court at Leipzig, or of the British authorities who
-failed to protect their fellow-countryman from most
-outrageous treatment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So much for the causes which helped to produce
-an evil atmosphere between the two countries.
-Looking at the matter from the German point of view,
-there were some root-causes out of which this monstrous
-growth had come, and it is only fair that these
-should be acknowledged and recorded. These causes
-can all be traced to the fact that Britain stood between
-Germany and that world-empire of which she dreamed.
-This depended upon circumstances over which this
-country had no control, and which she could not
-modify if she had wished to do so. Britain, through
-her maritime power and through the energy of her
-merchants, had become a great world-power when
-Germany was still a collection of petty States. When
-Germany became a powerful Empire with a rising
-population and an immense commerce, she found
-that the choice places of the world, and those most
-fitted for the spread of a transplanted European race,
-were already filled up. It was not a matter which
-Britain could help, nor could she alter it, since Canada,
-Australasia, and South Africa would not, even if she
-had desired it, be transferred to German rule. And
-yet it formed a national grievance, and if we can put
-ourselves in the place of the Germans we may admit
-that it was galling that the surplus of their manhood
-should go to build up the strength of an alien and
-possibly a hostile State. To this point we could fully
-see that grievance&mdash;or rather that misfortune, since
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P11"></a>11}</span>
-no one was in truth to blame in the matter. It was
-forgotten by their people that the Colonial Empire
-of the British and of the French had been built up
-by much outlay of blood and treasure, extending over
-three centuries. Germany had existed as a united
-State for less than half a century, and already during
-that time had built up a very considerable oversea
-dominion. It was unreasonable to suppose that she
-could at once attain the same position as her fully
-grown rivals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus this German discontent was based upon fixed
-factors which could no more be changed by Britain
-than the geographical position which has laid her
-right across the German exit to the oceans of the
-world. That this deeply rooted national sentiment,
-which for ever regarded Britain as the Carthage to
-which they were destined to play the part of Rome,
-would sooner or later have brought about war, is
-beyond all doubt. There are a score of considerations
-which show that a European war had long been
-planned, and that finally the very date, determined
-by the completion of the broadened Kiel Canal, had
-been approximately fixed. The importations of corn,
-the secret preparations of giant guns, the formations
-of concrete gun-platforms, the early distribution
-of mobilisation papers, the sending out of guns for
-auxiliary cruisers, the arming of the German colonies,
-all point to a predetermined rupture. If it could not
-be effected on one pretext, it certainly would on
-another. As a matter of fact, an occasion was
-furnished by means which have not yet been fully cleared
-up. It was one which admirably suited the German
-book, since it enabled her to make her ally the
-apparent protagonist and so secure her fidelity to the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P12"></a>12}</span>
-bond. At the same time, by making the cause of
-quarrel one which affected only the Slavonic races,
-she hoped to discourage and detach the more liberal
-Western Powers and so divide the ranks of the Allies
-from the outset. It is possible, though not certain,
-that she might have effected this in the case of Great
-Britain, but for her own stupendous blunder in the
-infraction of Belgian neutrality, which left us a united
-nation in our agreement as to the necessity of war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The political balance of the Great Powers of Europe
-is so delicately adjusted that any weakening of one
-means a general oscillation of all. The losses of
-Russia in a sterile campaign in East Asia in 1904
-disturbed the whole peace of the world. Germany
-took advantage of it at once to bully France over
-Morocco; and in 1908, judging correctly that Russia
-was still unfit for war, Austria, with the connivance
-and help of Germany, tore up the Treaty of Berlin
-without reference to its other signatories, and annexed
-the provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Russia
-immediately issued a futile protest, as did Great
-Britain, but the latter had no material interest at
-stake. It was otherwise with Russia. She was the
-hereditary guardian of Slav interests which were
-directly attacked by this incorporation of an unwilling
-Slav population into the Austrian Empire. Unable
-for the moment to prevent it, she waited in silent
-wrath for the chance of the future, humiliated and
-exasperated by the knowledge that she had been
-bullied at the moment of her temporary weakness.
-So great had been the indignity that it was evident
-that were she to tolerate a second one it would mean
-the complete abandonment of her leadership of the race.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On June 28, 1914, the Archduke Francis Ferdinand,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P13"></a>13}</span>
-heir to the throne of the Austrian Empire, made a
-state visit to Sarajevo in the newly annexed provinces.
-Here he was assassinated, together with his wife.
-The immediate criminals were two youths named
-Princip and Cabrinovic, but what exact forces were
-at the back of them, or whether they merely represented
-local discontent, have never yet been clearly
-shown. Austria was, however, naturally incensed
-against Serbia, which was looked upon as the centre
-of all aggressive Slavonic action. Politics take
-fantastic shapes in this south-eastern corner of
-Europe, and murder, abduction, forgery, and perjury
-are weapons which in the past have been freely used
-by all parties. The provocation in this instance was
-so immense and the crime so monstrous that had it
-been established after trustworthy examination that
-Serbia had indeed been directly connected with it,
-there is no doubt that the whole of Europe, including
-Russia, would have acquiesced in any reasonable
-punishment which could be inflicted. Certainly the
-public opinion of Great Britain would have been
-unanimous in keeping clear of any quarrel which
-seemed to uphold the criminals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Austria seems to have instantly made up her mind
-to push the matter to an extreme conclusion, as is
-shown by the fact that mobilisation papers were
-received by Austrians abroad, bearing the date June
-30, so that they were issued within two days of the
-crime. An inquiry was held in connection with the
-trial of the assassins, which was reported to have
-implicated individual Serbians in the murder plot,
-but no charge was made against the Serbian
-Government. Had Austria now demanded the immediate
-trial and punishment of these accomplices, she would
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P14"></a>14}</span>
-once again have had the sympathy of the civilised
-world. Her actual action was far more drastic, and
-gave impartial observers the conviction that she was
-endeavouring not to obtain reparation but to ensure
-war. It is inconceivable that so important a
-document as her ultimatum was launched without the
-approval of Berlin, and we have already seen that
-Germany was in a mood for war. The German
-newspapers, even before the Austrian demands were made,
-had begun to insist that in view of the distracted
-domestic politics of Great Britain, and of the
-declaration by M. Humbert in the French Senate that the
-army was unprepared, the hour for definite
-settlements had arrived.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Austrian ultimatum was such a demand as
-one nation has never yet addressed to another.
-Indeed, it could hardly be said that Serbia would
-remain a nation if she submitted to it. Some clauses,
-though severe, were within the bounds of reason.
-That papers should not be allowed to incite hatred,
-and that secret societies which were supposed to be
-connected with the crime should be forcibly suppressed,
-were not unfair demands. So, too, that all accessories
-to the plot, some of whom are mentioned by name,
-should be tried, and that certain measures to prevent
-a possible recurrence of such plots should be adopted.
-All these demands might be justified, and each of
-them was, as a matter of fact, accepted by Serbia.
-The impossible conditions were that Austrian judges
-should sit in Serbia upon political cases and that
-delegates of Austria should have partial administrative
-control in the neighbouring kingdom. Even
-these outrageous demands were not rejected
-absolutely by the Serbian Government, though it
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P15"></a>15}</span>
-proclaimed itself to be unable to accept them in the
-crude form in which they were presented. A humble
-and conciliatory reply concluded with an expression of
-the desire to submit any point still open to impartial
-arbitration. The Austrian Government&mdash;or the forces
-behind it&mdash;appeared, however, to have no desire at
-all to find a peaceful solution. So precipitate were
-they in their action, that on the receipt of the Serbian
-reply, in less than an hour the Austrian Minister had
-left Belgrade, and a diplomatic rupture, the
-immediate prelude to war, had taken place between the
-two countries. So far only two figures were on the
-stage, but already vast shadows were looming in the
-wings, and all the world was hushed at the
-presentiment of coming tragedy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been shown that Russia, the elder brother
-of the Slav races, had once already been humiliated
-over Austrian policy and could not be indifferent to
-this new attempt to coerce a Slavonic people. The
-King of Serbia in his sore need appealed to the Czar
-and received a sympathetic reply. A moderate
-castigation of Serbia might have been condoned by
-Russia, but she could not contemplate unmoved a
-course of action which would practically destroy a
-kindred State. The Austrian army was already
-mobilising, so Russia also began to mobilise in the
-south. Events crowded rapidly upon each other.
-On July 28 came the declaration of war from Austria
-to Serbia. Three days later&mdash;days which were
-employed by Great Britain in making every possible
-effort to prevent the extension of the mischief&mdash;Germany
-as Austria's ally declared war upon Russia.
-Two days later Germany declared war upon France.
-The current ran swiftly as it drew nearer to Niagara.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P16"></a>16}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The scope of this chronicle is more immediately
-concerned with the doings of Great Britain in this
-sudden and frightful misfortune which had fallen
-upon Europe. Her peaceful efforts were thrust aside,
-for she was dealing with those who had predetermined
-that there should be no peace. Even Austria, the
-prime mover in discord, had shown herself inclined
-to treat at the last moment, but Germany had
-hastened her onwards by a sudden ultimatum to
-Russia. From that instant the die was cast. The
-attitude of France was never in doubt. She was
-taken at a disadvantage, for her President was abroad
-when the crisis broke out, but the most chivalrous of
-nations could be relied upon to fulfil her obligations.
-She took her stand at once by the side of her ally.
-The one all-important question upon which the
-history of the world would depend, as so often before,
-was the action of Great Britain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Edward Grey had proposed a conference of
-ambassadors to deal with the situation, a suggestion
-which was set aside by Germany. So long as the
-matter was purely Balkan it was outside the sphere
-of special British interests, but day by day it was
-becoming more clear that France would be involved,
-and a large party in Great Britain held that it would
-be impossible for us to stand by and witness any
-further dismembering of our neighbour. Thus the
-shadow which had settled so heavily upon the south-east
-of Europe was creeping across from east to west
-until it was already darkening the future of Britain.
-It was obviously the German game, whatever her
-ultimate designs might be upon the British Empire,
-to endeavour to keep it peaceful until she had disposed
-of her Continental opponents. For this reason a
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P17"></a>17}</span>
-strong bid was made for British neutrality upon
-July 29, through the Ambassador at Berlin, Sir
-Edward Goschen. In an official conversation the
-German Chancellor, Bethmann-Hollweg, declared that
-Germany was ready to pledge herself to take no
-territory from France in case of victory. He would
-make no promise as regards the French colonies, nor
-was anything said as to the French Fleet, nor as to
-the gigantic indemnity which was already discussed
-in some of the German papers. In a word, the
-proposition was that Great Britain was to abandon
-her friend at the hour of her need on condition that
-she should be robbed but not mutilated. Subsequent
-experience of German promises may lead us to doubt,
-however, whether they would really have insured
-France against the worst that the victor could
-inflict.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Edward Grey answered with as much warmth
-as the iced language of diplomacy will permit. His
-dispatch of July 30 begins as follows:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"His Majesty's Government cannot for a moment
-entertain the Chancellor's proposal that they should
-bind themselves to neutrality on such terms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What he asks us in effect is, to engage to stand
-by while French colonies are taken and France is
-beaten so long as Germany does not take French
-territory as distinct from the colonies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"From the material point of view such a proposal
-is unacceptable, for France, without further territory
-in Europe being taken from her, could be so crushed
-as to lose her position as a great Power, and become
-subordinate to German policy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Altogether apart from that, it would be a
-disgrace for us to make this bargain with Germany
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P18"></a>18}</span>
-at the expense of France, a disgrace from which the
-good name of this country would never recover."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At a subsequent period the Premier, Mr. Asquith,
-voiced the sentiment of the whole nation when he
-declared that the proposal was infamous.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The immediate concern of the British Government
-was to ascertain the views of the rival Powers upon
-the question of Belgian neutrality, which had been
-solemnly guaranteed by France, Prussia, and
-ourselves. How faithfully this guarantee had been
-observed by France in the past is shown by the fact
-that even when an infraction of the frontier at Sedan
-in 1870 would have saved the French Army from
-total destruction, it had not been attempted. There
-were signs in advance, however, that Germany
-proposed to turn the French defences by marching
-through Belgium. The arrangement of the new
-German strategic railways upon the frontier all
-pointed to such a plan. It was evident that such an
-action must at once bring Britain into the struggle,
-since it is difficult to see how she could ever hold up
-her head again if, after promising protection to a
-smaller nation, she broke her bond at the moment
-of danger. The French, too, who had left their
-northern frontier comparatively unfortified in reliance
-upon the integrity of Belgium, would have rightly
-felt that they had been betrayed by Britain if they
-suffered now through their confidence in the British
-guarantee. The Balkans were nothing to Great
-Britain, but she had more than her interests, she had
-her national honour at stake upon the Belgian frontier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On July 31 the British Government asked France
-and Germany whether they were still prepared to
-stand by their pledge. France answered promptly
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P19"></a>19}</span>
-that she was, and added that she had withdrawn her
-armies ten kilometres from the frontier, so as to
-prove to the world that her position was defensive
-only. From Germany there came an ominous silence.
-Meanwhile, in Brussels the German representative,
-Herr von Below-Saleske, was assuring the Belgian
-Government that nothing was further from the
-intention of Germany than an infraction of the
-frontier. These assurances were continued almost
-to the moment of the arrival of German troops in
-Belgium, and give one more instance of the absolute
-want of truth and honour which from the days of
-Frederick the Great has been the outstanding
-characteristic of German diplomacy. Just as the Seven
-Years' War was begun by an attack upon an ally in
-times of peace, so her last two campaigns have been
-opened, the one by the doctored telegram of Ems,
-and the other by the perfidy to Belgium, which is
-none the less shameful because it has been publicly
-admitted by the Chancellor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another incident of these crowded days deserves
-some record, as it has been quoted in Germany as
-an instance of Great Britain having stood in the way
-of a localisation of the war. This impression is
-produced by suppressing a telegram in which it is
-shown that the whole episode arose from a mistake
-upon the part of Prince Lichnowsky, the German
-Ambassador. On August 1 Sir Edward Grey, still
-feeling round for some way in which the evil might
-be minimised, suggested through the telephone to
-Prince Lichnowsky that if both Germany and France
-could see their way to stand out, the conflict would
-then be limited to Austria and Russia. This practical
-and possible suggestion was transmitted to Berlin in
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P20"></a>20}</span>
-the absurd form that Britain would hold France out
-of the war, while Russia would be abandoned to
-Germany and Austria. The Kaiser lost no time in
-assenting to so delightful a proposal. It was at once
-pointed out to Prince Lichnowsky that he had made
-a mistake, and the Prince telegraphed to Berlin a
-correction of his previous message. This second
-telegram was suppressed by the German Government,
-while, some weeks afterwards, they published the
-inaccurate dispatch in order to give the world the
-impression that Britain had actually made a move
-towards peace which had been withdrawn when it
-was found that it was eagerly welcomed by Germany.
-The very idea that Britain could in any way pledge
-the actions of France is grotesque upon the face of it.
-Whilst making this false suggestion as to the action
-of Britain, the German Government carefully
-concealed the fact that Sir Edward Grey had actually
-gone the extreme length in the interests of peace, of
-promising that we should detach ourselves from our
-Allies if a conference were held and their unreasonable
-attitude was an obstacle to an agreement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether, if Belgian neutrality had been honoured,
-Great Britain would or would not have come into
-the war is an academic question which can never be
-decided. Certainly she would never have come in
-as a united nation, for public opinion was deeply
-divided upon the point, and the Cabinet is understood
-to have been at variance. Only one thing could
-have closed the ranks and sent the British Empire
-with absolute unanimity into the fight. This was
-the one thing which Germany did. However great
-her military power may be, it seems certain that her
-diplomatic affairs were grievously mismanaged, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P21"></a>21}</span>
-that, in spite of that cloud of spies who have been
-the precursors of her Uhlans in each of her
-campaigns, she was singularly ill-informed as to the
-sentiments of foreign nations. The columns of a
-single honest British paper would have told her
-more of the true views and spirit of the nation
-than all the eavesdroppers of her famous secret
-service.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We now come to the critical instant as regards
-Britain, leading to a succession of incidents in Berlin
-so admirably described in Sir Edward Goschen's
-classical report that it seems a profanation to
-condense it. Having received no reply to their request
-for a definite assurance about Belgium, the British
-Government instructed their Ambassador to ask for
-an immediate answer upon August 4. The startling
-reply from Von Jagow, Secretary of Foreign Affairs,
-was that the German troops had actually crossed
-the frontier. With a cynical frankness the German
-statesman explained that it was a matter of life or
-death to the Imperial Army to get their blow in
-quickly by the undefended route. In answer to the
-shocked remonstrance of the British Ambassador, he
-could only assert that it was now too late to reconsider
-the matter. About seven in the evening Sir Edward
-Goschen conveyed an ultimatum upon the subject
-to the German Government, declaring war unless by
-midnight a more satisfactory answer could be given.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From Herr von Jagow the Ambassador passed to
-the Chancellor, whom he found much agitated. He
-broke into a harangue in which he used the phrase,
-now become historic, that he could not understand
-the British Government making such a fuss about a
-mere scrap of paper, and declared that a breach of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P22"></a>22}</span>
-territorial neutrality was a matter of no great
-consequence. A recollection of the history of his own
-country would none the less have reminded him that
-it was precisely on account of an infringement of their
-frontier by the troops of Napoleon that Prussia had
-entered upon the ill-fated war of 1806. He continued
-by saying that he held Great Britain responsible
-for all the terrible events which might happen. Sir
-Edward pointed out that it was a matter of necessity
-that Great Britain should keep her engagements, and
-added with dignity that fear of the consequences
-could hardly be accepted as a valid reason for
-breaking them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such in brief was the momentous interview which
-determined the question of peace or war between
-these two great Empires. Sir Edward immediately
-forwarded a telegraphic summary of what had
-occurred to London, but this telegram was never
-forwarded by the Berlin authorities&mdash;one more of
-those actions for which the word "caddish" is the
-most appropriate British adjective. Throughout all
-our German experiences both before the war and
-during it, we have always found our rivals to be
-formidable; they have usually proved themselves
-to be both brave and energetic; but hardly ever
-have we recognised them as gentlemen. Three
-centuries ago the leading nations of Europe had
-attained something subtle and gracious which is still
-denied to the Germans.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The populace of Berlin hastened to show these
-same unamiable characteristics. Whereas the retiring
-Ambassadors in London, Paris, and also in Vienna,
-met with courteous treatment, the German mob
-surrounded the British Embassy and hurled
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P23"></a>23}</span>
-vituperations, and finally stones, at its occupants.
-Defenceless people were hustled, assaulted, and arrested
-in the streets. A day or two previously the Russian
-Embassy had been brutally insulted by the populace
-upon its departure&mdash;a fact which produced some
-regrettable, but very natural, reprisals in Petrograd,
-to use the new name for the Russian capital. The
-French Ambassador and his suite had also been very
-badly treated in their journey to the Dutch frontier.
-Thus it was shocking, but not surprising, to find that
-the Berlin mob indulged in excesses towards the
-British representatives, and that shameful scenes
-marked the final hours of Sir Edward Goschen's
-official duties. Truly, as Herr von Jagow admitted,
-such incidents leave an indelible stain upon the
-reputation of Berlin. It is pleasant to be able to add
-that Von Jagow himself behaved with propriety, and
-did what he could to mitigate the violence of the
-populace.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is difficult for us to imagine how any German
-could possibly for an instant have imagined that Great
-Britain would stand by in silent acquiescence while
-the little country which she had sworn to protect was
-overrun by German troops; but that such a delusion
-existed is shown not only by the consternation of
-the Chancellor at Sir Edward's message, but also by
-the extreme irritation of the Emperor. What part
-Emperor William had played in the events which
-led up to the war may possibly remain for ever the
-subject of debate. There are those who argue that
-the Crown Prince and the military party had taken
-advantage of his absence on one of his Norwegian
-tours, and had hurried matters into such an impasse
-that he was unable to get them back to more peaceful
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P24"></a>24}</span>
-lines. One would wish to think that this were true,
-and there is evidence that on previous occasions his
-influence has been exerted upon the side of peace to
-an extent which was unwelcome to many of his own
-subjects. On the other hand, it is very difficult to
-believe that such a situation, led up to by many
-preparatory steps which included the <i>fons et origo
-mali</i>, the provocative and impossible Austrian
-ultimatum, could have been arranged without the assent
-of a man who has notoriously continually interfered
-directly in all large, and many small, transactions
-of state. However this may be, it is beyond dispute
-that the action of Great Britain deprived him for the
-instant of his usual dignity and courtesy, and he
-dispatched a verbal message by one of his aides-de-camp
-in the following terms:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The Emperor has charged me to express to your
-Excellency his regret for the occurrences of last
-night, but to tell you at the same time that you will
-gather from those occurrences an idea of the feelings
-of his people respecting the action of Great Britain
-in joining with other nations against her old allies of
-Waterloo. His Majesty also begs that you will tell
-the King that he has been proud of the titles of
-British Field-Marshal and British Admiral, but that
-in consequence of what has occurred he must now
-at once divest himself of those titles."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Ambassador adds feelingly that this message
-lost nothing of its acerbity by the manner of its
-delivery. Some artist of the future will do justice
-to the scene where the benign and dignified old
-diplomatist sat listening to the rasping utterances
-of the insolent young Prussian soldier. The actual
-departure of the Embassy was effected without
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P25"></a>25}</span>
-molestation, thanks once more to the good offices of
-Herr von Jagow. On the same day, in the presence
-of a large but silent crowd, the German Ambassador
-left London and embarked for home in a vessel placed
-at his disposal by the British Government. His
-voyage back, <i>via</i> Flushing, was safely accomplished,
-but it is worth recording that it was only the warning
-from a British warship which prevented him and his
-staff from being blown up by the mines which had
-already, within a few hours of the outbreak of
-hostilities, been strewn thickly by his countrymen in
-the path of neutral shipping across the highway of
-commerce in the North Sea. Should our kinsmen of
-America ever find themselves in our place, let them
-remember that it is "all in" from the beginning
-with the Germans.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Let America also remember our experience that no
-pupil can go to a German school, no scholar to a
-German university, and no invalid to a German
-health-resort, without the chance of some sudden turn of
-politics leaving them as prisoners in the country.
-Even the elderly heart patients at Nauheim were
-detained by the German authorities. An old admiral
-among them, Admiral Neeld, made a direct appeal
-as sailor to sailor to Prince Henry of Prussia, and was
-answered by the proverb that "War is war." Our
-contention is that such actions are <i>not</i> war, and that
-their perpetration will never be forgotten or forgiven
-by the nations of the world, who can have no security
-that when their subjects pass the German frontier
-they will ever get clear again. Such practices are,
-of course, entirely distinct from that of interning
-reservists or males of fighting age, which was freely
-done by the Allies. It is only fair to say that after
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P26"></a>26}</span>
-a long delay there was a release of schoolgirls, and
-afterwards one of doctors, by the Germans, but many
-harmless travellers, students, and others were held
-for a long period of the war at a time when tens of
-thousands of Germans were free in Great Britain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By a gross perversion of facts German publicists
-have endeavoured to show that Great Britain was
-to blame for the final rupture. The pretence is too
-absurd to deceive any one, and one can hardly think
-that they believe it themselves. One has only to ask
-what had Great Britain to do with the death of the
-Heir Apparent of Austria, with the sending of the
-fatal ultimatum, with the declaration of war against
-Russia and France, or, finally, with the infraction of
-the Belgian frontier? She had nothing to do with
-any one of these things, which all, save the first,
-emanated from Vienna or Berlin, and were the
-obvious causes of the war. Britain was only involved
-because she remained true to her solemn contract, a
-breach of which would have left her dishonoured. It
-is mere effrontery to pretend that she desired war, or
-that she left anything undone which could have
-prevented it. We lay our record with confidence before
-foreign nations and posterity. We have nothing to
-conceal and nothing to regret.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the other hand, supposing that one were to
-grant the whole of the German contention, suppose
-one were to admit that Germany did not know of the
-terms of the Austrian ultimatum or foresee its effect
-upon the other nations of Europe, that she took her
-stand by the side of Austria purely out of motives of
-chivalrous loyalty to an ally, and that she was forced,
-by so doing, to find herself at variance with Russia
-and France&mdash;suppose so inconceivable a hypothesis
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P27"></a>27}</span>
-as this, even then it cannot in any way condone
-the admitted wrong which Germany did in invading
-Belgium, nor does it show any possible cause why,
-because Germany was false to her word in this matter,
-Britain should be so also. This point is so unanswerable
-that the only defence, if it can be called a defence,
-which Germany has ever put forward is, that if she
-had not infringed Belgian neutrality, somebody else
-would have done so. Not one shadow of evidence
-has ever been put forward to justify so monstrous
-an assertion, which is certainly not endorsed by the
-Belgians themselves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this connection one may allude to the so-called
-secret military engagements which were found and
-published by the Germans at Brussels and which
-were supposed to show that Great Britain herself
-contemplated the infraction of Belgian neutrality. One
-can only realise how bankrupt is Germany of all reason
-and argument when one considers such a contention
-as this. For years the German threats had
-been obvious to all the world. They had brought
-their strategic railways to the frontier of Belgium,
-and erected their standing camps there. Naturally
-Belgium was alarmed at such preparations and took
-counsel with Great Britain how her pledge should be
-redeemed and how her soil could be defended in case
-Germany proved perfidious. It was a simple military
-precaution which involved not the breach of a treaty
-but the fulfilment of one&mdash;not the invasion of Belgium
-but its protection after it was invaded. Each
-successive so-called "revelation" about the actions of
-Great Britain has only proved once more that&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Whatever record leaps to light<br />
- She never shall be shamed."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P28"></a>28}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These attempts to confuse the issue irresistibly
-recall the message of Frederic to Podowils when he
-was about to seize Silesia even as William seized
-Belgium. "The question of right," he said, "is the
-affair of ministers. It is your affair. It is time to
-work at it in secret, for the orders to the troops
-are given." March first and find some justification
-later.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Germany would have stood higher in the world's
-esteem and in the estimate of history if, instead of
-playing in most grotesque fashion the wolf to the
-lamb, and accusing her unprepared and distracted
-neighbours of making a surprise attack upon her at
-the moment when she was at the height of her preparations,
-she had boldly stated her true position. Her
-dignity and frankness would have been undeniable
-if she had said, "I am a great power. I believe I am
-the greatest. I am willing to put it to the test of war.
-I am not satisfied with my geographical position. I
-desire a greater seaboard. You must give it to me
-or I shall take it. I justify my action by the fact
-that the position of every state rests ultimately upon
-its strength in war, and that I am willing to undergo
-that test."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such a contention would have commanded respect,
-however much we might resent it. But these repeated
-declarations from the Emperor himself, the Chancellor,
-and so many others that they were deliberately
-attacked, coupled with appeals to the Almighty,
-make up the most nauseous mixture of falsehood and
-blasphemy which the world has ever known. The
-whole conception of religion became grotesque, and
-the Almighty, instead of a universal Father of the
-human race, was suddenly transformed into "our good
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P29"></a>29}</span>
-old God," a bloodthirsty tribal deity worthy of those
-Prussian pagans who as late as the fourteenth century
-offered human sacrifices to their idols in the Eastern
-Mark. The phenomenon was part of that general
-national madness to which, it is to be hoped, the
-German of the future will look back with bewilderment
-and shame.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One contention put forward by certain German
-apologists in connection with the war would hardly
-be worth referring to, were it not for the singular light
-which it casts upon the mental and moral position of
-a large number of the German public. It was that
-some special culture had been evolved by Germany
-which was of such value that it should be imposed
-by force upon the rest of the world. Since culture
-must in its nature be an international thing, the joint
-product of human development, such a claim can
-only be regarded as a conspicuous sign of its absence.
-In spiritual and intellectual matters it could not be
-asserted that Germany since 1870 had shown any
-superiority over France or England. In many matters
-she was conspicuously behind. It might fairly be
-claimed that in chemistry, in music, and in some
-forms of criticism, notably biblical exegesis, she was
-supreme. But in how many fields was she inferior
-to Great Britain? What name had she in poetry to
-put against Tennyson and Browning, in zoology to
-compare with Darwin, in scientific surgery to excel
-that of Lister, in travel to balance Stanley, or in the
-higher human qualities to equal such a man as Gordon?
-The fruits of German culture do not bear out the claim
-that it should forcibly supplant that of either of the
-great Western nations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have now seen how the great cloud which had
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P30"></a>30}</span>
-hung so long over Europe burst at last, and the blast
-of war swept the land from end to end. We have
-passed through the years of hopes and alarms, of the
-<i>ententes</i> of optimists and the <i>détentes</i> of politicians, of
-skirmishes between journals and wrestles of finance,
-until we reach the end of it all&mdash;open primitive
-warfare between the two great branches of the Germanic
-family. In a purple passage Professor Cramb spoke
-of the days when the high gods of virility would smile
-as they looked down upon the chosen children of Odin,
-the English and the Germans, locked in the joy of
-battle. The hour had struck, and it is a partial record
-of those crowded and heroic days which is here set
-forth with such accuracy of detail as diligence may
-command and circumstances allow.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P31"></a>31}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II
-<br /><br />
-THE OPENING OF THE WAR
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-There can be no doubt that if Germany had confined
-her operations to an attack upon France without
-any infraction of Belgian neutrality, the situation
-in Great Britain would have been extraordinarily
-difficult. The Government was the most democratic
-that has ever been known in our political history,
-and it owed its power to an electorate, many of whom
-were passionate advocates for peace at almost any
-conceivable price. The preparations for naval war,
-necessitated by the ever-growing German power, had
-been accompanied and occasionally retarded by a
-constant murmur of remonstrance which swelled
-periodically into a menacing expostulation. McKenna
-and Churchill found their only opponents in the
-members of their own party, who persistently refused
-to look obvious facts in the face, and impatiently
-swept aside the figures of the German armaments
-while they indulged in vague and amiable aspirations
-towards international friendship. This large and
-energetic party would certainly have most strenuously
-resisted British interference in a Continental war.
-The statesmen who foresaw that the conquest of
-France would surely lead to the conquest of Britain
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P32"></a>32}</span>
-might have carried the country with them, but none
-the less they would have gone to war with such an
-incubus upon them as the traitorous Charles James
-Fox and his party had been in the days of Napoleon.
-A disunited British against a united German Empire
-would have been a grievous disadvantage, be our
-allies who they might, for, as Shakespeare sang, "If
-England to herself be true," it is then only that she
-is formidable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This great misfortune, however, was obviated
-by the policy of Germany. The most peace-loving
-Briton could not face the national dishonour which
-would have been eternally branded upon him had
-his country without an effort allowed its guarantee
-to be treated as waste paper by a great military nation.
-The whole people were welded into one, and save for
-a few freakish individuals who obeyed their own
-perversity of mind or passion for notoriety, the
-country was united as it has never been in history.
-A just war seemed to touch the land with some magic
-wand, which healed all dissensions and merged into
-one national whole those vivid controversies which
-are, in fact, a sign rather of intense vitality than of
-degeneration. In a moment the faddist forgot his
-fad, the capitalist his grievance against taxation, the
-Labour man his feud against Capital, the Tory his
-hatred of the Government, even the woman her
-craving for the vote. A political millennium seemed
-to have dawned. Best and most important of all
-was the evident sign that the work done of late years
-to win the friendship of Ireland had not been in vain.
-If the mere promise of domestic institutions has
-ranged all responsible Irishmen upon one side on the
-day of battle, what may we not hope for ourselves
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P33"></a>33}</span>
-and for the Empire when they have been fully
-established and Time has alleviated the last lingering
-memories of an evil past? It is true that at a later
-period of the war this fair prospect was somewhat
-overcast by an insane rebellion, in which the wrongs
-of Ireland, once formidable and now trivial, were
-allowed by a colossal selfishness to outweigh the
-martyrdom of Belgium and the mutilation of France.
-Still the fact remains (and it must sustain us in our
-future efforts for conciliation) that never before have
-we had the representative nationalists of Ireland as
-our allies in a great struggle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The leaders of the Unionist party, Lord Lansdowne
-and Mr. Bonar Law, had already, on August 2, signified
-to the Government that they considered Britain to
-be honour-bound to France, and would support
-without hesitation every practical step to give effect
-to the alliance. Fortified by this assurance, the
-Government could go strongly forward. But after
-the Belgian infraction, its position was that of the
-executive of a united nation. Sir Edward Grey's
-analysis in Parliament of the causes which had
-brought us to war convinced the reason and claimed
-the sympathy of every political party, and even the
-most fervent advocates of peace found themselves
-silenced in the presence of the huge German aggression
-which could never admit of a peace founded upon
-mutual respect and equality, but only of that which
-comes from ascendancy on the one side and helplessness
-upon the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Should Britain ever be led into an unjust war,
-she will soon learn it from the fearless voices of her
-children. The independent young nations which are
-rising under the red-crossed flag will not be dragged,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P34"></a>34}</span>
-in the train of the Mother-Country, into any enterprise
-of which their conscience does not approve. But
- ow their assent was whole-hearted. They were<br />
-vehement in their approval of the firm stand made
-for the pledged word of the nation. From every
-quarter of the world deep answered deep in its assurance
-that the sword should not be sheathed until the
-wrong was righted and avenged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Strong, earnest Canada sent her 30,000 men, with
-her promise of more. Fiery Australia and New
-Zealand prepared as many, Maori vying with white
-man in his loyalty to the flag. South Africa, under the
-splendid leadership of Botha, began to arm, to speak
-with the foe in her own gates. India poured forth
-money and men with a lavish generosity which can
-never be forgotten in this country. The throb of
-loyalty to the old land passed through every smallest
-Dependency, and then beyond the frontier to those
-further lands which had known us as a just and
-kindly neighbour. Newfoundland voted a contingent.
-Ceylon sent of her best. Little Fiji mustered her
-company of fighting men, and even the mountains of
-Nepaul and the inaccessible plateaux of Thibet were
-desirous of swelling that great host, gathered from
-many races, but all under the one banner which
-meant to each a just and liberal rule.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the very eve of the outbreak of hostilities one
-man was added to the home establishment whose
-presence was worth many army corps. This was
-Lord Kitchener, whose boat was actually lying with
-steam up to bear him away upon a foreign mission,
-when, at the last instant, either the universal public
-demand or the good sense of the Government recalled
-him to take supreme charge of the war. It was a
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P35"></a>35}</span>
-strange and a novel situation that a soldier who was
-no party politician should assume the role of War
-Minister in a political Cabinet, but the times called
-for decided measures, and this was among them.
-From that day onwards until the dark hour which
-called him from his uncompleted task the passer-by
-who looked up at the massive front of the War Office
-was gladdened by the thought that somewhere in the
-heart of it those stern, immutable eyes were looking
-out at Britain's enemies, and that clear, calculating
-brain was working for their downfall. Slow,
-safe, methodical, remorseless, carefully preparing the
-means at every stage that led him to the distant but
-preordained end, he had shown, both in the Soudan
-and South Africa, that the race of great British
-generals was not yet extinct. He knew and trusted
-his instrument even as it knew and trusted him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That instrument was an army which was remarkably
-well prepared for its work. It cannot be said
-that the Boer War had increased the prestige of the
-British forces, though only those who have studied
-the subject can realise how difficult was the task
-with which they were then faced, or how considerable
-an achievement it was to bring it to a success. But
-the campaign had left behind it a valuable legacy,
-all the richer because so great a proportion of the land
-forces had been drawn into the struggle. In 1914
-a large proportion of senior officers and a considerable
-number of non-commissioned officers and reservists
-had passed through that ordeal, and learned by
-experience what can be done, and, even more important,
-what cannot be done, in face of modern rifles in
-skilful hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The lesson had been well pressed home after the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P36"></a>36}</span>
-war, and every general, from Lord Roberts
-downwards, had laid emphasis upon the importance of
-cover and of accuracy of fire. Apart from the sound
-technical training of the soldiers, the administration
-of the Army had, after an experimental period, fallen
-into the hands of Lord Haldane, who has left his
-mark more deeply than any one since Cardwell upon
-the formation of the land forces. A debt of gratitude
-is owing to him for his clear thought and his
-masterful dispositions. Had he been a prophet as well as
-organiser, he would no doubt have held his hand
-before he made the smallest decrease of our regular
-forces; but, on the other hand, by turning our
-haphazard, amateurish volunteers into the workman-like
-Territorials, in forming the invaluable Officers'
-Training Corps which tapped our public schools for
-something better than athletic talent, and in rigidly
-defining our expeditionary corps and providing the
-special reserves for its reinforcements, he did work
-for which he can never adequately be thanked. The
-weapon which he had fashioned was now thrust into
-the strong right hand of the new Minister of War.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is well to survey this weapon before we show
-how it was used. The total personnel of the Army
-with its reserves called up was about 370,000 men.
-Of this 160,000 were set aside as an expeditionary
-force, but only a portion of this number could be
-counted as immediately available on the outbreak
-of war, though the system of mobilisation had been
-brought to a fine point. It was hoped that three
-army corps numbering about 110,000 men, with two
-divisions of cavalry, about 10,000 horsemen, would
-be immediately available, petty numbers as compared
-with the millions of the Continent, but highly trained
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P37"></a>37}</span>
-professional soldiers, capable, perhaps, of turning the
-balance in the clash of equal hosts. The rest of
-the Regular Army had to provide garrisons for India,
-Egypt, Gibraltar, and other dependencies, but it
-was hoped that in time nearly all of it would be
-available for service.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Behind these first-line troops was the special
-reserve, something under 100,000 in number, who
-were the immediate reinforcements to fill the gaps
-of battle. Next in order came the Territorials, whose
-full complement was 340,000 men. Unhappily at
-this time they were nearly 100,000 under strength,
-and there are many who think that if the National
-Service League in their earnest campaign, which was
-inspired by a clear vision of the coming danger, had
-insisted upon a great enlargement of this constitutional
-force, instead of agitating for a complete change
-which presented practical and political difficulties,
-their efforts would have been more fruitful. These
-troops were raw, inexperienced, and only enlisted for
-home service, but with a fine spirit they set to work at
-once to make themselves efficient, and the great
-majority signified their readiness to go anywhere at
-the country's call. Many brigades were sent abroad
-at once to relieve the regulars in Egypt and India,
-while others were ready to join the fighting line on
-the Continent after a few months, where, as will be
-shown, they acquitted themselves remarkably well.
-The enthusiasm for the war rapidly sent the numbers
-of the Territorials up to nearly half a million. In
-addition to these troops there was the promise of
-70,000 highly trained men (one quarter of whom
-were British regulars) from India. Canada, Australia,
-and New Zealand came forward to offer some 60,000
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P38"></a>38}</span>
-men between them, with the promise of as many more
-as should be called for. Brave and hardy, these were
-splendid raw material, though their actual technical
-training was not, save in some special corps, more
-advanced than that of the British Territorials.
-Altogether, the British War Lord could see, at the
-very beginning of hostilities, nearly 1,000,000 of men
-ready to his hand, though in very different stages of
-efficiency.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But already he had conceived the idea of a
-campaign of attrition, and, looking forward into the
-years, he was convinced that these forces were
-insufficient. Some entirely new cadres must be
-organised, which should have no limitations, but be as
-reliable an instrument as the regular forces of the
-Crown. With a prescience which found no counterpart
-either among our friends or our foes he fixed three
-years as a probable term for the war, and he made
-preparation accordingly. Early in August he called
-for half a million fresh volunteers for the war, and
-early in October he had got them. Still unsatisfied, he
-called for yet another half-million, and before
-Christmas his numbers were again complete. It was a
-wonderful autumn and winter in Britain. Every
-common and green was loud with the cries of the
-instructors, and bare with the tramp of the men.
-Nothing has ever been seen in the world's history
-which can compare in patriotic effort with that rally
-to the flag, for no bounty was offered, and no
-compulsion used. The spirit of the men was
-extraordinarily high. Regiments were filled with gentlemen
-who gave up every amenity of life in order to face an
-arduous and dangerous campaign, while even greater
-patriotism was shown by the countless thousands of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P39"></a>39}</span>
-miners, artisans, and other well-paid workmen who
-sacrificed high wages and a home life in order to serve
-for an indefinite time upon the humble pay of the
-soldier, leaving, very often, a wife and children in
-straitened circumstances behind them. It is at such
-times that a democratic country reaps the rich fruits
-of its democracy, for if you make the land such that
-it is good to live in, so also does it become good to
-die for. These forces could not be ready, even with
-the best of wills, and the most intensive culture, before
-the summer of 1915, but at that date, including her
-sea forces, Great Britain had not less than 2,000,000
-volunteers under arms and ready for immediate use,
-a number which had risen to 4,000,000 by the end of
-that year, and 5,000,000 by the spring of 1916.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So much for the wise provisions of Lord Kitchener,
-which would have been useless had they not been
-supported by a stern and self-sacrificing national
-spirit. The crisis was met with a cold determination
-which gave some superficial observers the impression
-that the nation was listless, when it was, in truth, far
-too earnest for mere shoutings or flag-waving.
-"Wakened at last!" cried some foreign cartoon
-when a German outrage aroused the country for an
-instant to some visible gleam of wrath. A deeper
-observer might have known that a country which
-finds 5,000,000 volunteer fighters, and which, instead
-of putting the expenses of the war upon future
-generations, as was done by Germany, elects to meet
-a considerable proportion of them by present taxation,
-is in grim earnest from the start. The income tax
-was doubled without a remonstrance by a unanimous
-vote of the Commons, thus finding an extra £40,000,000
-a year for the prosecution of the war. Other taxes
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P40"></a>40}</span>
-were levied by which the working classes bore their
-fair share of the burden, and they also elicited
-no complaints. Before Christmas no less than
-£450,000,000 had been raised by a loan, a gigantic
-financial effort which was easily borne at a charge
-of 4 per cent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But if Britain was able to face the future with
-confidence, both in finance and in her military preparation,
-it was entirely to her silent, invisible, but most
-efficient Navy that she owed it. By wise foresight
-the Grand Fleet, numbering some 400 vessels, had
-been assembled for Royal inspection before the
-storm broke and when it was but a rising cloud-bank
-upon the horizon. This all-important move has
-been attributed to Prince Louis of Battenberg, First
-Sea Lord of the Admiralty, but it could not have
-been done without the hearty concurrence and
-cooperation of Mr. Winston Churchill, who should
-share the honour, even as he would have shared the
-blame had we been caught unawares. The so-called
-inspection had hardly been completed at Spithead
-before war was upon us, and the Fleet, ready manned,
-provisioned, and armed, moved straight away to
-take up its war stations. The main fighting squadrons
-vanished into a strategic mist from which they did
-not emerge for very many months, but it was understood
-that they were assembled at centres like Scapa
-Flow and Cromarty Firth which were outside the
-radius of the German torpedo-boats and smaller
-submarines, while they were near enough to the
-enemy's ports to be able to bring him to action should
-he emerge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Numerous patrols of small vessels were let loose
-in the North Sea to keep in touch with our opponents,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P41"></a>41}</span>
-who were well known to be both daring and active.
-It is said that no less than 3000 ships, large and small,
-were flying the white ensign of St. George. A portion
-of these were told off for the protection of the great
-commercial sea-routes, and for the hunting down of
-some score of German cruisers which were known to
-be at sea. Some of these gave a very good account
-of themselves and others were innocuous; but the
-net result in loss, which had been discounted in
-advance as 5 per cent of the merchant fleet at
-sea, worked out at less than half that figure, and, by
-the new year, the marauders had been practically
-exterminated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now as always&mdash;but now more than ever in the
-past&mdash;it was absolutely vital to hold the seas. Who
-wins the sea wins Britain. Of every five loaves in
-the country four come to us from abroad, and our
-position in meat is no better. It is victory or starvation
-when we fight upon the sea. It is ill to play for
-such stakes, however safe the game&mdash;worse still when
-it is a game where the value of some of the cards is
-unknown. We have little to fear from a raid, nothing
-from invasion, everything from interference with our
-commerce. It is one of the points in which our
-party politics, which blind so many people to reason,
-might well have brought absolute ruin upon the
-country. The cultivation of British food supplies
-should never have been a question of free trade or
-protection, but rather of vital national insurance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had the war come ten years later we might have
-been in deadly danger, owing to the rapidly growing
-power of the submarine. These engines turned upon
-our food-carriers might well have starved us out,
-especially if we had continued our national folly in
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P42"></a>42}</span>
-being scared by bogeys from building a Channel
-tunnel. But by a merciful Providence the struggle
-came at a moment when the submarine was half
-developed, and had not yet reached either the speed
-or the range of action which would make it the
-determining factor in a war. As it was, the fruits of
-submarine warfare, in spite of a wise and timely
-warning on the eve of hostilities by Admiral Sir
-Percy Scott, astonished the public, but the mischief
-done was a very small thing compared to the
-possibilities which have to be most carefully guarded
-against in the future.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In their present stage of development, the
-submarine could only annoy. With the great fleet in
-existence and with the shipbuilding facilities of Great
-Britain, nothing could vitally harm her save the loss
-of a pitched battle. The British superiority was
-rather in her small craft than in her large ones, but in
-capital ships she was able to place in line at the
-beginning of the war enough to give a sufficient margin of
-insurance. There was never any tendency to under-rate
-the excellence of the hostile ships, nor the courage
-and efficiency of the men. It was well understood
-that when they came out they would give a good
-account of themselves, and also that they would not
-come out until the circumstances seemed propitious.
-They were under a disadvantage in that the Russian
-fleet, though small, was not negligible, and therefore
-some portion of the German force on sea as well as on
-land had always to face eastwards. Also the British
-had the French for their allies, and, though the great
-ships of the latter were nearly all in the Mediterranean,
-a swarm of small craft was ready to buzz out of her
-western ports should the war come down-channel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P43"></a>43}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet another advantage lay with the British in that
-their geographical position put a six-hundred-mile-long
-breakwater right across the entrance to Germany,
-leaving only two sally-ports north and south by
-which commerce could enter or raiders escape. The
-result was the immediate utter annihilation of
-Germany's sea-borne commerce. Altogether it must
-be admitted that Germany was grievously handicapped
-at sea, and that she deserves the more credit
-for whatever she accomplished, save when, as on
-land, she transgressed and degraded the recognised
-laws of civilised warfare. It is time now to turn to
-those military events upon the Continent which were
-the precursors of that British campaign which is the
-subject of this volume.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Want of space and accurate material make it
-impossible to do justice here to the deeds of our
-Allies, but an attempt must be made to indicate
-briefly the main phases of the struggle abroad, since
-its course reacted continually upon the British
-operations. It may be shortly stated, then, that so
-far as the western theatre of war was concerned,
-hostilities commenced by two movements, one an
-attack by the French upon the occupants of those
-lost provinces for which they had mourned during
-forty-four years, and the other the advance of the
-Germans over the Belgian frontier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The former was a matter of no great importance.
-It took two distinct lines, the one from the Belfort
-region into Alsace, and the other from Nancy as a
-centre into Lorraine. The Alsatian venture gained
-some ground which was never wholly lost, and was
-adorned by one small victory near Mulhausen before
-it was checked by the German defence. The Lorraine
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P44"></a>44}</span>
-advance had also some initial success, but was finally
-thrown back on August 20 in a severe action in which
-the French were defeated. Luneville, across the
-French frontier, was occupied by the Germans, but
-they made no headway, and their subsequent attempts
-upon Nancy were repulsed by the army of General
-Castelnau. General Pau, a fiery, one-armed
-septuagenarian, was the French leader in the Alsatian
-invasion, but it was soon realised by General Joffre that
-he and the bulk of his men would be more useful at
-the vital point upon the northern frontier, to which
-early in September they were transferred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The main drama, however, quickly unfolded
-upon the Belgian frontier. Speed and secrecy were
-vital to the German plans. On July 31, before any
-declaration of war, and while the German
-representative at Brussels was perjuring his soul in his
-country's service by representing that no infringement
-was possible, three German army corps, the seventh,
-ninth, and tenth, fully mobilised and highly equipped,
-were moving up from their quarters so as to be ready
-for a treacherous pounce upon their little neighbour
-whom they were pledged to defend. Von Emmich
-was in command. On the night of Saturday, August
-1, the vanguard of the German armies, using motor
-traffic followed by trains, burst through the neutral
-Duchy of Luxemburg, and on August 3 they were over
-the Belgian line at Verviers. The long-meditated
-crime had been done, and, with loud appeals to God,
-Germany began her fatal campaign by deliberate
-perjury and arrogant disdain for treaties. God
-accepted the appeal, and swiftly showed how the
-weakest State with absolute right upon its side may
-bring to naught all the crafty plottings of the strong.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P45"></a>45}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For time was the essence of the situation. For
-this the innumerable motors, for this the light
-equipment and the lack of transport. It was on, on, at
-top speed, that there be no hindrance in the path of
-the great hosts that soon would be closing up behind.
-But time was life and death for the French also, with
-their slower mobilisation, their backward preparation,
-and their expectations from Great Britain. Time
-was the precious gift which little Belgium gave to the
-Allies. She gave them days and days, and every
-day worth an army corps. The Germans had crossed
-the Meuse, had taken Vise, and then had rushed at
-Liége, even as the Japanese had rushed at Port
-Arthur. With all their military lore, they had not
-learned the lesson which was taught so clearly in
-1904&mdash;that a fortress is taken by skill and not by
-violence alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Leman, a great soldier, defended the forts built by
-Brialmont. Both defender and designer were justified
-of their work. On August 5 the seventh German Corps
-attempted to rush the gaps between the forts. These
-gaps were three miles wide, but were filled with
-entrenched infantry. The attack was boldly pressed
-home, but it completely failed. The German loss was
-considerable. Two other corps were called up, and
-again on August 7 the attack was renewed, but with
-no better result. The defenders fought as befitted
-the descendants of those Belgae whom Caesar
-pronounced to be the bravest of the Gauls, or of that
-Walloon Guard which had so great a mediaeval
-reputation. There were 25,000 in the town and
-120,000 outside, but they were still outside at the
-end of the assault.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Liége, however, had one fatal weakness. Its
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P46"></a>46}</span>
-garrison was far too small to cover the ground. With
-twelve forts three miles apart it is clear that there
-were intervals of, roughly, thirty-six miles to be
-covered, and that a garrison of 25,000 men, when
-you had deducted the gunners for the forts, hardly
-left the thinnest skirmish line to cover the ground.
-So long as the Germans attacked upon a narrow front
-they could be held. The instant that they spread
-out there were bound to be places where they could
-march almost unopposed into the town. This was
-what occurred. The town was penetrated, but the
-forts were intact. General Leman, meanwhile, seeing
-that the town itself was indefensible, had sent the
-garrison out before the place was surrounded. Many
-a Belgian soldier fought upon the Yser and helped
-to turn the tide of that crowning conflict who
-would have been a prisoner in Germany had it
-not been for the foresight and the decision of General
-Leman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Germans were in the town upon the 8th, but
-the forts still held out and the general advance was
-grievously impeded. Day followed day, and each
-beyond price to the Allies. Germany had secretly
-prepared certain monstrous engines of war&mdash;one
-more proof, if proof were needed, that the conflict
-had been prearranged and deliberately provoked.
-These were huge cannon of a dimension never before
-cast&mdash;42 centimetres in bore. More mobile and
-hardly less effective were some smaller howitzers of
-28-centimetre calibre said to have come from the
-Austrian foundries at Skoda. Brialmont, when he
-erected his concrete and iron cupolas, had not foreseen
-the Thor's hammer which would be brought to crush
-them. One after another they were smashed like
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P47"></a>47}</span>
-eggs. The heroic Leman was dug out from under
-the debris of the last fort and lived to tell of his
-miraculous escape. Liége was at last in the hands
-of the invaders. But already the second week of
-August was at an end&mdash;the British were crowding
-into France, the French line was thickening along
-the frontier&mdash;all was well with the Allies. Little
-David had left a grievous mark upon Goliath.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The German mobilisation was now complete, and
-the whole vast host, over a million strong, poured
-over the frontier. Never was seen such an army, so
-accurate and scientific in its general conception, so
-perfect in its detail. Nothing had been omitted from
-its equipment which the most thorough of nations,
-after years of careful preparation, could devise. In
-motor transport, artillery, machine guns, and all the
-technique of war they were unrivalled. The men
-themselves were of high heart and grand physique.
-By some twisted process of reasoning founded upon
-false information they had been persuaded that
-this most aggressive and unnecessary of wars was
-in some way a war of self-defence, for it was put
-to them that unless they attacked their neighbours
-now, their neighbours would certainly some day or
-other attack them. Hence, they were filled with
-patriotic ardour and a real conviction that they
-were protecting their beloved Fatherland. One
-could not but admire their self-sacrificing devotion,
-though in the dry light of truth and reason they stood
-forth as the tools of tyranny, the champions of
-barbarous political reaction and the bullies of Europe.
-It was an ominous fact that the troops were provided
-in advance with incendiary discs for the firing of
-dwellings, which shows that the orgy of destruction
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P48"></a>48}</span>
-and cruelty which disgraced the name of the German
-Army in Belgium and in the north of France was
-prearranged by some central force, whose responsibility
-in this matter can only be described as terrific.
-They brought the world of Christ back to the days of
-Odin, and changed a civilised campaign to an inroad of
-pagan Danes. This wicked central force could only
-be the Chief Staff of the Army, and in the last instance
-the Emperor himself. Had Napoleon conducted his
-campaigns with as little scruple as William II., it can
-safely be said that Europe as we know it would hardly
-exist to-day, and the monuments of antiquity and
-learning would have been wiped from the face of the
-globe. It is an evil precedent to be expunged from
-the records for ever&mdash;all the more evil because it was
-practised by a strong nation on a weak one and on a
-defenceless people by one which had pledged themselves
-to defend them. That it was in no wise caused
-by any actions upon the part of the Belgians is clearly
-proved by the fact that similar atrocities were
-committed by the German Army the moment they crossed
-the frontiers both of France and of Poland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Allies had more than they expected from
-Liége. They had less from Namur. The grey-green
-tide of German invasion had swept the Belgian
-resistance before it, had flooded into Brussels, and
-had been dammed for only a very few days by the
-great frontier fortress, though it was counted as
-stronger than Liége. The fact was that the Germans
-had now learned their lesson. Never again would
-they imagine that the <i>Furor Teutonicus</i> alone could
-carry a walled city. The fatal guns were brought up
-again and the forts were crushed with mechanical
-precision, while the defenders between the forts, after
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P49"></a>49}</span>
-enduring for ten hours a severe shelling, withdrew
-from their trenches. On August 22 the fortress
-surrendered, some of General Michel's garrison being
-taken, but a considerable proportion effecting its
-retreat with the French Army which had come up to
-support the town. By the third week of August the
-remains of the Belgian forces had taken refuge in
-Antwerp, and the Germans, having made a wide
-sweep with their right wing through Brussels, were
-descending in a two-hundred-mile line upon
-Northern France.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The French plans had in truth been somewhat disarranged
-by the Belgian resistance, for the chivalrous
-spirit of the nation would not permit that their gallant
-friends be unsupported. Fresh dispositions had been
-made, but the sudden fall of Namur brought them to
-naught. Before that untoward event the French had
-won a small but indubitable victory at Dinant, and
-had advanced their line from Namur on the right to
-Charleroi on the left. With the fall of Namur their
-long wall had lost its corner bastion, and they were
-at once vigorously attacked by all the German armies,
-who forced the Sambre on August 22, carried
-Charleroi, and pushed the French back with considerable
-loss of guns and prisoners along the whole line.
-There was defeat, but there was nothing in the nature
-of a rout or of an envelopment. The line fell back
-fighting tooth and nail, but none the less Northern
-France was thrown open to the invaders. In this
-general movement the British forces were involved,
-and we now turn to a more particular and detailed
-account of what befell them during these most
-momentous days.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P50"></a>50}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III
-<br /><br />
-THE BATTLE OF MONS
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intro">
-The landing of the British in France&mdash;The British leaders&mdash;The advance
-to Mons&mdash;The defence of the bridges of Nimy&mdash;The holding of the
-canal&mdash;The fateful telegram&mdash;The rearguard actions of Frameries,
-Wasmes, and Dour&mdash;The charge of the Lancers&mdash;The fate of the
-Cheshires&mdash;The 7th Brigade at Solesmes&mdash;The Guards in
-action&mdash;The Germans' rude awakening&mdash;The Connaughts at
-Pont-sur-Sambre.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The landing of the British in France
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The bulk of the British Expeditionary Force passed
-over to France under cover of darkness on the nights
-of August 12 and 13, 1914. The movement, which
-included four infantry divisions and a cavalry
-division, necessitated the transportation of
-approximately 90,000 men, 15,000 horses, and 400 guns.
-It is doubtful if so large a host has ever been
-moved by water in so short a time in all the annals of
-military history. There was drama in the secrecy and
-celerity of the affair. Two canvas walls converging
-into a funnel screened the approaches to Southampton
-Dock. All beyond was darkness and mystery. Down
-this fatal funnel passed the flower of the youth of
-Britain, and their folk saw them no more. They had
-embarked upon the great adventure of the German
-War. The crowds in the streets saw the last serried
-files vanish into the darkness of the docks, heard the
-measured tramp upon the stone quays dying farther
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P51"></a>51}</span>
-away in the silence of the night, until at last all was
-still and the great steamers were pushing out into the
-darkness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No finer force for technical efficiency, and no body
-of men more hot-hearted in their keen desire to serve
-their country, have ever left the shores of Britain.
-It is a conservative estimate to say that within four
-months a half of their number were either dead or in
-the hospitals. They were destined for great glory,
-and for that great loss which is the measure of their
-glory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Belated pedestrians upon the beach of the southern
-towns have recorded their impression of that amazing
-spectacle. In the clear summer night the wall of
-transports seemed to stretch from horizon to horizon.
-Guardian warships flanked the mighty column, while
-swift shadows shooting across the surface of the sea
-showed where the torpedo-boats and scouts were
-nosing and ferreting for any possible enemy. But
-far away, hundreds of miles to the north, lay the real
-protection of the flotilla, where the smooth waters of
-the Heligoland Bight were broken by the sudden rise
-and dip of the blockading periscopes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is well to state, once for all, the composition of
-this force, so that in the succeeding pages, when a
-brigade or division is under discussion, the diligent
-reader may ascertain its composition. This, then, is
-the First Army which set forth to France. Others
-will be chronicled as they appeared upon the scene of
-action. It may be remarked that the formation of
-units was greatly altered with the progress of the
-campaign, so that it has been possible without
-indiscretion to raise the veil of secrecy which was
-once so essential.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P52"></a>52}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- THE FIRST ARMY CORPS&mdash;GENERAL HAIG<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- DIVISION I.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- General LOMAX.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 1<i>st Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Maxse</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Coldstream Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Scots Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Black Watch.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Munster Fusiliers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 2<i>nd Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Bulfin</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Sussex.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st N. Lancs.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Northampton.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd K.R. Rifles.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 3<i>rd Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Landon</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st West Surrey (Queen's).<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st S. Wales Borderers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Gloucester.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Welsh.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Artillery&mdash;Colonel Findlay</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25th Brig. R.F.A. 113, 114, 115.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26th Brig. R.F.A. 116, 117, 118.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;39th Brig. R.F.A. 46, 51, 54.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;43rd (How.) Brig. R.F.A. 30, 40, 57.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Engineers&mdash;Colonel Schreiber</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 F. Co.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 F. Co.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Signal Co.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- DIVISION II.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- General Munro.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 4<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Scott-Kerr</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Grenadier Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Coldstream Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd Coldstream Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Irish.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 5<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Haking</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Worcester.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Ox. and Bucks L.I.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Highland L.I.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Connaught Rangers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 6<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Davies</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Liverpool (King's).<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd S. Stafford.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Berks.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st K.R. Rifles.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Artillery&mdash;General Perceval</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34th Brig. R.F.A. 22, 50, 70.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36th Brig. R.F.A. 15, 48, 71.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;41st Brig. R.F.A. 9, 16, 17.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How. Brig. R.F.A. 47, 56, 60.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35th Batt. R.G.A.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;R.E. 5, 11, Field Cos.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- THE SECOND ARMY CORPS&mdash;GENERAL SMITH-DORRIEN<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- DIVISION III.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- General HAMILTON.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 7<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General McCracken</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd Worcester.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd S. Lancs.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Wilts.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Irish Rifles.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
- 8<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General B. Doran</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Royal Scots.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Royal Irish.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4th Middlesex.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Gordon Highlanders.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 9<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Shaw</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st North. Fusiliers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4th Royal Fusiliers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Lincoln.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Scots Fusiliers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Artillery&mdash;General Wing</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23rd Brigade 107, 108, 109.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30th Brigade (How.) 128, 129, 130.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;40th Brigade 6, 23, 49.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;42nd Brigade 29, 41, 45.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48th Batt. R.G.A.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>R.E.&mdash;Colonel Wilson</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;56, 57 F. Corps.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 Signal Co.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- DIVISION V.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- General FERGUSON.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 13<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Cuthbert</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd K.O. Scot. Bord.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd West Riding.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st West Kent.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Yorks. Light Infantry.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 14<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Holt</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Suffolk.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st East Surrey.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st D. of Cornwall's L.T.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Manchester.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 15<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Gleichen</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Norfolk.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Bedford.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Cheshire.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Dorset.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Artillery&mdash;General Headlam</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15th Brig. R.F.A. 11, 52, 80<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27th Brig. R.F.A. 119, 120, 121<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28th Brig. R.F.A. 122, 123, 124<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 How. Brig. 37, 61, 65.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Heavy G.A. 108 Battery,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>R.E.&mdash;Colonel Tulloch</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17th and 59th Field Cos.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 Signal Co.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p style="text-indent: 0%; font-size: 85%">
-The Cavalry consisted of four Brigades forming the
-first cavalry division, and
-one extra Brigade. They were made up thus:
-</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent: 0%; font-size: 85%">
-1st Cavalry Brigade (Briggs).&mdash;2nd and 5th Dragoon
-Guards; 11th Hussars.
-</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent: 0%; font-size: 85%">
-2nd Cavalry Brigade (De Lisle).&mdash;4th Dragoon Guards;
-9th Lancers; 18th Hussars
-</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent: 0%; font-size: 85%">
-3rd Cavalry Brigade (Gough).&mdash;4th Hussars; 5th Lancers;
-16th Lancers.
-</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent: 0%; font-size: 85%">
-4th Cavalry Brigade (Bingham).&mdash;3rd Hussars; 6th Dragoon
-Guards; Comp. Guards Re.
-</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent: 0%; font-size: 85%">
-5th Cavalry Brigade (Chetwode).&mdash;Scots Greys;
-12th Lancers; 20th Hussars.
-</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent: 0%; font-size: 85%">
-D, E, I, J, and L batteries of Horse Artillery were
-attached to these Brigades.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P53"></a>53}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the Army which first set forth to measure
-itself against the soldiers of Germany. Prussian
-bravery, capacity, and organising power had a high
-reputation among us, and yet we awaited the result
-with every confidence, if the odds of numbers were
-not overwhelming. It was generally known that
-during the period since the last war the training
-of the troops had greatly progressed, and many
-of the men, with nearly all the senior officers, had
-had experience in the arduous campaign of South
-Africa. They could also claim those advantages
-which volunteer troops may hope to have over
-conscripts. At the same time there was no tendency to
-underrate the earnest patriotism of our opponents,
-and we were well aware that even the numerous
-Socialists who filled their ranks were persuaded,
-incredible as it may seem, that the Fatherland was
-really attacked, and were whole-hearted in its defence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The crossing was safely effected. It has always
-been the traditional privilege of the British public
-to grumble at their public servants and to speak
-of "muddling through" to victory. No doubt the
-criticism has often been deserved. But on this
-occasion the supervising General in command, the
-British War Office, and the Naval Transport Department
-all rose to a supreme degree of excellence in their
-arrangements. So too did the Railway Companies
-concerned. The details were meticulously correct.
-Without the loss of man, horse, or gun, the soldiers
-who had seen the sun set in Hampshire saw it rise in
-Picardy or in Normandy. Boulogne and Havre were
-the chief ports of disembarkation, but many, including
-the cavalry, went up the Seine and came ashore at
-Rouen. The soldiers everywhere received a rapturous
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P54"></a>54}</span>
-welcome from the populace, which they returned by
-a cheerful sobriety of behaviour. The admirable
-precepts as to wine and women set forth in Lord
-Kitchener's parting orders to the Army seem to have
-been most scrupulously observed. It is no slight
-upon the gallantry of France&mdash;the very home of
-gallantry&mdash;if it be said that she profited greatly at this
-strained, over-anxious time by the arrival of these
-boisterous over-sea Allies. The tradition of British
-solemnity has been for ever killed by these jovial
-invaders. It is probable that the beautiful tune, and
-even the paltry words of "Tipperary," will pass into
-history as the marching song, and often the death-dirge,
-of that gallant host. The dusty, poplar-lined
-roads resounded with their choruses, and the quiet
-Picardy villages re-echoed their thunderous and superfluous
-assurances as to the state of their hearts. All
-France broke into a smile at the sight of them, and
-it was at a moment when a smile meant much to
-France.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The British leaders.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whilst the various brigades were with some
-deliberation preparing for an advance up-country, there
-arrived at the Gare du Nord in Paris a single traveller
-who may be said to have been the most welcome
-British visitor who ever set foot in the city. He was
-a short, thick man, tanned by an outdoor life, a solid,
-impassive personality with a strong, good-humoured
-face, the forehead of a thinker above it, and the jaw
-of an obstinate fighter below. Overhung brows
-shaded a pair of keen grey eyes, while the strong, set
-mouth was partly concealed by a grizzled moustache.
-Such was John French, leader of cavalry in Africa
-and now Field-Marshal commanding the Expeditionary
-Forces of Britain. His defence of Colesberg at
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P55"></a>55}</span>
-a critical period when he bluffed the superior Boer
-forces, his dashing relief of Kimberley, and especially
-the gallant way in which he had thrown his exhausted
-cavalry across the path of Cronje's army in order to
-hold it while Roberts pinned it down at Paardeberg,
-were all exploits which were fresh in the public mind,
-and gave the soldiers confidence in their leader.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-French might well appreciate the qualities of his
-immediate subordinates. Both of his army corps
-and his cavalry division were in good hands. Haig,
-like his leader, was a cavalry man by education,
-though now entrusted with the command of the First
-Army Corps, and destined for an ever-increasing
-European reputation. Fifty-four years of age, he
-still preserved all his natural energies, whilst he had
-behind him long years of varied military experience,
-including both the Soudanese and the South African
-campaigns, in both of which he had gained high
-distinction. He had the advantage of thoroughly
-understanding the mind of his commander, as he had
-worked under him as Chief of the Staff in his
-remarkable operations round Colesberg in those gloomy
-days which opened the Boer War.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Second Army Corps sustained a severe loss
-before ever it reached the field of action, for its
-commander, General Grierson, died suddenly of heart
-failure in the train between Havre and Rouen upon
-August 18. Grierson had been for many years
-Military Attaché in Berlin, and one can well imagine
-how often he had longed to measure British soldiers
-against the self-sufficient critics around him. At the
-very last moment the ambition of his lifetime was
-denied him. His place, however, was worthily filled
-by General Smith-Dorrien, another South African
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P56"></a>56}</span>
-veteran whose brigade in that difficult campaign had
-been recognised as one of the very best. Smith-Dorrien
-was a typical Imperial soldier in the world-wide
-character of his service, for he had followed the
-flag, and occasionally preceded it, in Zululand, Egypt,
-the Soudan, Chitral, and the Tirah before the campaign
-against the Boers. A sportsman as well as a soldier,
-he had very particularly won the affections of the
-Aldershot division by his system of trusting to their
-honour rather than to compulsion in matters of
-discipline. It was seldom indeed that his confidence
-was abused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Haig and Smith-Dorrien were the two generals
-upon whom the immediate operations were to devolve,
-for the Third Army Corps was late, through no fault
-of its own, in coming into line. There remained the
-Cavalry Division commanded by General Allenby,
-who was a column leader in that great class for
-mounted tactics held in South Africa a dozen years
-before. It is remarkable that of the four leaders in
-the initial operations of the German War&mdash;French,
-Smith-Dorrien, Haig, and Allenby&mdash;three belonged
-to the cavalry, an arm which has usually been
-regarded as active and ornamental rather than
-intellectual. Pulteney, the commander of the Third
-Army Corps, was a product of the Guards, a veteran
-of much service and a well-known heavy-game shot.
-Thus, neither of the more learned corps were
-represented among the higher commanders upon the actual
-field of battle, but brooding over the whole operations
-was the steadfast, untiring brain of Joffre, whilst
-across the water the silent Kitchener, remorseless as
-Destiny, moved the forces of the Empire to the front.
-The last word in each case lay with the sappers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P57"></a>57}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The general plan of campaign was naturally in
-the hands of General Joffre, since he was in command
-of far the greater portion of the Allied Force. It
-has been admitted in France that the original
-dispositions might be open to criticism, since a number
-of the French troops had engaged themselves in
-Alsace and Lorraine, to the weakening of the line of
-battle in the north, where the fate of Paris was to
-be decided. It is small profit to a nation to injure
-its rival ever so grievously in the toe when it is itself
-in imminent danger of being stabbed to the heart.
-A further change in plan had been caused by the
-intense sympathy felt both by the French and the
-British for the gallant Belgians, who had done so
-much and gained so many valuable days for the
-Allies. It was felt that it would be unchivalrous not
-to advance and do what was possible to relieve the
-intolerable pressure which was crushing them. It
-was resolved, therefore, to abandon the plan which
-had been formed, by which the Germans should be
-led as far as possible from their base, and to attack
-them at once. For this purpose the French Army
-changed its whole dispositions, which had been
-formed on the idea of an attack from the east, and
-advanced over the Belgian frontier, getting into touch
-with the enemy at Namur and Charleroi, so as to
-secure the passages of the Sambre. It was in
-fulfilling its part as the left of the Allied line that on
-August 18 and 19 the British troops began to move
-northwards into Belgium. The First Army Corps
-advanced through Le Nouvion, St. Remy, and
-Maubeuge to Rouveroy, which is a village upon the
-Mons-Chimay road. There it linked on to the right of
-the Second Corps, which had moved up to the line of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P58"></a>58}</span>
-the Condé-Mons Canal. On the morning of Sunday,
-August 23, all these troops were in position. The 5th
-Brigade of Cavalry (Chetwode's) lay out upon the
-right front at Binche, but the remainder of the cavalry
-was brought to a point about five miles behind the
-centre of the line, so as to be able to reinforce either
-flank. The first blood of the land campaign had been
-drawn upon August 22 outside Soignies, when a
-reconnoitring squadron of the 4th Dragoon Guards under
-Captain Hornby charged and overthrew a body of the
-4th German Cuirassiers, bringing back some prisoners.
-The 20th Hussars had enjoyed a similar experience.
-It was a small but happy omen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The advance to Mons.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The forces which now awaited the German attack
-numbered about 86,000 men, who may be roughly
-divided into 76,000 infantry, 10,000 cavalry, and
-312 guns. The general alignment was as follows:
-The First Army Corps held the space between Mons
-and Binche, which was soon contracted to Bray as
-the eastward limit. Close to Mons, where the attack
-was expected to break, since the town is a point of
-considerable strategic importance, there was a
-thickening of the line of defence. From that point the
-Third Division and the Fifth, in the order named,
-carried on the British formation down the length of
-the Mons-Condé Canal. The front of the Army
-covered nearly twenty miles, an excessive strain upon
-so small a force in the presence of a compact enemy.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P59"></a>59}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-059"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-059.jpg" alt="POSITION OF 2nd ARMY CORPS AT MONS. AUG. 23rd" />
-<br />
-POSITION OF 2nd ARMY CORPS AT MONS. AUG. 23rd
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-If one looks at the general dispositions, it becomes
-clear that Sir John French was preparing for an
-attack upon his right flank. From all his information
-the enemy was to the north and to the east of him,
-so that if they set about turning his position it must
-be from the Charleroi direction. Hence, his right
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P60"></a>60}</span>
-wing was laid back at an angle to the rest of his line,
-and the only cavalry which he kept in advance was
-thrown out to Binche in front of this flank. The
-rest of the cavalry was on the day of battle drawn in
-behind the centre of the Army, but as danger began
-to develop upon the left flank it was sent across in
-that direction, so that on the morning of the 24th it
-was at Thulin, at the westward end of the line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The line of the canal was a most tempting position
-to defend from Condé to Mons, for it ran as straight
-as a Roman road across the path of an invader.
-But it was very different at Mons itself. Here it
-formed a most awkward loop. A glance at the
-diagram will show this formation. It was impossible
-to leave it undefended, and yet troops who held it
-were evidently subjected to a flanking artillery fire
-from each side. The canal here was also crossed by
-at least three substantial road bridges and one railway
-bridge. This section of the defence was under the
-immediate direction of General Smith-Dorrien, who
-at once took steps to prepare a second line of defence,
-thrown back to the right rear of the town, so that if
-the canal were forced the British array would remain
-unbroken. The immediate care of this weak point
-in the position was committed to General Beauchamp
-Doran's 8th Brigade, consisting of the 2nd Royal
-Scots, 2nd Royal Irish, 4th Middlesex, and 1st Gordon
-Highlanders. On their left, occupying the village of
-Nimy and the western side of the peninsula, as well
-as the immediate front of Mons itself, was the 9th
-Brigade (Shaw's), containing the 4th Royal Fusiliers,
-the 1st Northumberland Fusiliers, and the 1st Royal
-Scots Fusiliers, together with the 1st Lincolns. To
-the left of this brigade, occupying the eastern end of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P61"></a>61}</span>
-the Mons-Condé line of canal, was Cuthbert's 13th
-Brigade, containing the 2nd Scottish Borderers,
-2nd West Ridings, 1st West Kents, and 2nd Yorkshire
-Light Infantry. It was on these three brigades, and
-especially on the 8th and 9th, that the impact of the
-German army was destined to fall. Beyond them,
-scattered somewhat thinly along the line of the
-Mons-Condé Canal from the railway bridge west of
-St. Ghislain, were the two remaining brigades of the
-Fifth Division, the 14th (Rolt's) and the 15th
-(Gleichen's), the latter being in divisional reserve.
-Still farther to the west the head of the newly arrived
-19th Brigade just touched the canal, and was itself
-in touch with French cavalry at Condé. Sundry
-units of artillery and field hospitals had not yet come
-up, but otherwise the two corps were complete.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having reached their ground, the troops, with no
-realisation of immediate danger, proceeded to make
-shallow trenches. Their bands had not been brought
-to the front, but the universal singing from one end
-of the line to the other showed that the men were in
-excellent spirits. Cheering news had come in from
-the cavalry, detachments of which, as already stated,
-had ridden out as far as Soignies, meeting advance
-patrols of the enemy and coming back with prisoners
-and trophies. The guns were drawn up in concealed
-positions within half a mile of the line of battle. All
-was now ready, and officers could be seen on every
-elevation peering northwards through their glasses
-for the first sign of the enemy. It was a broken
-country, with large patches of woodland and green
-spaces between. There were numerous slag-heaps
-from old mines, with here and there a factory and
-here and there a private dwelling, but the sappers
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P62"></a>62}</span>
-had endeavoured in the short time to clear a field of
-fire for the infantry. In order to get this field of fire
-in so closely built a neighbourhood, several of the
-regiments, such as the West Kents of the 13th and
-the Cornwalls of the 14th Brigades, had to take their
-positions across the canal with bridges in their rear.
-Thrilling with anticipation, the men waited for their
-own first entrance upon the stupendous drama.
-They were already weary and footsore, for they had
-all done at least two days of forced marching, and
-the burden of the pack, the rifle, and the hundred
-and fifty rounds per man was no light one. They
-lay snugly in their trenches under the warm August
-sun and waited. It was a Sunday, and more than
-one have recorded in their letters how in that hour of
-tension their thoughts turned to the old home church
-and the mellow call of the village bells.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A hovering aeroplane had just slid down with the
-news that the roads from the north were alive with
-the advancing Germans, but the estimate of the
-aviator placed them at two corps and a division of
-cavalry. This coincided roughly with the accounts
-brought in by the scouts and, what was more important,
-with the forecast of General Joffre. Secure
-in the belief that he was flanked upon one side by the
-5th French Army, and on the other by a screen of
-French cavalry, whilst his front was approached by a
-force not appreciably larger than his own, General
-French had no cause for uneasiness. Had his airmen
-taken a wider sweep to the north and west,[<a id="chap03fn1text"></a><a href="#chap03fn1">1</a>] or had
-the French commander among his many pressing
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P63"></a>63}</span>
-preoccupations been able to give an earlier warning
-to his British colleague, the trenches would, no doubt,
-have been abandoned before a grey coat had
-appeared, and the whole Army brought swiftly to a
-position of strategical safety. Even now, as they
-waited expectantly for the enemy, a vast steel trap
-was closing up for their destruction.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap03fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap03fn1text">1</a>] An American correspondent, Mr. Harding Davis,
-actually saw a
-shattered British aeroplane upon the ground
-in this region. Its destruction
-may have been of great strategic importance.
-This aviator was probably
-the first British soldier to fall in the Continental War.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Let us take a glance at what was going on over
-that northern horizon. The American Powell had
-seen something of the mighty right swing which was
-to end the combat. Invited to a conference with a
-German general who was pursuing the national policy
-of soothing the United States until her own turn
-should come round, Mr. Powell left Brussels and
-chanced to meet Von Kluck's legions upon their
-western and southerly trek. He describes with great
-force the effect upon his mind of those endless grey
-columns, all flowing in the same direction, double
-files of infantry on either side of the road, and endless
-guns, motor-cars, cavalry, and transport between.
-The men, as he describes them, were all in the prime
-of life, and equipped with everything which years of
-forethought could devise. He was dazed and awed
-by the tremendous procession, its majesty and its
-self-evident efficiency. It is no wonder, for he was
-looking at the chosen legions of the most wonderful
-army that the world had ever seen&mdash;an army which
-represented the last possible word on the material
-and mechanical side of war. High in the van a
-Taube aeroplane, like an embodiment of that black
-eagle which is the fitting emblem of a warlike and
-rapacious race, pointed the path for the German
-hordes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A day or two before, two American correspondents,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P64"></a>64}</span>
-Mr. Irvin Cobb and Mr. Harding Davis, had seen the
-same great army as it streamed westwards through
-Louvain and Brussels. They graphically describe
-how for three consecutive days and the greater part
-of three nights they poured past, giving the
-impression of unconquerable energy and efficiency,
-young, enthusiastic, wonderfully equipped. "Either
-we shall go forward or we die. We do not expect to
-fall back ever. If the generals would let them, the
-men would run to Paris instead of walking there." So
-spoke one of the leaders of that huge invading
-host, the main part of which was now heading straight
-for the British line. A second part, unseen and
-unsuspected, were working round by Tournai to the
-west, hurrying hard to strike in upon the British
-flank and rear. The German is a great marcher as
-well as a great fighter, and the average rate of progress
-was little less than thirty miles a day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was after ten o'clock when scouting cavalry
-were observed falling back. Then the distant sound
-of a gun was heard, and a few seconds later a shell
-burst some hundreds of yards behind the British lines.
-The British guns one by one roared into action. A
-cloud of smoke rose along the line of the woods in
-front from the bursting shrapnel, but nothing could
-be seen of the German gunners. The defending guns
-were also well concealed. Here and there, from
-observation points upon buildings and slag-heaps, the
-controllers of the batteries were able to indicate
-targets and register hits unseen by the gunners
-themselves. The fire grew warmer and warmer as fresh
-batteries dashed up and unlimbered on either side.
-The noise was horrible, but no enemy had been seen
-by the infantry, and little damage done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P65"></a>65}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now an ill-omened bird flew over the British
-lines. Far aloft across the deep blue sky skimmed
-the dark Taube, curved, turned, and sailed northwards
-again. It had marked the shells bursting beyond the
-trenches. In an instant, by some devilish cantrip
-of signal or wireless, it had set the range right. A
-rain of shells roared and crashed along the lines of
-the shallow trenches. The injuries were not yet
-numerous, but they were inexpressibly ghastly. Men
-who had hardly seen worse than a cut finger in their
-lives gazed with horror at the gross mutilations
-around them. "One dared not look sideways," said
-one of them. Stretcher-bearers bent and heaved
-while wet, limp forms were hoisted upwards by their
-comrades. Officers gave short, sharp words of
-encouragement or advice. The minutes seemed very
-long, and still the shells came raining down. The
-men shoved the five-fold clips down into their
-magazines and waited with weary patience. A senior
-officer peering over the end of a trench leaned tensely
-forward and rested his glasses upon the grassy edge.
-"They're coming!" he whispered to his neighbour.
-It ran from lip to lip along the line of crouching men.
-Heads were poked up here and there above the line
-of broken earth. Soon, in spite of the crashing shells
-overhead, there was a fringe of peering faces. And
-there at last in front of them was the German enemy.
-After all the centuries, Briton and Teuton faced each
-other at last for the test of battle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A stylist among letter-writers has described that
-oncoming swarm as grey clouds drifting over green
-fields. They had deployed under cover whilst the
-batteries were preparing their path, and now over
-an extended front to the north-west of Mons they
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P66"></a>66}</span>
-were breaking out from the woods and coming rapidly
-onwards. The men fidgeted with their triggers, but
-no order came to fire. The officers were gazing with
-professional interest and surprise at the German
-formations. Were these the tactics of the army
-which had claimed to be the most scientific in Europe?
-British observers had seen it in peace-time and had
-conjectured that it was a screen for some elaborate
-tactics held up for the day of battle. Yet here they
-were, advancing in what in old Soudan days used to
-be described as the twenty-acre formation, against
-the best riflemen in Europe. It was not even a
-shoulder to shoulder column, but a mere crowd,
-shredding out in the front and dense to the rear.
-There was nothing of the swiftly weaving lines, the
-rushes of alternate companies, the twinkle and flicker
-of a modern attack. It was mediaeval, and yet it
-was impressive also in its immediate display of
-numbers and the ponderous insistence of its onward
-flow. It was not many weeks before the stern lesson
-of war taught very different formations to those of
-the grand Kaiser manoeuvres.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men, still fingering their triggers, gazed
-expectantly at their officers, who measured intently
-the distance of the approaching swarms. The Germans
-had already begun to fire in a desultory fashion.
-Shrapnel was bursting thickly along the head of their
-columns but they were coming steadily onwards.
-Suddenly a rolling wave of independent firing broke
-out from the British position. At some portions of
-the line the enemy were at eight hundred, at others
-at one thousand yards. The men, happy in having
-something definite to do, snuggled down earnestly
-to their work and fired swiftly but deliberately into
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P67"></a>67}</span>
-the approaching mass. Rifles, machine-guns, and
-field-pieces were all roaring together, while the
-incessant crash of the shells overhead added to the
-infernal uproar. Men lost all sense of time as they
-thrust clip after clip into their rifles. The German
-swarms staggered on bravely under that leaden sleet.
-Then they halted, vacillated, and finally thinned,
-shredded out, and drifted backwards like a grey fog
-torn by a gale. The woods absorbed them once
-again, whilst the rain of shells upon the British
-trenches became thicker and more deadly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a lull in the infantry attack, and the
-British, peering from their shelters, surveyed with a
-grim satisfaction the patches and smudges of grey
-which showed the effect of their fire. But the rest
-was not a long one. With fine courage the German
-battalions re-formed under the shelter of the trees,
-while fresh troops from the rear pushed forward to
-stiffen the shaken lines. "Hold your fire!" was the
-order that ran down the ranks. With the confidence
-bred of experience, the men waited and still waited,
-till the very features of the Germans could be
-distinguished. Then once more the deadly fire rippled
-down the line, the masses shredded and dissolved,
-and the fugitives hurried to the woods. Then came
-the pause under shell fire, and then once again the
-emergence of the infantry, the attack, the check, and
-the recoil. Such were the general characteristics of
-the action at Mons over a large portion of the British
-line&mdash;that portion which extended along the actual
-course of the canal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not to be supposed, however, that there was
-a monotony of attack and defence over the whole
-of the British position. A large part of the force,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P68"></a>68}</span>
-including the whole of the First Army Corps, was
-threatened rather than seriously engaged, while the
-opposite end of the line was also out of the main
-track of the storm. It beat most dangerously, as had
-been foreseen, upon the troops to the immediate west
-and north of Mons, and especially upon those which
-defended the impossible peninsula formed by the loop
-of the canal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The defence of the bridges of Nimy.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is a road which runs from Mons due north
-through the village of Nimy to Jurbise. The defences
-to the west of this road were in the hands of the
-9th Brigade. The 4th Royal Fusiliers, with the
-Scots Fusiliers, were the particular battalions which
-held the trenches skirting this part of the peninsula,
-while half the Northumberland Fusiliers were on the
-straight canal to the westward. To the east of Nimy
-are three road bridges&mdash;those of Nimy itself, Lock
-No. 5, and Aubourg Station. All these three bridges
-were defended by the 4th Middlesex, who had made
-shallow trenches which commanded them. The
-Gordons were on their immediate right. The field
-of fire was much interfered with by the mines and
-buildings which faced them, so that at this point the
-Germans could get up unobserved to the very front.
-It has also been already explained that the German
-artillery could enfilade the peninsula from each
-side, making the defence most difficult. A rush
-of German troops came between eleven and twelve
-o'clock across the Aubourg Station Bridge. It was
-so screened up to the moment of the advance that
-neither the rifles nor the machine-guns of the Middlesex
-could stop it. It is an undoubted fact that this
-rush was preceded by a great crowd of women and
-children, through which the leading files of the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P69"></a>69}</span>
-Germans could hardly be seen. At the same time, or
-very shortly afterwards, the other two bridges were
-forced in a similar manner, but the Germans in all
-three cases as they reached the farther side were
-unable to make any rapid headway against the
-British fire, though they made the position untenable
-for the troops in trenches between the bridges. The
-whole of the 8th Brigade, supported by the 2nd Irish
-Rifles from McCracken's 7th Brigade, which had been
-held in reserve at Ciply, were now fully engaged,
-covering the retirement of the Middlesex and Gordons.
-At some points the firing between the two lines of
-infantry was across the breadth of a road. Two
-batteries of the 40th Artillery Brigade, which were
-facing the German attack at this point, were badly
-mauled, one of them, the 23rd R.F.A., losing its gun
-teams. Major Ingham succeeded in reconstituting
-his equipment and getting his guns away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is well to accentuate the fact that though this
-was the point of the most severe pressure there was
-never any disorderly retirement, and strong reserves
-were available had they been needed. The 8th
-Brigade, at the time of the general strategical
-withdrawal of the Army, made its arrangements in a
-methodical fashion, and General Doran kept his hold
-until after nightfall upon Bois la Haut, which was an
-elevation to the east of Mons from which the German
-artillery might have harassed the British retreat, since
-it commanded all the country to the south. The
-losses of the brigade had, however, been considerable,
-amounting to not less than three hundred and fifty
-in the case of the 4th Middlesex, many being killed
-or wounded in the defence, and some cut off in the
-trenches between the various bridge-heads. Majors
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P70"></a>70}</span>
-Davey and Abell of the Middlesex were respectively
-wounded and killed, with thirteen other officers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has already been said that the line of the 4th
-Royal Fusiliers extended along the western perimeter
-up to Nimy Road Bridge, where Colonel MacMahon's
-section ended and that of Colonel Hull, of the
-Middlesex Regiment, began. To the west of this point was
-the Nimy Railway Bridge, defended also by Captain
-Ashburner's company of the 4th Royal Fusiliers.
-This was assaulted early, and was held for nearly
-five hours against an attack of several German
-battalions. The British artillery was unable to help
-much in the defence, as the town of Mons behind
-offered no positions for guns, but the 107th Battery
-in the immediate rear did good work. The defence
-was continued until the Germans who had already
-crossed to the east were advancing on the flank.
-Lieutenant Maurice Dease, five times wounded before
-he was killed, worked his machine-gun to the end,
-and every man of his detachment was hit. Lieutenant
-Dease and Private Godley both received the Victoria
-Cross. The occupants of one trench, including
-Lieutenant Smith, who was wounded, were cut off by
-the rush. Captain Carey commanded the covering
-company and the retirement was conducted in good
-order, though Captain Bowden Smith, Lieutenant
-Mead, and a number of men fell in the movement.
-Altogether, the Royal Fusiliers lost five officers and
-about two hundred men in the defence of the bridge,
-Lieutenant Tower having seven survivors in his
-platoon of sixty. Captain Byng's company at the
-Glin Bridge farther east had severe losses and was
-driven in in the same way. As the infantry retired
-a small party of engineers under Captain Theodore
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P71"></a>71}</span>
-Wright endeavoured to destroy this and other bridges.
-Lieutenant Day was twice wounded in his attempt
-upon the main Nimy Bridge. Corporal Jarvis received
-the V.C. for his exertions in preparing the Jemappes
-bridge for destruction to the west of Nimy. Captain
-Wright, with Sergeant Smith, made an heroic endeavour
-under terrific fire to detonate the charge,
-but was wounded and fell into the canal. Lieutenant
-Holt, a brave young officer of reserve engineers, also
-lost his life in these operations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The holding of the canal.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having held on as long as was possible, the front
-line of the 9th Brigade fell back upon the prepared
-position on high ground between Mons and Frameries,
-where the 107th R.F.A. was entrenched. The 4th
-Royal Fusiliers passed through Mons and reached the
-new line in good order and without further loss.
-The 1st Royal Scots Fusiliers, however, falling back
-to the same point on a different route through Flenu,
-came under heavy machine-gun fire from a high soil
-heap, losing Captain Rose and a hundred men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The falling back of the 8th and 9th Brigades from
-the Nimy Peninsula had an immediate effect upon
-Cuthbert's 13th Brigade, which was on their left
-holding the line up to the railway bridge just east
-of St. Ghislain. Of this brigade two battalions, the
-1st West Kent on the right and the 2nd Scottish
-Borderers on the left, were in the trenches while the
-2nd West Riding and the 2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry
-were in support, having their centre at Boussu. The
-day began by some losses to the West Kent Regiment,
-who were probably, apart from cavalry patrols, the
-first troops to suffer in the great war. A company
-of the regiment under Captain Lister was sent across
-the canal early as a support to some advancing
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P72"></a>72}</span>
-cavalry, and was driven in about eleven o'clock with
-a loss of two officers and about a hundred men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From this time onwards the German attacks were
-easily held, though the German guns were within
-twelve hundred yards. The situation was changed
-when it was learned later in the day that the Germans
-were across to the right and had got as far as Flenu
-on the flank of the brigade. In view of this advance,
-General Smith-Dorrien, having no immediate supports,
-dashed off on a motor to Sir Douglas Haig's headquarters
-some four miles distant, and got his permission
-to use Haking's 5th Brigade, which pushed up in
-time to re-establish the line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been shown that the order of the regiments
-closely engaged in the front line was, counting from
-the east, the 1st Gordons, the 4th Middlesex, the 4th
-Royal Fusiliers, the 1st Scots Fusiliers, half the 1st
-Northumberland Fusiliers, the 1st West Kents, and the
-2nd Scottish Borderers, the other regiments of these
-brigades being in reserve. The last-named battalion,
-being opposite a bridge, was heavily engaged all day,
-losing many men, but holding its position intact
-against repeated advances. On the left hand or
-western side of the Scottish Borderers, continuing the
-line along the canal, one would come upon the front
-of the 14th Brigade (Rolfs), which was formed by the
-1st Surrey on the right and the 1st Duke of Cornwall's
-on the left. The German attack upon this portion
-of the line began about 1 P.M., and by 3 P.M. had
-become so warm that the reserve companies were
-drawn into the firing line. Thanks to their good
-work, both with rifles and with machine-guns, the
-regiments held their own until about six o'clock in
-the evening, when the retirement of the troops on
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P73"></a>73}</span>
-their right enabled the Germans to enfilade the right
-section of the East Surreys at close range. They
-were ordered to retire, but lost touch with the left
-section, which remained to the north of the canal
-where their trench was situated. Captain Benson of
-this section had been killed and Captain Campbell
-severely wounded, but the party of one hundred and
-ten men under Lieutenant Morritt held on most
-gallantly and made a very fine defence. Being finally
-surrounded, they endeavoured to cut their way out
-with cold steel, Lieutenant Ward being killed and
-Morritt four times wounded in the attempt. Many of
-the men were killed and wounded, and the survivors
-were taken. Altogether the loss of the regiment was
-five officers and one hundred and thirty-four men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the left of the East Surreys, as already stated,
-lay the 1st Duke of Cornwall's of the same brigade.
-About four o'clock in the afternoon the presence of
-the German outflanking corps first made itself felt.
-At that hour the Cornwalls were aware of an advance
-upon their left as well as their front. The Cornwalls
-drew in across the canal in consequence, and the
-Germans did not follow them over that evening.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The chief point defended by the 14th Brigade upon
-this day had been the bridge and main road which
-crosses the canal between Pommeroeul and Thulin,
-some eight or nine miles west of Mons. In the
-evening, when the final order for retreat was given,
-this bridge was blown up, and the brigade fell back
-after nightfall as far as Dour, where it slept.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The fateful telegram.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the late afternoon the general position was
-grave, but not critical. The enemy had lost very
-heavily, while the men in the trenches were, in
-comparison, unscathed. Here and there, as we have
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P74"></a>74}</span>
-seen, the Germans had obtained a lodgment in the
-British position, especially at the salient which had
-always appeared to be impossible to hold, but, on
-the other hand, the greater part of the Army,
-including the whole First Corps, had not yet been
-seriously engaged, and there were reserve troops in the
-immediate rear of the fighting line who could be
-trusted to make good any gap in the ranks before
-them. The German artillery fire was heavy and
-well-directed, but the British batteries had held their own.
-Such was the position when, about 5 P.M., a telegram
-from General Joffre was put into Sir John French's
-hand, which must have brought a pang to his heart.
-From it he learned that all his work had been in vain,
-and that far from contending for victory, he would
-be fortunate if he saved himself from utter defeat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were two pieces of information in this fatal
-message, and each was disastrous. The first
-announced that instead of the two German corps whom
-he had reason to think were in front of him, there
-were four&mdash;the Third, Fourth, Seventh, and Fourth
-Reserve Corps&mdash;forming, with the second and fourth
-cavalry divisions, a force of nearly 200,000 men,
-while the Second Corps were bringing another 40,000
-round his left flank from the direction of Tournai.
-The second item was even more serious. Instead of
-being buttressed up with French troops on either side
-of him, he learned that the Germans had burst the
-line of the Sambre, and that the French armies on
-his right were already in full retreat, while nothing
-substantial lay upon his left. It was a most perilous
-position. The British force lay exposed and
-unsupported amid converging foes who far outnumbered
-it in men and guns. What was the profit of one
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P75"></a>75}</span>
-day of successful defence if the morrow would dawn
-upon a British Sedan? There was only one course of
-action, and Sir John decided upon it in the instant,
-bitter as the decision must have been. The Army
-must be extricated from the battle and fall back until
-it resumed touch with its Allies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it is no easy matter to disengage so large an
-army which is actually in action and hard-pressed by
-a numerous and enterprising enemy. The front was
-extensive and the lines of retreat were limited. That
-the operation was carried out in an orderly fashion is
-a testimony to the skill of the General, the talents of
-the commanders, and the discipline of the units. If
-it had been done at once and simultaneously it would
-certainly have been the signal for a vigorous German
-advance and a possible disaster. The positions were
-therefore held, though no efforts were made to retake
-those points where the enemy had effected a lodgment.
-There was no possible use in wasting troops in
-regaining positions which would in no case be held.
-As dusk fell, a dusk which was lightened by the glare
-of burning villages, some of the regiments began
-slowly to draw off to the rear. In the early morning
-of the 24th the definite order to retire was conveyed
-to the corps commanders, whilst immediate measures
-were taken to withdraw the impedimenta and to clear
-the roads.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such, in its bare outlines, was the action of Mons
-upon August 23, interesting for its own sake, but
-more so as being the first clash between the British
-and German armies. One or two questions call for
-discussion before the narrative passes on. The most
-obvious of these is the question of the bridges. Why
-were they not blown up in the dangerous peninsula?
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P76"></a>76}</span>
-Without having any special information upon the
-point, one might put forward the speculation that
-the reason why they were not at once blown up was
-that the whole of Joffre's advance was an aggressive
-movement for the relief of Namur, and that the bridges
-were not destroyed because they would be used in a
-subsequent advance. It will always be a subject for
-speculation as to what would have occurred had the
-battle been fought to a finish. Considering the
-comparative merits of British and German infantry as
-shown in many a subsequent encounter, and allowing
-for the advantage that the defence has over the attack,
-it is probable that the odds might not have been too
-great and that Sir John French might have remained
-master of the field. That, however, is a matter of
-opinion. What is not a matter of opinion is that the
-other German armies to the east would have advanced
-on the heels of the retiring French, that they would
-have cut the British off from their Allies, and that
-they would have been hard put to it to reach the coast.
-Therefore, win or lose, the Army had no possible
-course open but to retire. The actual losses of the
-British were not more than three or four thousand,
-the greater part from the 8th, 9th, and 13th Brigades.
-There are no means as yet by which the German
-losses can be taken out from the general returns, but
-when one considers the repeated advances over the
-open and the constant breaking of the dense attacking
-formations, it is impossible that they should have been
-fewer than from seven to ten thousand men. Each
-army had for the first time an opportunity of forming
-a critical estimate of the other. German officers have
-admitted with soldierly frankness that the efficiency
-of the British came to them as a revelation, which is
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P77"></a>77}</span>
-not surprising after the assurances that had been
-made to them. On the other hand, the British bore
-away a very clear conviction of the excellence of the
-German artillery and of the plodding bravery of the
-German infantry, together with a great reassurance
-as to their own capacity to hold their own at any
-reasonable odds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The rearguard actions of Frameries, Wasmes, and Dour.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a night of flames and of uproar the day
-dawned, a day of great anxiety to the British
-commanders and of considerable pressure upon a portion
-of the troops. Sir John French had given instructions
-that the First Corps, which had been only slightly
-engaged the day before, should pretend to assume
-the offensive upon the extreme right wing in the
-direction of Binche, whilst the Second Corps began
-its retirement. The enemy was following up rapidly,
-however, along the whole length of the British line,
-both flanks of which were exposed. Shortly after
-dawn the evacuated positions had been occupied,
-and Mons itself was in the hands of the advancing
-Germans. The Second Corps began its retreat,
-helped by the feint which was carried out by General
-Haig upon the right, and by the bulk of the batteries
-of both corps, but the pursuit was vigorous and the
-shell-fire incessant. A shell from the rear is more
-intimidating than twenty in the front. Hamilton's
-Third Division, including the 8th and 9th Brigades,
-who had done such hard work the day before,
-sustained the most severe losses, especially at
-Frameries, four miles south of Mons. The 2nd Royal
-Scots of the 8th Brigade about midnight had been
-attacked by a heavy German column which got so
-near that the swish of their feet through the long
-grass put the regiment on the alert. The attack was
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P78"></a>78}</span>
-blown back by a volley at close quarters. The 9th
-Brigade (Shaw's), which covered the retreat, was
-closely pressed from dawn by the pursuing Germans,
-and was subjected to a very heavy shell-fire. A
-barricade, erected in the village and manned by Captain
-Sandilands, of the Northumberlands, with his
-company, held up the German advance, and they were
-never permitted to reach the line nor to hustle the
-retirement. Butler's 23rd Artillery Brigade helped
-with its fire. The chief losses in this skilful covering
-action fell upon the 1st Lincolns and upon the 1st
-Northumberland Fusiliers, each of which lost about
-150 men, including Captain Rose, Lieutenants Bulbe,
-Welchman, and others. There was a stational ambulance
-in the village of Frameries, and a foreign nurse
-in its employ has left a vivid picture of the wounded
-British rushing in grimy and breathless to have their
-slighter wounds dressed and then running out, rifle
-in hand, to find their place in the firing line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The remaining brigade of the Third Division,
-McCracken's 7th Brigade, had detached one regiment,
-the 2nd Irish Rifles, upon the day before to reinforce
-the 8th Brigade, and this regiment had, as already
-mentioned, some severe fighting, holding back the
-German advance after the retirement from the Nimy
-Peninsula of the Middlesex and the Gordons. It
-did not find its way back to its brigade until the
-evening of the 24th. The brigade itself, during the
-first day of the retreat, held a position near Ciply,
-to the south of Mons, where it was heavily attacked
-in the early morning, and in some danger as its flank
-was exposed. At ten o'clock it was ordered to retire
-<i>via</i> Genly towards Bavai, and it carried out this
-difficult movement in the face of a pushful enemy in
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P79"></a>79}</span>
-perfect order, covered by the divisional artillery.
-The principal losses fell upon the 2nd South
-Lancashire Regiment, which came under heavy fire from
-German machine-guns posted upon slag-heaps. This
-regiment was very hard hit, losing several hundred
-men. The brigade faced round near Bavai and held
-off the pursuit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cuthbert's 13th Brigade, keeping in line with
-their comrades on the right, halted at Wasmes, some
-four miles from the canal, where they prepared some
-hasty entrenchments. Here, at the dawn of day,
-they were furiously attacked by the German vanguard
-at the same time that the 9th Brigade was hustled
-in Frameries, but for two hours the assailants were
-beaten back with heavy losses. The brunt of the
-fighting fell upon the 2nd West Riding Regiment,
-who lost heavily, were at one time nearly surrounded,
-and finally, with dour Yorkshire pertinacity, shook
-themselves clear. Their losses included their
-commander, Colonel Gibbs, their adjutant, 300 men,
-and all their officers save five. The 1st West
-Kents also lost about 100 men and several officers,
-including Major Pack-Beresford. For the remainder
-of the day and for the whole of the 25th the brigade,
-with the rest of the Fifth Division, fell back with
-little fighting <i>via</i> Bavai to the Le Cateau line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the evening of the 23rd the 14th Brigade, still
-farther to the west, had fallen back to Dour, blowing
-up the bridge and road over the canal. After dark
-the Germans followed them, and Gleichen's 15th
-Brigade, which had not yet been engaged, found
-itself in the position of rearguard and immediately
-exposed to the pressure of the German flanking
-movement. This was now threatening to envelop the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P80"></a>80}</span>
-whole of Ferguson's Fifth Division. The situation
-was particularly difficult, since this General had to
-make a flank movement in the face of the enemy in
-order to close up with his comrades of the Third
-Division. He was soon compelled to call for
-assistance, and Allenby, with his cavalry division,
-was advanced to help him. It was evidently the
-intention of the enemy to strike in upon the western
-side of the division and pin it to its ground until it
-could be surrounded.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P81"></a>81}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-081"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-081.jpg" alt="1st MORNING OF RETREAT OF 2nd ARMY CORPS AUG 24th." />
-<br />
-1st MORNING OF RETREAT OF 2nd ARMY CORPS AUG 24th.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The charge of the Lancers.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first menacing advance in the morning of the
-24th was directed against the flank of the British
-infantry who were streaming down the Elouges-Dour
-high road. The situation was critical, and a portion
-of De Lisle's 2nd Cavalry Brigade was ordered to
-charge near Andregnies, the hostile infantry being
-at that time about a thousand yards distant, with
-several batteries in support. The attack of the
-cavalry was vigorously supported by L Battery of
-Horse Artillery. The charge was carried out by
-three squadrons of the 9th Lancers, Colonel Campbell
-at their head. The 4th Dragoon Guards under
-Colonel Mullens was in support. The cavalry rode
-forward amidst a heavy but not particularly deadly
-fire until they were within a few hundred yards of
-the enemy, when, being faced by a wire fence, they
-swung to the right and rallied under the cover of
-some slag-heaps and of a railway embankment.
-Their menace and rifle fire, or the fine work of Major
-Sclater-Booth's battery, had the effect of holding up
-the German advance for some time, and though the
-cavalry were much scattered and disorganised they
-were able to reunite without any excessive loss, the
-total casualties being a little over two hundred. Some
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P82"></a>82}</span>
-hours later the enemy's pressure again became heavy
-upon Ferguson's flank, and the 1st Cheshires and 1st
-Norfolks, of Gleichen's 15th Brigade, which formed
-the infantry flank-guard, incurred heavy losses. It was
-in this defensive action that the 119th R.F.A., under
-Major Alexander, fought itself to a standstill with only
-three unwounded gunners by the guns. The battery
-had silenced one German unit and was engaged with
-three others. Only Major Alexander and Lieutenant
-Pollard with a few men were left. As the horses had
-been destroyed the pieces had to be man-handled out
-of action. Captain the Hon. F. Grenfell, of the
-9th Lancers, bleeding from two wounds, with several
-officers, Sergeants Davids and Turner, and some fifty
-men of the regiment, saved these guns under a terrible
-fire, the German infantry being within close range.
-During the whole long, weary day the batteries and
-horsemen were working hard to cover the retreat,
-while the surgeons exposed themselves with great
-fearlessness, lingering behind the retiring lines in
-order to give first aid to the men who had been hit
-by the incessant shell-fire. It was in this noble
-task&mdash;the noblest surely within the whole range of
-warfare&mdash;that Captain Malcolm Leckie, and other brave
-medical officers, met with a glorious end, upholding
-to the full the traditions of their famous corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The fate of the Cheshires.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been stated that the 1st Cheshires, in
-endeavouring to screen the west flank of the
-Second Corps from the German pursuit, were very
-badly punished. This regiment, together with
-the Norfolks, occupied a low ridge to the north-east
-side of the village of Elouges, which they
-endeavoured to hold against the onflowing tide of
-Germans. About three in the afternoon it was seen
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P83"></a>83}</span>
-that there was danger of this small flank-guard being
-entirely cut off. As a matter of fact an order had
-actually been sent for a retreat, but had not reached
-them. Colonel Boger of the Cheshires sent several
-messengers, representing the growing danger, but no
-answer came back. Finally, in desperation, Colonel
-Boger went himself and found that the enemy held
-the position previously occupied by the rest of
-Gleichen's Brigade, which had retired. The Cheshires
-had by this time endured dreadful losses, and were
-practically surrounded. A bayonet charge eased
-the pressure for a short time, but the enemy again
-closed in and the bulk of the survivors, isolated amidst
-a hostile army corps, were compelled to surrender.
-Some escaped in small groups and made their way
-through to their retreating comrades. When roll
-was next called, there remained 5 officers and 193
-men out of 27 officers and 1007 of all ranks who had
-gone into action. It speaks volumes for the discipline
-of the regiment that this remnant, under Captain
-Shore, continued to act as a useful unit. These
-various episodes, including the severe losses of
-Gleichen's 15th Brigade, the attack of the 2nd Cavalry
-Brigade, and the artillery action in which the 119th
-Battery was so severely handled, group themselves
-into a separate little action occurring the day after
-Mons and associated either with the villages of Elouges
-or of Dour. The Second German Corps continued
-to act upon the western side of the Second British
-Corps, whilst the rest of General von Kluck's army
-followed it behind. With three corps close behind
-him, and one snapping at his flank, General
-Smith-Dorrien made his way southwards, his gunners and
-cavalry labouring hard to relieve the ever-increasing
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P84"></a>84}</span>
-pressure, while his rear brigades were continually
-sprayed by the German shrapnel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is to be noted that Sir John French includes
-the Ninth German Corps in Von Kluck's army in his
-first dispatch, and puts it in Von Bülow's second
-army in his second dispatch. The French authorities
-are of opinion that Von Kluck's army consisted of
-the Second, Third, Fourth, Seventh, and Fourth
-Reserve Corps, with two divisions of cavalry. If
-this be correct, then part of Von Bulow's army was
-pursuing Haig, while the whole of Von Kluck's was
-concentrated upon Smith-Dorrien. This would make
-the British performance even more remarkable than
-it has hitherto appeared, since it would mean that
-during the pursuit, and at the subsequent battle, ten
-German divisions were pressing upon three British
-ones.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not to be supposed that so huge a force was
-all moving abreast, or available simultaneously at
-any one point. None the less a General can use his
-advance corps very much more freely when he knows
-that every gap can be speedily filled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A tiny reinforcement had joined the Army on the
-morning after the battle of Mons. This was the
-19th Brigade under General Drummond, which
-consisted of the 1st Middlesex, 1st Scots Rifles,
-2nd Welsh Fusiliers, and 2nd Argyll and Sutherland
-Highlanders. This detached brigade acted, and
-continued to act during a large part of the war, as an
-independent unit. It detrained at Valenciennes on
-August 23, and two regiments, the Middlesex and
-the Cameronians, may be said to have taken part in
-the battle of Mons, since they formed up at the east
-of Condé, on the extreme left of the British position,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P85"></a>85}</span>
-and received, together with the Queen's Bays, who
-were scouting in front of them, the first impact of
-the German flanking corps. They fell back with the
-Army upon the 24th and 25th, keeping the line
-Jenlain&mdash;Solesmes, finally reaching Le Cateau, where
-they eventually took up their position on the right
-rear of the British Army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the Army fell back, the border fortress of
-Maubeuge with its heavy guns offered a tempting
-haven of rest for the weary and overmatched troops,
-but not in vain had France lost her army in Metz.
-Sir John French would have no such protection,
-however violently the Germans might push him
-towards it. "The British Army invested in
-Maubeuge" was not destined to furnish the head-line
-of a Berlin special edition. The fortress was left to
-the eastward, and the tired troops snatched a few
-hours of rest near Bavai, still pursued by the guns
-and the searchlights of their persistent foemen. At
-an early hour of the 25th the columns were again on
-the march for the south, and for safety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It may be remarked that in all this movement
-what made the operation most difficult and complicated
-was, that in the retirement the Army was not
-moving direct to the rear, but diagonally away to
-the west, thus making the west flank more difficult
-to cover as well as complicating the movements of
-transport. It was this oblique movement which
-caused the Third Division to change places with the
-Fifth, so that from now onwards it was to the west
-of the Army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The greater part of the Fourth Division of the
-Third Army Corps, coming up from the lines of
-communication, brought upon this day a welcome
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P86"></a>86}</span>
-reinforcement to the Army and did yeoman work in
-covering the retirement. The total composition of
-this division was as follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- THIRD ARMY CORPS<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- GENERAL PULTENEY.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- DIVISION IV.&mdash;General SNOW.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 10<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Haldane</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Warwicks.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Seaforths.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Irish Fusiliers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Dublin Fusiliers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 11<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Hunter-Weston</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Somerset L. Infantry.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st East Lancashires.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Hants.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Rifle Brigade.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 12<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Wilson</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Royal Lancaster Regiment.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Lancs. Fusiliers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Innis. Fusiliers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Essex.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Artillery&mdash;General Milne</i>.<br />
- XIV. Brig. R.F.A. 39, 68, 88.<br />
- XXIX. Brig. R.F.A. 125, 126, 127.<br />
- XXXII. Brig. R.F.A. 27, 134, 135.<br />
- XXXVII. Brig. (How.) 31, 35, 55.<br />
- Heavy R.G.A. 31 Battery.<br />
- R.E. 7, 9 Field Cos.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-These troops, which had been quartered in the
-Ligny and Montigny area, received urgent orders at
-one in the morning of the 25th that they should
-advance northwards. They marched that night to
-Briastre, where they covered the retreat of the Army,
-the Third Division passing through their lines. The
-Fourth Division then retired south again, having
-great difficulty in getting along, as the roads were
-choked with transport and artillery, and fringed
-with exhausted men. The 12th Brigade (Wilson's)
-was acting as rearguard, and began to experience
-pressure from the pursuers, the Essex men being
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P87"></a>87}</span>
-shelled out of the village of Bethencourt, which they
-held until it was nearly surrounded by the German
-cavalry. The line followed by the division was
-Briastre-Viesly-Bethencourt-Caudry-Ligny and
-Haucourt, the latter village marking the general
-position which they were to take up on the left of
-the Army at the line of Le Cateau. Such reinforcements
-were mere handfuls when compared with the
-pursuing hosts, but their advent heartened up the
-British troops and relieved them of some of the
-pressure. It has been remarked by officers of the
-Fourth Division that they and their men were
-considerably taken aback by the worn appearance of the
-weary regiments from Mons which passed through
-their ranks. Their confidence was revived, however,
-by the undisturbed demeanour of the General
-Headquarters Staff, who came through them in the late
-afternoon of the 25th. "General French himself
-struck me as being extremely composed, and the
-staff officers looked very cheerful." These are the
-imponderabilia which count for much in a campaign.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tuesday, August 25, was a day of scattered
-rearguard actions. The weary Army had rested
-upon the evening of the 24th upon the general line
-Maubeuge-Bavai-Wargnies. Orders were issued
-for the retirement to continue next day to a position
-already partly prepared, in front of the centre of
-which stood the town of Le Cateau. All rearguards
-were to be clear of the above-mentioned line by
-5.30 A.M. The general conception was that the inner
-flanks of the two corps should be directed upon Le
-Cateau.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The intention of the Commander-in-Chief was
-that the Army should fight in that position next day,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P88"></a>88}</span>
-the First Corps occupying the right and the Second
-Corps the left of the position. The night of the 25th
-found the Second Corps in the position named, whilst
-their comrades were still at Landrecies, eight miles
-to the north-east, with a cavalry brigade endeavouring
-to bridge the gap between. It is very certain, in the
-case of so ardent a leader as Haig, that it was no
-fault upon his part which kept him from Smith-Dorrien's
-side upon the day of battle. It can only
-be said that the inevitable delays upon the road
-experienced by the First Corps, including the rearguard
-actions which it fought, prevented the ensuing
-battle from being one in which the British Army as
-a whole might have stemmed the rush of Von Kluck's
-invading host.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The 7th Brigade at Solesmes.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whilst the whole Army had been falling back upon
-the position which had been selected for a stand, it
-was hoped that substantial French reinforcements
-were coming up from the south. The roads were
-much blocked during the 25th, for two divisions of
-French territorials were retiring along them, as well
-as the British Army. As a consequence progress
-was slow, and the German pressure from the rear
-became ever more severe. Allenby's cavalry and
-horse-guns covered the retreat, continually turning
-round and holding off the pursuers. Finally, near
-Solesmes, on the evening of the 25th, the cavalry
-were at last driven in, and the Germans came up
-against McCracken's 7th Brigade, who held them
-most skilfully until nightfall with the assistance of the
-42nd Brigade R.F.A. and the 30th Howitzer Brigade.
-Most of the fighting fell upon the 1st Wiltshires and
-2nd South Lancashires, both of which had substantial
-losses. The Germans could make no further progress,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P89"></a>89}</span>
-and time was given for the roads to clear and for
-the artillery to get away. The 7th Brigade then
-followed, marching, so far as possible, across country
-and taking up its position, which it did not reach
-until after midnight, in the village of Caudry, on the
-line of the Le Cateau-Courtrai road. As it faced
-north once more it found Snow's Fourth Division
-upon its left, while on its immediate right were the
-8th and the 9th Brigades, with the Fifth Division
-on the farther side of them. One unit of the 7th
-Brigade, the 2nd Irish Rifles, together with the
-41st R.F.A., swerved off in the darkness and
-confusion and went away with the cavalry. The rest
-were in the battle line. Here we may leave them in
-position while we return to trace the fortunes of the
-First Army Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Douglas Haig's corps, after the feint of August
-24, in which the Second Division appeared to be
-attacking with the First in support, was cleverly
-disengaged from the enemy and fell back by alternate
-divisions. It was not an easy operation, and it was
-conducted under a very heavy shell-fire, which fell
-especially upon the covering guns of Colonel
-Sandilands' 34th Artillery Brigade. These guns were
-exposed to a concentration of fire from the enemy,
-which was so intense that a thick haze of smoke and
-dust blotted out the view for long periods at a time.
-It was only with difficulty and great gallantry that
-they were got away. An officer of the 6th Brigade,
-immediately behind them, writes: "Both going in
-and coming back the limbers passed my trench at a
-tearing gallop, the drivers lying low on the horses'
-necks and screaming at them to go faster, while on
-the return the guns bounded about on the stubble
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P90"></a>90}</span>
-field like so many tin cans behind a runaway dog." The
-guns having been drawn in, the corps retired by
-roads parallel to the Second Corps, and were able
-to reach the line Bavai-Maubeuge by about 7 P.M. upon
-that evening, being on the immediate eastern
-flank of Smith-Dorrien's men. It is a striking
-example of the historical continuity of the British
-Army that as they marched that day many of the
-regiments, such as the Guards and the 1st King's
-Liverpool, passed over the graves of their predecessors
-who had died under the same colours at Malplaquet
-in 1709, two hundred and six years before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Guards in action.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On August 25 General Haig continued his retreat.
-During the day he fell back to the west of Maubeuge
-by Feignies to Vavesnes and Landrecies. The
-considerable forest of Mormal intervened between the
-two sections of the British Army. On the forenoon of
-this day the vanguard of the German infantry, using
-motor transport, overtook Davies' 6th Brigade,
-which was acting as rearguard to the corps. They
-pushed in to within five hundred yards, but were
-driven back by rifle-fire. Other German forces were
-coming rapidly up and enveloping the wings of the
-British rearguard, but the brigade, through swift
-and skilful handling, disengaged itself from what
-was rapidly becoming a dangerous situation. The
-weather was exceedingly hot during the day, and
-with their heavy packs the men were much exhausted,
-many of them being barely able to stagger.
-In the evening, footsore and weary, they reached
-the line of Landrecies, Maroilles, and Pont-sur-Sambre.
-The 4th Brigade of Guards, consisting of
-Grenadiers, Coldstream, and Irish, under General
-Scott-Kerr, occupied the town of Landrecies. During
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P91"></a>91}</span>
-the day they had seen little of the enemy, and
-they had no reason to believe that the forest, which
-extended up to the outskirts of the town, was full of
-German infantry pressing eagerly to cut them off.
-The possession of vast numbers of motor lorries for
-infantry transport introduces a new element into
-strategy, especially the strategy of a pursuit, which
-was one of those disagreeable first experiences of
-up-to-date warfare which the British Army had to
-undergo. It ensures that the weary retreating rearguard
-shall ever have a perfectly fresh pursuing vanguard at
-its heels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Guards at Landrecies were put into the empty
-cavalry barracks for a much-needed rest, but they
-had hardly settled down before there was an alarm
-that the Germans were coming into the town. It was
-just after dusk that a column of infantry debouched
-from the shadow of the trees and advanced briskly
-towards the town. A company of the 3rd Coldstream
-under Captain Monck gave the alarm, and the whole
-regiment stood to arms, while the rest of the brigade,
-who could not operate in so confined a space, defended
-the other entrances of the town. The van of the
-approaching Germans shouted out that they were
-French, and seemed to have actually got near enough
-to attack the officer of the picket and seize a
-machine-gun before the Guardsmen began to fire. There is
-a single approach to the village, and no means of
-turning it, so that the attack was forced to come
-directly down the road.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Germans' rude awakening.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Possibly the Germans had the impression that they
-were dealing with demoralised fugitives, but if so
-they got a rude awakening. The advance party,
-who were endeavouring to drag away the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P92"></a>92}</span>
-machine-gun, were all shot down, and their comrades who
-stormed up to the houses were met with a steady
-and murderous fire which drove them back into the
-shadows of the wood. A gun was brought up by
-them, and fired at a range of five hundred yards
-with shrapnel, but the Coldstream, reinforced by
-a second company, lay low or flattened themselves
-into the doorways for protection, while the 9th British
-Battery replied from a position behind the town.
-Presently, believing that the way had been cleared for
-them, there was a fresh surge of dark masses out of
-the wood, and they poured into the throat of the
-street. The Guards had brought out two machine-guns,
-and their fire, together with a succession of
-volleys from the rifles, decimated the stormers. Some
-of them got near enough to throw hand bombs among
-the British, but none effected a lodgment among the
-buildings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From time to time there were fresh advances
-during the night, designed apparently rather to
-tire out the troops than to gain the village. Once
-fire was set to the house at the end of the street,
-but the flames were extinguished by a party led
-by Corporal Wyatt, of the 3rd Coldstream. The
-Irish Guards after midnight relieved the Coldstream
-of their vigil, and in the early morning the tired
-but victorious brigade went forward unmolested
-upon their way. They had lost 170 of their number,
-nearly all from the two Coldstream companies.
-Lord Hawarden and the Hon. Windsor Clive of the
-Coldstream and Lieut. Vereker of the Grenadiers
-were killed, four other officers were wounded. The
-Germans in their close attacking formation had
-suffered very much more heavily. Their enterprise
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P93"></a>93}</span>
-was a daring one, for they had pushed far forward to
-get command of the Landrecies Bridge, but their
-audacity became foolhardy when faced by steady,
-unshaken infantry. History has shown many times
-before that a retreating British Army still retains a
-sting in its tail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the same time as the Guards' Brigade was
-attacked at Landrecies there was an advance from
-the forest against Maroilles, which is four miles to the
-eastward. A troop of the 15th Hussars guarding a
-bridge over the Sambre near that point was driven in
-by the enemy, and two attempts on the part of the
-1st Berkshires, of Davies' 6th Brigade, to retake it
-were repulsed, owing to the fact that the only approach
-was by a narrow causeway with marshland on either
-side, where it was not possible for infantry to deploy.
-The 1st Rifles were ordered to support the Berkshires,
-but darkness had fallen and nothing could be done.
-The casualties in this skirmish amounted to 124
-killed, wounded, or missing. The Landrecies and
-Maroilles wounded were left behind with some of the
-medical staff. At this period of the war the British
-had not yet understood the qualities of the enemy,
-and several times made the mistake of trusting
-surgeons and orderlies to their mercy, with the result
-that they were inhumanly treated, both by the
-authorities at the front and by the populace in
-Germany, whither they were conveyed as starving
-prisoners of war. Five of them, Captains Edmunds
-and Hamilton, Lieut. Danks (all of the Army Medical
-Corps), with Dr. Austin and Dr. Elliott, who were
-exchanged in January 1915, deposed that they were
-left absolutely without food for long periods. It is
-only fair to state that at a later date, with a few
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P94"></a>94}</span>
-scandalous exceptions, such as that of Wittenberg,
-the German treatment of prisoners, though often
-harsh, was no longer barbarous. For the first six
-months, however, it was brutal in the extreme,
-and frequently accompanied by torture as well as
-neglect. A Spanish prisoner, incarcerated by
-mistake, has given very clear neutral evidence of the
-abominable punishments of the prison camps. His
-account reads more like the doings of Iroquois than
-of a Christian nation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Connnaughts at Pont-sur-Sambre.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A small mishap&mdash;small on the scale of such a war,
-though serious enough in itself&mdash;befell a unit of the
-First Army Corps on the morning after the Landrecies
-engagement. The portion of the German army who
-pursued General Haig had up to now been able to
-effect little, and that little at considerable cost to
-themselves. Early on August 26, however, a brisk
-action was fought near Pont-sur-Sambre, in which
-the 2nd Connaughts, of Haking's Fifth Brigade, lost
-six officers, including Colonel Abercrombie, who was
-taken prisoner, and 280 men. The regiment was cut
-off by a rapidly advancing enemy in a country which
-was so thickly enclosed that there was great difficulty
-in keeping touch between the various companies or
-in conveying their danger to the rest of the brigade.
-By steadiness and judgment the battalion was
-extricated from a most difficult position, but it was at
-the heavy cost already quoted. In this case again
-the use by the enemy of great numbers of motor
-lorries in their pursuit accounts for the suddenness
-and severity of the attacks which now and afterwards
-fell upon the British rearguards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dawn broke upon August 26, a day upon which
-the exhausted troops were destined to be tried to the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P95"></a>95}</span>
-limit of human endurance. It was the date of Von
-Kluck's exultant telegram in which he declared that
-he held them surrounded, a telegram which set Berlin
-fluttering with flags. On this day the First Army
-Corps was unmolested in its march, reaching the
-Venerolles line that night. There was woody country
-upon the west of it, and from beyond this curtain of
-trees they heard the distant roar of a terrific
-cannonade, and knew that a great battle was in progress
-to the westward. It was on Smith-Dorrien's Second
-Corps and upon the single division of the Third Corps
-that the full storm of the German attack had broken.
-In a word, a corps and a half of British troops, with
-225 guns, were assailed by certainly four and probably
-five German corps, with 600 guns. It is no wonder
-that the premature tidings of a great German triumph
-were forwarded that morning to make one more item
-in that flood of good news which from August 21 to
-the end of the month was pouring in upon the German
-people. A glittering mirage lay before them. The
-French lines had been hurled back from the frontier,
-the British were in full retreat, and now were faced
-with absolute disaster. Behind these breaking lines
-lay the precious capital, the brain and heart of France.
-But God is not always with the big battalions, and the
-end was not yet.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P96"></a>96}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV
-<br /><br />
-THE BATTLE OF LE CATEAU
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intro">
-The order of battle at Le Cateau&mdash;The stand of the 2nd
-Suffolks&mdash;Major Yate's V.C.&mdash;The fight for the quarries&mdash;The splendid
-work of the British guns&mdash;Difficult retirement of the Fourth
-Division&mdash;The fate of the 1st Gordons&mdash;Results of the
-battle&mdash;Exhaustion of the Army&mdash;The destruction of the 2nd
-Munsters&mdash;A cavalry fight&mdash;The news in Great Britain&mdash;The views of
-General Joffre&mdash;Battery L&mdash;The action of
-Villars-Cotteret&mdash;Reunion of the Army.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Reference has already been made to the retirement
-of Smith-Dorrien's Second Corps, covered by Allenby's
-cavalry, throughout the 25th. The heads of the
-columns arrived at the Le Cateau position at about
-3 P.M., but the rearguards were fighting into the
-night, and came in eventually in an exhausted
-condition. The Fourth Division, which was still quite
-fresh, did good and indeed vital service by allowing
-the tired units to pass through its ranks and acting as
-a pivot upon which the cavalry could fall back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir John French had reconsidered the idea of
-making a stand at Le Cateau, feeling, no doubt, that
-if his whole Army could not be consolidated there the
-affair would be too desperate. He had moved with
-his staff during the evening of the 25th to St. Quentin,
-leaving word that the retirement should be continued
-early next morning. Smith-Dorrien spent the afternoon
-and evening going round the position, but it was
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P97"></a>97}</span>
-not until 2 A.M. upon the morning of the 26th that
-he was able to ascertain the whereabouts of all his
-scattered and weary units. About that time General
-Allenby reported that his cavalry had been widely
-separated, two and a half brigades being at Chatillon,
-six miles east of Le Cateau, the other one and a half
-brigades being near Ligny, four miles west of the same
-town. General Smith-Dorrien was in the position
-that his troops were scattered, weary, and in danger
-of losing their morale through continued retreat in the
-presence of an ever-pressing enemy. Even with the
-best soldiers such an experience too long continued
-may turn an army into a rabble. He therefore made
-urgent representations by telephone to the
-Commander-in-Chief, pointing out that the only hope of
-checking the dangerous German pursuit was to stagger
-them by a severe counter. "The only thing for the
-men to do when they can't stand is to lie down and
-fight," said he. Sir John assented to the view, with
-the proviso that the retirement should be continued
-as soon as possible. Smith-Dorrien, taking under his
-orders the cavalry, the Fourth Division, and the 19th
-Brigade, as well as his own corps, issued instructions
-for the battle which he knew must begin within a few
-hours.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Owing to the gap of eight miles between the nearest
-points of the two corps, both flanks of the position
-were in the air. Smith-Dorrien therefore requested
-the cavalry brigades from Chatillon to move in and
-guard the east flank, while the rest of the cavalry
-watched the west. He was less anxious about the
-latter, as he knew that Sordet's French cavalry was in
-that direction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The order of battle at Le Coteau.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The exhausted infantry, who had now been
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P98"></a>98}</span>
-marching for about a week, and fighting for three days and
-the greater part of three nights, flung themselves
-down where best they could, some to the north-east
-of Le Cateau, some in the town, and some along
-the line of very inadequate trenches hastily
-prepared by civilian labour. In the early dawn they
-took up their position, the Fifth Division being
-to the right near the town. Of this division, the
-14th Brigade (Rolt's) was on the extreme right, the
-13th (Cuthbert's) to the left of it, and the 15th
-(Gleichen's) to the left again. To the west of the Fifth
-Division lay the Third, their trenches covering the
-villages of Troisville (9th Brigade), Audencourt (8th
-Brigade), and Caudry (7th Brigade). Behind Caudry
-one and a half brigades of cavalry were in reserve to
-strengthen the left wing. From Caudry the line was
-thrown back to meet a flanking movement and extended
-to Haucourt. This portion was held by Snow's
-Fourth Division. Sordet's cavalry had passed across
-the rear of the British position the day before, and lay
-now to the left flank and rear of the Army. There
-were rumours of approaching French forces from the
-south, which put heart into the weary men, but, as a
-matter of fact, they had only their own brave spirits
-upon which to depend. Their numbers, putting every
-unit at its full complement, were about 70,000 men.
-Their opponents were four army corps at the least,
-with two divisions of cavalry&mdash;say, 170,000 men with
-an overpowering artillery. Subsequent reports showed
-that the guns of all five army corps had been
-concentrated for the battle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been said that Rolt's 14th Brigade was at
-the extreme right of the line. This statement needs
-some expansion. The 14th Brigade consisted of the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P99"></a>99}</span>
-1st East Surrey, 2nd Suffolk, 2nd Manchester, and 1st
-Cornwalls. Of these four regiments, half of the East
-Surrey had been detached on escort duty and the
-other half, under Colonel Longley, with the whole of
-the Cornwalls, bivouacked in the northern suburbs of
-Le Cateau on the night of the 25th. In the early
-morning of the 26th the enemy's advanced guard got
-into the town, and this detachment of British troops
-were cut off from their comrades and fired upon as they
-assembled in the streets of the town. They made
-their way out, however, in orderly fashion and took
-up a position to the south-east of the town, where
-they fought an action on their own account for
-some hours, quite apart from the rest of the Army,
-which they could hear but not see. Eventually the
-division of cavalry fell back from Chatillon to join
-the Army and picked up these troops <i>en route</i>, so that
-the united body was able to make its way safely back
-to their comrades. These troops were out of the main
-battle, but did good work in covering the retreat.
-The whole signal section of the 14th Brigade was with
-them, which greatly hampered the brigade during the
-battle. Two companies of the 1st East Surreys under
-Major Tew had become separated from their comrades
-after Mons, but they rejoined the British line at
-Troisville, and on the morning of August 26 were able
-to fall in on the rear of the 14th Brigade, where, as will
-be seen later, they did good service.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 19th Brigade had also bivouacked in Le
-Cateau and was nearly cut off, as the two regiments of
-the 14th Brigade had been, by the sudden intrusion
-of the enemy. It had been able to make its way out
-of the town, however, without being separated from
-the rest of the Army, and it took up its position on
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P100"></a>100}</span>
-the right rear of the infantry line, whence it sent help
-where needed and played the part of a reserve until
-towards the close of the action its presence became
-very vital to the Fifth Division. At the outset the
-2nd Argyll and Sutherlands were in the front line of
-this brigade and the 1st Middlesex supporting them,
-while the other two battalions, the 2nd Welsh Fusiliers
-and 1st Scots Rifles, with a battery of artillery had
-been taken as a reserve by the force commander.
-No trenches had been prepared at this point, and
-the losses of the two front battalions from shell-fire
-were, from the beginning, very heavy. The other two
-battalions spent a day of marching rather than
-fighting, being sent right across to reinforce the Fourth
-Division and then being brought back to the right
-flank once more.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P101"></a>101}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-101"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-101.jpg" alt="Sketch of the Battle of Le Cateau, Aug. 26th" />
-<br />
-Sketch of the Battle of Le Cateau, Aug. 26th
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The stand of the 2nd Suffolks.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the Fifth Division, on the right of the line,
-who first experienced the full effect of the heavy
-shelling which about seven o'clock became general
-along the whole position, but was always most severe
-upon the right. There was a dangerous salient in the
-trenches at the cross-roads one mile west of Le Cateau
-which was a source of very great weakness. Every
-effort was made to strengthen the trenches, the 15th
-Brigade and 59th Company R.E. working especially
-hard in the Troisville section. The Germans were
-moving round upon this right wing, and the murderous
-hail of missiles came from the flank as well as from
-the front, being supplemented by rifle and machine-gun
-fire. The 2nd Suffolks and 2nd Manchesters,
-the remaining half of Rolfs 14th Brigade, being on the
-extreme right of the line, suffered the most. The
-guns immediately supporting them, of the 28th
-Artillery Brigade, were quite overmatched and were
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P102"></a>102}</span>
-overwhelmed by the devastating rain of shells, many
-of them being put out of action. A heavy battery,
-the 108th, some little distance behind the line, kept
-up a steady and effective fire which long held back the
-German advance. The pressure, however, was
-extreme, and growing steadily from hour to hour until
-it became well-nigh intolerable. Especially it fell
-upon the 2nd Suffolks, who held their shallow
-trenches with splendid tenacity. Their colonel, Brett,
-was killed, Major Doughty was wounded in three
-places, Captains Orford and Cutbill, with eight
-lieutenants, were on the ground. Finally, when the
-position of the brigade became untenable and it was
-ordered to retreat, the gallant Suffolks held on to their
-line with the desire of saving the disabled guns, and
-were eventually all killed, wounded, or taken, save
-for about 250 men, while their neighbours, the 2nd
-Manchesters, lost 14 officers and 350 of their men. In
-this way the extreme right of the British line was
-practically destroyed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 19th Brigade, in the rear of the 14th, were able
-to observe the fate of their comrades, and about
-mid-day the 2nd Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, who
-had already lost a good many men from shell-fire,
-advanced in the chivalrous hope of relieving the
-pressure. The battalion went forward as if on parade,
-though the casualties were numerous. They eventually
-gained the shelter of some trenches near the
-remains of the 14th Brigade, but their gallant effort,
-instead of averting the threatened destruction, ended
-by partially involving them in the same fate. They
-could do nothing against the concentrated and
-well-directed artillery fire of the enemy. When eventually
-they fell back, part of two companies were cut
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P103"></a>103}</span>
-off in their trench and taken. The rest of the
-regiment, together with the 1st Middlesex and two
-companies of the Royal Scots Fusiliers from the
-9th Brigade, formed a covering line on a ridge in the
-rear and held back the German advance for a long
-time. This line did not retire until 5 P.M., when
-it was nearly enveloped. General Drummond,
-commanding the 19th Brigade, had met with an injury
-in the course of the action, and it was commanded
-during the latter part by Colonel Ward, of the
-Middlesex.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Major Yate's V.C.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The retirement or destruction of the 14th Brigade
-exposed the flank of the 13th (Cuthbert's) to a
-murderous enfilade fire, which fell chiefly upon the
-2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry. This brigade had
-defended itself successfully for six hours against
-various frontal attacks, but now the flank-fire raked
-it from end to end and practically destroyed the
-Yorkshiremen, who were the most exposed to it.
-On them and on the 2nd Scottish Borderers fell the
-great bulk of the losses, for the West Rents and the
-survivors of the West Ridings were in reserve. Of
-the two companies of the Yorkshire Light Infantry
-who held the foremost trenches, that on the right
-had only fifteen men left, with whom Major Yate
-attempted a final charge, finding his Victoria Cross
-in the effort, while the next company, under Major
-Trevor, had only forty-one survivors, the whole
-losses of the battalion being 600 men, with 20
-officers. Both the Yorkshire and the Scottish Border
-battalions lost their colonels in the action. Their
-losses were shared by the two companies of the
-1st East Surreys under Major Tew, who had been
-placed between the 14th and 13th Brigades, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P104"></a>104}</span>
-who fought very steadily in shallow trenches, holding
-on to the last possible moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whilst the battle was going badly on the right,
-the Third Division in the centre and the Fourth
-Division on the left had held their own against a
-succession of attacks. The 8th and 9th Brigades
-drove off the German infantry with their crushing
-rifle-fire, and endured as best they might the shelling,
-which was formidable and yet very much less severe
-than that to which the Fifth Division had been
-exposed. In the case of the 7th Brigade (McCracken's)
-the village of Caudry, which it defended, formed a
-salient, since the Fourth Division on the left was
-thrown back. The attack upon this brigade from
-daylight onwards was very severe, but the assailants
-could neither drive in the line nor capture the village
-of Caudry. They attacked on both flanks at short
-rifle range, inflicting and also enduring heavy losses.
-In this part of the field the British guns held their
-own easily against the German, the proportion of
-numbers being more equal than on the right of the
-line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whilst the right flank was crumbling before the
-terrific concentration of German guns, and while the
-centre was stoutly holding its own, farther to the
-west, in the Haucourt-Ligny direction, the Second
-German Army Corps was beating hard against Snow's
-Fourth Division, which was thrown back to protect
-the left flank of the Army, and to cover the
-Cambrai-Esnes road. Hunter-Weston's 11th Brigade was
-on the right, south of Fontaine, with Wilson's 12th
-upon its left, and Haldane's 10th in reserve at
-Haucourt. As the German attack came from the
-left, or western flank, the 12th Brigade received the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P105"></a>105}</span>
-first impact. The artillery of the division had not
-yet come up, and the 1st Royal Lancasters, stretched
-in a turnip patch, endured for some time a severe
-fire which cost them many casualties, including their
-Colonel Dykes, and to which little reply could be
-made. There were no cavalry scouts in front of
-the infantry, so that working parties and advanced
-posts were cut up by sudden machine-gun fire.
-Some of the covering parties both of the Lancasters
-and of the 2nd Lancashire Fusiliers were never seen
-again. At about seven the British guns came up,
-the 14th Brigade R.F.A. on the left, the 29th in
-the centre, and the 32nd on the right, with the
-howitzers of the 37th behind the right centre on the
-high ground near Selvigny. From this time onward
-they supported the infantry in the most self-sacrificing
-way. The German infantry advance began shortly
-afterwards, and was carried out by wave after wave
-of men. A company of the 2nd Essex Regiment,
-under Captain Vandeleur, upon the British left,
-having good cover and a clear field of fire, inflicted
-very heavy losses on the Germans, though they were
-finally overwhelmed, their leader having been killed.
-The 2nd Lancashire Fusiliers in the front line were
-also heavily attacked, and held their own for several
-hours. About ten o'clock the pressure was so great
-that the defence was driven in, and two battalions
-lost their machine-guns, but a new line was formed
-in the Haucourt-Esnes road, the retirement being
-skilfully covered by Colonel Anley, of the Essex, and
-Colonel Griffin, of the Lancashire Fusiliers. There
-the 2nd Inniskilling Fusiliers, the 1st Royal Lancasters,
-the 2nd Lancashire Fusiliers, and the 2nd Essex held
-firmly on until the afternoon under very heavy and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P106"></a>106}</span>
-incessant fire, while the 11th Brigade upon their
-right were equally involved in the fight. Two
-battalions of the 10th Brigade (Haldane's), the 1st Irish
-Fusiliers and 2nd Seaforths, had dug themselves in on
-the high ground just north of Selvigny and repulsed
-every attack, but two others, the 2nd Dublins and
-1st Warwicks, had got involved with the 12th Brigade
-and could not be retrieved. The Signal Corps had
-not yet arrived, and the result was that General
-Snow had the greatest difficulty in ensuring his
-connections with his brigadiers, the orders being carried
-by his staff officers. At two o'clock, as there was
-a lull in the German advance, Wilson of the 12th
-Brigade made a spirited counter-attack, recovering
-many of the wounded, but being finally driven back
-to the old position by intense artillery and
-machine-gun fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is worth recording that during this advance
-the Essex men found among the German dead many
-Jaeger with the same Gibraltar badge upon their
-caps which they bore themselves. It was a
-Hanoverian battalion who had been comrades with the
-old 56th in the defence of the fortress one hundred
-and fifty years before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The fight for the quarries.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 11th Brigade (Hunter-Weston), on the right
-of the 12th, had meanwhile played a very vital part
-in the fight. This brigade was defending a position
-called Les Carrières, or the quarry pits, which was
-east of Fontaine and to the north of the village of
-Ligny. It was a desperate business, for the British
-were four times driven out of it and four times came
-back to their bitter work amid a sleet of shells and
-bullets. Parties of the 1st Somersets and of the 1st
-East Lancashires held the quarries with the 1st
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P107"></a>107}</span>
-Hants and 1st Rifle Brigade in immediate support,
-all being eventually drawn into the fight. Major
-Bickman, of the latter regiment, distinguished himself
-greatly in the defence, but was seriously wounded
-and left behind in the final retirement. Besides
-incessant gun-fire, the defenders were under infantry
-fire of a very murderous description from both flanks.
-In spite of this, the place was held for six hours until
-the retirement of the line in the afternoon caused it
-to be untenable, as the enemy was able to get behind
-it. The brigade then fell back upon Ligny under
-heavy shrapnel-fire, moving steadily and in good
-order. The Germans at once attacked the village
-from the east and north-east. Could they have taken
-it, they would have been upon the flank of the British
-line of retirement. They were twice driven back,
-however, by the fire of the infantry, losing very
-heavily upon both occasions. About four o'clock,
-the Army being in full retreat, the brigade received
-orders to abandon Ligny and march upon Malincourt.
-The effect of a heavy shrapnel-fire was minimised
-by this movement being carried out in small columns
-of fours. A loss of 30 officers and 1115 men in a
-single day's fighting showed how severe had been the
-work of Hunter-Weston's brigade. The 12th Brigade
-had also lost about a thousand men. Many of the
-guns had run short of shells. A spectator has
-described how he saw the British gunners under a heavy
-fire, sitting in gloomy groups round the guns which
-they had neither the shells to work, nor the heart to
-abandon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the general fortune of the British left.
-At the extreme edge of it, in the gap between the left
-of the Fourth Division and the town of Cambrai,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P108"></a>108}</span>
-Sordet's French cavalry had been fighting to prevent
-the British wing from being turned. There was
-some misconception upon this point at the time, but
-in justice to our Ally it should be known that General
-Smith-Dorrien himself galloped to this flank in the
-course of the afternoon and was a witness of the
-efforts of the French troopers, who had actually
-marched 40 miles in order to be present at the battle.
-The narrative has now taken the movements of
-the left wing up to the point of its retirement, in
-order to preserve the continuity of events in that
-portion of the field, but the actual abandonment of
-their position by Snow's Fourth Division was due to
-circumstances over which they had no control, and
-which had occurred at a considerable distance. Both
-the centre and the left of the Army could have held
-its own, though it must be admitted that the attack
-to which they were exposed was a very violent one
-gallantly pushed home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All might have gone well had the Germans not
-been able to mass such an overpowering artillery
-attack upon the right of the line. It was shortly after
-mid-day that this part of the position began to weaken,
-and observers from the centre saw stragglers retiring
-over the low hill in the Le Cateau direction. At
-that hour the artillery upon the right of the British
-line was mostly silenced, and large masses of the
-German infantry were observed moving round the
-right flank. The salient of the Suffolks was in the
-possession of the enemy, and from it they could
-enfilade the line. It was no longer possible to bring
-up ammunition or horses to the few remaining guns.
-The greater part of the troops held on none the less
-most doggedly to their positions. A steady downpour
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P109"></a>109}</span>
-of rain was a help rather than a discomfort, as it
-enabled the men to moisten their parched lips. But
-the situation of the Fifth Division was growing
-desperate. It was plain that to remain where they
-were could only mean destruction. And yet to ask
-the exhausted men to retire under such a rain of
-shells would be a dangerous operation. Even the
-best troops may reach their snapping point. Most
-of them had by the afternoon been under constant
-shrapnel-fire for eight hours on end. Some were
-visibly weakening. Anxious officers looked eagerly
-over their shoulders for any sign of reinforcement,
-but an impassable gap separated them from their
-comrades of the First Army Corps, who were listening
-with sinking hearts to the rumble of the distant
-cannonade. There was nothing for it but to chance
-the retirement. About three o'clock commanders
-called to officers and officers to men for a last great
-effort. It was the moment when a leader reaps in
-war the love and confidence which he has sown in
-peace. Smith-Dorrien had sent his meagre reserve,
-which consisted of one battery and two battalions,
-to take up a rearguard position astride the Le
-Cateau-St. Quentin road. Every available detail,
-that could pull a trigger, down to Hildebrand's
-signallers of the Headquarters Staff, who had already
-done wonderful work in their own particular line, were
-thrust into the covering line. One by one the
-dishevelled brigades were drawn off towards the south.
-One section of the heavy guns of the 108th Heavy
-Battery was ordered back to act with two battalions
-of the 19th Brigade in covering the Reumont-Maritz
-road, while the 1st Norfolks were put in echelon
-behind the right flank for the same purpose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P110"></a>110}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The splendid work of the British guns.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Fifth Division, with the 15th Brigade as
-rearguard, considerably disorganised by its long
-hammering, retreated along the straight Roman road
-via Maritz and Estrees. The Third Division fell back
-through Berthy and Clary to Beaurevoir, the 9th
-Brigade forming a rearguard. The cavalry, greatly
-helped by Sordet's French cavalry upon the west,
-flung itself in front of the pursuit, while the guns
-sacrificed themselves to save the retiring infantry.
-Every British battery was an inferno of bursting
-shells, and yet every one fought on while breech-block
-would shut or gunner could stand. Many batteries
-were in the state of the 61st R.F.A., which fired away
-all its own shells and then borrowed from the limbers
-of other neighbouring batteries, the guns of which
-had been put out of action. Had the artillery gone
-the Army would have gone. Had the Army gone
-the Germans had a clear run into Paris. It has been
-said that on the covering batteries of Wing, Milne,
-and Headlam may, on that wet August afternoon,
-have hung the future history of Europe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wing's command included the 23rd, 30th, 40th,
-and 42nd Brigades, with the 48th Heavy Battery;
-Headlam's were the 15th, 27th, 28th, and 8th, with
-the 108th Heavy; Milne's, the 14th, 29th, 32nd, and
-37th, with the 31st Heavy. These numbers deserve to
-be recorded, for every gun of them did great service,
-though many were left in ruins on the field. Some, like
-those of the 37th R.F.A., were plucked from under the
-very noses of the Germans, who were within a hundred
-yards of them when they were withdrawn, a deed of
-valour for which Captain Reynolds of that battery
-received the Cross. One by one those batteries
-which could move were drawn off, the cavalry covering
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P111"></a>111}</span>
-the manoeuvre by their rifle-fire, and sometimes
-man-handling the gun from the field. Serving one
-day as charging cavaliers, another as mounted
-infantry in covering a retreat, again as sappers in
-making or holding a trench, or when occasion called
-for it as gun-teams to pull on the trace of a derelict
-gun, the cavalry have been the general utility men of
-the Army. The days of pure cavalry may have
-passed, but there will never be a time when a brave
-and handy fighting man who is mobile will not be
-invaluable to his comrades.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Difficult retirement of the Fourth Division.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was about four o'clock that the Fourth Division,
-on the left flank, who had been maintaining the
-successful defensive already described, were ordered
-to begin their retirement. The 12th Brigade was
-able to withdraw with no great difficulty along the
-line Walincourt-Villiers-Vendhuile, reaching the
-latter village about nine-thirty. The doings of the
-11th Brigade have been already described. There
-was considerable disintegration but no loss of spirit.
-One of the regiments of the 12th, the 2nd Royal
-Lancasters, together with about three hundred
-Warwicks, from the 10th Brigade, and some detachments
-of other regiments, were by some mischance,
-isolated in the village of Haucourt with no definite
-orders, and held on until ten o'clock at night, when
-the place was nearly surrounded. They fought their
-way out, however, in a most surprising fashion, and
-eventually made good their retreat. One party,
-under Major Poole of the Warwicks, rejoined the
-Army next day. Captain Clutterbuck, with a small
-party of Royal Lancasters, wandered into Haumont
-after it was occupied by the Germans. Summoned
-to surrender the gallant officer refused, and was shot
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P112"></a>112}</span>
-dead, but his men charged with the bayonet and
-fought their way clear to a post which was held by
-Major Parker of the same regiment, to the immediate
-south of the village. This officer, finding that he
-was the last rearguard, withdrew in the face of heavy
-German forces. Being joined by Major Christie of
-the Warwicks with 200 men, they followed the Army,
-and, finally, by a mixture of good luck and good
-leadership, picked their way through the German
-advance guards, and on the third day rejoined the
-colours at Noyon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Haldane's 10th Brigade had got split up during
-the confused fighting of the day, half of it, the 1st
-Warwicks and 2nd Dublins, getting involved with
-the 12th Brigade in the fighting on the Haucourt
-Ridge. The other two battalions, the 2nd Seaforths
-and 1st Royal Irish Fusiliers, kept guard as a reserve
-over the left flank of the division. Towards evening
-General Haldane, finding it hopeless to recover
-control of his lost regiments, collected the rest of his
-brigade, and endeavoured to follow the general line
-of retreat. He lost touch with the remainder of the
-Army, and might well have been cut off, but after a
-most exhausting experience he succeeded in safely
-rejoining the division at Roisel upon the 27th. It
-may be said generally that the reassembling of the
-Fourth Division after the disintegration they had
-experienced was a remarkable example of
-individualism and determination.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is impossible to doubt that the Germans, in
-spite of their preponderating numbers, were staggered
-by the resistance which they had encountered. In
-no other way can one explain the fact that their
-pursuit, which for three days had been incessant,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P113"></a>113}</span>
-should now, at the most critical instant, have eased
-off. The cavalry and guns staved off the final blow,
-and the stricken infantry staggered from the field.
-The strain upon the infantry of the Fifth Division
-may be gathered from the fact that up to this point
-they had lost, roughly, 143 officers, while the Third
-Division had lost 92 and the Fourth 70. For the
-time they were disorganised as bodies, even while
-they preserved their moral as individuals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When extended formations are drawn rapidly in
-under the conditions of a heavy action, it is often
-impossible to convey the orders to men in outlying
-positions. Staying in their trenches and unconscious
-of the departure of their comrades, they are sometimes
-gathered up by the advancing enemy, but more
-frequently fall into the ranks of some other corps,
-and remain for days or weeks away from their own
-battalion, turning up long after they have helped to
-swell some list of casualties. Regiments get
-intermingled and pour along the roads in a confusion
-which might suggest a rout, whilst each single soldier
-is actually doing his best to recover his corps. It is
-disorganisation&mdash;but not demoralisation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The fate of the 1st Gordons.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been remarked above that in the widespread
-formations of modern battles it is difficult to be sure
-of the transmission of orders. An illustration of such
-a danger occurred upon this occasion, which gave
-rise to an aftermath of battle nearly as disastrous as
-the battle itself. This was the episode which
-culminated in the loss of a body of troops, including a
-large portion of the 1st Gordon Highlanders. This
-distinguished corps had been engaged with the rest
-of Beauchamp Doran's 8th Brigade at Mons and
-again upon the following day, after which they
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P114"></a>114}</span>
-retreated with the rest of their division. On the
-evening of the 25th they bivouacked in the village
-of Audencourt, just south of the Cambrai-Le Cateau
-highway, and on the morning of the 26th they found
-themselves defending a line of trenches in front of
-this village. From nine o'clock the Gordons held
-their ground against a persistent German attack.
-About 3.30 an order was given for the battalion
-to retire. This message only reached one company,
-which acted upon it, but the messenger was wounded
-<i>en route</i>, and failed to reach battalion headquarters.
-Consequently the remainder of the battalion did not
-retire with the Army, but continued to hold its
-trenches, greatly helped by the flank (D) Company
-of Royal Scots, until long after nightfall, when the
-enemy in great force had worked round both of its
-flanks. It should be understood that the
-withdrawal of the Royal Scots was under direct order
-emanating from brigade headquarters, but an officer
-of the Gordons, not knowing that such an order had
-been issued, and perceiving that their flank would be
-exposed if D Company left their trench, said a few
-words to them which had such an effect upon their
-fiery souls that they rushed back to stand by
-the Highlanders, their Captain being shot dead as
-he waved his men back into their trench. From
-that time onwards this company of Royal Scots,
-finely led by two young lieutenants, Graves and
-Graham Watson, shared all the dangers and the
-ultimate fate of the Gordons, as did a handful of
-Royal Irish upon the other flank. When it was dusk
-it became clear to Colonel Gordon, who was now in
-command of the mixed detachment, that he and his
-men were separated from the Army and surrounded
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P115"></a>115}</span>
-on every side by the advancing Germans. At that
-time the men, after supreme exertion for several days,
-had been in action for twelve hours on end. He
-therefore decided, as against annihilation in the
-morning, that retreat was the only course open.
-The wounded were left in the trenches. The
-transport, machine-guns, and horses had already been
-destroyed by the incessant shelling. The detachment
-made a move towards the south, the operation being
-a most difficult one in pitch darkness with the enemy
-within a few hundred yards. The success attained
-in this initial stage was largely due to the way in which
-the Master of Saltoun conveyed the orders which drew
-in the flanks to the centre. Having made good the
-Audencourt-Caudry road at 1 A.M. on August 27,
-the troops managed to traverse some miles of road,
-with blazing villages all about them, and had a fair
-chance of reaching safety when unfortunately at
-Montigny they took a wrong turn, which brought
-them into Bertry which was held by the Germans.
-Some confusion was caused by the latter challenging
-in French. A confused fight followed in the darkness,
-in the course of which many individual acts of great
-bravery and devotion were performed. The enemy
-were now all round the Highlanders, and though the
-struggle continued for fifty minutes, and there was no
-official surrender, the little body of men was embedded
-in Von Kluck's army, and no escape could be found.
-The utmost discipline and gallantry were shown by
-all ranks. It must be some consolation to the
-survivors to know that it is freely admitted that their
-resistance in the trenches for so long a period
-undoubtedly facilitated the safe withdrawal of the
-Third, and to some extent of the Fourth Divisions.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P116"></a>116}</span>
-Major Leslie Butler, Brigade-Major of the 8th Brigade,
-who had made a gallant effort to ride to the Gordons
-and warn them of their danger, was entangled among
-the Germans, and only succeeded six days later in
-regaining the British lines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Results of the battle.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So ended the perilous, costly, and almost disastrous
-action of Le Cateau. The loss to the British Army,
-so far as it can be extracted from complex figures
-and separated from the other losses of the retreat,
-amounted to between seven and eight thousand killed,
-wounded, and missing, while at the time of the
-action, or in the immediate retreat, a considerable
-quantity of transport and thirty-six field-pieces,
-mostly in splinters, were abandoned to the enemy.
-It was an action which could hardly have been avoided,
-and from which the troops were extricated on better
-terms than might have been expected. It will always
-remain an interesting academic question what would
-have occurred had it been possible for the First Corps
-to line up with the rest of the Army. The enemy's
-preponderance of artillery would probably have
-prevented a British victory, and the strategic position
-would in any case have made it a barren one, but
-at least the Germans would have been hard hit and
-the subsequent retreat more leisurely. As it stood, it
-was an engagement upon which the weaker side can
-look back without shame or dishonour. One result
-of it was to give both the Army and the country
-increased confidence in themselves and their leaders.
-Sir John French has testified to the splendid qualities
-shown by the troops, while his whole-hearted tribute
-to Smith-Dorrien, in which he said, "The saving of
-the left wing of the Army could never have been
-accomplished unless a commander of rare and unusual
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P117"></a>117}</span>
-coolness, intrepidity, and determination had been
-present to personally conduct the operation," will
-surely be endorsed by history.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is difficult to exaggerate the strain which had
-been thrown upon this commander. On him had
-fallen the immediate direction of the action at Mons;
-on him also had been the incessant responsibility of
-the retreat. He had, as has been shown in the
-narrative, been hard at work all night upon the eve
-of the battle; he superintended that trying engagement,
-he extricated his forces, and finally motored
-to St. Quentin in the evening, went on to Noyon,
-reached it after midnight, and was back with his
-Army in the morning, encouraging every one by the
-magnetism of his presence. It was a very remarkable
-feat of endurance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Exhaustion of the Army
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Exhausted as the troops were, there could be no
-halt or rest until they had extricated themselves from
-the immediate danger. At the last point of human
-endurance they still staggered on through the evening
-and the night time, amid roaring thunder and flashing
-lightning, down the St. Quentin road. Many fell
-from fatigue, and having fallen, continued to sleep
-in ditches by the roadside, oblivious of the racket
-around them. A number never woke until they
-found themselves in the hands of the Uhlan patrols.
-Others slumbered until their corps had disappeared,
-and then, regaining their senses, joined with other
-straggling units so as to form bands, which wandered
-over the country, and eventually reached the railway
-line about Amiens with wondrous Bill Adams tales
-of personal adventures which in time reached England,
-and gave the impression of complete disaster. But
-the main body were, as a matter of fact, holding well
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P118"></a>118}</span>
-together, though the units of infantry had become
-considerably mixed and so reduced that at least four
-brigades, after less than a week of war, had lost 50
-per cent of their personnel. Many of the men threw
-away the heavier contents of their packs, and others
-abandoned the packs themselves, so that the pursuing
-Germans had every evidence of a rout before their
-eyes. It was deplorable that equipment should be
-discarded, but often it was the only possible thing
-to do, for either the man had to be sacrificed or the
-pack. Advantage was taken of a forked road to
-station an officer there who called out, "Third Division
-right, Fifth Division left," which greatly helped
-the reorganisation. The troops snatched a few hours
-of rest at St. Quentin, and then in the breaking dawn
-pushed upon their weary road once more, country
-carts being in many cases commandeered to carry
-the lame and often bootless infantry. The paved
-<i>chaussées</i>, with their uneven stones, knocked the feet
-to pieces, and caused much distress to the tired men,
-which was increased by the extreme heat of the
-weather.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the case of some of the men the collapse was so
-complete that it was almost impossible to get them
-on. Major Tom Bridges, of the 4th Royal Irish
-Dragoons, being sent to round up and hurry forward
-250 stragglers at St. Quentin, found them nearly
-comatose with fatigue. With quick wit he bought a
-toy drum, and, accompanied by a man with a penny
-whistle, he fell them in and marched them, laughing
-in all their misery, down the high road towards Ham.
-When he stopped he found that his strange following
-stopped also, so he was compelled to march and play
-the whole way to Roupy. Thus by one man's compelling
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P119"></a>119}</span>
-personality 250 men were saved for the Army.
-But such complete collapse was rare. The men kept
-their <i>moral</i>. "Beneath the dirt and grime and
-weariness I saw clear eyes and grim jaws even when
-the men could hardly walk." So spoke Coleman,
-the gallant American volunteer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Up to now nothing had been seen of the French
-infantry, and the exposed British force had been
-hustled and harried by Von Kluck's great army
-without receiving any substantial support. This was
-through no want of loyalty, but our gallant Allies
-were themselves hard pressed. Sir John French
-had sent urgent representations, especially to General
-Sordet, the leader of the cavalry operating upon the
-western side, and he had, as already shown, done
-what he could to screen Smith-Dorrien's flank. Now
-at last the retiring Army was coming in touch with
-those supports which were so badly needed. But
-before they were reached, on the morning of the 27th,
-the Germans had again driven in the rearguard of
-the First Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The destruction of the 2nd Munsters.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some delay in starting had been caused that
-morning by the fact that only one road was available
-for the whole of the transport, which had to be sent
-on in advance. Hence the rearguard was exposed
-to increased pressure. This rearguard consisted of
-the 1st Brigade. The 2nd Munsters were the right
-battalion. Then came the 1st Coldstream, the 1st
-Scots Guards, and the 1st Black Watch in reserve.
-The front of the Munsters, as it faced round to hold
-back the too pushful Germans, was from the north
-of Fesmy to Chapeau Rouge, but Major Charrier,
-who was in command, finding no French at Bergues,
-as he had been led to expect, sent B and D
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P120"></a>120}</span>
-Companies of Munsters with one troop of the 15th
-Hussars to hold the cross-roads near that place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At about 12.30 a message reached Major Charrier
-to the effect that when ordered to retire he should
-fall back on a certain line and act as flank-guard to
-the brigade. He was not to withdraw his two
-companies from Chapeau Rouge until ordered. The
-Germans were already in force right on the top of
-the Irishmen, the country being a broken one with
-high hedges which restricted the field of fire. A
-section of guns of the 118th R.F.A. were served from
-the road about fifty yards behind the line of the
-infantry. A desperate struggle ensued, in the course
-of which the Munsters, suffering heavily, overlapped
-on each flank, and utterly outnumbered, held on
-bravely in the hope of help from the rest of the
-brigade. They did not know that a message had
-already been dispatched to them to the effect that
-they should come on, and that the other regiments
-had already done so. Still waiting for the orders
-which never came, they fell back slowly through
-Fesmy before the attack, until held up at a small
-village called Etreux, where the Germans cut off
-their retreat. Meanwhile the Brigadier, hearing that
-the Munsters were in trouble, gave orders that the
-Coldstream should reinforce them. It was too late,
-however. At Oisy Bridge the Guards picked up sixty
-men, survivors of C Company. It was here at Oisy
-Bridge that the missing order was delivered at 3 P.M.,
-the cycle orderly having been held up on his way.
-As there was no longer any sound of firing, the
-Coldstream and remnant of Munsters retired, being joined
-some miles back by an officer and some seventy men.
-Together with the transport guard this brought the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P121"></a>121}</span>
-total survivors of that fine regiment to 5 officers and
-206 men. All the rest had fought to the end and
-were killed, wounded, or captured, after a most
-desperate resistance, in which they were shot down
-at close quarters, making repeated efforts to pierce
-the strong German force at Etreux. To their fine
-work and that of the two lost guns and of a party of
-the 15th Hussars, under Lieutenant Nicholson, who
-covered the retreat it may have been due that the
-pursuit of the First Corps by the Germans from this
-moment sensibly relaxed. Nine gallant Irish officers
-were buried that night in a common grave. Major
-Charrier was twice wounded, but continued to lead
-his men until a third bullet struck him dead, and
-deprived the Army of a soldier whose career promised
-to be a brilliant one. Among others who fell was
-Lieutenant Chute, whose masterly handling of a
-machine-gun stemmed again and again the tide of
-the German attack. One of the most vivid recollections
-of the survivors was of this officer lying on his
-face in six inches of water&mdash;for the action was partly
-fought in tropical rain&mdash;and declaring that he was
-having "the time of his life." The moral both of
-this disaster and that of the Gordons must be the
-importance of sending a message in duplicate, or even
-in triplicate, where the withdrawal of a regiment is
-concerned. This, no doubt, is a counsel of perfection
-under practical conditions, but the ideal still remains.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-A cavalry fight.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the retreat of the First Corps its rear and
-right flank had been covered by the 5th Cavalry
-Brigade (Chetwode). On August 28 the corps was
-continuing its march towards La Fère and the cavalry
-found itself near Cerizy. At this point the pursuing
-German horsemen came into touch with it. At about
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P122"></a>122}</span>
-five in the afternoon three squadrons of the enemy
-advanced upon one squadron of the Scots Greys, which
-had the support of J Battery. Being fired at, the
-Germans dismounted and attempted to advance upon
-foot, but the fire was so heavy that they could make
-no progress and their led horses stampeded. They
-retired, still on foot, followed up by a squadron of the
-12th Lancers on their flank. The remainder of the
-12th Lancers, supported by the Greys, rode into the
-dismounted dragoons with sword and lance, killing or
-wounding nearly all of them. A section of guns had
-fired over the heads of the British cavalry during
-the advance into a supporting body of German
-cavalry, who retired, leaving many dead behind them.
-The whole hostile force retreated northwards, while
-the British cavalry continued to conform to the
-movements of the First Corps. In this spirited little
-action the German regiment engaged was, by the
-irony of fate, the 1st Guard Dragoons, Queen Victoria's
-Own. The British lost 43 killed and wounded.
-Among the dead were Major Swetenham and Captain
-Michell of the 12th Lancers. Colonel Wormald of
-the same regiment was wounded. The excited
-troopers rode back triumphantly between the guns
-of J Battery, the cavalrymen exchanging cheers with
-the horse-gunners as they passed, and brandishing
-their blood-stained weapons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the evening before this brisk skirmish, the
-flank-guards of the British saw a considerable body
-of troops in dark clothing upon their left, and shortly
-afterwards perceived the shell-bursts of a rapid and
-effective fire over the pursuing German batteries. It
-was the first contact with the advancing French.
-These men consisted of the Sixty-first and Sixty-second
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P123"></a>123}</span>
-French Reserve Divisions, and were the van
-of a considerable army under General D'Amade.
-From that moment the British forces were at last
-enabled, after a week of constant marching, covering
-sometimes a good thirty miles a day, and four days of
-continual fighting against extreme odds, to feel that
-they had reached a zone of comparative quiet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The news in Great Britain.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The German cavalry still followed the Army upon
-its southerly march, but there was no longer any fear
-of a disaster, for the main body of the Army was
-unbroken, and the soldiers were rather exasperated
-than depressed by their experience. On the Friday
-and Saturday, however, August 28 and 29, considerable
-crowds of stragglers and fugitives, weary and
-often weaponless, appeared upon the lines of
-communication, causing the utmost consternation by
-their stories and their appearance. Few who endured
-the mental anxiety caused in Great Britain by the
-messages of Sunday, August 30, are likely to forget
-it. The reports gave an enormous stimulus to
-recruiting, and it is worthy of record and remembrance
-that, in the dark week which followed before the true
-situation was clearly discerned, every successive day
-brought as many recruits to the standards as are
-usually gained in a year. Such was the rush of men
-that the authorities, with their many preoccupations,
-found it very difficult to deal with them. A
-considerable amount of hardship and discomfort was the
-result, which was endured with good humour until it
-could be remedied. It is to be noted in this connection
-that it was want of arms which held back the
-new armies. He who compares the empty arsenals
-of Britain with the huge extensions of Krupp's,
-undertaken during the years before the war, will
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P124"></a>124}</span>
-find the final proof as to which Power deliberately
-planned it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To return to the fortunes of the men retreating
-from Le Cateau, the colonels and brigadiers had
-managed to make order out of what was approaching
-to chaos on the day that the troops left St. Quentin.
-The feet of many were so cut and bleeding that they
-could no longer limp along, so some were packed into
-a few trains available and others were hoisted on to
-limbers, guns, wagons, or anything with wheels, some
-carts being lightened of ammunition or stores to make
-room for helpless men. In many cases the whole
-kits of the officers were deliberately sacrificed. Many
-men were delirious from exhaustion and incapable of
-understanding an order. By the evening of the 27th
-the main body of the troops were already fifteen miles
-south of the Somme river and canal, on the line
-Nesle-Ham-Flavy. All day there was distant shelling
-from the pursuers, who sent their artillery freely
-forward with their cavalry.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P125"></a>125}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-125"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-125.jpg" alt="Line of Retreat from Mons" />
-<br />
-Line of Retreat from Mons
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-On the 28th the Army continued its retreat to the
-line of the Oise near Noyon. Already the troops were
-re-forming, and had largely recovered their spirits,
-being much reassured by the declarations of the officers
-that the retreat was strategic to get them in line with
-the French, and that they would soon turn their faces
-northwards once more. As an instance of reorganisation
-it was observed that the survivors of a brigade of
-artillery which had left its horses and guns at Le
-Cateau still marched together as a single disciplined
-unit among the infantry. All day the enemy's horse
-artillery, cavalry, and motor-infantry hung on the
-skirts of the British, but were unable to make much
-impression. The work of the Staff was excellent, for
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P126"></a>126}</span>
-it is on record that many of them had not averaged
-two hours' sleep in the twenty-four for over a week,
-and still they remained the clear and efficient brain of
-the Army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the next day, the 29th, the remainder of the
-Army got across the Oise, but the enemy's advance
-was so close that the British cavalry was continually
-engaged. Gough's 3rd Cavalry Brigade made several
-charges in the neighbourhood of Plessis, losing a
-number of men but stalling off the pursuit and
-dispersing the famous Uhlans of the Guard. On this day
-General Pulteney and his staff arrived to take
-command of the Third Army Corps, which still consisted
-only of the Fourth Division (Snow) with the
-semi-independent 19th Infantry Brigade, now commanded
-by Colonel Ward, of the 1st Middlesex. It was nearly
-three weeks later before the Third Corps was made
-complete.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The views of General Joffre.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There had been, as already mentioned, a French
-advance of four corps in the St. Quentin direction,
-which fought a brave covering action, and so helped
-to relieve the pressure upon the British. It cannot
-be denied that there was a feeling among the latter
-that they had been unduly exposed, being placed in so
-advanced a position and having their flank stripped
-suddenly bare in the presence of the main German
-army. General Joffre must have recognised that this
-feeling existed and that it was not unreasonable, for
-he came to a meeting on this day at the old Napoleonic
-Palace at Compiégne, at which Sir John French, with
-Generals Haig, Smith-Dorrien, and Allenby, was
-present. It was an assemblage of weary, overwrought
-men, and yet of men who had strength enough of mind
-and sufficient sense of justice to realise that whatever
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P127"></a>127}</span>
-weight had been thrown upon them, there was even
-more upon the great French engineer whose spirit
-hovered over the whole line from Verdun to Amiens.
-Each man left the room more confident of the
-immediate future. Shortly afterwards Joffre issued his
-kindly recognition of the work done by his Allies,
-admitting in the most handsome fashion that the flank
-of the long French line of armies had been saved by
-the hard fighting and self-sacrifice of the British Army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On August 30, the whole Army having crossed the
-Oise, the bridges over that river were destroyed, an
-operation which was performed under a heavy shell-fire,
-and cost the lives of several sapper officers and
-men. No words can exaggerate what the Army owed
-to Wilson's sappers of the 56th and 57th Field
-Companies and 3rd Signal Company, as also to Tulloch's,
-of the 17th and 59th Companies and 5th Signal
-Company, whose work was incessant, fearless, and
-splendid.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Army continued to fall back on the line of the
-Aisne, the general direction being almost east and
-west through Crépy-en-Valois. The aeroplanes, which
-had conducted a fine service during the whole of the
-operations, reported that the enemy was still coming
-rapidly on, and streaming southwards in the
-Compiégne direction. That they were in touch was
-shown in dramatic fashion upon the early morning of
-September 1. The epic in question deserves to be
-told somewhat fully, as being one of those incidents
-which are mere details in the history of a campaign,
-and yet may live as permanent inspirations in the life
-of an army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Battery L.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 1st Cavalry Brigade, greatly exhausted after
-screening the retreat so long, was encamped near Nery,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P128"></a>128}</span>
-to the south of Compiégne, the bivouac being a
-somewhat extended one. Two units were close to each
-other and to the brigade headquarters of General
-Briggs. These were the hard-worked 2nd Dragoon
-Guards (the Bays) and L Battery of Horse Artillery.
-<i>Réveillé</i> was at four o'clock, and shortly after that hour
-both troopers and gunners were busy in leading their
-horses to water. It was a misty morning, and, peering
-through the haze, an officer perceived that from the
-top of a low hill about seven hundred yards away three
-mounted men were looking down upon them. They
-were the observation officers of three four-gun German
-batteries. Before the British could realise the
-situation the guns dashed up and came into action with
-shrapnel at point-blank range. The whole twelve
-poured their fire into the disordered bivouac before
-them. The slaughter and confusion were horrible.
-Numbers of the horses and men were killed or wounded,
-and three of the guns were dismounted. It was
-a most complete surprise, and promised to be an
-absolute disaster. A body of German cavalry had
-escorted the guns, and their rifles added to the volume
-of fire.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P129"></a>129}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-129"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-129.jpg" alt="&quot;L&quot; Battery Action, Sept. 1st, 1914" />
-<br />
-&quot;L&quot; Battery Action, Sept. 1st, 1914
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-It is at such moments that the grand power of
-disciplined valour comes to bring order out of chaos.
-Everything combined to make defence difficult&mdash;the
-chilling hour of the morning, the suddenness of the
-attack, its appalling severity, and the immediate loss
-of guns and men. A sunken road ran behind the
-British position, and from the edge of this the
-dismounted cavalrymen brought their rifles and their
-machine-gun into action. They suffered heavily
-from the pelting gusts of shrapnel. Young Captain
-de Crespigny, the gallant cadet of a gallant family,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P130"></a>130}</span>
-and many other good men were beaten down by it.
-The sole hope lay in the guns. Three were utterly
-disabled. There was a rush of officers and men to
-bring the other three into action. Sclater-Booth,
-the major of the battery, and one lieutenant were
-already down. Captain Bradbury took command
-and cheered on the men. Two of the guns were at
-once put out of action, so all united to work the one
-that remained. What followed was Homeric.
-Lieutenant Giffard in rushing forward was hit in four
-places. Bradbury's leg was shattered, but he lay
-beside the trail encouraging the others and giving his
-directions. Lieutenant Mundy, standing wide as
-observation officer, was mortally wounded. The
-limber could not be got alongside and the shell had
-to be man-handled. In bringing it up Lieutenant
-Campbell was shot. Immediately afterwards another
-shell burst over the gun, killed the heroic Bradbury,
-and wounded Sergeant Dorell, Driver Osborne, and
-Gunners Nelson and Derbyshire, the only remaining
-men. But the fight went on. The bleeding men
-served the gun so long as they could move, Osborne
-and Derbyshire crawling over with the shells while
-Nelson loaded and Dorell laid. Osborne and Derbyshire
-fainted from loss of blood and lay between limber
-and gun. But the fight went on. Dorell and Nelson,
-wounded and exhausted, crouched behind the shield
-of the thirteen-pounder and kept up an incessant fire.
-Now it was that the amazing fact became visible that
-all this devotion had not been in vain. The cluster
-of Bays on the edge of the sunken road burst out into
-a cheer, which was taken up by the staff, who, with
-General Briggs himself, had come into the firing-line.
-Several of the German pieces had gone out of action.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P131"></a>131}</span>
-The dying gun had wrought good work, as had the
-Maxim of the Bays in the hands of Lieutenant Lamb.
-Some at least of its opponents had been silenced before
-the two brave gunners could do no more, for their
-strength had gone with their blood. Not only had the
-situation been saved, but victory had been assured.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About eight in the morning news of the perilous
-situation had reached the 19th Brigade. The 1st
-Middlesex, under Colonel Rowley, was hurried forward,
-followed by the 1st Scottish Rifles. Marching rapidly
-upon the firing, after the good old maxim, the Middlesex
-found themselves in a position to command the
-German batteries. After two minutes of rapid fire
-it was seen that the enemy had left their guns. Eight
-guns were captured, two of them still loaded. About
-a dozen German gunners lay dead or wounded round
-them. Twenty-five of the escort were captured, as
-was an ambulance with some further prisoners a mile
-in the rear. The cavalry, notably the 11th Hussars,
-endeavoured to follow up the success, but soon found
-themselves in the presence of superior forces. New
-wheels and new wheelers were found for the injured
-guns, and Battery L came intact out of action&mdash;intact
-save for the brave acolytes who should serve her no
-more. Bradbury, Nelson, and Dorell had the Victoria
-Cross, and never was it better earned. The battery
-itself was recalled to England to refit and the guns
-were changed for new ones. It is safe to say that for
-many a long year these shrapnel-dinted thirteen-pounders
-will serve as a monument of one of those
-deeds which, by their self-sacrifice and nobility, do
-something to mitigate the squalors and horrors of
-war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The success was gained at the cost of many valuable
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P132"></a>132}</span>
-lives. Not only had the personnel of the battery
-been destroyed, but the Bays lost heavily, and there
-were some casualties among the rest of the brigade
-who had come up in support. The 5th Dragoon
-Guards had 50 or 60 casualties, and lost its admirable
-commander, Colonel Ansell, who was shot down in a
-flanking movement which he had initiated. Major
-Cawley, of the staff, also fell. The total British loss
-was not far short of 500 killed and wounded, but the
-Germans lost heavily also, and were compelled to
-abandon their guns.[<a id="chap04fn1text"></a><a href="#chap04fn1">1</a>]
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap04fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap04fn1text">1</a>] The German cavalry were the Fourth Cavalry Division, including the
-2nd Cuirassiers, 9th Uhlans, 17th and 18th Dragoons. They published
-in their losses for the "Combat of Néry" 643 casualties. This is not
-the complete loss, as the artillery does not seem to have been included.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The action of Villars-Cotteret.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The German advance guards were particularly
-active upon this day, September 1, the anniversary of
-Sedan. Although the Soissons Bridge had been
-destroyed they had possession of another at Vic, and
-over this they poured in pursuit of the First Corps,
-overtaking about 8 A.M. near Villars-Cotteret the
-rearguard, consisting of the Irish Guards and the 2nd
-Coldstream. The whole of the 4th Guards Brigade
-was drawn into the fight, which resolved itself into a
-huge rifle duel amid thick woods, Scott-Kerr, their
-Brigadier, riding up and down the firing line. The
-Guards retired slowly upon the 6th Infantry Brigade
-(Davies), which was aided by Lushington's 41st
-Brigade of Artillery, just south of Pisseleux. The
-Germans had brought up many guns, but could make
-no further progress, and the British position was held
-until 6 P.M., when the rearguard closed up with the
-rest of the Army. Lushington's guns had fought
-with no infantry in front of them, and it was a matter
-of great difficulty in the end to get them off, but it was
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P133"></a>133}</span>
-accomplished by some very brilliant work under an
-infernal fire. After this sharp action, in which Colonel
-Morris of the Irish Guards lost his life, the retreat of
-the First Army Corps was not seriously interfered
-with. The losses at that date in this corps amounted
-to 81 officers and 2180 of all ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So much attention is naturally drawn to the
-Second Army Corps, which both at Mons and at Le
-Cateau had endured most of the actual fighting, that
-there is some danger of the remarkable retreat effected
-by the First Corps having less than its fair share of
-appreciation. The actual fighting was the least of the
-difficulties. The danger of one or both flanks being
-exposed, the great mobility of the enemy, the indifferent
-and limited roads, the want of rest, the difficulty
-of getting food cooked, the consequent absolute
-exhaustion of the men, and the mental depression
-combined to make it an operation of a most trying
-character, throwing an enormous strain upon the
-judgment and energy of General Haig, who so successfully
-brought his men intact and fit for service into
-a zone of safety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Reunion of the Army.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the night of September 1, the First and Second
-Army Corps were in touch once more at Betz, and
-were on the move again by 2 A.M. upon the 2nd. On
-this morning the German advance was curiously
-interlocked with the British rear, and four German
-guns were picked up by the cavalry near Ermenonville.
-They are supposed to have been the remaining
-guns of the force which attacked Battery L at Nery.
-The movements of the troops during the day were
-much impeded by the French refugees, who thronged
-every road in their flight before the German terror.
-In spite of these obstructions, the rearward services
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P134"></a>134}</span>
-of the Army&mdash;supply columns, ammunition columns,
-and medical transport&mdash;were well conducted, and the
-admiration of all independent observers. The work
-of all these departments had been greatly complicated
-by the fact that, as the Channel ports were now
-practically undefended and German troops, making
-towards the coast, had cut the main Calais-Boulogne
-line at Amiens, the base had been moved farther south
-from Havre to St. Nazaire, which meant shifting
-seventy thousand tons of stores and changing all
-arrangements. In spite of this the supplies were
-admirable. It may safely be said that if there is one
-officer more than another for whom the whole British
-Army felt a glow of gratitude, it was for Sir William
-Robertson, the Chief of the Commissariat, who saw
-that the fighting man was never without his rations.
-Greatly also did they appreciate the work of his
-subordinates, who, wet or fine, through rainfall or
-shell-fall, passed the food forward to the weary men
-at the front.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A difficult movement lay in front of the Army
-which had to cross the Marne, involving a flank march
-in the face of the enemy. A retirement was still part
-of the general French scheme of defence, and the
-British Army had to conform to it, though it was
-exultantly whispered from officer to sergeant and
-from sergeant to private that the turn of the tide was
-nearly due. On this day it was first observed that
-the Germans, instead of pushing forward, were
-swinging across to the east in the direction of
-Chateau-Thierry. This made the task of the British a more
-easy one, and before evening they were south of the
-Marne and had blown up the bridges. The movement
-of the Germans brought them down to the river,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P135"></a>135}</span>
-but at a point some ten miles east of the British
-position. They were reported to be crossing the
-river at La Ferté, and Sir John French continued to
-fall back towards the Seine, moving after sundown, as
-the heat had been for some days very exhausting.
-The troops halted in the neighbourhood of Presles,
-and were cheered by the arrival of some small drafts,
-numbering about 2000, a first instalment towards
-refilling the great gaps in the ranks, which at this date
-could not have been less than from 12,000 to 15,000
-officers and men. Here for a moment this narrative
-may be broken, since it has taken the Army to the
-farthest point of its retreat and reached that moment
-of advance for which every officer and man, from Sir
-John French to the drummer-boys, was eagerly waiting.
-With their left flank resting upon the extreme
-outer forts of Paris, the British troops had finally ended
-a retreat which will surely live in military history as a
-remarkable example of an army retaining its cohesion
-and courage in the presence of an overpowering
-adversary, who could never either cut them off or break in
-their rearguard. The British Army was a small force
-when compared with the giants of the Continent,
-but when tried by this supreme test it is not mere
-national complacency for us to claim that it lived up
-to its own highest traditions. "It was not to forts
-of steel and concrete that the Allies owed their
-strength," said a German historian, writing of this
-phase of the war, "but to the magnificent qualities
-of the British Army." We desire no compliments at
-the expense of our brothers-in-arms, nor would they be
-just, but at least so generous a sentence as this may be
-taken as an advance from that contemptuous view of
-the British Army with which the campaign had begun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P136"></a>136}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Before finally leaving the consideration of this
-historical retreat, where a small army successfully
-shook itself clear from the long and close pursuit of a
-remarkably gallant, mobile, and numerous enemy,
-it may be helpful to give a chronology of the events,
-that the reader may see their relation to each other.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<table style="text-align: center; width: 80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-HAIG'S FIRST CORPS.
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-SMITH-DORRIEN'S SECOND CORPS.
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>August</i> 22.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Get into position to the<br />
-east of Mons, covering the<br />
-line Mons-Bray.<br />
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Get into position to the<br />
-east of Mons, covering the<br />
-line Mons-Condé.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>August</i> 23.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Artillery engagement, but<br />
-no severe attack. Ordered<br />
-to retreat in conformity with<br />
-Second Corps.<br />
- </td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Strongly attacked by Von<br />
-Kluck's army. Ordered to<br />
-abandon position and fall<br />
-back.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>August</i> 24.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Retreat with no serious<br />
-molestation upon Bavai.<br />
-Here the two Corps diverged<br />
-and did not meet again till<br />
-they reached Betz upon<br />
-September 1.<br />
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Retreat followed up by the<br />
-Germans. Severe rearguard<br />
-actions at Dour, Wasmes,<br />
-Frameries. Corps shook<br />
-itself clear and fell back on<br />
-Bavai.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>August</i> 25.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Marching all day. Overtaken<br />
-in evening at Landrecies<br />
-and Maroilles by the German<br />
-pursuit. Sharp fighting.<br />
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Marching all day. Reinforced<br />
-by Fourth Division.<br />
-Continual rearguard action<br />
-becoming more serious towards<br />
-evening, when Cambrai-Le Cateau<br />
-line was reached.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>August</i> 26.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Rearguard actions in morning.<br />
-Marching south all day,<br />
-halting at the Venerolles<br />
-line.<br />
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Battle of Le Cateau. German<br />
-pursuit stalled off at<br />
-heavy cost of men and guns.<br />
-Retreat on St. Quentin.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P137"></a>137}</span>
-</p>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>August</i> 27.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Rearguard action in which<br />
-Munsters lost heavily.<br />
-Marching south all day.<br />
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Marching south. Reach<br />
-the line Nesle-Ham-Flavy.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>August</i> 28.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Cavalry actions to stop<br />
-German pursuit. Marching<br />
-south on La Fere.<br />
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Marching south, making<br />
-for the line of the Oise near<br />
-Noyon. Light rearguard<br />
-skirmishes.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>August</i> 29, 30, and 31.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Marching on the line of the<br />
-Aisne, almost east and west.<br />
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Crossed Oise. Cavalry<br />
-continually engaged. General<br />
-direction through<br />
-Crépy-en-Valois.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>September</i> 1.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Sharp action at Nery with<br />
-German vanguard. Later in<br />
-the day considerable infantry<br />
-action at Villars-Cotteret.<br />
-Unite at Betz.<br />
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Retreat upon Paris continued.<br />
-Late this night the<br />
-two Corps unite once more at<br />
-Betz.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<table style="text-align: center" width="80%">
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: center" valign="top" colspan="2">
-<br />
-<i>September</i> 2.
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Crossed the Marne and began<br />
-to fall back on the Seine.<br />
-Halted near Presles.<br />
-</td>
-<td style="text-align: left; width: 50%" valign="top" >
-Crossed the Marne and began<br />
-to fall back on the Seine.<br />
-</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P138"></a>138}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V
-<br /><br />
-THE BATTLE OF THE MARNE
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intro">
-The general situation&mdash;"Die grosse Zeit"&mdash;The turn of the tide&mdash;The
-Battle of the Ourcq&mdash;The British advance&mdash;Cavalry fighting&mdash;The
-1st Lincolns and the guns&mdash;6th Brigade's action at
-Hautvesnes&mdash;9th Brigade's capture of Germans at Vinly&mdash;The
-problem of the Aisne&mdash;Why the Marne is one of the
-great battles of all time.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The general situation.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There are several problems connected with the
-strategical opening of the great war which will furnish
-food for debate among military critics for many years
-to come. One of these, already alluded to, is the
-French offensive taken in Alsace and Lorraine. It
-ended in check in both cases, and yet its ultimate
-effects in confusing the German plans and deflecting
-German armies which might have been better used
-elsewhere may be held to justify the French in their
-strategy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another remarkable and questionable move now
-obtrudes itself, this time upon the part of the Germans.
-Very shortly after the outbreak of war, the Russians
-had pushed their covering armies over the frontier
-of East Prussia, and had defeated a German force
-at Gumbinnen, with a loss of prisoners and guns. A
-few days later the left wing of the widespread, and
-as yet only partially mobilised, Russian army struck
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P139"></a>139}</span>
-heavily at the Austrians in the south near Lemberg,
-where after a week of fighting they gained a great
-victory, with prisoners, which amounted to over
-70,000 men and a large booty of guns and supplies.
-Before this blow had befallen their cause, and
-influenced only by the fact that the Russian right wing
-was encroaching upon the sacred soil of the Fatherland,
-a considerable force was detached from the invading
-armies in France and dispatched to the Eastern front.
-These men were largely drawn from the Third (Saxon)
-Army of Von Haussen. Such a withdrawal at such
-a time could only mean that the German general
-staff considered that the situation in France was
-assured, and that they had still sufficient means to
-carry on a victorious invasion. Events were to show
-that they were utterly mistaken in their calculation.
-It is true that, aided by these reinforcements, Von
-Hindenburg succeeded on August 31 in inflicting a
-severe defeat upon the Russians at the battle of
-Tannenberg, but subsequent events proved that such
-a victory could have no decisive result, while the
-weakening of the armies in France may have had a
-permanent effect upon the whole course of the war.
-At the very moment that the Germans were withdrawing
-troops from their Western front the British
-and French were doing all they could to thicken
-their own line of resistance, especially by the
-transference of armies from Alsace and the south. Thus
-the net result was that, whereas the Germans had
-up to August 25 a very marked superiority in numbers,
-by the beginning of September the forces were more
-equal. From that moment the chance of their taking
-Paris became steadily more and more remote.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first month of the war represented a very
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P140"></a>140}</span>
-remarkable military achievement upon the part
-of Germany. In her high state of preparation as
-compared with the Allies, it was to be expected that
-the beginning of hostilities would be all in her favour,
-but the reality exceeded what could have been
-foreseen. Her great armies were ready to the last button.
-Up to the eve of war the soldiers did not themselves
-know what their field uniform was like. At the last
-moment two millions of men filed into the depots and
-emerged in half an hour clad in grey, with new boots,
-equipment, and every possible need for the campaign.
-On her artillery surprises she set special store, and
-they were upon a vast scale. The machine-gun had
-been developed to an extent unknown by other
-armies, and of these deadly little weapons it is
-certain that very many thousands were available.
-From the tiny quick-firer, carried easily by two men
-upon a stretcher, to the vast cannon with a diameter
-of sixteen and a half inches at the mouth, taking
-three railway trucks for its majestic portage, every
-possible variety of man-killing engine was ready in
-vast profusion. So, too, was the flying service, from
-the little Taube to the huge six-hundred-foot Zeppelin.
-From these latter devices great results were expected
-which were not destined to materialise, for, apart
-from reconnaissances, they proved themselves to be
-machines rather for the murder of non-combatants
-than for honest warfare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-"Die grosse Zeit."
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Making every allowance for the huge advantage
-which the nation that knows war is coming must
-always enjoy over those which merely fear that it
-may come, it would be foolish to deny the vast
-military achievement of Germany in the month of
-August. It reflects great credit upon the bravery
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P141"></a>141}</span>
-and energy of her troops, as well as upon the foresight
-of her organisers and the capacity of her leaders.
-Though we are her enemies, our admiration would
-have been whole-hearted were it not for the brutalities
-which marked her advance both in Poland, in Belgium,
-and in France. Consider that wonderful panorama
-of victory which was known all over the Fatherland
-as "Die grosse Zeit." On August 10 fell the great
-fortress of Liége, on the 22nd the great fortress of
-Namur, early in September that of Maubeuge, while
-the smaller strongholds went down as if they were
-open cities. On August 10 was a considerable
-victory at Mülhausen, on the 20th the Belgians were
-defeated at Tirlemont, on the same day Brussels
-was occupied. On the 22nd the French central army
-of ten corps was defeated in a great battle near
-Charleroi, losing, according to the Germans, some
-20,000 prisoners and 200 guns. On the left flank the
-Crown Prince's army won the battle of Longwy,
-taking 10,000 prisoners and many more guns. On
-August 23 the Duke of Würtemberg won a battle
-in the Ardennes. Upon the same date the British
-were driven from their position at Mons. Upon the
-26th they were defeated at Le Cateau. Most of
-Belgium and the North of France were overrun.
-Scattered parties of Uhlans made their way to the
-shores of the Atlantic spreading terror along the
-Channel coast. The British bases were in such
-danger that they had to be moved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Finally, upon the last day of the month, a great
-battle took place at Tannenberg in East Prussia, in
-which the Russian invading army was almost completely
-destroyed. I do not know where in history
-such a succession of victories is to be found, and our
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P142"></a>142}</span>
-horror of the atrocities of Louvain, Aerschot, Dinard,
-and so many other places must not blind us to the
-superb military achievement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not, it is true, an unbroken series of successes
-even in the West. The French in the early days
-won a victory at Dornach in Alsace, and another
-smaller one at Dinant in the Ardennes. They held
-the enemy in the neighbourhood of Nancy, fought
-a fairly equal battle at St. Quentin in taking the
-pressure off the British at the end of August, and
-had a success at Guise. These, however, were small
-matters as compared with the sweeping tide of
-German victory. But gradually the impetus of the
-rush was being stayed. Neither the French nor the
-British lines were broken. They grew stronger from
-compression, whilst the invaders grew weaker from
-diffusion. Even as they hoped to reach the climax
-of their success, and the huge winning-post of the
-Eiffel Tower loomed up before their racing armies,
-the dramatic moment arrived, and the dauntless,
-high-hearted Allies had the reward of their constant,
-much-enduring valour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The turn of the tide.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-September 6 was a day of great elation in the
-armies of the Allies, for it marked the end of the
-retreat and the beginning of their victorious return.
-It is clear that they could in no case have gone farther
-south without exposing Paris to the danger of an
-attack. The French Government had already been
-transferred to Bordeaux and the city put into a state
-which promised a long and stubborn defence, but
-after the surprising rapidity of the capture of Namur
-there was a general distrust of fortresses, and it was
-evident that if only one or two of the outer ring of
-forts should be overwhelmed by the German fire,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P143"></a>143}</span>
-the enemy would be in a position to do terrible damage
-to the city, even if they failed to occupy it. The
-constant dropping of bombs from German aeroplanes,
-one of which had already injured the Cathedral of
-Notre Dame, gave a sinister forecast of the respect
-which the enemy was likely to show to the monuments
-of antiquity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fortunately, the problem of investing Paris while
-the main French armies remained unbeaten in the
-field proved to be an insuperable one. The first
-German task, in accordance with the prophet Clausewitz,
-was to break the French resistance. Everything
-would follow after that, and nothing could precede it.
-Von Kluck, with his army, comprising originally
-something over 200,000 men, had lost considerably
-in their conflicts with the British, and were much
-exhausted by rapid marching, but they were still in
-good heart, as the roads over which they passed
-seemed to offer ample evidence that their enemy was
-in full flight before them. Knowing that they had
-hit the British hard, they hoped that, for a time at
-least, they might disregard them, and, accordingly,
-they ventured to close in, by a flank march, on to
-the other German armies to the east of them, in order
-to combine against the main line of French resistance
-and to make up the gaps of those corps which had
-been ordered to East Prussia. But the bulldog,
-though weary and somewhat wounded, was still
-watching with bloodshot eyes. He now sprang
-suddenly upon the exposed flank of his enemy and got a
-grip which held firm for many a day to come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Without going into complicated details of French
-strategy, which would be outside the scope of this
-work, it may be generally stated that the whole
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P144"></a>144}</span>
-French line, which had stretched on August 22 from
-Namur along the line of the Sambre to Charleroi and
-had retired with considerable loss before the German
-advance, was now extended in seven separate armies
-from Verdun to the west of Paris.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-General Joffre had assembled Maunoury's Sixth
-Army, which consisted of the Seventh Regular Corps,
-one reserve corps, and three territorial divisions, with
-Sordet's cavalry, in the neighbourhood of Amiens,
-and at the end of the month they lay with their right
-upon Roye. Thus, when Von Kluck swerved to his
-left, this army was on the flank of the whole great
-German line which extended to Verdun. Next to
-this Sixth Army and more to the south-east were the
-British, now no longer unsupported, but with solid
-French comrades upon either side of them. Next to
-the British, counting from the left or westward end of
-the defensive line, was the Fifth French Army under
-General d'Esperey, of four corps, with Conneau's
-cavalry forming the link between. These three great
-bodies, the French Sixth, the British, and the French
-Fifth, were in touch during the subsequent operations,
-and moved forward in close co-operation upon
-September 6. Their operations were directed against
-the First (Von Kluck's) and Second (Von Bülow's)
-Armies. On the right of the Fifth French Army
-came another extra, produced suddenly by the
-prolific Joffre and thrust into the centre of the line.
-This was General Foch's Seventh, three corps strong,
-which joined to the eastward General Langlé de
-Cary's Fourth Army. Opposed to them were the
-remains of Von Haussen's Third Saxon Army and
-the Prince of Würtemberg's Fourth Army. Eastward
-of this, on the farther side of the great plain of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P145"></a>145}</span>
-Chalons, a place of evil omen for the Huns, were the
-Third (Sarrail), Second (Castelnau), and First (Dubail)
-French Armies, which faced the Fifth, Sixth, and
-Seventh German, commanded respectively by the
-Crown Prince of Prussia, the Crown Prince of Bavaria,
-and General von Heeringen. Such were the mighty
-lines which were destined to swing and sway for an
-eventful week in the strain of a close-locked fight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Battle of the Ourcq.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The eastern portion of this great battle is outside
-the scope of this account, but it may briefly be stated
-that after murderous fighting neither the French nor
-the German lines made any marked advance in the
-extreme east, but that the Crown Prince's army was
-driven back by Dubail, Sarrail, and Castelnau from
-all its advanced positions, and held off from Nancy
-and Verdun, which were his objectives. It was at
-the western end of the Allied line that the strategical
-position was most advantageous and the result most
-marked. In all other parts of that huge line the
-parallel battle prevailed. Only in the west were the
-Germans outflanked, and the shock of the impact
-of the Sixth French Army passed down from Meaux
-to Verdun as the blow of the engine's buffer sends the
-successive crashes along a line of trucks. This French
-army was, as already stated, upon the extreme
-outside right of Von Kluck's army, divided from it
-only by the River Ourcq. This was the deciding
-factor in the subsequent operations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By mid-day upon September 6, according to the
-dispatch of Sir John French, the Germans had
-realised their dangerous position. The British Army,
-consisting of five divisions and five cavalry brigades,
-with its depleted ranks filled up with reinforcements
-and some of its lost guns replaced, was advancing
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P146"></a>146}</span>
-from the south through the forest of Crécy, men who
-had limped south with bleeding feet at two miles an
-hour changing their gait to three or four now that they
-were bound northward. The general movement of
-the Army cannot, however, be said to have been rapid.
-Von Kluck had placed nothing more substantial than
-a cavalry screen of two divisions in front of them,
-while he had detached a strong force of infantry
-and artillery to fight a rearguard action against the
-Sixth French Army and prevent it from crossing the
-Ourcq.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The desperate struggle of September 6, 7, 8, and
-9 between Von Kluck and Maunoury may be looked
-upon as the first turning-point of the war. Von
-Kluck had originally faced Maunoury with his Fourth
-Reserve Corps on the defensive. Recognising how
-critical it was that Maunoury should be crushed, he
-passed back two more army corps&mdash;the Seventh and
-Second&mdash;across the Ourcq, and fell upon the French
-with such violence that for two days it was impossible
-to say which side would win. Maunoury and his
-men fought magnificently, and the Germans showed
-equal valour. At one time the situation seemed
-desperate, but 20,000 men, odds and ends of every
-kind&mdash;Republican Guards, gendarmes, and others&mdash;were
-rushed out from Paris in a five-mile line of
-automobiles, and the action was restored. Only on
-the morning of the 10th did the Germans withdraw
-in despair, held in their front by the brave Maunoury,
-and in danger of being cut off by the British to the
-east of them.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P147"></a>147}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-147"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-147.jpg" alt="British Advance during the Battle of the Marne" />
-<br />
-British Advance during the Battle of the Marne
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The British advance.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The advance of the British upon September 6 was
-made in unison with that of the Fifth French Army
-(D'Esperey's) upon the right, and was much facilitated
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P148"></a>148}</span>
-by the fact that Von Kluck had to detach the strong
-force already mentioned to deal with Maunoury
-upon the left. The British advanced with the Fourth
-Division upon the left, the Second Corps in the centre
-and the First Corps upon the right. The high banks
-of the Grand Morin were occupied without serious
-fighting, and the whole line pushed forward for a
-considerable distance, halting on the Coulommiers-Maisoncelles
-front. The brunt of the fighting during
-the day was borne by the French on either wing, the
-Third and Fourth German Corps being thrown back
-by D'Esperey's men, among whom the Senegal
-regiments particularly distinguished themselves. The
-fighting in this section of the field continued far into
-the night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On September 7 the British and the Fifth French
-were still moving northwards, while the Sixth French
-were continuing their bitter struggle upon the Ourcq.
-The British infantry losses were not heavy, though a
-hidden battery cost the South Lancashires of the
-7th Brigade forty-one casualties. Most of the fighting
-depended upon the constant touch between the British
-cavalry and the German. It was again the French
-armies upon each flank who did the hard work during
-this eventful day, the first of the German retreat.
-The Sixth Army were all day at close grips with Von
-Kluck, while the Fifth drove the enemy back to the
-line of the Petit Morin River, carrying Vieux-Maisons
-at the point of the bayonet. Foch's army, still
-farther to the east, was holding its own in a desperate
-defensive battle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Cavalry fighting.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of the cavalry skirmishes upon this day one
-deserves some special record. The 2nd Cavalry
-Brigade (De Lisle) was acting at the time as flank
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P149"></a>149}</span>
-guard with the 9th Lancers in front. Coming into
-contact with some German dragoons near the village
-of Moncel, there followed a face-to-face charge
-between two squadrons, each riding through the
-other. The American, Coleman, who saw the
-encounter, reckons the odds in numbers to have been
-two to one against the Lancers. The British Colonel
-Campbell was wounded, and the adjutant, Captain
-Reynolds, transfixed through the shoulder by a lance.
-While drawing the weapon out Captain Allfrey was
-killed. The other casualties were slight, and those
-of the German dragoons were considerably greater.
-This example of shock tactics was almost instantly
-followed by an exhibition of those mounted rifleman
-tactics which have been cultivated of late years. A
-squadron of the 18th Hussars, having dismounted,
-was immediately charged by a German squadron in
-close order. About 70 Germans charged, and 32
-were picked up in front of the dismounted Hussars,
-while the few who passed through the firing line were
-destroyed by the horse-holders. It may fairly be
-argued that had the two squadrons met with shock
-tactics, no such crushing effect could possibly have
-been attained. It is interesting that in one morning
-two incidents should have occurred which bore so
-directly upon the perennial dispute between the
-partisans of the <i>arme blanche</i> and those of the rifle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 8th the orders were to advance towards
-Chateau-Thierry and to endeavour to reach the
-Marne. The Germans were retreating fast, but rather
-on account of their generally faulty strategical position
-than from tactical compulsion, and they covered
-themselves with continual rearguard actions, especially
-along the line of the Petit Morin. It is one of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P150"></a>150}</span>
-the noticeable results, however, of the use of aircraft
-that the bluff of a rearguard has disappeared and
-that it is no longer possible to make such a retreat
-as Massena from Torres Vedras, where the pursuer
-never knew if he were striking at a substance or a
-shadow. Gough's Second Cavalry Division, which
-consisted of the 3rd and 5th Brigades, swept along,
-and the infantry followed hard at the heels of the
-horses, Doran's 8th Brigade suffering the loss of about
-100 men when held up at the crossing of the Petit
-Morin River near Orly, which they traversed eventually
-under an effective covering fire from J Battery, R.H.A.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The First Army Corps upon this day forced the
-Petit Morin at two places, both near La Trétoire,
-north of Rebaix. The First Division secured the
-passage at Sablonnières, where the Black Watch
-seized the heights, causing the German rearguard
-some losses and taking 60 prisoners. The Second
-Division met with considerable resistance, but the
-2nd Worcesters got over at Le Gravier and the 2nd
-Grenadier Guards at La Forge. The enemy was then
-driven from the river bank into the woods, where they
-were practically surrounded and had eventually to
-surrender. Eight machine-guns and 350 prisoners,
-many of them from the Guards' Jaeger Battalion,
-were captured. Six of these machine-guns fell to the
-Irish Guards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Second Army Corps passed the Petit Morin
-near St. Cyr and St. Ouen, the 13th Brigade attacking
-the former and the 14th the latter, both being villages
-on the farther side of the river. Such fighting as
-there was in this quarter came largely to the 1st
-East Surrey and 1st Cornwalls, of the 14th Brigade,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P151"></a>151}</span>
-but the resistance was not great, and was broken by
-the artillery fire. To the soldiers engaged the whole
-action was more like a route march with occasional
-deployments than a battle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 9th the Army was up to the Marne and was
-faced with the problem of crossing it. The operations
-extending over many miles were unimportant in
-detail, though of some consequence in the mass. The
-real hard fighting was falling upon the Sixth French
-Army north of Ligny, which was still in desperate
-conflict with the German right, and upon Foch's
-army, which was fighting magnificently at
-Fère-Champenoise. The advance of the British, and their
-own exertions, caused the Germans to retire and
-cleared the passage over the Ourcq for our Allies.
-The chief losses during the day upon the British side
-fell upon the Guards' Brigade, the 1st Lincolns, and
-the 1st Cornwalls, most of which were inflicted by
-invisible quick-firing batteries shrouded by the woods
-which flank the river. The latter regiment lost
-Colonel Turner, Major Cornish-Bowden, and a number
-of other killed or wounded in a brilliant piece of
-woodland fighting, where they drove in a strong
-German rearguard. The 1st East Surrey, who were
-very forward in the movement, were also hard hit,
-having 6 officers and about 120 men out of action.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The 1st Lincolns and the guns.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The British infantry was able on this day to show
-that woods may serve for other purposes besides
-hiding batteries. The 1st Lincolns, being held up
-a rapid and accurate fire from invisible guns,
-dispatched two companies, C and D, to make in single
-file a detour under the shelter of the trees. Coming
-behind the battery, which appears to have had no
-immediate support, they poured in a rapid fire at
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P152"></a>152}</span>
-two hundred and fifty yards, which laid every man
-of the German gunners upon the ground. The whole
-battery was captured. The casualties of the Lincolns
-in this dashing exploit, which included Captains
-Hoskyns and Ellison, with Lieutenant Thruston,
-were unavoidably caused by British shrapnel, our
-gunners knowing nothing of the movement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this date (September 9) both the First and the
-Second Army Corps were across the Marne, and
-advanced some miles to the north of it, killing,
-wounding, or capturing many hundreds of the enemy.
-The Sixth French Army was, as stated, fighting hard
-upon the Ourcq, but the Fifth had won a brilliant
-success near Montmirail and driven the enemy
-completely over the river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pulteney's Third Corps, still a division short, had
-been held up by the destruction of the bridges at
-La Ferté, but on September 10 they were across and
-the whole Army sweeping northwards. The cavalry
-overrode all resistance and rounded up a number of
-prisoners, over 2000 in all. It was a strange reversal
-of fortune, for here within a fortnight were the same
-two armies playing the converse parts, the British
-eagerly pushing on with a flushed consciousness of
-victory, while the Germans, tired and dispirited,
-scattered in groups among the woods or were gathered
-up from the roadsides. It was a day of mist and
-rain, with muddy, sodden roads, but all weather is
-fine weather to the army that is gaining ground.
-An impression of complete German demoralisation
-became more widespread as transport, shells, and
-even guns were found littering the high-roads, and
-yet there was really even less cause for it than when
-the same delusion was held by the Germans. The
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P153"></a>153}</span>
-enemy were actually making a hurried but orderly
-retreat, and these signs of disaster were only the
-evidence of a broken rearguard resistance. German
-armies do not readily dissolve. There is no more
-cohesive force in the world. But they were
-undoubtedly hard pressed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-6th Brigade's action at Hautvesnes.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About eight o'clock upon the morning of the
-10th the 6th Brigade (Davies') observed a column
-of the enemy's infantry on a parallel road near the
-village of Hautvesnes. Artillery fire was at once
-opened upon them, and a vigorous infantry attack,
-the 1st Rifles advancing direct with the 1st Berkshires
-on their right, whilst the 1st King's Liverpool worked
-round each flank in Boer fashion. The 2nd Staffords
-were in support. The Germans had taken refuge in
-a sunken road, but they were mercilessly lashed by
-shrapnel, and 400 of them ran forward with their
-hands up. The sunken road was filled with their
-dead and wounded. Some hundreds streamed away
-across country, but these were mostly gathered up
-by the Third Division on the left.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this brisk little action the 50th R.F.A., and
-later the whole of the 34th Brigade R.F.A., put in
-some fine work, the shrapnel-fire being most deadly
-and accurate. The British had pushed their guns
-freely forward with their cavalry and did much
-execution with them, though they had the misfortune
-on this same date, the 10th, to lose, by the answering
-shell-fire of the enemy, General Findlay, artillery
-commander of the First Division. In this second
-action, in which the German rearguard, infantry as
-well as artillery, was engaged, the 2nd Sussex
-Regiment, which was leading the First Division,
-sustained considerable losses near Courchamps or
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P154"></a>154}</span>
-Priez, as did the 1st Northamptons and the 1st North
-Lancashires. Some 300 of Bulfin's 2nd Brigade were
-hit altogether, among whom was Colonel Knight,
-of the North Lancashires. The enemy came under
-heavy fire, both from the infantry and from the guns,
-so that their losses were considerable, and several
-hundred of them were captured. The country was
-very hilly, and the roads so bad that in the exhausted
-state of men and horses the pursuit could not be
-sufficiently pressed. Thirty large motor cars were
-seen at Priez in front of the 2nd Brigade, carrying
-the enemy's rearguard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-9th Brigade's capture of Germans at Vinly.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this same date the 9th Brigade captured 600
-German infantry, the survivors of a battalion, at the
-village of Vinly. This seems to have been an incident
-of the same character as the loss of the Cheshires or
-of the Munsters in the British retreat, where a body
-of troops fighting a covering action was left too long,
-or failed to receive the orders for its withdrawal.
-The defence was by no means a desperate one, and
-few of the attacking infantry were killed or wounded.
-On this date the Fifth and Sixth French Armies were
-hardly engaged at all, and the whole Allied Force,
-including General Foch's Seventh French Army on
-the right of the Fifth, were all sweeping along
-together in a single rolling steel-crested wave,
-composed of at least twelve army corps, whilst nine
-German corps (five of Von Kluck and four of Bülow)
-retired swiftly before them, hurrying towards the
-chance of re-forming and refitting which the Aisne
-position would afford them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On September 11 the British were still advancing
-upon a somewhat narrowed front. There was no
-opposition and again the day bore a considerable
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P155"></a>155}</span>
-crop of prisoners and other trophies. The weather
-had become so foggy that the aircraft were useless,
-and it is only when these wonderful scouters are
-precluded from rising that a general realises how
-indispensable they have become to him. As a wit
-expressed it, they have turned war from a game of
-cards into a game of chess. It was still very wet,
-and the Army was exposed to considerable privation,
-most of the officers and men having neither change
-of clothing, overcoats, nor waterproof sheets, while
-the blowing up of bridges on the lines of communication
-had made it impossible to supply the wants.
-The undefeatable commissariat, however, was still
-working well, which means that the Army was doing
-the same. On the 12th the pursuit was continued as
-far as the River Aisne. Allenby's cavalry occupied
-Braine in the early morning, the Queen's Bays being
-particularly active, but there was so much resistance
-that the Third Division was needed to make the
-ground good. Gough's Cavalry Division also ran
-into the enemy near Chassemy, killing or capturing
-several hundred of the German infantry. In these
-operations Captain Stewart, whose experience as an
-alleged spy has been mentioned, met with a soldier's
-death. On this day the Sixth French Army was
-fighting a considerable action upon the British left
-in the vicinity of Soissons, the Germans making a
-stand in order to give time for their impedimenta to
-get over the river. In this they succeeded, so that
-when the Allied Forces reached the Aisne, which is
-an unfordable stream some sixty yards from bank
-to bank, the retiring army had got across it, had
-destroyed most of the bridges, and showed every
-sign of being prepared to dispute the crossing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P156"></a>156}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The problem of the Aisne.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Missy Bridge, facing the Fifth Division, appeared
-at first to be intact, but a daring reconnaissance by
-Lieutenant Pennecuick, of the Engineers, showed
-that it was really badly damaged. Condé Bridge was
-intact, but was so covered by a high horse-shoe
-formation of hills upon the farther side that it could
-not be used, and remained throughout under control
-of the enemy. Bourg Bridge, however, in front of
-the First Army Corps, had for some unexplained
-reason been left undamaged, and this was seized in
-the early morning of September 13 by De Lisle's
-cavalry, followed rapidly by Bulfin's 2nd Brigade.
-It was on the face of it a somewhat desperate
-enterprise which lay immediately in front of the British
-general. If the enemy were still retreating he could
-not afford to slacken his pursuit, while, on the other
-hand, if the enemy were merely making a feint of
-resistance, then, at all hazards, the stream must be
-forced and the rearguard driven in. The German
-infantry could be seen streaming up the roads on the
-farther bank of the river, but there were no signs of
-what their next disposition might be. Air
-reconnaissance was still precluded, and it was impossible
-to say for certain which alternative might prove to
-be correct, but Sir John French's cavalry training
-must incline him always to the braver course. The
-officer who rode through the Boers to Kimberley
-and threw himself with his weary men across the
-path of the formidable Kronje was not likely to
-stand hesitating upon the banks of the Aisne. His
-personal opinion was that the enemy meant to
-stand and fight, but none the less the order was
-given to cross.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-September 13 was spent in arranging this dashing
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P157"></a>157}</span>
-and dangerous movement. The British got across
-eventually in several places and by various devices.
-Bulfin's men, followed by the rest of the First Division
-of Haig's Army Corps, passed the canal bridge of
-Bourg with no loss or difficulty. The 11th Brigade
-of Pulteney's Third Corps got across by a partially
-demolished bridge and ferry at Venizel. They were
-followed by the 12th Brigade, who established
-themselves near Bucy. The 13th Brigade was held up at
-Missy, but the 14th got across and lined up with the
-men of the Third Corps in the neighbourhood of
-Ste. Marguerite, meeting with a considerable resistance
-from the Germans. Later, Count Gleichen's 15th
-Brigade also got across. On the right Hamilton got
-over with two brigades of the Third Division, the
-8th Brigade crossing on a single plank at Vailly and
-the 9th using the railway bridge, while the whole of
-Haig's First Corps had before evening got a footing
-upon the farther bank. So eager was the advance
-and so inadequate the means that Haking's 5th
-Brigade, led by the Connaught Rangers, was obliged
-to get over the broad and dangerous river, walking in
-single file along the sloping girder of a ruined bridge,
-under a heavy, though distant, shell-fire. The night
-of September 13 saw the main body of the Army
-across the river, already conscious of a strong
-rearguard action, but not yet aware that the whole
-German Army had halted and was turning at bay.
-On the right De Lisle's cavalrymen had pushed
-up the slope from Bourg Bridge and reached as far
-as Vendresse, where they were pulled up by the
-German lines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been mentioned above that the 11th and
-12th Brigades of the Fourth Division had passed the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P158"></a>158}</span>
-river at Venizel. These troops were across in the
-early afternoon, and they at once advanced, and
-proved that in that portion of the field the enemy
-were undoubtedly standing fast. The 11th Brigade,
-which was more to the north, had only a constant
-shell-fall to endure, but the 12th, pushing forward
-through Bucy-le-long, found itself in front of a line
-of woods from which there swept a heavy machine-gun-
-and rifle-fire. The advance was headed by the
-2nd Lancashire Fusiliers, supported by the 2nd
-Inniskilling Fusiliers. It was across open ground
-and under heavy fire, but it was admirably carried
-out. In places where the machine-guns had got the
-exact range the stricken Fusiliers lay dead or wounded
-with accurate intervals, like a firing-line on a
-field-day. The losses were heavy, especially in the
-Lancashire Fusiliers. Colonel Griffin was wounded, and
-5 of his officers with 250 men were among the
-casualties. It should be recorded that fresh supplies
-of ammunition were brought up at personal risk by
-Colonel Seely, late Minister of War, in his motor-car.
-The contest continued until dusk, when the troops
-waited for the battle of next day under such cover
-as they could find.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The crossing of the stream may be said, upon the
-one side, to mark the end of the battle and pursuit
-of the Marne, while, on the other, it commenced that
-interminable Battle of the Aisne which was destined
-to fulfil Bloch's prophecies and to set the type of all
-great modern engagements. The prolonged struggles
-of the Manchurian War had prepared men's minds
-for such a development, but only here did it first
-assume its full proportions and warn us that the
-battle of the future was to be the siege of the past.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P159"></a>159}</span>
-Men remembered with a smile Bernhardi's confident
-assertion that a German battle would be decided in
-one day, and that his countrymen would never be
-constrained to fight in defensive trenches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The moral effect of the Battle of the Marne was
-greater than its material gains. The latter, so far
-as the British were concerned, did not exceed 5000
-prisoners, 20 guns, and a quantity of transport. The
-total losses, however, were very heavy. The Germans
-had perfected a method of burning their dead with
-the aid of petrol. These numerous holocausts over
-the country-side were found afterwards by the
-peasants to have left mounds of charred animal
-matter which were scattered by their industrious
-hands on the fields which they might help to fertilise.
-The heat of cremation had dissolved the bones, but
-the teeth in most cases remained intact, so that over
-an area of France it was no uncommon thing to see
-them gleaming in the clods on either side of the
-new-cut furrow. Had the ring of high-born
-German criminals who planned the war seen in
-some apocalyptic vision the detailed results of their
-own villainy, it is hard to doubt that even their
-hearts and consciences would have shrunk from
-the deed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Apart from the losses, the mere fact that a great
-German army had been hustled across thirty miles
-of country, had been driven from river to river, and
-had finally to take refuge in trenches in order to
-hold their ground, was a great encouragement to the
-Allies. From that time they felt assured that with
-anything like equal numbers they had an ascendancy
-over their opponents. Save in the matter of heavy
-guns and machine-guns, there was not a single arm
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P160"></a>160}</span>
-in which they did not feel that they were the equals
-or the superiors. Nor could they forget that this
-foe, whom they were driving in the open and holding
-in the trenches, was one who had rushed into the
-war with men and material all carefully prepared
-for this day of battle, while their own strength lay
-in the future. If the present was bright, it would
-surely be incomparably brighter when the reserves
-of France and the vast resources of the British
-Empire were finally brought into line. There had
-never from the beginning been a doubt of final
-victory, but from this time on it became less an
-opinion and more a demonstrable and mathematical
-certainty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Why the Marne is one of the great battles of all time.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The battle must also be regarded as a fixed point
-in military history, since it was the first time since
-the days of the great Napoleon that a Prussian army
-had been turned and driven. In three successive
-wars&mdash;against the Danes, the Austrians, and the
-French&mdash;they had lived always in the warm sunshine
-of success. Now, at last, came the first chill of
-disaster. Partly from their excellent military qualities,
-but even more on account of their elaborate and
-methodical preparations, joined with a want of
-scruple which allowed them to force a war at the
-moment when they could take their adversary at a
-disadvantage, they had established a legend of
-invincibility. This they left behind them with their
-cannon and their prisoners between the Marne and
-the Aisne. It had been feared that free men, trained
-in liberal and humane methods, could never equal
-in military efficiency those who had passed through
-the savage discipline which is the heritage of the
-methods that first made Prussia great at the expense
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P161"></a>161}</span>
-of her neighbours. This shadow was henceforth for
-ever lifted from men's minds, and it was shown that
-the kindly comradeship which exists in the Western
-armies between officers and men was not incompatible
-with the finest fighting qualities of which any soldiers
-are capable.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P162"></a>162}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI
-<br /><br />
-THE BATTLE OF THE AISNE
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intro">
-The hazardous crossing of the Aisne&mdash;Wonderful work of the
-sappers&mdash;The fight for the sugar factory&mdash;General advance of the
-Army&mdash;The 4th (Guards) Brigade's difficult task&mdash;Cavalry as a mobile
-reserve&mdash;The Sixth Division&mdash;Hardships of the Army&mdash;German
-breach of faith&mdash;<i>Tâtez toujours</i>&mdash;The general position&mdash;Attack
-upon the West Yorks&mdash;Counter-attack by Congreve's 18th
-Brigade&mdash;Rheims Cathedral&mdash;Spies&mdash;The siege and fall of Antwerp.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The hazardous crossing of the Aisne.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The stretch of river which confronted the British
-Army when they set about the hazardous crossing of
-the Aisne was about fifteen miles in length. It lay
-as nearly as possible east and west, so that the advance
-was from south to north. As the British faced the
-river the First Army Corps was on the right of their
-line, together with half the cavalry. In the centre
-was the Second Corps, on the left the Third Corps,
-which was still without one of its divisions (the Sixth),
-but retained, on the other hand, the 19th Brigade,
-which did not belong to it. Each of these British
-corps covered a front of, roughly, five miles. Across
-the broad and swift river a considerable German
-army with a powerful artillery was waiting to dispute
-the passage. On the right of the British were the
-French Fifth and Seventh Armies, and on their left,
-forming the extremity of the Allied line, was the
-French Sixth Army, acting in such close co-operation
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P163"></a>163}</span>
-with the British Third Corps in the Soissons region
-that their guns were often turned upon the same
-point. This Sixth French Army, with the British
-Army, may be looked upon as the left wing of the
-huge Allied line which stretched away with many a
-curve and bend to the Swiss frontier. During all
-this hurried retreat from the Marne, it is to be
-remembered that the Eastern German armies had
-hardly moved at all. It was their four armies of the
-right which had swung back like a closing door, the
-Crown Prince's Fifth Army being the hinge upon
-which it turned. Now the door had ceased to swing,
-and one solid barrier presented itself to the Allies.
-It is probable that the German preponderance of
-numbers was, for the moment, much lessened or even
-had ceased to exist, for the losses in battle, the
-detachments for Russia, and the operations in Belgium
-had all combined to deplete the German ranks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Belgian Army had retired into Antwerp
-before the fall of Brussels, but they were by no means
-a force to be disregarded, being fired by that sense
-of intolerable wrong which is the most formidable
-stimulant to a virile nation. From the shelter of the
-Antwerp entrenchments they continually buzzed out
-against the German lines of communication, and
-although they were usually beaten back, and were
-finally pent in, they still added to the great debt of
-gratitude which the Allies already owed them by
-holding up a considerable body, two army corps at
-least, of good troops. On the other hand, the fortress
-of Maubeuge, on the northern French frontier, which
-had been invested within a few days of the battle of
-Mons, had now fallen before the heavy German guns,
-with the result that at least a corps of troops under
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P164"></a>164}</span>
-Von Zwehl and these same masterful guns were now
-released for service on the Aisne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Wonderful work of the sappers.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The more one considers the operation of the
-crossing of the Aisne with the battle which followed
-it, the more one is impressed by the extraordinary
-difficulty of the task, the swift debonair way in
-which it was tackled, and the pushful audacity of
-the various commanders in gaining a foothold upon
-the farther side. Consider that upon the 12th the
-Army was faced by a deep, broad, unfordable river
-with only one practicable bridge in the fifteen miles
-opposite them. They had a formidable enemy armed
-with powerful artillery standing on the defensive
-upon a line of uplands commanding every crossing
-and approach, whilst the valley was so broad that
-ordinary guns upon the corresponding uplands could
-have no effect, and good positions lower down were
-hard to find. There was the problem. And yet
-upon the 14th the bulk of the Army was across and
-had established itself in positions from which it could
-never afterwards be driven. All arms must have
-worked well to bring about such a result, but what
-can be said of the Royal Engineers, who built under
-heavy fire in that brief space nine bridges, some of
-them capable of taking heavy traffic, while they
-restored five of the bridges which the enemy had
-destroyed! September 13, 1914, should be recorded
-in their annals as a marvellous example of personal
-self-sacrifice and technical proficiency.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P165"></a>165}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-165"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-165.jpg" alt="British Advance at the Aisne" />
-<br />
-British Advance at the Aisne
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-Sir John French, acting with great swiftness and
-decision, did not lose an hour after he had established
-himself in force upon the northern bank of the river
-in pushing his men ahead and finding out what was
-in front of him. The weather was still very wet,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P166"></a>166}</span>
-and heavy mists drew a veil over the German
-dispositions, but the advance went forward. The British
-right wing, consisting of the First Division of the
-First Corps, had established itself most securely, as
-was natural, since it was the one corps which had
-found an unbroken bridge in front of it. The First
-Division had pushed forward as far as Moulins and
-Vendresse, which lie about two miles north of the
-river. Now, in the early hours of the 14th, the whole
-of the Second Division got over. The immediate
-narrative, therefore, is concerned with the doings of
-the two divisions of the First Corps, upon which fell
-the first and chief strain of the very important and
-dangerous advance upon that date.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the top of the line of chalk hills which faced
-the British was an ancient and famous highway, the
-Chemin-des-dames, which, like all ancient highways,
-had been carried along the crest of the ridge. This
-was in the German possession, and it became the
-objective of the British attack. The 2nd Infantry
-Brigade (Bulfin's) led the way, working upwards in the
-early morning from Moulins and Vendresse through
-the hamlet of Troyon towards the great road. This
-brigade, consisting of the 2nd Sussex, 1st Northamptons,
-1st North Lancashire, and 2nd Rifles, drawn
-mostly from solid shire regiments, was second to none
-in the Army. Just north of Troyon was a considerable
-deserted sugar factory, which formed a feature in the
-landscape. It lay within a few hundred yards of
-the Chemin-des-dames, while another winding road,
-cut in the side of the hill, lay an equal distance to
-the south of it, and was crossed by the British in
-their advance. This road, which was somewhat
-sunken in the chalk, and thus offered some cover
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P167"></a>167}</span>
-to a crouching man, played an important part in
-the operations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The fight for the sugar factory.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lieutenant Balfour and a picket of the 2nd Rifles,
-having crept up and reconnoitred the factory, returned
-with the information that it was held by the Germans,
-and that twelve guns were in position three hundred
-yards to the east of it. General Bulfin then&mdash;it was
-about 3.30 in the morning of a wet, misty day&mdash;sent
-the 2nd Rifles, the 2nd Sussex Regiment, and the 1st
-Northamptons forward, with the factory and an
-adjoining whitewashed farmhouse as their objective.
-The 1st North Lancashires remained in reserve at
-Vendresse. The attacking force was under the immediate
-command of Colonel Serocold of the Rifles. The
-three advanced regiments drove in the pickets of the
-Germans, and after a severe fight turned the enemy
-out of his front trench, A Company of the Sussex
-capturing several hundred prisoners. A number of
-men, however, including Colonel Montresor and Major
-Cookson, were shot while rounding up these Germans
-and sending them to the rear. The advanced line had
-suffered severely, so the North Lancashires were called
-up and launched at the sugar factory, which they
-carried with a magnificent bayonet attack in spite of a
-fierce German resistance. Their losses were very
-heavy, including Major Lloyd, their commander, but
-their victory was a glorious one. The two batteries
-of the enemy were now commanded by machine-guns,
-brought up to the factory by Lieutenant Dashwood
-of the Sussex. The enemy made a brave attempt to
-get these guns away, but the teams and men were
-shot down, and it was a German Colenso. The
-British, however, unlike the Boers, were unable to
-get away the prizes of their victory. The factory
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P168"></a>168}</span>
-was abandoned as it was exposed to heavy fire, and
-the four regiments formed a firing-line, taking such
-cover as they could find, but a German shell fire
-developed which was so deadly that they were unable
-to get forward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A small party of Rifles, under Cathcart and
-Foljambe, clung hard to the captured guns,
-sending repeated messages: "For God's sake bring
-horses and fetch away these pieces!" No horses
-were, however, available, and eventually both the
-guns and the buildings were regained by the
-Germans, the former being disabled before they
-were abandoned by their captors, and the factory
-being smashed by the shells. Major Green and
-a company of the Sussex, with some of the Coldstream
-under Major Grant, had got as far forward as
-the Chemin-des-dames, but fell back steadily when
-their flank was finally exposed. Two companies of
-the 1st Coldstream, under Colonel Ponsonby, had
-also pushed on to the road, and now came back.
-Nothing could exceed the desperate gallantry of
-officers and men. Major Jelf, severely wounded,
-cheered on his riflemen until evening. Major Warre
-of the same regiment and Major Phillips rallied
-the hard-pressed line again and again. Lieutenant
-Spread, of the Lancashires, worked his machine-gun
-until it was smashed, and then, wounded as he was,
-brought up a second gun and continued the fight.
-Major Burrows rallied the Lancashires when their
-leader, Major Lloyd, was hit. Brigade-Major Watson,
-of the Queen's, was everywhere in the thick of the
-firing. No men could have been better led, nor could
-any leaders have better men. A large number of
-wounded, both British and Germans, lay under the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P169"></a>169}</span>
-shelter of some haystacks between the lines, and
-crawled slowly round them for shelter, as the fire
-came from one side or the other&mdash;a fitting subject
-surely for a Verestschagin!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-General advance of the Army.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile, it is necessary to follow what had been
-going on at the immediate left of Bulfin's Brigade.
-Maxse's 1st Brigade had moved up in the face of a
-considerable fire until it came to be nearly as far
-north as the factory, but to the west of it. The
-1st Coldstream had been sent across to help the
-dismounted cavalry to cover Bulfin's right, since
-the main German strength seemed to be in that
-quarter. The 1st Scots Guards was held in reserve,
-but the other regiments of the 1st Brigade, the
-1st Black Watch and the 1st Camerons, a battalion
-which had taken the place of the brave but
-unfortunate Munsters, lined up on the left of the
-factory and found themselves swept by the same
-devastating fire which had checked the advance.
-This fire came from the fringe of the woods and
-from a line of trenches lying north-east of the
-factory on the edge of the Chemin-des-dames. Up
-to this time the British had no artillery support on
-account of the mist, but now Geddes' 25th Brigade
-R.F.A., comprising the 113th, 114th, and 115th
-Batteries, was brought to its assistance. It could do
-little good in such a dim light, and one battery, the
-115th, under Major Johnstone, which pushed up
-within eight hundred yards of the enemy's position,
-was itself nearly destroyed. The 116th R.F.A., under
-Captain Oliver, also did great work, working its way
-up till it was almost in the infantry line, and at one
-time in advance of it. The whole infantry line, including
-a mixture of units, men of the Rifles, Sussex, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P170"></a>170}</span>
-North Lancashires, with a sprinkling of Guardsmen
-and Black Watch from the 1st Brigade, came slowly
-down the hill&mdash;"sweating blood to hold their own."
-as one of them described it&mdash;until they reached the
-sunken road which has been already mentioned.
-There General Bulfin had stationed himself with the
-reserve, and the line steadied itself, re-formed, and,
-with the support of the guns, made head once more
-against the advancing Germans, who were unable
-to make any progress against the fire which was
-poured into them. With such spades and picks as
-could be got, a line of shallow trenches was thrown
-up, and these were held against all attacks for the
-rest of the day.[<a id="chap06fn1text"></a><a href="#chap06fn1">1</a>] It was the haphazard line of these
-hurriedly dug shelters which determined the position
-retained in the weeks to come. As this was the apex
-of the British advance and all the corps upon the
-left were in turn brought to a standstill and driven
-to make trenches, the whole line of the First Corps
-formed a long diagonal slash across the hillside, with
-its right close to the Chemin-des-dames and its left
-upon the river in the neighbourhood of Chavonne.
-The result was that now and always the trenches of
-the 2nd Brigade were in an extremely exposed
-position, for they were open not only to the direct
-fire of the Germans, which was not very severe, but
-to an enfilading fire from more distant guns upon
-each flank. Their immediate neighbours upon the
-right were the 1st Queen's Surrey, acting as
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P171"></a>171}</span>
-flank-guard, and a Moroccan corps from the Fifth French
-Army, which had not reached so advanced a position,
-but was in echelon upon their right rear.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap06fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap06fn1text">1</a>] Until an accurate German military history of the war shall appear, it
-is difficult to compute the exact rival forces in any engagement, but in
-this attack of the 2nd Brigade, where six British regiments may be said
-to have been involved, there are some data. A German officer, describing
-the same engagement, says that, apart from the original German force,
-the reinforcements amounted to fourteen battalions, from the Guards'
-Jaeger, the 4th Jaeger Battalion, 65th, 13th Reserve, and 13th and 16th
-Landwehr Regiments.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-It has already been shown how the 1st Brigade
-was divided up, the 1st Coldstream being on the right
-of the 2nd Brigade. The rest of the 1st Brigade had
-carried out an advance parallel to that described, and
-many of the Black Watch, who were the right-hand
-regiment, got mixed with Bulfin's men when they were
-driven back to what proved to be the permanent
-British line. This advance of the 1st Brigade
-intercepted a strong force of the enemy which was
-creeping round the left flank of the 2nd Brigade.
-The counter-stroke brought the flank attack to a
-standstill. The leading regiments of the 1st Brigade
-suffered very severely, however, especially the
-Cameron Highlanders, whose gallantry carried them far
-to the front. This regiment lost Lieutenant-Colonel
-MacLachlan, 2 majors, Maitland and Nicholson,
-3 captains, 11 lieutenants, and about 300 rank and
-file in the action. Some of these fell into the hands
-of the enemy, but the great majority were killed or
-wounded. The 1st Scots Guards upon the left of
-the brigade had also heavy casualties, while the
-Black Watch lost their Colonel, Grant Duff, their
-Adjutant, Rowan Hamilton, and many men. When
-the line on their right fell back, they conformed to
-the movement until they received support from two
-companies of the 1st Gloucesters from the 3rd Brigade
-upon their left rear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The 4th (Guards) Brigade's difficult task.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 4th (Guards) Brigade, forming the left
-of the Second Division, was across the river in
-battle array by ten o'clock in the morning and
-moving northwards towards the village of Ostel.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P172"></a>172}</span>
-Its task was a supremely difficult one. Dense woods
-faced it, fringed with the hostile riflemen, while a
-heavy shell-fire tore through the extended ranks. It
-is safe to say that such an advance could not have
-been carried out in the heavy-handed German fashion
-without annihilating losses. As it was, the casualties
-were heavy, but not sufficient to prevent a continuance
-of the attack, which at one o'clock carried
-the farm and trenches which were its objective. The
-steep slopes and the thick woods made artillery
-support impossible, though one section of a battery
-did contrive to keep up with the infantry. The
-3rd Coldstream being held up in their advance on
-the Soupir front, the 1st Irish were moved up on
-their right flank, but the line could do little more
-than hold its own. Captain Berners, Lord Guernsey,
-Lord Arthur Hay, and others were killed at this
-point. The German infantry advanced several times
-to counter-attack, but were swept back by the fire
-of the Guards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At one period it was found that the general German
-advance, which had followed the holding of the
-British attack, was threatening to flow in between
-the two divisions of the First Army Corps. The
-3rd Brigade (Landon's) was therefore deployed
-rapidly from the point about a mile south of Vernesse
-where it had been stationed. Two regiments of the
-brigade, the 2nd Welsh and the 1st South Wales
-Borderers, were flung against the heavy German
-column advancing down the Beaulne ridge and
-threatening to cut Haig's corps in two. The Welshmen,
-worthy successors of their ancestors who left
-such a name on the battlefields of France, succeeded
-in heading it off and driving it back so that they were
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P173"></a>173}</span>
-able to extend and get in touch with the right of
-the Second Division. This consisted of the 5th
-Brigade (Haking's) with the 6th (Davies') upon its
-left. Both of these brigades had to bear the brunt
-of continual German counter-attacks, involving
-considerable losses, both from shell and rifle fire. In
-spite of this they won their way for a mile or more
-up the slopes, where they were brought to a standstill
-and dug themselves into temporary shelter, continuing
-the irregular diagonal line of trenches which had
-been started by the brigades upon the right.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Cavalry as a mobile reserve.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is impossible not to admire the way in which
-the German general in command observed and attempted
-to profit by any gap in the British line. It
-has already been shown how he tried to push his
-column between the two divisions of the First Corps
-and was only stopped by the deployment of the
-3rd Brigade. Later, an even fairer chance presented
-itself, and he was quick to take advantage of it.
-The advance of the Guards Brigade to the Ostel
-ridge had caused a considerable gap between them
-and the nearest unit of the Second Corps, and also
-between the First Corps and the river. A German
-attack came swarming down upon the weak spot.
-From Troyon to Ostel, over five miles of ground,
-Haig's corps was engaged to the last man and pinned
-down in their positions. It was not possible to fill
-the gap. Not to fill it might have meant
-disaster&mdash;disaster under heavy shell-fire with an unfordable
-river in the rear. Here was a supreme example of
-the grand work that was done when our cavalry
-were made efficient as dismounted riflemen. Their
-mobility brought them quickly to the danger spot.
-Their training turned them in an instant from
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P174"></a>174}</span>
-horsemen to infantry. The 15th Hussars, the Irish Horse,
-the whole of Briggs' 1st Cavalry Brigade, and finally
-the whole of De Lisle's 2nd Cavalry Brigade, were
-thrown into the gap. The German advance was
-stayed and the danger passed. From now onwards
-the echelon formed by the units of the First Corps
-ended with these cavalry brigades near Chavonne to
-the immediate north of the river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Third Division of the Second Corps, being on
-the immediate left of the operations which have been
-already described, moved forward upon Aizy, which
-is on about the same level as Ostel, the objective of
-the Guards. The 8th (Doran's) Brigade moved north
-by a tributary stream which runs down to the Aisne,
-while the 9th (Shaw's) tried to advance in line with
-it on the plateau to the right. Both brigades found
-it impossible to get any farther, and established
-themselves in entrenchments about a mile north of
-Vailly, so as to cover the important bridge at that
-place, where the 7th Brigade was in reserve. The
-three Fusilier regiments of the 9th Brigade all lost
-heavily, and the Lincolns had at one time to recross
-the river, but recovered their position.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The attack made by the Fifth Division near Missy
-was held up by a very strong German position among
-the woods on the Chivres heights which was fronted
-by wire entanglements. The regiments chiefly
-engaged were the Norfolks and Bedfords of the 15th
-Brigade, with the Cornwalls and East Surreys of the
-14th Brigade, the remains of the Cheshires being in
-close support. They crossed the wire and made good
-progress at first, but were eventually brought to a
-stand by heavy fire at close range from a trench
-upon their right front. It was already dusk, so the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P175"></a>175}</span>
-troops ended by maintaining the position at Missy
-and Ste. Marguerite, where there were bridges to be
-guarded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Fourth Division of Pulteney's Third Corps
-had no better success, and was only able to maintain
-its ground. It may be remarked, as an example of
-valiant individual effort, that this division was largely
-indebted for its ammunition supply to the efforts of
-Captain Johnston of the Sappers, who, upon a crazy
-raft of his own construction, aided by Lieutenant
-Flint, spent twelve hours under fire ferrying over the
-precious boxes. The familiar tale of stalemate was
-to be told of the Sixth French Army in the Soissons
-section of the river. Along the whole Allied line the
-position was the same, the greatest success and
-probably the hardest fighting having fallen to the lot
-of the Eighteenth French Corps, which had taken,
-lost, and finally retaken Craonne, thus establishing
-itself upon the lip of that formidable plateau which
-had been the objective of all the attacks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the Vailly region the 5th Cavalry Brigade
-found itself in a difficult position, for it had crossed
-the stream as a mounted unit in expectation of a
-pursuit, and now found itself under heavy fire in the
-village of Vailly with no possibility of getting forward.
-The only alternative was to recross the river by the
-single narrow bridge, which was done at a later date
-under very heavy fire, the troopers leading their
-horses over in single file. This difficult operation was
-superintended by Captain Wright of the Engineers,
-the same brave officer who had endeavoured to blow
-up the bridge at Mons. Unhappily, he was mortally
-wounded on this occasion. On the afternoon of the
-14th&mdash;it being found that the British artillery was
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P176"></a>176}</span>
-shelling our own advanced trenches&mdash;Staff-Captain
-Harter of the 9th Brigade galloped across the bridge
-and informed the gunners as to the true position.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Towards evening, in spite of the fact that there
-were no reserves and that all the troops had endured
-heavy losses and great fatigue, a general advance
-was ordered in the hope of gaining the high ground
-of the Chemin-des-dames before night. It was nearly
-sunset when the orders were given, and the troops
-responded gallantly to the call, though many of them
-had been in action since daybreak. The fire,
-however, was very heavy, and no great progress could
-be made. The First Division gained some ground,
-but was brought to a standstill. The only brigade
-which made good headway was Haking's 5th,
-which reached the crest of the hill in the neighbourhood
-of Tilleul-de-Courtecon. General Haking sent
-out scouts, and finding German outposts upon both
-his flanks, he withdrew under cover of darkness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus ended the sharp and indecisive action of
-September 14, the Germans holding their ground,
-but being in turn unable to drive back the Allies, who
-maintained their position and opposed an impassable
-obstacle to the renewed advance upon Paris. The
-battle was marked by the common features of advance,
-arrest, and entrenchment, which occurred not only
-in the British front, but in that of the French armies
-upon either flank. When the action ceased, the 1st
-Northamptons and the 1st Queen's, sent to guard
-the pressure point at the extreme right of the
-line, had actually reached the Chemin-des-dames, the
-British objective, and had dug themselves in upon the
-edge of it. From this very advanced spot the British
-line extended diagonally across the hillside for many
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P177"></a>177}</span>
-miles until it reached the river. Several hundred
-prisoners and some guns were taken in the course of
-the fighting. When one considers the predominant
-position of the Germans, and that their artillery was
-able to give them constant assistance, whereas that of
-the British and French was only brought up with the
-utmost difficulty, we can only marvel that the infantry
-were able to win and to hold the ground.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The next day, September 15, was spent for the
-most part in making good the position gained and
-deepening the trenches to get some protection from
-the ever-growing artillery fire, which was the more
-intense as the great siege guns from Maubeuge were
-upon this day, for the first time, brought into action.
-At first the terrific explosions of these shells, the
-largest by far which had ever been brought into an
-actual line of battle, were exceedingly alarming, but
-after a time it became realised that, however
-omnipotent they might be against iron or concrete, they
-were comparatively harmless in soft soil, where their
-enormous excavations were soon used as convenient
-ready-made rifle-pits by the soldiers. This heavy
-fire led to a deepening of the trenches, which
-necessitated a general levy of picks and shovels from the
-country round, for a large portion of such equipment
-had been lost in the first week of the campaign.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Sixth Division.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Only two active movements were made in the
-course of the day, one being that Hamilton's Third
-Division advanced once more towards Aizy and
-established itself a mile or more to the north in a
-better tactical position. The 7th Brigade suffered
-considerable casualties in this change, including
-Colonel Hasted, of the 1st Wilts. The other was
-that Ferguson's Fifth Division fell back from Chivres,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P178"></a>178}</span>
-where it was exposed to a cross fire, and made its
-lines along the river bank, whence the Germans were
-never able to drive it, although they were only four
-hundred yards away in a position which was high
-above it. For the rest, it was a day of navvy's toil,
-though the men worked alternately with rifle and with
-pick, for there were continual German advances
-which withered away before the volleys which greeted
-them. By the 16th the position was fairly secure,
-and on the same day a welcome reinforcement arrived
-in the shape of the Sixth Division, forming the missing
-half of Pulteney's Third Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Its composition is here appended:
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- DIVISION VI.&mdash;General KEIR.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>16th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Ing. Williams.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st East Kent.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Leicester.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Shropshire Light Infantry.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd York and Lancaster.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>17th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Walter Doran.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Royal Fusiliers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st N. Stafford.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Leinsters.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd Rifle Brigade.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>18th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Congreve, V.C.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st W. York.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st E. York.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Notts and Derby (Sherwood Foresters).<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Durham Light Infantry.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Artillery.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Brig. 21, 42, 53.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12th Brig. 43, 86, 87.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24th Brig. 110, 111, 112.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38th Brig. 24, 34, 72.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;R.G.A. 24.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Hardships of the Army.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This division was kept in reserve upon the south
-side of the river. The French Commander-in-Chief
-had intimated that he intended to throw in reinforcements
-upon the left of the Sixth French Army, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P179"></a>179}</span>
-so, as he hoped, to turn the German right. It was
-determined, therefore, that there should be no attempt
-at a British advance, but that the Allies should
-be content with holding the enemy to his positions.
-The two armies lay facing each other, therefore,
-at an average distance of about five hundred yards.
-The pressure was still most severe upon the 2nd
-Brigade on the extreme right. Bulfin's orders were to
-hold on at all costs, as he was the pivot of the whole
-line. He and his men responded nobly to the
-responsibility, although both they and their neighbours
-of Maxse's 1st Brigade had sustained a loss of over
-1000 men each upon the 14th&mdash;25 per cent of their
-number. The shell-fire was incessant and from
-several converging directions. German infantry
-attacks were constant by night and by day, and the
-undrained trenches were deep in water. The men
-lay without overcoats and drenched to the skin, for
-the rain was incessant. Yet the sixth day found
-them on the exact ground upon which they had
-thrown their weary bodies after their attack. Nations
-desire from time to time to be reassured as to their
-own virility. Neither in endurance nor in courage
-have the British departed from the traditions of their
-ancestors. The unending strain of the trenches
-reached the limits of human resistance. But the line
-was always held.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On September 16 occurred an incident which may
-be taken as typical of the difference in the spirit with
-which the British and the Germans make war. Close
-to the lines of the Guards a barn which contained fifty
-wounded Germans was ignited by the enemy's shells.
-Under a terrific fire a rescue party rushed forward
-and got the unfortunate men to a place of safety.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P180"></a>180}</span>
-Several of the British lost their lives in this exploit,
-including Dr. Huggan, the Scottish International
-footballer. The Germans mock at our respect for
-sport, and yet this is the type of man that sport breeds,
-and it is the want of them in their own ranks which
-will stand for ever between us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-September 17 was a day of incessant attacks upon
-the right of the line, continually repulsed and yet
-continually renewed. One can well sympathise with
-the feelings of the German commanders who, looking
-down from their heights, saw the British line in a
-most dangerous strategical position, overmatched by
-their artillery, with a deep river in their rear, and
-yet were unable to take advantage of it because of
-their failure to carry the one shallow line of
-extemporised trenches. Naturally, they came again and
-again, by night and by day, with admirable perseverance
-and daring to the attack, but were always forced
-to admit that nothing can be done against the
-magazine rifle in hands which know how to use it. They
-tried here and they tried there, these constant sudden
-outpourings of cheering, hurrying, grey-clad men.
-They were natural tactics, but expensive ones, for
-every new attack left a fresh fringe of stricken men
-in front of the British lines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-German breach of faith.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One incident upon the 17th stands out amid the
-somewhat monotonous record of trench attacks. On
-the extreme right of the British line a company of
-the 1st Northamptons occupied a most exposed
-position on the edge of the Chemin-des-dames. The
-men in a German trench which was some hundreds of
-yards in front hoisted a white flag and then advanced
-upon the British lines. It is well to be charitable in
-all these white flag incidents, since it is always possible
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P181"></a>181}</span>
-on either side that unauthorised men may hoist it
-and the officer in command very properly refuse to
-recognise it; but in this case the deception appears
-to have been a deliberate one. These are the facts.
-On seeing the flag, Captain Savage, of B Company
-Northamptons, got out of the trench and with
-Lieutenant Dimmer, of the Rifles, advanced to the
-Germans. He threw down his sword and revolver
-to show that he was unarmed. He found a difficulty
-in getting a direct answer from the Germans, so he
-saluted their officer, who returned his salute, and
-turned back to walk to his own trench. Dimmer,
-looking back, saw the Germans level their rifles, so
-he threw himself down, crying out, "For God's sake
-get down." Captain Savage stood erect and was
-riddled with bullets. Many of the Northamptons,
-including Lieutenant Gordon, were shot down by the
-same volley. The Germans then attempted an
-advance, which was stopped by the machine-guns of
-the 1st Queen's. Such deplorable actions must
-always destroy all the amenities of civilised warfare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the afternoon of the same day, September 17,
-a more serious attack was made upon the right flank
-of the advanced British position, the enemy reoccupying
-a line of trenches from which they had previously
-been driven. It was a dismal day of wind, rain,
-and mist, but the latter was not wholly an evil, as
-it enabled that hard-worked regiment, the 1st
-Northamptons, under their Colonel, Osborne Smith,
-to move swiftly forward and, with the help of the
-1st Queen's, carry the place at the bayonet point.
-Half the Germans in the trench were put out of action,
-thirty-eight taken, and the rest fled. Pushing on
-after their success, they found the ridge beyond held
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P182"></a>182}</span>
-by a considerable force of German infantry. The
-2nd Rifles had come into the fight, and a
-dismounted squadron of the composite cavalry
-regiment put in some good work upon the flank. The
-action was continued briskly until dark, when both
-sides retained their ground with the exception of the
-captured line of trenches, which remained with the
-British. Seven officers and about 200 men were
-killed or wounded in this little affair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-<i>Tâtez toujours.</i>
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 18th found the enemy still acting upon the
-Napoleonic advice of <i>Tâtez toujours</i>. All day they
-were feeling for that weak place which could never be
-found. The constant attempts were carried on into
-the night with the same monotonous record of advance
-leading to repulse. At one time it was the line of the
-1st Queen's&mdash;and no line in the Army would be less
-likely to give results. Then it was the left flank of
-the First Division, and then the front of the Second.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now and again there were swift counters from
-the British, in one of which an enemy's trench was
-taken by the 1st Gloucesters with the two machine-guns
-therein. But there was no inducement for any
-general British advance. "We have nothing to lose
-by staying here," said a General, "whereas every day
-is of importance to the Germans, so the longer we can
-detain them here the better." So it seemed from the
-point of view of the Allies. There is a German point
-of view also, however, which is worthy of consideration.
-They were aware, and others were not, that
-great reserves of men were left in the Fatherland, even
-as there were in France and in Britain, but that,
-unlike France and Britain, they actually had the arms
-and equipment for them, so that a second host could
-rapidly be called into the field. If these legions were
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P183"></a>183}</span>
-in Belgium, they could ensure the fall of Antwerp,
-overrun the country, and seize the seaboard. All
-this could be effected while the Allies were held at the
-Aisne. Later, with these vast reinforcements, the
-German armies might burst the barrier which held
-them and make a second descent upon Paris, which
-was still only fifty miles away. So the Germans
-may have argued, and the history of the future was
-to show that there were some grounds for such a
-calculation. It was in truth a second war in which
-once again the Germans had the men and material
-ready, while the Allies had not.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The general position.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This date, September 18, may be taken as the
-conclusion of the actual Battle of the Aisne, since
-from that time the operations defined themselves
-definitely as a mutual siege and gigantic artillery duel.
-The casualties of the British at the Aisne amounted,
-up to that date, to 10,000 officers and men, the great
-majority of which were suffered by Haig's First Army
-Corps. The action had lasted from the 13th, and its
-outstanding features, so far as our forces were
-concerned, may be said to have been the remarkable
-feat of crossing the river and the fine leadership of
-General Haig in the dangerous position in which he
-found himself. It has been suggested that the single
-unbroken bridge by which he crossed may have
-been a trap purposely laid by the Germans, whose
-plans miscarried owing to the simultaneous forcing
-of the river at many other points. As it was,
-the position of the First Corps was a very difficult
-one, and a reverse might have become an absolute
-disaster. It was impossible for General French to
-avoid this risk, for since the weather precluded all
-air reconnaissance, it was only by pushing his Army
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P184"></a>184}</span>
-across that he could be sure of the enemy's dispositions.
-The net result was one more demonstration upon both
-sides that the defensive force has so great an advantage
-under modern conditions that if there be moderate
-equality of numbers, and if the flanks of each be
-guarded, a condition of stalemate will invariably
-ensue, until the campaign is decided by economic
-causes or by military movements in some other part
-of the field of operations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is ample evidence that for the time the
-German Army, though able with no great effort to
-hold the extraordinarily strong position which had
-been prepared for it, was actually in very bad
-condition. Large new drafts had been brought out,
-which had not yet been assimilated by the army.
-The resistance of Maubeuge had blocked one of their
-supply railroads, and for some time the commissariat
-had partially broken down. Above all, they were
-mentally depressed by meeting such resistance where
-they had been led to expect an easy victory, by their
-forced retreat when almost within sight of Paris, and
-by their losses, which had been enormous. In spite of
-their own great superiority in heavy guns, the French
-light field-pieces had controlled the battlefields.
-There is ample evidence in the letters which have been
-intercepted, apart from the statements and appearance
-of the prisoners, to show the want and depression
-which prevailed. This period, however, may be said
-to mark the nadir of the German fortunes in this year.
-The fall of Maubeuge improved their supplies of every
-sort, their reserves and Landwehr got broken in by
-the war of the trenches, and the eventual fall of
-Antwerp and invasion of Western Belgium gave them
-that moral stimulus which they badly needed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P185"></a>185}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some wit amongst the officers has described the
-war as "months of boredom broken by moments of
-agony." It is the duty of the chronicler to record,
-even if he attempts to alleviate, the former, for the
-most monotonous procession of events form integral
-parts of the great whole. The perusal of a great
-number of diaries and experiences leaves a vague and
-disconnected recollection behind it of personal escapes,
-of the terror of high explosives, of the excellence of
-the rear services of the Army, of futile shellings&mdash;with
-an occasional tragic mishap, where some group of men
-far from the front were suddenly, by some freak of fate,
-blown to destruction,&mdash;of the discomforts of wet
-trenches, and the joys of an occasional relief in the
-villages at the rear. Here and there, however, in the
-monotony of what had now become a mutual siege,
-there stand out some episodes or developments of a
-more vital character, which will be recorded in their
-sequence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It may be conjectured that, up to the period of the
-definite entrenchment of the two armies, the losses
-of the enemy were not greater than our own. It is
-in the attack that losses are incurred, and the attack
-had, for the most part, been with us. The heavier
-guns of the Germans had also been a factor in their
-favour. From the 18th onwards, however, the
-weekly losses of the enemy must have been very much
-greater than ours, since continually, night and day,
-they made onslaughts, which attained some partial
-and temporary success upon the 20th, but which on
-every other occasion were blown back by the rifle-fire
-with which they were met. So mechanical and
-half-hearted did they at last become that they gave the
-impression that those who made them had no hope of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P186"></a>186}</span>
-success, and that they were only done at the bidding
-of some imperious or imperial voice from the distance.
-In these attacks, though any one of them may have
-only furnished a few hundred casualties, the total
-effect spread over several weeks must have equalled
-that of a very great battle, and amounted, since no
-progress was ever made, to a considerable defeat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus on September 19 there was a succession of
-attacks, made with considerable vivacity and
-proportional loss. About 4 P.M. one developed in front
-of the 4th and 6th Brigades of the First Corps, but
-was speedily stopped. An hour later another one
-burst forth upon the 7th and 9th Brigades of the
-Second Corps, with the same result. The artillery
-fire was very severe all day and the broad valley was
-arched from dawn to dusk by the flying shell. The
-weather was still detestable, and a good many were
-reported ill from the effects of constant wet and cold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 20th was the date of two separate attacks, one
-of which involved some hard fighting and considerable
-loss. The first, at eight in the morning, was upon
-Shaw's 9th Brigade and was driven off without great
-difficulty. The second was the more serious and
-demands some fuller detail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Attack upon the West Yorks.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the arrival of the Sixth Division upon the 18th,
-Sir John French had determined to hold them in
-reserve and to use them to relieve, in turn, each of the
-brigades which had been so hard-worked during the
-previous week. Of these, there was none which
-needed and deserved a rest more than Bulfin's 2nd
-Brigade, which, after their attack upon the
-Chemin-des-dames upon the 14th, had made and held the
-trenches which formed both the extreme right and the
-advanced point of the British line. For nearly a
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P187"></a>187}</span>
-week these men of iron had lain where the battle had
-left them. With the object of relieving them, the
-18th Brigade (Congreve's) of the Sixth Division was
-ordered to take their places. The transfer was
-successfully effected at night, but the newcomers, who
-had only arrived two days before from England, found
-themselves engaged at once in a very serious action.
-It may have been coincidence, or it may have been
-that with their remarkable system of espionage the
-Germans learned that new troops had taken the place
-of those whose mettle they had tested so often; but
-however this may be, they made a vigorous advance
-upon the afternoon of September 20, coming on so
-rapidly and in such numbers that they drove out the
-occupants both of the front British trenches&mdash;which
-were manned by three companies of the 1st West
-Yorkshires&mdash;and the adjoining French trench upon
-the right, which was held by the Turcos. The West
-Yorkshires were overwhelmed and enfiladed with
-machine-guns, a number were shot down, and others
-were taken prisoners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Counter-attack by Congreve's 18th Brigade.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fortunately, the rest of the brigade were in
-immediate support, and orders were given by General
-Congreve to advance and to regain the ground that
-had been lost. The rush up the hill was carried out
-by the 2nd Notts and Derby Regiment (Sherwood
-Foresters) in the centre, with the remainder of the
-West Yorks upon their right, and the 2nd Durham
-Light Infantry upon their left. They were supported
-by the 1st East Yorks and by the 2nd Sussex,
-who had just been called out of the line for a
-rest. The 4th Irish Dragoon Guards at a gallop at
-first, and then dismounting with rifle and bayonet,
-were in the forefront of the fray. The advance was
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P188"></a>188}</span>
-over half a mile of ground, most of which was clear
-of any sort of cover, but it was magnificently carried
-out and irresistible in its impetus. All the regiments
-lost heavily, but all reached their goal. Officers were
-hit again and again, but staggered on with their men.
-Captain Popham, of the Sherwood Foresters, is said
-to have carried six wounds with him up the slope.
-Fifteen officers and 250 men were shot down, but the
-lost trench was carried at the point of the bayonet and
-the whole position re-established. The total casualties
-were 1364, more than half of which fell upon the West
-Yorkshires, while the majority of the others were
-Sherwood Foresters, East Yorkshires, and Durhams.
-Major Robb, of the latter regiment, was among those
-who fell. The Germans did not hold the trenches for
-an hour, and yet the engagement may be counted as a
-success for them, since our losses were certainly
-heavier than theirs. There was no gain, however,
-in ground. The action was more than a mere local
-attack, and the British line was in danger of being
-broken had it not been for the determined counter-attack
-of the 18th Brigade and of the Irish dragoons.
-To the north of this main attack there was another
-subsidiary movement on the Beaulne ridge, in which
-the 5th and 6th Brigades were sharply engaged. The
-1st King's, the 2nd H.L.I., and the 2nd Worcesters all
-sustained some losses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About this period both the British and the French
-armies began to strengthen themselves with those
-heavy guns in which they had been so completely
-overweighted by their enemy. On the 20th the
-French in the neighbourhood of our lines received
-twelve long-range cannon, firing a 35 lb. shell a
-distance of twelve kilometres. Three days later the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P189"></a>189}</span>
-British opened fire with four new batteries of
-six-inch howitzers. From this time onwards there was
-no such great disparity in the heavy artillery, and
-the wounded from the monster shells of the enemy
-had at least the slight solace that their fate was not
-unavenged. The expenditure of shells, however,
-was still at the rate of ten German to one of the
-Allies. If the war was not won it was no fault of
-Krupp and the men of Essen. In two weeks the
-British lost nearly 3000 men from shell-fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Rheims Cathedral.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was at this time, September 20, that the Germans
-put a climax upon the long series of outrages and
-vandalisms of which their troops had been guilty
-by the bombardment of Rheims Cathedral, the
-Westminster Abbey of France. The act seems to
-have sprung from deliberate malice, for though it
-was asserted afterwards that the tower had been
-used as an artillery observation point, this is in the
-highest degree improbable, since the summit of the
-ridge upon the French side is available for such a
-purpose. The cathedral was occupied at the time
-by a number of German wounded, who were the
-sufferers by the barbarity of their fellow-countrymen.
-The incident will always remain as a permanent
-record of the value of that Kultur over which we have
-heard such frantic boasts. The records of the French,
-Belgian, and British Commissions upon the German
-atrocities, reinforced by the recollection of the burned
-University of Louvain and the shattered Cathedral
-of Rheims, will leave a stain upon the German
-armies which can never be erased. Their conduct
-is the more remarkable, since the invasion of 1870
-was conducted with a stern but rigid discipline,
-which won the acknowledgment of the world. In
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P190"></a>190}</span>
-spite of all the material progress and the superficial
-show of refinement, little more than a generation
-seems to have separated civilisation from primitive
-barbarity, which attained such a pitch that no
-arrangement could be made by which the wounded between
-the lines could be brought in. Such was the code
-of a nominally Christian nation in the year 1914.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Up to now the heavier end of the fighting had
-been borne by Haig's First Corps, but from the 20th
-onwards the Second and Third sustained the impact.
-The action just described, in which the West
-Yorkshires suffered so severely, was fought mainly by the
-18th Brigade of Pulteney's Third Corps. On the
-21st it was the turn of the Second Corps. During
-the night the 1st Wiltshire battalion of McCracken's
-7th Brigade was attacked, and making a strong
-counter-attack in the morning they cleared a wood
-with the bayonet, and advanced the British line at
-that point. A subsequent attack upon the same
-brigade was repulsed. How heavy the losses had
-been in the wear and tear of six days' continual
-trench work is shown by the fact that when on this
-date the 9th Brigade (Shaw's) was taken back for a
-rest it had lost 30 officers and 860 men since crossing
-the Aisne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The German heavy guns upon the 21st set fire to
-the village of Missy, but failed to dislodge the 1st
-East Surreys who held it. This battalion, in common
-with the rest of Ferguson's Division, were dominated
-night and day by a plunging fire from above. It
-is worth recording that in spite of the strain, the
-hardship, and the wet trenches, the percentage of
-serious sickness among the troops was lower than the
-normal rate of a garrison town. A few cases of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P191"></a>191}</span>
-enteric appeared about this time, of which six were
-in one company of the Coldstream Guards. It is
-instructive to note that in each case the man belonged
-to the uninoculated minority.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Spies.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A plague of spies infested the British and French
-lines at this period, and their elaborate telephone
-installations, leading from haystacks or from cellars,
-showed the foresight of the enemy. Some of these
-were German officers, who bravely took their lives
-in their hands from the patriotic motive of helping
-their country. Others, alas, were residents who had
-sold their souls for German gold. One such&mdash;a
-farmer&mdash;was found with a telephone within his
-house and no less a sum than a thousand pounds in
-specie. Many a battery concealed in a hollow, and
-many a convoy in a hidden road, were amazed by the
-accuracy of a fire which was really directed, not
-from the distant guns, but from some wayside
-hiding-place. Fifteen of these men were shot and the
-trouble abated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The attacks upon the British trenches, which
-had died down for several days, were renewed with
-considerable vigour upon September 26. The first,
-directed against the 1st Queen's, was carried out
-by a force of about 1000 men, who advanced in
-close order, and, coming under machine-gun fire,
-were rapidly broken up. The second was made by
-a German battalion debouching from the woods in
-front of the 1st South Wales Borderers. This attack
-penetrated the line at one point, the left company of
-the regiment suffering severely, with all its officers
-down. The reserve company, with the help of the
-2nd Welsh Regiment, retook the trenches after a
-hot fight, which ended by the wood being cleared.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P192"></a>192}</span>
-The Germans lost heavily in this struggle, 80 of
-them being picked up on the very edge of the trench.
-The Borderers also had numerous casualties, which
-totalled up to 7 officers and 182 men, half of whom
-were actually killed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Army was now in a very strong position, for
-the trenches were so well constructed that unless a
-shell by some miracle went right in, no harm would
-result. The weather had become fine once more,
-and the flying service relieved the anxieties of the
-commanders as to a massed attack. The heavy
-artillery of the Allies was also improving from day to
-day, especially the heavy British howitzers, aided
-by aeroplane observers with a wireless installation.
-On the other hand, the guns were frequently hit by
-the enemy's fire. The 22nd R.F.A. lost a gun, the
-50th three guns, and other batteries had similar
-losses. Concealment had not yet been reduced to a
-science.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this period the enemy seems to have realised
-that his attacks, whether against the British line or
-against the French armies which flanked it, and
-had fought throughout with equal tenacity, were a
-mere waste of life. The assaults died away or became
-mere demonstrations. Early in October the total
-losses of the Army upon the Aisne had been 561
-officers and 12,980 men, a proportion which speaks
-well for the coolness and accuracy of the enemy's
-sharp-shooters, while it exhibits our own forgetfulness
-of the lessons of the African War, where we learned
-that the officer should be clad and armed so like the
-men as to be indistinguishable even at short ranges.
-Of this large total the Second Corps lost 136 officers
-and 3095 men, and the First Corps 348 officers and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P193"></a>193}</span>
-6073 men, the remaining 77 officers and 3812 men
-being from the Third Corps and the cavalry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The siege and fall of Antwerp.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was at this period that a great change came
-over both the object and the locality of the operations.
-This change depended upon two events which had
-occurred far to the north, and reacted upon the great
-armies locked in the long grapple of the Aisne. The
-first of these controlling circumstances was that, by
-the movement of the old troops and the addition of
-new ones, each army had sought to turn the flank of
-the other in the north, until the whole centre of
-gravity of the war was transferred to that region.
-A new French army under General Castelnau, whose
-fine defence of Nancy had put him in the front of
-French leaders, had appeared on the extreme left
-wing of the Allies, only to be countered by fresh
-bodies of Germans, until the ever-extending line
-lengthened out to the manufacturing districts of Lens
-and Lille, where amid pit-shafts and slag-heaps the
-cavalry of the French and the Germans tried
-desperately to get round each other's flank. The other
-factor was the fall of Antwerp, which had released
-very large bodies of Germans, who were flooding over
-Western Belgium, and, with the help of great new
-levies from Germany, carrying the war to the
-sand-dunes of the coast. The operations which brought
-about this great change open up a new chapter in the
-history of the war. The actual events which
-culminated in the fall of Antwerp may be very briefly
-handled, since, important as they were, they were
-not primarily part of the British task, and hence
-hardly come within the scope of this narrative.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Belgians, after the evacuation of Brussels in
-August, had withdrawn their army into the widespread
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P194"></a>194}</span>
-fortress of Antwerp, from which they made frequent
-sallies upon the Germans who were garrisoning their
-country. Great activity was shown and several
-small successes were gained, which had the useful
-effect of detaining two corps which might have been
-employed upon the Aisne. Eventually, towards the
-end of September, the Germans turned their attention
-seriously to the reduction of the city, with a
-well-founded confidence that no modern forts could resist
-the impact of their enormous artillery. They drove
-the garrison within the lines, and early in October
-opened a bombardment upon the outer forts with
-such results that it was evidently only a matter of
-days before they would fall and the fine old city be
-faced with the alternative of surrender or destruction.
-The Spanish fury of Parma's pikemen would be a
-small thing compared to the <i>furor Teutonicus</i> working
-its evil deliberate will upon town-hall or cathedral,
-with the aid of fire-disc, petrol-spray, or other products
-of culture. The main problem before the Allies,
-if the town could not be saved, was to ensure that
-the Belgian army should be extricated and that
-nothing of military value which could be destroyed
-should be left to the invaders. No troops were
-available for a rescue, for the French and British old
-formations were already engaged, while the new
-ones were not yet ready for action. In these
-circumstances, a resolution was come to by the British
-leaders which was bold to the verge of rashness and
-so chivalrous as to be almost quixotic. It was
-determined to send out at the shortest notice a naval
-division, one brigade of which consisted of marines,
-troops who are second to none in the country's
-service, while the other two brigades were young
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P195"></a>195}</span>
-amateur sailor volunteers, most of whom had only
-been under arms for a few weeks. It was an
-extraordinary experiment, as testing how far the average
-sport-loving, healthy-minded young Briton needs
-only his equipment to turn him into a soldier who,
-in spite of all rawness and inefficiency, can still affect
-the course of a campaign. This strange force,
-one-third veterans and two-thirds practically civilians,
-was hurried across to do what it could for the failing
-town, and to demonstrate to Belgium how real was
-the sympathy which prompted us to send all that
-we had. A reinforcement of a very different quality
-was dispatched a few days later in the shape of the
-Seventh Division of the Regular Army, with the Third
-Division of Cavalry. These fine troops were too late,
-however, to save the city, and soon found themselves
-in a position where it needed all their hardihood to
-save themselves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Marine Brigade of the Naval Division under
-General Paris was dispatched from England in the
-early morning and reached Antwerp during the night
-of October 3. They were about 2000 in number.
-Early next morning they were out in the trenches,
-relieving some weary Belgians. The Germans were
-already within the outer enceinte and drawing close
-to the inner. For forty-eight hours they held the
-line in the face of heavy shelling. The cover was
-good and the losses were not heavy. At the end of
-that time the Belgian troops, who had been a good
-deal worn by their heroic exertions, were unable to
-sustain the German pressure, and evacuated the
-trenches on the flank of the British line. The brigade
-then fell back to a reserve position in front of the
-town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P196"></a>196}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the night of the 5th the two other brigades of
-the division, numbering some 5000 amateur sailors,
-arrived in Antwerp, and the whole force assembled
-on the new line of defence. Mr. Winston Churchill
-showed his gallantry as a man, and his indiscretion as
-a high official, whose life was of great value to his
-country by accompanying the force from England.
-The bombardment was now very heavy, and the town
-was on fire in several places. The equipment of the
-British left much to be desired, and their trenches were
-as indifferent as their training. None the less they
-played the man and lived up to the traditions of that
-great service upon whose threshold they stood. For
-three days these men, who a few weeks before had been
-anything from schoolmasters to tram-conductors, held
-their perilous post. They were very raw, but they
-possessed a great asset in their officers, who were
-usually men of long service. But neither the lads
-of the naval brigades nor the war-worn and
-much-enduring Belgians could stop the mouths of those
-inexorable guns. On the 8th it was clear that the forts
-could no longer be held. The British task had been
-to maintain the trenches which connected the forts
-with each other, but if the forts went it was clear
-that the trenches must be outflanked and untenable.
-The situation, therefore, was hopeless, and all that
-remained was to save the garrison and leave as little
-as possible for the victors. Some thirty or forty
-German merchant ships in the harbour were sunk
-and the great petrol tanks were set on fire. By the
-light of the flames the Belgian and British forces
-made their way successfully out of the town, and
-the good service rendered later by our Allies upon
-the Yser and elsewhere is the best justification of the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P197"></a>197}</span>
-policy which made us strain every nerve in order to
-do everything which could have a moral or material
-effect upon them in their darkest hour. Had the
-British been able to get away unscathed, the whole
-operation might have been reviewed with equanimity
-if not with satisfaction, but, unhappily, a grave
-misfortune, arising rather from bad luck than from the
-opposition of the enemy, came upon the retreating
-brigades, so that very many of our young sailors
-after their one week of crowded life came to the end
-of their active service for the war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On leaving Antwerp it had been necessary to
-strike to the north in order to avoid a large detachment
-of the enemy who were said to be upon the line
-of the retreat. The boundary between Holland and
-Belgium is at this point very intricate, with no clear
-line of demarcation, and a long column of British
-somnambulists, staggering along in the dark after
-so many days in which they had for the most part
-never enjoyed two consecutive hours of sleep,
-wandered over the fatal line and found themselves
-in firm but kindly Dutch custody for the rest of the
-war. Some fell into the hands of the enemy, but the
-great majority were interned. These men belonged
-chiefly to three battalions of the 1st Brigade. The
-2nd Brigade, with one battalion of the 1st, and the
-greater part of the Marines, made their way to the
-trains at St. Gilles-Waes, and were able to reach
-Ostend in safety. The remaining battalion of Marines,
-with a number of stragglers of the other brigades,
-were cut off at Morbede by the Germans, and about
-half of them were taken, while the rest fought their
-way through in the darkness and joined their comrades.
-The total losses of the British in the whole
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P198"></a>198}</span>
-misadventure from first to last were about 2500
-men&mdash;a high price, and yet not too high when weighed
-against the results of their presence at Antwerp. On
-October 10 the Germans under General Von Beseler
-occupied the city. Mr. Powell, who was present,
-testifies that 60,000 marched into the town, and that
-they were all troops of the active army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has already been described how the northern
-ends of the two contending armies were endeavouring
-to outflank each other, and there seemed every
-possibility that this process would be carried out until
-each arrived at the coast. Early in October Sir John
-French represented to General Joffre that it would
-be well that the British Army should be withdrawn
-from the Aisne and take its position to the left of the
-French forces, a move which would shorten its line
-of communications very materially, and at the same
-time give it the task of defending the Channel coast.
-General Joffre agreed to the proposition, and the
-necessary steps were at once taken to put it into
-force. The Belgians had in the meanwhile made
-their way behind the line of the Yser, where a
-formidable position had been prepared. There, with hardly
-a day of rest, they were ready to renew the struggle
-with the ferocious ravagers of their country. The
-Belgian Government had been moved to France,
-and their splendid King, who will live in history as
-the most heroic and chivalrous figure of the war,
-continued by his brave words and noble example to
-animate the spirits of his countrymen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From this time Germany was in temporary occupation
-of all Belgium, save only the one little corner, the
-defence of which will be recorded for ever. Little
-did she profit by her crime or by the excuses and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P199"></a>199}</span>
-forged documents by which she attempted to justify
-her action. She entered the land in dishonour and
-dishonoured will quit it. William, Germany, and
-Belgium are an association of words which will raise
-in the minds of posterity all that Parma, Spain, and
-the Lowlands have meant to us&mdash;an episode of oppression,
-cruelty, and rapacity, which fresh generations
-may atone for but can never efface.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P200"></a>200}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII
-<br /><br />
-THE LA BASSÉE&mdash;ARMENTIÈRES OPERATIONS
-</h3>
-
-<p class="t3">
-(From October 11 to October 31, 1914)
-</p>
-
-<p class="intro">
-The great battle line&mdash;Advance of Second Corps&mdash;Death of General
-Hamilton&mdash;The farthest point&mdash;Fate of the 2nd Royal Irish&mdash;The
-Third Corps&mdash;Exhausted troops&mdash;First fight of Neuve
-Chapelle&mdash;The Indians take over&mdash;The Lancers at
-Warneton&mdash;Pulteney's operations&mdash;Action of Le Gheir.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-In accordance with the new plans, the great
-transference began upon October 3. It was an exceedingly
-difficult problem, since an army of more than 100,000
-men had to be gradually extricated by night from
-trenches which were often not more than a hundred
-yards from the enemy, while a second army of equal
-numbers had to be substituted in its place. The line
-of retreat was down an open slope, across exposed
-bridges, and up the slope upon the southern bank.
-Any alarm to the Germans might have been fatal,
-since a vigorous night attack in the middle of the
-operation would have been difficult to resist, and even
-an artillery bombardment must have caused great
-loss of life. The work of the Staff in this campaign
-has been worthy of the regimental officers and of the
-men. Everything went without a hitch. The Second
-Cavalry Division (Gough's) went first, followed
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P201"></a>201}</span>
-immediately by the First (De Lisle's). Then the
-infantry was withdrawn, the Second Corps being the
-vanguard; the Third Corps followed, and the First
-was the last to leave. The Second Corps began to
-clear from its trenches on October 3-4, and were
-ready for action on the Aire-Bethune line upon
-October 11. The Third Corps was very little behind
-it, and the First had reached the new battle-ground
-upon the 19th. Cavalry went by road; infantry
-marched part of the way, trained part of the way,
-and did the last lap very often in motor-buses. One
-way or another the men were got across, the Aisne
-trenches were left for ever, and a new phase of the
-war had begun. From the chalky uplands and the
-wooded slopes there was a sudden change to immense
-plains of clay, with slow, meandering, ditch-like
-streams, and all the hideous features of a great
-coal-field added to the drab monotony of Nature. No
-scenes could be more different, but the same great
-issue of history and the same old problem of trench
-and rifle were finding their slow solution upon each.
-The stalemate of the Aisne was for the moment set
-aside, and once again we had reverted to the old
-position where the ardent Germans declared, "This
-way we shall come," and the Allies, "Not a mile,
-save over our bodies."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The great battle line.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The narrator is here faced with a considerable
-difficulty in his attempt to adhere closely to truth
-and yet to make his narrative intelligible to the lay
-reader. We stand upon the edge of a great battle.
-If all the operations which centred at Ypres, but
-which extend to the Yser Canal upon the north and
-to La Bassée at the south, be grouped into one episode,
-it becomes the greatest clash of arms ever seen up
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P202"></a>202}</span>
-to that hour upon the globe, involving a casualty
-list&mdash;Belgian, French, British, and German&mdash;which
-could by no means be computed as under 250,000,
-and probably over 300,000 men. It was fought,
-however, over an irregular line, which is roughly
-forty miles from north to south, while it lasted, in
-its active form, from October 12 to November 20
-before it settled down to the inevitable siege stage.
-Thus both in time and in space it presents difficulties
-which make a concentrated, connected, and intelligible
-narrative no easy task. In order to attempt this,
-it is necessary first to give a general idea of what the
-British Army, in conjunction with its Allies, was
-endeavouring to do, and, secondly, to show how the
-operations affected each corps in its turn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the operations of the Aisne the French had
-extended the Allied line far to the north in the hope
-of outflanking the Germans. The new Tenth French
-Army, under General Foch, formed the extreme left of
-this vast manoeuvre, and it was supported on its
-left by the French cavalry. The German right had
-lengthened out, however, to meet every fresh
-extension of the French, and their cavalry had been
-sufficiently numerous and alert to prevent the French
-cavalry from getting round. Numerous skirmishes
-had ended in no definite result. It was at this period
-that it occurred, as already stated, to Sir John French
-that to bring the whole British Army round to the
-north of the line would both shorten very materially
-his communications and would prolong the line
-to an extent which might enable him to turn the
-German flank and make their whole position
-impossible. General Joffre having endorsed these views,
-Sir John took the steps which we have already seen.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P203"></a>203}</span>
-The British movement was, therefore, at the outset
-an aggressive one. How it became defensive as new
-factors intruded themselves, and as a result of the
-fall of Antwerp, will be shown at a later stage of this
-account.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the Second Corps arrived first upon the scene
-it will be proper to begin with some account of its
-doings from October 12, when it went into action,
-until the end of the month, when it found itself
-brought to a standstill by superior forces and placed
-upon the defensive. The doings of the Third Corps
-during the same period will be interwoven with those
-of the Second, since they were in close co-operation;
-and, finally, the fortunes of the First Corps will be
-followed and the relation shown between its doings
-and those of the newly arrived Seventh Division,
-which had fallen back from the vicinity of Antwerp
-and turned at bay near Ypres upon the pursuing
-Germans. Coming from different directions, all these
-various bodies were destined to be formed into one
-line, cemented together by their own dismounted
-cavalry and by French reinforcements, so as to lay
-an unbroken breakwater before the great German
-flood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The task of the Second Corps was to get into
-touch with the left flank of the Tenth French Army
-in the vicinity of La Bassée, and then to wheel round
-its own left so as to turn the position of those Germans
-who were facing our Allies. The line of the Bethune-Lille
-road was to be the hinge, connecting the two
-armies and marking the turning-point for the British.
-On the 11th Gough's Second Cavalry Division was
-clearing the woods in front of the Aire-Bethune
-Canal, which marked the line of the Second Corps. By
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P204"></a>204}</span>
-evening Gough had connected up the Third Division
-of the Second Corps with the Sixth Division of the
-Third Corps, which was already at Hazebrouck. On
-the 12th the Third Division crossed the canal,
-followed by the Fifth Division, with the exception
-of the 13th Brigade, which remained to the south of
-it. Both divisions advanced more or less north
-before swinging round to almost due east in their
-outflanking movement. The rough diagram gives
-an idea of the point from which they started and the
-positions reached at various dates before they came
-to an equilibrium. There were many weary stages,
-however, between the outset and the fulfilment, and
-the final results were destined to be barren as
-compared with the exertions and the losses involved.
-None the less it was, as it proved, an essential part
-of that great operation by which the British&mdash;with the
-help of their good allies&mdash;checked the German advance
-upon Calais in October and November, even as they
-had helped to head them off from Paris in August
-and September. During these four months the little
-British Army, far from being negligible, as some
-critics had foretold would be the case in a Continental
-war, was absolutely vital in holding the Allied line
-and taking the edge off the hacking German sword.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P205"></a>205}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-205"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-205.jpg" alt="Diagram to illustrate operations of Smith-Dorrien's 2nd. Corps &amp; Pulteney's 3rd Corps from Oct. 11 to Oct 19, 1914." />
-<br />
-Diagram to illustrate operations of Smith-Dorrien's 2nd. Corps &amp; <br />
-Pulteney's 3rd Corps from Oct. 11 to Oct 19, 1914.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-The Third Corps, which had detrained at St. Omer
-and moved to Hazebrouck, was intended to move
-in touch with the Second, prolonging its line to the
-north. The First and Second British Cavalry
-Divisions, now under the command of De Lisle and of
-Gough, with Allenby as chief, had a role of their own
-to play, and the space between the Second and Third
-Corps was now filled up by a French Cavalry Division
-under Conneau, a whole-hearted soldier always ready
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P206"></a>206}</span>
-to respond to any call. There was no strong
-opposition yet in front of the Third Corps, but General
-Pulteney moved rapidly forwards, brushed aside all
-resistance, and seized the town of Bailleul. A German
-position in front of the town, held by cavalry and
-infantry without guns, was rushed by a rapid advance
-of Haldane's 10th Infantry Brigade, the 2nd Seaforths
-particularly distinguishing themselves, though the
-1st Warwicks and 1st Irish Fusiliers had also a good
-many losses, the Irishmen clearing the trenches to
-the cry of "Faugh-a-Ballagh!" which has sounded
-so often upon battlefields of old. The 10th Brigade
-was on the left of the corps, and in touch with
-the Second Cavalry Division to the north. The
-whole action, with its swift advance and moderate
-losses, was a fine vindication of British infantry
-tactics. On the evening of October 15 the Third
-Corps had crossed the Lys, and on the 18th they
-extended from Warneton in the north to almost
-within touch of the position of the Second Corps at
-Aubers upon the same date.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Advance of Second Corps.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The country to the south in which the Second
-Corps was advancing upon October 12 was an
-extraordinarily difficult one, which offered many
-advantages to the defence over the attack. It was so
-flat that it was impossible to find places for artillery
-observation, and it was intersected with canals, high
-hedgerows, and dykes, which formed ready-made
-trenches. The Germans were at first not in strength,
-and consisted for the most part of dismounted cavalry
-drawn from four divisions, but from this time onwards
-there was a constant fresh accession of infantry and
-guns. They disputed with great skill and energy
-every position which could be defended, and the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P207"></a>207}</span>
-British advance during the day, though steady, was
-necessarily slow. Every hamlet, hedgerow, and
-stream meant a separate skirmish. The troops
-continually closed ranks, advanced, extended, and
-attacked from morning to night, sleeping where they
-had last fought. There was nothing that could be
-called a serious engagement, and yet the losses&mdash;almost
-entirely from the Third Division&mdash;amounted
-to 300 for the day, the heaviest sufferers being the
-2nd Royal Scots.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the next day, the 13th, the corps swung round
-its left so as to develop the turning movement already
-described. Its front of advance was about eight
-miles, and it met resistance which made all progress
-difficult. Again the 8th Brigade, especially the
-Royal Scots and 4th Middlesex, lost heavily. So
-desperate was the fighting that the Royal Scots had
-400 casualties including 9 officers, and the Middlesex
-fared little better. The principal fighting, however,
-fell late in the evening upon the 15th Brigade
-(Gleichen's), who were on the right of the line and in
-touch with the Bethune Canal. The enemy, whose
-line of resistance had been considerably thickened by
-the addition of several battalions of Jaeger and part
-of the Fourteenth Corps, made a spirited counter-attack
-on this portion of the advance. The 1st
-Bedfords were roughly handled and driven back, with
-the result that the 1st Dorsets, who were stationed at
-a bridge over the canal near Givenchy, found their
-flanks exposed and sustained heavy losses, amounting
-to 400 men, including Major Roper. Colonel Bols,
-of the same regiment, enjoyed one crowded hour of
-glorious life, for he was wounded, captured, and
-escaped all on the same evening. It was in this
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P208"></a>208}</span>
-action also that Major Vandeleur was wounded and
-captured.[<a id="chap07fn1text"></a><a href="#chap07fn1">1</a>] A section of guns which was involved in
-the same dilemma as the Dorsets had to be abandoned
-after every gunner had fallen. The 15th Brigade was
-compelled to fall back for half a mile and entrench
-itself for the night. On the left the 7th Brigade
-(McCracken's) had some eighty casualties in crossing
-the Lys, and a detachment of Northumberland
-Fusiliers, who covered their left flank, came under
-machine-gun fire, which struck down their adjutant,
-Captain Herbert, and a number of men. Altogether
-the losses on this day amounted to about twelve
-hundred men.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap07fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap07fn1text">1</a>] Major Vandeleur was the officer who afterwards escaped from Crefeld
-and brought back with him a shocking account of the German treatment
-of our prisoners. Though a wounded man, the Major was kicked by the
-direct command of one German officer, and his overcoat was taken from
-him in bitter weather by another.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Death of General Hamilton.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 14th the Second Corps continued its slow
-advance in the same direction. Upon this day the
-Third Division sustained a grievous loss in the shape
-of its commander, General Sir Hubert Hamilton, who
-was standing conversing with the quiet nonchalance
-which was characteristic of him, when a shell burst
-above him and a shrapnel bullet struck him on the
-temple, killing him at once. He was a grand
-commander, beloved by his men, and destined for the
-highest had he lived. He was buried that night after
-dark in a village churchyard. There was an artillery
-attack by the Germans during the service, and the
-group of silent officers, weary from the fighting line,
-who stood with bowed heads round the grave, could
-hardly hear the words of the chaplain for the whiz
-and crash of the shells. It was a proper ending for a
-soldier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P209"></a>209}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His division was temporarily taken over by
-General Colin Mackenzie. On this date the 13th
-Brigade, on the south of the canal, was relieved by
-French troops, so that henceforward all the British
-were to the north. For the three preceding days
-this brigade had done heavy work, the pressure of
-the enemy falling particularly upon the 2nd Scottish
-Borderers, who lost Major Allen and a number of
-other officers and men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The 15th was a day of spirited advance, the Third
-Division offering sacrifice in the old warrior fashion
-to the shade of its dead leader. Guns were brought
-up into the infantry line and the enemy was smashed
-out of entrenched positions and loopholed villages
-in spite of a most manful resistance. The soldiers
-carried long planks with them and threw them over
-the dykes on their advance. Mile after mile the
-Germans were pushed back, until they were driven
-off the high road which connects Estaires with La
-Bassée. The 1st Northumberland and 4th Royal
-Fusiliers of the 9th Brigade, and the 2nd Royal Scots
-and 4th Middlesex of the 8th, particularly distinguished
-themselves in this day of hard fighting. By
-the night of the 15th the corps had lost 90 officers
-and 2500 men in the four days, the disproportionate
-number of officers being due to the broken nature of
-the fighting, which necessitated the constant leading
-of small detachments. The German resistance
-continued to be admirable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 16th the slow wheeling movement of the
-Second Corps went steadily though slowly forward,
-meeting always the same stubborn resistance. The
-British were losing heavily by the incessant fighting,
-but so were the Germans, and it was becoming a
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P210"></a>210}</span>
-question which could stand punishment longest. In
-the evening the Third Division was brought to a
-stand by the village of Aubers, which was found to
-be strongly held. The Fifth Division was instructed
-to mark time upon the right, so as to form the pivot
-upon which all the rest of the corps could swing round
-in their advance on La Bassée. At this date the
-Third Corps was no great distance to the north, and
-the First Corps was detraining from the Aisne. As
-the Seventh Division with Byng's Third Cavalry
-Division were reported to be in touch with the other
-forces in the north, the concentration of the British
-Army was approaching a successful issue. The
-weather up to now during all the operations which
-have been described was wet and misty, limiting the
-use of artillery and entirely preventing that of aircraft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The farthest point.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 17th the advance was resumed and was
-destined to reach the extreme point which it attained
-for many a long laborious month. This was the
-village of Herlies, north-east of La Bassée, which was
-attacked in the evening by Shaw's 9th Brigade, and
-was carried in the dusk at the point of the bayonet
-by the 1st Lincolns and the 4th Royal Fusiliers.
-About the same time the Scots Fusiliers and
-Northumberlands had stormed Aubers. The 7th
-Brigade was less fortunate at the adjoining village
-of Illies, where they failed to make a lodgment, but
-the French cavalry on the extreme left, with the
-help of the 2nd Royal Irish, captured Fromelles.
-The Fifth Division also came forward a little, the
-right flank still on the canal, but the left bending
-round so as to get to the north of La Bassée. The
-1st Devons, who had taken the place of the Dorsets,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P211"></a>211}</span>
-pushed forward with such fire that they were half a
-mile ahead of the Army and in great danger of being
-cut off, but by individual coolness and resource they
-managed to get back to safety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 18th, Sir Charles Ferguson, who had done
-good work with the Army from the first gunshot of
-the war, was promoted to a higher rank and the
-command of the Fifth Division passed over to General
-Morland. Thus both divisions of the Second Corps
-changed their commanders within a week. On this
-date the infantry of the 14th Brigade, with some
-of the 13th Brigade, were within eight hundred
-yards of La Bassée, but found it so strongly held that
-it could not be entered, the Scottish Borderers losing
-heavily in a very gallant advance. The village of
-Illies also remained impregnable, being strongly
-entrenched and loopholed. Shaw's 9th Brigade took
-some of the trenches, but found their left flank
-exposed, so had to withdraw nearly half a mile and
-to entrench. In this little action the 1st Royal Scots
-Fusiliers bore the brunt of the fighting and the losses.
-Eight officers and nearly 200 men of this regiment
-were killed or wounded. A fresh German division
-came into action this day and their artillery was
-stronger, so that the prospects of future advance were
-not particularly encouraging. The British artillery
-was worked very hard, being overmatched and yet
-undefeatable. The strain both upon the men and the
-officers was constant, and the observation officers
-showed great daring and tenacity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Fate of the 2nd Royal Irish.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 19th neither the Third nor the Fifth
-Divisions made any appreciable progress, but one
-battalion was heavily engaged and added a fresh
-record to its ancient roll of valour. This was the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P212"></a>212}</span>
-2nd Royal Irish under Major Daniell, who attacked
-the village of Le Pilly rather forward from
-the British left in co-operation with the French
-cavalry. The Irish infantry charged over eight
-hundred yards of clear ground, carried the village by
-storm, and entrenched themselves within it. This
-advance and charge, which was carried out with the
-precision of an Aldershot field day, although 130
-men fell during the movement, is said by experienced
-spectators to have been a great feat of arms. The
-20th saw a strong counter-attack of the Germans,
-and by the evening their two flanks had lapped round
-Le Pilly, pushing off on the one side the French
-cavalry of Conneau, and on the other a too small
-detachment of the Royal Fusiliers who were flanking
-the Irishmen. All day the defenders of Le Pilly
-were subjected to a terrific shell-fire, and all attempts
-to get messages to them were unavailing. In the
-evening they were surrounded, and only two or
-three men of the battalion were ever seen again.
-The gallant Daniell fell, and it is on record that his
-last audible words were a command to fix bayonets
-and fight to the end, the cartridges of the battalion
-being at that time exhausted. A German officer
-engaged in this attack and subsequently taken
-prisoner has deposed that three German battalions
-attacked the Royal Irish, one in front and one on
-each flank, after they had been heavily bombarded
-in enfilade. Several hundred Irish dead and wounded
-were taken out of the main trench.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P213"></a>213}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-213"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-213.jpg" alt="Southern End of British Line" />
-<br />
-Southern End of British Line
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-There was now ample evidence that the Germans
-had received large reinforcements, and that their line
-was too strong to be forced. The whole object and
-character of the operations assumed, therefore, a
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P214"></a>214}</span>
-new aspect. The Second and Third Corps had swung
-round, describing an angle of ninety degrees, with
-its pivot upon the right at the La Bassée Canal, and
-by this movement it had succeeded in placing itself
-upon the flank of the German force which faced the
-Tenth French Army. But there was now no longer
-any flank, for the German reinforcements had enabled
-them to prolong their line and so to turn the action
-into a frontal attack by the British. Such an attack
-in modern warfare can only hope for success when
-carried out by greatly superior numbers, whereas
-the Germans were now stronger than their assailants,
-having been joined by one division of the Seventh
-Corps, a brigade of the Third Corps, and the whole of
-the Fourteenth Corps, part of which had already
-been engaged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Third Corps.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The increased pressure was being felt by the Third
-Corps on the Lys, as well as by the Second to the
-south of them; indeed, as only a few miles intervened
-between the two, they may be regarded as one for
-these operations. We have seen that, having taken
-the town of Bailleul, Pulteney's Corps had established
-itself across the Lys, and occupied a line from
-Warneton to Radinghem upon October 18. The latter
-village had been taken on that day by the 16th
-Brigade in an action in which the 1st Buffs and
-2nd York and Lancasters lost heavily, the latter being
-ambushed as it pursued the enemy and losing 11
-officers and 400 men. Colonel Cobbold fell back
-upon the village and held it successfully. Pulteney
-was now strongly attacked, and there was a movement
-of the Germans on October 20 as if to turn his right
-and slip in between the two British corps. The
-action was carried on into the 21st, the enemy still
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P215"></a>215}</span>
-showing considerable energy and strength. The chief
-German advance during the day was north of La
-Bassée. It came upon the village of Lorgies, which
-was the point where the South Lancashires, of
-McCracken's 7th Brigade, forming the extreme right
-of the Third Division, were in touch with the East
-Surreys and Duke of Cornwall's of the 14th Brigade,
-forming the extreme left of the Fifth Division. It is
-necessary to join one's flats carefully in the presence
-of the Germans, for they are sharp critics of such
-matters. In this instance a sudden attack near
-Illies drove in a portion of the 2nd South Lancashires.
-This attack also destroyed the greater part of a
-company of the 1st Cornwalls in support. An
-ugly gap was left in the line, but the remainder
-of the Cornwalls, with the help of a company of the
-1st West Kents and the ever-constant artillery, filled
-it up during the rest of the day, and the 2nd Yorkshire
-Light Infantry took it over the same night, the
-Cornishmen retiring with heavy losses but a great
-deal of compensating glory. The temporary gap in
-the line exposed the right flank of the 3rd Worcesters,
-who were next to the South Lancashires. They
-lost heavily in killed and wounded, their colonel,
-Stuart, being among the latter, though his injury
-did not prevent him from remaining in the battle
-line. Apart from this action at Lorgies, the 19th
-Brigade (Gordon's), upon the flank of Pulteney's
-Corps, sustained a very heavy attack, being driven
-back for some distance. It had been ordered to
-occupy Fromelles, and so close the gap which existed
-at that time between the left of the Second and the
-right of the Third Corps, situated respectively at
-Aubers and Radinghem. The chief fighting occurred
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P216"></a>216}</span>
-at the village of Le Maisnil, close to Fromelles. This
-village was occupied by the 2nd Argylls and half the
-1st Middlesex, but they were driven out by a severe
-shell-fire followed by an infantry advance. The
-brigade fell back in good order, the regiments engaged
-having lost about 300 men. They took up a position
-on the right of the 16th Infantry Brigade at La
-Boutillerie, and there they remained until November
-17, one severe attack falling upon them on October 29,
-which is described under that date.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the morning of October 22 the Germans, still
-very numerous and full of fight, made a determined
-attack upon the Fifth Division, occupying the village
-of Violaines, close to La Bassée. The village was
-held by the 1st Cheshires, who, for the second time
-in this campaign, found themselves in a terribly
-difficult position. It is typical of the insolent high
-spirits of the men, in spite of all that they had
-endured, that upon the Germans charging forward with
-a war-cry which resembled, "Yip, Yip, Yip!" the
-British infantry joined in with "I-addy-ti-ay!"
-the whole forming the chorus of a once popular
-Gaiety song. The Cheshires inflicted heavy losses
-upon the stormers with rifle-fire, but were at last
-driven out, involving in their retirement the 1st
-Dorsets, who had left their own trenches in order to
-help them. Both regiments, but especially the
-Cheshires, had grievous losses, in casualties and
-prisoners. On advancing in pursuit the Germans
-were strongly counter-attacked by the 2nd Manchesters
-and the 1st Cornwalls, supported by the 3rd
-Worcesters, who, by their steady fire, brought them
-to a standstill, but were unable to recover the ground
-that had been lost, though the Cornwalls, who had
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P217"></a>217}</span>
-been fighting with hardly a pause for forty-eight
-hours, succeeded in capturing one of their machine-guns.
-In the night the British withdrew their line
-in accordance with the general rearrangement to be
-described. Some rearguard stragglers at break of
-day had the amusing experience of seeing the Germans
-making a valiant and very noisy attack upon the
-abandoned and empty trenches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this date, October 22, not only had Smith-Dorrien
-experienced this hold-up upon his right
-flank, but his left flank had become more vulnerable,
-because the French had been heavily attacked at
-Fromelles, and had been driven out of that village.
-An equilibrium had been established between attack
-and defence, and the position of the Aisne was
-beginning to appear once again upon the edge of Flanders.
-General Smith-Dorrien, feeling that any substantial
-advance was no longer to be hoped for under the
-existing conditions, marked down and occupied a
-strong defensive position, from Givenchy on the
-south to Fauquissart on the north. This involved
-a retirement of the whole corps during the night for
-a distance of from one to two miles, but it gave
-a connected position with a clear field of fire. At
-the same time the general situation was greatly
-strengthened by the arrival at the front of the Lahore
-Division of the Indian Army under General Watkis.
-These fine troops were placed in reserve behind the
-Second Corps in the neighbourhood of Locon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Exhausted troops.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is well to remember at this point what
-Smith-Dorrien's troops had already endured during the
-two months that the campaign had lasted. Taking
-the strength of the corps at 37,000 men, they had
-lost, roughly, 10,000 men in August, 10,000 in
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P218"></a>218}</span>
-September, and 5000 up to date in these actions of
-October. It is certain that far less than 50 per cent
-of the original officers and men were still with the
-Colours, and drafts can never fully restore the unity
-and spirit of a homogeneous regiment, where every
-man knows his company leaders and his platoon.
-In addition to this they had now fought night and
-day for nearly a fortnight, with broken and insufficient
-sleep, laying down their rifles to pick up their spades,
-and then once again exchanging spade for rifle, while
-soaked to the skin with incessant fogs and rain, and
-exposed to that most harassing form of fighting,
-where every clump and hedgerow covers an enemy.
-They were so exhausted that they could hardly be
-woken up to fight. To say that they were now
-nearing the end of their strength and badly in need
-of a rest is but to say that they were mortal men
-and had reached the physical limits that mortality
-must impose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The French cavalry divisions acting as links
-between Pulteney and Smith-Dorrien were now
-relieved by the 8th (Jullundur) Indian Infantry
-Brigade, containing the 1st Manchesters, 59th (Scinde)
-Rifles, 15th and 47th Sikhs. It may be remarked
-that each Indian brigade is made up of three Indian
-and one British battalion. This change was effected
-upon October 24, a date which was marked by no
-particular military event save that the Third Division
-lost for a time the services of General Beauchamp
-Doran, who returned to England. General Doran
-had done great service in leading what was perhaps
-the most hard-worked brigade in a hard-worked
-division. General Bowes took over the command of
-the 8th Infantry Brigade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P219"></a>219}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the night of October 24 determined attacks
-were made upon the trenches of the Second Corps at
-the Bois de Biez, near Neuve Chapelle, but were
-beaten off with heavy loss to the enemy, who had
-massed together twelve battalions in order to rush a
-particular part of the position. The main attack
-fell upon the 1st Wiltshires and the 2nd Royal Irish
-Rifles, belonging to McCracken's 7th Brigade, and
-also upon the 15th Sikhs, who seem to have been
-the first Indians to be seriously engaged, having
-nearly two hundred casualties. The 8th Brigade
-were also involved in the fight. The Germans had
-some temporary success in the centre of the trenches
-of the Third Division, where, in the darkness, they
-pushed back the 1st Gordon Highlanders, who lost
-very heavily. As the Highlanders fell back, the
-2nd Royal Scots, upon their right, swung back its
-flank companies, covered the retirement, and then,
-straightening their ranks again, flung the Germans,
-at the point of their bayonets, out of the trenches.
-It was one of several remarkable feats which this fine
-battalion has performed in the war. Next morning
-the captured trenches were handed over to the care
-of the 4th Middlesex.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-First fight of Neuve Chapelle.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The pressure upon the exhausted troops was extreme
-upon this day, for a very severe attack was made also
-upon the Fifth Division, holding the right of the line.
-The soldiers, as already shown, were in no condition
-for great exertions, and yet, after their wont, they
-rose grandly to the occasion. The important village
-of Givenchy, destined for many a long month to form
-the advanced post upon the right of the Army,
-was held by the 1st Norfolks and 1st Devons, who
-defied all efforts of the enemy to dislodge them.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P220"></a>220}</span>
-Nevertheless, the situation was critical and difficult
-for both divisions, and the only available support,
-the 1st Manchesters from the Lahore Division, were
-pushed up into the fighting line and found themselves
-instantly engaged in the neighbourhood of Givenchy.
-It was dreadful weather, the trenches a quagmire,
-and the rifle-bolts often clogged with the mud. On
-the 26th Sir John French, realising how great was the
-task with which the weary corps was faced, sent up
-two batteries of 4.7 guns, which soon lessened the
-volume of the German artillery attack. At the same
-time General Maistre, of the Twenty-first French
-Corps, sent two of his batteries and two of his
-battalions. Thus strengthened, there was no further
-immediate anxiety as to the line being broken,
-especially as upon the 26th Marshal French, carefully
-playing card after card from his not over-strong
-hand, placed the Second Cavalry Division and three
-more Indian battalions in reserve to Smith-Dorrien's
-corps. The German advance had by no means spent
-itself, as on this day they came to close grips with
-the 2nd Irish Rifles and established themselves
-firmly in the village of Neuve Chapelle, near the
-centre of the British line, inflicting heavy loss upon
-the Royal Fusiliers, who tried to restore the position.
-A number of attacks were made to regain this village
-next day, in which as strange a medley of troops were
-employed as could ever before have found themselves
-as comrades in so minor an operation. There were
-South Lancashires, Royal Fusiliers, 9th Bhopal
-Infantry, 47th Sikhs, Chasseurs Alpins, and other
-units. In spite of&mdash;or possibly on account of&mdash;this
-international competition the village remained with
-the Germans, who were strongly reinforced, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P221"></a>221}</span>
-managed by their shell-fire to clear some of the nearest
-trenches and gain some additional ground, hitting
-the 1st Wiltshires and 2nd Irish Rifles hard and
-making a number of prisoners, two or three hundred
-in all. Again the times had become critical, the more
-so as the 8th Indian Brigade to the north had also been
-attacked and roughly handled. The indomitable
-Smith-Dorrien was determined to have his village,
-however, and in the neighbouring French cavalry
-commander, General Conneau, he found a worthy
-colleague who was ready to throw his last man into
-the venture. The Second Cavalry, now under General
-Mullens, was also ready, as our cavalry has always
-been, to spring in as a makeweight when the balance
-trembled. The German losses were known to have
-been tremendous, and it was hoped that the force
-of their attack was spent. On the 28th the assault
-was renewed, prefaced by a strong artillery
-preparation, but again it was brought to a standstill.
-The 47th Sikhs fought magnificently from loopholed
-house to house, as did the Indian sappers and miners,
-while the cavalry showed themselves to be admirable
-infantry at a pinch, but the defence was still too
-strong and the losses too severe, though at one time
-Colonel McMahon, with his Fusiliers, had seized the
-whole north end of the village.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some 60 officers and 1500 men had fallen in the
-day's venture, including 70 of the cavalry. The night
-fell with Neuve Chapelle still in the hands of the enemy,
-and the British troops to the north, east, and west of
-it in a semicircle. The 14th Brigade, coming up after
-dark, found the 1st West Kent Regiment reduced to
-2 officers and 150 men, and the 2nd Yorkshire Light
-Infantry at about the same strength, still holding on
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P222"></a>222}</span>
-to positions which had been committed to them three
-days before. The conduct of these two grand
-regiments upon that and the previous days excited the
-admiration of every one, for, isolated from their
-comrades, they had beaten off a long succession of infantry
-attacks and had been enfiladed by a most severe
-shell-fire. Second-Lieutenant White, with a still
-younger officer named Russell, formed the whole staff
-of officers of the West Kents. Major Buckle, Captain
-Legard, and many others having been killed or
-wounded, Penny and Crossley, the two sergeant-majors,
-did great work, and the men were splendid.
-These shire regiments, raised from the very soil of
-England, reflect most nearly her national qualities,
-and in their stolid invincibility form a fitting
-framework of a great national army. Speaking to the
-West Kents of this episode, General Smith-Dorrien
-said: "There is one part of the line which has never
-been retaken, because it was never lost. It was the
-particular trenches which your battalion held so
-grimly during those terrific ten days."
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P223"></a>223}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-223"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-223.jpg" alt="General View of Seat of Operations." />
-<br />
-General View of Seat of Operations.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-These determined efforts were not spent in vain,
-for the Germans would not bide the other brunt.
-Early on the 29th the British patrols found that
-Neuve Chapelle had been evacuated by the enemy,
-who must have lost several thousand men in its
-capture and fine subsequent defence. In this village
-fighting the British were much handicapped at this
-time by the want of high explosive shells to destroy
-the houses. The enemy's artillery made it impossible
-for the British to occupy it, and some time later it
-reverted to the Germans once more, being occupied
-by the Seventh Westphalian Corps. It was made an
-exceedingly strong advance position by the Germans,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P224"></a>224}</span>
-but it was reoccupied by the British Fourth Corps
-(Rawlinson's) and the Indian Corps (Willcocks') upon
-March 10 in an assault which lasted three days, and
-involved a loss of 12,000 men to the attackers and at
-least as many to the defenders. This battle will be
-described among the operations of the spring of 1915,
-but it is mentioned now to show how immutable were
-the lines between these dates.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The southern or La Bassée end of the line had also
-been attacked upon the 28th and 29th, and the 2nd
-Manchesters driven from their trenches, which they
-instantly regained, killing seventy of the enemy and
-taking a number of prisoners. It was in this action
-that Lieutenant Leach and Sergeant Hogan earned the
-V.C., capturing a trench at the head of ten volunteers
-and disposing of some fifty Germans. Morland's Fifth
-Division had several other skirmishes during these
-days, in which the Duke of Cornwall's, Manchesters,
-and 1st Devons, who had taken the place of the
-Suffolks in the 14th Brigade, were chiefly engaged.
-The Devons had come late, but they had been constantly
-engaged and their losses were already as great
-as the others. For sixteen days they had held on
-with desperate resolution, their Colonel Gloster and
-a considerable proportion of the officers and men
-being hit. When they were at last relieved they
-received the applause of the Army. On the whole,
-the general line was held, though the price was often
-severe. At this period General Wing took command
-of the Third Division instead of General
-Mackenzie&mdash;invalided home&mdash;the third divisional change within
-a fortnight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Indians take over.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The arduous month of October was now drawing
-to a close, and so it was hoped were the labours of the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P225"></a>225}</span>
-weary Second Corps. Already, on the top of all their
-previous casualties, they had lost 360 officers and
-8200 men since on October 12 they had crossed the La
-Bassée Canal. The spirit of the men was unimpaired
-for the most part&mdash;indeed, it seemed often to rise
-with the emergency&mdash;but the thinning of the ranks,
-the incessant labour, and the want of sleep had
-produced extreme physical exhaustion. Upon October
-29 it was determined to take them out of the front
-line and give them the rest which they so badly
-needed. With this end in view, Sir James Willcocks'
-Indian Corps was moved to the front, and it was
-gradually substituted for the attenuated regiments of
-the Second Corps in the first row of trenches. The
-greater part of the corps was drawn out of the line,
-leaving two brigades and most of the artillery behind
-to support the Indians. That the latter would have
-some hard work was speedily apparent, as upon this
-very day the 8th Gurkhas were driven out of their
-trenches. With the support of a British battalion,
-however, and of Vaughan's Indian Rifles they were
-soon recovered, though Colonel Venner of the latter
-corps fell in the attack. This warfare of unseen
-enemies and enormous explosions was new to the
-gallant Indians, but they soon accommodated themselves
-to it, and moderated the imprudent gallantry
-which exposed them at first to unnecessary loss.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here, at the end of October, we may leave the
-Second Corps. It was speedily apparent that their
-services were too essential to be spared, and that their
-rest would be a very nominal one. The Third Corps
-will be treated presently. They did admirably all
-that came to them to do, but they were so placed that
-both flanks were covered by British troops, and they
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P226"></a>226}</span>
-were less exposed to pressure than the others. The
-month closed with this corps and the Indians holding a
-line which extended north and south for about twenty
-miles from Givenchy and Festubert in the south to
-Warneton in the north. We will return to the operations
-in this region, but must turn back a fortnight or
-so in order to follow the very critical and important
-events which had been proceeding in the north. Before
-doing so it would be well to see what had befallen
-the cavalry, which, when last mentioned, had, upon
-October 11, cleared the woods in front of the Second
-Corps and connected it up with the right wing of
-the Third Corps. This was carried out by Gough's
-Second Cavalry Division, which was joined next day
-by De Lisle's First Division, the whole under General
-Allenby. This considerable force moved north upon
-October 12 and 13, pushing back a light fringe of the
-enemy and having one brisk skirmish at Mont des
-Cats, a small hill, crowned by a monastery, where
-the body of a Prince of Hesse was picked up
-after the action. Still fighting its way, the cavalry
-moved north to Berthen and then turned eastwards
-towards the Lys to explore the strength of the enemy
-and the passages of the river in that direction. Late
-at night upon the 14th General de Lisle, scouting
-northwards upon a motor-car, met Prince Alexander
-of Teck coming southwards, the first contact with the
-isolated Seventh Division.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Lancers at Warneton.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the night of the 16th an attempt was made
-upon Warneton, where the Germans had a bridge over
-the river, but the village was too strongly held. The
-3rd Cavalry Brigade was engaged in the enterprise, and
-the 16th Lancers was the particular regiment upon
-whom it fell. The main street of the village was
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P227"></a>227}</span>
-traversed by a barricade and the houses loopholed.
-The Germans were driven by the dismounted troopers,
-led by Major Campbell, from the first barricade,
-but took refuge behind a second one, where they
-were strongly reinforced. The village had been set
-on fire, and the fighting went on by the glare of the
-flames. When the order for retirement was at last
-given it was found that several wounded Lancers had
-been left close to the German barricade. The fire
-having died down, three of the Lancers&mdash;Sergeant
-Glasgow, Corporal Boyton, and Corporal Chapman&mdash;stole
-down the dark side of the street in their stockinged
-feet and carried some of their comrades off under the
-very noses of the Germans. Many, however, had to
-be left behind. It is impossible for cavalry to be
-pushful and efficient without taking constant risks
-which must occasionally materialise. The general
-effect of the cavalry operations was to reconnoitre
-thoroughly all the west side of the river and to show
-that the enemy were in firm possession of the eastern
-bank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From this time onwards until the end of the month
-the cavalry were engaged in carrying on the north
-and south line of defensive trenches, which, beginning
-with the right of the Second Corps (now replaced by
-Indians) at Givenchy, was prolonged by the Third
-Corps as far as Frelingham. There the cavalry took
-it up and carried it through Comines to Wervicq,
-following the bend of the river. These lines were at
-once strongly attacked, but the dismounted troopers
-held their positions. On October 22 the 12th Lancers
-were heavily assaulted, but with the aid of an enfilading
-fire from the 5th Lancers drove off the enemy.
-That evening saw four more attacks, all of them
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P228"></a>228}</span>
-repulsed, but so serious that Indian troops were
-brought up to support the cavalry. Every day
-brought its attack until they culminated in the great
-and critical fight from October 30 to November 2,
-which will be described later. The line was held,
-though with some loss of ground and occasional
-setbacks, until November 2, when considerable French
-reinforcements arrived upon the scene. It is a fact
-that for all these weeks the position which was held
-in the face of incessant attack by two weak cavalry
-divisions should have been, and eventually was,
-held by two army corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Pulteney's operations.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is necessary now to briefly sketch the movements
-of the Third Corps (Pulteney's). Its presence
-upon the left flank of the Second Corps, and the fact
-that it held every attack that came against it, made
-it a vital factor in the operations. It is true that,
-having staunch British forces upon each flank, its
-position was always less precarious than either of the
-two corps which held the southern and northern
-extremities of the line, for without any disparagement
-to our Allies, who have shown themselves to be the
-bravest of the brave, it is evident that we can depend
-more upon troops who are under the same command,
-and whose movements can be certainly co-ordinated.
-At the same time, if the Third Corps had less to do, it
-can at least say that whatever did come to it was
-excellently well done, and that it preserved its line
-throughout. Its units were extended over some
-twelve miles of country, and it was partly astride of
-the River Lys, so that here as elsewhere there was
-constant demand upon the vigilance and staunchness
-of officers and men. On October 20 a very severe
-attack fell upon the 2nd Sherwood Foresters, who held
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P229"></a>229}</span>
-the most advanced trenches of Congreve's 18th
-Brigade. They were nearly overwhelmed by the
-violence of the German artillery fire, and were
-enfiladed on each side by infantry and machine-guns.
-The 2nd Durhams came up in reinforcement, but the
-Foresters had already sustained grievous losses in
-casualties and prisoners, the battalion being reduced
-from 900 to 250 in a single day. The Durhams also
-lost heavily. On this same day, the 20th, the 2nd
-Leinsters, of the 17th Brigade, were also driven from
-their trenches and suffered severely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Action of La Gheir.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On October 21 the Germans crossed the River
-Lys in considerable force, and upon the morning of the
-22nd they succeeded in occupying the village of Le
-Gheir upon the western side, thus threatening to
-outflank the positions of the Second Cavalry Division to
-the north. In their advance in the early morning of
-the 22nd they stormed the trenches held by the 2nd
-Inniskilling Fusiliers, this regiment enduring
-considerable losses. The trenches on the right were held
-by the 1st Royal Lancasters and 2nd Lancashire
-Fusiliers. These two regiments were at once ordered
-by General Anley, of the 12th Brigade, to initiate a
-counter-attack under the lead of Colonel Butler.
-Anley himself, who is a hard-bitten soldier of much
-Egyptian fighting, moved forward his men, while
-General Hunter-Weston, the indefatigable blower-up
-of railway lines in South Africa, supported the
-counter-attack with the Somerset Light Infantry and the 1st
-East Lancashires. The latter regiment, under Colonel
-Lawrence, passed through a wood and reached such a
-position that they were able to enfilade the Germans
-in the open, causing them very heavy losses. The
-action was a brilliant success. The positions lost
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P230"></a>230}</span>
-were reoccupied and the enemy severely punished,
-over a thousand Germans being killed or wounded,
-while 300 were taken prisoners. These belonged
-to the 104th and 179th Saxon regiments. It was
-a strange turn of fate which, after fifteen hundred
-years, brought tribesmen who had wandered up the
-course of the Elbe face to face in deadly strife with
-fellow-tribesmen who had passed over the sea to
-Britain. It is worth remarking and remembering
-that they are the one section of the German race who
-in this war have shown that bravery is not necessarily
-accompanied by coarseness and brutality.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On October 25 the attacks became most severe upon
-the line of Williams' 16th Brigade, and on that night
-the trenches of the 1st Leicesters were raked by so
-heavy a gunfire that they were found to be untenable,
-the regiment losing 350 men. The line both of the
-16th and of the 18th Brigades was drawn back for
-some little distance. There was a lull after this,
-broken upon the 29th, when Gordon's 19th Brigade
-was attacked with great violence by six fresh
-battalions&mdash;heavy odds against the four weak
-battalions which composed the British Brigade. The
-1st Middlesex Regiment was driven from part of its
-trenches, but came back with a rush, helped by their
-comrades of the 2nd Argyll and Sutherland
-Highlanders. The Germans were thrown out of the
-captured trenches, 40 were made prisoners, and 200
-were slain. This attack was made by the 223rd and
-224th Regiments of the XXIV. German Reserve
-Corps. It was not repeated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 30th another sharp action occurred near
-St. Yves, when Hunter-Weston's 11th Brigade was
-momentarily pierced after dusk by a German rush,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P231"></a>231}</span>
-which broke through a gap in the Hampshires. The
-Somerset Light Infantry, under Major Prowse, came
-back upon them and the trenches were regained. In
-all such actions it is to be remembered that where a
-mass of men can suddenly be directed against scattered
-trenches which will only hold a few, it is no difficult
-matter to carry them, but at once the conditions
-reverse themselves and the defenders mass their
-supports, who can usually turn the intruders out once
-more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This brings the general record of the doings of the
-Third Corps down to the end of October, the date on
-which we cease the account of the operations at the
-southern end of the British line. We turn from
-this diffuse and difficult story, with its ever-varying
-positions and units, to the great epic of the north,
-which will be inseparably united for ever with the
-name of Ypres.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P232"></a>232}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII
-<br /><br />
-THE FIRST BATTLE OF YPRES
-</h3>
-
-<p class="t3">
-(Up to the Action of Gheluvelt, October 31)
-</p>
-
-<p class="intro">
-The Seventh Division&mdash;Its peculiar excellence&mdash;Its difficult
-position&mdash;A deadly ordeal&mdash;Desperate attacks on Seventh
-Division&mdash;Destruction of 2nd Wilts&mdash;Hard fight of 20th
-Brigade&mdash;Arrival of First Corps&mdash;Advance of Haig's Corps&mdash;Fight of Pilken
-Inn&mdash;Bravery of enemy&mdash;Advance of Second Division&mdash;Fight of
-Kruiseik cross-roads&mdash;Fight of Zandvoorde&mdash;Fight of
-Gheluvelt&mdash;Advance of Worcesters&mdash;German recoil&mdash;General result&mdash;A
-great crisis.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-It has already been seen that the Seventh Division
-(Capper's), being the first half of Rawlinson's Fourth
-first Army Corps, had retired south and west after the
-unsuccessful attempt to relieve Antwerp. It was
-made up as follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Seventh Division
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- DIVISION VII.&mdash;General CAPPER.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 20<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Ruggles-Brise</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Grenadier Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Scots Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Border Regiment.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Gordon Highlanders.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 2l<i>st Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Walls</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Bedfords.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Yorks.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Wilts.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Scots Fusiliers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P233"></a>233}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 22<i>nd Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Lawford</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st South Staffords.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Warwicks.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Queen's West Surrey.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Welsh Fusiliers.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Artillery.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22nd Brigade R.F.A.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35th Brigade R.F.A.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd R.G.A.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;111th R.G.A.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;112th R.G.A.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14th Brigade R.H.A. C.F.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Engineers.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;54, 55, F. Co.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 Signal Co.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Divisional Cavalry.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Northumberland Yeomanry.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Its peculiar excellence.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not too much to say that in an army where
-every division had done so well no single one was
-composed of such fine material as the Seventh. The
-reason was that the regiments composing it had all
-been drawn from foreign garrison duty, and consisted
-largely of soldiers of from three to seven years'
-standing, with a minimum of reservists. In less than a
-month from the day when this grand division of
-18,000 men went into action its infantry had been
-nearly annihilated, but the details of its glorious
-destruction furnish one more vivid page of British
-military achievement. We lost a noble division and
-gained a glorious record.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Third Cavalry Division under General Byng
-was attached to the Seventh Division, and joined up
-with it at Roulers upon October 13. It consisted
-of&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 6<i>th Cavalry Brigade&mdash;General Makings</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd Dragoon Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10th Hussars.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Royals.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
- 7<i>th Cavalry Brigade&mdash;General Kavanagh</i>.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Life Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Life Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Horse Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Horse Guards.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;K Battery, R.H.A.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P234"></a>234}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The First Army Corps not having yet come up
-from the Aisne, these troops were used to cover the
-British position from the north, the infantry lying
-from Zandvoorde through Gheluvelt to Zonnebeke,
-and the cavalry on their left from Zonnebeke to
-Langemarck from October 16 onwards. It was decided by
-Sir John French that it was necessary to get possession
-of the town of Menin, some distance to the east of
-the general British line, but very important because
-the chief bridge, by means of which the Germans
-were receiving their ever-growing reinforcements, was
-there. The Seventh Division was ordered accordingly
-to advance upon this town, its left flank being covered
-by the Third Cavalry Division.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P235"></a>235}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-235"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-235.jpg" alt="LINE OF 7th DIVISION (CAPPER) &amp; 3rd CAVALRY DIVISION (BYNG) FROM OCT 17th. ONWARDS" />
-<br />
-LINE OF 7th DIVISION (CAPPER) &amp; 3rd CAVALRY DIVISION (BYNG) <br />
-FROM OCT 17th. ONWARDS
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Its difficult position.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The position was a dangerous one. It has already
-been stated that the pause on the Aisne may not
-have been unwelcome to the Germans, as they were
-preparing reserve formations which might be suddenly
-thrown against some chosen spot in the Allied line.
-They had the equipment and arms for at least another
-250,000 men, and that number of drilled men were
-immediately available, some being Landwehr who
-had passed through the ranks, and others young
-formations which had been preparing when war
-broke out. Together they formed no less than five
-new army corps, available for the extreme western
-front, more numerous than the whole British and
-Belgian armies combined. This considerable force,
-secretly assembled and moving rapidly across Belgium,
-was now striking the north of the Allied line, debouching
-not only over the river at Menin, but also through
-Courtrai, Iseghem, and Roulers. It consisted of the
-22nd, 23rd, 24th, 26th, and 27th reserve corps. Of
-these the 22nd, and later the 24th, followed the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P236"></a>236}</span>
-Belgians to the line of the Yser, but the other corps
-were all available for an attack upon the flank of
-that British line which was faced by formidable
-opponents&mdash;a line which extended over thirty miles
-and had already been forced into a defensive attitude.
-That was the situation when the Seventh Division
-faced round near Ypres. Sir John French was doing
-all that he could to support it, and Sir Douglas Haig
-was speeding up his army corps from the Aisne to
-take his place to the north of Ypres, but there were
-some days during which Rawlinson's men were in
-the face of a force six or seven times larger than
-themselves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Upon October 16th and 17th the division had
-advanced from Ypres and occupied the line already
-mentioned, the right centre of which rested about the
-ninth kilometre on the Ypres-Menin road, the order
-of the brigades from the north being 22nd, 21st,
-and 20th. On October 18 the division wheeled its
-left forward. As the infantry advanced, the covering
-cavalry soon became aware of grave menace from
-Roulers and Courtrai in the north. A large German
-force was evidently striking down on to the left flank
-of the advance. The division was engaged all along
-the line, for the 20th Brigade upon the right had a
-brisk skirmish, while the 21st Brigade in the centre
-was also under fire, which came especially heavily
-upon the 2nd Bedfords, who had numerous casualties.
-About ten o'clock on the morning of the 19th the
-pressure from the north increased, and the 7th
-Cavalry Brigade was driven in, though it held its own
-with great resolution for some time, helped by the
-fine work of K Battery, R.H.A. The 6th Cavalry
-Brigade was held up in front, while the danger on the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P237"></a>237}</span>
-flank grew more apparent as the hours passed. In
-these circumstances General Rawlinson, fortified in
-his opinion by the precise reports of his airmen as
-to the strength of the enemy upon his left, came to
-the conclusion that a further advance would place
-him in a difficult position. He therefore dropped
-back to his original line. There can be little doubt
-that, if he had persevered in the original plan, his
-force would have been in extreme danger. As it
-was, before he could get it back the 1st Welsh Fusiliers
-were hard hit, this famous regiment losing a major,
-5 captains, 3 lieutenants, and about 200 men. The
-order to retire had failed to reach it, and but for the
-able handling of Colonel Cadogan it might well have
-been destroyed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On October 20, the situation being still obscure,
-the 20th Brigade carried out a reconnaissance towards
-Menin. The 2nd Wilts and 2nd Scots Fusiliers, of
-the 21st Brigade, covered their left flank. The enemy,
-however, made a vigorous attack upon the 22nd
-Brigade to the north, especially upon the Welsh
-Fusiliers, so the reconnaissance had to fall back
-again, the 1st Grenadier Guards sustaining some
-losses. The two covering regiments were also hard
-pressed, especially the Wiltshires, who were again
-attacked during the night, but repulsed their
-assailants.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-A deadly ordeal.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From this time onwards the Seventh Division
-was to feel ever more and more the increasing pressure
-as the German army corps from day to day brought
-their weight to bear upon a thin extended line of
-positions held by a single division. It will be shown
-that they were speedily reinforced by the First Corps,
-but even after its advent the Germans were still able
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P238"></a>238}</span>
-to greatly outnumber the British force. The story
-from this time onwards is one of incessant and desperate
-attacks by day and often by night. At first the
-division was holding the position alone, with the help
-of their attendant cavalry, and their instructions
-were to hold on to the last man until help could reach
-them. In the case of some units these instructions
-were literally fulfilled. One great advantage lay
-with the British. They were first-class trained
-soldiers, the flower of the Army, while their opponents,
-however numerous, were of the newly raised reserve
-corps, which showed no lack of bravery, but contained
-a large proportion of youths and elderly men in the
-ranks. Letters from the combatants have described
-the surprise and even pity which filled the minds of
-the British when they saw the stormers hesitate upon
-the edge of the trenches which they had so bravely
-approached, and stare down into them uncertain
-what they should do. But though the ascendancy
-of the British infantry was so great that they could
-afford to disregard the inequality of numbers, it was
-very different with the artillery. The German gunners
-were as good as ever, and their guns as powerful as
-they were numerous. The British had no howitzer
-batteries at all with this division, while the Germans
-had many. It was the batteries which caused the
-terrific losses. It may be that the Seventh Division,
-having had no previous experience in the campaign,
-had sited their trenches with less cunning than would
-have been shown by troops who had already faced
-the problem of how best to avoid high explosives.
-Either by sight or by aeroplane report the Germans
-got the absolute range of some portions of the British
-position, pitching their heavy shells exactly into the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P239"></a>239}</span>
-trenches, and either blowing the inmates to pieces
-or else burying them alive, so that in a little time the
-straight line of the trench was entirely lost, and
-became a series of ragged pits and mounds. The
-head-cover for shrapnel was useless before such
-missiles, and there was nothing for it but either to
-evacuate the line or to hang on and suffer. The
-Seventh Division hung on and suffered, but no
-soldiers can ever have been exposed to a more deadly
-ordeal. When they were at last relieved by the arrival
-of reinforcements and the consequent contraction of
-the line, they were at the last pitch of exhaustion,
-indomitable in spirit, but so reduced by their losses
-and by the terrific nervous strain that they could
-hardly have held out much longer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A short account has been given of what occurred
-to the division up to October 20. It will now be
-carried on for a few days, after which the narrative
-must turn to the First Corps, and show why and how
-they came into action to the north of the hard-pressed
-division. It is impossible to tell the two stories
-simultaneously, and so it may now be merely
-mentioned that from October 21 Haig's Corps was on the
-left, and that those operations which will shortly be
-described covered the left wing of the division, and
-took over a portion of that huge German attack which
-would undoubtedly have overwhelmed the smaller
-unit had it not been for this addition of strength.
-It is necessary to get a true view of the operations,
-for it is safe to say that they are destined for
-immortality, and will be recounted so long as British
-history is handed down from one generation to
-another.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 21st the enemy got a true conception of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P240"></a>240}</span>
-the salient in front of the Seventh Division, and
-opened a vigorous attack, which lasted all day and
-assumed several different phases at different points.
-The feature of the morning of the 21st was the severe
-and, indeed, disastrous artillery fire upon Lawford's
-22nd Brigade. The exact range of the British position
-seems to have been discovered with deadly results.
-Men, trenches, and machine-guns were all blown to
-pieces together. The 2nd Warwicks and the 1st
-Welsh Fusiliers were the two battalions upon which
-the storm beat hardest, and each of them had some
-hundreds of casualties. In three days the Welsh
-Fusiliers, who were on the exposed left flank, lost
-three-quarters of their effectives, including twenty-three
-of their officers, and yet preserved their military
-spirit. It became clearer as experience accumulated
-that the best trenches, if they are once fairly located,
-can be made untenable or turned into the graves of
-their occupants by the use of high explosives. The
-German fire was so severe that it was reckoned that
-one hundred and twenty shells an hour into or round
-a trench was a not uncommon rate of fall. The 2nd
-Queen's also lost seven officers and many men in this
-day's fighting. In spite of the heavy losses from
-gun-fire the German infantry could make no progress,
-being held up by a flanking fire of the South Staffords.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Desperate attacks on Seventh Division.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the afternoon of October 21 a strong attack
-was made upon the 21st Brigade in the centre of the
-line. The brigade was holding a front of two and a
-half miles, and, although the attack was generally
-beaten back, a certain number of stormers got through
-between the trenches and into the woods beyond.
-Here they lurked for a couple of days, during which
-time the 2nd Yorkshire Regiment, behind whose
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P241"></a>241}</span>
-line they were lying, were often compelled to have
-each alternate man facing a different way to keep
-down the fire. The battalion sent itself reinforcements
-by hurrying its right company over to help to clear
-its left. This movement was successful, but was
-attended with heavy losses, including several officers.
-Some of the Royal Scots Fusiliers had been forced
-out of their trenches on the right, and made, under
-Major Ian Forbes, a gallant attempt to re-establish
-them, in which Captain Fairlie and many men were
-lost. The Wiltshires also endured a very severe attack,
-which they repulsed with great loss to the enemy. On
-this same eventful day, the 21st, the Second Cavalry
-Division had been pushed back at Holbeke, and the
-Germans got round the right flank of the hard-pressed
-infantry. It was then that General Rawlinson brought
-his Third Cavalry Division round and established it
-upon his right instead of his left flank. From this
-time until October 30 this cavalry division was
-holding Zandvoorde Ridge, sharing day by day in all the
-perils and the glories of their comrades of the Seventh
-Division. There was no more dangerous point than
-that which was held by the cavalry, and their losses,
-especially those of the 10th Hussars, were in
-proportion to the danger. In the course of a few days
-the Hussars lost Colonel Barnes, Majors Mitford and
-Crichton and many officers and men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On October 22 the Second Division of Haig's First
-Corps, which had been fully occupied to the north
-with operations which will presently be described,
-moved down to cover the ground vacated by the
-Third Cavalry Division and to relieve the pressure
-upon the infantry of the Seventh Division. The
-4th Guards Brigade took its position upon their
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P242"></a>242}</span>
-immediate left. It was time. For four days they
-had covered the enormous front of eight miles against
-at least four times their own number, with more than
-six times their weight of artillery. It was touch and
-go. They were nearly submerged. It was indeed a
-vision of joy when the worn and desperate men,
-looking over their shoulders down the Ypres-Menin road,
-saw the head of a British column coming swiftly to
-the rescue. It was the 2nd Highland Light Infantry
-and the 2nd Worcesters, dispatched from the 5th
-Brigade, and never was reinforcement more needed.
-Shortly afterwards further help in the shape of a
-detachment of the Munster Fusiliers, two troops of the
-ever-helpful Irish Horse, and one section of artillery
-appeared upon the scene.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Destruction of 2nd Wilts.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Upon this date (October 22) the 22nd Infantry
-Brigade of the Seventh Division had fallen back to
-the railway crossings near Zonnebeke. Thus the
-salient which the Germans had been attacking was
-straightened out. Unhappily, the change caused
-another smaller salient farther south, at the point
-which was held by the 2nd Wiltshires. On the 22nd
-and 23rd there was a tremendous shelling of this
-sector, which was followed on the 24th by an infantry
-advance, in which the Wiltshires, who had been
-previously much reduced, were utterly overwhelmed
-and practically destroyed. The disastrous attack
-broke upon the British line just after daybreak.
-The enemy pushed through behind each flank of the
-Wiltshires, elbowing off the Scots Fusiliers on one
-side and the Scots Guards on the other. The Germans
-got in force into the Polygon Woods behind. There
-were no reserves available save the Northumberland
-Hussars, a corps which has the honour of being the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P243"></a>243}</span>
-first British territorial corps to fight for its country.
-With the aid of some divisional cyclists, this handful
-of men held back the Germans until the 2nd Warwicks
-from the north were brought to stem the advance.
-The Warwicks charged through the wood, their
-gallant Colonel Loring riding his horse beside them
-without boot or legging, having been wounded some
-days before. "Where my men go I go as well," was
-his answer to medical remonstrance. He was killed
-by a bullet, but he died at a moment of victory, for
-his last earthly vision was that of his infantry driving
-the last Germans out of the wood. Besides their
-colonel, the regiment lost many officers and men in
-this fine advance, which was most vigorously
-supported by the 2nd Worcesters, the only reinforcement
-within reach. The Worcesters lost 6 officers and
-160 men, but did much execution and took a number
-of prisoners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Hard fight of 20th Brigade.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this time the 20th Brigade, being the extreme
-right of the Seventh Division, held an extended line
-from Kruiseik cross-roads, about a mile east of
-Gheluvelt village, to near Zandvoorde, with a salient
-at the village of Kruiseik. On the night of the 25th
-the Germans planned a furious attack upon the whole
-salient. The assailants, who were mostly Saxons,
-broke through the 2nd Scots Guards just north of
-Kruiseik and got behind the line, which was pushed
-back for some distance, though Captain Paynter,
-with the right-hand company, held his position. A
-counter-attack by the Guards retook the line, together
-with 200 prisoners, including 7 officers. On the
-morning of the 26th the Germans were back on them,
-however, and began by blowing in the trenches of
-the Border Regiment south of Kruiseik. The German
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P244"></a>244}</span>
-guns had found the exact range of the trenches, and
-the defenders had the same terrible and intolerable
-experience which had befallen some of their comrades
-two days before. It was simply impossible to stand
-up against the incessant shower of shattering shells.
-So great was the concussion and the nervous strain
-that many of the men exposed to it got completely
-dazed or even became delirious. Grenadiers, Scots
-Guards, and South Staffords, of the 20th Brigade,
-held the line until the front trenches were carried
-by the Germans and many of the occupants made
-prisoners. It was pitch dark, and it was impossible
-to tell friend from foe. Major Fraser of the Scots
-Guards, going forward to reconnoitre, was shot
-dead and his party was destroyed. A house in a
-field taken by the Guards yielded no fewer than 200
-prisoners, but in the confused fighting in the
-darkness our losses were greater than our gains. It
-was in this night-fighting that Lord Dalrymple,
-Colonel Bolton, and other officers, with some
-hundreds of men, fell into the hands of the enemy
-after a most heroic resistance to overpowering
-numbers and to a weight of artillery which was
-crushing in its effect. The King's Company of the
-1st Grenadiers was isolated and in great danger,
-but managed to link up with the British line. The
-1st South Staffords also lost some hundreds of men,
-and was only saved by fine handling on the part of
-Colonel Ovens. Kruiseik was abandoned, and a new
-line taken up half a mile farther back. It was a
-critical night, during which the energy and firmness
-of General Capper were splendidly employed in
-reforming and stiffening his sorely tried division. On
-the 26th the 20th Brigade, which had been so heavily
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P245"></a>245}</span>
-hit the day before, was drawn out of the line for a
-rest, and the two other brigades closed up to cover
-a shorter line. The work of the 20th at Kruiseik
-had been magnificent, but their losses were appalling,
-including their Brigadier, Ruggles-Brise, who was
-wounded. Here, for the instant, we shall leave the
-Seventh Division, though their ordeal was by no
-means done, and we shall turn to those other forces
-which had been forming in the northern or Ypres
-section of the long battle line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Arrival of First Corps.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The reader will remember, if he casts his mind
-back, that the whole British line, as it extended from
-the south about October 18, consisted of the Second
-Corps and the advance guard of the Indians near
-La Bassée; then, in succession, the Third Corps in
-the Armentières district, the First Cavalry and Second
-Cavalry near Messines and Wytschaete, the Seventh
-Division near Gheluvelt, and finally the Third Cavalry
-on their left, joining up with the French, who carried
-the line to where the Belgians were reforming on the
-Yser. The First Corps had detrained from the Aisne,
-and was concentrated between St. Omer and Hazebrouck
-upon October 18 and 19. They represented
-a last British reserve of about thirty-five thousand
-men to set against the large new armies who were
-advancing from the north. The urgent question to
-be decided was where they should be placed, since
-there were so many points which needed reinforcement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir John French has explained in his dispatch the
-reasons which swayed him in deciding this question.
-"I knew," he said, "that the enemy were by this
-time in greatly superior strength upon the Lys and
-that the Second and Third Cavalry and Fourth Corps
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P246"></a>246}</span>
-(Seventh Division) were holding a much wider front
-than their strength and numbers warranted. Taking
-these facts alone into consideration, it would have
-appeared wise to throw the First Corps in to strengthen
-the line, but this would have left the country north
-and east of Ypres and the Ypres Canal open to a wide
-turning movement by the Third Reserve Corps and
-at least one Landwehr Division which I knew to be
-operating in that region. I was also aware that the
-enemy was bringing large reinforcements up from
-the east, which could only be opposed for several days
-by two or three French cavalry divisions, some French
-Territorials, and the Belgian Army."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He proceeds to state his opinion that the Belgian
-Army was in no condition to withstand unsupported
-such an attack, and that if it were allowed to sweep
-past us it was very likely to wash away all opposition
-before it, and get into the Channel ports in our rear.
-With this consideration in his mind, Sir John French
-took the bold and dangerous, but absolutely necessary,
-step of leaving the long, thin, thirty-mile line to do
-the best it could, and prolonging it by another ten
-or twelve miles by forming up the First Corps on the
-same alignment, so as to present as long a British
-breakwater as possible to the oncoming flood. There
-was nothing else to be done, and the stronger the
-flood the more need there was to do it, but it is safe
-to say that seldom in history has so frail a barrier
-stood in the direct track of so terrible a storm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In accordance with this resolution, Haig's First
-Corps moved, on October 20, through Poperinghe
-and Ypres and took their place upon the north or
-left side of the Seventh Division. On their own left
-in this position was the French cavalry corps of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P247"></a>247}</span>
-General de Mitry, while the Third Division of British
-cavalry was on their right. As the movement
-commenced Sir John French had a personal interview
-with General Haig, in which he held out hopes that
-the greater part of the new German levies had been
-deflected to hold our southern advance, and that he
-would only find the Third Reserve Corps and some
-Landwehr in front of him to the north of Ypres.
-His object was to advance upon the line of Bruges
-and drive the enemy towards Ghent. Meanwhile
-the gallant little Belgian army, which was proving
-itself a glutton at fighting, was entrenched along the
-line of the Ypres Canal and the Yser River, where they
-held their own manfully in spite of all that they had
-endured.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Advance of Haig's Corps.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first large landmark in the direction of Bruges
-was Thorout, and towards this the First Corps, with
-the Third Cavalry Division upon its right, took its
-first steps, little thinking that it was butting forward
-against an approaching army of at least double its
-own strength. It was very quickly made to realise
-its position, however, and any dreams of a victorious
-entry into Bruges were speedily dispelled. Only too
-fortunate would it be if it could hold its own line
-without retreat and disaster. Upon the 21st Haig's
-men attacked Poel-Chapelle and Passchendaale,
-French cavalry and Territorials (the Eighty-seventh
-and Eighty-ninth Divisions) under General Bidon
-advancing on their left, while the Seventh Division,
-as already described, kept pace upon its right. There
-was strong opposition from the first, but the corps
-advanced in spite of it until the pressure from the
-north became too severe for the French, whose flank
-was exposed to the full force of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P248"></a>248}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The British attack upon the morning in question
-was planned as follows. The Second Division was
-to advance upon Passchendaale. The First had
-orders to take Poel-Chapelle. The latter movement
-was headed by the 3rd Brigade, who were directed
-by General Landon to go forward about nine
-o'clock, the 1st Queen's having the station for their
-objective while the 1st South Wales Borderers
-attacked the village. The 1st Gloucesters were in
-reserve. The enemy met the attack with shell-fire,
-which it was difficult to locate, as the country was
-flat and enclosed. The progress of the movement,
-however, was steady though slow. About ten o'clock
-there were signs of a considerable hostile infantry
-advance from the north. The attack, however, made
-good progress up to midday, when there was a general
-retirement of the French Territorials, followed later
-by the French cavalry upon the British left. They
-moved back towards Bixschote. The Gloucester
-Regiment, who had been thrown out to reinforce
-that flank, were also driven back, and were in turn
-reinforced by the Coldstream Guards. This battalion
-executed a bayonet charge in clearing the small
-village of Koekuit, but later on had to retire, finding
-their flank exposed. It should be mentioned that
-one French corps, the Seventh Cavalry Division,
-kept its position upon the British left, and it is also
-only fair to point out that as the German advance
-was mainly from the north, it was upon the left flank,
-covered by the French, that it would fall. The
-1st Camerons were now dispatched to the flank to
-stiffen the French resistance, taking up their position
-near the inn which is midway upon the road between
-Steenstraate and Langemarck, north of the village
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P249"></a>249}</span>
-of Pilken&mdash;an inn with which they were destined to
-have stirring associations. With the support of the
-46th Battery, the Highlanders held up a German
-brigade which was thrusting through behind our
-main line; but farther west, in the Steenstraate
-direction, the defence against a northern advance was
-miserably thin, consisting only of one company of
-the Sussex Regiment and the 116th Battery. In the
-circumstances the more success Haig's troops attained
-in front, and the more they advanced, the more
-dangerous was their position upon the flank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About 2.30 the German advance from the
-north became more formidable, and the 1st South
-Welsh Borderers, between Langemarck and Poel-Chapelle,
-were heavily counter-attacked and suffered
-considerable loss, between two and three hundred
-in all. Two companies of the 2nd Welsh were pushed
-up to their help. It was clear, however, that the
-advance could not be continued. The 1st Brigade
-was therefore ordered to hold the line between
-Steenstraate and Langemarck, with their centre at the
-inn north of Pilken, so as to face the German advance
-from the north. Then from Langemarck the British
-line turned southwards, being carried on for two
-miles by the 3rd Brigade to hold the enemy who were
-coming from the east. The 2nd Brigade was in
-reserve at Boesinghe. During this long and difficult
-day the Second Division, operating upon the right of
-the First, was not subjected to the same anxiety
-about its flank. It advanced upon its objective in
-the face of severe opposition, ending more than once
-in a brief bayonet encounter. Several counter-attacks
-were made by the Germans, but they were all
-beaten back with loss. About two o'clock, however,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P250"></a>250}</span>
-the Second Division learned of the flank pressure
-which was holding up the First Division, and also of
-the extreme need for help experienced by the 22nd
-Brigade of the Seventh Division on their right. In
-these circumstances it was necessary to abandon the
-idea of further advance and to send south those
-reinforcements, the opportune arrival of which has
-been already described.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a net result of the two days' operations General
-Haig was not able to attain the line of
-Passchendaale-Poel-Chapelle, as originally planned, but he
-gained sufficient ground to establish himself from
-Langemarck to Zonnebeke, more than half-way to
-his objective. The whole character of the operations
-during these days was more of the familiar British
-type, being conducted upon the surface of the earth
-rather than under it, and cavalry making its last
-appearance for many a long day. Many fine deeds
-of valour were done. In one of these Captain Rising,
-of the Gloucester Regiment, with ninety men, defended
-some point with such heroic tenacity that when, some
-days afterwards, the Brigadier attempted to get the
-names of the survivors for commendation not one
-could be found. Quaintly valorous also is the picture
-of Major Powell, of the North Lancashires, leading
-his wing with a badly-sprained ankle, and using a
-cottage chair for a crutch, upon which he sat down
-between rushes. It is hopeless, however, and even
-invidious to pick instances where the same spirit
-animated all. The result was definite. It had been
-clearly shown that the enemy were in considerably
-greater strength than had been imagined, and instead
-of a rearguard action from weak forces the British
-found themselves in the presence of a strong German
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P251"></a>251}</span>
-advance. All day large forces of the enemy were
-advancing from Roulers and were impinging upon
-different points of the Franco-British line. These
-troops were composed of partially-trained men,
-volunteers and reservists, but they attacked with
-the utmost determination, and endured heavy losses
-with great bravery. It is a remarkable proof of the
-elaborate preparations for war made by Germany
-that, behind all their original gigantic array, they
-still had ready within the country sufficient arms and
-uniforms to fit out these five new army corps. He
-who plans finds it easy to prepare, and whoever will
-compare this profusion of munitions in Germany
-with the absolute lack of them in the Allied countries
-will have no further doubt as to which Government
-conspired against the peace of the world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On October 21, Sir John French began to feel
-that there were new factors in his front. In the
-evening, at a meeting with Haig and Rawlinson,
-he discussed the unexpected strength of the German
-reinforcements and admitted that the scheme of an
-advance upon Bruges would become impossible in
-the face of such numbers. Intelligence reports
-indicated that there was already a German army
-corps in front of each British division. General Joffre
-had promised considerable French reinforcements
-upon October 24, and all that could be done was for
-the British troops to hold their ground to the last
-man and to resist every pressure until the equality
-of the forces could be restored. Could they hold
-the line till then? That was the all-important
-question.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-October 22 was the first day of that long ordeal of
-incessant attacks which the First Corps was called
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P252"></a>252}</span>
-upon to endure, until by constant attrition it had
-become almost as worn as the Seventh Division to
-the south. On this day the German attack, which
-had not yet attained the full volume of later days,
-spent itself here and there along the extended lines.
-Only at one point did the enemy have some success,
-which, however, was the prelude to disaster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Fight of Pilken Inn.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The line from Steenstraate to Langemarck, defending
-the British left flank, was held by the 1st
-Brigade, the Scots Guards upon the extreme left,
-then the Cameron Highlanders, and the Black Watch
-in reserve. In the middle of the line north of Pilken
-was a solitary inn, already mentioned, round which
-trenches had been cut in horse-shoe fashion, the
-concavity of the shoe pointing southwards. This
-point marked the junction between the Camerons
-and the Scots Guards. About 3 P.M. this position
-was driven in and captured by a sudden and
-determined advance of the enemy. The German charge
-was a fine feat of arms, for it was carried out largely
-by <i>Einjahrige</i>, who may be roughly compared to the
-Officers' Training Corps of our British system. These
-high-spirited lads advanced singing patriotic songs,
-and succeeded in carrying the trenches in the face
-of soldiers who are second to none in the British
-Army&mdash;soldiers, too, who had seen, much service,
-while the German cadets were new to the work.
-The performance was much appreciated by British
-officers and men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Black Watch endeavoured without success
-to restore the line, and the 1st Northamptons were
-called upon from divisional reserve, while from all
-parts troops converged towards the gap. On the
-arrival of the Northamptons they pushed up towards
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P253"></a>253}</span>
-the interval which now existed between the Scots
-Guards and the remains of the Camerons, but found
-the gap broader than had been thought, and strongly
-occupied. It was then evening, and it was thought
-best to delay the counter-attack until morning and
-so have time to bring up reinforcements. The 1st
-North Lancashires and the 2nd South Staffords were
-accordingly ordered up, together with the 1st Queen's
-Surrey and the 2nd Rifles, the whole operation being
-under the immediate command of General Bulfin.
-The advance began at six in the morning, over very
-difficult ground which had been barb-wired during
-the night. The progress was slow but steady, and
-at eleven o'clock an assault upon the inn was ordered.
-The position was critical, since the enemy was now
-firmly lodged in the very centre of the flank of the
-British position, and was able to enfilade all the
-trenches of the First Division. The Queen's Surrey,
-the 2nd King's Royal Rifles, and the 1st North
-Lancashires charged home with splendid energy,
-capturing the trenches round the inn, besides
-releasing sixty Camerons and taking over five
-hundred prisoners. The trenches were carried by
-the North Lancashires, led by Major Carter. It was
-the second time within six weeks that this battalion
-had made a decisive bayonet charge. The price
-paid was six officers and 150 men. The inn itself was
-rushed by Captain Creek's company of the Queen's,
-while Major Watson, of the same regiment, organised
-the final advance. The fighting at this point was
-not finished for the day. In the late evening the
-enemy, with fine tenacity of purpose, attacked the
-inn once more and drove the Queen's out of a
-salient. The line was then straightened on each side
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P254"></a>254}</span>
-of the inn and remained firm. Both the attack on
-the inn and the defence of the line were splendidly
-supported by the field artillery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whilst the 1st Brigade had in this fashion got
-into and out of a dangerous position, there had been
-a severe attack upon two regiments of Landon's 3rd
-Brigade stationed at Langemarck. The defending
-units were the 2nd Welsh Regiment and the 1st
-Gloucesters. Aided by a strong artillery backing,
-they beat off these attacks and inflicted a very heavy
-loss upon the enemy. The Allied line to the north
-was solid and unbroken.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Bravery of enemy.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The British losses during these operations of the
-First Corps amounted to 1500 men, while those of
-the Germans were exceedingly heavy. These
-inexperienced troops advanced with an indiscriminating
-enthusiasm which exposed them to severe retaliation.
-It is doubtful if at any time in the campaign
-the British fire found so easy a mark. One
-thousand five hundred dead were counted in the
-vicinity of Langemarck, and the total loss (including
-over six hundred prisoners) could not have been less
-than 10,000 men. Correspondence afterwards
-captured showed that the Twenty-third Reserve Corps
-sustained such losses that for a time at least it was out
-of action. The Twenty-seventh Reserve Corps was
-also hard hit. A letter from a soldier in the 246th
-Regiment mentions that only eighty men were left
-of his battalion after the action of the 24th.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On October 24 and 25 the arrival of French
-reinforcements allowed the British to shorten up
-their defensive line, which had been unduly extended.
-The Seventeenth Division of the Ninth French Army
-Corps took over the line of the Second Division, which
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P255"></a>255}</span>
-was drawn back to St. Jean, and in turn took over
-part of the front of the Seventh Division. French
-territorial troops, under General de Mitry, relieved
-the First British Division on the line
-Hannebeke-Langemarck-Steenstraate. The First Division was
-drawn back to Zillebeke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Advance of Second Division.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meantime the Second Division, having the French
-Ninth Corps upon its left and the Seventh Division
-upon its right, made an attack towards Bacelaer,
-taking two guns and some prisoners. This advance
-was renewed upon the 26th, this being the day upon
-which, as already described, the Germans pushed
-back the 20th Brigade of the Seventh Division at the
-Kruiseik salient, creating a situation which brought
-the Second Division to a standstill.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this movement forward of the Second Division
-from October 24 to 26, the Guards' 4th Brigade were
-on the right, the 6th Brigade on the left, with the
-French to the left of them. The 5th Brigade were
-in reserve. Two small villages were taken by
-storm, the Germans being driven out of loopholed
-houses, though at a considerable cost of officers and
-men. It was in this operation that Colonel Bannatyne,
-the gallant leader of the 1st King's Liverpool,
-was killed. Ten other officers and several hundred
-men of this corps were killed or wounded. The
-1st Berkshires, fighting to the left of the King's,
-shared in its losses and in its success. The Irish
-Guards were held up before Reutel and separated
-from the rest of the force, but managed to extricate
-themselves after some anxious hours.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On October 27, Sir John French came in person
-to Hooge, at the rear of the fighting line, and inquired
-into the state of the hard-pressed troops. He found
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P256"></a>256}</span>
-the Seventh to be now such a skeleton division that
-it was thought best to join it with Haig's First Corps,
-forming one single command.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The attendant Third Cavalry Division was also
-attached to the First Corps. These readjustments
-took place upon October 27. They were, of course,
-of a temporary character until the eagerly awaited
-Eighth Division should arrive and so give General
-Rawlinson a complete Fourth Corps. At present
-there was a very immediate prospect that half of
-it might be annihilated before the second half
-appeared. The general arrangement of this section of
-the battlefield was now as depicted, the Seventh
-Division being entirely south of the Ypres-Menin
-roadway.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P257"></a>257}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-257"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-257.jpg" alt="General Scene of Operations" />
-<br />
-General Scene of Operations
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-This date, the 27th, was memorable only for an
-advance of the 6th Brigade. These continual
-advances against odds were wonderful examples of the
-aggressive spirit of the British soldiers. In this
-instance ground was gained, but at the cost of some
-casualties, especially to the 1st Rifles, who lost Prince
-Maurice of Battenberg and a number of officers and
-men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Fight of Kruiseik cross-roads.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now the great epic of the first Battle of Ypres
-was rising to its climax, and the three days of supreme
-trial for the British Army were to begin. Early upon
-October 29, a very heavy attack developed upon the
-line of the Ypres-Menin road. There is a village
-named Gheluvelt, which is roughly half-way upon
-this tragic highway. It lay now immediately behind
-the centre of the British line. About half a mile in
-front of it the position ran through the important
-cross-roads which lead to the village of Kruiseik,
-still in the British possession. The line through the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P258"></a>258}</span>
-Kruiseik cross-roads was that which was furiously
-assailed upon this morning, and the attack marked
-the beginning of a great movement to drive in the
-front continuing throughout the 30th and culminating
-in the terrible ordeal of the 31st, the crisis
-of the Ypres battle and possibly of the Western
-campaign.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-FitzClarence's 1st Brigade lay to the north of the
-road, and the battered, much-enduring 20th Brigade
-upon the south. They were destined together to
-give such an example of military tenacity during
-that day as has seldom been equalled and never
-exceeded, so that the fight for the Kruiseik crossroads
-may well live in history amongst those actions,
-like Albuera and Inkermann, which have put the
-powers of British infantry to an extreme test. The
-line was held by about five thousand men, but no
-finer units were to be found in the whole Army.
-The attack was conducted by an army corps with
-the eyes of their Emperor and an overpowering
-artillery encouraging them from the rear. Many of
-the defending regiments, especially those of the 20th
-Brigade, had already been terribly wasted. It was
-a line of weary and desperate men who faced the
-German onslaught.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The attack began in the mists of the early morning.
-The opening was adverse to the British, for the enemy,
-pushing very boldly forward upon a narrow front
-and taking full advantage of the fog, broke a way
-down the Menin road and actually got past the
-defending line before the situation was understood.
-The result was that the two regiments which flanked
-the road, the 1st Black Watch and the 1st Grenadiers,
-were fired into from behind and endured terrible
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P259"></a>259}</span>
-losses. Among the Grenadiers Colonel Earle, Majors
-Forrester and Stucley, Lord Richard Wellesley, and
-a number of other officers fell, while out of 650 privates
-only 150 were eventually left standing, the 2nd
-Gordons, upon the right of the Grenadiers, suffered
-nearly as heavily, while the 1st Coldstream, upon the
-left of the Black Watch, was perhaps the hardest hit
-of all, for at the end of that dreadful day it had not
-a single officer fit for duty. The right company of
-the 1st Scots Guards shared the fate of the Coldstream.
-The line was pushed back for a quarter of a mile
-and Kruiseik was evacuated, but the dead and
-wounded who remained in the trenches far exceeded
-in numbers those who were able to withdraw.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two small bodies who were cut off by the German
-advance did not fall back with their comrades, and
-each of them made a splendid and successful resistance.
-The one near Kruiseik was a mixed party under
-Major Bottomley of the 2nd Queen's West Surrey.
-The other was C Company of the 2nd Gordons under
-Captain B. G. R. Gordon and Lieutenant Laurence
-Carr. These small islands of khaki, in the midst of a
-broad stream of grey, lay so tight and fired so straight
-that they inflicted very great damage upon the enemy,
-and were able to hold their own, in ever-diminishing
-numbers, until under the protection of darkness the
-survivors regained the British line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the meantime, a number of small dashing
-counter-attacks by the indomitable infantry was
-bringing the British line forward again. South of
-the road the Gordons, under Colonel Uniacke, dashed
-themselves again and again against the huge host
-which faced them, driving them back, and then in
-their turn recoiling before the ponderous advance of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P260"></a>260}</span>
-the army corps. They were maddened by the sound
-of the rolling fire ahead of them, which showed that
-their own C Company was dying hard. In one of
-these counter-attacks Captain Brooke brought every
-straggler into the fray, and died while trying to cut
-his way through to his comrades. To the north of
-the road Captain Stephen, with the remains of the 1st
-Scots Guards, threw themselves upon the German flank
-and staggered it by their fire. The Germans, who
-had almost reached Gheluvelt, were now worried in
-this way on either flank, while the 2nd Border battalion
-and the Welsh Borderers with the rallied remains of
-the broken regiments were still facing them in front.
-The enemy was held, was stricken front and flank
-with a murderous fire, and recoiled back down the
-Menin road. Imperial eyes and overmastering guns
-were equally powerless to drive them through that
-iron defence. Five thousand British soldiers had
-driven back an army corps, but had left more than
-half their number upon the scene of victory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Second Division, to the north of the road in
-the direction of Reutel, had been ordered to counter-attack,
-and the other brigades of the Seventh Division
-to the south did the same. While Haig had a man
-standing he was ready to hit back. Between these
-two flanking forces there was a movement in the
-centre to follow the Germans back and to recover
-some of the lost ground. Landon's Third Brigade,
-less the Gloucester Regiment, was pushed forward.
-These troops moved past Gheluvelt and advanced
-along the line of the road, the 1st Queen's, their
-right-hand unit, linking up by a happy chance with
-their own 2nd Battalion, who were now on the left
-of the 22nd Brigade of the Seventh Division. Left
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P261"></a>261}</span>
-of the Queen's were the 2nd Welsh to the immediate
-south of the main road, while to their left again lay
-the 1st South Wales Borderers, in front of the village
-of Gheluvelt. By evening these troops had recovered
-some of the ground, but the village of Kruiseik,
-which had always constituted a salient, was now
-abandoned. The cross-roads also remained in the
-hands of the enemy. Landon's Brigade continued
-to bar the further German advance preparing in
-stern resignation for the renewed and heavier blow
-which all knew to be in readiness, and which was
-destined two days later to bring them a glorious
-annihilation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was clear upon the evening of the 29th that
-serious mischief was afoot, for there were great signs
-of movement on the German side, and all night the
-continual rattle of wheels was heard to the eastward.
-These menacing sounds were actually caused by a very
-strong reinforcement, the Fifteenth German Corps
-(Strasburg) of the regular army, which, followed by
-the Thirteenth Corps and the Second Bavarian Corps,
-were coming into the battle line with the declared
-intention of smashing their way through to Ypres.
-Correspondence, afterwards captured, showed that
-the German Emperor had issued a special appeal to
-these troops, declaring that the movement was one
-which would be of decisive importance to the war.
-It was, of course, not the venerable town of Ypres
-which had assumed such a place in the mind both of
-the Emperor and his people, but it was Calais and the
-Channel coast to which it was the door. Once in the
-possession of these points, it seemed to their perfervid
-minds that they would be in a position to constrain
-Great Britain to an ignominious peace, a course which
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P262"></a>262}</span>
-would surely have ruined the cause of the Allies and
-placed the whole world under the German heel. No
-less was the issue at stake. The British Army from
-Langemarck in the north to La Bassée in the south
-were resolutely determined that the road was barred,
-while to left and to right they had stout-hearted
-comrades of Belgium and of France.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Fight of Zandvoorde.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At half-past six upon October 30 a very heavy
-attack developed, which involved the whole line of
-the First Corps and also the French Ninth Corps
-upon its left. This attack upon the left was carried
-out by the Reserve Corps 26 and 27, with whom we
-had had previous dealings, and it was repulsed with
-considerable loss by the French and the 6th British
-Brigade. To the south, however, the British were
-very violently engaged down the whole line of trenches
-from the position of the Seventh Division near the
-Ypres-Menin road, through Zandvoorde, where the
-Third Cavalry Division was holding on under great
-difficulties, and on southward still, past the position
-of the Second Cavalry down to Messines, where the
-First Cavalry Division was also heavily engaged.
-The front of battle was not less than twelve miles in
-length, with one continuous long-drawn rattle of small
-arms and roar of guns from end to end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The British may have anticipated that the chief
-blow would fall at the same spot as had been attacked
-the day before. As a matter of fact, it was directed
-farther south, at Zandvoorde, on the immediate right
-of the Seventh Division.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first sign of success for the strenuous German
-efforts upon October 30 was the driving in of
-Kavanagh's 7th Guards' Cavalry Brigade from their
-trenches at the Zandvoorde Ridge. On this ridge,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P263"></a>263}</span>
-which is not more than a hundred and twenty feet
-high, the Germans concentrated so tremendous and
-accurate a fire that the trenches were in many places
-demolished and became entirely untenable. The
-survivors of the Life Guards and Blues who made up
-this brigade withdrew steadily through the reserve
-trenches, which were held by the 6th cavalry Brigade,
-and reformed at Klein Zillebeke in the rear. Two
-squadrons, however, and Lord Worsley's machine-gun
-section were killed or taken by the assailants. The
-unoccupied trenches were seized by the Sixth Bavarian
-Reserve Division, who advanced rapidly in order to
-improve their advantage, while their artillery began
-to pound the reserves. The cavalry had been
-strengthened, however, by the Greys and 3rd
-Hussars upon the left, while the 4th Hussars lined
-up on the right, and C, I, and K Horse Artillery
-batteries vigorously supported. In spite of great
-pressure, the position was held. Farther south the
-First Cavalry Division was also at very close grips
-with the Twenty-sixth Division of the Thirteenth
-German Army Corps, and was hard put to it to hold
-its own. Along the whole cavalry position there was
-extreme strain. A squadron of the 1st Royals were
-forced to evacuate the chateau of Holebeke, and the
-line in this quarter was pushed back as far as St. Eloi,
-thus flattening a considerable salient.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The danger of a position which consists of so long
-a line with few reserves is that any retirement at any
-point immediately exposes the flanks of the neighbouring
-units to right and left. Thus the evacuation of
-Zandvoorde threw open the right flank of the Seventh
-Division, even as its left had been in the air upon the
-day before. On getting through, the Germans were
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P264"></a>264}</span>
-on the right rear of the 1st Welsh Fusiliers and
-enfiladed them badly, destroying all the officers and a
-considerable proportion of the regiment, which had
-already been greatly reduced. Colonel Cadogan was
-among those who fell. The 22nd Brigade was forced
-to fall back, and the 2nd Yorkshires and 2nd Scots
-Fusiliers, of the 21st Brigade, being left in a salient,
-suffered heavily, especially the latter battalion, the
-conduct of which from first to last was remarkable
-even among such men as fought beside them. These
-two regiments held on with the greatest determination
-until orders to retire reached them, which were
-somewhat belated, as several orderlies were killed in
-bringing them. The 2nd Bedfords, who had themselves
-sustained very severe losses from the German
-artillery fire, covered the retirement of the remains of
-these two gallant units. The Seventh Division then
-covered the line from the canal through Klein Zillebeke
-and along the front of the woods to near Gheluvelt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The position was now most critical. The Germans
-were in possession of Zandvoorde Ridge on the British
-right flank, a most important position whence guns
-could command a considerable area. Ypres was only
-four miles distant. There was nothing but a line
-of weary and partially broken infantry to protect the
-flank from being entirely pierced. The whole of a
-German active army corps was attacking upon this
-line. The order was given to hold the new positions at
-all costs, but on the evening of the 30th the situation
-was full of menace for the morrow. The German
-flood was still thundering against the barrier, and the
-barrier seemed to be giving. At about 2 P.M. on
-October 30 the 1st Irish Guards and the 2nd Grenadiers,
-who were in reserve to two battalions of the Coldstream
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P265"></a>265}</span>
-in trenches in the Polygon Wood, near Reutel
-Village, were ordered to help the Seventh Division.
-General Capper subsequently directed them to take
-the place of the cavalry on the right of his division.
-The Irish Guards were accordingly on the right of
-the Seventh Division from now onwards, and the
-Grenadiers were on their right, extending down to
-the canal in front of Klein Zillebeke. The commander
-of the Ninth French Corps also, with that fine loyalty
-which his comrades have shown again and again during
-the war, easing many a difficult and perhaps saving
-some impossible situations, put three battalions and
-some cavalry at the disposal of the British. Two
-regiments of Bulfin's 2nd Brigade were also brought
-across and thrust into the gap. But the outlook that
-evening was not cheering. The troops had been
-fighting hard for two days without a break. The
-losses had been heavy. The line had been driven
-back and was greatly strained. It was known that
-the Germans were in great strength and that the
-attack would be renewed on the morrow. The troops
-and their leaders faced the immediate future in a spirit
-of sombre determination.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Fight of Gheluvelt.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the 30th Landon's Brigade had strengthened
-their position near Gheluvelt, and General
-Haig, realising that this was the key of his line,
-moved up the 2nd King's Royal Rifles and the 1st
-North Lancashires to form a reserve under the
-orders of General Landon. These regiments took a
-position south-west of Gheluvelt and connected up
-more closely between the Seventh Division and the
-3rd Brigade of the First Division. It was well that
-a closely-knitted line had been formed, for at the dawn
-of day upon the 31st a most terrific attack was made,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P266"></a>266}</span>
-which was pushed with unexampled fierceness during
-the whole day, falling chiefly upon the centre and left
-of the Seventh Division and upon the 1st Queen's
-and 2nd Welsh of the Third Brigade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A weak point developed, unfortunately, in the
-front line, for the Seventh Division in its enfeebled
-condition was further weakened by forming somewhat
-of a salient in the Kruiseik direction. They behaved
-with all their usual magnificent gallantry, but they
-were not numerous enough to hold the ground. The
-line was broken and the remains of the 2nd Royal
-Scots Fusiliers, after being exposed to heavy fire from
-5.30 A.M., were outflanked and surrounded in the
-early afternoon. The bulk of the survivors of this
-battalion had been sent to reinforce the line elsewhere,
-but the remainder, some sixty in number, were killed,
-wounded, or taken, including their gallant colonel,
-Baird Smith, who had been hit the day before. The
-Picton tradition which disregards wounds unless they
-are absolutely crippling was continually observed by
-these stern soldiers. On the left of the Scots Fusiliers
-the 2nd Bedfords were also involved in the
-catastrophe, but drew off with heavy losses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The left wing of the Seventh Division began to
-retire, and the 1st Queen's upon the right of the 3rd
-Brigade had both their flanks turned and were reduced
-to a handful under Major Watson and Lieutenant
-Boyd, who still held together as a unit. It was a great
-morning in the history of this regiment, as the
-two battalions had fought side by side, and their
-colonels, Pell and Coles, had both fallen in the action.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P267"></a>267}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-267"></a>
-<br />
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-267.jpg" alt="SKETCH OF BATTLE OF GHELUVELT OCT 31st." />
-<br />
-SKETCH OF BATTLE OF GHELUVELT OCT 31st.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-The line of the 3rd Brigade had been drawn up
-across the Menin road some four hundred yards to
-the east of the village. The road itself was held by
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P268"></a>268}</span>
-the 2nd Welsh Regiment, supported by the 54th
-Battery (Major Peel), which was immediately behind
-the village. Both the battalion and the battery
-fought desperately in a most exposed situation.
-The Welsh Regiment were driven out of their
-trenches by a terrific shell-fire followed by an infantry
-attack. They lost during the day nearly six hundred
-men, with sixteen officers, killed, wounded, or missing.
-Colonel Morland was killed and Major Prichard badly
-wounded. Finally, after being pushed back, holding
-every possible point, they formed up under Captain
-Rees across the open in a thin skirmishing line to
-cover the battery, which was doing great work by
-holding back the German advance. One German gun
-was in action upon the Menin road. Lieutenant
-Blewitt took a British gun out on to the bare road to
-face it, and a duel ensued at five hundred yards, which
-ended by the German gun being knocked out at the
-third shot by a direct hit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the First Division at the centre of the
-British line were driven in, as already described, and
-the Seventh Division were pushed back into the
-woods, the situation became most critical, for there
-was a general retirement, with a victorious enemy
-pressing swiftly on upon the British centre. The
-men behaved splendidly, and the officers kept their
-heads, taking every opportunity to form up a new
-line. The 2nd Rifles and 1st North Lancashires in
-immediate support of the centre did all that men
-could to hold it firm. The German artillery lengthened
-their range as the British fell back, and the infantry,
-with their murderous quick-firers scattered thickly
-in the front line, came rapidly on. Communications
-were difficult, and everything for a time was chaos
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P269"></a>269}</span>
-and confusion. It looked for an hour or two as if
-Von Deimling, the German leader, might really carry
-out his War Lord's command and break his road to
-the sea. It was one of the decisive moments of the
-world's history, for if the Germans at that period had
-seized the Channel ports, it is difficult to say how
-disastrous the result might have been both to France
-and to the British Empire. At that moment of
-darkness and doubt a fresh misfortune, which might well
-have proved overwhelming, came upon the hard-pressed
-forces. About 1.30 a shell exploded in the
-headquarters at the chateau of Hooge, and both
-General Lomax, of the First Division, and General
-Munro, of the Second, were put out of action, the
-first being wounded and the second rendered
-unconscious by the shock. It was a brain injury to
-the Army, and a desperately serious one, for besides
-the two divisional commanders the single shell had
-killed or wounded Colonels Kerr and Perceval, Major
-Paley, Captains Ommany and Trench, and Lieutenant
-Giffard. General Landon, of the 3rd Brigade, took
-the command of the First Division at a moment's
-notice, and the battle went forward. A line was
-hurriedly formed, men digging as for their lives,
-whilst broken units threw themselves down to hold
-off the rolling grey wave that thundered behind.
-The new position was three-quarters of a mile back
-and about four hundred yards in advance of Veldhoek,
-which is the next village down the Ypres road. The
-Seventh Division had also been rolled back, but the
-fiery Capper, their divisional chief, who has been
-described as a British Samurai, was everywhere
-among his regiments, reforming and bracing them.
-The British soldiers, with their incomparable
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P270"></a>270}</span>
-regimental officers, rose to the crisis, whilst General Haig
-was behind the line at Hooge, directing and controlling,
-like a great engineer who seeks to hold a dam which
-carries an overpowering head of water. By three
-o'clock the new line was firmly held.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Advance of Worcesters.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now General Haig, seeking round for some means
-of making a counter-attack, perceived that on his
-left flank he had some reserve troops who had been
-somewhat clear of the storm and might be employed.
-The 2nd Worcesters were ordered to advance upon
-Gheluvelt, the initiative in this vital movement
-coming from General Fitz-Clarence of the 1st
-Brigade. On that flank the troops had not joined
-in the retirement, and, including the South Wales
-Borderers of the 3rd Brigade, were still in their
-original trenches, being just north of the swathe that
-had been cut in the British line, and just south of
-where the Second Division, extended to cracking point,
-with one man often for every eight or nine feet, and no
-supports, were defending the left flank of the Army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the village of Gheluvelt and the trenches
-to the north of it had been captured by the enemy,
-a gap had been left of about five hundred yards
-between the northern edge of the village and these
-South Wales Borderers. This gap the 2nd Worcesters
-were ordered to fill. They were in reserve at the
-time in the south-west corner of the Polygon Wood,
-but on being called upon they made a brilliant advance
-under Major Hankey. One company (A) was detached
-to guard the right flank of the advance. The other
-three companies came on for a thousand yards. At
-one point they had to cross two hundred and twenty
-yards of open under heavy shrapnel-fire. One
-hundred men fell, but the momentum of the charge
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P271"></a>271}</span>
-was never diminished. Their rapid and accurate fire
-drove back the German infantry, while their open
-order formation diminished their own losses. Finally
-they dashed into the trenches and connected up the
-village with the line of the Welsh Borderers. Their
-right platoons, under Captain Williams, held the
-village until nearly midnight. Altogether the advance
-cost the battalion 187 casualties, including 3 officers,
-out of 550 who were in the ranks that day. Up to
-dusk the Worcesters were exposed to heavy shrapnel-fire,
-and small detached parties of the enemy came
-round their right flank, but their position was
-strengthened and strongly held until the final readjustment
-of the line. It was a fine advance at a critical moment,
-and did much to save the situation. The whole
-movement was strongly supported by the guns of
-the 42nd Battery, and by some of the 1st Scots Guards
-upon the left of the Welsh Borderers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been stated that a line had been formed
-near Veldhoek, but this difficult operation was not
-performed in an instant, and was rather the final
-equilibrium established after a succession of
-oscillations. The British were worn to a shadow. The 2nd
-Queen's had 2 officers and 60 men left that night,
-the 2nd Welsh had 3 officers and 93 men. Little
-groups, who might have been fitted into a large-sized
-drawing-room, were settling a contention upon which
-the fate of the world might depend. But the Germans
-also had spent all their force. The rattle of musketry
-behind their advance was enough to tell them that
-the British were still in their trenches, and the guns
-were for ever playing on them with deadly effect.
-Gradually they began to dissolve away among the
-thick woods which flank the road. They were
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P272"></a>272}</span>
-learning that to penetrate the line of a resolute
-adversary is not necessarily the prelude to victory.
-It may mean that the farther you advance the more
-your flanks are exposed. So it was now, when the
-infantry to the north on one side and the Third
-Cavalry Division on the other were closing in on
-them. That long tentacle which was pushing its
-way towards Ypres had to be swiftly withdrawn
-once more, and withdrawn under a heavy fire from
-the 29th, 41st, and 45th field batteries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-German recoil.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The scattered German infantry who had taken
-refuge in the woods of Hooge, which lie to the south
-of the road, were followed up by mounted and
-dismounted men of the Royals, 10th Hussars, and 3rd
-Dragoon Guards, aided by some French cavalry.
-These troops advanced through the woods, killing or
-taking a number of the enemy. By nightfall the
-Germans had fallen back along the whole debated
-line; the various British units, though much
-disorganised, were in close touch with each other, and
-the original trenches had in the main been occupied,
-the Berkshire Regiment helping to close the gap in
-the centre. The flood had slowly ebbed away, and the
-shaken barrier was steady once more, thanks to the
-master-hands which had so skilfully held it firm.
-The village of Gheluvelt remained in the hands of
-the Germans, but the British trenches were formed
-to the west of it, and the road to the sea was barred
-as effectually as ever. These are the main facts of
-the action of Gheluvelt, which may well be given a
-name of its own, though it was only one supremely
-important episode in that huge contention which
-will be known as the First Battle of Ypres.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the southern portion of the Ypres area at
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P273"></a>273}</span>
-Klein Zillebeke a very sharp engagement was going
-on, which swung and swayed with as much violence
-and change as the main battle on the Menin road.
-The German attack here was hardly inferior in
-intensity to that in the north. Having pushed back
-Lawford's weak brigade (22nd) it struck full upon
-part of Bulfin's 2nd Brigade, which had been detached
-from the First Division and sent to cover the right
-of the Seventh Division. Its own flank was now
-exposed, and its situation for a time was critical.
-The German advance was sudden and impetuous,
-coming through a wood which brought the dense
-mass of the enemy's leading formation almost unseen
-right up to the British line. The position of the 2nd
-Brigade was pierced, and the two regiments present,
-the 2nd Sussex and the 1st Northamptons, were driven
-back with loss. Their brigadier rallied them some
-hundreds of yards to the rear, where they formed up
-into a skirmish line in the open, and, though unable
-to advance, kept back the Germans with their rifle-fire.
-The losses still continued, however, and the enemy
-came on again and again with numbers which seemed
-inexhaustible. Suddenly there was a charging yell
-from behind a low slope covering the rear, and over
-the brow there appeared some three hundred survivors
-of the 2nd Gordons, rushing at full speed with fixed
-bayonets. At the same moment the dismounted
-troopers of the 6th Cavalry Brigade and a company
-of sappers ran forward to join in the charge. The
-whole British force was not one to three of its
-opponents, but as the reinforcing line swept on, cheering
-with all its might, the survivors of the hard-pressed
-brigade sprang up with a shout and the united wave
-burst over the Germans. Next moment they had
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P274"></a>274}</span>
-broken and were flying for their lives through the
-Zwartelen Wood. The pursuit lasted for some distance,
-and a great number of the enemy were bayoneted,
-while several hundreds were taken prisoners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-General result.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There have been few more critical occasions in
-the British operations than this action upon October
-31, when the Germans so nearly forced their way to
-Ypres. It is the peculiarity of modern warfare that,
-although vast armies are locked in a close struggle,
-the number of men who can come into actual contact
-at any one point is usually far more limited than in
-the old days, when each host could view the other
-from wing to wing. Thus the losses in such an action
-are small as compared with the terrific death-roll of
-a Napoleonic battle. On the other hand, when the
-operations are viewed broadly and one groups a
-series of actions into one prolonged battle, like the
-Aisne or Ypres, then the resulting losses become
-enormous. The old battle was a local conflagration,
-short and violent. The new one is a widespread
-smoulder, breaking here and there into flame. In
-this affair of Gheluvelt the casualties of the British
-did not exceed 2000 or 3000, while those of the
-Germans, who were more numerous and who incurred
-the extra loss which falls upon the attack, could
-not have been less than twice that figure. One
-thousand five hundred dead were actually picked up
-and six hundred prisoners were taken. Some hundreds
-of prisoners were also taken by the enemy. The
-British artillery, which worked desperately hard all
-day, had many losses both upon the 30th and the
-31st. The 12th Battery had all its guns silenced
-but one, and many others were equally hard hit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the night of the 31st considerable French
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P275"></a>275}</span>
-reinforcements began to arrive, and it was high time
-that they did so, for the First Corps, including the
-Seventh Division, were likely to bleed to death upon
-the ground that they were holding. It had stood
-the successive attacks of four German corps, and it
-had held its line against each of them. But its own
-ranks had been grievously thinned and the men were
-weary to death. The strain, it should be added, was
-equally great upon the Ninth French Corps to the
-north, which had its own set of assailants to contend
-with. Now that the line of the Yser, so splendidly
-guarded by the Belgians, had proved to be
-impregnable, and that the French from Dixmude in the
-north had repulsed all attacks, the whole German
-advance upon Calais, for which Berlin was screaming,
-was centred upon the Ypres lines. It was time, then,
-that some relief should come to the hard-pressed
-troops. For several days the French on the right
-and the left took the weight of the attack upon
-themselves, and although the front was never free
-from fighting, there was a short period of comparative
-rest for Haig's tired men. In successive days they
-had lost Kruiseik, Zandvoorde, and Gheluvelt, but so
-long as they held the semicircle of higher ground
-which covers Ypres these small German gains availed
-them nothing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-A great crisis.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Looking back at the three actions of the 29th,
-30th, and especially of the 31st of October, one can
-clearly perceive that it was the closest thing to a
-really serious defeat which the Army had had since
-Le Cateau. If the Germans had been able to push
-home their attack once again, it is probable that they
-would have taken Ypres, and that the results would
-have been most serious. Sir John French is reported
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P276"></a>276}</span>
-as having said that there was no time in the Mons
-retreat when he did not see his way, great as were
-his difficulties, but that there was a moment upon
-October 31 when he seemed to be at the end of his
-resources. To Sir John at Ypres converged all the
-cries for succour, and from him radiated the words of
-hope and encouragement which stiffened the breaking
-lines. To him and to his untiring lieutenant, Douglas
-Haig, the Empire owed more that day than has ever
-been generally realised. The latter was up to the
-firing line again and again rallying the troops. The
-sudden removal of the two divisional commanders
-of the First Corps was a dreadful blow at such a
-moment, and the manner in which General Landon,
-of the 3rd Brigade, took over the command of the
-First Division at a moment's notice was a most
-noteworthy performance. The fact that three
-divisions of infantry with brigades which resembled
-battalions, and battalions which were anything from
-companies to platoons, destitute of reserves save for
-a few dismounted cavalry, barred the path to a
-powerful German army, is one of the greatest feats of
-military history. It was a very near thing. There
-was a time, it is said, when the breech-blocks had
-actually been taken from the heavy guns in order
-to disable them, and some of the artillery had been
-passed back through Ypres. But the line held
-against all odds, as it has done so often in the past.
-The struggle was not over. For a fortnight still to
-come it was close and desperate. But never again
-would it be quite so perilous as on that immortal
-last day of October, when over the green Flemish
-meadows, beside the sluggish water-courses, on the
-fringes of the old-world villages, and in the heart of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P277"></a>277}</span>
-the autumn-tinted woods, two great Empires fought
-for the mastery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the British epic. There was another
-to the north which was no less wonderful, and which
-will be celebrated by the poets and historians of the
-lands to which the victors belong. It will tell of the
-glorious stand during this critical ten days of the
-Belgians, so weary, so battered, and yet so indomitable.
-It will tell how they made head against the
-hosts of the Duke of Würtemberg, and how in the end
-they flooded their own best land with the salt water
-which would sterilise it in order to cover their front.
-It will tell also of the splendid Frenchmen who
-fought at Dixmude, of Ronarch with his invincible
-marines, and of Grossetti, the fat and debonair,
-seated in an armchair in the village street and pointing
-the road to victory with his cane. Not least, perhaps,
-in that epic will be the tale of the British monitors
-who, with the deadly submarines upon one side of
-them and the heavy German batteries upon the
-other, ran into the Flemish coast and poured their
-fire upon the right flank of the attacking Germans.
-Ten days the great battle swung and swayed, and
-then here as at Ypres the wave of the invaders
-ebbed, or reached its definite flood. It would be an
-ungenerous foe who would not admit that they had
-fought bravely and well. Not all our hatred of their
-national ideals nor our contempt for their crafty
-misleaders can prevent us from saluting those German
-officers and soldiers who poured out their blood like
-water in the attempt to do that which was impossible.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P278"></a>278}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX
-<br /><br />
-THE FIRST BATTLE OF YPRES (<i>continued</i>)
-</h3>
-
-<p class="t3">
-(From the Action of Gheluvelt to the Winter Lull)
-</p>
-
-<p class="intro">
-Attack upon the cavalry&mdash;The struggle at Messines&mdash;The London Scots
-in action&mdash;Rally to the north&mdash;Terrible losses&mdash;Action of
-Zillebeke&mdash;Record of the Seventh Division&mdash;Situation at
-Ypres&mdash;Attack of the Prussian Guard&mdash;Confused
-fighting&mdash;End of the First
-Battle of Ypres&mdash;Death of Lord Roberts&mdash;The Eighth Division.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Attack upon the cavalry.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whilst this severe fighting had been going on to the
-north of the British position, the centre, where the
-dismounted cavalry were holding the line of trenches,
-was so terribly pressed that it is an extraordinary
-thing that they were able to hold their own. The
-Second Corps, which at that time had just been
-withdrawn for a rest from the La Bassée lines, were
-the only available reinforcements. When news was
-flashed south as to the serious state of affairs, two
-regiments, the 2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry and the
-2nd Scottish Borderers from the 13th Infantry Brigade,
-were sent up in motor-buses by road to the relief.
-Strange indeed was the sight of these vehicles flying
-along the Flemish roads, plastered outside with the
-homely names of London suburbs and crammed with
-the grimy, much-enduring infantry. The lines at
-Messines were in trouble, and so also were those at
-Wytschaete farther to the north. To this latter place
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P279"></a>279}</span>
-went two battalions of Shaw's 9th Brigade, the 1st
-Northumberland Fusiliers and the 1st Lincolns.
-Hard work awaited the infantry at Messines and at
-Wytschaete, for in both places Allenby's troopers
-were nearly rushed off their feet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has already been shown that on October 30 a
-severe assault was made upon the Third Cavalry
-Division, when the 7th Brigade (Kavanagh's) was
-forced out of Zandvoorde by the Fifteenth German
-Army Corps. Upon this same date a most strenuous
-attack, made in great force and supported by a terrific
-shell-fire, was directed along the whole line of the
-cavalry from Wytschaete to Messines. No British
-troops have been exposed to a more severe ordeal
-than these brave troopers, for they were enormously
-outnumbered at every point, and their line was so
-thin that it was absolutely impossible for them to
-prevent it from being pierced by the masses of
-infantry, from the Twenty-fourth Corps and Second
-Bavarian Corps, which were hurled against them.
-From the extreme left of the Second Cavalry Division
-near Wytschaete to the right of the First Cavalry
-Division south of Messines the same reports came
-in to the anxious General, of trenches overwhelmed
-or enfiladed, and of little isolated groups of men
-struggling most desperately to keep a footing against
-an ever-surging grey tide which was beating up against
-them and flowing through every gap. In the north
-Gough's men were nearly overwhelmed, the 5th Irish
-Lancers were shelled out of a farmhouse position, and
-the 16th Lancers, shelled from in front and decimated
-by rifles and machine-guns from the flank, were driven
-back for half a mile until three French battalions
-helped the line to reform. The pressure, however,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P280"></a>280}</span>
-was still extreme, the Germans fighting with admirable
-energy and coming forward in never-ending numbers.
-An Indian regiment of the 7th (Ferozepore) Brigade,
-the 129th Baluchis, had been helping the cavalry in
-this region since October 23, but their ranks were now
-much decimated, and they were fought almost to a
-standstill. Two more British regiments from the
-Second Corps, the 1st Lincolns and the 1st Northumberland
-Fusiliers of the 9th Brigade, together with
-their Brigadier, Shaw, who was a reinforcement in
-himself, were, as already stated, hurried off from the
-south in motor-buses to strengthen Gough's line.
-Advancing into what was to them an entirely strange
-position these two veteran regiments sustained very
-heavy losses, which they bore with extreme fortitude.
-They were surprised by the Germans on the road
-between Kemmel and Wytschaete on the night of
-October 31, the same night upon which the London
-Scottish to the south of them were so heavily engaged.
-Colonel Smith succeeded in extricating the Lincolns
-from what was a most perilous position, but only after
-a loss of 16 officers and 400 men. The Fusiliers were
-almost as hard hit. For forty-eight hours the battle
-swung backwards and forwards in front of Wytschaete,
-and in the end the village itself was lost, but the
-defensive lines to the west of it were firmly established.
-By November the second strong French reinforcements
-had appeared, and it was clear that this desperate
-attempt to break through the very centre of the
-British position had definitely failed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The struggle at Messines.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The struggle at Messines, some five miles to the
-south, had been even more severe and sanguinary than
-at Wytschaete. In the early morning of the 31st the
-Bays and the 5th Dragoon Guards upon the left of the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P281"></a>281}</span>
-Messines position, after a heavy shell-fire, were driven
-out of their trenches by a sudden furious advance of
-the German infantry. The front of the village of
-Messines was held by Wild's 57th Rifles, who were
-driven in by the same attack, every officer engaged
-being killed or wounded. A reserve company of
-Wild's Rifles and a squadron of the 5th Dragoon
-Guards endeavoured to restore the fight, but could
-not hold the torrent. The 9th Lancers, also in
-front of the village and to the right of the Indians,
-held on for a long time, repulsing the infantry
-attacks, until they were driven back by the deadly
-shell-fire. At one time they were enfiladed on both
-sides and heard the Germans roaring their war-songs
-in the dark all round them; but they were able, owing
-to the coolness of Colonel Campbell and the discipline
-of his veteran troopers, to fall back and to reform
-upon the western side of the village. Lance-Corporal
-Seaton distinguished himself by covering the retreat
-of his whole squadron, remaining single-handed in his
-trench until his maxim was destroyed, after he had
-poured a thousand shots into the close ranks of his
-assailants.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The situation was so serious after dawn upon the
-31st that General De Lisle had to call for help from
-Wilson's Fourth Infantry Division, holding the line
-upon his right. The Inniskilling Fusiliers were
-extended so as to relieve his right flank. The struggle
-within Messines was still going forward with fighting
-from house to house, but the Germans, who were
-coming on with overpowering numbers and great
-valour, were gradually winning their way forward.
-The Oxfordshire Hussars, fresh from the base, were
-thrown into the combat. A second line of defence
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P282"></a>282}</span>
-had been arranged a mile or so to the west, near
-Wulverghem, but if Messines must go the victors
-should at least pay the price down to the last drop of
-blood which could be wrung from them. Reinforcements
-were within sight, both French and British,
-but they were scanty in quantity though superb in
-quality. It was a most critical position, and one
-cannot but marvel at the load of responsibility which
-Sir John French had to bear upon this day, for from
-the left of Haig's First Corps in the north down
-to Neuve Chapelle in the south, a stretch of
-twenty-five miles, there was hardly a point which
-was not strained to the verge of cracking. Cool and
-alert, he controlled the situation from his central post
-and threw in such reinforcements as he could find,
-though, indeed, they could only be got by taking them
-from places where they were wanted and hurrying
-them to places where they were needed even more
-urgently. He was strengthened always by the
-knowledge that General Joffre behind him was doing all
-that a loyal colleague could to find fresh columns of
-his splendid infantrymen to buttress up the
-hard-pressed line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the moment, however, none of these were
-available, and Messines was still partly in British,
-partly in German hands. Briggs's 1st Brigade&mdash;Bays,
-5th Dragoon Guards, and 11th Hussars&mdash;with the
-Oxfords, held on to the western edge of the town.
-To their left, linking up with Gough's men in the
-Wytschaete sector, was the 4th Dragoon Guards.
-Late in the afternoon the 2nd Scots Borderers and the
-2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry, the joint detachment
-under Major Coke, arrived from the south, and were
-at once advanced upon Messines to stiffen the defence.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P283"></a>283}</span>
-Under heavy fire they established themselves in the
-village. Evening fell with desperate street fighting
-and the relative position unchanged. Twice the
-Bavarians stormed into the central square, and twice
-they fell back after littering it with their bodies. It
-seemed hopeless to hold the village against the
-ever-growing pressure of the Germans, and yet the loss of
-the village entailed the loss of the ridge, which would
-leave a commanding position in the hands of the
-enemy. Village and ridge were mutually dependent,
-for if either were lost the other could not be held.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As it proved, it was the ridge and not the village
-which could no longer sustain the pressure. On the
-night of October 31 Mullen's 2nd Cavalry Brigade&mdash;9th
-Lancers, 4th Dragoon Guards, and 11th Hussars&mdash;took
-over the defence from Briggs. Of these, the
-4th Dragoon Guards were to the left of the village upon
-the ridge. The London Scottish had been brought
-up, and they were placed upon the left of the 4th
-Dragoon Guards, forming a link of the defence which
-connected up the Second Cavalry Division with the
-First. The right-hand regiment of the latter, the
-6th Carbineers, of Bingham's 4th Brigade, were upon
-the left of the London Scottish. These two
-regiments held the centre of the ridge. The London
-Scottish had already suffered considerable losses.
-Hurried up from the lines of communication to
-St. Eloi, they were pushed forward at once into action,
-and were exposed for hours to all the nerve-racking
-horrors of a heavy shell-fire endured in most
-insufficient trenches. A more severe ordeal was in store
-for them, however, during the grim night which lay
-before them. The admirable behaviour of Colonel
-Malcolm's men excited the more attention as they
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P284"></a>284}</span>
-were the first Territorial infantry to come into action,
-and they set a standard which has been grandly
-sustained by the quarter-million of their comrades who
-have from first to last come into the line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The London Scots in action.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the early morning of November 1 there had
-been a strong attempt within the village to improve
-the British position, and some ground was actually
-gained by the cavalrymen, the Yorkshire Light
-Infantry, and the Scots Borderers. What occurred,
-however, on the ridge to the north made all further
-effort a useless waste of life. The Bavarian infantry
-had come with an irresistible rush against the thin
-British line. The order to hold their ground at all
-costs was given, and the London Scots answered it in a
-way which gained the highest praise from the many
-soldiers who saw it. It is not claimed that they did
-better than their Regular comrades. That would be
-impossible. The most that can be said is that they
-proved themselves worthy to fight in line with them.
-After being exposed for several hours to heavy shellfire,
-it was no light task for any troops to be called
-upon to resist a direct assault. From nine in the
-evening of October 31 to two in the morning, under
-the red glare of burning houses, Colonel Malcolm's
-Scottish and Colonel Annesley's Carbineers held back
-the Bavarian advance, an advance which would have
-meant the piercing of the British line. At two o'clock
-the Bavarians in greatly predominant force were all
-round the Scots, and even the reserve companies
-found work for their bayonets, preventing the enemy
-from encircling their companions. The losses were
-very heavy&mdash;400 men and 9 officers, including their
-gallant doctor, M'Nab, who was villainously stabbed as
-he bandaged a patient. In spite of the great pressure,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P285"></a>285}</span>
-the ground was held all night, and it was not till
-dawn, when the regiment found that it was outflanked
-on both sides and nearly surrounded, that, under
-cover of the fire of E Battery R.H.A., it fell back.
-The Carbineers and the Scots were close together, and
-the Germans, with their usual quick ingenuity,
-approached the former with a cry of "We are the London
-Scots." A disaster might have occurred in the
-darkness but for the quickness and bravery of a young
-officer, Lieutenant Hope Hawkins, who rushed
-forward, discovered the identity of the Germans, and
-fell, riddled with bullets, even while he gave warning
-to his comrades.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Germans had won the ridge, but the British
-line was still intact and growing stronger every hour.
-The village was held by the Scots Borderers and
-Yorkshiremen until nearly ten o'clock, when they
-were ordered to fall back and help to man the new
-line. The shock had been a rude one, but the
-danger-hour was past here as in the north.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fateful November 1 had come and gone. The
-villages of Messines and Wytschaete were, it is true,
-in German hands, but French reinforcements of the
-Sixteenth Corps were streaming up from the south,
-the line, though torn and broken, still held firm, and
-the road to Calais was for ever blocked. There was
-still pressure, and on November 2 the 11th Hussars
-were badly cut up by shell-fire, but the line was
-impregnable. Sir John French summed up in a few
-terse words the true meaning of the operations just
-described, when he said afterwards, in addressing the
-9th Lancers, "Particularly I would refer to the
-period, October 31, when for forty-eight hours the
-Cavalry Corps held at bay two German army corps.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P286"></a>286}</span>
-During this period you were supported by only three
-or four battalions, shattered and worn by previous
-fighting, and in so doing you rendered inestimable
-service." There have been few episodes in the war
-which have been at the same time so splendid and
-so absolutely vital. The First Cavalry Division
-lost 50 per cent of its numbers between October
-30 and November 2, and the Second Division was
-hardly in better case, but never did men give
-their lives to better purpose. Their heroism saved
-the Army.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Rally to the north.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile the current of operations was evidently
-running strongly towards the northern end of the
-British line, where help was badly needed, as Haig's
-men had been fought almost to exhaustion. There
-was no British reinforcement available save only
-the weary Second Corps, the remains of which from
-this date began to be drafted northwards. It was
-already known that the German Emperor had
-appeared in person in that region, and that a great
-concentration of his troops was taking place. At the
-same time the French were making splendid exertions
-in order to stiffen their own line and help us in those
-parts, like Messines, Wytschaete, and Ploegsteert,
-where the attack was most formidable. It was a
-great gathering towards the north, and clearly some
-hard blows were to be struck. Northwards then went
-General Morland, of the Fifth Division, taking with
-him four more weak battalions. The whole line had
-moved upwards towards the danger spot, and these
-troops now found themselves east of Bailleul, close to
-the village of Neuve Eglise. For the moment General
-Smith-Dorrien was without an army, for half his men
-were now supporting General Willcocks in the south
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P287"></a>287}</span>
-and half General Allenby or General Haig in the north.
-The British leaders all along the line were, as usual,
-desperately endeavouring to make one man do the
-work of three, but they were buoyed up by the
-knowledge that good Father Joffre, like some beneficent
-earthly Providence, was watching over them from the
-distance, and that fresh trainfuls of his brave little
-men were ever steaming into the danger zone. Day
-by day the line was thickening and the task of the
-Kaiser becoming more difficult. It was hoped that
-the crisis was past. If our troops were exhausted
-so also, it was thought, were those of the enemy. We
-could feel elated by the knowledge that we had held
-our ground, while they could hardly fail to be
-depressed by the reflection that they had made little
-progress in spite of so many heroic efforts, and that
-Calais was as far from them as ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The narrative must now return to the defenders
-of the Ypres approaches, who were left in a state of
-extreme exhaustion by the critical action of October
-31. On November 1 the First Corps was not in a
-condition to do more than to hold its line. This line
-was now near to Veldhoek, to the west of Gheluvelt
-village, and to that extent the Germans had profited
-by their desperate fighting, but this was a detail of
-small consequence so long as an unbroken British
-Army covered the town that was still the objective
-of the enemy. The Ninth French Corps to the north
-of the British had lost heavily, but to the south of the
-canal lay the Sixteenth French Corps, which was in
-comparatively good condition. This corps now made
-an advance to take some of the pressure off the British
-line, while Moussy's regiments to the north of the
-canal were to co-operate with Bulfin's men upon their
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P288"></a>288}</span>
-left. Upon the left of Bulfin's 2nd Brigade were two
-battalions of the 4th Brigade of Guards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One of these battalions had a terrible experience
-upon this morning. For some reason the trenches of
-the Irish Guards were exposed to an enfilading fire
-from the high explosives of the Germans, which
-wrought even more than their customary damage.
-For hours the Guardsmen lay under a terrific fire, to
-which they could make no reply, and from which they
-could obtain no protection. When at last, in the
-afternoon, they were compelled to fall back, their
-losses had been great, including their colonel, Lord
-Ardee, 7 other officers, and over 300 men. It is the
-hard fate of the side which is weaker in artillery to
-endure such buffetings with no possibility of return.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The French attack of the Sixteenth Corps had
-been brought to a speedy standstill, and a severe
-counter-attack, preceded by a heavy shell-fire, had
-fallen upon General Moussy's men and upon the half
-of the 2nd Brigade. Help was urgently needed,
-so the remains of the 7th Brigade from the Third
-Cavalry Division were hurried forward. The Germans
-were now surging up against the whole right and
-right-centre of the line. It seems to have been their
-system to attack upon alternate days on the right
-and on the centre, for it will be remembered that it
-was on October 29 that they gained the Gheluvelt
-cross-roads, and on October 31 Gheluvelt village,
-both in the centre, while on October 30 they captured
-the Zandvoorde ridge upon the British right, and
-now, on November 1, were pressing hard upon the
-right once more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That morning the Army sustained a loss in the
-person of General Bulfin, who was wounded in the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P289"></a>289}</span>
-head by shrapnel. Fortunately his recovery was not
-a lengthy one, and he was able to return in January
-as commander of the Twenty-eighth Division. Upon
-his fall, Lord Cavan, of the 4th Brigade, took over the
-command upon the hard-pressed right wing. At
-half-past one the hundred survivors of the 2nd Gordons,
-on the right of the Seventh Division, and the 2nd
-Oxford and Bucks, were desperately hard pressed by
-a strong German infantry advance, and so were the
-remains of the Sussex and Northamptons. The only
-available help lay in the 23rd Field Company of
-Royal Engineers. Our sappers proved, as they have
-so often done before, that their hearts are as sound
-as their heads. They pushed off the enemy, but
-incurred heavy losses. The situation was still critical
-when at the summons of Lord Cavan the 2nd
-Grenadiers advanced and cleared the Germans from
-the woods in the front and flank, while the 10th
-Hussars supported their advance. A gap had been
-left in the trenches from which the Irish Guards had
-been pushed, but this was now filled up by cavalry,
-who connected up with the French on their right
-and with the Guards upon their left. The general
-effect of the whole day's fighting was to drive the
-British line farther westward, but to contract it, so
-that it required a smaller force. Two battalions&mdash;the
-Gordons and the Sussex&mdash;could be taken out and
-brought into reserve. The centre of the line had a
-day's rest and dug itself into its new positions, but
-the units were greatly mixed and confused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-November 2 brought no surcease from the constant
-fighting, though the disturbance of these days,
-severe as it was, may be looked upon as a mere ground
-swell after the terrific storm of the last days of October.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P290"></a>290}</span>
-On the morning of the 2nd the Ninth French Corps
-upon the British left, under General Vidal, sent eight
-battalions forward to the south and east in the direction
-of Gheluvelt. Part of this village was actually
-occupied by them. The Germans meanwhile, with
-their usual courage and energy, were driving a fresh
-attack down that Menin road which had so often been
-reddened by their blood. It was the day for a centre
-attack on their stereotyped system of alternate
-pushes, and it came duly to hand. An initial success
-awaited them as, getting round a trench occupied by
-the Rifles, they succeeded in cutting off a number of
-them. The 3rd Brigade was hurried up by General
-Landon to the point of danger, and a French Zouave
-regiment helped to restore the situation. A spirited
-bayonet charge, in which the Gloucesters led, was
-beaten back by the enemy's fire. After a day of
-confused and desultory fighting the situation in the
-evening was very much as it had been in the morning.
-Both that night and the next day there was a series
-of local and sporadic attacks, first on the front of the
-Second Division and then of the Seventh, all of which
-were driven back. The Germans began to show
-their despair of ever gaining possession of Ypres by
-elevating their guns and dropping shells upon the old
-Cloth Hall of that historic city, a senseless act of
-spiteful vandalism which exactly corresponds with their
-action when the Allied Army held them in front of
-Rheims.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-November 4 was a day of menaces rather than of
-attacks. On this day, units which had become
-greatly mixed during the incessant and confused
-fighting of the last fortnight were rearranged and
-counted. The losses were terrible. The actual
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P291"></a>291}</span>
-strength of the infantry of the First Division upon
-that date was: 1st Brigade, 22 officers, 1206 men;
-2nd Brigade, 43 officers, 1315 men: 3rd Brigade,
-27 officers, 970 men; which make the losses of the
-whole division about 75 per cent. Those of the
-Second Division were very little lighter. And now
-for the 25 per cent remainder of this gallant corps
-there was not a moment of breathing space or rest,
-but yet another fortnight of unremitting work,
-during which their thin ranks were destined to hold
-the German army, and even the Emperor's own
-Guard, from passing the few short miles which
-separated them from their objective. Great was the
-"will to conquer" of the Kaiser's troops, but greater
-still the iron resolve not to be conquered which
-hardened the war-worn lines of the soldiers of the
-King.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Terrible losses.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-November 5 was a day of incessant shell-fire,
-from which the Seventh Division, the 4th and the
-6th Brigades were the chief sufferers. On this day
-the Seventh Division, which had now been reduced
-from 12,000 infantry to 2333, was withdrawn from the
-line. In their place were substituted those
-reinforcements from the south which have already been
-mentioned. These consisted of eleven battalions of
-the Second Corps under General McCracken; this
-corps, however, was greatly worn, and the eleven
-battalions only represented 3500 rifles. The Seventh
-Division was withdrawn to Bailleul in the south, but
-Lawford's 22nd Brigade was retained in corps reserve,
-and was destined to have one more trial before it
-could be spared for rest. The day was memorable
-also for a vigorous advance of the Gloucester Regiment,
-which was pushed with such hardihood that they
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P292"></a>292}</span>
-sustained losses of nearly half their numbers before
-admitting that they could not gain their objective.
-A description has been given here of the events of
-the north of the line and of the cavalry positions, but
-it is not to be supposed that peace reigned on the
-south of this point. On the contrary, during the
-whole period under discussion, while the great fight
-raged at Ypres, there had been constant shelling and
-occasional advances against the Third Corps in the
-Armentières section, and also against the Indians
-and the Second Corps down to the La Bassée Canal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most serious of these occurred upon November
-9. Upon this date the Germans, who had knocked
-so loudly at Messines and at Wytschaete without
-finding that any opening through our lines was open
-to them, thought that they might find better luck at
-Ploegsteert, which is a village on the same line as the
-other two. Wytschaete is to the north, Messines in
-the middle, and Ploegsteert in the south, each on the
-main road from Ypres to Armentières, with about
-four miles interval between each. The German
-attack was a very strong one, but the hundredfold
-drama was played once more. On the 3rd Worcesters
-fell the brunt, and no more solid fighters have been
-found in the Army than those Midland men from
-the very heart of England. A temporary set-back
-was retrieved and the line restored. Major Milward,
-of the Worcesters, a very gallant officer, was grievously
-wounded in this affair. The counter-attack which
-restored the situation was carried out mainly by the
-1st East Lancashires, who lost Major Lambert and
-a number of men in the venture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Action of Zillebeke.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Upon November 6, about 2 P.M., a strong German
-advance drove in those French troops who were on
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P293"></a>293}</span>
-the right of Lord Cavan's Brigade&mdash;4th&mdash;which
-occupied the extreme right of Haig's position.
-point was between Klein Zillebeke and the canal,
-where a German lodgment would have been most
-serious. The retirement of the French exposed the
-right flank of the 1st Irish Guards. This flank was
-strongly attacked, and for the second time in a week
-this brave regiment endured very heavy losses.
-No. 2 company was driven back to the support
-trenches, and No. 1 company, being isolated, was
-destroyed. Their neighbours on the left, the 2nd
-Grenadiers stood fast, but a great and dangerous
-alley-way was left for the Germans round the British
-right wing. The situation was splendidly saved by
-Kavanagh's 7th Cavalry Brigade, who galloped
-furiously down the road to the place where they were
-so badly needed. This hard-worked <i>corps d'élite</i>,
-consisting of the 1st and 2nd Life Guards supported
-by the Blues, now dismounted and flung themselves
-into the gap, a grimy line of weather-stained infantry
-with nothing left save their giant physique and their
-spurs to recall the men who are the pride of our London
-streets. The retiring French rallied at the sight of the
-sons of Anak. An instant later the Germans were into
-them, and there was a terrific <i>mêlée</i> of British, French,
-and Prussians, which swung and swayed over the
-marshland and across the road. Men drove their
-bayonets through each other or fired point-blank
-into each other's bodies in a most desperate fight,
-the Germans slowly but surely recoiling, until at last
-they broke. It was this prompt and vigorous stroke
-by Kavanagh's Brigade which saved a delicate situation.
-Of the three cavalry regiments engaged, two
-lost their colonels&mdash;Wilson of the Blues and Dawnay
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P294"></a>294}</span>
-of the 2nd Life Guards. Sixteen officers fell in half
-an hour. The losses in rank and file were also heavy,
-but the results were great and indeed vital. The
-whole performance was an extraordinarily fine one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Record of the Seventh Division.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Early on the morning of November 7 Lawford's
-22nd Brigade, which was now reduced to 1100 men,
-with 7 officers, was called upon to retake a line of
-trenches which the enemy had wrested from a
-neighbouring unit. Unbroken in nerve or spirit by their
-own terrific losses, they rushed forward, led by Lawford
-himself, a cudgel in his hand, carried the trench,
-captured three machine-guns, held the trench till
-evening, and then retired for a time from the line.
-Captains Vallentin and Alleyne, who led the two
-regiments into which the skeleton brigade had been
-divided, both fell in this feat of arms. After this
-action there remained standing the brigadier, 3
-officers, and 700 men. The losses of the brigade work
-out at 97 per cent of the officers and 80 per cent of the
-men, figures which can seldom have been matched in
-the warfare of any age, and yet were little in excess
-of the other brigades, as is shown by the fact that
-the whole division on November 7 numbered 44
-officers and 2336 men. It is true that many British
-regiments found themselves in this campaign with
-not one single officer or man left who had started
-from England, but these were usually the effects of
-months of campaigning. In the case of the Seventh
-Division, all these deadly losses had been sustained
-in less than three weeks. Britain's soldiers have
-indeed been faithful to the death. Their record is
-the last word in endurance and military virtue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The division was now finally withdrawn from the
-fighting line. It has already been stated that there
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P295"></a>295}</span>
-were reasons which made its units exceptionally fine
-ones. In General Capper they possessed a leader of
-enormous energy and fire, whilst his three
-brigadiers&mdash;Watts, Lawford, and Ruggles-Brise&mdash;could not be
-surpassed by any in the Army. Yet with every
-advantage of officers and men there will always be
-wonder as well as admiration for what they
-accomplished. For three days, before the First Corps had
-come thoroughly into line, they held up the whole
-German advance, leaving the impression upon the
-enemy that they were faced by two army corps.
-Then for twelve more days they held the ground in
-the very storm-centre of the attack upon Ypres.
-When at last the survivors staggered from the line,
-they had made a name which will never die.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Situation at Ypres.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The bulk of Smith-Dorrien's Corps had now been
-brought north, so that from this date (November 7)
-onwards the story of the First and Second Corps is
-intimately connected. When we last saw this corps
-it will be remembered that it had been withdrawn
-from the front, having lost some twelve thousand
-men in three weeks of La Bassée operations, and that
-the Indian Corps had taken over their line of trenches.
-Such fighting men could not, however, be spared in
-the midst of such a fight. The hospital was the only
-rest that any British soldier could be afforded. Whilst
-they had still strength to stand they must line up
-to the German flood or be content to see it thunder
-past them to the coast. They were brought north,
-save only Bowes' 8th Brigade and Maude's 14th,
-which remained with the Indians in the south.
-Although the Seventh Division had been drawn out
-of the line, its attendant cavalry division still
-remained to give its very efficient help to General Haig.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P296"></a>296}</span>
-The British position, though by no means secure,
-was getting stronger day by day, for General d'Urbal
-of the Eighth French Army to the north, and General
-Maud'huy to the south, had both been strongly
-reinforced, and with their usual good comradeship did
-all they could to strengthen the flanks and shorten
-the front of the British line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The men of the Second Corps who had come north
-from the La Bassée district were not left long
-unmolested in their new sphere of operations. On the
-afternoon of November 7 there was a hot German
-attack upon that portion of the line which had just
-been vacated by the Seventh Division. The trenches
-were now held by the Fifth Division (Morland's).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The enemy may have hoped for some advantage
-from a change which they may well have observed,
-but they found that, though the units might be
-different, the same old breed still barred their path.
-On this occasion, after the early rush had spent itself
-upon the 1st Lincolns, it was the 2nd West Ridings
-who led the counter-charge. The line, however, was
-never fully re-established. A number of smaller
-attacks broke upon the front of the Second Division
-on the same day, leaving a few score of prisoners
-behind them as they ebbed. On the same day,
-November 7, the enemy got into the trenches of the
-2nd Highland Light Infantry and remained in them,
-for all of them were bayoneted or taken. Upon this
-day the London Scottish were brought up into the
-Ypres line&mdash;a sign, if one were needed, that after the
-action described they were accepted as the peers of
-their comrades of the Regular Army, for no empty
-compliments are passed when the breaking of a unit
-may mean the enfilading of a line.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P297"></a>297}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-November 8 was a quiet day, but it was well
-known from every report of spy, scout, and aeroplane
-to be the lull before the storm. One German brigade
-came down the Menin road, and went up it again
-leaving a hundred dead on or beside the causeway.
-This attack inflicted some loss upon the 1st North
-Lancashires and on the 1st Scots Guards. The 1st
-Bedfords captured a trench that night. The 9th
-and the 10th were uneventful, and the tired troops
-rested on their arms, though never free for an hour
-from the endless pelting of shells. To the north and
-east the Eagles were known to be gathering. There
-were the Emperor, the Emperor's Guard, and a great
-fresh battle of the Germans ready for one grand final
-dash for Calais, with every rifle in the firing line and
-every cannon to support it. Grave messages came
-from headquarters, warning words were passed to
-anxious brigadiers, who took counsel with their
-colonels as to fire-fields and supports. Batteries were
-redistributed, depleted limbers refilled, and
-observation posts pushed to the front, while the untiring
-sappers gave the last touches to traverse and to
-trench. All was ready for the fray. So close were
-the lines that at many points the conversations of
-the enemy could be heard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Attack of the Prussian Guard.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Germans had already concentrated a large
-number of troops against this part of the British line,
-and they were now secretly reinforced by a division
-of the Prussian Guard. Documents found afterwards
-upon the dead show that the Guard had had special
-orders from the Emperor to break the line at all costs.
-The brigades which attacked were made up of the
-1st and 2nd Foot Guards, the Kaiser Franz Grenadiers
-No. 2, the Königin Augusta Grenadiers No. 4, and
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P298"></a>298}</span>
-the battalion of Garde Jäger&mdash;13,000 men in all.
-It was to be victory or death with the <i>corps d'élite</i>
-of the German army, but it was no less victory or
-death with the men who opposed them. After an
-artillery preparation of appalling intensity for three
-hours along the line of both the First and Second
-Divisions, the infantry advance began about 9.30
-on the morning of November 11 amid a storm of wind
-and rain. They are gregarious fighters, the Germans,
-finding comfort and strength in the rush of serried
-ranks. Even now the advance was made in a close
-formation, but it was carried out with magnificent
-dash, amazing valour, and a pedantic precision which
-caused, for example, the leading officers to hold their
-swords at the carry. The Prussian Guardsmen
-seemed to have lost nothing, and also to have learned
-nothing, since their famous predecessors lay dead in
-their ranks before St. Privat, forty-four years before.
-The attack was directed against the front of the two
-divisions of the First British Army Corps, but
-especially on the 1st Brigade, so that Guardsman faced
-Guardsman, as at Fontenoy. There were none of
-the chivalrous greetings of 1745, however, and a
-stern hatred hardened the hearts of either side. The
-German Guard charged on the north of the Menin
-road, while a second advance by troops of the line
-was made upon the south, which withered away
-before the British fire. Nothing could stop the
-Guards, however. With trenches blazing and
-crackling upon their flank, for the advance was somewhat
-diagonal, they poured over the British position and
-penetrated it at three different points where the
-heavy shells had overwhelmed the trenches and
-buried the occupants, who, in some cases, were
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P299"></a>299}</span>
-bayoneted as they struggled out from under the earth.
-It was a terrific moment. The yells of the stormers
-and the shrill whistles of their officers rose above the
-crash of the musketry-fire and roar of the guns. The
-British fought in their customary earnest silence,
-save for the short, sharp directions of their leaders.
-"They did not seem angry&mdash;only business-like," said
-a hostile observer. The troops to the immediate
-north of the Menin road, who had been shelled out
-of their trenches by the bombardment, were forced
-back and brushed aside into the woods to the north,
-while the Germans poured through the gap. The
-4th Royal Fusiliers of the 9th Brigade, upon the right
-of the point where the enemy had penetrated, were
-enfiladed and lost their gallant colonel, MacMahon, a
-soldier who had done great service from the day of
-Mons, and had just been appointed to a brigade.
-The regiment, which has worked as hard and endured
-as great losses as any in the campaign, was reduced
-to 2 officers and 100 men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The German Guard poured on into the woods
-which lay in the immediate rear of the British position,
-but their formation was broken and the individualism
-of the Briton began to tell. Next to MacMahon's
-regiment lay the 1st Scots Fusiliers, sister battalion
-to that which had been destroyed upon October 31.
-With fierce joy they poured volleys into the flank of
-the Guard as the grey figures rushed past them into
-the woods. Four hundred dead Germans were
-afterwards picked out from the underwood at this
-point. The Scots Fusiliers were also hard hit by the
-German fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this period the Germans who had come through
-the line had skirted the south of a large wood of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P300"></a>300}</span>
-half-grown trees, called the Polygon Wood, and
-had advanced into the farther one, named
-Nonnebusch. At this point they were close to the
-British artillery, which they threatened to overwhelm.
-The 41st Brigade R.F.A., and especially the 16th
-Field Battery, were in the immediate line of their
-advance, and the gunners looking up saw the grey
-uniforms advancing amid the trees. Colonel Lushington,
-who commanded the artillery brigade, hurriedly
-formed up a firing line under his adjutant, composed
-partly of his own spare gunners and partly of a
-number of Engineers, reinforced by cooks, officers'
-servants, and other odd hands who are to be found
-in the rear of the army, but seldom expect to find
-themselves in the van of the fight. It was a somewhat
-grotesque array, but it filled the gap and brought the
-advance to a halt, though the leading Germans were
-picked up afterwards within seventy yards of the guns.
-Whilst the position was critical at this point of
-the front, it was no less so upon the extreme right,
-where the French detachment, who still formed a
-link between the canal on the south and the British
-right flank, were shelled out of their trenches and
-driven back. Lord Cavan's 4th Brigade, their nearest
-neighbours, were too hard pressed to be able to help
-them. To the north of the Menin road a number of
-British units were intact, and these held up the
-German flood in that region. There are two considerable
-woods&mdash;the Polygon to the north and the Nonnebusch
-to the south-west of the Polygon&mdash;the edges
-of which have defined the British position, while
-their depths have harboured their artillery. Now
-the 1st King's Liverpool Regiment held firm to the
-south of the Polygon Wood, while north of them were
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P301"></a>301}</span>
-the 2nd Highland Light Infantry, with a field company
-of Engineers. Farther to the south-west were the
-1st Connaught Rangers, while on the other side of
-the Nonnebusch road was the 7th Cavalry Brigade.
-In the afternoon of this day the enemy, skirting the
-south of the Polygon Wood, had actually entered the
-Nonnebusch Wood, in which it faced the artillery
-as already described. In the Polygon Wood, when
-they penetrated the trenches of the 1st Brigade, they
-had the King's Liverpool Regiment on their right,
-which refused to move, so that for a long time the
-Prussian Guard and the King's lay side by side with
-a traverse between them. "Our right is supported
-by the Prussian Guard," said the humorous adjutant
-of the famous Lancashire regiment. While the main
-body of the Guard passed on, some remained all day
-in this trench.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The German Guardsmen had been prevented from
-submerging the 41st Brigade of Artillery, and also the
-35th Heavy Battery, by the resistance of an
-improvised firing line. But a more substantial defence
-was at hand. The 2nd Oxford and Bucks Light
-Infantry, which had been in divisional reserve near
-Ypres, had been brought forward and found itself
-at Westhoek, near the threatened guns. This regiment
-is the old 52nd, of the Peninsular Light Division,
-a famous corps which threw itself upon the flank of
-Napoleon's Guard at Waterloo and broke it in the
-crisis of the battle. Once again within a century an
-Imperial Guard was to recoil before its disciplined
-rush. Under Colonel Davies the regiment swept
-through the wood from north-west to south-east,
-driving the Germans, who had already been badly
-shaken by the artillery fire, in a headlong rout.
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P302"></a>302}</span>
-Many threw down their arms. The loss to the
-Oxfords was surprisingly small, well under fifty in
-all. As they emerged from the wood they were
-joined by some of the 1st Northamptons from the
-2nd Brigade upon the right, while on the left there
-was a rush of Connaughts and Highland Light
-Infantry from their own (Haking's) brigade and of
-Engineers of the 25th Field Company, who showed
-extraordinary initiative and gallantry, pushing on
-rapidly, and losing all their officers save one and a
-number of their men without flinching for an instant.
-A party of the Gloucesters, too, charged with the
-Northamptons upon the right, for by this time units
-were badly mixed up, as will always happen in
-woodland fighting. "It was all a confused nightmare,"
-said one who tried to control it. The line
-of infantry dashed forward, a company of the Oxfords
-under Captain H. M. Dillon in the lead, and the khaki
-wave broke over a line of trenches which the Germans
-had taken, submerging all the occupants. There
-was another line in front, but as the victorious
-infantry pushed forward to this it was struck in the
-flank by a fire from French batteries, which had
-been unable to believe that so much progress could
-have been made in so short a time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was now nearly dark, and the troops were in
-the last stage of exhaustion. Of the 1st Brigade
-something less than 400 with 4 officers could be
-collected. It was impossible to do more than hold
-the line as it then existed. Two brave attempts
-were made in the darkness to win back the original
-front trenches, but it could not be done, for there
-were no men to do it. Save for one small corner of
-the Polygon Wood, the Germans had been completely
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P303"></a>303}</span>
-cleared out from the main position. At twelve and
-at four, during the night, the British made a forward
-movement to regain the advanced trenches, but in
-each case the advance could make no progress. At
-the very beginning of the second attempt General
-FitzClarence, commanding the 1st Brigade, was
-killed, and the movement fizzled out. Besides
-General FitzClarence, the Army sustained a severe
-loss in General Shaw of the 9th Brigade, who was
-struck by a shell splinter, though happily the wound
-was not mortal. The German losses were exceedingly
-severe: 700 of their dead were picked up within a
-single section of the British line, but the main loss
-was probably sustained in the advance before they
-reached the trenches. Killed, wounded, and prisoners,
-their casualties cannot have been less than 10,000
-men.[<a id="chap09fn1text"></a><a href="#chap09fn1">1</a>] It was a fine attack, bravely delivered by
-fresh troops against weary men, but it showed the
-German leaders once for all that it was impossible
-to force a passage through the lines. The Emperor's
-Guard, driven on by the Emperor's own personal
-impetus, had recoiled broken, even as the Guard of
-a greater Emperor had done a century before from
-the indomitable resistance of the British infantry.
-The constant fighting had reduced British brigades
-to the strength of battalions, battalions to companies,
-and companies to weak platoons, but the position
-was still held. They had, it is true, lost about five
-hundred yards of ground in the battle, but a shorter
-line was at once dug, organised, and manned. The
-barrier to Ypres was as strong as ever.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap09fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap09fn1text">1</a>] The German returns for the Guard alone
-at this battle are reported
-at 1170 dead, 3991 wounded, 1719 missing.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The strain upon the men, however, had been
-terrific. "Bearded, unwashed, sometimes plagued
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P304"></a>304}</span>
-with vermin, the few who remained in the front line
-were a terrible crew," says the American, Coleman.
-"They were like fierce, wild beasts," says another
-observer. They had given their all, almost to their
-humanity, to save Britain. May the day never come
-when Britain will refuse to save them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Confused fighting.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Glancing for a moment down the line to the south,
-there had been continuous confused contention during
-this time, but no great attack such as distinguished
-the operations in the north. Upon November 7 two
-brisk assaults were made by the Germans in the
-Armentières area, one upon the Fourth Division of
-the Third Corps and the other upon the Seaforth
-Highlanders, who were brigaded with the Indians.
-In each case the first German rush carried some
-trenches, and in each the swift return of the British
-regained them. There were moderate losses upon
-both sides. On the same date the 13th Infantry
-Brigade lost the services of Colonel Martyn of the
-1st West Kents, who was seriously wounded the
-very day after he had been appointed to a brigade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This attack upon November 11 represents the
-absolute high-water mark of the German efforts in
-this battle, and the ebb was a rapid one. Upon
-November 12 and the remainder of the week,
-half-hearted attempts were made upon the British front,
-which were repulsed without difficulty. To the
-north of the line, where the French had held their
-positions with much the same fluctuations which
-had been experienced by their Allies, the German
-assault was more violent and met with occasional
-success, though it was finally repelled with very
-great loss. The 14th was to the French what the
-11th had been to the British&mdash;the culmination of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P305"></a>305}</span>
-violence and the prelude of rest. The weather
-throughout this period was cold and tempestuous,
-which much increased the strain upon the weary
-troops. Along the whole line from Ypres to Bethune
-there were desultory shellings with an occasional dash
-by one side or the other, which usually ended in
-the capture of a trench and its recapture by the
-supports in the rear. It was in one of these sporadic
-German attacks in the Klein Zillebeke section that
-the 2nd King's Royal Rifles held their trench against
-heavy odds, and their machine-gun officer, Lieutenant
-Dimmer, thrice wounded and still fighting, won the
-coveted Cross by his valour. Each gallant advance
-and capture of the Germans was countered by an
-equally gallant counter-attack and recapture by the
-British. The long line sagged and swayed, but
-never bent or broke. The era of battles had passed,
-but for thirty miles the skirmishes were incessant.
-So mixed and incessant had been the fighting that
-it was a very difficult task during these days to tidy
-up the line and get each scattered group of men back
-to its own platoon, company, and battalion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On Tuesday, November 17, the fighting suddenly
-assumed a more important character. The attack
-was again in the Ypres section and fell chiefly upon
-the battalions of the Second Corps, if so dignified a
-name as "battalion" can be given to bodies of men
-which consisted very often of less than a normal
-company, commanded, perhaps, by two junior officers.
-The 4th Brigade of Guards was also heavily engaged
-this day, and so were the cavalry of the Third Division.
-The general locale of the action was the same as that
-which had been so often fought over before, the
-Second Corps being to the south of the Ypres-Menin
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P306"></a>306}</span>
-road, with Lord Cavan's Guardsmen upon their right
-and the cavalry upon the right of the Guards. After
-a severe shelling there was a serious infantry advance,
-about one o'clock, which took some trenches, but was
-finally driven back and chased for a quarter of a mile.
-McCracken's 7th Brigade bore a chief part in this
-fighting, and the 1st Wiltshires particularly
-distinguished themselves by a fine charge led by Captain
-Cary-Barnard. The 2nd Grenadiers did great work
-during the day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An even heavier advance was made in the afternoon
-to the south of that which was broken in the morning.
-This involved an oblique advance across the British
-front, which was stopped and destroyed before it
-reached the trenches by the deadly fire of rifles and
-machine-guns. Over a thousand dead were left as a
-proof of the energy of the attack and the solidity of
-the resistance. Farther to the south a similar attack
-was beaten back by the cavalry after a preliminary
-shelling in which the 3rd Dragoon Guards suffered
-severely. This attack was repelled by the Third
-Cavalry Division, to which the Leicestershire and
-North Somerset Yeomanry were now attached. The
-latter did fine service in this action. Altogether,
-November 17 was a good day for the British arms
-and a most expensive one for the Germans.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-End of the first Battle of Ypres.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have now reached the end of the Battle of
-Ypres, which attained its maximum fury, so far as
-the British line was concerned, from October 29 to
-November 11. This great contest raged from the
-sand dunes of the north, where the Belgians fought
-so well, through the French Marine Brigade at
-Dixmude, and the Ninth French Corps, to General Haig's
-Corps, which was buttressed on the right towards
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P307"></a>307}</span>
-the latter part of the battle by the Sixteenth French
-Corps. Farther south yet another French corps
-supported and eventually took the place of the
-British cavalry opposite the lost villages of Wytschaete
-and Messines. From there ran the unbroken lines
-of the imperturbable Third Corps, which ended to
-the south in the trenches originally held by the
-Second British Corps, and later by the Indians.
-Across the La Bassée Canal the French once again
-took up the defence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not an action, therefore, which can be set
-down to the exclusive credit of any one nation. Our
-Allies fought gloriously, and if their deeds are not set
-down here, it is from want of space and of precise
-information, not from want of appreciation. But,
-turning to the merely British aspect of the fight&mdash;and
-beyond all doubt the heavier share fell upon
-the British, who bore the brunt from the start to the
-end,&mdash;it may be said that the battle lasted a clear
-month, from October 12, when Smith-Dorrien crossed
-the La Bassée Canal, to November 11, when the
-German Guard reeled out of the Nonnebusch Wood.
-We are so near these great events that it is hard to
-get their true proportion, but it is abundantly clear
-that the battle, in its duration, the space covered,
-the numbers engaged, and the losses endured, was
-far the greatest ever fought up to that time by a
-British Army. At Waterloo the losses were under
-10,000. In this great fight they were little short of
-50,000. The fact that the enemy did not recoil and
-that there was no sensational capture of prisoners and
-guns has obscured the completeness of the victory.
-In these days of nations in arms a beaten army is
-buttressed up or reabsorbed by the huge forces of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P308"></a>308}</span>
-which it is part. One judges victory or defeat by
-the question whether an army has or has not reached
-its objective. In this particular case, taking a broad
-view of the whole action, a German force of at least
-600,000 men set forth to reach the coast, and was
-opposed by a force of less than half its numbers who
-barred its way. The Germans did not advance five
-miles in a month of fighting, and they lost not less
-than 150,000 men without any military advantage
-whatever, for the possession of such villages as
-Gheluvelt, Wytschaete, or Messines availed them
-not at all. If this is not a great victory, I do not
-know what military achievement would deserve the
-term. Ypres was a Plevna&mdash;but a Plevna which
-remained for ever untaken.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Death of Lord Roberts.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On November 15 Lord Roberts died whilst visiting
-the Army, having such an end as he would have
-chosen, within earshot of the guns and within the
-lines of those Indian soldiers whom he loved and had
-so often led. The last words of his greatest speech
-to his fellow-countrymen before the outbreak of that
-war which he had foreseen, and for which he had
-incessantly tried to prepare, were that they should
-quit themselves like men. He lived to see them do
-so, and though he was not spared to see the final
-outcome, his spirit must at least have been at rest as
-to the general trend of the campaign. The tradition
-of his fascinating character, with its knightly qualities
-of gentleness, bravery, and devotion to duty, will
-remain as a national possession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The Eighth Division.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About this time, though too late for the severe
-fighting, there arrived the Eighth Division, which
-would enable Sir Henry Rawlinson to complete his
-Fourth Corps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P309"></a>309}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Eighth Division was composed as follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- DIVISIONAL GENERAL&mdash;General DAVIES.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 23<i>rd Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Penny.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Scots Rifles.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Middlesex.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd West Yorkshires.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Devons.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 24<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Carter.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Worcesters.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd East Lancashires.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Notts and Derby.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Northamptons.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 25<i>th Infantry Brigade&mdash;General Lowry Cole.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Lincolns.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Berkshires.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Irish Rifles.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Rifle Brigade.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13th London (Kensingtons).<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- <i>Artillery.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5th Brigade R.H.A., G.O.Z.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45th Brigade R.F.A.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33rd Brigade R.F.A.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Heavy Batteries 118, 119.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2, 5, F. Cos. R.E.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 Signal Co.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Divisional Cavalry.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Northampton Yeomanry.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8th Cyclists.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-We have now arrived at what may be called the
-great winter lull, when the continuation of active
-operations was made impossible by the weather
-conditions, which were of the most atrocious description.
-It was the season which in a more classic age of
-warfare was spent in comfortable winter quarters.
-There was no such surcease of hardship for the
-contending lines, who were left in their trenches face to
-face, often not more than fifty yards apart, and each
-always keenly alert for any devilry upon the part
-of the other. The ashes of war were always redly
-smouldering, and sometimes, as will be seen, burst up
-into sudden furious flame. It was a period of
-rain-storms and of frost-bites, of trench mortars and of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P310"></a>310}</span>
-hand grenades, of weary, muddy, goat-skinned men
-shivering in narrow trenches, and of depleted brigades
-resting and recruiting in the rearward towns. Such
-was the position at the Front. But hundreds of miles
-to the westward the real future of the war was being
-fought out in the rifle factories of Birmingham, the
-great gun works of Woolwich, Coventry, Newcastle,
-and Sheffield, the cloth looms of Yorkshire, and the
-boot centres of Northampton. In these and many
-other places oversea the tools for victory were forged
-night and day through one of the blackest and most
-strenuous winters that Britain has ever known.
-And always on green and waste and common, from
-Cromarty to Brighton, wherever soldiers could find
-billets or a village of log huts could be put together,
-the soldier citizens who were to take up the burden
-of the war, the men of the Territorials and the men
-of the new armies, endured every hardship and
-discomfort without a murmur, whilst they prepared
-themselves for that great and glorious task which
-the future would bring. Even those who were too
-old or too young for service formed themselves into
-volunteer bands, who armed and clothed themselves
-at their own expense. This movement, which sprang
-first from the small Sussex village of Crowborough,
-was co-ordinated and controlled by a central body
-of which Lord Desborough was the head. In spite of
-discouragement, or at the best cold neutrality from
-Government, it increased and prospered until no
-fewer than a quarter of a million of men were mustered
-and ready entirely at their own expense and by
-private enterprise&mdash;one of the most remarkable
-phenomena of the war.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P311"></a>311}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X
-<br /><br />
-A RETROSPECT AND GENERAL SUMMARY
-</h3>
-
-<p class="t3">
-Position of Italy&mdash;Fall of German colonies&mdash;Sea affairs&mdash;Our Allies.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-There has been no opportunity during this somewhat
-breathless narrative of the great events which will
-ever be associated with the names of Mons, the Marne,
-the Aisne, and Ypres to indicate those factors which
-were influencing the course of the war in other regions.
-They do not come properly within the scope of this
-narrative, nor does the author profess to have any
-special information concerning them, but they
-cannot be absolutely omitted without interfering with
-a correct view of the general situation. They will
-therefore be briefly summarised in retrospect before
-the reader is carried on into a more particular account
-of the trench warfare of the early winter of 1914.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Position of Italy.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most important European event at the
-outbreak of the war, outside the movement of the
-combatants, was the secession of Italy from the
-Central Powers on the grounds that her treaty applied
-only to wars of defence whilst this was manifestly
-one of aggression. Italian statesmen could speak
-with the more decision upon the point since the plot
-had been unfolded before their eyes. A year
-previously they had been asked to join in an unprovoked
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P312"></a>312}</span>
-attack upon Serbia, and in refusing had given clear
-warning to their allies how such an outrage would
-be viewed. The Central Powers, however, puffed up
-by their vainglory and by the knowledge of their
-own secret preparations, were persuaded that they
-had ample strength to carry out their intentions
-without aid from their southern ally. Italy, having
-denounced the treaty, remained a neutral, but it was
-always clear that she would sooner or later throw
-in her strength with those who were at war with
-Austria, her secular enemy. It was not, however, until
-May 1915 that she was in a position to take a definite
-step. It should be remembered to her eternal honour
-that the time at which she did eventually come in
-was one which was very overcast for the Allies, and
-that far from fulfilling the cynical German prophecy
-that she would "hasten to the assistance of the
-conqueror," she took grave risks in ranging herself
-upon the side of her Latin sister.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Fall of German colonies.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Upon August 24
-Japan also declared war, and by November 7 had
-completed her share of the common task, for Tsingtau,
-the only German colony in Eastern Asia, was captured
-by a Japanese expeditionary force aided by a British
-contingent. Already the vast Colonial erection of
-Germany, those numerous places in the sun which
-she had annexed all over the globe, were beginning
-to crumble. The little Togoland colony fell upon
-August 26. New Zealand took over German Samoa
-upon August 31. The Australians occupied the
-Bismarck Archipelago upon September 7, and New
-Guinea upon the 25th. These smaller twigs were
-easily lopped, but the main boughs were made of
-tougher stuff. A premature attack upon German
-East Africa by an expeditionary force from India
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P313"></a>313}</span>
-met with a severe check immediately after landing.
-In South Africa the Germans succeeded in blowing
-into a small flame the smouldering ashes of the old
-Boer War. De Wet and others broke their oaths and
-took up arms, but the majority remained splendidly
-loyal, and by the beginning of December Botha had
-brought the insurrection to an end, and was able
-henceforth to devote his grand powers of leadership
-and organisation to the extinction of the enemy's
-south-western colony.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Sea affairs.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A word, too, about sea affairs before we turn to the
-further detailed account of the British winter upon
-the Continent. In good time the Fleet had been
-ordered to her war-stations at the north and east of
-Scotland, with the result that German ocean
-commerce was brought to an immediate and absolute
-stop. The German ships <i>Goeben</i> and <i>Breslau</i>, which
-were cut off at the outbreak of the war in the
-Mediterranean, succeeded in a very clever fashion in
-reaching the Dardanelles and safety. Having taken
-refuge at Constantinople, these ships played a
-prominent part in determining Turkey to take action
-against the Allies on October 31, a most disastrous
-decision both for Turkey, which met her ruin, and
-for the Allies, who found their task greatly increased
-through the excellent fighting power of the Turkish
-forces.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A brisk action was fought upon August 28 in
-the Heligoland Bight, when Admiral Beatty with
-his cruiser-squadron and a number of light craft
-visited the enemy in his own waters, sinking three
-German warships and sustaining no losses himself.
-Among the prisoners was the son of Chief Admiral
-Von Tirpitz. Numerous minor actions led to no
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P314"></a>314}</span>
-noteworthy result, but the power of the submarine,
-already prophesied before the war, speedily made itself
-manifest. Several small British cruisers were destroyed
-by these craft, and finally a considerable disaster
-occurred through the sinking of the three cruisers,
-<i>Hogue</i>, <i>Aboukir</i>, and <i>Cressy</i>, upon September 22.
-This dashing and cool-headed exploit was brought
-off by a young lieutenant named Weddigen. Much
-as we suffered from his action, it was recognised in
-Britain as having been a remarkable deed of arms
-upon a very different plane to those execrable murders
-of civilians with which the German submarine service
-was afterwards associated. Some months later
-Weddigen's submarine rose amongst the Grand Fleet
-whilst it was in motion, and was rammed and
-destroyed by the <i>Dreadnought</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The outbreak of war had seen a considerable
-number of German cruisers at large, and these would
-undoubtedly have been strongly reinforced had it
-not been for the speed with which the British Fleet
-took up its war-stations. As it was, the amount of
-damage to commerce was not serious, and by the
-New Year all the wanderers had been rounded up.
-The most successful raider was the <i>Emden</i>, under
-Captain Müller, which captured and destroyed
-numerous British merchant-ships, bombarded the Madras
-gas-works, and sank by a surprise attack a small
-Russian cruiser and a French destroyer before it was
-finally cornered and sunk by the Australian cruiser
-<i>Sydney</i> off Cocos Island upon November 10. Captain
-Muller, though forced by circumstances to adopt
-certain measures not recognised in honourable naval
-warfare, behaved on the whole in the manner which
-one associates with the term naval officer. The
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P315"></a>315}</span>
-<i>Karlsruhe</i> had also considerable success as a naval
-raider, but met her end through an unexplained
-explosion some little time after her consort the
-<i>Emden</i>. On the whole, the damage inflicted by
-German commerce destroyers was very much less summary.
-than had been anticipated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On November 1, Admiral Craddock's squadron,
-consisting of the <i>Monmouth</i>, the <i>Good Hope</i>, and two
-small vessels, was engaged by a superior squadron
-under Admiral von Spee at Coronel off the coast
-of Chili. The result was a British defeat, the two
-cruisers being sunk by gun-fire with all hands. This
-disaster was dramatically revenged, as within six
-weeks, upon December 8, a special cruiser-squadron
-dispatched from England under Admiral Sturdee
-entirely destroyed the fleet of Von Spee in the Battle
-of the Falkland Islands. The British Fleet was
-considerably stronger, and little credit can be claimed
-save for the admirable strategy which enabled Sturdee
-to find the enemy in that vast waste of waters as
-promptly and directly as if the meeting had been by
-appointment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were no other outstanding naval events
-in 1914 save a raid upon Cuxhaven by aeroplanes,
-escorted by light cruisers, which probably did little
-harm as the weather was misty. This occurred upon
-Christmas Day 1914. It had been preceded by an
-attack by German cruisers on December 16 upon
-West Hartlepool, Scarborough, and Whitby. As the
-two latter towns were open watering-places, and as
-numerous civilians were the victims of the raid, it
-was recognised from this time onwards that the
-German Navy was as little trammelled by international
-law or by the feelings of humanity as the German
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P316"></a>316}</span>
-Army had shown itself to be in France, Belgium, and
-Russia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Our Allies.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The general movement of the French armies has
-been touched upon in recording the experiences of
-the British, for after their glorious victory at the
-Marne and the hold-up at the Aisne, it was at Ypres
-that the real fighting was done, the rest of the long
-line down to the Swiss frontier playing a subsidiary
-part. The Russians, however, had experienced both
-extremities of fortune, for their victory at Lemberg
-over the Austrians upon September 2 was of a very
-glorious character, while their defeat by the Germans
-at Tannenberg in East Prussia was no less decisive.
-All the events of the outset of the war were inglorious
-for Austria, who received rapidly the punishment
-which she deserved for her wanton disturbance of
-the world's peace. Apart from the blows which she
-received from Russia, she was severely defeated by
-the Serbians on August 17, and her invading army
-was driven out of the country which she had wronged.
-At the end of the year she had lost the whole of Galicia
-to the Russians, who in turn had been pushed out
-of East Prussia by the German armies under Von
-Hindenburg. An invasion of Poland by the Germans
-was held up after very severe fighting, failing to
-reach Warsaw, which was its objective.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These were the main incidents of the world's war
-during the months which have been under review.
-As those months passed the terrific nature of the task
-which they had undertaken became more and more
-clear to the British, but further reflection had
-confirmed them in their opinion that the alternative
-course of abandoning their friends and breaking their
-pledge to Belgium was an absolutely unthinkable
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P317"></a>317}</span>
-one, so that however great the trials and sacrifices
-in blood and treasure, they were not further embittered
-by the reflection that they could possibly
-have been avoided. Very greatly were they cheered
-in that dark hour by the splendid, whole-hearted
-help from India, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand,
-help which was even more valuable from a moral
-than from a material standpoint. With this brief
-synopsis we will now return to those operations which
-are the proper subject of this volume.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P318"></a>318}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI
-<br /><br />
-THE WINTER LULL OF 1914
-</h3>
-
-<p class="intro">
-Increase of the Array&mdash;Formation of the Fifth Corps&mdash;The visit of
-the King&mdash;Third Division at Petit Bois&mdash;The fight at
-Givenchy&mdash;Heavy losses of the Indians&mdash;Fine advance of 1st
-Manchesters&mdash;Advance of the First Division&mdash;Singular scenes
-at Christmas.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The winter lull may be said to have extended from the
-great combats at Ypres of the middle of November
-1914 to the opening of the spring campaign in March
-1915; but we will only follow it here up to the end of
-the year. It was a period of alternate rest and discomfort
-for the troops with an ever-present salt of danger.
-For days they found themselves billeted with some
-approach to comfort in the farmhouses and villages
-of Flanders, but such brief intervals of peace were
-broken by the routine of the trenches, when, in mud
-or water with a clay cutting before their faces and
-another at their backs, they waited through the long
-hours, listening to the crack of the sniper's rifle, or
-the crash of the bursting shell, with an indifference
-which bordered upon thankfulness for anything that
-would break the drab monotony of their task. It was
-a scene of warfare which was new to military
-experience. The vast plain of battle lay in front of the
-observer as a flat and lonely wilderness, dotted with
-ruined houses from which no homely wreath of smoke
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P319"></a>319}</span>
-rose into the wintry air. Here and there was an
-untidy litter of wire; here and there also a clump
-of bleak and tattered woodland; but nowhere was
-there any sign of man. And yet from the elevation
-of an aeroplane it might be seen that the population
-of a large city was lurking upon that motionless waste.
-Everywhere the airman would have distinguished
-the thin brown slits of the advance trenches, the
-broader ditches of the supports and the long zigzags
-of the communications, and he would have detected
-that they were stuffed with men&mdash;grey men and
-khaki, in every weird garment that ingenuity could
-suggest for dryness and for warmth&mdash;all cowering
-within their shelters with the ever-present double
-design of screening themselves and of attacking their
-enemy. As the German pressure became less, and
-as more regiments of the Territorials began to arrive,
-taking some of the work from their comrades of the
-Regulars, it was possible to mitigate something of the
-discomforts of warfare, to ensure that no regiments
-should be left for too long a period in the trenches,
-and even to arrange for week-end visits to England
-for a certain number of officers and men. The streets
-of London got a glimpse of rugged, war-hardened
-faces, and of uniforms caked with the brown mud
-of Flanders, or supplemented by strange Robinson
-Crusoe goatskins from the trenches, which brought
-home to the least imaginative the nature and the
-nearness of the struggle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Increase of the Army.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Before noting those occasional spasms of
-activity&mdash;epileptic, sometimes, in their sudden
-intensity&mdash;which broke out
-from the German trenches, it may be
-well to take some note of the general development
-of those preparations which meant so much for the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P320"></a>320}</span>
-future. The Army was growing steadily in strength.
-Not only were the old regiments reinforced by fresh
-drafts, but two new divisions of Regulars were brought
-over before the end of January. These formed the
-Twenty-seventh and Twenty-eighth Divisions under
-Generals Snow and Bulfin, two officers who had won
-a name in the first phase of the war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Formation of the Fifth Corps.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two Divisions together formed the Fifth Army Corps under
-General Plumer, the officer who had worked so hard
-for the relief of Mafeking in 1900. The Divisions,
-composed of splendid troops who needed some hardening
-after tropical service, were constituted as
-follows, the list including territorial battalions
-attached, but excluding the artillery as well as the four
-original regular units in each brigade:
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- FIFTH ARMY CORPS<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- GENERAL PLUMER.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- TWENTY-SEVENTH DIVISION.&mdash;General SNOW.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 80<i>th Brigade&mdash;General Fortescue.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Princess Pat. Canadians.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4th Rifle Brigade.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd King's Royal Rifles.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4th King's Royal Rifles.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Shrop. Light Infantry.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 81<i>st Brigade&mdash;General MacFarlane.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9th Royal Scots (T.F.).<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Cameron Highlanders.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Argyll and Sutherlands.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Royal Scots.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Gloucesters.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9th Argyll and Sutherlands (T.F.).<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 82<i>nd Brigade&mdash;General Longley.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Leinsters.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Royal Irish Fusiliers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Royal Irish.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Cambridge (T.F.).<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Army Troops, 6th Cheshires.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P321"></a>321}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- TWENTY-EIGHTH DIVISION.&mdash;General BULFIN.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 83<i>rd Brigade&mdash;General Boyle.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd E. Yorkshire.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st King's Own York. Light Infantry.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Yorks. and Lancasters.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Royal Lancasters.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd Monmouths (T.F.).<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5th Royal Lancasters (T.F.).<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 84<i>th Brigade&mdash;General Winter.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Northumberland Fusiliers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Suffolks.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Welsh.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd Cheshires.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12th London Rangers (T.F.).<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1st Monmouths (T.F.).<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- 85<i>th Brigade&mdash;General Chapman.</i><br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd East Kent.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2nd East Surrey.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd Middlesex.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd Royal Fusiliers.<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8th Middlesex (T.F.).<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Besides this new Fifth Army Corps, there had
-been a constant dribble of other territorial units to the
-front, where they were incorporated with various
-regular brigades. The London Scottish, which had
-done so well, was honoured by admission to the 1st
-Brigade of Guards. The Artists' Rifles, 28th London,
-had the unique distinction of being set aside as an
-officers' training corps, from which officers were
-actually drawn at the rate of a hundred a month.
-The Honourable Artillery Company, brigaded with
-the 7th Brigade, was among the first to arrive.
-Conspicuous among the newcomers were the London
-Rifle Brigade, the 4th Suffolk, the Liverpool Scottish,
-the 5th and 6th Cheshires, the 1st Herts, the 2nd
-Monmouthshires, Queen Victoria Rifles, and Queen's
-Westminsters. These were among the earlier arrivals,
-though it seems invidious to mention names where
-the spirit of all was equally good. Among the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P322"></a>322}</span>
-yeomanry, many had already seen considerable
-service&mdash;notably the North and South Irish Horse,
-who had served from the beginning, the Northumberland
-Hussars, the North Somersets, the Oxford
-Hussars, and the Essex Yeomanry. Most of the
-troops named above shared the discomfort of the
-winter campaign before the great arrival of the new
-armies from England in the spring. There can be
-no better earned bar upon a medal than that which
-stands for this great effort of endurance against
-nature and man combined.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To take events in their order: beyond numerous
-gallant affairs of outposts, there was no incident of
-importance until the evening of November 23, when
-the Germans, who had seemed stunned for a week or
-so, showed signs of returning animation. On this day,
-some eight hundred yards of trench held by Indian
-troops in the neighbourhood of Armentières were
-made untenable by the German artillery, especially
-by the <i>minen-werfer</i>&mdash;small mortars which threw
-enormous bombs by an ingenious arrangement whereby
-the actual shell never entered the bore but was
-on the end of a rod outside the muzzle. Some of
-these terrible missiles, which came through the air as
-slowly as a punted football, were 200 lbs. in weight
-and shattering in their effects. There was an advance
-of the 112th Regiment of the Fourteenth German
-Corps, and the empty trenches were strongly occupied
-by them&mdash;so strongly that the first attempt to retake
-them was unsuccessful in the face of the rifle and
-machine-gun fire of the defenders. A second more
-powerful counter-attack was organised by General
-Anderson of the Meerut Division, and this time the
-Germans were swept out of their position and the line
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P323"></a>323}</span>
-re-established. The fighting lasted all night, and the
-Ghurkas with their formidable knives proved to be
-invaluable for such close work, while a party of
-Engineers with hand-bombs did great execution&mdash;a
-strange combination of the Asiatic with the most
-primitive of weapons and the scientific European
-with the most recent. It was a substantial victory
-as such affairs go, for the British were left with a
-hundred prisoners, including three officers, three
-machine-guns, and two mortars.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The visit of the King.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first week of December was rendered memorable
-by a visit of the King to the Army. King
-George reviewed a great number of his devoted
-soldiers, who showed by their fervent enthusiasm that
-one need not be an autocratic War-lord in order to
-command the fierce loyalty of the legions. After
-this pleasant interlude there followed a succession of
-those smaller exploits which seem so slight in any
-chronicle, and yet collectively do so much to sustain
-the spirit of the Army. Now this dashing officer,
-now that, attempted some deed upon the German line,
-and never failed to find men to follow him to death.
-On November 24 it was Lieutenant Impey, with a
-handful of 2nd Lincolns; on November 25, Lieutenants
-Ford and Morris with a few Welsh Fusiliers
-and sappers; on November 26, Sir Edward Hulse
-with some Scots Guards; on the same day, Lieutenant
-Durham with men of the 2nd Rifle Brigade&mdash;in each
-case trenches were temporarily won, the enemy was
-damaged, and a spirit of adventure encouraged in the
-trenches. Sometimes such a venture ended in the
-death of the leader, as in the case of Captain the
-Honourable H. L. Bruce of the Royal Scots. Such men
-died as the old knights did who rode out betwixt the
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P324"></a>324}</span>
-lines of marshalled armies, loved by their friends and
-admired by their foes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-December 9 was the date of two small actions.
-In the first the 1st Lincolns of the 9th Brigade, which
-had been commanded by Douglas Smith since the
-wounding of General Shaw, made an attack upon the
-wood at Wytschaete which is called Le Petit Bois. The
-advance was not successful, the three officers who led
-it being all wounded, and forty-four men being hit.
-The attempt was renewed upon a larger scale five days
-later. The other action was an attack by the enemy
-upon some of the trenches of the Third Corps. This
-Corps, though it had not come in for the more dramatic
-scenes of the campaign, had done splendid and
-essential work in covering a line of fourteen miles or so
-against incessant attacks of the Germans, who never
-were able to gain any solid advantage. On this
-occasion the impact fell upon Gordon's 19th Brigade,
-especially upon the 2nd Argyll and Sutherland
-Highlanders and the 1st Middlesex. It was driven back
-with heavy loss.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Third Division at Petit Bois.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On December 14 the second and more sustained
-effort was made to get possession of the Petit Bois at
-Wytschaete, which had been attacked by the Lincolns
-upon the 9th. D'Urbal's Eighth French Army was
-co-operating upon the left. The British attack was
-conducted by Haldane's Third Division, and the actual
-advance was carried out, after a considerable artillery
-preparation from the batteries of two Corps, by
-Bowes' 8th Brigade, with the 2nd Royal Scots and
-the 1st Gordons in the lead. At 7.45 the guns were
-turned upon the big wood beyond Petit Bois, through
-which the supports might be advancing, and at the
-same hour the two regiments named swarmed forward,
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P325"></a>325}</span>
-the Lowlanders on the left and the Highlanders on
-the right. The Royal Scots, under Major Duncan,
-carried Petit Bois with a rush, taking fifty prisoners
-and two machine-guns, while the Germans fled out
-at the other end of the wood. The Scots at once
-entrenched themselves and got their own machine-guns
-into position. The Gordons, under Major Baird,
-advanced with splendid dash and gained some ground,
-but found the position such that they could not
-entrench upon it, so they were forced to fall back
-eventually to their original position. Both they and
-the 4th Middlesex, who supported them, lost considerably
-in the affair. The total casualties in the Petit
-Bois action came to over four hundred, with seventeen
-officers, figures which were considerably swollen
-by the losses of the Suffolks and Irish Rifles, who
-continued to hold the captured position in the face of
-continued bombing. The French in the north had no
-particular success and lost 600 men. The importance
-of such operations is not to be measured, however,
-by the amount of ground won, but by the necessity of
-beating up the enemies' quarters, keeping them pinned
-to their positions, and preventing them from feeling
-that they could at their own sweet wills detach any
-reinforcements they chose to thicken their line upon
-the Eastern frontier, where our Russian Allies were so
-insistently pressing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the morning of December 19 an attack was
-made upon the German lines in the Festubert region
-by Willcocks' Indian Corps, the Meerut Division,
-under General Anderson, attacking upon the left,
-and the Lahore, under General Watkis, upon the
-right. The object of the movement was to co-operate
-with the French in an advance which they had
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P326"></a>326}</span>
-planned. The Meerut attack was successful at first,
-but was driven back by a counter-attack, and some
-hundreds of Indian infantry were killed, wounded,
-or taken. In the case of the Lahore attack the
-storming party consisted of the 1st Highland Light
-Infantry and the 4th Ghurkas. Both of these units
-belong to the Sirhind Brigade, but they were joined
-in the enterprise by the 59th Scinde Rifles of the
-Jullundur Brigade. These latter troops had a long
-night march before reaching the scene of the
-operations, when they found themselves upon the right
-of the attack and within two hundred and fifty yards
-of the German trenches. Judging the operations
-from the standard reached at a later date, the whole
-arrangement seems to have been extraordinarily
-primitive. The artillery preparation for a frontal
-attack upon a strong German line of trenches lasted
-exactly four minutes, being rather a call to arms
-than a bombardment. The troops rushed most
-gallantly forward into the dark of a cold wet winter
-morning, with no guide save the rippling flashes of
-the rifles and machine-guns in front of them. Many
-were so sore-footed and weary that they could not
-break into the double. Some of the Indians were
-overtaken from behind by a line of British supports,
-which caused considerable confusion. An officer of
-Indians has left it on record that twice running he
-had a revolver clapped to his head by a British
-officer. All of the battalions advanced with a
-frontage of two companies in columns of platoons. Both
-the Ghurkas and Highlanders reached the trench in
-the face of a murderous fire. The left of the 59th,
-consisting of Punjabi Mahomedans, also reached
-the trench. The right, who were Sikhs, made an
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P327"></a>327}</span>
-equally gallant advance, but were knee-deep in a wet
-beetroot field and under terrific machine-gun fire.
-Their gallant leader, Captain Scale, was struck down,
-as was every Indian officer, but a handful of the
-survivors, under a Sikh Jemadar, got into a German
-sap, which they held for twenty-four hours, taking a
-number of prisoners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Day had dawned, and though the British and
-Indians were in the enemy trenches, it was absolutely
-impossible to send them up reinforcements across
-the bullet-swept plain. The 59th discovered a sap
-running from their left to the German line, and
-along this they pushed. They could not get through,
-however, to where their comrades were being terribly
-bombed on either flank by the counter-attack. It
-was an heroic resistance. Colonel Ronaldson, who
-led the party, held on all day, but was very lucky
-in being able to withdraw most of the survivors after
-nightfall. Of the hundred Punjabis who held one
-flank, only three returned, while thirteen wounded
-were reported later from Germany. The others all
-refused to surrender, declaring that those were the
-last orders of their British officers, and so they met
-their honoured end. It had been a long and weary
-day with a barren ending, for all that had been won
-was abandoned. The losses were over a thousand,
-and were especially heavy in the case of officers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-The fight at Givenchy.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Germans, elated by the failure of the attack,
-were in the mood for a return visit. In the early
-dawn of the next day, December 20, they began a
-heavy bombardment of the Indian trenches, followed
-by an infantry attack extending over a line of six
-miles from south of the Bethune Canal to Festubert
-in the north. The attack began by the explosion of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P328"></a>328}</span>
-a succession of mines which inflicted very heavy losses
-upon the survivors of the Ghurkas and Highland
-Light Infantry. The weight of the attack at the
-village of Givenchy fell upon the exhausted Sirhind
-Brigade, who were driven back, and the greater
-part of Givenchy was occupied by the enemy. General
-Brunker fell back with his Brigade, but his line was
-stiffened by the arrival of the 47th Sikhs of the 8th
-Jullundur Brigade, who were in divisional reserve.
-These troops prevented any further advance of the
-Germans, while preparations were made for an
-effective counter-stroke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Heavy losses of the Indians.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Little help could be given from the north, where
-the line was already engaged, but to the south there
-were considerable bodies of troops available. The
-situation was serious, and a great effort was called
-for, since it was impossible to abandon into the
-hands of the enemy a village which was an essential
-bastion upon the line of defence. The German attack
-had flooded down south of Givenchy to the Bethune
-Canal, and a subsidiary attack had come along the
-south of the Canal with the object of holding the
-troops in their places and preventing the
-reinforcement of the defenders of Givenchy. But these
-advances south of the village made no progress, being
-held up by the 9th Bhopals and Wilde's 57th Rifles
-of the 7th Ferozepore Brigade between Givenchy and
-the Canal, while the 1st Connaught Rangers of the
-same brigade stopped it on the southern side of the
-Canal. Matters were for a moment in equilibrium.
-To the south of the Canal energetic measures were
-taken to get together a force which could come
-across it by the Pont Fixe or road bridge, and
-re-establish matters in the north.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P329"></a>329}</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Fine advance of Manchesters.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The struggle had broken out close to the point
-of junction between the British forces and those of
-General Foch of the Tenth French Army, so that our
-Allies were able to co-operate with us in the
-counter-attack. It was directed by General Carnegy, and
-the assault was made by the 1st Manchesters, the
-4th Suffolk Territorials, and some French territorials.
-The Manchesters, under the leadership of Colonel
-Strickland, made a most notable attack, aided by
-two companies of the Suffolks, the other companies
-remaining in reserve on the north bank of the Canal.
-So critical was the position that the 3rd Indian
-Sappers and Miners were set the dangerous task,
-under very heavy shell-fire, of mining the bridge over
-the Canal. The situation was saved, however, by
-Colonel Strickland's fine advance. His infantry,
-with very inadequate artillery support, pushed its
-way into Givenchy and cleared the village from end
-to end. Three hundred of the Manchesters fell in
-this deed of arms. Not only did they win the village,
-but they also regained some of the lost trenches to
-the north-east of Givenchy. This was the real
-turning-point of the action. There was at the time
-only the one very wet, very weary, and rather cut-up
-Jullundur Brigade between the Germans and Bethune&mdash;with
-all that Bethune stood for strategically. To
-the east the 9th Bhopals and 57th Rifles still held on
-to their position. It was only to the north that the
-enemy retained his lodgment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the fight to the north had been a bitter one
-all day, and had gone none too well for the British
-forces. The Indians were fighting at an enormous
-disadvantage. As well turn a tiger loose upon an
-ice-floe and expect that he will show all his wonted
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P330"></a>330}</span>
-fierceness and activity. There are inexorable axioms
-of Nature which no human valour nor constancy
-can change. The bravest of the brave, our Indian
-troops were none the less the children of the sun,
-dependent upon warmth for their vitality and numbed
-by the cold wet life of the trenches. That they still
-in the main maintained a brave, uncomplaining,
-soldierly demeanour, and that they made head
-against the fierce German assaults, is a wonderful
-proof of their adaptability.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About ten o'clock on the morning of the 20th
-the German attack, driving back the Sirhind Brigade
-from Givenchy, who were the left advanced flank of
-the Lahore Division, came with a rush against the
-Dehra-Dun Brigade, who were the extreme right of
-the Meerut Division. This Brigade had the 1st
-Seaforth Highlanders upon its flank, with the 2nd
-Ghurkas upon its left. The Ghurkas were forced to
-retire, and the almost simultaneous retirement of
-the defenders of Givenchy left the Highlanders in a
-desperate position with both flanks in the air.
-Fortunately the next Brigade of the Meerut Division,
-the Garhwal Brigade, stood fast and kept in touch
-with the 6th Jats, who formed the left of the
-Dehra-Dun Brigade, and so prevented the pressure upon
-that side from becoming intolerable. The 9th
-Ghurkas came up to support the 2nd Ghurkas, who
-had not gone far from their abandoned trenches, and
-the 58th Indian Rifles also came to the front. These
-battalions upon the left rear of the Highlanders gave
-them some support. None the less the position of
-the battalion was dangerous and its losses heavy,
-but it faced the Germans with splendid firmness, and
-nothing could budge it. Machine-guns are stronger
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P331"></a>331}</span>
-than flesh and blood, but the human spirit can be
-stronger than either. You might kill the Highlanders,
-but you could not shift them. The 2nd Black Watch,
-who had been in reserve, established touch towards
-nightfall with the right of the Seaforths, and also
-with the left of the Sirhind Brigade, so that a
-continuous line was assured.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the meantime a small force had assembled
-under General MacBean with the intention of making
-a counter-attack and recovering the ground which
-had been lost on the north side of Givenchy. With
-the 8th Ghurkas and the 47th Sikhs, together with
-the 7th British Dragoon Guards, an attack was made
-in the early hours of the 21st. Colonel Lempriere of
-the Dragoon Guards was killed, and the attack failed.
-It was renewed in the early hours of the morning, but
-it again failed to dislodge the Germans from the
-captured trenches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Advance of the First Division.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-December 21 dawned upon a situation which was
-not particularly rosy from a British point of view.
-It is true that Givenchy had been recovered, but a
-considerable stretch of trenches were still in the
-hands of the Germans, their artillery was exceedingly
-masterful, and the British line was weakened by
-heavy losses and indented in several places. The
-one bright spot was the advance of the First Division
-of Haig's Corps, who had come up in the night-time.
-The three brigades of this Division were at once
-thrown into the fight, the first being sent to Givenchy,
-the second given as a support to the Meerut Division,
-and the third directed upon the trenches which had
-been evacuated the day before by the Sirhind Brigade.
-All of these brigades won their way forward, and by
-the morning of the 22nd much of the ground which
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P332"></a>332}</span>
-had been taken by the Germans was reoccupied by
-the British. The 1st Brigade, led by the Cameron
-Highlanders, had made good all the ground between
-Givenchy and the Canal. Meanwhile the 3rd Brigade
-had re-established the Festubert position, where the
-2nd Welsh and 1st South Wales Borderers had
-won their way into the lost trenches of the Ghurkas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was not done without very stark fighting,
-in which of all the regiments engaged none suffered
-so heavily as the 2nd Munsters (now attached to the
-3rd Brigade). This regiment, only just built up
-again after its practical extermination at Etreux in
-August, made a grand advance and fought without
-cessation for nearly forty-eight hours. Their losses
-were dreadful, including their gallant Colonel Bent,
-both Majors Day and Thomson, five other officers,
-and several hundreds of the rank and file. So far
-forward did they get that it was with great difficulty
-that the survivors, through the exertions of Major
-Ryan, were got back into a place of safety. It was
-the second of three occasions upon which this gallant
-Celtic battalion gave itself for King and Country.
-Let this soften the asperity of politics if unhappily
-we must come back to them after the war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile the lines upon the flank of the Seaforths
-which had been lost by the Dehra-Dun Brigade
-were carried by the 2nd Brigade (Westmacott), the
-1st North Lancashire and 1st Northamptons leading
-the attack with the 2nd Rifles in support. Though
-driven back by a violent counter-attack in which
-both leading regiments, and especially the Lancashire
-men, lost heavily, the Brigade came again, and
-ended by making good the gap in the line. Thus
-the situation on the morning of the 22nd looked very
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P333"></a>333}</span>
-much better than upon the day before. On this
-morning, as so many of the 1st Corps were in the
-advanced line, Sir Douglas Haig took over the
-command from Sir James Willcocks. The line had
-been to some extent re-established and the firing
-died away, but there were some trenches which were
-not retaken till a later date.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the scrambling and unsatisfactory fight
-of Givenchy, a violent interlude in the drab records
-of trench warfare. It began with a considerable
-inroad of Germans into our territory and heavy
-losses of our Indian Contingent. It ended by a
-general return of the Germans to their former lines,
-and the resumption by the veteran troops of the
-First Division of the main positions which we had
-lost. Neither side had gained any ground of material
-value, but the balance of profit in captures was upon
-the side of the Germans, who may fairly claim that
-the action was a minor success for their arms, since
-they assert that they captured some hundreds of
-prisoners and several machine-guns. The Anglo-Indian
-Corps had 2600 casualties, and the First Corps
-1400, or 4000 in all. The Indian troops were now
-withdrawn for a rest, which they had well earned by
-their long and difficult service in the trenches. To
-stand day after day up to his knees in ice-cold water
-is no light ordeal for a European, but it is difficult
-to imagine all that it must have been to a Southern
-Asiatic. The First Corps took over the La Bassée
-lines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="sidenote">
-Singular scenes at Christmas.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About the same date as the Battle of Givenchy
-there was some fighting farther north at Rouge Banc,
-where the Fourth Corps was engaged and some German
-trenches were taken. The chief losses in this affair
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P334"></a>334}</span>
-fell upon those war-worn units, the 2nd Scots Guards
-and 2nd Borderers of the 20th Brigade. Henceforward
-peace reigned along the lines for several
-weeks&mdash;indeed Christmas brought about something
-like fraternisation between British and Germans,
-who found a sudden and extraordinary link in that
-ancient tree worship, long anterior to Christianity,
-which Saxon tribes had practised in the depths of
-Germanic forests and still commemorated by their
-candle-lit firs. For a single day the opposing forces
-mingled in friendly conversation and even in games.
-It was an amazing spectacle, and must arouse bitter
-thoughts concerning those high-born conspirators
-against the peace of the world, who in their mad
-ambition had hounded such men on to take each
-other by the throat rather than by the hand. For
-a day there was comradeship. But the case had been
-referred to the God of Battles, and the doom had not
-yet been spoken. It must go to the end. On the
-morning of the 26th dark figures vanished reluctantly
-into the earth, and the rifles cracked once more. It
-remains one human episode amid all the atrocities
-which have stained the memory of the war.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So ended 1914, the year of resistance. During it
-the Western Allies had been grievously oppressed by
-their well-prepared enemy. They had been
-over-weighted by numbers and even more so by munitions.
-For a space it had seemed as if the odds were too
-much for them. Then with a splendid rally they
-had pushed the enemy back. But his reserves had
-come up and had proved to be as superior as his first
-line had been. But even so he had reached his limit.
-He could get no further. The danger hour was past.
-There was now coming the long, anxious year of
-<span class="pagenum">{<a id="P335"></a>335}</span>
-equilibrium, the narrative of which will be given in
-the succeeding volume of 1915. Finally will come
-the year of restoration which will at least begin,
-though it will not finish, the victory of the champions
-of freedom.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">{<a id="P337"></a>337}</span></p>
-
-<h3>
-INDEX
-</h3>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Abell, Major, <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Abercrombie, Colonel, <a href="#P94">94</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Agadir, <a href="#P7">7</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Aisne, battle of the, <a href="#P162">162-199</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Alexander, Major, <a href="#P82">82</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Algeciras, <a href="#P7">7</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Allen, Major, <a href="#P209">209</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Allenby, General, <a href="#P56">56</a>, <a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P88">88</a>, <a href="#P96">96</a>, <a href="#P97">97</a>,
-<a href="#P126">126</a>, <a href="#P155">155</a>, <a href="#P204">204</a>, <a href="#P226">226</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>, <a href="#P287">287</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Alleyne, Captain, <a href="#P294">294</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Allfrey, Captain, <a href="#P149">149</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Alsace, <a href="#P43">43</a>, <a href="#P57">57</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Anderson, General, <a href="#P322">322</a>, <a href="#P325">325</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Anley, Colonel, <a href="#P105">105</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Anley, General, <a href="#P229">229</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Annesley, Colonel, <a href="#P284">284</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ansell, Colonel, <a href="#P132">132</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Antwerp, fall of, <a href="#P193">193</a>; Naval
-Division at siege of, <a href="#P195">195</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ardee, Lord, <a href="#P288">288</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Army, the Russian, <a href="#P138">138</a>; at battle
-of Gumbinnen, <a href="#P138">138</a>; at battle
-of Lemberg, <a href="#P139">139</a>; at battle of
-Tannenberg, <a href="#P139">139</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ashburner, Captain, <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Asquith, Right Hon. H. H., <a href="#P18">18</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Austin, Dr., <a href="#P93">93</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Australia, offer of service, <a href="#P34">34</a>, <a href="#P37">37</a>;
-Bismarck Archipelago captured
-by, <a href="#P312">312</a>; German colony of
-New Guinea captured by, <a href="#P312">312</a>; <a href="#P317">317</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Austria, Archduke Francis Ferdinand
-of, assassinated at Sarajevo, <a href="#P12">12</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Austria-Hungary, annexes Bosnia
-and Herzegovina, 1908, <a href="#P2">2</a>;
-presents ultimatum to Serbia, <a href="#P14">14</a>;
-declares war against Serbia, <a href="#P15">15</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Baird, Major, <a href="#P325">325</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Balfour, Lieutenant, <a href="#P167">167</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bannatyne, Colonel, <a href="#P255">255</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Barnes, Colonel, <a href="#P241">241</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Battenberg, Prince Louis of, <a href="#P40">40</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Battenberg, Prince Maurice of, <a href="#P256">256</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bavaria, Crown Prince of, <a href="#P145">145</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Beatty, Admiral Sir David, <a href="#P313">313</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Belgians, King of the, <a href="#P198">198</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Belgium, infraction of neutrality, <a href="#P12">12</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Below-Saleske, von, <a href="#P19">19</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Benson, Captain, <a href="#P73">73</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bent, Colonel, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Berners, Captain, <a href="#P172">172</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bernhardi, General von, <a href="#P1">1</a>, <a href="#P8">8</a>, <a href="#P159">159</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bethmann-Hollweg, von, <a href="#P17">17</a>, <a href="#P21">21</a>, <a href="#P23">23</a>, <a href="#P28">28</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bidon, General, <a href="#P247">247</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bingham, General, <a href="#P283">283</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bismarck Archipelago, German
-colony, captured by Australian
-forces, <a href="#P312">312</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Blewitt, Lieutenant, <a href="#P268">268</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Boger, Colonel, <a href="#P83">83</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bols, Colonel, <a href="#P207">207</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bolton, Colonel, <a href="#P244">244</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Botha, Right Hon. Louis, <a href="#P34">34</a>, <a href="#P313">313</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bottomley, Major, <a href="#P259">259</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bowes, General, <a href="#P218">218</a>, <a href="#P295">295</a>, <a href="#P324">324</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Boyd, Lieutenant, <a href="#P266">266</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bradbury, Captain, V.C., <a href="#P130">130</a>, <a href="#P131">131</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Brett, Colonel, <a href="#P102">102</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bridges, Major Tom, <a href="#P118">118</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Briggs, General, <a href="#P128">128</a>, <a href="#P130">130</a>, <a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P283">283</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-British Expeditionary Force:
-departure from England, <a href="#P50">50</a>; its
-composition, <a href="#P52">52</a>, <a href="#P86">86</a>; its arrival
-in France, <a href="#P53">53</a>; its reception by
-the French people, <a href="#P54">54</a>; advance
-into Belgium, <a href="#P57">57</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Brooke, Captain, <a href="#P260">260</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bruce, Captain the Hon. H. L., <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Brunker, General, <a href="#P328">328</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Buckle, Major, <a href="#P222">222</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bulbe, Lieutenant, <a href="#P78">78</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bulfin, General, <a href="#P154">154</a>, <a href="#P156">156</a>, <a href="#P166">166</a>, <a href="#P167">167</a>,
-<a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P170">170</a>, <a href="#P171">171</a>, <a href="#P179">179</a>, <a href="#P186">186</a>, <a href="#P265">265</a>,
-<a href="#P273">273</a>, <a href="#P287">287</a>, <a href="#P288">288</a>, <a href="#P320">320</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bülow, General von, <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>, <a href="#P154">154</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Bülow, Prince von, <a href="#P3">3</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Burrows, Major, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Butler, Colonel, <a href="#P229">229</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Butler, Major Leslie, <a href="#P116">116</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Byng, Captain, <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Byng, General, <a href="#P210">210</a>, <a href="#P233">233</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cadogan, Colonel, <a href="#P237">237</a>, <a href="#P264">264</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Campbell, Captain, <a href="#P73">73</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Campbell, Colonel (5th Dragoon
-Guards), <a href="#P281">281</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Campbell, Colonel (9th Lancers),
-<a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P149">149</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Campbell, Lieutenant, <a href="#P130">130</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Campbell, Major, <a href="#P227">227</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Canada, offer of service, <a href="#P34">34</a>, <a href="#P37">37</a>; <a href="#P317">317</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Canneau, General, <a href="#P144">144</a>, <a href="#P204">204</a>, <a href="#P212">212</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Capper, General, <a href="#P232">232</a>, <a href="#P244">244</a>, <a href="#P265">265</a>, <a href="#P269">269</a>, <a href="#P295">295</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Carey, Captain, <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Carnegy, General, <a href="#P329">329</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Carr, Lieutenant Laurence, <a href="#P259">259</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Carter, Major, <a href="#P253">253</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cary, General Langlé de, <a href="#P144">144</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cary-Bernard, Captain, <a href="#P306">306</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Castelnau, General, <a href="#P44">44</a>, <a href="#P145">145</a>, <a href="#P193">193</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cathcart, Captain, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cavan, Lord, <a href="#P289">289</a>, <a href="#P293">293</a>, <a href="#P300">300</a>, <a href="#P306">306</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cawley, Major, <a href="#P132">132</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ceylon, offer of service, <a href="#P34">34</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Chapman, Corporal, <a href="#P227">227</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Charleroi, battle of, <a href="#P141">141</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Charrier, Major, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P120">120</a>, <a href="#P121">121</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Chetwode, General, <a href="#P58">58</a>, <a href="#P121">121</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Christie, Major, <a href="#P112">112</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Churchill, Right Hon. Winston S.,
-<a href="#P5">5</a>, <a href="#P31">31</a>, <a href="#P40">40</a>, <a href="#P196">196</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Chute, Lieutenant, <a href="#P121">121</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Clive, Hon. Windsor, <a href="#P92">92</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Clutterbuck, Captain, <a href="#P111">111</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cobb, Irvin, American correspondent
-with German Army, <a href="#P64">64</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cobbold, Colonel, <a href="#P214">214</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Coke, Major, <a href="#P282">282</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Coleman, American volunteer,
-quoted, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P149">149</a>, <a href="#P303">303</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Coles, Colonel, <a href="#P266">266</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Congreve, General, V.C., <a href="#P187">187</a>, <a href="#P229">229</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cookson, Colonel, <a href="#P167">167</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cornish-Bowden, Major, <a href="#P151">151</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Coronel, naval battle off, <a href="#P315">315</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Craddock, Admiral, <a href="#P315">315</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cramb, Professor, <a href="#P30">30</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Creek, Captain, <a href="#P253">253</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Crichton, Major, <a href="#P241">241</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Crossley, Sergeant-Major, <a href="#P222">222</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cutbill, Captain, <a href="#P102">102</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Cuthbert, General, <a href="#P71">71</a>, <a href="#P79">79</a>, <a href="#P98">98</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dalrymple, Lord, <a href="#P244">244</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-D'Amade, General, <a href="#P123">123</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Daniell, Major, <a href="#P212">212</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Danks, Lieutenant, <a href="#P93">93</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dashwood, Lieutenant, <a href="#P167">167</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Davey, Major, <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Davies, Colonel, <a href="#P301">301</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Davies, General, <a href="#P90">90</a>, <a href="#P93">93</a>, <a href="#P132">132</a>, <a href="#P153">153</a>, <a href="#P173">173</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Davis, Harding, American
-correspondent with German Army,
-<a href="#P62">62</a>, <a href="#P64">64</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dawnay, Colonel, <a href="#P293">293</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Day, Major, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dease, Lieutenant Maurice, V.C., <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-De Crespigny, Captain, <a href="#P128">128</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Deimling, General von, <a href="#P269">269</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-De Lisle, General, <a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P148">148</a>, <a href="#P156">156</a>, <a href="#P157">157</a>,
-<a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P204">204</a>, <a href="#P226">226</a>, <a href="#P281">281</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-De Mitry, General, <a href="#P247">247</a>, <a href="#P255">255</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Denham, Lieutenant, <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Derbyshhe, Gunner, <a href="#P130">130</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-D'Esperey, General, <a href="#P144">144</a>, <a href="#P146">146</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dillon, Captain H. M., <a href="#P302">302</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dimmer, Lieutenant, V.C., <a href="#P181">181</a>, <a href="#P305">305</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Doran, General Beauchamp, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P69">69</a>,
-<a href="#P113">113</a>, <a href="#P150">150</a>, <a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P218">218</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dorell, Sergeant, V.C., <a href="#P130">130</a>, <a href="#P131">131</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Doughty, Major, <a href="#P102">102</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dour, action at, <a href="#P79">79</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Drummond, General. <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P103">103</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dubail, General, <a href="#P145">145</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Duff, Colonel Grant, <a href="#P171">171</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-D'Urbal, General, <a href="#P296">296</a>, <a href="#P324">324</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Dykes, Colonel, <a href="#P105">105</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Earle, Colonel, <a href="#P259">259</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-East Africa, German colony of,
-attack on, fails, <a href="#P312">312</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-East Coast, raid on, by German
-cruisers, <a href="#P315">315</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Edmunds, Captain, <a href="#P93">93</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Edward VII., <a href="#P6">6</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Elliott, Dr., <a href="#P93">93</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ellison, Captain, <a href="#P152">152</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-<i>Emden</i>, exploits of the, <a href="#P314">314</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Emmich, General von, <a href="#P44">44</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Fairlie, Captain, <a href="#P241">241</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Falkland Islands, naval battle off, <a href="#P315">315</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ferguson, General, <a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P177">177</a>, <a href="#P190">190</a>, <a href="#P211">211</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Findlay, General, <a href="#P153">153</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Fisher, Lord, <a href="#P5">5</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-FitzClarence, General, <a href="#P258">258</a>, <a href="#P270">270</a>, <a href="#P303">303</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Flint, Lieutenant, <a href="#P175">175</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Foch, General, <a href="#P144">144</a>, <a href="#P148">148</a>, <a href="#P150">150</a>, <a href="#P154">154</a>,
-<a href="#P202">202</a>, <a href="#P329">329</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Foljambe, Captain, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Forbes, Major Ian, <a href="#P241">241</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ford, Lieutenant, <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Forrester, Major, <a href="#P259">259</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Frameries, action at, <a href="#P77">77</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Fraser, Major, <a href="#P244">244</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-French, General Sir John, <a href="#P54">54</a>, <a href="#P58">58</a>, <a href="#P62">62</a>,
-<a href="#P74">74</a>, <a href="#P75">75</a>, <a href="#P76">76</a>, <a href="#P77">77</a>, <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P87">87</a>, <a href="#P96">96</a>, <a href="#P97">97</a>,
-<a href="#P116">116</a>, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P126">126</a>, <a href="#P135">135</a>, <a href="#P145">145</a>, <a href="#P156">156</a>,
-<a href="#P164">164</a>, <a href="#P183">183</a>, <a href="#P186">186</a>, <a href="#P198">198</a>, <a href="#P202">202</a>, <a href="#P220">220</a>,
-<a href="#P234">234</a>, <a href="#P236">236</a>, <a href="#P245">245</a>, <a href="#P246">246</a>, <a href="#P247">247</a>, <a href="#P251">251</a>,
-<a href="#P275">275</a>, <a href="#P276">276</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P285">285</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Geddes, Lieutenant-Colonel, <a href="#P169">169</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-George V. visits the Army in France,
-<a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Germany, Heligoland ceded to, <a href="#P2">2</a>;
-agitation in, against Great
-Britain during Boer War, <a href="#P3">3</a>;
-navy bill of 1900, <a href="#P4">4</a>;
-anti-British agitations in, <a href="#P9">9</a>; root
-causes of hatred of Great
-Britain in, <a href="#P10">10</a>; and world-power,
-<a href="#P10">10</a>; preparations for
-war by, <a href="#P11">11</a>; declares war
-against Russia, <a href="#P15">15</a>; against
-France, <a href="#P15">15</a>; proposes that
-Great Britain should remain
-neutral, <a href="#P17">17</a>; and Belgian
-neutrality, <a href="#P19">19</a>; character of her
-diplomacy, <a href="#P19">19</a>, <a href="#P20">20</a>; invades
-Belgium, <a href="#P21">21</a>; Great Britain
-declares war on, <a href="#P21">21</a>; treatment
-of the departing Embassies, <a href="#P22">22</a>;
-the claim for culture in, <a href="#P29">29</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-<i>Germany and the Next War</i>, <a href="#P9">9</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gheluvelt, battle of, <a href="#P265">265</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gibbs, Colonel, <a href="#P79">79</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Giffard, Lieutenant, <a href="#P269">269</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gifford, Lieutenant, <a href="#P130">130</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Givenchy, fight at, <a href="#P327">327</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Glasgow, Sergeant, <a href="#P227">227</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gleichen, General Count, <a href="#P61">61</a>, <a href="#P79">79</a>, <a href="#P82">82</a>,
-<a href="#P83">83</a>, <a href="#P98">98</a>, <a href="#P157">157</a>, <a href="#P207">207</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gloster, Colonel, <a href="#P224">224</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Godley, Private, V.C., <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gordon, Captain B. G. R., <a href="#P259">259</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gordon, Colonel, <a href="#P114">114</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gordon, General, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P230">230</a>, <a href="#P324">324</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gordon, Lieutenant, <a href="#P181">181</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Goschen, Sir Edward, ambassador
-at Berlin, <a href="#P17">17</a>, <a href="#P21">21</a>, <a href="#P22">22</a>, <a href="#P23">23</a>, <a href="#P24">24</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Gough, General, <a href="#P126">126</a>, <a href="#P150">150</a>, <a href="#P155">155</a>, <a href="#P203">203</a>,
-<a href="#P204">204</a>, <a href="#P226">226</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>, <a href="#P280">280</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Grant, Major, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Graves, Lieutenant, <a href="#P114">114</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Great Britain, cedes Heligoland to
-Germany, <a href="#P2">2</a>; sympathy and
-respect for German Empire in,
-<a href="#P2">2</a>; agreement with France,
-1903, <a href="#P6">6</a>; agreement with
-Russia, 1907, <a href="#P6">6</a>; maritime
-power of, <a href="#P10">10</a>; efforts for peace
-by, <a href="#P16">16</a>; reply to German
-proposal of neutrality, <a href="#P17">17</a>;
-declares war against Germany,
-<a href="#P21">21</a>; preparations for possible
-naval war in, <a href="#P31">31</a>; effect of
-German war policy in, <a href="#P32">32</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Green, Major, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Grenfell, Captain the Hon. F., <a href="#P82">82</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Grey, Sir Edward (now Viscount),
-proposes a conference of
-Ambassadors, <a href="#P16">16</a>; replies to
-German proposal of neutrality, <a href="#P17">17</a>;
-suggests limitation of the
-conflict, <a href="#P19">19</a>; <a href="#P20">20</a>, <a href="#P33">33</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Grierson, General, <a href="#P55">55</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Griffin, Colonel, <a href="#P105">105</a>, <a href="#P158">158</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Guernsey, Lord, <a href="#P172">172</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Haig, General Sir Douglas, <a href="#P55">55</a>, <a href="#P56">56</a>,
-<a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P77">77</a>, <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P88">88</a>, <a href="#P89">89</a>, <a href="#P90">90</a>, <a href="#P126">126</a>, <a href="#P133">133</a>,
-<a href="#P157">157</a>, <a href="#P173">173</a>, <a href="#P183">183</a>, <a href="#P190">190</a>, <a href="#P236">236</a>, <a href="#P239">239</a>, <a href="#P241">241</a>,
-<a href="#P246">246</a>, <a href="#P247">247</a>, <a href="#P249">249</a>, <a href="#P250">250</a>, <a href="#P251">251</a>, <a href="#P256">256</a>, <a href="#P260">260</a>,
-<a href="#P265">265</a>, <a href="#P270">270</a>, <a href="#P275">275</a>, <a href="#P276">276</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P286">286</a>, <a href="#P287">287</a>,
-<a href="#P295">295</a>, <a href="#P306">306</a>, <a href="#P331">331</a>, <a href="#P333">333</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Haking, General, <a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P94">94</a>, <a href="#P157">157</a>, <a href="#P173">173</a>,
-<a href="#P176">176</a>, <a href="#P302">302</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Haldane, General, <a href="#P104">104</a>, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P112">112</a>, <a href="#P206">206</a>,
-<a href="#P324">324</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Haldane, Lord, <a href="#P36">36</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hamilton, Adjutant Rowan, <a href="#P171">171</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hamilton, Captain, <a href="#P93">93</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hamilton, General Sir Hubert, <a href="#P77">77</a>,
-<a href="#P157">157</a>, <a href="#P177">177</a>, <a href="#P208">208</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hankey, Major, <a href="#P270">270</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Harter, Staff-Captain, <a href="#P176">176</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hasted, Colonel, <a href="#P177">177</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Haussen, General von, <a href="#P139">139</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hautvesnes, action at, <a href="#P153">153</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hawarden, Lord, <a href="#P92">92</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hawkins, Lieutenant Hope, <a href="#P285">285</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hay, Lord Arthur, <a href="#P172">172</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Headlam, General, <a href="#P110">110</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Heeringen, General von, <a href="#P145">145</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Heligoland Bight, battle in, <a href="#P313">313</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Heligoland ceded to Germany, 1890, <a href="#P2">2</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Herbert, Captain, <a href="#P208">208</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hindenburg, General von, <a href="#P139">139</a>, <a href="#P316">316</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hogan, Sergeant, V.C., <a href="#P224">224</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Holt, Lieutenant, <a href="#P71">71</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hoskyns, Captain, <a href="#P152">152</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Huggan, Dr., <a href="#P180">180</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hull, Colonel, <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hulse, Sir Edward, <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Hunter-Weston, General, <a href="#P104">104</a>, <a href="#P106">106</a>,
-<a href="#P107">107</a>, <a href="#P229">229</a>, <a href="#P230">230</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Impey, Lieutenant, <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-India, offer of service, <a href="#P34">34</a>; <a href="#P317">317</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ingham, Major, <a href="#P69">69</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Italy secedes from the Central
-Powers, <a href="#P311">311</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Jagow, von, Secretary for Foreign
-Affairs at Berlin, <a href="#P21">21</a>, <a href="#P23">23</a>, <a href="#P25">25</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Japan declares war, <a href="#P312">312</a>; captures
-the German colony of Tsingtau,
-<a href="#P312">312</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Jarvis, Corporal, V.C., <a href="#P71">71</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Jelf, Major, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Joffre, General, <a href="#P44">44</a>, <a href="#P57">57</a>, <a href="#P62">62</a>, <a href="#P74">74</a>, <a href="#P76">76</a>,
-<a href="#P126">126</a>, <a href="#P127">127</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>, <a href="#P178">178</a>, <a href="#P198">198</a>, <a href="#P202">202</a>,
-<a href="#P251">251</a>, <a href="#P255">255</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P287">287</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Johnston, Captain, <a href="#P175">175</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Johnstone, Major, <a href="#P169">169</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Kavanagh, General, <a href="#P262">262</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>, <a href="#P293">293</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Kerr, Colonel, <a href="#P269">269</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Kitchener, Lord, becomes Secretary
-of State for War, <a href="#P34">34</a>; his
-estimate of duration of war, <a href="#P38">38</a>;
-appeals for volunteers, <a href="#P38">38</a>; <a href="#P54">54</a>,
-<a href="#P56">56</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Kluck, General von, <a href="#P83">83</a>, <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P88">88</a>, <a href="#P95">95</a>,
-<a href="#P143">143</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>, <a href="#P145">145</a>, <a href="#P146">146</a>, <a href="#P148">148</a>, <a href="#P154">154</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Knight, Colonel, <a href="#P154">154</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Kruseik cross-roads, fight for, <a href="#P256">256</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lamb, Lieutenant, <a href="#P131">131</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lambert, Major, <a href="#P292">292</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Landon, General, <a href="#P172">172</a>, <a href="#P248">248</a>, <a href="#P254">254</a>, <a href="#P260">260</a>,
-<a href="#P265">265</a>, <a href="#P269">269</a>, <a href="#P276">276</a>, <a href="#P290">290</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Landrecies, engagement at, <a href="#P90">90</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lansdowne, Lord, <a href="#P33">33</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Law, Right Hon. A. Bonar, <a href="#P33">33</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lawford, General, <a href="#P273">273</a>, <a href="#P291">291</a>, <a href="#P294">294</a>, <a href="#P295">295</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lawrence, Colonel, <a href="#P229">229</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Leach, Lieutenant, V.C., <a href="#P224">224</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Le Cateau, battle of, <a href="#P96">96-137</a>, <a href="#P141">141</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Leckie, Captain Malcolm, <a href="#P82">82</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Legard, Captain, <a href="#P222">222</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Le Gheir, action of <a href="#P229">229</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Leman, General, <a href="#P45">45</a>, <a href="#P46">46</a>, <a href="#P47">47</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lemberg, battle of, <a href="#P139">139</a>, <a href="#P316">316</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lempriere, Colonel, <a href="#P331">331</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lichnowsky, Prince, German
-ambassador to Great Britain, <a href="#P19">19</a>,
-<a href="#P20">20</a>, <a href="#P25">25</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Liége, <a href="#P45">45</a>, <a href="#P46">46</a>, <a href="#P47">47</a>, <a href="#P141">141</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lister, Captain, <a href="#P71">71</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lloyd, Major, <a href="#P167">167</a>, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lomax, General, <a href="#P269">269</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Longley, Colonel, <a href="#P99">99</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Longwy, battle of, <a href="#P141">141</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Loring, Colonel, <a href="#P243">243</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lorraine, <a href="#P43">43</a>, <a href="#P57">57</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Lushington, Lieutenant-Colonel, <a href="#P132">132</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Luxemburg, duchy of, <a href="#P44">44</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-MacBean, General, <a href="#P331">331</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-McCracken, General, <a href="#P69">69</a>, <a href="#P78">78</a>, <a href="#P88">88</a>, <a href="#P104">104</a>,
-<a href="#P190">190</a>, <a href="#P208">208</a>, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P219">219</a>, <a href="#P291">291</a>, <a href="#P306">306</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-McKenna, Right Hon. Reginald, <a href="#P5">5</a>, <a href="#P31">31</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Mackenzie, General Colin, <a href="#P209">209</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-MacLachlan, Lieutenant-Colonel, <a href="#P171">171</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-MacMahon, Colonel, <a href="#P70">70</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P299">299</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-M'Nab, Captain, <a href="#P284">284</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Maistre, General, <a href="#P220">220</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Maitland, Major, <a href="#P171">171</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Malcolm, Colonel, <a href="#P283">283</a>, <a href="#P284">284</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Manoury, General, <a href="#P144">144</a>, <a href="#P146">146</a>, <a href="#P148">148</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Marne, battle of the, <a href="#P138">138-161</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Martyn, Colonel, <a href="#P304">304</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Maubeuge, fortress of, <a href="#P85">85</a>, <a href="#P141">141</a>, <a href="#P163">163</a>, <a href="#P184">184</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Maude, General, <a href="#P295">295</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Maud'huy, General, <a href="#P296">296</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Maxse, General, <a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P179">179</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Messines, fight at, <a href="#P280">280</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Michel, General, <a href="#P49">49</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Michell, Captain, <a href="#P122">122</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Milne, General, <a href="#P110">110</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Milward, Major, <a href="#P292">292</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Mitford, Major, <a href="#P241">241</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Monck, Captain, <a href="#P91">91</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Mons, battle of, <a href="#P50">50-95</a>, <a href="#P141">141</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Mons, retreat from, chronology of
-events, <a href="#P136">136-137</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Montresor, Colonel, <a href="#P167">167</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Morland, Colonel, <a href="#P268">268</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Morland, General, <a href="#P211">211</a>, <a href="#P224">224</a>, <a href="#P286">286</a>, <a href="#P296">296</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Morris, Colonel, <a href="#P133">133</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Morris, Lieutenant, <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Morritt, Lieutenant, <a href="#P73">73</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Moussy, General, <a href="#P288">288</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Mülhausen, battle of, <a href="#P141">141</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Mullens, General, <a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P283">283</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Mundy, Lieutenant, <a href="#P130">130</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Munro, General, <a href="#P269">269</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Namur, <a href="#P48">48</a>, <a href="#P49">49</a>, <a href="#P76">76</a>, <a href="#P141">141</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Navy, the, mobilisation of, <a href="#P40">40</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Neeld, Admiral, <a href="#P25">25</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Nelson, Gunner, V.C., <a href="#P130">130</a>, <a href="#P131">131</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Nery, combat of, <a href="#P127">127</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Neuve Chapelle, first fight of, <a href="#P219">219</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Newfoundland, offer of service, <a href="#P34">34</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-New Guinea, German colony of,
-captured by Australian forces, <a href="#P312">312</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-New Zealand, offer of service, <a href="#P34">34</a>, <a href="#P37">37</a>;
-captures German colony of
-Samoa, <a href="#P312">312</a>; <a href="#P317">317</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Nicholson, Lieutenant, <a href="#P121">121</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Nicholson, Major, <a href="#P171">171</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Nietzsche, <a href="#P8">8</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Nimy, defence of the bridges of, <a href="#P68">68</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Oliver, Captain, <a href="#P169">169</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ommany, Captain, <a href="#P269">269</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Orford, Captain, <a href="#P102">102</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Osborne, Driver, <a href="#P130">130</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ourcq, battle of the, <a href="#P145">145</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ovens, Colonel, <a href="#P244">244</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pack-Beresford, Major, <a href="#P79">79</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Paley, Major, <a href="#P269">269</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Paris, General, <a href="#P195">195</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Parker, Major, <a href="#P112">112</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pau, General, <a href="#P44">44</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Paynter, Captain, <a href="#P243">243</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Peel, Major, <a href="#P268">268</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pell, Colonel, <a href="#P266">266</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pennecuick, Lieutenant, <a href="#P156">156</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Penny, Sergeant-Major, <a href="#P222">222</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Perceval, Colonel, <a href="#P269">269</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Petit Bois, fight at, <a href="#P324">324</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Phillips, Major, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pilken Inn, fight of, <a href="#P252">252</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Plumer, General, <a href="#P320">320</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pollard, Lieutenant, <a href="#P82">82</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ponsonby, Colonel, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pont-sur-Sambre, action near, <a href="#P94">94</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Poole, Major, <a href="#P111">111</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Popham, Captain, <a href="#P188">188</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Powell, American journalist, quoted,
-<a href="#P63">63</a>, <a href="#P198">198</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Powell, Major, <a href="#P250">250</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Prichard, Major, <a href="#P268">268</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Prowse, Major, <a href="#P231">231</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Prussia, Crown Prince of, <a href="#P145">145</a>, <a href="#P163">163</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Prussia, Prince Henry of, <a href="#P25">25</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Prussian Guards, attack of, at
-Ypres, <a href="#P297">297</a>; Kaiser's order to, <a href="#P297">297</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Pulteney, General, <a href="#P56">56</a>, <a href="#P126">126</a>, <a href="#P152">152</a>, <a href="#P157">157</a>,
-<a href="#P175">175</a>, <a href="#P178">178</a>, <a href="#P190">190</a>, <a href="#P206">206</a>, <a href="#P214">214</a>, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P218">218</a>, <a href="#P227">227</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rawlinson, General Sir Henry, <a href="#P224">224</a>,
-<a href="#P232">232</a>, <a href="#P236">236</a>, <a href="#P237">237</a>, <a href="#P241">241</a>, <a href="#P251">251</a>, <a href="#P256">256</a>, <a href="#P308">308</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rees, Captain, <a href="#P268">268</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Regiments:
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-<br />
-<i>Artillery&mdash;</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Field Artillery, <a href="#P69">69</a>, <a href="#P70">70</a>, <a href="#P71">71</a>,
-<a href="#P78">78</a>, <a href="#P82">82</a>, <a href="#P88">88</a>, <a href="#P89">89</a>, <a href="#P92">92</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>, <a href="#P105">105</a>, <a href="#P110">110</a>,
-<a href="#P120">120</a>, <a href="#P153">153</a>, <a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P192">192</a>, <a href="#P249">249</a>, <a href="#P268">268</a>, <a href="#P271">271</a>,
-<a href="#P272">272</a>, <a href="#P273">273</a>, <a href="#P300">300</a>, <a href="#P301">301</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Horse Artillery, <a href="#P263">263</a>; E
-Battery, <a href="#P285">285</a>; J Battery, <a href="#P122">122</a>,
-<a href="#P150">150</a>; K Battery, <a href="#P236">236</a>; L
-Battery, <a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P128">128</a>, <a href="#P130">130</a>, <a href="#P131">131</a>, <a href="#P133">133</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Heavy, <a href="#P109">109</a>, <a href="#P110">110</a>, <a href="#P301">301</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Howitzer, <a href="#P88">88</a>, <a href="#P105">105</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Honourable Artillery Company, <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-<br />
-<i>Cavalry&mdash;</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-1st Life Guards, <a href="#P263">263</a>, <a href="#P293">293</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-2nd Life Guards, <a href="#P263">263</a>, <a href="#P293">293</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Horse Guards (Blues), <a href="#P263">263</a>, <a href="#P293">293</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's
-Bays), <a href="#P85">85</a>, <a href="#P128">128</a>, <a href="#P131">131</a>, <a href="#P132">132</a>, <a href="#P155">155</a>,
-<a href="#P280">280</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-3rd Dragoon Guards, <a href="#P272">272</a>, <a href="#P306">306</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-4th (Royal Irish) Dragoon Guards,
-<a href="#P58">58</a>, <a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P118">118</a>, <a href="#P187">187</a>, <a href="#P188">188</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P283">283</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-5th Dragoon Guards, <a href="#P280">280</a>, <a href="#P281">281</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-6th Dragoon Guards (Carabineers),
-<a href="#P283">283</a>, <a href="#P284">284</a>, <a href="#P285">285</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-7th Dragoon Guards, <a href="#P331">331</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-1st Dragoons (Royals), <a href="#P263">263</a>, <a href="#P272">272</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-2nd Dragoons (Scots Greys), <a href="#P122">122</a>, <a href="#P263">263</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-3rd Hussars, <a href="#P263">263</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-4th Hussars, <a href="#P263">263</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-10th Hussars, <a href="#P241">241</a>, <a href="#P272">272</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-11th Hussars, <a href="#P131">131</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P283">283</a>, <a href="#P285">285</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-15th Hussars, <a href="#P93">93</a>, <a href="#P120">120</a>, <a href="#P121">121</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-18th Hussars, <a href="#P149">149</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-20th Hussars, <a href="#P58">58</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-5th (Royal Irish) Lancers, <a href="#P227">227</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-9th Lancers, <a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P82">82</a>, <a href="#P149">149</a>, <a href="#P281">281</a>, <a href="#P283">283</a>, <a href="#P285">285</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-12th Lancers, <a href="#P122">122</a>, <a href="#P227">227</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-16th Lancers, <a href="#P226">226</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Essex Yeomanry, <a href="#P322">322</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Irish Horse, <a href="#P242">242</a>, <a href="#P322">322</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Leicestershire Yeomanry, <a href="#P306">306</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-North Somerset Yeomanry, <a href="#P306">306</a>, <a href="#P322">322</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Northumberland Hussars, <a href="#P242">242</a>, <a href="#P322">322</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Oxfordshire Hussars, <a href="#P281">281</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P322">322</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-<br />
-<i>Guards&mdash;</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Coldstream, <a href="#P90">90</a>, <a href="#P91">91</a>, <a href="#P92">92</a>, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P120">120</a>,
-<a href="#P132">132</a>, <a href="#P168">168</a>, <a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P171">171</a>, <a href="#P172">172</a>, <a href="#P191">191</a>, <a href="#P248">248</a>,
-<a href="#P259">259</a>, <a href="#P265">265</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Grenadier, <a href="#P90">90</a>, <a href="#P92">92</a>, <a href="#P150">150</a>, <a href="#P237">237</a>, <a href="#P244">244</a>,
-<a href="#P258">258</a>, <a href="#P259">259</a>, <a href="#P265">265</a>, <a href="#P289">289</a>, <a href="#P293">293</a>, <a href="#P306">306</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Irish, <a href="#P90">90</a>, <a href="#P92">92</a>, <a href="#P132">132</a>, <a href="#P150">150</a>, <a href="#P172">172</a>, <a href="#P255">255</a>,
-<a href="#P265">265</a>, <a href="#P288">288</a>, <a href="#P289">289</a>, <a href="#P293">293</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Scots, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P171">171</a>, <a href="#P242">242</a>, <a href="#P243">243</a>, <a href="#P244">244</a>,
-<a href="#P252">252</a>, <a href="#P253">253</a>, <a href="#P259">259</a>, <a href="#P260">260</a>, <a href="#P271">271</a>, <a href="#P297">297</a>, <a href="#P323">323</a>,
-<a href="#P334">334</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-<br />
-<i>Infantry&mdash;</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders,
-<a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>, <a href="#P102">102</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P230">230</a>, <a href="#P324">324</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Artists' Rifles (28th London), <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Bedford, <a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P207">207</a>, <a href="#P236">236</a>, <a href="#P264">264</a>, <a href="#P266">266</a>, <a href="#P297">297</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Berkshire, <a href="#P93">93</a>, <a href="#P153">153</a>, <a href="#P255">255</a>, <a href="#P272">272</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Black Watch, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P150">150</a>, <a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P170">170</a>,
-<a href="#P171">171</a>, <a href="#P252">252</a>, <a href="#P258">258</a>, <a href="#P259">259</a>, <a href="#P331">331</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Border, <a href="#P243">243</a>, <a href="#P260">260</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Buffs (East Kent), <a href="#P214">214</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Cameron Highlanders, <a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P171">171</a>,
-<a href="#P248">248</a>, <a href="#P252">252</a>, <a href="#P253">253</a>, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Cameronians (Scottish Rifles), <a href="#P84">84</a>,
-<a href="#P100">100</a>, <a href="#P131">131</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Cheshire, <a href="#P82">82</a>, <a href="#P83">83</a>, <a href="#P154">154</a>, <a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Connaught Rangers, <a href="#P94">94</a>, <a href="#P157">157</a>, <a href="#P301">301</a>,
-<a href="#P302">302</a>, <a href="#P328">328</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Devon, <a href="#P210">210</a>, <a href="#P219">219</a>, <a href="#P224">224</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Dorset, <a href="#P207">207</a>, <a href="#P208">208</a>, <a href="#P210">210</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Dublin Fusiliers, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P112">112</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Duke of Cornwall's, <a href="#P62">62</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P73">73</a>, <a href="#P99">99</a>,
-<a href="#P150">150</a>, <a href="#P151">151</a>, <a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P224">224</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Durham Light Infantry, <a href="#P187">187</a>, <a href="#P188">188</a>,
-<a href="#P229">229</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-East Lancashire, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P229">229</a>, <a href="#P292">292</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-East Surrey, <a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P73">73</a>, <a href="#P99">99</a>, <a href="#P103">103</a>, <a href="#P150">150</a>,
-<a href="#P151">151</a>, <a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P190">190</a>, <a href="#P215">215</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-East Yorkshire, <a href="#P187">187</a>, <a href="#P188">188</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Essex, <a href="#P105">105</a>, <a href="#P106">106</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Gloucester, <a href="#P171">171</a>, <a href="#P182">182</a>, <a href="#P248">248</a>, <a href="#P250">250</a>,
-<a href="#P254">254</a>, <a href="#P260">260</a>, <a href="#P290">290</a>, <a href="#P291">291</a>, <a href="#P302">302</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Gordon Highlanders, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P69">69</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>,
-<a href="#P78">78</a>, <a href="#P113">113</a>, <a href="#P114">114</a>, <a href="#P219">219</a>, <a href="#P259">259</a>, <a href="#P273">273</a>, <a href="#P289">289</a>,
-<a href="#P324">324</a>, <a href="#P325">325</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Hampshire, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P231">231</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Herts, <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Highland Light Infantry, <a href="#P188">188</a>,
-<a href="#P242">242</a>, <a href="#P296">296</a>, <a href="#P301">301</a>, <a href="#P302">302</a>, <a href="#P326">326</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Inniskilling Fusiliers, <a href="#P105">105</a>, <a href="#P158">158</a>,
-<a href="#P229">229</a>, <a href="#P281">281</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Irish Fusiliers, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P206">206</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-King's Liverpool, <a href="#P90">90</a>, <a href="#P153">153</a>, <a href="#P255">255</a>,
-<a href="#P300">300</a>, <a href="#P301">301</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-King's Own Scottish Borderers,
-<a href="#P61">61</a>, <a href="#P71">71</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P103">103</a>, <a href="#P209">209</a>, <a href="#P211">211</a>, <a href="#P278">278</a>,
-<a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P284">284</a>, <a href="#P285">285</a>, <a href="#P334">334</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-King's Royal Rifles, <a href="#P93">93</a>, <a href="#P153">153</a>, <a href="#P166">166</a>,
-<a href="#P167">167</a>, <a href="#P168">168</a>, <a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P182">182</a>, <a href="#P188">188</a>, <a href="#P253">253</a>,
-<a href="#P256">256</a>, <a href="#P265">265</a>, <a href="#P268">268</a>, <a href="#P290">290</a>, <a href="#P305">305</a>, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Lancashire Fusiliers, <a href="#P105">105</a>, <a href="#P158">158</a>, <a href="#P229">229</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Leinster, <a href="#P229">229</a>, <a href="#P230">230</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Lincoln, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P151">151</a>, <a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P210">210</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>,
-<a href="#P280">280</a>, <a href="#P296">296</a>, <a href="#P324">324</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Liverpool Scottish, <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-London Rifle Brigade, <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-London Scottish, <a href="#P280">280</a>, <a href="#P283">283</a>, <a href="#P284">284</a>,
-<a href="#P285">285</a>, <a href="#P296">296</a>, <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Manchester, <a href="#P99">99</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>, <a href="#P102">102</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P218">218</a>,
-<a href="#P220">220</a>, <a href="#P224">224</a>, <a href="#P329">329</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Middlesex, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P68">68</a>, <a href="#P69">69</a>, <a href="#P70">70</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P78">78</a>,
-<a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>, <a href="#P103">103</a>, <a href="#P131">131</a>, <a href="#P207">207</a>, <a href="#P209">209</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>,
-<a href="#P219">219</a>, <a href="#P230">230</a>, <a href="#P324">324</a>, <a href="#P325">325</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Monmouthshire, <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Munster Fusiliers, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P120">120</a>, <a href="#P154">154</a>,
-<a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P242">242</a>, <a href="#P331">331</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Norfolk, <a href="#P82">82</a>, <a href="#P109">109</a>, <a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P219">219</a>, <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Northampton, <a href="#P154">154</a>, <a href="#P166">166</a>, <a href="#P167">167</a>, <a href="#P176">176</a>,
-<a href="#P180">180</a>, <a href="#P181">181</a>, <a href="#P252">252</a>, <a href="#P273">273</a>, <a href="#P289">289</a>, <a href="#P302">302</a>, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-North Lancashire, <a href="#P154">154</a>, <a href="#P166">166</a>, <a href="#P167">167</a>,
-<a href="#P168">168</a>, <a href="#P170">170</a>, <a href="#P250">250</a>, <a href="#P253">253</a>, <a href="#P265">265</a>, <a href="#P268">268</a>,
-<a href="#P297">297</a>, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Northumberland Fusiliers, <a href="#P68">68</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>,
-<a href="#P78">78</a>, <a href="#P208">208</a>, <a href="#P209">209</a>, <a href="#P210">210</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>, <a href="#P280">280</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Oxford and Bucks, <a href="#P289">289</a>, <a href="#P301">301</a>, <a href="#P302">302</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Queen Victoria Rifles, <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Queen's Westminsters, <a href="#P321">321</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Queen's (West Surrey), <a href="#P168">168</a>, <a href="#P170">170</a>,
-<a href="#P176">176</a>, <a href="#P181">181</a>, <a href="#P182">182</a>, <a href="#P191">191</a>, <a href="#P240">240</a>, <a href="#P248">248</a>,
-<a href="#P253">253</a>, <a href="#P259">259</a>, <a href="#P260">260</a>, <a href="#P261">261</a>, <a href="#P266">266</a>, <a href="#P271">271</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Rifle Brigade, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Fusiliers, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P68">68</a>, <a href="#P70">70</a>, <a href="#P71">71</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>,
-<a href="#P209">209</a>, <a href="#P210">210</a>, <a href="#P212">212</a>, <a href="#P220">220</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P299">299</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Irish, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P210">210</a>, <a href="#P212">212</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Irish Fusiliers, <a href="#P112">112</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Irish Rifles, <a href="#P69">69</a>, <a href="#P78">78</a>, <a href="#P89">89</a>, <a href="#P219">219</a>,
-<a href="#P220">220</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P235">235</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Lancaster, <a href="#P105">105</a>, <a href="#P111">111</a>, <a href="#P229">229</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Scots, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P77">77</a>, <a href="#P114">114</a>, <a href="#P207">207</a>, <a href="#P209">209</a>,
-<a href="#P219">219</a>, <a href="#P323">323</a>, <a href="#P324">324</a>, <a href="#P325">325</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Scots Fusiliers, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P68">68</a>, <a href="#P71">71</a>,
-<a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P103">103</a>, <a href="#P210">210</a>, <a href="#P211">211</a>, <a href="#P237">237</a>, <a href="#P241">241</a>, <a href="#P242">242</a>,
-<a href="#P264">264</a>, <a href="#P266">266</a>, <a href="#P299">299</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Seaforth Highlanders, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P112">112</a>,
-<a href="#P206">206</a>, <a href="#P304">304</a>, <a href="#P330">330</a>, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Sherwood Foresters, <a href="#P187">187</a>, <a href="#P188">188</a>, <a href="#P227">227</a>,
-<a href="#P228">228</a>, <a href="#P229">229</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Somerset Light Infantry, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P229">229</a>,
-<a href="#P231">231</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-South Lancashire, <a href="#P79">79</a>, <a href="#P88">88</a>, <a href="#P148">148</a>, <a href="#P215">215</a>,
-<a href="#P220">220</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-South Staffordshire, <a href="#P153">153</a>, <a href="#P240">240</a>, <a href="#P244">244</a>,
-<a href="#P253">253</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-South Wales Borderers, <a href="#P172">172</a>, <a href="#P191">191</a>,
-<a href="#P192">192</a>, <a href="#P248">248</a>, <a href="#P249">249</a>, <a href="#P261">261</a>, <a href="#P270">270</a>, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Suffolk, <a href="#P99">99</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>, <a href="#P102">102</a>, <a href="#P108">108</a>, <a href="#P224">224</a>,
-<a href="#P321">321</a>, <a href="#P325">325</a>, <a href="#P329">329</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Sussex, <a href="#P153">153</a>, <a href="#P166">166</a>, <a href="#P167">167</a>, <a href="#P169">169</a>, <a href="#P187">187</a>,
-<a href="#P249">249</a>, <a href="#P273">273</a>, <a href="#P289">289</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Warwick, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P111">111</a>, <a href="#P112">112</a>, <a href="#P206">206</a>, <a href="#P240">240</a>,
-<a href="#P243">243</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Welsh, <a href="#P172">172</a>, <a href="#P191">191</a>, <a href="#P254">254</a>, <a href="#P261">261</a>, <a href="#P266">266</a>,
-<a href="#P268">268</a>, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Welsh Borderers, <a href="#P260">260</a>, <a href="#P271">271</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Welsh Fusiliers, <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>, <a href="#P237">237</a>, <a href="#P240">240</a>,
-<a href="#P264">264</a>, <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-West Kent, <a href="#P61">61</a>, <a href="#P62">62</a>, <a href="#P71">71</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P79">79</a>, <a href="#P103">103</a>,
-<a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P222">222</a>, <a href="#P304">304</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-West Riding, <a href="#P61">61</a>, <a href="#P71">71</a>, <a href="#P79">79</a>, <a href="#P103">103</a>, <a href="#P296">296</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-West Yorkshire, <a href="#P187">187</a>, <a href="#P188">188</a>, <a href="#P190">190</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Wiltshire, <a href="#P88">88</a>, <a href="#P177">177</a>, <a href="#P190">190</a>, <a href="#P219">219</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>,
-<a href="#P237">237</a>, <a href="#P241">241</a>, <a href="#P242">242</a>, <a href="#P306">306</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Worcester, <a href="#P150">150</a>, <a href="#P188">188</a>, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P216">216</a>, <a href="#P242">242</a>,
-<a href="#P243">243</a>, <a href="#P270">270</a>, <a href="#P271">271</a>, <a href="#P292">292</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-York and Lancaster, <a href="#P214">214</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Yorkshire, <a href="#P240">240</a>, <a href="#P264">264</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Yorkshire Light Infantry, <a href="#P61">61</a>, <a href="#P71">71</a>,
-<a href="#P103">103</a>, <a href="#P215">215</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P278">278</a>, <a href="#P282">282</a>, <a href="#P284">284</a>, <a href="#P285">285</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Royal Engineers, <a href="#P70">70</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>, <a href="#P127">127</a>,
-<a href="#P164">164</a>, <a href="#P175">175</a>, <a href="#P289">289</a>, <a href="#P300">300</a>, <a href="#P301">301</a>, <a href="#P302">302</a>, <a href="#P323">323</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-<br />
-<i>Indian Army&mdash;</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-129th Baluchis, <a href="#P279">279</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-9th Bhopal Infantry, <a href="#P220">220</a>, <a href="#P328">328</a>, <a href="#P329">329</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-2nd Gurkhas, <a href="#P330">330</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-4th Gurkhas, <a href="#P326">326</a>, <a href="#P328">328</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-8th Gurkhas, <a href="#P225">225</a>, <a href="#P331">331</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-9th Gurkhas, <a href="#P330">330</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-58th Indian Rifles, <a href="#P330">330</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-3rd Indian Sappers and Miners, <a href="#P329">329</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-6th Jats, <a href="#P330">330</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-59th (Scinde) Rifles, <a href="#P218">218</a>, <a href="#P326">326</a>, <a href="#P327">327</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-15th Sikhs, <a href="#P218">218</a>, <a href="#P219">219</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-47th Sikhs, <a href="#P218">218</a>, <a href="#P220">220</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P328">328</a>, <a href="#P331">331</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Vaughan's Indian Rifles, <a href="#P225">225</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index2">
-Wilde's 57th Rifles, <a href="#P281">281</a>, <a href="#P328">328</a>, <a href="#P329">329</a>
-<br /><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Reynolds, Captain (R.F.A.), V.C.,
-<a href="#P110">110</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Reynolds, Captain (9th Lancers), <a href="#P149">149</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rheims Cathedral, bombarded by
-Germans, <a href="#P189">189</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rickman, Major, <a href="#P106">106</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rising, Captain, <a href="#P250">250</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Robb, Major, <a href="#P188">188</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Roberts, Lord, death of, while
-visiting the Army in France, <a href="#P308">308</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Robertson, Sir William, <a href="#P134">134</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rolt, General, <a href="#P61">61</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P98">98</a>, <a href="#P100">100</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ronaldson, Colonel, <a href="#P327">327</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Roper, Major, <a href="#P207">207</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rose, Captain (Northumberland
-Fusiliers), <a href="#P78">78</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Rose, Captain (Royal Scots Fusiliers),
-<a href="#P71">71</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ruggles-Brise, General, <a href="#P245">245</a>, <a href="#P295">295</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Russell, Second Lieutenant, <a href="#P222">222</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ryan, Major, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Salisbury, late Lord, <a href="#P2">2</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Saltoun, Master of, <a href="#P115">115</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Samoa, German colony, captured by
-New Zealand, <a href="#P312">312</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Sandilands, Captain, <a href="#P78">78</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Sandilands, Colonel, <a href="#P89">89</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Sarajevo, <a href="#P13">13</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Sarrail, General, <a href="#P145">145</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Savage, Captain, <a href="#P181">181</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Scale, Captain, <a href="#P327">327</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Sclater-Booth, Major, <a href="#P80">80</a>, <a href="#P130">130</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Scott, Admiral Sir Percy, <a href="#P42">42</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Scott-Kerr, General, <a href="#P90">90</a>, <a href="#P132">132</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Seaton, Lance-Corporal, <a href="#P281">281</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Seely, Colonel, <a href="#P158">158</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Serbia, reply to Austrian ultimatum,
-<a href="#P15">15</a>; King of, appeals to the
-Czar, <a href="#P15">15</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Serocold, Colonel, <a href="#P167">167</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Shaw, General, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P78">78</a>, <a href="#P174">174</a>, <a href="#P186">186</a>, <a href="#P190">190</a>,
-<a href="#P210">210</a>, <a href="#P211">211</a>, <a href="#P279">279</a>, <a href="#P280">280</a>, <a href="#P303">303</a>, <a href="#P324">324</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Shore, Captain, <a href="#P83">83</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Smith, Captain Bowden, <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Smith, Colonel (Lincoln), <a href="#P280">280</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Smith, Colonel Baird (R.S.F.), <a href="#P266">266</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Smith, Colonel Osborne (Northampton), <a href="#P181">181</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Smith, General Douglas, <a href="#P324">324</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Smith, Lieutenant, <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Smith-Dorrien, General Sir Horace,
-<a href="#P55">55</a>, <a href="#P56">56</a>, <a href="#P60">60</a>, <a href="#P72">72</a>, <a href="#P83">83</a>, <a href="#P84">84</a>, <a href="#P88">88</a>, <a href="#P95">95</a>,
-<a href="#P96">96</a>, <a href="#P97">97</a>, <a href="#P108">108</a>, <a href="#P109">109</a>, <a href="#P116">116</a>, <a href="#P119">119</a>, <a href="#P217">217</a>,
-<a href="#P218">218</a>, <a href="#P220">220</a>, <a href="#P221">221</a>, <a href="#P222">222</a>, <a href="#P286">286</a>, <a href="#P295">295</a>, <a href="#P307">307</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Snow, General, <a href="#P89">89</a>, <a href="#P104">104</a>, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P108">108</a>,
-<a href="#P126">126</a>, <a href="#P320">320</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Solesmes, action at, <a href="#P88">88</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-South Africa, offer of service, <a href="#P34">34</a>;
-insurrection in, <a href="#P313">313</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Spee, Admiral von, <a href="#P315">315</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Spread, Lieutenant, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Stephen, Captain, <a href="#P260">260</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Stewart, Captain, <a href="#P9">9</a>, <a href="#P155">155</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Strickland, Colonel, <a href="#P329">329</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Stucley, Major, <a href="#P259">259</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Sturdee, Admiral, <a href="#P315">315</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Swettenham, Major, <a href="#P122">122</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Tannenberg, battle of, <a href="#P139">139</a>, <a href="#P141">141</a>, <a href="#P316">316</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Teck, Prince Alexander of, <a href="#P226">226</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Tew, Major, <a href="#P99">99</a>, <a href="#P103">103</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Thomson, Major, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Thruston, Lieutenant, <a href="#P152">152</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Togoland, German colony,
-captured by British forces, <a href="#P312">312</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Tower, Lieutenant, <a href="#P70">70</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Treitschke, <a href="#P8">8</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Trench, Captain, <a href="#P269">269</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Trevor, Major, <a href="#P103">103</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Triple Alliance and Triple Entente, <a href="#P6">6</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Tsingtau, German colony, captured
-by Japanese, <a href="#P312">312</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Tulloch, Colonel, <a href="#P127">127</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Turner, Colonel, <a href="#P151">151</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Uniacke, Colonel, <a href="#P259">259</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Vallentin, Captain, <a href="#P294">294</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Vandeleur, Captain, <a href="#P102">102</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Vandeleur, Major, <a href="#P208">208</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Venner, Colonel, <a href="#P225">225</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Vereker, Lieutenant, <a href="#P92">92</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Vidal, General, <a href="#P290">290</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Villars-Cotteret, action of, <a href="#P132">132</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ward, Colonel, <a href="#P103">103</a>, <a href="#P126">126</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ward, Lieutenant, <a href="#P73">73</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-War Loan, success of the, <a href="#P40">40</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Warre, Major, <a href="#P168">168</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wasme, action at, <a href="#P79">79</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Watkis, General, <a href="#P217">217</a>, <a href="#P325">325</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Watson, Lieutenant Graham, <a href="#P114">114</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Watson, Major, <a href="#P168">168</a>, <a href="#P253">253</a>, <a href="#P266">266</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Watts, General, <a href="#P295">295</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Welchmann, Lieutenant, <a href="#P78">78</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wellesley, Lord Richard, <a href="#P259">259</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Westmacott, General, <a href="#P332">332</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-White, Second Lieutenant, <a href="#P222">222</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Willcocks, General Sir James, <a href="#P224">224</a>,
-<a href="#P225">225</a>, <a href="#P286">286</a>, <a href="#P325">325</a>, <a href="#P333">333</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-William II., Emperor of Germany,
-telegram to Kruger, <a href="#P3">3</a>; visits
-England, <a href="#P3">3</a>; <a href="#P20">20</a>; his message
-to Sir Edward Goschen, <a href="#P24">24</a>; <a href="#P28">28</a>,
-<a href="#P48">48</a>; special appeal to his troops
-at Ypres, <a href="#P261">261</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Williams, Captain, <a href="#P271">271</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Williams, General, <a href="#P230">230</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wilson, Colonel (Blues), <a href="#P293">293</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wilson, Colonel (R.E.), <a href="#P127">127</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wilson, General, <a href="#P86">86</a>, <a href="#P104">104</a>, <a href="#P106">106</a>, <a href="#P281">281</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wing, General, <a href="#P110">110</a>, <a href="#P224">224</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wormald, Colonel, <a href="#P122">122</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Worsley, Lord, <a href="#P263">263</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wright, Captain Theodore, <a href="#P70">70</a>, <a href="#P175">175</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Würtemberg, Duke of, <a href="#P141">141</a>, <a href="#P144">144</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Wyatt, Corporal, <a href="#P92">92</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Yate, Major, V.C., <a href="#P103">103</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Ypres, first battle of, <a href="#P232">232-310</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Zandvoorde, fight of, <a href="#P262">262</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="index">
-Zillebeke, action of, <a href="#P292">292</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-<i>Printed in Great Britain by</i> R. &amp; R. CLARK, LIMITED, <i>Edinburgh.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN IN FRANCE AND FLANDERS 1914 ***</div>
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