<h2 class="vspace"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER III<br/> <span class="subhead">OFFICERS AND NON-COMS.</span></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> higher ranks of officers have very little
to do with the daily life of the soldier. Two
or three times a year the general officer commanding
the station comes round on a tour of inspection,
while other general officers and inspecting officers
pay visits at times. The highest rank, however,
with which the soldier is brought in frequent
contact is the commanding officer of his own
regiment or battalion. This post is usually held
by a lieutenant-colonel, as by the time an officer
has attained to a full colonelcy he is either posted
to the staff or passed out from the service to half-pay
under the age limit.</p>
<p>By the time a man has reached the rank of
lieutenant-colonel he is, as a rule, far more conversant
with the ways and habits of the soldier
than the soldier himself is willing to admit. It
would surprise men, in the majority of cases, if
they could be made to realise how intimately the
“old man” knows his regiment. The “old man”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47">47</SPAN></span>
is responsible for the efficiency of the regiment in
every detail, since, as its head, he is responsible
for the efficiency of the officers controlling the
various departments. He is assisted in his work
by the second-in-command, who is usually a major,
and is not attached to any particular squadron or
company, but is responsible for the internal
working and domestic arrangements incidental to
the life of his unit. These two are assisted in their
work by the adjutant, a junior officer, sometimes
captain and sometimes lieutenant, who holds his
post for a stated term, and during his adjutancy
is expected to qualify fully in the headquarters
staff work which the conduct of a military unit
involves. So far as commissioned officers are
concerned, these three form the headquarters
staff; it must not be overlooked, however, that
the quartermaster, who is either a lieutenant or a
captain, and has won his commission from the
ranks in the majority of cases, is also unattached
to any particular squadron or company. He is, or
should be, under the control of the second-in-command,
since, as his title indicates, he is concerned
with the quarters of the regiment, and with
all that pertains to its domestic economy. He
cannot, however, be regarded as a part of the
headquarters staff; his position is unique, somewhere<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48">48</SPAN></span>
between commissioned and non-commissioned
rank, and it is very rarely that he is accorded
the position of the officer who has come to the
service through Sandhurst.</p>
<p>The colonel and the second-in-command, as a
rule, know their regiment thoroughly; they know
the special weaknesses of the company or squadron
officers; they are conversant with the virtues and
the failings of Captain Blank and Lieutenant
Dash; they know all about the troubles in the
married quarters, and they are fully informed of
the happenings in the sergeants’ mess. Not that
there is any system of espionage in the Army, but
the man who reaches the rank of colonel is, under
the present conditions governing promotion, keen-witted,
and in the dissemination of all kinds of
news, from matter for legitimate comment to rank
scandal, a military unit is about equivalent to a
ladies’ sewing meeting. The colonel and the
second-in-command know all about things because,
being observant men, they cannot help knowing.</p>
<p>To each squadron of cavalry, battery of artillery,
or company of infantry is allotted a captain or
major as officer commanding, and, in the same
way as a colonel is responsible for the efficiency of
his regiment, so the captain or major is responsible
for the efficiency of the squadron, battery, or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49">49</SPAN></span>
company under his charge. The squadron or
company officer is usually not quite so conversant
with the more intimate details of his work as is the
lieutenant-colonel. For one thing, he has not had
so much experience; for another, he may not have
the mental capacity required in a lieutenant-colonel;
the squadron or company officer is
usually a jolly good fellow, mindful of discipline
and careful of the comfort of his men, but there
are cases—exceptions, certainly—of utter incompetency.
A battery officer, on the other hand,
is of a different stamp. Of the three arms, the
artillery demands most in the way of efficiency
and knowledge; the mechanism of the guns
creates an atmosphere in which officers study and
train to a far greater extent than cavalry and
infantry officers. The battery officer, in nine cases
out of ten, is quite as competent to take charge of
an artillery brigade as the cavalry or infantry
lieutenant-colonel is to take charge of his regiment
or battalion.</p>
<p>Next in order of rank are the lieutenants and
subalterns, youngsters learning the business. The
lieutenant, having won his second star, is a reasonable
being; the subaltern, fresh from Sandhurst
or Woolwich, and oppressed by the weight of
his own importance, is occasionally “too big for his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50">50</SPAN></span>
boots,” a bumptious individual whom his superiors
endeavour to restrain, but whom his inferiors in
rank must obey, though they have little belief in
his judgment or in his capability to command
them intelligently. This may appear harsh judgment
on the subaltern, but experience of things
military confirms it; Sandhurst turns out its pupils
in a raw state; they have the theory of their
work, but, just as it takes years to make a soldier,
so it takes years of actual military work to make
an efficient officer, and the trained man in the
ranks generally views with extreme disfavour the
introduction of a raw subaltern from Sandhurst
into the company or squadron to which he belongs,
though very often the young officer shapes to his
work quickly, wins the respect and confidence of
his men, and adds materially to the efficiency and
well-being of his troop or section. Again, a young
officer may not be popular among his men in
time of peace, but may win all their respect
and confidence on the field, where values alter
and are frequently reversed from peace equivalents.</p>
<p>Lieutenants and subalterns are given charge of a
troop in the cavalry, a gun or section—according
to the number of young officers available—in a
battery and of a section of men in an infantry<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51">51</SPAN></span>
company. Nominally in command of their men,
they are in practice largely dependent on their
senior non-commissioned officers for the efficiency
of the men under their command. An officer’s
real efficiency, in peace service, does not begin
until he “gets his company” or squadron: in
other words, until he is promoted to the rank of
captain.</p>
<p>Next in grade of rank to the commissioned
officers stands the regimental sergeant-major, who
is termed a warrant-officer, since the “warrant”
which he holds, in virtue of his rank, distinguishes
him from non-commissioned officers. He has,
usually, sixteen years or more of service; he has
even more knowledge of the ways of the regiment
than the commanding officer himself, and his
place is with the headquarters staff, while his
duties lie in the supervision and control of the non-commissioned
officers and their messes and training.
His position is peculiar; the etiquette
of the service prevents him from making close
friends among non-commissioned officers, while
that same etiquette prevents commissioned
officers from making a close friend of him. The
only non-commissioned officer who stands near
him in rank is the quartermaster-sergeant,
who is directly under the control of the quartermaster,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52">52</SPAN></span>
and is also a member of the headquarters
staff.</p>
<p>From this point of rank downward the ways of
the different arms of the service diverge. In the
infantry, the chief non-commissioned officer of a
company is the colour-sergeant, who is responsible
both for internal economy and efficiency at drill.
In the cavalry and artillery the presence of horses
and the far greater amount of equipment involved
divide the work that is done in the infantry by
the colour-sergeant into two parts. In the cavalry
each squadron, and in the artillery each battery,
is controlled, so far as drill and efficiency in the
field is concerned, by a squadron sergeant-major
and a battery sergeant-major, respectively, while
the domestic economy of the squadron or battery
is managed by squadron quartermaster-sergeant or
battery quartermaster-sergeant.</p>
<p>Next in order of rank come the sergeants, the
non-commissioned equivalent to troop and section
officers, but of far more actual importance than
these, since parades frequently take place in the
absence of the troop or section officer, while the
troop or section sergeant is at all times responsible
to his superiors for the efficiency of his men. The
rank of sergeant is seldom attained in less than
seven years, and thus the man of three stripes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53">53</SPAN></span>
whom Kipling justly described in his famous
phrase “as the backbone of the Army” is a man
of experience and fully entitled to his post.</p>
<p>Next in order of rank to the sergeant is the
corporal, whose duties lie principally in the
maintenance of barrack-room discipline, though
he is largely responsible for the training of squads
and sections of men in field work. Often in the
cavalry he is given charge of a troop temporarily,
and in the artillery, though each gun is supposed
to be in charge of a sergeant, it happens at times
that the corporal has charge of the gun. The
lowest rank of all is that of lance-corporal, aptly
termed “half of nothing.” Men resent, as a rule,
any assumption of authority by a lance-corporal—and
yet the lance-corporal has to exercise his
authority at the risk of being told he was a private
only five minutes ago. Bearing in mind the
material from which the Army is recruited, it is
not surprising that a large percentage of lance-corporals,
having tried for themselves what non-commissioned
rank feels like, give it up and revert
to the rank of private. There are certain advantages
in being a lance-corporal; there is a distinct
advantage, for instance, in being “in charge of the
guard” instead of having to do sentry go; another
advantage arises in the matter of fatigues: the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54">54</SPAN></span>
lance-corporal—so long as he behaves himself—merely
takes his turn on the roll after the full
corporals in charge of a fatigue party; he is a
superintendent, not a worker, so far as fatigues
are concerned. The chief disadvantage consists in
the way in which his former comrades regard him.
As one concerned in their training and discipline
he is no longer to be considered as a comrade
and equal by the privates; in many infantry
units, lance-corporals are definitely ordered not
to fraternise with the men, although they perforce
sleep in the same rooms and share the same
meals.</p>
<p>The sergeants of each unit—taking the regiment
or battalion as a unit—have their own mess, in the
same way that the officers have theirs. They take
all their meals in the mess, and they sleep in
“bunks”; their separateness from the rank and
file is thus emphasised and their control over the
men rendered more definite and easy by this
separateness. In each unit there is also established
a corporals’ mess, but this is merely a recreation
room in the same way that the canteen forms a
recreation room for the privates. Corporals and
lance-corporals take their meals with the men and
sleep in the same rooms as the men. This, especially
in the case of lance-corporals, diminishes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55">55</SPAN></span>
authority, but at the same time it renders easier
the maintenance of barrack-room discipline and
the control of barrack-room life, for which corporals
and lance-corporals are held responsible.</p>
<p>Mainly in connection with the development of
initiative which arose out of the experience gained
from the South African war, a system of understudies
has been created among non-commissioned
officers and senior privates. Each rank in turn is
expected to be able to assume the duties of the
rank immediately above it, in case of necessity,
and all are trained to this end. It may be remarked
that certain certificates of education must be
obtained by non-commissioned officers; as soon
as a lance-corporal gets his stripe he is expected
to go to a military school in the evenings until he
has obtained a second-class certificate of education,
the qualifications for this being equivalent to those
evidenced by the possession of an ordinary fourth-standard
school certificate. The higher ranks of
non-commissioned officer—that is, all above the
rank of sergeant—are expected to qualify for a
first-class Army certificate of education, which is
quite equivalent to an ex-7th standard council-school
certificate.</p>
<p>Further, every non-commissioned officer must
obtain certificates of proficiency in drill and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56">56</SPAN></span>
musketry, showing that he is a capable instructor
as well as fully conversant with drill on his own
account. The way to promotion is paved with
certificates of various kinds. There are courses in
signalling, scouting, musketry, drill, and the
hundred and one items of a soldier’s work; these
courses qualify for instructorship, and some of
them are open only to non-commissioned officers.
The passing of such courses, increasing the efficiency
of the non-commissioned officers concerned, is
evidence of fitness for further promotion, and is
rewarded accordingly.</p>
<p>Technically speaking, the post of lance-corporal
is an appointment, not a promotion, and therefore
the lance-corporal can be deprived of his stripe on
the word of his commanding officer. With the
exception of the rank of lance-sergeant, which
admits a corporal to the sergeants’ mess and takes
him out of the barrack-room without a corresponding
increase of pay, all ranks from corporal upward
count as promotions, and can only be reduced by
way of punishment by the sentence of a court
martial. A regimental court martial, which has
power to reduce a corporal to the ranks and inflict
certain limited punishments on a private, is composed
of three officers of the unit concerned. A
district court martial, with wider powers, including<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57">57</SPAN></span>
the reduction of a sergeant to the ranks, is composed
of three officers; the president must not
in any case be below the rank of captain, and
usually is a major, and he and the two junior
officers who form the tribunal usually belong to
other regiments than that of the accused.
Military law differs in many respects from civil
law; there is, of course, no such thing as a trial by
jury; the adjutant of the regiment to which the
accused belongs is always the nominal prosecutor,
but in actual practice the witnesses for the
prosecution are of far more importance than is he.
Evidence for the prosecution is taken first, then
the evidence for the defence; the accused, if he
wishes, can speak in his own defence; if the court
is satisfied of the innocence of the accused, he is at
once discharged; if, on the other hand, there is
any doubt of his innocence, he is marched out
while the court consider their finding and sentence,
and the latter is not announced until the two or
three days necessary for confirmation of the proceedings
by the general officer commanding the
station have elapsed.</p>
<p>The promulgation of a court-martial sentence
is an impressive ceremony. The regiment or
battalion to which the accused belongs is formed
up to occupy three sides of a square, facing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58">58</SPAN></span>
inwards. The accused, under armed escort,
together with the regimental sergeant-major and
the adjutant of the unit, occupy the fourth side
of the square, and the adjutant reads a summary
of the proceedings concluding with a recital of
the sentence on the accused. In the case of a
private the ceremony is then at an end, and the
regiment is marched away, while the accused
returns to the guard-room under escort. In the
case of a non-commissioned officer the regimental
sergeant-major formally cuts the stripes from off
the arm of the accused. It is to be hoped that in
the near future this court-martial parade, degrading
to the accused man, and not by any means
an edifying spectacle for his comrades, will be
abolished, for a record of the court martial and of
the punishment inflicted is always inserted in the
regimental orders of the day.</p>
<p>Fortunately, however, court martials are infrequent
occurrences, and, so far as the non-commissioned
officer is concerned, life is a fairly
pleasant business. There is plenty of hard work
to keep him in good health, but there are also
many hours that can be spent in pleasant recreation,
and the man who takes his profession
seriously may now hope to attain to higher rank.
Promotions to commissions from the ranks have,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59">59</SPAN></span>
in the past, been infrequent; but the prospect is
now much more hopeful, and, in any case, the
non-commissioned officer can look forward to a
pension which will serve as a perpetual reminder
that his time has not been wasted.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60">60</SPAN></span></p>
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