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<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<p>I would speak first of a contrast—and yet I have come to recognize
how impossible it is to convey to the dweller in America the difference in
atmosphere between England and France on the one hand and our country on
the other. And when I use the word "atmosphere" I mean the mental state of
the peoples as well as the weather and the aspect of the skies. I have
referred in another article to the anxious, feverish prosperity one
beholds in London and Paris, to that apparent indifference, despite the
presence on the streets of crowds of soldiers to the existence of a war of
which one is ever aware. Yet, along with this, one is ever conscious of
pressure. The air is heavy; there is a corresponding lack of the buoyancy
of mind which is the normal American condition. Perhaps, if German troops
occupied New England and New York, our own mental barometer might be
lower. It is difficult to say. At any rate, after an ocean voyage of nine
days one's spirits rise perceptibly as the ship nears Nantucket; and the
icy-bright sunlight of New York harbour, the sight of the buildings
aspiring to blue skies restore the throbbing optimism which with us is
normal; and it was with an effort, when I talked to the reporters on
landing, that I was able to achieve and express the pessimism and darkness
out of which I had come. Pessimism is perhaps too strong a word, and takes
no account of the continued unimpaired morale and determination of the
greater part of the British and French peoples. They expect much from us.
Yet the impression was instantaneous, when I set forth in the streets of
New York, that we had not fully measured the magnitude of our task—an
impression that has been amply confirmed as the weeks have passed.</p>
<p>The sense of relief I felt was not only the result of bright skies and a
high barometer, of the palpable self-confidence of the pedestrians, of the
white bread on the table and the knowledge that there was more, but also
of the ease of accomplishing things. I called for a telephone number and
got it cheerfully and instantly. I sent several telegrams, and did not
have to wait twenty minutes before a wicket while a painstaking official
multiplied and added and subtracted and paused to talk with a friend; the
speed of the express in which I flew down-town seemed emblematic of
America itself. I had been transported, in fact, into another world—my
world; and in order to realize again that from which I had come I turned
to a diary recording a London filled with the sulphur fumes of fog,
through which the lamps of the taxis and buses shone as yellow blots
reflected on glistening streets; or, for some reason a still greater
contrast, a blue, blue November Sunday afternoon in parts, the Esplanade
of the Invalides black with people—sad people—and the
Invalides itself all etched in blue as seen through the wide vista from
the Seine.</p>
<p>A few days later, with some children, I went to the Hippodrome. And it
remained for the Hippodrome, of all places, to give me the thrill I had
not achieved abroad, the thrill I had not experienced since the first
months of the war. Mr. George Cohan accomplished it. The transport with
steam up, is ready to leave the wharf, the khaki-clad regiment of erect
and vigorous young Americans marches across the great stage, and the
audience strains forward and begins to sing, under its breath, the words
that proclaim, as nothing else perhaps proclaims, how America feels.</p>
<p>"Send the word, send the word over there...<br/>
We'll be o-ver, we're coming o-ver,<br/>
And we won't come back till it's o-ver, over there!"<br/></p>
<p>Is it the prelude of a tragedy? We have always been so successful, we
Americans. Are we to fail now? I am an American, and I do not believe we
are to fail. But I am soberer, somehow a different American than he who
sailed away in August. Shall we learn other things than those that have
hitherto been contained in our philosophy?</p>
<p>Of one thing I am convinced. It is the first war of the world that is not
a miltary war, although miltary genius is demanded, although it is the
bloodiest war in history. But other qualities are required; men and women
who are not professional soldiers are fighting in it and will aid in
victory. The pomp and circumstance of other wars are lacking in this, the
greatest of all. We had the thrills, even in America, three years ago,
when Britain and France and Canada went in. We tingled when we read of the
mobilizing of the huge armies, of the leave-takings of the soldiers. We
bought every extra for news of those first battles on Belgian soil. And I
remember my sensations when in the province of Quebec in the autumn of
1914, looking out of the car-window at the troops gathering on the
platforms who were to go across the seas to fight for the empire and
liberty. They were singing "Tipperary!" "Tipperary!" One seldoms hears it
now, and the way has proved long—longer than we reckoned. And we are
singing "Over There!"</p>
<p>In those first months of the war there was, we were told, in England and
France a revival of "religion," and indeed many of the books then written
gave evidence of having been composed in exalted, mystic moods. I remember
one in particular, called "En Campagne," by a young French officer. And
then, somehow, the note of mystic exaltation died away, to be succeeded by
a period of realism. Read "Le Feu," which is most typical, which has sold
in numberless editions. Here is a picture of that other aspect—the
grimness, the monotony, and the frequent bestiality of trench life, the
horror of slaughtering millions of men by highly specialized machinery.
And yet, as an American, I strike inevitably the note of optimism once
more. Even now the truer spiritual goal is glimpsed through the battle
clouds, and has been hailed in world-reverberating phrases by our American
President. Day by day the real issue is clearer, while the "religion" it
implies embraces not one nation, wills not one patriotism, but humanity
itself. I heard a Frenchwoman who had been deeply "religious" in the old
sense exclaim: "I no longer have any faith in God; he is on the side of
the Germans." When the war began there were many evidences of a survival
of that faith that God fights for nations, interferes in behalf of the
"righteous" cause. When General Joffre was in America he was asked by one
of our countrywomen how the battle of the Marne was won. "Madame," he is
reported to have said, "it was won by me, by my generals and soldiers."
The tendency to regard this victory, which we hope saved France and the
Western humanitarian civilization we cherish, as a special interposition
of Providence, as a miracle, has given place to the realization that the
battle was won by the resourcefulness, science, and coolness of the French
commander-in-chief. Science preserves armies, since killing, if it has to
be done, is now wholly within that realm; science heals the wounded,
transports them rapidly to the hospitals, gives the shattered something
still to live for; and, if we are able to abandon the sentimental view and
look facts in the face—as many anointed chaplains in Europe are
doing—science not only eliminates typhoid but is able to prevent
those terrible diseases that devastate armies and nations. And science is
no longer confined to the physical but has invaded the social kingdom, is
able to weave a juster fabric into the government of peoples. On all sides
we are beginning to embrace the religion of self-reliance, a faith that
God is on the side of intelligence—intelligence with a broader
meaning than the Germans have given it, for it includes charity.</p>
<p>II</p>
<p>It seems to me that I remember, somewhere in the realistic novel I have
mentioned "Le Feu"—reading of singing soldiers, and an assumption on
the part of their hearers that such songs are prompted only by a
devil-may-care lightness of heart which the soldier achieves. A shallow
psychology (as the author points out), especially in these days of trench
warfare! The soldier sings to hide his real feelings, perhaps to give vent
to them. I am reminded of all this in connection with my trip to the
British front. I left London after lunch on one of those dreary, grey days
to which I have referred; the rain had begun to splash angrily against the
panes of the car windows before we reached the coast. At five o'clock the
boat pushed off into a black channel, whipped by a gale that drove the
rain across the decks and into every passage and gangway. The steamer was
literally loaded with human beings, officers and men returning from a
brief glimpse of home. There was nothing of the glory of war in the
embarkation, and, to add to the sad and sinister effect of it, each man as
he came aboard mounted the ladder and chose, from a pile on the hatch
combing, a sodden life-preserver, which he flung around his shoulders as
he went in search of a shelter. The saloon below, where we had our tea,
was lighted indeed, but sealed so tight as to be insupportable; and the
cabin above, stifling too, was dark as a pocket. One stumbled over unseen
passengers on the lounges, or sitting on kits on the floor. Even the steps
up which I groped my way to the deck above were filled, while on the deck
there was standing-room only and not much of that. Mal de mer added to the
discomforts of many. At length I found an uncertain refuge in a gangway
amidships, hedged in between unseen companions; but even here the rain
stung our faces and the spray of an occasional comber drenched our feet,
while through the gloom of the night only a few yards of white water were
to be discerned. For three hours I stood there, trying to imagine what was
in the minds of these men with whose bodies I was in such intimate
contact. They were going to a foreign land to fight, many of them to die,
not in one of those adventurous campaigns of times gone by, but in the wet
trenches or the hideous No Man's Land between. What were the images they
summoned up in the darkness? Visions of long-familiar homes and
long-familiar friends? And just how were they facing the future? Even as I
wondered, voices rose in a song, English voices, soldier voices. It was
not "Tipperary," the song that thrilled us a few years ago. I strove to
catch the words:</p>
<p>"I want to go home!<br/>
I don't want to go back to the trenches no more,<br/>
Where there are bullets and shrapnel galore,<br/>
I want to go home!"<br/></p>
<p>It was sung boisterously, in a defiant tone of mockery of the desire it
expressed, and thus tremendously gained in pathos. They did want to go
home—naturally. It was sung with the same spirit our men sing "We
won't come back till it's over, over there!" The difference is that these
Britishers have been over there, have seen the horrors face to face, have
tasted the sweets of home, and in spite of heartsickness and seasickness
are resolved to see it through. Such is the morale of the British army. I
have not the slightest doubt that it will be the morale of our own army
also, but at present the British are holding the fort. Tommy would never
give up the war, but he has had a realistic taste of it, and his songs
reflect his experience. Other songs reached my ears each night, above the
hissing and pounding of the Channel seas, but the unseen group returned
always to this. One thought of Agincourt and Crecy, of Waterloo, of the
countless journeys across this same stormy strip of water the ancestors of
these man had made in the past, and one wondered whether war were eternal
and inevitable, after all.</p>
<p>And what does Tommy think about it—this war? My own limited
experience thoroughly indorses Mr. Galsworthy's splendid analysis of
British-soldier psychology that appeared in the December North American.
The average man, with native doggedness, is fighting for the defence of
England. The British Government itself, in its reconstruction department
for the political education of the wounded, has given partial denial to
the old maxim that it is the soldier's business not to think but to obey;
and the British army is leavened with men who read and reflect in the long
nights of watching in the rain, who are gaining ideas about conditions in
the past and resolutions concerning those of the future. The very army
itself has had a miracle happen to it: it has been democratized—and
with the cheerful consent of the class to which formerly the possession of
commissions was largely confined. Gradually, to these soldier-thinkers, as
well as to the mass of others at home, is unfolding the vision of a new
social order which is indeed worth fighting for and dying for.</p>
<p>III</p>
<p>At last, our knees cramped and our feet soaked, we saw the lights of the
French port dancing across the veil of rain, like thistledowns of fire,
and presently we were at rest at a stone quay. As I stood waiting on the
deck to have my passport vised, I tried to reconstruct the features of
this little seaport as I had seen it, many years before, on a bright
summer's day when I had motored from Paris on my way to London. The gay
line of hotels facing the water was hidden in the darkness. Suddenly I
heard my name called, and I was rescued from the group of civilians by a
British officer who introduced himself as my host. It was after nine
o'clock, and he had been on the lookout for me since half past seven. The
effect of his welcome at that time and place was electrical, and I was
further immensely cheered by the news he gave me, as we hurried along the
street, that two friends of mine were here and quite hungry, having
delayed dinner for my arrival. One of them was a young member of Congress
who had been making exhaustive studies of the situation in Italy, France
and England, and the other one of our best-known writers, both bound for
London. We sat around the table until nearly eleven, exchanging
impressions and experiences. Then my officer declared that it was time to
go home.</p>
<p>"Home" proved to be the big chateau which the British Government has
leased for the kindly purpose of entertaining such American guests as they
choose to invite. It is known as the "American Chateau," and in the early
morning hours we reached it after a long drive through the gale. We
crossed a bridge over a moat and traversed a huge stone hall to the Gothic
drawing-room. Here a fire was crackling on the hearth, refreshments were
laid out, and the major in command rose from his book to greet me.
Hospitality, with these people, has attained to art, and, though I had
come here at the invitation of his government, I had the feeling of being
his personal guest in his own house. Presently he led the way up the stone
stairs and showed me the room I was to occupy.</p>
<p>I awoke to the sound of the wind whistling through the open lattice, and
looking down on the ruffled blue waters of the moat I saw a great white
swan at his morning toilet, his feathers dazzling in the sun. It was one
of those rare crisp and sparkling days that remind one of our American
autumn. A green stretch of lawn made a vista through the woods. Following
the example of the swan, I plunged into the tin tub the orderly had placed
beside my bed and went down to porridge in a glow. Porridge, for the major
was Scotch, and had taught his French cook to make it as the Scotch make
it. Then, going out into the hall, from a table on which lay a contour map
of the battle region, the major picked up a hideous mask that seemed to
have been made for some barbaric revelries.</p>
<p>"We may not strike any gas," he said, "but it's as well to be on the safe
side," whereupon he made me practise inserting the tube in my mouth,
pinching the nostrils instantly with the wire-covered nippers. He also
presented me with a steel helmet. Thus equipped for any untoward
occurrence, putting on sweaters and heavy overcoats, and wrapping
ourselves in the fur rugs of the waiting automobile, we started off, with
the gale on our quarter, for the front.</p>
<p>Picardy, on whose soil has been shed so much English blood, never was more
beautiful than on that October day. The trees were still in full leaf, the
fields green, though the crops had been gathered, and the crystal air gave
vivid value to every colour in the landscape. From time to time we wound
through the cobble-stoned streets of historic villages, each having its
stone church end the bodki-shaped steeple of blue slate so characteristic
of that country. And, as though we were still in the pastoral times of
peace, in the square of one of these villages a horse-fair was in
progress, blue-smocked peasants were trotting chunky ponies over the
stones. It was like a picture from one of De Maupassant's tales. In other
villages the shawled women sat knitting behind piles of beets and cabbages
and apples, their farm-carts atilt in the sun. Again and again I tried to
grasp the fact that the greatest of world wars was being fought only a few
miles away—and failed.</p>
<p>We had met, indeed, an occasional officer or orderly, huddled in a
greatcoat and head against the wind, exercising those wonderful animals
that are the pride of the British cavalry and which General Sir Douglas
Haig, himself a cavalryman, some day hopes to bring into service. We had
overtaken an artillery train rumbling along toward the east, the men
laughing and joking as they rode, as though they were going to manoeuvres.
Farther on, as the soldiers along the highroads and in the towns grew more
and more numerous, they seemed so harmoniously part of the peaceful scene
that war was as difficult to visualize as ever. Many sat about smoking
their pipes and playing with the village children, others were in squads
going to drill or exercise—something the Briton never neglects. The
amazing thing to a visitor who has seen the trenches awash on a typical
wet day, who knows that even billeting in cold farms and barns behind the
lines can scarcely be compared to the comforts of home, is how these men
keep well under the conditions. To say that they are well is to understate
the fact: the ruddy faces and clear eyes and hard muscles—even of
those who once were pale London clerks—proclaim a triumph for the
system of hygiene of their army.</p>
<p>Suddenly we came upon a house with a great round hole in its wall, and
then upon several in ruins beside the village street. Meanwhile, at work
under the windswept trees of the highway, were strange, dark men from the
uttermost parts of the earth, physiognomies as old as the tombs of
Pharaoh. It was, indeed, not so much the graven red profiles of priests
and soldiers that came tome at sight of these Egyptians, but the singing
fellaheen of the water-buckets of the Nile. And here, too, shovelling the
crushed rock, were East Indians oddly clad in European garb, careless of
the cold. That sense of the vastness of the British Empire, which at times
is so profound, was mingled now with a knowledge that it was fighting for
its life, marshalling all its resources for Armageddon.</p>
<p>Saint Eloi is named after the good bishop who ventured to advise King
Dagobert about his costume. And the church stands—what is left of it—all
alone on the greenest of terraces jutting out toward the east; and the
tower, ruggedly picturesque against the sky, resembles that of some
crumbled abbey. As a matter of fact, it has been a target for German
gunners. Dodging an army-truck and rounding one of those military traffic
policemen one meets at every important corner we climbed the hill and left
the motor among the great trees, which are still fortunately preserved.
And we stood for a few minutes, gazing over miles and miles of
devastation. Then, taking the motor once more, we passed through wrecked
and empty villages until we came to the foot of Vimy Ridge. Notre Dame de
Lorette rose against the sky-line to the north.</p>
<p>Vimy and Notre Dame de Lorette—sweet but terrible names! Only a
summer had passed since Vimy was the scene of one of the bloodiest battles
of the war. From a distance the prevailing colour of the steep slope is
ochre; it gives the effect of having been scraped bare in preparation for
some gigantic enterprise. A nearer view reveals a flush of green; nature
is already striving to heal. From top to bottom it is pockmarked by shells
and scarred by trenches—trenches every few feet, and between them
tangled masses of barbed wire still clinging to the "knife rests" and
corkscrew stanchions to which it had been strung. The huge shell-holes,
revealing the chalk subsoil, were half-filled with water. And even though
the field had been cleaned by those East Indians I had seen on the road,
and the thousands who had died here buried, bits of uniform, shoes, and
accoutrements and shattered rifles were sticking in the clay—and
once we came across a portion of a bedstead, doubtless taken by some
officer from a ruined and now vanished village to his dugout. Painfully,
pausing frequently to ponder over these remnants, so eloquent of the fury
of the struggle, slipping backward at every step and despite our care
getting tangled in the wire, we made our way up the slope. Buttercups and
daisies were blooming around the edges of the craters.</p>
<p>As we drew near the crest the major warned me not to expose myself. "It
isn't because there is much chance of our being shot," he explained, "but
a matter of drawing the German fire upon others." And yet I found it hard
to believe—despite the evidence at my feet—that war existed
here. The brightness of the day, the emptiness of the place, the silence—save
for the humming of the gale—denied it. And then, when we had
cautiously rounded a hummock at the top, my steel helmet was blown off—not
by a shrapnel, but by the wind! I had neglected to tighten the chin-strap.</p>
<p>Immediately below us I could make out scars like earthquake cracks running
across the meadows—the front trenches. Both armies were buried like
moles in these furrows. The country was spread out before us, like a map,
with occasionally the black contour of a coal mound rising against the
green, or a deserted shaft-head. I was gazing at the famous battlefield of
Lens. Villages, woods, whose names came back to me as the major repeated
them, lay like cloud shadows on the sunny plain, and the faintest shadow
of all, far to the eastward, was Lens itself. I marked it by a single
white tower. And suddenly another white tower, loftier than the first, had
risen up! But even as I stared its substance seemed to change, to
dissolve, and the tower was no longer to be seen. Not until then did I
realize that a monster shell had burst beside the trenches in front of the
city. Occasionally after that there came to my ears the muffed report of
some hidden gun, and a ball like a powder-puff lay lightly on the plain,
and vanished. But even the presence of these, oddly enough, did not rob
the landscape of its air of Sunday peace.</p>
<p>We ate our sandwiches and drank our bottle of white wine in a sheltered
cut of the road that runs up that other ridge which the French gained at
such an appalling price, Notre Dame de Lorette, while the major described
to me some features of the Lens battle, in which he had taken part. I
discovered incidentally that he had been severely wounded at the Somme.
Though he had been a soldier all his life, and a good soldier, his true
passion was painting, and he drew my attention to the rare greens and
silver-greys of the stones above us, steeped in sunlight—all that
remained of the little church of Notre Dame—more beautiful, more
significant, perhaps, as a ruin. It reminded the major of the Turners he
had admired in his youth. After lunch we lingered in the cemetery, where
the graves and vaults had been harrowed by shells; the trenches ran right
through them. And here, in this desecrated resting-place of the village
dead, where the shattered gravestones were mingled with barbed wire,
death-dealing fragments of iron, and rusting stick-bombs that had failed
to explode, was a wooden cross, on which was rudely written the name of
Hans Siebert. Mouldering at the foot of the cross was a grey woollen
German tunic from which the buttons had been cut.</p>
<p>We kept the road to the top, for Notre Dame de Lorette is as steep as
Vimy. There we looked upon the panorama of the Lens battle-field once
more, and started down the eastern slope, an apparently smooth expanse
covered now with prairie grasses, in reality a labyrinth of deep ditches,
dugouts, and pits; gruesome remnants of the battle lay half-concealed
under the grass. We walked slowly, making desperate leaps over the
trenches, sometimes perforce going through them, treading gingerly on the
"duck board" at the bottom. We stumbled over stick-bombs and unexploded
shells. No plough can be put here—the only solution for the land for
years to come is forest. Just before we gained the road at the bottom,
where the car was awaiting us, we were startled by the sudden flight of a
covey of partridges.</p>
<p>The skies were grey when we reached the banal outskirts of a town where
the bourgeoise houses were modern, commonplace, save those which had been
ennobled by ruin. It was Arras, one of those few magic names, eloquent
with suggestions of mediaeval romance and art, intrigue and chivalry;
while upon their significance, since the war began, has been superimposed
still another, no less eloquent but charged with pathos. We halted for a
moment in the open space before the railroad station, a comparatively new
structure of steel and glass, designed on geometrical curves, with an
uninspiring, cheaply ornamented front. It had been, undoubtedly, the pride
of the little city. Yet finding it here had at first something of the
effect of the discovery of an office-building—let us say—on
the site of the Reims Cathedral. Presently, however, its emptiness, its
silence began to have their effects—these and the rents one began to
perceive in the roof. For it was still the object of the intermittent yet
persistent fire of the German artillery. One began to realize that by
these wounds it had achieved a dignity that transcended the mediocre
imagination of its provincial designer. A fine rain had set in before we
found the square, and here indeed one felt a certain desolate
satisfaction; despite the wreckage there the spirit of the ancient town
still poignantly haunted it. Although the Hotel de Ville, which had
expressed adequately the longings and aspirations, the civic pride of
those bygone burghers, was razed to the ground, on three sides were still
standing the varied yet harmonious facades of Flemish houses made familiar
by photographs. Of some of these the plaster between the carved beams had
been shot away, the roofs blown off, and the tiny hewn rafters were bared
to the sky. The place was empty in the gathering gloom of the twilight.
The gaiety and warmth of the hut erected in the Public Gardens which
houses the British Officers' Club were a relief.</p>
<p>The experiences of the next day will remain for ever in my memory etched,
as it were, in sepia. My guide was a younger officer who had seen heroic
service, and I wondered constantly how his delicate frame had survived in
the trenches the constant hardship of such weather as now, warmly wrapped
and with the car-curtains drawn, we faced. The inevitable, relentless rain
of that region had set in again, the rain in which our own soldiers will
have to fight, and the skies were of a darkness seldom known in America.
The countryside was no longer smiling. After some two hours of progress we
came, in that devastated district near the front, to an expanse where many
monsters were clumsily cavorting like dinosaurs in primeval slime. At some
distance from the road others stood apparently tethered in line, awaiting
their turn for exercise. These were the far-famed tanks. Their commander,
or chief mahout—as I was inclined to call him—was a cheerful
young giant of colonial origin, who has often driven them serenely across
No Man's Land and into the German trenches. He had been expecting us, and
led me along a duck board over the morass, to where one of these
leviathans was awaiting us. You crawl through a greasy hole in the bottom,
and the inside is as full of machinery as the turret of the Pennsylvania,
and you grope your way to the seat in front beside that of the captain and
conductor, looking out through a slot in the armour over a waste of water
and mud. From here you are supposed to operate a machine gun. Behind you
two mechanics have started the engines with a deafening roar, above which
are heard the hoarse commands of the captain as he grinds in his gears.
Then you realize that the thing is actually moving, that the bosses on the
belt have managed to find a grip on the slime—and presently you come
to the brink of what appears, to your exaggerated sense of perception, a
bottomless chasm, with distant steep banks on the farther side that look
unattainable and insurmountable. It is an old German trench which the
rains have worn and widened. You brace yourself, you grip desperately a
pair of brass handles in front of you, while leviathan hesitates, seems to
sit up on his haunches, and then gently buries his nose in the pasty clay
and paws his way upward into the field beyond. It was like sitting in a
huge rocking-chair. That we might have had a bump, and a bone-breaking
one, I was informed after I had left the scene of the adventure. It all
depends upon the skill of the driver. The monsters are not as tractable as
they seem.</p>
<p>That field in which the tanks manoeuvre is characteristic of the whole of
this district of levelled villages and vanished woods. Imagine a
continuous clay vacant lot in one of our Middle Western cities on the
rainiest day you can recall; and further imagine, on this limitless lot, a
network of narrow-gauge tracks and wagon roads, a scattering of
contractors' shanties, and you will have some idea of the daily life and
surroundings of one of oar American engineer regiments, which is running a
railroad behind the British front. Yet one has only to see these men and
talk with them to be convinced of the truth that human happiness and even
human health thanks to modern science—are not dependent upon an
existence in a Garden of Eden. I do not mean exactly that these men would
choose to spend the rest of their existences in this waste, but they are
happy in the consciousness of a job well done. It was really inspiring to
encounter here the familiar conductors and brakemen, engineers and
firemen, who had voluntarily, and for an ideal, left their homes in a
remote and peaceful republic three thousand miles away, to find
contentment and a new vitality, a wider vision, in the difficult and
dangerous task they were performing. They were frequently under fire—when
they brought back the wounded or fetched car-loads of munitions to the
great guns on the ridiculous little trains of flat cars with open-work
wheels, which they named—with American humour—the Federal
Express and the Twentieth Century Limited. And their officers were equally
happy. Their colonel, of our regular Army Engineer Corps, was one of those
broad-shouldered six-footers who, when they walk the streets of Paris,
compel pedestrians to turn admiringly and give one a new pride in the
manhood of our nation. Hospitably he drew us out of the wind and rain into
his little hut, and sat us down beside the stove, cheerfully informing us
that, only the night before, the gale had blown his door in, and his roof
had started for the German lines. In a neighbouring hut, reached by a duck
board, we had lunch with him and his officers baked beans and pickles,
cakes and maple syrup. The American food, the American jokes and voices in
that environment seemed strange indeed! But as we smoked and chatted about
the friends we had in common, about political events at home and the
changes that were taking place there, it seemed as if we were in America
once more. The English officer listened and smiled in sympathy, and he
remarked, after our reluctant departure, that America was an extraordinary
land.</p>
<p>He directed our chauffeur to Bapaume, across that wilderness which the
Germans had so wantonly made in their retreat to the Hindenburg line.
Nothing could have been more dismal than our slow progress in the steady
rain, through the deserted streets of this town. Home after home had been
blasted—their intimate yet harrowing interiors were revealed. The
shops and cafes, which had been thoroughly looted, had their walls blown
out, but in many cases the signs of the vanished and homeless proprietors
still hung above the doors. I wondered how we should feel in New England
if such an outrage had been done to Boston, for instance, or little
Concord! The church, the great cathedral on its terrace, the bishop's
house, all dynamited, all cold and wet and filthy ruins! It was dismal,
indeed, but scarcely more dismal than that which followed; for at Bapaume
we were on the edge of the battle-field of the Somme. And I chanced to
remember that the name had first been indelibly impressed on my
consciousness at a comfortable breakfast-table at home, where I sat
looking out on a bright New England garden. In the headlines and columns
of my morning newspaper I had read again and again, during the summer of
1916, of Thiepval and La Boisselle, of Fricourt and Mametz and the Bois
des Trones. Then they had had a sinister but remote significance; now I
was to see them, or what was left of them!</p>
<p>As an appropriate and characteristic setting for the tragedy which had
happened here, the indigo afternoon could not have been better chosen.
Description fails to do justice to the abomination of desolation of that
vast battle-field in the rain, and the imagination, refuses to reconstruct
the scene of peace—the chateaux and happy villages, the forests and
pastures, that flourished here so brief a time ago. In my fancy the long,
low swells of land, like those of some dreary sea, were for the moment the
subsiding waves of the cataclysm that had rolled here and extinguished all
life. Beside the road only the blood-red soil betrayed the sites of
powdered villages; and through it, in every direction, trenches had been
cut. Between the trenches the earth was torn and tortured, as though some
sudden fossilizing process, in its moment of supreme agony, had fixed it
thus. On the hummocks were graves, graves marked by wooden crosses, others
by broken rifles thrust in the ground. Shattered gun-carriages lay in the
ditches, modern cannon that had cost priceless hours of skilled labour;
and once we were confronted by one of those monsters, wounded to the
death, I had seen that morning. The sight of this huge, helpless thing
oddly recalled the emotions I had felt, as a child, when contemplating
dead elephants in a battle picture of the army of a Persian king.</p>
<p>Presently, like the peak of some submerged land, we saw lifted out of that
rolling waste the "Butt" of Warlencourt—the burial-mound of this
modern Marathon. It is honeycombed with dugouts in which the Germans who
clung to it found their graves, while the victorious British army swept
around it toward Bapaume. Everywhere along that road, which runs like an
arrow across the battle-field to Albert, were graves. Repetition seems the
only method of giving an adequate impression of their numbers; and near
what was once the village of Pozieres was the biggest grave of all, a
crater fifty feet deep and a hundred feet across. Seven months the British
sappers had toiled far below in the chalk, digging the passage and
chamber; and one summer dawn, like some tropical volcano, it had burst
directly under the German trench. Long we stood on the slippery edge of
it, gazing down at the tangled wire and litter of battle that strewed the
bottom, while the rain fell pitilessly. Just such rain, said my
officer-guide, as had drenched this country through the long winter months
of preparation. "We never got dry," he told me; and added with a smile, in
answer to my query: "Perhaps that was the reason we never caught colds."</p>
<p>When we entered Albert, the starting point of the British advance, there
was just light enough to see the statue of the Virgin leaning far above us
over the street. The church-tower on which it had once stood erect had
been struck by a German shell, but its steel rod had bent and not broken.
Local superstition declares that when the Virgin of Albert falls the war
will be ended.</p>
<p>IV</p>
<p>I come home impressed with the fact that Britain has learned more from
this war than any other nation, and will probably gain more by that
knowledge. We are all wanting, of course, to know what we shall get out of
it, since it was forced upon us; and of course the only gain worth
considering—as many of those to whom its coming has brought home the
first glimmerings of social science are beginning to see—is
precisely a newly acquired vision of the art of self-government. It has
been unfortunately necessary—or perhaps fortunately necessary—for
the great democracies to turn their energies and resources and the
inventive ingenuity of their citizens to the organization of armies and
indeed of entire populations to the purpose of killing enough Germans to
remove democracy's exterior menace. The price we pay in human life is
appallingly unfortunate. But the necessity for national organization
socializes the nation capable of it; or, to put the matter more truly, if
the socializing process had anticipated the war—as it had in Great
Britain—the ability to complete it under stress is the test of a
democratic nation; and hence the test of democracy, since the socializing
process becomes international. Britain has stood the test, even from the
old-fashioned militarist point of view, since it is apparent that no
democracy can wage a sustained great war unless it is socialized. After
the war she will probably lead all other countries in a sane and
scientific liberalization. The encouraging fact is that not in spite of
her liberalism, but because of it, she has met military Germany on her own
ground and, to use a vigorous expression, gone her one better. In 1914, as
armies go today, the British Army was a mere handful of men whose officers
belonged to a military caste. Brave men and brave officers, indeed! But at
present it is a war organization of an excellence which the Germans never
surpassed. I have no space to enter into a description of the amazing
system, of the network of arteries converging at the channel ports and
spreading out until it feeds and clothes every man of those millions,
furnishes him with newspapers and tobacco, and gives him the greatest
contentment compatible with the conditions under which he has to live. The
number of shells flung at the enemy is only limited by the lives of the
guns that fire them. I should like to tell with what swiftness, under the
stress of battle, the wounded are hurried back to the coast and even to
England itself. I may not state the thousands carried on leave every day
across the channel and back again—in spite of submarines. But I went
one day through Saint Omer, with its beautiful church and little blue
chateau, past the rest-camps of the big regiments of guards to a seaport
on the downs, formerly a quiet little French town, transformed now into an
ordered Babel. The term is paradoxical, but I let it stand. English,
Irish, and Scotch from the British Isles and the ends of the earth mingle
there with Indians, Egyptians, and the chattering Mongolians in queer fur
caps who work in the bakeries.</p>
<p>I went through one of these bakeries, almost as large as an automobile
factory, fragrant with the aroma of two hundred thousand loaves of bread.
This bakery alone sends every day to the trenches two hundred thousand
loaves made from the wheat of western Canada! Of all sights to be seen in
this place, however, the reclamation "plant" is the most wonderful. It
covers acres. Everything which is broken in war, from a pair of officer's
field-glasses to a nine-inch howitzer carriage is mended here—if it
can be mended. Here, when a battle-field is cleared, every article that
can possibly be used again is brought; and the manager pointed with pride
to the furnaces in his power-house, which formerly burned coal and now are
fed with refuse—broken wheels of gun-carriages, sawdust, and even
old shoes. Hundreds of French girls and even German prisoners are resoling
and patching shoes with the aid of American machinery, and even the uppers
of such as are otherwise hopeless are cut in spirals into laces. Tunics,
breeches, and overcoats are mended by tailors; rusty camp cookers are
retinned, and in the foundries the precious scraps of cast iron are melted
into braziers to keep Tommy in the trenches warm. In the machine-shops the
injured guns and cannon are repaired. German prisoners are working there,
too. At a distance, in their homely grey tunics, with their bullet-shaped
heads close-cropped and the hairs standing out like the needles of a
cylinder of a music-box, they had the appearance of hard citizens who had
become rather sullen convicts. Some wore spectacles. A closer view
revealed that most of them were contented, and some actually cheerful.
None, indeed, seemed more cheerful than a recently captured group I saw
later, who were actually building the barbed-wire fence that was to
confine them.</p>
<p>My last visit in this town was to the tiny but on a "corner lot," in which
the Duchess of Sutherland has lived now for some years. As we had tea she
told me she was going on a fortnight's leave to England; and no Tommy in
the trenches could have been more excited over the prospect. Her own
hospital, which occupies the rest of the lot, is one of those marvels
which individual initiative and a strong social sense such as hers has
produced in this war. Special enterprise was required to save such
desperate cases as are made a specialty of here, and all that medical and
surgical science can do has been concentrated, with extraordinary success,
on the shattered men who are brought to her wards. That most of the
horrible fractures I saw are healed, and healed quickly—thanks
largely to the drainage system of our own Doctor Carrel—is not the
least of the wonders of the remarkable times in which we live.</p>
<p>The next day, Sunday, I left for Paris, bidding farewell regretfully to
the last of my British-officer hosts. He seemed like an old, old friend—though
I had known him but a few days. I can see him now as he waved me a
good-bye from the platform in his Glengarry cap and short tunic and plaid
trousers. He is the owner of a castle and some seventy square miles of
land in Scotland alone. For the comfort of his nation's guests, he toils
like a hired courier.</p>
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