<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3>DESPERATE FIGHTING IN ESSEX.</h3>
<p>London was at a standstill. Trade was entirely stopped.
Shopkeepers feared to open their doors on account of
the fierce, hungry mobs parading the street. Orators
were haranguing the crowds in almost every open space.
The police were either powerless, or feared to come into
collision with the assembled populace. Terror and
blank despair were everywhere.</p>
<p>There was unrest night and day. The banks, head
offices, and branches, unable to withstand the run upon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
them when every one demanded to be paid in gold, had,
by mutual arrangement, shut their doors, leaving excited
and furious crowds of customers outside unpaid.
Financial ruin stared every one in the face. Those who
were fortunate enough to realise their securities on
Monday were fleeing from London south and westward.
Day and night the most extraordinary scenes of frantic
fear were witnessed at Paddington, Victoria, Waterloo,
and London Bridge. The southern railways were badly
disorganised by the cutting of the lines by the enemy,
but the Great Western system was, up to the present,
intact, and carried thousands upon thousands to Wales,
to Devonshire, and to Cornwall.</p>
<p>In those three hot, breathless days the Red Hand of
Ruin spread out upon London.</p>
<p>The starving East met the terrified West, but in those
moments the bonds of terror united class with mass.
Restaurants and theatres were closed; there was but
little vehicular traffic in the streets, for of horses there
were none, while the majority of the motor 'buses
had been requisitioned, and the transit of goods had
been abandoned. "The City," that great army of
daily workers, both male and female, was out of employment,
and swelled the idlers and gossips, whose temper
and opinion were swayed each half-hour by the papers
now constantly appearing night and day without cessation.</p>
<p>Cabinet Councils had been held every day, but their
decisions, of course, never leaked out to the public.
The King also held Privy Councils, and various
measures were decided upon. Parliament, which had
been hurriedly summoned, was due to meet, and every
one speculated as to the political crisis that must now
ensue.</p>
<p>In St. James's Park, in Hyde Park, in Victoria Park,
on Hampstead Heath, in Greenwich Park—in fact, in
each of the "lungs of London,"—great mass meetings
were held, at which resolutions were passed condemning
the Administration and eulogising those who, at the
first alarm, had so gallantly died in defence of their
country.</p>
<p>It was declared that by the culpable negligence of the
War Office and the National Defence Committee we had
laid ourselves open to complete ruin, both financially
and as a nation.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The man-in-the-street already felt the strain, for the
lack of employment and the sudden rise in the price
of everything had brought him up short. Wives and
families were crying for food, and those without savings
and with only a few pounds put by looked grimly into
the future and at the mystery it presented.</p>
<p>Most of the papers published the continuation of the
important story of Mr. Alexander, the Mayor of Maldon,
which revealed the extent of the enemy's operations in
Essex and the strong position they occupied.</p>
<p>It ran as below:</p>
<p>"Of the events of the early hours of the morning I
have no very clear recollection. I was bewildered,
staggered, dumbfounded by the sights and sounds which
beset me. Of what modern war meant I had till then
truly but a very faint idea. To witness its horrid realities
enacted in this quiet, out-of-the-way spot where I
had pitched my tent for so many years, brought them
home to me literally as well as metaphorically.</p>
<p>"I had run down Cromwell Hill, and seeing the
flames of Heybridge, was impelled to get nearer, if possible,
to discover more particularly the state of affairs
in that direction. But I was reckoning without the
Germans. When I got to the bridge over the river at the
foot of the hill, the officer in charge there absolutely
prevented my crossing. Beyond the soldiers standing
or kneeling behind whatever cover was offered by the
walls and buildings abutting on the riverside, and a
couple of machine guns placed so as to command the
bridge and the road beyond, there was nothing much to
see. A number of Germans were, however, very busy
in the big mill just across the river, but what they were
doing I could not make out. As I turned to retrace my step
the glare of the conflagration grew suddenly more and more
intense. A mass of dark figures came running down the
brightly illuminated road towards the bridge, while
the rifle fire became louder, nearer, and heavier than
ever. Every now and again the air became alive with,
as it were, the hiss and buzz of flying insects. The
English must have fought their way through Heybridge,
and these must be the bullets from their rifles. It was
dangerous to stay down there any longer, so I took
to my heels. As I ran I heard a thundering explosion
behind me, the shock of which nearly threw me to the
ground. Looking over my shoulder, I saw that the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
Germans had blown up the mill at the farther end of the
bridge, and were now pushing carts from either side in
order to barricade it. The two Maxims, too, began to
pump lead with their hammering reports, and the men
near them commenced to fall in twos and threes. I made
off to the left, and passed into High Street by the end
of St. Peter's Church, now disused. At the corner I ran
against Mr. Clydesdale, the optician, who looks after
the library which now occupies the old building. He
pointed to the tower, which stood darkly up against
the blood-red sky.</p>
<p>"'Look at those infernal Germans!' he said. 'They
can't even keep out of that old place. I wish we could
have got the books out before they came.'</p>
<p>"I could not see any of our invaders where he was
pointing, but presently I became aware of a little winking,
blinking light at the very summit of the tower.</p>
<p>"'That's them,' said Clydesdale. 'They're making
signals, I think. My boy says he saw the same thing
on Purleigh Church tower last night. I wish it would
come down with them, that I do. It's pretty shaky,
anyway.'</p>
<p>"The street was fairly full of people. The Germans, it
is true, had ordered that no one should be out of doors
between eight in the evening and six in the morning;
but just now they appeared to have their hands pretty
full elsewhere, and if any of the few soldiers that were
about knew of or thought anything of the interdiction,
they said nothing.</p>
<p>"The crash of a salvo of heavy guns from the direction
of my own house interrupted him.</p>
<p>"'That'll be the guns in my garden,' I said.</p>
<p>"'Yes, sir, and they've got three monstrous great ones
in the opening between the houses just behind the
church there,' said Clydesdale.</p>
<p>"As he spoke, the guns in question bellowed out, one
after the other.</p>
<p>"'Look—look at the tower!' I cried.</p>
<p>"The light at the top had disappeared and the lofty
edifice was swaying slowly, slowly, over to the left.</p>
<p>"'She's gone at last!' exclaimed Clydesdale.</p>
<p>"It was true. Down came the old steeple that had
pointed heavenward for so many generations, with a
mighty crash and concussion that swallowed up even the
noise of the battle, though cannon of all sorts and sizes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
were now joining in the hellish concert, and shell from
the English batteries began to roar over the town. The
vibration and shock of the heavy guns had been too
much for the old tower, which, for years in a tottery
condition, had been patched up so often.</p>
<p>"As soon as the cloud of dust cleared off we ran towards
the huge pile of débris that filled the little churchyard.
Several other people followed. It was very dark
down there, in the shadow of the trees and houses,
despite the fire-light overhead, and we began striking
matches as we looked about among the heaps of bricks
and beams to see if there were any of the German signal
party among them. Why we should have taken the
trouble under the circumstances I do not quite know.
It was an instinctive movement of humanity on my
part, and that of most of the others, I suppose.</p>
<p>"I caught sight of an arm in a light blue sleeve protruding
from the débris, and took hold of it in a futile
attempt to remove some of the bricks and rubbish which
I thought were covering the body of its owner. To my
horror, it came away in my hand. The body to which
it belonged might be buried yards away in the immense
heap of ruins. I dropped it with a cry, and fled from the
spot.</p>
<p>"Dawn was now breaking. I do not exactly remember
where I wandered to after the fall of St. Peter's Tower,
but it must have been between half-past five and six
when I found myself on the high ground at the north-western
corner of the town, overlooking the golf links,
where I had spent so many pleasant hours in that recent
past that now seemed so far away. All around me were
batteries, trenches, and gun-pits. But though the firing
was still going on somewhere away to the right, where
Heybridge poured black smoke skyward like a volcano,
gun and howitzer were silent, and their attendant artillerymen,
instead of being in cover behind their earthen
parapets, were clustered on the top, watching intently
something that was passing in the valley below them.
So absorbed were they that I was able to creep up behind
them, and also get a sight of what was taking place.
And this is what I saw:</p>
<p>"Over the railway bridge which spanned the river a
little to the left were hurrying battalion after battalion
of green and blue clad German infantry. They moved
down the embankment after crossing, and continued<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
their march behind it. Where the railway curved to the
right and left, about half a mile beyond the bridge, the
top of the embankment was lined with dark figures
lying down and apparently firing, while over the golf
course from the direction of Beeleigh trotted squadron
after squadron of sky-blue riders, their green and white
lance pennons fluttering in the breeze. They crossed
the Blackwater and Chelmer Canal, and cantered off
in the direction of Langford Rectory.</p>
<p>"At the same time I saw line after line of the Germans
massed behind the embankment spring over it
and advance rapidly towards the lower portion of the
town, just across the river. Hundreds fell under the
fire from the houses, which must have been full of
Englishmen, but one line after another reached the
buildings. The firing was now heavier than ever—absolutely
incessant and continuous—though, except for an
occasional discharge from beyond Heybridge, the artillery
was silent.</p>
<p>"I have but little knowledge of military matters, but
it was abundantly evident, even to me, that what I had
just seen was a very formidable counter-attack on the
part of the Germans, who had brought up fresh troops
either from the rear of the town or from farther inland,
and launched them against the English under cover of
the railway embankment. I was not able to see the end
of the encounter, but bad news flies apace, and it soon
became common knowledge in the town that our troops
from Colchester had not only failed to cross the river at
any point, but had been driven helter-skelter out of
the lower town near the station and from the smoking
ruins of Heybridge with great loss, and were now in
full retreat.</p>
<p>"Indeed, some hundreds of our khaki-clad fellow-countrymen
were marched through the town an hour or
two later as prisoners, to say nothing of the numbers
of wounded, who, together with those belonging to the
Germans, soon began to crowd every available building
suitable for use as an hospital. The wounded prisoners
with their escort went off towards Mundon, and are reported
to have gone in the direction of Steeple. It was
altogether a disastrous day, and our hopes, which had
begun to rise when the British had penetrated into the
northern part of the town, now fell below zero.</p>
<p>"It was a black day for us, and for England. During<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
the morning the same officer who had captured me on
the golf course came whirling into Maldon on a 24-h.p.
Mercedes car. He drove straight up to my house, and
informed me that he had orders to conduct me to Prince
Henry, who was to be at Purleigh early in the afternoon.</p>
<p>"'Was it in connection with the skirmish with the
Volunteers?' I asked.</p>
<p>"'I don't know,' was the reply. 'But I don't fancy
so. In the meantime, could I write here for an hour
or two?' he asked politely. 'I have much to write to
my friends in Germany, and have not had a minute up
to now.'</p>
<p>"I was very glad to be able to oblige the young man
in such a small way, and left him in my study till midday,
very busy with pens, ink, and paper.</p>
<p>"After a makeshift of a lunch, the car came round,
and we got into the back seat. In front sat his orderly
and the chauffeur, a fierce-looking personage in a semi-military
uniform. We ran swiftly down the High Street,
and in a few minutes were spinning along the Purleigh
Road, where I saw much that amazed me. I then for
the first time realised how absolutely complete were the
German plans."</p>
<div class="right">
"<span class="smcap">Tuesday</span>, <i>September 4</i>.</div>
<p>"About six o'clock this morning I awoke rather suddenly.
The wind had gone round to the northward, and
I was certain that heavy firing was going on somewhere
in that direction. I opened the window and looked out.
The 'thud' and rumble of a cannonade, with the accompaniment
of an occasional burst of musketry, came
clearly and loudly on the wind from the hills by Wickham
Bishops village. The church spire was in plain
view, and little faint puffs and rings of grey smoke were
just visible in its vicinity every now and again, sometimes
high up in the air, at others among the trees at
its base. They were exploding shells; I had no doubt
of that. What was going on it was impossible to say,
but I conjectured that some of our troops from Colchester
had come into collision with the Germans, who
had gone out in that direction the day of their arrival.
The firing continued for about an hour, and then died
away.</p>
<p>"Soon after eight, Count von Ohrendorff, the general
officer commanding the 32nd Division, who appeared to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
be the supreme authority here, sent for me, and suggested
that I should take steps to arrange for the manufacture
of lint and bandages by the ladies living in the
town. I could see no reason for objecting to this, and
so promised to carry out his suggestion. I set about
the matter at once, and, with the assistance of my wife,
soon had a couple of score of more or less willing workers
busily engaged in the National Schoolroom. In the
meantime the roll of a terrible cannonade had burst
forth again from Wickham Bishops. It seemed louder
and more insistent than ever. As soon as I got away
from the schools I hurried home and climbed out on
the roof. The top of the Moot Hall and other coigns of
vantage had all been occupied by the Germans. However,
with the aid of a pair of field-glasses I was able to see
a good bit. Black smoke was now pouring from Wickham
Bishops in clouds, and every now and again I
fancied I could see the forked tongues of flame shooting
up above the surrounding trees. A series of scattered
black dots now came out on the open ground to the
south of the church. The trees of Eastland Wood soon
hid them from my sight, but others followed, mingled
with little moving black blocks which I took to be
formed bodies of troops. After them came four or five
guns, driven at breakneck pace towards the road that
passes between Eastland and Captain's Woods, then
more black dots, also in a desperate hurry. Several of
these last tumbled, and lay still here and there all over
the slope.</p>
<p>"Other dots followed at their heels. They were not
quite so distinct. I looked harder. Hurrah! They were
men in khaki. We were hustling these Germans at last.
They also disappeared behind the woods. Then from the
fringe of trees about Wickham half a dozen big brilliant
flashes, followed after an interval by the loud detonation
of heavy cannon. I could not distinguish much
more, though the rattle of battle went on for some time
longer. Soon after eleven four German guns galloped
in from Heybridge. These were followed by a procession
of maimed and limping humanity. Some managed to
get along unaided, though with considerable difficulty.
Others were supported by a comrade, some carried between
two men, and others borne along on stretchers.
A couple of ambulance carts trotted out and picked up
more wounded. Our bandages and lint had not long to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>
wait before being required. After this there was a cessation
of firing.</p>
<p>"About one o'clock the German general sent word to
me that he thought an attack quite possible during the
afternoon, and that he strongly advised me to get all
the women and children out of the town—for the time
being at any rate. This was evidently well meant, but
it was a pretty difficult matter to arrange for, to say
nothing of raising a panic among the inhabitants. However,
in an hour and a half's time I had contrived to
marshal several hundred of them together, and to get
them out on the road to Mundon. The weather was
warm for the time of the year, and I thought, if the
worst came to the worst, they could spend the night
in the old church. I left the sad little column of
exiles—old, bent women helped along by their daughters,
tiny children dragged along through the dust, clutching
their mothers' skirts; infants in arms; and other older
and sturdier children staggering beneath the weight of
the most precious home adornments—and made the
best of my way back to arrange for the forwarding to
them of their rations.</p>
<p>"At every step on my homeward way I expected to
hear the cannonade begin again. But beyond the
twittering of the birds in the trees and hedgerows, the
creak and rumble of a passing cart, and the rush of a
train along the railway on my left—just the usual
sounds of the countryside—nothing broke the stillness.
As I stepped out on the familiar highway, I could
almost bring myself to believe that the events of the
past twenty-four hours were but the phantasmagoria of
a dream. After interviewing some of the town councillors
who were going to undertake the transport of
provisions to the women and children at Mundon, I
walked round to my own house.</p>
<p>"My wife and family had driven over to Purleigh on
the first alarm, and had arranged to stay the night with
some friends, on whatever shake-downs could be improvised,
since every house in the peninsula harboured
some of the ubiquitous German officers and men. I
wandered through the familiar rooms, and came out
into the garden, or rather, what had been the garden.
There I saw that the Saxon gunners were all standing
to their pieces, and one of my none too welcome guests
accosted me as I left the house.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"'If you'll take my advice, sare, you'll get away out
of this,' he said in broken English.</p>
<p>"'What! are you going to fire?' I asked.</p>
<p>"'I don't fancy so. It wouldn't hurt you if we were.
But I think your English friends from Colchester are
about to see if they can draw us.'</p>
<p>"As he spoke I became aware of a sharp, hissing
noise like a train letting off steam. It grew louder and
nearer, passed over our heads, and was almost instantly
followed by a terrible crash somewhere behind the
house. A deeper and more muffled report came up
from the valley beyond Heybridge.</p>
<p>"'Well, they've begun now, and the best thing you can
do is to get down into that gun epaulment there,' said
the German officer.</p>
<p>"I thought his advice was good, and I lost no time
in following it.</p>
<p>"'Here comes another!' cried he, as he jumped down
into the pit beside me. 'We'll have plenty of them
now.'</p>
<p>"So we did. Shell after shell came hissing and screaming
at us over the tree-tops in the gardens lower down
the hill. Each one of them sounded to me as if it were
coming directly at my head, but one after another passed
over us to burst beyond. The gunners all crouched
close to the earthen parapet—and so did I. I am not
ashamed to say so. My German officer, however, occasionally
climbed to the top of the embankment and
studied the prospect through his field-glasses. At
length there was a loud detonation, and a column of
dirt and smoke in the garden next below us. Then two
shells struck the parapet of the gun-pit on our left
almost simultaneously. Their explosion was deafening,
and we were covered with the dust and stones they
threw up.</p>
<p>"Immediately afterwards another shell passed so close
over our heads that I felt my hair lift. It just cleared
the parapet and plunged into the side of my house. A
big hole appeared just to the right of the dining-room
window, and through it came instantaneously the loud
bang of the explosion. The glass was shattered in all
the windows, and thick smoke, white and black, came
curling from every one of them.</p>
<p>"'The house is on fire!' I shouted, and sprang madly
from the pit. Heedless of the bombardment, I rushed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
into the building. Another crash sounded overhead as
I entered, and a blaze of light shone down the stairway
for an instant. Another projectile had found a
billet in my home. I tried to make my way to my study,
but found the passage blocked with fallen beams and
ceiling. What with the smoke and dust, and the blocking
of some of the windows, it was very dark in the hall,
and I got quite a shock when, as I looked about me to
find my way, I saw two red, glittering specks shining
over the top of a heap of débris. But the howl that
followed told me that they were nothing but the eyes
of miserable Tim, the cat, who, left behind, had been
nearly frightened out of his senses by the noise and concussion
of the bursting shell. As I gazed at him
another projectile struck the house quite close to us.
Tim was simply smashed by a flying fragment. I was
thrown down, and half-buried under a shower of bricks
and mortar. I think that I must have lost consciousness
for a time.</p>
<p>"The next thing I recollect was being dragged out
into the garden by a couple of Saxons. I had a
splitting headache, and was very glad of a glass of
water that one of them handed to me. Their officer,
who appeared to be quite a decent fellow, offered me his
flask.</p>
<p>"'The house is all right,' he said, with his strong
accent. 'It caught fire once, but we managed to get it
under. Your friends have cleared off—at any rate for
the present. They got too bold at last, and pushed their
guns down till they got taken in the flank by the warship
in the river. They had two of their pieces knocked to
bits, and then cleared out. Best thing you can do is
to do the same.'</p>
<p>"I was in two minds. I could not save the house by
staying, and might just as well join my people at
Purleigh Rectory. On the other hand, I felt that it
would better become me, as Mayor, to stick to the town.
Duty triumphed, and I decided to remain where I was—at
least for the present. All was now quiet, and after
an early supper I turned in, and, despite the excitement
of the day and my aching head, was asleep the moment
I touched the pillow."</p>
<div class="right">
"<span class="smcap">Wednesday</span>, <i>September 5</i>.</div>
<p>"It must have been about three in the morning when
I awoke. My head was much better, and for a minute or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
two I lay comfortably in the darkness, without any recollection
of the events of the preceding day. Then I
saw a bright reflection pass rapidly over the ceiling. I
wondered vaguely what it was. Presently it came back
again, paused a moment, and disappeared. By this
time I was wide awake. I went to the window and
looked out. It was quite dark, but from somewhere over
beyond Heybridge a long white ray was sweeping all
along this side of Maldon. Now the foliage of a tree
in the garden below would stand out in pale green
radiance against the blackness; now the wall of a house
half a mile away would reflect back the moving beam,
shining white as a sheet of notepaper.</p>
<p>"Presently another ray shone out, and the two of
them, moving backwards and forwards, made the whole
of our hillside caper in a dizzy dance. From somewhere
far away to my right another stronger beam now
streamed through the obscurity, directed apparently at
the sources of the other two, and almost simultaneously
came the crack of a rifle from the direction of Heybridge,
sharp and ominous in the quiet darkness of the
night. Half a dozen scattered shots followed; then a
faint cheer. More and more rifles joined in, and presently
the burring tap-tap-tap of a Maxim. I hurried on
my clothes. The firing increased in volume and rapidity;
bugles rang out here, there, and everywhere through the
sleeping town, and above the rolling, rattling clamour
of the drums I could distinguish the hurried tramp of
hundreds of feet.</p>
<p>"I cast one glance from the window as I quitted
the room. The electric searchlights had increased to
at least half a dozen. Some reached out long, steady
fingers into the vague spaces of the night, while others
wandered restlessly up and down, hither and thither.
Low down over the trees of the garden a dull red glare
slowly increased in extent and intensity. The rattle of
musketry was now absolutely continuous. As I ran out
of the house into the street, I was nearly carried off my
feet by the rush of a battalion that was pouring down
Cromwell Hill at the double. Hardly knowing what I
did, I followed in their wake. The glare in front got
brighter and brighter. A few steps, and I could see the
cause of it. The whole of Heybridge appeared to be on
fire, the flames roaring skywards from a dozen different
conflagrations."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>England halted breathless. Fighting had commenced
in real earnest.</p>
<p>The greatest consternation was caused by the publication
in the "Times" of the description of the operations
in Essex, written by Mr. Henry Bentley, the distinguished
war correspondent, who had served that journal
in every campaign since Kitchener had entered
Khartum.</p>
<p>All other papers, without exception, contained various
accounts of the British defence at the point nearest
London, but they were mostly of the scrappy and sensational
order, based more on report than upon actual
fact. The "Times" account, however, had been written
with calm impartiality by one of the most experienced
correspondents at the front. Whether he had been
afforded any special facilities was not apparent, but, in
any case, it was the most complete and truthful account
of the gallant attempt on the part of our soldiers to
check the advance from Essex westward.</p>
<p>During the whole of that hot, stifling day it was
known that a battle was raging, and the excitement
everywhere was intense.</p>
<p>The public were in anxious terror as the hours crept
by, until the first authentic news of the result of the
operations was printed in a special evening edition of
the "Times," as follows:</p>
<div class="right">
"(From our War Correspondent.)<br/>
"<span class="smcap">Danbury, Essex</span>, <i>September 8</i>.</div>
<p>"To-day has been a momentous one for England. The
great battle has raged since dawn, and though just at
present there seems to be a lull, during which the
opposing forces are, so to speak, regaining their breath,
it can be by no means over.</p>
<p>"Dead and living alike will lie out on the battlefield
the whole night through, for we must hold on to the
positions so hardly won, and be ready to press forward
at the first glimmer of daylight. Our gallant troops,
Regular and Volunteers alike, have nobly vindicated
the traditions of our race, and have fought as desperately
as ever did their forebears at Agincourt, Albuera,
or Waterloo. But while a considerable success—paid for,
alas! by the loss of thousands of gallant lives—has been
achieved, it will take at least another day's hard fighting
before victory is in our grasp. Nowadays a soldier need
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>not expect to be either victorious or finally defeated by
nightfall, and although this battle, fought as it is between
much smaller forces, and extending over a much
more limited area, than the great engagement between
the Russians and Japanese at Liaoyang, will not take
quite so long a time to decide, the end is not yet
in sight. I wrote this after a hard day's travelling backwards
and forwards behind our advancing line of battle.</p>
<p>"I took my cycle with me in my motor-car, and whenever
opportunity offered mounted it, and pushed forward
as near to the fighting as I could get. Frequently I had
to leave the cycle also, and crawl forward on hands
and knees, sheltering in some depression in the ground,
while the enemy's bullets whined and whistled overhead.
As reported in a previous issue, the Army which
had assembled at Brentwood moved forward on the 5th.</p>
<p>"During the afternoon the advanced troops succeeded
in driving the enemy out of South Hanningfield, and
before sundown they were also in full retreat from the
positions they had held at East Hanningfield and Danbury.
There was some stiff fighting at the latter place, but
after a pounding from the artillery, who brought several
batteries into action on the high ground north-west of
East Hanningfield, the Germans were unable to withstand
the attack of the Argyll and Sutherlands and the
London Scottish, who worked their way through Danbury
Park and Hall Wood right into their position,
driving them from their entrenchments by a dashing
bayonet charge. Everything north and east of the
enemy's main position, which is now known to lie north
and south, between Maldon and the river Crouch, was
now in our hands, but his troops still showed a stout
front at Wickford, and were also reported to be at Rayleigh,
Hockley, and Canewdon, several miles to the
eastward. All preparations were made to assault the
German position at Wickford at daybreak to-day, but
our scouts found that the place had been evacuated.
The news that Rayleigh and Hockley had also been abandoned
by the enemy came in shortly afterwards. The
German invaders had evidently completed their arrangements
for the defence of their main position, and now
said, in effect, 'Come on, and turn us out if you can.'</p>
<p>"It was no easy task that lay before our gallant defenders.
Maldon, perched on a high knoll, with a network
of river and canal protecting it from assault from
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>the northward, fairly bristles with guns, many of them
heavy field howitzers, and has, as we know to our cost,
already repulsed one attack by our troops. Farther
south there are said to be many guns on the knolls
about Purleigh. Great Canney Hill, standing boldly
up like an immense redoubt, is reported to be seamed
with entrenchments mounting many heavy guns. The
railway embankment south of Maldon forms a perfect
natural rampart along part of the enemy's position,
while the woods and enclosures south-west of Great
Canney conceal thousands of sharpshooters. A sort of
advanced position was occupied by the enemy at Edwin
Hall, a mile east of Woodham Ferrers, where a pair of
high kopjes a quarter of a mile apart offered command
and cover to some of their field batteries.</p>
<p>"Our scouts have discovered also that an elaborate
system of wire entanglements and other military obstacles
protects almost the whole front of the somewhat extensive
German position. On its extreme left their line
is said to be thrown back at an angle, so that any
attempt to outflank it would not only entail crossing the
river Crouch, but would come under the fire of batteries
placed on the high ground overlooking it. Altogether,
it is a very tough nut to crack, and the force at our
disposal none too strong for the work that lies before it.</p>
<p>"Further detail regarding our strength would be inadvisable
for obvious reasons, but when I point out that
the Germans are supposed to be between thirty and
forty thousand strong, and that it is laid down by competent
military authorities that to attack troops in an
entrenched position a superiority of six to one is advisable,
my readers can draw their own conclusions.</p>
<p>"The repairs to the railway line between Brentwood
and Chelmsford, that had been damaged by the enemy's
cavalry on their first landing, were completed yesterday,
and all night reinforcements had been coming in
by way of Chelmsford and Billericay. The general
headquarters had been established at Danbury, and,
thither I made my way as fast as my car could get
along the roads, blocked as they were by marching
horse, foot, and artillery. I had spent the night at South
Hanningfield, so as to be on the spot for the expected
attack on Wickford; but as soon as I found it was not
to come off, I considered that at Danbury would be the
best chance of finding out what our next move was to be.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Nor was I mistaken. As I ran up to the village I
found the roads full of troops under arms, and everything
denoted action of some kind. I was lucky enough
to come across a friend of mine on the staff—Captain
B——, I will call him—who spared a moment to give me
the tip that a general move forward was commencing, and
that a big battle was imminent. Danbury is situated
on the highest ground for many miles round, and as
it bid fair to be a fine, clear day, I thought I could not
do better than try and get a general look round from
the summit of the church tower before proceeding farther.
But I was informed that the General was up there
with some of his staff and a signalling party, so that
I could not ascend.</p>
<p>"My pass, however, eventually procured me admission
to the little platform, which, by the way, the General
left a moment after my arrival. It was now eight o'clock,
the sun was fairly high in the heavens, and the light
mists that hung about the low ground in the vicinity of
Maldon were fast fading into nothingness. The old
town was plainly distinguishable as a dark silhouette
against the morning light, which, while it illumined
the panorama spread out before me, yet rendered observation
somewhat difficult, since it shone almost directly
into my eyes. However, by the aid of my glasses I was
able to see something of the first moves on the fatal
chess-board where so many thousands of lives are staked
on the bloody game of war.</p>
<p>"I noticed among other things that the lessons of the
recent war in the East had not passed unobserved, for
in all the open spaces on the eastern slope of the hill,
where the roads were not screened by trees or coppices,
lofty erections of hurdles and greenery had been placed
overnight to hide the preliminary movements of our
troops from the glasses of the enemy. Under cover of
these, regiment after regiment of khaki-clad soldiers,
batteries of artillery and ammunition carts, were proceeding
to their allotted posts down the network of
roads and lanes leading to the lower ground towards the
south-east. Two battalions stood in quarter column behind
Thrift Wood. They were kilted corps, probably the
Argylls and the London Scottish. Several field batteries
moved off to the left towards Woodham Walter. Other
battalions took up their position behind Hyde Woods,
farther away to the right, the last of them, the Grenadier
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span>Guards, I fancy, passing behind them and marching
still farther southward.</p>
<p>"Finally, two strong battalions, easily recognised as
marines by their blue war-kit, marched rapidly down
the main road and halted presently behind Woodham
Mortimer Place. All this time there was neither sight
nor sound of the enemy. The birds carolled gaily in
the old elms round my eyrie, the sparrows and martins
piped and twittered in the eaves of the old church,
and the sun shone genially on hill and valley, field and
wood. To all appearance, peace reigned over the
countryside, though the dun masses of troops in
the shadows of the woodlands were suggestive of
the autumn manœuvres. But for all this the 'Real
Thing' was upon us. As I looked, first one, then
another long and widely scattered line of crouching men
in khaki issued from the cover of Hyde Woods and began
slowly to move away towards the east. Then, and
not till then, a vivid violet-white flash blazed out on the
dim grey upland five miles away to the south-east, which
had been pointed out to me as Great Canney, and
almost at once a spout of earth and smoke sprang up a
little way ahead of the advancing British. A dull boom
floated up on the breeze, but was drowned in an ear-splitting
crash somewhere close to me. I felt the old
tower rock under the concussion, which I presently discovered
came from a battery of at least six big 4·7 guns
established just outside the churchyard.</p>
<p>"They were manned by a party of bluejackets, who
had brought them over from Chatham. The movement I
saw developing below me was the first step towards what
I eventually discovered was our main objective—Purleigh.</p>
<p>"Could we succeed in establishing ourselves there,
we should be beyond effective range from Maldon, and
should also take Great Canney in reverse, as well as
the positions on the refused left flank of the enemy.
Maldon, too, would be isolated. Purleigh, therefore, was
the key of the position. Our first move was in this
direction. The scouts were picked men from the Line
battalions, but the firing lines were composed of Volunteers
and, in some cases, Militiamen. It was considered
more politic to reserve the Regulars for the later stages
of the attack. The firing from Canney, and afterwards
from Purleigh, was at first at rather too long a range to
be effective, even from the heavy guns that were in use,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span>and later on the heavy long-range fire from 'Bloody
Mary' and her sisters at Danbury, and other heavy
guns and howitzers in the neighbourhood of East Hanningfield,
kept it down considerably, although the big,
high-explosive shells were now and again most terribly
destructive to the advancing British.</p>
<p>"When, however, the firing line—which as yet had
not been near enough to fire a shot in reply—arrived in
the neighbourhood of Loddard's Hill, its left came under
a terrible rifle fire from Hazeleigh Wood, while its right
and centre were all but destroyed by a tornado of shrapnel
from some German field batteries to the north of
Purleigh. Though dazed and staggered under the appalling
sleet of projectiles, the Volunteers stuck doggedly
to their ground, though unable to advance. Line after
line was pushed forward, the men stumbling and falling
over the thickly-scattered bodies of their fallen comrades.</p>
<p>"It was a perfect holocaust. Some other card must
be played at once, or the attack must fail."</p>
<p>The second of Mr. Henry Bentley's descriptive articles
in the "Times" told a terrible truth, and was as
follows:</p>
<div class="right">
"(From our War Correspondent.)<br/>
"<span class="smcap">Chelmsford</span>, <i>September 7</i>.</div>
<p>"When I sent off my despatch by motor-car last night,
it was with very different feelings to those with which I
take my pen in hand this evening, in the Saracen's
Head Hotel, which is the headquarters of my colleagues,
the correspondents.</p>
<p>"Last night, despite the hard fighting and the heavy
losses we had sustained, the promise of the morrow was
distinctly a good one. But now I have little heart with
which to commence the difficult and unpleasant task
of chronicling the downfall of all our high hopes, the
repulse—ay, and the defeat—it is no use mincing matters—of
our heroic and sorely tried Army.</p>
<p>"Yes, our gallant soldiers have sustained a reverse
which, but for their stubborn fighting qualities and a
somewhat inexplicable holding back on the part of the
Germans, might very easily have culminated in disaster.
Defeat although it undoubtedly is, the darkness of the
gloomy outlook is illuminated by the brilliancy of the
conduct of our troops.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"From General down to the youngest Volunteer
drummer boy, our brave soldiers did all, and more, than
could be humanly expected of them, and on none of
them can be laid the blame of our ill-success. The plan
of attack is agreed on all hands to have been as good a
one as could have been evolved; the officers led well,
their men fought well, and there was no running short
of ammunition at any period of the engagement.</p>
<p>"'Who, then, was responsible?' it may well be asked.
The answer is simple. The British public, which, in its
apathetic attitude towards military efficiency, aided and
abetted by the soothing theories of the extremists of the
'Blue Water' school, had, as usual, neglected to provide
an Army fitted to cope in numbers and efficiency
with those of our Continental neighbours. Had
we had a sufficiency of troops, more especially of regular
troops, there is not the slightest doubt that
the victory would have been ours. As it was, our
General was obliged to attack the enemy's position
with a force whose numbers, even if they had been all
regular soldiers, were below those judged necessary by
military experts for the task in hand.</p>
<p>"Having broken through the German lines, success was
in his grasp had he had sufficient reinforcements to
have established him in the position he had won, and
to beat back the inevitable counter-attack. But it is
best that I should continue my account of the fighting
from the point at which I closed my letter of yesterday.
I had arrived at the checking of our advance near Loddard's
Hill by the blast of shrapnel from the German
field batteries. It was plain that the Volunteer Brigade,
though it held its ground, could not advance farther.
But, unnoticed by them, the General had been preparing
for this eventuality.</p>
<p>"On the left the two battalions of Marines that I
noticed drawn up behind Woodham Mortimer Place
suddenly debouched on Loddard's Hill, and, carrying
forward with them the débris of the Volunteer firing
line, hurled themselves into Hazeleigh Wood. There was
a sanguinary hand-to-hand struggle on the wire-entangled
border, but the newcomers were not to be denied, and,
after a quarter of an hour's desperate mêlée, which filled
the sylvan glades with moaning and writhing wounded
and stark dead bodies, we remained masters of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>wood, and even obtained a footing on the railway line
where it adjoins it.</p>
<p>"Simultaneously a long line of our field batteries came
into action near Woodham Mortimer, some trying to
beat down the fire of the German guns opposite, while
others replied to a battery which had been established
near West Maldon Station to flank the railway, and
which was now beginning to open on Hazeleigh Wood.
The latter were assisted by a battery of 4·7 guns manned
by Volunteers, which took up a position behind Woodham
Walter. The firing on Great Canney from our batteries
at East Hanningfield redoubled, the whole summit
of the hill being at times obscured by the clouds of
smoke and débris from the explosions of the big, high-explosive
projectiles.</p>
<p>"The main firing line, continually fed from the rear,
now began slowly to gain ground, and when the Grenadiers
and the Irish Guards, who had managed to work
up through the series of plantations that run eastwards
for nearly two miles from Woodham Hall without drawing
any particular attention from the busily engaged
enemy, came into action on the right, there was a distinct
move forward. But the defence was too stubborn,
and about midday the whole line again came to a standstill,
its left still in Hazeleigh Wood, its right at
Prentice Farm. Orders were passed that the men should
try to entrench themselves as best they could, and spades
and other tools were sent forward to those corps who
were not provided with them already.</p>
<p>"Here we must leave the main attack to notice what
was going on elsewhere. On the north the Colchester
Garrison again brought their heavy artillery into action
on the slopes south of Wickham Bishops, while others
of our troops made a show of advancing against Maldon
from the west. These movements were, however, merely
intended to keep the German garrison occupied. But on
the right a rather important flanking movement was in
progress.</p>
<p>"We had a considerable body of troops at East
Hanningfield, which lies in a hollow between two little
ridges, both running from south-west to north-east, and
about a mile apart. The most easterly ridge is very
narrow for the most part, and behind it were stationed
several batteries of our field howitzers, which fired over
it at Great Canney at a range of about 5,000 yards. A
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>number of 4·7-inch guns, scattered over the western
hill, were also concentrated on the same target. Although
the range was an extremely long one, there is no doubt
that they made a certain number of effective hits, since
Great Canney offered a conspicuous and considerable
target. But beyond this the flashes of their discharges
drew off all attention from the howitzer batteries in
front of them, and served to conceal their presence from
the enemy. Otherwise, although invisible, their presence
would have been guessed at. As it was, not a
single German projectile came anywhere near them.</p>
<p>"When the fighting began, those troops who were not
intended to be held in reserve or to co-operate with the
right of the main attack moved off in the direction of
Woodham Ferrers, and made a feint of attacking the
German position astride the two kopjes at Edwin's Hall,
their field guns coming into action on the high ground
north of Rettendon, and engaging those of the enemy
at long range. But the real attack on this salient of the
German position came from a very different quarter.</p>
<p>"The troops detailed for this movement were those who
had advanced against Wickford at daybreak, and had
found it abandoned by the enemy. They consisted of
the Oxfordshire Light Infantry, the Honourable Artillery
Company, and the Inns of Court Volunteers, together
with their own and three or four other machine-gun
detachments, their Maxims being mounted on detachable
legs instead of carriages. Co-operating with
them were the Essex and the East Kent Yeomanry, who
were scouting in the direction of Hockley.</p>
<p>"The troops had a long, wearisome march before
them, the design being to take advantage of the time of
low tide, and to move along out of sight of the enemy
behind the northern bank of the river Crouch, as it had
been discovered that the German line of defence turned
back to the eastward at a mile or two north of the
river at the point aimed at. Its guns still commanded it,
and might be trusted to render abortive any attempt to
throw a bridge across it. The Yeomanry had the task
of occupying the attention of the enemy at Canewdon,
and of preventing the passage of boats from the German
warships. This part of our operations succeeded admirably.
The long creeping lines of the Oxfordshires and
the machine-gun detachments in their khaki uniforms
were almost indistinguishable against the steep mud
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>banks at any distance, and they escaped observation both
from the German main lines and from their outpost at
Canewdon until they had reached the entrances of the two
branch creeks for which they were making.</p>
<p>"Then, and not till then, came the sound of artillery
from the left rear of the German position. But it was
too late. The Oxford companies pushed forward at the
double. Five companies lined the embankments of Stow
Creek, the easternmost of the two, while the remainder,
ensconced in Clementsgreen Creek, aligned the whole
of their machine-guns on the southern of the two kopjes
against which the manœuvre had been directed. Their
fire, which, coming from a little to the rear of the left
flank of the southern kopje, completely enfiladed it,
created such slaughter and confusion that the Honourable
Artillery Company and the Inns of Court, who had
been working up the railway line from Battle Bridge,
had little difficulty in establishing themselves at Woodham
Ferrers Station and in an adjacent farm. Being
almost immediately afterwards reinforced by the arrival
of two regular battalions who had been pushed forward
from Rettendon, a determined assault was made on the
southern kopje. Its defenders, demoralised by the pelting
shower of lead from the machine-gun battery, and
threatened also by the advance from Woodham Ferrers
village, gave way, and our people, forcing their way over
every obstacle, seized the position amid frantic cheering.</p>
<p>"Meanwhile the Oxfordshires had been subjected to a
determined counter-attack from North Frambridge. Preceded
by a pounding from the guns on Kit's Hill, but
aided by the fire of the Yeomanry on the south bank
of the river, who galloped up and lined the embankment,
thus flanking the defenders of Stow Creek, it was
beaten back with considerable loss. The machine-guns
were transferred to the neighbourhood of South Kopje,
and used with such effect that its defenders, after repulsing
several counter-attacks from the adjoining German
entrenchment, were able to make themselves masters
of the North Kopje also.</p>
<p>"Elsewhere the fighting still continued strenuous and
deadly. The main attack had contrived to make some
little shelter for itself; but though three several attempts
were made to advance from this, all ended in failure,
one nearly in disaster. This was the last of the three,
when the advancing line was charged by a mass of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span>cavalry which suddenly appeared from behind Great
Canney Hill. I myself was a witness of this attack,
the most picturesque incident of the day's fighting.</p>
<p>"I was watching the progress of the engagement
through my glasses from the high ground about Wickham's
Farm, when I saw line after line of the German
horsemen in their sky-blue tunics and glittering helmets
trot out into the open, canter, and one after another
break into a mad gallop, as they bore down upon the
advancing lines of our citizen soldiers. Staunchly as
these had withstood the murderous fire which for hours
had been directed upon them, this whirlwind of lance
and sabre, the thunder of thousands of hoofs, and the
hoarse cries of the riders, were rather more than such
partially trained soldiers could stand. A scattering
discharge from their rifles was followed by something
very much approaching a <i>sauve qui peut</i>.</p>
<p>"A large number of Volunteers, however, sought
shelter among the ruined houses of Cock Clarke's hamlet,
from whence they opened a heavy fire on the adventurous
horsemen. The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders,
who were by this time in Mosklyns Copse, and
the Guards and other troops on the right, also opened
a rapid and sustained fire on the German cavalry, which
seconded by the shrapnel from our guns on Loddard's
Hill, caused them to turn and ride back for their lives.
There was a tremendous outburst of firing from both
sides after this, followed by quite a lull. One could well
imagine that all the combatants were exhausted by the
prolonged effort of the day. It was now between five
and six in the evening. It was at this time that the
news of the capture of the two kopjes reached me, and
I made for Danbury to write my despatches.</p>
<p>"Shortly after my arrival I heard of the capture of
Spar Hill, a detached knoll about 1,200 yards to the
north-west of Purleigh. The Marines from Hazeleigh
Wood and the Highlanders from Mosklyns Copse had
suddenly and simultaneously assaulted it from opposite
sides, and were now entrenching themselves upon it.
What wonder, then, that I reported satisfactory progress,
and reckoned—too confidently, as it proved—on a
victory for the morrow?</p>
<p>"I spent a great part of that night under the stars
on the hilltop near East Hanningfield, watching the weird
play of the searchlights which swept over the country
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>from a score of different positions, and listening to the
crash of artillery and clatter of rifle fire which now
and again told of some attempted movement under cover
of the darkness. Just before daylight the continuous
roar of battle began again, and when light dawned I
found that our troops had cut right through the German
lines, and had penetrated as far as Cop Kitchen's
Farm, on the Maldon-Mundon road. Reinforcements
were being hurried up, and an attack was being pushed
towards the rear of Purleigh and Great Canney, which
was being heavily bombarded by some of our large guns,
which had been mounted during the night on the two
kopjes.</p>
<p>"But the reinforcements were not enough. The Germans
held fast to Purleigh and to some reserve positions
they had established about Mundon. After two or
three hours of desperate effort, costing the lives of
thousands, our attack was at a standstill. At this critical
moment a powerful counter-attack was made from Maldon,
and, outnumbered and almost surrounded, our
gallant warriors had to give ground. But they fell back
as doggedly as they had advanced, the Argylls, Marines,
and Grenadiers covering the retreat on Danbury.</p>
<p>"The guns at East Hanningfield and the two kopjes
checked the pursuit to a great extent, and the Germans
seemed unwilling to go far from their works. The kopjes
had to be abandoned later in the day, and we now
occupy our former line from Danbury to Billericay, and
are busily engaged in entrenching ourselves."</p>
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