<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<p class="pcn">A TROOPER’S TALE</p>
<p class="pch">[It has been said that in this war cavalry have ceased to
exist. As mounted men their opportunities have undoubtedly
been very limited; but in other ways they have done much
to maintain their ancient reputation. In the earlier days of
the fierce attempt of the Germans to break through the Allied
Armies and get to Calais the teller of this tale—Trooper Notley,
of the 5th Dragoon Guards—was engaged and was finally
wounded and invalided home.]</p>
<p class="pn"><span class="beg">There</span> are a good many men who, like myself, were
at Mons, the Marne and the Aisne, and then went
into the Fight for the Coast, and I think they would
all tell the same story—that that tremendous battle
was fifty times worse than the Aisne.</p>
<p>The Aisne was very bad; but even there, though
the Germans fought desperately to prevent themselves
from being driven back and turned away from
Paris, their efforts were not to be compared with the
determination they showed in their attacks upon the
troops who barred their way to Calais.</p>
<p>The Germans were mad in their resolve to hack
their way through to Paris; but they were madder
to break through and get to the coast, so that they
could get within sight of hated England. They tried
all they knew; even as I talk they are trying as hard
as ever, but I’m as sure that they won’t succeed as
I am that to-morrow will come.</p>
<p>People have heard and read a lot about the fighting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span>
at Ypres and Messines, and it is of this part of the
battle that I am going to talk, because it was at
these places that the 5th Dragoon Guards shared in
a great deal of furious fighting.</p>
<p>We had had a long inning at the Aisne, then our
brigade moved on to the Ypres region, which we
reached after being fourteen days in the saddle. We
made a short break at Amiens, where it was thought
that we might have to help the French; but before
long reinforcements arrived for them and we went
on our road to the north, approaching Ypres as the
advanced guard of a brigade.</p>
<p>It had been hard going on the march, and there
was plenty of excitement with it, even before we got
into the real fight for the coast. There were prowling
Uhlans everywhere, and nothing would have pleased
us better than to get at them in a thundering charge;
but they didn’t give us the chance, they are not
keen on that sort of thing, and kept in scattered
bodies. But at one point quite a little surprise had
been prepared for us by about three hundred Uhlans.</p>
<p>We were marching along when we discovered that
these Uhlans had taken up a position commanding
a road, and they had planted a Maxim, so that they
could give us a warm welcome. They soon discovered
that we were not going to be caught napping. Instead
of keeping to the road we were promptly ordered to
leave it and to take to a field running alongside. We
made for the Uhlans as fast as we could go, but
they did not stop to finish the welcome; they vanished,
and I was unable to see the end of them; but it seems
that they were completely surrounded and gathered
in by some of our infantry.</p>
<p class="vh"><SPAN name="f172" id="f172">f172</SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/ill-211.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="277" alt="" title="" /> <div class="caption"><p class="prcap">[<i>To face p. 172.</i></p> <p class="pc">BRITISH CAVALRY AT THE FRONT.</p> </div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>This was the sort of small affair that was constantly
happening, but it was a trifle compared with the real
big fighting around Ypres. The cannonade was
terrific, and the everlasting firing made it seem as
though nothing existed on earth but the thundering
of big guns and the screeching and bursting of shells
all around.</p>
<p>In and around Ypres, the Allies had pushed far
into the enemy’s line, and the Germans were concentrating
all their men and metal to crumple us up.
They strained every nerve and made the most dreadful
sacrifices to carry out the Kaiser’s command to
break through; but though they hurled themselves
to certain death, in thousands, they were driven
back.</p>
<p>Messines, a village quite near to Ypres, came
within the zone of this furious attack, and it was
at Messines that most of the brigade, including my
own squadron, was posted.</p>
<p>When we got to the village, which we reached by
way of the fields—rough going, but safer than the
roads—my squadron was ordered to hold the place
by the main road, and another squadron went about
nine hundred yards up the road and spent the night
in digging trenches, which were occupied by the
whole regiment on the following morning.</p>
<p>As we moved into the trenches we were under
incessant fire, and we were fired on all the time we
were in them.</p>
<p>For twelve days and twelve nights we held fast
to our trenches, against the onslaughts of forces that
were certainly five times as great as our own—and,
in spite of their countless losses, the proportion of
the Germans was never less than that.</p>
<p>We seemed to have nothing but shell fire and night<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</SPAN></span>
attacks, and to get anything like decent rest under
such conditions was impossible.</p>
<p>There was a curious sameness in this life in the
trenches. We had no chance, as we had at the
Aisne, of digging ourselves in, because the lie of the
land was against us. At the Aisne our positions
were very strong and we could afford to smile at the
efforts of the Germans to dig us out; but it was a
very different matter in country which is as flat as
a floor. There was nothing impregnable in our
little artificial gullies, and in this absence of help
from Nature we had to keep our wits about us to
escape the shrapnel and to prevent the nightly visits
of our German neighbours.</p>
<p>We were a mixed lot at Messines. Our line consisted
of the Connaught Rangers, the Somersets,
Bengal Lancers and some Ghurkas—a mere handful
compared with the hosts of Germans that were flung
against us, with an enormous number of guns. The
more troops they sent the more we shot.</p>
<p>Day after day this fighting went on, the German
attacks getting fiercer every day. Nightfall was the
time when they would make particularly stubborn
attempts to drive us out. They would leave their
own trenches and advance two or three hundred
yards at a time, then throw themselves flat on the
ground before beginning the next stage. We had
them under observation all the time, but did not
let a sound reach them; in fact, we lured them on
by seeming not to be there.</p>
<p>On they came, till they were something like fifty
yards away, then we got the order for rapid fire, and
let drive into the ranks that it was not possible to
miss. In this manner great numbers of Germans<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</SPAN></span>
were destroyed; we punished them terribly, for our
rapid fire was certain destruction for their front
ranks.</p>
<p>It is not always clear to people, I find, that trenches
may be constructed according to the needs of the
moment, at all sorts of odd corners and angles.
The idea seemed to be that the Germans dug themselves
in along a perfectly straight line, while we
dug ourselves in along a parallel line a few hundred
yards away. In our position by Messines the trenches
were splayed out, so to speak, some of them making
an angle of ninety degrees or so with each other.
We were so entrenched that we were inviting the
Germans to step into a hollow square, or rather to
form the fourth side of it, which with their heaps of
dead and wounded they occasionally did. Of course
the positions varied from hour to hour, both in
guarding against attempts to enfilade us and in
avoiding cross-fire between units of our own forces.</p>
<p>One night a supreme effort was made by the
Germans. The Indians had relieved us that very
morning, and one troop of our men had got into a
barn and cut loopholes in the walls, while another
troop had taken up a position at a barricade made up
of old wagons and sacks of earth.</p>
<p>At about three o’clock in the morning we suddenly
heard the sound of a bugle, and presently the Germans
set up a hullabaloo and fairly hurled themselves at
our trenches. They came in such strong numbers
that the Indians, who had been dealing out death
half the night, were overweighted by the enemy, who
got round their flank and attacked them in the rear.</p>
<p>A Maxim gun section of the 11th Hussars was
hurried down, and from the window of one of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</SPAN></span>
buildings it blazed away at the Germans and covered
the retirement of the Indians. The way in which the
Maxims have been handled in the war has been a
revelation to a lot of people. These handy weapons
have been got into upstairs and downstairs rooms and
even into the tops of trees, and they have caused
terrific havoc in the Germans’ solid ranks.</p>
<p>That night affair was desperate; but it seemed as
if nothing could stop the mad onrush of the Germans,
and at last there was nothing for it but to give way,
and so we received orders to evacuate the barn.</p>
<p>Near this particular point the road forks, and a
couple of men were left to fire up the right-hand
road and two to fire up the road on the left, and
for the time being we were effectually covered.</p>
<p>It was at this stage that there arose the chance
for a Territorial regiment to come into action for
the first time. The Territorials to win this great
distinction were the London Scottish.</p>
<p>The Scottish had been ordered up to relieve the
pressure, and they came on quickly and in gallant
style and took up a position at one end of the barn,
while the Highland Light Infantry, the brave old
71st, took up a position at the other, and between
them the two carried the barn with a bayonet charge
and killed, captured or drove away the Germans.</p>
<p>The Scottish had their baptism of blood in proper
good style, with a very strange preparation in the
shape of a cunning German trick.</p>
<p>Not far from the Scottish was a windmill which
had had three of its sails blown away or destroyed,
leaving only the fourth sail, and that looked as if
it had been cut clean in half. It was noticed that
this crippled sail was working about in the most<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</SPAN></span>
astonishing fashion, and those who saw it were
puzzled to account for the movements; but it was
soon discovered that there was a German spy hidden
in the mill, and that he was moving the sail to indicate
the position of the Scottish, and so bring the German
gun-fire to bear on them. When the dodge had been
discovered and the signaller settled the Scottish got
their own back.</p>
<p>By this time I was blazing away from a barricade
in an old covered yard, and there was a straggling
fire going on all around; but it was clear that we
should want reinforcements if we were to hold our
own and save Messines.</p>
<p>At last we heard shouts, and I cannot tell you
what it meant to us when we knew that the shouts
came from our own fellows, and that three battalions
of infantry had hurried up and got into action and
given the Germans more than they could comfortably
carry.</p>
<p>It was at this moment of the saving of Messines
that I was struck by a shrapnel bullet and had to
leave the fighting-line and come home, with the fight
for the coast going on. I had been in it right from
the start and had got used to the awful business,
even to the “coal-boxes,” which the Germans were
everlastingly firing. They made a particular target
of the church, and for nine days bombarded it before
they set the building on fire.</p>
<p>One of the strangest things about a shell is that
you never know what it is going to do, and some of
the “coal-boxes” acted like freaks.</p>
<p>During this bombardment of the church I watched
one of the shells come, and expected that it would
do something smashing, for it hit the building full<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</SPAN></span>
in the middle of one of the main walls. I looked for
the wall to be shattered, but the shell never shifted
a brick or a bit of mortar; it simply burst in on
itself, so to speak, and did no damage to anything
except itself, and in the end the Germans got a fire
going by sending a much smaller shell, something
like a fifteen-pounder.</p>
<p>In a general way of speaking, however, these
“coal-boxes” did some terrible mischief when they
really exploded, and no living thing within their
reach had a chance of escaping. Horses, guns, men,
wagons, everything that came within the area of
explosions was shattered or wiped out. Often enough
men who were killed by the explosions were found
in the holes, so that the shell which had destroyed
them had also scooped out their grave.</p>
<p>There were all sorts of side issues to the actual
fighting. We billeted in every kind of building, some
of them very strange; but I think the strangest of
all was a cow-house. This does not sound promising;
but that cow-house was one of the finest places I
ever slept in.</p>
<p>The farm itself was beautiful, and everything about
it was on the latest and best scale, so that the cow-house
was lighted by electricity, and the fittings were
in keeping with the illumination. I had a very
comfortable stretch there, and it would not have
been possible for us to be better looked after. The
proprietor had had notice of our coming and had
made every preparation for us, and we were only
too grateful for the many good things he freely gave
away. We had the same sort of kindness shown to
us by the French wherever we came into contact
with them.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It may seem somewhat odd that a cavalryman in
talking of the war should dwell so much on the
trench work and the shell-fire; but in this war a
great deal of the work of the cavalry has been dismounted,
and practically the same as the infantry,
and there has not been the chance that every cavalryman
longs for to get to close grips with the enemy’s
mounted forces.</p>
<p>We had heard so much about the Uhlans that we
expected to have some stirring times with them; but
these big encounters did not come off, and one great
thing we learned about the Uhlans was their skill
in avoiding us. We saw them everywhere, but in
scattered bodies, and they never gave us a chance
of getting at them in the mass. Whenever we formed
up in anything like force they melted away; but
one fine day we had better luck—we came across
them when they were in fair numbers, and before
they could perform their vanishing trick we had got
at them. At the end we found that we had punished
them pretty heavily, for we broke up seven hundred
lances which we had captured from them.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</SPAN></span></p>
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