<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> V. South Africa </h2>
<p>In the Autumn of 1914, after John McCrae had gone over-seas, I was in a
warehouse in Montreal, in which one might find an old piece of mahogany
wood. His boxes were there in storage, with his name plainly printed upon
them. The storeman, observing my interest, remarked: "This Doctor McCrae
cannot be doing much business; he is always going to the wars." The remark
was profoundly significant of the state of mind upon the subject of war
which prevailed at the time in Canada in more intelligent persons. To this
storeman war merely meant that the less usefully employed members of the
community sent their boxes to him for safe-keeping until their return. War
was a great holiday from work; and he had a vague remembrance that some
fifteen years before this customer had required of him a similar service
when the South African war broke out.</p>
<p>Either 'in esse' or 'in posse' John McCrae had "always been going to the
wars." At fourteen years of age he joined the Guelph Highland Cadets, and
rose to the rank of 1st Lieutenant. As his size and strength increased he
reverted to the ranks and transferred to the Artillery. In due time he
rose from gunner to major. The formal date of his "Gazette" is 17-3-02 as
they write it in the army; but he earned his rank in South Africa.</p>
<p>War was the burden of his thought; war and death the theme of his verse.
At the age of thirteen we find him at a gallery in Nottingham, writing
this note: "I saw the picture of the artillery going over the trenches at
Tel-el-Kebir. It is a good picture; but there are four teams on the guns.
Perhaps an extra one had to be put on." If his nomenclature was not
correct, the observation of the young artillerist was exact. Such excesses
were not permitted in his father's battery in Guelph, Ontario. During this
same visit his curiosity led him into the House of Lords, and the sum of
his written observation is, "When someone is speaking no one seems to
listen at all."</p>
<p>His mother I never knew. Canada is a large place. With his father I had
four hours' talk from seven to eleven one June evening in London in 1917.
At the time I was on leave from France to give the Cavendish Lecture, a
task which demanded some thought; and after two years in the army it was a
curious sensation—watching one's mind at work again. The day was
Sunday. I had walked down to the river to watch the flowing tide. To one
brought up in a country of streams and a moving sea the curse of Flanders
is her stagnant waters. It is little wonder the exiles from the Judaean
hillsides wept beside the slimy River.</p>
<p>The Thames by evening in June, memories that reached from Tacitus to
Wordsworth, the embrasure that extends in front of the Egyptian obelisk
for a standing place, and some children "swimming a dog";—that was
the scene and circumstance of my first meeting with his father. A man of
middle age was standing by. He wore the flashings of a Lieutenant-Colonel
and for badges the Artillery grenades. He seemed a friendly man; and under
the influence of the moment, which he also surely felt, I spoke to him.</p>
<p>"A fine river,"—That was a safe remark.</p>
<p>"But I know a finer."</p>
<p>"Pharpar and Abana?" I put the stranger to the test.</p>
<p>"No," he said. "The St. Lawrence is not of Damascus." He had answered to
the sign, and looked at my patches.</p>
<p>"I have a son in France, myself," he said. "His name is McCrae."</p>
<p>"Not John McCrae?"</p>
<p>"John McCrae is my son."</p>
<p>The resemblance was instant, but this was an older man than at first sight
he seemed to be. I asked him to dinner at Morley's, my place of resort for
a length of time beyond the memory of all but the oldest servants. He had
already dined but he came and sat with me, and told me marvellous things.</p>
<p>David McCrae had raised, and trained, a field battery in Guelph, and
brought it overseas. He was at the time upwards of seventy years of age,
and was considered on account of years alone "unfit" to proceed to the
front. For many years he had commanded a field battery in the Canadian
militia, went on manoeuvres with his "cannons", and fired round shot. When
the time came for using shells he bored the fuse with a gimlet; and if the
gimlet were lost in the grass, the gun was out of action until the useful
tool could be found. This "cannon ball" would travel over the country
according to the obstacles it encountered and, "if it struck a man, it
might break his leg."</p>
<p>In such a martial atmosphere the boy was brought up, and he was early
nourished with the history of the Highland regiments. Also from his father
he inherited, or had instilled into him, a love of the out of doors, a
knowledge of trees, and plants, a sympathy with birds and beasts, domestic
and wild. When the South African war broke out a contingent was dispatched
from Canada, but it was so small that few of those desiring to go could
find a place. This explains the genesis of the following letter:</p>
<p>I see by to-night's bulletin that there is to be no second contingent. I
feel sick with disappointment, and do not believe that I have ever been so
disappointed in my life, for ever since this business began I am certain
there have not been fifteen minutes of my waking hours that it has not
been in my mind. It has to come sooner or later. One campaign might cure
me, but nothing else ever will, unless it should be old age. I regret
bitterly that I did not enlist with the first, for I doubt if ever another
chance will offer like it. This is not said in ignorance of what the
hardships would be.</p>
<p>I am ashamed to say I am doing my work in a merely mechanical way. If they
are taking surgeons on the other side, I have enough money to get myself
across. If I knew any one over there who could do anything, I would
certainly set about it. If I can get an appointment in England by going, I
will go. My position here I do not count as an old boot in comparison.</p>
<p>In the end he accomplished the desire of his heart, and sailed on the
'Laurentian'. Concerning the voyage one transcription will be enough:</p>
<p>On orderly duty. I have just been out taking the picket at 11.30 P.M. In
the stables the long row of heads in the half-darkness, the creaking of
the ship, the shivering of the hull from the vibration of the engines, the
sing of a sentry on the spar deck to some passer-by. Then to the forward
deck: the sky half covered with scudding clouds, the stars bright in the
intervals, the wind whistling a regular blow that tries one's ears, the
constant swish as she settles down to a sea; and, looking aft, the funnel
with a wreath of smoke trailing away off into the darkness on the
starboard quarter; the patch of white on the funnel discernible dimly; the
masts drawing maps across the sky as one looks up; the clank of shovels
coming up through the ventilators,—if you have ever been there, you
know it all.</p>
<p>There was a voluntary service at six; two ships' lanterns and the men all
around, the background of sky and sea, and the strains of "Nearer my God
to Thee" rising up in splendid chorus. It was a very effective scene, and
it occurred to me that THIS was "the rooibaatjees singing on the road," as
the song says.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> The next entry is from South Africa: </h2>
<p>Green Point Camp, Capetown,</p>
<p>February 25th, 1900.</p>
<p>You have no idea of the WORK. Section commanders live with their sections,
which is the right way. It makes long hours. I never knew a softer bed
than the ground is these nights. I really enjoy every minute though there
is anxiety. We have lost all our spare horses. We have only enough to turn
out the battery and no more.</p>
<p>After a description of a number of the regiments camped near by them, he
speaks of the Indian troops, and then says:</p>
<p>We met the High Priest of it all, and I had a five minutes' chat with him—Kipling
I mean. He visited the camp. He looks like his pictures, and is very
affable. He told me I spoke like a Winnipeger. He said we ought to "fine
the men for drinking unboiled water. Don't give them C.B.; it is no good.
Fine them, or drive common sense into them. All Canadians have common
sense."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> The next letter is from the Lines of Communication: </h2>
<p>Van Wyks Vlei,</p>
<p>March 22nd, 1900.</p>
<p>Here I am with my first command. Each place we strike is a little more
God-forsaken than the last, and this place wins up to date. We marched
last week from Victoria west to Carnovan, about 80 miles. We stayed there
over Sunday, and on Monday my section was detached with mounted infantry,
I being the only artillery officer. We marched 54 miles in 37 hours with
stops; not very fast, but quite satisfactory. My horse is doing well,
although very thin. Night before last on the road we halted, and I
dismounted for a minute. When we started I pulled on the lines but no
answer. The poor old chap was fast asleep in his tracks, and in about
thirty seconds too.</p>
<p>This continuous marching is really hard work. The men at every halt just
drop down in the road and sleep until they are kicked up again in ten
minutes. They do it willingly too. I am commanding officer, adjutant,
officer on duty, and all the rest since we left the main body. Talk about
the Army in Flanders! You should hear this battalion. I always knew
soldiers could swear, but you ought to hear these fellows. I am told the
first contingent has got a name among the regulars.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Three weeks later he writes: </h2>
<p>April 10th, 1900.</p>
<p>We certainly shall have done a good march when we get to the railroad, 478
miles through a country desolate of forage carrying our own transport and
one-half rations of forage, and frequently the men's rations. For two days
running we had nine hours in the saddle without food. My throat was sore
and swollen for a day or two, and I felt so sorry for myself at times that
I laughed to think how I must have looked: sitting on a stone, drinking a
pan of tea without trimmings, that had got cold, and eating a shapeless
lump of brown bread; my one "hank" drawn around my neck, serving as hank
and bandage alternately. It is miserable to have to climb up on one's
horse with a head like a buzz saw, the sun very hot, and "gargle" in one's
water bottle. It is surprising how I can go without water if I have to on
a short stretch, that is, of ten hours in the sun. It is after nightfall
that the thirst really seems to attack one and actually gnaws. One thinks
of all the cool drinks and good things one would like to eat. Please
understand that this is not for one instant in any spirit of growling.</p>
<p>The detail was now established at Victoria Road. Three entries appear*:</p>
<p>* I only count two. . . . A. L., 1995.<br/></p>
<p>April 23rd, 1900.</p>
<p>We are still here in camp hoping for orders to move, but they have not yet
come. Most of the other troops have gone. A squadron of the M.C.R., my
messmates for the past five weeks, have gone and I am left an orphan. I
was very sorry to see them go. They, in the kindness of their hearts, say,
if I get stranded, they will do the best they can to get a troop for me in
the squadron or some such employment. Impracticable, but kind. I have no
wish to cease to be a gunner.</p>
<p>Victoria Road, May 20th, 1900.</p>
<p>The horses are doing as well as one can expect, for the rations are
insufficient. Our men have been helping to get ready a rest camp near us,
and have been filling mattresses with hay. Every fatigue party comes back
from the hospital, their jackets bulging with hay for the horses. Two
bales were condemned as too musty to put into the mattresses, and we were
allowed to take them for the horses. They didn't leave a spear of it.
Isn't it pitiful? Everything that the heart of man and woman can devise
has been sent out for the "Tommies", but no one thinks of the poor horses.
They get the worst of it all the time. Even now we blush to see the
handful of hay that each horse gets at a feed.</p>
<p>The Boer War is so far off in time and space that a few further detached
references must suffice:</p>
<p>When riding into Bloemfontein met Lord——'s funeral at the
cemetery gates,—band, firing party, Union Jack, and about three
companies. A few yards farther on a "Tommy" covered only by his blanket,
escorted by thirteen men all told, the last class distinction that the
world can ever make.</p>
<p>We had our baptism of fire yesterday. They opened on us from the left
flank. Their first shell was about 150 yards in front—direction
good. The next was 100 yards over; and we thought we were bracketed. Some
shrapnel burst over us and scattered on all sides. I felt as if a hail
storm was coming down, and wanted to turn my back, but it was over in an
instant. The whistle of a shell is unpleasant. You hear it begin to
scream; the scream grows louder and louder; it seems to be coming exactly
your way; then you realize that it has gone over. Most of them fell
between our guns and wagons. Our position was quite in the open.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> With Ian Hamilton's column near Balmoral. </h2>
<p>The day was cold, much like a December day at home, and by my kit going
astray I had only light clothing. The rain was fearfully chilly. When we
got in about dark we found that the transport could not come up, and it
had all our blankets and coats. I had my cape and a rubber sheet for the
saddle, both soaking wet. Being on duty I held to camp, the others making
for the house nearby where they got poor quarters. I bunked out,
supperless like every one else, under an ammunition wagon. It rained most
of the night and was bitterly cold. I slept at intervals, keeping the same
position all night, both legs in a puddle and my feet being rained on: it
was a long night from dark at 5.30 to morning. Ten men in the infantry
regiment next us died during the night from exposure. Altogether I never
knew such a night, and with decent luck hope never to see such another.</p>
<p>As we passed we saw the Connaughts looking at the graves of their comrades
of twenty years ago. The Battery rode at attention and gave "Eyes right":
the first time for twenty years that the roll of a British gun has broken
in on the silence of those unnamed graves.</p>
<p>We were inspected by Lord Roberts. The battery turned out very smart, and
Lord Roberts complimented the Major on its appearance. He then inspected,
and afterwards asked to have the officers called out. We were presented to
him in turn; he spoke a few words to each of us, asking what our corps and
service had been. He seemed surprised that we were all Field Artillery
men, but probably the composition of the other Canadian units had to do
with this. He asked a good many questions about the horses, the men, and
particularly about the spirits of the men. Altogether he showed a very
kind interest in the battery.</p>
<p>At nine took the Presbyterian parade to the lines, the first Presbyterian
service since we left Canada. We had the right, the Gordons and the Royal
Scots next. The music was excellent, led by the brass band of the Royal
Scots, which played extremely well. All the singing was from the psalms
and paraphrases: "Old Hundred" and "Duke Street" among them. It was very
pleasant to hear the old reliables once more. "McCrae's Covenanters" some
of the officers called us; but I should not like to set our conduct up
against the standard of those austere men.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> At Lyndenburg: </h2>
<p>The Boers opened on us at about 10,000 yards, the fire being accurate from
the first. They shelled us till dark, over three hours. The guns on our
left fired for a long time on Buller's camp, the ones on our right on us.
We could see the smoke and flash; then there was a soul-consuming interval
of 20 to 30 seconds when we would hear the report, and about five seconds
later the burst. Many in succession burst over and all around us. I picked
up pieces which fell within a few feet. It was a trying afternoon, and we
stood around wondering. We moved the horses back, and took cover under the
wagons. We were thankful when the sun went down, especially as for the
last hour of daylight they turned all their guns on us. The casualties
were few.</p>
<p>The next morning a heavy mist prevented the enemy from firing. The
division marched out at 7.30 A.M. The attack was made in three columns:
cavalry brigade on the left; Buller's troops in the centre, Hamilton's on
the right. The Canadian artillery were with Hamilton's division. The
approach to the hill was exposed everywhere except where some cover was
afforded by ridges. We marched out as support to the Gordons, the cavalry
and the Royal Horse Artillery going out to our right as a flank guard.
While we were waiting three 100-pound shells struck the top of the ridge
in succession about 50 to 75 yards in front of the battery line. We began
to feel rather shaky.</p>
<p>On looking over the field at this time one could not tell that anything
was occurring except for the long range guns replying to the fire from the
hill. The enemy had opened fire as soon as our advance was pushed out.
With a glass one could distinguish the infantry pushing up in lines, five
or six in succession, the men being some yards apart. Then came a long
pause, broken only by the big guns. At last we got the order to advance
just as the big guns of the enemy stopped their fire. We advanced about
four miles mostly up the slope, which is in all about 1500 feet high, over
a great deal of rough ground and over a number of spruits. The horses were
put to their utmost to draw the guns up the hills. As we advanced we could
see artillery crawling in from both flanks, all converging to the main
hill, while far away the infantry and cavalry were beginning to crown the
heights near us. Then the field guns and the pompoms began to play. As the
field guns came up to a broad plateau section after section came into
action, and we fired shrapnel and lyddite on the crests ahead and to the
left. Every now and then a rattle of Mausers and Metfords would tell us
that the infantry were at their work, but practically the battle was over.
From being an infantry attack as expected it was the gunners' day, and the
artillery seemed to do excellent work.</p>
<p>General Buller pushed up the hill as the guns were at work, and afterwards
General Hamilton; the one as grim as his pictures, the other looking very
happy. The wind blew through us cold like ice as we stood on the hill; as
the artillery ceased fire the mist dropped over us chilling us to the
bone. We were afraid we should have to spend the night on the hill, but a
welcome order came sending us back to camp, a distance of five miles by
the roads, as Buller would hold the hill, and our force must march south.
Our front was over eight miles wide and the objective 1500 feet higher
than our camp, and over six miles away. If the enemy had had the nerve to
stand, the position could scarcely have been taken; certainly not without
the loss of thousands.</p>
<p>For this campaign he received the Queen's Medal with three clasps.</p>
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