<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER VI</h2>
<p class="pcn">“IMPERISHABLE GLORY” FOR THE KENSINGTONS</p>
<p class="pch">[”By your splendid attack and dogged endurance on May 9th,
you and your fallen comrades won imperishable glory for the
13th London Battalion. It was a feat of arms surpassed by
no battalion in this great war.” This was the fine tribute
paid to the 13th (Kensington) Battalion of the London Regiment
by General Sir Henry Rawlinson, commanding the 4th
Army Corps, after the Kensingtons had taken part in the
British advance in May between Bois Grenier and Festubert.
The battalion had already greatly distinguished itself in the
Neuve Chapelle operations and elsewhere. This story of
some of the doings of the corps at the front is told by a member
of the Kensingtons, who wishes to remain anonymous.]</p>
<p class="pn"><span class="beg">The</span> main body of the Kensingtons had gone out in
October, and I left England with a draft in January,
the dead of winter. We marched up to billets in
Laventi, three miles from the firing-line. The place
was being heavily shelled by the Germans, and
amongst other buildings the church was smashed up;
but the men were lucky, and I don’t think that any
soldiers were hit there. I shall always particularly
remember that place, because it was there that I saw
for the first time a man who had been killed by the
enemy.</p>
<p>I was going along a street near an old ruined house
which was being used as a soldiers’ club, when I heard
the noise of an exploding shell. The crash was very
near, and soldiers rushed out from the ruined house
to see what had happened. They told me that the
shell had burst farther down the street, and that a
civilian had been killed. Without any loss of time
they took a door down, and using this as a stretcher
they carried the dead man away, and as I watched
them I realised that we were fairly in it, and I am
bound to say that I was very strangely moved and
deeply impressed by this little tragedy.</p>
<p class="vh"><SPAN name="f80" id="f80">f80</SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/ill-109.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="254" alt="" title="" /> <div class="caption"><p class="prcap">[<i>To face p. 80.</i></p> <p class="pc">FIELD ARTILLERY NEAR YPRES.</p> </div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>We realised even more fully what it all meant when
for the first time at the front we put five rounds of
ball ammunition in the magazines and marched off
for our first spell in the trenches, between our billets
and the firing-line. We started at dusk, so that we
should reach the trenches just when it became dark.</p>
<p>There was something very solemn in going away
like that towards the enemy; yet there was, of course,
intense excitement and curiosity. It was not a very
exhilarating start, because the country was in a
very bad state, owing to the heavy January rains.
There was plenty of water in the trenches when we
reached them, and it was bitterly cold. We were
only one night in them that time, but it was a useful
breaking-in experience, and hardened us a bit for the
much longer spells, during which the cold was so intense
that the rifles were frozen as they lay on the
parapets, if care had not been taken to keep them
well oiled after firing.</p>
<p>We got some fine experience and first-rate preparation
as a nerve-steadier in carrying out the duties of
“listening patrol.” When night came we went out
of our trenches and made our way to the front of the
parapet, working in pairs. This work was both
dangerous and ticklish, for we had orders not to fire
under any circumstances, as that would have brought
the German machine-guns on us; but to use only<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>
the bayonet in case we came across parties of the
enemy.</p>
<p>The object of the “listening patrols” was to find
out, if we could, the German working parties putting
up barbed wire entanglements and doing other things
for their own protection. One of the pair of men
would lie down on the ground and listen, and the
other would be on the alert, ready to report instantly
any suspicious noise that was noticed. If the
Germans were putting up barbed wire, it meant that
they were quite exposed and good execution could
be done amongst them by our machine-guns; on the
other hand, if the enemy heard our “listening patrols”
they would instantly open fire with machine-guns
and rifles and anything that came handy.</p>
<p>Patrol work was very trying, especially on the
intensely cold nights, when it was a hard matter to
keep awake, and the man who was lying on the ground
was almost frozen stiff.</p>
<p>This sort of work went on for several weeks—until
about March, slushing about in the trenches, and
often enough, when we went out of them at night we
would fall, in the darkness, into trenches that were
full of water. Sometimes men were in it up to the
neck, and the only way to get your clothes dry was
to let the heat of the body do it—a long business at
times, when the body had very little heat to spare.
There was no help for it, because the men who came
to grief like that could not change at all.</p>
<p>Early in March we were digging trenches on La
Bassée Road. This work occupied us for several
nights, and though we did not at the time fully
understand its meaning, we knew afterwards that the
trenches were meant for the massing of our men for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>
the battle of Neuve Chapelle. These were reserve
trenches, and in the open; the consequence being
that they were exposed to the German fire, and the
digging was very dangerous work. We used to get
as many as a dozen casualties in a company while
digging, and one spot became known as “Suicide
Corner,” because of the heavy losses there. Of
course, the digging was always done at night; but
digging means making a noise, and whenever the
enemy heard a noise they went for the place it came
from.</p>
<p>It was at “Suicide Corner” that I made my first
real acquaintance with the horrors of war. As usual
we had gone out to dig. We had been taken to our
allotted place by the Engineers, every other man
carrying a spade, and our rear being brought up by
four or five stretcher-bearers. It was obviously to
our interest to dig as hard as we could, to get shelter,
and we went at it with a will, being pretty well massed.</p>
<p>There was a man quite close to me, digging for all
he was worth. Suddenly he went down, and I felt
sure that he must have been shot, because the
Germans, doubtless hearing our digging, had opened
rapid fire on us. I soon found that the poor chap
had been shot through the chest, and I went to fetch
up our stretcher-bearers. They came, and a doctor
came, and the man was carried to the shelter of a
neighbouring hedge, where the doctor and the
stretcher-bearers did everything they could for him,
by the light of an officer’s electric pocket-torch; but
he had been mortally wounded in the chest, and he
died at the hedge side, in the darkness which was lit
only by the light of the torch and the flashes of
machine-guns and rifles. The poor fellow was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span>
covered up and put on a stretcher and carried back
to the billet.</p>
<p>This was the first man I had seen killed in action,
and it made a very deep impression on me, especially
as it happened at night. That picture of the dying
soldier under the hedge, with the doctor and the
ambulance men striving by the light of the little
torch to save him, will, I think, remain in my memory
when many of the bigger happenings of the war have
faded and are almost forgotten. It is an early and a
very sorrowful impression of the days that came just
before the beginning of the furious battle of Neuve
Chapelle.</p>
<p>No one who was in those Neuve Chapelle operations
will ever forget the massing of the British forces for
the fight. The whole countryside was alive with
troops of every sort, and there was the incessant
rumble of gun-carriages, ammunition-wagons and
heavy motor-lorries, and the tramp of hosts of men
on the march. There was a great deal of inevitable
noise, but at the same time a sinister and impressive
quietness. There was the feeling in the air that
something very big was going to happen, and everybody
felt on the “edge.”</p>
<p>The Kensingtons went on in the night until we got
into some reserve trenches, which there had not been
time to finish properly. They were simply scoopings
in the ground, with the earth thrown up on each side,
a rough-and-ready sort of arrangement, affording
very little cover and with not enough room for us to
lie down—indeed, so shallow were they that when
the bombardment began in the morning we were
actually lying one on top of the other.</p>
<p>The bombardment which opened the battle of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>
Neuve Chapelle began fairly early, and it is no exaggeration
to say that when the immense number of
guns began crashing it was hell let loose. The very
earth shook, and no part of the country where we
were seemed to escape from the shattering effects of
the shells of every sort which were bursting all around
us, a great many of them in the air. Some shells
fell into the reserve trenches, and many of our fellows
were hit.</p>
<p>The trenches in front of us were manned by two
fine Line regiments, and these troops were ordered to
advance towards the Germans and dig them out of
their trenches. The Linesmen had a heavy task
before them, but they began to carry it out most
gallantly, and while they did so we came in for a very
furious attack from the enemy’s batteries, because,
although they could not get at the advancing Regulars,
we were well in the zone of their fire. We suffered
severely during this bombardment, and were glad
when the order came to rush to the trenches that the
Linesmen had left and take their places.</p>
<p>To get to the trenches we had to rush over some
fields, and as we dashed along we were under a heavy
fire, which caused us serious losses, and those of us
who reached the comparative shelter of the trenches
were thankful when we were able to drop into them
and so escape from the open ground. The thing to
do was simplicity itself, and that was to get across
the open space from one lot of trenches to another.
There was no question of doing anything except
look after yourself and carry out your orders; there
was no chance of helping any one who fell—it was
forward all the time, and those who went down had
to be left where they fell.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Shells were bursting everywhere and the fragments
were scattered all around the battlefield, and men
were going down, killed or wounded, on every hand.
It was through this real hail of fire that we reached
the trenches which had been occupied by the two
Line battalions, and then we saw a sight that I, at
any rate, shall never forget—a spectacle, too, which
proved how terrible the struggle was and how greatly
the Regulars had suffered.</p>
<p>I talk of trenches, but no such things were left—the
German gunners had smashed them out of all
resemblance to ordinary trenches—and owing to
one of those inevitable happenings of warfare some of
our own British shells also had helped to complete
the work of destruction.</p>
<p>The trenches had been blown in on all sides, and the
barbed wire entanglements near them had been
utterly destroyed, so that what we saw was a confused
heap of ruins, or rather an area of shattered
ground in which men had been killed and buried at
the same time. The real horror of this part of the
affair was to see the brave fellows who had done their
best, and were now lying dead and shattered in the
debris.</p>
<p>I soon had a very bad experience in the trenches
that we had taken over, so to speak.</p>
<p>I and another Kensington had been allotted a
firing position, and we were doing our best with our
rifles when I suddenly became aware that my companion
had come to grief. I looked round and saw
that he was lying at the bottom of the trench—and
I made the terrible discovery that his head had been
blown completely off. I would not mention this
circumstance except by way of trying to show what<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>
the whole of the trench warfare meant. This incident
occurred in the open trenches; but a lot of the dug-outs
were blown in with the men inside, which meant
burial alive, and I know of one case in which seven
men, so killed, were lying together, and that is only
one instance of many of the same sort in this
tremendous war.</p>
<p>When we got into the trenches that had been
occupied by the two Line regiments we were ordered
to take up a firing position, and the first thing we
did was to try and restore the parapet and to make
the trench serviceable, in case the Linesmen were
driven back. At this particular time everything
gave way to the chief business in hand, which was
to fight, and only the stretcher-bearers were allowed
to do anything for the men who fell. Here, again,
every other man carried a spade, and those who had
them had to set to work at once to put the trenches
to rights again, as far as it was possible to do so.
This work was being done very vigorously when it
had to be dropped suddenly, because the order came
that we were to advance right up into the village of
Neuve Chapelle; and so it happened that we were
rushed up just behind the spot where the Regulars
had dug themselves in. We rushed up into the
village and lay in the open, behind some ruined
buildings.</p>
<p>The Germans had arranged a counter attack, and
if this had come to anything we should have made a
dash for the trenches, which were just in front of the
village; but as it was we made for the village itself,
or what was left of the place, for by this time there
was nothing left but the ruins, and the whole region
was an absolute shambles.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Before we made this rush the men of the Line
regiments began to bring in German prisoners.
These came in batches of fifteen or twenty, disarmed,
of course, so that one or two British soldiers were
enough for a batch. These prisoners looked as if
they had had a terrible time, and, indeed, they said
they had been through some dreadful experiences
owing to our artillery, and that our guns had given
them a shell for each yard of ground they held.</p>
<p>The German attack not having materialised, we
were able to retire to the trenches and make them
habitable. Before this could be done we had to get
the wounded out and bury the dead. As a rule, we
had dug a grave for each man, but now there were so
many of the killed that we had to put the bodies
side by side in long trenches, which we made just
behind the line. Quite a cemetery came into existence
there, and we did our best to make it nice and
worthy to be the resting-place of those who had given
their lives for their country.</p>
<p>There is one feature of this great war which has
been lost sight of to some extent, and that is the
tremendous call which has been made on the physical
endurance of the men, quite apart from the ceaseless
and excessive strain on the nerves and mind. I will
give one illustration on this point.</p>
<p>On the night of March 10th, during the battle of
Neuve Chapelle, the front line ran short of ammunition
and the Kensingtons were ordered to take up a
supply. First of all we had to load up with our little
lot, and, as it was impossible to carry the ammunition
in the cases, each man got a score of canvas bandoliers
across his shoulders, in addition to his own kit and
rifle, and he had to stagger along with this tremendous<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span>
weight, the filled bandoliers alone representing about
eighty pounds; so that with the rifle and standing kit
each man carried a burden of considerably more than
a hundredweight. That was bad enough, but matters
were made infinitely worse by the fact that we had to
go along a newly-made road, or rather track. This
road had been constructed by the Gurkhas, by the
simple plan of putting bricks down almost anyhow—there
were plenty of bricks handy from the ruined
buildings all around us; so that the road we had to
take was rather like the huge teeth of an enormous
saw, for there was no steam roller to flatten down the
surface.</p>
<p>In the darkness, under constant fire, we staggered
and stumbled along with our ammunition; but even
the biggest and strongest amongst us could not do
more than cover about a hundred yards at a time. If
a man did that he was proud and thankful, and having
got a bit of rest as best he could—and that was by
hunking up and resting on the rifle, for if a man had
really got on to the ground he would have been hard
put to it to rise again—we forged slowly ahead.</p>
<p>We had been ordered to take the ammunition into
a house that was battered, but was more whole than
the rest—it was really only a skeleton of a building—and
having reached the house we very gladly dumped
our bandoliers down in the garden. To reach the
garden was quite a simple matter—all we had to do
was to dash through a big hole in the side of the house,
made by artillery fire, and I give you my word that
we lost no time in shedding our burden of bandoliers.</p>
<p>It was a most exciting little performance from start
to finish, yet it put a terrific strain on every man who
took part in it—load yourself up with more than a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span>
hundredweight of stuff and see what it feels like;
then you will partly realise what we had to go through—and
the excitement was by no means ended when
we reached the garden in the darkness, because just
as we were getting rid of the bandoliers a shell
crashed into the house next to us and smashed it to
smithereens, a lot of our chaps being fairly smothered
in the flying bricks and rubbish.</p>
<p>That <i>was</i> a night, and one that I shall never forget.</p>
<p>There seemed every prospect that we should be
fairly mopped up, and when the order came for the
N.C.O.’s to take back the men in parties we lost no
time in returning, as best we could, to the trenches.
Shelling was going on all the time, and just by way
of giving a finish to the performance something like
thirty star-shells burst together, making the dark
night as light as day and giving the Germans a chance
to plump more shells into us as we got back. This
hurrying up with ammunition to the firing-line is
only one of many such things that have been done as
part of the day’s work by British soldiers at the
front.</p>
<p>About two nights afterwards these two Line
battalions of which I speak were relieved, and we took
over their trenches. There were no dug-outs, or any
such protections; the trenches were simply breastworks,
and we had a very bad time when the wet
weather set in, as it did.</p>
<p>When we took the trenches over they were in an
unfinished state, and we set to work at once to complete
them. One night, or rather about two o’clock
in the morning, I was working on the top of the back
parapet, with my head and shoulders showing, and
half asleep, for I was dead tired. Suddenly the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span>
Germans sent up about fifty star-shells, which burst
in the sky and made the darkness as light as day
and showed us up as clearly as possible. Instantly
the enemy opened rapid fire on our trenches and
swept us with machine-guns, the bullets whistling
over the parapets.</p>
<p>I was roused as swiftly as if the réveillé had sounded—perhaps
faster, because there are no whizzing bullets
when the bugles blow—and I well remember that I
wriggled and rolled sideways. I knew that the
darkness had become as light as daytime and that
the German fire was peppering us, and that the best
thing to do was to get out of it as rapidly as I could.
So I fell flat, then lay still, then rolled into a trench
as best I could. I remember—so soon do we get
accustomed to war—that one of our chaps growled,
“Why don’t you go a bit farther, then you could go
through an opening!” Fancy a chap picking and
choosing a landing-place when he was clearing out
from shell-fire! I knew that in rolling and falling
like this there was a risk of landing on top of a fixed
bayonet, as some of our fellows did, but I cheerfully
took that chance in my eagerness to get under cover.</p>
<p>After this we polished up our bayonet work and
went through a lot of routine, at the end of which we
were told that we were to take the offensive and that
some Regulars were to do the support work—a
proud position for Territorials. So we filed into a
front trench and relieved men who were only seventy
yards away from the Germans, so that we knew we
should not have far to rush when the real business
came to hand.</p>
<p>I wish I could tell you of what happened on the
glorious Ninth of May, when, according to all reports,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span>
the Kensingtons did so well and won so much praise
from General Rawlinson; but I cannot go into detail,
for I was hit at the start, and fell before the German
lines were reached. I know that this particular
fight began early in the morning, that it lasted all
day, and that our chaps were practically surrounded.
The order had come that we were to go for the
Germans, and I was doing my bit in carrying it out.</p>
<p>We were rushing forward when I was shot through
the chest and was knocked completely out. When
this happened I was in a trench, and our chaps were
cheering loudly, as if no such things as Germans
existed.</p>
<p>The bullet that struck me had gone through my
left lung, though I did not know this until later, and
I had had a very narrow escape; but I did not at the
time fully realise how close a call I had had.</p>
<p>After being shot I just managed to get back over
the parapet, and I was bandaged up and kept going
for the time being.</p>
<p>I felt pretty well until the alarm came that the
Germans were starting on the gas tack, and then I
wanted to be on the move. Respirators were fixed,
and every preparation was made to meet the devilish
device. For my own part, being shot and helpless,
I naturally wanted to be out of it, so I beseeched the
stretcher-bearers to carry me away, so that I should
have, at any rate, a sporting chance.</p>
<p>“Will you try and get me out?” I said; “because
I know that gas will finish me.” And being good chaps
two of them came, put me on a stretcher, and carried
me down a communication-trench and into safety,
under a constant and heavy fire, which lasted all
that famous day.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I have been yarning long enough, though I could
say a good deal more. By way of finish I will tell
you of a little incident of sniping.</p>
<p>Sniping was going on all the time. In many places
it was very deadly, especially where the green uniform
of the snipers harmonised with the cabbages, so that
the snipers could not be seen. We got used to
the cabbage-patches whizzing bullets, but we were
puzzled by some especially dangerous firing which
came upon us from the rear. For a considerable
time we could not make this out; then we discovered
a haystack, and suspicion was aroused. We kept a
strict watch, and made particular inquiry, and were
rewarded at the end of it, by finding that what looked
like an inoffensive haystack was a place of cunning
hiding for a German marksman. This special rick
concealed in its very heart a son of the Fatherland,
who had been having a truly glorious time in potting
us. He knew that he was certain to be discovered;
but he went on sniping till we found him and put an
end to his performance. He knew that his discovery
was certain, and that discovery meant death; but he
kept his game up—and he died game.</p>
<p>This was quite fair and square fighting, for sniping
is legitimate. I cannot say as much for the German
practice, which we fully proved, of using dum-dum
bullets in their machine-guns. This they did by
taking out the bullets as ordinarily used and reversing
them.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />