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CHAPTER
XXIX.
THE
BEGINNING OF THE END.
July
to August 7th, 1918.
THE
possession of a side-car gave me the opportunity of
getting much further afield in my visits. Our 1st Divisional
wing; where the new drafts were received and trained
for the front line, was at this time back in a place
called Loison, in the quiet and beautiful country between
St. Pol and General Headquarters. I had done a great
deal of parish visiting among our battalions in rest
and given the story of my leave trip to Rome many times,
so I though I would make an excursion to the Base. We
had a delightful trip down the St. Pol road through
little villages and towns which looked as they did in
pre-war days. The country where the Divisional wing
was stationed was very charming. It was well watered
by many pretty rivers, and hills covered with trees
gave diversity to the landscape. I told the men they
were living in a land flowing with milk and honey. I
stayed at the headquarters of the wing in a delightful
old house on a hill surrounded with fine trees. Each
Brigade had its own reserve, so there were many men
in the village, and an old mill pond enabled me to have
two or three good swims. In a Y.M.C.A. tent, courses
of lectures in connection with the Khaki University
were being given on various subjects. One evening, naturally
I gave them a talk on our leave trip to Rome. On another,
in a corner of the field, I gave them an informal lecture
on English literature. Having got so far from home,
I determined to go a little further, and so we made
a trip to Boulogne, where my son who had been gassed
was still a C.C.S., and that afternoon on our return
we went to Montreuil to see what G.H.Q. looked like.
I was told that Montreuil was a very picturesque old
walled city, but that we should not be allowed to enter.
However, I had been able to do so many forbidden things
in the war that I though it would be worth trying, so
the old Clino sped over the hard macadamized roads from
Boulogne till we came to the valley on the opposite
side of which the town is situated. We saw many cars
coming and going, and many troops by the way, and finally
we sped up the hill which leads to the entrance gate.
A sentry was [Page 267] standing there,
who saluted most properly, and we passed into the sacred
city without molestation. It was a delightful old French
town, full of historical interest. The narrow streets
and quaint old buildings carried one back in thought
to the days of chivalry and battles waged by knights
in shining armour. We saw some of the churches, and
then went to the officers’ club for tea. The waitresses
at the club were English girls who had taken the place
of the men needed at the front. I got them to provide
for my friend Lyons in their sitting-room, and I went
in to have tea with the officers. A great many were
there sitting at small tables. It was interesting to
see the badges of so many different regiments. Most
of the officers had a good supply of ribbons, and a
few of them had lost an eye or a limb, or bore other
marks of wounds. I think that almost all of them were
staff officers and that some of them were generals.
It struck me that the atmosphere to a stranger was rather
chilly. The demeanour of the people was much less free
than that which we had been accustomed to at the front.
Of course Montreuil held the brains of the army, and
it was quite right that the directing intelligences
there should feel the loftiness of their position. I
made up two lines as I was having tea, which I thought
hit off the mental attitude of some of the officers
present, when they saw a stranger and looked him up
and down through their monocles,
“I’m
on the staff of the G.H.Q.,
And I’d like to know who the devil are you?”
There had
been such a democratic upsetting of traditions and customs
in the Service, owing to the obliteration of the original
British Army, that it was quite refreshing to find that
a remnant of Israel had been saved.
I
paid two visits to the Divisional wing within a few
days of each other, and on one occasion, on a baking
July day, addressed a battalion of draftees who were
about to be sent up to the front. They were a fine looking
lot of men and knew their drill. Poor boys, they little
knew what was in store for them in those last hundred
days of the war.
Rumours
were current now that the time for our great attack
had come, so there were no more joy-rides for me to
the pleasant fields and society of Loison. On my return
on July 14th I found our Headquarters once again at
Etrun, and our Division were [Page 268]
holding their old trenches to the north and south of
the Scarpe. Once more I had the pleasure of sleeping
in Pudding trench and doing what I called “consolidating
the line.” I did a good deal of parish visiting
in the trenches at this time. I felt that big changes
might occur at any moment, and I wanted to be with the
men in any ordeal through which they might have to pass.
Very strange scenes come before me as I look back upon
those days before our great attack. One night I stayed
with the gallant Colonel of the Canadian Scottish at
Tilloy. His headquarters were in No Man’s Land,
and the front trench ran in a semi-circle to the rear.
The Colonel, having found a good German dug-out in the
cellars of the ruined château, preferred to make
his headquarters there. We did not know where the enemy’s
front line was, and our men were doing outpost duty
in shell-holes further forward. They had to be visited
every two hours when it was dark, to see that all was
well. That night I asked the Colonel if I might go out
with the patrol. He demurred at first, and then gave
his consent only on condition that I should take off
my white collar, and promise not to make any jokes with
the men on duty for fear they should laugh and give
away our position. I made my promise and started with
the patrol officer and his runner. It was a curious
sensation wandering off in the darkness as silently
as possible, tripping now and then on bits of wire and
almost slipping into the trenches. We came to the different
shell-holes and whispered conversations were held. The
sentries seemed surprised when I spoke to them, as they
could not recognize me in the darkness. I whispered
that I had promised the Colonel not to tell any funny
stories for fear they should laugh, so I merely gave
them the benediction, in return for which spiritual
function I got a very warm handshake. To do outpost
duty in a place like that must have been more interesting
than pleasant, for at all times the sentries had to
keep straining their eyes in the darkness to see if
a patrol of the enemy was coming to surprise them. On
our return we saw some shells falling to the right in
the shadowy desolation of what was called Bully-beef
Wood.
On
another occasion, I was coming out near Feuchy along
the railway triangle when the Germans dropped some gas
shells in the cutting. Two of the men and I were talking
together, and we had just time to dive into Battalion
Headquarters and pull down the gas blankets. We put
on our helmets, but not before we had got a dose of
the poison. As I sat there with my throat burning, I
was [Page 269] filled with alarm lest
I should lose my voice and be unable in the future to
recite my poems. It was hard enough, as it was, to keep
my friends long enough to hear my verses, but I thought
that if I had to spell them out in deaf-and-dumb language
no one would ever have patience to wait till the end.
However, after a few days my throat got better, and
my friends were once again forced to lend me their ears.
The
railway triangle was a well-known place, and any men
who may have lived in some of the dug-outs along the
banks are not likely to forget it. In the valley there
was a large artificial lake in which I had some of the
most pleasant swims I have ever enjoyed, although the
waters were sometimes stirred up by the advent of a
shell.
It
was part of our strategy to let our men get the impression
that we were going to stay in the trenches before Arras
for a long time. We had several raiding parties with
a view to finding out the position and strength of the
enemy, and our C.C.S’s were well equipped and
looked as if they were going to remain there forever.
Our Corps Headquarters, too, were not far from Etrun,
and the concentration of Canadians in the neighbourhood
gave us the impression that we had found a more than
temporary resting place. An American Chaplain was sent
up to stay with me for a visit in order to see what
conditions were like at the front. He was a Lutheran,
although not of German extraction. I took him up to
Arras one night, where we had dinner with the engineers,
and afterwards saw the 10th Battalion start off for
the trenches. He was much impressed with the spirit
and appearance of the men. It was late when we got back
to my quarters, and to my surprise on the next morning
an order came through that the American Chaplain had
to return immediately. Neither he nor I could understand
it. I began to think he must have got into some scrape,
as no explanation was given. The real reason came out
afterwards.
On August 1st our Division suddenly
packed up and started once more for Le Cauroy. We knew
now that big things were in store for us and that the
Canadian Corps were going to attack. We heard rumours
of the preparations the French and Americans had made
in the South, and we felt that at last the Allies were
going to get the initiative into their hands. Whither
we were going, however, we did not know, but we all
devoutly hoped that it would not be the Salient. The
secret of our destination was kept most profoundly.
We [Page 270] were told that everything
depended upon our holding our tongues and exciting as
little curiosity as possible among the inhabitants.
Once again, as before Vimy, but to even a greater extent,
we felt the electric thrill which kindles the imagination
of an army going into battle. The rapid move which the
Canadian Corps now made was the most sporting thing
we ever did, and it appealed strongly to the hearts
of young men who were keen on games and had been inured
to a hardy life in Canada. Swiftly and secretly the
battalions entrained at various points and left for
parts unknown. I went in my side-car to the machine-gun
headquarters at Liencourt, and on the next day to the
Curé’s house at Le Cauroy. I found out
from Headquarters that our Division was going south
within a day or so, but that I was not to tell the men.
The brigades were billeted in the neighboring villages,
but were soon to move. I was only one day at Le Cauroy,
and on the 3rd of August, after a rainy morning, started
off in my sidecar for Hornoy, a little village not far
from Amiens. We left Le Cauroy in the afternoon, and
soon the sun came out making the freshly washed country
more beautiful than ever. It was very interesting finding
our way by the map, and as we neared our destination
I met many friends in the other divisions who were stationed
in the villages through which we passed. By the time
we reached Hornoy, the sun had set. My billet was to
be with the Curé. I went over to the neat white
Presbytère which was approached by a large gate
leading into the garden. The old man came to meet me
at the door of his house, and put me through a lot of
questions in what I thought was a needlessly gruff manner.
I found out afterwards that he was very kind, and that
his gruffness was only assumed. He gave me a room upstairs
comfortably furnished, and invited me to come into his
office whenever I pleased. The church, which could be
entered from the garden, was in good order, and parts
of it were very old. The day after we arrived at Hornoy
was Sunday, August 4th. It was the fourth anniversary
of our declaration of war, and I had hoped to hold a
big service for the men. Unfortunately, we were all
scattered and, as our hymn books did not turn up, having
been confiscated as a reprisal by some of the crown
and anchor men, my plans were frustrated. In the afternoon
I went by sidecar to Amiens and found the city looking
very different from its appearance on my last visit.
The streets were absolutely deserted. Many of the houses
had been damaged by [Page 271] shells.
The Cathedral roof itself had been pierced in some places
and the noble interior looked very dreary, the floor
of the nave being covered with bits of broken stone
and glass. It was sad to think that it might share the
fate of Rheims. Some Canadians were wandering about
the streets rather disconsolately. The empty city gave
one a terrible sense of loneliness. On the following
evening about midnight the 16th Battalion and the 3rd
Battalion of Engineers passed through Hornoy in trains,
going forward.
Our own orders to move came
two days later, on August 7th, and I left for St. Feuchien.
I went off in my side-car to the quaint old village.
It is situated on the top of a low hill, and consists
of a few streets and some large buildings standing in
their own grounds. One of these was the country home
of the Archbishop of Amiens, and this was to be our
billet. I entered the grounds by a broken-down gate
and drew up in front of a large brick building, one
wing of which was a chapel and kept locked up. In front
of the building was a well full of empty tins and other
refuse. The interior of the place had once been quite
fine, but was now absolutely filthy, having been used
as billets. The billiard tables, however, could still
be used. The room assigned to me was on the ground floor
at the back. The dirt on the floor was thick, and a
sofa and two red plush chairs were covered with dust.
A bed in the corner did not look inviting, and through
the broken windows innumerable swarms of blue-bottle
flies came from the rubbish heaps in the yard. The weather
was very hot and there was apparently no water for washing.
I made an inspection of the building upstairs, but all
the rooms had been assigned to different officers. The
Archbishop’s room was very large with a huge bed
in it, but wore an air of soiled magnificence.
Everybody was in a great rush
and, although I did not know when our attack was to
take place, I felt that it might happen at any moment;
and so, not worrying about my billet, I started off
in my sidecar to see General Thacker at Château
Longeau. I found, as I passed through Boves and other
villages, that the whole Canadian Corps was concentrated
in the neighborhood. The dusty roads were crowded with
lorries, tanks, whippets and limbers, besides numbers
of men. When I got to Château Longeau I found,
to my surprise, that the General had gone to Battle
Headquarters in Gentelles Wood, and an officer whom
I met on the road told me that zero hour was on the
following morning. I determined therefore not to [Page
272] return to the archiepiscopal palace at
St. Feuchien, but to go off to the attack. I returned
to Boves, where, having washed and shaved, I had dinner
in a damaged house with some officers of a light trench
mortar battery, and after dinner started on my way to
Gentelles Wood. It was a time of intense excitement.
Less than a week ago we had been in the line at Arras,
and now we were about to make our great attack at Amiens.
The warm summer evening was well advanced when I reached
our Battle Headquarters behind the wood. All the staff
officers were so busy that to ask one a question was
like putting a spark to a powder magazine, so I kept
out of their way and journeyed up the road to the barrier
beyond which no vehicle was allowed to pass. I said
good-bye to Lyons and then started off to find the trenches
from which the 16th Battalion was going to lead the
charge. [Page 273]
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