DECEMBER-JANUARY, 1918
FLERS LE PARCQ VERCHOCQ
Snow had fallen and sprinkled the
countryside with a semi-transparent white mantle.
Roads due to freezing o’ nights were hard and
slippery, making the going for men labouring beneath
the burden of full pack irksome and heavy. The
Normans had no eyes for the countryside (there is
no beauty in the finest masterpieces of Nature if physical
conditions are not in harmony) but had the surface
before them fixedly under focus in the interest of
the neck’s safety.
Eighteen or so kilos (approximately
11-1/4 miles) over the long straight levels common
to France and which, although of course the shortest
route between two points is viewed by the marching
columns as far longer than it actually is because
of the distant visibility. And Tommy would prefer
a more winding journey even if the distance covered
is greater.
The night’s rest at Flers in
the midst of heavy falls of snow put the wind up the
men at the knowledge of a longer march on the morrow,
but the alarm was false and a trek of four kilos materialised hard
going the whole way to Le Parcq, a town
situated on the top of a hill, the discovery of a
short cut causing the break from schedule. The
“cut” was made up a steep incline that
proved a severe obstacle to the wildly struggling
horses of transport waggons on the vile surface.
Several lorries with the all-essential stores, blankets,
etc., found the “glass” road utterly
impassable.
This unfortunate set-back reacted
on the men, who, because of the blanket shortage were
doomed to but one per man throughout the winter
night of fierce cold, against which the shivering,
suffering lads had as protection billets without roofs
and in some instances with mere relics of sides.
The pain was acute, sleep difficult. Some unable
to withstand the torture paced up and down the whole
night through, banging arms heavily across bodies
to stimulate some semblance of warmth.
At the first indications of dawn they
were started on what proved to be one of the longest
marches in their experience. The weather was harsher
than on any of the preceding days and the frozen snow
surface of the roads presented in itself a factor
that materially magnified the heavy labouring beneath
full pack, arduous to a degree under the easiest of
conditions. Before mid-day the constant vigilance
and care necessary if a hard fall was to be avoided
began to tell on the nerves, irritability forced its
grip, and they glared savagely at one another at every
sideslip inevitable in a long trek over
such roads.
After twenty or so kilos had been
reeled off physical exhaustion invaded man after man,
growling ceased, heads bent forward and the eyes watched
unseeing the heels of the man ahead. Mechanical
rigidity of monotonous, torturous march again held
sway, the old dryness of tongue and aching of burning
feet grew more and more acute at each heavy step forward.
An hour passed in painful silence,
and another, but ever onward along the long trail
of miles left, right, left. At each
step you muttered it softly left right or
counted them one by one until the mind rambled on
confused in tens of thousands. A stage had been
attained when one felt nothing, knew nothing, but
just the unending chorus of padding feet guided by
the mere instinct of a mind in a condition of peculiar
coma. The ten minute halts were taken at each
hour with no comment. Men threw themselves prone
on the road, closed eyes, stood up unthinking at the
order and fell again into the harsh rigidity of movement.
Just before dusk the “machine”
halted at Verchocq, after a march of thirty-three
kilos. They were tired, worn, hungry....
No lorries or cookers turned up that night!
Followed that abrupt revival of spirits
that cannot but remain a pyschological mystery.
No cookers no grub. They threw aside
without an effort complete exhaustion, the outcome
of an entire day’s strenuous bodily exertion,
sallied forth with remarkable sangfroid and certainty
in Verchocq, there conversing with the inhabitants,
made themselves thoroughly at home and gratefully
partook of the hot fare hospitably provided them the
fierce inroads upon food that only the utterly famished
can readily appreciate, and which indelibly impressed
upon the intellect of their hosts a certainty that
British troops could never have their appetite satiated.
They returned to billets in varying
moods and conditions, one or two ignoring a straight
walk and zig-zagging an uncertain course across the
roads. Stumpy, who had received a generous welcome
from a misguided patriot, sat down with smug complacency,
holding one hand lovingly over an abdomen over-filled
with good fare.
“Weren’t ‘alf orl
right,” he said “lawd, wot with five eggs
an’ ‘am an’ bread; but there weren’t
any beer, only,” with a shudder, “a ’ome-made
lemonade.”
“Yus,” Duquemin agreed,
“dam good-hic-sort these French people.
Fine lil’ daughter wi’ blue-hic-eyes.
’Eld my ’and, and she hic-said was brave-hic
soldier. Ver’ proud ... ’allô
wot-hic-doing’.”
A lad was kneeling in his corner,
hands clasped in prayer. (He did so night after night
unmolested.) The crowd watched curiously but
had anyone dare to scoff they, as Mahieu said, “would
a’ knocked the b scoffer’s
’ead orf.”
Strange ingrained instinctive assertion
of fair play predominant in the attitude of those
wild, uncouth mortals. Few of them had thought
of outward expression of God a fierce resentment
world galvanise into life at the slightest sneer upon
the unprotected back of those who had the pluck.
From his couch in a solitary blanket the agnostic grunted.
“Fetish,” he observed
quietly, “the warrior appealing to his oracle
of Delphi like a savage to his moon. Passing
gods of a passing generation....”
“Yesh,” Duquemin agreed
sagely. “Passin’ gen’ral rashon no
rashon-hic-pore-Guernseys. Oonly wot people gi’....”
The friendship originated during the
Normans’ first night at Vorchocq with the French
grew as the days progressed, accentuated by the Norman
knowledge of the people’s mother-tongue.
They made the utmost of their time,
lived life to the very full, inspired by the knowledge
that the draft of four hundred Staffords and two hundred
or so Guernseymen (the ten per cent. who had not participated
at Cambrai) who were to become absorbed into the Ten
Hundred were auguries of an approaching further acquaintance
with the Front Line.
Christmas Day provided an ample fare
in addition to the ordinary rations, small parties
engaging rooms in estaminets and farms, purchasing
the very limit of eatables obtainable with what financial
lengths were at their disposal, obtained bottles of
port and gave vent to an unbounded vein of hilarious
humour and uproarious chorus in celebration of a Christmas
that many knew would be their last.
In a quiet room four of the ascetic
rankers (Clarke, Martel, Lomar and White) passed
an evening that will long remain a pleasant memory,
tempered with pain for the one who soon afterwards
paid the Supreme Sacrifice.
Everywhere uproar was rampant.
Light, laughter, and good cheer maintained undisputed
sway upon all. Rose-cheeked daughters of France
were toasted again and again, taken into muscular arms
and kissed times without number.
The old marching rallies of the Ten
Hundred were roared out from every tiny house ablaze
with light, echoed out into the inscrutable pall of
black and wafted far away into the shadows.
And they toasted the “Old Battalion,”
the warriors who were lying in the damp Masnieres
soil; the Future; and God’s own Isle their
little motherland. It hurt, how it hurt!
How the tiny green island rose mistily before the
eyes in all its sun-bathed romance and mystery!
How the sweet aroma of its gold, furze-crowned cliffs,
the laughter of blue waters, the lowing of cattle,
came flooding with glad memories on the mind ... and
you may not ever again scent that furze or glimpse
those waters!
They laughed memory back into its
dim past. What of the future? Live
only for the present!
Bunny was happy. Reclining gracefully
in the gutter he sang a jumbled lullaby of melodies.
“There’s maggots
in the cheese,
You can ’ear the beggars
sneeze ”
He struggled manfully to his feet,
fell into a helpless fit of laughter and collapsed
again into the roadway with a heavy grunt. An
N.C.O. found him there a few minutes later.
“‘Ere,” he demanded, “wot
are you doin’ there?”
“Doin’,” Bunny chuckled
helplessly: “wot think I’m doin ...
plantin’ daisies or diggin’ for gold?”
“Look ‘ere, me lad, if you’re lookin’
for trouble !”
“Lookin’ for trouble? not
lookin’ for anything. Just ‘avin’
a rest by the wayside an’ gazin’ at stars.”
“Well, get up or I’ll
‘old you up, an’ you’ll see
’em then.”
“Or-righ’. Want, want, lil’
drop toddy?”
“Got much? Pass it over.”
“Ain’t got none.
Only asked if you want a-a drop....”
He moved away and from far down the street his dirge
carried faintly:
“There’s whiskers
on the pork
We curl ’em with a fork .”
In unhappy contract to Christmas.
New Year proved to be a day of short rations, bully
beef and a rehearsal of an attack in the snow.
The bread ration dwindled down to Winkleian proportions.
A move up the line was pending in
the near future and rumours that of all hellish sectors
they were going up the Passchendaele-Ypres areas,
were received with continuous outbursts of growling.
The young Staffords who had not the
gruesome knowledge of Belgian desolation were satisfied
with a front anywhere near the magic Ypres. They
wanted to see the place where, as one of them was perpertually
saying. “A couple of Blighty regiments made
a bloomin’ ’ell of a mess of the whole
blooming’ Jerry army.”
There was everywhere a mutual recognition
of a possible, a probable, German attack on a scale
to date unparalleled. Every battalion in the
Brigade was thoroughly cognisant that at some time
during the next few months they would be called upon
to make another Cambrai stand. There was a general
feeling that he would attempt to crush the British
Army at a blow, seize the Channel ports, and thus
isolate what armies had escaped the first onslaught.